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                  <text>IS-The Daily Sentinel, I)Jiddleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Sept . 7, 1978

Possession charges filed here
Meigs County . Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports
Mike Fisher, 27 and
Stephanie Snyder, 26, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, were arrested
Monday
evening
for
possession of a .controlled
substance, marijuana.
They posted bond for appearance Friday in Meigs
CQunty Court.
· Arrested Tuesday to r.

possession of a controlled
substance t marijuana ) was

Dennis W. Tolley, 26. Rt . 3,
Albany . Tolley was booked at ·
the county jail after being
arrested on a Governor's

WarTant to obtain his retul'Jl
to the State of Virginia to
answer an indictment for a
bad check, when deputies
discovered a small amount of
marijuana in his possession.

.r---Ar~-a-Deaih;-1
BRADFORD MAAG
Bradford
Maag , 68,
Minersville, died Wednesday
at Holzer Medical Center.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Theodore and
Laura Funk Maag, and one
infant son, Bradford Maag,
Jr.
He was a member of the
United Methodist Church,

GOP committee
meeting slated

Minersville ;
Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, Pomeroy
Chapt e r 80 Ro ya l Arch
Masons, Bosworth Council 46
Royal and Select Masters,
Ohio Valley Commandery 24
Knight Tempiar,. and Tri
State Distrtct Council United
Brotherhood of Carpenters
and Joiners of America.
Mr. Maag is survived by hiS
wife, Helen Grueser Maag:
one daughter, Myrna Maag
Lowe;

son· in-law . Richard

Lowe . and two grandchildren, Trari and Steven
Lowe, all of Pi ckerington:
thre e sisters , Ka thryn
Br o wn . Mi nersville ;
Margr etha Wol fe, Columbus,
and Belly Reibel, Pomeroy;

The ne•t meeting ofthe loth
Districi Republican Com·
mittee has been announced
by the Committee's Chair·
man Pete Couladis of Athens.
The meeting will be on and several nieces and
Thursday, September 14 at
nephews.
.
the Hocking Valley Motor
Funeral services will be
Lodge off Rt. 33 nea r held Friday at 2 p. m. at
Nelsonville. A social hour Ewing Chapel with the Rev .
beginning at 6 p.m . will be Har·vey Koc h officiating .
followed by dinner at 7:15 Burial will be m Minersville
p.m.
Hill Cemetery. Friends may
Guest speaker will be Greg
call a ny t ime. Masoni c
Lashutka, Columbus city servi ces Will be held this
attorney. Lashutka will be evening at 7 p. m.
speaking on behali of Ohio
In lieu of flowers the family
Secretary of State, Ted W. requ est s co ntributi ons be
Brown.
made to the Heart Fund .
OPENS CAMPAIGN
Tenth
Distri c t
Co n gressman

Clarence

Miller launches his reelection
bid here this week with the
official opening of his cam·
paign headquarters, Miller
for Cong ress Committee
Chairman Maxine Charlton
announced today.
On Saturday, Sept. 16, at 10
a .m. Miller will hold an open
house at this campaign office
located atl24 East Main St. in
Lancast er . The publi c is
invrted to attend.

SQUAD RUNS
Middleport 's Emergency
Squad was called to the
apartment of Jake Scott , over
the Mark V store, al3 :39 p.IJI.
Wednesday Scott , who had
fall en. was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated and released,
At l : 10 a.m . Thursday , the
squad was called to 26
Railroad St ., for Chery l
Clark,· who was ~aken to
·Holzer Medical Center .

WESTERN
FLANNEL .
SHIRTS
(Boys

Sizes
From 6)

Team

No . 2
Jack's Dairy Bar
No . 6
No.5
Nn . 1
No.3

derailed at New Boston .
Thompson also said a N&amp;W
supervisor was hit with a
rock in the N&amp;W yards in
Portsmouth and suffered a
broken jaw.
''The supervisor was

Won

8
8
6
2
0
0

Team series - No. 2 1894 .

Team game - No . 6 610.
Hi gh se ri es - Darrell
Dugan 554. Mary Voss 454 ;
Ed Voss 544. Betty Smith 448.
High ga m~ - Ed Voss 214,
Mary Vo ss 166 ; Darrell
Dugan 203, Pearl Russell 158.
Early Wednesday Mixed
League
August 38, 1978
Team
Pis. ·
No. 6
8
No. 2
6
No.3
4
No. 4
4
No. t
2
No . ~

iBoot

5~or

Middleport
,Open :
9-5 MOn. thru Sat.
Friday till p.m.

0

Team se ries - No . 2 1959.
Team game - No. 2 699.
Hi gh senes - Charles
Smith 536, Delores Tyree 529 ;
Junior Phelps 495, Carolyn
Bachner 527 .
High game - Char les
Smith 208, Carolyn Bachner
212 ; Junior Ph elps 190,
Delores Tyree 184 .

~·

COORDINATED FALL
BLOUSES AND TOPS ALSO

Weather
Qear to night , with lows in
the low or mid 60s.
Probability of precipitation is
near zero percent today and
toni ght a nd 10 percent
Friday.

E.
SALE
CONTINUES

.

Fridoy

T•IB :OOp .m.

REG. 13.95 ...•......•..•....•..•.•• ~ 12.96
REG. '5.95.....•...••...••....•..... SALE 14.46
REG. '6.95 .........•.......••.•..•• SAL.£ '5.21

Boys' sizes 18 to 30. reverslbles, solid colors, painted
leathers, jeans belts, includes entire stock.
5

BOYS 1.95 BELtt ••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••.•••••••.. 1.67
BOYS 12.49 BELTS .•••.••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2.07.
BOYS 12.95 BELTS ......................................... '2.47
BOYS '3.50 BELTS ............................ '3.07
1

SALE '2"
$3.95 Garrison Belt, 11/• inch
width, black, sizes 32 to so.

' •3.39

Long sleeved in. dressy or casual styles,
stripes and solid colors. Sizes 34 thru AIO.

Pajamas. gowns, robes, boys' and
girls' sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14 .

REG. '11.00 ..................... SAL.£ '8.99
REG. 13.00 .................... SALE 10.69
1

1

WAREHOUSE

'2.98

SPECIAL PURCHASE AND SALE .

LEES CARPET

·KITCHEN mE
BROOMS

New combination of dye techn iques
creates this fresh fash ion loo k·of high.
lo w
scu l ptured carpet .
Subtle

gradations in hue are easy to r:ol or mat ch with other fabrics and paint
fin ishes . Pile . yarns are 100 per cent
nylon . a very durable, long.wear lng
fiber . Select f rom 4 colors, blends of
br-own, rust. green and gold . Reg .
sq . yar d .

Spec111 price for
Frid1y 1nd S.turd•y
on this Ytry popul•r
broom.
.

BROOM CORN
NATURAL OOlOR
SPECIAL

SQ. YD.
INSTAUED OVER lh INCH PAD
SALE

10~

inch
w~o ~) SKILLET

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

FASHION
JEANS

Handy·sized
skillet
made of thick
aluminum hn
Silva• Stone

jiffy!

Po~eoiain

Sale

•••

oxterio1.

I

Men'sS1U5 Jeans

$10.13

Men's $14.95 Jeans
Men's S16 .95 Jeans
Men's S17 .95 Jeans

$12.73
$14.43

$15.33

I

MEN'S.CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

WORK CLOTHES
Regular arid exln lar&amp;e sizes, overalls, iiiS!IIated covelllls,
quilt lined or blanlwt Uned jackets and coats, lined haOck,
dungarees. Buy what you need now while the selectiolis
are best and save•

~NERAL
N. Second Ave.
Middleport. 0 .

carhar•tt

According (o McGaha and
Cliff Bellamy of ·the Point
Pleasant Chessie System
Depot, the cars were being
transported to the Goodyear

Tire and Rubber P lant at
Apple Grove en r oute to
Huntington.
· Tuesday night, four cars of

substance.

a nother

Ches s ie

train

derailed on a stretch of track
between Hartford and New
Haven.

FOUR CARS ON a Chessie System train derailed
Thursday night near the Stauffer Chemical Plant near
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va . One car contained Pherphalic

•

a1

e

t

Acid, a non-toxic substance. It was the second train
derailment in two days in Mason County.

en tine

Fifteen Ce nts
Vol. 2\1 , No. 102

Withdraws
his forces

Varian checking his property
whil e McPhail was on
vacation .

In other business co uncil
announced. all alleys in the
village are io remain open
and not be blocked or closed.
Co un ci l also discussed
cutting weeds on vacant lots
and private property . !;etters
will be mailed to residents in
violation. Chief Varian
suggested old guardrails on
the park area , be removed
and replaced.
·
Chief Varian issued a
reminder. that both parko in
the village, one the lornter
State Park •. are closed frum
9:30 p.m. until 6 a.m .
Attending w'e re Mayor
Pickens, Larry Brogan, John
Amott, Kathryn Crow and
Mick Ash, council members,
Robert , Wingett, George
Holman , C hl ~ f Varian,
Herman London , Naomi
London and Mary Pickens.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
An ice cream social will be
held Saturdaf at the
Syracuse Fire St~ lion from 9
a.m . to 4 p.m. sponsored by
Syracuse Boy Scout Troop
242.

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

roy

'

""' ,. ..

:

•

.~

·~,.1 ' . ~

. ... /

....,,.-.~
. . ...

•• ,
I

...,

By ANDREW GALLAGHER
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
(UP! )- Secretary of Stale A.
James Manchin withdrew his
for ces at the last minute
Thursday in his fight to
revoke the charter of the New
Jersey company building the
co oling lower at Willow
Island which collapsed and
killed 51 workmen .
However, the West Virginia
official said he plans to attack
agai n again st Re se archCottrelllnc. of Bound Srook,
N.J., striving to keep it from
doing business in the stall! .
Afll!r a brief hearing . in
Ka nawha Coun ty Circuit
Court, Manchin distributed a
leaflet in which he said :
" I bave withdrawn but not
retreated. I have this day

' '•

,..

.,.

•

·:~· .~

,

;~

'

'.

I

\

•
.
~~
l
;fir •.• '
.
&lt;

•

•

..

..

' ;1' .

'•

'

se nt a new notice or
revoca tion,
one
not

susceptible to any misun-

'

derstanding ... ''

Company attorney Willis 0 .
Shay said his clients have had
"problems in West Virginia

II#

Y' · . ,.

... .

•

MEIGS CHEERLEADERS
These are the
cheerleaders for the Meigs High School varsity football
team for the forthcoming season. Aeross the front from
the left are Sandy Hamilton, Tina Randolph , Robin

Southern, Tina Conners and Maria Legar , On the second
level is Terri Yeauger and on top of the formation is Dec
Simms .

.

Summit tempo moving

By JIM ANDERSON
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)
The tempo of the
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - For the fourth time, members of the Utility Workers Union of America have rejected a tentative mountain-top summit has
quickened
and
the
cattract agreement with the Ohio Edison Co.
negotiations
have
turned
into
The USIJA is on strike at fOur Ohio ·Edison power planiB,
according to a company spokesman, who declined to say by a kind ·of marathon, with
President Carter and his
how much the latest offer was rejected hursday .
aides feeling out bOth sides on
key Issues in the way of a
Middle East settlement.
SAIJSBUR=,sia (UPI) - Black guerrillas who
Carter and key advisers,
shot down an
d civilian airliner with a heat-seeking including Secretary of
rnlsalle kept u their offensive with a mortar bomb attack on Defense Harold Brown,.were
theb&lt;rder city ofUmtall Thursday, causing several ~sua!Ues scheduled to meet over ..
and e:rtenslve danutge.
breakfast today ~ what the
The attack on Umtall came as the government in Sall5bury White House described as the
announced a heat.-.king rnisalle had been uaed to shoot down uaual Friday morning foreign
an Air Rhodesia Viscount turboprop airliner with 56 :persons policy breakfast.
aboard nortlrwesl of Salisbury.
White Holl8e officials said
the summit negotiations wsll
continue
through
the
'
.
despite
the
:
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UPI) - · Two more ~oxcars weekend,
Jewish , and
t.longlng to the strikebound Norfolk-Western railroad and Moslem,
Christian
religious
holidays
aeveral 1111111ll bulldln&amp;s at the N&amp;W yarda In Portsmouth were
to
be
celebrated
within
Camp
aet on fire early today·, pollee reported.
'
Two other boxcars on a track leading from the town were David. .
Prestdent Carter met
aet on fire Thursday and two derailments were reported 11 a
wave of strlltwelated Incidents contillled In ·tld.1 Ohio River· Thursday for a total of five
houra .Jointly with President
city.
Anwar Sadat and Prime
MinUter Menachem Begin.
In addition, the three leaders
~:· LONDON (UPI) - ~elth Moon, hllh-llving dnmuner lor apent allCllber three-quarters
'lbe rock 1f011P The Who , has died In his Lon1on apartinent, of an hour tocelher watching
.iJrlnaln&amp; to an abrupt end a flamboyant Ufe that earned him a Marine Corps preclalondrill . performtp~ce, and
lbe deiCI'iptlon "a onH118n lunatic fringe ."
,
1
Moon, 31, waa found dead In bed Thureday at hll another ' half-hour at a
'..,.nment In the eulusive Mayfair district by his ftancee, . rece)lllon hosted by Carter.
Liter, Carter and aelected
AMIUe Walter-Lax. Moon'• body waa dilcovered in the 111111e
,lllp&amp;or 1!1111ment In which singer Mama eau, a member of top aldel, lncludlng VIce
President Walter Mondale,
JIIIIJWP 1be Mamu and Papu, died two yean ago.
national security adviser
~l&amp;nlew Brzezinski, and
'
ROANOKE, Va. (UPI) -The Norfolk &amp; Western Railway Secretary of State Cyrus
.C.. II IIIII apenlinC COO!fortably in lbe black, dellljte 1 Vance, met with Satllt and
hlatopati\Wn.
,Ctll...._ llrlketbat blcan two monlha •Ill· . l
carter t.pn !be day with a
• Ia fad, lsellauoke 'l'lmel • World Newa quotea 1111 WaD
lwOOIIW'
maetlni with laraell
'ttr..tl!lllrll u II)'UW that the railroad mJchl pay hlllher
deleptlan.
·••" lallsll)'811'1banl.alt. 'lbelntii'IUitionaiB~tt
All told, Carter'• day of
. ,....., and Airline Cierb struck the railroad on July 30. I&lt;

.

Jlock .dnmuner found dead

SALE PRICES

Elberfelds In P

Syracuse Village Council
Thursday night accepted the
bid of York Construction
Company, Chauncey, for
asphaltic materials for
paving and patching work.
The bid totaled $25.50 a ton
lor approximately 250 tons of
asphalt. ·
Mayor Eber Pickens
reported Bob Willis had been
elected fire chief of the fire
department. Council approved Willis' appjlintment.
Herman London , pool
manager, reported gross
_; . ,Neiplalrem.tba poe~ tCJtale&lt;j
~1,018, as of July 31.
.
London extended his thanks
to Jim Wicklin'e and Glenna
Crisp for their assistance in
811pplying persons to work for
the village through various
federal programs.
Council commended
London for an excellent job as
pool manager.
:Council discussed rules for
the new tennis courts and
puthorized John Arnott,
councilman, to develop rules
and post them at the co urt
area.
Mayor Pickens reported he
11,\d received a donation from
Hugh McPhail in aP·
preclation for Chief Milton

Several fires set

Complete selection of popular Carhartt Brown Duck.

for winter tires.

Stop in and check
for low prices.

non~toxic

Guenillas still attacking

PRI-51ASON SAUl

Making room.

was on routine patrol on W.

Va. SR 2, in the Five-Mile
Road area. ,
Roush said he was told by
trainmaster F. L. McGaha

Fourth proposal rejected

selection of styles .

interior the premium non-stick

resists chipping,
p·eeling , clean s up in a

that three of the four cars
were empty while the fourth
contained Pherphalic Acid, a

·j~)_r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_

Fashion denim leans, cotton.polyHter
blends, 100 per cent cotton and
corduroy, entire •lock Included , wolst
size• 29 to 42, length• 30 to 36, fine

surface. SilmStone

'·.

discovered,at 10 :43 p.m. by a
Mason C.o unty Sheriff's
deputy, T. E. Roush, while he

Council lets
asphalt hid

REG. '7.00 ...................... .SALE '5.79
REG. 110.00 .. ..... .............. SALE '8.19

Reg . ss.oo ........... ...... Sate $4.09
Reg . S7 .oo ................. Sale 55.79
Reg . sn.oo ............... Sale $9.09
Reg . s18.00 .. . ............ Sale $14.79
Reg. 521.00 ... ... .... ..... Sale $17.19

PRICE

Buckeye Local in Ashtabula
County and . Logan school
districts.
In Dayton, about 1,000 out
· of 1,700 teache&lt;s set up picket
lines Thursday at the
system's 10 high schools and
60 elemen tar y. schools .
However, schools were open
!Continued on page 12 )

WOMEN'S FALL TOPS

CHILDREN'S
WINTER SLEEPWEAR

Final clearance of
summer
pajamas,
gowns and robes.
Large rack of sizes SM' L-XL

Mason County's secon d
- train derailment in two days
occulTed at 6 p.m. Thursday
when four cars of a Chessie
System train left the tracks
near the Staulfer Chemical
Plant near Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.
The derailment
w as

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Sept. s. 1978

SALE

2 DAl SALE

rejected' a propo;..l by the strikes continued in several
board cf education to take the school districts.
dispute tb a federal mediator
The employees, seeking
if the employees promise to more money and fringe
return to1 work:
' benefits, marched in front of
schoolchil· · more than 200 Ohio schools.
Meanwhile,
ren across the state
Nearly 10,000 school em·
found teachers and non· ployees in Cleveland joined
1
academic workers picketing strikes in the Dayton, Tall·
their classrooms today, as madge, Lima Shawn ee,

Chessie System .train derails

BOYS' SPORT BELTS

Sizes 32 to 50 in . black or brown. Regular price $3.50. Full
grain bridle cowhide, 1112 inches wide.

CLEARANCE

•

SEPTEMBER SALEI

MEN'S LEATHER WORK BELTS

0.

s.

ASSORTED SIZES AND COLORS
REG. s3.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 12.2'5

TWO DAY SALE

REG. '9.95

TIRE SAUS ·
O~en

REG. '9.00 .. ~...................... SALE '7.38
REG. 111.00 ........................ SALE '9.08
REG. '15.00 ....................... SALE '12.28
REG. '18.00 ..........= ......... SALE '14.78
REG. '24.00 ....................... SALE 119.68

start at 7:30 with special
singing. Rev . Don Karr is the
pastor
and
everyone

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance ol showers
northea s l Saturday,
otherwise fair and warm
through the period. Highs
will range from the upper
70s to the mid 80s north and
the mid to upper SO. south.
Lows will range from the
upper 50s to the mld 60s.

PLAYTEX CONTROL
TOP PANTYHOSE

Pants suits and dress styles. polyester.
machine washable, permanent press.

LINGERIE

Ualled Press lntemaliooal
Classes remained closed
today in Logan for the
district's 3,400 students. The
strike there by lBO teachers
and 100 non-teaching personnel began Aug. 29.
The Logan E.ducation
Association, representing the
has ·
. striking teachers,

ON

WOMEN'S UNIFORMS

is the eva ngelist. Services

welcome .

VE25%

SALE

REVIVAL
There will be a revival at
Nea se Settl ement Bapti st
Church, north of Pomeroy,
Sept. 1\1-16. Rev. John Jeffrey

NEW FALL
OUTFIT

*JACKETS
•SKIRTS
*PANTS

run ~

ning a switc h engine and
somebody threw a rock
through t he ca b of his
enngme," said Thompson.

SALE PRICED

For the Ladies' New
Fail Wardrobe
Group of Queen
Casual Outfits

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

Two trains
derail in
Portsmouth
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
(UP! ) - Two freight ll:ains of
the strike-bound Norfolk &amp;
Western Railroad derailed in
Portsmouth and nearby New
Boston late Wednesday night,
police said today .
Three sections of an N&amp;W
engine and five cars left the
track near downtown Portsmo uth, sai d Police Sgt .
Howard Thompson .
" We can't say exactly what
happened at this time;" said
Thompson .'
Thompson said three men,
who said they were striking
employees of the N&amp;W, were
arrested at the site for failing
to leave the scene.
" They
were
being
disorderly in the vicinity of
the wreck, " said Thompson .
"They were arrested when
they refused to disperse and
are now out on bond.''
Thompson sa id a large
crowd gathered at the sce ne .
The derailment at New
Boston occurred on a private
road leading to the railroad
properly . The road was
blocked by the derailed cars .
It was not immediately

-Logan ;t eachers reject
latest board proposal

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 MD SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9

determined how many cars

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed
League
Aug. 21 , 1978

Men's &amp; Boys'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SEPTEMBER SALE DAYS

Tulley is bein~ held · un· the
governor's warrant pending a
final hearin~ in Meigs County .
Cuurt .
In other department ac·
tivity . Meigs County Sheriff's
deputies investigated a one
car accident on CR 28, three
t e~ ths of a mile north of the
.Eagle Ridge Rd . intersection
Tuesday.
·
Billy H. Cretsinger, 29, Rt.
3, Racin e, wa s traveling
north on CR 28 in a 1977 Ford
pi c;kup truck, lost control of
his vehicle in loose gravel on
a curve . The truck struck an
embankment on the left side
of the roadway . There were
no injuries and no citations
resulted.

'Sdll operating in black ,

1

I

negotiations and socializing
lasted about 14 hours.
The core issues to be
resolved in'volve the timing
and extent of Israeli
withdrawals from
the
occupied Arab terTitories and
the kind of control the
Palestinians will have over
their own future, in their
homeland.
American spokesmen continued to maintain the news
blackout ordered by Carter,
and White House spokesman
Jody Powell said, " I would
steer you away " from reports
that appeared in the
Egyptian and Israeli press,
saying
the
American
president has proposed some
new Ideas in the negotiations.
Powell said the American
role Is still chiefly one of
listening and "we are really
not at ' that stage" of
proposing new ideas.
The conference is taking
place in a combination of
extraordinarily tight security
and easy informality within

T1lla week'• wlllnlng Ohio
Lollery aumbers:
Gtld IIUilber - t .
Wlllte •mber - Zt.
Blae DUJDber - 111.
, EatraCaob
115251.
•\

the Camp David compound.
The property is surrounded
by two layers of 8-foot fence ,
topped by barbed wire, and a
row of electrified fence. The
whote complex is closely
watched by Marine guards,
Park Service police and
Secret Service agents.
' Inside the protective
barrier, the atmosphere is

one of relaxed informality.
from the evidence of the
sele ct ed
c arefully
photographs that have been
released by the White House.
All of them show the
participants sm ilin g,
laughing, hugging each other
or otherwise demonstrating
jovial good will.

ELECTION NOV. 6
The amual election for
fairboanl members in Meigs
County is Nov. 6. Due to an
error, the headline in Thu1'9day's Sentinel read Sept. 21.
Nov. 8 is the correct date. .

company now, then revoke its

charter within 60 days . The
case will be set for a hearing,
" which is a useless
procedure .' '
In the meantime,

Shay
lamented, "it leaves him
(Manchin ) the opportunity to
make a lot more speeches."
Johit Applegate, secretary
of Research-Cottrell, intoned ,
" It leaves the company under
a cloud ."
Manch in revoked the
charter Aug . 22, citing a
report by the Occupational
Safe ty
and
Health
Ad ministration on the April
27 tragedy.
A

hearing on the issue

Thursday ended abruptly mi·
nutes after its start when
Manchin's attorney, W.C.
Field, told Judge Oden F.
Goshorn that Manchin had
withdrawn the r evocation
order .

F'ie id

styled

it

a

·' misundersta nding ,

and elsewhe re " because or

there fore the matte r is

Manchin 1S action.
Research.{;ottreil
would
have preferred to have the
case argued in court now, the
lawyer said.
" There 's no sta tutory
au thority for revokin g
charters for claimed acts of
negligence," Shay claimed .
The attorney said Manchin

rendered moot .."

Goshorn
slated .. that
Manchin had not complied
with
the
necessa ry
regu lat ions to issue the
revocation .
" It is a n an nulity,"
Goshorn pronounced . " It (the
order) has no force and
effect."

Income tax cut
awaits approval

By DON PHilLIPS
WASHINGTON (UPI )
An income tax cut ahnost
large enough to keep
Americans even in the fight
with infla tion and Social
Sec urity tax increases
driven in the suspect's ca r.
appears to be certain of
Grand Jurors also entered a approval by the Senate
second indictment a gainst Finance Conunittee.
The committee, which
Hall on felonious assault on
Bertha Jean Roush stemming began seven days of drafting
sessions on 8' tax cut bill
froin the same incident.
Mrs. Brumfield is charged Thursday, agreed to deal
with the April 24, 1978, with individual income tax
shooting of her so n-in-law, cuts first before moving on to
Stephen Wine Alford, 28, business tax cuts and the real
Milton. Alford, who was shot controversy in the bill : how
at close range with a .410 much to cut capital gains
taxes.
gauge shotgun, was found face
The Houae bas passed a
down in the yard of his in-laws $16.3 billion cut, $10.4 billion
by a passerby and died shortly going to individuals. The
thereafter of a chest wound. committee indicated its cut
;_:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:
would be larger but not by a
significant amount .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through · No action was taken ThursTuesday, temperatures
day and only two specific
wlll be near normal durtug
amendments were mentioned
lbe period with a chance of
by committee members .
showers Monday aud
Conunitlee chairman Ruasell
Tuesday. Highs will be ln
Long, 0-i..a., suggested an
lbe upper 70s to the lower : expansion of the earned
80s and lows will generally
range from 55 to 60.

2 indicted for murder
Two murder indictments
were included among the nine
returned by a Mason County
Grand Jury on the opening
daY of September circuit court
Wednesday.
Both Ruckle Lynn Hail, 20,
Ewington, 0 ., and Bettie L.
Brumf'teld, 50, Ashton Route I,
were named in felony in·
dictmEmts for alleged mur·
ders which occulTed less than
a month apart.
Hail ia charged with tiie
shooting death on May 19, 1978
of Bertha Jean Roush, 19,
.Meigs County, 0 . Mrs. Roush,
a former reaident of New
Haven, was shot in the upper
torso in a ruralarell near West
Columbia and pronounced
dead later at Veterans
IIJemorlal
Hospital
at
Pomet:Qy where ahe had been

ca n pr ope rly .notify the

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

Weather

GET LJCENSE
A marTiage license was
issued lo Gregory Alan
Cundiff, !9, Syracuse. and
Vickie Lym Roush, 1n, Rt. 2,
Racine.
"r

Generall y clear tonight ,
with lows in the low or mid
60s.
Probability
of
precipitation near zero
percent today, I0 percent
tonight, 20 percent~turday ,

'

income credit for the working
poor and Sen. Bob Dole, R·
Kan ., mentioned an extra tax
exemption for the totally
disabled .
Long said he would ask for
a vote on a $1.8 billion plan to
increase the earned income

credit , a form of negative
income tax going to those who
earn less than $8,000 a year .
The earned income credit
now allows low-inco me
workers a 10 percent credit
on wages earned up to $4,000,
a maximum $400 benefit that
phases out between income of
$4 ,000 and $8,000. Eligible
workers get a check from the
goverrunent if their earned
income eredit is more than
they pay in taxes .
Long said he would ask thai
the maximwn credit be increased to the $8,000 income
level - $600 - although the
phaseout would be more
rapid and those on welfare
would no longer be eligible.
Dole did not expand on his
planned tax break for the
totally disabled.
Long was more vague
about his plans for other
income tax cuts although he
pointed out the Senate budget
resolution allows enough
room for a tax cut that would
offset the Social Security tax
increases scheduled for next
year' and ooe year of the
1
cu!Tent 7 Pfcent inflatir.

I

�3-The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 8, 1976

?-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Friday, Sept. 8, 1978

Health Review

IN WASHIIGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

By Dr. Lamar Miller

I·OV College o( Ostoopathic Medicine
This is the third and final segment of the discussion
concerning epilepsy.
QUESTION : Is there anything which a · person with
seizures can do to prevent frequent attacks ?
ANSWER : The Main avenue of )X'evention still must
remain with medications, eitber.a single drug or combinatioos
of drugs. These medications must be changed and the dosage
adjusted occasionally . This part of the management, however,
is always best left to the discretion of your doctor . Many times
body adjustments to daily living, tn the onset of other illnesses
or to just growing older make the dosage cbangl!s necessary w
optimize the effectiveness of such drugs . Dilatin and
phenobarbital have been the main line of preventative
treatment for many years. However, recently newer
medicatioos such as mvsolin. -mesantoin and zarontin have
been introduced which may be more effective in certain cases.
Again, the decision should be left to your doctor.
QUESTION : Otber than drugs, are there any precautions
which ooe can use tn decrease the frequency of attacks ?
ANSWER : If possible, life's stresses should be minimized.
The pattern of life ·should be as simple as possible, which
means regular well-balanced meals, seven to eight hours of
sleep every night , and avoiding socially stressful situations.
An epileptic's life pattern should not be much different from
his or her peers and ''special' ' situations should be avoided
which provide different seating arrangements in school or
exclusion from physical activity. In fa ct, it bas been sh own
that more physically; ctive children with seizures tend to have
less frequent atta cks than those children who are sedate .
Un(&lt;rtunately, teachers and employers need to be educated
more so they are able to dispel lheir own individual prejudices
and learn how to deal with epileptics, instead of fearing and
avoiding confrontation s with tbese individuals.
QUESTION : Is there any special advice to offer regarding
physi cal activity or sp&lt;rts '
ANSWER: As I said previously, as little change from
normal as possible is the key to my advice. However, there are
special situa tions which need ad vice

~

avoid unnecessarv

risk. The seizure prone person should avoid swimming or
hiking alone, Such a person should also be certain that his or
her seizures are well controlled or that adequate warning is
always present prior to a seizure before either driving a car or
working with dangerous· machinery. Contact sports need no
special handling, and in fact , group sports and participation
are to be encouraged whenever possible. Finally, the Epilepsy
Foundation of America, with chapters in every state aod the
main office at 1828 "L" Street, N.W., Washingwn, D. C. 20036,
can provide informatioo and help to aU epileptics as well as
people who work &lt;r live with seizure_prone persons.

~HEALTH
~~

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:.

good soun:e of the kind of
Diarrht•a i!l
bulk that helps is bran. Try to.
a sy mptom
include in your diet each day
one of the cereals thllt has
DEAR DR. LAMB - I don't whole wheat witl1 an ' apknow how to explain this face preclab1e amount of bran in
to face to my doctor so I' m it. II you develop good bowel
writing to you in hopes that ha bits,. the behavior of your
you will help me. I fee I tense t'Oion may improve.
You need an examination
most of the time but the problem is I seem to have loose because there are a nwnber
of diseases that ca use diarbowe1movements often.
It happens a lot when I go rhea . If it's strictly an em&lt;&gt;;mywhere ~ it h my husband. tional react10n, that needs In
I'm not sure if it 's m y nerves be resolved and could be with
that make it happen or what professional counselu.g. It 's
is . the problem. Anyway. I'm important to find out why it is
afra id to go anywhere with that you get so tense every
time your husband wants you
ltim for fear this OL'C urs.
·r don 't eat much fruit to go someplace with him.
because of this although I Your Jetter doesn 't ma ke it
love Pepsi, pizza and candy. clear if you get this way if you
About two yea rs ago we were go somepla ce by yourself or
looking for cars and I had to not.
I realize you feel embar·
stop at three gas stations in a
row , AIJout a week later we rassed, but diarrhea is just a
went to the mall and I had to symptom. Your doctor is
go back again . That's what quite familiar with diar rhea .
makes me leary of going Keep in mind that if your pr&lt;&gt;blem is related to your
anyplace with him,
When I think he wants me oversensiti vity , correction of
to go any place with him 1 gel such a reaction could imner vous and I just don 't know prove your tile markedly in
what to do. Please help me if many other areas, other thlln
DEAR READER - I wish just controlling your diarthere were a way I could help rhea .
you just by ans wering your
questions but I'm afraid your
prob1em 1s more complex

.than that.
It 's important to know why
you have bou ts of diarrhea .
It 's tr ue that the colon is very
se nsiti ve to our emotions. In

fa ct, the colon blushes as it
becomes engorged with blood
. or turns pale during other
· emoti onal situatwns almost
• as a mirro r of what our reac. lions are.

To help you have a better
: understa nding of how your
bowel fun ctions and how to
develop good bowel habits I
am send ing yo u The Health
!.£tier number 2-1, Irrita ble
or Spastic Colon and Con•1ipation. Al though 11 doesn't
dea l specifically with diarrhea , it will tell you how to
develop good bowel hllbil.s
that might help you control
your problem.

TEACHERS HIRE D
The Eastern Local School
Dist rict Board of Education
has employed two addition al
tea chers to complet e the staff
for the new school year.
Employed were Margaret
Ella Lewis, a fol'mer Meigs
Local instructor , who will
tea ch special education at the
high school and William
Jewell who will wo rk as
lea rning disability teacher at
the Chester building.
PRAYER MEETING
A count y-wi de pra yer
meeting will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 17, at the
Rutland Community Church
with Glen Bissell as class
leader.

A s pastic colon can cause

either constipation or diar·
rhea and frequently intermittent bouts . Other readers who
want (his issue can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
sell-addressed envelope lor it
to me in ca re of this
newspaper , P.O. Box 1551,
Radi o City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Obviously, lor you to have
bouts of diarrhea associated
with emotional stress, you
must have an overactiVe,
hypersensitiv~ colon. You
might be able to help thllt
· some by adjusting ypur diet
to include more ~ulk in it. A

"'

.

PTO MEETING
The Syracuse PTO will
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the school . Introduction of
staff members will be the
p rogr am
h ig hli g h t.
Babysitting service will be
provided. All patrons of the
school are invited.

.

'

.

Much grumbling,
'
.
no fight .
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - Carter loyalists at the Democratic
National Conunittee ~re taking no chances that the party's
mid-term conferenc-e in Memphis this winter might tum into a
rebellion against the president.
.
·Party Chllirman John White and the DNC hierarchy hllve
rigged the agenda anij rules of the Dec. ll-10 L'Onclllve so lightly
lhat conference delegates will be all but. precluded from mounting any significant challenge to Carter's leadersh!P· ·. ·
It Is a risky maneuver, for the procedural manapullltion has
angered many li beral activists within the party who hlld hoped
to force a showdown' on the failure of both Carter and Congress
to fulfill the promises of the 1976 Democratic pllllform.
But it will probably suct'eed, despite the grumbling now going on. The liberals, blacks, union leaders and others most
disenchanted with Carter and Congress are not yet ready to
dec1are open w3rfafe.

Kennedy's clothing displayed
By Daniel F . Gilmore
WASHINGTON (UP!) .
Th e
tatt ered
and
bloodstained clothing worn
by President John F .
Kennedy on the day he died 15
years ago was displayed
publicly Thursday for the
first
time
by
the
con gressional panel trying w
answer qu estions about his
murder.
The stark scene of the
president's dark gray stilt
jacket and brown striped
shirt draped over a white

the brain remains had been
destroyed.
"The handling of President
Kennedy's treatment and
autnpsy - first in Texas then
in Washington - by the
doctors ,
the
Warren
Commission , and by the
president's family ... has
given rise to more questions
tnuching on his assassinatioo
than any other single
factor .
" The facts of what
happened and the question~
that have arisen out of these
facts merit the closest
attention ," he said.
" NJ far as is known,"
Blakey said, "no member of
the (Warren) commission or
its staff ever carefully .
examined the autopsy x..-ays
or photos, although Chief
Justice
Earl
Warren
repcrtedly did see them."
Doctors at Par kland
Memorial Hospital in Dallas,
where Kennedy was admitted
after the shooting, "differed
dramatically
in
their
descriptions of the head
wound, " Blakey pointed out.

The Parklllnd doctors, said
Blakey, were not even aware
of a wound·in the president's
back and only later a bullet
was foWld on the stretcher 111
which he was carried .
The Warren Commission
said this bullet was the same
lhat had struck Kennedy ,
exited through his throat and
caused the multiple woiUlds
to Coonally, wlm was .in a
jump seat in front of Kennedy
&lt;11 that day in Dallas, Nov. 22,
1963.
Outlining the conflicting
cooclusioos, Blakey noted :
~e Parkland doctor described Kennedy's throat

as to Its results," Blakey
said. "But rumors began to
fly anyway, and confusing
news accounts began to

·

They read the same opinion polls as the president, and they
rea lize any major ,Memphis confrontation over issues would
inevitably be viewed by the press as the start of a "dump
Carter" muv emen ~ within the Democratic Party.
" No one really wants the type of fight the Carter people are
obviously afraid of·, " said one liberal organizer, "but the more
they batten down the hatches, the more they run the risk that
sheer frustration will precipitate the very fight they want to
avuid."

.

The one issue that could ignite a liberal revolt a9ainst Carter
at the Memphis conference is probably national health inappear."
These erroneous news re- surance, where the president 's caution hils already provoked
ports, in tum, fueled the an open split by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and his powerful
allies in the United Auto Workers and other liberal unions .
coospiracy theorists.
But Kennedy , who insists he will not be a presidential canOn Wednesday ,
the
didate
in 1980, cannot afford to stir the troubled waters, and the
committee viewed a slowunion
people
are not likely to lead the way for fear their efforts
motion track of the famous
would
be
perceived
as a draft-Kennedy gesture.
Zapruder
film
which
There
will
be
1,633
voting delegates to the mid-term concaptured the assaasinatioo in
ference,
about
80
percent
of whom will hllve been chosen by the
its gruesome enlireiy.
end
of
September
at
various
t'Onventions and in primary elecThe film, taken by amaieur
tions.
So
far,
liberal
activists
likely to hllve no great affection
photograph·e r Abraham
for
Carter
are
picking
up
anywhere
from 35 to 50 percent of the
Zapruder as the presidenUal
delegate
seats.
motorcade passed through
taiJer 's mannequin was
But no matter how many potentially hostile delegates wind
Dealey Plaza, depicted in
highlighted by the glare of
up
in Memphis, they will be hard pressed to create any real
color
the
scene
at
the
moment
television lights and the
wound "as an entry wowtd,"
mi
schief.
The first two days of the conference will be devoted
Kennedy
and
Coonally
were
beaming chandeliers in the
leading to conjecture !hilt lbe
to
speeches,
parties and workshops thllt hllve no power to subshot.
room chosen by the House
)resident had been shot from
Connally, often dabbing his mit resolutions to the noor of the convention.
Aasassinatims Committee In
the front as well as from the
Only on the afternoon of Sunday, Dec. 10 - when most
rear and to inevitable eyes with a handerchief and
hold its hearifll!.
will be anxious to head for the airport to ca\ch the
delegates
pausing
for
gulps
of
water,
in
two
gunmen
theories
that
Kennedy's suiflacket was
last
planes
out of Memphis - will the conference devote an
a
morning
session
were
responsible.
.
slashed in the front and
hour
or
so
to
~.llbating and voting on resolutions.
Wednesday
gave
his
own
"
All
participants
in
tile
bottom sectioos, a telling
In
order
to
reach the conference noor for discussion,
.
emotiooal
report.
His
wife
(se
cond)
autopsy
(at
reminder of the frantic
however,
proposed
resolutions must be submitted to the DNC
filled
in
the
moments
when
he
Bethesda
Naval
Hospital)
attempts by doctors at
by
Nov.
27
and
be
cleared
by Dec. l by a majority of the DNC's
blacked out.
. ·
were under Naval orders Parkland Memorial Hospital
executive
conunittee
which
is finnly controlled by Carter
The Connallys sat in jump
not lifted until the Select
w save his life.
loyalistJolm
White.
(House) Committee began its seats in front of the Kennedys
The back of the suit was in
-To qualify a resolution for conference consideration over the .
investigations - to be silent oo that fatal drive.
tact, 5ave for a neat hole
obj
ections of the DNC executive committee, dissidents would
where experts believe tbe
hllve
to submilipelition signatures from 4W delegates to the
first bullet struck Kennedy
DNC
no
later lhjtn Dec. 5.
and exited through his throat.
That
amounts
to a four-day "window " for collecting and subThe clothing was but ooe of
mitting
signatures
from delegates scattered all over tbe couna number of grim displays,
try
an
almost
insurmountable
chore. Aa a prBI!Ucal matter,
inclwing specific drawings
any
group
pushing
a
resolution
thllt would meet objections
enroll
in
cooperative
work
archaeology
By
SANDRA
L.
LATIMER
in
the
Science
and pictures of the gaping
from
the
DNC
hierarchy
would
hllve
to start gathering petition
study
programs
or
sign
up
for
COLUMBUS
(
UP!
)
Department,
although
the
wounds th e 46-year old
signatures
long
in
advance
of
that
four-day
period.
business
blocks.
Social
Studies
Department
is
Public
schools
today
have
president sustained oo the
It
isn't
likely
to
happen.
Most
party
activists
will be too busy
Some
of
thOse
programs
battling
for
two
goals
in
mind
tn
lhat
COIII'!Ie.
day of his death in Dallas,
graduate students and to are set up in lour atld five " It's
history· made with the November elections to organize for Mempbil!, even if
Nov. 22, 1963.
Four offi cials of the prepare them for .what they hour blocks and deciding to interesting through they had the •1omach for a fullscale confrontation with the
Carter fort'eS., Those unlwppy with the president's Jle•
Natiooal Archives, where the · will face once they get out of "enroll in them is a major exploration ," he said.
decision for some students,
Curtiss himself has been a lonnance will no doubt find infonnal outlets for their senexhibits have been tighUy school.
visiting lecturer In that timents, but a lullscale noor fight will probably be forestalled .
They work to accomplish according ID Curtiss.
gnarded since the shooting,
"Students make decisions course, teaching Indian lore,
accompanied them tn the th ose goals by offering
within
the about clllsses acc&lt;rding to 111e of his hobbies.
hearing and stood just a few courses
"We've got one called ·sinfeet away as the committee curriculum that meet state teacher personality, word of
standards and courses known mouth about tbe course, the gles Living,"' he said. "It
members viewed them .
ease or interest of the course, started out as 'Bachelor
On
Wednesday,
the as electives.
Ohio
pupils
must
earn
at
alld friendship," he said.
living' for seni!l' ho}'ll, but
committee heard testimooy
least
17
credits
in
order
to
"And
when
it
comes
to
when
Title IX came out, we
from f&lt;rmer Texas Gov. John
enrollin8
in
a
class
where
the
graduate,
according
to
state
had
to
change the name of
Connally and his wife, Nellie,"
it.
II
student
is
going
to
he
set
off
standards.
lly XENNE'111 R. CLARK
who were riding in the same
Two of those must be three from . the rest of the
Title IX is a Department of Ualted Prea1 llltematlooull
car with the Kennedys when
the sh ooting ' occurred . credits in English, two in population lor lour to five Health, Education and
WIDENING 'ntE GRIN: The next.t&lt;Mut thing I.e. Spblb
Earlier today , conflicting physical educatioo , and one hours ~t a time , then it Welfare program which will needed to loae wu another tooth, but a New Orleana dentlat
autopsy
reports
were ea ch in ma th , science, health , becomes the question of cut off federal funds If yanked one of the lew be has left Thuntday after lplll'rlng
u. s. history and u. s. wherewiU my fri~nds be," he evidence of dlacrimination Ia partner Leroy DIU• loosened It for him. Splnb' pplng grin of
examined.
found.
Committee counsel G. government. The other seven said.
~umph after he Hfted Mnhamml!l All'l heavyweight crown
11
Business block courses fall
That 1 a a popular course earlier this year In Laa Vegas lold the world botb hla front
Robert Blakey said the units are earned in electives ,
Dick CurtiSs, a gUidance under the Intensive Office with about 56-SO enrollment," teeth&amp;remlalingandprompted All to dub him ''the v~ . "
autopsies prompted more
questioos about lhe mw:der counselor at Westland High Education where students , he said. " But It's still Spinks Ia training now for a return match with All Sept. 1$.
lhan any other single fa ctor School in the South-Western are in an office environment weighted towaed the boys.
Says he of hla latest loes in dentures, "We talked about II and
''At first It taught them how decided to go ahead, get it pulled and get It out of the way. I
- giving rise to multiple &amp; hooi District of Franklin with office machlens and
to sew on buttons, but it went didn1 want It to fall out in the ring . It would have cauaed • lot
gunmen theories. And Blakey County desc ribes an elective equipment learning office
over so well with seniors that of talk."
also disclosed that the as "a course that potentially duties.
.
remains of Kennedy's brain, could be a career, while for
The coopera!lve W!l'k study it now inclwes choosing a
FIGHT AT 'ntE OPERA : Stars In colllai111 aet the nervee ~
which was exploded by tbe others, it broad ens the programs have students mate and marriage," he olflciala ~t New York's Metropolitan Opera quavering about
impact of the third bullet educatiooal experience.''
leaving .the school to work. added .
an octave above high C Wedneaday.1be flap, involv!Jw t.~
He
also
says
teachers
are
Under Industrial arts falls James MeCractea and Joba VIelt:en, ended In a mldflheanal
fired at the motorcade, was
The jobs 1\DUid be In retail
encouraged to try to teach
factories, restaurants, World ol C111structlon and walkout by McQ-aelt:en - leu than two weelut befcn he wu to
~!side~~·~ie'/mywi!;:d ~~~ their classes how they relate , sales,
warehouses, busineues, or World of Manufacturing. In open the sea1100 In the tiUe role ol "Tannhauaer." Seema
vocationally and to make the even in hospitals and nuraln8 the construction class, McCracken Ia miffed because Vlckera ·wu cut to ling
been missing for yearrs,
Blakey said the committee student aware of what he wiU homes
through
the students set up assembly ''OieUo" In the first "Live from the ~et" JII'OII'Im of the
has asked the Archives , face when he leaves school Diversified Careers In Health lines to produce work, Publlc Broadcaattng System. Otello Ia one ~ MeCraelt:en'a
differelng from a shop cla.ss greatest roles and the current )rf!ducllon will dealgned for
Bethesda Naval Hospital, and and how he will do It.
Occupations.
Clirttss elqllained that at
Students are introduced to where each student makes an blm. He aaya he's laking a year's leave of
others,
including
the
IUebanl
Kennedy
family
for Westland, freshmen students the vocational education individual project.
Caully and Jell Tbomu reportedly wiU lake hl.t plact.
The manufacturing clus
Information about the must take English, math, school in their aophCIIIore
CLAUS'IROPIIOBIA : Egyptian Preitdent An1r Wat
science,
physical
educatim
linda
the students building gave security f!l'oesat Camp David, Md., the jlttera Wednelreceptacle used to keep the
year and can enroll there lor
brain, but has received no and a course being instituted !heir junior and senior yean, small homes, about the llze of day wheq he broke away from hla IAIIIIInit meeUnc with
this taU called "Planning They must take their doll houses, wiring them Prealdeat Carter and llraell Prime Mlnl8ter Meuelllm _ .
answer.
required courses at their electrically, and lnstalling to take a ride In Ule country. But ABC cairo eotta nlenl
Blakey said Attorney Your Future."
This
class
falls
under
the
home school before going to carpeting and windows.
General Robert Kennedy was
Doreea x.,.. aa}'ll!he lan't tl1ll"pl'laed . She aaya slld;t ean't
Social
Studies
Department
in
Jewelry and ceramics bear to be cooped up anywhere for more than :11 boun because
·worried at the time that his
the vocational education
brother's brain might be which stwents are required school where they get both come under the Art he lplllt too many of hla revolutionary Yeart In prilon -IDIIIY
stolen and put on display. to have ooe credit over and classroom and laboratory Department.
of thell\ in a tiny, unfumlabed, vermin~ eel!.
the
presc ribed work .
Classes In mythology and AcCIIIIoclaUona are better now. He nwde 1111 Wednelday
Blllkey said a member of the above
family told him he believed minimum.
In the South-Western aporta' literature are taught cmatitutlonalln a lkar motorcade.
·
"The goal of this cla.ss Ia diatrict, Westland and two lhrough the Engllah DepartPEA~:
lnWdt
Man!~~
lor
the
Nobel
Petlee Prlle?
to help the student make ~er high schools ccmpet. ment. Guest lecturers in the
Why
not,
IIYI
Fred
Rail
Cutnt,
chief
jUitlce
ol
the
PNIIpplne
decisiorisabouthla future and for openings in the vocational sports literature clua are
&amp;apnme
Court.
He'aiiGIIIinaled
hW
for
the
boner
11)'1 abe
111E DAILY SENTINEl
often the coaches of the
learn self awareness," 00 school.
n EVOTED TOTHE
deaerv"lt
becaol
her
''llnrelentq
eftarta
to
11r1at
paaee
said.
.INTEREST OF
"II often comes down to the varioUs athletic teliiiiS.
and
International
mlderatandlng
Unup
frlttv!ohlp
11110111
.U
MEIGS-MAIJON AREA
Sophomores are required to law of supply and deiiiDCI ,"
•llona.l'
But
lbe
PIIWpsiln•'
ftrat
lady
II
fltppn*!Pd
by
the
ROBERT HOEFUCH
take Sngllsh, health and sal\1 Curtlu. "If there are
CityEIJior
repcrt of her IKinlnallan. 81)'1 ... "Same ....... tmlll be
Publisht&lt;d da1ly ext.~pl. ~tun!My
physical education.
more
applicanll
than
wASHINGTON (UPI) - dreamiDg."
by TIM! .Ohio V1 llt!y Publishing
By the ume the student openings, then 1be lludent'a The National Labor Relatlllla
Com~ny-MuiHmed~. Inc.,
1IJ
8C~ : Batoo Rcqe Dlltrlct Attorney a.. INn kilt
reacheS his junior year, he Ia grade~, prerequlaltea . Bolrd has officially certllled
Court St., Pumeroy, Ohio 4 ~7611 .
Ida
bet on the JeiTJ Lewta MIIICIIIar D)'llropbj 'l'llltbaD,IIIII
b usint!!IS Offil'c Phone 99'2· 21511.
required Engllah and U.S, completed, attendance the N!l'th American Soccer
Editoria l Plume 9!12-11 57.
now
he ;hal to lole Ida hair. Brown Wlllred hla llowltc loeb
History, and only U.S. record and dl~ are · .League Playen Aliloclalkln
Sl'Cornl cl.r.i!£.11 posl.ll ~e ]Wild HL
IIIII
hla
dty'a llllltrlbutiCIII to the charity c1rtw wwltll't Nidi
Pomeroy , Ohiu.
'
Government Ia required in hl.t taken Into COilllclerallon.
u the c:ollectlve ~ bargalnlnc •.000- and It didn't, until bualne- n Ria Cnntftnl
N~:~Lioh&lt;t l a.d v~:rti.&lt;Ji ng r epre!ll:nsenior year.
Lati v~ , U.ndoo AQIX.il les, 3JOJ
,"If there are more agent of the l..gue•a playera,
...
Eucli d A v~ .• CleVebim.l, Ohiu H li~.
By the lime the student geta openinpthan candldltea,_the the NASLPA announced llepped ln. When the cll)''l tally . reached ... !hwfcrd anted up tile balance, juat to - I f 11row11
Subscnptlon ,.t~Wti : Ot'llvcretl by
Ule
required
COID'!Iel
out
of
inatructou aren't that Thlll'lday.
C'drrier whu e '• vailwble 76 ct.'nta {itlr
look 11M Jtojlk.
the way, he ia free ·for fuuy," he uld.
wwk By Motor Roull' whtJ re catrritr
Ed
Garvey,
the
r
NASLPA'a
FANtATIC: lu WtlmaleJr ~·t jlllt lllldarU.U. Rill. Ill
..ervice ~ .w.vllliiM.ble, Ontl 1T14.111th,
electives, 11101t of which are : For !aching electives, the \ staff dlr.ector, aald the
13.25. By m• il in Ohio Mnd w. v • .••
tile
ftl'lllc:ullr of Ida Shelleld, Encllnl, ..,.,. an, • Ill daft
I.Ait Yew;, P2.00; Six munttw, · taken durin~ the upperQJI
~ utllllea Ita own rtiOtll'- auocladon eJtpeCI&amp; to belin
yean,
about
I - .,much 10 Ibat be'allllllld
111r
fi L~ : Three montha, t7 . 00 ~ ·
~ 128.00 Ytw; Six munthJ
the
boltlttown
-.n.
,.
wbolt
llwlll.
...
.....
,
..
·
barllinJnl
...._
wtdiin
Or a tlludent may opt to
11 ~ . 50 : Thrt!t moo th~J , SU O
For
m.tance,
the
cbemlltry
two
weiu,
witit
a
10ii
ol
cbt
'17*1
Delli
'l'lnlr
.......
I .... 2
,
Su'-.Tiption price lnl'l udes SunliM) 1 attend
the
district's
TUm.'II.Sem1nel .
MmiiRPalliS ur
I
I;
vocational educaUon school, teacher whole hobby Ia n:- reaching an agreement ~an.
c a v a t If g , I each e I before nn:t ·
~w,,.,..
0... O!tdll6 w I
~

,

CHI LL I COTHE
Saturday night Atomic
Speedway hosted a large fi eld
of 66 very fast race cars to
kick off a big Labor Day
weekend of racing. In the
Sprint Car division, Kenny
Jacobs of Holmes vill e,
captured the 25-lap feature
event in the Gary Stanton
sponsored No. Jx. In the
earlier sta ges of the event ,
Dwain Leiber jumped into the
lead over Ma rietta's Tommy
Dickson in car No. 99.
Several "iaps later J acobs
came through the pack and
JumPed into a huge lead and
appeared to be charging to an
ea sy victory. But in the later
sta ges of the race tough ·
competitors George Harbour
and little Ja c Haudenschild
certainly gave Jacobs a run
for his money.
On the last lap, Jacobs went
high In the fourth tum and
Harbour who was ri ght on his
tail cut down low to ch allenge
for the lead. But at the
check ered flag Ja co bs edged
out Harbour for the wirf with
Haudenschild's No. 75 ·close
behind. Fourth went to Leiber
followed by Dickson who took
home fifth.
Heats went to Carl J odrey,
Charlie McCann, and Kenny
Jacobs with Larry McPeak
taking the Consi.
In the Late Model division,
area drivers Bruce Neigler
and Hilton Wolfe , Jr, along
with their mechani cs did very
well against the rest of the
field .
Nelgler's
chi ef
mechani c is Dave Shain while
Scott Wolfe hea ds Wol(e's
crew.

Nei gler 's " Sha in and
Neigler Ra cing
Tea m

Special" posted the night's
second fast time and finished
third in the fast heat.
In the second heat , Hilton
Wolfe's "Hill Bros. Produce"
Special jumped into an early
lead and charges on to vic·
tory over second pl ace
fi nisher Fred Payne. Wolfe's
No. 4l led every lap of the ten
lap event.
In the feature, live-time
feature winner Dick French
chalked up another victory
over close challengers AI
Nunnery, Bud Frazier, Moe
Beele r , Joe Te eters, an d
Racine's Bruce Neigler .

In the feature, Ju nior
Wolle, the "Flying School
Teacher' ' fr om Racin e,
popped a tire off the rim
while running tenth after
starting in the 17th startin g
. slot. Heats went to Jell
McGarvey, Jr . Wolfe, G.
Hatfield, and Bud ·Frazier.
On Monday night , Atomic
again hosted a line field of
ca rs for its annual Labor Day
Championships. In the Late
Model fe ature the crowd sure
got their money's worth as
the race was filled with aU
kinds of excitement! Un·
fortunately some of it wasn't
the kind of excitement most
race fans like to see. On the
start of the feature veteran
driver Jake Dyke of Waverly
came in contact with the
concrete wall while trying to
avoid a spinning car.

Dyke's car catapulted end·
-over-end into the a ir and

landed right-side up in front
of the nagstand. Dyke was
pinned in the car, but was
later freed and appeared to
be okay, but was taken to the
hospital for a safety check·

- - ---...,.---....-f

'* ••"" •

.'

...

...

I

I

I

I

,,

,ihe 28th lap Dan Aldridge got
airborn and rolled his ca r
three times down the front
stretch. He was uninju red .
As the race continued third
place r unner Greg Hatfield ·
jumped the gun and passed
the younger Adams. One la p
later Bob Jr. left the race
with a busted tire, but hi s Da d
was still pouring it on. On the
Ji st lap Hatfi eld passe d
"Bobby J oe" lor th• l•• ~ • n~

never ga ve it up . Throughout
the race it was nothing but a
" Hatfi eld and Ad ams"
ba ttle! With a little luck and
less ca ution, Adams' fin e

driving wou ld have no doubt
pulled off a victory , but that's
the way things are in auto
racing!

Hatfield took the feature
with hea t wins going to J .
Dy ke, Art Ball, and Calvi n
Kenneda .

The champi onship feature. traffic and lappeo every car
in the fi eld except for second
place finisher Ed Haudenswas Bobby Allen in his M &amp; J child. Third went In Ed's
Co al Co. No. Ia, fr om brother Jac. What makes
Hanover, Pa. Ea rly leaders Allen 's win even mor e imTu cker
Nunnery
and press ive is the fact that he
we blew an en gin e while
George,
Har bo ur
passed
by Allen on qualifying and cha nged
the lith la p a nd from engines right at the track!
that point on he was never The last heat went to Har·
headed . He toole d his·· bour whu rolled his car
"Winged Sprinter" through earHe r in t he even in g
followed by Bobby Allen and
Tommy Dick son.
Once the heat got started ·
Dickson,
d ri v in~
the
"Charlie Brown Specia l" No.
in th e sprint class went to one
of the nation's top drivers. It

By MIKE SHALIN
UP! Spurts Writer
The St. Louis Cardinals and
,the Atlanta Braves aren't
going anywhere this season .
But Thursday night, both
handed out tnugh defeats to
contenders for lhe National
League's divisional titles.
The Ca rdinals stopped
Pittsburgh ' s 11 -game
winning streak with a 5-4
vic tory while the young
Braves pulled out a 6-5·
decision over the slumping
San Francisco· at Atlanta .
"I didn't know if it was
going to stay fair or not, bull
knew it was out," Ted '
Simmons said of his two-run
homer off the foul pole in left
field that gave the Cards the
win and left the Pirates I""

games.behind Philadelphia in
the East .
The Pirates had six men
cut down on the bases - three
stealing and three trying tn
take extra bases - as the
loogest winning streak in the
National League this season
came In an end.
.
Rookies played the key
roles in Atlanta as Glenn
Hubbard, Dale Murphy and
Bob Horner helped send the
Giants·to their 5hird straight
defeat. Hubbard singled in
Murphy from secood base
with the winning run in the
eighth inning,
Horne belted his 18th
homer for Atlanta and Jack
Clark smashed his 23rd ior
the Giants , who fell four
games behind Los Angeles in

th e West.
In other NL games, Philadelphia defeate d Chicago 5-.1,
Los Angeles edged Houston 32, New York beat Montreal 94 a nd Cincinnati down ed San
Diego 6-2.
In the American League, it
was "New York 15, Boston' 3;
Toronto 5, Milwaukee 4;
Seattle 5, Chicago 3, and
California 7, Texas 6.
Ph lilies 5, Cubs 3:
Ted Sizemor e 's sacriflce
fly scored Mike Schmidt with
Ute tie-br eaking run in the
eig hth inning as Philadelphia
came back after trailing ~
in the fourth . Reli ever
Warren Brusstar, 5-3, picked
up the vic tory.
Dodgers 3, Astros 2:
Pinch hitter Vic DavaliUo

2-1 decisio n

homer was an inside:.the-park

·

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I

L

TOLEDO, Oh io I UPl i
Four Pawtucket pitchers held
Toledo to just five hits
Thursday night as the Red
Sox defeated the Mud Hens 21 to take a 2-1 lead in their
best of five series in the
l nt e rn a t io n ;~ l
Lea g ue
semifinal playoffs.
Pawtucket scored both its
runs in th e fo urth when Gary
Allenson walked and Dave
Coleman, Otis Foster and
Wayne Harer each followed
with singles off loser Kevin
Stanfield.

••...............

--------------------·-------------

action. "

The return came in Cin·
cinnati with the ex pansion
Bengals in 1966, but Brown
said he nearly picked Seattle
for his comeback.
"I went to Seattle to live lor
about six weeks to see if that
would be the place to put a
franchise, " he said. " I just
wanted to study the city. As
you know, the franchise there
toda y is a very successful
one, but at that time, Seattle
was s uch a one-industry.town
- Boeing - that it just didn't
look good then.
"And ," he added, " I felt
safe back in Ci ncinnati. Back
in Ohi o. I'd gone to schoo l at
Ohio State (in Columbus ) and

at Miami in Oxford and the fr anchise, it was as
coached at Massilon and si mple as that. "
Cleveland."
Alth ough Brown's new
Brown specifically credits Benga Is played thei r fi r;t two
three peo pl e for helping his yea rs in the old American
comeback in Cincinnati Footba ll Leag ue, Brown
Bill Hackett . a former player knew whe n he won th e
of his, Ohio Gov. James franch ise, that the cl ub would
Rhodes an d NFL Com · be merged mto the NFL 10
missioner Pete Rozelle.
1970. That entry caused a
" Bill Hackett first came rea lignment of some o ld~r
out to La Jolla to talk to me clu bs an d Brown's old
a bout getti ng someth ing Cleveland team was ta bbed

s tart ed

in

Ci ncin nati ,··

recalls Brown . "And when l
went to Cincinna ti to talk
about it, Jim Rhodes was
th ere with me.
·
"And, Rozelle had always
enco uraged me to come ba ck.
It was with his help that I was

let know that the franchise
would be ours. Rozelle was
instrum ental in my getting
,

Yankees crush
Bosox, 15-3
St. Louis 5, Pittsburgh 4;
By BIU. MADDEN
Philadelphia 5, Chicago 3,
UPI Sports Writer
and
Cincinnati 6, San Diego 2.
The way those Bronx
Angels
7, Rangers •=
Bombers stormed Fenway
Don
Baylor
antl Roo Fa irly
Park Thursday night in the
farst of four games with the hit two -run homers off
shellshocked Red Sox, you'd reliever Reggie Clevela nd tn
have thought they moved highlight a seven-run sixth
Uoston 's notnrious "CCIII bat inning that wiped out a 6-0
Zme" a couple of miles west. Texas lead. The win moved
Led by their least likely lhe Angels wilhin 21'l games
slugger - secood baseman of-Idle first-place Kansas City
Willie Randolph who knocked in the AL West on the eve of
in five runs ~ the surging their cru cial fourgam e
New York Yankees unloaded series.
a season-high 21-hlt barrage Blue Jays 5, Brewert1 I:
Rick Cerooe hit his third
oo four Red Sox pitchers en
homer
of the season following
route to a 1!&gt;-3 Iaugher that
a
double
by Dave McKay in
sliced Boston's American
the
eighth
inning tn provide
League East lead to three
Toronto's margin of viCtory ,
games.
Indeed,
while
the Reliever Victor Cruz, 7-1,
"anything goes" section of worked tbe final two innings
Bostoo they call the ''C001bat to get the win . Mariners 5,
Zme" Ia in anoUJer part ~ the While Sox 3:
Bob Stinson belted a twocity, the Yankees didn't let a
simple matter of geography run homer w cap a four..-un
get in the way of their ninth Inning for SeBttle. With
transgressions against the me out in the ninth, Bruce
beloved hometown Red Sox. Bochte tagged loser Steve
And if the Red Sox dldri't Stone, with his loth ~omer to
know the Yankees were trigaer the rally . Paul
COOling, they do now. The win Mitchell, S-13, spaced eight
was New York's 18th in the hits for the victory .·
last 22 games and moved
them the cloeell they 've been
ID first place Iince May 31.
"The Red Sox are
experiencing now what we
went through the first part of
the aeaaon," said Yankee
M8nager Bob Lemon. "But
they're tough in this park and
their record shows you can
never get enoulh runs bate."
El8ewbere In the AL, CaU·
fornla topped Teue 7-4,
Seattle put away Chicago 5..1
and
Toronto
downed
Mlll"ullee .....
In the National League, It
. . LGe Anples 3, Houstm
2; Atlanllt I, San Franclaco ~;

.I

Heats went to Ha r bour,

Nunnery , and &gt;11-year-&lt;&gt;ld Roy
" Pappy" Singletnn !

Bench taking
Bailey to Court

Bail ey has failed to repay the
loan,
Bench transferred the note
w Pitcairn, who is asking
repayment of the 110,000 plus
inter est .

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RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Apeliance
Gas Servtce
Racine, Ohi o

Chester, Ohio

continues

tnnight in Toledo, with a sixth
gam e, in necessary, also in
Toledo Sa turday.

6w~

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matur it y date :

If

Sales &amp; Ser\rice

new Bengals.
'' Wh en some thi ng fir st

(614 )992 -5652

ca me up about Clevela nd
coming in, Modell said it
would emasculate th e league

NOTICE

Tl'le Atnens County
sa vings &amp; Lotln Co.

Through th e fall sea son

Pomeroy . Ohio

fo r Clevela nd to come in with

W. Main St .

and winter

month s we

will be closed on Sunday .

ever see a barra cuda ?"

-

Brown's return to football

aoa W. Main St .
Pom eroy, OH 45769

after a five-year abse nce

went extremely smooth . He
coached the Bengals to three
playoffs in their first eight
yea rs - remarkab1e for an
expans ion club - but was
unable to get the team to the
Super Bowl.
It would have made a sweet
st ory for the old coach who
had won world cha mpionships back in the l!l&gt;Os to
ret urn and win the Super
Bowl in the 1970s. but Brown
claims he had no Super Bowl
drea ms.
"I never thought about
that, rea lly," he says. " I was
just tr ying to make this a
successful ent erprise. I
sta rted out think ing I mi ght
coach two or three yea rs and
th e n move i t over t o
somebody else, I just got
ca rried away and stay ed
eight years,"
When Brown fina ll y
decided to quit co a c hin ~ . he
did it as " lo w key "
as possible. He had the
team 's public relations di·
rector telephone reporters
late at night on Ja n. I, 1976,
an d t ell them that Bill
Johnson had been named
coach and that Brown would
continu e as genera l manager .
Brown purposely stayed out
of reach the next several days
to let.the hot news grow cold.

one yea r . P it ca irn sa ys

the ninth on a home run by
Dave Edwards. '
Bu rke Suder , Steve
Schneck, John LaRose and
Chuck Rainey com bined on
the five-hitter , with Schneck
getting the win .

for t he sa me div is ion as his

us," said Brown. " But then
they put up $3 million to each
of the teams th at would move
in with us and , well, did you

formerly with the Reds. Pitcair n says Bench loa ned
Ba iley the money in 1976 and
Bailey signed a note that he
would repay the loan within

To1edo's lone run came in

The

philosphy of the time: " I
don't go back into football
without owning a piece of the

ru nning beautifull y. Dickson

fi nished fo urth in the feature.

'Pleas Court against Bailey ,

delivered Dusty Beker with a
sac rifice fly in the eighth
inning as Burt Hooton, 17-8,
and Terry Forster combined
wslop Houston. Baker added
a homer for the Dodgers,
9New York 9, Montreal 4:
Willie Montanez hit a !treerun homer and drove in four
runs and John Steams set a
ma jor-leag ue record for
stolen bases by a catcher with
his 24th wlift New York.
Reds 6, Padres 2:
Ken Griffey, Johnny Bench
an d Pete Rose slamm ed
hom e runs and Paul Moskau,
5-4 , combined wi th Fred
Norman on a nine·hitter to
power Cin ci nn a ti. Rose's
shot ,

started on the tail of the pack
and worked his way up to
third as his ca r was really

CINCINNATI tUPl i
Attorney Robert A. Pitcairn
says Bob Bailey of the Boston
Red Sox owes Cincinnati
Reds catcher Johnny Bench
99, was t he on1 y one to pass $10 ,000, and he 's tak ing
anyone during the event. He Bailey tn court to collect.
Pitcairn has fil ed suit in
Hamilton County Commoo
Mud Hen s drop

Cards snap Pirates
winning streak, 5-4

By Rick VanSant
CIN CINN AT! (UP!)
Although he chose to stay out
of foo tball several years after
hi s jolting firing by new
Cleveland Browns' owner Art
Modell at the end of a winning
1962 season, Paul Brown still
wante&lt;) to come back.
But, he admits today, he
was afraid.
After all, he was nearing 60
years of age, and even though
that didn't matter to him , he
knew it did to others,
"At the beginning of it," he
re minisced
about
hi s
comeback, " well, I had some
apprehensions. I didn't know
just how I was going to be
accepted."
But, he knew one thing for
sure. When he came back , he
was going to be in complete
co ntrol of the fran chise.
There would be no way
someon e could gain the
leverage to fire him again.
Brown recalled his guiding

NlMIN

peopletalk.

m-e..

up. His car was a tota l wreck.·
When the race fin ally got
under way, Bob Adams, Sr . of
Racine jumped into the lea d
followed closely by his soo,
Bob Adams, J r. Bob Sr . or
"Bobby Joe" bu ilt up a huge
lead and did a super job of
driNing, but caution nags
would always cut down his
lead, The elder Adams did a
spectacular job as did his son
as they held on to I he first t wo
positions lor 28 la ps. Then on

Brown admits he__was afraid
when he returned to coaching

Schools have 2 goals

rwa,-;;n

EXTENDS THANKS
The Ladles Auxiliary of the
Bashan Fire Department:
extends thanks to all those
who helped and patronized,
th e annual ice cream social.

Neigler, Wolfe racing impressive LabOr Day

FSTJC

--------

®®~®~®®®®®®
78 Years of Quality and Service

DOWN-TO-EARTH
PRICES!

Polyester cord"

DELUXE CHAMPION

*20 =~~-~!all.

Plus $1.6 9 F.E.T.
and old tire
WHITEWALL ADD $3 .' A" tize &amp;-rib design .

,

E78 ·14, F78·14.
G78·14. H78-14.
G78·16.
Bleckw•ll

*32

Pl us 52 13 to

H78-15,
"l78-16.
Bleckw•ll

*36

Ptu s 52 65 tc

S2 60 F E,T.

S2 .93 FE T

end old tir e

and o ld t 1re.

·rre ad des1gn d1Herent t han shown. WHITEWALLS ADD S3 .

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.
"Front End Alignments"

992-2094

®®®®®®®®®®®
'

'I

�~The

4- l'he paily Sentinel, Middlei&gt;ort-Pomeroy. 0., Friday, Sept. 8, 1978
::·.:.::·:·:-::;-:·:·: ::·:::·:::::~::::·:·:;:;:;:·:::;:;:;&gt;:::::::::::;:::·:::::&lt;·:·:·:-:-:·:. :·: ·:·:.:-:.;-:&gt;:·:·:·: ·&gt;:·:::·:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:~:~.::

•.·.

·,·,

Today

r.
:-:·

ij

Thistledown

United Press Internati on a l
Thursday

Pro Football

Oakland

Sign ed

defe11sive tackle Mik e M cCoy
and waived de fensive tack le
Dave Rowe .
Kansas City Slgn.ed .
defensi ve back Don Parn sh
and released ro o k ie cor nerback
safet y Rav Milo.
Baltimore Signed of ferlsi'v'e tackle Don Morrison .
Intercollegiate Athletics
M id .Cont i nent Conference

-

Named F. L . " Frosly"

Ferzacca

its commissioner .
Hockey
Pitl sburgh - Sig ned M ike
M eeker , No . 1 draff cho ice . to
a multi -year co ntract .
Montreal An n ounced
that Irving Grundman will
ass u me duties of retired
general
manager
Sam

Pollock ; signed right wing

•• ••
• ••

I

Major League Results
By United Press International

Nitional League

National League

East

.·.·

SPORTS TRANSACTIONS

NORTH RANDALL , Ohio
( UPI ) - Jockey Mike
Perrotta guided Pawnee Pass
to victory in Thursday's
featured eighth ra ce at
Thistiedown ,-covering the six
furlongs in I : 11 3-:i to pay
$14 .60, $6.80 and $3.40.
Bill's Kids placed and Diplomatic Step showed. ·
The 8-1 combination of
Snips Indian and Doc's
Promise returned $149.20 on
th e daily double, and there
were 52 winning tickets on the
1-3-7 grouping of Bon Bon
Girl, Rustie Dutch and Relic
Tunes in the ninth race
trifecta - each wocth $860.40.
Attendance was 3, 725 and
the handle totaled $415,767.

Ma jor league Standings
By United Pren lnternt~tional

t
::::

BOSTON (UP!) - The crow'~eet ar~und Carl Yastrzemski's eyes·, those tiny ilnes that sometimes serve as a
measure of the weariness Inside a man 's body and soul, seem
to get a little deeper every day .
He's 39, looks it, and felt even older yet alter Thursday
night's 1:&gt;-3 Yankee shellshocker that shrunk the Red Sox' lead
to three games and turned this city, a long-established seat of
culture, into something more of a mausoleum.
Yaz appears worn and tired and admits be is.
.
AS the Grand Old Man of the Red Sox, their eider statesman
in his 18th season, Yastrzemski has been through this same
. nerve-wearing, high-voltage situat(mn l"any other Septembers before, so this is nothing new for him .
Being used as their designated hitter by the Red Sox will! a
protective cast around the left wrist he injured l&amp;st month,
Yastzrernski ·goes about his work without complaining about
his physical condition. He's perfectly aware that if the Red Sox
are to beat hack the present challenge of the Yankees and win
their diviSion, it won~ come easy and the race might not end
until the final day of the season three weeks from no101
·'We've got to grind it out every day," he says. "Even hack
in July when we were 10 games in front, aU of us knew we
weren't going to coast in."
For years, opening up an enormous.lead and then watching it
being ·chipped away has become something of a Red Sox
tradition. They run away from the rest of the league in midsununer and then wind up scratching and clawing for survival
right down to the wire.
Sometimes they make it, as they did in 1967 and 1975, but
more often they don't. To make it again this time, there's no
question they need Yastrzemski 's reassuring presence as
much as they need his artistic bat.
A perfect illustration of that took place in a series at
Baltimore earlier this week. In Tuesday night's contest, the
one in which Jim Palmer beat the Red Sox 4-1 , Jim Rice struck
out twice on a-:.nd-2 pitches, swinging at bad balls both times in
his over~agerness.
"Don 't tell him this until they (the Red Sox ) leave town, but
someiJne ought to let Rice know he doesn't have to carry their
whole bjlll club," Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver said to one
Boston writer after that game; "There's nothing wrong with
getting a base on balls . Ted Williams walked a hundred and
fifty times one year. The reason Rice doesn't have to carry the
ball club is beca use be has a man named Yastrzemski behind
him."
The following night, with Dennis Martinez pitching for the
Orioles, Rice came up with one out in the seventh inning and
the count went to ·3-and'2 again. Martinez came in with a slider
that was a little low and Rice took It, drawing a base on balls.
Yastrzemski fol lowed with his 12th homer, winning the ball
game for Boston 2-0.
Several Red Sox players are having good years, including
Rice, Freddie Lynn and Carlton Fisk, but it is Yastrzemski,
with his experience , general know-bow and faculty for being
extra dangerous in the clutch, whom enemy pitchers consider
the toughest out and least like to see up there for Boston in key
si tuations.
Aches, pains and all, Yastrzemski has taken part in 120of the
139 games the Red Sox have played so far. He 's hitting .290,
has accounted for 65 RBI and with his 126 bits be now has a
career total of 2,850 hits.

I

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

E
.·.·

•

I

•••

::::

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporls Editor

111 I

I

•• ••

::::
·.·.
·.·.

Sport Parade

Ill
I

Ph i l a
Pi ttsbrgh
Chicago
Montreol
St. Louis
New York

w.

L
Pet. GB
75 63 .543
74 6~ .532 1 1 2
69 71 ' .493 7
67 74 ..475 91 1
61 79 .436 15
56 85 .397 201 '

west

W. L

Pet.

84

.600

GB -

Phila
000 000 311- S 8 1
Ch i .
000200100- 3 62
Christenson , Brusst~r
(7) ,
Reed (91 and Boone . Lamp,

tn.

Hernande z
Moore (8),
Rader , co·x

McGlothen (7),

Sutl er (8) and
(8&gt;. W- Brusstar
(5 -J). L- Moore (9-7) .

N . Y . 9, Mon l 4

Pitt
002 100 001 - &lt;1 10 0
St .l
10000022x- S 81
Kison . Jackson ( 7) Md Dyer ,
Ott
Falcone. Frazier · ( 5L
Lopez (8), Schultz ( 91 , Littell
&lt;91 end Simmons . W- Lopez (4.
n . L - JackSon (8 -4 ) . HRs Pittsburgh , Parker (24) ; St .
Louis , Simmons (211 .

Atla 6, S. F . 5
Cinc i 6. S.D . 2
L .A . J, Hous 2
St .L 5, P ill 4
Today 's Probable Pitchen
(All T ime s EOT J
St . Loui s { Vuckovich 12 10

L A.
100 01 0 010- 3 11 0
Hous
010 010 000- 2 7 0
Hooton,
Forster
(8)
and
Ferguson , Yeager (9 ); Lemon gello and Bochy . W - Hooton
{11 -8J L- Lemoflgetlo ( 9-lJJ.

and Bruno 4- 1J at Philade lphia
( Ruthven 12 10 and Kaat 7-51, 2,
5. 35p .m
Chicago
( Burris
6- 10 ) at
Montreal (Sander son 1-?L 7: 35
p .m .
San Fran cisco (Blue 16 -7) at
Atlanta (Solomon 4-4), 7:35.
p .m .
Pit tsburgh (Candelaria 10-11 )
at N ew York. (Hausman J-3) ,
8· 0sp .m .
Diego
( Perry
16 6)
San
Cincinnat i { Norman 10-81, 9:05

S.F .
00 3 000200~ 5 8 1
Alia
010 100 31X- 6 8 3
Blue, Moff itt (7), Lavelle (7),
Curtis
17)
and
Tamargo ;
H anna . Eas t erly (3), C&lt;'! mp (4).
Skok (8 ), Garber (9 ) and
Ben edic t . W - Skok f J-1) . L Curt is (41 -2) . HRs- San Francis ca. Cl ark (23) ; Atlanta , Horner
118 ).

Los Ang

San Fran
Cincinnat

56

80 60 .571

4

San Diego
Houston

76 63 .547 712
69 .511 121 2
64 75 .460 191•

A t lanta

6 1 79 .436 23

n

Thur stl av•s Results
Phila 5, Chi 3

p .m .

Los Angel es (Welch 5 21 at
Houston (Forscn 8-5) ; 8 : 35p .m .
Saturday 's Games
Ch icago at Montreal , n ight
Pitlsburgh at New York ,
night
St . Lou is at Phi ladelphia.
night
Los Angeles a t At lanta, ni ght
San Franc isco at Cincin·na t i ,
night
San Diego at Houston . n igh t

en ;

HR!.- Los Ang,les, Bak.er (11). ·

N .Y.

252 000 000- 9 8 0
000 101 020:.__ 4 9 0

Mont
E s p in o sa and Stearns;
Ja mes, Pirtl e ( 2). Miller (3),
May ~4), Atkinson 17l, Mejias
(9 ) and Ca r ter , Fry (9l. wEspinosa ( 10-13&gt;. l - Ja m es (0 ll H Rs- New York , Youngblood (6l. Mont Me~ (17 ).

S.D.
0000 11000- 2 91
Cine
004 200 OO x- 6 7 I
Owch inko. Lee (3 ) , Eichel berg er (51. Lollch ( 6) and
Swee1: Mosk.au , Norman (6)
an d Bench . W- M oskau (5 -•0 . L
- Owch inko · (8 -12 ). HRs- Cin ci nnal i. Griffey ( 10), Ben ch
(2 1) . Ros~ (6).

Natives are
restless in
·
Cit
Queen y
I

CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
natives are getting resUess.
The Cincinnati Bengals'
poor showing In last
weekend 's upset loss to the
Kansas City Chiefs left a lot
of fans complaining about the
team and Thursday a
·newspaper took a 1-2 punch at
the Bengals.
A Cincinnati Post sports
cartoon
pi ctured
the
Cleveland Browns (Sunday's
opponent) as laughing at the
Bengals a nd the paper 's
veteran sports editor, Pat
Harmon, lashed out at the
Bengals foc a lack of "zeal"
and urged that changes be
made. ·
The cartoon pictured
Browns' coa ches showing
films of last weekend's
Bengals game to their
players.
"Bengals on defense, " says
a coach as the projector
whirs.
Then,
"Benga is
on
offense.''
At the end of the film , the
players break out laughing
-and a Browns ' coac h
laments, "It's gonna be tough
getting them up for the

game."

Underneath the cartoon,
Harmon's column blasts the
Bengals.
"What the Bengals do best
is collect draft choices," said
Harmon. "What the fa ns
want is more victories on the
American League
field.
N .Y .
2J250 1 020--d5212
"The fans do not recognize
Bost
000 200 100- 3 8 2
any
all-out zeal to make the
Hu nter' , Clay
(4)
and
Munson ; Tor rez. Hass ler (2) , Super Bowl ... There is a
Drago (4) , Ca mpbell (8) t~nCt certain cautiousness which
Fisk . W- Cia y f3 ·4l. L - Torrer
seems to say ,_ 'This is good
( 15 -9). HRs - Boston , Fisk (20 ).
enough .'
Sea
000 001 00-4- 5 9 I
"Good enough is not enough
Chi
000 300 ooo---.:- 3 9 o
M i tc hell and St inson , Plum - any
mor e," concluded
mer (9) ', Ston e and Co lbern . W
Harmon.
"As it stands now,
- M i tchell (8 -13 ). L - Stone (10 12_1 . HRs- Seall l e, Boehle (10) , the Ben gals will lead · the
St 1nson (10 )
league in draft choices once
M il w
200 00'1 000- 4 11 1 again. But nothing else."

American Leagu e
East
W. L.P ct. GB
Boston
86 53 .619
New York
83 56 .597 3
Milwaukee
80 60 .57 1 6 !J~
Baltimore
78 62 .557 81 1~
D e tr oit
75 6"4 .540 11
Cleveland
60 78 .435 25 1 2
Toronto
56 86 . 394 31 1 ?
W est
W. l. Pet. GB
Kan . City
74 61 .555
Cali f .
75 65 .536 21h
T exas
68 69 .496 9
Oakland
6-t 76 .457 13112
M inne so ta
62 78 .443 151/2
Ch icago
59 81 .421 JB1h
Sea ttle
52 85 .Jao 1 4 1•
Thursda y's Results
Sea 5, Chi 3
Tor 5, Mil w 4
N Y . 15, Bost 3
Tor
200 000 1'1)1 - 5 7 1
Cali f 7, Te~~:as 6
Au 9 us tine , Castro (7),
Today's Prohble Pitchers
McClur e
(7)
and
.Moore ;
I All Times EDT)
New York I Beatlie 3-ll at Clancy , Cruz f8 J and . Cerone . W
- cruz ( 7-ll . L - McCiure (2 -51
Boston (Wright 8 '1), 7 :30p .m .
Baltimore (Flanagan 17 -12) a t HRs- Toron ro , Cer one (3) .
Toronto (Underwood 6-12) , 7; 30
103 200 000- 6 8 0
Cle\leland
(Clyde
6 -9)
at Texas
Cali f
000 007 OOx - 7 10 0
Detroit (S laton 14-10l. 8 p .m .
Mcdich . Cleveland (6) and
Seaffle
(Co lbOrn 9-10) at
Ch icago (Ba rr ios 8 13), 8: 30 Sundberg ; Ta nana, M iller ( d ),
LaRocne f 8l and Down ing . wp .m .
Milwaukee (Rep log le 7-2) at Mi ll er (5-l ). L - Ci eveland (3 -8).
Hargro\le · (7 ).
Minnesota &lt;Serum B-6 }, 8 ·30 HRs- Texas.
BeniQuez (9) ; C ll I i f or n i a.
p .m .
Kansas Ci ty ((;ura 13-4) at Baylor C30l , F ai r ly 19 ).
games scheduled!
Californ ia (K napp 14 -7) , 10: 30 I only 1'
1
\ ' 1·"
p .m .
Texas ! Matlack 1.2-12) a t
Oak land (Johnson 10 -ll , 10 : JO
p .m .
Ma ior League Leaders
Saturday ' s Games
ly United Press International
New York at Boston
Batti ng
C1e11e1 and at Detroit
( based on l75 af bats)
M i lwaukee at M inne sota
National
League
Se attl e at Chi cago
.
G . AB H . Pet.
Texas at Oak l and
126 499 158 .317
Ka nsas Ci ty at Ca l i forn ia. 2, Parker , Pitt
Burrghs . At I
133 426 134 .315
rwi ·nigh t
Clar k , SF
136 516 .159 .308
Balfi mor e at Toront o . night
Cruz , Hou
133 496 153 .308
Mad lock. SF
104 3•5 118 .306
Smith, LA
119 422 128 .303
Rose , Cin
137 569 171 .301
Bowa , Phi l
133 559 )68 .301
Whitf ild , SF
128 413 1'14 .300
1)1 527 157 .298
Mark Napier t o a multi -year Puhl , Hou
Ame r ican League
con tra ct .
T . AB H . Pet
Pro Basketball
Carew, M inn
13'1 491 167 .340
Boston Ann ou nced the Rice. Bos
139 575 187 .325
retirement of g uard Dave Oliver , Tex
110 434 136 .313
Yount , Mil
107 417 129 .309
B ing .
108 388 120 .309
Ind ia napol is - Requested P in iella . NY
109 397 119 .300
waivers on guard Mike Ogl i \l ie, Mil
Fisk , 8os
133 484 144 .298
F l y nn .
Rober! s, Sea
112 388 115 .296
lynn , 8os
117 464 137 .295
Ca rt y, Oak
123 459 135 .294
Reynolds . Se
125 459 135 .294
Hom e Runs
National League : Fos ter. Cin
3 1; Luzinski , Phil 29 ; Smi th , LA
28 ; Kingman, Chi 25 ; ·Parker ,
Pitt 24.
American Leagu e: Rice, Bos
38 ; Thomas , M i t 31 ; Baylor , Cal
30 : Th ornton . Cle11 and Hisle.
Mil 29.
Runs Batted In
National Lugue : Foster, Cin
98 ; Gl!r lley, LA 97; Parker , Pitt
94 ; Clark, SF 93 ; Smith . LA
and Winf ield , SO 89.
,American League : Rlce , Bos
121 ; Sta ub, Det 107 ; Hisle, Mil
99 ; Thorn ton , C l ~\1 94 ; Carty,
Oak 99.
·
Stolen Bases
National
League : Moreno,
Pitt 63 ; Lopes, LA 41 ; Taveras,
P ill . 36 ;
Smith,
SO
JS ;
R ichards , so 34.
American League : Le Flore.
Del 63 : Cr uz , Sea -48 ; Wills, Tex
-41 ; Oilone, Oak 44; Wilson , KC
36 .
Pitching

APPEJ.RING THIS WEEKEND
AT THE

We don't wa nt a recall vote
in our city - who'd want ti1e
inewnbent back again '

Redskins open season --; Progressive dinner held by
. • .
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter
agaznst Ball State

,,,, _,,,,,,,'

••

N~tional

By GENE CADDIS
hope lor in an opener," said
UPI Sporls Writer
new BaU state Coach Dwight
It won't take new Miaini Wallace, who took over when
Coach Tom Reed long to find Dave . Mc~la.in .,went , to
out if his Redskins are W1consm . M1am1 s skilled
championship material.
positions are ~.s good as any
Miami, the pre-season pick In tiM; league..
to retain its Mid-American
Wh1le M1am1 and Ball State
Conference title, must start are going at it, two other Midproving it Saturday against Am game§. a~e on tap.
Bail State, picked the team Eastern M1ch1gan Is_ at
most likely to dethrone the Athens to test Ohio UmverRedsk in ~
· sity and Kent State goes to
Then come invasions by Mt. Pleasant •. M~ch., to take
Centra l Michigan and on Central M1cli1gan.
Western Michigan the next
Bowhn~ Green opens on the
two weeks. If the Redskins road agamst VIllanova , while
can survive that rugged start, Tol~o entertains MarsbaUin
it co uld be ali 'downhill · the a mght game.
rest of the way. II they can't,
_Kent State and C~trai ~lso
it could be ali over early, .but w11i be makmg their first
Reed is ready to give it a try. appearances under ·new
"There is always a lot of coaches - Ron Blackledge
excitement about the opening for the Golden Flashes and
game, and maybe even more He_rb Deromedi lor t he
so with this one because of its Chippewas.
impact on the league race,"
Central has only four
said the former Michigan retummg starters on offense
defensive
coach
·who · from last year's team whiCh
replaced Dick Crum.' "!know finished. Ill-!. but eight a~
I'm looking forward to back from the best defense In
starting the season."
the league m 1977.
The game matches two of
Eastern Mkhi ga~ brings
the league's premier quar- an 0-1 rec~rd mto Its game
ters Dave Wilson of Ball State agamst Oh10 U., bavmg lost
and Miami 's Larry Fortner 30-3 to Northern Michigan
and could be a high-scoring last week.
affair.
The Bobcats, under new
Fortner a 6-5 senior from coach Bob Kappas, ·who
Lorain , Ohio, passed for 1,473 1 replaced the lat~ Bill Hess,
yards and 15 touchdowns in , could be tough 1f they can
leading the Redskins to a lll-1 ·~-­
record in 1977. Wilson, a
junior from Findlay, Ohio,
threw for 1,589 yards and 17
touchdowns for . the Cardinals, who were 9-2.
Wide rece ive r is Rick
Morrison , of Lima, Ohio, who
caught 59 last year for 108
yards and eight TDs.
The Redskins may have the
better running aitack , headed
by Mark Hunter, who rushed
for 009 yards in 1977. Hunter, ·
however, missed a couple of
weeks practice with a thigh
bruise.
"Miami has a veteran and
explosive offense pius an
extr emel y active defense,
which will give us the
toughest cbaUenge we could

4-PIECE GROUP

PLUS VOCAL
FROM PORTSMOUTH, 0.

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY

10-2
THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY,O.

992-3629

'

in

-MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main Street992-2164 Pomeroy, o.
The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets - Stables - Large and Small
Animals . Lawns - Gardens.

Pom.., ,
FilMer
&gt;'J'

,.,

.

'

CALL TODAY FOR
FREE INFORMATION .--•••

POMEROY &amp;
MASON, W.VA. AREA

PHONE

992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL

ntr1 cuh
•

111WRN
8 AM •IMI I PM

conunittees for the year were
gi~e n . Debbie Finlaw w••
chosen valentine girl. The
chapter ch•nged its meeting
plac-e lor the year to the Colwnbia Gas Co.
Jennifer Anderson and
Carol Ad•ms gave the
cultural program on " Realizing Heritage.''

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

husb8nd ? As I see it, ~~Jere is
Find personal
just no way.
space
DEAR READER- You •re
right. There is no way to
DEAR DR. BLAKER -My please everyone. So stop tryto
8-year-&lt;Jid daughter and ill- ing.
What is your son's teacher
year-&lt;Jld son share a bedroom
doing
in the middle of this
in our small two-bedroom
very
personal
issue, anyway?
apartment. Both complain
Of
course,
a
smart Ill-yearPomeroy Chapter !86, bitterly about their lack of old could have taken a
OI'der ·of the Eastern SU.r, privacy. It is true that their remark on the subject out of
wUI observe "go to church" interests and friends are very t-ontext to strengthen his
Sqpday Sept. 10. Members different, but we just cannot argument for a bedroom of
will attend the Middleport afford more spac-e.
Last week, my son ·came his own. Whatever happened
First United Presbyterian
at school, forget about pleasCliurch, home' church of the home from school reporting ing the teHcher.
v(Orthy matron, and are to that his teacher said bad
Your children's demands
nl"et at the church at 10 :15 things happen when brothers are somewhat legitimate.
and sisters sleep in the same
aun. to attend in a group.
room. I assume she was U.lk- They need a degree · of
•
ing about sexual play. That privacy, but not ne~-essarily
makes me feel even worse two rooms. Why wouldn't a
about the bedroom situation. sheet hung from the ceiling
SINGERS SET
I think I must do something do the trick ?
:The Rev. and Mrs. Phi! about the problem, but there
After all, a bushman of the
Harris of Craigville, Ind., will does not seem to be any solu- Kalahari Desert bends a sapsfrve as evangelists and. tion. If my husband and I give ling into an arch to make a
s{llgers at the Pomer.oYi up our bedroom and sleep on doorway lor his home, whjcb
Wesleyan Holiness Church at
sofa bed in the living is merely a ho)low plHt-e in
1iao p.m. on Friday, Satur- the
room, the children wiU be the sand: The doorway symdly and Sunday evenings. happy . But my husband will bolizes the fact that the spot
The church is located on State be furious .
is his territory .
lloute 143. The Rev . Dewey
And what about your husHow can I please my
King, pastor, extends an children. the t.eacber and my band? He also needs privacy
uivitation to the public.
. -and so do you. Defend your
territory and help your
children acbeive personal
sp&lt;tt-e in their room .
DEAR DR. BLAKER - My
Mr. and Mrs. Larry L·. office is not my own because
Heines, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, people always come in to sit
announce the birth of a down •nd talk. It Is impossidaughter, Traci Michelle, on ble to work.
Aug. 28 at Holzer Medical
I have J.ried . cl011ing the
Center. The infant weighed door, but it has a small winsix pounds and eight and one- dow at abuut eye level. Peohalf ounces.
pie look in as they walk by. If
Tracie was welcomed home I happen to glance up, they
by her sister, Kristan, age 7. t-ome in. I don't WHDI to hurt
Paternal grandmother Is anyone's feelings, but my
Mrs. Louise Heines, Hemlock work is suffering.
Grove, maternal grandDEAR READER- Without
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ver- realizing it, you may be innard Edwards, Pomeroy, · viting people Into your office
great - grandmother is Mrs. to talk.
. ,
George Heines Hemlock
Turn your desk so 11 IS not
Grove.
'
squarely fa cing the door.
Then your eyes will not
automatically
gr•vitate
Officers installed
toward that lillie window,
The Southern Junior High relaying the message that
Athletic Boosters installed you are not too busy to chat.
new officers when they met
II that doesn't work, you
on Aug. 30. ·
_
may have to make your
Other business officers will desire to be left alone clearer.
be selected at a later dste. How about a small ''Do Not
The meeting date was Disturb" sign?
changed to the second
Your boss will no doubt apMonday of each month ..
preciate your elforls to
The next meeting will be reduc-e your socializing in
held Sept. 11 at 7:30 p.m. in favor of spending more time
the junior high gym .
on your work.
•••
·Write to Dr. Blaker in care
All
seventh
••
a
eighth
•
grade parents ami other of this newspaper, P.O. Box
•
"Mill M,
interested persons arl) ur~ed 47:i, Radio City Station, New
~
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
•
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions of
general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

go to church ' ·

·:::

SHE'S LIBERATED, HE'S LOSER!
DEAR HElEN:1 thought my wife and I had a good sex life. She always seemed ready and willing.
But now she says it lsn 't right fur the woman to have sex
when she Isn't in the mood, so about twit'e a week she turnll me
down. The other five or six times, everything's fine. (She's the
eager type.)
We had five great, unliberated years, before she got into
women's rights . Is it any wonder men don't like "equality?" JAKE

.

DEAR JAKE ;
You're describing honesty, not "equality."
Allli simmer down ! You're still far ahead of the national
average, friend, so m•ke the most of those five eager days. -H.
DEAR HELEN :
Is it true that big breasts are sort of going out of styli!' When
men begin not to ogle big-busted women so much, will naiure
then compensate by making smaller-topped models'
Persooally, I think A- or B-cup is better than bulbous, and so
does my husband. A well-known psychologist says most men
like medium-sized breasts on woinen, and wouldn't pick out a
partner mainly because she was well-endowed.
So what's all the ru!h to plastic surgeons lor breast enlargement?- HAPPY WITH WHAT I'VE GOT
P.S. Are busty females usually not long on brains?
DEARHWWIG.
First question: Yes, big busts aren't the show-stoppers they
were a few years back, though Dolly Parton would stili wow a
male audience even if she didn'tsing.
Will nature imitate style? More likely, if curves go out (as
they did in the 1920s) fashionable women will diet and dress to
minimize their tops. Models are already into this ; haven't you
notked the blousy, slinky, straght-up-and-down look?
Augmentation? Most women who elect fur surgical shapechange want only ordinary-sized breasts, not pneumatic
balloons.
And no, big-busted females aren't universally short on
brains any more than all blondes are dumb. (But an extrat'llrvy blonde must sometimes work twice as hard proving her
intelligence, especially to men.)- H.
P.S. Do I detect a bit of jealousy here' Come on, HWWIG,
live up to your signature !
DEAR HElEN.
So "Ex-Navy Man" likes foreign women better! If be wants
blind obedience ·and respect, why doesn't he buy a dog? If be
can't stand American women who assert themselves, why
doesn't he go back overseas where he says he had better times,
We can surely use one less chauvinistic male in this country!
-DISTURBED
DEAR DIS:
Your letter says it for doo:ens of American women who told
"Ex-Navy Mall" where he could go!- H.

'

'

seniors last spring. gt the
By Arnold Dibble
group, 2,581, or about 39
MINNEAPOLis (UPI)
.Jn an educational role percent, responded.
The TPI, or Teaching
reversal, a cross-section of
Proficiency
Index, was based
recently
graduated
upon
student
ratings of
University of Minnesota
teachers'
skills,
organization,
students. gave out "report
feedba ck, respect, assigncards" to their teachers.
Twenty percent Dunked, 20 ments and atmosphere.
percent were given "D" Nearly 1,400 of the 5,000
grades, 29 percent received faculty members were
"C", and 24 percent got " B". evaluated.
This fall's freshmen will
Only 7 percent were rated
rec~ive
copies. of the sup"A" teachers. Four teachers
were judged perfect by their plement. which the sponsors
caU the "Student Survival
students.
"We1lope there Is a lesson Kit."
The four perfect teachers,
in this for the university and
the
"Mr. Chips" of Minthat students will understand
nesota
; Hamilton McCubbin,
their responsibility to
associate
profe ssor social
themselves ·and their fellow
work
and
sociology;
Robert
citizens, the taxpayers," said
Hardt,
associate
professor
of
Terry Narchlniak, a liberalmathematic
s;
Allan
arts senior, active in student
Peterson, professor oen·
government.
tomology
; and Eugene Ogan,
The undertaking, caUed the
chairman
and professor of
Minnesota Teaching
Evaluation Project , · was anthropology.
developed
by
student
government leaders with
initial funding of $6,000 by the
Twin Cities Campus Student
Assembly.
The Board of Regents ·
opposed publication of the
findings and independent
publication . supported by
advertising was impossible
without the regents ' allproval. The lull survey linaUy
was published today as a
supplement by the Twin
Cities Reader, a free weekly
NEW!! ONE SHOT
newspaper.
They received support
BUG-KILLING METHOD
from Gov. Rudy Perpich and
• number of state legislators
under strong urging by
Not just a spray-but an
Marchiniak.
A questionnaire - using
questions developed in a
automatic logger.
University of Michigan study
was sent to 6,700 graduating

s.

,SALE
CONTINUES
Making room

for winter tires.

Stop in and check
for low prices.
ERAL

TIRE SALES ,
N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0 .

a ratS

The last. easy way to kill crawling Insects. Set
FOGerator In center of area , press locki ng nozzle and

walk away. Creates a penetrating lcig which reaches
into cracks and crevices, ki lling exposed stages of

insects by contact and vapor action. Guaranteed to kill

Politics never a mystery ·
to GOP Senate candidate

ByGwenM.L.-Coue
President
Theodore
TOPEKA, Kan. (UP!)
Roosevelt who visited with
Politica was never really a the pajama-clad children
mystery to Nancy Lmdon through the railing banister.
Kassebaum; the 1978 GOP
Political parties or not, the
candidate for the U. S. Senate Landons still had rules, and
from Kansas used to observe the children were shipped
it at the family dinner table. upstairs to bed after dinner.
The Wichita housewife says But with her ear to the
brainstorming among key ventilation system fn her
·Republican leaders at dinner upstairs bedroom, . Mrs.
parties was a way of life at Kassebaum
said,
she
the home of her father , one- followed the conversations,
time presidential candidate the contents of which now
Alf Landon, whose 9lst blr- escape her.
thday is Sept. 9.
One year, she recalled, she
Mrs. Kssehaum, 45, said was incensed at her parents'
that as a child, she was privy refusal to allow her to attend
to "a lot of political a presidential convention ·
discussions" at the dinner because of low grades. "! was
table and with a little help irate," she says.
from the ventilation system
An avid reader, Mrs.
in her upstairs bedroom.
Kassebaum said she was
"It was always politics" · always interested In politics
recalled her mother, Mrs. but her activities, until now,
Theo Landon, during a recent had been limited to camfamily Interview atthe home. palgns in high school. and at
But Nancy was not awed by the University of Kansas, '
the political ligures who were where she received a degree
guests of her parents - aa the in political science.
daughter of apromlnent
The political road that led
political figure, they were a to her victory over eight
matter of course.
competitors In the Aug. 1
The . famous and not-so- Republican primary was one
famous guests frequently of her own paving, her
joined Landon, the 1936 GOP mo4her said.
presidential candidate, Iils
Her lather supported her
wife, and their two children decision to seek public office,
at the dinner table in the I~ but she said he cautioned her
room plantation· atyle of the rigors of public IHe and
maMion that the family bas the "toll" it can take .
caUed hoiJ)e for more than to
She said she realized that a
years.
bid for the U. S. Senate waa a
In addition to politicians, big jump lor a candidate with
·
,
" ke Robert Taft, senator and no statewide or national
u-ee-tlme candidate lor the ' elperience and the decillion
6 lOP presidential nomlnaUon was a personal one.
In the late 19401 and 1850s, the
"I felt I related better to the
•
Linda Evans was hostesa dinner sueats often included state, better than to a
for the August meeting of the entertainers and newspaper Congreallional diltrlct and
I
Women's Department of the publishers.
•
· from that grew the thought It
Portland-Racine Branch of
••
Landon grins broadly at the was better for a woman to
the Reorganized Church ol recollections of dinners with run," she said.
'
Jesus Chrlat, Latter Day vivacious actress Zuu Pitta
What ~ her lather think
&amp;ints.
and the--North brothers who about a daughter who 1.1
Devotiollll were given by operated the Ringling running lor the U.S. Senat6?
Golda Glllillln, and Lu~-y Brothers Circua in the late
"It doeln't really matter
Taylor taught the lesson. It 111301 and early !MOs. "It wu ., What I think," Landon Ald.
was' noted that the group still always a pretty lively show,"
"There's going to be more
has cookbooks for sale at f4 be said.
women In politics bec:aUJe
each. These can be obtained
Surrounded by adultl, the there's more women In the
from Anna McHaffle,ll43-2413 )'011111 Nancy wu a ''good work force."
or by mall from the church.
liltener," her puenta said,
Refrealunentl were served lal'llely bec:auae then '!I'U not
by the II08Ieu to thote named
much chance to get In to the
and EW. Proffitt, Pearl Prof. conversation.
SAVE YOUR RC. NEHI, liPPER 10,
fltt, Dab RoiiSb, and Beulah
"You can leam an awful lot
Rouah•
by
· listenlna,"
Mra.
.DIET Rllf ' DAD'S kUUJ Itt"
Kulebaum said.
•
lklliLt CAPS FOR atARITY
And the children oc·
callionaDy did their llbare of
COOKOUT SAnJRDAY
enterta._,
'"'"• ._.._,
• """- sald.
Modem Woodmen ol
He recalled that at the ... Amll'ica., Camp 7230, will
SALE TODAY
ole or 7 Nancy would lilt and bold a cooko11t Saturday
The Willing Worllen Clua
bowlce on U!e " - of liD- bttlnnlnl at 8 : ~ p.m. at the
will bold • flllllllllll •le
MILL STREEl
portanliJUIIII.
• .,••• pull 011 Rolli II, 011
Frtdey from lun. to a p.m.
Mldcl..port. Ohio
Oil
another
occaalon,
the lift traftllllc nafth. '1111
In tile balllllllllt of the EnNancy
and
her
older
brutber,
IVIIII Ia for llltllllfln IIJid
ltrprlae United Methodilt
........__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.anarch.
Jadl, beml181Cl · a son of their familiae .

HOMECOMING SUNDAY
There
will
be
a
homecoming Sunday, Sept. 10
at the Big Four Church of
God, Hannan Trace Road,
beginning at 10 a.m.
Dan Hayman and the
Hymn Timers will be
featured. Guest speakers will ·
be the Rev. Jessie Jeffers and
the Rev . Norman Carrico.
Basket dinner will be served
at noon .

roaches . waterbugs, spiders, silverfish. adult fleas and
ticks or your money back . No obi ectionable odors or

staining.

405 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0Phone 992-3748 or 992-5020
Convenient Free Parking

FALL KICKOFF
SALE!

BOOK

'

•
'

..
•

•

brin&amp; YDII

'report
cards
'
.
US • • •By Helen Bo~tell\.

E.
0.

MIDDLEPORT

..________..._.

&lt;,

from Veterans Memori•l
Hospital for toys donated to
tile pediatric ward, from Mr.
and Mrs . Abe Grueser for
assistance in sending their
child to a camp for the blind,
and from tile Southern ()hio
Conunission on Alcoholism
for sponsoring Jolm Jacobs.
Reports from the social service and ways and meHns

Announce birth

ST. NO. 75.02.04728

NEWSPAPER.
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

Fall Qctivities of the Xi
Gamma .Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority began
Tuesday night with a progressive dinner beginning
with ~be appetizer at the Middleport home of Mrs. Marilyn
An4erson:
From there the group went
to Mrs. Carol McCullough's
for salad, Mrs. Charlotte
Hanning's for 1nain course,
and Mrs. Debbie Finlaw's for
desse rt and • business
meeting.
Mrs. Donna Byer presided
at the meeting during which
time it was reported that the
c-hapter ret-eived a three star
roting form InternatiUIIlll.
Jane Bourne was welcomed
back into the chapter by
tr,nsler.
Thank you notes were read

'

4SECRETARIAL

446-4367

of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority

.
f, &amp;stem
Smt

Design and
Qualily l:,

•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
jjJR. ACCOUNTING
4EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
4GENERAL OFFICE

Classified Ads

shopp'lna sprus

fxceJJem~e

New Quarter Be~ns
Sept. 18, 1978
Choose a Career in. . .

Victories

for

develop a productive offense.
OU suffered through a 1-10 '
season last year after being ,
decimated by injuries in the
opener.
Bowlil)g Green's trip to
Philadelphia to take on
Villanova will mark the first
tim e in lour Years the "
Falcons have been without ''
Mark MiUer at quarterback-' ·
Mike Wright , a junior from
Wellsville, has taken over for '
Miller, but must direct an "
offensive unit which bas oniy ··
four returning regulars . :
Flanker Jeff Groth, however,
was one cif the most exciting
players in the MAC a year:'"
ago.
Toledo, 2-9 last year and a ·..
24-0 loser to Marshall, could "
have its hands full again with "''
the veteran Thundering .. •
_ Herd.
';
•

REGISTER NOW

League : Hooton , LA
17.8;
Gr i msley ,
Mtl
1 7 -~ ;
N i ~kro . All 17-lS .· Perry , SO 166 : Blue, SF lid ; John, LA 1610.
American League : Gui dr y,
NY 20-2; Palmer , Ba!f 18· 12 ;
Ta nana. Cal and Caldwell , Mil
17 -9; Flanagan , Ball 17-12.
Earned Run A\le rage
( bnecl on llS innings pitched)
National League : Vuck.ovich ,
St .L 2.35 : Rogers , Mil 2.47 ;
Swan. N Y 2.49 ; Blu e, SF 2.59 :
Knepper_, SF 2.62.
Amtrican League : Guldry,
N Y 1.84; Matlack. Tex 2.36;
Caldwell , Mll 2.40 ; Palmer ,
Bait 2.A8 i Goltz , Minn 2.58.
Strikeouts
Nltionll Luoue : Richard,
Hou 256 ; Niekro, Atl 216 ;
Sea ver , Cin 183; Blue end
Montefusco , SF '5-4 .
Amerinn Lttgue : Guidry,
NY
215;
Ryan ,
Ca l
21.4;
Leon~rd. KC 158; Flanagan,
Bali 144 ; Kravec. Ch i IJB.

iF""'"ii;};;;,ii;ip=" I Students give

'

INN PLACE
'\1Jlll it,

~FLYING~
-;MACHINE~

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 8, 1978

STORE

here.

Linda Evans
hosts meetznu

'

On special
Nehi®cans.
• 12 oz.

RC BOmiNG CO.
m-ua ar m-1144

..

.

• WILSOI AUTOGRAPHED
WALTER PAYTON
FOOTBALL
• lm-79 PRO FOOTBALL
SCHEDULE
With purchase of selected

�6-The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday , Sept. 8, 1978

Chester~ Council

323
POLLY·s POINTERS.
holds Tuesday meeting

Mrs. Dessie Lorenz speaks
to Pomeroy Eastern Star
Mrs. Desiiie Lorenz, past
l!l"and matron of the swte of
Arizona and genera l grand
chapter committee memhe1·
was a guest at the Tuesilily
night meeting of Pomeroy
/Chapter , Order of the
Eastern Star, held at the
Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Lorenz is the aunt of
Mrs. JoaM Kautz. She was

preS.nted at the altar, given
grand honors, and seated i.n
Ow east. ·Ric hard and Ruby
Vaughan, worthy patron and
worthy matron, presided at
U1e meeting, hack in their
posts after two months
absence due to the illnesS of
their son , BiU. The Vaughans
reported that their sun is
greatly improved and expressed his appreciation fur
tl1e nwnerous cards.
Two candidates were
elected to rec't!ive the degrees
of the order. Initiation was
sd for Nov·. 7. Communica·
lions relative to Grand

Chapter session to he held in
Dayton , Oct. 24, 25, and 26,
were read . Also r·ead was an
invitaliun from the Harr isonville Chapter reminding
members of fri ends ' night to
he held Oct. 6.
An invitation was also read

r egarding t11 e reception
lmnuring Nancy Riley, deputy g1·and matron, at Marietta ,
lHI St!ut. 30. Also mmuunced
was a reception honoring
S..1tha Huffman , retiring
gr•nd secretary, on Sept. 23
at New Lexingt on.
It was noted that U1e
budget, trustees, and aud1t
reports a re to be submitted at
01e next meeting . Members
were reminded of the birlhilily of Mrs. Nellie Tra•y. Gelwell cards have been sent to
Mrs. Marie Custer , Mrs. An"" Vaugh•n . Mrs. Gayann
Clay , •nd Mrs. Lucille
sw.ckhanuner' and sympathy cards to Bill Watson,
Jofmi Waller Frank, •nd

Birth of ~on announced
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
Willimns , Dexter Road, •re
announcing the birth of a

seven puund, two ounce son,
El.hert Lee, Jr. bum on Aug.
14 •I the Holzer Medical
Center .
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . Harry Watson , and Mr .
and Mrs. Floyd Willilllns,
Pomeroy , and the greatgrandparelns are Mr. and

Mrs. E. M. Harrah, Long Bottom, Mrs. P . E. Stanley,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Lily
Dyke, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams
have a six year old daughter ,
Annie. E lbert Lee , Jr. was
returned home Friday from
Da.ytun where he was t.CJke11
for tre•lment at Children 's
Husp1tal.

new
• henAid

P-Ortable
(lishwasher
~:@

with cigarette smoke. f sug.
gesl that she tuck those
sponge-type fabric softener
sheets under the cushions and
anywhere
else she can put
DEAR POJJ .Y - Can you
them.
I
was
onc't! given an old
or one of the readers tell me
~1 ·o'up fur serv in~ her wedwhat to do when beating egg bookcase that had been
ding r td u:arsal diu ncr.
wltiles and they do not always •1ored in a bllsement with old
papers. It had a strong musty
Refresluncnt.s wen.• served beat up stiff ' - MRS. R.C.R.
by Mrs . Ell• Smith a nd Mrs.
DEAR MRS. R.C. R. - Do smell that vinegar, v• nilla
Marie Curd .
you always have the eggs at and crumpled newspapers
.
room temperature before . would not remove. But such
starting to heat them ' Also a sheets worked perfectly, even
TINY pinch of s•lt added to after they had been used in
Ure wltites before healing wiU the dryer. -MRS. E .G.
DEAR POLLY - To hold
help.-POLLY
I
tile
slipcovers in place on my
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
sofa
bed I put a length of old
Peeve is with the children's
vitamins U)at are made to broom handle bllck of the
resembl e c•ndy. Small cushions. Dowel slicks could
FRIDAY
chi lcren might think such also he used if you do not hllve
JONATHAN vit.amins are treats and eould a broom slick. We did nutlike
RETURN
Meigs Chapter, paughters of easily cons wne excessive the soft cushions so we put a
piece of thin plywood under
the Ameri can Revolution , amounts.- MABLE
1:30 p.m. Friday at home of
DEAR POLLY- After con- the cushions and on top of the
Mrs. Grace Eich with At- tinued us~ diaper pin~ tend lu spring part of the sofa that
torn ey Pa tri ck O'Brien slick. Must of us know that one pulls out to make the bed.
It is surprising how many
speaking on " Freedom 's .dipping them in a bllr of soap
Great est D oc um e nt ~~ in . will do the Irick . But I have "new to me" ideas I lind in
observance of Constitution found that dipping the tips of the colwnn and I am ·not so
Week , Sept. 17-23. Hostesses such pins into my always youngeither.-MRS . W.K.
DEAR POLLY - Are you
will be Mrs. E ich, Mrs. Ar- . open jar of petroleum jelly
lhur Sk'inn er , Mrs. Ge ne makes the pins slide just as till'owing good plant food in
Yost, Mrs. J . Edward Foster, well and can be done faster the garbllge ? Every tune you
use eggs save the shells and
when only une hand is free. Mrs. John Rose.
soak
them in water lor h•lf an
JEANETTE
HAPPY HARV ESTE RS
hour
.
Then remove the shells
DEAR
POLLY
When
wkClass, T1·inity Church, Fri- ·
and
use
thlll water on your
in
g
our
four
-ye
ar
-old
day, 1:30 p.m. in the social
house
P.
l
a
nts or young seedililughler
to
arena
or
theater
room of the ehurl:h.
lings.
It
is
best to use it imevents
we
bring
along
our
TOPS I Take Off Pounds
mediately.
Cold
diluted tea is
own
bllby
booster
seal.
It
is
Sensibly) will form a new
-MRS.
H.P .
also
good
.
chapter ~' riday at 9: 30 a.m. similar to those used in somt!
Polly
will
send
you one of
at the Mental Health Center. reswurants. This puts her at
her
signed
thank-you
For additional information U1e same height as ·adults in
newspaper cuupcn clippers if
call Ellen Rought at 992-5937 U1e audience who might
she
uses your favorite
otherwise obstruct her view.
or Debbie Hill at 949-2016.
Pointer
, Peeve or Problem in
. MARY SHRINE No. . 37, A more enjoyable time IS had .
her
column.
Write POLLY 'S
Order · of White Shrine of by all. - MRS . A.J .M.
POINTERS
in
care of this
DEAR POLLY - I am
Jerusalem , Friday 8 p.m. at
newspaper.
ans
wering
Ruth
who
ha
s
a
Pomeroy Masoni c Temple.
sofC:~ and love seat satu rat ed
Potluck refreshments.
SATURDAY
HYMN SING Saturday 7:30
p.m. at North Bethel United
Methodist Church featuring
the Gospel Tones Public
invited.

Eggs takt•
a !waling

---·
- ---,·-· .-I.
I
SoCI."al

I

I

1 Calendar

l

BETHEL 62. lntern• lwna l
01·dcr of Job's Da ughters, 7
p.m. Sa tunl ay at t he
Pomeroy MHsonit' Templ e.
Dinner ~ t 5; 45 p.m. J ennifer
Wise, hunurcd queen.

SUNDAY
JAMES
C.
AND
ETHALINDA
MOOR E
reunion Sunday , at Sutton

Church. Basket dinner at
12 :30 p.m . Friends and
relatives invited. Games and
contests lor ·all. Baking
contest, pies and cakes, for
women.

BIRDIE WARNER reunion
Sunday at Ft. Meigs on New
Lima Road at pavilion
number two on left. Basket
dinner at noon. Family and
friends invited.

Dried phnt arranging
subject of workshop
Mr~.

Jetmes Carpentel', an

H&lt;'l'redited judge of the Ohio
Aos oe~aliun of Garden Clubs
ami a member of the Rutland
Friendly G•rdeners, will conduct a workshop on milki ng
C:HTan gt;!ment.s with dr ied
plant llllllerials at the Tuesilily night meeting of the Middleport Garden Club.
The meeting will be held at
Ole Middleport firehouse with
a potluck dinner at 6: 30p.m.
'

Band Boosters

to

~eet ~uesdaJV

r---R:-vv~lXfMPTlfN;o:o~--1

I

______________ _:

No muss - no fuss - no
need to tear off your
roof to renew &amp; insulate
slate, metal, shingle or
built -up roofs. M'a ke it
Leak-Proof.

.'

'

•OOMMERCIAL
•INDUSTRIAL
•RESIDENTIAL

ATHENS - The Bureau of
Real Estate of the state
Division of Public Works is
preparing to issue legal
notices soliciting proposals
for the development of 42
acres of surplus Obi~
University land at the site of
ihe old OU Airport on East
State Street in Athens.
The university official said
OU 's Board of Trustees hopes
to consider proposals for
developing the property at its
winter or spring board

PRODUCT:

Slllad or dessert.

'

r----'Foi";O"R'E~,;(i;,AAjl();:-..tAii.-titiS.oouPoN"

I .U ROOF U SIDEWALL
II U SIDEWALKS

U PATIO U DRIVEWAY

I1 ADDRESS
.

I

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

ftt

HACKETT GRANULATED ROOFING

Ex1rasharp,alr , Real nice.

Only

PHONE 992·2444

'4495
1975 CHEV.
IMP.

'

·..t···· ~

Where spa ce is a problem . ..
Pi ck out t he conven ie nt , space-sav in g KitchenAid
top-loading portab le . Opens up, not o ut. Idea l
for narrow kitc hens. On ly 22 y, inc hes w ide .
Top-loading portable kDW-7.

-

See. all the KitchenAid Portables at ...

INGELS
FURNITURE

N 2ND AVE.

.... ·· '],:,,:;·'·- BeHer
:)r;_t1~· . Pork, Thanks
,.,'" .•...To Pork Producers
W e · a pplaud the pnrk producer s for bringin g fin e r quality
pork to our mark e ts. Th e ir advancements have b e n e fited u s all,

\

- OR a Carel.

Phone the Boa~:d of Elections -OR- Mall the Board

1975 BUICK
LESABRE

1975 DODGE
MONACO

Cust. 2 dr ., local one owner ,
Last of the BJg Ones.

4dr. Sed ., Real nice Dodge.
Air. Local car.

'2695

1975 CHEV.
.' C10

1974 FORD
T-BIRD

1974 FORD
MAVERICK

Red and while vinyl tap .
Real nice.

2 dr. While with Beige vinyl

Ton Pickup. 6 cyl., std.

top.

'3195

•3695

'2395

1974 AMC
MATADOR

1973 FORD
GAL 500

1973 BUICK
CENTURY ,

• dr. s8d. ReaT Nice.. Air ,
row mileage .

2dr. Green Vinyl top. Local
car.

Cust. 2 dr -HT .. Green and
white . Air.

'1895

'1695

'2395

1973 CHEV.
_ IMP• .

1973 FORD
CUST. 500

1973 PLYMOUTH
GRAN FURY

.

you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered,

I

I

Phone the Board.

OF ELECTIONS

l

PHONE 992·2697
HOURS 9:004:00 - SATURDAYS 9:00-12:00

1972 FORD
GAL 500

nice

1

'

2 dr HT, Air cond.', vlnyt

top .
, ...

1972 FORD

4dr HT Runreol_good. Nice
car.

'995

4 dr HT, Makes
family car. Air.

'179

'2195

ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county oHice, Or If

.P. 0. BOX 488, POMEROY, OHIO 45769

1.

'4695

'3895

Nice and cleon.

M~VERICK
2 dr Local car . One owner .

. '1495

'1995
1970 BUICK
LESABRE

Cust. • ilr HT, VInyl top ,
Air .

'995

We Are Tlte Friendly Deafersltlp

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING

It~ WOI dl

'5995

'2995

• dr ~ .• air, vinyl top.'

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Vinyl top , Low mil •• ~.

Red with While lop. local
one owner. EKtra clean .

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VIsit the Board's OHice In Penon

'

Kitchen
Aid
Because
ft.
\

dr ., Sed. Red and while,
Clean !nslde and out.

4

·~

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED
BY OCTOBER 7TH
.-~

Sun . Roof., alr, P.W .. P.R.,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

93 7TH AVE.

November 7th General Election

f .

1976 BUICK
REGAL

1977 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO

FORD
USTANG II

Irons., Nice .

Pick yours today,
use it tonight.

bounded by East State Street
and the a·&amp; 0 Railroad Co.·
tracks and includes approximately 3,605 ·feet on
frontage on the street.
Proposals for developing
either all or part of the site
will he considered, Harper
said.
University officials .
requested the state office to
solicit
proposals
lor
developing the land in May
alter OU's Board of Trustees
last spring reaffinned its

I

~

In Order to Vote in .the

Save on
installation.

meeting.
The land is located east of
the Athens MaU , which was
earlier devel oped on old
airport property leased from
the university aljer the au
facility was moved to Albany.
The 42 acres includes )2 acres
immediately contiguous to
the maU that is subject to
lease restrictions which will
not permit development of a
grocery or discount drug or
department store on the site.
The prop erty is also

1I

1cm

be

required

for

educational purposes . The

I

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS,

dirmer.

position that the site would
not

um DECK

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

Convertibleportable&lt;
KDS-58Al and
k01-58AL.

.4.

l

I NAME

I PHONE

Before Tomorrow"

3:1G--ABC News 13; 4;00-Movle "The Sunshine
Patrlol" 3.
6:~Bewltched 3

trustees also approved a

PROniiCT DATA
Pioneer I 1008 is a monoli thic coating that protec ts roots ag ain st industrial
atmospheric corrosion . sun ligh t aJd extreme weather variances. Th is speclal
cold process system can be used w11h or without the various colored cercwn lc
gran ul es wh1ch are Spray applied to the mast1c prior to dry1 ng.1
.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER f. 1971
6:00-Summer Semester·8,10; 6:3~TV Classroom 8;
U.S. Farm Report 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
7:00-Marlo &amp; the Magic Movie Machine 4; Fun for
Everyont! 6; Ghost Busters 8; Public Polley
Forums 10; Jlibberlaw 13.
7:30-Saturday Report J ; World of Survival •• Dusty's
Troehouse 6; Wacko 8; Grape Ape 13; Villletable

Trustees seeking proposals

PIONEER ,1008

lake any meat, veget.able , .

TUESDAY
EASTERN-First meeting
WINDI NG TRAI I. Garden
of
the school yea r of the
Club , 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Eastern
Local S.nd Boosters
home of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
be
held Tuesday, 7: 30
HAVE GUESTS
will
Kelton. Program on corn
p.m.
in
the
bll
nd
room.
husk flower s by Dolli e
All parents of st udents parMr. •nd Mrs. Leu King of
Hllyes; roll call r·esponse to ti clpating in the Eastern Wmtersv1lle were the guest of
be a bulb, and the arrange- Local Band program arc ask- . Anna Cornell recently. They
m e nt t hem e will be c'll to attend th e meeting. The were enroute home •Iter tak;, Memories" , la st of s wnmer
directur wi ll he seeking ideas mg lhelf daughter, Cmdy , trl
flowers. Mrs.
Mari lyn on the band uniform silua- Ule Kentucky CIU'Is!lan ColWi secup wiU he the judge .
. lion . Also to he di scussed will lege.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN be the needs of the bllnd !or
Club, 6:30 Tuesday at the s ueh iterru; as ins trwnenls
Mi dd le port
fir eho use, and supplies along with upeovered dish dinner with eumin ~:: event~.
IJevera ge ,ami table service
The meeting will also inprovided . Members are to d ude a discuss ion· on fw1d
take meal, vegewbl e, sa lad rais ing projects . New officers
or dessert. Suzy Carpenter to will be elected. t\ ttendance is
conduct workshop foll owing urgetl.

Run Away from It " 3; 4:30--Movle " Pushover" J;
6:00-Big Valley 3; 7:0D-Bewltched 3.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 1 P.M. - Late Show lPG)
9 &amp; 11 P.M.- Confessions of a Pop Performer t R)

FIX THAT ROOF

and the workshop to follow .
At the dhmer the beverage
aild table service will be provided . Members are to take
01e dish they had pl•nned to
wke to the August pienie
which was cancelled or to

REVIVAL SET
Revi v•l servi c'es will be
lwld at the Morse Chapel
Church on the RacinePortland Road from Sept. ll
th1·uugh Sept. 17, 7: 30 p.m.
each evening. The Rev.
Robe rt S•lser from Glasgow ,
W.-.Va . will be the speaker.
TI1cre will he specia l music
each evening . The public is
invited to attend.

4.

9'00-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3,4, IS; Roots 6,13; Movie
"SOmething for Joey " 8, 10; Great Performances
20; 1978 Drum Corps International Championsh ip
33.
.
10:00-News 20; 10 : 3~Monty Python' s Flying Circus
20.
tl :00-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15 ; Dick Cavell 20.
tl :3~Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Barella 13; Movie
"Arruza" 6; U.S. Open Tennis a; · Movie "The
Sorcerers" 10.
·; ·
ll :•s-Movle " Hells Angels on Wheels" 8; 12 : 4~
Ironside 131· I :00-Midnlghf Special 3,4, IS; ·Movie
"War of the Satellite•" 10; Janakl 33 .
I :-News 13; 2 : 3~New• 3; 3;00-Movle " You Can 't

be

mas11 C

Rascals • ; Bewitched 6; Action News for Kids 13.
· 12:00-Fabulous Funnies 3; Weekend Special 6,13;
Movie "River of No Return" • : U.S.. Open Tennis
8,10; PTL Club 15.
12 :3G--Baggy Pants 3; American Bandstand 13; Point
of View 6.
I :00-Big Blue Marble3; SOul Train 6; Montage 33.
I :Jo--Thls Is The Nfl3; Adam ·l213; French Chef 33.
2:00-Baseball Warm ·Up 3,,,1S; Greatest Sports
Legends6; Movie "Cat Ballou" 13; In Performance
AI Wolf Trap 33 ..
2: I~Boseball3,4, IS; 2:Jo--NFL Game of The Week 6.
3:00-1977 SEC Highlights 6; U.S. Open Tennis 8,10;
Book Beat 33.
3:1~Movle " The Eyes of Charles Sand" 13; 3:Jo-1977 PAC -8 Hlghllqhts 6; Way It Was 33.
• :00-An.dy Griffith 6; Phot"liraphy 33 . .
4 :30-Wide World of Sports 6·,13; Catch 33.
S : ~Star Trek 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Wre5lllng
IS; Zoom 33; S:JO-Once Upon A Classic 33.
6:00-News 3,4; College Football 6,13; God Has The
Answer IS; Zoom 20; Over Easy 33 .
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; You Bet Your Life 20;
Economically Speaking 33.
7:00-Little Rascals 3; Lawrence Welk •· IS; Hee Haw
8; Black Perspective On The News 33; New• 10;
Elec . Co. 20.
7 : 3~We Think You Should Know 3; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33; Woody Hayes : Football 10; Once
Upon A Classic 20.
8:00-Us Against The World, II 3,4, IS; Paper Chase
8, 10; Onedln Line 20; Great Performances 33.
9:00-Love Boat 6,13; Movie 'Magnum Force" 8,10; A
Good Dissonance LIke A Man 33.
. 10:00-Miss America Pageant 3,4,15; Hee Haw 6;
Newlywed Game 13; Movie " Riders of the Purple
Sage" 33.
t0 : 3~Mary Tyler Moore 13.
II : ~News 6, 13 ; Great Performances 20; II :25News 8.10.
11 :3G--Movle "Suddenly Single" 6; Movie "Dr. Jekyll
&amp; Sisler Hyde" 13; Janakl 33.
11:55-Second City T.V. 8; Movie " Where The Spies
· Are" 10; t2 : ~News 3.•. 1S.
12:25-Don Kirshner' s Rock Concert 8; 12 : 3~
Saturday Night Live 3,• •15.
t:2G--Movle "Chambers of Horrors" 13; 2 : ~Movle
" The Mad Room" 3; Movie "Only One Day Left

S:OO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister .R~rs' Nleghborhood 20.33; Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One! 13; Pet.
tli:oal Junction 15
5:»--dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogan ' s
Heroes IS .
6:00-News 3,4.8,10, 13, IS ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;.
6:Jo--NBC News3,., IS; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
·7:oo--&lt;:ross.Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13; Muppel
Show 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Is. IS; Lock , Sock &amp;
Barrel 20; Insight 33.
7:30-Porter.Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; $100,000 Name
That Tune 6, 13 ; Price IS Right 8; Political Talk 10;
Pop Goes The Country 15; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
20,33.
.
'
1:00-Bay City Rollers Meet Sturday Superstars 3,1S;
Happy Days 6, 13; Undersea Adventures of Pickle
and Bill 4; Wonder Woman 8,10; Washington Week
In Review 20,33.
I :Jo--Happy Days 6,13 ; Coconuts, Coconuts, Coconuts

CHESTE R- A report on the c'Omf01t er will he awarded by
b'latt! cunvt!ntiun held in the ways and means epmmil·
Dayton recently was give n by tee and those with tickets are
Enna Cleland at the Tuesday to tum them in at that time.
rti ghl · ml&gt;cting of Cl1ester Practice will also be held for
Council 323, D•ughlers of inspection.
.
America .
Foll owing the meetmg a
Eileen Martin, councilor, surprise birthd•y party was and ice cream and cake were
presided at the meeting at· held for Elizabeth Hayes, served by Mrs. Ridenour,
tended by . 26 members. -· deputy state. cuunc,llur. She Mrs. Ritchie, and Marcia'
Others (rum the Chesler wa s sealed 111 the center o! Keller .
Others attending were S..tCouncil attending the slate Ule hall where she was joined
ty
Roush, Jean Frederick,
meeting were Dorothy Rit- by her husband , John and
·
Ada
NeuWing , Mae McPeek,
chie, Doris Grueser, MiliTia ili! ughte1·, Esther Ridenour,
!,elm
Wood , Mary K. HOlter,
.Keller,andMa ry K.Hulter. , a nd g ran ds on ,. John
Goldie
Frederick, Mary
It was noted that Inzy Ridenour . Mrs. Ridenour
Hayes,
Charlotte
Grant , EmNewell has a new grand- pr ese nte d her w1lh a
daughtel' . A thank you note decorated cake Wllh three ma Ashley, Zelda Weber , Ailil
was read by Ma1·garet Tuttle, American fl• gs and ·:Happy Van Meter, Ethel Orr, Ada
l'ecording sec1·etary, fr01h Birthday, Mom " mscnbed on Bissell, . Dorothy Lawson ,
Jean Frederi ck regarding the top. Members sang "Happy TI1elma White, Julie Rose ,
death of her mother N'ura Birthday" and presented Leona Hensley, and lnzy
Brown . A reception to held · ca rds to her . Mrs. Ada Morris Newell.
Sept. 10 for the Ohio Stale
Councilor, M•ry Stipp, at
Mount Or•b was announced .
AI the Sept. 19 . meeting,
qumtc1·1y l&gt;irthdays will be
observed . There wiU be I
OPTOMURIST
1
potluck refrcsluncnts but
OFFICE
HOURS
:
9:30
to
12,2
to
5
(CLOSE
1
010se ha ving birthdays in Ju·
ly, August , or September, are I AT NOON ON THURS.&gt; - EAST COURT I'
not to lake a covered dish. A. .1-!1:1'.2~!~2,!;

Scholl repairs instruments

3,15; Movie "Angel's Alley" • : Tarzan 8, 10.
11 : Oo--Kroflt Superstar Hour 3, 15; .II : 30~ LIIIIe

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1'71

1ecited a poem and Mrs. Ritchie, chll innan of the good of
the order committee,
presented her with a gift on
behalf of the council. There
was a reliJI9nse from Mrs.
Hayes, pidures were lllken,

"App hca hon ot Pionee r ;; 1008

soup 15 .
8:00-Yogl's Space Race 3.• . 15; Scooby.Doo 6,13;
Popeye 8, 10.
. 8:30-Fangface' 6,13; 9:00-Chollenge of the Super·
friends 6, 13; Bugs Bunny-Road Runner 8,10.
9:30-God,zllla Power Hour 3,•, IS.
.10:00-Scooby' s AII ·Stars 6,1 3; 10:30--Fantasttc Four

TELEVISION
.
.
VIEWING

Polly Cramer ·

Cl• rencc Struble Il l the deatl1
of fa mily membe1·s.
It Wa:S CU lllOW\l'Cd that ill spt!cl iun of Job's Daughters
will be held Sa turday night.
Ann Massie thanke-d the

I

.7- The Dally Sentinel, Mi~~leJ!ort:P~roy, 0 ., F f!.'!aY· Sep!. 8: 1978

'

(

Don't Forget you owe It to yourself to check with us
bef,.-e you buy eny cer, new or used. We cen sne you
money. See or cell one of these Friendly Selesmen. J. D.
Story, Rey Dougles or Bill Nelson.

500 L MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

992·2174
'

Konra d Sc holl , former
instrumenta l teacher. having
taught in Meigs County is now
busy repairing stringed in·
struments.
The following is an article

that appeared in a r ecent
editiOn of the Boone News
Republican , Boone, Iowa.
"When l retired, I needed
'something to do. I couldn't
just. sit around," said Konrad
Scholl. Until his retirement in
1973, ·Scholl was director of
the Boone High School Orchestra for over 30 years, and
lor 25 of those years he was
head of the B.oone Hi gh Music
Department.

nylon Is good tor students,
and it is not affected by the
weather , as horseha ir is, " he
added. When using ha ir lor a
bow, it has to be wet and
combed out straight. The
ends are then dipped in hot
resin , a nd if one ha ir is not
st ra ight , the process has to be
repeated .

being a great factor .
Scholl would like to pass his
skills on to someone else, as
there is such a shortage of
repairm·en. But as he said,
"there is one drawback, a
repairman has to be able to
play the inst ruments, to see if
the proper repa irs have been

After the interna l r epairs
have been made on a n in-

pro blem lor him , as he plays
his violin every day for his

Prior to moving to Boolle,
Scholl taught for seven years
in Cas per, Wy o. Besid es
teaching, he is also an accomplished violinist.
-· It was while .he was
leaching in Kasper, t hat
Scholl lea rned to r epair
stringed instruments· from a
man living in Denv er . Li!Ue
did he know that this skili
would later lead to a busy,
aft er-retirement job . .
Player s of strin'ged in-

m ade." This of course is no

strwnent, the outside pieces own enjoyment , and also
are t hen glued together wi!h a m a kes many publi c a pspecia l glue that has tO' be pearances.
hea t e d . Clamps are then
attached , and the glue that
oozes out has to be removed
with hot water and a brush.
After the drying process has
been completed, it is ready to
be ·varni shed.
Befor e an instrument is
varnished, Scholl washes it
with water and then uses a
special cleanse r to take off all
of the old encrusted resin. II
is then aga in washed and
dried . He then uses ·the

fLiNiA-;swvFAIR
I

I BEAUTY SALON .
i Now

I
~

Open Under Ne w
Managemen t.
Connie Aldri dga, Owner

I
I

Cathy Wood s. Operator

Starting Sept. 12th

Call For Appointment

L

PERM SPECIAL

__

y Perm -Sl.OOOF F

9&lt;9·2838
_.._.._.._..

va cuum cleaner to remove

even the smallest particles,
as they would show up in the

varriish as imperfection s:
struments are on the in· . The instrument is .now r eady
crease, and repa irm en for the
ins trument s are on the

decrease. In fact , Scholl is
one of only two in the stale.
He repairs and refinishes
violins, violas, basses, cellos
and also repairs bows.
Scholl repairs instruments
lor schools in Des· Moines , ·
Marshalltown, Ames, Fort
Dodge, Boone and ISU and

lor the actual application of
va rnish . Scholl uses an oil
varnish which differs from
regular varnish, as it stays

perpetually soft underneath,
t o the wood, so it
vibrates with the wood of the
n e~t

ins trument.

Scholl applies the varnish
with sable brushes. The
number of coats of varnish
also for several mu sic are det ermined by the concompanies. He also does · dition of the instrument. If it
repair work lor individuals. is down to the bare wood, six
"Right now is a very busy coats are needed , wit h each
time for me with school about coat being rubbed down
to start," said Scholl. Tllis before the next one is applied.
was very apparent, a s one The drying time is from days
room in the basement had to weeks, with the weather ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . - - - - - - '
several large basses and
cellos waiting to be repaired
in hi s small, but wellequipped workshop .
"It is tedious and lime

resolution authorizing OU
President Charles J . Ping to
work with state officials on con ~ uming work, " said
the development in ac- . Scholl. " Depending on the
amount of work I have to do, I
cordance with state law.
work from a few hours to all
day," he said. Scholl used to
enjoy making candles but has
had to give that hobby up. " I
just don 't have the time, " he
said.
·
Scholl says , "the quality of
violins has gone down, but the
price has gone up, so ·many
parents are finding that it is
JAKARTA, Indonesia cheaper to have an old violin
(UPI) - Angry farmers in
repaired than it is to buy a
Lampung, South Sumatra, new one for beginning
have killed more than 70,000 students ."
rodents by pumping sulfur
Many tools are needed, and
i!'!S into rat holes with simple some are quite expensive , so
hand-made blowers.
Scholl ·has lea rned to make
The daily Indonesian some of his own at a much
paper, Pelita , reported lower cost. He has made aU
Thw-sday the · raids saved kinds of repairs from a crack
about 135 Ions of rice from to a violin brought to him in
hungry rats, according to
pieces in a paper sack.
head of the Lampung
Scholl said, "I think
agricultural department.
r ehairing a bow is the most
AI the height ollhe lo-day tedious job I do." Horsehair
rat patrol, 1,500 people armed or nylon can be used lor the
with shovels and hammers bows; horsehair being the
dug out the holes to retrieve most expensive. " I think the
the dead or dying animals.

•••

Rodents .

killed

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Col. &amp; Southern Ohio Elec.
Co. to State of Ohio, Temporary R-W Agree., Lebanon.
Col. &amp; Southern Ohio Elec.
Co. to State of Ohio, Temporary R-W Agree., Lebanon.
Loretta Stansbury to Jack
T. Gilkey, Donna J . Gilkey, I
acre, Columbia.
Gemma M. Casci, Paul L.
Casci , Guido J . · Girolami,
Vidia Girolami to George
Pierce, Sally Pierce, Pt. Lot
~17 , Pomeroy.
·
Velva Keys to Anne L.
Davis, Charles C. Wright,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Larry G. Johnson, Gloria J .
Johnson to Thomas Amott,
Gail Arnott, 1.003 acres,
Rutland.
Carlos E. Snowden, Pauline
M. Snowden to Gary Eugene
Grueser, Lots 12 and 13,
Hartinger Sub., Chester.
Terry Lee McGuire, Debra
Lynn · McGuire to Erika
Games, Delton L. Games, ~
acres, Salem.
Ruda Durst, FBMie Durst
to Timothy Wilkinson ,
Margaret WUkinsou, Parcels,
Lebaoon.
Ruda A. Durst. FaMie
Durst to Rucia A. Durst,
Fannie Durst, 10 acres,
Lebaoon.
James Casey, Connie
Caaey to Willlllm I. Blount,
Jr., Rolemary Blount, Lots,
Middleport.
Ancll H. Burbridge, Loulae ·
E. Burbridge • to Phillip
Burbridge, Loraine Burbridge, 8.082 acres, 23.729
acres, sppio.
Donald C. Shiffer, Reate
A. Shaller to Roger E. HiU,
J - Ann Hill, .0433· acre,
Sutton.

_...

OUR

FRESH
DELICIOUS
PEACH
SUNDAES
&amp;
MILK SHAKES

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

.. _..,,

..

.,.

9\lUL~··

DEDICATION &amp; OPEN HOUSE
2:00PM Sunday, September 10

Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Unit
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550 .

SAND HILL ROAD

NOW ACCEPTING
RESIDENT RESERVATIONS

PHONE:
304/675·5236

A
Skilled
Nursing
Facility

-.., . .

-

'

.I

"OwafUy Calle 9&amp; O~~~t H~"
I

-~

�.

9-The Dally SenUn~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 8,1978

+

-v

DICK TRACY

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.
John F. fulll, Mgr.
.
Ph. "2·210T
Pomeroy

MIDOLEPORT BOOK STORE

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

NEW YORK

Church &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS

Complete
Au'-otlve
S.nlce

ClOTHING HOUSE
KERMIT' S KORNER

Pomeroy, Ohio
sh ip . 11 O.!'fl , Sunday evemng
Middleport
serv
1
ce
.
7
p.m
.:
Wedne
sdo
y
Foml
Per rin . pastor , 8ob Buck , Sunday
1~ Troiing Hou r , 7 p m Wednesday
ach ()()l sup! Church School. 9 . 15
wo r sh ip senttce. 7 30 p m
a.m .. wo r ship se rvtc e, 10 .30 a .m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Choir rehear sal. Tuesday, 7·30
p.m under dire&lt;: lion of A ltce · Near Long Botto m , t:dse l Har t ,
poslor . Sunday schoo l . 10 o m .
We Fill Doctors'
Nease .
Chur ch
7·30 p .m ..
pray e r
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
PrescrlpHons
Pomeroy, Ohio
meet tng , 7:30p.m . Thursday
NAZARENE : Corner Un ton ond
"2· 29SS
MIDDLEPORT PENTECO STAL ,
M ulber r y, Rev . Clyde V. HenderPomeroy
Th ird A ve .. the Rev . W ill 1o m Kn 11
son. pas to r. Sunda y school, 'i1 30
tel
,
P9Sfor.
Ro
nald
Dugan
,
Sun·
o.m , Glen M cClun g. sup! .. morn da y Sc hoo l Supt Cla ss es for all
in g wors hip . 10:30 a .m ttYen ing
ogi!s . e ven ing service , 7:30: B ible
se t vtce , 7.30. mi d -w eek 1i e r111Ce .
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
study , Wedne sday. 7 30 p m
Wednesday . 7·30 p m.
Homelite Saws
youth servic es . Fndo y . 7 30 p .m .
C RA CE EPISCOPS L CHURCH
MIDDl EPORT FREEWil l BAP32b E. Mot n St . Pom eroy. The
Ph. 915. 3301
Chester
Ray Riggs
TIST , Corner Ash and Plum: No el
Re 11 Robe n 8 , G ra ve s, rector HoChest...
St. Rt. 7
Herrma n pas tor Saturday e ven
ly commum o n an d ser mon l l
mg ser v1ce . 7 30 p m .: Sunday
a .m . Junt o r chotr and nurs ery se r ·
School , 10:30 a .m .
vitlif . Ro m e Wil ltom so n a nd Dal e
MEIG S
Dutton la y reader s o ssisling the
COOPERATIVE PARI SH.
pas tor
M ETHODIST CHURCH
POMER O Y CHURCH OF CHR IST.
Robert T. Bumgarne r .
211 ·w . Ma in St John McAIIh ur ,
Directo r
pa stor. Bible sc hool. 9 30 a .m .:
220 E. Main 5!.
POMEROY CLUSHR
mor nin g wors htp . 10.30 a .m ..
Rev . James Corb itt
You th m eehngs , 6 30 p m even
Ph. 9&lt;9-9130
POM EROY . worship ser v ice,
tng worsh ip . 1 .30. Wedne sday
9 15 a .m .. Sunday s.c hoo l 10;30
night praye r mee t1ng and Bible
o m ,
Re v
Robe r t
M cG ee ,
st udy, 7 30 p m
mtniS ter
THE SAl VATI ON ARMY . 11 5
EN TERPRISE , Worshi p 9 o .m
But te rn ut A ve . Pomeroy . Envoy
Church Schooll O om
and Mrs. Roy Wimng, ol hcers in
The Store
ROCK SPRINGS , W or sh ip 10
c h ar ge
Su n d o y · h ol tne ss
With
A Heort
om
Chu rch School 9 I So m
meeting 10 a .m , Sunday Schoo l,
Racine
UMVF 0 .30 p m
10 .30 a m Sun day schoo l leade r
Ph. 949·2626
FLA TWOOOS. Worship , 11 o m
YPSM , fl o tse Adam s. 7 30 p m ,
Ch urch SchoollOa .m .
so lv ati o n
me e tmg . ... ariou s
M IDDLEPORT ctUSTER
speakers and mu sic spe&lt; 1als
2 Convenient
. Rev Rober1 Bumgarner
Th ur sda y ~ 10 om
lo 2 p .m .
Markets
HEATH , Rober t Bumgarner ,
l adies Ho me Leagu e . a ll women
Nationwide Ins. Co.
Midway
Pastor
Worst-1 1p
10 30
om
tn v1ted . 7 .30 p .m prayer meeting
of Columbus, 0.
Chu rch School 9·30 a .m . UMYF 0
and Bible study , Bob Estep
104W.Maln
pm
leader .
Rev . Noel
Hermon .
'
P
omeroy
ff2·2512
992-2311 Pomeroy
Rutland
So
lem
Center
Charge
teacher
M"'on 773·S72T
RUTlAND . Wi lbur H1lt , Pastor.
BURLIN G TO N SOU THERN BAP Worshtp 10.30o .m . Chur ch School
TIST CHAPEl , Route I , Shade9·30a .m .
Pa stor Bobby Elk ms
Sunday
It looks like something Don
SALEM CENTER Chur ch Sc hool
schoo l 5 p m .. Sunday wor shtp,
Quixote might have tilted at.
ISavi~tgs
5.45 p .m .. Wedn es da y pr ay er ser - 9:45am . worship 9 a .m .
Fragile, teetering, like • ludi·
SYRACUSE ClUSTER
VICe 7 30 p .m
crouo, oversized toy. Yet thla
Re v . Har vey Koch . Jr
POMERO Y WEST SIDE CHUR CH
216 E. Main
A SSURV. Wo rship 11 o .m .
scarecrowl1h windmill can
OF CHRIST , 200 W Mom St . Jerry
Church School 9 50 om . UMW
Pau l m1n ister , pho ne 992 -7660 .
harness energy. Among other
ftrst Tuesday Bib l e Study Thurs.
Con serval •v e . non 1n5 trumentol .
thlng1, It can cauM water to
7 30p m
Su nday w or sh1p. 10 a .m .. Bible
11J&gt;IIIInlo your kitchen oink.
FOREST
RUN
.
Worsh
ip
9
o
.m
study . 11 a .m , w or ship 6 p m
Chu rc h School 10 a .m .
Wednesday Bible study 7 p .m .
Things are not alwallt what
MINERSVILLE Worsh1p 10 a .m .
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
New Holland
they
seem. The outer package
Church
School9
o
m
CHUR CH ,
Re11 Rolrh
Smith ,
Farm
SYRACUSE Church School 9 00
can be a deceiver with people,
pastor . Sunday schoo , 9 30 a .m .
9f25T01
om . Worsh ip serv ice 1.30 p m ,
Mrs Wo r ley Frono s supe r.nten·
as well ao with objecto. Fumy,
SOUTHERN ClU STER
dent Preoch1ng sendces first &amp;
lan'tlt. that although we kn010
Rev . Da vi d Harr is
th ird Sunday s foll ow ing Su nday
better we reopond 10 readily to
Cluster
leader
School.
the
things, the people that look
Rev. Ste ven W il son
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
Florance Smith
Preochtng 9·30 a m first end se best-the sparkling diamond
Hilton Wolfe
cond Sundays of each month :
that · turn• out to be a rhine·
216 Second
Associates
third and f ou r th Su nda ys each
stone,
the
phony
with
the
won•
Pomeroy
BETHANY . (Dorcas !, Wo r shtp
month w o rshtp serv1 ce 01 7.30
992-3!25
derful,
flaohlng
omlle?
9
00
o
m
Church
Schoo
l
10.00
p.m . Wed nesday e v ~n 1 ngs of
214 E. Main
a.m .
7·30 Prayer and Btble Study
992·S130 Pomeroy
No one ever makeollthrough
CARMEL Chr uch School 9 ·30
SE VENTH -DAY
A·DVENTIST ,
life
without stumbling occa·
a.m
Worship
10:30
a
.m
.
2nd
and
Mulber ry Heights Rood . Pomeroy
4th Sunday s
.
slonally, So be n91 aohamed.
Pa stor . Alb'ert DiHes: Sabbath
APPLE GROVE. Sunday School
Schoo l
Superintvndenl , Rilo
The thing Is to learn by ouch
9 30 o . m Worsh ip 7 30 p m I s!
White Sabbath School. Satu rday
experlencea,
to progreN and
and 3rd Sundays: Prayer meeting
afternoon at 2:00 , wtth Worsh1p
461 S. Third, Middleport
not
retreat.
In
caH you've for~
GroceriesWednesday
7
30
p
m
Fello
wship
Se rv 1ce foll o w1ng ot 3 15
supper l~rst Saturday 6 p m UMW
General Merchandise
gotten, the Church Is a woniler·
RUTLAND FIRST
BAPT IST
m -21"
2nd Tuesday 1 30 p .m .
Racine 949-2550
CHUR CH St s ter
Harrtett
lui t,eacher.
EAST LETART Chruch Sch oo l q
Warner . Su p! Sunday School.
9·30 a .m .. morn ing worship , om . Worship ser vice 10 o m .,
Praye r
meet ing 7 30
p m
10 ·45 om
Wed nesday UMW h rst Tue sday
Saturday
Fndey
THE HILAND CHAPEL . Georg&amp;
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thurs day
7 30 p .m .
(oslo , poster Sunday Sc ho ol ,
Deuteronomy
Deuteronomy
Psalms
Revelation
lsata h
Isaiah
Luke
RACINE Wl: SlEVAN - Sunday
9:30 o m e vening worship. 7 &lt;}0
Sales &amp; Service
6·1·9
5. 1·2 1
5:6· 14 • 150. 1-6
1:46· 55
26 ' 1· 12 38:9-20
For The Best In TV Viewing
school
10
a
.m
..
wo
rsh
1p
11
o
.m
Thursday e vening pr ayer ser v•ce
68
79
.
441
Locust
Choir pract ice , Thu rsday , 8 p m
7:30p.m .
Ca
2 29 ·32
992·3093
LETART FAllS - Ch urch School
POMEROY
FIRS T BAPT IS T.
10
am
.
Warship
ser
vic
e
,
9
o
m
..
Dovtd Mann , mtn tster Wtlliam
MORNING STAR . Worsh1p 9.30
Watson , Su nday Hhoo l supf . Sun ·
a.m .: Church Schoo l 10 .30 a .m .:
day s.c hoo l 9 30 o m . mor ning
Mtd -Week Se r111ce Wed ne s. day 8
worsh1p 10 :30o .m .
Equipment
p .m
f iRST SOU THERN BAPTIST. 2B2
Sales-S.nlce
MORSE CHAPEL Wo r shp II
Mulberry A ve . Pomeroy . Pout J
Fire Ex"ngulsllera
om .. Church School9 :30 o .m
Wh ite , Pastor Gory Ba sham , Sun Fire Dtpt. Equip.
H3 S. Third
PORTLAND , Worsh •p 7 .30 p m .
day school sup! Sunday school
Rutland 742-2717
Church
Schoo19
·30
a
m
mormng worsh1p
9·30 o .m
SUTTON Chur ch Schoo l q 30
10.30, evening worsh1p 6 30 p m
o m Worsh•p I sf and 3rd Sunday s
Mtdweek pr ayer servi ce 7 .JO
10:30a .m .
p m.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
MIDWAV COMMUNITY CENTER
Eat Inor
Rev Rtchord Thomes
let us capture the story
De • ter Rd .. Langsvi lle . Oh io . Rev
Carry
Out
Pastor
FHturlnt DHp StHm
Cl yde Ferrel l Pasto r
Sunday
of your Wedding.
Bakers of
Duane Sydenstock er
126 E. Main
Scho o l
11
o. m
Saturda y
Extr1ctlon
Good Broad
John Dougla s
pt eoc h ing ser vices 7 30 p m
98S -4155
m-2206 or m-7630
992-6304
A ssociates
Wednesday evenm'g B1b le study
Chester, Ohio 4S720
Rt. 3, Pomeroy
JOPPA , Wo rship
10
o .m .
at 7.30 p .m .
Chur ch Schoo l q o .m . Pr eye r
FAI TH TABERNAClE CHURCH
Meeting Wed nesday 8 p m
Bo dey Run Rood , Re v . Emmett
CHESTER . Wor shtp q om .,
7:30 p .m ,S1bl e St udy Wedn es
Rowso n pastor l;l andley Dunn ,
CARL ETO N CHURCH Kingsbury Church 0 45 p .m . Vou ng People 's v1ce . 7.30 p .m . thursday prayer 992 2825. SaturdaY' even ing Mou,
RA CIN E CHUR CH OF 'THE
Church School 10 o m
sup! Su nda y school 10 a m Sun·
7 30. Sun day M oss , 8 and lO o .m ..
NAZAREN E, Re v . Joh n A . Co il · dey , 7 30 p.m .. Satur day mghl Rood Cor y Kmg pqs tor Sunday Service 0.45 p .m . Evongeli5tic muell ng 7 .30 p .m .
LONG BOTTOM Wo rsh ip 7 30 man pa sto r Frankl tn Imboden
pray er ser vtc e 7 30 p m
M T. HERMON Umted Brethren Confe ss 1on Saturday . 7 7:30p.m .
doy e vemn g ser vtc e 7.30, Btble
:.choo l 'il 30 a m . Ro lph Carl, Ser v 1ce 7 ·30 p m Women·s Mis ·
p m Chur ch Schoo 19.30 a ..
HtMLOCt&lt; GR OVE CHIH STI AN , su permt endent e11e mng v.~ or shrp
sionory Council 10 a .m . f ir st and Church Sunday School q:30 a .m .
teaching . 7 30 p m Thu rsday
VICTORY BAPTIST On the
cho 1rmon o f the Boord of Ch ris
ALFRED Worshtp 7 30 p .m
servr ce
10 AS
o .m
OYESV I LL E
COMMUNIT Y
meering . !h ird Tuesdays Prayer and Bible ' Worsh•p
Route 7 b~po s s James E. Keesee ,
110n L•l e Sund oy Sch ool 9·30 Roger Wol 5on po stor Kenn e th 7 30 p . m . Pra yer
Church School 9·30 o m
Byer Sunday sc hool supt M o rn - Wedn e s. da y• 7 30 p m
Study , Wednesday . 7 30 p .m .
Preaching services ev ery Sunday poslor Sunday school. 10 o .m .:
CHURCH . Roger C Tur ner. pa stor
o m
mor ntn g wor sh ip 10 JO
mg worshrp , 9 30 a .m . Sun ST PAUL Worsh •p 11 om . S unde~ e ven •ng w o r sho p , 7 30
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST olterna1ing with C. E. Wednesday morn1ng worsh•p . II a .rn : even Sunday sg;~ ool 9 30 o m . Sunday
LO NG
BO TT OM CHRISTIAN
Chur chSchoot9 ·30o m .
do~ sc hool. 10 30 0 m
evening !liuce Smti h
prayer mee1lng 7 :30 p.m Rev
morn in g wo 1 ~ h 1p 10 30. Su nday
pO !&gt;for
Wallace IN CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev
ing serv 1ce . 7.
p m Praye r mee ting Wed nes
REEDSVIllE , Sunday Sch oo l 9 J O doy , 7 30p m
ser vice 7.30 W edne~doy Btble Dame woo d ~ up! B1b le School, Wil ltom Campbell , pastor. Sunday James Leach, paslor . Oo~o~id
even tn g se rv1 ce . 7 30
TRINITY Chr~stion Auembly ,
o m Worshtp ] 30 p .m .; Proyer
Stud y. 7 30 p m
MIDDl EPORT
9·30 o .rn
Pr ea&lt;hm g se r vice . Sc ho ol. 9 ·30 om .; James Hughes, Holter loy leader
RACINI: FIR ST BAPTIST Oon l
Coolv tlle Gtlbert Spen cer ,
Meeting 7 30 p .m . Tuesday . Wel k er Pos!o r , Ran me Sa lse r ,
MT
UNION BAPTI ST, Oo n 10 45 o m N o cv enmg se rv1ce
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES. 1 mile pastor Sunday schoo l, 9 .30 a .m ..
supt . e vening serYice 7 :30pm.
M ID OLEPO Rl
CHUR CH O f
Vl si tot •on7 J0 p m 1st 1hursday
Wil s on .
Sunday
sch o o l
CHR IST IN CHR ISTIA N UN ION .
HYSEL L HUN FHH M ETHODIST We:dnes.day• eveni n g prayer eost of Rullond , junc1 ion ol Route mornmg wor sh•p. 11 a .m . Sunday
Sunda y sc hool sup!
Sund ay
SILVER RIDGE Wo rshi p 10 o m
superintendent. Sunday ~ c hool. CHURCH , R ~:!v Her be• t A ili ng, mee tmg 7·30 p m . Voulh praye r 124 and Noble Summit Rood (T- evening
Law ren ce Manley , pas tor. Mr s
serv ice . 7:30 p .m .:
schoo l. 9 30 a .m mor nin g w ar
Ch urch Sc hool 9 o m
174 ), Sunday Bible lec:ture , 9 ·30 m idweek prayer servt ce Wednes ·
Russ e ll Youn g Su nd ay School
sh•p . 10 40 o .m ,, Sun day even mg 9 45 a .m .. ev ening wo r :.h ip , 7 30 po ~lor . Su nday Sc hoo l 9 30 am , ser vice ea ch Tuesday
1UPPERS PLAIN S. Wors hip q worsh1 p 7 30 Wednesd ay even - p.m Pray e r meetmg . 7 30 p m
Watchtower study . 10 ·30 doy . 7:30pm .
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH , a
Mormng ser vte e , 10 30 o .m .,
Supr. Su n de~ School 9 30 o .m
Wedne:.do~
honge l• sll( se rv•ce I 30 p m . Letart , W . Va ., Rt . 1, Re v . Charles o .m .; Tuesday , Bible study . 7 and
Even•ng w or~ h • p . 7 30 . Wednes- om Chu r ch SchooiiOo.m .
mg S1b le s t ud ~ 7.30
MOUNT Olive Commun ttv
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST ser
TUPPER S PlAIN S CHRISTIAN Prayer mee tmg l hu r s.d ay . 7·30 Hargraves, pastor . Wo rship ser· 8. 15 p m .. Thundoy , theocrat ic Church . Lang Bottom . Russell
day praye r meeting . 1 30 p .m
DAN VILL I: Wf: SlE YAN . Rev H
CHURCH
Eugene Underwood . p m
7 :30
p .m .: s'er vtCe Cline
vice s . 9:.,30 a . m .. Sunday school. sch oo l .
MT M O RIAH CHURCH OF GOD , vtces each Su nday 9 30 o m
0 Br ow n pas to r . Sund ay Schoo l
superinlende-nl. Sunday
pasto r w 1th 9 30 o .m , morning
11 o .m , eyening worshtp, 7 30 meeting. 8 30 p .m .
Roc1ne Rou te 2, the Rev Ja mes George Pickens
F REl:DO ~ ~ G O S f'~ l MI SSION ot
wor sh•p pastor . Howm d Coldwe ll, Jr ,
School 10 am . Youth gr oup Of!d
preach in g on f1r st and thtrd Sun - 10:45 yo uth s.er 11tce b 45 p.m
Sunday Schoo l Sup !
Sundo y Bald
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St . prayer meetings Wednesday 7 :30
M. M uncy pa~tor . Sun da y sc hool.
Kn ob . Rev
lawrence p m . Tuesday collage prayer
da y o f m on th O liver Swain , Sup!
9 .fr ~ o m mormng wors htp I I
eve nmg wo rship
7 30 p m . School . 9 :30 o m M or n ~ng Se r- Glu es. en co mp Sr pasto r ; Roger meeting and Bible 5tudy , 9 :30 Middleport . Bobby Elkms. pastor. p.m . Church 5ervices Sunday 7.30
HOBSO N CHRI STIAN UNION
mon. I 0 30 a m ~ un doy eve ni ng W1 Ui o rd Sr Sund ay sc hool su p! . a .m . Wo rship se rvi ce . WedA-es· Sunday School, 10 o m . worship p m lawrence Bush . postor
a .m .
ev e nm g worsh1 p
7 30 .
p ray er and p tO •S. e , Wed ne sday
Hnvke , 7 p .m
day . 7:30p.m .
ser...tee . 11 a m .: even ing serviCe.
Pre yer mee t•ng I ues doy , 7 JO Rev Ke i th Ebl in , pas to r Sunday 7:30 p m
S und e ~ ~choo l 1:1 30 o , evening
FAITH BAPTIST Chur ch , Moson ,
Leonerd
FA LL S
UNITED wo r shtp
LET ART
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now 7.30 p .m . Thursday pray e r meet ot United Steel Worken
p m Yo ung peop le 's mee t ing Sch oo l . 9 JO om .
7 30 p m
Prayer
Sll VER RUN FR EE BAPTI ST Rev
G1 lm o r e fir st e ld er. e ven1n g ser
7 30 p m Thur sday
Mor,.in Mork 1n . pastor . Steve li t - BRETHREN Rev Free la nd Norm . meet ing , Wednes day 1:30 p.m . located an Pomeroy Pike , County meeting and 81ble study, 7 30 Umon Hell , Railroad Slreet .
v•ce , 7 .30p .m . Wedn esday pro~er tle Sunday schoo l supt Sunday pa slor , Floyd Norr i:. supt Sund a y Youth m ee t mg Sundoy 5,30 p m
Road 25, near Flatwood s. Rev . p.m .
MIDD LEP ORT FIRST BAPTIST
Moson Poster , Rev . Joy Mitchell.
mee t •n g , 7 30 p .m
mornmg se r- with Oo n ond Mart ha M eadows m 81o ckwood , pastor Services on
RUTLAND FREEWILl BAPTIST Morning worsh•p 9 45 om , Sun ·
Corner S1wlh end Palmer the Re ~o~
sc hoo l 10 a m
m o rn ing wo r - school . 9 30 a m
MT
.
M
O
RIAH
CHURCH
O
F
COD
Sunday ot lO:Xl o .m and 7 30 Church - Leland Hale~ pastor. do~ School 10·30 a .m . Prayer
Kt rby
Ode r.
po ~ t or
Ro be rt
sh ip . 11 a m Sunday ev enmg mon 10:30 o .m , Pr ayer s e r ~o~1c e . charge
Ractne Ro ute 2. Th e Re v Charl es v.~ o r s h•p 7·30 Pr ayer meet 1ng Wedne sdov' 7.30 p m
p m . with Sunday schoo l , 9 30 Sunday school, 10 o m , evening meeting Wednesda~ , 7.30 p .m
Por"er , s u p e rin te n d~nt S un de~
WHI TE S CHAPH Coo!vd le RD
Hand , pastor Sunday sch ool , 9 45 a nd Bibl e stud y . Th ursda y, 7.30
CHE STER CHUR CH Of
THE Rev ~ o y Deeter pastor . Sunday am Btble 51udy . Wednesday , ser¥ice . 7 :30 p .m . Preyer
WM PO Ro d •o pr ogram 7 45 o m
om . m o rn1 ng w or ship 11 o m
meeting, Wedne5doy , 7 30 p . m
Sun da y S&lt;.hoo l. 9 15 o ,m .. M o rn
p m .. you th ser vic e , b p m Sun · NAZARENE . Re v Herbert Gr ote , sc hoa 19 :30 a .m wor s. htp se rvtee 7 30 p .m .
po ster . Warsh 1p se r 'o' ICe , 11 a m
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH OF GOO of P'rophecy .
ing Wo rsh tp 10 IS am Youth ac - Even mg se r vic e~ Tu esd ay and day
10 30 o m . B•ble §tu dy a nd prayer
CHURCH , INC . - Pearl St ., Mid- located on the 0 . J. White Rood
In 1974, President Gerald
ttlol ll te s an d fe ll o w ~h 1p for 1un1o r Fn d ay , 7 30 p.m
CHESTER CfiURCH OF GOD , ond 1 JO p m Sunda y . Sunda y ser 11ice Wednesday 7 30 p .m
BEARWAUO W fUDGE CHUR CH Hev Donny R Coo k . pa stor Sun · Schoo l 9 30 om R• chord Borto n .
dle port
Rev . O 'Dell Manley. off highwo~ 160 Sunday School Ford
and sen to r ht gh studen ts , 6 p m .
RUTL AN D
granted · former
Sunda y e venmg wo r ~h o p 7 30 OF CHRIST. Duane Worden
RU tlAN D CHURCH O F CHRIS1 , pastor: Sonny Hudson . Su ndoy 10 o .m . Superintendent John President IUchard Nlmn full
da y school . 9:30 o m ; w or sh ip su p!. Pray er m ee t in g Wedn e s·
st hool supt. Sundoy school. 9 JO lovedoy . First W.-dnesdoy night
p .m . M id week praye r services. mlO ISfer B:bl e c! OSS, 9 30 0 m
l o rr ~ Cotem on . pa sto r Co · Sun
se r vi t e , 11 a .m .. e11enm g se r vic e . do~ . 7 30 p m
morn ing w or ship . 10 30 o ":I
BR A OFONO
CHUR CH
O F day :.ch ool wp ls., Sa m McK inn!:ly a .m . : evening wor5hip . 7 .30 p .m . of month CPMA 5erYices, second pardon f&lt;r all offenses he
Wednesday 7 JO p m.
7 00 ~ outh se rv iCe W edne sday .
even in g wor ship
b 30
p m
CHRIST, G abr iel Mn l&gt; , pastor , 8i - and He r b Ellt tt Sunday school end Prayer and pra i se
5&amp;r vice , Wednesday WMB meeting, third may have coounitted during
CHURCH OF CHRIST. M 1d
7 00 p m
through
fifth
youth se·rv lce . hia years In office.
dlepo d , Sth ond Mo m, George Wed ne sday Btbl e stud y , 6 30 p m
lAN GSV ILL E
CHRI STI AN ble Sunday School9 JO am . mor- commun• on 'il 30 a .m . Wor ship W ednesdoy, 7 ·30 p .m .
NEW STIVER SVILLE CO MMUNI - CHURCH Robe rt M usser . pasto r . ning chu rch 10 :JO a .m .. Sun da y and co m un 1on . 10 30 o m
THE PEOPLE 'S CHURCH OF George Croyle. pastor.
G lote , mtnt st@r M i ~e Ger lach ,
TY Church Su nday Schoo l 5e r
ser v•ce
7 00 p m
Cor ner Mo•n and , HOPE BAPTIST CH"PEl - 570
superin tendent
rerr~ Yan key ,
RUTlAND
C O MMUNIT'f' POMEROY Sunda y ~c hoo l , 9 30 a .m . Ro y eveni ng
A thought f&lt;r the day:
Sts., third , floor over Grant St .. Middleport : Rev . Bobby
youth m m•s ter Btb le schoo l 9 30 v1ce . 9 45 a .m .: Worsh ip se r viCe, S•gman supt .. mor n ing w ors h ip , Wednesday serv •c e . 7:30 p .m .
C HU~ C H . Su nday Sc h ool , 9 30 Court
10 JO Evangeli stic Service , 7 30 10 30, Sunday evening ser vice ,
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHO DIST a.m w ors htp !&gt;er v.c.e II am : Ltghlhouse Restau rant. Henry Elkins Sunday school , 10 a .m .; German phlloaopher Al1hur
a.m .. morn1ng worshtp
10 30
p.m
Wed n e sday .
Pray er 7 30 mtd w ee k se rv 1ce . W ednes - CHURCH Re 11 Flo yd F Shook . Wednesday p ro~er meet ing 7 30 Cook . pastor. Sunday school . 10 mornmg worship , 11 : evening Schopenhauer said, "Hatred
a .m .,
~~' "'eni n g wor sh ip , 7 30,
pastor , llo yd Wr igh t , Su nday p m you th ser viCe s Sunday , 1 o .m , morning wor5hip . 11 a .m .. worship , 7:30 p .m .: Thursdo~
prayer se r v1ce 7 p m Wed nes - meel ing , 7 30.
do~ 7 p m
l iON CHURCH O F CHR IST.
M ornmg Wor ship p.m , Su11 do y ni ght wors hip , ?:30 . evening ser'llice, 7:30 Wednes - evening Btble study and prayer oomes fnm the helfl, condoy .
SYRACU SE CHURCH Of TH E School Sup!
9
30
a
m
.
Sunda
y School 10 ·20
MIDDLEPOR T CHURCH OF THE Pomer o y-Harrisonvil le Rd ., Don NAZARENE , Re11
RUTLAND CHURCH OF . THE day evening serYice 7:30 In - meeting , 7 :30p .m . Affiliated with tempt from the helld, and
Dal e 8o ss
S.B C.
neither Is quite within our
NAZARENE , Rev . Jim Br oo me. Kennedy pa 51ar . Blll M cElroy . pastor , Bo b Moore ,
NA ZARENE . Rev . lloyd 0 Grtmm, terdenominational, full gospel
S unde~ a m Wednesday Pra yer end Bi Sunday Sc hool supt : Sunday sc hool 9:30 bl e Study 7 :30 p m . Sunday even - Jr ., pa!&gt; tOr. Sun day H hool , q,JO
HUTLANU lHURCH OF COO BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF pontrul,''
pas tor , Mrs Mar y Lalhe y, Su nday Sun do~ ' school su pt
sc hoo l supJ . S u n do~ school. 9:30 schoo l, 9 30 a .m mo r nm g wo r- a .m .: m o rning w o rs h ip , 10 45 ing worsh1p 7.30 p m ., Cho ir Pra c- o m . w or.sh ip 5er ... ice , 10.30 a .m . 1-'.,stor Dennis Bqles . Sunday CHRIST- Gabriel Mraz , pastor .
tic e Thursday ] p m .
a .m ., morn ing wor sh ip , 10 :30 shtp a nd comm un1on . 10:30 am .. om : &amp;Y angelist •c ser,..1ce . 7 p m
Br oadca st live o ~o~e r WMPO : yo ung School. 10 a .m . worship service , Sunday tt:hool . 9•30 om .: morn·
I 1.30 a .m. and 7 30 p .m . Prayer ing church , 10:30 a .m . Junior
DEXTER CHUR CH O F ( HHI ST. peopl e s
a.m .
Sun day
e vongel 1st i c Sunday e ven in g youth Chn stian Wednesday ser111tes
~e r v i ce ,
7
p .m
pr ayer
church program under directionm,et mg
7: 00 p .m
Prayer Endeavor . 6 p .m , w o rsh ip ser - ond pro• se. 7 p m . No1 arene Charles Russ.ell , Sr , mini stef , E11 ange list lc ser vice . 7:30 p .m . meet ing , W.dnesday , 7.30p.m .
vice , 7 p .m . Wed nesday eve ni ng youth 7 p .m . Do ll y proye r Rick Macomber , sup !. !:tu ndoy Wednesday \ erv1c.e , 7 .30 p m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH of Koren Mroz for children . 2-lO .
meet in g , Wed nesday 7 JO p m
OF JESUS Ct;IRIST , Elder James dJring regulor church hour In
UNITED
P RESB YTE RI AN prayer meeting and Bible stud~ 7 meetmg , 8.30 a .m . Men s prayer sc hool, 9.30 o m , w or i hip se r ·
MASON COUNTY
VIce , 10.30 om Bible Study , lue s·
MINISTRY OF M EIG S COU NTY . p m.
FIR ST SOU THERN BAPTIST, Cor· Mtller. Bible study , W.dnesday , church basement. Sundov even ·
meetmg Saturday. 7 p .m .
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Dwight l , ZoYi fl , direc tor .
ner o f Second a nd Anderson . 7·30 p .m .; Sunday School , 10 a .m . ing servi ce , 7 p .m .; Wedneadoy
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN day , 7.30 p .m .
servke , 7 :30p.m .
REORGANI ZI:D CHUHCH O F Meson . Pastor Fronk Lowther. Sunday night servtce, 7 ~ 30 p .m .
HARR I SO N VIL LE Pine G ro11e . lhe Re v . W 1ll1om CHRIST Elden R Bl o ke , pa stor
Chu rch Sunda y School 10 o .m .. Howard JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY
POMEROY
WESlEYAN
JU81lEE CHRISTI"N CENTER PRESBYTER IAN , Re v
Ern B st M iddlesworth , Pastor
Su nday school, 9 45 o . m : wor ·
SAINT S, Port land Re ci ne Rood. ship ser yic e . 11 a .m . and 7:30 HOLINESS - Harrisonville Rood ; Gear~ ·· CrHk Rood . Church
Stricklin , pastor . Sunday chur ch service• 9 ·30 o m Sunday School M cCoy. su pt. . Morning serm on
sc hool , 9 30 a.m , Mrs Homer 10:30a.m
p m.
We ekly
Bible
Study , Dewe~ King , poster : Edlton school , 9"30 a .m .; morning wor 11 a m .. Sunday night service s Willi am Rouih . po sl or • Ru ssell
BRADBURY
CHUR CH
Of Chr · ~ tio n Endeavor , 7 30 p m
Weaver . onlstont , Henry Eblin , ship , 10:30: evening ••rvice, 7.30.
Rotclilt , church school 0 1recto r . Wed nesday. 7:30p m
Lee . supt.: morn ing worsh ip ,
CHRISt . Mr Donald Roley , pastor , So ng service , B p .m ., Preachi ng Sunde~ School, 9·30 o .m , Mo rn ·
10·30 .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P. Jr . ~undoy school supt . Sundav Prayer mttllng WtdneuJay , 7:30
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school, Sunday schoo l, 9 ·30 o m , wor - 8 30 p .m . M idweek
'
Prayer ing worship , 10:30 a .m ., Su nday 0 Box 487 , M ill er Sf , Mason . W. Khool 9:30 a .m., morning wor · pen .
ST. PAUl LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
9 30 a .m ., Richard Vaug han , sup!. ship service 10.30 a .m .. Sundov meeHr.g Wed nesday . 7 p .m ; Ray evemng serv1 ce 1 p m . Wednoes - y o , Sundoy Bible Study 10 am .. llhip , 11 a .m . Sundoy evening ••r·
l ervices , 1 p .m . youth gr ou p
day evening prayer serv1ces 7 :Jt) Wor\ hlp II om , and 7 p m . Bible o,~ice , 7·30 . prayer m"ting, Thura - Carner of Sycamore and Second
Mornmg worsh ip 10 30.
Ada ms, lo y leader .
Sts ., Pomeroy. The Rev. William
SYRACUSE , Morning worsh ip , 9 Wednesdav . 7 p .m
Stud~ Wednesday 7 p .m ., Vocal d&lt;&gt;y , 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF JESU S CHNIST, p.m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev . ~or! l ocated at Rutla nd on New Limo
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF Middlesworth. Pouor. Sundoy
BETHlEHt:M BAPTIST , Re11 Earl
om : Sunday school , l Oam , Mrs .
music
. ..
lilt ......
Shuler , paator Sunday school Rnod ne x t to Forest Acre Pork . Shuler . pastor Wo rshi p service,
Not t'entec:o1tol , Riv . School et 9 :45 a .m . and Church ~II
MASON ASSEMBLY OF COD , GOD Sampson Hall . supt
O.eorge Oti J r . pottor , Wn; ship ServtCtl 11 a .m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF COD , 9 30o .m .: Church 5er v lce . 7 p m .. Nev . Roy Mouse pastor: Robert 9,3() a .m . Sunday sc hool 10:30 Dudding lone , Mason . W Vo
FUN -; yau putlt tGptbw
SACRED HEART, R•"'· Father
Ch.,li te r Tennant, Pasto r . Su nday se r v ice S\lndoy , 9 ... 5 a .m Sun ·
Rev . Bobby Potier , pastor . Sun - yo uth meeting . b p .m Tuesday Bi· Mu sser , Sundoy School supt. Sun· am , Btble Study and p r o~ e r se f'
plllllle."
&gt;&lt;. hoof -1 45 o m . Ch ild ren s day ~ehool. 11 a .m .: wo, -hip let· Paul D. WeltOI\ , po1tor . Phone
day school , 10 a .m ., Sundoy wor- ble Study. 1 p.m .
day school 10 '30 a .m .: wo rship v1ce Thursdo~ . 7·30 p .m
TRINITY CHURCH. Rev . W. H.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

These Messages

Of Our ReligWus Heritage

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

EN POMEROY

F

ANKU~

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.
-- -&lt;t =:JJL:.. '
~
- (p

· ·~irlpool
!':!.I~J~!.l~cosoorlos

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

'"'

CAPTAIN EASY
QUIT

IPTA~~IN',MIKI!'l

THI!!N YA

'IOU'R&amp; THe SHII&gt;Pit.l&amp;
FOReMAN- 'IOU MUST'I'e
~eN THEOSE-. SHARK.
DR4WINI9S IIEFORE0-1

MUST !(NOW

THEYMI!AN . . .
YOU TWO BETTe~_,

WHAT THEY
MEAN!

WATC:H 'I'I!R STEPl
I'VE TRIE-D T'WARN

C"MON! THAT'S NO

WHO'S 190Nt.IA FEED F1ot&gt;1&gt; PETE'S

ANSW ell l WHY
cAN'T YA LEV!L

THIO ~HARKS~ AR!:
VOU SAW-I S THIS

WITH IJS,MIKI!l

SAKe, KeEP
YEll: VOIC e
DOWfJ:

D~AWING MEAN!'o

'I'A T'PLAY IT

IT

CDOLt

~

LOOI&lt;! THIS WAS LEF-T IN

r:-·= n

... WHeRE
1 TOLD THELOCAL &amp;OSS
T'60 SLOW
HIS NOSE!

COULD HAPPEN

TOU§1

nE

GO T A
HUN C H IT HAS
SUMTH IN T'DO
WITH TH' UNION•

TRUCK CAB AFTER 1 G OT
BACK FIWM THE UNION HALL ...
OUR

RIE&gt;HH

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

AILEYOOP
HERE

~E'I

ALLEY!'?!!

... AN' IF' "'tXX -mY
TCLLIN' ANYSOD'V,

ARE,

DOC'TORl IF "'J'LL

YOU'~

GONNA
.BI! NO'THIN I

.JUST •••

Market
Bob's Market

Athens County

&amp; Loan
Co.

' •t.:.o
r ~· "'

UTl1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

'

Tractor Sales, Inc.

AND 0 ' COURSE,
h\ERT WOULD SAY
SOMETHII'tG, UKE

MA'(8E IF
TH' BILL WAS
PAlD --· E.R , ..

lHA1' S IT' WE'LL
$DID 11 TO HI,_ .. . 8UT
WE'VE GOT TO FIND
OUl HOW MUCH

AS NOT··

6U1 tiOW DO
YOU KEEP TRACt&lt;
OF WHAT THEY'
ALL OWE YOU?

UH · HUH --·
HOW WE
GOIH' TO

00 THAT?

li 15 " •

CAROS ! SEE?
J UST ~DD ON
EAC H TIMC A
CUSTOMER 010RGE S
SO MET HI I'\' ..

r

~ ~.:.·

10 EACH
CUSTOM ER ,
Ef-t ?

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

Reuter.Bfopn
Insurance
SeiVices

!;::::==
Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

I

Throw this slop out'
':="lrt"-:&lt;'' ~i I bouqht stea ~t, s '

I said

would~

Attend

The Church Of Your Choice

' .'
•I

MARK V STORE
Middleport

PillA SHACK

~

-.J.,_·~

_,
l

I

'

1 r"'
11

BROWN'S
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

This Sunday

Ken Grover Photography

'. ,

;-! .....

WILKINSON
Small Engines

IKE
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

.., _
I' ,
'

WINNIE

50 DID I , GARY .

'rOU1LL HAVE TO
COME TO PINNER

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

SU RE... ANYTIME YOU

6t:El' I WAS
RI(JIITl SHE

SAY.

/{) FA LLING

MORE OFTEN

iHER£5

FOR HIM!

50 WINNIE IN VITED

50METHINI3

A GUY FROM WORI\

ABOUT HIM

HOME FOR t' INNER.

niAT JU:OT

WH AT5 1l-IE B IG

POE5N'T Aliv
UP 1U11J.

t't,~L ?

w.

"

FRANK &amp;ERNIE

Frld~y, Sept. 8

li

i

BRIDGE

fROM 't'HB

"'"'HII'r WAS

SJirf~ werAa
f)RR!N'r c;;OMptWV.
Wt'nfOU'!' ANY Sc.,PPI!R.
Al-L ."'b Go "rb

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag_ _

reo

I

Reaching slam in notrumps

••

•..
~

ta1s w1H elthh pass o.-

••..

NORTH
• AB
• K 74
• K Q 10
•QI09!4

WEST

EAST
+ U3
WJ5
• Q6 3 2
• 86 3
• 9 74 2
• A3
• J 52
SOUTH
+ K Q2
w A 10 98
•A.J 5
...-K87
• 110974

BORN LosER
oo&amp;M~

FIV~ ~IJ'T

AU. TH.&lt;\T

BAD, I
IOUeSS .

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: South
Wool North Eut South
I NT
Pass 4 NT Pass 6 NT
Pau . Pass Pass
Opening lead : • J

LAFF -A -DAY

~1it,;;i~---,u. •

• JtcNw

•

BARNEY

LAMP ON

FER 'IE,

:I SHORE WILL 8E TICKLED
WHEN TAT~ GITS OVER
BEIN' SCAIRT OF TH' DARK

...

11tt

By Oowald Jacoby
aDd Ataa SoDial
The direct raise from one
to four notrump should not
be plsyed as Blackwood .
!Mtead It allould show 15 or
• 18 high-card points.
1
If partner haa opened with
18, the total of 31 or 32 will be
too little to Justify a slam
bid; lf he has opened with 18,
the total will be 33 or 34 and
he will bid a slam; If lie has
opened with 17 he will use his
own )Udllment. A hair
aplltter milht actually rebid
notrump, Ordlru!ry mor-

fl't

•

I,

••

points and went to six.
lf South had held the jack
of clubs instead of the jack of
diamonds, the slam would
have been a lay down. As it
was , he had to find the jack
of clubs to come to 121ricks.
He might well have gone
wrong and played West for
that card, but he decided
that West had opened a long
spade s u1t so that East
would hold the importanl
jack. So he picked It up and
made the slam. •

I!

The evening stars are Mars
and Venus .
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Virgo .
The late Ohio Republican
Sen. Robert A. Taft was born
Sept. 8, 1892. ThiS is

~1-8

• K 943

I JEDDA'

settlement of what ts now t he · ... ~
continental Unite d States was ·•·
founded a t the p r ese n t ~·':
loca tion of St . Augustine. F la. , ,, ,
In 1900, mor e than 6,000 ·
persons wer e killed when a · · •:
hurricane and tidal wave'" ·:
st ruck Galveston , Texa s.
. ...
In 1934, the U.S. liner• •'
"Morro Castle " burned off · •·
Asbury Park , N.J ., ta king 137,:
lives .

I

JcRAH
Nj
I '-'
_

l_ ...,1\."'
V \V
I
-"A"-"-.a.- -'--'

rIJ
~
~

~ow

I (]

tPIDUST

I. I.

Yeslerday's

I

-ro

C.O'N5TRL
AN " INDUSTRY "

OLTT OF i'JUDrTY.

I

0

Prlntanswar h&amp;l'f/:

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPHIS..: ASSN 1

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
fRN , send $1 lo. " Won al
Bridge , ' ' care of this newspa·
per, P.O Box 489, Radoo Cily
Stalio n, New York , N. ~ 10019.)

·-

America n com e di a n Sid· ......
Caesa r 's 56th blrlhday .
On this da y in hi,tory :
In 156S, Lhe first permanent· , · ,

I I I . """..0
--.-

¥2 ·

•AQJH
.K87
A New Mexico reader
wants to know our rebid. We
open one diamond and part·
ner responds one spade.
We favor the slight under·
btd of two spades.

.

'

Unscramble these lour Jumbies .
one tener 10 each square. to form
four ordinary word s.

~~~VJ:U~~oiRAIM ~
You hold :

I LEFT TH'

Old

six.
North's four·notrump bid
was made with only 14 high·
card points. but he decided
his fifth club plus the 10 and
nine represented a full point
in value . Anyway , he felt
like bidding and did bid four .
South looked at his HHHI
of hearts and 17 high-card

The Almanac
United Press International
Today is Friday, Sept. 8,
the 2:ilst day of 1978 with 114
to follow .
The moon 1s approaching
its first quarter .
The m orning stars are
Me rcury ,
Jupiter '8 nd
Saturn .

.
"

Now arrange the circled letters to', ' "
form the surpr1se a')swe r, as sug "" 1 ..,

i:

gested by the aboye 'car1 oon

rxxJDtiiJO~

tomorr'*'~
ENTIRE
·•,~

(Answers

Jumbles. PATCH

LURID WEAKEN

Answer : What a model may be when under a

.

strain - "DRAWN"

"

_,0......._._,.,.,1.35-

:;

.~

r7==~~~~~--~--~-----------,
- - l l o.10,_ ..
·' . ~
, Box 34, Harwood, N.J. ~. tndudl
yourrwne.~~OOCS...:ImMact.dcl~t.tJe• r : . ••·

pikl ham .klnllle. 0'0 tNI

•

,~

�!0--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Sept. 8, 1978

Want Ads Turn , Unwan-ted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
1:, WunJs ur Urltk&gt;r
C.a~h

. I WI}'

1~

l'tlell'j(t'

1.25

JWYs

1.00
LlO
1.80

1.25

6dwys

:1 00

J.l:i

:l dll \1~

1.00

f.c.dt " 'UI'd UVt·r !Ia&gt; 11\LIIi.Hl WU l:i
wunb is 4 c~n\s pt&gt;r wun.! pt'f tlay .

Ads

utht'r

ru nnu1~

c,illy) wrll

ll~&lt;~n l'llllst.'('Utivt-

~ ''hil rt.: ~-d .-t

lht- I tllty

rd tt' .

Card uf Tir;ouk~ ;uKl '
wunl. SJ.OO
mU\unwn. Catoh 111 atlvann:
In

11\t'l llU n ' ,

Otutu11 r ~ : 6- l't'nl'i per

Mr1brle Hunw su lt:s 1111d Yan.l sa h.•. ,:
ar ·c &lt;lel't~ ~tc&lt;l

unly with

e~sh

wrth

unh·r. 25 t 't'rtt chtu·~t: fur alb l' itTT~' ·
Uljj Hux Nurnber· In Cil r·c uf Th ~ St&gt;n l.lrwl

The Pui.Jhsht·r l't'St'l'\'l'S tl tt• 1'11!11\
lo cdJt ur r· ~·jl·t· l lillY .a1.b tk~ uwd ubJt'l'llut ll:ll . Ttw Pu lllis l1cr· wrll nul Lit•
rtspvnsrblt• fur ruun:' th&lt;~rr Ullt' ll l n!l"·
n~·r m ~t· r· uu u .

P horr~· !H!-'ll :ati

YOU ha ... e o servrce to alter . HJUH lfllSH ~etlel p01 1 coll1 e
won1 10 buy 01 sell sarneihu1g
pup&lt;, 99'} 3187 or 99'} 249b
oe- look•ng l ot . wot k
o•
1WO Kll HN~ tl week s old moiC'
who rever
you "ll get rQ!Iulh
"1 4'J 1J2C!
Iosier w 1th a Sentone l Want A d.
( all 997 21 ::Ob

YA WO SALI: l"hurido._,. htdoy and
Sa turda y t-r am 10 l1l 4 lf b
Mtdwo y Or•v ll'!' New Ho11en .
WV ~ob y clothes toy !&gt; dish eo; ·
rnen sand women s clo thes
YA RD ~ AU: and antique s. Le tart
t-o ll s Ohio across fr om gas.
slotlon . Stort s l hu rsd o.,- 9 am
thru Saturday
YA HD SAU: at Ruo;t k H1ll s on
l'hurlo . and ~r i. form 9.JO to 4.
Child1 en s and ad.u lt clothing .
Avon b o ttle~ , misc. it-ems
YARD SAH Sept l B, and 9.' q
om to 5 pm Genera l eleelrtc
washer ohd drye• :t bi Cycle s.
old r ock ong c h o~r . ch1ldren s
game s clot he s and m1sc Tur n
nght at Umted Me tho dis t
Church tn l'uppers Plom s.
loHaw !&gt; tgns
HOU St HOLO SAlt. Sept . 7 8 9.
Thur !&gt; 1-=ri and Sat . J"/4 E. Ma tn .
f-' omeory . 9 5

NOTICE

1-= I V~

~AMIL

Y Ya rd Sol e 3 big
day s lh ur~ . Sept .,
~r r .
Sep t 1:1 a nd Sot . Sept 9 Victo r
Bohr re1o•den ce 9 Ia 4 doily ,
$.0::0 an d up

Munllu\
Noon urr Sati.Lnlay
Tuc sd &lt;t~

tl1ru F n u"a \
4P.M.
tlw Jar

I.Jo:fl ,r ~

pui.Jbl·att&lt;•n

!.-;wot!a\
4 P.M.
Fr td 11~

11fkrnuurt

I

BAB YS ITTER fo r Iunder gar den age
child Gro vel Hill area A Fter 5
992 3477
NH DfD CARR IER
304 675 IJJJ

lor

Mason

8A BnllTtR FOR krnde r garten
age c h ~ ld 99 7 J54b a fter 5 pm
MA INHN ANCt:
Mu st hove In·
dustrt ol Plant Main tenan ce eli
pe11ence Pr •m artly a so hd elec
t11cal bock ground Appl y on
per 1oon 1he week of Sep t 1t
lmper ral · Uec t rtC
3 45
Syc an1ore
Mrddlepo n
OH
tt O M tI: XPt Rit:NCED Mt( HAN IC Own
tools requrr ed App ly 1n per
son Rrve o1o• de VW AM( Jeep
G oll1pol1s

Wanted I&lt;&gt; Buy ,_

sa

TIMBER POMER OY Fo rest Pr o
duC!s Top p11 ce l or standing
sow 11m ber Colt 9q:;l -5965 or
Ken! Ha nby I 446·8570
O LD f URN ITU RE tee bo~ e 1o brass
bed ~
tr on bed s desl&lt; s. etc
complete hou~ eh old~
Wrt le
M D M il ler R1 4 Pomero11 or
cali99'J .J7biJ

OLD

COIN S pocke t wa tches ,
ron gs wedd rng bands
d•ornond s Gold or stlver Coil
Roger Wamsley 7d2·7331
cl a~s

WANTED 10 buy any old motor ·
cycles or port s Doe s nol ho ve
to run
Rea sonable ptices
9&lt;i7·b34 5
WANT TO buy ol d plover p1ano .
Gall•poh !. 61 4-4-46 ·387 4 o r
b 14·44b-3945
WE PICK up junk
.ng 1unk car s
teri&amp;s and
Salvage . SR

1972 DAT SUN 4 door stat ion
wagon . 20 .000 miles 4 cy l .
good gas mileage . 2SO N 3rd .
Middlepor t. Phone 99'}. 73'19
othJr 4 p .m .
1'Ti'5 DAT SUN PIC KUP
l ow
mi leage Step bumper. Goo d
condition $2850 9B5 -J9i'9
19i' 4 DATSUN PICKU P
992 -6t92 after Spm .

condil•on
Weber

i' 47-21 4J

19i':l CUT LAS S SUPR EM I: 2-door
Wh ite w1th block vrnyl top. 250
7 bbl 949 -"}d l "f
19/ 1 CHA l lENGER RT 340 oulo .
SbOO . 843 -3 184 .
1975 ( AMARO Aut o trans _ t ilt
wheel . l o w mileage !:: •eel len t
co ndit 1o n
f-' r~c ed
to sell
992 5296
A TT t NTION MUSTANG lo-.ers
19i' l_ Mach I E ~c etl en r shape .
orr 302 $1 700. 965 3301 day s
985 -41 40 al ter S pm
JQb9 CHt V Y NO VA . V-8 ~ londa r d
Ir ons
R un~
goad
5650
9B5 -4771
IQ71 FI A T J5 rnrl es per ga llo n .
$595 742 2460

·- -

auto bodi es buy
sc rap iron . bot·
metal s. Rrder s
124
Pomor oy .

~f ~-~
riM VEL TRAilER lor sol e . 19"/2
Mar~ Two 1n 19 It 742-25bb .

COUNTRY MOHill: Home Pork
Rou te JJ north o f Pomeroy .
Large lots . Coll992 -7479
ONl: HEOROOM opt . Conl oct
Vr llogf! Manor
Apl
Mid.
dlepor t. '?92 7787
J AND 4 RM l urnts hf!d and un ·
fur nis h e d
o pt s
Ph o ne
99'}"5434 .

TWO BEDROOM Hailer . Adult s
on ly 992 3J24,

i

H by
S 'J ~ . UO

l b • 7 wheel s, 1-'r
1 l UO ~ !b Won ter tires

p• SSO 00 Coli QQ'} .7b9'2
FO ~ wrn ter Cobbler
Kenne be c and Supe tror Phone
H4j·149 1 l"om Sayte Grea t
Bend ~ H J3S

19bl nH V Y FOH port s 197::! Vega
moror Ha)' l or sale $.85 o
bale lol49 2413o• Q49-21:149 .
G UN~

AND ammo Lorge di Hou rtt

1974 DAlSUN PIC KUf-' .
997 -0Jl·rJ alter 5pm

1-'LAIO L OV~ sea l and rllotchong
chou and ottoman Hedroom
suite All ltlo. e new 1n eoo cel lent
corodtt ro n. 949 -2701
f-'OI? lABH t ll: (l'HI( d osh washer
tlechic dryer Bo!h l or S50

qn

~d:t CJ

TRAILER
SPACE
9q'}·2b2 5.

FOR

l-O U~ BU~Nt;R Hordwtr k blJrner
go ~ sto ve w1 th g11ddle tho! co n

vert s lo 5th burner D•g •tol
doc k
b: ce ller11 co nd 1tt on
99:} .)009
LARG~

fUH orl stove Alt er I 30
pm co l i 992 7690

~H R~ D CONSOL~ wrth BSH tur n
tabl e AM ~M rod1o 8 tro r k . lr)
good sh opt;&gt; pr 1ced r eal&gt;onable
992 &lt;l5S I

SC Alt tro tn ~ with l type
layout Corn ple te wr !h all low it c h e~ house chur ch , to c toroe ~
Beau lll ul. See Hor Ye'f l eo ·
•nand f-'0 B o ~ bJ I , Roc rne ,
Oh•o. by Wagner Hardware
)t or e

N

l9lb l"AN VM C lion )M ulc ted
pane led ca rpe t JJ 000 tmles.
Good 111es
standar d shdt
Good
co ndotoQr\
!o JlOO
9 H5 · 38~ 7
Jb ' elec t11 C 10n ge. e.cellen t ron

d•l•on 949·747b aft er
Anyt ime caii949.1JSI

~

pm

Pho1w 99'1 J I U 1

I RAi l~ R

AND 7'~ ou e~ on :J2~
rni ne ~ .. 0• •lied
we ll

/ 4'/. tO ~J

COAl liM~ S I ON~ . 1oan d g ra11el l WO HI:D~O OM l umo 5hecl hou se
Ill
Mtddt epor t
s l 7 00 0 .
•o l(lu m chlolide l e!l ol rl C! . dog
'1'-1'1 ~::0()~
l oad and a ll type1o o f ~o l t b ·
ceb tor ~o l t Wor lo. 1o , Inc. ~ Mo111
MULBH-I~ Y
Heights
Lois
of
~ ~ Poml.lroy ~I\I "J . JH91
pt •vo&lt;y ~on c h . J bedr oom
o Ve r 1 ocoe1o . f-'r u•t tree s fA
BU~H O UGH:,
5~ NSI MA 1'1 (
oc
co un l~rtg
n1od11n e .- Pho rw
l u1rtoCe Cent ral 011 Una ll och
tt92 - l1~6 lhe Dnily ~c nt i 1 11..&gt; l ,
ed 'J ror garage H W l loo rs .
Dr y ba sem en ! _ f-'o tro and deck .
111 Court ~ t r ee ! . f-' OillGI OY
992 -5792 .
j
Oh10 .

10·30 c

Jti,al Estate fOF l:iaJe

High School

-·

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service
Pomeroy.

f u lly furnished . Lot Is
50)(120 . Ready to move into .

$8,500.00.
JUST 6 YRS.

OLD

-

Lovely 3 bedroom home, a lI
electric, lovely kitchen . A

bu y at just $18.500.00.
CLOSE TO MINES Beautiful fen ced 1 acre
with s mall st re am
Newer
mobil e
home
f u l l y furni shed . This you
m ust see. Sl6,500 .00.
story fr ame. forced air
furnace , 4 bedrooms, ot her
build i ng s, many othe r
featu res . 525.000 .00.

JUST LOOK -

1'12 balhs ,

basement, porches, nat .
gas f .a. heat, por ches, 2
bedrooms , range , re f. ,
washer . Going at $8,500 .00 .

DUPLEX

In

g ood

condition , 5 bedrooms. 2
baths, lovel y lot . Li ve in
half - rent t he rest.

S15.000.00.
SYRACUSE
Lovely
newer 3 bedroom home.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

J bedroom house . 2 bath 1o ,
all e lec. , 1 aoe , Middleport ,
clo!.e to Rut land . Phone 992 ·
"f 48 t .

Pllone 992-6333 .
Office Hrs.
9a .m .- 5 p . m .
Saturdays at noon
Your Full Time
Real Estate Broker

Will sell fast at only $10.600.
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
frame hom e with natural
gas heat. Situated on nice
size lot on Main Street.

.

on one. th i rd of an a cre. Will

detached garage. Sit uated
sell at SJO.OOO .
RACINE - This beautllul 3
bedroom h ome ha s dining
room , family room and sun
por ch . Plenty of storage
spa ce. Garage and patio
with a c anopy . Situated on
alrnost 1 a cre on 'Sfate

Route 338. Sells for $30,000 .
RIGGS CREST MANOR Beautiful 12 room split
level
co l onia l,
has
bedrooms, 3 full batt1s and
much , much mor e! Call
today for more info and
make an offer .
We have other listings to
choose from . Please st09 in
or Cilt II us.

s

~

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Home Phone 742·2003
Hilton Wolfe , Assoc .
Home Phone 949.2489
Gecirge A . Hobstetter, Jr. ,
Broker
Home Phone 992 -5739

;

BEDROOMS - · Older

home. · some

remodeling ,
beautiful view of the river ,
m ust see to appreciate.

Price $12,500.
MIDDLEPORT

2

bedrooms ,
completely
re modeled .
carpet
throughout , garage, cellar,
spring water , grape arbor ,
n ice
garden
spot.
! mm e di.,te
oc cupancy ,

127,500.
MIDDLEPORT

3
bedrooms . older home ,

car peted , fully equipped
kltctten , full basement.
family room. alltiTl . siding,
new roof, storm windows,
double lot, owner will help
fi nance down payment or
will take a
newer J
bedroom tra i ler as down

payment . Well worth the
price of $35 •.000 .

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS .
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992 ·2298
Atter Hours

tall992-71ll
CONTACT :

l'T/ 4 KAWASAKI KX 750
co nd•t•on 985 -41 3J

Goo d

H ~G t ~T~RED

COLUMBIA rom 70
. months old Reg1s tered Su ff ol k
rom . ] ,. ear s old Co ll997 '/loS

19"1)

~ORO

~ he e l s

F-100 pt ckup t r ue~ 20
panel ing . / 42 'Jb4B

196tl CHtVHOHT CA HRY~ Ll ' •
ton b cyl st d. Ha s 19"12 en gine
fu l ly msuloted end carpe ted.
Good l rr es . $750 . Col1992 -6398 .
SWHT PO T ATO~ S Red , wh•te .
ond yello w Phone 84J -2437 .
!Iober! W lewis . Ht. 2 Rou mO!
SH 124
prece s
Will se ll
cheap . Syl vr o s
Uphols te•v ocrol&gt; S fr om 1e. a co
Sta tton ,
::,yroc u se
OH
991·51 07

GR IM~ ::,

GOLDt N. Red Del•c•ous
&amp; Golden OeiiCIO U5 app l e~ Fdz ·
Slo! 689
potr1ck Orc hard
tll4 -bb9·J"f85 .

t(jl7"]

HONDA JSO . Excellen t
~ hope .
Wt n dshlel d. SoSO
4t! 5.330 l day s. Q8~ · 414 (J :'Iter 5.

NEED A WATER
_.SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmlrk
soften &amp; (Ondition your
water with Co·OP water
so ftener , Model UC · SVI .

L et
Free

'
us

•289.95

test your w1ter

rom_., LandmarK

9 a .J""k w. caney, Mogr.
•

•

PlloMtt2-2111

EXTRA

Stucco l arge 9 room home
wi th
2 baths.
stove,
refri g erator , furnace. ci t y
wa t er , natural gas, double
g~rage and 2 bus i ness
rooms .
Good
corner
location on Rt . 12 4. Only

S35,000 .
25 ACRES -

On

good

gra vel road in Rutlancl
Township. A real place for
privacy . $12, 500

EXTRA

NICE -

New

in su l a t ed
home
wi th
fireplace I n the family
roo m . 3 n i ce size bedrooms,
step -save r k itc hen with bar
and d ining -area . 2 car
garage . sun deck and front
por c h . Situated In t he
woods on a one acr e lot .

NEW

LIHING

Furn ished 2 bedroom home
wi th T . P. water , shower.
b ath , .75 of an acre .
Loca ted on a good paved
country ro ad .

NEW LISTING -

Good

older 4 bedroom home:,
bath , natural gas heating,
drilled well, and large level
lot on blacktop road .

NEW LISTING - &lt;5 acres.
35 of timber , old house of 6
rooms and atl minerals
near oi l and gas field . Want

s:ro.ooo.
NEW

LISTING -

c arpeting.

d lniQg

wllh

slidtng gla ss door to sun
deck . Wood burner in the
basemen t and 24 acres .

IF
YOU
SOMETHING

SEAo v••~•, 1

eiNSIDE PAINT
OUT SIDE WHITE
•ROOF PAINT

BA THROOM S ANO
K11c hens
remodeled , ceramic l ife. plumbing, ca rpen try . and gener al
maint en ance . 13 years ex ·
per ienc e . 992 361:15 .
.
PUlliNS EXCAVATING . Comp le te
Service . fJhone 992. 24?8

-

REEVES TRADING Pos l . Pogev ille- .
Groceries . dry goods , hard·
wore . t eed , tack shop . Special
_25 lb . of do~ loo_d . $3 .88 .

your drum home, II hits 1 lnge kitchen wit" lots of
(lbinets, stove , refrigerator 1nd dishwasher. Bt111flfu I
dining room with sliding glass doars Ieiding out to
farge deck . L.arge living room and f1miiY, room, and to
finish this well -laid out home we have f ve bedrooms,
utility room and 11r1ge. Very klw heating bill. That's
not all , we hive str1wberries, raspberries and garden

space . Red bam-like storage building. Located about
len minults north of Pomeroy lust off Rl. 7. tall for
more details 1nd 1ppolntment. Asking S55,00.

JUST LISTED MIDDLEPORT - This well cared for
newer home has 3 brs, living room, bath, mostly
ca rpeted , kitc hen Is equlfped with refrigerator and
stove. utility room, natura gas forced air heat, outside
storage building . Price $27.000.

6 ACRES - Nice 11;, story home mostly carpeted with 3
or .4 bedrms ., living rm . , fam ily rm ., with fireplace,
basement , f uel oil fur nac:e, garage and outbuildings.
Some fen ci ng , plenty of road frontage and garden
spa ce . Ci t y water and drilled. well . Loc. close to

hospit al a nd school at Laurel Cliff . Asking s•2 ,500.
TWO ACRES - A beautiful• year old, 3 bedroom home

~~~-~~ ": ~.
WELL dr illing . Wi ll iam T.
Grant . 742 -7879 .

Will DO baby si tt in g in my home
on wee kly or day to day basis .

Y:;

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA .............'995

9' and 12' Vinyl

1973 PONTIAC GRAND AM:•. ,......'1695

sqi.

Air , vinyl

WANTED : We have a qualified buyer for a few acres
of land with a good home with at least J bedrooms

located on good road .

We n . .d4arge &amp; $mill Farms
and Many typos of pr&lt;&gt;porty
CALL JIMMY DE EM. Anocialt, f4f-2ll8

WANT
BAD

~~~~~~IF~~~. ~6bL~~~

GET IT .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
R111tor Associates

Housinu
:... He&lt;tdquartl!r~-.

141 ACRES - The
prevents her from continuing to operate
the farm end she dnires en Immediate sale. 50 to 60
acres tillable with some very good creek bottom hilltop land . The bolonce Is In pasture &amp; wcodo . Tf"\6

4 Dr. Wason.

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO ......... ~1295

'2295

'2295

1973 CHEV.
IMPALA

1972 OLDS
L.S. CPE

1971
BUICK

air ,

Full power,
am .fm tape.

.d r. sed ., air .

Skylark
au 1o .. p .s .

cpe . •

S895

'1895

'695

1973
BUICK

1973
DODGE

1978
DEMO

L esa bre sed ., air .

Charger
d r ., air .

S. E.,

2

98 Regency , 4 dr .
sed .

'1795

'1895

SAVE

1973 CAD.
CPE. DeVILLE

1975 OLDS
LS SED.

1978
DEMO.

Ful l power , ajr,
am -fm , v inyl roof,
good tires .

8B Roy ale , 4 dr

Fu l l

power , air ,

am . fm .

'1995

sed .

'4395

SAVE

GMQUALITY

SERVICE/PARTS
IGE:NEJIL\L MOTORS P~TS

THAT GREAT GM FEELING
WITH !;ENUINE GM PARTS,

Drive Home A Winner
See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete Burris.
Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris.

, u.,ur

Karr &amp; VanZandt

SEE THEM TODAY

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
Reedsville,

378-6125

by

FUNNY BUSINESS

0.

Roger Bollen

111178 Ill' NEA Int., TM. Reg. U.S 1&gt;11 Otl

NO

PARKING/•
of Paris
30 Stadia
31 Written

letter
32 Devoured
33 Ancient

4

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

times

34 Moral

2 DUNE BUGGrS .......~~.~~~.~ ....'1095

Rutlllnd

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT

:II Pure

st Alan or
Barbara

TRUCKS
1
975 FORD CUSJOM .302 ....•..... 52895

u European

11-8. auto .. 2 we. P.S .

1973 DAtSUN PICKUP.!......... :...... '1995
Wflh toppar, • cylinder. •speed, cab llgnts. Sharp.

A SOFA THAT
'
MAKES A
lED FOR

·

VANS
1972 aiEVY C-10.~~:!';............... '2495

TRACTOR

"·

CASE FMM TRAC10R ................. ssgs·

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
•
7

1 mil• north
Tuppers P11lns, Ohio

•

/

Perrectlllldirich on which
to diet : GI'CIIIIId broc:coi1 and
lurnlpl on,._ t.gell.
I.

'
Add IA1 )'CIUr o;olledlon
of
&lt;'OIIedlve nowll : A
~dult book llorea.

White-Wall

Co{)p

Custom Poly .

A78xl3

One l etter simply stands f o r another. In lhi1 sample A is
u sed l or. the three L's, X f o r th e two O's, etc . Si n g le l etter s,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

CRYPTOQUOTEs·

2 Connnient Numbllrs
985-3345 or 667-3463
St. Rt.

$9211

hints. Each day I he code letters are dill'ere nt.

See Roger Riebl!'

1!1 IN STOCK

4

'6900

" You ' ll like Our Quality Way of Doing Bu si n ess "
GMC Financing.
992-534 2 ,
Pomeroy
Open Eveni~gs unti 16 : 01}- Til5 p.m . Sa r.

• • • • • • ooooo• • o• oo• • 0ooo

I

gas. all &amp; coal have been found to bt plentiful . NHr
Rutland . 60's.
·

CAll lHE WISEMAN
REAL ESTA1£ AGENCY 446-3643

t Oit.

1972 PINTO WAGON ....................'695
UEV VEGA
cyl., ' s p.
'395
1973 I'W1

tall7•2-2211
TALK TO
wondoll or Herb Grote
or Gent Smith

7·2·2211

v .r .

roof.

1975 VEGA WAGON.......~.~!~::.~!~. '1295
973 CHEV. CHEVEU.L ............. '1395

Fully

EXCELLENT. FAltM BUY -

minerals go with It and lt'1 located In an aru where

2 dr ., am .f m , air

power , air ,

Auto ., p .s., p .b .• vinyl roof , Rlr.

owner ' s age

room home Is good (does need some modernization) ,
large ali purpose bam &amp; several outbuildings. The

Auto ., p .s., radio.

F u ll

. . . . . . k.pow..-.

4 dr. aulo. air, p.s .• p .b.

--·--

1974 OLDS
ROYALE

1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX.......!1495

you c1n came In
whit you're getting

RUG REMNANTS

~XPERIENCEO SEC RETARY

1976
PACER

Hatchback , 6 cvl.. auto.

'

40 A(rts of land In Sutton Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn . Priced at only $21,500 .

"'"vl!'nience

drlfl.

Halchback, 6 cylinder, automatic, P.S.

wi th large eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, all nicel y
carpeted , 2 baths, full basement with TV room . Many
more extras, tow heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furna ce . All this and two ncle acres of land in a good

location . Will go q uick lor $35,000.

Till l' :Otl p.,n .
FhoorpYpoo·n"gr
5

1

lowe• l•el

1974 CHEVY NOVA .......... ~ .......'1695

Gao
-d~So~lecl
~~
i ...
~Of

WILL BABYSIT in my home aft er
sc hool slarls. Bell y Von Meter ,
Syracuse . 992.7288.

1976 CAD.
SED. DeVILLE

4 Dr .. automatic, P .S., P .B.• au .

stocked.

WilL DO babysit ting in my home
on weekly basis. Ages 2 and
__u~. 992 - b32~-- .__._____..___ __ _

seek ·
ing port time e ... enh"!g or
weekend work
. typi ng .
payroll. bookkeeping. to)( com ·
putot ion . etc. Can
gi.,.e
re ferences .
985· 3988
or
bl4 -6b7 -b-448 after 5 pm .

Harvester
·1 New Idea

lllfllll$

1974 OLDS CUTlASS ...............'2495

From S2f5 &amp; Up

- -·- --·-

I
·1 lnlerllllional "I() pen Friday

1974 FORD COURIER...~i! ~.~~~~~ : .~.'?; ..... 11995
1
I 1976 FORD LONG BED............... ....... 2995
I 1976 FORD RANCHER0 .............. ........13295
1I Auto .• 301 , P.S., P . B. , Vinyl bed cover
1
1967 CHEVY lh IDN ... ... ..... ............. ..1395
1
1969 INTERNATIONAL VAN .••~~~~ ......••••• s595

Eco•o•• u~enn hl11dl• bi""· ro"'~"
iHt. Mow, ,hhl , tal. b.ntlon zo •"•til

4.dr . Wgn .. ps, pb. ac .

Buy wher1

991·3&lt;1 7.

TRUCKS &amp; VANS

"Finally, I've found
a MAN-SIZE tmctor"

.1974 FORD TORINO .................. '1495

Floor Covering In Stock

~ATER

air .

&amp; power door lock s, 350 V ·8, auto .• p .s., p .b . , vinyl roof ,
air .

As low As

-

P.B.,

2 dr., AM, w-8 track stereo. cr uise contr~l. p . wlno\JWS

Rubber Back Carpet

~elections

Ra ck, P .S.,

1977 CAPRICE ClASSIC ............ SS295

All carpat lnstollad with
p1dding 1t no ch~rgt.
Expert installolion.

- Good

75~~ ·

MIDDLEPORT, O .

\1~N

DRIVE ALimE
&amp;
. SAVE ALOT

and see

POMEROY, 0.
PH. 992-2176

[quiP111ent

SAVE ON
CARPETING

'4.88

op rt co r

L----------------------------------.. L---------J
992·2 196

~ctf\IU

HOWfRY
ANO MARTIN
h ·
covoti ng , sep tic:
sys t ems .
do1er. backhoe dump truck .
l•mes tone , grovel . black top
paving , N1 14J Ph one I (014)
698 -7331

1976 DODGE CORNET.•.•.~:~.~;~ .-.~.~........12195
1975 CHEVY WAGON ..... ~;~:.:.~........... 12495
1974. FORD PINID WAGON ..... : 1.'~: .'.~~ ~ . ...'1495
1973 CHRYSLER.WAGON .............. ....... 11595

1
·
Equipment Co• .I
I
I
1

442 . bucket seats,
con sol e ,
a m -fm
I ape .

'3795

WAGONS

MEIGS I·

I

See RDcky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or P1t Hill, Gtnerll ~anager , for a
Good Deol on a !jew or Used Vehicle.

t:.XCAVA TING . dozer
backhoe
ond di tcher . Charlei R. Hoi ·
lield . Bock Hoe
Service- .
~ u tlond , Oh1o . 1-'hone 142-2008.
WILL do roofing . cons lruc110n ,
plumbing 011d heating No job
too Iorge or too srrtoll 1-'hone
742· 2348.

I

3 sea t wagon , ful l
power , air , am ·
fm , new 1i res .

'3695

am .fn1 , new tires .

1973 FORD TORINO ••.•.•••'. ?:.:~:~·.~~?!~ ....11695
1972 FORD LTD ... :. ?.':~.~::: .~.~.: .~'.'; ...... 11095
1965 COMET........·.~~ :.~."!?: .................

p oo dle ~ .

r---------,

and

S.lurday 1115 :00
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD

New

spilt -level 3 bedroom home
in L etart Township. N ice

AK (
RtGI~H: HI:U
c h o c o lol e
I
1 .J04-tll:l/ -:nn

OP~N TILL 7 P.M.
Exce-pt Thursday &amp;

OUR

CLOSEOUT

dozer . loade r and
backh oe 'war~ . dump l ru cks
and lo -boys l or htr e : w ill haul
/ ill dirt , to so il, limesto ne and
grovel . Cal l Bob or Hoger Jef .
fers, day phone "rr92 .7069. night
phone 992 - 3~25 or 99'}. 5232 .

WI: DO puinling . gutter . ceiling
til e , panelin1:1 , roof repoir .
pfumb ir' g and con ~ rel e work .
Free estirnOtes . Coli 992 -7785
ask lor Wallace Morri!i. .

JUST LISTED - SPACIOUS 81-LEVEL. Tllis may be

STRONG

DURIN

IN SURANCE been
(Onte ll t;d? los t your oPer ator s
li ce nse? Phone 997 -2143 .

CENTRAL .REALTY' CO.

llo E. Second Stre-t

REPAIR
IOO!. Ier'&gt; . iron s. oil
small oppltances . lawn mower
r1e 1o:t to Slate Highwo-, Go1oge
·on Route 7, Phqne (bl4 ) 985-

AUTOMOBIL~

"•

VIR(; I LB. ;s R.
992.3325

Discount
Prices

BOW!:R ~

~XCAV ATING .

AUI'OMAII C MAY 1AG wo sher .
h eel le nt co nd ition . 949·7692.
t971 1-0WU ' • ton camper specro l
Power oor , au to .. duol ta nk s
t: . cell ent ru nn ong condo tro n
~14 7 ~ 9912392

$476500

1975 OLDS
CUT. SUP.

'1595

1974 FORD TORINO ..........................11795
i Dr .. P S., P .B.. ai r . 11695
1974 CHEVY IMPALA ........
....... , ....... .

l'cls for Sale

NOW

4 5peed .

1975 CHEV.
CAPRICE

2 Dr .. P .S .• P .B.. air .

LO VABLE: WHIH: snow drift gr ea t
I'YR!: NH 5 Puppre lo
1-'hone
l ·b I 4-bfl7.ji.1JH

step bumper
more .

~weepe r s .

4 D r ., aut o ., P.S., P. B.. ai r .

HISING SlA~ Kennell&gt; . Bo ord 11~ 9
ond gr oomrn g . a ll breed&lt;J .
Che shire , JOl 01'-n or Jb7-01Ub.

Auctioneer , Com·
plete Set vrce 1-'hone 949-2487
or 949 -2000. Haci ne Ohio . ( rill
Hrodlord

~LWOOD

1975 FORD GRANADA ....................... 12795

Phone992-2181

HOLLOW H o 1 ~e!&gt; Bu y. sel l
11ode 01 lr oin . Ne w and u1oed
s add l e~ . Nuth Reeve 1o . Alba ny
(b14 ) 691:1.J290

!:I~AOFORO .

MACHIN!: Mepoir s, se t
-.Ke . oil mak es GI92 -22S4 . Thc,.:obric
Shop . Pomerofl .
Auth or i zed Singer !Joles and
Servi~e . We ~ har pen Sc•s sor s.

3

TO BUY, SEE OR CALL
CLELAND REALTY THE HOME OF REAL
ESTATE .
MANY
OTHER LISTINGS TO
CHOOSE FROM, STOP IN
OR
CALL
NOW .
WINTER 15 ON THE
WAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR

-~A.

9·7· 1 mo.

4 Dr .• fully equipped . Whi te &amp; Red .

H OO~

Call 992-2772
8·10-1mo. (Pd.)

Estimates .

~ ~W I NG

bedroom , living roorri ,
k itchen and ut i lity . Located
l mile out New Lima road
in Rutland on 11h acres .

Asking $1 3,500.

-·

eng. XL T, fr ee
wheeling patkilge. 4
speed
trans .
and
more .

Experience itnd
fully insured
Free Est.

~B2S .

Closed Thursdays &amp;

Nat. ga s furnace. close to
sch ool s , large garage ,
lovely lot . $25.500.00.

992-2259 - 992-6191

All work
Call Tom
Hoskins, 949 -2160 . Free

1975 MERCURY BROUGHAN ................ 13295

W. Carsey , Mlgr.

~

2300cc

on heating cost

gu~tranteed .

N~W

Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio

LISTING

9,.,~ck

JIM KEESEE

experience .

HOMES tTl:S lor sale I acr e and
up. Middlepor t , near Rutland .
Coll99"l.748l

George 5. Hobsleflor Jr ..

NEW

$4885

00

&lt;wood·

ye;~rs

door.

Or ., blu e with white vinyl roof .

Pomeroy Landmark

2300cc eng .. 4 s pee d ,
XL T option, western
mirrors. AM radio,

Middleport - Nic e 5 room
homse with bath and

Hank , Kathy &amp; leona
Cleland
A ssoci ales

SERVICE

Call now tor appointment.

NOW

J&amp;L

Cellulosic
fiberl
Thermal insulation
S.ve30 pel. to 50 pel.

All types of roofing, guHers

CARS

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA.. .............. 14895

..30-tfC

Blown Insulation

&amp; downspouts. 20

0.

E:tepires
Sept. HI, 1978

A• 1t• &amp; Truck
Repaif ·
Also Transmis~ion
Repair
Phol.le 992-5682

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

3-15-tlc

SPECIAL
PRICE

,22,000 mil es, air co nd . . P .S. • P .B .• AM F M s ter eo. 2

8·2· 1 mo .

MOORE'S

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

6 cyl. ; v1ny l roof .

1975 DATSUN
8210

0.

Pomeroy

Al l

HUNTERS

.

OFF

s~

"'• mile oft Rt. 7 by-pass""
st. Rt. n•toword Rutland,

109HighSt .

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple

1974

BRING• IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

GARMiE

(Bob Hoellich )

'~ 192·2174

Special

.

ROGER HYSEll

ThePhotoPiace

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

•

BARGAIN

'

Any U .S. ·mlde car - p1rts
extra if needed. Excludes
tronl -wheet drive cars.

eng., 4 speed
overdrive tra n s., AM
radio .
western
mirrors, s liding rear
window, and more .

8-20·1 mo. (Pd.)

Call Us Today

Ph. 992-2848

VERY NICE Mobile Home

We are c urrently making
appointments tor · senior
portraits . We use tradi tional settings and at sq
featu re
outdoor
por traitUre.

Service

94~ · 2428 .

J', oo es w1 th water and ~e woge
on Peacock A ve ., Porne• o y .
Ohoo S 1000 down . Balan ce o f
Sbb J O per month to qualil ied
person . 99l'·5"!8b

SENIORS

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

-

IHRH BI: DROOM house J acres
land Close to l&gt;Choo l. pr iced
IVO~O ilObly . 992 -5 126

..

s129S

2300cc

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Open S.lurday 10·• p.m .
Sunday 12 noon to l p .m .
8·31-1 mo.

Radiator...--.....,

SPECIAL .

NOW

Guttets and
Downspouts

&lt;;HEAP!

!;::'t.
Tony 's Cury

Chester, Ohio

WAS. •4825.00
.

New or R:.ir

WOOD HEAT

KMR &amp; VAN ZANDT

ALIGNMENT

H. L. WRITESEL
ROOFING

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Slreet-&lt;&gt;ff
bthind
Mill Slrttl

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

lWO EXTRA nice lots 1n Hocine 12
x bO . Ho llypor k trod er . par tro lly
furnished . Al so IB x 40 ce men t
.. block b~ild m g w• th shed .

WINTI:H PO 1A TOI:S grode I and
2. C W . f-'r oll itt . 1-'0J !Iond , Oh1o .

Now Only
lWO FAMilY Yard Sa l@ at 109 CANNING pvaches . good q4oli ty.
EbE.ne1er St ., Pomeroy . Ohio .
Freestone conn ing peorhe r.
} h':rs ._ond Fri . 5ep!_: 7_8 ~ ~ ~
S7.96 , bring o wn con loin er
Ne to it and wholesale . Bob"s
YA JfD SALE . Man thru Fri .!:.ept
Ma son ,
M idw ay
Moril.e-t ,
11 thru 15. Sylvia Zwe!Hng
Mark~~tl , Pomeroy . Oh .
Syracuse , Ohio

(,j'\

MAYTAG WRING~R woshe• $50 ,
good condr llon Bell drar r'l tile ,
S 50 ea ch 2 steel wagon
wheel§ Ph ono 91:1 5-391 d.

ren t .

Tf.IAILER and lot •n
Syracuse across from pool
Phone 949 -237J.

{o unlly on Hy se ll Hun . All
tn lll t'H OI trg ht s I~ n"l lrlUte~ to
tQwn . For Sole '.&gt; tgn 111 yard. V a ·
can I Sl J 000, Shown an i~ lo "'
ter es te d po11re s. 7J~'J . J 0 7 4 ,

2 ACRES WITH ver y nice 2

APARTMENTS .
1
bedroom opl , S 11 3 mo. plus
elec"tri c. Monthly leases . t:qual
Oppo rtu ni ty Housin g . Co l t
992 -772 1 for appoin tment .

'1'11·5&lt;68

'

Ph one

Jack Ginther 915-3106

111

l'\

19 '1 ~

7 4 2 · 70 7 ~

QUALITY

~I X RO OM hou ~e anr:l bolh . Cen ·
trol hea t On 11 n ne~ . l oc ated

POH T ABL~ S elec ·
lror g01 ng to se ll or tr ade the m
too Fif e~ ~ Jrd M1ddlepott.
997 "/ 494

FORD ', ton pt ckup 300 b
cyl . 3 speed w•lh o VerdrtVe .
l"oke qver pay men ts. Selling
becau se ol m ov~ng
Andy
Vaughan
Call
~ . 30
prn

ReSidential and co,nmer clll. Cllf " tor estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any diY.
an y time .
PttonP 'BS-3106

1', AC~l:~ loco led t n11l ft fr o m
M ~1 g s M me 1, Urdl ed well ond
SfW trC sys. tern JU4 I.W~ iJ34

Yltllf

J{lck W (.Jr
Mq1

DB AI'I'AioiODAN.
· MUV&amp; GOJIPANY

ACIU LOT on Rt ~ N• (t~ blJrld •ng
~ ~~ 0 991 7574

l"YP~WRITI:H~

JO ' FRIGIDA IRE electric range
while 5150. J piece fam ily
room su tte . Spanish style , ~ 1 50 .
Pori a se t. glas s lop dming table
and 2 match1ng choir s. $50.
r,\91 -5869 or 9B5 -3595

HI V ~R SI DE

POMEROY
LANDMARK
For All

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

'147 ~:/ l'it .

PO IAl O~S

HVt Nf W Jeep AT Tracker tires.
S71 5 992·5 147

in

Plea

11car

M iddlepor t .

OUfo'LEXE Af-'T
992 -3&lt;1 06.

~~

~ 111 1! W Vo he1&gt;1riC Hcc k ~
llfl:.t Bt oodm o•C l&lt;l -.. (:) 4 '1 VA t-HA :JO yo to ., Otlrtng abo
reltnon t lltg lrclao •d Mo1tgage
bed! OOI\ 1
77 ~ ~to te- . Ath'cn .., ph or1~ (6 14 )
l l,l ~j Oo • ra n 14 11 DO 'J hl:'d • oo rn
~(I'} 30~1 .
19/1 V tCI OIICIII 14 ~ bl 3 bQd room
'J bo th
l HRt~ Bi:UHOOM fram e home m
1'1"/'J Covron ll y I 'J ~ b~ J bed roorn
M oddl.,.:port (all f.JI.j"J ]4~1
1'-lb'-1 5t alelo rnO n l 'J • bU l
IN ~ Y~A C U!&gt;~ I. b edr oo rn house .
bedt oom .
New stnnn wmci o w ~
N ew
·~. olurmnu m Ludd1t1g 'l p'or ches .

S,llt• PI If

•
UPHOLS rER-Y MATERIAl

fi&gt;rRent -

M O ~Il~ H O M~ ~

Ho!po111! Appl

Phon e

Uotlos

::,

G~TV•./o:.

PICK YO UR OWN
Red s k111
pea ches S 20 a lb . while they
19i' 4 JEEP CJS AM·FM rod1o l og
la s• . Mtrl lues Th ur s Fn 9-b
loghts . Jumbo t2 Mudder t~re s
Wed . So1 Sun 2 b Br,tng con
Good
s hap e
Ph one
torn cr !&gt;. Wagn er s Fruit Farm
6 t4 · 75J·2869
l ayma n Oh• o 2' 1 m iles oil SR
550 on CH b . 614 ·749 33 12
19i' d OLOS DEllA 88 Theron j
Johnson 241' -2152
HH~WOOD Wtnchester sho t gun
f.l emrn gton fflle l tke new coat
1970 DODGE OAIH 34 0. J-speed .
511e JB ( all992 -5335
aH st ock A skrng Sl bSO In mont

-

CHIP WOOD
Pol es
molt" .
diame t er 10 on larges t end ,
per ton Bundled ~l o b $6 per
Jon OPir11ered 10 Oh1o Poll et
Co Rt 7 Pome roy Qq'} ?b89

l 4"f0 Hill ( HI:!&gt;l12Kb0 l oco ted ul
~olem
Sen te"r o n CR I .
01 4-66 '1 5741 .

MU::,t(Al IN::,TIWMtNlS horns
gurtor ~ /lut es clormeh fr o m·
bo11es etc l o sell or 1rode
t-tl e " ~ s Jrd M1ddlepor t

~

WO RK O V ~Io/StAS .
Aus tralia .
A/nco Soulh Amenc o Eu ro pe
e l c.
Co n slr ucli on ,
Sa les
t ng1neers Cl erocol e tc. SBOOO
to S50 000 plus b penses patd .
For emplo yment on/or mat ion
wr1 1e Over~eos l:rnployrnen t
Box 10 11 Bmton Mo 07102

~43331 1

lWO FAM il Y Yard Sole " Man and
lues Sept. 11· 12. ~ r i . and Sal.
~ep t 15 -11:1 9-4 277 Main M id dleport OH .

.

DREAMING OF a wh1te Ch11s tmos
wi th no bill s? Wonderlul to
think abou t . but it co uld come
true. Be a Toy Ladies hos tess'
In your home orb',' orders h om
your lr 11:m d s Earn toys and gil ts
toys
fr ee. Nam e brand
reasonably
prt ced
w ith
gua rant ee . Gil ls for the whole
famo ly For mlormallon call
742-2J77 or 992.7050

19lb NA ~ HUA t4 • b~ J bedtaom
t , bo th under pon11ong . $1~
and os!&gt;u llle loon 949·1bH3 or

on shot she lls , 27 LH 72 Mag
etc. All kmd ~ o1 new and u1oed
~ hot guHo; , r iltes l1ond gun s.
Sornetunes vou don I even need
mone y. We llode l or almo st
anython g. Fd e s S ;}od . M1d ·
dlepor t 9Q1 149-4 .

SHOOTIN G MAT CH f- orked lo! un
Sport sman Club . Sept . J end
eve ry Sunday there af te r . Fo e· MIDDlEPOR T BU SIN ESS and Pr o·
fe ~s • o nol Women s Clu b will
tor y ch_?ke ~uns_only
ho11e o yard sa le Solurdoy .
NO HUNTING or tr esPa ss ing on
Sept . 9th , 9 om hl ? AI the Mor·
my properly without permo s
lin resi dence , We st Mom St
1-'omer o y, behind the Burg er
510f'l _ J ~dy Mc C.ro~
Ct-.el .
GUN SHOOT. Ra ci ne Gun Club
h er y Sunday 1 pm . Factoty LAR GI: GAR AGE Sole . Wate r St ..
choke guns only
::,yrocuse . Oh•o. Thurs .. Fr i.,
So t Sepl. 7. 8 9.
FRH CLO THING
Who do you
know tha t likes beauti ful YAHD SALE Fr1 and Sot. Milo
clo thes tha t con pay rodoy "s
Hutch•son r es•denc e . Rut lan d
pr tces . Gre at deal s now betng
YARD SAL!: fn end Sot .. Hr. 114
o fhn ed 949-17 18. 992 -3 94 1 or
' . mrle we sl of Rt . 7 Bypass 9
9(f'J.2J27
om Older lod•es Iorge dres !&gt;es
NO HUNT I N Q
on
George
srze 42 and coo1 s cheap . Other
Freelan d prop e r!~ Sy ro cuse .
clo thes etc .
Ohio
449 ' 1 LOC UST St ., across fr om
Sa ve More . beside Vaughan 's
Cardinal . Church parlw-, g lo t
sale . All proceeds ore to go for
new church. Anyone wanting to
FOUND LAR GE Treeing Walker
don ate coli 992 -9991 and wdl
Coon Houn d . 949 -2355 .
p•ck it up Wed .. Thun , Fr&lt;
FOUND IN Raci ne area . Ver-,
Saturda y Bak e ~ale an d caismall dog . Con be cl aimed by
wos h
identil-, •n g sex and col or Con
teet Hervey leomon d by
Wagner Har dware. Rac•ne
--~--

Humc• fur Sale

;.': ARPOHT SAH Thur s and 1-=ro .
llh ond Bth
10-d
Boy s
clo.th•ng , s•z es 10 and 11.
Numerous other ttems ~oo c h
re ~•den ce .
W rr ght
St
1-' omeroy Rom or shine .

YARD SA H Rose Hill ' ; mi le
!tom lo st l1 ght •n f-' omero y on
Rt 33 ~ep t 8 &amp; 9 J-:r iday &amp; Sot
9 ? Men women . little girl 5
clo!h mg
coo1 s
end tab le
glass wa re toy5 fa ts ol odds B.
en ds

·~

~lobile

~H.

Business Services

!{... alfl:•lalt· far &amp;I~

t'or&amp;le

CHARGES

r-wHEEL

porn of

'MW

D

FDJ

JZBZE

QMTLX

YMFXZRW

TDAXZ

YZ

J Z B Z·E

ML
XDI X

PROBATE DIVI SION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN T-HE
MATT EA
OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS ,
PROBATE
COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
Accou nts and vouchers of
the
,follow ing
named
f idu ciar ies ha ve been filed i n
th e Probate Court , Me igs
Count-, . Oh io . for aoproval
and se111ement .
CA. SE NO . 20121 Nint h
Annual A c co unt of Frank w.
Porter , Jr ., Truslee Under
Item V of the Last Will and
Testament o.t Jane Lo ui se 0 .
Smith , Dece ased .
CASE NO . 20677 F i rst
Annual Account of MJrior le
L . Hoffner , Guardian of
Th om as Glenn Wolfe , Charles
Bryan Wo lfe and J immy
Chr istopher Wolfe .
CASE NO . 22126 Final and
D is tr ibutive Account of Lena
K.
Nesselroad ,
Ad ·
m inis tratrix ot the E~ t ate of
Edgar E . Mitch , Dec eased .
Unless exceptions are t i led
thereto , said accounts wil l be
for hear ing be f ore said Court
on the lOth day of Oc tober ,
1978, et which time said
accounts will be considered
an d Continued from day to
day until finally d i sposed o t .
An y person in terested may
file Wr itten exceptions to said
acco unts or to matters
per ta ini ng to the execution o f
the trust; no1 less than five
days prior to the da t e set for ·
hearing .
Mlnning D. Webster, Judge
common Pltll Court.
Probltl Divisi on
M tl t s County, Ohfo
(t . I , lt c

•

!

t

e
r

e

e

y

•

•
~

d

�'
'

12-The Daily Se1.1lincl, MiddlepU11-Pumcruy. 0 .. fnda)' , Sept. 8. 19'i8

•

Sheriff not s"'re if ~ew
reg.ulations can be met

Food, wholesale prices decline during August
1

By JAMES HIWRE'm
WASHINGTON ( UPI l - Wholesale prices, led by a decline
In food C?Sts, fell 0.1 percent in August for the first decline In
two years, the government reported today.
The Labor Department said August's wholesa le price performance was the best since an 0.2 percent decline in August
1976. Increases had averaged 0.8 percent during the first seven
months of this year .
The figures were another encouraging signal of moderating
inflation .
Food prices dipped by 1.~ percent last month, the second
consecutive monthly decline and the largest since a 1.8 percent
retreat registered in August 1976, the department said.

There were large drops In the costs of processed poultry,
fresh and dried fruits and vegetables and eggs.
Wliat may be even more encouraging than the decline in food
prices was the moderate 0.4 percent Increase for nonfood
items, which equalled the smallest of the year.
The department 's overall Producer Price Index for Finished
Goods, which measures those products ready for sale to
consumer ouUets, stood at 195.3, a drop of 0.3 percent from
July. That means goods that cost SIOO In 1967 were priced at
$195.30 last month .
President carter and his economic aides have maintained
that inflation is the nation's No. I worry . And escalating
inflation - which rose at' a near double-digit pace during the
first seven months of 1978 - has undermined carter' "

president of the Farm Labor going to ask workers to stay
Organiz in g Committee , away from Ohio.
ca lled for · a nati onwide
" We have about 1,500
boyco tt
of
products workers who· will help us
manuf ac tured by Libby- campaign this fall in Florida
McNeil &amp; Ubby and the and Texas," he said.
Campbell Soup Co ., both
l(alasquez
sa id
the
for
t hei r
t wo-week-u ld
large users of Ohio 's $27 migrant.-; fight is not with the
walkout .
·million tomato crop.
tomato growers but with the
The workers we re to gather
. "We want a good day's pay tomato products firms . He
in front of Ohio State for a good day 's work ," said said the !inns have forced
University at 10 a.m. and Valasquez as he led the gr owers into accepting
march down High Street to marchers to Ohio's capital contracts that leave little for
th e Statehouse, where they city.
the migrant pickers.
were to hold a noon rally.
Valsq uez sa id FI ,()(' Lc:: . ~ l ~ ·
Severa l gpeakers will
address the crowd , all talking
on the them ''Justice for
Farm Workers ."
About 200 of the st rikers, Vrterans Memorial Hospital
Pcnlue : Linda Hud ge rs: Jay
who be gan wa.lkin g last
Adm i tt~d Cat he rine St iles: Ru.ssdl Sti\•crson ;
weekend from the fields of Brown. Middle port : Barbara BarlHII'C:I Swa n : Nul a
northeast Ohio to Col urn bus, Smith . Middleport : Nancy Swisher : Hti mld Thomas:
arrived Thu r sday night. Pullins. Middleport ; Gladys Georg&lt;' Vurch : Phylli s
Several hundred more were Nicholson. Rutland ; Mary · Wamt'r ; Lousela Whit e :
to .arrive today by bus.
Da vis. Rut la nd : Reese Pettrica Whit e.
A spokesman said the Williams. Pomeroy; Edward
Birth
workers hope W gain support LeMaster . Pomeroy.
Mr. Cl llti Mrs. John Wuyan.
from sever a I groups at Ohio
Di sc harge d - Jo Ann sun, ApfJicGruvc. W. Va .
State who are sympathetic to Mc La ug hlin , Ma rgaret
Di&gt;&lt;·harges, Sept 7
Lheir cause .
Barrett, Virginia Riffle .
!.is• Ba xter ; Huward Bir·
The workers engaging in
chfield : Patl'iea Rlevr ns:
the 100 mile march were
l..i:lw l'enc.:c Crtii g; Thomas
callil)g for a boycott of two of
(\H nmuns : MelissCI Oemp~
the nation's largest tomato
sl'y: Frank • Doss: Sha ron
Hullt'r Mt·dkal Ct·nlt"r
products firms and for a
Duff: Luci ll e Frey: Hichard
Diseharges, Sept. 6
boycott of Ohio's crops .
(
;I essne r : E r nes t
Mr .s.
The migrants struck the Flo rcii L'l' Barrett : Haze l EI'IJcst H&lt;i ylcy a11d tJ&lt;:tughtcr ;
tomato fields in northwestern Bt'lhel : !.aura Boutell: Chloia Mrs. r. il bcrt Hl.!nry anti sun:
Ohio two weeks ago at the Cam pbt'll : Clll'ryl Church: Elinore Hulluwily : William
peak of the growing season to W.snJa COO!Jt'r : Hycm Crisp:
.Jirln rson : Huth Karr ; Roy
back up demands for higher · llultw Goff : Mildred Har·t :
!.usher : Huward McCoure:
Alin·
l
.oc
klletr
t
;
Son
ja
wages and better working
.J
ulln Md)cmiel: Kllthlecn
Marks: J cr~ m r M&lt;:tthcm·y ,
conditions.
Me
Wil lia m o: Mi c hilel
Bald ema r Val as qu ez. ~.ssi t• Pat tcrs.ull . Winfield MdVilliet m8: Anna Nease ~

.

Ro~ rts;

Cory Rose;
Shamblin ; Evcrttc
Sha rp : Til bit ha S hee ts:
Ma bel Shci ld&lt;: Rcnil VanSrckle : M•ry WcbiJ.
Births
Mr. illld Mrs, i.•n·y
Wallace, su11 . Oak 1·1111
f:\'et. inc

FISCAL
PROGRAM

(JOLF RESULTS
Meigs 203
Scott McKin'ney 43; Rob
Davis 50 ; J . R. Wamsley 51 ;
Fred Young 59 ; Chu ck
Kennedy 60.
Warren Local195
Mark King 44 : Mark Aebi
4~ ; Scott Wynn 48 ; Stephen
Chevalier 58 ; Nate Proctor
60 .

Got droopy dollars'!
Tune up with th e po wer pair.
A Savings Accou nt Io ea rn high int eres t.
A Cht:cking A cc\l unt tn organ ize spending.
Give )'&lt;' ursc lf a li ft.

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

Meigs record 0-1.
SEOAL record 0-0.
Next match ·- Monday,
Se pt. II, Wellst on and
Gallipolis at Riverside Golf
Co urse, Mason. W. Va .

HOMECOMING SET
There
wi 11
be
a
homecoming Sunday at the
Orange Christian Church,
located between Alfred and
Lottridge on county road 53.
Worship service will he
held at 9:30 a.m., Sunday
Schoo l at 10 :30 with a basket
lunch at noon . Afternoon
services will he at 1:30 p,.m.
Guests will be Mr . and Mrs.
Scott Bryant , students of
Kentucky Christian College .
Every one is welcome to
attend .

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 9th
UNTIL 6 P.M.

UfAMILY PICNIC
OF

BOILERMARKERS LOCAL
NO. 667

CA.MDEN -PARK
U. S. 60.WEST

E'ITA YOUNG
Powell of Mason ; three sons,
Etta Young, 86, West William H. Young, New
Columbia." died at 1:40 p,m. ' Haven ; George H. Young,
Wednesday in the Holzer Gallipolis, and James F .
Medical Center following a Young, Letart; 20 grand.
children,
23
great·
long illness.
She was born June 16, 1892 grandchildren and one great1n West Columbia, to the late great-grandchild.
Jim and Cice ro Nichols
Funeral services will be
Hoffman.·
Saturday 2 p.m. in the CrowShe was preceded In death Hussell Funeral Home with
by her husband, William the Rev. George Hoschar
Young .
officiating. Burial will be in
Survivors in clude three Suncrest Cemetery.
daughter s, Mrs . Mildred
Friends may call at the
Brumley , Gallipolis, and funeral home after 2 p.m.
Mrs. Doris Eads of Pt. Friday.
Pleasant. and Mrs. Voneda

HUNTINGTON

confirmed ·by developer

STANFORD, Conn. IUPIJ
_ The Conoco Cool Developmen! Co. announced today it
had "1·eaffi1·med" its inten·
lions to build a $300 million
cool gasificativn plant in Noble Cuw•ty, Ohio, l&gt;ut a final
~ ecisi on on construction
depends un the federal
guvennnent.
Jilek Lord , a spokesman for
Cunoco, wltich is a subsidiary
uf Continental Oil Col., said
u1e decision to go with the Noble County site was made
after ' Conoco officials had
considered thelr sites
1
1 because of various teciUiical
1
Letters of opinion are welcomed . They should he less 1 reilsuns.
I than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor I 1
I and must be signed with the signee's address . Names may 1.
I be withheld upon publication. However, on request, 1
I names will be disclosed. Letten; should be in good taste, I
I
I addressing Issues, not personalities .

meet the pil!nt's process re·
quiremenb already tTosses
the site, a gas pipeline on the
site and an adequate sourc-e
of water is about five miles
away. ·
In additon, Conoco said,
"environmental work to date
has disclosed no problems
wltich might prevent is·
suant-e of Envirorunental
ProtedionAgenc-ypennits".
Conoco officiaLs also noted
the "strong and highly
positive attituda and support
of the people of Ohio and
especially Noble . County"
wward the project. Lord said
· construt'lion operation of the
plant would he financed even·
ly by the Department Energy
and' ConOt-o. Lord !lllid · the
DOE has already spent $22
tnlllion in the design of the ·
plan!.
·
I
" The decision w gu or nut
go is in the hands of De]lllrt·
ment of Energy," st~id Lord .
Lord said another project
I TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) - the entire southern district of to gasify eastern coal Ls in II·
Military troops fired Into a Tehran and the sister city of linois and the DOE would procrowd of anti-Shah protesters Rey, &gt;¥ith bursts of gunfire ilHI&gt;Iy have to make a chok-e
today killing up to 250 people, audible every few minutes. .between Ohio and Illinois.
The residential area
Lord 1111id ConOt-o bad
eyewitnesses said, and
around
the Iranian Air Force l.elited t'Oal found in the Noble
helicopters roamed over
Tehran to enforce a martial base at Farahabad was County area at a pilot lant in
law imposed in. 12 Iranian blockaded by troops and Scotland.
At first the process didn't
residents were trapped Inside
cities.
their
homes.
work
but with a modification
Leaders of the opposition to
of
the
process it changed NoThe
tanks
rumbled
into
Shah Mohammed Reza
firing
Into
the
air,
ble
County
t'Oal into gas
Tehran,
Pahl avi were rounded up in
within
hours
of
a
declaration
without
any
problem
.
their homes in an early
" It rt!l!IIY •· Jrks. We hope
morning government crack· of martial law in the capital
down against dissents that and II other cities to counter the decisi. of the DOE is
government favorable btcause we want to
the
bega n Thursday with the what
imposition of martial law in described as a plot to over· build and operate tlwt plant,"
Sllid Lord.
throw the shah.
major urban areas.
Bursts of machine gun fire
Government troops fired
into crowds gathering for a
demonstration in . East
Tehran's Zhaled Square.
Eyewitness reports said up
to 250 people were killed and
scores more wounded.
The water supply In the
area was cut off later in the
day , witnesses said.
Riotin~t spread to nearly

r--------------------------1

I

l .8~
lI ••• ~.. ~:. _ _
Appreciation is extended
Dear Editor :
Please allow me to take this opportunity on behalf of the
Meigs County React Team to extend thanks and appreciation
to all who contributed w our Memorial Day "Coffee Break"
held May 27.
"REACT" stands for fuldio Emergency Association
Citizens Teams. We are a national association of citizens
teams who volunteer their assistance and provide a citizens
two-way radio cCITlmunications in local emergencies. Even
though we are an important part of the national organization,
we are equally important as a local organization; having our
own officers and volunteers who monitor ChaMel 9 to help
anyone who may be In distress within our transmitting area. If
you are an operator of a citizens band radio, keep in nnind that
F .C.C. ruling reserves CB Channel 9 for "emergencies and
motorists assistance" nationally. If you do not receive
assistance on Channel 9, any of the forty CB Olannels may be
used for emergency . However, they should be cleared by
anyone who is not Involved In the emergel!cy. One of our teain
members (Grandma ) monitors Channel!9.
If at anytime, anyone is In need of motorlsts aasistance
(IQ..I6) or emergencies (11).33 ), please ask for Meigs County
React on Channel9 lor prompt action as you may be received
via "skip" . Remember w give enct location (lll-20) and
include city and state. Motirists assistance Includes requests
for road service, motor trouble, request for information
necessary to reach destination, report accidents, stalled cars,
e"'. Emergencies covers anything that threaterts the safety of
life or property.
If you are in doubt concerning F.C.C. regulations for CB
rules, we have up-to-&lt;late copies available.
Meigs County React meets the first Friday of the month at
7 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Building. We Invite the public to
see what "React" is all about.
·
Sincerely,
Do!Ula Stewart, Reporter
Meigs County React Team

·Logan
!Continued from page I I

SEEKS DIVORCE
Filing lor divorce in Meigs
Count y Common Pleas C01.rt
were Gary F . Hyse' l,
.P1~ne roy , against Carol n
Lee Hysell, Middleport .

. l.,].'

Area Deaths Construction intentions
I
I
I

I
I
I

be raised for salary in·
creases.
Strikes continued in the
Tallmadge school district in
Swrunit County where most
of the system's 180 teachers
were off the job but schools
r emain ed open for the
district 's 3,500 students and in
the Lima Shawnee School
District where 1~0 teachers
were off the job, schools were
also open lor the system's
· 3,400 students.

"Howtiver, after weighing
the tedmical reasons against
factors, including costs,
siting and t!nvirorunental t'Oil·
sideratiuns, the company has
c-oncluded Uwt the Noble
County location - · a 1,444acre tract near Sarahsville is best suited for the project,"
U&gt;e company said in a state'
men!.
In ~ letter to . the U. S.
Departnient of Energy, Con·
ocu said the Noble County site
is " advantageously located"
because a long tenn sourc-e of
Ohio cool is adjacent to U1e
site, a power line wltich can

NEWLY ENACTED regulations, instituted by Common
Pleas Judge Ronald R. Calhoun, foc the governance of the
Gallia Oounty jail, will, according to Sheriff's Department

officials, reduce the cell -capacity of the facillty by ~arly
two-thirds , while raising the cost of operation by thousands of
dollars a year.
·
·

VOL 13

FRANK RICIIARDS ·and daughters with two of eleven Engllsh setter pups.
Sara, 2, the blonde, holds "Patches," who belongs to Laurie, 5. These two pup!! and
their nine brothers and sisters were born Aug. 1- on Laurie's fifth birth&lt;jay;
theref&lt;re, ohe was given "Patches" as her birthday gift. (See page A-2 story and
additional pictures).

'

MIDDLEPORT - The pastor of the
Middleport and Syracuse Presbyterian
Olurches {&lt;r the past seven years and
moderator of the Harrisonvllle
Presbyterian Church, Rev. Dwight L.
Zavll.!, plana to retire as of Sept. 30. After
serving a• a layman for a number of years,
Rev. Zavitzaccepteda call to the Christian
Ministry over 33 years ago, serving a
small church in Saginaw, Mich.
In 1&amp;48, Pastor and Mrs. Zavll.! moved
South, where Mf. Zavitz served churches
In George and Virginia for the next 10
years. The family, including two boys,
moved back North In 1958, and have served
churches fn Indiana and Ohio for the past
:!ll years.
Mr. Zavil.! tool\ his wtdergraduate work
at Marion College, Marlon, Ind., and
C&lt;lllpleted his graduate study for the
Christian Ministry at Union Theological

made by squads
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered two calls
Thursday night.
At 6: 12 p.m., the squad
went to 118 Union Ave. for
Reese Williams who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted there. ·
At 8:30 p.m. the unit went to
168 Mulberry Ave. for Judith
Bacon , who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Income tax
estimate filings
due Sept. 30
GALUPOLIS- City Tax Commissioner
Edith C. Crosier issued a reminder yestcr·
dity that ~veryone who eetnJt!d income in
Gallipolis must file his de&lt;:i«ratiun of
estimated tax on or before Sept.
30 - everyunc, U\Ht is, whose employer
does not withhold city income taxes from
their wages .
Sept. 30 Is the deadline for half the
declared estimate, and O.C. 31 Is the
deadline for fllin~ the estimate un the
balance of U1e dty incume tax .
This filin~ Is required by Section 27.67 of
Ordinance No. 78-30.
Also, lh~ city lax commissioner said Uwt
paytnenls for June •nd July witl~1oldings
shuuld all be retumed by now. If not, inwrest will bt' "dded at the rate of one-half
&lt;1 one percent per month: the Aug Wit
withholding payme11t will be due on or
before Sept. 30.
The fon1111 for filin g are avail«ble at the
lox offlt-e In tl&gt;e Municipal Huildilt~ .
•

r-v,,:,....,..,..

svVAN

Seminary of Richmond . Va.
The Zavitzs plan to move back to
Virginia after they retire where they will
reside at The Chester Town Houses
Apartments, Chester, Va ., which is In the
proximity of Richmond . Their oldest son ,
Dwight, Jr., who serves on the editorial
staff of The Richmond News Leader, lives just .west of Richmond at
Midlothian . Their younger son, John, is an
Estate Lawyer with Sutin , Thayer and
Brown Professional Cooperation and
resides in Santa Fe, N. M.
After taking some time to reevaluate
their capabilities and get!lng adjusted to
retirement living, Pastor and Mrs. Zavltz
hope to set some new goals for the next
decade of life, do som~ traveling in the
United States, and seek limited
employment that 18 coouneqsurate with
their abilities at this junctw-e in their lives.
The Zavltzs appreciate the privilege they
have had of serving in Meigs County and
cherish the warmth and friendlinesa of the
people of this area.
The Middleport and Syracuse
Presbyterian Churches wlll be served by
an Interim minister, wttil arrangements
can be made for new leadenhlp.

account for the deposit of the inmates'
money , the establishment of· a com· missary or · j':,tore call" from which
prisoners may purch8se certain personal
items, and the issuance of jail uniforms for

all irunates.
Sheriff Montgomery stated Friday
that he had no objection to the rules , except on a practical basis. "To enact these
re gulations would cost thousands of
dollars, and I don't know where the money
is going to cume from ," the Sheriff said.
"The department is currently grossly
wtderstaffed," Montgomery coritinued,
"to meet the state average of 1.2 deputies
for every I ,000 population, we need to hire
an additional 16 deputies ."
The Sheriff's department at present
has 15 deputies, working three shifts.
" I obviously want to maintain a safe,
clea n and healthy jail," the Sheriff said,
"but I'm really more concerned with
adequate law enforCement and crime
prevention.''
Department officials indicated that
enactment of the regulations specifying
"prisoner , separation~· would cause a
major problem, m that the new rules
would drastically reduce the facility's
capacity to lodge inmates.
Unde r Section Il of the new
regulations, the foll owing prisoner
!Continued on A-2)

tntitttl
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

•I

•

lbree

P"r80DB

Eastern Ave., at approximately 4:30
p.m;, Saturday.
•
An auto dr!vea by Priscilla E.
Dayton, 24, Galllpolls, travelillg east oa
Eastern Ave .. was struck to the rlgbt
side while attemplfog o left tum In the
Suporlor Car Wash, by a west bound
vehicle driven by Barbara Ann
Hueholt, Z2, Bloomoburg, Pa. Hueholt
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center by SEOEMS. Two llllfdealllied
pa•sengers In the Huebolt auto were
transported by the Gallla Volunteer
Squad to Holzer Medl&lt;al Center.

Work to start
:lion (l,if
..J -y on

FIRE gutted the Gallipolis Terminal Co., 1528 Eastem A~(C ., Saturday when a
blaze of undetermined &lt;rigln began in the garage section of the building. The
Gallipolis City Fire Department, aided by unit:; from the Middleport-Pomeroy F.
D., responded to the call at approximately 2:30p .m. Flames, and heavy smoke
spread throughout the building and into the adjoining Voto Manufacturing Sales

new traffic light

eo. •

1r~1

MARIETTA - A spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Highways, Division 10
Office, here, announced Saturday work
will begin on the installation of a new
traffic light Monday at the Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza.
Plaza merchants and other Interested
individuals have been working on the
project lor the past three years. The light.
was funded through contrlb~tions of
existing businesses and area individualS.
Just last Tuesday night, Gallipolis City
Commissioners signed an ordinance approving work by the Ohio Department of
Highways.
Since the Plaza opened, tbe area h86
G;\1 .LI POLIS - Nation•lly renowned
Ci•rcncc McCabe will be the principal had a high accident rate.
speaker next Satu1·d•y in the Gallia County Junior Fairground for 115th allniver.sary edebraUon of llnculn's Ermmcipctli ul• Proclamation.
McCabe, l7 , a st&gt;niur at G• llia Academy
High School, is one uf two internatiotwl
vice-presidents of Koy Clubs ' Kiwanissponsored yuuth serviee clubs. He is the
lughest-•·a nking Key Club official from
Ohio since the or·gcmir.ation bt!gan.
This sununer he sang at the Ohio State
POMEROY - Sheriff James Proffitt's
Fair with the aii.Oitio slllte youth choir and department has charged Terence D. Lee,
is" membt'r of the GAHS symphonic choir 19, Pennsboro, W. Va. with carrying a
and
GAHS Madgrigals.
concealed weapon following a fight Friday
Amon~ num~rous lucal, ~\.Qtt!, ~:t.nd mt- night at the Sout"hern·Federal Hocking
tiunal activihes, McCabe is a mt:mOOr or foot ball game.
·
Key Club lntem•tional executive cununitAccordin'g to the report, Lei was in·
tce, d!Himum of the' Key Club Interna- volved In a small altercation. While
tional committee on awards, and was ruun- fighting, a loaded ,25 caliber automatic
t'tl to " Who's Who among Americl:m High pistol fell from his jacket pocket. Lee was
S&lt;'huol Students.''
lodged in the Meigs Collllfy Jail pending a
Subject uf his speed\ will be, "We 've hearing.
Cume a Long W•y."
Another person held In the county jail
pending a hearing Is 27-year old Theron P.
Stelnlger, Oxford, charged in Teus w!th
the unauthoriZed use of a motor vehicle.
Steiriiger was arrested lut week upon
a
routine
check by lherUI's deputies.
MEETING CANCELLED
According to the report, Steiniger was
POMEROY,- The Disabled American
Veterans September meeting has been hitchhiking on SR 7. When deputies
checked, it was learned Stelnlger was
cancelled.
. They wlll hold a picnic instead for wanted In Teus.
members and wives at Forest Acres Park,
New Lima Road, Tuesday, Sept. 12, at 6
EXTENDED FORECAST
p.m. Those attending are to bring a
Moaday ......... Wedlleaday, 1
covered dish.
cba... af allnerl .. -ten Oblo
Moodloy, ~MIIH IDly warm period.
FUNDS DISTRmUTED
POMEROY - State Auditor Thomas HJcllo wm 1oe .. 11oe 'ltl. ,.....,. wDI
E . Ferauson's office reports the
nee• ,,_ 11oe IIIIIJIIIa 111M lawer •
dlltrlbuUon of $177,781.&amp;17.66 in 1978 Jo. eariJ 111-r HI ~ 1110 low to mid
tangible tuea on financial institutions and Ill .TIINIIay ... Wetlmday.
.
securillea clealerr to Ohio'• 88 coWJtles.
Meip County received $124,206.12.

McCabe to be main
speaker Sept. 16

Man cited by

Meigs sheriff

FIre levels mobile· home
GALLIPOLIS - Fire completely home's $3,500 contents was saved.
destroyed a moblle home owned by Fred . Cox told firemen that when an automatic
Cox, 25, located on Georges Creek Rd., smoke alarm went off, he opened the door
during an early morn ing blaze Saturday. to the bathroom, where a washer and
The Gallipolis City Fire Department dryer were ruMing, and flames rushed out
was called to the scene. approximately one Into the passageway.
.
•
mile west of SR 7, on Georges Creek, at
Oox sustained minor bums to the right
1:21 a.m.
·
arm and the right side of the face, and was
The department reports that flames treated at the scene by firemen.
consumed the entire dwelling, valued at
Cause of the blaze; which originated in
$9,000. Appro~imately 1200 of the mobile the bathroom. is listed as .unknown .

Speaker named for conference
GALUPOUS - Dr. Charles V. Petty
will be In Gallipolis oo Sept. 15 and 16 to
lead the Family Life Enrichment
COOference, sponsored by the Gallia
County Ministerial Association .
Dr. Petty was born In England, Ark. He
received his Bachelor of Arts degree from
the Ouachita Baptist Universliy, his
Bachelor of Divinity from SouthwestPrn
Baptist Theological Seminary and his
Doctor of Theology from the same
seminary.
Dr. Petty has pastored congregations in
Arkansas aod Texas. He has done summer
mission work in Ghana, West Africa, the
Bahama Islands, and the state of

-

REV. DWIGHT ZAvn'Z

ELBERFELDS IN POMbOY

• GAI..LIPOL.IS -

were injured In a two-car crash oa

Burkett was report'ed home from the
hospital and William G. Beal was reported
confined to the Veterans Hospital in
Dayton.
Charles Swatzel reported on a recent
trustees and past commanders meeting
and also on the county fair pollee work of
the post. Some 51 members put in 5&gt;4\'z
hours working during the fair . A party lor
members who helped with the project has
been set for Sept. 24 at the hall.
Don Stjvers reported that membership
now stands at 199. The membership of
Robert E. Hartenbach was reinstated and
Chester Mundry, Jr~. and William Sorden
were accepted as ·new members. Joe
Zwilling announced that the department
chaplain has been Invited to Pomeroy for
the observance of Four Cha~s Day.
Refreshments were served by Charles
Hayes.

u..,

CAR CLUB
Gallla Car ClUb 11 belltg
formed. If interested, meet at
Bob Slunden Service Center,
llecond Ave. and Pine St.,
Sepl. II, 7:30 p.m. For more
information, call David
McCoj, ...... 18.

'

· 1.:"

·--~----~~------------~~~~~·

the sheriff to maintain a separate trustee

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1978

POMEROY - The building program
of Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion , to construct a new post home near
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, has been
shelved for the time being.
This was the decision at a Friday's
post meeting, when Paul Casci of the
building committee reported on progress
being made. Lack of Interest in the project
was given as the reason for giving up the
plans for the new post home at the present
time . Only some 25 percent of the membership responded to an opinion poll
conducted by the post.
During the meeting presided over by
Rodney Karr, commander, Homer Smith
gave a report on the swnmer baseball
program and a check wa s received in the
amount of $25 for the building fund . The
check was given in memory of Sherry
Marshall by the unit's auxiliary . Eddie

Pastor to retire on September 30

a-·

Interviewed Friday, Sheriff Mont·
gomery stated that he had requested an
updating of the regulations which govern
the operation of the jail, but that he had not
expected a document as " imposing'' as the
one he received frorn the Common Pleas
Judge.
"There is sim.ply no way we can meet
many of these regulations," the Sheriff
said, "The department ju;1 doesn't have
the money."
The regulations enacted by Judge
Calhoun call for the iinsta llation of a video
monitoring system which wo uld allow for
24 hour a day surveillance of at least one
area of the jail, the Installation of a "key
monitoring system" that would record the
jailer's rounds, as well as the employment
of jail physician to be on call 24hours a day
to administer medical care to thf inmates.
The new regulations furth er call for

Legion building
project shelved

Emergency runs

IGI1 utuiiJ filed Airl

u;rrection'." .

tmts

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

NO. 32

In LAKKY t:WING
GA I.LIPOUS - Commbn Ploas Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun releaaed last week a12page document specilflng a new set of
rules, re"gulations and procedures for the
operation of the Gallia County Jall, and the
conduct of the inmates lodged therein.
The document , which was filed with
the Clerk of Common Pleas Court, directs
Sheriff James Montgomery , and all his
deputies, to comply with the new
regulations, " at the earliest possible
date ."
Judge Calhoun's ruling supe,cedes all
jail rules previously In effect. Operation of
the facility had previously been governed
by a set of regulations enacted in 1949 by
Oommon Pleas Judge . Robert M. Betz.
The document releaaed by Judge
Calhoun states that the new regulations
ar'e being enacted, "In accordanc~ with
the request of the Gallia County Sheriff,
the recomm endation of the Gallia County
Grand Jury , the latest Federal Court
decisions, the newly enacted provisions of
· the Ohio Reviaed Code, and the newly
adopted recommendation of the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and

•

unba

Military:troops
l kill protesters
l

for th e system's 37 ,000
students on !he fir s! day of
classes and were expected to
be open today .
The
Middleport
The school board sought a
Emergency Squad was called
court order Thursday ordering tea chers ba ck to work,
to Route I, Cheshire at !Q:27
but Judge Ca rl Kessler
p.m . Thursday for Vera
postponed a decision until 9
Stewart, who was taken to a.m. today. He said he would
Holzer Medical Center.
order dail y contrat1 talks
At 6:07p.m. the unit went to
with a federal mediator if the
the school playground where
teachers would retum to
an unidentified child had
work.
fallen from a slide. The child
Tuday's special is yester- was treated on the scene by
But, the Dayton Education
day
's b~d guess by the chef.
Association rejected that idea
the squad.
·
and said its members would
remain out.
Thur sday was also th•
beginning of th e third year of
busing for deseg regation
purposes in the Dayton school
system.
The Dayton teachers say
the board of education has
refused to give them any pay
raises for two years. The
board claims it has no money
for salary increases.
In Cleveland, pickets were
100'1. ~ ICI nylon
111.
up at the city 's 126 schools
Thursday which was a
preparation
day
for
teacher s.The · first day of
THE TOUCH OF LUXURY YOU DESERVE
school for the rlty's 100,000
students is today .
The prestige dren shlrtl' 'f!le toucl) of juxury 'll1d sen·
Negotia~ors
for
the
SUOUI
comfort. Incredibly 10ft and IUprtmtly flattering.
Cleveland'
Boa rd
of
In
surprisingly
practical 100%
nyton. Fabric by ·
Educa tion and the coalition of
Klopman.
Van
0-WIIen
you
Wll11
to
feel 11 great u
school employee unions claim
you look. $17.50 Alao available In elegant pattems.
they have been ''hamstrung"
by conditions set down by the
state in prohibiting the ex, Be sure to see all the otllt_! '" 'W dr... and
penditure of .20.7 million in
shirts In the Min's DlpWtmtnt - lit
emergency state school aid
loor.
· .~
on wage increases.
Both side demanded !hat
.
'
Ure state controlling buard 11ft
the funding restriction aa
1100n as possible su money can

.

.

,

I

COLUMBUS I UPI )
Several hundred st r ikmg
migrant fartn workers
arrived late Thursday night
in the Capital City,. prepared
. to march on the Statehouse
today to try and ga in support

Marion

moderated aomewhat Iince JDid.lummer, diWiy beca1111 of
decllnes In fOO(I priCH. Prlc:ea of !*~'food ltema have In·
creased at about !be -.me riPid rate throuihout lbe yNr.
AdminlstratiQII ecGnamlc plamen worry !hat !be riPid
advance of non-lood ltema ml&amp;ht llall eftCII'II to queD ~Uon.
Food prtcee have rt.en ilharply foe' Jdne llralght montha untO
July's 0.3 percent drop.
Beef and veil Jrlcea feU apln lut month. But picea for
pork and dairy _products lurned up uroewl..t lifter decllnlns In
July, !be department uld. ,
. Fish prices incre.ae a Uttle mere than in Ju)y, poulbly
indicallng that there Ia IDne conaumer relillence to high meat
coots.

----------- . . ·····" -------------1

workers' march today

HOSPITAL NEWS

popularity with the public and forced the administration to ·
toughen the fight against inflation.
The White House is expected to announce a second phase of .
an anti-inflation program later this month . The revamped
program reportedly may contain voluntary wage-price
guidelines.
·
The administration has predicted that inflation will be about
8 percent by year-end , considerably above previous
expectations.
The 0.1 percent drop in wholesale prices last month
compared with an 0.5 percent increase in July and 0.7 percent
rises in both June and May .
Inflation at both the consumer and wholesale levels has

DR. CIIRLES PE1TY

Washington . He was Associate Director of
the Olristlan life Commission of the
Texas Baptlst Commission. Currently, Dr.
Petty serves as Director of the Council on
Olristian Ule and Public Affairs for the
Baptist State Convention of North
Carolina.
He lives with his wife, Jannie Brewer,
dl•d his two sons, Anthony Charles, 10 and
J•remy Charles, 7, In Raleigh, N.C. Dr.
Petty speaks about lamlly relationship!!
oot just from books he has read nor
profesaors he bas heard, lilt !rCITl the
great teacher, experience, too.
Dr. Otarles Petty may be heard on Sept.
15and 16at 7:30p. m. at the Church &lt;f. the
Nazarene. Also during the day on Saturday
he will Jl'estlt a special lecture on
"Parenting" at 10 a. m. At 12 nooo he will
meet with senior high otudenta over a free
lunch to talk about "DaUhg and
SeJ:Ulllity." At 3 p. m. he will deal with the
topic "Communication Clearly."
The conference is open to all interested
citizens. There will be a free will offering
to help psy for expenses. Some of the
expenses are being paid through a grant
from the Gallia-Jackson-Melgs Cowtty
Mental Health and Retardation 848 Hoard.
There will be qualified ' nursery care
provided lor babies and toddlors. Younger
children through the third &amp;rade will be
entertained with movies lhown during the
lectw-es .
SQUAD RUN
POMEROY
The PomeroY·
emergency squad answered a call to Rose
Hlllat 10:~ p.m. Friday lor Unda Dickena
who was taken to Veter1111 Memorial
Hoapltal where she was treated and
released.

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