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•

'

10-The DaUv sentinel. Mlddleoort.Pomerov. 0 .. Monday. Oct. 2,1978

I

i--A~e--a---D--e-~a--th------1

Dam. • ·

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(Continueo from page I)
a cost of $213 millon; another
single lock structure with
provisions for a future lock,
costing $190 million; and the
continuation of the existing
projects at a cost of $64
million.
If any of the alternatives
are adopted, besides the
continuation project, up to 560
acres of land could be used
primarily
to- deposit
materials
from
the
rxcavation. No families
reportedly
would
be
relocl!ted.
Besides the presentation by
the Corps of Engineers.
people from the public were
given an opportunity to
speak. While many of those
speaking did support the
concept that the locks either
need
renovation
or
replaCement, some came out
against it.
One Mason County resident
said he did not believe any
additional ·money should be
spent on the locks and dams

··

S l

·

. HARVEY BLAIN
A prominent Mason County
farmer,
Harvey
Otho
Browni e Blain,.
61, Southside, died Saturday
in Holzer Medical Center
after a short illness. He was
born March 3, 1911, Mason
County, to Mary Donnally
Austin Blain, Point Pleasant,
. and the late Byrd Otho
Blain who died in 19n: He
was preceded in death by one
brother, Byrdie Austin Blain
in 1970. He attended the
Beech Hill United .Methodist
Church. ·
·
Surviving in addition to his
mother, Is his wife, Ruth
Melton Blain ; two daughters,
Mrs. Ruth Ellen Sommer,
Southside, and Mrs. Nancy
Ann Blevins, Bidwell; three
sons,. Harvey David and
Charles Richard Blain, both
· of Point Pleasant, and Robert
Reed Blain, Gallipolis. One
sister, Mrs. Marjorie White,
POint Pleasant, and 10

grandchildren.
.
Funeral services will be
Tu~sday 2 p.m. in the Beech
Hill United Methodist Church
with the Rev .Bennie Stevens
and the Rev. Fred D. Me·
Callister officiating. Burial
will be in the church cemetery . The body will be taken
to the church one hour prior
to services.
Friends may call at the
Wilco•en Funeral Home
today from 31o 9 p.m. In lieu
of nowers, contributions may
be made to the memorial at
the Beech Hill Uni!ed
Methodist Church.
Active pallbearers are
Randy Blain, Roger Hopson,
Ernest Kay, Dexter Dowell,
Lannie Williamson and John
• Musgrave.
Honorary pallbearers are
Madison Bowles, William
Stanley, John Lewis, Jinuny
Shadle, Albert MCoy, James.
Hopson, Preston Anderson
and. Grant Stanley.

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1

'

ARMSTRONG
FLOOR COVERINGS
Designed and created by people for
!'eople - Floors that bring your
mdoor ~~rid_ more variety, vitality
and orrgmahty than ever before.
Floors for today's living.

and said instead
of the
could bemuch
alleviated
if river traffic were
controlled more.
Ed Bumgarner, who said
he was representing Com·
missioner of Agriculture Gus
Douglass, said they were not
against any particular
renovation project, but the
· Corps of Engineers should
strongly consider not using
prime agricultural land for
the project. He told Bichir ~o
consider soil erosion and land
use before making a decision
and suggested that · the
_
~oblems

replacement pruject be done KBLE S'fAR'I'S
elsewhere.
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
It was brought out during KBLEOhlo, the city's fourth
the meeting that it could take cable television system and
oa tow a!ld its barges up tp six the ooly, such black-owned
hours to Jock through the operation in the nation, began
Gallipolis facility and ac- operations Sunday_ when It
cording to a representative went on-line at the Mt .
frum the American Com·"" Vernon Plaza a residential
merical Barga Line this structure er..:ted two years
means an additional _$250 per ago with federal funds as a
hour costs. It was potnled out black cmunercial enterprise.
that it normally takes an hour
KBLE-Ohio President
for a hoat to lock through any William T. Joh!IBOO said more
of the other 12 locks and dam than 80 percent of t)le
facilities located on the Ohio potential audience had made
River.
.
Initial subscriptions for the
Other speakers advocating two-way cable televisio!l
ihe construction of a one or service, the fourth to go into
two lock facility, referred to operation in .separate
this facility as the bottleneck Colilmbus regions.
·
of the Ohio River, saying it is
the only one on the Ohl~iver
which does not have a I ,200
foot lock.
A .,s pokesman for Ken·
•
tuckians for Better. Tran· RECORD .CROWDS
sportation, said the consumer
PENINSULA, Ohio (UPI)
ultimately pays for the delays - A ·record attendance of
and highter costs. Speaking 569,427 for the recent season
in favor of a replacement - 40,000 more people than
project, he said it would attended last year -has been
mean additional jobs also for · reported by Blossom Music
the area.
Center.
Written statements sup· · Thls year's attendance also
porting a replacement was the highest In Blo9som 's
project were given by W.Va. . 10-year history.
Senator Jennings Randolph
The Barry ManUow perforand Ohio Congressman 1llllllces In July attracted the
Clarence E. Miller.
largest total attendance by a
single ~rformer in Blossom
history :.... 54,420 for three
ASK TO WED
nights.
Marriage licenses were
issued to David Orville
Watson, 21, Rt. I, Pomeroy,
and Betty Christina Morlan,
20, Rt. I, Reedsville; Carol AUfOS DESTROYED
CLEVELAND (UP!)- A
Lee Gilmore, 36, Rt. I,
building
housing .Dixoo Auto
Rutland and Mary Ann
Body
on
Cleveland's East
Pierce, 30, Rt. I, Rutland.
Side was destroyed, as were
eight ·cars · inside the

Three injured ·in .one of
nine area ·weekend wrecks
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
nine weekend accidents.
Three persons were injured
in a Iwo-vehicle collision
Saturday,l\t41:20p.m., on SR
7 at the junclion of Second
Ave ., in Kanauga.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Larry CUrry, 39,
~anauga, pulled into the path
· of .a vehicle driven by Tom
Neal, 30, Poca, W. Va., while
attempting a left turn onto
Second Ave.
A passenger in the Neal
auto, Lawrence Mayes, 59,
Kanauga, displayed visible •·
signs of injury and was transportt)d to Holzer· Medical
Center where he was treated
and released. ·
Two passengers in the
Curry vehicle, Barbara
Curry, 6, and April Curry, 9,
displayed visible ' signs ·of
injury and were transported
to . Holzer Medical Center,
where they were treated and
released.
Curry was cited on charge
,

1
I

AT NOON ON THURS.) ST., POMEROY.

1 by firefighters, who took
1 . about an hour to bring t)le

EAST COURT

· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • blaze under control.

someone happy
this Christmas.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sepl. %9)
l!llen
Ball,
Kelly
Bonecutter, Matthew
Bowden, Ronald Browning,
Kevin Byus, Mrs. Keith
Connode and son, Tina Casey,
Dee Cline, James Coe, Robert
Cosby, Mary Deer, GUBtavie
Dillon, Scott llonnley,·Darryl
Downard, Sharon Drummond, Mrs. Roger Garrett
and daughter, Joseph Griffin,
Mabel Halley, Timothy
Harvey, Virgil HixOn, Mary
Hoffman, Charles Howard,
Naomi Howell, Edward
Layton, Wilma Midkiff, Hazel
Montgomery, Thomas
l'ilceswanger, Matthew
Pierce, Richard Potts, James
Preston, Donald Price, Linda

Like a child you don't even know.
Ma_king youngster~ happy- is there anything better thai
you could do with your time·.) And, if that happy moment

co,ncs at Christmas. it tu ms for many children

&lt;t

sad time

into a happy one
Enter the Dres~- A ~ Ooi! TM Contest or lhl! Design-A-Toy fl.~.
Contest. You

fl'tUY panicipate in one or both. whatever you

choose . We furnish the doll and the toy. They are both
available now in our lobby . You dress the dol l, and those
enteri ng the toy ~o nte st need onl y assemble the toy from a
sheet of complete instructions and add whatever decoration
they choose to the exterior of the toy .·The roy. a·truck.
comes in three dillerent model!oi: log truck, fire· engine and
dump truck . We will give dolls and toys to needy boys and
girls in our area . Or e of our local org&lt;~nizations will help
distribu te them . They know where -the dolls and the toys are
most need ed . You would be surprised how many need
so much .
Along the way. your doll ,;nd toy will he on di splay in
ou r lobby and people from miles around will be fnvited to
see th em . Both dolls 11nd trucks will be judged and you can
even win a prize.
Make !"orne lillie girl or boy happy this Christmas and you
will have a h'appier Chris tmas too . Enter our Dress -A-Doii TM
or Dt;.o;;ign-A-Toy 11.' Contest. It costs you nothing but your
time to sew a do ll dress or assemble a truck. .

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

Invitation
accepted .Bidwell ••
..

'.

·.

..

'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Otpositcw
Member FedOIJI Otposit_IOsuranco Co&lt;poratoo

\

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Patsy Laudermilt, Racine.
Saturday Discharges Gertrude Swartz, Alice
~ussell,
Phyllis Cadle,
Mistee •Grueser, William
Morris, Alice Holliday,
Matthew Erwin.
.~.
Sunday· Admissions Harry Roush , Jr. , Mid·
dleport ; Vina Bailey, Reeds·
ville; Winfield Bailey, Reeds·
ville; Sue Walker, Pomeroy;
Charles Karr, Pomeroy~;
Betty Theiss, Racine ; Cora·
Jewell, Albany; Beatrice
Rairden, Hartford; Carl
Gheen, Pol!leroy.
Sunday· Discharges - Lois
Reitmire, Marion Hill, Vicki
Boso.
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;---..--w---CO--M--P-TO--N---0-D----, ~~~~t~{~·in:'ct"er;.i:~~e d~~
I
A• •
1
• •
I $65,000 damage there
:
OPTOMETRIST
I
Saturday.
.
1 OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 21o s ·ICL.OSE I No injuries were reported

-

of failure to yield.
an east bound auto driven by
There wsa moderate Theresa ' Shiffer,
27,
damage to both vehicles.
Pomeroy.
The patrol investiga_\!!d
According to the patrol,
four other accidents Satur· both vehicles Incurred
day.
moderate damage.
Officers were called to the
Smith was cited on charges
scene of a two-vehicle mishap .of failure to yield.
at 6 p,m., on SR 7, at the
Officers Investigated a onejunction of CR 82, in Meigs auto accident at 11 :50 p.m. on
County.
Utile Kyger Rd., two-tentlis
According to the patrol, an of a mile north of SR 7.
auto ·operated by Jerome ·- According to the patrol, an
Cook, 72, Shade, traveling auto operated by Robert
north, pulled Into the path of a Mitchell, 22, Cheshire, passed
north bound vehicle driven by off the left side of the road·
John Gibson, 18, Mansfield, way while t~ttempting to pass
while attempting a left tum. another vehicle.
Officers report moderate
The Mitchell auto went into
damage to both vehicles. · a field and overturned.
Cook was cited on charges
Mitchell was unlnjlired.
of failure to yield.
Officers report moderate
At 6:25p.m., the patrol was damage to the auto.
called to the scene of a twoAt 9:35 p.m., a vehicle
auto accident on Old U.S. 33, operated by !Wnald Barr, 18,
at the junction of CR 19, in Gallipolls, went out of control
Meigs County.
on wet ·pavement In a curve
Offic¢rs report that a on SR 160, one mile south of
vehicle operated by James Porter.
Smith, 60, Hemlock Grove,
The Barr auto passed off
pulled from 19 into the path of the roadway, struck a tree
and came to rest In a ditch.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Barr vehicle.
Barr claimed injury, but
Priddy, William Ramsey, was not immediately treated.
Frances Reigel, Anna
No citation was issued.
Robinson, Beverly Shaffer, ' Sundsy, at · 4:30 p.m., of·
Helen Sharp, James Shook, J. fleers investigated a one-auto
Stone, Faye Wallace, William accident on SR 160, two and
five-tenths of a mile north of
Wells, Ullian Wise.
SR 554.
(Births, Sept. 29
According to the patrol, a
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Manlin,
north liound auto operated by
son, MacArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lyons, .Cathleen Chapman, 18,
Vinton, went off the right side
son, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold of the roadway into a ditch .
Chapman ·wsa" cited on
McGuire, son, Gallipolis.
charges
of failure to drive on
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Manlin,
the
right
side of the roadway .
son and daughter, MacAr·
There
was moderate
thur.
damage to the vehicle.
(Discharges, Sept. 80)
At .7:40 a .m. Sunday, the
Irene Baxter, Norma
Brandenberry, Nina Burke, patrol investigated a oneAmanda Caudill, Vance vehiCle mishap on SR 141, 30
Cline, Virginia Day, Jason ft. east of SR 325.
Officers report that a west
Dunn, Eugene Fisher, Mark
Hammond, Deloris Hart, hound auto operated by Floyd
Garnet Hemsley, Christina Payne, 27, Waterloo, went out
Kerwood, I::rnestine Kisor, of conlfQI in a curve, passed
Kathleen Lawliss, William off the right side of the
Mays, Melissa Nance, Gary roadway, and struck a
Nibert, Mrs. Robert Pugh bulldlng owned by Herman
and
daughter,
Daria Wood, Patriot.
Offic~rs report ·moderate
Rayburn, Sherry Reynolds,
damage
to the auto, slight
Lillian Smith, David Sword,
Harold Thomas, Bethany damage to the building.
Payne was cited on charges
Tucker, Mrs. Kenneth Turley
and son, l'iancy VanMeter, of failure to drive on.the right
Barbara Wallace, Drusie side o.f the roadway.
The patrol Investigated a
White.
one-auto'llCcjdent Sunday at I
Births, Sept. 30
Mr. and Mrs. · Roger · p.m., on Bowmans Run Rd;,
Deweese, son, Apple Grove. seven-tenths of a mile north
.
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Carter, of SR 124.
son, Albany.
·
Officers report that . a
vehicle operated by Richard
Births, Ocl. I
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Fitch, Blessing, 28, Pomeroy,'
traveling north, pulled into
son, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael the south bound lane to avoid .
Beaver, daughter, Gallipolis. a chuck hole, then swerved
hack into the north lane to
avoid an on-coming vehicle.
The Blessing auto passed
• off the right side of the
roadway into a ditch.
The vehicle incurred
(f,;ontinued from [Jage I )
moderate damage.
C1ncinna 11: · Robert
Blessing was cited on
Chambers, 48, Cinciripati and cha{ges of left of center.
Emmanuel Goins,
82,
At 7:27p.m. Sunday a deer
Norwood, killed In two-car ran into the path of a vehicle
accident on a city street.
operated by Hershel Me·
Suoday
Clure, 42, Pomeroy.
Dayton: Albert McGarr, 80,
The
patrol
reports
Dayton, killed whUe crossing moderate damage to the
a city street.
vehicle which was traveling
Defiance : Florence M. east on CR 20, one and eight·
Goaker, Oakwood, killed in tenths of a mile west of SR 7,
mecar crash on a county in Melgs County.
road.
The d~r was not killed.

.

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I

CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) President Anwar Sadat said
today that President Carter
has accepted ·an Invitation to
visit Egypt and join in signing
an Israeli-Egyptian treaty
which the two sides will start
negotiating later this
month.
Sadat
anounced his
Invitation to Carter in a
parliamentary speech in
which he urged all Arab
parties directly involved in
th.e conflict with Israel to
negotiate direcUy with it in
accordance with two Camp
David peace agreements
signed by Egypt, Israel and
the United States Sept. 17.
He appealed to other Arabs
to show understanding for the
accords, which he described
as "positive steps paving the
way to an .VeraU aolutloo."
Sadat pral8ed Carter for his
role at Camp David, saying,
"History will place him in the
forefront of leaders who
changed the face of the world
to bring love instead of hatred
· and peace Instead of war."
"From this rostrum, I
Invite President Carter to
villlt Egypt and ·slgp the
peace treaty," Sadat said. "I
do not doubt for a moment
that eVP.ry Egyptian man and
wtman will look fcrward to
this vial t to 1!XJftS8 great
esteem for a great man."
After the parliamentary
llelllon Sadat told reports
that Carter had accepted the
Invitation.
But
the c Palestine
Liberation Organization
promptly rejected Sadat's
caD f~r hla Arab oppmenta·to
join In current peace moves.
In Beirut PI.O apoke1111an
Mahmoud Labady said the
PLO "refused to Clllle In,
deal or partlclpale In theonaplraclea· ll&amp;luat the
l'lllltlnlan people and the
Arab world."·

.... .

ELBERFELD$
•
TOASTMASTER•
· CONnN.UOUSCWNING FLIP-OVER
TABI.fTOP OVEN-BROILER . ·
~v/\. ..

;..._J -... \..

$4275

2 -.:::"3 ~
~~\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday:, October 3, 197R

Cleens Itself continuously while operating at normal
temperatures
·
o Features finest quality Calatytlc Por&lt;:elaln Enamel
finish - as found In expensive lull:stze ra"'in
oTwo appliances In one ..... ln one poalllon, II BROILS and
GRILLS, flip II over and It BAKES and ROASTS
· • Convenient color-coded broiling and baklng-r-tlng
guide
o FuH-vlew chrome and gins door, plua a rack and tray
·
- removable lor easy c!Nnlng
· Housewal'tl Dept., 111 FlOor
0

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

aty

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 119

Logan facing loss of state foundation funds
A&gt; the Logan school strike

enters Its 36th day, believed
to be the longest in the naton ,
the district faces another
crisis, possible loss of its
state foundation funds.
According to a story In
Monday's Logan Dally News,
if all students in the district
are not registered by the end
of this week,lhe district could
lose much of.its $2 million in
state foundation funds .
Foundation funds are based
on the average number of
students attending school in a
district during the first full
week in October. To be in·
--eluded in the county, absent
students
must
have
authorization for. their absence.

Roger Lulow, executive
director for the state
superintendent of public
instruction, said he was !)Of
sure whether au students in
the Logan District would be.
counted in determining
foundation funds , or only
those students actually at·
tending school. (An unofficial
estimated 10 percent of the
district's 4,300 students),.
Lulow also said the state
cannot step In to break up the
strike.
Uttle progress has been
made in the Logan strike.
Negotiators failed .to reach
any agreements over the
weekend. A hearing on an
injunctive action filed by the
Logan school board against

Meigs receives
$140,000 grant
A $140,000 grant to provide additional medic;! I and
dental services to citizens of Meigs County has been
announced by Congressman Clarence E. Mliler.
The rural health initiative grant will be
administered by· the Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation, Inc. of Atliens.
·
Meigs County is currently designated as a
medically underserved area by the Bureau of
Community Health Services, Department of Health,
Education and WeHare.
The foundation's executive director, Einon H.
Plummer, reported that a dentist has already been
recruited to serve Meigs County and that recruitment
efforts for physician services are presently being
conducted in conjunction :.vith Scott Lucas,
·Administrator of the Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy ..
Plummer said that the clinics involved will be a
part of the foundation's proposed primary care clinic
network. It Is anticipated ·that the joirit efforts of the
foundation and hospital to establish the clinics will
result in easier accessibility of primary health services
and strengthen the hospital's service area.

j;..,•)L-.._r_he_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_
•

Battle lines drawn
WASHINGTON (UPI)- The battle lines are shaping up
over the Senate Finance Committee's $23 billion tax bill.
On a day when both houses of Congress took it easy
·because of the Jewish New Year, gen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., sounding the opening gun by pledging .to work for more
.tax relief for those earning $10,000 to $50.000 a year.

Rail recoriunendation coming
WASHING'l'ON (UP!) -A presidential rail emergency
board hopes to send President Carter - before an Oct. 28
deadline- its recommendation for setting a dispute which led
to the nationwide strike of raUroad unions.
The action, however, could allow a ~resumption of the
strike durin~ that period.

Woman becomes human torch
. GENEVA Switzerland i) - The woman complalRed the
United Natio:.S was not doing its job and promised, "
Something spectacular is going to happen that is going to stir
up the world." ·
'
Half an hour later, she burned herseH to death in front of
Europe's U.N. headquarters- the first inunolation ever at
the world body.

Authorities seek arsonist
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) - Youngstown authorities
were searching for an arsonist who set a two-alarm fire
Monday that damaged the main buDding of the Youngstown
and Mahooing County Public Library.
Firefighters laid tarps over book stacks in an effort to
minimize smoke and water damage to books in the six-Btory
' building. Books and equipment there are valued at more than
$2million. There was no immediate estimate Qf damage.

the Logan· Education Assn.
and Chapter 218 of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees (OAPSE) bas
been set for I p.m. today.
It had been· slated for last
Friday, however, at the
outset of· that hearing, at·
torneys for all parties in·
volved indicated they were
in
making
progress
negotiations and felt that
agreements
could
be
reached.
Schools in the district
opened Sept. 21 for the 1978-79
school year, with only 10
percent of the teachers and
students attending.
In other strikes across the
Buckeye State:
A Cuyahoga County

, Auto business hack on track

~ Troopers find ballots

Lima may ·be changed
a

.

Common Pleas judge has in the West. Geauga district.
Negotiators •for the 10,000
ordered striking Cleveland
school employees to ratify a strikers in Cleveland reached
tentative contract agreement the tentative accord in the 3\'z
or face legal penalties, non, week old walkout late
teaching employees went on Monday night following a
strike in Twinsburg lodi!Y · fourth day of court-ordered
and West Geauga teaches negotiations. .
voted against a walkout.
In announcing the develop·
Non-teaching employees in ments, Judge Harry A.
the Twinsburg School District Hanna .said he was ordering
struck the 2,500-student striking teachers and support
system today in a contract personnel to ratify the latest
dispute. However, teachers contract proposal. Hanna told
and students crossed the school employee unions to
nickel lines.
complete voting on the pact
In another! dispute, this by 4 p.m. Wednesday.
one
concerning
union
The judge" also issued a
recognition , teachers who are backto-work injunction
members of the West Geauga against the unions that will
Education Association e'arlr take effect on Thursday, if
today voted against a strike employees
reject
the-

tentative settlement.
But James O'Meara, leader
of the Unity Committee, a
cqalition of school unions,
refused to say whether he and
other union leaders would
recommend acceptance of
the proposal.
"We're going to indicate to
them (strikers) that we'Ve
spent long hours on this
matter and tliat it's the best
deal we could come up with,"
O'Meara said. "But until we
meet with our membership
we can t comment whether to
recommend the proposed
contract."
The strike against the
IOI ,OOO·student district,
largest in Ohio, began Sept. 7
and has compl etely shut
1

Cable TV hike sought,
.
council fails to act
I

that the TV is used · eight mini-park for a proposed The letter indicated no
BY KATIE .CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday hours a day or 56 hours a grant. Brown noted he will be paving will be done this )'ear ·
night in a lengthy meeting week.
notified if the grant is ap- and possibly not in 1979 .. Cost
to the village to pave SR 7 and
took no action on a request for
Council, before taking any proved by Nov. 15.
· a cable TV increase proposed action, would like to get the
Brown also discussed the US 33 would be $6,000. In a
by Paul Gerard of PoinTView opinion of residents. The last possibility of adopting a sign hitter from Governor James
Cable. Council fell it should increase given to PoinTView ordinance that would give Rhodes sometime ago, he
receive comments from the Cable was in November 1974. council control as to what indicated that SR 7 and U.S.
general public be(ore any
In other business, Mayor signs would be placed within 33 through Pomeroy would be
action is taken.
Clarence Andrews read a the village by local business paved. However, nothing has
Gerard explained that letter of resignation from establishments. It was noted transpired.
Representative Ron James
PoinTView Cable is planning councilman Jim Neutzling. that certain areas would be
also
wrote to Rhodes
to change the movie channel Neutzling explained that due exempt, however.
regarding
the paving. Mayor
to a home box office channel to the hours of his emBrown was advised that the
on channel17 and a christian ployment, • (4-12), it was matter should be referred to Andrews is still working on
the project.
broadcasting channel. Both necessary that he resign. the village solicitor.
Bill Young, councilman,
channels will offer 24 hour Council commended Neutz·
Mayor Andrews reported
service. When the change is ling for his work, and with he had checked traffic going reported the Jaycees arc
made channel four will be reluctance, 'accepted the over the Pomeroy . Mason going to hold a haunted house
\ll:opped and channels five resignation.
Bridge for two days. He at the old senior high building
and 13 combined.
May,or Andrews reported · · rtported that from 5 a.m. to 8 and a&amp;ked if a banner mnM
This will cost money that meters from the Liberty a.m. 435 cars traveled be placed across the highway
in front ofthe building. Young
Gerard said. Cable TV is Cafe to Simon's Gift Shop had through the area.
commended
the Jay cees [or
asking for a $1 .a month in· been replaced twice. Council The problem' with the
cutting
the
grass
at the senior
· crease which will raise the discussed the problem at traffic situation is the traffic
high
·
building
.
He also
1t1Jil0nthly price from $6 to $7. great length and decided to coming up West Main toward reported the 'Jaycees have
Senior citizens and disabled remove all the meters in the . , ,JI~oy.
persons will be given a area mentioned and paint the
Traffic is turning right on' contracted to have a fence
discount, Their monthly rate area yellow for a no parking red, as the sign says, and not around the tennis courts at
will iilcrease from $4.50 to zone.
allowing traffic going jeft the mini-park which will be
$5.25.
· Council advised . it also onto the bridge with a green pal&lt;! out of $5,000 grant.
Chief Jed Webster reported
Gerard observed the . wanl~d strict law en· light to make the turn. It was
his
department during the
change would occur about forcement in the area an.d a decided to disallol\' a right.
month
of October in·
Dec. 1. He also stated that re~ort made at each meeting turn on red on the side
vestigated
14 accidents,
channel17 will offer 30 hours on ever)thing that has trans- coming froni Middleport.
made
46
arrests,
issued 1,356
a week of sports and 30 hours pired.
It was reported the recent ·
parking
tickets,
collected
a week of movies.
Council approved the paving cost the village $46,!'34
Gerard also added the new second reading of an or· and there was $3,800 in $3,246 from the parking
channels would on!~ be dinance to provide lighting reserve for paving. Council meters and drove 4,188 miles.
available to villages that · for the village. The contract also discussed the possibility • The meeting was opened by
approve the rate increase. is with Columbus and of repairing holes on the prayer by Mayor Andrews.
If the rate increase is not Southern Ohio Electric.
parking lot and on Second Attending were Mayor An·
drews, Jane Walton, clerk,
approved, people will be Mayor Andrews ·was given Street.
losin2 two channels. All authority to purchase a blade
Aletter was read from Glen Young, Larry Wehrung,
Brown ;
villages will be asked for an for the backhoe.
Smith of the Oio Department Larry Powell,
councilmen,
J
ed
Webster,
increase.
Harold Brown, councilman, of Transportation regarding
Gerard noted that cable TV reported a representative the paving of SR 7 and US 33 chief of police, Gerard . and
is very inexpensive en- · from the Bureau of Outdoor . from Nye Ave. to the bridge. .Donnie Ward.
tertairunent when you figure Recreation had inspected the

Tradionalists want
pope's death ·probed

VATICAN CITY (UP!) - A
Roman
Catholic
traditionalist movement said
today it has asked a Vatican
prosecutor . to investigate
uthe true causes" of the
death of Pope John Paul I.
· The Civilta • Cristiano
· . DETROIT.&lt;UP!) -A resumption of rail traffic has put the movement, an Italian group
!nation:s auto mdustry hack on track, easing critical parts that has been· close to
shortages that threatened to close assembly lines and Idle rehelliousFrench Archbishop
Marcel Lefebvre, said it sent
; thousands of workers.
a
copy of its request to the
·
Some auto companies Monday reported production levels
college
of cardinals so they
· still were .below normal at factories where parts supplies
may
decid&amp;
on possible
• nearly were exhausted during a four-day strike by employees 11
W'gent"
action
.
:of lite nation 's raUroads last week.
The step by. .Civilta •
Cristiano was the first
concrete action taken by any
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP!) -State Pollee, searching all person or group· since news
, : major election offices, discovered three more discarded media began discussing the
' ballots from Alaska's muddled Aug. 22 primary electlon,lt was pros and cons of performing
· disclosed Mooday. The discovery added further \Dicertainty to an autopsy on the pope '·S
. the results which are under challenge in the courts by two hody. Tbe Vatican said last
week that laws governing
unsuccessful candidates.
·
'
Troopers began their search Friday, and I!Bid they found vacancies of the papal see do
two of the three'Anchorage ballots in a garbage can and the not . con\4!mplate autopsies,
: other in a drawer. It was not Immediately known if the ballots . but otherwise ignored the
media suggesllons.
.
: had been counted.
Civilta' Cristiana did not
say why it felt an autopsy was
'
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UI:'l) - A former Indiana required.
"CivUta' Cristlana, throngh
· University student was jailed four days on a charge of falling
Its
legal representatives, has
. to return 48 books to the campus library.
submitted
a formal request to
;
Edwina C. Williams, 28 Bloomington, amassed $3,000 In
the
promoter
of justice
fines from the .JU Library from 1~3 to 177, with 48 books listed
(prosecutor)
at
the
tribunal
: aa mJsslng and overdue fines imposed on about 300 others.
of
the
Vatican
City
State
that
_:Deputy. Prosecutor Bob Beck said the missing books were
the
prosecutor's
office
open
a
.found In her apartment.
judicial Inquiry to ascertain
the true causes of the death of
the supreme pontiff John
· - OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The adminiJtration of Gov. James Paul I," the group said In a
· A. Rhodes plans to turn Lima State Hospltai Into a maximum presa release.
B:Urity correctional facillty In 1981, possibly combining it
"The detailed document
With mort-term mental health
center.
addressed to the Vatican
.

: Student jailed, fined $3,000

coo~lng

e

•

judiciary was also sent to His
Most Reverend Eminence
Cardinal Carlo Confalonieri,
dean of the Sacred College, so
he may know its contents and
report on it in a direct and

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thrusday tbrough
Saturday, mostly cloudy
and mild througb • the
period, with
chance of
showers ·Friday- and
Saturday. Hl,hs will be In
the middle cir upper 60s,
wblle lows will he Ia the
upper 40s to' lower 50s.

a

mme shop
0

Meigs CountySheriff James
confidential way to the J . Proffitt reports deputies
cardinals, who are the are investigating the theft of
depositaries of sovereign power tools from the car·
power in periods of Vacancy penter shop at Meigs Mine
of the (papal ) see, for aU No.1. The theft occurred over
(Continued on page 10)
the weekend. A padlock was
,
,• •
•
knocked off a wooden tool
lRJUnes cabinet to gain entrance. The
incident is under · in·
ported to Holzer Medical vestigalion.
Sheriff Proffitt advises his .
Center, where he was treated
department
has received
for a scalp laceration and a
several
complaints
about
contusion to the chest, and
ears
of
corn
being
thrown
at
released.
passing
motorists.
The
Simpkins wsa cited on
charges of operating a motor sheriff urges parents to
, vehicle without a valid caution their children con·
cerning this type of halloween
license.
11
activity.
The cooperation of
Usa Roush, 18, Pomeroy,
parents
in
helping curb this
was treated and released at
vandalism
will be ap·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
predated,"
Sheriff
Proffitt
following a one-auto accident
said.
on Bailey Run Rd.,lwo·tenths
of a mile north of SR 124, in
Meigs County, at 6:50 p.m. :;:::::;:::,:;:::::;:::::,:::;:::::::::':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
According to the patrol, a
TAKES FIRST PLACE
vehicle operated by Roush,
MASON - The Wahama
traveling north, went out of. High School band directed
control on Bailey Run, and
by Charles Yeago woo first
struck an embankment.
place In field competition
No citation was issued.
and second place In parade
Officers report slight da(llage
competition at the Wtrt
to the vehicle.
County Band Festival
Saturday.
The Wahama ·musicians
competed against nine
other bands from Ohio. and
West
Virginia. The bsnd
Cooler, chance of showers
plans
to
travel to Wheeling
~ Wednesday. Highs in the
this Saturday where It will
middle or upper . 60s. compete with 17 other
Probability of precipitation hands from Ohio, West
20 ·percent today, 70 percent
Virginia and Pennsylvania.
tonight, 40 percent Wed·
nesday.
.,:,:;::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;:·::::::.:::;:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::::

Two persons treated for
Two persons \"ere treated
for injuries sustained during
two one-vehicle accidents
investigated by the Gallia·
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol
Monday.
Officers were -called to the
scene of an accident on Ad·
dison • Bulaville Rd., fourtenths of a mile west of SR 7
at 10:20 p.m.
According to the patrql, an
auto operated by Joseph
Simpkins, 18, Gallipolis,
traveling west, went off the
left side of the fog covered
roadway, and struck a tree
and a utility pole.
A passenger in the vehicle,
Russell
Christian,
18,
Gallipolis, displayed villible
signs of injury and was trans-

Thloeves hit

Weather

down the system.
Walkouts also continued
today in the Columbus suburb
of
Whitehall ,
Logan,
Painesville Township and
Midview, Lorain Co unty,
schools district,
Negotiators
for
the
Twinsburg school board and
the Ohio Association of Public
School Employees, which
represents 60 of the 85
nonteaching employees in the
system, met late Monday to
try to work out an agreement
on a new contract but failed.
The

ass oci ation ,

representing bus drivers,
custodians, cafeteria workers
and

other

nonteaching

workers, was seeking a 4(1.
cent-an-hour

raise.

The

school board has offered 25
cents an hour _
In West Geauga, the school
boa rd ha s repeatedly
rejected reque;;ts during the
past 10 years by the teachers
association for recognition as
bargaining age nt.
John B. DiCillo, association
president , said his 170·
member organization would
strike today 1f the hoard did
not

grant

recognition.

However , the tea~hers
decided tn wait on a report by
a citizens committee before
taking ony aciion.
Little progress has been
made in the Logan,
Painesville Township and
Midvi ew school districts,
(Conti nued on page 10 i

.

•

STACK AGING - This aged smoke stack in Minersville is beginning to show signs of wear and tear at the top
and it is reported that at least a part of it is to be torn
down. According to the Waterways Journal, a permit has
been issued to the Raven Hocking Co~l Corp., MaSon, W.
Va., to construct a coal barge loading fa cility on the right
hank of the Ohio River at Minersville near this stack.

Abandoned mines
to he reclaimed
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Abandoned coal strip mines
will be reclaimed with the
help of technical assistance
and funds from
the
Agriculture Departmen t
under a program that began
Monday.
Almost 70 percent of the
land eligible for the Rural
Abandoned Mine Program is
located in Appalachia.
In Pennsylvania, there are
240,000 acres eligible under
the program, one of four
provided under the Surface
Mining
Control
and
Reclama lion Act of 1977.
There are 196,709 acres
eligible in Ohio, 118,71!' acres
in illinois. 101,637 acres in
Kentucky, 84,868 acres in
West Virginia, 72,292 acres in
Alabama, 70,688 acres in
Missouri, 41,256 acres in
Kansas , 36,118 acres in

Oklahoma and 29,583 acres in
Tennessee.
·
Other eligible states
include Alaska , Arizona ,
Arkansas,

Ca lifprn ia,

Colorado, Georgia , Indiana,
Iowa, Maryland, Michigan,
Montana, New Mexico, North
Dakota , South Dakota,
Texas, Utah, Virgini a,
Washington and Wyoming.
Assistant Agriculture
So!cretary Rupert Cutler said
high priority would be given
to "slide-prone mine spoils or
mine-waste piles and mine·
waste impoundments that are
unsafe or are likely to fail and
life
and
endanger
property."
He also said attention
would be given land from
whfch coal dust blows onto
populated areas and land
which endangers drinking
water supplies.
The department's Soil
Conservation Service, which
handles rural water and land
conservation, will provide
technical · help for the
projects. ·
They will be finan ced by
contributions by coal mine
operators of up to 35 cents a
ton.
" Soil lo ss on these
abandoned lands may range

from 60 to !50 tons per acre
every year," Cutler sa.id,
compared to the four or flve
tons per acre which is
considered acceptable

Masonjoh ·among road
bids let
CHARLESTON - Si• highway projects totalling over
$1.3 million, including con·
struction of the Ripley Junior
High School Access !Wad in
J ackson Co unty, will be
under way soon, Governor .
Rockefeller announced
today, following awards by
the West Virginia Depart·
ment of Highways from its
September 19 bid opening.
Alan Stone Co., Inc. of
Chesterhill , 0., was awarded
the $933.,823 Jackson County
contract, calling for con·
struction of an access road
and bridge to the Ripley
Middle School on 0.375 miles
of Co. 15·1. The work will
provide the !().foot lanes with
four-fool shoulders and a fivefool si dew~ lk from U. S. 21 to
Klondyke Road on Co. 15 and
ca lls for the use of 180,700
pounds of structural steel in
construction of the 199-foot
steel girder bridge.
A $27,200 contract calling
for repair of an expansion
joint on 0.134 miles of Appalachian Corridor "E" in
Monongalia County was
awarded to Lama, Inc. of
Morgantown . The broken
joint is .located at the east·
bound. abutment of the
Sabraton Interchange bridge
crossing Deckers Creek, W.
Va. 7 and the railroad near
Morgantown.
The..remainirt'g projects
awarded included Mason Stabilization and drainage of
4.33 miles Crab Creek Rd. on
Co. 29, State Construction,
Inc., Huntington, $247,354.

�SP"tlnel, Middleport-Pm~eroy, 0., Tuesday,Oct. 3, 1978
-

\

IN WASHINGTON

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters
•

Will

Meet the Marauders

Donald !=.Graff

an iss!Je be enough?

Briefly noted

•

•

•

By Martha Angle and Rotw;rt Walters

By Don Graff

WASHINGTON ( NEAl - Durmg the ride from New
York 's LaGuardia Airport to Spamsh Harlem on the f.irst
leg of the GOP' s recent cross-eountry tax cut campa1gn,
Sen Charles McC . MathJas Jr of Maryland told the local
advance man he had JUSt one quest10n
'How do you say 'Republican tax cut blitz' in Spamsh?"
Senator," the advance man rephed with a grin , " I can
tell you how to say 'tax cut blitz' a ll nght, but around here
there' s no s uch word as 'Republican ' "
The crack got the guffaw it deserved, but the needle
unquestiOnably drew blood. For wherever they went on
their three-&lt;lay tnp from New York to California,
Republican barnstormers e ncountered similar problems.
For the first lime m memory , the national GOP has put '
1tself out m front of the curve of American politics wtth an
1ssue that a llows 1ts candidates to be wholeheartedly for
somethmg mstead of perpetually on the defensive.
Yet 11 IS far from clear th a t Republicans wtll reap the
benefits of the tax cut tssue they are so vigorously
champ10nmg once voters step m the polling booth this

Captstrano has long had its s wallows, whose return each
year to the old Spanish mission in California makes the
arrtval of spring official
And then there's Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, where
groundhQ_gs supposedly one-up the swallows by sil!nalllng
in February whether seasonably warmer weather"' going

to arnve early or late.
(Tbtre's also Hinckle{., Ohio, which does an annual Udng
with lluzzards, but the ess comment on that probably the
better )
Ngw 1t appears that New York's Emptre State Building
and assorted migrating birds may also be Into forecasting.
The .Manhattan landmark is illuminated at night, a
custom hazardous to birds m foggy weather when the
outlines of the building are obscured. Apparently mistakmg the glowmg mist for natural light, they are attracted to
it and crash Into the building:
As a humane gesture, therefore, the tower's floodlights
are switched off on foggy nights, particularly during the
peak m1gration periods of Sept. !Wet. 31 and April1:;.May

November

~

Thev have three maJOr advantages the Republicans
cannoi match, and th e btggest ts stmply the accumulated
votmg hab1ts of a majonty of the Amertcan people
Spa msh Harlem ts n 't lhe only place where there's no such
word as Republtcan ." Old loyalhes run deep indeed, and
1t w1ll ta ke more than one tssue - and one campaign - to
overco me the vtsceral identlficatmn many voters feel wtth
the Democrattc Part y
Secondly , the advantages of mcumbency are impossible
to overstate - especially m races for the House, where

constituent service and personal contact can keep a
member m off1 ce for years even when hts votmg record is
totally at odds w1th maJOrtty sentiment m hill district.
Democrats outnumber Republicans 2 to 1m the House, and
, they are past masters at the art of nulkmg incumbency for
a II tt's worth
. Fmally there IS the longstandmg predilection of most
voters to' choose between candidates on the basis of
character style ethmc 1denttficallon, party loyalty anythmg ~ nd e v ~rythmg except for issues. For the most

part even m seats where there 1s no mcumbent, the

De~ocrats th1s yea r have more appealing candidates than
the Republicans - who lack a vtable farm system at the
state and local level
None of whtch is to say that the lax lllSUe doesn't ~ut, or
that Repbhcans a re wastmg thetr t1r0e to pursue 11 with
such vehemence
In states where tax-euttmg m11latives are on the ballot
this fall voters are likely to turn out in droves to pull the
" yes" lever, just as they did in California in June.
But votmg for a ballot proposition that has an immediate
a nd clear -eut payoff m the form of lower taxes Ill one thing,
a nd votmg for a candidate who merely promises to outdo
h1s opponent m seeking a tax reduction is. another.
Cynic1sm runs rampant about the ability of any one
poltl1c1an to change the course of government, and if
" they're all alike" m the mmds of the voter, old habits are
likely to prevail
Republicans, by nghts, ought to benefit f~om \he tax
revolt At the GOP Nallonal Committee and m Congress,
they have been beatmg the drwns for a major tax reUef
program for well over a year - long before Proposition 13
scared thetr Democrallc counterparts into echomg th~
tune
f .
d
But h£e, as Jtmmy Carter once observed! is un aar- an
poltllcs LS simply life played out on a pubhc stage.
l NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

HEALTH
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
'

Weight-lifting
for women

•

,

"I guess inflation has become as American as apple pie."

Broadcaster murdered

The Open Road

}

By PE'l'ER MAY
UPI Spo~ Writer
BOSTON (UPI) - Reggie
Jackson, the flamboyant
Yankee slugger known more
for his vanity than hts
humility, tried to cbeer up a
llhrary-llke Boston Red Sox
·locker room after the
Yankees beat the Bosox 5-4 to
win the American League
East title.
"I honestly don't know who
the best team is," said
Jackson as he talked to
several Red Sox, including
Ceorge Scott, Carlton Fisk
and Jun Rice. "Either of
these teams would be

AR

'

y

WJ' "'''
~

.....,.....

Letters

I

The Editor
~e Sentinel
1'11 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769•

~

.

" .. . And I'm pleased to say that 'masstve
fraud and kickbacks' is also runmng behmd
last week 's levels
"
~----------------------~--~

~

A
R

y

September 30, 1978
--,_

•

I.I
I

Red Sox Manager Don
Zuruner . "But I told them
that no one should walk out of
here hanging thell' heads not the way they bounced

back.''
The Yankees were bubbling
and the most effervescent of
aU was unlikely hero Bucky
Dent. The light-hitting
shortstop coonected for a
three-run homer to put the
Yanks ahead 3-2. They would
never trail again .
"I thought the best it could
do was hit the waU," said
Dent of his seventh-inning
homer, which barely cleared
the famed " Green Monster"

in left "I didn't know it
cleared the waU until I passed
first base ."
Jackson accowtted for the
eventual game-wmning run
when he launched a shot off
Bob Stanley into the center
field bleachers to give the
Yanks a 5-2 lead. But the
controversial slugger nummized his liRporiance m the
game.
" When tl wound up m the
bleachers, I just thought 11
was an extra run. I JUSt feel
good that we won and what
makes tt so unportant ts that
it was a collective victory. We
all had a hand m 11."

By RICK VAN SANT
promotion of Rice.
CINCINNATL (UPI)
Rice said he hopes to tum
Homer Rice, a 28-year the ().5 club into a winner.
41
veteran high - school and
1 feel good," he said. 111
college coach but with only accept the challenge. 1 hope I
six months pro experience , can bring the team along and
today began the biggest provide the leadership. •
challenge of his career "I feel this gives us a new
regroupbig the winless lease on life. We're now
Cincinnati Bengals. ,
beginning a new program. I
Rice, 51, whose first'tas~ of will make evt;ry effort In
pro football came last April motivate improvement each
when he was appointed Ben- day."
gals' quarterback coach, was
Rice also hoped his lack of
named Monday to replace pro experience won 'I hurl
Bill Johnson as Cincinnati him.
bead coach.
' "I've never felt any
1
Johnson was let go lit the pressure at any time durmg
wake the Bengals' 1).5 record, my :!&amp;-year career and I don't
the worst start in the 11-year think football is different at
history of the Cincinnati fran- this level than what I've 'done
before," he said. "This is a
chise.
, Johnson, 52, had led the - team thing and I think that by
Bengals to 10-4 and 8-6 working together we can
records his first two seasons, overcome adversity."
but this year's club was a
The new coach said there
maJlr disappointment
would be no major changes
Cincinnati lost 1ts fifth right away .
straight gume to previously
"Before I make any
winless San Francisco on innovations, we've got to cut
Sunday and on Monday down on the little mistakes,
morning Bengals' General the mental errors," be said.
Manager Paul Brown had a " And what we reaDy need to
get things going is thai first
meeting with Johnson .
"We mutually agreed win to improve morale.
something had to be done,"
"I have so much confidence
Brown said in announcing in Paul Brown and his
Johnson's departure and the , organization, but I am very

J

Jackson called F1sk "a
superstar, !love to watch you
play but I hate to play aga1nst
you." He told Rice "you had
the strongest offenstve year
I've ever seen and deserve to
be in the playoffs " Then, he
nbbed Rice about ftelding.
"You know as much about
the outfteld as I do ," satd
Jackson, not exactly a candt·
'
Ma 1or Leagu e leaders

Ftnal
By Untted Press Internati onal
Ba1ttng
(Based on 450 at bats)
Nat•onal L eague
GAB H Pet
Pa r ker Ptt

148 58 1 194 334

Garvey LA
Cruz Ho u
Wmf te ld SO
R tchardsSD
Clark SF

162 639 202
153 565 178
158 587 18 1
15.t555171
156 592 181

316
315
308
JOB
306

Rose Ctn

159 655 198 302

Con c pcn Cm
Burroghs A tl
Cabell Hau
Cr mr t 1c Mt l

153 565 170
153 488 147
161 657195
159 607 180
League

A m er~ca n

301
301
297
297

G,AB H Pet
saddened at Btll Johnso11 's picture wtth ~ !me coachtng Car ew M 1n
15'2 564 188 333
resignation. He is a and admintstrahve back- 0 11ver Tex
133 525 170 3'2 4
ce 8os
163 677 '2 13 315
wonderful man and made a ground ," Brown satd of hts R1
P1n1e1 1a NY
130 472 148 31 4
)Vonderful contribution to the new head coach. "Well known Ogl 1v1 e Mil
1'28 469 147 303
134 471 141 299
, in CinCinnati, he is taking Rob erts Sea
game of football."
sos
150 5&lt;H 161 298 '
Johnson went fishing after over immedtately and his Lynn
Oh s KC
141 486 145 298
·his departure was announced first meeting with the players M un son NY
154 617 183 297
lore Det
155 668 198 29 6
to avoid reporters.
will be at I p.m Wednesday LeF
Bo stoc k Cal
147 568 168 296
·"He bas gone fishing, he when they return to practice
•
• Home Run s
Nat•onal League Foster, C1n
really has," 881d Johnson's for next Monday mght's
40 , Luzmsk •, Phd 35 . Parker ,
wife, Dot. "He belongs to a game at Miami.
Ptff 30. Smith , LA 29 ,
private fishing club and he
"There will be no K• n gma n, Ch• and Starg el l, P1tt
decided to go there and he disruption in our working 28 Am encan Leagu e R1ce, Bas
probably won't be back home staff. All the other coaches 46 Baylor, Ca l and H• sle, Mil
34 , T hornt on . Clev 33, ThOmas ,
till tomorrow night.
will continue in !hell' usual Mil
32
" He dectded he wasn't duties, directed by Homer
Run~ Barted In
Nat•onal L ea gue . Fos ter , C1 n
quite ready to meet the press RICe.
120 . Parker , P1tt 117 , Garvey ,
and so he decided to go off
"We will rev1ew our p1cture LA
11 3 , LUZ inSkl, Phil 101 ,
and get htmself together.
at the end of the season/' Clark , SF 98
League Rt ce, Bo s
"He 's
not
happy, added Brown, "but I have a 139Amer~can
, Staub , Del 120 Htsl e, M1l
obviously," added his wife, lot of confidence m Homer 115 . Thornton , Clev 105 ,
Bay lor, Ca l and ear ly , Oak 99
"but Btll is a very strong man R1ce."
Stol en Bases
and he's !me. I Jusl think Bill
Before JOining the Bengals
Na t ton al L eague
Moren o,
is the greatest coach on earth as an asststant this pas\ PIt 71 , Tav e ras , P1tl 46 ,
Lope s . LA 45 , DeJesus, Ch• 41 ,
and the finest man I know. Apnl , R1ce was athleltc Smi
th , so 40
"This apparently just director and head football
Amencan Leag u e LeFlor e,
wasn 't meant to be . We've coach at Rice Univermty Det 69 Cruz , Sea 59 W ills,' Tex
52 , Olione, Oak 50 W1lson KC
had our down moments from 197&amp;-78, athletic director 46
PitChing
before and we've always at North Carolina from 1969V1ct on es
bounced blick. I don't know 75, head football coach at the
Nat1onal Lea gue Perry, SO
wherewe'U windup this time, University of Cincinnati from 216 , Gr•msley , Mil 2011.
but we'D come out aU right." 1967-68, an asSistant at Hooton , LA 19 10 , Ni ekro , Afl
19 18 , Blue , SF 18 10 , Richard ,
Added Brown, "Bill Ill a Oklahoma in 1966 and an Hou 18-11
Amertcan Lea gu e Gu •d r y,
One, proud man and he put assistant at Kentucky from
NY 25 3 , Ca ldwelL Mil 22 9 ,
the welfare of the club first 196~.
Pa lmer Balt 21 1'2, L eo nard ,
For II years before that, he KC 21 17 Eck er sley Bos 20 8 ,
and agreed that a change
oa NY ;209
was a high school coac~, F' 1guerEarned
could help our situation.
Run Av erage
"Homer Rice gets into the winning 101 games, losmg ( Based on 102 mnmgs piTched}
NaT•onat League Swan, NY
only nine and tymg seven. At
2 43, Rogers , M tl 2 47 , Vuck
one pomt, his teams won 50 OVI Ch, St L 2 55 Knepper , SF
2 63 , Hooton, LA 2 71
games m a row.

Amencan

Meigs 8th
defeats KC

-

'

•
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- ''
San Francisco running back :
O.J. Simpson says he was .
benched in the lli!cond half Ill i
the Cincinnati game Sunday :
as a precautionary measure . :
A Bengal defender had
jammed Simpeon 'a left
into the bq" .p,:lllflclal ·•
surface of ~k Park •
in tba.llrll haU. S~Jnta&gt;n had '
surgery on the lmee lall year '
and has been troubled by "
swollen sc~r tllaue . ,He ~
watched the re11l of the 1ame ;
'flth ice m the llnee.
:

'mee •

•

representative. And you guys
would be even better agamst
a lef\ohanded pitcher."
But Jackson 's praiae for
the Red Sox couldn't bury the
feeling of disappointment
etched around the creamcolored loeker room . There
were all the signs of the
celebration that was not to
be: The centrully located
camera;
the
network
pitching rotation for the
playoffs in Kansas City; the
travel bags ready for a trtp to
the Midwest . But 11 was not to
be.
"I can't be angry . I'm
hurtin' a little, but I'm hurtin'
for the players more," sa1d

Rice named Bengals coach

·'
LoUD AND CLEAR:' Wednesday is "lo.4 Day," good '
buddies, on the say«l of the Firat Daddy himself. 'lbe White '
House says that's what President Carter has designated for •
the 4th day of the lOth month, to mark the 20th anniversary of
Citizens Band radio. In CB parlance, "1D-I" means ''message understood." It will be the same thing on the flip side - nest
•
year.
r'
GUMPSES: Jack Alberllon, who underwent intestinal ~
surgery at St. John's Hospital in Sania Monica, Calif., Ia ,
reported ''up and wallling" and Ia expected back on the set of •
his TV series, "Grandpa Goes to Washington," in about two ;
weeks ... 'lbe Anlerican Academy of Pediatrics Is going to '
present Dinah Sbore with a special award •'for outstanding ·
cootrlbutlons to chUd health programs" ... Fonner President
Gerald Ford, acccmpanied by wife Beety and daughter Stun,
will deliver a series of lectures nest Marclr In Tokyo on behalf ,
of the Kansai Telecasting Corporatiol),'s 20th anniversary

Dear Mr. Editor:
Ruth Powers has asked to write thiS week's Lilrary
Letters colwnn, and I have no wish to interfere with that ·But
Kathy Foster's letter to the editor (Thursday, Septembe~ 28,
1978) cries aloud for an answer. So I hope you will find room for
tlus in the Letters to the Editor column
Yes, Kathy, our llbriuies should hav~ more patrons. But
your letter overlooks a few things. First of aU, the Sentinel Ia
very good about giving publicity to what the libraries are celetration....
doing. In fact, they print a weekly column about what Ia going
on at the libraries.
CLEVELAND (UPI) - InSecond, the libraries can not be closed because of lack of
interest . Libraries in Ohio are funded by the Intangibles tax· jured Cleveland Browns runthey can be forced to close If not enough people pay their- taxe~ ning back Greg Pruitt abnost
?"stocks and bonds. So far this year, we have collected f434.26 certainly will return to action
m fines and $143.20 in sales of old or otherwise unuseable when tbe Browns face the
~oks. $877.4618 not enough to keep our~oorsopen- but even- Pittsburgh Sleelers !I week
if the entire population made use of the Ubraries (as we wish from Sunday, along with
guard
Henry
they would), the fines and book sale money would not increaae injtjred
Sheppard and cornerback
enough to help much
So what can 'the .Sentinel and you and other interested Oliver Davis, Cleveland
people do? Join the Friends' of the Litrarles. President Pro· Coach Sam Rutigliano
Tern Sandy Rodman, Friend Dorothy Reibel, Eleanor Knight, ' disclosed Monday.
But the three wiD not play
Patty Asbeck, and other friends will be meeting at the
thia Sunday when. the Browns
Pomeroy Lilrary at 7:30, October 9, to beg)n organizing the
battle the New Orleans Saints
grotlp. I hope I'll see you there.-Sincerely, (Mrs.) EDen BeU
Dtrector.
•
"
' in the Superdcme.

,.,I

FRESHMEN CHEERLEADERS - These a re
members of the freshman cheerleadmg squad at Mctgs
Htgh School They are Penny Miller, front; second row,!

(/&gt;

L'" Library~
'R

Tim Bashao, S.5, 135 lb. , - Richard Bashan, S.9, 179
Jr. luliback-MB.
1~.• Junior guard,MG.

to r, Ta nuny Ferguson , Tern Roush and Unrecka Johnson
wtth Kelly Tyree at the top

Rose will test value

J'a ckson 's homer ousts Bosox

peopletalk:

Berry's World

Todd Eads, 5-9, 135 lb.,
Sophomore
fullback,
cornerback.

"•

°

.. . . . .

•

Thts has been going on for some 20 years and would be no
cause for comment at this pomt but for an unscheduled
change m the birds' flight plan this faU. Migrating flocks
began showmg up early, and the lights had to be doused on
several foggy occasions weeks in advance of the customary begmmng of migralton. Empire State custodians are
now wondering if the premature migration js nature's way
of signalling an early wmter .
That, possil!le, or it could be that the airline industry 's
message on 'The advantages of off-season flights has gotten
through to the b1rds. A case, tt nught be said, of life
tmitating commercial artifice. ,
·

By JOHN JONES
Iron Curtain.
lONDON (UP! ) - Tbe
Markov died in a London
second Bulgarian exile in a hospital after complauung of
' BY REV . HOWARD C. BLACK
Keeping up with the royal Joneses
month has been found dead - a jab from an umbrella
218 w. Seveotb Ill., MI. Carmel, IL. 82863
his body , clad in nightclothes, wtelded by a foretgner who
Telephone: (618) ;162-5778
If running the average home pre!lents budget problems,
was found mside his securely hurried away in a taxi.
WONDER-WORKING Wi)RDS
consider what the head of a royal household has to deal
loeked home - three weeks
Simeon v ' s de a 1 h
Mark Twain Is credtted as having said: "1 can live for two wtth.
after a co-worker was mur- prompted speculatiOn -of a months on a good compliment."
To keep food on the table, fuel in the furnace, guards, at
dered with a jab from a vendetta by the Bulgarian
Everyone has a need to feel wanted and appreciated. We the gates and that sort of thing requires an annual $5.7
poisontipped umtreUa.
authorilles
to
stlence all like to feel that we are a part of the group, whether It be million for Britain's Queen Elizabeth II. And at that she
"We are treating this as a journalists broadcasting to where we live, or wbere we work, or where we play. Although must do an effictent job of shilling pinching, what With the
suspicious death m vtew o~ eastern Eur9pe, although the we may not he strivmg for the pratse of others, it still helps us numerous royal establishments scattered about her sizable realm. Rllllnerup Prince Rainier, sovereign of
the recent murder of Georgi Bulganan Embassy has to believe that we are respected and appreciated. Yet , how minisc ule Monaco, enJoys a royal purse just a shade
Markov" Scotland Yard denied any mvolvement .
often are we, ourselves, remtssinexpressingthatappreciation lighter at $5.6 million.
said. The Yard 's anti- 1 Markov';; tale of )'n to others?
These and other details were revealed m a Spanish
terrorist chief was placed in umbrella that so meliow
No matter how mdependent we may be, we still are economic pubUcation's report on the finances of Europe's
charge of the case .
inje~ted him wtth potson mterdependent on each other. What we do, or do not do, will nme crowned heads. Next to the bottom was Spam's own
A girlfnend of Vladimir ~ounded
incredible
to have its direct or indirect influence upon others. The Kmg Juan Carlos, with $2 million to spread over two
•
Simeonov, 30, went to hts mvesttgators- until patholo- effectiveness of our relatiOnships with others are enhanced by palaces and a yacht.
At
the
very
bottom
1s
Luxembourg's
Grand Duke Jean
home in east London 's gtsts recovered a mmuscule a mutual feeltng of love, respect, and appreciation for
with
a
scant
$1.1
million,
small
change
as
privy purses go,
everyone.
shabby Dockland section metal pellet from ht~ leg.
maybe , but easily enough to keep a roof over a regal head
Monday to- why he had not
Last week an identical
New-born babies cannot survive the shoek of birth without and even maintain a royal moped or two.
shown up for work at the· pellet containing trace~ of a love. Without love children may become withdrawn and
British Broadcasting Corp polson
was
surgt('ally mentally retarded. Young people, destilute of wtderstanding First things first
She peered through the removed. from .the flesJ;t ?1 andrespectfromothers,maybecomedisillusioned, depressed
Second Thoughts on Headlines Department:
mail slot in tlie front door and another Journalist, Vladim.ll' _ misftts in soctety, tripping out on experimental drugs. And
saw Simeonov, clad in Kostov, who was atta~ked ~ adults who feel unloved, unwanted, and unappreciated wiU
pajBmas and a bathrobe, a . Pans metro siation ~ often become sullen, fnmrated neurotics.
"Sex of child seen as Important."
d
.
(From the White Plains, N.Y., Reporter-DJS~tch, on a
August He felt mildly ill
bottom
th
0f
t
led
spraw
a
e
a
·
·
We live m a close, sometimes c':'w~e • enVIJ'onment poll of hig.h school students as to gender pre{e;:.,nces lor
statrwell
with
blood afterwards but has smce today, and everywhere you look you will fmd ~y lonely ,
their own children when they start families.)
streaming from his mouth. rej:Overed ·
.
despondent people who are dying for a tittle lilt of love - a
7
Ambulance attendants,
Both pellets, onl~ 1. ~ m little kindness, a word of a ppreciation. Why don't we give . Important isn't the word, it's downright basic.
who broke in, found him diameter • were ldenllcal. them some roses while they are still living?
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
It has been said that flattery will get you nowhere , and
dead.
Composed of 8 platinumSimeonov's death came irtdium alloy, eac.h had ~wo maybe 1t won't, but what mightitdofor the other person? Kind
three weeks after the bizarre holes bored Into •t at r1ght words of appreciation, sincerely spoken, are wonder-working
demise of Markov, a BBC . angles - possible poison- , )Vords that will strengthen and encourage everyone. Consider
colleague who also al!'ed dispensing chambers. .the benefits of eJIPressing appreciation to others (it just might
First . results of a post- help you, too):
troadcasts to Bulgaria and
other cowttries behind the mortem on Simeonov ordered
1 Words of appreciation will help win and hold friends.
by ScOtland Yard mdicated Other people are made.comforiable in your presence when you
he was asphyxiated by blood
from a fractured nose. show them love and respect. Kind thoughtfulness on our part in By KENNE'nl R. CLARK
trammg to h~ develop Apparently the fracture could expressing appreciation to others promote .1\Bppiness and United Press International
MICK MIFFED: Mlck Jagger says he doesn't know if he'S&gt;
have occurred while he fell retlowship among everyone.
muscles.
down
the
stairs
of
his
home.
2.
Words
of
appreciation
stimulates
interest
and
the
father of actress Marsha HIDlt's 7-year-old dsughter, Karls
You can use strength exerThere
was
no
immediate
enthusiasm
among
people.
It
ts
a
good
remedy
for
a
lot
of
the
the
only daughter he recognizes is 7-year-old Jade, by
cises etther to develop
suggestion
about
what
could
ills
and
discouragements
of
!if~.
Others
are
.
mor~
likely
to
estranged
wife Blanca. Miss Hunt is suing the Holling Stone~
muscles or to mamtam your
have
caused
his
fall,
but
become
actively
mterested
and
mvolved
in
thmgs
if
!bey
feel
lead
singer
in Los Angeles for support of Karis. Jagger, in an
muscles. Through strength
interview
with
the music magazine Soul, is quoted as saymg be
police
sa1d
further
tests
that
they
are
appreciated.
trauung you can help to avoid
3 Words of appreciation encourages cooperation and reaDy doesn't know how many children he has, but be calls
obestty. How you do it would be conducted.
Simeonov, smgle and de- effici~ncy. If we think our efforts are apprecia~ed we will give Miss Hwtt "lazy" - says she's "just out for publicity," and
depends upon your goal.
My advtce to you does not scribed by neighbors as a more time and energy to a project. Everyone trtes harder to do adds, "I reaDy have no idea whether that chUd IS mine or not."
apply to aU readers because rather solitary man with few his best when he feels that he is respected and appr~tated. Jagger concedes he sends Miss Hwtt money, but she complains
the f~rst requirement for friends, defected to the West Where there ts mutual good wiU among people you will fmd it's less than $20 a month, and she wants ~ore than $1,000.
anyone who is skinny, or has Ul 1971 while vacationing in cooperative team work with a positive, creative, and
SPANKY REMEMBERED: It's' been a long time since kids
productive attidue.
.
.
lost wetght, should be to have London.
He JOined the BBC a year
4. Words of appreciation mcreases self-eonfldence m queued up at the box offiCe for "little Rascals" and ''Our
a medical examination and to
later,
working
wtth
Markov
others.
When people feet' that they are ~anted and needed they Gang" comedies, but fans of George "Spaalty" McFarland
be sure there ts no underlying
as
one
of
11
program
grow
in
self.r~pect. By our .expresstons of a.pprectallon to haven't forgotten. About 300 of them turned out Monday in
medical problem. Smce you
have already done this, I feel asststants in the Bulgarian others, they will gam self-confidence and .grow m selfol'espect. Marion, Ind., to help him celebrate his 50th birthday.
McFarland played the rolypoly, beanie-topped urchin of the
that you can safely follow the sectton of the BBC World .. Wordsofappreciationhe)psotherstofeelunoriant,. too.
Someone once said, "I shaD pass through this world but series in th~ 1930s, starring in 95 productions from \he
program I have reconunend- Sernce.
BBC colleagues described once . Any good therefore that I can do, or any k~ess that I launching of.his career at the age of 3 untU his retirement 11
ed.
h1m as
" lively
and can show to any human being, let me d.o 1t now. Le~.me not years later. Says he, " Iwas8or 9 before I reaUzed that aU kids
cheerful
."
defer nor neglect it, for I shall not pass thiS way agam.
weren't in movies. I had a baU -made a lot of money ... When
In 1972, PreSident Nixon
's
job
involved
A
pat
on
the
back,
it was over, it was over. I wouldn't take a million do\lars for tbe
Simeonov
and Soviet Foreign Minister
reading
the
news,
lranslating
A
word
of
pratse,
.
experience."
Andrei Gromyko signed
Well deserved and smcere,
strategic arms lim! tat10n scnpts and announcing proHelps everyone aU their days.
PATRON OF THE ARTS: JacqaeUue Kennedy Ooassls
agreements putting the first grams. He was the regular
.- - - . showed up on lhe arm of colwnnist-author Pete Hamlll
restrictions on the two cohost of a pop program for
Monday night at a New York cocktail party on behalf of
cowttries' nuclear weapons. teenagers.
American Rag magazine. 'lbe publication Ia an outgrowth of
the Frederick Douglass O'eative Arts Center founded in 1971
by writers Fred Hud10n and Budd Schulberg. It's designed to
provide support for ialented young artists and funds for the
I
8
B #"'
ponilrOfit center.

wm ts a champiOn in the
women's powerlifting group
for the Uruted States. She ts in
the 132 pound class and is a
shapely, blond high school
semor
Jandrena comments that
trammg has been geared for
boys but, "girls can do !hell'
thing, too, if they want " The
1r0proved development of
your body and increased
strength
may make you feel better,
too.
a.
The omy way you can mcrease the mze of your
muscles ts by working them
under load. The larger the
load a muscle has to contratt
agamst, the larger the muscle will become.
So, my advice to you is very
sunple . Eat enough calones
to support aU your daily activities and develop an exercise program that helps
develop your muscles. I am
sending you The Health Letter number 5-4, We1ght Traming For Energy and Wetghl
Control.
Other readers who want
this ISSUe can send 50 cents
with a long,' stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it. All·
dress your request to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019. This
issue Will tell you what you
need to know about wetght,.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
wntmg to you because many
people who have problem§ do
and I have one. I am 25 years
old and only wetgh 95 pounds. ·
I am 5 feet 4 inches tall
As you can see, I am very
skmny, and don 't ask me to
go see a doctor because I
have, and they all say I am
OK. They gtve me a bunch of
vitamins that won't help me
to ga m weight and I am very
worrted about this. On the
other hand, . my mother's
mother was skinny , but not as
skinny as I alii\ and the rest of
my famtly is OK. Please
help '
DEAR READER - In the
first place, you are absolutely
rtght about taking a bunch li
vttarruns. They won't 1help
you gam weight. V1tarruns do
not contain calories. If you
are already on a balanced
diet and get an adequate
amowtl of vtianuns, takmg
additional ones won't help at
all.
Most of the vttanuns that
you would be mterested m for
this purpose serve sunply as
catalysts to break down your
loud. The energy ts m the
loud not' the vitamins. If
you~lready have 'enough
catalysts to break down the
loud you eat, adding more
catalysts won 'I help.
You 'II be surpriSed at my
suggestion. Why don't you
lake up wetght liftmg' You
don't want to get fat. That's
not very appealing. You want
to develop your muscle s1ze.
Women who take up weight
lifting find that tt helps them ,
a great deal. It will develop
your strength and muscle
stze' and you can be shapely
at the same time. You don't
need to worry about becommg an Arnold Schwarzenegger because you ,don't have to
grow large bulgmg mu.!lcles
tn the process.
.
Weight lifting for women "'
an id.ea' whose time has
•come Women do not tend to
grow the large muscles that
men do In fact, Jandrena Ir-

Mike Drehel, 6-2, 200 lb. ,
Senior guard, Senior guard. MG .

31.

The Democrats dtdn 't mamtam thetr political dominance for the las t 40 years by mtssmg Signals from \he
electorate Ever s mce Propostllon 13 swept California by a
2 to 1 margm, Democrats ha ve scrambled to climb on the

bandwagon

•

Select their Christmas
Bff'UX)molete. USI~_OLitLBIV-AINii!'PIE.m ;~ : it a:&gt;StS no more!

SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4th
--

-

-

-~

FREE-CQLECO TV GAME
- Sign up for the drawing to be held
Tuesday, October 10 at 5:00 P.M.

PLUS:.--.s3 Gin CERTIFICATES
No Purchase Necessary- Need not be
present to win
Baby Wet- Care ... $11.97 Giant Aero year ............ .... ..... .. SI0.97
Many, many more sale priced items

BEN .FRANKLIN STORE

NEW HAVEN, W.VA.
812-2705

Hours Mon.- Thur. 9-6
Fri. · Sat. 9-8

The Me~gs Etghth Grade
football team defeated Kyger
Creek 22-12 m a contest
played last Thursday at
Kyger Creek.
'lbe Marauders were again
led by the rushing of fullback
Todd Fife who scored two
touchdowns on runs of 35 and
50 yards.
Offensive linemen helping
in the scoring were Mike
Hawk, Cliff Icenhower , Bill
Holcomb, Scott Harrison ,
Craig Bolin, John McKmney,
Scott Pickens, and Mike
Jackson.
'lbe final Meigs .Core was
the result of wmgback Greg
Taylor's fine rwt. Scoring
extra points for Metgs were
Brill King and Brett Carl.
Carl also scored on a ~yard
run which was called back
because time had exptred in
the ftrst half. Both Kyger
Creek scores came late m the
second half.
The Meigs defense was led
by Fife, Taylor, Jackson,
Rtck Chancey, and Eddie
Blount. The 2·0 Baby
Marauders host
Pomt
Pleasant .on Oct. 5 at 5 30
p.m. m Mtddleport

Leagu e
Guidry,
Matlack, Te)( 2 27.
Ca ldwe ll , Mil 2 33
Pal mer,
Ball 2 -46 , Go ltz , M1nn 2 54

NY

1 74,

Stnkeouts

National

League : R •chard,
N1ekro, All 248,
Seaver, Ctn 226, Blyleven. P1ll
182 . Montefusco, SF 177
Amencan League Ryan Cal
260 , Gu1dry, NY 2-48 . Leon a r d ,
KC 182 , Flanagan , Sa lt 167 .
Eckersley , Bos 161

Hou

303 ,

date for a Gold Glove. " But
hey, if we weren 't domg th1s ,
we'd be dnvmg trucks ."
While thts verbal repartee
was going on, Carl Yastr zemski, the vahant captaill who
homered and smgled to dnve
m two r uns, talked at length,
unable to mask the pam
"My mmdes are all knots. I
don 'I ha ve words to express
how I feel. J know we 'r e a
helluva ballclub and there's
nothmg any player has lo he
ashamed about Sometunes,
you wonder tf 11 was meant to
be or not · It's been a funny
season but when you have the
kind of talent we have, you
look forward to next year,''
Yastrzemskt smd
" We'd hke to think of
ourselves as wmners," said
Red Sox outfielder Fred
Lynn . "We won 97 last year
and 99 this season and no
team can say that except the
Yankees. But we went to the
last out and you really can't
get much closer "

By RICK VAN SANf
CIN CINNA Tl ( UP! I
Pete Rose, who has indicated
he 'll lest his value on the free
agent market this year, has
turned down the mo st
lucra ttve salary offer m
Cmcumalt Rc&gt;ds' history.
Alt)mugth not diSClosed by
the Reds or Rose, the offer
Monday was believed to be ill
th e netghborhood of $400,000 a
year
Reds Pr esident Dtck
Wagner satd the offer will
stand through Oct 10. "We're
hopeful that after constdenng
our offer, he wtll choose to
accept tt qlllckly ," he satd
"It ts liRportant for the
Reds to know where they
staod wtth Rose, smce he is
eligible for the free-agent
draft this year," satd
Wagner , who talked With
Rose and Rose's agenl,
ReU\'e n Katz for an hour
Monday

Thos week 's

Oh•o
~

Untv

Western M• c higan ~at

Slale
M1am1 aiNorlh Carolina

Kent

Anon at Western Kentucky

Dayton at Ashland
Kent ucky State at Centr al

State

Ctn crnn a h a l Flonda Stat e

(n)
E lfltnors a t Youngstown
State
Mu sk.ngum at Capital
Kenyon at Manetta (n )
Ot l erbem at W oo st er
Wrttenb erg at Herdelberg

(n)

Denrson a t Ba ldwm Wa l lace
(n I
O h •o

Wesleyan
Oh1o Nor l he~n al F1nd lay {n)
Taylor lind I at Blullton

Han over ( lnd) at Def1an ce
W1imtngton at Earlham (In d)
John Carrol l at Case Wes tern

Hor am al W

1978
CADILLAC SEDAN
DEVILLE

before fal l mg to a f1n e
Waverly club, 170-186. No

Bowlrng Gr een at Toled o (n )

Central Michtgan at

at

USED CARS

Tite Mc1gs Golf team pu• on
a gocd try last mght at Mason

SMU at OhiO Slale

Un• on

THIS WEEK' S SPECIAL

~

Umted Press International

Mount

" The club needs to know
Rose's dec1s10n so that tt will
kn ow what directi on It must
go ill makmg Improvements
to the team that has ftmshed
second m the western diviSion
t wo stra1 g ht years after
c apturtng
Wur ld
Championships m 1975 and
1976," std Wagner
Tha t sta teme nt, when
coupled wtth the Oct 10
deadline, presumably means
the Reds wtU beg ill searching
for a replacement for Rose
after Oct 10
De sp1t e the deadlme,
Wagn er 1ns1st ed he wants to
keep Ro se m Cinc mnat1.
Durt ng a 16-year maJor
league career Rose has never
played for any other team.

Waverly team
beats Meias

Ohio College
Foolba II Schedule

a.

J ( Pa I
n - denoles mghl game

hnkster had a score in the
close
match that wasn't really
dec1d ed until the last man
came m.
F or Metgs , J . R. Wamsic)
led \\lth a 43 followed closely
by Scott McK111n ey and
Chuck Kenned) w1th 44 and
45, 1 espectively Ro!J Dav1s
turned m a 54 and David
• Kennedy had a 56
F or the wmn ers, Tom
DePugh was medahst wtth a
40, and Troy Banta and Greg
Stargell were nght behtnd
wtth 41 and 42. J 1m Dutcher
ha d 47 and Joe Moore had a
thirties, but It was a

F u ll power , leather trrm

Stereo crurse . T &amp; T

·BIG SAVINGS

1- 1978 REGENCY
SEDAN
-BIG SAVINGS·

"BOTH lOADED"

Karr &amp; VanZan~~
You'll Ltke Our Quality

Way of Doing Bus~ness
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'fl l6 00

54

Me1gs and southern travel
to Oxbow for a quadrangular
mat ch wtth Belpre and
Warren tomght

Titsp m . Sat

•---------•

M a t or League Standmg s
Final AL Standmgs
By Umted Press InternatiO nal
East
W L Per
G.B "'
New Yo rk
100 63 6 13
9q 64 607 1
Boston
93 69 57&lt;l 6 1:~
Mliwauke
90 71 559 9
Ba l t•mre
86 76 531 13 1!~
Detro•t
69 90 434 29
Clevelnd
59 102 366 40
Toronto
West
W L Pet
GB
Ka n C1ty
92 70 568
ca l• f
87 75 537 5
Texas
87 75 537 5
M 1nesota
73 89 451 19
Ch 1cago
71 90 441 20 1h
Oakland.
69 93 426 23

Seattle

· Freeze lifted

on free agent market

56 104

350 35

Monday's Results
New Yor k 5 Boston 4
(End Regu la r Season Mat or
League Standtngsl

by commissioner
Nt;;W YORK (UP!)
Baseball Commtss10ner
Bowie Kuhn said Monday he ::::;:==
is lifting the freeze on
transactions between the
New York Yankees and the
Cleveland Iudians imposed in
April. ,
"I have been advised that
the New York Yankee
partnership interests of Gabe'
Paul and Steve O'Neill have
been purchased from them by
the partnership," SBid K1;hn.
"Since there , is no fur &lt;her
reason to continue our freeze
on transactions, between the
Yankees and the Indtans, it
has been lifted."
Kuhn imposed the freeze
until Paul, former• president
of the Yankees, eould divest
himself of his stock in the
Yankees after joining the
Indian organization.

See Bill Childs- He Works For You!

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
,o.

~

~
992-2342
•

'
•

�"

..
4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q.• l'\lesday, Oct. 3,1978
Ohio CoUece FootbaU Records
By Ulllted Press l.ateruatlooal
Mid-American Confemce
AU GaD!es·
Conference
W. L. T.
W. L. T.
4 0 0
BaD State
4 0 0
CentralMich
2 I 0
2 2 0
·WesternMich
3 I 0
2 I 0
Bowling Green
2 2 0
I I 0
I 2 0
Ohio Univ
I I 0
Miami
I 2 0
1 2 I
Eastern Mich.
I 2 0
2 3 0
Kent State
I 2 0
2 2 0
I 2 0
Nor Illinois
0 I 0
Toledo
0 2 0
0 4 0
Ohio Conference
(Red Division)
All Games
Coolereoce
W. L. T.
W. L. T.
2 I 0
Ohio Northern
I 0 0
Baldwin-Wallc
3 0 0
0 0 0
Denison
J. I I
0 0 0
I I I
Mount Union
0 0 0
0 2 I
Ohio Wesleyan
0 0 0
0 3 0
Heidelber g
0 I 0
(Blue Division)
All Games
«;oolerence
W. L. T.
W. L. T.
Wittenberg
3 0 0
I .0 0
Wooster
3 0 0
0 0 0
Muskingum
I I I
0 0 0
NFL Standing s
·
By United Press International
American Confer-en'ce

East

W . L. T . Pet.
Miam i
3 20 .600
New England
3 2 0 .600
NY Jets
2 3 0 .400
Buffalo
2 3 0 .400
Baltimore
1 4 0 .200
Central
W L. T. Pet.
Pittsburgh
5 0 0 1. 000
Cleve land
3 20 .600
Houston
3 20 .600
Cinci nn ati
0 5 0 .000
West
· W. L. T. Pet.

Denver
Oakla nd

4
3
2

1 o
2 0
3 0

Sea tt le
San Diego
1 4 o
Kansas City
1 4 0
National Conference
Ea st

.200

.200

W. L. T. Pel .

Washington
Dallas

5

0 0 1.000

3

2 0

.600

3

2 0

3
0
central

2 0
5 0

.600
.600
.000

Nt/lG iants

Ptil'ladetphia

St. Louis

.800
.600
.400

W. L. T . Pet.

Green Bay
Chicago
Minnesota
Tampa Bay
Detroit

4
.3
3
2
1

1
2
2
3

0
0
0
0
4 0

.800
.600
.600
.40p
.200

West
W- L. T. Pet.
Los Angeles
5 o o 1.000
New Orleans
2 3 0 .400
Atla nta
2 3 o · .400
San Francisc
1 4 0 .200,
sunday's Results
Houston 16-.. Cle~o~eland 13
Buffal o 28, Kansas City 13
Minnesota 24, Tampa Bay 7
At lan ta 23, NY Giants 20
Pittsbu r g h 2B; NY Jets 17
Miami 24, St . Lou is 10
New Eng land 28, San Diego
23
filhila 17, Bal timor e 14
Green Say 35, Detro if 14
Los Ang 26, New Orlean s 20
San Fran 28, Cincinnati 12
Oakland 25, ChiCago 19, ot
Denver 28, Sea ttl e 7~
Monday' s Result
Was h ington 9, Dalla s 5
Sunday, Oct. 8
Plli la at New England
washington at Det ro ll
Atl_anta at Pittsburgh
Buttalo ·at NY Jets
Tam pa Bay at Kansas Ci ty
Baltimore at St. Lou is
Chicago a t Gr een · Bay
Cleveland a 1 New Orleans
Den ver at San Diego .
Houston at Oakland
Minnesota at Seattle
NY. Gi ants at Dalla s
San F ran at Los _A nge les
Monday, Oct. 9
Cincinna ti at Miam i

Capital
Otterbein
Marietta

IN THE
COMMO N PLEAS COURT

0
0
0

2 1 0

0 0
0 0
1 0

I

2

--

I
1

].

0

CARL A . RITCHIE ,
Plalntitt,

vs .

NORMA RITCHIE";-ET AL..
'.
Defendants
x-Kenyon
0 3 0
X
X
X
No. 16,756
- NOTICE OF SALE x-Oberlin
X
X
X
0 4 0
Pursuant to
Order of
x-ool competing for title
Sa l e i ssued by the Common
Pleas Court of Me igs County,
Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
Ohio , t wilt offer for s!'le at ,
AU Games
Conference
pub I ic auction on th e Jrd . day
of November, 1978 , at 10 : 00
w. L. T. W. L. T .
A .M . on the Court House
3 0 0
FindlaY
,3 0 0
steps at th e Court House in
Hanover
2 0 0
2 0 I
Pomeroy, Ohio, the foll ow ing
described rea l estate :
Anderson
2 I 0
2 1 0
The fOIIOWif)Q real es tate
Taylor
I 1 0
1 2 0
situated in fhe Cou nty of
Meigs , In the State of Ohio,
Defiance
1 2 0
I 3 0
and in tt1e Township of
Wilmington
I 2 0
2 2 0
.C hester , and bound ed and
Bluffton
I 2 0
desc ribed as follows :
1 3 0
Parcel No . 1 : Si tuate in
Manchester
0 2 0
0 3 0
Chester Towns hip , M ei gs
Earlham
I 2 0
I 2 0
County , Ohio , and in Sect ion
1. Town. 4, Ohio company's
Others
Purchese , beg inning i n the
L.
T.
center of the road at the.
northeast co rn er of gr.ive lot
Youngstown State
4
0
0
and meet i ng house lots,
Dayton
4
0
1
the nce west 15 rods to a
Hiram
2
0
0
co rn er ; thence nort h 8 ro ds to
a cor ne r ; th ence east 15 ro d s
Akron
3
I
0
to a co rner ; thence 8 rod s to a
Ohio State
2
I
0
co rn er ; t hence east 15 rods to
a corn e r ; then ce so uth 8 ro ds
Case Western
2
2
0
to th e p lac e J~l f beginning ,
2
0
John Carroll
2
containing l,'.l iler e.
Parc el No . 7: Situa te in the
Cincinnati
I
2
0
Town sh ip of Che.s ter, Me igs
Central State
I
2
0
Cou nty , . OhiO, and be ing iJ
Ashland
0
part of Sec ti on 7, Town 4 ,
1. 3
Ra nge 12, Ohio Company's
Pur chase. beginni ng on t he
wes t I ine of Section 1, where
the southeas t corner of la nds
of F . W . Zehm intersects said
section line, and running w est
al ong th e north lin.e of la nds
ot Joh n Bake r , 28 rod s 5 t eet
to the ce nter of th e tow nship
road , know n as t he School
Hou"'se Road through said
Sectio n 7; then ce i n ·a north ·
easte r ly d ir ection along th e
meanderings of th e ce nter- of
sai d road to where t he west
line of said Section 1 cros ses
sai d r o ad ; thence south a long
th e said wes t line of Sec ti on 1
left-hander Ron Guidry; :!a-3, to th e pla ce of beg inn in g,
By FRED McMANE
started and won the playoff conta in ing 5 ac re s, more or
UPI Sports Writer
.
.
game, his second straight less
KANSAS CITY (UPI)
Pa rce l No .3: Situ a te In th e
It's the same old stor y in the appearance with only three Townsh i p of Ches ter, Meigs
Cou nt y , Ohio, and i n Section
American League East days rest.
1, Town 4, Ra ng e 12, Ohio
two
·games
are
c)
The
first
Company's
P u r c hase ,
championship series. Only
inning at William Bell's
this time the Kansas City played on the artificial nbeg
o rthee st corner ; th enc e
Royals are confident they can · surface of Royals StadiUin north to the east branch of
where Kansas City set a club Sh ad e Ri~o~er ; thence up sa id
change the ending.
cr eek w it h i ts meanderings 96
The Royals will be meeting . record by winning 56 of 81 rod s to a stake; !henc e south
5 degr ees west 16 rods to the
the New York Yankees in the games .
coun t y road : thence easterly
best-of-five American League
on said road t o the pla ce of
playoffs for the third year in a ·
beginning , co ntaining
6
ac res, more or less .
row, beginning tonight, and
Exc ept a l ot deeded to
once again the heavy hitters
Schoo l Directo r s of Di st . 1 tor .
school purposes :
from the Bronx are favored to
By Greg Bailey
Parcel No . 4: Situ ate in th e
win.
The Southern Junior High, To wns hi p of Ches t er, M eigs
"They just don't give us coa ched by Bill Hensler, County , Ohio . Al so ano t her
piec e O:f land being directly
credit," said Frank White, defeated the Wahama White west
of the abo:.t e described
the Royals' All-Star second Falcon football team by a p iece, beg inn ing at the ce nter
Cre ek on the west
baseman. "But we keep score of 12-0 last Thursday . lofineShade
o f sa id Section 1, the
popping up . We.'ll have to get Dave Talbott , right balfback, southwest corner of land
in the World Series and win it led the Southern team as he formerly owned by Frederick
Feiger; thence 25 r ods to the
to wake some people up."
ran for most of the yardage county ro ad ; then ce easterly '
Ordinarily, White' s and scored one touchdown. on said roa d 35 r ods to a white
oak marked for a corner ;
unbridled optimism might
The first score came with thence north 5 deg rees east 20
largely dismissed as pre- 45 seconds remaining in the ro ds to the center of sai d
game hype , but this year the first hall when Terry Pat- c reek ; the n ce north 65
degrees west 7 rods to the
Royals definitely feel they' terson plunged one-yard for branch of said creek and
have the upper hand . Their the. TO. The extra point stone cor ner ; th ence north 8
degrees west 5 rods; thence
iaith is built on three factors :
converSion was no good. The westward 24 rods to th e
a) The Yankees are tired second TO came late in the· section line and place of
inning , contain ing 4 acre s
after Monday's emotion-drai- third period when Talbott ran beg
a nd 147 r ods , mor e or less.
ning, sudden-death playoff 45 yards up the middle for a
Parcel No.5 : Situate in the
with 'the Boston Red Sox for score. Again, the extraS: were Townsh ip of Chester , Meigs
Cou nty , Ohio : A l so the
the East Division title. Bucky no good.
follow ing piece bf land lyin g ·
and · ad jo in ing th e
Dent hit a three-run homer,
The Southern defense held sou th of desc
ribe d
pi ece .
Reggie Jackson added a solo Wahama to only four . first . above
Beg i nning at Charles B .
homer and Thurman Munson downs, all being late in the Cowdery's nor:thwest corn er ;
then ce eas t 105J/• rod s to the
doubled in a run in a 5-4 game.
sou thw es t corner of land s
victory.
In the meantime, the of- sold to Benjamin Johnson ; '
b) The Yankees' pitching fense did a very admirable' , then ce nor th to_ the northwest
.
· corner of Meetmg House and

an

.

w.

Royals are
co~fident

Southern has .
12-0 victory_

be

staff is disoriented since ace

JOb a s they moved the ball up
the field at east. There were

four touchdowns called back

Factory-Trained
Hearing Aid
Specialists
To Attend Special
I

OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

because of penalties.
John Porter d1'd an

ex-

cellent job i't quarterback,
and Terry Patterson zane
.
'
Beegle, Allen Tucker, Mitch

Bable and Dennis Teaford all
.

'

.

cjid well gomg both ways.
The Wahama boys played
·
bl
we11 , bUt a Iack 0f b emg a e
to control the ball was the
main obstacle. They played

good defense but were unable
to move t he ball on offense
until the fourth quarter.

Better-Hearing Consultation

Name, grade , height,
weight and number are ·

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1978
LOWE HOTEL
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

· Al l
,
Bn·_an
en , 7• 4 11. 79, 10;

Beltone Hearing Aid Specialists will be
there
to :
Give you a chance to talk over your hearing
problem with an expert in his field .
Advise you on how to protect the hearing
you still . have and what ~ can do to
conserve your abil ity to hear .
Arrange a modern hearing loss test to
· better evaluate your hearing ability.
Clean and adjust aids_(any make or model)··
at no cost or obligation .
Not even a Bellone aid can solve every
hearing problem . But, thanks to 'm odern
technology. most hear ing problems can be
helped better ·than ever before. Find out if
you could be hearing better than you are.
Plan to attend this special event now.
FRESH· BATTERIES . ONE- HALF PRICE
If you are a hearing air user and come in
during our Better Hearing Consultation, you
may purchase a packag e of batteries at
half· price.

listed ·

MartmAndrew, 7,.4-10,72,22;

Troy Arnott, 8, 5-1, 104, 30 ;
Randy Armes, 8, 4-8, 70, 50;
Milch Sable, 7, 5·8, 148, 54;
Rick Sable , 7, 4-9, 86, 11 ;
Zane Beegl e,
5-4, 11 3, 23 ;
Nick Bost ick 8 5. 4 104 70 .
·
B
. k, '
'
'
Ch ns _ OSfiC ,8,5-51/'... , 107,
84.
Cec1l Brlnager , 8, 5-5, 131,
64 ; Da v id Bryant , 7, 5-0, 96;
68; James Bush , 7, 4-10, 90,
36; Trevor Cardone , 7, 5-10,
96, 51 ; Wade Connolly,. 7,
98, 45 ; Keith Cook, 7, S-l 1f'2,
100, 61 ; Jeff Delong, 7, 5 ~ 2, 97,
46 ; Richard Dugan , 8. 4~ 10, 85,
80 ; Gregory Duvall . 7, 5~2'12.

a,

s-o,

burying ground ; thence east

to ce nt er of the road ; thence
north 10 degrees east to the
cente r of th e road that leads
up the h ill by the sc hool house
following th e m ean der ings of
sa id ro ad westerly to th e
sec ti on li ne ; then ce sou th 1"3

rods . to the . ~ lace ot b egi n ~
nmg , co nta tntng 19 acres ,
mor e or less .
Ex cep t 31• acre ad join in g
tne c hurch and burying !ot

so ld for a sc hool lot .
Further exce pt ing from
Parcel No . 5, 2'h acres

conveyed to Emerson Bell , by

deed reco rd ed in Vol. 103.
Pag e 216 of the Deed .Records

of Metgs County , Oht o.
Parcel No.6 : Situate in the

Township of Chester . Meigs

Cou nt y, Ohio. Also the
following describ ed premises
adjoi r:li ng ~he _ above on the
south . Begtnnmg at the west
lin e of sai d Sec ti on 1 and the
cen te r of Shad e River ; th enc e
down sa id creek 68 rods to a
bend in the creek ; th enc e
down said creek 66 ro ds to a
corner ; thence nor t h 70 rod s
tq a corner ; thence northwest
20 r od s To a corner ; thei)Ce
. ~es~ 98 rods to the s~c t !o n
line, then ce sou t~ o n. satd ltne
to pl ace of begmnmg , co o ta inin g50acres,moreorl ess.
Except t.he Cowc;try fam i ly
burying ground . ,
Parcel No . 7: Si tua ted in
th e_ Township o_f Ghes ter ,
Me•gs _Count y , C?h •o : ~ l s o the
follow.n g desc n bed p1ece of

l'h
bo
· ose rn on this date are
130, 72; Steven Fisher. 7. 4- 1mder the sign of Ubra.

10'12, 761f2, 16.

parcel ot land acJioining the
last descr i bed piece at the
nor-theast
,corner
and
d esc r i bed
as
follows :
*ginn i ng ninetv eight rod s
east of Charles B . Cowdery's
northwest co r ner ; the n ce
so uth 45 deg . East twenty ,
rods to a stake ; th ence n·o rth
fourt een rods ; thenc e west
fourt een rods to p lace of
beginning , conta ining ninety
eig ht r od s, be the same mor e
or less .
Parcels 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7
above described lie w es t of
the road leading from Kena
to Tuppers Plains .
Parcel No . 8 : Situated in
the Township of Ches ter,
M eigs County , Ohio , and
si t uated in Sec tion 1, Town 4,
R ~nge 12 of the Ohio Com pany ' s -Purchase bounded
and described as fo l lows :
Begi nning 2 rods 18 Jinks
north 30 degrees wes t of a
Black walnut tree on side of
th e road ; thence 19 ro ds on
th e roa d to a stak e and the
cOr n er of the meeting house
lot. thence .west 3 rods 10 links
to a stake; th ence north 16
l inks to t,he sout hw es t corner
of the meeting ho use; th enc e
wes t a long said line of the
meeting hOU$e lot 35 feet to
th e southwe"s t Cornet of the
meeting ho use lot; thence 19
rod s 2 0 l inks · sou th ; th ence
east 6 rods 121f'2 links to the
place o f beginning , con ·tainlng l16rods, more or l ess.
Parcel No . 9: Situa te in the
Townsh ip o f Che5ter , Mei gs
Cou nty , Ohio : Situa ted in
Sec ti on 1, Town 4, Ra ng e 11 of
the Ohio Company's Pu r chase begi nn ing 1 rod west of
th e b lack walnut tree on th e
south line of lend formerl y
own ed by Ethan Cowdry ,
th ence south 33 rods to a
hedge,' thenc e east 17 rods to
a stake ; th enc e continuing
east to the ce nter of the East
Shad e Creek ; then ce north
easte r ly fo llow ing the center
of th e meanderings of the
creek to l a nd formerly owned
by David Osborn west line ;
th ence north Wit h said lin e 9
rod s and 1 /.o~ ; th ence west 95
r-ods to t he p la ce of beg inn ing .
Parcel No . 10: Situa te in
th e Townsh ip of Chester ,
M e igs cou nty, Oh io. Th e
fo l lowing d escribed piece of
land adjoining th e above
d escri bed t ra ct on the East ;
b ~ g in n i n g at . a stone In the
cente r of Section 1. Town 4,
Range 12 ; then ce from said
stone easterl y to the center of
ftie t r eek ; fc
' hence d own the
ce nt er of 1 e creek .to the
mouth of S dore run; th en ce
eas terly 6 r ods 12 teet t o a
Willow ; thence a little west of
solH h to th e center of t he
creek ; th ence d o wn said
creek about 10 feet below an
old mI ll dam ; thence easter:ly
about 2 rods to an oak tre e;
th enc e east 9 rod s 12 feet to a
stak e; t hence south 18 r ods to
a Gum tree in a small ra11in e ;
th ence a littl e west of south 40
rods to a stOne in John F .
Forrence ' s west l ine; then ce
west on said line to David
Osbor n's north a nd south
li ne; th ence on said I ine -to the
pla t e of beginni ng, con ta inin g 15 acres , more o r Jes·s.
Parcel No. 11 : Also ad join i ng
th e las t
abov e
described parcel on the so ufh .
Situate in Chester Township ,
Meigs
County ,
Ohio .
Beginn ing on · th e center I ine
of Sec ti on 1 runn in g nor th and
sou th about 10 rod s so uth of ·
wh er e said lin e crosses th e
cr eek, a st on e co rn er in sa id
sectio n ; then ce . north 80
degrees west to the center of
the cree k ; thence following
up said creek to sai d cente r
line ; thence south about ten
rods to the piece of beg inn ing ,
conta ining 1· acr'e, m ore or
l ess .
Parcel No . 12: Situo1,te in
th e Townsh i p of Che ster ,
M eigs County , Oh io : All thai
part
of
th e
following
d escr ibed rea I esta te that lies
south of th e center of the East
branch of Shade Riv er , to wit : Beginning 132 rod s east
of t he northwest cor ner of
Sect i on 1; thence south 46
rods to a dra in ;. t hen ce so uth
70 degrees east 41 r ods to th e
ce nter of said section ; th en ce
south 164 rods to Bell's line ;
thence east 73112 rods to David
Osborn's l i n ~; then ce north to
sec t iOn line , th ence west to
the place of beginning , in
TOwn -4 , Rang e 12 .
Parcel No . l l : Situate Tn
th e Townsh i p of Chester,
M e igs County , Ohio : Ali that
part
of
the
fo l lowing
d esc r ibed real estate th at lies
south of the center of the Eas t
bran ch of Shade River , to Wit : Being in Section I , Tow n
4 , Ran ge 12 of the Ohio
Com pany 's
Purchase,
d esc ribed
as
fo llow s :
Begi nning ao rods east of the
nort hwest corne r of Sectio n
1; then ce eas t 62 r od s ; th ence
south 46 ro ds to a drain ;
thence south 70 degrees east
41 rods t o the center of sec tion ; running north and
south; thence south 163 rods ;
th ence west 58 rod s. to tne
ce nter of the r oa d : th enc e
north 2112 degrees west 24 red s
on sa id road to a Walnu t tr ee ;
th ence north 10 degrees east
52 rods to th e center of th e
east branch of Sha de Riv er ;
thence west 7 rods to m o.uth of
small run ; t hence nor th 10
degrees west 152 rods to the
pla ce of beginning , co n tain i ng 95 acres, more or tess .
TERMS OF SALE : Cash,
for n o t less than two -thirds of
th e appraised value, and
su bje cted to real estate ta xes
tor 1978.
Pr o per t y appraise d at
$33,60 0.00 .
Jam es J . Proffi tt .
Sheriff of
Me igs Cou nty , Chip .
I 101 3, 10, 17, 24, 31r 51

•

Tim Patterson, 8, 5-61f:z, 125,

101

REUTER-IJROGAN INSURANCE

116, 55 ;

Dennis Teaford , 7, 5·9, 200,
· 71; James Tucker , 8, S-3, 139,

62 . and Troy Ward, 7, 5·1'12,
109, 33.

Thursday, Oct . s, Water ·
ford , Away, S p.m.
Monday , Oct . 10, Meigs 7th ,
Home, 4:30 p.m . .
Thursday . Oct . 12, Eastern.

The annual Persinger·Dill
reunion was held recently at
the
Meig s
Co unty
fairgrounds .
Attending were Clarence
Jr. 'a nd Doris Spurrier, Eagle
·River Alaska ·; Wanda
Shouldis of Phoenix, Arizona·
William, Gladys and Li,;
Bowers; Randy and Terri
Bowers , Jack and Kathy
Davis, Cuyahoga Falls;
Eugene, Mary Lou, Ronnie
and Regina Hawkins, Kelly
Shasteen, Joseph a nd Pauline
Fields, Middleport ; Charles
and Kathryn Wildermuth,
Allen Dill, Sr ., Lillian Napper, Sleven , Sandra, Danielle
and L•1cianna · Sc•nll . Rollin

Complete
Kit

VINYL CARPET
RUNNER
24x5' Clear
$3.59
Valu•

~f$198~

RAVE
PERMANENT
$5 .4 9 $ 2 8 9
Valu•

'

DANAL
COAT
HANGERS

10 Pack
$1.19 Value.

24's

$1.69 Valu•

(
44

Fireplace Hearths1de
12 oz . .
$2 .32 Value

LOGGER KITS
HSL·i
$22.95 Value

tam thinking al purchulng • recr.. tionat vehicle. 1
un~erstand that only certain types of vehicles qualify
.for coverage under a molar homo Insurance P&lt;tllcy.
What should I look for?
A. This Is a good question and one more people should
be concerned about when purchasing a recreational
vehicle. A motor home Is considered to be a selfpropelled lend motor vehicle of the four-wheel variety
equipped as living quarters. It must Include at least
cooking, sleeping and rest room facilities to qualify as

Beltone·
• Hearing Aid Center
The Better Way to Better Health
601 , Sixth Ave .• Huntington, W. Va .
Ph.one 525-7221

Tuesday, Oct. 31 . North
Gallla, Away. 5 p.m .
Coach : Bill
Hensl e r ;
Manager : Jerry Wolf .
Cheerleaders :
Kim
Morrow. Tracy Riffle. Missy
Cummins, Janie Amberger,

Jenny Bentley. Beth Hart .·
Cheerleader

advisor:

Valerie JohnS?Jl ·

r•

The InsUrance Store

2H E. Main,

"2-S130,

Pomeroy~

0.

Pomeroy.
..
Janice Carnahan , Dan,
Donna Jean, Tnuruny and
Teq Smith; Ernest, Carolyn
Sue Tripplett and Buddy,
Terry, Faith, J enny and
Bridget , Racine; Dan, Mary,
J erry and David Smith of
Bashan ; and Cathy, Corissa
and Chanda Mulford of
Cheshire, and Tim Dill,
Chester.

Florence Richmond
becomes bride of
Roger'· Stearns

GEM

BATH PAC
SPECIAL
~

99&lt; Value

179(
ALCOHOL
Isopropyl
16 oz. Pameco
54'
Value

33(

'

Prescriptions
filled .

FIRE STARTER
CUBES

Safe-Lite

~-- ,-·-

SoCI"a} III
1Calendar I'
II''

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE
PTO
TueSday 7:30p.m. Plans for
Halloween party will be made
and a discussion will be held
on · se nding kin derga rte n
children to Rutland . AU I nterested parents urged to
attend.
MINERSVILLE United
Methodist Women will hold a
ya rd sa le. Tuesday and
Wednesday from 9 ~ . m In •
p.m. at the home of June
Sayre in Syracuse .
MIDDLEPORT
LODGE
363, F . a nd A. M., 7:30
Tuesday at the Middlepo.r t
Masonic Temple.
XI GAMMA MU CHAP·
TER OF BETA SIGMA PHI
SORORITY, 7:30 Tuesday at
the Columbia Gas Co. office.
Judy Crooks and Marilyn
Anderson to have the cultura l
program, Jennifer Anderson
and Carolyn Grueser to be
hostesses.
SUTTON
TOWNSHIP
Trustees meeting, 8 p.m.
Tuesd ay
at
Syracuse
municipa l building.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7:45 p.m . Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Election of officers. two 50
year pins to be presented. Of-

home of Mrs. Maxin e
Philson . Program on Thomas
Wolfe by Mrs. Forrest
Bachtel.
GALLiA COUNTY SALON
612 , Eight and Forty, .
Wednesday , 7:30p. m. at the
home of Mrs. David Cummings, Harrisonville .
POMEROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AM, regula r meeting, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday.
THURSDAY"
WEST ERN
SQUARE
dance, 8 p.m . .Thursday at
Royal Oak Park recreation
building;
Dewey Hart ,
Columbus, caller . Western
square dancers invited .

"FLEXSTEEL"
Whate ver your taste in furnit ure. you can
choose with confidence from Flexsteel.
Wheth er you · select · contemporary .
traditional. modern or colonial. you wilt find
an impeccable elegance in every piece that
will be a proud addition to your hom e. Thi s
distinctive Flexsteei furni ture is available
in sofas. sectionals. suites, chairs , and a
unique sofa · sleep~r .
Hundreds and
hundred s of fabrics, all decorated-selected
for beaut iful correctness.

VISITORS
· Mr. and Mrs. Roland Karr
and Sandy of Owensboro, Ky .
were weekend guests of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Otho
KaiT, Route I. Middleport.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

DO v.o.u
QUA.LIFY?
'

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT!
There are 20 Reasons Why You Should Do Business
W~h

Us. Conie In and We Will Discuss Them.

DAVIS INSURANCE AGENCY
992-6677
Across from the Court House in Pam eroy
Bill Quickel; Jeannie Starcher

Accurately
TAMPAX
40's
Regular or Super

70's
$1.98 Value

$166

//

$2 .44
Value

~----~------~----~
USDA CHOICE
GAY
GREASELESS
··1 / 4 a..
$1.49 Value

.8 9 ,.
~

AQUA NET
Non Aerosol

HAIR SPRAY

ROUND BONE
SHOUUDER

59"'

GOOD NIWS

RAZOR
3 Pack
89C Value

Vatu•

:uSHROAST

lip

.

,

~89~

AUTOMATIC
-.. V
, APORIZER
$11.25 Value

DAIR Y

PLUMR
32

01.

$1.29 Value

MASSENGILL DISPOSAIU
DOUCHE
VInegar and Water
uc Off
6 az.
57C Value

29~
Naturemade

$139

••eeee••·············

ROYAL
GELATIN
Strawberry,
Raopberry
'ar Cherry

BROUGHTON'S
VITAMIN D
'

l!z

HOMO MILK.~.A.~.
~ODERN DAIRY ~
$}39
2% MILK........~~~....

79(

SUPERIORS
CARNIVAL

WIENERS

CHUCK ROAST

Hankacfaft 5592

LIQUID

$'J19
LB.
·

BLISSCRAFT
6 PC. COVERED
:~ BOWL SET

79( o'~
$~2
. 99V59
Q

:1~:~

ROAST
·
.
.

. USDA CHOICE

SUPERIORS

Brau ilschwetger...... ~~ 69¢

16

39.(

oz. 99~

PRODUCE
EGGS.....•e..~~~~~~-~~ ........~ ...............~t ..69e ·
HOLSUM BUNS.. ~?~.~.?~.~~~~-E.c.~~--~-~~~.. 49e
·
· 3LB.
YELLOW
ON
IONS
..
~~~ ...
DR. PEPPER.......•••......•.. ~:.~.~~~-~~~~.. 99e RED DELICIOUS
HARTFORD ROAST BEEF.......~~-~:.~!~. 99e APPLES.............~.~-~: ..~} 00
PEPSI COLA ········ee•·············-.... ~.~~?:, •13•
EXTRA GOOD SPECIAL
MODE~ VITAMIN D
GLAD TRASH BAG Ll NERS.. ~~~,:1-z~... 99e
ALPO DOG FOOD.... :~;~!~.A.v.!.R!~~ ••• 3CANs•1 00
HOMO MILK

49¢

New From Purina
22 oz.
OOUNTRY BLEND CAT CHOW....,........................ ... ~~~... 49~
R~$~~
OOUNTRY BLEND CAT CHOW ...................... :.... su9.,...

GAL

$149

!

ALL WEEK

THURSDAY

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE, SERVICE

Wesley Smith, Steve, Kelly
and Jason Stewart ; Timothy
and Tamela Bearhs, James,
Phyllis a nd Scott Bearhs,

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stearns

Thursday. Oct . 19, Kyger

Creek, Away, 5 p .m .

Larry , Janet and

----....

·Following the picnic, Mrs.
-~
Magel Smith and Diane
'
Smith assisted by Mary
Braley, Kay Imboden, and
Cathy Scarberry, conducted
games for the children. There
was group singing with Steve
Eblin on the guitar. Among
those attending were several
bride 's veil fell from a head- from ~ the Meigs County Inpiece of lace.
firmary.
The bride's three atten- '
dants wore gowns of pink ,
green and yellow and carried
bouquets of pompons and
baby's breath with white
ficers to wear gowns.
streamers. The bride 's bouATTEND BANQUET
WEDNESDAY
quet was of Wue tinted pomMr s. lVIarie Hawkins,
LADIES AUXILIARY of
pons and baby's breath with supreme queen 's attendant,
blue ribbon streamers tied in Order of the White Shrine of Middleport Fire Departm ent
Wednesday 7: 30 p.m . at fire
lover's knots . The groom !s
The Victory Baptist Church Kobert E. Smith following a mother wore a street length Jerusalem, attended a ban- station. Hostesses are Donna
on the Route 7 bypass near · 15minute prelude of music by ' dres5 of yellow and white quet and reception honaring Byer , · Bernice DOrst and
Twila McDonald , supreme
Pomeroy was the setting for Eloise Matson.
floral , and the bride's mother second handmaid, held at the Emma Wayland. Plans for
the June 25 wedding of Miss
Halloween party will be
Given in marriage by her was in a two piece dress of
Florence Richmond and father, Robert Richmond, the blue with pink and white Masonic Temple ballroom, made.
.
Parkersburg, W. Va. on Oct.
Roger Stearns.
MIDDLE PORT
bride wore a floor length trim.
I. A program was presented
The single ring ceremony gown of white splendor knit
UTERARY a,UB, 2 p.m.
The couple honeymooned in following the banquet.
was performed by the Rev . trimmed with white lace. The Florid~ .
Wednesday at the Racine

a motor home.

Away / 5 p.m .

terson,

Toe annual Sunday school
picnic of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church held
recently at Forest Acres
Park was attended by 86
adults and children .

FAMILY
COMB PACK
Q,

Dill, Roger, Iris, and Robie
Davis, Sherri and Mindy Pat-

Sunday school picnic held

Stance 90·116 Big 8

Ma r k Salser. 7. 4· 11 , 76, 52 ;
llave Talbott , 8. 5· 8, 126. 24 ;

· Annual Persinger-Dill
reunion held recently

IOO's
N1423
$2.71
Value

&amp;1; John Porter ; 8, 5-3, 112,
l2 ; Br ian Riffle; 7, 5~0. 122, 32;
S t~ ve Souder, 8, S-1,

J&gt;a~ly &amp;;·nlinel, Middl•epcn,&amp;-Pome~ov. 0., Tuesday , Oct. 3,1978

DAILY IRON
TABLETS

Russell Flagg. 7, 5-4. 144, 66 ;
Robert Gibbs, B, 4-11 , 97, 14;Jaso n Hill , 7, 5-2, 109, 85 ; Paul
Hill . 8. 5·4, 9B. B1; Richard
Hill , · 7, 5·2, 127, 74 ; Tony
Imboden , B, 5·5'12. 113, 60;
Ri ch ard Lyons, B. 5· I'll, B8,
80 ; Robert Mc Haffie, B, 5-1'12,
90. 48; Nelson Morris , 7, 5·4,
111, 82; Terry PaUerson , 8, 59'1&gt;, 139, 44.

•

RC or DIET RITE
16 oz.
8 PKG.
BTLS.

'1"

PEPSI
COLA
'8 16 oz. somEs

1

.
De~u;;: ..
~

Plus
'

~

�•
6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Oct. 3,1978

Business and Professional Women t.o.
.mark .'National Business Club ' week

~edding an~iversary ·

.

to be celebrated
LETART FALLS-Mr. ·and
Mrs. Guy Shule r ·will
celebrate their 50th' wedding
&lt;11111iversary with an OIJ"n
house at their Letart Falls
home from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday.
Mr. Shuler, son of the late
Edward and Nancy Shuler,
and Mary Boies Shuler,
daughter of the late Lillian
and Raymond Boies of
Athens, were married on Oct.
6, 1928 at the Letart Falls
Methodist Church parsonage.
They have three children,
Edna Stobart of Miami, Fla.;
Farrell Shuler of Fort
Lauderdale. Fla. and Sherrie

Dillon, Hartselle, Ala., and
five grandchildren, Cheri and
Karolea Stobart, Tra vis
Shuler, and Joshua and
Nathan Dillon.
The Shulers operated
Shuler's Market in Pomeroy
for over 30 years. They moved to Letart Falls in 1975.
Preceding their open house
observance, there will be a
family reunion at the Letart
Falls Community Building,
the location of Edward and
Nancy Shuler's 50th aJmiversary celebration.
Friends and relatives are
invited to call during the open
house hours.

An active week will be
observed by the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club to mark
" National Business Club
Week," which will begin on
Oct. 14.
Some mem hers otthe local
club will possibly attend a
Columbus luncheon for the
national president, •Mrs.
Geraldine R. Eidson, who will
be in Columbus on Oct. 14 to
kick off the week.
Mrs. Eidson became
president of the Business and
Professional Women's Club,
Inc ., in July, this year, at the

'

na tiona I convention held in
Puerto Rico.
She Is vice pr!l5ident and ·
loan officer of tbe Ridglea
State Bank in Fort .Worth,
Tex. As principal officer of
the National Federation, she
will be in the forefront of all
BPW ratification efforts for
the Equal Rights Amendment
during the next months.
A member of the BPW
since 1958, Mrs. Eidson has
demonstrated her leadership
abilities by serving as
president of the Texas
Feder'l.!!2!' and in many local

and state BPW offices. She is
particularly interested In the
political. process and - has
conducted several BPW
political action conferences.
She has an ongoing concern
for educational and career
development opportunities
for women and s~pports use
of the regulatory process to
insure equal treatment for
women in the work force.
Locally, members· of the
Middleport Cl~b will attend
church services on Sunday,
0£\. 15, and on Monday, Oct.
16, there will he a dinner at
the Meigs Inn. Following the

dinner and a silent auction,
"Woman of the Week" and

" Woman of the Year"
awards wiD be given ..
The awards are based on
the outstanding contributions
women of the club have made
in promoting the club and its
aim and supportive treatment of all committees and
officers.
Finale of the week will be
the att'endance of Middleport
Club members to the 50th
anniversary celebration of
"the Athens Business and
Professional Women's Club.

Betty Roush gives program on world hunger
·'

'Many Splendored Self'
to be subject of program
" The Many-Splendored
Self" will be the topic of a
program to be presented at
the Pomeroy Public LibrarM
at 7:30p.m. on Monday, Oct.
16.

.

and music. Tbe purpose of the
program is to show how the
humanities serve to make
people recognize the uniqueness and significance of the
individual.
" The Many-Splendored
Self" will also open for
discussion the question of
how public policies such ~san
affirmative action and
retirement laws attempt to
deal with the needs of the
individual.
•
The program, open to the
public, will be sponsored by l
the Washington County
Friends of the Library and
the Ohio Program in the
Humanities. The speakers
are Carol Steinhagen and
Steven Blume of the English
· department and William
Hartel of the history
department of Marietta
College. Readings, music,
slides and public discussion
make up the program.

The Rev.

Scarletts to speak

The Rev . and Mrs. Don
Scarlett, missionaries to
Africa, will be at three
Churches of the Nazarene in
Meigs COunty this week.
The Rev. and Mrs. Scarlett
are on medical furlough and
the Rev . Mr. Scarlett . is
holding deputation services
among Nazar,ene churches.
Rev . Scarlett's first
assignment was to · the
Rehoboth Bible College as a
teacher and evangelist in the
Capetown area. A year later
he was transferred to be in
charge of the work of the
Northern district of the
Colored and Indian field and
continued
to
conduct
evangelistic campaigns. In
1964, the Scarletts were
transferred to the southern
::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:::::::::.::::::: ::·::::::::::::::::'::•:: ::::'::•: •:::: :::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::: :::::::::::::,::::::::::: :::::::::: :::::: ::·~ district of that field and in

The program deals with
generalizing or identifying a
person as a woman or a man,
as a teenager or a senior
citizen, as a fanner or a
professor as a way of communicating some assumed
unde!:§landings about that
person . However, the
program will point out that
such understandings, though
they may be easily conveyed,
are often inaccurate and at
best deny the uniqueness of
the person irl question ,
making him seem just one
part of a large group.
The program will examine
this process of stereotyping
and present alternative ways
of viewlrig individuals
through poetry, fiction, art

RACIN~;-A program, on
world hunger wao given by
Mrs. Betty Roush at.a recent
meeting of the Racine United
Methodist Women held at the
church.
Several members joined
M1·s. Roush in her presentaDon Scarlett
tion on world hunger. Prayer
was by Mrs. Beulah Bradford
with Mrs. Roberta Thaxton
giving a reading, "The Little
Loaf." Scripture by Mrs.
addition to his regular duties, Martha Dudding was from
he also began construction of Matthew 25, verses 42 to 46,
several churches. In 1969, the and St. John 21. ve'"e" 1~ "nd
Scarletts pioneered the work
of the Church of the Nazarene
among the black people of ·
Port Elizabeth.
ln September of 1976, the
Scarletts were asked to direct
the building of a new Bible
College complete in Port
Elizabeth and will be
assuming that task.
The Rev. Mr. Scarlett will
speak at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene,
Tuesday, 7 p.m. ; Wednesday,
7:30 p.m . at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene and
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
Racine Church of the
Nazarene.
The public is invited.

17. Mrs. Etta Mae Hill gave
the prayer to close the program.
During the business
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Alice Wolle, a report was
given on the district meeting
held at the Methodist Church
at The Plains. Mrs. Etta Mae
Hill gave the traeasrer's
report, and Mrs. Margaret
West the secretary's report.
Mrs. Dorothy McKenzie
presented the nominating
committee report. Mrs.

Frances Roberts was named
president, Mrs. Ruth Wolfe,
vice president, and the offices
of treasurer and secretary remained the same.

·.·.
:;: Plans for the annual
.
.
·.·
j(~
;:;: preferential tea to be held on
·= Oct. 29 at 2:30 p.m: at the
home of Cheryl Crow in
RUNNING JSN'TTHEONLYWAY ...
Syracuse
were discussed durDEARBOTHOFYOU:
ing
a
meeting
of the Ohio Eta
I'm 13 and was happy once. Then Mom met a mao and we
moved away from Ohio. He hits me all the time. Hard. He gets Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Mom to hit me too, He comes home at midnight and if one little Phi Sorority held at the Meigs
bit of housework isn't done he gets me up and beats on me. It's Inn recently.
Jenell Haptonstall, social
like living In hell.
•
chai1man,
has charge of the
My friends in Ohio say I can come and live with them.
tea
and
asked
for suggesThey're nice and Mom used to like them11,lot. But she's changtions.
Announced
· was the
ed so much I don't know. U I told her she'd probably blow up.
Halloween
party to
couples
Should I just run? - NEEDS HELP BAD
be
held
on
Oct.
28.
DEAR NEEDS HELP:
It was noted that a disco
Running away usually gets you caught and returned- or put
dance
planned in September
in juvy. Instead, ask your Ohio friends to contact your mother.
She may be more relieved than you think to see you out of a was cancelled. A chili supper
had situation.- SUE

By IJelen and Sue Hottel

u

DEARNHB :

It's possible your mother wants out of a bad situation too.
Maybe she feels so trapped and beaten down she can't think
straight.
,
Talk to her about how she's changed. Show her you're on her
side, but you can't take many more beatings.
With your Ohio friends' help, perhaps you can both find the
courage to leave.- HELEN

Receive
word

Announce birth

Word has been received
here of the death in Cincinnati of Adele Schoenlein,
former Pomeroy resident.
Miss Sc.hoenlein, daughter
RAP:
of
the late WiU and Sally McKerry, my closest friend, has fallen in love with kevin. She
Schoenlein was a
Clellan
says he's adorable·, sweet, wonderful - and not interested in
graduate
of Pomeroy High
her; noway.
School
and
a journalism
I finally met him and he's all she says, a lot more ' Also, he
of
State
.
graduate
seems attracted to me. But not wanting to hurt Kerry, l told University. She Ohio
was
at
one
her he wasn't my type.
time
an
employe
Of The Daily
My question is, do I forget Kevin, even though I really care
for him, or make Kerry jealous and resentful by telling her the Tribune.
She was :i member of
truth? I might risk a good girl-friendship for nothing, as Kevin
Grace
Episcopal Church,
may never ask me out.- CINDY
Pomeroy,
at at the time of
DEAR CINDY.
her
death
was
the supervisor
If a friendship can't survive truth, it isn't as. close asyou
in
the
Ohio
think. Tell Kerry you're attracted to Kevin and don't do Employment. Bureau of
anything to discourage his interest. Even though understanGraveside services will be
dably jealous, she'll soon realize (I hope ) that you can't take a
held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
guy away from a girlcwho never had him. -HELEN
the Mt. Hill Cemetery,
Gallipolis.
GUESTS
Saturday dinner guests of NAMED BELLRINGERS
Mr. nand Mrs. Hartwell Curd
Mrs. Peggy Wood, Midwere Dr. and Mrs. RQI;tnd • dleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Boice of Walnut Creek. Calif~ James Souls by , Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Eloise Wilso~ Mid- have been named Mental
dleport.
· '
Health Bellringer . chairpersons in their respective
towns, for the Oct. 1o-Nov. 1:;
VACATIONS
campaign, F. Harrison
Mrs. Lois McElhinny , Green, president of the
assistant vice president of the Mental Health Assn., of Ohio,
Citizens National Bank, Mid- . announced.
dleport, spent a week in Las
"The Mental Health Assn.
Va)egas, ~ev . where she at- is the largest citizens'
tended the National Associa- voluntary advocacy
tion of Bank Women. She was organization in the United
accompanied there by her States fighting mental illness
husband, Kenneth and the and promoting mental
two enjoyed numerous shows health," Green said. Since
including one of the last per- the organization is nonformances of Edgar Bergen
governmental, its . entire
support must come from
YARD SALE
contributions such as those
The Middleport Busi!'less collected from Oct. 15 tci Nov.
and Professional Women's • 15.
Club will .stage another yard
·
sale beginning at 9 a.m.
Saturday in the alley directly
RUMMAGE SALE
behind the Werner Radio
A rununage S\lle wiU be
Sllop In Middleport. Clothing,
dishes,
books
and held Wednesday and Thursmiscellaneous items will be day from .9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church.
for sale.

'

!'

was discussed and details of
that will be announced later.
There was also a discussion
on portraits as a money making project.
The bylaws were read and
approved. It was noted that
the chapter received a three
star rating from Beta Sib~na
Phi International. Carol and
. Cheryl Crow served
refreslunents. Kay Walker
gave the cultural report. Next
meeting will be on Oct. 10 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County
Branch of the Athens County
SavingsJ!nd Loan. It will be a
model meeting for the benefit
of pledges.

GOSPEL MEETINGS
Keith Kress, evangelist of
Pennsv4lle, Ohio, will conduct
a series of gospel meetings at
the Success Church of Cl\rist,
County Road 46 in the Reedsville area, at 7:30 each
evening Oct. 9 through Oct.
15. The public is invited.

Mr. and Mrs. William Curnutt of Irvine, Ky. are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Ali Constance, on
Sept. 25. The baby weighed
seven pounds, eight ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Curnutt have
three other children, Paige,
Parrish, and Jill. Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Bonecutter of
High St., Pomeroy , are
grandparents, and Mrs.
Garnet Chapman, Letart, W.
Va. is a great-grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Bonecutter
returned Sunday after spending a week with the fmpily.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til.5:00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until5 P-M·
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason, W.Va.

.
~'

CHUCK ·STEAK.·••••• •••••••L!.•

3 OUNCES OF
ACCURACY IN ACTION ...

BONELESS

·

. LB.

99¢
$

.

LB.

99¢
MEAT LOAF MIX ••••••••••••••• ~:.
7
9¢
CHUNK BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••
FRESH MADE

139
CHUCK ROAST•••••••••••••••••
BONELESS
.
LB
.
$}49
ENGLISH ROAST•••••••••••• ~ ••

F~ENCH CITY

·.

.

New featherweight fashion fo r travelers. Keeps
hours and minute s m conti nuous display with
electronic quar tz precisi&lt;;Jn.

LB.

I

I

I

I

•

• Accurate to within 20 seconds a month .
• Operates full year bn a single battery . .
never needs winding.
• Permits precise to- the- second setting .
• Tells A.M./ P.M.
• Back panel has fingertip con trols for
minutes/seconds, nigh! light, 4 minu tes extra
snooze, 24-hour repeat alarm or ·second
time zone display.
• Weighs under 3 ounces.

\

·..BY
SAVE fiBJ .

• Only 1 %" h1gh, 4 314'' wide, %"deep.
• Leatherette travel pouch inc luded. ,

'

• Chqice ol black case/silve.rtone tr im or
brown case/goldtone trim.

A recent graduate of the Mid-Ohio PracUcal Nursing
Program at Mansfield is Mrs. Sam Clatworthy. Mrs.
Clatworthy\ls the former Brenda Brown, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald C. Brown, New Haven, W. Va. She won
the faculty award of her graduating claSB. She is a 1967
graduate of Wahama High School being an active member
of the class. Mr. and Mrs. Cia tworthy have two children
and are planning to move to Merit I.sland, Fla., Oct. 21
where Mr. Clatworthy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
· Clatworthy of Middleport, has been transferred with the
North Electric Co.

•

Another fine gift idea from Bulova . . . a name
you know on a clock you can trust.

\

COURT ST.

:SirE

1f2 CASE AND

THIS WEEK At" GATEWAY WE'RE HAVING A

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

•

WHOLE .CASE SALE. STOCK UP FOR WINTER ON GROCERY

POMEROY, OHIO

'ITEMS YOU USE EVERY DAY. THEY'RE TOO MANY ·ITEMS TO

..••...
"

LIST. COME IN

STOCK UP ·-

AND SAVE$$$

••

~

"'

Yale" DEADLOCK

1m iG1 '1

'REG. 10.95

&amp;!:JL

347~g
S~VE

397~

757

0

LATCH
REG.
5.99

!J NIGHT LATCH·

SINGLE CYLINDER OOUfll.f CYLINDER
1

PUSH BUTTON ·

l

0

HYDRAULIC

DOOR CLOSER

CHAIN

:~; 447

REG.97c
1.49

SAVE 1.'12

2.52

WEATHERSTRIP

VINYL AND ALUMINUM

VINYL DOOR sn

~444

DOORBOnOM

R.EG.
. 6.69

REG.
4.99

..

REG.
2.29

361NCH
ALUMINUM THRESHOLD

297

SAVE $2.00

.] 57
-·

~

1.

DOOI

sn

REG. k:;
6.89

88

No. 185

W/C

,..
~

·-

0

-

=-

.

~

1i:ot BOx

ggc

No. 175
W/C

·2

is oz.

BOXES

~~~~

7

10013700 .
No. 105
W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coup,on Expires Oct. 7, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

10013700
No. 355
W/C

BOXES

. Limit o!'le please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Oct. 7,1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

\

COUPON

.

10 OZ. JAR

$369

.

.~

.

10013700
No. 125
W/C

Limit one please with this coupon•
Coupon Expires Oct. 7,1978
TWIN ITYGATEWAY

W!C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Oct. 7,1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

~

TENDERLEAF

SALTINE CRACKERS

TEA BAGS

POUND BOX

59'

No. 105

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Oct. 7, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

100 CT: BOX

$}69
W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Oct. 7, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

CANNED FROSTING

89

No. 205
W/C

ZESTA '

j

1Em CROCKER

16 OZ. CAN

1001~7oo

INSTANT COFFEE

COUPON

oz. 9gt
.
2

·C:mll~ .

$}.19

NESCAFE

Limit one please with this coupon \
Coupon Expires Oct: 7, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

HAMBURGER HELPER

j

WHEATIES CEREAL

IAMI-UP
WIAJHIISIIIP

~UUP(,J N

10013700

BETIY CROCKER

Limit one please with this coupou
Coupon Expires Oct. 7, 1978 .
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

~...; 333

79¢

I

49¢ .

5 LB. BAG

'
REG. 5.59

SAVE
52•

MOIST CAKE MIXES

Limit one pleasewith th.is coupon
Coupon Expires Oct. 7, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

10013700

COUPON

POTATO BUDS

j

FLOUR

J

BEm CROCKER

GOLD MEDAl

KEYED
PADO DOOR LOCI

DOOR GUARD

COUPON

COUPON

BEm CROCKER

16 .0Z. BOX .

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Oct. 7, 1978 ,
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

The Department Store of Building Since 191.5

L

COUPON

FROZEN COOL WHIP
.
No. 105
9 OZ. TUB. 49~ ·
W/C

,

TUBULAR DEADLOCKS

J

L~OUPON _

BIRDSEYE

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Has birthday ·

SHOP

$.}39
_CUBED ·BEEF STEW •••••••••••••••••
BONELESS

LCD QUARTZ
TRAVEL ALARMS

l

A birthday party was held
recently honoring Mark
Po1ter on his eighth birthday.
Games were played with
refreshments of cake, ice
cream, and koolaid being ·
served. Presenting Mark
with gifts were his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Porter,
Tracy Beegle, Amy Smith,
Annette Cardone, Melanie
Van Meter, Danny Gheen,
Damon Fisher, Shawn Diddle, John Porter, Zane
Beegle, Anita Musser and
Dianea Diana King.
'

.

BULOVA

Generation Rap lil Plans made for preferential tea

lili

.

Plans were made for a soup
supper to be held Oct. 11, 4 to
7 p.m. at the church.
Refreshments were served to
the 15 members attending.

COUPON

CHEER DETERGENT

FOLGER'S COFFEE
'

49 OZ. BOX ·

$119

2 LB. CAN
W!C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupo!'l Expires Oct.7, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•

•

'

. ,....

$469
W/C

Limit one please with tl\is coupun
Coupon Expires Oct. 7,1978 ·
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'

�8- 'ryle Datlv Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 3, 1978

9The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 3,1978

•

15 Wtot d~ l lr Umh r
(

I tl u\
1llo11 ~

'"'

'"'

ldll\'
h(l,\\ '

190

1111

l25
•I 75

\ lMI

J\u li

\HJi d IJ \CI

I~

llli.H ~t:
! 25

··~"

llliiiUilWil Jj

\he

1111111~ !:'&gt; ~ L1.11\S ~I \l lltd j)l'r df!)
,\ tl" •u nntl \1! uthu lllilllll!llst't' UliYt'

d,11.., 11 11! llt
[,lh

~: h:.l~t d

,,\ tilt• I dav

Ill lllllllU I\ Cw d uf Jh.u lko and
l)IJHLI·II I b l t'IIL-; J}l,!l \\ l i d SJ 00
11 111 11!11 \IJII C'a.shU! ,Idl'.t!ll t'
'•h•llllt Hor tu
.1 11

,I&lt;

1 t']Jlc• ll

S..d• ~ tmdY.ud ::.u lt•!';

Ulll) 11'1111

tash With

urd• •• !.Jl~ lllth:.u w· flll .!tbcarl\111), H~t\ "' tu nbt 1 In Call .. r llw St !lund

lilt l'ulJi i!iollt'l
'" t d11 111 n

IC~ll\t• s

!\ 'Jli iiiSibit• fol

wont to buy or sell somelhmg
ae look1ng lor work
or
whatever
you II get result s
foster w•th o Sent mel Wont Ad
Coli 99'1 2156
GARAGI:: SAL!: Thurs and Fn 9
to 4 R•ggscrest Manor oil CR 2!l
at lop of !:-aste rn Htg h School
hil l
YARL&gt; SA L!: Oct 3 4 5 9ttl da rk
~evero l . p•eces of furn•tu re
cloth.ng baby to me 14 elet
tr~c oppl.a nces d1shes
pots
pons e tc 2 rn• les nor th of Fi ve
Po1nts 35b l0 Flatwoods Rd
A f=OUR fa mily Yard Sole l ues
day Oc t 3 throug h Saturday
Oct 7 /rom 9om t./1 dark
8eh1nd Powells Super Val ue at
the Chns tm e Beeg_le res 1de~ c!

tlw 1 1~l1l

PulJh ~ llcr

IIIUIL

l-llll11ut bt·

\IJdU L'lll' tlllOI-

Ilt I Ill~ I I Ilii I

l' liu111 fl'r2·'1 :il,

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
1 U t1~ d,11
tl uu F1nlill\

tlw tl&lt;l\

41 ' M
1)1 fort llllhllt ,JIIun
Suml 1\

In

VOU ha . . e a serviCe to ott er

Jt'll am .nh d!'L m~tl ui&gt;-

JI'(llun.tl The

~

Wanted to BUy

Yard Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES

l I' :0.1
n tlu\ .1ftt rnu1111

Memnry o

PUBLIC NOTlCE

-

CAWAG~ S~U

LHlP WOOL&gt;
Po les ma~e
d•ameter 10 on la rgest end
Run Rd 2nd troller on left from
58 50 per ton Bundled slob
124 follow s •gns
Sb 50 per ton Delivered lo
Oh•o Pollet Co Rt 2 Pomerov
CARPORT SAU: Thurs and f n
99'1
2b89
Oct 5 &amp; b Hoover fl oo r scrub
ber fl ower pots gas heotmg TIMBER POM I:: HOY Forest f-' ro
st oves
electriC appl•onces
ducts Top pr~ce for sto ndmg
mens coots s•ze 40 d• shes
sow t1 mber Coli 99'1 5q65 or
Kent Hanby 1 ddO 85/0
odds ond e nd\ m•s c lunch bo)(
and th ermos bottles 1643 L1n
OLD f=U RNIT URE 1ce bo K~s bro s~
coin Hts , Pomeroy
beds 11on beds desks e tc
YARD SAL~ Octo ber 3 Ia 7th 810
complete hou seholds Wr1te
S 2nd Ave Middleport Oh10
M D M1lle r H:t 4 Pomeroy or
Sh1rley Templ e doll ath er
coll992 7760
doll s, bedd1r~
p1ctur es
OLD COINS pocke t watches
1ewelr',' la mps Avon •ron kef
class r1ngs wedd1ng bonds
ti es Oepress1on g loss red
d1omonds Gold or SIIYer Call
glass other d•she!i po ts pons
Roger Wamsley 742 2331
drape s curta1ns sorne fur
n1ture lots m•sc cloth mg
W~ PICK up 1unk au to bod•es buy
1ng Junk cars scra p 1ron bot
RUMMAGE SAL~ Oc t 5 8. b 9 30
te n es and metals
R1der s
4 00 Boshon F ~re Dept Spon
Salvage SR 124 folomeroy
so~e? ~y ~ h ~ l ad u?_
s Aul( 111a ry
992 5468
- - - ._
RUMMAG E SALE
House of
OLU
MOTORCYCLI::S
and ports
1
f-' royer 449 , Locust St M1d
Ooesn t hove to run 9n b345
dlepor t Man
Tues
Wed
Bake sole Wed All proceeds go WANT TO buy J9b7 Dodge Cor
to new church
onet 440 949 2470
CARPOJH SALE Oct 3 8. d Tues WAJVT TO buy Small olum.nurn
&amp; Wed 10 to 4 pm ot Cordone s
boot or ca no e Reasonable
Oth St Raone Oh1o 949 2449
142 2692
fo! ototdl e r Sears 8 h p $250
Rug s
d •shes
draperte s
liothes of all SIZES

The annual elect •on of the
Me•gs County Agr,cutrura l
Soc•ely D•rectors wdl be he ld
Monday , Nov ember 6, 1978 1n
th e Sec retary Off iCe aJ the
Fa.r Grounds at
Rock
Spnngs, Ohto from 5 to 9 p m
Quallf•cst•ons fo r d1rectors _
are thai they must be a
oua l rfled vote r of Me,gs
Cou nty and mu st have a
membersh•P ltck el •n sa •d
- "
- SOCiety Of 1978
Ca ndidates pelttton s must SIX FAMilY Yard So le •n Brad
be f•led w1th the Sec r etary no
bury Tue s Wed and lhurs
later lhan 5 p m Monday,
Clothmg d1shes pottery p• c
Oc to ber 30, 1978 Only per
lu res tables and cha11s and
sons hold1ng memberShi p
m?ny
~th_er ' ' :"~s _9 !"_S
t•cl&lt;.ets at the close of the 19781
Cou nty Fa •r or a! least (15)
YARD SALt: Thurs &amp; Fd Oct 56
calendar days bef ore the date
fro m 8 30 to d 00 Men s
ot e lect. on are quill•f•ed to
wo
men s
an d
children s
vote
clot hmg
good cond•t•on
The Me•gs Agr•cu l tural
Chtld s btk e w1th trommg
Soc•ety By Mrs Wallace
wheels Manlyn Powell s V1ne
, Bradford Sec retary
St Rocme
(10) 2, 3, 4, 3tc
YARD SAL!: Thurs and Fn 9 5
Fron k Cleland res 1dence. Vme
Sl Racme Ohto

MEMORY ot Lawrence H For Wednesday, Ocl. 11
Srn1 th who passed away 24
years ago today We m•s s vou
ve ry much
Sadly m1 ssed bu t never forgotten ,
Your child ren Jtm Mary Lou , , Bernice Bede Osol
and Loro ly n and Brothers
Osco1 Lorry and S•ster Donna
Jean
(N

ASTRO•GRAPH

F';.r,H...hl - .
-

COUNTNY MO.Q.Ilt Home Pork
Rou te 33 Oor th of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Call992 7479

-

-

3 AND 4 RM fu rn1sh ed and un
lurn1shed o pts
Phone
992-5&lt;134
TWO BEDROOM tro1ler
on ly 99'1 332A
TWO

Adu lts

l\EOf.IOOM tra der 99'1 2530

after 5 pm

I'OR RI:: Nl 3 mob1le homes lor
season I shady acre water
IUim shed Or for sole $30 000
50 m1les from Sarasota and H
Myers '" ond 9 mdes from Ar
cad10
Walter
Messier
I 813 494 285/ No coll ec t roll s
' - ----THRH 1BEDROOM house 107
l ocust St Pomeroy $150 per
mon th plus $100 depos1t
Refere nces 992 33b0 alter 5

THRH: FAMilY Yard Sol e Boshon
Ke no Rd Ha yward Btssell Look
fo ~ s~~s t-: ~1 _a '2.d ~o!__~ ~ _
VARD SAL!: Fnday on ly 8 5 I
m1le from Chester 8r1dge Rt
248 t lot hes coots cur totns
wrtnger was her odd s and
_e nds~~ mochn~.e_ _ _
YARD SALE Sot Aug 7 Alley
p~ -- - - - - - - beh1nd Werner Rad1o Clolh•ng TWO B~DR OOM mobile home
d1 shes books etc M1 ddl epor t
Real n1ce
Ad ults onlv
Bus 1ness
&amp;
Pr o less• onol
992 33'14
Women s Club
SHARI: APT hvmg fo r e lde rly only
THR I::E FAMIL V Yard Sale Tuesda y
1n Pomeroy
available 1n
and Wednesday Oct 3_ 8. 4
No ll'ern ber everyth1ng fu rnish·
ed e:w.cepl med• calton $175 per
Wlllyer clo thes ch ddren s ond
ad ult s Coots e tc 1b3 ji:J Fran I
mo nth cove rs all Wnte Anno
St Mtddlepo rt
Hotnes 957 Lock bourne Rd
---------Columbus OH 43200 Coli colLARGE YARD So le Fr• So t , ond
lect l 253 5&lt;181
Sun 1 rTUie form Har mo nvdl e
on 143 east at !:Ida Carsey TWO BEDROOM krtche n furn•sh home Items to o numerous to
ed opt Coli befo re 1:1 om
1
h
1
992 2266
_•s! ~o_met~n~ _o:_ e~e!y~n,: __
d
YA IW SA'L~
Tues oy an d HOUSE FOR rent Iorge house 1n
· Wednesday fr om 9 Ill 5 3 m1les
e~ece l/ en t cond1 t1on 1n Le ta rt
south of Mtddleport on Rt 7 ot
foils Ohto Refere nces and
Fredd 1e Moore s
depoSit requ1 red For ml orma- - - - - ---- - - - - - llon contact Fred W Crow
FOUR FAMILY Ydrd Sale lues
Ooyhrne 992 2692 Even •ngs
thru ~ r t 10 5 Cloth mg form 1n
992-2562
font to odull , · lots oi m1sc
Clock rod1o
ars
1tems
1
s to neware ,
w ho I n e t s
bl
d
Every th mg reo sana y pme
~ or t h of fo 1rgrounds on Old Rt

NO HUNTI NG or lri=!spassmg on
rny proper ty w1thout perm1s
October 11, 1978
s•on Jud_y ~:_Gro~ _ _ _ The com mg year should be a
G UN SHOOT Roc 111e Gun Club
fun one for you socially, and a
Ever y Sunday I pm Factory rewardtng one matenally It will
chok e guns onlv
be ne cessary, howe11er , that
GUN SHOOT- R;,~ e~ V-o~u~ ·you set up a budget and hve
Fire De pt Eve1y Saturday 6 30 Within your means
pm ol their bu il ding m Boshon LIBRA (Sept Zl·Oct . 23) Keep
t:act ory choke guns on ly
your wtlil ngness to share With
~
others wt thln reasonable
I OR YOUR com ple te hous mg
d
B
&lt;oosir" &lt;" on and boun s today
e generous,
'e'-odel•ng
"
"
b 1 0t
ih 1
'lila!
rnomto nence. grvc J R o try
ull " tn a way a yosu F edr
1
Re Ier en c e
a" o • I a b I e
co ec gtver s re mor e t 1 ~
Roa so nob le pr~ ces
Phone ou t who you re roman tea Y
9'12 5191
s ut ted to by sending for your
--~
~---copy of Astro-Graph Letter
SKAT!:- A WA Y announces BALK Mat \ 50 ce nts tor each and a
10 SCHOOl PARTY Sot
Oct long, self-add ressed stamped
7th Races pmes balloons envelope to Astra-Graph , p 0
S
Open Wed Fn Sal 'even•ngs
I 30 to 10 00 Avo• loble lor Bmc 489, AadtO Ctty
tafton,
N
y
10019
Be
sure
to
spectfy
pr1vat e por t1es Man , lues,
btrfh stgn ,
fh urs even •ngs Sot and Sun
3
o lt er noon
985 3929
o r SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) A
destre to put your personal YARD SALE Thurs a nd Fr1 Ort 5 LIKI::: N~W Hondo gu 1tar an d cose
985 9990
-~stamp on things that are gomg•
&amp; 6 1968 Fo rd p1cku p tru ck
eKtrO set of str~ ng s and piCk s
PARASOL BOUTIQ UE Beo ur y wel l wtlhout 11 could work
gravely tractor
llv•ngroom
•ncluded Maytag Coppertone
I d
So lon neKI to Skate a way
L 1 1
su11e 1n eJ&lt;ce llent co nd111 on :23
Porto po1r washer and dryer
~oi l er Rmk a nnounces October agarns 1 you 0 ay e s eepmg
cub•c ches t freezer desk lots
Very good condllton sell as
dog s lte .
dd
d
d
Spe &lt;'al
1
se
t
Sylvon1a l1me o ton
23
0
o
o
s
on
en
s
At
Don
SAGinARIUS
Pe rmonenh IO Qe olf Operators
. IN ov.
• ec.
Walkers on 5th St Roc1ne
Sunl am p and eye protectors
Sondra Kerns Cr~stol Rayburn 21} Your self-confidence may
Oh•o
Coli ofler 5 00 pm , 99'1 2995
Phone 985 4141
be too negattiJety affected to- __ - - · - - - - __
- -- - - --- - --- - - - - - - day by what you thmk others YARD SAlt:
Rutland Ulll ted J l . acres located 1 mdelrom·
11
I AM o P nc•p le lool·un g lo r gas lhtn k of you tnstead of what you
Method•st Chu rc h Someth1ng
Me•gs Mme No 1 Dnlled well
and oil leases •n the Rutland lhiOk of yourself.
for everyone
Cloth 1ng
o nd
se pt1 c
system
area Ha ve dr1ll er and money CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Z-Jan. 19 )
househo ld furm sh1ngs , 1ewel ry
1 304 -B!l'l 2334
Call aft e r 6 pm bfY9 82q 7728
Un less you kn ow exactly what
m•sc 1tems Ocl 4 5, and 6 9
LIKE NEW Hondo gu•lor and case ,
-1
ur
an
-~:..
==f
':-_.
----~
you're
dotng
today
you
co
uld
om
to 4 pm on the chu rch lawn
eK tr o set of slrmgs and p1ck s
H '=P ,., L[l!(l
W1ll be moved mto the church '
~ -= .=.-~- = e nd up tn the unusual sttuatton
•ncluded Moytag Coppertone
basement
1
n
the
e
.
.
ent
of
rom
\o\I()RK OVI::: R S~AS
Au!&gt;troho of being a wtnner who loses m
Porto po1r wohser a nd drye r
New merchond1se eac h day
AI riC O South Amemo Europe the process
Very good cond1hon sell a s
e tc
Cons tru ction
Soles AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
se t
Call after 5 00 pm,
l: ng1neers Clemo! etc $8000 When tt comes to concepttonal·
992 2995
to $so 000 plus Eltpenses potd 1ztng today , tl 's 11ery ltkely
t:IVI:: Plt:CE dmette se t 992-70&lt;10
For employment mformott on you'll produce bnlllant tdeas
w r~te Ove rseas Employment
19b2 DOOGI:: '• ton 4 whe e l
When 11 co mes lo execulmg
8o11 1011 Bos tor1 Mo 02102
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Suy sell
dr 1ve
runs good
1rn6 '
them your grade s are much
_:...~
trade or tro1n New and used
Plymo uth Vol1ant 50 000 rn•les
A\IO N YOU ca n go lo work when lowe r
saddl es Ruth Ree11es Albany
b qil aul a really n1 ce Phone
the k1ds go lo sc hool Sell PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Gel
949 2763
(614) 698,--"
32_9()
__---:---,-AYon You set your own hours an early s tart loday Do whal
so ','OU con be home when the needs dotng .as speedtly as RISING ST AR Kennels Boordmg 1975 DATSUN PICKUP
Low
k1ds get home And th e harder posstole Procrastination lesond groomt ng all breeds
m•leoge good cond1t •on, step
yo u work the more you earn se ns your self-confidenc e con·
Chesh•re , 367 0292 or Jbl -01 06
bumper good !~r es truck m1r
Call today Ann rhomos Avon stde rably
rors $2850 985 3979
LOVABLE WHITE snow dnh great
D•stmt ~o~er , 742 2354
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll t9)
PYRI::NHS Pupp•es
Phone 4 HP OUTBOARD motor Four 8 75
Where your self-Interests are
16 5 !ires 52 gallon water
36"'--,-----::
I 614 607 38.,.
at s tak e today , try not to yteld ONE GREAT Done ApproK 150
heal er
Ptston type wa ter
pump
Axle
sprm gs adn fifes to
too much co ntrol Others co uld
lb Male Brown Good coon
make trad er
Sla nt SIK
pe rform poorly on your behalf
dog 965 43.::
33:::.___
Plymou th wdh std lransm1s·
TAURUS (April 2!1-May 20) Be
s10n L&gt;ouble barre l sho tgun
prepared lo make adjustments ~~G ISTERED BOSTON Hull Temer
mole 9 mont hs old . Hod all
500 watt Demon l1neor 200
on short no ti ce today rega rdtng
shots
Call Mrs
Su ii i\ICn
Phone
wo ll H .~ C l1 neor
a ma1or goal One you co u nt on
:J04-Bb3 BSOO
2703
949
lo r help may nol be sympalhe tt c to your cause
19btl FORO 11 ton p1ckup sho rt
bed b cyl w1t h topper Call
GEMINI(May 21-June 20) Mu c h
of yo ur success Will be de~2-~ 7 o~r 5 p~ pe nden t upon how well you can 1974 DATSUN PICKUP, Phone 16 FT SEA Star boss boot 115
manage others today Be firm ,
992 619'1 alter 5pm
l::vonru d e
Fully
r1gged
992 3193
bul don ' t be arrogant
1977 FORD LTD 4-door sedan L•lo: e
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
new w 1th o~r , p S , p B t1h 90 of 6 ch01n· link fence for sole
Spin Balance
You' re warmly receiveEt' by
wheel AM FM B-trock More
w.lh 7 posls and one 32 ' gate
(Reg. I S4 so
lnends today , bu t you must
eKtros 742-2826
s125 992 3382
Woth Alignment S3.50
guard agamsl domg tmpul·
----Bubble Balance
sively fOQiiSh lh lngs lhal co uld l 9l7" MONZA SPVDE R, 305 lARGE FU EL od stove ond tonk ,
247-2196
(Reg J $2.50
crea te so me shock waves
engme L1kebrond new w1th
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) As long
ever,thong 742 2826
w1 th a ltgnment $2.50
TRUMPI::T
AND
S1nger
If you want an
as you ab1de by your log1cal 197" OLDS CUTLASS Suprem e
lreodlesew.ng moch1ne Both m
, experie nced front
JUdgment you'll keep everyGood shape 992 708" P S
excellent cand •fton
Al so,
end man ask for
th tng under co ntrol today If
P 8 , AM tope , o1r _ _ _ _
!,rewood 9d9 2358
Trent.
"
you let your emotions make the 1967 DODGI::: 200 v4 ton heavy du- REGISTERI::D QUARTER horse
declsion II will be another · ty !ruck 1968 Cad tlla c 4-door . _w~o~ l•_n!!_i la l!.'_~ _9d9 .3~_=!.._
story
hardtop Sedan deVille Bot h
REDUCE SAH 8 fast w1t h GoBese
'
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Your
reasonably pn&lt;ed 949 2253
Tablet s 8 [ Vop water pill s
c hances for personal gai,n are 19 ]3 NOVA- 350 -ilo-75 Cal l alter
N ':_l~o-~_L&gt;rug
very good today Don t ~o
b evenmgs, 992-2797
anytt1tng not m accord wtth
----your h1ghes1 s tandards even 1969
PL YMOUlH
ST AltON
AbSolutely free wolh
though a temptation pr~sents
wagon $350 Carl St•ll -400
afignment
and
Itself
Rutland St . M1dd lepor~._t?..h~
SOFTENER?
balance.
1963 NOVA CHE VY II 0 cvl. d.
Bring In
Let Pomeroy Landmark
door , 2 new snow tir es, new
Coupon and Receive
On this day m history:
soften &amp; condition your
upholstery 50.000 actua l mdes ' water With Co-op water
In 1922 , Mrs . Rebecca
1
Call 949-2728 alter b pm
- - - - - - - - softener, Model uc-sv1.•
Felton, a Georgia Democrat,
...9!!- ft lignmen1
1974 PINTO IN ve ry good cond1- ' Now Only •
became the first woman to
Special
t•on Has hod gas lank mod1f1 ed
Price
serve In the United States
to meet Federal stan dards Coli
Let us test your water
EKptres
992-5085 aft er 5
Senate .
Frpo
' Oc:t. 7, 1978
In 1939, Italian Dictator 1974 ~ INTO l iGHT blue Auto 4 •·
Any U. S. made carcyl rod•al ttres new bopery
Benito Mussolini Iauncbed an
parts ex trtJ if needed.
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr,
and exhaust svstem Sl200
attack on Etlnopia .
e .. cl udes front-wheel
Co~
l&lt;/92.:.~~~-fter
Sp~
-·
_
__
In 1960, Soviet Premier
Phone 992-2181
drive cars.
Nikita Khrushchev refused to
Will now for aptiOintm...t. meet President Eiaenhower
THREE GREENHOUSES loroted on
In Paris unleaa the United
area Need 3 or
Skull Run Rd Wtll sell one 01
-States admitted U-2 spy plane
.tl b
co m house to rent &lt;;r , all Also have boiler w•th 05
le e . Will furnt sh references
flights over Ruasla were acts
fe.el of heated be.nch Pr 1ced f o1
depostt Bernard K1ngsley ~o~e
qu~ek sole. Must be moved Call
of aggresalon, ' Eiaenhower
63 1 Orrvdle... Oh1o
304 8b3 !lSOO
refused.
'
~

-----

- -- -

j

Phone 992-2181

Call992-7013
For Free Estimates
COAL LIM E~lON ~ . sa nd gro11el
colc1um chlort de fertilizer dog
food and all types of §Oi l EK ·
cels •or Salt Works Inc ~ Mom
St Pomerov _9~'1 ~38~1 - _
BURROUGHS SI::NSI MAliC oc
cou nhng moch.ne
Phone
992 2156 The Dody S'-"ntmel
Ill Court Street , Pomeroy,
OhiO

.

SWI::n POlATO!:=S Red wh1te
and yellow Phone 843 2432
Robert W Lew1s Rt 2, Hocme
SR 1~4
GHIMI::S GOLDI::N Red Del1ctous
&amp; Go lde n Oe hc1ous @pies f=1tz
pa tn ck Orchard ·::,R b89
bi4·0b9 37!l5
-- ,- ~-----

SC HQOL 8US camper
bO
passenge r w1th new t1res
Good cond111on Conloct Tom
Monkm at 992 2201
1971 ~ORO 1 • ton ca mper speCial
power Olf auto , dual tanks
hce llen t runnmg cond1t1on
SIJ95 992 2392
~

- -- - - - --

--

-,

DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!

-

NEED A WATE R

2.00 OFF

309,95

-~---

-

---- -

Pomeroy Landmark
9,.

t!i!.

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-lS-Ifc

All types of roofing , guHer5
&amp; downspoufo, 20 years
exPerience .
All work
guaranteed. Call Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160. Free
Estimates.
9-7-1 mo.

HOMI::SITI::S for sole 1 acre and
up M1ddleport near Rutland
Coll 992 7481

NI::W THRI::E bedroom home rec
room f1reploce, Iorge deck ,
garage basement one and o
holt baths Phone l ee Construe
t tan 992 3454
weekends
1 61 4-4db 9568

-

SY RACUSE 7 room house and
both w1th e~etro lot, Iorge cor·
port , new roof a nd storm w1n
dows. 992 37 17
--'-:-

COU NTRY ESlAH W1ll sell to 120
acres whatever you wa nt wtth
8 year o ld, 2400 sq A ranch
sty le house, 3 bedroom 2 full
ba ths ce ntral ou and heat he at
pump well msufoted on good
road , City water Truly beout1ful
home 2 barns 2 pond s 3
postur es
all new fen ce
ttmber, 105 new ma c h~nery
shed and work shop '15 acres
m meadow For a ppo intm en t to
see coli owner 614 949 2763

1961:1 Sta r bO~e 12 2 BR
1970 Syl\lo bOK 12 2 BR
1968 Vil lages bO:w.l2 2 BR
1964 Wmdsor S l ~e lO 2 BH
1970K• rkwood 1 2~ebOJBR
6&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
P1 PL~ASANT W VA
I '' ACRI:: 12 x 60 mob1le home
near Oe~ete r 992-58.5!l
~----- ·-

12 J&lt; 05 CASTLE MOBILE home w1th
12 x 30 butlt on , 1 acre lot
Also 8 room house , ¥~ acre
742-:206B
.
------- HOUSE IN Pomeroy 3 or -4 bedr
lull s1ze b9sement
Noce
dr~Yewo~
Lorge mechantcal
.§JD!_o__9 ':._ ~ rg e lot 992-7b'll___
~- -

BJWJVJ
ew
~

BEDROOMS Olde .
home, some remodeling,
beautiful view of the river,
must see to appreciate.
Price $12,500.

Ml DOLE PORT
2
bedroom, remodeled,
carpeting, double lot,
garden spol. spring water,
nice qutet street. Price
$27,SOO

•

MIDDLEPORT - 2 sfory,
3 bedrooms, older hOme,
carpeted, fully equipped
kitchen , full basement.
wood burner, family room,
alum. siding, new roof.
sform windows, double lot,
owner will help finance
down payment or will lake

a newer 3 bedroom trailer
as down payment. Well
worfh the price of $35,000,
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS,
804 W. Main
Pomeo'oy
99'1·2291
Aller Hours

Ca!l992-713l
CONTACT:
Lois Poutey
8n'1ch ~na9er

81;TTEii: NOT- IT MAY
BE WIRED TO AIJ ALARM
SYSTEM ... I THINK I
KNOW A SAFER
WAY, WASH!

GARAGE

'i11111Nt ID\1

,., mile oil Rl. 7 by-paso on
51. Rt. n4 toward Rutland,

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square. to 10fm
tour ordmary words

0.

Aul!l &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission,
Repair
Phooe 992-5682
4·30-tf&lt;

rYIHNNI

IJ I

tGROINI

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-i&gt;ll
Mill Street just behond
Tony'$ Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-~ p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p. m .
831 -1 mo.

J (]

992-3325
216 E. Second Street
NEW LISTING - 6 room
brick building on Second
Street with full basement
and 1 car garage, 20's
NEW LISTING- 2 story
business building that
would be a fine place for a
business. Live upsta1rs on
Ma tn Street. 20's.
COUNTRY HOME 3
bedrooms, ba th , new ad dition of ltvtng with
fireplace and eat-in ktt
chen. Fuel otl furnace and
10 acres of land 30's
10 ROOMS 4 or 5
bedrooms, :2 baths, natural
gas furnace, city water,
shop, garage and J lofs.
20's.
1 NEW
LISTING
3
bedrooms , bath,
new
natural gas furnace , and
city water . 17 m.
NEW LISTING - 45 acres
in Rutland Township 1ust
off New Lima Road. All
minerals. 10-m.
POMEROY - 3 bedroom
home, bath , gas furnace,
new carpeting. basement
and yard Reduced to
S16,SOO
NEW LISTING -S room
frame home In the country,
Has dug well, electric and
over 1 acre of land Jusf
$6,500.
Adjust yourself to modern!
living. Invest In
family's dream home.
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

III)

rON THE(
. (Answers tomorrow)

I Answer

••

6UllARDS! WATCHIN'
EVERY MOVE HE

Jumble Book No 10. wtlh the latest 1 10 puzzles. Ia avaHatM tor $1 35 poetpaid tram Jumble, C/o thiS nen1~, Box 34, Norwood, N.J 07648 lrdude
yourrwne, address zlpoodeand make ctw::kA ~vabte to Newapapefbooke

M AKES ... I SURE
HOPE UNCLE JE B

FOOLS 'EM'"

~NHII"fH!d
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Lothano's
1 Trattoria

look
favortte
41 Hit, bib6 Prudish
Iical style
Fed " the
42 Hat material
kitty"
43 Adjusted
" Splitsv1lle"
the pitch
12 Elegant
DOWN
country
1 Bucolic
place
2 Precede
Knowing
3 Nebraska
about
and Nevada
Let stand
4 Holiday
Mic hael
in Hanoi
or .Alfred
5 "Dte
17 Area or
Fleder:l't1~~:=;
M orse
maus" role

Chester, Ohio
10·30·c

(
,,

'

------

i iiiiiiiiiiil 18 Erhard's
therapy

I::XCAVAT!NG , dozer, load er on~
backhoe w'ork. dump tru cks
and lo-boys far ht re w1ll haul
f1ll d~rt to so•/ l•meslone and
gra vel Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , day phone 992-7089, ntght
phone 992-3525 or 992 5232

Z4

~I
Yesterday's Answer

9 Romantic
Illumination
12 POW's top1c

16 Dolt
Zl Scholarly
22 EmphasiZed
Bestow
27 Red wine
28 Toddler
28 The late
Miss Tate

za

6 Instantly
7 Wrest
8 Division
word

19 Parseghian
and others
20 Sturdy

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Serv1ce Phone 992 2478 .

BuT eNOUGH
ME

REEVI::S TRADING Pos t, Pagell'tlle
Grocer~es, dry goods , hard
wore feed , tack shop Speetol
25 lb ol dog food , $3 88

A&amp;O&amp;Jr'

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? los t your operators
hcense? Pho.ne 992-2143
CHIMNEY FIRES ore no fun I Hove
yours cleaned the dustless way
The Ch1mney Sweep
t 14 373 6057 .

ov ~t •

lnr

l l!j Ae9

us

011

LOCATe HI&amp; EX-WIFE1
BERNICE FAGIN!

us.

.,

+

6--+-+--+-

/olAV~ t.{OU

so

CAU THE WISEMAN ,
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

FOR SALE or rent MF 711 Skid
Steer loader MF 200 two row ,
chopper. A.C Gleaner combine
4 row. New Ideo 1 row picker. 1
Sh1nn's Tractor Sal•, leon, '
wv 304 458-16;10.

C~ EO:: ED

!{Ol!R

DOG'S COLLAR
LATI!L'{?

DON 'T '{OV
THfNK L/Ol!

SHOULD?

MAl/BE
IT'S TOO
TIGHT

L005EN
IT, L{OU

t KQ943
+A 6 4

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

North East

Pass

I"
3 NT

South
1+
2 NT
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead :

J

+5

One Jetter simply stands for another J n thts sample A.' ts
We are indebted to Paul
used ror the three L's, X for the two O 's, etc. Stngle le tt e r s,
Lucaks and the Bridge
apostrophes, the length and formati On of th e words arc aJI
World for today' s hand .
hmts Each day the code letters are ddTerent
South is in a nonnal three
CRYPTOQUOTES
notrump and wms the spade
lead.
.
With any luck h e will
XKKEH
KL
ZPWR
GBZGKHP
CNP
make a lot of tricks. Five
diamonds, one spade and the
OS
CK
YOST
CNP
ZWG
CK
OH
aces and kings of the other
suits: However, there is ':'0
CNOSEOSF . law that diamonds w1ll
K AS
OCH
T K 0 SF
break and if they don 't, he
DN Z 0 HCKGNP Z
Y K Z R P J doesn't want to let East in to
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : "WE SURE SHOOK THAT lead through the remaining
BRIDGE ' ' THE MOUSE SAID TO THE ELEPHANT AFTER spade honor.
The ordinary declarer
THEY HAD CROSSED THE BRIDGE.-soURCE UNKNOWN
ieads a doamond to dununy 's

c

TO PUT AWAY
O lliE OF HIS
TOI/S

ace at tri ck two East shows
out and while South still has
lots of ways to go for mne
trocks he almost s urely
won't get them
The really careful declarer enters dummy w1th a
club or heart and proceed s
to lead the deuce of diamonds. He plans to finesse
the mne if East follows, but
East shows out.
This doesn't bother our
man with the suspenders
and the belt. He sunply wins
the diamond and leads
toward dununy's ace·&lt;nght.
West can't keep declarer
from scoring four diamond
tncks, not to m e ntion game
and rubber.

A Canadian reader asks if

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
By Oswald Jacoby LONGFELLOW
and Alan Sontag

we would open the b1ddmg m
third seat
We hold .

•

The answer is a decided
negative. We do have 12
high..:ard points but the odds
are that an opening bid with
this hand would lead to a loss ·
of points.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

(Do you have a quest1on for
the experts? Wnte ' 'Ask the
Experts," care of th is newsps·
per lndlvtdual ques11ons will
be answered If accompanied
by sta mped, self-addressed
envelopes. The most inter~t·
mg quest1ons wtfl be used In
th1s column and wtll receive
copies of JACOB Y MODERN.)

NIGHT WATCHMAN

FERGlT,

PAW

1().3-B

4' Q X X
.. .. Q X X
+ Qx x
+ AQX X

THAT'S HIS

I

-

We&amp;t
Pass

SLOCKI-IEAD!

SIAMESE CAT '192·6397

----

• A6

TATER FERGOT

EXCELLENT FARM BUY. - 141 ACRES
The
owner's age prevents her from continuing to operate
the farm and she desires an Immediate sale.
to 60
acres tillable with some very good creek boftom hilltop land . The balance Is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good (does need some modernization I,
large all purpose barn &amp; several outbuildings. The
minerals go wlfh II and It's located In an area where
gas, oil &amp; coal have been found fo be plentiful . Nea•
Rufland. 60's.
•

lO ·J ·A

NORTH

.

rto

© 1978 Kang Features Syndieate, fnc

Housin_
q
Headquarters

0 n playing with caution

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

1HI\V.E'1 1o- j
_ _ _ _ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _.._.._

THAT'S WHY I WANT YOU -o 6E:T IJU5Y
ON WE: PHONE AN C/ SEE IF YOU CAN

pod
39 Australian
bird

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

EAST
WEST
• J 932
+A l075
.. Q 10 9 7
.. J 53
+Jl0 765
Q J 10 8 3
+7
SOUTH
+ KQ8

monox1de

P~1

"

35 Plant

t A82

, Is
(\) 197ft

Razor's

• 64

lacks
36 Vaponze

LE..-•5 TAL.(tc:. ASOU"r
.JoHN ...RAVOLTA ~

BRIDGE

34 ''The

+ K 9 52

30 Alias Mrs.
Nick
Olarles
320lympian
goddess
33 Make a
reduction
from
36Smell 37 What
carbon

·

Tuesday, Oct. 3

hands

Z9 British

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Silent , Run Deep!' 10
12 ·S5-SWAT 6 ,13 ; 1 Co-Tomorrow 3,4 .
2 05-News"'IJ

• K842

zt Oloose .... li1-t~r--r­

thequ4 who
drove it!

Sesame S1 20,33; Batman 10
4 30-Litfle Rascals 3; Gilligan's Is . 4, 8, Br ady Bunch
10, Pett1coat Junction 15
5 OO-Voyage to The Bottom of the Sea J, Star Trek 4;
Be\f~rly Hlllbtlltes 8; Mtster Rogers' NetQhborhood
20,JJ, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Brady Bunch 15
5 30-Sanford &amp; Son 8, E lec Co 20,33. Mary Tyler
Moore 10, Odd Coucle IS
6 OO-News 3,4,6,1 0,13,15 , Zoom 20
6 . 30-NBC News 3,4, IS ; ABC News I J; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8,10, Over Easy 20
7 00-Cross-Wt ts 3; PM Magaz 1ne 4, Newlvwed Game
6,13; Sha Na N-a 8, News 10, Love, Amertcan Style
IS, Copmg W tlh Kids 20 ; B1g Green Maga'lne JJ
7 30-Dolly 3, Datmg Game 4, Match Game PM 6.
Pme IS R tght 8; T he Judge 10: That' s Hollywood
13, Wild Kingdom IS , MacNeil -Le hrer Report 20,33
8- ~D1ck Clar k's Lt ve Wednesday 3, 4,15 ; Baseball
PlayOff 6,13; Jeffersons 8,10, Ltve tram Li•'col n
Center 33; To Be Announmced 20
8 JO-In The Beginning 8,10
9 Oo-Movle "BJ &amp; the Bear" 3.4, 15 , Movi e ' Network"
8, 10, Prisoner 20 .
10 00-News 10, 10 31}- Tu rnabou t 20
11.00-News J,4, IS , Dick Cavett 20 , Ltltas , Yoga S. You
33
11 15-News 6,8 , 10, 13.
ll JG-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 , ABC News 33
11 ·.45-Poltce Woman 6,13 ; Gunsmoke 8; M ovie " Run

Like some
poker

'-A-t-t-+-

And -that'G

31 Baker's
purchase
33 Fiddler's
spot

9 oo-Merv Grift tn 3, Phil Donahue 4. Emergency une
6; Match Game 10; Hogan's Heroes 8
9 Jo-Brady Bunch 8; Famtly Affair 10
10 :00-Card Sharks 3,1S , My Three Sons 4, Edge of
Ni ght 6, All In The Famtly 8,10, Dating Game 13
10 31)-Jeopardy 3,4,1S; Andy Grtfflth 6, Price IS Rtghf
8,10. $20,000 Pyramid 13
II 01)-Htgh Rol lers 3.4,1S. Happy Days 6,1J ; Lowell
T homas Remembers 20
11 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,1S, Family Feud 6,13,
Love of Lt fe 8, 10 , Sesame Sf 20,33
II.S5-CBS News 8; House Call 10 .
12 oo-Newscenter 3, News 4,6,1 0, America Altve 15.
Mtdday Magazine 13
12 30-- Ryan 's Hope 6, 13, Bob Braun 4, Sean:h for
Tomorrow 8,10 : E lec Co 33
..
1 00-Hollywood Squar es J •. All My Children 6, 13,
News 8; YounQ &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women
Only IS
J~Days of Our Ltves 3,4, 15. As The World Turns
8,10 , 2 OO-One Life To Live 6,13
2 30-Doctors 3,4,1 5, Gutdlng Light B. 10
3 · 01)-Anoth er World 3,4,1 5, Baseball Play Off 6,13,
ltl1as Yoga &amp; You 20
3 · 31!--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Over Easy 20, Safet y
Town 33
4 00-Mts te r Cartoon J ,· Battle of the Planets 4,
Hol lywood Squares 15; Porky Ptg &amp; Frtends 8,

.,.....,.:;--r;;-ro:-

r.--T.:'""~"""T.:-1r.--'

25 Japanese
statesman "

HOWERY AND MARTIN e,.
covot•ng , septic svstems '
dozer backhoe dump truck
l1mestone grovel
blacktop
pov•ng Rt 143 Phone 1 (6 14)
698-7331
BATHROOM S AND Kitchens
remodeled , ce raMIC ltle, plum·
bmg carpen try , and general
momtenance . 13 years e)(
penence. 992 3695

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-2259
992-6191
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland
( Reaftor Associates)

Now arrange the ctrcle d letters to
form the surprtse answer as suggested by the above ca rtoon

Jumbles FILMY ABOVE GUITAR INVOKE
What he came tnto wh en he was
born-BEtNG

Yesler d ays

Jack's Septic
tank Service

WILL do roo f• ng , constructton,
plumb1 ng and heottng . No JOb
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742·2348

I

Answer: "t I I I ][ I I
L~~=:::::::::::::=~
-.

Residenttal and commercial. Call for esttmate. 24
Hour ServLCe. Any day ,
anytime.
Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginther 985·3806

NEW LISTING Ex
cellent locaflon In Middleport.
Ranch ,
3
bedrooms, equipped kit chen,
basement,
new
carpeting, In excellent
condition, level yard .
$30,000 .00.
2 STORY - 3 bedroom
home, l'h baths, good
ne tghborhood In good
repair. Many features .
Asking $20,000 00.
OWNER NEEDS SALE And will he Ip finance the
Ranch
type
home,
basement , 3 bedrooms, 2
lots, carpeting , separate
utility.
· Call
today,
$27,300 .00.
CHEAP - $9,000 will buy
the. home In Pomeroy. Lois
of yard and storage space.
IN THE COUNTRYBeautifully fneced 1 acre,
sfream, very nlc~ . 12x60
mobile home, 1n excellent
condtllon, fully equipped
and furnished . Ready to
move
lnlo.
ONLY
$16,500.00.
70 ACRE FARM - Barn.
house, other buildings .
CAlly $33,500.
THE HOME OF REAL
ESTATE
IN
MEIGS
COUNTY.
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS AND ACCESS
TO ALL TYPES OF
FINANCING. LIST WITH

r/e---..,.

rx

1

QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

EXCAVATI NG , dozer backhoe
and d1t che r Charles R Hotft e ld , Bock t-loe Servtce,
Rutland . Ohto Phone 742 2008

byHennArnoldandBcbLee

BORN LOSEH

'1118 fli'PAWQIIAN
S'IUV6 GOIIIPANY

6 E.
MAIN 1...11~:0:.:...1
POMEROY, 0.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4,1978
5 45-Farm Reporf 13, 5 50-PTL Club 13, S.55Sunrlse Semester 10
6 00-PTL Club IS, 6 25-Chrlstopher C loseup 10
6 JQ-News Conference 4, News 6 . Sunrise Semester 8,
6 45--Morning Report 3
6 SO-Good Morn ing, Wesl Virginia 13. 6 55-Chuck
Whtle Reports 10, News 13
7 OO-:roday 3,4 , IS ; Good Morning Amer ica 6,13, CBS
News 8, Jetson s 10.
7 30-Schoolie s 10, a · oO-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10. Sesame
s J3.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

TWO t:XTRA n1ce lois 1n Racme BRADFORD Auctioneer Com·
plete Serv1ce Phone 949-2487
w1th 12 x bO Hollypork tro1l er
or 949 2000 Ro cme Ohlo, Cntt
Port1ally furntshed 18 x 40 ceBradford
ment block buddmg w1th shed
Iorge garden space w1th fru•t t:L WOOD BOWERS REPAIR tre es 949-2428
Sweepers toasters u::ons, all
small appliances law n mower,
12 ~e 65 CASTLE MOBIL~ hom9 wt th
ne,.;t to State H1ghwoy Goroge
12 K 30 bu ilt on I acre lot
on Route 7 Phone (61.4) 985Also , B room house l t• acre
3625
742 2006
SI::WING
MACHINE Repa•rs, serPRICE RI:::OUCED on l year o ld all
vtce, all makes 992-'1284 . The
eleclnc 3 bedroom horile w1th
Fabr •c., Shop, Pomeroy
some appliances 1ncluded
Authomed S•nger Soles and
949 2424
Ser111Ce We sha rpen Setssors

1 973S to rbO~eU2BR

- -- --

HE MUST'VE HAD
SOME KIND OF
E'L!CTI&gt;:ONIC
BHPe~ IN
HIS CAB

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

---

1974 SCHULTZ MOBILE home 12 K
b5 2 bedroom househo ld fu r
n1 sh•ngs und erptnn1ngs 5teps
new RCA color TV $9500 H25 S
?r~d _s~ _M·~~efO!:_t_____ _
1961 HOUSl TH AILE R 12,60 All
e leclnc furn1shed on condt
honed washer a nd dry er -Also
'1
lots 1n Ha f,[ISOnYIIIe
742 2826

eve"l'

ROGER HYSEll

'\'

llTTLF: OR PI! A:\ .I 'IN IF:

HOUSE IN Mm ers\11lle Alummum
s1d1ng Newly cmpe ted Partly
1976 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
fu rn1shed 4 bedroom , hvmg
1' 1 both underp•nn1ng $1500
room k1tchen ut illly room
a nd assume loon 949-26!l3 or
both niCe basement Only osk
843 3:J11
_'.n~!!~.
5~9.!2_ 5~2i!_ - - 1970 Amherst SDK 12 2 BR
HOUSE IN Pomeroy large lol
1970 Chomp ton 60 K12 :2 HR
Some recen t remod e lmg new
1965 Genera l bOK 12 'l BR
carpet, ce ntra l heotmg ultltly
196B PMC 5'1K 12 2 BR
room ful l basement , 2 por1955 Pro1n e Sc hooner 28K81 BR
ches Furntshed or unfurn1shed
1973 Royal Emba ssy Ollx 14 3 BR
9927D:c
7~
4 _________
1959 Sta r SO~e lO 2 BR
~- -

Ph. 992-2848

Save30 pct.'to50 pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
fully Insured
Free Est.
C..ll992-2772
8-10-lmo . (Pd.)

Pomeroy Landmark

-~-

Muffler
Brakes - '
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

SERVICE

FAHM FOR sale House. 2 barns
tro1 le r Large pond 10 oues or
B2 acres 742·2566

Mut.ii.tm~~=~
- - -

MOORE'S

Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation

Dunng Our
Seasonal
Closeout.
OUtside While
Red roof patnt

. . . ~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone992-2181

Ct\ITAIN EA::&gt;Y
THE eAT! JUST
OPI:NI:D Al'ID CLOSED
AUTOMATICALLY WHI:N ,
THAT TltUCK CAMe OUT'THe DRIV!It DIDN' T
SOUND
HIS HORI&gt;J

P'fl, t!!-2174

-·

Sanford &amp; ·Son 8; E lee . Co. 20,~3 : Mary
Ty ler Moore 10. Odd Couple IS.
6 :00-News 3,4,8,IO,IJ,IS, ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20.
6 · 30-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20:
7 00-Cross-W IIs 3. PM Magazine 4, Newlywed Game
6, 13; Pop Goes The Country 8, News 10; Love.
American STyle 1S, Lock, Sock and Barrel 20,
Economically Speaking 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races 8,
Dat1ng Game 4: Candid Camera 6 : Price Is Right
10, Donna Fargo 13 ; Abbott S. Costello 15 , MacNeil.
Lehrer Report 20.3J.

"'

Sft'ITH·NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

fram e home m
_M!..d~~~~!__ Coli ~2.:_345_
7 __
FI VE ROOM house and both
remode le d fully carpe ted May
be seen after :J pm Phone
992 3933

-~-,~~---

For The Best

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

·J &amp;L

T HRE~ 8~DROOM

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

SPECIAL FREE
GREASE JOB

9-21-lmo.

VA FHA , 30 yr t. nan ctng al so
relmonc1ng Ireland MorldJOQe
77 [ Stole Athens phone (6 14 )
592-3051

PAINTS

I(

---------

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy,O,

s:JI)-News 6;

8-20· 1 mo. (Pd.)

Armstrong Carpeting

Jack W. CGrsey,

-·

or 949-2160

Your HeadquartetS For

EUIOIT
APPUANCE II

_

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

Free Estilnates
Phone 949-2862

Bob Hoeflich )
109 Htgh St .
Pomeroy

•

Service
.._

New or R_
epair
Gutlels and
Downspouts

8 2 l mo

l'omera, Landmark

-

ROOFING

The Photo Place

Prices includes
Fed. Tax
I does not include
sales ta K or
balancing I
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Other s1zes
comparobly
priced.

~

·H. L WRITESEL

we are currently maktng
appointments for sentor
portra1ts . we use tradt·
honal settings and also
feature
outdoor
por ·
tratture.
Calf Us Today

White-Wall Co-Op
Custom Poly
A78xl3

·-

"Carr te" 8,10
10 :00-News 20 ; 10 ' 30-Like II Is 20, Area Showcase
33
11 DO-News 3,4,8, 10, IS; Dick Cavett 20: Over Easy 33.
I I 15- News 4,6,13 . 11 30-Johnny Carson 3.4,15,
Gunsmoke 8; Mov ie "Test Pilot" 10; ABC News 33
11 45-Movie "Shoot Out " 6,1 3, 1 DO-Tomorrow 3,4,
I 25-News 13

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3,1978

High School
SENIORS

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

- _

Bus-iness Services

•'

4 NEW

s tart tng Monday

Ort . 'J 1111 ? f rom 9 t1f &lt;1 So lley

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DICK THAC¥-----.;:;:;;c

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

8:00-Grandpa Goes To Wash ington 3,15, Baseball
Play Off 6,13 ; Jacques C&lt;&gt;usteau ~; Paper Chase
8,10; Opium 33
9 DO-Movie " Little Women " conclusion 3,4, 1S; Mov ie

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Oct . 3, 1978

HOSPITAL NEWS

·v ance .begins
bilateral
talks
.
Hy ALVIN B. WEBB
UNITED NATIONS ( UP!)
~ Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance is hack at work on his
longest and busi)SI mission
yet at the U!)lle11 Nations wooing the plomatic world
for support for the Camp
David accords.
· The tadturn secretary
wasn 't giving any details and
his underlings were saying
litUe more about the dawn-todusk rounds of "hotel
diplomacy" that Vance is
pursuing in advance· of the
start of Israeli Egyptian
peace talks starting Oct. 12 in
Washington .
.
In Washington, White
House spok esman Jody
Powell said Monday Egypt
and Israel had accepted
President Carter's invitation
for
U .S .- mediated
negotiations that could lead
to the first treaty eve r
between a n Arab state and
Israel.
The Egyptians hope the
treaty will be ready for
signing by Nov. 19, the first
anniversary of Sadat's peace
trip to Jerusalem.
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat recently said he would
love to have it signed atop
Mount Sinai - a holy spot
where, according to the Bible

and the Koran (the Moslem
holy book), God spoke ·to
Moses.
In a major speech to
Parliament Monday, Sadat,
who signed the accords in
Washington with Israeli
Prime Minister Menachein
Begi(., invited Carter to visit
Egypt and sign the treaty.
" I do not doubt for a
moment that every Egyptian
man and woman will look "
forward to this visit to
express great esteem for a
great man," Sadat said .
Carter accepted the invita·
tion Sadat said but no date
has 'been set fo; the visit.
In Tel Aviv, Israel's
national radio said Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan will
lead the Israeli delegation to
the Washington peace talks
after going to the United
Nations.
• Vance chatted for about an
hour Monday with Saudi
Arabia 's foreign minister,
Prince Said a l-Faisal. A
spokesmim for Vance would
say only that the secretary
had brought the prince "up to
snuff " on the rapidly
changin·g
Middle
East
. developments.
But it was clear what
Vance was after: support for

the Camp David agreements
from Saudi Arabia, the Arab
world's big bankroller whose
backing could be expected to
silence objections from Arab
hard-line states.
The United Sta~ also was
trying to persuade Syria and
Jordan to support .the Camp
David accords. But there
appeared little chance that
Syria would soften its_opposilion- unless the Saudts coti.ld
be persuaded to pressure
Damascus.
Vance himself is expected .
to head the U.S. delegation
when the Israeli-Egyptian
talks begin later this month,
althoughhelikelywillhaveto
leave early on another
m1sston to Moscow for
strateg_ic ar~s limitatio n
talks wtth Sov1et leaders.
Today, Vance had another
M1ddle East target Foreign Minister Ahmed
Khalifa a lSuweidi of the
United Arab Emirates- plus
a date to talk over the
problems of Iran with that
cou~tr;[ 's foreign minister,
Am1r
Khosrow
Afshar
Qaserrilu .
.
Vance has been plumbing
the U.N. waters for support
for Camp Davtd for the past
eight days, except for a
weekend time-{)ut tn retnm Ill

VeteraDB Memorial Hospital
Holzer Medical Center
Admitted - Brian Riffle,
Discharges, Sept.OciZ
Washington to sit in 00 Syracuse; David Rumion,
Clara Cofflll!ln; Thomas
another round of apparently Rutland.
Epling; Barbara Ferguson;
·inconclusive SALT talks with · Discharged- Cleo Baker, Ryan Fuller; Mrs . Neal Ma'
Soviet Foreign Minister John
Riffle,
~ladys · nion and son and daughter;
Andrei
Gromyko
and Nicholson, Edna Wilcoxen. William Merry;
Ruth

Pr~::ntw~~:~ain
at the ~
- .··::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
~~~:~~f Q~~i~~~; p-;{;6~
· he
·
Schwartz; Melislla Smith;
· ed N ·

Ur_ut

ations -!!Ow m t

thlr~ week of t~s 33rd regu!~

sesston - until at least tlus
weekend. It Is far and away
his longest trip yet to the
world body.
Vance's efforis to seek
support for the accords
coincided . with similar
diplomacy by President
Carlllr's security adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski in Paris
Monday and Middle East
trouble shooter Alfred '
Atherton in Morocco .
French news medln said
Brzeziilski asked President
Valery Giscard d'Estaing to
use his influence • with
hardline Arab nations such as
Libya, Syria and Iraq to
induce them to drop their
hostility to the Camp David
accords.
France has been the only
Western European nation to
voice misgivings about the
Camp David talks contending
that any Middle East settle·
ment will not succeed without
Palestinian participation.

Airline disaster still p.u zzling

(UP I) - Secretary of State
Cyrus
Vance
called
Lebanese U. N. Am.bassador Gbassao Tueol to
a private meellng today to
dluuss the worsening
situation In that country,
where renewed fighting
could threaten the Camp
David peace IDlllatlve.
Vance wa• back at work
on bls longest and busiest
mission yet at the United ·
Nations - wooing the
diplomatic world for
support for tbe Camp
David
accor~s.
The
Lebanese crisis, with
Egyptian-Israeli talks only
days away, clearly had the
Car~er'
administration
worried.
Officials dellnced to say
exactly what subjects
Vance and _Tuenl would
cover at their afternoon
"hotel room" chat, but
diplomatic sources said
this week's rocket and shell
bombardmeot of Beirut
and the threa I to the
Lebanese
government
were at the top of tbe llsl
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:=:-:-:-:::.:-:-:-:-:-:=:=:=:-:::::::::::::::::::

Kapustin said investigators . :;;ep:U"ate , advisori~s to the
investigalllr for the National
still cannot say why both Jetlmer ptlot warnmg him of
Transportation Safety Board,
planes, both in contact with • the light plane nearby, the
said it was too early to rule
air traffic controllers were in last about 71 seconds before
out possible involvement of a
the same place at the same . the planes collided at 2,600
third plane. He said radar
time.
feet . The pilot acknowledged
plots of aircraft in the vicinity .
FM
earlier
in
the
dliy
all four.
The
were still being analyzed in
The tape of talk betwe_en
made
public
the
tape
of
tbe
Washington, D.C.
last communications between the pilot of the Cessna, a
Chambers said the FAA
controllers at Lindbergh Marine pilot practicing
believes the air-traffic
Field and the Miramar ilistrument flight , and the
control
system
at
Lindbergh
''Something'' was Ute worst
Approach
Control Center and Miramar center was broken
Field
is
"perfectly
safe,
as
it
aviation tragedy in U.S. his-.
the
pilots
of the Pacific by repeated garbles. It was
the
country,
and
we
is
around
tory, a 144-&lt;leaih collision
Southwest
Airways
727 and a not .clear whether the Cessna
between a jetliner and a have not changed any of our
Cessa.
pilot acknowledged the alerts
singl...,ngine
procedures ... The s·y stem is
small plane.
The
recordings
showed
he
was given to look out for
Even as the tape recording the world's finest ."
issued
four
the
big jet.
controllers
of the exchanges between the
pilots and traffic · controllers
Wl!S made public Monday, a
week after the crash, officials
of two federal agencies
inv estigating the crash
disagreed over the meaning
Sheriff Proffitt' is the in·
Law Enforcement Ex- council.
of what they have discovered
stitutional
representative
plorer Post 230 observed open.
The Meigs Post was fanned
so far.
with
Deputy
Howell as Ex·
Federal
Aviation house and registration night October 31, 1977 with its
Sept.
29,
in
the
plorer
advisor.
Wednesday
,
in
the
law
speciality
being
Administration spokesman
Requests for membership
Bruce Chambers
said briefing room of the Meigs enforcement field with its
into
the Explorers are still
County
sheriff's
.office.
purpose
to
help
young
adults
speculation a third plane may
being
accepted and those
'Judy
Spen
cer
,
E;xplorer
14
through
20
presently
age
have confused the jetliner
young
adults
interested are
coordinator
of
Tri-state
Area
attending
Eastern,
Meigs
and
pilot hsd been " put to rest"
reminded
to
attend
a regular
Scout
Hea
dquarters,
Hun·
Southef
n
Local
High
Schools,
by the recording.
But Rudy Kapustin, chief tington, West Virginia and become mature, responsible post meeting. Meetings are
Connie
Leonard,
EPA citizens. Students are given held on Saturday mornings lit
president, all of Huntington, the opportunity to examine 9 a .m. in the briefing room of
were present .. They reported the
law
enforcement the Meigs County Sheriff's
YA RD SALE
the purpose and scope of the profession as a possible Department.
Wednesday 9 to 5 off Count y
career, aiding in character
Rd . Sand Of f R t 124 . LOOk Exploring program and the
f or sign s. 992 -5778 .
planned future events of the training, to create a better
understanding of the law
enforcement programs on the
local , state and national
levels and to develop a stable
(Continued from page 1)
scale of values.
where
walkouts
were
After the business part of ·
triggered
by
wage
disputes.
the meeting, Margie Proffitt
Logan teachers and non·
and several mothers of the
academic
employees went oo
members served cake and
strike
Aug.
29, Midview Sept.
Kool -A id . The cake was
19,
and
Painesville
Township
decorated with yellow icing
last
Wednesday.
·
brown
trimming
with
Whitehall
teachers
walked
denoting the · first an·
niversary of the founding of out Monday, but schools
relll!lined open with non·
the post.
teachers
and
Attending
were
Don striking
Snyder, Damy Hysell, John substitutes maming classSnyder, Margaret, J oe, Mike, foams.
In Painesville , negotiators
Chuck, Kathy and Patty
Parker, Tad Darling, Peter, for the strikers submittfll a
Mathew , Alan and SuS&amp;n new contract proposal to the
Darling , Lisa Thomas, Gary board of education Monday
Wolfe , Evelyn Thomas, night before a public forum
Sonya
Ohlinger ,
Tina attended by about 300
Spencer ,_ Judy Spencer, citizens.
There was no inunediate ·
Connie Leonard, Milford
Hysell, Margie Proffitt, and reaction from the board
regarding the proposal.
James Proffitt, sher iff.
By STEWART SLAVIN
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - The
voices buzz back and forth
with the clipped calm, aimost
nonchalance, that marks
professionalism in air traffic
control. There was only one
outburst of "My God.'; As one
voice put it : "Something
happened."

Ope~

SESSION SLATED
UN IT ED
NATIONS

house observed

Logan

Fans charged
With assault
NEW YORK (IJPI) ·-Two
football fans were charged
with assault and attempted
murder
for
allegedly
throwing a security guard
head-first over a railing
during Sunday's New York
Jets-Pittsburgh Steelers
game at Shea stadium.
The
guard,
Harold
Seymore, 33, of Queens, fell
15 feet to a ramp below. He
was in Booth Memorial
Medical Center in Flushing
with a fractured skull,
concussion
and
neck
injuries.
Queens District Attorney
John Santucci said the
incident occurred in the' loge
section of Shea Stadium
toward the end of the Jets' ~
17 loss to Pittsburgh.
·
Seymore was trying to
break._ up a fight among fans
when - the two suspects
allegedly "picked him up
bodily, held him by feet and
legs over a railing, and let
him go," Santucci said.
The suspects, both •33 yearsold and from Lake
Ronkonkoma, N.Y., were
Identified as Glenn Edward
Kaspar and Robert Morstadt.
Santucci said Kaspar and
Morstadt were arraigned
Monday before Criminal
Court Judge Michael Curci
and held on $2,500 bail each:

Flossie Story; William
Walters.
Births, Oct. 2
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Butcher, daughter, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Parker,
son, Reedsville:
Mr. and M.-.. John Shuler,
daughter, Addison.

Mrs. Mills.appointed
A liaison position between
the Rio Grande College and
Community College depart·
ment of education and the
area public schools which
provide experiences for the
college's education majors
has been created.
Sandy
Mills,
former
placement director and
English instructor at Rio
Grande, has been named
coordinator of early field
experiences. Her primary
duties for the college will be
with s uperin·
working
tendents , principals and .
cooperating teachet-s to
arrange
school experience
.
.

Pontiff laid to rest

for students enrolled In the
coilege's education major .
Mills received a bachelor's
degree in edufation from
Northwestern University 'a nd
a master's degree in English,
from Marshall University.
Mills al!o instructed English
in area schools for tllree
years.

By JACK PAYfON

Paul VI, John Paul 's coffin
VATICAN ciTY (UP!) was lifted
from
the
Poj,e John Paull, ttie humble catafalque on which
it had
bricklayer's son whose smile
lain inside St. Peter 's and
illiDDinated the world during
was placed on a Persian
his ~ay-reign, today was
carpet on the st,one slab in
sent to his final rest in an
fron t of the church .
outdoor funeral Mass in the
The Sistine Chapel Choir
shadow of St. Peter's
led the hymn singing during
Basilica.
the Latin language mass
Resplendent in their
concelebrated
by
a ll
crimson robes, those of the
cardinals present and read by
127 Cardinals already in
Cardinal Carlo Confalonieri
Rome escorted the pla in
. 85, the dean of the Sacred
cypress coffin bearing the College of Cardinals whn
body of the late ~mtlff from

MEE'QNG CALLED .
The regular meeting of
Meigs
County REACT
scheduled for Friday evening
has been cancelled. A special
meeting is being planned for
Nov. 4 with details to be
amounced later .

Another levy· lose·. s

the
massive
basilica.
. John
Paul's
reign was so
brief that never as pontiff did
he celebrate a mass in the
United Press International
Voters in the Little Miami
baroque basilica, the largest
in Christendom .
School Di strict, _ignoring
John Paul , the Roman predictions that schools will
Catholic Church's 263rd be forced to close this year,
pontiff, died last Thursday overwhelmingly rejected ·a :;.
night at the age of 65 of a year levy, while Centerville
sudden and massive heart voters ap prov ed a 2-mill
attack while reading in bed. · school levy in balloting
Tens .of thousands of · Tuesday.
TI1e unofficial count in the
m"o urn e r s· Ignored
threatening skies and a cold Little Miami district showed
drizzle 'to pack the inunense 850 votes for the levy and
cobblestone square between 1,194 against. An oper ating
Bernini 's Doric columns for levy ha.s not been passed in
Pope John Paul's final rites. th e district since 1970.
CIetus
B u 1a c h ,
Following the practice set
by the wishes of the late Pope superintendent of the ~.11111\.

Explosion kills two
•
perso11:s zn Colorado
By DANIEL CHISZAR
I beard . this boom/' said picture window was lying m
COMMERCE CITY, Colo. shirley Gonzales, who lives the Door. My neighbors were
(UP!) - A Conoco oil about a mile away. "I went running outside to see what
refinery exploded in flames out in the living room and the happened."
at dawn today, killing two
~-~·
employees, injlil'ing at least
two dozen others and sending
a , ball of fire and flaming
metal 500 feet into the sky.
An hour after the initial
explosion in the main
'
refinery area northeast of -I
Denver, one of tbe plant's
MASON - The Mason Extension Homemakers held their
main storage tanks also
regular
meeting on Sept. 19 at the fonner Virgil A. Lewis
exploded. Firefighters feared ·
hom~,
Brown
_st., with Mrs. Laurene Lewis, pcesident,
· the ftre might spread to otber
At
thts
meetmg the pcesident named the lessons for
pceStding
.
nearby tanks.
19/'S-79.
The
October
lesson is entitled, "Is Your Home a Fire
"I ' was driving oo the
Trap?"
Mrs.
Fr!!!l
Spencer
is the 1€sson leader next month,
highway near the refinery
_and
Roberta
Young
and
Evelyn
Stewart are hostesses.
when. the ground began to
~t
the
opening
of
the
meeting
following the Pledge of
shake and a ball of flame
Allegtance
to
the
Flag,
the
devotional
leader, Mrs. Roberta
erupted,"
said
Frank
devotiQJ1als
to
her
friend of 60 years,
Young,
dedicated
the
Mathias, wbo witnessed the
Mrs.
Evelyn
stewart.
She
used
scripture
John
15, 13th chapter ;
6:36 a .m. explosion.
4,
lith
verse
and
Proverbs
17
17th
verse.
The groop sang
John
"Then debris began falling
"Love lifted Me."
'
'
out of the sky and tbe car was
A
reading
entitled
,
"Friend&amp;
Make
the
World
a
Happy
covered. I thought it was
paper, but it was white Place to be.'' She closed the devotionals with pcayer.
Mrs. Helen Williams read, ''A few things all club members
flaming metal. The ground
need
to remember in order to have a good club meeting."
shook for a long time and then
Laur_ene Le~ls and Mrs. J. Marshall reported on the
Mrs.
there
was
another
County
Council
meeting which they attended. It was reported
explosion."
Day will be held on Oclllber 19 at the
that
Achievement
Medical teams set up an
Holiday
Inn,
Kanauga,
Ohio:
'
emergency evacuation center
It
was
announced
that
Sandy
Knotts
County
Home
Health
one block from the refinery,
is
available
to
speak
to
the
clut&gt;s'
on
family
health
care
Service,
which is located in an
and
can
be
contacted
by
calling
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
at
industrial . area ·surrounded
675-4340
extension
253,
or
calling
6'/lHi!Ol.
by homes. The injured were
Two hooks were exhibited and were given to Mason's
taken to five Denver area
Public
Library, and they are "A Mother's Sourcebook of
hospitals by evacuation
Inspiration''
and given in memory of Mrs. Lawrence (Ted)
helicopters and ambulaitces.
)Jy
Mason County Homemakers Council, and
.
Roush
Fire departments from
"Adventures
in Good Living" by Gertrude Humphreys and
throughout the metropolitan
donated
by
Mason
ExteR!ion Homemakers.
' ·
area rushed to the scene,
"'U
Mrs.
J.
Marshall
showed
sltetches
of
the
Vlrgll
A.
I.ewla
using water and foam to fight
the fire. Heavy black smoke hom' made by Ruth Ryan, a Charleston artist. No action was
billowed 3,000 feet into the taken by the group in having the pcints made. It was brought
out thai if the Mason Extension Homemakers and tbe Mason
air.
The force of the explosion Historical Society would buy in larger quantities that the price
.
would be .c heaper.
ratUed hmtes as far away as
The
secretary's
report
was given by Mrs. George Carson
22 miles and windows in close
treasurer,
Mrs. William Zerkle.
and
approved,
and
the
to the blast site were
reported.
shattered by the force . Police
Refreshments were served to Mrs. Willlam Zerkle, Mrb.
closed off all roads itt tbe
Ramona
Sydenstrlcker, Mrs. Fred Spencer, Mrs. Matilda
are~, including Interstate
Nob~e, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. J. Marshall, Mrs. Laurene
270, causing massive traffic
jams as residents tried to get Lewts, Mrs. George Carson, Mrs. Roberta Young, Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Sr., Mrs. Catherine SJulth by
to work.
"I was just getting up when hostesses, Mrs. Lester Johnson and Mrs. Helen Williams.

r--------._.._,._____

I
I

Tradionalists

Mason County

News Notes

By Alina Marshall

Pomeroy-Middleport , Ohio
Wednesday , October 4, 1978

~ur low-cost

auto .. ioans are the key to
fmancmg your next car . We've got a variety
pf loan "models" ... one is just right for you
and the car you want.

at 7:30P.M.
WITH
OC T . 4
REV. RALPH CAIN
Caldwell F. M. Church

"The Friendly Bank"
Walk-up teller window

C"T . 5
REV. R. D. BROWN
Danville Weslt~• an Church

and auto-teller window
open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m.

...

•IILEJICIItT

Public Invited

~ ·'. ""'- ~· \

lns~red

SPECIAL MUSIC

to S40.000.ou.

&amp;NURSERY

studio"'GmPU'®
one

AMPLE PARKING
Host Pastor, Rev. HERB AILING

'·

(Bob Hoeflich)
109 High

St.

Pomeroy

Pair

'

.

.

Fifteen Cent s
Vol. ~!1. No. 120

innocent pleas

Council accepts project

Grands.and fire probed

Woman sheriff testifying

Loss set

One ends, another starts

Style No. 7967 •
Comfort plus good looks work well together In .this
suburban coat from the Studio One collection by
Campus. It's of textured polyester gabardine with
contrast plio collar ·and lining. Deep, full pocket.,
leather-look buttons and stitch -lllng make this a.
handsome choice 1..- lall .

at $41,000

Order decline·-forces layoff

.

IN POMEROY
''

•

.
enttne
'

By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON passed the natural gas and their gross income -of up to certain spendin g on energy
Con ference Chairman Rep.
WASHINGTON (UP!) coal conversion bills and the $300 for insulation work done conservation equipment and AI Ullman, ~re, felt both
Co n gress ional energy House is waiting for all the on their homes. The credit techniques.
House and Senate had
-Give busin esses a 10 promise d Americans the
negotiators have kept what energy bills to be passed by would be 15 percent of
som e felt was a promise Ill the Senate so it can vote on expenditures up to $2,000, for percent tax credit for insulation credits because
such things as insulation , spending on equipment that that feature was in both bills.
Ame&lt;icans : they have voted th em as a package.
·to reward homeowners who
Th e conference staff more efficient furn aces, would proctuce oil from shale He compromised with Long
insulate by giving them tax estimated
the
home storm windows and doors, or produce gas f rom highly Ill the extent of watering
credits totaling hundreds of insulation featur e would caulkin g a nd weather- pressurized underground hot down th e credit from the $400
both houses have voted to the
millions of dollars.
mean some $600 million in tax stripping. That provision was sprin gs.
Sen. Russell Long, D-La ., agreed-upon $300.
But their proposed $300 cr edits a nd the business made retroactive to April 20,
. so
qualified chair man of the Senate
credit compares with the $400 credits perhaps $400 million. 1977,
one ea rlier voted by both Precise estimates could not expen ditur es sin ce then Finance Committee and
leader of the Senate energy
House and Senate.
be made because the llltals would be eligible.
Partly cloudy Thursda y,
-'-Give a tax credit of up to tax conferees, wanted to
A House-&amp;nate energy tax de pe nd on how people
insulation
credits
·
hi
ghs
in the upper 60s or
remove
the
$2,200 for expenditures up Ill
co nf e ren ce Tuesday respond to the credits.
of
tax
lower
70s . Probability of
because
of
the
loss
$10
,000
for
residenti
al
approved the insulation plan
The main portions of the
for
what
he
felt
was
precipitation
is 10 percent .
revenue
of
solar,
wind
or
installation
as well as a package of insulation-&lt;:onservation plan
minimuln energy conserva- through tonight and 20 re r·
business tax credits for on .which th e conference ge~thermal equipment.
cent Thursday.
-I.et businesses take a 10 lion .
energy efficiency and new . agreed Thesday night would:
· energy technology .
-'-Give people a tax credit percent investment credit Conferees scheduhid an - that is, an outright in addition to a general
afternoon meeting today Ill subtraction fr om their tax bill investment tax credit of 10
settle remaining issues in the instead of a deduction from percent now in the law - for
energy tax bills, passed in
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:;:·:::::·:::;:::;:;:;:::;:::::;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;
vastly differing forms last
year by the two houses.
A separate conference
committee has completed
work on bills for energy
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The Ohio Department of Trans·
conserva ti on, nat ural gas
purtallon held groundbrealdng ceremonies today just
pri cing , industrial conversion
suuth of Peebles In Adams County for a section of the
COLUMBUS - Gov . James pa lac hi a n Education Ne tCLEAN UP ALLEY- This alley between Moore's Store and the Pomeroy Wine Store is
to coal a nd utility rate
Appalachian highway, extending from Cincinnati through
A. Rhodes today announced work Program. The grant
getting a cleanup - thanks to Allie and Paul Simon. The alley for years has been used as a
r efo rm . The Senate ha s
approval of a $325,000 grant will be supplem ented with
shortcut from Second to Main St. and recently has become extremely littered as well as
the southern Ohio W Belpre.
'!be a fternoon ceremony for the nearly 9.9 mile fourfr om the ·Appala chian $14J.66i fr om local sources.
grown up. ·The Simons hope to make it a pleasant area for the lower block of th e business
The project, which serves
lane highway running from Peebles to Seaman was at the
Regional Commission !ARC )
section.~~ debris pictured is just a part of the littering which is being cleared away. "No
all
28 counties in Appalachian
to the Consortium for Health
intersection of Ohio 41 and 32.
littermg stgns will be posted and the alley w11l be wellllghted m the near future. Residents
FUNDS APPROVED
Ohio
, w'ill id entify and
John R. Jurgenson Co., Cincinnati, is to complete the
Ed ucat ion in Appa lachi an
are asked to cooperate in helping keep the alley clean and to report a ny violators.
Gallia Co unty Comcoordin
ate health education
projec t by Oct. 31, 1980. 'lbe estimated cost is $11,993,818.
Ohio· for the fourth -year
missioners Tuesday ap·
:-:·:·:·:·:-:::-::::;.;.;:;:;:::;:;.;.;:;:;.:-:=:=:-:=:-:::-:-:=:-:-:-:-:·:·
fo
r
health
professionals and
proprlated $2,600 for the :-:::·:-:::·:·:·:·:·:-:·:.:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:::·:·:::-:-:-:::::-:-:::::::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:::·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:- . funding uf the Ohio Apthe
publie
. Professiona l
EXTENDED FORECAST
operation of the Galliahealth
education
includes
· Cool .ttirough the period,
Melgs Regional Airport for
developing
family
practice
with showers possible both
th e remainder of the year.
ettings
and
res
idency
s
Friday and Saturday, aud
Larry Beebe, Lin Young,
co
ntinuin
g
ed
ucation
for
highs in the upper 50s or the
Eldon Wuerch and Ernie
nurses
and
hea
lth
lower
60s.
Early
morning
Thompson, all of Gallipolis,
ent~r
low
tempe
ratures
wlll
be
in
were reappointed to serve
.
.
PAINESVILLE, Ohio (UP! ) - Two Painesville men have
Mason Town Council ac- final inspection was made on with the consulting engineer technicians.
the 40s Friday and\ In the
M d
and contractor and arranged The proJect was submitted
as members to the airport
pleaded innocent to aggravated murder and aggravated
cepted th e $239,000 conb
d th for remaining details on the for approval by the Departon ay .l
authority through Sept. 13,
robbery charges stemming fr om the death of an 86-year-old middl e 30s to lower 40s both
struction
project to upgrade
C~un·c l ~emd ers 1of~re oo~ job to be completed
Saturday and Sunday.
ment of E c onomi c and
1979.
jeweler in Fairport Harbor .
the Town's water system a.fter sys em
:= :=:=:-:-:-:-::::::::::::::;:;.;:;:::::::;.;:;.;:;:;.;::·:·:·:·:·:·:=::;:;•. :;:;:::::::::::::·:;:·:·:::·:::::::::::·:::::::·:::::::::_::::::::::::;:;:;:
on
ay
a
er
n
The
full
cost
of
ihe
water
Community
Development 's
1
Clarence D. Dunn and Jghn W. Ware , both 23, were in the
system
improvements
was
Appala
chian
Development
Lake County jail today under $150,000 bond each. Both men
Office, which admm isters the
th
- were indicated by the1Lake County grand jury last week for the
·
covere d by a gran t f rnm P:
•
US Department of Housing ARC p rogram m 0 hw. .
death of Oscar Ruusten, whose body was found Sept. 15 in the
· ·
Oh io's 1978 Appalach ian
:back of his jewelry store.
and Urban Development Deve lopm ent Plan and
'(HUD). Town ofhc1als ap- Project Investment Package
plied and qualified for the contains approximately $i .28
. GEORGETOWN, Ohio (UP!) - Fire officials are
funds in 1976.
million in h,mding proposals
· investigating a fire which destroyed the grandstand at the
Beller fire protection will be for OHio's 28 Appalachian
Brown County Fairgrounds Tuesday, just three daY,s after the
possible with the increased· eounties in areas of health,
-fair ended.
flows and storage provided by child development, energy .
Officials said arson was a possible cause of the 4 a.m. blaze
a nd natural
the new lines a nd tank, as well educa t ion
and state fire marshal officials were called into investigate.
as
the
additional
fire
hydrants
resources.
There were no injuries in the fire , but a truck and a car parked
that were installed, according
ARC is a state-fede ral
near the grandstand were ~estroyed.
to City Engineer Calvin Smith. partnersh ip which promotes
The new storage tank adds the economi c and social
250,000
gallons to the Town's development of the Ap·
Sf. CLAIRSVILLE, Oh io (UPI) ~ The Belmont County
pa lachi an region of the
l!l'and jury met today to get testimony from Belmont County
capacity, for a total of 350,000 United States.
Sh~riff Kathy Crumbley and her husband James in connection
gallons.
with its investigation of her bodyguard's death.
The West Virginia Rating
The body of Douglas Tatomir was found in his car in the
Bureau is being invited by
garage behind the Crumbley residence in Shadyside Feb. 13.
Mayor Fred Taylor to review
Authorities ruled the cause of Tatomir's death was carbon
Mason's fire protection rating
monoxide poisoning .
as a result of the water system
improvements.
" We thank all those who
Teachers in the Wellington Exempted Village School
helped ma ke this water
District began a strike today in a contract dispute , but at the
project possible ," Mayor
Loss wa s estimated at
same time a teacher walkout in another Lorain County school
Taylor stated. " It is th e $41,000 in a fire Tuesday
•. cllstrlct apparently wsa nearing an end.
biggest improvement in which destroyed the home of .
Negollators for about 160 striking Midview School District
Mason's water ~,. , ~"m since Ottie Vernon and Virginia
teachers and the board of education reached ·a tentative
the to•o . ~ .. J w1ll allow for . Lu cas located on Africa Rd.,
em tract agreement early today. Both sides were to vote on the
''""";oswn of the Town
for Cheshire Twp.
1
pact later today :
· ·:.:\ l 1Y j't!ars to come.'.
Middleport's fire depart~
The tank site was acquired ment was called at 11:21
from Lee and Gertrude Hobbs, a.m., but the how was
Fred
Taylor,
Council
members
Charlutte
.i
&lt;'n"'and
INSPECf!NG WATER SYSTEM- Members of the
who cooperated completely practically levele\f when
FAIRMONT, W.Va . (UP!) - A decline in orders for glass
Catherine Smith, Recorder Lois Test. Back row, in no
Mason Town Council, other town oificials, a contractor
withtheTownoverthemonths firemen arrived . It was
bottles and jars and higher freight costs have led Owensparticular order, Lee Hobbs, property owners from whom ·
and property owners made a final inspection of the town of
of construction. ·
believed the fire originated in
Illlnoil to furlough 455 of tbe 974 employees at Its Fairmont
the tank site was requlr€d; Cm.ndiman Dayton Raynes,
Mason's new water system Mondsy. The system was
Lawrence Roush is the the dining room near a wood
Gl888 Container Manufacturing Plant.
Maurice Rennecker, C·)nsul:i_ng Engineer, Calvin Smith,
funded through a HUD Block Grant. Standing in front of a
Water Commissioner for the burning stove.
EmjJloyees have been told of the impending layoffs,
town engineer. Councilnlhu ',awrence Roush and George
plaque, erected in connection with the water project, are
No one was home at the
Town, and John Bush is the
according to plant manager James Derrickson . Workers
Sma les, genera l contractor of Coleman-Tra iner CQ.
front row, from left, Russell Capehart, inspe&lt;ltor; Mayor·
Water Superintendent.
tirrie of the blaze.
fa~ furloughs include 410 on hourly wages and 45 on sal~y.
~
1
•

j{IC)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_,_ro_d_a_y_

,
DANCE SCHEDULED
of Southern High School are
A round and square dance
asked to meet at the high f9r the public will be held
school Wednesday at 7 p.m. to from 8 to 11 p.m. at the Meigs
practice for the pre-gam«: Sen!!Jr Citizens Center in
show on Friday, Oct. 6. It was • Pomeroy. Admission will be
reported that instruments are · $1 for adults, with children
available for alumni to use: under 12 admitied free when
They will pl~y the " Fight accompanying their parents.
Song" and the "National Music will be by the String·
Anthem ." All alumni band dusters.
members are urged to parFALL CARNIVAL
ticipate.
The Racine PTO will hold a
fall 'carnival which will in-SUIT FILED
elude a ham and turkey
In Meigs County Common dinner Saturday.
Serving will begin at 5 p.m.
Pleas Court a suit in the
amount of $1,194.:19 was filed with the carnival beginning
by Sears, Roebuck and Co., • at 6:30 p.m. There will be
Ash'""A Ky., against Daniel , games and a country store.
er· . JUU&gt;&lt;l Dodson, Syracuse. The public is invited.

THE PHOTO PlJCE

at y

Peggy Neigler, Lori Chapman and Becky Crow. The
queen will be crowned durmg half-time activities at the
homecoming game Friday at Racine . Southern will clash
with North Gallia.

$325,000 ARC
Groundbreaking held .grant ok.a yed

ALUMNI PRACTICE

And the. onlY . one who c~n arran~e the
treasured, unique yet mexpensrve Christmas gift of your portrait for friends
and family .
.
And now is the time to make your appomt·
ment. Give us a call.

OC T. 7
REV. JIM ('ORBITI'
Enterprise U. M. Church

01110

MeJ!Iber F.D.I.C. Deposits

..,_

OCT. 6
REV. FLOYD SllOOK
Laurel Cliff F. M. Church

•

HOMECOMING QUEEN CAN DIDATES AND
ATTENDANTS at Southern High School are, front, l·r,
Jody Grueser , sophomore attendant , Brenda Ash, junior
attendant, and Amber Warner, Freshman attendant,
back , queen candidates, aU seniors, Janis Carnahan.

Weather

1\11 alumni band members

FALL
SPIRITUAL REVIVAL
Hysell Run
Free Methodist Cmrch
October 4th to 7th - 1978

e

The coffin s we re then
lowered int o a marble
sarcophagus a nd covered
with a large ston e. slab. The
lllmb was only a few steps
away from those of · John
XXIII and Paul VI. the two
pontiffs from whom he took
his name.

Energy ·tax credits offered

•·

those measures , including
urgent ones, that an
evaluation
of
the
circumstances requires."
For the third straight day
today, torrential rain slowed
down the flow of mourners
filing into st. Peter 's basilica
Ill pay last respects to the late ·
pope .
Vatican officials estimated
that more than hslf a million
people have viewed the
pope's body since it first went
on display Friday.

pupil district in Warren and
Clinton counties, said schools
would be forced to close Dec.
I, and would reopen in
January.
The school district pro jects
a $198,000deficit by th e end of
the year.
The Centerville levy, approved by a 3,212-2,756 vote,
will provide $5.46 million,
which will be used to add a
wing to the district 's high
school, build a gym and a
football stadium.
The levy replaces another
of simila r millage that
expires at the end of the year.

police helicopters circled the
square
and
police
sharpshooters eyed the crowd
from positions alo"fig the 151·
foot high facade of the
basilica . More than 7,000
police were assig ned to
security.
As the hells of St. Peter's
knelled, the coffin was
carried back inside the
basilica.
Walking down the central
nave, accompanied only by
the pontiff 's immediate
family and a half d6ien .
cardina ls, the pallbearers
moved Ill the left of the main
altar '!lld slipped out the
"Door of Death " to reach the
grottoes beneath the church.
· Down inside the grottoes
John Paul's cypress casket
was placed in a lead liner
weighing 880 pounds. This in,
turn was placed in a more
massive casket of oak.

'

ELBERFELD$

(Continued from page I)
MEETING SLATED
Youngsters interested in
becoming new members of
the Riggs Royal-ettes Baton·
Corps are to meet at 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the recreation ·
building of Royal Oak Park.
Girls .from three through 13
are eligible to participate and
no previous experience in
baton is necessary.
Regular members are to
report at the same location at
6:30 p.n\. Wednesday.
.Anyone needing further
information may call Mrs.
Judy Riggs at 985-3595.

performed the same services
for Paul VI only last Aug . 12.
Dignitaries from
114
nations including Mrs . Lillian
Carter, the mother of the U.S .
President, sat in- special·
roped off chairs to the left and
right of the altar.
Once the funeral mass
ended Cardinal Confalonieri
read the funeral service itself
- intoning a brief homily and
sprinklin'g holy water on the
coffin .
Throughout the service

'

•

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