<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15570" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15570?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:08:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48692">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/3f95be26bced65c4477bf006f8ce39f4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>878dce50c3fd4a6e652b12231a02e8f7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49918">
                  <text>12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middeport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wc'&lt;lnesdav . Oct. 4. 197R

Inflation_setback......... food costs up last month

Vietnam massing military .forces
preparations
for
a
By PAUL WEDEL
BANGKOK , Thailand widespread invasion during
(UP!) - Vietnam is massing the dry .season, clairping the
military forces along much of Vietnamese are "1\eU-bent on
its burder with Cambudia for selling themselves out" to the
what some intellig ence Soviet Union and serving its
analysts said today may be a interests.
Radi o
Ca mbodia
A
drive to knock Phnom Penh
editori a l carried by the
out of the war .
·
Although any timetable for official New China News
a new offensive has been Agency called on the people
thro"n off by widespr ead and army to heighten their
flooding - much of eastern revolutionary vigilance and
"get well prepared so as to
Camhodia is a lake and 2.7
million people in Vietnam . foil the a rmed invasion the ·
Vietnamese authorities may
need urgent assistance unleash in th e dry-season or
visitors just back from the
border area have seen truck- at any time ."
Intellige nce analysts in
loads of guns, ammunition
Bangkok said the buildup in
and troops in Tay Ninh
Tay Ninh is part of a general
province, 55 miles northwest
buildup along the entire
of Ho Chi Minh City .
" With all of that war goods,
south~rn porti on of the
they are not going .on a boy
scout outing , and they don't
need that much for defense. It

can only mean a new offensive," said one witness, a
veteran observer of the Vietni.m war and its aftennath.
·cambodia
a ccuse d
Vietnam today of making

Nine forfeit,
one man fined

VietnamCambodia
border .
" They are building up a
capability." said one analyst,
·· but
intentions?
Who
knows?"
He said the Vietnamese
could take the Camb!&gt;dian
capital, but then would be
faced with the sallie problem
the United States faced :
tr ying to hold a city against a
na tio nalistic rural

Hocking Hills festival set
COLU MBU.S - The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources 1ODNR ) in
cooperation with the Hocking
Hills Artists and Craftsmen
Association, is Spon sorlu~ the
sixth annual Hocking Hills
Arts and Crafts Festival Oct.
14 and 15.
The fest ival at Hocking
Hills state Park will be open
to the public from 11 a .m. to 6
p.m . both Saturday a nd
Sund ay·. Over 55 arts and
cra ft displays will be
exhibited at t~e picnic area
near Old Man's Cave. The
cave entrance is 12 miles
southwest of Logan off State
Route 664.
In aqdition to the displays
ther e will be demonstrations
on making apple dolls.

Nine pe rsons forfeited
bonds and a lOth was fined in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday
ni ght.
Forfeiting bonds were Glen
Cole, Columbu s, $30 posted on
a charge of failing to yield the
right of way; Ronald Estep,
Mason , $30 , failure to yield
R egistration
right of way; Elizabeth Lane,
Pomeroy , $30, failure to yield
right of way; George Moody, deadline nears
Cheshire, $25 , speeding ;
Meigs Countians have until
Martha Fer guson , Middleport , $25 speed ing; Bobby 9 p,m. Saturday tb register to
vote in the Nov. 7 general
Co~hran, Point Pleasant, $30,
election
.
speeding; Wayne Stewart,
Ohio
law requires t hat
Mason , $350, driving while
voters
must
be registered and
intox icated ; Donna Kay, New
Haven , $25, speeding; Clinton to accommodate those who
Fa ulk , P om.eroy, $100, have not done so, the Meigs
possession of a controlied Board of Elections office 1
lo cat~d in the Masonjc
substance.
Fined was Roy Eblin, Temple building, Mulberry
Pomeroy, $50 a nd cos ts, Ave ., Pomeroy , is main disorderly manner ; $100 and taining special hours this
costs , intoxication , and $100 week .
Besides being open from 9
and costs, possession of
4 p.m. each day, the
a
.m.
controll ed substa nce.
board office will be open from
6 to 9 p.m. Friday and from 9
· a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday to
register voters. Newcomers
Concert series
to the county are especially
th.at they must
begins Thursday advised
register in the county to vote .
The Southeastern .,,,.,.
Area Community Cu;..:ect
series will open in Waverly
Thursday at 8 p.m. witli the
appearance of the George
Schering Duo on the stage at
Waverly High School.
Membership cards for the
Tri -Co unty Com munity
Concert Association's 1978-79
/( request for a modification
series, along with a complete to a franchise that tile town of
calendar of all community Mason holds with PointView
~oncerts in the area , were Cable TV was presented to
mailed ou Tuesda y morning . membet'll of the Mason Town
Council Monday evening.
Appearing before council on
the matter was Richard
Newell, manager of the cable
service. He noted that Pointview is requesting an inerease
in the basic rate of single set
service fEom $6 to $7 per
month for the purpose of
carrying out two additional
stations by satellite. The
stations
are
Christian
Broadcasting Network and the
independent station WTCG,
Atlanta , Ga. Council approved
a motion to accept the first
reading on the modification.
According to Mayor Fred
Taylor the public was not
notified of the attendanee of
Newell, because arrangments
for his presence were not

to

Startire diamonds br 1ng
you guaranteed fine quality ,
beau't1fu lly mountec;i in 14·K
yellow o r wh ite gold ... w ith

perm anen t

registratio n ~

toured Tay Nilih province last
week said, "the fighting is
costing the Vietnamese a lot .
Every day there are shellinS
attacks and ambushe!f."
Intelligence sources said
the Vietnamese have already
pushed into Cambodia's
" Fishhook" strip north of
Tay Ninh.
"There are elements of
three divisions holdinR their

insurgency .
Another observer just returned from the border said
his car ran into a Cambodian
artillery barrage .
"We carne under fire from
the other side of the burder
(cambodia) and the shooting
was answered by gunners in
the marshes surrounding Tay
Ninh," he said..
~
A Western journalist who

ground ·up to three miles into

Cambodia," said one fl&gt;urce .

•

But the sources said any
plans for major · offensive
have ahnost certainly been
delayed by widespread
flooding
that
makes
movement of men and heavy
equipment along the border
extremely difficult. The
floods in Vietnam also have
created · serious
food ·
shortages.

HOSPITAL NEWS

baskets, dulcimers, furniture
and woolen animals. other
demonstrations will include
silk screening, chair caning,
quilting, spinning of yarn and
·
painting with acrylics.
Those attending the festival
will be able to participate in
the making of corncob jelly
and cornhusk dolls. These
activities will be led by the
Program Section of ODNR's
Division of Parks and

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Holzer Medical Center
ADMITTED - Walter
Discharges, Ocl. 3
Vaughan,
Pomeroy; Barbara
Floyd Bennett; Ruth
King,
Middleport
; Carl
Blelner; Debra Bowman;
Smith,
Reedsville;
Philip
Mrs. Blaine CArter and son;
Null,
Tuppers
Plains;
Lela
JAcob Chevalier; Jerry ColEasterday,
Racine.
ley; Lottie Collins; Florence
Crossin; Ronald Davis; Ne~a , DISCHARGED - John
Denney; Mrs . Roger Cundiff, Jeffrey Barton, Vicie
Edweese and son; Benjamin Williams, Charles Beegle,
Dowell; Iva Durst ; Wayne Winfield Bailey.
Recreatlon.Fergu.so~; Rosa Foul; Ruth
Live country and bluegrass Hamilton; Juliius Jamey ;
SHIP SINKS
mu~ical entertainment will Gordon Jarrell; Issac Jones ;
Spain
CARTAGENA,
be sponsored by the Hocking Gwendolyn Knox ; Edward
(UP!)An
Algerian
ship
Hills Artists and Craftsmen Lewis; Mrs . Harry Lyons and
sank
In
the
Mediterranean
Association.
son ; Samuel Morris; Roger
early today after colliding
Hours ; Roger Ours; !.AJrie
wllh an ltallan vessel, and
Pope; Ruth Powell; Edna
26
of tbe Algerian eraft's
Reibel; Mrs. Jeff Schoonover
crew
were missing, the
and son; Paul Steinmetz; AnCartagena Navy command
nita Stevenson ; Joseph
said.
Viars; Esther Voreh; HerA base lntelllgenee ofshell Wares ; Debbora h
said an air and sea
ficial
Woolum.
search
was launched for
Births, Ocl. 3
the
26
men reported
Mr. and Mrs . Vernon
missing
from
the 1,5911-lon
Miller, daughter, Oak Hill . ·
Algerian ship Colo.
· COLUMBUS (UP!) - The · Mr. and Mrs . George
The collision occurred 60
FBI Tuesday announced the Newsom , daughter, Oak Hill.
miles east of the Cape of
arrest of Michael Lee Towns,
Palos aud the ltallau sblp
27, and Cynthia Bankston, 19,
Involved was the 8,39G-Ion
both of Columbus, in
connection with a July 25th
Expreso Marilyn, the
bank robbery in the city ..
SJKikesman said.
Tom W. Kitchens Jr .,
He said the cause of the
special agent for the FBI's
4 a.m. collision was not
immediately · lui.,..n, The
Cincinnati bureau, said the
two are charged with the
site of the aecident was ofl
anned robbery of the City
Spain's
southern
National Bank.
IV/edllerranean
coast.
SUNDAY
U convicted, each could
HOMECOMING at Rutland
receive a maximwn sentence Church of Christ .sunday.
of 2:&gt;-years in prison and a
Covered dish dinner at 12 :30
TRICK Oll TREAT
$10,000 dollar fine.
p.m . in fellowship room ;
or Treat night in
Trick
Both have appeared before afternoon service, 2 p.m. with
Pomeroy
has been set for
U.S Magistrate Mark Abel Earl Slack as special
Oct.
30, from 6 to 7
Monday,
and presently are being held s~eaker; special music.
p.m.,
Mayor
Clarenee Anin federal custody in lieu of Public invited.
drews
said
today.
The siren
$50,000 cash bond .
HOMECOMING OF Flat- will sound to mark the
woods Methodist Church opening and closing of the
Sunday. Sunday School at 10 event.
followed by · church at 11. A
• basket dinner will be enjoyed
at 12 ;30 with the afternoon
JOBS AVAILABLE
program to begin at 1:30.
Two part-time jobs for
. Special singing by The persons 55 years or older on
Messengers and others. The . low incomes are still
Rev . Bill Airson will be the available in Pomeroy Village
made until late in the aithrough the Green Thwnb
speaker.
ternoon. Interested persons
Program. Persons are paid
are asked to attend the Oet. 16
for 20 hours each week
meeting of council.
through the program and
In other matters, eouncil
those interested may contact
INSTALLATION SET
approved a request from tile
Mrs. Dorinda Nardei at
Racine Grange will have Pomeroy Village Hall.
Christian Brethern Church to
extend
concrete
from installation of officers Thurssidewalks to the edge of the day at 8 p.m . All officers are
blacktop in front of the church urged to attend. The meeting
SQUAD CALLED
and gave approval for leaf is open to the public.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 236
pickup in the town with dates
Mulberry Ave., Tuesday
to be announced later.
POST GO%
morning
for Walter Vaughan
Council was also informed
Racine American Legion
who
was
taken to Veterans
that the town had been denied Post 602 will meet Thursday
Memorial
Hospital where he
8 p.m. Refreshments will
a request for a grant on the
was
admitted.
Income
hOusing be served.
low
remodeling projeet. A permit
for a tra1·1er space on Bi rc h
Lane was granted to Bob and
Letters of opinion a~ welcomed. They should be less
Agnes Roush.
I lhan 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor)
Present were Mayor Taylor, I aud must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
Recorder Lois Test, council 1 be withheld upoa publication. However, on request,
members,
Ed
Perry, .1 names wiD be dlselosed. Leite~ should be in good taste,
Catherine Smith, Charlotte I addressing Issues, not personalities.
Jenks and LBwrence Roush. I

GEORGE
V .
VOINOVICH, Republican
candidate for Lieutenant
Governor will be vislllnl! a
-five county area of South·
eastern Ohio on Tuesday,
October !fl. During the day
he will be .In . Gallla ;

J.ackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
and Vinton counties. That
evening be wUI be the
featured speaker. of the
Jaekson
County
Republlc•n Women's
Club's Candidates Night to
be held at 8 p.m. at the
Jackson City Library.
Voinovleb Is &amp;.republican
from Cuyahoga County.· In
1966, Iii bis first bid for
public office, he beat a
three term Detnocrat · incumbent and was elected
state representative from
the most democratic
district of any republican
elected In Ohio.

FBI nabs
robbery
suspects

,------·-··1
So CIoal II
1 Calendar l
t

I

END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Joseph E.
_ Kropka, Middleport, filed for
divorce against Sandra M.
Kropka, MI. Pleasant, Ohio.
Granted .divorces were
Brenda Lemaster from
James
Lemaster
and
Delcena Bowling, Cheshire
from otis Bowling, Newton,
N.C.
Marria~es dissolved were
Janey L. Donahue and Daniel
L. Donahue; Ernest J.
Deeter, Rt. 1, Long Bottom
and Audelle M. Deeter, same
address.

TV Rate Increase
Sought In Mason

r------

at

Ir-------------------------1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Sept. 18, 1978

Choose a Career in. . •
eBUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
eJR. ACCQUNTING
eEXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
eGENERAL OFFICE
eSECRET A RIAL'
ST. NO. 75..02.04728
'

I
I
I

Y FOR
fREE INFORMATION
446 4367

!

delegate
Bob
Fox,
Route
4,
Pomeroy, a book editor and
publisher, is one of 19 Ohioans
representing the interests of
business the handicapped,
minorities, education and
other ·concel'lll', seleeted to
represent the state at the
National White House Conference on Library and Information Services to be held
October,
1979
in
in
Washington, D. C.
Fox was elected with the
other national delegates by

250 Ohioans at "Infor-um '78,"
the OHIO White House
Conference on Library and
Information Services in .
Columbus, Sept. 20-22. Aitending that state meeting .
also from Meigs County was
Mrs. Pat Holter, fulute 3,
Pomeroy.
The state conferenee included three days of intensive
deliberation by persons of all
ages and frorn all walks of life
to pinpoint the major
recommendations for future
growth and development of
Ohio libraries.
The Ohio conference
delegates 'agreed on 16 top
issues of major concern
which they will send to the
national conference with the
~hio delegation.

ELBERFELD$

EU

With this l~tter, we wish to congratulate the Meigs
Marauder Football team and its coaches for the oul8tanding
performanee this football season and hope your effort will
continue in success .
' Your efforts not only win Jootball games but create
interest and pride within your school and the public. These
characteristics need to be broUght out in our people and you as
a· team are doing a great job.
Keep up the good work and BEAT IRONTON! -Yours
truly, MEiqSCOUNTY JUVENILE COURT -Carl R. Hysell,
Janet MorriS, Carolyn Thomas, Maming Webster.

• Tan , wal~rproof cowhide
leather
• Leather lined lor tom tort
• Cushion insole and steel
shank alch support
• Sl ip and oil resistant sole
and hee l

WOLVERINE '
8" WATERPROOF BOOT

Open letter to Meigs fans
• Maple. waterproof cowhide
leather
• Cushion insole and steel
arch support
• Leather lined lor comfort

• Slip and pil resistant sole
=tnd heel

HARnEY SHOES. INC.
Middle o( Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0.

Mon~~~~i~:f!"&amp;sat.

1

I

'~i:S~~~·.::;.:;i·

I

As most of you already· kn.,.., the Meigs Marauder
Football team travela to ltonton Friday for what wiU be their
toughest and probably most important game of the season.
'T!&gt; ~ u· le could possibly be for the league title. The local Jl()ys
dud their macl1es under the direction of Olarles Chauncey
have worked hard and come up with one of the best ·te81111 our
fans have seen in several years. What they really need nowYou can fumi!j! -SUPPORT AND BACKING.
Even though this week Is an a,way game, get out lhoae
maroon and gold flSRs - Shake the dust nut nf thern and fly
them proud!). 'Nt,.,~ .: 11.:.&lt;· bur:; c&lt;&gt;lll~ .11&gt; iile Meigs Inn to eat .
before leaving lor Ironton Friday, let's show thP.m we're
behind them. You might even put some signs ~n )our store
windows wilhlng them luck. I
'. ·
'It's easy to crJtlclze when they're loaing - but they're
winning now and your support mi!lht jult be the one final
mgredlent IIIey neec! to bring hnme thai Ilia one thla Friday.
Come to Ironton with L'!"!n aud give them your all. They'll
be giving theirs! -MrR. Don Thomas, A Football"Mom" and
Marauder Booster .
·

•

Agreement
:rejected

'
upholding his veto of the public works bill he considers inflationary.
'
The September report from the Labor Department said food
costs soared by 1.7 percent , the largest rise since April, after
falling 1.5 percent in August and 0:3 percent in July .
The overall 0.9 percent wholesale price jump was also the
biggest since last April's 1.3 percent, the department said.
Overall wholesale prices had actually declined in August for
the rirst time in two years.
.
If prices rose during each month at the same rate as
September's, the aruma! rate of increase would be 10.8 percent
and a return to doubl~igit inflation.

Even without the volatile food price sector, other wholesale
prices rose 0.6 percent compared to just 0.4 percent in August.
To make the situation even worse, the department also
reported that wholesale prices at the intermediate and crude
stages- those products not yet ready for shipment to retailers
- also turned in dismal performances.
Intermediate prices
0.7 percent, the biggest gain since
March, while erude goods prices jumped 1.6 P.rcent after
falling for two straight months .
By far , the biggest surprise in the report was the ll!rge gain
in the prices of food ready for shipment to supermarkets.
The I. 7 percent gain, the department said, was attributed

rose

•

at y

e

"

VOL. XXIX NO. NO. 121 POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RUTLAND As the arran gement, as far as
situation stands today the Rutland council is concerned,
Rutland gymnasium will not stems around the three-year
become th~ Rutland town lease. Officials indicated the
hall.
structure is in.need ofa lot of
Meeting · Tuesday night, work such as roo"f repair,
Rutland's town council down spouti ng,
window
turned down the gymnasium replacement, etc., and the
which it had requested from village planned to put the
the Meigs Local School structure in good repair.
District for use not only as a
However, it was felt that
v.i llage hall but for a senior village ·council could not
citizens center, headquarters expend the money for the
•for the emergency unit of the repairs and run the risk of
town and for other possible having to give up the building
uses.
in a matter of three years.
Council rejected tenns of
Rutland officials indicated
agreement on the structure they hope the situation is still
as submitted from the eentral in the negotiating stage even
office of the school district. It though they have turned
provided for a three year down the short tenn lease.
lease to the toivn on the
Bryne Vaughan of the
building with a notice of Pomeroy polcie department
cancellation of the lease from appearing before -Rutland
either side to be submitted in council outlined aspects of
writing GO to 90 days prior to forming a police auxiliary .
tile eancellation. The village Council deeided against such
was to pay the lnsuranee an auxiliary . It was agreed to
costs and utilities. It was not install a new water tap from
to sub lease the building or Main to across Salern St.
any part of the building for a Marshal Larry Coleman was
period of much length .
authorized to attend a police
QUEEN AND AITENDANT CANDIDATES - Among those seeking homecoming
The tanker truck was not to sehool at Rio Grande College. queen and atten~t honors at Kyger Creek this fall are, first row, left to right, Vicki
be housed in the building and
Trick or treat night .was set Russell, freshman attendant; Kim Kern, and Christy Roush. senior aueen candidates. R.,;,
the board of educaton was to from 6 to 7 p.m. on Monday, - Judy Darst, senior queen candidate; Elaine Ward, junior attendant and Leslie Taylor,
have been advised of van- Oct. 30 with firemen to help sophomore attendant.
ctalism as soon as possible. patrol the street during the
The arrangement also stated evening.
that land . given to the
Attending the meeting were .
emergency medical service Mayor Eugene Thompson,
must be returned to the board Clerk Vernon Weber and
(that land was in front of the council members Dick Fetty,
Rutland High School) and the Bill Williamson, James
school board ask~ to retain Spangler, John Jacobs, V 1
one of ti two rooms -lh - the Wendell Grate and Larry
·The 1978 h omeco min g even ing l he traditiona l football _g.'l_me in the !Cyger
gyomasium for storage.
· Edwards.
activities of - Kyger Creek bonfire and pep rally will be Creek High School gymThe hangup on the
High· School will begin this held to insure a victory over nasium
feat uring
the
week with the eleetion of the Southern Tornadoes . VISIONS band from Athens .
underclass attendants and Friday, the student, body will · Ohio . The "Most-Spiriied
senior king- and queen can- vote
upon
the
1978
Class" will be announced at
didates.
'
Homecoming King and Queen
the dance.
Homeeom ing
will be ·who will be crowned at halfThe students and fa culty of
celebrated at Kyger Creek time.
Kyger Creek Hi gh School are
.
•
I
.
High School the week of Oct. 6
At 6 p.m. Friday evening, a
working very hard to make
through Oct. 13, with classes parade of floats featunng
this the best homecoming in
competing for points to win song titles as themes will
Kyger Creek High School
S'l'OCKHOLM, Sweden (UP!) - Isaac Bashevis Singer, the coveted " Most-Spirited begin in Cheshire and conhistory.
' Polish-born writer who emigrated to the United States in 1935, Class Award." ,
tinue to the fo otball stadium ,
Participation by all friends
A few of the events during where first place trophies in
has woo the 1978 Nobel Prize for literature, the Swedish
and members of the Cheshire
the week will include a tug-of- thr ee categories wi ll be
Academy announced today.
- Addison area is welcomed.
He won the award "for his impassioned narrative art war, sponsored by the Key awarded
in
pre-game
Any group wishing to enter a
which, with roots in Polish-Jewish cultural tradition, brings Club, bulletin board and ceremonies.
float in the parade, please
locker contests, color day,
universal human conditions to life," the aeademy said.
The Homecoming Dance
contact Kristy Blazer at. the
Hats Off to Bobcat Day, and (semi-formal) will be heidi high school by Tuesday, Oct.
Sock-it-to-em Day. Thursday immediately following the
10.

'

Homecoming activities
underway at Kyger Creek

i ..

).....__rh_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

UREKA POWER TEAM
A MOTOR
HERE

New York Post strike ends

NEW YORK (UPI)-After a 57-day absence, the New
York Post was back 11n ihe newsstands thiS morning. ·
A spokeswoman for the newspaper said the presses began
.to roll about 5:40a.m. and one million papers were expected to
be circulated throughout the city by 9 a .m. The price of tbe
dally, which ran 128 pages, remailied unchanged at 25 cents.

Retail milk prices-.go up
WASIUNGTON (UP!) -,. Retail milk priees, pushed
upward by rutbacks In milk production, will rise in coming
months, the Agriculture Department predicted Wednesday .
Butter and cheese prices already are up because of a tight
· supply ~tuatlon .
.
Farmers prices lor milk this fall are expected to be more
than 10 percent above a year ago. Department economists sald
the Increases would not be as sharp as in late 1973 and 1975
because of a trice-depressing eflect of large government
supplies of butter and nonfat dry milk.

ANOTHER
MOTOR HERE

--"'
$5'0

00 .\

, __ .,.

Construction hill signed

,.

\OFF 1
REG

'239.9s

SALE

•

'189.'5 ·.

MODEL 1279

Eureka Deluxe Pow•
Team with 2 motor po,wer
• Powerful upright carpet cleaning action with
canisler versAtil!tyt
• Rolo·MPII ~· powerhead wllh rnotorlzed Vlbra·
'1 · ,., ,,,8f&amp; bealer bar bruSh roll thoroughly
uaep-c!eana carpet like an upright.
• Brilliant headllghl and cleaning lools. included.
• Roto-Matlc• Powerhead wllh all-melal
Vll!ra-Groom~

HOME FURNISHINGS-1ST R.OOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed
leglalalioo, effective next Jan. 3, aimed at eliminating long
delays in building coostruction which may be caused by the
stale Department of Industrial Relations holding up approval
of buDding plans and specifications.
Elistlng law requires that no work may begin until
approval of the plans ill given.

Public appeal issued

en tine
PRICE FIFTE.EN CENTS

Three youths

ch~~:rged

· Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports
three Rt. 2, Racine, youths
have been charged in the
Tuesday breaking and
entering of Arthur Hill's
trailer
on
Greenwood
Cemetery Road. All have
been charged with truancy
and B&amp;E. One youth has an
additional charge of violation
of probation filed against

and a sherifl's deputy went to
Southern High Scbool, picked
up the three youths who, after
being advised of their rights,
admitted entering the trailer
and taking approximately $60
which has been recovered.
They were held in jail
pending release to their
parents. Hearings will be
later in Meigs County
Juvenile Court later this
him .
week.
According to the report,
Meanwhile, deputies are
Hill arrived at his residence continuing investigation into
early Tuesday evening and the aecldent and reported
discovered that his trailer theft of a 1976 Ford Van
had been entered through a owned by David W. Grindbroken window. Checking his staff, Rt. 3, Racine.
Tuesday evening, the
residence, he found a jar of
coins had been taken . sheriff's offiee received a
Neighbors advised three report at 11 ;25 p.m. advising
van was over the embankjuveniles were seen walking
in the vicinity. A check with men! on SR 124 near the otis
Southern
High
School McClintock farm out..ide of
oflicials indicated three boys Racine.
were missing from school at · As Sheriff's deputies were
that lime.
enroute, Grindstaff called
Wednesday
mo'rning, from his residence advising
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell he believed his van had been

a

BEIRUT, ~banon (UP!) latest round of fighting began
- Fighting raged unabated in at dawn Monday.
eastern Beirut and the
But the radio station run by
outskirts of the capital today · the right-wing Christian Phawith Syrian forces t'rying, to langist militia said there
deal a knockout blow to were at least 650 people killed
Christian militia uoits.
or wouoded · in the past 48
In the fiereest Lebanese hours and .at least 20,000
conflict yet seen, police homes or apartments were
sources said 55 Lebanese damaged in the shelling.
were killed and 100 woWided
The Syrians releaSed no
in the past 24 hours, bringing casualty figures . But militia
the estimated loll to 300 dead sources said Syrian losses
and 400 wounded since the were "very heaVy'_' and that

Two persons were injured the rear.
in a three-vehicle accident
Jolley
and
Stollings
Wednesday, at8 p.m., on U.S. displayed visible signs of
35, four-tenths of a mile west injury and were transported
of SR 160.
to Holzer Medical Center by
According to the Gallia - the Gallia Volunteer Squad.
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol,
Stollings was admitted for
vehicles operated by Phillip treatment of. injuries .
Glass, 26, Mt. Airy, N. ';.,and
Jolley was treated for
Evelyn Jolley, 71 , Pt. fractured ribs on the left side,
Pleasant, were east bound on and released .
35.
The patrol reports slight
A west bound auto operated damage to the Glass truck.
by Clyde Stollings, 68, Vinton,
went left of center and struck
the J olley auto head-on.
The Glass pickup truck
then struck the Jolley auto in

In New York: Secretary of
they saw three trUckloads of
Syrian corpses being hauled State Cyrus Vance said today
toward Damascus during tbe _ the United States is urging
"restraint on tbe part of
night .
Israel,"
which has sent overfWitnesses said both the
lights
across
the Lebanese
Syrians and the Israelipast
to demonborder
in
the
backed
rightists
were
strate
its
support
for the
reinforcing their positions. In
some tlistricts of eastern Christians.
Beirut Radio interpreted a
· Beirut the Syrian and militia
positions were only 50 yards quick visit to Moseow by
apart and the rival forces Syrian President Hafez
.traded curses and insults Assad as dimming hopes for a
across no-man's land.
(Continued on page 8)

King Ah.dul dead

Principals find locked doors

'

Copen testified. "There is
absolutely no way that OSHA
can earry out their objectives
as It stands now."
Copen made his comments
during the second day of
hearirigs by a Senate human
resources subeommittee reviewing OSHA operations.
Sen. Harrison A. Willillms
Jr., D-N .J., chairing the session, interjected; "Obviously
very few job sites will be
inspected.''
Copen, wloose father-in-h.,.
died in U:e o\pri! t:: disaster,
said the federal govenuuent
oversee
safety
should
conditions and " let the stateenforce some of OSHA's
standards and the state be
accouotable tJ (;."'lA."
:le added that OSHA

rellan ce
on
workers'
complaints before inspecting
a work site would not sueceed
because of fear of reprisals,
despite protections included
in the law.
"Keep your mouth shut.
That way I have my job,''
Copen said was the feeling of
most workers.
Copen said OSHA should
spend less time "nltpieking"
and more time on inspecting
"
construction areas.
In
other
testimony ,
muu•try officials called for
the abolition of OSHA, or if
not possible, drastic changes
i).l its operation. ·
"! seriously question the
initial reasoning in &amp;.!ling up
CI.'&gt;HA," said Franll Wheatoo
Jr .. president of Wheaton

Industries, Millville , N .J.
"Yes, OSHA may be
effectively
reducing
accidents in industry, but it
has been very expensive.
"I feel that the law may be
good in its intentions, but in
the real . world of its
application , it has become a
serious intrusion into the dayto-&lt;iay operations of private
enterprise." .
Charles
Sheehan
of•
Westcheste~, · IlL,
vice
president of the American
Cast Metals Federation, said
that 400,0QO.employe industry
favors abolishing OSHA.
"U there is · one common
attitude within our industry ,
il Is that ol scrubbing the
tresent C'SHA and all of Its
progrlllllS and 818rting over,"
Sheehan said.
~

Th e Jolley and Stollings
vehicl es incurred heavy
damage.
Stollings was cite d on
char ges of left of center.
The Gallia - Meigs Post
investigated four other accidents Wednesday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a mishap on Turkey
Run Rd. , 200ft . east of Little
Kyger Rd. at 6:40 p.m .
According to the patrol,
autos operated by Harve
Clagg, 44 , Cheshire, traveling
east, and Charles Young, 52,
west bound , met in a narrow
sect ion of the roadway.
The Young a uto swerved
right and slid down a steep
embankment.
Officers r e port slight
damage to the Young
Vehicle.
Clagg was cited on.charges
of operating a motor vehicle
withOut a valid license .
At 5:30 p.m. the patrol
investigated a set of related
one-vehicle accidents on SR
7, at the junction of Little
Kyger Rd.
Officers report that autos
operated by Kimberly Roush,
23, Hartford, W.Va., and Kay

Hockman, 43 , Cheshire, were
(Continued on page 8)
Former
residenf
Relnholdl Mees, now of
Seal Beaeh, CalH., now 90,
more than enjoyed a vlslt
to his former hometown,
Pomeroy, .., Tuesday-

- r~c:::i~::*h:;;:s;::z:::~l§i Fonner
resident

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
spokesman for !he families of
51 construction workers who
died in the Willow Island,
W.Va., tower collapse in
April told a Senate hearing
Wednesday that states should
handle more enforcement of
health and safety laws.
David Copen Sr. of
NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI)-King Abdulla dead. His reign
Parkersburg,
W.Va., noted a
luted only two years and he passed away at the estimated age
Eula
report
by
Administrator
of 50, llie biggest, the grandest, the designated "king" of
Bingham
of
the
Oceupatlonal
Kenya's elephants.
,
and
Health
Park r~~n~~en found the budy of the massive elephant, Saf&lt;lty
Administration
that
only
17
whose tUIIb alooe weighed rrr pounds, at the edge of the
compliance
officers
oversee
Maraabll game reB!!I'VI!, 250 miles north of Nairobi, this week.
3!,000 work sites in West
Virginia.
" I don't know if aU the
· CIEVEu.ND (UP!) - Many Cleveland publlc school states are having the same
prlncl[JU found locked doors today wben they reported fQr problems, but 11. is_ quite
·warll, delpile a back-to""ork order lsllued by a ~te court evident ... that it is
apilllt Cleveland's 10.~ strlldng publlc school teachers and impossible for OSHJI to
achieve the tmpossible ," ·
~ per1011nel.
,.

stolen. He said he had gone to
a pool tournament and had
left his van parked at the
White House at Pomeroy .
When he returned, the van
was missing.
The van was heavi ly
damaged. A fence owned by
otis MeClintock, was also
dama ged. In vestigation is
continuing .
Tuesday evening 4()-year
old Burlin Oliver Mullins, Rt.
I, Dexter, was charged with
operating a motor vehicle
while under the influence of
.alcohol following an accident
on SR 684 in Harrisonville.
At 7:55 p.m . Millins was
southbound on SR 684, lost
control of his station wagon
which ran off the roadway
into a yard and ditch on the
Richard Davis property.
Mullins was taken before
Meigs Couoty Court Judge
Robert Buck Wednesday and
entered a guilty plea to the
DWI charge. He was
sentenced to three days and
fined $150 and costs.

Two persons injured
-in R t. 35 collision

Fierce fighting rages
in Beirut, outskirts

TULSA, Okla. (UP!) - Bill Julian has isaued a public
appeal to the oorglar who took his lather's ashes; please
return the oo~. No questions will be asked.
Julian said the small teakwood bo~ containing the ashes of
Harry .Ju!Uu1 was taken from his mother's home during the
weekend. He said his mother was on a vaeation trip to Canada
md the house was empty at the time of the burglary.

..

mostly to a large jump in beef and veal prices .
But prices also turned up after decreasing in August for
processed poultry, vegetable oil end products and whole black
pepper. Prices rose more than in August for refined sugar, the
.
department said.
The department said its overall wholesale price index stood
at 196.9 last m011th. That means goods and services costing
$100 in the base year of 1967 were priced at $196.90 in
September.
·
During the past year , wholesale pricers have now risen 8.2
percent and food is up 10.2 percent since September 1977, the
department said.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1978

Singer Nobel Prize winner

Keep up your te8.m effort

WELLINGTON

._. ,. . . ._.. ,. _____. . . --• L----'1'111·----·--·.1
•

Fox named

WOLVERI~E ·

w· WATERPROOF

I

REGISTER NOW
N~w Quarter Begins
,•'

~ ·ux

I
I
I
I
I

1

II

!lUll

,WASHINGTON (UP!) - 'n.e cost of food, down for two
lljl'allht months, rose sharply in September to push up aU
wholesale trices by 0.9 percent, the govennnent reported
today. It was the greatest increase since spring and a severe
setback to the fight against inflation.
. President Carter and his . economic policymakers have
maintained that inflation would taper off somewhat eapecially in the food sector -during tbe second half of 1978
after surging ahead at an alanning pace during the first half.
At the White lfouse, Carter had no Immediate comment on
the figures, but a spokesman said he had informed members of
G!Jngresa beforehand of tbe "bad news" on tbe prlees front and
used that infonnalion as a wedge to curry their support in

0

0

revzszts
Pomeroy
Should old acauaintanee be
forgot ?
Well - not as long as
·former
resjdents
like
Reinhold! C. Mees, now of
Seal Beach, Calif., are
around.
Mees, who was the subject
of a feature artiele by the late
Chester L. Tannehill in The
Daily Sentinel In the 1960s,
was in Pomeroy Tuesday to
visit with old friends and
relatives.
Mees, aceordln~ to the
(Continued on pa.ge 8)
~

Weather
Cloudy and cooler tonight,
chance of showers, lows in
the low or mid 40s. Variable
cloudiness, cooler Friday,
with a chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 50s or
lower 60s.

Apple butter
orders being
accept~

now

It's apple butter makin'
time at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy
and residents wishing the
product are asked to phone in
their orders Immediately so
proper plans can be made.
The apple butter will sell
lor $2.50 a quart. Purchasers
must supply their own containers. The apple butter will
be made next Wednesday and .
purchasers should l!&amp;ve their
containers at the center by
that time. Those wi.shing to
plaee orders may phone 992:
7886 or 992-7884.

.i

�i- The Daily Sentinel, Mi~dleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, Oct. S, 1978

,.

I

IN

:r MEAKr

How fragile an

Meigs-Ironton
contest
Meet the Marauders
could be real thriller

COMMENTARY

MUHAMMAD All.

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

j :: Donald F. Graff

~lliance

By Martha Apgle and Robert Wallers
MINNEAPOLIS (NEA) - When the dust setUes a month
from now, it is entirely possible that RepubliCai!S will
occupy both U.S. Senate seats and the governorship here in
the land of the late Hubert H. Humphrey.
It is not only possible, it is downright probable - as of
·this writing, at any rate . Which speaks volumes about the
current condition of the " house that Hubert built,'' the
remarkable Democratic-Fanner-Labor Party of Minnes~
ta.
The DFL, at the ripe old age of 34, is going through a
classic mid-life crisis. And it is not so much external
pressures (e.g., Republicans and a nationwide tax revolt)
that threaten its well-being as various internal stresses
that erupted-.-witll embarrassing ferocity in the Sept. 12
primary.
It is difficult for outsiders to comprehend the panic that
swept through much of the DFL when millionaire
businessman Robert Short narrowly defeated liberal Rep.
Don Fraser, the party's endorsed candidate for
Humphrey's old Senate seat.
TI!at is because outsiders have never understood how
fragile the alliance is that Humphrey welded a generation
ago between the radical, protest-&lt;Jriented Farmer-Labor
party and the urban, organization-minded Democratic
Party of the New Deal. ·
For thirty-some years, Hubert H. Humphrey not only
held the uneasy marriage together, but managed to keep
the DFL identified with a coherent philosophy of liberalism
and social activism. Orville Freeman, Eugene McCarthy,
Walter F. Mondale - all were outstanding graduates of the
Humphrey school of pj)Jitics.
Yet for tbose same thirty-&lt;Xid years, Bob Short, whose
roots are essentially in the old Farmer-Labor wing of the
party, was also a major factor in the DFL. Despite his
generous contributions to Humphrey and other liberals,
Short regularly warred against many of the liberals who
dominated the party and against the unique endorsement
system the DFL establishment used to forestall bloody
primary fights.
Running against the " bosses," Short helped deliver
Minnesota's 1956 national convention delegates to Estes
Kefauver, whipping Humphrey and his Adlai Stevenson
supporters . In 1966, when the DFL tried to dump
incumbent Gov. Karl Rolvaag in favor of his lieutenant
gov·ernor, Short teamed up with Rolvaag in the primary
and beat the endorsed slate - only to Jose to the
Republicans in November. And now he has defeated
another DFI.rendorsed liberal, Don Fraser, for the very
seat Humphrey held so long.
" Bob Short is like the Mongols against whom the Chinese
built the great wan; : said DFL treasurur David Lebedoff,
a leading authority on Minnesota politics. "Every ten
years or so, he comes along to pillage the city and ravish

(

The vanishing envelope-stuffer
By Den Graff

---

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 5, 1978

Item: In 1960, 38 percent of all women were employed.
By 1977, the working percentage had risen to 411.
Item: The proportion of married women working baa
increased from 4Cl.5 percent in 1970 to 46.4 parcent in 18'17Item: Volunteer agencies across the country are feeling
the pinch of personnel shortages.
All of the above are aspects of the same dernoSt'aphlc
trend - .t he cl1anging role of women from -Ually
homemaker to increasingly· breadwinner. According to a
recent. Census Bureau study, women either married or
postponing marriage for a career now account for 41 -~
percent of the more than 100 million U.S. labor force. And
. the trend continues upward.
Women are entering the emrloyment market in ever
greater numbers for a variety reasons - to supplement
family Incomes in inflationary times, to take advantage of
expanding career opportunities in fields previously cJOiled
to them, for the intellectual stimulation of professional
activity.
.
Whatever the individual reasons, one of the far-reaching
consequences is the shrinking of the pool of volunteers
which a host of agencies devoted to good causes long baa
been accustomed to drawing upon for the bulk of their
personnel.
·
These were the women who rang the doorbells, handled
the telephones drove the cars, Almost always for free. As
more and mo~e of them turn their attentions to drawing
1 paychecks rather than stuffing envelopes, many agencies
.,
which relied upon them are having to curtail thetr
activities . The realistic among them, however, are
restructuring their operations to adapt II&gt; the cbanged
'
situation.
The Junior Leagues, for one notable example of the
latter group, saw the change coming some years ago. In
1951, approximately 9 percent of League membership

o

TV ••• in Review

-&lt;:------------....:..----------, .

r

Health Review
.
.

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI'felevlslon Writer
Lamar Miller
NEW YORK (UP!) - Will "Apple Pie" become apple
strudel?
OC CQUege of Osteopathic Medicine
Is it the end for "In the Beginning?"
"Who's Watching ~e Kids?" HarcDy anybody except Fred
By Lamar Ml!ler, D.O.
Silverman.
Assoelate Professor of Famtly Medtelne
NBC cut "W .E.B." from its schedule this week, tile televiOhio Unlvenlty College of ·
sion season's first cancellation. There's no inunediate word on
Osteopathic Medicine
consisted of "professionals," either working women or
its replacement, but the odds favor "The Runaways,"
DIABETES - PARTDI
studentS. CurrenUy, this group is estimated to account for
scratched from the season's opening schedule at the last
more than 30 percent of total membership.
QUE'i&gt;TION: What is tbe glucose tolerance test?
Adapting to their new occupational proftle, the Leagues
minute.
ANSWER: This is a special test used fairly often by
· While the networks ponder further cancellations, a look at physicians to determine how suspected disbetics handle their have changed their emphasis from an ouUet for the
tile bottom of the Nielsen ratings brings up some likely blood sugar over a three to five hour period of time. It is the interests of a socially ~lite group of women ~ broadened
.,
the scope of activities. Some programs are structured to
candidates.
most sensitive and accurate way to make a definitive permit . employed women to participate in nonworking
At the bottom of the list in 67th p)ace is ABC's "Apple Pie." diagnosis of diabetes. Tbe test is performed as follows : after
·' · ~
hours. Volunteer activities are tailored to assist particiABC was taken by surprise by the 'high ratings that NBC's an.appropriate fast (eight to twelve hours) without food, the pants in career preparation. They are also pressing . · ,..
"CHiPs" earned earned opposite "Pie" and its lead-in, patient receives a blood test (fasting glucose). He or she is employers to adopt release-time'-- authorized time off the
"Carter Country."
then given a meal or a drink with approrimately 100 grams of job - policies for women volunteers, an advantage male ~· .
..
If "CHiPs" continues its high ratings- a big improvement carbohydrate and told to return in one-half hour, one hour, two workers for good causes long have enjoyed.
There is also a trend toward tapping a new reservoir of . ,.,
on last year- ABC will have to act. As the No. I network, with hours, and three hours for blood tests at each of these times.
its otber four new shows in the top 20, it can afford to be Occasionally, the physician may want four and five hour volunteer help - retirees, both women and men. These are
patient,or to switch time spots. Or itcancutitslosseson " Pie" samples of blood as well. Next, the results of these tests are not bnly numerous and often eager to remain active, but
bring special skills to volunteer work.
the maidens."
and hope to preserve "Carter."
_
plotted on a graph. Normally, the glucose level will rise above
The organizations that seem to be hurting the most now,
This year, the DFL was torn apart by controversies over
Next to the bottom is "W.E.B.," already canceled. Right fasting levels after one-half hour and one hour, and return or
League spokeswomen note, are those which did not foresee
abortion, the Equal Rights Amendment, gun control and
the use of motor boats and snowmobiles in the wild ahove that is CBS' "Paper Chase." CBS might ride with this begin returning to fasting levelS after two or three hours. Tbe the coming change and restructure to meet it. As it is
one because of favorable critical reaction and because its slot physician will then analyze these f~gures using various criteria turning out, the days of an unlimited supply of unpaid · ...
Boundary Waters Canoe Area. Short and Fraser split on all
· of them, with Short tossing in some virulent anti- opposite "Happy Days" and " Laverne &amp; Shirley" is the worst to see what chance the patient has of having diabetes now, or envelope stuffers would appear to· be nearing an end. But ·; ;
position on the schedule.
government, ta~-cutting rhetoric for good measure.
even what chance he or she has of developing it in the future. volunteer work, once it adjusts to the change, is llkely to be ~
While Sen. Wendell Anderson and Gov. Rudy Perpich
the healthier for it.
.,
There are other shows more likely to be dropped from the
were not really caught up in those fights, they have CBS schedule - " American Girls," ·another bottom dweller,
QUESTION: Is diabetes hereditary?
problems of their own - largely stenuning from the fact
Chauvinism on the board
"Dallas" if it doesn't pick up from its low ratings. "Mary"
ANSWER : Yes, at least in the majority of instances.
, they inherited their jobs when Mondale became vice
didn't fare well last week opposite "Battlestar Galactica" and Rarely a per!ion may develop diabetes as a result of inJW'Y to
••4
The increasing male role in volunteer work raises
president rather than winning thein in an election.
"Centennial," but CBS is sure to give Mary Tyler Moore's new the psncreas, but usually the pancreas will fail or decrease its another point, a sore one.
.
,.
Republicans are happily e~ploiting the ,disarray within
production of insulin because of hereditary weakness .
A recent study by the Alliance for Volunteerism noted "'
the DFL. Rudy BO.Schwitz, a personable plywood manufac- show time to catch on .
NBC's ceDar dwellers include "Who's Watching the Kids?" Diabetes has been separate~ into four stages : prediabetes, that while women traditionally have filled the unpaid
turer and maverick liberal, has opened a wide lead over
Anderson. Quiet, moderate Rep. Albert Quie is leading_ and "Waverly Wonders." It will surprise no one if Joe latent or stress diabetes, chemical diabetes, !lnd overt or ranks and files of agencies, the decision makers have been ,,1
Perpich slightly. And Twin Cities attorney David Duren- Namath's "Wonders" are dropped . "Who's Watching the clinical diabetes. Only the fourth stage of diabetes actually predominantly male. Of 100 nonprofit agencies to Boston
berger, who looks and sounds Jlke a more co"""rvative Kids?" is the show NBC chief Fred Silverman fashioned out of .requires active treatment In the first group, known as survey in 1975-76, women held pnly 23 percent of the board
Fritz Mondale, is openly soliciting -,- and receiving the pilot for "Legs." He may have enough faith in his format to prediabetes, are those individuals who will certainly develop and 19 percent of the officer posts. Many groups had no
representation by women at the top levels.
·
.
support from Fraser backers in the DFL.
·
stick to it for a while .
the condition at some time in the future, but have completely
This is a status that is not likely to remain quo as women
• Most DFL leaders insist the party will survive, with its
" Lifeline," pr...,mpted last week, looks' dead to 'l)8DY' normal glucose and .normal glucose tolerance at the pr~nt. increasingly enter lrolunteer activity from professional
old ideals intact, regardless of what happens Nov. 7. "You
industry
experts.
These are the people who are children of two diabetic parents, fields rather than straight from the home.
don't wipe out 30 years of progressive tr11dition ·in one
One
problem
NBC and CBS have is that not one of either the sibling of an identical twin with diabetes, and aU mothers
election," insisted top Mondale aide Richard Moe, a
network's new shows hit a 30 percent share of the viewing who deliver heavy babies (over ten pounds at birth). This
former DFL chairman.
.
·
audience in the Nielsen's for the week ending.Oct. I - and a 30 latter group has recenUy been included since it has been found
Maybe not. But if Bob Short gets elected, the fight for the
party's soul will continue for a long time. Which is why share usually IS the stay-alive magic number. They can-t that nearly 100 percent of these women will become diabetic
1
Dave Durenberger, Republican though he may be, Is seen cancel everything.
within 25 years.
•
bY" man:V DFLers as the key to the party's future.
·
There's hope that "WKRP," "Flying High," "In The Beginning," "Dick Clark's Live Wednesday" and " Grandpa Goes to
QUE'i&gt;TION: Who are the chemical diabetics and latent or
Washington" might rise in the ratings.
.
stress diabetics?
.
Network strategy on lead-ins and lead-outs also figures in
ANSWER : These two stages are very similar. Chemical
cancellation tactics. If NBC's "Eddie Capra Mysteries" is diabetics have abnormal glucose tolerance tests, but normal
going to drag down its lead-in, "Rockford Files," then fasting. blood levels .. They are not actually clinical diabetics
"Catra" must go. If "WKRP" and "People" don't interfere yet Most of these people are overweight, and losing weight
By KENNt:l'HR. CLARK
••
.
Mr . and Mrs. Chester with "M-A-S-H," CBS ·can afford to prolong their run.
may take them out of the danger zone. Usually, they have no
United Press IDtematlonal
Spencer and A. R. Caster,
Waiting in the wings for NBC and CBS are extensive second symptoms of the disease but are potential future diabetics.
Russell M. Cline, Leona J . Charleston , W. Va ., joined season replacements - and particularly watch NBC, where Latent or stress diabetics also have abnormal g\ucose
DON'T GO NEAR 'DIE WATER: Penthouse magazine
Cline to Lawrence L. Driggs, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, Fred Silverman will get his first crack at the network's lineup. tolerance tests and maybe even elevated fasting levels, .but publisher Bob Guccione chose Studio 54- New York's disco of "
Eyvonne Driggs, 'h acre, local; and Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Drily temporarlly as a result of some stress in their lives such the jet set- to unveil his new "Pet of the Year" Wedn!!sday ::
Wiseman, Harrisonville, on Baumgardner ami urn, Mrs. Paul Gaston, local, have as an infection, majoc surgery, pregnancy, or even unusual night. She's f&gt;.foot-11-inch Domtnlque Maure, a New York :
Olive.
Marjorie L. nes to Edward Sunday for dinner at the Coshocton, Ohio ; Mr. and received word of the birth of a · emotional upheaval. When tbe stress is over, the sugar levels model who rang up.$95,000 In prizes - amoog them, a $211,000 ;::
N. McConnell , Cindy K . Ponderosa .Steak House in Mrs. Michael Baumgardner, daughter, Michelle Patience, return to normal once again: This type of person, however, Is Excalibur SS Phaeton and· a $10,000 Finnish raccoon coat ·.•
McConnell , parcels , Athens in honor of the 85th M~nsfield ; Mr. and Mrs. hom to Mr. and Mrs. David unusuaUy prone to develOp clinical diabetes In the near future, after 10 million readers chose her as best of the buff ' "
birthday of Mr . Starkey. 0011 Graham and Mr. and Norris (Leah Gaston), eitber because of some new stress or an excessive weight gain. centerfolders. She displays her many charms across .16 pages . ,,
Columbia.
Cecil V. Dillon Jr., Flossie They later joined the birth- • Mrs. Chuck Fry, Zanesville; Logan. Besides the local
in the magazine's current edition. Dmninique's specialty has ;;
Dillon to James R. Husk, day celebration held for
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walker, g randparents, paternal
QUE'i&gt;TION: What are some of the complica lions of been modeling bathlng suits, but it stop!l there. She says she's "
Maxine P . Husk, .42 acre, Dale Dye at Lake Snowden Jack, Kent Travis, Carrie, grandmother is Ada Norris, diabetes?
terrified of the water - a phobia she'll try .lo cure at a chic :..
near Albany.
· ~
Olive.
and Mr. and Mrs . Kevin NelsonviUe. The little one has
ANSWER: The diabetic coma, as previously mentioned in phobia clinic now that she's in tile chilli.
Vernon E . Norris, Juanita
Michelle Combs and Kathy Walker, Thurman.
"
a sister, Serena Joy.
this current serieS of articles, is the most common and most ·
L. Norris to Jerry L. Runyon, Keefer, OU students, were
Dr . and Mrs. RichANNOUNCE BffiTH
serious . Uncontrolled diabetics have a higher death rate from - ·TOUGH TRAINING: For Carl Wealhen, the rol~ of .•
"-.
Vanessa L. Runyon, 45 acres, recent weekend guests of Mr. ard Fisher , Rio Grande;
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Jordan, all vascular diseases, such as coronary artery disease, heavyweight champ Apollo Creed to the sequel to "Rocky" and Mrs. Lewis Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Dean KeislinY. local, are announcing the hypertension and stroke. In addition, diseases of leg vessels now being fUmed In Hollywood - means a chance to get back , ,
Rutland.
Neva Grimm, etal, to Paul . they celebrated the 19th Hillsboro; Mr. and Mrs . Glen birth of a son, Jerod Lee, at and nerves, as well as of the eyes and kidneys, are distinctive in shape. Weathers says befoce he was cast as the man ,
Simon,
court
order, birthday of Miss Combs. She Irwin,
Marge,
Paul, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital complications common to diabetics. Many cases of kidney moUntain in the new fight movie, he was· "overweight and -,
is a daughter of the late Raymond
Pomeroy.
and
Jane , in Athens on Sept. 18. failure and blindness could have been prevented if the diabetes never looking so Jiad in my life." Pro ring trainer A1 SiJwDI '
DanielL. Donahue to Janey Edgar Combs of Copley and Marysville ; Mrs. Mary Grandparents are Mr. and were controlled more evenly. Of course, all infections· are has taken care of that, putting Weathers throagh the ropes as _,
Donahue, parcels, Salisbury. is a cousin of Mrs. Smith.
Kepnar, Jeff and Valerie, Mrs. Lavern Jordan; local, more common in diabetics f:ban.in the nono(jfabetic population. though he were preparing for a real fight . Now, says he, "1 ;:
First Baptist Church of
The bake and rummage Hartford ; Mr . and Mrs . and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
have no fat left to lose." Weatbers' role model foc Creed: the -·
real heavyweight king - Mubammad AU.
·~
Pome roy to Michael L. s1lle held by members of the Grant Price and sons, Mr. Dugan, Albany;
great
~
Wright, Sharon K. Wright, Busy Bee Society of the Lawrence Woodyard, Mr . grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ca rpenter Baptist Church and Mrs. Dick Huffman and D. B. Dugan, Athens, Mr. and
CAN CAN: To Tonv SteHen. "beer's all right. I'm not In love ~
lot , Pomeroy.
.
with it." But the 14-yel!f-illd EJiln, ID. high schOol freshman Ia "
Charles W. Miles, Mary J . was well attended and netted Tim, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs . Mrs. Gerald Hayes, Shade,
'I
111 love with thecanslt comes ln. He values the 4,000cans In his ~
Miles, Leroy L. Miles, Phyllis a nice profit for the group. James Foster, New Vienna ; and Mr. a nd Mrs. Reed
••
Miles , Ruby P. Moore, John The new roof has recently Mr. and Mrs. Bill Riley, Mt . Jeffers, local, and a greatcollection at $3,500, and with his father, Jim, he travels the M
Moore to Floyd Rgss, Edith been completed at the church Sterling ;. Mr. and Mrs. John great-grandmother, Mrs .
Midwest, adding to it all the time at various beer can :;,
conventions. He says his father has emptied abwt tOO rl. his ,.;.
and other projects are Starkey and sons, Lancaster ; Amy Dugan, Belpre. A
Ross, parcels, Bedford.
Shelby Pickens, Ruby proceeding.
hoard, but he wants lo limit bls take to current beers Jest tblnga • :::
Mrs. Gamet Moore, Canton ; brother, Jason, welcomed the
get too unwieldy, Says he, "Some.beer cans da\IQg to 1t35 can Pickens to Michael Caton,
Mr . and Mrs . Walter Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman, new baby.
rwi up tO ,1,000. It's juat Impossible to complete a beer ;.:
Marjorie
Caton,
lots, Jordan, Joshua and Jeremy, · Harrisonville; Mr. and Mrs.
collection. There's always something new ... You just get :=
have returned from a 2600 Charles Cochran, Athens ;
Pomeroy .
In 1960, an Eastern Air
John D. TumbuU, Opal V. mile trip that took them to Mr. and Mrs. T. J . Spurlock
hooked on them for some reason."
·
Turnbull to James A. Sisson, Gatlinsburg, Tenn., where and Mrs. Jean Brookhart, Lines Electra crashed into
QUOTE OF TilE DAY: Utah sen. Jake GilD, blaming
Keith Ann Sisson, I acre, they spent some time, then Albany; Mr . and Mrs . Boston Harbor, killing 61 .
family pressures - to the extent of at least ooe uncomftrmed
west and south to Denton, Chester Spencer and A. R. per~&gt;:ms.
Salisbury.
repoct of a divorce threat-fCl' failure of bls fellow la~ers ·
Virginia Mae Lyon Moore Texas, where they visited his Caster, Charleston, W. Va.;
to pass his amendment aUowing states to rescind pa1J1811e of
to John E. Lyons, Rosemary uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Thad Dye and ,.
111E
DAILY
SENTIN'Sl
the
Equal Rights Amendment: "Several told me It was unfair
Evans
Rutherford,
and
Lyons, Jot, Middleport .
family , Mad~e Blackwood,
DEVOI'I!D TO THE
to provide resciaBion ), but they couldn't vote with me and
(not
Mary Jane Ebenhack to members of !lis family in the Lisa Dye, Murl Galaway,
· INTEREST OF
ME1GS-MASON AREA
face tbeir wives and daugliters."
::l
Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop. DaUas area before returning Beulah and Cindy Crabtree,
ROBERT HOEFUCH
Inc. right of way, Bedford. · home through St. Louis, Mr. and Mrs . Lewis Smith,
City Editor
·
l Pubi i.Shed dally ex&lt;.-ept Saturday
GLIMPSES: Songwriter Loula St. Luala haa rued IIIII In Loa
Joseph G. McNabb, Mary Missouri and Indianapolis, Mr . and Mrs. Reed J elfers,
by The ,Ohio Valley Publishing,
Angelei
against Camerlca Music, Inc. rl. New YOI'It, uldng ,.
Lou McNabb Naughton, Lynn Indiana.
Metta Fisher, Mr. and Mrs.
ComPIInr·MultimediK, .In c., lU
M60,000 In roy.Wee for the aong "Sandy" fnlm the movie •••
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Starkey, Mrs . Rex 1 tourl Sl., Pomei\!y, _ohio 4570..
H. Naughton, to Russell - M.
bw;int:SS OffK:e Phone 992- 21$6.
"Greue," to which Camerlca cJaiow the rlghta ... R4llert
the Cheadle, Kathy and Bradley,
Cline ,' Leona J , Cline, lots, Crabtree attended
Editonal Phone 992-1157.
Reed, woo' played the father on the old "Brady Buncb" rv 1 "
Bishops Day at the First Mrs. Rexie Cheadle and son,
Second cialf:l pust.w.ge P!,l'ld 111
-Syracuse.
Pom~y, Ohiu .
•
'
series, Ia ll1inll Quinn MarUn Productlona In lAI Anctlel for I ::
Hawthorne Murphy, Flora · United Methodist · Cllurch in Mrs. Raymond Nelson,
t Natiofial advertisin~ repres.:n,
•1115,000, cbargtng lireaeh of CGDirllct for dropplnc biB role ::
Murphy to Paul E . Nunley, Atheqs on Sunday afternoon Rayma Sue and Mathew
J,utive·, ·Landon ,\.ssociMleli 3101
t uclid Ave., Cleve-land, Ohiu l4115.
fnlm "Operation: RWI8way" ... Jmll Jan wiD be fatured nut · :::
Booth, Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Anna Ma e Nunl.ey, lot, and evening.
Su ~;cript.OJI htes. Ddtve.-ed by·
Tuesday
on "Good Morning America" In an appearance to · ..
BIRTHDAY CELEBRATED Jordan and the guest of
Rutland .
barr~r where "uaihlble 75 cen\11 per 1
plug
her
latest LP and an upcoming concert toor ... R4llert · •
Week.
By
Motor
RouLe-whertt
carrier
The 80th birthday of Dale· honor , Dale Dye.
OOrvtce
I[Wt avaU~:~ble, Om: mo)tlh,
Vaughn
Ia
mlocatioo In Page, Ariz., starring In "o.ntelln the : ::1
Dye was celebrated with a · A delicious potluck dinner
$3.25. By'Jnail in Ohio amd W. VH.,
Uons'
Den"
with David Birney, NehelJ!tM Penoff and Dean . ~· ·
gathering at Lake Snowden was enjoyed with special
One r Year, S22.00; Six mooUts,
I
On Ibis day in history :
flho; Three .munt.hs, $7.0(1;
Slt)CtweJIUp!lrtofNBC-TV'a "Storleafromthe Bible" ••• Barl "
Shelter House near Alhilny on cakes being served in the
" It all began when they started talking about
~eV(hert p$.00 ye~r; Six rnurtlll~
In 1918, the German
lVIII haa jOOted Georp llllrDI and llroolle Ai u
at ~
Sunday. Among friends and afternoon. ,
Jl3 .$Q; lhrt!i:! m "nlhs 1 17.&amp;1t
·
adding
more digits to the zip r;cde "
Hlndenburg Line was broken
tb&amp;·ription pnee lncu.ldeMSUn·i:JY
Columbia's Burllant, Caltf., studio foc the IUmlng of "One :
relaLives attending were Mr.
DAUGHTER ~ORN
as World War. I neared an
u :ltlo~eMinel.
and
Mrs .
Chester
CARPENTER - 1 Mr . and .
- - - -- - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - _ ]_' ..Night Stand"....
;; ':;
end.

By Dr.

...

j

...

Larry Byer, 5-11,180 lbs.,
Sophomore taekle.

G1lUia, Meigs teams
clash in key battles

NEW YORK (UP!) Sports illustrated magazine
reporters Melissa Ludtke and
Kathy Andria may be
assigned to cover the
American and National
League playoffs and the
World .Series - and they
East em, one of the two predon't
want
Baseball
season
favorites to dethrone
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
the
defending
champion
keeping them out of the
Kyger Creek Bobcats will get
teams' locker rooms.
The women Wednesday its chance Friday night.
Coach Joe Mitchem 's
sued Kuhn in U.S. District
Cou-q_ in Manhattan on Eagles will host Coach· Jim
charges he has ordered Sprague's Bobcats in the top
women sports reporters game this weekend in the
barred from the locker rooms Southern Valley Athletic
of the four teams involved In Conference.
North Gallia, the other
the playoffs. Miss Ludtke
recently obtained a court team given the best chance to
order allowing women win the title, travels t o
reporters access to the Southern in the only other.
league game.
Yankees' locker room .
Non-league encounters find
So uthwestern a t Symmes
...,. _ ,~

..

••

PHONE 992·3662

"'•

HOURS: M-S. 9-6

~

'

.
....-.."'
...
..
..
...

Sunday .Noon-6

30H25-1. ...... .'20.27
30H 11-1....... ~25.97
Floor Runner .....•.•..•..•.... 89e yd.

BEFORE WINTER ARRIVES

........
E
......
.

.••..
.•

t

'

~

•_.2

.

•Aluminum Door Strips
•Aluminum Door
Bottoms
.-Felt Weather Stripping
eSelf..sticklng Foam
Weather Stripping
eVinyl Foam Tape

I

3

.,

momentum going.
1\ couple of i~juries have hi I
the Meigs squad this week .
Stout and Seelig have leg
injuries. a nd if they do start
thi s Frida y they will see unly
limited action. Stout runs out
of the wingback position most
of the time and See lig is an
end. If Stout can't go , at his
defensive cornerback spot,
Chris Judge wi ll get the, nod .
If Seelig can't mak e it, then
Brent Bolin will ::.1 art at of~
fensive end . Dan Thomas,
whu started the first three
games at the quarter.ba ck.

spot, is •till oul.
Meigs has pride, desire,
and hustle going for them,
and I ron ton is a mighty
tempting target si tting at the
tup of the league. If Meigs
wins, then it might mean a
league championship .

'""' '"" ' LOWEREu
THE COST OF
CARPET CLEANING

NOW RENT

LOWER
:RATES
Do-it-yourself
and get professio nal
results

Case

YKasem

W M PO

STAR SUPPLY CO.
949-2525
Racine, 0 .

SATURDAYS
9 til Noon

~--~- ---

four th . We st J eff erson
remains in Eilth, followed by
Columbus Bishop Ready in
sixth , Middletown Fenwick
and West Liberty Salem tied
for seventh , Woodsfield in
ninth and Crobksfille, the
defending Class A playoff
champion, in tenth. ~

ARVIN HEATERS

,.

~I

Jerry Fields did well with 75
yards. Van Willford cracked
the line for 31 yards, and
Dave Blake hit all of his extra
points, and had an important
kickoff return to the Rockets '
end of the field to keep Mei gs'

HARDWARE WEEK
SALE NOW IN PROGRESS

..

Bertys World

overs. Last week the Meigs
crew of Coach Charlie
Chancey cut down on their
mistakes.
..Offensive and defensive
ta ckle Robert Clay of the
Tige r s will have to be
reckoned with. He's 6'3" and
225 po unds, and already has
been contacted by several
maj or coll eges, in clu ding
sume from the Big Ten . Hi s
blocking helped the Tigers to
score 21 points in the secund
P.,riod last week.
On the other side of the
coin, the Marauders are on
their way up. Their' defense
has been outstanding and is
considered one of the best in
the a rea. But until last week 's
outing against Wellston , t he
offense couldn't get un tracked. But get going they
did.
~
In that victor that ra ised
the squad 's recor to 3-1, the
Mara uders amassed 328
yards. 235 rushing and 93
passing. After a shaky •ta rt ,
the defense showed pride and
finished strung, allowing just
one TD a fter the first period.
There were many bright
spots in that win, besides the
overall offensive show. There
was a blanced ground and air
attack.
John Stout and Bog Seelig
hoth had st icky hands while
mak ing good receptions, and
freshman quarterback Bob
Ashley showed poise and
capability with his- clutch
pinpoint passing. He came
through when the pressure
was on. and completed eight
uf eleven passes.
Greg Becker had anothe r
guod nig ht with .86 ya rd s
whi le sophomore fullba c k

Wyoming·moves
into No.· 1 spot

MIDDLEPORT, OH•

~

peopletalk

Vall ey and Coal Grov.e's a gia nt step towa rd their fir st
reserves visiting Hannan league title since 1971 Friday
night against the injuryTrace Saturday night.
Kyger
Creek
ha s riddled Bobcats.
Kyger Creek is 1-2-1 going
dominated the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference into Friday's game. The
football championship pic- Bobcats def eated Federal
Hocking in their seaso n
ture the past five years .
Since becoming head opener, 14-8.
coach, Sprague's grid teams · Since that time, KC has
have won five championships laDen on some bad times.
and finished second the other During the last three outings,
time. Eastern has not beaten KCHS has been beaten by
KC in the past five years, Wahama, Alexander and tied
howeve r,
the
Eagles Hannan Trace.
Eastern , meanwhile, is off
managed a 20-20 tie three
to
one of its better starts in
.
years ago.
recent
years. The Eagles own
The Eagles will try to take
a· 3d record with their only
loss coming at the hands of
Caldwell.
Last weekend, Eastern
defeated Federal Hocking ,
20-ll. Two weeks ago, the
Eagles defeated Alexander
12-9. Earlier, the Spartans
romped KC, 41-ll.
Coach John Blake's North
Gallia Pirates, 5&amp;-12 winners
over Symmes Valley last
COLUMBUS ( UPll - UnFriday travel to Racine for a beaten Cincinnati Wyoming,
conference match against the the
pla)'olf
defendin g
Tornadoes.
champion, has moved intO the
Co ach John Dudding's No. I spot in this week 's
eJeven has not scored in four United Press International
outings this faD . Southern Ohio High School Board of
owns a tie ·against Federal Coaches Class AA football
Hocking but has lost to ratings .
Caldwell, Waha ma, and
The Cowboys of Coach Bob
Southwestern.
·
Lewis rolled to their fifth
Coach Bob Ashley's im- straight win of the season, a
pr oved
Southwestern 57-6 decision over Cincinnati
Highlanders will try to get Greenhills,
and
took
back on the winning track advantage
of
E lyria
against Symmes Valley. Last Catholic's scoreless tie ,with
weekend, SWHS lost 30-13 to Elyria West, which dropped
non-conference foe, Ports- the Panthers all the way to
mouth East.
third behind. Wyoming and
Hannan Trace which has unbeaten St. Marys Memotied Kyger Creek and Just to rial .
Green Twp. the past .two
Meanwhile, both of tlje first
weeks will also attempt to week's leaders in Class A and
Cov in gton and
break into the win column AAA aga in st the Coa l Grove Cincinnati Princeton
managed to hold onto their
reserves.
positions.
Priilceton, a 33-14 winner
S\IAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
over Lima Senior, received 29
W L T P OP of 33 first place votes in the
TEAM
Eastern
3 1 0 72 23
North Gallia 2 2 o 96 52 AAA balloting and has a 323Sym. Valley 2 3 0 64 79 286 lead over runnerup
Sou fhw es tern 2 3 0 89 91
Cincinnati Moeller .
Kyger Creek 1 2 1 34 102
Covington ran its record to
0 3 1 0 122
Southern
S-0
with an ~ win over
Ha nnan Tra ce
0 4 1 46 121 Springfield Catholic a nd
SVAC ONLY
continues to lead Newa rk
TEAM
W L T P OP Catholic in the small school
Nor th Gallia 1 0 0 14 7 voting, this week by a 202-177
Eastern
0 0 0 0 0
Southern
0 0 0 0 0 margin .
There were no change s in
Kyger Creek 0 . 0 1 20 20
Ha nnan Trace
the rop four in AAA with
0012020 Massillon Washington and
Southwestern 0 1 0 7 14
Canton McKinley finishing
third and fourth for the .
.
second straight week. But,
from there on down there was
l.DS ANGELES (UP!) ...:_
a shakeup .
Walte r O' Malley , board
Cincinnati Elder moved
chairman of the Los Angeles into fifth and Zanesville took
Dodgers, has asked doctors to over sixth . Cleve land St.
allow him to remain in Queen Joseph and Findlay finished
of Angles Hospital until he
tied for se~e nth , while
can regain his strength.
Lakewood St. Edward , a 17-14
A hopital spokeswoman loser to Moeller Saturday
said O'MaUey, 75, has shown night, fell from fifth to ninth
"real .improvement" since and Fremont Ross, despite a
entering the hospital last 23-6 win over Lorain Admital
from King, tumbled from ilinth to
week
suffering
numbness In his legs caused
tenth .
by a temporary decrease of
Wyoming's lead over
blood through his spinal cord. unbeaten St. Marys is a
. meager!Opoints, 159-149, and
Elyria Catholic remains In
CLEVELAND (UP!) hot
contention with 145.
Cleveland· Indians' outfielder
After
that comes Ironton
Bobby Bonds, who was acwith 102 In the fourth spot ,
quired from the Texas
Columbus'
followed by
Rangers Tuesday in a trade,
DeSales, Orrville , Cleveland
has reaffirmed his intention
Benedict ine,
Brookfield,
of refusing to report to the Campbell Memorial and New
club, saying he'll retire if he Concord John Glenn.
isn't trader' ·, a West Coast
: ienn.
club.
.
Brookfield, Memorial and

407 PEARL ST.

~

Meigs
Carpenter
Property Personals
Transfers

Davis, 5-10,
lbs., Junior tackle.

·.

...
.

.-.'".
-...."'
-·......
...:-..
.

David Hysell, 5-10, 168
lbs., Junior end,. CB.

Dan Edwards , 1&gt;-2, 207
lbs., Senior tackle.

By Greg Bailey
The re's going to be a
humdinger of a football game
Friday night at Ironton when
the " red hot " - Meigs
Marauders visit the Ironton
Tigers. Ironton is currently
tabbed as lith in the state in
the AP poll for AA schools
and was · picked by th e
SEOAL coaches and sport swriters to win the league
again thi s year. Meigs
meanwhile was pi cked to
finish fourth. Last week, the
Marauders pulled off a mild
upset by beating Wellston' s
Golden Rockets, 28-21 in a
real dogfight. Wellston was
picked to finish second in the
league.
Ironton is averaging 36
points per contest for their
first four games, and last
week convincingly downed
Athens 35-ll. In that contest,
the Tigers compiled 541 total
yards, 315 rush in g a nd
another 126 in the air. That
win upped their mark to a
· perfect 4-0.
F ullback Rod Boykin a nd
halfback Terry Royal have
been leading the attack of
Coach Bob Lutz's Tigers.
La st week, Boykin had
three touchd owns and 110
yards while Royal added t wu
sco re s, bot h on pa sses.
Sub.st itute Tim Hodges , ·
filling in for the injured
Gabriel Lewis, rushed for 123
yards on the night . Greg
Ainsworth leads the club at
quarterback.
Ironton fumbled nine llmes
last week a nd lost six, and
that's one thing that the
Tigers and Marauders seem
to have in common - turn-

eMortlte Caulking Cord
•Window Plastic
eStove pipe, elbows
eStove Accessories

"I'm s..

"EVERYTHIN'G IN HARDWARE"

Ebersbach Hardware
ST.

PH.

1

IJ1r'

\f)

my ear Her

statemem," Bouds told The
Cleveland Press Wednesday.
·• .. .! wiD not change my
milid. Cleveland will have to
trade me to a West Coast
team or I'D ret.ire." Bonds
has four mort yed·. son a fiveY&lt;ar contract Iota liM $2
million
"

JoM Glenn are newcomers,
replacing
Bucyrus,
Cincinnati Reading and
Elida . .
Hamler Patrick Henry, a
2~ winner over Swanton,
edged into the No . 3 spot in
Class A ahead of Cory
Rawson, which fell a notc'J to

.

USED CAR CLEARANCE

DUE TO THE RECORD NUMBER OF NEW CAR SALES IN THE PAST
2 MONTHS, WE ARE OVERSTOCKED WITH GOOD, CLEAN, LATE
MODEL USED CARS. PRICED AS NEVER BEFORE;

1973 CHEVY

CHEVROLET
CAMARO
305 v .a, auto., A.C.. road
wheels. T-top, ra lly str ipe,

AM-FM rad io.

1977 PLYMOUlli

NOVA
2 door Halchback , 350 V-8,
auto .. A.C.. cl oth interi or ,
rally whee ls.

VOLARE
2 tone bl ue, pri nt i nterior ,
10 .000 mi l es , local one

owne r

1973 JAVELIN

1975 CHEVY

·1971 FORD

AMX

MONTE CARLO

ECONOLINE VAN

"SUPER SPECIAL"

TH I wheeL A.C.. bla ck on
bla c k on bla c k , mag
whee ls, 47 ,000 mi les .

6 cylinder eng., auto . t ransmission , ca mper con -

version .

$3795
1974 JEEP
WAGONEER
4 WHEEL DRIVE
4 door wagon. A.C., au to.,
P.S., power tailgate, roof
rack, a lumi,num whee l s.

1976 AMC

1975 CHEVROLET
NOVA
4 door sedan, auto., A.C.,
P.S ., v in yl fop , w i re whee l
cover s.

GREMLIN
Air conditioning, auto .
floor sh i f t. 6 cyl. , roof rack ,
rally stripe wire wheel
covers .

$3295

$4995

OTHER SPECIAL CARS
1978 Jeep CS-7 Renegade .
1977 Trans AM
1976 Buick Regal
1975 Olds Cutlass Suprem e
1975 Chev. J/• Ton Truck
1974 Plymouth Fury

$6995

$6995
$4695
53995
$3495

$1995

1978 T - Bird
1977 Monte Carlo
1976 Ford Elite
1975 Chev . Mal ibu
1974 Ford y, T . Truck
1973 Ambas sador

$6495
$5395
$4695
$3295

$2995
$1295

�I'·

..

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 5, 1978

Long ball assault gives Dodgers
•
9-5 win in championship series
PHILADELPffiA (UP!)Steve Garvey slammed a pair
of homers and drove in four
runs while Davey Lopes
added a two-run blast to
highlight a vicious long-ball
assault Wednesday night Utat
carried the Los Angeles
Dodgers to a 9-li triumph over
the Philadelphia Phillies in
the fll'st game of the National
League championship series.
In takil)g a 1-0 lead in the
best-of-five ~eries foc the

.
PLUS SELECTED REGULAR AND SPECIAL PURCHASE VALUES
as
seen on
national

AM/FM RADIO &amp;
CASSETTE RECORDER

TV

Minlsette~&gt;-lv

by

Realistic~&gt;

95·

LEAGUE CHAMPS - Athens Golf team took the SEOAL championship a nd came in ,,
second in the golf tournament held at Riverside Golf Course in Mason Wedn~sday . Left to
right are Craig Goldsberry, Jim Hensler, Bill Salyer , Brian Lawson , medalist of the day
wiUt a 78 and Tim Kerr.

Reg.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
- Just two years ago, Larry
Gura wasn't good enough to
pitch. for the New York
Yankees . And just one month
aro, Clint Hurdle wasn't good
enough to start for the
Kansas City Royals.
players
shed
Both
themselves of those raps in
convincing fashion
Wednesday as Gura held the
Yankees scoreless fOI' sii&lt;
innings and Hurdle highlighted a !S-hit attack with a
sil)gle and triple, scoring one
run and knocking in another
to give KanSas City a 10-4
victory over New York to
even the American League
Championship Series at one
game apiece .
Gura was Manager Whitey
Herzog's choice to try to win
back respectability for the
Royals after they had been
humiliated on Uteir home
turf, 7-1, in Ute first game of
the playoffs Tuesday night.
· He responded with six innings
offour-hlt pitching while his
teanunates were ruJUling up

Small 4 V2K8 'AK2 1.4" size makes taping or listening convenient
anywhere - in classroom, office or off-the:air. Sleep switch
for automatic s hut -off. Built -i n mike. Jacks for eKtemal mike,
remote control, e arphon e or speaker. 4 " AA" batt e ri es. Jacks
for optional 12V DC or 1 1 7V AC adapters. 14-831

PROTECT YOUR FAMILY WITH,SMOKE DETECTOR BARGAINS!
by Archer ®

·

'

,.-· -----.-.

JUST IN TIME FOR NATIONAL
FIRE PREVENTION WEEK!
October 9· 15

21~!

Buy bo111 for prolecl •on from smolder,,..~ or tJ ialon g l1rt:sl

---

2795

Ionization alarm
responds best to
blazing fires. W ith
9V battery, hardware , instruction
manual. 275-454

TOURNAMENT CHAMPS - Gallipolis won the SEOAL tournament held at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason Wednesday. Left to right, John Milhoan, co~ch, Brad Rodgers who
also shot a 78 and played sudden death against Brian Lawson of Athens, Jeff Clary, Aaron
Jeffers, J . D. Jones and Mark Allen.

GAHS wins tournament
Coach · Jolin Milhoan 's
Gallipolis Blue Devils captured the 1978 Southeastern
Ohio League golf tournament
Wednesday, beating regular
season champion Athens and
fiv.e other participating
teams.
.
The tournament · victory,
however, was not enough to
overcome Coach Mike
DuiUl 's Athens Bulldogs in
the final standings . AHS
captured all Ute marbles this
fall with a conference ~ark
of 18-1.
Galli.polis . placed second
with a 16-3 record.
Waverly finished third with
an 8-9 mark ; Jackson w_a s 910; Ironton 8-10; Meigs 2-15
and Wellston 1-17. Logan was
4-1 before the strike wiped out
the Chieftains remaining
matches.

Gallipolis' Brad Rodgers preparin g fo r sect ional
and Athens Brian Lawson tourn ament play, which
fired eight-over-par 78s to tie begins Friday at the Oxbow
for the medalist title.
. Course in Belpre.
Here are the 1978 tourIn a "sudden death"
nament
results :
playoff which went three
extra holes, Lawson edge~
GALLIPOLIS (327)
Rodgers lor the 1978 m eda list
Brad
Rodgers
40-38-78
trophy.
J . D. Jones
37 -42- 79
Wednesday 's tournament Aaron Jeffer s
44 -4Q-84
was played on the Riverside Jeff Cla ry
46-40--86
45-46- 91
Golf Course in Mason City. Mark Allen
ATHENS (338)
Gallipolis shot a 327 fo r top Brian Lawson
41-37- 78
honors. Athens was second Jim Hensler
42-39-81
with a 338, followed by Craig Goldsberr y
45 -42- 87
46-46-92
Waverly, 347 ; Ironton , 363 ; Bi ll Sa lyer
49 -46- 95
Jackson, 372; Meigs, 385; . Kim Kerr
WAVERLY (347)
Wellston, 395. Logan did not Tom DePugh
41-41 - 82
particil'ate, due to the strike. Troy Banta
40-42- 82
48-42- 90
Area teams are now Jim Dutcher
Greg Sturge l
47 · 46-93
Paul Bearhs
5 1-57- 108
IRONTON (363)
Marauder girls
Carry Fairch ild
45-43- 88

Playoff results

The Meigs Girls' Volleyball
Steve Haynes
44-43- 87
team evened its record at 3-3 Tony Yer ian
48 -44- 92
Tuesday with a solid win over Jeff Moore
49·46- 95
Jackson. Meigs took the Sieve Lanier
53·45- 98
52-52-1 04
match in two straight games, Mark Robbins
MEIGS (385)
15-10 and 17-15.
J . R. Wamsley
43-47- 90
Coach ~aren Walker at- Chuck Kennedy
50-43- 93
tributed the win to good team Scott McKi nney
50-5 1- 101
59-42- 101
play as the match saw Rob Davis
Dave
Kennedy
52-56-1 08
sev.eral long volleys.
WELLSTON (395 I
The Reserves picked up Ted Williams
36-34- 80
44 -4(}- 84
their first win after two losses Scoll Kibbler
50-55- 105
by handily downing the Iron· Jeff Dav is
58-68- 126
girls 15-12 a nd 15-5. Meigs' Pa l Edwards
Bruce Kounlz
60-68-128
next match is tonight at
logan (0)
Did not pa rticipate, due to
home. The opponent will be
Athens in a SEOAL contest. str ike.

Major League Re sults
By United Press International
National Leilgue
Game 1
LA
004 211 001 - 9 13 1

Phi ia

010 030 001- 5 12 1

Hoot on ,
We lch
(5)
and
Yeager; Christenson , Brusstar
(5). Eastyt' ick (6), McGr aw (7 )
and Boone . W- Welch ( 1-0J . L Christenson (0 -1 ). HR!.- Los
Angeles, Garvey 2 (2L L opes
( 1), Yeager (1) ,· Philadelphi a,
Martin (1) .

N.Y .

Amerjcan League
Game :2
0000002 2(}-412 1

K.C.

140 000 32x- 10 16 1

Tidrow 12L Lyle
{7) and Munson ; Gura, P a1ti n
{7), Hrabosky {8) and Port er .
W- Gura ( 1-0). L - Figueroa {0·
1) . HR s- Kansas City, Pat ek
Figueroa,

defeat Jackson

RCA~~&gt;

159

-

World Series will · open

Oct . 10 at 8:30p.m_. ·in the home
park of the Nattonal League
champion .

- frr. LOtJIS (UPI) - Tight

end Al Chandler, waived lut

M

the Newifngland
•itaa llign
ednesthe S
Louis

'1
Cardln'la:
•
• . The
Cardinals
said ·
Clllldler Ia expected to play
Sundlly aplnlt the Baltimore
Colla. To make room on the

•roatl!r, St. Loula released
lilbt end Jim 'llla~-

SAVE
~::.~ 20%

Separate bass / treble controls,
end-of -tape indicator light, Auto·
Stop .. 1 4x9 V, x4 V&gt;" speakers , ~~~
mike/ phono/a ux inputs. 14-931
"-'-==~:!:::!:~:JJ

·gggs

ALLsggs

Reg.

.

L1:VP~~~E

FOR

Realistic- Ch annel 9 priority
switch lets . . .,you report emer·
gencies immedia tely. LEO indicator alerts you to antenna
sh orting or m ismatch.

ADDITION

ssg
Reg. 14915

21-1534

SAVE
540

40 -watt slereo frequency
. . booster. 12-1871!.
Surface -mount 40 -watt speak ·
ers . 12-1863 .

CBBIRTHDAY
SALE
A. TRC-427 MOBILE by

by Realistic

..
•
"
••

--·

Mounts in or under-dash in most cars. For 12V DC neg .
grnd. systems. With extra plate, cable, hardware. 12-1838

19980
. We bought out RCA's co.l)1plete " Studio
11" inventory! 2 digital keyboards, car tridges for blackja ck/ casino , tennis/
squash and one extra. 60-3048 / 9

139"

B. TRC-449 AM / SSB MO·
BILE by Rooliotic -Single -

7995
5995

~

""
'"
-

Pr.

channels and
power! LED mode lights and
channel indicator w ith dimmer

remote coaxial cOupling unit.
A must for CB ,ers or "hams"l

Model J, aut., ps, pb, air, tape, tilt whee ls, elect r ic
windows. clock. low mi leage, whi te w -black top.

range receptiop. Virtually
eliminates static. Triple " U"
clamp bracket for up to 1Yl"

masts. 21-964.

1974 BUICK CENTIJRY LUXUS .... s2695
2 dr . h.t., w hite . blac k top, tow rry ileage, ps, pb, air .

1975 CHEVY MONTE CARLO ....... s3995
Landau, pbr ps, fill wheel. crui se, 40 degree 60 degree
seat, power w indows, tape loaded.

1974 MERCURY CAPRI
2000 SERIES ............ .'..... .......... ~5

E. TRUNK·MOUNTANTEN·
NA- No holes to drill! Weather,
corrosion-resistant top and
bottom fittings . 16 -ft. cable and

connectors. 21 ·926
F. REGULATED DC POWER
SUPPLY- Use car &lt;;B's or
iepe players at home I 13.8V DC
regulated output at 2.5 amps
continuous current (5 amps

3495
1795
1995

surge). U.L. listed . 22-124

Reg.46 15

Reg. 2315

Reg.2511

as
seen on
national

Located on W. Vo. Side of Pomeroy-Mason
Brldgt (304) 773·5177
v

SAVE
25°/o

"

homered in the slxUt off
Rawly Eastwick, the third
Philadelphia pitcher who was
making his first appearance
in Utree weeks.
'
Stunned but not yet
subdued by ttt·e· Dodgers'
early assault, the Phillies got
to Los Angeles starter Burt
Hooton in the fifth with a
" nickel and dime" attack of
five singles that produced
three runs. Garry Maddox'
base hit, tile fourtil of the
inning, knocked in two of the
runs while Richie .Hebner
the
singled in the final run
inning to slice the Dodger
lead to 7-4 and chase Hooton .
That brought on rookie
righthander Bob Welch, who
Utwarted the Phillies to earn
the victory . The 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld •
Welch , his fastball blazing,
struck out five and allowed ·
,
only two hits 41-3 innings - a
pinch-bit homer by Jerry
Martin and a single by Larry
Bowa in the ninth .
The Phillies scored first
when Greg Luzinski led off
the second inning by ripping a
,.
triple high off the right field
wall and came home on
Schmidt's sacrifice fly to

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
(UP! ) - Parnelli Jones, the
1963
Indianapolis
500
champion who now is a
successful · businessman and
U.S. Auto Club championship
car owner, will be honored at
the Beverly Hilton Hot el
Sunday, Oct. 22.
·Jones will be presented by the
City of Hope Aids, a leading
supporting a uxiliary for the
City of Hope, with the Spirit
of life, the most prestigious
award given on bebalf of the
free, nonsectarian medical

0

You 'll sleep we ll knoWing that
flley 're sleeping warm In Carter 's
Jama-Bianket sleel)en. They're made
af a new soft pile fabric available, only

SAVE
23°/o

from carter's. For long wear . Added
comfort . And extra snuggles.
~:~

Moat itoma
Radio ShiCk

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

ONIO&lt;I.

pliiiiiiiiii

Ia....
lii:I.V

Hours:
f : :IO to S:OO
Mon . thru S.t.
t : lO to 1100

Aa.-1.
• IIGVft

Frld•y

Look for thil
·neighborhood.
sign in your . ._ _
a--.1.•11111
_ _ _ _•
'.1 PRICES MAY VAIIY AT INOMDUAL

cart•r's popularly priced Jama·
Blanket sleepers with safety step feet
ere knlt of a bl.,d ot SEF modacryllc
and Spectran polyester fibers.

..

KIDDIE SHOPPE
,2nd st .
POMEROV , O.

•

~.

'
- '.

RETREAD SNOW TIRES
OLD MAN WINTER IS .
A TIME AWAY

LARGE.

SELECTION
AT REASONABLE
PRICES

TIRE SALES
N. Second Ave.
Midtleporl. 0 .

As It Cleans"
• Instant Rug Adjustment
• Edge Cleaning Suction_...-Power

The best way to care for carpet is a
Hoover Convertable Cleaner.

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport , 0.

Group

1 Group

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
CANVAS

MEN'S

STEEL TOE
WORK SHOES

Includes discontinued sty les
and colors of Converse
Coach.

Reg. $38 .99

SALE
1 GROUP

WOMEN'S "SOFT TOUCH" SHOES
REG. 15.99
SALE
' 1 2 88
1

Open Friday Nights Til8 P. M.

heritage house
OF SHOES
N. 2nd Ave .

pen

Middleport, 0 .

Saturday
Specl'als

Til 8 p.m.

GREAT
VALUES
MEN'S
PUUOVER
SWEATERS
Assort. Styles
Values
to$12 .95

MEN'S 14 OZ.
NO FAULT
JEANS

BOYs ·
TUBE SOX
Asst . Stripe
Slight. irr .

$987

2 FOR $}00

BIRDSEYE

GYM SHORTS

DIAPERS

Volleyball Style

GIRLS
FAKE FUR
COATS
7-14

4-6X

$17.99

'21.95

COATS &amp; CLARK
WINTUK YARN

SO-SO Poly-cotton

$597

POLY
DOUBLE KNIT
MATERIAL
Yd .
Men's
Fruit Of The Loom

UNDERWEAR
Briefs
T-Shirts

2f2.99
3f2.99

V- Neck
Crew

&gt;a

e''lt Beats, As. It Sweeps,

Friday

IJ@!!:J)@.a§~~

WITH

Complete With
Tools

---.!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Friday

&amp;ET
READY
FOR

You·can forget the coven
when they're wearing
Carter's Blanket Sleepers.

SALE

1ST OF THE MONTH

Asst. Patterns

SAVE
25°/o

alive but Hooton thwarted it
by striking out Christenson to
end tile inning .

88
$68
.

of

CLEVELAND ( UP!) The Cleveland Browns have
acquired veteran g uard
George Buehler from the
Oakland. Raiders for an
undisc losed futur e dr aft
choice,
the · Browns
announced Wednesday.
The huge guard is expected
to provide a big boost for
wounded
C leveland 's
offensive line corps. To make
room for Buehler, the Browns
released
guard
G'r eg
Fairchild, who recently was
acquired on waivers from the
Cincinnati Bengals.

mcludmg
_crlticlsm
of Brown,
. on
h•s mghtly
radio
sports I anm;d~r=es:e:a~rc:h~c:e:n:te~r~.
I

l~J

OliO oveiloblo It

A DMSION OF TANDY CORPORAnON

· on"When
Brown's
shoulders
.
Paul
Brown came
to

McRae, Darrell Porter and
LaCock joining Hurdle with
two hits apiece as the Royals
saddled 2G-game winner Ed
Figueroa with the loss.
Figu eroa lasted just one
innin g.
Chris Chambliss collected
four hits and Bucky Dent
!mocked in three runs to pace
Ute New York attack, which
consisted of 12 singles•.
"Any time you' re playing
the other team in th eir park,"
said Dent , "all you hope for is
a split. But now we're going
home."
Game 3 of the best-of-five
- series will he played Fridsy
night ·with Catfish Hunter
going for the Yankees against
19-game
winner
Paul
Splittorff.

flatly
Trumpy
sa id
Wednesday .
Trumpy also blamed.
Brown for low player morale .
"I'm still close enough the
team to judge t he attitude of
the players and I've never
seen them further down, " he
said. "And believe me,
confidence in pro football is
90 percent of the game.
"A lot of it has to do with
the attitude of management
to the players. You can't
approach the playe rs as
employees. It's got to he a
situation where they're your
best friends . And it's not that
situation with the Bengals.
That business approach is
picked up hy Ute players.
"The players are not being
given a fair shake. Why do
you have so many players
- who ;:,ant to get off that
team·
,, Ask",'! to elaborate. about
_some players wanting ?ff.
the team, Trumpy said,
"There are more than some.
W31.t ti'll ·~
nd 0 f th
.,
u•e e
e
season.
.
.
Trumpy has been .settmg
the town ~n Its ear this we ek
with candid co~ments about
the B e n g~ls. problems, .

.PUJJLJC·lNVITED
1i1me 7:00 P,M• October 7 8 '78
VICTORY .BAPTIST CHURCH

TV

RADIO SHACJ( OWNS AND 'OPERATES 20 ELECTRONICS FACTORIESf

•

CINCINNATI (UP!) Former Cincinnati Bengal
Bob Trumpy, saying he's the
first one in town to "tell it like
it is," blames the winless
Bengals' problems on general
manager Paul Brown for
exerting too inuch control
over his head coach· and
players.
Brown this week replaced
Head Coach Bill Johnson with
Homer Rice after the Bengals
lost .. their fifth straight
game_,_ -·
Trumpy said he's never
seen the team more
depressed , declared there are
players "wanting to get off
Ute team" and also stood by
his earlier statement Utat
Johilson recently told him he
liad no more control as a head
coach than he did
an
assistan_}.
· .·: • · .
"I'm the first one to really
tell it like it is and there's no
one that can tell it any better
because I' ve bad 10 years
.
.
he Be
Is
experience with t
nga
and I'm still close to the
team," said Trumpy .
Trumpy ' who retired
earlier this year to go into
sports . broadcasting, placed
the Bengals' woes squarely

·:1

Air, radio, 4 spt .• 4 cyl.

CL.IFTON
AUTO SALES

Former Bengal
blames ·Brown

filmed
the Holyland

21 -522

D. ON1NibiRtCTIONAL
CROSSBOWI&gt;iBASE AN·
TENNA-.64-wave for long-

E
HUNDREDS OF

drive off the right field fence,
just above Reggie ,Jackson 's
glove 385 feet from home
plate.
That made' it S-2 and Fred
Patek contributed a two-run
homer, his firSt in Kansas
City this season, in the same
inning to give the Royals a
six-run cushion.
Amos Otis chipped in three
hits with George Brett, Hal

WOND:EBS

SAVE
37°/o

3 -30 MHz . Earphone jock,

Utird base on an attempted
fielder 's choice. The ball
skittered away and Hurdle
trotted home for the first of
four runs in the inning, giving
the Royals an insurmountable 5-0 lead .
After New York pulled to
within three runs in the 1
seventh, Hurdle tripled home
Pete LaCock , who had
doubled, with a towering

Cincinnati he wanted total
talk show.
control of,his own destiny,"
"I've had about 100 p:'"ple
said Trumpy. "But I don 't
stop metoda~ and sa!, Hey,
think he offered Bill Johnson
Pau~ .. Br?wn s look!~g for
the same opportunity . That's
you, said Trumpy. Well, I
forgetting where you came
still have respect for Paul
from ."
Brown, but I feel I 've got to1
itt
Trumpy
specifically
comtell
the truth about what I
ADAPTED FOR TilE. SCREEN
~ND DIRECTED Bl( RON ORMOND
plained that Brown was in- . feel. ·
valved
in decisions that the
could say, 'Well, gee
DR.
BOB
GRAY
DR. JACK HYLES
DR . R. G . LEE
head coach should be
whiz, the Bengals have a lot
permitted to make by himself
of youn~ ~ys ":'d there have
"picking
assistant
be~n InJUries ...
coaches,
picking
his
players,
But people , expect the
1 1
determining draft choices,
truth and I feel! man ~xpert
what direction the team on this situation and ; ~ m not
(Middleport- Pomeroy Bypass)
takes."
pulling any punches.
' - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -- - - ---' . Br0 wn bas contended his
On his radio. program,
h
Trumpy
predicted
the
1
head coach does contra t e
Bengals might go ().16 or 1-15
team.
this year ("They might beat
Countered
Trump y,
B ffal , h · 'd )
"Control by the head coach
~, 0 ' e saI '
ba to . I de a Jot more than
I hope that turns out to be
s me u
wrong "
Trumpy
said
ju~ between I p.m. and 4 Wedne;w,y . "There's nothing
p.m. on Sunda:Y a~~ at the I'd like ·better than . for the
weekday practices.
te
to · · 't
t 11
Trwnpy said Johnson told
am wm ' s nex
games
.
that
he
had
and
go
on
to
the
Super
Bowl.
110
him thIS season
"But there's no doubt that
more control 85 head coach the team is in trouble now and
than wtien he was ~n I think I have the right to give
assistant. Johnson smce 8 ~ 1 d out as much information as I
he doesn't remember saymg
.
h
posslb~y . can about why t e
1't but Trwnpy said it was
'.
·
team lS m trovble ."
satd.

SAVE
170

~ideband triples

Lopes drilled his homer over
the 371-foot mark in left for a
S-1 lead.
Another tr ipl e to the
centerfield wall by Garvey
with one out in the fifUt finally
finished Christenson but
reliever Warren Brusstar
was greeted by Ron Cey's
single for another Dodger run
before getting Dusty Baker
on an inning ..,nding doubleplay grounder.
Yeager added to the
Dod~er
total when he

Russell's grounder skid
through his legs at third for
an error . Reggie Smith
followed with a line single to
center that delivered Lopes.
Garvey then connected for
his first homer of the game .
The Dodgers .continued ·the
bombardment of Christenson
in the fourth when Rick
Monday led off with a
towering triple that caromed
off the wall in deepest
centerfield. Tw~ outs later,

. BIBliCAL

CB rodlo II your key to hlghwoy nlely ond lnlormo:·
lion. With mobile CB, you'11ln touch wllh mony locol
pollee, motelo, oervlce aiellono ond voluntHr groupo
like REACT. In 20 yeero CB hll grown to become
Amerlco'o frlendlltsl "party llne"f

SAVE
6085

September, climaxed a fourrun third iMing by walloping
a three...un homer over the
left field wall. He added a solo
shot leading off the ninth his fourth in championship
competition for .the
Dodgers' final run .
Lopes started the third
inning uprising with a double .
Mike Schmidt, who !mocked
in the Phillies' first run with a
sacrifice fly in the second,
kept it alive by letting Bill

as .

CAR AM-FM STEREO/ CASSETTE PLAYER

Measures power, % modUlation and a-ntenllil SWR from

1974 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ..... ~3495

a 5-0 lead.
Gura allowed four singles
and two runs in the seventh
before being lifted in favor of
Marty Pattin, who teamed
with AI Hrabosky to preserve
Gura 's first post-season
victory against two defeats.
"If Billy Martin were still
managing Ute Yankees, we'd
be playing the Red Sox," said
Gura . "I wouldn't have been
surprised if Martin had been
broqght here to heckle me."
Hurdle, who spent aimost
entire
month · of
the
September on the bench, was
the only line-up change by
Herzog for 'Game 2 as . he
abandoned Herzog's
doghouse to replace Steve
Braun in left field .
"This was my first time
back in a crucial situation
since the f irst part of
September when we played in
Anaheim," said HW1ile. "I
didn 't want to blow it."
Hurdle singled in the
second, took second on a
single by AI Cowens and then
bowled over Graig Nettles at

20,000 DEGREE:S ~AHRENI-IEIT
·
and no~ a drop
. of watet

for night operation . 21-1662

s -

York 4
.
oct . 6 ...... Kanse s C• I Y at NE!w
York, 3:30p .m .
oct. 7 _ x-Kansas City at
New York , 8:30 p .m.
oc 1. 8 - x-Kansas City at
New York, 8: 30p .m .
x-lf necess•rv

······ · · ~·

95

PROGRAMMABLE TV GAME

Jeft Linn
44·48- 92
Jay Wolfe
50-5()- 100
Jim Williams
55-47- 102
JACKSON (372)

Championship Series
By United Press International
(Best-of-Five)
(All Times EDT)
Nationa l League
LUS ,u.1lge1es ..-s. Phi ia
(Los Angeles leads , 1-0
oct . 4 - Los Angeles 9,
Phil adel ph ia s ·
Oct .
Los Ang eles at
Ange les, 8:30p .m .
Oct. 7 - ~&lt; - Philadelphi a at
Los Angeles , 4: 30p .m .
Oct . e - l&lt; -Ph i lad elphi a at
Los Angeles, 3! 55 p .m .
American League
Kansas City vs.- New York
(Series tied . 1·0
oct . 3 - New Y or k 7, Ka nsas
City 1
.
Oct. 4 - Kansas Cit y 10, New

~ ·~-

AM /FM / STERE0/8-TRACK by Realistic

C. 3-RANGE CB TESTER -

Philadelphia , 2:30p .m
Oct. 6 - Ph i ladelphia at Los

...

Wall / ceiling mount infrared photoelectronic detector responds
best to smoldering fires. LED "on" indicator, low battery warning . 9V battery, hardware, instruction manual. 276-463

CLOSEOUT SPECIAL!

44-39- 83

( 1).

The'

·SAVE21°/o

National League peMant, the
Dodgers battered Larry
Christenson, the Phillies'
starter, for seven runs on
seven hits - five of them for
extra bases - in 41-3 innings.
The four home runs by the
Dodgers tied a · National
League championship series
record, set by the Pittsburgh
Pirates in 1971.
Garvey, the Dodgers •
hottest hitter down the
stretch when he hit .430 in

Gura, Hurdle lead Royals past Yanks

. 8995

Steve Hurley

center. Successive singles by
Bob Boone and Ted Sizemore
Utreatened to keep Ute rally

CARHARlT
WORK CLOTHES
Pants, Jackets,
Hoods
O'alls, Coveralls ,
Vests
Everyday
Low Prices

ANGEL TREADS
Washable

TOBOGGANS
WATCH CAPS

House Shoes

99~

Dan River .

Girls'
Acrylic

Dacron
Polyester

PILlOWCASES

PULl.()N
PANTS

THROW RUGS

Reg. $4.29
Save

Size 4-14

SALE

$3911

34" X 54"
Lots of Colors
And Styles

Assorted Colors

EXTRA LOW
PRICES

TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS
Open Friday Til 8:00 p.m.

.• .

•I

�....
6- The Dailt Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursilily, Oct. 5, 1978

0

n.

t

er s t e

,

7~The

: : By
. Helen and Sue Bottel

::;: Fairview Heights, Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of a
:::; son , Sept. 16 at the Holzer
Medical Center.
THEREADERSALWAYSWRITE
The infant weighted seven
DEARRAP :
.
pounds and five ounces and
I have a question for " Ashamed" who is afraid to teD her has been named Brandon
daughter that she was a " premature baby" - started before I.e. Maternal grandparents
marnage.
are Mrs. Goldie Van Maire,
Wouldn_'t. she want to know if her parents bad ·been in the West Columbia, W. Va. , and
the late Harvey Van .Maire,
same positiOn- and would she have thought any less of them?
There's nothing really to be ashamed of. My' folks had me and the paternal grand:
less than seven months after they were married. When I was parent£ are Mrs . • Naom1
old enough to understand they expl~ined. I'm just thankful Fl oy d , Pomeroy, and 0 ran
I d
they went ahead and tu,&amp;d me Instead of taking the abortion !&lt;loyd, Route 3, Pomeroy.
Great•grandparents are Mr.
route.
The only thing that matters is that they loved and love each and Mrs. Halley Sayre, Cotother and they love me. Realizing they're human brought me tagev1lle, W. Va. Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd have a daughter,
even closer to them .
Corne on, Ashamed, let your daughter know you care enough BethanyLynn,age 10.
to share. - HAPPY AND GLAD I KNOW
DEARHAG!K.
Thanks for your. good letter. It's somewhat different from
the following viewpoint :
Ell~n Bell, librarian, and C.
1';.
Blakeslee, Don Mullen
DEAR HELEN :
Wanda
Eblin, arid Pat Holter,
You should be ashamed of your advice to "Ashamed " who
nursed guilt for 17 years. Why didn't you tell her guilt is a trustees of the Meigs Library
were in Nelsonville
pos11lve thing if It leads to repentance, and then emphasize Board,
Wednesday night for a
that she should ask forgiveness lor her sin of premarital sex. meeting of the Ohio Valley
Instead you implied her feelings of guilt were unfounded She Area Libraries held at the
was a w;egnant bride, wasn't she•
·
'
Why does no one in the media recognize that much heart- Hocki ng Va IIey Motor Lodge.

::.;.;

)

ScoH's World
life changed by anyone but
Tbe "Other Girt"
me. When massive outside
By VERNON SCOTT
forces load me down with
· HOLLYWOOD (UPI )
demands and pressures, I
Instant fam e affects In- just want to hid and not talk
dividuals differently and to anyone.
"I only did those shows
nowhere is the controst more
apporent than In the cost of because I was asked ao often
"Three 's Company," the that I began to feel I was
hottest new situation comedy being rude.
"Everything that's been
of the past year.
Until the show hit the air happening to me In the post
last season all three prln· year and ·a half is all new. I
cipals John Ritter, couldn't have anticipated any
SuzaMe Somers and Joyce of this - the excitement, the
De Witt - were virtually national attention , people
anonymous . ·
recognizing me and asking
Suddenly they were seen In lor autographs.
"So I've been runnlng down
some 40 million homes every
week. They became, literaUy, the street trying to catch up
overnight stars.
. with me. I hadn't intended to
Ritter
and
Somers · have this sort of career.
blossomed on magazine
" I always wanted to be an
covers, on talk shows and actress and had never given a
worked 'in TV specials and thought 'to stardom. I don't
movies. Somers became a · even know what a star is. I've
sex symbol ·and made news worked . in stock and litUe
• with acci&gt;unts of a hectic theater since I was 13 years
post, a nude poster and a run- old and no one ever
break, suspicio~, VD, a nd many abortions could be eliminated
in with the law .
recognized me.
·
Publicity
ballyhooed
"I think an actress should Ifpeoplewerevirtuous.1
Faithful
and
virtuous
couples
enjoy
love,
peace,
emotional
Ritter's and Somers' post and . take her makeup off In the and spmtual well-being so that their children will grow up
present . They are household theater and walk out without pure. Careless use of sex, the power that creates life, is dirty
anyone caring who she is. But
names and faces now.
and dishonorable. It's right and healthy that one should feel
And then there is Joyce, the it seems If you're In a TV guilty about it.
"other girl" on the show. series you can't avoid a
. I fear, Helen, your "help" is not inspired by heavenly
Unlike her costars, Joyce De certain notoriety.
sources.- ROSALEE
Witt reacted to the trauma of
"I'm pleased not to be as DEAR ROSALEE ·
stardom by keeping a profile visible as John and Suzanne. I
Is 17 years of ~eedless guilt inspired by heaven? Sorry,
so low as to be almost in- think It's great for them and
friend, I'm not of the "Repent or be damned and good rid·
visible.
they enjoy it all. There is no dance" school, especially when the only "sin" was falling in
While blonde Suzanne is as conflict among us. We're love. - H.
·
·
·
flamboyant off the show as close friends on and off· the
on, brunette Joyce is set. We just think differently
DEAR HELEN.
reserved, introspective and about our careers.
It's good to hear from one of your male readers that \here
· something of a mystery . "I had opportUnities to do a
are
still some nice guys at disco dances. (He's the disc jockey
·woman around Hollywood. lot of guest shots- not half as
wh?
couldn't find a girl because most considered him square.)
She has chosen not to work many as SuzaMe - but last
.
I
m
told I'm attractive, dress well and am a good dancer, but
in other projects during her year I only did our series.
11
seems
that most of the guys at those disco clubs are only
series' hiatus and has ap"As an actress I make it a
after
warm
bOds.
'
peared on only two talk shows point to observe people, and
.
If
more
fellows
would
show
their true colors Instead of put- with Merv Griffin and that's hard to do when
on
the
tough,
hard
sexy
act,
they'd find it easier to meet
ling
Mike Douglas.
everyone is watching me. "
E_ven so, Joyce, somewhere
Joyce would like to become some of us okay girls.- DISCO'ER IN NEW JERSEY
in her mid-20s, was. horrified another Helen Hayes, which DRD:
The sad fact is " tough, hard sexy" - in other words "self·
by the image she projected on is a long stretch from a ·TV
assured " - · attracts fenlale!t, while the shy guy in the
both shows.
situation comedy.
"I'm not myself when I'm
She hopes her role in backgrouud,stays there.
scared," she said during a "Three's Compony" will give . If you really look for him, you'll find him " Disco'er." ',
ra~e interview. " And I was ~er
an opportunity to grow HELEN AND SUE .
rid then ·go on to other
scared to death on the talk
shows. A defense mechanism
'~lets .
'
'
rather do a few terrific
takes over and I become a
very together, on-top-of-it things than a lot of ok things.
l,ady. I really become another
"I don't want the public to
person whom I don't like at get tired of me. If people want.
The U. S. Air Force has an aircraft main~enance
to give me an Importance promoted Ronald S. Rife, son technlclan.
all.
"It was really frightening. now that I don't · deserve, I of Mrs. Sara M. Rife of 143 N.
He is a 1959 graduate of
When I saw the shows, I cried will try to work hard enough E. Easy St., Port Charlotte, Rutland High School. His
at some of the things I said to earn it in the future. It's a Fla., to the rank of master wife, Marjorie, is the
• and did.
sort of mutual trust. My sergeant.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
"F arne hasn't been easy for career is very precious to
Sergeant Rife is serving at Priddy of Rt. 1, Rutland.
me to handle. I don't want my me."
Rickenbacker AFB, Ohio, as
._..
._..
A native of Wheeling, W.
Va. , Joyce was reared in
Indianapolis. She is an Intense young woman who
By Clarice Allen
Mrs. Esther Wright, The
takes her career seriously.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ronald
Clay
Plains,
spent a weekend with
Joyce hopes to. avoid the
honored
their
son,
Todd,
for
Mr.
and
Mrs. Wald Spencer
perils of instant fame which
,
his
l!!th
birthday
at
their
and
spent
SUnday evening
too often results in a swift
home
Sunday
afternoon.
A
with
Mrs.
Erma
Cleland.
return to obscurity.
Star
Wars
birthday
cake
and
BaUey,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
She lives with actor
SATURDAY
ice
cream
were
served
to
his
Flatwoods,
called
on
Denzil
Raymond Buktenica of the
HARRISONVILLE Lodge "Rhoda" series at Malibu grandporents, Mrs . Evelyn Cleland, Sunday afternoon.
411, F&amp;AM, regular meeting Beach. They met in graduate Gaul and lllr. and Mrs. Lando
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
7:30 p.m. Saturday; all school at UCLA where both Clay, his sister, Suzanne, Mr. Eichinger and Suzannah,
and Mrs. Samuel Clay, Mr. C&lt;&gt;lumbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Master Masons Invited.
were studying drama .
SUNDAY
and Mrs. John Wickham, Mr. Don Eichinger, Rio Grande,
"Raymond and I are very
HOMECOMING
at private people," she said. and Mrs. Richard Gaul and were weekend visitors of
Carleton Church, Kingsbury " We don't go out much and David, and Matthew Harris. Mrs. Opal Eichinger.
&amp;ad Sunday with Sunday we avoid Hollywood parties. I Todd received many nice
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Newell,
school, 9:30 a .m. ; basket don't believe In making a gifts.
. The Plains, visited Monday
lunch at noon foUowed by splash.
Mr. . and Mrs. B uel with Mrs. Erma Cleland.
afternoon program at I : 30
Ridenour
entertained with a
Mr. arid Mrs. Richard
"Even when I was living on
p.m . with Gospeltones, nickels and dimes - which dinner, Wednesday evening VanMeter, Gary, Ind., spent
Charleston, W. Va., singing. was only a couple of years at their home, for their son, the weekend with Mr, and
Public invited.
ago - I was selective about John's birthday. Present Mrs. Tom Nice and Mrs.
SPECIAL HOURS at Meigs the ports I accepted. It was were Mr. and Mrs. John Mabel VanMeter.
&amp;ard of Elections Friday, 9 difficult for me because Ridenour and sons, Jason and
Mr. and Mrs. Huey Hall,
a .m. to 4 p.m . and 6 p.m. to 9 e\oeryone has a mercenary Jared, and Mr. and Mrs. . Akron, spent Saturday with
p.m . and on Saturday from 9 survival lnstintct.
James Ridenour and sons, Mrs. Erma Cleland.
a.m. to 9 p.m. to register
Mr . and Mrs . Rollo
"I chose to slap ham- l&lt;Jwell and John.
voters. All voters must be burgers rather .than work In
Henry
Beaver
Is Wickham, Illinois, and Iona
registered by 9 p.m. Saturday TV shows I didn't believe ln. I recuperating at !he home of Wickham, Washington, D. C.,
for Nov. 7 election. Election think of my ability as a gift, a his son, Lowell, and family In spent a couple of days with
board office located in precious commodity of which Middleport after undergoing Mr. and Mrs. B: K. Ridenour
surgery at Mt. Carmel and Mr. and Mrs. John
Masonic Temple building, I am the custodian."
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Wickham.
Hospital in C&lt;&gt;lumbus.
' DANCE at recreation
building at &amp;yal Oak Park
Sunday 7 to II p.m. with
George Hall at the organ ;
sponsored by Preceptor
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
By Lyle Baldenoo
Sorority.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L.
~, • HOMECOMING at Rutland
Hetzer and Alecia &amp;bertson
· Church of Christ Sunday.
of Belle, W. Va. visited with
:; Covered dish ·dinuer at 12: 30
the Hetzer-Bise family
&amp;
': p.m. in feUowship room';
.
. ; ; afternoon service, 2 p.m. with recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Meredith
•, Earl Slack as special
•• speaker; special music . of Phoenix, Ariz., are visiting
with her father, Ben Buckley .
:
Public invited.
and other relatives. ·
Mr , and Mrs. Eugene
HOMECOMING OF Flat·
Wilson
visited wilh Mt. and
woods Methodist Church
Mrs.
Gail
Sams and newborn
Sunday. Sunday School at 10
•' followed by church at 11. A son, Adam Lee, and Mr. and
• basket dinner will be enjoyed Mrs. &amp;bert Sams at Jane
• • ·at 12:30 with the afternoon Lew, W. Va., recently.
•.
Mrs. Milton Tuttle of Texas
:. program to begin at 1:30.
• Special singing by The &amp;ad visited with Mrs. Helen
Archer Monday afternoon.
Messengers and others. The
•• Rev.
Mrs. Archer presented her
Bill Airson will be the
•' speaker.
niece with a decorated ·
,•
,•,
birthday cake.

Ronald Rife promoted

____
I

I

__ ___

O.ester News Notes

l
t

Social
1 Calendar 1

Attend meeting

H.

. . /a d
Omecomzng p nne

·. .
The . St. Pau~ Umted
Methodist Church m Tuppers
Plams . will
celebrate
homecomm,g Sunda~:
.

. Thl ed day sl actiVI~Ies ~tillh
me u e regu ar serv1ces WI
Sunday school at 9 a .m.
followed by morning .worship
at 10 a.~. There will be _a
basket dinner at 12:15 p.m. m
the church basement.
At I :30 p.m. there will be a
dedication service for the
new outdoor buUetin board of
the church. The afternoo~
program of Inspiration wiD
begin at 2 p.m. and will
feature music by the Uhrig
Brothers Quartet from
Chillicothe. The pastor, the
Rev . Richard Thomas invites
all members, friends of the
church and former pastors to
attend.

Workman
graduates
Navy Seaman Recruit
George Workman, son .,f
George and Helen Workman
of 209 N. Mllls St., Wilkesville, has completed recruit
training at the Naval
1'raining Center , Great
Lakes, Ill.
During the eight-week
training cycle, he studied
general military subjects
designed to prepare him for
. further academic and on-the' job training
one of the
Navy's 85 basic occupotional
fields.
Included In his studies were
seamanship close-order drill,
Navy history and first aid.
Personnel who complete Ibis
course of instruction are
eligible for three hours of
college credit in Physical
Education and Hygiene.
He joined the Navy In July
1978.

m

I

Lynn Shuler honored by .layette
shower at Middleport firehouse ·

Noviceflowershowto be staged -

Calend' ar I

heldasurprisepartyonOct.l
C\
for !hei r daughter, Lori Lynn,
.
on her 12th birthday.
.•
THURsDAy
A halloween theme was
/'t:t
C.o
WEST ERN
SQUAJl.E carriedoutinthedecorations
J,..lJoof ~op
dance, 8 p.m . Thursday at with games being won by BitRoyal Oak Park recreation ly Murphy and Debbie Werry.
building ; Dewey Hart , Angie Grueser won the door
C&lt;&gt;lumbus , caller. Western prize. Gifts were presented to
square dancers invited.
Lori. Attending were Brenda
Bentz, Jennifer Grover,
EVANGEUNE CHAPI'ER Rodney and Mistee Grueser,
172 • Order of the Eastern
Debbie Werry, Melina and
Star,. 7:30p.m. Thursday at Melinda Mankins, Jeremy
the Middleport Masonic Tern- Phalin, Amy Halley, Roger
pie. Election of officers. Dues and Billy Murphy, Angie
are now payable.
Grueser, Mrs. Rubert Halley,
RACINE American Legion ' Mr. and Mrs. Rick Murphy ,
Post 602 Thursday 8 p.m.
Dave Grueser, the honored
Refreshments.
guest's grandfather, and
RACINE GRANGE in- Mrs. Thelma Grueser, her
stallation of officers Thurs- · grandmother, and Annette
day 8 p.m. All officers are Phaline.
·
urged to attend. The meeting
She also received a gift
is open to the public.
from her aunt, Kay Grueser,
13.00 OFF
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kuhl;
Mr . and Mrs . 'George
One Week Only
MONT.J:~ID:iETING of Hubstetter and Mr. and Mrs.
Ends
Oct. 11, 1978
Gerald Hogue, Wendy and
REACT scheduled for Friday
is cancelled with a special Karen of Darlington, Pa.,
No.
2220
Oiled
meeting being plaMed for aunt anrlnncle..
.
-:~
. --~
leather, Cat Paw sole
Nov. 4 with details to be
d 11
&amp;
heel.
Cushion
Your "Extra Touch "
a":~fl~D a 1~D square
Flprlst Since 1957
inside.
da
F ·cta
8 t 0 II
M ~ce,S ·
~.m. rl Y at
P e1gs emor Citizens Cent~r,
·'
o~n:eroy. O_pen to public;
muSI~ by Strmgdusters. F~ee
to children under 12 attendmg
Accepted
FLOAI.ST
Open
.
wltFhij";NenDtSs. NIGHT F 'd
. r1 ay
Mon. lhru S..l.
PH. 992·2644
7:30 p.m . Harrisonville
1118 p.m.
O.E .S. at Harrisonville. ,
E. Main, Pom1.~roy
P~ogram by Po~eroy, · 352Yr1•ri=TO
Flori."'- t
Middleport, and Racme and :
Harrisonville chapters. AU .
· O.E.S. members invited. r,:======::::::-.;;...~----:---:--=:-1
Harrisonville members to
bring salad, sandwiches or a
covered dish.
BAKE SALE at Dale C.
Warner Insurance Agency
Friday sponsored by :Forest
Run Methodist Church.
BIG YARD and bake sale
Friday and Saturday at
Bethany Church aMex, one
mile east of Racine on SR 124
sponsored
by
Dorcas ·
~·· ~ ~~ ·
Women 's Fellowship from 9
"Eillperience tn. DiftJV!fflce "
a.m. until dark.
The,.·re number 1 wlfh lodoy's act ivo woman

I

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 5, 1978

+-"""'s

I

--

--·-

...

Q

..

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT Business
and Professional Women's
·Club yard sale, Saturday,
begilming 9 a.m. In alley
behind Werner Radio Shop;
clothing, dishes, books and
miscellaneous items.
FALL CARNIVAL and ham
and turkey dinner by Racine
PTA Saturday at school.
Dinner serving starting at 5
with ham or turkey, mashed
· potatoes, homemade noodles,
green beans, cole slaw, rolls
and drink. Adults, $2; $1.25
under 12. Pie and cake extra.
Carnival begins at 6:30 p.m .
games and country store.

t.lcau se they're var!alile and comfortable.
They go Where you go and beg lor more.

' NOWI

A flower show will be stag- · Classes will he line, line mass
ed by thOse enrolled in the re- and mass with each of the
cent flowering arranging county's garden clubs being
~ourse Monday night In l'Onasked to provide at lea&amp;'! one
junction with the fall meeting arrangement fur a modern
of the Meigs County Garden class.
Clubs Association.
Mrs. Janet &amp;lin and Mrs .
Mrs. Pat Holter, county Suzy Carpenter, both accontactchairnnan ,announl~d
credited judges of the Ohio
the meeting for Monday night Association of Garden Clubs
at the Royal Oak Park will judge the entries on basis
recreation building. The ·of merit with each arrangebuilding will be opened at 6 ment to receive a ribbon. The
p.m. for exhibitors to arrange judging will begin at 7:45
their entries in the show. p.m.

colors and Your size . SPI"ingy crepe
sotea and soft buttery leather
mean unmatched comfort.

The 7lst annual reunion of
the Hoyt and Miry Catherine
· Curtis family was held at the
Chester Fire Department.·
The George Curtis family
were the hosts. During the
reunion, the recent death of
John Anderson, husband of
Chloe Curtis Anderson, was
noted. Members attending
from the .George Curtis line
were Mrs. Mary Pierce of
LOng
Bottom;
Elmer,
Darlene Newell, and children
Scott and Rex of Chester;
John, Mary, Misty, and Mike
Newell of Chester; Hobart
and Inzy Newell of Chester;
Dennis and Sheila LOng and
children .of Long Bottom.
Members of the Nlban
Curtis family were Terry
Curtis, Tammy Curtis, Edith
Curtis of Akron; Hazel Curtis
of Reedsville; Mr.' and Mrs.
James Grenier and son,
Curtis, of Ladron, S. C.;
Anita Raines, Clinton; John
and Marjorie Brewer of
Reedsville;
Douglas,
Carolyn, Brian, Mike, &amp;yce,

TUPPERS PLAINS-The
annual carnival of lhe Tuppers Plains School Boosters
will be held Saturday night
with a supper beginning at
5:30 and the carnival being

HOMES
By
All American

MEETS
•OHIO BUILD,ING
CODES
•FHA &amp; VA
. SEE OUR LOT

MARGUERITE'$ SHOES
Betty Ohlinger

101 E . Main

MODEL TODAY

Pomeroy, 0.

KINGSBUR.Y
.HOME SALES
noo- E. Main

Leather Never Looked Better

Pomeroy, Ohio

A thought for the day:
British historian George
MacAuley Trevelyan said,
"Education has produced a
vast population able to read
- but unable to distinguish
what is worth reading ."

992-7034

Mr. and Mrs. John 1
Wickham had as dinner
guests on Wednesday, Mr.
and lllrs. &amp;llo Wickham,
Iona Wickham, Pauline
Ridenour and Mrs . Caddie
Wickham of Gallipolis .

Brent, and. Tim Bissell of
Tuppers Plains; Paul, Sheila,
Gary , Alban, and Donna
Curtis of Pomeroy; Albert,
Marilyn, and Julee Pooler of
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Curtis, Andy, and
Chris of Springboro; Perry
and Sylvia Curtis of Reedsville; Steve and Virginia
Reynolds of Parkersburg.
Members of the Artie
Curtis line were Howard
Johnson, Seraphina, and
Nina of Newark; Hubert and
Marie Johnson of Alexandria .
Members of Katie Curtis
line were Brian and Donna
Bradford of Wouster ; Barry
Bradford, LOttie Bradford of
Racine ;· Paul and Ruth
Bradford of Racine.
Members of the Mollie
Curtis line were Ralph and
Ruby Bowman of Newark ;
Don, Yvonne and David
Griffith of Granville; Armand, Paula Ann, Judd, and
Stormy Boucher, Ellsworth
and Dora Crispin of LOng
Bottom ; Elmer Swank of

Newark.
Members of the Sonoma
Curtis line were &amp;bert and
June Ashley of Letart FaUB;
Keith and Emma Ashley of
Chester; Randy and Heidi
Smith of Clifton, W. Va .
Members of !he Filura .
Curtis line were Richard and
Phyllis Palmer of East
Liverpool; Betty Wilson of
Wellsville; John and Ruth
Pabner, David and Kim of
Niles; John Wilford and
Myrtle Palmer of Youngstown; Curtis Palmer of Eost
Liver poool; Ruth Palmer of
East Liverpool.
Members of the Chloe
Curtis line were Mr. and Mrs.
J . K. Anderson, Michelle and
Melody of Glenford ; Kermit
and Annabel Anderson of
Alexandria ; · Perle and
Margaret Anderson of
Newark.
Others were Mona Springston of Parkersburg aild David
Smeeks.
Next year the Artie Curtis
Johnson family will host.

Carnival planned by school boosters

MODULAR

Get them tOday.

Mrs. Gwinnie White and
Mrs. Texanna Well entertained recently with a layette
shower honoring Mrs. Lynn
Shuler at the Middleport
firehouse .
A pink and blue color
scheme was carried out with
a cradle holding a baby
centering the refreshment
table. Nutcups carried out the
baby t heme . A sa lad ,
crackers, c'Offee a11d tea were

Curtis_family reunion held at Chester

Choose sliP"Qn or tie styling in lot&amp; of

Get Nane
and Oasis
in Plushy
Suedes

At 8:30 the business
meeting will be held at which
time plans will be made for
the Christmas flower show.
Mrs. Sally Ingles and Mrs.
Twila Buckley will be
distributing schedules that
evening fur the show which is .
tentatively set for the fin4·.. ·
weekend in December. At 9
p.m. slides will be shown by
the Wildwood Garden Club.
The Chester Garden Club is
the host club.

An immunization program
through the Ohio Department

Miss Jo Ellen Lawrence
and George Carter exchanged wedding vows on Sept. 15
at the Hickory Chapel United
Methodist Church at Point
Pleasant, W. Va . The ·!Wv.
Orville White officiated at the
ceremony.

walks. There will also be a
jail and a "ye olde mall" with
sweets and baked goods, by Dr. Elaine Walster of (he
bazaar items and country University of Wisconsin instore foods. Door prizes will dicates that the intense pasbe awarded during tlie even- sion most people think of as
ing. Mrs. Sally Caldwell and romantic love tends to cool
Mrs. Carolyn T.ripp are in after about two years of marcharge of the kitchen, with riage.
Mrs. Joyce Ritchie and Mrs .
2. Only in marrying dope"'
Jean Spencer as the carnival pie agree to a contraet in
chairman.
which the tenns, limitations
and
penalities
ar e
unspecified. Since there are
no specific criteria fur performance, a breach of con~
tract is undefined .
3. An agreement between
two equal people need not
necessarily produce an equal
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
rights contract. After all, a
person has the right to choose
agreem~nt about what our a subordinate role.
Pre-nuptial
In other words, you could
life will be like after the wedcontract
ding. She has suggested in- sign a pre-nuptial agreement
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I cluding how our money will based on •traditional marital
am 18 years old and plan to he earned and spent as well roles. That C'Ontract would
marry my childhood as whether or not we want give your marriage a strong
foundation if romantic love
sweetheart within the year. children.
That might be fine for a wanes.
We are very much in love and
You might want to send for
can hardly W'dit to live more liberated c'Ouple. But I
a
copy of such a contract to
am
quite
traditional-like
my
together as husband and wife .
use
only for discussion betmother
used
to
be.
My
In fact, everything would
ween
you and your boyfriend
boyfriend
is
an
incurable
be perfect if it weren't for my
with
no
signatures required.
romantic
who
would
accnse
mother's interference. She
If
you
are
interested, send $3
of
throwing
ice
water
on
me
recently took her first job outplus
50
cents
postage to Inour
relationship
if
I
asked
for
side the home. As a result, ·
stitute
for
HWllan
!Wsponanything
in
writing
before
the
has been on a feminism kick
6200
Winchester
siveness,
ceremony.
that has driven · everyone
I wish my molher would Road, Lexington, Ky . 40511 .
around her slightly crazy.
·Ask for the "Equalog ConFor example, she doesn 'I just mind her own business.
DEAR READER - Your tract."
think I should get married unYou will receive just what
mother's
business has been
til my boyfriend and I sign an ·
your happiness for more than the name promises: a
18 years. You can't blame her promptbook for a discourse
for trying to prevent you from (logos) between equals
repeating some of her (equus).
Thank your newly liberated
mistakes -especially now,
when she is feeling for the mother for introducing you
first time the exhilaration of to an idea that in the long run
being a person In her own m a y st rengthen th e
American family .
right. ·
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
·Remember, the final decision is yours. But before you' of this newspaper, P.O: Box
throw out the idea complete- 475, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
ly, consider these points:
I. Recent research on love mail prohibits personal

held from 7 to 10 p.m .
Parents and teachers are in
charge of. the games including a cork gun game, ring
the cane, dart game, dish
throw, milk can throw, football throw, and basketball
throw.
Oihers activities are the
fish pond, treasure chest,
haunted house, balloons,
bingo, cartoons, and cake

CHOICES

'
and
.
IJUtldtng materJals

.

•;

':
:•
•:
••
•,
'• ·
;;
•~
1
" .

REVIVAL, Oct. 8 through
Oct. 15 at Faith Tabernacle
Church on Bailey Run &amp;ad
juat back of Middleport, 0 .,
Thole born m .thla date
with Elder Ruuell Cline
under
tbe lllsn of Ubra.
teaching the Bible each
Cbeater
Arthur, 21st
evening, startinll at 7:30p.m.
.
pre&gt;ident
of
the United
Everyone welcome, phone
Btatea,
~ bom Oct. S, 1830.
119217445.
~.

are

ONLY

'

95

Supply
Limited

•

.'

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II
220 L MAIN

992:7113

Free flu vaccine shots will
be given at the Center in October or early Novermher . In
order to obtain the vaccine,
the Health Department must
know by Tuesday how many

RECUPERATING
Mrs. Dwight Wallace who
recently underwent foot
surgery at the Holzer Medical
Center is now recuperating at
home.

The bride is the daughter of
Mary King, Minersville, and
Joe Lawrence of Cheshire.
The groom is the son of
Thelma Carter, Middleport.
The couple took a honeymoon trip to Niagara Falls,
Canada, and now reside in
Middleport.

the

CrysMl Dawn Manley

Has birthday

replies, · but questions of
general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

Wolfpen
News Notes

POMEROY, 0.

(

·

Mrs. Iva Johnson was a
Sunday dinner guest of Mrs,.
J . R. Murphy, Peggy, Carmel, Barbara and Joe Evans.
Mrs. Daniel Worley and
Stacy of Beckley, w. Va .,
were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp , Kail, Kevin .and
Charles and Mrs. Daniel
Worley and Stacy.
. Mr . and r.trs. Robert
Reeves and daughter of
Chester were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. James
Reeves and Bryan.
Alta Atkins of Hillard and
Mr . and Mrs . Atkins of
Hillard and Mildred Bradshaw of Paonia, t:olo. were
Sunday afternoon visitors of
Iva Johnson.
Mrs. Charley Smith, Jo
Worley and Stacy visited
Monday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Harley Johnson.

Sept. 26 marked the ninth
birthday of Crystal Dawn
Manley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert 0. Manley , 50
Riverview Drive, Middleport.
It was celebrated with a truck
load of friends at the Burger
Chef. in Pomeroy.
Later that evening a cake
was presented to Crystal by
her grandparents, the Rev.
and Mrs. Odell Manley, inscribed " Happy Birthday,
Granddaughter".
Joining Crystal for the party, first held at the new
restaurant, were Rhonda J effers , Jodie Wells, Brenda and
Donna Robbins, J aye
Roberts, Tara Wolfe, Janie
Eblin, Lisa Huffman, Kim
Stewart, Penny Clark, Wendy
Barker, Donna Manley,
Kathy Laudermilt. Crystal
received cards and gifts from
her grandparents , Mrs.
Leona Eblin and the Rev. Mr.
and Mrs. Manley, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Freed. Also at
the party besides the children
were Crystal's parents and
her uncle, Steve Manley.

-

worm
turns ...
Your interest multiplies
as fast as earthworms
when you open a savings
account with us. We have
a number of high interest
plans you can choose
from, depending on the
amount of deposit and
the length of time you
plan to keep your account.

NOODLE DINNER
A chicken nuodie dinner of
the AUlliliary of the Mid·
dleport United Pentecostal
Church announced earlier
has been postponed. The new
date will he announced.

A Home&amp;nk
In 1965, Pope Paull)lllde an
unprecedented 14-hour visit
to New York to plead for
world peace before the
United Nations.
In 1975, Idaho Democratic
Sen. Frank Church charged
the CIA .tried to kill Cuban
Communisl Premier Fidel
Castro
during
the
administrations of three
presidents . .

PutMe ;g. County.

Hush

lli.p1~!~~

People

FOR AU THE

RACINE

. FAMILY

HOME NATIONAl

BA:NK

THE

•

CASY&amp; CARRY
PRICES

exclusive designers
provide features ~·~======~~~~
of durability,
'
convenience and .
fashion stylblg
that last for years
to come.
Pomti'oy,O.

E. Main
Open Nlt!h.h 1111 ;

"

3rd Ave.
· Micid-iiport .,
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:.00 Mon thru Fri.
7:00to3:00 S.turdey

oHIO

MARAUDER

WE
DELIVER

WARM UP SPORTs JACKETS
Two styles: Burgundy with beige
sleeves and gold trim or burgundy
with black with gold trim . 111\ade of
wool mellow with vinyl sleeves.

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
,
s.
o.

923

Melli£

0.

MEIGS

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

Incomparable fine leathers
combined with expert finishing
detail create quality
.
of rich beauty. And Justin's

Mrs. Grace French,

persons desire the immunization.
Resident s s hould ca ll
992-7884, 992-7886 or 992-73il ,
or stgn up at the Center.

As

. BUILDING OR REMODELING?

2 PIECES

Eul~r,

of Health, administered
through the Meigs County
Health Department, is being
offered to senior citizens of
Meigs County.

]o Ellen Lawrence,
George Carter
exchange vows

Middleport,

14
Q:

'

Mrs. Lorena Davis, Mrs .
Beulah White, Amber Well.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Ruth Savage, Mrs. Elsie
Chambers, Mrs. Norma Jean
Stivers, Mrs. Edna Russell ,
Melinda McLain, and Mrs .
Millie Humphreys.

SHOE BOX

CHAIR

:.

Guests were Mrs. Lois
Snyder and . dau gh ter ,
Melissa, Mrs. Sandy Henderson, Diana and Leanna, Mrs.
Sandy Luckeyduo, Amy and
Leigh Marie, · Mrs, Frances
Brewington, Mrs.&gt; Henrietta
Shuler, Mrs. Eloise Wilson ,
Mrs. Janice Daniels, Mrs.

Senior immunization program offered

Reedsville
News Notes

•SOFA

White.

Martha Haggerty; Peggy
Lewis, Penny and Ellen, Mrs.
Bertha Batey, Mrs . Ruth

served by the hostesses
assisted by Mrs. Beulah

REGULAR
&amp; LO~G .
Crazy Baby. Crazy Curi,'
Son of a Gun &amp;
Much More'.

So

VILLAGE PHARMACY
M!dd,cport,

o. &amp; New Haven r W. Va .

$27;,- $3600
BAHR CLOl'HIERS

N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,

o.

992-2351

�•

··· ~

~-· ·t _

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

~

•

.

Fierce •••

ADVERTI ~ i~MENT

FOR IUDS

Bids will be r eceived at the
Office of Lead ing Creek
Conse rvancy Distri ct . Stete
Rou te 124 , Rut land , Ohio,
until 12· 00 Noon on the 2oth
quick political settlement in day of October, 19 78 for the
follow ing :
the fighting .
EQUIPMENT
Assad had been scheduled
SPECIFICATIONS.
to meet today with l.ebanon's
A M ic ropro~essor - based
ac counting and bookkeeping
president, Elias Sarkis.
machine providing at least
The worst-hit region was 4K bytes of user memory plus
the Ashrafieh Christian at least 6K bytes of ROM .
based firmwar e. Firmware
suburb in eastern Beirut. It sha ll be cllpable of trans·
looked like a heavily bombed lating program instruct ions
'.
-, ).j
into
mach ine
city of World War II with directly
language
,
with
no
com ,
( ' f ;: ~ , -:; ~''I\~
more ihan half its buildings pilation or assembly stape
r eq uired . Program
in '"&gt;"&lt;7&gt;1
partly demolished by shells, structions
set supported shall
heavy mortars and rockets. be BAL or equivalent
Many apartments were assembly language .
B Dual Flexible Disk
completely burned out and Storage Un 1t to provide at
heavy mortar shells had ·least 622,000 bytes of on line
upgradeable from
SECOND PLACE WINNERS in a poster contest at
crashed through two or three storage,
this to at least 1.2 million
Racine Eleroentary School advertising a dinner, country
Doors at a time.
bytes without use of adstore and games to be held Saturday were, front, 1-r, Joey
charred corpses and ditional disk drives .
1. The keyboard Is to be
Rice, Chris Jewell, Patrece Circle; second row, Legina
burned-out automobiles and anC. integral
part of the '
Hart, Lori Adams, and Sandy Harden . The first place
furniture from shattered pr 1nlmg unit , ca pable of
generat1ng the full 128
winners received $1 and second place winners received 50
homes littered the area.
cha racter ASCII set.
cents. The event is being sponsored by the Racine PTO .
2 . The printer must print at
The main Phalangist
a minimum of 45 cha racters
The dinner will be served at 5 p.m. with games getting
stronghold centered on the per
second, alphabetic or
'
underway at 6:30p.m .
apartment home of right- numer1c
3. The printer is to be a full ·
wing leader and former
formed character. impact
President Camille Chamoun. printer
EXTENDED FORECAST
4 . Absolute
tabulat ion
himself was
Chamoun
hor
izontally
at
a
minimum
of
Saturday
through
directing local operations 50 inches per second: and
Monday, a chance of
from thli basement of the vertically at a m inimum of 24
bruises . Her husband,
lines per second
showers Saturday, cloudy
apartment building.
5 Operator selectable ten
songwriter-producer George
Sunday and Monday. Highs
The home of Sheikh Pierre or twe lve pitch (pica or elite ;
Richey, was at her bedside.
will be mostly In the 50s
Gemayel, the other main !en or twelve characters per
lOCh) ,
Neither the mnnber of perSaturday, warming to the
Christian leader, was also
6. Line length of either 1.12
sons involved In the
low or mid 60s by Monday.
under heavy attack in the hill or 158 characters, operator
le
kidnapping nor the motive
town of Bickfaya, northeast selectab
Lows will be In the 30s or
7.
Pr~n te r
should be
was immediately known.
low 40s early Saturday and
of Beirut. Phalangist sources programmable to pr int in 1"We're keeping a lid on it," a
Sunday and mostly In the
said his home was damaged 60" 1ncrements horizontally
and 1· 48 " increments ver .
Giles County Sheriff's
by shelling but Gemayel was tically
30s Monday.
Department dispatcher said
B. Form feed device should
not home at the time.
include
selectable
early today. "At the moment
Syrians based in the Rizk pin feed operator
sprocket or friction
there are no suspects."
office tower building which feed .
9. Printer shou ld have an
Mildred
Lee,
Miss
dominates the Ashrafieh dis- audible
error sig1:1al to alert
Wynette's mother, said the
trict were firing 82mm operator when incorrect keys
(Contin~ed
from
page
l.j
singer had gone to the Green
mortars and Soviet-made or too many keys have been
depressed . This function is to
Hills Shopping center in north hound on 7.
multiple rocket launchers at be au tom a tic as well as
Nashville to pick up a
The Hockman vehicle close range into the militia programmable .
10 Ledger card capability
birthday present for her stopped in traffic-. The Roush positions.
both for manua l card align daughter, Georgette, 8.
auto was unable to stop and
ment and automatic card
When the singer returned to swerved right to avoid
a11gnment; both car:&gt;ab1lities
on the same card post unit.
her unlocked car, she collision.
. 11. The printer must have a
apparently was surprised by
minimum of 157 character
Seeing the approaching .
printer buffer .
a man hidden inside. The Roush auto, Hockman pulled
12 Character transfer rate
man shoved her to the floor, right in an attempt to avoid
must be 120 characters per
second .
tied the pantyhose around her contact.
(Continuedfrompagel)
13 The keyboard must
neck, drove south on
Both autos struck a guard·
have a ten key numberic
Interstate 65, and got off at rail. There was no contact be·
entry pad as well as a stan .
feature, was known as one of dard a lphanumer ic (type.
the U.S. 31A exit about 15 tween the vehicles.
the "hard hitter boys" of the writer) keyboard .
miles from the Alabama
D . System shal l be fully
Both autos incurred slight
. d
h
border.
damage, No citation was t tr ward in Pomeroy and progr~mmab l e from its own
others making up the group keyboard .
Mrs. Lee said her dauilhter issued.
which was known "far and
E. System shall not require
use of a CRT display devtce,
never got a good look at her
Officers were called to the
wide"
for
tlie
ball
playing
but
such a device sha ll be an
abductor .
· scene of a one-auto mishap in ability it possessed were opt1ona1 a,ddit ion to the
"He had his face covered, Mason County on U.S. 33, two·
.
system .
and he would not let her look tenths of a mile south of SR 7 George Rappald, Ed H. SOFTWARE
Scharf, Carl Schaefer, SPECIF IC ATION S.
at him," she said.
at 12 :40 p.m.
·
t F .
A System sha ll support
. v·
F ran k te
mcen , ntzer floppy disc based Utilit'(
Miss Wynette · told the
According to the patrol, a
family who found her and north bound vehicle operated King, Clarence Cooper, Drew Billing Software. Capal!&gt;ilities
Webster, Ralston Gress, Otho of this software shall include
1. Random on line access to
administered first aid, the
by Roger Boley, 56, Nelson·
man stopped the car near tbe ville, passed off the right side Ashworth and Horton Keiser. at least 1850 customer BC ·
· th 1st
·
f counts; maximum access
Mees IS
Brick Church community,
e a surviVOr o
time not to exceed 8· 10 of a
of the road and struck a sign.
just northeast of Pulaski,
Officers report moderate the group. At 90, Mees, a second
former stock broker in
2. Printing of. bill 1m·
slapped her in the lace,
damage to the auto. Nq
Minneapolis
and
NeW
York
~:~ei
ra~~~Ydtnu:.on entry of
kicked her out of the Cadillac,
citation was issued.
Cit~·,
is
still
active
playing
3
Provision for m ul.fiple
and drove away in a station
At 9:40 a .m., the patrol golf at least twice a week. He meters for same account.
wagon that was headed south.
4 . Prov1S10n tor b1lling
investigated a one-vehicle
Tennessee Highway Patrol
accident on SR 7, one·tenth of has given up his recreation mult iple services.
which used to come by
5 Provision for mu1 t1 tier
officials said they were
rate structure (min 1mum of 7
a mile north of CR 24, in
playing
third
base.
The
"hard
tiers!.
searching for two white
Meigs County.
boys" were at their
6
Automatic calCulation
males possibly driving a lateOfficers report that an auto hitter
baseball
prime
about
.
1902.
and
printing of penally
model black and blue station
amount
on
payments
operated by Arlene Watson,
Mees is a brother of the late received after past .due date .
wagon .
53, Parkersburg, traveling
FloydMeesand the ·lat'e Mrs.
7 . Provision for posting of
Miss Wynette was spotted
. full and partjal payments and
south, attempted to pass an
Amelia
Bauer
of
Pomeroy.
tor
allocalion of lhese
about 7p.m. by Bobby Young,
unidentified vehicle, went out
While here, he paid multiple services .
21, who had just pulled out of
of control, passed off the west
8 CalculatiOn and storage
his driveway to go to a
edge of the roadway over an respects to Dr. Pearl Stanley of average usage for each
(the late Mildred Mees meter and optional printing
service station to pick up his
embankment, and struck a Stanley was also a sistCrL g~~~~is as estimated charge on
brother, who was returning
sign.
1
Mees Evans and
9 Billing summar'v listing
from a hunting trip.
The patrol reports slight ·Charlotte "th
current billings tor all or
El
a
W
"When I came by, I saw
e
nor
l
ers.
selected
accounts, available
damage to the auto. No
Driving
Mees
in
for
the
immediately
after print ing of
this woman who looked like
citation was issued.
she might be staggering,"
visit were his sisters, Dorothy bil11 Report breaking down ·
GET LICENSE
Young said. "When I pulled
"Mees and Mrs. Louise Stein· consumption of water by
A
marriage
license was bauer of Columbus, and a pipe .
up, she fell down beside the ·
11. Provis ion
for fully ora
road. She told me who she issued to Dennis Allen friend of Mees, Mrs. Hazel partially
exempting
19,
Rt.
1,
Long
cuslomer
lrom
lax ond
Billings,
Long
Beach,
Calif.,
Persons,
was and that she needed
reporting monthly•on amount
Bottom and Pamela Virginia accompanied Mees on the ot
belp."
exempt charges.
Shuler, 23, Rt. 1, long Bottom. "sentimental journey."
12. Report showing amount
I"";:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----......~~::-:::~~~, used
each customer
.
13. bY
Provision
for adjusting
cash receipts amounts , in ·
eluding
adjustment
of
··----------------- ------ --- --- ----- : I
allocation to various ser
vices
•
B. Software shall be written
,1
in BAL or equivalent
:
3SSembly language.
,
Delivery and in5tallation of
~
the components must begm
/
r
Hithin 45 days from the date
,
Jf bid acceptance and be
#-~-- - - -: -'
oromptly
i nsta l led
-- · -- -~
thereafter. Payment for the
r
~Quipment will
be made
I
installation and proof of
:
oroper functio,., ing. The right
,
Is reserved to reject any and
I 1
2111 bids.
(Continued from page 1)

FIRST PLACE WINNERS - Flrst olace winners in a
poster contest advertising a ham and turkey dinner,
country store and games to beh eld at Racine Elementary
Saturday beginning at ~ p.m . were, front, 1-r, Brenda
Zirkle. Melanie VanMeter, and Annette Cardone; back,
Rachel Reiber, Becky VanMeter and Lo1s Ihle. Tbe event
is being sponsored by the Racine PTO. Dinner for adults is
$2 and $1.25 for children"under 12.

Country singer kidnapped
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (UP!)
- Country singer Tammy
Wynette was kidnapped
Wednesday from a shopping
center by a masked man who
choked her with a piece of
panty hose and drove her to a
rural area 80 miles away
where he slapped her and
kicked her out of her car.
" They tried to kill me. I
don't know why, but they
tned to kill me," Miss

Wynette told authorities after
her abductor kicked her out
of her canary yellow Cadillac
·
near Pulaski.
Miss Wynette, 36, four-time
winner of the Country Music
Association 's top female
vocalist award with such
songs as "Stand By Your
Man" and 11 01-V..Q.R...C ..E n
was admitted to Giles eouniy
Hospital at Pulaski for
treatment of cuts and

Two persons ••.

Fonner

•BRAKES
•MUFFLERS
•SHOCKS
•WATER PUMPS
•ALTERNATORS
•FUEL PUMPS
•TUNE-UPS
EXPERTLY INSTALLED
BY DENVER KAPPLE AT

AFFORDABLE USED CARS

1977 PINTO 2 DR •••••••••••.•• s2995
Local owner, clean interior, AM-FM CB radio, Qood
tires.

1976 MUSTANG ••••••~~~~; •••• s2795
automatic, good tires, blue finish, radio, good
economy &amp; real sporty .
4 cyl. ,

1973 MONTE CARLO •••••••• ~ •• '1895
Landau V-8, automatic, P S., P .B., air, AM, 8 track.
stereo radio, power door locks and windows. High
mileage but a real bargain.
II ['
Laguana Cpe.

1973 CHEVE~················ $1995
Local 1 owner car. V-8 engine. automatic trans., P.S.,

P.B., radio Clean Interior .

1976 CHEVROLET.............. '3495

Sport Pickup, 350 v.a. automatic trans .. P.S .. P. B.,
radio, like new tires, bed rails. orange w!th white trim.

1976 GMC % TON ••••••••••••.s3695
1 owner, good tires ,v .a, automatic, P.S., P. B., radio.

3:

SPECIAL

'

· 1973 CHEVROL£T 1f2 TON ••••••.'1995
Fleetslde, good tires, clean Interior, 350
automatic, P.S., P. B., radio.

8'

v.a,

1972 CHEVROLET 1f2 TON······ s1795
v.s, auto .. 'P .S.. Cheyenne cab, low mileage. good tires,
alum . body covers .

1976 CHEV. T.E.C. MINI HOME

FOR

A LIMITED TIME

ONLY-Our stock

of heavyweight denim Big Bells

are reduced

COME ON IN FOLKS

in price. A price wi'h a savings everyone will

SEE THE NEW

want to take advantage of. Now is the time to
stock

1979CHEVROLETS

The following documents
are received or prepared by
The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency dur ing th e

previo us week . The effective

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

$

re~o~oke, or renew a perm jt,
· li cense, or variance ; or to
ap prove or d 1 sappro~o~e plans
and speciflc.!!tions, may file

an appeal with The En ·
viron mental
·Board
of
Review, Sujte 305, 395 E.
Bro.ad St ., Columbus. Oh io

October 5, 1171
Without being selfish you are
going to have much stronger
self-interests this coming year.
As you progress you will carry

43216, wi thin th irty (30) days
ot the euect1ve date. pur . ,those you love along as well.
sua nt to Ohio Revised Code LIBRA (Sept. !3-0ct. 13) The
sect ion 3745 .07, unless such spirits~ of someone you're fond•
final action was preceded by of will be badly In need of a
th e same or substantially the
same prorosed action . All boost today. You'll know ex·
such fma actions are so actly ' what to say to cheer him
identified. Such person! ml'!y up . Having trouble selecting a
request an ad jud iC ation career? Send for our cop of
hearin g before The Ohio EPA
y
)I
on a propose'd ac;tion to issue. Astro-Graph Letter by mailing
deny, modify . revoke, or 50 cents for each and a long,
renew a permit, lice nse, or self--addressed, stamped envevar1ance; or to approve or lope to Astro-Graph, P.O. Box
disapprove
plans
and 489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
specif1cat1ons, within thirty 10019. Be sure to specify birth
(30) days of the issuance
date. OR c 3745.07 does not sign.
prov ide f'or adjudication SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22)
hearing requests or appeals Open your heart and purse
on orders , verified com - today where the needy are
plaif'lts, or · enforcement
B
compliance schedule letters . concerned.
eing generous
Within 30 days of publication will make you feel as good
in a newspaper in the affected about your deeds as those who
county , any person may also : receive them.
· Ill submit written comments SAGITTARIUS ·(No•. 23-Dec.
relating to act1ons, proposed 21~ Oth
th" k
'
actions, verified compla ints,
'
ers may In you re a
or enforcement compliance bit of a dreamer today, but
schedu le letters ; {2) request actually you are very realistic
a public meeting regarding where . your visions are conprposed actions ; and -or !3) earned . You'll devise ways to
request notice of further b · th t f ., .
acttons or proceedings All
nng em o. rut ton .
requests lor adjudication CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
hearings
and
pub liC Challenges don•t Intimidate
meetings, and other com - you today- they stimulate you
municat1ons
concerning toward achievement. How you
public meetings , adjudication pull things off wins the secret
hearings, verified com · d 1
plaints. and regulat ions, a m ration of your peers.
should be addressed to The AQUARIUS (Jan. !11-Feb. 19)
Legal Records Section, Ohio Friends are receptive to your
Box 10.49, suggestions today. You share
EPA, P 0
Columbus, Ohio 43216, (614) your knowledge and experi466 -60 37 Un less otherwise
h h
·
stated 10 particular nottces, . ence rat er t an trying to lotst,
al l other communications your opinions upon them .
including comments on PISCES (Feb. 20.Morch 20)
proposed actions , should be When the going gets tough
addre~sed either to The Air
today thai's when you'll get
Perm1ts and Comp liance
· 'y h
Monitoring Division or go1ng .. ou av~ an enormous
Permit and Approval Section, reservotr of fortitude and luck
whichever Is appropriate , at to fall back upon .
The Ohio EPA. P . 0 . Box ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) In
1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216. decisio n-making today , do
Iss uance
NPDES
permo.f1t renewal of whatyourinstinctsdictate
.
· You
Vi llage of Pomeroy
are QUICk to perceive facts and
Pomeroy, Ohio, Effective Will have the ability to use them
dale 09 27 78
imaginatively.
.Receivi ng waters . Ohio TAURUS (April !11-Moy 20) 11
Rtver .
Facil ity Description
something nee~s to be syssewage treatment plant.
tematized, do It today. Your
Permil No B532· BD.
organizational abilities are esThiS · finat action not peclal ly keen. Put them to use
preceded by proposed action to bring order out of confusion .
a no IS appealable to E BR .
GEMINI (Moy !1.June 20) Yo ur
( 101 5, uc
feelings for your friends are
very Intense today . If one llnds
hirpsell in a tight spot, you"ll
have much to say In his
defense.
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
CANCER (June 21.July 2!) The
OHIO ESTATE OF MINNIE type ol tasks that will be the
V. BENGEL. DECEASED most appealing to you today
Case No. 22487
are those that require a creNOTICE OF
ative touch and full use of your
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
.
Imagination.
On September 29, 1978, in LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Your
, the Meigs County Probate powers o persuasion are exCourt. Case No. 22487, tremely effective today. When
Theodore A. Downie, 106 High
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 you speak, everyone will take
was appointed E,.;ecutor of notice·of what you have to say.
the estate of Minn1e v VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Main,
Bengel, deceased , late of taic a slight aura ol mystery
Pomeroy , Me igs County,
about yourself today In busi·
Oh10
ness mailers. II could put you
Manning D Webster in a stronger bargaining posiProbate Judge .Cierk tion . Play your trump cards
last.
1101 5, 12. 19, 31c
CLOSED MONDAY
Offices
of the Meigs County
The Gallia
Meigs
and the Board of
Courthouse
Corrununity Action Agency
Elections
office
wlll close all
offices, including head start,
day
Monday
in
observance
of
wlll be closed Monday, Oct. 9,
Columbus
Day.
in observance of Columbus
Day. Classes and programs
ESCUES ANNOUNCE
will resume at the normal
BlllTH
time on Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Escue,
local, announced the birth of
PAPERS FILED
ll daughter, Alisha Renee at
Articles of Incorporation O ' Bleness Memorial
bave been filed in Columbus Hospital, Athens, Sept. 19.
with Secretary of State Ted Grandparents are Mr . and
W. Brown by .Cleland Realty, Mrs. Clarence (Jack) Fraley,
Inc., Pomeroy.
local, and Mr. and Mrs. Nye
HenryE.Cleland,Sr.,H. E. Escue, Albany. Great·
Cleland, Jr. and K. M. grandmothers are Mrs.
Cleland are listed as the Dennis Fraley, local, and
incorporators. Henry E. Mrs. Clarica Hamilton, Oak
Cleland Is the agent. Papers Hill, W.Va. The little girl has
were filed by O'Brien and two brothers, Travis and
O'Brien of Pomeroy.
Aaron.

992-2126

126 E. MAIN

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8:00p.m.

•

POMEROY

•

earlier
this year
by
overwhelming margins, and
O'Meara said the unions
would not accept any offer
which hinged on the outcome
of a citywide levy vote.
The Painesville Township
School District strike moved
into its eighth day today after
the board of education
Wednesday rejected the
teachers' offer to accept a 7.4
percent pay increase In a one·
year contract, saying it. lacks
·the extra money.
Wellington teachers walked
out Wednesday in a dispute
over grievance procedures
set forth in the board of
education's proposed
contract. Salary levels were
not an issue in tbat dispute, a
_school official said.

MARKEY s·mucK
DELTA, Ohio (UP!)

Uical 877 of the United Auto
Workers Union struck the
Markey Bronze Co. in Delta
early Tuesday in a contract
dispute.
The contract expired
Saturday night and the local
voted during the weekend to
reject the company's latest
contract offer. The firm
makes bushings for auto and
mdustrial users.
A federal mediator has
been asked to join the
bargaining sessions, said Joe
Riley, vice president and
general manager for the
firm .

the class of

OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat. 8:30til5:00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday UntiiS P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason, W. Va.

I

I

GLADYS N. RALPH
(Katie ) Robinson and Mrs.
CHESHIRE- Miss Gladys Isabelle Brandeberry, both of
N. Ralph, 76, Columbus, Findlay; Mrs. Hazel Taylor
former
Cheshire
area and Mrs. Ada Taylor, both of
resident, died Wednesday. Rutland : 35 grandchildren, 30
Miss Ralph was born in great-grandchildren and
Gallia County, a daughter of severa l great - great .
the late Blane and Edith Hix grandchildren .
Ralph.
Also surviving are two
Surviving are two sisters, brothers, Hollis Rupe, Kyger,
ACrJONS Fll..ED
Lucille Rupe and · Virginia and Robert Rupe, Rutland ;
In
Meigs
County Coiilmon
Ralph, both oJ Cheshire; six sisters, Mrs. Amanda Van
three brothers, Wesley and Kirk, Mrs. Dale Wyman and Pleas Court a suit for money
Kenneth, both of Cheshire, Mrs: Garnet Rife, all of in the amount of $1,670.47 was
and James P. Ralph, Toledo, Kyger: Mrs. Helen Frazier, filed by Oak Park Trust a nd
and ' several n1eces and Route 1, Middleport : Mrs. Savings Bank, Oak Park , Ill.,
nephews.
Gay Sowers, Sandusky, and against Ronald R Estep and
Funeral services will be Mrs. Shirley Swartz, Youngs· Winnie , Estep , . Rt. 4,
held at 10 a.m. Saturday at town , and several meces, Pomeroy .
James
W. Ohlinger,
~=~=~=~:~:j:l:;:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:j:~:~:j:~~~=~=~=~:j:~:~:l:l:::;:~:~:::~::~~:::::::~:~:~:~:~·~:~:~:~:~:j:~:::::~:~:::~:~:::~:~·~:~:~·~:~:j:j·l:l:l:. the Rawlings-Coats Funeral nephews and cousins. Besides
Middleport
,
filed smt for
Home in Middleort with her parents and husband she
JOBLESS BENEFITS
FlUEMAN FUNERAL
agamst
Dottie Jean
divorce
burial following in Cheshire's was preceded in death by a
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
CINCINNATI (UP!) -Ser- Gravel
Ohlinger
,
Sprtngfleld.
Hi11 Cemetery. son, a grandson, three
total
of 9,819
newly
vices
were
conducted Frtends may call at the
brothers and a sister.
unemployed persons. filed
Wednesday
for
Irwin funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
Funeral services will be
initial claims for benefits
PRODUCTION RALLIES
Frieman, longtime chief of a to 9 p.m. Friday.
held at 1 p.m . Saturday at the
under the Ohio UnemWASHINGTON (UP! ) local antiproperty taX group,
Walker Funeral Home with Following declines for t wo
ployment Compemation Law
the League of Hamilton
ROY C. HERRMANN
the Rev. Loyd D. Grimm, Jr., months m a row, domesuc
during the week ending Sept.
County
Property
and
CHESHIRE
Roy
C.
officiatmg.
Burial will be in raw
30, 6.5 percent more than filed
steel
produ ction
Homeowners Assocatlon.
Herrmann,
86
,
Route
1,
the Miles Cemetery.
the previous week.
rebounded 1n August , a cFrieman and his group Cheshire, well known area
Friends may call at the cording to the American Iron
Albert
G.
Giles,
actively opposed most fanner, died Wednesday at
funeral home any time after and Steel Institute.
administrator of the state
property
tax
increase the Holzer Medical Center 10 a .m . Friday . The family
Bureau of Employment
The indu stry trade
proposals In recent years and following a lingering illness.
will receive friends at the assoctation satd U. S. mills
Services, said the nwnber of
most of the fights were
Mr. Hernnann was oorn funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
initial claims filed ·under all
poured 11.550,000 tons of raw
sucressful.
Sept. 8, 1892 in Meigs County, to 9 p.m . Friday.
other programs last week
steel during August , an in·
Frieman, 69, died Sunday a son of the late George and
was 448 for an overall initial
crease of 162,000 ton s over
of a heart attack.
Minnie Ripley Hernnann.
claims total of 10,267, 6.2
July and 1,157,000 tons more
Besides his parents, he was
percent higher than for the
than domestic steelmakers
DAN DeWOLFE
preceded in death by a son,
week ending Sept. 23.
pou red dunng th e same
Today is Thursday; Oct. 5,
Word has been received of
The number of jobless Ohi· the 278th day of 1978 with 87 to George Harvey Hernnann, in
month last year.
infancy; a brother, Clarence, the death of Dan DeWolfe ·of
oans filing claims for benefits
follow.
and two SISters , Alma Newark. He died as a result
under all programs · were
The moon Ia between its
estimated at 72,821, a 1 new phase and first quarter. Brechtel and Edith Abbott. of an auto a ccident on Sept. SrRIK,ERS ARRESTED
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UP! )
Surviving are his wife, Gail 'll. He was buried at Lutheran
percent decline from the
The morning stars are
Mulford Herrmann: five Cemetery on Lionville Road - Seven striking workers
73,582 total for the previous Jupiter and saturn.
picketing the NCR plant in
daughters, Mrs . Emmett near Newark.
week.
Cambridge
were arrested for
(Pauline) Thompson and
He was the son of Mr. and
diso
rde
rl
y co nduct
Charles
(Peggy) Mrs. Harold DeWolfe Jr. of
Mrs.
Wednesday
for
refusing to
Thomas, both of Cheshire: Newark. In addition to his
to stop
obey
a
police
order
Mrs. Bill (Maxine) Little, parents, he is survived by his
Middleport: Mrs . Howard wife, Roxanna, two children, blocking an intersection.
Polic e sai~hey were
(Wilma) Parker, Route 1, Amy and Matthew, and a
called to the !ant by NCR
Long Bottom, and Mrs. Carl sister, Carol Prmce.
(Karen) Austin, Inverness,
Immediate relatives in this officials , w o sa id the
Fla
.:
two
sisters,
Amy
area
mclude his great aunt strikers were blocking an
\Roush, Pendleton, Oregon, and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. entranc e leading to the plant,
and
Margaret
Stark, ChffordHolterofRacme : two backing up traffic and
Phoenix, Arlz.; a brother, great-great aunts, Mrs. Hazel blocking an intersection.
Horace
H c r r mann , Curtis of Reedsville and Mrs. Three police offlcer s said
Reynoldsburg; 12 grand· Mary Pierce of l.~ng Bottom, they ordered the strikers to
move, and when they refused
children ,
four
great· and many cousins .
they
were arrested, .
Relatives attendin~ th e
grandchildren and severall
About
1,800 members of the
meces and nephews.
funeral were Mr. and Mrs.
Funeral services will be . Keith Ashley of Chester and International Brotherhood of
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Mrs . Robert D. Ashley of Electrical Workers went on
strike last Saturday night
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Letart Falls.
after rejecting a three·year
Home with the Rev. Noel
proposed contract.
Hernnarm officiating. Burial
will be in Cheshire's Gravel
2 DOOR SEDAN
Hill Cem"etery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from
Totally new ... with:
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
• more hip room
Six grandsons - Douglas and
• more leg room
Keith Little, Roy, Dwight and
• more shoulder room
Jon Thompson, and Todd
Thomas - will serve as pall·
• more handling ease
bearers.
ON OLD ST. RT. 13 IN MILLFIELD, OHIO
AT THE OLD COMPANY STORE.
MARSHA HISLER
Moving to Florida will sell collection of
Marsha Hackett Hisler, 29,
several g e neration antique furnitur e and
Naples, Fla., formerly of
misc . old items like flatwall cupboa rd .
DOOR LANDAU
Middleport, died Wednesday
r(letal
ice box, walnut high boy dressers,
afternoon
following
a
rockers , advertising tins. stone jars, hooked
lingering illness.
rugs , organ stool. walnut mantle clock,
• more acceleration
Mrs. Hisler is survived by
·German wall clock, German Statue clock ,
her husband, Jotm Hisler, a
• more trunk space,
oil lamps. and many other mi sc. 1tems . A
year
old
daughter,
Crystal,
23.4 CU . ft.
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
complete line of body shop and garage
• more visibility
Michael Hackett, Ft. Myers,
equipment. tools, etc. like elec. welder. air
Fla.; two brothers, James
compressors. pumps. wheel balancer, tire
and barry , three sisters,
changer . battery charger . metal lathe ,
Elaine, Michele and Monica,
cutting torch, jacks, chain hoist, new chain
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
saw. wrenches, other hand tools , etc . Model
George
Hackett,
Sr.,
49 rifle 22 cal. 410 Newpor! Model CN dble.
Middleport, nwnerous aunts,
barrel shotgun . . Savage 101 si ngle shot
uncles and cousins .
piltol . 22 cal. 1950 Willeys Jeep w -cab and
She was preceded in death
elec. snow blade . 1936 German Adler
by her grandparents, Mr. and
Cabriolet convertible (collector's item).
Mrs. Donadee, Harrisburg,
Pa .
1959 Edsel 4 dr. 1970 Chevrolet Nova . 1974
Funeral services will be
Fiat 128, 4 dr. sedan . 1972 Gremlin. 1969
conducted Friday in Naples.
Cadillac limousine. 1969 Corvette. 1969
2 DOOR HARDTOP .
Cadillac convertible. 1970 Dodg e Swinger . "
ESTELLA G. SEARLES
1961 Ford Falcon 2 dr . sedan, perfect
RUTLAND - Mrs. Estella
condition, only 18,000 miles . 1967 Chevrolet 1
G. Searles, 86, Rutland, died
T wrecker w · Holmes twin boom . 10112 ft.
Wednesday afternoon at the
Frolic truck camper w · jacks (slide in type .
Holzer Med1cal Center
1975 - 750 Yamaha w ·or without sidecar .
following a long illness.
1970 Honda 350 road bike. 1969 - 650 BSA
Mrs. Searles was oom Nov.
chopper . International Cub Cadet 10 hp.
6, 1891 in Kyger, a daughter of
garden
tractor w ·aulo trans ., complete w ·
the late Darius and Nancy
mower.
plows , disc and snow blade.
Phelps Rupe. She was
Nothing
shown
before day of sale. Lunch on ·
married on June 27. 1908 at
New breed. Mustang '79 has been comp letely restyled.
premises.
Sale
held o~tside regardless of
Kyger to Hollis Searles who
to be racy, roomy and quick.
preceded her in death on Oct.
weather , dress accordingly . Terms - cash
29, 1971.
.
or check ~ith - positive I D day of sa le. Not
A· homemaker most of her
responsibll! for accidents .
life,
Mrs. Searles is survived
DOOR HATCHBACK
REMEMBER THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL
by four sons, Dennis,
LISTING.
Rutland; Rolland, Route 2,
Owner - Ted Snyder
Middleport : John
and
Auctioneer- Bill Janes, Phone 557.3411 or
Robert, both of Fostoria; four
557
-3133.
daughters, Mrs. Jasper

'79

PUBLIC ·AUCTION

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8
AT 10:30 O'CLOCK A.M.

Acceleration ... with:
• 5.0 litre (302 CID), with
variable venturi
carburetor, V-8 standard
• 0-55 MPH in 13.9

4

se·c~o~n~d~s~;~~==~

FORD ••• Better Ideas for
the American Road

.THE NEW·BREEDI M..,tang

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

WASHING~N (UPI) - President Carter, defytag
wamlop from tile l!lmgreselooalleadenblp, Ieday W!toed tbe
$10.% billloa pubU~ woru bill and promised be wW do the same
to slmUarly lnlladooary leglaladoa.
,.
House Speaker 'IIlomu O'NeiU Immediately scheduled a
vote for noon EDT to override the veto. Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd said then woald be an afteruoon vote Ia
the Senate If lbe HoUle falles to overrlde.
Both men have waraed Carter apbut taldag action to
shelve the legislation. O'NeiU said today the Honse vote wW be
"pretty close."
Carter summoned reporters to the OVal Office. as
witnesses to his de~lslon to scrub the bill that contains 33 weter
projects - many of which be coDAiders loflatlooary and
wasteful.
""fwo day!l ago I said my concern about Inflation and my
determloatloo lo reduce wasteful government speadlag would
compel me to veto the public worts appropriation," said
carter.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Francis
Admitt ed
Morris,
Racine : Betty
Hamm ons, Reedsville ;
Theodore Van Cooney,
Middleport{ Ruth Mulford,
Pomeroy; Mearlene Arnett,
Pomeroy ; Agnes Brown,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - Mary Roush,
Milton Geary , Charles
Ohlinger, Harry Roush, Jr.,
Jo Ann Roush.

A new American road car. lTD

IN THE

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy ER squad
was called Wednesday at
10:27 a .m. to the Myrtis Kay
Beauty Salon for Thelma
Grueser, a medical patient,
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

':; ;:; ;:; ;:; ;;:::t:::;;:;:=:=::m':; :::':' ' ;' ;';';' j'j'}}';:- r-~A;~a.-n;;-~~:h~:.~

DAN THOMPSON FORD
invites you to see

FOR THE BEST DEALS

New handling. With new suspension, plus rack and pinion steering , you get
l!l1~od cornering control, responsive handling and parkability.

3

A VERY SPECIAL DAY!
FOR

FAMILY OUTING
OF

INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
OPERATING ENGINEERS
-

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

impose and collect fines. " ·
Classes r-eswned today in
the Midview School District
in Lorain County for tbe first
time in more than two weeks
after
teachers
overwhelmingly approved a
new tontract with the board
of education Wednesday .
Midview teachers went on
strike in a contract dispute
Sept . 19. However, classes
continued in the 3,8(J(h&lt;;tudent
school system.
The contract, retroactive to
last Jan. 1, calls for a base
salary of $9,800 this year with
an increase to $10,300 next
year. If also includes a no·
. reprisal clause and a binding
arbitration.
Meanwhile, school strikes
continued in Wellington,
T .winsburg, Logan,
Painesville Township and the
Columbus
suburb
of
Whitehall .
Cleveland School Board
President John Gallagher
said he was ·.:surprised" by
the unions' vote and· declared
schools would be open today
for staff members, but not for
students. He said the board
intended to have students
report Monday.
Gallagher disclosed that
the offer rejected by the
unions proposed an 8 percent
wage hike now and an
additional 6 percent if
Cleveland voters approve a
proposed $11 million tax levy
on the Nov. 7 ballot.
But Clevelanders rejected
two other school levies

MASON FURNITURE

LOCAL No. 132 A. B. &amp; C.
"Your Che~y Deafer"

United Presalotematlooal
Striking school employees
in Cleveland today defied ' a
judge's order to return to
work and many principals
who attempted to open
schools found doors locked.
Meanwhile, a strike in the
Mldview School District in
Lorain County ended today
following ratification of a new
contract by teacliers.
Cleveland Public School
teachers
and
support
personnel were urged to
continue their 4-week-old
strike today despite a court
order to return to work.
The employees, who
rejected a tentative contract
settlement with the city
school board Wednesday by
about a 66-40 percent margin,
were told by James O'Meara ,
leader
of
the
Unity
· Committee, a coalition of
school unions, to "stay on the
picket lines."
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Harry A. Hanna,
who issued the back-to-work
order, warned the strikers
late Wednesday he would
level heavy individual fines
against them if the order was
ignored.
"! have no intention of
turning our city into a
Bridgeport, Conn.," said
Hanna, referring to the
jailing of teachers In that city
who refused to work without a
contract. "But if you
(strikers) persist, you will be
subject to fines. It woUld be a
very simple thing for me to

ord~~

SHOP

50

ONLY

Strikers defy

adve rsel y affected by a final
ac tion to issue, deny, modify ,

up.

NOW

Bernice Bede Osol

eac h proposed action is
stated. Anyone aggrieved or

LEVI'S BIG BELLS

ON DISPLAY NOW

ASTRO•GRAPH

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 5, 1978

dale of each f inlll act ion Is
slated . The issuBnce date ·ot

LEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DIS TRICT
&lt;101 5, 12 . 19 . 3t c

i

-

For Thuradoy, Oct . I

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE

.

PARK RESERVED FOR FULL DAY
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8th
CAMDEN PARK NOW CLOSED FOR 1978 SEASO.N

~. ALL

ARE WELCOME
TO A REVIVAL

·New performance. Your pick of four spiriteo power teams . The sporty tloor
shift 4-speed manual transmission and 2.3 litre engine are standard . Opt1onal
·power teams are: 2 ..8 litre V-6 with 3·speed SelectShift and 4-speed manual,
5.0 litre (302 CID) V·B with 4-speed manual overdrive and Se lectShlft, and
the new 2.3 litre Turbocharged engine with 4-speed manua l transmission.

AT TH

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST

COME IN AND SEE THE CLASS OF '79
OCT. 6 &amp; 7 AT DAN THOMPSON FORD INC.

Glen Wheeler, Evangelist

OCTOBER 8 THRU OCTOBER~ 13

DA·N THOMPSON FORD

7:30P.M.

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill, General Manager, for a Good Deal
on a New or Used Vehicle.
'
.
992-2196
MIDD' EPORT, O .
Open Til17 P . M. ,EKcept Thursday &amp; Saturday tiiS:?O. Closed Sunday .

PLEASE COME!
/

�' Daily Sentinel, J¥'iluw..•"h , •..-ura tctvy, v.,
10-The

.~.nursday,

~

Oct. 5, 1978

II - The Datly Senl111e l, M•tldlcport-Pomcr~&gt;)',

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES

NO HUNTING or tresP&lt;Jntng on
my property w tlhout perrms

ston Judy McGraw ,
1:; wuntsor Uudt:'r

150

I 25
100

GUN SHOOT Hoctne Gvn Club.
Every Sunday l pm ~octo r y
choke guns only .

""

3 75
'"

GUN SHOOT Racme Volunteer
Ftre Dept hery Solu£day b 30

Ca!ih
100

I d11y
l ililys
Jtlays
6Wtys

Cllarl&lt;(t!

J OO

pm at the.r buddtng m Soshon

EcH:h wurd ovt&gt;r tht• llllltUnwn JS
wo r~ LS 4 t t' lll:s i)(r W\.11 d per day
Atb rUiliiUI!i uthct limn lu iiSClUtiVt'

WI)~

wtll be ehargetl at tht' I da)

Factory c~o~k ~ g~n~s on ~y _ . _
FO~

'TOUR comple te housmg
remodeling , const ruc lton and
mallll onence gtve J H ~ a try
Referen ce
o vod obl e
prtces
Ph one
Reasenable

ratl'

lu memury, Ctu d ur Thaulc;

tu tti

6 n:nt.s pt-r "'urc.l, $3 00
Ciilih 111 itt.IVijll\,:c

Ol.ltt uary
IIWl ll llWII

9rn 5 191

Mobile Hom•• Sl:II!!S cmtl Yom.l s.a les
arc lll'l'epled only w1t11 l'CI!&gt;h Wllh
order 25 L'C n~·hurgc fo1 ads llll rvUl g Uox Num
In Dan· of Tl'll' St•n tinel

The PuiJhsher reservcs the nghl
to cthl ur reJt!Cl i:UlY ;uh; i.lccml!d obJl'lllull&lt;.il Tile Pubhshcl will nul tw
n:spuns1lllc for murl' limn one Ult'ur
rcl t mSt·rtloll
Phone 99'l·21;)6

YAR D SALI: Fndoy only 8 S 1
rnde from Ches l er Br 1dge Rt
14!j Clo thes . coot s cu rtam s,
wnnger washer , odds and
ends_ sew1ng m~chm e
CHIP
WOOD
Pole s m a x
diame ter 10 on larges t end
$8 SO per ton Bundl ed sl ob ,
$6 50 per ton Oelrvered to
Oh1o Po lle t Co Ht 1, Pomeroy

992 2b89
TIM St H POMt:HOY
duc ts Top pn ce
sow 11mber Co li
Ken t Hanby , 1 446

NOTICE

----------

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
M 0 ullll)'
•
Noon on Sat LJI da}

OLD COINS po cke t watches
class nngs, weddmg bands ,
d mmonds Gold or s1lve r Cal l
Roger Wams ley . 742 2331

lP M
~fur c pul.JIJUI~Iilll

Sunda)
~

p M

fl H.li:l)' &lt;l fl l'rti\JOII

SKATE ·A · WAY announces BACK
TO SCHOOL PARTY Sot
O ct
7th . Ra ces pm es balloons
Open Wed Fn Sat e11enmgs
7 30 to 10 00 A vodob le lo r
pr ivate por11es M an , lues ,
Thur s even1ngs Sot and Su n
af ter no on
985 3929
or

985 9996
PARASO L BOUT IQUE
Beau ty
Solo n n ext to Skate-a-w ay
Hol ler R1nk announces October
SpeCial
,
Perma n en ts 10'1. off Operators
San dra Kerns , Cryst al Rayburn
Phone 985 414 b.

IC&amp;CCU
REGISTERED
NURSES
Pleasant Valley
. ~Qpital
YaiR Drive

I AM o pr~nc 1pl e looktng for gas
and o il leases 1n t he Rut land
area Hove dnl ler and money
_.5=o_1 1aft e r 6 pm b09 829 7:..?~~ ~

FASHION

BEAUTY

Shop

hos

employ ed a new ope rate r
Beverly B1 shop advan ced h01r
styling . Open b day s o week
Ga ll 992 -2702 for appomtment
Ehzobe th Vaughan , Owner

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OMIO
ESTATE OF GEA
TRUDE
E.
DRAKE ,
DECEASED
Case No . 22483
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 29, 1978, m
the Meigs Co unt y Probate
Co urt, Cese No . 22,483 , Bur l

Drake , Route 1. Vinton. Ohio

45686 was appointed Executor

of the state of Gertrude E
Drake , deceased, late of
Route 1, Vinton , Ohio 45686.

AVO N YOU can g o t o work when
th e ktds go to sc hoo l Sel l
A von You se t y our ow n hours
so yo u con be home when th e
k1ds ge t home And the harder
you wo rk , th e more you earn
Ca ll today , A nn Thomas , A von
D• stmt Manager, 742-235 4

KITTENS · FREE 992 2520

BIHD DOG pupp1es Mo th er !S
re'g 1stered 8nttony Spon1 el ,
father lnsh Setter 992 -5072 fer

bpm

FHIGIOAIHE Qvocodo relngerotor
17 cu ft 992 7 126 .

(10 ) 5, 12, 19, 31c
HOOF HO LLOW Horses Buy , se ll
t rade or tram New and used
sadd les Huth Reeves, Albany

:--::-

RISIN G STAR Kennels Boarding
a nd groom in g , all breeds
Chesh1 re . 307 -0292 or 367·0 106
LOV ABLE WHITE snow dnft great
PYRENEES
Pu pp 1es
Phone
1-bl4·667-383B
ONE GREAT Dane App rox lSO
lb Mal e Srown . Good coon

dog 985-4333.
RI:::GISTE RED BO STON Bull Terrie r .
mal e , 9 m ont hs old Hod all
shot s. Coli
Mr s
Su llivan

1977

front

ask

for

S~ECIAL FREE

GREASE JOB
Absolutely frH with
alignment
and
"balance.
Bring In
Coupon and Receive
1

2.00 OFF

on alignment
Special
Price
Explr"
Oct. 7, 1971

AKC

reg •stered $65 30A 882-3242

SPYOER ,

PLYMOU TH

STATION

wagon $350 Car l Stdl -400
Rutland St . Middleport Oh10

---·
1963 NOVA

-

CHEVY II 6 cy l , -4-

door 2 new snow tires new
upholstery . 50 ,000 ac tual m1l es .

Coll949-2728 oiler 6 pm
197-4 PINTO. IN very good condt·
t1on Has hod gas to nk modif 1ed
to me et Federal standar ds . Call
9Q1-508S afte r 5
cy l rodto l t 1re1 . new battery
and e)jhoust syslll' m . $1200
Call 992 -3757 oher 5pm

·-·----·

1975 CA DILLAC ELDORA DO . Full

power and A .C AM FM rod1o ,
power seats Coll 992 7467.

PQWer and air

AM -FM rod•o

~~nJ.ec tt~n..: ~~9'!2· 7~~.
1972 BU IC K . RIVIERA
Low
m1feoge . Dayt,1me
1\fter 5 'W:t-5363

...

.~,.._,.......,.

H

- ·--- ---

GIGANTIC TH RH
Fa mily Yard
Sa l e Thur s and Fr t., Oc t 5 &amp; b
10-? Ch1ldren s and adult 's
clothmg , mcl ud.ng good 1eons
and coot s Lo d1 es ' go ad nurs es
un.form s. Glo· l::tt e outf 1t wt th
top shoes CB bo se ant enna
G 1rl s -20 m mo tocross b1ke ,
Vorm 1t 22 250 n i le mchJdmg o tt
r e lood1ng eq u 1pm ent 100 lb
we •gh ts. bed spread s lamps
Turn at top of Ha rt ford H1ll l 1r st
hou se on lef t

SAL£ HAHLIS Fi nk 's, SR 248. Bet
ween Chesler a nd Long Bo t
tam Oct. b &amp; 7 . 10 -.11 Hao..,er
upn ght sweepe r . liv1ngroom
cho1r , Warm
Mornmg gas
heat er , goss1p benc h. and

~ ~~y m~~.! t em~--­
YAR D SA L!::: Thurs . F r~ Sa t 10 4
Oct 5, b and 7 th . Women 's,
ch 1ld ren s. mens clot hmg toys
l amp s,
applian ces , d 1 s h e~
cam era bo ok s . knick knack s
plent y of mis e Lor ge yellow
hou se across
fo rm Rocm e
G rad e Sc hool. Roc m e , Oh10
FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole Sotur
day
Oct
7
q.-, Mens
women 's bo ys . g•rl s' inlont\
and e )( tra s1ze clot h1 ng . baby
so me lurmture
equipmep t
Worl d Rook Encycl o ped•a . fans
curlo 1ns . odd s and ends At
Eldon Krau ter's on 124 1n'
Ract ne , nex t at E:ber s Gulf
Hom cancels

ceramiCs:c__ _ , . - - - , - - YARD SA L!::: at Mmersv1 ll o Turn
lelt at A sh land Pla nt Fn and
So t
Motern1ty , ktd s, other
1lems, Avon bott l es

997-2284 .

1?7 ) FO~O 4·dr . SW., auto new
battery, good t ~res ,
good
m':fChoniciJI condi ti on
$550
.
- Coii992·708ColterSpm
..

___.,.._ __

-- ' -. -

I630.
-WV-J04-458·
-----·-. . ... -.
- -!'Ji¥8::: -~:..- _-~ ::t:t::si~
DEALER 'S AIJ(TI ON . Pub Pc tn ·
v1ted Frtdoy , Cc t b 1 Pm t tl ?
New mer chandise sold ir quon
'•tv ot O h1o R•ver Au ction, 537
H1gh St .. Miidl,rort Ohio.
flt'gulor sale , lndyo on d S?t .

!l •~h~~-ot _7 _pm..: .

f

We are currefttly maktng
appotntments for senior
poJ"tra•ts .
use tradl·
tional seHings and al so
feature
outdoor
por ·

anytime.

Phone 985· 3806
Jack Ginther 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

ROGER HYSEll

Autp &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
•
Repair
Pho.oe 992-5682
4-30-ttc

we

tra•tur:e.

Call Us TOday

Tlle Photo Place
I Bob Hoeflich)
109 Hogh St.

Pomeroy'

Chesser, Ohio
10·30-c

BoX 3

BlOwn Insulation
JIM' KEESEE

SERVICE

Cellulosic (wood· fiber!
Thermal insulation

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

5ave30 pet. to so pet.
on huting cost
Experience and
Aully insured
F~" Est.
Call992-2772
.8-10-1/no. (Pd.)

/

EA5Y FOI.l.OW5 SUIT A

8-2·1 mo .

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

0.

WI LL SHUP and r efln•s h furn tture
See Ann Leomond by Wagner
Ho rdwo• e Ro cm e

F~W MOM~i'JTS

LATE! ill~

J&amp;L

TR UMPET FOR so le 304 882 2755
1973 f OHO F 100 p •c"'-up Powe1
steenng , auto 1nS~ Iot ed top
per $2000 Cor 1101fer $500
94t,l 2880

PAINTS

.....-

See
Denver Kapple
At

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

IIMIII..., to the

1976 NASH UA 14 I( bS 3 bedroom
I ', bo th l)nderp1nnmg $1500
and ass um e lo on 949 2683 o r
1343 3311
1470 Amherst 50)( 12 2 Elf(
1970 C h arn~1on bOx 12 2 BR
I 'Jb 5 Genera l bOx 12 2 BR
19btl PMC S:lx 122 BR
1955 Pra 1ne Schooner 2BxH 1 BR
1973 f.l oyal Emha ss y b tl)( 14 3 BH
1954 Star SOx 10 2 l:!H
1973 Storb0Kl4 7 8R
1 9~ Stor60xl2 2 l:!R
19 /0 Sy f.to bOx 12 '1 BR
1'tot! V 1l loges bOll: 12 '1. SR
l9b4 Wmd sor 5 I x 10 2 BR
19/0 Ktrkwood 12)( 00 3 BH

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one Ieber to each square, to form
four ordtnary words

e l ec tn c l u rm shed a•r cond l·
t lon ed wa sher and d•yer Al so
2
l o ts
1n
Har r 1son v dl e
142 1826

bO STAR 2 bedroom
~ o • se d fron t k1tch en Co n re
ma •n on l o t Me •gs Sc hoo l
D 1s tr 1C f ,
H arr~sanv1l l e
'142-3122
&gt;1

..

-c

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

WANHD TO rent garag e Prefer
Gra .... el H1 ll a r ea. Mtddle port

992 3273

HWOOD

BOWERS

REPAIR

WILL d o roofing construcfl o n ,
plumbing and heo tmg No 10 b
too Iorge or too small Phon e
742-2348
. .
.
HOWERY
AND
MARTIN
h ·
co votmg , se ptic
syste m s,
dozer backhoe , dump t ruc k ,
limestone
grove l
blacktop
' po vm g Ht 143 Phone I (bl4 )
b9U 7331
BArHRoOMS - A ND - K~hens

SE:WING MACHINE Rep01rs, ser.
v•ce , a ll makes , 992 22ll4 The
Fo brt c
Shop
Po m eroy
Authonzed Stnger So les and
- Service We sharpen Sc iSSOr&lt;;

remodel ed cerom 1c td e, plum
bmg carpen try , and general
mom teno nc e
13 year s ex
pe rll:!nce 992·3085
- - -- - - · - · ~ - · - - •
PULUNS t; XCAVATING Complete
ne 992 2478
Se rv1 ce Pho
____
~ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

EXCAVATING , dozer , lo ade r and
backh oe wo rk dump tr u( k s
and lo boys fo r h~re w 1ll haul
ft ll d1rl to sari lim es tone and
grovel Call Sob or Roger Jeffe rs. rloy phone 992·7089 , n1ght
_£~one_!9=._~ s25 or 992 5232

HHVES TRADING Post 1-'age..,tlle
Grocef!es dry goods hard
wore . feed , lock sho'p Speci a l
?5_U~_. ~~-~OiJ f~~ · _$_! 8~-- _ _
AUTOM081Lf INSURANCE been
cance lled? l os t you r operators
l1cense? Phone 991-21.43

~XCAVATING ,

-- - - - - - - - --

1967 HOUSl TRAILER 12 &lt; 60 All

~w(;•.p~~ -

Pomeroy, 0 .
· 3-15-llc ·

10

I SCOUF

Armstrong Carpeting

IF 'lt:\)

AC.'{).JIC. I I'D

CYTIMIST,
WH'I D1W'T
'/01.1 BU'i A
BI.\Jt;;f?IRD GF

~!?V;:;!Z HAY~

ELLIOTT
.. APPUANCE II

'IOU

220 E. Main SlrHt,
Pomeroy,O,
Ca 11992-7013
For Free Estimates
9-21 -lmo.

Swee pers toas ters, 1rons, all
small appliances lawn m owe r ,
nex t to Stat e H•ghwoy Garage
on Rou te 7. Phone (614 ) 985 -

TWO SbO 13 fac tory w hee l s an d
t 1res S65 98 5-3862 Charl es
Chafl ee

----------

19b.4 CHI:VROLH PICKUP 19b7
Bonnevt lle Po ntiac 1971 Elect ro
Bu1 ck Call 992 -320 1 afte r 5 pm .

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

NEW G IBSO N 10 000 BTU otr co n
d1trone r On ly used 2 mont hs
992 6350

do:zer, backhoe
and dttcher . Ch arl es R. Hotft eld
Bock
Hoe
Serv1ce ,
Rutland . Oh1o Phon e "/42 -2008

- ---1972 CHE VROLET

VA N.

l ong

w hee l bo se $1500 Co lt aft e r 5

~

7
742·311___,
--____ -

-- -

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your

water with Co-op wale~
softener, Model UC-SVI.
Now Only ,

3 oq,95

Let us test your water
Free

Phone

_______ _

FOR RENT 3 mob1le home s tar
season I sha dy acre. wa ter
furn 1shed Or fo r sole SJO,OOO
50 m1les from Sa rasota ond Ft
Myers and 9 m1l es fr om Arco d to
Wolt e r
Mes si e r
1 813 494 -2857 Noc.oll ect ca ll s '

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

SHAR t AP T hvmg for elderly o nly
m
Pomeroy
ova 1la bl e m
N ovember eve rythmg furn1 sh
ed except medtca t1on S 175 per
month cove r s all. Wnte Anno
Homes. 957 l ock bou rn e' Rd

Columb u&gt; OH 43206 Coli col
lec t 1-253-548 1.
TW O 8EDHOOM . ktt chen furn1 sh
ed . op t Coli l;lelore B om

q92-2288
HO USI::: FOR ren t Iorge house 1n
e)(ce llent cond •llon m Letart
~oil s , Ohio
Refe rences and
depos1 t r eq u•red For mf o rmoll o n . con ta cf ~r e d W Crow
Day time 992 -2692
Evenmgs

992-2562

Phone992-2181 ·

Rt::GISTC RED OUROC boor Bo rn
July 197b Out stondmg hog
Average hiler SI Ze Prtce $300
Phone b14·bt;l7 -3493 aft er 5 30

HOME SITE $ for sa le, 1 acre end
up M1ddleporl near Rutland
Coll992 7481 '

YOUR CHOICE
Buy th ese two ho m es tor

the pric e ot one or spltt
them u p . Owner says se ll!
Make u s an after

No. 1. You w i ll have to see

tht s

2 bedroom

home

to

be l1 cve the pr i ce. Fea tur es

a la rg e liv1ng room w new
ca rpe tmg , ex tra lar ge din
ing room . Two n ice l o t s
w tth plenty of shade . N ow
r e nting for ex tra INCOME!

No 2 12x60 Elcona mobile
home co m p letely furni shed
on a nt ce y. a ir condtto n
ed, ce m enl pa ti o an d
driveway .

Janice I. Gettles,
Realtor
Roberta HuH man
Branch Mar. 698-6300
AssoclatesL
Tom Bozlcevic
669-5063
Kennellt Crabtree
. 698-6196

pm
LUMP HOUSt coo l $35 per ton
del.vered 992 712b,
LU-MP COAL

a nd stoker

cool

742 2183

---------

'·-

,.

BEDROOM~ - . Oldei
hom e, some remodeling,

3

beautiful view of the river,
must

see

to

appreciate.

Price $12,500.

'92

30

White-Wall Co-Op

Custom

Po~

Prices includes
Fed. Tax
.
ldoes'nol include
sales taJt or

balancing)
FULLY
GUARANTEED

Other sltes
COITI(Ninbly
priced .

Pome"' Landmark
' Jlck W. Carsey, Moor. II
PhoMffl-21•1

MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom , remodeled,
carpeting, double lot,
garden spot. spring water,
nice quiet street. Price
$27,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story,
3 bedrooms, older home,
cafPl!led, fully equ ipped
kitchen , full basement,
wood burner, family room,
alum . siding, new roof,
storm windows, double lot,
owner will help finance
down payment or will take
a newer 3 bedroom trailer
as down payment. Well
wort~ the price of $35,000.
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804 w. Main
Pomeroy
992-22tl'
After Hours
)
Ca 11992-1133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Bra.,ch

Manager

"K l X I

J"

New or R_epair
Gutters and
·Downspouts

V A -FHA , 30 yr hnoncmg , also
r e fmoncing . Ireland Mortgage
77 E State, Athen s, p hon e (bl4 )

592 3051
THREE BEDROOM frame home m

Moddle porl. Call '192-3457 .
FIVE ' ROOM house and both,
r em odel ed ful ly ccrpeted May
be seen aft er 3 pm . Phone

$30,000 00.
2 STORY 3 bedroom
home, l'h baths, good
neighborhood
in good

repair . Many features.
Asking $20,000.00.
OWNER NEEDS SALE And will help finance· the
Ranch
type
home,
basement, 3 bedrooms, 2
lois, carpeling , separate
utility .
Call
foday,
S27,300 00.
CHEAP - $9,000 will buy
lhls home In Pomeroy Lots
of yard and storage space.
IN THE COUNTRYBeautiful ly fneced I a cre,
stream , very nice 12x60
mobile home, In excellent
condition, .fully equipped
and furnished . Ready to
move
into.
ONLY
$16,500.00.
70 ACRE FARM - Barn ,
house, other buildings .
Only $33,500.
THE HOME OF REAL
ESTATE
IN
MEIGS
COUNTY.
WE- HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS AND ACCESS
TO ALL TYPES OF
FINANCING. LIST WITH

us.

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

lJJ.

'192-39.::33:.:·_ _ __ _ __
FARM FOR sole Hause 2 barns
trailer . Lorge pond 10 acres or
82 ocres . 742 25b6 .
-~~~~~'-------

NEW THREE bedroom home, rec
room, 'ireplace. Iorge deck .
goroge, bolement , one and o
ha lf baths. Phone l ee Construe·
ti o n
992 -345 4 ,
weekends

1-614-4-46-9568

--- - - - -

HOUSE IN M inenv•lle. Alummum
sid ing New ly carpeted. Portly
furn1 shed 4 bedroom , hvmg
room . kitchen . uti lit y ro om
both , ni ce basement Only ask -~ng $17 . ~-'1:!~5~2_3:.;._ __
HOU SE IN Pome roy. Lorge lot.
Some recen t r emodeling, new
ca r p et , central heottng, util1ty
"' room , full basem e nt 2 pa r·
ches . Furni shed or unlurn ts hed.

992 7074
1'J. x bS CASTLE: MOBILE home w1th
) 2 11: 30 built -on. 1 c ere lot
Al!:o,
rt&gt;ol"'' hou$e, l'•acre.

a

7-4?.-2068 .

PRI CE Rf.UUCtD •.m I year oiJ all
e lec l ric . 'l hedroom home with
som e
appl ian ces ' mcluded

9-49-2424

Jumbles ADULT

I Answer

LINEN

PONCHO

IN FANT

What you have to take mto cons ideratiOn
these days when you have your ttres pumped

- ~~~~~~--:--------:-----------.

The latest JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK ItO aM JUMBLE
BOOK .¥11 Available for S1 35 EACH, postpaid from Jumble c/o this
newspaper, P0 Box 34, Norwood, N J 07648 Mak.e checks p8yabte to
_,
Newspaperbooks

~MWtd

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
Z Kazan
by

8-20-1 mo. I Pd.)

3 "Never - to

1 Assatl
I Watch

know . ":
Donne
4 Recipe item
5 lOth U.S .
=~''?Michigan city
president

BRADFORD , Auct1oneer , Com p le te Service Phone 949· 2487
o r 949 2000 Rac•ne O ht o, Crill
Bradford

settmg
Mournful
verse

6 " The - knows
himself ~o be
Yesterday's Answer
lli Youngster
a fool" :
20 Doctrinal
32 Electronic
16 L, in the
Shakespeare
SpaniSh
7 Pilfer
suffix
lookout
Thursda y, Oct. 5
alphabet
8 Old Insh robe 21 - glance
33 Italian
22 Neighbor
river
1 t - - - -- - - - - -ll7 In medias- 9 SecrelB Non-paying
tariat, e.g.
of Fr.
34 Perfonner
24 Particle m 35 Mussolini
occupation
10 Soviet
False friend
news agency
,. a cyclotron 37 - smashe!
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
25 Director's 31! Hawaii 's
---------~-....::,_:.:..:..__ _;_,....:.:= -- "With - to- 14 Get nd of
ward
18 Egyptian
word
bird \
26 Sununer,
39 Unoriginal
none . . " :
Christians
in Caen
n Outlaw r - - - - - - - - - - , diamond . He is slightly disLincoln
19 British
26 Kneecap
42 MacGraw
appointed when the ace
~--~~z7Domg
co~r
NOR 'Ill
lU .:&gt;-A
doesn 't appear, but he wlll
• Q 10 9 7 4
the town'
still ma ke his contract b y
• K 52
Z9 Clan_~nbt&gt;Jb~l--+---i-+-means of what is called, 1 1a
t K 8 43
30 Put up,
loser
on loser play."
•s
in poker
He ruffs his last club ,
WEST
EAST
leads dwnmy's king of dia·
,__..--, 31 Brenda
• 53
---monds and discards a heart.
or Bart
• Q84
• AJ 97
That heart was going to be
• Q J 10 7
t A 9 52
r'")-~ 33 Do sums
a
loser in any case. Now
•Q9873
• K J 106
38 Before
poor East is on lead. If Ge
SOUTH
leads a heart it establishes
i"t:.!~ 37 Babylonian
•
AKJ86
2
dummy's
kmg . If he leads a
de tty
• 10 6 3
club, South ruffs in dummy
tO Certain
• 6
wliile chucking a second
social
• A 42
heart .
Either way all the defense
Vulnerable : East-West
gets will be two diamond
tricks and one heart.
Dealer : South

BRIDGE

c hen,
ba sement, new
c arpeting , in excel l ent
condition , level yard .

•

Pomeroy Landmark
9 ... Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

!Iii,

Now a rrange the Circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as s ug
gested by th e above ca rtoon

up- INFLATION

IT'S B-8 - BROKE ,
I GUESS ••· 1-1
FEEL TERRIBLE --·

E.

NEW LISTING Ex ·
cellent location In Mid:
dleport ,
Ranch,
3
bedrooms, equipped kit -

TWO Bt:DHOOM troller 992 2530
~ f..!_er _5 R~ -

Yec:te rd ay s

ORPHAN ANNIE-CRIES OF THE WOUtmED

8; Match Game

10.
•
9·JC&gt;-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affa ir 10.
10 :1)()----Card Sharks 3, 1S; Consumer Buyllne 4,
Bewitched 6; All In The Family 8, 10; Dat ing Game
13.
10 31&gt;-Jeopardy 3,-4,15; Andy Griffith 6; Pri ce Is Rig ht
8, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 ·00---High Rollers 3,4,15; Ha ppy Days 6.13; Elec . Co.
20.
11 31&gt;-Wheel of Forlune 3,4,15; Fam ily Feud 6, 13.
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 ·5.1-C BS News 8; House Ca ll 10
12 :oo---News 4,6, 10; Ameri ca Alive 15; Youn g &amp; the
Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13 .
12 :3D-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Bob Brjun 4, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
1.00---1-lo llywood Squares 3, All My Ch&gt;l dren 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; th e Rest l ess 10, Not For Wom en
Only 15.
1·31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Tu rns
8, 10.
Life To Live 6, 13.
2
2:31&gt;-Doctors 3,4,15 : Guiding Light 8.10 .
3 00---Another World 3,4, 15; Baseball P lay -Off 6, 13.
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3:3D-Mash 8, Joker ' s Wild 10; You Bet Your Life 20
4:00---Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Pl anet s 4;
Hollywood Squares 15; Porky Pig &amp; Fnen ds 8,
Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10.
4:31&gt;-L illle Rasca ls 3; Gilligan' s Is 4,8, Brady Bunch
10; Petticoat Juncflon 15.
s 00---Voyage to the Bottom of th e Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; M1s!e r Roggers' Neigh
borhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Brady
Bunch 15.
5:31&gt;-Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lec. Co. 20 ,33; Mary Tyle r
Moore 10; Odd Couple 15
6 00---News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, IS, Zoom 20,33
6·31&gt;-NBC News3 ,4,15 ; ABC News 13 , Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Ove r Easy 20
7:1)()----Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; New lywed Game
6,13; Muppet Show 8; News 10; Love, American
Style 15, Consumer Survival Kit 20. Ins ight 33 .
7·31&gt;-Hee Haw Honeys3; Dating c;;ame4: $1.98 BeauJy
Show6; Family Feud 10; Bonker s 8, $100,000 Name
That Tune 13, Pop Goes The Country 15 ; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33 .
8.00---Waverly Wonders 3,4, 15; Baseba ll Play -Off 6. 13:
Wonder Woman 8, 10; Wa s hington Wee k In Rev iew
20,33
8 31&gt;-Who's Watch ing th e Kids 3, 4,15, Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9·01&gt;-Rockford Files 3,4, 15, Incredible Hulk 8,10;
Congressional Outlook 20,33 .
9·Jo-Turnabou t 20; Great Performances 33 .
10 01&gt;-Eddie Capra M y• ter les 3,4, 15. Flying High 8, 10.
News 20
10 31&gt;-Monty Python' s Flying CirCUS 20 .
11 01&gt;-News 3.4,8,10 ,1 5. Dick Cavett 20 . .
11 : 15- News 6,1 3; 11 30- J oh nn y Carson 3.4, 15,
Gunsmoke 8; Movie "The Valley o f Gw angl " 10.
11 45---Baretta 13 , Movie " Mo rgan t he Pirate " 6;
12 · 00-Monty Pylhon 33.
'
12 55--Ironside 13; 1 01&gt;-Midnlght Spec ial 3,4,15:
Movie " Five Million Years to Earth" 10.
1· 55--News 13; 2: 3D-News 3; 3:oo---Movle" Journey to
Sh iloh" il, 4·45---Movle "House of Cards" 3.

'1,;;;~ 13 Meeting
~
places

MAIN ...,illii.iiliiiiolio. .
POMEROY, O.

992 5434

-·

!5&gt;U~'T5

INIO TEARS.

I I I J

T.lil l.f. O R i 'IiI., \ '-'Nif

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING

3825 .

6

3 AND 4 RM furm shed and un·'

- _'18:; 2:i "-'---

-AND

Print answer here:

CHIMNEY FIRES or e no t un 1 HO 'w'e
yours cl ea ned the d ustless way
The
Chtm ney
Sweep ,

COUN TRY MOBIL!:= Hom e Park
~ ou t e 33 , nor th ol Pomero y
La~ ge ~o l s £ oil :!_92!___4___7_9 -~o pt s

THE 15055 15 'UPSET"

IDAPRONt

Hogan ' s Heroes

..

oo--one

0

J I I

.

, generous?

'/

tLOOSAN f

HAPPINeSS'?

61 4-373-605"1

fu r n1shed

I I I

'""''Tr::r&gt;'

AWLK~'IW

W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Ot:WALT RADIAL orm sow w 1th
man y attachment s Hondo 90

II I

I TUBOA
IF I 'D Kt-JOWfJ
YOO 'IJ~~ 9JCH

Whywaslso
~

(Answers tomorrow)

1' , A CRE 1'J )( bO mob1 le home
nea r Oex ler 992 58513

Dyring Our Seasonal
Closeout.
Outside White
Reel roof paint

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service
Ph. 992-2848

PT PltASANT ' w VA

DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!

Vt\ITH·NELSOM

""OTORS, INC.

B&amp;S MO BIL ~ HOMlSAU5

1969 12

MOORE'S

Emergen'y One 6 ;

8· 30---Mork &amp; M indy 6,13. 9: 00--Qulncy 3,-4, 15; Three' s
Company 6, 13: Pete Seeger &amp; Arlo Guthrie In
Concert 33; Mayor of Casterbrldge 20.
9:30---Taxl 6,13 .
10:00-WEB 3,4, IS ; Barney Miller 6,13: Hawaii Flve-0
8, 10; News 20.
10:3D-Soap 6, 13; You Bet Your Life 20
11 ·00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias,
_Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 ,
Gunsmoke 8 ; ABC News 33 ; Movie "Somewhere I' ll
F ind You " 10.
12 .4D-SWAT 6, 13, 1.01)---Tomorrow 3,4
1 :50--News 13.

'i1 ~~~'1.\.ft fi;}1} W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~~ ""
by Henrt Arnold and Bob Lee

For The Best
Price In Town

Sa~7VIce

A78x13
FOR SA LE o r r ent MF 7 11 Sktd
Sleer loade r . MF 100 two row
chopp er AC Glean er combine
4 row ' N ew Ideo I row pick e r .
Shmn 's Tra ct or So l e~. leon

HEAT

'¥• mile off Rl. 7 by-pass on
St. Rl. 1141oward Rutland,

YARD SALE Oc t I 2. 13 , 14 Fur niture
cl ot h•ng, w1gs and
cosmeti cs Ann Sauvage , Du sky
_ -~ t....: Sy~c_u~e -~'=!__ - _____ _
YAHO SA LE near Pomeroy How lmg All ey Fn TV stereo ,
cloth 1ng. pomt s and bru shes,

ReSidential and commer·

for estimate. 24
Hour · Service. Any day,

GARAGE

- - - -- Bak e Sol e at

1974 PINTO LIGHT bluo Auto. 4

-1977-------·- --CADILLAC ELDORADO Full

~A

•

YARO S'ALE across s-treet fr~m
V1sto . Tuppers Pl oms , clothmg ,
d 1shes and mt sc . Oc t 5, 6 7
M•ldred 81 sse ll apd Ban n 1e
Thoma s

engtne L1kebrond new w 1th
every th ing $4 500 742 -2826

1969

-

f-=I VE FAMILY Ya r d So le Oct 5-b .
Mo xm e M 1choel. La ure l Cl•fl
Rd 8o r dt shes , some A von
boules , wh at no t l o ts of n1 ce
thmg s In case o f rom wil l be on
~ rc h __
_
_

Gt: flM A N POLICE dog. m1 Ked
Mu st be go ne by ~n d oy
Housebroken 2 111 year s o ld
Used to cttent•on 84 3 7223

experienced

- -

FIREWOOD $30 pe t !ruck load
7 4_2 - ~J~q .c.,._e~m~ s- ___ ~

9B5-3909

-

304-863-8500
APRICOT
POODLE

-

replies

H"lgh SchocJI
SENIORS

cial . Co~ll

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mill Street just behind
Tony"s tarry Out.
Open Saturday 10·4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon lo 3 p.m .
. 8-31 -1 mo.

WA TER WE LL d n l hng Wtlllam T
Gronl 742 -2H7Y
- - · · - ·

19bij ~ORO '' ton p1ckup short
bed 6 cy l w1th toppe r Call
992-5117 aft er S pm

YA RD SA LE Thu rsday and Fndoy
5th gnd 6th of O ctober 9-?
Roger Kerr res 1dence I m1le up
N ew Hope Hd a cr oss fro m Paul
Kerr res1dence Toke h t rood
to left past Ches te r hre Stot 1on
gom g toward Rt 248 Ant1qu e
mantel clock, cloth es, kni ck k nocks. wh1te bathtub s1 nk
and todet , gen1une turqu1 se
1ewel ry
etc
Fo ll ow s1gns

Employer

Spin S.r.nce
(Reg.) $4.50
With Alignment U .SO
Bubble S.lance ·
(Reg.) $2.50
with alignment u .so
II you want an

-

'

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

992 2995

l 1 2 m1les wes t of Cheste r . CR
25 Ch1no cloth es bedspr eads ,
w atch es , co f 1ewelry,
lee~ok er d 1sh es t oys and lo ts
more 985 -3ff/5

Opportunity

-

-

All

'

CHEAPI

LI KE NEW Hondo gu 1tor and ca se ,
eK tra set of st r. ngs and p1cks
1ncluded Maytag Coppe rt o ne
Porto potr w o hser and drye r
Ve ry good co nd111 on se ll as
Ca ll
aft er 5 00
pm
se t

- ------ ._ -- --YARD SAl t , bake sole Oct 5 &amp; b .

Contact
Personnel Dept.
An Equal

(614 ) 698 3290

- -

WOOD

fringe

LI Kt: NEW Hondo gUitar and ca se
eJ&lt; tra set of stnng s and p 1c ks
•nduded Moy tog Coppert o ne
Po rta -pmr washer and dryer
Very good cond11t on se ll as
se t
Sylv an i a
l1me o ton
Sun lamp and eye protectors
Ca ll af ter 5 00 pm 992 2995

BIG YARD and
Betha ny Chu rch Annex , one
m1le eas t of Ro cm e on Rt 124
Oc t 0 and l 9 om t1l dark

-------~

M ann ing 0 Webster
Probate J udge Cl erk

•

- --

wv

LOST SMA LL mal" Blue T1ck Tt Ck
hound w tlh new co lla r no I D
tog l ost 1n Rocme El1 Be ntz,
Roc1ne 949 2124
.:....:....
--'--.

__

-

Goad

slrickly confidential.

--

lARGt: YAHD Sol e l::: •gh t and For
l y O ct 7 9 om Ma ry Mar tm
res •dence by E:lu rger Chef

Pf :-lfleasant,
25550
304-675-4340

RACIN E GU N Club 1979 M ember sh •p dues ore due October l
Must b e po1d be l ore Janua ry l
Dues or e $20

end man
Trent.

SCHOOL
BU S camper
60
pa ssenge r wt th new t1res
Good co nd1 ll on Con tact Tom
Monk.n at 992 -:l:J01

-~ ::~

NOW HIRING

QUALITY

arra nged.

- .

pe!:s.~~m~ s- • _ ·- _ •. __
YA RD SALE a nd bo"'- e sole 299
W r~ ght St , Pom e r oy , Oh1o. fr~ .
Oc t 6 and Sa t Oct 7 from 9 to
5 Held by th Eagles Lad1es
Au x1 ho ry

Mu st be good typist and
know shorthand .
Ex perience helpful but not

resume . Interviews w1ll be

sfA

-

.

'1118 APPAWIGIIIAH
' MOVE GOIIlPAHY

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6,1978
5:45---Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13.
5:55---Sunrlse Semesler 10.
6:00---PTL Club 15 , 6 25---Socletles In Tra nsit iOn 10.
6:31&gt;-Testlmony Time Today 4, News 6; Sunrise
Semester 8 .
6:45---Morning· Reporl 3; 6: 50--Good Morning, vies
Virginia 13 ; 6 55-Chuck Wh ite Re ports 10, News
13. 7: 3D-Schoolles 10..
·
8 ·1)()----Capt Kangaroo 8;, 10; Sesame St. 33.
9 :00- Merv Griffin 3; Pl!ll Donahue 4,13,15,

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5,1978
7:30--'-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4; llonoers
6; Please Stand By 8; $100,000 Name That Tune 10:
Nasvhille On The Road 13; Dolly 1S; Public Schools
in Ohio 20; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33.
8:oo---Prolecl U. P.O. 3,4.15, Happy Days 6, 13; Salute
to American Imagination 8,10: Nova 33 .

•.

bene fits . Write Box · 406,
Pomeroy, Ohio, glvin9 full

YA HD SALt:
Hu t lond Untied . l b FT
St ar b~ss .bo~t l -I S
Method•st Chur ch
Some th1ng
Ev o n rud e
Fully
,.gged
1ng tunk cars, sc rap 1ron bot
l or
everyone
Cl ot hmg
992-3193
tenes an d meta ls
R1de r s
household furmshmgs, 1ewelry,
Sa l .... oge , SH 124
Pom eroy
m1sc 1tem s Oc t 4 5 and 6 9 REDU CE SA ~E 8 f ast wllh Go8ese
997 54b8
Tablet s 8. E-Vap wate r p1 ll s"
om to 4 pm on the church lawn
N e lson Drug
Wdl be moved mto the ch ur ch
WA N T TO buy Srnoll ' lum1 nu m
ba semen t tn the even t of ro1n
boat or canoe Reasonable
197 1 ~ORO ' • ton cam per speCi al
New merchond 1se each dov
742 ·2692
po wer C lf a uto dual tan ks
i:=KceiiE"n t ru nn1 ng co nd ll lon
YARD SAL!:= Oct S t. Green house
513%
392
Green 1-ta u!.e beh1nd Stal e
'
_Hr~
h_w~y
G~r~g~
r:
n
Rt_
!_
1
~
~
THf.lE - RH NH USES ll'lc ot ed on
-Sk II Run Rd Wdl st" ll one or
&lt;AHD SA LE Wed , Thur s Fn
WORK
OVERSEAS
Au stro ha
all Al so hova Do1l er w 1th 6~
I 0 3 In Syracu se, across lrom
Af n co . South Am en co Europe ,
f ee I heated bench Pr1ced f or
Hubb ard s Green house s•gn
e tc
Cons t r ucllon , So l es ,
quiCk sole M ust bemovf'd Call
Too ls, m1 sc , cl o th tng
. -- - - - . - - - Engineers, Clencal etc S8000 304-86J S50V
GARAGt: SA LE Thu rs and fn
to $50.000 plu s fxpenses po1d
Nt:W
180 pou nd barbell s a nd
Oct
5&amp;6
Good
cloth
•ng
pl
oy
Fo r employmen t mf ormot1on
dumb be ll s plus benc h press
pen 11res and m1 sc 1tems
wnte Overseas l::: mploymen t , ,
Col lalter5 , b14 6bi' -3278
H1 cko ry Hill s Su b · rll vl slon , Tup
Box IOI I , Bo ston , Mo 02102

~~ ~~

'

Need Office Girl for
General Office Work.

necessary .

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Business SeJ.vices

b 14 -609 3i'fl5

wf PtCK~p ~ ~n k ~;obod,;s b;y.

lhru F ru.J.ay
lhl' Ucly

l ARGt: YARD Sole ht . Sot . and
Sun I m 1le for.m Hormonv tll e
on 14 3 east at !: Ida Carsey
home Item s too numerou s to
li st Some thmg l o r eve ry one
---- . . . . .
FO UR FAMILY Yard Sol e lu es
thru Fr 1 10 5 Cloth mg form 1n
lont to adu lt
lot s ol m1 sc.
1tem s
Clock
rod 10 , to r s,
st o n ew ar e
whol · no t s
E:very th1ng reasonab l y pmed
North of fo 1rgrounds on Old Rt
33 _ _ _ _ _ . . _ _ _ _ _

Fo res t Pro for slondmg
qq2 5965 or
8570

O LD f.= UHNilUIU-: , 1ce boxes brass
beds !(On beds desk s e tc
compl ete house ho ld s, Wnte
M D M il ler Rt 4 Pomeroy or
call 992 77b(J

TUI:'Sli&lt;l)

YA RD SALt: Sot Aug 7 Al ley
beh 1nd We rner Rod 1o Clo! htng ,
d1 shes . book s etc M•ddleport
Hu s1ness
&amp;
Prole ss •onol
Women s Club

! Ill'!\ 'l !. -\{"',

HELP WANTED

COA l , LIME StON E. sa11d , grov e l
IF YOU ho ve !i serv1ce to off er
cal Ci um chlorrde fe•ll lizer dog
wont to buy or se ll someth1ng
load , and al l types o f salt Ex
ae lookmg foor wo r k
or
ce ls1or Soh Works Inc E: M'om
wha tever .
you II gel re sult s
St , Pome•oy qcn :JHtsll.
lm. ter with o Sent mel Wont Ad
BURROUGHS SENSI -MA TIC oc
Co ii'IY2 2156
co unt1ng mo ch1ne
Phon e
GAHAG!:= SAL!:= Thurs and Frt 9
99")_ 2 156 The D01ly Sen tin el
to 4 R•ggscres t Manor aft CH 1B
111 Cou rt Stre et Pomeroy ,
o t top o l !:=astern Htgh Sc hoo l
O h1o
hill
SWHT POTATOES Red wh1te ,
RUMMAGf ~AlE Oct S 8 b 9 30 ·
and yellow Phon E' · 84:1 2432
4 00 l:!a shan ~1re Dep t, Spon
Ro ber t W Lew1 &gt;, HI 1 Roc m e ,
so r ed by the LodJ es .Au.o l1ory
Sf.l 114
l HHH ~ AMIL Y Ya rd So le Bashon GR IMES GOWI:::N Red DeliCiou s
Keno Rd Hoy word B•sse ll Loo k
&amp; Golden De li cious app les h t z
lor srgns Fn and So t 6 I
po tn ck
Or cha rd
SH
bB9

o.. Thurstla; . Ot·t . 5. 11178

12 , o5CASTLEMOBILE homewoth
12 )( 30 bu1lt -on. 1 acre lot.
Also. B room house, 1/ • acre.

742-2068.
HOUS'E IN Pomeroy 3 or :" bedr .,
fult
stte basement
Noce
driveway
Lorge mechanical
__JJO!?_g_e_ ~orge lot. 992·7627.

992-3325
216 E. Second StrHI
NEW LISTING - 6 room
brick bui lding on Second
Street w ith · full basement
and 1 car garage , 20's .
NEW LISTING - 2 story
business building that
would be a fine place for a
business . Live upstairs on
Main Street. 20' s .
COUNTRY HOME 3

bedrooms, bath , new

Lose a loser on a loser

.

ad-

dition of living with
fireplace and eaf-in kllchen. Fuel oil furnace and
10 acres of land . 30's.
10 ROOMS 4 or 5
bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
gas

furnace ,

city

water,

shop, garage and 3 lots.
20's
NEW
LISTING
3
bedrooms,
bath, new
natural gas furnace, and

city water. 17.m .
NEW LISTING- 45 acres
in Rutland Township just
off New Lima Road . All
m i nerals. 10-m .

West

4+

.

POMEROY - 3 bedroom
home, b!ith ,
furnace ,
new carpeli
and yard .
$16,500.
NEW LISTING -5
frame home In lhe COIJnllrv . i
Has dug wei I. ele,ctr·ic
over 1 acre of land .
$6,500.
Adjust your5elf to modern!
living. Invest in

~'!bP

You h old :

1 Familiar

ME wHeN .:t

'

ANNOUNC:.f: -

MV RuNNJNC::.

~~o cr

THREE
R1chordson mobile home l2 x
bO Excellent cond1hon , 3 bedr .,
washer . dry er 2 air condi ·
ttaners, all carpeted , nicely fur
n 1shed. bottle gas healing
system. Or.lled well , plenty of

good water. •moll bldg. 1 bldg
si:ze 12 x 28. $11 ,000. Call
6l4-367·7-410 or contact lassi e
Just•ce. Rt . 2, Ch.shira on
Storys Run Rd . 1hc·tenths of
mile off SR 7

EXCELLENT FARM BUY - 141 ACRU - The
owner' s age preven1s her from continuing 1o operate
the farm and she desires an Immediate sale. 50 1o 60
acres tillable with some very good creek boHom hilltop land . The balance is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good [does need some modernization),
large all purpose barn &amp; several outbuildings. The
minerals go with II and It's located In an aru where
gas, oil &amp; coal have been found to be plentiful. NHr
Rutland . 60's.

. CALL THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

- -·- - :L-_..;.- - - - - , - - - - - - : - - - - 1 '

YO U'VE GOT A LOAN SHARK

IT'&amp; NO

BREATHING 170WN YOUR
NECK .. .YOU NEVER
KNOW WHEN YOU'RE
GOING TO 6fT

ROUGHED UP
A6AIN, OR

WORoE ...

CAN I

NO GOOD
1"0 YOU TH I8 WAY
... AND I CAN'T
KEEP RUNN IN6 ...

~~O~~&amp;N~~~~J!f'!Jr?U
FACED YOUR PR.CI?LEM
SQUARE-LY I ARE YOU
WILLIN&amp; TO 'JO

GARY ?

how
A X Y D L BAA X R
LONGFELLOW

to

work it :

By Oswald Jacoby
andAianSontag

Today's hand is another
One letter Simpl y &gt;la nds for another In this sampl e A is example of the power of the
used for the three L's , X for th e t wo O's, etc Smglc letters , spade swt. East and West
apostrophes, the l englh and forma tion of th e words ar e all can make five clubs but East
hints Each day th e code l•tters are di ffe rent.
just doesn't want to gamble
at the five level so he lets
CRYPTOQUOTES
South play at four spades .
The ordinary declarer will
NPMA
U MS ' A
RB
K V S B wind up down one after
losing three hearts and a
T W G W S L . diamond. The expert deAPB
LTV H X
VE
clarer will make four
0 .
U ·
M H Y 0 A V S L
Vesterday'sCryptoquote: AMBITION,ENERGV, INDUSTRY,
PERSEVERANCE, ARE INDISPENSABLE RE;QU!SITES
FORSUCCESSIN BUSINESS.-P.T.BARNUM
© l978King Feoturos Syndicate, Inc.

PAW--'IE

PROMISED ME
'IOU'D FIX
THAT
6GTTOM

RUN6
ONMY
LADDER

.

+ AKQxxx

l]).:;.B

---

is

1 0- ~

tQ

• A Kxx
t K J X

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

MA,.&amp;.

U~E ... I CAN:T
COII.CENTRI\TE J

Opening lead :

letter
sign-off

Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

-- .
ACRES more or less . 1971

Pass

South
It
P ass

SE~VING.

family's dre•m home.

Ho11s;ng
Headquarters

North East

"PIJ~es.lays a low diamond
from ~urnrny, ruffs the sec• ond diamond, cashes, two
trumps, plays ace of clubs,
ruffs a club, ruffs a low

A Montana reader asks If

we open this hand with a
forcing two bid.
We certsinly do. If playing
standard, we open two
spades. If our only forcing
opening Is two clubs, we
open two clubs . This hand
may not produce a game but
we sure want to try.
{NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. I

(Do you have a question for
the experts ? Write " Ask the
Experts ," care olth1s newspaper Individual questions will
be answered If aooompanlqd
by stamped, self-addressfld
envelopes . The most interestmy questions will be used Jn
this column and will receive
cop1es of JACO BY MODERN.1

-

�•

••
t:.• - The Daily Sentinel,

. 0 .. Thursd"Y · Oet. ; : 1978

Elberfe

Unemployment rate up in September

Pomer~y

sIn

~~~fJiiii~

By Drew Von Bergen
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
The nation's unemployment
rate rose only slightly to 6
percen_t in September despite
.a significant increase in the
number of jobless teen-agers
who lost their summer jobs.
The Labor Department's
Bureau of Lab&lt;r Statistic~
rep&lt;rted the total number of
unemployed
during
September was 6 002 000
• • •
compared to 5,968,000 in
August .

BEGINS FRIDAY, OcTOBER 6TH AT ·9:30 A.M. AND CONTINUES
FOR ONE WEEK: ENDING SATURDAY, OOOBER 14TH AT 5:00P.M.
•

- REG. '2.00

WINTER COAT SALE

EARRINGS
rack of pierced earrings.

Large
many styles . •

Ann iversary sale prices on our ent ire stock of junior ,
missy, and extra size coats.

2

REG. '54.00 .................................... SALE '45.95
REG. '62.00 .................................... SALE '52.95
REG, 182.00 .................................... SALE '69.95
REG: 1104.00 ................................... SALE 188.95
REG. 1128.00 .................................. SALE 1108.95
REG. '148.00 · ................................ SALE 1124.95
REG. 1198.00 .................................. SALE 1167.95
• 1248.00 ............... ;.................. SALE '210.95

Men's and women's styles .
electric, and self winding.

-

Di~itals,

·

EUREKA UPRIGHT SWEEPER

.,~--~---

Women's

SPORTSWEAR SALE

SALE $S•99 TO $30•69
SALE! WOMEN'S WINTER ROBES

Reg. SB.OO to 54 l.OO
...,-·-·--

Long and short styles in fleec e . pile ; brushed tricot and
flann el. Sizes petite thru XXL.
Reg. $12 .00 ......... Sale $10.55 Reg. S24 .00 ......... Sale $21.15
Reg. $16.00 .. .... .. Sale $14.05 Reg . 528.00 ......... Sale $24.65
Reg . $20.00 .... , .... Sale $17.60 Reg . $33.00 .... .. ... Sale $29.05

WOMEN'S
WI
PAJAMAS
Special sale of our new winter line ol winter pajamas in
sizes, 32 t hru 48. Brushed tricot and flannel styles.
Reg $8 00 ........... Sale $6.60
·
Re · 51 i ·oo ........ .. Sale S9.65 Reg. $16.00 ........ Sale $14.05
g:s 14 : ......... Sales1 2 . 35 Reg.S18.oo ........ Sale$15.85
Sale

WOMEN'S
WINTER
GOWNS
Short ar\d long styles in brushed tricot or flannel. Sizes
petite, S, M, L, XL, XXL.
Reg· )6.00 ............ Sale $5..25 Reg . $15..00 .. .. ....... Sale $13.20
Reg · $6.00 ........ · .. ·Sale S7 .05 Reg . $18.00 ........... Sale $15.85
. S12.00.......... sale S10.55

CAR TAPE PLAYERS

.

Reg .S29.9S .B· T. •••••••.••••••••...•.•.•..•.••.••.•• •• Sale$23 .99

Reg . $39.95 Cassette ............................... . Sale$31.99
Reg . 569 .95 Cassette ............................... Sale$55.99
Reg . $119.95 8-T-AM-FM ................. .......... Sale $94.99
Reg. $139.95 Cassette-AM- FM .. . .... · ........... .
Sale

MEN'S CORDUROY TROUSERS

Full cu t corduroy in navy blue, brown or tan , ideal for
work or spo rtswea r . Wa ist sizes 32 to 46 , length 30 to 34 . .
Men's $14.95 Corduroy Trousers ........................ 512.64
Men's $17.98 &amp; $18.98 Corduroy Trousers .. ..... ........ $14.64
Anniversary Week Sale!
Men's Wrangler Straight Leg

BLUE DENIM JEANS

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

MEN'S SUITS
3 piece vested suits in-solid colors, plaids and neat stripes.

7.95 .KNIT SHIRTS .................. '6.44
MEN'S 18.95 KNIT SHIRTS ................... '7.24
MEN'S 110.95 KNIT SHIRTS.~ ................ '8.84
1

MEN'S

MEN'S

'12.9_5 KNIT

Sizes 36 to 46 regulars and longs.
Men's S89.95 Suits •••••• •••••••••• ~. ·••••••••••••••••• ••••• $71 .94
Men's $99.95 Suits ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $79.94

SHIRTS ................ '10.44

RUBBERMAID BIRD FEEDER ·

Holds 2'12 pounds of seed, loads through roof cap. Natu_r~l
colors with tinted windows . ·Install In tree, on pole·'or
platform, 8" x 8" x 8" high . ·
Reg. $5.95

SALE •3 •95

BOYS' WINTER JACKETS

'14.95

JACKETS ................... 112.24

1

JACKETS ..... ..............

PRESTO PRESSURE COOKERS .

Cooks 3 to 10 times faster, retains .vitamins and minerals, exclusive
pressure regulator and automatic air \lent, cover lock.

Reg . $24.YY Aluminum 4 qt ......................... Sale $20.00
Reg. $34.50 Aluminum 6 qt •• ~ ........ ; .... , ......... Sale $27.60
Reg. $28.50 Aluminum 4 qt.. ....................... Sale $22.80
Reg. $39.SO
.

1978
Special Clearance Prices

16.34
JACKETS ............... , .... 118.84
JACKETS ................... '20.44
1

Only one of each model to sell •

. Roll . $850

Modern slyllnjj, roiitwOod SL-100 Colortrak........ SaleS750.00
Reg . $825 Modern styling, pecan, XL-100, Colarlrak ......... Sole , 725.00
Reg. $850 Mediterranean styling, pecan, XL Colortrak...... Sole $750.00
Reg. S675 Contemporery styling, walnut, XL-100 ............ Salt$599.00

Anniversary Week Sale!

Sale

CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

AREA RUGS

WORK .CLOTHES

100 per cent nylon, non skid back, machine washable,
decorator colors.
-~
$6 .49 21 x 36 •nch size •••••• ••• •• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4,99
$9.49 26x45 inch size .••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $6 .99

Save during our anniversary sale. on
entire stock Carhart! Brown Duck
coveralls, jackets, coats, overalls.
dungarees, hoods, regular . and extra
large sizes.

14 -ounce, 100 per ce nt cotton, No Fault blue denim, won't
shrink, pucker or wrink le. Waist sizes 29 to 42, lengths 30 to

VESTER AND COTTOM BED SHEETS
-

No iron, 50 per cent polyester, so per cent cotton, sassy
stripe patterns in green, gold or tan.
$6.99 Full Bed Flat or Fitted .............................. $4.89
$5.49 Twin Bed Flat or Fitted .... .... .................... .$3.89
S4.99 Pair Pillow Cases . . ...... . ............. .. .. . .

SALE·PRICES

'1164

ers~a~ryy~~;ks~"~-~-~-·-·-~r·-·-----~A~n~ni.iv~e~r~s;a~ry;ivvN;ee;kk"~~~""'.______li~--~---·---Anniversary
MEN'S AND BOYS'

$1.49 WINTUK KNITTING YARN

1

1.25

TUBE SOCKS

Boys' s izes 7 . to 11.
men 's 9 to 15, white with
colored tops, excellent
selection

OPEN STOCK

Red Heart worsted hand knittery yarn ,
complete s~lectlon of solid colors, sparkle
colors and variegated 3'12 ounce 4 ply
ske
SKEIN

g~

MAPLE BEDROOM FURNITURE

-

Single, double and triple dressers.
4, 5, 6 and 8 drawer chests.
Night stands.
0/
Bunk beds.
/0

G.E. 19-INCH
COLOR TELEVISION
·

-

Solid state
StyJ.Ish cabinet
Dependable service

9~--~P.~A:I:R~--l--·-----·-·---~----,-·-·-·~~~~~~~~~-~~F;u~ll:a~n~d.~t~w~i~n~s~iz~e~be~d~s~-~~~~--·,_~-J~--.~~~~~Wb~~·--:~=:~~-~--~-t
~

$114

of;c:o~l:o:r~s~-•._,_.,____._.,___

CHILDRELN'S COATS
Jackets, snorkels, dress coats,
boot length coats, ski jackets,
snowmobil e suits. Sizes 2-4, 4-6X,
7-14.

'18.00 ............ SALE 114.39
REG. 122.00 ............ SALE 117.59
REG.

27.00 ............. SALE '21.59

REG.

1

REG.

'32.00 ......... :... SALE 125.59

REG.

'54.00 ............. SALE '43.19

20

Special~~~~~n o~~~~

stock of
albums . Country, pop, rock, religious,
movie soundtracks, instrumentals . Reg .
$3 .?9 to $15.79.
,.

SALEs~

TO

lr

5

5

Main Store and Mechanic Street WarehouSe
Open firiday 9:30 A.M. to 8 P.M. - Saturday
9:30 to 5 P.M.

.Eiberfelds

111 Pom

OFF

-

SPECIAL

Despite an order to return to work and honor their
cootracts, strlldng employee!! of tbe Logan school district
remaloed strong in foree this morning .
According to a news person from the Logan Dally
News, pickets tried to prevent non-&lt;~trlking lnslnj.ctors
from entering two buildings this morning.
In his order Issued 'fbursday, Hocldng County
Common Pleas Colirt Judge James Stilwell, ordered all
strikers to refrain and he enjoined from striking, and that
all pickets be removed and that all persons Involved In
picketing eease from that activity.
In addition, the court ordered the teachers and
classified employees to honor their written or verbal
cuutracts and for the plaintiff, the Logan Board of
Education to continue good faith bargaining with the LEA
and OAPSE employees.

•

iii(IIIJ_r.;..h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y"'!"'""
SWAT team shoots' assailant
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A Columbus man was shot and
killed by police officers Thursday night after he allegedly shot
and wounded another officer. ·
Stephen Gimmey, 20, died at a Columbus hospital about an
hour after the 7:20p.m. incident, authorities said. Police said
SWAT officer Joseph Dickerson, 33, spotted Gimmey and
anot~r man outside their car at a service station on the city's
south Side.
.

32·~&gt;employee~: charged
DETROIT (UPI) - Thirty-two women employees of the
Detroit Police Department, all rut two of thein officers or
former officers, have been charged in a $50,000 welfare
cheating _scandal.
The women were indicted Wednesday by a Wayne County
citizens grand jury from among a list of 400 police officers who
had been investigated .for possible welfare fraud . Among those

-f..-

Anniversary

Boys sizes 8 to 20 in waist length styles and
longer lengths. Our entire stock sale priced
for Anniversary Week. Denims, wool plaids,
nylons, all warmly lined, many with hoods.

19.95
BOYS 122.95
BOYS 124.95

--....

.

Anniversary

BOYS

-·-·--..t

!Sizes 8 to 20, colorful plaid patterns, regular and westernstvlM
Boys $5.95 Flannel Shirts ..... , ................ , .......... $5.05
Boys $8.95 Flannel Shirts ................................. $7 .65
Boys$10.95Fianne1Shirts ................. ....... ....... .. 9.35
Boys 5 1 1.95 Flannel
.......... : ................... S10·15

"

Entire stock. our new fall and winter
selection, long sleeves, crew nee ks, co II ared
styles, sweat shirt looks, turtle necks. Stock up
now and really save.

BOYS

Styles for in-dash and · under-dash installation .

36 .

BOYS' fLANNEL SHIRTS

Anniversary Sale

Large group _of missy and extra size sportswear includ ing
skirts, jackets, blouses, s lacks, vests. sweaters.
Queen Casual- Bradley - Departure

$1164

Pre-washed, 14. ounce, No
Fault, denim , won't shrink,
wrinkle or pucker. 100 per
Included Free
cent cotton . True western
$19.95 Tool Set
styling, waist sizes 29 to 42,
..:.._':~.-~----~--·-·--r---·-..l..l~~l!,lths 30 to 36.
r-a'le ..... ·.. , _
Anniversary :.

$7995

SALE
$}9.95
DRASTICALLY
R
·:::.:._-.::.::-_:.-~-~~~~-~~~:!~.-.-1-_;~~~~:~~:~~:!.~~~~~.,:~~::~:.._._,_L. ___

·

~.::: a~_e::dy27f~~':r•• two civilian employees and three
Mortar sh e11s expI0 d e

NICOSIA, Cyprus (UP!) - A mortar shell exploded in the
courtyard of the U. S. EmbllS.'ly in Lebanon today and two
others hit nearby in a new esc~)ation of fighting between
Syrian troops and right-wing Christian militias.
First reports said several persons were believed wounded
in the attack .

· Cardigans, coat styles, v-riecKs, sweater
vests. Our entire S? ·.-k Included for
anniversary week. Excellent selection of
styles and colors In sizes S, M, Land XL.

'9.95 SWEATERS .... .. .... . 17.84
MEN'S '11.95 SWEATERS ......... '9.44
MEN'S 114.95 SWEATERS .........'11.84.
MEN'S

18.9fSWEATERS. ........ '14.94• .
MEN'S '27.95 SWEATERS .........'22.()4
MEN'S

1

~·- ,,_,

.,.-~

RENOV AT! ON UNDERWAY - The ljistoric Coa lport
School on Liberty Lane in Pomeroy is being 'remodeled
into a church by the House . pf Prayer and Praise in
Middleport . When remodeling processes are completed

the church will move from Middleport to the new location.
The school wsa sold at public auction several years ago by
the Mei gs Local Board of Education to Pomeroy Attorney
Rick Crow.

·

e

·~ontatzon
·

•

United Press lnlernational
Israeli gunboats off the
coast of Lebanon dueled with
Syrian shore batteries
Thursdaynightinanominous

•

..

expansion of the weeklong
battle for Beirut that has left
the divided capital isolated
and blackened .
Th e l s ra eli - Syrian
confrontation - the first
between an Arab state .and
Israel since the 1973 war posed a threat to the delicate
Camp David accords and
carried the seeds of a fifth
Middle East wat;.
A high U.S. official at the
United
Nation s
said
Washington probably will ask
the Security Council to force

. .·

.

h ghttn g between Synan
for ces and Christ!an rightists
does not end ·thiS weekend.
The offtc1al confirmed the
United States has been m
contact w1th Mosco~ where Synan . P~es1de~t
Hafaz Assad 1s v1s1tmg - m
an effort to conta in the
fighting .
.
The Beirut fighti ng, wh1ch
erupted
before
dawn
Monday, has echpsed the
ferocity of the battles of
Lebanon 's 19-month ClVll war
- whi ch involved leftist

a}Ge
-as ~ecininB
eiruetif the
e -hM
osa
. t em~Pg
a tee
stins
ians and

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio has received an $80,962 federal
grant for improving services to abused and neglected children
and their families . Receipt of the ·grant was announced Thurs'day by Gov. James A. Rhodes, who said it will he used for ·
projects in Ashtabula, Jackson and Sununit counties.
The Jackson County Welfare Department will set up a 12week educational program for parents involved in abuse or
neglect.

a'

OPEN DOOR SESSION
October
11,
a
On
representative from
Congressman Clarence F.
Miller's office will conduct an
open door session from 10.12
noon in the court house in .,
Pomeroy. •
If anyone has any questions
concerning the Federal
• govenunent, please stop by to
discuss them with the
.representative

CHIW KILLED
Vlclor Sowards, age 9,
Rt. 1, Ewington, was
pronounced dead on arrival
at the Holzer Medical
Center Thursday al 7:40
p.m. following an apparenl
farm tractor accident near
bls home. SGwards Is the
son of Samuel and Martha
Sowards, VInton. He wu
transported to lbe hospital
by private vehicle.
No report of the accident
ON TV 8 NEWS
was made lo the Gallla
WCHS-TV Channel 8 has Coanly Sheriff's Depart·
done a story on REACT and ment.
that presentation featur:tng . The body Is at lbe Mcinterviews
by George
Coy·l\foore Faaeral Home
Fnbner and Nellie Watkins is Ia Vintols.
scheduled to .be shown at 6
this evening.

...

By JACK R. PAYfON
VATICAN CITY (UP!)
The cardinals who will choose
the second Roman Catholic
pontiff in as many months get
down to the specifics today of
finding a man who ca n realize
the unfulfilled promise or
Pope John Paul I.
At least 96 cardinals ha ve
arrived in Rome . Their
meeting at th e Vatica n
Palace today was to be the
first completely devoted to
discussions of how to choose
John Paul's successor,
Vatican sources said.
John Paul, the former
Cardinal Albino Luciani , died
last Thursday . He captured
the world's imagination with
his simplicity and humility
during his 3'klay reign, but
he had no chance to make
important decisions: '
Vatican sources said the
last meeting on cardinals, on
Wednesday, was la rgely
taken up with appointing
three commissions to deal
with the. mechanics of the
Sistine Chapel election
conclave hegiruiing· Oct. 14.
According to senior church
sources, the coming conclave
may . be longer and more
difficult than the one that
chose John Paul, because
there is no obvious candidate
who can capture .art
immediate consensus among
the cardinals.

ile

. jUVefi

ROBIN SNOWDEN

Snowden AEP
scholarship
recipient
Robin
M.
Snowden,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Snowden of Rt. 4
Pomeroy , has been named a
winner of a 1976 American
Electric Power System
scholarship.
Miss
Snowden ,
who
graduated in June as
salutatorian ·of her class at
Meigs Hi gh School, will
receive a $3,000 award $2,000 toward her freshman
year's expense and $1,000 for
her sophomore year. She has
enrolled at Rio Grande
College and was the winner of
a Rio Grande College
Scholarship earlier this year.
Her father is a maintenance
foreman at Meigs No. I mine
of the Southern Ohio Coal
Company, one of the subsidiary mining compani es
within the AEP System.
At Meigs High School, Miss
Snowden was a membe ~; of
· (Continued on page 12)

•

•

RACINE - The curfew for
16-year olds and under in
Racine has been changed
from 10 p.m. to 9 p.m. each
night , Racine Village Council
report s. According to the
provisions of the curfew,
juveniles in that age bracket
must be off the streets by 9
p.m., unless accompanied by
a parent or guardian .
At
council's October
meetin g, Mrs.
Maxine
Wingett, a council member,
demonstrated use of t he
" votomatic" machine which
is to be used at voting
locations in Meigs County for
the first time on Nov. 7. It was
also stressed that voters must
be registered by 9 p.m. ,this
Saturday in order to cast
ballots in the Nov. 7 election.
Trick or treat nighi was set
lor Saturday , Oct. 28, from 6
to 7 p.m. E . A. Wingett
volunteered to take charge of
·the- necessary work on a
plaMed aMexation .
A discussion was held on
expens es at Gree nwood
Cemetery and it was stated
that money paid through a
levy does not provide any
cemetery funds for Racine. It
was suggested there .be a
cemetery maintenance levy
· for Racine Village only at a
future election. ·
lt ·was reported new parts
have been ordere4 for a

•

~
Curi.eW
school light and wire has been
replaced after being torn
down by a delivery truck . The
village maintenance man
was asked to repair a
drainage area near the
Recreat ion Center and to
secure hot mix and make
repairs where needed before
winter.
Fly ash and salt for snow
will also be sec ured . It wa s
agreed to purchase four
r eca pp ed tires from the
Home and Auto Store for the
village dump truck and two
snow tires for the police
cr uiser. The clerk was advised to order a screen for the
police cruiser.
Attendmg were Mayor
Charles Pyles; Mar shal
Alfred Lyons; Clerk Mae
Cleland, and council members, Albert Hill, Ben Pet~el ,
Clarence Bradford, Maxme
Wfngett and Earl Cleland.

Council may
•
razse rates
Syracuse Council Thursday

phones. Frightened families
huddled in their basements as
heavy shells - some of the
Syrian fllOrtars fire 1,110().
pound shells that can wreck a
large building - rained

Mr. and Mrs. Don Cottrill
rega rdin g
a
drain age
problem behind their home
which is causing water to fun
into their basement. Council
agreed to lo ok into the

do;;';;.ut Radio said three
Israeli " warships" fought a
!Xkninute duel with Syrian
gun batteries off the coast of
Moslem W~st Beirut.
Israel's military command
said the vessels were sent to
shell a Palestinian guerrilla
base near Beirut airport, but
Israeli nlilitary sources confirmed the action was to f&lt;rce
an end ·to the Syrian artillery
offensive against the rightist
Christians, whom the Israelis
have supported.
The Israeli action carne
after a top secret Cabinet
meeting that ended with a

d ra inage
at
the
George Freeland residence
has caused damage to the
driveway. Council agreed to
repair three feet of the driveway going into the Freeland
residence.
Mayor Eber Picken s
agreed to contact Robert
Jeffers . to make · necessary
repairs near the Oma Hysell
residence.
Council voted to place an
8: 30 p.m. curfew In the

..

.. .

statement declaring Israel
" is making and will make
(Continued on page 12) .

Weather
Mostly cloudy , windy and
cool with a chance or sho~ers
today and highs near 60.
Partly cloudy , windy and cool
tonight, with lows in the
upper 30s . Mostly cloud~,
windy a nd cool agam
Saturday, with a chance of
showers and highs in the mid
or upper 50s.

. In the ballo ting that
selected J ohn Paul Aug. 26,
the church sources said, the
cardi nals rallied to him
almost immediately as a man
who would unify the church
and inspire its followers at a
. time when it was going
through a ser ious threat of
schism .
Thi s time, one senior
church source said, there is
no one man who can
command that kind of
support. Election of a pope
requires a two-thirds pius one
vote of the cardinals.
One of the major cr iteria
being discussed by the cardinals in choosing the next pope
is the possibility of schism
within the church, the
sources said.
The
ca rdinals
are
particularly worried about
breakaway
conservatives,
led by French Archbishop
Marcel Lefebvre, who defied
the late Pupe Paul VI for
three years despite threats of
excommunication .
Preparatidns for
the
coming conclave began in
eltrnest Thursday when
Vatican workmen began re- ·
in sta liing the floor and
benc hes that had been
rem oved
fr om
the
elaborately fr escoed Sistine
Chapel after John Paul was
elected.

ChriStian militias. There are
no reliable cas uattr esttmates.
.
Pollee S81d at least 350
Lebanese have d1ed m hve
days. There were no Synan
casua ity
figures,
but
Chr1sllans sa1d they had
inflicted " heavy losses" and
cla1med to have seen
truckloads of Syria~ c-orpses.
The shower of ~rtlllery has
severed ~ommumcatiollS between Betrut a nd the o~ts1de
world, left the c1ty Without
water , electricity and tete-

0

Jackson Com1ty gets grant

HARBOR SPRINGS, Mich. (UPI)- Teamsters President
·Frank E. Fitzsimmons has voweq the powerful truckers' union
will not become
"whipping boy" for government inflation
Hghters nut w1ll resist Carter administration efforts to hold
down wages.
.
'
In a blistering speech to Michigan Tea!llllters leaders
Thursday, Fitzsimmons also bitterly attacked union dissidents
and critics who, he said, suggest he IS linked to organized
crime and the 1975 disappearance of his predecessor, James R.
Hoffa.

Cardinals
meet today

night
accepted
th e
resignation of Lan:y Brog~n ,
counc1lman, who IS movmg
from Syracuse and ·ruscussed
raising water rates 75 cents a
month .
Council , in discussing the
water rate increase whi ch
wouldbefrom$4.15 amonth
to $5. 50 a month, agreed to
st udy the issue until the first
of the year before making
adecision.
It was noted inOation has
hit the water department ·the
same as everything else, and
that water rates have not
been increased lor the past !0
years.
Meeting with council were

I

MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UP!) - A five-story building
collapsed in the heart of downtown Montevideo today, causing
deaths and injuries, authorities said. Gen. Hugh Linares
Brum, the Interior minister, said most of the people in the
building were buried under mountains of rubble.
Firemen said they had found one body and rescued eight
people injured when tbe building fell. The cause of the collapse
1was not immediately known.

Union no whipping hoy

percent in August.
Dep artmen t analy st
When President Carter ind ic ated unemployment
took office at the beginning of would remain in the 6 percent
1977, the rate was 8 percent , range for the remainder of
and he made unemployment the year.
a key target of his
Analysts said although
administration.
'
156,000 new jobs had been
Maj or improvements created during August , the
during the August drop were level was far below the
reco.rded among blacks, average monthly rate of
women .and teenagers, with 366,000 jobs during the first
black joblessness reduced to six months of 1976.
its low..t level in almost four • In June atone, about 700,000
year - 11.7 percent.
jobs were made available.
But
a
Comm erce

Ariother Israeli-Syrian
fi
d
·
con
un erW' oy

Five-story building falls

Anniversary Sale

MEN'S SWEATERS

ployment figures hit a fouryear low of 5.7 percent.
The rate has flip-flopped
during the summer months,
after hovering most- of the
late winter and spring around
the 6 percent and 6.1 percent
range.
After the 5.7 percent figure
for June, unemployment
jumped sharply to 6.2 percefJt
in July, then hack down to 5.9

Court order defied

MEN'S
RARE BWE DENIM JEANS

Regular $99.95 sweeper with chrome plated
steel vibra groomer . 6 position adjust to
carpet height .- edge kleener. light.

months earlier, when unem-

' .;

$3295

FROM

percent.
The first time was only two

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1978

SALE PRICES

quarlz.-

SAVE 20%

jean s, headwear, shirts, hosiery, sport
coats and many other items.

The BLS said the increase
in teen..age unemployment.
came as an unusually large
number of specially created
sununer jobs ended with the
onset of a new school year.
Teen-age unemployment
returned to the May level, but
still showed considerable
improvement from a year
.earlier.
The August drop in unemployment to 5.9 percent was
only the second lime in four
years the figure was below 6

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIX N'O. 122

August.
- Adult women : 6 percent,
down from 6.1 percent.
-Teen-agers: 16.6 percent,
up from 15.6 percent.
- Whites: 5.3 percent, up
from 5.2 percent.
- Blacks and other minorities :, 11.2 percent, down from
11.7 percent.
- Full-time workers: 5.5
percent, unchanged.
The total civilian labor
force was 100,670,000, up from
100,549,000 in August .

•

e

Warm fashions for winter fun.
- Machine washable
- Shell and lining 100 per cent nylon
- 100 per cent polyester fi II

TIMEX WATCHES

ODDS
AND ENDS TABLE
Odd lots, discontinued styles, carryovers,

Touch a button to fold away handl e. Packs
1,000 watts of power . Ligh tweig ht super,
small size, air conce ntrator nozzle, high-low
heat sett ing .
Reg. $24. 95

Many,

Anniversary Sale

Men's and Boys' Wear

SUN
SWINGS-AIRE
1000 BLOWER-DRYER

JUNIOR
SKI JACKETS

•300

PAIRS

which had predicted a 5,9percent level at the end of this
year.
Both hourly and weekly
earnings of non-fann workers
advanced 0.5 percent during
the month, and were 6.3
percent and 8 per ce nt ,
respectively , above
September 1977. ·
The unemployment breakdown, by category of popula•
·
tion:
- Adult men: 4 percent,
down from 4.1 percent in

Anniversary Sale

Anniversary Sale

WOMEN'S

Employment nationwide
was up 290,000 in September
to 94 .9 million, with adult
w~men providing the bulk of
the boast.
In.
August,
the
unemployment rate hit 5.9
percent after fluctuating
throughout the summer and
hitting a four-year low of 5. 7
percent in July.
The leveling off at 6 percent
was
in
line
with
administration forecasts ,

CLEVELAND (UPII This week's winning Obto
Lottery numbers :
Gold number - 3. •
Whfte number - 16 .
Blue number - 073.
Win· A-Thou
49959.

si~:~~onArnott,
counciiman.
report ed
that
water

b

thro ugh Ohio Farmers Union
called "Green Thumb" will
e1n ploy a supervisor for the
village, at no cost to the
village .
Under the program the
person must be over 55 and on
a Jow income. This is one
pro blem th e village experienced this past sunm1er
having wo rk ers, but no
sup erv iso r. Arnott is to
contact Joseph Collins, field
s upervi~r. "'
Bob Wil lis , fire c hief ,
req uested a police radio for
the new fire truck. Council
agreed to have WiUis purchase the radio. Coucnil also
agreed to haul cinders in
preparation lor winter and
stockpile loads at various
pla ces in the village.
Attend ing were Mayor
Pickens, Robert Wingett,
grants administrator, George
Holman , treasurer, Chief
Varian , Jani ce Lawson,
clerk , Herman London, Mr.
and Mrs. Cottrill , Doug
Hemsley, Willis, John Arnott,
Kathryn Crow, Jimmy Joe
Hem sley and Mick Ash,
council members.

Middleport
squad makes
three .r uns

vi11 age through t e month
Three calls were answered
of October. The siren wlll
Thursday
evening by the
sound each evening. The
unit of the Midemergency
curfew -· is for juveniles
dleport
fire
department.
under 18, . unless acAt 5:53p.m ., the unit went
companletl by , a -p arent.
to the Meigs Junior High field
Chief of Pollee Mtlton
where Greg Taylor had
Vaflan
warned
the
received a possible ankle
throwing of com at moving
fracture in a football game.
vehicles must stop. Anyone
He was taken to · Holzer
apprehended wlll be cited
Medical Center.
to court.
At 6:54 p.m., the squad
Trick or treat was set for went to the !Wute 7 ·bypass
Monday, Oct. 30 from 6 to 7 near
Bradbury
where
p.m. The siren will sound to Tammy Ferguson and Becky
begin and end the evening's Coleman had been injured in
activities. •
a car-tractor trailer accident .
Council also agreed to send The two teenagers 'were
letters to people ownin g taken to Veterans Memorial
trailers who have not com- Hospital where they were
plied with the trailer or- checked and released .
dinance. Those who do not
At 10:04 p.m. the squa\i
comply by removing mobility went to Silver Run for Viele
and underpinning will be Williams, a medical patient,
cited to court.
who was takeo to Veterans
Amott reported a pro~ram Memorial Hospital.
'
~
(~
.4-

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="808">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11451">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49920">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49919">
              <text>October 5, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3786">
      <name>dewolfe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2581">
      <name>hackett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2671">
      <name>herrmann</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7687">
      <name>hisler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3752">
      <name>ralph</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="851">
      <name>rupe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
