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                  <text>10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesdav, Oct. 10. 1978

Official silence maintained
By JACK R. PA YI'ON
VATICAN CITY (UP! )
The Vatican maintained an
official silence today on
reports that Roman Catholi.c
cardinals have demanded
public clarifications about
the circumstances of Pope
John Paull's death .
Although reports of the
cardinals' dispute with the
Curia ,
or
church
bureaucracy, appeared in
Monday
morning ' s
newspapers, the Vatican
refused to either confirm or
denY them.
The cardinals themselves
were not talking, maintaining
the oath of ~crecy which all
of them took on arriving tn
Rome following John Paul's
sudden death Sept. 28.
The Vatican said the
former Cardinal Albino
Luciarii died of a heart attack
while reading alone in his
bedroom and that his body
was found the following

morning by his personal
secretary, the Rev . John
Magee of Ireland.
Other reports said the pontiff's body was fomd by a nun
bringing him an early
morning cup of coffee.
Several cardinals said
earlier
the
Vatican's
handling of the pope's death
was inept, so much so as to
give rise to rampant but
unsubstantiated
rumors
about foul play.
The Vatican also was silent
about demands for a fullscale judicial in'lestigation of
the pope's death, made by the
conservative Roman Catholic ·
organization Civllta
Cristiana.
Civilta Cristiano and other
traditionalist groups contend
an autopsy should have been
performed on John Paul's
body. They note n'o medical
certificate was issued listing
the exact cause of his death .
John Paul's death also has

Twinsburg strike ends,
Logan-remains closed

not been officlally registered
in his hometown of Canale
D' Agordo in northern Italy,
as is required by Italian law.
The moderate newspaper
stampa Sera of Turin said the
cardinals had demanded the
Vatican rectify the situation
by answering all "questions
aroused in public opinion"
before the start of the
conclave to choose John
Paul's
successor
on

MEET THURSDAY
The M-G-M District Boy
Scouts of America. Roundtable, for cub and scout
leaders, will be held TIIUrsday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Guiding Hand School at
Cheshire.
Garland Parsons,
leadership training chairman, will conduct a training
session. All leaders are urged
to be present.

Opponent
seeking
•
mcrease

FAU. HMDY MUMS
UJO Each

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE

SQUAD RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Unit of the fire
department·was called to 26
Rutland St. at 4:31 p. m.
Monday for Patricia Clark,
eight months, who had a
facial laceration near an eye.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
At 12:03 a.m. Tuesday the
squad went to 532 S. Third
Ave. for Grace Glaze, a '
medical patient, who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

YOURSELF
A LIFT

THURSDAY MEETING
Preceptor Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi will meet
Thursday at 7:45 at the home
of Jane Walton. Co-hostess is
Jeannie Werry.
1

'
' SEEK LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Daniel Reid Roush,
, 29, Portland and Francis
Christina Ours, 16, Portland.

Buy a New Car
Today With Our
Low Cost Auto Loan
We'll lend you cash in a hurry ... no hitches
involved' Just call lor information about the
variety of easy payment plans we have available. There's one to suit every budget. So
don't delay buying that car ... thumbing it
can get awful tough!

Wajk-up teller window
and auto. teller window
open Friday Evenings s to 7 p.m .

SEEK DIVORCE
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Melva L. Eblin,
Rt. I, Rutland, filed suit for
divorce against Gerald C.
Ebltn, Rt. I, Rutland.

Tt&gt;e Athens SoU and water
Conservation Distl-ict and
Hocking Technical College
will host an autumn
woodland-wildlife field day
on Oct. 14.
·
For the last 10 years, the
college has been practicing a
wide variety of forest
management methods on an
800 acre tract leased from the
Sunday Creek Coal Co. This
tract is typical of woodland in
Southeastern Ohio. Results of
the management practices
will be shown and explained
on the day's agenda. All of the
practices that will be viewed
are applicable to most wood
lots.
On hand for {he day wlll be
area foresters , natural
resources instructors , from
the college and knowledgeable
natural
re
source students. Tt&gt;ese people will provide not only a
thorough explaination of the
various practices that have
been applied to the Sunday
Creek tract, but wlll also
explain government
programs and local resources
that can assist in the
management of woods.
The day's agenda Including
a bean soup and cornbread
lunch is open to the public and
is free of charge. Time
schedule includes: convening
and boarding buses in
Hocking Tech parking lot, 99:30; opening remarks, 9:4510; wagon tour with stops at
the timber management area
on Sunday Creek land labor,
ID-12 hoon; lunch in woods,
12-1 p.m. ; complete circuit of
management area, 1-2:30;
returning to parking area at
Hocking Tech, 2:30.

Call us for a II details without obligation.

[)J .;e.:;:,c:.

.

...
'..,

~

. Member F.D:I.C. o.poailllnsured to $40,000.00.

..

;
•
I

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

,j :

NEW HAVEN - One man
was killed and another inj~r ed Tuesday when a heavy
section of handrailing fell 15
feet at the Phihp Sporn
P ower P lan t in Ma son
County.
The men were employed by

•'·

"

the Un ion Boiler Co. of Nitro,
W. Va ., and were working
rout in e mC:!intena nc e on a

McGraw, Tracy McGraw and Tammy Er:vin. A member
of the group not pictured is Donna Hubbard.

comedian of the year, was
back in the winner's circle
again, chomping on a cigar as
he
accepted
the
instrumentalist of the year
"Country Boy," was named award.
Louis Maronall Jones, a
male vocalist of the year and
skipped up to the stage
wearing his cowboy hat ahd
blue jeans, unlike most of the
other performers who were
decked out in tuxedos. ·
Ronnie Milsap, the blind
won Song of the Year honors
for writer Richard Leigh.
Don Wllliams, the drawling
HGentle Giant" best known
this year for his album

pianist-singer who won top

entertainsr, album and male
vocalist honors a year ago,
claimed the album of the year
award again.
The Kendalls - former St.
Louis barber Royce Kimdall
and his teen-age daughter
Jeannie - won single of the
year honors fOr HHeaven's
Just a Sin Away," a lively
and suggestive tune about a
girl who declares "Lord, help
me when I say I think I'm
givin' in."
The Oak Ridge Boys, a
former gospel quartet turned
contemporary country since
it originated during Worid
War II, won vocal group of
the year honors and their
back-up• group, The Oak
FtidgeBoysBand,wasnamed
instrumental group of the
year.
Kenny Rogers and Dottie
West, who sang "Anyone Who
Isn't Me Tonight," during the
show, were named vocal duo
of the year.
Roy Clark, a veteran of
pic kin' and singin' who has
won previous CMA awards
ranging from entertainer to

MEET THURSDAY
Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart ·Falls, will meet
Thursday evening at the ·hall
to make plans for a
Halloween party to be held
Saturday, Oct. 28, for
children of Letart Township.
Tt&gt;ere will be potluck refreshments
at
Thursday's
meeting.

died of massive head injuries.

INSPECTING HAND-RArUNG - Deputy Sgt. N. E.
Benson, left, and Sheriff James Hall, right, inspect the
hand-railing that fell 75 feet Tuesday at the Philip Sporn

banjo picker and comedian
dubbed "Grandpa" at the
ripe old age of 22 more than 40
years ago, was S&lt;llected as
the 31st person to be inducted
Into the Country Music Hall of
Fame.

Anniversary to
be celebrated

The 25th wedding anniversary of Joan and Charles
MeL.11in will be celebrated on
Tuesday, Oct. 17 with an open
house at the couple 's Route 2,
Racine home . The celebralion is being hosted by the

couple's children, Beverly,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
McLain, Jr. and Mr. and Mrs.
James McLain. Friends and
relatives are cordially invited
to attend the open house. i
Refreshments will be served.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, October 11. 1978

WARNING ISSUED
The Middleport Board of
Public Affairs is warning

CIRCULAR
CHECK IN TOMORROW'S
OCT. 11, 1978 SENTINEL

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gladys
Nicholson, Rutland; Clarence
Haning, Albany; Mary Van
Meter, Rutland ; Betty
Pauley, Mason.
DISCHARGED - Danny '
Will, Paula Horton , Theodore
Van Cooney.

BEDROOM

GIFT

W/C

SOFA

DINING

MUCH, MUCH MORE
•

INGELS
FURNITURE

N. 2nd Ave.

Mlddl&lt;&gt;nr&gt;rt. O.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
TOWEL SALE.
WHITE BACKGROUND TOWn WITH FLOR~_L OVER PA nERN IN ROSE,
BLUE OR GOLD-:- VERY ABSORBENT 86% COrrON 14'7• POLYESTER

REGULAR '3.49 BATH TOWEL •••••••••••••••••• '2.99
REGULAR '2.49 HAND TOWEL •••••••••••••••••••1.99
REGULAR '1.39 WASH CLOTH •••••••••••••_•••••• 99~

THE PHOTO PLACE

OUR 114TH ANNIVERSARY sALE CONTINUES THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14TH

992-S292
( Bob Hoeflich J
109 High St .. Pomeroy

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
,•

•

e.

at y

of handrailing fell down ·the

Center sa id Cochran was in
critical condition . He un-

shaft from a seQtfld concrete

"We have an idea but I'd
rather nut •ay until OSHA

level about 75 feet above the

L"ompletes its investigation,"

derwent surgery for head
injuries la st night.

ground floor , Rader sa id .
"For som e reaso n there

Rader said the men were at

must have been some
pressure put onto the handrailing," Radar sa 1d. "The

the bottom of a shaft
alongside a power plant
boiler. They were loading
equipment onto a hoist when

anchor bolts were just turn
loose.' '

Rader declined to speculate
about2: 15 p.m., he said .
on what may have caused the
The 80-pound , 8-f&lt;&gt;ot section handrailing to break loose.

th e accident occurr ed at

he Si:iil.l.

Officials of the Occupational Safety and Health
Admin ist ration we re .co n~.
dul1ing an investigation intu
the accident last night, according lo Rader.
An OSHA invest igator said

the investigation 's fmdings
will be released later.

Collins named chairman
George Rogers, the 31ycar-old Republi can can didate for State Treasurer.
toda y an nounc ed the ap-

point ment of Geo rge M.
Cullins as his count y chairman in Meigs County .
Hogers . wh o won th e

heavily contested Republican
primary ln Jun e s aid ,
"George Cull ins is well
r espected in the comm unity ,
a t remendous worker and a
va lued frie nd. With hi s help

we'll win in Meigs County."
Collins is a resident of Olive
Township and is treasu rer uf
Meigs Cu unt y and is active in
m any
c u rn rn u n i t y

organizations.
Main theme of Roger s'
campai g n is, " ln vest in

Ohio. " According to Rogers,
his opponent sends the bulk of
Ohio' s investm ent capital

outside of the State of OhJo to
purcha se federal securities .
Roge r s has promised t u

en tine

ret urn thts money to Ohio
banks and savmgs and loans .

"Between $100,000,000 and
$900,000,000 leaves the slate
fo r six lll unths l11 12 month s at
a ti111e," said Hugcrs. " What
wuuld happen if the Federal
&lt;:overnme nt inves ted lik e
Ohi o dues and sent a couple
hundred billiim dollars to
Sw itzerland for six months ?
My election \'r"ill be a real
stimu lus to Ohi o's economy.' '

Fifteen Cents
\'ul. :m. No. 125

\\'a ter

customers

that

tampering with meters and
meter boxes is against the
law and offenders wlll be
prosecuted .

Customers

should contact the water
· office lor 1urn oils to fix
leaks.

Rhodes' proposal explained
Meigs County ·real estate
taxpayers stand to save more
than $171 ,000 in 1980 thanks to
Gov . James A. Rh odes'
proposal to provide reli ef to
property owners, his running
mate, George V. Voinovich,
said Tuesday.

Committee named
HARVEST
OF VALUES

Plant at New Haven. One man was killed and another
seriously injured when the railing collapsed.

The injured man was
ide ntified as Denni s R.
Cochran . 33, of 325 21st St. ,
Dunbar. A spokesman at the
Genera l
Divi~ion
uf

Charle sto n Area Medical

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

·::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:;::::

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Oct. 9
Mrs. ·Robert Black and
daughter; Mrs. Baymond
Brandau and daughter ; Quinton Brewer; Kay Cecil;
Heather Compston ; Angela
Flannigan ; Scotty George;
David Harris ; Keith Hatten;
Jean Howell ; Matthew Moffitt; Donna Mollohan; Donald
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Newell; Sheryl Snodgrass;
Dlseharges, Oet. 9
Hattie Jorden, Pl. Plea- Laverne Stewart; Greg
sant; Mrs. Billie Hughes, Taylor; Carrie Wallis; Mrs.
Ashton·J Bertha ·casto ) Leon·' George Young and son.
Births, Od. 9
Mrs. James Hubbard and
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Reddaughter, Syracuse; Mrs. ,
mund,
son,
New · Haven, W.
Ray Beaver, Crown City;
Va.
Florence Skinner, Arbuckle;
Mr. and mrs. Arthur Kisor
'Michael Derenberger, Pl.
daughter,
Coalton.
'
Pleasant; John Reitmire;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
David
McJean Waugh, Henderson ;
Quaid, son, Gallipolis.
Lisa King, Roberstberg .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Births ·
Whespcrasp,
son, McArthur.
Mr. and MIW. Douglass
Mr.
and
Mrs. Frank ·
Thalin, Pomeroy, son.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson, Samapowitz , son, Middleport.
. New Haven, son.

boiler at the Appalachian
Power Co. plant, according to
William E. Rader , Union
Boi ler corporat e safety
director.
Rader identified the dead
man as Harold E. McAfee, 50,
of Gnmm s Landing in .Mason
County .
McAfee was pronounced
dead at the scene by Mason
County Coroner Dr. John M.
Grubb. Grub b •aid McAfee

*-

j.;.

FLAG CORPS- Making up the Southern High School
Marching Band Flag Corps this year, from the left, are
Julie Toren, captain; Ann Williams, Julie F1agg, Bunni

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS

your convenience.

Sporn accident leaves
one ·dead, one critical

f/

field day
SCheduled

Can be .included in your senior portrait
previews.
We give you quality, reasonable prices
and personal attention and schedule you at

~

~

I

W00d}3lld

-Double Exposure

f

t

stage naked" to accept the did ."'
CMA and network officials
award.
made
frantic last-minute
She didn 't have to. She
borrowed a mink stole from changes in the schedule when
someone In the audience and singer Tammy Wynette, who
was scheduled to present
bounced - well covered onto the stage to collect her awards, canceled her
appearance hours before the
prize.
" I had this dress made broadcast. Miss Wynette is
hoping I would win," said recuperating from bruises
Miss Parto·n in her suffered last week when she
acceptance speech. "But a was abducted from a
few minutes ago I was hoping Nashville shopping center
I wouldn't because I just and driven 80 miles before
being released .
busted the front out of it.
Crystal Gayle, sister of
"I guess it's like my daddy
longtime
country star Loretta
said - you shouldn't try to
put 50 pounds of mud in a Lynn, was named the top
female vocalist for the second
fivepound sack.
consecutive year. "Don't It
"It's nice and pretty to put
on the mantel· 1n case you Make My Brown Eyes Blue ,"
made famous by Miss Gayle,
have kids," said Miss Parton
about her award. "You can '
say 'Look at what mommy
'
BAND BOOSTERS MEET
The Eastern Local Band
Boosters will meet at 7:30
tonight in the high school
band· room. Talks will continue about new uniforms and
instruments and election of
officers will be held. All
parents and students are
welcome.

-Traditional Studio Background$
-Outdoor Portraiture

"The Friendly Bank"

•

Dolly 'entertainer of the year'

By MARK SCHWED
NASHVILLE, Tenn. ( UPI)
United Press International strikebound system. ·
Twinsburg bus drivers ,
As the strike entered its - Buxom Dolly Parton said
cafeteria and maintenance fifth full week, the school she "busted·out the front" of
workers are expected back on board had passed a resolution her new dress just before she
the job today afterratifying a · earlier Monday asktng the was named CoWJtry Music
new 29-month contract State Controlling Board to Association entertainer of the
Monday that grants the the ease loan restrictions - year Monday night. But she
wage increases they struck freeing about $15 million for said she would have "run on
one week for.
employee raises.
Meanwhile, walkouts
Twinsburg Superintendent
continue in four other Ohio William Hanning said he
districts, including the state's expected all 81 striking nonlargest, Cleveland.
acader.Jic workers back on
·union leaders for 10,000 the job Tuesday morning.
striking Cleveland Public The teachers who respected
School employees are to picket tines Thursday and
appear in Columbus today, in Friday were back in the
·yet another effort to persuade classroom Monday, as were
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
state officials to ease most of the system's 2,500
J~es A. ~des said today
spending restrictions on its students.
loans to Cleveland schools.
Tt&gt;e agreement will cost his O!!P!!Pent m the November
Word of the visit came late , Twinsburg $143,000, but part election , Lt . Gov. Richard
Monday, as hopes dimmed of . the agreement is ~leste, has plans for a tax ·
for ending the month-long contingent on a tax levy mcrease that "will be larger
school strike within the next upcoming in a couple of than the increase felt by
Ohioans when the income tax
few d,ays.
Pessimism . years.
was passed."
abounded when Cleveland
Other school strikes
"My opponent's massive
school officials disclosed the continued
in
Logan,
tax
Increase plan will hurt
State Controlling Board· and Wellington, and Painesville
Ohio's
working men and
state Board of Education Township.
women
and
their famiilies,''
were refusing to lift
Striking school employees
in a statement.
Rhodes
said
restrictions on loans to the In Logan- both teachers and
"Ohio's
working
people
non-academic workers need
help
from
their
state
lfso continued to ignore a govermnent, not higher taxes
back-towork order issued last
week by Hocking County which · wlll cut their budgets
5
Common -Pleas Court Judge for food, clothing and other
necessities even further," he
Also:
Hanging James Stilwell.
said.
Baskets, ·House
Negotiators for striking
"Our administration is
Plants and African Painesville Township · helping
to fight inflation by
teachers resumed bargaining
Violets.
keeping
the cost
of
Sunday . The 190-member
government down," said ~he
Pa inesvi·ll e Township
Education Association struck governor. "We will continue
to meet the obligations of
the district Sept. 'n over
state
government in a
Syracuse, 0.
wages .
and
working
way without new
responsible
992-5776
conditions.
taxes."
·

IVE

Saturday .
During their formal
meeting
Monday,
the
cardinals decided voting in
the Sistine Chapel conclave
will follow the same pettem
as the balloting in the August
conclave that elected John
Paul.
Tt&gt;ere will he two votes
each morning, beginning at
9:30 a.m., and two in the
afternoon sessions at 4:30
p.m., the cardinals said .
Church experts said the list
of candidates for the papacy
was wide open, with non Italians and even noncardinals being mentioned as
possibilities.
"I think this time the pope
will not be an Italian," said
Cardinal Frantisek Tomasek
· of Czechoslovakia, add in!!'
that he thought Argentine
Cardinal Eduardo Pironio
stood a good chance.
Tt&gt;e last non-Italian pope
was Hadrian VI of Holland,
whose reign ended in 1523.

Acommittee was appointed
to head the annual Pomeroy
Christmas promotion when
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce met Tuesday at
the t&lt;Ieigs Inn.
Nam•IIJ,Q.the.committee by
Paul Simon, president, were
Barbara Chapman, Pat
O'Brien, Bill Mayer, John
Anderson and Jim Frecker,
parade chairman.
The committee will select a
date for the annual Christmas
parade and organize the
annual Christmas promotion.
John Anderson, second vice
president , reported all that
will be necessary for this
year's Christmas decorations
will be the replacement of red
and green bulbs.
Anderson reported
decorations will be erected
before Thanksgiving. Lights
will be turned on the day after
Thanksgiving.
Dave Jenkins reported the
Meigs County Jaycees have
doubled their membership
this year. They now have a
total of 70 members. jenkins
announced Jay cees will have
a "Haunted House" at the old
senior high building Oct. 20
and 21 and Oct. 24 through
Oct. 31 . Admissi on is $1 per
person.
A Halloween party sponsored by Powell's Super Valu
will be held at the Haunted
House on Oct. 31 from 6 to 7
p.m.
Fred Crow once again
discussed the possibility of
renovating the old senior high
building.
·crow added, " If we get the
right people working we can
get the amount of contributions needed." Crow
suggested
money
be
borrowed througp the ~HA
over a possibly 40 year
period.
Estimated cost to renovate
the building is $100,000. Crow
also stated that it would be •
necessary to get the
cooperation of the village for
the project. He also noted
that plastic should be placed
over the windows and that he
will direct a letter to Mayor
Clarence Andrews in regard
to the matter.
William Spencer of General
Telephone Company said it
would cost approximately
f500 to move phone equipment from the present city
hall to the senior high
building. It was estimated by
village council sometim~ ago
that the cost to move communicatlons would run in the
neighborhood of $30,000. This
amount was quoted for all
. communications not just the
telephone company's
equipment.
Emmogene Holstein,
secretary, read a Jetter from
Robert Morris, principal at
Pomeroy and Middleport

... .

Elementary

Scho o l s
Nati o nal
Education Week, Nov . 12-18.
Morris suggested that
chamber honor outstanding
teachers, students and administrators with a luncheon
during that-week.
Attending were Paul
Simon , presi dent, Mrs.
Holstein, Anderson, Wesley
Buehl, Jenkins, Bill Mayer,
Virgil Teaford, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Warner , Hank Cleland,
Crow, Stan Houdashelt ,
O'Brien, Joe Young, Bob
Miller, Kyle Allen, Ferman
Moore and Paul Gerard.
re ga rding

Voinovich , in Pomeroy on a
swing through Meigs County,
said the governor's proposal
also ensures that
a
"Pro posi tion
13
ty pe
movement is unl ikely to
occur in Ohio."
" Although property taxes
in Ohi o are among the lowest
in the nation, because of the .
inflat ionary increases that
have occurred ii'l farm and
home valuations: some relief
is needed rlow," Voinovich

said.
" Because of th1s proposal,
property owners in Meigs
County will receive more
than $171,000 in property tax
savings in 1980 if the General
Assembly acts to approve
this package," he added.

According to Voinovich,
who is currently Cuyahoga
County

Commissioner and

former Cuya hoga Co unty
Auditor, the proposal would
place a st r.ict hmit on incr eases in unvol ed property
taxes, which is currently
p ermitt ed
m
six-year

reappraisa ls or the threeyear dates .
Under
present
law,
Voinovich explained, all
tax ing authorities are permitted to levy up to a total of
10 mills insid e mill age
without a vote of the people.
This proposal would place-a
hold on this 10 mills at· the
1977 levels' by applying the
tax reduction factor that
currently exists in House Bill

920 to the inside unvoted
millage. · Voin ovich said the
loss of dollars to taxing and
school distri cts as result of
this pro posa l will be made up
through

(;I

direct

reim-

bursement from the state's
general funq.
TI1e proposal, which calls
for nu new state taxes, will be
funded throu gh an expected
$:1.3 billion increase in the
st ate bud get over the next
four years. " This increase

will be "the result of natura l
growt h in the budget,"
Voinov ich sa id .

Voinovich noted property
owners ln non-charter cities
whose property has increased
at the average ra~e of in( Continued on page.14)

Middleport woman ;~~;;~~;~,~~~!i;~i. '
• coIIiSIOD
•
h u rt m
&gt;

Fair
showers

Gallipolis City Police were
called to the scene of a twocar collision Tuesday at 2: 11
p. m., at the intersection of
Pine St. and Third Ave.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Cecil E. Searles,
76, Pomeroy, traveling east
on Pine, fail ed to stop at a red
li ght at the intersection and
struck a vehicle driven by
Marlen e E. Houck, 40,
Gallipoli s, north bound on
Third.
A passenger in the Searls
auto, Emma Searles, 67 ,
Middleport, was transported
by the Gallia Volunteer
Squad to Holzer Medical
Ce nter, where she was
treated for a contusion and
sprain of the right shoulder,
and a conc usion and released .
The city police report
severe damage to bot h
vehicles.
Searles wa s cited on
charges of failure to obey an
automatic traffic control

B&amp;E probed,
items are
confiscated
Within 15 minutes after
Middleport police were
notified of a breaking and
entering Tuesday at an antique shop on North Second
Ave., a suspect was taken
into custody. ·
Police Chief J. J. Cremeans
sa id hi s department was
called at 10:10 a.m. by Ruth
Gosney and Osby Martin,
operators of the antique shop.
They reported two clocks and
two flint lock antique pistols
were missing.
· Investigation showed entrance had been gained by
knocking a hole in a rear
upstairs window. Exit was by
the same path, according to
Cremeans.
Chief Cremeans said officers questioned a suspect,
who took them to his home
where the items from the
shop were found along with
items taken during a
breaking and entering at a
furnished, but unoc cu pied
home on North Fifth Ave.
The 19-year-old male
. suspect had entered the Fifth
Ave. residence in the same
manner as he entered the
antique shop, the chief stated.
Taken from the Fifth Ave.
residence was a quantity of
dishes and glassware, also all
antique.
The suspect, whose name
was not disclosed by Chief
Cremeans, pending further
investigation, has been jailed
and will face two counts of
breaking and entering in the
Meigs County Court. The
Fifth Ave. breaking and
entering occurred around
Sept. 24.
The chief also reports
Jeffery Sparks, 19, Middleport, chatged
withbreaking and entering the
Village Pharmacy on Sept. 28
is confined to the Meigs
Co1mty Jail. He has entered a
plea of guil~J and is awaiting
sentencing.

IN POMEROY TUESDAY - In Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon were Oakley Collins, state
senator , and George V. Voinovich who is running for lieutenant governor. Shown, left to
right, are Oakley Collins, Voinovich and Richard Jones. Meigs County Executive
Committee chairman.

ITEMS CONFISCATED - Capt. Sid Little, left, and Patrolman Dale Rockhold of the
Middleport Police Department, stand with a table loaded with antique dishes, gla ssware,
clocks and pistols recovered by the department Tuesday, from two breaking and entering
Incidents in the community . Asuspect has been jailed on breaking and entering charges.

device.

At 7:07 p.m. officers investigated a two-vehicle
mishap on First Ave., at the

intersection of Court St.
According to the police, a
vehicle operated by Audrey
L. Randolf, 20, Pt . Pleasant,
pulled frorri Court into the
path of an auto driven by
Marvin F . Sheets , 37. Crown
City, traveling south on First.
Offic ers rep ort slight
damage to both vehi cles.
Randolph was cited on
charges o! failure to yield.
::::::;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;::::::::

MORE FALSE ALARMS
For the second straight
night local fire departments
received false alarm calls .
Receiving the ca lls Tuesday
night were the departments
of Pomeroy, Middleport and

Friday,

with

developing late
Sa turday and continuing
Sunday. Highs will be in the
upper 60s or the iOs Friday

and Saturda y and in the 60s
Sunda y. Lows will be in the
50s Frida)', lowering ·to the

middle or upper 40s by
Sunday.
.:.:.:' :.:.::.:: ' .:.::~ : ~; ' ;:;~.::::': :;::~ : :::::.:::::;:::::;:::: ' ;::::::::

Safety rules
offered by
Meigs deputies
Meigl-i Co un ty Sheriff's
deputies have issued a sa fet y
reminder for pa rents and

children rturing the upcoming
Halloween aseason.
Acco rding to the announce ment , HRII uwcen is a
time uf fun for children , btit it
can also res ult in tragedy.

Parents are asked to acRacine. Anyone with in- company their youngsters on
formation as to the person tri ck or treat round s.

making the calls is asked to
co nta ct loca l law enforcemen t officia ls. Th e
caller Tuesday night told one
dispatcher that he had to do

Children sho uld usc li ght·
color ed, non flammable
costumes short enough to
preven t trippin g. colorful
makeup instead of masks.
something for som e e n- And, as alw ays. st reets
sho uld only be crossed at
terta inment.
corners

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:

an d

marked

crosswa lks.

Four injured in auto accident .
Four persons were injured
in a one-auto accident
Tuesday on SR 588, ninetenths of a mile west of Bob
McCormick Rd. at 11:20 p.m.
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports a
westbound auto operated by
Steve D. Deeter, 21, Palistine.
0 ., went out of control ,
passed off the right side of the
road, recrossed the highway,
went off the left side of the
highway, and overturned.
Deeter
and
three
passengers, Thomas Herbert,

18, Columbus, Steven Denton,
22, Marietta, and Garvin
Smith, 21, Pickerington, were
transported to
Holzer
Medical Center by the Gallia
Volunteer Squad.
Deeter was admitted 'for
treatment of a fract,ured jaw,
and is listed in satisfactory
condition.

Denton was autuiUed with

a blunt abdominal in trauma ,
and is listed in satisfactory
condition.
Smith was treated for a
contusion of the chest and left
shoulder, and released.
Herbert was treated for
contusions, and released.

Officers report heavy
damage to the Deeter
vehicle.
Deeter was cited on
d1arges of OWL
The Gallia-Meigs Post
investigated four other accidents Tuesday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two.:.truck collision
at 10 :15 a. m . on SR 218 at
Lew Southern nd .
According tu the report, a
vehicle, operated by Isaac
Hively, 20, pulled from the
county road into the path of a
northbound

t

rut:k driven by

Charles Holley , 61, (;allipulis.

,

Offi ce rs report heavy Violet Satterfield, 56, Reed- .
sville, attempted to slow for
damage to both vehicles.
Hively was cited on an oncoming vehicle driven
by Gerald Barringer, 42,
charges of failure to yield.
The patrol investigated a Reedsville.
The rear of the bus slid
two-vehicle mishap in Rio
Grande, on College St., at 2 p. stri king the Barringer
m.
vehicle.
Officers report that an auto
There was no injuries.
The patrol . reports slight
operated by Kathy Baker, 19,
Middleport, pulled from a damage to both vehicles. No
side street into the path of a citation was issued .·
so uthbound vehicle driven by
The patrol reported at3:05
Kevin Lloyd, 19, Oak Hill.
p. m. on Fairview Rd., twoBoth vehicles incurred tenths uf a mile south of
moderate damage . No Hannan Trace Rd~ , a nor1hbound vehicle driven by
citation was issued.
At 4:10 p.m. officers in- Alice Caldwell, 48, Crown
vestigated an accident in- City, went lefl of center
volving a school bus owned by striking a southbound auto
the Eastern Local School operated by Judith Wright,
District on CR 274, two and 38, Crown City.
five-tenth s miles north of SR
Officers report moderate
124 in Meigs County.
damage to both vehicles.
Officers repot t that the
Caldwell was cited on
S&lt; 1uthbound bus,_&lt;&gt;Pcl'hted by charges of left of center.

.,

PRESENTED BANJO MUSIC - Deputy Darrell
Slone entertained the sixth grade classes at Pomeroy
Elementary School Tuesday with several banjo numbers .
This was part of a program sponsored by the sheriff's
department to "get acquainted with your police officers".
)
~
'•

�.

2- The Daily Sent mel, MiddleP,Ort·Pomeroy, 0 .. Wedneoday . Ocl. 11. 1978

1 itfl..'v'E A
@ME fu\N. I tXl'Sr
CAt-if 1f:.\..L ltU Wtt$J'

•

Country Conditions of the
fall season are brought out at
the annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival Friday throl!'gh
Sunday on the Bob Evans
,
.
Farm lll R1o Grande. .
The featured attraction of
the three-&lt;lay event will be
the more than 100 early
American
era f tsmen
demonstrating pioneer skills.
F'estival-goers will see
wooden toy makers and
'th
candlemakers, . silversrm s
and blacksmiths, glass
blowers and Jogrollers.
Banjos,
fiddle_s
and
dulcimers Iring back the
sounds of an old country hoe·
down. Field demonstrations
feature Bradford's border
collies
herding
sheep ,
horseshoeing, sheep shearing
and trick mules.
Appetites can he satisfied
wJth apple elder, sausage ,
cornbread and kettle-cooked
bread.
Hours are Friday 10 a.m. to
8 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m . to 6
p.m . and Sunday from 9 a.m.
to S p.m.
The Hocking Hilla Art1sta
and Crafl8men Association
hosts the aMual Hocking

•

\

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

..

Building a better bus
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHING1'0N (NEA ) • Confrontations over public
policy m th1s capital seldom fail to attract the interest of
the press and public, but too !itt!~ attentiOn IS pa1d to the
peaceful resolullon of those conflicts ..
A case in point : The often acnmonwus seven-year-long
diSpute over the design of the next generation of buses to
meet the nation's transportabon needis m the 1980s and
beyond
.
That issue inspired years of lawsuits, emotiOnal accusa·
tions and political maneuvers. The Department of Trans·
portation (DOT) which provides 80 percent ofthe fundis for

purchase of urban mass transit equipment, was forced

repeatedly to change its policy .
But the matter centered around the Transbus, a
radically different intercity bus designed _specifically to
provide access to the approxunately 30 milhon elde~Jy and
disabled people who find it difficult, if not unposs1ble, to
negotiate the steep steps and narrow doors of current bus
models.
.
To achieve that goal the Transbus floor will be only 22
mches above the gro~d and the vehicle will h~ve the
capability to mechamcally. "kneel" do'!"'" to 18 mches,
compared with the 32- to 34-mch floor he1ght of buses now
in service.
A retractable ramp and a 44-inch-wide door would
pennit those confined to wheelchairs to use the buses. (The
wide door also would allow simultalleous entry and ex1t of

other passengers, an obvious improvement over the

current single-file system of entry and egress. )
The General Motors Corp ., whose GMC Truck and Coach
DiviSion is by far the country's largest producer of buses,
adamantly opposed the entire concept, arguing that the

.,.ransbus was a "technical disaster."

·, On the other side of the conflict was a coalition that
included leaders of the Paralyzed Veterans of America,
National Council of Senior Citizens, Amencan Council of
the Blind United Cerebral Palsy Associatlons and Ameri·
can coan'tion of Citizens with DiSabilities.
Members of that ''Transbus Group" lobbied against GM
on Capitol Hill and within DOT, held public demonstrations
in major cities and enlisted the support of maJor politlcal
figures mcluding DOT Secretary Brock Adams and Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
GM President Elliott M. Estes recently agreed to meet
twice with representatives of the Transb.us Group. From
those wmpublicszed sess1ons, a compronuse e_m e_rged:
GM had insisted upon a rear-door hydraulic lift as the
only acceptable means of providing bus access to infinn
and handicapped passengers. The Transbus Group was
equally adamant in 1ts campaign for a front-&lt;loor ramp.
The feuding parties and DOT agreed that both the ramp
and lift will be available as alternative optwns, to be
selected by local transit agencies when they buy the buses .
In either case, the mechaniSm w1ll he attached to the front
door.
GM withdrew its support of congressional legislati~n
that would have required a one· to three-year delay m
implementation of the program and the company no longer
actively opposes the Transbus concept.
The Trans bus Group and the DOT originally pressed for
a production schedule calling for delivery of the first buses
by !981. They acquiesced to GM's demands for more tune,
and deliveries now are scheduled to begfn in !984.
Major corporations, self-proclaimed "public interest
groups" and federal agencies. fr!'9uently have ~n
accused - with considerable JUStification - of bemg
inflexible when dealing with each other on such issues.
But the Trransbus experience demonstrated the value of
the compromise. Philadelphia, Miami, Los Angeles,
Denver Pittsburgh Portlond, Seattle, San Diego, New
York, Chicago, Min~eapolis and othe~ cities now will he
able to place their orders for a vastly unproved bus.
432
Men 's High Series - Mike
Capehart, m. 169 and 163.

Two Way
Communicators League
September 22, 1978

Wed. Early Birds
September 27, 1978
W

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

L
B

Sw iSher S. Lohse
24
Royal Crown
16 16
Ktng Builders
16 16
Jack 's Clu b
15 17
Reibel's Used Cars
14 18
Team 5
11 21
Hig h lnd Ga m e - Marlene
Wilson 200, Barbara Fte lds
181 , Mary Voss 175 .
High lnd Ser ies - Marlene
W ii~on 480, Jean Norton 459 ,
Haztlu Reibel 453
High Team Game Reibel ' s Used Cars 798 ,
Re tbel ' s Used Cars 746,
Swisher S. Lohse. 713.
high Team Series Reibel 's Used Cars 2244, King
Builder s 2243 , Swisher &amp;
Lohse 2120.

Women ' s High Sertes Margaret Wyatf 442 ; 1\i\arlene

Team
Young 's Gulf Sta .

W L
18 6

Team 5
Young 's Carpeting
Tea m 2

14
12
12

Team 4
Team6

10 • 4
2 22

10
12
12

Htgh lnd Se r ies ~ Young' s
Gulf Station 994, Young 's
Carpeting 876, Team 4
Hi g h TP.am Game -

Young's Gulf St a tion 351 ; 340
and 313.
Men 's Htgh Game - Butch
Roush and Mtke Capehart
156, Mike Capehart and Terry
Seidenabel 151. Butch Roush
148
Men 's High Series - Buich
Roush 433, Terry Seldenabel
422 . Mtke Capeheart 403.
Women 's High Game -

Margaret Wyatl, 190, 179 and
164.
Women's Hig h Series -

Wednesday Earlybirds
September 27, 1978
Team
W L
32 8
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Royal Crown
24 16
Team 5
19 21
King Builders
16 24
Jack's Club
15 25
Reibel's Used Cars
14 26
High Ind. Game .., Myrtle
St . Clair 212, Debbie Hawley'
184, Candy Brothers 183.
High lnd Series - Donna
Grate 486, Myrtle St . Cta1r
467, Betty Whitlatch 463 .
Team High Game Swisher ond Loshe 2368. 792,
Teom High Senes Sw 1sher and Lohse 2368 ,
Royal Crown 2173, Reibel 's
Used Cars 21 30 ·

Margarel Wyatl533, Marlene
Wtison 454, Edtth Hall 321.
Two Way Communication
League
September 29, 1978
Teams
W L
Young's Gulf Sta.
20 12
Team 2
20 12
Team 5
20 12
Young's Carpeting

16 16

Team 4
14 18
Team6
2 30
Team High Series Young's Carpettng 897, Team
4 896, Team 2, 782
Team High Game Young 's Carpeting , 304 ;
Young 's Carpenter 301.
Team 4, 294
Men's High Series -

Mike
Terry

Caper art ,
509 ;
Seidenabel 475; Bu lch Roush
#

Wilson 422. Edith Hail 308
Women ' s High Game Margaret Wya tt 177, Marlene
W tlson 147 and 138.

TwoW
Communicat rs League
Octob 6, 1978

Tea'?
Tea rt;! 2
Youn
Young s
Team 5
Team 4
Team 6
H1gh

Sefles

-

W
28
26
22
22
14
4

I am often appalled at the
ends to which agency heads
go to justify budget increases
to the Congress. ,They conjure
up all kinds of new, fine
sounding programs and
package them many limes in
a way that IS totally
misrepresentative. A case in
point1s this year's request for
an additional $40 b1ll10n from
ACTION agency Director
Sam Brown for an un·
dertakmg labeled the Utban
Volunteer Program. This new
elfort is defined as a com,
pllat10n of existing programs
whose stated aims are
principally to strengthen
volunteerism at the local
level and to bring govern·
ment closer to the people. On
the surface such objectives
are difficult to take excepllon
to, but let's take a closer look
at the aims and actions of
ACTION.
Before I do however, let
me digress for a moment to
more fully explalu what
ACTION is and who Sam
Brown is. ACTION Is thT
agency created lu 1971 to

oversee our country's
various volunteer oriented
organizations. II brought
under one roof such
programs as the Peace
Corps, Vista (Volunteers lu
Service to America), the
Foster Grandparent
Program, and a number of
similar but smaller scoped
programs. Sam Brown, if
you remember, is lbe anti·
establishment activist of
the 1960's who bas long
been an outspoken critic of

government

and

our

society In general.
The Sam Brown of today
has traded his protester's
placard for a three piece suit
and a $52, 500 a year job as one
of
Washington's
top
bureaucrats.
His
representations before the
Congress
disguise
his
background, but his action at
ACTION do not. To Congress,
he maintains the Urban
Volunteer Col'Jlll will work
with local governments and
:he e&lt;lsting private voluntary
;ector to strengtben the
•apabilities of all concerned.
ie comes on as Mr. Clean
earnestly pursuing harmony
of effort between all sectors

.

MISSION, Kan. (UP! ) NCAA
DivisiOn l·A md1vidual leaders released
today :
Rushlug
att yds avg td ypg
Persell, W Mich
174 847 4.9 3 169.4
White, SoCal
Ill 610 5.5 6 IS2.5
Dickey, Tex A&amp;M
74 S94 8.0 7 148.S
Jackson, NTexSt
148 851 5.8 3 141.8
Alexander, LSU
127 S67 4.5 7 141.7
Passing
all cmp yds int td cpg
Dils,Stnfrd
174 112 1182 II 9 22.7
Ford,SMU
141
83 1120 6 6 20.7
Sprggs, NMx
179 95 1384 17 9 19.0
Thmpsn,Wsh
128 67 829 6 9 16.7
Smith,'Baylor
127
64 847 7 16.0
Scoring
td xp fg pis ppg
8 0 0 4812.0
Ross, No Ill
9 0 0 54 10.8
Lewis, Va Tech
9 0 0 4 10.8
Sims, Okla
7 0 0 4210.5
Hill, Army
7 0 0 4210.5
Alexander, LSU
Reeelving
ct yds td ctpg
Petzke, No Ill
35 467 5 8.7
Beasley, Aplchn St
32 473 2 6.4
30 604 4 6.0
Evans, N Mex St
Francis, Stnfrd
29 218 0 S.8
Cunnmgham, Rice
23 230 0 S.7
'
Total Offense
att yds avg ypg
Spriggs, N Mex St
257 1539 6.0 307.8
189 1398 7.4 279.6
Wright, Bwlg Gr
Ford, SMU ,
163 1071 6.6 267.7
Oils, Stnfrd
209 1175 5.6 235.0
Thompson, Wash St
160 878 5.S 219.5
All-purpose Ruonlug
rush rev kr ypg

or

of our society.
Once outside the hearing
rooms of Congress it's
another story altogether. A
quick look at some of Sam
Brown's
more
recent
remarks when he IS not
lobbying for taxpayers' fundis
reveals that he is not so en·
thusiastic about what the
pubhc can do for Itself. In
fact, he is contemptuous of
local authonty and elected
officials. To the reporter of a
VISTA publication he commented, "my predecessor
sa1d he turned VISTA into
motherhood and apple pie.
Well, that's not my intention.
Right now we have VISTA
lawyers pushing paper for the
community. My view is that
they ought to be filing cases
against the community." To
a Washington Star reporter
he stated, "politics IS the
struggle to redistribute
power and wealth; that's just
what I'm all about." That
sounds a little more hke the
Sam Brown of old, rather
than the horn again convert
to Jess government and tax
cuts that he postures himself
to be before the Congress.
Let's look at the record of
Mr. Brown at ACTION. Mr.
Brown inherited a staff of
16, he presently has a
personal staff of 48. To help
revamp the ageney, Brown
has hired an unbellevable
122 consnltants. The
previous director bad an
ali-time high of 22. One of
the Ilrst things Brown did
as Director of the agency
was cut the budget of the
· Retired Senior Volunteers.
This program paid no
salary, but provided meals
and lravel expenses to
senior
citizens
who
volunteered their service to
the needy lu their com·
munlties. At the same time
Brown was cuttlug Ibis
program,
be
began
speodlug his agency luto a
budget deficit situation
through excessive travel
and salary allowances.
Fortunately for taxpayers,
all of this has not gone un·
noticed . the House Ap·
propriations Committee and
the General Accounting
Office are presently in·
vestigating the operaation of

s

"The idea is to ease yoWlgsters into it," Thomas says.

"The public agency has very good people seekmg
nonpunitive treatment rather than jail tenns."
For a town of 250,000 persons the system has turned up a
phenomenal nwnber of sexual abuse cases, says Thomas.
In the six months prior to Feb. I, Knoxville had a tolol of
61 sexual abuse cases filed, of which 19 were "confirmed"
- that is, certain.
In the five months after the system started 76 cases were
filed, 42 conlinned.
Many people, especially teenagers, "won't report sexual
abuse because of the stigma, the shame," says Janet
Rosensweig, one of the two counselors who cover Knox·
ville's telephone hat-line full time. " Sex abuse Is harder to
deal with than any other kmd of child abuse. We provide
information, guarantee anonymity and offer a· direct line
to a therapist without the usual procedures that frighten
away people."
Somewhat surprisingly, she says, only two calls since
Feb. 1 have involved homosexuality.
Ms. Rosensweig, 23, holds a Ph.D. in health education
from Penn State. Her home phone iS tied to the hot-llrle.
She's on duty 24 hours daily for a week, then gets a week off
and does personal counseling and "a lot of teacher
education ... teachers need training on sex abuse."
Thomas says he's developed a manual so other commun·
ities can set up without backup counseling.
This weekly colwnn provides information about federal .
services offered to individuals and groups. Queries are
invited. We can't reply to each letter ·but ~ anawer ....
many as possible Write to "THE U.S. AND YOU," care of
this newspaper.

------------------------------------.
Justify more fully the $117.3 =
million of taxpayers' money '
they presently are getting. It
appears Mr. Brown and his
fellow political activists are
trying to get through the
bureaucracy the money and
support they could not get
through the electoral process.

Peopletalk
By KENNE'm R. CLARK
United Presslotematlooal
FRIDAY NIGHT FEVER: The disco epidemic has spread
all the way to Provo, Utah, where "The Donny and Mary"
show is taping its fall season to the heat and packing t!Je bill
with everyone from Miss America to Marcus Welby. The
Osmond kids -who quit being kids some time ago -will open
their ABC·TV Friday the 13th production with Robert Yo1111g,
Kris Kristofferson and Paul Lyadi in a ''white tie and tails
competition," judged by Kyleoe Barker :-the reigning Miss
America. Rita Coolidge, Betty White, COIIIIC Jobooy Dark and
the show's regular "Disco Dozen" round out the cast.

I

I

Young's

oo

23
Stachowicz, Mich St
31
Buford, Tex Tech
44
Birdsong, W Tex St
20
King, So Cal
24
Davey, Wash St
Field Goals
fga lg pet
1714 .824
Bahr, Penn St
II 9 .818
Tala, Navy
8 81.00
Adams, Tex Tech
9 6 .667
Duncan S D1ego St
13
9 .692
Sav1ch, Cent Mich

Yanks turn to
Catfish Hunter
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
WS ANGELES (UPI)
Having run head-on into a
tidal wave of "Dodger Blue"
emotion, the New York
Yankees, rocked by IS hits
and three homers, turn to
Catfish Hunter, the catalyst
of their miracle of 1978
comeback, in an effort to get
even tonight in tbe second
game of the World Series .
The Los Angeles Dodgers
came out wearing black patches hearing the numeral 19
on their uniform sleeves
TUesday night in tribute to
their late coach, Jim Gilliam.
They
took
out
their
bereavement on the Yankees,
11~, with Davey Lopes' two
borne runs triggering the
victory.
Gilliam, who died Sunday
night after lying in a coma for
three weeks following a eerelral hemorrhage, will be
buried today.
"Jimmy's
up
there
watChing us," said Lopes,
who belted a two-run homer
in the second Inning
Wednesday night and added a
lbree-{'un blast in the fourth
to increase the Dodger'' lead

to !Hl. " ...The Yankees should
know they're playing SO of us
out there now insiead of 25.
That's because Jimmy's
spirit is in every one of us and
he's in all the right holes."
Meanwhile the Yankees
didn 'I score until the seventh
inning and managed just two
fly balls out of the infield over
the first six innings against
Tommy John, the Dodgers'
3S-year-old
sinkerball
specialist.
"Our scouting report on
John was probably the best
thing we had in the game,"
said Yankee Manager Bob
Lemon. "They said he doesn't
like to let the ball go airborne
and that's pretty much what
happened until the Dodgers
starled throwing the ball
around in the late innings."
Dodger Manager Tommy
Lasorda will go with his top
winner, right-hander Burt
Hooton, in hopes of taking a 20 lead in games back to New
York.
The Dodgers wasted no
time in giving John a
comfortable cushion. After
wasting a pair of singles in
the first inning, they began to
take Yankee starter Ed

have been strikes ," said
Figueroa . "I told Lemon
when he came to the mound
that this guy (Vargo) has got

a small strike zone."
Fi~ueroa

Lemon yanked

~wr I 2-3 mnmgs With the

Box Score

avg

46.4
46.1
44.0
43 7
43 7
fgpg
2.33
2 25
2.00
2.00
1.80

Game One

NEW YORK
ab t h bi

Player

Rtvers , cf

4 0 0 0

Blair . cf
Whtte , It

1 0 0 0
4 0 1 0

Munson , c

4 1 0 0

Jackson, dh

4 1 3

Piniella , If

4 2 1 1

Nettles, 3b
Chmbl s. 1b
Stanley. 2b
Johnsn . ph
Doyle, 2b
Dent , ss

4 0
4 1
2 o
1 o
0 0
4 0

Doug Clelland
6-8, ISO lbs.
Sr. TB·CB

1

La st Fnday night, Eastern
Eastern travels to South·
western Fr1day mght m t he took a g1ant step forward with
top game m t he Southern a 40-0 romp over t he dclen·
Va lley Athletic Conference. dmg champton Kyger Cr eek
Other lea gue tilts lind South· Bobcats. Coach J ohn Blake's
ern VISiting Kyger Creek and P1rates have bea ten South·
Ftgueroa , p
0 0 0 0
Clay, p
0 0 0 0 Hannan Trace at North western , 14-7 and Southern,
Lindblad. p
o o o o Gallla. In anothe r area 36~ tu take a one game lead
Ttdrow, p
0 0 0 0 contest inv olvmg Class A in the SV AC sta ndings
Totals
36 5 9 5 schools, Symme s Valley
A week ago, Coach Bob
LOS ANGELES
As
h le y' s Hi g h la nd e r s
plays
at
Hannan
,
W.
Va
Player
ab r h bt
Lopes, 2b
5 2 2 5
It now appears that the defea ted former league foe,
Russell . ss
5 1 3 0 Eastern-North Galli a game Symmes Valley, 20-0. Pacmg
Smtth, rf
5 0 1 1
the 40-0 Eagle vi ctory wa s
Garvey , l b
5 1 2 0 slated Oct. 27 may be the
Cey , 3b
4 1 1 0 game to dec1de lh1s year's semor tatlback Randy Br·
womng who rushed for lSI
Baker , lf
4 2 3 1 champiOn m the SVAC.
Monday , cf
2 2 1 0
However, an order to mak e yards. Teammat e Bn a n
North , cf
1 1 1 2
B1ssell , jumor quarterback,
Lacy,dh
3 0 I 1 that the po ss1ble cham·
scored
four touchdowns a nd
Yeager , c
4 1 0 0 p10nsh1p battle, Coach Joe
John, p
0 0 0 0 Mit chem's .E astern Eagles two extra pomts.
Forster , p
0 0 0 0 m ust defeat much unproved
Ea s t e rn 's de fe nse m ust
Totals
38 1I IS 10 Southwestern
New York
000 000 32D- 5
Los Angeles 030 310 31x- 11
1 1
1 0
1 o
o 0
0 0
1 2

E - Dent, Lo pes , Russell
DP- New York 2, Los

Angeles 1 LOB- New York 6.
Los Angeles 6. 2B- Stanley,
Monday ,

North,

HR ~ Bak e r

(1) ,

Russell .

Lopes 2 (2) ,

Jackson ( 1).
1p h r er bb so
IL 0- 1)
1 2-3 5 3 3 1 0

2 2
0 1
0 1

Wagner
studies

proposal

10% OFF ALL
PANELING IN STOCK

~

~

but the real "B.D."4he embattled conservative who ~~
never removes his foolball helmet -Is unlike his comic strip
alter ego. fn fact, says llrlu DowliDI, "I'm a liberal." He
never joined the Anny to escape wrltlnc a term paper and hal \•
no Vletcoog buddy named Pbred. He waa 4F. Cartoon11t Gal')' til
'l'nldeau, a fellow Yale student when he began the strip,
patterned B.D. alter· quarterback OllwliDI, who aaya, "lin'!
simllarity between me and B.D. ended wben !left Yale, alter
the drinking and womanizing days." Dllwlln8 II in Lol Angeles
where he recen~ waa cut by the Rami.

Pro playoffs

fans

i

Women's High Series -

Marlene
Wilson
547.
Margaret Wyatt .m , Edith
Hail 335

'

l

" Wilen I grow up, I want to be just /Ike the
heroine of' W.E.B. ', a predatory TV execu·
five. "

'

----------~--------~~-----J

QUOTE OF THE DAY: LiiiJaa Carter, asked In Bolton If
she ·has any reaervatlolll about enclorliiDg Democratic
Congressman Pal E. TIIGqu In hill CIIIIIJllllgn agaiDit
Incumbent Sen. Ednnl W. Brooke - the nallllll'• oaly black
senator: "I love tbe black people, u they alllmcnr. Well, Mr.
Brooke - ·he's a Republican, ain't lie? I know a lew
Republlcana, but I can't remember their names."
~

..

.

to late Jim Gilliam
Jackson did hiS usual War ld
series thing by hittmg a lon g
home rljll to lead off the
seventh It was Jackson 's
Sixth homer m his last four
World Sems games - a
record .
Ot her tha n Jackson 's
homer - a 430-foo l blast over
th e Dodgers' bullpen m right
field - about the only other
consolation the Yankees got
was finding out that second
baseman Lopes and hi s
doubleplay partner, shortstop
Bill Russell, are sometimes
prone to lllistakes.
Lopes booted a potentia l
double-play grounder m t he
seventh mnmg, which led to a
two-run smgle by Buc ky
Dent, a nd John might have
survived the e1ghth had 11 not
been for a throwin g error by
Russell that led to the fourth
Yankee run and set up the
fifth, which was dnven m by
Graig Nettles' single.
Before
he
departe d
however , John virtually
starved
the
Yankees .
Feeding them an assoriment
of smkerballs, the biomcarmed southpaw had them
beating the ball into the
ground. Of the 23 outs John
recorded, 17 of them were the
result of grounders.

ROBERT HOE fi.I CII
C1ly Ed1tur
Pullh:;hctl d,uly l'lU:cpt Satunlay

Ll) rht: Ol nu Vall t'l' Pubhshmg
Comp.a ti\'·Multn m·lh&lt;i lm: , ' I ll
Cum t St , Pu1 11 ~ 1 o) . Olno ~ 57 1i!J
B u suws.~ Offll'c Phout• 992· l l56
htltt un ul Phone 992·11;,7
St•t ()ll~ l'ias.s IJ"~' "~·· p.utl
te~ ll vt·

\.u ntloll

Warld series Standings
BY Un•ted Pren lnternattonal
New York vs. Los Angeles

HARDWARE

( Best-oi-SevenJ

,

(All T1mes EDTJ

MEIGS PLAZA
992-3662
9-6 MIS
12-6 SUNDAY
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .

'"

(Los Angeles leids, 1·0)
Oct 10 Los Angeles 11,
New York 5
Oct 11 - New York at Los
Ang eles. a· JOpm
·
Oct 13 - Los Ang eles at New
York, 5 30 p m
Oct 14 - Los Ang e le s at New
York , 3 JO p m
Oct 15 - x Los Angel e s at
New York. 4. 30 p m
Oct 17 - x. New York at Los
Ange l es , 8:30p .m
Oct . 18 - X New York at LOS
Angeles
, 8:30pm
JHf necessary

r1 1

L&lt;il ll t'l wi lt rt• ol\.&lt;l l l&lt;l hl &lt;..• 73 l'l'l\ 1 ~ lll.!f
\&gt;t·c k B) Mutur Huuh' will'tl't .111 it I
st.•n Itt' nul ,!Vttllahl l' Om m11111h.
$.! ;!j lh mall 111 Ql uu .md W V.t •
Ont' '., .11 it2 1111 S 1~ 11\llll lhs,

lliLCl'

111011\h«

F,\ st V. h t!l l' $~htlil \l'•lt

and Ha rman Trace .

Fnd ay's h omecomm g
game w11l be the first hom e
l1lt m lour weeks for KC fans
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
Team
W L T P OP
Easte rn

4

North Gal it a

3 2 0 132 52

1 o 112 23

So uthweste r n 3 3 0 109 91
S Va ll ey

2

3 0

76 155

Kyger Creek 1 3 1 34 U 2
Ha nn a n TraceO d l 46 153
Southern
0 d 1 0 15B

SVAC ONLY
W LT

Team

POP

North Gall1a 2 0 0 40 0
Easte r n
l 0 0 AO 0
Ha nnan Trac eO 0 1 20 20
Kyg er Creek 0 1 l 20 60
Southwestern 0 1 0 7 lJ
Southern
0 l 0 0 36
fr 1day 's games : Eastern
at Southwe s tern , Hannan
Trace at Nor th Ga llta , South ·
e r n at Kyger Creek and
Sy mm es Vall ey a t Ha nnan ,

w

Va

• Ftshmg Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
e Guns and
Reload1ng
• Ba 11 Gloves
Campmg
Equipment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gill
Certificates

On Certificates
Of Deposit
$1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term
Etfe c ln1e
rate
w1th
compounding 6 .66 per cent.
Nme ty day Intere st penalty
If
Withdrawn
before
matuntv date.

601 Main St .
Pt . Pleasant, W . Va.
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

W. Main St.
Across rrom Courthouse

PHONE
67 5-2988

Pomeroy, Ohto

ESTJC

-------

LUCITE ~, WALL
PAINT

ll'Jllt'Sl'l l·

AssUI.'I,IIl's, '1101

F.ut'liJ 1\Vl ,Clc~t·land Oluu~41 1 3
Subsu 1 pt 11~1 !.t tl!:; Dcli\'Ci l'll II\'

Sl l 511

fa ll The Bobcats of Coach
J1m Sprag ue opened Wllh a
14·8 wm over F ederal
Hockmg, but s mce that time
have fallen on ha rd \lmes. KC
has lost t hr ee and t1ed
Hannan Trace.
Last week's 40-0 loss at
Eastern was the Bobcats'
first leagu e loss m 36 games.
Dunng that st r eak, KC had
ties with Eastern , Southern

INTEREST

9&lt;'m~a8pm

DF\'OTF.DTOTII E
INTERF.STm
1\-tEIGS-1\lASON AREA

Pomt' I U\, Oiuu
N&lt;~tlllll t~l cl tl\t·t iL s lll ~

stop Southwestern's r unnmg
attack led by jumor fullback
She r man Pott er and hls
brother, Joe Potter Sherman
had 158 yards r ushmg against
the
V1k1ng s
Olh e r
Highlander threa ts a1 e senwr
quart erba ck Gen e Layton
who scored on a 61-yard
sweep and sophomor e Scott
RusselL
North Gallla , losers m liS
hrst two outmgs thiS fa ll , has
bo unced back to win three m
a row. The Pirates will be
trymg to mcrea se their SV AC
record to 3-0 aga mst Coach
Larry Cremeens' Wildcats of
Hannan Trace.
Last Fnday n1 ght , T1m
Howell and Mart y Glassburn
Jed the Pirates to t he1r 36-0
wm ov er Southern . Howell
rambled for 100 yards m 15
carn es wh1le Glassburn
scor ed t wu ·touchd owns.
HaiUla n Trace was bea ten 320 by the Coal Grove reserves
last weekend
At Cheshire, Kyger Cr eek
w;JI attempt to get back mto
the win column a gainst the
winless Southern Tornadoes
Coach John Duddmg's tea m
has had trouble sconng th1 s

Ope n Sunday 1· p .m .-6 p. m .
Monday thru Saturday

TH E lMII VS E Nri NI-:1 ,

$7 (10

SIX ll l ! ll l lh ~

$1 \ 50 Th rt•• lllt ll!l ts $7 ;;o
Snbst l lpl 1u11 ]ll ll.l' llldutll'S StmdttY

runt. ~-s.: nt llll l

AND BOOPSIE?: This may shock devoted "Doonesbury" oi

Stmpklns Jr .. 457 ; Mike
Capehart 449.
Men's Htgh Game - Terry
Seidenabel
167,
Mike
Capehart ond Leroy Sim·
pkins 164, Butch Roush 155.

Dodgers pay tribute

By FRED MCMANE
UP! Sports Writer
Facts &amp; figures
WS ANGELES (UPI )
Wearing
black patches on
2 4
LOS ANGELES IUP I ) - Forster
1 1·3 l 0 0 0 3 their uniforms in tribute to
Fa cts and f tgures on rhe f1rst
WP- Ciay T- 2 48 AJim Gilliam, the Los Angeles
game of th e world Sertes
55.997
Dodgers wrote the first line of
Attendance - 55,997
Nel receipts - $816 .891 50
an epitaph for their late
Comm 1SS 10ner's oH 1ce sha r e
coach Tuesday night by
- $122.533.72 .
Playe r's share - $416,614 .67
burying the New York
Leagues ' and clubs ' shar es Yankees
11..1 in the first game
$69,435 78
of the World Series on a pair
of home runs by captain
Davey Uipes.
The Dodgers had dedicated
Figueroa apart in the second.
themselves to winning · the
Dusty Baker led off with
world championship for Gil·
the first horne nm of the
Jiam, who died Sunday night
Ser1es - a blast that just
after several weeks m a coma
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cin· - and it was perhaps fittmg
cleared the wall in left. Rick
Monday was next with a lined cinnati Reds' Preside~t Dick that Lopes should emerge as
double to center that Mickey Wagner, whose contract offer the hero of the opener just as
Rivers almost caught at his to Pete Rose of the "highest he had been in the first game
shoe\ Ips. When Figueroa salary in the club's history" of the National League
walked Lee Lacy, Lemon was rejected, is now studymg playoffs
came to the mound for a chat a counter-proposal suggeste~
Perhaps the closest friend
with his 20 game-winning by Rose.
of Gilliam's on the Dodgers,
Neither Rose nor Wagner Lopes delivered a two-run
right-hander .
The talk apparently did wUI disclose the figures they homer in the second mrung
some good because the next are discussing .
and added a thre~un shot m
Wagner
said
Rose 's the fourth to spark a 15-hit
batter, Steve Yeager, hit into
a double play, but Lopes attorney, Reuven Katz, this attack againsi four Yankee
drilled a 400-foot shot over the week "gave me some figures pitchers. Lopes also homered
lefto(:enter field wall. The which he called a counter· twice against Philadelphia in
·
record Dodger Stadium proposal."
the Dodgers' opening-game
" Befoce I get back to Mr. victory in the N .L. playoffs.
crowd of 55,997 screamed for
a curiam call that Lopes Katz, I want to study and
" We feel we're the best
obliged by stepping out of the digest the fi~r!'S he gave me team in baseball and we want
dugout and tipping his hat to without any interruptions," to prove that," Lopes said
said Wagner . "That is the before the game. " There 's
the crowd.
only
comment I have on the never any loud screaming or
Their home-run bats
having forged the early lead, matter now."
hollering in our clubhouse but
Wagner last week opened emotion plays a pivotal part
the Dodgers turned to their
singles attack to pad it after contract negotiations with in World Series games. We're
Rose by offering him what he psyched up but we c an
Uipes' second shot.
said was the best salary ever control our emotions."
Another of Gilliam's pais,
extended any Reds' player.
Katz brushed it aside as Dusty Baker, chipped in· with
merely a good starting point a solo homer and left-hander
for negotiations.
Tommy
John
pitched
Rose, 37, who has played superbly over six innings
his entire major league before some shoddy defense
career in his bometown of cost him two unearned runs
Cincinnati, is eligible for the and
an
eightHinning
free agent draft this year and departure.
has indicated he will test his
John stretched his post·
value with other teams if the season scoreless tnnings
Reds don't offer him enough streak to 15 before Regg1e
money .
Clay
2 1-3 4 4 3
Ltndblad 2 1· 3 4 3 3
Tidrow
1 2-3 2 1 1
John IW 1 01
7 2·3 8 5 3

• .. Rick Blaettner
6-0, 1781bs.
Jr. TB-CB

John Stout
5-9. 1481bs.
Sr. End,CB

Tim Faulk
6-1, 1631bs.
Sr. Center, MG

Eastern plays at Southwestern
Friday in top SV AC contest

!!111111-------------.----------,

RIGiff GUY, WRONG MODEL: CybW Sbephenl thinks
the nmors are funny - was not true. The rro.ty blonde,;
actress' car supposedly broke down in Memphis, her home t ~
town, and she and the mechanic were so smitten by love at first~
sight tbat he walked off the job and she lrougltt him bact to
Hollywood. The rml story is less like a movie plot, she says, In
Los Angeles. Her brother Introduced her to her new boyfriend
-26-year-old David Ford -In a Memphis nlghlciub. She didn't , ;
go to his Mercedes-Benz agency "because I drive BMW and ~
you wm't ever find a Mercedes man helping fix a BMW." And •
he's not a mechanic, he owns the place.

Meet the Marauders

in trouble."
Losing pitcher Ed Figueroa
and s ome of his mates
questioned what they felt was
a shrunken strike zone with
National League umpire Ed
Vargo behind the plate .
"fn the American League,
those balls thrown high would

Dodgers leading , iJ-0. saymg
he :elt Figueroa had a control
problem .
Lemon had no alibis for the
initial loss but said, " The big
three runs the Dodgers got
were the three off Paul
Lindblad in the seventh
inning. If they hadn't gotten
those it might have been a
different
ballgame."
~82 106 199.S
20 168176.7
43 104 176.S
32 0 175.8
196 0 170.0

White, SoCal
610
Brooks, Auburn
Sl9
Ross, No IU
5S9
Persell , W Mich
847
Nelson, Stnfrd
485
Punt Returns
oo yds avg
Blackmore, Miss St
7 lSI 21.6
KBrown, Nebraska
10 211 21.1
Matthews, Wis
9 176 19 6
Nelson, Stnfrd
10 169 16 9
Perry, SMU
13 219 16 8
Kickoff Returns
oo yds avg
Collinsworth, Fla
5 206 41 2
Brown, Arkansas
6 202 33 7
Rogers, SoCar
6 193 32 2
Brown, UCLA
8 255 31.9
Webster, S Jose St
II 347 31.5
lntereeptions
g no yds ipg
Curran , Cornell
3 4 56 1.33
4 5 60 1.25
Williams, LSU
4 5 54 1.25
Hill, SMU
5 6 224 1.20
Washington, Calif
5 5 99 1.00
Ray, Oklahoma
Punting

a

Men's High Series - Terry
Seldenabel
474 ;
Leroy

said Jackson modestly, " I'm
just a face in the crowd, but I
appreciate the honor ."
"We've just got to come
back tomorrow," said Lou
Piniella, who got &amp;single and
scored once. "We can't go
back to New York down two
games. We've got to get a
well-pitched game from
Hunter. "
Tommy John handcuffed
the Yankees with his slider
for six innings and Piniella
said , "Our hitters lost their
patience. When you're down
7~ and you try to get Mck in
a hurry against someone like
Tommy John, who doesn't
g1ve up the long ball, you' re

Figuero

'

ACTION
and
the
management it IS being
provided by its Director Sam
Brown. From the looks of
things, ACTION should not be
given the additional $40
million they are requesting.
Furthermore, I will see to it
that they are required to

two days off, we had too much
time to think."
Lemon ,
a
low-key
' manager, in his quiet way
said TUesday rught, "This is
just ooe ballgame . We 've still
got a few to play. We'll show
up tomorrow."
Reggie Jackson set a
majoc.Jeague
record
by
hitting hiS sixth homer in his
last four World Series games.
He belled a 43Mooter into the
Yankee bullpen off Tommy
John in the seventh in rung .
Jackson had held the old
mark with an earlier Yankee
slugger , Lou Gehrig, who hit
five in four games in 1928 and
1932.
''Compared to Gehri g, ''

NCAA grid statistics

BerrY's World·

Carpe1ing 1021, Team 5, 891;
Young's Gulf Station 875.
Team High Game
Young ' s Carpeting 357 .
Young's Carpeting 334; Team
5, 333

face."

" We're not going to roll
over and die but those two
days off may have hurt us,"
said Catfish Hunter, chosen
by Manager Bob Lemon to
start the second game.
"When you start thinking,
you get in trouble. And w1th

MEADOWLARK FUES: Alter 23 years of sinking baskets
and doing an all around standup comic routine for the Harlem
Globetrotters, Meadowlark Lemon is calllng It quits - to go
•
into show biz full time. Lemon says, from the team's training
camp at Pepperdine University in Los Angeles, he's being .
released from his contract_ that "it Is time to move on and •
pursue my career in motion pictures, television and on
recordings." Lemon Is -apping up his first starring film role •
.-- -- - - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , in ' "'lle Fish that Saved Pittsburgh," and Casablanca Records 1
will release his first album in January. Taking over his team
duties as player-coach for the Globetrotters 53rd season wW be .:w
Nate Branch.
.
:

L
12
14
18
18
26
36

A thoughtfor the day: Anna
Eleanor Roosevelt wrote,
"You gain strength, courage
and confidence by every
experience in which you
really stop to look fear in tbe

game.

getting many Knoxville teenagers to seek help fo~ sex
problems It is f.art of an $85,000, one-year el&lt;perunent
financed by the ederal government's National Center on
Child Abuse and Neglect. II could be the pr~totype for
similar services in communities across the nation.
Sexuil abuse iS a hush-hush subject. But it eldsts and
most experts agree the best way to deal with it is to
confront it - face-to-face if possible.
So George Thomas, president of the mdependent
Regional Institute for Social Research, Athens, Ga.,
proposed the Knoxville test, getting the Tenness~e f:?epart·
ment of Human Resources to cooperate and aSSJgnmg the
work to Child and Famliy Services of Knoxville, Inc ., a
private agency.
The taped phone message service began Feb. I and in the
first month drew 1 389 calls. Smce then, calls have
averaged 600 to 800 a month.
But the important figure iS the follow-through - the
nwnber of people who stayed on the line to talk to a
counselor. In the first four months after the system be~an,
225 callers spoke to counselors; 130 wanted to complam of
sexual abuse, the other 9S wanted more general sex·
related information.
the 130 complainants, 77 were adolescents , aged 12 to
18.
Thomas says one of the most surprising findings was
that half of the sel&lt; abuse calls were from adolescent boys,
coerced by a mother, a stepmother or a neighbor into
sexual relations.
The message makes 1t clear that anonymity wiD be
preserved if the caller wants, and this anonymity can
carry through to personal meetings with a counselor. But
once a caller discloses his or her identity, the cor:tplaint
must be referred under state law to a legal authority, the
State' Department of Human Resources. ·

.

Local Bowling

•

s·r.

By JOE
AMANT
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
One game does not a World
Series make, the New York
Yankees well know .
They lost the opener of the
1978 Fall Classic to the Los
Angeles Dodgers, 11~ . and
Manager Bob Lemon and his
players inunediately set their
sights on tonight's second

trained counselor.
,
The voice is an around-the-clock taped message that s

Fnday Late Muted

744.

William Steif

By William Stelf
.
When you dial a certain number 10 Kno&lt;ville, Tenn., a
female voice dellvers a three-mmute pitch detailing ways
teenagers and children can cope with sexual abuse.
.
"You may feel scared," the voice s'ays, " but help 18
avUable." The caller is urged to stay on the line to bilk to a

Waynesville, which bills
1tsell as the antique capital of
the Midwest, hosts its ninth
annual Ohio Sauerkraut
Fes tival Saturday and
Sunday .
This two-day festival in
Warren County features
German band, German food,
all-&lt;lay sauerkraut dinners,
live enterla llln1ent and a
parade Saturday.
Some 100 dollhouses and
miniatures will be on diSplay
at the Daybreak Dollhouse
and Mllliature Show at the
Montgomery County
Fall'grounds in Dayton.
An admiss ion will be
charged for the ' two-&lt;lay
show, Saturday from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m . and Sunday from
noon to 5 p.m .
The Marietta Welfare
League Antique Show and
Sale will be Saturday and
SUnday at Marietta High
School. Hours are Saturday
from 10 a .m. to 9 p.m. and .
SUnday II a.m. to 5 p.m.
For the weekend outdoor
people, the Fort Hill Hike will
be held at the Fort Hill State
Memonal at Bainbridge
Saturday Naturalists will be
stationed around the trails to
explain natural phenomena
aod to answer questions.
A SQ.mile Coloc Caravan
Tour, a drive-it-yourself tour,
goes through the s cenic
Hocking Hills around Logan
at the peak of the fall season.
Tour guides will be
available from noon to 2 p .m .
Saturday and Sunday.
A Walk W1th Nature
Sunday goes along the old
Miami a nd Ene Canal at St
Marys.
An Afr1can Violet Show and
Indoor Ught Gardening Show
will be held at Kingwood
Center at Mansfield Saturday
and Sunday from 10 am . to 5
p.m . both days.
The All-American Quarter
Horse Congress opens a nme·
day run at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds Saturday.
The F3ll'field County Fall'
at Lancaster rounds out thiS
year's fall's . That fair runs
from Tuesday through Satur·
day .
ThiS also marks the closmg
w~kend of activity at Kings
Island Amusement Center

Team

LA bombs Yankees

THE U.s.AND YOU

Confronting sexual abuse

events.

make bread and Johnnycake
lll wood stoves, and also
watch open fire cookery,
candle dipping, rug hooking,
spinnmg and waving.
There will also be free
entertainment and an antique
flea market, along with tours
of Century Village, located at
the intersection of Routes 87,
700 and 168 in Burton m
Geauga County.
Ashley,
m
Delaware
County, hosts 1ts fourth
annual Apple Butter Festival
Saturday, turning out 1,000
quarts of apple butter. A
variety of arts and crafts will
be demonstrated.
TIJe Apple Butter Festival
at the American Legion Hall·
in
Deerfield
Saturday
includes the crowrung of the
apple butter queen.
This one-day event also
includes
apple
butter
t'OOking, apple pie judgmg
and quilting. The festival
begins at 7 a.m. w1th
breakfast.
An apple harvest will be
observed Saturday and
Sunday from noon to 5 p .m . at
Darby Creek Park in western
Franklin County.
Apples will he pressed into
dder and made into apple
butter ..
Apple hu tter will be made
Saturday and Sunday at the
Sprmg Hill Fall Festival at
the Spring Hill Historic home
in Massillon.
Visitor s to this 1821 home
where the festival1s held can
also see wool dyeing,
spinning and weaving and
candle dipping. Tours of the
home and outbuildings are
also on the agenda .
The Autumn Celebration at
Crosby Gardens in Toledo
Saturday centers on an oldfashion fall harvest, with
events centering around the
1837 Pioneer Homestead .
There will be cider
pressing, pwnpkin carving,
bla ck pot cooking and
contests at the one-&lt;lay event
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

•

if \?.YeT...

Hills Arts and Crafts Festival
Saturday and Sunday, from
II a .m . to 6 p.m.
Mor e than 55 arts and craft
displays will be exh1b1ted at
the Hockmg Hills State Park .
There
will
a ls o
be
demonstrations on making
apple
dolls,
baskets,
dulcimers, lurm ture and
woode n
animal s,
and
festival·goers can help make
corncob jelly a nd cornhusk
dolls.
The Algonqum Mill Fall
Fesllval at the Algonqum
Ste am Flourm g M1ll at
Petersburg m Carroll County
Fr1day through Sunday .
Th1s festival features an
oldtime prmt shop, fiddler's
and cornhusking contests and
barn dancing , while flour and
corn meal made from the mill
will be for sale .
are
featured
Mums
Wednesday through Saturday
at the Tipp City Mum
Festival . There will also be
arts and crafts, flea market,
parade and other special

v1s1tors can see crafters

0

cf ~

Festival lovers
have big choice
this weekend
By SANDRA L. LA'nMER
United Press loternatiooal
With many festivals this
weekend focusing on apples
1r using apples in one way or
another, New York City could
very well lose its nickname to
Ohio.
AppiNelated festivals are
found this weekend m Deerfield, Burton, Coshocton,
Massilon, Ashley, Colwnbus,
Toledo, R1o Grande and
Hocking HUts .
HisllrlCal Roscoe Village
in Coschoton 1s the settmg for
the annual Apple Butter
SIUTm' Saturday and SUnday
when nch , dark apple butter
will be stirred by families in
demm and c alico . Four
groups of people will be on
hand those two days to make
th e nearly I,SOO quarts of
apple butler Ill' sale
As the apple butter
sinuners in copper kettles,
there will be games, c ontests
and music representative of
the harvest soc1al of the
1800s .
Vlilage actiVIties begin at
10 a.m. both days and run
through 7 p.m . Saturday and
6 pm. Sunday . A fall foliage
tour is planned lor the area
also thts weekend .
Century Village at Burton
hosts an Apple Buller
Fesllval Saturday
and
Sumlay from 10 a.m . to 6 p.m .
both days.
As apple butter ts bemg
made over the open fires,

3- The Dally Sentmel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 11, l ~'/8

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Appearance
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• Easy Wa,er
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• Excellent
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LOW SALE

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PICKEN'S .
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MASON, W.VA.

�'.

-

,

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PomeroJ, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. '11 , 1978

Lo:Pes reputation· is changing

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Bengals 'bad· news'
in the Queen City

::::
.·.·
•'•'

::::
·.·.
•, •,
::::

WS ANGELES (UPI ) - Any one of them .is capable of
deciding this World Series, and although they no longer sleep
together or play for the same ballclub, they still consider
themselves closer than the Three Musketeers.
When they started out in professional baseball eight years
·ago, Rich Gossage and Bucky Dent, who are with the .Yankees
now, and Terry Forster, with the Dodgers, discovered they bad
a common problem . No money.
They reported fresh out of school to the Class A Appleton
club in Wisconsin and finding they got along very well with
each other, they quickly decided upon rooming together as a
me.ans of cutting down expenses.
"We had ooe room with only one bed," says Gossage, the
Yankees' flame-throwing relief ace they signed for $2.7 million
when he became a free agent last winter. "All three of us
couldn't fit in that one bed, so we took the top mattress off the
box-Bpring and Bucky and I slep't on the mattress on the floor
and Terry slept on the box-5pring .
"All we had was a sheet to cover ourselves and the room was
so small we had to sleep in front of the air..:onditioner. It's a
wonder we didn't catch pneumonia. Ayear later, Bucky went
off and got married. That meant we didn't sleep together
anymore," Gossage laughs.
Not too long after that, the three of them were called up by
the parent Chicago White Sox and they remained together until
two years ago when Gossage and Forster were traded to the
Pirates in the deal fa- Richie Zisk and Dent went tO the
Yankees.
Now Gossage, with his 27 saves and 2.01 earned run average
this season, is the key man in the bullpen for the Yankees, and
Forster, with his 22 saves and 1.94 ERA, enjoys the same
status with the Dodgers. Gossage relies purely on smoke,
throwing the ball as hard as anyone in either league. Forster
owns probably the best slider in the game and his fastball isn't
that shabby, either. His slider has been clocked at 87 miles per
how- and his fast ball at 93 mph. ·
He had both tl:lose pitches working perfectly in nailing down
the Dodgers' lf:O victory in Tl,lesday night's World Series
opener.
Taking over for starter Tommy John with two out in the
eighth inning, Forster gave up a bloop single to Chris
Chambliss and then struck out pinch hitter Cliff Johnson plus
two more in the ninth.
As foc Dent, he's basically a glove man at shortstop for the .
Yankees, but he singled home two nms against the Dodgers
Tuesday night and the Yanks have him to thank as much as
anyone for being in the World Series. It was his three-run
homer in the seventh inning at Fenway Park that brought the
Yankees from behind in their sudden-&lt;leath pennant clincher
against the Red sox.
Dent remembers those early days back in Appleton when he,
Gossage and Forster had to shoe-hom themselves in the same
one-room flat.
,
"It was a little crowded, but we bad a lot of fun, " he says.
"Rich and Terry always talked about different pitchers in the
big leagues, but my hero was Mickey Mantle."
Forster, who also became a free agent last year and signed a
six-year contract with the Dodgers for $900,000, also likes to
talk atiout his baseball roots and how he, Gossage and Dent
shared that crackerbox in Appleton.
"We always drop a tine to each other at Christmas and I telL
them they each owe me $55 for a month-and-a-half's rent but I
never get the money," says the Dodgers' leflhander,
grinning.
Forster doesn't seem . too worried about it, ·though.
Especially now that his arm is sound and be's throwing the ball
well again.
"I hurt my arm with the White Sox in 1975 and for nearly two
years I couldn't throw a ball 20 feet," he says. "Johnny Sain,
who was the pitching coach there, worked on my cutting the
ball when I threw my slider. When it comes to the mechanics of
pitching, he's the best there is anywhere."
For Forster, who appeared in 47 games for the Dodgers this
season and was credited with their pennant clinching victory
over the Phillies, getting into this World Series in the ultimate.
"I hope all our starters do well, but if they don't, I'd love to
pitch in every game," be says. "When you're a kid cooped up
in a little room in Appleton, Wis. , all you can do is dream about
something like this."

CINCINNATI (UP!) - o drubbing by the Miami · blamed General Manager
on
national Paul Brown for exerting too
Walter Matthau and Homer Dolphins
much control over his
Rice have something in televi sion Monday night.
coaches and players, could
Fans
had
a
few
things
to
common, suggests one dieonly
commiserate , with the
say
about
their
"Bad
News
hard Bengals fim.
callers.
Bengals"
Tuesday.
Both their teams started in
" I'm telling you, I'm
"I'm so frustrated this
a faShion that can only be
running
out of things to say,"
know
what
to
year.
I
don't
described as bad news.
Trumpy
said, dourly. "I wish
do,"
said
one
loyal
fan
.
. " ... We're kind of a 'Bad
"
They're
not
excitin
g,
I
could
be
definitive and say
News Bears' aroWld here ,'''
suggested one die-hard they're boring," added a what we could do to bring
back the team."
female Cincy fan, among season ticket holder.
" 1 honestiy feel the
"We've got 33 (season )
those who called former
.
coaching
staff is as mystified
ticket
holders
in
our
block,
Bengal Bob Trumpy's radio
at
the
problems
the Bengals
and
none
is
going
to
the
game
talk show Tuesday to vent
having
as
the
rest of us
are
Sunday
(against
New
frustration over their winless
are.
It's
so
sad,
because
of the
England),"
added
a
third.
Bengals.
One
former
Columbus
resitalent
oo
that
team."
Matthau 's little league
The Bengals' latest loss
team, the Bears, earned its dent and continuing Ohio
nickname in the movie for its State Buckeye fan suggested: was the first as Cincy head
inept early season play. The "Maybe we need Woody coach for Rice , who repla.ced
Bill Johnson when Johnson
Bengals of coach Rice earned (Hayes) '"
Trumpy, who has publicly resigned after losing to
the comparison Mter their 21-

come true."'
" There are an awful lot of
die-hard
fans,"
said
Trumpy.
Myriad criticisms were
leveled at the Bengals ,
prompting the talk show host
to interject, "Unfortunately,
everything the Bengals do
until they win a game is going
to be wrong by anybody's

d

By GENE CAD DES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
high school football notes
from around the state :
TALK about a one-man
show! St. Clairsville's Tim
Spencer turned one in Friday
might in the Red Devils' 54·
33 win over Martins Ferry.
Spencer, a 6-2, 205-pound
senior, scored six touchdowns
and rushed for 303 yards in 26
carries. Included in his half
dozen TDs was an 8().yard
kickoff return and a 45-yard
run from scrimmage.
Spencer, who rushed for
1,280 yards and 17 touchdowns as a junior, has ' 711
yards and 84 points, although
sitting out one of St. C's five
games.
EIGHT different players
scored Wyoming 's nine
touchdowns Friday night as
the No, I ranked AA Cowboys
overwhelmed North College
Hill63-8 for their 17th straight
win. Freshman fullback Andy
Cramer led the way with 111
yards in 9 tries. Senior Frank
Jacobs scored twice 'to up his
scoring output for the year to
68 points.
WESTEIWILLE North was
forced to forfeit three loot ball
wins because of the use of an
ineligible player. North had
to forfeit victories over
Columbus
Pickerington,
DeSales and Chillicothe
because AI Christh, senior
running back and captain of
the Warriors, is in his fifth
year of high school.
COLONEL Crawford used
the big play for its 13-7 win
over Sycamore . Mohawk
Friday night. The Eagles' Ty
Clark raced 99 yards · from
scrirrunage for one second

the three races, the six mile,
were Ken Nephew of Cincinnati, 18 in first place with
Gary Park of Pt. Pleasant,
27, the runnerup. Top runner
in the three mile competition
was Todd Reece of Gallipolis,
16, with a close second by
Michael Carter, also of
Gallipolis, 26 .
From the 83 who ran the 1.5
mile race, Dave Schoener of
Ironton, 16, came in as the
leader, with his brother,
Greg, 18, as runnerup.
In commenting on the
excellent response to this
first Fun Run planned by the
employee group at the
Hospital, Charles E. Hol,zer,
Jr., M.D., President of the
Hospital's Medical Staff said:
"Not only did we have a

quarter Colonel Crawford
score' and, later in the same
period, Tom Seif picked off a
Mohawk pass and raced 69
yards for a score.
UNBEATEN and No. 2
ranked AA St. Marys
Memorial had three players
surpass the 100-yard mark in
rushing Friday night in its 4822 decision over Lima Bath.
Scott Shelby gained 129 yards

Miami~

host event
AKRON, Ohio {UP!) - The
Professi o nal Bowlers
Association has announced
that a $100,000 tournament,
the Firestone 721 Classic, will
be held in Miami, Fla., Feb.
26 • March 3 as part of. its
Winter Tour.
PBA Commissioner Joe
Antcnora. who made the
announcement along with
L.awrence Lombardo ~ vice
president of sales and
marketing for Firestone, said
a site for the tournament has
not been selected.
Antenora said the finals of
the Classic will be televised
on Saturday, March 3. First
prize will be $15,000.
Firestone also sponsors the
Tournament of Champions,
held annuaily in Akron .
totally enthusiastic crowd of
men, women and children
participating in this event,
but the follow-up by so many ·
who found out how really
exhilirating running can be
as an aid to sound health, is
impressive . You can see
many on the track beside the
hospital now during the late
afternoon and evening,
running routinely."
Dr. Holzer added, "People
are rea lly getting into the
running habit because they
feel better, breathe better,
increase their stamina, trim
down and utilize .the muscles ·
of their body that frequently
become lazy and flabby.
Running can and should
become an integral part of
daily living. Those who
become involved also become
dedicated to running, and
arrange their days so that
they have the time to run.
Running is not only healthy
but really is fun. "
Walt Saunders commented
that the · response was so
enthusiastic to this first attempt to hold a Fun Run, that
the co mmunity can be .
assured that another will be
planned in the not too distant
future.
A healthy good time . was .
had by all 134 who took a
Saturday morning to enjoy
one of the most popular of
sports to improve their
physical fitness ... running.

power, the 1'/0-powlli aecmd
baseman replied, "My bat."
Lopes hit a t;wo.nm bcmer •. ::
off Yankee starter Ed • •
Figueroa in the secood inning "
and clubbed a three-run shot """
off Ken Clay In the lourth to . " ~
help get lefthander Tommy
John off to a IHl lead.
·" · ,
It was easy for Los Angeies •, 1
after that.
· ••w
Lopes made It clear the .; ;
Dodgers were especially .:&gt;;.,
dedicated to winning their ... ",
first
World
Series ... ,
championship since 1985 '"
because of the death of , ·
Dodger first base coach Jim ...:~
GilliliiU, who died &amp;mday , .,
night after suffering a train . '"
hemorrhage Sept. 15. His ",
funeral is today.
·

3-3.

caller. " Anything can
happen. Paul Brown has
never been in this situation,
and I know it !Jurts him
dearly. Homer Rice has
never -been in this situation.
The players have never been
in this situation; they come
from winning college football
teams ."
No one was willing to carry
the "Bad News" comparison
to its end, 'however.
In the movie, Matthau's
Bears bounced back to miss
winning
the
league
championship by only one
run.
In Cincinnati', a simple win
would be heralded as good
news.

Lr'nesco
. re

have extreme .confidence that • '
we are the best team untU the
Yankees prove different. I have no doubt ·In my mind '
that we're going to win.
•
.u

XL-100
COLOR TV

JERRY Burgei ran for 194
yards in 22 carries and scored
both of his team's touch·
downs on 10 and one-yard
runs Friday night as OttawaGlandorf beat Defiance 14-7.

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fastest nmner in 30s
~CAGO (UPI) -As one
of lle world's fastest humans
!luling the !936 Olympics,
!Uiph Metcalfe and his.teames brought on the fury of
f Hitler.
a maverick politician
d 41 yin g
Chicago's
Dfnocrattc Machine in the
eafly 1970s, Metcalfe
lnF"ed the wrath of Mayor
Rifhard J. Daley.
lletcalfe; 68, who collapsed
his south side Chic.ago
e and died of a heart
ck Tuesday, was a
mber of the 1932 and 1936
otmpic teams and was
retarded as the "world's
faJtest human" in 1934-,'l5,
naning IIi~ 100-y.ard dash in
I~ seconds.
:In the '1936 Olympics at
lin -dominated by Jesse
ens' four gold medals tcalfe finished second to
&lt;&gt;tens in the IOOrneter event
at! won a gold medal on the
wJrld record 400-meter relay
m. The performance of
ens and his teammates
· uriated the Nazi fuhrer.
&lt;11'1 want to express my
-~ow at the loss of a very
gl&gt;d friend," OWens
said in
!Joenix, Ariz ., 110ne that I
lEI contrjbuted a great deal
to the programs of social
justice in America."
calfe, a native of
ta,lived most of his life
cago. He worked his
w, up the ranks in the
D4fnocratic organization and
ele.cted 3rd Ward
ocratic committeeman
in 952 and alderman in 1955
--lbe year Daley was elected
nfyor.
)1etcalfe soon became the
l.Pr of the city's black
wirds for Daley, and he built
a (powerful base. He was
cted . president
pro
pore of the aty CoWlcil in
and· was elected to
cllgress'in 1970 with Daley's
sJI!port.
~~~Ut in the early 1970s,
~alfe complained bitterly

!

~

·about police harassment of
blacks. He demanded that
Daley come to his office to
discuss the situation, but the
mayor refused and tl)e rift
widened.
Metcalfe fw-ther infuriated
Daley by endorsing the
mayor's opponent In the 1975
Democratic
mayoral
primary. Daley then tried to
push through the Illinois
Legislatw-e a coogressional
redistricting plan which
could have left Metcalfe without a district. The attempt
failed.
When Metcalfe was up for
reelection in 1976, the
Democratic organization
backed another candidate.
But Metcalfe rallied support
from
within
his
predominantly black district
and won.
It was not until after
Daley's death in December
1976 that Metcalfe and the
Democratic machine made
received
peace . - He
organization ·support .in his
bid for re-election on Nov. 7.
Mayor Michael A. Bilandic
and Cook County Board
President George Dunne,
leaders of the Democratic
organization, said they were
saddened by the death. "His
relationship
with
the
organization for the past few.
years has been fine," Dunne
said.
Born March 29, 1910,
Metcalfe attended Marauette
University where he was the
NCAA 100-meter and 200meter champion from 193234. He served as coach at
Xavier University from 193642, and joined the Army
dw-ing World War II.
In the House, he served 011
the Merchant Marine and
Fisheries Committee and the
Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee.
He is survived by his wife ,
Madalynne, and a son, Ralph
Jr., 30.
Funeral arrangements
were pending.

:lice still confident

PLAIN WHITE

CEILING TILE
ONLY

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

~ INCINNA TI

game that set up the
Dolphins' first score. "The
kids were sky high when they
went out, and scoring then
would have really plllhped
them up."
Miami scored all its points
the first half.
"I was pleased that we
hung in there in the second
half," said Rice. uwe came
back in the second half and
played fairly decent football.
"! thought the defense
played pretty well. The offense just hasn 'I put it
together yet."
Said wide receiver Isaac
Curtis,
"It's
pretty
frustrating . I felt like
everybody was ready to play.
But we turned the ball over
and
they scored on us quick."
lost the football wllen
The
Bengals entertain the
\\!1 had a chance to make it
New
England Patriots
ilierestfug," he said of a
Sunday.
cllcY' fumble early in the

(UP!) w Cincinnati Bengals
ch Homer Rice remained
c fident Tuesday despite
nday night's 21-0 emassing loss to the Miami
'lphins
on
national
islon.
.
t was Cinch's sixth
aight defeat without a
. ory.··
'This team has bad a lot of
t gs happen to it, so when
stnethlng happens they
tbtlk, 1Here we go again,'"'
siid Rice, recounting how
eG-Iy Bengal errors against
r.Oami hurt the team'.s
rale.
We have to overcome
tlilt, and we will," declared

1

~e

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69

~~ ..... ~.~~~~. ~199

The company is similarly
committed to baseball's AllStar game in midsummer,
most visibly through an
underwriting of the ballots
cast for the players. Gillette
distributed 40 miltioo ballots
forthisyear'sgameinwhatit
claims is the largest non- i
political election in the
United States.
Gillette 's identification
with sports dates to the early
part of the century when it
used testimonials from sports

figures to plug its product,
among them New York
Gia11ts manager John
McGraw and baseball stars
Honus Wagner and Frank
Chance.
During the 1940's and '50s,
it sponsored more than 600
boxing programs from
arenas throughout the
country . And it is now ·
wocking on its presentations
for the 1980 Olympics.
"We probably have a
longer association with sports

than any ot her U.S.
corporation," Marino claims.
The bulk of the safety razor
division ad budget goes f9r
sports, half to baseball.
Marino ' s
division
emphasizes sports simply
because that's where the
customers . are. He has
figures showing that more
than 200 million persons in
the United States saw some
part of the 1977 World Series,
that nine of 10 Americans see
a baseball game ·either on

television or in person during figured Baer would be champ
the season .
for years to come and signed
"We also know that 72 him to star in a private
million Americans shave, detective series on radio
and most of ' them are under its sponsorship.
baseball fans ," he said.
Audience interest in the proThe company's first major gram plummeted after Baer
venture
into
sports lost.
advertising
was
an
Gillette began as the
embarrassment. In the mid- American Safety Razor Co. 77
1930's W sponsored the years ago in South Boston,
. heavyweight title bout and has been in the area ever
between champion Max Baer since, Wisconsin-born King
and Jirruny Braddock. Like Camp Gillette, a traveling
everyone else, the company salesman , founded the
.,

::::~~::::.-Majority members concerned

•

HAMBURGER HELPER ............................ ~.~~--- 69'
UPlON TEA BAGS............................... :~~ .~t:. $1.79
BUSH'S BEANS .. ~:-~.~.~~~~.·.~~.~.~~~.... :......'.5.~.':. 3/89'
DOUBLE COIJ .... ~ .................... 816 ot. Bottles '1.09

APPLES

'

time.
''Actually we 'now spend oo
getting our message across at
World Series time about 50
times what we did way back
then," Joseph A. Marino,
marketing vice president for
Gillette's . safety razor
division, said In an Interview.
The mooey shoveled out by
Gillette includes a $1 millioo
promotion involving prizes
and rebates and the cost of
special displays at retail
stores. It pays off. Marino
estimates the safety razor
division rolls up as much as

Metcalfe was
world's
.,.,

~

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Chef Boy-Ar.Oee
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124

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--PRODUCE-

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..
..

9 1.

LA
030 31 03lx- 11152
Figueroa , Clay (2), Lindblad
{5). Tidrow (7) and Munson;
John , Forst er (8) and Yeager.
W- John (1 .0 ). L- Fig ueroa (0 · ,
1) . HRs:_New York, Jackson
(1) : Los Ange les, Baker (11.
Lopes 2 (2) .

'"

"U

.

wood from H-29'h '', W-35'' , 0-20 1!.. ''.

World Series Result

UPI Baa1De11 Writer
NEW YORK - If anyone
should long for the good old
-- days, especially around
World Series time, it is the
GU!ette Co.
When the company first
sponsored the series in 1939,
its total . bill foc broadcast
rights, air time (ooly radio
then), productioo costs and
talent came to around
$200,000. Today this amount
of money Would buy !!bout
three. 3&amp;-aecond commercial
segments on the sports
extravaganl'B now occupying
prime television and radio

By ROBERT MACKAY

25"

By Unitect Press ln1ernational

By EDWARD CRAIG

relaxed in my life than I was

tonight,'' Lopes explained. "I ! ~:

fr;:~~~ .. ~~~int~Iloau~ot::!~

in 9 carries, Jeff Cisco 115 in 7
and Gordon Blue 108 in 8 as
the ·Roughriders gained 511
yards on the ground.
PAULDING'S 19~ win over '
Ada Friday night was the
fifth shutout in six games this
year for the unbeaten Panthers and seventh in the last
eight games going back to
last year . Lima Perry,
Paulding's opponent this
week is the lastteam to score
more' than one touchdown
against the Panthers, almost
a year ago.
· DAVE Acuna raced 62
yards for a touchdown on
Ashland's first play from
scrimmage Friday night and
the Arrows held on for a 6~
win over Mansfield Malabar.
ACuna fini shed the night with
118 yards on 16 carri~s as
Ashland evened its record at

Gillette limbers up for World Series time

''I've never been more

imagination."

High school gri notes. . .

One-hundred and thirty-four
take part in 'Fwi Run' event
Ron Saunders who chaired
Running enthusiasts from
the area of all ages, along the planning for the race, and
with employees . and their Walt Saunders, President of
families from the Holzer the Employee Recreation
Medical Center, participated Committee, expressed their
in the first Fun Run spon· satisfaction in both the
sored by the Employees response and the enthusiasm
Recreation Committee of the shown by all who participated
Hospital, held on the Gallia in this first Hospital em. ployee sponsored running
County Fairgrounds.
./
One hundred and thirty· event.
Eighty-three ran the 1.5
four entries were recorded
for the three races that made mile race, 3li were in the 3.0
up the first Holzer Fun Run, mile race and 16 stalwart
for 1.5 miles, 3.0 miles and 6.0 runners competed in the 6.0
miles. All of the entrants inile race, with all of the
completed their races and races being officially started
received a dark blue tee shirt by Hugh P. Kirkel, President
to wear proudly, with the Fun of the Holzer Medical Center.
flun and Holzer Medical Trophies were awarded to the
Center insignia imprint on winner and the runner up in
the front in light blue and each of the races. Those who
triumphed in the longest of
gold.

previously winless San
Francisco. It also was the
first time the Bengals had
been shutout since the 1970
playoffs.
One northern Kentuckian
was inspired to send Trumnv
a T-shirt proclainin g, " !
Survived The Bengals Of
1978."
" He said, 'I started it as a
joke, I thought it would be
furmy ,"' Trwnpy said. "'That
was a long time ago. Now it's

By JIM COUR
UPI Sports Writer
WS ANGELES (UPI)- A
year ago, the Los Angeles
Dodgers set a major-league
record when four of their
players had 30 homuun
seasons.
Davey Lopes wasn 't one of
them.
Lopes still doesn't rank
with Steve Garvey, Reggie
Smiih, Ron Cey and Dusty
Baker - the Dodgers' home
run quar.tet in 1977 -as far as
power goes. At least by
reputation.
But ihe S.foot-9 Dodger
leadoff man's reputation is
rapidly changing. The New
York Yankees found out why
Tuesd;~y night.
'
Lopes unleashed a pair of
homers foc five RBI and the
Dodgers clobbered the Yankees, 11-5, in the opening
World Series game.
Lopes was relaxed and
smiling after the game.
Asked where he ~ot his

:coLUMBUS (UPI) Jl,w!ing Green quarterback
e Wright and Kent Slate
enslve tackle Mike Zele
1 ·unanimous choices as
ldl\merican Conference
fenslve and defensive
yers l.'vf the week, the
gue ~ounced Tuesday.
It was the second such
ectlon of the year foc both
yers, and for Zele it was
e second straight week for .
honor. II was also the fifth
In hla career that Zele
· s been selected.
.Wright won offensive
nora after accounting for
1 yards' total offense,
IU!Iinll two touchdown runs
d li Pair of scoring passes,
the F,l)coos' 45-27 win over
ecit ~''
The 6-3, !82-pOund junior

from Wellsville gained 131
rushing yards, Including TD
runs of 72 and two yards, in 13
carries. He completed eight
of 16 passes. for 210 yards.
The 6-3, 236-pound Zele, of
Euclid, tw-ned in a career
high 23 tackles - 16 of them
solo- against the top rushing
team in the conference as
Kent State lost to Western
Michigan 14-0.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- The Kan8811 City Oliefs
Tuesday placed offensive
tackle · Jim Nicholaon and
wide receiver Bill Kellar on
the in~ reserve list ·and
replaced them with tacltle
Larry Brown and receiver
Jerrold Mella!!.

are concerned with past campaign money from memBy LEE LIWNARD
political fund-raising prac- bers of the hoard of directors
UP! Statehouse Reporter
tices of the state's newest of the REA to a political
COLUMBUS (UP!) group. · Under
utilities action
Majority members of the public
questioning,
he denied he
Ohio Senate Energy and commissioner.
signed
any
checks.
"I acted
•
"He's
got
a
lot
of
explaining
Pubtic Utilities Commission
to do," said Sen. Neal F . as a carrier, he said.
"In southeastern Ohio, we
Zirruners Jr ., D-Dayton, after
the committee finished call that a 'bag man,"' said
grilling Howard A. Cummiris Sen. R. Kinsey Milleson, DFreeport.
for three hours Tuesday.
"I guess you could call it
Zimmers said he hopes to
that,"
responded CUmmins.
get the committee together
1
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) for one more confirmation
' We are concerned,'' said
- Considering his field goal hearing on Cununins before Zirruners after the hearing ,
kicking pace this season, the Nov. 7 election. "I've got "thai if he has acted as a bag
~enn state's Matt Bahr could some questions to ask and I man and washed campaign
end up in the NCAA record know some of the other money, it might be indicative
book.
members do, too," said of how be would act as a
Bahr, who also plays Zirruners.
commissioner.
professional soccer, has
Cununins flatly denied he
cummins spent most of the
kicked 14 field goals in 17 time fielding questions from contributed to Rhodes in 1974,
tries this season to lead Democratic members who as he bad indicated at a news
NCAA Division I kickers for wanted to know about his conference the day he was
the third straight week.
credentials as a Democrat, .appointed.
If Bahr car\ maintain his potential conflicls of interest
"!can't remember whether
.824 percentage through at with consumers and his I contributed anything
least three more kicks, he political activities.
personally in 1974, but if I did,
would erase an 11-year-{)ld
Cwrunins was named to an it would have gone to (former
record for accuracy held by interim term on the commis- Democratic Gov. John J.)
Gerald Warren of North sion by Gov. James A. Gilligan , he said.
Carolina State. In the 21&gt;kick Rhodes last Sept. 12 as a
Cununins said he bas never
minimum category, Warren registered Democrat and a had a financial interest in any
hit !7-{)f-22 field goal tries in consumer advocate.
utility company, nor has any ·
1967 f!lr .a 77.3 conversion
member
of his family. He
He told the committee that
rate.
also
said
he has no
while serving as executive
Bahr is averaging 2.33 field mi!Dager of the Ohio Rural investments in any coal
goals per game for the No. 3 Electric Association, a non- company.
Nittany Lions, IHJ.
The committee asked that
profit consumer-owned
In other categories, Jerome utility, he was a "carrier" of he provide a copy of his
Persell continues to lead the political contributions for financial disclosure
nation in rushing with an candidates from both parties. statement to•be filed with the
average of 169.4 yards per
Cummins said he funneled state.
game (17 better than runnerZimmers indicated the
up Olarles White of Southern
chances of confirming CumCal) and Allen Ross of
mins are not good. "I'm
Northern Illinois is again on
amazed at his lack of undertop in scoring this week with
eight touchdowns in fowgames.
steve Dils of Stanford is
first in passing for the fifth
straight week with an
average of 22.4 completions
per game while David Petzke
WS ANGELES (UP!)
of Northern Illinois is tops in
Los
Angeles Dodgers' owner
receiving with 35 catches in
Walter
O'Malley · has
four games for 467 yards and
dismissed
any rumors his
five touchdowns.
baseball
team
might be for
QJarterback David Spriggs
sale.
of New Mexico State is No. I
Los Angeles Cams' owner
in total offense with an
Caron
Rosenbloom, in
average of 307.8 yards per
response
to
a question, said
game and White.is the leader •
recently
he
would be
in all-purpose running with
"interested
in
making
such a
an average of 199.5 yards per
Jll,ll"chase,"
but,
he
added,
he
game - 23 more than
broached
the
subject
with
Aubw-n's James Brooks, who
was injured last week and O'Malley several years ago
will miss the remainder of the and nothing came of it.
The rumors surfaced over
season.
reports
that
Warner
Also, Ray Stachowicz of
Communications,
in
which
Michigan State continues his
Rosenbloom
has
a
substantial
hold in punting with a 46.4
average, ·Richard Blackmore interest, was attempting to
of Mississippi State leads In buy the club.
But O'Malley said there "is
punt returns with an average
no
truth to the rumors" and
of 21.6 yards in seven retw-ns,
the
club and the stadium are
Cris Collinsworth of Florida
not
for sale.
is first in kickoff retw-ns with
"We're
not talking to anyan average of 41.2 yards in
body
about
"it," he said.
five returns and John Curran
"We're
not
listening,
we're·
of
Cornell
leads
in
not
negotiating,
we're
not
interceptions with four in
soliciting."
three games.
11

Bahr leads
NCAA kickers

standing of the public utility
law," said the senator, "although he does understand
the issues surrounding
utilities."
Cummins
told
the
committee under questioning
that consumers are going to
have to pay for the cost of fuel
regardless, and he's not in
favor of eliminating changing
the fuel surcharge in the
absence of an alternative
plan.
'~ I want to see what we're
going to go to next."

company with MIT graduate
and machinist Wllllam
Nickerson oo a $5,000 stake.
The first razor set, which
included 2ll blades, sold for
$5, which is about what the
company's latest razor costs,
the inflation factor aside.
The company still makes
all the blades it bas produced
since its beginning and even
gets requests foc repairs of
some razors more suitable as
museum pieces.
"We recently had a request
from an 80 year old man to
repair his three-piece razor,"
Marino recalled.
"He said It bad sentimental
value because it had been
handed down to him from his
father.''

Cummins said when asked if
he favors repeal of the fuel
adjustment clause, in which
the cost of excess fuel
required to get Ohio utilities
through the last two cold ·
winters has been passed on to
conswners.
"I think it would be folly to
say 'let's do away with it,"'
said Cummins. I'd like to
know how we're going to pass
it (the cost of fuel ) through.
Let's come up with something
better if we're going to
change it."

FALL HARDY MUMS
$1.00 Each
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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. ll, 1!178

.niDGING ON the merit system these arrangements
by beginning arrangers gave Janet Bolin, pictured, and
Suzy Carpenter, both accredited judges of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, the opportunity to point out
the good and the bad in each one. The flower show was
held at the county meeting Monday night with most of the
arrangements coming from those enrolled in an
arranging course completed last week.

POP ART in floral design was shown at Monday
night's meeting of the Meigs County Garden Club's
Association by Mrs. Betty Dean. She exhibited in the
modern design class the entry which had won a blue
ribbon for her at the recent state convention of the OAGC
in Dayton. The theme "All Things Bright and Beautiful"
was carried out by Mrs. Dean with detergent bottles, a
soap powder collage, and plastic hose which served as the
container for mums, gladioli and foliage.

Program presents drug discussion

Work session planned
A work session on comforts

at the church was planned
during a recent meeting of
the Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodbt
Church .
Held at the home of Mrs .
Amber Lohn, Mrs . Jean
Wright we lcom ed th e
members and had prayer.
Devotions by Mrs . Tina
Jacobs were from the 46th
Psalm with the meditation,

Bonnie McLain, educcttiun

··somebody's Watching."
The program by Mrs. Doris
Shook was on "Bread
Basket" and told of how God
supplies the bread of life . She
also read "Sowing Good
Seed" and had prayer.
Mrs.
Lohn served
refreshments to those named
and Mrs. Della Curtis, Mrs.
Ann Mash, Mrs. Donna
Gilmore, Mrs. Wanda Eblin,
and Mrs. Iva Powell.

Kingsbury News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brickles
celebrated their 57th wedding
anniversary last Sunday .
Spending several days with
them was Mrs. Faye Pratt.
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Carl,
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Carl
and family were recent
visitors of Mr. and ·Mrs.
Ralph Carl .
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
· were recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Garold Gilkey, Mr. and
Mrs . Jason Hanning and
Amber Lynn at Athens.
Spending several days with
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Walter
Dean, Jeremy and James,
were Mr . and Mrs. Hobart

specialist, and Linda
Krasner,
recreation
specialist, of the alternatives
pr ogram
of
the
GalliaJackson-Meigs Community
Mental
Health
Center, were guest speakers
at a recent meeting of the
Hanisonville PTO held at the
school.
The two discussed drug
abuse, recreational activities
available and ways of providing alternatives to delinquents through community
based programs.
The annual halloween par-

W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Well
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs.
(Linda Beal), Chester, are
Garold Gilkey and · Tammy
announcing the arrival of a
and Amber of Athens.
baby girl. Those visiting were
Mrs. Neva King had as a
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal,'
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young
recent guest at her home,
and Mrs. Anita llean and Mrs. Wealthy Well.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chase
James.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Dais has been visiting at their
had as recent Sunday guest farm here and visiting in the
neighborhood.
Rev. Jay Stiles of Albany.
Recent guests of Mrs.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs . John Dean were Mr. and Hazel Arnold were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Mrs. Patrick Wllllams and
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Robert family of Me Arthur and Mr.
Ried and Bruce, Syracuse, and Mrs. Ronald McMalley
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Well of :and family of Athens.

Smalley
of Mustoga,
Okla. • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
While here
Mr. Smalley
celebrated his birthday.
Those who enjoyed a birthday
dinner were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bruce Ried and son,
Robert ; of Syracuse; Mr. and
Mrs . Robert Ried , of
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
J ohn Dean , Mrs. Anna Mae
Terrell, Miss Juanita Terrell,
Pataskala, Mrs. Donna
Youn g and Susan of
Pomeroy, Junior Smalley,
Dale and Hobie of Wierton,

IT'S NOT

TOO LATE!

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE

...

Livestock Report
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) Tuesday 's Ohio livestock
auctions report:
Compared
with
last
Tuesday, slaughter steers
and heifer s 1 to instances 1.50
higher on choice, 1-2 higher
on good; slaughter cows 1
higher; slaughter bulls
scarce to firm; feeder cattle
untested .
Slaughter steers : choice 23, 950-1270 lb. 55-56.50, lew
high dressing 56 .50-57 .00;
choice 3-4, 1000-1300 lb. 54-55;
good and low choice 2-4, 8751150 lb. 52-M.
Slaughter heifers: choice 23, 891).1175 lb. 53.50-54.75, few
high dressing 55-{i5.60; choice
3-4, !JOO.llOO lb. 52-53.50; good
and low choice 2-4, 74&lt;f.950 lb.
~2 ; good 2-3, 7~5 lb. ~
50; few standard 1-2, 900-1150
lb. 42.75-46.50.
Slaugi•ter cows : utility and
commercial 1-3, 851).1300 lb.
36-42.50.
Slaughter bulls : 1's 13501600 lb. 5&lt;f.S3.3.'i ; 2's 800.1300
lb. 42.50-48.
Feeder cattle : steers :
small lot choice 750 lb. 58.75.
Bulls : good 675-ll15 lb. 46.50SI .?b.

Hogs: sows .85 to 1.85
higher, boars 1 higher.
Sows: US 1-3, 300-450 lb.
45.35-16.40; 1-3,. 45().65() lb.
47 8549
·
·: 3~0lb. 37.10; 195Boars
265 lb . 37-n . ,
Feeder lambs : choice 74lb.

~.

""

,,

Flower shpw highlights fall meeting

IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES

ty was selfor Oct. 27 at 7 p.m.
Refreshments were served
by the first grade following
the program. The first grade
presented a program.

A fl ower show by amateur· arrangement lht! r~ by g1ving:
ari·angers highlighted the fall a lesson in design.
A " best of class " was
meeting of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association awarded in each category
held Monday night a! Royal with the winners being
Evelyn Thoma, for line
Oak Park recreation ~-enter.
The show which had a total mass ; Binda Diehl , lor mass
of 52 arrangements, most atTangement; Sharon Pratt ,
made by students in the re- for traditional line mass, and
cent flower arranging course, Sally Ingels, for modern, a
was judged by Suzy · class filled by experienced
Carpenter and Janet Bolin, arrangers.
R~'Ceiving blue ribbons in
both accredited judges of the
Ohio Association of Garden . the judKing were Clarice
Clubs, on the merit system Krau!ler , Shelia Taylor,
rather than on a competitive Helen Johnson, Evelyn
basis. Emphasis of their orili Thoma , Karla Cheva lier,
judging was to point out the Lois Walker, Ida Murphy ,
good and bad features of each Clara Bell Riley, Jan Knapp,
Janel Koblentz , Perla
Averion, Mrs. 'Randy Young,
Mrs. Roy Snowden, Lydia
Simon, Mrs. Chris Diehl,
MEIGS WINS
Thelma Giles, Susanne
Meigs' girls volleyball
Teaford, Mrs. Andrew Cross.
team defeated Eastern's
Receiving red ribbons were
girls, 2-1 in three volleyball
Lilly Kennedy, Delores Surmatches Monday night.
face, Joyce Manuel, Helen
Eastern took the opening
contest, 15-7, but Meigs came Johnson, Delores Whitlock,
back to win the next two, 15-12 Sharon Pratt, Linda Hubbard, Evelyn Thoma, Patty
and 15-3. The win gives Meigs
Parker, Clara Bell Riley,
a 5-3 reeord this fall .
Eileen Buck.
Thursday night, Meigs will
In the class of modern
host Wellston in a league design for experienced armatch.
rangers, blue ribbons went to
Sally Ingels, Chlorus Grimm,
Bunny Kuhl, Leota Young,
Evelyn Hollon, AJice Thompson, Betty Dean, Addalou
Lewis, Pat Holter, and Jennie
CHICAGO ( UPI) - The Machir, with red ribbcns to
Chicago Bulls have obtained Geneva Nolan and Janet
forward J obn Brown from the Koblentz.
.Program for the meeting
Atlanta Hawks in return for a
future draft choice. .
was given by Sherman and
Bulls General Manager !'vlickey Cundiff of Syracuse.
Rod Thorn refused Monday to They showed slides of the H
disclose the position of the Holy Land. The Wildwood
draft cboice given to Atlanta. Uarden Club had charge of

.............
...
"

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Rubber boote tor 111 tht family, wtrm

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Sites • to 11 In 1 hiJQt selection .
Down ttadlum parkas , wool blend

pleld.,, denims, twlll" plu" more. SH

Mrs . Betty Fu ltz was
elected president of tile
United Methodist Women of
the Heath United Methodist
Church at a meeting held
Monday night at the church.
Other officers elected were
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle, vice
president:
Mrs.
Clara
Criswell, secretary; Mrs.
Maxine Philson, treasurer ;
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, Christian social involvement: Mrs.
Ruth Bwngarner, global concerns; Mrs. Grace French,
persvn hood ; Mrs . Nan
Moore,
program
resource; Mrs. Mary
Rinehart, Mrs. Mae Lambert
and Mrs . Bumgarner ,
membership; .Mrs. Enuna
· Wayland, Mrs. Lorena Davis
atid Mrs. Beulah Hayes, supportive t'Ommunity; Mrs.
Lettie Young, public relations
and historian; Mrs. Beulah
Jones, mission coordinator : .
Mrs. Bumgarner, Mrs. Billy
Jo Krawsczyn, nominating
committee.
Mrs. Pauline Horton, retiring president, gave a report
for the nominating committee. The new officers will be
installed in November.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Krawsczyn who read,
"Working Where We're Needed" by Jesse Wesler. :-.~n c-~rli -

~~~~~=~~~=;-~-::::;~::iiiiiiiiiiii::i:ii~l
•

de from Gutde Posts, •nd
had prayer.
Mrs. Horton reported on a
recent meeting held at The
Plains Church and noted that
the local UMW 1-..d taken st~
cond on the banner. The
district training session being
held today at the Rutland
Church was noted. Mrs .
Criswell announced that
Church Women United of
Meigs County will observe
World . Conununity D•y on
Nov . 3 at the Chester United
Methodist Church.
Mrs . Etoil!a Cassell
presented the program
reviewing the book, "Trials,
Tears and Triumphs ": by
Dale Evans Rogers . The book ·
is the story of her life and
f•ilh, and of the strength she
gained in the loss of her
mother and her three
children. Mrs. Cassell told of
her personal testimony to
many audiences in dties
across the country and commented on her views on abortion, trial marriages, and
pornography. She said that
she prays to begin each day.
Mrs. Horton closed with
prayer. Refreshments were
served by · Nellie and Hallie
Zerkle, Mrs . Frances Brewington, and Mrs. Nan Moore.

During a recent Convocation at Goucher College,
Towson, Maryland , Ms.
Briget Polichene was introduced
after
being
designated a Dean's Scholar
for 197S.79; in recognition of
her exemplary academic
record achieved during the
1977-78 academic year .
Fifteen members of the class

REG.
13.99

For

\.arge c.ramlc table 11mp. PINtMi
lhecle . Anorted color bne. A $12 .99
value.

$500

DRIED FLOWERS

Fl11te Lind

.Womens Fashion

Wr1n1111, Murltk, 111 Yank
Straight ltgl or flarel.gs. Mlny prt·
Sltet 2t to A2. Several
styles, reduct'dl

w••htd.

$966Values

$11

Thtsel

Take advantage end Seve. Pullover
or urdlgen style1. A Yery complete
ltltdlon of wanted models for now
and later ,

$899

MENS JEANS

To 114.99

PRICE

WOMEN$
SWEATERS

Front

11-L-XL
ltd, Grey, &amp;r11n, llaiJ

!h

Entire Stotk On Stlel

HOODED
SWEAT SHIRTS

EIITIIE STOCK ON SALEI

GINGER JAR
LAMP

ARTIFICAL FALL FLOWERS

MENS WAIM

Full Zlpptr

HOODED
TOPS
Fashion Loobl

$544
MAGNETIC

PHOTO ALBUM

s:e~ts · $} OO

25%
off .
EVERYPRI_CE PRICES
l Teens
JEANS

Womens

ON -SALE!
Entire New Fall Stock .
Washed and styled INns. Site
3 to II lAd l2 to 31. Includes
Danlm, "Girl, Big Yank,

2i(}(to"FF
OUI EVERYDAY PRICE

PRICES fN EFFECT
NOW
THRU SUNDAY!
P.V.C. VIIITL

WOMEN$ POLYESTER

WTHEILIKE

WOMEN$
LONG
COATS
MMt
bvtton cvtr, two

WE IIEED SPACE!
FOAM FILLEll

BED
PILLOWS

with

PKkttt. Nddle stitch, red,

bled;, bette or ten. Sla S
XL .

Qullt.d covtr or t.otPital •tripe

~

PANTS

Size iO .To II, XL 32 To 31
New fall (Oion. Right out ot ttock .
Elastic waist, slltcllect front crea.'on most. A verr special buy!

Val111 To '5.99

$266

CO't'tr. Flrfttore to.m filled. Plump,
full 1111,

SLICED

The families of Douglas
and Edison Johnson recently
held a potluck dinner and
cookout •t the Portland State
Park.
Games and picture !•king
were enjoyed in the afternoon. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Johnson, Sr.,
and Roy, Jr., Wade Johnson,
Lizzie Wood, Laura Circle,
Mrs. Arthur Johnson and
Sheryl, Gloria Manuel, Mr.

and Mrs. Gary Willford, Alisa
and T•bitha' Mr. anq Mrs.
Roger Manuel . Angie and
Arnie, Mr. and Mrs. John
Manuel and John, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Johnson and Sandra, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Prater, Connie and Jason,·
Mr. and Mrs . Milford
Frederick, Jr., .Scott, Tony,
Juanita and Sherri, and
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Mac
McKay and family .

POLLY·s POINTERS

·

BULK BACON ... ~~-.59
BUCKET

.

CUBE STEAK ....L~~
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK STEAK...L~~
.

GROUND

.

$}! 9

¢

$}69
•• ·

·

% PORK LOIN~~.l

29

••

$}09

BEEF..L~; ..

GROUND CHUCKI-.1

19

EIITI RE STOCK REDUCED!

circular knit on sale I

2

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU OCTOBER 14, 1978

Polly Cramer

CoHon.polyttter blend . Long tlHw
lhlrtt or ankle lqttl drawers.
lntula~

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

of 400 were so honored. Ms.
Polichene graduated from
Wester-n Reserve Academy,
Hudson, 0. and is presently a
sophomore at Goucher.
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . N. P. (Anne
Phillips)
Pollchene of
Ravenna, and the granddaughter of Mrs. Gomer W.
Phillips, Gallipolis.

'~""11

Regular 12.99. They look
end smell like rul ones .

~.

Pouch Pocklt

EVERYDAY PRICES

lilillll\\1

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Briget Polichene honored

ALL SALE PRICES IN
EFFECT NOW • TON IGHTI

Mens Thermal Insulated
UNDERWEAR ·
.,

oui"S thlt w.. kend and seve.

OFF

19~I.

SILK
SCENTED
ROSES

WINTER IS COMING!

'

BOYS WINTER
JACKETS

Solid Colon and
Fancies. Regular S2.ol9.

Rogul••
"'· tfrlpt
Eoeh ""
36~~:72 . With
and
tacks.

SAVE 20!.

20%

WOMI!NS
KNI!I!-HI
NYLONS
Callfort Top
RtiUiar 39'

MENS
FLANNEL

Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive your
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you.

eg. No.
................
..

•SUEDE

Mrs. Betty Fultz
named president

Potluck cookout held recently

Classes being offered can be applied
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind. We can
give you the training that you need
to qualify for the job of your future.
We have more ca lis from employers
in the area for our graduates, than
we have graduates.

R

FABRIC IN STEP
WITH FA11

CELEBRATING POINT PLEASANT'S FAMOUS BATTLE 204 YEARS AGO!

STARTING OCT. 30, 1978

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND
VISIT US AT THE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

"Christinas Is ..... " will be
the program which also included a dance by Ada Holter the theme of the show which
will include classes for beginin Japanese costwne.
Mrs. Pat Holter, county ning arrangers and senior
citizens as well as the usual
co~tact chairman, presided
at the meeting with Twila invitational classes, garden
Buckley and Sally Ingels club member classes, ~nd
presenting the schedule for junior classes. Christmas
the annual county Christmas .decorations and gift 1¥fap!)flower show which has ten- ings will also be included.
Cookies and coffee were
tatively been set for the first
weekend in December at the served by the Chester Club
Pomeroy Elementary School, following the meeting.

7- The Daily Sentiuel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedm•&gt;tlay, 0&lt;"1. 11, 1978

IIIIUitr
'19.99
OPEN

TOIIITE

•••

EVElY
Nll'E
POINT PLIAIANT or MASON

Op.que nYlon. Solid Q)IOI't.
Perfect quellty . W111te end
Ft~hlon Fill ~Mdtt. SlZII 6·
IYJ end 9·11.

DEAR POLLY- I would
like to know if any of the
readers know how to remove
ash burns dropped from
cigarettes that have tiny dark
spots on white knit pants. I
have two pairs of pants with
such spots. - MRS. P.U.
DEAR MRS. P.U. - I could
use an answer for this, too, if
there is one. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Before
tacking a new grocery list to
my bulletin board I draw
lines to divide It into sections
lor easy
supermarket
Shopping. When I go to the
meat section, the dairy
counter, etc. I have aU my
needs listed together for each
department and save a lot '()f
time . There 's also less
chance
of
forgetting
something. - KATIE
DEAR POLLY - I am
answering Anne whose Pet
Peeve was that the frozen
were
scattered
foods
throughout her bagged
groceries. She could unload
her frozen items and place
them together on the counter.
This also saves time for the
checker. Save money and put
all articles that are say three
for $1 or four for 89 cents
together. A checker has to
work last and cannot
remember that 30 items back
you had a group item. - PAT
DEAR POLLY - Tired of
breaking fingernails trying to
open and close aluminum
storm windows? I cut wooden
dowels into six-inch lengths
and keep two on each window
sill. I use these sticks to push
the metal tabs in the corners
of the windows to open and
close them instead of using
my fingers. Great lor saving
the nalls and wonderful for
the disposition, too . MAJORIE
· DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve is literally · a "pet"
peeve. It really Irks me that
people apow their dogs to
stick their heads out of car
windows while going down
the road at 50 mph. These
people must not realize how

-

much damage this can do to a
dog - it could be blinded by
the fierce wind, not to
mention !h~ danger of flying
sand, pebbles and dirt. I feel
sorry for dogs with such
dumb human owners. - M.D.
DEAR POLLY - When
making slacks press the
creasesin with a cloth dipped
in a solution of one-half white
vinegar and one-half water.
The crease wllllast the life of
the slacks. - MRS. J .W.B.
Polly will send you one of
her
signed
thank-you
newspaper coupon clippefS if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in ·
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in case of this
newspaper.

VISITORS
Mrs . Mary Chri sty of
Coolville visited several days
in Columbus with Mrs.
Rachel Christy and her sonin-law, Randall Edwards,
who is hospitalized due to an
industlial accident.
The Almanac
United Press loternatlonao
Today is Wednesday, Oct.
1\, the 284th day of 1978 with
81 to follow.
The moon is between its
first quarter and full phas~ .
The morning stars are
Sa tum and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Mars, Venus and Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Libra.
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt,
wife of President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, was born Oct. 11,

1884.
On this day in history :
In 1811, the first steampowered ferry in the world
started its run between New
York City and Hoboken, N.J.
In 1868, Thomas Alva
Edison fUed papers for his
first invention - an electrical
vote recorder to tabulate
floor votes In Congress In a
matter of minutes. Congress
rejected it.

YELLOW

49¢
ON IONS.......... ~~.~ ...
3LB.

JOAN OF ARC

$

KRAFT MIRACLE

KIDNEY
COLLEGE INN

13 oz. CANS

CHI-CKEN BROTH4/

$

FLAVORITE FROZEN

1POTATOES..... ::G~ ..

COUPON

COUP ON

COUPON

CAMPBELL'S

CORONET

MAXWELL HOUSE

CHICKEN NOOIU SOUP

TOILET ·TISSUE

10¥4

oz.

5/$1

8 ROLL
.W/C

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
. Offer Ex11ires Oct 14, 1978

!!;; ~ ;;; ~~!!;;~~

PAK

$119

Lim,it 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
XDr'tl!• Qcl, 14, 1978

320Z.

5

COL:PON

FLAVORITE GRANULATED

SUGAR
JLB.
CAN
Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's

5LB.
BAG ·

99¢ w

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
' 14, 1978

�....

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

'

8- The Daily Sentinel. Mi&lt;llllcpurt-Pomeruy. 0 .. WcwiC•llay, ()d . I I. 1978

National Business Women's Week observed·
Natio n::1l
Bustn t:ss I.)Usine.ss ar1t.l Ute vruicsstonsi
Women's Week, Oct. 15-21, to promote the interests of
will be obse•·ved by the Mid· business and professional
dleport Business and P1·ofes· women, to bring about a
sional Women '• Club with spirit of t'Ooperalion among
several activities highli~htcd busi!1es.• and professional
by a dinner meeting with.. the wo1~ to extend op·
selection of a " Woman of~unities to busmess a nd
Week" and a " Woman· of the professional women along the
Year."
lines of industrial, scientific
The dinner will be held and vocational activities.
Monday evening at the Meigs . Sunday the . local cl ub
Inn and in audition to the members are mv1teu to atreeognition uf women ·fur

uut•tanding servit'C to the
dub, there wjll be a review of
the aims and objectives of the
organization - to elevate the
standards for women 'in

THIS TRITON - a ball-mao, ball-fish god of the sea is fasbloned from two large pearls; one makes up bis
torso and the other his tail. The Reaalssance pendantembellished with gold, diamonds and robles - Is the
finest of the 1,600 palotlogs and art objects from the
collection of John Gellatly perma!leDtly exhibited lo
Washington at the National Collection of Floe Arts.

American Cancer Society
introduces services

de livering these services are .
the dedic ated volun teers
\Vurking to alleviate some of
th• suffering of the cancer
lJilticnt and to provide the
emtJtiona l support ofte n

( 4) Ftnancial aid for
medication.
( 5)
Counselin g
and
emot ional support to patients
and their families.
We hope to expand this list
in the future; and feel we can
by our continuing awareness
of community needs. We are
asking for volunteers to help
in this very worthwhile en·
deavor. We are not asking for
hours of your time, just a few
minut es when you are
needed. ·
To make use of our present
services, please call the unit
office at 992·7531, Teresa
Co llins, R.N . at 992·2104, or
Michael Bendinelli, R.Ph. at
992-9287. Our office is located

needc~.

in

Some of the se rvices
prtJv ided by the Se r vice
Cummiltee a re :

films availabl e fur public use.
(2 1 Fr~e ~u pplies s uch as

building, East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Office hours
are 1:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
every Tuesd ny and Timrsday.
If you woul d like to become

hr&gt;'pita l beds (on. a loan

involved in assisting cancer

1\ s a continuation

of a

l)eries of articles sponsored

by the Meigs County Unit of
the America n Cancer
Society, we would like to

fan uliarize the residents of
Meigs County with Service
Committee. These services
provided by thi s committee
are made possi ble to you by
funds raised through th e
tmnua l crusade, as well as

t:n ntributions g iv e n
lhruugho ut !he year. Playing
.~

an

impo r tant

role

in

111 Free pamphlets and

the

Senior

Citizens

patients in Meigs County by
occtside co mmodes and other vo lunteering your services,
please complete the following
!I ems.
13) Assistance in arranging . form and mail to:
t ranspori.ation, as well as
Mei gs County
Unit ,
Xlt'liSJ,

undcrpads, dre:;sings,

fin.mcial aid for travel ex-

American Cancer Society, C-il

jWnscs for

Senior Ci•izens Building,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

medical treat-

m•:nt.

~arne::_------------------------------Address'-:- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone '- - - - ------------------------: I I know of someone with cancer who could use your
&lt;iet'vices.

r

1 Transportation

1 1 Delivery of supplies
1 1 Administrating other services
'

J

Visitations &amp; emotional support

r 1 Making supplies
1 ) I am unable to help at this time ·but would like to
make a contribution .

.Young Adult class met
__.... recently
SY RACUSE-Officers were
elected when the Young Ajlult
CJ"ss me t at the Asbury
IJn ited Methodist Church
1 ccc ntly.

Elec ted wer e Dennis
Moure, pres1dent ; Kenny
Buckley, vice president ;
Faye C1 ifford , secretary;
Norma BHker, treasurer ;
Apr·il Harmon, chaplain; and
Hose Ann J enkins, historian .
Mem bers were reminded to
fr nish up their items for the
lwzaar w be hela Nov. 4 and
5. A work session was set £or

Nov, 3 and each member was
"sked to sign up for the h0urs
he or she can work.
Meetings scheduled for the
remainder of the yea r were
Od. 24, halloween costume
party at the Buckley hurrie;
Nov. 17. meeting at Jim and
Faye Cli ffurds , and Dec. 15, a
Christmas get-together at the
Htt&lt;;s Moon; home.
II was dccideu that the
ti&lt;Jss will again this year lake
l'a re of the Christmas candy .
I.;;st year's officers were
recogmzed. Moore opened u,.,
meeting with devotions and
g r oup
s inging,
and

refreshments at the condu·
sion were served by Roy and
Ruse Ann Jenkins.
Attending we1·e Mr. and
Mrs. Buckley , Dennis Moore,
Judy Williams. Hope Moor ,
Norma Baker, Janice Lisle,
Roy Jenkins, Faye Cliford,
and April Harmon .

FESTIVAL SET
LETART FALLS - A fall
fest ival will be held at the
Letart Falls Elementary
School Saturday. There will
be a t urkey and meatloaf
diMer starting at 5:30 p.m.
The festival will also feature
games and a country store.
FISH FRY
Modern · Woodm en of
America, Camp 7230 will
ha ve a fish fry at 7 p.m.
Saturday at the Woodmen
Hall in Burlingham. A fish
dinner will be served free of
charge and members are to
take a cov ered dish. A
business meeting will follow
lhe diMer.

mversctry ccJcoralton .

Bu s in ess
N.a tional
Women's Week was first
celebrat!'(J April 15-22, 1928,
with the announced purpose
of dramatizing contributions
uf women to the business and

professional life of the county.
From thqt lime National
Bu•iness Women's Week has
grown to be a ·nationwide
recognition of business and
lend church services i:Jl t~e pi-ofessiOnal women's conSacred ·Heart (:hm·ch m tributions as citizens and of
the leadership they are proPomeroy, to a.m. Mass.
On Thursday,_Oct. 19, local vit.ling in the economy, social, .
members will v1s1t the Athens cultural, busine•s and profes·
Club for that club's 50th an· sional life of the Unitc'&lt;l
States.
Now held during the third
full week of October, it is a
public relations event, a
stimulus to program interpretation and an aid to
membership progress.
SUNDAY
On the local scene, MidANNUAL Homecoming dleport Business and ProfesMorning
Star
United sional Women's Club was
Methodist Church Sunday. organized in 1946 by the
Carry-in dinner at 12 :15, Gallipolis BPW Club. The
afternoon program at 1:30. charter is dated July 1. 1946
Wesley Clark , district and Mrs. Sylvia Burford was
superintendent,
Athens, the' first local p&lt;esident.
guest speaker. Special There were 64 members.
singing.
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Mrs.
Edith ' Forre st, Mr s.
Geraldine Swadley, Mrs.
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The Rose Reynolds and Miss
Cincinnati Stingers said Freddie Houdashelt are
Monday they have cut from charter members Mrs. Pearl
the team, John French, a Reynolds is a fonner district
center obtained 10 days ago director .
from the .Indianapolis
The interests of all business
Racers.
~nd professional women are

WEDNESDAY
SOUP SUPPER Wednesday , 4 to 7 at Methodist
Church annex.
POMEROY Chapter 80
li.A.M. Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Bosworth council 46, royal
and select rriasters 8: 15. ,.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club will
hold a regular meeting , at
noon Wednesday, at the
Meigs Inn.
BOARD of Trustees of
Columbia Township Thursday 7 _p .m. at township
building.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednes·
dav at the home of Mrs, . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
W~lter Crooks wiU1 Mrs.
Daniel Thomas, co-hostess.
THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi will meet Thursday at
7:45 p.m. at home of Jan.e
Walton. Co-hostess is JeaMie
·
Werry.

GOSPEL MEETING
OCT. 11·15

OHIO VALLEY Grange
2612, Letart Falls, will meet
at 7.:30 p.m. Thursday at the
hall to make plans for a
Halloween party to be held .
for children of Letart
Township on Oct . 28; potluck
refreshments ..
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Thursday night at the hall.
Time changed to 7:30p.m.
WOMEN'S
AGLOW
Fellowship , Pomeroy
Chapter, Thursday at Meigs
Inn.. Dinner at 7 p.m., $3.50 a
per~on. Mavis Hankey guest
speaker.
DISTRICT ll's 48th annual
cunverltiun uf Pythian Sisters
at Gallipolis Temple 76,
Thursday. Registration and
coffee hour, noon until I p.m.
when business session starts.
Evening.session at 7:30p.m.
LAUREL CUFF Better
Health Club, anniversary
meeting. Putluck diMer at
Amber Lohn 's home, 6 p.m.
Sunshine sisters to have gift
exchange.
MEIGS County Hwnane
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
Meigs County Branch of the
Athens Cuunty Savings and
Loan Association.
PARENT-TEACHER For·
urn of Meigs Junior High
School, organizational
meeting , 9:30a.m. Thursday
in the conference room. Plans
for open house on Oct. 24. All
interested parents invited.
FRIDAY
PAST
MATRONS ,
Evangeline Chapter 172,
OES, special meeting , 2 p.m.
Friday at the masonic tem·
ple .
YARD AND BAKE Sale
Friday at Bethany Church
annex, one mile east of
Racine on SR 124. Sponsored
by
Dorcas
Women' s
Fellowship. Open from 9 a.m.
until dark.
DAUGHTERS of the
American Revolution, Return
J onathan Meigs Chapter
Friday, 1:30 p.m. home of
Mrs. James O' Brien. Guest
'iiJeaker Mrs. Hilda Grace
McPherson, registrar of Ohio
DAR, Coshocton. Hostesses,
Mrs.. O'Brien, Mrs. Larry
Wiley, Mrs. Nancy Reed and
Mrs. A. R. Knight. Guests
members of French Colony
Chapter of Gallipolis.
MARY SHRINE 37, Onler
of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem , ceremonial at 8
p.m. rriday at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Officers are
· to wear formals ; potluck
refr es hments
served
following ceremonial.
SATURDAY
SALE M C E NT E R
Educational Organization
yard sale Saturday from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
NEW HAVEN Volunteer
Fire Department . chicken
barbecue beginning 11 a .m:
Saturday at New Haven city
building; full dinner to be
served.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, I : 30 p.m.
Sunday at Nease Settlement
Church with music by the
Gospeltones of Chester.

WESTSIDE
.CHURCH OF CHRIST

shared by the National
rederation uf Business and

Professional Women's Clubs.
A non -partisan, non-

sectarian, non-profit, self·
s upporting and self· _.,'
governing organization, there ;
are approximately I75,000 ~
working wumen , in the 50 :
states with me_mbership.

Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru ~at., October 14th

••
•

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••'~~.!1.09
French City

HONEY, PEPPER
or PORK &amp; BEEF ROAST. •••••••••••••• !~·.. 51.79
French City
BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1~2.!~·. sl.29 .
MARGARINE.. ................. 2149'
OHIO COLBY

LONGHORN CHEESE

CHUNK S1.59 lb.
SLICED $1.69 lb.

24 oz. BROUGHTONS

COTTAGE CH~ESL. .............. 99'

Evenings 7: 30--Sunday 10:00. 6:00

Speaker: .P aul Casebolt
Paden City, W.Va.
COME AND HEAR THE TRUTH

CABBAGE ............. 2lb. 29~
New •
RED GRAPES ...........'~;.. 79~

Melody Snouffer Hoschar

· Buying or selling a home
·Arrest
·Your will
·Divorce
·Adoption
·Law suit
· Juvenile court
· Contesting a will

The five Mothers' Leagues
of South Central District of
the Ohio Guild Conservation
'league wish to invite you to
be their guest at a potluck
supper and meeting which
will be held on October 24, at
the Kyger Creek -Recreation
Area Club House at 7 p. m .
Each league will furnish food,
including drinks and rolls,
and table service for their
invited guests.
OCCL
is
a
State
Organization to which local
leagues belong. The purpose
of the Ohio Child Conservation 1 League is to
promote the general welfare
of children believing that ''A
child well guided today ,
tomorrow will guide well his
own .destiny."
If you would like a chance
to confer with other mothers
about the rearing of your ,
children, a chance to hear
some very qualified speakers
· on the spiritual, mental ,

physical or moral welfare of
yo ur child, a chance to do
some philanthropic service
for your community, plus the
bonus of good fellowship, a
State Convention, and · a
District Spring Conference,
of
which
are
both
enlightening and inspiring,
come and join us on the 24th
and we'll" show and tell" you
how you can become a part of
this worthwhile organization.
New · mothers, older
mothers, and any other
women interested in the
welfare of children are
welcome to attend. Just call
one of the " contact persons"
listed below if you have not
already received an in·
vitation, or just come to the
meeting on the 24th.
Contact persons are :
First.Step Mothers ; Cathy
Wray, Route 2, Debby Dr.,
Gallipolis, Phone 446-4255;
Middleport CCL: Peg Harris,
Route 3, Pomeroy, Phone 9927569; Progressive Mothers :

5 oz. Banquet Boil in the Bags .•••••••• 2/69~ "...,

Karen Gillam, 517 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis, phone 446·
7456:-Rio Grande Mothers:
Cheryl Vanc o, Route 3,
Gallipolis, phone 446-1168 ;
Toddlers to Tassels Mothers :
Mimi Slone, 31 Evans
Heights , Gallipolis , vhone
446·1323.
Distri&lt;:t president, J ean
Gillespie, Route 3, Gallipolis,
phone 441&gt;-3969.
At this supper meeting you
will be encouraged an"

•

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

welcomed to join either a new
league (to be fanned that
night 1 or one of the five
existing leagues.
Each mem ber of each
league is requested to ca ll the
" contact person" (or your
league and give her names
and addresses of persons to
whom you would like a
written invitation sent She
will do this for your league.
Please (eel free to invite
whomever you wish by
personal contact, also .

•

ANTI·
FREEZE

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fridley
of Colwnbus, are announcing
the birth of a nine pound, 10
ounce son, Michael Wesley,
on Sept. 20 at Doctor's
Hospita l, North, Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Lightfoot and Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Beaver, Middleport,
are the grandparents. Great·
grandparents are Georl(e

Moore, Colwnbus ; Henry
Beaver, Chester ; and Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Miller, Mid·
dleport.

$289

GAL

During Sale Only

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

In 1962, Pope John XXIII
opened the 2nd Vatican
Ecumenical Council in St.
Peter's Basilica in Rome.

700 Main

Pomeroy, 0.

992-2101

\

4'1• oz. Del Monte .

'

SNAK PAK PUDDING ••••••••••••••••••• :.~:~•• 89~
_12"x2S'
REYNOLDS WRAP............................. 2/.89*

..

~

103/• oz. Campbell's

.,

CREAM OF MUSHROOM SOUP. ••••••••••• 3/79~
29 oz. Del Monte
PEAR HALVES .............-••••••- ~ ••••••~•••••••••• 83c

..'

"'

.·'"..

14'h oz. Hunts

'

WHOLE TOMATOES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 49'

"

ROAST
BEEF &amp; GRAVY••••••••••••••••••••• ..Sl.09
15'14 oz.

,.,"'

VIENNA WITH BEANS ••••••.•.••••••••••••• .'••
Roll White Cloud
TOILET TISSUE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• :.k.9~. 95$·
4

3

oz.

INSTANT NESTEA ~········ ~ ............... !:~.,..'1.99.

v

...
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..

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Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Snouffer are announcing the
marriage of their daughter,
Melody, to Thomas William
Hosehar, Son of the Rev. and
Mrs; George F. Hoschar,
West Columbia.
The wedding was an event
of Sept. 15 at the Salem CommWiity Church, and was performed ·by the groom's
father. Matron of honor was
Mrs. Vicki Snouffer, and
Theron Ray camp was the
best man.
A reception honoring the
couple was beld at the
Hoschar residence.
Melody, a 1978 Meigs High
School graduate, is an
employee of Powell's Super
Valu and attends Gallipolis
Business College. Mr .
Hoschar is a 1974 Waharna
High School graduate and has
spent the past four years in
the. U. S Anny. He is now a
construction worker.
The couple are temporarily
residing with the bride's
family in Pomeroy but will
move mid.Qctober to their
home in West Colwnbia.

.'

The need for a lawyer's services often occurs under
unforeseen circumstances, when the cost can be least
afforded. So, all too often people act without legal
counsel-even though a lawyer's assistance may be
desperately needed.
Now you may be able to protect yourself-and your
family-against such unforeseen costs through a Group
Legal Plan. Under such a plan, legal advice and other
important services can be secured through a small monthly r
payment or other prepayment method which allows the cost •
of legal services to be spread over the group. It's a conven- '··
ient arrangement which lets the group provide coverage h
its members at a low per-member cost. So, when legal
••
services covered by the plan are needed, they're already '
·''
paid for. .
.
A Group Legal Plan also offers you other important · 1
benefits, such as assistance in locating a lawyer who .
practices in a particular area of the law. And, of course, you :
can always use your own family lawyer, or any lawyer '
,,
you choose.
·
..'
Find out how you, too, can avoid untimely expenses
!
through a well-devised Group Legal Plan. For your own
sake-and your family' s-don 't trust your luck.
r-----------~--------,
Fill out and mail
this coupon today.
Ohio State Bar Association
.
.• I
33 Wes1 Eleventh Avenue
1
Columbus. Ohio 43201
1
I

Please send me more information about the

.I
I.

Group Legal Plan.

Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Robin·
son were surprised by their
' family in honor of tht;r 50th
wedding anniversary.
Coming Friday evening to ,
obllerve the celebration were
Mr. and Mrs. John Robinson
and daughters, Cindy, Unda
and Debbie, Mechanicsville,
Va.; Md Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Dudek and son,
Rickie, and daughter, Laurie,
Mentor.
A reception was held Saturday afternoon at their home
at 175 Mulberry Ave. and a
diru1er was given at the Meigs
lrln on Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robinson
were married in Pomeroy on
Oct. 12, 1928.

UOI'I •01
ON IIIOOIII.IANO
PIOOUCU

Except Closed S•lllnl•r lli41illrt Til 9 All Stlnd•r
bu,t Minto11, Whit• Sulphur Sprlt!g&amp;
1nd 514 S. Tllird St ., Ironton

C&lt;H'TIIOHT 1911- T. . . .0011 CO. lrtMI AHO ~
0000 IUHDA't OCT . I ntiU IATUIDAY OC1 . 1• . 1t111M

......
c.

Address

Foot! Stamp•

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. Corn

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~~~.25C

KIOGER
·U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .

Catsup ·

32·••-69C
IM.

BEEF CHUCK

Center Blade
Cut Chuck
Steak .. ........ lb.

City

State ,

Zip

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(.~-~

....

cos,

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Br1ght
Liquid Bleach

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Mixed
Fryer
·Parts .. ...... lb.
Fresh
Picnic
Pork Roast..1b.

(IICtUDINC THIS ITEM!

I
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I

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PLUS
DIPOSIT

I

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Lowfat Milk

Kroger 20;.ol
White
Bread ........ .... .....

~

IIIIDCEII CDST CUTTEII COUPOI
SWEETENED OR UNSWEETENED 6·0Z . CANS

" I

Kroger Frozen
Orange Juice

I

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Pak

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Hi Nu 2%

CIII'II-SIIIM!KI IIHIUIII.Uotl llllll
MI!IU It .mtUiti1TITI I lOCAl lUIS

6$ 69

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Df

couto"'..-

Diet Rite or
R.C. Cola ...... .. .Pak

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lii!T I GIL WITH Cotii'ON IRO 1750 IDDITIO!It PURCHm

... · ..&lt;~,

LIMIT ONE IOTTLE
IOUNDTOP
.

Slicing Site
Tomatoes ....

Ctn.

co\,

Kroger
Vegetable
48 _01
Ot"I ... .. ................ . .
LAIGI VINEIIPENED

I
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MRS. CARL TAYLOR

18334.

Gal.

I

Gal.$

dleport, Is a paUent at the
Holzer Medical Center. She
uoderwenl surgery Tuesday
morning. Her room nwnber

I

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$

"

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PINT IITUINAIIE IOTTLES

I

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USDA
CHOICE

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IIIIOGEII CDST CUTTEII CDUPOI

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• '.

IIIJICT fl II'PI.tc.la( ITIH I lOUt lUll

I

Mrs. Carl Taylor of Mid·

MEETING SET
Feeney'Bemlelt Post 128,
American Legion, will meet
tonight at 7:30 at the Mid, dleport hall. Followlnjj the
meellnC fried oysters and
D)'ller stew prepared by Tony
Fowler will be served.
Mtllllbera are urged to attend.

, _ . . . HON!Kf IBUUBOOI&lt;KIU. II&lt;I

I

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liMifONECOUPONPU-F·.t.Mi lY

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Boneless
Pot Roast

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(IIClUDIIIC THIS ITEM!

D!
'

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Grade A
Large
Eggs .......... Doz.

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till! ltiS. WITH COII'ON liD 17.50 •oDITID!It PURCHU!

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Roll

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LIMIT 1 C4N Pli4SI

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1-lb.

I

Krogo
48
Shortening..... . c~~z.

-.

19

I
AVONDAlE CIIAM STYU

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Gunnoe's
.Sausage

I

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ltrottr Weh:oMII
'four F..eral

SIIVH UK»GG I ,OMIIOY UOOin. WI IUIIVI , ..
liGHT TO LIINI QUAHTifiU. NOJriiiiQi.O TO DIAlln .

Name- - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - 1
n

OPEN
24HRS.
ADAY

.ANTASTI( tA.VfllfG5

Has birthday
Mr. Md Mrs. Ronald Logan
recently entertained with a
party in celebration of thesecond birthday of . their son,
Kevi!l. A Hulk birthday cake
was served with otber
refreslunents. Presenting
cards Md gifts to Kevin were
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Logan,
Barbara Logan, Mr. and Mrs.
Archie Glbs011 and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs: WU!iam Ault,
Merri Ault, Perk Ault, Vickie
Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Aull, Md Darin Logan.

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORES

95fk

Anniversary
surprise

The fact there's a
Group Legat·Ptan
means
you're in-luck.

ohio
state bar
association

2Md 'BUj Week To. s~ 'OWtiHg K'UUJe'l'~

•

mamag~

.,

The fact
youhavetit
had a legal
problem
means
you're lucky.

•

Ohio Child Conservation League
plans potluck supper, meeting

RUnAND
'DEPARTMENT STORE.

12 oz. Armour

Corner of Butternut &amp; Main, Pomeroy,
Ohio. ·

9-~~~11 Sentinel, Mkldleuort· Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Oct. II , 1978

1

UIIT Oil HIA •111 COIPIII Ul SJ.SUIIliiOUli'IICtllll

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

;~";'~;;:;.·,;; tm

Of

'Deficow&amp;eg S,eciol6
hailable On~ In Stores Willi Deli De11's
Hot foodsl111lable II 1111-1 rM

,.,..."in' 5
ce
Dinne
Smithfield
Boiled Ham ..... ..... ....

~::~~ ~~!. ~

8

............ Eoch

Gwaltney German
Bologna ...... .. ......... .. Jb
Macaroni
Salad .. ....... ........... ...lb.

-

1·
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19

Sl 59
79c

�·'
11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Wednesday , ()('t. II, 1978

No~~c¥A0x?Ng~oN

Mayors' Court

Monthly activity report released

EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Siity-one arrests were hav ing an opera:tor's license
Six d clendants were fined
and two o thers forfeited
made by the Middleport ami one each for assured
bond~ in the court of MidPolice Department during clear distance ; failure t o
Resolution Of the 8qard of
Trustees ot the Township of
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
September, according to the yield the right o f way ; perOlive. Otllo , pasud on the 5th
Tuesday night.
report of Police Chief J . J . mitting unlicensed person to
davot August. 1978, there will
operate motor vehicle; un- . Fined
Cremeans.
be subm !Hed to .!1 vote of the
were
James
peopte of said Township of
safe ve hi c le; . improper
Staebler,
21,
Athens,
$25
and
Heading
the
list
of
offenses
Olive at a General ELEC ·
costs, disturbing the peace;
was speeding with 20 arrests, backing ; leaving scene of a n
TION to be held in the
Township of 011\'e , Ohio ,. at
Donald Lovett , 55 , MidWhile disorderly maMer WaS accident ; false statement to a
the regular places of voting
dlep o rt, $100 a nd costs,
second with seven arrests. police officer. There were 14
therein, on Tuesday , the 7rh
dll.V of ~ovem ber , 1978, the
diS&lt;Jrderly maMer; Roger
There were four arrests for cases dismissed or in whic h
question of levying , in excess
charges
were
dropped.
One
driving
while
intoxicated
,
Lee f!9schar, 20, West
of the ten mill lim itation , for
Columbia, W. Va, $225 and
the benef it of Olive Townsh ip • three for allowing dogs to run case was transferred t o
ror the purpose of ·d u!t
coWlty court .
costs and three days in jail,
control , for the preven tion . loose, two for failing to
Parking
meter
collections
driving
while intoxicated;
control
vehicle
and
for
not
control and abasement of air
pollution .
for the month t otaled $837 and
George A . McDaniel, 51,
Sa it ta. being : an ad .
the police cruiser was driven
Middleport, $100 and costs,
d ition al ta x of (3) three mills
to run for F lve (5) years at a
4,261 miles during the month.
diwrderly manner; Robert
rate not exceeding Ill three
NOTICE OF ELECTION
L. Price, 36, Nelsonville, $225
mills for each one dollar of ·
ON TAX LEVY IN
and
costs and three days in
valuation, wh ic h !mounts to
EXCESS OF THE TEN
S.30 Thirty Cents for each one
In 1975, Vice President jail , drivi n g while inMILL
LIMITATION
hundred dollars ot \lalul!ltion ,
Nelson Rockefeller urged a toxicated, and Willard D.
NOTICE is hereby giVen
for Five (51 years .
at in pursuan ce of a
swift federal loan to help New Mohler, 56, Middleport, $50
The Polls for said E lection th
Resolution of fhe Board of
will open at 6:30 o'clock A .M . Trustees
York City avoid economic and costs, disorderly manof the Tow ns hip of
and remain open until 6: 30 Rutland,
passed on the
~nkruptcy .
o'clock P .M . Eastern Stan - Jlst day ofOhio,
ner.
August , 1978, there
dard Time of said day .
Will
be
su_
bm
lt
ted
to
a
vote
of
Forfeiting bonds were
For Thursday , Oct 12
By order of the Board of the people of sa id Township of
Harry
K.' Full, no age or
Elections, of Meigs County ~ Rutland at a
General
Ohio .
address lis ted , $50 posted on a
ELECTION to be held in the
Ernest A. Wingett
Townsh ip of Rutland , Ohio , at
diS&lt;Jrderly manner charge
Chairman
the regular pla ces of voting
Bernice
Bede
Osol
and
Larry E. Nelwn, 26,
the rein , on Tuesday , the· 7th
Oorotohy M . J ohnson
da y of November , 1978, ttle
Middleport.
$28, posted on a
Director question of levy ing, in excess
Dated October lOth, 1978
charge
of
driving
41 miles an
ot the ten mill limitation , for
the
benefit
of
Rutland
hour
in
a
25
mile
an hour
(101 11 , 18, 25 (111 1. 4tc
Townsh ip tor the purpose of
zone.
provid ing and maintaining
fire apparatus , appliances.
bu ildngs, or sites therefor , or
Thirteen defendants for·
sources of water supply and
Oclober 12 . 1978
feited bonds and five others
ma te rials therefor·, or the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
establishmen t and ma inwere fined in the court of
Som.:~lhing you had just about
ON TAX LEVY IN
tenance of lines of fire alarm
written off the books will prove Pomeroy Mayor CJarence
EXCESS OF THE TEN
telegraph or the payment of
MILL LIMITATION
permanent , pari -ti me , or
to still have lite le ft in it this Andrews Tuesday night.
NOTI CE is hereby given volunteer firemen or fire
Fined $300 and costs oil a
thet in pursuance o f a fighting companies to operl'lte coming year . You may not get
all that you hope d for. but it will charge of carrying a conResolut ion of the Board ot the same.
Tr'u stees of the Township ot
Said tax be ing : a renewal
re turn a profit .
cealed weapon and $500 and
sa·fisbury , Ohio, passed on of an existing ta )( of .30 mills
LIBRA !Sept 23-0cl . 23) Be
the 1st day of September . to run tor Five (5) yearJ&gt;.
extra-wary today of exceeding costs on a charge of assault
1978, there will be submitted
your physical limitation s. Seek upon a minor was Bobby
to a vote of the people of sa id at a rate not exceeding .30
energetic
assistance if you get Shaver, Pomeroy .
county at 1!11 GENERAL m ills for each one dollar of
ELECTION to be he'ld in the valuation, which amounts to
involved in heavY. work. Having
Keith Petrie, Middleport,
ToWnship of Sal isbury , Ohio, three cents fc;" eac h one
trouble selecting a career? was ·fined $500 and costs on ,,_
at the regular places of voting hundred dollars of valuation , Send for your copy of As tro- h
1 fl ·
1·
therein , on Tuesday, the 7th for Five (51 years .
,
Graph Letter by mailing 50 c arges • 0
eemg a po ICe
day of November. 1978, the
The Poll!i for said Election
ce nts tor each and a long, self- officer; $200 and costs on a
Question of levying, in excess Will open at 6 : 30 o'clock A .M.
addressed stamped envelope reckless Operation charge,
ol the ten mill limitation, for and remain open until 7:30
the benef it of Salisbury o 'c loc k P .M . Eastern Stan - to, Astra-Graph , P .O. Box 489, . $300 and costs and three days
Township for the purpose of dard Time of sa id Clay .
Radio City St~tion, N.Y. 10019. in jail on a driving while
ma intaining and opera t ing
By order of the Board at
Be sure to spec1ty birth s1gn .
intoxicated charge and $50
cemeter ies .
Elections , of Meigs County ,
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
Said tax being: an ad - Oh io.
could rain on your own parade and costs on a charge o[
ditional ta x of 1.0 mill to run
for Five (5) years
Ernest A. Wingett
today as well as on those you operating a motor vehicle
Chairman
are
with it your attitude is glum wile under suspension .
at a rate not e'.ICceedlng (1)
rather lhan festive . Get in the
Others fined in the court
one mill for each one dollar ot
Dorothy M . Johnson
valuat ion. whic h amounts to
Dir ector
spirit
were
Harold
Carson,
S. 10 for each one hundred Dat ed October lOth , 1978
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. Rutland $29 and costs
dollars of valuation, for Five
21) Sweep no tam1ly respons1. '
'
(5 ) years,
(10) 11, HI. 25 (ll) l , 4tc
b1lities under lhe rug today . speedmg; Paul Reeves,
The Polls for said Elecfion
You ' ll collect lots of guill re· Albany, $50 and costs, open
will ope n at 6 :30 o'clock A.M.
garding things you could have flask, and $too· and costs,
and remain open until 7:30
o'clock P .M . Eastern Stan.·
intoxication, and Franklin
do ne, but didn'l.
dard Time of said day.
NOTbcN\o:xELLlvVION
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jan.
19) Taylor Albany $30andcosts
By order of the Board of
INEXCESSOFTHE
Don 'taskfora cntlquetodayof
d. '
'
'
Elections, of Mei gs County,
TEN MILL LIMITATION
your actio ns from a pal who spee 10 ~ ·.
Ohio .
NOTICE Is hereby gi ven tel ls it like it is . You may not be
Forfeltmg bonds were
Ernest A . Winget t
that in pursuance of a prepared to deal with the raw Robert · Atkinson, Little
Chairman
Resolution of the Council of truth .
Hocking, $30, posted on a
the Village of Pomeroy . Ohio ,
passed on Ihe 171h day of AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Feb. 19) Be charge of failing to yield the
Dorothy M . Johnston
Director
July , 19~0 . there wi!l be extremely sensible today m t~e right of way· PauJ Rodman
submitted to a vote of the· management of your financial
'
.
'
Dated October 10th, 1978
peopi.e of said Village of and material resources . Do n' t Pomeroy, $25, speedmg;
( 10 ) 11 , 18, 25 (ll l 1, 4tc
~t~~~~b'N taot bea he~ erne~;~ . loan what you can 't afford .
Jesse King, Huntington, W.
VBiage of Pomeroy, Oh ;o, al PISCES (F.e b. 20-Morch 20) You Va . , $25 , speeding; Nita
the regular plaCes of voting maY f&amp;ef unable to achieve Wisniski
Addison
$25
therein, on Tuesday , the _7th today w l t~out the assl~tance of speeding.' Jimmy · McClure'
day of November. 1976, the strongall1es . ln actuality, you 'll
'
.
'
NOTICE OF ,ELECTION
Question of levy in g. in excess perform much better as a loner. Pomeroy_, $30 , ~peedmg;
ON TAX LEVY IN
f~:hebtee~e'n: 11 6ir it~~i~n~;g~ ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19, As- Gary Smtth, Pomeroy, $30,
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Village tor the purpose of suming others' responsibilities speeding ; James Wilhelm,
, MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
provid ing and maintaining could severely stifle your inde- Jr., Coolville, $3Q, assured
that In pursuance of a
fire apparatus, appliances ,
d
t d Th
ld b8
buildings . or sites therefor , or pen ence 0 8 ~ · ey cou
clear distance ; J ohn Roush,
Resolution of the Board of
Mason $350 driving'
County Commissioners of. the · sources of water supply lind straws that might break th e Jr
mo!lterials therefor , or the camel's back .
••.
.
'.
'
County of Meigs , Pomeroy ,
establish ment and ma in - TAURUS (April 20--May 20, So- whtle mt o xlc~ted ; John
Oh io, passed on the 1st day of
Aug ust , 1978, there will be
tenance ot lines ot tire alar m cial demands may prove sur· Harmon, Huntmgton , $25 ,
submitted to e vote of the
telegraph or the payment of prisingly burdensome today . speeding; Hoyt Weekley,
people of said County at a
permanent. part -time , or
b t
volunteer firemen or fire What you thouQht would e un Owosso, Mich., $30, running a
General ELEC TI ON to be
fighting companies to operate may end up bemg a bummer. red light· Thomas Martin
held in the County of Meigs,
the same.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Per·
.
'
. :
Ohio. at the regular places of
Said la x being : a renewa l sonal ambitions might have to Pomeroy, $25, speedtng,
voting there , on Tuesday , the
7th day of November, 1978,
of an ex isting levy of .90 mills be shelved today because duty Ronald Hudson, Vanceboro,
and an increase of .10m ills to
d
the Question of levying, in
constitute a ta'.IC of LOO mills calls. Fighting tt1is fact of life N.C ., $100, intoxication, an
ex cess of tl]e ten m ill
to run for Five (51 years .
will only make things worse.
Haro1d Workman, Albany,
lim ita lion, for lhe benef it of
Meigs County for the purpose
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II'S $30, speeding.
of the maintenance and
at a rate not exceeding l. OO not like you to be so rigid, but
mills tor each one dollar of
operation of schools, trein ing
centers l!lnd workshops tor ·v aluation, which am ou nts to today if your view s are op·
ten cents for each one hun ; posed you won 't give an inc h .
mentally retarded persons .
Said ta'.IC being 1 an ad - dred dollars of valuation, for Clinging to a fixed position wi ll
Five (S l years .
suffocate you .
difional tax of 1.25 mills to
run for F ive {SI Years .
The Polls for sa;d ElecHon LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) An old
will open at 6: 30 o'clock A .M . obl igation may clamor for payat a ra te not e)(ceeding 1.25 and rema in open until 7 30
o'clock
P .M . eas tern stan - ment today . Even though it may
mills for each one dollar of
MEETING CHANGED
d.ud Time of said day .
financially inconvenience you , .
valuation , which amounts to
The
Scout Roundtable will
twelve and one -half cents for
By ord~r of the Board at It's best you get it off the
each one hundred dollars of . Elections . of Meig s County, ledger.
be held Thursday at 7:30p .m,
Ohio .
va luation , for Five (5) yel!lrs .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) To- at the Natoinal Guard ArThe Polls for sl!lid Election
Ernest A. Wingett day you may have difficulty in mory nea r Point Pleasant
will open et 6 :30 o'clock A.M ,
Chairman seeing beyond ·the negative
an"d remain open until 7:30
instead of the Guiding Hand
o'clock P .M . Eastern Stan side and thereby overlook a
Dorothy M . Jo hnston possible solution to your prob~ School in Cheshire as
dl!lrd Time of sa id day .
Director
By order of the Board of
previously announced,
lems.
Dated October loth , 1978
Elections . of Me'igs County,
(NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
ASSN
.I
Ohio
(10) 11 , 18, 25 (111 1, 4tc
Ernest A . Wingett
Chairma n
NOTICI: is htrebv Qiven
that in pursuance of a

OCTOBER 8·14

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STOP
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FALL
5
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ASTRO·--=-=GR:--:-"OAP~H

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-;{)-.,.., ..... ..._rn

Carelessness has no boundaries. No one can predict when or where the
next tragic fire will happen. That's why it's important that we all do our
jobs and practice fire preyention in every way. Make it your business to
look for fire hazards... in the home, on your property and where yC\u
.work! Fix any faulty wiring ... immediately; empty trash regularly ... avoid
buildups; keep heating an«;~ cooking equipment in ·top repair; store old.
oily _rags in metal containers. Make sure you and everyone in your family
knows what to do in a fire emergency .. .before it happens. Play it
smart ... be fire safe!

••

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TO HONOR THE MEN OF THE AREA VOLUNTEER FIRE
DEPARTMENTS WHO GIVE SO MANY DEDICATED HOURS OF
THEIR OWN TIME TO HELP MAKE OURS A SAFE AND BETTER
COMMUNITY IN WHICH TO RAISE FAMILIES AND CONDUCT
BUSINESS, THE FOLLOWING BUSINESSES ARE
SPONSORING THIS SALUTE.

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Dorothy M . Johnston
Director
Dated October 10th , 1978

DOWNING-CHILDS INS.
Middleport
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Pomeroy
STAR SUPPLY

..

Racine

•,

WAID CROSS &amp; SOI\IS
Racine
RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
Middleport
MEIGS INN Pomeroy
MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
Pomeroy
BAUM TRUE VALUE
Chesler
TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
Middleport
KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomeroy
KARR &amp; VANZANDT MOTOR SALES
Pomeroy
VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
RACINEd~OOD MARKET
Racine
EWING FUNERAL HOME Pomeroy

.

WESTERN AUTO STORE
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
Middleport
Pomeroy
MARGUERITE'S SHOES
EBERSIACH'S HARDWARE
Pomeroy
Pomeroy
ROYAL CROWN BOnLING CO.
MOORE'S Pomeroy
Middleport
FABRIC SHOP Pomeroy
VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
Middleport
MARK V
DALE C. WARNER INS.
Middleport
Pomeroy
MEIGS AUTO PARTS Pomeroy
NEW YORK
ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE Middleport
PomeroyCLOTHING HOUSE
OHIO· VALLEY PLUMBING &amp; ·HEATING heritage house Middleport
Pomeroy
TEAFORD REALTY ·
ACE HARD~ARE Middleport
G&amp;J AUTOrPARTS
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY Pomeroy
'
Pomeroy
MEIGS
BRANCH,
ATHENS
COUNTY
SMITH NELSON MOTORS
Pomeroy
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN Pomeroy
DAN THOMPSON FORD
Middleport
McCLURE'S 3 IN ONE POmeroy
RAWLINGS.COATS FUNERAL HOME
Middleport
. LEGAR .MONUMENT Pomeroy
POME~!!~OWERSHOP

FRANCIS FLORIST Pomeroy

MIKE SWIGER, STATE FARM INS.
Middleport

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(101 11 , 18 , 25, (11) 1. 4t C

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\

NOT(CE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of l!l
Resolution of the Board .. of
Trustees of the Township of
Sall~bury, Ohio, passed on
the 1st day of september ,
1978, there will be submltted
to 1!1 vote of the 1people of said
TownshiP ot Salisbury at a
General ELECTION to be
htld- in the Township of
Salisbury, Ohio, at the
regular pla ces of voting
therein, on Tuesday . the 7th
day of November , 1978, the
quest ion of levying, In excess
of the ten mill lim itation, for
the benefit of Salisbury
Township tor the pur!'ose of
dust
con trot,
tor
the
preventatlon , control and
ablltement of air pollution .
SBid tax btlnQ: an ad ditional tax of 2.0 mills to run
tOr F ive (5 ) years .

at a rate not exceeding

2,0

mills for each one dolll!lr of
valu8tion, which amount! to
$.20 Twenty Cents for each
one hundred dollars · of
valuation, for Five {5) years .
The Polls tor said Election
will open at 6:30 o 'clock A .M .
and remain open until 6:30
O'ClOCk P .M. Eastern Stlln ·
dard Time of said day .
By order of the Boerd of
Elections, of Meigs County,
Oh io.
Ernest A. Wingett
Cha irman

~

'MONARCH

' 18, 25 (11)1 , At e
(10) 11.

!10) 11, 18, 25 !11) I. 4tc

4.25
5.75
8.09
6.79

300 12 CANS

4.39

'••
""
"'.,·~

24 CANS

7.99

7114 OZ. 12 CANS

3.59

24 CANS

6.99

.•·&lt;

,.••
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6A9 48 CANS 1

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14 OZ. 12 BTLS. 4.35
46-0Z.
6 CANS 3.59
303 12 CANS 3.85
300 12 CANS 3.59
303 12 CANS 3.79
303 . 12 CANS 3.59
303 12 CANS 4.29

24 sns.
12 CANS
24 CANS
24 CANS
24 CANS
24 CANS
24 CANS

'•

8A9
6.99
7.49
6.99
7.39
7.49
8.39

•,,
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R

A
TR~ET

12 OZ. 12 CANS 14.69 24 CANS

DINTY MOORE

24 OZ. 12 CANS 1

24 CANS

27.99

13 OZ. 24 CANS

48 CANS

18.99

ARDINAL
BEANS &amp; BACON SOUP
TOMATO SOUP
VEGETABLE SOUP

10%

oz.

12 CANS

10% OZ. 12 CANS
10% OZ. 12 CANS

3.39
4.89
2.89

6.49
24 CANS 9.59
24 CANS

24 CANS

5 BOXES

TIDE

49 OZ.

5.69

10 BOXES

WHOLE FRYERS
4

LIMIT

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$809

PLUS TWO SUPER SPECIALS FROM
OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT

SHOE SALE CONTINUES

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CATSUP
TOMATO JUICE
GREEN BEANS
PORK &amp; BEANS
CORN, WHOLE KERNEL
PEAS
TOMATOES

·Stride Rite

'1

8.49

24 CANS

4.05

MONARCH

CHILDREN'S

:l.,

8.39
24 CANS 11.59
24 CANS 15.99
24 CANS 13.39
24 CANS

303 12 CANS

14% OZ. 24 CANS

PER
POUND

OTHER PURCHASES

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BONELESS HAMS
49
WHOLE ....................•. ~ ...•~~-..~ 1
HALF.•. ~ .••.•.....••••••••.••.••.• ~~~.! 159

Let's Not Forget Produce

As

Much
_As

"

50 POUND,POTATOES ....................... s299
1/2 BU. APPLES ..~~~~~.~~~~c!?~~...................s249

3Q%o~l: ·~

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Dorothy M . Johnston
Director
Dated October 10th , 1978

12 CANS
12 CANS
12 CANS
303 12 CANS

~
.;:.

CASE

V2 CASE

SIZE

303
APPLESAUCE
FRUIT COCKTAIL
303
PEACHES, HALVES OR SLICED 2%

Ernest A . Wingett
Chairman

·Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
Dated October lOth, 1978

.

·'

ANNUAL

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that ln pursuance of a
Reolution of the Counci l of !he
Village of Middleport , Ohio
passed on the 28th di'IY of
August. 1978, there will be
submitted tO a vote of the
people of said VIllage at a
General ELECTION to be
held In the Village of Mid ·
dleport. Ohio, at the reg ul ar
places of voting ther:e in , on
Tuesday, the 7th day of
November, 1978; the qUestion
of levying , In excess of t he ten
mill limitation. for the benefit
of Middleport Village for the
purpose of Providing and
ma inteinlng ,
apparatus,
appill!nces , buildings, or s ites
therefor , or sources of water
supply
and
materials
therefor , or the establish ment and maintenance of
lines of fire alarm telegrllph
or the payment of permanent.
parf .time
or
volunteer
firemen fire fig hting com ·
pan ies to operate the sarne.
Sl!lid tl!lx being : an ad ditional tl!lx of 1.0 mill to run
for Five {5 1 years . .
at a rate not exceeding 1.0
mills for each one dollar of
valuation , which amounts to
Ten cents for each one
hundred dollars of valuat ion,
for Five ( 5) .y~ars .
The Polls tor Sl!l-ld Elect ion
will open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
and reml!lln open until 7:30
o'clock P .M . eastern Stan dard Time of said dey . ··
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Meigs County,
OHio .

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�12- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday. Oct. 11. 1978

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Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wurds 1,_ Uudt•r
c~~ ~~

!dew

Char~~

!.25

1 ~1

:!don· ~

].90 .
:l.25
3.75

I :)(1

~da)· :o;

180

IHill~'M

,I Otl

lOSl LARVI:: whrte female dog
w1th one blue eve and onl::!
brown 111 Surlinghom area.
Heward Answers to Amv
4CI2 -2016
LOST BHITlANY Spon 1el Mole .
whrte and brown. Sol1d brown
head . · Around Vanderhoof
H1dge Tuppers Platn s area.
014 -b67 -J908

F;;tdt wurd oYI:'r UM.• 1111/IUnwn 15
WHI'ti"i lS ~ l't'llls pt'l' .... md Jlt'l d01y
1\ d:&gt; rumaul,l( other thuu I'UIISt!l'Uli Vt!
tlay!&lt;o ~~o· lll ~ duu-~l'd &lt;~ I tilt' I day
rillt•

In

m~:mury, Ct~rd

uf

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rur

tirn~ l

P ulllisher •~se•-vt'!S tht• u~ht
to t.'&lt;.llt Ul' l'i!J~l any uds tlct•mt't.l ulr
~t· tiunal Tht! Pullhsht&gt;• IO.' lll nut lJt.•
rcspuustblt• fur 11\0rt: lhan u llt'lllc.tJrrt't'\ mst&gt;rtiu11
Tilt"

Phullt' 99'l·tl5ti

WORK OVERSEAS , Au strol1a .
Alma , Sou th America , l::urope
e tc
Cons t r u cti on ,
Sole!&gt; ,
l::ng1neers , Clerical , etc $1:1000
to $50 .000 plus l::~~:penses po1d
ro r emplo ymenl mformoflon
wrr te Overseas l:mployment ,
Bo ~~: lOll , 1:5oston. Mo . 02102

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Munr.luy

COUNTER MAN l or hardware ond
building supply store Som e
delivery
Coli Mr Thomas ,

99H&lt;&gt;1 1

Tue:~Ja~

4 PM

lilt&gt; day

~ for~

.

pubht•at1Hr1

Su ntl i:l~'

&lt;p M

fo'nday aflt&gt;nl~ ill

~~~:=-~-.-~
TOM LUTHERAN. F1ve Years s1nce
you leh me. Miss you .
Love , Ruth .

.

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Ol' fi CC GUll por t time . 3 days a
week . Some typing and ltght
bookkeeping Coli Mr Th om as ,
9n-b011

thru rnr.Jav

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V{liiJW ~~,~ ~ ~ ~
CHIP WOOD .
Po les
mo~~:
dramet er 10" on largest end.
$8 .50 per ton Bundled slob .
$0.50 per ton . De lrve red to
Ohto Pollet Co , Rt 2 Pomer oy
992 - 2&lt;&gt;~9

TIMBER POMI:: ROY Forest Pr o
duc ts. Top pn ce for standm g
sow limber . Coli Cf&lt;jl2-5905 or
K :nt~ H~n.by.: ~ - 4_40: 8~70 .
OLD fURNITURE , ICe bo~~: es . bra ss

beds rron beds, desh , e tc. ,
complete households . Wrr te
M D. Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
co ll992-7700

NO HUNTING or trespassi ng on
my properly w1thoul permis - s1on . Judy McGraw: _ _ _ _ _ OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
class ri ngs, wedding bonds,
GUN SHOOT Racme Gun Club .
diamond s. Gold or s1lver Col i
!:very Sunday I pm. Factor y
Nager Wams ley , 742-2331 .

_c: h~ke gu~S__9~Y~----·-

GUN SHOOT. Ra cine Voluntee r
Fi re Dept Every Saturday b 30
pm at th e1r building iri Boshon
~~ t~r_r cho_k':_ g~ns ~n_!! __ _

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SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING SHOP
Mrs. Woodrow T. Zwelling
Syracuse, Ohio
PARASOL B0 UTI0Ut: Beauty
Solon ne~~:t to Ska te- a-way
Roller Rink announces Oc tobe r
Special :
Perman ents 10% o ft . Opera tor s
Sondra Kerns , Crystal Rayburn .
Pho ne 985-414 \.

.

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RACINE GUN Club 1979 Membership dues ore due October l .
Must be po1d before Janu ary l .
Dues ore $20

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

NOTICE is hereby given
that rn pur s uan ce of a
Resolution o f the Council of
the Village of Sy ra cuse. Ohio .
passed on th e Jrd day of
August. 1978 there wil l be
submitted to a vote of said
people of said Village of
Syracuse at a Gene ral
ELEC T IO N to b e h eld In the
V i llage of Syracuse. Oh io , at
the regular places of voting
therein , on Tuesday , the 7th
day of Nov ember, 1978, the
qu es t ion of l evying, in excess
of the ten mill lim itat ion , for
the benefit of Sy racuse
Village tor th e purpose of
provid ing and maintaining
fire apparatus. appliances ,
build ings , or sites t herefor , or
so urces of water supply and
materials t h erefor . or the
est abl i shment and main ·
tena n ce of li nes of fire alarm
telegraph
or
the
paym ent of p erma nent. part time. or volunteer fi r emen or
fire fi gl"ltmg Companies to
operate the same. •
Said tax be ing . l! renew a l
of a par t of a 2.0 mil l existing
lev y. being a redu ct ion of 1.0
mill to consti tute a tax ot 1.0
mill to run fo r Five ( 5) years
at a rate not exceed ing l.O
mills f or each one dol lar of
Vl!luation, wh ich amounts to
ten cents fo r each one tvJ n dred dollars of valuatro n . for
Five (5) years .
The Polls for said Election
will o pen at 6 : 30 o'clock A .M .
and r emain open unt i l 7:30
o'c lock P .M . Eastern Stan dard Time of sai d day .
• B y order of th e Board of
Etectlons, of Me igs Cou nty ,

Oh io

Ernest A Wi ng ett
Ct111 ir man
Dorothy M . Johnston
Direc tor
Dated October lOth, 1978

(10) 11 , 18, 25 ( Il l 1, &lt;tc

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- -- - . - --- - - - WI: PICK up 1unk auto bod1es buy tng 1u nk car s sc rap rron ba tlanes and met al s
Rrder s
Selvage, SR 124 Pomeroy .
9&lt;jl2.5468.

Too all our friends and
former customers. We are
taking orders far furniture
. to be upholstered.

~

WAN TI:: D to buy l to 3 acre s of
land , pr 1ced low or no t to elC
ceed $500 per acre. Wrrte boJC
223 Rutla nd , Ohio 4577 5

NOTICE
back in business again and

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:.p.

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COUNl RY MOt;ll E Hom e 1-'ort..
Rout e J3 rw 1th o f Pom eroy
Loq;~o lots Co1144'J 74/ Q

:;(

· --

TWO BHJROOM trarle1 49'1
after~ pm

FOUl( BI:DROOM '1
4 t 1 Lmcoln St
Ohro SJOO pl u!t.
monlh For 1nore
(Oil &lt;149-:tJtlb aft er

ijURf&lt;OUC.HS SENSI MAliC ac
coun l tng mochtrH"
Ph one
492 -:JISO . The lJatly Sentinel ,
111 Court St reel , Pomeroy ,
Oh1 o
GR IMI::S GOLDI::N , Red Oclr crous ,
g Golden DelrCiou s apple s. ~lit
po trrck Orchard
SR
ot:l&lt;jl
61 4-M9-:J7t:IS

'

SC HOO L BUS
camp er
00
passenger wtlh new trres
Good condtlron Con tac t To m
Monkrn at 992 220 1
UK I: NI::W Hondo gut to r an d case
extra se t of strrn gs and p1chs
tncluded Moylog Coppc-rtone
Por1o -po1r washer and drver
Very good co ndttton sell as
se l . Sy l vo n 1o
Tttne , o , fon
S.unlamp ond~e p1ole( tors
Call alter 5 00 pm 992 2995

SI::A S101 boss boot 115
l::vor~rude
fully
rtgged
992 -3\93

NEW GIBSON 10,000 STU o1r con
drtroner Only used '1. months
9&lt;jl2 -6350
LUMP HOUSI:: coal. $3 5 per fan
delrvered Q&lt;jl2 7 120 ,

.

M I X~ I)

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YAR D SAlt . Th urs. 12. f-= ri 13.
Sat
14 . Clrtford
Beegl e
resrdence On Rt. 124 1n Dorcas.
todre s whr te umlorms , qu•lt1n g
frames , Men's, wom en 's and
chrldre n's cloth ing - all srzes ,
dishes, etc . Ro1 n will cance l

-----------PORCH SALE. Oct. 12 and 13. 9-5

~--

7SI Urownel l . Midd leport .
W1nte r clothes and m1 sc 1t em s.

---------- --THRH FAM ILY Yard Sol e Oc t 12
&amp; 13. lOom to Spm .. each day
Lots o f good clothing and mise
John Dam ewood's r es1dence
above Eastern H1gh School on
CR 28

HA Y 992 245:1

For

RI::MODELING AND house poin ttng
See Gory Cremeans .

742·2288

'

1975 CADILLAC ELDORADO. Full
power and A ,C. AM -FM rad ro,
power seats Ca ll Y92 -7462

,9;7-·CAoJi."u \cEU)aRA-Da F ~-~~
power and oir , AM-FM rod to
fuel in 1ection Co li
7402

m.

good work cor. 991-'1491 or

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-- -

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1973 FORD STATION wagon . h ce llent runn1 ng cor . $75{) .

' 992-5780.

'

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19-s!i f ord 1 ton truck

phone

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1974 SATOH TRACTOR 27 h p 2bll
hours w1th I rani loader . power
!&gt;teenng , 3 pi httch. drlf eren
hal loc K, 1 bo tt om 16" plow I
row cultivat or and \ 'l' pos 1 hole
.d,~g:r _b~4 - qa5 - 3S~t:l
SI:: ARS KENMORI: elec tnc washer
for ports . Good motor Sl5
&lt;jl92-5420
19! 3 BRONC O 4x4 . 301 . au to
P.S
rodro , wh rl e
spoke
wheels, ve ry good condt lron
$3400 or bes t offer . 992 6323

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Rl:oun SAn &amp; losI wilh GoUese
Tabl ets 8. t -Vap · wa ter pills '
Nelson Orug
19:18- C HE v'ROL ~T - 4 ~wheel "dnve ,
350 aul a P S , P B , short wrde
bed t1000 rn1les fiberglas s top
per lot ~ ol e~~: fr o s $8000

992-2987 .
- - . --· .. -

- --. - -

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1973 FORD GRAN Tori no statiOn
wagon . PS,
P.B., 4-door .
Beige w1 th brown rn t enor .
.SS .OOO miles . $700 , 742-2589.

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H:eal :Eotate for Sale

PAINTS

RANCH

STYL E - 3 b e droo m s,
bu rlt in ki t ch en , elec tn c
hea t , ' Insu lated, ca rport ,

s torage bldg .. $28,500.00
MOBILE HOME - wi t h
n1ce level lot 50xl20, ready
t o move into. l 2x60 - 2
bed rooms, n ice kit chen and

BUILDING - 5

re n tals,
good
go ing
business, very ni ce in come
property . $47,200,00.

DOUBLE YOUR JOY IN
ONE OF THESE FINE
BUYS. WE ALSO HVE
OTHERS .
I

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-2259
992-6,191
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland

I"lB

PRICES!! !
During Our Seasonal
Closeout.
Outside White
Red roof paint

Landmark

W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Moe

KING WOOD heater wtt h blower
Used 1 season Alter 0, ca ll
614 -098-3809 .

.

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JVC RI::Cti VI:: R, 2 JVC s peaker ~
Cen t re~~:
8 l rock tope deck
Morontz turn ta ble . Used 2
mon ths AlterS , 9&lt;jl2 75bl .

.

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ASTHO BEAM CB ba!&gt;e an tenna
742 -2187 .
1966 GMC VAN Pan e led , s1nk .
bed . 8-troc k tope Runs good
S4SO 742,2589
19'/'J KAWASAKI
942 -b:lOJ

175 .

Call

Let Pomeroy Landmark
sotten &amp; condi tion your
water with Co-op wate4'
softener, Model U C· SVI.

NowOnlv

,

309•95

L et us t es t yo ur water
Free

Pomeroy Landm~rk

9 .. Jack W. Carsey, Mgr ·

-·
.Ailil

Phone 992-2181

Low Price! $12,000.
N o. ') 12X60 Elcon a m ob ile
nome completely furni shdd
on a ni ce y air cond •ton
ed , ce ment patio and
.driveway . Now!
$10,500.
Janice I. Gettles,

Realtor
Roberta HuH man
Branch M9r. 698-6300
•

Assoc•atesL

Tom Boticevic
669 - ~063

Kenneth Crabtree
698-6196

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

, Georges. Hobsletter Jr.
Broker
Your Full Time
Rea I Estate Broker
Office 992-6333
Racine Beautiful 3
bedroom home, dining
room. family room and sun
porch. II has gas hot waler

good o lder ho m e that has 9
room s,
4 bedroo m s, 2
b aths, furnace, and large
yard wi th 2 car garage?

NEW LISTING - Like new .
Only 7 years old . Has 3
b edrooms, enc losed ba th,
modern
kitc hen ,
Larg e
ca r pe ted fam i ly room with
woodburning
fir ep la ce.
Large lo1 too, Just $29,500.

FAMILY

HOME - 10
rooms. 4 to 5 b edrooms,
tam1 ly room , ba sement,
shop, natur al gas furn ace,
car peti ng, garage, and 3
lo t s.

NEW

LISTING

- Campsi t es on the Ohio
Riveron' Route 124.

Ll KE NEW - 3 bedroom
split -lev el hom e. Enc losed
ba th, drilled well and 24
acres in Letart T ownship.

NEW

LISTING

- 3

bedr oom 7 room house with
ba th , natura l gas h ea t , and
c 1ty water i n town .

NEW LISTING - 1.46 acre
building lot on 124 W es t .

NEW LISTING - 1976 Hoi ·
ly Park m obile h om e. 3
bedrooms, 2 fu ll baths, cen ·
tral air a nd heat. a nd 1. 66
acres on Stilte Route

Adjust yourself to modern
livtng .

Invest

in

your

family 's dream home.
WOULD YOU LIKE SOLD
ON YOUR PROPERTY?
TRY US, IT JUST MIGHT
WORK, BUT IT MUST
MEET OUR APPROVAL .
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy

A

' I

Houstirg
Headquarters

I'll. 992-2848

l'llmeray, 0 .
3· 15·1fC

SERVICE
All types of roofing, guHer1
downspouts, 20 years
experience.
All work
guaranteed . Call Tom
Haskins, 949 -2160. Free
Estimates.
n -1 mo.
&amp;

992·3933. -

bedrooms, 11J2 baths, new
gas furnace and new roof.

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
·Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.
Home Phone 949-2589
GeorgeS. Hobsloltar, Jr ..
Broker
Home Phone 992-5739

The Photo Place

-------·-HWOOO ~OWERS REPA IR

Sweepers, toasters, .rons , all
small applian ces. lawn mower ,
ne~~: t to Stat e High way Garage
on Rou te 7, Phone (0 14 ) 985

Price

~1 ,•~--

FRH TO good home block , mol e
German Shephard, I year old.
Good wrt h chddren House
broken . Co11378- 0319 .
Tom

White-Wall Co-Op

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

Custom

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
Alter Hours
ca 11992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manog,lt

Po~

A78xl3
Prices includes
Fed. Tax
(does notlncludo
sales tax or
balancing)
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Other slles
com,..robly
priced.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
JUST LISTED -Good 2 story older home, nicely
carpeted with '5 bedrooms, large kitchen &amp; dining room
and 2 baths . Basement with nat. gas heat . Apprax. 1
acre of land with nice garden. Located In Chester. All
for $21,500.
JUST LISTED - Over 4acresaf land with a 2 bedroom

Pome"' landmark
J•ck w. carsey, Mgl
Phono 992-2111

house . Clty wa1er . House needs some repair . Located

In Minersville. Price $4,000.
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'12 story house with full
besement. Large pond slacked with fish . Priced for
quick sale, $40,000.
SPACIOUS Bl-LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. II has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
roam with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room, and Ia finish this well-laid aut home we
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage. Very low
heal ing bill . Red bern-like storage building. Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy lust off Rl. 7.
Asking S55,000.
M I DOLE PORT - This well cared for newer hom" has
3 BRs, living room, baltl, mostly carpeted, kitchen Is
equiPRed with refrigerator and slave, utility room,
natu ra l gas forced air heat, outside storage building .
Price $27,000.
6 ACRES - Nice 1'12 story home mostly carwted with 3
or 4 bedrms .. living rm ., family rm., wlll'i fireplace,
besemenl, fuel all furnace. Loc. close Ia hospital and
school at Laurel Cliff. Asking $42,500.
TWOACRES - Abeautlful ~year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basemen! wllh TV room. Many
more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of land !n a good
locaHon. Will go quick for S35,000.
40 ACRES of land 'in Sutton Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn . Priced at only $21 ,500 .
515,000 - Good 5 bedrool)'l house with 2 full baths.
Natural gas forced air heat, located In Chesfer.

.

4-30-IIC

I KJ

·~

. ,·
. '
,.,

~~' lHSf'~ CLI&gt;V~!
tEr
PIJ~L- AIJ'Ill11 ~ !

Armstrong Carpeting

.'

OOtJ'T WORRY, I'M
~MARlER 1\WJ I "~··y

I HOPE'

r

I I

.-----r--.,.------,
r---t

I

News 8; Young &amp; the Rest less 10; Not For Women

so ... a.tr
IJOLTES

ELLIOTT

I K)

APPUANCE II

I

~~-II

COME IN TH16 AND

YOU'l-L. WIN!

.

,,·'·., ''
... -

Pomeroy,O.

Ca II 991-70 13
Far Free Estimates

0

0

'
Printanswerhere.·

•'·
Yeste rday's

JJTTLF. ORPHtl:\ A:'&lt;INIF.

I

LITTLE ()RPHAN ANNIE-STEI:' LIVELY, PLEASE

QUALITY

.,-

~

HEY" · 'TilE

'·

CHEAP!

(X X X X )
(Answers tomorrow)

· 8'10\'6 GOMPAHY

WOOD HEAT

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon

(J I

0

0

0
0

9~21-lmo .,

no :A.I'P:Ah1GIIIA

IBYRBACI

TRACKS STOPPED
HtRE ·.. SEE" WHAT
&gt;UNNY ,SHOES'"

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Slreei-&lt;&gt;H
Mill Street just behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8-31 -1 mo.

1 HEY WENT O N INTO
tHE ROCKS AWD BRUSH
up ABOVE ... QU ICI\ NOW
... WHILE NOBODY CAN

5EE. US ...

J um bles. SWOOP LEGAL EMBODY AMOEBA
Answer : What he did around the house when told
he waa too young to have a moped " MOPED"

HU RRY• ..

TOOT 'TH'
WHISTLE ..
LET'S GE T

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 1111 with 110 puzzles Is available for $1 35 postpaid !rom Jumble, c/o lhls newspaper, P 0 . Bo~~; 34,
NorwOOd, N.J. 07848. tnclude your name, addreae, zip code and make
checks payable to NewspaperbOoke.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
37 - Carlo
1 Blues singer,
Marvin 5 Collection

BATHROOMS AND Kitchen s
remodeled cera mic til e, plum bmg, ca rpentry an d general
maintenance 13 yea rs expenance . 992- 3685

Only 15
1·3G-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:()()-()ne Life to Live 6,13.
2:3G-Doctars 3,4,15 ; Guiding Llg ~l 8,10.
3: 00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
J:JI)-Masn 8; Joker 's Wild 10; Dick Cavell 20
4:DO-Mister Carloon 3; Battle of the Planels 4, Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:3()-LIIIIe Rascals 3; Gil ligon's Is . 4; ,8 ; Brady Bunch
10; Petti coat Junction 15.
5:0C&gt;-Vovagelo lhe Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood
20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One 13;
Brady Bunch 15.
5:3G-News 6; Sanford &amp; San B; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6 :3G-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:~ross- Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Family Feud 8; News 10; Love, Amer ican

Slyle 15; HocklnQ Valley Bluegrass 20; Consumer
Survival Kit n .
7:3()-Hallywood Squares 3; DatlngGame 4; Bonkers 6;
Waltons 8; S100,000 Name That Tune 10; Nashv ille
On The Road 13; Dolly 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33.
N
8:00-Praiecl U.F.O. 3,4,15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13; ova
20,33 ; Wallons 10.
8:3()-Whal's Happening 6,13.
9:oo-Qulncy 3,4, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Hawaii Flve.o
8, 10; Three by Four 33; Mayor Casterbrldge 20
9 :3G-Soap 6,13.
lO :DO-Weekend 3,4, 15; Family 6, 13; Barnaby Janes
8,10 ; Sneak Previews 33 ; Ne ws 20.
10:3G-Reel West 33 ; You Bet Your Lite 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15. Di ck Cavell 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You. 33.

JN. SlDE '"

~d:te~td
Menolti

38 Scanty
39 AUanta
Hawks'

PUlll NS EXCA VA
::T;::IN-;:G::-.-;C:-om pi e te
Service Phone992-2478.

·- -

RI::EVES TRADING Post Pogev1lle.
Grocer tes , dry goods , hardwore . feed, lodo: shop. Speci al
1~-~g food $3 88 .
AUTOMOBIL~ INSURA·N
- c:C-::E- ,b-e_e_n
·~o ncelled? l ost you r operators
license ? Phone 992-214 3.

11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 ;
Gunsmoke8 , ABC News33, Movie " Jo hn Goldfarb,
Please Come Home" 10.
12 :3G-News 8; 12: 0'12?- SWAT 6, 13.
l ·oo--Tomorrow 3,4 ,· l · S~News 13.

Wednesda y, Ort. 11

- - ---------=-=--

SAVE ON
CARPETING

BRIDGE

DRIVE ALimE

&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

0\.1 ~ if 'HttiHI'I
I qoto
the car
wash
with

worthy of champions .

NORTH

!.lOU

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4 88

•

sq. yd.

'"P

SOUTH

9' and 12' Vinyl

+AJ

10 74
• AQ2

liLa - "

Floor Covering In Stock

•

~F~R~AN~~K&amp;~E:R~N~IE:'---------------=----------------------------------------------~N~~~ic~;-~-

• 72

+A K 5

32 Gelid

33 Climbing

Buy where you can come in
and ... what you're getting
- Good 10lectlons - Fully
stocked.

caii74Z-2211
.TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Gr•l•
or Gene Smith

DRINJc 1,.

l:v.&amp;~Y

Vulnerable : North-so uth
Dealer : South
West North East South

plant
34 Norris
Dam
agcy.
35Stow,
as cargo

'f'HIS ..9'1"'JFF ISN'...
1-IAII,. • foRM I NGa
M LONG. AS YOU

DAY·

I 'I'
Obi.

Pa ss

2+
Pass

Pass

Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

l___::~:~~~~~!.,:J:~!.::J.,;,:~:,.::O:,.:..;~:,:-,;,.,______-::"'____..____-:-_____

742-2111

One letter simply stands lor anolher. In Lhis sample A is By Oswald Jacoby
used for th e three L',, X for Lhe IV.:o O's, elc. Single leiters, and Alan Sontag
apostrophes, Lhe length and formahon of the wordl are all
In an ordinary bridge
hints. Each da y the code letters ar_c dtf!cre nt.
game West would lead three
r-------~~--~----~~-CRYPTOQUOTES
rounds of diamonds. East
.. AND &amp;HE1&amp;
5EE IF &amp;HE'Ll
would ruff dummy's jack,
&amp;TILL AT
TALR. 10 ME ON
declarer
would overruff,
T GXF
LBTOFGN
TBSCWU
LRF
THE SAME
THE PHONE!
draw trumps, cash t he top
ADDRESS!
ruff . his last club,
IS B G U
I RXGF
LBCLR
XN
H C L • clubs,
discard the deuce of h earts
on . the queen
diamonds,
SW
RFB ESSLN . - NHCBVFSW try the heart finesse and just
' IIi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Yesterday's Cryptoqaote: IN COURTING NEW CUSTOMERS make his c ontract when it
,\'
DON'T FORGET TO TELL THE OLD ONES YOU STILL LOVE lost. .
THEM.-HAL STEBBINS
Bot h declarers made
game in the finals of the
©1978 Kinr Features Syndicate, Inc.
Spingold, but the play was
THAIIIES 10·1/

IT WAS EASY. HE

LI5TED HER AS

'

13ENEFICIARY ON

HIS COMPANY
LIFE IN SUR-

ANCE POLICY ..

~~ LXWV

YE GOT TO FIX THIS Ot:

15' IN STOCK
WHAT COULD I DO ?
SHE SMILED AT ME!

In The Valley

...

4+

Openin g lead : t K

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
WINNIE

Largest Selection

10- 11 -A

'I' K 9 8 6
• 765
• Q J 64
• 63
WEST
EAST
+ 2
+Q 53
• K J 3
• 10 9 8 4
t AK 98 3
+ 10 5
+ QJ98
+10 742

todal,l,

w.. -d !Mge &amp; sm•ll F•rms

•ncl Mllny ty.-s of property.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Associate Uf-2311

b

YIRDT

. .,

All carpet installed with
paddinq at no charge .
Expert tnstallatian.

'92 30

$35,000.00.

Jetsons 10,

7:3()-Schoolles 10.
8 : ~apt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
9 : 00- Merv Gr llf ln 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15 ;

~--

bedrooms, modern bath,
large kitchen &amp; dining
room , fireplace, • several
outbuildings. Owner being ·
transferred .

.•-

'
'

7331
-------·--- --------

4 NEW

11 ACRES -More or less, 4

Aut11 &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phune 992-5682

THURSDAY,OCTOBER 12,1978
5 :4So-Farm Reporl 13; 5 : ~PTL Club 13; 5·5sSunrise Semester 10.
6 :0C&gt;-PTL Club 15; 6: 2s-Far You ... Biack Woman 10.
6 :3()-Dactars on Call 4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester B.
6 : 4So-Mornlng Report 3; 6 · 5G-Good Morn ing , West
VIrginia 13.
6:55-Chuck While Reports 10; News 13.
7:0C&gt;-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13;

10
9:3G-Brady Bunch B; Family Affa ir 10.
10 : ~ard Shrks 3, 15; My Three Sons 4; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8, 10; Dallng Game 13.
10:3G-Jeopardy 3,15; Andy Griffi th 6; Price Is Right
8, 10; S20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happ y Days 6,13 .
11 :3G-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Famil y Feud 6, 13 , Love
of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20; Nova 33 .
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10 .
12:00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; America Alive 15;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 8, Midday Magazine 13.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Bra un 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co. 20,33 .
1:00-Hollywood Squares 3; ; All My Ch ildren 6,13;

0.

210 E. Main Street,

(BOb HaelliCh)
109 High 51.
Pomeroy
8·2· 1 mo.

PUPPIES,
port beagle .
Grueser. 992-3853

Middleport
Charming
older home located an
Saulh 3rd Avenue. 3

has a detached garage .and
Is sllualed on one-third of
an acre. Only $26,000.00.
We have other listings to
choose from , can us today
for more information an
buying and selling your

Call Us Today

- - - - -------

SIMJill'

NO- THE JEI'tK\9 aOT WISE
SOMJ:I«lW I TH!&lt;Y WERE! 80U~D
T' F191JII:E TH&amp; POT CAME F~M
WARiiHOUSE- SO l\IE HIU&gt;PA
CLMit IT OUT FASTJ

Price Is Right 8; The Judge 10; That's Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeii · Lehrer Report 20,33,
8:0C&gt;-World Series Pregame Show 3,4, 15; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Jefleroons 8, 10; Marie Curie 20-33 .
8: 1So-World Series 3,4, 15; 8 :3()-1!1 The Beginning 8, 10.
9 : ~harlle's Angels 6,13/ Movie " Lifeguard" 8,10;
Prisoner 20; Great Performances ;13 .
lO:OC&gt;-Vegas 6, 13; 10: 3G-Crosstalk 33; Turnabout 20 .
11 :00-News 6,8, 10, 13; Dick Cavell 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33 .
11 :3G-News 3,4, 15; Pollee Woman 6,1 3; Gunsmoke 8;
Movie " The Bliss of Mrs. Blossom " 10.
12 :00-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; 12 :3G-News 8.
12:4()-SWAT 6,13; 1:3G-Tomorrow 3,4.
l:~News 13.

Emergency One 6; Hogan 's Heroes 8; Match Game

I

We are
making
appointments for senior
portraits. We use tradi tional settings and also
feature
outdoor
por traiture.

&lt;&gt;9~-

IT~ ~II&lt;E THIS, MAYO~ WE
rRifD T' FRAME THOSE TWO
~J:W HANDS ~ P~ANTIN' POT
N THEIR TRIJCI&lt;- liND TIPPI~'

~THI!COPS!

Your Headquarters For

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

today for more info .

nice 3 bedroom home. It

High SchOOl
SENWRS
curre.fttly

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

on State Route 338. Call

Se lls for 525,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT Owner
oas reduced price of this

Cellulosic· (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
So ve30 pet. to so pel.
on heating cost
Experience and
.fully insured
Free Est.
Call991-1772
8-10-lmo. (Pd.)
;

-.-

"

'f• mile aH Rt. 7 by-pass on
St. Rt. T24 toward Rutland,

FAKM ~OR so le. House. 2 ba rns
trailer . large pond . 10 acre;. or . 3~25 .
82 acres . 742 -2566
SI:W ING MACHINE R e pa~r s, ser
.,,ce, oil make s,, 9&lt;jl:2 -2284 . The
NI:W THRE I:: bedro om home , rec
f ab r i c Sho p , Pomeroy .
room, fr replo ce , large deck
Authonzed Srnger Soles and
garage , basement, one and a
Serv1ce. We sharpen Scissors.
hall ba ths. Phone l ee Cons truc tion 992-3454 , weekends I::XCAVATI NG , dozer , loader and
1-014 -446-9568.
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo-boys for h1re· w ill haul
TWO SEOROOMS window seat .
hll d1rt , to so• l. limes t one and
f~r e ploce
w1th mantle and
gro veL Cal l Bob or Roger Jef .
bookshelves wrth gloss doors .
fers , day phon e 992-7089 night
Modern k itchen w 1t h bar . Portly
phone 992 -3525 or 992· 5232 .
carpet ed . 808 East Mo1n .
992-3871
E£c!.: vATINC, do;;- -back hoe
and d1tcher . Charles R Hat 3' 1 ACRI::S rn Pomeroy . secl uded
f te ld, Bock
Hoe Se r vi ce ,
wooded areo on top of hil l.
Rut land, Ohio . Phone 742·2008.
Overlooks river . Water and
electric availabl e 992-388() .
Wilt do roofrng , con stru cti on,
plum bing an d healing . No job
r 1Ve- ROoM- ho~~; -a ~d7 b~ th .
too large or too small . Phone
remodeled. fu lly carpe ted. May
742 -2348,
be seen alter :J pm . Phone
992-3933
HOWER Y AND MARTIN
EM
ca vo ll ng,
septrc sys t ems,
HOUSE IN Pomeroy . Lo rge lot .
dozer back hoe, dump truck ,
Some recent remodelmg . New
limestone,
grovel, black top
carp.et. Central heotmg Utlhty
paving , Rt . 143. Phone 1 (b1 4)
roo"
~vi i ba semen t. 2 porches , furnished or unfurnis hed .
992-7074

CAPT API EASY

GARAGE

BRADf-=ORD , Auchoneer , Com,
plete . Serv1ce . Phone 949 24CI7
or 949-2000 Racine, Ohio, Cri tt
Bradford.

HVt ROOM house and b oth,
remodel ed, lt~ll y car pe ted . M ay
be !&gt;een alter 3 pm . Phone

ii..A...

ROGER HYSEll

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Muffler - Brakes .
Shocks . Tires .
Battery.
Installation Service

'

~

........

8·20-1 mo. IPd.l

J&amp;L

MOORE'S

heat, fireplace and a wood
and coal burner also .
Situated on almost qne acre

home.

991-3315
216 E. Second Street
FAMILY HOME - Want a

DISCOUNT

CORNPtCKER
for sole .
~ p_e~c e_r _9H5-~87&lt;jl

698-6300
44 STATE STREET
ALBANY, OHIO
· YOUR CHOICE

No. 1. You w ill h ave to see
ltllS 1 b edroom home to
bel 1eve th e pnce Fea tures
c'l l arge 1ivt ng room w new
car pe tin g. ex tra la rge d1n ·
1n g room. Two n1 ce lo ts
w1th plen t y of shade. Now
r entlf"'n f nr- P'll' tr &lt;" INCOME!

GENUINE

10·30·&lt;

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

4:3G-LIItle Rascals 3; Aflerschool Specia l ~;
Gilligan' s Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10; Pelllcaal Junction
15 .
5:00-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gome Pyle USMC 10; Aflerschool Speclal13;
Brady Bunch 15.
5:3G-News 6; Sanlard &amp; San 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary.
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:0C&gt;-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,15; Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20.
7 : ~ross -WIIs 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Sha Na No 8; News 10; Lave American Style
15; Coping with Kids 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7: 3G-Dolly 3; Dating Game 4; Match Game PM 6;

' 10"

Free Estilnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Chester, Oh io

BoX 3

OHIO VAUEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

th e pr1 ce o f one or split
th em up . Owner says sell !
Milke us fl " o ff er

f-=IR I::WOOD FOR sole . $20 pe r
pt c;_ kup_lo_ad 9_92_.: ~57

Pomer~r~

THRH 81:: 0 0ROM , fu lly ca rpeted
basement garage Ha ven Hts
304 -882 -2590

Buy 1hesf two ho m es f or

"142-233&lt;&gt;.

949.2508 .
19b2 CHEv-ROLET- pj(t(Up truck .
E~ecellent
con dit1 on
$550 .

l 96E:f 12 x 6~ mobrfe mobt le home
Very good cond1llo n. Corn ,
pletely furnr shed , porch . own mg 4 x IO shed , 2 or 3 bedroom
opt 1on . $5000 ter ms n ego11oble.
Country Mobile Home Pork , Lo t
L/ qq{ 6144 for inl ormo t ron .

NEWER
GRAVH Y TRACTOR and 3() '
mowe r
Good
con d i tio n
992 -7492 or 992&lt;.l710 .

- . -

THRH BI::OROOM lrome home in
M r ddlep~ rt C_oll 992: 3~5~

Rot sed front k itchen Con rS:motn on lot Me1gs X hoo l
01 s lrrc l ,
HorriSOn'olr l le .
'/ 42 -3122

$29,500.00.

l~9:;ciF.loo- FoRD NGER ~.~k~~ N EED A WATER
tru ck . Explorer pack age , P.S.,
P.B.. au to . tran s.. ', ton, 300 __ .SOFTENER? .. ..

14tH 12 x 60 STAR 2 bedroom .

bed r oom home, nat . gas
h eat, fir ep lace, ba sem ent,
2 ca r garage, ov erlooks the
ri ve r $32,000,00
2 STORY REMODELED
HOME - .d bedrooms, for ma l dining , enclosed front
porch , 1 c ar g arage , oTher
stor age bldg. Low gas bill s.

992-371&lt;&gt;.

C.I.D , b cy l. engine 742 -2826.

l9b7 HOUSI: TR AILI::R 11 11: bO All
elcc trrc l urn tshed . Ot r con d ~11oned wa sher and dryer Also
Horri SOn.,d le .
2
l ol !&gt; rn
! ~1 ::.!820.

5 ACRES - wrth fruit and
nut rrees, ntce 3 or 4

Your

Phone 992-2181

":..::C::-c:::-'·--- --- ... -

----------

1 ACHI:: . 17 11: 00 mobrle hom e
near Dex ter 942 -5851:1

c...

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11,1978

.,_

New or ~epair
GultetS and
Downspouts

·Jack's.Septic
Tank Service

.

$11 ,000 00

Mqr.

William T.

f OR VOUR com plet e hous1ng
remodeling . construct ion and
maintenance, give .} R. a try
Referenc e
a v ai la ble
Heasonoble prices
Phone
992·5191 '

I'

Servlee..._._..,._.Trwller•..._..,
......... to ...

"''

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

Jack Ginther 985-3806

for sol e. 1 acre and
up Middl epor t, near Rutland
Coll992 74E!l

.

Radiator~

anytime.
PhOnf q8S-l806

HOM~~)ITES

VA ·FHA 30 yr fi nancing , al so
reflnonc.ng Ireland Mortgage,
'17 1:: . State. Athens, phon e (0 14 )
592 305 1

EXPERIENCED

Resident ial and c;ommercial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Ser.vice. Anv day,

l%H V1 lioge s OUlC 12 2 8R

ca rpet ing
an d paneling, b asement,
na t gas hea t , small lot ,
ideal
fo r
a
couple .

Sa It&gt; Pr !CPS
Jack W. Carsey,

YAR D SALE Fr i Corner of Fore!&gt;t
n Rd and Rt. 7 9-J . Rorn
cancels.

WATER WELL drill ing
Grant . 742 -2879 .

All

APRilO l
POODLI::
AKC
reg1;, tered Sb5 . J04 882 3242 .
GOING OUT of Business Sole 1
Pood les . Pekrngese . Pomera nian l eocup. Tmtes , $35 to
5115 , Ph one014 -696 1297.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

1 4'10Sy l vob0~~:122HR

ll/b4W1ndsor 5l x l02Bf.&lt;
J&lt;rt() Kt r kwood 1 1~~:60 3 UR
88. S MO!lll~ HOM!: SA l !:~
f-' 1 PU:ASA NI W.VA.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

'

·-~

LOVABll:: WHIT!:: snow dnft great
1-'YR!:NHS Puppies . Phone
I bt.l -607 -3838 .

- 2 bedrooms,

Holpou1t Appl.

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

-- .!~~.P~~~ --~---

1970 Amhers t ~0)1 I 'l 'l BR
1970 C hor ~pron bo)l l '1. 'J BR
I %5 General 00~~: I 'J 2 BR
1&lt;1()8 PMC 5'1•1 'J '1 8R
l&lt;IS5 Proirre St hoo ne ' ::J811ij I ~I(
14'1J Royal bnbos!t.v btllll4 J HH
14',;,4 ~lor SUxiU '1 Bl(
14'1:1 Slor tl.lx\4 '1 BH
\908 Star bUx\11 Bl(

liVIng R JU ST S8,500 .Q0.
ABOVE THE AVERAGE

GE T.V.'&lt;, &amp;

YARD SALE . Sumner Road 1st
tro1 ler &lt;!In left . Thursday and
Friday . Clothes. baby ltems
etc .
·

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole , Sot .,
Oct. 14 , ocro!&gt;s from th e f-=ire

-

POMEROY
LANDMARK

to 5 pm . 185 South Front St ,
Mrddleport Ohro. Be d spreads ,
coiner o, pong game, dresses
size 20 1l , etc

-.

- -

-

HAY PHONE 992 7751

-- - ---------- -·
YARD SALE. Oct . 10, 11 , 12, 13 9

LARGE YARD Sol e. Oct. 11 . 12. 13
14 . Some th1ng tor everyone .
fir st house on left a fter yo u
cross
Railroad tracks at
Chesh1 re at the Mary Lovn e
res rdence .

05 J bcd toorn
1', both underprnning , $\~00
and o~ ~ unH' loon 449 -268J or
liAJ-JJ ll
11:

10 FT

YARD SALE. Oct 5-6. Green house
Gre&amp;n house behind State ·
High way Garage on Rt . 7. l 0-4

124 , 4t h house post M1 les
Cemetery out of Rutlan d . K~ng
trum pe t Metgs 1ock et , b• cycle,
doth rng and misc . 1tems .

19fb NA ~ HUA 14

992·2995

_____________- --

-------------GARAG E SALE Oc t. 12 8. 13 HI .

l\lobilc Homes for Sale

UK I: NI::W Hondo gu1tar and co ;, e
exira set of str1ng s and p1 Cks
tncluded Moytog Copperfone
Por la-pon woh ser and dryer
Very. good condll1on . '!&gt;el l as
set
Coli after 5 00 prn ,

=--==

..

slory hou se
M1ddlepor t.
utrl1t1e!&gt; per
•nlormol•on
f:J pm

COAL , UMI:STON I::. sand , gravel .
cole rum chloride. ferlrlrz er dog
food . and all type!&gt; o f sal! b celstor Salt Work s, tnc , E Mo tn
St , Porne10y Q&lt;jl2.:Jt:l9 1

If-= YOU hove a servrce Ia o ffe r,
wont to buy or se l l some th1 ng,
oe look.ng tor work
. . or
whatever , . you 'll get results
fa s u~r with o Senllne'l Wont Ad .
_ Call992-215b.
_,

'l~JO

t'or Sale

·~~~

19-:ro-Pl vMOUTH VAL I/.:NT ~ o ~~.
LAFF- A- DAY

t'or H "nt

rll A.rv

l'el• [or tialc

VW ~A ( 10HY mrnpt,.•r . C.oorl HOOf HOllOW Hor"'-'"" · Buy !&gt;ell
110dt' 01 !tOll\ N ew and U!t.I:Kt
co nd th on Trodtt for hou!t.e
.. ad dle'!&gt; Ruth Reeve'&gt; . Albany
ltoo ler o t w1 ll ~e ll tor SIS&lt;I5
lb 14 ) &lt;&gt;9~ - 3290
1 ~ '1 '1 19'1
f(J~ING !:.TAH Kenrels . l:loording
and grooming, all breed~&gt; .
Cheshire 367 O'J&lt;jl2 or 367 -0106

19!;7 CH~V~OLU '1 cfoo1 hardtop
Vt&gt;r y good cond1 t10n '}41..1 Ltd I

TWO BEDROOM kt tch en fuf- ru!&gt;h
ed . op t Ca ll b~:?l o r e !:1 om
492 -1288

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Nuon un Satunh:~y

l ~t:J'I

tt..lp:Wanm'l
. . ' - -

WANTED
MANAGING
cosmetohg tst wtlh cl ientele
Above Average com (lliSston
Wnte Bo ~~: 175 . MiddlepOr t O H
stottng e~~:pe n ence and phone
number Rephes confident tal

NOTICE

1970 CAO tllAC ~l-OAN l oodt· d
(oil 1.1cn 0107 01 4"1'1 :U40

J ANl) 4 HM turn1 shed ond un
tur 1 11 ~ h e d
opt !&gt;
Ph one
W'l ~4 J 4

am.J
(l)ltu&lt;:~ry : 6 L~llts ~r wurd, $:1 .00
nw1unwn. C~tsh LJ1 advant'e

on.ler 25 l~ll l L'h.iil')(t'
t~ds t"arl)'•
VI~ Dux Num ~ r In Cl:u t' uf Tt~~:~ St&gt;l l-

For ~a l&lt;&lt; llrnt or Trade

LOST IN Rocme. mole Blu e liCk
hound. 40- SO lb. New collar . No
1 D. tog . Heward ~li Yonce
94&lt;1 2124

Thank~

Mubale Humt- ~ Its i:Hj l Y&lt;llll Sl:llts
an.• &lt;K't.'~pted only -Mfh l' l:l~h w1l h

Auto :sale•

Business ·Services·

13- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Wednesday, Oet. 11, 1978

. . . ·- ..
~

. 1M SURPRISEC' AT YOU !

L(OU USUAW1' DON'T DO
DVMB THINGS LIKE THAT..

ROCK IN' CHAIR, PAW

of

IT LOOKS LIKE
IT'S ROCKIN'
PURTV GOOD
TOME

4

Bill Root of th e runner-up
team a nd Pa ul Soloway of
the winners shifted to the

queen of clubs a t tri ck two.
Edgar Kaplan of Lh:')
runners-up and Bobby Gold'
man each won that club and
led their second diamond
whereupon both West players made the brilliant play
of ducking . Each decla re r
had s aved a diamond loser ,
but sllll had problerns.
Each took a different way·
to resolve them . Goldman
led a club Lo his a ce, ruffed
his sm a ll cl ub , cashed
dummy's king of trumps, led
a second trump, finessed his
jack and was home when th~
finesse

worked .

He would also ha ve been
home had the finess e lost.
West would have been on
lead and forced to lead a
heart up to the ace-queeni
lead a club to give a ruff and
discard, or a diamond to set
up dununy 's queen .
:
Kaplan's line was equally
effective . He ruffed a dia'
rnond, cashed his high club,
ruffed his last club in
dummy and the last diamond in his own hand. Then
he cashed the ace of hearts,
led a second heart and didn't
care how t rwn ps broke. He
was not going to have to
guess since he would not
have to play the suit.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

•

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD.·
ERN, send S1 to: " Win at
Bridge, ·· care of rhis newspaper. P 0 Box 489, Radio City
Station. New York. N. Y. 10019.)

IT AIN'T
5'POSED TO
I

�14- The Daily Sentinel, Middlci)Ort-Pumcruy. 0 ., Wednesd"Y · Oct. 11 , 1978

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

Money actions filed in court
Two suits for money, a
foreclosure and a dissolution
of marriage have been filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court .
Robert Venoy , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, filed suit against
the P&amp;P Paving, Inc.,
Wellston, in the amount of
$2,200 for poor workmanship
in pouring a driveway .
TheRacine Home Natio~al
Bank filed suit in the amount
of $854.23 against James
Junior Dailey and Bonnie
Dailey, Pomeroy:
A foreclosure suit was filed
·by Citizens National Bank,
Middl epor t , against

Frederick W. Klein and
Martha Ellen Klein, Middleport , and George Collins
as Treasurer.

Hospital

Nc-'w~

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted ~ Rhonda Jones,
Rutland ; Laura Sigler,
Rutland : Aida Doerfer,
Midd leport ; Adria Swick,
Langsville: Merle Manley,
Middleport.
Discharged
Ai r won a
Walker.

BURGUNDY
SMOOTH
EATHER

Area -D eaths -1

1
I

SARAH E. SIMPSON
Mrs. Sa nih E. Simpoon, 62,
Middleport, formerly of
Arbuckle, W. Va ., died
Monday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Survivors include five
daughters, Mrs. Daisy
Raac~. Texas; Mrs. Betty
Downing, Georgia; Mrs.
Mary Roberts, Robertsburg ;
Mrs. Sarah Stanley, Middleport; Mrs. Sandra Wolfe,
Poirlt Pleasant ; one son,
have occurred in Mason Harry SimpSon, Jr., Winfield,
County this year.
and 14 grandchildren.
Bennett was born June 27,
Services will be Friday, 2 p.
1962, in Point Pleasant, to m. at the Raynes Funeral
Marvin Bennett Jr. and Lena Home with the Rev . Cladls
Yvonne Swartz.
Paxon officiating. Burial will
He was a junior at Wahama be in the IOOF Cemetery,
High School and a member of Poca.
the Broad Run Lutheran
Friends may call at - the
Church.
funeral home 6 to 9:30 p. m.
Additional survivors in· today and from 2 to 9:30p. m.
elude two sisters, Cheryl Ann Thursday.
and Rebecca Yvonne Bennett
at home ; three brothers,
Marvin E., Timothy Wayne
Holzer Medical Center
and Charles William Bennett
Discharges Oct. 10
at home; maternal grandThomas
Back, Margaret
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Brohard,
Ronald
Brown,
Edward Roush , Letart, and
Wade
Carroll,
Charles
Burt,
paternal grandparents, Mr.
Carter,
Bruce
and Mrs. Marvin Bennett Sr., Parnie
Donohew,
Davison,
Mildred
Point Pleasant.
The funeral will be held Ray Ellis, Thelma Grueser,
Friday, I :30 p. m. in the Ronald Hammond, Janis
Foglesong Funeral Home Hankla, Betty Meadows,
with the Rev. John Campbell Archie Patterson, Guy
Dixon Roush,
officiating. BuMal will be in Rollins,
Rebecca
Sargent,
Shirley
Graham Cemetery.
Shepherd,
Hansford
Stanley,
Friends will oe received at
the funeral home Thursday Clyde Stollings, Heath
from 2 to 4 and from .7 to 9 Tackett, Ebb Tomblin ,
Robert Tucker, Kay Warden,
p.m.
Donna Waugh and Helen
Wroblewski.
Blrlbs Oct. 10
Mr. and Mrs. Danny McTHE ONE AND ONLY
Neal, son, Oak HilL
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Row,
son, Gallipolis.

Bolens

~ Mulching
Mower·,........,.~
Bolen's
Sell- Propelled

4 H. P.

--.~

1
. '

Mulchers

•40.00 OFF
Suggested List
No imitation works as well

as the original Bolens

Mulching Mower. lt chops

ABORTIONS BARRED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Most free abortions for
military
personnel or
dependents would be barred
under a .record · breaking
$117 .5 billion defense ap, propriations bill sent to both
Houses by a coference
committeec
The House and Senate hope
to vote on the compromise
legislation - the largest
appropriations bill in history
- before they adjourn at the
end of the week.
·

crease in tbeir real estate
taxes . Property owners
whose real estate has increased in value at a faster
pace than the annual rate of
inflation would have a slight
increase in taxes. And those
whose - valuations have
remained the same or fallen
will receive a reduction in
their real estate taxes.
Those property owners in
charter cities will not receive
all the benefits of the
package, he said. Because of
the Home Rule provision of
the Ohio Constitution, it is
impossible to reduce charter
millage. Taxes that are
levied according to the
charter of a city caMot be
reduced unless the charter
contains a provision calling
for the reduction of the
charter millage in a reappraisal year. However,
Voinovich urged officials in
charter cities to take "a hard
look" at their need to receive
additional property tax

revenue.
The plan, he said, also calls
for a constitutional amendment which will halt the
current shift of the real estate
tax burden to the homeowner
and farm'e rs, from the
commercial and industrial
taxpayer. This will be done
by applying the tax reduction
factor of H.B . 920 by class of
property, rather than adjustment on the entire tax
duplicate.
Voinovich, who is called
"Mr .
Homestead"
ln
Cuyahoga County because of
his sponsorship of the constitutional amendment that
put the Homestead on the
ballot, and his successful
efforts to expand its benefits
for the senior citizens and
disabled, said the RhodesVoinovich plan calls for
expanding the Homestead
income eligibility level to
$15,000, up from the current
$10,000 level.
The exl'ansion of the
Homestead provision will
allow approximately 30,000
additional senior citizens to
benefit. In addition, .it will
increase, by five per cent,
each · income class a
maximum . allowable
exemption up to $5,000 in tax
value.
Richard Jones, Meigs
County Commissioner and
chairman of the Meigs
County Republlcan executive
committee, introduced
Senator Oakley C. CoUins and
Voinovich.
Jones, in introducing
Voinovlch, stated that the for
the first time in the history of
the State of Ohio, candidates
for governor and lieutenant
governor are running as a
team.
"George Voinovich is not a
household word in Meigs

SEEK FUNDING
WASWNGTON (UPI)
'
'36.95
The executive leaders of
One that's blown deep into
three
of the nation's major
your lawn. See for yourself
OTHER STYLES FROM $28.95
at ..
religious communities today
called on President Carter to
make $100 million aqailable
in federal assistance to an
interfaith
group seeking to
Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy. 0 .
SMALL ENGINES
reopen steel mills in
SALE &amp; SERVICE
Youngstown, Ohio.
County," Jones commented,
9a .m .-Sp.m.
Mon. thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
" but when you talk to people
498 LDCU$1 St.
9 a.m .. u p.m. Fri.
~ho know him everyone
992-301'2
Closed Sunday
UNUSUAL DECISION
I
Middleport, 0 .
speaks highly of him." The
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)- fn best recommendation Jones
an
unusual
coroner's received was when he asked
~--••••••••••••llli•••••• decision, a train derailment Ralph Welker, former
that killed three people has representative, what he
been ruled a homicide.
thought of him. W~lker said
Montgomery County that he was the finest man he
Coroner Dr. Robert Zipf said ever met.
an investigation indicated a
Voin0vich explained that he
derailment last month in was delighted to be in Meigs
nearby Miamisbu~g was County and that Oakley
triggered by poor distribution Collins had given him the
or loads of steel ingots in grand tour. He also comrailroad cars.
mented he .referred to Ralph
Welker as the sheriff since
Welker was sheriff in Meigs
County some years ago.
Voinovich explained that
LEBANON RESULTS
the lieutenant governor in tbe
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!)- past presided over the seante,
Sinart Shadow nosed out Ms. but this has been changed.
Pebble at the wire Tuesday
'f he lieutenent governor will
night to win the featured be a member of the gover- .
Right now, at your kitchen eighth race at Lebanon nor's cabinet. For the first
Raceway.
time, a lieutenant governor
dealer, right here in town,
The winner, driven by Jeff
will take an active role in the
Brewer, covered the mile in
stale's
decision-making
for a limited time only, you 2:07 4-S and returned $25.80,
process. In the absence of the
$9 and $5.80. Ms. Pebble
can buy modular pieces of kicked
chief executive, he will
back $4.60 and $4 to
preside
over
cabinet
your new kitchen at a 15~ place, while Glory's Best meetings
,
Voinovich
ex·
came in third and paid $7.80.
plained.
.
discount off list price!
The 8-3 nightly double
combination of She's A . The biggest change in the
Corker and So Be It was lleutenant governor's duties
will be his work with the
$26.40.
You can save another 20% if you 1ns11a worth
A crowd of 1,214 wagered newly-forrned State and local
government commission of
$116,789.
~.:::;::::::~ your kitchen yourself. And we're happy to
Ohio.
and rechops ~rasa ctip·
pings into a fme mulch.

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

WILKINSON

you how to do it right. Come in and talk to nn•lllll ~~-----------.-.
of our kitchen experts.

PROVINCETOWN -

"J\es••pe...
DALE'S
KITCHE_N CENTER
2119 J1c:kson Awe.

675·2318

Point Pltlllnt

WE SERVICE Y HAT WE SELL

e

(Continued from page I')

I nation would have no in-

JOHN W. BENNETI
A Letart · youth, John W.
Bennett, 16, died Tuesday
afternoon in St. Mary's
Hospital from injuries
received in an· autumobile
accident Oct. I on Route 33 in
front of the Foote Mineral
Plant, Graham Station.
Two other Bend area
youths died from the same
accident. Their deaths bring
to seven the total number of
highway fatalities which

Fashionable
slip-on in rich
leather with decorative matc hin g braid . Long·
wearing sole and hard heel
with rubb er toplift. Help yourself
to convenient slip-on fashion'

Rhodes •• •

TRIPLE SELECTED
NORTHERN GROWN
SOLID MAPLE
Create the interior design that fits the
personal preferences and the life .style of
your family with Provincetown. This is
heirloom quality furniture that retains Its
beauty for years to come. Created by
craftsmen who take pride in excellence.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE MIDIJII f'OF\l, OHIO

'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, October 12, 1978

•

at

•

enttne

'Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 126

V'mton County record passed

Negotiations continue in long Logan strike
EXPLAINED PROGRAM- Deputy Becky Mohler is shown as she addressed the sixth
grade classes at Pomeroy Elementary School Tuesday. On Mrs. Mohler's right is Usa
Thomas a junior at Meigs High School who is a member of Explorer Post 230.
"Get acquainted with your police officers" was the idea behind the meetirlg. Meigs
County Sheriff Deputies and Carl Hysell, juvenile probation officer, spoke to the sixth grade
classes. They informed the students that the purpose of the program sponsored by the
Sheriff's department, was to acquaint the children with the police officer and to establish a
better relationship. They explained that a police officer has an obligation to do his job. It
was also noted that the police protect the public and children should never fear going to a
police officer for help. They emphasized that the police officer was their friend .

Orlld assault
draws fine,
jail sentence

Access road abandoned
Meigs
Co unty
Commissioners Tuesday night
decided to drop the idea or
constructing an access road
from Mulberry Ave. to the
new multi-purpose building.
After many hours of
discussion during the past
month Commissioners issued
the following state ment ·
concerning the proj ect :
"After a great deal of
deliberation the Board of
County Commissioners have
decided to discontinue plans

Bobby Shaver, 27, 101
Second St., Pomeroy, was
arrested by Pomeroy Police
Officer . L. B. Vaughan for
assault upon a 11-year-old
boy Saturday evening.
At the tim~ of Shaver's
arrest, he was found with a
concealed weapon .
Shaver appeared before
Mayor Clarence Andews
Tuesday evening and was
fined $500 and costs for
assault and $300 and costs for
having a concealed weapon.
Shaver is presently being
held in Meigs County Jail.

Weather
Thundershowers tonight
and Thursday. Lows tonight
between 50 and 55. Highs,
Thursday
near
70.
Probability of precipitation
20 percent today, 50 percent
tonight, 40 percent Thursday.

SVAC MEETING
A meeting of the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
will be held at 7:30 p. m.
Monday at the Kyger Creek
High SchooL ·

, Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Mrs. Max
Wilson and son, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Ray McCoy and t wins,
Clifton; Watson Upton, Leon;
Mrs. Harry Neville, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Johnnie
Owens, Southside; Mrs.
William son ,
Raym ond
Mason; Brady Bonecutter,
Leon ;
Ca rol Masters,
Gallipolis; Ferris Morgan,
Cot ta gev ill e; Leroy Hill ,
Buffalo.
Births - A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Marcum,
Vinton; a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs. Dorman Pearso n,
Henderso n; a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Timothy Double,
Southside.

to construct an access road
from Mulberry Ave. to the
new multi-purpose building.
It is the opinion after much
study and consideration that
the county would be better
served if the money available
for such work would be spent
to construct an access that
would eventually lea d to
Union P,ve., and would, 9pen
up more than 100 acres of
county owned land for future
development."
County · Engineer Wesley
Buehl discussed County Road
improvements.
Commissioners outlined a number
of complaints they have
received concerning needed
road repair. Buehl agreed to
investigat e
them
immediately.
Carol Costanzo discussed
the housing acquisition and
rehabilitation program. Mrs.
Constanzo reported that final
approval had been received
and that the project was
ready to sta rt.
The Commissioners agreed
an oversight committee
· consisting of three people
would be appointed at the
Oct. 17th meeting.
Appointed to the Gallia Meigs Regional Airport
Authority for one-year tenns
were Thomas W. Bowen,
Ronald J. Browning and
Franklin Rizer.

Elberfelds ln. Pomeroy

LOGAN
(UPI)
Negotlat ions co ntinu ed
Wednesday in Logan, where
school employees have been
!&gt;ll strike since Aug. 29.
A ' pre;setnement
agreement reportedly was
reached earlier this week, but
the
Ohio
Education
Association said the board of
education voted not to accept
·
the settlement.
Non-teaching employees of
the .district, .repreSented by
Chapter 218 of the Ohio

Association of Public School
Employees, do not appear to
be close to an agreement with
the board.
The stMke has now passed
the length of the previously
longest Strike, which OC·
curred in Vinton County five
years ago and lasted for six
weeks .
Meanwhile, teachers in the
1,600-student Wellington
Public School District ended
their walkout Wednesday
after approving a new, one-

Lottery probe underway
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. James A.
Rhodes today called for an Ohio Highway
Patrol investigation into "several possible
irregularities" in the awarding of contracts by
the Ohio Lottery Commission.
Rhodes, in a letter to Ohio Highway Safety
Director Robert M. Chiaramonte, told
Chiaramonte to "take the appropriate action
necessary to gain Controlling Board approval
for .the State Highway Patrol" to begin the
investigation.
''Recent newspaper reports have pointed
out several possible irregularities with regard
to the awarding of contracts by the Ohio
Lottery Commission," said Rhodes. "It is
imperative that no questions remain
unanswered with regard to the operations of
the Ohio Lottery Commission."

LUDINGTON, Mich. (UPIJ - Sheriff's deputies and U.S.
Coast Guard officials say they have had repeated sightings of
!rightly llghted, fast-moving unidentified objects over Lake
Michigan.
"The lights were lremendously bright," said Oceana County
Ilepaty ~ ol an t;)ct. I lighting. " They made you
dizzy to loolf at !bern. )'ou don't want to get too excited about
IIIia beca111e peop!e thlilk you're goofy, but I saw it and it made
a definite believer out of me."

Medicine prize .being shared
. STOCKHOLM (UPf)- Dr. Werner Arber of Switzerland,
and Drs. Daniel.Nathans and Hamilton Smith of John Hopkins
University in Baltimore, Maryland, shared the 1978 Nobel
Pl;ze for Medicine, the Karolinska lnstitute announced today.
They were cited for their "diSCQvery of restriction enzymes
and their application to problems of molecular genetics."

COLUMBtm""(UPI) - The State Controlling Bcfard has
been asked to reconsider the conditions it attached to use of the
Ohio Highway Palrol by Franklin County Prosecutor Geor~e
C. Smith to investigate the state auditor's office. Board
President Robert Howard confinned Wednesday that he had
received a letter requesting reconsideration of the board's
action from Franklln County grand jury foreman Albert
Kuhfeld.

Parolee charged with murder
SAGINAW, Mich. (UPI) - Keith Ray Pontseele, nearing the
end of three years' probation for a window-shooting spree, had
found a steady job as a bartender and was about to become a
free man. But Wednesday, the 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld Army veteran was
jailed on charges of first-degree murder, assault with intent to
commit murder and using a firearm in a sniping incident last
month that killed a young boy and wounded two other children
in nearby Merrill.

AEP seeks coal permit
ASHLAND, Ky . (UPI) - The U. S. Army Corps of
Englileers has received an application from the American
Electric Power System for a penni! for rail to river coal
transfer facility on the Ohio River at Wurtland in Greenup
CoWity. KentuCky Power Co. executive vi~ president Robert
Matthews said Wednesday the proposed facility - upon
o:mpletion - will result in use of low sulphur coal from
eastern Kentucky and will employ about 60 people.

A credit of $91,430 will be
shared by Ohio Power
Company's 600,000 customers
in November under an order
issued October 11 by the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio.
The reduction amounts to
about four cents for the
residential customer using
700 kilowatt hours of electricity a month. The amount

Rugged as the Men
Who Wear Them.

Union Made in America

fuel reserves, power plants
were operated to ieveitze the
coa l supplies at each plant
and that those steps were
taken in customers' inter ests.
According to the PUCO
order, the company 's action
was tak en in advance of the
time deemed appropriate by
the commission, and, since
the efficiency standard was
not met, the reconciliation is
required.
In September, Ohio Power
reduced customer bills, as it
had volunteered to do, by a
total of $707,422 through the
fuel clause as the result of
a nother
coal
strike
development.
That credit, amounting to
about 32 cents for the 750kilowatt hour per month
exa min a t io n . Wagher residential cust om er,
complained of back and leg resulted from over-billing of
·
customers during the strike
pams.
Edward Berryhill and a 17- due to incomplete fue! cost
year-old juven ile arrested information received from
Sunday in Pomeroy for the electric utilities from which
armed robbery of the Mason the com pan y purchased
Vista Station were released to emergency power, Ohio
the West VIrginia State Power officials said.
Police Wednesday afternoon .. In a related matter, the
after waiving extradition to PUCO has granted . Oh1o
West Virginia.
Power a rehearmg on Nov . 30
Berryhill and the juvenile of a commiSSIOn order m
are marines from Paris connectiOn wtth .the ~et·
lsiand, S.C.,whenquestioned tlement of a lawsUit agamst
Sunday afternoon, they ad- the Westmghouse . Electrtc
mitted to having robbed a Corporatt on regardmg . a
liquor store Saturday ar- malfunctJOnmg generatmg
ternooQ in Beaufort, S. C. No umt.
charges were filed against
them in Meigs County .

Gravel pins
Young Work er
An 18-year old Rt. 3, Racine
man escaped possible death
after being pinned for more
than two hours by gravel at
the Tri-State Materials Plant
at Apple Grove.
According to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department,
Darrell Wagner, an employe,
was on top of. a pile of pitrun
gravel at the conveyor belt
and slipped into the trap
when loose gravel gave way,
trapping him up to his waist.
The accident occurred
around 7; 30 p.m. Frontend
loader operator, Pete J elfers,
Portland, observed Wagner
sliding into the hole, otherwise he would have dumped
approximately two ton of
gravel on him.
Company employes ,
Racine Fire Department and
emergency squad members
worked for approximately
two hours to dig Wagner out.
When freed at 9:45 he was
transported
to
Holzer
Medical
Center
fo r

NOW YOU KNOW
The Murchison meteorite
that fell on Murchison,
Australia , in 1969 contained 8
amino acids, including six
that are found in living cells
on earth.

Fire kills five
BOSTON, N.Y. (UP!) Five children died early
today when fire broke out in
their Erie County home,
filling it with smoke and
suffocating them while their
parents were out to d,inner,
state police said.
Troopers said the five were
found in two upstairs
bedrooms after firefighters
broke a window to get into the
Robert Clifford residence .
The fire did not severely
damage the two-story home,
but acrid smoke filled the
building, officials said.

The dead were identified as
Robert Clifford Jr., 7, Casey
Clifford, 8, Roxame Clifford,
10, Jacqueline Hustead, 14,
and Stephanie Hustead, 13.
Police said tbe Hustead girls
were step-sisters of the
Clifford children .
The fire was believed to
have begun in a · first-floor
living room , but officials said
an investigation would
continue into the cause.
Authorities said the · cause
of death was asphyxiation.

Test-tube baby gets welcome

Alleged heroin head booked
: CHICAGO (UF'f) - The man drug agents say heads the
nation's largest heroin smuggling ring- an enterprise whose
estimated $100 niilliori annual profits outrank 75 percent of the
Fortune 500 corporations- has surrendered to authorities in
Mexico Federal agents said Wednesday the arrest of Jaime
Herrer~-Nevarez, the godfather of the ' 'Mexican Connection",
could lead to more arrests in a year-&lt;&gt;ld effort to break up the
lrOwn heroin smuggling operation.
·

.
SAVE ALL THIS WEEK ON

CARHARTT BROWN DUCK
WORK CLOTHES. You'll find

a

complete

selection

of

regular and extra l•rae situ
- We' ll gladly help you' find
the right garment in your

prOper size.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, OCT. 14TH
•
AT 5 P.M • .

But this time, school union
leader James O'Meara said
the ratification vote should
succeed. Ratification of the
settlement could end a strike
which began Sept. 7 and has
prevented th e district's

will be credited to the fuel
clause portion of November
bills.
The credit was ordered for
failure by the company to
meet PUCO-esta bli shed
generating efficiency standards in January, 1978 during
the coal miners' •trike.
Company officials sa id that
in an effort to avoid power
curtailments and to stretch

CALCUTTA, India (UPI) - _Nine-day-&lt;&gt;ld Durga Agarwal,
the W«ld's second test-{ube baby, and her mother came home
Wednesday and were greetinR with a traditional Hindu
welcoming chorus of conch shells. Durga's father, Prabhat
Kumar Agarwal, 36, arid her grandjMlrents celebrated the
homecoming with worship of the Hindu goddess Durg~.
revered as the destroyer of evil and harbinger of good luck.

car'l'laPtts

margin .

101,000 students from at- to give ongoing education and
tending classes ali falL
we can't sit back and let til is
The Painesville Township continu e," she said.
Board of Education has
If teachers don't reputt for
approved a resolution saying work today, they wouhl be
any teacher who remains off notified by registered mail
the job by today will be listed that they have voluntHrlly
as having voluntaril y resigned , Ms. Karir- said.
resigned.
Teachers' association Pr e s ~
Boa rd President Patricia idcnt
Kath leen
IU Joy
Karle said the board decided charged the school board '" "
to take the action in an effort attempti ng " to intim id:Jte
to get classes back in full teachers through threatei!•Jd
session.
" Tehe
maj or firing s."
· responsibility of any board is

'

.

UFO sightings reported

state legislative delegation to
urge support of the relaxed
loan standa rds.
A week ago, the city's
teachers a nd support personnel rejected a proposed
contract by a 60-40 percent

Ohio Power customers
share ordered credit

j_J~. _rh_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Seeks reconsideration

There 's a special au thority about the man in
Brown Ducks. Put them on and you're ready
for work. And how ·these engineered work
clothes pro tect you on the job!
Carhart! is the co mplete line of 35 tough,
top quality work garments.
Choose Brown Duck bib overalls, double
knees, co pper rivets, triple seams, tool
pocke ts and elastic ,suspenders ... or carpenter's overall s with more pockets, swing
nail apron, etc. Examine the many different styles of heavy duty, rip-proof, wearproof Brown Duck jea ns , jackets, coats
and coveralls, too. Come in and see
these gutsy work outlits that have
got to give you a lilt All tOO% cotton.
Preshrunk. Machine Washable.

year contract with the back in their classrooms Walter requested the board to
of after ratifying a one-year meet as soon as possible to
Wellington
Board
Education.
contract with the Wellington rescind requirements that the
The system's 90 teachers, Board of Education Wed- Cleveland district escrow any
who .struck Oct. 4 over nesday.
back taxes collected from the
grievance
procedures,
The state Controlling Board Penn Central Railroad, and
previously had agreed to pay was asked Wednesday to build a 3 percent reserve fund
raises averaging 13.4 percent relax the tenns of a $20.7 from program and personnel
across the board.
million state loan to the cuts.
Striking Cleveland school Cleveland Public School
A "united committee"
employees were to vote today District to provide for pay comprising members of the
on a second attempt to ratify increases for the city's 10,000 six striking school teacher
their school board's latest striking school employees. and employee unions and
contract offer, while in
State Public Construction Cleveland school officia ls
Wellington, t eacher s are Superintendent Franklin B. was to meet with Cleveland's

MEIGS QUEEN CANDIDATES - One of these five Meigs High School seniors will
reign as homecoming queen Friday night at the Meigs Stadium. The candidates fr om tl!e left are Judy Hall, daughter of Mrs. Betty Reed, Middleport ; ~' honda Wood, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Wood, Rutland area; Jamie Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jaml'&lt;
Johnson, Wolfe Pen Road; Shari Mitch, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Gene Mitch , Pomeroy ,
and Sandi He.mjlt.ol.'l, daughter af Mr . and MrS. Charles Hamilton. Route 1, Minersville. 'l11l'
queen will be crowned during pre-game ceremonies.

L zcenses
•
discussed,
new councilman named

NEW HAVEN - The issue
of a business license and the
naming of a new council
member were discussed at
the Tuesday meeting of the
Two Middleport men, New Haven Town CounciL
According to' a spokesma n
James P. McCloud, 19, and
Dennis Michael Smith, 21, for the council , James King, a
were arraigned before Judge resident of the towr appeared
John C. Bacon in the Meigs requesting that action taken
County Common Pleas Court during the last meeting be
Wednesday. They appeared revoked . When council me.t
on Bills of Information un Oct. 3, a petition was
chargi ng t wo co unts of presented from residents who
opposed King having a tire
breaking and entering.
The men entered guilty shop on his property. Council
pleas to charges or breaking then in turn denied King a
and entering a North Fifth business license to operate.
In the Tuesday meeting,
Ave. residence and removing
antiques and breaking and King again approached
entering the Martin Ant ique council and asked that his
Shop and ta kin g severa l business license be granted .
The town ordinance was read
items.
and
council voted not to grant
Mc.Cloud was released
King
a license. He was told by
Wider a $5,000 recognizance
council
the spokesman noted,
bond pending a preto
close
his business and take
sentencing inv estiga tion .
down
aU
signs. It was also
Smith was remanded to the
t hat several
custody of the sheriff until r eported
sentencing at I p. m. Friday. neighbor s attended the

Pair enters
guilty pleas

other items of wearing apparel for you and
your family and frunishings for your home. -

Elberfelds in Pomeroy
t.

•
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Agriculture Department
· ' Wednelday f&lt;l'ecast 1978 corn production at 6.82 billion
bulhell, up less than I percent from last month, for a record
crop which is spected to moderate reaW food inflation.
Proapeelll for a record crop and the already existing surplus
havedr aged c&lt;l'll prices below, farmers' cost of production.
With prices low, COlis of feeding livestock and poultry also
have decllned and should slow the Increase in retail food
;rices, which Ia spected to be 10 percent this year.

:;::::::::·:·:·::::;.;.;.;.;:;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of showers each
day and cool through the
period, with highs In the
50s. Lows will be in the 40s
Saturday and Sunday and
In the 30s or lower 40s
Monday.

~

~

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

Weather

APPLE BUTTER TIME - The making. of apple
butter has aimost become a lost art - but not for
members of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program and

other interested seniors of the Meigs Senior C itizen~
Center, Pomeroy. They arrived Wednesday at 7:30a . m .
to begin the day-long job. Approximately 130 quarts were
made and sold.

at th e next meeting un Orl .
24 .

Trick or treat night was srl
for Oct. 31, 6: 30 to 7:30p. m.
Phil Burgess was granted
approval to operate a 11 ~il('l'
park with a maximum of two
trailers.
Attending were Mnyor
Cha rles Smit h, Reeurder
Wendy Divers , counci l
members Mike Fields, .Jeff
Mankin, James MncKnight
and David Jones. Othe rs
were Mrs. Raymond Sisk,
.Jame s Parsons, Lar ry
Duncan,
Paul Girard,
Douglas Draper, Ray!IIPIH !
Sisk Jr. and James K inl!

Thunderstorm.s
hit Florida

United Press International
Thunderstorms continued
to poW' rain on southeast
Florida
and
norther~
Missouri
today
and
rainshowers were scattered
1 from the Great Lakes into the
upper Ohio Valley.
' Widely scattered showers
also were reported over
northern Nebraska , southern
Sout h
Dakota
and
northwestern Montana.
A travelers advisory was
posted in southwestern
wuisiana, where dense fog

Com -crop up from last month

SAVE
'oURII\IG
OUR
. l14TH
ANNIV,ERSARY CELEBRATION on Many

meeting protesting th e
establishment
of
th e
business.
Pat Fields, New Haven ,
was voted upon as the new
council member to replace
Virgil Weaver, who resigned
his post on Sept. I I.
In other matters, Pau l
Girard of PoinTView Cable
TV appeared before council
asking for a rate increase in
cable service. The increase
would be $1 per month per
unit. The increase would
allow the service to provide
two addi tional stati ons .
ModificatiJn was read for the
first time on the matter and
will be read the second time

Showers
and
thun derstorms tonight , with lows
between 50 and 55. Showers
continuing and turning eooler
Friday, with hi ghs in the low
or mid 60s.

blanketed highway s and
surrounding areas. Pntdtcs
of fog also covered porti ott&lt; of
the Gulf Coast.
Much of the remainder uf
the nation experienced partly
cloudy skies and near seasonal temperatures .
Temperatures arow1d the
nation early today ranged
from 35 degrees at St.
JobnsbW'Y, VI. to 78 deg•·ees
at Blythe, Calif.
Wednesday af ternoon
tempera tures ran 10 to i fJ
degrees higher than seasonal
averages throughout th e
Southern and Central Plains,
with 90-degree readings
extending from central Texas
into south-central K:msas.
San Francisco also was
unseasonably wann witi1 an
afternoon high of 87
degrees.
Temperatures w&lt;r~ in the
60s and 70S throughout much
of the remainder ~&gt;I the
Plateau and Rocky Mountain
regions. The Gulf and South
Atlantic Coast states enjoyed
70 and 80 degree weather
while temperatures over the
rest of the eastern half of tb
· nation were generally in tt,_
60s to low 70s.

.,

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