<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15586" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15586?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T21:48:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48708">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/fdc08adf23b0734862602ecc5ba4cfd7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>befc3c33d42d64894f32b0b635e89655</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49966">
                  <text>.

'

i
Tax cut bill approved
By JOHN F. BARTON
· WASHINGTON (UP! )- U
your family of four earns
$10,000 a year, you'll get a
nice - $136 - tax cut next
year. But if your family of
four earns $25,000, you'll get
an even nicer - $249 - cut.
That's backwards from the
way President Carter wanted
the cuts distributed.
But the final $18.7 billion
tax cut bill passed by
Congress in its closing hours
Sunday was more palatable
to him than some of the
earlier versions.
The bill is a compromise
between the House 's $16.3
billion tax cut and a $29.3
li.llion Senate version the
administration criticized as
excessive.
Aides to Carter said late
Sunday night that he will
probably sign the measure.
The new income tax cuts
would partially, but not entirely, offset the big Social
Security increases due in
January . The bill does not
take effect until Jan. 1, which
means taxpayers will not feel
the impact of the reductions
until they file tax returns in
early 1980.
The measure would give
major relief to wealthy investors, cut business taxes and
give older homeowners a
chance to make a tax-free
profit of up to $100,000 on a
once-in-a-lifetime sale of
their homes.
The House gave final congressional approval to the
legislation on a 337-38 roll call
vote Sunday morning after an
overnight session . The Senate
had approved the bill an hour
earlier by a 72-3 vote.
The $18.7 billion tax cut
includes a $12.7 billion reduction for individuals, $3.6

billion for businesses, $2.1
billion for investors and $250
milli on in misce llaneous
relief.
The
bill
would
let
homeowners 55 or older make
a onetime, tax-free profit of
up to $100,000 in the sale of
houses they have occupied for
three of the previous five
years.
Th e personal ·exemption
would rise from $750 to $1,000 .
Tax rates would drOp and tax
brackets would be widened,
letting individuals earn more
money before moving into a
higher scale.
Investors would realize a
$2.1 billion tax break by the
bill 's exclusion from regular

federal taxes of 60 oercent of
capital gains ; that is , profits
from the sale of property,
stocks , bonds and other
assets.
The corporate tax rate
would be reduced from the
current 48 perc-ent to 46
percent in 1979.
A current 10 percent investment tax credit would be
made
permanent
and
permitted to offset 90 percent
of tax liability instead of the
current 50 percent.
House-Senate negotiators,
aware of Carter's threats to
veto
what
he
calls
inflationary and unfair tax
cuts, eliminated two items
opposed by !he president :

tuition tax credits and
indexing or adjusting tax
rates to compensate for inflation .
A whopping five-year , $165
billion tax cut authored by
Sen. Sam Nunn, [).{;a., also
was axed because Carter
called it inflationary.
The bill endorsed Carter's
proposal for the imposition of
taxes on unemployment
benefits for per90ns earning
$20,000 a year or more.
Political cootributions of up
to $100 would no longer be
allowed as an itemized
deduction, but the tax credit
for political contributions
would double to $50 for single
returns and $100 for joint

returns .

Carter scores again
By IRA R. ALLEN
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter must be
credited with a victory for
enactment by the 95th
Congress of an energy
program whose fate was in
doubt for 18 months.
But the end result was so
patched, compromised,
rewritten and amended that
few are sure just what be got .
Not long after the five-part
energy program ran into its
first wave of congressional
resistance last year, Carter's
description of it as the
"mora] equivalent of war"
had been converted in the
capital's back rooms to the
"moral equivalent of the
Vietnam War."
Final passage came after a
fmal14-hour Senate filibuster
Saturday and after the

HARVEST
OF VALUES
SALE CONTINUES
LIVING
BEDROOM
DINING

GIFT W/C

FREE
Coin-Purse/·
Key Ring
Our Gift

to You •••
Just for Coming In ...

FREE GIFT COUPON
(Entltlfl bearer to FREE Coin Pur,.)

Nam.----------------------------~di~L-----------------------

House , by a one-vote margin,
adopted a rule Friday night
allowing the five-point
package to go through as a
unit,
preventing
abandonment
of
the
controversial natural · gas
pricing measure .
Components
of
the
program include energy ,
taxes, conservation, utility
rate reform, industrial
conversion from gas to coal
and deregtilation of natural
gas prices.
" We have declared to ourselves and the world our
mtent to control our use of
energy and thereby to control
our own destiny as a nation ,"
the president said in reaction .
House floor manager
Thomas Ashley, D-Ohio; was
proud, too. "The bill will

reassure own own citizenry,
our allies and even perhaps
the critics that we can act. "
It wasn 'l an easy road to
passage - Ashley called it
"tortuous" -'- as Congress
discarded the president'&lt; $45
billion tax on crude oil, the
$20 billion tax on industrial
use of oil and gas and $50
billion in taxes on gasoline to
discourage use.
Eventually, the estimated
savings of 4.5 million barrels
of oil a day by 1985 were
scaled down to between 2
million and 2.5 million
barrels.
James Flug, head of the

ENROU N&lt;M
FOR NEW QUARTER
STARTING IN
DECEMBER
College- level diploma
courses in a year or
less ...
Secretarial
General office
Accoutning &amp;
Bus. Management
Limited Enrollment

We have more job calls

than graduates!

We do not employ sales
represent•tives nor use
telephone solicitation .

For information or cata log,
visit or call 446-2239 soon.

SOUTHERN HIUS
To be-valid, coupan muot be depOilted by an aduh
only. limit one per cuotomer. Offer goad only
during 10le. No purchaM neceosory.

SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS
Thomas C. Breech,
Director
414 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis
RN0585B
Bus. &amp;
Professtonal Bldg.
"Not iiHiliated with any

other school."

SENIOR CITIZENS

SALE
25% Off Purchase,
Just Present Your

Golden Buckeye Card
When ordering.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAU.EY

Contract termination could lead to layoffs

-------------------------. Ohio's large~t
Area Deaths 1
festival slated

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerol , U.. Mondav. Od . 16. 1978

Energy Action consumer
group, said passage marked
"a sad day for the American
people and the American

economy,'' because whatever
good was done in the
conservation and rate reform
portions of the measure was
outweighed by deregulating
natural gas prices.
He said it would cost
consumers $50 billion to $60
billion during the next eight
years and that the average
American will see higher gas
bills immediately.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
participated
in
who
filibusters against the
legislation during the past
two years, said the gasguzzler tax feature was
"nothing -a phony" because
of Energy Department esti. mates that it wouldn't save
much oil at all.
He had proposed a flat ban
on production of cars that get
low mileage.

Cardinals
(Continued from page I)
Sunday's fll'st four ballots
was signaled to a crowd of
about 300,000 people in St.
Peter's Square and millions
of television viewers around
the world by puffs of black
smoke from the 11-foot steel
chimney atop the Sistine
Chapel.
John Paul, the smiling
former patriarch of Venice
who reigned as pope only 34
days before dying of_a heart
attack Sept. 28, was elected
oo the fourth ballot in August
after just eight hours and 54
minutes of voting.
Though conclave election
deliberations are top secret,
church sources speculated
Sunday's four inconclusive
votes
meant
that
conservative and moderate
blocs of cardinals had been
unable to elect one of their
own men or settle on a
compromise candidate.
The church sources pointed
out that John paul's election
Aug . . 28 was one of the
. quickest in 300 Yil8fS and that
another one like it should not
be expected. But no conclave
!his century has lasted more
than four days.
The church sources said the
first round of ballots in the
·conclave were probably a test
of
strength
between
conservative cardinals - led
by Giuseppe Siri, 72,
archbishop of Genoa - and a
group of 'more moderate
cardinals who follow the
general policies of the late
Pope Paul VI wbo died Aug.

6.
The second group includes
such cardinals as Giovanni
Colombo, 75, archbishop of
Milan, and the so-called
"pastoral" candidates Corrado Ursi, 70, archbishop
of Naples, and Salvatore
Pappalardo, 60, archbishop of
Palenno, Sicily.
Church sources said Ursi
and
Pappaltrdo
could
eventually
emerge
as
compromise candidates
along with cardinals Pericle
Felici, 67, and Sebastiano
Bagglo, 65, both of the
Vatican
and
both
conservatives.
Still not to be counted out,
the sources said, was
Cardinal Giovanni BeneW,
57, the powerful former
assistant Vatican secretary
of state who Is now
archbishop of Florence.
The cardinals went into the
conclave saying it was
virtually certain that the
church's 455-year tradltloo of
an Italian pope would be
upheld, but the l!hurch
sources said the chances for
an noo-ltallan would grow the
looger the cooclave lasts.
Hadrian VI, a Dutchman
who died in 1523, was the last
non-Italian pope.

'

NELLIE F. LEMLEY
WALLACK W. AMBERGEI\
Mrs.
Nellie
Frances
Wallace W- Amberger, 61,
Chester , Meigs County's L&lt;!mley, 82, Route I, Port·
Veteran Service Officer, died land , died Monday morning
this morning at Holzer at
Vetera ns Memorial
Medical Cent'er. Mr. Am· Hospital.
berger was born Feb. 27, 1917,
Mrs. Lemley was a
son of the late George and daughter of the late James
Minnie Holter Amberger. He and America Holsinger
was a!Bo preceded in death by Lemley. She was preceded in
two brothers and two sisters. death by her first husband,
He was a veteran of World Benjamin · Franklin Burns;
War II, member of Drew her second husband, Fred
Webster Post 39, American Allen · Frizzle, two children,
Legion, Chester Methodist three brothers, a sister, a
Church and Free and Ac- grandson and a greatcepted Masoqs, Chester.
grandson.
Mr. Amberger is survived
Surviving are her husb;md,
by his wife, Margaret Franklin E . Lemley; a
Spencer Amberger, one son, daughter, Mrs. Cha~les (lola)
William of Chester; one Wilson, . Reedsville ; six
daughter , Mrs. Charles grandchildren, 10 great·
Caldwell
of grandchildren; a sister, Mrs.
(Peggy)
Columbus;
two grand· Iva Stewart, , Minersville; a
daughters, Carrie and brother, James White, Wells·
Cristina
Caldwell
of ville, and several nieces and
Columbus, and several nieces nephews.
Mrs . Lemley was a
and nephews.
Funeral services will be member of the Stiversville
held Wednesday I p.m. at Church.
Funeral services will be
Ewing Chapel with burial in
Pine Grove
Cemetery. held at 3 p.m. Wednesday at
Friends may call at the the Ewing Funeral Home
funeral home after 7 p.m . this where friends may call after
10 a .m. Tuesday. Burial will
evening .
be in Eden Ridge Cemetery.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Edith Watson, · Pomeroy;
Timothy
Herdman,
Pomeroy; Merle Manley,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges Barbara Pierce, George
Hupp, Avis Lawson, Celia
Hite.
Sunday Admissions ...!.
Charles Landers, Minersville; Arminta Hill, Portland;
Carolyn Buckley, West
Columbia; Eugene Un·
derwood, Tuppers Plains;
Gina Arnett, Pomeroy.
S~nday Discharges Hiram
Pauley,
Betty
Hanunonds, Ch11ries Knapp,
Sara Diddle, Mary Howell,
David Durst.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Ocl. 13
Maxine Arnold; Carnot
Bavan; Norna Canterbury ;
Roher! Chapman ; Jacob
Chevalier; Glenna Crisp;
Elam Dement; Vivian Ercher; Harriet Exline; Bert
Fayne; Toni Gabbert ; Nina
George; Donna Heffel!; Bonnie
Harrison;
Charles
Howard; Mrs. Jo,;eph Jones

and son; Vivian .J:unes; Mrs,

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - William
Stone, Ravenswood; Eldon
Vanscoy, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Hollis Brown, Jr .,
Gallipolis; Joan McDonald,
Cheshire; Mrs. Lonnie
Boggs, Gallipolis; Mrs . Emil
Gray, Letart; Mrs. Claude
Thornton,
Leon;
Jule
Campbell, Point Pleasant;
Tanna Pierson, Leon; Mrs.
James Mash, Middleport;
Mrs. Kenneth Hoffman,
Middleport; Stella Neal,
Point Pleasant; Nancy
Kearns, Letart; Mrs. Terry
Waugh, Crown City; Lewis
Johnson, New Haven; Laurel
Rollins, Point Plea~ant;
Norma Thomas,
Point
Pleasant; Cleo Phillips,
Syracuse; Donald K_elly,
Middleport; Ralph Gtbbs,
Letart; Mrs. Lewis Varga,
Thurman, 0.; Cecil Morris,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Michael
Marcum and son, Vinton;
Mrs. Homer Blessing, West
Columbia;
Mrs .
Jose
Caballero and daughter,
Buffalo; Jonathan Dickens,
Pomeroy ; .James Gillispie,
Pliny; Florence Kinder,
Point Pleasant; Edward
Roten, Gallipolis Ferry.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
Ualled Press Inlft'Utiooal
Even if the frost is on the
pumpkin, thousands ol people
will flock ·to Circleville in
central Ohio for the a11111al
Pumpkin Show Wednelday
through Saturday, the largest
.
festival in Ohio,
'The festival features a
pumpkin pie five feet in
diameter and weighing more
than 300 pounds.
More than 100,000 pounds of
pumpkins, squash and gourds
will be on display, along with
home arts and crafts, baked
goods and camed goodB,
flower show and art show.
Entertainment rilns from
until
midnight.
noon
Festivalgoers line
the
sidewalks for seven parades
and sample
pumpkinflavored food, including
pumpkin burgers, pumpkin
ice cream, pumpkin donuts,
pumpkin waffles, pumpkin
taffy and, not to be f«rgotten,
pumpkin pies.
Another late October
celebration Is the Fall
Festival of Leavea at
Bainbridge Saturday and
Sunday.
This festival focuses on the
changing colors of the leaves
and features folk arts, crafts,
music,
flea
markets,
midways, parades and four
drive-ityourseU tours.
· For an international flavor,
it's the International Institute
Family Folk Festival at
Stambaugh Auditorium in
Youngstown
Thursday
through Sunday.
Songs, dances, music,
foods, arts and crafts and
workshops represent 24
ethnic groups. The Annual

Five couples
end marriages .
In Meigs County commoo
pleas court two actioos for
divorce were filed, two were
granted and ooe marriage
was dissolved.
Filing foc divorce were
Doris Farley, Rt. I, Vinton,
against Delmus Farley,
Pataskala; Richard E.
Phillips, Middleport, against
Barbara
G.
Phillips,
Jacksonville, F1a.
Ina Catherine Meadows
was granted a dlv«rce from
Danny Lou Meadows and
Peggy J. Phllllps from
Matthew J . Phillips.
The marriage of Argyle
Uoyd Deeter an(j Fl«rence
Eloise Deeter was dissolved.

Folk Festival gala will be
part of Friday's agenda.
The Fifth Aruauil Bazaar
and Auction will be held .
Friday and Saturday at ·
Toledo's Southwyck Mall.
Quilts and other handmade
items will be on dulplay and
crafts will be demonstrated.
The auction will Qe held'
Saturday at II am.
Craftspersons demoostate
their skilled at the Harvest
Fest! val Sllturday and ·
Sunday at Hale Farm 'and
VIllage near
There will abo be old-time
music, apple butter making,
elder and pwnpkin pie. Tours
of the farm and village will be
available.
For those who enjoy the
outof-doors, weekend
camping programs are
planned at a couple of state ,
parks.
..
Tours and hllres to natural •
andhistorlcpolntsoflnterest, :
potluck
dinners
and •
cam[iires are on the agenda ;
for the Fall Campout at :
Cowan Lake State Park at '
Clarksville and at the :
Harvest Mooo Campout at :
Pike Lake State Park at ·
Morgaatown.
·
An Ohio Camping Rally will .
be held at the\ Hlllbrook ·
Recreation Area in Ottawa :
Friday through Sunday.
.
A special tour of the Cedar ·
Bog State Park Mem«rial :
near Urbana will begin at I ;
p.m. No reservations are -~
necessary.
.
The All-American Quarter ·
HorBe Congress, which began ';
Saturday,at the Ohio State :
Fairgrounds wraps up •·
Sunday.
.

Akron.

Luncheon
program ,,•
scheduled
•

The
Meigs
HumanResource Council will present'
a
luncheon
program
Tuesday,
October
17,
featuring five new community resources.
Included In the brief·
presentations will be Ellen
Bell, new Pomeroy librarian;
McLain,
new
Bonnie
education - . prevention
specialist with the Alternatives program; Carol
Tannehill, new well child
nurse; new Meigs county
school psychologist Sandy
Jackson;
and
Martha
Graves, who is bringing
energy to the area of urunet
child care needs in Meigs.
The public is invited to ·
attend the ·monthly meetings
at noon ·at the Meigs IM.

Arthur Kisor and daughter;
Richard Lawhorn; Clara
McMaster; Wili&gt;;~m Mulhns ;
Vtolet Nunnery; Marian
Preston; Carol Pugh; Ellison
MEETS WEDNE:SDAY
R&lt;lgland; Mrs. Robert RedRACINE
- The Southern
mond and son; Floyd Riffle;
Two
vehicles
were
Junior
High
School PTO will
Linda Rtffle; George Robert; damaged and one driver was
meet
at
7:30
p.m. Wednesday
Mrs. Frank Samatowitz and cited to mayor's court as the
son; Bertha Snyder; Herman result of an accident at the at the school. All parents of
Sprague; Mildred Stevens ; intersection of Walnut and junior high students are
Rhett Stidham; . Maxine North Second Sts. in Mid· asked to attend.
ATHENS
Tabur; Gloria Tribble; Mrs. dleport at 8:31 a.m. Monday.
LIVESTOCK SALES·
HArold Wheatcraft and son;
Police said a pickup truck
APPEAL REJECTED
Salunl•y,Oct. 14, " 78
Sandra Yates .
driven by Juris ·Senselds, 28, WASHINGTON (UP!)- The
Feeder Sleers («ll-800 lbs.)
Births, Oct.13
Athens, struck the rear of a Supreme Court today turned choice 53.50-47.76, good 31.50Mr. and Mrs. Herman car drtven by Glenn Enslen, down an appeal by Skokie, 53, Feeder Heifers (400-700
lbs.)50.50-60.50, good 33.50-50,
J r. Middlepo rt ·
Koby, daughter, Gallipolis.
Dl., officials who argued they Feeder Bulls (.00-800 lbs 1)
Discharges, Ocl. 14
The Enslen vehicle was could lawfully prohibit a Nazi choice 50.50-49, good -40-50.
Thelma Blankenship ; stopped at the traffic light. demonstration in the village
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
Joseph Bryant,· Landon Senselds was cited on an where many Jewish sur- lbs . ) 41 · 49. 10 ; Slaughte·r
,
Cows, utilities 36-41, canners
Burnett; Margaret Coast ; assured clear distance vivors of World War II live. and cutters 32-37.75.
It let stand aU. S. ·appeals
Veals (choice and prime)
Ferne Davts; Chad Duncan ; charge.
Elsie Farley; Lenore
court ruling that tbree or- 51-67 .50, Baby Calves (by lhe
head l 26-64.
,
Flowers; Carl Gardne, Jr.;
SEEK UCENSE
dinances adopted by the
Hogs (No. 1, barrows and
Hazel Guess; Gail Hart;
A marriage license was village board last year to gills, 200-230 ibs .) 51-52.20,
Elizabeth
Hobsteptcr; issued to James Nelson prevent
a
threatened Sows 35-~.50. Boars 37.50-48,
Rebecca James; Ayward , Morris, 23, Pomeroy, and demonstration violated the Pl~s (by the head.) 15-42.50.
Jones ; Virgil Justice; Mason ·~T~on:y~a~J~o~w:~se:·~·~1~8~,:P~om:ero:y~·-N:aZI:·s~·~~:.:to:,!free~.:=~-~eed;:;;e~r..:L:a~m~bs:.;5~4-;59~._.,
Kennedy; Vickie Kimbler ; _
Jessamine Lyons ; Ruth
Musser; Michael Nibert;
Sandra Parsons; Linda Roe;
Eveline Chamblin; Daryle
Sheets; Mrs. Dana Smith aQd
son; IA&gt;is SMtih; Doris
SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION
Stapleton; Michael Stone;
Goldie Terry; Lilian Thornsin : Jack VanL'C; Floyd
Walker ; Richard Wamsley,
Jr; Bobby Watson. Alan
Wi!liams.
Births, Oct: H
Mr. and Mrs. MArlin Potts,
son, Oak Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wells, son, EWington .
THERMAL TOP
Discharges, Ocl.15
A comfortable blend of cotton and polyester Is extra warm
Donna Beard; James
and resists shrinkage.
Broyles; Effie Buskirk; Roy
Double-ply Mck for added strength.
Tollcired to keep Its shape ·and retain fit.
Chamberlin; Steve Deeter;
Cut generously to avoid roll-up.
.
Robert Enyart; Mrs. Paul
Deep thermal pockets to keep In warm air, keep out the cold.
Fife and son; Virginia Hindy ;
Mrs . Gregory Hoffffilln and
THERMAL DRAWERS
daughter; Rhonda Jarvis ;
A comf..-table blend of colton and polyester Is extra warm,
Patricia Jewett ; Mark
and reslsls shrinkage.
Convenient self-cloolng fly .
Johnson; Melissa Johnson;
Heat resistant camfortable elaotlc waistband.
Dawn Knepper; Mary
Double fabric In fly and crotch for mortabsorbency ·
ld
Lambert; Lewis Louis Lee;
Deep thermal pockels to keep In warm air, keep
fhe co ·
Mrs. Danny McNeal and son;
Brenda Miller; Gregory
Miller; Ruby Mullins; Mrs.
Choose Regular or Deluxe.' All sizes Including
Michael Powell. and son;
Big Man _and Tall Man sizes.
Nancy R1chards; Donald
Roush; Linda Smith; Mrs.
John Stevens and son;
Also Boys Hanes
Underwear
Charlotte Thomas; Dewey
Whit• . Jr.
Births, Oct. 15
Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs.
Ronald Howell, son, Oak Hili.
Mr. and Mrs . Mitchell
m&lt;·il. dau~htm·. Wellstnn

Driver Cited
after mishap

ELBERFELDS

MEN'S Hanes®
THERMAL UNDERWEAR

out

j

n"

~herlnal

By JOHN T. KADY .
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Three large utilities pllin to terminate
contracts for nearly three million tons of coal from the
Con.lolldation Coal Co., threatening the jobs of hundreds .of
Ohio miners and costing Consol about $75 million , UP! has
learned.
The utilities are Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., Detroit
Edison and a utility in Michigan which was not named. The
three million tons is nearly hall of Consol's production in Ohio.
" Cleveland Electric Illuminating has advised us it is
reducing its coal contract with us by 100,000 tons this year," a
Con90! spokesman told UP!. "It is being done so .they can
stockpile low sulfur coal to meet the compliance deadline for
Environmental Protection Agency sulfur dioxide regulations.
"They have indicated it will be ·replaced by low •ulfur rnnl

j

Elberfelds In Pom

from other areas of the country ,"Southern West Virginia and
1
eastern Kentucky," sa id lhe spokesman.
·:The cutback will be 100,000 tons in 1978; 400,000 in 1979 and
in 1980will total a full1.6 million ," said the spokesman.
The remainder of the cutback will be made up by Detroit
Edison which will terminate contracts for LIS million a year
and by the other Michigan utility, which says it intends to
cutback on 450,000tonsof Ohio coal a year.
" In the last two weeks we have received either written or
verbal indications that approximately three million tons of
southestem Ohio coal will be down lhe drain by 1980," said the
spokesman.
.
Con!!Ol has four deep mines and six surface mines in eastern
Ohio and the spokesman said it did not know in which lype nf

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, October 17, 1978

mines the cutbacks in the work force will be made .
The firm employs about 2,000 persons in the Buckeye State
with an amual payroll of almost $39 million with a nother $.15
milhon in supply purchases.
"That's bad, that's real bad," said John Guzek , president of
Distr ict 6 of the United Mine Workers Union with headquarters
in Dilles Bottom, Ohio. "The EPA is going to put us out of
business . I don 't know what else to say."
The U.S. EPA last summer held hearings in St. Clairsville
and Cleveland to determine the economic impact on Ohio if
coal users are forced to sWitch to iow-suUur coal or install
expensive anti-pollution equipment because of EPA pollution
regulations.
U the economic impact is to be severe, as the EPA has
acknowledged it would he, then President Cart-. ran take

•

at y

action to alleviate U!e situation .
" I think the ultlities should at least wait until President
Carter makes his deciswn," said Guzek. " I don't think lhey
should be cutting back until he makes the decision to see which
way we will go."
Mea nwhile, the Supreme Court Monday rejected challenges
to a suUur-dioxide poilution..,ontrol pian imposed in Ohio by
the Environmental Protection Agency.
The justices let stand a 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
ruling upholding the pian, as well as a controversial computer
model on which it bases emission limit.s.
The plan for limiting pollution from Ohio's high s ulfur coni
was adopted m 1976 and attac ked by 32 companies, including
electric uhhties.

•

enttne

Fil'teen Cents
Vol. 2!1. No. 12!1

Meigs board increases
student credit hours
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Beginning with this year's
Freshman class, students at
Meigs High School will have
more work ahead of them to
complete
graduation
requirements as a result of
action taken at Monday's
regular meeting of the Meigs
Local School Board of
Education.
The
board
voted
unanimously to increase the
number of credits required
for graduation from 17 to 20
hours.
Discussing
the
recommendation with the
board were high school
principal James Diehl and
Tim Fisher, a guidance
counselor at the school. They
stated that the additional
requirements will provide
more motivation for students
and will cut down the number
of ·study hails offered.
Electives must be added to
the curriculum, however. It
was pointed out that there are
some classes now which
could easily tolerate more
students.
Dan 'Morris,
director of curriculum, also
recommended
the
requiremenl· lncr&lt;&gt;ase. · •· • ·
A letter from the Southern
Local School Board of
Education was read stating
that district is unable to make
full payment of $13,000 in
tuition
for
voca tiona!
students due to financial
problems. The board indicated it would like to pay
the Meigs board, $1 ,000 a
month until January and then
pay the balance.
• However, the Meigs board
indicated that it, too, is in a
financial bind and agreed to
ask the Southern board to
make the full payment before
January.
COMPLAINTS AIRED
Two parents appeared
before the board expressing
their displeasure over

!E
'

situations with their children.
One father said that his
daughter was suspended for
10 days for fighting with
another girf. He said the
other girl had provoked the
fight and that the girl had had
several other fights and he
felt his daughter was too
severely
punished
for
defending herself. However,
it was pointed out that a
hearing before Supt. Charles
Dowler is to be held in the
incident.
A mother appeared before
the board complaining that
her daughter was suspended
from riding on a school bus
for five days for fighting and
charged that last year a high
school student had struck her
daughter and was given only
a warning, but was not
suspended. She said she felt
rules should be the same for
all level students and that her
(laughter had been in no
difficulty before.
However, Dwight Goins,.

assistant

administrator,

stated 8afety on the buses is
important and reported that
in the particular incident, the
..driveritad to stop-the vehicle
and physically separate the
two girls thereby threatening
the safety of other students on
the bus . He also stated
suspension penalty should be
invoked for a first offense.
The mother also protested
that her daughter is having
difficulty with Algebra in the
junior high school and that
she had requested that her
daughter be allowed to transfer over to regular math since
she appears unable to handle
the Algebra.
Junior high principal John
Mora said the student in
question is not failing
Algebra and that allowing her
to change over would open
the door for other students to
make changes. This would be

The World Today

~-----------------Russian roulette fatal
.

FORT WORTH, Texas (UP!) - Police say a Southwest
High School student found dead of a gunshot wound in the head

apparently was playing Russian roulette.
Authorities Monday said the victim, wbose identity was
not released, was skipping class with another student and
sitting in a car parked near the school', waiting to be joined by
other boys. The youth apparently found a loaded gun in the
glove compartment of the car and shot himseU in the head
while playing Russian roulette, authorities said.

a problem because the junior
high does not offer a wide
variety of courses.
It was decided to hold a
conference with Mora, the
teacher, the student and the
mother to decide what steps
should be taken. The mother
charged that keeping the girl
in the Algebra course will
"lock her in, [or the entire
year. Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
board member, commented
that while students should be
encouraged to do their best
work, she also felt that it IS a
mistake to " lock a student
in ."
Richard Rupe, a parent,
also appeared before the
board urging it to seek a
gymnastics coach for g1rls
and to provide better track
facilities. The board mdlcated it has been unable to
secure a gymnastics coach .
However, Principal Diehl
indicated there is one

prospect at the present time
and he will look into that.
The board discussed the
track fa cilities and asked
Diehl to look into that
situat wn. Principal Mora
sa1d a junior high school girls
basketball coach is also still
needed .
OTHER BUSINESS
The board approved minor
fund transfers and d1scussed
in executive session leasing
the Rutland gymnasium to
Rutland village. -Thomas William Kennedy
was accepted as a tuition
student and Patricia Asbeck
and Donald Salmons were
a dded to the s ubstitute
teachers list.
The resigna lion of R&lt;llph

Stone as a bus drlver was
accepted and . hired as a
regular driver was Pam
Ogdin. Melvin Duff was
named a substitute bus driver
(Continued on page 10)

Bloodmobile
nets--48 units
Forty-eight units of blood
were collected Monday at the
October visit of the Hun·
tington Regional Blood·
mobile .
Twenty-five replacements
were made and four persons
were deferred. Joining the
six:gallon club was William
Radford. Robert W. Crow
was a first time donor.
The medical staff was
composed of Dr. L. D. Telle
and Dr. E . S. Villaneuva and
Mrs. Fern dora Story, RN.
The Child Conse rvation
League had charge of the
canteen.
Clerical workers were
Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Juanita Sayre, Mace! Barton,
Helen Pickens, Grace Drake,
Joyce Hoback, Erma Roush
and Vernon Nease.
Paul Sinart, /Neva Simms,
Betty Christopherson, Grace
Turner and Bernadina Meier
of the Retired Seni or
Volunteer Program also
assisted.
Donations were made by
Quality Print Shop, Meigs
Local School, The Daily
Sentinel,
The
Athens
Mes~enger, Pomeroy ER
Squad
and
Ve\erans
Memorial Hospital.
Donors were: Pomeroy Jeffrey Hilleary, Janet
Ambrose, Harten Wehrung,

Mary L. Starcher, Billy J .
Spencer, Ada Nease, Patricia
Imboden, Patricia Vaughan,
Pamela
J.
Vaughan,
Kathleen Wells , George
Harris, Mae Young, Homer
G. Baxter, Stacie Arnold,
Dorothy J. Oliver, Virgil
Windon , Howard P . Logan,
William M. Radford, Sally J .
Pi erce, Gerald Rough(,
Sheila J . Taylor and Marvin
E. Taylor .
Syracuse - Larraine M.
Cundiff, Richard Ash, Robert
W. Crow and Kathy Cuntings.
Cheshire - Charles W.
Searles.
Reedsvtlle - Richard S.
Barton, Mane Probert,
Mace! Barton and John Rice.
Gallipolis- James E. Stlk.
Middleport - Patricia L.
Craig, Martha J . Hackett,
Roger Morgan, Mark Smith ,
Sarah J . Fowler, Debra J.
Carder, and Freda Durham.
Rutland Donna M.
Davidson .
Racine - Donna Hill ,
Esther B. Smith, Rev. David
C. Harri s, Debra K.
Holsinger , William M.
Hoback, Marvin T. Hill and
Debbie Davis.
Minersville - Edwin Ash,
Marcia Arnold, Virginia L.
Davis and Carolyn A.
Charles.

American, Russian share prize

GRAND CHAMPION - The Meigs High School Flag
Corps was judged grand champion corps of all bands
taking part in competition held Saturday in Columbus .
Making up the prize winning group are, starting at the
bottom of the " E" formation at the left and moving clock::·:·:·:;.;.;:::;:·:::·:::::·::.·:·:·:·:::::::·: :·:·:·:::::-:·:·:·:::·:·:··

EXTENDED FORECAST
Th~rsda y
throu g h
Saturday, fair and cool
through the period, with
highs in the 50s aud lows in
the 30s.
.;:·:::·.::::·:·::::.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:::·:·:·:·:::·:·:·.

BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday
night named Betty Baronick
to fill the unexpired t erm of
former councilman Jim
Neutzling . Neutzii ng had
resigned earlier .
By a 4-1 vote, council approved the first reading on an
ordinance tha t im:reases
CHARLESTON , W.Va . . cable TV rates. Larry
(UP!) - An $l1.6 million Wehrung opposed the motion.
contract was awa rded
Paul Ger ard of PomTView
Monday by the West Virginia Cable met with counc1i for the
Department of Highways to second t ime r egardmg the
Bristol Steel and Iron Works new $1 per month ra te mto build the Ravenswood crease, a raise from $6 to $7
Bridge on the Ohio River.
whlle senior citizens and
The contract to lhe Bristol, disabled persons will be inVa. company calls for a 2,71(}. creased from $4 .50 to $5.25.
foot bridge on W.Va. 56,
With the increase in rates
linking Jackson County in residents will be offered a
West Virginia with Meigs home hox office chaMel and
County in Ohio
a Christian broadcasting
The firm will use . 11.3 chaMei. Both channels will
million pounds of structural offer 24-hour service . When
. steel, 522 ,000 pounds of the change is made , Chamel
reinforcing steel and 2,550 4 will be dropped and 5 and 13
cubic yards of coocrete.
will be combined.
Welded plate girders will
Meeting w1th council was
be used on West Virginia 's 82Mae Mayle rega rdi ng o
foot approach span and on
parking zone from Liberty
Ohio's six approach spans,
Cafe to Simon's Gift Shop.
totaling 904 feet . Trusses to
She stated that the no parkmg
be used on the lhree main
zone was hurting her
river spans ' will total 1,724
bu sine ss. Ma yor Clarence
feet.
Andrews and co uncil ex-

Bridge
contract
awarded

CLEVELAND (UP!) -Officials of the Ohio Deparbnent
of Na~ural Resources and Cleveland Metroparks are studying
the mysterious killing of hundreds of fish in the Rocky River on

.

"There was something in the water that got to the giU
-atructure of the fish ," said James JohnSon, cllief Metroparks
ranger. "It was like a paralysis and they were not able to take
in oxygen."

New surgiCBI technique found

Coosr•

'

.

plained act10n taken was
necessary becau se of vandalism in the area.
Mrs. Mayle asked ifa s1gn
could be placed in the area
stating that parking was
allowed after 6 p.m. Council
stated it could not at this
time, change its action until a
longer study is made of the
s it uation and until t hey
receive activity reports from
the police department. It was
also suggested council hire an
add itional polic e office r .
Council noted that it could not
afford another officer.
A letter from Fred Crow,
Village Solicitor, was read by
Jane Walton , clerk. The letter
stated that Charles Legar,
fire chief, had indicated there
are
several
unsightly
.buildings thai should be torn
down and removed . The
letter a!Bo stated that at one
time there were individuals
who would do such work
without any charge excepl to
retain the ma terials. Now it
appears there is no one who
wants to do this work free of
charge .
The letter further asked the
village appropriate monies
for removal of buildings .

Harold Brown, councilman,
stated the project was in·
eluded in a grant that was
turned down. Council at this
time does not have funds to
undertake such a project. It
was suggested that Legar
submit a list of t he house
buil dings and estimat ed
costs.
Crow also submitted a
letter regarding payment for
plastic to cover windows at
the senior high budding. The
Pomeroy Jaycees would do
the labor. Council voted to
purchase the plasti c not
exceeding $50.
Council, in other ~ business,
discussed an ordinance
prohibitirfg erection of new
signs or billboards along the

Fish killings under study

SAN FRANCISal (UP!) -A Texaa professor said today
improved SID'glcal techniques make it possible for a woman
wbo has undergone a mastectomy to be provided with a
natural-lool!lng breast- not just "a .mound that will fill a
brUIIIere."
.
•
Dr. Thomas A. C1'1111in, clinical professor of plastic slu-gery
al the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, said in a
repcrt prepared f«r delivery to the 64th annual Clinical
of the American College of Surgeons that the new
methods enabled doctors to reconstruct the breast with a
nipple-areola complex.
.

1

Brenda Foster, Patti Mitchell , Carrie Bearhs. Carlo
Snuth , Kathy Quivey, Sue Taylor, i.JJrra Wisecup, Jan
Bet.zing, Becky Dorst, Mnrgo Marti n. Angela Kennedy.
Sheila Horky, a nd Kell ee Rought.

First reading held,
council person named

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UP!) - Arno A. Penzias and
Robert 'W. Wilson of the United States and PiOtr Leontevitch
Kapitsa of the Soviet Union today won the Nobel Prize for
Physics, the SWedish Academy announced.
Kapltsa was awarded half the $165,000 prize, with the two
Americans sharing the other half.

Sunday.

Wlse are: Jam1e Sisson, Anita Musser Lori Faulkner,

·W eather

FLAG PRESENTED - District RepresentatiVe Ron
James, Meigs cotinty Sheriff Jan!es Proffitt, and Verne
Riffe, Speaker of the Ohio house of Representatives

presenting an Ohio state flag to the fifth grade class at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary Schoof, Monday afternoon .

Clear and cool tonight, with
sca ttered fr ost and lows in
the mid 30s. Sunny and
warmer Wednesday, highs in
the low or mid 60s.
Probability of precipitahon is
zero tonight and Wednesday.

so utherly side of Main Street
in Pomeroy from Minersville
to the west rorporation line of
the vtllage. The ordinance
declares it to be a nuisance
a nd provides penalties for
viulatiun of the ordinance.
Territ ory excl uded is from
Crow 's to the Middleport
co rporation it was indicated.
Council took no action on the
1)rd1nance until they discuss it
furt her with their village
SH]l('Jtor
Mayo!' Clarence Andrews
tnld rounc1l he had been
co nta cted by Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
regarding submission of a
joint application for a federa l
housing grant with Houe.ing
Ur ban Development. Council
agreed lo consider th e
proposal.
Council agoin requested a
month ly report from the
Board of Public Affairs.
Larr~· Wehn.ing , coun ~
ci lman, commented that they
had ap pro pri ated an ad·
ditionai $10,000 for water
improvement. Since t hat
time they have heard nothmg
from the water board.
Bill Young, councibnan,
s u ggested that additional
pa1·king meters be placed on
Court Street bet ween the
Amy Kings and Jones' lot and
the side entrance to the Blue
a nd Grey . Council agreed to
look mto the possibility of
addmg additional meters.
Wehrung stated that he
would like to set up a street
committ ee meeting Wed·
nesday at 6:30 p.m. He also
stated that traffic at the
bridge was still a problem.
We hrung
s uggested
a
meetmg be set-up with some
employees at 1301 and Phillip
Sporn and Mason County

a uthorities .
Mayor Andrews stated that
a li has been done that can be
to correct lhe situation. It
was suggested that inquiry be
made for a manual control at
the light on the Pomeroy side
of the bridge. Mayor Andrews
is to make the necessary
contacts.
Council also gave Mayor
Andrews authority to secure
tar to patch holes on the
parking lots. Council renewed
a taxi license for Anthony
Cardello and approved the
(Continued on page 10)

�2-The Daly Sentmel Muldleport Pumeroy 0 Tue..Wv Ot'l 17 1978

Ill WASHIIIGTOII
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Dems accept 'indexing'
Jly Martha Angle aad Robert Wallen

WASHINGTON (NEA) Imitation may be the Sincerest
fonn of flattery but there are llffies when the compliment
Is a I tile hard to take
Consider for example what has been happenmg to the
Grand Old Party this year on the 'lwm Issues of Inflation
and taxes
For most of the last decade Republicans on Capitol Hill
and elsewhere have been vigorously denouncing both
lnflat on and h gh taxes only to see their warnings Ignored
by the public and their programs Ignominiously defeated
by the maJor ty Democrats
Now that the voters have finally aroused who do you
suppose Is reap1ng the benefit' The Democrats that s who
and they are doing so 1n large part by shamelessly
plagiarizing great chunks of heretofore Republican economic doctrme
The tax b11l now nearmg enactment m Congress could
~aslly have been wr tten by al) all Republican cast but
I!Ven 11 pales m companson to recommendallons contamed
In a forthcom ng report of the J om I Econonuc Committee
• The JEC Is comprised of 12 Democrats and 8 Republi
cans drawn equally from the House and Senate Although
It has no legJSiauve JUrisdiction Its econorruc analyses
carry cons derable we1ght With Congress as a whole
And the JEC with the approval of Its Democratic
majonty 1s about to come out In favor of mflation-prooflng
the tax system by of all thmgs mdexmg
There IS nothmg mtellectually disgraceful about Index
lng On the whole t s an emmently sensible notion that
should have been ncorporated Into the tax structure years
ago But until now 11 has been the pr1vate preserve of the
Republican Party scorned and feared by Democrats
especially 1 berals
The details of mdexmg sound compllcaled to a layman
IIIII the results are srmple enough With an indexed tax
system wage-earners businessmen Investors and small
savers would pay mcome or capital gams taxes only on
realmcreases not nommal gains due solely to Inflation
Under the current system a worker who wins an 8
percent pay mcrease this year will see his entire wage gatn
wiped out by mflatJon But he may nonethel- wmd up
paymg more m mcome taxes because his nominal Increase
has shoved him mto a higher tax bracket A saver eal'lllllll
f percent Interest on a passbook savm1:1s account will
Rtually lose ground because inflation will eat away his
entire gam and then some yet he will bave to pay taxes on
the mterest he earns - adding maull to Injury
Indexing as outlined m the soon-to-be-published JEC
report would elumnate such distortions and Inequities by
wldemng bracketlrm1ts exemptions standard deductions
llild tax credits at a rate equal to the rise tn the Consumer
Price Index the precedmg year A •age-earner wouuld
then pay h1gher taxes only on the portion rl his pay
Increase wh ch exceeded the Inflation rate
One reason liberals have opposed Indexing tn the past Is
that the federal government rece1ves an Inflation dividend
1111der the exJSI ng system with revenues rlstng faster than
real growth In the economy
But Congress never lets the dividend grow too big When
It gets out of hand as It IS now Congress steP-' In to vote a
lnajor tax reduction so that the government s slulre of the
total econonuc pie remains roughly the same
Unfortunately these periodic taz reductions do not
always provide rel110f when It IS most needed and never
rorre&lt;:t all of the Inequities Inflation creates In the tax
system The small saver w1th the passbook account for
eaample will get no help from this year s tax cut
legJSiabon
The real reason Congress tn general and the Democrats
In particular have been so resistant to Indexing In the past
lo thalli would remove the necessity - and opportunity for penodic tax reductions for which they can claim
llolitical credit With Inflation now the cruelest tax of all
ltl.t Is no longer an acceptable excuse If the JEC report is
lillY clue the Democrats may finally recogniZe that fact

HEALTH
lawrence E lamb M D

Dt feahnga
'I'Ot belly
DEAR DR LAMB- You
hlld an article m our paper on
sit-ups not helpmg a pot bel
ly Could you please send
me the infonnatwn and exer
tises that may remedy this
Abo are there any other
nwt.hods or exerCises that
• will trun and f1nn a thick
maddle? I am short and tend
lo gam we ght m my stomach
llld abdomen I exerc se da
ly but my waiStline never
lolies any mches
DEAR READER - There
are two bas c reasons for hav
lng a pot belly One IS a lot
rtf fat either directly under
lhe skin which you can feel
ur 1ns de the abdomen around
lhe abdonunal organs Most
pouple don I realiZe that there
111 Wlually as much fat 1ns1de
lhe abdomanal cav1ty as there
Is outside ~&amp;~der the skin
The second reason JS loss of
muscle tone because the
lower abdominal muscles
areA I exerCised
Walking and most runrung
exerciSeS do not use the lower
juggmg or runrung IS done on
• flatsurface
If you lie down and do an or
dlnary SJt-up regardless as to
the technique rl domg the s t
11p you are only gomg to use
lhe upper abdommal
muscles If you want to test
lhls put your hand on the upper abdomen while you are
doing a Sit-up and you Will

-

The lower abdominal
lnllSCles are worked by domg
leg lifts This means lymg flat
m the floor and Willig the legs
u a weight against the lower
lbdominal muscles I would
caution that anyone who has
IIIICk trt&gt;ubles of any sort
lhould nut try these Without
hiving seen their doctor first
But you can do simplified ver
8lonll of these that do nut
llrain the blck and at the
time will help w
lllrengthen the lower ab-

F

o

da

he

3 TheDa ly Sent nel

BYREV HOWARDC BLACK
Ill W Seve~~tb It Mt CUmel JL.12113
Td~e (~)~

Peopletalk
By KENNE'111 R CLARK

Ualted Preas llltematloulll
FAME S CHILDREN The Anmes and the orphans all got
togelher Monday night m Hollywood at a party celebrating the
West Coast tpenlng of Annie Star of the party as well as the
show was 11 yearold Purtcla Puta Also oo hand were
Andrea McArdle now 14 who played Little Orphan Annie oo
Broadway and Keeae CUrtll who does Daddy Warbucks m
both productioos O.lelle Brisebois the lltUest orphan m
the Broadway version - was there too celebrating the takeoff
of her own career She Uplay the young Judy Garlaad In the
NBC TV mov1e Rainbow WJth costars Doa Murray Piper
Laurie and Michael Parks directed by Jaclde Cooper who
grew up With the oroemal Rambow g1rl

THE ALMANAC
United Press International
Today IS Wednesday Oct
18 the 29151 day of 1978 w1th
74 to follow
The moon IS between ts full
phase and last quarter
The mornmg stars are
Jupiter and Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mer
cury Mars and Venus
Those born on this day are
under the SlgD of Libra
American actor George C
Scott an Academy Award
WUUler m Patton was born
Oct 18 1927
On thiS date m history
In 1776 the boundary
between Maryland and
Pennsylvania was f nally
settled It was to be known as
The Mason Dixon Une
In 1959 RusSia clauned to
have taken the f1rst pictures
of the far Side of the moon
In 1977 three Jailed West
German
terrorists
comnutted sonc1de and a
fourth stabbed herself
PUBLIC NOTICE
the Court of common
P us
Juven e
Court
D v son Me gs County Oh o
n

SUMMONS

case No 22497

Doc 2 Plie 196
Ta C1 I R

Hyse

Juven e

Probet on Off cer of Me gs

Coun v Oh o
You a e
ommanded
o
no y Ve non Combs Ad
d ess Unknown
tha
a
camp an has been
ei:l n
h s Cou
ha
C ndy J
Oh nge age.( yea s 0 0 B
3 4 9 4

CHILD OF FAME The celebrities were among the fans
Mmday night at New Yorks Grande Finale n where Lorna
Lull - daughter of the late Judy Garliuul and s ster of Uza
MillllelU -debuted her nightclub act She got applause from
her father Sid Lull Pat Lawford and cliildren Norman
Maller Soupy Sales and Andy Warbol among others Sister
Liza missed the opener bUt got there m time for the second
act

appea s

neg ec ed and

ch

o be a

dependen

d

HELEN AILING New York Gov Hugh Carey showed up at
the Helen Hayes Hospltalln West Haverstraw N Y ~onday
to BIIIIOIIIIce a $500 000 grant for a new research center for
bram-damaged children But Miss Hayes for whom the
hosp1talls named dido~ make 1t The 78-year-&lt;Jld actress has a
respiratory disorder and IS confined to bed but her
housekeeper says she IBll t seriously ill

QUOTE OF 1HE DAY Blslwp Daniel Pllarczyk of
Cincinnati who is of Polish ancestry 1n reaction to the electiOn
ol Polish Cardlllal Karol Wojtya as Pope John Paul II
Polack jokes are out

GLiMPSES Damly Tbomu was the toaSUnaster and Diana
Ruu the star entertainer Mmday mght 1n New York at the
awards blnquet of the Federat1m of Mouon Picture Pioneers
dununal muscles
honoring Dr Julea Stela-founder of the MuSic Corporation of
If you get the fat out and America
New York Yankee Pilcher Ron Guidry will be
off and lone up the muscles honored as 'the best arm in major league baseball Oct 26
you can do a lot for the pot To when Remlngtm Arms and Sport Magazme present hun w1th a
giVe you more Information on 13-lnch baseball trophy at Gallagher s m New York
Jack
this relat vely common pr&lt;&gt;- Albert11011 returned to work m the set of his TV series
blem I am sending you The
Grandpa Goes to Washingllm m Hollywood Monday after a
Health Letter number 3-7 three-week absence for Intestinal surgery Jane Fonda has
G rth Control Avoiding The been named female star of the year by the National
B g Middle other readers Association of Theater Owners
The Veterans Ad
who want lhls ISSUe t'lln send ministration has gJVen the AdliJinistrawr s Award one of 1ts
50 cents With a long stamped highest honors to producer Jerome Hellmaa for 'Conung
self-addreSsed envelope for Home a movle VA chief Max Cleland himself a VIetnam vet
11 Address your request to says gave the American public 1ts first compassiOnate and
me m care of lhls newspaper sensttive perspective of the VIetnam era veteran
P 0 Box 1551 Radio City Sta
ton New York NY 10019
1
DEARDR LAMB-lama
16-year~ld g rl but feel like a
5(}-year~ld woman because r-----------------------,
of those homble bags under
my eyes I don I understand
why I get enough sleep most
oflhemght
I found out that those bags
nught he due to lack of exer
elSe of the lower I d rl the eye
and 11 was suggested that I
pract ce closmg the eye by
brm~ ng up the lower lid m
stead of lowering the upper
one I tried that and after a
while I gave I up smce no
fast change was OCt'IIITing
DEAR READER - The
f1rst lhlng 1s to fmd out what
you really mean py bags
under your eyes One cause
for swelllng of the lower eye
1ds IS the accumulation of
flwd This is most apparent in
the mormng when a person
f1rst gels up Why? Because
flwd tends to run downhill
If you are Silting up the
11) 98byNEA• ~ho~
head 1s above the heart and
drains down to the heart and
the face and the eyelids don t
You re JUSt considering the negat ve as
tend to swell When you lie
peels of cion ng What If they d1d Cheryl
down the fluids m the tissue
T1egs?
move nto the facial area and
the lower lids swell If you
have marked swelling of the
eyes you need a medical ex
In 1974 the atergate
arrunaUon to find out why you that s what it 18 about the on coverup tr lal jury heard a
have flwd accumulating m ly lh ng that can he done 18 tape recording In which
--'dent Nix
told ide
these areas
the surgical removal of the Pr....
on
a
Another cause for puffy fat pads You are probably Jobn
Dean lo try lo Blop the
eyea is a 111nall fat pad m too young for this opt;rat on Watergate burglary
'
thatarea This little fat pad depending entirely on the Investigation
before II
may be a familiar of m nature uf
llags ) ou are Implicated While House
If lescnbin~
hented charat'ler1st
perDU.eI

w
ld
Berry 5 or

-----rl'ln----

By Jane E Mo

0

7

s

Ch et Deputy C e k

c

FORECLOSURE

NOTICE OF

In The Cour of

common Pleas

Me gs County Oh o

NOTICE
OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DEL NQUENT LAND
TAXES BY ACT ON IN
REM
BY
COUNTY
TREASURER OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO

Pub c No e s hereby
g ven ha on he 4 h and 6 h
day o Oc obe
978
he
coun y T easu e o Me gs
Coun v Oh o
ed a om
p a n n he Cou
o Com

mbn P eos of Me gs Coun y

Oh o at Pomeroy
o he
fo ec osu e o
ens to
de
nquen
a x es
assessments pena t es and
cnaroes aga nst cer a n rea
p ope y s ua ed
n such
Coun y as desc bed n sa d
ca mp an
Theob ectof heac on s o
ob a n
om
he co u
a
udgmen o ec os ng he ax
ens aga ns such ea es a e
and o der ng he sa e of such
he sa s ac
ea es ate o
on o he ta x ens he eon
Such act on s b ough
aga ns he rea p operty on y
udgmen
and no pe sona
sha be en e ed he e n
The pe m anent pa ce
numbe o each parce n
c uded n such ac on he fu
s ee add ess o he pa e f
ava abe a desc p on o he
pa ce
a s a emen of he
amoun
o
aM.es
asses smen s pena es and
cha ges due and unpa d on
such pa ce and the name
and add ess of he as known
owne
he eof es such ap
pe~
on the gene e tax st
a I as more fu
set to th n
hecompan areasfo ows
CST OA Co umb a Town
sh p Me gs Coun v Oh o Lot
No 6 20 W s de of N
T G
C av addres&amp; unknown
Be ha
C av
add ess
unknown the unknown he rs
dev sees
ega ees
ad
m n s ato s executa s and
o ass gns o Be ha Clay f
deceased the unknown he rs
ctev sees
legatees
ad
m n s ato s execu o s and
o ass gns of T G C ay f
deceased $ 1 3 07 Se No 78

v

DLT 5

-------------=-:=:-=,_..,.,..,.,...-.,...,....J MeSUTvs 0CounSu von OhTownsh
p
o 5 47

u"'

Po neroy 0 Tuesday Oct 17 1978

Morton
regains
form,
I
Eastern's 1978 E ages
Broncos drop Chicago

The Open Road
SOMEBODY EVERYBODY ANYBODY AND NOBODY
How well do you know your neighbors and your
neighborhood' Too well some nughtthink but probably llj)t
well enough Most of us are slr~mgers to the other people on the
same block
Fred Sonlebody Tboma.s Everybody Peter Anybody and
Joe Nobody were neighbors They all lived on the same block
In an average neighborhood of a certain town However they
were such off people - different from you and me -difficult to
understand and the way they lived was a shame to the
cmunumty
Everybody was always too busy to be fnendly With h1s
neighbors Anybody wanted to he friendly but he was afra d
Somebody wouldn t be very soc able So guess who was the
friendly perliOII m that neighborhood Uh-hub Nobody You
and I would not have enjoyed livmg m that community
Really Nobody was the only hosp table person of that
ne ghborhood Nobody visited With the others Nobody worked
m cmununity projects One tune the ne~ghborhood needed a
perm to represent their mterests at a common ty meeting
Everybody thought Anybody would do 11 and Anybody thought
Sonlebody ought to do It bot do you know who did 1t • That s
right Nobody
A new ne~ghbor moved Into the commumty one day
Everybody thought that Somebody would welcome hun to the
neig!lborhood Anybody could have made an effort to do 1t
Well you probably know who finally did 1t You re r1ght
Nobody
This UtUe story bnngs to focus once agam the fact that
each me of us is personally responSible for makmg our
neighborhood a fnendly enjoyable conunumty m wh1ch to
live If helpful and courteous ne ghborliness 1s just left to
somebody anybody and everybody nobody will do t
We all have to put forth our best efforts 1n bemg a good
neighbor We really aren t as Fred Somebody Thomas
Everybody Peter Anybody and Joe Nobody Or are we•

MI~dlepurt

at es n N

~

Sec 2 T 2 R

J

Oh o Company s Purchase
Le'l' s Hudson 1 1 v ng
add ess
unknown
If
dectasod ho unknown ho "
dev sees
ega tees
ad
m n s olo sexeculorsondo
ass gns of Lew s Hudson he
unknown spouse 1 any of
Lew s Hudson Ann e H ud
~o n
f
ng
add en
unknown

deceased

he

SUT 02 OVT 02 Su on
Twp
Me gs Coun y Oh o
0
gas en d o he m ne sa s

EXCEPT coa
unde y ng
00 a cr es mo eo ess n 160
a e L o 2 9 T 2 R 2 Oh o
Com p any s Pu c he5e 0 ve
T wp
M e gs Coun v Oh o
0
ga s and o he m ne a s

u de

y ng 95 A

R

Pu c ha se

Oh o

The

n S 29 T 3
Company s

m n ng

n

tees s n 60A n s 29 T 3 R

Oh o Company s Pu
chase 30 A S 29 T 3 R 1
Oh o Companv s Pu chase
0 A S 29 T J R 1 Oh o
Company s Pu chase
0 A
S '29 T 3 R
Oh o Com
pany s Pu chase
COAL
under y ng 6 A S 29 T 3
R
Oh o Company s
Pu Chase
EDNA
D
CORYELL
f
v ng 2430
Chann ng Way
Be key
Ca f
f deceased
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega tees adm n st a o s and
o ass gns o Edna cot ye
dec
he unknown spouse f
any of Edna Co ye
8 F
Pu nam
v ng whose as
known add ess s Mar et a
Oh o
deceased
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ees
a dm n s a o s
executors and a ass ons of B
F Punam dec RUDOLPH
W GLASNER
f
v ng
add ess
nknown
deceased the unknown h.e s
dev sees
ega ees
ad
m n s a o s execu o s and
o ass gns o Rudo ph w
G ftS e
de
OHN 0
AMES
vno
add ess
unknown
deceased
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ees
adm n s a o s
executa s and or ass gns of
John o Ames dec $4 7 09
Se
No
78
DL T
4a
$
92 25 Se No 78 DL T l 4b
RV02 RufandV age
Me gs Coun y Oh o Lo :.2
Fa on s Add on Ru and
ex 20 ee o E s de &amp;
ang e o W s de
Ca a
Cha
eon
add ess
unknown
deceased
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ees
adm n s a o s
execu o s and o ass gns o
c ara Cha e on dec
he
unknown spouse
f any o
C a a Cha e on $36 82 Se
No 78 OL T e
RU OJ Ru and v age
Me gs Coun y Oh o
s2
ac es sw co ne S 26 T 6 R
4
AMES PHELPS whose
ast
known
address
s
Ru and Oh o
v ng
d ec eased he unknown he s
dev sees
ega ees
ad
m n s a o sand o ass ons o
James P h e ps dec
he
unknown spouse f anv o
Les e Phe ps de CLAUDE
A SHLEY whose as known
address s M dd epo
Oh o
he
ng
deceased
unkn o wn he s dev sees
ega tees adm n s a to s and
o ass gns o Cia ude Ash ey
he unknown spouse
any o
C aude Ash ey name and
add ess unknown W L BUR
A SHLEY whose as known
add ess s M dd epo
Oh o
ng
f dece.!sed
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ees adm n s a o s and
o ass gns o W bu Ash ey
he unknow spouse f .!ny of
w bu Ash ey na me and
add ess unknown
MAY
QU VEY whose as known
add ess s
5 M
S
A hens Oh o
v ng
f
deceased he unknown he s
dev see s
eg a ees
ad
m n s a o s and o l!ISS ons
o May Qu vev he unknown
spouse
anv
of May_
Qu vey name and address
nknown
R CHARD
DENSMORE
whose last
known add ess s Ga away
Oh o
v ng
deceased
he unknown he s de sees
ega ees lldm n s r:a o s and
o ass gns of R cha d Den
smo e he unknown spouse
f any o R cha d Oensmo e
name and add ess unknown

Bryan While &amp;-2 180 lbs
Senior End

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
LOS ANGELES ( UPI - When I was a kid all caught up With
baseball lever espec ally at this time of year we called It the
World Serious because to us tbat s what t was - more
unportant than war flood or famme
Looking around me I notiCe there st II are a surprtslngly
large number who equate the World Series m approxunately
the same terms today and that s worthy of note f for no other
reason than many of those who feel that strongly about it get so
carr1ed away they frequenUy become more emotiOnally
mvolved than the players themselves
W111mng the pennant represents a far more saUsfymg sense
of accompl shment than wmnmg the World Senes to most
players And 1t should because 11 mvolves all their phys cal
and mental capac1tJes over SIX months and 162 games
compared w th a week and a half and seven games at most that
t takes for the World Ser es
Talk to Bobby Thomson about that sometime Thomson you
may remember was the fellow who h t the rruracle home run
for the New York Gants m the nmth mrung of their fmal1951
playoff game with the Dodgers and t became known as the
shot heard around the baseball world because 11 won a peMant
for a team that was 131&gt; games back m August of that year
We were so emotionally drarned after that the World
Senes agamst the Yankees that year was somethmg of an
anticlimax says Thomson
It showed too as the Yankees beat the GJants m the ser es m
Slx games
The mtense fan interest m this ongomg World Senes between
the Yankees and Dodgers JS reflected by the unprecedented
coverage liS getUng from the var ous forms of the med a
Normally if you were a ball player you d f gure this was
good but ball players don t always figure normally
Most of them feel t s the media more than the oppos1t on
which produces most of the pressure on them and they may
be right m that respect although if they are they must share
some of the responsibility lor trymg to live up to what they feel
IS their public unage
I remember one well-known catcher frettmg and nervously
b1tmg hls naUs on the eve of a World Senes game and saymg to
a busmessman acquamtance of his Sure you go to work
tomorrow and f you make a nustake 11 s nothing anyone s
gonna hold agamst you But If I strike out 20 mill on people
watchmg me on TV are gonna remember t the rest of their
lives and never let me forget It e ther
Don Sutton who goes agamst the Yankees Catfish Hunter
tonJght hopmg to keep the Dodgers alive m game No 6 IS as
susceptible to pressure as anyone else but he knows how not to
let 11 get the best of hun Every profesSional should have that
capabil ty Not all do though
Pressure IS an overused word Sutton says
L o o k he goes on nobody s gomg to shoot me at sunrise
on Wednesday mornmg If I lose Tuesday n~ght My wife and
children are still go ng to love me And I m still gomg to have
to drive m the car pool on Wednesday
By lookmg at tomght s game that way Sutton takes some of
the pressure off hunself He also has that I tile speech of h s
down pat and the reason I know that IS because I heard hun
make exacUy the same me durmg last year s World Ser es
The Yankees were up then three games to one and if they
won the fifth game they would have closed out the Dodgers
Suttoo was tapped to pitch that game and he went out and beat
the Yankees 10-4
That kept the Dodgers alive at least for one more game
Suttoo s hemg asked to do the same thing agarn now He
hopes he can E1ther way he s not fwng to get up at sunrise
tomorrow

14 3 c

N THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
ME GS COUNTY OH 0
CARL A RITCH E
P alnt ff

vs

NORMA RITCH E ET AL
Defendants

By JIM COUR
UPI Sports Writer
WS ANGELES UPI)
l.Als Angeles Dodgers skipper
Tommy Lasorda sounded
f1ghtmg mad Mooday
In the wake of three
straight World Senes defeats
at Yankee Stad urn mcluding
a 12-2 shellacking by the New
York Yankees Sunday
Lasorda defended
hs
Nat onal League cbamp ons
I don t understand
Lasorda told an off-day news
conference why everyone
says we have to get over
these mental thmgs about
playmg the Yankees
We played two great
games agamst the Yankees
right here 1n our own ballpark
and we could have score1 f1ve
or SIX more runs m the third
game as well were t not for
some great p ays by Gra1g
Nettles Plus we were
leading the fow lh game unt 1
that play when the ball hit
ReggJe Jackson
There s no mental block
and we II prove that Tuesday
because we re going to wln

Randy Browning 5-9 155
lbs Senior Tailback

Tuesday
Yankee Manager Bob
Lemon whose club now has a
3-2 edge and can wrap up Its
second straight world
champwnsh p tonight at
Dodger Stadium sa d If we
lose t now we have only
ourselves to blame
Asked how he felt alter the
Dodgers won the first two
World Series contests at l.Als
Angeles he replied I was
scared Witless Only he used
a different word
Lasorda was mcensed by a
New York newspaper story
Uoat suggested his mfielders
101ght be better suited to be
deSignated hitters because of
Uoe preponderance of errors
they cormmtted m the three
Yankee Stadium losses
These guys he pomted
out are the guys who got us
here over 162 games and then
the playoffs They d dn t
deserve to be cnt ciZed as
des gnated hitters That s
JUSt It they have a couple of
bad games and some guy
wr tes this stuff I don I

Woody blames injuries
for Buckeye mistakes

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI) Ohio
State Coach Woody Hayes
admitting h s Buckeyes are m
an unusual s tuaUon after
Saturday s 27 16 Big Ten loss
to Purdue vowed Monday to
have a good football team
before the season IS over
We rem an unusual Sllua
Uon Hayes rold hJS weekly
press conference
In that
we ve lost as many as we ve
won
What will we do? We U go
back to work Who am I to
think we should WID all our
football games No matter
what you read or hear I am
not an egomamac That guy
out there at West Lafayette
(Purdue Coach Jun Young)
did a whale of a JOb
Hayes sa d there were a
lot of facets contnbuting tll
the Ohio State loss to Purdue
referrmg to early mistakes
which kill~ off potential
Buckeye scoring drives
mcludtng fumbles on the
Boilermaker 20 and 11 yard
lines and some lliiXed up
plays
They were all little
SHENANDOAH Iowa hard r1ght and left punches w thmgs sa d Hayes not b1g
(UPI) - Msny of the players the head at 22 seconds after until you gel down to the 11
In the 1978 World Ser es wear the start of the filth round
yard line Five hundred
The fight was one-6lded and yards doesn ~ mean a damn
gloves manufactured by a
man who began his career by Gush ken was too fast and thmg
making farmers shucking powerful for the South
He blamed the mistakes m
Korean challenger WBA s a rash 9f m)urles which
gloves and husking hookS
Byron Raldt founded a No 4 JUniOr flyweight forced hun to use less
manufacturmg company m contender
expenenced players
1928 and worked at It unW his
Gush !ken took command In
Hayes said he was
the second round during unpressed wlth the play of
death earlier th1s year
In 1967 Ra1dt made an which he scored several hard freshman quarterback Art
agreement with another punches to Chung s lace and Schlichter but not because of
glove manufacturing body
the youngster s 354 total
company to produce handball
yards came wlthm $IX of the
gloves and left handed
single game Oh1o State
TOKYO (UPI) - Homers record
batting gloves Eventually
the firm was pfO(Iucing 60 000 by Charlie Msnuel Fujio
A lot of thmgs go mto
left-handed gloves annually Sumi and Katsuo Osugl winning a football game
By 1977 crmpany officials enabled the Yakult Swallows
said more batters were to beat the Hankyu Braves 1().
wearing their product In the 6 Sqnday and even the best 6-4 Sunday to wm the Count
W&lt;rld Series than all other 1lf«ven Japan pro baseball Godo Trophy at the Royal
brands combined
cbampionship series at one Barcelona Tennis Club and
game apiece
earn top prize money of
The
Swallows
who $21000
clinched the Central League
After Wlnnlllg two of the
pemant Oct 4 f&lt;r the flrsl
TOKYO (UPI) - Yoko time tn their 28-year history first three sets Nastase
Gushlken of Japan stopped scored four runs In the third wanted to continue With the
South Korean challenger two runs In the second and fourth without a break But
Chung Sang D In the fifth sixth and ooe run in the tournament officials inalBted
on the 15;nlnute break and
round of a scheduled Iii-round fourth and eighth
Nastase WeDt m to lose the
II tie match Sunday and
final
two seta
retained his Wprld Bolling
In the women a final 1&amp;BARCELONA
Spain
Association (WRA) junior
(UPI l - Balasz Tarocllf of yearold Hana Mandlllkova of
flyweilhtliUe
Gushlken 23 finished Hungary outlalted Rcmanlan Czechoslovakia won her
O!ung wfth a ctmbinalion of me Nastase 1-6 7-5 4-6 w second consecutive Grand
)

..

( 10 3

Dan Spencer 6-0 190 lbs
Senior Fullback

srud Hayes and Art would
he the first to agree He s
dooe an amaZing job lor a
freshman p1ckmg up our
offense But the yardage one
gets doesn t get the Job
done
Schlichter had the best
paSSing day of hJS young
career
agamsl
the
Bo lermakers h1ttmg 20 of 34
for 289 yards WJlh hiS only
interception commg on a
desperatiOn throw n the
closmg seconds
What has helped hJS passmg? Hayes asked We ve
shortened up hiS throws And
that also has opened up the
long ones
Hayes sa d Rod Gerald the
former
all B g
Ten
quarterback who Hayes
moved to spilt end to make
room lor Schlichter will be
out three to four weeks WJth a
bone chlp m his left elbow
Gerald caught a 60-yard TO
pass from Schlichter pnor to
JS mjury
L nebacker
Tom
Cousineau who again led the
Buckeyes m tackles With 19
givmg him 122 for the year
sustamed a hip pomter In the
game Hayes said and will
101ss most of the week s
practice
We had more than our
share of mjunes
said
Rayes Are our players not
In shape' No I thought they
hit hard
Schlichter was named the
offensive back of the week for
hiS performance against
Purdue and tight end Jimmy
Moore who was Injured
making a divng pass
reception the lmeman of the
week
Defensively tackle Byron
Cato was named the
outstanding performer

gur

compel \lon for the top
quarterback JOb completmg
7 of ll throws for 74 yards
It was mce gett ng back 10
there espec ally after every
body had wr \ten me off n a
matter of a week he sa d
Morton refer ed to specula
t on the past week that he was
be ng ~ mped as Denver s
s ar n~; qu arterback
fo ow111g Coach Red M Uer s
announcement that Penrose
a bird year veteran bad
been g ven the startmg nod
for Monday rught s game
The
Broncos
und er
Penrose s d1recl on scored
early m the f rst quarter on a

ThiS was probably my
best game of the year sa d
Morton who was awarded
the game ball by h1s
teammates
AnytllTle you
get the protection that I got
you can pass
Morton relegated w back
up quarterback beh nd
reserve Cra g Penrose for the
Ch cago game got the
opportwuty to show h s ski! s
late m the second quarter
after Penrose suffered a
rrunor shoulder separat on on
a sack and was s delmed
Penrose before his depar
ture was m the m dst of
g v ng
Morton
st ff

45-yard ecord-settmg Jun
Turner field goal to go mto
halftime with a ~ lead The
r eld goal was the 283rd of
Turner s career makmg hun
the second leadmg aU-tune
r eld goal booter m NFL
h stor) behmd George
Banda
Late m the open111g per od
Ch cago moved to Denver s 2yard !me on a spectacular 76yard run by Walter Payton
but the Bronco s Orange
Crush defense p eva led as
cornerback Steve Foley
111tercepted a pass thrown
11110 the end zone by Roland
Harper

Ohio grid standings

Lasorda fighting mad

Today

FLOSS E PHILL PS whose

as known add ess s Logan
Oh o f
ng fde eased he
unknown he s dev sees
ega ees adm n s a o s and
o ass gns of F oss e Ph
ps
he unknown spouse
any o
F oss e Ph
ps name and
address unknow n REVA
SMITH whose as known
add ess s Logan Oh o
f
I v ng
deceased
he
unknown he rs dev sees
ega ees adm n s ra ors and
o ass gns of Rev a Sm h he
unknown spouse
eny of
Reva sm h name and ad
dress unknown HAROLD
PH LL PS whose as known
add ess s Ma on Oh o
v ng
f dec ease d
he
unknown hers dev sees
ega ees adm n s a o s and
o ass gns of Ha o d Ph
ps
he unknown spouse
any o
Ha o d Ph ps name and
ada ess unknown
DALE
PHELPS whose as known
add ess s R
w aynesbu g
Pa f v no t deceased the
unknown hers dev sees
legatees adm n s a o s and
o ass gns o Da e Phelps the
unknown spouse
anv o
Oa e Phe ps name and ad
d ess unknown
BESS E
SIDERS whose as known
address s R u and Oh o
I v ng
f deceased
he
unknown he s dev sees
ega tees adm n s1 a ors and
or ass gns of Bess e s de s
he unknown spouse f any o
Bess e S de s name and
adress unknown
ELV RA
BARR
whose
a~
known
address s Langsv e Oh o
v no
deceased
he
unknown he rs dev sees
eQatets adm n s ato s and
o ass gns of E v a Ba r- the
unknown spouse f any of
Elv a Barr
.name and
ad ess unknown HELEN
SARLE S whose est known
address s Hamden Oh o f
'V no
f deceased
the
unknown he s dev sees
egatees adm n s ato s and
or ass gns at He en Bar es
he unknown sj:)ouse f any of
Helen Barles name and
add ess unknown
S7 83
Ser No 78 DLT 9
PV 02 V age of Pome oy
Me gs Coun v Oh o T 2 R
13 Lots 124 and 25 A so lot
20 X 8Q I ROGER DAVID
SON P 0 Box 54 Pome oy
Oh o
45169
CLARA
OAV DSON f v ng whose
ast known address s c o
Paul nt Her en 470 Map e

Rusty Wigal &amp;-1 180 lbs
Senior Guard

By JAMES LAWRENCE
DENVER (UP!)
Cra1g
Morton IS hopmg his perlor
mance n the Denver
Broncos Monday mght 1&amp;-7
tr umph over the Ch cago
Bears will put an end to talk
that he s over the hill and
should be dumped In favor of
youth
The 35 year-old veteran
s1gnal caller connected on 8 of
13 passes for 109 yards w
gu de the Broncos to their
v1ctory over the Bears
before a crowd of more than
75 000 wildly cheering fans
dressed m orange and a
natwnal telev SIOO and1ence
Denver s now S-2 on the
season and leads the AFC
Western D1v Slon

blame
em for be ng
annoyed
He noted Regg e Jackson
the Yankees des gnated
hitter was hittmg 444 w th
SIX RBI while the Dodger DH
duo of Lee Lacy and Rick
Monday was h t11ng under
200

Lasorda sa d
I m
d sappomted yes n our
des goaled h tters I was
hopmg Lacy would h t more
Durmg the season he was our
best hitter commg off the
bench he h I f1ve pmch hit
homers
Lemon a member of the
baseball s Hall of Fame who
won 20 games seven different
times w th the Cleveland
lnd1ans admitted he didn t
think the Yankees would
sweep three m a row at
Yankee Stadium
But thi S he qu ckly
added JS the kind of ballclub
that plays one game at a time
and they feel they can wm
every ballgame they re n

Ohio College Football Records
By United Press Internal onal
M d American Conlernce
Conference
AI Game s
w L T w L T
BallS ate
4 0 0
0
WesternM ch
4
0
5
0
4 2 0
Centra!M ch
3 1 0
BowlmgGreen
3
0
4 2 0
I 4 0
Oh oUn v
I 2 0
2 0
3 2 I
M a101
I 2 0
3 3 0
EasternM ch
2 4 0
Kent State
I 4 0
1
0
No I nos
0
0
0 6 0
Toledo
0 4 0
Oh o Conference
Red D v son
Conference
All Games

•

w

L

T
0
0
0
0
0
0

Oh oN orthern
2 0
Baldw n Wa lc
2 0
Oh oWes eyan
I I
Den son
I I
Moun Un on
0 2
He delberg
0 2
Blue DIVIs on

w

Conference
L T
2 0 0
2 0 0
I I 0

w

enberg
Wooster
Cap tal

w

3

5
I

L

T
2 0
0 0
3

2 ~
1 3 1
0 5 0

All Games
w L T
5 0 0
5
3

0

0

2

0

Otle be n
Muskmgum
Mare a

Thllf week~

college games
ThsWeeks
Oh o College
Footba I Schedu e

Un ted Press lnternat anal

owa at Oh o State
Bow ng G een at M am
Marsha a Ken S a e
To edo a Oh a Un ve s ty

Ash and at H llsdale M ch)
Cen a Sf a G and Va ey
Mch
Tu sa a C nc nna

(n

Day an at Fa dham
Ak on at Youngstown S a e

Otte be n a Cap a
Ma et a a Musk ngum
Wooster a W lien berg
Baldw n Walla &lt;e at Oh o

Wes eyan
Oh o Nor he n at Den son

Mou n Un on at He de be g

Obe n a Geneva Pa

Grove C ty &lt;Pa a Kenyon
De ance a Bluff on

Ande son
lnd) a F ndlay
Hanove ( nd) a W m ng on

Case Wes e n a Be hany

W

Va
H am at John Carro
n
deno es n gh game

College rahngs
The

PO All

586

570

499

45

4 2
37

learnmg the game of football
followmg a 34 14 troWlc ng
by the Pittsburgh Steelers
The soft-spoken coach who
believes n keep ng h s
players on an emot onal
even keel sa d he wasn t
about to chew ou the club for
ts
m stakef lied
performance aga nst he
arch nval Steelers at
Mun CJpal Stadium
The loss left he Browns
w th a 4-3 record
three
games beh nd undefeated
P ttsburgh n the NFL
Central D v1s on - and
cons derably dunmed their
hopes for challengmg the
Stee1ers this season
Yell ng and scream ng
has never been m) way of
do ng th ngs Rut gi ano
srud
You have to play
errorless football agamst a
club the caliber of Pittsburgh
andweddn t
Cleveland quarterba ck
Brian S pe threw two ~ey
mtercept ons and the Browns
fumbled twice w kill their
own dnves as 81 000-plus
watched - the largest NFL
crowd of the season
There s no question we
put too much pressure on the
defense
the
coach
admitted referrmg to the
111tercept ons and fumbles
But
there
were
opportwut es for the defense
which we d1dn t take
advantage of he added
notmg the Steelers were able
to mount two sustained
touchdown dr ves In the th1rd
quarter
Commenting
on
a
speclacuillr 9$-yard kickoff
return
by
Pittsburgh
speedster Larry Anderson

2
I
3

I

2 0

0

2
3
2

0

1 4 0
x Kenyon
X X X
0 5 0
X X X
x Ober m
x not compel ng for t lie
Hoosier Buckeye Conference
Conference All Games
w L T w L T
5 0 0
4 0 0
I 0
2 0
2 2 0
2 2 0
2 3 0
2 3 0
3 0
4 0

Ande son
a) o

Ea ham

Others

4 2
2 3
2 3
2 4
2 3
4
4

w
6

Youngsto" n State
H ram
Dayton
Akron
John Carroll
Oh o Sa e
Case Wes e n
C nc at
CnaSae
A and

I

3

3
3

4

5
4

L
0
0
I

4

2
2
I
I

0

0
0
0
0
0

0

T
0

2
2
2

0
I
0
0
I

4
4

0

4
5

0
0

tha may have been the key
play the for the Sleelers
Rut ghano confirmed that he
me With his spec al teams
p ayers on the s delme JUS!
before the unback
1 fe t r gh at that po nt
tha twas unportant for us to
go mto the locker room 7~
he sa d Cleveland h a~ sco ed
Just before the runback to
take the lead for the f st ume
m the game ate 111 the
second quarter
The coach reported his club
came out of the game m good
shape phys cally Three
Cleveland starters who saw
their first ac on m several
weeks durmg the Pittsburgh
game
run rung back Greg
P u tt cornerback 01 ver
Dav s and guard Henry
Sheppard
all w 11 play
mor e n futur e games
Rut gl ano said
Only cornerback Ron
Bolton who s ecover111g
f om a broken arm will m ss
Sunday s contest agarnst the
Kansas C1ty Chiefs

USED CARS
1977 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT SEDAN
Rea

ean

ow

m eage

'5295

1971 CAMARO
'795

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You

L ke Our Qual ty

Way of Dong Bus ness

GMAC F lNANC NG

992 5342

Pomeroy

Open Even ngs lol6 00
T l5 p m Sal

369

2'
2"
9S

·~ G~~~~~~~~~~~=========~~

'5
4

Prix Utle defeating Italian
Sabma Sunmonds 6-1 S-7 &amp;3 The teenage daughter of a
Olech track champion also
heat Simmonds ln the final
me week ago in tbe Madrid
Gralld Prix

SAN DIEGO (UPI
The
San Diego Chargers Monday
placed Charlie Alu a guard
from Hawall on waivers and
s gned tlght end Greg
McCrary to fill the roster
opening

Sports Transact ons
By United P ess n e nat onal

Mond•r

Butb8 I
Co umbus
n e na t ona
he
eague
Announced
appo n men of Gene M hae
p ~sen v he f s base coach
o he New Yo k Yankees as
anage nex vea

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Middleport 0

0

THIS WEEKS SPECIAL

Browns coach won't yell
By ROBERT SANGEORGE
CLEVELAND ( lJPI) Cleveland Browns Coach
Sam Rutigliano has declared
that yelling and screamang
JUst JSO this style so h s club
will continue a methodical
nutsand bolts approach to

0

0 2 0

..

992 2342

•

�N F L Sta nd in gs

By Untfed Press International
Am er ican Con fer ence
Eut

\c,' . :~.
'--1-5.":

w. L. T. Pet .

New England
s
M iam i
5
NY Jets
Buf falo
2
2
Baltimore
central

•

w.

Pi tt sbur gh
Cl evel and
Houston
Cincinn ati

7

••

w es t

0

2 0

.71 .

2 0

.714

3

.286
.286

0 0 1.000

.571

3 0
3 0
7 0

T.
0
0
0
0
0

. 57 1
.000

Pet.

.714

.714
.429
.286
.143

W. L. T. Pet.
1 0 .857

Green Bay
Chicago
Minnesota
Tampa Bay
Detro it

2 0

3 0
3 0
7 0

l

4 0
4 0
• o
6 0

TAKE THffiD - Third place winners in the recent
punt, pass and kick competition staged by the Meigs
Jaycees at the Middleport field under the sponsorship of
Dan Thompson Ford are pictured. Winners in their

respective age groups from the left are Rodney · Ebersbach , 13; John Perrin, 12; Scott Gheen, II ; Darin Wolfe,
10; Eric Seamon, 9, and PatShrimplin, 8. With them is Pat
Hill representing the sponsoring business.

World 'Series resumes in LA
By· BIU.. MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES ( UPI)
The New York Yankees,
somewhat battered but very
much in command, hope to
give Ron Guidry . a welldeserved vacation one ·da y
early today by sending
"Catfish" Hunter to wrap up
the World Series against the
error.plagued Los Angeles
Dodgers.
"The decision to start
Hunter was a lot easier after
winning Sunday," said
Yankee Manager Bob Lemoo
in reference to the Yanks' 122laugher, behind the pitching ·
of rookie Jim Beattie that
gave them a 3-2 lead in
games . " Otherwise I would
have left the decision up to
Ron. I know one thing ,
though , if he didn't feel he
could pitch, I never would
have started him. I'd never

risk a man's arm- not even
if the World Series was at
stake.
11
As it is, I hope we won't
need. to use him again."
The Dodgers, their backs
against the Pacific Ocean (or
San Gabriel Mountains if you

will) , will go with right·
bander Don Sutton in an
elfoct to s1.ay alive in this
Series and force a seventh
game
and
another
confrontation with Guidry.
SuttOn, r.-2 in post-season
competition, lost the third
game of the Series in New
York,
but
expressed
confidence Monday the
Dodgers would ward off
extinction.

"There's no question we
went to New York and got OW'
butts kicked," said Sutton .
"But there were a lot of good
card games and conversation
on Dur flight back home.
Nobody wore black and
nobody's made the funeral

arrangements yet."
The Yankees ' three-game
sweep at home did not come
without SO!lle casualties that,
may yet play a part irrlll iS
series.
Catcher Thurman Munson
(sore ankle) , shortstop Bucky
nent (sore knee ) and rookie
second baseman Brian Doyle
(sore shoulder) all spent
most .of the off-day getting_
whirlpool treatments, while
Chris Chambliss' strained

wrist tendons made him a
doubtful starter for the
second straight game. In
addition, Mickey Rivers '
hamstring pull and bruised
hip make him cinly a part·
timer .
"Munson, Dent, Doyle and
Rivers should all be able to
play,"
said
Lemon,
"however, Chambliss is very
doubtful and we'll go with
Jim Spencer at first base
again."
If there were two factors
that most seemed to influence
the Yankees' present edge, it
is the Dodgers' defensive and
designated
hitter
deficiencies.
In the first five games, the
Dodgers committed six
errors and their infielders.· shortstop Bill Russell in
particular - have come
under some heavy criticism
by the media covering the
Series.
" All I can say is these are
the same infielders who
helped me get my 21 wins in
1976 and the same ones who
got me into the World Series
three out of the last five

years./' said Sutton

defense.
Dodger Manager Tommy '
Lasorda bristled at one
repoct that suggested the
Dodger infielde~s should
become designated hitters,
however he conceded his
" official" DHs haven't done
the job.
"! guess you'd have to say
the
DH
has
been
advantageous to the Yankees
because without it, either
Reggie Jackson, Roy White
or Lou Piniella would have to
sit down and all of them are
hitting well in this Series." ·
The biggest plus for the
Dodgers, though , would
appear to be the return to
their home park and friendly
fans .
If nothing else, Lasorda has
precedent going for him. No
team has ever lost tile first
two games of a World
Series and come back to win
four straight. Were that to
happen now, Ron Guidry can
go home to Louisiana a day
early, content to wait for his
Cy Young Award . and
possibly a Most Valuable
Player Award as well.

in

v!~u: 55~

.571

B·H WETTING
SOLUTION

,000

.429
.429

.m

.143

west

w.

PLASTIC
BOOT TRAY

. 714
,571

W. L T. Pet.
6 1 0 .857
3
3
3·

L. T. Pet.

Los Angeles
7 0 0 1.000
AtH! nta
3 4 0 . .4 29
New Orleans
3 4 0 .429
San Franc tsc
1 · 6 0 .143
Sunday's Results
NY G iants 17, Tampa Ba y 14
Phita17, Washi ngton 10
Atla nta 14, Detroit 0
New Eng 10, Cinci nnati 3
Pitt sburgh 34, Cleve 14
Houston 17, Buffalo 10
Callas 24 , ·St . Louis 21, ot
NV Jet s 33, Balt im ore 10
Green Bay 45, Seattl e 28
Oakland 28. Kan sas Citv 6
L os Ang 34, M innesota 17
Miami 28 , S.ln Diego 21
N ew Orleans 14 , San Fran 7
Monday's Result
D en"Ver 16, Chicago 7
Sunday, Ott. 22
Chicago at Tampa Ba y
Cincinnat i at Buffato
Miami at New England
St. Louis at NY Jets
San Dieg o at Detroit
Wash ington at NY Giants
Philadelph i a at Dallas
Cl eveland at Kansas City
Gr een Bav at Minnesota
Atlant a at San Franci sco
Den ver at Baltimore
New Orl eans at Los Ang
Oakland at seattle
Mondi!y, Oct. 2l
Houston at Pitt sburgh

World Series Standings
By United Pres. International
New York vs. Los Angeles
(Best-of -Seven)

(All T imes E DT1
(New York le,ds, 3·2)
Oct . 10 - Los Angeles 11 .
New York 5.
Oc t. 11 - Los An geles A, New
York 3.
Oc t. 13 - r-,tew York 5, Los
Ang eles 1.
Oct. 14 - New York 4, Los
An geles 3, 10 innings.
Oc t. 15 - New York 12, Los
Angeles 2.
oct. 11 - New York at Los
Ang eles. a :JO p.m .
Oct. 18 - · x -New Yo rk at Los
Ange les , 8:30p.m.
x· if necessary

... ......-·-

0

$169

2oz.
$2.78 Value

advertising ,

" 4 Sale, · 5

Seats."
No rush was seen to their
area.
The reason for such signs is
a Cincinnati winless streak
that spiraled to seven
straight games Sunday when
New En glan~ . became the
latest NFL club to feast oo
the "Bad News Bengals."
Just how bad are things for
the Benga ls?
Well , new head coach
Homer Rice declared that
Sunday was the Bengals' best
game of the year. And that
was a home game in which
Cincy was una ble to score a
touchdown .

Chris Bahr kicked a 52-yard
field goal Sunday - and
missed three shorter ones.
Ken Anderson threw three
interceptions Sunday, raising
his three-game total to nine .
He only threw 11 all of last
year.
Anderson also threw
incompletions on several key
plays. For instance, with a
second and seven at the New
England eight, Anderson
threw a pass behind Pete
Johnson. On the next play, he
threw a pass way over the
head of S.foot-3 Rick Walker.
So , on came Bahr to try a 2f&gt;.
yard field goal. He missed.
Anderson obviously has not

"something" heading his way roo~ice said Rodney Parker
had been the ball .
tried to "scalp" the two
The Bengals' running game World Series tickets for $100
· was even worse than their each to two unidentified
attempt at passing,
McClendon, l.SU.
Lenvcl Elliott ran four wocnen. The tickets were
MIDLANDS :
Tom times for a total of seven among a set of eight reported
Osborne, Nebraska ; Barry Yards . Double Reisman ·burglarized from O'Malley's
room in the Summit Hotel
Switzer, Oklahoma ; Earle
Trophy winner Archie Griffin Thursday, along with a
Bruce , Iowa St. ; Jim Wright,
ran eight times for a grand wristwatch and two fur coats.
Wichita St. ; Bob Commings,
Parker was being · held on
total of eight yards . In all, the
Iowa; Bud Moore, Kansas,
Benga!s ran 25 times for 73 charges
of
criminal
SOUTHWEST :
Bill
Yeoman, Houston; Emory
the only good 'thing posseSS!,
. ·on of
Bellard, Texas A&amp;M ; Grant for the ()..7 Bengals is that a po Ice spoou=uan 881 •
Tea!! , Baylor ; Hayden Fry, there won't be any " We want Detectives were questioning
North Texas State; Fred our money back" signs at the suspect to determine if he
Akers, Texas ; Lou Holtz, Riverfront Stadium next would be charged with the
Arkansas.
Sunday . The " Bad News burglary.
The coats and the watch
Bengals" take their show on were not. recovered, police

Oklahoma still No. 1
BY utA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ok.,.
lahoma clung to the nation's
No. 1 ranking after nearly
losing to Kansas, but five
other top 10 teams lost last
weekend to 8et off a major
reshuffling Mooday in the
UP! Board of Coaches college
football ratings.
The beneficiaries of the
changes were PeM State and
Arkansas, who moved up to ·
No. 2 and No. 3, respectively,
after having the weekend off.
Alabama moved up three
notches to fourlh with a
victory over Florida and
Nebraska also moved up
three places to fifth with a
rout over Kansas State.
Maryland
remained
unbea ten and vaulted into the
No. 6 slot , but Southern Cal,
secondranked last week ,
plunged to seventh after a 2Q..
7 loss to Arizona State.
Texas moved up five spots
to eighth place with a
trlwnph over North Texas
state and Michigan fell frol!l
fourth to No. 9 after a 24-15
lol!s to rival Michigan State.
UCLA moved into the No. 10
spot with a win over
Washington State.
Six coaches from each of
the nation 's seven geographic
areas make up the UP! Board
·
of Coaches.
Tiley are:
EAST : Frank Clsnetti,
West Virginia ; Carmen
Cozza, Yale; Frank Burns,
Rutgers ; Jackie Sherrill ,
P!t\Sburgh ; Frlll)k Maloney,

Syr acuse; Jerry Claiborne,
Maryland .
MIDWEST : Jim Young ,
Purdue ; Lee Corso, Indiana ;
Dan Devine, Notre Dame ;
Woody Hayes, Ohio State ;
Cal Stoll , Minnesota ; Pat
Culpepper , Northern Illinois.
SOUTH: Bear Bryant ,
Alabama; Vi nce Dooley ,
Geor gia; Dou g Dickey ,
Florida; Jim Carlen, South
Carolina ; Johnny Majors,
Tennessee ;
Chatli e

yal:.~t

Cavs open home season

,W/It'

101 Ct.
$L69 Value

66~

$129

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) positions.
__:_ The revamped Cleveland
Also watching from the
Cavaliers open their ninth sidelines will be Bobby
home season tonight at the 'Bingo " Smith, the only
Coliseum a gainst the Los or iginal member of the Cavs.
Angeles Lakars looking for Out of action with a leg
their second straight victory. injury, Bingo was part of the
The Cavs, wbo made the 1970 quintet that dropped its
National Basketball fir51 15 games and finished
Association playoffs the last the season with a 1:&gt;-67 mark.
three seasons, are still trying
The Lakers have lost their
for their first entrance into first two games, including a
the championship series.·
107·105 squeaker to New
Coach Bill Fitch, who has Jersey last Saturday might .
l)eld the job since the team , Los Angeles eoa~h Jerry
was focmed in 1970, will pit West believes teamwork may
the same lineup that crushed have been lacking.
the Boston Celtics 11:&gt;-!0llast
"You can have the ·best
Friday night a gainst Kareen players on your club, but you
Abdul.Jabber and the rest of still have to work toge ther as
the Lakers.
a unit ," he said.
Campy Russell and Jim
After tonight's game, the
Brewer will handle the foce· Cavaliers will have three
ward spots and Jim Cbones dayo of rest to prepare for a
will be at center in p\aee of Saturday night contest with
the injured Elinore Smith. the Chicago Bulls at the
Foots Walker and Austin Coliseum.
Carr willliOid down the guard

.•

OIL OF OLAY

GARRITY LIFE-LITE

DISPOSABLE
FLASHLIGHT

4 oz.
$4.75 Value

$119

$274

~~~~;~~~F=R=IE=ND~LY
PHARMACIST

PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE

o

66~

A.7 oz.
20~

Off
$1 . 11 Value

ARWO

WINDOW COVER
KIT

$375

'6.98

Aslc Questions

-~-

~

59(

PARKING
OF STORE

SHICK
SUPER II
5's
$1.60 Volue

55(

99
12 FT.

36't
$1.15 Value
.

'4

(

BUFFER I

I own residential property which I normolly ront. I

the pol ley will be covered at no additional eh_arge, or 2)

full coverage is provided at no additional prem lum for
the period the premises remain, vacant. Discuss with
your agent your sltuatlon and how best to meet your

needs.

ALPO DOG FOOD

11 oz.
$1.79
Value

99~

The lnsuronco Storo
992-51:10

Pomoroy,O.

WMPO ,'

BIG SAVINGS
ON All
QUALITY ADMIRAL
REFRIGERATORS &amp; lV's

WILSON AUTOGRAPHED
WALTER PAYTON
FOOTBALL

SYRACUSE-The Syracuse
Cub Scout Pack 242 visited
the WMPO Radio station
MlJnday evening a ft~r school.
On the outing wer e Chris
Occm~ r.
Mike Patterson,
f rank Cox. Chris Bae r, Jerr y
Aleshire, Chr iS Grindley,
Scutt McPhail, Tudd Davidson, Chri s Smith, Todd
Ada ms, David Duffy, Jeff
Fronk, Brian Freenum, and
Eri L· Thort!n.
Adults and other accompanying the cub scuuts we n~
Mrs. J im Adams and Ki m.
Mrs. Greg Bailey and Andy
Bae r, Mrs . Alien Davidson
and Lois, Mrs. Jerry
Aleshire, Tara and Todd
Wolfe, Mrs. Joyce Thoren,
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPhail,
Corey and Heather.

With purchase of selected
Admiral Refrigerators or TV's

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

99¢
29

99

~

HOMEMADE FRISII

PORK SAUSAGE ................L~;.

3

CANS

DIAL SOLID

EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE

$100

DIET RITE COLA
OR RC
THURS. ONL Yl

8 '1 09
PAK

PLUS DEPOSIT

DIET OR REGULAR

DR. PEPPER

8

PAK

99e

PLUS DEPOSIT ·

Scented ar Untcentetl
2 oz.
$1.19
Value

GRADE B LARGE

MOTOR OIL

REGUlAR OR SUGAR FREE

PEPSI or MT. DEW
ALL WEEK

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
214.E. Main

l ..ular or Lime

,..,".,

Scouts visit

VALVOLINE

ALL WEEK

carry fire and extended covenge. Recently mr renters
moved and I have not r&amp;-rentect the house since I m•y

TRAC II
SHAVING CREAM

FALL KICK OFF

IN THE REAR

98C Value

73

RIB
STEAK

FREE

PLASTIC
BOOT TRAY

CONGESPIRIN

ADMIRAL

END CUT PORK CHOPS ... ~~~~.1

USDA CHOICE

..

A. Whenever property that Is Insured becomes vacant
you .should promptly notify your agent. l'lli Standard
Fire Polley allows JO days vacancy for the purpose of .
giv ing notice of vacancy to your agent. Beyond 'the JO
day per iod there are 2 ways to provide coverage: I)
during vacancy. two-thirds of the amount Insured with

DELMONICO
STEAK

® 55(
.WHITE

Vehn0::1 Pierson received JS
puund l'ibiJons. Judy RolL&lt;i1
lost the most weekly weight
with Jeannie Sayre as her .
runnerup.

BEEF SHORT RIBS.............L~.•

USDA CHOICE

$1 .19 Value

LEENEX

dctsscs flere:tltlme Bl~ssinl{
received her 20 pound pin,
Nancy Brctgg , her 35 pound
ribbon , e:tnd Coimle Evi:tll,.li
wi:ts the bi)( loser of the we(!k.
At the Thursday evening
class the re, tlll'ee new
mcmbt!rs were welcomed,
and Ullian Pierson and

SUPER MAllET - DP£11 DAILY 9 1t) 10 P.M.
SUMDAilO 10 10
We lccept Federll hit :illlllps-fle K.,. 'The RWd To Lmit Ql!an$ils

CLUB
STEAK

12 oz.
$1.69 Volue

6.5o~.

--:..."';:

a nd Mrs. Fermin Boring,
Hamden ; a nd the following
children and families :
Bernice McKnight a nd Jim
Rittan, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs . Roger McKnight,
Danny , Randy and Darrin,
Williamsport ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Frazier, Susan, J erry
and Danny; Cheryl Nichols
Madge
Fra zier,
a nd
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Gaston and Joe.

STEAl&lt; SPECIALS

LISTERMINT

BOUQUET TALC.

Voiue

parents, Mr . a nd Mrs. Ea rl
Starkey.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Ha r old
Gillogly , Vickie afnd Bruce,
were at the 50th wedding
anniversa ry celebration for
and
Mr s.
Fr ed
Mr.
Tuckerina n at Woifpen on
Sunday' afternoon .
Mrs. Gillogly Honored
Mr . a nd Mrs. Arthur
Cra btree enterta ined with a
family open house on Sunday
aft e rn oon honoring her
mother. Goldie Gillogly , on
her 82nd birthday. Those
present included a sister,
Eckhart
and
Beatri ce
da ughter , Lynn , Mansfield; a
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.

'2'7

$1.A3 Value

sell the property. If the house should hove o Hro, om I
insured?

message. The Nove mber
meeting wilfl be held a t t he
Pa rson age in Albany with
Mrs. P ri ce a s host ess.
West ina Crabtree will give
the devot ions for
t he
Thanksgiving meeting.
Martha Mays is confined to
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital, Athens, for ob·
serva tlon and treatment .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Earl Sta rkey ,
Roy
loca l, and Mrs.
Wise m a n, Harri sonville,
were Co lumbus vis it ors
recently and called on his
sister. Jessie J ewell.
Rev. and Mrs . · David
Wi seman and family, Lima ,
were guest s .of his grand·

•

ta,hmere

90~

Mt·s .

USDA CHOICE

36's

Q.

Gassaway, Powell, visited
with t heir son·in · law a nd
daug hter, Mr . a nd Mr s.
William Miller and family,
for several days.
The Unit ed Meth odist
Women 's Group of Temple
Church met at the Church on
Wedn esda y evenin g. ·A
report on the annual session
at The Plains was given by
Pastsy Price. Kathy Jordan
ga ve inter estin g a nd in·
spir in g devotion s usi ng
hymns, readings and quiZ
qu es tions to brin g the

Chartm· members,

Rusi ncss and Professional Wmncn 's Club. A dinn er party
was held at the Meigs Im1 in t'l'lebratiu n uf National
Business Women's Week.

79~

AREPLACE/HEARTH

'

Mr . and Mrs. Lewis Smith,
local and Mr . and Mrs.
George Daugherty , Glouster,
attended the 50th wedding
anniversary celebration of
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Davis
in Columbus on Saturday.
The Davis family wer e for·
mer Dexter residents .
Smiths
and
The
-Daugherty 's were supp er
. guests of Mr. and Mrs.
· Reecce Prather 1Nancy
Smith) in Westervill e on
Saturday evening.
Mr . and
Mrs. Glen

-

H.\ ll ltl SUN VII .LF.-- Lu is
Pauley ,was clcrlt'll wo1t hy
matron , and Pa ul J , Pauley,
wurtlly patron of Harrisonville Cha;&gt;le r 255, Order . the
£ astern Star , at .a recent
meeting held al the Masonic
Temple.
Other officer,; elected we re
J a itit.·c OeBun.l. associate
ma tron : Dallas DeBord .
a .ssodat c pa tron; Grade
Wil son, secretary; Butty
Bis hop , t reas urer ;· Juan
Kaldor, conductress: Jill
I.awrcnct! associate conductress; and Stella Atkins,
trustee .
Tell ers wt!re Donna Nelson,
Avanei George, and Joan
Kaldor.
The budget report was
given by Luis Pauley, the
audit report by Bernice Hoff·
mon , i:ltld t he trtLStces report
by Conni e Smith.
An invitation wets reotl to ct
rece pti on &lt;:~t Reiner sv ille
hon oring Bob She rid a n,
grand a1de to the deputy
grand matron . Get-well ca rds
were sent to Winnie Stout ontl
Luther Gilliam. The worthy
matron annow1ced that there
wiJl be initiati on in
Nuveml&gt;er .

tifieatc.
Twelve n"ew rnerhb~rs
rame into lhe Tuesday ni~ht
class at Middleport.
Presented 35 puund ribbons
were Edwina Scott, Delores
I Amg, Sheila Erlewine, a nd
Regina E•·lewine. Shirley
Pt•iddy lost the most weekly
weight and Juanita Gerard
was runnerup. Suzt-mn_e Wolfe
was acrept&lt;:d in the slim and
trim program .
At the Point Pleasant

.TOOTSIE ROLL
MIDGEES

BOOSTER CABLES
'6.98
59
VALUE
_..~--..1-------...;;;;....._+_______-1

REUTER-IIROGAN INSURANCE

f~arpenter - Personals

MF.MBF.R.~

CHARTF.R

Edith F'ot'l'est , left . anti Mrs. Ruse Reynnlcl!-:, \\'C r c
. recognized at l&lt;:~s l night's meet ing uf the Middlepor1

H1bbons and cc1tifirales
weight loss were
presented at re~.:ent meetings
of the Slinde1·e!la Diet
Classes.
At Mason the dass look in
one new membet' and a 20
1•mnd 1·i b1Jon and ce1t ifkate
was given to Maide Long and
:!5 pound r ibiJons lu Delores
Long, Candy Van Meter, Mit·
zi Oldaker , Pa uline Lieving ,
F:ileen F ields, ·and Virginia
J11hnson.
At the Tuesday morning
Middleport d ass at Heath
Church, tivo new mem bers
were welcom ed a nd 35 pound
ribbons went to Sha ron
Asidey Zella Riley and Sue
Imboden. Vi ckie Houchins
lost the most ·weekly weight
. and runn erup was Mrs. Riley.
Sharon Ashley also rere ived
her 50 pound ribiJon a nd rer·

ru r

Accurately

15oz.
$1.19 Value

NO. 601A
'5.98 VALUE

NATIONAL BUSINESS WOME N'S WEEK hon o•·ees of
' the Middleport Busmess a nd Professional Woinen·s Club
were Frances IAJuise Davis, ldt, selected as the "Wmmm
. of the Yea r". a nd Mrs. J a net Korn, " Woman of the
·, Week ." The two were presented ~or sages a nti silve r c111d
gold ruses dur ing a dinner meeting Monday niMhl at t he
Meigs Inn.

Weight loss certificates given

• Prescriptions Filled

WRITE-ON
LAP DESK

~~prope~yd,

.theiOir:IOoaDOdtoOCBIO&lt;u.,.ffa...,lo._ _IOISBICIC.OC:d._

DUM-DUM
POPS

_,.

LIFE LIT&amp;

79~

#5A9 AO Ct .
$1.00 Value

52 Ct.
$1.0A Value

VAWE

SERIES TEMPS
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Temperatures
will
be
hovering around the 7()..
degree mark at the start of
this evening 's sixth game of
yet fully recovered from the the World Series with the
broken hand that kept him thermQmeter showing the
out of the first four games.
mid 60s by game's end.
His passing hand was
The National Weather
swollen ·after Sunday's game.
Service said sunshine will be
While trying to downplay how
filtering through some high
much the injury is still clouda and moderate smog
effecting him, Anderson did
when the Los Angeles
admit that his passing hand Dodgers and New York
" is still not as strong as the• Yankees take the fiela.
other hand and I'm still a
little bit rusty."
NEW - YORK (UP!) _
Late in the game, Anderson While Los Angeles Dodgers
threw a pass to Boobie Clark, President Peter O'Malley
a little high but catchable . was watching his team lose to
But Clark , running out in the the New York Yankees
flat , apparently wasn't Sunday, police arrested a 41.
· expecting a pass, .or anything year-old man outside Yankee
else, at that tune, Clark Stadium for tryjng to sell
glanced ·up
and saw tickets that were believed
something heading toward
his helmet. He ducked. The taken from O'Malley's hotel

BIT'O HONEY
MINIATURES .

BUBBLE
BUBBLE GUM

Fans upset with bad news Bengals
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
11
Ba.d News Bengals" are so
bad tha t a group of
· disappointed fans hung a
gigantic banner at Riverfront
Stadium Sunday saying, " We
want our money back. "
At one point during the
game, however, the fans
pulled their sign in.
A change of heart?
No, some wise guy just
tacked on an amendment and
when the sign was rehung, it
read, " We want our money
back - or 4 cheerleaders. "
At the other end of the
stadium, other disheartened
hung a
banner
fans

elected

BLEACH

L. T. Pel .

National Conference
Eilst
w ashi ngton
6
Dall as
.s
NY Giants
•
Ph il adelphia
•
St . Lo uis
0
Central

Lois Pauley

.

o .m

5 0
5 0

W. L.
5 2
5 2
3 4
2 5
1 6

Oci kl and
Denver
Seattle
San Diego
Kansas City

SAifl'• ;.,., . ,,.,~

PREPARED
FOR WINTER
II

\ I

li- The J&gt;Hily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Pom.roy. 0., Tuesday. Oct. 17, l!J78

8

PAK

99~

PLUS DEPOSIT

QUART

EGGS

69~

DOZEN

DAIRY VALUES
BROUGHTON

1% Lowfat Milk .................~~~~~... $1
09
COTTAGE CHEESE . . ...~~.~~.~~~.~.~..~~

35

VALLEY BELL

ggt
HOMO MILK "• •••••~.'?! !.~!~!. ••••~. ~~~ ~!.R.T~~.
MODERN DAIRY

EVERYDAY

.

•

GLAD TRASH CAN LINERS
\

10 PACK
•••••••••••••••

PARTY ICE ............................. ~~.~-.~~~
APPLES.... ~ ................................. 4 $1 00
ZESTA CRACKERS .........~ ....~~~!. 59t
RED DELICIOUS

LBS.

'

'

.

i

.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tucsd.y, Oct. 17, 1978

r ·- ---

Rose Garden Club
installs officers
.

1 Social
1 Calendar
TUESDAY
:)ALISBURY PTO, Tuesday, 7:30 at the the school
with the Meigs County
Historical Society to have the
pt·ogram.
REVIVAL at the Trinity
Christian Assembly Church,
Coolville, Tuesday through
Sunday with Angel Ping as
speaker and Susan Hickman,
presenting special singing.
Public is invited by Gilbert
Spencer, pastor.
CHESTER Council 323,
Daughters of America,
meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
Annual inspection to be held
with members to wear white
to help with the work.
AREA Volunteer Fire and
Em.ergency Association
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at Ripley, W. Va., fire station.
Decals will be available at
that meeting. November
meeting to be at new New
Haven Fire Station.
SOUTHERN Local District
Board of Education meeting,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at high
school, Racine.

Nancy Sue Greenlee

Wedding planned
Mr. and Mrs . Edgar
Greenlee of Pleasant Ridge ,
Pomeroy , a r~ announcing the
approaching marriage of
their daughter, Nancy Sue, to
Dale Thoene, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Thoene, Bow
Valley, Neb.
The wedding will be an
~vent of Oct. 28 at Tacoma,
Washington, with Mrs. Opal
Wigal as matron of honor .

and Chester Wigal as the best
man. The couple will reside in
Tacmn. following their wedding.
The bride-elect is a
gr·aduate of Meigs High
Sehoul and is employed at the
Holzer Medical Center. Her·
fiance graduated from Wynot
High School and he is stationed at the MLoChord Air Force
Base in Washington.

Baptist Woman 's Day of
Prayer scheduled here
Plans for the Baptist
Women's Day of Prayer service to be held in November
were discussed at a Inet!ting
of the Missionary Society
held Thursday night at the
Pomeroy . Fh·st Baptist
Church.
·
The program : will be
preceded by a 6 p.m. dinner.
Tl1e Society arranged to fill
the while ct·oss quota fot·
overland which will go lo the
Dayton Christian Center.
Mrs. Margaret Bailey
dedicated the love gill following the opening by Mrs.
Phyllis Skinner with the
hymn, ,.~ Pri:tise Him, Praise
Him" and the Lord 's'Prayer.
Mrs . Caddie Wickham
presented the program with
material on men of God. Mrs.
Skinner read about George
Beverly Shea and his songs
that lift the heart ; Mrs. Burton Smith about Oral
Roberts , an inslrwnent for
God through his · healing

power ; Geor~ia Watson ,
Peter Marshall, a beloved
Protestant minister; Haricll
Sterrett about Billy Graham,
who presents peace with God.
Mt·s. Bailey gave a daily
mediation · by Kenneth Morris, and Mrs. Caryl Cook talked about the Rev. Alonzo A.
S~at·k ; pastor of the local
church for 12 years, and his
friend, Dr. John Strong, a Bible teacher. 'There was
material by Maria Foster on
Biblical women, Ruth and
Esther and the part they
played in the history of the
Old Testament. Mrs. ·Belly
Wiles told of Mary, the
mother of Jesus, and
Elizabeth, the mother of John
the Baptist, and Mrs. Caddie
Wickham closed with a
prayer from ' the book, -- My
Strength and Shield.
Refreslunents were served
by Mrs. Phylli:; Skinner with
Mrs. Audrey Young, a contt·ibuting hostess.

'

TU PP ERS
PLAIN S-Installation of new tlficers
highlighted a recent meeting
of the Rose Garden Club at
the home of Mrs. Frederick
Goe bel , installing officer.
Installed were Mrs. John
Rice, president ; Mrs . Doris
Koenig, vice president: Mrs.
Glen Stout, secretary; Mrs .
Robert Dorsi, treasurer; and
Mrs. Floyd Stout, news
r·cpor1er.
. Mrs. James Stout · gave
devotions and Mrs. Anna
Rice presented a demonstration on how to make roses

Several members pa·r ticipated in a workshop. At
the October meeting to be
held with Mrs. John Arbaugh
on
Oct. 18, 7:30 p.m., Mrs.
Evelyn Cullum will give a
demonstration on macrame.
Mrs. Cullum will have'
macrame supplies with her
which can be purchased by
the garden club members.
Mrs. Maude Gray won the
door prize, and Mrs. Leola
Massar the traveling prize.
Refreslunenls were served to
the 14 members attending.

from crepe paper and t•lnth
'
'

FIRST PLACE WINNERS - The Meigs Hi gh School Band, ils flag and riffle corps,
wet·e frrsl place wmners in competition staged Saturday at Westland High School, Columbus. The band took ftrst olace in Class B competition for· schools with up to 750 students in
the top three gr·ades eompeting agamst seven other bands, while the flags and riffles took
ftrst places 111 compebtwn with all 24 bands at the contest. Displaying the trophies won at
the contest are fl·om the left, Bcvef'ly l·loffman. Sheme Osborn e, and Eric Scites.

..

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

Poet's Corner

TUESDAY
XI
GAMMA
MU
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Phi
SOMETHING'S WRONG
GROUP TWO of United Sorority, 7:JO p.m. Tuesday
something's
wrong ...
Presbyterian Church at the home of Mt·s. Jane
tears
hidden
behind eyes
Tuesday 7:30p.m. at home of Daggett, Point Pleasant, for
(not
able
to
fall)
Jean Moore. Co-hostess is a card party. Mrs. Martha
Mildred Bailey. Devotions by McPhail and Mrs. Ruth Riffle lumps in the throat
(choking, stroking)
Ruth Woodard.
to have the cultural program. mea~ingless phrases
OAPSE Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Debbie Finla w, (of incoherent nonsense)
at Southern High School.
l'ohostess.
clouds of smoke
WORW WAR I night observance when Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
meets at 8 this evening at the
post home. Oyster supper will
be served.
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN JUNIOR High
PTO meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the school; all
junior high parents asked to
attend.
RUMMAGE, Soup and Pie
sale Tuesday and Wednesday
at Letart Falls Community
Hall from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.
sponsored by Apple Grove
United Methodist Women.
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS BETTER
Health Club, Thursday, 1:15
p.m. at t.he home of Mrs.
Phyllis Skinner. Mrs. Susie
Pullins to have the program,
Mrs. Nancy Morris, the conLest. Secret pals will be
revealed.
GraL-e Episcopal Church
· Women, 12:30 Thursday at
the rectory.

WESTERN
SQUARE
dance 7:30p.m. Thursday at
Royal Oak Park. Hayride and ,
wiener ro,a~ following close
of dance at 19:30 p.m. Dewey -.;
Hart, Colun'lllus, caller. All
Western square dancers
invited · and should take
wieners and buns for the
roast.
COMBINATION BAKE
sale and products party to be
staged at the community
building by the Long Bottom
Community Assn. beginning
at 10 a.m. Thursday and
SYRACUS E--Mrs . Judy Wednesday at the Rutland running through Oct. 24.
King hosted a meeting of tile ehul'ch was noted .
PLANNED Parenthood
The annual conference to
Asbury United Methodist
Clinic
scheduled for Nov. 2.
Church Women recently at be held at Ohio Wesleyan , An appointment is necessary.
Delaware, Oct. 28 was anher home.
Call 992-5912.
Mrs. Mary Lisle presided nounced. Mrs. Betty Koch
REVIVAL now in progress
wi th Mrs. Opal Klues giving . had the program entitled
through
Oct. 29 at Middleport
devotions entitled " Dreams " Personal Theology."
Independent
Holiness
Refreslunents were served
Cmne True'' by Nonnan VinChurch,
Pearl
St.
Evangelists
cent Peale. It was noted that to those named and Mrs. are the Rev . and Mrs. Ken45 sick visits had been made. Helen Teaford , Mrs. Anna neth Bogard, Washington
Reports were given on the Hilldor e, Mrs . Nora
Court House. Special singing
district annual meeting held Houdashelt, Mrs. Christina each evening. Pastor is Rev.
recently at The Plains by Grimm, Mrs. Linda Ferrell ,
O'Dell Manley.
Mrs. Lisle, Mrs. Kloes and Mrs. Ann Sauvage, Mrs. RllMrs. Marga ret Eichinger. seann Jenkins, Miss Marcia
OBSERVE BIRTHDAY
The workshop held last Karr, and Mrs. Grace Weese.
Mrs. Garnet Williamson,
retired Rutland business
woman, will observe her 87th
birthday Sunday at her home
in Rutland.
New chuir ro be~ were
dedicated in a cco·emony Sunday at the Pomery United
Methodist Church. The robes
were presented to the church
by Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Tdle.
The program titled · " A
(}r·eat Day of Singing" consisted of hymn singmg and
conunentaries on the hymn
)Vriters. Taking part were the
Rev. Robert ML-Gee, pastor,
Mrs. John Werry , choir dil·ector ; Mrs. Harvey Van
Vr·anken , organist : Mrs .
Tclle of Ute choir, and Mrs. V.
D. Edwards, chait-person
assisting in the seledion of
the rubes .

t enveloping self)
unexpressable
incapable of letting loose.
something's wrong something's wrong .
By Jim Brewer, Jr.

A thought for the day:
American poet .Joaquin
Miller said, "In men whom
men condenm as ill, I find so
much of goodness still. "

INSURANCE REDUCTIONS

MASON FURNITURE

VISit Us ·
Davis Insurance Agency
Acron trom the Court House in Pomeroy
BtU Quickel
JtaMit Starcher

Oteck our circular delivered to your house for m~y money saving

you money coupons -

Or stop in the store and pick one up if you don't receive one -

Here

are some Price Blasters!

Gateway Anniversary Produce Buys

you
it

FRESH SOLID

JONAlliON OR MciNTOSH

CABBAGE

REGUlAR
OR DIET

APPLES

STAR-KIST

TUNA FISH

PEPSI COLA
8-16
.

oz.

6lf2

BOTilES

oz.

CAN

40 BU. BASKETS OF GROCERIES
GIVEN AWAY - 10 EACH WEEK
DURING OUR 4 WEEK ANNIVERSARY.
BROUGHTON

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY - ENTER

·cottage
Cheese

Rates are going up
on all kinds of health care
protection. But rates don't tell
the whole story. When the benefits
And your
you're getting live up to the rates
Blue Cross and
you're paying, you're still getting
Blue Shield dollar supports what we
good value. 1bat's what counts.
call-positive health care strategies...
programs aimed at helping people
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield
protection dollar for example. As
stay healthy. Our nutrition education
always, it buys you top health care
·program in high schools and
· .tmiversities is one example. We're
protection. But we're making it do
more,-by providing benefits that go
making sure you get the best value
beyond just paying bills. It.supports a possible for your health care dollar.
We want it to work for things that
concerted effort to eliminate waste
are good for you and the health care
and promote efficient tise of health
care dollars. (Unnecessary duplication system. .. and not for things like
·excess facilities and services
of technology and facilities doesn't
for patients With
make health care better...
only more expensive.)
preventable problems.

®

.

CANS

$}39

PORK LOINS ................ ~~; ...

$ 39

QUARTERED

PORK LOINS ................L.B: •••

1

RIB END

$149

LOIN END

$}S9

PORK ROAST................L~; •••.
PORK ROAST.......•....... ~~~ ...

99C

PORK CHOPS ... ~ ••....... ~; ...
THIN CUT

SUPERIORS NO. 1

$ 69

FANCY CENTER CUT

USDA

LB.

Atglst~ M"kll!u. CretM Mtoc •tl lor~
' RegitterH Strt+ee Merkt ol I~ N1110~1
At.OC•IIio n ol Bh" Sl'li.ld ~lnt

PORI( LOIN SALE
WHOLE

.CHUCK STEAK
Value added.

WHOLE KERNEL OR
C~EAM STYLE CORN,
CUT GREEN BEANS OR
FRENCH STYLE

IN STORE EACH WEEK.

COTTAGE 24 oz.
CHEESE .... ~~~~~.

CHOICE

Blue Cross.
Blue Shield.

DEL MONTE
SALE

OFTEN - WINNING NUMBERS POSTED
BROUGHTON'S

A Lien. Monthly Payments Also
Available.

Come help us celebrate our third year - We have some really hot specials to save

OPEN:
Mon., Tues .. Wed. &amp; .Sat. 8:30 til5 :00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until5 P.M.
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va.
773-5592 -

Lower Preferred RateS for Persons
45 Years or Older on Homes Without
An'END SEMINAR
Lynn and Stephen Shuler of
Miller Homes, Belpre, have
returned from Wichita,
Kanau, where they attended
a heat pump service training
seminar conducted by The
Coleman Co., Inc. Tbe fourday seminar l'tlnsisted of
classroom and workshop
sessions on the Coleman heat
pump.

.,

TRI-STATE AREA

judy King hosts meeting

.Choir robes dedicated

------- - -

.

!

SLICED BACON

$179

12 oz.

BREAKFAST CHOPS .....~~·....

PKG. ·

$1 29
BEEF STEAKETTES......................Hl; ••

STOCK YOUR FREEZER

m ...,.z

I

..

I

'

�••

9- The Daj,l, Sentinel , Mtddlcport-Pomcm}, 0 , Tuesday , llt:t. li. 1978

.

8-Thl! Dally Sentmel, Mtddleport·Pomet oy , 0 ., Tuesday, Oct 17. 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Business Services

WANT AD
CHARGES
1;. Wt1Hl-- .., Ulldll
1 t.l.it Hl
3dcl\ .s

,,.

lll&lt;41 ~~

,~,

1 90
2 t5
3 i5

I

ti tla~ s

'

\Cl!;h
I Ill

,.

twn

~I

F.ad1 wurd UVt'l tiM. mmunwtl 1;;
~onls u; 4 l~ ni.S pt.'r wurt1 per da~_:
Ads I"UIUIUI.: other U\0:111 llliiS~Ullve
dil) '* o.~ll.l bt- dw q..:tod al U~ I day

"'"In memu1y Canl of Tlranks il nd

(lt)IIUal} 6 u~nl'i pt&gt;r wutd S3 00

nwumWn Ctt.sh UtaJv&lt;tnn·
Mub1k&gt; Hunw !NI.leli and YMd salt'!&lt;i

art au !!IJI.ed only w1th uosh wtlh
Ull"llt•r 25 l't'lll chlltjl(t' fot at.Ls latty ·
111e: Uu~ Number In Cat't' uf Tht&gt; ~~~­
Unel
Tht' Pullltiher 1e~rves the 11~ht
to l'llll ur re1~1 any ads d~m~ u~
~t i UILCI I Tl~ Publtsht'r will nut llt•
~M~ Illl~ fur mutt' than unt' tmor·
~ llllst

r1LUI I

P hunt' 99'.!2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Tut:sda)
thru Ft u.I&lt;H
4P M
tht• ilily bef01 e pu1Jlicat11m

Sunday
4PM
F'11da~

iiUt&gt;mwn

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
b•ds will be ac
cepted at the off1ces of Trott
&amp; Bean, 51 W Broad St ,
Columbus Ohro, 43215 tor th e
purpose of
rllzrng
and
removing Community Hall,
appro&gt;Crmatety 9.500 gross
square feet on the Rro Grande
Campus The burldrng, rn
c ludrno footers anCI basement
areas. rs to be removed from
the
premises
Contra c t
specrf rcatrons are available
from Trott &amp; Bean Vrsual
tnspecfion
availab le
by
co ntac t rng
R1o
Grande
Commun rty College offrce
Srds are due November L
1978 The college reserves the
rrght to re 1ect any or all b•d s
Se~led

Oct

17 , 24, 31

e

IJrJJmrJ
\.:JU

l!.J I
[DncrWl,Jl(JJ\]

Cue No. 22506
Doc 2 Page 391

To Carl R. Hysell, Juven1le
Prob•tron Off1cer of Mergs
County , Oh•o
You are comma nded to
not•fY Sandy Butcher Orstel •
horst , address unknown and
Pa u l O l ste l horst , !lddress
unknown , that a comp latnt
has been tried rn thrs Court
that Ilona Jan Olstelhorst,
age 9 vears , D 0 a 6 13 1969
appeared to be a neglected
Ch tid
It is requested that per
manent custody be granted
Permanent cus tody means
that the parent. guardian or
other custod1an may be
permanentlv d•vested of all
parental rrght!!o
If Is ordered that they
appear per sonally before the
Cour t at Pomeroy Ohro on
the 1st dav of N ovember. 1978
at 10 oo o ' c lock AM Further
1t rs or dered that the person
having phys1cal custo~y or
con trol of sa•d chrld shall
brrng the c h1ld to the hearrng
A person so not1f1ed , who falls
to appear , may be punished
as rn o~her cases of co ntemp t
of court
Any party 1S entitled fo
counsel In the proceedrngs
and the Court will appornt
counsel rf th e party rs rn
drgent
Said Cart R
Hysell w rll
make due return of thrs wr1t
on or before the 28th day of
October 1978 •
WITNESS my hand and the
se al of sa rd Court th1S 14th
day of October 1978
Mann~ng D Webster
Ju dge
By J ane t E Morrrs
Chref Deputy Cl erk
(10) 17, ltc
PUBLIC NOTICE
tn the court of common
Pleas,
Juven1le
Court
Divf510n, Meigl County , Oh10
SUMMONS
Case No. 22504
Doc. 2 Page 397
To Carl R . Hneli, Juven1ie
Probafron Off1cer of Mergs
County , Ohro
You are commanded to
no trfv Sandy Butcher D istel
horst , address unknown, that
a complarnt has been f ried rn
thrs Court that Sherotyn
Marre Butcher , age 13 years,
0 0 8 2 18 1965 appears to be
a neglec ted chrld
It rs requested that per
manent custody be granted
Permanent custody mea ns
that the parent, guerdran or
other c ustodran may b e
permanently d1vested of all
parental r ig hts
11 rs ordered that she ap
pear perso nally before the
Court at Pomeroy, OhiO on
the 1st day of November, 1978
at 10 00 o 'clock AM, Further
rt rs ordered that the person
hav rng PhYSical custody or
contro l of said child shall
brmg the ch ild to the hearrng
A per son so not rfred , who fa rls
to appear, may be pun1shed
as rn other cases of contempt
ot :~~rtparty rs entrtled to
counsel rn the proceedings
and the court will appornt
counsel If the pa r t v 1S rn
drgent
Satd carl R Hvsell w rtl
make due rerurn of t hiS wr~t
on or before the 28th d ay of

l:ard o( Thank•

Loot and t 'ou nd

t ur :;ate

Wt WISH 10 e x pr e~~ ou • t hank s
to l)r Blaz~wr n and the ~t tatl of
Ve ferens Mcrn r010I Hos prtol for
therr kmdn l.!ss upon the d t.'oth
of ou r fathe1 and gr ondl o ther
Paul 1 Man uel To oil our
1 "-'I Q fiiii~S
rll?tg hbo r ~
a nd
l n"-' nd ~ l o• tlw fl ow t&gt;n• cord !.
and food to H e ~ l)o v•d Horn s.
lor ht s consolmg word ~o lo
Hawhngs ( oat s fun eral home
to oil who h elped 111 any way
our many thank s
lhe Paul Manuel !-= omtly

i O~ l

(O AL

•

~

Wl: WOUlD like to thank the
Holt er
Medrcal
Staff
the
Pomeroy hner gency Squad
our
many ne tghbors and
frt ends o f the communrty and
espectall v t o Re v U11d~rwoo d
for hrs consol tng wo rds Thanks
to everyone who helped rn onv
woy at the death of ou r bel oved
daughter ond srster E ~ o t s e
The Srnclorr fom rl y

NO HUNTING or trespo ss mg on
my property wrthoul permts
ston Judy McGraw
GUN SHOOl Ho cme Gun Club
her y Sunday I pm fa cto r y
chol&lt;e gun s on ly
GUN SHOO T Racrne Vo lunteer
Ftr e Oep t hery Sa l urdoy b 3()
pm at theu bu ldmg rn Bo shon
f oct o•y choke guru only
THOUBl t: WI1H w1 ld onrmol s f ox
rn rn k
ra coon
opo ss um
beaver e tc Ca ll 98 5 J984 Wri t
con tact rn per son l or stgned
permrsston
HAPPY lURTHOA Y on Oct 'l2 to
Garn et Mo Wtllramson
l ove Oh ve f loyd and fomrly

Wantro tu U.uy
CHIP
WOOl)
1-'al es
rnox
dtometer 10 on lar ges t end
$8 50 per ton Bundled slab
$6 50 per ton Delr vered to
Oh•o Poll e t Co Rl '2 Pomerov
992 2689
11M8t:R POMt:ROY
duct s Top prtce
sow limber Call
Kent Ha nby 1 o4J 6

for est Pro
l or sta ndrn g
992 5965 or
85i'O

OW f URNITURt: rce

bo~ees

brass
beds rron bed s de:&gt;ks e tc
comple te hou seho lds Wnte
M D Mrl ler Rt o4 Pomeroy or
co ll 992 ~ i'60

OW

COINS po ck et wat ches
class rrngs · wedd•ng bonds
dramonds Gold or srlver Ca ll
Roge r Wam sl ey ~42 2JJ1

WANTED to buy l to _, acres ol
land prr ced low or not to e)l
ceed $500 per acre Wrr!e box
2;.!3 Rutland Ohto 45r/S
Wt: PICK up tvnk
rng 1unk cars
lerres and
Salvage
SR
qc.n 54b8

auto bodt e s bvv
scrap •ron bol
metal s
Rrd er s
124
Pom eroy

October 11, 1971
Several splendid opportunities October 1978
WITNESS mvhandand ftle
may come your way 'hi s year seal of said court this l~th
from people who you know day of october 1978
on ly casually. However, If you
Mannmg o Webster
!real lhem too lightly, • you
Judge
might never take advantage of
By Janet E Morris
lhe lnvllatlon
Chref Deputy Clerk
LIBRA (Stlpl. 23-0cl. 23) Don 't (tOI 17 , lt c
be loo quick to accept favors
offered 10 you loday Whal may
look like a kindness could have
PUBLIC NOTICE
expensive strings iltlached In the
Court of Cammon
Find ool 10 whom you 're ro- Pleas,
Juvenile
court
manllcall y suited by sending DIVISion, Meigs County, Ohio
SUMMONS
for your copy of Astro-Graph
Case No. 12505
Letler. Mall 50 cenls lor each
Doc . 2 Pate 397
and a long, sell..,ddressed,
To Carl R . Hysell, Juven11e
stampad envelope to Astro- Probation Officer of Meigs
Graph, P 0 Box 489, Radio City county, Oh1o
You are commanded to
Stallon, N V 10019. Be sure to
noti h' Sandy Butcher O rstet
specify birth sign .
horst , addrns unknown , that
SCDRPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22) a complaint has been flied rn
Your Intentions mlghl be good, this Court that Martsa Ann
bu1 don't offer advice or coun ~ Butcher, aoe 10 years, o o B
sel, solicited or not II things 2 28 1968 appeared to be a
chrld
don 'l work out, you'll be neglected
It rs requested that per
blamed
manent custody be granted
SAOITIARIUS INov. 23ollec.
Perm anent custody means
l1) Thinking you can 't get along that the parents, guard1an or
· wllhoutlho help of anolher Is a other cus t od ran mav be
d ivested of all
groundless lear. Rely solely on permanentlv
parenta l rights
yourself The job will get done
It is ordered that she ap
pear personallv before the
right
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jon. 11) Court at Pomerov. Oh10 on
A. slluallon where you share an t he 1st day of November 1978
at 10 00 o'c lock A M Fu rther
Interest may not produce what rt IS ordered that the person
was projected Trying to place havrng physr c al custody or
lhe blame on each olher won't control of sa td chrld shall
brr ng the Ch i ld to the hearrng
solve alhlng
A person so notified , who falls
AQUARIUS IJon. zt.Ftb. 11) A to
appellr, may be pun tshed
broken promise today could as rn other cases of contempt
By Janet E Morris
serve as the spark to alienate of court
Chief Dep ut y Clerk
Any
party
is
ent1tled
to
an association. Be sure there is
( 10 1 17 , He
nothing worth saving before counsel '" the pro ceed rngs
and the Court will appornt
you cut the lies
counsel rf the party 1S rn
PISCES !Fob. zt.March 20) dlgent
Said Carl R Hysel l wrll
Grand or bold Ideas aro good
IN THE
only when you know how to make due return of thrs wrrt
COMMON PLEAS COURT
on
or
before
the
28th
day
of
carry Ihem oft. Before attempt·
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
October 1978
lng such feats, be sure you
RICHARD E PHILLIPS ,
WITNESS my hand and the
Pliunttft, '
possess the necessary knowl· se!ll of sard Court this 14th
vs
day of October 1978
edge
BARBARA G PHILLIPS,
ARIES IMorch ZI·April 11)
Defendan1
Mannmg D Webster
Counllng on friends to ball you
No 11002
Judge
oul of a financial mess you pot
-NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION yourself Into would be a mlsBy Janet E Morr is
Bar,bara G Phr ll ips, whose
Ch1ef Deputy Clerk
Jake. Be realistic. Work things
last known address was Box
oul yourself.
92, Mrddleport. Oh10 , who
17
11
00
1
TAURUS !April zt.May 20) Due
' '
may have been residing rn
10 a misunderstanding, you
care ot Edna Jordan, 0/gen
Street, Jacksonville, Floridll
could draw an Incorrect concluNOTICE OF BIDS
3205,
whose address Is
. slon Involving oomeone close
Notr ce is hereby given that otherwise unknown will take
10 your heart Don't lei a brds will be rece rved bv not.ce that on the 14th dav of
Townshrp .October, 1978, RIchard E
miBinterpretatlon drive a Colu.mbta
Trustees, Me1gs County , Rt
Phillips , as Plaintiff, f ried a
wedge between you
J, sox 82, Albany, Ohio, 45710, com plaint chargrng gross
OEMINI (May 21-June 28) You until
November 3, 1978
neg lec t of dutv and extreme
have a lendency to talk conlln·
B •ds
will
be
opened
cruelty against her In whrch
uoualy today. Stop and listen November A, 1978, at 8 p m
the relief demanded IS a
N
ew
tractor.
1n
dustr1al
lor a moment You might even
d 1vorce and oth er re i ref and
type , diesel engrne with that th i s case mav be heard
get some answers.
m rn1mum 40 horsepower, at twenty e1ght days after the
CANCER !Juno Z1-JIIIJ 22) least 10 ply front ttres , 6 ply last pub licat ion of not1ce
Bragging .about how much you rear tires . hydraulic brakes . whrch will be made on the
have will not lmpreas anyona lights, turn signals and 28th day of November , 1978,
and that the final hear•ng ha s
~ul yourself today People are flashers , equipped with rn
type front end been set for 9 00 a m on
more stirred by humility than dustr1al
loader , qutck detachab le type Oec ember 30, 1978
by bucks
backho e and hydraulic boom
You are required to answer
LEO !July ZWug. 12) Playing type mower
thrs complaint bv not later
Brdder to submit detalted than
lho one-upsrnanlhlp game Ia
twenty e i ght
deys
an lnaull to your Intelligence specifications of equrpment fOllOWing the la St PUbliCatiOn
ot t his notice or ludgment by
and a waste of tlmt Don't let offered
The Board of T ru stees default may be taken, a.ga rnst
an exaggerator draw you Into lt. reserves the r ight to r etec t you
VIROO (Aug. D-Sapt. 12) Even anv &amp;nd all brds
Put the word "Bid" on
though you know your eource
Larry E Spencer.
of envelopt
Clerk of Court
Isn't reliable, you could pan outside
By Order o f the Board of
Common Pleas Court ,
on faulty Information today Trustees
of
Columb 1a
Meigs Countv. Ohio
aolely on the grounds II makoa Township
Glar11
Hutton.
clerk
lor an lnlereatlng story
( 1oI 17, 24, 31 ( 11 I 1, u. 21. 28,
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

flGJ 17, 24, 31, Jtc

!,i:NSI MAliC 0(
cou ntrng mo ciHil E:.'
Ph one
9&lt;n 21Sb llu: b otfy Senr tnel
1t 1 Lourt Str etl
Po meroy
Ohto

BURR O U G H ~

WORK OVI::RSI::AS
Austrolra
Air rca South Amenco l::urope
Constru ctto n
Soles
ciC
t:ngrneers ClefiCal etc $8000 GHIMt:S GOLUt:N Hed Oeh CIOU!&gt;.
&amp; Co lden Delrcrous app les f rtz
to 550 000 plu s hpense!. pot d
pahr ck Orchmd
SH: b!l4
f or emplovment tnlormolto n
014 b64 3/!JJ
wtrle Overseas bTtployrne nt
B a ~e 1011 Basion Mo UL102
SCHOOL
BU S camper
00
pa !&gt;Senger w tth new tr re!.
!:lABYSITTI::R needed rn my home
lor I krndergordep studenl
Good condr! •on Contact To m
Monkrr1 at 1192 n01
Wed and i-=rt I om Ia 5 30 pm
and an o c co~tonol Thur sday h i
LORNPI LKt:H lor
sal e
Moe
l.) ~c 15 99'J. 5.484
~p e n ce r 985 3!l ~ 9
WANTt:O Port ltme oppo r l unrty
I :J fOOT OH Hoy camper
ovOtlable Ideal for hou se wtfe
mounted on \ ton truck
w ho needs fl e xrble hour s For
YY:l 2194
oppom tment coll992 39.41
MA YT AG CUPPt:HTONt: Po rto
Par t w asher and dr yer Very
\ard&amp;k
good con dttr on sell o s se t Call
after ~pm 4'1'J. 2Y9'i
If YO U have a servrce !o offer
wont to buy or sell some thtng
MH A l BOOKCAS t: 4 sh elves.
o e lookrng lor work
, or
Mo tchr ng me tal slep table wrth
whatever
you II ge t resulls
3 shel ves Smal l stereo and
ta ste r wrlh o Senltnel Won1 Ad
radm comb rno tro n large t'hrlco
Loll9q2 21 S6
ster eo w th rad ro romb rnolr on
Revolvrng wro ught •ron TV
YARU SA lt: OC! S 6 Green house
s1ond Boys lrn ed CPO srze 12
Gre en hou se behmd Stat e
C rrl s wrnler coot srze 1b
Htghwoy Gar age on Ht I 10-4
Men s dre ss shoes stz e 9 1
steel toe Boys Them M eAn
!&gt;hoes b 1 0 ond monv Ioeh r
l'cto for sate
boys
g•rl s
1unror s
and
women s cloth tng 992 '1.1!5
HOOr HOLLOW Hor!.es Buy sell
trade or trorn New and used
saddles Ruth Ree .... es Albonv
( 614 ) 69~

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

3290

RISING ST AR Kennels Boardrng
and groomtng
all br eed s
Ch eshtre J6i' 0292 or 3b7 01 Ob

l HAlf AUSTRALIAN 1:\lue Heale r
on d ha lf Austrolton Shephe r d
f er nole 94q '11:32'1

Now Only

ill!.

water

100 fORO NGER pr ck u p
t:xplorer pack oge P S
auto Irons
l
ton 300
6 cy l engm e 747. :lH£'6

llll5 CHE VROLH CAMAR O
'1'12 562 1 or 992 2205

1&lt;n l CAMARO

trr es
and
9q2 3859
19~ 1

fORO SW automofrc power
stee rmg good mechan tcol con
d thon 997. i'OHO offer 5pm

19 15 DATSUN PICKUP Good con
dt! ton
Good trres
l ow
mrleage Step bumper Truck
rnrrro rs $2750 985 39~9
19~.4

PINTO 4 spE&gt;ed
5 1 000
m tl es New brakes and balfery
Good trres
NAOA reto rt
S 1525 Loon $9~5 Askrng $ij50
992 S'lJO

197 t L)USTER good condt tr on
SIOO 9C/26101
19 ~5

CHEVY LUV wr!h camper
Pnced to sell 992 ~850 oiler

4pm

1478 TOYOTA CHICA GT l 1fl
back Spec: 1a l ed rt ro n Sl ack
Phone 992 5860 or 992 32bo4

Fodt(.a

~~~~ii ~ :~

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 nor rh of Pomeroy
larg= ~ol ~ _loii9CI3__ i'4}9
J AND 4 RM lurnr shed and un
lur n rshed
opt s
Ph one
9'n 5434
TWO BEDROOM kt!chen furnrsh
ed opt Call before 8 om
12

SNOW
TIRE SALE

Pomeroy Landmark

9 ...J_!Ck W.

Carsey, Mgr.
. . . Phone 992-21BI

-·

LAI)Y KENMOHI:: com poc! w asher
and drver wrlh sta ck sland
Lrke new Ideal lor lrarler

22~~

bO MOBILE home m Rocrne
area 992 5858
I(

INTE RNATIONAL OU550 dresel
engme {Broken cr ank) No
star ter $200 f42 3093
tOOo rT 4 p1pe Plarn end $1 It
fo42 30qJ
5 SPt:t:D Gl:Afl bo~e for 1850 Int er
notional $200 742 3093

HOUSI:: IN Bradbu rv 1 chrl d con
s1 der ed no pe ts Reference re
qurred
$150 per
mon th
304 075 3834
PORTLAND AREA 3 bedroom un
furnrshed modular $200 per
month References ond deposr l
requned 304 273 5272
rOU R BEDROOM house rn Racrne
No pets 949 22~3
ONt:

mole

adult

9'1231BI

~-

~

-

1 II
:&gt;leeps
Stll. gas ele&lt;:111c refngerot or
fu rnace gas range w rlh O\len
hood ond fan double srnk ,
flush torlet holdr ng tan ks 4
1ocks and other equ1pment
clean and tn excellent cond1
Iron G 1: Heuter Bo x b66
Pomeroy OH J5769 Phone

()\1\.o'&gt;ll o"' ,&lt;-~ ~347
"' q'#' gal.

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark

9 ... .:!.ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

-·

...

Phone 992-2111

TWO 81:0ROOM opt
close lo
tow~ Co~ I ~2 3592ol!_er_7 pm

CUT YOUR own lrrewood SA
regular prc ku p !ruck load 1-'aul
Nease
Rt
3
Pome roy

ONt: B!:OROOM mobrle home
A dults on ly 992 259H

100 BU Of old co rn $2 per bu

9~5

3942

9~5 392~

.£

-

PHON[

9926192

2 825 14 1n wheels and trres lor
WATER WH L drrllrng Wd ltom T
Grant l4:l LHN
fOH YOUR r omplete hou!&gt; lll9
temodeltn g con struct ron and
rnorntenance grve J H a trv
Hl" f o r e ce
ovadoble
Reasonable prr (. es
Pho ne
9~') 5191

=
SHAPER STAND ond blades compressor wtlh hose nnd sprov
gun Craftsman Bondsow 9
lhroa l HonlPitte cho rn loOW
rww
M rll t.•rfo ll nu tc r sow
ltV') b:J8~

MOUNTI::l) TRACTOR sprover
f-armoll a tr OII\11 Whe Ois and
Ol(le to burld tta tlt• • h nJr 8 i'5 •
16 ::i 1rud&lt; IIH! t. lrlo.• llt!W fo rm
Ct ru rr
c.- lev ato r

.

Call Us Today

older Chevy 14 rn chorns
Hand mower ond spraver as •s
S~ each Sn ack bor l or lroiler
Other ttems 3rd tra1ler from
f uppers Plarns Fue Dept

CAPTAIN F:,\SY

9-7- 1 mo.

WHAT A&amp;OUT
MAYOR 60613 ~
AND MOX.IE- ~

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich)
109 H1gh 51

•

I

Pomeroy

8 2·1 mo

MAY~e W~ BETTER TIE
'E M UP FIRST--IN CA~E­
THEY COME TO! I'LL RIP
UP THE~E DRAPES!

OKAY-- NOW T'FIND THAT
"5U&amp;·I3A~E-MENT" TH&amp;Y
WERE TALKIN' A&amp;OUT!

1}Jtjif.\.ft ~'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
1..9 ~~ ® byHennArnoldandBoblee

~

QUALITY

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter Ia each squa re to form
four ordrnary words

WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

220 E. Mlln StrMI,

Pomeroy,O.
C.ll992-7013
For Froe Estlmoles
9-21· 1mo.

.

Tony's Carry

ut.

•

1

••

Open Soturdly 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8 31 I mo .

I

H. L WRITESEL

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

ROOFING

Res,dentlal and commer·
cial . Call for est1mate . 24
Hour Serv1ce Any day,
anytime.

Radiator~
Service..._ ............ ,,..

............
..............
..... _,_

'

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

·'

10·3D·c

MARRI!'D ~

~OU

I I I

ATIRI Bure

IHAPNORt

tJol1. SOCC~SFUl-

I KJ

IMRRIN/Je~

tSPSEC

~h.I9Z.Z174

fOH SAl t: or trade 14 frbergloss
boot wrlh motor end lra1!er fOR SAl t: by owne r 512 1: Morn
Also a B x .40 house tror ler 2
St
Pomeroy b roo m house
bedr good for camp rng Can
carport
W B
fir ep la ce
be seen at .41 ~ Morn St
ca rpeted com pl ete modern k11
Pomeroy 992 30b9
chen concrete d~rve Also a d
1o cent A !rome bu s1ness
budd•ng w tth conc re te po rk rng
area $55 000 f or appt "phon e
992 39~ 1

Muffler . Brakes
Shocks . Tires
Battery .
Installation Service
I'll. 992·2848

'

1n

·=
11 ACRES -More or less, 4
bedrooms, modern bath,
large kitchen &amp; dining
room ,

fireplace,

several

rA HM fOR sale House 7. barn s
tra der large pond 10 a cres or
H2 acres 14 2 2!:&gt;00

outbuildings. Owner being
transferred
Price
$35,000 DO

Nt:W THRU: bedroom home rec
room frr epl oce large deck
garage basemen! one a nd a
hall ba th s Phone Lee Construe
tron
992 345.4
wet::tkends
1 b14 446 95b8

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

fi VE ROOM house and bo th
remode led full y carpeted Mov
be see n after :J pm Phone
4'1:J J933
IN Pomerov Lorge lot
Some recenl remode lrng New
carpet Central heatmg Ut1lrty
room ful l bo semenl 2 per
ches f urnr shed or unfurnr shed
992 i'Ol-4

2 c eres
9Y1 1513

o.

Pomeroy.
3·1S-ffc

I,

Sweepers roos ters rrons all
small apphonres lawn mower .,
nex t to Stole Htghwoy Goroge ~
on Route 7 Phone {6 1.4 ) 98S

3625

-

exira lot, 4
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas heat, city water, and 2
car garage $14,000
OUT SKIRTS OF TOWN3 bedroom home with level
lot Has nice bath, natura l
gas central heating, city
water , U-shaped modern
kitchen. and near schools.
$185.00 down payment and
$248.06 per month to those
who qua l ify.
LARGE NEW HOME W11h 3 nice s1zed bedrooms,
2 baths, excellenl family
room · with flrejJlace and
large plate glass windows
and doors. 2 car garage and
I acre of level land
COZY - • bedroom home
with ~ gas ~1". , city
water ~·,.c.,a.~~Q and
garden. \ '""'V~y $10,000
for a qulc ... sale
LAND - Lots of acreage
on Stale Routes, Ohlo
River, and In l~e country
All sizes and prices. Drop
In

has

to see

ARE YOU WANTING TO
SELL? CALL 992-3325 for
lEST RESULTS.
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Tulerd
Sue P. Murphy
Aasoeitllel

flousmq
fl, !i ulqu.u t l'r s

-

- ~- -.--

--

-

-

MAIN ............

0.

NEW LISTING - ..S Acres,
mostly timber , 1 year old
14x70 Hollypark, with large
adda room and expando, 3
Bdrms ., 1'1:2 baths, ex
cellent condition, large
deck area, beautiful set
ling, secluded on good
r011d, $48,000 00.
NEW LISTING 1'12
slory, 3 bdrms ., 50x200 lot,
part

basement,

112 acre

ground, fireplace, $800.00
down, 30 yrs .. 911:1 Pet. lnl,
$119.41 monthly pay, If you
qualify ONLY $15,000.00
NEW LISTING
In
Middleport, duplex. new
kllchen, new heating, new
carpeting, 2 lols, plusa 1966
Skyline mobile home. ALL
FOR $15,500 00.
MODERN RANCH - In
SyJIIICuse,
3
bdrms ,

garage ,

part

basement,

nice 1yard, porch, patio,
excellent condition, ex
ce ll ent neighborhood .
Below lair MKT VALUE
$2S,SOO 00.
SUPER NICE - A-Frti
21f:z acres, 3 bdrms.
baths,

~

--~

rec . room, flrep

e,

many features. close to
town. $37,500 00.
OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AND WE STILL
HAVE
QUALIFIED
BUYERS
FOR
ALL
TYPES OF PROPERTY,
LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992·22,, 992-6191
992-25d
Klink, Kathy Leon•
Cle'-nd
Associates

a

A ·m

mammal
Wine 11 Ubyan port 31 Nudge

(

zs Enfold

being

N Gratify
M Uke Z5 Obatliulll!
of bricks
ze Conllcience 311 Gennan
ptaguer
article

Republic

capltal

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

/

t;RrM.SLi!V HA$ 1\
r-Reltr Fu"r'URE HER!

••••

AUTOMOBIL~

INSURANCI:: been
conceit ed? lost your operators
license? Phone 'W'l 2143

Ha~

PfleuuD&amp;c::.es

AR! ALL IN £.1Nf:

\Nti"H c::.OMPANY

19 i'6 t-JASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1' , both underp1nnrng, $1500
and assume loon 949 26E:I3 or
843 3311

slanglirl--t-

30 Put cash
Into

poL.lGY.

Opemng lead : • 8

~t

U Weight
43 Voice for
11

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Mother

Machree"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

One letter Simply stands for another In thio sample A lo
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc Stngle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the warda are all
hints. Each day the code lettel'! are different.

IRQ

JYG

OHXXHFZ

electn c fu rn1shed otr condl·
Ironed woshef and dryer Also
2 lots rn Horrrsonlid lo
142 2826

A351

0 DI Z

ZIKQ

JQHRB

ZHUQK -

GDFR

RIGDHRB

HU

HRSQNHUHIR
AFZQU

Yellenlay 11 Cryptoquote: DO NOT ALWAYS ASSUME THAT
THE OTHER FELLOW HAS INTEWGENCE EQUAL TO
YOURS. HE MAY HAVE MORE.-TERRY-THOMAS
© 111'18 Klq FNtuno Sylldiule. In&lt;:

1901 HOUSE !HAILER 12 • bO All

9~ 5

HR

DFJHGYFX

---

Bottom enclosed Ti.d down
Complete hook up Winterized
o acre lo t
Tool 5toraga

~

Rl

DYZFR

1 1 , ACRt: 12 x bO mobrl e home
near Oex ter 992 5858

rwo YEDROOM mobile home

It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

HU

PT PLEASANT W VA

- - - - - - - - ·-- -

how to work

CRYPI'OQUOTI!S

Amherst 501C\2 2 HR
lYIO Chompmn b0~~:12 2 HR
1965 General60xl2 2 Blf
1Yb8PMCS2x i22BR
19SS Prarrre Schooner 2Hx8 1 BH
1YI'J Hoy a! Embas:!ly btiiC I 4 3 BR
1959 Star SOx 10 2 HR
1973 Star bOx 14 2 8R
1%a Star bO•l'l2 8R
1970 Syl va 60x12 2 Blf
19b8 Vtlfoges bOIC\2 2 BM
19M W1ndsor Sl x 10 2 BR
1970 Krrkwood 12x60 J SR
8&amp;S MOBILE HOME SA.U:S

Unlurnrshed
Comp letely
redecorated I 304 b75 1958 for
appomtm~t _ ~ __ _

• KJ9753

Vulnerable , Netther
Dealer : East
West Nortlt East South
z• Pass
3 NT
Pass
Obi
Pass
Pass Pass Pass

19~0

1915 OAKMONT 14 • 70 3 bedr

• 865

of Turkey

Rl:t:Vl: S TRADING Pos t Pagevt lle
Gracerres drv goods hard
ware feed lock shop Specrol
25_11~-of do~_!?od S3 8!!,_ ____

1977 ACAD~MV MOBILE home 2 ..
bedroom wt !h horseshoe krt
chen Iorge drmng room Seen ,
at 737 8eech St Mrddleport
Oh1o

t K73

• 84

+KJ
+ KB
+109753 2
SOUTH
• 10 4 2
•AQ6
• QJ095 2
• Q4

31 Braided
Prohibit
UConcert

P

NORTH
10.17-A
+ AQJ 9
• 10 2
• B74 J
+ AJ 6
EAST

+ A6

~---atlil ..

IF~R~A~N~K~&amp;~E~R~Nri~
E--~--------~-----------------------------------------------,

Making finesse decisions

WEST

boat
..~.....'111111 37 She: Fr.
\

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

31 Fonner
Indian coin

34 Oriental

- - - ----

-

zz Sift

ruler

PULLINS EXLAVATING Complet e
Ser11rce Phone 992 2478

-

tJ Brldal-fiOte 3% Quench
word
:13 Principle

human
llArmenian

BRIDGE

Z8 Sir Arthur

Moslem

some

carpeting, Immediate
possession $11,000.00.
NEW LISTING VS
approved, 1'12 story, 3
bdrms , carpor1,

~

nymphs
• Scrutinize
7 Armor
skirt
I Any

of Pollux
graft:

~

BA THROOMS AND
Krtchens
remodeled ceramiC ttl e plu m
hrng carpentry and gener al
tno1nlenonce, 13 veers e:o:
pe_r r~ n5e_ 992 3bEI5

1C S.A.

Z8 Political

HOWERY AND MARTtN
h
cav olrng
!i&amp;ptr c sy stem s
dozer backhoe dump lrtJck.
lrmes ton e
grave l, b locktop
pa vrng Ht 143 Phone 1 (b 14)
698 13J1

POMEROY,

124

of

Will do raof rng con!ltruclron
pl umbrng and healrng No JOb
too Iorge or too small Phon(!
~42 2348

S EAU Tt~Ul

1.9 ACRES - Nice older
home of 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, fu ll basement,
modern
kitchen,
and
garage Ideal location In
good neighborhood.
OLDER HOME - On Rt

Dad never approved

'100 ASKED SNOOf'lf'
TO GET "(OUR BLANKET
BACK FROM EUDORA?

IF ANI{ONE CAN DO IT,
HE CAN ... HE'S 601N6
TO WIN HER OVER AT
THE DISCO SCENE

BABE' DO 'fOU
HERE OFTEN 7

L U/1"'

I'LL GIVE
'IE A SLICE
OF BLUEBERRY
PIE SOON AS
\IE GIT ALL
'lORE T0'/5

PUT AWAY

15.

1 oo-Hollywood Squares 3. All My Children 6,13.
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10, Not For Women On ly 1S
I 31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, As The World Turns
B. 10, 2 oo-Qne Life to Live 6,13
2 31&gt;-Doctors 3,4,15. Guiding Light 8,10
3 oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospllal 6,13,
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
J 3G-Mash B, Joker' s Wild 10, Over Easy 20
4 oo-Misler Cartoon 3, Battle of lhe Planets 4,
Hollywood Squares IS, Merv Griffin 6. Porky Pig
&amp; Friends B, Sesame Sl 20,33, Balman 10, Dinah
13
4 JG-LIIIIe Rascals 3, Gi lligan's Is 4,8, Brady Bunch
10, Pettlcoal Junction 15
5 oo-Voyage to the Bottom oflhe Sea 3, Star Trek 4,
Beverly Hillbillies B. Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood
20.33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10, Emergency One 13.
Brady Bunch 15
5 31&gt;-News 6, Sanford &amp; Son 8, Elec Co 20.33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10. Odd Couple 15
6 oo-News 3,4.6,B,10,13,15. ABC News 6. Zoom 20
6 31&gt;-NBC News 3,4,15. ABC News 13, Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20
7 DO-Cross Wits 3, PM Magazine 4, Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha Na NaB, News 10; Love, American Syle
15. Coping With Kids 20. Big Green Magazine 33 .
7 3D-Doll y 3, Dating Game 4, Match Game PM 6,
Price Is Righi B, The Judge 10. That's Hollywood
13. Wild Kingdom IS, MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33
8 oo-Movle " lshl" 3,4,15. Eight Is Enough 6,13,
Jeflersons 8,10, Marie Curie 20,33
B 31&gt;-ln he Beginning B,1 0
9 DO-Charlie's Angels 6,13, Movie " Mcllntock" 8,10,

Ylltenlay'o .U.wer

II Mountain

Z3 IchabOd!eCommune
In Tuscany
Z7 Motber

1hel(re all rich! The~
can afford to pa4 a bucll.
ortwo
a lesson'

~,6, 10, America Alive

Tuesday, Ocl. 17

t One o' -

Priest
!1 111 ruedias ~~~::.1 IL!~~~_:_:::L__JI!;.:_~~=J__~.....l....I......JIZ% Magi guide

qive those people
pleasure! The~'ve nPVI~r
pla4ed with a pro ,..,;___..::;:-,,
before!

3, News

go-between

ze -Baker

(;ASOLINE ALLEY

OQ-Newscenter

Great Performances 33, Prisoner 20

~ad~

15 Repair
17 Blood
condition
18 Walt upon

SI:WING MACHIN!: Repo1n sc r
vrce all mak es q92 2284 The
fobrte
Shop
Pom eroy
Authorrzed Srnger Soles end
Servr ce We .s~~pen ~~~ors

20

10 oo-Vegas 6,13, News 20
10 31&gt;-Monet 33, Turnabout 20
II oo-News 3,4,6,8,13,1S. News. Dick Cavetl20. Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15. Pollee Woman 6,1:j;
News 8.10
12 oo-Gunsmoke B. Movie " The Plge&lt;~n That Took
Rome" 10
12 41&gt;-SWAT 6,13, 1 oo-Tomorrow 3_4, News 8
1 o;o....,News 13

3 Athlete's

vehicle

I::XCAVA liNG dozer
backhoe
and drtcher Charles R Hnl
lreld
8o ck Hoe Serv rce
Rutland Ohro Phone 742 2001:1

After Hours
C.II992-713J
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

s~:a~.
(~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 10 P881111geway

1% Shipment
to Bethlehem
U Serving

l::XCAVATING doter looder ond
back hoe work dump truck s
and lo boy s for hrre wtll haul
lrl l drrt to sod hmestone ard
grovel Coli Bob or Rog er Jef
l ers day phone flq2-7089 ntghl
p~o~e ~92 35~5 or 992~~~

B04 W. Mam
Pomeroy
992-2298

UTIER STAID BICKER ENMITV
' He likes you a lot, but he co uld be
married '- "ADMIRER"

ACROSS
44 Anti-prohi1 Defunct basketbltionist
ballleague
DOWN
t Spain's 1 Kitchen
del SOl
emanation
9 Clothing
Z Buque

ELWOOD BOWEHS RErAIH

rooms 011d
Old Rt 33

3 bedroom all electrrc
home w rth over I acre of land
Prrce reduced 949 2424

rn

XI I I I I )"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BRAOFOHD
Auct ronee r
Com
pte te Servr ce Phone 949 24 ~ !
or 949 2000 ~acm e Ohro (n il
!!radford

fOR SALE by owner l
bolh

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form the surpr~se answer as sug
gested by the above cartoon

tiMM'tHI

'

AI.I.EYOOP

lernale

MIGIHI &amp;E.

The latest JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK ~11 Available for $1 35 EACH pos tpaid trom Jumbl e c/o this
newspaper P 0 Bm: 3.4 No rwood N J 07648 Make chec ks payable to
NewspaperbookS

Giw Away

8JWJI1t

I Jumbles
Answer

I;

MOORE'S

·.

Yesterda, s

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kappte
At

VA f HA JO yr frnancrng also
relrnanc rng Ireland Mortgage
n t: State Athen s phone (b14)
5CI'J3051

lO GOOL&gt; horne b months old

I

1'5ARGIAINPR IC::ED CAME~A5

(Answefs tomorrow)

HOMESITt:S l or so le 1 acre end
up Mrddleport near Hutlond
Ca ll q92 i'd~1

Kill ~NS 2 yellow slrrped one
whtle long ho tred 1 grey Ot1 e
yt:llow and whr te
House
11 otned Mergs County Humane
San ely W2 'l.5Y2 or 992 2039

XJ

Prlntanswerhere· "[

8-20-lmo (Pd)

!-=Of.! SAL!: or trade l9b9 Plymouth
Rood
Runner
H1gh per
larmance 383 4 speed Phon e
304 713 5615 or rngurre at cor
ner ol Center and 4th Sf
Mason

...

NADAP

TOWAATOO

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Free Est1mates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Chester, Oh10

114\S IS AW!.Ef'Hc;,.l(;
fQ.l- ... m" 'lbU
HAPPil-'1'

EXPERIENCED

Remembers

Tomorrow 8,10

" ~'.\';~!.- "'""··-

"
"

Thomas

11 31&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15. Family Feud 6,13,
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St 20,33
11 55-CBS News 8. House Call 10
Young &amp; Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13
12 31&gt;-Ryan's Hope 6,13, Bob Braun 4 , Search tor

r1

•

WEDNESDAY, OCTOIER,II,1971
5.45-Farm Report 13, 5 50-PTl Club 13, 5 55Sunrise Semester 10.
6 oo-PTL Club 15; 6 25-Chrlstopher Closeup 10
6 31&gt;-News Conference 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester B.
6 45-Mornlng Report 3, 6 50-Good Mornlno. West
Virginia 13. 6 55-Chuck White Reports 10. News
13
7 oo-Today 3,4,15, Good Morning America 6,13. CBS
News 8. Jetsons 10
7 .-schoolles 10
8 DO-Capt Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame Sl 33
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3. Phil Donahue 4,13,15, Hogan' s
Heroes 8. Match Game 10.
9 31&gt;-Brady Bunch 8, Family Affair 10
10·011-Card Sharks 3,15; My Three Sons 4. Edge of
Nlghl6. All In The Family 8,10, Dating Game 13
10 31&gt;-Jeopardy 3.4,15; Andy GriHIIh 6. Price Is Right
B,IO. $20.000 Pyramid 13
11 oo-High Rollers 3.4. 15; Happy Days 6,13. Lowell

12

PUJEL

In Mtdd leporl between
Third &amp; Fourth SlrMI-off
Mill StrHI ~sf behind

BORN I.OSF:R

992-3325
216 E. Second Street

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay SJ.99

work

'Ilia APPJliJIIGIIJAN
MOVE GOMPANY

ELLIOTT
APPUANCE II

ANTI-FREEZE

1914 DATSUN PICKUP

I,

Annstrong Carpeting

9'12 2490

12 x 60 mobtle home nea r Dexter
992 585~

TRAilER

SENIORS

we are currently 'maktng
apporntments for sen1or
portrarts
We use trad1
tlonal sethngs and ats.~.
feature
outdoor
por ·
fra tiure

H O U S~

--PICKUP CAMPER 10

Estimates.

Your Headquarters For

THRt:t: Ht: DROOM fra me home
Mtddlepor t Call992 3451

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

All

Call Tom
osk1ns, 949 -2 160. Free

High School

lr tsh Seiter
red
IIB5 JB t 0 oiler 4

992 3324

1977 MONZA SPYO t R 305 engrn e
Power steer rng Power b rakes
AM 1-= M rodro More e)(lra s Cal l
742 2826

991

1-=0Uf.l 13 rr ch Crogor SS w hee l!&gt;
W1H frt f ord and Chevrolet
$200 1.42 282b
1907 f OHO 1-'ICKUP Good cond t
Iron $500 or best offer Phone
992 b323

350 auto new
porn!
S1SOO

experience .
~uaronteed.

4-311-IIC

Phone 992-2111

1HRH THACTOHS
sole
Wagons other form equ tp
menl
fltck Crow
y&lt;j2 2tJ92
(day) 992 ~511 (eve nr ngs)

'•

'

All :r.pes of roofing, guHtrs
ownspouts, 20 yurs

~

Chev rolet heovv du ty 1 , lon
0 cyl Slon dard lronsmlsSton
wrth topper Good condrtron
Call 949 2449

I

&amp;

Real. ~:et&amp;~r
1m- SD~e
.
. :. ;. -~

19 ~5

..

SERVICE

I

6 oo-News 3.~.8.10,]3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6 31&gt;-N BC News 3.4,15; ABC News 13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B,IO, Over Easy 20
7 DO-Cross-Wits 3, PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Pop Goes The Country B. News 10, Love,
American Style 15; Lock, Stock and Barrel 20 ;
Economically Speaking 33
7 31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races 8;
D~tlng Game 4, Candid Camera 6. Price Is Right
10. Donna Fargo 13, TV Honor Society IS, MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33
B oo-Movle "Little Big Man" 3,4,15, Happy Days 6.13;
Paper Chase 8, 10, Soundstage 20, City Report 33
8 31&gt;-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13, When the Boat Comes In
33
9 oo-Three's Company 6,13 ; Movie "The Great Scout
&amp; Cathouse Thursday" B,lO, Champions 20
9 31&gt;-Taxl 6,13; In Performance AI Wolf Trap 33.
10 oo-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13, News 20

'

'

'

BoX l

1913 INH:RNATIONAL 1 ton V 8
tru ck wr lh Omaho metal grarn
bed and cattle rack ex ten!&gt;ron
On ly IU 000 miles Shrnn s Tro c
l or Soles JOd 4 ~8 1630 Leon

.. -

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING!
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

Aut'&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

309 ,95

w,o

t'1n CAIJI LlAt HIJORAIJO ru l l
power and orr AM fM radro
fuel mtec tr on Coli 992 746'2

0

Gunsmoke 8, Movie "Planet of the Apes" 10, ABC
New§ 3J
12 3G-N'ews B. 1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4
1 ss-News 13.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17,1970

"'• milt oH Rt. 7 ll'f-t&gt;U• on
51. Ill. 124 to-ret Rutland,

Cellulosic ( woDd. fiber)
Therma I insulation
Sovt 30 pct. to 50 pet.
on hutlngcost
Exptrltnculld
lu lly iMured
FrM Est.
Call992-2772
8-10-lmo. (Pd I

' ..£~~~w~~~:J.'!.r.

14!5 CADILLAC HDOHADO r vl l
power and A C AM fM rod ro
' power seats L.al l 992 l -407.

7t

'

,

Let us test vour
l=ree

1:\fAGLE PU PS and trd'lned rabbrt
dogs Voung and old Wrl l se ll
or tradtco l or guns or someth mg
of eq ual va lue 742 2521

1978 f
truck
1-' H
CI0

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Easy 33
11 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3.4,15, Movie " Calch-22" 6,13,

A

.

ROGER.HYSEU.
GARMiE

Phone 985-3106
Jock Gtnlher 985-3806

soften &amp; condthon your
water w1th Co-op wate~
softener, Model UC·S VI

LOVAHLt: WHITt: snow drrft gr eat
PYI?t:NEES
Puppr es
Phone
t 014 60 ~ ::1838
GOING OUl o f ~u s rn es s So le 1
Poodles Pek mgese Pomero
ntan Teacup Tm tes $35 to
S l 2~ Phone61.d ,b46 J'lq!

J&amp;L

Let Pomerov Landmark

t4fU fORD VAN cu stomrzed
new potnt fi r es an d wheel s
S I '200 or b es t offer ~42 239b
' PUBLIC NOTICE
In the Court of Common
Pleas,
Juvenile
Court
DIVISIOn, Melg5 County, Ohro
SUMMONS
case Nb. 21501
Doc 2 Page J98
To Carl R Hysell, Juven rle
Proba ti on Off rce r of Mergs
County, Otiro
You are commanded to
notrfy Sanely But cher D1stel
hOrst , address unknown and
Paul Orstelhorst address
unknown that a compla rn t
has been f1teel rn th1S Cour t
that L1Sa Orste lh or st, age 7
years, 0 0 B 6 10 1971 ap
pears to be a neglec ted chrld
It rs requ ested that per
manent custody be granted
Permanent custody means
that the parents, guard tan or
other c ustod1an may b e
permanent ly d1vested of all
parenta l rights .
tt 1s ordered that they
appear persona ll y befo r e me
court at Pomeroy , Ohio on
the 1st day of November 1978
at10 00 o'clock AM Further
rt rs ordered that the person
hav rno physrcal c ustody or
control of sa rd c hild shall
bring the c hild to the hearrn g
who
A person so not rf1ed
tarts to appear. mav be
punished as rn other c ases of
contempt of court
Anv partv rs ent rtted to
cou nse l rn the proceedings
and the court writ appoint
counsel rt the party is rn
d 1g ent
Sard Cl!rl R Hvsell w i ll
make due return of thiS wnt
on or before the 28th day of
October 1978
WITNES S my hand and the
sea l ot satd court thi S 14th
day of October 1978
Mann rng 0 Webster
Judge

~ nnd

g•o . . el
i l;:' t tdiJ c t dog
loorl anrl all lypt•!&gt; of .. all b •
u•b tot Soil Wor k ~ lm 1- Mar 11
~ ~ Pomeroy 11&lt;12 J!l&lt;l1

Help Wanted

•

I

liM t~ I O NI~ oluur n ch lonrle

ONl: Iorge whllt• lt.: mol t•
ciog t brown 1 blut' P'J'C Butl
•n gham
or e o
Re owrc1
'1 9'1 1016

TELEVISION
VIEWING

,,

'

PUBLIC NOTICE
In the Court of Common
Pleas.
Juvenrle
Court
D1vrsron, Melg5 County, Otpo
SUMMONS

10 .-Like If Is 20, Area ShowcaH 33
11 ·oo-News 3,4,6,B,IO.J3,15; Dick Cavell 20, Over

ves,

MA'AM

East-West were usmg the
weak two bld, a convention
that has become very popular, especially among tournament players. It 1s a descriptive b1d enabling the
weak two-bidder to defme
his hand within certain limIts and also to rob the opponents of valuable blddmg
space.
ThiS tune the weak twobid backfired. The effect
was to catapult North-South
Into a 22-pomt, three-notrwnp contract wh1ch they
would not have reached under their own steam; yet it
wlls a contract that was
made with careful play .
The opening heart lead
was covered by the 10 and
king . Declarer made his
first good play by allowing
the king to wm the trick. The

obJect was to keep hearts
stopped and exhaust West of
the few hearts he possessed
East contmued with a
heart which declarer won
wtth the queen. He succeSS·
fully !messed the kmg of
spades wtth dummy's jack
A small dtamond was led
from dununy and East's
jack was headed by South's
queen and West's ace.
West had no heart to lead

to h1s partner,

so he

switched to clubs South
once agam made a fine play .
He rose w1th dwnmy's ace of
clubs, refusing to take the
club finesse
Unfortunately, most players love to take !messes.
Takmg them Is all rtght, but
knowmg when not to take
them is better.
South didn't need the club
ftnesse. What he did need to
do was to knock out the kmg
of dtamonds before letting
East set up his hearts. So he
rose wtth the ace of clubs
and led another diamond
East took hts king nnd
cleared the hearts, but tl
was to no ava1l. South r epeated the spade finesse and
wound up with all the remaining trtcks

A Connecticut reader asks

If there ever was a card
called the cavaher.
Yes. It was an extra court
card used tn certain European games.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRJSE ASSN I

{Do yo u have a question for
the experts' Wrlle " Ask the

Experrs, '' care of this newspa·
per Individual quesllons will
be answered If accompanied
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes The most mterest~
mg quesllOns will be used In
fh 1s column and wtll recewe
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN)

I

f;

BRING

ON THE
BODACIOUS
PIE

•

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Midilleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Od. 17, 1978

Cardinal Wojtyla new pope
of Holland in 1523.
make a mistake correct me.'' Polish nun . She had stood in
But Wojtyla transformed
His words were drowned the great cobblestoned
VATICAN CITY (UP!) any disappointment to out by cheers of welcome. H square for 10 hours to learn
The choice of the papal
jubilation when he appeared any people in the throng had the name of her church's new
conclave electrified the
on
the balcony 15 minutes .nursed a private hurt that leader.
world, even before Pope John
later
in the full majesty of his John Paul II was not Italian,
"I'm so happy we have a
Paull! uttered his first words
red, white and gold papal they were woo over.
pope who is Polish like us,"
in slightly accented Italian.
vestments.
"! was afraid of receiving she said. " But at the same
The 300,000 people in St.
He opened his arms to the this nominatioo," the new time I wish we could .have
Peter's Square gasped when
crowd, raised his eyes to pontif! said, as the crowd kept him in our country as a
they heard their 264th pope
heaven and smiled
quieted down. "But I have cardinal."
was Cardinal Karol Wojtyla ,
somewhat nervously at first , taken it in the spirit of
Wojtyla was born to a
archbishop of Krakow ,
then with great warmth. The obedience toward our Lord working-class ·family in
Poland.
Polish pope came as a and absolute faith in his most Wadowice,
19
miles
The first non,Italian pope in
supplicant
before his Italian holy mother, the Madonna." southwest of Krakow, oo May
455 years.
flock, and they opened their
With a smiling Cardinal 18, 1920. The Nazis invaded
The first Polish pope.
to
him.
hearts
Wyszynski called ·to Poland when he was a teensiefan
The first pope from the
14
Praise be to Jesus his side, Wojtyla then ager, and his entire adult life
"church of silence" behind
Christ," were the pontiff's switched into Latin to intone has been spent under
the Iron Curtain.
first words to the world.
his first "urbi et orbi," the totalitarian rule.
Only 58 years old The ,t raditional traditional papal blessing
He studied for the
remarkable youth for the
benediction, a hallmark of directed to the city of Rome . priesthood secyetly while the
man chosen by his peers in
the devout Polish household, and the world .
Nazis controlled Poland,.and
the College of Cardinals to be
is
one of the phrases a Polish
Now that Wojtyla has as- was ordained at the age of 26.
the spiritual leader of the
child learns earliest in his sumed
the
papacy, He later earned a doctorate
world's 700 million faithful.
life.
Is
the
only degree in ROme and . has
Wyszynski
He is the youngest pope in
"My
dear
brothers
and
in
Poland,
where
85 attained a reputation as an
cardinal
modern times.
sisters, we are all still percent of the 33 million intellectual of the first order.
Wojtyla hilS become known
saddened at the death of our people are Roman Ca,thollcs. . He speaks English, French,
as a staunch anti-Communist
beloved Pope John Paul !," Polish Cardinal Boleslaw German and Italian in
in his leadership of Poland's
the new pope said · in . Filipiak died last week.
addition to Polish and the
estin\ated 30 million Roman
accented, but fluent ttalian.
After his brief "urbi et official church language,
Catholics. For years he has
KYGER CREEK ROYALTY ...,; Miss Judy Darst, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Darst,
" Even if I am not able to orbi" benediction, Wojtyla Latin.
defied the relentless hostility,
Rt. I, Cheshire, was crowned 1978 homecoming qtieen Friday night at Kyger Creek High
explain myself well in your retreated to the Vatican
The Rev . George H.
but he also is known to be
School. The crowning came during the after game dance held in the high school gym. Queen
Italian, in our Italian, if I Palace, accompanied by the Williams, a Harvard divinity .
slightly
more
ceremooies were scheduled for halftime of 'the KC-Southern game but were moved inside
110 beaming cardinals who professor who has known the
because of the incelement weather. Jon Thompson, right, was named KC homecoming king .
elected him, for a night of Polish prelate for 16 years,
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Thompson, Rt . I, Cheshire.
rest.
said, "! think he'll make a
"It's unbelievab1e! " cried great pope, He may even
Sister Irene Piotrowicz, a save the world ."
His first movie, a dramatic
introduced to burlesque king
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) Dan Dailey - a song and Harold Minsky, who put the role in "The Mortal Storm "
'
'
dance man in musicals of the dancer in a clown outfit with was followed by several other
19318 and 40s who became a flappy shoes to entertain the drama~ . His career was inI
I
audience before the women terupted by a stint in the
r~ed actor and wanted
MARVIN MULLENS
Springfield, and Jackie Lee
Army. Dailey returned from
to go pn stage in a wheelchair came on stage.
Marvin
M.
Mullens,
62,
Large; Route I, Middleport; a
to keep working after a
Soon, Dailey appeared in the Army to MGM in 1946 and
resolution
as
being
in
favor
of
Route
!,
Middleport
,
died
(Continued
from
page
1)
daughter,
Mrs. Charles
crippling injury - died in his the Broadway musicals starred with Miss Grable ih
equal education and funding Monday
afternoon
at (Kay) Willett, Route I,
pending
ceriilication.
sleep Monday at the age of 62 .. "Babes in Arms," "Stars in "Mother Wore Tights."
The board approved Diane for keeping buildings in good Veterans Memorial Hospit&lt;!L Middleport; three brothers,
From 1969 to 1971 Dailey Your Eyes" and "! Married
His three marriages, to
Mr. Mullens was a veteran William, Circleville; Wilson,
Haddad's attendance at the repair.
starred as the governor in the an Angel," where he was seen Esther Rodier, Elizabeth
The
board
approved
apof
W.orld War II having Springfield, and Roy of Mt.
Ohio
Art
Education
television series, "The by "!l MGM scout who signed Hofer! and Gwenn O'Connor
for
Title
Four
funds
serv~ in the U. S. Army and Sterling ; a sister, Miss Lillie
plication
Association
Conference
in
all ended in divorce.
Governor and J.J." He was him to a contract in 1940.
Columbus next month and and changed a contract on was a member of the Grace Mullens, Gallipolis, and 10
nominated for an Academy
Sam
Crow to serve as a transportation by Mrs. Bible Baptist Church at Point grandchildren.
· Award for "Mother Wore
·
Funeral services will be
membtir
of the North Central Esther Scragg from Sept. 6 to Pleasant.
Tights" in 1947, one of a
Aug.
31.
He
was
born
March
10,
1916
held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Team
for
the
Evaluation
series of musicals costarring
It
was
also
agreed
to
at
Point
Pleasant
a
son
of
the
Grace
Bible Baptist Church
Newark
Catholic
High
Dailey with Betty Grable.
participate
in
the
Win
·
late
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Francis
No
expenses
are
with
the
Rev . Kenneth
School.
His manager, Al Melnick,
which
one
Mullens
.
He
was
also
program
through
Coleman
officiating.
Friends
involved
in
either
situation.
· said Dailey had been
The board approved the employe will be paid by the preceded in death by a may call at the Rawlingsuvirtually an invalid" since
Coats Funeral Home in
attendance of Jeame Bowen Bureau of Employment brother and a sister.
A~gust 1977, when he feU on
Surviving are his wife, Middleport from 2 to 4 and 7
and Barbara Shultz to a Services to receive training
stage during a performance
reading training session in in the schools. This is for 13 Ethel Queen Mullens; two to 9 p.m. Wednesday. The
of "The Odd Couple" at a
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. the West Virginia University Columbus as a part of their weeks but can be extended up sons, James Edward Large, body will be taken to the
dinner theater in North
to one year. The hoard will
church at noon on Thursday.
Carolina, breaking his hip, (UP!) - Although traveling School of Engineering and a Federal grant requirements.
use the employe to establish a
YO.U GET ALL THIS
in
"uncharted
waters,"
the
commission
member,
Is
the
employment
of.
There
and his condition was
media
center
at
the
Rutland
I
- 11 x 14 2 - 5 x 7's
chairman
of
the
Governor's
averred
tlje
credibility
of
one substitute involved in
aggravated for the last
Community
party
elementary
school
according
Commission
on
the
Willow
OSHA
is
at
stake,
and
he
their
attendance.
several months by severe
2- 8 x IO's 10 - Willlets
Island Disaster stressed at wants to know if the federal
The board entered into an to present plans.
anemia.
In LIVING COLOR
The
resignation
of
Iaces event
He appeared on Broadway the commission's first agency "did or didn't" do a agreement for the Nelsonville Elizabeth
Hensler
as
an
aide
rep
YOU PAY $3.00
last year despite surgery on meeting Monday that no good job investigating the -York School District to
(Continued
!rom
page
1)
. stone should be left unturned industrial accident.
assist with the identification was accepted.
the hip.
In lieu of a community
when photographep and
Attending .the meeting were ,
"Just because you're an of suspected handicapped
. While the fall fll'ced him to in determining the cause of
party, trick or treat night in mayor 's report showing
$13.95 when you
·
OSHA inspector doesn't mean children at 13 cents a student. Supt. Dowler, Goins, Dan Racine, scheduled for Oct. 26, receipts in the amount of
abandon plans to perform in a the accident.
Although not directly you're an expert," Atcheley A letter from Me1gs County Morris , principals, Diehl, has been cancelled.
new Broadway show, "Spot$3,253.75.
ckupyo~u~r~~~--~
Supt. Robert Bowen was read Mora and Bob Morris, board
light," Melnick said he had authorized to investigate the remarked.
The meeting was opened by
The auxiliary of the fire
The engineering dean's in reference to the absence of members Wendell Hoover, department will hold a party prayer by Lou Osborne.
hoped to continue his career cooling tower scaffold
collapse
itself,
the
panel
has
observation
came after Cook several bus drivers from a Carol Pierce, Virgil King and for Racine community Attending were Mayor AnIn "The Man Who Came to
indicated
it
will
scrutinize
the
said
the
commission
had no required safety meeting on Sheets and Treasurer Jane children at· the fire station. drews, Osborne, Brown,
Dinner," in which the leading
Wagner.
investigation
by
.
the
"vendettas"
against
bus driving held this fall.
l11M\M! ON
character is confined' to a
There will be sacks of goodies Wehrung, Young and Larry lii NG U3: fOLon
5U1Jt.:(·n
Occupational Safety and anybody .
wheelchair.
given to children 12 and under Powell, council members f'UH(; HA !&gt;• • I.W T IIE f'A ll( .\&lt; oY. .
"! or no other member of
Dailey, who lived with a Health Administration of the
from 6 to 7 p.m. on Monday,_ Jane walton, clerk, Donnie
A.t the request of the Franknurse in an aparbnent in April '!/ tragedy in which 51 .this covmission have any
REMEMBER!
Oct. 30. There will also be a Ward, Henry Werry and
vendettas against any lin County area superinGI\OOP'l &amp; FAM.Il Y POr\1 1\AJI~
Hollywood, last "as seen by a men died.
grand march of those masked Gerard.
IAKlN AI "NO AODIIIONAl
"We
are
traveling organization or individual or tendents, the board passed a
doctor Sunday night and
with prizes to go to the best ,
c~-&gt;A!l.C.t NOAc.rLwJI oruxn
~ w.NY PA( K,A(,IJ AS YOU
refused his advice to go to a . uncharted waters in this anything," Cook said. "We
dressed, ugliest, prettiest and
N£f0
hospital. He was found dead situation," West Virginia have prejudged no one."
most original. Anyone
HYMN
SING
of
Labor
One thing the governor 's
Department
Mooday morning.
wishing to donate to the party
Ahymn sing will be held at
POMEROY
The New York-born actor Commissioner Stephen Cook panel wants to know is when
is asked to contact any 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Hazel
BEN FRANKLIN
said.
"One
of
the
objectives
of
OSHA's
final
report
might
be
always considered dancing a
auxiliary member.
C-0 -M-1-N-G
Community Church.
FURNACE OVERHEATED
" lucrative hobby ," even. this COJ!lmission is to clarify ready.
ONE ... DAY ... ONLY
Featured singers will be the
Wednesday , O(t . 18
Many questions formulated
The Orange Township
though his f1rst fllm role with areas that have certainly not
Gospel
Express
from
Time :. 121il S p.m.
been
cleared.
by
the
cOmmission
centered
volunteer
fire
department
MGM in 1940 was that of a
MASONIC RITES
The
public
is
Reynoldaburg
.
"It's important we leave no on qualifications, training was called Monday at 4:30
"heavy."
Members of Shade River invited.
United
Press
and assignment of federal p.m. to the R~ell Shields By
He began taking dancing stone unturned."
Masonic Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Cook said the commission inspectors, disposition of residence, Tuppers Plains IntemaUonal
lessons when he was 14 and he
will conduct Masonic rites for
Federal mediation between
and a schoolmate soon were would meet again Dec. 12, safety complaints that had where an overheated furnace
Wallace Amberger at 7:30
working for $2.50 each , perhaps in Charleston and been made at the Willow was on fire, Bob Tripp, fire the striking Painesville this evening at the Ewing
Township Education Funeral Home.
hoofing in a minstrel show. hopefully have some of the Island site, information oo chief, reported.
fines
and
violations
by
Dailey danced in the chorus answers from federal
The fire was contained to Association and the district's
industries
and
data
to
16
questions
on
safety
investigators
line at Roxy's and on a cruise
the furnace area . Damages school hoard was to resume
posed
at
records
for
construction
the
first
meeting.
ship bound Ill' the West
were estimated at less than today, following the teachers'
REVIVAL PLANNED
William
Atcheley,
dean
of
nationwide.
$1,000. There was insurance unanimous rejection of the
Indies before lie was
A
revival has been set for
on the home. Nine men an- last board offer.
the
Freedom
Gospel Mission
David S. Thorley, of the
swered the call.
at
Bald
Knob
from Oct. 22 to
Federal Mediation and
Oct.
29
with
the
Rev. Bernard
Concilation Service, declined
Thrash
of
Parkersburg
as
comment on the offer and has
EVENT OCT. 3ll
evangelist.
There
will
be
Trick or treat night in imposed a rule that neither special vocal music each
Tuppers Plains will be held side discuss the negotiations. evening for the services
The Painesville Township
Monday, Oct. 30 from 6:30 to
school
board made its latest which will begin at 7:30 p.m.
7:30. The siren will sound to
The
Rev .
Lawrence
begin and end the evening's offer late Sunday, after three Gluesencamp, pastor, invites
activities. Fire trucks will be days of bargaining ordered th.e public.
You t ho ug ht the Co nvert ibl e was gone - bu t
at each end of town to. slow by Lake County Commoo
it 's back in a unique ly sty led ri ng- o ne
Pleas Judge John M. Parks.
down traffic.
· side hi gh fash io n , one side casu al
The teachers rejected it, 1210. Thorley then called a one- Veterans Memorial hospital
James
Admitted
day halt to bargaining, to let
BAZAAR SLATED
Autherson, Racine ; Olmer
both
sides
reassess
their
A bazaar and bake sale will
Grimm, Middleport; Bennie
be held Thursday from 9 to 4 positions.
About 180 of the district's Lyons, Pomeroy; Naomi
at the home of Mildred
Bentley, Middleport; Edna wkb 11o•w EXCLUSIVE, ~mON
Spencer, Antiquity. The event 205 teachers are in the Richmond, Middleport; Mary
Is being sponsored by Willing association. They struck the Osborne, Pomeroy; Floyd
from
Hands Ladles Class of An- 4,7oktudent system Sept, '!/ . McClellan, Langsville.
in a dispute over wages and
tiquity Baptist Church.
COMMEMORATiVE WATCH
Discharged - Clarence
working conditions.
Haning,
Ruth
Mulford,
The district's 10 schools
That's right I Your own INDIVIDUALLY
CLASSES CHANGED
Wanda Sprague, Loretta .NUMBERED watch, REGISTERED IN
have
remained
open,
with
an
The baton classes held at
• We ar it as an opal for casua l wear
Holsinger, Edith Watson, YOUR OWN NAME.'
Royal Oak Park on Wed- average pupil attendance of Timothy Herdman.
Designed to celebrate 50 years ol tun
nesday have been changed to 25 percent.
e Flip it over to Diamonds &amp; Ru bies fo r evening
hom Mickey Mouse, the watch Is sure
A
strike
also
continued
Thursday night this week
to become a collectors' Item as
only. The time of the classes tOday in Logan where
e Or ch oose your ow n favo rite ston es
SQUAD RUN
Mickey grows lor· anol~er 50.
teachers
walked
out
Aug.
29
remain the same.
The Pomeroy emergency
It features an antique' Mickey Mouae figure frolt\l
making It the loogest school
the Disney archives In full color on the dial:
strike in the state's history. squad went to Laurel Cliff at
Mickey 's animated hands tell the time; precision
9:48
p.m·.
Monday
for
Roy
Logan schools have been
Swlaa movement; tailored go ldtone can; bruehed
FUNDS DISTRmUTEII
open with clsssea·-taught. by Howell who was taken to
lllu•lratlant
met•l back with Individual engraving; molded twoState
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Holzer ·Medical Center.
tnlarttd
piece strap; ettractlvely packaged.
supervisory peraonnel.
Ferguson reported the Oc"Th e regt1tratlon form Is packaged '11fllh lhe ..atch and
In Cleveland, students were
tober
distribution
of
muat be filled oul and returned In order to be rtglstertd,
back in the claasroom today
'-'....
.
$6,282,066.89 In local governSQUAD CALLED
Wttch llluatl'llttd Is children's sin. Alao available In larger..!ound and tan~ ltyle.
fclr the first time lhla SChool
ment fund money to Ohio's 88 ,year.
The emergency unit of the
counties and 388 cities and
Middleport
emergency squad
Teachers and nonacademic
villages levying local income employees ended a five- . was called to Bradbury at
tax.
weekold strike again.st the 3:53p.m. Monday for Marvin
' Meigs County received
!Ol,OOO«Iident school district Mullins who was taken to
$12,500 of the' total.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
last week.
Jly JACK R. PA YI'ON '

accommodating to the atheist
state than his colleague ,
Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski.
His election !rings· new
hope for peace between the
Marxist East and the
capitalist
West ,
but
ironically, his accession to
the Roman church's supreme
leadership post may mean he
can never return to his
homeland behind the Iron
Curtain.
The
new
pope
is
conservative in church
affairs - he firmly defended
the church's 1968 ban on
artificial birth control - but
also a determined advocate
of social democracy.
Wojtyla's election was announced to the world by
Cardinal Pericle Felici.
The wild cheering and applause that had greeted the
senior deacon of the College
of Cardinals seconds earlier
almost immediately reversed
to a gasp of disbelief as Felici
read the new pontiff's name.
There were some cries of
disappointment from some
Italians, whose countrymen
had controlled the church·
since the death of Hadrian VI

Actor Dailey claimed

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

Meigs board

1

Area Deaths

I

Photo's

NEW!!!

PAC

Commission's
pro.b e begins .

First •••

•

~" I T H

School
strikes
still on

1

$495.

gjou mugt come .gee
this unique flittg!
GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·

Sen. Kennedy blasts Republican leadership
By ROBERT SANGEORGE

Rhodes .
CLEVELAND (UP!) The
Massachusetts
Blasting
Republican senator , touching repeatedly
leadership in Ohio and on one of his favorite themes,
Washington and urging declared that health care
support for his national should be "a matter of right,
health care program, Sen. not a matter of need. " He
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., leveled strong criticism at
helped pumped enthusiasm ·Republicans, whom · he
and money into Democratic accused of cutting taxes at
gubernatorial candidate the expense of social service
Richard Celeste's campaign. programs . for poor and
Kennedy stumped the working people.
Cleveland area Tuesday on
"The next time you talk to a
behalf of Celeste, who is in a Republican member of Contight battle this fall with gress who say~ we can't
incumbent Gov . James A.

afford a national health care
program, you tell him , 'If it's
good enough for the
Congress, it's gond enough
for the people of the state of
Ohio,'" Kennedy told a crowd
of about 1,200 at the annual
Democratic Party Steer
Roast Tuesday night at
Cleveland Public Hall.
Earlier tuesday, Kennedy,
sporting a red carnation and
a booming voice that grew
hoarse as the day wore on,
brought a heavily ethnic
crowd of some 600 to its feet

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday . OCtober 18, 1978

OJIEC project
approved
COLUMBUS (UP!)- The Ohio Air Quallty Development
Authority Tuesday approved a $62 million bond Issue for the
Kyger Creek Power plant of the Ohio Valley Electric Co. In
Pike County to purchase and Install air pollution control
equipment.
Richard A. Mercer, executive director of the OAQDA, said
It was the largest bond issue ever approved by the authority,
which helps arrange financing for alr pollution control
projects .
OVEC plans to purchase five electrostatic pr~ipltators to
oontrol particulate emissions at the plant, which serves the
Piketon uranium enrichment faclllty.
Mercer said the equlpnient, to be in place by the middle of
1979, wUI bring the plant up to federal air quality standards.

at the Slovenian National
Horne on the city's East Side,
as he directed barbs at Ohio
Republicans and praise for
the statewide Democratic
ticket.
"Go on out and elect these
men to positions of
responsibility in the great
state of Ohio, " Kennedy
urged the crowd. "They're
concerned about jobs and
they're concerned about
inflation and how it robs the
pocketbooks of the average
working person ''

•

at

On hand for Kennedy's
appearance in Cleveland was
the
entire
state wide
Democratic ticket - Celeste,
Michael Dorian, candidate
for lieute nant go vernor ;
Attorney General William
Brown ; Auditor Th omas
Ferguson ; Treasure~
Gertrude Donahey, and
Anthon y
Ce lebrezze,
candidate for secretary of
state.
Also present were Ohio's
two senators, Howard
Metzenbaum and John Glenn,

proposals lor a national
health insurance program.
The senator and Carter
have publi cly spl it ove r
nationa l heal th insurance
options. "There are tens of
thousa nds, hundreds of
thousands, of Americans who
are failing to get the kinds of
care which they should
receive,'' Kennedy said, 'jand
(they) are really paying for
the health insurant'e failure,
the failure of the Congress to
enact it."
At the Cleveland rally,

en tine

Kennedy characterized the
statewide Democratic ticket
as one that is ~~ co ncerned
about education of the yow1g,
concerned about senior
citizens and concerned about
pro•i ding health care for
all ."
The senator arrived with
Ce leste after a brief
in
campaig n
stop
Youngstown earlier in the
day . While in Cleveland, He
also appeared at a fund raising cocktail party for
Celeste.

Fiftee n Cents
Vol. 2!1 , No. 130

Cardinals ih
ed for
courage by new pontiff

VATICAN CITY (UP!) The first Polish pope today
thanked ·the cardinals for
showing ugreat courage" in
electing him as the first nonItalian ponitff in 455 years
and asked the princes of the
church to join him in blessing
every believer in the world.
HOn this occasion~ the
. authentic universality of the
church shone out," Pope John
Paul II said in his second
address to the cardinals who
elected him two days ago as
leader of the world'e 700
million Roman catholics.
The former Cardinal Karol
PRETORIA, South Africa (UP!) - Secretary of State Wojtyla of Krakow said only
Cyrus Vance has met serious difficulties in his bid to get South his confidence in God could
Africa to accept a U.N. independence plan for Namibia , lead him to accept nis
election·with confidence .
endangering ~e vital diplomatic mission.
" Venerable brothers, it
"We are working tonight, I don't know about lomorrow,' '
was
an act of confidence and
said South African Prime Minister Pieter Botha Tuesday after
at
the
same time of great
two days of talks on Namibia's future with the representatives
courage
to call a non-Italian
of five Western nations, led by Vance.
to be bishop of Rome," the 58year pontiff safd in Polishaccented Italian.
PARIS .( UPI) - An exiled Croatian writer who was shot to
He said.that even after they
' death two days ago may have been the latest victim of return to their home dioceses
Communist agents who have dispatched three Bulgarians - or Vatican offices, the
two of them in poisoned umbrealla attacks, an emigre cardinals should continue to
publisher says.
Bruno Busic, the Croat propagandist, was warned by
French police eight mooths ago to stay away from Paris
because Yugoslav killers had been. assigned to murder him,
said emigre Croat publisher Vlado Pavlinic in London .

The vigorous, 58-year-old
share with him in the care for
former
. archibishop of
the church as a whole.
"! would like to impart on Krakow di splayed his statesyou, with great affection, my manship in tum by pledging
apostolic blessing,'' the pope "to extend our hand and open
said. "! would like to do it our heart " to all the world's
first for you and then with all oppressed peoples. But at the
of you, so the church same time he promised no
everywhere may be blessed " politi ca l interference or
by the new bishop of Rome participation in .. . worldly
and the entire college of a£fairs."
John Paul also spoke out on
cardinals, whose members
ecclesiastical
affairs . He
come from all parts of the
world and are close to him ." promised to give his bishops a
A chorus of prayers and greater voice in running the
congratulations from around church but warned both
the globe has pledged suppot liberals and .conservatives
to the .new pontiff, who alike he expected obedience.
Ita ly's outspoken Civilta
already is displaying the gift
of conciliation he learned
while defending the Roman
Catholic faith in Poland.
At the outset uf his historic
reign, the Polish pontiff won a
wann reception from his
form er opponents in Warsaw's Communist gov e rn ~
ment, whose leaders cabled
th eir " great sat isfaction"
and said they would aid
pilgrims anxious to see their
WAsHINGTON (UPI)
countryman take office this
Law
officers have been
weekend.
unable to check the steady
rise in violent crimes usually carried out by men
under 25 - but overall crime
appears to be dropping
slightly, the latest crime
statistics show.
The FBI's newly released
ATHENS, Mich. (UP!) - Members of the Huron
annual index of seven major
Potawatomltribe living on the Pine Creek Reservation are
crimes shows the total
considering a $1 million damage suit against the state for
number of those offenses
failure to provide promised financial aid, a tribal spokesman
to 15,000 law
reported
said Tuesday.
enforcement
agencies fell by
Gordon Buish, director of Huron Potawatomi Inc., the
COLUMBUS
(UP!
)
Gov.
the
same
kind
of
storm,"
in
1977, compared
3
per
cent
reservation's governing body, said that despite agreements
James
A.
Rhodes
said
today
Rhodes
said.
with
1976.
signed more than a century ago by ¢ate officials, the governor
Since last year's storms,
But the number of murders
has failed to provide the reservation - the only state Ohio " is preparing as never
before"
to
meet
the
problems
Ohio Departmeot of in the · nation rose by 2
the
reservation in Michigan - with needed services.
that could be caused by Transportation
has percent, rapes increased by
another severe winter in the purchased more than $3 II percent and aggravated
Buckeye State.
million worth of new snow- assaults were up 6 percent,
EVANSTON , Ill. (UPI) -Virtually all newborn infants
"State workers did a fighting equipment.
according to the Uniform
should be breast-fed, the American Academy of Pedia tries terrific job in fighting last
This includes 88 new large- Crime Report made public
urges in its most sweeping endorsement of the practice.
winter 's killer blizzard, but capacity diesel dump trucks Tuesday.
The academy Tuesday recommended breast-feeding for we're organizing to do an with snow blades and salt
Attorney General Griffin
all newborn infants unless the child or mother bas some even better job if Ohio has the dispensers. Also included are Bell said he was encouraged
specific physical condition making such feeding impossible. misfortune to be hit again by 20 new tandem diesel plows by the decline in overall
which can clear a strip crime , which he said
almost 28 feet wide, the "appears indicative of a
governor said.
trend that is continuing into
The department has also 1918."
purchased 150 more plows to
Geographically, all regions
use on trucks it already recorded decreases in total
has . .
crime index offenses: the
Rhodes said the Ohio North central states reported
National Guard also has a 6 percent drop , the
expanded its snow-fighting Northeast a 4 percent decline,
equipment with the purchase the South a 2 percent .
of abnost $750,000 worth of decrease and the West a I
items, including snow plows, percent drop . There were
additional four-wheel drive significantly more murders,
vehicles, radios and power rapes and other violent acts
generators.
in the West and South.
During the last several
weeks, Rhodes said he had
met with state disaster
services officials , local
officials , em e rgen cy
volunteer organizations and
utility company representatives to tighten up plans for
Middleport's fire departwinter emergencies.
ment was called at 6:35 p.m.
"We are improving Tuesday to the residence of
communications all down the Mae Fairchild on Little
line,"
Rhodes
said. Kyger Rd.
"Amateur radio groups and
According to the report, the
CB operators, fourwheel blaze caused minor damage
drive clubs and the Red Cross around a chimney. While
are all working closely with returning to the station, the
our state and local disaster department's fire truck was
service officials.
ditched when the road caved
"We can't stop the bad in.
weather , but we can
A wrecker was summoned
minimize its bad effects by to get the vehi cle out.
being ready,'' Rhodes said. Firemen . were unable to
return to the station until 11
THE GOBLINS WILL GET YOU - A "haunted house" wW be sponsored by the Meigs
p.m.
Jaycee's on Oct. 20 and 21 and Oct. 24 through the 31 at lhe old senior high building. On
The emergency unit of the
weekdays the haunted house will be open from 7 to 10 p.m. and weekends from 1 to II p.m.
Middleport fire department
Features include a coffin room, a room for Dr. Madd Mummy case with some extras,
was called to the station at
Boothill Dr Frankenstein's lab, and a visit to hell. Admission Is tor eacn ana everyone.
Weird sier~ music will be played throughout the building that will be spine chilling. The
Cloudy tonight, Thursday, 6:20 p.m . Tuesday to treat
lows tonight in lower 40s. Nancy E. Huffman, 4,'Village
10unct system was set up by Paul Gerard. Mike Williams, Midilleport, did the lighting. The
·Jaycees have S350 in masks and approximately~ In costumes. The Jaycettes will serve
Highs Thursday in the lower Manor Apartments, for a
'refreshments 1n the auditoriuril. Shown with the mummy that will be on display are 1-r,
or middle 60s. Probability uf head bruise. She was later
David Fox, chairman of the event and a member of the board of directors and Dave Jenkins,
precipitation 20 percent taken to Veterans Memorial
tonight,!O percent ifb~rsday. Hospital via private car.
l!r"lident.

J;..,J__rh_e_w_._o_rl_dT_od_a_y_
Serious difficulties met

FBI notes

slight dip
•
•
m
·cnmes

Writer may be latest victim

Damage suit considered

as well as many local
Democratic candidates.
"The voices of Republicans
say, 'ut's hold back. Let 's
stop.' I say that we can have
effective economic management under Dick Celeste and
we ca n have it under
President Carter," Kennedy
told the audience.
Kennedy, in an interview in
Washington earlier Tuesday ,
expressed general support
fo r Democratic coll eague
Jimmy Carter but said he
plans · to promote his own

Cristiana mo vement , the

traditionalist group that
bitterly cnticized Pope Paul
VI for the liberal influences
he brought to the church,
reversed its · years of opposition to the Vatican and
issued a jubilant statement
hailing the first non-Italian
pope in 455 years :
"The Catholics uf Civilta
Cri st iani express their
pleasure uver the election to
the throne of Peter of a son of
Marian Poland, an authentically heroic and forever
Catholic land , a bulwark of
Christian civilization against
the barbarians. The church of
silence a nd lt s martyrs
triumph today in the august
persons of the vicar! of
Christ.''

John Paul, who is one of the
(Continued on page 12)

Landfill regulations,

Ohio preparing

violations outlined

for bad winter

Recommend breast-fed babies

Fire fighters
answer alarm

'

'I

Weather

EASTERN QUEEN CANDIDATE ~ - Homecoming
will be held at Eastern High School Friday night. In the
back row, the senior homecoming candidates selected by
the senior class members are, from the left, Diana Evans,
Janet Brooks and Betsy Riffle . Seated at the front, from
the left, are the class attendants who include Tina Beaver,
h·eshman: Melanie Root, sophomore, and Sheila White,
junior _The crowning of the queen wi ll take place at half
time. Eastern will be pl aying Hanna n Tra ce .

CHRISTOPHER LA YH

Dayton native
administrator
Christopher Layh, Rt. 1,
Rutland, has been named
administrator of the Meigs
County Board of Menial
Retardation .
A native of Dayton, Layh
received hl s bache lor 's
degree from Central State
University at Wi lberfor ce
and his master's deg ree in
special education at Ohio
University in August, this
year.

While at Ohio University,
he was a graduate assistant
at the Ohio University Center
for Human Development.
Layh taught for four years
for the Mont gomery Board of
Mental Retardat ion and also
worked as a teacher in the
field of mental retardation
for one year in Preble
County .
Layh's primary 'concern at
the present time will be
passage of a 1.25 mill tax levy
to be voted upon for operation
of a school for the mentally
retarded in Meigs County on
Nov. 7.
He will also be developing a
Meigs County program for
when the Meigs Count y
students are returned to local
facilities.
The county will receive 90
perce nt fundin g for the
construction of a training
workshop and a trainin g
school for local students. The
state is at the point of
awarding a contract to an
architect for the planning of
the local facilities.
Unless the levy passes on
Nov. 7, (unds lor operating
the school as provided by law
will come from the county's
general fund which will
reduce monies which can be
spent for other services in the
county. ,\

Randy Marshall , co unty mittee tu operate its
sanitarian. met with the ·program.
Jim Page of Flem ing, Page
boa rd of co unty cumand
Stolle, Inc. met w1th
missioners Tues da y ni ght
discussing
commissioners
outlinin g
violations
of
the
rural
house
numbering
regulations of the co unty
project and the access road to
sanitary landfill.
Marshall pointed out that it the mu lt i-purpose building.
Pa ge noted he would train a
was his responbility to see
person
assigned to the upkeep
that regulations are enforced.
of
the
house numberin g
He noted that commissioners
project.
Dir ectories are
could be taken to co urt for
ready
to
be
relea sed to the
violating EPA regulations:
public
and
additions
will be
Commissioners pointed out
printed
periodically
to
keep it
that due to fin ancial
cu
rrent.
restrictions there is no way to
The boa rd decided lo
comply with the EPA laws.
release
the directories for
Marshall stated if the major
sale
lo
the
publi c at a cost of
violations are corrected, such
50
cents
each
.
as the provision of adequate
Page explained that
cover and mat erial and
draina ge pipe, then the ·detailed plans for the access
operating license could be road section from Un10n Ave.
to the multi-purpose building
issued.
are
not com pleted, but
co m·
Commi ssioners
agreed
to have the work
mehted that due to the excompl
eted
in the near future .
pense involved, the count y
At
tM
ding
we re Henry
may be compelled to close the
Wells,
Richard
Jones
and Jim
landfill and let the EPA take
Ro
ush,
commiSsioners
· and
it over.
Over s ig ht committ ee Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
appointees, Carl Dennison
and Pete Shields of the
Housin g Rehabilitati on
Pro g ram
di sc u ssed
requirements of the com-

No quorum,,

Cancer update

•
no actions

meeting set

met

A professional education
sem inar. " Cancer Updat e
'78" will be held from 8:30
a.m. to 3:30p.m. Saturda y at
the Meigs Local junior high
school in Middleport.
Those who should attend
the seminar include n~rses.
nursing students, physicians,
ph atmacists,
ph ysica l
therapist s, psychologists.
social workers, dietitians and
alli ed
hea lth
other
professionals. Certifi cates of
attendance will be given . The
event is being sponsored by
the Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society and
to · register residents should
phone 992-2104 and ask for
Mrs. Rhonda Dailey, R.N.,
profess ional edu catio n
chairman .
.)_,

Syracuse village council
in

s pec ial

session

Tuesday night but, du e to a
lack of quorum . no decisions
could be made.
Howeve r. Mayor Eber
Pickens did take action by
naming Woodrow Zwilling to
fill a council vacancy created
when
Herman
London
resig ned

as

mayor a nd

Pickens, as president, was
appointed mayor. "
May or
Pickens also
report ed additional patching
had to be done on Sixth Street
from J ohn Street to the main
highway , over a hole on
College Road and another on
Gherry Street.
Attending were Mayor
Picke ns, Janice Lawson,
clerk, George Holman,
treasurer, John Amott and
Kathryn Crown, council
members. '1'
~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="808">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11451">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49968">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49967">
              <text>October 17, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="767">
      <name>mullens</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
