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                  <text>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'
~

�'
~ntinel .

IN

,..---

M ECONOMY-MINDED C\TI'Z.EN~

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

o~

HEALTH

)'

DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would like to know about
hypoglycemia. What are the
symptoms? I have been hearing so much about it lately. I
wondered if this could be my
problem. I asked my doctor if
I might have it and he said
some doctors don 't even
believe in it and that he is one
of them. But yet, he says I
have low blood sugar. I don 't
u n d ersta nd .
I s n't
hypoglycemia the same thing
as low blood sugar ?
DEAR READER - You
probably have a communications problem with your doclor. Low blood sugar is the
pu·blic's
term
for
hypoglycemia. Technically
speakin·g,
hypoglycemia
means lowjllood glucose, and
low blood sugar could include
some other sugars besides
glucose.
Your doctor probably
means your blood glucose
level by a laboratory test is
low, but that he doesn't think
that low level has anything to
do with any symptoms that
you mi ght have. We know
that perfectly normal,
healthy young people can
have fairly low blood glucose
levels and have no slmploms
or impairment of body fun ctions at all . You can see tnls
in lop- notch athletes. That's
one reason why doctors don 't
always get excited just
because a laboratory test
shows a relatively low
glucose level.
The other problem is that
the symptoms of nervousnesS

anxiety,

sweating,

trem ulou s ness
and
sometimes a fast heart rate
are all just symptoms. They
can be caused by several dif·
ferent
things :
The
mechanism that causes many
of these symptoms can be the
release uf adrenaiine in your
body . Adrenaline' is the "fight
or fli g ht" hormone .
Whenever your blood glucose
level is too low, it will
stimulate the formation of
adre.,line . In a se'fitive per·

son this might produce symptoms. However, a person who
has simple anxiety, witll a
perfectly normal blood
glucose level, can have an excess production of adrenaline
and have nervousness, sweaty palms, tremulousness and
a fast heart. The diagnosis in
this instance, would be 'an
anxiety reaction, not
hypoglycemia.
When you accept the fact
that these are symptoms, not
a diagnosis, and that many of
these symptoms can be caused by anxiety and other problems, you then realize that
you can't always attribute
these symptoms to simply
having a low blood glucose
level. It is not that simple.
For the reasons I have
mentioned, the ilsual approach is to make a diagnosis
of hypoglycemia unless you
can demonstrate that tile
blood ghit'ose is low at the
same time the person is hav-

Dodgers In,. 7-2

.., '

• •

'

By Don Graff
"' '.
-~
The Internal Revenue Service, which has acquired • '
considerable expertise over the years in catching tax ':" :
cheaters red handed, is passing some how-to adv~ce on to ;,;! :
... 1
tts own employees.
An IRS advisory, as reported recently by The WaD Street ' ;
Journal, suggests discouraging desk-top snitching by '
sprinkling items with a colorless chemical, phenol· :
phthalein. The truth outs later whenever the snltcher :
washes hands, the chemical traces in combination with .; •
alkaline soap turning bright .r ed.
~:
That's not the end of this petty crime and punishment '"' '
story, however. Phenolphtalein, an ingredient in many " :
commercial p;epara.t ions, also hapJ&gt;Ilns to have a laxative :
effect. If a smtched 1tem happens to be edible a culprit's • •
subsequent experience may be considerably rr:ore moving -. :
than merely red hands.
•'·• •
The IRS remedy, as the Journal notes, may be turning a ":: :
routme problem of petty pilferage into a gut issue.
:
Mike Hayman, 5-11, 150
lbs. Senior End.

It figures?

L
I
8
R
A
D

"

y

..... ,.
~

Letters

.......

.,..&lt;Jo

October 16, 1978
Mrs. Linda King

Route 1
Minersville , OH 45763

Dear Linda:

A very big THANK YOU to you and the other members of

the Otester Garden Club for the plants and macrame hanger
you gave the Ubrarles. There are so many plants in the one
container that we shout~ have no trouble dividing the loot between the two libraries.
Right now they are llharing a hanger with another plant,
but we will give them homes of their own as soon as a certain
depsrtment stll'e receives the hangers they ordered.
I think all the Cheijter Gardeners would be Interested in
knowing that while .they were busy being friends of the
liocaries, Pat Neece, Betty C. RouBh, Kathy Foster, Dorothy
Retbel, and Barbara Karr were busy being Friends of the
libraries with capital letters. The ladies (and Altreda and
Monroe McCown, who were not at the first meeting) have
founded an organization dedicated to publicizing the libraries
and to supporting the libraries through dues, fund·nislng,
volunteer work, and lobbying. They set dues at $3 .50per person
. &lt;r $5perfamily,in the hopes that many, many people like you,
who have been friends of the libraries, will now become
Friends . .
Meetings of the Friends will be held the first Monday night of
each month at 7:30 p.m. We all hope that you and some of the
other kind members of the Otester Garden Club will come to
the next Ftlends meeting (ill Middleport library) so that we
can say "Thank you" In person.
Sincerely yours, Ellen Bell, Director of the Pomeroy and
Middleport Lltrarles, Serving 'All of Meigs County.

Market Report
Point !&gt;tenant
.
500 lbs. 70.
Livostock Company
Heller Calves - Good and
Od. 14, 1978
Choice , under 300 lbs. 56.75 ;
Slaughter Steers - Good 300--400 lbs . 54.50; 400·550 lbs .
and Choice 800.IUIQ lbs . 50.50 ; 54.50' Cows and Calves I by
Standard 800-llOO"Ibs . 43
head) 7A9 .
Slaughter Heifers - good
Bab~ Calves (by'_ head) and choice 700-1.000 lbs . Beef 55-70 ; Holstein and
39.75 ; Standard 700-1,000 lbs . . Brown Swiss •1 ·55.
37.25.
Hogs - U. S. 1·3 190·2•0 lbs.
Slaughter Cows - Com- 51.50; U.S. 1·3 240·260 lbs.
mercia! 40 .50; Utility 38.90 ; 50.10 ; Sows, U.S. 1·3, 300·500
Canner and Cutler 32·34.75 ; lbs. 42.50; Pigs (by head) 20·
Bulls, over 1.000 lbs. A6.50.
40 lbs. 25.50 ; 40-60 lbs . 28 ; 60
Vea l - Choice and prime lbs. + •2.
190·225 lbs . 68.25 ; 226·265 lbs.
71.
Yearling Steers - 500·600
lbs . 69.75 ; 600·100 lbs . 59;
PROMISES MADE
Feeder Bulls 700-1,000 lbs.
53.50.
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Yearling Heifers - Good
and choice 500·600 lbs . 51 ; 60Q. History's first Polish pope
today promised to lead the
750 lbs . 51.
Steer Calves - Good and world's 700 million Roman
choice under 300 lbs. 73.75 ; Catholics on the path of faith
J00.-40() lbs. 71.75 ; &gt;400·500 lbs . and prayed for victims of
68.50.
Bull Calves - Good and ''injustice or discrimination''
Choice J00.-4()0 lbs . 69 .75 ; 400· anywhere in the world.

8erry s Wo rId
f

r ____.:________. . .,;._______-,

ing symptoms. The combination of the two, simultaneously, is the basis for the
diagnosis.
There are a lot of people
who are diagnosed as having
hypoglycemia who . really
have anxiety and don't
deserve the diagnosis at all.
There are many other people
who do have fluctuations in
their . blood glucose level in
sufficient amounts to cause
symptoms. Some of these
people can change their
lifestyle' particularly their
diet habits, to improve · the
way they feel. Low blood
glucose is also just a finding
and may be caused by
several different disorders:
To help you sort out ali of this, .
and .to give you some information on what you can do 1
about diet, I am sending you
The Health Letter number
3-9, Low Blood Sugar:
Hypoglycemia . Other
readers who want · this issue
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it Address your
request to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 1"19.

/

ll\E
fiRST AMENDMENT

BOOKSTORE
/

/II

Maybe several million holes?

...

Pocket money is also up, over the very long term.
Back m 1910, according to a recent report, $34.07 in
currency and coin was in circulation for every American.
Today, the per capita circulating wealth Is estimated at
$500.
.
That's statisticaUy !r"pressiveo A check of persona'
pockets, however, ts likely to leave many of us feeling
shortchanged.
.

...
, ..
·
··

As a boy scout, I always portray themselves in their
tried to heed the motto " Be recruiting efforts as more 'or
'
Prepared." , As a Congress- an average employer and less
'"'
man, I try to do my part to as a disciplined provession.
;i
'"
see to it that we as a country Recruiting is focused on
'
,.,
appealing to enlistees on the It can happen there
''are prepared."
basis
of
occupational
"
Lately, however, r have specialities, travel and a
Britain Is the citadel of individual libet q right?
Person and privacy are inviolate, a ma~'s home is his ~1~~-.
grown increasingly con- chance for a college
cerned about ·our Nation's education. As a result, many c~stle, not to be trespassed without due process of law '~
' ·
defensive capabilities, individuals have entered into rtght?
Well,
that's
the
idea.
particularly our military's the service with high exBut apparently not always the practice, as the ulmanpower needs. My con- pectations that military life trarespected magazme, The Economist, reports firsthand. ,
cern is for both adequate wlll 9e an 8 to. 5. job with The conn~ctlon was so had dUring a recent telephone ~
numbers of personnel and the weekends off, 30 days paid conversatton of the editor's wife that she bad to ring off.
quality of individuals being vacation, and a life-style When, after several attempts she managed to replace the ·
recruited . The U. s. must be comparable to the · private call, she found herself listening to a recording of her
prepared to engage in any sector of our society. When previous conversation.
The incident was reported to the phone people, troubtype of conflict, from a these expectations are not
l~~hooters
res!ored service and a head offl~e representa-•
localized
one
country realized mora le problems ·
lt~e promp~ly called to deny that there was or ever had ·
operation to a large result.
been !'nythmg wrong with the line.
'
Eureopean theater type
Though present active . Whtch leayes the editor woddering how to explain the
action . Since U. S. manpower military manpower needs mcident to h1s wife, whom he Mad been assuring for a year
Is only half as great as its with respect to numbers are that the line definitely .was not tapped, the strange noises
Soviet counterpart, the need being met, the same camot and bad ~onnecttons bemg merely wbat was to be expected ...
:
for reliable manpower is be said for the Reserves. from typtcally eccentric British equipment.
As
for.
the
recorded
conversation,
it
was
with
a
cook,
.:
more critical than ever.
Without compulsory service,
,,_
The United States meets its without a defined military concerning the menu of an upcoming dinner party . .
total military manpower obHgation, the Rese':'es are
requirements with both fallmg far short m thetr effort
active and reserve forces. _to retain and attract the
()ur U. S. defense posture in man~ower nec~ssary to
· Europe and other parts of provtde the htgh level
the world is predicated on the readiness our national
By KENNETH R. CLARK
..
use of a strong and well security requires . The
Uult~ Presslnteroatlooal
trained reserve as a backup situation appears as i~ it wi~
TilE MOOD IS NUDE: For Hollywood director Buzz Kulik
for our front line forces. The get worse before tl gets
the famous love scene in his remake of James Jones' classi~
reserves comprise ap- better. I am of the opinion
"Fro"! ~ere to Eternity" is a headache well nigh Incurable. In '"
proximately 54 percent of our that we must act to modify the ortgmal movie version, it involved Burt Laocalter ·and " '
country's total Army force . our pre sent approach to
DeborabKerr in that torrid beach clinch, but Kulik's doing it ,"'
At the close of 't he Vietnam staffing our armed services if
for televiSion now, a1ld in keep in~ with the tbnes he wants
War, the U.S. adopted the AU we expect to meet our con- Natalie Wood and William DeVane to play It In the nude . NBC •
Volunteer Force (AVF), and yentional force requirements
says no, so Instead, the adulterous lovers will dash into the surf "'
eliminated compulsory m the years ahead.
and hurl their swim suits in the air. Says Kulik, "We've got to ·':
service in the military. The
Certam steps should be
do that scene. Everbody expects it - and it isn't even in the ·'
AVF was greeted with considered ,in this regard. A
book." And, of 46-year-old Miss Wood, he adds, "That's a lady ·
predictions that it would soon system of universal conwho has taken care of herself."
''
become inordinately ex- SCriptiOn has been suggested
pensive, undermanned and wherem all quaHfied in·
FIGHnNG NO.6: Calif&lt;rnia's homosexual community has .. ;,
underqualified. Dependlng on dividuals of a given age
:?"e hi~h-caliber . help in its battle to defeat the state's :·:
who you talk to, most if not all would be asked to give a set
PropoSition 6" - the ballot initiative that would allow school
of these fears have been or hgure of ltme to their
ol!icials to fire openly homosexual teachers. Burt Lancaster ' '
are about to be borne ~ut. country. This could be in the
will be the emcee Friday at a fund-raiser for a "No on 6" " '
Though the Department of form of military service, campaign. Backing him as headliners for the evening are Uly .. ·
Defense claims to have met social or administrative Tomlin and John Travolta, with singers Rooee Blakely and ·~·
active Ioree recruitment work,
wherever
their Peter Yarrow and ex-presidential aide Midge Coltanra as the ''
goals with the All Volunteer respective aptitudes and featured speaker.
·"
conceQt, 40 percent of those intere:;t He. Short of an au ·
entering have failed to mcluStve system system of
PAYING A DEBT: The magnificent contralto voice was one ·::
complete first term enlist- conscription, we should also
of the greatest In the world, but back In 1939 It wasn't emugh ,.
ments, compared to a 2!i explore the merits of .a
to get Marlaa Andenoo into Washington's Constitution Hall . ." '
percent attrition rate during proposal advanced by the
~e was black, and that's the only criterion the Daughters of ,
draft years. Additionally, Executive Branch which
the American Revolution cared about then. Tuesday · ·
many of those that have been calls for funding a standby President Carter recaUed the Easter Sunday when banished .. ,,
recruited are being drawn Selective Service system that
from the hall, she sang Instead at the urging oi Eleanor ·~
Into the military only because can readily mobilize the
Roosevelt from the steps of the lincoln Mem&lt;rlal, drawing a ·-::;
of a lack of other employment ~dditional manpower needed
crowd of 7S,OOO. Carter made up for the 46-year-old raclalllllub · '
alternatives. This has led to m the event of a national presenting the 76-year-old retired concert· star with ~ ·"'~
the admission of a large emergency.
Coogressional Gold Medal fer her ''unstinting efforts 011 behalf '"
percentage of seriously
Talking about the need for of the brotherhood of man."
underqualified
individuals a strong national defense is
Into our armed forces. One somewhat analagous to one's
estimate Is that 20 · to 30 tndividual
feelings
GLIMPSES: "'!'heaterRowMonth,"proclaimedlncelebra- :
percent of 'our recruits are surrounding the purchase of a lion of New York s new milllondoUar row of Off.Qff-Broadway :;
unable to read or write Hfe insurance policy. No one showcaaes, was Inaugurated Tuesday at ceremonies attended :
beyond the fifth grade level
likes to talk about the reason by row director John Adams Vacearo, Otltural Affairs Com- %
Furthermore,
the
Ali for its need. It is an on· mission chalnnan Edward VUiella, E. G. ManbaU and "'
Volunteer concept has comfortable subject, one that Maareea Stapleton, costars of "The Gin tame," actreas :
prompted the military to · we would like to avoid if Estelle Panoao and playWright EIJiene Ionesca ... Mary :
possible but realize we Frances Crosby, 19-year-old daughter of the late BlDg ant.by '"
cannot. So it is with our says she'll soon marry 27-yeat-old song wrlte1 EdmGIId ;:
military manpower needs, Prestoa Lottlmer, a native of Richmond, Va.... Arientlne :
Wedneoday
and some of the alternatives saxophonist Galo Barbieri, who wrote the music fer "Last "'
Aaron's Rod, the symbol we must consider.
Tango in Paris," canceled a IIO!d-out concertunW Nov 11 after
of authority, which miracufood polsooing felled him in New York ... PrlDel!ll kgaret of ..
lously blossomed and bore
Britain, vlslling Calif&lt;rnia, was presented the lrey to the :
almonds, attested the exclu· ·
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
' City of Los Angeles Tueaday by Mayor Tom Bradley....
sive right of the tribe of Levi
DEVOTED TO TilE
to the duties and privileges
INTEREST or
"'
of the priesthood.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
" ... &amp;Ddbebold,lberodof
I l
Aaron for tbe boase of Levi
Publlllht!d Wtily ext-q:.t &amp;tturdlty
'll
was budded, and
by
n.,
Qh;o V•lt.y Publlsh;ng
PORTS
N bronght
ComPilny·MwUmt:d;a,
Inc..
11
1
MOUTH,
Ohio
Scioto
County
,.
•
am. 1•: 8
·cnurt Sl., Purneruy, Ohio 45769.
( UPI) - The 4th Ohio
...__
.r
HoUle. :
f 0 rthbud8 ... 8w;in~ss Offke Phone m
District
un: revet'8ala C&amp;me in the
Ediluri•l Phune992-21$7.
Court of Appeals casea of Paul R
,.
,.,.• ,~ cia" l""'"g' ,.1 at
Monday
reversed
the Isaiah ,_,_ and
. Brumfield, "'
Prnneruy,Oh....
coovlctlons of three Southern Lane w"'ho""_...re.
Michael '"I
Naliu•W:I I advt'rtbing reprnenW'C
e&lt;ravicted of "
.. l.ve. · ~ndun Assodat... 3101
Ohio. Correctional Facility tryug to eacape In No·-mbe ..
Eudh1Ave .,Cit!vt!lllni.I,Ohiu44115. ,
irunates whose trials
r ""
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UP!)
Su\)s(:riptiun !'O:I ll'S : ~!iVt'l"ed by
held insl
were of 1976. I_
..
- The New York Islanders
carrier whel't! availablt' 75 L"t!llls pel'
de the institUtion'S
'lbe appellate COUJ1 sent the f"
\Yl'Ck. By Motm· Rul)te Wlll.!n! C811it:l'
Administration Bulld1ng.
cases hac'" to th
....
Tuesday signed Coach AI
SIJI'I'it't' IU)l IWKii~Je, One munth,
The tfl
judg
A
t Scioto
Arbour to a multi-year
I:J.!5. By mull ;. Qh;u ...1 W. v....
ree- e court held County cmunOII I ju
••
contract prior to their game
On• Ym, m .ooo Six '"""'"'·
unanimously
that
the for further
dge ;:
Ill .SO: Thr ee munlhs , $7.00;
ccmstltutional ~nt..ta ol the
PI\,~-. . but ·u.
against
the
Montreal
F.lsowhm\' 126.00 yeor ; s;x munll~
three
......
an appeal of the clecilllia to
Canadiens.
m so, Thr"'' muntm. 17.50.
prlaonera were violated the Ohio Supreme Court •·
Terms of the contract were
~~:_::X.~~~:: ~~~l·c intludt!s swlday by holding the trials 1n the poulble
..
____;J . penitentiary instead ol the
·
not amounced.
1-- - - - - '·: :..__

P eopletalk :

..

Don Eynon, 6-1, 2%5 lbs.
Junior Tackle.

Greg Hayman, 5-10, 155
lbs. Junior Center.

Tim Dillon, 5-10, 160 lbs.
Junior Fullback.

Hannan Trace at Eastern
•
Friday m only SVAC tilt
Eastern will host Hannan Gallia goes to Hannan , W. Va.
Trace Friday night in t he and Kyger Creek hosts
only encounter scheduled tllis Burch, W. Va.
weekend in the Southern
Last Friday night, Eastern
Valley Athletic Conference. rolled over Southwestern, 26Coach Joe Mitchem's 0 while Hannan Trace was
Eagles trail North Gallia by edged, 14-S by North Gallia.
one-half game for the
Eastern's offense is led by
league's top spot. Coach John junior signal caller Brian
Blake's Pirates are 3-ll in the Bissell. The Eagle running
SV AC while Eastern owns a 2- attack has been paced by
0 mark. A win would give senior tailback Randy
both 3-0 records going into Browning and senior fullback
next week's headon clash at Dan Spencer. Brow'nin g
North Gallia.
scored three touchdowns and
In non-league games, North two extra point s while

rushing for 1110 yards last
week at Southwestern .
Coach Larry Cremeens'
Wildcats are still looking for
that elusive first win. HTHS
tied Kyger Creek 20-20 earlier
this fall .
Hannan Trace is led of·
fensively by junior quart erback Archie Meadows,
junior Jay Bray and
sophomore running back
Todd Sibley. The Wildcats'
touchdown last week against
North Gallia was produced by
Mike
Webb' s
fumble

'Catfish ' plans to
go hunting shortly
at the lead when Jackson Yankees - Bucky Dent and
By RICH TOSCHES
LOS ANGELES (UP!) connected off reliever Bob Brian Doyle. Dent was
chosen the World Series
Tuesday night
Reggie Welch.
'MVP.
He had 10 hils and
"
This
win
makes
m~
Jackson and Jim " Catfish"
especially
happy
because
seven
RBI
in the six games
Hunter, who had been In·
strumental in bringing three Catfish pitched," Ja ckson including three hits and three
consecutive World Series said. " !admire Catfish more RBI In the clincher. Doyle,
titles to the Oakland A's, than anyone I've ever played playing in pla~e of injured
Willie Randolph, had seven
again pl~yed large roles as with. He's a pro's pro."
But Jackson had more on hits in the Series and had
the New York Yankees
captured their second con- his mind than Hunter or the three hits and two RBI
secutive World Series title victory. He obviously was Tuesday.
"It's a big thrill," said
with a 7·2 victory over the Los steaming at being used as a
designated
hitter
in
au
six
Dent.
Angeles Dodgers in Game 6.
"I haven't been able to
It was the first time a team Series' games and In three of
four
playoff
games
against
contribute
all; year because I
that lost the two opening
games came back to sweep Kansas City. lie said was hurt. All these other guys
members of the Yankee were the MVPs all year
the next four.
long."
Hunter earned the win, organization lied to him.
"They told me !'d play in
Doyle said he was numb.
scattering six hits in even
" It's the greatest thrill of
innings before giving way to the field and I didn't "
Rich Gossage. He struck out Jackson said. "They gave ~P my life In bsaebaU," he said.
" I won't be able to comthree and only walked one. on me. They have told me I
prehend everything until
"I didn't have the velocity can't play the outfield and I
three or four days from now. i
tonight," he said, 11 but the don't like it."
But the heroes of Tuesday's have to sit down and think
control was sharp. I could hit
game
were two unheralded
about the last week."
the corners at will and that's
what saved me."
Hunter said he was catching an early flight out of
los Angeles to return to his
native North Carolina. It's
deer hunting season in the
~ports Transactions
Southern state and Hunter is
Un•ted Press tnternationcll
· d d
Tu es day
tn ee a hunter.
Fool ball
world Series Standings
uJ'm going hunting," he
Cinci nnati Rei nstated
United Press International
said . .'~Deer season is on now offensive
tackle
Ron
Hunt
and waived defen si~o~e end
New York vs . Los Angeles
Best-ot-Seve n
and I've already missed two Dav e Pureifory .
New York wins series, 4-l
dsys."
T am pa Ba y P !Ziced
tullba ~k Jimmy D u Bose on
Oct . 10 - Los Ange les 11 ,
There is no bigger Hunter th e 1ntured reserve li st
New York 5
Oct. 11 - Los Aflgel es 4,
fan than Jackson, whose 410Boston NHockey
H L - Ca lled up
N ew York 3
f OOtt two•run homer in the defense m a n AI Sims from
Ocl. 13 - New York 5, Los
Ange les 1
seventh was the shot that Rochester
.
De t ro it
Assigned
Oct . 14 - New York 4, LOS
seemed to break the Dodgers. goaltender Ron Low to ·Ange les 3, 10 Inning s
Oct. 15 - New Y ork 12, Los
New York led, o-2, at that Kansas c ; ~ .
Angel es 2
point and Los Angeles had
Pit1Sburghoseba~ laced pit .
Oct . 17 - New York 7, Los
seemed ready to make a run - cher Cl,ay Carroll on waiv ers .
Angeles 2

Standings

recovery run .
Coac h . Jim Spragu~
Kyger Creek Bobcats will
seek their second straight win
against Burch.
Burch High School from
Delbarton, W.Va . owns a 2-4
mark this fall . Earlier this
season, Burch, a Class A
school, lost to South P.oint.
Playing on a wet , muddy
turf last Friday night, Kyger
Creek defeated Southern in
it s annua l homecom ing
game.
Paul Lasseter, junior
running back, enjoyed his
best night thus far with three
touchd owns and 103 yards
ru shing. Kyger' s other
running threat is junior full·
back Victor VanSickle.
North Gallia goes t o
Hannan, W. Va. with four
straight wins following two
opening non-league losses.
Hannan should provide some
formable competition since
the Wildcats own o-2 record.
Last F riday night , Hannan
dumped Sy mmes Valley , 38-

a

2.

North Gallia, meanwhile ,
ha d a hard-fou.ght battle
against Hannan Trace. The
Pirates won by scoring tivo
second period touchdown s
one on a trick play with just
50 seconds remaining in the
first half.
Roger Crem~ens, senior
running back, scored on TD
while Stacey Winston added
the other on a long pass from
Don Shupe on a punt attempt.
Southwestern and Southern
are idle this week .
Looking at the SV AC scoring
slats provided by Tom
Metiers of t he " Athens
Messenger, Brian Bissell and
Randy Browning of Eastern
are leading the pack.
SVAC STANDINGS
TEAM

W L T P OP

E.astern
North Gall Ia
Southwestern
Kyger Creek
Sy m. Valley

5 1
4 2
3 4
2 3
2 A

0
0
0
1
o

Hannan Trace

0 5

0 5 1

Southern

138 23

us

58

109 11 7
54 142
78 193
52 167
0 178

.SVAC ONLY
TEAM

W L. T P OP

Eastern

2 ·o 0

North Gallia 3 o. 0 64 13
66

0

Kyger Creek 1 I 1 40 60
South western 1 2 0 .41

.40

Hannan Trace

0
26 34
Southern
0 3 0 o 90
This week 's games :
Friday -

Eastern ;

Hannan Trace at
North

Gallia

at

Hannan, W. Va . and Burch ,

W. Va . at Kyger Creek.

By BILL MADDEN
UP1 Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - It
was a most improbable finish
to a mo•t incredible sealiOn
for the Yankees, who rallied
from 14 games behind in July
. to win the American League
East in a playoff, beat the
Kansas City Roya ls for the
third straight year for the
pennant, then, after losing
the first two games of the
World Series to the Los
Angeles Dodgers, came back
to sweep the next four ga mes
for th eir second straight
World Championship.
And who could have ever
guessed that in the sixth and
final game Tuesday 1ight, it
wou\d be Bu, ky De t and
Bri a~
' Doyle, a couple
pintsized lap-hitting infie ers,
who u limately would d the
Dodgerf in•
Of cqurse, " Mr . 2ct er"
Reggie' J ackson a
unted
for part of the
n ees' 7-1
;clincher with a me run and
"Catfish" Hunt turned in a
vintage pitchi g perform·
ce to em erg the winner even hout!
e appeared to
be one st ep away fr om
baseball's scrap pile in July.
Bucky Dent, a .243 ·hitter
who led the lin eup in
remova ls for a pinch hitter,
ran away with the World
Series Most Valuable Player
Award .
"Winning the MVP is obviously my biggest thrill,"
sa1d Dent, who had three
straight singles and drove in
three runs to fini sh the Series
with a .416 average and seven
RBI. " I think batting ninth in
the order helped a little
beca use pitchers often let up
a little when they come to
me."
In this case it was Dodger
loser Don Sutton who " let up"
a little when he came to Dent.
For that matter, Sutton took
Doyle a little too lightly as

well.
Doyle, who only got a
chance to play in the World
Series because of an injury to
r egular Yankee second
baseman Willie Randolph,
wound up hitting .417 for the
Series including three hits
and two RBI in the finale .
" I haven't grasped it just
yet and it'll probably be a
couple of days before I do,"
he said.
'Doyle's and Dent's first
turn came in the second in·
ning when after a single by
Nettles and a walk to Jim
Spencer, Doyle doubled into
the leftfield corner to tie the
scor e 1-1. Dent followed with
a single up the middle to
make it 3-1.
The Yankees' "Dynamic
Duo'' struck again in lhe
sixth aft er Lou Pini ella
singled and took second when
Sutton was charged w1th a
wild pitch in striking out
Spencer. Doyle singled to
center and took second on
Rick Monday's throw to the
plate, which was bobbl ed by
J oe Ferg uson , a llowin g
Piniella to score .
That knocked out Sutton ,
but Dent greeted reliever Bob
Welch with a single over
shortstop to brin g Doy le
home for the fifth Yankee
run .
Jackson belted his towering
two-run homer some 425 feet
into the Yankee bullpen .in
right field to close out the
Yankee scor in g in the
seventh.
In the meantime, Hunter
sett led down after a leadoff
homer by Davey Lopes in the
first inning and kept the
Dodgers in check into the
eighth.
" I didn't have my velocity
tonight, but the control was
sharp," said Hunter, who
ga ve way lo Rich Gossage in
the eighth when Ferguson led
off with a 400-foot ground r ule

CLE VELAND . (UPI ) Looking toward a game this
Sunday against a. rather
hapless opponent and looking
back at a tough loss last
Sunctay , t he Cle vela nd
Browns could be ripe for an
upset.
But Coach Sam Rutigliano,
a.. positive tlllnker '
always
.
tsn't worned about a letdown
against the ceUar-&lt;iweUing
Kansas City Chiefs.
The Browns, sporting a 4-3
record, are tied for second
place in the Central Division
with the Houston Oilers, three
big games behind the
undefea t ed
Pittsburgh
li\eelers.
With Pittsburgh looking
Invincible and Super Bowl
predictions abounding fo r
Steelers, many of the Browns
have conceded that they're
now in a fight for a "wild
card" playoff berth, not the
division title.
H they are to make a
serious run for such a playoff
spot, the Browns can ill
afford an upset loss to a club
like Kansas City, which has
won only one of its seven
games this season .
"We'lljust have to continue
doing the good things we 've

YOO t.1t.lS1'
fJ£ ovett

21

~~.

ROB~~:.:LICH

r.·

j

.

I

~

I

3

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0

1 11

1

o o o o

n

LO S ANGELES
L ope s 2b

ab r h bi
4 1 2 2

Ru sse ll ss
Smi th rf

11
4

0

1
0

Ga rv ey lb

4 0

0

0

Cey Jb

4

0

1

0

o 0
Q. 0
I i

0

o

Bal'. ertf

3

M onday c f

3

F ergu son c

3
"l

Wet chp

00

Oav ali ll o dh
Su tt on p
Raup
To t al s
N Y.

Gossage
Slt n , L 0 2

L o pe s

(3) ; New York . Jack son (1).

'

'

' '

h

0

Hntr , W 1. 1

Sutton ( 0

Game 6
ob r
N E W YORK
4 0
Riverscf
I 0
Blair ct
1 1
Whit e lf
Thomasson lt
0 0
Munson c
s 0
Jackson Clh
s I
1
Pin iella rf
Johnstone rf
0 0
I
N elll es 3b
3 1
Spence r lb
Doyle 2b

0

LA
101 000 000- 2
E
Fer guson OP - New
Y ork 2 LO B - New Yo r k 6,
Los Ang eles 3. 28 - Doy le.
Fer g uson 2, HR - Lopes (3),
Ja cKso n ( 2 1. SB
Lop es. S O nv at illo
ip hrerbb sa
7

6 2 2 1 3

2

1 0 0 0 '}

5 2-385516
11 -321212
2
10003

W el c h

Rau
Hunt er pi t ched to 1 ba ll er
in 8!11 .
WP -~ SUtton . T -

2 : 34. A

55, 98 5

CAPS

HR s - Lo sAngete ~,

0

0

00 0 0
30 2 7 2
030 007 700- 7

N .Y .
· 030 002 200-- 7 11 0
LA
101 000 000- 2 7 1
Hun'ler , Gos sag e { 8 ) a nd
Munson : Sutton . Wel ch {6),
Rau (81 and Fe rg uson . w Hunt ('r ( 1 1). L -

0

0 1 0
0 o 0 0

NEW
PICKUP TRUCK

21 .

o

bl

0
0 0
1 .0
0 0
1 0
1 2
1 0
0 0
I 0
0 0
3 2

0

SH IELDS - FLAIRS
at

Codner's Campers
Rainbow Ridge
C. R. 28 to Bashan

Bolen 's
Propel
4H.P.
Mule
• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Gun s and
Reloading
.-Ball Gloves
Camping
Equipment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• ·We
hav e Gift
Certificates
601 Main St .
Pt, P leasa nt, W . Va .

Now

•40.00 OFF
Suaqested List
No imitation work s as well
as the o rigi nal Bolens
Mulching Mower. ll chops
and rechops grass c lippings into a f ine mulch .
One that's blown deep into

your lawn . See for yoUrself
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WILKINSON
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PHONE
675 -2988
Open Sunday 1· p .m .-6 p . m .
Monday thru Saturday

9-" m . 1c 8 p.m .

SMAll ENGINES
SALE &amp; SERVICE
498 Locust St.
992·3092
Middleport . 0 .

PHONE·
17' Loweline Aluminum Bassboat
50 Horsepower Mercury Motor
Tennessee drive on Trailer
Motor Guide Remote Trolling Motor
2 Marine Balteries
Kill Switch

992-2156

New Winter Hours

per month

Mon. thru Thurs. 10 til6
Friday 10 to 8
Saturday 10til6
Sunday 12 til6

THE DAILY SENTINEL

't''lg

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MIDDLEPORT AREA

a
CoDVIC
• l Ions
• . reven;e
, __) d / "
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4 0

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NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

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~real

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Den I ss
Hunter p
Gossaqe p
Totals

World Series Result
United Pre ss I nterna t io nal
Gam e6

been doing and try to improve
in other areas," Rutigliano
said after his club lost to the
Steelers 34-14 last Sunday.
"I'm not worried about a
letdown agai nst Kansas
City, " th e coach declared.
"I've got a good staff and
morale comes from your
staff. We'll play Kansas City
just like everybody else."
The coach cited as good
signs the fact that only one
Cleveland player will miss
the game at Arrowhead
Stadium, cornerback Ron
Bolton, who has a broken
arm. Running back Greg
Pruitt ,
guard
Henry
Sheppard and cornerba ck
Oliver Davis, ali starters,
returned to action last
Sunday against the Steelers.
Rutigliano said Pruitt, who · ·
had only limited duty last
week, will start in Kansas
City and will see considerably
more action.
" It was really Important
for us to play Greg, even
against Pittsburgh. Of
course, he wasn't anywhere
near himseH, after missing
four straight games," he
said. " But for the final nine
games, if lie's 100 percent,
it'll help us tremendously ."

3

r-------..;_-

double over t n~ center field
fence .
After Ferguson's double
Vic Davalillo beat out a bas~
hit over second base . But
Gossage ba iled himself out of
trouble by striking out Davey
Lopes and getting Bill Russell
on an inning-ending double
play.
The victory was Hunter's
fift h in eight World Series
decisions ~h il e the homer
was Jackson's ninth.
" This feels a helluva lot
better than th e ones in
Oakland ," said Hun ter,
" because nobody believed we
co uld come back to win this
thing."
" This feels better than any
of my other four," said
Jackson.
" But I knew we were
somehow gonna do it.''
Funny, not too many other
people thought so.

Browns could be
ripe for upset

~

-------il)1978byNEA, Inc·.

Speaking of' the IRS, not to mention gut issues, the tax
collectors report a record take of $154.6 billion on personal
incomes for 1977. That's an increase of 9 percent over the
previous year's nic:king .of the taxpayers.
:!:
Total income was also up, to $1.31 trillion, but by less a ••
bit over 7 per~ent. It appears to be a case of the more we :.:::. '
earn, the much more Wt: pay Uncle Same.
Meanwhile, another set of statistics reveals another
UP'!II;rd trend .in life, American style. Uquor consumption ~­
IS rlSmg, headmg toward a record 450 million gallons which ~
would be 5 percent over last year.
•
There's probably no comection with taxpaying, but ...

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

Library

Lawrence E.lamb, M.D.

Hypoglycemia
defined

•

•.• •'
'

their corporation, industry, labor union, trade

assoctatton or other special interest group. ·
·
Prto~ to 1971, the law governing the financing of
campatgns lor federal office required only that donors be
1dentifted . by name and address. As a result, it was
vtrtually Impossible to determine whether they were
affiliated w1th a special interest group.
But a major overhaul of the statute seven years ago
requtred the dtsclos~e of two important additional pieces
of mformatwn relating to contributors - their occupation
and prmctpal place of business.
Despite the availability of that data , most of the public
attenllon patd t~ ~pectalll_lterest giving in recent years bas
focused on polibcal actton committees (PACs), which
sohc1t money from officers, directors and members of
mter est groups, then use those funds to contribute to
·
favored candidates.
But there's another, more sophisticated technique:
Ofhctals of a corporation agree to participate in a
voluntary but coordinated effort to make sizable personal
donatt~ns to a legislator expected to be sympathetic to the
f1rm's mterests .
The collective impact of those gifts is not lost on the
llOllltctan, but. the contributions are difficult to find in the
fma~ctal reports available for public inspection because
they re purposely scattered among the names of thousands
of other donors.
An unprecedented effort to identify those giving patterns
now has been undertaken by a respected Washingtonbased journalist, ~dward Roeder. The first results of his
work. wtll appear m a forthcoming issue of the magazine
Pollttcs Today.
··•
Roeder initially focused on the 1978 campaign of Sen.
Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., and the 1976 campaign of Sen.
Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev.
Thurmond is the ranking minority member of the
anlltrust subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Conunlttcc , which must approve any legislation requiring horizontal or vertical dtvestitute of the nation's petrolewn
companies.
PACs. affilia~ with firms in the oil, coal, energy and
mtning.mdustrtes have contributed $133,600 to Thunnond's
ca~l&gt;atgn, but Roeder found another $23,000 donated by
mdtvtduals associated with those companies.
Thurmond also is the ranking GOP member of the health
subco~ttee of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee
In addition to $24,600 given to his campaign by PAc,;
~elate~ to medical an~ phannaceutical interesta, Roeder
1denllfted $9,300 from mdividuals in those fields .
Ca n~on now IS chairman of the Senate Commerce
Comnuttee, but when he ran for i'eelec(ion two years ago
he headed only that panel's aviation subcommittee
Roeder ,found mo~e than $32,30!1 - almost 10 percent of all
Ca~~on s campatgn funds donated by individuals
afftbated with the air transportation industry.
Locatmg and ISOlaltng such contributions through the
pamstaking ~amination of thousands of pages of public
fmanctal _reports IS a tedious but invaluable undertaking
because It more fully identifies the legislators' "second
constituency."
·
Those constituents aren't the voters who live in the
lawmake~· .home states and congressional districts, but
rather mdivtduals whose work Is directly affected by the
deciSIOns ~de by House and Senate conunittees - and
who are willing to pay dearly for "access" and "frlendsh•o" on r.::~~oitol Hill.

or

Briefly noted

iWENT'I'·FIVE BUCKS ?...

•

'

Donald F. Graff

'5HAI.L WE 5ENP .
~OWARD ..)AR'J\5

By Martba Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON .&lt; NEA ) - Contributors' personal reasons
for ma kmg. donabons to politicians' campaign funds will
always be u;nposstble to ascertain, but prior to the 1970s
there weren t even any clues available
In theory, financial supporters of ca~didates for House
and Senate s~ats are generous, public-spirited individuals
mottvated rrmctpally by the high-minded desire to share
the costs. o maintaining a democracy.
There mdeed are many such donors, but they account for
~ far s maller share o.f all campaign contributions than do
mdlVlduals whose prtme motive Is to subtly advance the

Eastern' s· 1978

COMMENTARY

CON.CERN~V A~UT \1\'( REFORM .......

Paying dearly for access

cause.

..

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1978

Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Wednesday . OcL 18. 1978

ZINN'S LANDING
431 Pike St.

BETWEEN
·'

Gallipolis, Ohio

,,

,.
'

'i

�4- The Daily Sentinel , Middlep011-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 18,1978

•

\~/:::::::~::::;:::·:::·:·::::: : :::::::::;: · :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:::::·:::·:·: ·:·:::·:·:-:-:·:;:~::&gt;:::::·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;::::_:(

'World won't
Sport Parade \ end'-Rose
Today

•

NCAA grid stattstrcs
MISS ION,

Kan .

(U P! )

-

NCAA

Division 1-A jndividlial leaders released

Tuesday:

519
Brooks, Auburn
669
White, SoCa1
630
Nelson, Stnfrd
613
Holland , Cornell
10
Goodlow, Kan St
Punt Returns

:;~:~
1

11

By MILTON RICHMAN .
UPI Sporls Editor

5- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1978

Vitale ls suffering from " an

irritable bowel condition and
a lactose .intolerance," but ;,s
not bleeding internally and
can return to coaching next
week , hls physician said
Tuesday.
~
Assistant Coach Richie ':
turned down Wagner 's final : Adubato will replace Vitale -~
offer.
for Detroit's three games this
Some callers sounded week. Vitale is expected to ,
indignant at Rose's salary return to the bench when .
request, which although Cleveland fs at the Silver- ~
undisclosed, would easily be
dome Oct. ~· · -·•
~
more than that of the
,•
Pre sident of the United
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
..
States.
" You don't believe that The Pittsburgh Pirates said
when you're born, God didn't Tuesday they have asked
give you a gift, you shouldn't waiver s on pitcher Clay
be paid to do it well?" Rose Carroll for purposes of his
de(ended . "What makes a unconditional release.
Carroll was called up frorn
loaf of bread worth 75 cents?
What makes a .quart of milk Colwnbus in September and
worth . a dollar and a .appeared in only one game,
but had no decision.
quarter ?"

:-:·

20 168 176.7
108 106 176.6
245182 176.2
4 36 163.2
541428 163.2

PONTIAC, Mich. (UP!) Detrmt Pistons' Coach Dick

r
:·:·

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
world woo 't end if Pete Rose
leaves the Cincinnati Reds.
DO yds avg
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) - Most of the Yankee players did
That 's the message the
6 115 19.2
exactly what you'd expect them to the moment they came back unsigned hometo\\'11 favorite
Flint, Mern St
8 !53 19.1
into the clubhouse alter nailing down their second straight had for listeners to a sports
Blackmore, Miss St
19.1
210
ll
world championship.
·
·
talk show Tuesday night.
KBrown, Nebraska
8 140 17.5
Oorn , Rutgers
They acted like a bunch of happy kids, hugging each other,
When one season ticket
12 205 17.1
dousing one another with champagne and generally carrying holder sugges¥ Riverfront
Matthews, Wis
Kickoff Returns
on as if it were New Year's Eve .
,
Stadium "wm't betllesame"
DO yds avg
One of them, however, second baseman Willie Randolph, if Ro..: leaves, Rose quickly
•
5 206 41.2
ineligible to play ln the World Series beca~SI! he pulled a ham· replied, "Thank yo~ . I
Collinsworth, Fla
•••
6 228 38.0
string three weeks ago , sat quietly in the lralner 's room,ln his appreciate your comments,
Scott , Georgia
9 307 34.1
' j
civvies, with a bottie of champagne in one. hand and a but if !leave it's not going to
Foster, Illlni
I,.,
6 202 33.7
Sandwich in the other .
be the end of the world for
TBrown, UCLA
12 373 31.1
. He bad just watched the man who replaced him, rookie anybody. I'm probably going
Webster, S Jose St
'
Inlerceptlons
Brian Doyle, astonish everybody by leading all the Yankees at to .lose some fans (if he
•
g DO yds lpg
bat in the Series with a .438 average and handling 23 chances leaves),
Mr.
(Reds'
5
6
54
1.20
flawlessly
ln
the
field
.
President
Dick)
Wagner
is
Hill, SMU
•
6 6 224 1.00
Willie
Randolph
had
seen
Brian
Doyle
do
even
more
than
going
to
lose
some
fans
.
But
Washington,
Calif
•
6 6 281.00
Anderson , Ariz St
that. He bad seen him contribute a double and a pair of singles baseball will go on ln
•
5 5 60 1.00
in the Tuesday night's 7-2 wrapup; collect five consecutive hits 1979 ... "
·Williams, I.SU
•
. 4 4 561.00
'
over two games to come withon one hit of a Series' record; pull
"There 's . going to be
Curran , Cornell
.'
t
Pun
ling
the
Yankees
out
of
their
deepest
hole
by
starting
a
key
double
baseball
in Cincinnati in 1979.
I
avg
DO
play in the third inning and push shortstop Bucky Dent ln the There's going to be basebaD
40 46.7
vote lor the Most Valuable Player of the Series. Dent won the for Pete Rose ln 197\1."
Buford, Tex Tech
...., Duty 18 Lb. c.p.:tty
24 46.4
vote but Doyle wasright ln back of him.
The 37-year-old switch
Stachowicz, Mich St
Wlhr with
48 44.4 .
"He did some job ot~t there, didn't he,'' Randolph said, hitter, who last week turned
Birdsong, W Tex St
26 44.0
Knit flbrlc CJC!e
speaking about Doyle without the slightest trace of envy in his down what Wagner termed
King, So Cal
43.3
26
voice.
"He's
one
helluva
ballplayer.'
I
broke
ln
with
him
ln
1973
the
Reds'
highest
offer,
said
Partridge, Utah
MO&lt;MI LA41
,,•
Field Goals
when be was with Gastonia and I was with Charleston ln the he agrees the Reds might be
Jig 18-lb. capacity
lga lg pctlgpg
rnioors, so I know what he enn do. Wbat he did didn't surprise lrylng to tell him something
o
Heavy
Out~ Spiral Ramp
.•
17 14 .824 2.33
me.
through
con -tract
Bahr, Penn St
Agitator-for big wall!
•
13 10 .769 2.25
"Of course, I would've loved to have played ln the Series," negotiations.
Tata, Navy
loade
•
14 10 .714 1.67
Randolph went on. "But the Lord works in mysterious ways
"It seems like the way the
Savich, Cent Mich
0
K!llt fabric cycle
••
8 81 .00 1.60
and it all came out lor the best. For Brian, for the team, for all Reds are negotiating this
Adams, Tex Tech
0 Tllree agltalion/apln speed
12 8 .667 1.60
of us. Look, that's one of my teammates there," said the whole contract, they are
Christopolus, Wyo
••
eelectlont
Yankees' regular second baseman, motioning toward the other saying between ·the lines, 'We
Flve-poelt!On water eaver
•
'
with "Re-telect" setting ·
end of the clubhouse where Doyle was surrounded by a group dont want you no more," '
'.
Flve-poailiOn w,ater
of reporters. "He pulled for me all year. You think I'm gorma Rose said, and added he was
temperature qontrolSPECIAL
do anything but poD for him now?"
mystified that the Reds
lncluillng 3 P.ermarient
Doyle never dreamed he'd play the klnd of part ill the insisted he come to contract
••
Pr-aettinga
WASHER.oRYER
.
World Series for the Yankees he did. With sY.acuse of the · terms 10 days afrer the
0
Bleach
dlapenMr
• · COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio halfbacks for Coach Pat
JOHN Smatana threw five
International League last year, he was called up by the Yanks season ended.
Double-Action washing
: : high '\(!hool football notes Mancuso's unbeaten Vikings touchdown passes Friday
oo April 23, sent to Tacoma of the Pacific Coast League May
"·What's the hurry? What's
Potaialn
enamel top and
•. from around the state :
and their statistics for the night to pace Nordonia to a
12, recalled three days later, sent dnwn again on Aug. 19 and the big hurry? I've been here ·
1111
: : OPPONENTS of top- year are jlist about as close. 37-22 win over Cuyahoga
brought back a third time on Sept. 11.
16 years, diving into bases for
Lint filter and reclrculetlon
: · ranked Princeton (AAA)
Sma tan a,
who
Stinson has 703 yards Fa lis .
Actually, Doyle wsa ineligible to play ln the Series but them (the Reds), and all of a
.yetem
' ; might think they're seeing rushing in 127 carries and has completed 15 of 20 altempts when Randolph came up with his hamstring puD, the Yankees sudden they give me 10 days
Lock 'n Splnno Safely Lid
: • double when look-alike scored 10 touchdowns . for 237 yards on the night, had asked for and received pennission to use him as his to decide whether I want to
Fabric .attene~ dlapenHr
; : cousins Leroy Stinson and Roundtree has carried 124 TO tosses of 40, 37, 30, 8 and 28 replacement lor the playoffs and the World Series.
play here ."
· (optional accHeory) .
:; : Ken Roundtree trot onto the times for 756 yards and seven yards. The 30-yarder went to
And, he wouldn't even have played had the Dodgers
But Rose, who said he
0 Backed by.Nationwide
, ; fi eld. Both are 5-9, 165-poWJd touchdowns.
his brother, Rick .
decided to go with left-bander Doug Rau instead of right- hasn't talked with Wagner
Sure Service ·
'
---·- -- .
about a contract since
bander Don Sutton in Tuesday's contest.
White- Westinghouse
, ~ ~-------------------··-----·~·
''It's absolutely unbelievable!" the 5-foot-9, 162-poWJd Saturday, said he has no hard
''
Still Builds Them
resident of Cave City, Ky., kept saying over and over again . feelings toward the only
Like
They Used To.
Doyle comes from a family of second basemen. His older major league club . he's
brother, Oermy, played for the Phillies, Angels and Red Sox played with.
••
••
before retiring a year ·ngo, and his twin brother, Blake, led the
''One thing I'D never have
••
in
fielding
with
Rochester
this
year.
is
hard feelings toward this
International
League
••''
"Denny helped me a' lot," Doyle said. "He was In the big ball club," Rose said.
,•
leagues eight years and we discussed every phase of the game. "Everything I have ls
'
•
He told me how little guys like us have to play the game because of baseball ..."
~
New Haven, W . V a.
differently
from the big guys. Keep an eye on Blake, too. He
Rose's guest spot on the
'.
makes the double play quicker than I do and I think he's a talk show Tuesday provided
405 Fifth Street
belter ballplayer than I am."
the first chance for fans to
Next year, Willie Randolph, who did such a good job for the direcUy address him since he
Yanks this year, is sure to be back at second base lor them. r------------------------------1·•
What then1
"I doo't know," sald Doyle. "Right now, I'm not thinking
that far. I'm only thlnklng of what happened these past few
days and it's unbelievable."
Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy, 0.

••
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'

Rushing
all yds avg td ypg
Holland·,Cornell
122 613 5.0 8 153. 2
196 910 4.6 3 151.7
Persell, W Mich
Brown, NC Stat e
139 694 5.0 5 138.8
White, SoCal
129 669 5.2 6 133.8
121 665 5.5 5 133.0
McClendon, Grga
Passing
alt cmp yds lot td cpg
Dils,Stnfrd
213 139 1542 13 ll 23.2
Ford,SMU
184 115 1455 7 10 2.1.0
Sprggs, NMx
216 115 1737 18 II 19.2
Halda ,S DgSt
125 67 759 s 3 16.7
161 . 79 1047 9 9 15.8
Thmpsn,Wsh
Scoring
ld xp lg pts ppg
9 0 0 54 13.5
Cribbs, Auburn
8 0 0 48 12.0
Holland, Comell
II 4 0 70 11.7
Jones, Miss St
Merendino, UT-C'ga
II 2 0 66 11.3
10 0 0 60 10.0
Sims, Okla
Receiving
ct yds ld ctpg
Petzke, No Ill
42 564 7 8.4
Tolbert, SMU
34544 7 6.8
38298 0 6.3
Francis, Stnfrd
Flowers, Fla St
36 298 5 6.0
35598 2 5.8
Beasley, A pplchh St
Total Offense
att yds avg ypg
Spriggs, N Mex St
312 1883 6.0 313.8
213 1392 6.5 278.4
Ford,SMU
Wright, Bwlg Gr
240 1659 6.9 276.5
Dils, Stnfrd
255 1506 5.9 251.0
Wright, New Mex
198 1228 6.2 245.6
All-purpose Running
rush rev kr ypg

hHigh school grid notes

~~

..

W•tlnlhOUII
Alltltar

•••

•

sure.
servrce

•

•

Nzlbnwide

..

THE NEW

GtU:t:Nt:·S

'79

..

SALES CENTER

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Stunned Dodgers

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1978 Concord Left For Discount

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9a .m. -5 p.m.
Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m .•a p.m . Fri.

The stunned Los Angeles
Dodgers took their loss in the
World Series hard
Manager Tom Lasorda and
pitcher Don Sutton had tears
in their eyes after th• New
York Yankees beat them, 7-2,
. Tuesday night in the final
game.
' In the morgue-like Dodger
dressing room, some of the
players groped for words in
trying to analyze how they
managed to win the first two
games in the 1978' all classic
and then collapsed ln the next
four.
Reggie Smith, hitless in
four trips Tuesday night ,
suggested possibly the great
defensive exhibition by
Yankee third baseman Craig
Nettles in the third might
have been the turning point.
Prompted by a reporter,
Smith said, "One game like
that can turn a team
around."
Catcher Joe Ferguson, who
got two o( the Dodgers' seven
hits, both doubles, offered,
"In the first two . games, it
looked like we were the
greatest team ever. Theh we
lost our momentum. 1 won't

I

I1

from our

pRETTY DAY
sANDAL
Collection.

eous designer
Gorg
'I "ble unit
d I on 'e)(.l
san a
nd flattering
bottoma C mfort·
heel-height. o
able and pretty.

BLACK &amp; RUST .
PATENT

$2300

PORK Sl:«lULDER
STEAK
. $ 29

..................................... 10 oz. 4!r
Smucker's Grape Jelly ............................................. 32 oz. 99'

Folgers Coffee All Grinds ... .. .. ................................ 2 lb.· 14.99

I

j '

:

PHEBE'S STORE
Thursday,0&lt;1.111hrough0ct. 21
we Gladly Acupt Fod. Food Stomp.
Monday thru Fridoy
' : 001117 :00
Saturdlly 9:00.9 :00
CLOSED

oUNDAY5

.------'!'
HEAD
LETI'UCE

TOMATOES

RUSSET
POTATOES
10 LB.

$109.

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SftC\N.\ PORK
SHOULDER
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lARGE
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'

.

Forecast

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Upset Speclalisl
Egad, friends, do we have some surprises for you this week!
In a schedule lo~ded with big games The Hoople System
forecasts one major upset and three others that - ahem -will
be more than fllild surprises.
To satisfy ·your curiosity, we'll get to the big one immediately. The Iowa State Cyclones will live up to their name - ka ffkaff - as they huff and puff their way past the fa•;ored
Oklahoma Sooners.
Watch for the Cyclones' great tailback Dexter Green to put
on a spectacular offensive show and the State defensive forces
to rise to new heights in stopping the powerful Oklahoma
eleven . Yas, dear readers, 'twill be the "upset of the year " as
Iowa State wins, 23-21- har-rumph.
A trio of sllghtly milder surprises are on tap as Texas
IUillbl~s Arkansas, 17·14,_ in the SWC headliner ; Kentucky will
prevail, 24-20, over I.SU man SEC encoWJter on the Wildcats '
home turf; _and in a very important Big 8 engagement , Colorado, playmg with the horne field advantage, will turn back
the ndds-on Nebraska Cornhuskers, 24-21.
Don't forget, you read about 'em first in the Hoople Forecast
- wn·kumph! Remember, too, it was Hoople -and only Hoople
- who gave you Mmrru to tumble Auburn from the undefeated
ranks !
In some others, set down here not in the order of their importance, it's Penn State vs . Syracuse; Texas A&amp;M vs.
Baylor; Pitt vs. Florida State ; Maryland vs. Wake Forest;
USC vs. Oregon State; Ohio State vs.Iowa ; Alabama vs. Tennessee, and Michigan vs. Wisconsin.
It will be another long afternoon for the Syracuse
Orangemen as lhe Nittany Lions romp home a 37-j) winner. The
Texas A[M-Baylor meeting is their 75th, and we look for the
Agg1es to maul Baylor, 30-14.
In the rest, here's howtheHoople System sees 'em : Pitt 21,
Florida State 18; Maryland 42, Wake Forest 7; Southern Cai39,0regon St. 17; Ohio State 35, Iowa 10; Alabama 35 Tenn 18·
and Michigan 28, Wisconsin 6.
'
'
There's a quartet of traditional intra-state meetings on the
Slate. In the granddaddy of the series- heh-heh -the New Mexico Lobus. and the New Mexico State Aggies will mix it up for
th~ 79th tune. Al Buquerque, our New Mexico correspondent; ·
assu~es us this IS the year of the Lobos as they win, 26-20.
The North Carolina-North Carolina State meeting at Chapel
Hill will be the 68th in their series. The North . Carolina Tar
Heels lead 44-17-£, but this year's game belongs to the visiting
Wolfpack . We look for Bo Rein 's boys to win, 29-17.
It'll be the 60th meeting for Virginia and Virginia Tech's
Gobblers when they get together on the Cavaliers field . Bill
Dooley's Gobblers get lhe Hoople nud in a close encounter
17-10. California and UCLA will ha.ve at each other for the 49t.li
time . In a bruising affair, we see lhe Uclans triwnphing, 24-18.
Now go on with my forecast:
SATURDAY,Oct.21
NoCaroSt29 NCaro 17
Notre Dame 38 AForce 14
Auburn 35 Ga Tech 12
No Ariz 26 No Colo 13
BpiseSt 24 WeherSt 13 (N)
Minn 35 Nrthwstern 14
BYU 37 UTEP 14
Ohio U 24 Toledo 7
UCLA 24 Calif 18
Ohio State 35 Iowa 10
Cent Mich27 ~o Illl8
Kansas 220kla St 12
Tulsa 23 Cmc1nnat116 (N)
Penn St37 Syracuse6
Duke 24 Clemson 21
Pitt 21 Florida St 18
Colorado 24 Nebraska 14
Princeton 14 Colgate 13
ColoSI 28 UN-Las Vegas 10
Tex Tech 29 Rice 12 (N)
Brown 18 Cornell17
· ECaro 26 Richmond 18
Florida 35 Army 15
Rutgers 21 Villanova 20
Fla A&amp;M 23 Tenn St 21 (N)
SDiego St 36 Pacific 14
Georgia 16 Vanderbilt 7
FrsnoSt 31 SJoseSt 28 (N)
So Carolina 21 Miss 15
Grmblng 24 Jcksn St 12
Harvard 21 Dartmouth 13
USC 39 Oregon St 17
Purdue 22 Illinois 17
SMU 32 Houston 28
Ba11St42 Ill St 21
Temple 24 West Va 10
WTex St 23lnd St 14
Alabama 35Tenn 18
Iowa Sl23 Okla 21
Texas 17 Arkansas 14
Missouri 35 Kansas St 14
Texas A&amp;M 30 Baylor 14
Kentucky 24 I.SU 20
Tulane 28 TCU 20 (N)
Penn 34 Lafayette 15
Va Tech 17Virginia 10
IfBchSt 2[ FulrtnSt 13 (N)
. VMI 33 Lehigh 25
L VIlle 28 Bost U7 (NJ
Washington 27 Oregon 12
Maryhind 42 WForest 7
Wash St 35 Stanford 31
Mphis St 18 SoMiss 10 (N)
Wichita 23 So Ill20
Miami(F) 33 utahSt 18 (N)
Michigan 28 Wisconsin 6
Miami(O) 22 Bwlng Gr 20
Wyoming 19 Utah 14
1\'IIch St 28 Indiana 21
Yale 32 Colwnbia 14
Navy 33 WM &amp;Mary 12
New Mex 26 NM St 20

Small college grid ratings

Jean

Vim co Noodles Extra

"th &amp; Pearl
1_
' ·. ... ·-

•..' ;I

' .

aggressive ,
but I wlU say we were a little
b,it apprehensive."
Smith, first baseman Steve
Garvey, who drew a blank at
the plate in the last game,
and third baseman Ron Cey,
who had a single in lour trips,
aU agreed the Yankees were
a great team and took ad·
vantage of Dodger misplays.
"We were outhit, outpitched and outdefensed,"
said Cey. "We just got beat,
that's all."
Said Garvey, "You have
two teams pretty evenly
matched in a short series.
You have to get the rallies
going and make the plays ...
That's what the Yankees
did."
"The Yankees were great,"
said Smith. "We gave them a
lot of opportunities and they
took advantage of it."
"The Yankees are one of
the best teams that ever
played the game ," said
second baseman Dave Lopes.
" The opposition just took it to
us and made us look very
bad. I know we're a better
baD club than we played. We
made mistakes and they
capitalized on them."
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MISSION, Kan. (UP!) l)'lontana
State
and
l)'llnnesotaMorrls moved Into
fhe lead in the NCAA Division
1-AA and Division III weekly
football polls released today
by the NCAA.
• Winston-Salem (N.C.) hWJg
onto !irst place in Division II.
: Montana State, IMI, which
\lad been number two in the
poll for several weeks, passed
South Carolina State, which
fell to sixth beenuse of a tie.
!,Minnesota-Morris, 6-0,
moved up to the top spot after
two strnlght weeks in the
second position. Dayton
(Ohio), which 'had been
1\llmber one for four
cmseeutive weeks, leU to
number two.
·winston-Salem, 7-0 ,
remained in the top spot in
. Qlvlslon n for the third
straight
week
but
Youngstown (Ohio) State
moved up to the second

slot.

This week's rankings and
team' s
records
in
parathensis :
blvtll011 1-AA
' I, Montana State (IMI); 2,
Jackson (Miss.) State (IMI);
3, Nevada-Reno (6-0); 4,
F'lorida A&amp;M (S.O); 5, Lehigh
(Pa.) (5-1);~. South Carolina
State ( 6-0-1) ; 7, Eastern
~tucky (4-1); 8, Rhode
llland (4-1); 9, (tie) Northern
Arizona
(5-1)
and
Massachusetts (3-2).

I

Dlvlsloo n
1, Winston-Salem (N.C.) (70); 2, Youngstown (Ohio) St.,
(IMI); 3, Delaware (4-2); 4,
California Poly St.SLO (4-1);
5, Nebraska.Omaha (S.l); 6,
Akron (Ohio) (4-2) ; 7, (tie)
North Alabama (~I) and
Northern Mlchlgan (4-1-1); 9,
California-Davis ( 4-1); 10,
Troy (Ala. ) State (4-1).
·
Division Ul
I, Minnesota-Morris ( IMI) ;
2, Dayton (Ohio) (5-1-1); 3,
Ithaca (N.Y.) (6.0); 4,
Millersville (Pa.) State (S.O);
5, Wittenberg (Ohio) (S.O); 6,
BaldwinWallace (Ohio) (50); 7, Wesleyan (Conn.) (40); 8, Buena VIsta (Iowa). (ItO); 9, Slippery Rock ( Pa.) ( 41); 10, St. I..twrence (N.Y.)
(4-1).
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
New York Yankees, having
defeated the Los Angeles
Dodgers, 7-2, Tuesday night
to win the World Series, were
to return to New York
tonight, at about 8 p.m.,
aboard a Delta Airlines
flight, and be honored with a
tickertape parade on Thurs- '
day.
City officials Tuesday night
said a tickertape parade to
celebrate the team's victory
would be held at noon Thursday. Details of the parade
were to be annoWJced today
by Mayor Edward Koeb!s

offiCe.

World Series

Leadership lacking-Matson
CINciNNATI (UPI) .'ormer Cincinnati Belllial
Pat Matson saya the winless
Bengals lack leaderS&gt;ip from
coaches and veteran players
and he even questioned
whether the "atmosphere"
for such leadership is
present.
Matson, writing a guesi
column in a local newspaper
Tuesday, noted that in his
decade of pro ball his major,
basic belief was that the
game was meant to be played
by " excited, ignited and
motivated players."
"These intangibles, I think,
are missing on the Clnclnnatl
Bengals," said Matson .
"I played with a number of
the current players. I've seen
the rest play. I finnly believe
this team has the quality and

ability to go out on a Sunday
afternoon and perform with
the zest tbat turns on the fans.
"Based on this knowledge
of the Bengals' capabilities, I
do not think we're seeing the
best of their talents each
week . They are not properly
motivated to perform in such
a way as to give their fans the
type of show they pay for and
deserve to see.
" Leadership from within is
needed, people who can Instill
the missing spark Into each
player ...
"In my days with the
Bengals, Bill Bergey was a .
leader. Lemar Parrish led by
example. SQ did Mike Reid,
before he got turned off by the
politics in football. After I
left, Coy Bacon was a leader.

They're all gone now, for one
reason or another, and new
leaders are needed.
"This is a simple but
glaring weakness with the
Bengals.
They
need
leadership from the coaches
and from certain proven

veterans. But I'm not sure the
atmosphere to produce this is
present.
"Unfortunately,"
added
Matson, "when someone does
rise to the top and show these
leadership qualities on the
field (or verbally off the
field) he is instantly
suppressed. Either he goes
back into the mold of silence,
which is the norm, or he is

banished to another city and
team.
" As often is the case , some
great talents surfa ce again

elsewhere and we see former HWJt was reinstated, one
Bengals helping new teams player - which turned out to
win games , giving those fans be Pureifory - had to be _
the show and excitement they dropped to keep the roster at
the 45-player limit.
pay to see.
Pureifory had come to the
"This is a sad lament, a
in the preseason on ·
Bengals
waste of talent," figured
waivers
from
New England.
Matson , adding, •'There'~ a
The Bengals, who have lost
total lack of motivation by the
seven straight games, lry for
club's leadership circle."
Meanwhile Tuesday, the their first victory Sunday at .
Bengals reinstated offensive Buffalo against the :N&gt; Bills.
tackle Ron Hunt and waived
Dave
defensive
end
Pureifory.
Hunt, unhappy because he
hadn't been playing, left the
team last Friday but asked
for permission to return this
week.
After Hunt's departure last
week, tackle Mike Wilson was
added to the roster, so when

facts, series
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Facts and figures of sixth
game of the 1978 World ·
Series :
Attendance : 55,965.
Net receipts: $817,378 .
Co mmissioner' s s hare:
$122,606 .
League and club shares:
$173,692 .
Total gate receipts:
$4,667,542 (record) .

LAST VISIT BEFORE CHRISTMAS

Thompson .paces Portland win
By STEVE WII.STEIN
UPJ Sports Writer
With Bill Walton out with a
foot injury WJtil at least
January, and possibly not
returning to Portland at all,
some people were suggesting
the Blazers might not even
reach the playoffs this yeat.
But Myehal Thompson, the
NBA's top draft choice for
Portland, Tuesday night had
an answer to that. He poured
in 37 points and grabbed 13
relioWJds to lead Portland to
a 115-112 triumph over the
Kansas City Kings.
And the Blazers not only
are playing without Walton,
but forwards Maurice Lucas
and Bob Gross also are on the
injured list. Starting guards
LioQel Hollins and Dave
Twardzik were injured
Tuesday and are expected to
miss tonight's game ag•inst
Denver .
Thompson did it all,
however, and wiped out a 32point effort by Kansas City's
Otis Birdsong. "Mychal is

was outstanding on defense."
"It felt good," Thompson
said. "Not the points, but the
win . As the game neared the
end, Jack Ramsay kept
calling my number and I'm
not going to argue wlth him. I
just took my normal shots
and they went in."
Elsewhere, Seattle ripped
New
qrok ,
120-109,
Washington beat New Jersey,

very active and very good,"

said Kansas City Coach
Cotton Fitzsimmons.
Portland Coach Jack
Ramsay says Thompson "is
going to be a good NBA
player. He was outstanding ln
the opener, and he had a
great second game. He also

NBA Standings

United Press International

Eastern conference

Atlantic Division
W . L. Pct.GB

Wash .
Phila.

2
1

0 1.000
0 1.000
1 .667

'h

New Jersev
2
lf:z
New York
0 2 .000 2
Central Dlvlslol)
W. L. Pet. GB
Houston

2

0 1.000

Cleve .
San Antonio
Atlan t a
New Orleans

2
2
1
1

0
1
1
2

1.000

lh

.667

.500

1

.333

111:1

Detroit
0 3 .000 2'12
· Western Conference
Midwest Division

W. L. Pet . GB

Denver

2

0 1.000

Indiana
Mi l w .

1
1

a 1.000

a .sao

Ch icago
1 2 .333
Kan . City
0 2 .000
Pacific Division

112
1

11;,
2

W. L. Pet . GB

Meigs 7th

wins 14-8

113·109, Cleveland edged Los
Angeles , 113-111,
New
Orleans defeated Detroit, 114109, San Diego clipped
Chicago , · 99-94, and San
Antonio nipped Phoenix, II~
107.
Sonles 120, Knleks 109
Seattle's Lonnie Shelton,
Dennis Johnson and Freddie
Brown each scored 20 points
and Jack Sikma helped the
Sonics dominate the backboards as they soWJdly beat
the Knicks .from start to

finish .
Bullets 113, Nets 109
Bob Dandridge scored four
points in an 8-point, fourthquarter streak to spark
Washington. Mitch Kupchak
tied Dandrid ge for t ea m
scoring honors with 19 points.
Cavs 113, Lakers III
Foots Walker tossed in a
career·high 26 points and
Campy Russell flipped in 16
of hiS 22 points in the second
half to pace Cleveland to its
second straight victory and
hand lhe Lakers their third
straight loss.
Jazz lU, Pistons 109
Pete Maravich broke out of
a scoring slump, hitting 17 of
his game-high 36 points ln the
third quarter, to lead New
Orleans.
Clippers 99, Bulls 94
San Diego, ·with Lloyd Free
COLUMBUS - The Ohio scorlng 29 points, won its first
Depa"tment of Natural NBA game after three losses.
ResourCes ' Division of
Spurs 110, Suos 107
Wildlife will accept apLarry Kenon scored 39
plications through Oct. 31 lor points on 15 of 25 field goal
special deer hunting permits shooting. and George Gervin
at the Ravenna Army Am- notched 25 points to help San
munition Plant in Portage Antonio hold off a late
County.
Phoenix rally.
Any Ohio resident age 21 or
older may apply by sending
name, address and 1978 deer
penni! number on a postcard
to: Ravenna Hunt, Division of
Wildlife, Fountain Square,
Columbus, Ohio 43224.
Only one application per
hunter will be accepte~ , and
the deadline lor applying is
Oct. 31. A public drawing for
the permits will be held ln
Columbus on Nov. 8. Those
whose names are drawn will
be notified by mail.
Deer of either sex may be
hunted at Ravenna with
shotguns using rifled slugs
only. The dates for gun
hunting will be Dec. 9 and 16,
and Jan. 6, 13, and 20.

Special deer
permits may
be obtained

On a muddy Chancey Dover field and ln freezing
rain , the visiting Meigs
seventh grade football team
downed the Cliancey seventh
graders l&gt;H Monday evening.
Meigs scored ln the first
quarter. on a 20-yard run by
Jon Perrin. The run capped a
drive led by the rushing of
Chris Burdette and Mike
Willford.
Shawn Eads also caught an
important pass on a fourth
down situation. The PAT was
nqlllfied by a penalty.
Midway through the second
quarter, Meigs quarterback
Nick Riggs went 65 yards
around his right end for the .
second TO. Burdette scored
the points after behind the
blocking of Eddie Bishop
and Dave Barr to give Meigs
the advantage at the half, 140.
The second half was
marred by many fumbles and
penalties . Chancey scored
early in the last period, but
the Meigs defense held on for
the win . This defense was
anchored by Perrin, Burdette, Wi!Hord, Andy Iannarelli, and Jiiii Farley.
The win upped the seventh
grade's record to 2-1. Their
next outing is a rematch with
the Chancey - Dover squad
Oct. 26 at the Meigs Junior
The boss' wife is raving.
High stadium in Middleport.
She
bought one of those cute
This game is the second half
gaboon
planters and the Old
of a doubleheader as the
eighth grade plays Athens in Man keeps putting his cigar
the opening game at 4:30p.m. b~tts in the thing. ·

Seattle
3 0 1.000
PhOen ix
2 1 .667 1
Golden State 1 1 .500 lllz
Port I and
1 1 .500 11;,
San Diego
1 3 .250 21h
Los Ang .
0 3 .000 3
Tuesday's Results
Seattle 120, New York 109
WHA Stindlngs
Wash 113, New Jersey 109
United Press International
Cleveland 113, Los Ang 111
W. LT . Pts .
New Orleans 114, Detroit 109
Winnipeg
.
2 1 o .e
San D iego 99, Chicaoo 94
New England
2 0 0 4
San Antonio 110, Phoenix 107
c incinnati
1 1 1 3
Portlend 115, Kan Citv 112
Edmonton
1 1 0 2
Todar's Games
Birmingham
1 1 0 2
Washingto n at P.h i l adelph ia
Quebec
0 1 1 1
Boston at Atlanta
lnctlanapolis
o 2 o o
New Jersey e~t Houston
Tuesday's Result
Portland at Denver
New England 2, Edmonton 1
Seattle at Indiana
Quebec 5, C inci 5, t ie
PhOen i x at Golden State
Today•s Games
San Anton io at san Dieg o
Indianapolis at Quebec
Thursdar's Games
New England at Winnipeg
Boston at New Orleans
.
Thursday's Game
Houston at Kansas Clty
Birm ingham at Ci ncinnati

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Od. 18, 1978

Therapy workshop to be held at GSI
Plans for a therapy
workshop at the Gallipolis
State lnstit:ute were_ made
during a recent meeting of
the Star Garden Club of Dexter held at the home of Mrs.
C. E . Stout. Announced at the
meeting was the regional
meeting to be held Nov . 4 at
Marietta with Prof. James
Caldwell to be the afternoon
speaker. His topic will be
" Smorgasbord for Fall."
Mrs. Henry Turner presided
at the meeting with Mrs.
Emerson Bigony, Mrs. Ed
Jordan , and Miss Ocla
Gillogby as guests.
Members said tbe Lordls
Prayer in unison and answere
roll call by naming a

mechanical aid used in flowe r and love of gardening among
arranging. The creed, t'Ollect ru:nateurs."
and prayer were given by the
"Decorations made with
members. Members taking Plant Materials " was the proflowers 1o their churches gram topic. by Mrs. Radekin .
were Mrs. Harry Lewis, Mrs. She said that Christmas
G. A. Radekin, Mrs. James det'Orations made with topic
Nic holson, Mrs. Norman by Mrs. Radekin who talked
Will, Mrs. Virgil Atkins, and specifically about Christmas.
Mrs. Henry Turner. Mrs.
She told of the plant
Radekin and Mrs. C. E. Stout materials which can be dried
were award first and second including nuts and cones and
places respectively for (all said these should be put into
flower arrang!Jlents which an oven at 350 degrees for a
they exhibited.
few minutes and then stored
Mrs. Lewis won the travel- in a plastic bag with moth
irig prize donated by Mrs . balls . .
James Nicholson. Mrs ..
As a base for decorations,
Turner read the club aim - Mrs. Radekin suggested us"To stimulate the knowledgP ing hangers and foam forms.

Auxiliary installs officers
New officers were installed
by Mrs. Campbell Harper,
past president, at a meeting
of the Ladi.e s Auxiliary,
Lewis Manley Post 263,
Am~rican Legion, held at the
home of Mrs. Charles
Saunders.
· Installed were Mrs. Allen
Hampton, president; Mrs.
Saunders, vice president;
Mrs. William Smith, second
vice president ; Mrs. Arnold

Richards, secretary; Mrs.
Ruth Brown, assistant
secretary; Mrs. Ernest
Bowles, treasurer; Mrs.
Frank Washington: chaplain;
and Mrs. Nellie Winston,
sergeant at arins.
' ·
The meeting opened in
ritualistic form with Mrs .
Bowles giving the legislative
report on bills pending in Con-.
gress pertaining to the rights
of veterans of World War I.
Mrs. Smith, poppy chairman,

gave her final report on the
poppy drive last May, and
there were also reports on the
birthday party held in
Chillicothe. A Jetter was read
from Dorolha Walsh concerning the ditty bags sent to the
Chillicothe hospital.
Annual dues were paid by
members. Tentative plans
were made to hold a
Christmas party at the Meigs
Inn . Refreshments were served by Mrs. Saunders.

She spoke of cutting acorns
an&lt;t using geenery' southern
magnolia , dogwood, bittersweet and other plant
materials wired securely to
the base to create attractive
wreaths.
Mrs. Radekin also told how
lu make poinsettia from
milkweek and sweet gwn
seeds, and corsages from tiny
cones and seeds, along with
miniature Chrislmass trees
using gumdrops.
Mrs. Lewis's subject was
multiflora roses. She said
that the 11th Ohio General
Assembly outlawed the planling of multiflora roses except for use as understock by
licensed growers or with a
special penni! from the D
Agriculture Depariment.
She noted that it was introduced into the United
States in late 1800's and was
used as understock and in the
development of new roses. It
later was promoted as
wildlife plant and as a living
hedge. It was noted that the
multiflora rose has spread
radpidly and grown into impassible thickets with the
seeds being carried by birds
and wind.

Robert Guralnik to appear in concert
at Marshall University Smith Hall
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. A
dramatic
recital,
"Tonight: Franz Uszt," will
be presented by American
pianist Robert Guralnik
Monday, Oct. 23, at~ p.m. in
Marshall University's Smith
Recital Hall. The program,
which is open to the public, is
a feature of the Mount
(student) division of the
Marshall Artists Seiies.
Mrs. Nancy P. Hindsley,
Marshall coordinator of

cultural events, said tickets
may be obtained at Kenney
Music Co., at the Marshall
Music Department office in
Smith Music Hall, and at the
Artists Series office in Room
2W23, Memorial Student
Center.
Guralnik, who has performed with orchestras
throughout the United States
and Western Europe, will
portray the aged Liszt
reliving the great moments of
his life in the dramatic
presentaton.
Guralnlk developed the
combined approach to music
and drama several years ago
when be was given the opportunity to use his talents in.
both fields in a one-man

He plays Uszt complete
with Hungarian accent in the
current production, written
and directed by Harold
Guskin. His portrayal
eludes Uszt's memories of
the women he had known, his
son-in-law Richard Wagner,
his admiration for Chopin,
and the time he stormed off
the stage because the Tsar's
whispering interrupted his
recital.
Prices for the performance
are $3 for adults and $1.50 for
youth ilnder 18 and Marshall
staff. Marshall students
holding activity and l.D.
cards will be admitted free.
Students without activity
cards will. be charged $1.50.

Put away the D-con, ·enter a race

jane Ann Williams

Celebrates
birthday .
Jane Ann Williams,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Williams, Syracuse,
recently celebrated her sixth
birthday with a slumber par·
ty at her home.
Games were played with
Tara WoHe winning a prize .
Wendy Fry broke the piniata.
Cake and ice cream were
served. Later in the evening
pizza , potato chips, pretzels,
and pop were served. Each
guest was presented a
ceramic Halloween piece.
Attenping . were Terri
Roush, Tricia Michael, Tara
WoHe, Chasity Jacks, Wendy
Fry, Syracuse; Jenny Buck,
Pomeroy; Vicki and· CJuisti
Richards, and Mrs. Edna
Richards, Pennylsvania, and
Mr. and Mrs. Williams,
Tucker and Ryan. Sending
cards and gifts were Jane
Ann 's grandparents, Jack .
Williams and Mr. and Mps:'
Clarence Baxter, Mr._;and
Mrs. Vince Kibbee_v~ah
and Kristen, and Betty
Spencer.
-~

PARTY SET
A Halloween party will be
staged from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
oo Monday, Oct. 30 at the
Long
Bottom
United
Methodist Church buement
for youth of the Long Bottom
community. Donations would
be appreciated and those
wtlblng to help are to call . _

3681.

ABERDEEN, S.D. (UPI)
- South Dakota's offbeat
contests already range from
the Pukwana Turkey Races
to the Pierre Buffalo Otip
F1ip. Now, those things have
inspired promoter Mike
Costello's creation- The Rat
Races of Aberdeen.
"This will be a very
consistent thlrig," Costello
said·. "We'll be running five
races every Saturday with
maybe ooe Monday night
race" In a bowling alley pub.
Costello, who designed an
eight-foot~ong track with six
lanes, said a $5 entry fee per
rat will allow the owner of the
winning rodent to receive a
share of the pot.
Nine domestic rata - no
wUd or sewer rats allowed have been entered in the race
Saturday, whiCh ai!Jo happens
to be the dsy of the National
Cornhusking Contest in Bran·
don, S.D.
Costello plans to publish a
rat catalog, which will show
what city the rats are from,
their sex, their race times
and
other
pertinent
,.inf&lt;li'I!Iatioo for rat racers '110rt of a Daily Racing Form,
like the Thoroughbred horse
racing set has.
Gary Nielserl, lowner of an

· Aberdeen pet snop, sa1a rat
sales
have
increased
dramatically since
preliminary races began
three weeks ago.
"We used to sell two or
three a week and never really
stocked them . Now I'm
selling as many as 10 a week.
It's hard to get them now,"
Nielsen said.
Nielsen and Costello - who
claim to know their rats said cheese Is not a favorite
food of the rodent and
probably will not get the
animal to run its fastest race.
Costello puts a cherry at the
end of the track 1o encourage
his rat. Other owners use
seeds, grain and olives.
·
In addition to training rats
1o race, Costello said, owners
also must work to Improve
the critter's self image.
"People walk around
saying 'dirty rat' all the time.
But actually they're very
affectiooate little creattD'es,
very intelligent and very
clean. They're wasl)lng
themselves all tbe time," he
said.
To improve the seH-image
of biB own rat, "Sweet
Loretta Modern," Costello
said he tells her, "boy, I'm
glad you're not a snake."

By KENNETH R. CLARK .
NEW YORK (UPi l Wilbur made a pi~ of himself
at Sardi 's - but it was all
right . That's what he's paid to
do.
WHbur, a 100-pound porker
who is exPected to · hit 700
pounds by the time he grows
up, is the latest in a long line
of four-looted stars that
periodically make thei r hype
and hoopla-laden debuts on
Broadway. Wilbur costars
with Don Scardino, Pamela
Blair and Millicent Martin in

the neW musical, "King of
Hearts," but his Tuesday
entrance for previews of the
show completely eclipsed his
human colleagues.
Wilbur . arrived
on
Broadway in a limousine and
Immediately was escorted by
a mob of reporter~ and
photographers to the famed
theater district restaurant
where Maitre D' Jimmy
Molinski greeted hini with
aplomb. Nothing surprises
Molinski - especially when
he's been briefed.
Luncheon customers many of whom had never
seen a pig outside the Central
Park Zoo, and none of
whom ever bad dined with
one - were not briefed.
Some craned their necks
for a closer look. Others drew
away. At least one spluttered,
· " Is this my ham sandwich?."
Wilbur placed his standard
luncheon order - spinach

in NATO exerczse

and mushroom salad, to be
delivered at the theater then wrap(ll)d up' liis news
conference at the restaurant
by trying to make hors
d'ouvres
of · all
the
microphones that were thrust
in his face .
After a stroll down Shubert
Alley, he checked his billing
on the cast list and settled
into his dressing room at tile
Minskoff Theater where the
show formally opens !l_unday.
A couple of telegrams were
waiting for him - one from
Oscar Meyer, telling him to
"break a loin," and another
from · co-producer Joe Kip- .
ness, who owns New York's .
Pier 52 and Konaliki
restaurants.
"If you're not a hit, you're
going to wind up as suckling
pig at one of them," Kipness

encouraged.

Timothy Nease
selected for
trf!ining
SAN ANTONIO - Airman
Timothy M. Nease, son of
Claude K. Nease of Rt. 1, St.
Marys, W. Va., has been
selected 'for
technical
training · at Sheppard AFB,
Tex., in the Air Force
medical service field .
The airman recently
compieted basic training at
Lackland AFB, Tex. , and
studied the Air Force
mission, organization and
customs and received special
instruction
in
human
relations. Completion of this
training earned the individual credits towards an
associate in applied science
degree through the Community College of the Air
Force.
Airman Nease is n 1978
graduate of Southern High
School, Racine.

l~l:

,,

NEW FTD
Sure, it's Bl)other day
for flowers, but doesn't
she deserve it? She'U
never forget that you
remembered . Just call
us or stop in today.
We can send her
flowers almost
FOR YOUR
anywhere--.
"OTHER"
the FTD way.

"

MOTHER.
cash 'n carry
Register your Mother-inLaw's name. She could win

a

~orget-Me. Not

Bouquet

BEAUTIFUL
ROSES
A sure way to impress her.
She' ll tell everyone you're

the world's greatest son or
daughter-in-law.

-------··
-··-I
1

Social I
1 Calendar l

1

THURSDAY
Marine Private First Class
BATON
CLASSES held at
Johnny A. Johnson, son of
Royal
Oak
Park on WedMrs ..Don Ritenour of Route I,
nesday
WILL
BE HELD ON
Reedsville, is participating In
Thursday
this
week
only. The
the major NATO exercise
time
of
the
classes
remain
the
"Display
Determination."
same.
He is serving as a mem her
BAZAAR AND BAKE
of Battalion Landing Team
SALE
Thursday from 9 to 4 at
Two Slant Two (BLT-2-2),
home
of Mildred Spencer,
based at Marine Corps base
Antiquity. Sponsored by
Camp Lejeune, N. C.
"Display Determination" Willing Hands Ciass of Anis designed to demonstrate tiquity Baptist Church.
PAST
PRESIDENTS
and
improve
NATO's
Parley
of
Drew
Webster Unit
capability to reinforce and
39
will
meet
Thursday
at 7:30
resupply· Southern Europe.
p.m.
His command has joined
BRADBURY Elementary
with forces from Belgium,
PTA
will hold its first
Greece, Italy, Prtugal,
meeting
of the year on Thurs·
Turkey, the United Kingdom
day.
at
7:30p.m.
Open house
and the Federal Republic of
will
be
observed.
All parents
Germany for the exercise.
are
urged
to
attend.
The exercise began with
ships from Pprtugal, the
United Kingdom and the U.S.
rendezvousing in the Eastern
Atlantic. His naval force
proceeded through the Strait
of Gibraltar and joined with
additional American and
Italian ships in the Western
Mediterranean. Other surface ships, submarines, and
land based alrcraft are acting

If she's a plant lover,
delight her with a

HANGING BASKET
BOSTON FERN
'12.50-'15.00.'20.00
Cash and carry prices
$10.00

$12.00

$16.00

as

"aggressors''

and

59 N- Second St.
Use Your Charge Cards
· Get Cash 'N
Prices

Phone 742-2100

vac pak

lb. French Citv

ROLL HAMBURGER ••••••••••••••••••••• :~·~ •.s2.69
She4ld's
bowl

MARGARINE ........~?~!.
Fisher 2 l.b .
Chef Delight

79~

$1
79
atEESE ..........~?.~ ... •

Pizza Cheese or

HEAD LmUCE.. .... ~~.~~.. 49'
CRANBERRIES ....1.}.~:.~~~: 59'
ORANGES..... _: ............6/69'

i............... ~ ..-........~1.29

Stvle Is one reason. Our JEWELS OF
BEAUTY diamond enga~ement and '
wedding rings ccin match your taste
at the right price. What's more. every
diamond Is guaranteed lor color,
proportion, and brilliancy ...
now and forever! ·

CORN BEEF HASH ••••••••• ~ •••-~ ••••• ~::~:~.:~•. 79'
29

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• Fur

THE FABRIC SHOP
Second Sl

Pomeruy, 0.

oz.

CRI'SCO OIL .••.••••••••••.••••••••••••••••• ~:~~~. 89'
30

oz. DelMonte

FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••••••••••••••••••••••·•••••••. 89'
40

Features:
n bobbin, adjustable
elastic stitch, Zig Zag or Blue hemstitch. 30

oz.

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SPAGHETTI &amp; MEAT BALLS ••••••••••••••• s1.29
49

oz.

BOLD SOAP DETERGENT••••••••••~:~~::~. s1.49
26 oz. Campbell's
TOMATO SOUP.~ •••• ~ •••...••••.•••••...•••.~:~. 4SC
10 oz .

Maxwell House'

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart
hosted a meeting of the Hearthstone Class of the Middlepm'\ ~'i rst Baptist Church
at theil· home recently .
:·:·
Mrs . Willis Anthony presid' prize brou~ht by Mrs . Parker ed at the meeting with Mrs .
was won ~y Mrs. Thompson .
Allen Hughes giving devoMrs. Thompson gave the tion:-; using " Reflections" C:IS
calendar for gardening for her meditation topic with
next month noting that scripture from Phil 4. She
November is the ideal time also read., " I Can If Daddy
for fall landsca pe planting Will Hold My Hand " aJid
and for setting out dormant scripture from Peter.
bare r oot rose bushes. She
Plans were made fur the
said roses can be hilled now annual Christmas dinner paror extra muleh put around ty . Several prayer requests
them, and that now is the were noted and a birthday
time to clean up equipment, eakc was served in celebraand gel the cold frames in
shape for spring.
Arrangementscarrying out
the Halloween theme were
judged by Mrs. Parker with
blue ribbons going to Mrs.
Lew1s, Mrs. Pat Thoma , and ·
Mrs. Alice Thompson, and a
red to Patty Parker.
Guests were Mrs. Jo Wiles,
Mrs. Mary Mitchell and ·
daughter. Mrs . Parker wiU
host the Nov . 14 meeting.
Halloween cookies, spice
cake, punch and sandwiches
wercserved.

plans for anniversary

·:·:

Beckry M Oe hter WetCOme d
v~ewpoints(atleastMom's-Dadwon·ies)onpremaritalsex. as member oifB &amp; PW

S1gn me- JUST YOUR TYPICAL AMERICAN TEEN-AGER

Another who considers herself a "run-of-the-mill teen " is
this i7-year-old virgin who writes: "My parents let me get
away with murder. I do drugs, cut school (two suspensions la st
year), get bad grades, smoke and drink, and bitch at them but

never listen.''
Then she adds, " Sure, llove being a teen-ager. It's the best
time in your life: no taxes, no insurance ' lots of partying. I'd
like to take a 'forever pill' so I wouldn't have to grow up."
And yet another letter :

BANQUET FROZEN
PIES
APPLE &amp; PEACH

20

oz.

SIZE

59~

IN OUR CIRCUlAR IT STATED

THE JONES BOYS
POMEROY &amp; GALLIPOLIS STORES

SHOTS TO BEGIN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
State Health Department will
begin a program 1o immunize
Ohio's 80,000 nursing home
residents against a severe
form of pneumonia that can
be fatal to individuals over 50
years of age.
Health Director Dr. John

Ackerman sa id Tue sd ay
Pneumovax, a new vaccine
approved by the Federal
Food
and
Drug
Administration last January,
provides protection against
BO percent of the various
bacteria
that
cause
pneumococcal pneumonia.

i:i

EASY WIPE
REUSABLE CLOTH
8 pkg.
Mfsl . lisi 169

~

2/89'

f.i
"""'

SUPER POU - GRIP
DENTURE
-.._.w,
~~HESIW
~[~~

GELUSIL
UOUID

...

!bte d (Jio, O.!llrlnvrt Ill N.mce. Ctrtilicate cl
Condi110 - Thlllllle,;pd, S..riltendert lllinslnlu

s1"A9

d 1~ !ble Qf IIi.~ hlrtby cartifin tiYt AMEIICAII
liEMMI. LIFt IllS. w . Of DlU., ol ~lmi ~l.Jl. !ll.e of

DeiJWIII , has ~i·~ -.lth lht IIll'S ot lhil!tl! IIIJPii~!
to it nl istlllloriltll INiffllhll cwrert )U 14tmua ~ ~
Hdsltlle IU -*lltliusiiiiiU Ill ir'll!nlCII. Ks FiUI'ICiti
Dtim i1 sholrn ~lis ..,UiilllltmeiiiiO haw bee• IS
!otlcm. on O.umillr l l, 1!77: .ldmilt~d mm,

si:ag

$!11D,ll&amp;Q26.00: Ullilhln, $542.19S,nJ.OO: hJ'~n.
S2l,JU,iSJ.OO: IIICIJI'II, $1S6.Wl,Ot9.00j ~nditurn,
I'J2,a7S,ll6.00;

~I

IIMII,

~ f.322,2)J .OO;

!:191111.

IN' 'MlJrf$ 'MfJIEIJ, I Nwe ~rtlltc ~bed my
Nrllll ~ ~:~~~~ed my ~~~ to bt .tli111d II lllllfnbd. OiG,

Mrs. Becky Moehler, deputy in the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, was
weJcomed as a new member
of the Middleport Bu.oiness
and Professional Women's
. Club at Monday night dinner
meeting held at the Meigs
·
Inn.

plat£0nn on which the club
will vole to accept or reject
'
the contents. As earlier an·
nounc ed' Mrs . Frances
'"Ul·se Davis was selected
UJ

"Women of the Year" and
Mrs Janet Korn "Women of
· '
· t'
th e . Week!l 10
CODJllflC 100
'lh
wt

Na ( wna
'
1 Bustness
·
-

Women' s Week.

~ ~~ ~ • ttnltlnl w• .ur.,. • ·"' 1 ~&lt;~.()i~l

!1111 Df Oio, ll!•nll " lnullll. Ct~titita:t o1
~ i iiQ - ,.. !Jd!r1il111!d, -rinllidlii "' liuu'IMI!
"' tiM !1111 o1 ilio. t~tr~ll!' Cfrlillu thll: Alllnu•
tndillll!ldls,
trMI~t~~ , tw
~ itd ~~~ tilt 11111'1 altlth 9:1t .itlble ICII IIIII I~

91••"'

mm '""co., "'

•U:IIIflmiMf!ttlllt~mrll'll•to i~~M~Cttntli•:!lttt•h
.,..11:1 llllliiii!U ai111SdU . h fillnlli anlt \tC111\
11r its nllllll ••!~rl to 11M ~~~e~ es kltOirSIWI
Oltctmllrlr 31, 1911: .lnt1td tUtti, $4~. W. !I9liJO,
tilbititiuJ~uJ503.9Jllll: !M.Idus. St42.sro.• .
11'10)11'11 , wv:~, l011. 785.~ Ullllliltns. 121&amp;.9/WG.OO,
Nit liWts, $l4S,QJ9.078.00. Cloital. 12.4&amp;&amp;.9».00.

•

oo.

TEACHER FORUM
The Meigs Junior High
School Parent Teacher
Forum will sponsor an open
house in the School Cafeteria
at Middleport on Tuesday,
October 24, at 7:30 pm ..
All parents of seventh and
eighth graders in the Meigs
Local School District are
invited to attend. Time will be
available to visit with
teachers and to tolD' the
buildings.

HI-LOW TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
highest temperature reported
Monday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 102
degrees at Casa Grande,
Ariz. Today's low was 14
degrees at Concord, N. H.

b'/ ~ ... o.n.. ton

orollo&lt;rWII

Will '"' Sl

IN .. TII.SS VHJfilf. lin hr:rtllto ~blclmy

this drfniUtt. Hwly~.

!o9

.19.

~~nllw:ICIII!IIdiTII'wllltDbrlllfli ~ard!Jilt~us. &lt;»rio

~. ~. "' lllSldiKl\~~~~l

was the Young Careerest program of BPW with women in
business up to 30 being invited to participate. Mrs.
Alwilda Werner is chainnan
for the program and anyone
interested is asked to contact
her.
As a fund raising project,
the finance committee launched a homemade candy sale
with boxes to be sold for $3.50
each. Jan Judge was welcomed as a guest. A silent auction
was held at the meeting. Mrs.
Marjorie Goett, who gave the
prayer preceding the dinner,
also presented the legislation

· APPLE &amp; CHERRY. WE ARE
SORRY THIS HAPPENED

Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Campbell , Mr. a nd
Mrs . JOhn Werner , Mr . and
Mrs. Milton Hood and the
host and hostess .

Sfi.IX{I,(Q),IJ),

Discussed at the meeiing

WE APPOLOGIZE!
OUR PRINTER GOOFED •••

lion of the birthdays of Uly
Hubbard and J ulm Werner .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hubba rd, Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Baker, Mr. and
Mrs. Willis Anthony , Mr . m1d

HOME
RUN ·'
TRASH &amp; LAWN
BAGS

150 ct. box
Mfg . List S1, H)

30-Gollon
15 Count Roll
M4g . l _
ist S.89

77•

98•

AYDS REDUCING
CANDY

..__

~- ~·

~·1\--

~:87:

LOW
LOW
PRict

INSTANT 'COFFEE ...................~ ••••!::. S4.49

J.] A.utomatiC thermo~tat controls the
Combustion air intake by means of a
highly sensitive bi·metal coiL Just set
the comfort level you desire.
(I] New, thicker linings of high
· temperature refractory brick .
[!] Caot iron grates with scientifically
designed,heavy duty ribbed construction
[or years of hard use.
[!]Cast iron rotating duplex shaker
grates for coal burning I Mod1•l
[1] Cast iron ash &amp; feed
are warp resistant and
airtight seal with
[1] Cast iron ash &amp; feed
withstand high tenopen;
warp steel doors. A
gasket maintains an
ma~hing frame .
[1] Cut iron flue collar
temperatures in stride
extended flange for easy
0 Extra large ash
and easy ash removal.
0 Full end cabinet
access to ash and
§] Heavy duty firebox
designed "wrap" co~~tnoctl
an embossed cooking surface.
[!I Contemporary styled cabinet .with
handsome wood-grained panel, gold
mesh grill to accent the dar~ bro_wn
cabinet color, and a porcelam fimoh
. looting beauty. .
~ Louvered top that lifts off
emergency cooking on the
. firebox top.

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA

9 9-6 MIS 12-6 Sun.

HOME VISION
TEST KIT
Includes : Pre-School
Eye
test
chart .

Revular Distant Eve
Tesl Chari , 8-pg .
booklet, occluder, tape
· '!'8eSure, emergency
first aid label.

Dodger Vaughan, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E.
Vaughan, celebrated his first
birthday on Oct. 1 with a party at home.
A " Big Bird" birthday cake
was served with punch, nuts,
and mints to the paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, Jr .,
maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Nicinsky, Bill,
Zandra and Beth Vaughan,
Mrs. Florence Windon, and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Vaughan, Sr.

Mfg . lis!S4.95

.'3.99
SERIES
OFFER

ROSE MIUI

SKIN CARE
CREAM
klrltll:l or ~ tor

Rebate

.... Lilli! •

s.99.

GILLEm DRY LOOK
MEN'S HAIR SPRAY

113 ct. California

15 oz. Armour

WE MAKE
YOUR DIAMOND
AN EASY DECISION

\

0

Plans for a 30th anniver- chairman.
sary dinner party to be held
The afternoon of Oct. 30 at 2
at a restaurant in Belpre p.m . was set for the fall
were made when the Winding cleanup of the planting at the
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Your lee~ questionnaire started our whole family thinkin ~ TrailGardenClubmel Thurs- Meigs County Infirmary.
and dtscussmg. Our two children answered it then let us rea d day night at the home of Mrs. Tulip bulbs will be planted
and flower beds will be
what in some instances were real eye'&lt;lpener~. We understand Marjorie Walburn.
The party will be held on prepared for the winter. It
one another better now, and we've all learned a bit more about
honest conununication. How about a parents' survey soon'' - Nov.4withmemberstomeel wa s noted that Mrs .
at the Ohio Power Co. for Margaret Parker and Mrs.
MR. AND MRS. T.W.
DEAR MR. AND MRS. W. : Please' Let us. catch our breaths rides to Belpre. Recognition Bunny Kuhl are co.,hairmen
will be given four charter for· the regional c junior
first! -HELEN AND SUE
members, Mrs. Iris Kelton gar·den clubs.
Pal Thoma reported on the
RAP: I have two sets of values, one for myself, the other for and Mrs. Wilma Terrell, aclive , and Mrs, Dora Heaton tour of Francis Schaefer's
the rest 'of the world.
Some of my friends have had abortions. Many have sex a and Mrs. Faye Pratt , dahlia garden and the picnic
which followed .
few think marriage is stupid, two are homosexuals, one ~as honorary.
The fall regional meeting to
Mrs. Iris Kelton installed
burnt-out on drugs bu\ is coming back.
be
held
in
Marietta
on
Nov.
4
the
new officers including
I don 'I argue with or condemn them. I like them as pe1·sons,
at
the
Baptist
Church,
PutMrs.
Lewis, president; Mrs.
and how they hve IS the1r own affair. It's good to care about all
man St., was announced with Terrell, first vice president;
different kinds of people so you stay flexible .
They don't condemn me for being " square" either. They Mrs. Addalou Lewis noting Mrs. Cora Beegle, second
think it's .great that I'm a virgin (some even envy me), and my that Prof. James Caldwell of vit-e president; Mrs. Alice
not drmkmg or smokmg hasn 't really hampered my social· life . Ohio Stale University, will be Thompson, treasurer; and
Of t'!'urse, I don't hang out with the real boozers and dopers, the ;-peaker. Registration Mrs. Pat Thoma, secretary.
The Halloween theme was
but there are lots of "in-between" people who maybe experi- must be made by Oct. 28 with
the club secretary.
carried out at the meeting
mimt once in a while but can have just as much fun sober.
Alice Thompson reported with members coming maskYour last question asked, " How would you change vour life if
on
the Meigs County fall ed. Decorations and
·
you had it to do over'" My answer:- NOWAY.
meeting
noting particularly · refreshments carried out the
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
arrangements theme. Mrs. Walburn gave
the
numerous
, I don't think marriage is going out of style, but !think it's
by
those
who
had recently devotions from the book,
misused. They shouldn't jump into it with the idea of ''Oh well ,
there's always divorce." I want a lifetime marriage with lots .completed the flower arrang- " Blue Denim and Lace" with.
ing course. She also announc- the meditation "The Little
of children, my own and adopted.
Would I favor living together before marriage J Only if it 's a ed the Christmas flower show Things ." For roll ca ll
to be held Dec. 2 and 3 at the members displayed a root or
platonic relationship. - " 17''
Pomeroy Elementary School mum or chrysanthemem for
DEAR RAP:
I've been a non-virgin since I was 16 (no regrets ), smoke pol with Mrs. Twila Buckley and exchange . The traveling
occasionally, drink a little, mostly wine. Was valedictorian of• Mrs. Sally fnlih•..: ~~ r• n .
my high school class, am now in college where I hope to earn a
master's at least, and have ll terrific career which includes a
1.
· 1
husbandandchildren.
My family doesn't approve of all I do but they're proud of me
·
and very supportive. Through discussion, I've changed .thcir·
·
·.

(Tomorrow: Young people discuss their parents, drugs ,'
alcohol, themselves . I

SLICED BACON. ..........................~~~·. s1.39
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD•••••••••••••• .'~;.sl.09
2

By Helen and Sue Bottel :·: ~·~ made

.Virgin-~;mirgin, what's the big deal' It's no worse for a girl
to lose her virginity than fur a guy to give up his, and nobody
caresaboullbal.
When I meet the right person, I won't hesitate. But I'm gnnna be sure he's right! -NATALIE

Prices Effective Thru Sat., October 21st
Golden Isle

.

RAP:

RUnAND
'DEPARTMENT STORE

simulating attacks as the
NATO ships transit the
Mediterranean for an amphibious landing in Southern
Greece.
.
Johnson joined the marine
Corps in December, 1976.

1.

.
. NATIONWIDE TEEN SURVEY (J'ART21
Herewtlh are excerpts from letters enclosed with t~e completed nationwide questionnaire for unmarried teen-agers.

Wilbur, who appears in the
play as one of a flock of
evacuees fleeing the Germans from a town in France
during World War I, is a
veteran trouper by now, He
made his stage debut in
"Alice," the black theater
version of "Alice in Wonderland," but it folded in
Philadelphia.
When he's not treading the
boards, Wilbur lives in
porcine opulence at Animal
Actors, Inc., in Washington,
N. J ., where he was trained
for his role.

.

Timothy Nease

: ·:= ·=·= ·= ·G;;;=;;!i'~~=·= R;~·=· _·.:_· i,.'r1. = ·w;;d;;· :· = = ·=r;;i/'·'Wc~';J;=;·=·=·=· ct:b·=,·= · :_'f. Smarts host Hearthstone class

ANNOUNCING!

oz, Chef

'

CLAsS SET
Edith Talbert IB teaching a
cl888 on better understanding
of the Bible at the Salem
Center Oturch at 1 p.m. each
Thursday afternoon . The
publjC IB invited.

A new ham on broadway

Pjc. john johnson

show, "Chopin Lives."

7-The Dail" Sent1nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Oct. 18. 1978

GIUEm~
FOAM~!~~!!c£~~!

A-D MIRAL
FALL KICK OFF

~.."~

.

.

~' ''" $99 ..-.,'

I I Mu

~

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

WILSOII AUTOGRAPHED'
. WALTER PAYTOH
FOal'iALL
With purchase of selected
Admiral Refrigerators or 1V.'s

-

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MIDDLEPOin,
OHIO

&amp;
.

NEW HAVEN,
W.VA.
·~·

�'
9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1978
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 18. 1978

r·----- Happy Harvesters met Friday
ISoial
I
C
1. Calendar

SPECIAL SERVICES - The Rev. and Mrs. Louis
Bustle, missionaries to Ule Doolinican Repuliea, will be
holding special services at 7:30p.m. Friday at the Chester
Church of the Nazarene. Services will include a slide
presentation. The Rev. and Mrs. Bustle have served in the
Virgin Islands before opening the work of the Ulurch of
the Nazarene in the Caribbean.

POLLY-·s POINTERS
POlly Cramer
Take fur 'ta a pro
DEAR POLLY - I have a
fake fur coat that looks like
leopard. The cleaning directions say that it has to be
cleaned like a real fur coat. Is
there any way I can clean this
at home • - MRS. J .A.G.
DEAR MRS. J.A.G. - I
think you had better heed the
cleaning instructions that
came with your coal. If the
pattern was applied.after the
fabric was made you might
find it disappearing. Have
you rubbed a spot with a
white cloth to see if any coloring comes off] Com meal can
be rubbed into a fur coat ljnd
then brushed out. That will
remove surface dirt on furs
ti)at really do not need a professional cleaning. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I read
your answer to Toni about
cleaning oil spots from a cement driveway and think it
sounds too complicated and
would be lots of work. We use
dry, sawdust-like granules
that are sold commercially
by an oil company. We find
the m most satisfactory and
inexpensive . I just sprinkle
some of it on a grease spot
and I work it in with my shoe
to prevent the wind from
blowing the granules away.
Repeat treatment until
grease is gone . Our garage
and drive are nice and clean.
To prevent~ "grease pit" in
our garage my husband uses
cardb oa r d s heets and
change-&lt; ll, ·m when needed.
If ynu garden or house
plants ,, · bothered with
aphids plant one or two onion
sets in pots or near a bush.
Leave them there from year
to year and the aphids will
disappea r . My plants are now

REVIVAL SET
Revival services will be
held at the Alleghany
Wesleyan Methodist Church,
Oct. 23-29, with the Rev .
Lew1s Urey as the speaker.
There will be special music
by Mrs. Janet Urey •at the
7: 30 nightly services. The
Rev. Robert Cherry is pastor.
The church is located on
Route 7, south of Coolville.

WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN JUNIOR High
PTO meeting, 7:30 p.m .
WClines day 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
Unitect Methodist Women.
THURsDAY
ROCK SPRINGS BETTER
Health Club, Thursday. I : 15
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Phyllis Skinner. Mrs. Susie
Pullins to have the program,
Mrs . Nancy Morris, the contest. Secret pals will be
revealed.
Gra~'e Episcopal Church
Women, 12:30 Thursday at
the rectorv.
WESTERN
SQUARE
dance 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Royal Oak Park. Hayride and
wiener roast following close
of da~ at 9:30p.m. Dewey
Hart, Columbus, 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. beginnim:
at 10 a.m. Thursday and
running through Oct. 24.
PLANNED Parenthood
Clinic scheduled lor Nov,, 2.
An appointment is necessary.
Call 992-5912. •·
REVIVAL oow in progress
through Oct. 29 at Middleport
Independent Holiness
Church, Pearl St. Evangelists
are the Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth Bogard, Washington
Court House. Special singing
each evening. Pastor is Rev.
O'Dell Manley.
INSTALLATION
of
Pomona and subordinate
grange officers, 7:30 Thursday at the Rock Springs
Grange hall.
PAST PRESIDENT'S
Parley, American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39, 7:30 Thursday evening at the hall.
SUNDAY
RALLY DAY at the
Alleghany
Wesleyan
Methodist Church between
Tuppers Plains and Coolville ·
on Route 7, Sunday.
'

very happy and so am 1. HELEN
DEAR POLLY - I use one
or two old oilcloth tablecloths
(far better than vinyl which
tears so easily) to cover my
umbrella
clothesline
whenever rain starts to fall
on my half-&lt;lry wash. This
keeps the clothes "as ill" until
a shower is over. Sometimes I
leave this covering on and the
clothes continue to dry quite
well from just the wind. Byusing this trick I dry clothes
out of doors ahnost all year
roWld.-P.S.
DEAR POLLY - When a
recipe calls for greasing pans
I do not dig into my shorten,
ing can but sprinkle a few
drops of the squeeze-type liquid margarine into the pans
and spread it with a pastry
brush. -MARYS.
Polly will send' you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
If it's Hau gourmet," the
her column. Write POLLY'S $3.75 hamburger steak will
POINTERS in care of this cause you to lay out about
n!'Wspaper.
$6.25.

IT'S NOT
TOO LATEI
'

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IS STIU TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES
STARTING OCT. 30, 1978
Classes being offentd can be· applied '
toward your diploma. G.B.C.' is a ~
college with you in mind. We can ·
give you the training that you need
to qualify for the job of your future.
We have more calls from employers
in the area for our graduates, than
we have graduates.

NOTICE .OF El-ECTION
ON TAX LEVY

MEIGS HIGH SENIORS

class members. It was also
noted that the Friendly Circle
still has cookbooks for sale.
Members were reminded to
take items for the food pantry
project to the next meeting.
Reported ill and sent con-

Mrs. Stella Kloes and Mrs.
Wihna "I:errell were named to
the nominating cununitt"" at
the Friday afternoon meeting
of the Happy Harvesters
Class of Trinity Church.
Miss Erma Smith presided
at the meeting with it being
noted that vanilla and getwell card~ HrP nn ~.~~1,. h~·

Erb, Mrs. Frances Reibel,
Mrs. Edna Reibel, Mrs.
Thelma Grueser, Mrs . Freda
Duffy. and Mrs. . Neva
Seyfried.
.
Mrs. Eva Dessauer gave
devotions. Members sang
valescent cards were Mrs. " Under His Wings" followed
Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Ruby by a prayer poein, " On the
Wings of a Prayer." Tbere

SEVEN PERISH
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) At least seven people died
early today ·in a fire in a
three-story home in North
Philadelphia, police said.
Fire investigators said the
4:30 a.m. 'blaze apparently
started in the lower floor&lt; ond

swept upward, trapping the
occupants on the upper
floors. Six people died in the
fire while one man apparently fell to his death
while trying to escape.
Police said two families
lived in the home.

' w~s a poem, "COoperation"

11!• Meigs locol Board of Edu&lt;ation soys that you

may have yOur senior porfr~it made •1 the _studio of

your choice.

The Yearbook Advisor s11ys our blilck end white
ve•rbook pictures - provided free with your portrait
pack•ge - are fine for the yearbook.
Meantime, the fAll leaves are getting "lust right" for

some great outdoor portraiture, included with every
set of senior previews.
Feel free to call us complete information.

and prayer with Mrs. Terrell
reading " The Cross is My
Prophet "
Mrs. Terrell and Mrs.
Genevieve Swartz were
hostesses and the table
&lt;)ecorations carried out the
Halloween motif.

without obligation -

for

lHE Pt«JTO PlACE
(Bob Hoeflich)
992-5292

109 High St., Pomeroy

•

_
SAVE ON BIG .DOLLAR· STRETCHING:VA'LUES.NOWI
ii

I

.

..
&gt;.,,..
.

•, . ~j:

You're Rlghtl There Is Always Something Going On At Shoppe·r s Mart
It Doesn't Just Happen··· We Plan If That Wayfl
REGULAR '5"
BOYS 8~18
NEWEST FALL
V1lues

QUILTED
STADIUM
COAtS

WOMENS
BLOUSES

Down or Nylon . 4 styles.
Detachable or lay-back
hoods. Save up to $7.99

~~:LG.

$15° 3 PAIR
0

~--------------~~---Jto~tc

TONIGHT!.-----~

SUPER SAVINGS

TOPSI TOPSI

WOMENS PULLOVER
SWEATERS

TOPS.I

ON SALE -NOW THRU SUNDAY

A HUGE SELECTION OF SHORt SLEEVES
PRINTS - SOLIDS • NOVELTIES

Out of our Stock. Cowl
.necks, turtles, V-necks and
more. Orion acrylic In FIat
or Full
.

.....

A 5-0ay Sale. Select from dozens. Polyester or
• cottop blends. Our new fall colleetlon. Perfect
with Jeans and Skirts ..Get your Winter Selection
Now. Save Money I

Up to
S3H

FOR

V1lues

BARGAIN

BUYS

TO

HELP

REGULAR VALUES

SAVE '1"
16" HIGH

'TERRY
BATH
TOWELS
FOR

FIRESTONE FOAM FILLED .

AREA RUGS
Aetual Values to $8.99. Shags, ·
,carpets, runners. We need room
..:.. Come Get Bargains.

$300 $200

AND

$300

'ALADDIN' THERMOS BOnLES

To •a•

V•lues

ODD LOT CLEAN-UP:

J'rinted Designs. ~annon
Irregulars. Full Size.

2

EverydiJ

PAIR

BED PILLOWS
WE NEED THE SPACE!
Full Size Stripe

·or

Flor1l Covers

$2

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

INT and QUART SI~ES
V1lues To

s3•

•
UP 0:5 PERCENT
WASIDNGTON (UP!)
Industrial production, a key
indication
of
overall
economic health, rose 0.5
percent last month, but
production of consumer'.
goods remained sluggish, the I
, Federal Reserve Board said
today.
·
September's increase was ·
identical to the August gain
and was consistent with the
administration's projection
that the economy will expand
between 3.5 and 4 percenlfor
the reS\ of the year.

People who back inio their
garages obviously haven't
mastered the art of bringing
the car to rest before the wall
Is contacted.

Rea. No.

SAVE UP TO

YANK' -P
Styled or Basic styles.
Pre-washed Denim or
Corduroy.

NAT. ADVERTISED
MAGIC DENIM

YS JEAN
Size 8 to 18

•a"

.haular
1nd Slims

.

-

'

.

POINT PLEASANT OR

75~2-44728 ·
)

submitted to a vote of the
people ot said Village of
Pomeroy. at a General
ELECTION to be held in the
Village of Pomeroy , Ohio , at
the regular places of voting
therein, on Tuesdav , the 7th
dav of Novembe_r ,_ 1978, the
question of levying, in excess
of the ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of Pomeroy
Village for the purpose of
providing and maintaining
fire apparatus , appliances ,
buildings, or sites therefor , or
sources of water supplv and
materials therefor, or the
establishment and main ·
ten a nee of I ines of fire alarm
telegreph or ·t he pavment of
permanent, part -tim e , or
volunteer firemen or fir E!
fighting companies to operate
the same.
Seid tax being : a renewal
of an existing levy of ,90 milts
and an increase of .10 mills to
constitute a tax of 1.00 millS
to run for Five (5) years .

Ernest

) '.

IN

NOTICE is herebv given
that in pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board Of
County Commissioners of the
County of Meigs, Pomeroy ,
Ohio, passed on the 1st dlly ot
August . 1978, thfre w ill be
submitted to a vote of the
people ot .said County at a
General ELECTION to be
held in the Countv of Meigs ,
Ohio , at the regular places of
vot ing there, on Tuesday, the
7th day of November , 1978,
the question of levying , in
excess· of th e ten m ill
limitation , for the benefit" ot
Meigs County for tl:le purpose
of the ma intenance and
operation of schools, training
centers ana workshops for
mentally retarded persons .
Said tax be ing : an ad ditional tax of 1.25 m ill s "to
r~n for FiVe (5) Years .

at a rate not exceeding 1.00
mills for each one dolla r of
valuation, which amounts to
ten cents for each one hun dred dollars of valuation, for
Flve (5 1 yei!llrs.
The Polls for said Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock A..M.
and re ma in open until 7:30
o'clock P.M. Eastern Stan dar~ Time of Sl!!id dev.
By order of the Board of
E-lections, of Meigs County,
Ohio. ·

NOTICE OF ELECTION

ON TAX LEVY

IN

EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

NOTI CE is hereby given
that in pursuan ce of a
Reso lution of the Board ot
Trustees of the Township of
· Salisbury , Ohio , pass_ed on
the lsi dav of Septembtr ,
1978, there will be subm !tred
to a vote of the people of said
Township of Salisbu ry a t a
General ELECTION to be
held In th e ToWnsh ip of
Sal isbury , Ohio , at the
regular . places of vot ing
therein , o·n Tuesday, the 7th
day of November , 1978, the
question of levying , in excess .
of the ten mill limitation , tor
the benef it of Sal isbury
Township for the purpose of
dust control,
tor the
preventat ion, contro l and
abatement ot air pollution .
Said tax being : an ed ·
c!it ional ta)( of 2.0 mills to run
for. Five (5) years .
at a rate not e X~eedi n g 1.25 al a rate not ex ceeding 2.0
milts for each one dollar of mills tor eac h .o ne. dollar of
valuation , .which amounts to valuation , which amounts to
twelve and one -half cen ts for S.20
Cents for- each
each one hundred dollars of one Twenty
hundred dollars of
valuation , tor Five (5 1 years. valuation , fo r Five ( 5l vears .
The Potts for said Election
The Poll s for sa id Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock A .M . will open at 6:30 o'c lock A.M.
and remain open until 7:30 and remain open until 6 :30
o'clock P .M. Eastern Sta n- o'c lo ck P .M . Eastern Stan ·
dard Time of said day .
By order of the Board of da~~ ~~'::ir 0 ~,s~~~ d:ciard of
Elec:tions, of Meigs Cou nty , Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio
Ernest A . Wingett Oh ;o _
Ernest A . Wingett
Chairman
Chairman
Dorothy M . Joh nston
Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Clerk ·
Dated October lOth , 1978
Dated October lOih . 1978

(10)

11,

18,

25, {11) 1, 4tc

(lO) 11 ,

18 , 25 ( 1l)l,

41 c

ASTIO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

-~(!}[/
~ ITJ~mrilmlJ
October 11, 1871
New and adventurous Interest
will be. awakened In you this
coming year and you'll · set
more ambitious goals .. Don't be
discouraged If things get off. to
a slow start, the momentum
builds.
LIBRA CSept. 23-0ct. 23) Be
extremely care fu l as to whom
you take into your confidence
today . One who does not have
your best Interests · at . heart
might try to use what you have
to say for his own ends. Having
trouble selecting a career?
Send for your copy of AstroGraph letter by mailing 50
cents for each and a long , ~elf·
addressed, stamped envelope
to Astro-Graph, P .O . Box 489,
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth sign .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOv. U) The
old adage lhal too many· hands
in the kitchen could spoil the
soup applies lo you loday. Do
your own thing. You'll be far
· better off.
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Doc.
21) Because you're willing to
cooperate and . give a little

doesn 't mean otners are going
lo dl' the same. Be wary tO(jay
of one who only knows how to
take .
CAPRICORN (D..:. 22--Jon. 111
Keep an active hand In all your
undertakings today. Nothing
will get done properly If you
depend on subordinates to
lhlnk for themselves.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D-Fo. 19)
Insist that all business transac·
lions or financial dealings lo-

lime keeping your mind on
whal you are doing today .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Get It out
of your head today that you
have to lry lo keep up flnan· clally with everyone. People
like you for whal you are, _not
for whal you have.
VIRGO (AUQ. 23-Sept. 221 To
keep peace today, you're apt to
let a bully have more Influence
ewer you than you should .
Ignore this person . Do what

day
put in writing.
If you
don't,besomeone
may try tO
pull
the wool over your eyes.
PISCES (Feb. 2D-Morch 20) An
old, unresolved domestic Issue
Is likely to rear its head again
loday . so be careful how you
handle any family mailers .
Don't you do anything to sli r
lhlngs up.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Normally you're quite willing to
share your know-how with
lrlends who need it. Today,
however, you'll make it clear
you won't be Imposed upon .
TAURUS (Aprii2D-Moy ZO) Your
paternal Instincts are aroused
today. Your concern Is admlrable. However, don 't lei a
spoiled person abuse your
generosity.
GEMINI (Moy 2t..June 20) Try
using some of those encourag·
ing considerate · words you
have for everybody eloe on
yourself today. Self-negativism
Is destruclful.
CANCER (June 21--Juiy 22)
Slick to acllvities that don 't call
for heavy or deep concentralion . You might have e -dillicull

you
know to be best.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

'11"

Banner " was sung in
Baltimore for the first time.
In 1936, an around{he·
ld irplan
b th
wor a
e race Y ree
newspaper writers ended at
Lakehurst, N.J . H. E . Elkins
won with a time of 18 days, II
hours, 14 minutes and 33
seconds.
· In 1973 President Nixoo
'
. .
sent Henry Klssm ~er to

A thought for the day :
American man of letters
Oliver Wendell Hohnes said ,
" Man h as his will - but

woman has her way ."

HEARING TESTS SET
FOR MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

THE ALMANAC
United Press International

ELECTRONIC
HEAR·ING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattingly

Today is Thursday, Oct. 19,
the 292nd day of 1978 with 73
to follow.
·
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
Th
e morning stars are
Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars.
Those horn on this day are
Wider the sign of Lib a
Am .
. r ·
ertcan novelist Fannie
Hurst was born Oct. 19, 1889.
On this day in history :
In 1781, the American
Revolutionary War neared an
end as British Gen Lo d
Cor
II'
· r
nwa lS surrendered at

Hearing Aid S ecialist
BELlONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
Meigs

19, 9

Inn, Pomeroy, Ohio, Thursday, Oct.

a.m. to 12 noon.

Anyone who has trouble hear ing is welcome to have a
hearing te~t ~sing t~e latest electronic eq uipment to
determine 1f h1s loss 1s one which ml!ly be helped. Some
of the causes of hearing loss will be expla ined and
diagrams of how the ear works will be shown .
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids
BaHeri~ And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
·
If You Cannot Come In Call For a Home
Appointment.
Phone 992-3629

Yorktown, Va.
In 1814. "The Star Spangled

Cha irman

Dorothy M. Johnston
Dire ctor
Dated October. 10th, 1978

Of

1101 11, 18, 25 llll 1. 4tc
NOTICE -OF ELECTION

LEVY

IN

NOTICE is hereby glven
that in pursuance of · a
Reolution of the Council of the
Village of Middleport, Ohio
passed on the 28th day of
August, 1978, there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of said Village at a
G~neral
ELECTION to be
held in the Village of Mid dleport, Ohio, at the regular
places of voting therein , on
Tuesday, the 7th day of
November , 1978, the quest ion
of levving, in excess of the ten
mill limitation, for the benefit
of MiQdleport VIllage for the
· purpose of Providing and
ma in taining ,
apparatus,
appliances, buildings, or sites
therefor, or sources of water
supply
and
materials
therefor, or the establiSh ·
ment and maintenance of
lines of tire alarm telegraph
or the payment of perm anent,
part -time or
volunteer
firemen fire fighting com panies' to operate the same.
Said tax being! an ad ditional tax of 1.0 mill to run
for Five {5 ) years.
at a rate not e,.;ceeding 1.0
mill s fo r each one dotlar of
valuation, which amounts to
Ten cents for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
fOt:' Five {5) years.
The Potts for se id Election
witl open at 6:30 o'clock A.M.
and remain open until 7:30'
o'clock P.M . Eastern· Stan dard Time of sai'd day .
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
OHio . .

ONUOGIIHAND
PIODUCU

Except Closed Saturday Mid11ghl nl 9 AM Sunda,
Eleept Himon, White SulphUr Sprin91

CUT

.nd .514 S. Third St. , Ironton

Green Beans

.11...0

CCM''tlttGKT ~ 1,11 THI II'IOGII CO. ITIMS
IOIICII
0000 SUNDAY OCT. IITHIUSA1UIOAY OC'I21 lt1UH
SH.VII lnHH ANO I'OMU()y )(fiOGift. WI illll'l'l

~~~-27c

THI ttGHT TO liMIT QUANTIJilS.

DIAUirl.

"

NONI SOLO TO

I

~o•-2

110 ) II, IS , 25 Ill) 1, 41C

Whole
Smoked
• ....... . lb.
P•ICniCS

I
I
I

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMIL 'Y

I
I

"

II

I

c

I
I
I

Lilli I PAK IIITN tOUPGK AID $7.50 ADDITIONAl PURCNISI
lllCLUDINC TN IS ITEM)

1

·Roll
Pak

I

I
I
I
I

I

I.
I

I

el.

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER fAMILY

I o•

.\

1

FROZEN FROM THE MEAT DEPT.

... 69c
Cit.

wii;~&amp;oneless $
Beef
Rib Eye ........ lb.
Serve 'N'
Sa.ve
1•1b.
W1eners ..... Pk1•

$

•• OFF I. .. IEL

Aiax
Cleanser ........... .

14-oz.
Ctns •

:

i

LIMIT 2PUS.IIITII COIPGUND 17.50 ADDITIONAl PIIICNASI

:

LIMIT ONl COUPON PU FAMILY

IEICLVOING THIS ITEM I

L

CII. . CIIISIIIiUCr 15-S&amp;flltAUU Zl.ll11 '

::;tic $139
Ctft.

IOUNDTOP -.

Kroger 20-oz.
White
Bread ................... .

I ··
I '
I
:

··············-·········

Fresh Baked
Pumpkin Pie

$ 19

~~:~d~~~~ts ..

o••

5129

Virginia
$349
~~~d Ham ... ......... ............ .... .. 1bb. $

Longhom Cheese .. .... .... ........... 1

199

Thin Sliced Meats
Roast Beef.. .. .. .. .......... .... .. . . ..
GoWen Glo Turkey Breast .......... .. ...

Hanl Salami..

'

1

stiJltr li.WI.ICIII.f snn • UICil 1uo

lo Storos Willi Dti Dopt's
Not FOG4s A.,;;,~, II Alll-7 PM

Lowfat

I

~. , .

l"ib~le Only

Grade A
large
Eggs ...... _.... Doz.

5

.

'Deficafa&amp;M S,eciah

KROGER

Stayman
or Rome 111
Apples ....... iai

c

I
I
Of

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

'

i

-lb.
Pki.

I

Itt.

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON ·
CERN :

:
:

2$ 99

I

I

12

Banquet
Fried Chicken

1

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,

I
I

•

4

I

I

Grape Jelly

I
I
I

0:

Northern
Bathroom Tissue

110) 11. 18 , 25 Ill) I, 4tc

Notice Is hereby given that
on october 30, 1978, at 10 :00
A.M . a public sele will be held
at Pomeroy Motor company
to sell for cash the following
colleteral. to wit: 1914
Chevrolet, Na.va s No .
IY17H4W237B98 , · so ld
co111teral being held to
secure an obligation arising
under a ·retaillnsto!llment sale
contract 1925 87036 held bV
General Motor$ Acceptance
corporation as secured
party . Said public ~ate Is to be
conducted according to the
18ws of the State of OhiO.
General Motort Acceptance
corporation reserves tht
right to bid at thiS sale.
Tht collateral IS presently
Stortd and may be seen at P
0 Box 591, Pomeroy, OhiO
.5769.

I
I
I
I

Cans

I
I
I
I

lUCID .

I

II Mill CANS WITH COUPGN AND $7.50 ADDITIONAl PURCHASE
(IXCLIDING TNIS ITEM)

I o•
I '1

Rinso
49 ·oz.
Detergent. ... Box

I
I

10%-oz.

I
I
I

Spotlight
Bean
Coffee ........

Wingett
Chairman

at a rate not exceeding .30
mills for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
three cents tor each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for Five (5) years .
T-he Polls for said Election
will open at 6: 30 o'clock A.M.
and remain open until 7:30 .
o'clock P .M. Eastern Stan·
dard Time of said day .
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
ErnestA . Wingett
Chairman

I

I
I
I

Corn

1:

$

I
PIUS DIPOIIT

AVONDALE CIEAM STYLI

" I

Campbell's Chicken
Noodle Soup

I
I

A.

MILL LIMITATION
NOT ICE is hereb-y given
that in pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the Townsh ip of
Rutland, Ohio, passed .on the
31st dav of August. 1978, there
will be submitted to a vote of
the peopte of said Townsh ip of
Rutland at a General
ELECTION to be held in the
Township of Rutland, OhiO, at
the regular places of voting
therein, on Tuesday, the 7th
day of November, 1978 , ttie
...:juestion of levying , in excess
of the ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of Rutland
Townsh ip tor the purpose of
providing and maintain ing
fire apparatus , appliances,
bulldogs , or sites therefor, or
sources of water supplv and
materials therefor, or the
establishment and main ·
tenance of lines of fire alarm
'telegraph or the pavment of
permanent, part -time , or
volunteer firemen or fire
fighting companies to operate
the same.
Said tax being : a renewal
of an existing ta x of .30 millS
to run for Five (51 years.

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGtk STORES

I

F~HTAUIC SAVINGS ·

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Dated October lOth , 1978

·1101 18, ltc

Moscow to discuss ways to
end the Middle East War,
which had started 13 days
earlier .

r--------------------

A . Wingett

Dorothy M. Johnson
Director
Dated October lOth, 1978

Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll a.t G.B.C., receive your
marketable skills and then the Jobs
·will come to you.

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

passed on the 17th day of
Ju lv , 1978, there will be

LEVY

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN

From Our

2 $1 OO

Scented Lamp Oil-88*•

NOW

Tab Trims, half elastic cinch
waists. Tailored polyester
pants In the wanted fall colors.

·MENS -ORLON
SOCKS

$300

- -

WOMENS
STYLED
PANTS

FITS 10-13
EGULAR 11"

Crystal Glass

'4''

INFLATION

1st QUALITY

CAPE COD
OIL LAMP
Regular

FIGHT

Pomeroy ; Ohio,

Ernest

TO 110"

YOU

the Village of

ON TAX

EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL ~IMITATION

For Thundly. Oct. It

EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Solid Colors or Prints.
Long sleeve. Tailored or
Trimmed.

Sizes 5-6-7. While and colors.
Acele acetate. Reg. 59c

IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
'hat In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Council of

ON TAX

'Fruit of the Loom'

RICES IN EFFECT

NOTICE OF ELECTION

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

3

5 99

3
5299

5 19

,

�U~-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Wednesd•y. 01:1. 18, 1978

.

·

Want Ads .Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN

WANT AD
CHARGES
I Wi}'

2dw3 l0

15 Wut Us ~'T' Untk·r
( luu ~t·
Cash
1!5
I~~·
::..1
1.!10

..

,
:t

:h lli)S

tidily!&gt;

l lfi
· I 75

00

F..adt word u't't'f' tiM: mmunwn 15
wutds ~ 4 ctttl.li per wort! p;.•1 day .
Alis rul\IIUI)( otht:t than l, lllst!t'UliVt'

l'lwr).:tod at ttw I lilly

~

dau; will
nih'

In lllt'tnUt) r~· d or Tit~mb oukl
Obituary n t't'nl.i pc1 \liutd S:l oo
1rununwn Cash utl:ld\l,an('t'
~k.·:;

Mulnlt! Uunw Sllil!!ti arMI Ylltd

ilorl' ;Jt't'tptl!d. on))' Wll h l'WSh With
unlt!t 25 l'\'rll diHti(L' fur atls l'Oitl'~ •

vtg Box Nwn~ In Cw.rt&gt; ur Tl~t&gt; S...u·

Und

'fhl' Pul.lla.sher

r~n't':i

the nl(ht

w t'dll ur rtja:l any cu.i:l dl.'t.'lllt'i) ubjtt·uunul Tht! PuiJhsht!r Wllllwt lx•

l't'l&gt;l'OIWble fur nw1 t' ttum unt'

llll'tll'·

rt't.Lin~·rtlull

Phont' 99"1·2136

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monda)

Noon urt Satunl&lt;~~
Tu~dlt}

MILL LIMITATION
NOT j CE IS hereby g1 ven
that in pursuan c e of a
Fhsolution or the Co un cil of
th e Village or Syracu se . Oh•o .
passed on the Jrd day of
August , 1978 there Will be
submitted to a 11ote of said
people of sa id V•llage of
Syracuse at a
Genera l
ELECTION to be held tn the
V•llage ot Syracuse . Ohio , at
the regular places of voting
'therem , on Tuesday , t h e 7th
day of November . 1978, the
quest ion of l evying , in excess
of the ten mill lim 1tation . for
th e bene f1 t of Syracuse
Village for tl'le purpose of
providing and ma1ntam ing
fire apparatus , app11ances ,
buildings , or s1tes therefor. or
sources o f water supply and
ma te rials therefor . or the
esta bli Shment and main
tena n ce of lmes of fire alarm
telegraph
or
the
payment of p erma nen t , part
t ime , or volunteer firemen or
t1re fighting Compan1es to
operate the same .
Sa1d tax bemg a renewa l
of a part of a 2 0 mi ll existing
le vv , be1no a reduct ion of 1.0
mill to constitute.! ta x of I 0
mill to run for Five (5 ) years
at a rate not exceedmg 1 o
mills for each one dollar 01
valul!ltion , which amounts t o
ten cents for each one hu n
dred doll a rs of valuation , fo r
Five l5 &gt; yea r s
The Polls for sa1d Elect 1on
will open at 6: 30 o'clock AM
and remain op en until 7 JO
1 o'clock PM . Eastern Stan .
dard Time of sa id day
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Meigs County,
OhiO .

IPM

Ernest A Wingett
Chairman

d&lt;ly ~furt' publlt'I:IU PII
Sum.le~y

Dorothy M . Johnsto n
Director
Dated October~ 1978

IPM
Frida) .Hflt'llllJI.JII

00) 11. 18, 25 (11 ) 1, 4tc

NO HUNTING or trespoumg on
my property w1thout perm1s
s1on . Judy McGraw
GuN SHOOT. Ractne Gun Cl ub
Every Sunday 1 pm Factory
choke guns only.
--~
GUN SHOOT, Racme Volunteer
Fire Dept Every Sat~rday 6 30
pm at the1r build1ng 10 Bashon
Factory choke guns only.

WORK
OVERStAS ,
Austra l1a,
Afnco , South Amenco . Europe,
etc
Construction
Sole!.,
~ ng,neers Clencol , e tc SEIOOO
to $50 ,000 pl us Expenses po1d.
For employment 1nformol1on
wn le Oveneas Employment ,
Box 1011 , Boston, Ma 0:2102

---- - -- - -- - -BABYSI TTER needed m my home
.

for I kl ndergarden student
Wed and Fn. 7 om to 5 30 pm
and on' occos1onal Thursday Ill
Dec 15 99:2 -5489

A~E

VOU troubled with w1ld
animals? Fox , mmk , racoon.
opossum beaver. etc? Coli the
trapper. 985-396.4 Will co ntact
1n person for s1gned perm•s·
SIQO.

OPENING SOON: Coke and Con
dy Craft Shop. ~nyone 10
terested m coke decorot1ng
classes
beg i nn1ng
1n
November. call 992 25133 or

992-3289.

LOST RUTLAND area feomole ,
black and cr.am German
Shepherd Blue collar . Ch1ld s
pet Reword 742· 2808
BLACK AND wh1te spnnger
spani el Female. 10 months
old. lost on Me1gs CR 31
Reword. ~2- 3209

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN

EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

be

held

In

-- -

--- - -

----

~

.

WANTED · Par t lime opportunity
ava ilabl e Ideal for hou se w•fe
w ho needs llex1 ble hours For
appointment , call992 3941 .

- - -- ·-- --,.-- - - ---MAN OR woman to represent
-

Western-Southern Life 1n
Pomeroy or Middleport Must
hove cor No expertence required Salary commiss ions,
co r expense and oil benef1t s
M1n1mum age 22 Apply in parson
Western -Southern l 1fe,
218 ' l E Mo1n, Pomeory . OH

.

~---

- ----

-

-

--

POSITION OPEN for parts oss1s
tont Expenence preferred Ap:
ply at Two H1vers Ford Inc Rt
b2 N 30A-b75 1.490

CHIP
WOOD .
Poles
max
dtometer 10" on largest end
SB 50 per ton Hundled slob
Sb 50 per ton Deli vered to
Oh1o Pollet Co . Rt . 2, Pomeroy
--------~.

the

To'wnsh lp of Olive. Ohio. at
the regular places of vot1ng
therein, on Tuesdav. the 7th
dav of November, 1978, the
question of levying, In e)l(cess
of the ten mill limitation , for
tl'le benefit of Olive Township
for tl'le purpose of dust
controL for the prevention ,
control and abasement of air
POIJUI10n.
Sa it tax being : an ad ditional tax of (3 ) thrH mills
to run for Five (5) veers at a
rate not exceeding (3) three
mills lor each one dollar of '
vllluallon. whl&lt;:h amounts to
s 30 Tl'llrty Cents for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for F ive (5 ) vears.
The Polls for said Election
w il t open at 6 :30 o'clock A.M.
and rem a in open until 6 . 30
o'clock PM . Eastern Standard T ime of said dav .
By order of the Board of
E lec tions , of Meigs County,
Oh10
Ernest A . Wingett
Cha i rman
Carotohy M Johnson
Direc t or
Dated October lOth , 1978
nol n , 18, 25 (11) 1, Ate

TIMBER . f'OMEROY For est f' ro
ducts. Top pdce for !!.tondmg
saw timber. Call 992. 5965 or
__ K!_nf Ho~ by_!_ 4~~ 8~7~ - _ _

OLD FURNITURE . ICe boxes. bra ss
beds. 1ron beds . desks etc
complet e households Write
M .D. Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
coll992 7760

OLD

COINS pocket watches .
doss nngs weddmg bonds
d•omonds Gold or silver Coli
__Roger Wamsley 742 · ~ -­

WE PICK up JUnk auto bod1es buy
1ng 1unk car s. scrap ~ron . bat
tenes ond metals
R•der s
Salvage , SR 124, Pomeroy .

'1'12-5&lt;08 .

If YOU hove o ser111ce to offer
wont to buy or sell someth1ng.
oe lookmg for work
or
whatever . . you 'll get results
foster w1 th o Sentmel Wont Ad .
Co11992·2156
YARD SALE Oct S-b Green house
Green house behmd Sta te
H1ghwoy Garage on Rt 7 10 4.

sAie

YARD
Fr~doy , Oct 20. 9~
Solem St .. Rut land D1 she s. fur
n~ t ure ,
doth•ng . m 1n1 b1ke
miSC. 742 :2"'90
YARD SALE October 19th and
20th . 9 4 Hysell Run Free
Method1st Parsonage . hou se
nex t to church All clothes$ 10
each Also m• sc Items

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
that 1n pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the Township of
Salisbury, Oh IO, passed on
the 1st day of September,
1978, tt,ere will be submitted
to a vote of t he people of nld
cou nty at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held in the
Township of Salisbury, Ohio ,
at the regular places of voting
therein , on Tuesday, the 7th
day of November, 1978, the
quest ion of levying, in excess
of the ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of Salisbury
Township for the purpose of
maintaining and operating
cemeteries
satd tax being : an ad.
dltionat tax of 1 0 mill to r un
for Five (5) years
at a rate not exceeding (1)
one mIll for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts to
S.IO for eacl'l ont hundred
dollan of valuation. for Five
(5) years.
The Polls for uld Election
will open at 6 30 o'cloc k A .M .
and remain open until 7 JO
'o'clock P .M
Eastern Stan·
d.ard Time of satd day .
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Meigs County,

Ohio .

Ernest A . Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M Johnston
Director
Dated October lOth, 1971

1101 11 , 18, 25 Clll 1, Ate

,.

H&lt;·al t:•tah' for !:ialc

111 7~

!t ~P H D C ~AJ.t box lo• l tl: SU tnle1
not1 011 01 $100 H'J JO'iJ

H OM t ~ lli: ~

~ '1

CHt: V ROlEI
( A M AR O
)O:I l or &lt;R2 :1:105

11170

fORO VAN customized
u c w pomt l~re s and wheels
S I l OU or bes t a lt er 74 'J. 'JJ~6

1Y/ 1 l AMARO J50 auto new
tu es
a nd
pomt
SI SOO
'141 J8S'I
19 15 DATSUN PICKUP Good co n
d1t1o n
G oo d t~r es
l ow
m ileage Step bumpe1 Tru ck
lll ll f OIS S:J7 S() 1185 39 711

ICJ"/S CHEVY lUV w1 th camper
Pnced to sel l 991-78 50 aile!
4pm

PU..:KUP (AMPI:'R 10 ' , It sleepti
; n, ga s elerlru: re lnge•oto r,
fur nace , ga s r onge w1t h oven ,
hood ond fen . double smk
!lush toile t hold11,g tonM &amp; 4
ta c M ~ and oth er equ•pm en l
clean and 111 excell ent co nd• 1
11 011 G C Reuter Ba M bbb
Pometoy OH 4S i'b9 Phon e
'PJ'J :t4YO

COUNTRV MOBil£ Home Pork
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Call 992 7479

ANTI-FREEZE

J AND 4 RM furn1 shed ond un
turn1 shed
opt s
Phone
942 5434

Qll\_o~ o&gt;~~ ,{,"- $347

I '1 )( 00 MOBILE home 1n Roc me
area 992·585a

Town &amp;Country

POR TLAND AH~A 3 bedroom un
furn1shed modular $200 per
month References and deposit
requ~red . 304 273·51_
72
~OUR

BEDROOM house m Racme
No pets Y&lt;l9·225 3
ONE

mole

adult

992 31 8 1
TWO BEDROOM opt
close to
town Coli 992 3592 after 7 pm
ON~

-

Pomeroy Landmark

,.

-

.

-

-

SEDROOM mobile home
Adu lts o~ ly 992 25~

• • .:!,ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-21BI

-·

11Ai11

!Cii' 4 DA TSUN PICK UP

(614) 69B·3290
RISING STAR Kennels . Boardmg
and groommg, all breeds.
Cheshire 367-0:292 or 367·0106
LOVABLE WHITEIS'now dnft great
PVRENEES Pupp•es
Ph one

1 614·007·3838
= ----

GOING

OUT of Bus1ness Sole 1
Poodles ," \ Pek •ngese, Pomera
nlon , Teacup, T1ntes $35 to
$125 Ph one61A·b96· 1297 :. _ _

197b HW PAC~R 3· speed b cy l.
AM FM top e player CB rod 1o
Mus t sell Phone 742 2814
19b4 18 fT honkll n troller Selfcontomed '-'11th V.:ater pump
New 12 volt batt ery Gas
rel ngerotor stove furna ce
own1ng JOCk s hot water tonk
Slee~s_s1• ~h_o~e 7.4?·213: 4 __

F~~H~M'¥* ~~

FOR SALE or trade • 1969 Plvmouth
Road Runne r. H1gh per
l orm an ce 383. A· speed Phone
304 773·5615 or 1ngu1re at cor
ner o f Center and 4th St
Mason
- - . ·~OH SAL E or !r ode 14 f1bergl oss
boot w 1th motor and trailer
Also a 8 M 40 hou se tro1ler, 2
bedr good fo r comp1nr Con
be seen ot 415 Mon1 St
Pom ~r~y~ 992~ 3?b~ ___ _

-

b

-~--

FOOT
mounted

DEL Roy camper
on 1 ton tru ck

992 2794
-

~ - --

- --

MAYTAG COPPERTONE Porto
Po1r washer and dryer Very
good co nd1t1on sell as set Co li
__of!e r Sp!!' , 992-2995 _ _ _

METAl BOOKCASE , 4 shelves
Mo tch1ng metal step table w1th
3 shelves Small stereo and
rodm combinohon Lorge Ph1lco
stereo w1th rod1o combmot1on
Revo lv1 ng wrought 1ron TV
stand Boys hned CPO. s1ze 12
G.rls ' w in ter coal , s1ze 16
Men's dress shoes . s1ze 9' ',
steel toe. Boys Thom MeAn
shoes, 6 1' , D and many Ioehr
boys , g1rls , JUmor s and
~~me ~s cloth1ng 9!}:}775__

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

water with Co-op

wale~

Now Only

,

309•95

let us test your water
Free

19'10 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
l ' 1 both . underp1nn 1ng $1500
and assume loon 949 2bt33 or
843.3311
--

--

·

--

--~

-

1970 Amherst SOx 12 2 BR
1970 Champion b0xl2 2 BR
1965 General bOx 12 2 BR
19b8 PMC52x12'l 8R
19S5 Pro•ne Schooner 28xB 1 BR
19"13 Royal Cmbo ssy bBx 14 J BR
1959 Star SO~e 10 2 BR
197 3 Stor b()xl&lt;l2 BR
19bB Star ClrOM 12 2 BR
1970 S-ylvo 60x 12 2 BR
19bB V•ll oges b0x12 2 BR
19b4 Wmdsor Sl xlO 2 BR
1970K .rk woo d I JJ&lt;6038R
B&amp; SM0 81lE HOME SALES

"ilfe.J.•ck W. C..rsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

SHAPER STAND and blades cam
pressor w1th hose and spray
gun Craftsman Bondsaw 9'
throat. HameHte cho1n sow .
Millerfall m1ter sow
new

·------------MOUNTED TRACTOR sprayer
Formoll 8 tractor. Wheels ond
a xle to bwld troller Four 8.75 x
16 5 truck fires l•ke new. Form
wago n
Gram
ele11otor

949 27"'63~·-----1973 INTERNATIONAL I ton V-B
truck w1fh Omaha me tal gra m
bed and cattle rock eMtens1on .
Only 18,000 m iles Shmn s Troc·
tor Sales J0.(.458- lb30, l eon ,
Wvo
f

--- FOUH 13 mch Cregar SS wheels .
..

-------~ -

W1ll f1t Ford ond Chevrolet.

5200. 7•2 2826.

·----------__._7•2-30'13
_,_,- . - ------ -·--

engme (Broken crank)
starter $200 742-3093.

No

~

1000 FT 4 ' p•pe Plain en d. Sl ft .

.

bock SpeCial • dttton Black
Phone 99'1 sew or 992·326.4

.

IY77 MERCURY STATION wagon
15.000 mile!&gt; A wheel d1 sk
brOkes trailer towi ng pockoge
Speed control Auto temp. 01r
conditionmg
tilt
wheel
949-2746

REALTY

GeorgeS. HoDstetter Jr.
Broker
Your Full Time
Real Estate Broker
Office 992-6333

SELLING FAST!!!
Call us today for all
your Real Estate
needs . WE NEED
LISTINGS!!!

SNOW
TIRE SAlE
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNOMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark
ck W. C1rsey, MOf.
Pllone 992-2111

.

'

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
10-18·1 mo .

PT

PL~ASA N T ,

MOVE GOlllPANY

sur AFtE'R

A ,!;TAIRWAY LEAD IN'
DOWN T' THE SUB~
BASeMENT LEVEL!

SEA~CHIN&amp;
THE •A~E~ ~

MENT THOR-

OU&lt;?HLY...

DOORWAY-· NUTHIN! NO
WO).JDER MOXIE FIGURED
THE DOPE WOULD Be

SAFE IN THE SUB·
B!ISE/MENT:

WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

Pomeroy, 0.

1 mo

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11,1971
5.1l0-VoyagetotheBottomoftheSea3; ; Star Trek4 ;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One 13;
Bredy Bunch 15.
5:3Cl-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son B; Elet . Co 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6·1l0-News 3,~.6,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3Cl-NBC News 3,•• 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7·oo-&lt;:ross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha Na Na 8: News 10; Love, American Syle
15; Coping With Kids 20; Big Green Magazine 33 .
7 3o-Dolly 3; Dating Game 4: Match Game PM 6.
Price Is Right 8; The Judge 10; That's Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporf 20,33.
8 oo-Movle "Ish I" 3,4, 15; Elghf Is Enough 6, 13;
Jeffersons a,10; Marie Curie 20,33.
8:3Cl-ln he Beginning 8,10.
9.oo-&lt;:harlle's Angels 6, 13, Movie " McLintock" B, 10;
Great Performances 33; Prisoner 20.
10:1l0-Vegas 6, 13; News 20.
'fl''if\i~ fii}l} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

\!!)

~~ ®

I LEWJE
I [)

ReSidential and commerAny

day,

Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginther 985-3B06

10
9·30-Brady Bunch B.
IO ·oo-Card Sharks 3,15; My Three Sons 4, Edge Of
Nlghl6; All In The Family 8,10 ; Dating Game 13
10 :3()-Jeopardy 3,4,15, Andy Grllfllh 6, Pr ice Is Righ t
B. IO : $20.000 Pyramid 13.
11·QO-High Rollers 3,4,15: Happy Days 6,13
11 :3()-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13,
Sesame St. 20; Novo 33.
11 ·55--CBS News 8, House Ca ll10.
12:oo-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10, America Alive 15 ;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine I~
12 .3Cl-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Broun 4, Searc for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec Co. 20.33 .
1·QO-Hollywood Squares 3: All My Children 6,13:
· News 8, Young &amp; the Restless 10; Nol For Women
Only 15.
1· 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15. As The World Turns

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

CJ

Chester, Ohio

BoX 3

10 30 c

)IIRGILB. SR . ~~~~
992-3325
216 E. Second Street
1.9 ACRES -

Nice older

~ --

-

Un furnished
Complete ly
redecorated I 304 -075- 1958 for
~ ppolntme~n~I~·-·-----~----TWO BEDROOM mobile home
Bottom enclosed T1ed down
Complete hook· up. W1nterlzed.
a acr e lot
Tool stor age
985-&lt;35 I.

THREE B~OROOM frame home in
M1ddleporl . Caii992-3A57.
~

FARM FOR sale House 2 barns
troller. large pon d. 10 acres o r
82 acres 742·256b
NEW THREE bedroom home , rec
room , fireplace , Iorge deck .
garage . basement one and a
holf baths Phone lee Construe·
tlon 992· 3454 , weeken d s
1·614 -4.46 95b8 .
FIVE ROOM house oh d both ,
remode led . fully ca rpeted . May
be seen after 3 pm Phone

'1'12-3933
HOUSE IN Pomeroy large lot
Some recent remodeling . New
carpet Central heot1 ng Ut1hty
room. Full basement 2 por·
ches Furnished or unfurnished

992·7074

~ - -~·--'--

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom oi l el ec tr iC
home w1 th over 1 acre of land
Pnce redu ced 949-4'424

--------- -·--- --FOR SALE by owne1 512 ~ Mom

-.

St . Pomeroy 6 room h ouse
carpor, ,
W B
fire plac e .
carpeted . com plete modern k1t·
chen concr ete dlrv., A lso ad·
JOCent A lrcime business
bu1ld1ng w 1th co ncrete parking
area $55 000 For oppl , phone

992-3921
-- - - -- - - - - - - --BY 'o wNER 1n Meson , 3 bedroom
Wol! to wall carpet , fireplace
central air and heat full bose
ment w1 lh garage oppllnnces
Call ofte1 Spm J04 Oi'5 1i'Si'

road, $48.000.00.
NEW LISTING 1'/ 2
slory, ~ bdrms. , SOx200 lot,

good neighborhood
OLDER HOME - On Rl.

approved. 1112 story, 3
bdrms .• carport, 112 acre
ground, fireplace , $800.00

car garage: $14,000.
OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN 3 bedroom home with level
lot Has nice bath, natural
gas central heating, city
water, , U -shaped modern
kitchen : and near schools.

for a qulc" sale.
LAND - lots of.. acreage
on State Routes, Ohio
R1 ve r, and in the country .
All s1zes and prices. Drop
in fo see .

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

Ill_

PI&lt; 9!2-2174

8-20-1 mo. (Pd.)

J&amp;L

Pomeroy, O.
3-15·1fC

YfAH ... BUT GUYS liKE
THI'IT HEAR BElTER' f&gt;l
WIW 1'\NIMALS '"
HE'S GONE MOW·· ·

Celluiosic (wood· tiber)
Therma I insui!Jtion

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

-

T.iiTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Blown lnsulatioo
JIM KEESEE

MOORE'S

LET'S

Yesterda s
Y

NEW

LISTING -

VS

down, 30 yrs. , 9V• Pd. lnl.,
$119.41 monlhly pay , if you
qualify. ONLY $15,000.00.
NEW LISTING In
Mlddleporl, duple•. new
k1tchen, new heating , new

carpeting, 21ols, plus a 1966
Skyl1ne mobile home. ALL
FOR $15,500.00
MODERN RANCH - In

BRADFORD , Auctioneer. Com·
plete Serv1ce Phone 949 2487
or 949-2000 Ro cme , Oh•o. Cntt
_ __Br~d_lo_c.~
d ;__..c.._ _ _ __
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toaster s, 1rons all
sma ll appliances. Lawn mower .
nex t to Stote H1ghwov Garage
on Houle 7 Phone (bl4) 985·

382,.:5'---=~:--,--SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser
v•ce. oil makes 992-2284 The
Fobr1c
Sh o p
Pomer oy
Authorized Smger Soles and
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors .

Syracuse,
3
bdrms . •
garage , part basement,
nice yard. porch , patio,

e.cellenl condlllon, ex cellent

neighbo rhood .

Below la1r MKT . VALUE
$25,500.00 .
SUPER NICE - A-Frame,
2'h acres. 3 bdrms • llh
baths, rec . room, fireplace,
many features, close to

lown $37,500 00.
OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AND WE STILL
HAVE
QUALIFIED
BUYERS
FOR
ALL
TYPES OF PROPERTY,
LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELANO
REALTOR
'1'12-2259. 992-6191
992-2568
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leonil

Cleland
Associates

A11oci•te5

Housing
Headquarters

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
JUST LISTED --Good 2 •lory older home, nicely
carpefed with 5 bedrooms, large kitchen &amp; dining room
and 2 bafhs. Basement wifh nat. gas heal . Approx. 1
acre of land with nice garden . Located In Chester . All
for 521,500.
JUST LISTED - Over 4 acres of land wlfh a 2 bedroom
hoU5e. Clfy water. House needs some repair . Located
in Minersville . Price $.4,000.
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'12 story house with full
basement. Large pond sfocked with fish . Priced for
quick sale,: $.40,000 .
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. If lias a large kitchen with lots of cablnel&gt;,
slove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room wlfh sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-laid out home we
haveflve bedrooms, uflllly room and garage. Very low
healing bill . Red barn-like storage building . Located
about len mlnufes north of Pomeroy just .off Rl. 7.
Asking S55,000.
MIDDLE PORT - This well cared for newer home has
3 BRs, living room , bafh, mosfly carpeted, kitchen Is
equipped with refrigerator and stove, utility room,
nafural gas forced air heal, outside storage building.
PrIce $27,000.
6 ACRES - Nice 1112 story home mostly carpeted with 3 ·
or 4 bedrms,. living rm,., family rm .. with fireplace,
basement, fuel oil furnace . Loc. close to hospital and
school at La~rel Cliff. Asking $42,500.
TWO ACR ESr A beauflful 4 year old, 3 bedroom home
wlfh large oat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 bafhs, full basemen! with TV room . Many
more extras, • low heal bill wlfh nal. gas forced air
furnace . All th is and two nice acres of land In a good
IOc:aflon . Wlll ,go quick for $35,000.
40 ACRES Df land In Sulton Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn. Priced at O!lly $21,500.
515,000 - Good 5 bedroom house wlfh 2 full baths.
Natural gas f'!'ced air heat, located In Chester .

EXCAVATING. dozer, backho e
and d1tcher. Charles R Ho t
f1eld , Back Hoe Serv1ce
Rutland, Ohio Phon e 7.42-2008
~

Will do roofing . construclton
plumbing and heatmg. No JOb
too Iorge or too small. Phone

7•2-23cc4:::8:___ _ _ _ __
HOW~RY
AND MARTIN ~x·
covot1ng
septic
systems,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone. g ro11el . blacktop
po111ng , Rt 143 Phone 1 {61.4)

b9B-7331

{Answers tomorrow )

Jumbles JULEP
Answer

PUlliNS EXCAVATING . Complete
Ser111Ce Phone 992 2478
REEVES TRADING Post , Pogev•lle
Grocenes, dry goods hard·
ware , feed , tack shop. Special

25 lb. ol doglood , $3 .88.
AUTOMOBILE INSURANC~ been
cancelled ? lost your operators
l1cense? Phone 992-2143

WANT TO rent . storage space for
outos. Mason. Pomeroy . M•d·
dleport area. See R1chord Harmon, 140 N . 3rd. Ave , Middleport

--·---

PANDA

ORPHAN

What bargain-priced

SEPTIC

cameras might be-

~·-(f)toa/

.fully Insured
Free Est.
Calf992.m2
8-10-1mo. (Pd. l

38 Dynamo

foR

YOUR complete housing
r emodeling construct ion and
ma intenance give J R. a try .
available .
Re f ere n ce
Rea sonabl e pr1ces
Phone

~E

OLD ONE IN·

I'M AFRAID

S'TRUC'T'ED Me 'TO

AID 'tOW 'TWO IN
ANY WAY I CAN!

WELL , "THE

BJ;:eeZE IS
~ISHT...

~GASOLII'iE

ALLEY

He wants
me to meet him
in Casablanca!

&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

oo-Tomorrow

WEST

23 Desire

25 Cracker
shape
261n owgroup
27 Defrost
[
28 Swiss river

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As
sq. yd.
II: up

@',

1 ~Fe::

•

f::n·

TIME 1 ••• .,-~
TiN MlNvr'!$

-n-te

In

ond- wh1f you're golllllfl
- Good salutlons - Fully
stocked.

.........,

AF...ER WHNr'fvffil

C..ll742·2211
' TALKTO
Wendell or Herb Gr1to
or Gtn~ ,Smltll

MIG4¢Y'$ J..OST

ARM wouLD ft

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

poaN-riN~

RuH•nil

-rG •
10· tA

•

1F 6ARY CDMES
e.ACI&lt;. BEFORE I 170 1
TELL HIM TO WAIT
HERE FOR ME!

WHAT 60017 AM I
TO 'IOU 17EIID ? IT'S

YOUR MONEY )OU
WA N1i 1SN'Ti T ?

GOT A POINT THERE
HOW CD WE KNOW
NOT AN OTI-IE'R ONE
Of' H1.5 PHONY
PROMISES?

EAST

•QJ09B

+K 76532

• ... •

•

• 96543
+QIOB4

• Q2
+J6

¥ KQI09752

• J87
+A 9 2
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer : North
Wesl North East
l NT Pass
Pass 4¥
Pass
Pass Pass Pass

b-+-+--+-

31 Title in
India
3% Owned
33 Old note
35 Beverage
maker
37 M0&lt;1lem
prayer call

Opening lead : +10

.._....--'-..!..:::-: By Oswald Jacoby
I

and Alan Sontag

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y D L B A A X R
Ia L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
.
one letter simply stands for another .. In thts sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 s, etc S1ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

The bidding was notscien·
tific, but it was a fast,
exciting, shoot-for·the-moon
sort of auction that ended In
a sound contract.
A beginner would think the
contract depended on a dia·

hmts. Each day the code letters are d•lferent.

mond finesse , but a more

experienced player would
realize that the discard of
H N J his club loser on the opening
IN
HNJ
M T I' 0
QTH
lead opened up a second
V
C
A
possibility
- playing A K of
Y
'0
ON
AEGAMO
clubs and rufflng the third
club in the hope that the suit
VIMNFA
H N J S
would divide 3-3.
But declarer on the di·
B V y y V T F
K A T 0 Z A S
agranuned hand made the
Yeotenlay's Cryploquote: THERE IS NO MORE MISERABLE slam even though the dia·
HUMAN B EING THAN ONE IN WHOM NOTIDNG IS mond finesse --:as offside
and clubs were divided 4-2.
HABITUAL BUT INDECISION.-WIWAM JAMES
He immediately attacked
CRYPTOQUOTES

© 1978 King Featuree Syndicate, Inc

soo·Hoo
15 IN STOCK
I'VE GOT DISCO
FEVER, 6A5E !

LArgest Stltctlon In The V1Uey

I-lOW DO '(OlJ LIKE
GOLD CHAINS?

WHAT 00 '{OJ SA'-i,

BABE? 00 '(OU COME

1-l&amp;E OFTEN ?

WHAT'S '{OUR SIGN,
6ABE ? '1'0ll A LEO ?

A 43

.....

the trees''

Floor Cowering In Stock

WINNIE

.' .
'

and Alan Sontag

HOO

HIIWHRW

1fEHEEHfE

WHAT ON
AIRTH AILS

vou,

trwnp, drivmg out East's"

ace .

East re turned a spade.

wh1ch declarer ruffed. South
then drew East's remaining
trwnps, played a d1amond t o
dummy's ace, played the A.
K of clubs and ruffed a club.
Most declarers would now
ta ke the diamond finesse
and complain bitterly when
1t lost. South was made of"
st erner stuff. He realized h e·
had one extra chance, and

he took it.
He ran off all his trumps.
When he led the last trump, ·
South had the trwnp he led·
plus the Jack-..ight of dia·
monds . West had the queen
of clubs and two diamonds. ,
Dununy had the kmg-10 of;
diamonds and club seven:
East's hand was immateri·
a!.
.
West had to d1scard a .
diamond on the last trump
lead . To do otherw1se would
establish dummy's club as
the 12th trick. Declarer
countered West's discard by ·
pit c hing dummy's now .
worthless seven of clubs.
Declarer led the jack of
diamonds at trick 12, and
when West played low declarer immediately played
dummy's king of diamonds,
dropping the queen. Declarer had not seen East's
cards,

but he had "seen"

West's . Smce West' s last
card was known to be the
~ueen of clubs, the diamond
fmesse could not succeed.
By running the trwnps and
delaying the finesse, declarer had given himself the
slight extra margin that in
the end proved decisive.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

(For a copy of JACOB Y MOD·.

fRN, send 11 to " Wm at
Bridge," care of this newspsper, P 0 Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y. 10019.)

I WUZ. PEELIN' ONIONS
AN' I BUMPED MV
FUNNY BONE

w~ nMd large &amp; small F•rms
a ftc! Many typu of p...,.,.,.

CALL JIMMY OEEM, Astoclafe94f.2311

t

\

3, 4.

SOUTH

29

\@

9' and 12' Vinyl

742-2211

1

"

All carpet Installed with
padding 11 no ch1rge.
Expert lnsl•ll•lion.

__

. •'

BRIDGE

DRIVE AUTILE

Buv where 'r'OU Cln come

''

Timing is all important

SAVE ON
CARPETING

4 •88

.'
.'

1·5Q-New s 13.

Yesterday's All!lwer
3 Goal for
Wednesday , Oct. 18
9
Aseptic
25 Tend
the bride
the garden
and groom 12 Vessel
of vassals
27 Scanty
tenn
4 Nigerian
16
Languish
29
Alan Ladd
I&amp; Lalapalooza
city
Oswald Jacoby
19
Not
role
17 Pitcher's stat. 5 Foolhardy
taped
30
Large
18 Journal·
&amp;Wed on
22 Sentinel's
antelope
the run
istic credit
word
34
The price
7 Author
23 Uncorrupt
to play
Deighton
24
Part
of
38
Kind of
dynasty
8 Guide for
10-18-A
NORTH
an
player
•
A
J
4
~:;:!:i~;;:e;;s~
22
Chinese
dynasty
the
r
auto
37 - hinunel '
• J86
22 "Oh! the
troops
+A K 10
old
+
K75 3
·swinunin'

DU STLESS FIREPLACE and ch.mney
cl eamng The Chimney Sweep
Call 614 -373 -0057 .

'

'

3,4,6,8,10,13, 15: Dick Cavell, 20. Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Sfarsky &amp; Hukh 6,13 ,
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33, Movie " Will Penny"
10
12:3()-News 8; 12 . 4~SWAT 6,13

2"- Ev'ry
Mountain''

'1'12-5191

.,'

1 1.~News

40 Dissuade
41 Jekyll,
at times
· DOWN
llndlan c1ty

ALLEYOOP

'
•,'·

33, Mayor ol Casterbrldge 20 .
9·3o-Soap 6. 13.
IO .QO-Sword ol Justice 3,-4,15; Family 6,13 ; Barnaby
Jones B. 10; News 20.
10.3()-Boston 's Marathon Ma 33. You Bel Your Life

by THOMAS JOSEPH

WATER WELL dnllmg Wilham T
G r ant 7.:12-2879

.,'
'•
,,

· 8, 10; Ormandy&amp; His Orchestra . Japanese Odyssey

39 Tilt

1

BATHROOMS AND Kitch en s
remodeled ceramic tile, plum
bmg corpentr';'. and general
ma•ntenonce
13 years eM ·
perience , 992-3685 .

I I 1 I I Xl )

NEW- JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 11 t wlth 110 puules !a allallable for $1 .35 postpaid from Jumble, cJo this newapaper, P.O. Box 3.(,
Norwood, N J 07648 Include your name, address, zip code and make
check&amp; payable 10 Newspaperbooks

BACKj

E~CAVATING dozer. loader and

backhoe work : dump trucks
and lo·boys for hire will haul
f ill dirt, to so1l, limestone and
gro11el Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers . day phone 992· 7089. mght
phone 992.3525 or ~2. 5232

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form 'the surpnse answer, as sug
gested by the Bbo11e cartoon

. "SNAPPED" UP

Experience and

1

I

GET OUT

0' HERE 'FORE
HE COMES

SaveJO pet. to 50 pet.
on heltlng cost

L-~----------~~~

i~AIN e'{ NI6H'T.

Printenswerhere: (

~ne

Life lo Live 6,13 ; 2:30-Doctors 3,4,15,
Guiding Light 8,10
3 co-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospita l 6, 13,
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3: JG-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10, Dick Cavell 20
&lt;·llO-Mister Cartoon 3: Bailie of lhe Planets 4,
· Hollywood Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6, Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; SesameS . 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4·JG-LIItle Rasca ls 3; Gilligan's Is 4,B : Brady Bun ch
10 Pettlcoal Junction 15
s·~Voyage fo the Bottom of the Sea 3, Star Trek 4;
· Beverly Hil lbill ies 8; Mister Rogers' NeighbOrhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Emergenc y One 13;
Brady Bunch 15
5· 3o-News 6 ; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co 20,33 : Mary
Tyler Moore 10: Odd Couple 15.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
6:3Cl-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13, Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B,1 0, Over Easy 20.
7·QO-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
· 6,13; Family Feud 8; News 10 , Love American
Style IS ; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20; Consumer
Survival Kit 33.
7·3o-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game -4 , Bonkers
6, Waltons B. S100,000 Name That Tune 10 : Nash
ville On The Road 13; Dolly 15: MacNeii ·Lehrer
Repart 20,33
B:QO-,-Dick Clark 3,4,15, Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13, Nova
20,33 , Walfo ns 10
B·3Q-What's Happening 6,13 , Please Stand By 8
9·0Q-Qulncy3 ,4,15, Barney Mill er6,13 ; Hawaii Flve-0

FOR 'THO.SE. WHO

~~BERROK6

deck area, beautiful setting, secluded on good

part
basement.
some
carpeting, immedtate
possession . S1UJOO.OO

..

1907 HOUSE TRAILER 12 x bO Al l
e l ec tr~ c furn •shed , ofr cond1·
t•oned , wcsher and dryer . A lso
2 lot s
m
Horn sonv lll e
742-2826

Bdrms., l'l:z balhs, e• cellent condlflon. large

home of 4 bedrooms, 2
baths ,
full
basement,
modern
kitchen .
and
garage Ideal location in
124 has ext r a
lot , 4
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas heat, city water , and 2

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

adda room and expando, 3

ISIFOSY
I
[()

,.•'
'•

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

r J

I I

FU!JfJY AT MB!

IT DIDIJ'T WORK ...

IT DIDf..l'T W()gl( ,..

.....

fJO'N 11B;S L-00Kif..l0

111n.J H~ li:Of ~ID OF Tl1f;
c.a=Ffe URN BE'-G/&gt;.USE'

J1F; WT RID OF 111~
WATE'R- t:cot.er. BI;GAUSE'

I,

'
•

.,,'.

6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 .5Cl-GOOd Morning , West VIrginia 13: 6 . 5~Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13
7:1l0-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,1 3,
Jetsons 10; CBS News B.
7:3()-Schoolles 10.
s ·oo-&lt;:apl Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St 33
9. OCI-Mer'v Griffin 3; Ph il Donahue 4, 13 , 15.

2

R~T

Service,,..... ,... ...... '""*.,. ..........
........ to ...

·'
Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

~

Radiator~

New or Repair
GuttetS and
Downspouts

cial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour service.
anyt1me.

EXPERIENCED

.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19 , 1978

BORN I.OSER

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

•

5 : 4~Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTLClub 13.
5 5~Sunrlse Semesfer 10.
6·1l0-PTLClub 15; 6 : 2~For You ... Biack woman 10
6 J~Ooctors on Call " ; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ord1nary words

In Middloporf between
Third &amp; Fourth StreetMill Street lust behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12noonfo3p.m.
·
B·31-l mo.

C..ll992-7013
For Free Estimates
9-21 -lmo.

109 High 51.

MAYBE THE RE 'L L SE- "'~IIIIIIJIIIII[., NO DOWN ,TAIRWAY.. NO

QUALITY

220 E. Main Street,

(Bob Hoeflich)

THERE'S A SUTTON
MARKED "&amp;A!1EMENT"
&amp;LIT NO Sl/8·
BIKE/MilNTI

'Ilia A.JIIl'AWIGIIIA

ElliOTT
APPUANCE II

The Photo Place

14K70 Hollypark , wilh large

COZY - • bedroom home
with ~l gas ~I' , cl ly
waler "~·· t.l"~"u and
garden . \ \'l~~ y $10.000

W VA

- - -·- -- - ---

CAPTAIN EASY

Armstrong Carpeting

Call Us Todav

mostly' timber , 1 year old

2 baths,' excellent family
room with fireplace and
large plate glass wind ows
and doorS . 2 car garage and
1 acre of level land .

1 ', ACRE 12 M bO mobde home
near Dex ter 992 5858

-

9-7-1 mo.

Your Headquarters For

We are .currently makmg
appointments for senior
portra1ts . We use trad1 t1ona1 sett1ngs and also
feature
outdoor
portratture.

a2

All types of roofing, gutters
downspouts, 20 years
experience. Alf work
guar•nteed. Call Tom
Hoskins, 949 -2160. Free
Estlmofos.
&amp;

4·30-IIC

High School
SENIORS

Pomeroy

SERVICE

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

All Type Concrete Work
No Contr~ct Too large Or
Too Small
25 Years Experience
All Work Guaranteed

NEW LISTING - 48 Acres,

$885.00 down paymenl and
$248.06 per monfh lo lhose
who qu~lily .
LARGE NEW HOME Wllh 3 nice sized bedrooms,

--- ---- ----·---- --1915 OAKMONT 14 M 70 3 bedr

· Pomeq Landmark

!!i!.

lor

1977 ACADEMY MOBILE home 2
bedroom w1th horseshoe k1t
t:hen, Iorge dmmg room . Seen
ot 737 Beech St , Middleport
OhiO

softener, Model UC·SVI.

BEAGLE PUPS and tro1ned robbit
dogs You ng ond old. Will sell
or trode for guns or somethmg
of equal va lue. 742-2521 .

7· 2-2826
~- --- - - ~---- 1978 TOYOTA CELICA GT Llh

,HOBSTEITER

C1~_Mii ~~ il ~ 1~i' ,

12

mile oft Rt. 7 by -pass on
St. Rt. 124 toword Rufland,
0.

'I'•

To Existing Structures

Loi&amp; Pauley
Branch Manager

"~~1 t~~~~~~t

--~

lndustril l
Commerciill and Home
Building
Any Type Improvements

MAIN L,lliQ!Ir,l.l..l
POMEROY, 0 .

COAL. LIME STON E. sand. gravel,
co lc1um chl on de fert1h zer dog
food end all type s of salt ~x
ce ls1or Salt Works Inc . E Mom
St . Pomeroy . 992 -3891.
KITTENS 2 yellow stnped . one
-· · - - - - - w h1te long ho1red . I grey , one
BURROUGHS SENSI -MATIC cc
yellow and wh1te
House
co untmg mo chm e
Ph one
tr omed Me•gs County Humane
9&lt;n 215b The D01ly Senlmel
Soc 1ety 992·2592 or 992-2639.
ll l Court Street, Pomeroy
Oh10
TO GOOo~ h~,;;e~~nt~h s- ~ld
ln
!th
Setter
red
female
G RIM~S GOLDEN Hed DeliCIOUS
9853B 10ofter4
&amp; Golden Oei1C1ous apples F1ll
potmk Orchard , SR 689 wANi~D ~
-h~~e 614 b69·37EI5
th oroughbred Pers 10n cot
·
- - - --- - - -~
Beautif ul 992 -2680
· SC HOOl
BUS camper
60
- - - - - .
pa ssenger w 1th new fires
Good cond1 t1on Con tact Tom
Monk10 at 992 2201
~-

GARAGE

Type

IO :JG-Monet 33 ; Turnaboul 20
11 :00-News3,4,6,8,13,15; News. Dick Caveft 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :JG-Johnny Carson 3.• •15, Pol lee Woman 6,13;
News 8,10
12 .oo-Gunsmoke 8; Movie " The Pigeon That Took
Rome" 10.
12 :-40-SWAT 6, 13; I.QO-Tomorrow 3,• . News B.
1 50-News 13 .

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OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

ROGER HYSEll

' C!Mryl Lemley, A5SOC.
. Home Phone 742-2003
, Hilton Wolle, Assoc.
Home Phone 949-2589
George 5. Hobsteller, Jr.,
Broker
Home Phone 992-5739

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992 0192

SIX ROOMS '' both . basement
gas furna ce Che sler wa ter m
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992-2298

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992-6385

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saddles Ruth Reeves , Albany

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....
oulbulldings O.Vner being
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S35,QOO 00

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay 53 99

TWO BEDROOM krt ch en lurnr sh
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992 22BB

.

BiWJIJt·

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100 BU 0~ old corn $2 per bu
111::15 31.121::1

t 'or H llllt

VA ~ HA 30 'II i ulOil CIIlQ , ol~o
rel•noncmg Ireland Mollgog e
7"1 t: Stat e Athens ph one [bl4 )
5'/1 J05 1

1 VOUH own fne wood S4
regular ptckup lruclc lood Pa ul
N ease,
Rt
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Business Services

l o• '&gt;.alu I acre 011 d
up Middlcpm l near ~ u tl a n d
Call 'I'I'J /41:U

( U

"GOOD

'1'12-2089
---

NOTICE Is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolut ion of the Board of
Trustees ot ' the Townsh ip of
Olive. Ohio, passed on the 5th
day of "ugust. 1978, there will
be submitted' to a vote of the
people of said Township of
Olive at a General EL EC

TION to

For !:ialt·

TI~Ail~R

thru Fr1da'
tht'

AutoM.Ics

11- The Dail" S..ntmel, Middleport-Pmneroy , 0 .. Wednesd" y, Oct. 18, 1978

'

.

I

�•
12- The Daily Sent mel. Mlddlepuri·Pomeroy , 0 .• Wednesday , Od 18, 1978

Columbia Gas proTr~ises
no curtailment this winter
There Will be· no industrial

"Wllh ou r Improved gas

or eommercial natural gas

supply picture this winter, we

cunailment from Columbia will be able to serve all of our
Gas of Ohio as the winter customers wlthout cu rheating season commences. taihnent even if it ts 11 per
That is the word contained · cent colder than normal." J.
in letters to 1,102 large m· M. Koebel, gas company
dustnal and 720 large com- manage r at Ga lha-Meigs
mercial customers, m· Area sa id.
formmg them what to expect
"But ~ho uld severe cold
when Columbia begins its weather persist in the early
f1ve-month wtnler a llocation part of November or
period Nov. I.
December, it is possible that
lmprovmg gas s.upply over sotne portiOn of the gas used
the last two years ha s by industries that have large
en a bled the company to bOilers may be curtailed."
eliminate c urtailment .
Contributing to improved
supply is approximately 12.3
Our Interest is
hiiUon cubic feet of gas
representing the first natural
Greater For You
gas obtamed in hquid form
from Algeria and regasified
at Columbia's new recetving
termmal at Cove Pomt, Md.
On 90-Day
Al so
conlnbutmg is
residential con se rvation,
Certificates
which has reached 16 per cent
since
1972-73 oil embargo.
5.75 per cent paid on
''Gas
conserved
by
90 day Certificates of
homeowners
can
be
utillzed
Deposit .
$500 .00
by commercial and industrial
Min imum .
Interest customers,"
Koebel said.
Payable Quarterly .
Koebel stated Col umbia
A substantial penalty is
also ha s leased storage
invoked on all certif1care
facllit ies for 3.4 billion cubic
accounts withdrawn pr1or
feet
of gas to be used lor the
to the date of maturity.
coldest days in winter.
In addition, Columbia w1ll

5.75%

Meigs Co. Branch

receive more gas this year

from its supplier, Columbia

~v
-

Ga s Transmission Corp.,

which has undertaken an
extensive gas procurement

program that w1ll supply
approKimately 16.9 billlon
cubic feet of local gas from
Ohio and the Appalachian
area to one million

The Athens County
Sa vi nus &amp; Loan Co.
w. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

customers.

FSTJC
_L_..;;-;;;-;;-;;·;-;-;:._.J

The gas company also will
rece1ve approKin)atley 14.6
billion cubic feet of gas from
Columbia LNG 's synthetic

HAS A LARGE SELECTION
OF RECAPPED SNOW TIRES
JUST FOR YOU.
We a Iso have the
studding available for
good use on Nov. 1, 1978

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John Fultz, Mgr .
700 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
992-2101

'

gas plant located in north·
western Oh10.
'·Columbia will continue to
keep its cust omers advised as
Slgntflcant

developments

take place that would change
1ts overall supply picture and
affect customer curtailment
levels," Koebel said.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Mary Evans,
Portland ; Monid Good, Long

-------------------------- Personal

! Area Deaths !
I

I

I

CORA B. JOHNSON
Mrs. Elsa Kimes, M1d·
dlepon, received word of the
death of her sister, Cora Baer
Johnson of Charleston, W.
Va .
SurvivOrs include a
daughter, two sons, another
sister, Mrs. Frances Jarrett.
three nieces and two
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 2:30p.m. Thursday at
the
Bream
Memorial
Chapter, Washington St.,
Charleston. The body is at the
Wilson Funeral Home in
Charleston.

Bottom, Brenda Fry, Mid-

dleport ; Harry Greathouse,
Racine .

GEORGE McCLINTOCK,
Discharged - Henry Eblin,
SR.
Sr., Ca rl Gheen , Charles
George B. McClintock, Sr.,
Landers, Bret Korn, Eula 66, '603 27th Street, Point
Welker, Aida Doerfer, Joyce Pleasant, died Tuesday, 3:19
Bing, Frances Imboden, p.m. in the Cabell · Hun·
Adra Swick.
tington Hospital. He was a
pension member of the
electrical union IBEW,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Huntington, and a veteran of
Discharged- Myrtle Neal, World W~r II.
Fraziers Bottom; Mrs. John
he was born March 16, 1912,
Oshel, Point Pleasant; Letart Falls, 0., to the late
Robert Williams, Rutland ; Frank and Veatrice Sayre
Steve
Durbin,
Point McCJinlook.
Pleasant; Mrs. Thomas
Survivots include his wife,
Wilson, Leon; Mrs. Richard Wilma Pickens McClintock;
Sydenstricker and son, three sons, George B. Me·
Southside; Mrs David Pierce Clintock, Jr., Point Pleasant;
and son, Pomeroy ; Juanita Donald , E. McClintock,
Runion, Letart ; Lloyd Bates, Spencerville, 0 ., and Ronald
Henderson; Daisie Brown, E. McClintock, Chesapeake,
Point Pleasant; Nellie Cox, 0 .; two brothers, Otis Me·
Middleport ; Jessie Donohue, Clintock, Racine, and Robert
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Ken· McClintock , Norwalk, 0.
neth Watson, Point Pleasant; Arrangements will be an·
Oscar Pack Jr., Crown City; nounced bY the Crow-Hussell
Rhonda Johns, Buffalo; Ray Funeral Home.
Nettle, Robertsburg; Mrs.
Jack Paugh, Letart; Mrs.
Charles Martin, Buffalo ;
'
LELA~ E. NELSON
Brett Castle, Pomt Pleasant;
Leland E. Nelson, 61, Route
Alice Grimm, Mason ; Mrs. 2, Pomeroy, died Tuesday at
William Lee and daughter, tbe Holzer Medical Center.
Vinton ; Olive Starcher, Point
Mr. Nelson was a son of the
Pleasant; Mrs. Albert late Freeman and Maggie
Rhodes, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Cremeans Nelson. He was
Omlle Ellis, Point Pleasant. also preceded in death by two
brothers, Roy and Donnie.
Mr
. Nelson attended the
HONOR ROLL
Cliff Free Methodist
Laurel
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Church
and
was a veteran of
first six weeks honor roll of
''
the
Tuppers
Plains World War II.
He is survived by his wife,
Elementary School has been
announced. Receiving a Flossie Maye Kapple Nelson;
grade of "B" or above to be two sons, johnny Lynn and
Eddie Lee, both of Pomeroy;
hsted on the roll were :
fqur
sisters, Ullie Smith and
Grade 6 - Angie Spencer,
Bonnie
Miller, Middleport, ·
Tammy Calaway, Tracy
and
Hazel
Moore and Gladys
Schul, all A's, Tara Guthrie,
Blosser,
both
of Groveport,
Tony a Fortney,
Mark
two
brothers,
Otis of
and
Shriver, Deedrah Sanders,
Columbus,
and
Lloyd,
Kelly Null, Jay Carpenter,
Proctorville.
Rhonda Phillips, Usa Hawk,
Funeral services will be
Paul Collins, Kim Wiener,
held at I p.m. Saturday at the
Jim Weber.
Grade 5 - Royce Bissell, Ewing Funeral Home with
Jlrnrny Caldwell, Tim Dorst, the Rev. F;loyd Shook of·
Lisa Henderson, John Rice, ficialing. Burial will be in
Joe Runyon, Kim Schul, Terri Miles Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Stout.
Grade 4 - Delanie Baker, after 10 a.m. Thursday.
Robyn Barnett, Eddie
Collins, Angela Damewood,
Erica Kessinger, Usa Lance,
Brenda Reed, Kenny Ritchie,
Lee Ann Robinson, LeLeah
Sanders, Jeff Sayre, Marie
Scyoc, Susie Swain, Todd
Wilson , Carol Henddx,
'
Five defendants received
Richie Belew and Missy ·
fines or jail sentences and a
Calaway.
sixth forfeited a bond In the
court of Middleport Mayor
BILL HUBBARD
Bill Hubbard, Syracuse, is Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
~fined were Roger D. Arix,
a surgical patient at Pleasant
21,
Harrisonville, $225 and
Valley Hospital, Point
three
days in 'jail on a charge
Pleasant. His room number is
of
driving
while intoxicated;
103 for those who wish to send
Juris
Senfelds,
28, Athens, $10
cards.
and costs, assured clear
-JiiiiMIIP!JI• distance and Buddy
~
McKinney, 61, Middleport,
$50 and costs each on two
counts of disilrderly manner.
Given 30 day~ jaU sentences
each on disorderly manner
charges were Don Lovett, 55,
Middleport, and George A.
I
McDaniel, 51, Middleport.
Tim Spires; no age or ad·
dress recorded, forfeited a
$50 bond posted on a disorderly manner charge.
worn mountmg s Yet they

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CANDY'S CLASSICS
INGELS
FURNITURE
"Two in One Group ..

Six defendants forfeited
bonds and foUr others were
fined In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds posted on
speeding charges were
Ramona Plaqtz, Middleport,
$25; William llalley, Dayton,
$25; John Zurcher, Mid·
dleport, $32; ' Delma Karr,
Middleport, $30 and Michael
Hubbard , Syracuse, $29.
James Rife, 1Cheshire, lor·
feited a $100 bOnd posted on a
charge of leaVing the scene of
an accident ~nd $250 on a
reckless operation charge.
Fined were William
Graham, Racine, $31 and
costs, speedlDg; Ell Eberabilch, Mldddleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner;
Roy Boggs, Middleport, $350
and costs and three days In
jail, · driving while ln·
toxicated, an~ $50 and costs,
operating a tmotor vehicle
while license: II SUipellded;
Dennis Butcjter, Pomeroy,
$50 and costS, no protectiveequipment,
$30 and costs,
failure to regllller a motor
vehicle.
1

•¥.

income rose

The o.s percent Increases in $ioo million decline in
WASIDNGTON (UPI) each
of the last two months August. The turnaround in
Personal
income
of
O'Connor, 98 1 Racine, died Americans rose a moderate were below the 1.4 percent that sector was primary due
'
Tuesday afternoon at 0.5 percent last month the rise in July and tbe 0.8 w manfacturlng.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. gover nment reported percent boosts in both June
Farm
income
was
.Mrs. O'Connor was born Wednesday, the same and May, the department unchanged last month,
June 7, 1880, a daughter of the mcrease as in August and a said.
following a $700 million drop
The September and August In August, the department
late Benjamin and Ann Knarr gain thai will probably be
rises were the smallest since said.
Borgert. She was also eroded by inflation .
preceded in death by four
The new report from the the 0.4 percent increase of
sons, Dan, Tom , James Commerce Department could last January when severe
O'Connor, and William cause concern
among winter we~ther and the
O'Bitz, three brothers and a administration economists nationwide coal miners strike
(Continued !rom page 1)
sister; two husbands, Ed· who have been counting oo impeded earnings.
youngest
men elected pope In
Total personal income last
mond O'Connor and William robust consumer spending
modem
times,
set Sunday as
O'BI!Z.
this fall IAJ keep economic month stood at $1.74 trillion,
the
date
for
the
ceremonies
an increase of of $8.3 billion
Surviving
are
three expansion on target.
that
will
invest
him
formally
daughters, Mrs. Robert
When Jess mooey is earned, over August, the department
In
his
role
as
the
leader
of the
(Catherine) Shrolt, Pitts· it leaves fewer dollars for said.
worldwide
church.
The dollar gains in August
burgh, Pa.; Mrs. Marion consumers to spend in
The Vatican released no
(Jane ) P1bbs, Elyria, and grocery stores, department and July were $8.5 billion and
details
of the ceremony, but it
$23.1
billion,
respectively.
Mrs. Gino (Betty) Mangione, stores and other retail
was
expected
to parallel
Wages
and
salaries
Greensburg, Pa .; a son, outlets.
.
closely
the
simple
Investiture
increased
by
$4.3
billion
in
Edward O'Connor, Racine; a
The other negative aspect
slster, Mrs. Ann Verran, of the report is that the September, compared with chosen by Pope John Paul I,
Venice, Calif.; a daughter·m· September income increase, $1.9 billion in August, tbe who spumed the traditional
law, Anna O'Bitz, Racine; 18 like the one In August, will department said. Tbe speed· gold and silver papal crown
grandchildren, and 36 great· probably be completely up was accounted for by In favor of a simple white
higher average hourly shawl or pallium to symbolize
grandchildren .
erased by inflation.
his reign.
Funeral serv1ces will be
If the Seplerilber coosumer earnings.
John Paul spent his first
Commodity-producing
held at I p.m. Friday at the price lnde%, which will be
full
day as pope Tuesday
Ewing Funeral Home wltlt niade public Oct. 28, climbS industries' payrolls increased
learning
about some of the
the Rev. Freeland Norris by 0.5 percent or more' then by $1.7 billion, followin~ a
more
mundane
aspects of the
officiating. Burial wlU be in all of September's personal
papacysuch
as finding his
Greenwood
Cemetery. income gains would have
way around the vast Vatican
Friends may call at the been offset by higher prices.
Palace and making ritual
funeral home alter 7 this
benedictions.
evening .
POTLUCK DINNER
In taking the name of his
The Democrat Party will Italian predecessor' wbo
FLORENCE REEFER
hold a potluck dinner at the reigned over the church only
Mrs. Florence Reeler, 85,
party headquarters in the 34 days, John Paul II paid
Athens, formerly of Letart
Orchid Room, E. Main St., homage to the warmth and
Falls, died Tuesday evening
Pomeroy, beginning at 6:30 humanity of the late Albino
at the Kimes Convalescent
The Gallia-Meigs Post , p.m. Saturday. Fesllvitjes Luciani.
Center.
are being arranged by a
The former Cardinal Karol
Mrs. Reefer was preceded Highway Patrol, investigated committee which asks those Wojtyla continued his
in death by her parents, her lour accidents Tuesday.
Officers )Vere called to the attending to bring a covered predecessor's pastoral
husband, two brothers and
scene of a one-vehicle crash dish. Speaker will be Rep. tradition by making an unfive sisters. She was a
Ron James and the public is precedented visit to a Rome
member of the Central on SR 325, one-tenth of a mile mvited. '
hospital Jess than 24 hours
north of milepost 3, al 7:10
Avenue United Methodist p.m.
after his election.
Church. Nineteen nieces and
The pope visited for 15
According to the patrol, a
nephews survive with those
minutes with Polish Bishop
north
bound
vehicle
operated
living In Meigs County in·
Andrzej Deskur, a longtime
by General Bays, 24, Patriot,
eluding Clarence Sargent, came
colleague
who suffered a
over a hillcrest, went
Mrs. Erline Wolfe, Racine,
stroke
last
week.
the right side of the
and Harold Sargent, Mid· off
He
spoke
afterwards, in
roadway, came hack onto the
dleport .
Italian,
to
a
gathering of
Nine
teachers
strike
Funeral services will be pavement, went bilck of! the leaders in Memphis, Tenn., hospital officials, doctors,
held at the Jagers and Sons right side of the road, and which has the largest nurses and patients. As he
Funeral Home at I p.m. overturned.
Bays displayed visible teachers' strike In the nation, concluded his remarks he
Friday with burial in the
signs
of injury, but was not are in jail today because of waved to the patients, called
Letart Falls Cemetery. There
out the traditional Polish
contempt findings.
lrnrnedlately
treated.
will be graveside rites at the
"You need to remember benediction, "Praise be to
Officers
report
heavy
cemetery. Officiating will be
damage to the Bayes auto. No that you are an example for Jesus Christ," and turned to
the Rev. Joe Bishman.
the ch1ldren in this com· walk out.
Friends may call at the citation was issued.
Bishop Giuseppe Caprio,
n:mnity. Stop making it a bild
At
11:01
a.m.,
a
sem•·
funeral home from 2 to 4 and
one," Chancellor D. J. the Vatican's undersecretary
tractor
trailer
operated
by
from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday.
Earl Gilkey, 30, Pomeroy, Alissandratos said Tuesday of state placed his hand on the
swerved of! !be right side of night in jailing the strike pontiff's ann, leaned over
and whispered briefly m his
SR 7, five-tenths of a mile leaders.
EARL F. RIFFLE
ear.
The
Memphis
strike
has
Earl Franklin Riffle, 73, north of the Gallia-Meigs
John Paul's face broke into
Point Pleasant Route 2, died County line, to avoid an auto affected 113,000 school
children since Oct. 5. It is a broad grin and his light blue
this morning in Holzer stopped in the roadway.
Medical Center after a threeThe Gilkey vehicle over· among the school strikes in eyes twinkled.
"The undersecretary tells
month Illness. He was a turned in a ditch, incurring nine states that idled or
otherwise affected about me this is not enough," the
retired emplbyee of the West moderate damage.
Officers were called to the 250,000 pupils six weeks into pope said. "I still have to give
Virginia Malleable Iron Co.
the benediction. He tells me
with 34 years of service. He scene of a two-vehiCle the fall semester.
Alissandratos found nine of how a pope should behave."
attended the Eddy Chapel collision in Meigs Co., on TR
The crowd burst into
Church.
279, one and !our-tenths of a 30 leaders of striking
laughter
and applause. Then
teachers in contempt and
He was born June 2, 1905 to mile south of SR 681.
John
Paul
blessed the
the late Nonr.an and Cora
The patrol reports that a sentenced them to 10 days in
onlooker
with
the
sign of the
Roush Riffle . He was west bound auto operated by jail for their "lawlessness."
cross
and
recited
the Latin
Those sentenced included
preceded in death by his first Diana Bartoe, 20, Long
verse
usually
intoned
by
Lorene
Osborne,
president
of
wife,
Clara
Margaret Bottom, and an east bound
popes
when
they
visit
outside
the
5,30()..member
Memphis
Flowers Riffle in 1932 and his vehicle driven by Donald
second wife, Carrie Mae Baum , 28, Reedsville, Education Association, seven the Vatican.
other MEA officials · and a
Connolly Riffle In 1975.
sideswiped in a curve.
Surviving
are
two
Officers report moderate member of the National
EXTENDED FORECAST
daughters, Mrs. Elva Durst damage to both autos. No Education Association. They
Warming during the
were jailed 1rnrnediately.
and Mrs. Roma Jordan, both citation was issued.
period, with a chance of
of Leon ; three sons, Curtis
At 9:10 p.m., a vehicle
showers ln northern
Franklin (Tank) Riffle, operated by Thomas Hill, 17,
counties on Sunday, Highs
Pomeroy; Leroy and Charles Bidwell, backed from a '
SQUARE DANCE SET
will be ID the lower 608
Riffle, both of Point parkmg space into the side of
A square dance will be beld
Friday, warmiDg to the
Pleasant; one sister, Mrs. a parked auto, owned by
at the senior citizens center
upper lOs or the lower 70s
Bee (Mary) Jordan, Leon; Jackson Icard, Bidwell.
Friday
from 8 to 11. Ad·
by Sunday. Earlf mornlDg
four brothers, James Riffle,
Officers report minor
lows will be ID the upper 30s
Mt. Alto ; Edgar and Lou damage to the Hill auto, mission is $1 for adults with
or the lower 40s Friday
Riffle, both of Leon and moderate damage to the children under 12 admitted
free.
The
dance
is
open
to
the
morning, moderating to lbe
HatTy Riffle, Ravenswood; Icard vehicle.
public.
Music
will
be
middle
of upper 40s by
19 grandchildren and nln~
The Incident occurred on
Sunday morning.
great-grandchildren.
SR 554, three-tenths of a mile provided by the String
Dusters.
Funeral services will be west of milepost 13.
Friday 1:36 p.m. in the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home with
END MARRIAGES
the Rev. Herman Jordan
The
matTiage of Argyle
the Milky Way - the
PATIENT IMPROVING
officiating. Burial will be In
Lloyd
Deeter
and Florence galaxy of which our own solar
·
Mrs.
Grace
Glaze
has
been
the Eddy Chapel Cemetery,
Eloise Deeter was dissolved
Leon. Friends may call at the moved from the intensive and Russell Roy William system is a member - Is
funeral home after 6 p.m. care unit Into Room 426 at the Lyons was granted a divorce 100,000 Ugh! y~ars In
diameter and contains about
Holzer Medical Center. She is
Thursday.
improving and cards may be from Marilyn J o Sharp :IAlO biillon stars, or 50 lor
Lyons.
every human on earth.
sent to room 426.
ACTION FILED
A suit to quiet tiUe was filed
in Meigs County common
pleas court by Christine
Beegle, Pomeroy, against the
unknown heirs of Edward
Findling, deceased.
CATHERINE O'CONNOR
Mrs.
Catherine
N.

Cardinals

Patrol probes
four mishaps

Instructors
jailed today

Now You Know

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
CLOSE~UT

SALE
WINDOW SHADES

SALE FRIDAY
A combination bilke sale
and products party wlll be
hel.d at the Community
Building by the Long Bottom
Community Association
Friday beginning at 10 a.m.
not on Thursday through Oct.
24 as was reported.

White on Outside-Willow,
Pongee, Brass or Tangerine on
inside

SIZE 37'Ax6:..............

SIZE

THURSDAY MEETING
The Magnolia Club will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the home of Bertha
Canaday· A white elephant
sale will ,J"' staged.

$399

55'Ax6~ ..............~499

Home Furnishings-1st Floor

Phoenix.

'I

Ashade for all reasons.

Jo;~nn a W"t&lt;rrn's Phocn&amp;a Window shade docs jun about
~verything you ~ould w11n1 illihadc to do. Of hca n-welght

pl astlc,lt 's room-darkening , fhune ·reslstant • nd wllll•ble
And it comu in a h•nd10me te•tured home5pun look '"
wtllaw, pongee, bn1n 11nd tangerine .
Th~ POOen llshade 111 an efficient eneray 11aver, too It ca n
cut hellltin&amp; fuel costJ up to 8% a nd air coodlnoni!lacosu up
to21%.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•

BUllous of dollars - consum~r dollsrs ~ and a threatened
shortage of electric energy are at stake in finalizing federal
enworunental regulations.
·
_This evaluation was niade yesterday at a'n "energy and tbe
enwo~e~t" seminar in Columbus by Charles A. Heller,
executive v1ce president of Ohio Power Co. The seminar was
sponsored by the Ohio Air Quality Development Autbority .
Heller expressed concern that a general mandate for
scrubbers on power plants would result in unnecessary
expenditures f&lt;r consumers. He quoted studies indicating
scrubbers on some generating units could be more than 100
percent more eKpensive than compliance with air quality
requirements through the use of low-oulfur coal.
He emphasized that the "cuswmer ends up pa)'lng these

costs." He described a typical scrubber as "almost as long as
and wider than a football fie ld, and as tall as an eight story
building ."
At
the
same
tune,
he
sa1d,
" It
has
been estimated that if scrubbers were generally
mandated for every 10 power plants constructed, an additional
powr plant of equal size would have to be built just to run the
enruorunental equipment."
Heller also stated that the national electric reliab1hty
council rep&lt;rted recently that the power supply outlook m the
United States is deteriorating and that serious generating
capacity shortages loom m the 1960s. "Brownouts or blackouts
would mean Joss of employment, loss of industrial production
and a breakdown in the workings of our society," he cautioned.
Further, Heller said, msistence on

Ohio Power
purchases
Ohio coal
COLUMBUS (UP!) - An
official of the Ohio Power Co .
said his firm had signed
letters of intent to purchase
an additional 1.5 million tons
of Ohio coal per year w
replace western coal now
burned In one of its plants.
Charles
A.
Heller,
executive vice president of
Ohio Power said the
committments would create
new jobs.
"These commitments to
Ohio coal, which will
obviously create new Ohio
coal mining jobS, offer a
tangible demonstration of the
positive economic effects that
we have achieved while
meellng environmental
standards
which
are
r•asonable ," Heller told a
seminar Wednesday
sponsored by the Ohio Air
Quality Development
Authority.
He also said consumers'
dollars and a threatened
shortage of electric energy
are at slake in finalizing

federal environmental
regulations.
He further expressed
concern that a general
mandate !&lt;r scrubbers 011
power plants would result In
unnecessary expenditures for
consumers.
He said studies indicated
scrubbers
on
some
generating units could be
more than 1110 percent more
expensive than compliance
with air quality requirements
through the use of Jow-onllure
coal.
"The cuswmer ends up
paying these costs," he
said.
Addressing himself w a
report that the power supply
outlook in the United Stales is
deteriorating and shortages
loom in the 1980, be said the
shortages could mean loss of
work.
"Brownouts or blackouts
would mean Joss of employment, loss of industrial
. production and a breakdown
in the workings of our

--~~~~-------------~--i-ety__,'_'_c_au_u_·o_n_ed__H_e_l__
ter.

Jr,.)~T_h_e.;.;;..W_o_r_I~,:._T_o_d_a__y_.,
Peace negotiations progress

WASHING 'roN (UP!) -As Israel and Egypt work on a
peace treaty based on an American draft, all three delegations
insist the negotiations are neither deadlocked nor in a crisis
stage.
"None of us feels concerns have been raised which could
not be met,'' cooference spokesman George Sherman said
Wednesday. "Negotiations continue. There is no crisis. There
is no deadlock, no emergency."

Onistmas tree to he pbmted
KENT, Ohio (UPI) -The national Christmas tree,~ 2s.
footColoradoBlueSpruce, is scheduled IAJ be planted Friday at
the ellipse on the White House Grounds In WashingiAJn.
Acontract Ill transplant the tree, being moved !rom York,
Pa., was awarded Wednesday w the Davey Tree Expert Co.,
Kent, by the National Park Service.

California pumpkin bigger

Susan Ford getting manied

Nerve gas plant planned

Boyd prime suspect

.....

scr uhbpr~

compliance techruque would "stifle" newer technologies
which offer an "opportunity for reconclhng clean air goals,
coal industry goals and the mterests of electriC utility
consumers." As examples, he said, Ohio Power Company is
involved in three research projects "which may permit the
burning of high sulfur Ohio coal in compliance with ambient
air quality objectives. The progress of these projects is the
basis for our optunism that new desulfurization technology is
on the horizon.,'
~
Ohio Power, he added, 1s m compliance with sulfur d10x1de
regulations and is not faced with scrubber installations
Because emission standards for Ohio Power Company's
plant.c:; were made more moderate, Ohio Ppwer is increasing its
use of Ohio coal without scrubbers. Heller announced his

VOL XXIX

•

achieved while meeting environments] standards which are

reasonable," Heller c011cluded.
other speakers at the seminar were from the U. S. and
Ohio Departments of Energy, The Ohio EPA , the Public
Utihties Commissioo of Ohio, Republic Steel Corporation,
Battelle Memorial Institute, Ohio ,State University and Ohio
University.

•

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 131

company has signed letters of intent for an additional 1.5
million tons of Ohio coal (per year) to replace Western coal
now burned - along with Ohio coal - at its Gavin plant.
Western coal no longer is needed for compliance at Gavin,
he stated. "These commitments IAJ Oh10 coal, which will
obviously create new Ohio coal mining jobs, offer a tangible
demoostration of the positive economic effects that we have

as ::.

e

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1978

Rhodes urges
coal u.sage
pr omised h1m he would
continue his fight w burn
Oh10 coal m Ohio.
Tostenson said there must
be a compromise to allow the
continued use of Ohio coal
without a sacrifice In Qhio air
qualit~ and thai a flexibl e
compliance program must be
adopted to ach1eve, all of
these goals and still keep the
cost of electricity IAJ Ohio

CXJLUMBUS (UP!) - A
spokesman lor the Ohio
Mining and Reclamation
Association sa1d today he has
been advised by Gov. James
A. Rhodes thai "we are going
to burn Ohio coal in Ohio."
A
spokesman
for
Consolidation Coal Co. said
this week that the firm will
probably lose contracts for
three million IAlns of Ohio coal
by March 31, 1960, because of
U S.

L
right, Valeria Labonte, Dave Hedrick, Paula Hysell and
Susan Hannum.

SENIOR BAND MEMBERS - The Seniors of the
Eastern High School F.agle Band this year are. left to

H

•

OliJilS~g

By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASIDNGTON (UP!) How high are the monthly
housing

expenses facing

today's home buyers?
It all depends oo where you
live.
But if it's San Francisco or
Washington, D.C ., you can
almost count on $575 to 1600
monthly housing bills, whlle
if you're in Morristown,
Tenn., or even St. Louis, your
bills, including mortgage ,
real estate taxes, utilities and
insurance are Jess than $350 a
month.
That is part of the results of

expenses high

a new study,
"Homeownership: Affording
the Single Family Home,"
released Wednesday by the
U.S. Lea gue of Sav1ngs
Associations.
•
The league's study, which
looked at 6,500 conventional
mortgage loans made in 1977,
found the typical Amencan
home buyer's monthly
housing costs were $400.
"The fact is the Amencan
home is still an integral part
of the great American dream
- so much so that literally
millions of American home
buyers are willmg to stretch

thm
budgets
to
accommodate a housmg
purchase," league V1ce
PreSident J oseph T. Benedict
said
The league's study sought
Ill show how home buyers
were managing to meet
housing expenses in an
lnflation..fueled economy
"Our study indicates two
main ways," Benedict said
lncludmg the use of tw~
incomes and the decisiOn by a
number of home buyers ro
break the once standard ruleoflhumb that only 25 percent
of mcome should go toward

•

Gallia included zn
Columbia project
estimated to cost about $6.5
mlllion with costs IAJ be split
between Colwnbia and the
DOE.
Whte said the program, if
successful, will determine
how much gas can be
economically recovered from

the trillions of cubic feet of
natural gas known to exist in
Appalachia by assessing
what fracturing techniques
work best and measuring
the1r cost.
" The goal of these
programs is to find the best

way to unlock the dense,
tightly compressed structure
of shale to release the gas we
know is there and do 1! in
volumes that are economical
to produce," said White.
"Drilling for shale gas is
nothing new," White added .
"Columbia has been doing it
lor years in the Big Sandy
Basin of southwestern West
Virginia
and
eastern
Kentucky. The proposed
programs seek w produce
gas
from
previously
undeveloped shale areas ."

Driver charged,
car demolished
Acar was demolished and
its driver was lodged in Me1gs
county jail on charges of DWI
following 'an accident at 11:43
p.m. Wed nesday Sheri ff
James J. Proffitt reported.
According to the report
Marga rette S. Robmson , 20,

Charleston, was travelin g
south on SR 124 in Minersville
in front of Brown's Trailer
Park when she Sideswiped a
telephone pole . Th e car
traveled over the riverbank
then overturned onto its side.
The car, owned by Mike
Houck, Gallipolis, was
demolished.
J ennie Bass, Syracuse ,

notified the sheri!f's office
Wednesday !Hat her car had
been stolen !rom her
driveway at approximately
3:30 a.m. The car. a 1972
P ontiac,

was

fQund

by

sheriff's deputies in a creek
in Rutland at 6 a~m . Wed·

nesday.
According to the report the
stolen car, whose drtver was
unknown, was traveling on
SR 124 approximately 200 feet
east of the Rutland Cor·
poratlon limit. The driVer
apparently lost control
causing the vehicle to skid of!
the road, mto a creek.
Sheriff Proffitt's depart·
ment IS investigating the
incident .
Tuesday evening on U. S.
Rt. 33, one-hall mile south of
Darwin, a deer was killed
when' 1t ran into the path of a
car driven liy Ellen Bell,
Pomeroy. There was shght
property damage.
Wednesday at 7:40 .p.m. on
SR 124, north of Reedsville,
an eight point-buck was killed
when it ran into the path of a
truck dr1w.n by Bernard Bay.
There was heavy damage to
lhc truck.

conswners down.

The mining executive
added that the Ohio coal
industry is under constant
pressure
of
feder al
regulations of a "meaningless nature, " the impact of
which will do nothing but
drive up the price of coal.
He said that taxes imposed
within. the past year by the
federal goverrunenl of from
50 to 65 cents per ton produce
a direct mflationary impact
on the cost of coal, which IS
reflected in utility bills.

Environm e ntal

Protection Agency an tipollution requirements.
The U.S. Supreme Court
this week also refused to

'

HALF MOON BAY, calif. (UP!) - The Great Pumpkin is
alive and well and vlctarlous In \Ills coastal community south
of San Francisco.
.
The monster pumpkin, weighing in at 297.5 pounds, was
declared winner of the annual Half Moon Bay Pumpkin
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Co·
Festival which began a five-day run Wednesday. The big lumbia Gas System says it
pumpkin was grown by Francis W. Collings of Petaluma : It will participate in two
was more than twice the size of the largest entry from programs IAJtaling $14 million
Circleville, traditional rival at tbe event.
w recover natural gas from
shale
formations
in
Appalachia .
The programs involve
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (UPI) - Susan Ford has drilling 31 wells, 21 in Ohio
announced her engagement to a divorced, 37-year-&lt;Jid Secret and 5 each in New york and
Servlceagentwho guards her father, !onner President Gerald Maryland,
and
then
Ford.
artificially fracturing the
A brief statement from tbe Ford home announced underground shale formation
Wednesday that Miss Ford, 21, will marry agent Charles in an eff!l't w increase their
Vance in June.
ability to produce natural
gas.
Marvin White, board chair·
man
of Columbia Gas of Ohi&lt;r,
WASHING'roN (UPI) -The administration wants to go said preliminary
agreements
ahead with long-delayed plans IAJ build a production plant or a for the two programs
have
new type of nerve gas weapons, Pentagon sources said
been signed with the U.S.
today.
Department of Energy.
The sources coo!irmed that Deputy Defense Secretary
The first program was
Charles Duncan, In a secret document outlining requirements jointly submitted to the
lor the fiscal 1960 budget, which wiD go to Congress in January, Department of Energy by the
&lt;rdered tile Anny in July IAJ program funds for the faclllties Mitchell Energy Corp.,
that would be located at Pine Bluff Arsenal , Ark ,
Houston, Texas, and the
Columbia System. It calls for
drillng II wells over a 32month period in southwest
CHARLES'roN, W.Va. (UPI)- West VIrginia took a 99- Gallia
County,
Ohio ,
year lease Wednesday 011 a chunk of history.
beginning next spring.
For the next century, the state will 'be free IAJ develop
Cost of · the program is
Blennerhassett Island In the Ohio River, where Vice President estimated at about $5 .3
Aar011 BlD'r and onetime Irish lord Harman Blennerhassett million with the Deparbnent .
plotted treuon. The infamous scheme IAJ carve out an empire of Energy to supply about $3
In the Southwest was hatched wben Thomas Jefferson lived In mlllion and Columbia and
Mitchell sharing tbe rest.
the White House.
The second program is a
joint undertaking involving
only Columbia and DOE. It is
FAYETTEVILI..E, W. Va. (UP!) - Michael Boyd, 20, expected to begin next year
Akron Ohio, remained In jail today on a burglary charge and with 15 wells scheduled to be
as a .:.S.,ect In the Monday shooting death of Charles Dode drilled In 1979.
Five wells are w be drllled
Lucas.
Lucas, 18, who lived alone In the Mount carbon in Lorain and Tru11Jbull
ccmmunlty, was shot under the ear with a .357-magnum, counties, Ohio and Steuben
deputies said. Boyd was charged with burglary. Auth!l'lties County, N.Y. Five additional
a11o Identified him as a suspect In the Lucas slaying, but wells are w be drllled In
declined w elaborate. Boyd had been staying In .the Klmtrly Garrett County, Md. in 1960.
The 26-well program is

Island leased by W. Va.

MADE BY JOANNA

MEET OCT. U
The Long Bottom Com·
munlty Association will meet
Wednesday Oct. 25 at 7:30
p.m. at the Community
Building.

Electrical shortages, dollars are at stake

review Ohio's more flexible

sulfur dioxide emission
regulations which the state
wanted to implement m place
of the federal regulations but
had been turned down by
lower coW'ts.
Neil Tostenson, executive

VICe president of the association , said Rhodes had

housing .
Another major facwr, particularly lor first time
buyers, was that lenders
were writing what Benedict
called 1 'a surprising number' '
of low down payment loans.
Benedict sa1d th~ typiCal
home buyer facing $400 a
COLUMBUS (UP!)
month in lwusing payments
Murphy
Oil Co ., Colwnbus,
was pay ing $273 on the
which
owns
nnrung right.s to
mortgage principal and
an
estimated
200 million tons
interest, $60 for utility bills,
of
coal
in
Washingwn
County,
$54 foc real estate taxes and
Ohio, said it will not mine the
$13 lor hazard msurance.
In the larger cities, coal unless federal pollution
however, the home buyer standards are relaxed, it was
paid $442, while in medium- reported today .
The Columbus Citizensized cities the figure was
Journal said the firm claims
$382and in smaUer cities, just
the coal contains too much
$351.
snllur
to be burned in Ohio,
The league study says San
according
IAJ standards set by
Francisco, with monthly exthe
U.S.
Environmental
penses averagmg $614, was
Protection
Agency.
the nation's highest housing
"The coal is there, but the
cost c1ty, followed by
Washington , D.C., at $578; way the environmental
Los Angeles, at $567; New people are putting a crimp in
everything, we're not sure
(Continued on page 12)
we 'll do anything down

Coal standards
must he relaxed

Substitute
employees
employed
Southern Local's Board of
Edu ca tion Tu esday night
employed two substitute
teachers and two substitute

controversy over the sulfur
regulations recently made
the company dec1de to free its
operations 111 Washington
county, a spokesman told the
newspaper .
"We have no plans to do
anything further until we get
thiS thing worked out," smd
the spokes who sa1d the
Washmgton County coal has a
relatively low sulfur content
~t still won't meet the stri ct

there," sa1d a spokesman

who declined IAJ be identified.
Murphy Oil Co. has paid
landowners $300 an acre w
secure the deep-mining rights
en about 30,000 acres In
northern Washingtoo County.
The company had planned to
develop
deep-mining
operation during the next five
Ill 10 years, the newspapers
said.
However ,

c urr e nt

bus drivers.

Instructors added to the
substitute hst were Patricia
Asbeck and Donald Salmons.
Drivers em ployed were
Beverly Dowell and Lois
Wolfe
Superintendent Bobby Ord
was authorized to attend a
school fmance meeting Oct.
31 at Cambridge,
Carl Wolfe, head hasketbilll
coach and athletic director,
was granted permission to
attend a coaching clinic thiS
weekend in Columbus and
Judy Spencer was hired as a
subStitute cook
The board established an

Openhous·e
planned at
Middleport

Principal John Mora will
introduce the staff when an
open house is held at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Junior High School in Mid·
dleport .
After ~oing introdu ced,
elementary vocal music
staff
members w1ll go to their
account, approved necessary
respective
rooms where they
budget transfers and agreed
will
meet
parents.
to install a sink In the lh1rd
The open house is being
grade room at Racine
sponsored
by the junior high
Elementary School. The sink
parent-teacher
forum which
was purchased by the
will also serve refreshments
school's PTO.
A special meeting was set during the evening.
A map of the buildings
for 7:30p.m. next Tuesday at
involved
in the junior high
the high school. Boa rd ,
school
classes
as well as a list
members attending the
of
faculty
members
will be
Tu.esday night meeting were
available
to
those
attending.
Dallas Hill, presid en t ;
Shirley
Johnson,
Sue The initial 7:30 opening will
Grueser, Betty Wagner and be held in the school
cafeteria.
"
David Ne~.

federal guidelines.

HWhy mine it if we can' t
sell it ," said tbe spokesman.

Pomeroy man
hurt in wreck
Kenneth
Harris, 22,
Pomeroy, was injured Thurs·
day morning at I : 10 a.m., in a
one-vehiCle accident on en
20, one and three-tenths of a
mile south of CR 39 .
·
The Gallia · Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports an
auto operated by Harris,
traveling east on CR 19, went
out of control, shd across en
20, and str uck

an

em-

bankment .
Harri s displayed visipl e
Signs of mjury and was trans·
ported by a relative to Holzer
Medical Cent · r.
Harris was treated fur
lacerations of the chin and
nose , and released.
Officers

report

severe

damage to the Harris vehicle.
No citation was issued.
The patrol investigated u
second one-vehicle mishap
Thursday morning at 12:35
a.m., on U.S. 35, three-tenths
of a mile west of CR 3.
Officers report that on·
commg traffic flipped a stone
that struck the grill and
radiator of a west bound auto
operated by Eddie T. Price,
42, Vinton.
There was moderate
damage to the Price vehicle.
The Gallia · Meigs Post
investigated two one-vehicle
accid~nts Wednesday.
OffiCers w~re called to the
scene of a m1shap on SR 588,
• one-tenth of a mile west of CR
3, at 6:45. a.m.
According to the patrol, ~ · .
east bound auto operated by
(Contirwd on page I~

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