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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accounts withdrawn pr1or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

Mayor's C.Ourt

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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~

�. _........

"'..1

- ...·---- --- .. ---------

-·-

. . ...

..._._

......

_,

;

3-The Daily &amp;nlind, Middlepol't-Pumcruy, 0 ., Thursday. Dd . 19. 1!1i8

Meigs_I;Jaules Waverly Eastern's 1978 Eagles
• •
zn zmportant .contest

2- The DailySentinel: Middlepor\-Pomcroy, D.. Thursday, Od. 19. 19i8

COMMENTARY

HEALTH

Donald F. Graff

••
•••

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

1•ruh•in in
tlw dic·l
DEAR DR. LAMB - How
ma ny grants of protein are
necessa ry per day to maintain good health fur a person
27 years of age, 5-feet-1 inch
and weighing 100 pound ?
DEAR READER - Sixty
grams of good quality protein
should be enough. That
amow1i should be enough for
a li adults and growing
children , male or female .
Good quality, complete protein means that protein in the
diet contains adequate
amounts of all of the essential
amino acids that your body
cannot produce in sufficient
amounts. These proteins ;:~re
fow1d in lhe meat group ( red
meal, fish and poultry ), and
the dairy group, particularly
milk.
The other requirement is
that the total calories from ali

not

bananC:~s,

nu~.

oa~

(soaked ) , sometimes some

cheese (he's not
To this point, he h~s been ~
bad student in many classes.
His performance is almost
"0." He is mouthy and dif·
ficull to handle, showing
egotistic ideas. I wonder if ali
this behavior and his fanatic
altitude a bout eating
everything raw is a sign of
1nenlal disturbance? VVhat
would you advise?
DEAR READER - I am
always sorry lu hear that
young people are damaging
their bodies with poor eating
habits, caused by a complete
lack of knowledge, or having
been propagandized with
completely false information
about health and diet.
Your son's diet is horrible.
If it is r'eally limited to the

Lucrative beginnings

LA6aK PE PT: PATA
$HowW~'&lt;&gt;· .
. fARN Vl'1tNS

By Don Graff

The cost of living is tough aU over - almost.
There is at least one group among us which should not
find it too much of an effort stretching a paycheck to cover
expenses.
s tJ
·,
Beginning lawyers, according to a WaU tree ourna
survey of the legal employment scene, can probably
expect a sa lary in the comfortable neighborhood of $30,000
a year if they are among the fortunate few selected for

IN(]s HAVE
CONSISTENTLY
AVERA6Et&gt; ABour
60 "/• OF M€'N'5
~ftiCE 1950

"

..

~

''

positions ln the natiOn's top finns .
These are professional beginner~, the current third-y~ar

...

law school students who are the object of mtens1ve scrutmy
by campus recruiters and who will be starting at the very
bottom rungs, learning while they earn - and that very
'::J
weU.
·
y k h' h
.,
This top figure is for leading firms m New _or .• w lC
sets the pace for the rest of the country, and IS. m lme W!th
average ll percent annual increase in startmg salarles
during ·the past several years. The going rate for la~t
year's beginners in New York was around $28,000 - m
Washington, $24,000, and in Clucago, $22,000.
. .
Next year $34,000 or $35,000 is considered a distmct
·u h t
possibility.
.
The high salaries for legal talent wh1ch st1 '!! o prove
itself are justified, the argument goes, by the h1gh cost of
living in metropolitan centers where the f1rms that can
afford to pay them are concentrated and as. necessary to
attract the top students.
,
And only a few of the thousands of law school graduates
,.,
every year, the very best of the best as determined by
campus recruiters, have a chance at them.
The overwhelming majority of beginning lawy~rs must
settle for considerably more modest compensation, such "
as the fed~ral government's starting salary of $18,000.
·~
.... .,•
That's bad?
I

items you mentioned, it is

"Yeah, well .. . er
it's still about 60 percent. of what he gets, but we
grossly deficient in protein .
He needs that protein at this
ah ... figure that ... uh ... men are ... er ... better equipped to handle those
stage of his development if he
wants to have a healthy , ol' heavy pay envelopes."
sources in your diet. ~ar· mature, well-developed body.
bohydrates and fats as well,
It's hard to say whether he
should be enough to supply is just a rebellious teenager,
your daily calorie needs . U fighting against his home enyou are on a calorie-deficient vironment and using his diet
,.
diet, you can expect the pro- a~ a weapon ' or whether
The ABCs of office politics
""
tein in your diet to_!Je brok.en there is something mor.e
••
Cracking the books and a top classroom perfo~nce •• ••
down and used for energy. It seriously wrong. He certainly
'
may land a blue-chip job for a graduate, but building a
will
That may have can 'I continue this way
'
complications
on
an
already
Soviet
Union
wouici
not
career
from
that
point
on
requires
a
different
approach.
•• •
something to do with why pro- without seriously damaging By NICHOLAS DANU.OFF missiles.
••
Or so goes the theory behind a career counseling
The supporters of SALT are complicated SO-page SALT accept a Senate-altered
WASHINGTON (UP!) tein diets are extremely low !tis health.
document
the
way
Panama
treaty.
seminar
which,
a
wire
report
mforms,
has
been
mstttu~
••
expected
to
be
led
by
As &amp;cretary of State Cyrus
in calories and contain
Fur that reason, I think he
at
Northwestern
University
this
fall.
It's
entitled
"Office
More
importantly,
the
to
do.
was
forced
assistant
democratic
leader
•
nothing but protein, ultimate- should see a physician for a Vance fUes to Moscow, battle
Politics: Where Are You, Machiavelli, When We Need You
••
ly fail to meet the body's more objective, first-hand ap- · lines are forming in the Sen.' Alan Cranston, ~alif.,
Most " and the advice offered students for developing their
••
needs. So, you shouldn :t ask praisal of what's going on. I Senate in anticipation of a with energetic support from
pro!e'ssionai careers lives up to the title.
just how much protein should would caution · you, though, bitter debate early next year &amp;ns. Edward Kennedy, D• When it comes to getting ahead, hard work at the desk
be in your diet per day but that the continuation of this over the projected treaty to Mass.; Dick Clark, D-lowa;
is the hard way ; a drink after work with the boss can do
Hart,
D-Coio.;
what your total diet should form of eating is · a very limit __J!.S. and Soviet Gary
more for you.
Claiborne
PeU,
D-R.!.,
and• Don't wait to be discovered, let the upper echelons
anns.
strategic
contain.
serious matter, not because
know how good you are through memos and personal
Vance is expected to make McGovern.
Even 200 grams of protein a the foods he is eating are bad
feeding of the office grapevine.
.
The critics are expected to
day, if you didn 't have uny but because he is missing a the final breakthrough in
•
Cultivate
secretaries
and
clerks
to
hod
out where
argue
the
treaty
is
defective
other source of calories, lot of things that are essential Moscow Oct. 22-23 for a longare
buried.
.
company
bodies
studies are
underway
simply wouldn 'l be adequuie. to a normal, well-balanced term treaty to codify because :
• Better yet, get to know if possible a retired executive
Chessie System, Inc: and
-It
will
aUow
the
Soviet
regarding a possible af- who can tell you how the present men at the top got there_.
"strategic parity" between
To this should add that taking diet.
Seaboard Coast Line In-the two superpowers - and Union a free hand in dustries, Inc. bave jointly filiation of the two railroad
excess protei!' won 'I help
Students are advised to be realistic a bout advancmg
limit them to an equal mix of producing swing-wing announced that preliminary holding companies.
either. If you corisume more
their careers, and that means recognizing that it is less a
. The proposed rail system matter of what an individual knows and does than what the
2,250 strategic bcrnbers and Backfire bombers capable of
protein than your body needs,
United
States
with
hitting
the
would
operate approximately bosses think he knows and does.
missiles.
it will simply be converted to
nuclear
bombs
if
they
refuel
It was not indicated under what traditional academic
30,000
mi.les of trackage in
While
not
all
details
of
the
carbohydrates and fats.
pact have beccme public, in flight and recover in
twenty states, the District of discipline the course was listed - presumably not ethics.
To give you, more infonnaOblo Valley Livestock Co.
conservatives in both Senate Mexico or Cuba.
Columbia, and the Province
lion about protein, I am sen~Iober 14, 1978
-U.S. intelligence is
and House have served notice
of Ontario in Canada. The
ding you The Health Letter
Prices taken from the Chessie System consists of
they consider the pact defec- incapable of checking up on
nwnber 3-5, Proteins: Part I
aU aspects of Soviet auction of Saturday, October the Chesapeake and Ohio.
tive.
and :HI, Proteins: Part II.
•
The
treaty's
main compliance with the aceerd's 14, 1978. Trends: Cows $1 to Baltimore and Ohio, Western
:
Other readers who want these
$2.50 hig!Jer r Feeders steady
"Every beef and dairy negotiator, Paul Warnke, complicated provisions.
issues can send 50 cents for
chtcago
Maryland,
to $2 · higher. Veal calves Shore
should
vote
for
the
-SALT
11
will
nat
limit
aU
producer
chief of the U.S. Arms Qlntrol
and South
Bend,south
and
•
each will&gt; a long, stamped,
••
865.
steady.
Total
Head:
aspects
of
technological
1m.
Beef
Referendum,
scheduled
and
Disarmament
Agency,
several
smaller
lines
self-addressed envelope. AdCattle
operating in the Northeast
=
dress your request to me in for October 24, 25, and 26," announced his resignation provement, and both sides
Steers:
((Good and and Midwest.
Feeder
will
continue
a
qualitative
according
to
Warren
Pickens,
shortly
before
Vance
:
care of this newspaper, P .O.
Choice)
250
to
300
lbs.
75;
300
arms
race.
Reedsville,
Chairman,
Meigs
embarked
for
Moscow.
Une
InBy
KENNETH
R.
CLARK
;
Sea
board
Coast
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
to
100
lbs.
72.50;
100
to
500
ibs.
Supporters
will
coWJter
:
County
Beef
Referendum
That
development
spurred
dustries
railroads,
which
UnltedPressJntemalional
•
New York, NY 100i9.
68;
500
to
600
65.50;
600
to
700
-For
the
first
time
in
Committee.
The
ReferenSen.
Jake
Garn,
R-Utah,
to
operate
as
the
Family
Unes
GUESSWHAT,MAMA?:SIIIuFordislullofsurprises•
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
System, include the Seaboard apparently even fer her mother. In Betty Ford's Jllemotrs,
•
a 17-year-old teen-ager who dom, if passed, will il!crease say: "The treaty is his baby, history, the two superpowers ibs. 59; 700 and over 53.50.
· Feeder Heifers: (Good and Coast Uile, Uluisville and excerpts of which have just appeared in Ladles' Home __
decided that cooked food iS the investment by caitlemen and we are going to want to have agreed to a nuclear
the pitfall for him and from 10 to 25 cents per head know what he thinks about it. parity. This symbolism of Choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 60; 300 Nashville , Clinchfield, Jownal, the former first lady writes of a teenage romance be- ,"':::
anybody elSe. For the pa•t on cattle sold. The voting will Warnke must be held equality is Important to the to 400 lbs. 59; 400 to 500 lbs. Georgia, and several smaller tween Susan, now 21, and a Vail, Colo., ski patrolman. Sbe says : ,.:
few weeks he bas consumed be held at the county ex- personabiy accountable lor Kremii.n and will help 55.50; 500 to 600 lbs. 54; 600 to roads in the Southeast and · there have been no men in photographer Susan's life since - ' ...,.
SALT II, as bad as it probably stablize the often unsteady 700 !bs. 50; 700 and over 47. Midwest.
that the only thing developing in that darkroom are 8 by-10 , only fresh-made vegetable tension office.
Feeder BuUs: (Good and
Pickens
said,
"The
Beef
will . be, and he owes the U.S.-Soviet relationship.
The two rail systems are glossies. Add me of Charlts F. Vuee. Susan says she'D marry ~
juices, fresh uncooked
-SALT will restrain the Choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 73.75; both major coal carriers, and the 37-year old Secret Service agent - assigned as her ,::
vegetables , citrus fruits , Industry just doesn't have the &amp;nate and the American
numerical
arms race. 300 to 400 lbs. 69; 100 to 500 are also heavi.ly involved in bodyguard after the Fords left the White House. Vance, who is do
the
job
which
people
an
explanation."
funds
to
bananas, nuts, ou.t.s (soaked),
Without
it,
the
Soviet Union lbs. 53.25; 500to 600 lbs. 58.50; the transport of autos, diverced, has been with the Secret Service for 13 years.
On
the
ather
side,
&amp;n.
seems
to
be
necessary.
Our
sometimes some cheese (he's
::
advertising, research, an~ George McGovern, 0-S.D., is could have as many as 4,372 600 to 700 lbs. 54.50; 700 ani! chemicals, metals and other
.::
promotion programs need to urging the Senate to app-ove strategic bombers and over 48.40.
natural resource products.
FRIEND IN NEED: MIUie Segal never thought of herself :
Slaughter BuUs (over 1,000 They · also have several as a midwife, but she became one swiltly Tuelday when ber ;::
be increased. We are SALT and go on to further . missiles by 198:i, while the
Local Bowling ,
United
States
would
have
lbs.)
43.50 to 49.30.
especially concerned that U.S.Soviet arms control
Amtrak rail passenger routes nelghbcr suddenly went into labor in Chicago. Mrs. Segal went
"
Slaughter
Cows: Utilities 37 operating over their lines.
only
2,000.
negotiations.
consumers
continue
to
want
into
action
when
it
became
evident
Althea
Mllyfleld,
who
had
:
Wednesday Earlybirds
- U SALT is rejected, the to 44; Camers and Cutters 30
"H the United Stales and
our product; and, secondly,
The affiliation is the latest caUedherfcrhelp,neverwould be able to outnm tile stork to a
,;
Oct. H. 1978
United
States would have to to 37.75.
with higher prices, we are Soviet Union can keep their
Standings
of a series of railroad hospital. She calmed the expectant mother and minutes later ;:
Veals: Cholce and Prime mergers proposed since delivered$ 7.pound baby boy. The lather - coiiiJIOHr Curtlll ~
W. L. able to help them find ways to relationship on-an even keel spend up to $20 billion to stay
Swisher and Lohse
35 13 continue to fit beef into their for another decade while we even with the Russians in 62.50 to 71.50; Standards and
changes in laws governing Mllyfield, beet known lor his musical score of the 19'12 movie :
Royal Crown
32 16
Mediums 51.50 to 80.
such activities which set a "Super Fly" - was on business in Memphis, Tenn., and ::
New Yo;-k Clothing
21 27 budget." Currently, beef learn more about each otber, 1985.
Baby Calves (by the head) time limit for Interstate mlBsed his son's abrupt arrival. The couple has two other :
Jack 's Club
20 28 promotion fuods are used to: it is just barely possible that . The SALT debate will be
Reibel's Used Cars
30 28 Provide home economics we will be on the path of something of a replay of the 20 to 70.
Commerce Commission children.
'"
- u
King Bui lders
16 32 teachers with beef teaching survival, nat of suicide, and Panama Canal treaties of
Hoc•
consideration.
Among
ather
~
High ind . game Bess
1978. But there will be a
Hogs : (No. 1, Barrows and mergers presently under
[)() NOT DJSruRB: Ewllce Habbart doesn't like :;
Hendric ks
201;
Betty kits ( 1100 in 1978); Support a that our children and theirs
Gilts, 200-230 ibs.) 48.50 to discussion are Burlington trespassers - not even when they're movie stars. Even :
Whit lalch 191; Bess Hen- National Beef Advertising will live out their natural majer difference.
The
administration
was
52.25.
_stricks 188.
Program; Provides nutrition lives."
Northern - Frisco, Southern - debonair Cesar Romero wasn't able to cozen the IJO.year-old :
High ind . series Bess education materials to grade
Butcher Sows 43.50 to 47.25. illinois Central Gull, and a woman into moving her chair from tha road through her ranch u
Behind these two pointmen, willing to negotiate with key
Hendricks 52 1; Margaret
senators some . compromise
Butcber Boars 33.50 to proposal by Chessie System near Las Vegas Wednesday. A CBS-TV movie crew, headed for ::
Wyatt dt!J; Betty Whitlatch school children (23,000 second two serious, opposing blocs amendments to make Senate
35.25.
and third graders in are forming.
462.
and Norfolk and Western to Paui Anka's rand! to shoot a segment of "Vegas," had to ::
Pigs (by the head) 15 to jointly acquire the Detroit cross Mrs. Habbart's property to get there, but·she said no . ;:
The critics and opponents ratification more palatable.
High team game Cleveland
in
1978);
Reibel's Used Cars 825, 805; Distributes educational of SALT are expected to be
Administration officials 42.50.
Toledo and Ironton.
Says R&lt;mero, "She was a spunky old gal just sticking up for :::
New York Clothing 734 .
are
warning no such
lead
by
Sen.
Henry
Jackaon,
materials
on
beef
to
conber righiB. When I was introduced to her, she sal~, •y ou ,.
Hig h team series who brought alterations will be possible
Reibel 's Used Cars 229 3; New sumers through exhibits at DWash.,
wcrkin' fer this outfit?' I said yes and she Said, 'I'D never ::
York Clothing 2123 ; Roy•! consumer shows, shopping withering ·criticisms to the with tbe SALT treaty.
watch yoU again." Mrs. Habbart finally was decoyed by a ":
Crown 2089.
For one thing, 8!J!endments
centers, fann-city days, and.: first stategic arms pact
telephme caU and the crew scampered through. A spokesman '::
force . new
other educational programs; limiting U.S. and Soviet land- would
says the delay cost the production company about no,ooo.
Friday Late Mixed
and
sea-based
Oct. 1J, 1978
Promotes Ohio feeder cattle based
..'
W. L. by the publishing of a feeder
'DIE HUCKSTER: Never would New York "Jayer Ed :::
Team 2
36 12 cattle brochure, listing sale
Koch
trytoaeUa poor out.of-towner the Brooklyn Bridge. He'd .:
Young 's Carpelin~
28 20
seU tbe World Trade Center instead - and Wednesday he tried •
Young's Gulf Stat1on
26 22 dates, and providing funds
Team 5
26 22 for experimental health
to. 'lbe ovt-of-towner - Oherbuergermelllter - That's •
Team 4
18 30 programs for feeder cattle;
German for Mayer -Klaus Blmlert of Dusseldorf. AGerman ~:
Tea m6
6 42 Assists in special beef adbank recently expressed interest in buying the twin towers that :::
Team hi gh series vertising
blitzes
in
,
dominate
'New Ycrk's skyline. Koch says their tax~xempt :.:
You ng 's Car peting 829 ; Team
4 817 ; Team 2 814.
cooperation with retailers
status costs the city $65 mllllon a year -that, "when you buy, ••
Team high game - Team .4 and Provides Beef Industry
you'D pay taxes ... So, aa far as I'm concerned, take a tower "
304 ; Young's Carpeting 301 ;
TV
information
through
no,
take
both
towers."
But
Bungert
wanted
to
talk
about
civil
!';
Team 6 286.
servanta. Said Koch, "I'm familiar with that problem. We ::
Men's high series - Butch shows, news releases, and
Roush 488 ; Mike Capehart , other activities.
ober~rge~eisters have to stick together."
423; Leroy Simpkins 378.
111\en's high game -'- Butch
QUOTE OF 'DIE DAY: Prealdelll Carter, commenting at :
Roush 193; Terry SE:idenabel
a ·Baltimore, Md., fund·niser on ibe rile Ia lU popularity since •
157 ; Botch Roush 149.
Women 's high series the Camp David Summit, and !be resulting dlaappeartlllCe of "'
TifEDAILYSENTINEL
Marlene
Wllson
460 ;
DEVOTED TO THE
obscene
gestures he had been seeing In crowda; "11'1 very nice i::
Margaret Wyatt 389 ; Edith
INTER!'.ST OF
now
having
people wave at me. Now they lUie all tl1elr fln&amp;ers." :
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
Hall 373.

By Greg Bailey
their fifty victory of the
The Meigs Marauder season.
gridders travel to Waverly
Big fullback John Knight,
Friday night fur an important · weighing in at 270 and
contest against Coach John standing at. 6'3", leads the
Burchinai's Tigers.
Tigers. Last week he picked
Meigs, tied for second with up 70 yards on 17 tries.
Athens, is very much in the
The Tigers play power
runnin g for th e SEOAL football and will take · tne
championship with a 2·1 pig~kin right up the middle.
record. The Marauders own a
Ru1ming from the wishbone
3-0 lea gue slate.
offense they a re led by
Waverly sports a 1-2 league quarterback LOren Weeler.
record (3-3 overall ), but has Last week, Waverly totaled
perhaps its best gridiron 202 yards, but completed just
team ever fielded .
one or six passes.
So the Marauders of Coach
Meanwhile, Meigs defeated
Charlie Chancey won't have a Jackson 23-14 in some very
pushover contest.
muddy con ditions. Mei gs
Last week, the Tigers fell to built up a \7-jj halftime lead,
Athens 15-ll, but some costly but the soppy field conditions
turnovers on the muddy field gave J ackson some chances,
made the difference.
which
t he
Ironm en
The Tiger team this yea r is capitalized on to make a
very big, and Coach Chancey game of it. Earlier this fall
says it will take a fine team the Ironmen squeaked by
effort for them to chalk up Waverly.

.. .
...

Senate set to battle over SALT

~

~

"GRASS HOPPER"
DRESS BOOTS

J&gt;ossible ~er~er
bein~ studied

Support

-CHAPMAN
SHOES

..

solicited

Peopletalk :

Next to
Elberfelds
In Pomeroy

.

Berry's World

..

...

?.

Appreciates humane society

Women ' s high

game Marlene Wilson , 159, 157, 14.4.

Abib, the Hebrew for an ea1·
of corn, was about the same
as our April and was tlie first
month in tbe older Hebrew
calendar,later called Nisan.
"This day eame ye out, io
the month Abtb." - Ellod.
13:4

If tbe menu says "all you
can eat" for a fixed price, you
often can be sure this was
pianiled for In the liltchen.

ROBERT HOEf'LKll
CllyEdU•r

Publisht=d dally ~xc..:ept Salurdli)l
by The Ohio V~tllt'y Publl.shinl!

Company·Mu!Umeilia , Inc.,
ll1
Cour1 Sl .. Ponll:!ruy , Ohiu 4$769.
Busin~ Offlt"t: Phvne 992· %15111.
F.ditorial Phone 982-:!:157.

SecurHJ cht!l.\1 pu:~LI:Igc I)M.id wl
Pomeroy, Ohio.
NMlionwl ~tdVI!rtitling represen-

llttive, l..c~n don A.!llwda~s, 3101
Euclid Ave., Cl evt~land, Ohlo44U5.
Sul)lf(:ripllun rttltls: Delivered by
carrit~r where wvwiiMble 75 l'tm1J ptr
' week. Ry Motor Routt! where cwrrier
lll!'rvlce nut IIVMibtble, One month,
tUS. By mall if1 Ohio Mnd W, Va .,
One Year, $22.00: Six 1nonlhs,
fii .OO : Three munlhs, ,7 .00 ;
Et.ewhert u;.oo yt~¥r: Sl• •nonlhl

fl 3.50 ; Three monthll, t7.5tl.
SubM:ripl.iUII price im: lud~ Suntl11y

·nme$...~nlmii.

Dear Sir :

Three little boys prayed 1aat night to fiad a way to help our
pet &amp;nokey who was a very sick little cat. Since rm very poor
we couldn't take him to the vet. But thanb to Mrs. Dorothy
Flllher and a gr~t group of ladles at tile Mellis Humane
Society, be got help. &amp;nokey was .ln need and when in need
M.H.S. 1.1 a friend iadeed.
We should all take part in helping thele great ladles and
we can by taking Ia astray today. God bletll you, Mrs. ,ilher,
and M.H.S. May He help you in your work. 'l11ree Utile boys
thank you, I thank you, and since some aay call can't talk I'll
aay thank you for my beautiful Utile gray Smokey .If yov need
my help feel free to call m me. I'D do my belt to repay your
kind act today. You ladies goo,. of your way to help in any
way. Keep up the good wcrk you did today. - Mra. WIWam
Fink, 244 Syc81r10f,! St., Middleport, Ohio.

by

HEA.In c~lle.~~)..

"I'm calling about a lingerie ad In your
catalog. Can I get a poster-size print of It?"
l

GLIMPSES: Burt ReyDoldl, Warren BeeUy and Ja• :':
Fonda were honcred at New York's Americana Hotel by the- -~
National Alaoclatlon of Movie Theater ownera ... cab ~
Calloway and Gr*ben Wyler got together at !be USO's 17th ;;:
annual Gold Medal Awarda.Weclnelllay honoring Avco·Carp. ::;
Ola1rman Jam.e. R. K.err ••• A trial date rl. Dec. 8 baa '-n aet fer divorce proc:eed~Dga between Rod 8teller and Nlrarilled :
wife, Sherry, witll Steiger lr)'inll to get back bla ..,,000 holjl6 .~;
ln Malibu, where Mrl. Steiger Uvea peDtllng a Httlellllllt ... :~
Bruilian music man ..,rse Bell, whole orcheltra lopl aU :-:;~
charta lOUth of the herder, drew Marpeu H 4 IWMl',
gnat Pele, New Ycrk Colm01 capl8ln CUiw Allllrto ;: :
Sell. JaeobJallll aadaclutdl ofCGWIIa,--..and U.t\ .-:;:
amba•tKkn to New York's xerum dllco W•ll•ay ffilbt tor-;:
a "Fetlll Braslleirs" party ...
'~

v

'

AMC -

JEEP

SUPER WEEKEND SPECIALS
LIMITED TIME ONLY

1977 CHEVROLET

1978 PONTIAC

1977 PONTIAC

MONTE CARLO

GRAND PRIX

TRANS AM

A.c.. cruise control. tilt
wheeL AM - F M stereo,
radials.

A.c ., AM· FM stereo radio,
powe r wi ndows. roa d
wheels.

tape play:er, road wheels.

Was 56,295 .00

Was 56,995.00

'499999

Now

A.c .. tilt wheel, AM-FM

Now

'639500

1976 FORD

(2) 1978 AMC

1978 FORD

ELITE

CONCORDS

THUNDERBIRD

Wire wheel cover s, A.c.,

AM -FMRad io.

V-top ,

power s1eering .

1 Stat ion Wagon , 1 4 door
seda n. Factory official
cars.

.' low miles ," white wi th
green c loth inter ior .

· Was $4,795.00

'649900

Now

1977 PONTIAC

1973 CHEVROLET

GRAND PRIX

IMPALA

·1977 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

2 door hardtop. brown with
white v-to p, a.c., low miles.

Firethorn Red with red
ve lour inter ior , loa ded.

"loaded ." A.c ., til t wheel,
cruise controL AM - FM
stereo, rear
window ,

defroster .
was 55 ,795.00 •

Now

was s2 ,295.00

Now

'1695

Was S5,695.00
00

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ron
Guidry ,
whose
.893
percentage set a record for
modern major league 20game winners, was QDe of two

Once again, Riversilje V. W.-AMC-Jeep has had a record number of
new car sales and we are overstocked with the finest used cars in the
area. We are passing the savings on to our customers.
Sale starts at S: OO P.M. Thursday 10-19-78 and ends at S:OO p.m.
Saturday 10-2 1-78.

Now

Va n Willford and Randy
· Arnold had outsta ndin g
nights on defense as they
consiste ntl y sacke d
Jackson's backs for losses.
Meigs' total offense last week
was 206 yards, not bad considering the mud and slop.
. With so me more fine
defense, another ba lanced
offense , and a team effort,
Meigs should return home
Friday with their fifth win
aga insl just two losses.

AL all
stars
named

"THE DEALER THAT CARES ABOUT QUALITY"

Was 55,795.00

aeria-Ls.

Cards' Devine
•
resigns post

RIVERSIDE
V.W. -

just a freshman , passed for ·68
yards, completing seven of 10

ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Bing But I had not expected this. "
Devine, loyal to the St. Louis
Both Claiborne and Devine
Cardinals since attending are natives of St. Uluis and
games as a member of the gu radua t:s of Washington
Knothole Gang in the 1930s,.: ruvers1 y. ..
has resigned as the team's
Claiborne worked for the
Cardinals from 1968 to 1972 as
general manager.
Devine, 61 , who served 18 assista nt public relations
years as the ·cardinals ' director and administrative
general manager , assistant in the farm system,
Wednesday decided he did then left to become director
not want to report to his new of minorleague operations for
boss,
Ja~k
Claiborne ,' the Oakland Athletics. He
appointed senior executive became assista nt to Boston
vice president and chief Red Sox general Manager
Dick O'Connell in 1976 but lost
operating officer.
August A. Busch Jr ., presi- his job when the team was
dent of the team, said at a sold a year later . He had been
news conference Wednesday, working for Monogram Co. in
"We need youoger capable Boston .
"I had hoped Bing would
executives" and announced
the appointment of Claibvrne, stay with the Cardinals,"
39.
Claiborne said . " I am in
Busch said of Devine, "I baseball because of Bing
urged him lu re main , Devine, and I am sorry he
especially as a consultant, will not be with us. Yet I can
but he did not feel he could." Wlderstand his feelings."
Devine started working for
Devine said later: " I did
not accept the offer to stay on the Cardinals in 1938 as an
in a subordinate ·capacity office boy . ' He became
because I still believe I can general manager in 1957 until
make a contribution as a he was fired in 1964 and was
mana ge r
or
general manager to some general
president
of
the
New
York
team. CaU it ego, caD it pride,
call it whatever you want. I Mets from 1965 through 1967
could not see myself in this when he was rehired by the
role."
Ca rds as general manager.
Commenling on the Cards'
poor season, Devine added :
"I was aware that Mr. Busch
had been upset about things
recently and when he is
upset , things usually happen.

.

Washington window

The Marauders will be at
full strength this week.
Last week they dominated
the contest as the defense
limited Jackson to just 80
yards on the ground. The
whole team had just 31 yards
m penalties, much better
than earlier in the season.
Tailback Greg ·seeker
again led th e Marauder
rushing with 79 ya rds in 20
tri es. Rick Blaettnar came on
in the second half to rally the
team with A6 ya rds on nine
trips .
Quarterback Bob Ashley.

Now

Sale Prices good Thursday 10-19-78 S: 00 p.m. thru S:00 p .m . Saturday
10-21 -78
No Exceptions or Time Extension~

unanimous choices and
among four members of the
New York Yankees selected
today on the UP! 1978
American League All-Star
team.
Guidry, who had a 25-3
woniosl record, and slugger
Jim Rice of the Boston Red
Sox, who led the major
leagues in six offensive

categories,
were
the
Wlanimous choices on the
squad of eight regulars, a
designated hitter, two
starting pite hers and one
reliever.
The squad was chosen by a
UP! panel of 30 baseball
experts from around the

coWltry, who cover games
regularly.
Rice was named on aU 30
ballots with 25 experts
selecting him as an outfielder
and the other five as a
designated hitter.
Joining Rice in the outfield
were Larry Hisle of tbe
Milwaukee .Brewers and AI
Oliver of the Texas Rangers.
The infield was composed of
first baseman Rod Carew of
the
Minnesota
Twins ,
shortstop Robin Yount of the
Brewers and second baseman
Willie Randolph and third
baseman Graig Nettles of thO
Yankees.
Carlton Fisk of the Red Sox
and Rusty Staub were
rWJaway winners at catcher
and· desi gnated hitter,
respectively, Mike Caldwell
of the Brewers was the
second starting pitcher and
Rich Gossage of the Yankees
was the relief pitcher.
MONTREAL (UP!) - The
Mootreai Expos Wednesday
announced the signing to
·
con tracts of
-lree~!ge11tpitchers Raymond
Torian and Mark Reed.

'·

'·'

"

Brian Bissell , 5·11, 155
lbs. Junior Quarterback.

Scott Hill, 5-11, 145 1bs.
Junior Halfba ck.

Rodney Keller, &amp;-0, 220
1bs. Sophomore Tackle.

Ray Werry, 5-9, 165 Ibs.
Sophomore Center.

.·.· .. · ·.. · ·.·.· • ·.. . ..• ·. .· ·. ,",',' . •'&lt;·"· .·.· . . ·.·.·.· ·.·-:

Today

..

·.·

r
·•·

::
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Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMA N
UP! Sports Editor

;:=:

..

NEW YORK (UPI ) - This is a sad day for .the Cincinnati
Reds, the day Pete Rose, the most popular a nd product ive
player in thw histor), puts hunself on t he market to the
highest bidder.
Ros~·-ufficially declared himself a free agent Wednesday.
And he sa id he's going to Ja pan - but don' t let that throw
you. He's only going there on a post-season trip with the rest of
the Reds and will be back in this country on Nov . 2:1.
Of fa r greater interest is where he 's goi ng aft er that, or more
specifically, which club he' ll be playing for next season after 16
years with the Reds, a nd judging from what I heard a t the
World Series, most signs point to San Diego.
Philadelphia is another distinct possibility. Rose likes the
city and if the Phill ies go for him, they could put him on th1rd
base and move Mike Schmidt over to first.
Mindful of the penalties Bowie Kuhn has imposed on ottwr
clubs he found guilty of tampering with free agents, Padres'
owner Ray Kroc has ma intained a discreet silence on the
subject of Rose.
But Kroc, a self-made multimill ionaire who has hustled all
his life, has an enormous passion for tl10se cut in the same
mold , and that being the case , Pete Rose ap pea ls t11 him as no

other player does in all baseba ll.
He wants Rose to play for the Padres, and in thal regard he's
like Lola in the play " Damn Yankees." Whatever Lola wants,
Lola gets. Generally, anyway . One thing about Kroc. He never
lets money stand in his way.
The Reds, of course, can stili wind up signing Rose but that
isn't likely. Not afte r the last meetin g he had with Dick
Wagner . tile Reds'

~resident ,

two weeks ago . Tha t session

didn 'l go well at all . It went terribly , in fad.
Rose's attorney, Reuven Katz of Cincinnati , was at the

meeting at which ti1e Reds informed their 37-year-old, switchhittmg future Hall of Farner what they would give him to sign.
"We promised to come back with a counter proposal. and we
did la st week," Katz says. " It was una ccepta ble to them . They
then gave us what they said was their final offer. That was the
term they used, flnal offer .' This is a nice way of saying take it

or leave it, and Pete has decided not 1o take it. ··
According to the rules, free agents must declare their
inten tion of leaving the clubs they are with on Oct. 15 or
anytime during the 15-day period immedialely following the
World Series, whichever comes sooner . That i.s the time when
any interested clubs are permitted to talk to them, but not sign
them.
Before signing any free agent, a d ub first has to draft him
and this yea r's draft is Nov. 3.
Uke Rose, Katz is a native of Cincinnati and has lived there
all his life. He says he's sorry to see Pete leave the ball club
with which he started and made such a tremendous reputation .
" As someone who has lived in Cincinnati ali my life a nd has
always had such a fondness for the Reds, I hate to be a party lo
helping Pete leave them," says Katz. " It will take a miracl e
for him to sign with them. At the sa me lime, I do believe in
miracles, though."
Rose doesn't like the idea of leav in g the Reds, either . But
be's determined to get the money he feels he's worth - if not
from the Reds, then from someone else. He'd rather play for a
contender and for an offensive-minded team becaLLSe he's a n
offensive player .
EverybQ&lt;ly likes to be appreciate-d and Pete Rose is no
exception. The Reds say they appreciate him , but not to the
extent of the price he's asking them to pay. Curiously, they
were on the other side of the fence when Tom &amp;aver ran into
the 'same kind of salary stalemate with the Mets .
It all depends on how you look at it. From Ray Kroc's
vantage point, Pete Rose will look mighty good in a San Diego
uniform .
MAGNETIC BENGAL
CINCINNATI (UP! ) . - U
you're tired of that cliche ,
"Get it together,' ' then how
about trying, ~~Magnetite.' '
That's the word Cincmnali
Benga is offensive tackle
Vern Hoiland is Using to tell
people he fi gures the winless
Bengals are about ready to
win a game.
starti ng
" It 's
to
magnetize," he says : ·
Asked to explain what ' he
means by "J113gnetize," Holland says, "The bail bearings
were spread all over the
table . Now they're coming

Rose now
free agent
C!NC!NN ATI I UP I) Pe te Rose today is a free
agent.
Rose, the 37-yea r-old
switch hitter who has not
~ome to contract terms with
the Cincinnati Reds . officia lly
notified the Baseba ll Players
Asiociation Wednesday he
plans to partici pa te in the
free-&lt;lgent draft next month .
He has indicated for weeks
he plans to try the free-agent
draft to discover his worth on
the ba seba ll market. He
nonetheless has maintained
he would like foremost to play
for Cincinna ti, his hometown
team.
Reuve n Ka tz, Rose 's agent, ·

said Wednesday, "11 is not a
happy day for Pete or the
Cmcinnati Reds fans ." Reds'
President Dick Wagner sa id
he was disappointed, bu1 not
surprised.
"Of course ," sil id Wagne r,
" he's been ta lking about it in
the media for the last 45 days
now. so you couldn't help but
be aware of it.

"Well , it's really up to hm1
right now ,'' added Wagner.
" We 've told Pete and Mr .
Katz that we sincerely want
him to play for us next year.
They ha ve to make the next
move ."
Durin g a la lk show
Tuesday , Rose said he hadn't
discussed a contract with
Wa gner since Saturday .

" It see ms to me the way the
Reds are negoti~:ning this
who le contract, they a re
say ing between the lines, 'We
don't want you no mor e,"'

Rose said.
Added Rose, "! figure I'll
jus t wait a nd see what
happens in the (free agent I
draft now , They ·ve taken

M ost punch SL'I'Vcd &lt;.~t wed-

ding receptions isn't strong
enuugh tu give yuu mor e than
et f n endly ta p.
""

were among several Saints'

Since clubs draft in reverse

order of 1978 finish , the New
York Mets will have first
pi c k.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON , Ohio IUPI) Miss Br andee paced to a l 1tz
length victor y over Tender
Ca res~\ in.

Wednesday njght 's

featured eighth race at Lebanon Raceway.
Ivy 's Ch a rm carne in
third .
11le winner , driven by Phil
Siebo ld, covered the mile in
2: 07 2.,) and returned 16.40,
$2.60 a nd $2 .60 . Tender
Caress kicked ha ck $2.60 and
$2.80 to place and Ivy's
Charm paid $2.60 to show.
The 2-1 ni ghtly double
c.:omblnatwn of' Swinger Boy
and Patcheye was worth
$45.40.
A crowd of 1.232 wagered
$112,464.

WHY

PAY

MORE
FOR
CARPET

CLEANING
Get professio na l
res ult s at a
fract ion of th e cost.

together ."
The 0-7 Bengals will try to
"magnet ize" by Sunday
when they play Buffalo.
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) Kicker Tom Jurich was cut
and Steve Mike-Mayer was
brought back for another try
with the New Orleans Saints
wednesday .
J urich and Mike-May er

their offer off the table."
Rose turned down what
Wagner termed the Reds'
highest possible offer, but has
stressed he would like to play
for the Reds next year.
As many as 12 clubs in
addition to the Reds can
select Rose in the Nov. 3 draft
in Ne\' York. When the draft
is completed , the Reds will be
asked if thev wish to
negotiate for Rose along with
the 12 other teams.

-·---- ---.- -------

::r-------------$12a.

.,

CaseyKasem

STAR SUPPLY co.

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with one-game
car eers this season since an
injury sidelined starter Rich
Szaro.

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4- The Dai ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Oct. 19. 1978

1

Yankee fans storm -airport

Den Talk

By JUDI HASSON
NEWARK, N.J . (UP!)
By GREG BAU..EY
A few urgent points of interest should be noted by local The crowd stormed the
sportsmen. Deer hunting permits are now on sale and are $10 airport runway . They jumped
plus a 50 cents writing fee. You must have a 1978 hunting over barricades, ignoring the
orders of the outnumbered
license in addition to lbe permit.
. .
The application blank for an antleriess deer penni! is policemen.
Air traffic was shut down
attached to lbe deer license. Hunters wishing to apply for these
antlerless deer permits have ooly until October 23, Mondsy, to for 36 minutes.
Finally, authorities decided
mail their applicatioos. Successful applicants will be notified
by mail. Disabled veterans exempted from purchasing a a show of force was
huntmg bcense or deer permit may get an antlerless deer necessary . Out came the
application from the Division of Wildlife, Department of water hose, and some of the
Natural Resources, Fountain Square, Columbus, Ohio 43224 or 6,000 to 8,000 Invaders got
from the local ASCS office.
·
doused.
A replay for the movies of
Landowner antlerless permits will be issued upon the
request of landowners or their children owning 10 or more the Saigon airfiight1 It was
acres. Only one penni! per landowner family will be issued. homecoming for the World
New
Yo'r k
Applications for these may. be obtained at any local deer Champion
checking station or offices of the ASa&gt;. Deadline for Yankees.
parade
in
application for these pennits is October 31. The outlook for this , tickertape
year's deer season is very good .
Hunters will be seeing more and more about the division 's
program to increase quail populations. Tbe present population
of quail in Ohio is 90 percent below that of two years ago.
Severe winters have been tabbed as the reason for the decline.
Briefly, .the program will Iive,trap pairs of quail and
gather their eggs to incubate scientifically. The next phase will
be to release the hatched wild birds one year later in a
restocking program. The third phase will be carried out by
Ohio sportsmen and farmers. The di-:iSion and sportsmen's
clubs are asking fanners to leave some soy beans, corn, or
other grain unharvesteli in areas of known quail populations.
This practice will increase winter food supply and enhance
BY GREG BAILEY
winter survival. Delayed mowing of old fields, odd areas, and
An Ohio " Huskie Muskie"
roadsides during the nesting months of June and July will
is the fish many anglers
increase nesting success,
dream of landing according
The Ohio Slate Turkey Calling Championship will be held
to the Ohio Department of
Saturday, October 28 at the Robynhaven Camp near
Natural Resources , Division
Kimbolton (near Cambridge), Starting time is 1 p.m., and
of Wildlife.
trophies will be awarded. Entry fee is $5 with registration, and
A muskellunge over 30
new callers may regisier or request additional irdormation
inches long is considered a
f1·om : Darrell R. Cline, Route 3, New Matamoras, Ohio 45767, trophy class catch . So far this
telephone ~20.
year, making them eligible to
Local game protector Andy Lyles and we sportsmen join the Ohio Huskie Muskie
extend our thanks to Middleport police in a recent illegal deer Club.
case. They were very helpful and cooperative, among them Sid
Of the muskies caught, 74
Little, Dave Wollard, and Lieutenant Bill Miller. Also in recent were returned unharmed to
developments is the completion of three littering cases. Good the water and 58 will receive
work, genUemen.
·
special recognition as being
H you are going out West to hunt or if you are a youngster, over 40 inches in length and
you will be interested in the hunter safety course offered by the weighing at least 20 pounds.
Division of Wildlife this Saturday at the division office on State The largest muskie catch
Street in Athens, Registraton can be made by letter, in person, reported this year was caught
or by calling 593-&lt;i933 by Friday at 5 o'clock. Most western in Pymatuning Reservoir.
states require a hunter safety course before selling a hunting The fish weighed 42'h lbs. and
license, and all students in Saturday's course must be at least measured 51".
12 years old.
"September and October
~ick notes - fox hunting opens Friday, Deer long-bow
are prime fishing months for
season came in last Friday, and the primitive weapons season muskies," said riayt on
opens for deer on October 30 at Shawnee Forest, Wildcat Lakes, Fish Management
Hollow and Salt Fork. Raccoon hunting opens November 1. Supervisor for the Wildlife
Fox trapping also opens this Friday.

Manhattan promised more of
the same frenzy .
The Yan,kees had won a
second straight World Series
championship , Their fans
jammed Newark Airport
Wednesday night to show
their appreciation.
When the crowd got nea·r
taxiways and runways, two
Pathfinder trucks used in
fighting aircraft fires were
moved into place, and airport
Manager John Dickerson ordered one of the vehicles to
begin shooting streams of
water to the side of the crowd.
"The intent was to show
that we meant business,''
Port Authority spokesman
Ed Franzetti said. "And that

Anglers dream
about ·muskies

NBA Standings
By United Press International

Eastern conference
Atlantic OiVI$iOn

W L. Pet. GB
3 0 1.000
1 1 .500 n·~
2 2 .500 111:.
1 2 .333 2
0 2 .000 7 1J~
Division
w, L . Pet. GB
Houston
3 0 1.000
Clevel and
2 0 1.000
lh
San Anton io
3 1 .750
lh
Atlant a
1 2 .J33 2
Ne w Orlens
I 2 .333 2
De troit
o· 3 .000 3
Western Conference
Midwest Di'o'iSion
W. L. Pet. GB
Denver
3 0 1.000
India na
I
1 .500
llh
M il wau k e
1 1 .500
l 1/1
Chic ag o
1 2 .333 2
Kansas City
0
2 .000 2 1n
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet , GB
s eattl e
.o1
o 1.000
Phoen ix
3 1 .750 1
Go lden St .
1 2 .333 2lh
Portland
1 2 .333 2V1
San Diego
1 4 .200 Jl!]
Los Angeles
0 J .000 J 1h
Wednndiy's Results
Was hington 121, Ph i la 111
Boston 116, Atlanta 99
Houston 139, New Jersey 87
Denver 125, Portland 113
Seattle 99 , Indiana 92
Phoen ix 122, Golden St. 112
San Antonio 127 , San Dgo 125
Washingtn
Phila
New Jersey
Boston
Ne w York
Central

Thursday ' s Games
Bos ton at New Orleans
Ho us ton at Kansas City
Friday's 'G ames
Den ver al New Jersey
Philadelphia at Detroit
San D iego at Chicago
New York at M il wa ukee
Portland at Golden State
s an Antonio at Seattle

NHL Standings
By United Press International
campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Af lanta
2 0 2
6
NY Islanders
2 1 l
5
NY Rangers
1 o 2
4
Philad elph ia
1 1 l
3
Smythe Division
W. L . T. Pts.
v anc ouver
2 2 1
5
Chicago
1 0 2
4
St. Lou is
2 2 0
4·
Colora do
0 4 0
0
Wales Conference
Norris Division
W. L. T. Pts .
Mon treal
3 1 0
6
washington
1 2 1
3
Detroit
1 2 1
3
Los Angeles
1 2 0
2
P ittsburgh
0 3 1
1
Adams Division
W. L . T. Pts.
Boston
3 0 1
7
Toronto
3 I 0
6
BuffliiO
1 2 1
3
Minnesota
I
2 0
2

OPENING

Wednesday ' $ Results
Detroit 3, N .Y . Rngrs 3, lie
N.Y . lslndrs 5, Pittsburgh 3
Chicag o 4, wash ington 2
Minnesota 7, vancouver 2
Toronlo 2, Buffalo 0
Boston 3, Los Angeles 2
Thursday's Games
N.Y . Rangers at Delr·oit
Pittsburgh at Philadelphi a
Minnesota at Ch.icago
Toronto at Buffalo
Friday's Games
Montreal at Atlanta
Los Angeles a t Washington
St . Lou is at Colorado
Boston at va;n couver

WHA Standings

By United Press International
W. L. T. Pts.
New England
2 0 1
5
Winnipeg
2 1 1
5
Cincinnati
1 1 1
3
Edmonton
1 1 0
2'
Birmingham
1 1 0
2
lnd ian apol is
1 2 0
2
Quebec
0 2 I
1
Wednesday ' s Results
Indianapoli s 4, Quebec 0
New Eng 4, Winnipeg 4, tie
Thursday's Games
(No games scheduled)
Friday's Game
Edmonton at Ind ianapolis
Birmingham at Cincinnat i

MOVE UP
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(UP!) - Findlay College
moved up to eighth in this
week's NAJA Division II
football poll , with 104 points.
The Oilers, 5-0, were
ranked ninth last week,
Linfield (Ore.) continued to
hold the. top spot in· this
week's poll.

OWLS
PIGS
DOGS
BEARS

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cost price

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Lay Away Now For Christmas

SIMONS
GIFT
CENTER

l

•

'
THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!) - Jockey H. Rivera
Jr. guided Ridanwin to
victory in Wednesday's
featured eighth race at
Thistled8W!t, taking the horse
over the' mile and 40 yards in
1:41.
)
Swirlin Sue was second and
·
Jug o· Gin third.
Strickly Taboo and Jackies
Delight •returned $372.80 on
the 2--7 daily double, and lbere
were 153 winning tickets on
the 7-2-8 grouping of Lad of
Portsmouth, Naturally Gifted
and J. Pop in the ninth race
trifecta - each worth $308.50
The crowd of 4,073 wagered
$489,096.

Sports Transactions
By United Pres$ International
Wednesday
Baseball
St . Louis Bing Devine
r esigned as vice pr esident and
general manager and wa s
r eplaced by John W . Claiborne
Ill.
Montrea l - Signed pitch er s
Raymond Torian and Mark
Reed to minor .leag ue contract s.
Football
New Orleans Cut ki cker
Tom Jurich and re plac ed hi m
with St ev e Mike.Mayer .
51. Louis - Sign ed running
back Lawrence Barnes and
dr opped run ni ng back Will ie
Shelby .
Cleveland Signed f r ee
agent Randy R'ich , a defensiv e
back and k ick return spe ci ali st ,
and p!a(ed lineba cker Dav e
Graf on the injured reserve li st .
Hockey
Montrea l - Rea c tivated Rod
Schutt , then
sent him
to
Pittsburgh for " future consider ·
ations ."
Pittsburgh - Signed cen ter
Gregg Sheppard .

352 E. Ma in, Pom&lt;.,oy

-------.---.
Yi' t•r .c'TO Flo,.,·... t

• ur make no comparisons
fietween those days and
Iiese," said the 79-year-&lt;&gt;ld
;oyt, a mainstay of the
~anks' pitching staff in thelr
erst
World
Series
appearance , a 5-games-to-3
.r,&amp;!s to the New York Giants
1D 1921.

FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI•STATE AREA

., ••There are some 25 or 30

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon .. Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat. 8:30til 5:00
Thursday Till2 No()n
Friday Until8 P.M.
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Mason, W.Va. ,,

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Send a talking lette r! Built-i n m•ke, pu s h·
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'lllllimparison whatsoever.''

COLUMBU S (UPI ) Thi s '
week 's
Ohio
H igh
Schoo!
Athletic Asso ci ati on comp uter .
ized football ratin gs, with point
totals :
Class AAA .
Region 1
l . Sol on , 74.00 ; 2. North
Ridgeville , 62.50 ; 3. Elyria .
58 .50; "'· Strongsv il le . 58.25 ; 5.
Middleburg Heights M idpark .
55.20 ; 6. Parma Padua, 52 .00 ; 7.
Warren Western Reserve . 51.00 ;
a. Cleveland St . Joseph', 49.00 ;
9. Chesterland West Geauga ,
47.00; 10. Wi c kliffe , 45.50.
R:egion 2
1. Hill iar d, 70.00 ; 2. Grove ·
port -Madison , 62.00 ; 3. Toledo
Bowsher , 54. 00 ; 4. ReynOl ds burg , 53.00 ; 5. Sandusky , 52.50;
6. Galion . 51 .00 : 1. Galloway
westland , 50.00 ; 8. Li ma senior ,
49.91 ; 9. Gahanna Lin co ln ,
49.00 ; 10 . Upper Ar lington ,
48.00.
Region J
l. Newark., 74.00 ; 2. Canton
G. ..?nOak, 72.00 ; 3. Dov er , 68. 40 ;
4. Zanesv ille, 67.20 ; 5. New
Ph iladelphia , 64.87 ; 6. Barber .
ton. 62 .00 ; 7. Mog i'! dore Fi eld ,
60.75 ; 8. Ravenna. 60.00 ; 9. (tie )
Louis v i 1 1 e and Ri chfi eld
Revere, 56.50.
Region 4
1. Cincinnati Prin ceton, 83.00 ;
2. Clayton NOrthmont. 73.50 ; 3.
Cincinnati
Elder , 68.00 ;
4.
Cincinnati Colerain , 64 .50 ; 5.
Cincinnati Turpin, 59.25 ; 6.
Centervll'l e, 58 .50 ; 7. Ci ncinnati
Moeller ,
55.80';
8
Dayton
Carroll , 54 .00 ; 9. w est carroll ·
ton . 47 .25; 10 . Kett ering Fair ·
mont Ea st , 411 .00.

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ilfferences. I can 't tell you
Bow many things ·are
!lifferent. I don ' t make
tpmparisons . This is . a
ii£ferent era entirely. The
!!arne is changed, the
personalities have changed.
J:verything 's changed.
:2'!Jere':i no basis for

Added Hoyt : " If they like
" I kinda felt sorry for the
the game today, more power . Dodgers," said Hoyt, .who
to them. This is their w&lt;rld; also pitched for the Brooklyn
my world is gone. I am not an Dodgers. ''They're a better
objector. I think the game is
wooderful today . The people
like it. Everything we do is
changed."

A member of the select
group of 200-game winners,
Hoyt won 237 games in a
career that began at age 16
and spanned both leagues. He
wound up with the Yankees
from 1921-30, backed . by
hitters like Babe Ruth, Lou
Gehrig and Anthony Lazzeri.
Hoyt compiled a 6-3 World
Series record in Yankee
pinstripes, and joined in the
Yanks'
first
World
Championship, a 4ilames-to2 win over lbe New York
Giants in 1923.
Now a Cincinnati resident ,
Hoyt this week watched the
Yankees win their second
straight World Series - the
first Yankee team to do so
since 1961-62. And, he offered
a few obs~rvations.

Computer ratings

Chronomatic ®·207 by Realistic ®

-

Accepted
Open

9-5 Mon.lhru Sat.
Friday til B p.m .

•

ClasS AA .
.
Region 5
1. Campbell Me mor ial. 49 .60;
2. El yri a West , 48.50 ; 3. tt iel
Chagrin Fa ll s · Kenston and
Perry , 48.00 each ; 5. Elyri a
Catho lic , 42 .50:
6. Warren
Kenn edy , 40.00 ; 7. Brookf ield ,
39 .45; 8. lf ie l M edina Hig hland
and Orrv i lle , 37 .00 ea ch ; 10 .
Leavitt sburg La Brae, 35.50.
Region 6
1 &lt;tiel Millbury La!&lt;.e ·and St.
Marys Memor ial, 57.00 ea·ch ; 3.
Loudonville, 48.00: 4. Elida,
44.00 ; 5. (tie } Fostoria and
ottawa .Giandorf . 41 .50 each ; 7.
·wauseon • .40. 00 ; B. Columbus
Independence. 38 .40 ; 9. Colum ·
bu s De Sales, 36 .50 ; 10. Bel lev ue, 36.00.
Region 1
1. New concord John Gl enn ,
66.50; 2. Maysville • .45.50 ; 3. St .
Cl air sv ille, 39.75 ; 4. Ironton ,
38..10 ; 5. Bloo m ·Carroll , 38.00; 6.
West M usk ingu m , 36.50 : 7.
M iner va .
36.00 ;
8.
Sandy
Va lley, 35.50; 9 . Bridgep ort ,
35.41 ; 10. Claymont. 35 .00.
Region 8
· I. Cincinnati Wyoming , 57 .00 ;
2. Cin cinnati McNicholas , 56.00 ;
3. Cin ci nna ti Read ing. 47 .50 ; 4.
(tie) Cinc inna t i Deer ParK and
Hamilton Badin , 46.00 each ; 6.
Milton Union , 40.00 ; 7. Blan ch est er , 37 .50 ; 8. Goshen, 37.00 ;
9. Dayton OaKwood , 36.00; 10.
Tr enton Edgewood , 35 .50.
Class A.
.
Region 9
1. Lorain Cl earview. 49.00 ; 2.
Mogadore ,
38 .50 ;
J.
New
London, 29.50 ; 4. Middlefield
Cardi nal . 28 .50; 5. Card ington ·
Lincol n, 28 .00 ; 6. Jackson ·
M il ton , 27 .50 ; 7 . Columbiana •.
27 .00 ; 8. Burton BerKsh ire ,
25.50 : 9_ Sandu sk y St. Marys .
2S.OO ; 10 . Ashtabula St . John ,
24.60.
Region Ill
1. Crestl ine , 44 .00; 2. Fremont
St. Joseph, 42.50 ; 3. Hamler
Patrick Henry. 40.00 ; 4. M il ford
Center Fairbanks , 36.00 ; 5.
Montpelier, 35.00 ; 6. carey,
31,00 :
7.
(t iel
Bloomdale
Elmwood and
Fostoria
St.
Wend elin , 29.50 each , 9. Tiffin
C a I vert, 26 .25 ; 10. Cory
Rawson•, 25.50 .
Region 11
1. Newark Cath olic , 44.50; 2.
Croo ksville , 35.00 ; 3. Brilliant
Buckeye North , 32.50 ; 4. Colum bus Ready , 130. 00 ; 5. New
Albany , 29.50 ; 6. Woodsfield ,
27 .50 ; 7. Johnstown Northridg e,
25 .25 ; B. Beallsville, 24.66 ; 9.
Newcomerstown , 24 .25 ; 10. Dan ·
v ille , 24.00.
Region 12
1. West Jefferson , 49.00; 2.
Covington • .46.00 ; 3. versa illes ,
44 .50 ; 4. M iddlet own Fenwic k,

5~:~8 ~

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7. &lt;tiel Cedarville and · west
Liberty Sal em, 24.50 each; 9.
Plain City Jonathan Alder,
23. 75 ; 10. (t iel Bradford and
Roc\&lt;.ford Parkway. 22 .0 0 each .

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Most stores open Sunday afternoon until Christmas

Opon Frid8y

ud the latest World Series
Victories by the New York
· Yankees. And, between those
tonquests, the limes - as
Bob Dy Ian might say lhey've been a changin'.
Just ask Waite Hoyt , one of
;ie original World Champion
:Jankees.

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Former announcer Hoyt-recalls 1921 series

~ CINCINNATI (UPI) .:._ It's

LAR!

CHARGE IT

W. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .

many fan s weren 't even, .

1

SHOP

~:;..;eThh:,t·j:n":pes:i~p ;~~

down and pulled his shoulder
out of the sock et when the
Yankees won the sixth and
deci.ding game of the series
Tuesday night against the
Los Angeles Dollgers.
Once the Yankee buses left,

Flor ist Slncel957

aware the team had gone.
Ya nk ee owner George
Steinbrenner surveyed the
scene oo the r unway and said,
"Y ankee fan s a re the
greatest fans in the world, H
lbey want to go out and tear
up a lit tle gr~ss, that's okay."

-

f-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thurs~ay, Od. 19, !9i8

Your " Extra Tou ch"

FALL
SAVINGS ·

.•

I

"! have never been so
thrilled by 'a baseball team ...
in aU my Ufe," said one fan
who brought his two teen..age
sons with him .
Dave Mackey of Jersey ·
City, N.J ., clutched a Ya nkee
T-shirt and said he had been
to 51 Yankee games this year.
"When you're 3 years old and
someone sticks a Yankee
pennant in your hand, you're
always ·a Yankee fan ," said·
Mackey, now in his early 20s.
' 'Baseball, hot dogs, apple
pie and those Yankees. What
else could you want?" said
another booster , Jeff Ryan , of
Jersey City.
Another ran went to the
airport with his arm in a

Division . '' We expect to
surpass last year's catch of
big muskies within the next
month. 11
At this time IHst year, 395
muskies over 30 inches had
been reported. The t otal
catch for 1977 was 503, If
projections hold true, about
565 trophy class muskies will
be caught, an 18 percent
increase over last year.
· Native muskeil unge
populations were found
primarily in ihe larger
stream systems of southern
Ohio. Through artificial
propagation and stocking ,
quality muskie fishing is now
available throughout the
state.
Lakes where the largest
number- of 30-inch muskies
have been caught this year
are Leesville Lake With 153,
Rocky Fork Lake 91 ,
Pymatuning Reservoir :;:;,
Salt Forli Lake 33, and Cowan
Lake 30.•

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'"'ct~

(the water ) did stop them."
" Is this what we get? Is this
what we get?" yelled a
woman whose hair wa s damp
from the water .
Franzetti insis ted the
truck 's hose was not aimed at
the crowd , but several
hundred people nearest the
truck got wet and began
running away .
Runways at lbe airport,
which hapdles both domestic
and i nternational flights ,
were closed to incoming and
outgoing traffic from 8:00
p.m. to 8:41 p.m.
No one was reported
injured or arrested.
The Yankees ' plane landed
near the airport 's North
Terminal - an area that has
been used for such visiting
dignitaries as President
Carter and Queen Elizabeth.
Then , three buses carried the
team to safety from their
Delta Air Lines j•~ln general, the wetting
down did no.t dampen the
crowd's enthusiasm.

CHILDREN'S
WINTER WEAR

-Candle Holders · Lamps
-Ash Trays • Anniversary Gifts

-Many items at

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s.

Jrd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
992-2709 or 992-6611 ·
Open: 7: oo to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 Saturday
.

ball club than they showed ,
They didn't play too well ."
''I don 't think the pitching

on either side was very
good ," he said, noting the
reliance oo relief pitching.
"What impressed me, some

NFL grid statistics
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
Rusblng
all yds avg lg td
Williams, Mia.
130 663 5.1 58 3
Campbell, Hou.
119 608 5.1 73 4
van Eeghen, Oak.
119 541 4,j 34 2
Harris, Pitt.
142 529 3.7 37 3
Long, N.Y .
98 504 5.1 27 5
Punting
no lg avg
Mclnally, Cin.
43 63 43.2
Guy, Oak.
31 69 41.9
Ramsey, N.Y.
30 79 41.9
Roberts, Mia .K.C.
33 !i9 41.1
Andrusyshyn, K.C.
37 60 40.9
Punt Returns
no yds avg lg td
Upchurctr,Den.
16 255 15.9 75 I
Moody, Buff.
l!i 214 14.3 82 I
Harper, N.Y.
10 139 13.9 82 I
Terry, Pitt.
7 80 11.4 24 0
Cefalo, Mia.
12 135 11.3 26 0
Kickoff Returns
no yds avg lg td
Washington, Bait .
8 231 28.9 90 I
Dirden, Hou.
14 395 28.2 60 0
Owens, S.D.
10 280 28.0 51 0
Payton, K.C.
16 446 27.9 66 0
Collins, Clev.
12 315 26.3 41 0
Scoring
Toucbdowos
td rush rec ret pts
Sims, Sea.
7 7 0 042
Casper,Oak. Oak.
6 O!i136
Jefferson, S.D.
5 0 5 0 30

BNiirem Nua ,
5 0 :; 0 30
Swann, Pitt.
5 0 5 0 30
Whittington, Oak.
5 :; 0 0 30
Long, N.Y.
5
5 0 0 30
Kicking
eP'a fg·a lg pis
Leahy, N.Y.
19-19 12·14 47 :;:;
Cockroft, Clev.
13·13 ltl-14 43 43
23-23 6-12 44 41
Gerela, Pitt ..
Fritsch, Hou.
11-12 9-11 49 38
17-17 6-11 42 35
Mann, Oak.
Pasrilng
att comp pet yds td lnt
Bradshw, Ptt.
167 99 59.3 B75 13 5
Fergusn,Bff.
143 80 50.9 1086 9 5
168 il4 64.21317 9 9
Fouts,S.D.
Zorn,Sea.
195 121 62.11665 7 11
strock,Mia.
125 65 52.0 743 10 6
Rating based on pet. compn avg. yds,
pet. td, pet. int.
Pass Receiving
no yds avg lg td
Swann, Pitt.
35 477 13.6 37 5
31 532 17.2 48 3
Largent, Sea.
28 213 7.6 22 I
Mitchell, S.D.
25 355 14.2 44 :;
Casper, Oak .
White,K.C.
25 232 9.3 24 0
Interceptions
no yds lg td
:; 119 46 0
Darden, Clev.
4 51 29 0
Alexander, Hou.
Foley, Den.
4 31 28 0
3 17 15 0
Beamon, Sea.
3826!i0
Dungy, Pitt.

Bullets having problems
By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
The Philadelphia 76ers
may have a few problems,
but Washington Coach Dick
Motta was too busy worrying
about his own club to notice.
"! just .look at our own
team," said Motta last night
after his defending ch8mpion
Bullets handed the Sixers a
121·11_1 setback. "We have
our own problems. But we
played better tonight than we
did at any point last year."
Charles Johnson scored 19
points and Bob Dandridge
added 18 to lead the NBA
champions. ·The undefeated
Bullets, winning their third
game in a row, trailed only in
the early minutes before
Larry Wright, Dandridge and
Johnson reeled off 10 points to
give Washington a 43-33 lead
that was never seriously
threatened.
Philadelphia, now 1·1,
trailed, 96-71, after three
periods, but rallied In the
final quarter to come within

periods to lead Boston to its
first victory of. the season.
Rockets 139, Nets 87:
Rudy 'fomjanovich scored
28 points and Moses Malone
adcled 24 points and 15
rebounds to lead undefeated
Houston to the most lopsided
victorY in Its history.
Nuggets 125, Trail Blazers
113:
George McGinnis scored
21,
"They shot 60 percent," the first seven points of the
pointed out Sixer Coach Billy final quarter to break open a
Cunningham, who is trying to close game and send Denver
compensate for the loss of to victory over Portland.
Lloyd Free and George SuperSooice 99, Pacen 9%:
Lonnie Shelton sc&lt;red 19
McGinnis. "We had chances
late in the game , but we points in a substitute role snd
simply couldn't capitalize." led Seattle to its fourth
Elsewhere in the NBA, it straight victory,
was Boston 116, Atlanta 99; Suns 122, Warriors 112:
Paul Westphal wit~ 33
Houston 139, New Jersey 87;
Denver 125, Portland · 113; points and Walter Davis wilb
Seattle 99, Indiana 92; 30, combined to lead Phoenix
Phoenix 122, Golden State 112 over Golden State.
and San Antonio 127 San Spun 127, CUppers 125:
Defending NBA scoring
Diego 125.
champion George Gervin
Celtics 116, Hawks 99:
Billy Knight, held scoreless scored 46 points to pace San
in the first quarter, hit for 37 Antonio over San Diego.
points in the final lbree

115-109 with 2:11 left.
However, the 76ers went
scoreless for the next iwo
minutes while Wes Unseld,
Tom Hende~son, and Mitch
Kupchak scored six straight
points to seal it for
Washington,
Julilljl Erving led Philadelphia with 25 points,
followed by Doug Collins with

of the balls they delivered
were so far off lbe mark they
were aiming at, it made me
wcoder ." ,
Who was Hoyt rooting
for1
"I was pulling for the
Dodgers, actually ," he
quickly replied. "! have no
direct affiliation with that
club back there (Yankees).
All lbe owners and manager
and players and that have
changed, the philosophy has
changed. There seems to.be a
great deal of unrest on too

club."
He also said the 1978
Yankees "are not a very
dignified ball club."
As a former radio
announcer and television
color man for lbe Cincinnati
Reds, Hoyt also studied the
television crew, which he
thought did "a good job."
"The only things I object to
are !elias who make
comparisons and doo't know
the circumstances and they
don't know what took place in
the early '20s and ·~." Hoyt

• h sch~00f rattngs
•
Up1 h ~{!&lt;
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Thi s
week ' s

United

In-

Press

ternational Oi o High School
Board and Coaches football

ra ti ngs { w ith first place votes
and won - lost records in
parentheses) :
·

Class AAA
Team
Points
1. Cincinnati Princeton
I
(JO) (6· ) 344
2. Cincinnati Moeller

(5-1) 267

3. Massillon Washington

4. Zanesv ill e

(3)

5. Cincinnati Elder

(6-0) 264
(6-0) 176

16-0) 144

6. Lakewood St. Edward

(4-1 ) 96

7. Miami Trace
(6-0)
6. Cleve St. Jooeph

9. Newark
10. Barberton

90

(8 1I 76
(6-0) 65

I5-11 62

Second ten: 11. Hilliard 56 ;
12 . Canton McKinle y 48 ; 13 .
Clayton Northmont 34 ; 14 .
Solon 31; 15. Warren Wester n
Reserve 24; 16. Centerville ~

23; 17. (lie) Parma Padua
and Canton Glen Oak. 17
each; 19. itie) Sandusky and

Nordonia , 16 each .
Others with ten or more
points : Groveport . Madison ,
Youngstown
Cardinal

Mooney,

Elyria, . Toledo

Bowsher ( 1) and Youngsto w n
Card i nal ~coney.
Class AA

1. Wyoming
(101 il-01
2. St. IIAarys Memorial

191

i6) (6·01 179
3. Elyria Cathol ic
12 1 (6-0-11 131
4. New Concord John Glenn
17-0) 994
5. Columbus DeSales
'
(7 .0) 84

6. Ironton
7. Pauldina

(1I (6-0) 62
(2) {7-01 59

Beulah results

GROVE CITY , Ohio (UP!)
- Amos the Famous won the
first running of the Ohio
Debutante Handicap
Wednesday at Beulah Park,
going the mile and !-16th for
jockey Perry Ouzts in 1:46 35.
It was Ouzts' 18th win of too
meeting, making him the
winningest jockey at the
meet.
Amos lbe Famous came
from behind in the race for
two-yearold fillies to defeat
La Croix by three-&lt;juarters
length with Sp~_rsburg
coming in third.
Hcmero Hidalgo rode the
winners in the second, third,
sixth and sevenlb races to
give him 11 wins for the
season, tied with Mike Ewing
for second, behind Ouzts.
Turn to Toast and Adult
Toy won the first two races to
return $321.20 on the daily
double combination of 5 and
3.
Olivares, First Chair and
Bronze Express were the first
rounding out the AA top ten . lbree finishers in the trifecta
Cory Rawson moved into on the combination of ~-1 to
lbe third position this week in return $13,812.30 to five ticket
Class A, with West Jefferson holders.
slipping one spot to fourth . · The crowd of 4,144 wagered
Versailles, taking advantage $497,947.
of Its big win over Covington,
leaped aU the way from tenth
last week to fifth.
The rest of the top ten in
Class A includes Columbus
Ready in sixth, followed by
Covington, Mechanicsburg,
West Liberty Salem and Fostoria St. Wendelln and
Crestline tied for tenth .

8. Brookfield
9. Elida

(6 -0J 52
(6 ·11 42

10. Cincinn ati McNicholas

(6 -1) 41
Second ten : l 1. Perry (1)
33; 12. (tiel Elyria West and
Campbell Memori al, 29 each ;
14. Orr v ille 26 ; 15 , Cleveland
Benedictine 24; 16. Bellville

Clear Fork ; 17. (lie) Milton Union,
Loud Onville,
St.
Clairs ville
( 1I
and
Bridgeport. lB each.

Others with ten or more
points : Millbury Lake .

Class A

Points

Team

1. Newark Catholic
(6)

(7-0) 191

2. Patrick Henry
.

(2) (7 -0)

(4) (7-01 147

4. Wes t Jefferson

( \) (6-1) 140
Versa il les
16) (7-01 134
6. Columbus Ready
(2) (6-l) 112
7. Cov ington , (.1) (6-!) . 103
5.

8. Mechanicsburg

(1) (7 .0) 54
9. Wesl Liberty Salem
(6-11 52
10. (lie Fostoria St . Wndln
(1) t6-0) 43
10. (tie) Crestline
(1)

Second
d le t o wn

(6-0) 43

nine : 12 .
Fenwick

Montpel ier and Fremont St.
Joseph ,
27
each ;
17 .

Ashtabul• 51. John 23; 18.

Cr ooksville
21 ;
19 .
Tuscarawas Catholic: (1) 20 ;

20. Cedarvil le (1) 19.

Others with fen or more

points : Twin Valley South,
Dalton,
Jackson ·Milton ,
Newcomerstown ,
Columbiana ( l), Liberty Benton , St .
He nr y, Williamsburg {1).
Parkway , Hemlock Miller

and New Albany .

,.

0

0

•

SUIT YOUR
MOODS
FALL, WINTER
FINE WEARING
APPAREL
FOR WOMEN
AND
MEN

Wyoming still tops zn
UPI's Class AA ratings
appearances.
Wyoming, which ran its
record to 7-0 and its winning
streak to 18 over two years
with a 4~ win over Harrison
Friday night, has a 191·179
lead over No. 2 St. Marys
Memorial in AA, with
defending poll champ Elyria
Catholic third with 131.
New Concord· John Glenn
jumped from sixth to fourth,
with Columbus DeSales,
Ironton, Paulding,
Brookfield, Elida and
Cincinnati McNicholaS again

M i d41 ;

Woodsfield 34 ; 14. Lorain
Clearv iew 33 ; 15. illel

•

By GENE CADDES
UPl Sporli Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Unbeaten Newark Catholic has
taken oyer the No . 1 spot In
this week's United Press
International Ohio High
School Board of Coaches
Class A foothall ratings .
The Green Wave of Coach
J.D. Graham, after three
weeks as runnerup to
Covington, made their move
when Covington lost 28-12 to
unbeaten Versaille~.
The defeat
dropped
·Covington all the way to
seventh, with Hamler Patrick
Henry moving into the No. 2
spot to challenge Newark
Catholic, although . trailing
the Green Wave 191-170 in
points.
Meanwhile, both Cincinnati
Princeton and Cincinnati
Wyoming remained atop the
Class AAA and AA lists,
respectively,
· Princeton, unbeaten in six
games, received 30 of 35 first
place votes and 344 points out
of a possible 350 in the AAA
balloting and holds a 57i&gt;Oint
margin over runnerup
Cincinnati Moeller, &amp;-1.
_ Massillon, 6-0, remained In
the third spot for the fourth
straight
week,
with
Zanesville inching ahead .of
Cincinnati Elder into fourth
and dropping the Panthers
into fifth,
Rounding out the AAA top
ten as the coaches • balloting
reached the half way mark Is
Lakewood St. Edward in
Sixth, followed by Miami
Trace, Cleveland St. Joseph,
Newark and Barberton.
Trace and Newark, both 6-0,
are making their first

170

3. Cory Rawson

said. "I don't think people
should ever comment or
write or talk sagely like they
do with positive knowledge
about what they have never
seen and can only conjecture
about.
" I can't cite you any
examples, but I know I heard
during the Series some things
happened they cited that you
would think is the first time it
happened. (That's) because
it seems new to these fellas,
but it's not new at all."
Hoyt also shrugged off
comparisons between current
baseball players, with their
doubleknit uniforms and
ariificial turf, and players of
his day .
" There are different
surfaces, the ball is different,
the bats are different, the
equipment is different, the
rules are different, and their
(players') attitude toward .
the game is different .
Whether they 're better
ballplayers or not, I don't
know.
"I'm a firm believer in this
- if they played in my day,
they'd he good ballplayers.
And if players of my day
played today, they would play
according
to
the
circumstances of today and
would do just as well."
"The thing that strikes me
as odd," he added, "is
sometimes (people ) insist the
longer they (players) go, the
longer baseball is played, the
better
they . become.
Watching this World Series, I
see nothing that Would make
me believe that.
"They're good ballplayers,
but I failed to see anything
startling."

Use Layaway
Plan For
Christmas

I

BAHR CLOTH IE.R.S
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport

New
Outdoor
shoe

"&gt; QUALITY HOME
FURNISHINGS

that's a
Bear for
Wear!

AT

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REASONABLE
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with
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Ankle-high with soft
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Special speed laces.
Long wearing Kraton
Sole. Ava ilable in
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leather.

TRY US

Men's Sizes: 5 10 12
Children's Sizes: 12 ~

for active
Americans
from 4 to 40!

10

4

herltag•
house
Middleport, 0,
Open Friday Night untiii :OO P.M .

'"

·'

�....

6- The Daily Sentinel, Mi~~leport-Po meruy, 0 ., Thurs~ay, Dl'l.

1~ .

r'' w(b;;;pyQ@
;;;;'"i

1978 ·

For Friday, Oct. H

CHESTEII-- Purchase of
stage drape materia l an~ a
hun~red chairs were approved when the Chesler PTO met
Monday night at the elemen·
tary school. .
Mrs. Janel Koblentz will
have charge of the material
for the drapes an~ the new
chairs will pe or~ered . Bob
Davis expressed his apo
predation to the carnival and
ways an~ means conunillee
and all others who helped
with the fall festival and
jitney supper. It was noted

October 20, 1171
There Is not too much you can't

handle this coming year.
You're ready to take large
steps forward in your over-all
development.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) KnowIng how to get the most out of
the very least. Is YI&gt;Ur torte
tOday . Don 't Jet others with
less savvy do your thinking for
you. Like to lind out more
about yoursel!1 Sond tor your
copy of Astro-Graph Letter by
mailing 50 cents tor each and a
long, sell-addressed, stamped,
envelope to Astro-Graph, P.O.
Bo• 489, Rad io City Station,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
birth sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A

:::r:::::::;:;~B:;::;;::::;;,,;t~;::::'/~?~::::::::::::::::::~i

welcome the opportunity to put

lo work some of those Ideas
had sitting on the back

burner. Let him help.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
Z1) The lion's share ol the
spoils could be yours today.
You'll use the right tact and
diplomacy and break the barri-

COMPLETES TRAINING - Teresa Ferrell
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. mlford Ferrell, Syracuse, ha~
completed her state board rn cosmetology and is now
employed at the B&amp;A Beauty Salon in Racine. Teresa is a
1978 graduate of Southern· High School and Meigs
Cosmetology class.

ers of a stubborn situation.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19)
No problems are too difficult
(or you to solve today . The way
you come up with the solutions
will have you standing tall In
the eyes of others.
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 19)
TOday you have the taculty to
face up to and overcome a

problem that has had you
down . This should give you
much to cheer about this 'evening .
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) The
tine mental work and organizational foundation you have laid
Is now ready to support a
strong structure. Build as large
as you'd like.
ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprll 19) EKpress your ideas· on how you

r-----,

.r
f

I Social 1
1 Calendar 1
THURSDAY
ROCK,SPRINGS BETTER
Health Club, Thursday, I: 15
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Phyllis Skitmer. Mrs. Susie
Pullins to have the program,
Mrs. Nancy Morris, the contest. Secret pals will be

r';

see a tough project being handled . You hOld the key to the
riddle. Everyone will be de·
lighted to team up with you.
TAURUS (April zt.Moy 211) Perform to the tultest today and

revealed.

you can't go wrong. Even if you

get stuck there'll be an angel in
the wings, pushing you on to a
substantial return.
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) This
is one of those lovely days tor
both your wort&lt; and your pleasure. After a . satistylng ~ork
day, the evemng holds enJOy·
ment with friends .
cANCER (June u..Juty 22) .se-

cause you concentrate on what

you want in the long run , not on
momentary pleasure, yo.u'llset
a course today others wrll wan(
to follow.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have
learned your lessons well and
should profit from yesterday's
mistakes. An invitation could
be extended to you to put your
new knowledge to work .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ) Your
chances ·tor success are
greatly enhanced because ot
the caretul manner In which
you lay yo~r plans today. Gains
could be srzab\e.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

Carpenter
Personals
Cecil Gillogly, Steve and
Alisa Ann and Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gillogly, Vickie and
Bruce , all local. Mr. and
1 Mrs. Rick McDaniel and
' Charity and Mr. and Mrs.
J Carl Crabtree, Russell and
•

'

Aaron Reid Salisbur11
J
.
Announce bzrth
Mr . and Mrs. Steve
Salisbury are announcing the.
birth of their second son
.
'
Aaron Retd. He wa~ born
September 13 and we1ghed 9
lbs., 7 ozs. He is welcomed
home by his brother, Adam
Richard age 2.
M ' '
d
aternal gran parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkms,
Long Bottom, and paternal
grandparents,
Warren
Salisbury of Gallipolis and
Evelyn Carney of Gallipolis.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Wamsley,
Mrs. Ethel Larkins and Mrs.
Alena Salisbury.

Kevin , Albany ; a nd Mr.
and Mrs . David Norris,
Serena
and
Michelle,
Logan ..Cake apd punch were
enjoyed and Mrs. gillogly
received many gifts to make
the celebration nicer, along
with cards fr om friends and
relatives.

WE DON'T CLAIM TO
SEll THE MOST
ONL V THE BEST!
1969 CHEVELLE V.S WAGON ......... ....... '599
1971 DODGE POLARO V.S 4 DOOR .. ...... 1769
1972 DODGE MONACO V.S 4 DR.............~5
1972 CHEVY BEL AIR V.S 4 DR ••.•••.•.••• 1795
1972 FORD 4 DR. V.S, auto., P..S........... . 1695
1970 NOVA V.S CPE Automatic................ 1795
1972 NOVA V.S CPE Automatic.............. 11395
1972 CHEVY KINGSWOOD ST. WAGON. .•• 11195
1974 CHEVELLE ST. WAGON V.S, auto....... 11695
1973 CAPRICE CPE V.S, full equipment. 11795

I

scheduled in Athens

1j\'

person indebted to you will
~ou''ile

that buth were a t un·c".
Pun·hase of a Lr'ash ran
cart for the janitor w~s also
approve~ . Supt. Clark I .Ces
met with t)le group an~ talkc~
about impro.verrients to be
made in the system. He also
gave an u¢ate~ financia l
statement.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer. The
proKram was presented by
the Mei~s County Historical
Society. Refreshments were
ser·ved. Next meeting will be
on Nov. 20.

1977 CHM C-10 H. DUTY 8' PICKUP
Less than 6,300 miles and clean as new one, 350 v .a
automatic, pb, p. steering, r ad io, bonan za pkg . L. 78· 15
tir es, step bumpe r, wh . covers . Uses reg . gas . 2 tone
blue.

Grace Episeopal Ct.urch
Women, 12 :30 Thursday at
the rectory .
WESTERN
SQUARE
dance 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Royal Oak Park. Hayride and
wiener roast following close
of dance at 9:30p.m. Dewey
Hart, Columbus, caller. All
Western square dancers
in vited 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. begineing
at 10 a.m. Thursday and
ruMing through Oct. 24.
PLANNED Parenthood
Clinic scheduled for Nov . 2.
An appointment is necessary.
Call 992·5912.
REVIVAL now in progress
through Oct. 29 at Middleport
Indep e ndent Holiness
Church, Pearl St. Evangelists
are the Rev . and Mrs. Ken·
neth Boga rd , Washington
Co urt House. Special singing
each evening. Pastor is Rev.
O'Dell Maruey.
INSTALLATION
of
Pomona and subordinate
grange offi cers, 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.
BATON CLASSES held at
&amp;yal Oak Park on. Wednesday WILL BE HELD ON
Thursday this week only. The
time of the classes remain the
same.
BAZAAR AND BAKE
SALE Thursday from 9 to 4 at
home of Mildred Spencer,.
Antiquity . Sponsored by
· Willing Hands Class of An·
tiquity Baptist Church.

11

i.\f

HUNTINGTON The session will follow the
Marshall University Institute panelists' comments. The
for the Arts will sponsor a symposium is free and the
public forum on "Business public is invited.
Dr. Michael Cerveris,
and the Arts" Wednesday,
Oct. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in Mar- director of the Institute, said,
shall's Old Mam Auditorium. " Public support for the arts is
Panelists lDcl ude Goldwin becoming an important issue.
McLellan of the. Business We see this forum as a
Committee for the Arts, Inc. catalyst for ideas that will
in New York ; Robert Tolan, further develop the cultural
managing director of the · climate of th e Tri-State
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Area ..''
Cerveris explained that
Park, and ·Fred Gros, curator
of education at Huntington McLellan was chosen as a
panelist because the Business
Galleries.
Issues such as the role Committee for the Arts tours
business can play in the country conducting
pronloting the arts, tax campaigns and seminars to
benefits · and · corporate bring art and business
patronage will be discussed. communities into close and
A question and answer fruitful relations . The
committee also publicizes
examples of corporate in·
THURSDAY
volvement in the arts through
PAST ·; PRESIDENTS its sponsorship, with Forbes
P!irley of Qrew Webster Unit Magazine, of the annual .
39 will me ~\ Thursday at 7:30 " Business in the Arts"
p.m. , . .
awards competition. The
BRADBURY Elementary committee also organizes
PTA will. hold its first local, statewide and regional
meeting of the year on Thurs· art conferences.
day at 7:30 p.m. Open house
Interested persons may
will be observed. All parents obtain additional information
are urged 'to attend.
by calling 696-6665 or 696-6615.
MAGNOUA CLUB Thursxay 7:30 p.m. at home of evening at the Freedom
Bertha Canaday . . White Gospel Mission, Bald Knob,
with Rev. Bernard Thrash,
elephant sale.
Parkersburg,
evangelist.
FRIDAY
Special
singing
each
eveni~g .
SQUARE DANCE Senior
Pastor
the
Rev.
Lawrence
Citizens Center Friday 8 to II.
Admission $1 for adults, Gluesencamp invites the
children under 12 free . Open public.
HYMN SING at Hazel
Ill public. Music by String
Community
Church, I :30
Dusters.
p.m.
Sunday'
with
the Gospel
COMBINATION Bake sale
and products party to be Express from Reynoldsburg
staged at the community to be featured singers; the
building by the Long Bottom public is invited.
Community Assn . beginning
RALLY DAY at the
at 10 a.m. Friday.
Alleghany
Wesl e yan
Methodist Church bet ween
SATURDAY
TURKEY
SUPPER Tuppers Plains and Cool ville
Satu'rday night at. the Tupo on Ro"te 7, Sunday.
pers Plains fire station
LAFF- A- DAY
sponsored by the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Orange
Township Volunteer Fire
Department. Serving will be
from 4:30 to 7 p.m. with
turkey , dressing, mashed
potatoes, gravy, tossed salad,
homemade noodles, green
beans, rolls, pie, coffee and
tea to be served. All proceeds
will go to help paying bills for
the new furnace, upkeep of
..
1
the.fire station and upkeep of 10 1'1 .. ..._ . ,_ _ •• · · -· ·- · ·- :..
" Ralph gave up his silly idea
the fire trucks.
of
early retirement alter I told
POTLUCK DINNER by the
him
how much 1 was looking
Democrat Party Saturday,
forward
to his help with the
6:30 p.m. at the party
housework
.··
headquarters in the Orchid
Room, E. tdain St., Pomeroy.
&amp;n James wlll be speaker
and those attending are to
take a covered dish .
YARD AND bake sale at
the Salem Center Elemen·
tary School, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, rain or shine. All
proceeds will go to the Salem
Center' education
organization.
SUNDAY
REVIVAL
SUNDAY
through Oct: 29, 7:30 each

YOu Are Invited"

Members and families of
the Middleport-Pomeroy
Area Branch of the American
Association of U n i~er sity
Women will atten~ services
in a group Sun~a y at 10:20

SPECIAL SERVICES
Special services will be
held Friday 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport United Pen·
tecostal · Ch urch, with the
Rev. and Mrs. E. L. Freeman
as honored guests.
The Rev. Freeman is the
Regional ·Field Supervisor to
Africa, where .he and Mrs.
Freeman ha ve served in the
missionary field for 30 years.
Th ere are 413 ,000 ,000
people on the African continent. With the major
·languages bein g English,
French and Portuguese along
with many other nativ e
dialects.
The Rev. Freeman will be
the speaker f0r the Friday
evening service. Slides will
also be shown.
Pastor William Knitt e l
invites the public.

co.

a.ni . at Trinity Church ' home
church of the president. Mrs.
Dorothy Woodard .
The group attendance is a
part of the observanc-e of
AAUW Week which was
declared by Gov. James
Rhooes, Oct. 14-21.
F'ounded in Boston in 1882
by 65 women coll eg e
graduates, the AAUW now
had 190,000 members located
in every state, the District of
Colwnbia . Puerto Rico and
Guam. Headquarters is a
mooern , eight-story building
in the nation 's capital, just a
short walk [rum the Kennedy
Center. It hou~es a cum-

AWARDED DEGREE
Ellen Sugerman Bell of
Pomeroy, has been awarded
the Master's degree in
Librarianship from the Case
Western Reserve University
School of Library Science.
She is one of 24 students to
receive advanced degrees
from the school in August.
All graduates are encouraged to participate in
commencement ceremonies
in May.

·-

.

,

I

::::

'J

11

RACINE-A program on
Francis S.:ott Key , author of
the national anthem was
presented by Mrs. Cor~ Webb
at a meeting of the Past Of.
firers Club of Racine
Chapter , Order of the
Eastern Star, held at the
Shriners Park, Racine.
The meeting was preceded
by a covered dish dinner.
Using "Mr. Key's Poem"
as her topic, Mrs. Webb
related the story of ·his
assistance to a young doctor
who had been captured by the
British during the War of 1812
which took him aboa rd a
British ship. She told of how
Key obtained cnidenlials
from President Madison to
get aboard the. ship where he
was detained due to a sea atlack against Fort McKinley .
The inspriation, she said, for
JSey to write the Star Spangled Banner came When after
the battle, he saw flying over
F.ort McKinley the stars and
stripes.
Mrs. Webb noted that

through the years some have
wanted to change the national
anthem because of the range
of the music, while others
have noted that it is a melody
to a popular British ~rinking
song . .
It wasn't until 1931.!hat it
was adopted as the ofiicia)
nati opal anthem of the United
States. Mrs. Webb noted that
several verses have been,
written and added to it, but
none have been officially
adopted. Members discuss~
the anthem an~ laking part
were William Stewart, Ralph ·
Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Grinun, Mrs. Getta Simpson,
Mrs. Bernard Diddle, and
Mrs. Louise Stewart.
Mrs. Stewart . gave devotions and there was silent
prayer. During the business
meeting plans were made for·
the annual Christmas party
to be held at the Shriners
Park Dec. 7, at 7 p.m. There
will be a gift exchange at that
time.

~

.-.....

..._.

... .,_.

Cynthia Cotterill honored '~.::: : ;:;:Fri;;d;;,,,, ci;;k:: : ::;;:::::;:,:::::::,:lr

1
a p :/: Cottenll
A shower for Cynthia Ann
, mfant ~aughter of
By Helen and Sue Hottel :~:~) Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Cotterill,
was held recently at the

.

NATIUNWIDF.TEENSURVt:Y IPART 3J
.
T oday we contmuc Generatron Rap·s 19i8 Surwy on Unmarned Teen-agers.
In our first 119741 Nationwide Teen Survey, correspondents
told us the .generalron gap wasn 't near·ly as great as picture~
by the media. Our new 1978 study paints an even more positive
prcture.
· Four years ago •. 61 percent reported they had good give-andtake eommumcatwn with their parents. Today 's figure stairds
at 77 perc-en!, and a whopping 90 percent feel their parents
" have done a good job raising t hem ."
. To the question, "Do you plan to be less or more strict in br,
~ngrng .~P .you.r chr~dren?'.' 41 percent chose "less" : 28 percent

more Ias compared wrth 50 and 15 perc-ent respectively in
1974/ . The rest 131 percent) voted "no change" : their parents'
way seem~ frne wrth them. These statistics tie. in with tbe
growmg conservatrsm we noted in Part I : 13 percent more
than formerly insist they will be '·tougher" than their parents
Ill rarsrng .therr own brood ; and fewer young people today feel
theu· upbrmgmg IS oppressively rigid.
·
. They are also "gelling through" more often : "Via di scussum, can you sometimes change your parents' viewpoints]"
br·ought 76 percent affirmative answers, lin 1974, only 53 percent held much hope here.)
Asked,."Do you basically agree with your parents ' views on
most maJor rssues'" 75 percent checked "Yes." Compare this
wrlh 40 percent m our previous teen study.
And 83 percent said they "generally go along with parental
rules a~1d ~ec1srons, even though they ~on '! always agree."
But, as 10 1974, a number added, "I don't have any choice' "
.. Do you lhmk they understand you most of the time? " Some
66 percent of the current crop gave parents a plus-mark on this
questron. The vote was 53 percent " aye" four years ago.

··.

ECin,~te,arcs·phtr.eisle

United

Metodi~t

streamers
decorated a backdrop and
gift table. A play pen', gift
from the choir members who
hosted the shower , held the
gifts. The refreslunent table
was c~ntered with a Wynken,
Blinken an~ Nod~ piece. The
cake was ~ecorated with pink
stork and small plastic baby
iiems m pastel shades.
Games were played with
prizes going to Beverly Will,
Elizabeth Davis, Agnes Dixyn and Frankie Hunnel.
Dorothy Smith won the door
prize.
Cake , nuts, mints, and
punch were serve~ .
··
·

Attehdrng were those nam·
ed,thehunoredKuestandher
mother, and Mrs. Delores
Will , Mrs. Carol Ohlinger· and

~

Laura, Mrs. Kathy Corbitt,
Gail and Shellie, Mrs.
Beatrice Buck, Miss Helen
D'dvis, Miss Enuna IAJu
Davis, Miss Joyce Davis,
Mrs. BeUlah Utterbac~, Miss
Fre~a Ueving;· Lisa Pullins,
Mrs. Jennie Warth and Amy,
Mrs. Dorothy Warth, · Patty
Edwar~s. and Kelly Wilson.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Susie Pullins, Mrs. Marjorie
Bowen, Mrs. Alma Young,
Brian Will, Mr. and Mrs .
·Thomas Bentz , I.eona and Ed
King, Carl and Mabel Moore,
Mabel Kesterson, Carl' and
Rachel Jennings, Karyn and
Dale Davis an~ Chris, Paula
Hall, Mrs. Harriet Spencer,
Mrs. Ruby Frick, and Mrs.
Addie Brown .

1\ T
1

"e w Haven Women
hold October meeting

goods to pantry, names1
·(
.
!!i nominating committee
Iii

~

.\j\

~:

~

Additional canned goods
were added to the church
pantry and the nominating
conunittee was named when
Friendly Circle met Tuesday
evening at Trinity Church.
Miss Elizabeth Fick named
Miss Mary V. Reibel and
Miss Mary E. Chapman to the
l!o!llinating mmmittee. A
report was given on the
cookbooks sold and early
planning of Christmas projects was started. Members
will bring ·their Christmas
stocking funds to the next
meeting.
· Mrs. Dorothy Woodard announced that members of the
American Association of
li'riversity Women will attend worship services at
Shintoism
The ancestral religion of
Japan, Shinto developed out
of primitive nature and
ancestor worship sometime
before the sixth century,
when written records first apo
peared. The term "Shinto" is
ihe Chinese equivalent of
"the way of the gods," and
came into use at that time to
distinguish it from the Bud·
dhism that was then being
imported from the Cbinese
mainland.

Trinity Church Sunday morning.
Miss Fick presented a preChristams program ba sed on
the be-alli!udes entitled
" Blessed Are the Peace
Makers." She Closed with a
prayer of St. Francis of
Assisi.
Mrs. Rober! Wilson an~
Mrs. Opha Offutt served a
salad course to the 16
me!llbers attending using a
fall motif in the decorations.

MODULAR
HOMES
By
All American
MEETS
•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
•FHA &amp;VA
SEE OUR LOT
MODEL TODAY

NEW HAVEN - The New Exe c utive Co mmittee
Haven Women of the Church meeting would be held on
of God held their October Thursday, Oct. 26 , beginning
meeting in the Missionary at 7 p.m. and will be held in
Building with Mrs. Kenneth the Missionary Building.
Greene, Mrs. Cecil CoMingIt was reported that ad·
.As in 1974, the subject teens ~ould discuss least comfortably ham and Mrs. Doc Fields ditional silverware had been
wrth parents was masturbation, with venereal disease and sex serving as hostesses. The purchased for the kitchen.
was
beautifully Members were remir.ded to
second and lhrrd on the liot. Many wrute, " We can talk about· room
in
keeping
with the bring birthday gifts for a
decorated
nythrng under the sun -so long as we're discussing.others. It's
Halloween
season.
A
costume
will
begin
at
4
p.m.
petition
patient at Lakin State
Final plans for an overa different matter 1f I'm personally involved,..
.
ni g ht trip to
New Saturday at the New . Most yo1111g people shiel~ their folks from first-hand fa cts of party was held prior to the Hospital.
Hostesses
for
the
Philadelphia for band com- Philadelphia High School Irk Three-fourths still believe the el~ers are " very firmly meeting with Mrs . Cecil
Grant's Demise
petition were made when the Quaker Stadium.
In 1884 the collapse of the
agamsl premarrlal sex for girls," and half guess this extends Cunningham, Mrs. Do.c November meeting will be
Randy Hunt, band director, to boys also. The estimate has scarcely changed since the ear- Fields, Mrs. Fred Taylor, and Thehna and Kay Grueser, Grant [ Ward investment
Meigs Band Boosters. met
reported
on the suecess of tag ly
Monday night at Meigs High
' 70s .,
.
.., Mrs. George Reed winning Susie Bess, and Martha house left ex-President
day
in
Middleport,
Pomeroy
School.
Ulysses S. Grant penniless.
Not many of today's youth considere~ their parents prizes. Mrs. Lewis Dodson Grueser.
an~
Rutland.
A
diseusion
was
A report was given by those He then began his "Personal
The band members will
··ovt:!ranxious" or "OVerpermissive," but 37 percent termed conducted several games
with the prizes going to Mrs. attending the State Prayer Memoirs," writing while ill of
travel to New Philadelphia held on having a new trophy thein "overprotective." Near two-thirds, however sai~
110G-E. Main
Doc
Fields, Mrs . Cecil Retreat held in Charleston. A cancer and completing them
ease
built
for
the
band
following the Waverly foot"They're okay most of the time." (1974'- 43 percent. 1 '
'
ball game Friday night. Com- trophies.
Those who graded their elders "Not much interested in me" Cunningham and Mrs. Wyllis very inspirational and in· four days before his death on
Pomeroy, Ohio
format.i.ve retreat was en- July 23, 1885. Grant was
were (like our 1974 vintage I apt to dislike themselves and their Davis.
The meeting was called to joyed by all attending.
hves.
buried in a tomb on Riverside
992 -7034
by the president, Mrs.
order
St ewardship director, Drive, N.Y., where his wife
Fortunately, this group is small. Here are three questions'
whose posrllve answers refute the idea that teen-age is all David Fields, Jr., and prayer Patty Maynard, received the also lies.
MASTERS' NIGHT
was led by Mrs . Rena Penny-a-Day money .
How come the railroads are crazy, mixed-up misery:
Middleport Masonic Lodge
Johnson.
,
Missionary
Education
Do you think you've had 'a pretty successful life so far' .
363, F&amp;AM will hold the a thing of the past, but
Mrs.
Fred
Taylor
reported Director Becky Reed,
1978-86
percent
1974-86
percent
Do
you
like
yourself'
become
ab-so-lute-ly
essenannual past masters' night at
that the Group Bible Study is presenied the program. The
.
1974-88 percent
7 p.m. Tuesday. All Master tial if anything shuts them 197Q -.94 percent .
Outsrde of occasiOnal bad limes, do you enjoy being a teen- continuing and the next theme was "C~venant Living
down for 24 hours ?
Masons are invited .
meeting will be held at the in Time of Change." The
ager?
home of Mrs. Lewis Dodson.
closed
with
1974-92 percent She also reported that the prog ram
~-----------. . 1978 -95 percent
devotions given by Delores
Opinions on drugs haven't changed in four years. Aske~ hour from 9-10 a.m. had been Taylor and singing, " Blest Be
selected for the Prayer Vigil The Tie That Binds." Circle
whr~H they considered the greater teen problem : rllegal drugs
or hquor- 57 percent checked the former, 43 percent, booze. to be held on Friday, prayer was led by Fay
Yet many young people reported family conflicts over drink· Deeember 22. Plans will be Carpenter.
announced later.
Members attending were
mg.
.
~I!:D[Q)a§~@W
It was aMounced that an Mrs. Rena Johnson, Mrs. Iva
Nearly one-fifth of our letters included such comments as
Real Armadillos would never bite your ankle
Capehart, Mrs. Loretta
"Dad (Mom ) is an alcoholic" ... ''My parents are upset
- they're softly padded from head to tail. inside
Ste~art,
Mrs . Roberta
because
I
drmk
but
who
doesn
'tincluding
them•"
...
"I
gel
and
o ut. Real Armadillos will not hide
WITH
Maynard, Mrs. Fay Cardrunk every weekend but usually keep it down to one a day unin your closet - they'll
penter, Mrs . . Margaret
til Frrday" ... "I worry because my folks drfnk and smoke so
keep right rn step with
Ta ble
in
Ravenswood Dodson, Mrs. Orpha Fields,
much" ...
you wherever you 're
Evidently because alcohol is legal and "dope" isn't, teens beginning at 7 p.m. Members Mrs . Grace Cunningham,
off to. because ...
OLD MAN WINTER IS
assume the latter rs. more dangerous, even though they are to contact Mrs. David · Mrs. Bonnie Fields, Mrs.
Simonton If they plan to at- Nonna Greene, Mrs. Eleanor
ob.;erve hquor's sometimes disastrous effects far more often .
A TIME AWAY
Real Armadillos
Davis, Mrs. Delores Taylor,
At)east half of our young correspondents did not inclu~e tend.
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner Mrs. Becky Reed, Mrs. Patty
are made
manJuana on therr "dangerous drug" li~t : they felt it should
Maynard, and Miss Kay
only by
be legalized- or deeriminalized- nationally. But they're pull- won the door prize.
Others attending the Grueser. Guests were Mrs.
mg away from prlls and hard drugs, as they 've "seen too many
meeting
besides
the Alice Kerns, Mrs. Marcia
burn--outs."
hostesses,
Mrs.
Clark,
Mrs.
Sladewski, and Miss Andy
Not one menlione~ angel d~st , which had sudden notoriety a
Burris
and
Mrs.
Weaver,
Greene.
year ago.Is rt already becommg passe'
were Mrs. Carroll Adams,
N. Second Ave.
Jr., Mrs. Douglas Miller,
Middleport, 0.
Mrs. DaMie Harbour, Mrs.
OPERA TICKETS
David Fields, Jr ., Mrs.
ATHENS
Ohio
William C. Gibbs, Mrs. University's Opera DepartNEW HAVEN- Mrs. Mel Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. ment will present two mnClark, Mrs. Pete Burris and Roy Jones, Mrs. Larry Wiley, temporary operas by Marc
Mrs. Chester Weaver were Mrs. David Simonton, Mrs. Bucci, "Tale for a Deaf Ear"
hostesses at the October Harold Moxley, Mrs. Phil and "The Dress," at 8:30
meeting of the Nehaclima Batey, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, p.m. on Oct. 20 and 21 and at 2
Garden Club held at the New Mrs. James N. Roush, and p.m. on Oct. 22 in Recital
Mrs. James Lockhart, Hall .
Haven Public Library.
The meeting was called to members and guests, Mrs.
Tickets will be available at
Belly Ohlinger
order by the president,. Mrs. Fred Batey arid Mrs. Hobie the door and may be reserved
Pomeroy, 0.
102
E.
Main
·
Roy Jones. Devotions were Lowe.
by calling 594-6587.
given by Mrs. Weaver.
The secretary's report was
given by Mrs. Douglas Miller
· and the treasurer's report by
Mrs. Dannie Harbour.
The 1\lini Flower Show was
discussed and thank you
cards were read from the
judges of the show. The show
was
sponsored
by
the Nehaclima Garden Clu~
and the New Haven Garden
Club. It was the general
consensus of the club that it
was very successful. The
president thanked everyone
~0
that participated and helped
in any way .
Final plans were made to
attend · the Ohio-Guyan
District meeting to be held in
•••WITH YOUR PURCHASE OF REGULAR PRICED
Huntington . • Members
planning to attend are Mrs.
MERCHANDISE YOU WILL RECEIVE A RAINCHECK. ·, •••
,
Roy Jones, Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner,- Mrs .. David
IN THE AMOUNT OF 10% OF YOUR PURCHASE, TO
Fields, k, Mrs. Wllllam C.
Gibha, Mrs. Chester Weaver
ONLY
and Mrs. Harold Bumgarner.
IE USED ON YOUR NEXT PUiCHASE. OFFER GOOD
Members
voted
to
decorate
.·' Jocket diameter 20'12'', height from floor Includes
tbelr yearbooks and bring to
FROM OCTOBER 13TH THRU OCTOBER 31ST. A
nipples 32", nipple size 3!4", between nipples 8",
tbe December meeting lor
height of electric outlet 24lf• 11 , Immersion type 4500
judging: Mrs. David Fielda,
wall lower and upper twin elements. Capacity 52
Jr.
printed the yearbooks for
GREAT WAY TO START YOUR FALL SHOPPING OR
gat, well in5ulated white enameled outer jacket. 5the club.
Y"EAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY.
· Members voted to give $15
CHRISTMAS SHOPPI~GI
to CARE project entitled
'"Operation
Growing
Challenge." It was also voted
to have a Christmas Bazaar
.. . the. date and place to be
aMounced later. Mrs. Harold
--- -Moxley reported that she has
126 E. MAIN STREET
drawn up a plot for the land·
seeping of the Medical
I.
Phone 9Y2-2811
Center.
110 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
POMEROY, 0.
It was announced that the
117.00
REG.
PRICE
November meeting will be
held at Mrs. Peery's Bounty

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

·•EARRINGS
•CHAINS
•PINS
•ANKLETS
• RINGS
"FOR lHE MEN"
DUDE-NECK CHAINS

WITH
FREE GIFT POUCH.
COMPLETE STOCK

Armadillos

&amp;ET
READY
FOR

RETREAD SNOW TIRES

'

lARGE ~ t1fiNERAL
sELEcTION

AT

T&lt;eiiiiiettr McCullough; R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday t0 :30 to 12 :30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992·2955 .

REASoNABLE

TIRE SALES

PRICES.

Nehaclima Garden Club met

fJJlorian QWni,;.

Friendly. Service

E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

Open Nightsti 119

Marguerite's Shoes ·

YO
BEST
BUY

I

GET READY FOR
OLD MAN WINTER

\

to a potluck meal Saturday

-STORM WINDOWS

evening, Oct. 21, held at the

-CAULKING
-HEAT TAPES
-WOOD OR COAL BUiNING
STOVES
.A!&gt;'..-

ADDED SAVINGS FOR YOU!

ELECTRIC
WATER HEATER
'13795

•

plenty of room, tables, and

RAIN CHECK SPECIAL

0 •

52 GAL glass lined

-WEATHER STRII'PING
PIPE INSULATION
..
.

evening meal. "You're Invited"

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

MOR-FLO

--t'PLUS MORE

chairs. Festivities will begin

GAS MODELS

30 GAliON

. .,
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8:00p.m .

~

'e,,,,.,,,,n
,,,,,,,,,,,.e
_, , ,,,,,r,,,,,,,,a,,,,,,,,,t:'"'''': ::o,,,,,:::::n::::,:,,,,,,,,,,R
,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,:::::-

.. ....

P_lans made for overnight trip

at 6:00P.M.

992-2126

,

prehensive ·library and archival collection on women.
AAUW is involved in the advancement of women's
education, commimity and
cultural interests, international relations, and legislation .
ANOmER SUIT
CINCINNATI (UP!)- For
the second lime in less than a
week,l! lawsuit has been filed
in connection with the
government's 1976 swine flu
vaccination program.
Elaine
Harden
of
Cincinnati filed a $50,000 suit
in Hamilton County Commoo
Pleas Col!rl claiming she
suffered a disease affecting
nerves in her arms and legs
after being va&lt;:cinated Nov:
18, 1976.
The suit named the U.S.
government, the city of
Cincinnati and the Cincinnati
Board of Health.
The other .suit c;~me last
week from a Mason , Ohio,
widow who· claimed in a
$500,000 lawsuli ihat the
vaccination her 73-year old
husband received . Oct. 12,
1976, caused him to die the
next day.

1

"Your Chevy Deafer" ·

!["!"'''' ''G

·.
. .
(
IW'nsents
piW'o~aiW'/Jm on:: :
6, u
:::
P
c. c·ott Ke
.LD'{IW'/Jnc;s
U
VI
~1}

For Fall

block of Pomeroy. There is

•4695

Mrs. Cora lVebb

the Lasting, Loving Gift

Don't Cook your Saturday

Orchid Inn located at the upper

7- Tite Dail1 Sentinel. Mi~dleport-Pu·~~ruy, 0 .. Thurs~ay, Od. 19. J!I7R

American Association of Ut}iversity
Women to attend church services

~

Ya'll corne tt,o\V.
Sponsored by the Democratic Party.

'

40 GALLON

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
'·

*LEVI BIG BELL

JEANS
'12 99

~ ·

OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8 P.M.

I

,,

•·

�-- ... -......_.

-.

.. - --- -. - - .. - -··-·• .......
~

··-

-

..,,_ ...

. .....

'

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday , Ol'l. 1 ~1.1978

Dorcas C~rcle plans
holiday projects

with DOE for the past three
years to find bow much gas
Two mdti-million dollar programs . can
he produced at what cost

Medicare recipients
don't have to retire

Several holiday projects at the meeting with Mrs . An·
were planned when the Oor· lhony giving devotions entitlcas Circle of the B. H. San· ed "Autumn Hills" witl1
born Mis,;ionary Society of scripture from Psalm 121 and
the Middleport First Baptist 122 .
Church met at the home of
Announced were World
Mrs. Dorothy Anthony .
Conununity Day of Church
Residents of the Meigs Women United on Nov. 3, and
County Infirmary will be the Baptist Women's Day of
remembered with a gift of Prayer on Nov . 6. The while
money and a card lor Hallo· .cross ~ uota was presented
ween, cmd on Thanksgiving and plans we1·e made to fill it.
the circle 'will send a tray of Members will remember ·
fruit to those at the Young's Mrs. Lettie Roush with cards.
Mrs. Alwil da · Werner
home.
Arrangements were made pl'esenled the program entitlto send a gift of money to ed ··Health, Hunger a nd
Jolm Kennedy, the Baptist Hwnani ly "" taken from the
scholarship student. · Mrs. Rotary magazine. Other:; a t·
Manning Kloes presented in· lending were Mrs. Kalhern
formation on the boy who at- Metzger, Mrs. Beulah While,
tends Judson College. Some Mrs. Pearl Hollman, Mrs.
money will also be sent to Martha Klem , Mrs . Katie An·
Mrs. Allen Stewa rt, a foreign lhony, Mrs. Sara h Fowler,
missionary , for her birthday.
and Mrs. Elizabeth Searles.
Mrs. Milton Hood prPsirlt&gt;d

Polly Cramer

Many people thinlt they and we cannot reach each
have to retire to get Medicare person individually to remind
at age 65. Well, that just isn't them . So we're asking lor
carton together mo;t carefulHow to
true! You can apply for your help.
ly and do not put cartons in a
Remember , be su re to store clothes
Medicare two or three
damp basement or a too-hot
.
attic. -POLLY
months before you reach age apply for Medicare two or
65 and you can sign up even three months before vou're 65
DEAR POLLY - A good
DEAR POLLY - What is
though you plan to work past even if you are not. retiring the best way to pack 1i1Y idea lor a temporary case lor
and if you know someone who da ughter's baptisma l gown, eyeglasses is a vinyl check
your 65th birthday.
If you wa it until the month will soon reach that " magic ba by afgha n· . a nd other book holder.- L.S.B.
alter your birthday, your age" please spread the word favorite ba by clothing? Could
DE AR POLLY - Always
·Medicare
cove rage
is about Medicare.
·wash
off the lop of a can
I use a plastic gar bage bag inFor more inform ation side a large box' Will I need before opening it. Sometimes
delayed . In fact, the longer
you wait to apply fo r contact your Social Security to add molhballs 1 How do I the lids fall into the opened
Medicare, the longer you wait Office. ·
keep the l"hite clothes from cans and any dirt and dust on·
them go into the food. When
to be covered by Medicare's
turning yellow1 - J UDY
valu able hospita l a nd
opening
frozen juice cans
DEAR J UDY - Probably
medical insurance.
the most important thing to rinse the inside of the lid with
There are two parts to
remember when packing a bit of water as lots of the
Medicare - Part A is the
away clothes is that they juice clings to the top. Swish
N ew Haven Personal s
hospital insurance and Part B
The West Virginia Warnell must be scrupulously clean. out the bottom of your !aWlis the doctor 's. insurance. The of The Church of God held Also there should be no starch dry detergent container
only premium you pa y lor their State Board meeting in any such clothes. If clothes because granules always clMedicare coverage is $8.20 and Annual Prayer Retreat seem clean 1t might be well to· ing to the bottom of such
per month which covers the at the Main Street Church of give them a good airing and boxes.
Never forget the cooling
cost of Part B. The other pa rt God in Charleston . The theme sunning. Use an extra large
is paid for by the nation's of the ret reat was "Slop The container or carton such as and soothing value of com
income tax.
World, God ... I Want to Get those that stores get from starch. Mix a little in your
Usually, when someone Off!" !'ro. Marie Strpng of dress and fur manufacturers. dusting powder, especially
retires and starts drawing Anderson, Indiana was the Make as few folds as possible · during the hot months. .
their monthly social security guest Spea ker. Members in the ga rments. Stuff MRS. A.V.A .
DEAR
POLLY
When
benefit, this $8.20 premium is att endin g from the New sleeves, inside of dressf etc.,
deducted from tl)eir check . If Hav en WCG were Mrs. with blue tissue and then transferring eggs from the
you plan to continue working, William C. Gibbs, Mrs. David completely cover them with carton to the refrigerator
however, and do not expect to F ields, Jr ., Mrs. Iva more tis,;ue . This will help moisten the fingertips to prereceive monthly checks from Capehart , Mrs. Fred Taylor, prevent yellowing. Any vent an egg slipping out of
Social Sec urity , Medica re Mrs. Rena Johnson, Mrs. woolen clothes or baby your hand. - LINDA M.
Polly will send you one of
will send you a bill for the George Reed, Mrs. Thelma sweaters, etc., that are knit·
he
r s ign ed than k-you
premiums ev ery three Grueser,
Mrs .
James ted with wool could have
months. It's also a smart idea Maynard, Mrs. Pansy Fry, mothballs spread around in newspaper coupon clippers if
to know what changes if any and Mrs. Cecil Cunningham. the separate box you would she uses your favorite
to expect in your company or The retreat was a spiritual put them in. Most wool yams Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
private insurance coverage experience lor all, attending. a1·e mothproofed today but her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
when you reach age 65.
you might feel better to use POINTERS in care of this
THAT MAGIC AGE
Mrs. David Fields, Jr., them. Tape all open edges of newspaper.
In the past, the Internal local president of the New
Revenue Service sent us the Haven Women of the Church r---o:-----------~--~·
names of people who would of God, attended the National
soon be 65. Social Security in Board meeting· of the WCG
tum wrote or called those 'held in Anderson, Indiana.
people reminding them to Mrs. Fields serves on the
By Alma Marshall
·'
apply for Medicare. Because National WCG Nominating
of the Privacy Act, we can no
Committee . She was aclonger obtain age information companied by her husband,
MASON - Mrs. Fred Spencer presented the Mason
David Fields, Jr.
Extension
Homemakers lesson, "Wake Up Get Out and
CAVE CITY, Ky . (UP!) Live
,"
when
the group met on Tuesday evenu;g at the f~er
Mrs. Virginia Doyle, mother
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kerns
Lewis
home
on
Brown St. She pointed out what to do if a fire
of World Series standout and Mrs. Marcia Sledewski of
in
the
home.
She said the whole family should have an
strikes
Brian Doyle, said Wednesday Wyandotte, Michigan are
escape
plan.
The
club
members made a rough diagram. and
that her son's religtous visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
mapped out two separate routes from ,every room In tbeir
convictions helped him adapt Doc Fields.
homes. Special attention was paid to bedrooms where fire is
to occasional feuding among
most li!&lt;ely to trap you. In case of fire before opening a door
the world champion New
Miss Lisa Davis of Hun·
test the door to fmd if intense heat and 51Iloke may be on
York Yankees.
tington spent the weekend
·
"He gels along fine with with her parents, Mr. and other side - one breath can kill.
The
lesson
illustration
prepared
by
Cooperative
Exte~on
Billy Marlin and Reggie Mrs. Wyllis Davis of New
Service,
West
Virginia
University,
points
out·
that
if
you
expect
Jackson and all of them," Haven. Miss Davis is at·
fire
on
otber
side,
don
'I
open
the
door.
But
if
you
think
It
is safe
said Mrs. Doyle. "He's a tending the Huntington
-open
it
cautiously.
Brace
shoulder
against
door.
Keep
head
religious boy. He knows how School of Beauty Culture.
to
one
Side.
Open
door
slightly
ready
to
slam
it
if
any
heat
to adapt to those situations."
and smoke rush in.
U you are caught In smoke and heat, keep low and take
short breaths, because heat rises and air is better closer to the
floor .
Officers for the club year 1978-79 were installed by Mrs.
Laurene Le\vis and they are president, Mrs. John Marshall·
vice president, Mrs. Matilda Noble; secretary, Mrs. Georg~
Carson and treasurer, Mrs. WIWam Zerkle. ·
.
The president announced that the area leadership meeting
will be held on November 2a! Camp Vlrgll Tate. Reservations
should be made by October 26. Registration fee is $1.
.
The secretary's report was given by Mrs. George Carson
and Mrs. William Zerkle, treaslD'er, reported.
Thanks was extended to Mrs. Laurene Lewia of Clifton for
having served as president for the past two years and to Mrs.
Dennis Harris and Mrs. Malildi Noble for making favors for
Achi~vement Day which will be held on Oct. 19 at Holld&amp;y Inn.
VolWtleers f&lt;r the 1979 Scrapbook are Laurene Lewis,
Laura Johnson, Joyce Carson and Mrs. J . Marshall.
Mrs. Roberta Young presented the devotionals, following
the Pledge of Allegiance to our Flag. She gave a reading.
entitled, "Autumn Promise." Scripture Isaiah 46:Uwas read
and she concluded with group singing and prayer.
Mrs. Landon Smith gave a Family Ufe report on places
she visited while on lour, and the life style of some of the
people.
Mrs. CecU Smith of the Safety Conunittee, look the group
next door to Mason's Public Library, where a film "Home and
Property Protection" was shown by Mrs. Ray Proffitt.
On November 14, Mrs. Clara WilliamiJ is lesson leader. The
aff!lir will be puUuck, and will meet at the former Lewis home
at noon . Mrs. Alburtice Younli_is devotional leader.
Hostesses were Mrs. Roberta Young and Mrs. Evelyn
Stewart. Attending was one guest, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, . and
members, Mrs. Ramooa Sydenstricker, Mrs. Fred Spencer
Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Cecll Smith, Mrs. John Marshall:
Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. George
Carson, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter and Mrs. Laurene Lewis.
Mason and area penonala
Roy Brinker, a retired employee of Ohio River Co., is a

I
i

a'

u.;

E·A NEWSPAPER

YOU OWN YOUR
OWN BUSINESS!
You are an INPEPENDENT CONTRACTOR·· You buy
your newspapers from us, and In turn sell to our·
home Subscribers, keeping the diHerence as your
profit.

OWN YOUR -OWN
NEWSPAPER ROUTE
IN MIDDLEPORT NOWI_
CALL 992-2156

-

I

THE DAILY SENTINEL

from Devonian Shale," he
said .

revealel by Columbia Gas

POLLY.$ POINTERS

I Mason. County News Notes I

KNOW YOUR CARRIER - Brian Allen 12 son of
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Allen, Syracuse, has be~n carrier
m the village of Syracuse over two years. Brian is a
seventh grade student at Racine Junior High School. He
plays football , basketball and baseball. As a hobby he
collects Avon bottles.

.. .

BUSINESS OPENED -A new Shenang Springs on Route 7 is open after almost a year. It burned down in
October of 1977. Owner is Bill Lehew, Pomeroy.

·Forces pound guerrilla bases
RETURNS - L-Cpl. James Ferrell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ollford · Ferrell, Syracuse, has returned from
Okinawa where he has been stationed for th~ past year.
After spending a 30-day leave with .his family, he returned
to Camp Pendleton, San Diego, Calif., where he will
cootinue his training in combat engineering for the next
two years. James is a 1975 graduate of Southern High
School and Meigs Mining class. ·

HiliJnd Chapel extends invitation
The Hiland Chapel recently
ac-quired a church bus and is
inviting all those not attending chur ch to worship with
them. Transportation can be
arranged by contacting
either the Rev. George Caslil,
pastor, at 992-7144 or Thomas
O'Bryan at 773.,';790.
Services include SWlday
school at 10 a.m.; evening
services at 7:30 p.m. and
prayer meeting at 7:30 on
Thursday. The congregation

recently held a potluck dinner
at the church. Attending were
the Rev. and Mrs. George
Casto, Pomeroy; Mrs. Yogger, Hobson; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas O'Bryan and Travis,
Mason, W. Va.; Mrs. Dorothy
Gibbs and Wendy, Mrs. Helen
Kimes J Miss
Trecia' Kimes '
.
Mrs. Nancy Kimes and R&lt;ly, .
Scott, Steve, Mark and Todd, ·
and Alfred and Marcia
Rowley, Hartford, W. Va .

RESERVATIONS FOR SEMINAR
Reservations f&lt;r a professional education seminar on cancer
update to be held · at the Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday are to be
made by calling 992-2104 and asking for Mrs. Rhonda Dailey,
R.N.
NlD'ses, nursing students, clergy, physicians, pharmacists
physical therapists, respiratory therapists, PIIYchologists'
social workers, dietitians and other health professiona~
should attend the meeting. A lWlch will be served at noon for
$2.50. The seminar is sponsored by the Meigs County Unit of
the American Cancer Society.
.patient at United States PHS in Baltimore, Md. His address is
US.PHS 3100 Wyman Park Drive, Balti.inore, Md.
Mrs. Helen Mawhirter and son, Jason of Colwnbus
visited over lbe weekend with her parents, Mr: and Mrs. And}~
VanMeter.
·'·

JOG
ON
OVER

Active Jogging
Suits
Boys' Sizes
9-24 mo .
2T-4T Toddler
4-7
Girls' sizes
9-24 mo.
2T-4T
6-6X

March with three local black
By JACQUES CLAFIN
SALISBURY, Rhodesia leaders.
Although there is a far
(.UPI) - Rhodesian forces
pounded -black guerrilla greater number of Mugabe's
bases in both Mozambique ZANLA guerrilas operating
and Zambia today , raiding a · inside Rhodes ia, military
major base camp on tbe comm a nd ers c on si der
ZIPRA
outskirtS of the Zambian Nkom o ' s
capital ol Lusaka in an
unprecedented display of
armed might.
Thrusting 62 miles into
Zambia in tbe deepest Rhode·
sian penetration of that
coWttry ever reported, the
force s struck what the
military command called tbe
main headquarters of Joshua
COLUMBUS - The 69th
Nkomo's Zimbabwe Peoples
Annual
Convention of the
Revolutionary Army.
Ohio
Association
of Rea ltors
The base, known as "FC"
recently
concluded
here was
camp and located at
a
source
of
valuable
ideas fo r
Westland&lt;! Fann, 12 miles
the
members
of
the
north of Lusaka, is widely
Southeastern
Ohio
Board
of
believed to have housed
Realtors.
Cuban advisers along )Vith
Board Vice President Willis
guerrillas.
T. Leadingham sa id; " AtResidents of Lusaka
reported hearing loud tending the convention is
explosions at about 8.30 a .m. important from the stand·
and some said their homes point that we come away with
a bett er feeling for the
were rocked.
A mil(tary e&lt;mmunique de- programs a nd projects of·
scribed the base as "the main fered by the Ohio Association
controlling military - programs that can mea n
headquarters from which the difference between going
terrorist operations ... are into a professional situation
plal\neq and have been cold, or being prepared to
launched against Rhodesia." meet the needs of a potential
It said the forces that property buyer or seller."
Lea dingham noted that
carried out the morning
amon
g · th e
impor tant
attack against the base 62
he
will relate
developments
miles Inside Zambia "are
to
members
of
his
board
upon
returning to their bases."
his
return
to
Gallipolis
where
It was not immediately
known whether groWtd troops he lives and conducts his real
were imlolved in the raid, and estate business is OAR's plan
new
there were no imediate to distribut e a
"
The
Principal
publication,
rep&lt;rts of 'casualties.
As the operation was Wider ·Broker's Newsletter" on a
way In zambia, Rhodesia 's regular basis.
He said, "this publication
westem nelghba-, residents
will
mean a lot to the broker
.in the Umtali district
memb
ers of our board
reported that Rhodesian
because
it is to be filled with
Canberra jet bombers were
articles
offering practica l,
streaking across the eastern
day-to-day
a dvi ce to t he
border on tbe second day of
broker on how to conduct his
strikes against insurgent
business more effectively."
hases in Mozambique.
"OAR's new emphasis on
Operating on the Western
training materials for those
front with bases in Zambia
working in our industry will
. are guerrillas loyal to Nkomo
while in the east, with camps
in
Mozambique,
are
members of Robert Mugabes
Zimbabwe African National
Liberation Army.
·
Nkomo and Mugabe c&lt;Head
, the Patriotic Front Alliance,
which has rejected the
"internal" major ity rule ·
, agreement Prime Minister
/ Ian Smith concluded. in

revolutionary army a greater
military threat.
They
say
Nkomo's
guer r illas, with. training
facilities in Zambia, Angola
and the Soviet Union, have .
been fa shioned into a
coh es i ve well-tr ai n e d

Leadingham attends
recent convention

military for ce by Russian and
Cuban instructors.
Today's twin offensive appeared aimed at blunting the
guerrillas ' expected 1978
rainy season push.
Besides pre-empting an expected guerr illa offensive,
Rhodesia 's raids were
expected to have the effect of
underscoring the war's rapid
escalation on the eve of a
crucial meeting in the United
Sta tes between Prime
Minister Ian Smith and
British a nd American
off icials.

COLUMBUS
The
Colum bia Gas ;ystem
announced today II multimillion dollar pro~ms to
improve recovery onatural
gas from the gas-:h, but
l ight l y COm!ESSed
u n d erground 1ha l e
fo r mations t hat 1der li e
much of Appalachil
Marvin E. Whit· board
chairma n of Columt Gas of
Ohio,. sa id prenina ry
agreements have be' signed
with tbe federal Dertment
of E nergy for e two
programs, which wilnvolve
tests of 31 wells, 21 ahem in
Ohio.
Columbia Gas Tra ns- ·
mission Corporatioranother
Colum bia subsidli', wil l
carry . out the bul of the
drilling activities.
The fir st pro11m, a
research activity, "' jointly
submitted til DOEby the
Mitc hell Energy Co rp .,
Houst on, Tex " 1d the
Columbia System. hills for
drilling 1l wells or a 32month period in athwest
Gallia County, Ohic
Dr illing is ex p'ted to
begin with five v.ls next
spring. Six more we will be
drilled the lollowi: year,
hased oo data fronne first
five.
Cost of the pr~am is
estimated at ab1t $5.3

million, with DOE to supply
about $3 million and
Columbia a nd Mitchell
Energy sharing the rest.
The second program, to
last 26 months, is a joint
undertaking involving only
Columbia and DOE.
II calls for drilling 20 wells
into various shale formations ·
in three states, 10 of them in
Ohio. Five wells each will be
drilled in Lorain and
Trumbull Cou nties, Ohio ;
Garrett County, Md .; and
Steuben County, N.Y .
Drilling in thiS program is
expected to begin next year
with 15 wells scheduled for
1979, live each in Lorain and
Trwubull Counties, Ohio, and
Steuben County, New York .
Five additional wells are to
be dr illed in Garrett county ,
Maryland, in 1980. Colwnbia
Gas Transmission will carry
out this program as part of its
normal drilling activity.
This 20-well program is
estimated to cost about $8.5
million, with costs to be split
between Columbia and DOE.
White said the program, if
successful ,
will
help
determine how much gas can
be economically recovered
from the trillions of cubic feet
of natural gas known to exist
in our own back yard by
assessing what fr actur ing
techniques work best and

"These. techniques need to
be further developed ,
particularly in view of the
varying geologic conditions
throughout Appalachia.
"Many shale wells exist.
Columbia Gas Transmission
has about 1,500 Appalachian
shale wells among its
operated supply sources. But
these characteristically have
low·volume flow, " he noted .
"Historically, drilling into
the freer-flowing sandstones
in Appalachia has been more
economically feasible."
Devonian Shale formations
underlie 100,000 square miles
of Appalachia and vary from
just a lew feel to more than
7,000 feet in thickness.

measuring their cost.
"The goal of these
programs is to find the best
key to unlock tbe dense ,
lightly compressed structure
of shale to release the gas we
know is there and do it in
volumes that are economical
tc produce," the chairman
said.
"Drilling for shale gas is
nothing new ," he added.
"Columbia has been doing it
for years in the Big Sandy
Basin of southwestern West
Virgin ia
and
eastern
Kentucky. The proposed
programs seek to produce
gas
from
pr eviously
undeveloped shale areas ."
White said deveioping
better ways to recover shale
MEET TUESDAY
gas is a long-range process
The
Harrisonville Senior
and gas from Appalachian
Citizen
Club will meet
shale is not a total solution to
Oct.
2! at 7 p.m. at
Tuesday
the na tur al gas supply
the
club
house
in Harrison·
problems facing the nation's
20-trillion • cubic • fee t • a . ville . Sandwiches, cookies
and co ffee will be served. All
year appetite.
"This is just on e of the members are urged to attend.
many ways Columbia is
seeking to develop gas for our
HYMN SING
customers in Ohio and elseThere
will be a hyiiUl sing
where to use in the years
at
t
he
Hazel Community
ahead," he noted.
Church
Sunday,
Oct. 22 at
William F. Morse, research
1:30
p.m.
Featured
will be
director for Columbia Gas
Leonard
Preston
and
the
System said both programs
Express
fr om
are part of DOE's Eastern Gospel
Reynoldsburg. The public is
Gas Shales Program.
"Columbia has worked invited to attend .

also come into play as we
stri ve to keep our members
up-to-dale on such topics as
listing, counseling investors,
and closing a sale. OAR is in
the process of compiling slide
presentations and ·full-color
videotapes dealing with these
topics and more. All training
materia ls offered through the
State Associat ion will be
ava ilable lo local boards like
ours at a fra ction of the cost
we would have to pay com·
mercially or through the
Nati onal Assoc iat ion of
Rea lt ors. For a growin g
board such as our:; il's ex·
tremely important that we be
able to offer such services to
our.present members as well
as having such programs as
an added plus in attracting
future members."
The Sout heaste rn Ohio
Boa rd ha s 73 members
representing 16 real estate
firms doi ng bu si ness in

'.\ ··.:

Meigs , Gallia, J ackson, and
Vinton Counties. The board
alternates its meeting sites
between Gallipolis, Jackson,
Pomeroy , and Wellston .
Boa rd
offi cers
a re
President Virgil B. Teaford,
Pome roy, ·Vi ce Presi dent
Willis T.' Leadingha m,
Ga llipolis, and Secretary·
Tr easurer Helen Te aford ,
,Pomeroy.
For more information on
the board and its programs
Mr.
Tea ford,
contact
Pomeroy, Ohio !5769.

•

.

can create a new
roomin·aday!
That's all the time it takes to panel a whole
room with these big, easy-to-handle panels.
SAVE $1.00

Wilkesboro Maple is a lig ht. but warm pane l that
measu res 4' x 8', 5132" thi c k. and has a
·
s imula ted wood grain o n lauan . #13882._ Reg . $6.99

I

Hours :
9: 30 to 5:00

Mon .' thru S.t.

. ...

P: 341 to 1 :00

FrhiiY

KIDDIE SHOPPE
2nd St.
POMERO"r', O.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WAN·TED
FOR

MIDDLEPORT AREA
PHONE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

SEEK TRANSFER
The Ohio Department of
Liquor Control reports an
application has been filed for
the transfer of a D2 (high
powered beer and wine for
. on-pre mises consumption
and carry-out) license from
Thomas L. Goett , doing
business as the Royal Flush,
N. Second, Middleport, to
Steven R. VanMeter and
Patrick H. O'Brien, doing
business as the Royal Flush.

McCLINTOCK Rl'I'ES
Funeral services for
George H: McClintock, ·Sr.,
Point Pleasant, who died
Tuesday will be held all p.m.
Friday from the Crow·
Hussell FWteral Home with
Rev . Herman Hayes of·
flclating.
Burial will be ln Letart
Fails Cemetery, Meigs
County. Friends may call at ·
the funeral home after 2 p.m.
today.

ARM FRACTURED
Larry Wright, Laqgsvllle,
was admitted to Veterans
Memorial Hospital late
Wednesday fo~ trea\ffient of a
fractured ann r.eceived in a
gaa pwnp explosion.
The accident occurred in
the Salem Center area .
Wright was transported to the
hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency squad .

•

$5?.~
SAVE $1.00

Sundance Hickory is a light brown panel wit h
e mbossed fa ults &amp; imperfections . 4 ' x 8 ', 5132"
thic k, simu late d gra in on la uan. #13893. Reg . $9.99

sa~~

Spanish Moss has a di stin ctive gree n trace o n a n
off-white bac kgro und . 4 ' x 8', 5132" thi ck, wit h
s imulated grain o n wood co mposit ion. #13883

We've got all the acossories you need for a really professional job.

CAN YOU IDENTIFY - Can you identify this picture
of a yoWtgster, wbo is now a man ? If you can, the first one
to submit an Identification to the office of The Daily
Sentinel wlll receive $5. No relatives are allowed to
participate or give any suggestions.

..-

CONTINUOUS AUCTION
SAT., oct. 21, 1978 10;00 A.M.
Will continue on with Frye Pennzoil Station
and Gro. sale . Located in Rutland, Ohio.
LARGE ITEMS
Pop and ice machines , deep freeze s , air
compressor , cigarette mach in e. showc ases,
gas floor furnac e , 500 gal. No. I heating fuel .
"MISC."
"
Spoke wheels, chrom e s ide pipes, .T ires,
C. B., misc. repair for a uto and gro. and
other ite ms too num e rous to mention .
Something for eve ryone .
Owner - C. D. Frye
J . Carnahan
L. Donohue
D. Smith
Positive 1D
Lunch
Cash

,,

Attach paneling to
hantly '1'4" x 2"
furring · strips. # 11782

.05

Te finishing touch
hpre-flnished
ll\Uidlng. 1 01400

.ft

linear root

.1::.

per foot
any shoe moulding

Color coordinated
putty pencils fill
in spaces. #40052-64

Colored paneling
nails won 't show
on paneling. i1'12122·31

.39each

.88

bo•

UTNAM HOWE DRIVE
BELPRE, OHIO
Just Say Charge If! ·

PHONE 423·9533

OPEN: MON. THRU THURS. 7:30-5:0 FRIDAY 7:30-7:00
SATURDAY 7:30-2:00'
,,

OF

BELPRE, OHIO

�..

-.

-

10-The Da1ly Sentlllel , Middleport-Pmnt ro) 0 , Thursdal. 0&lt;. t 19, 1!!78

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
p

W~ Ill s "t U n~it 1
l .l ~h
t hal ~t

,.,
'"'

I .!5

llkl

ld;n

! tht\ S
ld.!t\ :..

hd;n s

190
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IIlii

J- Cll h ,._IIHI 1\t'l llll IUIIII! I tWtl J;.
tb L' ~ , u1\s Jlt r "''' d pu dav

wu1

,\d.-;

IUIII I I!l~ olhtr than tlll\~t uttllt

1la"- \UI I U\ d\a r ~t'( l 41 1 tht I den
rah
In lllt'IIIUI\ l t~ll l o f !hu nk.-, and
Olmuan h t t n~o.; Pl ' v. vrd t llM.l
IIWIU IWII ( it.!ih Ill CHJ VGIIL't'

MuL.n lt llunu ~ lt si:l rKI\,udsolt s
aH~ pt ul

an

onh ,.,1\h tas ll wnh

Lltlll 2a L't nt cha• gt f111 ;nls u n n
ut~ lkox Nu mlw1 lnl &lt;t l t'tf fht ~ ~~
Und

Tht P ui.Jhsllt't 1 est r\1:!:1 tht ll f! hl
\.llt'thl 11 t'tjtc:\ am ad.s dtt tnt't l ulr
~ t il t lli.ll The Pullh sht l 1'11 11 n t l&gt;t
"Sp&lt;lf iSi blt fttt Ill ti L tha I Ifill LIIU I

n't t

111~1 1 11111
!'hUlk~~ 11JtJ

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mu!ll!OI;
N ~turl t lll

Scitut dil\

ruu;tl&lt;l \
llu u F1tda ..

'r

M
tltt tlavlll 101 ~ pullh t all! n

:\UIItl&lt;ll
' p ~
!- I td&lt;l\ c l fl~ 1 h~•n

LOST RUTLAND ar.ea fem ale
black and cream German
Shepherd Blue J;ollar Ch tld s
pe t Reword 7.d2 2808
ULACK
AND white spr1nger
spant el Fem o le 10 month s
old l os t on Metgs CR 31
Reword 992 3209
REGISTERED Sprmger
LOST
Spontel and regtslered Beagle
near State Pork on Rt 33

992 7308
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO

V

ESTATE OF MINNIE

BENGEL ,

DECEASED

Case No 22487

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On September 29 1978 In
the Me1gS County Probate
Court
Case
No
22497
Theodore A Down e 106 H1gh
Street Pomeroy , Oh10 45769
was appomted Executor of
the estate o f M.nnte V
Ben gel
deceased
la te of
Pomero y
Metgs County ,
Oh10
Mann 1ng 0 Webster
Probate Judge Clerk
{ 10 ) 5 12

19, 3tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Oh10 Department of
Adm tntstrattve
Servtces ,
Off•ce of Manpower oe ... elop
ment , has announced tiS
plans for Ftscal Year 1979
(FY 1979) fund 1ng thr ough
the U
s
Department of
Labor
Under the
Com
prehenS I'o'e Employment and
Tratn•ng Act { CETA) of 1973
Fund1ng covers tne per tod
from October 1 1978 through
September 30, 1979
The general purpose of
CETA 1S to prov tde aob
tra1n10g a nd employment
opportun1ttes
for
econom lcally disadvantages ,
unem ployed ,
and
un
derem played persons and to
assure that these servtces
lead
to
maximum
em
ployment opportunlf es T he
plans. wtll
serve Oh tO s
Balance of State Prtme
Sponsorshtp, whtch currently
cons ists of 57 count1es
The Balance of State Pr tm e
Sponsor CounCil established
the fOllOWing pr iOrttteS Of
services
Heads
of
Households Youth 14 to 21
V te fnem Era Veterans
Older Workers (55 years and
ove r) , t he Hand•capped ,
Offenders Ltmt ted Engi1Sh
M t nor1t 1e5 ,
Speaktng
D1sabled Veterans , Mtorant
and Se&amp;sona l Farmworkers ,
and
Fe males
Act1vlt1es
funded mclu de
Classroom
Tratntng
(educattonal and
sk1ll tratnlng ~ tnSt1tUt1ona 1
and less than c lass ) On the
Job Tra tntng
Work E x
penence and Pu b ltc Serv1ce
Em ployment
serv 1c es to
participants snail tnclude but
not be ltm I ted to Outreach
recruitment In t ake, Assess
ment
Or l entatton
Coun
set ng,
coach ng,
Job
Development
and
Placement and Emergency
A•d The followmg serv1ce5
wer e fou nd to be 10 need 1n
the
BOS
area
trans
portal ton health, ch ild care.
and legal asststance
The
d 1verstty of need tn the BO S
area w111 be met through the
m Jx of the abo'o'e m ent1oned
acttvt ftes and serv1ces On
the Job T ratn tng w il l be
admtntstered through a sub
contract w 1th th e Oh1o
Bureau
of
Employment
Servrces All programs m the
80 5 w•ll operate und er the
d 1rec t1on of and mon 1tored
by the Off ice of Manpower
Developmen t
Fundtng
le v els
under
vanous t1t1es are
T1t!e I S18 196,2 47
Ttf le II
$.4 ,507 .429 (th re e
months only }
T 1tle Ill
(a) YETP $5 677 ,&lt;2J

(b ) YCCI P $1 077,767

(c ) Naftve
Americans
I lnd 1ans l

SJ0 7 868

(d ) STIP $570 000
(J) HIRE II $979172

T1tle VI SHI 754,362 (three
months only)
Caples of the plans are
ava1lable tor 1nspect1on dally
at the Off tce of Manpower
Development (OMDJ 30 E
Broad Street , 27th Floor,
Col umbus OhiO 43215
Co mments mav be made to
t he address listed or to the U
S De partmen t of Labor ,
Employment and Training
Ad m lnts t ratlon, 230 Sout h
Dearborn Street
Chtc ago ,
lllmols 6060-4

AN
EQUAL
OP
PORTUNITY EMP LOYER
IMALE FEMALE)
(10) 19, 1ft

'

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIOS
B1ds Will be recetved at the
Olf•ce of Leadmg Creek
Conservancy D•sfrt ct Slate
Rou t e 124
Rutland
Ohto
until 12 00 Noon on the 2oth
day of October 1978 fo r lhe
follow1ng

EQUIPMENT

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

ESTATE OF

DECEASED

Edgar Roush

Case No 22427 Dock et M
Page 2
PUBLICATION

OF NOTICE

TO ALL PER SONS IN
TERESTED
IN
THE
ESTATE OF Edga r Rou!h
DECEASED LATE OF R t 1
Mmersv1lle Ohto , MEIGS
COUNTY
PROBATE
COURT CASE NO 22427 An
appltcat ton ha s been ftled
aslo.tng to rel1eve the estate
from adm.nt5trat ton sa y tng
th a t th e asseh d o not exceed
SlS,OOO and the cred1 tors w1 1t
not be pre1udt ces thereby A
hear1ng on t he appltcat ton
wtll be held No ... ember 14
1978 at 1 00 o c lock P M
Persons know tng ~ ny reason
why the appltcalt on should
no t be grant ed shou ld appear
and mf orm the Cour t The
Court 1S located rn Pomeroy ,
Oh10
Mann ing D Webs te r
Prob a te Judge Cl erk
( 10 ) 19 26 (11) 2 Jtc

SPECIFICATIONS
A Mt cro processor - based
ac count1ng and boo kkeep i ng
machtne prov1dtnQ at l eas t
4K b'f'tesof user memory plu s
a t least 6K bytes of ROM
based ftr mware Firmware
shall be ca pabl e of tran s
lat 1ng program nstructtorts
dtrectly
1nlo
ma c hme
la ngu age
wtth no com
ptlatton or assembl'f' stape
r e(l Utre d
Program
tn
stru ct ton s set supported Shall
be
BA L
or
equtvalent
a ssemb ly lan guage
B
Dual FICX tbl e OtSk
Storage Un1t to prov1de at
l east 622 000 bytes of on !me
storage upgradeab le from
th tS to at least 1 2 m illton
bytes Without use of ad
d1t1onal dtsk dnves
C I Th e keyboa r d tS to be
an 1nt eg r a 1 par t ot the
pr rnt1ng un1 t
c apab le of
generaf tng
the full
12 8
chara ct er A SC II set
2 Th e prtnter mu st pnnt at
a m tntmu m o f 45 character~
PROBATE COURT OF
per second , alphabet c or
MEIGS COUNTY.
n umenc
OHIO
ESTATE OF GER
3 Th e prmter 1S to be a full
TRUDE
E
DRAKE
f o rm ed c hara c ter
m p ac t
DECEASED
prmter
Case No 2248 3
4
Abso lu te
tabul alton
NOTICE OF
l'l or1zontally at am ntmum of
APPOINTMENT OF
so tn ches per seco nd and
FIDUCIARY
ver t tcally a t a mm 1mum of 24
On Sept ember 29 1978 m
lines per second
Me1gs County Probate
5 Operator se lectabl e t en the
Court
Case N o 22,483 , Burl
or tw el ... e p1t c h (p1c a or el1te
Drake , Rout e 1 V ml on Ohto
te n or tw elv e c haract ers pe r
45686 was appo1 nted Exec utor
m ch ~
the state o t Gertrude E
6 Lt n e length of etther 132 of
Drake d ecease d late of
or 158 chara cters opera to r
Route 1 Vm ton Ohio 45686
selecta bl e
7
Prtnter
should
be
Mannmg D Webster
programmable to prt nl m 1
Probate Judge Clerk
60' 1nc re men ts hortzontally
and 1 48
tn cre men ts ver
( 101 5 12 19 3tc
ttcall'f'
8 Fo rm feed device should
m clu de operator selectable
P•n feed spr ocket or frtc t ton
feed
9 Prmter should have an
aud tb le error s gnal to alert NO HUNTI NG or lre sposs.ng on
my prope rty w1thout perm 1s
operator when mcorr ect keys
stan Judy M cG raw
or too many keys have b een
depressed Th1S functron •s to
be automattc as we lt as GUN SHOOT Rocme Gun Cl ub
Every Sunday I pm Fact ory
programmable
choke gun s on ly
10 Ledger card capability
both for manua l card al1gn
menl and autom at 1c card GUN SHOOT Rocme Vo lunteer
Ft re Dept Eve ry Sa turday 0 30
alig n ment both capabll tf 1es
pm ot the tr bu ddmg tn Bosh an
on the sa m e card post un tt
11 The prtn t er must ha ve a
Factory choke guns only
mln tmum of 157 character
ARt: YOU troubled wtt h w •ld
prmter buffer
on 1mol s? Fox mmk rrcoo n
12 Character tr ansfer rate
opossum beo ... er e tc? Ca ll th e
must be 120 characters per
sec ond
trapper 985 3984 Wtll contact
13
Th e keyboard must
tn person f or stgned perm1s
have a ten key number iC
S!On
entr y pa d as well as a stan
dard alphanum er iC (type
OPt:NING SOON Coke an d Con
wrtter ) keyboard
dy Croft Shop Anyone m
D System shal l be fu ll y
ter es ted m co ke decorol tng
programmable from 1ts own
c
las ses
b eg1n ntng
1n
keyboara
No vemb er col i 9cn 2583 or
E Sys tem shall not requrre
992 J2a9
use o f a CR T dtsp lay devtce
but such a d ev ce sha ll be an NOTI C~ 0 ~ Publtc Sole
opttona l addlf ton to t he
The l ollo w1ng deswbed 1tem w tll
system
be olfered for so le to the
SOFTWARE
h t~e st btdde r on the prem1ses
SPECIFICAT IONS
A System sha l l support
ol t he Pomeroy Noftonal Bonk
f loppy dtsc base d U t ility
ol Tu ppers Plo1ns Oh1o on th e
Btllm g So ftware Ca pabtltl es
1 st day of November 1q78 ol
of th1 s software sha ll 1nclude
lOom
1 Random on 11ne ac cess to
1973 ~o rd p1 ckup truc k Mfg
a t lea st 1850 custome r ac
FIOYLS00505
co unt s
ma xtm u m access
t 1m e no t to exceed 8 10 of a Te rm s ol sol e Cash The se ller
second
rese rves th e nght to b d end
2
Pn ntmg of bill 1m
the n ght to re 1ect any and oil
med iately upon entry of
btds
me ter readtng
3 Provtston for multip le
meters for same account
4 Pro ...lslon for bdltng
multip l e serv1ces
5 Pr ov ts! on for mu1t1 r er
rate structure (m1n1mum of 7
fters)
WORK OVI:RSEAS
Austra lia
6 Automat tc calculat 1on
Alrtco South Amenco ~urope
and pr 1ntmg of penalty
etc
Co n st ruclton
Soles
amount
on
payments
Eng1neers Clertcal e tc $8000
recetved after past due date
to $50 000 plu s E.o::penses po1d
7 PrOVI SIOn for posting of
For employment ln formot ton
full and pa rtral payments and
wnte Overse as t:mployment
for
allocat1on of
tnese
multip l e servtces
Box lOll Boston Mo 02 102
8 Cal c ulat ton and storage
of av erage u sage for each BABYS ITT ~R needed m m.,. home
for l k1 ndergorden student
met er and opt1ona1 prmtmg
o f thiS as est1mated charge on
Wed and Fn 7 om to 5 30 pm
bill
and on occos 1onol Thur sdoy ttl
9 Billing summary ltsftng
Dec 15 q92 541Jq
cu rrent billtn gs for all or
se lected accounts availa b le WAN TED Port t me opportuntt y
1mmed tately after prm trng of
avotl ob le Idea l for house wtfe
bil l s
who need s fle xible hour s For
10 Report break1ng down
opp-:1 nt~e~ t _c~ll_?93_39~ _
consumpt 1on of water by
pip e
MAN OR wo ma n to represent
11 Pr Ov •ston for fully or
Western SoU the rn L1le 1n
parllally
exemptmg
a
Pomeroy or M tddleport Must
customer
fr om ta x and
ho ve cor No expert ence re
report ing mo nthly on amo unt
qu tred Salary commt SS ton s
of exempt c harges
-.
cor expense oand all benefi ts
12 Report showmg amount
u sed bY ea ch customer
M1mmum age 22 Apply m per
13 ProviSIOn for adfust tng
so n
Wester n Southern Ltfe
cash rece 1pt s amounts, m
218 '~ E M~1n_ Pome~2'~
ad ( us t ment
of
c ludmg
POSITION OPEN for po rts ass1s
allocatton to va rtou s se r
VICeS
fon t Exper 1ence preferred Ap
S Software sha ll b e wrtften
ply at Two R1 ven Ford Inc Rt
tn
BAL
or
equtvalent
62 N 304 b75 1.d90
a ssembly la nguage
O el• very and •ns tall atton of BAR HELP nee ded Call 992 38b0
the com pon ents must begm
between 8 on d 9 om
wtth• n 45 days fr om the d ate
of b td acceptan c e and be
promptly
1nstalled
thereafter Paymen t tor the
equtpment wtll b e made
tnstallal1on end proof of IF 'r'OU ho ve a ser-.. tce to offer
prope r tun ct10n 1ng Tl'le r1ght
won t lo buy or se ll somelhtng
1S reserYed to r e1ect any and
oe lookmg lor work
or
all b tds
whatever
you II get resuhs
IO!oter w th o Sent mel Wont Ad
LEA D I NG CREEK
Co ll 992 21 5b
CON SERVANCY
DI ST RI CT YAR D SALE Oct 56 Gr&amp;en house
!10) 5 12 19 3tc
Green hou se behmd State
Htghwoy Garage on Rt 7 10 4
-------~

YARD SALE Frtd oy Oct 20 9 .d
Solem St Rut land D•shes fu r
n11ure clot htng mtnt btke
miSC 742 24q0

PUBLIC NOTICE
P u r suan. t
to
federal
requtrements the records. of
ex pen"tf ttures of Fed era 1
Revenue sharmg funds are
a ... ~ llable for pub l tc m
spectu)rl at th e Mayor's of
ft ce 237 Ra c e St M tddleport
Oh to ,
Monday
thro ugh
Fr 1day , Oct 27 through Nov
17 1978 betw een the hours of 8
AM and .4 PM
Ex p e nd 1ture
of
Ant•
Recession Frsca l As sts tan c e
Funds 1n th e Vt llag e o f
Midd leport between Jul y 1
1977 and Ju n e 30 1978 were as
f ol lows
F •re Dept
5504
Gene Grate Clerk
V l tlt'lge of Mtddlepor t

YARD SALE October 19th and
20th q 4 Hysell Run Free
Methad1 st Par sonage hou se
nexl to ch urch All clothes S 10
each Al so m1sc tlems
POR CH SALt: Fr1 ond Sot 9 ttll 5
931 Hysel l St Middleport Lots
clothes
toys
Roto l ill er
women s Jorge w1nte r coo t cur
toms et c
PORCH SAL E So t Oct 21 9 .4
Boys coots shtr ts mes 10 l2
l4 1eans Lodte s coots slo&lt;:Ms
blouses slack su1ts dre sses
SI ZeS 7 9 U ' 1 )0 J gameS
Ve ra ld M 1ch oe l s Syracuse
~-

Y ARIJ SAL f
Sponsored
by
Southeast Oh to Jun1or M1 ss
Inc Frtdoy Oc t 19 48.4 1-'eorl
St Mtddleport

c. HIP

WOOD
1-'o le!&gt;
mo•
dtomeler 10 o 1 lorges l e nd
S!:l 50 per ton Bundled s! ob
Sb 50 per ton IJe!tvered to
Ohto Po llet lo Rt 'l Pomeroy
"14'1 1ba9

TIMSf R
durb

POMHtOY Forest Pro
l op pnce lor stond1ng
~nw tnnbe r
Col i ~·n ;905 or
Ken t Hanby I 4.db 8570

OLL&gt; 1-= URNI TURt: tee box es bras s
beds 1ron beds desk s etc
romplete households Wrll e
M [) M1ller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
coiiY'I'l 77b0
OLL&gt; COINS pocket w at ches
cl os&lt;o n ngs weddmg bond s
d10m ond s G old or sdver Ca ll
Roger Wamsley 14'1 ::J331

l'cts for Sale

Wt: PICK up 1unk
t n~ 1unk ca r s
lenes ond
Salvage
SR
'192 5.469

auto bod1es buy
sc rap Iron bot
me tals
H1der s
124 Pam eroy

~t

HOOl

tiU)

l OIH JH H

bU

HOOf HOLLOW Horses Buy sel l
trade or tram New and used
saddles Ruth Reeves Al bonv
(0 14 ) o98 3'190

wtth new tu c .'l
Good cond tlton Cont act To rn
Monkm ot 99'1 :.'201
MAY I A G &lt;..OP P I:RION~ flo 1to
Potr wa sher and d 1ycr Ve ry
good condt tton sell o ~ ~ et Ca ll
alter Spm qn 'J995
Mt: TAL BOOKCASt:

and blodes com
presso r wdh hose and !&gt;pray
gun Crollsmon 8ond sow 9
th• oot Hornel te cham sow
n ew
M1llerfo ll m 1ter so w
992 0385

BJ:AGlt PUPS and trotned r obb1t
dogs Young a nd old W1 ll sell
or trade for guns or some thtng
of equal va lue 742 2521

Auto&amp; Truck
Repa1r
Also TransmissiOn
Repair
Phone 992-5682 '

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark

nos

1q 70 FORD VAN customtz ed
new point ft res and wheels
$1200 orbest olfer 7.d22396
19 71 CAMARO 350 outo new
t1re s ond
potnt
$1 !JOU
Y92 3859
19 75 DATSUN PICKUP Good con
d thon
Good t1r es
Low
mdeage Step bumpe r Truck
m.rrors $2750 985 3979
1977 MONZA SPYDt:R 305 engt ne
Power steermg Power brakes
AM FM rodto More extras Coli
742 2826
PUEI TOYOTA CH ICA G T L1ft

Your HeadquarteiS For
Armst1011g Carpeting

EWOTT
APPUANCEII'

-'
WANT TO rent storage space for
autos Mason Pomeroy M1d
dleport oreo See Rtchord Hor
nson 1.d0 N 3rd Ave Mtd
dleport ,

~...at11l "- ~i_,_ ~ ~ ~

H

COUNTRY MOBIL£ Home Pork
Rout e 33 north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Co~l992 7-479
3 ANO 4 RM turn shed and un
1
furn1 shed
opts
Phon e
qy'} 5434
TWO BEDROOM kttchen furntsh
ed opt Co li before 8 om
992 2288

----- --

-

PORTLAND ARt:A 3 bed room un
furntshed modular $200 per
month Refer ences an d depos1t
requ~r_':d 3~4 _2~3 _52}2~ __ _
FOUR Bt:DROOM house tn Ractne
No peh 9'49 2253 _ -:_ _
TRA ILER

ONt:

mole

adult

'1'12 3181
TWO BEDROOM opt
d ose to
town Ca11992 3592 alter 7 pm
- - -SIX ROOM S 11 both ba sement
gas furnace Chester w at er tn
Boshon A L Dee ter Rt J
Hoclne
HOUSE FOH rent Coli Sot
fr om 9 5 949 2-432

21 sl

All types of roofing, gutters
yeors
expertence
All work
~uaranleed .
C•ll Tom
osklns, 949 -2160 . Free
Esllmates .
9 7 1 mo.

In Moddleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Slreel~
Mill Street lust beh10d

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark
. . . .:!_ack W Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 9'12 2181

-·

.Aiiil

1000 H .d pt pe Pla1n end $1 h

142 J09J
5 SPHD GEAR box for 1850 Int er
no tio nal $200 742 3093
PI CKUP CAMPER 10 1, I t sleeps
stx gc s electric re /ng erotor
furnace gas range w1th O\len
hood and fon do uble stnk
flu sh to ilet hold1ng tank s 4
tocks and other equtpment
clean on d tn e)(ce llent co nd 1
ft on G E Reuter Bo)( 666
Pomeroy OH 45 709 Phone
992 2490
100 BU OF old corn $2 per bu

985 3928
197.d DATSUN PICKUP

992 6192

PHONE

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond1hon your
water w1fh Co op wa1e~
softener, Model UC· SV I

Now Only

,

309 •95

Let us 1est your water
FrPP

I

Free Est1mates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
a 20,1 mo IPd)

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
p~

992 2174

HOMESIHS for so le I acre an d
up Mtddfeport ne ar Rutlond
Lol l 992 7481
VA FHA JO yr I na ncmg also
reftn oncmg Ireland Mortgage
77 t: Stole At hen s phone(b14 )
5'12 3051

fARM FO R sole House 2 barn s
trad er Lor ge pond 10 acres or
El2 acres 742 25661

;;r

*K=~~ ~i~i ~~:

AUCTION Fn and Sot at 7 pm
Ne w and used merchand1se at
Oh10 f! 1ver Auct1on 537 Htgh
St M t ddlepo~ _O_H ___ _ _ _

Cellulosic (wood f1berl
Thermal insulation
Sne 30 pet. to 50 pet
on hooting cost
Experience and
fully 1nsured
Free Est.
Call992-2772
8101mo(Pd)

HOUSt IN Pomeroy Lar ge lot
Some recen t remodelmg New
ca rpe t Central heotmg Utt llty
room Full basemen t 2 p er
ches Furnt sh ed or unlurntshed

992 7014
S ~A UT IF UL

3 bedroom oil electr c
home w1lh ove r 1 ocre of land
Pr1ce red uced 949 2424

BY OWNEH tn Mason 3 bedroom
Wall to wall carpet h reploce
centra l ot r and heat fu ll bose
ment w1th garage appl•onces
Coli ~f!_er_ S~ m 304 ~~12_57 __

11 ACRES - More or less, 4
bedrooms,

TO GOOD h ome 6 months a!d
lmh Se tte r
red
female
q!:ls 3810 after 4
WANTED
GOOD home for
tho r oug hbred Pers1on cot
l!eoultful 992 2680

--~~----

---

1977 9', loot truck camper 3 way
refngerotor
furnace
sel f
cleonmg oven self contotned
247 203 1
--

196 !:1

FORD

~--~-

F 100

p1 ckup

949 2077
Sale CARPET REMNANTS Odds
and Ends Shop Rt 1 Mtd
dlepo rt
Oht o
992 61 73 or

992 6206
WATE R Wt:ll dnlltng Wtl ltom T
Cront 742 2879
FOR YOUR complete hou s1ng
remod e!mg cons tru ctt on and
motntenonce g1ve J H a try
Reference
a ... o tl ob le
Reaso nabl e prtc es
Phone
992 5191
DUSTLESS FIREPLACE ond chtmney
cl eon tng The Ch1mn ey Sweep
Col/ 61.4 373 6057

1974 ) • ton p tcku p A•r condthon
1ng
A. 1 co ndthon
Phone

992 59 13
1975 F 100 Ford ptckup Explorer
package 0 cy l 300 engme
$21'95 ftrm 014 667 b42o4
N~W

IO~A

P ho~e

9!_2

- - ---------

No 7 cornptcj..;er
3334 o!!_e~ 0 30 e._~

BA8V DRoS5ERETU Youlh bea
Jumper cho1r Phone 991 5567

S&lt;NSI MAlic - .;.,

co unt1ng
mochme
Phone
(/in 1150 The Dody Senhne(
I ll Court Str ee t Pomeroy
Ohto
t
VHJMES GOLDt:N Red Oeltctou s
&amp; Golden Deltcmus oppl&amp;s F1tz
poh tck
Orchord
SR 0~9
OIA 669 378 5

bath,

f ireplace,

severa l

outbuildings Owner
transferred

be~ng

Pr 1ce

$35,000 00
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
804 W Ma1n

Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours
call992-7133
CONTACT :
LOIS Pauley
Branch Manager

bath,

natural

gas heal, city water, and 2
car garage $14,000

OUT SKIRTS OF TOWN 3 bedroom home with level

lol Has nice bath, nal ural
gas ce ntral heatmg, city

water, U shaped modern
kitchen , and near schools
S885 00 down payment and

5248 06 per month to those
who qualify
LARGE NEW HOME With 3 nice sized bedrooms,
2 baths, excellent fami ly
room wllh fireplace and
large plate glass windows
and doors 2 car garage and

1 ocre of level land
COZY - ' bedroom home
with ~ gas ~-.. , city
wafer ...,,. lll"\"U and
garden \
510,000

tt"'v·•Y

LAND - Lots ol acreage
on Sl•te Routes, Ohio
River , and m the country

All s izes and prices Drop
In to see
ARE YOU WANTING TO
SELL? CALL 992-3325 for
BEST RESULTS .
Holen L Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Sue P Murphy
A
I

J

1\IOT THE FIR5T M&gt;\N
TO SE INVOLVED
IN A DUEL.!

I

Print answer here
LI'ITI.E OHPHAN ANNIE

Type

VeSielday 5

I Jumbles JEWEL

SUCH LUCK 1
GUYS LIKE THAT

OlD YOU

DARK

BY HERE?PHEW~

NO

To Extshng Structures

CAH

THE

tIl I I I]
(Answers tomorrow)

T'IPED OSSIFY

NOTICE
WHEH HE WE~T

AND THEY
SMElL-- ~

Years EICpertence

Pho~~:~~~ 144

t: XCAVATING dozer loader and
b ackhoe work du mp tru ch
and Ia boy s for htre will haul
hl l dtrt to sod limestone an d
grovel Ca ll Bob or Roger Jel
fe rs day phone 992 7089 mghl
p hone 9q2 3S25 or (/q'J 5232

098 733 1

0.

deck area, beautllu l set
ling, secluded on good
road, $48,000 00
NEW LISTING 1'12
story, 3 bdrms , 50x200 lot,
part
baseme n t ,
some

carpellng, lmmedlale
possession $11,000 oo
NEW liSTING VS

iAll

BATHROOMS AND
K1l chens
remode led cer amt c Ide plu m
btng carpen try and genera l
motnlenance
13 veer s e~~:
pe_!~nce 992 3685

DOWN
1 Soho meet-

&amp; F:RNJE

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complet e
Serv1ce Phone 992 247 8
RHVE S TRADING Post Pogev•lle
Grocenes dry goods hard
ware feed lock shop Specto l

_25_1b_ ~l_&lt;!og food $3 aa

ktfchen , new heating, new

carpeting, 21ots, plus a 1966
Skyline mobile home ALL
FOR $15 500 00
MODERN RANCH - In
Syracus.e ,
3
bdrms ,
garage, part basement,
nice yard , porch, patto,

excellent condition, ex
cellent neighborhood
Below fair Ml&lt;T VALUE
525,500 00
SUPER NICE - A-Frame,
2'12 acres, 3 bdrms , 11!2

baths, rec room, fireplace,
many features,
town $37,500 00

close

to

OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AND WE STILL
HAVE
QUALIFIED
BUYERS
FOR
ALL
TYPES OF PROPERTY,
LIST WITH US.
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
9'12-2259, 992-6191
992 2568
Hank, Kothy &amp; Leona
Cle land
Associates

liN IJfMU., n: TIll

fill. u.s ,. Oil

T"'"'"'s

WTNNIF.
YEAH, ALL WE GET OKAYMK. FAr31N YOU JU&amp;T e,ouGHT
VOUR&amp;~LF ONE PHONE CALL 10 YOUR
OUT OF IT IS A
BO&amp;~ AND AN HOUR'&amp; TIME. FOR HER
MURC7E/&lt;. RAP •. IF
TO {jfT HERE WITH THE DOUGH '
WE'RECAUGHT I

742 2826
1975 OAKM=O::-N::T-:1-:&lt;-•-,70:-:3--:b~'"'
ed , ­

-------

I'VE GOT DISCO
FEv'ER BEAUTIFUL!

Movie
Movie

' The

Curse of Bigfoot" 10
1 •~News 13, 2 311--News 3 3 oo-Mov1e " Tell Them
Willie Boy Is' Here ' 3
5 oo--Mov1e " To Dt e In Parts 3
Thursday, Oct 19

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Picking the right loser
NORTH
• 743
"A 3 2

10-1!1-A

tAQ

.Q7532
WEST
EAST
•QI02
•K965
•85
•976
t76532
t84
•JI09
.K864
SOUTH
• AJ 8
" K Q J 10 4
t K J 10 9
Vulnerable: North-south
Dealer : South
Well Nortb East

Pus 2•
Pass

Pus '"
5"

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

BoOGIE DOWN

LONGFELLOW

By Oswald Jacoby
aadAIIUISootag

One letter Simply stands for anolher In this sample A Is
used for the lhree L's, }{ for the two O's, etc Smgle letters
See if you can figure out
apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all bow South makes six hearts
h10ts Each day the code !etlers are dilferent
after West opens the jack of
clubs. We'll give you a tip It
CRYPTOQUOTES
Ia another lose on the peanuts, make on the bananas
VEBYohand.
VEH
WXJV
FBAABTKSV
The key is that South has
to let East make a trwnp
BY
VEH
RXPSF
vx L F W B Y B J - trick In order that South can
avoid two spade losers.
V H P
H A A H T V B Q H S M
B J He takes hia ace of clubs,
cashes the klng of hearts,
S H B J K P H .
W L Y S M
E L S S leads a heart to dummy's
Yesterday's Ceyptoqaote:IF YOU CAN'T SAY NO YOU CAN'T ace, ruffs a club, enters
EXPECT TO UVE WITHIN YOUR INCOME.-WIWAM dummy with the ace of dieFEATHER
© lt18 Kin&lt; Featurn SJndieat.e, lne

THIS

- - - - - ---::----,-1967 HOU5o TMILEM 12 &lt; 1&gt;0 All .&lt;
electri C furm shed otr condt ,
t1 one d w asher and dryer Also
2 lots
10
Horrtsonv ille

Gunsmoke B

Python 33 12 311--Tw iggy s Jukebox 8
13

.A

II

1 11 ACRE 12 M bO mob1le home
near Dex ter 992 5858

_?~m; ment

1~M o nty

6

monds, ruffs a second club,
gets back to dwruny agam
with the diamond queen and
ruffs a third club to set up
dummy's queen as the last
club and east's last heart as
the high trwnp
South is now In his own
hand and ready to lead his
!sst good diamonds in order
to discard spades from dummy
Suppose East trwnps one
of those diamonds. That will
be hia only tnck. South with
e1ght tricks In will still score
hia last diamond and ace of
spades while dummy will
get hia deuce of trumps and
queen of clubs
Suppose East refuses to
ruff a diamond South will
collect four diamonds, his
own f1ve trwnps, the black
aces and a ruff with
dwruny 's deuce of trwups.
East will take his good
trwnp at trick 13

Opening lead: •J

tO.

•1

Than

4~1ronslde

;;;;-+--t-t--+--il Pass a•
;:;-+--t-t--+--i I Pass Pass

PT PLoASANT W VA

985 &lt;351

''

e

More

1 DO--M1dnaght Special 3,4 lS, N ews B Movte

-+---t--11

~UPJ,.E: HuND~SD

1955 Pra1ne Schoo ner 28:&lt;8 1 BR
1973 Royal Embassy 68 )( 14 3 BR
1959 Star 50x102 BR
1973 Stor60M14 2 BR
1%8 Stor60x 12 2 BR
1970 Sylva b0x 12 2 BR
1968 Vdlages 60xl2 2 BR
19b:-4 Wtndsor 51 xlO 2 BR
1970 Ktrkwood 12xb0 3 BR
8&amp;5 MOBILE HOME SALES

Unfurnished
Comp l •te ly
redecorated 1 304 075 19!SB for

12
12

2: ffGouRI!O

19oa PMC 52.12 2 BR

8ottom enclosed Tied down
Complete hook up Winterized
o ocre lot
Tool storage

J-1 l!ilflquarters

PoR A

1976 NASHUA 14 x OS 3 bedroom
I ', both und erp1nnmg $1500
ond as su me loan 94q 2683 or
843 33 11
19i'O Amherst 50)( 12 2 BR
1970 (hamptOn 60M 12 2 BR
1965 General 60x12 2 BR

Johnny Come Lately
Berserk'
10

~"""

~ GtUYS wouLD B&amp;
W1LLIIV6 ~ ~RV M!

TWO BED:~R;:;
OO
:;:;:-M~mo
-cb-:,,:0--.
ho-m
~e-

Housing

•S,

Dei I

1nt ,

$119 41 monthly pay, If you
qualify ONLY $15,000 00
NEW LISTING
In
Middleport, duplex , new

,

THe NA"rrON.AL

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cance l led? lost your operators
ltcense? Phon e 992 2143

ground, firep lace, $800.00

Pet

~

Movie

News 20, S1na1 F1e\d M1sslon 33

(;.ONSii&gt;tRINGo W,_.A'T'

approvect, l'h story, 3
bdrms , carport , tf:r acre
down, 30 yrs ., 9112

-

-.)

3 15

10 3~Monty Pythons F lying C~rcus 20
11 O~News 3,4 6.B 10 13 15 Dick Cavell 20
11 3~Johnny Carson 3 4,15, Baretta 13

mg place

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

··~

Files

Fnends '6, 13 Incredible Hu lk B. 10, Congressional
Outlook 20,33
9 3~Turnabout 20 Real People 33
10 oo-Edd1e Capra Mysteries 3 4 15, Flying High a 10

What did
58tj,Mother?

t: XCAVATING doze r
backhoe
and dttcher Charles R Ho t
f1el d
Bo ck
Hoe Serv tce
Rut land Ohto Phone 742 2008

Washmgton

Street Week 20,33

9 QO-Rockford

%Suburb
of Pans
A!.!.F:Y ()() P
3 Popular
-;-;;:;:~;;;-;:;;:;;;-;;r--;:;;;:;w;~--;;;,;;~~~~T,ioo;l r------,--, r·-----:--,--r--:--- - . , u Macaw
I1
0\&lt;AY! SO NOW~
&gt;AKE'
... HOLD ONTO
Talk
comedieMe
ON iOl" OF ~IS 01-IING
~16,
~E END OF ll'
•
/'A&gt;'' '
WHA&gt;!i Nel&lt;&gt;?' ...
M16e
AND WAYS IT
talk, talk
t Tell's canton
o...
AROUND! .----;
13 Hearsay
5 Hindu uruverr--,_..•....,.:1 report
sal symbol
Yesterday's Answer
&amp;
Main
artery
20
Gerpalttidine
31 Lync1st
15 Kind of opener
or
a
Harbach
16 Appomtment 7
3% Haul
Loyal
!1 GJ m
Refram
8 ~e overacts
trouble
33 Purviance
mold songs
9 Sioux
Z2
Greek
vlcof the
18 Pollllcal
10 Oct baseball
tory goddess silenta
patronage .
event. abbr. 23 Stram
34 Hebrew lyr
slang
1t Jellied
at a 35 Distant
21 liVhere
veal
dish
!4
Ruthlan
3&amp; Go off
Wanda is
1 • ~ ~o 1e
17
SluggiSh
clout
- tangent
24 Yemen's
GASOI.INF: ALLEY
1B Duo
28 Incapacilale 37 Tin Tin of
cap1ta1
19
Magnaru
30
Cagney
the silents
E=""--""'==. /- - - - - - , _,-:rw.:--=-=-:-;.-"'&lt;;7-;:;:-::-::s-=
a=-=
~d;-:;-::-:so-:m=e-, 25 With sails
of cmema
fihn role
38 Badly
LjOU
...
1;hrnq about tha1;
spread
nearyo~~
I.
27Word
!'ltd SUck"tnQ ItS
of approvalll:---1---+-----lf--1--28 Papal
crowns
29 SuffiX
With book
30 Sacred
chest

3S25

3~Wall

8

Musketeer

SEWING MACHINE Repo trs se r
vtce all makes 9q2 2284 The
Fabri C Shop
Pom e r o y
Auth onzed S1nger Soles and

Pop Goes T he Country 15 MacNe tl

Ivanhoe" 4 Wonder Woman 8 10
Week tn Revtew 20,33

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ELWOOD BOWERS Rt:PAIR Sweepers toas ters 1rons all
small opphonces Lawn mower
ne)( t to Stole Htgh w o y Garage
on Reu le 7 Phone {bl4 ) 985

America Alive IS,

Lehrer Report 20 33
8 oo-Prorect U F 0 3 15 Donny &amp; Marie 6 13, Movie

The latest JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 1110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111 Available for 11 35 EACH, postpaid from Jumble elo thle
newspaper P 0 Bote 3~ . Norwood , N J 07648. Make checka payable to
Newspaperbooks

ACROSS

4,13,15

Show6, Fami ly Feud 10, Bonkers 8, $100,000 Name
That Tune 13

t'$t:tlt1., ,.(

All Work Guaranteed

Donahue

7 JG-Hee Haw Honeys 3, Dating Game 4 S1 98 Beauty

BROKER

YOU SAID IT'

CAN SEE IN TH

All Type Concrete Work
No Contracl Too Large Or
Too Small

Now arrange the ct reled leners to
form the surpr1se answer as sug
gested by the abo ... e cartoon

For those who tratn by mght -SLEEPERS

Answer

HOWERY
AND MARTIN h
covoflng
se pt 1c systems
dozer backhoe dump truck
ltmestone
gro.,el
blacktop
pov tng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)

adda room and expando, 3
Bdrms , 1'12 baths , ex
cellen t cond l hon, large

bedrooms,

I
I I. I

tTUSALE

Phtl

Young S. lhe Restless 8, Midday Magazine 13
12 3~Ryan s Hope 6 13 Bob Braun 4, Search for
Tomorrow 8.10, Elec Co 33
1 oo-Hollywood Squares 3, All My Children 6, 13,
Young S. the Restless 10, News 8, Not For Women
On)y 15
1 3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, As The World Turns
8,10
2 QO--One Life to Live 6, 13, 2 3~Doctors 3 4, 15,
Gu1dlng Light a,10
3 ()()-Another World 3,4,15. General Hospital 6,13
Lilias Yoga S. Y.ou 20
3 3~Mash B. Joker s Wild 10, You Bet Your Life 20
4 oo-M1ster Cartoon 3, Bail ie of the Planets 4, Mer v
Griffin 6 Porky Pig &amp; Friends B Sesame St 20,33
Batman 10, Q)nah 13
4 3()-Lillle Rascols 3 Gilligan ' s Is 4,8, Brady Bunch
10, Petticoat Juncllon 15
5 ()()-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3 Star Trek 4
Be•erly Hillbillies 8 Mlsler Rogers Neighborhood
20,33, Emergency One 13, Brady Bunch 15
5 3~News 6 Sanford &amp; Son 8, E lee Co 20,33 , Odd
Couple 15, Mary Tyler Moore 10
6 oo-News 3,4,B 10,13 15 BC News 6. Zoom 20,33
6 3~NBC News 3 4,15 Carol Burnett S. Friends 6,
CBS News B, 10 Over Easy 20
7 oo-Cross Wlls 3, PM Magazine 4, New)ywed Game
6, 13, Muppet Show 8, News 10, Love American
Style 15 Consumer Survival Kit 20 Insight 33

~1&gt;\\:IS.

Dl

WILL do roofm g con stru ct1o n
plum bmg and heottng No 10b
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 2348

NEW LISTING - 48 Acres,
mostly limber, 1 year old
14x70 Hollypark , with large

1 9 ACRES - N1ce older
home of 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, fu ll basement.
modern kitchen, and
garage Ideal location In
good nelgMborhood
OLDER ltDME - On Rl
124 has extra lol, 4

BAD

n-1~

3,

12 oo-Newscen1er 3, News .t,6, 10

0

I KJ

IENCOBAb

_2)e! v~:!~-:._s h o rpen s~-

POMEROY.

for a qt.Jic .... s.ale

COAL LIME STONE sand gr o'o'e l
colc tum chlortde lerfllizer dog
food end al l tvpe s of salt E.
cels1or Salt Works Inc E Ma1n
~ t Pomeroy 992 J~91

modern

large kitchen S. dlmng

MAIN...,.

f92 3325
216 E Second Slreet

\\WJT Fl~r -z

BRAD FORD
Auclt oneer
Com
plete Servtce Phone q49 2487
or 949 2000 Rocme Ohto Cntt
Brad lord

~

1970 REO PACER 3 speed 6 cyl
AM FM tope player CB rodto
Must sell Phone 7112 2874

DEKIN

IS mAT I'M IJOf

WlfJ0 10 Tat- 'iOIJ

lndustna l
Commercial and Home
Building
Any Type Improvements

:zs

byHennArnoldandBobLee

.._CL.--'.JL 6 Noted

PROPERTY FOR Sole Great In
vestment 3 h aeres Htver Iron
toge w1th mmero l ngh ts
$1 S 000 or best offer Coli aft er

-

~ ~~'IJS

Gntfln

Emergency One 6, Match Game 10, Hogan's
Heroes 8
9 3~Brady Bunch 8 Fa1&gt;1lly Affair 10
10 oo-&lt;:ard Sharks 3,15 Consumer Buyllne &lt;. Edge
of Night 6, All In The Fam!)y 8, 10, Dating Game 13
10 3~Jeopardy 3,4, 15, Andy Griffith 6, Price I S R1ghl
B 10. 520,000 Pyramid 13
11 oo-H!gh Rollers 3,4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Elec Co
20
11 3~Wheel of Fortune 3.4.15 , Family Feud 6,13
Love of L1fe B, 10, Sesame Sl 20,33
11 55-CBS News 8, House Call 10

b

sports wnter

~O R

SALE by ow ner 51 2 t: Mat n
Sf
Pomeroy 6 room house
carport
W B
l1replo ce
carpeted com plet e modern k tt
chen concrete d trve Also od
1ace nt
A /ro me busme ss
butldtng w1th concrete pork1ng
oreo $55 000 For opp l phone
992 392 1

1J.1r;

1 Noted

room,

bp ~ ~-4_80b ~~_?__ __

r~ 001 I!OOD ~~ ~D BAD
1-)j;'#JS "'+Jfllal 00

10 18 1 mo

HV t: ROOM hou se and bath
remodeled l ul ly carpet ed May
be seen alter 3 pm Phone
992 3933

Phone 99l 2111

52 GALLON Mar Flo electnc ho t
w ater heater New cond1tton
$50 See or ca ll74 2 2421

All

NI::W THRH bedroom home rec
room f1re pl oce Iorge deck
gar age basement one and o
hal f ba ths Phone l ee Construe
tt on
992 3454
weekend s
16144469568

L------------'
19M I !:1 FT Fronk ltn tra iler Self
conto 1ned wtfh water pump
New 12 volt battery
Gcs
refngerafor stove furnace
awnt ng tacks ho t water tonk
Sleeps SIX Phone 742 2874

I I I

BORN LOSF:H

ourning and
Price BuildeiS

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

•Ck W Carsey, Mgr
~ '\

ECHLE

Pomeroy, 0
3 151ft

Ph 992 2848

9 00- Merv

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one lener to each square to form
four ord1nary words

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
lnstallat1on Service

J&amp;L

~Landmark
FOR SAlE or trade 1969 Plymouth
Road Runner
Htgh per
formo nce 383 4 speed Phone
304 773 5615 or mgu1re at cor
ner ol Center and 4th St
Mason

~UTTON S ECRET~

~ ~ ~Ul~ ®

MOORE'S

THRH BEDROOM f rame home m
Mtddlepor t C oll9~2_3~57

q~gal

10 30 c

For The Best
Pnce In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

ANTI-FREEZE

\-

THERE~

-·"--"
·-

Chester, Ohto

sox J

DOWN

OKAY, LET 5 ASSUMEHE WANTS. T KeEP
THe SUB-BASEMENT

3,4

13

6 4s--Mornlng Reporl 3, 6 ~Good Morn ing, West
Virginia 13, 6 55-Chuck White Reports 10, News
13
7 ()()-Today 3 4,15 Good Morning America 6, 13, CBS
News 8, Jetsons 10
7 3~Schoo ll es 10
I oo-&lt;:apl Kangaroo a 10 Sesame St 33

Style 15 Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20, Consumer
Sur•lva l Kit 33
7 3()-Hollywood Squares 3. Dating Game A, Bonkers •
6, Waltons 8, $100,000 Name That Tune 10, Nash
•ll le On The Road 13 Dolly 15, MacNeil Lehrer
RepOrt 20,33
B oo-Dtck Clark 3,4,15, Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13, Nova
20,33 Waltons 10
B 3()-What's Happening 6,13, Please Stond By 8
9 ~ulncy 3,4,15, Barney Miller 6,13. Hawaii Five 0
8 10, Drmandy S. His Orchestra Japanese Odyssey
33, Mayor of Casterbrldge 20
9 3()-Soop 6,13
10 oo-sword of Jusllce 3,4, 15, Family 6, 13, Barnoby
Jones a,10, News 20
10 3~Boslon's Marothon Ma 33 You Bet Your Life
20
'ft'f1~Nl fii}'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

......_

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Out.

Open Saturday 10 4 p m.
Sunday 12 noon lo 3 p m
B31 1 mo

MAYSe Sc•-- SUT IF
THERE- S NO SUTTON
TO PUSH , HOW DOES
HE MAkE IT 60

'"

Phone 985-3806
Jack G1nlher 985 3806

CHEAP!

Tony's Cirry

•

IF THERI:'~ NO OTHER WAY
DOWN• Hll5 ELEVATOR'S GOTTA
Ill' THE WAY B0615S 6ET5 DOWN
TO HIS SUB-BASEMENT!

~News

Sunr:.l se Semester 10
6 oo-PTL Club 15, 6 2s--Soclelles In Translllon 10
6 30----Columbus Today 4, News 6, Sunrise Semester 8

6, 13, Family Feud 8, New ~ 10, Love American

B 2 1 mo

ReStdentlal and commer·
c1al Call tor est1ma1e. 24
Hour Serv1ce Any day,
anvhme

Wvo

'-o'~~ oil ,&lt;-~- $347

Tyler Moore 10, Odd Couple 15

Pomeroy

oo- Tomorrow

FRIDAY, OCTOBER20, 1978
S 4s--Farm Reperl 13 5 50--PTL Club 13, S 5s--

6 ()()-News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 3~N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13, Carol Burnett S.
Friends 6, CBS News 8.10, Over Easy 20
7 oo-&lt;:ross Wits 3, PM Maga&gt;lne 4, Newlywed Gatne

109 H1gh 51

QUALITY

8'1011E GOMNNY

New or Repair
GutteiS and
Downspouts

19i'3 IN H RN A TIONAL I ton VH
truck wtth Omoho melol gro1n
bed and catt le rock ex t ens on
On ly IB {)()() m•les Shmn s Tro c
tor Sole!&gt; 304 .d58 1030 Leon

()II&lt;

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19,1978

(Bob Hoeflich)

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

1

1

5 3~ News 6, Sanford S. Son B, Elec Co 20.33, Mary

The Pholo Place

ROOFING

TRA CTOR spr ayer
~ormo ll 8 tractor Whee ls and
a xle to bvtld trad er Four 8 lS x
lb 5 truck ttres ltk e new Farm
w a gon
Cr am
elev ator
949 2i'b3

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay S3 99

NO SIGN OF HIM.

Coil Us Today

H. L WHITESEL

-

INTER NATI ONAl DU 5SO d1esel
engme (Broken cra nk) No
st arter $200 7.d2 J0q3

FRONT GATE AND 'SAYS

•

.Aiiil

FOUR I J 1nch (ragor SS whee ls
Wtll ftt Ford an d Chevrole t
S::JOO 742 :J8:J6

)T S AFTER MIDNIGHT,
MARTY'S DOWN AT THE

We are currently
appo1ntment s for sen tor
portra1ts We use tradl
flonal setttngs and also
por
outdoor
feature
tratture

ne AI'PllWGIIIAN
WOOD HEAT

220 E. Main Street,
Pomervy, 0 .
call992-7013
For Free Estimates
9-21-1mo.

. . .J!ck W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992-2181

bock Speo ol ed tlto n Block
Phone 992 5860 or 9q2 3204
1977 Mt:RCURV STA TION wagon
15 000 mdes 4 wheel dtsk
brakes tra der towtng pa ckage
Speed co ntrol Auto t emp 01 r
condtlton Jn g
I It
whe e l
949 27 4 ~

SERVICE

1

High School
SENIORSmaking

11 oo--News 3,• 6,8 10 13,15 Dick Cavell 20, Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3 A, 15, Starsky a. Hutch 6, 13,
Gunsmoke 8 ABC News 33, Movie " Will Penny"
10
12 3()-News 8 12 •II--SWAT 6,13

TELEVISION
VIEWING

YOU SO SURE, BIG

..

( AP I'AIN F:ASY

MOU NHD

CAMARO

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
&amp; downspouts, 20

4-30-IIC

SNOW
TIRE SALE

lOVAlll t WHITE snow dnft greot
PY~ENEJ:=S
Pupp tes
Ph one
I 614 667 3838

HAlF AU STRALIAN Blue Heale r
and hall Au stralian Shepherd
Female 9.dY 2822

¥• mile off Rt. 7 by pass on
51 Rt 124 toword Rutlond,
0

4 shel ves

Motchtng metal step tabl e wtth
J ~ heh•e!! Srnoll stereo and
•Od1o co rnbmot on Lo rge Phtlco
!&gt;IP.reo wllh rod1o combma110n
~evolvmg wrought 1ron
TV
~ l a nd Bo.,.s lined CPO ~ 1 ze 11
Gtrlc:, Win ter COO l SIZe 10
M£&gt;n s dress shoes s1ze 9 ,
~ fee l toe Boy s Th orn M eAn
:. hoe s 6
0 o nd many tochr
boy s
gtrls
JUntor s and
women s clot hmg 94'j 'l775

!{ISING STAR Kennels Boardtng
all br eed s
and gr oom•ng
Chesh tre 36i' 029 2 or 367 0 106

GOING Ol:JT of Busmess Sole '
Poodles Peki ngese Pomero
man Teacup Ttn es $35 to
$1'J5 Phone 014 096 12'17

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

po ~~cn ge•

~HA I-'I:R ~ TANO

1975 lH t: VRO HT
9Y2 5621 or 992

me K TH IC''

.

\\anted IQ Um

BUMHOUGHS
The new Susan B Anthony
dollar IS to be larger than a
quarter, smaller than the
Elllenhower dollar - and, 1f
we're lucky, worth about as
much as the 50-cent com

Business Services

11- The Da1'1 Sentinel, MiddlepUI t-Pome1"' 0 Tliu!Sday Ott 19 !978

MOLASSES
PIE IS PLUMB TASTY,
LOWEEIY- - HOW DO
'-IE MAKE IT?
SORGHUM

I TAKE TWO
CUPS OF BLEEP- -ONE CUP OF BLEEP -UP THREE
BLEEPS -- ADD
ONE TBSP.
OF BLEEP -FUST,

A Vennont reader asks if
the Pitt Coup is named after
an actual player
No, George Coffin of Waltham, Mass , probably invented the name We will
show the p!~y In tomorrow's
article.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

!Do you have s quest1on for
tho oxperts ? Write " Ask the
Experts," care of this newspllper Individual questions will
be answored If accomponled
by stamped setf-BddrBssod
envelopes The most InterestIng questions will be used In
this column and will receive
copies oi JACOBY MODERN I

--AN' THEN STIR IN
TWO TBSPS OF BLEEP ADD A DASH OF

BLEEP AN'- --

'-IOU AN' 'lORE
BLEEP BLEEP

SECRET

RECIPES!!

�ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SPECIALS FOR

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~'riday , October 20, 197M

·FRIDAY, OCT. 20th AND SATURDAY, OCT. 21st
FRIDAY 'TILL 8:00 P.M.

CARPET
SPECIAL

6' X9'
Rubber backing
Bound edges
Rust, Gold, Red, Olive, Blue

SPECIAL

EAGLE CHEERLEADERS- The Eastern High School Varsity Cheerleaders for ·the
711-79 season. They are Betsy Riffle , on top , supporting her is Brenda Frecker; on bottom,
tell to right, Beth Headley , Karen Probert, Angel Blake, Sherrie Starcher and Dawn
Sorden.

Benelli almost named
By JACK R. PAYTON
VATICAN CITY (UPI) Polish Cardinal Karol
Wojtyla won election as pope
alter two rival Italian church
princes burned themselves
out in heated early balloting,
Roman Catholic sources say.
Power f u 1 Cardin a I
Giovanni Benelli of Florence
came within a few votes of
being elected pontiff, the
sources said Wednesday , but
he was blocked by a coalition
of members of the church's
central government and
conservatives led by Cardinal
Giuseppe Siri of Genoa.
One source said Benelli
may have gotten as many as
73 of the 75 votes required for
election before being stopped
short by Siri's conservatives
and cardinals from Curia, the

Housing
!Continued from page II
•
York, at $497, and Miami, at
$443.
Benedict said 18 percent of
all those buying homes for the
first time last year could not
have afforded the housing
they bought without a second
inccme. The same was true of
11
percent
of
all
repurchasers.
In addition, the study said
38 percent of those who
bought in 1977 exceeded the 25
percent of income rule and
nearly 14 percent spent more
than 30 percent on their
housing costs.

NEW
PICKUP TRUCK

CAPS
SHIELDS- FLAIRS
at

Codner's Campers
Rainbow Ridge
C. R. 28 to Ba shan

THE

cent ral church gove rnment.
When it became clear that
neither Benelli, Siri nor the
other ~4 Italian cardinals
·could collect the required
· two-thirds plus one majority
of the 111 church princes in
the Sistine Chapel conclave,
the sources said, they began
considering a non-Italian
candidate.
Wojtyla , the 58-yea r-o ld
former
archbishop
of
Krakow, was elected on the
eighth ball ot to become the
first non-Italian pontiff in 455
years.
Though the cardina ls who
took part in the conclave that
elected Wojlyla are under
oath never to reveal how the
voting went, Benelll himself
provided a clue in a
newspaper
i.n t e r view
published today .
''There was n't enough
convergence to get enough
voles to elect an Italian," the
stocky, balding Benelli told

the newspaper Gazzetta del
Popolo.
The other main ,contender
lor pope was Siri, who ac·
cording to some sources
actually oulpolled Luciani in
the first ballot last August but
could not expand his con·
servative base enough to
. ,collect a two-thirds plus one
ma jority.
Though both Siri and
Benelli wound up losers in the
conclave, Vati ca n experts
said policy lines that a new
pope should follow the pvlicy
lines of his predecessor,
favored by Benelli, emerged
victorious in the election of
Wojtyla. ·
" I am very satisfied,"
Benelli told Gazella del
Popolo. " He (Wojtyla) is the
right man at the right time. If
there was one man who
believes in the Second
Vatican Council and had a
firm will to carry it out it was
Cardinal Wojlyla."

Pomeroy

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED
- Mrs.
Edward Lekan, 21, In·
Daniel
Knotts,
Middleport;
dependence, 0 ., went off the
right side of the roadway, Mrs. Kenneth Martin, Buf·
came ba ck on the pavement, falo; Frank McPherson ,
went ba ck off the right side of Minersville; Mrs. Kenneth
the road, struck a ditch and a Hoschar, Cottageville; Iva
Young,
Mason;
Diana
barb wire fence .
Officers report moderate Dalton, Point Pleasant ;
damage to the Lekan auto. Leslie Carr, Pomeroy; Mrs.
At 7:30a.m. a deer ran into Lester Casto, Point Pleasant;
Plants,
Point
the path of a north bound auto Bertha
operated by Robert Holland , Pleasant.
40, Cheshire, on CR 13, one
and three-tenths of a mile
south of SR 554.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Holland
vehicle.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
The deer left the scene.
and West Virginia today announced the awarding of a
$3.6 million contract Ill the
Dravo Corp., Pittsburgh, for
the first phase of construction
. of a new Steubenville-Weirton
bridge.
The contract, of which Ohio
will pay $1.1 million, is for the
two main river piers of the
suspension bridge.
The . Ohio Department of
Transportation reported that
the new bridge will he built
with a unique "stayed
girder" · design . Instead of
two sets of cables connected
to the bridge on either side,
there will be a single line of
cables through the center of
the bridge.
·
The bridge is expected to
'
help
relieve
extreme
congestion in the Steubenville
'
area.
I "
I COOI'I inu ed from page 1J

Dravo Corp.
·gets contract

~1ROOPER"

MEN'S WARM LINED BOOT

I lush
I•u Jln!~:.~
Brushed
Pigskin

• Color
Hash Brown

Warm blanket sleepers, pajamas,
gowns and robes for little boys
and girls .
Month sizesthru 14

Reg. $4.50 ........... . .... ... .. Sale 53.59
Reg . $6.00 ..................... S~le 54.79
Reg.$9 .00 ••••• •• .•••••.••••••• SaleS7.19
Reg. $12 .00 ................... Sale $9. 59
Reg. $14.00 ................... Sale $11.19
Reg. $18.00 ................... Sale $14.39

.,

/

THE
SHOE BOX

1
...,f

EVENT OCT. 30
Trick or treat night in the
Bashan area will be observed
Monday, Oct. 30, from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. This will be in lieu
of a Halloween party, Cheryl
Boston, secretary of the
ladies auxiliary of the lire
department, announces.

Weather
. Cloudy tonight an«! F'riday,
lows tonight in the lower 50s,
highs in the upper 50s or
lower 60s. Probability of
precipitation is 40 percent
today and 20 percent tonight
and Friday.
1

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

REG. s11.00 ........ SALE '8.79
REG. s16.00......... SALE s12.79
REG. szo.OO ......... SALE '15.99
"

$2 . SCHOOL NAME
TOBOGGANS
95

100 Pet . Acrylic - School colors and school
names for Wahama Falcons, Meigs
Marauders, Eastern Eagles, Southern
Tornadoes.

I

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE

DENIM JEANS

MEN'S WRANGLERS
FLANNEL SHIRTS

•a••
FOR TWO DAYS ONLY ·

Sizes small (14-14'12 ), medium (15151h), large (16-16'12). and extra
large (17-17 1/2), two pockets, extra
long tall, colorful plaid patterns.

TWO DAY SALE

®

SALE! MEN'S HANES 14.69

THERMAL UNDERWEAR
Thermal tops or bottoms in size S,
M, L and XL Two layer knit.
colton inside polyester outside.
Stock up now . .Regularly $4.69 for
top or bottom. Sale.

'3"
SA I.E I

CANNON
BED SHEETS
nnon Gold Label no-iron muslin sheets, floral pattern
on while · background, SO percent colton. 50 percent
polyester.
· $6.99 Full bed size Flat or filled: .. : ................ $5 .89
$5.49 Twin bed size flat or fitted .................... 54.59
$10.99 Queen size flat or filled ...................... 59.29
$13.99 King Size flatorfftted .................. ; .... $11.29
$4.99pair Pillow Cases .......................... S4.19pr .

MEN'S $695 SWEAT SHIRTS
Sizes S, M, L and XL - Warm fleece lined
sweat shirts with crew neck, regular shoulder,
long sleeves, Wrangler and Springfoot brands.

'5''
CLOSE-OUT SALEI

WINDOW SHADES
Duplex
shades
of
heavyweight.
room
darkening,
plastic
willow. brass or tangerine
on Inside, ·while on outside.

Size 37'-A" by 6' Long .... ~3.99
Size 551f4" by 6' Long .....s4.99
Limited quantity

BUY YOUR
DUTCH FLOWER BULBS

READY MADE DRAPERIES

NoW -HOUSEWARES DEPT. 1ST A.OOR -

Good Selection, Solid Colors and Patterns . 63, 72 or 84 Inch Lengths.
Home Fumishinp - 1st Floor

EXCELlENT SELECTION - TULIPS •
NARCISSUS • DAFFODILS ·CROCUS •
HYACINtH AND OlHER.

at y

enttne

than 4 percent.
Today's report confirmed that trend and also dispelled fears
- voiced by some private economists - that the nation is
verging on a recession.
Economists believe a growth rate in the 3-4 percent range
will be helpful in the battle to tame inflation. It should also be
sufficient to keep unemployment from rising.
The GNP is considered the most accurate indicator of U.S.
economic health.
The Commerce Department said the total Gross National
Product in current dollars stood at $2.14 triUion during the
third quarter - an increase of $53.6 billion from the April.J une
quarter .
The drop in inflation - as measured by the implicit price
deflator- was considerable. The department said much of the
improvement was accounted for by lower food costs rlurinP thP

third quarter .
The GNP prii'O deflalllr is considered to be the most accurate
gauge of inflation because it measures price changes
throughout the economy- not just in the consumer sector. The
Labor Department issues a monthly report on consumer prices
that gains more publicity.
still, a 7-percent inflation rate is high by historical
sta ndards . President Carter is expected to go on national
television next Tuesday to unveil his revamped anti-inflation
program . II is expected to include voluntary wage-price
guidelines fm· business and labor to be enforced by a set of
government sanctions.
In a breakdown of the GNP, final sales increased by $56
billion com pared with a $92.1 billion increase in the second
quarter. All major components, except net exports,
contributed to the increase.

Gover,nment regulations
growing threat Bell

Machine washables.
Solid colors and checks.
Sizes 4 to 20 and 30 thru 40 ..

Mr. Leggs 14 oz.
Prewashed .:_ flare leg. sizes 29
to 42 waist, length, 30 to 36. True
western styling, special sale .

Hanes

Wall ·aways · Rock·o·loungers ·
swivel rockers· occasional chairs

SLACKS

CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR

By JAMES HILDRETH
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The natiun •s·economy grew at a 3.4
percent annual rate during the third quarter of this year, the
govenunent reported today , a pace almost exacUy on target
with administration projections.
Furthermore, the Commerce Department said inflation
during the July-,September period decelerated sharply rising by just 7 percent after an II-percent surge in the second
quarter.
The 3.4-percent expansion of the " real" Gross National
Product - the total output of goods and services adjusted for
inflation - was considerably below the second quarter 's B.7percent growth rate.
However, government economists had been predicting for
months that. the economy would slow down during the second
half of the year and finish with a gmwth rate of slighly more

Berkline and KroehleE. Quality
Cloth or vinyl upholstering.

JUNIOR SLACKS

SALE

Wolfe, Pomeroy; Larry
Wright. Langsville; Rocky
Blake, Reedsville .
DISCHARGED - Donna
Rose, Mary Van Meter, Dana
Blumenauer, Thomas
McKay, Jr., Betty Theiss.

CHAIR SALE

WOMEN'S OPEN STOCK

e

•

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 132 -

Third quarter economy rate rose .4 percent

FURNITURE DEPT.

SALE
Solid Colors
Belted
Sizes 3 thru 18
1
REG. 10.00 ............... SALE 17.99
REG. 112.00............... SALE 19.59
REG. 115.00............... SALE 111.99
REG. 120.00 .............. SALE 115.99
1
l-::_,_w~-·--·--·~~~.;';!~~·:;.:."'·· .......... SALE 17.59

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Maggie
Gilmore, Racine; Brian
Spencer, Pomeroy ; Kathryn
Pierce, Middleport; Helen
George, Bidwell; Thomas

'29 95

•

Regular Price $12.99 to $14.99 Pair -

1f2 PRICE

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.

·ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.

HUNTINGTON
proposals of whatever good
Galloping
government intent that work against local
regulation - shifting from development."
utility restrictions l o con·
As examples of common
sumer control - is a real and concerns, the Columbia
growing threat to Ohio Valley president cited his own
communities' economic and compandes' exerpences as the
industrial progress, Daniel L. first local energy supplier to
Bell, Jr., pre si dent of face regulation directly af·
Columbia Gas System feeling most of his audience .
distribution ·companies, told a "Now we are working out of
Huntington audience Thurs·
day night.
Guest speaker lor the
Central Ohio Valley In·
dustrial
Council's
Silver Anniversary dinner
at Gliyan Country c ·tub , Bell
urged that organization to
become "iss ue oriented,"
Identifying and opposing · o·
energy regulation that works.
against the .basic interest 111
the West Virginia , Ohio and
Kentu cky communities il
represents.
"It is time," B~ll said, "to
bolster credibility here in
these tri-state communities,
in the state capitals and in
Congress and the regulating
agencies in Washington as a
public interest group that
champions economic . adDANIEL BELL
v8nceinent and opposes

i,.]__Th_e_W~o-rl_d_T_o;....d_a_y_
· Assembly fire damages cars
~ CINCINNATI (UPI) - A lire broke out on the assembly
line at the General Motors plant in suburban Norwood late
Thursday night, heavily damaging two 1979 Chevrolet
Camaros.
Fire officials said gasoline being pumped into one of the
cars spilled on ill the floor and ignited when the second car was
started . Firefighters were called to the Jllanl shortly after 11
p.m. and had the blaze, which was confined to the vehicles,
extinguished within a few minutes. There were no injuries
reported.

Scandal bottom not reached
c;&lt;lLUMBUS (UPI) -Jay Solomon, administrator of the
General Services Administraiton, said Thursday night
investigators do not believe they have yet reached the bottom
of the GSA corruption scandal.
Eighteen indictments already have reSulted from an
investigation by a federal strike force. "We really don 't know
.the whole story yet - who's involved or how much money,"
said Solomon who was in Columbus for a speech.

UFO film lost in mail
LUDINGTON, Mich. (UPI ) - The Coast Guard said
Thursday the post office apparently has lost film an officer
took of an unidentified flying object sighted nearly three weeks
ago.
The film, taken by Chief Petty Officer Scott Richardson
was mailed Oct. 511l the Coast Guard's Ninth District Office i~
Cleveland, but spokesmen at the headquarters said It never
arrived.

Settlement
nets Meigs
$153,217

this made-in-Washington gas
shortage," Bell said. "Our
unaided efforts have brought
us to where we expect to have
gas for all our customers
needs this winter, and next
year we expeCt to have gas
for those who have been
waiting for it rive or six
years. But when will
Columbia have more gas is
the wrong question. You
should be asking: 'Will we be
able to get gas for industry? '
"The new regulation that
ha s crept up on all of us
during these years of crisis is
not utility regulation . It's
consumer

regulation .

7~~:(~;~fi? 'liftt~t·
'

AREA REPAVED - The area at the.Hobson railroad crossing below Middleport has
been repaved for the second time in less than a month . There was extensive work done
recently at the area and the crossing area was torn up by a train derailment . While the new
paving ha s created an improved situation, the track warning lights of the crossing are being
used on an around-the-dock basis at the present time .

Peace talks stalled
By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
serious differen ce over the
comprehensive Middle East

settlement has brought the
Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty
talks to a point of deadlock .
Conference officials said
the stalemate, which has
been building since Monday
night, will require more
· active participation by
President Carter. It was not
certain whether he will deal
with the foreign ministers at
the talks, or speak directly to
the heads of government in.
Cairo and Jerusalem.
Officials, who had been
predicting a successful
agreement by tonight, are
now certain the talks will
extend past I he Jewis h
Sabbath , which begins at
sundown.
A conference spokesman,
George Shennan, said: "No
one denies there are
difficulties. There is a
determination on the part of
all three parties to reach
success in these negotiation s."
There
will
be
no
negotiation s Saturday, and
the talks are expected to

CINCINNATI (UPI)- City Manager William Donaldson
and two other_city officials have been spared jall. Found in
contempt of court earlier this month for not complying with
orders to improve the City Workbouse, Donaldson, Safety
Director Richard Castellini and Workhouse Superintendent
William Withworth were scheduled for sentencing Thursday
by Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge Harry
Klusmeler .
Klusmeier told the three they had not purged themselves
of contempt, but said he would suspend the sentences and told
the.three to move quickly on improvements at the workhouse.

950 insurance firms out
NEWPORT, Ky . (UPI)- Some 950 insurance companies
have been dismissed as defendants in the Beverly Hills nightclub fire case. The ruling Thursday by Campbell County
Circuli 3udge John Diskin still leaves about 100 defendants in
the case to be heard sometime next year, including the owners
of the burned-&lt;&gt; ul club where 165 people died May 28, 1977.
Relatives ofvictinls are seeking a total of nearly $2 billion.
The insurance companies dismissed were members of the
Insurance Services Office or the Kentucky Property Insurance
Placement Facility.

CAMP PENDLETON MARINE BASE, Calif. (UPI)- A
21-year-&lt;&gt;ld Marine from Ohio was killed Thursday when he
jumped up to grab the net of· a basketball hoop and the
backstop snapped and toppled on top of him. striking him in the

chest.
Kllled was Lance Cpl. Daniel G. Dzlak, of Northfield, Ohio,
In Summit County. A base spokesman said Dzisk was
returning to f!is barracks ala bout 11:15 p.m. Wednesday night
when be jumped up and grabbed the net In a recreational area.
Th;!,(llructure broke off a!the base ~nd fell onto him .
;,,

&lt;'.'

'

City officials spared jail

Backstop kills soldier

-~

'·

It

regulated you, not us. All
over the country, as gas
companies appeal for permission to lift restrictions
and serve new customers,
variations appear on th'e
theme
of
consumer
regulation ," Bell sai rl
In some states the first new
gas goes to homes with new
energy saving construction or
to customers who have
retrofi\led insulation and
other 'measures, he con·
linued. In another eastern
state, a gas company's return
to unrestricted service was
met by a storm of opposition
with seven different interest
groups, from . curtailed industrial customers to public
housing agencies, all laying
exclusive claims to the first
available gas.
"Other troubling aspects of
trends in energy regulation
are a drift of state and federal
legislators toward
in·
cremental, or other forms of
punitive pricing and, particularly in federal energy
regulation , moves to end-use
regulation ," Bell said.
"Proposals for national
energy regulation operate on
a basic assumption thai gas is
a dwindling resource that
must be husbanded for
domestic use, rationed to
critical industrial processes,
and literally barred frorn use
in new industrial expansion.
"There is no basis in fact
for this position," he pointed
out. ''The numbers it rests on
are suspect. It ignores the
tremendous volumes of gas
available in this hemisphere.
It · is contradicted by the

Inventory investment was $17.6 billion, down $2.5 billion
from the second quarter .
Personal consumption expenditures increased by $31.6
billion in the third quarter, compared with a $46.2 billion
second quarter boost. Expenditures for durable gOOds increased $1.5 billion, compared with $14.3 billion in the previous
quarter .
The del't'leration in this category was accounted for by
reduced purchases of motor vehicles, the department said.
Disposable - after-tax - personal income rose by $.11.4
billion while personal outlays increased $33.2 billion, tbe
department said.
As a result, the department noted that personal savings
decreased by $1.9 billion.
Business fixed investment increased by $5.3 billion compared with $14.5 billion the second quarter.

OLD SATAN AND DRACULA arrived in Pomeroy
Thursday to be on hand for the haunted house feature of
the Meigs Jaycees Ill be held tonight and Saturday and
next week from Oct. 24 through Oct. 31 at the former
Pomeroy High School. The Jaycees have spent hundreds
of dollars on costuming and masks for the Halloween
sea$)n feature which will run from 7 to 10 p.m. each
evening on the designated dales . Admission is $1 a Jl'lrson
and the feature is for young and old. Jaycee-&lt;!tles will
have seasonal refreshinents on hand for sale in the
auditorium of the building. Jaycees have worked for
weeks getting it all together to provide a thrilling
\
experience .for haunted house visitors.

resume Sunday .
A rare glimpse of the
difficulties emerged when
Carter allended a working
luncheon of the conference at
Blair House Thursday.
The microphones of reporters, who were present. for the
start of the meeting , picked
up Dayan's voice saying:
11
Whether you can obtain a
change of position through
the delegations here is very
doubtful . It's not Camp David
with the heads of state."
Carter was heard to reply,
~~ r recognize that's one of the
problems."
Later Carter, · clearly
annoyed by reporters'
questions
about
the

overheard exchange , said
1
'there are no particular
problems" and refused Ill
answer any questions about
the difficulties that ha ve
emerged.
A further glimpse of the
tone of the negotiations carne
in a speech by Amb. Simcha
· Dinitz, a member of the
Israeli negotiating team, late
Wednesday at Georgetown
University.
Dinitz, speaking in the
presence of Dayan, said,
"Israel cannot and will not
prejudice the prospects of
peace by yielding to
unilateral demands or
ultimatums presented as a
substitute for negotiations."

Patrol probes
five accidents
The Gallia · Meigs Post,
Hi ghway Patrol , investigated
five accidents Thursday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one·vehicle accident on SR 160, five-tenths
of a mile north of milepost 2,
at 6:50a .m.
According to the patrol, an
auto operated by. Allan
Evans, 21, Bidwell, traveling
south, went out of control,
struck a guardrail, and
flipped over.
Evans was not injured.
Officers report severe
damage to the vehicle. No
citation was issued.
The patrol investigated a
two-vehicle accident on SR
160, one·lenth of a mile north
of CR 2, at 3 p.m.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Irene Sword, 58,
McRoberts, Ky., was south·
bound passing a vehicle
driven by Joseph Williams,
60, GallipoHs .
The Sword auto pulled back
into the right lane striking the
front of the Williams vehicle.
The patrol reports slight
damage to both vehicles. No
citation was issued.
At 7:15a.m., a deer ran into
the path of a vehicle operated
by Roberta Holliday, 39,
Dexter, on SR 160, two-tenths
of a mile north of Vinton.
Officers report sllght
damage to the Holllday
vehicle.
The deer was killed.
A deer ran into the path of
an auto operated by Glenna
Holland , 23, pt, Pleasant,
traveling south on SR 325,
lhree·lenths of a mile south of
CR I at 6:45 a.m.
Offi ce rs report slight
damage to the vehicle.
There was no report on the
condition of the deer.

At 7:45a.m., a deer ran into
the path of a vehicle driven
by Timothy Davis, 20, New
Haven, on SR 7, at milepost!.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Davis vehicle.
The deer left the scene.

Leal pick-up
starts Monday
Annual leaf pick-ups in
Middleport
will
begin
Monday , Oct. 23, it was an·
noun"ed today by the
mayor's offlce.
Residents are asked to rake
their leaves into the street
along the curb and they will
be picked up by the street
department free of charge.
Schedule for the pick-up is:
Monday,
first
ward ;
Tuesday, second ward ;
Wednesday, third ward;
Thursday, fourth ward. Pickups will continue each week
until further notice.

CLEVELAND
(UPil
This week's wlnnlug Ohio
Lottery numbers:
Gold number - &amp;.
White number - 38.
Blue number - 368.
Wln·A·Thon
471&amp;9.

~

Meigs County will be
$153,217 richer as a result of
real estate taxes to be paid by
the Penn Central Railroad
according to decision s passed
down following some eig ht
years of litigation.
Meigs County treasurer
George Collins reports the
county will receive $40,449.29
in cash, a Iota! of $27,000 in
short term notes and total of
$85,800 in long term notes.
Interest will be paid to the
county on the notes.
The long court battle over
back taxes was led over the
years
by
t he
Ohio
Prosecuting Attorneys Assn.
headed
by
Douglas
MacGillivrat. Logan County
Prosecutor, c urr ent
association president.
On April 22, 1977, the U. S.
Distr ict Court lor the Eastern
distrlct of Pennsy lvania
approved the proposal of the
Penn Central trustees to offer
a comprorriise settlement of
state and loca l tax cla ims.
The ~ourt ordered that state
and local laxing authorities.
had 180 days to accept or
reject the compromise offer.
On June 10, 1977, the court
ordered that Penn Cen tral

Protest
planned
SOUTH SHORE, Ky. (UP!)
- Residents of South Shore
plan a protest Saturday to
express concern over the loss
of emergency helicopter
service that had enabled
access to Portsmouth, Ohio
hospitals.
The residents plan to stage
a car caravan to Morehead to
tell Kentucky Gov. Julian
Carroll they need helicopter
service while the U.S. Grant
Bridge is closed for repairs .
In a related development,
Congress has allowed funds
to rebuild the bridge,
according to Sen. Wendell
Ford. The $30 mlUion special
designation for the bridge
was ' included as part of a
huge increase .in a special
bridge replacement program
funded by Congress.
Despite the announcement
of the funding, the protest is
expected to go on as
scheduled acco rding to
Sourth Shore councilman
Kenneth RaUiss, who said the
repairs probably would not
be done in enough time fo
allow reopening of the bridge
before December 1979.
A ferry service operates
between the two cities, but
residents claim that is
inadequate. They indicated
what used to be a 15-minute
trip from one city Ill the other
now takes several hours be·
cause of the delay for the •
ferrys.
The idea for a caravan
came this week when the trip
of a pregnant woman to a
hospital in Portsrr\outh was
delayed by the slow ferry
service.
The money for the Grant
Bridge project will be
available when the President
signs
the
bill.
The
approximate funds for bridge
repair were not known unlit
ThtD'sday when the HouseSenate conference committee
report became available.
.

~

begin paying current taxes
"lawfully assessed against
th e properties in their
po ssess ion or lawfully at&gt;"
plicable to the activities of
the Penn Central Enterprise
for the period subsequent to
Ja n. I, 1977.1t should be noted
this order applies only to
property still owned by Penn.
Central Transportation Co.
and does not apply to
property taken ove r by
ConRaiL
With respect to ConRail
property, ConRail will pay
cu rrent taxes assessed on and
after April I , 1976. It is
estimated
th at
approximately BO percent of
Penn Central in Ohio was
conveyed to Con RaiL
Treasurer Collins says that
a check for Ohio's counties
which will .receive back taxes
will be picked up by the Ohio
Prosecuting Allurneys Assn.
on
Wednesday
in
Philad elphi a. The amount
due to Meigs County will be
transferred to a local
depository next week.

Weather
Clear and cold tonight, with
lows in the middle or upper
40s. Moslly sunny again
Saturday, with highs in the
upper 60s or lower 70s.
Probability of precipitation
nea r zero t hrough Saturday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday, fair Sunday, with
showers Monday and
Tuesday. Highs will be In
the 70s Sunday and Monday
and In the 60s Tuesday.
Overnight lows wlll be in
the low or mid 50s Sunday
and In the mid 40s by
Tuesday.

CAA gets

$141,138
The Gallia • Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency has
been allocated $141 ,138 for a
comprehensi ve work experience program with 42
slots as a part of a 7.3 million
dollar , Federal
Com·
prehensive Employment
Traini ng Act grant
Gov. James Rhodes announced the funding which
will continue to provide jobs
lor approximately 2,200
people in 57 counties.
"Veterans, blacks, youth 21
and under, and the han·
dica pped are among the
groups that will be given
special consideration . for.
enrollment in employment
and training programs, it was
reported .
The director of the Ohio
Department
of
Ad·
ministrative Servi ces,
Richard D. Jackson, said in
addition to jobs, some of the
participants will receive
training, education and
supportive services to enable
them to secure and stay
employed at their maximum
capacity.
Jackson said every effort
will be made to lind per·
manent, unsubsidl•e«&lt;
positions lor CETA (all
CAPSO patp/cipailts.) ·"1-

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