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                  <text>.10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday . Oct. 23, 1978

Egypt takes favorable
view of treaty draft
United Press Ioteruallooal
Egypt today took . a
favorable but qualified view
of tlle draft of a historic peace
treaty witll Israel that could
officially end three decades
of hostility between the two
nations.
Moshe Dayan; Israe l's
chief treaty negotiator and
foreign
minister, was
presenting Ule draft text to

Ule Israeli cabinet today in
Jerusalem for its approval.
Dayan, on arrival from
Washington SWJday witll De·
fense
Minister
Ezer
Weizman, said the two sides
were '(closer together" but
emphasized "there are a
number of areas where even
now we do not have an

agreement.''
Israeli and

Egyptian

• Automatic Cook-Master
Oven Control

negotiators announced in
Washingtoo SWJday they had
resolved all the "principal
issues" of a treaty under
which Israel would withdraw
from Ule Sinai and Egypt
would allow economic and
cultural ties with the Jewish
nation.
A cautiously worded
Egyptian statement issued in
. Cairo today was large ly
favorable to the draft treaty
and high on praise for
President Carter for his role
in eliminating differences between Israel and Egypt.
"Egypt holds that some
points in the draft might
require further study to make
it r eady for signing, "
Presidential Press Secretary
saad Zaghloul Nassar said
today.
Nassar praised President
Carter's intervention witll the
Israeli and Egyptian negotiators late last week to bring
tentative agreement on the

draft .
The spokesma n thus
impled that Egypts reaction
to. the draft was largely
favorable.
"Egypt must pay tribute to
the wonderful and honest
effort made by President
Carter who held a lengthy
meeting with UJe Egyptian
delegation Saturday morning
to push Ule process toward
agreement and to overcome
some
difficulties
and
differences," Nassar said.

Mikoyan dead
IContinued from page ll
innerctrcle as commissar of trade .
In Ulat role, he was Ule first top Communist official to
visit the United States. After a tour in 1936, he brought
back ice cream pies, corn flakes and mechanized
bakeries.
"We must study America," he said.
Mikoyan seemed w have a built-in political baro~eter ,
an instinct that always seemed to put him beside the right
person at tlle right time.
Stalin's purges feU hard on Ule inner circle, but Mikoyan
managed to survive, carrying a deputy-premier's title he ·
was to hold for more than three decades.
But he had close calls.
"Stalin held ' us in his hand," he ooce said. "Only one
escape was left to us (suicide) . At the end of Stalin's life, I
was about to be executed."
But it was not to be. Mikoyan's barometer led him to tlle
side of Niklta Khrushchev during Ule coup of 1957. When
Khrushchev emerged, Mikoyan rose with him.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 20
Dorothy Adams, Joseph
Adams ,
Billie
Akers,
Margaret Bray, James

•Glass 'window in oven
door
• Easy-View Surface Unit

controls
• Broiler-roaster Pan

Now Only

34900

5

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturda y admission Dorothy Greathouse, Racine.
Saturday discharg es Henry Greathouse, Betty
Pauley, Gina Arnett, Brenda
Fry, Marilyn Powell, Goldie
Roberts, Larry Smith, Calvin
Pickens, Monid Good, Merle
Manley.
·
Sunday admissions - Mary
Bonecutter, Pomeroy; Nona
Winebrenner, Middleport ;
Jr.,
Edward
Martin,
Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges- Mary
Evans, Otmer Grimm.

PAULA SISSON; left, educa tiona! consultant of the
Ohio Deoartment of Education. confers witll Greta Suttle,
a county school supervisors and chairman of Ule coWlty's
right to read program. Ms. Sisson and Mrs. Suttle met
witll the county committee on the right to read program
Thilrsday afternoon to discuss the future steps to be taken
_in.the program .

someone happy

this··Christmas.
Like a child you don•t even know.
Mak.ing youngsters happy-is there anything beUer that.
yOu could do with your time'? And , if that happy moment
comes at Christmas, it turns for maliy children a sad time .
into a happy one
Enter th~ Dress-A-Do!lru Contest or the Design - A -Toy n.~
Contest . You may participate in one or both , whatever you
choose . We furnish the doll and the toy . They are bo!h

Brenneman, Lily Browning,
Karen Bullington, Maril~n
Campbell, Hugh Childs,
Maude Corder,
Bruce
Davison, Deborah Friend ,
Thelma Green, ·Roberta
Hartley, ~Y Hill, Reginald
Hill, Freddie Houdashelt,
James Israel, Wiima Jolley,
Mrs. Robert Jones and
daughter, Donald LeNay,
Julia Lee, Nora Lucas, Ralph
Mahan, Effie Mahle. Kathryn
Maines, Robert Mayries,
Helen Manring', Helen
McGuire, Ray McGuire,
Charles North, Roy Phillips,
Linda Preston, Home&lt; Rees,
Anthony Remy, Catherine
Shifflet, James Simms, Seth
Stobart, Nina W::tgner,
Rebecca Woltz.
Births, Oct. %0
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Craig,
son, Scottown ; Mr. and Mrs.
James Garey, daughter,
Middleport.
Discharges, Oct. 21
Joseph Beattie, Mrs .
Johnny
Berkley
and
daughter; Glenn Biddle, John
Brunton, Roy Burns, Mildred
Clarey, Grace Copas, Dawn
Elliott, Hobart Ferris,
Glennie Fox, Donald Fox,
Thelma Houck, Charity King,
Edwin Larue, Donald Lipscomb, Meda Mink, Hillard
Newsome, Dorothy Pierce,
Tamara Lance; Mary Riggs,

1------------------~------·
I

1

JAMES WILFORD ROUSH
.lame&gt; Wilford Roush, 62 of
Newton Falls, died early
Thursday morning at the St.
Joseph Hospital at Warren.
Son of the late Orval and
Myrtle Thornton Roush, he
had been employed for over
25 years at the Newton Steel
Tube Co. He was reared by
his grandparents, the late
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thornton of
Mt. Alto.
· He is survived by his wife,
Evelyn Jordan Roush., five
daughters and one son, and
was preceded in death by an
infant daughter, and three
brothers, Floyd , Homer and
Jesse. He is survived by a
brother, Albert Roush, Route
4, Pomeroy , and an aunl,
CORRECTION
The Meigs County sheriff's
department erroneously
· reported that Mrs. Betty
Bishop, 40, Rt. 4 Pomeroy,
struck a car driven by Elaine
M. Barnhart, 17, on the Meigs
high school ' parking lot
Friday. This was incorrect as
Miss Barnhart did not see
that Mrs. Bishop was stopped
and Miss Barnhart struck the
rear of the Bishop car.
Charles Rowland, Elsie
Saunders, Orin Smith ,
Tressie Stevens, Einma
Swon, Evelyn Tredway.
Births, Oct. %1
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Burd,
son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Shobe, daughter,
Leon, W. Va.
Discharges, Oct. 22
Debra Adkins, Ronald
Brown, AnthO!lY Davis,
Wanda Dillinger, Carol
Drake, Hazel Harding, Mrs.
Eugene Hornsby and son,
Blanche Johnson, Bessie
McCormick, Harry Parsons,
Minnie Riffle, Callie Roberts,
Edna
Rollins,
Joshua
Rutherford, Ronald Swisher,
William Will.
Births, Oct. 21
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Clark, caughter, Wellston.

IJ,..:_r_h_e_W_or_fd_To_d_a_y_
(Continued from page I )
urged voters to cast UJeir ballots for Lt . Gov. ·Richard Celeste
for governor.
Speaking along witll Celeste at a get-&lt;Jut the vote rally for
the Coaltitlon for Political Participation Saturday, Young told
a primarily black audience of about 300 tllat "one vote
shouldn't make a difference - but it does . One vote could
mean Ule difference between healtll and happiness or
mediocrity and confusioo."

ELBERFELD$
.

'·'· '

'

,.

Mrs. Mary Dean, Bidwell.
Funeral services were held
at 11 a.m. Saturday at the ,
Browski Funeral Home at
Newton Falls.
Albert Roush a ttend~d
along with other members of
his family, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Flowers, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush and Susan.
· BERTHA C. PLANTS
Mrs. Bertha C. Plants, 81,
Regency Apt. Five, Point
Pleasant, died Saturday
evening at her' home.
She was born Feb. 6, 1897 in
Mason County, to the late
James C. and Amanda J.
Meadows Edwarda.
She was preceded in deaUJ
by her_. husband, Dell D.
Plants in 1974.
Su..Vivors include two sons,
Duane Plants, Jericho Rd.,
Point Pleasant; Kenneth D.
Plants, Morgantown ; two
sisters, Mrs. Osia Riffle, Pt.
Pleasant and Mrs. Cora
Morgan, Mason; six grandchildren.
Services will be.Tuesday 11
a.m. in the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with the Rev_.
Wilbur Baxter officiating.
Burial will be In Yauger
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m.
today .
EULAH BRACKEN
Eulah Norris Bracken, 81,
Darlington, Pa., formerly of
Letart Falls. died Satnrrlav
afternoon at a hospital in
Midland, Pa .
Mrs. Bracken was the
daughter of the late Philson
and Ella Norris. She was also
preceded in deatll by her
husband, Roy, one daughter,
Kathryn, one son, Carl
Peacock, and one brother,
Edwin Norris.
She is survived by one son,
Earl Peacock, New York, two
daughters-in-law, several
grandchildren and great ·
grandchildren, four brothers,
Tom Norris, Letart Falls,
Ross Norris, Syracuse, Carl
Norris, Junction City and
Rev. L. T. Norris, Rome City,
Ind., and a host of other
relatives.
FWleral services will be
conducted Wednesday at 2
p.m. at the United Brethren
Church, Letart Falls. Burtal
will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
During the meeting presided over by Thereon Johnson,
.The Ohio Environmental Agency has not been formally chairman, plans were made for a special session for reviewing
advised that a coal loading facility is being readied in the Ule indUstrial site study report. The report is to be completed
Minersville area, C. E. Blakeslee, executive director of the by the JeMings and Associates Consulting Co. in January and
Meigs COunty Planning Commission, reported Monday when according to plans made Ule meeting to reveal the study to the
the 'commission met at the Farmers Bank Building.
public will be held in conjunction with the Pomeroy and
Wakeslee reported tllat he had talked to EPA persoMel in Middleport Otambers of Commerce. H. E. Shields and E. F.
botll Logan andfl:olwnbus and Ulat tlley had advised him that . Robinson were named to attend tlle November meeting of the
no application had been filed for the planned coal loading Meigs and Atllens County group which is working on the
facility but did indicate that ooe would have to be filed . The .industrial site study . .
facility does have permission from UJe State of Ohio to run a
Johnson reported that progress is being made at the site of
conveyor for coal under the road in Minersville and has been Ulenursing home construction on former Route 33 and Blakesgiven permission by the U. S. Corps of Engineers for using the lee annoWJced Ulat maps of Meigs CoWJty heine made bv Ohio
river as a part of tlle operation, Blakeslee reported . .

entering the toy contest need only assemble the toy from a
sheet of complete instructions and add whatever decoration
they choose to the exterior of the ro)'. The toy, a truck,
comes in three different models : log truck, fire engine and
dump truck We will give dolls and toys to needy boys and
girls in our area . One of our local organizations will ,help
distribute them. They know where the dolls and the toys are
most needed. You woul d be surpri sed how many need

so much .

Along the way , yoor doll and toy will be on display in
our lobby and people from m.iles around will be i'nvited to
see them . Both dolls and !rucks will be judged and you can
even win a prize.
Make some linle girl or boy happy this Chri stmas and you
will have a h"appicr Cltristmas too . Enter our Dress-A-DoJJTM
or Dr:sign-A-Toy !),j Contest It ~..:osl"i you nothing but .your
time tO sew a doll dress or assemble a truck

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
~

Member Feder~~ Oopotit '""""'" C..poqt»n

VOL. XXIX NO. 134

rw -

A TltA0E&gt;1o\Jtll. AND SERVICE MARK Of IUCHAlD ITEIIBII'IS _.,/liD AS~OCI .-.lU . INC

•

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1978
,•

Cable TV
rate hike
denied
WHICH MASK? -That's what Amy Joy Boston was
asking herself Monday as she prepared for Halloween .
Amy· is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Mike Boston of
Letart .

·Explosion

kills

•

SIX

By JAMES L. OVERTON

Twilight beef
:meeting set

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

University are nearing completion.
committee . Blakeslee also pointed out Ulat legislation on land
Mrs. Carol Costanzo reported on several conferences she use in Ohio 'is to be introduced in Ohio's General Assembly in
has had with Ule county commissioners in reference to a home January and he stated tllis will have some effect on Meigs
rehabilitation program. The coun ty has some $80,000 which County.
will be used to rehabilitate homes and no repayment will be
Archie Stegall, Shields and Robinson were named to serve
necessary for tllose receiving benefits. Shields and Carl as the nominating committee and besides selecting a slate of
Denison have been named by the commissioners to an officers the group will also recommend a citizens'
overseeing committee and a director will be hired by the representative on the commission. The next regular meeting
commissioners for tlle home improvement program . Mrs. was set for January 4unless a special meeting has to be called
Costanzo indicated tllat Ule director might find other federal earlier to handle business matters which might arise.
programs through which additional funds for similar
Attending the session were Johnson , Blakeslee, Robinson ,
programs might be obtained.
Shields, Mrs. Costanzo, Stegall, Wesley Buehl, Edison Baker,
Plans were made for printing _the annual report of the Rick Crow and Boyd Ruth .
commission in December and Blakeslee is to namP A rPvif'W

e

four to six and two houses
were totally destroyed."
Officials said about 150
persons lived in Ule trailer
park. Most commuted to
work in Houston or to nearby
chemical plants.
'-' II was like daylight when I
got tllere," said David Smith,
ooe of tlle first Pearland
Emergency
Service
personnel who arrived at the
scene. " We had a tremendous
fire."
Smith said several of the
injured . were
burned
critically and were airlifted
to a Houston burn center.
Others less seriously injured
were taken to a nearby
elementary school and
treated.
Classes were canceUed at
the school, located about a
mile from Ule disaster area,
and classrooms became
temporary shelters for the

BROOKSIDE VILLAGE,
Texas (UPI) - A natural gas
pipeline exploded before
dawn today, sending flames
racing through a small trailer
park. At least six persons
died in Ule infetno and dozens
were injured.
· Police said 43 persons were
taken to nearby hospitals
with burns . The more
seriously injured were
evacuated by Houston
hospital helicopters and U.S. ·
Coast Guard choppers.
, Brookside pollee chief B.G.
: Ellis also said residents of the
· small community, located
· about 15 minutes from
downtown Houston, were
being evacuated because
, "they are expecting another
· · explosion ."
The 3:30a.m . explosion left
: a Hi-foot-wide cra'ter andlflat·
: tened nearby mobile homes.
• The fire "turned the night evacuees.
' into day ."
The blast could be felt in
' "The flames were 200 to 300 soutlleast Houston more than
feet high and visible for at 20 miles away.
least 10 miles," said Lt.
"I can see the flames from
· Qndr. J.C. Cobb of Houston's here," said a spokesman for
· Coast Guard air station. "I Aviation Charter Inc., an
' didn't count the trailers ambulance service at Hobby
(damaged) but I estimated Airport in soutlleast Houston .
(Continued on page 10)

available now in our lobby . You dress the doll. and those

'•0.000 Mnimum l1110110te For Elctl

Application has not been filed with EPA
for planned Minersville coal loading facility

Area Deaths !

There will be a twilight beet
meeting at the . Dave
near
Gloeckner farm,
· Ractne, on Wednesday,
· October 25, at 6 p.m., with
: many interesting things to
' show and discuss.
·
- Pasture management for
more beef per acre.
- Demonstration on the
control of multi-flora rose.
- Observe and discuss
handling equipment.
- Discuss and observe the
beef herd.
-Discuss the use of Ralgro
and other growth stimulants.
- Talk about intensive ·
management of beef cattle.
Refreshments will be
served.
For more information or
directions to the farm,
contact the Meigs County
- Extension office at 992-3895.
•

I

~'

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Members of Middleport village coWJcil are satisfied with
the service of the PoinTView Television Cable Co. "just as it
is. "
That was tlle gist of a motion passed by the council at a
regular meeting Monday night when Paul Gerard,
representative of Ule Cable co·., appeared before tlle group to
request for Ule second time a rate increase. Gerard explained
again that the two local channels would be combined into one
local channel and two ·new channels would be added to the
service witll Channel 4 Colwnbus to be removed from the
service.
Gerard had asked coWJcil said he is concerned about
to approve an increase from whether residents on fixed
$6 to $7 a month for incomes can meet additional
Middleport customers and prices to which Gerard·
from $4.50 to $5.25 for senior pointed out that his firm does
citizens
and disabled offer a 25 percent discoWJt to
residents. Middleport has senior citizens and disabled
some 700· 'cable . customers. persons.
Mayor
Fred
Councilman Carl Horky Hoffman said that he does not
commented that the idea of think the cable company can
cable television in the first remove Ule two channels
place was to secure more from the Middleport service
Ohio news, sports programs with the changeover if the
and other state oriented raise is not approved. Gerard
programs and that he felt said as the situation now
Ulat the removal of Channel 4 stands, there will be no
defeated
the original programming on the two
purpose. Councilman Marvin channels affected by the
Kelly questioned the $25 changeover if Middleport
maximum
charge
for does not ~pprove the rate
subscribing and reconneting increase.
to Ule service . Gerard said
CoWJcilman Dewey Horton
tllat Ule maximum charge said that all of his neighbors
would be used only in cases are against tlle change and
where several members of the increase and upon his
Ule firm were required for motion
coun cil
voted
long periods in installing the unanimously that the town is
service.
satisfied with the service "as
(Continued on page 10)
Horky said that the
company will be breaking its
franchise in not providing
programming from Channel 4
after Gerard said that
Channel 4 is definitely
scheduled to be removed
from tlle service.
Robert Fisher, attending
the meeting as a fire
department representative,
said Ulat the cable company
should conduct a survey to
determine 1he wishes of
subscribers.
During questioning in
regard to what improved
services the c'Ompany had
provided in Middleport ,
Gerard said that equipment
had been updated and tllat
repair service offered by the
company is quicker than that
offered by any utility.
CoWJcilman Allen Lee King

CANCE R UPDATE '78 was held Saturday by the
Meigs County Unit of the American Cancer Society at ·
Meigs JWJior High in Middleport. Moder.ator was Rhonda
Dailey, R. N., B. S. director, professional education
committee Americ;an Cancer Society, Ohio Division, Inc.,
Meigs County Unit. The welcome was given by Frances
Helmick, R.N., director of professional education
American Can"'r Society, Ohio Division , Inc., Cleveland .

Rhodes plan
for education
•
lS detailed
By-t.EE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS I UPI) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes told the
Ohio Congress of Parents and
Teachers tOday he is "completely dedicated" to local
control of schools, and that
under his education plan,
there will be enough money to

$2 million track
project started
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
((JPI) - Consolidated Rail
Corporation said today it has
started the final phase of a
$10 million, three-year track
rehabilitation project
between Charleston and
Colwnbus, Ohio.
The West Virginia work
involves rehabilitating 44
miles of track between Point
Ple8118Ilt and Nitro at a cost
of $2 million, as well as
renovation of Dickinson Yard
east of Charleston.
The completion of this work
and a similar project in
soutlleastern Ohio will result
In removal of slow orders
from Ule ~ile line, the
company said.
The current West VIrginia
projects calls for installation
•I

of 34,000 crossties on the main
line and another 4,000 in the
yard, 1Coorail said.
The work is being done by
two tie gangs of 50 workers
and 25 pieces of equipment
each. One group is beginning
work at Buffalo and
proceeding toward Nitro . The
otller gang is scheduled to
start work next month
working from Point Pleasant
to Buffalo.
Since rehabilitation of the
Charleston-Columbus line
began in 1976, Coorail said it
has Installed 63,017 ties
between Gauley Bridge and
Nitro. The railroad has also
surfaced the track and
renewed switches and
highway grade crossings.
•

I

Medication update was give n by Ruth Bope, R.N., M. N.
Oncology clinical purse specialist med ical oncology, Inc.,
Columbus. Nursing care of the patient with an·ostomy was
given by Margaret Milen, R.N., E. T., Riverside Hospital,
Columbus, an.d Patricia Hurd, R.N., E. T .. Doctors
Hospital, Columbus. Phychological Aspects of Cancer
Nursing by Beverly Nichols&lt;in. R.N., B.S., head nur~e of
oncology WJit at Riverside . Shown are 1-&lt;, Rhonda Dailey,
Beverly Nicholson, Rutll Bope and Frances Helmick. Mrs.
Dailey is director of in-se rvice education at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

iJ,c"_r_h_e_W_or_ld_To_d_a_y_
Country music mother dead

NASHVILLE, Tenn . (UP!)- "Mother " Maybelle Carter,
69, whose haWJting ballads from dirt-poor Appalachia helped
pioneer today's $400 million country music recording industry,
died at her suburban Madison, Tenn., home Monday.
increase teachers' salaries
The former Grand Ole Opry performer, called "The
without local property tax Mother of CoWl try Music" by her peers, had been in failing
health from Parkinson 's disease. Although she had been a
hikes.
" ! am tota ll y and member of son~n-law Johnny Cash's road show and appeared
completely dedicated to local on network television with him, she limited her performances
control of your schools," in recent years.
Rhodes said. "I will continue
to stand against efforts to
impose costly mandates on
CLEVELAND I UP I) -Cleveland City Council has voted
local scho ol districts in
overwhelmingly to file suit against Mayor Dennis Kucinich's
Ohio."
Rhodes detailed his plan to appointment of Jeffrey Fox as police chief of Cleveland.
Amid repeated charges that Fox is unqualified for the job,
spend an extra $1.1 billion on
the
coWJcil
voted 7-6 late Monday to challenge the appointOhio public schools in the
next four yea rs and said it ment, announced earlier Monday by the mayor . "Fox will be
would provide enough money just .another member of the 'Kucini ch cult,' " said Council
to increase average teacher President George Forbes.
salaries by more than $1, 100

Appointment riles council

per year over the four year

period .
two
Rhodes
add ed
qualifi cat ions : If schoo l
administrators maintain the
current share of their budget
which goes to teachers and if
they tailor their budgets to
declining enrollments.
"There is no person more
important to a child 's
education than UJe classroom
teacher," said Rh odes .
"Teachers deserve adequate
pay,"

Rhodes also leaned heavily
on his plan to keep schools
open and said UJat no school
in Ohio has lost any days Ulis
fall unless by its own
choosing.
''We will keep schools open
in Ohio," said Rhodes. "We
must
ma nage
them
efficiently."
Rhodes was asked after his
address about two school
districts which have clooed in
C'rawford County.
"They closed becase of
their own choosing," said t he

governor . "They didn 't close
becaue of a lack of state
money .It was local money. If
they borrow from us they can
· open tomorrow. "

Secretary Vance succeeds

LONDON IUP!) - Secretary of State C)Tus Vance
succeeded in resolving two items in the U.S.-Soviet talks on
limiting strategic arms and mde "some progress" on other
issues, a senior American official said today .
Vance stopped in l.llndon enroute home from Moscow
without the strategic arms limitation pact he was sent to
complete, but with a commitment from the Soviets to "bend
every effort" to reach a new treaty.

U.S. dollar rallies
. TOKYO (UP!)- The dollar rallied sharply today on the
Tokyo Foreign Exchange market and closed at l82.25 yen, up
from Monday's record low of 181.
Dealers said both Japanese traders and foreign banks
bought back dollars to r~ad just their holdings following the
spectacular plWlge the previous day. The dollar opened the
day at 181.50 and moved between 181.30 and 182.40. Spot
turnover totaled 435 million, down from $5(13 million Monday.

Punk singer slashes wrists
NEWYORK 1UP! ) - Friends of British punk rock star Sid
Vicious say Ute 21-year old musician screamed "I want to die, I
want to join Nancy," after he slashed his arms in an alleged
suicide attempt at a Manhattan hotel room . Vicious had been .
(ree on $5(1,000 bail in the stabbing death of his American
girlfriend, Nancy Spungen.
Vicious, whose real name is John Simon Ritchie, was listed
in satisfactory condition today at Bellevue Hospttal's
Psychiatric Division, according to a hospital spokeswoman.
Meanwhile ,lawyer William KWJstler said he had been asked to
defend Vicious but had not yet decided if he would take the
case.

Burglary under investigation
•

DENISE WHITE, a sophomore at Eastern High
School, is the field commander for the Eagle Marching
Band. Denise is the daur hter of Mr . and Mrs. Marvin
White. Rt. :t Pomeroy .

The Meigs Co umy sheriff' s
department is investigating
the breaking and entering of
the lzaak Walton Gun Club
that occurred sometime be~
tween F'rida y evening and

I

vicinity of the club over the
Monday artcrnoun.
The kitchen doo r fr ame weekend tnat might have
was ' damaged as was · a seen any suspicious persons
window in the main club or autos in the area is
· req ues ted to con tact the
room .
Anyone who traveled in the sheri ff 's office.

�'·

\1\Gt\ ~~~~ &lt;JRJl-Dr
Urt ...C#I 'W R~D
oR WRi\E ...f

orgamzat10n founded by
Ralph Nader.
Many of those m the audient'e were disappointed
because Kennedy didn't g1ve
\hem a fire-and-brimstone
denunc1al10n of nuclear
power, confimng h1s remarks
ms\ead to econorruc and
employment Issues.
But Kennedy's particlpalwn m the conventiOn program was a calculated
pollllcal dec1s1on. One a1de
characteriZed his first foray
' mto the held as "dippmg his
toe mto the water to test the
temperature."
A future Kennedy dec1s1on
to jwnp mlo the pool can only
produce gnef for the already
beleaguered nuclear power
mdustry.

No debate desired here
The highly contentious
of "gay rights" has b'Urssue
1
faced at the White House in a
surprasmg context: President
Carter's search for a new
deputy sec retary of
agncul\ure.
The second highest position
at the Agriculture Departmen\ has been vaeant ever
smce Jolm c While Jefl the
JOb seven months ago to
beeome chairman of \he
Democratic Nalwnal Comnuttee.
The leadmg contender for
the post 1s reported lo be W.
R. (Buster) Hancock, a citrus
grower from Leesburg, F la· .
who 1s a eurrent member aod
f01mer chairman of the
Flonda c1trus Comrrusswn.
The conun1sswn contracted
several ye~rs ago w1th smger

Amta Bryant to star m a
seraes of teleVISIOn conunercials promotmg Flor~da
orange jwce. MISS Bryant
touched off the contmwng
controversy when she subsequenlly mounted a personal
tTusade against homosexuahly
That dispute ought to be
qmte Irrelevant to Hancock's
eredenllals and quahfications
for the JOb, bbt \he "gay
nghts" Issue mvanably produces a no-Win Siluahon for
any pohllclan.
AS a result, While House off1e1als are quietly but carefully "touchmg all \he bases" to
make sure that Hancock's
nommation won't embarrass
Carter by producmg an unwanted public debate over
homosexuah~

Derus' dwindling lead?
The "eonvenllonal pohllcalwisdom" these days holds
that Republicans w11l achieve
only modest gams m their
campaign to piCk up seats m
the House of Representatives
111 next monlh 'seleclwns
Many observers believe the
net GOP pickup will amount
to only 10-20 seals, but that
VIew is bemg challenged by
noted pohlical analyst
Richard Scanunon.
Scarrunon suggests that too
much reliance 1s bemg placed
on an early aulwnn Gallup
pull that asked voters
whelher they'd prefer a
Republican or Democrat "If
the electwns for Congress
were bemg held today "
Respondents preferred the

Homeowner repairs can result
in small state income tax credits
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Homeowners making repairs
worth at least $300 In a year
will be eligible for small stale
mCOOie tax credits under a
'
'
new law.
\
The law, which took effect
Monday, applies to next
i!PI'Ulg's income lax returns
for repall's completed m 1978.
The tax credits will amount
to 5 percent of \he repair
costs up to a maxunum of $65,
but in no case can the credit
exceed the homeowner's
state tax hability.
Its defined m the law, the
tax credits are for repairs or
"other phySical alterations"
costing at least $300 m a
dwelling or lDlit in a multiple-

Democrats by a wide 57-43
margin But Scammon,
Writmg m \he AmeriCan
Enterpnse
Institute's
Public Opmwn" magazme,
notes that the rallo acluall)
represents the smallest
Democratic edoe
" smce 1950.
More Important, he says, IS
a hlstoncal trend datmg bacli
more than 30 years
· Democratic conuresswnal
"
fortunes bloom m August
(polls) but shrivel m
November's election results
" Polls taken m early fall m
each non-presidential eleclion year show an enormous
Democrallc lead, which 1s
then whittled down eons1derably m November's
elecllon results "
(NEWSPAPER ENTER-

lawrence E.lamb, M.D.
DR

LAMB

Because there are so many
people diclmg these days, I
would hke to share my experience w1th you and others,
1f you feel 11 IS worth 1\.
I had never found 11
necessary to diet (I am a
female, age 54) unlll about a
year ago when I stopped
smokmg, I qml suecessfully
and watched my food mlake
to avoid gammg weight
When I firs\ started to
wateh my weight, I developed
bad headaches, day and mghl
fur weeks I went to doctors
;.md had munerous tests, m~
eludmg bram scans All of
this cost a lot of money. I was
finally told my headaches
were eaused by tensiOn, and
Vallwn was prescribed. I
d1shke takmg tranquiliZers,
so I d1dn 't """ them . I! was
my opmion that 11 would
cover up, but not solve, the
p10blem
1 tncd everythmg but had
no results . One mormng I ate
breakfast, which I had never
dune, and I had no headache.!
\ned the same lhmg the
followmg day and, agam,
.noheadache The third day I
deliberately did nut eat
breakfast - a headache
resulted.
After all \he m"ery and
money down the tubes, I
found the reason for my
headaches The only tune I
have a headache seems to be
when I am hungry. Could this
happen to other people? With
so many people d1etmg, 11
could be an important problem
DF:AR READER- Yes We
l'llll those lnmger hetH.J o~.: hc s
Bdorc the ftr~t day ts ovc t',
manv .1 per~on 11ho stalls a
stm·~atwn the! will be Ill e•l
and have a he~dachc The
same thmg will occur f&lt;ll peoph• who gu '"' a luwt: arbohydratl' dtd or nnI,

Some people can get along
Wllhoul breakfast, but a person who does not have a lot uf
e•cess fat storage, or IS aecub1omed to breakfast, may
mdeed develop hunger
headaches Without 1!. In
hunger headaehes, eatmg
w1ll solve the problem.
You don't have to have a
high-fat , high-cholesterol
breakfast, either It 1s a good
\!me to gel a nourishing bowl
of cereal that eontams bulk
This w1ll help your digestiOn,
start your day off r1ght and
he lp prevent hunger
headaches
I am '"ndmg you The
Health Letter number 2-2,
Low Carbohydrate D1els,
tha l discusses the coniphcalions people can have by
followmg such dietary fads .
other readers who want this
Issue can send 50 cents for 11
With a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope. Address
your request to me m care of
this newspaper, P.O Box
1551, RadiO City Station, New
York, NY 10019
DEAR DR. J.AMB - Some
lime ago I read m your eolwnn about' a low sperm l'ount
111 men
After laboratory
tests, my son-m-law has been
told that he has a low sperm
count and that the chances of
their havmg a baby are sl11n
Is there anythmg that can be
done 111 Uus s1luatwn so they
can have a baby?
DEAR READER - There
are
some
hopeful
developments 111 this area
The fertility pillS used to mdu&lt;·e pref(mtnctes m wmncn

who f1 equenlly don '( ovulall'
c. m i-ilStJ be used m tcrtalrl

'
m&lt;1 les Tills scunt• tn('dllllll'
may 1111.:1 c.1se the sperm ct·ll
pt udurtwn 111 nutlt•!:i JUSt H_s 1t
lilt rcases tht• O\'a prodm twn

m'femall·s
I be:hcvt' ytJUr soJHn-law
slwuhl d"k Ins tlo t ln J
t

owner.
Its or~gmally authored by
state Sen. Charles L. Butts,
DCieveland, the tax credit
program was more liberal,
allowing an $85 credit for
energy-related
improvements, and a general
credit for any repalf costing
at least $100. The House
tightened the provisions
before passing the bill last
June. .
.
Repairs qualifying for the
credit uoder \he law mclude
alterations of \he foundation
floor , walls, gutter or roof to
mamtain or .mer ease the
value of the home .
They also mclude repair or
mstallat10n of windows,
doors, insulation, electncal

wirmg, plumbmg, hot water
heaters, or furnaces.
Construction of a room,
storage area or garage that is
phySically attached to the
home IS ehgible for the credil.
But pamting, carpeting or
mstallalion or construction of
any other Item not spelled out
m \he Jaw are not eligible.
In figuring \he $300 cost,
interest charges count, but
Insurance benehts and
government home
improvement grants must be
deducted.

What people are saying ...

Mllte Mansfield

~~~~;(jjdLawrence Lamb,
M.D.

un1t home occupied by the

QUOTE/UNQUOTE

HEALTH
DEAR

Donald F. Graff

Old dominos, new gam~

Ted
tests reaction ·
WASHINGTON (NEA) Opponents of the nuclear
power mduslry have forged a
very tentative but polenllally
powerful alhanee Wllh one of
the cuwiiry's most mnuenllal
polille1ans - Sen Edward M
Kennedy.
Kennedy, a Massaehusells
Democrat, long has been an
acllve and outspoken leader
111 public policy debates mvolvmg a w1de range of
Issues But unlll very recently he steered clear of the
g1uwmg controversy over the
use of nuclear fissiOn to
genc1 ate commerctal electnc
power.
Earlie r lh1s month,
however, Kennedy made an
unpubhc1zed speech at the
annual meehng of "Cn\Ical
Mass , ' an antJ ·nuclear

COMMENTARY

"We can expect an oil
renaissance ou here m the
range of what ud1 Arabia

has "
- M1ke Mansfield, U.S amhassador to Japan, prediClmg
the world's next b1g pool of ml
Will be found off the coast of
East As1a.
" My roses are beautiful,
my crown is beaullful, and all
I want to do 1s cry."
- Lorrame Vandal, 49,
acknowledgmg her elechon
as Homecommg Queen of
Minot (N.D) Slate College
She was the candidate of the
Older Than Average Students
ASsociallon.
"There IS nothing hke get-

speeiflcally about thi s
posslblllly 111 his particular
case He should not simply be
brushed aside by bemg told
that such a med1cme Isn't used for that purpose because 11
~ertam)yas

m ~ume ca.ses
There are some men who

have low sperm counts that
&lt;annul benefit at all from this
type of medicine, buill 's new
enuu~h and Important enough
that the questiOn should be
1a1s~d

tmg ms1de the tent If you
want to reuse a ruckus "
- Ex-U S budget director
Roy Ash , proposmg a " ta•payer advocate" ageney
within the federal government to foree maJor spendmg
reduclwns
"He tells me how a pope
should behave That's only
right."
- Pope, John Paul II, the
newly elected Ruman
Catholic leader, speakmg
about a papal a1de who
remmded h1m \o Issue a
blessmg before endmg a tour
of a Rome hospital
" In the event of hosl!li\Ies,
our Navy must put the enemy
at the bollom of the '"as fast. "
- US Navy Secretary W.
Graham Claytor Jr., warnmg
that supenonty on the
world's oceans 1s sbll essenbal for the defense of
Amerit:a.
"We will never know how
many Walergales we will
rruss. "
- A.M Rosenthal, New
York Tunes execullve editor,
complammg news Lips are
harder to fmd because court
rulmgs force Journalists to
reveal confidential sources
"Amy admireS hiS ffiUSIC
very much ,.
Mary Hoyt , news
secretary to Rosalynn
Carter, e•plammg why the
First Family mv1ted him star
John Travolta - a favonte of
the president's daughter -.-to
a pnvate Wh1te House dinner
"Maybe 10 years from now
we'll have profess iOnal
lacrosse I know I'm not gomg to be an mvestor.' '
-Texas millionaire Lamar
Hunt, mulllple franchise
owner (NFL, NASL, NBA J
and promoter CWCT) , jokmg
about the prohferal10n o( biglime sports.

THF. DAILYSF.NTINEL

DEVOTED TO THF.
INTERF...STOF
MEIGS-MASON ARF.A
ROBERT HOEfi.ICH
Clly F.dltur
Pu1Jh11hed da1lv uu~pt Salunla)
ll\ Th~: Oluu Vallt'Y PuiJhsl\llij!.
clltllpllll ~ Multnnetha , Jm I
Ill
Cuu11 ~~ , Pmnc1uy, Olnu 45769
8Ll.~lllt'!IS Off1n Plum~: 99"1 2Uiti
F.d1lot IHI Phum• 992:·:.! 157
\
&amp;'ti~ntl du,.;,.'&gt; pw;W~t· paul at

N.. tu •nal

adverllslll~

I It'll

:-.;. lllilo I

•

TV ... in Review
NEW YORK ( UPI) -Television causes strange conflictslike between the works of Harold Pinter and Enna Bombeck,
\he performances of Laurence dliv1er and Carol Burnett.
Those are among the alternatives for Oct. 25, when CBS from
9-11 pm., Eastern time, presents Miss Burnett in a comedy
based on the Bombeck best-seller, "The Grass Ii Always
Greener Over the Septic Tank" and PBS offers Olivier and
Alan Bates m Pinter's "The Collection" (check local listings
for exact time)
Born beck and Burnett undoubtedly have the bigger folloWlDg
-they'll find the script disappomting but not the tart, smart
and sympathetic portrayal by Miss Burnett.
The comedienne plays Dorothy Benson, who with her
husband Jim (Charles Grodin) and kids moves from New
York City to suburbia. She tries to pursue a writing car"':r In
the garage in her spare time .\while he falls in love -not With a
sexy neighbor but with his prospective lawn.
Individual bits are hilarious, hke \he visit from the insurance
salesman, and \here are some funny · swipes at \he builder,
whose phone number turns out to be a candy store where they
take messages.
'
But m translating Mrs. Bombeck's essays into comedy
drama \he writers lost the perspectiveJ Whal makes Erma
Bombeck so funny IS the way she pinpoints how we all fall to
live up to what's expected of us by television conunercials.
In real life not only do our kitchen floors have waxy yellow
buildup, but by midWUlter so do our children. Our livmg room
floors aren't clean enough to eat off of - most of us are happy
if our dishes are that clean. And it would take more \han panty
hose with support panels - more like a trash compacter - to
make us f1t into size 8 slacks.
Whatever our failings, Erma Bombeck has \hem worse and
describes them better. That's tbe 11l1Ssing magic in \he CBS
translation, which merely concentrates on \he problems a city
dwelling family has in converting to the suburbs.
Nothing is that simple in the Pinter drama, which boasts
superlative perfCl'mances by all concerned. "The Collection"
doesn't have a plot so much as a situation. Olivier and viciously elfin Malcolm McDowell hve together quietly and
homosexually until \helf lives are interrupted by a menacing
Bates.
Bates has been told by hiS wife, Helen Mlrren, \hat she was
unfaithful one night in Leeds With McDowell.
Has she lied? Pinter takes his characters, and the audience,
on a tour of possible truths, exposing strength and weaknesa as
he goes but never pulling the veil from' his central mystery.
Pinter is as suspenseful as any mystery thriller - but his
ending lies up no loose ends. He may be an annoymg
storyteller but he is also a compelling one, and Olivier and
company make' the most of his script.

By KENNE'IH R. CLARK

--

(!) 1978byN~A ~

'

Lamar Hual

Peopletalk ·

Berry's World

f-.,..

ltJlll':'i~n·

Dulles biit virtually nowhere ~
else
ASEAN certamly has the "
best wishes and assistance as
required of the Umled Stales, ·
bull\ is essenllally a creallon •
of the five Southeast Asian .
members for their mutual :,
secunty and economic ~:
develupment
~
(( has had some mterestmg •
effects on the politics of more ,,
the regiOn . Withm it, "
MalaySia , Smgapore and Indonesia have managed to put
aside squabbles \hal had
made them vulnerable to outside mampulat10n, and the
Ph1bppmes and Malaysia
have turned off what had
been a very Jpw-voltage territorial dispute over northeast Borneo.
ASEAN's major current
problem may well be Its increasmg popularity in the
very quarters which once
seemed to threaten it. All \he
maJor Communist po~s in
the area are showing i{ marked signs of favor,
Relatwns with China are
generally cordiaL The Sov1el
Umon is making friendly .overtures, including a proposed VISit to several AS)CAN
capitals by a deputy foreign
m1mster . And VIetnam,
which this summer turned off
1ts propaganda assault on the
group as creatures of
Amencan policy, IS now seekmg a much closer association
1tseH.
The VIetnamese may see in
ASEAN , 1t IS being suggeoied, both a source of assistance
for their tattered economy
and pobhcal support m the
mountmg conn1ct with their
Chinese neighbors. An eventual b1d for membership 1s
not inconceivable, although
not hkely under the present
circumstances to be
favorably receiVed.
ASEAN for \he present IS
playing 1\ very cool, more
responding cordially to all .
parlles but avOiding mvolvement w1\h any and m the ,
mler-Communisl feud.
So much for donunos. It's •
an enl~rely new game m ·
Southeast AlllB these days.

United Press lnlemallonal
.
mE FAN CLUB: Neither ram nor sleet nor snow, nor dark '
of mght - nor any of \he rest of it - can stay the fans of •
comedian Steve Martla from their appointed places in the
ticket line, Scores of \hem queued up in Wichita, Kan ., Monday .
m chilly WUlds- some braving overnight temperatures in the '
40s -for a shot at the first of 9,000 tickets to Martin's Nov. 20. •
At \he head oflbe line was 19-year-old Wichita State University •
student Brad Schlegel. Says he, "I've never done anything like .
\his before and 1 probebly wouldn't do it for anyone else but
Martm -or maybe the BeeGees."
mE SNAPPIEST: The Men's Fashion Association picked
its 1978 heroes of sartorial splendor Monday night in New
York, and Henry Foada was at the head of \he Jist- as \his
year's inductee for the group's "Image Hall of Fame." Special •
awards went to Bea Vereea, DaD Ralber, Merv Griffin, •
Michael Jackson, David Mahoqey of Norton Simon, Inc., J.M. •
Haggar of Haggar Menswear and Georgia State Senator Jullaa
Bond. There was no citation for New York Yankee shortstop
Bucky Deal, but he showed up anyway, after receiving hls own
award - the Most Valuable Player trophy - from Sport •
magazine and major league baseball. Among presenters wet'e ;
Qcely l'ys&lt;ln, Bess Meyenoa, New York Mayor Ed Koch and
PbyW. George.
, AN OFFER SHE CANNOT REFUSE: The people of ,
Trinidad were justifiably proud when hometown beauty Pelllly ;
Janelle Commlssloag was crowned Miss Universe last year, •
but oow \hey want her home. To lure her beck to Portof-Spain,
a government spokesman says she's being offered a lllate job •
- as a school guidance counselor. The 2f&gt;.year-old Miss •·
Commlssiong may have higher aspirations - says she wants :
to become a fash1011 buyer - but \he position back borne may '
be temptmg. A government spokesman says she'll only have to '
work as a counselor two days a week -for $600 a month.
OR TIIAT HANGOVER!: Gregg Allmaa, one-time leader of
\he now deflmct Allman Brothers Band, found hlmseU facing
\he slammer on a drunk charge SUnday night. Police in
Bradenton, Fla., say Allman- married lrlefly to Cher Bono
- was drmking outside a bar With a gi:OUp of friends when the
fracas erupted. Says Pollee. Chief DOD Plh, "We have an
ordinance that says you can't drink outside. The officer started
telling the people to go inside, but Allman started revving up
\he engine of a Harley Davidson chopper he was sitting on so
no one could hear lhe officer." Pike adds, after A11man was
booked and released m bond, "He was very remorseful" .
QUOTE OF 11IE DAY: Former Sen. James Backley, asked
{l
at a New York cocktall party about \he "Proposition 13" taxcut fever sweeping the country: "It goes deeper thaa just
oppressive taxation. It's a demand that we cui government
interference in people'sllveti. Ole way or ano\her,lt will play a
role In many of \he campaigns across the colDltry today,"
GUMPSES: Rtta Moreoo opened her new nlgbtclub act at
New York's Grand Finale D Monday night - an event
attended, amoag o\het'S, by Vlrllola Vellloff, Gretcbeli Wyler,
Mllllceat Mlrtla, Margaret Wlllt]JII, Jalle Blldd, Lorllll Laft,
MarDyn Mlcbaela and Stepbule Mllll ,.. Bert Parb, Betty :
Furneu, Sam Leve1110a and Arleoe Francll - all former
H'IC
panelists on \he old "What's My Une?" quiz show celelrated publication of a boOk by that title with a Monday
night party atSardl's in New York ... Onclnnatl Reds baseball :
star
Pete Rolle has donated $1,000 to the University of
"Face it' You can't expect to change the
&lt;lnCUlnati
for establlahment of \he Pete Rille Baseball '
forecast for a harsh wtnter by stomptng
Scholarmlp Foundatloa ... Loleatla Holloway did a onHIIIbt
woolly bear caterpillars "
concert at New York's lpanema -Monday,lnlroducing a new :
wrinkle b the chalrlesa dance floor of the dJseo .:... llttle
~ows fCl' the parking pleaaure pf \he weary ...
'----~------------~

-

Pt ~ llt.THI,O IIIU

UltiH l.o~utlon A:-~soc.lilles • •1101
f'uthdAvl ,('l~·vt:liind,OhiOHIIa
~lJI&gt;,,.t rlptlun rates Dt•lrvcred by
lolllll'J &gt;1 hcrt• uvutlahlt• 75 t!t'll l!'; pt r
V.lt k lh Mutut Routt wl1en• t &lt;Ufll r
st nu t not .avalhlllle On~e mu11th
:i;l Ji.J B) lll&lt;U] Ill Ohw and W V.l ,
I)Ju
Ytlt l $&lt;!200 St1&lt; 1111&gt;/lths
$1 1 ~1 1
rlu et• ll\l &lt;l tlll " $71111
f.'l:-~~ v. h• n S1h nn HlMr S1s nwntl1s
$1: atl
I hrt • mon th", $. &lt;.~ U
~U I &gt; c-t t lpl lnl !Ji lt I IIll h it II'" ~ltl l tl, t}

The state tax commissioner
may require documented evidence for the credit,
including certification by the
county auditor that \he 1epair
was actually made.
The penalty for making a
false claun 1s a maximum 30
days in jail or a fme of up to
$250, or both.
The credit may be taken
once every three taxable
years. A married taxpayer
filing a separate return may
not claim more \han one-half
the allowable credit.

Whatever became of the
dommo theor There are some
among us who very likely
would prefer not to be
reminded that it ever existed,
Jet alone be provided with an ·
updating.
The dommo theory , 1! may
be recalled, wq,s much heard
durmg the height of the VIetnam war as a primary
justification for preventing at
all costs a Commumst
takeover throughout the Indochina pemnsula .
If Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia fell, the argwnent
went , they m turn would topple Thailand, MalaySia and
the other ecunorrucally weak
and pollllcally shaky
Southeast Asian lands
beyond.
lndochma IS now Communist, allhough far from
harmomously so And the
onellme potenllal dommos
have bet'Ome something called ASEAN - the AssociatiOn
of Southeast Asian Nations.
ASEAN groups Thailand,
Malaysia, Smgapore, Indonesia and the Phibppmes m
something that IS short of a
full-fledged albance, but
mucb more than a paper expressiOn of regiOnal solidarity such as the fractwus
Orgamza!1on of African
States.
The pohl1es of most of the
f1ve members still leave considerable to be desired from a
Western democratic poml of
v1ew and problems are a
common denommator of \heir
economies But m both
respects they are looking
much' more roblll&gt;i today than
m that dark period when VIet·
nam was about to go under
and, 1\ was feared, take them
along
Particularly mtereslmg
under the c~rcwnstances is
that the Umled States 1s not a
member nor, Communist
denunc1atwns to the contrary , IS 1\ calling the plays
for the members. ASEAN IS
no SEATO - the defunct
Southeast Asia Treaty
Orgamzallon which had a
sigmf1cance for the State
Department of John Foster

I

•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Oct. 24, 1978

Steelers dumped from ~ unbeaten ranks, 24-17
By SKIP WACHTER
PITI'SBURGH (UPI)
What rookie running back
Earl Campbell lacked m
yardage he made up for m
points, and that was jUBt
enough to keep \he Houston
Oilers' playoffs hopes alive m
the AFC Central DiviSion ,
Hailed by Pittsburgh as the
Oilers'· "ca talyst" despite
failing to reach \he 100-yard
mark for only the fourth time
this season, Campbell scored
three touchdowns Monday
rughl to lead Houston to a 2417 victory over the sluggish
Steelers and end their reign
as the NFL's last unbeaten
learn.

Inspired because "Mom
was watchmg " and led down
\he held by an overpowering
offensive front line, Campbell
twice knifed over from \he !yard line and went 3 yards for
\he other TD to snap Pittsburgh 's VIctory string at
seven.
"They ran on us tonight bke
no other learn has this
season, and Mr. Campbell
was the reason why," sa1d
Steelers middle linebacker
Jack Lambert. "But I guess
he was their top draft choice
Now you can see why "
But Campbell chose to
credit
h1s
89-yard
performance to h1s frontline.

which also shielded 01ler
quarterback Dan Pastorm1
from Pittsburgh's "Steel
Curtain" delense. It was the
s1xth lime this season
Pastor101 escaped unsacked
"The offens1ve hnemen
was super," Campbell sa1d
"They did a great JOb of
knocking \hem out of the
way "
And he wasn't alone m h1s
feelmgs.
"Campbell has a lot to do
with \he1r success tomght,
but probably the biggest
thing was \hat front lme,"
Lambert sa1d. "They did a
great JOb commg off the ball
They took 11 nght at us And

\hey played clean all the way
They won my respect for
that "
Pittsburgh took a 7~ lead m
\he second quarter on Terry
Bradshaw's 25-yard
touchdown pass to Lynn
Swann, but Campbell's first
!-yard d1ve lied 11. Then, after
a 30-yard field goal by Roy
Gerela put \he Steelers back
on top, Tom Fritsch answered
11 With a 39-yard boot to make
it 10-10 JUSt before halftime.
The Oilers broke away to a
24-10 lead v1a Campbell's ~
yard TD bolt m the third
penod and his other 1-yarder
- on a second~hance - in
the fourth quarter before

TONY KENNEDY, 5-3,
100 lbs. Sophomore QB.

GREG WIGAL, $-9, 135
Jbs. Sophomore QB

Herzog won argument
By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wrller
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- King Arthur never lost an
argument w1\h \he Round
Table. Neither 1s Whlley
Herzog gomg to lose one w1\h
his coaching staff
Which IS why Herzog has
been s1gned to a one-year
contract to manage the
Kansas City Royals again m
1979 and Charlie Lau, his
batting instructor, has been
di.srriissed.
It was \he second tune m
fiVe years the popular Lau
has gotten the ax as the
Kansas City battmg coach
and Herzog sa1d it was simply
a difference In hltlmg
philosophies.
"It's tough for a manager
to s1gn a one-yeat contract
and fire a popular coach,"
said Herzog m his hrst
meeting w1th the press smce
signing the contract. He
departed Kansas City for a
fishing
expedition
Immediately after s1gnmg
last Thursday and was
unavailable for four days
"But I did 11 and I'll stand
by it I played with Charlie in
1961 and I considered him a
friend. I still do But 16 guys
on this learn can't all stand in
the same spot In the batter's
box, hold the bat \he same
and h1t \he same.
"Charlie did great things
with George Brett and Hal
McRae but there are other
guys on this learn who could
be doing much better. Not
everybody can hit standing
three feet away from the
plate Everybody can't be a
batting
mstructor for
everybody."
Just as \here was a player
uprising when then Manager
Jack McKeon ousted Lau the
first time, player diScontent
has surfaced m the wake of
Lau's second termmallon of
duties m Kansas City

"Right now ,I don 't care 1f I
come back to Kansas City,"
said McRae last week.
"Somebody said he heard
Char he was gettmg a job w1th
Seattle I'll go \here 1f \hey
want me"
Brett, who won. the battmg
title in 1976 w1th a .333
average, also expressed
displeasure w1lh Lau's
disrrussal.
"I didn't want to see
Charlie go because he helped
me so much, " said \he All
•
•
NBA Standmgs
Bv Unrted Press tnternataonal
Eastern Conference
Atlantic DIVISIOn
W L Pet.
Wash rngtn
4 0 1 000
Phrla
3
1 750
New York
2 2 500

New Jersey
2 4 333
Bostoh
1 4 200
Central Division
W L Pet

GB

1

1
3
3 112

GB

Cleveland

3

0 1 000

Houston
San An tonto

4
3
2

I
3
2

800
500
500

11h
1 1h

2
0

3

400
000

2
4

Atlanta
New Orlens
Oetrott

5

western conference
Midwest OIVtslon
W L Pet

Denver

.t

lnd1ana
Mtlwauke
Kansas C1ty
Chicago

2
3

1
1

I
1
2
3
4

800
667
600
250
200

GB

21/:r
3

Pac•flc Otvts•on
seattle
Phoenix
Golden Stat
San Drego

5

W
4
2
2

L Pet. GB
0 1 000
1 800 1
3 400 3
5 286 4

Los Angeles

I

3

250

Portland
1 4 200
Monday 's Results
No gemes scheduled

3 112

4

Star third baseman. "But
I've grown to respect Whitey
Herzog as a man and as
manager so I'm not gomg to
blast hun, "
Herzog sa1d he d1d not feel
\he discontent would carry
over mto \he sprmg.
Lau will he replaced on the
Kansas City coachmg staff by
John SulliVan, who managed
the Triple-A Omaha Royals to
the Amencan Assoctatwn
tiUe this past summer.
Today's Games
Atlanta at New York
New Orleans at Cleve lan d
Kansas Crty at Ch1cago
New Jersey at lndrana
Milwaukee at PhOen iX
washtngton at Portland
Boston at San An tonto
Los Angeles at San D1 ego
Wednesday's Games
Atlanta at Phlladelphta
Cleveland at Detroit
New York at H ouston
Phoen1x at Denver
Mtlwaukee at San Drego
washtngton at seattle
Golden State at New Jersey
New Orleans at Kansas Ctty

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Th e Washington Capitals
Monday obtained left wmg
Rod Schull from the Montreal
Canad1ens
and
sent
defenseman P1erre
Bouchard, who was obtamed
from Montreal earlier m the
day m the wa1ver draft, back
to theCanad1ens' Nova Scotia
farm club, winmng that
league's Rookie of the Year
Award.

DENNIS DURST, ~.
160 lbs, Sophomore HB.

This week's
Ohio college
grid games
Untied Press International
Northwestern at Ohto State
Centr al Mtehtgan at Bow ling
Green
Kent State at Atr Force
M 1am1 at Toledo
OhiO
Un1v
at
Western
M1 Ch 1gan
Northern Mtchtgan at Akron
In !
Ashla nd at Towson State

IMd l

'

Cen tral Slat e at Da y ton
Ctnc 1nnat1 at SW LOUIS iana
In I
Villanova at Youngstown
stat e
wooster at Capttal
Otterbetn at Manetta
W tttenberg at Muskmgum
Baldwm wallace at Oh 10
Northern
Mount Unton a t Den1 son
Oh10 Wesleyan at H e•delberg
Oberltn at Grove Ctty (Pa&gt;
Kenyon at Wabash (tndl
Wrlm 1ngton at Deftan ce
F1ndla( at Taylor (lnd)
Th el Pa ) at Case Western
Bethany (W va) at H1r am
John Carro l l at Ca r neg 1e
Mellon ( Pa l
n - denotes nt ght game

WHA Standrngs
By Un1ted Press tnternattonal
W L T Pts
New England
4 0 1
9
Crnctnnatt
3 I I
7
Edmonton
3 2 0
6
W10n1peg
2 2 1
5
Btrmm gham
2 2 0
.t
ln d tanflpOII S
1 4 0
2
Quebec
o 4 1
1
Monday's Results
No games scheduled
Today's Games
New England at C1 netnnat1
Brrmrngham at Wrnn1peg
Wednesday 's Games
C;nci nna ft at Quebec
Bt r mtngham at Wmn1peg

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincmnali Ben gals coach Homer
R1ce says he's not ready to fly
the white nag,
"We've been down," R1ce
sa1d after reVJewmg films
Monday of the Bengals'
forgettable 5-0 loss m Buffalo,
"but each week \hey come
back and play hard I think
It's a positive mdication they
have not given up, \hey will
not gwe up at all "
The ~ Bengals will at least
have quarterback Ken
Anderson ready for the
Houston Oilers Sunday m
Riverfront Stadium R1ce
sa1d Anderson should be
recovered from a bruised
nght elbow mcurred durmg a
16-yard scramble Sunday
Anderson, who miSsed the
first four regular season
games w1th a broken hone m
his passmg hand, S8ld he hit
his ~~crazy bone" on the
scramble and felt a "tingling
sensation" which prevented
him from grippmg the ball
The firststrmg quarterback
was 0-for-4 1n passmg
Sunday,
WIth
one
mtercepllon.
The "Bad News Bengals"
will need all the offensive
punch they can muster
agamst Houston After e1ght
games, the Bengal offense
ha s scored only four
llluchdowns passing and has
yet to make 11 into \he end
zone rUBhmg

NEW YORK (UP!)- As 1t
says on \he license pta u,,
"Oklahoma IS OK "
Following a 34-ll victory
over Iowa State Saturday,
unbeaten Oklahoma retamed
1ts No. I spot on UPI's Board
of Coaches college football
ralmgs.
The Sooners, 7~. lead the
nation m rushmg, w1th 413
yards per game, and are
second to Nebraska m total
offense, 503 I yards to 490 3,
and m scormg, 41 points to 40
Sllll, Coach Barry Switzer
IS not about to compare th1s
Oklahoma squad to some of
his earlier great ones
"We like to reserve that
kind of comparison unlit the
season ts over," he sa1d
"This team IS more
talented, but won't have the
stallshcs of the 1971 team, "
Switzer sa1d "The defense
doesn 't have the great
phySical strength as m 1973 to
1975, buill has \he speed and
qutckness "
While Oklahoma rolled
over Iowa State, No. 2 Penn
State d1d not gel away so
easily. The N1ttany L1ons,
also 7~. beat Syracuse 45-15
to retam Its second-place
rankmg.
Alabama, 6-1 and climbmg

NFL stand•ngs
By Umted Press lnternaftonal
Amencan Conference

East
W

MtamJ
N v Jets
Buffalo
Balttmor e
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cleveland
Cm c•nnat1
Oa k land
Denver
Sea ttle
San 01ego
Kansas CtiY

L

6
5
5
')
3

T

2
3
3
5
5

0
0
0
0
0

Pet.
750
625
625
375
375

Central

W l T Pet
7 1 0
B75
5 30
625
4
40
500
080000
West
W l T Pet.
5 J 0
625
s 30 625

~

2

:~

6 0

-~~~

I

250

Natrona! Conference
East

W L T Pet.
6
Dallas
6
Washington
5
NY Grants
4
Phtlade lphra
0
Sl LOUI S
Centr011

2. 0
2 0
3 0
40
8 0

750
750
625
500
000

W L T Pet
6
4
4
3
2

Green Bay
Mtnnesota
Tampa Bay
Ch1cago
Detrort

2 0
40
40
5 0
60

W l

750
500
500
375
250

T Pet

Lo s Angeles
7 l 0
Alla nta
4 4 0
New Or leans
4 4 0
san Francts c
1 7 0
Monday's Result
Houston 24, P1ttsburgh 17
Thursday, October :116
Mtnnesota at Dallas

pm

875
500
500
125

a 30

Sunday, October 29
Houst on at C•ncmnatt, 1 p m
Kansas C;ty at Prttsburgh, 1

pm

Buffalo at Cleveland, 1 p m
New York Jets at New
England, 1 p m
St LOU IS at Phtladel phra , 1

pm

San Fraf'lctsco at Washrngton ,
1p m
Tampa Bay at Green Bay, 2

pm

Detro;t at Ch •cago , 2 p m
New York Giants at New
Orleans, 2 p m
Balt 1more at Mtamt , 4 p m
Denver at Sea ttl e 4 p m
San Otego et Oakland , 4 p m
Monday , October JO
Los Angetes at Atlanta , 9

established
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
beseball scholarship has been
established at the University
of Cincinnall m the name of
Pete Rose .
Rose, jVhO )las declared
himseH a lree agent, Monday
gave the unlyersity $1,000 to
establish the Pete Rose Basebell Scholarship Foundation.
UC Foundation Director
William Smart said, "The
name of Pete Rose, long a
byword in Cincinnati, is being
perpetuated through . this
generous gift. Cincmnali 1s a
great beseball town, and I
hope this fund will grow
quickly."
Rose made the donation,
according to UC officials,
because of his frJendship w1\h
with UC baseball coach Glenn
Sample.

pm

HOLD ON- Wahama's Jack Smith (25), With the bsll, bulled his way for 202 yards on
the ground Saturday mghl against Parkersburg Catholic, as well as scormg two
touchdowns. Here, Parkersburg defenders are trymg to brmg Smith down from behmd
Wshama won the game, 37~.

Rum

steadily smce falling from the for 1\s first defeat Texas
No 1 spot four weeks ago, A&amp;M fell from the top 20 after
moved up a notch Ill replace taking 1ls second straight
Arkansas at No 3 after a 30- loss, 24-ll to Baylor.
17 tnumph over Tennessee.
Cap1tabzmg on the Texas
Nebraska, 6-1, also rose one A&amp;M loss was Clemson, the
pos1t10n to No 4 thanks to a only new learn m \he rallngs
52-14 rout of Colorado
th1s week Clemson won 1\s
Fifth-ranked Maryland, the fifth game agamst one Joss
only other unbeaten U,am m w1Lh a 28.a tnumph over Duke
the top 10, blanked Wake to reJOIO the top 20 after a
Forest 39~ for Its seventh fourweek absence
VIctory Southern Cal, 5-l,
Fillmg out the top 20 were
responding from Its first loss No II Arkansas, No 12
w1\h a 38-7 wm over Oregon Anzona State, No
13
Slate, was siKth Te•a s, Georgia, No 14 Louisiana
despite a 28-21 victory over State, No 15 Pittsburgh, No.
Arkansas that ra!S\hl the 16 M1ssoun, No 17 Purdue,
Longhorns' record to 5-l, No 18 Navy, No 19 Notre
moved up one pos11lon to No Dame and No . 20 CleljiiSon
Navy kept pace wit~" Ok7
UCLA, 6-t, had httle lahoma , Penn State and
trouble w1th Cahforma, Maryland as \he nation 's only
wmnmg 45-0 and climbing maJOr teams still unbeaten
two spots to No 8 Michigan, The Middies edged Wilham
5-l, coming off Its first loss, and Mary 9-lJ for their s1x\h
beat WISCOnSID 42-{) to remam wm without a loss.
nm\h. Tenth-ranked Houston,
Six coaches from each of
nahan 's
seve n
5-l ,wwhich began the season the
on probation, cracked the top geographical areas make up
10 for the f~rsl time thiS year the UP! Board of Coaches
followmg a 42-28 lnumph Each coach casts a weekly
ballot for the top 15 U,ams.
over Southern Methodist.
The only casualties from Pomts are awarded on a 15last week's top 20 were 14-1~12-etc basis, w1\h first
Arkansas and Texas A&amp;M place worth 15 pomts and 15th
Arkansas dropped from No 3. place one
to No II after losmg to Texas

Hayes cautious
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, OhiO (UPl) -

New England

c•n;;t ch

Ph1ll1ps had said all week
prior W Monday night's game
\hat no one could catch the
Steelers, but deep inside he
bebeved the time was r~ghl
for Pittsburgh to be
"dumped 11
" I thought \hat before the
game," Phillips admitted,
"but not once 11 got started.
They played too hard, too
well. They weren't down by
any means
"Our whole team just
played well - we had to. I
thmk 1t showed a helluva lot
of character on our part.
Pittsburgh's a great team.
ll's an honor to play them "

Oklahoma still No. 1

west

Scholarship

and Sleeler cornerhack Ron
Johnson recovered 11 But the
Steelers were ruled offside on
the _play and Campbell got
one more shot.
"That play hurt us real
bad," Lambert sa1d. "We gel
the ball there, "e really gel I!
gomg . We have
the
momentum And they sill!
only have 17 pomls
"I don 't know, maybe some
good will come of th1s Some
of us were starting to think
we couldn't be beat This
shows us This may really be
advantageous. The unbeaten
stuff ts over w1th , Ulat's for
sw-e."
Houston

Bengals will
not surrender

Meet the Eastern Eagles

STEVE BROWNING,
$-3, llO lbs. Sopbomore
HB.

Swann grabbed a 6-yard
scormg toss from Bradshaw
with ~:20 left m \he game to
brmg Pittsburgh back withm
str1kmg range
The Steelers had excellent
field positiOn several limes
during the game and three
times in the last few minutes
of the contest, but couldn't
capitalize Twice they gave
\he ball up on downs. The
other tune Houston's Kurt
Knoff mlercepted a pass near
\he goal lme.
Just before Campbell's
!mal, dec1s1ve touchdown, he
had tried to bull over from the
1 but the ball popped loose

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- William Miller of Ouachita
(Ark.) Baptist and Timmy
Newsome of Winston.Salem
(N.C.) State emerged
Monday as the f~rst two 1,000yard gamers of \he season 1n
the NAJA.
Miller picked up 121 yards
Saturday to bring his ,
season's Wtal to 1,103 yards in
seven games Newsome
Saturday rushed for 209 yards
Ill bring his total to 1,085
Division II All-America
quarterbsck Tom Stine of
Central ( Mo ) Methodist
passed for 376 yards Saturday
to hft his season's total
passmg yardage to 2,231 and
became \he first 2,000-yard
passer Uns season

Ohio Stale Coach Woody
Hayes
Isn't
lakmg
Northwestern lighUy
"I can't g1ve a good buildup
to a learn which hasn 'I won
any more than they have,"
Hayes sa1d of this week's
Buckeye opponent, wh1ch will
brmg an !J-6-1 record mlo the
game "But, you never dare
take a team lighlly The
longer you see football , the
more you realize anything
can happen ''
Hayes recalled last year's
contest
against
Northwestern, m which the
Buckeyes had to scrap for a
35-15 wm over a heavy
underdog Wildcat squad.
How can he keep h1s team
from bemg overconfident ?
"We'll work a hltle harder
than usual ," said Hayes
Aller v1ewmg films of lasl
Saturday's 31-7 wm over
Iowa, Hayes still llked what
he saw, especia lly of the
defense and the Jack of
mistakes by the offense.
" The pluses were we went
through without a fumble or
an inlerceptwn and the
defense played like we used
to," Hayes told his week ly
news luncheon .
All but one of OhiO State's
four touchdowns were e1ther
scored by or set up by the
defense, which picked off
three Iowa passes
"The mterceptions really
turned the game around,"
S8ld Hayes. "! don 't think I
can remember when we
scored 31 points as relallvely
easy as we did Saturday
Those 24 pomts 111 the second
quarter JUS! put the game out
of

Going mto \he Iowa game,
Oh10 State ranked last 10 the
Blg Ten m turnovers, having
lost the ball on fumbles or
mterceptwns 12 more times
than 1ls opponents.
"That's what has been
killmg us," sa1d Hayes, wbo
figuresilf \he Buckeyes can
reverse that trend "we can
play wrl.h anyone."
Hayes said both outside
linebackers - Paul Ross and
Kelton Dansler - came out of
the Iowa game With IOJUfles
which could possibly keep
them out of action next
Saturday
against
Northwestern, w1th Dansler
1knee) the most senously
UIJured of the two.
In additiOn, split end Rod
Gerald, who suffered a bone
ch1p of his left elbow a week
ago, 1s a doubtful sta1'ter "He
might m1ght be ready, but I
doubt 1t," sa1d lla)eS
Seruor middle guard Mark
Sullivan, who scored on a 13yard pas s mterceptwn
return, was selected the top
defensive player of the Iowa
game

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�•

•

•

.·.·

Today

Cavs off to good

Ohio college records

st~

.. &amp;- n. D&amp;Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 24....!2~·----

Sports 'Transactions

!

By United Preu lnternatlonll
Mondav

C/ub reviews Miller Socu.l-1 'Christmas Is
at recent meeting I Calendar

8Uklfblll

Milwaukee - Traded rookie
. RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) befCI'e·loslng a game. ·
forward Otis Howard to O.trolt
This year's early season for ll l'i81 tourlh ·round draft
-; Reversing their usual
pick and
I!Cti\lated rookie
snail's pace early season perf(l'm8ncy Is all . the more forwllrd George Johnson .
remarkable
because
the
form . of past seasons, the
I 4 1Muskingum
I 2 0
By United Press !Dternalional
White SOX - Traded
Cleveland Cavaliers have team has done it without reiChicago
ief pitcher J lm Will oughby to
3 3 0
0 3 0
Marietta
Mid-American Coofernce
starting
center
Elmore
St. Louis for outfielder John
burst out of the gate this fall
Conference All Games
Smith. Smith had· knee Scott .
in
the
NBA.
I 5 0
Los Angeles - Signed 'pinch
X
X
X
x-Kenyon
W. L. T. W. L. T.
'
Coach Bill Fitch has his surgery just before the hitter Manny Mota to a one 6
0
0
X
X
X
By MILTON RICHMAN
i
0
6
x-Oberlln
4 0 0
Ball State
club off to a flying 3-4 start regular season began. Also year contract .
UPI Sports Editor
x-not compethlg for Utle
6 I 0
Footb•ll
5 I 0
Western Mich
this season, with victories out fCI' the early part of the
Detroit
defensive
Hoosier-Buckeye
Conference
5
2
0
1
4
0
CentraiMich
season has been reserve lineman DaveSigned
Pureitorv to
the
Boston
Celtics,
Los
over
Conference AU Games
4 3 0
3 2 0
Bowling Green
(jefeOslve end Ken
Angeles Lakers and Chicago guard Bingo Smith, who has a replace
Sanders who underwent knee
W. L. T. W. L. T.
4 2 I
2 2 0
Miami
sprained
ankle.
surger y.
Bulls.
6 0 0
Findlay
5 0 0
I 5 0
I 3 0
NEW YORK (U P! ) -In the next couple of days or so, just as
Ohio Univ
Among the big surprises so
Hockey
A
check
of
the
record
book
1
I
4
4 I 0
WaShington - Act i v ate d
Hanover
3 4 0
1 3 0
soon as he shakes that nagging cold he has, Calvin Griffith
Eastern Mich
far this year foc Fitch has cente-r
shows
the
Cavs'
start
this·
. Ryan Walter, defense3 3 0
3 2. 0
3 4 0
Defiance
I 4 0
plans to call Butch Wynegar or sit down and write him a letter
Kent State
year
is
the second-best in the been the play of 6-7 rookie man Gord Lane and left wing
0
3
3
0
3 2
Manchester
1 6 0
Nelson Bur ton and assigned
I 4 0
assuring him he has nothing in the world against romance.
Toledo
nineyear history of the NBA focward Mike Mitchell, of center
Ron Lalonde to Bing 4 3 .0
3 3 0
·o 2 0 2 4 0 Wilmington
He would've done it a .Jot sooner than this, especially in light
Nor Illinois
Auburn.'
Mitchell,
who
hamton .Of the AHI.. , left wing
franchise.
5
2
0
0
2
4
Bluffton
Ohio Conference
of the fireworks ignited by those off-the.(:uff remarks of his at a
Mike Marson to the Phila · On four occasions - 197G- showed very littie during del
2 '4 0
phia Firebirds of the AHL
2 4 0
Anderson
I Red Division)
Uon 's Club ltmcheon In Waseca, Minn .. a few weeks ago, but
exhibition
season,
scoced
11
71, 1972-73, 1973-74, 1974-75 and left wing -center Blair
I
5
0
0
I
4
All
Games
Taylor
Conference
he feels he has a much better chance of conveying exactly
the club opened the season by points, all in the first half, in Stewart to Hershey of the AHL .
1 5 0
I 4 0
Earlham
W. L. T. W. L. T.
what he meant to his 22-year-&lt;Jld receiver now that some of the ·
dropping its first three · Cleveland's 113-104 victocy
6 0 0
Others
3 0 0
Baldwin-Wallc
furor over his original statements has subsided.
games. The highlight, of over Chicago Saturday night.
w. L. T. course,
3 3 0
2 I 0
Griffith said some things about his seven-time batting
Ohio Northern
Cleveland hosts the New
Some put their best foot forwas Clev~land's
0
0
7
·Youngstown State
3 2 I
champion, Rod Carew, and about his young catcher, who
2 I 0
Denison
Orleans Jazz Tuesday night ward- others manage only tu
memorable
G-15
start
m
1970,
0
4
I
I 4 I
Hiram
1 2 0
slumped to .229 this year, and although he later explained he
Ohio Wesleyan
step on everyone else's toes.
the first year of the franchise. at Richfield Coliseum.
1
1
6
2 3 I
Dayton
I 2 0
intended no malice and Carew told him . he understood, the
Mount Union
On three occasions - 1971-'
5
2
0
0 6 0
John Carroll
0 3 0
Twins' owner has heard nothing from Wynegar , who ma'kes his
Heidelberg
72, 1975-76, 1977-78 2
1
3
Ohio State
(Blue Division)
LEGAL NOTICE
home in York, Pa.
Cleveland
opened the season
0
4
3
All Games
Akron
What particularly angered Wynegar, who wed the former
Conference
by dropping two of its first
The Public Utilities Com:
5 ·o
2
Case Western
W. L. T. W. L. T.
Gretchen Oas last December, was that Griffith blamed the
three
games.
mission of Ohio has set lor
0
I
~
6 0 0
Cincinnati
3 0 0
catcher 's slwnp on his marriage, saying he felt Wynegar
Wittenberg
ln ooly one other season,
public hearing Case No .
0
I
~
I 0
Central State
~
2 1 0
shouldn 'l have come to spring training while still on his
Wooster
19'15-76, did the Cavs get off to
78-627-EL-FAC
to review
6
0
1
4 2 0
Ashland .
2 1 0
honeymoon.
Capital
NORTHFIELD
a
better
start·
than
this
year.
the
fuel
procurement
prac?
~
1
"He took his exercise rwming around the bedroom instead of
1 2 n
NORTHFIELD , Ohio
Otterbein
Two years ago they went 8-4
tices
and
policies
of
the
(UP!) - Swift Favorite set a
running around the outfield," Griffith said.
Columbus
&amp;
Southam
A lot of ballplayers will ma'ke a statement and then deny it.
lifetime record Monday night
Ohio Electric Company,
Griffith doesn't deny saying what he did. Rightly or wrongly,
in covering the mile in 2:03 4•the
operation of its Fuel
5 while winning the $2,000
many other baseball people share Calvin Griffith's belief, that
Personally,
I
can
understand
Calvin
Griffith's
line
of
thin·
Cost
Adjustment Clause,
traditional
thinking
is
not
necessarily
wrong
or
obsolete.
a young ballplayer rarely is at his best on the field during his
·ninth race at Northfield Park
king,
possibly
because
my
old
sports
editor,
the
one
I
worked
and
related
maners. This
"!
am
not
against
romance
by
any
means,
"
Griffith
says,
fir;'! year of marriage, the only difference being that the
by two lengths over Miss Jay
for
more
than
20
years,
had
little
patience
when
it
came
to
his
hearing
is
scheduled
to be"and
I'm
not
trying
to
tell
a
ballplayer
when
he
should
get
Time. Brunswick County was
majority of baseball people who feel that way don 't usually say
employees
taking
time
off
to
get
married
no
matter
when.
One
gin
at
10:00
a.m.
on
Octomarried,
but
i
think
if
he's
only
20
or
22,
and
intends
to
make
third.
.
it publicly while Griffith did .
·member
of
our
department
informed
him
he
had
set
the
date
ber
30,
1978
at
the
Comhe
should
wait
at
least
until
'he's
fairly
baseball
a
career,
" I wasn't trying to downgrade Butch Wynegar," he says. "I
The three-year-&lt;lld filly, in
for
his
wedding
during
the
second
weekend
in
November.
·
minion's
Offices,
180
East
established
before
he
gets
married.
And
if
he
does,
I
don't
think ve ry highly of liim as a young man and as a ballplayer . I
recording her secood straight
roared
my
old
sports
editor,
getting
his
blood
"What!"
Broad
Street,
Columbus;
good
idea
for
him
to
spend
his
honeymoon
·in
think
it's
such
a
remember telling Gene Mauch a couple of years ago, 'don't
win and third in the last four
pressure up. "On a foolbal) Saturday!"
Ohio. All interested perworry about our catching, we got a kid over at Reno, who's spring training.
starts with Kelly O'DoMell in
was
divorced
recepUy
but
that
doesn't
mean
Calvin
Griffith
sons will be given an
"A
few
years
ago,
Jim
Hughes
was
voted
our
Pitcher
of
the
~oMa take care of it. Wait and see.'
the sulky, returned $5.00,
opponunitv
to be heard.
"Well, I was right abOut him . Wynegar made the All-Star Year Award alter winning 16 games for llll," goes on the Twins' he doesn't believe in marriage.
$3.00 and $2.60.
"I was inanag~ Olarlotte of the Piedmont League when I
Funher information may
team his first season with us two years ago and I'm sure he's boss. "The following spring he sent me an invitation to his
The Big Triple combination
be obtained by contscting
going to make it again. He's only 22, and personally I think he wedding and said he was going to spend ~is honeymoon in got married In 1940,-" says Griffith, who \vas 29 at the time . of o.&amp;-10 paid $543.90.
"We
got
married
on
February
first
and
went
to
New
York
for
Florida
during
our
training
period.
I
told
him
he
was
writing
the Commission.
could be a Hall ofFamer if he gets some more strength."
The 2,270 1\arness racing
our
honeymoon
.
Being
in
the
minors
like
we
were,
our
team
himself
a
ticket
to
Tacoma
.
What
was
so
wrong
with
getting
Calvin Griffith is a traditionalist and he thinks like one .
fans bet $319,869.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
didn't start spring training until the end of Marcil."
·
Hight her e is as good a place as any to point out that all married a little earlier?"
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Richard L. Smith,
Secretary

Sport Parad~ \

B•••b•ll

The ~orks of Arthur Miller,
playwnght and poet, were
reviewed by Mrs. Nan Moore
at the recent meeting of the
\lfiddleport Uterary Club
held at the home of Mrs.
James Titllll.
Mrs. Moore noted that
Miller was from Manhattan.
She reviewed three of his he;1
known wocks, "Death uf a
Salesman", seen on New
York stages and on television, and the winner of the
J'ulitzer Prize, "View from
the Bridge", and "Crucible ",
the story of the nation's
hysteria years during the

DEAR POLLY - The gold
metal ornaments on my
·green suit are tarnishing and
,J cannot replace them . Is
.there anything I can do to try
'to restore them to their
•original gold finish ? -JOSEPIDNE
DEAR JOSEPHINE - I do
·not know of anything that will
restore such a finish. But to
prevent it happening again
you might coat new ones with
clear nail polish. Be · very
careful to protect the garment until the polish is completely dry. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When
making cookies that need to
be rolled I freeze the dough
for several hours and then
use equal parts of granulated
sugar and flour when doing
the rolling. They do not stick
so badly.- RUTH
DEAR POLLY - When I
buy a new window shade I
always get one at least six
{eel long. When the slat end
get:&gt; worn and dirty I can cut
off the lower part. I fold up
one-half inch, turn over and
then fold up a hem deep
enough so the slat can be slipped in easily. Be sure to cut
and fold straight so the shade

29
.
'1
.
ARM ROAST••·•••••••
~...

USDA CHOICE

·~. USD~

CHUCK

GR. CHUCK ....••• ~~.!.l

29

LEAN BONELESS

59

.

.

2·/gge

~~~
HI HO CRACKERS...............................!.~~~~.x.. 79$
OREO COOKIES.................................. ~~.~~.~~~~. 99$
VALLEY BELL
VALVOLINE 01 L.~~.~~~~~!~ ..............................qr;. 69$
00
ALPO
DOG
FOOD
...••.......••.............••.••.
3
CANS . ,
CHOC. DRINK
HOT DOG or BARBECUE
HOLSUM BUNS..................•......•...........~.!~K.. 49$
BROUGHTON
FAVORITE BREAD...•. ~ •.....•....•...•....•.•..3LOAVES • ., 00
COTTAGE CHEESE
U
P.:~.~t .........................................~.~~~.~~~~.N..' 13•
7
HYLAND or SUNSHINE CHUNK STYLE
24 OZ. CARTON 9 9 e
DOG FOOD ...•...•......•.••......•.......•.•........ ~~.~-.~~..•3"
PEPSI
HILTON
OYSTER
STEW
...•........•.....
:
.•
.t~Y!.~~.~~. 59$
Plastic
KEEBLER
.
2 Liter 99°
SALTINE CRACKERS.••.....•.......•.•. ~ ...•.. .t.~~;.~~ ..59°
HEREFORD
ROAST.
.

.

.

•

.•

Plus Deposit

$

8 Pk.

SUPER MAllET- OPDI DAILY 910 10 P.M.
· .
· JJNOAY 10 .1810
·

We Accept f-.1 foit . -..-We lUI w T• RWd To IJiit Ql!lntl6.
..

16 oz. Bits.

Plus Depllit

•

, Patrick and Penny Mullen,
• Middleport, announce the
birth of a son on Sunday, Oct.
2Z at ·St. Joseph Hospital,
Parkersburg. The infant
weighed seven pounds and 14
ounces.
· Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen,
.Middleport; maternal
• grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
, : George Price, Long Bottom,
' paternal great • grand·
r-~ parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
:: Hackett, Sr., Middleport, and
:;maternal great • grand·
; ' mother, Mrs. Golda Mour: •Ding Roush, 'Middleport.
'' 'lbe couple are also the
; ' parents of a daughter,
; Jacinda Dawn, age four.
\

''

SPECIAL
MEETING
Southern Local Board of
Education, 7:30p.m. Tuesday
in high school cafeteria.
WOMEN'S Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
hospital cafeteria . Mrs. Edna
Russell will speak on home
health care.
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY Area Branch of
the American Association of
University Women, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn
social room. Rep . .Ron James
to speak on legislation of
interest to women.
MEIGS AREA Holiness
Assn . meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday
at
Danville
Wesleyan .Church with Rev.
James Broome speaking.
WEDNESDAY
MEETING oi the trustees
of Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the museum in
Pomeroy; c6mmittees for
1979 will be appointed.
LONG BOTTOM Community Assn. meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in the
community building. Long
Bottom area residents asked
to attend and support community growth program.
REVIVAL SERVICES
All eg han y
Wesleya~
Methodist Church, 7:30 each
evening. Located south of
Coolville on Route 7. The Rev.
Lewis Urey, evangelist; Mrs.
Janet Urey, vocalist. Rev.
Robert Cherry, pastor, inVItes the public. To continue ·
through Oct. 29.
MEIGS County Republican
Women's Club meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in banquet
room of Meigs Inn. There will
be a guest speaker and free
refreshments. All Republican
women are invited.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club
meeting, noon, at the Meigs
Inn.
LADIES Auxiliary of
Racine Fire Department will
hold a card party Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the fire
;'tation.

t~pec 1 a l

classes for ix!JdnninJ.{
arnmgcr!'), t~spcdally geared
tu thu:-;c whu just comph.:tctl a
flower arranging co urse

"Chi·Istmas Is .. ." will be
the theme of the annual
Meigs County Christmas
flower show to be held Dec. 2
and 3 at the Pon1er oy
Blementary School.
Mrs. Sally Ingels and Mrs.
Twila Buckley are general
chainnen for the show which
will featur e specimen
flowers, artistic designs, holiday decorations, and gift
wrappings.
In addition the chainnan
plan to have Christmas
displays of a nun-competili ve
nature, as well as corruner·
cia! exhibits, and demonstrations at the two day show.
Something new will he

taught by Mrs. Janel Bolin .
There arc also two invila·
lit,mal classes, open to anyone
wishing to exhibit, and ·une
for senior citizens , 60 years of
i:lge r:tnd uver.
Tht!I'C are 12 d&lt;i~es in the

'theme offlower show

as.semblages, interpretive ar~ the artb tic Cl!Ti:Ulgem cnt.s
1·angements and blachlight division .
Plans call for oral judging
materiaLs. There is also ct
special class fur junior ex- of exhibits to begin at I p.m.
hibitors in the artistic design on S~turday , Dec. 2 with one
di-vision as well as in the hor- blue, one red, a yellow and a
tieuJture specimens.
while ribbon to be placed in
F'our awards will be given eachdass.
in the artislie ctt•r·angemenl
classes. They are " best of
show", "reserve ", "creativi-

designs

Installation of officers
highlighted the Pomona _
Grange meeting held Thursday night at the Rock Springs
Grange hall.
In addition to the installation of the Pomona Grange officers, several officers from
the subordinate granges of
Hemlock Grove, Harrisonville, Rock Springs , and Columbia were install ed by
Pauline Atkins, assisted by
Chester King, marshall ;
Avanell Holliday, emblem
bearer; Gary Holliday,
regalia bearer ; Lucille
Leifheit, chaplain; and Norma IA!e, pianist.
Pomona officers insta lled
were Stanford Stockton,

Inast er ;

division

Rubert

retn:e~t.

Pauline

Reed,

F l :';E UPIIOLSTE!t !Sil J; l ' I!:';ITI ' HE

Flexsteel craftsmen use on ly th e finest mater ials and
the highest quality wor.kmanship to assure that the
construct ion of Fle xstee l is as superior as it s styling .
All frames are made of th e finest kiln -dried hardwood,
do uble-dowelled and corner-blocked for extra stre ngth
and stabili ty .

steward; Norma n Will , assis-

Not a detail is skimped . Ski llful tailoring - careful
cutting and sti tching - in sures an expert job o f
upholstering that makes the most of F lexsteel's
beautifu l fab r ics. All e)(posed wood trim s have a rich ,
warm finish .

Atkins,

The same hig h dem a nd s on qualit y and workmanship
have been standard at Flex steel fo r over 80 years.

BAKER FURNITURE
Middle port, 0 .

more p&lt;:tssers than flunk er s.

•

ortnJ
in Iowa.
,.,.
;,·''"

... ,;;· ..

•

liTE ·AL.ARM a b olTon

'

l igl1ts up .
Bla ck or brown
wiln maTcl1 ing

dial . PoliShed
m e T&lt;t l l r im

J II~" ' K J ] /8 ' 'X] "

$16.95

OAV -OATE -C otor ( OOrdin a te d
cti S!!, hands and number
a l s. L.uminousd iii i. III Or y
with black dial ,
Blue wiTh sil11er di al
JJ&amp;S"~J"K3" " .

$17.95

The Blue Cross
and Blue Shield membership card.
There isn't a member hospital or
hardly a doctors office in America
that won't recognize it immediately.
So if you live in Ohio, and get sick or
injured in Iowa, we'll be there.
Because we're nationaL But the
beauty is... we're local too. Our plans
are locally administered, and that
means more efficient use of your
health care dollar... it doesn't
go off to some distant home

office to trickle back in nickles
and dimes. National recognition...
local, careful management of your
money. That's how we got to be the
leader in health care protection, and
why our card is America's nwnber
one Get Well card. It's also America's
nwnber one Stay Well card. Because
we're developing what we call
positive health care strategies,
programs aimed at helping people
stay healthy. Its another way your
Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans
make sure you get more value for ·
every health care dollar.
And thats what you'd
expect from a leader.

COMPACT TRAVEL ALARMS

BYBULOVA

Blue Cross .
Blue Shield .

Value added.
r.l' Regottered Mtr kl Bh.111 Cross Anot•III O"
.,~ · Reg rtltlld Strllic e M11 ~ R ol thll ftlto on•l
,lt, uoco1110n 1)1 B l~ e Shoeld Pl1n1

Court St., Pomeroy, 0

later .

•

EXPERIENCED
TRAVELERS
Pres~

announced by the r hainnen

The deep-sea ting comfort of Flexsteel f ine furniture
starts with thi s unique Flexsteel spring. made of th e
f inest watchspring steel. Formeq into a sing le unit, it
provides lasti ng Comfor t w ith never a coil to break or
com e untied.

tant stewa rd ; Maxine Dyer,
lec t urer; Opar Dyer, -lady ass ista nt stewa rd ;
Goldie Reed, chaplain ; Menda l Jordan, treasurer; J . H.
Quivey, gate keeper ; .lane
ATTEND RETREAT
Hazelton, Ceres; and Homer
Mrs. Freda Van Inwagen, Radford and J . H. Quivey, ex·
Mrs. Jean Wright, Mrs. Dun· ecutive committee.
na Gi lmore, a nti Mrs .
Refreshments uf donuts
Mildred Jacobs recently at- and cider were !:ierved f ullowtended a Free Methodist in g the meetin g.
Retreat held at B1g Prarie.
Nearly 200 women from over
Ohio attended the retreat
If some teachers would
wh.ere Alberta Hause, author
of "Vinegar Boy" and a siste1· spend less tune plann1ng
of Mi.ss Glenna Runune l, was teac hing mod ules w:U run
guest speaker. She also tpeir dassruums, the Jea rnpresented a Bible sk1t at the mg mode might produ ce
overseer;

The show will be open for
public viewing from I p.m. to
5 p.m. un Saturday, ~nd from
Ito 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Details on all of the classes
incl uded in the show will he

FLEXSTEEL ·

ty award" an "special
which are open only to garden lighting awa rd". There will
dub members. They include also be a chainmm 's award
nour arrangements of four fur the must outstanding
fed or over, ones with junior artistic exhibit and one
Madonna and child, and une for the Ueginning arranger
Wllb just tho Madonna, some artistic exhibit.
using candles, glitter a mi--or
The cha irman also plan to
baubi es. others be1ng give a sweepstakes award, in
artistic

Pomona Grange installs officers

and rne eli a I

· Announce ·birth

RC or DIET RITE

99~

FALL CONFERENCE of
the
Eighth
District,
American Legion Auxiliary,
Thursday at the Middleport
hall, begiMing at 12 noon .
Several Department of Ohio
officers to attend.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Chamber
of Commerce meeting, 6:30
p.m. this evening at Meigs
THURSDAY
REVIVAL at Dexter
Church of Christ, Friday
through Sunday with Charles
Russell, former minister of
Bradford Church of Christ, as
evangelist. Services, 7:30
each evening. PubUc lnvlted.
REVIVAL now In progress
at Rutland Church of God
through Oct. 29 at 7:30p.m.
~nightly, Don Stacey is the
• evangelist. Public Is invited.
. '

Thurs. Onfy

8PACK
16 oz. Bottles

WILDWOOD GARDEN
Club, Wednesday night 7:30
at the the home of Mrs.
Hir31l) Fisher. " Come as you
are" party and meetin~.
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shr inettes,
7:30 'p.m. Thursday at home
of Emma Clatworthy, High
St., Middleport.

Peavley, Route I, Rutland
are ani10uncing the birth of a
son, Timothy Ryan, un· Od. I
at O'Bieness Hospital,
Athens. The baby weighed 10
pounds and was 22 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are
Ola St. Clair, Pomeroy, and
the late Avery St. Clair .
Paternal grandparents are
Jack Peavley, Detroit, Mich .,
and the late Mary Peavley.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. !'rank Douglas,
Route 4, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Mae St. Clair, New York.
Mr. and Mrs. Peavley's
other children are Vicky,
Jay, Kathy and Jeff .

TUESDAY
PAST MASTERS night
observance when Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363,. F&amp;AM,
meets at 7 p.m. Tuesday; all
Master M11sons invited.
OPEN HOUSE , 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Meigs Junior
High School cafeteria,
Middleport. Tour of building
and meeting with teachers in
their classroOmS'; refreshments by Parent-Teacher
Forum.
HARRISONVILLE
Senior Citizens Club Tuesday 7
p.m. at club h9use in
Harrisonville. Sandwiches,
cookies and coffee will be
served. All members urged to
attend.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs IM. Christopher
Layh will be guest speaker.
OCCL ALL - LEAGUE
meeting; potluck, 7 p.m.,
Kyger Creek Clubhouse.

Inn.

•

OR. PEPPER

OHIO VALLEY Commandery number 24, Knights
Templar Wednesday 7:30
/
p.m.
LONG BOTTOM Com·
munlty Associatoin Wednesday 7:30 p.m. at community building.

''

•

I

I

WINESAP or
Rm DEUCIOUS

4 lbs.

will hang evenly. I fasten thb
~~m up with strips of clear
tape.
I find many uses for a bottle
brtish. They are most helpful
when cleaning the drain in
the refrigerator, the tines on
forks, tea strainers, the
strainer in the automatic
washer and also for cleaning
the wire splatter lid I use una
skillet.- EDITH
DEAR POLLY -My Peeve
is with those people in the
supennarkets who wait until
all their purchases are added
up before they start to write
their checks. They could save
a lot of time for themselves,
the checker and the people in
line if they would fill out the
check at home, just leaving
the amount blank (and )he
signature, if they feel safer
about that ).
Also, if people would put
purchases on the counter with
the price side up this would
save time for the checkers.
Clerks also appreciate'
coupons being neatly cut with
scissors rather than being
torn off.- L.M.B.
Polly will send yuu one of
her signed thank -yo u
newspaper coupon clippers i[
she us es your favorite
Pqinter, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POJ;LY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper .

Calend ar I Announce
birth
1
I
Mr . and Mrs. Ja ck

BY THE

SUPERIORS

CHIP 'N DIP

• EGGS 00l69¢

-,.~. ~So
~;:;;c-ial_. _ll

1
BOLOGNA.!~E~~ •• ~..9 9 ~

BROUGHTON
•

.

BEEF STEW•••••••••~·.•!

ROAST
GR. B LARGE

·1 29
ROAST•••.....•• ~...
'
LB •

FRESH LEAN

CHOICE '

war. She noted that Miller's
works are well received all
over the world and especially
England. ·
Mrs. Sibley Slack presided
at the meeting opening with
the club collect in unison. For
roll call members gave a
l'Uirunent on the book. Mrs.
Cecile Kincaid and Mrs.
Elizabeth Morning were
guests.
·
Refreslunents were served
by the hostess with Mrs.
Slack at the coffee servil-e.
Next lll#.~\ing will be held
at the home of Mrs. Carl
Horky on Nov.! at 7:30p.m.

POLLY.$ POINTERS

USDA CHOICE

ENGLisH
CUT

I

~ -

• ' '

'

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 24,1978
•
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
._. I n The court of

common Pleas

Mejgs county

NOTICE

Ohio

OF

FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES , BY ACTION IN
REM
BY
COUNTY
TRE ASURER OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO .
Publ i&lt;: No1ice is he reby
gi ... en that on the 4th end 6th
day of october . 1978. the
county Treasurer of Meigs
county, Ohio, fi led a com pla int in the Cou r t of Com mon Ple as of Me igs c ounty
Otlio , at Pomero y , for th~
foreclosure of liens for
de 1 i n q u en t
taxes.
assessments , p"e na lttes , and
cr,a rges aga inst ce rtain real
property si t uated in such
Cou nty as described in said
com pla int .
The ob ject of the aclion •i s to
ob tain f rom the cou r t a
judgment fo r ec lo sing the ta x
liens against such real esta t e
and ordering the sa le of suc h
real es tate fo r the satis fa c lion of the ta x l iens th er eo n .
such action is brough t
against the real property onl y
and no personal judgment
sh all be en t ered t herein.
The permanent parcel
number o f each pa r cel in cl1.1ded in such ac t ion . the full
street address of the parcel , if
available . a descr i pt ion of the
parcel , a statement of th e
amoun t
of
laxes,
assessments , p ena tr ies and
char ges aue ana u npa ia on
s~c h parcel , and the name
and address of the la st k nown
owner thereof , as such ap pea r on the gen eral tax lis t.
all as mor e fully se t forth in
the comp laint ,a r e a s follow s:
CBT .o4 , Co lumb ia Town ship, Me igs County, Ohio, Lot
No . o, 10'WsideofNt 2 , T .G.
Cl ay , address unknown ;
Bertha
Cia y ,
address
unknow n ; the unknown heirs,
de visees,
lega t ees,
ad m in istrators. executor s, and
or assig n s of B er tha Cla y , i f
deceased ; th e unknown hei r s,
de vise es ,
lega t ees.
ad minist rat ors, executor s, end
or ass i g n s o f T . G . Clay. i f
de ce ased ; $113 .07 , Se.r . No . 78
OLT 15 .
SUT .01 , Sutton Township ,
Meigs Cou nt y, Ohio , 5. 47
a cr:es in N lf:l Sec. 2, T .2 R . 13,
Oh iO Co mpan y's Purchase,
L ew is Hud son , if living ,
address
unknown :
if
de c~ased. tn e unknown heir s,
d evtsees,
l ega tee s,
ad minisfratorsexecutorsandor
ass·I gns of L e WI·s H U d SOn ;. ! h e
unknown spou se if any of
Lewis Hudson ; Annie Hud son ,
if
living,
address
unknown : i t decea sed . the
unkn ow n heir s. devisees,
leg a tees , administrators .
exec ut ors, and or a ss ign s Of
An ni e Hudson ; Dav e Hudson .
if liv ing , address unknown ; i t
deceased , th e unknown heirs .
d~v!sees , l e gatees . ad m• nt SI~ ator s, executor~ and
or asstgns of Dave Hudson .
dec .• S28.00, Ser . N o. 78 -DL T
16
R T -02,
R u tland
Twp .•
M eigs County, O hio, 2 acres .
10 r ods , S.J, T . 6 R . 1.4_, Ohio
Com pany 's
Purchase ;
Rutland T ow nsh i p, Meigs
Co unt y, Ohio. 1 acre, s 23, T .
6. R . 14 , Ohio co mpany's
Purchas e: · F red Pink ston , if
liv ing , address u nknown ; It
deceased , th eunk nownheirs ,
devisees ,
legat ees,
ad mi ni !.trators , exec utors . and
or ass i g n s of F red Pin ks to n,
dec .; Hal i dav H'l' se ll . if
living , address unk nown ; if
deceased the u nknown h eirs,
devisees,
legatees ,
ad mln \stretors , e'Jlecuton. end
or a ssi gn s ot Haliday Hvsell,
d ec .• SJ9 . 41 , Ser. No . 78 OL T
17.
, S U T .02 . OV T -02 . Sutton
T wp ., Me igs county, Oh io ,
Oil. gas and other m inersa ls,
EXCEPT coa l
underly ing
100 acres more Or tess, in 160
acre Lot 1219; T . 2, R . 12, Ot'1io
Companv' s Purchase,· Ol i ve
Twp ., Meigs county, Ohio ;
Oil . gas and other minerals
underlying 95 A . in S.29 , T . J,
R . 11 , Oh io
company's
Purchase ; The minin g in t erests in 60 A . in s. 29 , T . 3, R
11
Ohio Compan,. •s Pur ch'ase ; 30 A .• s . :L9, T . J. R . 11 ,
Ohio Compan y'S Purchase ;
10 A . s. 29, T . 3, R . 11. Ohio
Company's P urchase ; 70 A ..
s 29 T 3 R 11 Otl io com ·
pilny'·s · P urC:ha'se , COAL
under lying 16 A., s. 29, T . 3,
R
11
Ohi o
Company's
P~r ch~se .
EDNA
CO RYELL
if l iv ing
243
Channi ng ' Way , se 'r kl ey,
Ca l if .; if dec ea se d , the
unknow n he i rs
devfsees
lega tees, .a dmini Strators and
or as -; igns of Edna Coryell
oec .; H1e un known spouse 1i
any o E In a Coryell ; B. F.
Putnar •. , · li vi ng , whose last
known address is Marietta ,
Ohio .
if
deceased
the
unkn~w n heirs , dev'i sees ,
legatees , adm in istra to r s.
execu to r sandora ssi gn sof B .
F . Putnam . dec .; R UDOLPH
w . G L ASNER , if'C !ivi n ,
address
unknow n.
~f
deceased , the unknown' hei r s,
d ev i sees,
lega te es,· ad min istrators e~Cecu t o r s and
or assigns ·~ f Rudel h w
G l asner
d ec . JolN o ·
AMES , ' it li ~ ing , addresS
unknown . i f dece ased the
u n know~ hei rs de vi~ees
le ga t ees
administrators'
el(ecuto r s' and or assig ns 0 f
John o Ames dec s
ser
No
Dl'T 477 ~09 :
Sl 192 25 Ser N d 78 DLT 14ab,
'
· '
·
·
·
RV -02, Rutla nd Vi llag e,
Meigs County , Ohio, Lot 2
Fallon 's Addi t ion Ru tl and .
ex . 20 fee t of E side, 8.
tr iangle ot w side .:
Cla ra
Charle t on,
~tddress
unknow n , ; i f deceased . the
u nkn ow n heirs, d evisees,
legatee s , ad mi n ist r ators,
e~Cecutors and o r assig n s of
Cla ra (har l e ton , de c.: the
un k now n spouse, i f any , ot
Cla ra Charteton . SJ6.82: Ser .
No . 78 DL T 18.
RU -0 3, Rutland Vi llag e,
Meigs Cou n ty , O h io, 15 .2
acres SW c orners 26 , T . 6, R .
14. ; JAMES PHELP S, whose
la s t
known
addr ess
is
Rutland, Ohio. if living ; i f
deceased , t h e unkno wn !1eirs,
de ..,.isees,
le g at ees,
ad ·
minislrators and or ass ig n s of
James Phelps , de c., the
unknown spouse, if any , of
L est er Phelps , d e&lt;:. CLA UDE
AS H L EY . whose laSt known
address is M iddleport , Ohio,
if li'w' lng ; if d ecease d the
unk now n hei rs , devi sees .
lega tees , adm inistrato r s ~nd
or a ssig ns of Cl~t ude Ashley .
th e unknown spouse, i f anv • of
Cla u d e Ashley, name a nd
El ddress unknown . WILBUR
AS H LEY , whose l ast known
ad dress is Middleport. Uhio,
if living ; i f decease d , the
unknow n heirs , devisees,
legatees , a dministrator s a nd
or assigns of Wilbur ASh ley,
l he unk nown spo us e, if any , of
Wi lbur As hl ey, name and
ad dr ess
un k n ow n . MAY
QUIVEY , whose la st known
ed dre ss Is 151 Mil l St .,
Athens , Oh iO, if living ; if
dece ase d t he unk nown heirs ,
de visees ,
legatees.
ad m in is trators . and or assigns
of May Quivev. the u n k now n
spou se, i t any , o f May

o
0

n;

1

Qulvey, name and address
unknown .
R I CHARD
DENSMORE. whose last

known address is Gallaway ,
Ohio. if liv ing ; if deceased ,
the unknown he~rs. devisees ,

teoate~s , adm1n1~tra tor s and
or ass1gns of R •cherd Den ~more ; the unknown spouse,
•I any . ot Richard Den smor e_,
name and add r ess un known .
FLOSS~E F'HILLIF'S , whose
las t k~o~n. add_ress is Logan ,
Ohio. tl lt\ltng, tl decease d the
unknown hei,r~ . devisees ,
tegate_
es , adm tnt st~ator~ ~nd
or as "t gns of Floss1e ~h1!1tps .
the Ur') know':" ~pouse, tf any Of
Flosste Phtll tps , n ame and
address unknown . REVA
SMITH . whose last kn ow n
a_ddress is Logan , Ohio , if
I t v n g ; If d_ec eased ~ t he
unknown het.r ~ , dev1see, ,
legate_es , a dmm1strat~rs and
or ass1gns of Rev a ~ m1th ; the.
unknown .spo 1.1se , 1f anv. of
Rev a Sm 1th , name a nd ltd ·
·dress unknown . HAROLD
P HI LLIP.s , wno~e last k!"ow_n
.a_ d~r ess t.s Manon , Oh tO, 1f
ltvtng ; tf d_ Hease d ~ the
unkn own he 1_r ~. dev1se es ,
legate~s , admtn tstrator _
s and
or asstg n s of H arold ~h ill ips ;
the u nknow':' ~ p ause , 1f anv . of
Harold Ph tlt ps , n ame and
a ddre ss u nk nown .
O.A LE
P HELP S. wht~se last known
ad dr ~ss_ i~ R l. _
1, Waynesburg ,
Pa • tf l tv mg ; ~ f de cease_d . the
unknown h e!r~, de v 1sees r
legate_es , a dmmt stra tors , and
orass•gnsofDale Phelp s; the
u nkn own spou se, if an'; . qf
Dale Phelps , name and ad dress vnknown . BESSIE
S! OE RS ,_ whose las t k':" ow ~
a_d~res s ~ ~ Rut·l and. Ohto , 1f
l l vt nQ ; tf d_ecease d ~ the
unk nown h e •,r~. devtsee s,
legate~s , admtntstr .ator~nd
or aS Signs o f Besst e . Sidtrs,
th e u~kno":-'n spouse, If any , of
Bes s te S tders, name and
adress unk nown . ELVIRA
BARR , . whose l~st know _
n
a.d~res~ 1s_ Lang sv •lle, Ohio , tf
llvtng , If &lt;_!eceased_ the
unkno wn he t_r~. dev tsees.
leg ate_e s . admm,_s trators and
or asstgns of E !lnra_Barr ; the
un k':' ow n spouse, •f any · of
Elv tr.a
Barr , name and
adrcss unknown . HELEN
S AR LES_. whose last know!"~
a_d ~r ess · ~ Hamde n, Ohio, •f
lt v mg ; tf d_ecea sed : ttle
unf(nown he t. r~, deVISees,
legate ~s, admm•strators and
or ass 1gns of Helen Barles .
th e unf(nown spouse,l.f any, of
Helen Barles , name an~
addre.s s unknow n., S7l . 83 .
Se~ .v~o~ · ~~~~~gL:
~9 p
r
•
.
' 1
me oy,
M ei gS County, Ohto , T . 2, . R .
13 , Lot s 124 and 125 . Also lot
20 x 80 ft · RO GER DAVID ·
SO ~ , P.O. Bo x .54 • Pomeroy ,
4 5 7 ~ 9 • . . CLARA
OhiO ,
~~tV I~ SO N , tfd~• vmg , :-"hose
. nown ll re ss tS c .o
.Pautl.n~ Har less . 147 0 Maple
Street. &lt;;:tearwater, F l ortda
33151 ;
tf
deceased,
the
u nknow n heirs . dev i sees ,
l eg atees, administrators and
or as~igns ot Cl ara Davidson ,
d ec .,
ERNEST
W.
DA VI D SO N.
aka
RINK
DAVIDSON , if liv ing, whose
la st known address is 113
E.b e nezer Street , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 ,; if d ecea sed , the
u nknow n heirs,. devisees,
l eg atees , admintstraors and
or assign s of Ernest
Dav i dson ,
aka
Rink.
Davidson , de ce ased ; the
!Jnknown he i rs, devisees.
legate es. ad mints trators , and
or assigns of CATHERINE
EBERSBACH , deceased ; the
un known spouse . i f any , of
Rog er David son. wh ose name
and address are unknown ;
th e unk now n spouse, if i!lny , of
Catherine Ebersbach, whose
name
and
address
is
unknown .. U36 .08 .
Any person owning or
c laimin g any r ight, t i tle or
interest in , or lien upon , any
parcel of re al property ab ove
lis ted mav fi le a n answer in
such action setfing forth the
natureandamountofinterest
owned or claimed and any
defense o r objection to the
foreclosure . Such answer
must be filed In the office of
t he under s i gned Clerk of
Court , and a copv thereof
served o n the County
Prosecutor on or b efore the
21st day of November, 1978.
If no an swer If f iled on or
before the date s pe~i~ied as
the last day . to r f1llng an
answer , a tudgment of
fore t': los ure w i ll be taken by
defaulta st oanyparcelllsted
in the complaint as _to whi ch
noanswerha sbeenf d ed . Any
par ce l
as
to
which
a
for ec losur e is taken by
default shall be sold for th e
satisfaction o f the tll~es,
a ssessme nts , p en altieS ,
_-; har_ges, and costs incurred
in the tor ecl'oSure that ar.e
due and unpa id .
~~ an,. time prior to the
fil tng _o f an entr,. of con·
ft r n;atton of sa le, any owner
~r lie nh older ~t a percel Hsted
tn the complat nt mav redeem
such par cel by tendering to
the County Treasurer the
amou n t
of
. taxes,
assessments, penaltteS, and
cha rg es due ~tnd unpaid on
su ch parc el. tog ether with all
cos ts which have been in ~ur~ed In a!ly proceeding
tns trtuted a ga tnst suc h par c el
u nd er Sec tion 57'2 1.18 of the
Rev i sed Cod e. Upon the tiling
of any entry of co nf irmat ion
of sa le, there sha ll be no
further ·eq uity of r edempt ion .
Anv
p e r so n
ther ea fter
claiming any r ight, title and
interes t in , or li en upon , anv
su ch parcel shalt be forever
bar re d and f or ec lo se d or anv
such r ight , title , in terest in ,
lien upon , and anv equity of
redemp t ion in, such parcel.
LARRY E . SPENCER ,
Clerkotcourtof
common Plus
By :
Marlene
Harrison ,
Oeputv Clerk
Meigs Countv , Ohio
(10 ) 10, 17 , 24 , 3tc

co rner ; thence east 15 rods to
a corneri thence south B rods
to the place of beginning ,

conta ining J .. acre .
Parcel No . 2 : Si tuate in tn e
Townstlip Of c"'ester. Meigs

~--p~;;~;· -1

!

Personal Notes

!

•
'-1
,,

f3radbury PTA met, discussed new year ..
..
•

A l'l'Vit•w of plons for the
Yt'Hr by Oun Hanning , priu~
d(Jal, a lung with an open
house a nd classroom visita·
tiun . highlighted the- Thurs·
day night PTA meetinc held
at the · Br·adbury Elrnentary
&amp;h&lt;M&gt;i.

County . Oh io, and being a
M1·s. Pc~rl J~eub.' ~nd Mr.
part of Section 7, Town 4,
and Mrs. James Gilmore
Range 12. Ohio Compa ny ' S
Puq:nase . beginning on the
retumt!d Thursday after ~
west li ne of Sec t ion 1, wh;ere
several
d~ys visit in Colwnthe southeast corner of lands
of F . W . Zehm intersects sa'id
bus with Mrs. Sandy Darst
sect ion line , and ru nn ing west
and famil y and Mr. and Mrs .
along t h e north line of l ands
William Jaeob,o;.
of John Baker , 28 rods S f ee t
Ha nning gave an outli ne of
to the center of ttle township
Miss Patty Lochary, sturoad , known as the Schoo l
the
Bradbury Sehoul muline
dent at Ohio University, spent
House Road through said
and
diseus,;ed the new school
Sec ti on 7 ; thence in a north ·
the weekend here vis itin ~ her
easterly direction along the
·Jibrar.
v whit•h is now bcinc
grdndparents, Mr. and Mrs .
meanderings of the center of
s.a ld r oad to where the- west
Patrick Loehary . On Sunday
lln_e of sai d Section 1 crosses
Mr. and Mrs. Loehary went to
.sa1d road : then ce south a tong
Amesville
for a visit with her
the said west line of Section 1
to the place of beg i nning ,
b1·other
and
his wife , Mr. and
co nta inin g S acres . more or
Mrs.
Hllrry
Henry.
less .
Parcel No . 3: Situate in the
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van lnTownship of Ct]ester. Meigs
wagen
of near Marietta were
County , Ohio , and in Section
1. Tow.n 4. Range 12, Oh iO weekend visitiors of his .
company ' s
Purchase ,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
begin nin g at William Bell's
Van lnwagen .
n or theast cor ner ; the nce
Alpha Epsilon Ch"pter of
north to the east branch of
Mrs. Lee Wukelich and Alpha Della Kappa held its
Sh ade R i ver ; thence up sa id
sons of Bell Valley spent the Founder's'd Day meeting in
creek with its meenderings 96
rods to a stake ; then ce south . weekend here visiting Mrs.
the Riverboat Room of the
5 degrees west 16 rods to the
Clyda Bing and daughter, Sc:tvin ~s anti Loan Co. Tuescounty road ; thence easterly
on said road to the pla&lt;:e o t
Joyce.
day night with 16 members
be ginn ing ,
containing
B
Guest of the Rev . and Mrs. attending.
a cres . mor e or less .
Floyd Shook recently w~ s
E x cept a lOt deeded to
Afte1· devotions entitled
School Directors of O) st. 1 for
their
niece , Miss W~nda "A utumn '' hy Mr&lt;.: r.n,,,,n .
school purposes .
Peters of Harrisburg , P~.
Parcel No .
Situate i n the
Township of Chester . Meigs
Sunday visitors of Mrs. EdCountv , Ohio : Also another
ward Foster were Mr. and ~-------·-,
piece of land being · direc tlv
west of the above desc ribed
Mrs. William Westervelt of
pie ce, beginning at the center
Tuscon,
Ariz., Mr. and Mrs.
of Shade Creek on the west
Charles Westervelt, Colwnline of said Section 1, the
so uthwest corner o f land
bus, and Mrs. Edson Roush,
formerly owned by Frederick
Radne
.
Feiger; thence 25 rods to the
county road ; thence ea sterly
Mrs. Kay Gilkenson,
on said road 3Srods to a white
PRAYER FOR OTHERS
Mrs. Emily Woods and
oak niarked tor a corner ;
Thank
Thee , Father, for
thence north 5 degrees eaSt 20
daughter, Emily, of East
rods to the center of said
Salvation,
Uverpool were ret'enl guests
creek ;
thence north
65
Which is free for every one
of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
degrees west 7 rods. to the
the blood of our
Thru
brant':h of sa id creek and
and Jayne.
stonecorner ; thencenortht
Redeemer,
degrees west 5 rod s; then ce
And Thy own and only Son.
westward 24 rods to the
easterly following the center
section line and place of
Lord, my prayer is for others,
of the mtander i ngs of th e
beg inn ing, containing 4 acres
creek. to land formerly owned
Who have failed to come to
and 147 rods, more or less.
bv David Osborn west lin e;
Parcel No . S: Situate in the
Thee
thence north with said line 9
Township of Chester, Meigs
rods and 1, .. ; thence west 95
For
this marvelous Salvation,
county,
Ohio : Also the
rods to the place of beginning .
Which
is making sinners free .
following piece of land lying
Pilrcet No. 10 : Sit ua te in
...
south o 1 and adtOmtng
the
the Township of Chester ,
above
descr i bed
piece .
Meigs County, Ohio . The
Loving Father , save our
Beg i nning at Charles B .
following described piece of
Cowdery ' s northwest corner ·
children,
land adjoining the above
then&lt;:e east lOS' ~ rods to the
described tract" on the Ea st ;
Who
are yet unsaved today,
southwest corner of lands
beginning at a stone in th e
sold to Benjam in Johnson ;
Lead
them on to certain
center of sect ion 1. Town 4,
thence north to th
th
t
Range
12
;
thence
from
said
vict'ry
e nor wes
stone easterlv to the center of
corn~r Of Meeting House and
In the straight and narrow
creek ; thence down the
~~r~mt~ gr~~~d ; th~nct'h east the
cent~r of . the creek to the
way ;
no;thn
d~oreee;o:as;t toe~~= mouth ot Sedore run ; then ce
Save
them, Lord, while I am
center of the -road that ted
eastertv 6 rods 12 feet t o a
.
as
hying,
Will ow ; thence a little west of
up tl'le_htll by ltle scho'OI, house
south to the center ot the
fo l.lowmg the mundenngs of
If it be Thy Holy will.
creek; thence down sald
said. ro~d _wesfertv to the
So
we all can walk 'together
creek
about
10
feel
below
an
section line . the~ce south _13
rri ill dam ; then ce e~tslerly
To the lop of Zion's Hill.
r~ds , to the . ~late ot beQtn · old
about 2 rods to an oak tree;
n ng , conta.ntng ~9 acres ,
thence east 9 'rods 12 feet to
w. more or le~s .
.
stake,· thence south 18 rods to
May each member of our
·Except Y• acre adjo1nlng
a Gum tree in a sma ll ravine ;
t~e church and burying lot
family
thence a little west of south &lt;40
so~d for a school lo.t.
rods
to
a
stone
in
John
F
.
Who
have come by law or
urther exceph1ng from
Forrence ' s west line ; then ce
Parcel No . 5, 2 h acres
birth
west on said tine to Dav id
conveyed to Emerson Bell, by
Seek and find this true
OsbOrn 's north and south
deed recorded In Vol. 103,
line ; thence on sai d line to I he
Page ~16 of the Deed Records
Salvation,
p l ace of beginning , con of Me tQ S Coun!y,_Ohlo ._
Ere
they go away from earth.
taining 15 acres , more or less .
Parct_l No . 6. S1tuate 1n ~he
P.-rcel No . 11: A lso ad .
They are scattered in this
TownshiP Of ~hester , Me1gs
joining
the
last
above
Count_y ,
Oh1o,. Also
the
Nation,
described parcel on the south .
f4(1110wtng descrtbe~. premises
Situate In- Chester Township,
Most. are near, some far
aa1o1n1ng :ne . aboVe on the
Meigs
County,
Ohio .
s.ou th . Be~~nntn~ at the west
away ,
Beginning on t h e center line
I me of Satd Sect1~n 1 and the
And they need ro be
Qf Section 1 runn ing north and
center Of_ShadeR tver ; thence
south about 10 rods soutl'l of
down sa1d creek 68 rods to a
protected ,
where sa ld 1ine c rosses th e
bend In_ the creek; thence
for them, I humbly pray.
creel&lt; , a stone corner in said
down sa1d c reek 66 rods to a
section; thence north 80
corner; thence north 70 rods
degrees west to the center. ot
to a corner • thence northwest
They are con stantly in
the creek; thence· ~allowing
20 rods to a corner ; thence
up
sa
id
creek
to
sa
id
c
enter
danger
~est 98 rods to the sect !on
line ; thence south about ten
line ; thence south on_ said I me
On
the highways and at
rods to the place of beginni ng.
to . place of begtnntnQ , con .
home,
containing
1
acre
,
more
or
tatnlng50acres , moreorless .
less .
Ex.cept the Cowdry family
In the schools and other
Parcel No . 12 : Situate In
burymg ground .
places
the
Townsh
i
p
o
f
Chester
,
Ptrcel No . 7: Situated in
Mei gs County, Ohio : All t hat
the_ Township o_
f Chester,
On
this earth where'er they
part
of
the
follow ing
Me1gs .County , Oh10 : A_lso the
roam
;
described real estate that lies
fot lowmg describe~ ,P!ece of
south of t he center of the East
So they need this true
parce l of l_end ad101ntng the
branch of Shade R iver , t o.
last descrtbed piece at the
Salvation
wit : Beg inning 132 rods east
north~a s r
corner
and
More than all they can obtain
of the northwest corner of
des ~ rt~ed , .as
_fol lo ws :
Sect ion 1; thence south 46
Begtnn1 ng nmety etght roHs
In the way of earthly riches,
rods to a drain; thence south
eut of Char l es B . Cowdery 's
Which does not the soul
70 degrees east 41 rods to the
northwest corner; thence
c enter of said sec t ion ; thence
.south 45 de·g . Eas t twen t y
sustain.
south 164 rods to Bell's line ;
rods to a stake ; thence north
thence east 7l lfl rods to David
fourteen rotts ; thence west
Osborn 's line ; thence n or th to
Lord, I thank Thee for the
tou~teen rods to plac~ of
section I ine, then c e west to
beg inning, contain ing ntnety
members
the place of beginning, in
.
eight rods , be the same more
Who
have found Thy saving
Town
4,
Range
12
.
or less .
Parcel No. 13: Situate in
Parcels 3 •. 4.
6 and }
grace,
the Township of Che ster ,
above descr tb_ed l1e west of
It is good to know they're
Meigs Countv . Oh io : All t h at
the road leadtng from Kena
part
of
the
follow ing
to Tuppers Pl~lns . .
living
descrlbed real estate that l ies
Parcel No •. 1: St tuated In
With
Thy smile upon each
so uth of the center of the East
the _ TownShiP of ~hester,
face;
~e 1 gs ~ounly.• Oh1 0 , and br~tnch of Sh ade Riv er , to wit : Being in Sect ion 1. Tow n
Situated 1n Sect•on 1. Town 4,
May they keep on being faith4, Range 12 of the Ohio
Range 12 Of the OhiO Com ful,
Co mpany 's
Pu rc ha se,
pany ' s Pu_rc hase bounde~
descr ibe d
as
follows :
and . d~scr t bed as follo_ws .
Every
looking 'tward the
Beginning 80 rods east of th e
Begmn•no 2 rods 18 ltnks
goal, .
north west corner of Section
north 30 degrees west _ of a
I ; thence east 62 rods ; thence
Black walnut tr ee on S1de of
Where there is great joy
south 46 r ods to a drain ;
the road ; then ce 19 rods on
awaiting
t
hence
south
70
degrees
east
the road to a stake and th e
41 rods to the center of sec corner of the meeting l'louse
Each and every blood washed
tion ; running north and
to t, thence west lrodS. lO links
s&lt;iul. .
south ; then ce south 163 rod s ;
to a stake ; thence north 16
thence
west
58
rods
to
the
links Jo the _southwest corner
center of the road ; th ence
of the meeting house ; thence
Lord, my prayer includes all
north 21;, degrees west 24 rods
west .along !laid line Of the
meetmg house tot 35 feet to
on said road to a Wal nut tree ;
the so u t hwest corner of the
thence north 10 degrees east
meet ing house lot ; then ce 19
52 r o ds to the ce nter of the
rods 20 links south ; thence
east branch of Shade R iver ;
east 6 rods 12'.'1 l inks to the
thence west 7 rods to m out h of
place of beg inn i ng , con sm~ll run ; thence north 10
taining116rods,moreorless .
degrees west 152 rods to the
Parcel No . 9: Siluate in the
place of beginning , c on TOwnship ot Chester. Meigs
taining 95 acres , more or le ss.
County , Ohio : Situated . in
TERMS OF SALE : Cash .
Sect ion 1, Town 4, Range 12 oJ
tor not less than two -thirds of
t he Ohio Comp~tny's Pur ·
the appra isea value, and
chase beginning 1 rod west of
subjected to real estate ta xes
t he bla ck wa lnut tree on the
for 1978 .
IN THE
south line of la nd formerly
Proper ty appraise d at
COMMONPLEASCOURT owned bv Ethan Cowdry,
$33,600.00.
OF
thence south JJ rods to a
James J . Pr offitt .
Sher i ff of
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
hedge ; the'!ce east l7 rods to
Meigs County, Oh io .
CARL A . RITCHIE , .
a stake ; then c e continuing
Pla int i ff ,
east to t he cent er of the Eut
1101 3, 10, 17 ' 24, 31, 51
... s.
Shade Creek; thence north
NORMA RITCHIE , ET AL .,
Defendants
No. 16,7U
- NOTICE OF SALEPur suan t to an Order of
Sa te issued by the com mon
Pl eas Court of Meigs cou nty
Ohio , 1 will offer fo r sate ai
p ublic au c t ion on thE' Jrd . day
of NO&gt;Jember. 1978, at 10 : 00
A .M . on the Court House
slep s at th e Court House in
Flam er o v, Ohio, th e follow lng
desc r ibe d ree l estate :
IN THE
The followin g r eal es tate
situated in the Co unt y of
M eigs_. in the Stat e of Ohio , .
and 1n t he Townshi p o f
Ches t er. and bounded and
des c r ibed as foll ows :
Parcel No . 1: Situate in
Ch ester T ow n sh i p , Meigs
OPEN:
Co unt y , Oh io, and in Section
1. Town 4, Ohio compllny's
Tues.,
Wed.
&amp; Sat. 8:30til5: 00
Purchase , beginn ing in the
cent.e r of th e road at the
Thursday Til12 Noon
northeast corne r ot gr ave lot
Friday Until8 P.M.
and meet i n g house lots ,
thence we st t 5 • ro d s t o e
Herman Grate
co rner ; thenc e n orth B r oa s to
Mason. W. Va.
773-5592
a co r ner ; th enc e east 15 r ods
to a cor n er ; t hence 8 r ods to a

estublished. He nnlt•rl thai
books are needed and sug.gestcd donations to lhe
library. About 50' new books
o n• now on order, he
reported.
Charles Cassell presidt!d at
the meeting which opened
with the pledge to the flag by
Teresa Casd 's home room.
The Rev. James Keesee gave
devotions. Offieei'S inlroduc-

PI: A projects discussed ined were Cassell. president:
cluded
the improvement of
Miss Case[, first vice pre•ithe
playground.
Miss Casci
denl: Carolyn French, second
re
ported
thai
at the
vice president: Phyllis
November
meeting
Ca rl
Baker, secretary: Cinda HarHysell,
juvenile
offk"er,
will
ris, treasurer.
a
film
on
drugs.
The
show
There was a discussion on
by-laws changes which in- · room count was won by Miss
crease the dues to $1, change Casci's class. Parents visilt!d
the meetings from the second classed and the executive
served
to the third Thursday, and commit t ee
raise the room count from $5 refreslunents .
lo$10.

1

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•

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Alpha Epsilon' Chapter of Alpha Delta
Kappa held Founder's Day mee:ting Tuesday
Buck, Mrs. J ean Alkire,
pr es id e nt ,
reviewed
highlights of the Southeastern
Ohio Distrid meeting held at
the Ohio University Inn,
Athens, Oet. 14.
Thirteen members of the
local ' chapter served as

hostes,;es for the distrid
meeting .
Mrs. · Bernice Carpenter
conducted the FoWJder's Day
randle lighting ceremony
assisted by Mrs. Daisy
Blakesiee, Mrs . Nonga
Robetis, Mrs. Suzanne Wolfe,

.,;-·
and Mrs. Ida Diehl. Mrs.
Lucille Swackhamer culledt!d the birthday dues for
the ways and means committee.
Refreshments in keeping
with the autumn theme were
served by Donna Norris and
Jan Norris.

•
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1I The Poet's
.
II Weight

1

0 0

uf

a

SO,

s.

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

Mon.,

Comer

loss
.
l awafid.S 6azven
'
Awards for weight loss
were given to several and

new members were ae,.!epted

Tripk birthday celebrated
The birthdays of Mrs. Edith
Sauer, Mrs.
Elizabeth
Searles, Mrs. Beulah White
and Mrs. Roma Hawkins
were celebrated at the T.hurs- ·
day night meeting of the Busy
Bee Clas,; of the Middleport
First Baptist Church.
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin re~d
" Any Age is a Lovely A~e to
Be." Devotions were given by
Mrs. Hllwkins who read
"Each New Day." A card
was read from Mrs. Iva
Turner who is now at
Rt!dhouse, W. Va .
·
Holiday activities were
discussed and M"'. Leora

Sigman had a reading "How - •·
Important Eaeh Moment Is " •
fmm the Christian Herald,
and a
Bible quiz .
.Refreslunents were served
by Mrs. Sigman, Mrs. Nora
Jordan and Mrs . Hawkins,
fmm a table decorated with
crochelt!d baskets filled with
artificial fruit and flowers .
Others attending were Mrs.
Freda Edwards, Mrs. Lillian
pemoskey, Mrs . Eloise
Wilson, Mrs. Eva Hartley,
Mrs. Elecla Souders, Mrs.
Nelle Werner, and Mrs. Mary
Brewer.

at the past week's meetings
o£ the Slenderella Diet
Ch::tsses.
At the Mason County Monday night meeting 16 new
members were taken in and a
20 pound ribbon was given to
Connie Turley, and six 35
pound ribbons to Madaline
Roush, Marilyn Clark, Judy
King, Hope Eblin, Diana
Jolmson, and Linda Ilue , with
a 50 pound ribbon being
presented to Candy Van
Meter . The revolVing
A Bible study and discus- and Linda Foster, Kathy
trophies for the most weekly sion on Revelations was held Scarberry, Dick and Sharon
weight loss went to Carol al the Thursday night Folmer, Bob and Patty Bar·
King, Ma rei a King and Alma meeting of the Young Adult ton, Sherrie Chirk, Leona
Jeffers.
Class o£ the Laurel Cliff Free Martin, Betty Will, Ella Mae
At Middleport 's Tuesday Methodist Church held at the Ellis, and .Randy and Darla
morning elass, two 20 pound Meigs County Infirmary.
Hawley.
ribbons were awarded, one to
Plans were discussed fur a
Faye Wallace and the other to Halloween party ~nd donuts
FALL CARNIVAL
Maxine Jord~n . One 35 pound and eider were served by
The
Syracuse PTO Fall
ribbon went to Jo Ann Clark Sh~ron Folmer and Brenda
Carnival
will be held
and the slim and trim awards Hllggy. Attending were the
Saturday
at
7 p.m. at the
went to Ruth Gardner and Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook,
Featured
will be
school.
Kathy Scott. Three new Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, Bobby
games, prizes will be
member&lt;&gt; were taken into the
awarded, and sandwiches
d"ss. The revolving trophi~s
sold.
The public is invited to
went to Euvella Bechtle,
LARRY
SMITH
attend.
Chloris Roush, and Jo Ann
Larry M. Smith, Pomeroy,
Clark.
CAAMEETSET
who
has been a patient at
At the Tuesday evening
The
Gallia·Meigs Com·
dass, six new members were Veterans Memorial Hospital, munity Action Agency Board
welcomed and two 20 pound has been transferred to the of Trustees will hold its
ribbons were awarded. The intensive care unit at monthly meetmg Thursday,
Hospital,
revolving trophies went to University
Oct. 26 at 8 p.m. in the
Columbus.
Naomi Foreman and Phyllis
Cheshire Office.
Knopp who lied fur first place
in weight loss, and Peggy
Lewis, the runner-up.
Geraldine Blessing and Lizzie Stover were the revolving
t rophy winners at the Point
PleaS&lt;rnl Class ses,;ion TI1Ursday morning . Thai evening
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
the trophies went to Gloria
McCallister for the most
weight lost , and Velve Pierson, the runner-up .

Young Adults discuss Bible

sinners,
Help them find the narrow
way .
Lord, I know You are not
willing
For one person to be lost,
As You shed Your blood for
others,
And for them have paid the
cost.
Composed· in November
1964, by Mrs. Riley Pigott,
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

Of

'

r--

are some Price .Blasters!

BANANAS

TOMATOES

4 LB.

•

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

..

~ark . Working closely with the mathematics of

;nsurance. figuring the probabilities of risks and th

o:

iaws
a~erages and investments, actuaries are ver;
mpor an to the insurance industry and to the

po 1lcyholders,

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

VINE RIPE

,

lnsur~nce. Being professionally trained in ut~e
technical aspects of Insurance (calculating premiums
reserves and dividends) ' actuaries are part of the tea~
which makes the theory a~d practice
insurance

coupons -

Oteck our circular delivered to your house for many money saving

,'

A. An actuary Is the person who takes the gambleo t f

others
Who are in this world today,
Bless Thy peopple, save the

you money -

themselves.

NO PURCHASE .NECESSARY

-

ENTER

OFTEN - WINNING NUMBERS POSTED
IN STORE EACH WEEK.

·
1
29
PORK STEAK ............. ~~~ .....
$ 1 59
_ .PORK STEAK ............ :~; ......
$

FRESH &amp; LEAN

r---------1 ··
REUTER-BROGAN· INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E. Main

The Insurance Store
992-5130

Pomeroy,O..

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NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

MIDDLEPORT AREA
PHONE
992-2156·

THE DAILY SENTINEL

We have some really hot specials to save

.'•

JIIVR·IIfiOIRB.
Q . What is an actuary?

Come help us celebrate our third year -

DELICIOUS CUBED

"STORE MADE"

SANDWICH SPREAD..... ~~~

99¢

MEATLOAF MIX........... ~~~-~ 1

19
·

.

.

.

HAM LOAVES. ...............

$}59

8
L. : •••

-

PORK SAUSAGE. ..........
~~~-~ }
.J
FRENCH CITY

·

29
.

$
139

SLICED BACON ............. ~~:!.~~·... .

�.

. 9- The Da1ly Senttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Oct. 24, 1978
a ~ Tile DRilY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0 ., Tuesday , Oc t. 24, 1978

IJIC'K TIW "Y

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Item.s Into Cash
Case No 71· 1092- PL· ABN
Appendt k B

O h to Otl G ath e r tng Cor
porat ton 11 has t ri ed an ap

1.5 Wun.lsur Undu

p l tcat lon w i th the Publ tC
Utr lll tes CommtSS •on o f OhtO

C~ l t

N ohce •S h ereby

,.,

"''

~2$

as

th e

se n rce

Sta t.on ,

r ender ed

M or gan

Mulnll! Homl' sa les ami Y;u d sail's
In Ctm of 1111.' &amp; u-

Und

Tht' Pubhsi"rr t~.st.' n es tht' tr,l( lrt
wl*llu or t'l'Jft l &lt;IllY &lt;1tls dt't.'nlt'tl ubJl'l h lH utl Th~ Pub lisher wrll nut lk'
re:;pun.sJblt' fur mul e lht~ rr une llll Vr
r n ~ r ll u n

Pllorw !l9'.!213b

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Tut~da \

lhru Ftui&lt;l\
1p M
the &lt;lay befot e pullhu tl!uu
&amp;I nti;;~

1p M
~flt' IIIUUII

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RICHARD E PHILLIPS,
Ptalnttff,

vs
BARBARA G PHILLIPS,
Defendant

No 11002
-NOTICE FOR

PUBLICATION-

Barbara G Phtllrps, whose
last known address was Box
92 , M 1ddleporL Ohro , who
may have been res1drng rn
care of Edna Jordan , D1gen
Street. )acksonville , Florrda
3205, whose address rs
otherw i se unknown Will take
notrce t hat on the 14th day of
October , 1978, Rrchard E
Phllt tps, as Plarntrff, flied a
compla1nt chargtng gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty agernst her rn wh1ch
the retref dem.anded IS a
drvorce and other relref and
that th1s case may be heard
twenty erght days after the
last publrcatron of not1ce
which W1ll be made on the
28th day of November , 1978
and that the frnal hearing has
been set for 9 00 a m on
December JO. 1978
You are requ1red t o answer
thrs complarnt by not later
than
twenty erght
days
followmg the last pubhca tr on
of this notrce or 1udgment by
default ma y.. be taken agarnst

Co unt y

'l~f ~~"sese~"r:: en~~~~~f~~~QIO~~

vou

Larry E Spencer ,
Clerk of Court
Common Pleas Court ,
Me1gs County, Oh ro

110117, 24, 31 ( II) 1, 14, 21. 28,
71
NOTICE OF BIDS
Not rce rs hereby grven that
bids Will be rece1ved by
Columbra
Townsh r p
Trustees, Me1gs County , Rt
3. Box 82 , Albany, OhJo, 457 10,
until November 3, 1978
Brds
will
be
opened
November 4, 1978, at 8 p m
New tractor , 1ndustr1al
type, dresel engtne w rth
m rn rmum 40 horsepower, at
l east 10 ply f r ont t~res, 6 ply
rear tires , hydrauliC brakes .
l rgtlts, turn srgnals and
flashers , equtpped w rth rn
dust r ral type fron t end
loader, qutck detachable type
backhoe and h')ldra u lrc boom
t ype mower
Brdder to submrt defatted
speclfr cations of equipment
offered
The Board of Trustees
r eserves the rtght to re1ect
any and all btds
Put the word " Brd" o n
outs tde of enve lope
By Order of the Board of
Tru s tees
of
Columb ra
Tow nsh1p
Glorra Hutton , clerk
&lt;tO) 11, 24, Jl, ltc

vacancy of the late Wallace
Amberger All applicants

must be a veteran . All
applteattons
must
be
submitted by Nov 1st.

11 , 24, 3 1

RAIN OR SHONE

LARGE.PUBLIC. AUCTION

SAT., OCT. 28th
202 JOAN PlACE, HAVEN HTS.
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.
Oak Bed, 16 Payne corner

cupboard, walnut. very old (best b•dL B It banquet
table oak + spool cabinet. 5 sets of tha~rs, 1 sel press
back, 7 It cabinet roll type+ oval . 7 II modern cabinet
+ 5 piece settee, tron kettles, copper boilers + app le
butter kettle, oak stands, old wall phone long type, milk
cans stone 1ars. many wtth writtng, Ice tongs , round
oak fable, oak square 1able, old coins, gold watch,

some jewelry, flat Irons, wooden wheelbarrow, old

dishes many, old lamps, rallroetl IBntern, tr~n beds,
broad ax, oval trunk, tools, garden plow, 2 pteces of

farm museum, 370 Winchester, cast Iron bean pol, cast

Iron teakettle, dated jar~. old green jars, wicker rocker
nice, oak rocker, 3 old stoves pieces and pony saddle

Please note No Junk All Antiques.

OWNER, NANCY FIELDS
Audloneers BoD Slontkint and Bruce Noland

.

PAfn TI M~ openrn g for RN or lflN
wil h Pharma cology J 11 shIt
Con tact Nancy Vo n Me ter RN
P1necres t
Cor e
Ce nt e r
0 14 44 b 711 2

Wednesday, Oct. 25

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~riJrm

VGJ~wlli~mv
October 25, 1978
Many c han ges are m store for
you thts commg year wh tch
could advance your self-Intere sts Have pattence tf thtngs
start out slow G1ve them a
chance to develop

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) lnttmldat ton ts one way to get
somefhmg you want today, but
ask yourself what pnce you
plac e on your tmage or reputalton On ly then shou ld you

decld·e 1f 11's worth 11 Find oul
fa whom you ' re romanttcaffy
sutted by send1ng for your copy

of Astra-Graph Letter Mall 50
cents for each and a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope

to Astro-Graph, P 0 Bo• 489,
Rad10 C1ly Station, N Y 10019
Be sure to spec ify your b1rth
s1gn

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2tl Bring lhlngs oui m the open
rather than stew tn Stlen c e over
a matter that has you greatly

disturbed today Cleanng the
I

atr wtlf pre~ent getting. an ulcer

f1rst
you
you
that

Oc t

..

WAN l t:D COUNH R man Apply
m person M o tor Part s Co
Mtddl epor t Ohr o No phon e
ca ll s

S Pump~ng stat1ons at
Syracuse , Chester , Hon e y
Cr eek , Star , Ew rng, Carbon
Hrtl , Cl8rk , Murray , Gr eer ,
Mohtcan , Berry and Hom an
The com m rss1on will hold a
public hear rng rn th rs matter
begrnn rng at 9 30 AM E S T
November 15, 1978 at the
offrces of t he PubliC Utrlrt1es
Commlssron of Ohro , 180 Eas t
Broad Stre e t. Columbus , Ohro
43215
F or
furthe r
rn
formatron co ncernrng thrs
applrcatl on , please contact
Oh10 011 Gatherrng Cor
porat1on II
Surte 400 201
K1ng ot
Prussra Road,
Radnor , Penn sylva ni a 19087
or
the
Pubtrc
Util l tres
Com m rss ron o f Ohro
OHIO O I L GATHER I NG
CORPORATION II
BY
J
Raymond
Pr oha ska , Att orn ey at Law

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Seal ed b1d s wrtl be ac
cept ed at t he o ffr ces of Trott
&amp; Bean , 5 1 W Broad St
Co lumbus, Oh10 , 43215 for th e
purpose
of
raz rng
and
r emovrng Commu nrt y Hall ,
appr o .. lm at e ly 9, 500 gross
sq uare te et on the Rro Grande
Campus
The butldrng, rn
Clud rng fo o t er s and basement
area s. rs to be removed from
the
pr e m l s e s
Contract
spec rfrcat 1ons are ava rl able
from Tro tt &amp; Bean Vrsual
/OSpect ron
available
by
co nta c t1ng
R1 0
Grande
Commu nit y College off rc e
Brds are du e No v ember 1.
1978 The co ll ege r eserves th e
r rght to r e tec t an y or a ll brds

Service Officer to fill the

MAN Ofl woman to represent
Wes ter n South ern l rf e rn
Pomeroy o r M rddleporl Must
ho ve car No e .. per rence r e
qurred Sol o ry comm1ss rons
cor eJ&lt; pen se and oil benefrt5
Mrn rm um age 21. App ly rn pe r
:.on
Wes tern Sou th ern l 1t e
1 Hl
I: Ma111 Pomeo r y OH

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191

( 10 ) 24, 31 ( II) 7, 14 , 4t c

Veterans Office, Pomeroy,
0 , to employ a Veteran

+

WOR K OVI::flSI:::A S
A uslrolto
A Inca Sou th Arn errc o l::: urope
e tc
Cons tr uctr on
Sal es
~ n g rn ee r s Clerrc ol e tc $!l(X)U
to $50 UUU p lus b1penses pard
l- or emp loym ent rnform otron
wr rte O ver5 eos Ernployment
Bo" 10 11 Basi on Mo 02 102

( 4") and si x Inch (6 ') lmes ,
and one tour rnc h (4 " ) lr n e
between Lodr StlltJon , en d
Berea StatiOn, both rn Medrna
County , Oh1o ,
Q One four rnch (4") line
between Hom a n Stet1on and
Lodl Statron , bOth rn Medrna
County, Ohro ,
R One four rnch (4") lrne
from
Killbu c k
Statron
Holmes County, Ohro, north
to Shreve Junct1on drscharge
line , Wayne County , Oh10 ,

and

APPLICATIONS
Will be rece1ved at the

N1ce wooden Ice Box

!i ~ lp ~a_nt_ed___ _

betw een Ch es ter Statton
Metgs Count y Ohto , and th e
l tne
desc rtbed 1 tn
s ub
pa ragraph A a b ov e
C One Lrne , c ons rstrng o f
van ou s segmen ts of two m en
(2 " ), thre e m c h (3 ") and four
rn c h (4 "1 l rne s b etw een
Honey
C r e ek
Stat ron ,
Hoc krng County , Oh ro, a nd
Haydenv il l e Sta h on , Hoc kr ng
Co unty , Oh1o .
D One two rn ch (2"1 l rn e
betw een St ar St at 1on and
Hone y Creek dr sc ha r g e lm e
bOth rn Hoc k rn g Count y ,
Oh ro ,
E One lrne , co ns 1strng o f
van ous segm en t s of two rn ch
(2" 1 and three rn c h (3 "1
lrnes , between Ewrng sratron
and Haydenville Statron , bo th
In Ho ck1ng County , Ohro ,
F On e three rnch (3" ) lm e
betw een Carbon H il l Statron
and Haydenville drscharg e
lrne , both rn Ho c krng Co unty
Oh ro
G One tour 1nch 14"1 be
twe en Cl ark Statron , Morgan
County , Ohr o , and th e F rsher
Ka uffman
Junct r on
diScharge
l rne . Morgan
County , Ohro ,
H One four mch ( 4") lm e
between Mur r l!ly Statron
Hoc krng County , Oh1o , an d
t he Haydenv1lle dr scharg e
lr ne , rn Perry C ounty , Ohro .
I One fo u r rnch ( 4" ) lrn e
betw een Greer Stat1on K no )(
County , Ohro , and the Srrnk
haven drsch a rge lrne
1n
Hol mes County , Ohro ,
J One lrne , cons1slrng of
var ro us seg m ents of two rnch
(2 ' ), three mch (3") and four
1n c h (4" ) l rnes, between
Mochr can Stat1on
Ashland
County , Oh1o , and Greer
Stat ion, Kno x Coun t y , Oh10 ,
K One l rne c onsrstrng of
var rous segment s of two rn c h
(2 " 1 and tour rnch 14" } lrnes ,
between Berry Stat1on and
Moreland Sta tron , both 1n
Wayne Cou nty Oh10 ,
..._ One four 1nc h (4 ") l rn e
between Millersburg Sta t ron ,
Hol m es County , Oh io, and th e
Berry Mor elan d Stal1 on , lrne
r eferred to rn subparagraph
K, above ,
M One four mchl (4 '') l rne
between Be r ry Statron and
Woo s ter Statron , both rn
Wayne County , Ohro
N One SIX 1nch (6") lrne
and one four rnch (4") lrne
between Shreve Junctron ,
Wayne County, Ohro
and
Wooster
Stat1on, wayne
Cou n ty Oh10 ,
0 One l1n e , co nsrSf 1ng of
vanous segments of four mch
(4 " ) and sr x rnch (6" ) lm es.
a nd one four rnc h (4") lrne
between W oo st er Stal10 n,
Wayne Cou n ty , Oh1 o and
Lod 1 Stat 1on , Medma County,
Ohro ,

are an~ptt!d only oullr L'Clsh wtth
on.ie1 25 L~ n t cha r~;:e fur a ds &lt;ar r) ·

.

or

Oht O
B One thre e tnc h [3") l rn e

In nlt!rnory, Card of Thanks antJ
Obltuar) 6 t:~Hls ~~ word $3 00
nunu nwn Ci:ish 111 advarrt t'

.

ancillary

M ei g s Co unt y , O h to, and Jov

"'"'

f'll tlil}

be

ther e b y
A On e th ree m ch (3") l tn e
betw ee n Sy ra cu se Sta tton ,

Ads I'UIIII UlK ull~ r than (UJ~l'&lt;' U\I Vl'
will I.Jt. dUir!.(t'tl at the I da'y

rt'l t

ma y

r elated th er e t o togethe r wtth

liH}!'i

Num ~ r

LOV ING memory ·o f Erne5t
Molde11 , who passed away Oct
14 197:.1
Sornc trrn es 1t s hard to unde r ~
land
Wh-,. some thrng s hove to be
Hu t rn h rs wrndow God ha s pl onn
ed
Heyond ou r powers to see
::,Oodly m1ssed by w rfe son rn low
daught er an d grondchrl dren

You ' re not usually a nttprcker
but today you're apt to badger
pals over ptcayune tssues

You II

feel

different

about

th1ng s tomorrow

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Avo1d pressmg too hard today
1n trymg to make your potnts If
you do, you could al1enate a

pal
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) You
must set a goo d example tf
want others to produce for
today It's easy to cnttctze
wh1ch you ' re not dotng

G f.IIM fS GOLD~N R,ed Oelrcrouo;
ARt YOU troubled w1th wrld • IJ, Golden Dehclous apples h tz
potn ck Orc har d
SR 089
onrm ols? Fox , m rnk ~ocoon
opossum beo ver e tc? Colt !he
0 14 bbY 3785
trappe r 98 5 3984 Will co nlocl
SU S camp er
60
rn per son for s1g ned permr s SC HO Ol
pa ssenger w 1th new lrres
S l0 f'1
Good condrt1on Contact Tom
OP~NING SOON Cok e and Con
Monk rn at 992 24!01
dy Croll Shop A nyone rn
teres ted Ill co k e decorot rng MAYT AC COPPl:IHONt Port o
!-'orr washer and dryer Very
c la sses
be g1 n n1ng
rn
good cond1tr on sell as se t Col i
Novem ber colt &lt;/92 2583 or
aft er Spm t/9'1 2'1 95
ct'n 3289

- __ _ Wa-'~t_e!l__tE_f!!Jy_ _

197 -4 DATSUN
49'l bl91

TIMB~f.l

1964 18fT fronklr n tra1ler Sell
con tame:d w1th water pump
New 12 -volt battery
Go s
relr1gerator
sto"e furnace
ownmg 1ock s hoi wat er lank
Sleep-; s1x Phone 74'1 11:174

for est Pro
lor stondrng
992 59bS or
8570

OLD COINS po ck e t wa tc hes
d oss rmgs w eddmg bond s
dromonds Gol d o r s1l11er Colt
f.log er Wamsle y 742 2331
W~ PICK up tunk
rng 1~rnk cars

BABY OR t: SSI:RETTE Yo uth bed
Jumper cho1r Phone &lt;192 5567

a uto bod1es buy
scrop 1ron bot
lerre!i an d me tal s
R1der s
Sal va ge SR 1:/4 Pom eroy
&lt;~'n 546H

~----~

If YOU hove o 5er vrce to off er
wont to buy or sell somethmg
ae loo~rng fo r work
or
whate ver
you II get re sults
foster w11h a Senlrnel Want Ad
Coll992 2156
YARD SALt Cl othtng kmg sr ze
bed S50 e lectr rc h eater te nt
srngle bed !rome m rsc Tues
Wed 9 Ill dark f l\le Pornls tu rn
rrght at Mernr o y Ga rdens
Ce mete r y Tu rn rrght at lsi 1n
t ers e c tr on
2 nd
house
991 JJflt:t
YARO SALE Thru Soturdoy the
1flth Robert Hayes on 124
Syra cuse 992 3618 Alumrnum
bool ar chery bo w s 1 w eddm g
gowns golf clubs o ld anhque
table set of wheel s for ( Ort
clock s coss etle5 albums con
sol e stereo carpe t swe eper,
house plant s and pot s onlrq uc
sewmg mochrn e no cabr net on
flque gu1fl f rames
games
sm okm g p1pes and holders
croll boolo. s ond sh ell s book
ca se bo oks Tupperwo re and
su ppl r e s
cheop
ca lculators m rsc

side pressures by well-mean tog frtends could lead you to
take c hanc es you ordtnanly
wouldn t You run the nsk of
gelling tnto deeper trouble 1f
you do

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Mind
your temper today If lhe family
does lhmgs thai don I e•actly
go along w1th your des1res
Remember, they have nghts,

loo
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22) II'S
not likely you ' ll have your mend

on whal you ' re doing today
You can get away w1th beeng
absent mrnded only en ummportant matters

CLAJI:K 4000 lb fork hit In good
operot1ng
cond 1t1on
Day s
9HS JJOI l:::venrngs 985 41 .40

LUMP HOUSE: cool $35 per ton
de l1 vered 991 7120

AKC WHirl: poodle Female 1 ':
years old H drawer dre5ser
wrth mrrror
K1rby uprrght
sweeper
flnc es
cheap
992 3581
PIG S fOI-l sole
742 29 10

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SE,RVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark

LOVABLE WHITt: snow drrft great
PYR~NHS
Pupp1 es
Phon e
1 014 Obl 3838

1971 MERCURY STATION wagon
I !i 000 m1l es 4 w heel dr sk
brak es trarl er lo wmg poclo. oge
Speed cont rol Auto temp 01r
cond rtro nrng
til l
whe el
949 1740
1908 CORVETH conv er tobl e w1th
h ar d lop
SSSOO
Day s
9fl 5 3301 tvenmgs 9E:I5 4140
1974 OODGt: COLT Huns good
Needs some body work $1200
991 2!UI2 alter 4 w eekdays
1976 OlDSMOBILI: STAf.lflf.ll: 4
cylrnder 4 speed 25 ()()() mrl es
New trr es Excell ent condrt ron
S2'150 985 3909

9..,~ck W. Carsey, Mgr.

-·

-

(NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRI SE ASSN )

DALLAS
( UP!)
Defens1ve end Harvey Martm
IS listed as questionable for
the Dallas Cowboys game
Thursday mght against the
MUillesota Vtkings.
Martm ts suffermg from a
hyperextended knee that kept
him out of last Sunday's
Philadelphia contest.

A 1978 Hondo Howlo. 400cc motor
cycle 1100 m1fes SllSO Cal l
74 '}. 2028

NEW
PICKUP TRUCK

CAPS
SHIELDS - FLAIRS
at

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

TKAilt:R
1./92 3181

ON~

mole

adult

TWO Bt:DROOM mobile home 2
m1l es out on SR 143 Adults on l y
or w rll con srder one chrl d
Refere nce and depo s1l re·
qu rr ed Po1d uhlrt res 992 3b47
Stephen Henderson
SI SO per
1Hf.IH BEDROOM
rnonth SIOOdepos11 IOi' l ocust
51
Pomeroy House w1ll be
&lt;.. ho wn Sot O ct 28 from 10 2
Tf.IAIL I:R l O T on G ronl 51 Mrd
dlepo rt
lnqurr e
f lo!&gt;s le
AII Pn~ w o r! h 612 G r ant St
~-- ·----~-

- __?Jve Away ____ _

KlllfN S WHIH lon g horred 3
' " t"1 fh s ond b wr r ll. s w ay :•
rn 0 11th ~ M orgs Hurnonp Sn1 IP
ty '-NL '1':191 dt'd qrn 2oJY
1WI) l OVABlf hoff gr ow n ye l low
i&lt;I JI £&gt; 11 5 I C! l)OOd hOI11('
(~ 1
'-' P ~ ~Ji lt)

8 2 1 mo

M a v• e "Suc h Good
Frt ends" 6, 13 , G un smoke 8} A BC News 33. Movie
" T he Pleas ure of H is Com pan y" 10
12 JG- Ne ws 8, 1
Tomorrow 3,4, 1 30-News 13

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

~uaranteed.

9•9~2160 .

osk1ns,

4·30-tt&lt;

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

I
I

MOORE'S

Muffler - Brakes
Shocks - Ttres
Battery.
Installation Service

Ph. 992· 2848

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Therma I insulation
I
to SO pet.
. Save30pct.
on heating cost
I
Experience and
I
.f~ly Insured
''
rae Est.
Call992-2771
'
B-10-1mo (Pd.)

-

-

0.
3-15·11C

Pomeroy,

'
'

rYour

All

4

~lohilt•

1970 Amherst 50x I '1 :.1 BR
FrtOChamp ron b0 x 12 2 BR
1965 Gener al b())( 12 2 BR
1968 PMC S2xl22 BR
1955 Prorne Schooner 28 x8 1 BR
1973 Royal Emba ssy b8)( 14 3 BR
1959 Stor 50)(10 2 BR
191 3 Sto r O{) x l4 2 BR
19bE!Star bOx122BR
1910Sy lvo 60)(1228R
19bEl V rltoges bCJ, 12 2 BJI:
19b4 Wrndsor SI)( I 0 2 BR
1970 K1rkwood 12xb0 3 BJI:
6&amp;5 MOBIL~ HOM t 5Al~S
Pl PLEASANl W VA

HOMESITES lor sole I ocre and
up M1ddlepo rt near Jl:utlond
Coll 992 7481
VA FHA 30 yr frnoncrng also
r ef rnoncmg Ireland Mortgage
77 I: Slate Athens , phone {014)

592 J051
THRH 8tOROOM frame home rn
M1ddlep ort Coll992 3457

~ARM fof.l -s ~l e- Ho-u; e • 2-b~r ~s
tr a der large pond 10 acres or
B1 acr es 742 2560
fiVE ROOM house an d bath
remod eled fully corpeled May
be seen offe r 3 pm Phone
992 J9JJ
HOU SE IN Pomeroy Large lot
Some recent rem odeling New
carpet Centro! heotrng Ut1 lrty
room ~ufl basement 2 por
ch es fu rn rshed or unfurnrs hed
992-7074

196 7 HOUSI:: THAILt:R 11 .. bO All
elec trr c furnr shed orr con dt MODI:::HN J bedroom home tully
Irone d wa sher and dryer Al so
cor pel ed central orr full bose
lot s rn
Hcrr r •so n v rll e
men! wrth f1rep loce rncl osed
2
74:/ 182b
su n p orch located on 6 1 1 acres
near Jl:oc rne o n bloc k top rood
Reasonably prrced
$40 000
949 -2830 after 7pm

--

----

Real Estate for Sale
SIX ROOM hou5e wrth l • ocreo; of
land All efedrrc (rty water
Col 199227ll after1

8 SLA Tt: top pool tobl e r;om
plete wrt h bolls rock pool
slicks ond one 5pc cue $:l50
Phon e 992 2413

1970 fORD l ton stoke bed tr uck
S1000 992 7583 after 6pm
19"15 CAMARO Chorfes W1lder
ll'IUih 991 2205

ANTI -FREEZE
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay 53.99

()ll\.olll oil

,c.'&lt;- $347

'-' ~q.; gal.

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark
9..,.:!,ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

-·

....

Phone 992 1181

1975 OAKMONT 14 .. 70 3 bedr
Unlu r n rs h e d
Completely
redecora ted I 304 67l IY!i81or
opp ornlment
S KVLIN~

MOBilE hom e
2
bedroom s Nalurol gas heat I
ocre of le vel ground po1ches
ond own rngs 4 cor cement
block garage , 24 x ) 4 frurt
tr ee ~ Located at Reedsv dle
Ohr o on SR 1:14 Close to store
loll anyt1me
alter 3pm
tJ 1.J J(l i' bJSI for oppornlmCIII
S/0 000

.

SlAf.l 11 I( 60 'J bed roorn
h an ! k1l chen H"J:lOioted
ct m ~r1 9 room «, vi up and ready
I tt!
lr vmq
A skm g S:JbOO
I t ~ II :i'l

r 'J ~~

to r~e d

·'

NEW LISTING- A dream
new

ranch

with

basement . large family
room with wood burnmg
fireplace , large living
room, dining room and nice

216 E. Second Street
REDUCED- 4 bedrooms,
gas heal, city water, city
water, near stores, and
schools Has a 2 car garage
with storage over. Nice

level lot In Middleport.
$23,000
BUSINESS BUILDING 36x80 Building out of high·
Has

air

condllloh1ng. natural gas

kllehcn, 3 bedrooms, 1'h
baths, fully carpeted,
garage It has elec ceiling
heat, deck, many modern

features S51 ,500.00
CLOSE
IN-NEWER
RANCH, 3 bedrooms,
beaut•ful kitchen, larger
llvtng
room.
carport.
storage buildings, over 1

acre. V. A approved for
easy

flnanc1ng

If

you

and
In

qualify . ONLY $31,000.00.
HERE IS- A nice newer 3

GOODOLDHOME- 66of

ranch, equipped kitchen,
carpeting. sllflng porches,

heat , city
concrete
PQmeroy.
an

acre

wa1er.
floor

In

excellent

location on No. 124. Large
eat-In kitchen, centra I
heating
and
air
conditionIng,
sever a I
porches, and city wa1er

Now only $25,000.
·
EXCELLENT LOCATION
- Has 3 large bedrooms,
bath, natural gas heating,
city water In Rutland,
reduced to only $11,000.
l8 ACRES ~ New 3
bedroom, 2 bath, 24' x 48'
home. Nice step saving
kitchen, dining r0001 and
second older house.

NEW

LISTING

J

bedroom renovated home

with enclosed balh, central
heating,
rural
water,
woodburner, and over an

acre of land. $23,000 for
prompt sale.
LIST WITH US, WE HAVE
YOUR INTEREST AT
HEART. NEW , FREE
CALENDAR.
Heltn L. Teaford
G. Bruce Telford
Sue P. Murphy
Assocl•tts

Hnusmy
Headqllilfters

-,

Business Services
BRAOFOim
A uct 1oneer
CorTI ·
pfete Serv rce Phone 949 24 B7
or 949 2000 Ro crn e Ohro, Cnlf
Bradford
1

problem

I DON'T LIK!O '"

WELL'? WH.ti:T' IS
JT, NUM~ ONe.7

5 Coy
11 Australian

NUMBER ONE!

"THEY MUST 1 BE

WI-IA,.'S THE
D!ELA.Y?

STOPPeD.

export
12 Equalized
13 Unite
14 Indigenous
15 Fishy
product
16 Stannum
17 Decunal
base
18 Golf clubs
20 Lincoln's

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

SEWING MACHINE Repo rr5 sur
v rce oil mak es qcn 2284 THe
Fobrr c Shop
Pomeroy
Authorrzed S1n ger Soles and
Ser ¥1Ce We shar pen Sc1ssors .
---- ,.~

EXCAVATING dozer loader and
bo c: khoe w or k dump truck s
and Ia boy s for hrre w11f haul
fdl drrt to so •l li mestone ond
grovel Cal l Bob or Roger Jef
l er s day phone 992 7089 n1ght
phone 992 3525 or q92 5232
-

- - - -

-

-

EXCAVATING
d ozer
backhoe
and drtcher Charl es R Hot
fr e ld
Ba c k Hoe Ser v1ce
Hutlond Oh10 Phone 742 2008

---· --------- T

WILL do roof1 ng constru ctr on,
plumbrng and heolrng N o rob
too large o r too smoll Phone
"/42 2:!41:1

bedroom ,

all

modern

small garden space, level

lot. A STEAL AT $27,700.00
NEAR POMEROY
Secluded and spacious,
W B F P , 3 bedrooms,
bullf.ln kitchen, recreation
room,

:v,.

acre. Below Fa1r

Markel Value. $20,500.00
70 ACRES - Farm, ranch
type home. barn, other
buildings. $33,500.00.
$9,500 will buy this 1'1•
story, 3 bedroom home.
NEED TO SELL- Price
reduced . Lovely 2 story
frame, 3 or 4 bedr0001s, 2
baths,
very
modern
kitchen, N.G. hot water
heat, (budget $69.00 per
month) corner lot. Loadsbf
remodellnt. $27,500.00.
WE HAVE SEVERAL
BUSINESS • AND
INVESTMENT
PROPERTIES.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992·1259, 991-6191
H•nk, Kathy &amp; Leoni
Assocl1tn

A·m

BATHROOMS
AND
K1t ch en s
remodeled ceromrc lrl e plum
b rng car pentry and g eneral
morntenonce
13 y eors e )(
per rence 992 3b8S
'
-

-

-

- - - - ---

I'm sure that can't hold a
qirl means
candle
nothinq .-,~~~ to ®I'I!J

to

Rufus,
· Melba'

Evidently they dedn't s1t down when they
madelhloloasi~ " BOTTOMS

UP"

C lark' s Ltve Wednesday 3,4,1 5, E1ght rs
Enough 6, 13, Bugs Bunny Spec1al 8, 10. Marte

9 OO-Mov1e " Desperate Women "
4, 15, Charlte ' s
Angels 6, 13, Movie " The Grass rs Always Greener
over the SeptiC Tank " 8, 10, Great Performances
33 , Prtsoner 20

38 Dealer's
request
39 Unt1l now
40 French n ver

10

'

:X. r;P W1SH VOLI
-rwo WOULD Qui,.
pGIN,.ING. A"r
oTH~R Pec»PJ..~
PLIRING. M'f

•
••~
;

'••

~EfZMONS.

Services Offered
WAHR W t LL dnllmg W1fliom ' T
Gronl 742 2E:I7 9
~·

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

•· WINNIE

,-----::c-::-:.,-::-~--=--,--:=:-"&lt;"""-

AND lET ME BORROW YOUR HANDBAG FOR A WHILE MI NE IS TDO

SMALL FOR WHAT I

-- ----·

DUSTLESS FIRt:PLACE end ch rmrfey
cleanrng "The Chtmney Swe"p
Call bl4 373 b057

HAVE

- -- - ---

WILL TAKI::: CARt: of elderly person
rn my home Mole or female
bl4 bb7 J.t02
j
--·~---- ,..

TO DO!

~Vegas

6,13, News 20

10 os-Great Performances 33 , 10
11 ~News 3,4,6,B. 10,13. 15. D1ck

DOWN

Poltee Woman 6.13 ,
Gunsmoke 8, AB C News 33, Mov1e " Susan Slept
Here" 10.

12 3o-News B, 12 4Q-SWAT 6,13
00-- Tomorrow 3,4, 1 oo- Tomorro w 3,4, I so-N ews
13

HA - "

1

4 DlStnct
of England
5 ' 1T8XI Drtver"
star
6 Renowned

actor
7 Encountered

Yesterday's Auswer
25 Bull's-eye
Tuesday. Del. 24
10 Paradisiacal 2C Harsh
16 Sea gull
28 Inebnate
19 Swerve
29 Uplift
22 Mrs. Chaplin 30 Eating place
23 Sept !943
35 "I Oswald
battle site
Camera"
24 Presume
38 ~ Gatsby

9 Daydream

BRIDGE
Jacoby and Alan Sonta
::;g,__

Dealing with a bad break
~ORm

10.24

• to 9 2
"'Q 6 3

• A

• A8 7632
WEST
EAST
• 5
• 13
"'J97
"'KB42
• Q 10 5 4
• K 9B7 6 3
• K Q J 10 9 • &gt;

so urn
•AKQJ876
"'Al05
• J2

Now he ruffs h1s last diamond with dwruny's deuce

••

Pass
Pass
Pass

37 Win one's
heart

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~Here's

how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

2•

5t

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

the kmg and West with the
Jack
Tough luck , but not the
sort of tough luck that would
defeat a declarer who gave
himself every chance .
That declarer ruffs a club
at tr1ck two Leads-a 'spade
to the 10 Ruffs a second
club, leads a spade to the
mne. ruffs a third club, leads
a diamond to the ace, ruffs a
fourth club to set up
dummy' s last club as a

wmner.
of

Vulnerable . Both
Dealer South
'
West North East

Orleans"

lo

30--Turnabout 20
Cavett 20 Lilias

Yoga &amp; You 33
11 3Q-Johnny Carson 3,.4 ,15,

1 Cltat10n
2 Tinge
3 Sinatra m

...- - -...... . . - - . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , 34 Travolta
film
36 "Maid of

- .....

FOJI: YOUR compl ete ha usr .. g
remodelrng con stru ction ctnd
morntenan ce gr ve J H o try
Re feren c e
o v orloble
Rea sonabl e
prr ces
Pho:he

a OO-D 1ck

Curie 20.33
8 3Q-SpeClal: Fal Alberl8,10

33 Asian fiver .,.,.-+-+--

FRANK &amp; F:RNIF.

Battle ot the P lanets 4,

Hollywood Squares 15; Merv Gnffm 6, Porky Pig a.
Friends B. Sesame St 20.33 . Batman 10; Dinah 13
4 3o-L1ttle Rascals 3; Gilligan ' s Is 4,8, Brady Bun ch
10, Petticoat Juncllon 15
5 ~Voyage to The Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4,
Beverly Hillbillies 8, Mtster Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 20.33 . Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10. Af1erschool Special 13, Brady Bunch 15
5 3Q-News 6, Sanford a. Son 8, Elec Co 20.33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Odd Couple 15
6 ~News 3,4,a,10,13,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 30-NBC News 3.4,15 , ABC News 13, Carol Burnell a.
Fnends 6, CBS News 8, 10 , Over Easy 20
7 ~Cross W 1ts J, PM Magazine 4, Newlywed Game
6, i3 , Sha Na Na B. News 10; Love Ameman Style
15, Cop1ng Wllh Kids 20 ; Big Green Magazme 33
7 3Q-Dolly 3. Dating Ga me 4, Match Game PM 6;
Pme IS R1ghl a; The Judge 10; That ' s Hollywood
13, Wild Kmgdom 15. MacNeil Leh rer Repori20,3J

at- . "

AU TOMOBILI:: INSUJI:ANCE been
concel lecf ? Los t your operolof s
f1cens e' I-I hone 992 -214 3
•

- -

GAMBLE

potable
28 Reviled
31 Alkali
32 "The slag

- - - - - ----r-

'19251 91

U~LOAD

27 Pub

ftHVES TRADING Post Poge"rtl e
Grocerre s dry goods hard
ware feed tack shop Specrol
25 tb of dog food $3 88
;

- -

l X) AS D ( I l I 1 1 J

''Cap'n - " 8 N.Y C. sightseers, mecca
21 Ustmov
film role ~~~....22 Of a poem
23 British gun
24 Accomplished
25 HimlilayanfisT-Tgoat
26 Yemen's
capital

GASOLINE Al.l.F.Y

PULLINS t XCA VATING Compl ete
Se~v~c!_ Phone 992 247_8 __ -~

- - -- -

4 OO-M1ster Cartoon 3,

DE5PITE !JEINeo
1-lle-H- Si~UNIS7.

Answer

ACROSS

- - -- --- ------or-

--

THE ee5T
OF HeALTH

Jumbles SWAMP TROTH

1 Tooth

ELWOOD BOWER5 R~PAIR , _
Sweeper s tooslen rron s, oil
small oppl1o nces l own mo wer
ne .. t to Sla te H1gh w oy Garage
on Rout e 7 Phon e (6 14 ) 9E:IS -

------

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
Al.l.EY OOP

-

General Hosp1tal 6, 13

3 3o-Mash B. Joker's Wild 10, Over Easy 20

~tAM.~tr

Free Esttmates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

3825

I

Squares 3. All My Chlldfen 6, 13,

Only IS
1 3o-Days of Our Ltves 3,...-, 15, A s The World Turns
a.1o
2 oo-Dne Life to L1ve 6, 13, 2 30-Doclors 3,4, 15,
Guiding Light B, 10
3 110-Another World 3,4, 15. Lil •as Yoga a. You 20,

Jurnb6rt Book No 10, with the lateet 110 puzzle~, iiiiVdable for $1 35 pOO•
paid from Jumble, C/O tf'lll MW'IIl. . . Box 34, Norwoocl, N J 07M8 Include
your name, .tdreel, zip code .ndm&amp;llec:hecbpaytiM iJUcn l*"'*boc:Aii

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
Ex c-ova trn g
septr c sysl ems
dozer backh oe dump tr uck
lrme stone
grovel
blacktop
povrng Rt \ 43 Phon e 1 (614)
098 7JJI

home,

water .

'

Real Estate for Sale

tlomt•' for Snit•

Ye sterdays

•

~Hollywood

News 8, Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women

(Answers 1omorrow)

8·20·1 mo. ( Pd I

I(

PUJI:E SORGHUM molo sse5 $2 30
a quart wrth contorner A lv 1n
Myers
Sliver
Jl:rdge Rd
He ed svrll e
Oh1 o
Phon e
&lt;/85 41"12

New or R.epair
Gutters and
Downspouts

.

12 oo-Newscenter J, News 4,6, 10, Amer 1ca Al1ve 15,
Young &amp; the Restless 8. Midday Magaztne 13
12 3o-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 . Bob Braun 4 ; Sear ch for
Tomorrow 8, , 10

Now arrange lhe crrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug
9_!tsted by the above cartoon

Answer l!ere{

10 ~Card Sharks 3, 15, My Three Sons 4, Edge of
N1ght 6; All In The Fam ily B.IO, Dalmg Game 13
10 3Q-Jeopardy 34,1 5, Andy Gnftlth 6. Pnce 15 R1ghl
8 ,10, 520.000 Pyramid 13
11 ~High Rollers 3,4,15, Happy Day s 6,13, Lowe ll
Thomas Remembers 20
11 ,3o-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,1 5, Fam1l v Feud 6.13
Love of Life 8,10. Sesame St 20,33
1I 55-CBS News a. House Call 10

I

•"

l.ITTI.F: OR PI IAN ,\NNif.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

8-31-1 mo.

/=o:=='il

l

Phone 9'12·6144
992·7547
10-1B·1 mo

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mill Street just behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10·4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m. ·.

t&gt;yHenrtArnoldandBoblee

J I K

All Work Guaranteed

CHEAP!

10
9 3Q-Brady Bunch a. Fami ly Altair 10

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~CEVIEDj

He;ARDjT!

25 Ye"'rs Experience
'

' Emergency One6 , Ho gan' s Heroes B, Mat ch Game

r J

I I

M~ IF 'lbll'VB

All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small

WOOD HEAT

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call992-7013
For Free Estimates
9-11-1mo.

Home

To Existing Structures

QUALITY

ELLIOTT
APPUANCE II

Industrial

Bu1ld1ng
Any Type Improvements

'1118 APPAWIGIIIAN
8"1011E GOM.PANY

Armstrong Carpeting

Type

Commercial and

'

Headquarters For

H~~~s~~
OIJ~... STOP

Morn1ng Amenca 6.13. CB S

7 3Q-Schoolles 10
a ~Capt Kangaroo B, 10, Sesame St 33
9 00- Merv Grif f in 3, Phi l Donahue 4,13, 15 ,

I THEFE
[j( .

'BORN I.OSF:R

13

~ Toda y 3,4,1 5, Good
News 8 ; Jetsons 10

7

HO..D ().), ~.

Price Builders

'

rn'il

Unscramble lhese four Jumbles
one fetter to each square, IQ form
lour ordinary words

Moummg and

J&amp;L

I

'flfl~Nt

~ ~ ~~ ®

10·30 c

5 55-Sunrtse Semester 10.
6 ~700 Club B; 6 25-Chnstopher Closeup 10
6 JG-News Conference 4, News 6.
6 45-MorninQ Reoorl 3, 6 5(}-Good Morning, West
V~rg l n 1 a 13. 6 55-Chuck Wh 1le Roorts 10. News 13

Soundstage 20 . C1ty Report 33
8 3Q-laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13, When the Boat Comes In
33

Chester, OhiO

BoX3

9-7·1 mo.

5 so-PH. Club 13

10, Donna Fargo 13 , TV Honor Society 15 , Mac Nei l

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Free

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2S, 1978
S 45-Farm Report 13. 5 5(}-PTL Club 13.

Lehrer Report 20,33
B ~Grandpa Goes to Washlnglon 3,15, Happy Days
6, 13, Jacques Cousteau 4 , Movie "Pa ll llon " 8,1 0,

Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginther 915·3B06

All work
Call Tom

Est1mates

CAN'T YOU HEAR
ME RATTLIN ' THI,_
C(;ll DOOR~

anyteme.

All types of roofing, gutters

1o the Bollom of the Sea J , Star Tre k 4, ,
Beverly Hillbillies 8. Mlsler Rogers ' Neighborhood
20,33, Gome r Pyle USMC 10, Emergency Or1e 13.
Brady Bunch 15
3Q-News 6, Sanford &amp; Son B. Elec Co 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10. Odd Couple 15
~New s 3.4.8.1 0,1 3.15. ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15, Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 6.
CB S News 8,10, Over Easy 20
~Cross Wits J. PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game

E conomica lly Speaking 33
'
7 3G--Hollywood Squares J : ; LeT ' s uo 1o fhe Kaces 8 ,
Oatlng Game -4 , Candid Ca m era 6 Price 1s Righ t

ReS•dentia;l and com mer-

&amp; downspou1s, 20 years

experience.

('\!"rAIN f:,\SY

cia I. Call for estimate. 24
Hour serv1ce. Any day,

SERVICE

oo-

~Voyage

6, 13, Pop Goes The Country 8. News 10 . Love
American Style 15. Loc k, Stock &amp; Barrel 20

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

CHICKI::N fOR sale $1 15 eoch
Ph one no 992 7 SO/

:J AND 4 RM f urn1 shed ond un
opt s
Phon e
f urn rs h e d
992 5434
TWO 8fDII:OOM ktt chen lurm sh
ed opl Cal l b ef ore 8 om
992 2281:1

-.

THR EE SPHO brke 10 speed btk e
needs reporr New 3' 1 qt slow
cook er lb rn Homelrte chorn
sow almost new 991 3079

For Rent

?92

o.

1' 1 ACRE 11 .. bO mobde home
near De .. ter q92 !i858

1975 CHEVf.IOLH Ht:AVY duty ,
ton b cyl
std w1th top per
Very good condrt1o n Also 8
h p rototrller 949 2449

l'O:J
H
CAMINO
tru(.k
Cr u rs omatr c, 11ft steerrng
pow er locks A C 2 ba r stools
S5 74'l 'Jbb9

Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lor ge lots Coli
7.479

¥• mile off Rl. 7 by-pass on
St . Rt. 1241ow•rd Rutland,

7

Phone 9'12·5191
10·22· 1 mo.

OHIO VAU.EY ROOFING
.
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

ROGER_HYSEll
GARAGE

6
6

"

Reasonable Pric::es
References Available

(Bob Hoeflich)
109 H1gh 51.
Pomeroy

.,

Construction
Maintenance

The Photo Place

I'lL IIZ·ZI74

5

Carpentry, Electrecal,
•
Pain1ing

Call us Today

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

5

J. R. Coostructjon
Co.

currently
for senior
portratts. we use trade ·
tio,af settings and also
feature
outdoor
por
traiture.

. . . . Phone 992-2181

• LOWf.IEV GI:N IE 4.:1 All extras In
pe rfec l condrtr o n 992 32lS _.

High School
SENIORSmak1ng
are

appointment~

IY7b NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1' 1 both underprnnrng $1500
and assume loon 949 2683 or
843 3311

SNOW

affairs today . Hard feelings COUNTKY MOBILt Home Pork
of

Ch arl es Seorf es

115 HONDA S525 949 28JO

RI SING STAR Kennels 8oordrng
on d groommg
all breeds
Ch eshrre 307 0292

1977 MONZA SPYDUI: 305 engrne
Power stee r1ng Po w er brak es
AM fM rod10 Mo r e e)( t r os Coli
742 2B2b

we

I Service

HONDA XJI:"/5 985 4219

1nvo fve lrtends 1n your ltnanc tal

could qwckfy result One at
you wo uld feel taken advantage

so le 9crJ 77 51

TIRE SALE

Auto Sales

I'

197J KAWASAKI f 7 Lots of ex
tros
Al so
Crorg AM FM
ca ssette rn dash cor ste reo and
Jen son speakers Alter call
991 2522

HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy sel l
trodP or tro1n New ond used
saddles Ruth Reeves Albany
(bl4 ) 09H ::!290

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0cl. 23) Don ' t

~OR

APPALACHIAN STOVE CO Lorge
selectron of wood or coal
heaters lowest prr ces feotur
rn g Ashley Open Sot l 0 Ill
4pm Sun 12 noon trl 3pm In
Mrddleport between 3rd ond
4th St down the alley fro m
Ton y s
Corrvout
Phon e
014 b9!J 7191

Pets for Sale

AKC REGISTERED Bea gle 8 mon
ths ol d Mol e $ 75 :J6 l 0292

!

GALlON Mor Flo electf rc ho t
water heater Ne w condrtron
$5 0 See or coli 742 2411

HAY

Yard
Sale
--

you are to do otherw1se
TAURUS (April 20-Moy

CANCER (June 2t-July 221 Out-

19 "/6 f.IED fl ActR 3 speed b cyl
AM fM top e play er CB rod1 o
Must sell Phone 742 2874

Sal e CAHPH REMNAN TS Odds
ond Ends Sho p Rt I M1d
dleporl
Oh ro
9t12 bl "13 or
992 b206

ONE f.IEGI SHREO G eldrn g Ten
ncssee Wofker 9 year s old
Reg1 stered Blue Tre k !emot e
74 2 300 b

tendency to not ftntsh things
w11f be accentuated today If
yo~.:~ don ' t want to c lutter up the
workroom , don ' t beg1n anythmg new at all

PHON E

~2

ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Trou-

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your

PICKUP

OLD fURNITURE 11:e bo )(es bra ss
be ds rro n bed s d esks e tc
compl ete hou seho ld s Wnle
MD Mrller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
coll 992 77b0

ble wtll ensue ef you poke your
nose m areas where 1t doesn ' f
belong
Keep your mouth
closed , no matter how tempted

There wtff be s ome dtff1culty m
ach1evmg a meeting of mmds
today Perhaps 11 would be best
to d1scuss tmportant matters
tomorrow

1J rnch Crogp r SS wheels
Wtll Itt Ford and l he vrolet
5 200 742 2826

CHIP
WO O L&gt;
Po le s mo JO
d1o me ter I 0 on larges t end
Sa 50 per ton Bu n dl ~d slob
$6 SO per ton Delrvered to
Oh ro Poll et Co IH 1 Pomeroy
&lt;~n 1oa9

- - --~

Easy 33
11 3G-Johnny Car so n 3,4,1 5,

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1C, 1978

~ OU R

--~ --

GOING OUT of Susrne ss Soler
Poodles Pekmgese Pomer o
nron Teacup Trmes SJ5 10
Sl 25 Phone b l4 69b 129 7

20)

Business Services

NO HUNTING or h esposs rn g on COAl UMf Sl O NE sand gro-ve l
ro lr ru m r hl orr de ferl 1lrier dog
my p roperly Without per rn r ~
food and oil ty peo; of soli b
sron Judy McGra w
r e l ~ro r Soli Wo rk '§ lm E M or n
GUN SHOOT Racr ne Gun Club
~ ~ Pomeroy 991 3691
Eve ry Sunda y 1 pm fa ctor y
BURROUGHS SE N SI M ~TIC oc
cho k e guns on ly
cou ntm g mo ch 111e ' Ph o-ne
GU N SHOO T Roc rne Volu nteer
y rn :1156 Th e Oorly Sen trn el
Frre Oept h ery Sotutdoy 0 30
111 Cour t Slree t Pomeroy
pm at the1 r bu rld1 ng rn Bo sh on
Oh
10
Fac tory choke gun s on ly

POMI:ROY
ducts Top pr1 ce
sow trmber Col i
Kent Hanby 1 446

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I nr ~al•·

Notices

IN

Ca se No 78 109 2 PL ABN
auth or tt y to aband on t he
fo l low tng ptp ell n es tog e th e r
W1fh such pumpt ng stal ton s

J 1)

Bux

t hat

tor

12$

·' 00
Eillh wurd tN r r tl-r 11 111\U ilWil 1$
words IS 4 L'flll:i !)l'r word I)Cr W._y .

Ul~

c:j~tv e n

In

Chat .l::t'

1 00
1511

In Memory _

LEGAL NOTICE

WANT AD
CHARGES

-

9 oo---Mo vl e " Donner Pa ss T he Road 1o Sur vival "
3, A, I S. T hree's Company 6, 13. Cham pions 20 .
9 JG-Taxt 6,13 , In Per for mance at W olf Trao :n
10 oo-starsky &amp; H ut c h 6, 13, News 20
tO 30- Lik e It Is 20. Area Showcase 33
11 oo- News 3 4,6 8, 10, 13, 15, Dt c k Ca ve tt 20. Over

trumps,

dtscards

A Canadtan reader wants
to know who W.H. Whitfield

Opening lead : • K

was.

One letter s1mply stands for another In lhlo .. mplo A II By Oswald Jacoby
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc Smgle leiters, aud Alan Sontag
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints Each day the code letten are different
South took dununy's ace of
clubs,
played it's 10 of
CRYPTOQUOTES
trumps and proceeded to
ruff a club. If clubs hac been
KCTXSC, kind enough to break 4-2,
V N F WCAYC
YNAAXF
South would have made
LQF
EWOAW- seven by setting up two
WF
YNA
NUPNZH
clubs for heart discards . The
NUUCSWNFC
NAE
I Z
T W H • 5-l break made it Impossible
for him to set up ev~n one
discard and he had to play
hearts. He drew a second
trump, led a heart toward
the 10 and was one down
when East showed up with

He was a mathematics
tutor at Cambr1dge UniverSity who publlshed the most
beautiful card problem of all
tune back in 1885. It Is
known as the Wh1Uield SlX.
We w11l show the problem on
Thursday and its solution on
Friday.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

(Do you .flave a questton for
the experts ? Wnte " Ask the
Experts , ·' care of thts newspaper lndiVJdua/ questions will
be answered If accompamed
oy stamped. se/1-adctressed
envelopes The most mterestmg quest1ons w111 be used In
th1s column and will rece1118
cap1es at JACOBY MODERN 1

(C) 1978 Kan1 Featunr• Syndkate, IRC"

RAR NF.Y

I DON'T SEE WHY I
CAN'T TAKE THJS POLE,
AND JUST REACH RIGHT
OVE~ THERE AND...

JUGHAID AST ME
TO FIND OUT
WHAT 'IE WANT

BLESS HIS
cy LEETLE

HEART \1

FER 'lORE
BIRFDAV. MAW

WANT TO rent 5toroge space tpr
out o!o. M05on, Pomeroy Mid
dleport area See R1chord Hdr
rtson 140 N 3rd Ave , Mid
die por t

..

'
'

"

HIM HE.
CAN GIT ME A
POT HOLDER
TELL

one

heart on that last club and
has made h1s slam m sp1te of
the 5-1 club break.

WHAT YORE AUNT
LOWEE2'1 WANTS
IS A CORSET

�.
10- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Ut:u:.,

r-------------------------1I1

Rogers seeks Donahey's post

I

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is
the sixth In a series 9! 11
dispat ches prepared by
United PretJslaternallo'nal on
the contests aud Issues facing
the vuters al the Nov. 7
election. Today's article
deals with the race for state
treasurer.)

I
1
1

Letten of opiDJon are welcomed. They should be less
tlllln 380 words long (or subject to reduction bYthe editor) 1
I IIIJd muai be signed with tbe signee's address. Names may 1
I be wllldleld upon publlcatioa. However, on request, 1
I names wW be disclosed. Letters should be In good taste, , I
I addressing Issues, not personalities.
I

II

I

8~

II·

4ML "tJ.Y:~~ •
~ •••''Vl•~•

I

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouae Reporter

About special operating levy
To Whom it may Coocern :
As the new Administrator of the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation, I would like to bring a matter of concern
to the residents of Meigs Co WilY.
AI the general election on November 7, 1978, there will be
submitted a special levy for the operation of a progr~ for the
Mentally Retarded in the county.
In 1973the voters passed a bond i~ue to provi&lt;!t: funds for
the county's share of :;o percent funding for a facility for the
Mentally Retarded . In JlUie of ~is year, the State of Ohio,
made an additional grant to provide 90 percent funding by the
state and 10 percent by the county. This indicates the support
of a Meigs County program by the State.
Because of a lack of fa cilities ow- Mentally Retarded ate
now being serviced on a temporary, yearly contract With
Gallia CoWltY, the cost of which is paid by the Metgs County
General Fund. Formerly there was a levy, but thts has
exp~ed.
.
All children, regardless of their handicap, are entttled to a
free, and appropriate education. This is the LAW. The county
must bear the cost . Meigs County ts one of two out of .88
COlUities in the State that does not operate a program for tis
Mentally Retarded.
·
.
The proposed new facilities are in the process of becommg
a reality and what is needed now is the support of the
conununiiy,.by the approval of the special operating. levy on
November 7th. This will assw-e that other COlUity acbvtlles will
not be cW'Iailed.
Please help show our people that they belong, that we
accept them, and that we want them back in ow- COWIIy. Vote
for the Meigs County Mental Retardation le.vy, operated by

COLUMBUS (UP!)
George C. Rogers, the
Republican nominee for state
treasurer, is in the middle of
.an almost thankless job.
Rogers, 31, the Whitehall
city attorney , is running
against Demo cr atic
Treasure r Gertrude W.
Dooahey.
That's like running against
Grandma.
Mrs. Dooahey, 70, is the
first woman ever to be
elected to an executive state
office in the history of Ohio .
Swept into office in 1970 by
a margin of 320,900 votes,
admittedly on the tide of a
Stateho~ ''loan scandal''
involving imprudent and
illegal treasw-y investments,
Mrs. Donahey was lopped

SINGERS - Robin, age '4, and Donita, age 8,
daughters of Joyce and Don Manuel, Racin~, wW be guest
singers at a revival at the Clifton Untied Methodtst
Chw-ch, Clifton, W.Va. Wednesday, Oct. 25, at 7:30p.m.
The public is invited.

10 Boardwalk
stores burn

Meigs ColUity, for Meigs County residents, and in Meigs
County.
.
.
Thank You- Christopher C. Layh, Administrator, Metgs
Co. Board of Mental Retardation.

By JOHN RHODES
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J .
(UP!) -Tenstoresalongthe
Atlantic City Boardwalk were
destroyed and 14 police
officers and firefighters were
!mocked out of action today in
a f~e that burned out of
control f~ seven how-s.
The F~e Department eslimated property damages at
$2.5 million, and there was
additional personal loss. A
and illustrations that "really tavern owner lost a prized
wine collection, and a
upset me.''
" I think it's very 110uve~ shop was destroyed
only hours after its owner
misleading
sensationalized, and does a vacated the store to allow the
disservice to me," she said. conversion of an old hotel into
"Sometimes it gets to you a gambling casino.
Firemen said they had no
and I begin to be sorry that I
shared this experience," she idea what caused the blaze
between Kentucky and
said.
•
But in discussing another illinois Avenues, low- blocks
Resorts
recent highly publicized from , the
event, her face lift, which International, Casino Hotel.
Twelve f~emen suffered
makes her look far younger
than her 60 years, Mrs. Ford smoke inhalation. The
was asked about l~st lady Atlantic City Medical Center
Rosalynn Carter's remark to said three of the firemen
reporters that she probably were admitted in satisfactory
would not have been as condition, while the others
were treated and released.
''forth~omlng" as Mrs. Ford
in . aMoWlcing such facial Also, a policewoman and a
fueman were treated for foot
sw-gery.
"I think the world is made and leg injuries.
The blaze broke out about
up of all different kinds of
people. Perhaps I am too 9:30 pm. Monday and was
candid, too open. But I think put Wider control by aho.ut
the pluses outweigh the 4:30 am. today.
Winds blowing at 25 mph
minuses," Mrs. Ford said.
and
heavy smoke and fire
As for the face lift itself,
hampered
efforts
to
she declared : " I'm very
extinguish
the
blaze:
pleased. I'm very happy and
Soon after the fire started,
delighted I did it. Everybody
says they like it. My boys say puffs of smoke were seen
coming from a restaurant.
'Wow'."
"I haven 't had any The flames spread through
negative comment ,'' she an entire block of shops that
added. "It's all been on the shared a common ceiling.
plus, side . People have There were no fuewalls becongratulated me, both men tween the shops, firemen
said.
.
and women.''
·
All the shops were closed
when the ftre broke out.
About 200 Atlantic City
firelighters
using about 20
MEET AT HUGHES'
pieces
of
equipment
fought
A meeting of the Twin City
the
blaze.
Shrinettes , originally
scheduled for 7:30 Thursday
evening at the home of
Emma Clatworthy in Middleport, wiD be held instead
at the same t~e at the home
of Mary Hughes, also in
Middleport.

Betty Ford feels she
was too candid, open
By

Davis

Insurance
Nothing
is
ALL
wrong! Except a
clock
that
has
stopped r un11 ing is
right twice a day ...
Of all the investments
make
you
can
towards
your
family's
future,
nothing wi II do for
them
what
Life
Insurance c!oes.

-SEE-

DAVIS

INSURANCE
AGENCY
"Across from
the Courthouse"
in Pomeroy
Bill GrueSer

Jeannie Starcher
9'12 -6679

By HELEN THOMAS
"Things change," she ex..
UP! White House Reporter
plained. "You have to be
WASHINGTON (UP!) Dexible . That 's part of parenBetty Ford says she may thood. You have to adjust.
have been "too candid, too I've changed my mind about
open," about her treatment a lot of things ....
for drug abuse and
She said Susan, now 21, was
alcoholism, because the upset because Mrs. Ford's
publicity somet~es upset observation was coupled in
her enough to make her sorry many news stories ·with the
she shared the experience announcement of her engagewith the public.
ment to Vance, who is 37.
However, iit a telephone
But Mrs. Ford said Susan is
interview with UP!, the "so ecstatically happy" and
former f~st lady said she has "come to realize that she
feels overall "the pluses is in the position of a public
outweigh the minuses" in her person ."
habit of openly expressing
Susan, Mrs. Ford said, is
her thoughts and feelings.
making plans for her June
Mrs. Ford also discussed wedding and has the florist
her new face 11ft - like her and the church "signed up alhospitalization, highly publi- ready ."
cized - and her· delight over
Mrs. Ford said it has been
the forthcoming marriage of rough at times to see
daughter Susan to Secret magazine references to her
Service agent Charles R. treatment for drug abuse and
Vance.
alcoholism, sometimes
Both she and her husband accompanied by drawings
are '~tickled to death" ' over
the engagement, and are
excitedly looking forward to Two divorces,
the wedding and to ''happy
times."
Mrs. Ford said she has One dissolution
changed her mind since she
Two divorces were granted
observed in her new hook, and another marriage was
"The Times of My Ufe," that dissolved in Meigs County
21 is too yoWlg to marry.
common pleas court.
Jeffrey Wickersham was
granted a divorce from K~a
Wickersham and Kima
Wickersham was restored to
her maiden name of K~a
Jarrell ; Shirley A. Wolfe was
granted a divorce from
Clarence T. Wolfe.
The marriage of Phillip W.
Kelly and Lois G. Kelly was
dissolved.

Turn in that old gas hog!

FREE CWTHING DAY
Free clothing day will be
held at the Salvation Army on
Thursday, Oct. 26 fr om 10
a.m. utnil noon. All area
residents in need of clothing
are welcome.

We can finance your
new car purchase.
If you're $\ill driving an old gas hog.
now's the time for you to turn it in
for one of the new compact gas saver$!
So go ahead and find the new ca r you
want.. .then see us about financing.
You 'll like our low-interest bank rates
and easy budget payment plan$. See
us today about a new car loan!

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Becky
Mallory, Racine : Elija
Powell, Pomeroy; Bernard
Rairden, Hartford, W. Va.;
Mary Hindy, Middleport.
Discharged - None.

CORRECTION
Pomeroy pollee report that
Donna Misner, Cheshire, has
heen cited to mayor's court
rather than Pamela Graner,
Pomeroy, as the result of an
accident on Nye Ave., SlUiday
morning. Misner is cited on a
left of center charge.
DINING THURSDAY
Member.s of the Riverview
Garden Club will dine at 6:30
Th.ursday evening at the
Fisherman's Cover in Belpre.

I

i

Announces the opening of his

j

l!

office for the practice of

I

!

Open Frfday Evenings S to 7 p.m .

L:ilitens ~alional. Bank
'

; •POit'f'
Wlllll!IIIIOILL.~&lt;OIUO

. . "a
A!

6'6

!

···~

~WAili.i!la~o!'o;i!l;tiilll!i&amp;•ll!.lliTllliiii:•. .• -

Member F.D.I.C. Deposits tnsur~ to s4o,ooq.oo.

j

R. CRAIG MATHEWS,
D.D.S.

!

Walk -Up Te.ller Window
And Auto Teller Window

iI

general dentistry.

205 North Second Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
I

Office hours
appointment
,_,-

Telephone
992-6658

.............. _.._.._...~---.---

I

I

· been e~:hausted does the
treasury make out-of«ate
Investments, she said. "You
wouldn't want your tax
· . money sitting around idle,
W{Juld you?"
.
. Rogers has suggested that
the treasurer's . office loan
money to bWII!lesses ~d
1ndustnes expanding
operations in Ohio.
"That is the job of the Ohio
Development
Fipancing
Commission, which has made
$29 mllllon in loans and
provided $138 million worth of
industrial de velopment
bonds ,"
replied
Mrs.
Donahey.
Rogers a1so has proposed
branch offices of the treasury
in Cleveland and Cincinnati.
"That would just increase
the cost of government," said
the treasw-er. "I've been all
over Ohio, and people want

BOOSTERS TO MEET
A special meeting of the
Southern Local School
District band boosters will be
held at 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the high school in Racine.
SQUAD ANSWER CALL
The Middleport fire
department's emergency unit
was called to Park St. at 8:42
. p.m. Monday for Mrs.
Cynthia Ghoring; a medical
patient, who was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.
INJURED IN FALL
At 10:28 p.m. Monday the
Pomeroy emergency squad
answered a call to Pine Grove
for Smoo Newlun who had
fallen. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

J

By NED TEMKO
Arab foreign ministers last
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) week . The pro-militia
- Shellfire and sniper newspaper Le Revell quoted
activity in subw-ban Beirut unidentified "political
today
j eo pard iz e d ~cles " as asking whether
government and Arab efforts the renewed fuing was "a
to cement a cease-fire prelude to a new round" of
between Syrian troops and Syrian attacks on Lebanon.
rightist Christian militias. . The
Ar~b
League
The Christian Phalanglst peacekeeptng force,
Radio accused the Syrians of dominated by Syrians, held
starting the latest f~elight the militias responsible for
and said Syrian troops of the the renewed violence, .
An Arab force commWltque
Arab peacekeeping force
unleashed shellfire early charged that the mWtiaa had
today oo suburban Dikwaneh. taken a&lt;lvantage of a Syrian
It also said road traffic in the pullback from two key battle
area was paralyzed by sniper positions In Christian East
fire.
,
Beirut to ''persist in armed
The broadcast insisted appearances" there and
rightist irregulars were "shift their guns" toward the
respecting . the cease-fire , new Syrian positions on the
despite repealed Syrian southeastern fringe of the
violations.
city.
Residents of the Olrlstlan
Sonte Beirut diplomats,
southeastern suburbs of noting the jaunty tme of
Beirut said snipers and Olrlstlan presa reports of the
occasional rocket-propelled limited Syrlitn pullback, begrenade shots hit the ll~ved the militias might now
neighborhood Monday . try to
force Syrian
Militia officials charged the withdrawal
from
the
Syrians also had Wlleashed southeastern subW'bs as well.
the~ ~~~ extended artillery
The
diplomats
said
barrage since the Oct. 7 . although the Incidents haY!!
ceasefire
against
the not 110 far led to a major
Christian resort town of breakdown in the truce Bickfaya.
now more thll!l twQ weeks old
The Christians flatly - cmtlnued glUt duels would
accused the Syrians of Inevitably point In that
violating the truce - ~ectlon.
~'Oilaolidated at " m&lt;etinl! of

Concerted .effort against inflation sought
,
'
:
:
•

E.xpIOSIOD
•

(Continuedfrorqpagel)
· ,
ts.Council approved , the
transfer of llceitses bf the
Royal Flush from Tom GoeIt
to Pat O'Brien and Steve Van
Meter and authorized Mayor
Hoffman to spend up to $2,900
00 a llSed truck if he attends
. an
au~tlon
in
New
Philadelphia on Saturday.
Coun'cil
discussed
improvements being made by
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 ,.
American Legion, at the park
located behind the post
. office; a request for an
additional light near the old
Park st. school, which was
denied, the condition of the
Middleport levee which is
being vandalized and the
need for a bricklayer to point
up the exterior of the village
hall.
·
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate, and Cowteilmen
Horky, Kelly, King, William
Walters ·and Dewey Horton.

HALWWEEN PARTY
Racine Grange 2606, Oak
Grove, will hoid a Halloween
party Friday, Oct. 27 at 7
p.m. The party is open to the
public. All those attending
are asked to be in costume·

less goveulrnmde:, no.;.,:!~Y
8
That wo ,,
Wln.ecel58l'y.
traveled
Rog;~ · w~o the liOn of
aroun e ~ !Illgraduated
au Army 0 J:::'~erllity and
~ ~~0 La School
' :worked;thecaO:paign
t If of Franklin County
sa
C Smith
Prosecutor George ·
,
the Republican nomlneee for
state
:neral, tyan'd
was e
o
e. COWl · s
economic fraud unit and
overseer of COWI\y grand
juries.
•

:'!ctorn"f

Cahle TV

Cease-fire
jeopardized _

.-..------·------------ . . . _-- . . . -1

·1

ooly by Sen. John Glenn in
winning reelectiOI) low- years
later.
·.
What's more, the likeable
lady has earned the state
more than $469 million .in
interest Income whtle
maintaining. her payroU at
135 people ll1 the last etght
years.
" We are the state's
hanker " she explains. "We
invest' your tax dollars
according to law, to make
them safe and secure."
Nevertheless, Rogers has
been campaigning hard
against Mrs.' Dooahey - a
campaign he began two years
ago when he thought he could
capture the Republican
nomination for secretary of
state.
"The treasurer sends $600
million to other states for
investments," says ·Rogers.
"We need that money ba., k
hi The banks d
here in 0 o.
hi an
savings
anddeposits."
loans in 0 0 are
crymg for
Rogers also charges that
Olilo is $2.2 billion in debt.
"It's about time we had · a
treasurer in Ohio to put a stop
to th•t free-wheeling, freespending Legislatw-e.' '
"Our office Is statutory,"
replies Mrs . Donahey,
explaining that the General
Assembly has set forth the
laws under which she
operates, and they don't
include telling the legislators
how .to spend money.
As for the Investments, "we
follow the law that says we
have to write to ever;r b~k
and savings and loan m Ohio
· every two years asking if
ihey care to partlcipate in
deposits of state funds," said
the treasurer.
The treasurer must get bids
on interest rates and the
hanks must put up collateral
to safeguard the state's
money . "We call every
institution that 's near the
going (interest) rate," said
Mrs. Donahey. "We have to
get the highest interest rate
available."
Only after Ohio bids have

,

(Continued from page 1) ·
"It shook our building. I don't l
know It we could even get in
·there (to the scene) or not."
·Ellis; whose h(llle was
about 1o/• miles from the
trailer park, said he at first
tho"""t
..,.., "a hnde
..., jet aircraft
had crashed."
"II lit up this area like
daylight. I thought my clocks
had stopped but tbep I
realized that it was an
explosion ."
. Pearland Pollee Capt. Ron
Coleman said the explosioo
produced '-'a huge ~ball. One
of the dispatchers said it felt
like an earthquake when it
went off·
"!live 20 miles away (in
Santa Fe). When I walked out
of my door, I could see it (the
fire). ,

.'

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PAIR

Custom-matched
PLAIDS of Easy-care
100% Polyester in
BROWN/GREEN
or GREY /BLUE
PLAID
SHIRTJACwith side slits and two
patch pockets. Big
favorite this season!
Sizes 8-18$28.00

Women's Ready-To-Wear on the second
floor.
Perfect wit!l
DOTTY
MANN'S
.
.
Slim ZIP PANTS In plaids to match the
Shirt Jac colors. Sizes 6-18 $17.00.
.
.
.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

7 percent - to gro ups of
workers who adhere to the
wage standard. The rebate
would equal the amount
inflation topped 7 percent
multiplied by an employee 's
pay " up to some reasonable
!~it. "

Carter called it a "real
wage insurance policy
against inflation which might
be caused by others."
"This will give our workers
an additional incentive to
observe th e program - and
· will remove their only legitimate
reason not
to
cooperate," he said.

His proposed voluntary
price standard for business l~iting . in&lt;;reases to a 0.5
percent below 1976-77
increases - would not apply
to each product, but rather to
a firm's average price.
Co mp anies
claiming
unavoidable costs co uld
demonstrate that their
before-tax profit margins are
no higher than in the best two
of the last three years.
" As far as I'm concerned,"
the president told Americans,
''every business, every union,
every professional group,
every individual in this

country has no excuse not ID
adhere to these standards. If
we meet these standards, the
real buying power of your
paycheck will rise ."
He made clear the government will withhold iis S80
billion annual purchases
from f~s that don't comply
with the voluntary standards.
He indicated that in otber
cases it could deny what he
ca lled " eco n o m ic
privileges," such as special
franchises, protected wages
and prices, subsidies , and
protection fr om foreign
competition .

en tine

Fiftee n Cents
Vol . 29, No. 135

:· :~ :~:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::

FUNDS COLLECTED
Mike Mullen, special
investigator for the Meigs
County Prosecutor's office,
reports $5,600 In bad checks
written to Meigs County
resi dents , wa s colle cted
over the past week with
restit ution being made.
Floes levied in 1975 in the
amount of $790 and not paid
have also been collected by
the county proescutor's
office.

The amount of tax would attending school in Cheshire.
therefore be $4.38 on such
Layh explained it has heen
property Layh said.
manadated that all people
Money from the levy will be have the right to an
used in the operation of a education. There are only two
school and training program counties in Ohio that do not
for those 6 to 20 years of age ; have a facility for the menan activity center and tally retarded Layh comwor!&lt;shop lor those over 20, mented, Meigs and Noble
and a pre-school program for counties.
those · under six years and
Layh also said the program ::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
possibly a home training is required by law and it is
program for those school age, necessary that Meigs County
who are unable to attend bear its cost. If the levy tails,
because
of
physical such cost will have to come
disability.
from the county's general
Layh further q&gt;mmented funds which would curtail
that the state has agreed to some other county fWi ctions.
RALEIGH, N: C. (UP! ) finance 90 percent of the cost
"I am here today to rally With tears in her eyes, a
of the construction of a school support for the retarded," Wake Forest teenager
and workshop for Meigs Layh observed.
testified Monday that Bland
CHARLESTON, W.Va . ft;om private junk dealers County. The colUity's share
Meeting at noon at the Julius Hill Jr. told her he shot
(UP!) - Perjury Charges ahd car crushers.
will be 10 percent. He in- Meigs Inn , director s for- a vacationing West Virginia
Jurors
also , were dicated the buildings would mulated plans for the annual teacher " right between the
were lodged Tuesday against
a former worker in West investigating the possible he constructed in Syracuse on Christmas parade. The event eyes" during an August
FLAG PRESENTED - Rep. Ron James, at Tuesday 's meeting of the MiddleportVigiltia's old clean-up agency embezzlement of public the
Carleton
College will be staged on Sunday, roadside ambush.
~rea Branch of the American Association of University Women, presented an
Pomeroy
REAP
employees
money
involving an allegedy
property.
Terry Ann Hamm said she
Dec. 3,
Ohio
flag
to Mr s. Martha Husted, left, and Mrs. Maxine Wingett of th e legislative
collected
from
junk
dealers,
kickback from an Ohio firm
fie also added lhat, at the
Paul Simon, president, was present when Hill- killed
committee.
The fla g will be used in the Riverboat Room of the Metg,..Offtce of the Athens
that specializes in crushing and whether they were present t~e, 42 per:ions from asked John Anderson to give Jerry Romine, 32, of Point
County
Savings
and Loan Co., usual meeting place of the local branch of AAUW .
converting property picked Meigs County are presently
junked cars.
Pleasant , W. Va.
a
report
on
the
recent
The indictment followed up .to the~ private use.
"B. J . made the statement
meeting of the Christmas
The jury asked Porter
more than a year of quiet
that he shot h~ right bepromotion
commi~tee .
~bing by a federal grabd ·about a deal struck with.
Anderson reported the tween the eyes," she said.
Butler of Ohio in the
:JUlt. alnid-reports that the Frank
She also told the Wake
will be staged on
parade
.Welt Virginia Rehabilitation purchase of junk cars in 1974.
Superior
Court jury of six
1Continued on page 121
'Environmental
Action Porter denied to the jury that
men and six women that she
Program · was
being he met Butler at a drlve~n
played a decoy to get
restuarant in Grantsville,
Investigated.
•
motorists to stop and then
· REAP, as the agency was . W.Va. , and look $2,052 from
Hill and Mike Reyes Llamas
The So uthern Local School pl anned a special meeting in cha ssis were rejected
simply !mown, was headed at him.
of Wake Forest would rob the
"Isn 'I it a fact that when he
District's
estimated income the office of the Superin- because of the financial
that time by A. James
good samaritans.
for
1978
will
be down by tendent Bob Ord Oct. 31 to cond iti on of the dtstrict.
Manchln, who often delivered gave you the money you told
An earlier robbery left the
$64,831.16,
treasurer
Linda receive input from the public David Nease was named to
' flambuoyaqt spee~es during him you weren't going to give
three only a few dollars
him a receipt because the
Spencer
reported
when
the on Title 4-B flow through serve as vice president of the
his travels.
richer, she said, so they
The first school bus driver
board
met
in
special
session
proj ect. The title program board.
Manchin is now West money was a campaign .
decided to rob someone else.
Tuesday
night.
concerns
the purchase of
Virginia secretary of state. contribution?" the jury training class in Meigs
Board members attending
Hill, 19, faces a possible
County has been set for 6:30
·
Mrs.
Spencer
said
real
materials
and
equipment
for
Indicted was Charles C. asked .
were
Dallas Hill, president;
death sentence if convicted.
intangible personal property a primary learning disability Sue Grueser, Shirley John"No," Porter had replied, p.m. on Monday, Nov. 6 at the ·
·Porter, a Glenville, W.W.. ,
Prosecutors
have
agreed
to
Meigs High School.
resident, who faces two "that's not a fact."
so n, Betty Wagner and
reduce charges against Miss tax will decrease $1 2,399.15 ·class.
John Riebel, former ·
under the anticipated income
The indictment charged
Bids on the bodi es and Nease.
counts of perjury. He was
Hamm,
17,
in
exchange
for
·accused of lying in his denial that Porter took some cash superintendent ofthe Eastern
her testimony. Llamas has of the district because of the
that he received $2,052 from from Butler for junk cars sold Local Schools now employed
pleaded guilty to murder, change of status in real estate
an Ohio f~ and committing to h~. A second part of the in a district bus driver
armed robbery, .kidnapping from real property to utility
perjury with regard to the charge was that Porter lied in training program, will serve
and conspiracy but hasn't status. This is land where a
power plant might be conselling of parts from junk connection with selling the as instructor which will ' inSET CLOCKS been sentenced yet.
clude some 12 hours of class.st,ructed.
auto parts.
cars.
The district has lost $33,000
Upon conviction, Porter room work plus six to eight
BACK
The indictment said that
hours
of
actual
bus
driving
in
state subsidies for the
could
face
a
maximwn
five
Porter appeared before the
ONE
HOUR
experience.
of two new school
purchase
years
in
prison,
a
$10,000fine,
jury in April 1977 during an
in
Those
interested
buses
as
or
both.
·
the
state's share. It
investigation of whether
Sunny, breezy and warmer
SUNDAY
enrolling
in
the
program
had
been
planned
to buy two
REAP workers got kickbacks
today with a high near 70.
must he at least 18 years of
OCTOBER 29
buses.
Increasing cloudiness and not
age; must have &lt;locurnenThe dist rict will be down
The Ga llia -Meigs Post, p.m.
as
cold tonight with a low
2
A.M.
.tation of a local and national
The patrol reports that an
near 50. Cloudy with showers $19,432.01 below what was Highway Patrol, investigated
criminal record check;
auto operated . by Preston
likely tomorrow, with a high anticipated from sta te three accidents Tuesday .
docwnentation of a local and
Officers were called to the Jarrell, 16, Bidwell, traveling
near 70. The chance of foundation funds.
national driver check;
The board accepted Brian scene of a two-vehicle west on 554, drove into the
precipitation is 10 per cent
docwnentation of a medical
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The Office of the Consumers'
Hupp as a tuition student and collision on SR 160 at the path of a north bound vehicle
today.
examination and must be
C..unsel wUl request a ,1.2 million refund for ColumbUB &amp;
jlUiction of SR 554, at 10:20 on 160 operated by Rex
recommended by a local,
Southern Ohio Electric Co. customers at a hearing before
Justice, 19, Bidwell.
city, exempted village or
the Public Utilltles Commission of Ohio Monday.
The Justice auto incurred
parochial school superin'lbe refund Is being sought Ia the form of a
moderate damage. There
tendent. ·
reconciliation adjustment because of improperly
was slight damage to the
Corttact people in the three
calculated fuel costs during last winter's coal strike,
Jarrell vehicle.
districts of Meigs County
Consumers' ColUisel WHI!am A. Spratley said Tuesday.
Jarrell was cited on
For the first t~e, the be represented in the " Miss
Keprc ,enting the local graduate of Eastern High charges of failure to yield.
include Dwight Goins in the
An expert OCC witness discovered that c&amp;SOE
Meigs Local District, Archie Meigs County Unit . of the Hope" competition at the chapte r is Mrs . Deborah School, and a 1978 graduate of
. modified Its usual method of determiDJog fuel costs dnrlng
At B: 10 p.m., an aut o
Rose in the · Eastern Local American Cancer Soctety wtll allllual meeting in Cleveland. (Debbie) L. Smith, a 1974 Pa rk ersburg Com munity operated by Ronald Jackson,
the months of January-March, when certain purchased
College with an associate IB, Galli polis, went off the
District, and Bobby Ord in
power co!lls were deferred for later recovery, said
degree in applied science in right side of Brushy Point
the Southern Local District.
'
Spratley.
nursing.
Although the first session of
'lbat resulted to collection of approximately $1.2
Rd ., one and four-tenths of a
The annual meet ing wi ll be mile south of U.S. 35, and
the new class will be held at
mWion In exeess fuel costs, he said.
held Nov. 3-5 in Cleve land. struck a fence.
the Meigs High School, Riebel
Mrs. Smith rece ntly
reports classes will probably
reports
The
patr ol
received notification of moder ate damage to the
be rotated into each of the
becoming a registered nurse ve hicl e. No citatio n was
three districts of the county
after passing her state board issued.
depending upon the enrollexam in July. She is presently
ment.
Officers investigated a twoemploye
d at Vetera ns vehicle mishap on SR 554, 100
The
course
content
includes
Plans for the annual parade, merchants will stage
Memorial Hospital in the feet west of CR 10, at 4 p.m.
bus · driver
: Christmas progra m were a moonlight sale from 6 to 9 school
- surgical unit .
medical
requirements,
public
p.m.
offering
special
prices
to
According to the patrol, an
.• continued when the MidMrs.
Smith
said she has obj ect fell from a truck
dleport Chamber of Com- early Christmas shoppers. relations, pre-drivin g inhad several experiences with operated by Jeffrey Patmerce met Tuesday night at Stores of the town will start struction, driving the bus,
cancer patients since her terson, 21, Pomeroy, while
the Meigs Inn with vice maintaining evening hours on defensive driving, pupil
employment
at Veterans traveling east on 554.
preslde.nt Edison Baker in Dec. 8. Anyone interested in management, safety and
Memorial
Hospital
as well as
A west bound vehicle
charge.
. taking part Is ·asked . to emergency procedures, first
experiences
from
her past driven by Ernie! Thomas, 59;
aid,
transporting
the
excontact
Miss
Ingels
at
the
Candy Ingels, who 1s
education.
ceptional child, two-way
Rodney, ran over the object
beading the annual parade to . Ingels •Furniture Store,
Mrs. Smith hopes that in causing damage to the brake
radio
operation
and
laws
Mrs. Alwllda Werner
welcome in the Chrtstmas
her role as Miss Hope for line.
season reported bands .have presented the trea~~r_er's pertaining to school bus
Meigs County she in some
driving
.
'
Patterson was cited on
" been .;.,ntacted and she is report and minutes of the last
way may bring hope and charges of insecure load.
Those
successfully
commeeting .
. accepting parade entries.
encourage ment to those
Sara Owen, John Werner plet ing the course, will
·: The parade will be held at
persons who are and will be
receiv
e
a
certificate
of
and
Cash
Bahr
were
named
8:30 p.m, Monday, Nov· 27 ·
diagnosed
as hav mg cancer.
completion
·
Issued
by
the
to
the
noll)inating
committee
• Included In the participants
Mr
s:
Smith
and her
State
'
Department
uf
to
select
a
slate
of
new
ofFEES INCREASED
will be Santa and his helpers.
husba nd, Roy R. Smith ,
Education.
ficers.
The
next
meeting
was
Larry
E . Spencer, Meigs
. '' Following th~ parade, .the
reside
at
Rt.
I,
Portland.
Meigs
residents
interested
set
for
Nov.
16
at
the
Meigs
Clerk
of
Courts , has an,.. group will be 'at the drtveDebbie
was
presented
.
a
in
becoming
school
bus
lnn.
'
nounced,
effective
today lees
; through facility of the
plaque Tuesday by Delores for notarizing applications,
A FIRS;r - Mrs. Debbie Smith, right, was presented a plaque Tuesday by Delores
.Later
that
evening drivers should get in touch
• Citizens National Bank where
Frank, executive director of affidavits and assignments
F)'ank, executive d~eclor of the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society , for being
:: Santa will distribute candy members will prepare candy with th.e contact person
the Meigs County Unit of the have been increased froro 50
chosen "Miss Ho~" for 1979. Debbie will represent Meigs ColUity at a m~~ting Nov. 3-5 in
treats for the dlstributifa_n by within their respective
' t~ts to youngsters.
An1erican CanMr Society. cents to $1.~
Cleveland. AMi.SI\iope of Ohio will be chosen at th.at conference.
district.
~
bn the evening of the Santa.

Accomplice
testifies

Southern district loses
$64,831 in tax revenues

Patrol probes

Weather

Request refund

Carefree!

at

Bus driver
•
trammg
scheduled ·

_________..,
. ELBERFELDS

•

Perjury charges
lodged Tuesday

1

would not apply to workers
earning less than $4-ar)~our
or to already~gned labor
contracts.
It would apply not to an
individual's wage, but to the
average within each of these
groups in a given f~ :
management, employees
under labor contracts and
other employees.
Carter sa)d workers fear
that if they i~it the~ wages,
prices still will rise .
Therefore, he said, he
would ask Congress next
January to launch a new
program giving offsettin g tax
rebates - if inflation exceeds

.BY KATIE CROW.
penses for the new facility for
Pomeroy's Chamber of the retarded . There was
Commerce Tuesday endorsed formerly a .75 of a mill levy
the 1.25 mill operational levy which expired in 1975, and .20
lor the Meigs County Mental of a mill. which expired this
l;tetardation Program.
year. Presently, there is no
Speaking at the Tuesday's levy for operations.
meeting was Christopher
The new levy amounts to
Layh, administrator for the . $1,25 for each $1,900 of tax
Meigs County Board of value of property Layh exMental Retardation. ,
plained. If the true value' of
Layh explained the levy is property is $10,000 the tax
needed for operational ex- value is 35 percent or $3,500.

Plant with 20 years of service.
..
Survivors include hls wile,
Kathleen j... Weaver; four
sons, Virgil M. Weaver, New
Haven, William M. Weaver,
Middleport,
David
L.
Weaver, Jacksonville, Ark.,
and Lawrence M. Weaver, at
home; one brother, Noah
Weaver, Charleston; one
sister, Dorotha Phillips,
Nitro; two half~sters, Mrs.
Ray Shank, Nitro, and Mrs.
Gladys Wears, Columbus,
and 12 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at I :30 p.m.
in the New Haven United
Methodist Church with the
Rev. John R. Campbell officiating. Burial wW be in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call today
from 7 to 9 p.m.
The body will be taken to
the church one hoW' prior to

services.

e

expect inflation to continue .
Because we expect it to
happen, it does happen, and
once it's started, wages and
prices chase each other up
and up.
"It is like a crowd standing
at a football stadium. No one
can see any better than when
everyone is sitting down but no one is willing to be the
first to sit down."
Specifically, Carter set a
voluntary standard of 7
percent f0r wage increases
dw-ing the coming year in
private business and state
and local governments . It

OJamber endorses levy

-------------~-----------.
CHESTER M. WEAVER
Chester M. Weaver, llli,
New Haven, died Monday
morning in Plea!IBnl Valley
Hospital.
He was born July 16, 1913 In
New Haven to the late Jasper
Decatur and Georgia Morris
Weaver.
He was a family historian
compiling a hist0ry of his own
family and assisting in
compiluig the Roush and
Allied Families History. His
great - grandfather, Nicholas
Weaver, was one of the first
settlers in the Ohio Valley.
He also was a member of
the Mason County Farm
Musewn and the New Haven
United Methodist Church. A
machinist, he was employed
at the Marietta Manufacturing Company, .Philip
Sporn and Kyger Creek
power plants. He was retired
from the Kaiser Aluminum

By lX&gt;NALD H. MAY
Beyond that, the president president's speech.
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
proposed to trim federal
Administration economists
President Carter wants spending, cut federal hiring, said the goal is to hold
"every business, every union , eliminate "needless " regula- inflation to between 6 and 6.5
every professional group, lions, encourage increased percent in the coming year.
every individual" in the competition and oppose That is its average lor the last
riatlon to join a new campaign fW'Iher income tWI cuts untO decade, but below its recent,
against Inflation.
· iltflation is reduced.
, eight-month spurt to a
In a televised address · He called the package cw-rent aiUlual rate of 8
Tuesday nl~ht, he urged "tough " an~!ai~d-J)ercent.
workers to limit th~ wage promised no " quick or
The president gave the
demands to 7 percent , ' dramatic" results.
public a quick economics
proposing a new kind of
But traders on the Tokyo lesson.
· "insw-ance" against rising money market didn~ agree.
" Most companies raise
prices if they do.
The dollar plunged to a new their prices because they
He called on business to low of 180.75 yen in heavy expect costs,to rise," he said.
hold price increases at least selling of the U.S. cw-rency at . "Unions call for large wag~
0.5 percent below the amount · the co nclu sion of the settlements because they
of increase in 1976-77.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 25. 1978

The 30-inch thick gas line,
which was located near one
comer of the trailer park,
apparently was owned by
United Gas Pipe Line Co .
"At this particular time, I
don't know what cauae it.! do
not have the information in
yet as to the extent of '
damages,
injuries
or
anything of this type ," said
Pat Burnett, vice president Of ~
the Houston-based ~.
"It'sa main line. We call it ·
·the south loop."

! Area Deaths

-

'

three mishaps

...~~

Mrs. Smith represents Meigs
-

Parade plans outlined here

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