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12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Oct. 25, 1978

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R. CRAIG MATHEWS,

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A nnounces th e opening of his

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office for the practice of

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general dentistry.

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D.D.S.

I 205 North Second Street
1
1 Middleport, Ohio 45760

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! Office hours
Telephone l
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Charges taxpayers' dollars support efforts
State Auditor Thomas E. petition drive effort were
Ferguson said Monday Ohio planned and complet ed,
taxpayers' dollars supported Ferguson said. The affidavits
·lhe Rhodes Administration 's comprise bulk of the Ill page
reelection petition drive Specia l Report .
Two em ployees sub·
efforts by Ohio Department
of Transportation workers in poenaed by Ferguson's
the northea stern part of the examiners refused to sign
.their statements on advice of
state.
The Auditor's statement their legal counsel.
said
hi s
came with the making public . F:erguson
Monday of a Special Report examiners began an inquiry
of Ohio Depa rtment of Trans- after an Akron citizen 's
por tation Division No . 3 written complaint to the Ohio
personnel, Ashland County Attorney General was forwarded to the Auditor for
offices.
Besides Ashland County, investigation of misuse of
Division No . 3 involves: •tate tax dollars.
The female complainant,
Lorain , Medina, Richland,
Erie, Huron , Wayne, and Citing "an extremely credible
source," contended that state
Crawford County.
Sworn affi dav its taken Highway District 3 Deputy
from highway department Director Harold Reeder, " in
workers by Ferguson' s charge of District 3 ... held a
examin ers explain how re-election meeting (on Feb.
mechanics of the reelection 23, 1978) for Governor Rhodes

.......... -.-- ·---

during reg ular business minlstrative Assistants were
hours at the District 3 on vacation during the " two
headquarters in Ashland," pay periods in question ."
Examiners said a planning
involving " at least nine men"
for the reelection
meeting
superintendents
or
petition
drive
was held in
assistants from each of eight
of
Ashland
Department
counties in District 3.
Transportation
offices
on
According to the complainant, " during
the February 23, 1978, during
meeting, the superintendents regular business hours.
Additionally, question is
wer.e directed that each
would receive a petition for presented in the report as to
Governor Rhodes' re-election whether or not Governor
to be circulated in their James A. Rhodes was even in
respective counties. Upon the state the day the petitions
completion , the petitions were allegedly signed on
1978 and
should be returned to the March 10,
Administrative Assistant , Declaration nf rfl nrlict nry
who, in turn, would forward
them to Columbus."
Petitions to permit Gov .
James A. Rhodes to run for
re-election were picked up in
Co lumbus by highway
CHARLESTON, W. Va.
department Administrative
(UP!)
- The West Virginia
Assistants from divisional
Department
o( Highways
offices around the slate,
know
until
at least
won't
according to the Special
J
anuary
what
caused
108
Report.
defects
on
the
steel
skin
of
the
Ohio Department of Trans·
portation Deputy Director Silver Memorial Bridge at
Andrews allegedly admitted Point Pleasant.
It's been more than a year
handing out petitions to the
since
the bridge between
Administrative Assistant.
Point
Pleasant
and Kanauga,
Andrews would not sign his
Ohio,
near
GaUipolis,
was
statement.
Andrews, however, told closed three months because
Ferguson's examiners that of cracks in the steel.
The bridge, opened Dec. 15,
petitions were not picked up
1969,
replacing the Silver
by state employees in their
Bridge,
which collapsed into
state cars on state time.
Ohio
River at Point
the
Rather , Andrews said, the
Pleasant
Dec.
15, 1967, killing
highway workers were on
non-pay status when petitions
were picked up.
Examination of state
payroll ~ecords , examiners
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) said, failed to show that any
County Prosecutor
Athens
of the divisional AdDavid Frey has asked for
help from the state auditor's
office in connection with his
investigation of alleged
irregularities in Sheriff Gary
Efaw's 'office.
"We have requested there
be a special audit of the
sheriff's office since the time
of the last regular audit,"
Frey said.
The prosecutor said he
wants a state examiner to
check areas including the
sheriff 's Furtherance of
Justice Fund, compensatory
time paid to a sheriff's deputy
and the inventory and
disposal of property held in

in a state car, too ," he said.
ail of that day ."
Copies of some petitions
Department of Trans·
ci rculated in Highway
Division 3 show the first portation Division 3 Ad·
signatures were obtained on ministrative Assistant
Robert
Snyder
told
M~rc h 13, 1978, the Monday
following the Friday filing of examiners, "I would &amp;l~Sume
an envelope that I gave to the
candidacy papers.
Stated in one of the signed Wayne County Super in· .
affidavits is that a state car tendent while he was in
District Office on other
was used.
"Oh, when I picked up the business, was taken back to
petitions," . the highway the Wayne County ODOT
worker swears , "I came over Garage in a state car he was
to the Ashland offices on probably driving."
Snyder's wife, Norma L.
other business and I just
carried them back with me at Snyder signed as circulator
the same time . That was done as one of the Ashland County

made with the Secretary of
State's office in Colllmbus.
Ferguson's examiners said
that on March 10 , th e
Governor "flew from Ohio
State University's Don Scott
Field to New York City. The
Governor departed the Don
Scott Field at 8:45 a.m. and
arrived back at the Franklin
County airfield at 7:05 p.m."
"Thus, there is question,"
examiners said, " whether the
Declaration of Candidacy
form could have been signed,
printed, and distributed on
March 10. 1978. since the
Governor was out of the state

Bridge defects still mystery
One defect was found in the
parent metal . itself, the
commissioner said.
Miller estimated repairs to
the _span would total $750,000.
West Virginia and the
federal government will
share the cost of the work on
a 30-70 matching basis, acco rding to _ Patrick M.
Gallaghe r , highways
department spokesman.
The department originally
contracted Battelle Memorial
Institute of Colwnbus, Ohio,
for $50,000 to determine what
caused the cracks.
Battelle did a little work
but was unable to complete
the project, according to
Gallagher .
"So we had to hire a second
consultant and he put us a
couple of months back, "
Gallagher said. ·~The con-

46 people.
West Virginia closed the
replacement span from July 6
to Oct. 19 in 1977 for repair
work.
The same type of steel or
welds used on the Point
Pleasant span have been used
on 13 other bridges in West
Virginia .
Department of Highways
Commissioner Charl.es L.
Miller said 36 of the defects
found on the bridge were
serious enough to warrant
repair work. By defect,. he
said he meant an item which,
if found in the shop, would be
gouged out and rewelded.

Prosecutor seeks .help

COMING, NOVEMBER 11th

1 DAY ONLY

RUTLAND FURNITURE IS REPEATING
THEIR 1 DAY STOREWIDE SALE
FE.ATURING 11 HOOVER.,

A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE
IN OUR STORE ALL DAY NOVEMBER 11th
TO DEMONSTRATE THE BEST HOOVER
COMPANY HAS EVER MADE.

The
Ultimate .

Ctll'tCEI?T
CJf'tEna

Cleaning

the stolen property and
evidence room.
· Frey also wants to know
whether any part·ime
deputies were paid for full·
time work. "Based on the
information we have received
in our investigation, it
became quite apparent to me
there
were
certain
.discrepancies in these particular
area s
which
warranted an audit finding as
soon as possible," Frey said.
The prosecutor said he also
will get help from agents
from the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation, who
will · look into 'firearms
dealings and possibly wire
taps.

Mayor's Court

Mrs. Michelle Manning,
REBA N. SCHWARTZ
Reba Nona Schwartz, 81, Evarts, Ky .; three sisters,
Myrtle Cheorch,
Mason, was pronounced dead Mrs.
on arrival Tuesday at Charleston; Mrs. F: A. Scites,
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She Cheylan, W. Va., and Mrs.
was born Nov. 6, 1960, Cabin Adam Johnson, Sissonville;
Creek, W. Va. to the late nine grandchildren.
Beauford and Lillian McLast rites will be held
Daniel. She was employed at Thursday I :30 p.m. in the
lakin State Hospital for 18 Foeelsong Funeral Home
years as nUrses aid super· with the Rev. Frank Lowther
officiating . Burial will be in
visor.
Survivors include three Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the
daughters, Mrs. Carole Sue
.Dailey, 1 Portland, 0 .; Mrs. funeral home from 7to 9 p.m.
. Judy Murphy, Letart; and today .

HOSPITAL NEWS

System

Veterans Mem,orial Hospital
Admitted - Emily Kuhn,
Vinton ; Sandra Ohlinger,
Middleport;
Edward
LeMaster, Pomer oy; Bertha
Rile, Middleport ; Gale
Rhodes,
Middleport;
Deedrah Sanders, Reedsville.
Discharged
Deett
Mallory, Marie Custer.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Dis c harged: Sharon
Jessee, Pomeroy; Albert
Boyles, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Richard Wallace, Point
Pleasant ; Don Oldak er,
Leon ; Mrs. Jesse Dohahue,

sultant's report is not done
and may be done by the first
of the year."
The second consuilants are
Dr. Carl FranL of the
University of Texas and Dr.
Bruce Ctirist of the National
Bureau of Standards.
The highways department
signed a $33,000 contract wdh
the Univesity of Texas for
Frank's services, and the
state signed a $40,000 contract with the Federal High· · way Administration for
Christ's services.
Joseph Speed Jones, former Department of Highways commissioner,
speculated at one time that
extreme cold may have led to
the cracks.
However, Jones told a
legislative committee in
September 1977 he did not
think the two contracting
firms on the bridge - Allied
Steel Co. and Harris Steel Co.
- could be held accountable
Five defendants were fined for the faults because they
and five oth ers forfeited u.Sed · what had been proper
bonds in the court of Mid- specifications for the welds.
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday nlghi.
Fined on four charges was
CLOSED NOV. 10
Paul D. Mitchell, 23, LangsAll
offices of the Ohio
ville, and the fines included
Bureau
of Employment
$100 and costs, issuing
Services
(OBES) will be
menacing threats; $100 and
on
Friday,
Nov . 10, in
closed
costs, criminal mischief; $50
observance
of
Veterans
Day,
and
costs,
criminal
Administrator
Albert
G.
trespassing, and $50 and
Giles
has
announced.
costs, disorderly manner.
When a legal holiday fails
Others lined were Barbara L.
on
Saturday, such as
Roush , Hartford, W. Va., $18
Veterans
Day this year, it is
and costs, speeding, 43 miles
observed
on the preceding
in a 25 mile zone; Diana L.
Friday.
OBES
managers
)3arber, 18, Reedsville, $10
have
been
instructed
to post
and costs, running a stop
appropriate
notices,
sign; Tony Manley, 23 ,
Middleport, $50 ,and costs, no reschedule claimants and
operator 's license ; 1\andail make other necessary ad·
W. Roach, 18, Pomeroy, $16 justments in office operations
and costs, 41 miles an hour in as required.
a 25 mile zone.
Forfeiting bonds were
Joseph L. Neal, Jr., 39, West
SEEK INJUNCTION
Columbia, $350, posted on a
A temporary injunction has
charge of driving while in·
toxicated; John C. Sheldon, been filed in ·Meigs County
no age or address recorded, common pleas court by Burl
$40, di sorderly manner ; L. Putnam and Bonnie S.
Lawhana Goodnight, 21, Putnam, Reedsville, against
Letart , W. Va., $25, running a Ivan Chevalier and Lydie
stop sign; T. J . Thomas, 19, Chevalier, Rt. I, Reedsville.
The plaintiffs charge that
Middlepolj.,&lt;$45 speeding, 58
the
defendants are blocking
miles in a"25 mile zone and J.
an
access
road to and on the
M. Bradbury, 40, Cheshire,
Putnam
property by in$27, 40 miles in a 25 mile zone.
tentionally depositing trash
Fined ·in the co urt of and debris.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday riight were
Clarence McDaniel ,
GOPRALLYSET
Rutland,. $200 and costs, on a
Meigs County Republicans
petty theft charge, and David will rally at 6:30 p.m.
Huston, Syracuse, $30 and Saturday at the County Highcosts, assured clear distance. way Garage on the Rock
Six defendants foneiting Springs FairgroWlds.
bonds in cluded Donna
There wlll be a buffet
Misner, Cheshire, $30, posted. supper at 6:30 followed by a
on a left of center charge; discussion of issues by local,
Mark Michael, Pomeroy, $26, district and state Republican
speeding; Barbara King, candidates.
Middleport, $25, speeding;
Dennis Butcher, Pomeroy,
$30, no motorcycle endorsement ; Thomas Walters,
Middleport, speeding, $25 and
Doris Holley , Minersville,
$200, petty theft.

Point Pleasant ; Susie Taylor,
Point Pleasant; Kathryn
O'Shay, Middleport ; Mrs .
Homer Hill, Mason; Mrs.
James
Sayre ,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Anne Byus,
Letart ; Thomas Craig,
Huntington ; Mrs. Earl
Chapman, Lesage; beulah
Oliver, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
James Burdette, Point
Pleasant ; Noah Sheets,
Crown City; 1\oger Byer,
Point Pleasant; Emogene
Moore, Henderson; Mrs.
Dennis Goddard, Buffalo.
Births : A daughter to Mr.
and Mrs . James Green,
Gallipolis; a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Yost, Rutland.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, October 26, 1978

petitions, examiners said.
Snyder Ferguson alleges
sii!Ded his wife's petition.

•

at

DRAFT APPROVED
JERUSALEM (UP!) The cablllel today over. wbelmlqly approved lbe "
U. S. draft peace treaty between Egypt and IJrael.
But tbe national radio said
Ute cabiDet made some
changes In the document.

By JAMES HILDRETH
WASffiNGTON ( UP9 - The White House is orchestrating
an intense public relations blitz wtUt just one goal - getting
Pre$dent Carter 's new a!lti-inflalion campaign off the ground.
The effort has several mgredients : an impor tant new face to
run the show, name-&lt;:alling aimed at skeptics Stern warnings
that total_cooperation is essential, and timely announcements
that busmessmen, l;"lliticians and a majority of average
Amencans are rallymg behind the effort.
. But the pr~gram, announced by Carter Tuesday night , did
little to instill confidence in overseas monetary exchange
markets or on Wall Street.
The value of the dollar plunged to record lows against
several foreign currencies Wednesday and the stock market,

.·

(Continued from page 1) .
Sunday, Dec. 3 at 2 p.m. and :
the annual "Gold Star" Christmas promotion will be .:
held again this year.
.
Anderson also said mer- ;
chants will participate and ··;
prizes will be awarded each :
day uritu Christmas, possibly .•
two or three a day.
:
As in the past, persons can :
participate in the Gold Star
program with no purchase ·
necessary.
Anderson also staled a new
Santa ,Claus suit is needed. It
would cost approximately :
$200. He also announced that •
Christmas lights will be ·
turned on Friday, Nov. 24, Ute :
day after Thanksgiving.
Fred Crow reported Gen.
Abram of the Ohio National ·
Guard will be guest speaker ·
on Nov . 15. He also reported :
he is ·in touch with the
professor of the art depart· .
ment at OU regarding ·
members of his class possibly :
designing and bulldlhg a
large frog to be placed on top
of a stack at Kerrs Run.
Dave Jenkins, president of
the Jaycees, reported the
"haunted house" project . in
the old senior high building ia .
doing well . The haunted
house .will rtm through Oct. ·
31. Powell's Super Valu party
will be held at the haunted
house on the last night.
Attending were Simon,
Layh, Emmogene Holstein,
secretary, Bill ·Mayer, Bill
Grueser, Jim Frecker, An·
derson , Jenkins, Hank
Cleland, Joe Young,. Pat
O'Brien, Bill Quickel, Kyle
Allen, Stan Houdashelt, Fred
Crow, Thereon Johnson,
Virgil Teaford, and · N. W.
Compton.

Man given
·probation
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Judge John C.
Bacon has placed a Mid·
. dleport man on probation
when he appeared on felony
charges.
Dennis Michael Smith, 21 ,
was placed on two years
probation. He and Jar,,es
McCloud, 19,
were arrested by
Police on charges of
and entering Martin's . An·
tique Shop and a Fifth
Avenue residence.
Both entered guilty pleas.
McCloud was released on
$5,000 bond pending ¥ presentencing investigation.

PREPARE MEALS WITH
PUSHBUTTON EASE

ACE HARDWARE

" " " en t i n e
"We either demonstrate that we are an American people, or
thai we are just 200miUion pecple at war with one another," he
said.
Top administration officials also spoke out, hoping to defuse
widespread criticism of the program.
White House Budget Director James Mclntrye told a luncheon gathering he was mystified thai some people apparently
were not willing to give the president a chance.
" I cannot understand why .some persons voiced skepticism
and disapproval of the president's program even before he
described it to the nation, " Mcintyre said.
"The president 's program can work . It will work if we think
of our common good."

after attempting an afternoon rally, ended lower in fairly
active trading.
.
Allred Kahn, a 61-year-old economist who has headed the
Civil Aeronautics Board for the past 16 months , was introduced
as Carter's hand-picked choice to run the new program.
He will succeed Robert Strauss, who wanted to give up the
job in order to concentrate on trade matters.
The blunt-5poken Kahn, who dragged his feet before accepting the jobWJtil guaranteed he would have a free hand, wasted
tittle time in taking over.
After being introduced by Carter as "my new partner in
controlling inflation in this country," Kahn la id it squarely on
the line that cooperation is essential.

-.

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Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2H , No. 136

Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal promised the new
program would not be "a ooe-&lt;lhot affair, that the "spirit of
austerity will continue indefinitely until ... inflation Is licked ."
The White House, meanwhile , released a long list of business
leaders, mayors, governors, and minority groups thai have
already lined up behind Carter's plan, and set up a series of
forums across the country to promote lbe program and answer
questions about it.
Carter's aides said the White House had logged 1,300 telephone ca!)s by early afternoon , with "over 60 percent" in
support of tile program.
,
Officials said oppooents mostly preferred mandatory wagepn ce controls over Carter's voluntary program or didn 't want
any type of standards.

Logan strike continues

Otamher

ELDS .

'

Aides plan intensive public relation blitz

HALLOWEEN PARTY
Bradbury Conununity
Hailoweey party will be held
Thursday at the Bradh\U'Y
Church of Christ. There will
be costume. prizes at tlie
party which will be from 71o 9
p.m . Youth of the church Is
sponsoring the event.
A

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United Press International
· Striking teacher s in
Painesville Township
continued picketing schools
despite an order bv lake

County Common Pleas Court other school districts.
Parks issued the back-toJudge John H. Parks to
return to their classrooms. work order Wednesday and
Strikes also continued in two said "good faith" bargaining
must reswne .
Walkouts also continued
today
in Logan and at the
0
0
Lorain
County
Joint
Vocational School District,
whe'i." teachers struck ·
Mondayinacontractdispute .
Steve Burge ss of the
Painesville Town s hip
Education Association said it
was three to four inches from would be up to each teacher
the victim ," Butts said.
to decide whether to obey the
The prosecution maintains back-to-work order. Only 16
that Hili and another man hid of 40 buses were also reported
while a female friend stood rolling.
by her car to make passersby
Meanwhile, negotiators for
stop. 1\omine was traveling the strikers and the school
with two companions to Na gs board have been o(!!ered by
Head.
the judge to hold negotiations
The other two men, who daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
were locked in the trunk of until a contract is reached.
their car, were not injured
Pa rks enjoined PTEA
although shots were fired into members from striking and
the trunk .
withholding their services
Wake County Deputy P. J. and said that negotiations
Bissette linked items and should be held before a
money allegedly taken from federal mediator.
1\omine and h;s companions
The back-to-work order
to Hill. Bissette said deputies was issued, Parks said , at the
. searching Hill's mobile home request of the schoo l board
·-round Romine's watch.
because the strike - in its
He said $200 worth of fifth week - is causing
travelers checks bearing the irreparable harm .
signature
of
Richard
The teachers struck Sept.
Pickens, one of Romine's 27 over wages and other
companions, was found at the issues.
house of Mike Reyes Llamas,
Both sides have agreed on a
anoth er defenda nt in the new starting salary of $10,500,
case.

Test-. .....,.ony CODtffimng
. Romm'e m· urder CaSe
m
0

.I..AAA

TAKES FIRST PLACE - Wahama high school's
newly formed flag corps won first place last Saturday in
the Tri State Marching Band Festival. This Is the first
year for the flag and rifle corps and the second first iliac•

.D

.Th,

Wo~ld Today

RQOkie policeman killed ·
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A 23-year-old policeman who was
with the suburban Delhi Township police force less than three
months was killed in an automobile accident while responding
to a call Wednesday afternoon . Township police said they are
investigating the death of John Bechtol, of Delhi Township,
killed while he and another unit were responding to a call.

Fire damages hospital ward
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)-A fire apparently set by a patient
damaged a room in the Psychiatric Ward on the fifth floor at
St. Thomas Hospital Wednesday night , according to hospital
officials. Hospital officials said nine employees were treated
for smoke inhalation and 35 patients were evacuated but some
IIIler moved baCk into their rooms On the same floor.

Youth blows off fingertips
NEW YORK (UP!) - A IS-year-old high school student
blew off his fingertips in an' explosion Wednesday night that he
apparently touched off while playing with a chemistry set in
his parents' exclusive Manhattan apartment , police said.
Nichols Karp was taken from his home to Lenox Hill Hospital.
Hospital officials would not release details of his coodition
because his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Karp, were out of
town .

Metal failure main cause

won by the rifles. They also won the "best rifle" trophy
two weeks ago at the Wheeling Calvalcade of Bands.
Charles Yeago's band took first place in the fe stival in the
1
Class C competit' on .

WARNING ISSUED
· Acts . of vandnUsm In
Middleport had better
come to a screeching halt,
Middleport Police Chief J.
J. Cremeans warned
today.
Egg throwing Is a
popular act of vandalism.
Vandals have thrown eggs
at homes and cars, the
chief said. He warned that
some of the offenders are
known at this point and that
parents are being held
responsible a S far as
payment for repainting
homes and cars is concerned.
. Parents will be held
responsible for payment of
damages in all such cases
and juveniles wlli be taken
Into the juvenlle court, the
chief stated.
::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::;::

Hoffman
named
director

HOUSTON (UP!) - Initfal investigation of a natural gas
pipeline that ruptured and exploded - killing six pecp!e indicates "metal failure" rather lban maintenance or
operation problems was responsible for the blast. Philip A.
Lauren Hoffman, langsHogue of the National Transportation Safety Board · ville, has been · appointed
Wedne$y said the remnants of the :!().inch pipeline had been director for the housing
taken to a United Texas Transmission facility at Deer Park, rehabilitation program in
where effocts were tu1der way-to clean it 'sufficiently for close Meigs County. The ap·
inspection.
pointment was made at
Tuesday's regular meet ing of
Meigs
County
Commissioners.
It
followed
a
brief
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Police have filed armed robbery
charges against a man who claimed he ro~bed a grocery store discussion.
In other action , Norman
to pay for his grandfather 's funeral. Pobce Wednesday sa1d
Larry Martin, Tl, told them he robbed the store of $626 Tuesday Humphrey, Jr., met with
commissioners regarding the
beca~ he needed mooey for the funeral .
sanitary landfill. Hum·
phrey's concern was that if
the
landfill should be closed,
NEW YORK (UP!)- Eastern Airlines was negligent and
he
would
want the property
liable for the 1975 crash of a Boeing 7TI at Kennedy Airport that
in
a
good
condition, as he
left
killed 113 people, aU. S: District Court jury ruled Wednesday.
had
been
assured
of at the
The plaintiffs contended during the five-weektrial in Brooklyn
time
the
property
was
leased
that the Eastern pilot had been aware of " wind sheer" and
to
the
county.
.
weather problems and should not have attempted to land.
Commissioners agreed that
the area would be reclaimed
in accordance with EPA
MEfllOURNE, Australia (UP!) -: The ground, air and regulations of the landfill is
sea .search for a pilot who vanished after radioing his small closed.
Atte ~di ng were Henry
plane was being pursued by an unidentified flying object has
been called off by authorities. A Federal Transport Depart- Wells , Richard Jones and Jim
ment spokesman said eight civil aircraft and an air force Roush, commissioners and
reconnaissance plane bad searched 1,000 square miles of ocean Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
without success for Frederick V alentich, 20, and his Cessna
182. It will now be up to ships and planes crossing Bass Strait
between Victoria and \he island of Tasmania to spot the
wreckage, if it exists.

·Funeral expenses motive

Shooting
suspect
booked
The Mason County Sheriff 's
Department has arrested a
suspect in connection with a
shooting which occurred near
Mason Tuesday night but
doesn't seem to be able to
locate the victim.
In custody is Ralph Horace
Gibbs, 52, Letart. Gibbs was
arraigned early today before
Magistrate Miles Epling and
is currently incarcerated in
ihe Mason County jail in lieu
of $5,()(){) bond.
The shooting is reported to
have .occurred at 10:39 p. m.
at a residence in the Billie
J ean's Beauty Shop just
outside the Mason cor·
poration limits on property
owned by Ray Dawson.
The victim was identified
as Charles Samuel Lehtio, 41 ,
Pomeroy. Lehtio apparently
was wounded in the right hip
area but told deputies at the
scene that he would seek
t r eatment on his own :
however, a check of area
hospita ls showed no reco rd of
him bei ng treated.
The original report of the
shooting incident was phoned
to the Mason Police dispat·
(Continued on page 10)

1\ALEIGH, N. C. (UP!) The bullet ·that killed a West
Virginia schoolteacher came
from the same gun Bland
Julius Hill Jr. reportedly was
holding at the time of t he
August roadside ambush, a
State Bureau of Investigation
agent says.
Thomas Montgomery also
testified before a Wake
Superior Court jury Tuesday
that a second bullet found
near . the body of J erry
Romine, . 32, of Point
Pleasant, W. Va., came from
the same , type of gun. But
Montgomery said he wasn't
certain it was from the same
gun that killed Romine: ·- ·
Terr y Ann Hamin, 17, of
Wake Forest, testified earlier
in the trial that she saw Hill
shoot and kill Romine after
she flagged down the
schoolteacher and his two
companions and Hill and
Mike Reyes Llamas of Wake
Forest robbed them .
The companions testified
Tuesday that Miss Hamm
was the woman who fla gged
them down along a northern
Wake County road , feigning
cal' trouble.
They also sa ia u1at Hili , 19,
loo ked like one of the two
masked men who then robbed
them and shot Romine.
oth er law enfo rcement
officers described the arrest
of Miss Hanun, Hill and
Llamas and talked about
finding t he partially burnt
belongings of the West
Virginians near wher e
1\omine was killed.
Hill faces a possible death
senten ce if convicted.
Prosecutors have agreed to
reduce charges against Miss
Hamm in exchange for her
testimony. Llamas has
pleaded guilty to murder,
armed rob!:&gt;ery , kidnapping
and conspiracy but hasn't
been sentenced yet.
· Durin g
Wedne sda y's
sess ion, a
pathologist
testified that Romine, who
Bland Julius Hill, Jr., is
accused of murdering, was
killed by a pistol held just
inches fro m his forehead.
Dr. John Butts said Romine
was burne!l by powder from
the shot that killed him .
" In my opinion, the muzzle

Deadline nears
for candidacy
With the deadli ne for
candidate filing less than one
week away, only five in·
c umbenls have filed for
election on the Meigs County
Fair Board.
Petitions of candidacy
must be filed with Mrs.
Muriel Bradford, bo ard
secretary, by 4 p. m. Oct. 30.
Those wishing petitions may
contact Mrs. Bradford at 9853974.
The annual election will be
held from 5 to 9 p. m. on Nov.
6 at the fairboard office,
located on the Rock Springs
FairgroWJds. Board terms
are for three years.
A specia l session is
scheduled in the near future
to outline plans fo r grandstand attractions for the 1979
county fair.
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
the sixth advance distribution
of 1978 state motor vehicle
registration fees totaling
$10,488,818 .64 to Ohio's
co unties , cities, townships
and villages. Meigs County's
port;on was $9,724.77.

up from $9,550, but there is
still disagreement over
working conditions.
Classes are being held, but
only a maximum of about 60
of the 205 teachers have
reported for work in the 4,7()0student system.
Also Wednesday, the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees demanded that
the sta te Depa r t ment of
Education halt payment of all
sfate ftu1ds to the Logan City
School District.
·In a formal complaint, the
OAPSE said the department
should stop payment until the
district complies with state
law regarding pay increases
for
classified
school
employees.
The association charged
that the Logan Board of
Educa tion for the last four
years has refused to meet .the
lega l requireme nts of a
statute that mandates
minimum an nual wage
school
for
increases
employees.
At the same time, the
OAPSE said board members
have refused its offer to enter
into 11 i.nunediate, marathon
public bargaining sessions"
in an attempt to end the nine·
week-old Logan stnke.
The association is an in·
dependent labor organization
representing 120 classified
Logan school employees.

Two injured,
DWI charged
Two persons received in- charges of driving a vehicle
jur ies and anot her was while under the influence of

a rr ested on charges of
drivin g whil e intox icated
(DWI ) following an accident
Wednesday at4 :30 p.m. at the
intersect ion of County 1\oad
28 a nd SR 124.
According to the report of
Sheriff James J . Proffitt,
Hel en E. Bai ley. Rt. l,
Racine , was stopped at the
intersection waiting on traffic
when her vehicle was struck

in the rear by a southbound
car driven by Harry D.
Barton, 40, Rt. l, Racine.
The Bailey vehicle was
knocked onto 124 blocking the
east bound lane.
Two passengers in 't he
Bailey vehicl e, Ven ida
Knight and Linda Watson of
P ortl and were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Racine ER Squad
where they were treated and
released.
Barton was arrested on

alcohol and was lodged in
Meigs County Jail. Barton
had several children in his
ca r. They luckily escaped
injury.
At 8:53 a.m. Wednesday,
Don R. Hill, 41 , Leta rt Falls,
was traveling on Sixth Street
in Racine near Wa gner
Hardw are when he heard
so methin g ratt lin g. Hill
looked down to see what it
was and lost control of his
vehicle which ran off the road
strik ing a nd severi ng a
telephone pole. The driver
was not injured. There was
heavy damage, no citation
was issued.
On SR 143 approximately
three miles nort h of SR 7, a

deer was stru ck but not killed
when it ran into the path of an
auto driven by Cheryl Reuter,
23, Pomeroy. The deer ran
from the scene. There was
slight damage.

COurt rules against airline

MEIGS PlAZA

9-6 MIS 12-6

DON'T MISS THIS ONE DAY

Ground, air· search off

RUTLAND FURNITURE
ARNOLD GRATE
42-2211

Continuous-cleaning - cleans itself while cooking at
normal temperatures. Dual tubular heat elements to
broil, roast, and bake. Color-coded pushbuttons for
bake, broil, and off. Automatic thermostat maintains
a temperature from 200• to 525-0 ./Hinged door with
full view window is removable for easy cleaning.
Chrome tray and baking rack are removable lor easy

'4.99

RUTLAN

0.

~lean;ng .

• Paneling
• Furniture
• Cabinets
for one
qt .' can

Don't Strip. Use Carve'r Tripp.

Weather

,..,

Grain supply largest ever

Housewares Department -1st Floor

Elberfelds In

Showers .ending ton ight ,
lows in th e low 40s.
WASmNGTON (UP!) - The Agriculture Department Decreasin g clo udin ess
says the supply of U. S. feed grainS for 1978-79 Will be the Friday, highs in the upper
Probability
of
largest ever. The projected total supply of 250 milllon metric · 50s.
precipilallon
90
percent
tons ,lncludes carryover stockS from old crops and thla year's
projected record crop of 209 million metric tons, the today, 40 percent tonight and
20 percent Friday .
department said Wednesday.
~

•

.

•l

\.
NEW TECHNIQUE - Gerald Spencer, a student at Meigs High School in the industrial
arts program, iS seen working with the rotational molder used in the field of plastics,
relatively new in the industrial arts department of the schapl.
l(

USING MOLD - Jeff McKnight Is shown working
with a plastic injection mold, Plastics are just one of the
many subjects covered in the industrial arts classes at
Meigs High School.
'

•

y

•

�2- The Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Oct. :W, 1978
'

;.;_,-, IN WASHINGTON

€"trA. t OR1
fWLMf

'"'·"'·" '•

COMM~NTARY

' Martha Angle and
~,Robert Walters

•

--""
-·--

V'o/("1~11 ·~ AR O E. l ( G~

Donald F. Graff

J., .

' "'

CIA's curious 'control'
H) Ma•tha Angle and Robe&lt;t Wallc•s

Another bicentennial?

WASHINGTON t NEA J - The Central Intelligence
IS at tt agam - mvokm g "na ttona1 secu nty " m
a belated effort tU'cover up 1ts wept handlwg of a
sens iti ve matter
The c urrent case mvolves Arkad y Shevchenko, a

By Don G•aff

Agency

Soviet Un1on dtpl omat who until last sprm g was the

United Nct lwm;' undersecretary gene ral for political
and seeurtty affatrs
Shevchenko disappea red f•om the UN last Apnl , then
sut·faced two \\ ee k~ later to apply for asylum In this
country The request was g ranted ~
But 111 ea rly October . a n embarrassed Shevchenk.o
reappeared, m the company of a young woman named
Judy Chavez who cla1med that after she met the Sov1et
defector through her "escort agency" he paid for her
compamonship at a n 1mtial rate of $500 a mght and later
at $5.000 a month
In addition. she cla1med. Shevchenko took her to the
V1rg111 Isla nds on a vacatiOn and boug ht her a $9,000
sports car. The total ta b ca me to $35.000 to $40,000, she
estimated, w1th the money provtded to Shevchenko by
the CIA .
After the story was uncovered by James R. Polk, a
reporter for NBC News and one of Washmgton 's best
tnvestlga tlv e JOUrnahsts, the CIA huffily denied every·
thmg . 'The whole thmg IS the woman's story." said
t~genc.: y spokesman Herbert Hetu "The tmphcat10n IS
fal sely made that the CIA IS paying for a whore."
The CIA then qu1ckly took the offens iv e, suggestmg
that NBC had somehow b&lt;eached security. " Part of h1s
(Shevchenko's ) protection was hts anonymity Obvi·
ously 1t was blown ," said Hctu .
"He was und er cover unhl all th1s happened, " added
the CIA offiCial. ··Now the Sov1ets have got him
ptnpotnted an~. we' ll just have to relocate him "
fhe Soviet defector d1d indeed occupy a Washington
apartment under a fictitious name . But last May he
opened a personal checking acco unt at Washmgton 's
second largest bank under "'A. Shevchenko."
r
As recen tly as last month , Shevchenko was paymg
persona l debts - mcludmg those owed to Miss Chavez
- w1th checks bearmg h1s own name
The choice of locatiOn for Shevchenko"s new home is
equally curwus because th1s ctty ts nvalled only by New
York in terms of the large number of Soviet diplomats,
1ntelh ge nce agents and other USSR off1c1als allowed to
freely roa m the streets.
Shevchenko was a frequent VISitor to Washmgton
nig htclubs and restaumnts, no apparent effort was
rnade to dtsgUise hts personal appearance and before
Ius downtown apartment was &lt;cady for occupancy he
was housed m two of the ctty's busiest hotels .
Pnvately. CIA and FBI officials point accusmg
fi ngers a t each other, cla1mmg that the sloppy security
a rrangements were the responsibility of the other
agency.

P ublicly, the CIA says "we have no control over any
defedor " The selectiOn of Washington, Shevchenko's
name on hts check s and the decision to lead a very
public life all were " his choice," claims an agency
spokesman

But earlier thts year, the congressional committee
mvesttgating the assassinahon of President John F.
Kennedy sought to gam access to Shevchenko to
question htm about Lee Harvey Oswald's hfe in the
Sov1et Union
.
The CIA firmly reJected the .equest, mslsl!ng that
sel'unly precautiOns surroundmg Shevenchenko were
so hght that he couWn 't even be questwned by the
con unittee m a gua•ded meeting closed to the public.
Mtss Chavez ' motives for provtdmg much of the story
to NBC News became apparent when she sur-faced at
the New York press conference less than a week after
Polk 's excl usive report to tout her forthcommg book
about the expertence
Even if the CIA d1dn't pay fo r Miss Chavez' support, a
far more corp.pelhng question remams unanswered: If
She1•chenko's security was so lax that she could turn
htm over to a televLsion network, what would have
prevented her from turmng hlm over to the Soviets?

Peopletalk

" Come on in

Bill Brown seeking third
term as attorney general
(EDITOR'S NOTE : Tbls Is
the seventh of 11 articles on
the contests and Issues facing
Ohio voters In the Nov. 7
election. Today's article Is on
the race for state attorney
gene.al.)
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporte•
ffiLUMBUS (UP!)- This
year's contest for attorney
general-the state's lawyeris a re-rWI of 1974.
Democrat William J .
Brown,
the
two-term
incumbent, is defending
against F.anklin County
Prosecutor George C. Smith,
a Republican whom he
· defeated by 505,000 votes four
years ago .
.
Bmwn, 37, the yoW!gest
attorney general in the
history of Ohio when he was
first elected in 1970, had been
conside•ed a good prospect to
)"\Ill for governoc this year.
But he pulled in his horns at
the tho~W!t that a costly
primary battle mi!Qit ruin his
chances against Republican
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Smith, 43, is attacking
Brown on grounds that he has
failed to go after organized
crime in Ohio, that he is a
"tool" fo• pressure groups

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United P•ess Ioternational
KEEP THE CHANGE : New York Yankees owne• George
Steinb&lt;enne• was so overwhelmed at receiving the keys to the
c1ty Monday f&lt;om Mayor Ed Koch, he gave away his team's
Wodd Senes trophy. The :!-loot tall gold-plated trophy - on
public display m City Hall since last Thursday - was destined
fo• a permanent home at Yankee Stadium, but as Steillbrenner
left Koch's honors ceremony with Most Valuable Player Bucky
Dent a mayoral aide thanked him for letting New Yo•k display
the victory symboL Steinbrenner's unprecedented 3J1SWC&lt; .
"Keep it ." Asked if he meant that, he added, "I think 11 belongs
to the city and to the people. It was a victory foc the city and
the people in it "
ROSE NATIONAL MONUMENT?: Cincinnati Reds superstar Pete Rose is a f•ee agent now, and the home folks ar-e
afraid he might leave town -so they're planning to turn him
into an histodc landmark . Memben of the city's planrung
commission say they'll urge the commission on Friday to
declare Rose "listed p&lt;operty." That would make him one of
Cincmnati's protected landmarks, meaning he couldn't be
" demolished, displaced o• .elocated" w1thout commission
approvaL
NONPARTISAN ISSUE : Vice President Walter Mondale
was in top form m his campaign swing on hehalf of Democratic
candidates m Sioux Falls, S.D., Wednesday - until he spotted
the kid m the Dallas Cowboys T-ahirt. The freckle-faced &amp;year-&lt;Jid boy approached him for , an autograph and was
st•icken mute when Mondale squawked, " What - a Dallas
fan ?" Mondale, who proudly carries the home territocy
ruckname "Mmnesota Fritz," added, "Where I come from
they don't let you in the state unless you're a Vikings fan." But
Mondale remains a politician fi.st and a fan second. The
Cowboy booster got the autograph .
MYOB: Martha Downe&lt; has lived 104 yea.s -and that's
long enough to lose any reticence about putting an upstar-t
repo.te• in his place. When the newsman asked her about her
past at the birthday celebration m a SeatUe nursing home, she
snapped, " You know what it makes me feel like saying? Mind
your own busmess." Then she added, " I don't thlnk about
myself or the past. " She was equally candid when asked to cut
he• bi&lt;thday cake foc assembled guests. Said Mrs . Downer, "!
think I ought to get the wbole thing 1"
QUOTE OF THE DAY : A papal bodyguard in Rome,
commenting on the energetic schedule athletic Pope John Paul
U has adopted, shaking hands, kissing babies, giving speeches
and granting audiences : "I don 't know what it's doing to HIS
Holiness, but the pace is kUling me."
GUMPSF.S: Celebrities arxl fo.rner students turned out en
masse Wednesday night to salute famed acting coach Lee
Strasberg at a "Struttin' at Roseland" masked ball to benefit
Actoc 's Studio- among them, Eli Wallach, Joey AdaiDI, Je-18
Ma.sh Dick cavett and AI Paclno, with girUriend, Marthe
Kellc&lt;' ... Fifty years after the premiere of "Three Penpy
Opera ," Kurt Wle)l's symphonic music rang again through
Avery Fisher Hall in New York Wednesday as the Greenwich
Philharmonia staged a concert debut in honoc of o•iginal
Three Penny star Lotte Lenya, on her 80th birthday ... Ray
Charles will join Dionne Warwick next month to headline t~
Westbury Music Fair in New York ... Rip Tom has been cast m
the •ole of-former President Rlc._rd Nixon foc CBS-TV's fourpart miruseries " Blind Ambition," based on the book by exWhite House counsel John Dean, who's being played by Martin
Sheen ..
I

•

the water ' s fine"

and that he failed to recover
millions of dollars in
misguided state invesbnents.
" George Smith will restore
objectivity, impartiality and
cool-headedness to the

investigate
with
made in a bankrupt nursing only
horne finn a decade ago, and approval of the governo• or
that the attorney general has the Legislature. Smith
filed "frivolous" lawsuits for contends Brown has not even
the publicity, then "settled asked for such approval.
Brown says legislation is
the cases on the defendants'
needed
permitting his office
terms.
!mlth attempted to re-try a to call statewide grand juries
investigate
crimes
to
theft4n-&lt;~ffice case against E.
Eugene Starrett, former crossing coWity lines. Such a
director of the Ohio Bureau of bill has clea•ed the Senate
Criminal identification and but is stalled in the House.
Smith says the answer does
investigation, whom Brown
fired, allegedly foc political not lie m a statewide grand
jury, but with better rapport
reasons.
The case was transferred to with local officials. He says
Madison CoW!ty, whe.e a he has that rapport. "I
judge •efused to he~r already work with these
starrett's change of plea people," he says.
Brown chides Smith on a
from !(no contest" to
shaky
conviction record in his
''mnocent.''
Smith's main complaint role as coWity prosecutor,
about Brown's 5&lt;Mk!mployee particularly in several wellope.ation is that the crime publicized murder cases.
"If there's a better
section has "spent most of its
time fighting with local law attorney gene&lt;al's office in
enforcement agents instead the country, I'd like to know
about it," Brown says it)
of helping them."
· Sinlth faults BroWn for not defense of his own office.
"We are paying foc ourselinvestigating •eports that o•ves,"
he says, 41noting that
ganized crime has made
inroads into the coal and gas his consumer p&lt;otection
fields of eastern Ohio, section haS recovered at least
making loans to marginal $1 million a month for
mme operato•s and hoping to Ohioans and his charitable
capitalize on the demand for t.ust section has freed $300
million in public money
fuel.
· Brown replies that he has whlch had been illegally held.
no autho&lt;ity; that he may

office," he says.
&amp;own is emphasizing his
&lt;eco&lt;d, and claims to be "the
most experienced attorney
general m the history of
Ohio."

He points to leading a drive
to overhaul Ohio's drug laws,
enfo.cing its consumer
protection
laws
and
proposing mandatory p&lt;ison
terms for violent criminals.
Smith, president-elect of
the
Ohio
Prosecuting
Attorneys Association, is in
the middle oi a four -year
term as · coW!ty prosecutor
and is completing eight years
of service.
·
A fonner assistant attorney
general, he charged that
B&lt;own mishandled and
deliberately held- ' up an
investigation into a $12
million dollar real estate
trust
case
involving
securities frauds to shield
political
friends
and
campa1gn contributors.
He also charges that Brown
was neglig~nt in trying to
recover investments the state

State educators complaining
COLUMBUS (UP! I
Educato.s th&lt;oughout Ohio
are
complaining
that
Republican Gov . James A.
Rhodes and hiS Democratic
challenge&lt; , Lt Gov . Richard
F . Celeste, ar-e jeopardizing
passage of desperately
needed local school levies
with
their
campaign
promises, it was .epocted
today.
Scripps-Howard
newspapers said school superintendents and citizens
wocking foc the levies say the
candidates' rheto&lt;ic and
advertising are leaving
voters with entirely the
wrong impression which is
that local school leVIes are
unnecessary because the
solution to the state's school
furxling mess will be swift
after the election.
These leaders say they a.e
facing a tough uphill battle to
convince voters that nothing
could be further from the
truth, the newspapers said.
Nearly 200 school issues
will be on the ballot in two
weeks along with the names
of the candidates fo•
governor and other statewide
offices. In similar elections m
the past, seven in 10 school
issues we.e defeated by the
vote&lt;s.
'
Two of the state's largest
school districts, Cinccnnati
and Cohnnbus are in need of
money but decided not to run
that risk of failure on Nov. 7.
Cleveland school officials,
boweve., are asking voters to
approve a 3. 7 m!ll operating
levy.
A survey by Sr&lt;ippsHoward Newspapers of
school dist.icts with issues on
the
ballot
found
superintendents and citizens
wocking fa. the levies truly
concerned about the chances
of their own success in this
election year. '
"Scbools are being used by
the gubernatorial

candidates ·,"
W1lmmgton

said '

Supedntendent

•

Roge• Bocror. "They are
saying things to make people
believe they have the
solutions, but I don't believe
them. They have put a real
noose around the local school
districts and it's making it
difficult to pass levies."
The campaign discussion
ahout solving the education
funding. mess is having a
decidedly negative impact on
Wellston 's effo•t to win
passage of a levy, said
Superintendent Ralph D.
McCormick. His c•iticisrn of
the candidates is sha&lt;p:
" One's a liar, and the other
one doesn't know what he 's
talking about."
Rhodes has p•om1sed no
new taxes while saying he
will commit $1.1 billion more
to education over the next
fou• years . Celeste has
promised a citizen study
commission
to
make
recommendations on how to
shift the burden of supporting
schools away from the local
property tax to the slate
inc&lt;me tax.
Lakewood Superintendent
Richard A. Boyd said "We
can't wait fo• a state plan.
We'.e trying to get that
across to tne voters."
In canton, Superintendent

Harold Walke&lt; said the campaign talk about education
leaves people believing the
state's solution will be quick
and pamless. "We're trying
to assure our voters It will not
be quick or painless." ·
Walke. said his system
needs money m January and
a new state plan will not even
be m place by that time .
Hamilton County's
Southwest
Local
SUperintendent Paul Kuhn
said he's sorcy tha\ the
candidates are using the
schools as political pawns in
their election games. " Both
candidates are saying things

that just can't happen, and
it's having an adverse effect
on passage of ow- levy," he
said.

CHICAGO
(UP!)
Outfielde. John Scott of the
St.
Louis
Cardinals
o&lt;ganization was traded to
the Chicago White Sox
Monday for relief pitche. Jim
Willoughby.
Willoughty, 29, acquired
from Boston last Ap&lt;il, was 16 with 13 saves arxl a 3.86
ERA With the White Sox in
1978.

Berry's World

TH E DAILY SENTINEL
llEVOTEDTOTHE
INTEREST OF

.

MEIGS-MASON ARF..A

I

ROBERT HOEfi.ICH

'c ny F.dll~1r
PUIJ inoht~l tla t l~ l' X t~ p l S¥turdi1)
I.!} Thl' Oln u Vullt·~ Pubh!illlng

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Ill
('vut1 St., Pnmct oy, Ohh1 ~ :J7fl9
Ausitll'SS Offtn• Phon!! 9!rJ· ;!156
f.tlilj tdal Phone 99'l-:l!S7 ,
St·un ttl tlilss posla~c, purd ut
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A!'isot IHit!l,

1101

, Clt •vd~:~ ud,

Ohro 4olllii
Sull)(r 1'1ptrun t ul c!i Dt: li-.cn&gt;tl l&gt;}

\\ here uva tlublt 7~l t'lll ~ ]&gt;t• r
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(S) 1978byNEA lflc

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" Looks like ANOTHER CIA operative took his
'
own life 1 "

1

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• 1

.'

Are we ready for another bicentennial ?
Ready or not, another such is commg up and it is every
bit as momentous as the 1976 event.
That one marked the 200th anniversary of the Decla•at10n of Independence, while come 1987 we will begin
celebrating two centunes of an epochally suc~essful
adventure in self-government under the Constitution of the
United States of Amenca
In these latter days it is generally and perhaps
understandably overlooked that what was begun in 1776
was not brought to a satisfactory conclusion until1787 . The
first event had a monopoly on the color and drama - the
nngmg of bells and ringing defiance of Geo&lt;ge III.
In comparison, the d•afhng of the Constitution, a fourmonth proceeding which 10 of the appointed 65 delegaats
did not even bother to attend, was a dry affair. a tiresome
process of occaswnall y sparited debate but more often selfserv ing trading and compromising. Even in those brave
post-Revolutwnary days, special interests called the plays
1n the political game.
The document 1t produced, however, still ranks as one of
the political marvels of the age. Where the Decla.atlon of
Independence required the cou&lt;age to r1se to the challenge
of the hmes, the Constitution called for vision to p&lt;epare
fo• the challenges of a future that could be but dimly
fores een
And that it did. Brief to the point of be1ng terse, the
original document is unique among most such basic laws of
modern times 111 that it did not attempt to dot ever i and
cross every tin determining the structure and operation of
the government it was establishmg. Its st•ength through
almost two centuries has been not in what It spelled out
specifically, but in the latit11de it has allowed for
mte•pretat10n, for the applicatiOn of basic principles to the
changing needs of changing times .
Cons1de• that it was designed for a government which in
its three branches initially consisted of a few hund•ed
IndiVIduals and today numbers its personnel in the
millions Yet it still functions - not to perfection, perhaps,
but effectively.
Chief Justice Warren Burger, takinf note of both the
occasLOn and the enormous expansion o the governmental
apparatus, is suggestmg that the bicentennia 1observance
take the form of a nationwide discussion of the p&lt;esent and
future roles of the three branches of federal government.
He would extend the proceedings over a three-year
period - appropriate, since the Constitution was submitted to the states in 1787 but •atification was not completed
until 1789 - w1th one yea• devoted to analysis in detail of
each of the branches. The •esult, he enviswns, might be a
sedes of papers "comparable in utility if not in quality
with the Fedemllst Pape.s of 200 years ago."
A poss1bll1ty, pe&lt;haps, but likely to strike today's public
as an even drier affai• than the original constitutional
convention was for the citizenry of that time .
A major observance, however, is certainly in order. And
there is bme to prepare since nothing that occurre.d
between 1776 and 1787 - the squabbling among the literally
sove&lt;eign states, the •ealization that they were not
hanging together and therefore were very likely to hang
separately - is the stuff of national celebration.
Considering whe re it started and where we've come, 1t's
the least we can do.

,.,
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I

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALHDMARK
SERVICE STATION

9a~ck W. Carsey, Mgr.
. . . Phone 992-2181

---

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of the ·Month

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••
••
••

'.••,.'.

QUANTmES LIMITED
Master

MECHANIC."

••
••
••

-'•••

The offense looked unpresslve. It is third in the
league with an average of 271
yards per contest. Athens is
second with 284. Last week
Meigs had their finest night,
369 yards. But the offense
fumbled five IIIDcS and lost
all five, a p&lt;oblem it has
fought all year.
The whole team Is healthy
with just some minor injuries. Van Willford is limping slightly, but Thomas is
almost at full strength and
will see some action either at
quarte•back or on defense at
a deep back.
Richa•d Deem, out for the
last three week&amp;, is coming
back and may see aciwn at a
linebacker post.
Coach John Murray's
Bulldogs had their finest
game last week when they
dumped Gallipolis 41-20.
Athens had 456 total yards.
Split end John Schanzenbach caught si&lt; passes for
143 yards, two touchdowns,
and four extra pomts to lead
the attack.
Tailback Jack Smathers,
who leads the league in
rushing w1th a 144 yards pe.
game, •oiled fo• 2B4 yards in
'!J tries. Athens is quarterbacked by Fred Ross.
Those three guys comprise
most of the Athens offense .
Meigs will have to shut down
all three to stop the Bulldogs.
Friday night in Pome&lt;oY, 1f
you hear a loud crash, a few
grWits, and lots of chee&lt;mR,
you'll know that one of the
biggest games of the year has
begun. Game tune 1s 8 p m.

MODULAR

will result in loss of muscles, ' ' •
weakness and other pro- ·· : :
blems. A successful dietary
program to \ose weight : :
should probably not be con· • •
tinued for more than about : :
six or eight weeks at a time, : ;
after whlch a person should ; :
eat a normal maintenance •' ••
diet for a few weeks to let-· • •
their body adjust for any : :
dietacy deficiencies that may : :
have occurred, then reswne •' •
the diet program.
••
So, the answe• to your ques• • •
lion is to see what's happen- :.:
ing to your body weight while ~
You're dieting and exercising. ".
If you're losing more than •
about a poW!d a week, that's
probably too much. Certainly, if you're tired and weak at ,
the same time it may be too •
much. If you're not losing •
anything, and that persists •
·over a pe&lt;iod of several ,
weeks with your dletacy and •
exercise routine, then you ..
have not restricted your diet •
enough or else you're not do- •
mg enough physical activity.
I'd like to emphasize to all •
my readers not to neglect the
value of physical exercise in
helping to eliminate body fat.
Most people, if they would
just walk a mile and a half a
day and not increase their ;;;
dietacy intake, will lose eight ::;:
to 10 poWlds in a year's time ::
with such a program.
""'

now

:!

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••

-

".

SPRINGFIELD, ill. (UPI) "
- A group of Unlve.sity of .::: '
Illinois athletic backers ':
seeking the dismissal of •.~
Athletic Director Cecil ''
Coleman says fund-raising :"~
will become increasingly dlf- -~
f!cult if Coleman staya on the '::.
job, a spokesman says.
:,:
Key voiW\teer leaders of '~
the Grants in Aid Program, a
group of alumni and ~'!
supporters
who
raiae ~~
scholarship
fun!b
for ..
Wliversity athletes, wUl meet •.•
next Tuesday with Cbancellor ::
William Gerberding to lobby :;;
foc Coleman'• dllmlasal. , ,:;
"The abnposphere Ia BUch • •
that there Is no longer ':::.
cooperation
between ::;:
(financial) supporter• and ·.:
the athletic director," ..
spokesman Howard :O:
HIDDphrey said Wedneoday ·:
night. "Our concern Ia that ..
without a change, fund -;
raising Ia going to llcome ;....
more difficult."
,.

:=

'

six of 12 aerials for 78 yards.
His favorite &lt;eeeivers have
, been Larry Stewart and Bob
Seelig, both among the
leaders of the league, being
second and third, •espeetlvely.
Stewart looks better every
game and last week got two
for 34 yards. John .Stout
caught two passes for 27
yards.
Meigs defense still looks
strong as they gave up just
two fi•st downs in the second
half whlle holding Wave&lt;ly's
powerful .unner, John
Knight, to just ten yuds. The
team is si.'Cond in the league
in defense, giving up an
ave&lt;age of 234 ya•ds a game.
Athens is thii-d, yielding 265.

••
••
••
••

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm 30
years old, 5-feet-2 and we1gh
128 poW!ds. I would like to get
my we1ght down to 128
poW!ds. I work at a factocy
and I do a lot of walking, liftmg heavy boxes and pushing
a broom all day long. Could
you send me a pamphlet on
how much I can eat during
the working day so I can keep
my weight down to 120 poW!ds
and not be so tired?
My mother weighs 146 and
is 5-feet-4. She would like to
get down to 140 poWids and
keep !bat weight. She doesn't
work. She's at home all day.
I'd appreciate any information you can send.
DEAR READER- The&lt;e is
no magic amoW!t of food you
can eat to lose we1ght and not
get tired. You have put your
finger on an unportant pomt.
People wbo diet often feel
tired, particularly if tbey
overdo it and try to lose
weight too fast.
I am sendmg you Thf
Health Lette• number 4-7,
Weight Losmg Diet, that you
asked for . It will provide you
a basic diet plan of between
1200 and 1400 calories that
you can use. Others who want
this issue can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope foc it. Address your request to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
If you do a lot of physical
work, that may not be enough
calones for you as ,your goal
should be to lose weight slowly . Everyone should think of
fat as stored energy just like
the cash balance in your
checkmg account. What you
eat increases your fat
deposits and the work you do
uses up your fat deposits. It's
a straight balance situation.
The only way you can tell
when you're working enough,
or physically exercising
enough, and limiting your
diet sufficiently, is by what
happens to your body fat
stores. That's best judged by
feeling how much fat is under
the skin.
lthlnk il'sa big mislakefor
anyone to tcy to lose much
more than a pound a week on
any do-it-yourself dietacy
p&lt;og&lt;am. Any more than that

SNOW
TIRE SALE

-

the lronmen with ease 2314 on a muddy field.
Both teams are 3-1 inside
the league, just one game
behind the powerf!!l Imnton
team, and both a•e 5·2
ove.all. Both have some
individual league leaders.
The teams are second and
third, alternately in just
about every team category.
Senior tailback Greg
Becker has been leading the
Meigs rushing this season.
Last week he had his finest
night of the season rushing
fo• 151 yards in 22 car&lt;ies
against Waverly. He's fifth in
•ushing in the league with an
89 yard pe&lt; game average.
Last week Becker com·
plemented in the &lt;WIDing
department by Rick Blaettnar who gamed 32 ya&lt;ds,
Je&lt;ry F1elds who got 24, and
Dave Blake gamed 22.
F.eshman qua•terback
Bob Ashley has done just
about everything asked of
him since assuming the
signal calling role when Dan
Thomas got injured. The
lanky six-footer Is the
league's leading passer with
351 yards, completing a fine
30 of 48 attempts.
Last week, he completed

••

••

Don't neglect
. exercise

By Greg BaUey
Second place in the SEOAL
will be at stake Friday night
when the Athens Bulldogs
invade the Meigs Ma•auder
Stadium
in
Pomeroy.
Everything shapes up to"look
like a real battle, at least on
paper.
Tbe two -teams have three
common league opponents
already Wider their belts this
season. They both beat
Wave.ly, Athens downmg the
Tigers 15-8, and Meigs rolling
ove&lt; them last week 17-{1.
Ironton has beaten both
teams, thumping Athens 35-{1,
but having a rough time with
Meigs, 35-20, winning in the
final quarter. Athens got by
Jackson 12-{1. Meigs handed

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

Bulldogs here Friday

Pomeroy Landmark

••
••

HEALTH

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oc'l. 26,1978

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Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7014

Giants' Altobelli chosen
f
Sport Parade ! -! NL manager of the year
Today

....

--·

\
···

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

··.
•'•'

::
···
NEW YORK (UP!)- Ron Guidcy isn't a popoff. His basic
personality is such that he doesn 't makeyour ears tired talking
about himself.
If anything , he often downplays the remarkable year he had
for the Yankees, a year in which he won 25 games and lost only
three during the regular season and then added two moce wins
in the playoffs with the Red Sox and Royals plus anothe. m the
Wodd Sedes with the Dodgers.
Without trying to be urxluly modest about it, Guid•y comes
right out and tells you, yes, he was surprised at his overall
recor~ but, no, not at the way he pitched, and that he could've
easily lost 10 or 12 more games if the club hadn't been hitting
on the occasions he pitched. You don 't find too many p1tche.s
talking that way .
Ron GU!dcy is straight up With everybody because that's the
way he was taught g&lt;owmg up a•ound Lafayette, La. The
Yankees' skinny, 28-year-&lt;Jid left-&lt;lander, who sports a neatly
trimmed black rno\IStache to go with his thick shock of wavy
hair, looks like the guy wbo sings bass in one of those old
barbershop quartetB.
He has an even, easy-going nature and that's why you never
hear of him involved in any kind of controversy although
there's one building up aroW!d him now over which he bas
absolutely no control.
It involves the American League's MVP Awa•d to be
announced in two weeks and already the.e are widely
dive&lt;gent viewpoints over whether Gwdcy was mo•e valuable
to the Yankees than Jim Rice was to the Red Sox and whether
Guidry should qualify foc MVP altogethe• masrnuch as he's a
cmch to wm the Cy YoWJg Award as the league's No. 1 pitcher.
Guidry led the league m ea•ned runs (1.74), winning
pe&lt;centage (.893) and shutouts (9) as well as in VIctories. Rice
had just as supe&lt;lative a year, f!Dishing IU"st m runs batted in
(139),hits(213),bomeruns(46),triples(l5) , totalbases (406)
and slugging percentage ( .600.)
It IS hard to separate Rice and Guidry because it 's a little
like comparmg apples and oranges, but I'm quite sure the
Yankees never would've won without their wiry 160-poWid
cajun fastballer and on that alone, I would call Guidry the
American League's MVP of the year. Mo.e than that, he'd get
my vote fa. the Cy Young Awa•d as weU. Why penalize him
simply because he's a pitcher? Pitchers have been voted MVP
16 times previously , and five of them, Don Newcombe, Sandy
Koufax, Bob Gibson, Denny McLain and Vida Blue, won both
theMVPandCyYoungawardsinthesarneyear.
Everywhe.e he goes these days, Guidcy IS asked how he feels
about the MVP awa&lt;d, and Wednesday wasn't any exceptiOn
when he earned himself a $10,000 check fo• winnmg Seagram's
Playe&lt; of the Year awa&lt;d.
Typically, Guid&lt;y dwelt on Rice first , not himself.
" Jim bas had a great year," said the Yankees' strikeout ace .
' " He has done something no other hitter has done in ages and
, has had a year equal to what I had, only he's a hitter and I'm a
pitcher. lf Jim gets it (the MVP) , I'm not gonna hang my head
down. It •eally doesn't matter that much to me . 1 didn't come
into baseball to get the MVP award. I came into the game
because 1 like to play .
"'The only thing I frown on is that it's called 'The Most
Valuable Player Award' and to me, that makes evecyone on
the team eligible, but some people say pitche.s shouldn't
qualify," Guidry went on . " If you'« gonna label It MVP, then
it's just what it says, the Most Valuable Playe., not the most
valuable batter or pitche.. If it's going to be •est•icted only to
batters, then they should call 11 something like 'The Ty Cobb
Award' or 'The Rod Ca&lt;ew Award.' "
Guidry shied away fmm comparmg his season performance
with Rice 's until he was prodded into doing it. When pushed for
some kind of answer, he hesitated momentarily and then
revealed the way he felt.
" ThiS may sound cocky," he started out slowly, "but I know
whlch one won the battle between us, which was most valuable
in going up against each other. He got two base hits off me this
yea• in 11 '"' 12 limes up."
That was it. Guid•y didn't have to say anymore .

:···
.·.·

Wahama JV's top Meigs, 8.()
Coach
Louis
Hall's
Wahama JV squad beat the
Meigs Marauder JV team 8-0
Monday night in a hard-

SLUG MATCH
Anyone mte.ested m
getting ready fo• the deer gun
season should take note of the
slug matches sponsored by
the Izaak Walton League. The
league is sponsormg slug
matches each Sunday in
November beginning at 1
p.m.
Shotgun slugs will be
available for purchase, and
pnzes will be hams, bacon
and turkeys. Everyone is
welcome, as long as he is a
safe sportsman and not a slob
hunter.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

MASON, ·W. VA. AREA
PHONE

992-2156

THE-DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

hitting contest.
The lone sco.e came on a
pass play f•om quarterback
Shawn Fields to Kevin Jones.
Jones also scored the twopoint conversiOn on another
pass.
The Falcon JV team now
sports a 5·1 .ecord. The
Southern Tornadoes come to
town on Monday evening.
Falcons tummg in a fine
performance were: David
Burton, F1elds, Larry Gibbs,
Peanut Harris, Jones,
Raymond Kimes, Shawn
Paugh , Eddie Roush, Donald
Roush, Jerome Roush, Tim
Roush, Tom Roush, Rick
Staffo_rd, Kendell Weaver and
Mike Weaver.

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Joe
Altobelli, only two year-s out
of the minor leagues, today
was named the Natwnal
League's Manage• of the
Yea• by United Press
Internatwnal for guiding the
San Francisco Giants to their
best finish in seven seasons.
Altobelli , 46 , was a
runaway winner in a
balloting of 30 UP! baseball
correspondents
as
he
outdistanced Chuck Tanner
of the Pittsburgh Pi&lt;ates,
Roger Craig of the San Diego
Padres and Tom Lasorda of
the Los Angeles Dodge.s. The
GianiB' skipper received 14
votes as compared to seven
for Tanner, four foc C&lt;aig and
th•ee for Lasorda .
"I'm tickled pmk to win 1t,"
said Altobelli. "I had an
inkling l'd wm. I thought
Chuck Tanner had a good
chance because he did a great
job with the Pirates ,
especially down the stretch . I
wouldn't have been surprised
if Lasorda (last year's
winner) won , but the Dodge.s
were picked to win our
division anyway ."
Under A It o be Ill 's
leade&lt;ship the G1ants won 89
games and battled the
Dodgers for hrst place m t he
Natwnal League West for
most of the season San
Franc1sco eventually fm1shed
th!fd m the division - s1x
games behind the first place
Dodgers.
"I'm nol really surpnsect at
the way we played," sa1d
AltobellL "I based my opl!mism last spring on that we
were simply bette• than the
75wins we had in '77. We blew
about 30 games m 1977 and I
figured that even 1f we just
reduced that m half, we'd
have 90 wins With 90 wms
you should be a ble to contend
for the title.
"Ou• hittmg failed us down
the stretch, but as long as we
have pitching we'll be m it
ne&gt;&lt;t yea• . We st1ll have to
·shore up our defense and cut
errors down. There's a lot of
hard wo•k ahead because the
top two teams (Los Angeles
and Cincmnatl) are always
tough and Atlanta w~l play
better in '79
" But we've graduated to
the point we can compete
w1th Cincinna t i and Los
Angeles . It'll be no fun bemg
out of it. We won 89 games
last yea• and I'm hopmg for
at least eight or nine more
wms next year. "
Altobelli sa1d his biggest
pmblem next year will be in
finding a starting eight. The
G1ants' pitching 1s strong, but
the club will lose third
baseman Darrell Evans to
free agency and is weak
offensively behind the plate,
at shJ)rtstop and in center
field .
"I'm working toward
establish ing an ever da

eight for us," sa1d Altqbelli
" Right now we're about one
o• two players shoct of that. I
would love to be able to come
to the ballpar-k everyday and
know exactly who's starting .
We need a lefthanded h1ttmg
thU"d baseman w1th powe.
and we have to teach our
young playe&lt;S co ntroll ed
experienc e, being mo.e
selectiVe at the plate."

Altobelli's success has been
&lt;ema&lt;kable in that he spent
, the better part of his mino•
league managenal career
With an American League
affiliate, the Rochester Red
Wings of the International
League . When he carne to the
National League as manage•
of the G1ants in 197The had
virtually no !mowledge of NL
players.

HERE IT IS

Cu1Jass Salon Seda n

1976 CUTLASS SALON
Elect r ic bucket seats, window, tr unk, loc ks,
am -fm tap e, auto . on fl oor. t ilt wheel. air .
gauges. 35.000 miles.

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Located on W. Va. S1de of Pomeroy- Mason
Bndge (304) 773-5777

1969 CHEVELLE V-8 WAGON ..... ,......... 1499
1971 DODGE POLARO V-8 4 DOOR ........ 1769
1972 DODGE MONACO V-8 4 DR ........... ,95
1972 CHEVY BEL AIR V-8 4 DR ............ 1795
1972 FORD 4 DR. V-8, auto., P.S........... '695
1970 NOVA V-8 CPE Automatic ............ 1795
1972 NOVA V-8 CPE Automatic............ '1395
1972 CHEVY KINGSWOOD ST. WAGON. ... 11195
1974 CHEVELLE ST. WAGON V-8 1 auto..... %95
1973 CAPRICE CPE V-81 full equipment. . 11895

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
992 -2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8 : 00p.m.

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CINCINNi\TI (UP!) -The
Cincinnati Reds Wednesday
began their final •oad trip of
1978 ....: to Japan .
Three
top
Reds
management officials,
manager Sparky Anderson
and 22 players, including free
agent Pete Rose, left for the
first tour of Japan by a
baseball team since 1974.
The Reds will play 17
games in 13 cities between
Saturday and Nov. 21. The
first two games are
scheduled fo• Saturday and
Sunday in Tokyo's 50,IJOO.seat
Korakuen Stadium against
the Yomiuri Giants and home
run hitte• Sadaha•u Oh .

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YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY .

BEULAH RF.SULTS
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!)
· - El Rai Zone led from start
to finish Wednesday in
pos ting a seven-length
victory ove&lt; Walking Tall in
the featured $7,500 eighth
allowance race at Beulah
Park .
Lanta Lad showed.

..

...'.
'

EBERSBACH

HARDWARE
Phone 992 -2811
110 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .

l!;:;::::::::::::::::~-----------•

Attendance wa s 3,820 and
$2.80 and $3 .
the handle $477,671.
•

'•

•

�•

•
. 4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Del. 26, 1978

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 26, 1978

Eagles-Pirates battle
Friday for SVAC title
~

Eastern's powerful highflying Eagles travel to North
Gallia Friday night in what
could decide the 1978 Southern Valley Athletic Conference race.
Both Joe Mitchem 's Eagles
and Coach J ohn Blake's
Pirates are unbeaten against
league foes. Overall, Eastern
sports a 6-1 record while
North Gallia is 4-3.
A victory would give the
Eagles a Hl record with just
league opponent Southern left
on their schedule.
North GaUia, if victorious,
could throw the race into its
final two weekends. · The
Pirates round out their
season at Kyger Creek.
If the right combinations
occur, Coach Jim Sprague's
defending champion Bobcats
could still have title hopes.
However, North Gallia would
have to defeat Eastern ;
Kyger Creek would have to
win its two games with Southwestern and North Gallia and

GOOD
GIFT
SELECTION
• Belts
'

~

• Buckles
• Handbags
•Jeans
• Boots
• Boots
• Boots

layaway for Christmas

$an's
Middleport

Eastern would have to lose to
Southern . That's a lot of if's.
Easte rn 's offense ha s
scored 157 points in seven
games, a 22.4 average while
North Gallia's offenile has
produced 152 points in seven
games for a 21.7 ave.
Defensively, the Eagles
have permitted just 29 points, '
a stingy 4.1 average for seven
11ames. The Pirates defense
has allowed 84 points for 12
points per outing.
Last Friday night, Eastern
dumped North Gallia, I!Hl
while North Gallia lost to
Hannan, W. Va. 26-£.
Leading Eastern are senior
tailback Randy Browning
with 28 points in three SV AC
contests, and junior quar-

terback Brian Bissell. Bissell
has 26 points in three league
tilts.
Eastern must stop North
Gallia's main runrting threat,
junior tailback Tim Howell.
The speedy Howell has
scored 22 points against
SV AC opponents.
Other Pirate offensive
threats are Roger Cremeens,
senior running back, and
·Marty Glassburn, offensive
end.
Southwestern travels to
Hannan Trace in the only
other league contest Friday
night while Symmes Valley
visits Kyger Creek and
Southern plays at Miller in
non-league affairs.
Coach Bob Ashley's
Highlanders idle last week,
will attempt to get back on
the winning track against the
winless, but improved
Hannan Trace Wildcats.
Southwestern relies on the
hard-running of Sherman and
Joe Potter and the leadership
and passing provided by
senior quarte rback Gene
Layton.
Coach Larry Cremeens'

REG. '17.00

SALE

$}299
•

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY, 0.

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I
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Il kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Rilfle, R. Ph.
1
Ronald Hanning , R. Ph

r

I
II
I
I

Mon. thru5al. 8:00 a .m. to9p.m.
1·
Sundav 10 :30 to 12 :30 and S to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
'
PH. 992-2955
Friendly. Service
E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Open Nights lill9
1
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___ .....'-" _____ .;_, ,~---· · J
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1

I

Wildcats go into the game
with a G-7-1 record, however,
Hannan Trace has shown
much improvement having
lost to North Gallia, 14~ and
Eastern just last week, 19-IJ.
Jay Bray, junior fullback ,
is seventh in league scoring
with 14 points in three games.
Junior quarterback Archie
Meadows runs the offense.
At Cheshire, Coach Jim
Sprague's Ky ger Creek
Bobcats winners of their last
I wo games, will host the
Symmes Valley Vikings.
Coach Joe Bokovitz's Vikings
have 11 Cooled off" somewhat
following a good start. SVHS,
idle last week, is 2-4 this fall.
Kyger Creek's 21-ll win over
Burch, W. Va. last Friday
night gave the Bobcats a 3-3-1
record.
During the past two weeks,
junior running back Paul
Lasseter has rushed for over
100 yards in each game.
Lasseter ·is third in SVAC
scoring with four touchdowns. His tearrunate, junior
fullback Victor VanSickle is
ninth in scoring with 12
points. VanSickle and

I
.

Tigers eighth zn UPI ratings,
By GENE CADDES
the No. 3 spot with 232 points. appearance .
polled 199 points this week to
UPI Sparta Writer
Wyoming, which won its 170 ftr No. 2 St. Marys
Zanesville alld Cincinnati
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Elder, which tangles with 19th straight game Friday Memorial, 7-ll.
There were no changes Moeller Friday night, hold night with a 14-0 decision over
New Concord John Glenn,
iunong the top teams in this down the fourth and fifth Cincinnati Western Hills, unbeaten in eight games,
week's
United
Press spots again this week in AAA,
moved up from fourth to third
lnternation~tl Ohio High
while unbeaten Newark
with 131, dropping Elyria
School Board of Coaches jumped all the way from
Catholic one notch to fourth.
football ratings.
ninth to sixth.
The rest of tbe AA list
: Cincinnati Princeton in · Rounding out the AAA top
LEBANON RESULTS
consists of Columbus DeSales
Class AAA, CinCinnati ten are Lakewood St. Edward
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) - in fifth, followed by Paulding,
~yomlng lh AA and Newark
in seventh, followed by Reed's Pence grabbed the Loudonville, Ironton ,
Pltholic in A head into the Miami Trace, Hilliard and lead at the top of the stretch Brookfield and St. Clairsville.
home stretch of the season Cleveland St. Joseph . Hilliard Wednesday night and moved Loudonville
and
St .
with unbeaten records and is making its first top ten · out to a one-length victory Clairsville are making their
Sizeable leads.
over Smooth Skipper in the first top ten appearances.
: Princeton, the season~ong
featured eighth race at
Newark Catholic's lead
leader In AAA, puts a 7~
Lebanon
Raceway.
over
runnerup Patrick Henry
TIIISTLEDOWN
record Ill the line against
The
winner,
driven
by
Cliff
ballooned
to 39 points this
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
Middletown Friday night. (UPI)
Albertson
,
covered
the
mile
week,
220-181
, with West
-Jockey Billy Wilson
lbe Vikings hold a 323-260
in
2:
Iii!
2-li
and
returned
$1b,
Jefferson
just
a couple of
guided Hold the Onions to
ID8rgin over runnerup victory
$5.80
and
$5.60.
Smooth
points
behind
in
third at 179.
in Wednesday's feaCincinnati Moeller (6-1) in tured eighth
Skipper
paid
$3.60
and
$3.20
to
Versailles
continued
its
race at Thist0.SS AAA.
place,
while
Champaign
move
upward,
going
from
ledown.
' Masaillon, also 7~. is the
The winner covered the six Miracle came in third and fifth to fourth with 172, while
only other AAA team in furlongs in 1:11 1-6 over a fast kicked back $4.60.
Cory Rawson fell from third
cootention at the moment, the track to pay $10.20, $5.20 and
Tuesday's Sister and Jon to the No. 5 spot.
Tigers again holding down $5. Bill's Kids placed and LaBelle teamed up for a l.a
Rounding out the Class A
mghUy
double
combmatton
top
ten are Covington in sixth,
Manchester Kid showed.
that
was
worth
$12.40.
followed
by Crestline, MeJeannie's Loom and Dee
A
crowd
of
1,131
wagered,
chanicsburg,
Columbus
Frost returned $20.40 on the 2. WS ANGELES (UPI) $114,000.
Ready
and
Woodsfield.
Cal State Fullerton fullback 7daily double, and there were
Obie Graves, who rushed for seven winning tickets on the
291 yards in a 34-9 upset over 6-7-9 grouping of Mike's
Loog Beach State Saturday Diver, Sonic Hope and Missy
night, waa named the Pacific Omission - each worth
Coast Athletic Association $6,960.
Attendance was 3,635 and
Offensive player of the week
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - This ternational Ohio High School
the
handle totaled $421,359. week
Board of Coaches football
Mooday.
'
' s United Press In ·

Lasseter had Bobcat touch·
downs last weekend.
Coach John Dudding's
Southe"l Tornadoes have an
awesome assignment ·at
Miller. Southern has not
scored a point all season
while permitting 178 points ..
Miller, on the other hand, has
a 7-1 record. The Falcons
have scored 181 points while
allowing 92 points, or an
average of 11.5 per outing.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP
Eastern
6 1 0 157 29
North Gallia 4 3 0 152 84
Kyger Creek 3 3 1 75 142
Southwestern 3 4 0 109 117
,sym. Valley 2 4 0 78 193
Southern
. 0 5 1 0 178
Han . Trace o 7 1 51 186
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T P OP
Eastern
3 0 · 0 . 85 0
North Gallia 3 o o 64 13
Kyger Creek 1 1 1 40 60
Soulhwestern I 2 0 41 40
Hannan Trace

.
Southern

Mike Hauber
5-4, 135lbs.
Freshman guard

DaveWoHe
5-11, 110 Jbs.
Freshman tackle

Officials of the Southern Preview. The eoent has been
Valley · Athletic Conference scheduled at Rio Grande
Tuesday night tentatively set College's Paul R. Lyne
Saturday, Nov. 18 as the date Center.
for the annual SVAC Cage
Action be£ins at 6 p.m. with

This week's games :
Friday - Eastern at North
Gallia ; Southwestern at
Hannan Trace ; Symmes

Council wants
llose listed
as property

Valley at Kyger Creek and
Southern at Miller.

Den Talk 1

BY GREG DAlLEY
Bad news to all you game law violators _ especially you
deer killers- good news to hQIIest sportsmen and concerned
citizens - local law enforcement agencies are working
harmoniously to halt a recent upswing of deer poaching,
jacklighting, and other offenses concerning our wildlife and
sportsmen.
For some unknown reason. perhaps a general acceptance
and the unconcern of the public, game law violators are
running rampant in Meigs, Athens, Gallla, and Vinton
Counties. The Division of Wildlife and Ohio sportsmen are very
much concerned and are taking giant steps to Mrrect tbe
problem. The last two weekends have seen a concentration of
wildlife personnel and law officers in these counties cracking
down on violators. Evidence of this crackdown is shown in the
increase of cases brought into court.
Last Wednesday, Meigs County Court Judge Robert Buck
beard the cases of Mike Barker and Dale Queen, both from
Charleston, West Virginia, and showed tbem what be thought
of their actions. Barker and Queen, a former Meigs County
. resident, were charged with attempting to take deer with a gun
at night with a spotlight. Barker is a prominent car salesman
in his hometown.
The Meigs County sheriff'sdepartment responded to a call
from a Rutland area resident of a deer shooting. Wililllfe agent
Jim Spleet joined them at the scene, and the two violators were
arrested on illegal transportation of firearms in a vehicle.
Further investigation of the case saw Sheriff J. J. Proffitt,
Gallia County Ga~e Protector Ken Tomlinson, Meigs County
Game Protector Andy Lyles, and Assistant Prosecutor Carson
Crow assisting in the case. Judge Buck fined Barker $570plus
court costs, suspended all hunting rights in Ohio for three
years~ and Ordered him to forfeit the gun involved in the I
VIolation. Queen was fined $738, Joss of hunting rights for three
years, placed on six months probation, and sentenced to 30
days in jail, suspended. This was Queen's fifth deer violation.
He owed $438 in back fines, and Barker owed $270. The gun
forfeited to the state was a Remington high-powered rifle, and
Barker's car was impounded until complete payment of the
fines .
Judge Buck, all of us sportsmen alld concerned citizens
thank you for your efforts alld genuine concern for our wi.ldlife.
· ~al law enforcement agencies have been working
together quite well. The Division of Wildlife extends its sincere
appreciation to the sheriff's department, Middleport Police,
Prosecutor Crow, Judge Buck, Milton Varian, and other law
·
officers.
Another case that broke !·ust last week involved two fellows
!rom Fairborne, Ohio. Car os Ritchie and Mike Collins were
charged and sentenced for attempting to take a deer at night
from a vehicle with a spotlight alld gun.
· Once again, Judge Buck took a stern position with these
first-time violators. Their car is now impounded pending
payment of their fines, and each man was fined $161 the loss of
their gun, loss of hunting rights for one year, and deer rights
for two years. Other cases are breaking right and left.
The Fairborne case was brought to court through the
cooperation and report of a local landowner. ·The lalldowner
called the sheriff's department, who in turn notified Lyles.
Responding to the call, Lyles found the two men in a pickup
truck With a gun. Through interrogation it was discovered that
the men had shot from tbe vehicle and attempted to take a
deer. Thanks, landowner.
·
The general public can belp by keeping its eyes open and
not being afraid to report any suspicious activities. We can be
assured that any legitimate report will be responded to as
th~re are not only local lawmen helping, but also wildlife
offJcers fr?~ ar~und the state. These other officers are coming
~ at specified tunes, concentrating on certain areas. So you
VIOlators can be assured that sooner or later, you'll pa;r!
Perbaps much of this increase in violations 1s due to
ignorance of some of the penalties. A new law that should be
very effective permits the court to confiscate and keep a
violator'svehicle. That could be rough . Word has it that Meigs
County will see this penahy enacted.
. . ,A first-time o!f~nder can be fined up to $500, sixty days in
]Btl~ three years hcense suspension, forfeiture of gun and
vehi~le . Repeaters may be fined up to $1,000, six months in jail,
hunting rights suspension, and gun and vehicle forfeiture. Lots
of offenders mistakenly believe that if they're not -caught cold
then they're okay. Wrong! Violators can still be held and
eventually tried even if they are not caught at the scene.
One last measure tliat is going to be taken by local
agencies and by me : All of th~ out-of-town violators, a large
segment of our problem, will , be reported to their · local
newspapers. These newspapers will be asked to run an account
of their arrest alld convictions. Imagine being a car salesman
who's also known as a deer poacher!
·Violators take warning - Sheriff Proffitt, his deputies
Judge Buck, Attorney Crow, Andy, Jim, Ken, and all wlldlif~
personnel - go get 'em. We sportsmen are behind you and
·
we'll help.
. W~A Standings

JobuBeaver
5-3, 120 lbs.
FreshmauHB

Freshman tackle

SVAC preview· set, committee

0212653
0 3 0 0 9~

1 .. 0
By Un1ted, Press fnternation~f Indianapol is
Wednesday's Results
W. L. T. Pts .
Quebec 4, Cincinnati 3
New Engiand
5 0 1
11
Cincinnati
W innipeg 7, Bir minQham 2
J J 1
7
Winn i peg
Tod1y's Game
3 2 1
I
Birmingham
New Eng at Quebec
3 3 0
'
Friday's Games
Edmonton
3 3 0
'
Winnipeg at New Eng
Quebec
1 4 I
J

Joe Sayre
6-3, 220 lbs.

2

CINCINNATI (UPI) Pete Rose fans in city
government will go to any
lengths to keep the 37-yearold baseball player from
leaving his hometown. ·
Now, they want to declare
him historic property.
Members of the Cincinnati
Planning Commission plan to
suggest Friday that the commission declare Rose. the
Cincinnati Reds third
baSI!man turned free agent,
as "listed property."
That would make Rose one
of the city's protected.
landmarks, meaning he could
not
be
"demolished,
.displaced or relocated"
without the commission's
approval.
Planning staff members
say Rose qualifies ftr city
protection against removal
as "an object 'of unique and
historic value to the public
and the city·"
The motion, of course will
be tongue in cheek. Or, so
they say.
.
.
.

Reds beiYJ•n
e.,

Japan tour
CINciNNATI (UP!)- The
Cincinnati Reds Wednesday
began their fiqal road trip of
1978-to Japan.
Three
tQ,g..
Reds
management officials,
manager Sparky Anderson
and 22 players, including free
agent Pete Rose, left for the
first tour of Japan by a
baseball team since 1974.
The Reds will play 17
games in 13 cities between
Saturday alld Nov. 21. The
first two games are
scheduled for Saturday , and
Sunday in Tokyo's 50,00G-seat
Korakuen Stadium against
the Yomiuri Giants and home
run hitter Sadaharu Oh.

Sports Transactions
By United Press I nternational
. Wednesday
Baseball
Te)(as - Traded first base ma n Mike .Hargrove, inf ielder
Kurt Bevacqua and minor
~eaoue catcher Bill Fahey to
San Diego for outf ielder Os car
Gl!mble, catcher Dave Roberts
and cesh .
New York Mets Added
pitchers Neil Allen , Michael
Scott and Kim Seaman , second
Ms~man Ke lvin Chapman and
snorts top Mario Ramirez · to
their major league roster and
released outrigh t first baseman
0arshall Bran t, outfielder Ed
C1pot and util ity shortstop
Sergio Ferrer to Tidwater of
the Internat iona l League.
Plttsburg!'l - Larry Sherry
announced his' resi gnation as
pitching coach .

Linebacker
inked
by Bengals
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
winless Cincinnati Bengals
Wednesday lost offensive
tackle Ron Hunt for the
season with ·an ankle injury
and signed former Btiffalo
Bills linebacker Tom Rudd to
take his place on the roster.
Hunt injured the ankle in
practice Tuesday, when he
got tied up with running back
Archie Griffin. He was put on
the injured reserve list.
Rudd, an All-American at
Nebraska , was the fll'st rOtind
draft choire of the Bills in
1975. The 6-foot-2, .223-pound
linebacker was waived by tbe
Bills this season.
"We had regard for him
when he was at Nebraska,"
said Mike Brown, Bengals'
assistant general manager.
"We could never ullderstand
why it didn't go better for him
(at Buffalo) than it did."
Quarterback
Ken
Anderson, who bruised his
right forearm just below the
elbow against Buffalo
Sunday, is expected to start
against HoUston in Riverfront
Siadlum. But four other
Bengals were hobbled: tackle
Rufus Mayes (sprained
ankle), linebacker Jim
LeClair (sore foot), receiver
Isaac Curtis (pulled groin)
and cornerback Scott Perry
(pulled groin).
General Manager Paul
Brown, who saw the Houston
Oilers' nationally televised
win over Pittsburgh Monday,
said of the Bengals' opponent
fo{ Sunday : "There were a
lot of great efforts on there,
people catching passes
upside down, sta,llding on
their heads. That's what it
takes to win - the big play,
the big catch."
WALNU1 CREEK, Calif.
( UPI) - UCLA defensive
tackle Billy Don Jackson ·
today was named Pacific-10
Conference defensive player
of the week.
Jacks&lt;in made six tackles
and one sack, recovered a
fumble and ran 16 yards for a
touchdown with a pass
interception in the Bruins' 450 win over California
Saturday.
Hockey

Washington - Released wing
Dave Forbes and said he will
sign with Cincinnati.
Football
Cincinnati-- Pieced offensive
tackle Ron Hunt on the_ln!ured
reserve list and signed line.
· backer T om R:udd. _
Denver - Signed tight end
Bob . Moore to rep lace the
Injured Ron Egloff.

named ~:~\

''

teh reserves of Kyger Creek Syrrunes Valley has with- · ; ;
and Southwestern meeting. drawn from the league. u · '
Kyger Creek's varsity will was reported Wahama too
meet Southwestern in the would like to join the league.
No action was taken .
first varsity tilt.
Eastern 's reserves will However, a corrunittee was
play the Hannan Trace named to survey school
reserves in the next set of facilities alld make recomCommittee
games. The Eagle-Wildcat . mendations.
members
are
Dr. David .
varsity match follows that
Miller;
.principal
at Kyger•
two quarter affair.
Creek;
John
Boston,
Eastern .
In the night's finale, Southbasketball
roach
and
John ,
ern and North Gallia meet
Blake,
head
football
cOiich
at-after reserve squad,s battle
North
Gallia.
'
for two quarters.
It
was
announced
the
neirt'.
A dele~ation headed bv
Randy Clark, head football league meeting ·will be''·
coach, requested that Han- Tuesday, Nov . 14 for the ·
nan, W. Va. be admitted to purpose of selecting' the all
the SV AC. The league is now SV AC football team.
down to six tea~ since

INTERNATIONAL
HOCKEY LEAGUE ·
United Press lnternatiorial
North
·
W L T Pis GF GA
Kalama.
2 I 0 4 .17 10
pt , Huron
1 2 1 3 IS 24
Saginaw
1 2 0 2 15 18
Flint
1 3 0 2 15 25
Muskegon 0 3 0. 0 3 IS
South ·
W L T Pis GF GA
Ft. Wavne 3 0 0 6 15 5
Toledo
2 0 1 5 14 7
Grand
5 22 11
Rapids
2 1
Milwaukee 1 I 1 3 12 13

Friday's Games

Port Huron at Muskegon

Saginaw at Toledo
Fort Wayne at Mi lwaukee
Kalamazoo at Grand Rapids

9 tJI. NOOI'J

REP~ESENTA TIVES.

STATE - DISTRIC! .. LOCAL
ENTERTAINMENT
SPONSORED BY

MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMIITEE

RIVERSIDE
VW ·· AMC -- JEEP
"The Dealer That Care s
About Quality"

Local owner, six cylinder,

A.C. ,

auto.,

control ,

wheel,

cruise

power windows,

1971 FORD
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a. c., power

51 ,000 miles.

power steering.
"~rice

Reduced"

2 door, dark brown, with .

323
260
3. Massillon Wash . 3 (7.0) 232
4. Zanesville (7-0)
169
5. Cincin . Elder (7-01
141
6. Newark 17-0l
87
7. Lakewood St . Edward (5·
1)

80

8. Miami Trace {7-0 )

79

9. Hilliard (8-0)
68
10. Cleve. 51. Joseph (6-1I 53
Second ten: 11 . Barberton
(1) 49 ; 12. Clavton Northmonl
39 ; 13. Sanduskv 32; t4.

.2995

Canton McKinley 31 i 15, (tie l

Warren We~ tern Reserve and
Center vi lie, 22 each; 17 . Solon

18 ; 18. Youngstown Cardinal
Moonev 16; 19. Groveport -

e SKEET
e HOCKEY
e TARGET

Class AA

Points

9 (8 -0)
199
2. St. Marys Memorial3 (70)
170
J. New Concord
John Glenn 2 lB-O)

t31

4. Elyria Catholic 1 (7 .Q. l) 120
5. Columbus DeSales 1 (7 -

0)

108

6.

· 59

Paulding 2 (8-0)
7. Loudonvi lle 18-0)
B. Ironton (6-0l
9. Brookfield (1-0)
10. St . Clairsvi ll e 2 (8-0l

58
55

35
29

Second ten : 11. E lyria West

Navarre

Fairless

19;

15 .

Perry 18; 16. Waynedale Ill

17 ; 17. Cincinnati McNicholas

14 : 18. (t ie) Elida. Hamilton
Badin

an d

Edgewood, 10 each .

Trenton

Class
Team
Points
1. Newark Catholi c 7 ( B-0)

:no

2. Patrick Henry 6 (8-0) 181
3. Wesl Jefferson 3 (7- 1) 179
4 . Versail les 5 (8-0)
172
5. Cory Rawson 3 (8-0)
156
6. Covm~ton (7-ll
117
1. Crestline 1 (8-0l
75
8. Mechanicsburg 1 18-0) 64
9. Columbus Ready I (6-2) 62
10. Woodsfield 1 (I-ll
so
Second ten: 11 . Middletown
Fe nwick 44: 12. Lorain
ClearView 43; 13. Crooksville
29 ; 14. Fostoria St . Wendelln

It I 26 ; 15. Wesl Libertv
Salem 25 ; 16. Liberly Benlon
24; 17 . Buckeye Nort h 18 ; 18.
(tiel

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An
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SQUASH
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e

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Sleek, tow style of 1a1es 1racers I W1th cams 1 1 " long .

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29•s

Reg.

SAVE

a PRACTICE

Madison 14 ; 20 . Louisville 12.
Team
I. Wyoming

Reg. 399 '

• TENNIS
• SQUASH

and Jackson · Milton , 16

"PETTABLE PORTABLES"
A. Poklngeoe

b~ Rodlo

L~;'

___,

REGAL

Automatl• Iran
vlnyl top. "'

..

_lARGE ~ ~
~NERAL
SELECTION
TIRE SALES
AT REASONABLE
N. Second Ave.
PRICES
Middleport, 0.

TV Scoreboard ® by Radio Shack ®

D. Block

E.
F.

PORSCHE GRAND PRIX RACER

Sheck

1095

12-977
12-971
12-980

'1295
1976 BUICK

whee ls.

OLD MAN WINTER IS
A TIME AWAY

'

The leader inwood heating b 75yean.

60-40 seat, AM-FM stereo,
a.c., cruise control, chr'OITIO

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TY FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT AT 25% SAYINGS
FUN FOR 1·2 PLAYERS
4·1N·l TV GAME

steering,

white lop and tan Interior,

auto., p.s., ~ . c ., wire wheel
covers.

0l

2. Cincin . Moeller (6-1)

B.

.

Automatic, six cylinder,
wire wheel covers, a .c.,

Class AAA ·

Team
Points
1. Cincin. Princeton 28 (7-

A. 12·967

new Jeep Wagooeer tradeln.

'2995
1976 AMC
GREMLIN

WIT.H

BEAT THE CHRISTMAS RUSH
WITH TOY LAY-AWAYS!

,1
",...................~~~!-......................................ea~c~h~...................

1975 DODGE
CRESTWOOD
STATION WAGON
tilt

RICHARD E. JONES - CHAIRMAN
41098 lAUREL CLIFF ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

;

MASON FURNITURE

OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til5 : 00
Thursday Ti I.12 Noon
Friday Until8 P.M.
Herman Grate
Mason. W.Va.
773-5591

FREE BUFFET DINNER.
BEGINNING AT 6:30 P.M.

•

DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO HEAR
A DISCUSSION OF THE ISSUES BY
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES OR THEIR

1974 PLYMOUDf
FURY Ill
4·DR. SEDAN

MASON FURNITURE

MEIGS COUNTY HIGHWAY
GARAGE· MEIGS COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS
~

~~

'----

.1973 CHEVROLET
IMPALA

lRI-STA TE AREA

SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 28th

.

WMPO
SATURDAYS

*4795

IN THE

REPUBLICAN
RALLY

h

'2595

FOR THE BEST DEALS

parenthese ~;

...

SHOP

_

rat ings w ith firs\· Pia ce votes
and won - lost records in

'

·

week 's
Ohio
High·· ·schOol
f',fhlef ic Association computer IZed football ratings , wi th pOin t
totals :
Cl~n AAA .
.
Region 1
1. So lon , 87.00 ; 2 . North
Ridgeville, 85:50 ; 3. Strongsvil le, 82.08 ; 4. Clevelan d St.
Joseph , 71 . 15 ; 5, Willoughby
SOuth , 70.40 ; 6. North Olmsted ,
63.6111 ,' 1. Parma Padua . 63 .33 ; 8.
Warren Western Reserve, 63 .16 ;
9 . M iddleburg Heigh ts M idpark,
61 ;83 ; 10. El yria , 61.60.
Region 2
1. Groveport -Madison, 88 .00 ;
2. Sandusky, 8... 30 ; 3. Hi llia rd .
83.50 ; 4. Upper Arlington , 73 .00 ;
5. (tie l Gallon and To.l edo
Bowsher , 70.00 each ; 7. !tie)
·Gi!lhan f'l" Lincoln and Re ynol dS ·
burg , 67 .00 each : 9. Maumee,
62 .00 ,· 10. Findlay , 59.50.
Region 3
1. Newark, 10.4 .50; 2. 8ar ber ton , 98 .00 ; 3. zanesville, 93.91 ;
A. New Philadelphia , 81 .55 ; 5 . .
Nordoni e, 81 .50 ; 6, Louis v ill e.
79 .00 ; 7. Centon G!enOak, 78 .00 ;
8 . Akron Garfi eld , 16. 12; 9.
Dover . 73 .50 ; 10. Youngstown
Boardm an, 73.00.
Reg ion 4
l . Cincinna t i Pr inceton ,
10111.00 ; 2. Cincinnati Elder .
93 .66 ; 3. Cincinnati Moeller .
86.60 ; .4 . Clayton North mont ,
86.50 ; 5. Cincinna!i Colerain ,
82 .50; 6. Cincinnat i Turp in.
78.25; 7. Centerville, 75.00 ; 8 .
Ketter ing
Alter ,
69 . 1.4 ;
9.
Kettering Fa ir mont Ea st , 60.83 ;
10. Dayton Carroll , 60.27 ,
Class AA .
.
.
.
Region s
1. Brookfiel d, 61.83; 2. Elyria
West , 60.67; 3. Elyr ia Catholic,
57. 73 ; 4. Chagrin Fa lls Kenston,

UPI high school ratings

Wednesday's Result
Kalamazoo 8, Port Huron 2
Toledo 6, Grand Rapids 4.

Thursday's Games
No games schedu led

~7 : 66 ;
5. Perry, 57 .00 ; o.
Campbell Memori~JI . 55.58; 7.
Twinsburg Chamberlin , 52 .66 ;
8. Warren Kennedy , 46,00 ; 9.
Olm sted Fa lls, 45.50 ; 10. Apple
Creek wavnedale, -45.00.
Reg ion 6
1. (lie) Millb ury Leke and St .
Marvs Memoria L 6-4 .00 each ; 3. ,.
Loudonv ille, 63.00 ; 4 . Columbus
OeSales , 60.50 ; 5. (tiel Oregon
Cardinal Str i1ch and Of1a wa .
Gla'ndorf , 59. 50 each : 7. {tie&gt;
Elida and Fostoria, 58.00 each ;
9. Bellville Clear Fork. 52.00 ;
10 . Colonel Cr awford , .48.00.
Region 7 ·
1. New Concord John Glenn,
78 .50 ; 2. Ironton , 61 .60 ; 3.
Maysvi lle/ 58 .50 ; 4. St. Clairs v ille , 52.30 ; 5. Navarre Fair tess, 51.00; 6. Bridgeport, 47 .14 ;
7. Heath, 46 .50 : 8 . Un loptown
Lake, 45.00 ; 9. Bl oom -Carroll ,
-44 .00 : 10. West Musking um ,
41.50.
Region 8
1. Cincinnati Wyoming , 85.70 ;
2. Cinc innati Me Nicholes, 71.00 ;
3. . Hamtton Badin , 63 .66 ; 4.
Cincinnati Reading , 58 .00 ; 5.
Trenton Edgewood , 54 .00 ; 6.
'Blanchester ,r 52 .00 : 7. {tie)
Cinc innati
o eer
Park and
Millon Union, 51.00 each ; 9.
Goshen , .46.50 ;
10 .
Dayton
oaKwood , .. 6 . 16.
Class A.
Reg ion 9
1. Lora in Clear view, 64 .00 ; 2.
M ogadore, 47 .51J ; 3 . Jackson M ilton , 36.08 ; 4. ca rd ington Lin cc;J! n, 36.00 ; 5. Co lum biana ,
35 .58 ; 6. Ashtabula St . John ,
35. 29 ; 6. Ashtabula 51. John.
35 .29 ; 7. M iddl ef ield Cardinal ,
34 .50; 8. Burton
Berkshire,
33 .50 : 9. New London., 31 .50 ; 10.
Sand usky St . Marys , 30.00 .

ThiS

COLUMBUS tUPil

secf!nd in Region 7 standings

'

34.83; 6. (tiel Bellaire St . John
and New Albany. 3.ti .SO each ; 8 .
Danville , 34.00 : 9. B~verly Fort
Frye , 28 .66 : 10. Tuscarawas
Catnolic , 28.00 .
Reg ion 12
1. West Jefferson . 64. 00 ; 2.
Covington, 60.00 ; 3. M idd l tolown
Fenw1ck , 58.83 : 4. Ve rs~illes ,
56.50 ; 5. Twin Valley SOuth ,
41.00 ; 6. Mechanicsburg , 38.50;
7. Bradford , 37 .00 ; 8, Port " c;;;.-·_ ,;2. sm ou th Notre Dame , 31.33; 9.
Tip p Ci t y Bethel , 30.90 ; 10.
Wesf Uberty Salem .

Computer ratings

•

Meet the Eastern Eagles

Region 10
1.
fl ie)
Hemler
Patr ick
Henry and Crestl ine, 50.00
eac::h ; 3. Frem ont St . Joseph ,
•1 .50; • - Carey, 42 .00 ; 5. M ilfor d
Center Fa irba nks , 40.00 · 6
Tif!in .Calv er t , 38.75 ; 7. Monl :
pel1er , 38.00 ; e. Fostor ia ·st.
Wendeli n, 33 .90 ; 9. (tie) Bloom dale Elmwood and Gibsonburg ,
32.50 each

12-975
12-979

1295

...-:;--..

12"
11"
14"
10"
13"

15"

Poodle
• fndoor ! Outdoo1
e R•dio Conltol
Am radios tucked inside!
Outside controls. Req .
Forward. reverse , turn by
9V
remote control. Backup lights.
Req . 2 9V. 4 " AA " batts.
60· 3008

LL~;:: :~, J
CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES}

WITH R
FIREMAN'S HELIIIET WALKIE-TALKIE
by Archeri!D
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12

6"

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6" in soil!
Req .9V batt.

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SUNDAY AFTERNOONS TIL CHRISTMAS

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For your junior fire
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Req . 2 " C" batts. ao-300&amp;

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hold 2 - way
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batt. 60-4003

95

e

Most •te1111
also available at
Rad•o Sh.ck
Dealers,
Look lor thtl
s•gn •n vour

PRICES

netghborhood.

D...,L••

-:::::::~~=~

MAY VARY T

lndiAnl'polls et 8ir m Ingham

"

1

•

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Oct.

ARCHON performs service ·
RIO GRANDE- Ewington
is the final resting plact! of
Gaius Niles, a veteran of the
American Revolution.
When vandals senselessly
and maliciously damaged
many of the markers in this
small family cemetery, they
probably didn't realize the
. historical importance of his
marker.
Word of the destruction
soon filtered back to Mrs.

.

DUITON DRUG CO.
Middleport,

HUNTINGTON - Tickets
for Marshall University
Theater's production of
"Tobacco Road," featuring
television and film actress
Conchata Ferrell, will go .on
sale Wednesday, Nov. I.
.
An American theater
classic, "Tobacco Road" will
he presented in Old Main
Auditorium at 8 p.m. Nov. 1518. An adult drama "Tobacco
Road" was adapted from
Erskine Caldwell's novel of
the same name, ·according to
Dr. William G. Keams, MU

1 j\SL£

SLEEPWEAR

PHILMAID:

Birthday celebrated

NEWSMEN QUARTET
The Newsmen Quartet of
Charleston, W. Va. will be at
the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene Sunday for both the
Sunday School and the
morning worship services,
starting at 9:30a.m. The Rev.
Clyde Henderson, pastor,
invites the public to attend.

worship service at 10:30 and Sunday evening service at 7
p.m. From 1-r, are Sam Batten, Steve Ranson, George
Draper, Rick Ranson and Dave Lucas; center, Vickie
Warren. The public is invited to attend.

Tickets qvailable for 'Tobacco Road'

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
coi'J\fOR

Saturday night at the Rock
Springs Grange hall .
Winners in the costume
judging were as follows :
Up to six : Danny Folmer,
prettiest; Shawn Hawley,
ugliest; lbindy .Hawley, funniest; and Jeff Tracy, most
The birthday of Miss Marcia Karr was celebrated at a unusual.
Seven through II: Anita
meeting of the Eagles Class
Smith,
prettiest; Scott Marof the Asbury United
tin,
ugliest;
Tammy Clark,
Methodist Church held at the
funniest;
and
Bobby Foster,
borne of Virgil and Helen
must
unusual.
Teaford Tuesday evening.
12 and over: Unda Foster,
A potluck dinner was
prettiest;
Bob Barton,
followed by a birthday cake
ugliest;
Wanda
and Steve
and ice cream, and a gift was
Eblin,
funniest,
and Jim
presented to Miss Karr,
Gilmore,
most
unusual.
.
teacher of the class ,
In
the
games
were
Winners
· Attending were the Rev.
Folmer,
Jason
Michelle
and Mrs. Harvey Kod1, Marcia Karr, Eleanor Robson, Wright, Tammy Clark, and
Jean Kloes, Carroll and Ad- Danny Folmer.
Refreshments were served
die Norris, Karl and Opal .
to
the nearly 60 persons attenKloes, Alma Louks, Emogene
ding
the party.
Holstein, Franklin and Wanda Rizer, Robert Flanagan,
Mary Cundiff, Millard and
YoUr "Extra Touch"
vera Van meter; and the
Florist Since 1957
Teafords.

WATCHMEN- The Watchmen wiil be featured at the
youth revival to be held at the ~on Church of Christ, SR
143 five and on~alf miles from SR 7 bypass, Oct. 29
thr~ugh Nov. 3. Services will be 7 p .m. nightly. Sun~ay
morning Sunday School is at 9:30a.m., Sunday mormng

o.

The Perfect Gift

associate professor of speech
and director of the upcoming
production.
"It was one of the first
plays to depict the harsh
realities of life In the rural
south in the late 1930s, where
people were pitted against
the forces of nature and the
economy in a struggle which
often saw them leave their
land," Keary~s said.
The theater box office,
located in Old Main 107, will
be open from I to 4:30 p.m.
weekdays. Mail orders and

*LONG PAJAMAS
•LONG GOWNS
*SHIFT GOWNS
All in Brushed Nylon

SLEEPSHIRTS WITH
· BIKINI Available
Also with coordinating robes,
long and short.
LONG FLANNE.L
GOWNS- PAJAMAS
LONGANDSHORTNYLON
GOWNS &amp; PAJAMAS

telephone reservations will
be accepted. The box office
number is 696-2306.
All seats are reserved and
tickets are $2 each. MU
students with valid Activity
Cards will be admitted free .
A former MU student, Miss
Ferrell will join the Marshall
student cast in the role of
Sister Bessie. In addition to
appearing in the show, she

SALESMAN HONORED
Ford Division of the Ford
Motor Company recently
aMounced that Rocky R.
Hupp has attained membership in the Fofd Society of
Professional Sales Counselors for 1978.
Society membership can
only be attained by those
Ford salesmen who display
outstanding
sales
achievement during the
calendar year. Rocky is
employed with Dan Thompson Ford and has been a
member of their sales staff
since 1976.

will present three free, public
lectures on acting. The times
and places of the sessions will
be announced later.
Miss Ferrell's campus
appearance has been made
possible by a grant !rom the
West Virginia Arts and
Humanities Commission to
the Marshall University
Foundation.
The recipient of an Obie for
her off-Broadway work and a
1974 Theater World Award,
Miss Ferrell has appeared in
a number of television shows,
including " Rockford Files,"
"Blailsky's Beauties," "One

Day at

~

Mrs. Cathryn Ervin , Mrs.
Bernalene Kelly , and Mrs.
Grace Hawley were named to
the nominating committee at
a meeti.ng of the Loyal
Bereans Class held Tuesday
night at the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Mrs. Alice Robeson had the
opening prayer for the
meeting conducted by the
men . Marvin Kelly had
prayl:!r and gave several
readings included "Sanctum" by Joseph Share,
"lord, It is I" and "It Has
Taken Long." Dana Swift had
a reading entitled " The MissREPRESENTATIVES- These three members of the Meigs County RSVP program
represent the 54 individuals who have participated in the program for five years. They are
from the left, . Mae Weber, Rutland; Early Roush, Letart; and Evelyn Swrunerfield,
Tuppers Plains.

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pom1"oy
y,.. 11 .. ~TO Ffori::t

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

The observance of national
Education Week , Nov. 12 to
18, was planned during a
meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
Tuesday night.
Mrs. Faye Wildermuth is '
scholarship and education
chairman and noted that a
window display will be in a

by

Hush

lliPP,!~!

lHE

The

"REGENf~

•Brown
•Black

Sewing
Center's
Pre·Otristmas

••

'I

Time/' "Maude,"

"A Death in Canaan,"
"Hatter Fox," and the pilots
of ~&lt;Mixed Nuts/' and ' 4 1V~n
the Terrible."
She perhaps is best known
for her role as April in the TV
comedy series "Hot L
Baltimore." She originated
the part in · the Broadway
production. Miss Ferrell is a
former member of the New
York City Circle Repertory
Theater.
'

SALE .
All Knits
'2.98 yd .

..

THE SHOE BOX

Velour and
Fleece

Middleport, Ohio

'

'

. (Values lo $4.98 Yd.

'1.00 off per yd.
(Excellent Quality 1

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II

On the "T" IIi Middleport

legionniaries of f!acine 602,
Middleport 128, Rutland 467,
and Pomeroy 39. Mayor
Clarence Andrews and the
district commander of the
American Legion will he on
the program with Post 39 to
provide the color bearers and
the firing squad. The program will begin at 10:45, and
the churches will be asked to
toll their bells at 11 a.m.
Following the program a
diMer will be served at the
Pomeroy Post for legionnaires and their families. Armond Turley will be at the
organ . The Auxiliary will provide the dessert and a committee to take care of this was
named. They are Mrs. Gemma Casci, Mrs . Dorothy
Jenkins, Mrs. Wildermuth,
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart,
Mrs. Edith Lanning, and Mrs.
Betty Wiles. Miss Erma
Smith and Mrs . Veda Davis
will handle the table decora-

tions.
It was announced that that
same day the 40 and 8 train
will be in Meigs County to collect the post dues.
A report was given on the
reception honoring Mrs. Lyeli
Roush, Department of Ohio
president, in Marietta on Oct.
7. Going from the post and
unit were Mr. and Mr:;. Paul
Casci, Frank Vaughan, Mrs.
Mary Martin, Mrs. Pearl
Knapp, Mrs . Dorothy
Jenkins, Mrs . Marjori e
Goett, Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
and Mrs. Veda Davis.
Several will attend the
for
Julie
r ece ption
Ehresman,
Department
junior president to he held
Nov. 5. The Eighth District
conference being held in Middleport today was also noted.
Thank you notes were read
from Mrs. Dollie Hayes, for
gifts and cards during illness,
and from the Reese Williams
family for a flag. Mrs. Reuter
reported that 129 dues have
been paid to date and that the
goal is 161. Dues are payable
to Mrs. Reuter who hopes to
attain goal by Nov. 10.
Mrs. Davis reported on the
recent junior meeting and
noted that she and her husband will visit Arcadia Nursing Home Saturday to deliver
a birthday gift to Bill Rovnak ,
and trick and treat bags to aU
14 veterans there.
A parly was'planned for the
veterans at the Athens Mental Health Center on Nov. 9. A
sewing project was set for
Nov. 16 at the hall at which
time ditty bags and towel bibs
wiil be made for the
Chillicothe veterans hospital.
Pecans are now for sale by

JOG
ON
OVER

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

EARLY BIRD SAVINGS

s ooo·FF

PHOTO
GREETINGS

Pomeory business window
during the week drawing attention to the observance.
Also that week, the Auxiliary will have " an apple for
the teacher" program honorIng the teachers at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Mrs. Wildermuth will be
assisted there by Jennifer
Couch, a jun,ior member.
Another activity planned wiU
be the presentation of two
flags to teachers at the
Rutland Elmentary School.
"Need a Lift" will be
presented to school
counselors, and at the end of
the school year, a $100
scholarship will he awarded.
Mrs. Wildermuth introduced Mrs. Thelma Dill, a
retired teacher, who related
experiences of her 54 years in
the classroom. She noted that
she started out in a one-room
school and was paid $90 a
montl1. Today she feels that
discipline and the lack of it is
a major problem in the'
classroom. She noted that the
small school is coming back
in the way of Christian
schools and noted that in
most of these schools there is
a waiting list.
Paul Casci also spoke at the
meeting imd announced a
county-wide · Veterans Day
program to he held at the
courthouse on Saturday, Nov .
11. Participating will he the

Girls' sizes
9-24 mo.

2T-4T
6-6X

ALL

-

Hours :

t ::JOfo 5: 00
Mon. thru Sat .

.It
.

t:lO to 8 :00
FridAy

'

KIDDIE SHOPPE
2nd St.
PoMEROY. o.

BOOTS FOR

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

the members.
Mrs. Grace Pratt, president, opened the meeting in
ritualistic form . Guests were
Mrs. Dill, Mrs. Nellie Cooley
and Casci. Mrs. Casei was
chaplain. Mrs. Welsh was
s~crl!tary pro lem.
Hostesses for November
will be Mrs. Marge Reuter
and Mrs. Wiles and the program will be on membership.
Mrs. Jenkins, music chair·
man, had group singing with
Mrs . Casci directing the
group in " Church in the
Wildwood" , "America, the
Beautiful", and "Beautiful
Ohio." Mrs. Jenkins was at
the piano for the meeting .'

r--cou~NOOOD~r-- 1

Social II
I Calendar I
I
!

THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
7:30p.m. Thursday at home
of Emma Clatworthy, High
St., Middleport ..
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.
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. Public invited.
REVIVAL now in progress
at Rutland Church of God
through Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m .
nightly. Don Stacey is the
evangelist. Public is invited .
MEMBERS of Riverview
Garden Club will dine at
Fisherman's Cove, Belpre,
6:30 p.m. Thursday.
FRIDAY
DISCO DANCE lessons
Friday at Royal Oak Park at
6:30 p.m . For additional
information call 992-2622.
HALLOWEEN
PARTY
Racine Grange 2606, Oak
Grove Friday 7 p.m. Open to
public. Those attending are
asked to he in costume.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT Lions Club, directors'
meeting, Friday, noon at the
Meigslnn.
SATURDAY
WESTERN Boot CB Club
Halloween party Saturday, 7
p.m. for members and
families at Racine Grange
Hall, Oak Grove Road. Adult
and children costume prizes.
Each members is to take a
covered dish.

I
:

$1.00 OFF:1
ANY ORDER OF
25 ~':,~~~ PHOTO

1
1
I..ICKEg
co9~!~~!~'!~
SHe~2! IS I
UP. LIMIT ONE COUPON PEII OIIDEII .

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

220 E. MAIN ST•

VILLAGE PHARMACY

992-711,3

L VAll

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
o.

103 E. Main

'

',.

ENTIRE MONTH OF OCTOIEII . 1978 ..1

New Haven,
W.Va.

Middleport,
Ohio

•,

. POMEROY.

o.

.

"Spring Air Bedding'' - "Howell Dinettes" '

'

Admiral - Hoover - Frigidaire - Armstrong

Caloric: - Speed Queen

=

HARlWEU.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDL;EPORT, 0.
'

DEAR POLLY- Whenever
I have leftover embroidery
thread I wrap it around an
empty U1read spool. This
keeps it from getting tangled
and Is easier·.to store.
i hope someone can help
me with my problem. My
white vinyl coat h~s orange
marks on it. I have tried
everythin9 l can .think of to
remove them but nothing has
worked. I do not know what
the stain is since I bought the
coat at a yard sale. If someone ca n give me a suggestion ·! will be most grateful. MRS. J.E.
DEAR MRS. J.E. - Try
hair spray and leave it on until it dries . It is very hard to
remove a stain when you
have no idea what it' is.
Perhaps that was the reason
the coat wa s put in the yard
sale- someone else had tried
and fail ed . -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I keep a
recipe file box on a shelf
above my washing machine .
When I buy a new gannent I

si lver of the church.

: ,

At the next meeting there
will be a silent aucti on. Mrs.
Martha Haggerty and Mrs.
Louise McElhinny will be the
hostesses.

•

: :
; :
•
:

Pumpkin pie and coffee • •
were . served by Swift, ; '
Clarence McNeal, and Kelly. ; ;

. -----··

••
:•
For unique Christmas
I
gift giving,
your
portrait is a natura lc '•' I~
Phone us today for ~I \~ '
information or an ' •
• •'
appointment .

•

..• '

mine has been usir1g the
following Pointer for yea rs. If
kitchen windows are located
over the sink where steam,
water, soap, etc. can soil or
dampen the curtains, place
the bottom part o! the curtain
in a clear plastic bag. Attach
with a decorative bow or pins .
This saves laundering and

pressing:

the

curtains

i'n the box. Jnstrudion.s are

whatever and now much was
used . Next time yoli paint
there will be no guesswork. MRS.M.B.
Polly will send you one of
her s igne d thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if

Better
Health
Club met

she

A contribution to the
Southeastern Ohio Lung
Assodation was made when
the Rock Springs Better
He"lth .Club met recently at
the home of Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner.
Prayer and the pledge to
the flag opened the meeting
with Mrs. Frances Goeglein
giving the devotions. For roll
call each of the members
tried to guess the name of her
secret pal. A card frul\;.lrs.
Gladys Morgan for flowers
sent to her bv the club was
·
read.
Mrs . Ethel G1·ueser and
Mrs. Lottie Leonard were appomted to write the history of
the club for the book being
published by the Meigs County Historica l Society.
Mrs . Lenora Leifheit
presented the program on
emergencies around the
home. Mrs. Nancy Morris
had the contest.

uses

your

'

I

.

'' !
I~ !

..._________. ' .:
{ Bob Hoeflich)
109 High Sl.
Pomeroy

'

I

•

'
I

J.tiGJ.t-RiSE ANd
JiANdSOME ... TJ.iE
~

so

always handy when I am
ready to launder . - MRS .
C.M.
DEAR POI .L Y- A friend of

IJHE PHOTO PLACE : i

A thought for the day: Irish
poet Thomas Moore said, " ...
tllere's nothing half so sweet
10 life as love's young
dream ."

'.·l

•. i

&gt;'

'

'Poll.§J&gt;arrot

olten. The bag can be removed when company is expected
and the curtains will have a
fresh, tidy look . - L.L.P.
DEAR POLLY - Recently
my mother-in-law bought
new bedroom furniture and
had to remove the old furniture. When it was time to
move the mattress and box
spring she thought of using a
skate board instead of trying
to'lift them. She put the board
w1der the mattress, which
was on its side. With the
board 111 the middle, one person in front and one in the
bock it was a cinrh. I am sure
your kids wlil not mind if you
borrow a skate board to do
such moving . - MRS. P.A.
DEAR POLLY - When
painting a room keep a
remove the washing instruc- record of the brand and color
tions, write the name of the of the paint, whether or not it
garment on the tag and file it was flat , enamel, latex or

The Almanac
United Press loternaliooal
Today is Thursday, Oct. 26, ·
tlle 299th day of 1978 with 66 to
follow .
The moon is between its
last •quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Jupiter and SAturn .
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Venus.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Scorpio.
American gospel singer
· Mahalia Jackson was born
Oct. 26, 1912 .
On this day in history :
In 1825, the Erie Canal,
America's first man-made
.waterway, was opened for
traffic between Buffalo and
Albany , N.Y

."Flexsteel" - "Provincetown Maple Dining Rooms" - - "lane" -

&lt;

,,

I

•
I

I

•!

BOOT

•••
•

•'

•

•I'

The most in fashion boots
.. . shining krinkle patent,
side zipper, crepe sole. Just
· what young feet need ...
pro te ction , suppor t and
flexibility .

!

s•
•

. Children's sizes 8-4
Misses 5-10

••

••'
•

Several styles to choose from!

favorite

Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this

heritage house

newspaper.

Friday night tillS p.m .

0.

'.••
•
••
'
•••

.•

•

E.O.M.
Men's Corduroy

LADIES' DRESSES

WORK PANTS
Heavy Weights
Reg. $17.99

Misses &amp; Half Sizes.

Sale $}400

REDUCED 20%

Me.n 's long Sleeve
Colored Dress

LADIES

SHIRTS

PANT SUITS

Size 14'1&gt;· 17

•

'

i

REDUCED 20% r

Any
Shirt

Reg. $9.00
to $18

•

,.'
•.
'

f

Reg. $10 1o $16

'

I

~
1-----------~~------+---------------------1 '

AT

.

In 1974, President Ford
agreed to meet with Russian
leader Leonid Brezhnev Nov.
23 and 24 in the Vladivostok
area of the Soviet union.

Reduced 20%.

THE HOME Of QUALITY

ELLIOTT
.APPLIA·NCE II

Coat has a stain

,------··-·1

f ~\.\. 8Ait£

OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 11, 1978

'·

'

'·
ing Ingredient from Life."
.J T•
Cynthia Go hring was
reported ill. Ruth Ka'IT thank- 1,
ed the class for cards and
flowers, and Bessie Ashley
for cards. The birthdays of
Dana Swift, Mrs . Ashley, Bob '
McE lhinny and Martha •
Childs were observed . Plans '.\
were made for making new ~(
flannel wrappings for the ,

•

lAY-AWAY

FOR CHRISTMAS

,J

.'

BLUE PIN AWARDS -. Pictured are three of the four members of the Meigs RSVP who
rect!ived special "blue pin" awards, provided by the Ohio ACTION office for their work in
the program. From the left are Mae McPeek, Long Bottom; Glen "Paddle" Lambert,
Middleport, and Dorothy Will, Pomeroy. The fourth recipient, not pictured, was Josephine
Smith, Racine.

·Observance planned of National
Education Week planned Tuesday

' FLOAi.T

- Jean Blevins, Pomeroy,
employed at the La Mar Beauty Shop, 101 W. Second St.,
Pomeroy. The daughter of Mr ..and Mrs. Vernon Blevins,
Pomeroy, Jean received her training at Meigs High
School where she graduated In 1977. She has worked at
Grandmother's Beard and the UtUe Mink Boutique in
Athens. Terry Walker is ownerofthe La Mar Shop.

BOOTS FOR
Nl:M

Loyal Bereans
Class met,
named committee

'

'!be anhual Halloween party of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church was held

Beatrice Clark of Rio
Grande, a great, great, greatgranddaughter of Niles. She
contacted
the
Archon
Fraternity at Rio Grande.
College and Community
College for assistance.
The fraternity took on the
project of cemetery cleanup
and applied to the Vnited
States Government for an
historical marker for Niles'
grave.

In our hands you and your
doctor are .assured of the
highest professional standards.
.

Halloween party held

-.,

' I

Q;;ds~roy Shirts

Reduced 20%

LADIES' BLOUSES

Reg. $18.00

MEN'S

jACKETS

•

;

Reduced 20%
FALL &amp; WINTER

!

LADIES

CAR COATS

••

'i•
''&gt;

''••

I----R_Eo_uc_Eo_z_o%:--L-_R_e_du_ce_d_2_o~_o_-t \
\

BAHR CLOTHIERS

~

N 2nd, MIDDLEPORT

~

�11 oo-News 3,4.,8, ,o, '!, ::lick Cavett 20, Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
G
ke a·
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, News 6,13, unsmo
•
ABC News 33. Movie "Bundle of Joy" 10
12 oo-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13
12 30-News B. 1
Tomorrow 3.4.
l IG-SWAT 6,13, 2 2G-News 13

8- The Da.ly Sent mel , Moddleport-PomcoUl 0 1 huo oda1 . Ck l 26 1978

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Dl! K THJ\C Y

C

, . YOU !),TJJ..L.
flAVEN'T TOLD
1,\E- WHO 'IOU ARE,
AMIG05 --A~$-O flOW
YOU FOUI&gt;JD U$- WITH·
OU J WINDING UP IJ,I
MAYOR BO&lt;!&gt;e~·
SHARI&lt; POOL-

1}Jtlfrul \1i)'\t

~THAT SCRAMBL-ED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~l,!:ll.!l ®
byHenriArnoldandBobLee
Unscramble these four Jumbles
one lener to each square to form
four ordmary words

b
01_

IYOHAR

BORN I OSEH

.. ,HARD- (.Q()((BD
~.

I TUFOL

PBRfJOD

0

_I I I

C.A~'

ISHUL08

tJ

I I

~

IGOULEY0

~\Z::=::::::::::I
....:::::J .

I I rI J

WHA'T HE WA~ WHEN
HE WA:. FIN15HEC'
W i'TH iHE DRIL.L. IN\9o.
Now arrange the c1rcled letters to
rorm the surprise answer as sug
gested by the above canoon

Prtnranswerhere: "(

I I 1111 )"
(Answers tomorrow)

WHOOF!WOW'
M"(

HEAD!

Yeslerday s

-

I

Jumbles UNCLE TOXIC
Answer

COMMON VORTEX

Could be' " mad" -but with a motive-

"LOCO '-MOTII/E

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

SHIFT YOUR WeiGHT
AND ROO&lt; -n&lt;e PAllA·
SEE:DS' IT WILL ALTE:Il
-.t:)UR 1=1.16HT
PATTEilN!

GADF~! THEY'LL HAVE:
TH' !lANGE: IN ANQ~Eil
MINUTE ~"TWO!

--c,,.

KeEP !COCKING! OH~S
HOPE'
/ ..___

FOil LJS YET!

8 Soamese

ACROSS
1 Maple genus
5 Browrush
yellow
Bundle

twm
9 Matter· law
11 Compelled
14 Nouroshed

of papers

12 Not a soul
-..,:~"'113 0 T 's Canticles

16 5,280 feet
17 Vollainous

Heep
&gt;&lt;ro:c--.~ 15 Roll of film
18 - Donungo
16 Berg's
19 ReSident
"Wozzeck," e.g
of suff.
2% Fit to be toed
ZO Uruon
23 Slippery general
25 Like some
21 Change
stationery
24 Montana
'f;;'"i':- 26 Jalopy
soght
;;.:::..r....:...;..:...;_...,._:....t:,__"'---' 28 Break bread
28 Harmoruous

He4 ~ That's

t.he best

But. I has a
qirl fre'n'!

news I've
heard!

29 The Devol's
playground

sounds
27 Talk . sl.

37 Greek

mad
32 Uidy's fur
garment
33 Attention
35 College
m Iowa

osland
38 Famung
unplement
39 - Brynner
40 Publisher's
concern

36 Hockey
lwrunary

abbr
U Born . Fr.

WEST
• AKJ98

• 83
• J 72

SOUTH

eQ

HAVf:

ANY,..IN~

West

North East

'

You INAN.,DINN~R.

Of COUR&amp;E,IT WOULDN'T
HAVE

BE-EN 111ERE IF

GARY HADN'T MADE

, TfiOSE LUCRATIVE

MERCHANDISINo
17EALS

fO~

genus
&amp;Money

b

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

-n

Wi-44' DON'T ((OUSIJRPRISE
HIM ?DROP DOWN CJ-1
HIM FROM AHELICOPTER I

YOU LENT THAT
WU'f.HLESS VARMINT
FIFTY CENT?

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

&lt;PM

F'tltl&lt;~.\afhtnlln

Local Bowling

Standmgs

Pomeroy Bowhng Lanes

Early Sunday Moxed
League
Oct 15,1978
Tom's Car:ry Out

46

Jack's Daory Bar
3inOne

40
34

Royal Crown Bottlmg

26

Team

series

-

Ta1J1'S

Carry Out 2066
Team game - Tom's Carry

Out 709

34
32
30
25
25
22

214, Carolyn Bachher 190,
John Tyree 191, Delores
Tyree 188
series

Youngs

Smith

game

Oct to, 1978
G &amp; J Auto Parts
Sears
Karr &amp; VanZandt

Gibbs Grocery
No 3
Newell Sunoco
KH 1gh 1nd

game

P.arsons 20B, 171
High md ser1es -

·--

.A K 9
• 10
Hearts are trumps South
leads and must make aU the

trlck.s.

Solution tomorrow
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

Men's h1gh senes R1ck
Mart1n S17 Jeff Martm 472

Ralph Gibbs 439
Women's h1gh game Morns 183 Gwen Mart1n
Ann Morr1s 167
Women's htgh ser1es Morns 470 Gwen Mart in

~rsons 519

Ann
406

Team h1gh game -

Hot

h1gh senes -

Hot

Sunday Miners

Sep1 24, 197B
Standongs
W L
2B 12
23 l7

Hot Shots
Team No 6
Country Bumpki ns

20 20

Plnbusters
Alley Cats
Sunday Duds

1a 22
18 22
13 27

Men'~ h1gh game -

Rtck

Marton 213, Ralph Gibbs 169,
166
Men's h1gh ser1es -

R1ck

Mart1n 484 , Ralph Gibbs 479
Ann

29 Marty Ro~gs 131
Women s htgh senes - Ann
22
22 Morris 396 , Marty Riggs 3aO,
19 Sheryl G obbs 362
Team high game Ho1
la
Shots
341
Alley
Cats
303
,
10
Country
Bumpkms
290
Gerry
Team high series - Alley
Cats 860 , Hot Shots a25 ,

Hogh team game- G &amp; J
Auto Parts 851
High team seroes - G &amp; J
Auto Parts 2335

Columbia Nat1onal Life

Country Bumpkms 802

Frodoy, Oct 27

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

Tro County league
Oct 10, l97B
32

Roach Gun Shop
30
Eagles Ci ub.
27
Pomeroy Cement Block
24
H &amp; R Plrestone
16
Bill's Body Shop
15
' High team 3 games Roach Gun Shop 2640,
Columbia Nat1onal L1fe 2552.

liagles Club 2531
High team game - Roach
Gun Shop 91B, Columbia
Natoonal Lofe 916, Eagles
Club 882
High ond game - Ed Voss
236, Don Nelson 216, Kom
Neal 214
H1gh ond 3 games - Ed
Voss 589 , Dave Jenkons 5a4,
John Tyree 574
League

Oct. 17, 1978
Roach Gun Shop
Coiumboa National Lofe

3a
36

Pomeroy Cement Block

30

29
20
H &amp; R Ftrestone
I5
fllgh team 3 games - Roach
Gun Shop 2492 Eagles Club
2436 , Columbia Naloonal 2411
fllgh team game - Roach
Gun Shop a92, Eagles Club
851, Columbia Natoonal life
BA7
fllgh lnd game - larry
Dugan 227, 207, Ray Roach
203
High ind 3 games - Larry
Dugan 576, Ray Roach 539
Jerry Vanlnwagen 535

POMEROY
BOWLING
lANES
MORNING GLORIES
()CT 17, 1978
37
1.G &amp; J Auto Parts
30
Karr &amp; van Zandt
22
• Sears
21
• Gibbs Grocery
lB
~No 3
16
~ Newell Sunoco
' 1st Hogh lnd Game.Ma'J.
'Porter. 164, 2nd High In
!pme Gerry Parsons, 160
, lsi ' High lnd series, Ma'J.
'Porler • 434, 2nd High In
t~rles. Gerry Parsons, 417
' lst High Team Game,
'Karr &amp; Van Zandl, 812 , lsi
!High Team Series , Karr !.
\/an Zandl, 2394

I.

Ann
176

Sheryl Gobbs 349

October 27, 1978
Several unusual persons Will
have a hand 1n makmg luc ky
th1 ngs happe n for you th1s
commg year Be sure to take
advantage of meetmg as many
new and different people as the
opportumhes come along

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22) The
best of your dynamic qualities
are pronounced today All w1ll
be attracted to you but espe-

coally 1hose of the opposote
sex Lik e to fmd out more abO\Jt
yourself? Send for your copy of
Astra Graph Leller by mailing
50 cents for each and a long,
self addressed stamped enve~

lope to Aslro-Graph P 0 Box
4a9 Radoo Coly Slaloon, N Y
10019 B e sure to specify b1rth
SIQn

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) Wllhoul seekong ot and
much to your surprise, you II
be an a leadership rote today
You mnately know what others
want and how to d1rect then1

CAPRICORN IDoc. 22-Jan 19)
There s a good chance today
you II run mto or hear from
someone you haven't encountered for some ttme You II
have a good t1 me catching up
on thmgs

AQUARIUS (Jon

NOPE··THAT'S
WHY HE HIT ME

Rtck

Women's high game -

Eag les Club
Bill 's Body Shop

• 10 9

Men's h1gh game -

Marton 201 Jeff Marton 186
Kenny R lggs 166

Morris 146 Sheryl Gtbbs 132

Gerry
Drema Sml1h

Tn~County

SOUTH

24 24
20 28
15 33

Roland Morns 464.-

Morning Glor1es

• 1086

Alley Cats
Ponbusters
Sunday Duds

Shots 923 , Alley Cats a70

High ser1es - John Tyree
583, Pat Carson 533 La~ry
Dugan 504, Delores Tyree 487
High game - John Tyree

·-•a

24 24

Sunday Duds 817

Oct 11, 1978
Long Shots
Smith Nelson Motors
Young's Market
Zlde's Sport Shop
No 3
No 2

eJ&amp;

Coun1ry Bumpkms

Team

M1xed League

EAST

34 l4
27 21

Shots 377 Alley Cats 3lB, 314

Early Wednesday

·--

W L

flo! Shots
Team No 6

Gibbs Grocery
26
Meigs Inn
20
Hogh seroes - Ed Voss 572
Mary \loss 560
Darrell
Dugan 564, Marlene Wilson
461
High game - Bill Willford
223, Mary Voss 202 Darrell
Dugan 214, Ellen Rought la4

'

'·

Pomeroy lanes
Sunday M1ners

Oct l, l97B

.a 7
• J5
+ A2

• J3

Mann1ng D WebSter
Jud ge
Common Pleas Court
Probate DIVISI On
Me1gs County Onto
26 l t c

Local Bowling

Nelson Motors 667

• Q7

Accounts a nd vou t:hers of
the
totrowmg
named
flduc•ar.es nave been ftled 1n
the Probate Court
M e 1gs
County Ohto 1 for approval
and se ttlement
CASE NO
22 257
F1nal
Account of Fred w Crow
Adm tnls t rator of the Es t l!lte
of R eed Gan dee, D eceased
CASE NO
19,4 64
Ftrst
Cu rrent A cco unt of Charlotte
Brown Guard 1an of Steven
Robert Peckham , Jeffrey
Olen Peckha m and Gregory
Dan1el Peckham Mmors
CASE NO
22 161
F1na1
Account of Ralph M1chael,
EKecutor ot the Estate of
Hazel M1chae1 Deceased
CASE NO
21 699
F 1na1
Account of Ada E
Bays
E11ecutr1x of the E state of
Ethel Wheeler Deceased
Unless excepttons are ftled
thereto , sa1d accounts w111 be
for heanng befor e sa1d Court
on the 24th day of No ve mber
1978
at whtch t1me said
accounts will be considered
and contmued from day to
day unt11 tmally diSpose d of
Any person mtereste d may
file wr~tten eM.cept1on s to sa td
accounts or to matters
pertammg to the execut1on of
the trust, not less than f1ve
days pr1or to the date set for
hearing

SUiltlcH
4PM

Team

•• 0Q7.

OHIO

110 I

lilt' tlay bdu!t publa ;~ It• n

Market 1952

WEST

COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT , MElG's COUNTY,

Tucsdcn
tlu u F11tla'

"Quite the contrary," replied the aged expert , "I
made this same play In
Milton Work's column wlien

By 01wald Jacoby
lllld Alaa Sontag

One letter somply stands lor another In thos sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc Songle letters,
Old man Z who used to
apostrophes, the length and formatiOn of the words are all Play the dummy in the
honts Each day the code !etten are doft'erent
bridle columns of the Twen·
Ilea 6ad made one of his rare
CRYPTOQVOTES
appearance~~ at the club.
WELL MR. fA61N YOUR TIME 15
There Ia nothing timid
LV
LE
FVY
YV
DT about the old man's bidding,
RUNN'ING OUT 1 HOPE/ FOR YOUR
as may be
by his jump
BAKE1lliAT YOUR ~Bt7 1&amp;RAD
NVO
SOEY
K MJ T to four hearts without even
\1'---o WOMAN OF HE" W0 .
one ace in hla hand.
BLY
YV
MJVLR
K M J • The nonagenarian (he ad·
mlts to being 90) ruffed the
LFA
YVV
SOIK.- MFRHT
SMOHVLE second spade, drew trumps
";S~~ Yeaterday's CrypWqaote: A LOYAL WIFE IS ONE WHO SITS with two leads, ruffed
dununy's last spade and
""
UP WITH YOU WHEN YOU ARE SICK AND PUTS UP WITH
went after diamonds. He
WHEN YOU ARE WELL.-soURCE UNKNOWN
@ 1978 KUIJ Featu,.. SJDdieate, Inc

SNUFFY HIT ME
FER A FIFTY-CENT
LOAN TODAY,
ELVINEV

Tht- Pub l1s hu rescrvl'S tht ngllt
tl') t'd .!ill)' ttds tl~t'rn~d ub~ttwnal Ilk' Pullhshel "'ll nt I lM.
resptlnstblt Cur mort• Uum ont uu.: m
rl't t lllSt•rliUil
Phone99'l21:iti

to t'dll ur

Here Ia the famous Whit·
field sill: problem:
NORTH

marcbe
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It ·

tal l \

tng Box Numbt!r In Cart' uf Tht !:it r1
uuel

~~~

Opening lead:+K

7A-

ordt'r :?!i L-ent dutq(t fn1 ads

coat

e K Q 10 3
• K 74
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

sl.

MOOtle Humt&gt; 11111~ ami Yard salc!i
ar~ cttnpl~d only w1th tash Wll h

I was just36 It couldn't
my contract because you are
now caught in an end play "
Sure enough West was end
played. A Club lead would
set up the king. A spade lead•
would allow a ruff and dlacard. If old Z had played hla
queen of diamonds and East
had held the jack, the con' ,
tract would have been set.

¥ KQJ84

5Goose

"'(Ou CJtN

• 10 6 52

.u

• 886
• Q J 10 3

+ A98

DOWN

NeWS

111 lllt'mur y CcmJ uf Th;tnk ~ und
Olntuary 6 L~ n ts per wurd $.:1 00
lnDllm wn Ca!:ih m atlva!Kl

cashed his king, entered
dummy with the ace, led a
third diamond and ilnes.sed
his 10.
West chortled aa he took
his unguarded jack. "You
would never have made thai
silly play when you were
10," he remarked.

EAST

175

....

BRIDGE

¥A1097
e A 54
• 652

1 25
190
!25

100

Team

• 743

harl(t•

t

words as 4 tCIIl:l per wurd per day
Ads rurmm~ uthtr than um::&gt;t:L Ullvc
days will l.k.&gt; dlll! J.ll~ l at th t I day

A great play never ages

( 34 Rose
essence

~~n'LH,EME'i:~TT~FR ~t

Eildl WUI 1.1 IIVt'l tl~ llliiiiiiiWII 13

za

NORTH

lNmny
2 Japanese
length
3 Poetocal
adverb
4 Tease

""''

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

30 "Oater"

45 OtherwiSe

13 Wnrdsur Umlu
Ca:;h
!Iii
1 511
I ill

2 ti&lt;IY!:i
Jliays
6liclys

1 oo-Hollywood Squares 3, All My Children 6,13 ,
News 8, Young !. the Restless 10, Not For Women
Only lS
1 3G-Oays of Our lives 3,4,15 , As The World Turns
B,lO
2 OG-One life to live 6,13
2 ]()-Doctors 3,4,15, Guodlng Light B,10
3 oo-Another World 3,4, IS, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3G-Mash a• • Joker' s Wild 10, You Bet Your life 20
4, oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Battle of the Planets 4,
Hollywood Squares 15, Merv Griffin 6, Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10. Dinah 13
4 30-Little Rascals 3, Gilligan's Is 4,8, Brady Bunch
10, Petticoat Junction l S
5 OG-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3, Star Trek 4,
Beverly Hillbillies 8, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Emergency One 13,
Brady Bunch 15.
5 3G-News 6, Sanford &amp; Son B. Elec Co 20,33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Odd Couple 15
6 oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABCnNews 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3G-NBC News3,4,15, ABC News13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News a,lO, Over Easy 20
7 OG-Cross Wits 3, PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13, Muppet Show a, News 10, Love, American
Style 15, Consumer Survival Kit 20, Insight 33
7 3Q-Hee Haw Honeys 3, Dating Game 4, $1 98 Beauty
Show 6, Bonkers! 8, $100,000 Name That Tune 13,
Pop Goes The Country 15, MacNeil Lehrer Report
20,33
B oo-wltch's Night Out Special : 3,4,15, Donny &amp;
Marie 6,13 , Magic of David Copperfield 8,10.
Washington Week In Rvlew 20,33
B 3Q-Who's Watching The Kids• 3,4, 15 Wall Street
Week 20.33.
9 oo-Rocklord Files 3,4, 1S, Movie "Obsession" 6,13;
Incredible Hu lk a,lO, Congressional Outlook 20,33
9 3Q-Turnabout 20 , Real People a3
10 oo-Eddle Capra 3,4, 15, Flying Hlqh B.lO. News 20.
Faces of Communism 33
10 30-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20
11 oo-News 3,4,8,6, 10,13, 15, Greaseband 33.
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Baretta 13, Movie
"Mission to Morocco" 6, NBA Basketball B, Movie
"THX 1138" 10,;.
12 oo-Monty Python 33
12 4G-lronslde 13
1 oo-Midnlght Special 3,4 , 1S, Movie "The Devll's
Hand" 10
1 4G-News 13, 2 3G-News 3
3 oo-Movle "Five Finger E•erclse" 3
5 oo-Movle "The Whole World Is Watching" 3

•

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTI',OH!O

WANT AD
CHARGES

Tomorrow B, 10

Thandlly, OeL

211-Feb

19)

Just when you think someone
has let you down , another
person turns aut to be even

beller for you You II be glad
!hongs happened as they dod
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) The
best way to unwmd a touchy

soluatlon oslo be a good listen·
er The nght perspns w1th the
nght advtce wtl l cross your path

Joday
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11) You
should hawe a rather InterestIng day bectuse of some pleas·

ant,

uneMpe&lt;:led happenings

that wall alter your normal rou·

line
-tAURUS (April 211-Moy 20) Cu
pld has his eye on you If you
lei him, he'll make sure all
goes smoothly m the roman ce

'

•

Business Services

•

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1971
5 A5-Farm Report 13, S SG-PTL Club 13, 5. 55-Sunrlse Semester 10
6 oo-PTL Club 15, 700 Club B, 6 215-Socletles In
Tran.ltlon 10
6 30-Columbus Today 4, News 6, 6 45-Mornlng
Report 3, 6 SG-Good Morning, West Virginia 13
6 . 5~huck While Reports 10, News 13
7 oo-Today 3,4,15, Good Morning America 6,13 , CBS
News 8, Jetsons 10
7 3G-Schoolies 10
8 OG-Capt Kangaroo B, 10, Sesame 51 33
9 00- Merv Griffin 3. Phil Donahue 4, 13,15,
Emergency0ne6, Hogan's Heroes a, Match Game
10
9 3Q-Brady Bunch B. Family Affair 10
10 OG-Card Sharks 3, 1S, consumer Buyllne 4 Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family B,10. Dating Game 13.
10 3Q-Jeopardy 3,4,15, Andy Griffith 6. Price Is Right
8, 10, $20,000 Pyramid 13
11 oo-High Rollers 3,4,15. Happy Days 6,13, Elec Co
20
11 30-Wheel ot Fortune 3,4,15, Famllv Feud 6 n ·
Love of Life B,lO; Sesame Sl 20,33, ll 5~ BS
News B, House Call 10.
12 DO-Newscenter 3, News. 4,6, 10, America Alive 15,
Young &amp; the Restless B, Midday Magazine 13
12 3Q-Ryan's Hope 6, 13, Bob Braun 4 Search for

Yesterday's Answer

31 Went like

35 Poem by
Emerson
42 Wmdow
style
43 Drunkard
!__L:J!U:5- 44 Gnaw

C.Ool&gt;

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

oo-

TiiURSDAY, OCTOBER 26,1971
5 oo-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3, , Star Trek 4,
Beverly Hillbillies B, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20.33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10. Emergency O~e 13,
Brady Bunch 15
5 30-News 6, Sanford &amp; Son B. E lee Co 20,33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Odd Couple 15
6 oo-News 3,4.B,10,13.15. ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 3G-NBC News3,4,15. ABC News 13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News B, 10. Over Easy 20
7 oo-Cross Wits 3. PM Magazine 4, • Newlywed
Game 6,13, Family Feud 8. News 10. Love.
American Style 15. Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.
Kanawha County Schools 33
7 3G-Hoilywood Squares 3, Who Spooked Rodney&gt; 4,
Bonkers' 6. Waltons B, • 5100,000 Name That Tune
10, Nashv il le On The Road 13, Dolly 15, MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33
•
B oo-Town Hall Decision ' 78 3, Dr Seuss 6, 13, Movie
"Cotton Candy" 4, 15, Nova 20,33, Waltons 10
B 3G-NFL Football 6.13 . Please Stand By B
9 oo-Hawail Five 0 B,lO, Duchess of Duke Street 20
10 00-Qulncy 4,15, Barnaby Jones 8, Sneak Previews
33, Celebrity Concerts 10, News 20
10 30-Pompell Frozen In Fire 33. You Bet Your Life
20

I P l' A IN FA~Y

'

9-The Datly Sentom•l, Middleport Pomeroy, 0 .. Thurooay, Oct 26, 1976

REQUEST FOR
PROPOSALS
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
AND TRAINING
PROGRAMS
DEMONSTRATION
PROJECTS
OHIO DEPARTMENT
OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES

tn Memory
IN MEMORY ol our mo ther Ruby
l a1ler who poss e d owoy Oc1
2b 1975
Wf' do not l or ge l her we lo'l'e her
too dearly
~or het memory to lode from our
I 'l'o?S li ke a dream
Our lips nee d not speak when our
hearts mour n sm c ere l~
f- or gnet often dwell~ where rt
seldom rs seen
~adly mt ssed by ch1 ld ren

t_.l\f.!AG l ) AU: ~ m tlo, oil fO l
on t.H JO
n
M(t llll!lgstor
Horgh ts Sub Sol
Oct 28th
'lam to 4prn Hoby lurmlu re
\weEtper elec lr•c gu lor and
• stze l o om moltre ss
amp
rockmg horse wrn ler c o at ~
!t mo l l oppl1onces mrsc Phone
'149 'l333

ss

----- - ---

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

ROGER HYSElL
GARAGE

Res,dent•al and comme~ ctal Call for est1mate 24
Hour Servtce
Any day.
anvt•me
PhonP qA~ 3806
Jack Gmt her 985 3806

,., mite off Rt 7 by-pass on
St Rt 124 toword Rutland,

0
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transm1ssron
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

ANTI -FREEZE

()11\_o&gt;~~ o&gt;~~ ,(.-.. S3fl

Town &amp; Country

Pomeroy Landmark

,,

!!IS!

"

'

Chester Oh1o

BoX 3

-~

I

All

Type

H. l WHITESEL
ROOFING

lndustrool
and

.~

,, ..

.

MOORE'S
Muffler
Brakes
Shock s
Tires
Battery
lnstallatron Servoce
Ph 992 2848

Pomeroy,

-

' •of.,r-~•..•
-~ ­
·""
~.

0

3 15 tfc

'

Mourning and
Price Builders
Commercial

...•

For The Best
Pr1ce In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

10 30 c

4·JO-•tc

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Home

Buoldong
Anv Ty~ Improvements
To Ex1shng Structures

All Type Concrete Work
25 Years Exper1ence
All Work Guaranteed

992 7S47

•

-..
0

I'

Construction
Maintenance

"

'

-·•

•

Reasonable Pnces
Ref ere nces Available

•

Phone 992-5t91
l022 lmo

a 20 1mo ( Pd I

Phone 992-4144

.•

J. R. Construction
Co.
Carpentry, EJectncal,
Pamhng

'
Free Est1mates
Phone 949 2862
or 949-2160

No Contract Too Large Or

Too Small

10 18 l mo

1-orS,,IP

---'-..c:
- -- COAl liMESTONE sa nd gra 11el
w lctu m ch l01tde l er ttltze r dog
l oad ond all lypes of salt Ex
ee ls to r Soli Works Inc 1:: Mom
Sf Pomeroy 992 3891
HURROUGHS Sl:NSI MATt&lt;... oc
count ng mac htn e
Ph one
992 7150 The Ootly 5enlmel
Il l (curl Sl reet
Pomeroy
Oh10
GRIM~S

GOLDEN Red Oelt cto us
&amp; Golden Delle ous apple s r rtz
polnck
Orchard
SH b89
614 669 3785

SCHOOl
HU S ca mp e r
bO
passenger wtth new llres
Good condrtton Conlee! Tom
Monktn o t 992 2701
MAYTA.G COPPERTONE Po rto
Potr washer ond dryer Very
good co nd t11on sell os se t Loll
alter Spm 992 2995
!-=OUR 13 mch Cr ager SS wheels
Wdl lrl fo rd and Che11rol e t
5200 742 782 6
1'1 14 DATSU N PI CKUP
CJ92 b\92

PHONE

TRAPPING SUPPLIE S Sole 40° o
regula r pr r!'&gt;s on oil srze tro ps
S lr e t ch e· ~ Mo ron Fur House
N ~rown Me son WV Ph one
614 7735290
HAY ~O R

SAL ~

992 745:.1

Busoness Serv1ces
-BRADf O RD Au cltoneer
Com
ple l e Ser vrce Phone 949 '1487
or 949 2(X)() Rocme Oh1 o C r~tl
81odf ord
HWOOD B OW~ R S REPAIR
Sweep er s loo sters HOn s all
small appl ton ce s lawn mowe t
1exl l o Slole Htghway Garag e
on Reule 7 Ph one 16 14 ) 985
3625
SEWING MACHINE Reparr s se r
ll tCe all m a k e~ 992 U84 I he
~ obrrc
Sho p
Pomeroy
A ulhorrzed S ng er Sol es end
Se rv1ce We shorpen Sc ssor s
EXC AVA TING dozer loader ond
backhoe wo r k dump tru ck s
and to boy s for ht rc wr tt haul
ltll dtrt to sod ltme stone and
gro ve l Ca ll Bob or Roge r Je t
le r ~ day phone 992 ?089 n1ght
phone 992 J525 or 9Q2 5232
EXC AVA TING dozer backh o e
end driC her L ho rles f.! Hoi
I c ld
ti o ch Hoe Ser v tc e
Hut lond Ohto Phone 74'1 200U
Will do roo ft ng con51ru clto n
plumbrng ond healm g No tab
loo Iorge or lao small Phone
~4'1 'l3dl:!

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
cov o l ng
sepl tc sysl em s
dozer ba ckh oe dump lrucK
blackt op
ltmeston e
gr o11el
povtng HI 143 Phone 1 {Old )
OCiB 733 1

MAGIC CHH go!&gt; ran ge n1ce con
d 1 on $125 Moytog wr1nger
was her niCe condd1 ton SlUO
Phone 992 ~26 4

BATHR OOMS AND Kttch en!&gt;
remod eled ce ra miC Ide plum
bmg corpe n1ry ond gen eral
matntenan ce
1J year s ex
pertence 9&lt;17 J685
l9b9 PONTIAL UMANS S475 2
!els m eal scales .&gt; l ewarT s Gun PUlliN S I:: XCAVATI NG l ompl e le
Shop Gun s l m sale Phone
5ervtce Pho ne 992 2478
742 242 1
RCEVES TRADING Po st Poge11 dl e
LUMP OR stoker coal delr vered
Groceries dry goad'&gt; ha rd
74'J 2183
wo re feed lock shop Spe crol
25 lb o f dog food $3 88
HONH
IN
COM ~
Phone
985 3555
AUTOMOEHU INSUHANCE been
cancelled? l osl yqur oper a101s
l tc ense? Ph onc992 2143

POMEROY
LANDMARK

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
Stit.
e.......
rv
i ctulw_
e..1 Trvd.
er
~

IN"

h45.tor to Itt.

&lt;-•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
PO 992 2114

Pometll)'

L-----------'
Real Estate tor Sale
-----H OM~S I

fi::S l or so le I acre and
up M ddleporl near Rutland
loll 997 7dE!1

VA FHA

JO yr l tnonCin g also
ref noncmg Ireland Mortgage
77 t: Sta le Ath ens phone (614 )
592 3051

lH RI:: E BI::OROOM fro me ho -nc tn
Mrddl eporl Colt 992 3457

For All Your

GET.V . 's&amp;
Holpoon1 Appl.
Sale Proces
Jack W. Carsey,
Mqr.
Phone 992 · 2181

Real Estate lor Sale_
PROPI:::RTY f OR sole Good tnves l
men! J 1 ocrc s wr th app ro ~&lt;
over 200 tt ol r111e r lronto go
An x1ous to sell loll all er 6p -n
b 14 BM 9027

\- lVI: ROOM hou5e and bclh
temo del ed lully co rpf•led May
be se e• olle• 3 p•n Phone
99'} 3933
MOOEf.!N 3 bedroo m home lull)'
co r pe l ed cen tral a' lull bose
men! w tth I rep lace mclos ed
sun porc h lac e l ed on 6 1 acr es
nee Roctne on blor h lop rood
Reo sonobl y pr reed
SaO 000
949 283b ol! er 7pm
SIX ROOM hou se wtth 1• acr es of
land All eleclrtc Ctly wat er
Lo ll 992 271 1 ohe&gt;r 2
THRH OR 4 bedroo m h ou~e for
sal e
m
Pomero y
Central
h eo t rng
l u ll
bo se rnenl
99') 7074
S Al~ ol Tu ppers Pl oms OH
on Rt 7 Sroom !rome house
Al so wash room ond bolh roo m
wtlh exit a Iorge g01og e ollo ch
e d to house w th bree; ewoy
App ro ., acr e o f g ound
Llose l o school pos t o f !tee end"
ch urch lmmedta te possess ton
l on be seen onyt tme Fm tn
l ormol ron
ca ll 304 773 577 6
aile• 7pm weekday s ony l me
we ek en ds

Serv1ces Offered
WATER WH L drtlltng W II10m T
Gran t 7d2 2879
f OR YO UR comp le te hous m g
rem odel ng co nslr udton and
mo ntenonce g1ve J R o tr y
Re f erence
o v odoble
Reasonable prt ces
Ph o n e
'1 92 5 191
DUSTLESS FIREPLA&lt;..I::: on d chrmney
cleon rn g The Chr mney Sweep
Ca ll b14 J!3 00 57 ____ _
WILL TAKI:: CARl: of elde rly person
n my home Mole 0 1 fe male
6146673402

G1ve Away
THRH I:IVHT week s old krttens 1
dachshund 4:.!5 As h St Mrd
dleporl
TWO PHK A l-'OOS
mole 992 'J77 1

I female

1

TWO CATS l ull bl ooded Stomese
mole an d long hat red block
mole 9927 11 5
H:J MO !)LD pup s Ci92 74l b
r\lolul1

llonu·" IHr ~.tit·

19/6 NASHUA 14 x bS 3 bedroo m
1 , both under ptnnt ng $1 500
and assume loon 949 2683 or
643 J3 11
I 9 /U Amh erst 5Ux1 2 "J BH
19/0 Chom pron bO )( 12 'l BR
19b5 General bOx 12 2 BR
1r,l6!:1PMC52x1'12~R

lr,l5S Pr otrte Schooner :lf:lx8 1 ~R
1973 Roy al Emba ssy ef:lxl4 3 BR
1954 Slor SOxlO 2 HR
197'J StorOOx14 2 8R
1461:1 Star OOx12 2 8~
1970 Sylva 60x12 2 8R
1%8 Vrliogt:!&gt; bOx 12 2 8R
l9b4Wmdsor .llx1028~
19l0 Kirk wood 12xb0 'J 8R
11&amp; 5 MOti ll E HOME SALES
PT PL EASANT W VA
, A C R~ 1~ x t&gt;O mobile home
near De:.-ter r,lc,t'} 5858
Tq6? HOUSE TRAIU:R ll x 60 Al l
f'leclrl c lur 11s hed o ~..on d t
Ir oned was h er onJ d1yer Al so
'/.
lol~
rn
Horrr sonvtlle
1-l 'J 7H&lt;'b
:, 1All 1J Jt r,u 2 bedroom
,J l on t l. h lu•rr ..,ep ornt~d
'" 4 t o, l11 "'(' ' up o 1d ' cociy
l n r t, ~ ,~~q
A ~ I. Hlg
S:JbOO

l ~tJ 'I

&gt;Ill

J ,'

~

n

REALTY

6os E.
MAIN..,.,...-.POMEROY ,

0.

I

NEW LISTIING - A dr eam
home
n ew ra nch wit h
ba se men t large fam lly
room w1th woo d burn1ng
f1repla ce
l arge l 1vmg
room d~nmg room and n ce
k 1tehcn . 3 bedrooms, Ptz
bath s
fully
c arp ete d ,
garage It has elec cetl.ng
heat dec k many modern

features 151.500 00
CLOSE
IN - NEWER
RANCH ,
J b edrooms.
beautiful k1 tc hen larger
li v 1ng
room,
c arport
storage bulldmgs over 1
acre V A approved for
easy fmancmg If you

qua lol y

ONLY $31 000 00

HERE IS - Amce newer 3
bedroom
all
moder n
ranch equ•pped k•tchen
carpet1ng s1tt mg porches
small garden space leve l

lot A STEAL ATS2770000
NEAR
POMEROY
Sec luded and

WB F P

spl!CIOUS

3 bedr ooms

but it tn k1tchen , rec reation
room J;4 ac re Below Fa 1r
Market Value $20 500 00
70 ACRES - Farm ranch
type home, barn , other

992 J32S

216 E Second Street
REDUCED - 4 bedrooms
ga s heat ctt y water c1 t y
water
near stores and
school s Has a 2 car gar age
w1t h storage over
N1 ce
le vel lot 1n Middleport

$23 000
BUSINESS BUILDING -

36 x 80 Bulldmg out of h1gh
water
Ha s
a1r
cond1hohmg n atura l gas
hea t, c1ty water
and
c oncrete
f loor
In
Pomeroy

GOOO OLD HOME -

66 ol

an
acre m
exce llent
locat1on on No 124 Larg e
eat 1n kitchen
central
h ea t1n g
and
a1 r
condlt 1o ntng
several
porches and c1ty water

Now only 525 000
EXCELLENT LOCATION
- Has 3 large bedrooms
ba th natural gas heat ing
ctty water. 2 car garage
and
back
y ard
Just

$15 000
BUSINESS BUILDING
P lus

a

small

W1th bath

res1dence

gas heat and

buoldong s $33 ,500 00

c 1t y water 1n Rutland
Reduced to only S11 000

S9 500 Wlll bu y thiS 11/ 2
story 3 bedroom hom e

2B ACRES New 3
bedroom 2 bath 24' x 48

NEED TO SELL -

Pnce

r educed Lovely 2 story
fram e 3 or 4 bedrooms 2
baths
ve r y
moder n
k1lchen
N G hot water

heat

(budget $69 00 per

month) cor ner lot Loads of
remodel mg $27 500 00

WE HAVE SEVERAL
BUSINESS
AND
INVESTMENT
PROPERTIES
HENRY E CLELANO
REALTOR
992 2259, 992 6191
Hank Kathy &amp; leona
Associates

'.'
'

'

f AHM FOR sole House 2 ba rns
tro~l e r Lor ge pond tO acres or
(l:/ acre ~ 7 4'1 2506

FOR

noo

...

0

Yard Sale

Not1ce 1S hereby g1ven that
the OffiCe of Manpower
Development IS reQuestmg
proposa ls for O emon str atton
Glt....ANTIC YARO SALE • Children s
Pr o1ec t s fund ed under the
clo thntq to ys oquortum Holl o
Youth
Employment and
ween mask s househo ld rl em~
Tra1n lng Program IYE TP J
- - -N- - -, c-e_s__ _
MUCH MORt: Frrdyo 27 th 9 lrl l
Ttf le
111 of
th e
Com
01
dor k ~t 33 tow ard Athens
prehens ve Employm ent and - - - - - = -tal low s1 gn s near road std e
Tra1n1ng Act of 1973 (C ET AJ
NO HUNTING or trespo ssmg on
rests '192 1300 Ror n cance ls
ThiS SOIICi ti'ltron tS for the
my proper ty wrth oul perm r ~
deve l opm ent of expertmenta l
s10n Judy M cGraw
and p lot p r o1ects whtch wtl l
tncre a se
the
knowledge GUN SHOO T f.!ocrne Gun Club
_P~ t~or Sale_ _
conce r n tng youth pr ogr ar1
!:very Sundoy I pm ~octory
HOOfHOllOW Horses fl uy se l l
des1gns applrcab le to th e
choke gun s on ly
• Balan ce of State area The
trade or l rom New ond use d
geogr aphiC area to b e served GUN SHOOT Ro e~ne Volun teer
~addl es Rut h Reeve~ Albany
tS the 57 co ~nt y Oh o Balance
hre Dept hery Saturd ay 6 JO
(!&gt;14 ) tt9B 3790
ol St a t e area Pro1e c1s may
pm al th etr bu tl dm g tn Hoshan
serve a sub county a cou nt y
RISING STAR Kenn els Boord1ng
~acto r y choke gun s only
or a mu lft co unty area
an d groomtng
all bre eds
Protects Will be l 1m rled lo A ~ E YOU lroubled wtlh wtld
Chesh lfe Jbl 0292
S100 000 dura t10n will b e n o
ommols? ro, mtnk racoon
long er than e1ght month s
opossum beave r etc? Col i the LOVABLI::: WHITE snow drdl greot
(Jan ua ry 1 1979 to Aug u st 31
PYHENH S Pupp1 es
Phone
tra pper 965 J984 Wrll contact
19 79)
Prot ects musl be
I ~14 667 3B3El
rn
person
tor
signed
permt
s
str uc tur ed after one of the&gt;
sron
fo llowtng mod els
GOING OUT of Bus ne ss Sole 1
1 Educat1on Model A
Po odle s Pektngese Pom ero
va rrely of dtffer e n t se lf
nron Teocup Trnre ~ $J5 to
contatned pr og r ams have
S12S Ph one b1-4 b96 1297
b een
de ve lop e d
by
edu cat tonal servtce s to ad
AKl RI::: GISTENI:D Beagle 6 mon
dr ess the pr oblems of youth
ths old Mo le $75 367 0292
APPLICATIONS
employmen t and tra m1ng
Will be recetved at the
Examples of lhese InClud e
AKC N~G German Sc hnauzer
Veterans Off1ce, Pomer oy,
Ex per ence Ba se d Care e r
puppres 992 7040
Educatton
Pr o 1ect 700 1
0 , to employ a Veteran
AI&lt;C
REGISTI:::RED col he pupp1es 6
Career D ec1S10n Makrn g
Service Officer to fill the
Program
and
career
weeks old SltlO 742 2292
vacancy of the late Wallace
Plannmg Program Thes e
Amberger All appl1cants
TWO CHIHUAHUA S
fema le
and o ther srm!lar programs
must be a veteran All
!4'1 2J2::J or 742 2962
hav e be en used successfully
tn urban se tt.ng s The Offte e
appl 1cat1ons
must
be
of Manr,owe r Oe\l elopme nt rs
submttted by Nov 1st
tnter es ed '" the appllcat1 on
Auto S"'a"'le,.,s:.__ _
of thts type pr ogram to a
19 /l MONlA SPYOEH 305 eng tne
rural settmg
Pow er steerm g Power brokes
2 Vocat1onal E11plorat1on
Model - Pro1ec ts w tl l allow
AM FM radr o M ore extras Co li
part1 c1pants
to
become
742 282b
fami11ar wtfh tnterrelated 10b
PROBATE COURT OF
19()8
CORVHTI::: con&gt;~e r toble w rl h
fun c tton s The pro1 ec t Will be
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
desrgned to offer youths a ESTATE OF Ed g ar Roush
hard
top
$550 0
Day s
broad rang e of l ea rnrng DECEASED
985 JJ01 hen ngs 995 4140
eoxper enc e wh ch prov 1d e
Case N o 22 427 Dock et M
1974 DODGE COLT Runs good
e11posure to the world ot Pag e 2
w or k Pro1ects are t o pro\ltde
Need s some body work S1200
PUBLICATION
e11posure to a va rt ety ot
99'1 2E!B7 otler 4 weeMdoys
OF NOTICE
vocat10ns throug h demon
TO ALL PERSONS IN
l'l lb OLOSMOHIU STARHRE ~
s trat10n or pracftce Th e TER ES TED
IN
THE
baSIC des1gn Of the pr01ect IS ESTATE OF Edgar Roush
cylmder 4 5peed 25 000 miles
to h ave the youth Shuttle from DECEASED LATE O F Rt 1
New ltres l::xcell en l condtlton
10b to ob w1thln a spec1ftC M1nersv11te Oh 0 MEIGS
$2 750 9!:!5 3909
de partment of a com pany or COU NTY
PROBATE
bu st ne ss
then tra ns fer Ia COURT CASE NO 22427 An
1Ci7J
H
CAMINO
tr uc k
another departm ent th en ~ppltca tton has been frie d
Cru tsamot 1c
1111
stee r 1ng
sh ft W1th1n that departm ent
powe r locks A C 2 bor slool &gt;
ask m g to re li eve the es tat e
Ac i iV II les un der th1s mo del from admm1Strat1on saymg
142 2b69
should be su ppl emented by lh a I the as sets do not exceed
an or1entat on componen t lo $15 000 and lhe cred1tors w II
l9 7J ~ORO V~AN Tor mo J5 1 V 8
beg n each area of rotatronal not b e pre1udtees ther E: bY A
A C 9q'] 7458
work e11posure
heanng on the appl tcatton
3
Advanced
Tra1n1ng will be held November 1-1
\1'.,176 C H EV ROL~ I MONTi: Cori o 2
Model
Pr01e Ct S Wt ll 1978 at 1 00 o clock PM
' door P S P B A l an d mroe
pro v 1d e partte lpants il lready Persons know 1ng any rea so n
Ve r y
good
cond tlt o n
ha v tng baste occupaflona l why the appltcatton should
~14 773 5758
skills wtth furth er tra1 nt ng 1n n ot be granted sho uld app ea r
th etr
part1cul a r
ar e as
19/ 4 OLO S CUTLASS Su pr eme Sto
and 1nform the Court Th e
Part1c1pants Wtll lea r n the Cour t ts loca ted 1n Pomeroy
!t on Wogan Powe r wrndow s
co mplet e pr ocess tn the Ohro
power se ot s ttll wheel rear
production of an 1tem or the
Mann 1ng D Web sle r
wtndow del roster power door
operatron of a bU S H}~S S or
Probate Judge Cl erk
l oc k ~ Ci92 7663
1ndustry
Th1 s m fd~l w il l ( 10 ) 19 26 (Ill 2 3t c
enable parti Cipant:) to see
how thetr part1cu1ar skills are
Integrated 1nto the total
Lost and Found
product1on or op e rat1onal
For Rent
pr ocess
LOST CONCRHE
4ft
shule
4 Model for 14 and H Year
Reword b14 446 1142
LOUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork
Old Youths - Pr 01ec ts must
Route 33 nor th ol Pomeroy
be stru ct ure-d so as to prov1de
r OUND
LA~ G I:::
blo ck dog
Lorge lois Ca ll 992 7479
broad career e)(posure to 14
~utlond 742 2f:tB6 and dent fy
and 15 year old youths
J
AND
4 RM fu rnt shed and un
and
pay
board
btl!
Pr o1ect compo ne nts may
lu rn rs h ed • o pts
Phone
m c lud e but are not ltm1ted
997 5434
to any combmat•on of 10
Help Wanted
dept h career co unse11ng
TWO BEDROOM k•t chen l urn tsh
world of work
arre ntation
WORK
OV~ R SEAS
Austrolta
ed opl Cal l bef ore B o m
skil l tra1nmg 10b sampl1n g
Alrr co Sou th Amenco ~ur o pe
992 22B8
occupatrona I
and
labor
e tc
Cons tr u ct on
So les
market mtormat10n and 10 b
TRAI LER
ONE
mol e adult
seek .ng sk 111 s
l:ngtneers Clencol etc .58000
un 3 18 1
N ote to Prop osers
to $50 000 pl us bpen~es po•d
Re gu laf ton s requ.re t he
f or employmen t tnfo rmot1on TW O B!::OROOM m ob1le home 2
Prtme Sponsor to select
wn
te Overseas l:::mplo yme nt
mrle s ou t on SR 143 Ad ults only
operators pr1marlly f rom
8 0)( 10 11 Bos ton Ma 02 102
or wrl l consrder one chdd
commun1 ty
bas e d
Referen ce and depos tl re
organizations
w ho
hav e
WANHD COUNTER mon Apply
qurred Pard ult lrtres 992 3b47
pr ov en d emonst r ated e f
m p erson Motor Po rts Co
fe ct r~J eness
Stephen Hend erson
M tddleporl Oh to No phone
Any
1nd 1vtdual
or
calls
THRH
UI:::OROOM
$150 per
orga n1zat 1on may subm1t a
mon th $100 d epos tl 107 l ocust
pr opo sa I
how ever
th e
PAtH TIME openrng for RN or LPN
R egulations d isa llow th e
~~
Pomeroy House wrll be
w rth Phor r10co logy 3 11 shrfl
fun d 1ng of a progr am wh ch
show n Sot O ct 78 from 10 2
Contocl Nancy Van Meter RN
would produce prof1l for t he
P necres t
Care
Cenle r
contra cto r
Part1 c1pants must be 16 21
61444b711~
I or lo\.111
years of age, ex cept f or
WOU LD LIK~ o female to h'l'e tn
Model Four Prtortty will be
Sole
CAR
PET
RI:MNANT S Odds
and h elp core l or 2 grrl s ages b
g ven to wome n mmor d1es
and ~ nd s Shop Rt I Mrd
&amp; 8 992 771:1El
~Jeterans offen ders and the
dleport
Ohto
992 b17 3 or
handicapped
Parti Ctpant
I-' ART TIM!:: Clr ntc Recep lton sf
el g1b111ty 1S open l o those that
992 b20b
Clerk Approx 37 hou rs per
ha\le severe dtffiCU ifles ob
CLARK 4000 lb fork ltl l In good
lamrng em pl oyment la ck
month Re qurrements mclu de
operolrng
co n di11on
Days
cre dent1als
re qu tre su b
res1d ence 10 Me1gs Co ab tl tty
stant1a l bas1c r emedtal sk rll
985 330 1 E11enmgs 985 &lt;1140
to me el p eopl e eostly accuracy
de\le lo pme&gt;nt
come from
wrlh h gures and spellr ng clea r HAY ~0~ so le 992 7751
fam 111e s w1th an 1ncome
hondwrtf1n g local refe re nces
be low 85 percent ot the low er
APPALACHIAN STO VE CO larg e
Equal op portun tly employer
l1v 1ng standard and to tn
seleclton of wood or coo l
~o r more mlormotl on con tac t
lertrt le t ransfers ( tf they
h ea lers lowes t p rtces feolur
meet the eltg1brl/ty cnterta )
Planned
Par en thood
of
rng A sh ley Open Sat 10 td
All opportuntt1es wtil be
Soulheo~ l Ohr o Offrce rn (our
4pm Sun 12 no on l tl 3pm In
ma de availab le
Wit ho ut
thou se phone992 5912
regard to race creed co lo r
Middl eport belween 3rd and
nat onal or~g n
sex, han
4th St dow n the all ey from
dtca p , poltf ,cal affli1at1on or
Tony s
l_orryout
Phon e
Wanted to Buy
beliefs
b14 b98 7191
Applica t iOns may b e ob
CHIP
WOOD
Pole s mo 11
tatned from Ch es t e r D
l97J KAWASAKI n lo is ol ex
drome
ler
10
on
lorge s1 end
Wh i te Plann 1ng SuperviSOr
tra s
Al so
Cro tg AM PM
$8 50 p er ton Bundl ed slob
Oft tee of Manpower Develop
ca~ s ett e rn dash cor slereo and
Sb 50 per tan Oel1vered to
ment 30 E Broad Street 27th
Jen so n speakers Alter colt
Floor Columbus Oh1o 43215
Oht o Po llet Co fit 2 Pomeroy
99 ~ 35&lt;7
at (614) 466 8326 or 1 BOO 1050
992 2689
(toll fr eel
comp l eted ap
LUM P HOU SE cool SJS per ton
MSER POME HOY ~o r es l Pro
pl 1cat1ons sho uld be re-turned
del1 ve •ed 992 ll'J6
t o Chester 0 Wh1te at the
duels Top prrce for stan ding
sa m e add ress on or bef ore
sow ttm ber Col i 992 5965 or AK C WHITE poodle Femole I '
NO\Iember l l 1978
Kent Hanby 1 446 85l0
years old 8 drower dresser
wrth mt rror
K trby upnght
(10) 26, H e
OLD FURNITURI:: rce bo)(es bra ss
sweeper
Pr~ c es
cheep
beds rron be ds desks etc
992
35Etl
co mplete households Wrrte
M D Mrll et Rl 4 Pomeroy or 125 HONDA $525 949 2636
co11992
A 1978 Hondo Ha wk 400c c moto r
department for you and yours OLD COINS pocket welChes
cycle 1200 miles $11 50 Call
today
cla ss nngs wedd ng bonds
~42 2028
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
d1amond s Gold or stl&gt;~er Lol l
PURl: S O~GHUM mola sses S2 30
cause you're so creahve today
RogerWo m!.ley 74'1733 1
a q uml wtl h canto ner Al vrn
work wtll seem more like play
WI:: PICK up tunk au to bodes buy
Mye r s
Srl ve r
f.!tdge Rd
It s the nght hme to take on a
mg ru nk cars scrap rro n bol
Recd !t v lie
Oh o
Phone
project 1hal has been loo tough
terr es and met als
R1 der s
985 &lt;11 /7
1n the past
Salvage
SH 124
Pomeroy
19/0 rOf.!D 1 ton stoke bed truck
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Un
Ci92 5468
SLOOO 992 751:13 otter bpm
planned events somet1mes
turn o ut to be the mo st fun
1975 CA MARO Charles W 1lde r
Th 1s i s one of tho se days when
muth 99'l2205
_ _ Yard Sale
a bnght , chee rful perso nality IS
~A8Y S ROCKING cho1r baby s
the unexpe c1ed spark lo gel IF YOU ho 11e o serv rce to offer
bed boby clothe s ha mper
things humming
wo nt to buy or sell somethmg
riressn1g loble and wo men s '16
oe Jookrng l or WDrk
or
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) An unu
btlo..e qdc,r n bS
whotevo r
you 11 get resu lt ...
sua! propos 1t1on could come
laster w1th a Sent nel \Jonl Ad
your way today offenng a
loll "19'17 156
means to acqUire someth1ng
you ve been wanhng Snat c h 11 YA~ O SA H 1hru Saturday th e
up
I'Bt h f.! obc1 1 Ha yes on 124
PERMANENT
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Fle&lt;OS yrocu ~ e 9Ci2 :tbl8 Alu mtnu m
ANTI-FREEZE
bie plans woll work out bes1 for
b oot or che1y bows 7 weddntg
Why PAY S3 99
g owm golf rlub\o old ont1q ue
you today Several fun ond
lo
hlr...,e
l
of
whee
ls
for
cort
eMcitlng thongs could pop up,
clade s CO%c lfes album s con
and you II wa,..• to take advan\. ~~gal
sol e- !'. Ioree corp~ t ~wr&gt;t• pe•
tage of th&lt;· ~ 1
house
pl
o1Hs
and
po
l
~
on
lr
qta.•
LIBRA (Sept 23-0el 23) Your
~ cwiOQ mnch u1e no r ob ""' ' on
mater-al prospects look very
t r •
gl• th hmn r"
90111 1" \o
promising today Be alert for
1 tl lolnq 11 1.1~~
n ...t I old"" ' '
something gomg on behmd the
u ofl h on~ '' fl d ! , It b t&gt;Qi&lt;
'l'a~•ck W Carsey, Mgr.
scenes that w 111 mean financial
I Of'
hr ,).
) l f P' I 'Jt'1 1t t
l
ga1ns
uJ 1 I ,
I o1
Phone 992 2181
!NEWSPA PER ENfERPAISE ASS N !

.

home N• ce step sav mg
kitchen d•nlng room and
second older house

NEW

LISTING

3

bedroom renovated hom e
w ith enclosed beth central
heat 1ng
r ur al
water
woodburner , and over an

acre ot land

$~3

000 lor

prompt sa le

LIST WITH US, WE HAVE
YOUR INTEREST AT
flEART
NEW FREE
CALENDAR
Helen L Teaford

G Bruce Teaford
Sue P Murphy
ASSOCiates

Housing '
Headquarters

,.•

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middl•port-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 26, 1978

;,

Meigs Farm BuJ.eau
annual dinner meeting
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Membership pin s were
Election· of trustees , presented to new members
honoring of new and veteran and members who have
members - and passage of belonged to the organization
numerous resolutions on the fo r as long as 60 years.
New members include
local state and national level
highlighted the annua l Donald G. Putnam, Reedsmeeting of the Meigs County vi lle; Frank M. Colwell,
Farm Bureau Federation Vinton; Terry R. Scaggs,
Thursday night.
Middleport;
J ames
J.
Elected to three-year terms Proffitt, Route 4, Pomeroy;
as trustees on the federation Dorothy Sedgwick, Tuppers
board
were
Richard Plains ; (.1arence Lambert,
Koblentz, Route 3, Pomeroy; Route 2, Pomeroy; William
Tom Hamm, Route I, B. Downie,
Pomeroy;
Minersville ; Virgil King, Richard Koblentz, Route 3,
Kingsbury ,
and
Rex Pomeroy; Boyd A. Ruth,
Shenefield, Langsville.
Ro ute 3, Pomeroy; Curtis E.
Henry Frank, Route 3, Balthaser, Route I, LangsPomeroy,
was named ville; Otis McClintock, Route
delegate to the 1979 state I, Racine; Larry J . Wiles,
convention with Ru!a Wolfe, Route I, Racine; Davis JnRoute 2, Racine, being named surancc, Co urt St., Pomeroy;
first alternate.
Diane Sue Eberts, McArthur ;
Maidie Mora, president of Royal Oak Farm, Route 3,
the board, presided over the Pomeroy; Ohio Pallet Co.,
dinner meeting held at the Route 3, Pomeroy; Nick!ois
Chester Elementary School - Lee Le onard , Route 3,
with Lawrence Bush giving Pomeroy; Gary L. Michael,
Route I, Minersville; Roy
the invocation.

FRIDA~,

OCTOBER 27 AN.D
OCTOBER 28
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8:00 P.M.
CHANNEL MASTER ·
COMPONENT
SYSTEMS '.REG. '379.95
player--recorder

WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR
-

One group of Jackets, Slacks,
Skirts, Blouses and Vests.
Missy and extra sizes.

Stereo radio

speed record changer
-2 quality speakers
- Microphone

Reg. $8.00 ••••••• . Sale 55.99
Reg. $11.00••••••• Sale 58.29

•349

00

Reg.

Reg . S23.00 ....... Sale 517.29

- Cassette Player-Recorder
- AM-FM stereo radio
"-3 speed record changer
- Microphone

- 2 speakers

PUMPKIN QUEEN - Carol Moore was crowned
queen of the Circleville Pumpkin show last Wednesday.
She is a junior at Circleville High School and the daughter

Shooting
!Continued from page I)
cher by Teresa Susanne
Gibbs, 20, Mason, ex-wife of
Ralph Gibbs, who was a
witness to the incident.
Deputies T. E . Roush and
H. W. Colegrove, along with
State Police Trooper Fred A.
Backus, responded to the
call.
The Mason Rescue Squad
also was at the scene but the
injured subject refused to be
transported, deputies said.
LOWERED
THE COST OF
CARPET CLEANING

NOW RENT

LOWER
RATES

The Gallia - Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
four accidents Wednesday.
Officers were ca11ed to the
scene of a three-vehicle
accident in Meigs County on
SR 7, two-tenths of a mile
north of CR 3 at 3:35 p. m.
According to the patrol, a
Meigs Local School Bus
operated by Louise Wyant,
42, Pomeroy, had stopped
north bound to unload a
passenger.
A southbound semi-tractortrailer stopped fo r the bus.
A so uthbound ve hi cle
operated by James Rucker,
49 , Reedsville, was unable to
stop, swerved left of center
and struck the school bus in
the left side.
Officers report slight
damage to the bus and the
Rucker vehicle.
Rucker was cited on
charges of assured · dear
distance .

At 12 :45 p. m., the patrol
inv estigat ed a two-vehicl e
accident on SR 7, six-tenths of
a mile north of CR 2.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Lura Counts, 20,
Racine, had stopped in traffic
on 7. A vehicle driven by
Debbie Young, 22, Pomeroy,
failed to stop and struck the

Do·it- yoursell
an d get profe ssional
r&amp;s~J,Its

.,

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

:'

P U.BLI C NOTICE
B id s f or o pen i ng, c losing
g ra ves and r emoving d irt wi ll
be ac cepted by the Ru tl and
Tow nship Tru st ee s, Rutland ,
0 . until Thur sda y, Oc t 26,

STAR SUPPLY CO.

1978 at 6 :00P .M .
T he t r us tee s r eser ve right
to reject an y o r a ll bi d s.
Edna M. Swic k ,
Cle rk
( 10 ) '16 , lfc

949-2525

Racine, 0 .

Bring us your money.
We'll pay you for it!
011r high earning rale means
growing savings far fOil. Come In soon.

Counts auto in the rear.
Officers report moderate
damage to both vehicles.
Young was cited on charges
of assured clear distance .
Officers were called to the
scene of a one·auto accident
at 11 :40 a . m. on SR 325 at CR
9.
The patrol reports that a
south bound ,vehicle operated
by Steve Montgomery, 16,
Crown City, slid off the right
·side of .the roadway while
traveling south.
The auto went · out of control, crossed the road, hit a
bump which flattened the
right rear tire, and flipped
over on its side.
Montgomery was uninjured. Officers report
moderate damage to the
vehicle. No citation was
issued.
At 3 :30 p. m., officers investigated a two-vehicle
collision on SR 143, seventenths of a mile west of SR 7
in Meigs County.
The patrol reports that a
westbound auto operated by
Ernest
Mitchell ,
17,
l;'omeroy, attempted to pass
a vehicle operated by Beverly
Eishop just as Bishop started
to pass a school bus.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Bishop auto,
slight damage to the Mitchell
vehicle.
No citation was issued.

Fur'

Meigs County
People

RACINE

.......

HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

OHIO

~----------- - --~-*J

Reg. $34.00 ....... Sale $25.49

'239111

Reg. 41.00 ....... Sale $30.69

The special education class
of Barbara Demoskey is
having a "spook house" at
the Meigs Junior High
Ce ntral buildin g all day
Friday until 6:30p.m .
Admission will he 50 cents
and 25 cents and the public is
invited. Proceeds will he used
to purchase equipment for
the class. Mrs. Demoskey
reports the class has done an
excellent job on the feature
and asks public support of the
.. spook house" .
REVIVAL SLATED
A revival at te Middleport
I nd e pendent Holiness
Church, Pearl St. , will continue 'through October 29 with
the Rev . and Mrs. Kenneth
Bogard, Washington Court
House, as singers and
evangelists. The Rev . O'Dell
Manley, pastor, invites the
public to the services which
are at 7: 30 each evening.

TO END MARRIAGES
Filing for dissolution of
their marriages in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
were James E. Roush,
Dexter and Barbara E.
Roush, Dexter; Frank
Herald, Jr., RD, Middleport
and Mary Jane Herald , RD,
Middleport.
CLINIC TUESDAY
The Harrisonville Senior
Citizen Club will sponsor a
blood pressure clinic day
Tuesday Oct. 31, beginning at
10 a.m. at the club house. The
clinic wiU be held once a
month.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to Mulberry
Ave. at 5:25 a . m. Thursday
for Dr. R. E. Boice who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
HALLOWEEN PARTY
A Halloween party will be
held at Letart Falls
Elerhentary School Friday at
2 p.m. for the school children.
Prizes were donated by
Modern
Woodmen
of'
America .
VISITORS
Mrs. Dale Roush of Apple
Creek spent the weekend here
visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Turner.
MEET TONIGHT
Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter bf Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet at 8 this
evening at the Meigs Inn.

Vinton; Ste ll a Grueser,

Middleport; Halliday and
Atkins Farm, Route I ,
Rutland and Vernon Nease,
Route I, Minersville.
The Buddy Young Show
which had been booked for
enterta inment was Wl able to
be on hand . Providing the
entertainment was the Al
Myers musical group and a
comedian, AI Ga briel.

Resolutions passed by the
organiza tion include :
COUNTY
BE I T RESO L VED we oro e

iContinu eu 011 page 12)

6().YH . MEMBERS HONORED- These Farm Bureau
Federation members attending the annual meeting in .
Chester Thursday night all are 60 year members and they
received gifts . They include : front , I to r, Mrs. Stella

this yea r ; Mrs . Maidie Mora, federation pro • d

Grucser , Mrs . Sar a h Cal dwe ll , l'epresenting Mrs . Emma

Vernon Nease, 60 year member .

•

e
VOL. XXIX

MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

REVERE
WARE

FASHION

140(

1-quarl

COVERED 1 QUART SAUCE PAN

Stainless Steel with (!q)per
REG. '17.00

SALE $13

~()\

SALE! MR. LEGGS
MEN'S RANNEL
SHIRTS
Pooular Country Flannel In solid
colors and plaids. Two button

down flap pockets, full tails.
Regular sizes S, M. t.: and XL. ·

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Debrah
Ridgway, New Haven;
Lonnie Taylor, Middleport.
Discharged - Roy Fox,
Larry Wright, Charles
Manley, Ruth Lutheran,
Bennie Lyons, Thomas Wolfe,
Rose Marcinko, Helen
George.

Uoyd and Wayne Roush,
Racine.
'Forty-year members
honored were Mr. and Mrs . .
Ziba Midkiff, Route J ,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Blakeslee, Pomeroy.
Gilts were presented to
50 years and over members
locludlng, Mrs. G. L.
Michael, Route I, Mlnersv11le; Emma Findling,
Route 3, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Everett Colwell, Route I,

Findling; Mrs. Ruby Halliday and d&lt;tughter , \l1 ' "·· ;,."
Atkins, all 60 years: back row, from the 1.-'1 I,',, rt
Burdette and Thomas Hamm, in t:harge of w : Jr r 1 p
··~o''

•

at

en tine

·'' "

A writing workshop for
residents wishing to prepare
a family history to be
published in an upcoming
Meigs County History will he
held at I p. m. Friday at the
Meigs County Museum,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
Families can submit a 500
word essay of their activities
and background and one
picture for publication in the
history. They need not buy a
history book to take part:
In order to assist families
in preparation of the
material, representatives of
the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society will
conduct such workshops at I
p. m. each Friday _at the
museum and at I p. m. each
Monday at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy. The
workshops will be held
throughout the month of
November.

~-------,

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By :
Richard L. Smith ,
Secretary

*

1 quart covered sauce pan .
Stainless steel Farberware with

Workshop
planned

'spook house'

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set for
public hearing Case No.
78-627·EL·FAC to review
the fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of the
Columbus &amp; Southern
Oh io Electric Company,
the operation of its Fuel
Cost Adjustment Clause,
. and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to be·
gin at· 10 :00 a.m. on Octo·
ber 30, 1978 at the Com·
mission 's Office's, 180 East
Broad Street , Columbus,
Ohio . All interested per·
sons will be given an
opportunity to he heard.
Further information mav
be obtained by contacting
the Commission.

FARBERWARE

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday tbru Monday
United Press International
Cool through the period,
with showers possible
Saturday and
again
Monday. Fair Sunday.
Highs will be In tbe 50s
Saturday and Sunday and
In tbe upper 50s or lower
60s Monday, Lows will
range from tbe middle 30s
to the lower tos .

Class sponsors

LEGAL NOTICE

A Home Bank

Reg. $28.00..... .. Sale $20.99

ot the late Ohio State Patrobnan, Sgt. Edward G. Moore,
Jr ., granddaughter of Kathryn and Edward G. Moore, Sr.,
Middleport and niece of Kathy Cumings, Syracuse.

Three-car
crash
.
probed in Meigs

Reg , SIB.OO •••••• Sale $13.49

S269.95

Alan Holter, Rout e 3,
Pomeroy; Gregory A. Stover ,
Gallipolis; Robert Brown ,
Bidwell, and Carroll Caldwell, Route I, Northup.
Receiving 25-year pins
were Ralph E. Carl , Route 2,
Pomeroy ; Henry Frank ,
Route 3, Pomeroy; Eugene
Holliday, Route I, Dexter ;
Cressa
F.
Brown,
Binghamton, N. Y. ; Edison
and Larry Hollon , Route I,
Minersville.
Thirty-year pins went to
Leota Massar , Route I ,
Reedsville; Edward Wayne
Wolfe, Route 3, Pomeroy;
Pau) W. and Jean L. Sayre,
Portland; Paul Montgomery,
Ro ute I, Langsville; Francis
YolUlg, Ro ute 4, Pomeroy;
Edso n Roush, Racin e;
Charles lhle, Route I, Racine .
Pins for 35 years of
membership went to Alfred
Frank, Route 3, Pomeroy ;
Thomas Sayre, Ro ute I ,
Portland; Aaron and Eula
Wolfe, Route 3, Racine, and

Extra sizes IB , 19 and 20. Tall

/ .·'I

sizes M, L. and XL

·

11.95 Solid Colors, Reg. Sizes ......... '10.19
112.95 Plaid Patterns, Reg. Sizes ... -.. '10.89
1
13.95.Solid Color, Tall Sizes .. .-...... '11.79
1
14.95 Plaid Tall and Extra Sizes ......'12.59
1

Reg. $8.50........ Sale $6.79

Consumer

largest

TOPs

i _
A

~

MEN'S BANLON
PANEL
DRESS SLACKS
Regularly '1.00 A Pair - One size fits all
sizes 10 to 13. Excellent selection of

cars

40 YEAR MEMBERSHIP - Mr. and Mrs. Ziba
Midkiff , left , and Mr . and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee
received 40 year Farm Bureau Federation membership
pins Thursday night.

Reg. $23.00 ..... Sale $18.39

TWO DAY SALE!

REGULAR $1 49
WINTUK YARN
By Coats and Clarks - Big selection
of colors - 3lh ounce skeins.

17.95 Waist Length Style..... ..'15.29'22.95 Long Length Style....,}19.59

1

OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 5100 P.M.

dam~ed

m oming .

Pomeroy poli ce said a car
driv en by Li sa Jctt.
Pomeroy , pulled from tile
Smith-Nelson Motor Co. lol
into the path of a westbound
car

Early graduation policy
adopted by Eastern board
A poli cy for ear ly
graduation was adopted when
the Eastern Local School
District Board of Education ·
met this week at the high
school.
According ta the policy, a
parent and student will
provide th e hi gh scho ol
principal with a letter of
intent no later than Aug. I,
preceding the student's
junior year. The administration will evaluate t he
individijal situation and make
a recommendation to the
parent,
student
and
superintendent prior to the
beginning of the school year.
Re commendation of th e
administration and the approva I of the local board of

A

with warm sherpa lining - machine
· washable. Ideal for school wear.

si nce ea rly

Two ca rs were heavily
damag ed and one dri ver
injured in an accident on East
Main St .. Pomeroy, 'nmrsday
30 YEAR MEMBERS - Receiving 3()-year Farm Bu reau Federation membership pin s
Thursday night at Chester were, front, Melissa Jhle, Mrs. Clark Til le a 11d Loi s !hie,
representin g Charles Jhle , and back, I tor, Mrs. Francis Young and Mr. and Mrs . Paul W.
Sayre.

~·

88~ PAIR
BOYS WRANGLER
SHERPA LINED DENIM JACKETS
Sizes 8 through 20 - No fault denim

Reg. $2l.OO ..... . Sale $16.79

lncrer~se

Woman hurt,

colors - Two Days Only.

Reg. $16.00...... Sale $12.79

ruse 0.8

summer, as food prkcs
resumed th eir upwa rd
adv ance and the cost of
attending college soa red, the
governme nt reJKJrted todav .

~ttom.:{..

00

price~

percent in &amp;,ptember , the

:"~: ::!::::::::::::::~: ::~:: ~

Reg - $12.DO ...... Sale $9.59

·119

~
t

By JAMES HILDRE11l
WASHINGTON IUPI I

:::: :~~:::~:-.-.~·.::::::· ::~: :~:: !

HX, 7-14.

Reg. $6.00 ........ Sale $4.79

FRIDAY, OCTOBER ·27 , 1978

PR ICE FIFTlE N t:ti;,:,

Consumer prices rose
0.8 pet. last month

REG. '7.00 ............... SALE •5.95 . ~REG. '9.00 .............. SALE '7.65 . .

Includes ~resses, Skirts,
Jackets and Jumpers.
2-4,

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

S, M, L, XL

LITTLE GIRLS
DRESSES
Sizes

NO . 137

education woul d mean the
student would immediately
be cla ssi £ied as a senlur in·
stead of a junior. It is anticipated an approved ea rly
graduation student wo uld be
participating in graduation
exercises and receiving a
diploma with the se11ior class
with wh ich the student had
been registered.
During the meeting, Supt.
Clark Lees advised he is
looking for a cert ifi ed teacher
to give home instructi on . A
considera bl e portion of the
, meeting wa s spe_nt in
reviewing matters of policy
changes and matt ers related
to problems ·with the school
transportation system.
The board approved a new

driv e n

by Fl orence

Hatfield. Columbus.
Miss Jett wH s tak en to

Veterans Memc•rial flospital
where she was admitted for

job description for the school
rnr chanic . It. also
rece ived a report from Supt.
co n ce rnin g
L ees
organizational changes and
needed improvements within
the transportat io11 depa rtment. In the area of tra ns·
p011ation, the board agreed to
pa rticipat e a pr e·serv ice
school bus driver traininK
program with Meigs Local
and Southern Local Districts.

inju r ies . Invest igat io n is
continuing.

bu s

P e rs ons

interest ed

in

needing information about a
pre·se rvi ce pr og ram for
t raining schoo l bus drivers
should contact Archie Ruse.
James Wilhelm presented a
proposa l from the band
boosters relative to the
(Continued on pa~c 12 )

t;LEVEl.AND (Ul'l) Thl!&lt;. week' s winning Ohio
Lottery numbers:

Gold number - 4.
White number - 66.
Blue number - 808.
Win-A·Thon
19805.

THIRTY-FIVE YEAR MEMBERSHIP pins in the
Meigs Farm Bureau Federation Thursday night went to
left couple, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sayre and on the right,
Aaron and Eula Wolfe.

Nursing home

unvei led his new antiinflation campaign he hopes
will lower the annual rate of
inflation to between 6 and G.5
percent in 1979.
~·ood and bevernge p1·ices,
U1e biggest contr ibutor 1o
consum er inflation earlier in
year rose 0.5 percent in
September a11d grocery costs
went up 0.4 perce11t, the
Labor Department said in i1s
!&lt;~test inflation measurement.
Alth ough the food cost
gains were moderate when

Andrews new
coordinator
Mayor Clarence Andrews
proje ct
cuordina1 or of a Federa l
Land and Water Conservation F und gnmt of
$19,926 to improve the .Jaycee
Mini Park on Mechani c St,
Pomeroy.
1l1c mayor has been ad~
vised he will recei\.'e a letter
frum th e office of Outdoor
Recr.ealion Services witllin a
few
days
explainin g
pro cedures ne cessary to
obtai n fin al federal approval
of the project.
He has been advi sed not to
proc eed with an y c on·
tractural agreements on the
project until he has received
a signed federal .contract.
h as been named

RALEIGH , N. C. (UPI )·A Wake Superior Court jury
has convicted Bland Julius
Hill Jr. for the first-d egree
murder of a Waha ma school·
teacher.
The jury will decide today
whether Hill should be sen·
tenced to death. It took the
group of six men and six

Prosecutors maintain Hill,

Romine and two companions

who had stopped when Miss
Hamm pretended her car was
stalled. Llamas has already
entered a guilty plea and
Mis s Hamm wa s a key
prosec ulion witness .
Miss Hamm told the court
she posed as a woman

of tlle trucks that were inspected is Bob Clark,
superintendent . Clark reported that all equipment is in
order and ready for the winter season\V

fo od

prices

virtually unchru 11: I

The

depar!tL

'' sharp ' '

other

incre 'l\"'~
fP t· ~

'''·

~chool

school books ~llti
contributed si1; nif l
the overall inflLI : 1'

.,

month .
l11 e p erson ~d ( ti~

'

;.

l'ose I percen t. ~~~ ~
j ump of 1978. 1(. 1
higher prices fot tn.· ' ,·
and a ppli an( -..s arru
and b:-~ r ' be r sht'P -"~I -

"

The overall n :;·:&gt;
percent was a!.ouv· r: · ' .•
O.G percent gaiw. ld
August and "'· ''') u .~
sinre June's 0.9 peH •

i~

'..'

.I

. • .t
"

Ut e departuwn t s&lt;li d

"

• 0

G ft 1\ NT It l·:n .J·
Pomero } \' ilbt r
rec·eiH·d a $1 9,!J2G"

thr tlcv••lopnwul
Jayl.'l'e

cording

,, ..
t:

1 •

m rn t pt tJ

r;, n.

Rhudcs,

Ohio's dtit&gt;'&gt;, \"i 'a· ~ · .I
oth e r lor a l gn •r!rt~~-· ct
agenci es nilt ,,. ,. \ . .
funtling ns ~islau n r •··-'JI' 1
o' 'er 11 .6 mi11ion ,Jstt
pu blic uutdott r i •.'
proj rc· ts rw:\:t ~, -,...
Rh ndt·s amwuw·•· '
The J 18 I•_,, ,; 11 r

. sele-ctNI for luuflr,
pirked from ;-. t
appli cations.

Romine murder

Terry Ann Hamm, and Mike
Reyes Llamas jumped

WINTER INSPECTION - Trucks and all other
equipment of the Meigs County Garage of the Ohio
Department of Transportation underwent tht state's
annual inspection 11mrsday morning. Shown with several

still abovP the 1
Augus t perfonu:n 1•

! '

'

wom en just 90 minutes to

proJect out

com pared wi!l1 tLc
months nf th P ) p;,, '

Guilty verdict givt•J • ." r ,

decide that Hill had k1lled
J erry E . Romine of Point
Pleasant .

•

According to a reliable
A JOO.bed nursing home source, a representative of
project in • Middleport has the Hermanson Construction
apparently fallen through Co. , Indiana , has stated that
according to reliable so urces. the planned construction will
The home wasto have been not fit onto the land that is
constructed near the corner now available_ Some 60 to 70
of Page and Powell Sts. in more fee t are needed and the
Middleport and would have . owner of additional land will
been a $) ,750,000 building not sell, It Is reported.
Middleport village has been
project not counting the
economic improvement to the promised grants totaling over
community through 60 jobs $100,000 for sewage system
after it was completed. A work in conjunction with the
planned apartment complex planned nursing home. It is
for senior citizens will also go a$sumed, at this point, those
down the drain with the grants 'l'ill not he forthca*ellatlon of the nursing coming due to the ap[i\retJI
cancellation of the project.
home. ,

Last month's in&lt;:rease -9.6 percent on an annual rHte
- was ;umowtced three days
after Presiden t Ca rter

needing help along the highway while the two men hid iri
n ea r ~y
woods, Llamas
testified yesterday . H• said
after Hill murdered Romine,
Hill and Llamas then drank
beer and smoked marijuana
they had stolen from a North
Carolina man i,l) a similar
ambush about t wo hours

en ~:".

ea rli er.
Defense lawytr W•~l.;n11 W.
Merrim:-:tn ITI1 old lh· jnr,\· •rt
closing arguiiF'I11 ~ tli:tt \ lJ!l
was no mort' guilt y Ihan i\i! "
Hamm, ,.·ho original!~ fac• •J
the SHrne mu nlcr, nrm ~'t\
r obbe ry , kid rwpping .aiJd

conspiracy to ro b chH rgc!-: a~
Hill. All but. th e robl·•'• ,v
t;;harges were dropp£'d m
exchange for her trstJm,Hl\.
"Tf you can't convi rt Tc'T .V
Harrun of each t•r;mr, t!•(n
don 't eonviet Bland lfo! l ,•f oil
l'rimes ,'' Mf'rriiT IPil !v!Hl
"No one defendnn l :;hu i!lrl !J;'
treated 111ore h:'lr.;\11)'" th:m
Terry Hamm .. ,
Assistant Distriet AIJor:-w~

Nicholas J . flO mbulb sa111
the evidence is ovr1·wtwllninH
that Hill is guilty . lie noted
that Romine 's wr ht w~11ch
was found in Hill 's bt•droom.
Miss Hamm .uml Llam::!s

testified Hill ki!l eli Hmnine
with a single shot. as thr West
Virginia teacher plendcd fo r
mercy .
A state medical exnminE'r
testified Rom ine ,·,us sl1ot
with a .38-caliber hutlcl ftom
a gun held Oilly 1hree or [our
inches fr'W' Ius fureM~&lt;J.

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