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                  <text>10- The Daily S.ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Munday, S.pt. 11, 1978

Southem band
participating

Students still holtle,
worry about education
While striking teachers and
non,.cademic employees .talk
with school officials about
money matters , some
students worry about how the
strikes will affect their
education.
Strikes in six Ohio districts
have put more than 13,000
school employees on the
picket tines, affecting more
than m,ooo students.
Students in Cleveland, the
state's largest district, could
not get into classes Friday
because doors were locked,
apparently by striking nonteaching employees. Those
students were sent home.
students in Logan School
District have not had classes
at aU. Their teachers and
nonacademic employees
have been on strike since
Aug. 29.
Classes are being held in
Dayton , Lima Shawnee,
Buckeye
Local
and
Tallmadge whil e striking
employees walk picket lines.
But carrie Ruth, 18, a
senior in the Dayton school
system, said she was being
tanght things she didn 't need.
She and several other
seniors expressed concern
about learn ing the right
information for their collegeentrance tests which are
administered in November.
Others also expressed fear
that if the strike, which began
Wednesday, is prolonged,
they won't have time to make
up the missed work.
Miss Ruth said she spent
part of Friday in an English
class with students from all
four upper grades and "there
were teaching how to
capitalize ." Classes are being
beld in study hall rooms,

~

cafeterias, band room and
libraries, rather than regular
classrooms.
Attendance was low
Thursday and Friday.
ClaSses this week will be
staggered, with grades one
thr,ough five, nine and 10
going Monday, and grades six
through eight, II and 12 going
Tuesday. All grades should
be . attending school . by
Wednesday .
Dayton's 2,220 teachers and
the scbool board have been
meeting with Montgomery
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Carl D. Kessler to
work out a solution to the
strike, triggered over a wage
demand .
The two sides have been
asked to produce financial
info rmation for today's
session in the judge ',s
chambers.
Meanwhile, talks aimed at
bringing an end to the teacher
walkout in :rallmadge broke
off Sunday, an Ohio
Education Association
spckeswoman said.
"The Tallmadge Board of
Education broke off negotiations ... while the Tallmadge
Teachers Associa tion was
continuing to bargin in good
faith ," said Helen Dorobiala
of the OEA.
She said the action came
. after the TTA offered
counterproposals on salary
and dental insurailce.
'ITA President Dick Burns
said his association "is
gravely disa ppointed that the
board broke off negotiations,
and we remain willing to
meet day and night to reach
an equitable settlement ."
Most of Tallmadge's 180
teachers are off the job but

ann versary sale
-

"FLEX STEEl"
Whateve r your· taste in furniture , you can
choose wit h confidence from Fiexsteel.
Wh e t her you s elect contempo r ary ,
traditionaL modern or coloniaL you wi II fi nd
an impe ccab le elegance in every p iece that
will be a proud addit ion to your home. This
distinct ive Fiexsteel furniture is available
in sofas . sectionals, s uites . chairs. and a
un ique sofa-sleeper . Hundred s and
hundreds of fabr ics, all decorator -se lected
for bea utiful correctness .

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

schools remain open f&lt;r the
Summit County system's
3,500 students.
In Marion, a threatened
strike by members of tbe
Marion Education
Association against the city
school system has been
averted, at least temporarily,
with the ratification Sunday
night of a new contract
agreement.

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

1 Area Deaths !
I

I

GERTRUDE DRAKE
Gertrude E. Drake, 81, a .
resident of Rt. I, Vinton,
died ai her home at 6:45
p.m. on Sunday. She had
been in failing health for
several years.
Mrs. Drake was born on
Jan. 10, 1897, in Meigs
Co unty, (Salem center
community) daughter of the
late Delbert and Mirah
Thaxton Williams.
Survivors include her
husband, Burl Drake. She
was preceded in death by one
brother and one sister. She
was a member of the Huntington Grange.
Funeral services will be
held I p.m . Wednesday at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
with burial in Salem Center
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 7 until 9 p.m.
GOLDYE JOHNSON
Goldye Randolph Johnson ,
78, New Haven, died Sunday
in Holzer Medical Center
after a long illness.
She was born April 11, 1900
in New Haven, to the late
J ohn and Ann Roush Goodnile. She was preceded in
death by her husband ,
Herbert Johnson in 1952.
She wa s a retired
restaurant operator in New
Haven, and a member of the
Broad Run Zion Latheran
Church.
Survivors
include
one
daughter , Mrs. Mildred
Zirkle, Hartford; two sons,
George Randolph , New
Haven , and Paul Randolph ,
Letart Route •I; four sisters,
Mrs. Mamie Griffin, Carrollton , 0 .; Mrs. Pansy Frv. New
Haven; Mrs. Dorothy Cunningham , Weirton; Mrs .
Sylbil Grinstead , Letart ;
seven grandchildren and 10
great-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at I :30 p.m. in
the Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev. Geor~e Weirick

lkltch's Response
to Parental Advice
let's face. it . Butch is far more likely to fol low your ex&amp;m'ple than )IOVr advice.
So, whtn 1t comes to teaching· children t"Jbout thri!VSklp the " penny saved Is 4
penn y earned " speech ; and . instead . take the kids with you to Farmers Bank and
let them watch Yf)U open a savinQ s accoun1. Now, that's exam ple.

I!!]
t 1

2

A

The m~bershlp voted 2248 to accept the two-year
agreement. Members d. the
Marion City School Board
will act on the tentative
agreement during their board
meeting tmtght.
Officials say it's Ukely the
board also will ratify the
agreement. There are 7,800
students in the Marion school
system.

Far111ers Bank
PQMEROY, OHIO

officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call today
from 3 to 5 and from 7 to 9
p.m. at the funeral home.
DR. GERALD LOZIER
Dr. Gerald Scott Lozier, 4.7,
died Saturday in the Princeton, N. J. , Medical Center.
Dr. Lozier was the husband
of the former Rea Ann Myers
and a son of Mr. and Mrs.
Hugo Lozier of Loudonville.
He was a son-in-law of Mr.
and Mrs. Aaron Kelton of
Minersville and had visited
here over the years.
Born Oct . 3, ·1930 at
Loudonville, Dr. Lozier was
senior member of the techical
staff of the David Sarinoff
RCA Laboratories where he
had done outstanding work
for the past 23 years.
He was a graduate of
Western Reserve University
where he attained his doctorate in physical chemistry .
He was a member of
numerous scientific societies
and the recipient of several
outstanding acbievement
awards.
Besides his wife and his
parents, he is survived by two
children, Jay Scott, of
Atlanta, Ga. , and Joan Marie
of Oakland, Calif.
Memorial services are to
be held at All Saints
Episcopal Church in Princeton.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p. m. Thursday at
the Banks-Barley Funeral
·Home in Loudonville where
friends may call on Wednesday and Thursday. The
body will be flown · from
Princeton, N. J. to the funeral
home
in
Loudonville
Tuesday.
Accompanying the body on
the flight will be Mr. and Mrs.
Aron Kelton, Mr. and Mrs.
John Austin and family and
the Lozier family .
The Loziers reside at 11
Terhune Road, Princeton, N.
J.
HAROLD BIRD
Harold William Bird, 55,
Route 2, Racine, died
Saturday
at
Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
An automobile mechanic,
Mr. Bird was a son of the late
Fred and Oddessia Virginia
O'Neil Bird.
Surviving are his wife,
Emma Lee Bird : two
daughters, Mrs. Genevieve
Roush, Charleston, S.C., and
Mrs. Virginia Hope Wolfe,
Portland; a son, William
Harold Bird, Racine; a sister,
Mrs. Clara Powell, Route 2,
Racine, and six grandsons.
Funeral services will be

):IUNTINGTON ..,- More
than
1,800
marching
musicians will pre$ent the
half-time show a' the Marshall University - ·Appalachian State football
game Saturday, Sept. 16, in
Fairfield Stadium.
Marshall's 150 - m4!1Pber
Thundering Herd Marching
Band will be joined by approximately 1,700 musicians
fro01 21 high school bands in
the "BB!Id Day" production,
according to W. Richard
Lemke, director of Marshall
bands.
Their half-time show will
be a massive salute to Walt
Disney. The Marshall ba¢
will lead the event with the
"Mickey Mouse March" and
the high school bands will join
to play a ''Mary Poppins"
medley, "When You Wish
Upon A Star," and a special
arrangement, "Disco While
You Work."
Attending bands and .
directors from Ohio include
Coal Grove High, Robert J.
Barthen ; Southern High of
Racine, Jess Bro'wning;
Valley High of Lucasville,
Gale L. Dalton; South Point
Hlgh, Kent Wellman; . Clay
High of Portsmouth, Glirly L.
Billups; Chesapeake High,
Bob Brooks, and Greene High
of Franklin Furnace, John
Bane.

17 die
(Continued from page 1)
25, Bellewe, when he lost
control of his motorcycle on a
Huron County road.
Cleveland: KeMeth Bero,
20, and Daniel Podvorac, 17,
both of Cleveland, when their
motorcycle struck a heavyconstruction grader parked
on Interstate 90 in Cleveland.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Monkey
Run at 4:30p.m. Sunday for
Eugene Fisher who was
taken to Holzer ~edical
Center. At 5:56 p. m. the
squad went to Kyger for a
Mrs. Stalling who was dlso
taken to •Holzer Medical
Center.
BOOSTERS MEETING
The
Meigs
Athletic
Boosters will meet at the high
school at 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
Films of the Point Pleasant
football game will be shown.
MEET TONIGHT
RACINE - A meeting has
been set for 7 p. m. this
evening at the home of Jan
Cardone to dicuss plans for
the .Racine Elementary PTO
fall camivalto be held Oct. 7.
All persons interested in
plaMing and helping with the
event are asked to be present.

:·.Summit effort hinges on Egyptian response
ANDER8()N
-·-M.~M
P DAVID,
Md.

a formula fir continuing

Je
East
peace
IIIOIIatlona
apparently,
llillled today on an awaited
IOJ!tlan response to a
1111 1111 on the future d. the
~led West Bank, confer-IOUfces said.
'ftle conference, according I
II) . dealgnated spokesman
Joc1Y Powell, baa moved Into agreement."
a. "an · lntenae and detailed
MEIGS COWity Senior Cltlzena vlaltlng the COUIIty senior cltiDna center In Pcmeroy will
have a head start on many votera in the Nov. 7 election. The ~~enlon are receiving
instruction in tbe operation d. the votomatlc DIIIC!Uea which will beiiMid for the lint time In
the county this fall. The votcmatic machlnee will make It poaaible to count the votes In •ch
precinct in just a matter of minutes Instead d. boUI'I. Donna Wllllunaon, aenlor cltlama
center staff member, left, is shown Instructing IJI1Ian Napper, Mlnenvllle, on the
votomatic.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veteraoa Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions .:..
Lowell McNickle, Racine;
Asa Hoskins, Pomeroy;
steven
Kirk
Patrick
Pomeroy.
'
Saturday Discharges Linda Rhodes, Juanita
Runyon, Bronwyn Thomas,
Besste Turley.
Sunday Admissions Milford Bailey, Athens;
Joyce Vance, Albany; Aaron
Zahl, Pomeroy; Darla White,
Racine ; Daisy Glassburn,
Rutland ; Hattie Powell,
Racine .
Sunday Discharge - Steve
Kirkpatrick.

r------- ------------------1

I
I

Band parent roncemed

WOMEN'S

(Continued from page I )

CREST UNIFORMS

"It's very unusual to have
tw)' accidents that close
tol:ether, but it's definitely
not due to unsafe track,"
Jaco said.
Last Tuesday night four
cats of a Chessie train
derailed on a stretch of track
between Hartford and New
Haven. Oa Thursday night,
another Chessie
train
derailed near Stauffer
Chemical Plant at Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Va.

Style No. 3531
Sizes 3· 15 .

l ii•II IAior•·
ur Th ~ IH• Il' Of flhl o. lrrrfhl' l'ril ln" tha t

'40,000 MaXImum lnsura&lt;1ce fo1 Each Depositor
Member Fede1al Oeposrt Insurance Corporation

l' rrlt f d l nres lors l.lfr lm r, . ~ r Kat~SJ~&gt; Cl! )',
fi t at• ~~ Ml ~ rl II U rurnrll h•il ~ ll h 111~ Ju·,
~I · I I I IS Slll f lf!l)llnblr In It 11111 1 b .t\llli••rl zr&lt; l
11\lrlllf: lhr rurrr rrl H l r t u lri.,,;~~ T In 111 '•
l&gt; lt lt Its l lll)n~J~r l.u l•"lilt'&lt;.• ul lii&gt;lll' ~tl rr It•
nnmr lal Cll nrlUI" ~ IIi 111~ ~ 11 h)' lr. Mmual &gt;Ide
111N II I ll liUf bt~n U f llii{)U Ull h rc ~ I, J !Jj i
,\ rlmlll rd AWl! U li ,l11 1\. ~ ~l 1HI 1 . 1~ 1 &lt;1111 1 •••
J :JU~~~ . ~MI !lfl . .''lurpl u~ $ :;! r 0.2.~~.HJ~ cm . In
rum• $ ~ 1 . ~ it 9 ,!f l~ . ll ll , J:lf&gt;!'Pii ll lu r t~ ' lfi,H,\ :1,
~~~~ 011 . Ne l A 1~ t s S ~1.~~2 . 0t~ nf1 , l'•rol t11
J: I ,IJOO ,(II10.00. JN WIT.' i.::ili 1\l!l:u t:nr
I hut hrr•unt " •ul" rr ll'l'd m)' 1111 n 1 ~ 1wl 'llhe•l
rn t· ~ttl tu bt •lfl• ~ d 11 l'&amp;lumt..h, Uhl, t h l·
d.!) IIlii !!tit , July I , l ft78 11"11' \' .linnto,
• illltll'l!ntfodtnl uf l ttsUfi!R"l' of flh lfl I St:,\ J..J

,..,

PI QUE DOUBLE KNIT

tOO ', Kode l' Palye s1er.
Whtle only .

______
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;,_ _ _ _ _

I •

..~

NO. 104

MANDIE ROSE

Crest uniforms and
l'lnll Suits. Jr. sizos 3

held at 3 p. m. Tuesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Freehind Norris
.officiating. Burial will be In
the Letart Fails Cemetery.
Friends may .call at , the
funeral home anytime.

l

lo 5, Misses slzes 'Bto 20,
Holt sizes 14112 to 24'12.

I

I

WOMEN'S

READY TO WEAR

2ND FLOOR

DANA HANING
Dana Haning, 81, Route 2,
Pomeroy, died Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was a son of the late
STU[ OF llitiQ, DlPAJITIIIINT OF IN·
Edward and Jane Carleton
SUitUtl. CUTiriC.UI: Dr CCIM,LIU CL
Tllf ~ndrnlcnrd . Kllllf rt nttlldl!'lll nf Jnaunra
Haning . He was also
m ~ !ttat.f Of Ohio, tlfrtiiJ trrtl~,. t t.t
l nd\l !lllpol\1 Lllr l ll!IIIU!ef l'o , of Jndltn&amp; p·
preceded in death by two
oll1 , 8\tle ijf lndllt~~. h•~ r"Urripllfd • ·tth thr
Ia•·• of thl• lllate •rtJI!~Ib l e to It and I'
sisters, Kate Mello! and
RU!II(Jr \ud !kll'l!ll tM cur""' y~ar • ~ trill&amp;'·
Clara Stanley and a brother,
IK'I Ill Ill\' Bltlr lt l I PDI{)tlrlll t hlli iPi!:U r.r
lntur&amp;nce gn the Mutual l'l•n Ju nri.nel.lt
William.
coodltlon b llbtJ•n b1 IU '""'Ill •tt lemr.rlt
tu ~. •• ~ tlttn 11 . rtlloa·~ tn Ot-t. 31, 19fr :
Surviving are his wife,
,\limII t"l A ~lltll 1460,3 1!1 .6110.00 : Ll&amp;lollll ~
• ~tfl , l 9~ . 8 06. 00 ; !lurpilu U 9. 813, U 3.00 ; J, .
Edna
Cuckler Haning; a son,
•-urnf uor..fl!t.ur.oo; liiHIMIIt~ rK JU .
Harley, Route , 3, Pomeroy;
11~ 1 . ~ 7.5 00 . IN WJTNE88 WHEIEOI', I tll;t
hN I!\I IH ~ .Wiltfflbed Ill)' ntlllt IIIII n.-d "''
two daughters, Mn. Harold
!il'll IO' bt II'Uud I t Ctluml~l . Ohio 11111 Ill,
• nd dltr. Jul7l , 1911 . Harr,v. Jvllp, !Jui&gt;lr·
(Evelyn) Morris, Route 2,
lntmc!ent or lMUIMt r1 Ol!lo. /S EAL!
Albany, .and Mrs. Hllber
(Helen) Qulvey, Route 2,
, Pomeroy, and a brother,
Emmett, of Ca!lMmter. Atlo
IT.Ut . , Oltll DfiiiAIIITIUT IF Ill·
surviving are U grand·
1'-'IUCl. CUTihCATl " t::II,LIAICI.
T1tt llllllfrlllht41, IJitcltrllltmdrot llr 1,_.,...
children,
2t
great·
m ftle ltatt Of Ohio, hlnbr ttrtl"- Ullt
tf
Att*blle. l'ftUCI ..I Llfl lrtiUI'IIMe CCI
grandchildren
and
several
INll• , 111\t ot' lnu hal et!lllllltd w&amp;tb IM
nieces and nephews. '
1a•t or IIIII Bille ltDIIub\1 lll It 1111\ II
IUfl!oriMd ..,,,. 'tiM c.rrfflt ,.., to 1~
Funeral servicea wUI be
In Ulb liLlie I~ IJIPfi!PI'Illt IMIMM of i..,
-•nee. Ill ftrudll etndiUon II lhowri br It•
held at I p. m. Tuesday at the
tutn.ll) IUlt,_t,t lo hut bttn 11 F1\loft tn
lltf, I I. 1171' : Adllltttd A...u IBIS fh .
EwinR JIIUiel'al Home with
IIIIU'JO; Llabllltla Utf,tOI ,IOf,OO · ....I.
the Rev. Alan . Blackwood
iJIIIIIMlll.oo; .,.... tnu:n.otl.oo; • ·
llrftl lllf.80f.lti .OO ; lflt A-t• IU •
olflciating. Burial will be In
.171.00 : CApital IUti,Hl .OO. IN Wrf.
/11- WilD lOP, I IW.rt Mf'Nrtlt lllllwi'W
the Burllneham Cemetery.
1111 .... IIIII - . f •r IMI to tie llfb:N at
CtMIM,
I
Frienda may call at the
" "· llarnOlllt
' · VIII
J..,,4a1 and datt. Jlllr
tf ••
.,... rl ...... 1114LI
funeral home any time.

the Minnie Price Scholarship
award for the 1978-79 school
year. The Minnie Price
scholarship is awarded to a
student Interested in extension or in helping people ·
through the application of
home economics knowledge.
The scholarship is financed
largely through the efforts of
the
Ohio
Extension
Homemakers Council.
Minnie Price began work
- with Home Economics' Extension in Ohio in 1921 as
assistant state leader. She
became state leader of Home
Economics Extension in 1923.
In 1948, the Minnie Price
Scholarship Fund was started
with gifts of 15,348. Miss
Price retired in 1951.
In 1948, the Homemakers
sho~d
Council of Meigs County met
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The natlon's fire chiefs were told their quota of $100 for the
Monday they should be just as adept at extinguishing inflation scholarship fund . The
homemakers raised the ITUley
aa putting out fires.
"With Inflation, America Ia demanding Its public officials by selling door hangers,
do more with leas money," Onclnnatl Allllstant City Manager sewing machine lights,
Martin WaiSt aaid In an address to 6,000 persona gathered at broom and mop hangers and
· the annual convention of the International Association d. Fire other useful household arQdefa. "We've got to asaesa our producltivlty," added Walsh, ticles.
"IIIII IInd out bow we can run more efficient departments.;;
Miss Rose is the first Meigs
countlan to receive this
award and wishes to thank
· PJULADELPmA.(UPI) '- A small radioactive device those homemakers who
worked to raise Meigs
!bat had been Implanted in a cancer pstient at the University County's contribution to this
of~IUII)'Ivanla Hospital Ia reported missing, according to the
scholarship.
Nuelear Regulalilry Cammission.
Miss Price now makes her
...:. The agency however said there w88 no reaaon to beUeve ·home in Portland, Oregon
~ play waa involved in the disappearance d. the device, a
loves to hear from
llllall green stalnl- steel cyUnder about 1\'z inches long and. and
members
of
Ohio
ee-elghth of an inch wide.
homemakers
clubs.
Especially those wbo were·
members during the time she
;. · CLEVELAND (UPI) -A Cuyahoga County grand jury was state leader.
She will be a senior at Ohio
~~... Indicted Ricardo Brown, Iarmer chief investlgatOI' In the
state
University this fall. She
"'i!oanty's welfare depariment, on 13 counts of bribery for
is
majoring
in Home
•' l!llegedly ollerlng to help cbeats get benefits for a fee .
Economics
Education
and
". Brown, who also once served as a lieutenant in the county
will
be
student
teaching
~ !lhlrlfl's department, reportedly waa fll:ed from the
!l". . .rtment earU.- this year becalllt CJI complaints from some spring quarter. She Is a
member of The American
Jtflople wbo dealt with him.
Horne Economics·Association
and
Omicron Nu, a home
~e
economics honor society.
"'
WASHING'lON (UPI)- Citing ligh cancer rates among
workers In specific flelda, govemnent aclentlata now say at
~; 111!11 one of every five cancer caaesln America apparently Ia
:, eantractad at work.
'
"We chooae to uae the ~ 20 percent in order to be
' v1tive," they said In MOnday's start~ new report on
, · _.k ll8lardl rangin&amp; from lllbestas to vinyl chloride and from
jlliraleum dlallllatlil to coke-oven emlaslma.
Students In the Eastern
· Local School District are
required to be immunized
,
against
six
diseases :
diphtheria,
tetanus
(lock:
jaw),
pertussis
(whooping
"' D.p. tmalt In Mont&amp;omery County are not aceounted fOI' now cough), polio, mmstes and
•• IIIII eantrac:ll ~ purchue rl two new lnlcb should rubella (German measles).
· lit looUd al for "pclllible dl.lcrtlpanclea."
a child baa not completed
IJur1aC the nplar elimination ol the to'il'lllblp'a financial allIf required
immuniutions,
IIIUdl from March 21, 1m, throu&amp;b Jan. 31, 1m, alate
the
child
can
remain
In school
,
hlft found the IIJwnlblp Mel not aold Cl' traded the
if
he
or
lhe
baa
bad
least
: ;. :;I 'c'laa,aada Utle cheebdawedboth still In th8to'II'JIIhlp'a one DTP lhot, and at
dOle
of
...,, . . 'ftlly'-lbeenn..Julateult'lt.
1
polio vaccine, and a measles
shot or meules dlleaae, and
~.,..,..
a rubella lhot.
...
l!tARX, Ala. (\IPI) - Army Wanul Ofllctr Richard studenta must complete the
··_...,._of Bailon, MIA., alreld)' f~ a life aentence fCI' DTP and polio -lea aa fast
....._ 11Q1111 o1- ftmalt IOidler at rort Raclter, Monday was u posalble. FaUu,. to do 10 is
· _...., 1 Cllllltinuance until ~ov. 1J for another trial for a rea1011 to exclude from school
at 1 later date. The Board of 1
••
....... ClOIIvlctad "' the rape and munler In Education will accept a ·
IIIII ,.ar o1 Army SpeC. 5 Donna WlJcylllkl, a doctor's statement which
(ConUnued on page 10)
o.R, 01*1, raaldent.
-'
~

&lt;i_);.,__r_h_e_W_or_ld_To_d_a_y_
help too

hnmunization
policy noted

/1

,,
::.fire
trucks not accountable
..

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Will Middleport Vtllage get
a new $19,000 backhoe?
That's the $64 question
resulting from a regular
meeting of Middleport
Village CouncifMonday night
when
council
voted
unanimously to accept a bid
on a backhoe and to borrow
money, if necessary, to make
the purchase.
On tbe ottier band, Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate
warned the vtllage Is In no
poaltlon to make the
purchase and advised be
woold refuse to sign the
note necessary for the

Enrollment
Mandie Rose, daUghter of
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Rose, . down two
Long Bottom, . has received

Rate high in specific fields

'

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OH I0

Scholarship
award winner

,-.Investigator indicted

Be sure lo see ell the
other ityles in women'.s

at y

RACINE - Enrollment in
the Southern Local School
District for the new school
year Is down two from last
year as of today, Supt. Bob
Ord reports.
Enrollment lor 1978 includes 356 high school
students; 176 junior high
students; 461 elementary
students and 67 In kindergarten. · .
In addition, the district has
26
students attending
vocational classes at Meigs
High
School.
Total
enrollment this year is 1,060.

~cer
granted continuance
.

_

.... ~

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
.

~'"*"'

J

iJ

I .

:- ;~·~··~-~·=;'1~1111
I

•

enttne

TUESDAY, SEPTEM BER 12, 1978

parchase.
Council passed a motion
accepting the bid of the
Southeastern Equipment Co.,
Gallipolis, at $19,284, the low
bid submitted, and passed an
amended motion to borrow
funds over a three year
period, if necessary, to pay
for the backhoe.
Council President Marvin
Kelly said there is tile to be
laid and that village workers
are behind schedule. He said
that the present backhoe
would require a lot of money
to repair and still would be
subject to frequent repairs.
He commented that the new
backhoe is ne~essary to "stay
in business."
Councilman Allen Lee King
also stated that the purchase
is necessary "to do the job."
King and Kelly commented
that breaks in water lines and
sewage problems must be
taken care of, and without a
backhoe it would take several
days to make repairs. "This
· would not be service to the
people of the town, " they

Motorcyclists
gtven wammg
0

0

'

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt issued the
following reminder to area
motorcycle operators today.
Ohio Law requires that
operators and passengers on
motorcycles must use some
type of eye protection. The
recently enacted law was in
regard to the wearing of
helmets!
It should also be pointed out
that the helmet Is required of
operators and passengers
under 18 years of age and also
required by operators that
have less than one year experience as a licensed cycle
operator.
Sheriff Proffitt advises his
department is receiving
complaints from residents
regarding cycle operators
without ~ye protection as well
88 a nwnber of operators
under 18 operating without
helmets.
Sheriff Proffitt was called
to the Mildred Circle
residence Monday where
Mrs. Circle was found dead
on the living room Door by
Mrs. Margaret Holter who
lives behind Mrs. Circle's
house.
Mrs. Circle, 71, lived on
Pine Grove Road, Minersville. The Racine Squad was
at the scene along with Dr. R.
R. Pickens. · The cause of
death is undetermined, and is
stlD under Investigation.

~

-~w::~~~te.::tor~=p~

tails of the proposals now on
tightly held secret.
Apart from the usual social U1e table.
The American hopes for the
amenities, the early meetings
were heavily weighted summit conference, from the
toward American and Israeli beginning, have been set
negotiations. Then there was deliberately low, aiming at
a weekend lull while the continued negotia lio ns
various sides paused for between the Egyptians and
reflection and refinement, the Israelis, rather than" full
leading to the current peace treaty .
Conference sol!rces sa id
situation
where
the
negotiations are almost those hopes are still alive and
totally
between · th e Uw outcom e should become
Americans
and
the clear in U1e He'll 36 hours.
Egyptians, discussing the de-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Will backhoe he purchased?

....,

fu'i

•

that from piints using highsulfur. coal.
·
Saying he has not made up
his mind which route to lake
in a final rule, Costle urged
"sprited and thoughtful
debate" on the issue during
the next three months when
the proposal will be open to
public comment.
Costle said meeting the 85
percent cleanup target could
add $10 billion or more to the
cost of power plant
construction during the next
12 years and might boost
borne electric power bills by
betWeen 30 cents and $1.10 a
month.
· He said applying a lessstringent standard to lowsulfur users would cost less
for cleanup equipment on
each individual plant, but
would add $15 billion to total
construction costs because
more plants are likely to be
built.
"I think this, in teflll.!l of
cost, is one of the most
significant (orders) the
.agency has put out,'' he told a
news conference.
"By 19911 we expect about
200 new fossil-luel-flr~d
power plants to bum nearly
1.5 billion tons of cool to
produce vitally needed
energy for this. country.
"Today's proposal would
protect air quality during this
period of enormous coal
consumption by ensuring that
all new plants employ the
best technology available for
reducing pollution," he said.

VOL XXIX

were saying privately : the
conference, after one week,
hangs in the balance, and the
outcome depends on Sadat's
decision.
The conference schedule of
meetings - one of the few
Items of information being
given out by the official
spokesman - has set a
pattern which indicated the
direction of the negotiations,
although the substance of
. those negotiations are a

•

e

- Radioactive devise stolen

Princess seamed w ith tuck kni t
tr i m on bodi ce inserts and sleeve
cuff s, ba ck zipper.

5TA1'f: OF OHIO . DEI'AIIfiHHT OF II• ·
11 r

'

llr:IIDWARD K. DeLONG
'·-_ASalNGTON (UP!) The
Environmental
'Protection Agency has called
. 'for a '10 billion crackdown on
: Ill' pollution from future coal1ireil power plants, saying the
)lropoaed new standard could
be one of the most c011Uy it
·t.J lasued.
" But the agency also may
eae the new regulations, and
thus cut the cost of
ampllance, for plants that
burit low sulfur coal.
Whatever it does, the .
eleanup move will mean
1liCJier home electric bills
.because utilities will pasa the
COlt of compliance on to their
customers.
· Under the plan ouWned
Monday by EPA chief
Douglas Costle, all new coallind po1rer plants - no
.O.tter what type of coal they
burn - would have to
ltll!ninate 85 percent of tbeir
JIOlelltlal sulfur dioxide pollutlcin by 1990.
- &amp;lch a unif&lt;rm percentage
eutback would cause power
. plants burning low-sulfur
coal from mines in the West
to produce much le111 total
pollution than plants burning
hlghsulfur coal from mines in
the Midwest and East.
qo.tle acknowledged it Ia a
Cllllltrovenlal approach. He
llld ·another option would be
Ill let plants burning lowlllllfur coal reduce their
"'entia! emissions by a
IDnr percent, making their
_total pollution comparable to

Fire chiefs

IELBERFELDS

Chessie

EPA calls
crackdown
I

and daughter, Mary Struder,
Eliza belli Vance, Jerri :
Wallace, Glennla Wallen,
Freddie Watera, Verbl•
Waugh, James Wooldridge.
Birth, Sept 8
. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Mash,
son, Point Pleasant.
Blrlba, SepL I
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Hodge, daughter, Welllton.
Mr. and Mrs. Als Halley,
son, Cheshire. Mr. and Mra.
Tracy Dlcua, 10n, Itadcllff.
Dbcbat'let ·
Louis Blevins, Mn. Ben·
jamin Bragg and son,
Gregory Gooderham, Gus
Henry, Letha Markham,
Todd Mugrage, Ralph Oller,
Timothy Pancake, Ja~qea
Patterson, Matthew Sheela,
Betty Smith, Reba Smith.
Birth, Sept. 10
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wl~~e~~~an, son, Patrlct.

· responsibility for an arm
which used to be part d.
Jordan. He could only accept
it as a basis f&lt;r negotiations,
which would imply that
Jordan would become a
participant in any conference
following a successful Camp
David summit.
Powell said there Is no
basts
" for
Informed
speculation about
the
outcome" of the conference
- appparently a convoluted
WRY of saying whAt officials

Conference sources · Sadat.
They said the Israelis
translated that to mean the
delegations have begun the worked into the early
actual business of drafting morning hours Monday,
the language and details of a finishing details ol the
framework of a peace proposals, which were
settlement, which would be preaented to President Sadat
worked out later by foreign in the morning and to the rest
of the Egypllan delegation
ministers.
The .sources said the Monday night.
The S018'ces said Sadat's
summit las moved into its
final alld decialve phase, acceptance of a plan lor the
after the Israeli and West Bank would not he final,
American delegations since he does not take
worked
!JUI to
' out prCJPQsals. to
.

.....

Evelyn Beaver, Sanford
Bills, Howard BriUUion, Mai'Y'
Burnette, Mrs. Robert Burns
and daughter, Edward
'Campbell, Thomas Carlisle,
Edna Carsey, Betty Casto,
Brenda Causey, Timothy
DeLong, Mabel Ewing,
Bessie Fell, Kathleen Fetters, Nellie Fields, Carol
Graham, David Groves,
Mahala Hagley, Tomas
Hqynes, Stephen Horsley,
Wesley Jackson, Vicky
James, Janet Johnson,
Juanita Lambert, Sharon
Manley, Lyla Patrick,
Harvey Pelfrey, Richard
Perkins, Ida Preston, Herbert Reffett, Dorothy Rife,
Pleasant Valley Hoopttal
Betty Rimm~, Rilla Ruak,
Discharged: Mrs. Joveline. Mrs. Pearl · Siders and
Montero, Lakin;
Lynn , daughter, Mrs. Clyde Smith
Harris, Buffalo; Mrs. Gerald
Shouldis, Ripley; Mrs. Jan
Allen , Letart,· Mary Keams,
Hartford; Debra Chevalier, 1
Vinton ; Clarence Schurman, 1
Letters CJI oplaloa are weleomed. Tile)' lbGUd be leu
Point Pleasant ; Alice Sauer, 1 than 380 wordiiOII&amp; (or Abject to recJadloa by the edltw)
1
Point Pleasant; Thomas 1 and
be 11--' with the
Hancock , Point Pleasant ·,
must
,.....
stpee'a ....--. N-lliay I
I be withheld upon publlcatica. .However, on ~t,
Veanna Cundiff, Mason; Mrs. 1 namet will be dbciOied. Leaen lbould be 1a lood tute,
Orman Hall, Point Pleasant; I addres 1t118 las
1 noutttl
Harley Bonecutter, Letart; . 1
aes, ao pe
"·
!
Crystal
Whittington,
Roberts burg: Mrs. James
Burdette, Point Pleasant;
Charles Sheline, Henderson;
Mrs. Cleo Smith, Glenwood;
I would Uke to take this q,portunlty to elqiiWI my opinion
.
Mrs. Albert Blackwell, on a much concerned mpt,ter.
Racine.
, After bavlng atlencled the Southern.Fedtnl Hocking
Births - A son to Mr. and football game Friday, SePt. I, I was appalled at the behavior ol
Mrs.
James
Merrick, one ol our athletic cilrectora,
Gallipolis; a son to Mr. and
At some time c1ur1n1 !be foar1h ~. the Soutllml a.nd
Mrs. Steve Burton, Pomeroy; began to play the light 1011g. Tben, our athletic direckr or
a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. coach 01', what,ever Ids title, dllplayed an Idiotic behaviOI' by
Jackie Donahue, Pliny; a screaming, in front d. a lew laUidred people, at our bud and
daughter to Mr. and · Mrs. band direckr. The ~e ·wblch he IIMid was not at all
suitable or necesaary.
Jerry Owens, Syracuse.
I have a - who plllyts In the band. lfli Ia not 111bjecled to
thia type of language from bls band director or at IKme.
Holzer Medical Center
U this Is the type ol character we are paying u a coach '
Discharges, Sept. 8
Timothy Adams, Madge and teacher, then maybe we should all talk to the school bou-d
Alexander, Jamie Baker, bef&lt;re contract time ccmee again. - Earl Cleland, Rae

SUAANCIE . C[llflrlUTE OF COMPLIAHC[.
Tlir Un!l.-r~ IJrlfd, 'lllll~ rl!l1r'l11kr i l

(UP!)

mona at Camp David to

phase to see if approiiCheli
can be found to deal with the
important differences that
remain." ·
Egypllan sources said the
principal remaining
difference is the future of the
occupied West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
Powell, Prestdent carter's
pre111 secretary, said the
conference Is als!l "trying to
refine areas where tbere is

STIJDENTS INJURED
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) Two Middleburgh Heights
Junior High School students
were rushed to Southwest
Community Hospital this
morning after being struck
by lightning on the way to
school.
Treated aqd released wu
Bemle Kopec, a ninth grader
at the junior hlich· Being held
for obeervallon waa · John
Rossi, alto a ninth grader.
School offlclals said the
boys were struck during a
thundentorm as they crossed
an open field on the grounds
of Midpark High School a few
blocka from the J~r high.

stated.
Mayor Fred Hoffman was
·in agreement. He sa id the
equipment could be paid for
by three departments of the
village - street, water and
sewerage - with each
department paying one-third

of the cost. He, too, stressed a
water break could take
several days lo repair
without a backhoe.
How eve r, Grate sta ted
emphatically that he doesn't
see where the money fo r the
purchase could come fr(l[n.

Charge false
claims Heller

lie stated the purc ha se
" would put the vi !loge over a
barrel." Wh en horro w1ng
money for the purchase w~! !;
brougl1t up, Grote indicate'!
that he would not sign ti ll!
note.
Tbc five members couu
cilmen present. Kelly. Kir,g.
Bill Waller:&lt; . Dewey Horton
and Carl Horkv vut&lt;!d for ,the
motions on the pu rclm se anO
a Jetter was read frum ti tL
sixlh council mem be r ,
Charles Mullen , who wn:;
unable tc, be present for the
meeting. Mullen indi catcrl
the purchase ,&lt;;hould be mad e,
but

did re comm end nn·

The
Ohio
Attorney Heller said. "This cannot be rondilioning for th€ t;quip
General's recent charge that done overnight. We are now menl. However , the bid a cOhio Power Com pan y is in the ma&lt;ket for reliable cepted Was for o bac1dlfli'
'' ignorin g" Ohi o coa l is long-term suppli es uf washed without air conditioning .
totally false, according to local coa l meeting suitable
Mullen's letter in part .&lt;mid:
Charles A. Heller, the quality and delivery con- " I would like to •;tate my
company 's executive vic e ditions."
viewpoin ts on t h~! pel)l lin1:
president. The char~e was
Heller said Ohio Power action cooccrr'l.ing th~ pm
made in a letter frorn At· already has phased out one chase of a trnt1or - lo:Hicr ·
torney General William J . western coal supplier; did not backhoe.
Brown to Gov . James A. exercise its right to renew a
I feel that it is nf th e utl! ,..., l
Rhodes and quoted in the contra ct which will expire at importance that tl1i ~ pi&lt;~t ;; lif
the end of 1979, and recently equipment be purchns\"1. To
state's press.
Heller said tl1e fact that signed an agreement for the do ollr erwisc would put li te
Ohio Power is the state's . delivery of 500,000 additiona l village in the positi on uf not
.::~:::::: :::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::~:;:::,:,:::,:,:::: :: ::: :::::::::::::::: .largest user of Ohio coal, has
tons of Ohio coal for use at bein g able to provide l) w
created
2,000
Ohio
coal
Gavin Plant in Cheshire,
EXTENDED WEATHER
neressary servil'es etnd
The only reason Ohi o maintenance of the vota w·.
Tburaday through . mining jobs in the last
sevet'a1 years; ·and has an- Power obtained low-sulfur
Saturday, ~oo1 tbroagb tbe
As the Cl&gt;st of equipment
nounced plans to increase C&lt;Ja l from the West several . rl scs each year and the Ya luc
period, wltb raJa aad
that ·usage can hardly be years ago was to mix that of the' dollar tl ecr eases f;"a ch
possible tbandersbowen
considered "ignorin g" Ohio coal with Ohio coal to meet year, small villages are pu• 111
Thursday and Friday.
propo sed su lfur dioxide the position of h~tving tn
coat.
Highs wiD be In tbe 701, aad
"The attorney general has emission reg ulation s thnt pruden tl y purcha se tlt i' H'
lows Ia the 5h or lower 10s
repeatedly made false and were unduly st.ringcnt &gt;md
Thursday and Friday, and
( (' OI)l intU.'rl Oil JWgf' J!J l
irresponsi bl e stat ements would have pn&gt;hibited tire
In the low or middle 50s
regarding Ohio Power's fuel exclusi ve use of Ohi o cua l,
Saturday.
practices," Heller said . " His Heller said.
" We have not caused one
::::::::::,:;:,:::;:,:,:,:,:;:::::;:,:;:::::,:::.:::::::,:,:,:::,:,:,:;::::: Iat est ch a rg es are particulariy disturbing sin ce Ohio coa l miner to lose his
they are complete disto rt ion5 job, and . in fact, have created
about 2,000 new mining jobs
of the facts ."
"We burn from D to 10 in the 1970s in conn ection with
million tons, or more than 20 three deep mine operations
per cent, of the state's annual which supply the Ohio coal
coat produ c1ion," Heiler sa id . burn ed at Ga vin Plant."
·•our intention is to increase Heller ex plained.
UnJtcd Press Int~rua tinnal
Heller stated that Ohio
the use uf local coal by about
Thuroderstorrn s · poured
40 per cent in the next few Power for .a number of years
heavy
rain on :;o uth Texas
ha s been fighting for
years."
early
todoy ,
floodin g
Brown's reference to Ohio rea sonable air quality
hi
ghways
and
streets,
as
·· • Power's ··expandin ~ use" of standards to help keep
U1understorms
diminished
electric
costs
to
customers
as
western . coa l al so is
erroneous, according to low as po&gt;Sible. "Our efforts over the North und Centml
COLUMBUS (UP!)- John Heller.
have heen beneficial to Ohi o's Great Plains.
Parsons, assistant
Water was "up to car
"Two weeks ago at an coal mining industry," he
superintendent of the Toledo Environmental
hoods" on Corpus Christi.
Protection said.
City seh()()!s, was named Agency hearing in St. ClairsHeller added that Ohio Texas, streets and ioolated
executive director f&lt;r the ville, we repeated statements Power is not attempting tu the police station at on e point.
newly established Office of we have made many times purchase coa l rnin()S in either Several hi ghways were
School Management Assist- that we arc phasing out use of Utah or Wyoming, as the closed around Vi ctoria, w!&gt;jch
ance by the state Board of western co al ~ t Gavin Plant,' ' attorney gcnerul chargetl.
received more ttum 5 int:hcs
Education at its meeting
of rain in 24 how·s.
Monday.
" It's been raining all ni ght
The ofllce will provide
and still is," a Victoria pol ire
inservlce education to school
dispatcher said today . " All I
officials in fiscal and
know is that we've got lots of
managerial matters and wlll
streets flooded."
also monitor the Emerg_ency
Scattered thundershowers
School Loan Program.
extended
throu gh
the
Parsons baa been superinMississippi and Ohio valleys
tendent of the N&lt;rthwestem
rnrd [rom Michigan across
Athens,
Albany, New York and New Englund .
Over 125 firefighters from were
Local School District in
Meigs County; direct&lt;r of the 20 area fire departments Richl and, Rome Waterloo,
Lightning bolts struck a
Division
of
School attended the Hocking Valley Ame sville , Nel so nville, high school football field in
Finance in the department of Regional Fire School at l'ri- Washington Twp .. Logan, Whitman , Mass ., killing an
Education ; assistant County Join t Voc atio nal McArthur, Belpre, Jackson, assistant coach and slightly
Pomeroy, Orange Twp ., injuring 14 players and two
superintendent of schools in School Sunday, Sept. 10.
Gallipolis,
Coalton, Syracuse, teachers.
"The
flre
training
classes
Dade County, Fla., and acRutland
and
Middleport.
were
geared
to
pruv
ide
the
ting superinttrldent of Toledo
"The players und coaches
The
fire
school was were knocked to the groWJd
participants
with
up-to-elate.
City Schools from Jan. I, 1978
information on the latest sponsored by the Richland all over the place," said
until Alll!ust, 1978.
fireflghting
techniques", said Area Fire Brigade and lunch Michael Shey, 16, Hanson . "I
The board alto awarded
Chief
Adkins,
Chairman of was prepared and served by was knocked to the field and
special education program
the
school's
Planning the Richland Auxiliary.
charters to county boards of
was stunned but never lost
During the morning consciousness.''
Committee.
Classes
were
mental retardation In Adams,
Auglalze, Clermont, held in e~tinguishment, auto assembly, Chief Lloyd Gill of
The assistant coach killed ,
Cuyahoga, Fulton, Gallla, extrication, arson. electrical the McArthur Fire Depart- Dennis O'Brien, 30, was
Hamilton, Henry, Logan, hazards, pumper relay water ment was honored for his directly hit by .the bolt, the
Lucas, Mercer and Ross movement, and ladder many years of service to the corner said .
McArthur community and his
operations.
counties.
Eau Claire, Wis., had more
Through the efforts of Chief years offire instruction in the than 3 inches of rain Mondnv
Knight of the Nelsonville Fire Hocking Valley.
night and Victoria, Texas,
The Hocking Valley Fire had nearly 2 inches.
Department, participants
received practical training in School wishes tothank TriA tornado touched down
SQUAD CALLED
fire
' extinguishment. Chief County Joint Vocational near EusUs, Neb., winds
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad wu ~aUed Knight located an abandoned School for the use of the gusted up to .75 mph near
to 1:111 High St. at 5: tO p.m. house in Nelsonville which school building, the Rlcbtand Dickinson, N.D., and up to
Monday for Eus- French the owners donated to the Area Fire Brigade, Chlef nearly 70 mph at Watertown ,
who waa taken to Veterans school. The house was set on Knight and the NeiBQnvllle S.D., Monday afternoon · but
fire and firefighters ex- community, and the following caused no serious damage.
Memorial Hospital.
tinguished
the fire . Practical State certified fire training
Cooler air moved today
At 1:67 p.m. the aquad went
auto
e•trlcntlon
experiences instructors: Charles Legar, across the Northern Rockies,
to '" N. Fourth Ave. for were· also received
at a local Earl Goodin, John Hegedus, the intermountain region and
Mlmle Clark, allo a medical
Nelsonville
junk
yard.
Dick Wittekind, Marvin Sells, the Northern Great l..akes.
patient, who wu taken to
Area
fire
Stan
fighting
squads
Wilson, Andy Lemley Southern sections contillUed
Veterana Memorial Hospital.
partlclpati'f in the classes and George Envoldaen.
;
. to have w9 temperayes.
~

'

Grid coach
killed by

Parsons

lightning

heading
office

Firefighters
attend school

�J-"nle Dally Semlnel,Middleuort-Pcmeroy, 0., 'l'lleeday,Sept.12, 19'18

2- Tilt Dally Senllnel, Mlddleport-Pumeroy, 0 ., TUeaday,~t. 12, 19'18

Vikings edge Broncos 12-9 in sudden death

Commentary

HEALTH

...

Briefly noted

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:

,..

l &gt;.&gt;i I

..
""'
'

Sotne authorities think little strokes are caused by
clots that may be in the
artery in the neck and then
DEAR DR. LAMB - Will gradually let small pie~-es of
you please write somethin~ the clot break off and be car"
about little strokes' I would ried with the blood stream to
lodge in small arteries in the
like to know: What causes
them ? How to prevent them ' brain. Others think they are
What else are !hey called? cai!Sed by tiny cells we call
What medications, if any, can platelets, that are nonnally
I
you use? Must one stay on in the blood , clumping
medication for a period of together in an abnonnal
time and must one live in fear fashion and causing Iran·
d having a big one? Are there sitoi'y blocking.
There is evidence that a
any warning signs'
daily
SJnall dose of aspirin
DEAR READER - A
will
~lp to prevent recurrent
stroke refers to an area of
damage W the brain. The attacks. The usual approach
" big one," as you refer to it, lo managing such a case i.s to
~
the one everyone give medicines that lend to
recognizes which may cause decrease or prevent blood
loss of speech, paralysis d clotting or to prevent the
of the sinal!
body parts and other major clmnping
platelet
cells
that
I mentionand obvious symptoms.
"I'm ~fraid you've caught him at a very busy time- he's trying to get off
ed.
Little strokes are
Usually this medicine. has to Switzerland on one of those combined business and pleasure trips."
sometimes called transitory
to
be taken for prolonged
ischemic attacks, TIA's.
!
periods of time or perhaps
They may cause exacUy the
for
life in an individual who
same symptoms as a major
definitely
has such attacks,
stroke but the symptoms may
or
for
that
matter in in·
be of very short duration,
dividuals
who
have
recovered
after which the person may
frotn
a
"big
stroke."
recover completely norThe best way of preventing
malunctions.
problems relates to
these
Since there are large parts
Dry herbs and plants, plant
shows similar to thO!le of the hsve their wares on display .
preventing
fatty-&lt;&gt;holesterol By SANDRA L . LATIMER
uf the brain which are even
arrangements,
antiques and
United Press !Dtel'llllllooal
mid-1800's,
a
parade, There will be a country store,
silent, as far as we can tell in deposits in the arteries.
homemade
apple
butler will
The
legendary
patron
of
vaudeville entertainment and music, food, and not to be
tenns of function, it's possi- Disease of the arteries can apple orchards sets the flea market .
be
available
at
tile
event 1n
forgotten in a ghost town, gun
ble to have many small areas cause strokes if the arteries theme for one of the many
the
Colwnl!us
suburb.
Antique
cars,
arts
and
battles.
&lt;:1 damage in the brain and involved are in the brain, or festivals in Ohio this crafts, a parade and fiddler's ' Antique cars will be
Other events Sunday
never know it. That is one ex- they can cause heart attacks weekend.
include
the SS5th Ait National
.contests
are
part
of
the
featured
in
a
parade
during
planation for the personality if the arteries involved are in
Guard
band
coocert at Fort
Johnny
Appleseed,
as
activities
at
the
Old
Timers
the
Gourd
and
Harvest
changes that gradually the heart.
Meigs
State
Memerlal at
legend
goes,
traveled
in
the
Day
Festival
in
Peebles
'Festival
at
Felicity
Thursday
The fatty-cholesterol
develop in s·&gt;me people as
Perrysburg,
the Harvest
MidweS!
sowing
apple
seeds.
·
which
hegins
Thursday.
through
Sunday.
deposit abnonnality is the
they get older.
Pioneer crafts will be
Lisboo this weekend honors
There will also be games, Festival at Caesar's Creek
The area of the brain in· same. It's just the location · him · at
Village
at
a
three-day demoostrated at the three- contests and a flea market. Pioneer
that's
different.
valved in one's personality
Gems and minerals and a
Waynesville, and Polish
celebration Thursday day Pioneer Crafts Days at
To
give
you
more
infonnahas gradual changes from
the
Hardin
County large display of fossils can he Festival Day at the Lucaa
multiple episodes of damage tion on strokes I'm sending through Saturdsy.
seen at the Gem and Mineral County Recreation Center In
Activities revolve around Fairgrounds in Kenton .
you
The
Health
Letter
to s mall areas. There are proThis festival is aimed at Show· at the Masonic
Maumee .
the apple and its byproducts.
2-S,
Strokes:
number
bably not very many real
Also on tap this weekend
Window displays of historic preserving the arts, skills and Auditorium In Toledo Friday
Cerebral
Vascular
Accidentwarnings' of an impending litof
Hardin
County's
through
Sunday.
are
the Draft H..-se Show and
chores
artifacts, demonstrations of
tle stroke other than the same Cerebral Thrombosis. Other old arts and crafts, and early pioneer days.
Field
Days at Reed's Park
·
The
Toledo
Gem
and
Rocksymptoms that you see with readers who want this issue various mementos carry
south
of
RusseUville Friday
Craftsmen,
such
as
potters,
hound
Clu\1,
spoosors
of
this
the big stroke which may oc- can s'end SO cents with a long ,
through
Sunday and the
woodw..-kers,
leathersmlths
event,
charges
admission.
visitors hack to pioneer days .
c-ur just momentarily, such stamped, - self-addressed · This weekeiid also provides and glassblowers, will
Ten
private
gardens
in
the
Buckeye
AU Hobbles Club
as paralysis of the arms and envelope for it to me in care festival goers )Oith the oppor- demonstrate their skills at German Village area of Hobby Show Saturday and
legs ·or something of that &lt;:1 this newspaper,. P.O. Box
IS51 , Radio City Stahon, New tuniity to step hack in Ume the Crafts Festival at Sauder Columbus are open to the Sunday at St. Marys.
nature.
A few fairs are being held
Archbold public Friday and Saturday
200 years, lo taste the foods of Museum... In
York, NY 10019.
Saturday.
for
·
Backyards-by·
this
week.
that time, lo see master
The Wayne County fair
This festival runs from 9:30 Candlelight. Hours for these
craftsmen demmstrale their
Thursday;
the
skills, and to enjoy all the · a.m. to 6:30p.m., and there is tours are frmn 7 to 10 p.m. closes
with the German VIllage Guernsey County Fair runs
games and amusements of an admission price.
Meals with pork as the Society bandllng the Wurs. through Sunday, and the
pioneer America .
Other Saturday events In- Hocking County fair closes
· It's all available at the main course are highlights of
sixth annual Yankee Peddler the Preble County Pork elude a display and sale of Saturday.
The Wyandot County fair
Festival at Clay's Park Festival at the Preble County miniature furniture at the
Resort in Canal Fulton Fairgrounds in Eaton Stan Hywet Hall in Akrm, runs Wednesday through
Heirloom Discovery Days at Mooday and the Ashland
Saturday and Sunday. An art Saturday and Swxlay.
A sa~g~ and pancake Crosby Gardens In Toledo County fair and Delaware
show, family picnic, barbershop quartets. bike races, . breakfast 1s served both where antique specialists County fair both open
square dancing, parade and mornings and a barbecued frmn New York City will Sunday.
The looe independent fair
flea market are highlights of pork chop smm-gasbord is tbe appraise antiques, and an
this
week Is at Bellville,
noon-day
meal.
There
will
be
International
Wine
and
September 11, 1978 the Mason Heritage Festival
running
Wednesday through
along
with
Cheese
Festival
at
Blossom
a
parade
Saturday
in Marion Thursday through
Mike Mullen
arts
and
crafts
both
days.
Music
Center
near
CUyahoga
Saturday.
Sunday.
S83 S. Second Ave.
Life in the west creates the Falls.
Chesterville
has ffs
Middleport, OH 45780
GahaiVIS - dubbed "The
Heritage 'Days Saturday and atmosphere at tile Arts and
Crafts
Show
at
Ghost
Town
Herb
Capital of Ohio" Sunday .
Dear Mike:
near
Findlay
Sunday.
hosts
its
ali-day flea market
These
feature
re
Thanks for agreeing to do a karate demoostration for Club
More
than
SO
exhibitors
will
Sunday.
enaclment
of
old
medicine
456 on September 30th at the Middleport Library.
As you know, Club 456 is a free club for 4th, 5th, and 6th
graders which starts this saturday at the Middleport Library .
BACKFIELD OF WEEK
It will meet Saturday afternoons at 2 p.m. We will have films ,
NEW YORK (UPI) crafts, and live demonstrations such as yours.
Dexter Green, getting a good
The only time there will be a charge will he when we do
crafts which coatm..-e than the llbrary ·budget can spare; so
ari'd Increase research to start on his bid for tile Heisnot received much mail
we certainly do appreciate the willingness of people like UP! Statebolllle Reporter
develop
altemaUve enerav man Trophy by rWihing for
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I urging 100 percent of parity
"' 165 yards and three touchyourself to share your time and knowledge without any reward
Agriculture Secretary Bob (cost of producbbn) for the resources 1..- agriculture, our downs Saturday to key Iowa
other tban the satisfadlon of sharing something you love.
entire food system Is In State's 23-19 victory over
I'm really looking forward to learning how to defend Bergland says American fanner.
" I doo 't thnk we're going to jeopardy," said Bergland. Rice, headed UPI's first 1978
myself and clobber the bad guys -and I have a feeling that fanners are in better shape
than they were a year ago see the frantic activity which
Bergland said he will lead a Backfield of the Week
many 4th , Sth, and 6th grade !'II will feel the same way '
and
the federal government characterized the lobbying trade missioo to China In Monday.
Sincerely, Ruth - Ruth Powers, Library Assistant
is not going to slide an last winter," said Bergland. early November • journeying
Named with Green were
(Serving all of Meigs County ).
artificial price booster under
The secretary said poor to Peking with . American Nebraaka tailback I. M. !Upp,
a bounteous corn crop in 1978. weather and the cost of r e s e a ~ c h dstrc 1en t Is t s , Florida State tailback Homes
Bergland told a news processing
and economists an ade experts Johnson and Southern
conference Monday that good manufacturing have driven f..- the purpose of discussing ' Methodist quarterback Mike
weather Is responsible for a up consumer food prices.
China ' s long-range Ford
•·tremendous" corn crop
plans .
·
He said processing and agricultural
which could drop wholesale manufacturing account fOI' 80
CINCINNATI (UPI I - A the hearing. Leadoff wit· prices to $l.SO a bushel,
Justice Department hearing nesses today included of· partly because of a lack of percent of the increase and
that
consumers
have
on the proposed business licials ol the Post's owners, storage facilities.
processing
demanded
costly
merger of Cincinnati's two lhe E. W. Scripps Co., who
The secretary said,
packaging "for their own
daily newspapers, the testified about the paper's however, thst he feels the and
coo. venience. ''
'Enquirer and .Post, opened financial losses.
price will go hack up to
In a speech to the
Mmday and Is e&gt;:pected to
nonnal levels and that . the cooventioo, Bergland warned
cootinue for several weeks.
government should not buy that any energy shortages
The
hearing,
being
up large quantities of grain to could
cause
"severe
by
Justice
conducted
protect fanners who have not disruptions" in agricultural
Department Administrative
used the farmer-owned production , resulting In
Law Judge Donsld R. Moore,
reserve program.
higher food prices and a
is to help Attorney General
sports 1 ranuctlons
"
I've
looked
at
thil
one
reduction In American
Griffin Bell determine By United Press International Very carefully ," he sald, exports
used to pay for fuel
MonCioy
whether ID approve the joint
Footb•ll
"and I believe it would be a oil.
operaling request of the En·
Minnesota Signed defen"Unless we take definite
sive back Nate Allen · and big mistake to buy a billion
quirer and Post.
defensive tackle Doug Suther - bushels of corn just to prop up
actions to promote cooservaBell's decision Is not land to mul ti ple -year contracts . the p-ice."
tion, stimulate production
Tampa B~y - Placed defton ·
expected until late tills year slve
"They dedded to stay out
back Jerry Anderson on
or early next year.
injured reserve and recalled (of the reserve ), and we don't
Under terms of the request , defenslye ba c k William Cesare Intend to change the rules to r
offensive lineman Kurt
111E DAILY SENTINEl
the Enquirer would take over and
Schuma cher .
acc&lt;mmodale people who in
DEV(]I'EDTO&lt;rHE
printing , circulation and
Los Ange les - Traded third · my opinion made a mistake: '
lNTERESTOF
year guar d Greg Horton to th e
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ndvertising oprations of the Tampa
Bay Bucaneers tor a said the secretary.
ROBERT IIOEFUCH
Post, which has been losing draft cho ice .
Cltt' F..dilur
"
The news conference was
Baseball
Published tbil)l t! Xl'ep!. SilUf'da)'
money in recent years.
Montreal - Signed free .agent held in conjunction with the
tJy The .Ohio Ywllty Pub li~ hin ~
The editorial operatloni of pitcher ~andy St . Claire to a 80th annual convention of the Cornpany·MullinM.'
&lt;Ha. Inc., .Ill
DJUrt
St.,
Pomenty, Ohio 4~761.
the two papers would remain m inor leagu~ contract.
Chlca;o IAL l - Purchased National AaliOclallon of State
nw.ult'!i!l Off.et' Phone ·m. 2151.
separate .
the contract at Joe Gates from Departments of Agriculture.
Editorild PhurM! 1192.11~7 .
Knoxville
ot
the
Southern
Owners of the Post coo lend
Sa:unt.l cU.U post.~e p¥'1d 1t
C1971b\&lt;HEA..... ~
Bergland predicted that Pl.lmeroy
League
.
, Otuu.
tile business merger Is
J .J ...
farmers'
lobbying
efforts
will
Batkttb•ll
NaUoi'illl i1dvertiliifl8 reprt iM..'fl·
needed to keep the paper
Denver Signtd forward he less frenetic thil year than
UUive, l...IUJdun ASIOCIMlcs, 310!
Rod Griffin of Wake Forest to a
Ave., CleYel.lnld , Ohio 44116.
operating.
they organized F..ucl.id
.r last, when
.year contract .
Suhscripth.~n••t.es : Ot'llvt'rtd b)
Oppooents of the proposal mulfJ
Atlanta Signed guard "lraclorcadea" for high !ann
t:•n-ii!r whert~ 'lvllihrble 7:; cenl.al pt!l
Wttek. By Motor RvutM where c11rrlft
lnclude Post printers and . But ch Lee to to a mulfi .year price supports.
'
"This IS a coincidence/ I'm wearing a
l:lt'rvk:e ""'- lfVIIil11ble, One munlh
other noo..,.lltorial workers cont ract
Hoc;e y
At that 'time, he said, the 13.2$. By rn11il in Ohio 11nd W. v • .
'flyaway' hairstyle, too, only mine's not
who stand to lose their jobs if
0rlt' v ~ 11r , s:n.oo: Si11 monUw
Plitsuvrgh Oetensem an weather was bed and young
Tom
Edur
announ
ce
d
h
is
NEW/"
fl
1.50:
Thrt
e
mond111,
S7
.00
:
the proposal Ia approved.
ret ire ment.
farmers were losing their F;J.ow~r e S26.00 year; Sl• rnootll!
Monday's opening session
SJ:U O: Tllree munlhs. S7.50
01 1
Jackson~ i lfe ~ eHired ThOm ~investments. N~w, CI'ORJ are Nrbscr1ptlvn
pric4• indUdrJI SUrKIII)
ns
dominated
by Shannon
a• anistant basketb~t l good and farm tne&lt;nle is up,
Timl"!l..tiel\l lncl.
esttblishlng grot&gt;nd rules for coach . \
he said, addlnglithat t.. has

What is a
'little stroke'':'

~

.W eekend festivals set

Library

By Duoa Graff
.~;;_
As if the oplnioo polls weren't enough, President Carter is,,

now having problems with hil reaiden~-e.
~:&lt;.
That's slnkin"rio• too.
''
....
· -~,
Governmenl engineers aren't sure preclaely why -ilhlfllng of,..,
the earth, uneven setlling of the new steel-buttressed Interior.~ 1
installed durillg the Trwnan occupant-y - but the White House..;.:;
is definitely atilt.
.
.::!!
It's the southwest comer that's taking the plunge, 1~/1000ths ~ !':!
of an inch a year by current measurement, which means that
in something less than a million years it L'Ould sink out ol sight.
Which isn't likely to happen, ~lnce attention is already bein!k'
direded to ~'&lt;&gt;rrective measures. Still, the Italians have ha&lt;t,
1110 years to straighten out Pisa's Tower and still h&amp;tven'tc,
brought it off.
Parting thought: It's probably purest coincidence, bul the
southwest comer of the Exe&lt;.-utive Mansion points toward
President Carter's native Georgia. Its opposite, the northeast
which draws a bead on Sen. Edward Kennedy's·
Massachusetts, is rising at an equal rate.
,
~
WHAT'S IN A DEGREE?
#
Canine Intelligence ·varies from breed to breed and individual to individual; but Ph.D. material it is not.
&lt;,
Although there are institutions which apparently thlnl(: ·:
otherwise, a New York legislaWr charges.
Assemblyman Leonard P. Stavisky of Quetlll!! says his ward '"
Shanna, in return for a registration-by-mail fee of $5, has
· bee•
i ••H ill·
a~'&lt;.-ept ed f or the doctoral degree program in recreation .
management and supervision of Pacific College In Los" ~
Angeles. More, a personal letter from the school's president .: ;~
sees great things in Shanna's post~egree future since "talent ,;~;
and experience are going to be recognized sooner or later."
Remittanc-e of an additional $ISO would get Shanna her· -:
degree, but Stavisky has elected to make her an ear~ dropout ' ~
since as a six-month~ld Gennan shepherd her academic-;:::;
background is limited to a stint at obediance school. She does, ,w
however, hark inseverallanguages.
. _
Shanna 's brush with academia, set up by StaviBky tO~~
publicize his ~ampaign against "unscrupulous degree mills.'': .•
made a point as to the noi!Slllectivity of diploma-by-mail ,:-:;
operations.
.
It may also have made another one unintentionally about
state of highest educalion these days, The way their job: '.~
' market has been shrinking of late, a lot of graduate school~-:
almnns may be deciding that adviiJI(-ed degrees are for the;;:;;
dogs.
\W I
SEASONAL LAW ANDORDER7
1 11,1 I
Good newsa boutdogscomesfromNewYorkCity
. ,
More precisely, about dog owners. To the considerable sur.'.:':;
prise of authorities, the city's new ordinance requiring walkers of dogs to clean up after their charges is working.
_,.,
Masters and mistresses of New York's dog populatiOIJ .
.guesstimated at between a half and one rnilUon ~now venture~·.~
forth equipped with a variety of makeshift and specially:designed pet a~-cessories, and the ~-onsequeiH.-es are evident.., .
Sidewalks and streets are noticeably cleaner. Some residents ·
of hlgh-o&lt;.'t.'Upancy neighborhoods are even ~ring not to look '"'
down befol'l! every step. Less thap a hundred violation citations have been issued.
·
~
The not so good news is that animal shelters report an inl
~Tease in traffic. Animal love for some pel owners apparenllycan be rapidly ~'OOled by inconvenience.
.
Which has custodians of civic cleanliness wondering how
long the present state of compliance may last. It c-ould turn out
to be a warm-weather phenomenon, subjet:! to sudden change
with winter when cleaning up becomes more IIH.-onvenient.
When the snows come, the question may be: Where are the
law and order of yesteryear'
-

:v

tJxi:

...

Letters

Farming in better shape

Hearing opens

Berry's World

...
..

'

peopletalk ::
...

BY KENNETH R. CLAJUt
Ulltted Preu lnterlllltloul
..
WOLntAN'S SHOOTOUT:-llad Abboet and Loll C.tello. ,
have nothing to do with I!Je Wollman movie being planned Ia ~
Hollywood by Howl Productions. The Title: "Shootout at"
XERF." The subject: A chapter from the life c1 hlnute diJco..
j~~ekey and rock personality Wollmao Jaek, who once worked·;
for an English language radio stallon that broadcast from jlllit
over the Rio Grande In VIlla Acuna, Malco. The Wolfmali;"
who played himself, liDrt of, In "Amrlcan Gralllll.'' will be in"
the movie about himself- but not aa himlelf,
;
SIGN LANGUAGE: Rock singer Allc:e CGeper'a money w.;talklng sign language - Hdlywood SJan languqe that Ia. It ·
has to do with that battered landmark on a hlllalde overlooking..
movie dty. Cooper turned over a penonal check lor tfl 770 tO..
Los ~eles Mayor Tc!m Bradley to pay for one letter In 'a new:
sign. His honer then declared Cooper an ~ LA
"amha!llllder" fOI' his efforts on behalf of a t2JIO,Ooo liglr •
renewal drive. Cooper warned the mayor not to drop his check-:
- written on a piece of sheet metal from the old lign _ ;
because "It woo'tbounce, bulltmlchtcutyourfootoff."

SEA CHANGE: Elllot ruc~Wd.oa, U.S. SpoJrwnwn at tha4
U.N. conference oo sea law, 1101 some meGitaave advlee
Mooday In New YCI'k from Sri ~oy - Indian guru to:
United NaUona delegatea fOI' the put e1gbt Jearl. Said•
Ddnmoy, ''The sea repueenta conacl011811- and v..tnea.lt-remlndl ua of our own Infinity which we elllbo!b' within
ourselves." Said Richanlaon, "Those are very tmplred warda.
Iehallcertainlyrememberthem.~tthe~."
: -;

-·

GOING H0U. YWOOD: Broadway !requentl7 goea Hor. •
lywood, but It ~'I al...ya take Its C1W11 1111'1 alan&amp;. The
e:rcepUon II'Aa Reillklq, hlah4epplng 1um1n1ry of tblllase
)l'Oductloo "Illlncin.'" She left the lhow MCIIIda7 to-make·tbt
111m venlon- to be titled "AD Tbal Jus" - dlrectad by Its
Broadway creator 8Gb F -: She'U retum to lhl New York
cutlnJamary.ltevllllllllle,a'Tony wlmer for hllrole In ''On
the Twentieth Cemwi'," wu on hand at the Broadlllnt
'!beater to wilh her boo voya~e.
.

QUOTE OF Tll1l: DAY: Elrllla IUCI, M,)'lll8111 an m-.r
for the October edition ol VIva maantne tbll tbe role a
really wanta to play Ia ~t of 1~ New 011 M
Voodoo prlelleu ar.rle Laria: "I lave WIDtld to piiJ' blr
for years. But they .-e abraya telUai me tbl time
rflhl •lam ahead al my time. AJ...ya have been ... Wbtn will the-.
world he ready for me?"
•·
~· ~

•'t

..
GLDIPIIEII: Dlua . . . wiD be Ill C1111C111 for lilb&amp; da7a ~~­
'

New Ycn'a Raclo QV Millie HID, 'Oct. '-11 ... ,_ ......
1Uctpbclle king JtU..r Grlllla 01111111 a.IIHq tM'ID tla;
Urtled lltatll Hit 'fllllda1 at t1a Maa11nJ Jus hllltll•
atw an .._.,. rl 11 ,_. ... ltriiiJ lleNI • , o1 lilt:
"Family" TV .ne. bu been dDm faYIII'Itt ddld ld • . ;
thiN lllllusl ourvey Ill PbaiiiPiaJ 'MJ IM ne' ; ... 'l1le.
. . atlonal Conference of C21r11t1aaa and J - wiD 1fw Ita.
annual bumanltarlan award to mtertalalr ~- 1 utt ..:.

-

-

•tlr faallll,

a.e,.Grier-adar, ,._.foobllllaraad'

bod7aurd - bu been .............

1
"

......

~lnlMAIW. . fnlmMirlle,W.wtlaollm,_.'{

.

lly IUCIWW MeFARLAND
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
(UP!) - Rldt O.runeier a
roollle from Sioux Falls Collese, was tile tout of the
Mlnnelota Vlklnga today.
He kicked four field goals
Mmday nlght, Including a f4..
yarder In sudde!Hieatll overtime that gave the VIkings a
1U vlct&lt;ry over the Denver
Broncos In • wild and chaotic
flnilh at Metropolitan
Stadlwn.

Red Sox regain
undisputed lead
~~~-~

.hope we can maintain this for
,... the 19 games left."
Jim Rice -who remained
Luis Tlant, who was
at Fenway Park for 2S . reUeved by Bob Stanley, 1t-2,
minutes of extra batting thinks the had baseball Is
' practice Sunday after the behind hil team.
·Red So~: were'thrashed by the
"We lost four In a row and
New York Yankees for the the way we lost them was
fourth straight game Sunday j emharraaalng,'' said Tlant.
-Moodaynlghtwentoutand - "But that's over now. We
belted two home runs to he!P played· 'like champions
Bostoo regain first place m tonight and that's what we're
the American league East going to be no matter what
with a r.-4 victory over the the Yank..;. do."
1n other AL games Kansas
Baltimore Orioles.
The win moved Bostoo a City defeated oa.W:nd 7-2
hallgarne up on . tile · idle Texas blanked Calif~, 1~:
Yankees In the East.
Minne110ta downed Chicago 3-.
Rice hit tile first pitch from ·I, Milwaukee heat Seattle 5-3
reliever Joe Kerrigan, 3-1, and Cleveland and Toronto
deep into tile center-field split a double-header with the
stahds In tile eighth Inning, Indians winning the opener
marking tile 18th time In his 8-4, and the Jays lh~
car~ has hit two home nightcap, 7-1.
runs In a game. His first
In the Nallonal League ·
homer, also a solo shot, P"" Royall 7, A'• Z:
Boston a 3-llead In the sixth.
Darrell Porter hit a patr of
The win waa a vital one for solo home runs and Amoo
the Boso:r, who played Otis added a three-run shot
erry&gt;rleu ball fer the first fir the Royals, who moved 1
tlnie in 11 games.
games ahead of Callftrnla In
"Anythln_g can turn it the West. Raqero 1, Angell
around," sa1d Rice. "I hope It t:
builds our confidence. Let's
Mike Hargrove singled In a

nm with two out in the fifth
inning aM nrguson Jenkins,
Is:&amp;, pitched a three-bitter for
the Rangers. Jenkins struck
out five to move past Bob
' Feller annd Warren Spahn
into ninth place oo the aUtime list with 2,S84.
Twins 3, White Sol&lt; 1:
Roy SmaDey hit hil 19th
home nm, a two-run shot in
the fifth inning, to power
Geoff Zahn, 12-13, and the
Twins. Mike Marshall picked
up hil 19th save.
Brewers 5, Mariners 3:
Lary Sorensen notched his
17th triumph and i&gt;on Money
banged out two doubles to
keep Milwaukee 410 games
behlhd Boston In the East .
Indiana 1-1, Blue Jays ._7:
Willie Horton drove In two
nms and scored three times
and Don Kirkwood, 4-3,
tosaed a slx-ldtler for Teronto
In the nightcap. In the first
game, Gary Alexander drove
In three runs with a homer
and single and Andre
Thornton belted his 30th
homer W give Rick Walts, 1213, and the Indians the
victory.

Dodgers ·move step
closer to West title
By FRED MeMANE
UPI Sparta Writer
\mle liiOit players starve
oo the servings of tile San
Francisco Glanta' pltchel'll,
Rm Cey faeda on them like a
Fllberman'e Wharf blue
plate special.
And hecaliae of that tile Los
Angeles Dodgers are another
ltep cloller toward locking up
their
second
straight
National League West
peiVISnt.
Cey hit · two heme runs
Mooday night and led Loa
Angeles to a 7-2 triumPh over
San Franclaco,
which
Increased the Dodgers' lead
over the Glanta In tile NL
Wlllt to five games.
The lltocky third baaeman
bit 110lli hcmera In the fourth
and nlntiiiMinga to help hand
VIda Blue his eighth loa
against 18 victories.
,"lUke hitting In this park
(€andlestlck)," said Cey. "I
Just have a good feeling
playing here, even though
everybody bool me."
•In the NL's eutem half c1
tile battle fir the pemant,
Philadelphia had· little
trouble with Pittsburgh,
cruahln~ the Plralea, 10-3, to
Increase Its lead IAi flw

pmee.
Pittsburgh grabbed an
-ly S.llead oo a 110lo homer
by Dl1e 8eiTI and a twOoi'Uil
ahot by WUlle Stargell, but

the Phillies broke the game
open with a sl:r-nm, ftfthInning qutburst to win their
seventh game in their last
eight starts •
B!lke McBride sl8!JIIIled a
two-run hCIIler and winning
pitcher Steve Carltoo singled
home a pair of runs to
. .hUght the uprising against ·
rookie Don Roblnaon, 12-6.
Larry Bo... , the Phllllea'
shortstop, credlta tile club's
surge to an Increase In
Intensity.
"The intensity on the
recent road trip was
DI~ethlng I'd never seen oo
thil team before,'' aald Bowa.
"If we had always played
with that intenalty we'd have
a big lead by now."
Elsewhere In the NL,
Cincinnati topped Houston, &amp;, 8, Montreal defeated St.
Louil, s-1, Chicago routed
New York, !1-4, and Atlanta
trimmed_San Diego, 7·2.
·El&lt;poa S, Canllllall 1:
Gary Carter's two-run
homer and the three-hit
pltchlngofRoaaGrimBley, 1~
9, carried the EKJIOS past St.
Louil. The 18 victories equals
GrimBley'a career best .
ciibe 1, Meta 4:
Bobby Murcer had three
hlta, lnciudinl • three-run
homer, and ck'ove In four runs
to spark a 1~t attack by the
Olbll. Murcer e:rtended his
consecutive hlt streak to

"

eight, tWo shy of the NL
record.
Bnves 7, Padres Z:
Gary MaWlews had five
hits, Including his JSth
homer, to lead rookie Larry
McWilliams to his eighth
triwnph In nine decisions.
Gene Garber got the last two
Ollts to preserve the victory.

EVENT SLATED

The
haal
Waltoa
Ltape, aloa1 wllb otber
sportsmea'a dabe of Mel11
Couaty, wlll celebrate
Natloaal Haat1a1 aad
Fllblng Day OD September
Z3 at Royal Oak Parl,
he11m11Dg at 9 a.m. •
Caooelllg, fllhlq, tnp
obootlllg; mauleloadla&amp;,
81111 tomahawl throwinJ
are jDSt a few of tile actlvltleo thai wlll · be
available.
Tbe day II free al charge
wllb free IWicb ud door
prizes heiDI IJvea.

Safety
course
offered
ByGregBalley

,.,. 00
~

hunter safety course offered

,.

•• llyGENECADDES
UPlllporll Writer

Moot figure It baa to do wltll
the quarterback pooltlon

• COWMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- wilere frellhman -lion
Art Schlichter - althoaah
Aller more than two weelul of lilted uNo . Son the Buckeye
wtec:y, old 1enera1 Woody depth c:bart - II rumored to
lily• of Ohio lltate -~ have talim over from twoabout to blow bla cover
rear regular and all-Big Ten
' "I'm sotrJ," the Buclleye Rod Gerald.
CDildl told his lint .,.....
Gerald baa been bothered
~of the year MoodaJ,
by leg problema alnce
'!!lull doa't have anythlnC to practice began, althouah
rtport of• eartlllibaklllg Jm. Hay• aslcl Maclday hi Ia
J*'taDce."
"rounding Into form, He baa
~ left tbole
come along real well and I
11iJna with Plilll State Coach don't thln1 there II any
Joe l'ltamo, ltlll -lderlac queatlon he will be ready to
. . Hay• baa up Ida lleeve flO 011 Satllrday."
IIilldnd bla doMd pndlce
But, the queatlon nmalns:
iita
Wb.-e?
I

..--.t.

Meigs
In aU probability, next year
will see the Implementation
of a new law requiring every
hunter who baa not had a
previous hunting and trapping licenae to pasa one of
these hunter safety couraea
before purchasing a license.
The cou!'lle will be offered
Friday, Saturday, and
Sunday with reglatratlon to
becln on Friday. The first
.aalon will run Friday night
from 7 to 9 p.m., the second
oo Saturday from 1-6 : p.m.
and the Jut on Sunday from
1-6 p.m. The final day will see
tests gtven.
AWioUCh, panil primarily
to the younpter or adull who
baa never taken to the liooda
or field, or those havlntllittle
knowlqe of the outdoor
sporta, the COlll'lll Ia open to
aU ac• and au - - For
more .Information, contact

.-..... c..o. •m1.

which meant the clock
~ped and we could line up
for Turner ·to kick his tying
field goal," Weese said.
The ball was snapped with
three aecoods left and TUrner
kicked the goal as time ran
out.
The Vikings - including
the ordinarily stolid Coach
Bud Grant - were fuming.
"Some of the officials
agreed with me that the clock
should hsve nm ·down but the

•••
••• '
e
••• •• •• •••

'
BASEBALl SCOREBOARD
I

Maior

Leaiue

I
I

I
I

I
•

lend , Ale)l(ander (15), Thornton

Standings

head official wouldn't chsnge
hil mind," Tarkentoo said.
In the overtime, Minnesota
received on its 18. Foreman
swept right end for 2 yards.
Kramer ran for 10, then
passed to Bob Miller fer gains
of 14 yards and 9 yards, and a
IS-yard personal foul on
Denver moved the ball to the
Denver 31. Foreman ran to
the 26 and Danmeier kicked
hil winning goal.

Tarkentoo completed J:klf.
'll passes for 98 yards and

was intercepted three times.
Weese had a beef about
another play - when Viking
Alan Page blocked TUrner's
try for extra point after
Denver's only touchdown.
"There's no way he could
hsve made that play without
being offside," Weese said.
"But ... that's sour grapes.
They played well and won."

Angry boos turn to
cheers as Reds win

. (301 .

CINCINNATI (UP!) last week.
run lead in the bott&lt;m of the
J ohnny Bench laughingly
o
ooThe
Reds
still
led
by
one
ninth. The Dcxnlnican right10
230
1
1
13
0
East ·
010 ooo ooo- 1 • o suggested that a video tape of run with me out in the top of hander responded by walking
W. L.. Pet . GB Cleve
Kirkwood and Ashby ; W ise, the g
· th whe n Bruce Bochy Driessen and Foster, the fll'st
Phil a
79 6ol .552
Hood
(51 , Monge 111 , Sp iiiner
arne be used as a ·the run
74 69 .517 5
Pittsbroh
and Jay Alou slammed two \~alters he faced ,
73 n · .so7 6'! 2 (91 and Diaz . w- Kirkwood (4 •. training film for Utile
Chicaoo
31 . L- Wise (9-191. HRs- leaguers.
coosecutive homers off Dave bringing Bench to the pia te.
1Vtelntreal
68 71 .469 12
Toronto, Ew: ing (2).
St . Louis
62 83 .428 18
•
R~ds' manager Sparky
Tomlin to send the Astros
The
Reds'
catcher
New York
59 .86 .407 ~H
Bait
000 010 03o- • 13 o Anderson
labeled
his
ahead
8.7.
bunted
to
the
right
promptly
West
000 112 01x - 5 B a handlln
W. L. Pet. GB 80s
Palmer, Kerrigan
(61 and
g of re Icef pitchers as
Ironically, it was Tomlin of the mound, advancing
Los Ang
86 58 .597
Dempsey ; Tiant , Stanley 181 a "butchered up job."
who wound up with the Driessen to third and Foster
San Fran
81 63 .563 5
Fisk.
wstoniey
11•-121
.
L
"The
only
thing
I
can
be
.
victory, hiS' e!'ghth against lo secood.
Clnclnati
79 6.t .552 6 1/ 2 and
igan (3. 1) . HAs- Boston,
S&amp;n Diego
73 72 .503 13'12 -Kerr
Vaslrzemski (13). Hobson (161. happy about tonight is that me loss.
"The man (Sparky) asked
Houston
67 76 .169 18'12
Rice 2 1&lt;01.
we woo," added Anderson
"I'm figuring after Tomlin me to do it and I did it,'' said a
Atlanta
63 81 .138 23
Mond•y's Resulfs
Minn '
001 020 ooo- 3 8 1 after Ken Griffey's twwun got the first hatter out the grinning Bench.
Montreal 3, St. Louis 1
Chi
000
010 ooo- I 10 0 ground ball pu..
'""h slng1 e, werst they can do is get a
The last time Bench
Phi Ia 10, Pittsburgh 3
Zahn,
Marshall
(7)
and through th
hoi
hetw
Chicago 9. New York 1
Borgmann ; Kravec and Col ·
e
e
een base hit," said Anderson, dropped down a sacrifice
Cincinnat i 9, Houston a
bern . W- Zahn (12-13l . L- third and shtrt in the bottom explaining hil reluctance to bunt was in 1974.
Atlanta 7, San Oieoo 2
Kravec (11 -14) . HRs Min - of th
· thIn ·
'
Los Angeles 1, San Fran 2
"This Is 1978.'' he chortled
n•sota,
Smalley !191 ; Ch icago.
e run
rung, gave the br mginhisacereliefpitcher,
Today's Prob•ble Pitchers
Coibern
111.
Reds a 9-8 victery over the right-hander Doug Bair. "A gleefully, "and the next Ume
l-"11 Times EDT!
Houston Astros Monday night home run never entered my I'll lay ooe down it'll will be
Houston {Lemongello 9-13) at Oak
000 000 OlD- 1 4 1
Cincinnati {Moskau 5-4}, 5 p .m . K.C.
015 010 OOx - 7 9 0 in the opener of a two-game mind "
1982."
St . Lours (Vuckovich 12-10) at
Keough , Norris. ( 3 ), Lacey {81 series.
Anderson
winced
upon
When Griffey, who didn't
Montreal (May 6·9 L T:JSp.m.
(8) ;
and Robinson , Meyer
The Reds, traDing, 6-1, learning B&lt;1ehy's homer was start because of a sore heel,
Pittsburgh (Candetarl.a 10·111 Pattin and Porter . W- Pattln
.at Philadelphia (Christensen 11 · (l 2 ) L K
..
l"l uR
went ahead in the bottom of his third of the seasoo .and stepped lo the plate as a pinch
12), 7:35p.m .
. .
.
· - eoug!' 18 4. • n sChlcago (Burris 5·111 jt New Kansas City, Ohs (20}, Porter 2 the seventh with a six-run Alou's was ooly his secood. hitter fer Tomlin, Virdm
York (Espin osa 10-131. 8:05 OBI.
splurge as they pounded
"Bochy's big enough to hit replaced Andujar with Dan
p.m.
(1811J
000
000
ooo0
3
0
Astro
starter
Vern
Ruhle
and
...quite
a few h&lt;mers" said Warthen. And with the Infield
Atlanta (Mahler 4-10} et San
000 010 ooo- 1 10 0 r~lie~ pitcher Joe Sambito for Astro manager Bill Vlrdoo.
Diego (Owchlnko 8-12), 10 p.m . Te)(aS
drawn, Griffey delivered his
Hartzell and Downing ; Jen .
Los Angeles {Hooton 11 -8) at k. ins
and
Sundberg.
WJenk!ns
SIX hits.
"And
Alou
is
hatting
about
game-winning hit to left on
San Francisco (Blue 16-1}, 10: 35 05-8). L- H~rtzell (6 -101.
Cesar Geronimo led off the .400 against left-banders- the first pitch.
p.m .
W.c:lntsday's Games
"Griffey jammed? That
Mllw
'200 003 000- 5 8 I ·rally with a double and beat the Padres' Bob Shirley
Atlanta at San Francisco
000 002 1oo-- J 8 1 scored the first run of the · Sunday with a pinch hit."
pitch
he hit was finger naU
Montreal at New York, night Sea
Sorensen , Cas1ro (8) and
C h I c ago at Philadelphia, Mart
~ing on Ken Henderson's · Virdon called up&lt;11 Joaquin high on his bat,'' said
inez
;
Mclaugh
l
in
,
Parrott
night
"
and Stinson, Pasley ( 9) . w pinch single. Pete Rose Andujar lo protect the one- Anderson.
St . Lours at Pittsburgh, night -(6)Sorensen
( 17-10). L - Mclaugh . greeted Sambito with a single
Cincinnati at San Dieoo. night lin ('2.7) .
Houston at Los Angeles, night
and one out later, Danny
{Only games scheduled 1
Driessen walked to set the
American League
stage for George Foster's
'
Eut
Major Lelgue Leaders
game~tying grand slam
W. L. Pet. Gl
By United Pre-ss InternatiOnal homer, his second of the
Boston
87 56 .li08
86 56 .606
1f2
New York
cBased ~:':~~gat batsl
season and sixth of his major
83 61 .576 41h
M ilwauke
Netronal League
league career.
·
Baltlmre
80 63 .559 7
THIS WEEK'S SPECII.L
77 65 .512 9-lh
Detroit
Parker Pil
:;oAs~&lt; ~62 P3cltS "The first grand slammer
62 81 .434 25
Clevelnd
137 439 138 .314 I've ever given up and the
57 89 • .:10f\ 'II l.t.. BurrQ1lhs Ati
Toronto
Wtlf
cruz Hou
137 512 159 .311 first h&lt;mer Foster has hit off
108 402 125 .311
W. L. Pet. GB Madlock SF
Clark SF
1&lt;0 532 16-1 .308 me," said Samblto.
Kan City
18 64 .S..9
NEW YORK (UP II -The
Cllllf
78 67 .518 1'12 Rose Cin
w 585 176 .301 Bench following Foster to
Texas
70 71 .496 7'h
aowa Phil
138 sn 173 .300 the plate
went down Un ited Press International
Garvey LA
1"'"' 576 173 .300
• '
Oak,land
66 78 .•sa 13
Board of Coaches' top 20
Cromrll Mti
1&lt;2 , .. lOA .300 swinging ilfter driving a hall, college football ratings, wi th
Minesota
6-4 BO .4.U 15
UliED CARS
Chicago
61 83 .42• 18
Smith LA . 123m 130 .300 foulbyafewfeet into the left first -place votes and won -lost
Amer.can LtiiUUt
.
•
Seattle
53 88 .376 241J2
:·
Special!
G "''· H. Pet. field
seats,
Davey records .in parentheses Points
Monday's Results
Cleveland 6, Toronto 4, 1st
Carew Min
136 502 168 .335 Concepcion followed a Team
1. Alabama (30 (l -0)
558
Rice Bos
143 590 192 .325
•
Toronto 1, Cleveland 1, 2nd
Piniella NV
111 399 128 .321 Champ Summers single With 2. Oklahoma (4) (1 -0)
'72 OLDS
461
Boston S, Baltimore 4
Oliver Tex
II HII u3.317 a double to left center to send
Minnesote 3, Chicago 1
3. Arkansas (2) (0·01
454
Kansas Cltv 7, Oaklarld 1
' · Michigan (11 (0-01
366
98 LS CPE.
~~~~;.~~ea
~~
j~ the Reds ahead, 7-6.
Texas 1, California 0
5. Southern Cal ( 1·01
..
J63
..:i
Ogilvie Mil
113 412 123 .299 "Uke being born again," 6 Ohio St . (0-0)
Milwauk~e 5, Seattl~ 3
358 ,,
Taday's Probable Pltehers
ThmpliOn Dt
13A 519 IS• .297 exclaimed a beaming Swn- 7. Texas (0-0)
'1895
339 1
Fisk 8os
137 497 147 .296
.
(All Times EDT)
B
.
Penn
St
.
(2)
(2·0)
337
us SAS 161 .295 mers, who now has four hits
Baltimore (0 . Martinez 12 -11 ) Munson NY
262
at 8oston (Torrez 15·9) , 7: 30
Homo Runs
in seven at hats since called 9 . UCL-" (l .O)
National L.. gut : Foster, Cln
nd1a
1
p.m.
10. Missouri {1 -01
162
napolls cub II. Texas-"&amp;M(l·O)
'73 DODGE
Toronto (Clancy 10·11 J at 32 ; Lutinsk l, Ph il 30; Smllh , LA up from the I
137
29 ; Kingman, Chi 25; Parker
Clev~land ( Frelsieben 1-•J . 7: 30
12
.
Pittsburgh
(0-0)
123
and staroell, Pit1 and Clark, SF
p.m .
13. LSU (0-0)
93
New York (TidrO"W 7-91 at 2•.
CHARGER CPE.
14. Nebraska(! -)
92
American League: Rice, 60s
Oetrol1 {Young 5-S), 8 p.m.
15.
Florida
St.
(1
-01
80
4p
;
Baylor,
Cal
32;
Thomas
,
Mil
Minnes.ota (Serum 8-7) at
16. Notre Dame (0·1 )
74
Chicago (Stone 10-12), 8:30p .m . 31 ; Thornton, Clev and Hisle,
SE
17. Maryland (1.0)
34
Oakland (Langford 7-IOJ at Mil 30.
_
Runs B•Hed In
Kansas City (Gura 13-11 , 8: 30
lB. Kentucky (0-0I
30
N•tlanal League: Fo~_t er , Cin
p.m .
19.
Washington
(0-11
29
'1895
California (Tenane 17 -9 ) at 103; Garve~ , LA 100; Parker.
20.
Colorado
(1-0I
27
Pitt 96 ; Clark , SF 94 ; Smith ,
Texas (Medich 7-8), 8: 35p .m .
This Week's
Note: By agreement with
Milwaukee {Bombach 0-0J at LA 92 . .
Ohio Co liege
the
Amer i can
Football
American Le•gut: Rice; Bos
Suttle (Mitchell 8-13) , 10 : 35
Football Schedule
Coaches Assoc iation , teams
123 ; Staub, Oet 108 ; Hisle, Mil
p.m.
102 ; Thornton, Clev 95 ; Carty , United Press International
on probation by the NCAA are
Wednesuv•• Games
Penn State al Ohio Stale
Oak 9'2.
Baltimore at Mllw, ni9ht
ineligible for top 20 and
You'll LlktOU(.QNllty
Staltn BaHI
Kent State at Bell Sta te
Boston at Cleveland. night
national
championship
W•y of Doing Builnnt
New York at Detroit , night
.National Ltagut : . Moreno , Bowling Green at Eastern
consideration by the UPI
GMI.C FINANCING
California at Texas, night
P!tt 63 ; Lopes, LA ,.1 ; Taveras. Michigan {N)
Board
of Coaches. Those
Oakland atKan City , night
Po
ll
37
;
Smith,
SO
3l
;
C
1 1 Ml hi
t
Ml
·
m-5342
,moray
teams currently on probation
Richards, SO 3&lt;4.
en ra
c gan a
am1
Opt11 Evtnlngt 'II 16; 00
are :
Mich igan
State,
American Le•vue: LeF lore, Toledo at Minnesota
Oet 63 ; Cruz. Sea 49; Wilts, Tex Akron at Northeast Missouri
Till p.m. Sal.
Houston. Oklahoma State and
Mojor League Results
•&gt;
:
Diione.
Oak"'
Wilson.
KC
Southern
Mississippi
at
Grambling.
ly Unl ed Press lnt~rnatlon•l 38.
Cincinnati (n)
National L..gue
United Pr•ss International
National league

(2nd
Tor game I

Missouri jumps

to

m

lOth

g:

j

This week's

college games

Kart &amp; VanZandt

::;~:~r.~

s 12 0

d y says G. erald annU:w!~v~~re o!nuw~:
should be ready ~~~-;~-:::ro~
.. -fior 0 rnen r.ng
. u·lt

TFJ: ·

•

goal in the dying seconda of
regulation Ume.
Reserve
Denver
quarterback Norris Weese,
who replaced Craig M&lt;rtOO
late in the third period, rolled
out with 11 seconds left
looking for a receiver In the
end zone. When he didn't find
me, he was Sll\othered by the
Vikings.
"I was lucky enough to
hsve tile Clfflcials rule I was
sacked after trying to pass,

"Aa 11000 aa I hit the ball we win this game," upeet oakland a week ago, Is
alao 1-1'.
and It got over the ·Une I Tarkenton said.
"We never got going until
Danmeler kicked a U-yard
thought It would he good,"
tile fourth period and then we field goal in the first quarter•
n.nmeter said.
Second-year
reserve thought we could win It," He booled a 46-yarder and a
quarterback Tommy Kramer Denver Coach Red Miller 21-yarder In tile third period
Denver's
Jon
waa a hero, too. Kramer said. "But Kramer came in before
scored
a
came on In overtime to and did a marvelous job and Keyworth
replace tiring veteran Fran Minnesota's defense got touchdown midway in the
fourth quarter.
Tarkentoo - whoae tbimb Ughter." .
The
VIkings,
who
suffered
a
The most controversial
waalnjured- to engineer the
frustr11tlng
loss
at
New
play
was·the me that allowed
winning drive.
"It was very Important' that Orleans In their opener, have TUrner to kick his tying field
a 1-1 record. Denver, which

Wilcox , Burnside (7), Tobik
Nationll League : Grimsley ,
(7) and Parrish ; Guidry and Mti 18-9; Niokro, -"11 18-15;
Munson ,
Hr i ms · Perry , SO 17-6; Hooton, LA 17ley •nd Carter . W-Grlmstey 8: Blue, SF 16-1 ; John , LA 16·
(18-91. L- Dennv Ill -Il l. HRs - 10; Richard, Hou 16·11.
Montreal. Carter c 171.
American Lu1ut : Guidry,
Ptsbgl'l
012 000 ooo- J e 1 NY , 21 -2; P1lmer-, Bait 18-12;
Phila
103 060 aox- 10 a 1 Tana~a. Cal 17-9; Sorenson, Mil
2
O .Robinson,
Whitson
{5), 17 · 10 ·.~~~':8 l~'n ~a~!r~l! ·
Carroll (6) , Hamilton (8 ) and llated on 131 innints pitched&gt;
Over ; Carlton and McCarver .
Notional Ltoguo: Vuckovlch,
W- Cariton (1-4-12) . l - D.Robln · Sl .L 2.35 ; ROGers, Mtl 2.A7;
son {12-6) . HRs- Pi1tsburgh, Swan , NY 2.49 ; Blue, SF 2.70 ;
Berra
(51 ,
Stargell
(21) ;
Philadelphia , McBride (8) .
Kn:~e:ic::
eu• ~ . Guidry,

2(,. .
1.77; Coidwoil, Mil

Youngstown St
(Mich)

at Wayne St

Kenyon at Capital .
Heidelberg at Manetta (n)

Muskingum · at Edinboro St
OHerbeln at Dayton (n)
Valparaiso ( lnd 1 at Witten ·

berg

Adrian (Michl at Wooster
Baldwin-Wallace at Ashland

(n)
Albion (Michl at Mount

W &amp; J (Pal ot Denison
Union

Oberlin at OHio Nortnern (n)

NY
2.32; Camll!lie-Mellon (Pal at Ohio
Chi
003 02• DOO- 9 16 I Matlack, TeK 2.42 ; Goltz, Mlnn Wesleyan
N.Y.
100 210DOO- &lt;10 0 2.51 ; Palmer . Bait 2.53.
Findlay at Bluffton
Lamp and Rader ; Bruhert ,
Striktouts
Centre (Kyl at Defiance
Jackson
(51,
Siebert
til.
Nation•• League: . Richard, John Carroll at Buffalo
Cornejo Ul and Stearns. w267 ; Nlekro , Att 219; Wilmington at Manchester
Lamp (7 -13) . l.- Bruhert (3·91. Hou
Staver. Cin 188 ; Bitiovon. Pitt (lndl
HRs-Chicigo, Murcer (9) .
~~: Blue and IW&gt;n tfutco, SF

Hous
Cinci

302 010 002- 110 0
000 010 602- 9 10 3

Ruhlt. Samblto {1), Andular
191, warthen C9J and Bochy :
Norman, SOto (4), Sarmiento
16), BorbOn C8l, Tomlin (I) and
Bench . W-Tomtin !8-ll . L -

n _ denotes night game

American League ~ Ryan. Cal
'2'26 ; Guidry, NY 2'20; Leonard ,
KC 1~ ; ~ lanagan , Bait 145,·
Kravec . Chi Ul.

Anauior (5-51. HRa- Houoton .
Watson 11•1. Bochy '(3), Aiou
(ll ; Cincinnati, Foster (32) .

Atla
003100 030- 7 13 1
San Doo
000 000 101 - 2 • 3
McWilliams , Garber (9} and

Benedict ;

Jonos.

Lee

[7) ,

Shirley (8) , O'Acqultfo (8) and
Tenece . W-McWIIIiems U -lJ.
L- Jones (11 -14) . MRs- Atlanta.
MefthiWI (16) .

LA
Son Fnn

003 100 003.._ 7
000 010 1()0- 2

9 2

71
Rau, Forster (7) end Fer ·
guiOn ; llue. lerr (5), Wllll1m1
(7),

Curtit (91 ana

Hilt .

w-

Aau (U·I) . L - Biue (16-1). HRI
-LOS Angeles, Cey 2 (20); San
Francisco, Clark·(24l .

Amtrlcan Ltt,eue
Clst e•meJ
Tor

Ciovt

010 300 ooo- 1 9 1

110 120 lOx- 6 9 0

Jefferton. Coleman (5) and

Cerone; Welts and Alexander.
W- Waitl 02-IJ). L- Jetflt'IOn
(7 -131. HRs- Toronto, Velez (9),
Ault (3~, McKay {7) ; Cle"JI·

Set Bill childs ,..... He Worics For Youl
I

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANa AGENCY, INC.
o.
l·

J

�•

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tueoclay, Sept. 12, 1m

Harrison hosts Carl reunion

Rutland Garden Club staged
'A-utumn ·Treasures ' show ,
RUTLAI'ro-A wide array
of elegant arrangements
showing creativity a nd
originality in design along
with housep lanl• and home
decoralion.s were on dis play

at the Rutland Garden Club's
flower show staged Saturday
at the Rutland United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis
was general chainrian of the
show which featured special
tlisplays of a non-competitive
nature. Mrs. Edith Williams

showed numerous macrame
plant holders which she hsd
made, the Senior Citizens
Center had an extensive
tlisplay of.plant related handicrafts. and the Pomeroy
flower Shop exhibited plant
material., all appropriately
labeled, along with a large
tlrit!U arrangenumt.
··Autwnn 's Treasures'' was
U1e show theme. Ribbons in
fv ur places were awarded in

U1e artistic design classes as
follows:
·
"The F laming Hills" , an
arrangement to include some
colored leaves : Mrs . Alma
Turner, Mrs. Pauline Atkins,
Mrs . Ruth Er\ewine, and
Mrs . N~va Nicholson .

" Trea s ures
Ga rd en".

from the
including

E.

0.

s.

SALE
CONTINUES

Making room
for winter tires.
Stop in and check

for low prices.

e!SNERAL
TIRE SALES
N. Sl!cond Ave.
Middleport, 0 .

The Carl rewri(Hr was held
Sept. · 3 at Dale Harrison's
cabin orr Kingsbury Roa&lt;!.
Attending were Carla,
Shari arid Mike Lohrer, TrOY ;
Bill and Isabelle Cool,
Piketon; Bill and Lois Harsh,

vegetables a nd-ur fruit : Mrs . and Mrs . Kate Jarrell, and
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Binda lor fall horne decorations
Diehl, Mrs. Turner, and Mrs. made from dried plant
Judy Titus.
rnaterials, ·the wirmers were
"I
Remember Other Mrs. Eva Robson, Mrs. Kate
Autwns " , interprt!tive but Jarrell ~ Mrs. Donna Jenkins,
traditional : Mrs . Pauline U1ird and fourth.
Atkins, Mrs. Eva Robson,
Mr-,;. Suzy Carpenter, an
Mrs. Arma Turner.
a~-credited judge of the Ohio
" Gat h ering in the Associati .. l of Garden Clubs
Treasures", modern design : was the judge.
Mr s. Judy Titus, &lt;Mrs.
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Binda
Diehl, ~nd Mr·s. Eva Robson . ~-~----.
In the invitational classes
for artistic arrangements,
open for public exhibit, the

LODGEIM,F~

Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, will observe open
houae Saturday from 5:30 to
7:30 p.m. 'lbe Ohio Grange
Lodge film, "A Precious
Heritage" will be mown and
representatives of Muonr)',
Job's
Daughters
and
DeMolay will give presentations on their respective
groupa. The general, pubUc
as well as Masons, members
of the Order of Eastern Star,
Job's
Daughter.•
and
OeMolay are cordially in-vited to attend the open house
to be held at the temple.

-,

winners Wt!re : Hrnmgement:

1 Socia! 1
II Calendar
I
.
I

"Looking Ahead ", a
Clnistma s
arrangement ': Mrs. Sharon Jewell,
TUESDAY
Mrs. Rev a Snowden, Mrs. AdCOME AS YOU ARE a
dalou Lewis, and Mrs. Eva Harrisonville PTO meeting
Robson .
Tuesday, Sept. 12, 7 p.m. at
(
" The Smell 0 an Ope n Harrisonville Elementary
Fire ", weathered wood in- School.
eluded in the design : Addalou
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
. Le wis, Eva Robson, Ceeile
1
d ·
1
Kincaid and Neva Nicholsoir. . at the '!Chool. ntro uchon o
"Off to the Hills", including staff members. Babysitting
service will be provided . All
native nuts: (for J'wriors l patrons of the school are
Craig Bolin, Scott Geyer, and invited.
J oyce Lambert with an
ho norable m en lion to
SYRACUSE PTO, 7' 30 p.m.
Tuesday at the school with
Michelle Barr.
introductions
to
In the horticulture division staff
for juniors, Chuck Simpkins, highlight the program ;
Michelle Barr and Becky Rife babysitting service will be
were the ribbon winners in provided.
dish gardens, while Craig
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of
Bolin, Suzy Ftye , and Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, first
Mi chelle Barr won for meeting of the fall at 7:30
specimens of dried m•teri•l• p.m. Tuesday at the River
suitable for use in ar- Boat Room of Meigs Branch,
rdngernents.
Athens County Savings and
Winners in the senior hor- Loan in Pomeroy.
ticulture tlivision for bloom- HARRISONVILLE
Easting ho useplants except ern Star 255 Tuesday 8
African violets : Mrs . Anna p.m.
Turner , Mrs. Binda Diehl,
SOUTHERN
LOCAL
both second and third and School Board Tuesday 7:30
Mrs. Emma Ledlie.
'
• p.m. at ~igh school.
POMEROYCHAMBEROF
Foliage (two tlivisioos) : a .
Mrs. Erruna Ledlie , Mrs. Com~erce Tuesday at noon
Neva Nicholson, Miss Ruby at Mergs Inn .
Di e hl , and Mrs . Ruth
RACINE LODGE 461
Erlewine; ·a nd b. Mrs. Reva F&amp;AM Tuesday. Work in MM
Snowden Mrs Anna Tumer 1egree. All master masons
Mrs. Ern;na ~lie, and Mrs: nvited.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Eva Robson : ~nd African
violets : Miss Bernice Durst, Club, 6:30 Tuesday at the
firehouse,
first and fourth , and Miss Middleport
Ruby Diehl, second and tltird. &lt;"vered dish dinner with
·Field or roadside nower beverage and table service
display, six to 10 plants : Mrs . 4&gt;rovided . Members are to
Eva Robson, Mrs. Kate Jar- take meat, vegetable, salad
rel\ , Mrs. Margaret Ella or dessert . Suzy Carpenter to
Lewis , and Mrs . Anna conduct workshop following
Turner.
tlinner .
In the educational exhibits
WINDING TRAfL Garden
fur n~tive tree leaves, the rib- Club, 8 p .m . Tuesday at the
bon winners were Mrs. ·horne of Mrs. Alice Thump-.
Dorothy Barnes, Mrs. Reya son. Program on corn husk
Snowden , Mrs. Eva Robson,

BLUE RIBBON WINNER-Mrs. Anna Turner, president of the Rutland Garden Club, was a blue ribbon winner with her arrangement in "The Flaming Hills" class .
with the design feaJ,uring some colored leaves.

constderntJOn.

•
••

,

·

125 E. Main St. • 992-2171

;'

•

'

Canoeing enjoyed

'Duncan Falla.
Roy and ·Mabel Brl&lt;•kb•o
Olen and Louise
Faye Pratt, Phil,
Rodney, lllld
rison, Dwight and
Carl, Ron, Kelly, Jeff,
and Ivan, Ralph and
Carl, Ron, Linda,
Tina Riffle, Charles
ni&lt;-e Riffle, Bud and
Wilson, Virgil, Judy,
Randy, Danny and
Carl, Lloyd, Eva,
Brill, and Phillip King,
Marlene, Scott lind Jodi
rison, all of
Rodney and Monu Frecke1r.~
Chuck, Ruth Ann,
Cindy and Ann Riffle, Rodne)'i
and Debbie Carl, all of

Offlt-ers were elected at the
Sunday evening meeting of
the Ruck Springs United
Methodist youth group.
· Elected were Susan Zirkle,
president; Trat-ey Jeffers,
vice president; Pam Evans,
_treasurer; Tanuny Adkitts,

Youth of the Bradbury
Olurch of Christ enjoyed
canoeing Sunday at the Ract'Oon Creek Canoe livery
near Rio Grande. In the
·group were Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Hank and
Kathy Johnson, Kevin King,
Cathy Hess, Sherrie Bar. nhart, Rodney Bailey, Oesi
· Jeffers, and Ruth Carsey.
illeport.

Edith King .returns home
,

:

WESTERN BOOT
Daughters of the American
The Western Boot Citizerui;!
Revolution invite you to study Band Radio Club will
the American Constitution, picnic at the Porthind -::--.- ·
understand its meaning and Sept. -24, 10 a .m. to 4
understand why the United Members are to take
States of America is the best &lt;-overed dish and their
nation In the world. Read table service. All CB'ers
your Constitution.
invited to attend.

,
'
:
;

Mrs. Edith King hils returned to her horne in Clrester
alter at-companying her son ,
Cecil and his family of East
liverpool to Illinoi s to visit
her daughter, Mrs. Inez
Brelun of Island Lake, arid
granddaughter, Mrs. Ralph
Peters and family of
McHenry, Ill.
Enroute home the Kings
toured the Kellogg Plant at
Battle' Creek, Mich. and the
Stroh's Brewery in Detroit

'

I

• . YOUNGSTOWN (UP!) , The Ecwnenlcal Coalition of
the Mahoning Valley will
• sponsor a three-day national
religious convocation with
, the theme, "Save Youngs: town, Save America,'' Sept.
' 28·30. The coalition , a
rellgious - community action
group pushing for a
reopening of the mothballed
C&amp;mpbell Works of Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube Co., said
· the gathering will focus at. tention "on the growing crisis
' In cities caused by plant
• closings
or
reduced
production."
, The group also said it will
· e:rplaln "the dramatic effort
!Diderway In Youngstown to

ed gifts. Also celebrated
the 30th anniversary of
and Mrs. William
Others attending were
Finlaw children, Heather
Matthew, Kevin King,
Kathy Johnson, and Mr.
Mrs. Rick Meckstroth;
tington, W. Va.

ro.ast s.. netirne tins fall . The
group recently sponsored the
Carriers, a si n gin~ group, at
the
Rock
Springs
fairgrounds .
The program was on love,
rnarriage and dating with
scriptures from Rmnans 12,
Genes us 2, Ephesians 5, first
and Second Corinthians,
Psalm 32, Jolur 7, and
Romans 21. The meeting dosed with prayer.

O.; B!!It;Roush, JaneSmlth, I Letart , W. Va.; Jim
l'auletta Winston of Mason, Delores MaJ'\ln, Tim and
W. Va.; Leland and Carol Sue Sharon Chrisma n, Scott
Smith, Melissa Smith, Martin, Edwin and Elna
Johnny Lawson, of Mason, W. Hoffman, Eric , · Melody ,
Va. ; Clay and Clara Rooney, ,Margret and Monica, all of
Bunky, Meli~ and Chester Urbana, Ohio.
~·
of New Haven, W. Va.;
Games were played, plenty
Charles and Melissa Hoffman of food enjoyed and it was
of Letart, Rt. I, W. Va.; decided the standing dale of
Clarence and Lyta Roush, the. Sunday prior to Labor
U&gt;u Roush , AI Sprouse, of Rt. Day be the annual reunion .

Andy Warhol - done with soup cans -

along with the 'Greenfield
Village. They spent a day in
Windsor, Canada going by
JAMES HOLMAN
way of the tunnel under the
James Holman has been
Detroit River and returning promoted to specialist fourth
via the bridge. Before return- · grade with the U. S. Army.
ing to her horn~. here, Mrs. Spec. Holman left Friday for
King then spent three weeks a two month exercise in
with the Cecil King family Gennany after visiting with
and arwther daughter, Mr·s. his mother , Mrs. Jacob
Robert (Eloise) Eardley in Holman and other relatives in
East Uverpool. The trip was the Racine area for several
rnade in the· new motor horne days.
of the Kings .
Alperovitz, co-director of the
Nation~l
Center
for
Economic Alternatives.
cr.e ate a model solution ·
"The plight in Youngstown
where a giant steel mill has began with our moral conbeen shut down ."
cern, as religious leaders,
The Campbell Works were with the plight of tens of
closed a year ago, laying off thousands of people affected.
some 5,000 workers .
by the shutdown of the
Programs planned for the Campbell Works of Youngsthree-day convocation in- iown Sheet &amp; Tube by its
clude a "national interfaith .owner, the Lykes Corp.," the
service" and a bus tour of the coalition said in a letter to
Mahoning Valley steel clergy and lay leaders.
complex. Discussion sessions
"In recent months we have
will be held on subjects such developed a plan to reopen
as "Elements in the Sturggle the plant under worker •
to Save Youngstown," and community control. The plan
''Reopening the Mill : What involves the basic principle of
Will It Take."
local sell-help. More than $4
Guest speakers will include million have been deposited
Dr. Harvey Cox, professor of in banks in the valley as sign
divinity
at
Harvard of that determination," the
University, and Dr . Gar coalition statement added.

but still creating usual 'objets d 'arl'
restaurants and discos. It Marilyn Monroe montage
By FRANK T . CSONGOS
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Andy seems more Important than (1962 ) and the chilling
painting of an electric chair
Warhol wants to stuff a jar anything else."
with money, frame it and
Said the lamed pop artist , (1965 ) - are critically acwriter and underground I ibn- claimed.
hang it on the wall.
But perhaps Warhol is best
With an alarm system at- maker who turned 50 last
known for his paintings of the
tached to it to protect it from month :
" Ifeel older . It b&lt;rthers me . Campbell Soup can, the Brillo
thieves.
" Is it art ? Depends on how Now I sleep 14 hours a day . package and the green Cocaits done," Warhol said. "Art The rest of the time I work a! Cola bottles. Those works are
is tur'rling it out."
the studio. Working is my in private collections and in
museums . ·
He paused and said, "I favorite relaxation ."
His films include " Eat/'
always thought I was in the
Warhol, born In Pittsbw-gh
11
Kiss"
and
entertainment business.''
of CzechoslOvak immigrants, Sleep,"
Dressed in blue jeans, got his break in New York as ''Empire.''
Warhol recently completed
chOcolate-colored shoes and a commercial artisl in the
white, open-collar shirt, 1950s. He landed his first job a series of paintings of
Warhol discussed his llfe at a magazine- when a Muhammad Ali, the boxer.
And he is keeping buay with
style and work in an cockroach jumped out of his
interview at his Manhattan portfolio as he was being Interview magazine , which
art studio.
interviewed. He said the job · be is publishing each mooth.
As the interview ended,
"I ltke blue jeans and was his because they felt·
grabbed a couple of
Warhol
necktie," he said. " As long as sorry for him .
Hershey
chocolate bars and
you have a necktie on, you
" We
have
more
can get into places, like cockroaches now than we 've signed the wrappers .
"Here," he said as he
ever had," Warhol quipped.
"The cockroaches are getting tossed them on the table, like
an GI throwing candy to a
richer .''
Warhol can't complain hungry ,child.
PAUL BURTON
He said nothing, but the
either .
Paul E. Burton of Racine is
His painting of Liza gesture seemed to imply:
a patient in Room 142, Minnelli was sold to tbe " Some
day
these
Veterans Memorial Hospital, actress for $25,000, Warhol autographed candy bars may
Pomeroy.
said. His earlier works - the be worth money in the bank. "

-----

.. Religious convocation
.
sponsored

rs. N aomt•K"tng
with birthday

The birthday 'or Mrs .
No.ami King was celebrated
recently with a party at the
horne of her son-In-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Finlaw.
The . family enjoyed a
twkuut followed by cake and
ice cream. Mrs. King receiv-

secretary; and Jackie Zirkle,
literature.
Prayer opened the meeting
presided over by Jay Evans.
$214.72. Literature to be used
at future meetings was
discussed along with plans
for a hayride and wiener

an~:

::::: LETART - The first
annual Walter and Maud
Hoffman family reunion was
held Sunday, Sept. 3, 1978 at
· the Racine Dam picnic area.
Attending were Maud
Hoffman Yo\mg, eldest of
family from M,son, W, Va.;
Charles and Martha Hoff:
man, Pomeroy, 0 .; George
and Joan Hoffman, Lisa,
Tami, Bryan of Middleport,

Senior class hosts
ha1J
rid.e and roast
'J
LETART - The Senior Roush, Pam Gibbs, Travis
Class of Fairview Bible and Angle, Tammy and
Church of Fairview Com· Connie Black, Myron Fields,
munity was hostess for a bay Misti and Roquelle Gibbs,
ride and wiener roast on Jason Knight, Carla King and
Thursday evening at the Carl, Cynthia Kearns, JenFairview Bible Church picnic nifer Miller, Mikie and
area .
. Timmy, Bucky Knapp and
After they all came back Stephanie, Jerry and Stella
from the hay ride a circle was Morgan, AI Sprouse, James
fonnedby all and Connie and Carol Reynolds and
Gibbs prayed a prayer of Jimmy, David and Lynn
thanks before starting Morgan , Tammy, Bobby ,
roasting wieners..
.
Roberta and Jeff Ohlinger,
A good time was bad by all. Paula and David CunningThose present were : Joyce bam, Charlene Lewis and
Zerkle, Stewart, James, Jake Trerit, U&gt;u Roush, Debbie
and Ruby Gibbs, Melissa . Lewis.
Hoffman, Lyta and Clarence

I!!A~!~~IRB
•

Q. We have a 55 vear.old executive in our corporation

who we think may be consideri119 seHing up his own
company in competition with ours. Obviously, we
would like to keep him and we don't need thi s kind of
competition . Do you have any ~uggestions to make him
wont to sloy with us?
A. You might consider the use of a non -qUal ified
deferred compensation plan funded by a high cash
value life insurance policy . There have been some
changes wrought as a result of the Tax RefOrm Act of
1976 but this could be an excellent sol ution to your
problem and one easily put In to operation . Come in and
I will eKplain how this is implemented .

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E . Main

The lmur1nce Store
992-5130

Pomeroy, O.

MRS . NEVA NICHOLSON, left, shows her devil's
backbone plant, a red ribbon winner, while Mrs. Reva
Snowden displays her 10 year old globe cactus which
received a blue ribbon.
flowers by Dollie Hayes; roll
call response to be a bulb, arrang_'!_ment
theme,
"Memories" using the last of
summer flowers. Mrs .
Marilyn Wisecup, judge.
EASTERN LOCAL Band
Boosters, 7:30 Tuesday in
the band room . Election of
offi&lt;-ers, fund raising projects, and band needs to be
discussed . Baird parents
w-ged to attend .
MEIGS ATHLETIC
Boosters at high school, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday. Film of Point
Pleasant game to be shown.
MEIGS ffiGH School PAT
(Parents and Teachers )
meeting 7 :30 p.m . this
evening at the high school
with Principal James Diehl to
answer any questions parents
may have concerning -tll'e
opening of school this year.

THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane
Society. 7:30 Thursday at the
meeting room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.,
Pomeroy.
SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Volunteer Fire
. Department and its auxiliary
will hold a chicken barbecue
Saturday at the fire station
beginning at 11 a.m. Complete dinners will be served.
POMEROY Lodge 164,
r&amp;AM, open house, 5:30-7 :30.
Everyone welcome.

BARBARA SHERIDAN
will be speaker when the
Pomeroy Chapter of the
Women's Aglow Fellowlhlp
meets Thursday at the Meigs
Inn. Doors will open at 6:30
for the dinner meeting with
dinner served at 7.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday noun at the home of
Mrs. Mary Morris, lincoln
Hill, fur a lunc heon .
Members are to take gifts ,
for tlreir se&lt;.Tet sisters.
MEIGS COUNTY GIRL
Scout Leaders, other
volunteers, 10 a .m. to noon
at the Meigs Jm. Program
and activities for fall to be
discwr&amp;ld.

STEAK...........................L.~·
FRESH HOMEMADE

CONSTITUTION WEEK
Our Constitution , the
cornerstone of our freedoms,
was written to protect every
1\merican from the abuse of
power by political parties as
much as from abuses by
kings. Without the determination t o restrain the
tempting excesses of political
power, our Republic ·Will
perish . The Daughters of the
American Revolution urge
that we study the value of
public service during Cdlrslitution Week . Today 's
problems call for the highest
character of leadership.
Read your Constitution.

99~

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THURSDAY
PR'ECEPTOR BETA
BETA Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority 1 luncheon ,
Thursday, noon at the home
of _Mrs . Mary Morris .
Members are asked to take
gifts for their secret sisters.

When you 're making an ~tion (of any kind), or need llUiey for any good
reason, talk to us at The Ctty Loan Comjmty. When major projects reqWJ'l
larger amounts, we can arrange a Homeowner Loan quickly and with·

Colwnbus; David and Leah
Kalasky, Morgantown, W.
Va .; J ohn, Pat Shawna, Joe,
Scott, Mike, and. Trudy Cool,
Piketon; Donna Willson of
Jasper; Terry, Coleen, Jay,
Jon, and Joshua Ohlinger,

:llr}i;J;:':' 'j;:'i~,,,,,,;;::,:;~;,, , ,/;;/d'' &amp;;,;:=' ' ' 3l:J

Rock Springs group elects
officers at Sunday meeting

CONSTITUTION WEEK
. The Constitution of the
United States protects as well
as serves; it is proof that the
United States of America can
and will function under any
,
circumstances. This i s M
Constl""tion Week . The
VICKY EPPLE
Vicky Epple, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Epple,
3Slai Epple Road, M'mersville, is now attending Miami
University.
A 1978 spring graduate of
Meigs High School, Miss
Epple plans to be a physical
education major. Her address ill Bo:rlj, Dorsey Hall,
Miami University, · Orlord,
Ohio 45856.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Middle'port lions Club, Wednesday noun, at the Meigs Inn .
Ufo!ITED_ METHODIST
Women,
Letart , Falls
Church, 7:30 Wednesday at
the Letart Falls Church. Mrs.
Andrew Cross will present
the program.
EMMA CIRCLE, United
Methodist Women, Rutland
Church, 7:30 Wednesday
night at the church with Mrs.
Janet Nakomoto as hostess.
Mrs. Harold Sauer will have
the
program.
Church
progranis will be outlined.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80
Royal Arch Masons Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Bosworth
Council Royal and Select
Masons 8 :15 p.m. All companions invited.

Welendahand.

1- The Dally Sedlnel, Mlddl!!port-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Tul!lldrJy, Sept. 12, 1978

DR. PEPPER
16 oz.

8 PAK BOTn.Es

�•~'lbt DIU)oSentlnel,Mlddleport·Poolero)', 0., Tueaday, Sept. 12,1971
OR DINAN( I N0.1G73· 71
f L 0 0 D
D A M A G I
PIt IV aNT I 0 N
0 R.

,DINANCI : SECTION t.a :
-STATUTORY
AUTHORIZATION ,
FIN ·

DINOS OF PACT, PUR POSE

AND O&amp;..IICTIVeS
1. 1
ST A T U T 0 R V
-.uTHORIZATION

tht community . ·
"FittOCI lnsurence Study"
meens '"'' officia l report

provided bv t he Federlil
Insurance Admlnis t rat i ort
that Includes flood profile~,

the Flood Boundarv . Flood way M&lt;~p , and the water
surfacf: elevat ion of "tt"ie base

Where this ordinance end
en o t h t r
ord i nan c e ,
easement , covenant , or dl'ed

restr i ction
confl i ct
or
0\llerllp , whichever lmnn~~~"'•
the more 1trlngent restr J~ ·

tlonl shall pnvall .

board I shall constaer all
technical evaluations, all
relevant factors . standards
specified in other sect ions of
this ord inance , and :
(I)
the
Clinger
that
materia ls may be swept o.n to
other lends to the Injury of
others ;
( ii) the dang~r to I lfe and
properl v due to flooding or
erosion dem11ge ;
( iii I the suscept i bility of the
proposed facility and Its
contents to flOOd damage an.d
the ettec t of such dam age on
the individual owner ;
( hi) the importance of thl'
service' Provided by th•
proposed faclllh to the
co mmunity ;
(v J the necessHy to the
ta ci tit V of a waterfront
location , where applicable ;
( vil the availability of
alternati ve locations . tor the
proposed use wh i ch are not
subJect to flooding or erosion
damage :
( viii the compa tibility of
th e propose.ct
use with
eKisting an.d antic i pated
developme11t ;
'
( viii&gt; the relat iOnsh ip of the
proposed use to the com .
prehensive plan .and flood
plain ma nagem ent program
for that area ;
( ix) the sa fety o t access to
the property in times of flood
for ordinary and emergeocy
vehicles ;
·
{x) the expected heights,
velocity , duration ,. rate of
r i se , and sediment transport
of the flood waters and tt"le
effects of wave action, if
appl i cable , expected at the
si te ; and.
( xi I the costs of prov iding
governmental
services
cluring and after flood con ditions , including ma in tenance and repair of public
ut ilities and facilities such as
sewer, gas . ·electrical. and
water systems , and streets
and bridges .
(5) Generally , \larlances
may be issued for new con struction and substant i al
impro\lements to be erected
on a tot of one ·half acre or
te ss in size contiguous to .and
surrouflded by lots with
ex i sting structures con ·
!.tr ucted, below tne base rtood
level. prov iding items (i .x i )
in Section -' .4·1 (4 ).have been·
t ully considered . A!l th! lot
size Increases Deyond the
one -ha lt a cre, the technical
just i ficat io n required tor
issui ng the var i ance in ·
creases .
(6J Upon cons ideration of
the factors of Section -4,4· 1 {4)
and the purposes of this or ·
d inance. the M idd lepo rt
Planning Commission may
attach such cond itions to the
granting of veriances as it
•deems necessary to further
tne pu rp oses ot this or .
d in3nce .
(7) The Bu ilding Inspector
shall maintain the rec ords of
all appeal actions and report
any \lariances to the Federa l
Insurance Administration
upon request .
for
4.-' -2
Conditions
Variances
(1) Variances may be
issued for the reconstruction ,
rehabil it at ion or restorat ion
of structures listed on the
Natione.t Register of Histor ic
Places or the State Inventory
of Historic Places . without
regard to the procedures set
forth in me remainder of this
section
•
(21 var.iances shall not be
i ssued within o!lny designated
floodway if any increase in
f lood le\lels during the base
f lood discharge would result .
(3) variances Shal l only be
issued upon a determination
tha1 the variance is the
minimum necessary , con ·
sidering the flood hazard . to
afford rel ief .
(4) Variances sho!lll only be
issued upon .
( i l a showing of good and
sufficient cause ;
(ii) a determination that
railur e to grant the var i &amp;nce
would result in e~ece pt lo nal
· hardship to the. applicant ;

3.5
INTERPRETATION
In the Interpretation and
flood .
application of th i s ord inance .
The Legislature of the State
"Fioodwly" me-ans theall rrov .i slons shall be- :
Of Ohio has In the Oh io channe-l of 1 r i ver or other
( )
Cons i dered
as
Conatitution
and
Ohio waterccourn and the ad ·
minimum requ irements ;
Revised Code delegated the
lacent land areas that must
(21 Libe-ra ll y construed In
responsibility
to
local be reurved In order ro
favor of the 90verning body ;
governmental units to adopt dischuge the base f l ood
and .
regulations des i gned
to without cumulat i vely i n .
(JIOeemedneithertotiml t
promotr tne public health, creasing the water surfacenor re-peat any other powers
!l;afety, and general welfare of elevation more than one .half
granted under state statute~ .
Its citU:e,-.ry . The-refore, the- foot.
3.0
WARNING
AND
Council of the Village of
"Habitable floor" means
0 I S C L A I M E R
0 F
Middleport , State of Ohio any floor usable tor livi ng
LIABILITY
does orda in as follows :
purposes, which i ncludes
The
degree
of
flood
1.2 FINDINGS OF FACT wor~ing , steeping , eating ,
protection required by thiS
(1 ) Tne flood hazen:t areas
cookmg , or recreation , or a
ordinance I s cons i dered
of Middleport ert sublect to combination th~reof. A floor
reasonable for regulatory
ptriod i c inuna'lltion which
used only for storage pur .
purposes and is bued on
results in loss of l ife and poses is not a " hab itable
sc ie ntif i c and eng ineerlng
. propert.y , hUI't h and Sllfety floor ".
considerat ions . Larger floods
h1nrds .
disruption
·ot
" Mobile home" means a
can and will occur on rare
commerct and governmental structul"e that is t r 21 ns ·
occasions . Flood h·e ights may
services, e-.traordlnary portable in one or mor e
beincre-asedby ·man .madeor
public expend itures tor flood sect ions , built on a per .
natural causes . This or ·
protection and relief. and manent chassis. and design~d
dlnance does not i mply that
lm palrm•nt of the ta:c base-, to be used with or w i thout a
land outside lhe ar~as of
a llot which advers~ly affect permanent foundation when
special flood hazards or uses
the public health , safety and connected to the required
perm itted with in such areas
general weJtare .
utilities . It does not include
w i ll be tree from flooding or
(2) These flood losses are
recr•at i onal veh i cles or
flood damages . This or caused by the cumulative travel trailers .
dinance shall not create
effect of Obstructions in areas
" N•w construction" means
li~bility on tf'le part of the
of special flood haza.rds structures tor wnich the
VIllage- of M iddleport, 01'\io ,
of
cont~truction"
any ofl i c~r or employee
Which lf'\creoase flood heights 1'sflr t
and velocities, and when
commenced on or t~fter the
thereof. or the Federal In ·
Inadequately anchored . tfftc:tive date of this or surance Administrat ion. for
dama4ije uses In other areas . din•nc:e.
any flood damages that result
Uses that .are inadeQuately
" New mobile tt~me piUk or
reliance on thiS ordinance or
flood -proofed ; elevate-d or
mobile home subdi'llision"
any administrM i 'lle decision
otherwise protected from
means a parcel ( or con lao,vtully made thereunder .
flood damage also contribute tiguous parcels) of land
SECTION C.O
to the flood loss .
divided into two or more
ADMINISTRATION
1.3
STATEMENT
OF
mobile home lots tor rent or
4.1 ESTABLISHMENT OF
PURPOSE
ute tor whiCh the co n ·
DEVELOPMENT PERMIT
It is the purpose of this
structlon of facilities tor
A Development Permit
ordinance to promote the serviCing the lot (including,
shall be obtai ned before
public health , safety , and at a minimum , the in construction or development
general welfare , and to stallation of ut il ilies. either
begins within any area of
minim .i ze public and priva te fina l site grading or the
special
flood
hazard
·Iones due to flood conditions pour ing of concrete pads , and
estab li shed in Section 3.2.
in
specif i c
areas
by the constru ction of streets) Is
Appl ication tor a Develop .
prov i sion~ designed :
completed on or after the
ment Permit sha l t be made
(1) To protect human life
effect ive date of this or .
on forms furnished by the
and health ;
dinance .
Build ing lnspedor and may
(2)
To
minimize
ex ·
"St•rt of constructi.o n"
incl ude , butno tbe limitedto ;
Pf'ndlture of publicmoney for means the first placement of
plans i n duplicate drawn to
costly flood control prolects ; permanent construction of a
scale. showing the nature .
(3) To minimize the need
structure {other than a
loca l lon . d i mensions , &amp;nd
fO'r rescue and relief efforts mob i le home/ on a s ite , such
elevations of tt~e area In
question ;
existing
or
assoc,lated with flooding and as the pouring of stabs or
gtne(ally undertaken at the foot ings or an~ work beyond
proposed structures , fill ,
u;pense of the general the stage of excavat ion .
storatile
of
materials ,
.public ;
Permanent const ruct ion does
drainage facilit ies; and the
(-')To n11nlmlze prolonged not inc .l ude lancl preparation ,
location of the foregoing .
business Interruptions;
.such as clearing. grading.
~pecifical l y , the foll owi ng
(5) To minimize dll mage to and t i II ing , nor does It include
mform ation is required :
pubtlc fadtltles and u.tilities the installat ion of streets and ·
(ll ~levation in relation to
mean sea level. of the lowest
such as water and gas mains . or walkways ; nor does it
ele-ctric. telephone and sewer
include e.:cavation for a
floor (including basement) of
lines. streets ·and bridges basemen t. footings , piers or
all ~tructures :
located in areas of special foundations or the erection of
(7) Eleva tion in relation to
flood hazard ;
temporary forms ; nor does
mean ua lev~ l to wh i ch any
( 6) To help main·tain a
It Incl ude t he insta llation on
structure has been flood stable tax base by provid ing
the property of accessory
proofed ;
for the sound use and buildings , such as garages or
(3)
Certlf.l cation by a
deve-lopment of treas of sheds not occupied
as
registered professional
special flood hazard so as to dwelling un i ts or not as part
engineer or architect that the
mi!"' lmlze future flood bli;ht Of the main structure. For a
floodproofing metnods for
areas ;
structure (otner than a
any nonresidential structure
(1) To ensure that potent ial
mobile home) without a
meet
the
f loo dproof ing
buyt_rs are not ified tha t basement or poured footings ,
criter ia in Sections 5.2 · 2: and
property Is in an area of the " start of construction "
(4) Oescriplion of the ex ·
includes the f irst permanen t
tent to Which any water .
spec ial flood huard ; and
(8) To en$ure tnat those
framing or assembly of tt1e
course will be a)tered or
who occupy . the area of structure or any part thereof
relocated as a result of
special flood nazard assume on its piling or foundat ion .
proposed development .
responsibility for the ir ac · For mobile homes not within
4v2 DESIGNATION OF
tions .
amobllehomeparkormobile
THE
BUILOING
IN ·
1.~
ME·THOOS
OF
home subdiv ision. " start of
SPECTO'"I
A E 0 U C IN G
F L 0 0 D construction" means the
The Building Inspector Is
LOSSES
affix ing of the mobile home to
hereby appointed to ad In order t o accompl ish its
its permanent site . For
minister and imp lement this
purposes , this ordinance mobil~ homes within mob ile
ordinance by grant ing or
includes
methods
and home parks or mobile home
deny ing deve lopment perm it
provis ions for :
subd ivisions , " start of con
applications in accordance
(\I
Restricting
or
struction " is the aate on. with its provis ions .
prohibiting uses wn ich are which the construction of
-4 .J
DUT I ES
AND
dangerous to heanh, safety , fac i litiestorservicingthesite
RESPONSIBILITIES
OF
and property due to water or on wh i ch the mobile home is
THE
BUILDING
IN erosion hai&amp;rds , or which
to be afti-.ed (including , at a
SPECTOR
result in da·m aging increases mlnimum .t he construction of
Dut ies of the Build ing
in ~roslon or in flood nelghts streets , either final site
111spector shall include, but
or velocities ;
grading or the pour ing of
are not lim ited to :
(2)
ReQuiring that uses
concrete pads , and i n 4.J. \ Permit Review
vulnerable to floods , i n · stall at ion of u tilities ) i s
(ll Review all development
eluding facillt in wh ich ser\le
com pleted .
permits to determine that tne
such uses , be protected
" Structure"
mea11s
a
permit reQuirements of th is
against flood da'rn age at the
walled and roofed building ,
ordinance
have
been
time of inlfl al construct ion ;
liqu id or gas storage fac ili t y ,
satisfied .
{3 )
Controll i ng
the
or mobi!e home that 1s
(21 Rev iew all development
alteration Of natural flood
principally above ground .
permits to determ ine that all
plains, stream channels , and
''S ubs t • n t i a I
i m.
necessary perrnits have b.een
natural protective barr iers. provement" means
any
obta ined from t hose federal .
and
which help accommodate or
repa ir. reconstruction . or
state or loca l governmental
(ii i) a delermination that
channel flood waters ;
improvement of a structure ,
agencies from which prior
the granting of a varia nce
(4 ) Controlling fi l ling,
the cost of wh ict1 eQuals or
approva l is requ il"ed .
will not resu lt l n increased
grading , dredging , and other
exceed .50 percent of the
OJ Rev iew all development
~evetopment whicl'\ may
marktt valueot tne structure
permits to determine if t he ttood he igh t s, additional
1ncrease food damage ; and , eitner :
proposed de11elopment is t h reats to public safe ty ,
extraord inary publ ic ex .
Preventing
or
(1) before the improvement
located within the designated
( 5)
IJense , create nuisances,
re;utat lng the construction of
or r~pa i r is started , or
regulat ory Fl oodway . If the
cause fraud on or v l c flood barr iers which will
(2) if the structure has been
proposed development is
timilat ion of the public as
unnaturally divert f lood
damaged .and
is
being
located withll1 the reg u latory
identi fi ed in Sec t ion 4.4. 1 (4},
waters or wh ich may in · restored. before the damaoe
Floodway , assure that the
crease flood hazards in other
occurred . For the p urposes of
encroachment provision of or conflict with ' ex ist ing local
laws or ord inances .
·
areas .
this def init ion " substantial
Section 5.3 (lJ is met .
(5) Any apP lic ant to whom
SECTION l .O
im provemen t " is cons idered
4.3·2 Information To Be
a 11ariance is granted shall be
DEFINITIONS
to oc cu r when the f i rst
Obta ined And Ma intained
granted wr itT en notice tha t
Unless specifically defined
alterat ion ot eny walt.
(I ) Obtain and record lhethe structure w il l be per below . wordsor phrases used
ceiling , f loor. or
ott1er
actual elevation ( in relation
mitted to be b u ilt w ith a
in th i s ordinance shall be
structural part of th~ bu ilding
to mean sea Ievell of the
interpreted so as to g iv e them
com mences , whether or not
lowest hab itable floor ( in · lowest floor ele va t io,n below
the base flood elevation and
the mean ing they ' have in
that alteral ion affects the
elud ing basement ) of all new
that the cost of flood in ·
comm on u5age and to g ive
external d imens ions of t he
or sub.stan tially improved
will
be
co m ·
su·ra nce
this O"d i., ance its most
Stl"ucture .
structures .
reason c. \ lr appl ic ation .
The
term
does
not ,
OJ For all ne w or sub · mensurate w ifh the increased
however , include ei ther :
stant i ally improved flOOd · risk resulting f rom the
" "'ppea l ' means a request
reduced
lowest
floor
tor a review of the Bu ild ing
(1) any proje c t for lm proofed structures ;
elevation .
Inspect or 's interpretation of
pro·vement of a struc t ure to
(l l v er if y and record the
SECTION 5.0
any pro v ision of this or · com ply w ith e.:ist ing state or
actua l elevation (in relation
PROVISIONS FOR
d inance or a request for a
local health , sanitary , or
to mea n sea Ievel l. and
FLOOD HAZARD
variance .
safety co de speci f ications
( i i) ma intain the flood ·
A: EDUCTION
' Area of special llo·od
wh ich ar~ solely nece!lsary to
proofing
certifications
5.1 GENERAL STA ND ARDS
huard" m eans the l and in
assure safe living condit ions ,
required in Section .. . 1 (3 ) .
In all areas of spec ial f lood
the flood pl ain with i n a
Ol"
fll Maintain tor public
community subiecf to a one
(21 any alteration of a
inspec t ion all records per - hazards the following stan ·
dards are required :
percent or greater cnance ot
structure
listed on
the
taining to the pr'ovislons of
5. 1-1 Anchoring
flooding In any gl\len year .
National Register ot H istOI" i c
lhi!. ordinance .
( 1J All new constr uct ion
of
"Base flood" means the
Pl aces ora State Inven to r y of
4.J. J _
Alteration
and
substant i al
im ·
flood h-a'ol ing a one percent
Histor ic Pla ces .
warercourses
provements Shell be an ·
chance of being eQualled or
" Vuiance" means a grant
I l l Not ify adjacent com cnoreCI to prevent l lota tion ,
exceeded In an y given year .
of
relief
from
the
mun i t i es and
t he Ohio
collapse or la tera l movement
"Development " m eans any
requirements of th i S or .
De p artment
of
Natural
of the structure .
man .made chang e to im d i nance
which
permits
R~sources , D ivision of Water ,
( 21 All mobile homes shall
proved or uni mproved real
construc t ion in a manner that
P~" I Or to any alterat ion or
be
anchored
to
resist
utate , i n cludi ng but not
Wou l d
otherwis~
be
relocat ion of a watercourse,
flotation . collapse. or lateral
lim ited to bu i lding s or other
proh i b itec;t by this ordinant;.e .
and submi t e11idence of such
mov emen t by providing O\ler .
s!ructures , m in ing , dredging,
SECTIO .. l.O
notif ic ation lo the Federal
the .top and frame ties to
ftlllng , grad i ng , paving ,
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Insurance
Adm inistration .
excavat ion
or
dr i ll i ng
3. 1 LANDS TO WHI CH
(~)
ReQu ire that main ground an c ho rs
Specific
req.u irements shalt be that :
operations located w ith in the
THIS
QROINANCE
AP .
lenance is prov ided within
{I) over . the .top l i es be
area of spe ci a l f lood hazard .
PLIES
the altered or relocated
"Existi ng mobile home
Th is ordinance shall apply
port ion of said watercourse
provided at each of the four
corners of the mobi le home ,
puk or mobile home subto all areas of spec i al flood
so th~t t~e f loor . car rying
w ith two addit ional ties per
division " means a parce l !or
hazards
w i thin
the
ca pac,ty IS not d tminlshed .
jurisdiction of the Village of
4.3· 4, Interpretati on of
Si de
at
intermedia te
con tig uous par ce ls ) ol tand
loca tions , with mobile homes
divided in to two or more
Middleport , Ohio .
Flood Boundaries
,._ __ ,
mob i le home lots fo r rent or
3 .2
BASIS
FOR
Mak.e
Interpretations
less ..than SO feet long
sate for wh i ch t he c on ·
ESTABLISHING
THE
whereneeded , astotheexact
reQutrtng one add llional tie
struct ion of fa c i liti es for
AREAS
OF
SPE I CAL
lo c ation of tne boundaries of
per side ;
(iil frame t ies be provided
serv ici ng the lot on wh i ch the
FLOOD HAZARD
the areas of special flood
mob i le hOme is to be aff l lled
The are5s of special flood
h~zards (for ell ampl e . where
at each corner of the home
(includ ing , at a mi n im um
hazard id~ntified by \ he
there appears to be a conflict
w ith five add itional ties per
tOe insta ll ati on of utiliti es '
Fecleral
lnsuran c ~
Ad · between a mapped boundary
side at i~termediate points,
eitherf inalsit eorad lngorth!
min istration in a sc ientif ic
and actua l field cond it ions&gt; .
w i th mobile homes tess than
pour i ng of concrete pads. and
and engineering report en · The person contesting the
SO feet long requiring tour
the construct ion of streets) is
tilled " The Flood Insurance location of the boundary shall
illldditional ties per side .
completed be for e the et Study for the VIllage of be given a reasonable OP ·
(Iii) all co mponents of the
fectivedate~tthisordinance .
M i ddleport , OhiO
dated porlunlty to appeal the in ·
arlchorlng system be c apable
"Explnsion to in elllstlng
September 29, 1978 , with
terpretat lon as pro\l ided in
of carrying a for ce of .-.800
mobile hom• p•rk or mob ile
accompanying Flood In · Section -4 .4
pounds : and ,
home subdivision" means the
surence Rate Maps Is hereby
4 . 4
v A R 1A N c E
( illl any additions to the
mob ile home be similarly
preparat ion of add it ional
adopted by reference and
PROCEDURE
si tes by the construction ot
declared to be a part of this
4.4- 1 Appeal Board
anchored :'
facilltiesforserv ici ngth~lots
ordinence . Th e Flood In (I)
The
Midaleport
5 . 1... 2
Construction
on wh ich the mob il e homes
surance Study tor the V il lage Planning Commission as
Mater i als and Methods
are to be affixed (i nclud ing
of Middleport , Ohio dated e~labl i Shed by Mlddt.eport
( 1) Ali new construction
the installation of titles .
Se~tembe r 29, 1978 , with
VIl lage Council sha ll hear
and
substantial
1m either fina l si te grad ing or
accompanvinQ Fl.ood In ' and decide appea ls and
provements shell be con pouring of conc rete pads, or
surance Rate M,IIPS is hereby requests for \lar iances from
st ru cted with mater iels and
the construction of streets ) .
adopted Oy reference l!lnd the requirements of th i s
utility equ ipment resistant to
"Flood" or "lloodinl"
declared to be a part of th is ordinance .
flood damagt .
means a general and tern ordinance . The Flood In ·
(2..-)
The
Middleport
(2l All new construction
porery cond ition of partial or
surance Study is on f lle at the Planning Commission snail
and
subst•ntlal
lm ·
provements Shill be con.
complete
Inundation
of
Mayor ' s Office , 237 Race hear and decide appeals
normally dry l and areas
Street. Mlddltport , Ohio .
when it is alle~ed there Is an
structed using methods and
from :
3.3 COMPLIANCE
err~r . In any requirement.
practices that m inimize flood
damage .
11&gt; The overflow of inland
No structure or l and shall deCISIOn . or determinat ion
5. 1·3 U t ilities
or tida l waters and ·or
hereafter be constructed , made by the Building In ·
(I)
All
new
and
(2) The unusual and rapid
located ~ extended, converted,
spector In th~ enforcement or
replacement water supplY
accvmu~etlon or runoff of
or altered without full
a~minlstration of this or ·
systems !hell be designed to
surftce waters from any
compliance with the terms of . d1nance .
minimize or eliminate in ·
source .
this ordinance and other 1 Il l Those aggr l e\led by the
f i ltrat ion of flood waters in to
"Flood 1n1ur1nce Rift
applicable rqulatlons .
decision of the Middleport
the system ;
Mlp" (FIRM) mean! the
3 . .- ABROGATION AND
Planning CommisSion . or any
(2 ) New end replacement
official map on wl'\lch the
GREATER RESTRICTIONS
taxpayer , may ~ppeal such
sanitary sewa9e system•
. Federal
lnturance Ad This Ordinance it not In - decision to the Common
shall be designed to minimize
ministration has delineated
tende~ to repeal. abrogate, or Pleas Coul"t , as prov ided in
or ellm inate infiUretion of
bothth,arenofspeclalf lood
l mpa,r
any
existing
Ohio Rev ised Code .
flood waters Into the system:
l'l#lll•rcu
and
the
risk
easements , covenants or
(.t ) In passing upon such
12~ New and replacement
premium zones appl icable to
deed r~~tr i cflon!t . Howe'ver , applications , the (appeal

I

senltarv nwage tv~tems
shall be designed to ni lnlm l u
or el iminate lnfittntlon of
flood waters into the sVsttms
and d i scharge from the
systems into flood waters ;
and ,
(31 On -site waste disposal
systems shall be located to
avoid Impa irment to them or
contamination from them
during flooding _
5. 1·4 Subdivision Proposals
(H
All
su.bdivlsion
propos a Is shall be""""conslstent
with the need to minim lze
flood damage ;.
(2)
All
subdiviSion
proP.osals shalt h&amp;\lt public
utihties and facilitate such as
sewer, gas . electrical, and
water sy.stems located and
constructed tom lnlmize flood
damage ;
(231
All
subdlvlslon
proposalS
shall
have
adequate dra inage provided
to r educe exposure to t lood
damage; and ,
(4 1 Base f lood elevBtlon
date Shall be provided for
subdivision ·proposalS and
other proposed development
which contain at least .50 tots
of S acres (Whichever is less I.

5.2

SPECIFIC

STAN ·

DARDS

In all areas of special flood
hazards where -base flood
ele vation data has been
provided as set forth in
Section 3 .2 BASIS FOR

ESTABLISH IN .G
THE
AREAS
OF
SPECIAL
FLOOD
HAZARD,
the

of value ot the streets,
utilities and g1ds before the
repa i r , reconstruct ion or
Improvement
has
com ·
menced ; and for mobile
homes not places In a mobile
home park or mobile home
subdivtslon. rtCIUire that /
(I I stands or lots are
elevated. on compacted fill or
on p i lings so that the towe5t
floor of the mobile home will
be at or above the bese f lood
level ;
(ii l
adequate
surfact
drainage and access tor a
ha~l~r as provided ; and ,
( 1ll) -tn. the instance of
elevation on pilings , that :
- tots are large enough to
perm it steps,
piling foundations are
placed In stable so i l no rnore
than ten feet apart, and
relnforc~ment
IS
provided tor pilings more
than sill te~t above the
grOund le11el .
( 3) No mobile home shall
be placed In a floodwav .
eHept In an existing mobile
home park or existing mob ile
home !11,/bdiVislon .

5.3 WATERWAYS

Located within areas of
special
flood
hazard
established In Section 3.2 are
areas desionated as flOOd ·
ways . Since the floodwav is
an extremely hazardous area
due to the velocity of flood
waters which carry debris ,
potential prolecllles, and
erosion
potential.
the
following ,prov isiOns aoply:
. (I Pn;:.hibit encroachments,
tnclud1ng fil l. new con ·
struction, substantial im provements ,
and
otner
development unless cer ·
tification by a registered
professional engineer or
architect
is
provided
demonstra.tlng
that
en .
croachm~nts shall not result
in any increase ln flood levels
during the occurrence of the
base flpod d ischarge_
(21 If Section 5.3 (11 is
satisf i ed,
all new
con .
struction and substantial
improvements shall comply
with all applicable flood
hazard reduct ion provisions
of Section 5.0 PROVISIONS
FOR
FLOOD
HAZARD
REDUCTION .
6.0 That this Ordinance
shall take effect from and
after the earliest period
allowed by law .
Passed the 28th day of
August , 1978

Tbe Alm••e
Utolted Preaa IatenatiGeal
Today II Tuelday, Sept. 12,
the _ , day of 1971 with 110
to loUow.
'lbe moon Ia between Ita
first quarter and lull 'Pbaae.
The morning stars are
Saturn,
Jupiter
and
Mercury.
'lbe evening stars are Mars
and Venus.
Tho8e t....n 111 Iilia date are
under the sign d. VIrgo.
French enterialner
Maurice Chevalier was born
Sept. 12, 18811.
()I this day In hlatory:
In 1109, Henry Hudson
discovered what Is now
known as the Hudson River.
· In 1922, the Protestant
Episcopal House of Bishops
voted 36 to 2'1 to take the word
" obey" out· of the marriage
ceremmy.
In 1966, America's Gemlni 2
docked with an Agena space

~lddleoort-Porncroy,

deposed Emperor Halle
SeiMIIe from the Etldoplan
thnJne he had OCCliPied for
more than a half-century.

0 .• Tuesday, Seot.IZ. 1~ 8

.'.-·c
~

'· ' ( ;,

- A thought for the dlly:
English novelllt . and poet

' .,

~ ~

Stella Be1110n laid, "CaD no
man foe, but nevtr love a

! ·....

'
:""

stranger •II

' fu
...

:.-.

.'·..

, '.n

Mlchlgan
Wh&lt;lt is now the state of
Michigan was first villited by
Fromch fur traders and mis·
sionaries in 1616. A millsion
was established at Sault Sle.
Marie in 1641 and a permanent settlement in 1668. The
entire region was transferred
to Britain In 176:i, following
the. French and Indian War,
and provided a boise for attacks on American set·
Uements during the Revolution. The United States ac·
quired the territory in the
peace settlement, although
vehicle.
the British returned briefly
In 1974, military officers uring the War of 1812.
.

. ..
,..

QUARTER PAK

~·L,

' 7 .-~.'

'

:;;:;:~~................................~..~..111 jllli'

MEATY ENSLIGH STY LE

following pro\lisions are
required :
· 5.7· 1 Res i dential
Co n .
struction
New constr uction
and
substantial improvement of
any resident i al structure
shall
have
the
lowest
h.~bitable floor , elevated to or
above base flood elevation ,
5. 2·2 Nonresidential Con .
struction
New construction
and
substantial improvement of
any commercial , industrial
or
other
nonres i dential
structure shall either have
the lowest t"labftable floor ,
ele\lat.ed to the level of the
Mse flood ele"Vation; or.
together with attendant
utility and sanitary facilities ,
shall :
(1 ) be floodproofed so that
below the base flood level the
structure is watertight wl'h
walls
substantially
im .
permeable to tne passage of
water ;
( 2) have structural com .
ATTEST : Gene Grate, Clerk ponents capable of resisting
Treasurer ; M . L. Kelly,
hydrostatic
and . .President of Council
hydrodynam ic loads and
effects of buoyancy ; and
(9) 12. 19, 2tc
{3)
be certified by a
•
reg istered professional
CONSTITUTION WEEK
engineer or architect that the
sta ndards of this subsection
Constitution Week comare satisfied . Such cer the signil\g of the
qlemorates
t if ications Shall be provided
Constitution
of the United
to the official as set forth in
Seo.tion ... 3·3 (2) .
States.
It
is
the
oldest con·
5.2 -3 Mobile Homes
stitutlon
still
in
active
use in
{lJ Mobile homes shall e
anchored in accordance with the world today and Is the
Section 5.1·1 (2l.
·
basic document of the United
(2) For new mobile home
perks and mobile home States
Government, ,a
subdivisions ; for expans ions
government
which protects
to e"istlng mobile home
the individual liberties of its
parks and mobl!e home
subdivis i ons ; tor exist i ng
citizens. The Daughters of the
mobile home parks and
American Revolution urge all
mobile home subdivisions
where the repair, recOn ·
Americans to be worthY of its
struction or improvement of
protection. Study your
the streets, utilit ies and pads
et:~uats or exceeds 50 percent
·Constitution.

..,.,

, . ....u

:~~~~ .....................~;.~ }39

NOBODY
tells you the·time in
as many ways as

U.S. NO. I
HOME GROWN

,.,

BULOVA

RED DEUCIOUS

YELLOW

COOKING
ONIONS

APPLES

WHITE
POTATOES

3 LB. BAG

3 LB. BAG

69¢

~

10 LB.

BAG

,..

PURE

:~:~KETTES...........~~-..$1

GATEWAY PRODUCE BUYS

·~

29

.. •;
'

I,

• '·n
' . h

'!:

DELICIOUS THIN CUT

' •H

~~~$ ....................~~.~ }79

. ..,_.
'

. ;,

-···,,,.

.

. ··h

GATEWAY GROCERY SPECIALS
CASCADE

AUTOMATIC
. GIANT "$ }59
DISHWASHER
DETERGENT••••••. :~.?~~.~~~..
DAWN
'

19
3
~:u~~SHES.~ .•.......•.•..•. }.?;;.~?~ .. ~ 1
ALL FLAVORS

49¢

HAWAIIAN
.
46 OZ. CAN
PUNCH•.•.•..•..••.•...................•.....

aulov•

eom putran

Flve-fvnctlan
L. E.O. q.. m digit• I
In Sllverlont

HUNTS-PRIMA SALSA

SHOP

Nobody!

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS

SPAGHEnl
.
15 OZ. JAR
SAUCE.•.•...~•..•••.·•••.••.•......•....•..•.. 59~
ASSORTED GLADE

Whatever you want in a watch, you'll lind In
our Bulova Collection . Watches you wind
and watches that wind themselves.
Electronic watches and solid state dlgltals.
Calendars and day-dates . Sklndlvers and
diamonds. All kinds of watches for all kinds
of people. Including you.

IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon .• Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30 til 5: 00
Thursday Ti 112 Noon
Friday Until 5 P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason. W.Va.

:~L~E$ HENER..•..•...

2

FOR

6 oz. s1zE
e •• e ••

89~

GOLDEN ISLE BRANDS SALE
CUT BEUS, C.S. or W.K. CORN, PORK &amp; BEANS
or CUT GREEN BEANS

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY.
113 E. Court, Pomeroy

$
CANS

WHY NOT SEND ALONG
COUPON

THE DAILY SENTINR

COUPON

FOLGER'S MOUNTAIN GROWN

and

- ·-

CHIFFON SOFT STICK

00
L

cnuPDN

COUPON

.

COTTONELLE

TIDE DETERGENT
84 OZ. BOX

LB. CAN

.,

-TOILET TISSUE

SUNDAY TIMES-SENnNn
FOR ONLY

··'"

4 ROLL PKG.

79¢

" '

W!C

.,'.

'17.50

''

THEY WILL
RECEIVE
9 MONlHS OF

THE IIJMETCMN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

..
W/C

THIS

OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY
COWGE
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

Limit one pleas'e with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 16, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

OFFER

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769

NAME................... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,
ADDRESS............ •••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••••••
.

EXPIRES
SEPQBER
1978.

0 _CHECK ............. 0
LJ AMT..•••.••••••••

I

MONEY ORDER·•••••••••••••

I ••••••••••••••••• I ••••••••••••••••••••

COUPON

PILLSBURY FAMILY

PILLSBURY HUNGRY JACK COMPLETE

BROWNIE MIX

~lnt ........•....................•.•••••••••••••..•••.•......

STATE. .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ZIP CCIDE ...........

Limie-one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 16, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

30,
SORRY,
NO

NO. 155
~2

REFUNDS

OZ. BOX

99$

,,'"'

W/C

2-ll. BOX

79~

HEFTY

GINGERBREAD MIX

PANCAKE MIX
NO. 155

PILLSBURY

W/C

NO. 125
14 OZ. BOX

59~

Limit one plea5e with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 16 , 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Li mit one please with this coupon
Coupon E)(pires Sept. 16, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

LAWN AND LEAF BAGS .
NO. 205
$}59 W!C
10 CT. BOX
Limit one please with thi s co upon
Coupon Eltpires Sept. 16, 1978

..

.,·'.
,,

.'

1

~~~~~~~J ·~., ·
~!!~!:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~~:!!!61 .......
.
T WIN CITY GATEWAY

.. ..,

.,,

,..-

I·'

/,

''

'

1

'

'·

••

'

.

�•

•
~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PIII*'GY, 0., ru.la)'' ~. !2, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
;

WANT AD

CHARGES
15 WlH'ds Or Under

....

C..h

I &lt;lily
2W! )'S
3 ~ )'S

ISO
100

6W.y!1

3.00

Eadl wunl uver the nuni:mwn 15
wvnb IS 4 L't'llls per word ~r tU&amp;y.

AWl ruruunw other lhll.n l~·uttve
di:&amp;) s Will be char~t.'d ~t Uw I day
ntk•.

ln memory . Cartl of Thanb und
Clutual')': 6 L-enLs per word , 53.00
nw1unwn. Caulh m atlYIIIll'e.
Mubt~ Homt' sales MIMi Yoml sale!&gt;

art• al't'~pteU on ly Wllh Cli8h wilh

urdt•r :15 L~nt t'hart~e fur ads cart}'·
u1g Box Noml:ll!r In Car~ ul The Setl·
tin.-1
T~ Publis~r r~rvt'S Ow right
tv t!dtt ot rt'~l any J:tC.ls drtlned ulr

)l:dJUnal The Pubhsht.•r Will nut be
r\'SI)tHlSil&gt;k (or uwre thlm one uu.:or·
ra1tnsertum
P tx-1e 992·1 1)6

-

.

. -

SHOOTING MATCH , Forked Run
Sportsmen Club. Sept. 3 and
ever~ Sunday there after . Foe
tory c~k• ~u!"s.a~ly
NO HUNTING or trespassing on
my p,:ope-rty without permis·
· ~ion Jud~ McGraw .
GUN SHOOT: Racine Gun Club
Every Sunday I pm . Factory
choke guns ani)' .
FREt: CLOTHIN G -_ -who do you
know that hkes beautiful
Clothes that con t pay todoy 's
prices . Gr,ot deals now being
offered 9~9 . 2718 . 992-3941 or
9·2-2321 .
NO HUNTING on George
Freeland property . Syracuse
Oh1o .
DR IV ER AVAILABLE to bus
chi ldren to and from Galho
Christian S&lt;hool Vinton , Ohto
Travel New limo Rd ., to Har·
rtSOnY tlle . 143 to RU 1' toRt. 124
and 325 1nto V1n ton . 742 2008

~ ;·-=zv~ f·~k
I

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mund!:t)'

T Ut'S!ill )
thr u F ndt~ y

4p M
llno ~y lief u 1t' ~u li hl&lt;~li u n
S uml&lt;~~

.JP.M.
}o' ride~ y a ll~ ruiJIJit

----- - --

LOST ONE small brown dog ,n
Nease Hollow area If fo un d .
colt 843·2271
- -- - - - - - - -

FOU ND in Monkey Ru n area .
Jorge white mo le dog . Pouibly
German Shepherd 992-2602
- -·- - VOUNG MALE port beegle dog
fo und . EY1dently someone s pet
while with brown and block
markings . Martha Husted , Rt .
33.

-- -

--

---

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

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sea led bids wrll be rece l'v ed
bY the Board of
Commissioners ,

LOST ON Rt . l3 neor A1hens Co
li ne: 1 adult fema le Great
Dones . black and while spot
ted Reward for 1nformatton · or
re turn . No quest1ons asked .
61 4.597-1788

c

Noon on &amp;ttu n.J&lt;~~'

1%.{

Cou!'ty
Me•QS

County , Oh ro , , at the Com ·
missioners ' Heanng Room ,

CHIP WOOD . Poles mo• .
dtameter 10' on largest end , $8
per ton . Bundlttd slab, $6 per
ton. Del ive red to Ohio Pallet
Co .. Rt 2. Pome_ro.y. 992-7b89
TIMBER . POMtROY Forest Pro
ducts. Top prtu for standing
sow timber Colt W2·59b5 or
Kent Hanby l -o114b·8570
OLD FURNITURE . 1ce bo11es . brass
beds, iron beds. desks. etc ..
complete househo lds . Write
M .D . Miller , ~I o4 , forneroy 01
coll992·77blJ.
Co tNS , pocket wat ches ,
class rings . wed~ing bands ,
d1omonds. Cold or sil'o'er. Call
Rog':r Wom_sley . 7o42 ·23JI .

olo

IF YOU have o serviCe to offer .
wont to buy or sell some th1ng.
oe lool•ung for work .
or
whate ver . . you 'll get resu lts
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coll9'12 2150.
YARD SALE . Mon . lhru Fri Sept .
II thru 15 . Sylvlo Zwelling,
Syra~ u:e . ~hto

THREE FAMILY Yard Sale at the
home of Roder1c" Crimm on
Broadway m Racme . Come to
top of hdl from fire stol10n turn
right Time of sole 1s Wed . ond
Th un .. Sept .. 13 and 1• . 9 00
un lllo4 00
YARD SAU Clothes , dishes , elec·
trtc applian ces , l tnens . Hours 9
to S. II to 1o of Sept. I mtle
from Langs v1lle . CR 10. Phone
747-7668
YARD SALE Tuesday . Sept . 12
thru Fndoy Haro ld Brewer .
_ .L o~g- ~Ito~ _ _ _
_ ~
CARPORT SALE . Wed and Thvr s
424 Broadway Mtddleporl. 9 td

--- - -

YARD SALE 1667 ltncoln Hetghts .
Thurs . 9 to 4 Sept 14
- - WI:D
AND Thurs .. next to
Brown 's Trod• Court Min i
bike , record player , aluminum
storm door , babv chest ol
drawers . clothing, tnfants and
adults .

- . --- - - - - - -

HELP WANTED

- - -- - - - -

-

--

PAUL ORR

-- ----·--

--- ----

---

'

~

--

- -

-

----------

,._.,000

--

--

- - ----- - -- ·- - -

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On AuguSt 24 , 1978, in the
Metgs Co un ty Probate Court.
case No 22449 , Kat h ryn
R tchards , 112 Vale Street ,
Pomeroy . Oh io was ap .
po inted Adm tnis tratri X Of the
estate of Kathryn Ellen
F 1 tc hpatr ick , de ceased , l~te
of JEI9 w 111tam Street , M1d ·
dlep ort , Oh1 0

Manning D. Webster
Probate Judge Cl!rk
(81 2• • ( 9) 5 , 12 , Jt c

trade or train. New and used
saddles . Ruth Reeves . Albo'ny .
(bl&lt;) ··8-3290.
RISING STAR Kennels . 8oording
ond grooming, oil breeds .
Cheshtre. Jc,7 .Q192 or Jc,7·0106.

1977 VOLARI:: PHEMU::R" 4 door, 3Ht
e ngtne , au la .. P.S.. P.B tWOO
o&lt;tual mil es, UbOO . 19/:.t No11a
2-dr .. auto, hcellen~ condition .
p S .. P . B . $1800. 197-4 Apache
camper fo ld down . liver glo u
panels , S1~85 99~- Jb 11 .

LOVABLE WHITE snow dr ift great
PYRENEES Puppies . Phone
1 b14 b67 ·3838.

J&amp;L

JIM KEESEE

NEED A WATER

Cellulosic !wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation .

SOFTENER 7
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond1t1on your
water with Co· op water
softener, Model UC -SVI.
NOW Onlv

AKC REGISTERED poodl es .
choco lat e .
1
op r~cot .
I JO.o-882 3242
TWO IRISH Selle r pu pp1e5 fo r
sale . 30• ·773·5538

Save 30 pet. lo SO pet
on hHting tool

Let us test your water
Free

Pomeroy Landmark

. onv old motor cycles or ports . Does not have
to run Reasonable prices .
q9:z .6J45 .
TRAVEL TRAILER for sole 1972
Mark Two1n . 19ft. 741·2566.
WANT TO buy : old player piano.
Ga ll ipolis b14 · 446·3874 or WHEEL CAMPER , sleeps 6. E11tros .
Oven . furn ot: e , own•ng
614 ·44b·3&lt;145 .
Reasonable 9.. 9.1225.
WE PICK up 1unk auto bod1es buv· ·--lng Junk cars . scrap ~ron , bot
1eries and metals . Rider·s
Sol..,age , SR 124 , PomeroY'
992-5408 .

-- ----------TWO BEDROOM trailer 9fi'J. 2530
~--

"' milt off Rt. 7 by-pon on
St. Rt. !241oward Rutland,

sURROuGHs -

SE Ns-t-MA nc oc ·
counting mo chtne . Phone
992-7156 The Datly Senhnel.
111 Court Street Pomeroy ,
OhiO
2 6 by 1b' • 7 whee h Pr .
525 00. 1 · 700 1r 16 Wmter tires
pr 'S5;it 00 Coll9fJ2.7697 .

Aut•&amp; Truck
-Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair
PhOne 992-5682
4-JO-ttc

1\ I i y ()Ill

&lt;,F T \1

1967 CEH~ FOR ports . 1973 Vega
moto r Hoy lor so le . $ 85 o
bale . 949.2413 or 949.28_.9

New or R_
epair
Gutters and
Downspouts

,/\.

H () t p ()I 11 t 1\ p fJ I
Sd II' PI" I( t•',

-

GUNS AND ammo· Lorge di sco unt
on sho t shells, 22 LR 12 Mag
~tc All k1nds of new and used
s.hot guns , niles , hand guns .
Sometimes you don ' t even need
money . We trade for almost
anyth ing Fife ,. , S. 3rd , Mid·
~ l~p?r ~ ~~ ·_7_49_4 :., __ _
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS horn s
guitars , flutes , clarinet s h orn ·
bones . etc To sell or 1rode
Ftfe s. s Jrd .. Mtddl e porl

.Jo~ck

W (,lt

,.,.

PIHlflt·4Y) 1181

:

•

(Bob Hoe.fllch I
10f High St.
Pomeroy
8-2·1 mo.

1

.CAPI'AIN EASY
JoiO WONPI!R IVIR!I. &amp;ANCHE:t
;· "OT IJPIJIT WHEN SHE· H\!!ARD
. Wit CAM&amp; FROM THI: PLANT!

QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

Pomeroy,O.
3· 15-tfc

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-&lt;&gt;ff
Mill SlrHI lust llthfnd
Tony's Carry Out.
Open S.lurd•y 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8-31 -1 mo_

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE .

"Seventh Heaven" 33.
9 :00-Movle "The Critical List" 3,&lt;,15;

Throe's

'fl'f}~~ fi;)lt ~THAT SCRAMBlED WOIID GAME

~ ~ ~~~~

tJyHonnAmoldandBobL.ee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each SQUSJe. to form
lour ordinary words
BORN LOSER

r.. Hl-2174

All types of roofing, gutters
&amp; downspouts, 20 years
experience.
All work
guoranteod. Coli Tom
Hoskins, 949 -2160. Free
EstlmaiM.
9-7-1 mo.

tERVEWSI

SPECIAL

Any O.S. made car -parts
extra if needed. Exdudes
fronf.wheel drive cars.

ftt,aJ~~t&lt;ii
SBie_
--=
- ---------==
-~-

THREE BEDROOM ca rpeted home .
fu ll y insulated with I ' 1 baths ,
1n Pomeroy . Reasonably priced
Phone 992 -3872 ·
FIVE ROOM hou~e and both
lCmodeled , tully ca rpe ted May
be see n after 3 pm . Phone
991·J9JJ
. FARM . 3.4 acres timbe r. Drilled
well block bu1ldmg . older
tro1le r . Old Rt 7 Chesler .
Ohio . 985.3897 betwee n 4 ond b
pm _ ----COUN TR Y HOME. 4 bedroom . 7.
baths , free gas
SR 174
Po rtland 843·21 11

- OWNER TRANSFERR ED Must i ell

3 be droom . All elec tric home in
Su bd iv ision .
Mo rn1ng s to r
949-1424 .

1971 FORD , • to n &lt;am per spec1ol.
Power . oir, aula .. dual tank s .
hce ltent runntng condttion ,
51475 992 2392

-

------

Sz-' OFF
SPECIAL
PRICE
Exptres

UPHOLSTERY MATERtAl pieces .
Wtl l sell choop . Syl vi a s
Uphol stery . o&lt;ross fro m Tex a co,
Stallo n .
Syrac u se .
OH .
992.5162
GRIMES GOLDEN . He d De licious . ,
&amp; Golden Del ic iou~ app les Fttz .
polnck Orc har d
SR b89 .
b 1Ho9 3785
FIVE NEW Jee p AT Tr ocke1 tires .
5225 992 51 47

sept.

-

-

-

*

THREE OR four bed roo m house in
Pome roy . 8oth and ', Cen tral
· .heotin~ 99? 707.4 _
HOUSE IN Mtnersvd le ove rlook ·
1ng r1ve r 4 bedroom . h..- 1ng
roo m 1.. 1tchen . both . uttl ity
room and bo ieme nl. lorry
F1eld!.&gt; , 9q2-582J .

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

1968 CHt:VROU:T CARRYAll ~ .
ton 6 cy l std Has 1971 eng1ne .
l ully •n~u lote d and carpeted
Good !ires . $750. Coll992·b398
sWEE_l _ PoTATOES -Red. - whi;e.
and ye llow. Phone 843·2432
Robert W lewis . Rt . 1 Racine ,
SR 124 .

FARM FOR sole House . 1 ba rns .
tra iler Lorge pond 10 acres or
1:12 acres , 7~2 ·~~~-- __

'

call now lor appointment . •

Pomeroy landmark
IT.ic. k W. Carsey, MQr.

EAR CORN , $2 per bu Corn
Phone 992-2111
sheller $550 J 0 No . 5 mowing L=~~:.__:_=::::__:_:::....:_...:__J
mach1ne . $700 Int . Boler $1400.
After b pm coil 9BS-,.13 I or
985·3537.

-

ma nure .

1976 l . ton Chevrole t ptckyp 4speed 350 eng me 3 inc h Reese
hil ch
E.:celle nl co nd1tia11 .
Phone 992. 5348

--

Older
3 BEDROOMS
home, some remodeling.
beautiful view of the river,
must see to appreciate.
Price 512,500 . .
11 ACRES - More or less. 4
bedrooms. modern bath.
Iorge kitchen B. dining
room . fireplace, seVeral
out buildings . Owner being
transferred .
Price
S35.ooo.oo.

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804W. ~Min
"l -2291
Pomeroy
After Hours
(all992-7.n3
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Bra~ch tMnagor

Disr:ount
Pnces

VIRGIL 8_ SR
YY2-332S
216 E . Second Street
NEW LISTING - Nice 4
bedroom older home with
modern kitchen and bath .
Elec tr ic baseboard heat,
ci ty water. secohd bath in
full basement, garage and
ne arly 2 a c res . $48,500.
NEW LISTING - SO a c res
in lebanon Township on
good grave l road . Old 4 rm .
house with e 1ectr1 c . S20,000 .
FAMILY
HOME
- 4
bedrooms, bath , natural
gas heat, fireplace , city
water and ex tra lot on R1 .
124 . wants14,000 _
NEW
LISTING
- 3
bedroom fra me' home . Just
olf Rt . 33 near Rock SprIngs , Nice kitchen w tth lots
of cabinets, new oas fur nace, utility room, . dining
and level lot . $29,.500.
4 ACRE 5 3 bedrooms,
enclosed bath, new natural
gas furnace Wtth central
air ,
full
ba~ement,
carpeti ng ,
and
out buildi ngs . Ni ce fish pond
ready for you to stock .
$35.000 .
NEWSPAPERS SELL
ADS, SALESMEN SELL
HOUSES. CALL 992-3325
FOR RESULTS.
Helen L. Teaford
G. Brute Teaford
Sue P . Murphy
Associates

i!"'~~
'~~
'·1ri'iii c
,-~~'"'---- r ;I

:C

- - - - -·-

Oil, SURE ··· BOT IT'S
HARDLY uP TO MR.
MUSTAI!D TO SUPPORT
'EM ··· HE}..S I"'OT RICH.
EITHER·-·

1

-- -

IN SYRACUSE : 2 bedroom house SE-WING -MACHiN'ERepa1rs . se; .
New s torm wtndows. New
vice. oil makes , 992·228.. . Th~
olummum build1ng. 2 por ches
Fabric Shop . Pomeroy
992·3219
Authorized Singe1 Soles and
-·- Service . We shorpen Scissors
ACRE LOT on Rt . 7. N1ce butldmg
site 9&lt;11· 7574
EXC AVATING d~~;;-o;;d
-· - ··- ~backhoe work : dump trucks
THREE BEDROOM house . 3 a cres
ond lo boys for hire; will haul
la nd Close to sc hool. priced
ltll dirl , to soi l limestone and
reo son_o bly_992 · 5~7b ___ _
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef ·
3 ' 1 ones wllh wate r an d sewage
fers, day pho ne qq2 .1oeq. night
on Peococ lo; A. . e . Pome roy .
phone 992-3525 0 1 qq1. S232
Ohio . S10C() down Ba lance o f
EX(AW
!NG. do,e,- boc~
560.70 per month to qualif 1ed
a nd dit cher Cha rles R Hal ·
_pers~n_. 991·5786.
ftel d , Bock Hoe Serv ice ,
f! ut lond , Oh10 , ~h~ne 742· ~ ·
Will do roofing , const ruction ,
plumb1ng a nd heating . No iob
too Io rge or too small. Phone
142·2348
HOWERY AND MARTIN
ca .... oting . se pt1c s~stem s .
dozer, bockhoe . dump tru ck .
limesto ne
grovel , blacktop
po11ing , Rt. UJ . Phon&amp; I (b14 }
098·7331 .
BATHROOM S AND Kitchen s
remode led . ceramic; tile, plum·
SYRACUSE (Rustic Hills)
bmg carpentry , and genera l
- 3 bedroom ranch , e quip ·
main ten ance . 13 years V
ped kitchen , hardwood
perien&lt;e 992· 3685.
floors , a ir cond ., ca rport
and storage S28,500.00.
PULLINS ExCAVATIN G Co~~l ;;e
SYRACUSE - C lo se to
Se rv tce Phone 992·2H8.
school, 3 bedrooms, full
REEVES TRADING
Pog;:il~
basement , 2 leve l lots.
Groceries, dry goodi . hard $27.300.00.
wore , feed , toe.~ shop. Sped ol
LETART - Brick ranch
351!::_o~ dog food . S3.88 .
type, l'h baths , f irep lace,
1
central air, modern kit·
AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
chen, porches . $31,600 .00.
cancelled? Lost your operoiOI !ii
NEAR FORKED RUN
li cense? Phone q92 -2
.,_l:_:4:::
3:_
. __
-Q'w!er 1 acre. -4 bedrooms,
weoo
----;ointln
-g
,
g-utter
'
ceiltng
bath, nat. gas F .A heat,
tile paneling . roof repair .
large garqe &amp; workshop,
plumbing and concrete work .
other building . 529.500 .00.
Free es timates Call 992 ·7785
CLOSE - 5 acres ,
3
osk lor Wollo&lt;e Morr is .
bedroom s. bath , n ice kit chen, c hick e n house , barn .
CHIMNEY FIRES ore no fun! Hove
all fenced, part basement .
yours cleaned the dustless way
DUPLEX - in Pomeroy ,
. The Chimney Sweep
good c.onditlon , 1 has 2
614 ·373 6057 '
b edroo ms ,
1 has
3
bedrooms, ready to move
into . 515,000.00.
MANY OTHER PROPER TIES CALL TODAY
197b NASHUA 14 x 65 J bedroom
FOR YOUR NEEDS . THE
I ' , bOth, underp inn ing , Sl!KXl
ttOME OF REAL ESTATE
and assume loan. 9A9·2b83 or
IN MEIGS COUNTY .
843 · 33:~1.:_
'-:___ _ _ _ _ _ _
HENRY E- CLELANO
1970 HILLCRES T 12 1t 60 lo&lt;ated in
REALTOR
Solem Senter on CR ' I .
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
6141 069·5742 ,
"'I
Cleland
--- ~
Realtor Associates
l 97 4 TOTAl ElECTRIC I 2x60. A&lt;992-2259--992·2568
bough oddttlon , Tuppers Plains .
Con be moved or left on lot .
Eventngs , a.tJ-2414 .

"f€A.t1 ·· LUCKY

I GUESS 1HfRE'5
IUNTV o ' PEOPlE
LIKE l~' JITTERS ...
KtN.D HOH[ST FOLHS
... siJT .JUST SORT 0'
COASTIN' ALONG ···

FOR 'EM
THERE'S AlSO
GU~ S LIKE
MR . MUSTARD!

I

ACROSS

-·.-for

11 .35-

34, Nol
d, N.J. 07M. Indudl
oodt and tnlt.edwdc:l ~ tl PII 1 p boob.

1Z Candle
IZ l.Joeless

5 Gather
together
l.o Potpourri
II Tooth stain

vegetation

DOWN
1 Celestial
sight
Z Oil source

~Widow's -

14 Richly
bedecked
15NIIht
preceding
II Black cuckoo
... ,._.__
17 Sesame
9
:..l...Jti~~::&gt;JIU.!._______-•_&gt;._ _J II Baltony
ZIOncewbile
She was never De Valera's

ver4 qood at

robbinq
ban\1.5!

land: abbr.

Froat, e.g.

33.

3 Liquid

measure
Ye.terdlty'a Allnrer
t Foot member
5 Immediately 11 Swiss river
:sa Signal
I''- From
JJ Mil. Moreno
llght

Sunny Italy"

ZZ Glass

24 'l'ru.ltworth:y
1$ Hiltoric

Vallant'sSIJII

I Depot
I Inapen.slve

BRIDGE

31 Soap
plant

:a Gratify

7 Prince

Tuesday. Sept. 12

yacht

silk fabric
• C.lanlltous
1% Pertain; state !I Dive lor Spitz

:..:d::...:_A:::Ia=n~_S=o:..:nt.::a~g
12 Bum a bit _ __:O:..:s:..:w:..:a:::l.::d_:J.::a.::c.::ob=-y~an

sa Foutatep

:II Esplode
• Playing

One expert way to a slam

marble
NORTH
II A J 9 6
• A 64

He loved
liNtrice

Tony-

for

• 2

mllll;rt-t-

client

EAST

spades says, "Partner, I

117

• K QJ

• 10985 32

c ould have jwnped right to
four spades, but I wantt•d to
take time out to show you
that I hold a singleton

•KJ874

• 96

• 7

"beat"

• 965
82

+KJ

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

.&lt;arilt

commune

We1t

n l'llclllc

llland
:IIRalllenc:y
P\IQ~·l• ()pen1

/

"

Pass

Pass

about
t1 Seaweed

Opening lead: \1 K

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how
AXYDLIAAXB

II

It

nlERE'S NO WAY I CAN
PAY OFF MY LOAN
AND INTEREST

ANDHOWCANI
EXPLAIN T'RIS

work It:

LOUIE THE

5HARK •••

A78xl3

.

This should be enough. for
South to go right into Black·
wood since South knows that
all North's strength is where
South wants it to be. North
shows three aces and South
bids the slam happily.
What is the other· expert
way to get to six? Splinter
bids will be discussed 1n next
week 's articles.

You hold :
!H2-B

IIAKQ87
By Oawald Jacoby

LONGFELLOW

diamond."

• 2

aad Alan Sontag

zc

SHINER TO

WINNIE?

MIXED UP W1111

to

One letter almpl,y standt for another. In thia sample A Ia
Here is yesterday's hand
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc_ Sin1le letters, with one little red card.
apoetrophea, the lencth and formation of the worda are all change_ North and South are
hlats. Each da~ the code leiters art dllerenl.
now cold for six spades and
modern
experts have two
CBYPTOQVOTI:Il
ways to get there_
depend on one modR IT F'T
PEHQ E UYYL PEH ernBoth
gadget. The use of a
reverse bid by the original
RY
KT
WYMHL MH LTF
E
C IE It· bidder as a one-round force.
Thllll, when North rebids two
KQ
IER. GIZHTCT
BFYATFK hearts he knows that his
Yuludlly't CaiPIIIItte, WHEN FIRMNESS IS SUF· partner won't pass.
FICIENT, RASHNESS IS UNNECESSARY.-NAPOIEON, South's tw&lt;Hlpade ·rebid
merely shows that he has at
ONE
least a flve-eard spade suit.
When North made his reBARNEY
verse bid of two hearts , he

•

• l i'EVER ~LD
HAVE ,GOTTEN

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pus
Pus

.Ju.9r
/

t AQ103

• 73
SOUTH
11 KQ843

IF~R~AN~K~&amp;~E~R~N~IE:______ . _ .__________. ___~------~~~~~~----------------,UV~
• Be lltuated t=+--+--

promised that he would not
drop the bidding below three
clubs - the level in his firs t
bid suit he had forced by
bidding two hearts . ·
North 's jump in four

WEST
• 10 52

mponc~.

'T'!L.'- HIM
tf"S R!ALL.Y

9-12·A

+ A Q 10 ~. 4

~\~\~~~ • FIX'!lcn
ent'a
•

• J97653

• A

-

A Canadian reader asks
what our opening bid is?
We open one dtamond. We
can bid spades twice later on
if we wish to do so. It is
important to show that dis.
monds are the longer sui( . .
I NEWSPAPER ENTER.PKJSE ASSN . )

(Do you have a question :lor
the 8)lperts? WrUe "Ask lhe
Experts, '' core of this new!ipa.
per. Individual questions will
be answered II actompan/ert
by stamper!, se/1-adrtressert
envelopes. The IJlOst lnlt~resf·
inQ questtons will be used In
this column and wlfl rectJive
copies of JACOBY MODERI'I.)

OORN~mREE~~--~r------~~~~
HIDE.TATER!!

I'D

POMEROY
LANDMARK
JACK W. CARIIY, Mgr.
PHON I 992-2111

GiVE AN't'TH!NG
TO KNOW.WHAT '1'0U'RE
KEEPING TRACK OF!

ONE NO'tCfli{E5TER~..
TWO NOTCI-lE5 TODA'r' ...
WHERE DO tfO\J GO
FROM HERE?

I

'IE TIPPED OVER
Ot: BULLET'S

r1 FROM NOTCHES
J' TO MOBILE Jj

WASHTUB

~ee

00

HEE
!4EI! i
l

0

••

12 :00-Janakl33; 12:40-SWAT 6.13; 1:00-Tomorrow
3,4; l : 50-News 13.
Movie CINonnel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. -Island of Dr. Moreau lPG I
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Damnation Alley I PGI

Babble

!I Kind of
!1 Ending

HollywoOd Oldie (gl
I Never Promised you a Rose Garden

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, lt71
5:4s-Farm Report 13; 5 :50-PTL Club 13; 6 :00-PTL
Clup 15; Summer Semester 10.
6:30--"ews Conferem:e .C; News 6 ; Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10.
6 :4s-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50-Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13; 6 :5s-News 13; 7 :00-Todey 3,4,15;
Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS News 8; Jetsons
10.
7:25-Chuck While Reports 10; 7:30-Schoolles 10.
8 :oo-capt _ Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:00- Merv Griffin 3 ; Phil Donahue 4,13 , 15;
Emergency One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game
10.
9 ·3o-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10; B1t With Knit
33 .
lO .oo-card Sharks 3,15; My Three Sons~~ Edge of
Night 6; All InTh~ Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13;
Bit With Knit 33.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6; Price
Is R lght 8.10; S20.000 Pyram ld 13.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; 11 ·3GWheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Family Feud 6.13; Love of
Life 8,10; Sesame St. 33 .
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
l2 :oo-New5center 3; News 4,6,10; America AHve 15;
Young B. the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13 .
12 3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co. 33.
l :00-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young B. the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; National Geograpnlc 33.
l :30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2 :0G-One Life to Live 6,13.
2: 30-Doclors 34,15; Guiding Light 8,10; 3: IJO-Another
World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20.
3:»-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Over Easy 20 .
4 :00-Misler Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer, For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig B. Friends 8;
Sesame St . 20,33; Batman 10 ; Dinah 13.
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan' s Is . 4,8; Brady Buncn
10; Little Rascals 15 .
5:00-Bonanza 3; Star Trek 4; Beverly Hlll~lflles 8;
Mister Rogers 20,3J; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10;
Emergency One 13 ; Petticoat Junction 15.
5:30-News 6; Sanford B. Son 8; Mary Tyler Moo•e 10;
Hogan's Heroes 15 .
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh 6,
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7:oo-cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4 ; Newlywed Game
6,13; SheNa Na8; News10; Gilligan's Is. 15; D 1ck
Cavett 20; BiQ Green Maoazine 33.
7·30-AII -Star Anything Goes 3; Dating Game 4;
Wollman Jack 6 ; Price Is Right 8; The Judge 10;
That's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeil .
Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 :00-World of Disney 3.4, 15; Eight is Enough 6, 13 ;
Popeye 8,10; Greet Performances 33; Jam e s
Michener's World 20.
8 :30-Movle "Buffalo Bill and the Indians" 8,10.
9:oo-charlle's Angels 6,13; Mayor of Casterbrldge 20 .
10:00-WEB 3,4,15; News 20; 10:30-Danlel Fosler
M.D . 20; Mystery Murals of Baja California 33.
11 :00-News 3.~.6.8, 10, 13.15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias
Yolga &amp; You 33.
11 : »-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Gunsmoke 8; Pollee
Woman 6,13; Movie "The V. I.P.' s" 10; ABC News

n Late plfer,t.;-+-t-11-

HI! adquartt!t s

CAl! THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE MiENCY 44-3643

Yesterday's

I Man's foal

1974 MOBilE HOME . Complo1oly
furnished with underp inning .
storage building , on owning .
992·7•79.

White-Wall UHJ,o.
Custom ·Poly

(Answers tomorrow)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEYOOP

----- ·-

~2JI

I I I I I ]"

~AA1'."M'

-

n

"[

Jumbles TWILL UNITY BEHALF JUGGLE
Answer. What they made when there was a power
failure-LIGHT OF IT

' your,...,.,~ Zip

-

-

Prlntanswerhere:

...........
-No. 10, wltlllhl- 110
l)llkl from Jtinble, C/o lhllraw :x;v, b

- --- -- -

---- --

Now arrange lhe ctrcled letters to
form the surprise answer, liS sug·
gesled by the above cartoon

0

I.I'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Hn;Jsinq

EXCELLENT FARM BUY - 1:41 ACRES - The
owner' s age prevents her from continuing to operate
the farm and she desires an Immediate ule. 50 to 60
acres tillable with some very good creek bottom hilltop lend . The balance Is In pnluro &amp; wooda. The 6
room home Ia good (does need some modernization!.
largo all purpose barn &amp; oevoral outbuildings. The
minerals go with II and It's located In •n arN where
gas, oil &amp; coal have been found to be plenlllul. NNr
Rutland . 60'1 .

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

&lt;:: o=.;¥!~~F~ _:i:~.

ro;,-

17 I 1f71

1974 SC HUL Tl tota l etec tn c. 2
bedroom washe r a nd dr yer. FRfE WOOD. Free
q49. 2521 even.~.9~
fu rnished , ur'lderpm ned, or·
1111C1al l1rep lo ce , e•cellenl con·
dt11 0n $10.000 or best offer·.
825 S 2nd Av e Middleport. 15
cu . ft d epp freeze 5200 19b9
Che . . y Impala . $150

~~t.;,_~.w -

- - -

-

$}295

=---::::'

WATER WEll drill ing Wdliom T HOMESITE S 'for sole. 1 acre ond BRADFORD . Auctioneer Co m
plete Sen.. ice Phone 949 ·2.. 87
up. Midd leport , neo1 Rutland
G ra nt 741·2879
or 949·2000 Racine , Oh to . Critl
Coii992-7A8l.
Will DO baby ii tl mg in my hom e
Bradford ,
_ ___..
in Recine a rea. 8 fo A VA-FHA , 30 vr fino nctng , als o
ElWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
._.;,
refi nancing . Ire land Mortgag e ,
Weekday s . Donna Wolle .
Sweepers,
toasters
,
irons
,
aU
77
E.
State
,
Athens
,
phone
(b14
)
94921 58 .
smoll appliances . Lawn mower",
592·3051.
next to State H1ghway Goroge
•
- ';-==::~-=="::' THREE BEDROOM fra me home m
~~ ;oute 7. Phone (614 ) 98~
Midd leport . Call997-3457

WINTER POTATOES , grade 1 and
2 C.W Proff111 Portland , Ohio .

ONE DOUBLE bowl porclem top
s1 nk cab inet un11 like new
$1 50 One gm dryer , 20 lb.
capacity , gold , l1lo;e new , $150
2 propane gas heOt ers, good
&lt;.ond1tlon . One $300 o ne $200 .
H1 J1 17 after S pm

Muffler · Brakes
Shocks · Tires
Battery.
lnstallatinn Service

SMITH NELSONMOTORS, INC.

-:;:.=··

r-v;JHEEL
ALIGNMENT

197b TAN GMC Von . 1nsulote d
paneled . cor pel 33 000 mile'&gt;
standard shift . Good 111es .
Goo d
condit1on .
$37 00 .
985 3857

~ ~dd l eyo r l

,

Coli Us Todoy

MOORE'S

8-20-l mo. (Pd . l
ALLIS Chalmers C w11h
3 heads a· drag type disc . fro nt
end loa der lor o MF 35 50 I I
e l ev at o r
b r u sh
hog
cul ipodo;e•. Andr ew Cross ,
l e tart Foil!. . 247 2852

-

KING SIZE ... a terb ed , lrome . mot .
tress. pede 5tal , lmer , hea te r
1976 KE 175 Kawasak i on oft
rood . 1100 octual miles . Wil l
soch 1f1Ce. Apt 108 .. Ri¥erv1ew

traiture.

COM~INE

TYPEWRITERS· PORTABLE S elec· 19"/7 KC )000 Kawa saki mot orcy·
Trtc . gomg to sell or rrod e them .
cle . EM te llent cond tfi on Some
too F1f e s S Jrd . Midd leport.
e)( fra s. . pr 1cedreos.on obly
992· 7.494
997·6 100
1974 DATSUN PICKUP . Phone GRAVI:l Y TRACTOR w1 1h mower
992·6191 afte r Spm
ond sulk ey
Alt e r 5 cal l
747 2978
PLAtb LOVE seat a nd motchmg
cho1r and ottoman ~ed room REG ISTE RI:D AMERICAN saddle
suite Al l like new tn eHellent
bre d Geldmg
Aul o mot1 c
condiflo n 949 2761
washe1 61.4 698·3190
-- lARGE FUI::l 011 stove . After ~ ,30
pm coil qq:z 7b9b
N SCAlf trotns wtlh l type
layout. Complete w1th oil swll ·
ches , house chur ch , lactor1e'&gt; .
Beou11ful. Se ll or swap lor
campe r ol equa l value See
Harvey Leomond PO 8011 63 .
Rac ine Oh1o by Wagner Ha rd·
wore Store

par · !

outdoor

Mrlle Channel 4
5 and 7 P-m . 9 and 11 p .m . (rl

SERVICE

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

.'\.~ q f

We ~tre

· 8'1UV6 OOMPAHY

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

LANDMARK
!)I"

Price In Town
-- See
Denver Kapple
At

""- "2-2848

3:30-MASH 8; Joker's llilld 10; Consumer Survival
Kit 20.
&lt;:110-Mr. Cartoon 3; Superman &lt;;. For Richer, lor
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Klg and Friends
8; Seseme St. 20,331 Batman 10; Dlnahl 13.
&lt;:30--My Three Sons 3; Gilligan' s Island&lt;: Gilligan's
hi and I; Brldy Bunch 10; Little Raocals15.
5 :00-Bonanza 3; Star Trek&lt;; Beverly HJIIbiiiiH 8;
Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Emergency One I 13; Petticoat Junction
15.
5:30-News 6; Sanford and Son 8; Electric Co. 20,33;
Mer·y Tyler Moore 10: Hogen's Heroes 15.
6: 00-News 3,~,8, 10,13,1$; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News3.~.15: ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7: og...,.(;rosa-WIIs 3: PM Magazine ~~ Newlywed Game
6,13; Pc)p Goes the Country 8.; News 10; Gilligan's
Island 15; French Chel20; How To Buy a Home 33 .
7 :311-Hollywood SquarH 3; Dating Game ~~ Candid
Camera 6; Let's go to the Races 8; Prtce Is Righi
10; Donne Fargo 13; Abbott end Costello 15;
MacNeil- Lehrer Report 20,33 _
8 :oo-canlne Hell of Fame 3.~.15;; Happy Days 6,13;
Spider-Man 8,10; Saturday Game 20; Movie

itppointments tor ••nlor ,
poFtraltl. We use tr•di · :
tion•l 1ettings •nd •Ito

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

· ~-----.....-,

POMEROY
F

'

o_

--··----

__a.!!_!!_ S_P~- - - - · -~ __ _
FOUR ROOMS and both, All new
point . New carpet No inside
_P!_b_P~2-n~2- ~ - - - --

W.ALL TRAILER ond lot tn
Syracuse across from pooL
Phone 949·2373

GARAGE

TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, lt71

' •
'•

-------;1
For The Best
na APPAhiiGIIIAII

ROGER HYSEll

Phone "2-2181

san! , W Vo bestde H ec k~
L...:..___._____·_____,
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
bedroom
PICK 'f'UUtl U WN WI: U SK IN
1973 Dorton i"4 • bO 1 bed room
PEACHEs 5. 11 lb. Man , 1 ues ,
1972 V1c torton 14 11 b7 J bed room
Thur s. Fr 1, 9 to b . Wed , Sot ..
2 both
~ u n . 2 to 0 lh 1ng co nt01ne rs , if
1971 Coventry 12 1r 65 3 bedroom
you wont to use step ladders
1969 Statesman 12 11 60 2
br1ng yo ur own Yo u p1ck OP·
bedroom .
pies coming soon Wagner Fruit
· - - · ·
form . layma n, Oh io 2', miles
COAL. liMESTONE. sand , grovel ,
o H Rt. 550 On CR b .
calcium chloride, fertil tze r, dog
014-749 3312 .
food , ond all types of salt . E•
celstar Sal! Worlo; s, Inc ., E. Matn HKTRIC FIR(PLACE . automat ic .
corner model. 992· 7051
St .. pomeroy 992-3891

ONE PAIR ( 3 channe l ) walkie
Talk1es L1" e new Rea lt!ollc
Reasonable Colt '192· 5566 .

RIVERSIDE · APARTMENTS . I
bedroom apt $113 mo. plus
electric. Monthly teases . Equal
Opportuntty Houstng. Coli
_Wl · 77~1_!.o~~~i nt~!~ __
ONE BEDROOM mobil• home
'1'12·2598.

~

BoX l

,,

SENIORS
currently makint :

te•ture

Company 6, 13; Movie "~" 8, 10; Los Angeles
PhilHarmonic et tile Hollywood Bowl 20 •
9 :30-Texl6, 13; 10:00-Stanky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
10:30-Like It to 20; Blue-Collar Cepllallsm 33.
11 :00-News 3,&lt;,6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 :30- Johnny Carson 3, ~.15; Movie "Thes -Last,ol
Sheila" 6,13; Gunsmoke 8 ;"The Bullet" 8; ABC
News 33: Movie "The Brothers O'Toole" 10.
12:00-Janakl 33.
·
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4. 1 :5s-News 13-

TELEVISION
VIEWING

TRACYLOOK!

The Pholo Place '

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Experlencoond
fully Insured
Free Est.
Call992-l772
8-10·1mo. (Pd. i

•289.95

Plea ·

Relid... tial and cammer·
clal. Calf lor ostimote . l4
Hour Servlct. Any day,
anytime.
.
· Phone 985-3106
Jack Ginther 915-31116

•

lflgh SchaOI

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANfNG

Blown Insulation

9 .. Jack W. Caney, Mgr.

Co unty
Cou rthouse ,
Pomeroy , Ohio , ' until 4 ·00
o'c lock PM . EST on Sep tember 19, 1978 , and opened
at 6 30 PM tor tne following :
F urn tSI"r 1ng the n ecenary
---- - -------tabor , materials , toots , and
YARD AND Bake sale ot the Long
machinery to do the site
Bottom Commumty Budding.
prept'u·ation work tor the
Me igs Co unty Mulft Purpose
. !r~d-~y . Sep_!. .!,_~ __ _
Health Facility , Pomeroy ,
YARD SALE . 7th St ., Syracuse,
Ohio , according to draw ing
Ohto . Sept . II thru 1.4 Teenage
sheet
Number
I
and
specificat ions Se~tlon 02.10,
clothing . shoes . cheap
Couple
or
lady
to
do
-· Otvt sion 2, on file •n tne .offtce
YARD
SALE . Fr 1 , Sept. 15 01
light
housekeeping
of the Architect. Wright ·
leona Stewarts res1dence
Keske . Kritschgau , Inc , 3600
for a retired mar~.
Trabue Road , Columbus,
Mulberry .He ights Pomeroy
Ohio , 432()..4 coptes of satd
Live in. Contact From 9 to b . Flower poh
drawtnos and specif tcattons
dishes , dresses 16 to 70 ',
may be obtained by bidders
records , and mise
from the Archtlect upon
- - - deposif of $10 00 In cash or
THREE FAMILY Yard Sole
c heck for each set Of
Wednesday and Thursday
ctrawmgs and specif ication$ .
North on New 33 . left into CR
Bids
for
the
above
Long Bottom cw llsiNom
I 9 Peach Frok Rd . I sl house on
desc r ibed work must be
,4,-l ,J or fi5.-J5N
ri9ht Real ni ce clothing , in·
m ade on blllnks turn1shed by
eluding coah, furniture , plumb·
the Archtlect.
Each btd must contain the
~n~
.~ds_o~d_en~ ~- ___ _
WORK
OVERSEAS . Austrol iO
full name ot every person or
Afri ca . South America , Europe,
company interested in the
etc
ConsTruc t ion , Soles ,
same, shell separately state
Engineers . Clertcal , etc. S8000
th e pr 1ce tor labor and
m atenat , and musr be a c
to $50 .000 plus . Expenses po1d .
companied by a Bt d Bond or a
F0 , employment mformolton 1972 DA lSUN • door stati on
wagon . 26 OCIO miles 4 &lt;yl. .
c ert ified check in an amount
wr ite : Overseas Employ,nent .
not less th an 5 percen t of the
good
gos mdeoge. 750 .N Jrd.
~ OK 101 1, 8os tor, , Ma 02101 .
total b td .
Middleport . Phone 991. 7329
The successful bidder , upon
after 4 p.m
EXPERiENCED MECHANIC Own
acceptance of his proposal,
- - - - -·
tools
requtred.
App
ly
1
n
per
must furnish 100 perc ent
1974 DATSUN PICKUP Phone
son
River
s1de
VW
.
AMC-Jeep
performllnce bond and 100
_9~~·.?,1 ~2 ~f!e~Sp~ _ __ . _
percent tabor and materlitl
- ~~~~~':.~---.
1974 JEEP CJS, AM .fM rod1o , fog
paymen t bond to the owner .
EXECUTIVE SECREl ARY Ia work
Bidder shall also note tho!lt
ltghts Jumbo 12" Mudder tires
lor Medical 01rector and serve
the prev.!liling wage rate
Good
sh ape
Ph one
as After ca re Secretory. Must
published by the Un1ted
bl• 75J 2809 .
Sta res Department of Labor
ho"'e eMCellent c lemol s.k tl ls in·
s hal l be c omplied w it h
c ludmg shorthand . typ tng . ATTENTION MUSTANG lo¥ers ·
thr oughout th is project.
197 1 Mach I. hcellent shape .
Eng ltsh. grommo r and the obdt·
Bidders shall also note the
tv to co mpose motertols nee-d · o tr. 301 . $1700, 985·3301 days .
Rules a nct Regulations on
985 ·4140 offer 5 pm
ed in both sensitive chnico l and
eoua l
employment
OP ·
.
- odm1nistrotive
areas
Work
portun tty shall be made a
1%9 CHEVY NOVA V·8 standard
wtth
psychiatr
ists
scheduling
part of this contract .
Irons
R'uns good
SbSO
oppo1ntmenh ond keepmg
No bidder mlly withdraw
985· 4171
hts b1d w 1th tn 30 days afler
medi cot 1on u~cords Must be
t he a crua t date of the
wilt ing to work lleK 1ble hou rs 1971 FORD TORINO GT A ~r . P S .
opening .
5b50 Fu ll set of Wilson golf
inc:luding some evenings OS
If , tn the op inion of the
cl ubs , bog and golf cart , $100
sched
uled
for
medi
cot1on
Meigs
County
Com ·
.92 ·2987 .
clin tc s. A los. must be will ing to
m ISS to ners , the acceptance of
tro¥el a nd work In other coun 1977 OLDSMOBILE Vista Cruiser 3
the lowest bid i s not in the
tun t~o days per week . If 1n ·
best inte rest of all concerned ,
seat wagon . Well equ 1pped.
the Co m missioners reserve
te res ted , please call the Goltio ·
742-2007 otterS pm .
the right to w.:11'-'e any in ·
Jackson -Meigs Community
rorma1 1t1es
Mental
Health
Center JQ74 VW BUS , 7 pa~senger 1975
snould any b1d be rejected ,
Ford Granado . Freemon
biA 446-SS•A An Equal Op·
suc h check shall be re tu rned
Williams , Minersv1lle. Ohto
p
or
~~mployer
.
to the bidder, and sh ould any
?9~ · 7692 of~e r S P~ ·-- __
b id be a ccepted , such c he ck
C. E T A
TITLE VI. Mu s. t be
w ill be ret u rned upon the
unemployed 15 of lost 20 1975 PINTO RUNABOUT 4 cyl.
uecution of the Contract
miles $1500 . 992·3611
~ks . residf!lnt of Me1gs CounMEIGS COUNTY
or 992-2.:_
7:..:
19:;_._ _
ty , meet federal income
COMMISSIONERS
gu 1d&amp;l ines . Contact Ohto Job 1975 MONTE CAR LO. Lots o f ex ·
Ma rv Hobstetter ,
Clerk
Ser 'o' i&lt;es 9 13.78. Equal Op·
fros . 51900 992·7089 . after 5
( 9 ) 5 , 12
portun•ty Employer . ( 1) So1l ---~---1970 PLYMOUTH 6 cyl. , aut o
Conser¥ofton Aide .
PROBATE COURT OF
Cedar wardrobe . ln1lng room
MEIGS ¢0UNTY, OHIO
s.AsYSITTER IN my home for
su1te . treadle , 5eWin g mochme.
ESTATE OF KAT HRYN
working mother 10 day s o
porch swing . Iorge pitcher and
ELLEN
FITC HPATRICK ,
mont h Must ho .... e e11penence .
bowl 997.71 U .
DE C EASED
Colt
9q2
.24q4
after
5
00
pm
case No 224.49 Docket 12
1971 BRONCO 4·wheel dr~ve
Pa ge 69
51550 992-7054
NOTICE OF

r

HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , sell

B 8 S MOBilf HOME S. Pt

3.

DREAMING OF o white Chnstmos
w1th no bills7 Wonderful to
think about , but it could come
true Be o TOy Ladies' hostess !
In your home or by orders from
our f.-le nds . Eorn toys ond g1ft5
rae
Nome brand toys .
reasonably
priced
with
guarantee . G1hs for the whole
family . For mformalion call
7oll2 ·2377 or 9'92· 705b .

Business Services

t'""s.i..

.

. • -The Dilly Semlnel, Mlddleport.Pomero:y, 0 ., Tuelday. Sept. 12, 1978

o

-

o

··

•

�•
I

10 - The llllily Sentinel, Mlddleport·P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Theaday, Sept. 12, 19'11

Cleveland's schools closed·
"Some irresponsible people
United
Preu
have
chained school doors,
Interuth&gt;aal
jammed
locks with pieces of
For the first time since a
metal
and
wood so that
teachers' strike began last
principals,
teachers and
week, Cleveland public
pupils
cannot
enter most of
school administrators today
the
buildings
,"
said
officially closed their 101,000.
Board
of
stuclent system. Walkouts by Cleveland
Education
President
John
instructors in five other Ohio
districts continued Mooday. Gallagher.
The workshop 's purpose "is
Meanwhile, nm-academic
to
help principals overcome
employees in Dayton are
the
obstacles of opening
scheduled to join striking
buildings
and ·maintaining
. teachers on the picket line at
in
order to keep the
security
midnight Thursday .
build
i
ngs
open, "
Cleveland schools were
a
c
kn
owledged
Acting
shut
down
while
Cle
v
eland
Scho
o ls
administrators prepared to
Superintendent
Peter
P.
present a state court judge
Carlin.
with details of the district 's
Gallagher said classes will
financial plight. At the same
resume
Wednesday.
lime, principals today were
Cuyahoga
County Commm
attending a workshop to
Pleas
Judge
Harry A. Hanna
learn, among other things,
last
week
ordered school
how to break into their own
officials
to
come up with
buildings.
financial
data
m possible
The walkout involves 10,000 ·
budget
redu
ctions
by today,
teachers and support perwhen
he
was
to
again
take uo
sonnel.

a hearing on the di.!pute. The
budget wts would be used to
fund pay raises for school
employees.
Dayton's 611 schools. were
open for the system's 37,000
students Mooday, but the
district is preparing for still
more trouble Thursday when
500 nm-academic workers
say they will walk off the job.
Some pupils Monday
picketed the llllytm Board of
Education in an attempt to
get contract negotiations
resumed.
Classes were also held
Mooday in the strikebound
Lima Shawnee, Buckeye
Local and Tallmadge school
districts, but Logan schools
remained closed.
In related matters:
- .An Himpasse pa.nel 11 for
the Lakewood Board of
.Education in suburban
Cleveland and the district 's
teachers met today in an

r--:-----------------------~

Will •••

By

1I
I

Area Dea··ths

MIDLRED CIRCLE
'Mildred Ann Circle, 71, was
found dead at her Route 1,
Minersville residence late
·
Mon day mornmg.
Mrs. Circle was a daughter
of the late Henry and Lena
Durst. She is survived by a
daughter , Mrs . David
(Joyce ) Davis.
Little
!locking ; a grandson, David
Davis, Jr., three brothers, Sid
Durs t , Ruda D urs t an d
r P rtl and .,
Robert Dur st , aII oo
three sisters Iva Carpenter
'

'

11 equipment
(continuedfrompage1 )
with foresight,
1 paying for such equipment

Portland ; Zetta Boyd, with deflated dollars, which
Parkersburg . and Olive ~ onlyto the advantage of the
Talbott, Xenia, and several VIllage.
.
nieces and nephews. She was
As fo~ the options and
an employe of the Meigs accessories specified on the
b'd h
·
-' d
County Infirma ry.
' • t ere IS a reason on ~r
Funeral services will be necessity for each and eve~y
held at 1 p.m. Thursday at the one of them . The return to dig
Ewi ng Funeral Home with and self·l~ve!lmg features,
the Rev. Freeland Norris whether standard or optional,
offidating. Burial will be 1n are nec~~ary whe.n a VIllage
Meigs Memori al Garden . can antiCipate havmg several
Friends may call at the different operators over an
·
Th e
funeral· home anv time after 7 exten ded peri'od of tune.
.
· ret
d!
b 15
' fth
this evening.
· sa Y 111° -~ af r ca
or e
protectiOn o

lmmwrization
(Continued from page I )
indicates that irrununization
might be harmful to the
student.
Statements must be in
writing. Parents who object
to immunization .,because of
reigious convictions, or other
good .cause, are asked to

REVIVAL GOING
A reviva l i.s in progress at

tire Mount Moria! Church uf
Gud, Route 2. IU!r ine, 1: 30
p .m .

ecu;h

evening.

The

public is invited.

REVIVAL SI..ATED
submit written statements Hev iva l services at the
fo r Board of Education Clwste r Chu rch of the
consideration .

Nazarerw wi ll begin Wednes·
day

ni ght

&lt;1 rtd

continu e

through Sept 24, 7:30 p.m .
caeh evening. John Lani er of .

FIRE EXTINGUlSHED
Jmr rtiun City will be the
Pomeroy Fire Department 1~va ngeli st , and thE:' pastor,
was called to County Road 19 Herber1 Grate, invites the
at 9 :4• p.m. Monday to ex- public to attend .
tinguish a brush fire.

the operator

during extreme weather
conditions and in the event of
a rollover.
Also, in relation to the
specification for a beater and
air-conditioner, this is
definitely necessary if the
operator is to work in a safe
manner , uninterrupted by
noxious fumes, a hostile
unenvironment
and
necessary intrusion byJraffic
or civilian noises.
The main disadvantage to
the deletion of an air con·
ditioner is the loss of
productivity, due to the in·
fluences mentioned above.
Since the loader - backhoe
will be a diesel, the air
conditioning will not adversely affect the consumption of fuel.
I feel that if there is no need
for air-conditioning in this

piece of equipment, there is

anniversary sale
"FI.EXSTEEI."
Whatever your taste in furn iture. you can
choose with conf idence from Fle xsteel .
Whether you sel eel contemporary ,
traditionaL modern or coloniaL you will find
an impeccable e legan ce in every p iece that
will be a proud addit ion to your home. This
d istincti ve Flexsleel furni t ure is available
in sofas. sectional s, s uites , cha ir s. a nd a
un iqu e s ofa ,slee pe r . Hundr e d s and
hundre ds of fabr ics, all decorafor ·se lecfed
for beautiful correctness.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

no need for air-conditioning

in the village police cruiser or
any other village owned or
operated vehicle, since the
additional fuel consumed by
the ba ckho e - loader Is
miniscule compared to the
extra consumption caused by
the police cruiser and~r any
other gasoline operated
vehicle or piece of equipment
owned or operated by the
village.·
··
There is one thing
remaining in relation to the
aforementioned items~ and

this involves the pay received
for the work performed by
any village employee. Even
though a village the size gf
Middleport cannot afford to
pay employees wages
comparable to the private
sector , We can certainly

make their work area more

!Uonf!fin four/f!ons
isnRPol
Comfol1oblf!fef!Hng
But, like your jeans, that money can fade away
!aster than you'd expect! By putting it to work
m one .of our high-interest savings accounts,
~ou can tnsure against money burning a hole
'" your pocket!
We've a number of savings
1
pans . ·.. and one of them is bound to fit your
budget JUSt right!
"The Friendly Bank"
Walk-up teller window artd a 10 1
u · eller window open Friday Evenings 5 ta
1 p.m .

lilitens national Ba·nk
"

6'6
Membor

F.D.i.c. Dot&gt;osill Insured

Ia S&lt;o,ooo.oo.

.,.., '

·~ schools

New Orleans' teachers given
seven percent pay in~rease

effort to hammer out a
contract agreement. and
avert a strike.
The pane!·failed to reach a
settlement Friday, after a
three-hour session, said
spokesw&lt;man Carol Dolgosh
of the Lakewood Teachers By ANDJU;W A. YEMMA
Associatioo.
_ _ Ualted Press IDierutiOIIal
Buoyed by • 7 percent
- Voters in the Oeveland
suburb of Parma went to the salary increue, the JX"esiclent
polls today to decide the fate of the teachers unioo in New
of a critical 6 7-mill Orleans says be hopes never
emergency school levY ·
again to caU a strike like the
Parma residents ,·have ooe that ~ippled classes
rejected the last seven school through the first three weeks
levy proposals put cin the of the faU term.
ballot. If passed, lhe latest
Teachers in II slates and
property tax lUke plan wouJd f~ maj&lt;r cities hope their
bi'ing in an additional $5.2 p1c~t lines will pay off in
million arumally f&lt;r the next similar benefits~ but more
five years.
than 3!i0,000 students idled by
Parma school officials lhe walkouts may be thinking
have warned that a state about the extra hours of class
takeover of the district's and home work they will be
finances looms if the levy required to undertake mce
fails.
·
the strikes end.
New Orleans teachers
voted unanimoualy Mooday
to settle their 13-day strike.
pleasant, thus creating an · Regular classes were
inducement for any present scheduled to resume today
or future operator to remain for the 90,000 students.
with the vUJage and operate Substitute teachers, paid at
the equipment in a respon·
sible fashion. The VIllage of
Middleport is indeed lucky to
have some employees that
are willing to put forth much
more effort than is equated
WASHINGTON (UPI) with their salaries.
The
House Assassinations
Although the low bidder
should receive the order, we Committee today came to
should also look ahead·to the grips with the central
future, when the warranty questim about the murcler of
expires. We should consider John F . Kennedy: Was there
the distance to the dealer and more than me gunman1
Trajectory experts were
the amount chaqjed by the
hour for any service. It Is this caned to trace the path of the
difference that must be bullets fired at the Kennedy
analyzed if the village Is to motorcade' in DalJas Nov. 22,
keep the cost as low ·as 1963.
"Bullet trajectory ... goes
possible, as the cost factor
to
the heart of the issue
should take into con·
whether
a single bullet
sideration any and all
wounded
both
the JX"esident
possible future servicing of
and
(Texas)
Gov. John
the equipment."
Cmnally,"
said
G. Robert
So whether the piece of
equipme.nt will be forth· Blakey, the committee's
coming was "up in the air" chief coUnsel, in introducing
following the meeting even the witnesses. "It also locates
though council did approve the position of the assassin - .
acceptance of the bid and will or asse&amp;dns."
borrow the money for the
equipment, if necessary.
Hilah Jones, S. Third Ave.,
appeared before council and
·asked for a wider area for her
driveway exist. Council will
look at her problem .
A slight decrease in the cost
of natural gas was announced
and an air quality control
The Meigs County Comseminar was announced for missioners CET A Programs
Oct. 18 in Columbus. A letter are committed to equal
from the Ashland Refinery employment
opportunities
announced a one-half cent per for all applicants, par·
gallon increase in .gasoline as ticipants and employees in all
or Sept. a.
facets of its operations; and
Council approved the where deficiencies are noted
A~gust report or Mayor Fred
to take affirmative action to
Hoffman showing receipts of correct such deficiencies.
$1,963.75 in fines and fees and
In addition, it is a policy to
$144 in merchant police recruit, hire, and promote in
collections for a total of - all job classifications without
$2,107.75.
regard to race, color,
Transfer of the liquor lUltional origin, sex (except
license of the Good Times Bar where sex is a bona·fide
from Charles Humphreys to occupational . quaWication)
Betty Gilkey was approved. age, political affiliation,
The resignation of Helen ancestry, handicap (provided
Shuler from the Board of physical limitation does not
Public Affairs was an· prevent job performance), or
nounced and Tom Anderson beliefs.
of Fair lane Drive was named
It is a policy to take af·
as her replacement.
firmative action to insure
Mayor Hoffman stated that all training programs
officials will have to look into
the purchase of a circulating
pump for the Middleport Pool
before next season. The Veterans Memorial Hospital
mayor reported Capt. Sid
Admitted : Effie Buskirk,
Uttle had attended a meeting Rutland; Cilrl Tryler, Dex·
at Hocking Technical College ter; Dorsa Parsons, Racine i
oo new jail regulations. The LaDonna Clark, Pomeroy ;
mayor indicated there are a Fannie Aleshire, Racine ;
number of new regulations Minnie Clark, Middleport ;
which must be met by Mid· Ruth Lutheran, Racine.
dleport. He indicated Mid:
Discharged : Golda Epple,
dleport may become a 7-2· Debra Fleming, William
hour maximum confinement Pigott, and Nancy Pullins.
jail. The mayor will make

twice their ncrmal rate In a
moderately succesaful effort
by the acho&lt;il board to keep
classes . open during the
strike, were released Immediately.
The board originally
proposed a 4 percent teacher
wage increase. During the
bitter days of the strike, it
reduced the offer to 1.6
percent.
But
union
negotiators finally won a 7
percent raise.
The new contract raised
minimum salaries from
$10,096 to $10;8031cir teachers
with bachelor's degrees and
no experience. The salary for
teacher-s with 12 years
experience and a doctorate
would be raised from $15,200
to $16,425.
"This was a strike at an 00
percent effective level," said
Nat Lacour, president of the
teachers union. "I hope it is
never again necessary to

cmduct another strike."
new cmtracl
Troubles for the New
Slrlba llled 110,000 city'
Orle1111 students have not . college lludenta for a 1hlrd
ended, however. Bus drivers, wee11: 1n Cblcaeo a :11,000
who have been on strike since IIICll'e In lllree ~publlc
Sept. 1, llli11 are negotiating . school dlstrlcla. Other lllrlkes
with the school board.
kept 101,000 public IChool
In Burlington, VL, about lllldenla out of cJau In In
100 parents and students were Cleveland; 10,000 In Seattle
expected to march oo City and Tacoma, Wuh., and
Hall today to aak olficlals·to 30,000 In 'Dayton, Ohio.
pressure the school board
In Boston, negollatl0111 are
into
extending
an working to aver! a Thursday
"acceptable offer" to strike deadline that could
teachers to end a week~d sen&lt;! h&lt;me 70,000 studenta.
strike. Teachers dlsmanUed But
else'lfhere
in
their picket Jines today to Ma.uachuaeltl, teachers in
allow voters to enter sii Fall River and Chelmafwd
public schools used as polling went on strike, hatting
places In a primary classea lw 22,000 students.
electlm.
In Cranston, R.I., 740
Philadelphia's 250,000 striking teachers and the
public school pupils returned city's School Committee
to school Mmday. A !lbort reached tentative agreement
strike that canceled · the on a new contract late
opening of classes last Friday Monday, hours afler the
encled with rll,tillcat!oo of a . union dell~ a court order to
open classrooms for 12,700
stuclents in Rhode Island's
third-largest
city.
A
ratification
vote was
• scheduled today.
Teacher walkouts and ad·
(findings) for the fact' that it mlnlstrator "blackboard Ou"
assumes the shot came from outbreaks In Michigan ham·
the rear," Blakey said.
pered or halted educatim for
The Assassinations thousanda of pupils in elgbl
Committee, he said, took a school districts.
different apJX'oach.
Other strikes were under
" It decided to take the "BY in Vermoot, .California,
·entry wounds to the JX'esident Idaho, New York and New
and Gov. Connally as the Jersey.
starting points in its
calculations and working
outward from there. II was
llypothesized that, given a
margin of error, the
trajectory back from the
limousine would lead to the
positioo of the assassin."
The committee commlssion
An action for money and
ed
some
15
photo two complaints for divorces
scientists
. to
review · have been filed in Meigs
the film of the murder County Conunoo Pleas Court.
taken al t he lime by
The Racine Home Natiooal
Abraham Zapruder and by Bank filed an action for
scientific methods "locate money 00 two promissory
precisely the position of the notes in the amounts of
limousine" . at the time the $3,138.60 and $3111.44 against
shots were fired that hlt David E. Kiser, Route 2,
Kennedy and Connally.
Racine.
On Monday, acoustics
Charles Thomas Hill, Route
expert, Dr. James E. Barger, 2, Racine, has filed for
told the committee lour shots divorce fr&lt;m Debra K. Hill,
may have been fired at the Route 2, Racine, charging
JX"esiclential llmousine and gross neglect of duty and ex·
twice played a recording in treme cruelty and asks for
the hearing room In an eustody of the couple's two
attempt to prove his point. minor children.
To most members of the
Christine Kirkpatrick,
committee, reporter~ and Route 2, Pomeroy filed lor
publlcpresentlnthehearing divorce from Steven
room, the recording sounded Kirkpatrick, Weal Salem,
like lour distinct shots -two also charging gross neglect
in rapid successioo, a pause, and extreme cruelty, and
and then two more quickly asks custody of the two minor
fired.
children.

Schools remained closed in
Logan today where a school
district employee strike
entered Its third week
Tuesday.,
According to a story in
Tuesday's Logan Dally News,
the way has been cleared for
Intensified negotiation s
toward getting the . 15-&lt;lay
strike settled. Jim Myers,
Logan editor, in his story,

BACK TO BOARD - The fate of the Pomeroy High
School as to its becommg the community's village hall has
gone back to the drawing board. It will cost an estimated .
$100,000 to remodel and repair the structure plus another
$30,000 to !Dove radio and accessory equipment from the
JX'esent VIUage hall to the new quarters. It has been

..,

Was there another gunman ?
Cmnally was riding in the
jump 5eat of the presidential
limousine directly In froot of
Kennedy when tbe shooting
erupted .
Blakey said the Warren
Commission in its 196•
findings reasoned all the
!lbota were fired by Lee
Harvey Oswald from , the
sixth floor of the Texas School
Book Depository.
In. recoostructing the presumed bullet trajectories, he
said,
the
commission
Investigators plotted from the
sixth floor window to the
positioo of the presidential
limousine as determined by
motion pictures taken at the
time.
"The critics have decried
the commisston's trajectory

I

Affirmative
action policy _
and aU personnel actions
such as rate of compensation'benefits, transfers, and
promotions, layoff and ter·
mlnations be administered
with regard to race, color,
national ortgln, aex, age,
political affiliation, handicap
or beliefs.
Henry Wells, chairman,
will have the overall
responsibility
of
administering the programs. If
a program participant or
applicant feels he-she has
been discriminated against in
employment, seeking em·
ployment and-or training
with this agency he-she
should inunedlately contact
the E.E.O. Officer, I. Carson
Crow, to pursue the proper
discrimination complaint
procedure. Telephone 992·
5626 for appointment.

Money, divorce
actions filed

Men's Velour Shirts

I Bob Hoeflich)
m-5292
1~ High St.
Pomeroy

VOL XXIX

NO. 105

Lucas, administrator,
outlined . operational
procedures at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital at
Tuesday's noon luncheon
meeting of the ·Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Meeting at the Meigs Inn,
Lucas, ~uring a question and
answer session, pointed out

hospital operations have been
cut as much as 50 percent
during the summer due to
vacations and a shortage of
doctors. He stated there are
four active doctors on the
staff and that it is difficult to
get new young doctors into
smaller

hours involved in practicing .

FALSE ALARM
Area fire departments
and emergency squads
'O'M'AWA, Ohio (UPI)- Putnam County Commoo Pleas
were reportedly plagued by
Court Judge Richard Leopold has fined 'to striking migrant
aanonymoua
calla early
workers $50 each on disorderly conduct charges stemming
Wednesday
moralog.
The
from an Aug . 26 disturbance at the Libby-McNeill &amp; Libby
Middleport Emergency
cannery in Leipsic .
·
Unit was called to a nooexlsteot auto accident Ia
Rutland aad the Pomeroy
PARMA, Ohio ( UPI ) - An additional levy lor the Parma
Fire Department was caUe
School District was approved Thesday after nine unsuccessful
dto a non-existent fire In
attempts in nine years.
Harrisonville. Persona
The 6.7-milllevy passed by a vote of 14,858 to 12,217 in a
found guilty of making
special election . It will generate an estimated 15.197 milllon . such calls will be
over five years, wtping out the $1 milllon deficit JX'Ojec~ for
prosecuted to tbe fullest
this year.
extent of the law, officials
report.

46 strikers fined by judge

lOth try is charm for board

f262

II you'~~e nev.- wa.;n a ~~elour lhlrt- thla..,. coukl win
you ov.-. In f.IUih eolld CIIIGI'I with button placlalt end
elngle pocke , It' I tiOOd tooktng and a true piMeure to
pUt on . From the Studio One collection by Cam Pill In
never.lron ciiiiCII·polyeslw.

Sl111 S. M, L. XL.

Elberfelds In PomiiOJ

23 drivers
certified
Twenty-three bus driver
certificates were issued by
the Meigs County Board of
Education Tuesday night.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - David Kuykendall, 6, Columbus,
was killed Thesday night when a voting machine fell oo him.
Pollee said the child was playing in the nursery of a
Issued certificates were
bowling aUey on the city'slar west side and tipped the machine Carolyn Ritchie, Dennis
· over oo him. The voting machine was stored in the bowling- Eichinger, Alan Holter,
alley, police said.
Charlene Estep, John Riebel,
Frank Upton, Robert White,
Sarah Blake, Oris Smith,
Clark Lees, Joe Mitchum,
CIUCAGO ( UPI) - The FBI will begin eltlensive Keitha Whitlatch, all Eastern
campal&amp;ns to thwart the top echeloo of whlte-&lt;Xlllar criminals Local District ; Dona!A
and to moriitor spying by foreign governments, says Director Barrett, Harry Parker,
Patr·icia Parker, Pamela
Wi11iam H. Webster.
Ogdin·
, Fay Manley, Virgil
Expressing coofidence tliat agency Is doing "e:uctly what
Carl,
William Smith, all
the American people want," Webster said the FBI also aill
Meigs
Local, and Thomas
begin auii!JI(ng 8 volunteer cadre of special agents to rout mob
HiD,
Beverly
Dowell and
arson activity.
Marshall Adams, all South·
\
em Local.
The board authorized Supt.
TRENTON (UPI) -New Jersey authorities, following up Robert Bowen to attend the
leads that Jed to the seizure of 8 vintage DC-8 cargo plane wtth state meeting of county
nine tms of marijuana In July, have 111covered a mulll-millJon superintendents to be held In
dollar dnla ring that smualeil shipmenlll fl'OOl the jungles of Columbus begi~ning this
Colomllla to small alrporta In the East.
evening and running through
"The amount of cash that cha,.ed hangs was almoet . Friday·
.
mlnd.qgllng," Attorney General Jolin J. Degnan said
Courses of study m home
Theaday In announcing lhe Indictment of 24 ring members.
econo~lcs and drivers
educatiOn were approved.
The board set the ·next
regular meeting for Oct. 6.
Board members attending
OOLUMBUS, Ohio ( t,JPI) - The Ohio Senate Local were Harold Roush, Harold
· · Government Committee today considered emergency Lohse, George Perry, Oris
Jealalalioo to give Cleveland the.flniblllty to WCII'k on 10lvirul Smith and Robert Burdette.
Ill clebl problem.
A bW to do the Job wu Introduced at Tuelday'1 Senate
·leaiiGII, and the ctlliiDIUee Immediately '-rei tstlmolly on lt.
CLOSES OFFIE:E
a.v.land'1 finance clrector told the canmlttee IU city needl
Dr. John 1belas baa closed
lpedal dllpenaattm to ll'lgoliate the nflnanctng of f'O mlllim his veterinarian office at
In lhc.«enn no tea to regain financlalllabiUty.
Shade.
Dr. Thelas baa practiced in
Athens County since 111118 and
has been located at Shade
I
OOLUMBUS (UPI)- lm'prlle and -ppolntment have IInce 1975.
A 1965 graduate 1&gt;f Ohio
been l'tllll•rl!l In lhe llale leglllatlve halll over Gov. Jlllllla
Slate
University, Dr. Theiss
A. Rbodei' appointment of a retired uUiity euwtlve to a
will
be
area veterinarian
ftC8IIq oo the Public UtWtl• Commilllon Ill Ohio.
medical officer for the Ohio
. . . - - · !ram botb partiN prof
d tbat they did
, lltJt bow _..., lbaut Howard A. l)mgn!e wbam Jlbodu Depal11nent of Agriculture
• llllllld 'nllltlai, IIIIIIIIIU public~. But pr!Yately, tilly and WUJ be workinl In a
aeveral county area .
....lontd tha appointment.
It

Emergency hlll considered

No.

because of the income and the

i~J_r_h_e_w_or_ld_ro_d_a_y_

Miilionaire drug ring

Style

WEDNESDAY,

He noted the annual hospital
payroll is $900,000 and that
the hospital is equipped with
the latest medical equipment
and facilities.
There was no indication
c ommunities
that the local hospital will
.not continue to be open.
President Fred Crow
named a committee com·
' posed of Theron Johnson,
Paul Simon. Beulah Jones

Extensive campaign slated

Appointment big surprise

closed

talks. 'rhi s wa s issued,
howev er, before Nace's
a n n o un c e m e n t t h a t
negotiatoins wilt be in·
tens!fied.
Monday evening's strikeconnected activit ies started
off with a meeting at
Kachelmacher Park between
Concerned Citizens of the
LJJgan School District and
OAPSE representatives.
Some 60 persons attending
heard Robert LeCtain , fi eld
representative for the nonteaching employees, explain
OAPSE's position in the
current contract dispute.
He said he had asked the
school boa rd to beg in
negotiations last September,
but never rece ived a ny
response until Februa ry and
the fir st meeting was held in
March.
LeCJain charged that the
board has cancelled at least
SIX negotiating sessions. He
also held a question-and·
answer session.
Jim Pas ka!ane , OAPSE
field spec ialist , told the
crowd that Chapter 218 will
stay out 'until snow fli es if

necessary. • ''

Meanwhile, the Cleveland
Board of Education attorneys
and striking school employee
unions today were back in
court for more debate on the
dist ric.1.'s financial problems.

Dayton st~d e n ts marched
Tuesday in protest of a
teacher walkout.
Whil e Cleve land sc hool
admini st rators prepared to
ma ke a major effort to get
their strik ebo und system
operating, ,Cuyahoga Co unty
Common Pleas Court Judge
Harry A. Hann a today heard
oral arguments on passible
bu dget red ucti ons in th e
district .
'
The money saved would be
used ru fund pay raises for the
10,000 striking schoo l employees, who virtually shut
down the 100,000-student. 175school system Tuesda y.
In Dayton, about 200 pupils
marched in front of the Board
of Ed ucation Building
Tuesday. Hoping for passage
of a school tax levy on the
Novemb er ballot, they
chanted, "No teachers, no
schoo ls. !!

enttne
SEPTEM~ER

13, 1978

Hospital operations outlined
S~tt

held by the school board
Monday night, in which ' the
board inunedlately went into
executive session for nearly
four hours on negotiations
matters.
The first mediated talks between representatives of the
school board and LEA, - set
up over the past weekend will be held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday in the Columbus
offices of the Federal
Mediation Service.
Fegen, a Norwalk attorney,
had indicated · earlier that
after the initial bargaining
session Wednesday, he
wouldn 't be available again
until Sunday.
Supt. Nace said several
citizens have questioned why
the talks are to be held in
· Columbus. He said it is ·
because the sessions are to be
held in the federal mediator's
office.
Bill
Parrigin,
LEA
president, had no comment
on the strike situation 1 except
that the LEA was adopting a
wait - and-see position in
connection with Wednesday's

•

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Voting machine kills child

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS

THE PHOTO PLACE

e

• ELKHART, Ind. (UPI)- Indictments against the Ford
Motor Co. loomed as a posslbility today at the conclusion of a
grand jury Investigation of a fiery traffic accident in which
three teenaged girls riding in a Ford Pinto were kliJed.
Elkhart County Prqescutor Mike Consentino said the Jury
questlooed its last witnesses Thesday and returned today for
dlsclLssions of the alternatives.

SEE OUR NEW SELECTION

MARRIAGE UCENSES
Randall Rae Carpenter, 31,
Route 1, Minersville and
Peggy Ann Young, 21,
Minderville. ·
Malcolm L. Keen, 38, Coraopolis, Pa., and Charlotte
Rood, 30, Reedsville.
Eddie Russell, Jr., 40, Middleport, and . Jenny Jo
Ferguson, 23, Minersville.
Mark Allen Micqael, 18,
recommendations on the
Pomeroy, and Denise Ann
matter In the near future.
MEETS TONIGHT
Hendrix, 19, Reedsville.
'
Mayor Hoffman reported
Middleport Lodge 363, F.
Ricky Joe Smith, 18, Mid·
salt will be available locally and A. M., will meet tonight dleport, and Terri Lynn
through the Excelsior Salt at 7:30 p.m. for work in the Tobin,18, Middleport.
Co. this winter at $24.50 a ton. entered apprentice degree at
Donald Ray Pridemore, 22,
Councilman King reported the Middleport Masonic Tem- Pomeroy, and Jo Ellen Hin&lt;&gt;the tennis court area is being ple.
josa, 27. Pomeroy .
littered and Mayor Hoffman
indicated the area will be
cleaned up.

PLEASANT VAI.LEY
DISCHARGED - Robert
Warren, Gallipolis ; Mrs.
James Merrick, GaU!polls;
Margaret Coughenour,
Cheshire ; Homer Oldaker,
Edna Willl'amsoo and Mrs.
Charles Fisher, aU Point
Pleasant; WU!iam Duncan,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
Marvin Luckeydoo, Hen,
derson; Guata Huffman,
Glenwood; Michael Badgley,
Buffalo; Mrs. Albert Gr-dy,
Leoo; Mrs. Jasper Ukena,
Henderson; Mabel 0.11lett,
Wheeling; Melinda Waugh,
Lesage; John Harrera,
Southside.
BIRTHS - A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. William Har·
bour, Point Pleasar,t.

•

· Indictments said possible

ELBERFELD$

Getting your senior portrait made is a
private. personal experience. We make
vour appointment to fit into your busy
schedule and at your convenience.
· In order to provide a good variety of •
previews for vour final selection. we
photograph vou before Indoor traditional
backgrounds and In attractive outdoor
settings so popular today.
Feel free to call us- witl!out obligationfor details.

. suggested that $50,000 could be raised in contributions
especlaUy from Pomeroy High alumni wbo would like to
see the structure useful and maintained. However, the
village has been unable to aewre any grants which might
help with the remollellng and upgrading of the bllilding .
The entire JX'Oblem has been passed back to the building
. , committee of village councll. (Photo by Dorsel Thomas).

said :
"Supt. Richard Nace an·
noun ced Tuesday that
Michael Fegen, one of the
Logan School Board's hired
negotiators in contract talks
with the Logan. Education
Association and Chapter 218,
Ohio Association of Public
School Employees, will
propose to the federal
mediator that negotiations be
scheduled almost every day
and on weekends until the
disputes are settled.
Nace said he was notified
by Fegen or this proposal In a
telephone conversation
Tuesday morning.
Tuesd'I;)''S action came on
the heels of a special meeting

•
rema1n

and Katie Crow to select the
winner of the "man of the
year' ' award . He introduced

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Award bridge
contracts

Archie Stegall of the Fanners
Home Administration and
Billy Joe Spencer, General
Telephone Co. employe.
Nearly $2 millloo in highway COIIStruction work
Wendell Hoover of fhe
including
the West Virginia approaches to the Ravens:
Columbus and Southern Ohio
wood
Bridge
and renovation and improvement on nearly
Electric Co. was also in·
40
miles
of
state
local service roads, will be underway
traduced by Crow who ex·
soon,
foUow!ng
awarding
of contracts from the West
pressed regret for the
Virginia
Department
of
Highways'
Aug. 29 bid opening.
company's having moved its
Stevens
Excavating
Company
of
South Charleston
o££ice from Middleport.
was
awarded
a
$1,7116,279
contract
for
constructioo
of the
A discussion was held with
Weat Virginia approaches to the Ravenswood Bridge. The
StegaU regarding the Farproject, for grading, draining, bituminous concrete
mers Home Administration
pavement, abutment, Pier No. 9, signing and lighting on
program which has loaned
0.4\)5 miles of W. Va. 56, involves constructioo of an 82-foot
$2,333,000 in a three county
steel girder approach span and roadway to the bridge and
area and more than
includes the installatlm of a number fo 4().foot roadway
$133,000,000' over the state.
poles, with high.ftasllre sodium luminaires to light 611
During the diScussion, a
Intersection and the roadway loop onto the bridge.
question was raiSed whether
The contract is \he third of four !or coostruction of the
or not FHA funds might be
Ohio
River span whicb will provide two 12-foot Janes with
available for renovation of
nearly
4-foot shoulders between W. Va. 68 and Ohio 338.
the former Pomeroy Senior
River
piers are already under construction, bids taken
High School.
Aug.
29
for tbe Ohio approaches are being held for
It was decided to look
considerat!m
by Ohio and the final cootract for the
further into the possibilities
superstructure,
paving and bridge lighting will be ~
of an FHA loan for renovation
for bid Sept. 19.
.
of the structure. It was noted
that the village could comply
to regulations regarding the
nO&lt;od plane.
Others attending the
meeting were John Anderson,
Bob Miller. Phil Kelly, Jack
Carsey, Bill Mayer, Dave
Jenkins, Hank Cleland, Joe
Young, Bill Grueser, Rev.
Two persons were injured emergency vehicle, and was
Robert Graves, Stanley
struck in the rear by the
Houdashelt,
Emmogene in a one-car accident Tuesday Myers vehicle.
Holstein, Thereon Johnson at 11:55 p.m. on SR 1611, one
Both autos incurred minor
mile north of U.S. 35.
and Norbert Compton.
damage.
Myers was cited on
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
charges
or following too
tlighway Patrol, reports that
closely.
a vehicle operated by
The patrol investigated a
Michael R. Marcum, 27,
one-vehicle
accident at 4:40
Vinton, traveling north on
p.m.
,
on
CR
5,
five-tenths of a
110, went off the left side of
mile
south
or
SR
7, in Meigs
the road, struck and passed
County.
over a guardraU, and rolled
Officers repart that an auto
· down a steep embankment.
operated
by John R. Nelson,
Marcum and a passenger,
Penelope McMillin, 18, 18, Middleport, went out of
Vin ~on, displayed visible control in a curve . The
signs of Injury, and were vehicle passed off the right
transported by the patrol to side of the road into an embankment.
Holzer Medical Center.
The
auto
incurred
McMUJin was admitted for
moderate
damage.
There
treatment
of
facial ·
was
no
report
of
injury.
No
lacerations at 12:20 p.m., and
citation
was
issued.
is listed in good condition.
Marcum arrived at the
Medical Center at 3 p.m., for
treatment
of
facial
lacerations. A spokesm111 for
Holzer stated this moming
that be would probably be
admitted.
The Marcum vehicle was
RICHARD E. JONES
demolished.
Marcum was cited on
Melg1 County ·Comr
charges of DWI.
mluloaer Rlrhard E.
Mr . and Mrs. Walter
The Gallla·Meigs Post
Jone1 hal . beea aamed
investigated two other ac- Green, residents of Salem
chalrnuln ol tbe Meigs
Township, met with Meigs
cidents Thesday.
Couaty
Repulillean
Officers were caUed to the County Commissioners
Executive Commlllee. He
scene of a two-vehicle Tuesday night to discuss a
replace. Leslie F. Fultz,
collision at 9:06 p.m., on SR culven problem on township
Pomeroy, who re~l1atd
1611, at the ramp to U.S. 35. · road 37.
afler 10 yean 1ervlee Ia lbe
Engineer ·wesley Buehl
According to the patrol, an
post.
stated
he would check into the
auto operated by Paul E.
problem.
Myers, 30, Gallipolis, was
Judge MaMing Webster,
south bound on 180, following
. Bill Carr, Nora Rice, Grace
a
vehicle
driven
by
Owen
DISCUSSION HELD
Walters, 72, Patriot Star Weber and Wilma Parker of
Level four of the grievance Route.
the 169 board, discussed the
procedure preaented by the
mental retardation program
The
Walters
auto
rlowed
Southern Loca• Education for
and the levy to be voted on in
an
approachlng
Alsoclation was discussed
November.
when the SoUthern Local
Shelli Denise Ward was
Board of Educalion me' in
hiroo as a full-time secretary
special seaslon Tuesday
Lows tonight in middle 6lls at the County Infirmary on
niaht.
and highs Thursday In low the CETA program.
Bus routes were reviewed BOs.
Probability
of
Attending were Henry
and another special sessioo precipitation 80 ~rcent today Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
was sellor 7:30p.m. Sept. 18 and tonight. ao percent
Roush, commissioners, and
In the hlch school cafeteria. Thursday.
Mary Ho~etter, clerk.

.•

1

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'

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'

NEW SANITARIAN - Randy Marshall, a resident of
llayton for the past 12 years, has been named sanitarian
for the Meigs County Department of Health. Marshall
received his bachelor. of science degree in environmental
health at Wright Stat.! in Dayton in June , this year. As
sanitarian he will be handling inspections of J estaurants
and schools, trailer parks and camp grounds, taking
water samples, handling home sewage disposal system
applications, inspecting parks and pools and investigating
dog bites. Marshall says there is a tw&lt;&gt;-month backlog at
the present time oo horne sewage disposal system
applications. He is the son of Mr . and Mrs. Philip
Marshall, Dayton .

CAA director
Two persons hurt
.v ice-chairman

in one-car wreck

Culvert
problem
presented

Weather

~~

MARIETTA - Keith F.
Molihan, Radcliff , and
Joseph Barsotti, Galtipolis,

Ja nis Starn , Chilli cot he ,
presented the Youth Em-

were re-ele cted chairm a n
and vice-chairman respec-

tively of the Corporation for
Ohio Appalachian Development in a contested election
held at the annual COAD

report , showing 82 young
problem youth now employed
with a total of 186 served in
the past. The program is
designed to give problem
youth jobs and help them

conv ention.

is

becom e responsible citizens.

executive director for the
Gallia-Meigs CAA Program .
Molihan will be serving his

Mi cha el McPherson ,
Wellston , reported for the
Head
St art
Tr aining

Barsotti

second consecutive term as
chainnan, and has serVed

ploym ent Training Program

program, with a new class

training 25 persons will begin
this fall with the continued
expa nsion of the Head Start

three former terms. He is
also a National Director of
the National Association of prog ram.
Community Action Agencies.
Marvin Huston gave the
June Vernon. Adena, was re- F oster G randparent
elected secretary and An- Prog ram report showing the
thony Me!e, Marietta, was re(Continued on page 12 )
elected treasurer .

COAD is an association of
16 Community
Aetion
Agencie s

s er v in g

Southeastern Ohio counties.
Pat Cusick, Washington. D.
C., National Direetor of
Community.Action Agencies,
addressed the guests at the
Eighth Annual
CO AD
Banquet. He said, "We ha ve
the power of people" and
asking for solidarity for the
community action mov ement .

" We're

se rvin ~

over 20 million people and
have a power base in every
congressional
di stri ct ,' '
cusick said.
Staff report s or COAD
programs were presented
with Rose Marie Thomas,
Marietta, giving the Senior
Companion Program report.
There are 58 companions on
the rolls and a $1 73,000
budget. The Senior companions are assigned to
elderly clients in the tatters'
homes.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday tbroagb Sunday,
there will be showers daUy,
wltb hl&amp;ba In tbe 70s and
Iowa In tbe 50s.

Police
report
•

g~ven
Middleport Police Chief J .
J. Cremeans reports 31
arrests by· his department
during the month of August.
Eight persons were arrested
on disorderly manner
charges and there were four
charged with disturbing the
peace. Three persons were
charged with reckless
operation and two each for
drivin
. g while intoxicated·
runnmg a stop sign ; leaving
the 'scene of an accident;
fighting in public, and con·
tributing to the delinquency
of minors. One person was
arrested eac" for spinning
tires and carrying a Con·
1cealed weapon. Three cues
were discussed.
Parking meter collectloo!
for the month totaled $790.2(
and the police crulaer was
driven 4,341 miles dllrin8 the
month.

.

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