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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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'

....

'

.:1
·~

•&gt;. ltJ
~;

j

''

'

'

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.

.

�'

... MU~R. I?A.PE

IN WASHINGTON

A~D

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

ij:JOOEK(...

How 'MIT 'PUf

Martha Angle and
Robert W~lters

Ted: Fm1 is enough ••• today
By Martha Angle and Ro~rt Walters
BOSTON (NEA)- When the natiOn's governors deuded to
feature a discussiOn of natwna l health insurance at the1r an·

nuar meetmg here, the chmce of a lead speaker was obvwusly
Sen. Edward M Kennedy
And when the governors swtlrlted to a revtew of federal
regulatory refot·m, tt was only logtcal to ask Ute leadtng congressiona l proponent of atrline and truckmg deregulation to
join in - Sen. Edward M Kennedy.
The nwnber one toptc of mterestto the governor·s in the field
of cruninal jusltce ts the future of the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration, which funnels feder·al money to the
states to beef up thctr crnne-fighting capacrty. So who better to
consult than Sen. Edward M. Kennedy , author of btU to refonn
and improve LEAA ?
Although he spent less than a day at their conference. Ken11&lt;-dy was the dominant figure of the governors' meeting. effortlessly oocupying center stage wherever he went.
Even when the governors dtsagreed wtth tum, as many do on
the subject of naltonal health msurance, they acknowledged
Ute force of Ius argwnent and adrmreulus grasp of the tss ue.
There IS, 111 fact, hardly any area of domesltc or forergn
policy where Kennedy ts out of Ius dept h Aftet· 16 years 111 the
Sena te, he has accwnulated a remarkable degree of experttse
ori everythtng fr om strategtc arms llmrtatwns to the anti-tmst
laws
That alone would guarantee hun a steady stream of speaking mvitattons, even 1f tus name were , as the old hne goes, just
plain Edward Moore Wluclt, of course, tl ts not. And m this
summer of '18, with Jilmny Carter's poll ratings at an all-tune
low, Edward Moore Kennedy rs a very brg draw at any conferenee or meeting
Kennedy contmues to mstst wrth a perfectly straight fal'C ,
that he wrllnot be a candidate for prestdent 111 1980. And both
Ute people who answer the pollsters' questions and the polrticrans who scrutinize those replies, contmue to rgnore his
disclauners.
Kennedy could dampen the speculatuin at least somewhattf
he hunkered down and declined all mvttatrons to appearoutsi de his nattve stale. But he has nul done so. Indeed, he has
turned up all over the cowtlry these past few months al
high .visibiltly events rangrng from an NAACP meeting in
Detroit to ceremomes althe Umversrty uf Mrssissippi.
On occasion, as at a national ma yors' eonference a few monUts ago, Kennedy accepted an rnvitation tu speak after Carter
had declined to appear - a ctrcwnstanl'e whtch escaped no
one's altenlwn

Democratic candrdates from coast to coast' are ~seec hrng
lum tu campargn fur them thts year even as they scramble to
put drstance between themselves and Carter. And . Kennedy rs
respondtng. He wtll ~ 111 Pennsylvama later tins month to help
gubernatonal candrdate Pete Flaherty , tn Mam to campargn
for Sen. Wrllram Hathaway, m New Jersey next month for
Senate candtdate Br ll Bradley : m Iowa for Sen. Drck Clark ; in
Dlrnors for Rep Abner Mtkve and the sta te Democratic ticket
But he wtll also be m New Hampshrre on Sept. 30 for a state
party shmdig that he could easily have ducked, as he has done
m other yea rs New Hampshrre - wtth tis frrst-m-the-nation
presrdentral prtmary New Hampshrre withits easy wrtte-in
laws - the kmd that penmt a candidate to walk off wtth ~
presidentt al prunary , as Henry CabotLodge drd back m 1964,
wtthout so much as lrftmg a finger
Why ts he gmng? "Oh, I just thought 11 would be ... .. and the
word -- run " hung m the atr, chopped off by the mrschievous
gn n and a mock groan of, ·Oh, no you don 't ..
But there tl was, nonetheless. Ted Kennedy rs having fun .
Tile more they grit therr teeth at the Whrte House, the more fun
Kennedy has For the moment, rt is enough. Tomorrow may
never come, but sufftcrent unto the day ...

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:

H y poglyct-mia
amlth•· milk

habit
DE AR DR LAMB - l have
l&gt;eert havtng so much trouble
Wltil gas f dectded ( O USe the
lactase enzyme 111 my rmlk as
I drt nk qmte a btl and l have
low blood suga r 1hypo·
glycerma l
l wonder tf rt 1s all rrght for
a hypog lycemrc to use the
lactase as tt spltts the sugar
mrntlk mto smgle sugars
l wrote to the Suga r-Low
Company, 3540 Atlanltc
Avcrtue. P 0. Box 1011, Atlart·
tic Ctty, New Jersey 08404 to
ask alxlut thts and thev wrote
ba c k t ha t tf i had
hypuglycetma to ask my duetor tf tl was all right fur me to
use the enzyme.
I asked hun and he satd
"Try 1! - you rmght feel ~I­
ter. " what

IS

your opmwn

about ltypoglycernrcs usrng
Laci·Atd ?
DEAn READER - !..actAid is an enzyme that splits
the lactose !the double sugar
mrntlk ) Ill two' so tt can be absorbed. People who have a
normal amounl of letrt.asc enzyme in thetr mtestine do this
on \herr own IL's useful then,
just for people who have a
deficrency in the lactase enzyme , but there are plenty of
those, parttcularly among
adults. It really doesn't do a
thing to milk that the normal
body doesn't do m Ute
digestive process.
There 's no great diffe• ence
between using mtlk that has
been treated by Lact-Aid and
milk wluch ts split by lactase
in a nonnal person's mtesline
in tenns of tls effect on blood
sugar and 1ts relationship to
low blood sugar or, for that
matter, to diabetes.
True, tl wlll provide unrnediate single sugars for the
body to act on in the amounts
liSUally found in milk , but the

r .

r.

same tlung happens wrth any
Irulk that yo u use anyway tf
you fonn lactase enzyme,
whether you're a dtabetr c or
l"'ve low blood sugar.
Mrlk tntolerance certamly
can cause gas troubles but rt
ts only one cause for them. To
gw~

you more mformalwti

alxlut ga s I am sendmg you
Tite Health Letter nwnber
&amp;-8, Controlling Gaseousness.
Other readers who want help
"'tit thts problem can send 50
cents wrth a long , stamped,
se lf-addressed envelope for
Uus tssue m care of this
newspaper, P 0 Box !551,
fuldro Crty Statton , New
Yor·k, NY 10019.
DEAR DR LAMB - My
mother, age 86, has to take
water pills These keep her up
allnrght long Dunng the day
she ts all worn out and can 't
;1ay awake . Aldactazide ts
tile name of the medicme she
IS takmg. This makes her
practically an mvalid. She is
all right other than this. Is
there any way besides th1s
rnedtcme that you know of tu
solve her problem?
DEAR READER - Aldactaztde 1s really a combinatron
rnedtcme which lends tu
elumnate water and lower
blood pressure. The dturetic
agent 111 AldactaZide that
nushes out water does not affect potasstum the same way
many of the diurettcs do and ,
for that reason, it ts not wtse
to take additional potassiwn
when you're taking Aldactazide.
Even so, washmg out
sodtwn salt and water in ex-

Another Cart ern0 mmee
creating h~problenns
e

By IRA R. AlLEN
WASIDNGTON (UPI )
One of the first nommat1ons
President Carter sent the
Senate · when the 95th
Congress began caused him
grref, and, now, one of the last
the Senate will consider may
cause him as much pain.
The first was Theodore
Sorensen to head the CIA. He
withdrew
under
fire,
admittiQg he removed
classified materials from the
Kennedy White House for his
personal use.
The latest problem is John
McGarry, a Boston lawyer
and businessman and protege
of Speaker Thomas O'Neill,
whom Carter wants on the
Federal
Election
Commission.
It was 12 monUrs ago when
Carter moved to fill two
vacancies on the SIX·
member, bipartisan FEC, the
~ye ar-old agency charged
with enforcing campaign
finance laws enacted after
Watergate.
One of the nominees Iuld to
be a Republl{:an , one a
. Democrat. To Uris day, no one
has heen apP.Ointed, in large
measure because Carter
chose people beholden to oher
interests than pure electioo
reform.
The Republican was Sam
Zagoria, a former reporter

and labor specialist, who was
a Democrat In philosophy and
Jl"actice and a Republican in
name only. He was opposed
for most of a year by tbe GOP
congressional leadership who
beld up Senate action because
be was not amon~ their
EvenrecommendatiOns.
tually he withdrew his name,
and a successor has not ~en
nominated yet.
The
Democrat
was
McGarry, who was held up by
Republicans until the Zagorta
matter was being settled.
Though he was a consultant
and employee of Ure House
Admmtstratron Commrttee,
which oversees electiOn laws ,
lor 18 years, McGarry was
put up mainly because of his
fnendship and loyalty to
Speaker O'Neill.
. A GOP source working
against McGarry says the
nominee, as an investigator
for tbe House panel, "was an
expert of who stole what
election and not really an
on
campaign
expert
fmance ."
McGarry's nomination expired when Ure Senate failed
II&gt; act at the end of last year,
and now In the waning weeks
of this session, the attempt to
get him confirmed will
probably spark a long Door
debate certainly

embarrassing II&gt; Carter's Mr.
Clean Image.
McGarry has several problems that are certain to be
discussed fully .
One was his failure, while
a House employee, to report
on required disclosure fonns
the $70,000 he earned from the
dissolution of his law partnership. For one who would
enforce campaign finance
laws, the ommission was
glanng.
_
Second was a maze of
business dealings that left
both the IRS and Senate
investigators bewildered at
times.
Reka Hoff, a tenacious
auditor hired by the Rules
Committee
to
check
McGarry's tax returns,
differed sharply wrth both the
nominee and the IRS, which
had in past years found
nothing wrong with his
deductrons, Including more
than $26,000 in commuting
expenses between his Boston
home and the Capitol.
Miss Hoff, who refused II&gt;
be put off by either
McGarry's explanations or
Ure IRS, concluded that he
"evidently mls'epresented
Ure expenses" and In another
case committed "a material
distortion of income" In
computing a large deduction.

'l1le finance mlnllter to
French mooardl Loull XIV
OOCII obeerved that "the art of
taxation conslat• In 10
plucking the goote u to
obtain the J.raest poulble
amo111t of feetbers with the
smallest poulble amo111t of
hlaalng." Well, the American
g0011e Is being plucked bald
and It Ia hlulnc loudly at the
bureaucratic hand that
Plucks It. A tallp8yers' revolt
is underway and for good
rea01111. Forty.four centa out
of every dollar earned In Urla
cowtlry goes to govenunent.
From 1967 to 1977 federal
Income taxes rose 125
percent, IOCial security taxes
220 percent, sales taxes 199
percent, property taxes 132
percent and state and local
inc&lt;me taxes 405 percent. ·
'l1le only effective way to
curb government growth is to
put It In a constitutional
straightjacket; Ural is, lbJdl
by law what govenunenl can
tax from Individual incomes.
left unchecked, govenunenl
in a few short years could
confiscate as much as 80
percent of your paycheck. AI
that point the goose won't
hiss. It will be dead.
Back In 1972 Ure cooununity

of Bellevue In the State of
WaS!lngton app-o~ the 111e

of e«poral punilbmlnt In ita
pubUc IChoola. And no one
appll'entlY e&lt;mplalned abol&amp;
Ita 111e - that II, unlll the
Federal government decided .
to 111ep ln. HEW bureeucrata
after studying the number of
boys and glril belnlllfpUked
ruled Ural dlscrbnlnatlon wu
afoot.
The
school
superintendent denied any
policy of discrimination
saying 1110 heppena that boys
tend to be Involved In lbe type
of behavior that warrantl
corporal punilhment more
often than girll.
"U corporal punlmment Ia
necessary,., he said, ''we
should not have to consider
whether 'tis a boy or girl. 1t
should be judged on the baals
of behavior." After talking to
Bellevue school officials, I
am _happy to say that HEW
has decided to withdraw any
contemplated action. But the
point still remains that what
has happened to Bellevue,
Washington shows just how
far the long ann of the
Federal govenunenl reaches
into our lives and our schools
and how petty ita meddling
can become.

Third,
although
not
particularly damaging to his
chances in the Senate, was
McGarry's demeanor and
background.
Answering questions from
the c&lt;mmittee, be sounded
evasive, at times like doubletalking comedian Norm
("Hey, Beertender") Crosby.
By KENNETH R. CLARK
His financial practices and
Ualted Prell IDternaU. .J
political associations marked
FALL LINE : The prophet, seer, revelator and leader ci the
him as someone who would
world's
4 million Mormons doesn't care what the yoonger
not liltely he a reformer oo
generation
considers chic In the way of wardrobe. llpeaeer W.
the FEC, although to he sure,
KlmbaU says when they go to Brigham YoiDig University,
most memhers of the FEC
have
been
clubhouse Urey'U honor the rigid dress code or get out. 'l1le 112-year-old
politicians put on the agency KlmbaU laid down the law Tuesday In his annual dewtional
speech at the churcho()Wiled school In Provo, Utah. Said he,
as a reward for past political
"We hope you would not spend your time banging your head
services.
against
these regulations. One factor contributing to immodesAnd that is really what's
ty
and
a
breakdown of moral values Is the modem standard of
hehlnd Carter's misbegotten
dress
and
grooming. We must be different."
nominations. They were, apparently, designed to make
MUI'II!&lt;Y MAGNETS: Neither of them' was able to win the
sure the FEC's ~opposed
1976 presidential election, but ex,Callfornla Gov. Ro1111ld
neutrality has a slight tUt Reagan and former Presldeul Gerald Fonl still appear to be
toward the Democratic view
the heavyweight champions 'of fund raising. The ooe-Ume
Ural Republicans have too
political antagooists joined forces TUesday in Dallaa on behalf
much money to spend too
of Republican oilman William Clemeau, who uplrel to be
freely In congressional
governor of Teua. Backers paid $1,000 a plate to hear Ford
elections.
praise Clements and Reagan lllten Prellldelll Carter's foreign,
From that perspective,
~nomic and defeue policies to abetract art - "II doeln'l
anything to help equalize the
make any sense no matter how you look at it." The take- a bit
GOP's fund-raising and
spending prowess would be more than $1.3 million.
welcome. C&lt;me to think of it,
DOWAGER QUEEN: What do you give a dowager
Miss Hoff, the auditor, might
queen who baa everything? Wby another tiUe, ci coune, llld
have made a pretty good
the one bellowed Tuesday on Brltaln's 7&amp;-year-old Qaeea
nominee. But nobody asked
Mother Elbabelb is a cherished antique Indeed. Site's now
her party affiliation.
Lord Warden of the Onque Porta - a !,~year-old job that
used to lnwlve 11plrtted defenae of aeaporll In the EncJiah
Channel with headquarters at Dover Castle. Nowadays, It's an
honor reserved for retired dlatinguilhed citizens. The late
Wbratrm Cbardrlll ooce held II and the lalt lord warden wu Sir
Robert Meaxlea, former prime minister of Auatralla. Qaeea
Ellubetb'a mother Ia the llrlt wcman ever BOhonored.

peopletalk

The lighter side: An .early start
By DICK WEST
WASffiNGTON (UPI )
The 1980 election is still a
good two years away and
already the "not runners"
are out In force.
You see them everywhere
- political heavyweights ,
and even a few mid·
dlewelghts, in both parties
vrgorously not running for
president.
Jerry Ford not-runs
somewhere nearly every
week, usually at a golf
tournament. Ronald Reagan
ts another Republican
regular, showing up at
polltrcal gathermgs all over
the coUntry to deny he is
runntng .
On the Democratic side,
Gov . Edmund Brown of
Calrfomia has lately become
an active non-candidate of
considerable stature. But by
all odds the current front running not runner is Sen .

CONSTmJTION WEEK
The Daught ers of the
American Revolution remind
us that September 17th
through 23rd has been
proclaimed by the President
of the United States as
Conslltution Week. If our
Nation Is to remam vital, 11
must malntam the spirit of
liberty expressed 111 our
Constitution If we fail to
guard that spirit, and become
mdifferent to the worth of our
freedom , we will have lost the
right to freedom. Read your
Constitution.

eess amoWlUl t.:an_ t.:aWje a

person to be Migued. Certainly not getting sufftcrent
rest at mght would cause
fatigue.
· The only real answer is to
gu to your doctor and Ialli tu
hun about your motber. He
nught wi sh tu use a different
diureltc agent or decrease the
amount she ts taking, depending on what her baste
medrcal problem really ts.

•

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middlepart~Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Sept. 13, 1978

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.l3, 1978

Edward Kennedy .
While I don't have an accurate count, I feel confident
111 saymg that Kennedy has
been Interviewed at least 800
times this year on the subject
of his not running
And interest 111 hiS
disclaimers are growing
every day .
Everywhere he goes he Is
asked about his lack of
presldentlalmtentions. There
are frequent national polls
pitting him In trial heats
against President Carter, the
memory of Elvis Presley and
other promlnent personages
and phantoms. Each visit to
the magazine rack discovers
yet another article detailing
his reasons for not running.
Anyone adept at jumping to
C&lt;Jnclusions might Infer that
Kennedy has a bit of a
credibility problem - that no
matter how many times he
reaffirms his status as a not
runner, many people remain
unconvinced.
But I think it's more of a
C&lt;Jmmunicalions problem that despite the multiplicity
of disavowals on his part,
many people still aren't
gettlng the message.
I was talking to a com·
mumcallons expert about this
and he confirmed that

national politicians begin not
running for president earlier
now than they once did.
" W1th so many other things
competing for the public's
attentron, it takes that much
longer to make people aware
that you aren't rWUIIng," he
explained.
"If a non-candidate could
use bumperstickers, posters
and other traditional political
tools, you could make your
position known fairly quickly.
But those things cost money
and the Federal Election
Commission won 'I provide
any funds to offset the expense of not running.
"So you are forced to rely

on press
conferences,
newspaper interviews,
television talk shows and the
like. All of which are pretty
unreliable.
"When you appear on a
panel show there Is no
guarantee that anyone will
ask whether you are getting
into the race . That makes It
difficult to get yourself fitmly
established as a bona fide
non-candidate."
I said, "I can see the
problem. What happens If you
walt too long not to run?"
"The others who aren't
running will he so far ahead
you won't have a chance to
catch up "

Berrys World

INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MABON •REA

ROBERT HOEFUCH
CttrFAUtor
PulllitihOO dlnly except SHturdly

Juatlce Department
spokesman
Terrence
Adamson wu not IIJIICiflc

Company-MuiUmedlll, Inc.,
Ill
Cuurt Sl , PuHlt'IV)', Ohlu 4$7811.
businelili OHM:~ Phone tt2- 1156
Editor lid Phone 9'12-11~7.

abouttM~,bHIIwu

Set'Ond clail putilMI(e ~d 1tl

I

Tnn~olmd

Probe underway

Georp.

by Tilt Ohio Valley PuiJillhinC

Pon~ruy,Ohiu.

HOUSTON (UPI) - The
Houston Astros Mooday ac·
qulred the contract of -~
lilttlng minor-leaguer Jeff
I.A!onard as the aecood player
from Loll Angeles In an
earlier trade of catcher Joe
Fergt111011. "

GLIMPSES: allford lrYiq, Who faked the btocrapby of
Howard Hqbea, and Die Nutaae, who faka out opponenb on
the tennil court, llhowed up to congratulate Mille Wallaee llld
Dtlvld Frolt Tuesday at a New York party honoring the lOth
annlverury of CBS-TV's "60 Minutes" ... CBS televlalon
newnen Clllrlet Kllralt and Bm Moyen, and the ABC ll!lWI
segment "20-20," are Emmy wlnnen, for excellence In
broadcut Journaillm ... Claadette Colbert Ia reheal'llnll ' 'The
Klncbrer" In New York wi~ Re:rr: Harrlloa under the
dl:rectlon of Lllldlay Allele~ ... Novelist Taylor Caldwell will
he In New York Oct. 4 to promote her latest work, "Bright
Flows the River" ....

By GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UPI) The Juatlee Department said
today II Ia lnveatlllatlng
reported . attempts by a
G-&amp;la man to approach
White Houae officials on
behalf of fugitive financier
Robert veaco.
Vesco, who II living in the
Bahama• .ml out of reach of
federal Investigators,
allegedly tried to Influence
two of Prelldent Carter's
cloaelt advbon - Hamilton
Jordan and Cllarles Klrbo through their friends ' in

11fE DAILY SENTINEL
DE1JO'I'ED TO 111£

NlltiofiMI tldvt'rtillmg 1ttprese-n·
~Uve. L.andoo A~WUC:I.iilell, 3101
tudid A.ve , Clev'elllnd , Ohio 44U:i.
SubscrapUtfl '!'01te* Dellvtn&lt;l by
tarrier w~re i v11Uable 75 Cl"l'ltl pel
Wtit:k By Motor RouW wl~rl! camer
t~ervlct £alit avaliMble. Ontl monLh,
SJ.25. By tnall In Ohlu and W. VII .,
())e Ye~r . U2 00; SIA 1nonU.~·
Ill $0 , Thtet! rnunlhJ , t7 00 ~
t.L'Ie~re fai.OO year; Six nwntiVI
SLUO; Tlm:e monthll, 1 7 . ~ .
tiub~riptkm price includes Sund•)

FAlL-DOWN COMIC : Chevy Clllle, who won fame for
falling down on "SatW'day Night Uve," aays he hal ablolutely
no desire to be a llan&lt;klp comic. Not that he objects to working
on hla feel aom«imea, but he recently told an Interviewer he
doesn't have the temp«ament to do the ldDd of nightclub
comedy that depends on polilhed deUvery ci aiel routine. Says
the two-lime Emmy-wlnner, "I'd be bored Iliff ... II takes
dedication and a de.perate need to have people laugh at you.
I'm not that cleaperate. To me, moat comedians look
unhappy."

(f)1978Dy NEAin t

~~

" It's the latest - see-through plastic pants,
JUSt like they wear at discos! "

The matter first was
disclosed by syndicated
columnist Jack Anderson,
who In another report todaY
said wilneaea have alleged
the plot Involved a $10 mWion
payoff, aome of which would
have gone to Jordan.
Veaco fled the United
State• following his Indictment on chargea he
plwtdered a poo million
mutual fund and tben tried to
buy his way out of trouble by
contrlbutlnl $100,000 to
Nixon'•
1t72
Richard
prelidentlal campal&amp;n.
He recenUy l.tt Colla Rica,
under pre~~~~n, and Iince bu
been lltl)'inlill the"'hlrmuAttemptl to atradltt 111m
hlr:ve lalled.
Adamson said the J.-tc:e

helleved to center around
reported attempta by Spencer. Department normally doll
Lee IV, of Albany, Ga., I not maile public crlmlllll
dOle lawyer friend of Jor- lnvllliptlona, but bt aald,
dan's, to persuade the ado "It Ia cl•rly In the public
mlnllllraUon to help Vesco lnterlll .. . that thin be
pu bile confidence lllat
aolve hla lllel probllllll.
mattan
of lbla IIGI't ue
Both J~_Land Klrbo
hlrve den1ed _,- ever were handled In tbt r•plar
approached.
c:hamMII of the~··
...apooii~Wtlea."

•

'Lousy hunt' gives Cincinnati 4-3 win
CINCINNATI ( UPI ) Rick Auerbach admitted It
was a lousy bunt.
" But," he said wiUr a grin,
"the result wail tremendous. "
The acore was tied 3-3, one
was out In the bottom of the
ninth and Ken Hender10n had
just drawn a walk from
Houstm Astro relief pitcher
Joe Samblto when Auerbach
stepped to the plate.
Reds' manager Sparky
Anderson flashed Ure bunt
sign,
"And I banted the ball right
back to the pitcher," liald
Auerbach.
Samblto, fielding the ball,
wheeled and fired a throw to
second fa- an attempted fa-ce

out.
"A tailing fastball-that's
what Samblto gave (Rafael)
Landestoy ," Anderaon said.
When the Astra lefty's
throw sailed beyond the
reach of Landestoy and
skipped along the Astro-Turf
past center fielder Terry
Puhl, Henderson raced h&lt;me
with the run that gave the
Reds a 4-3 victory Tuesday
night.
1
"I was headed foc the
inside of the bag," said
Henderson. " I was going to
make sure Landestoy wasn 'I
gorma get off a throw to first
for a double play. Why he
didn't catch Samblto's throw
1 don't know. Mavbe he was

looking at me. Maybe I
distracted him and he took
his eyes off the hall."
"Uke I said," repeated
Auerbach, "It was a lousy
bunt but Ure result was

tremendous."
The victocy was the Reds
ninth In their last 12 outings,
and left them 6\2 games
behind the Dodgers as they
headed Into tooight's opener
of a two-game series with the
Padres In San Diego.
"We woo, but if Paul
(Moskau) doesn't foul up a
couple of sacrifice bunts and
makes a quicker Urrow to
first on Puhl's bunt, the score
would have heen 5-I and he 'd

had the victory ," said sore arm, responded wrth a
Anderson
single and a double and a
As It turned out, Doug Bair, flawless performance on the
the Reds relief ace who field .
blanked the Astros in the top
The two hits boosted Auerof the ninth, picked up the bach's batting average to
victory, his seventh against .333- 16 for 48.
five losses.
Auerbach laughed when inAnderson , however, was formed he's in the midst of a
the only one in the Reds nine-game hitting streak
clubhous e who wasn't dating back to July 2.
wearing a happy smile.
"You gotta be ktddmg," he
11
l'm so tired from running satd wrth a grin.
that I'm ready to fall .over
"Wtth that average, you've
dead , but I don't mind it," he got a chance to win tbe
said. "I'm always happy batting IItle," someone
when I get a chance to start a kiddingly remarked to the
game. "
Reds handyman.
Auerbach, hlling it at
"Yeah, if he starts aU of the
shortstop
for
Dave 17 games we've got left and
Concepcion who's nursing a they all go 40 innrng&lt; ."

Pirates cut Phillies
lead to four games
By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
One thing has remained
constant in the 197011 - the
Pittsburgh Pirates'
contentioo for the National
League Eastern Division
tiUe.
Tuesday night, the Pirates
heat first.place Philadelphia,
5-I, behind a pair of two-run
homers by Dave Parker,
moving them wtthin four
games of the PhUiies with 18
games remaining for both
teams. Since the four-division
realignment in 1969, the
Pirates have never finished
lower than third place In the
NL East and only once have
they failed to win at least 88
games.
Parker, Tl, is heir apparent
to 37-year-old Wlllle StargeU
as the Pirates' captain, and
the S-foot-5 right fielder was
the overwhelming choice of
major-league
general
managers in a recent poll to

name the game's best player.
But Pittsburgh Manager
Chuck Tamer sa)'l! his main
man Is hurling.
"He's (Parker) been wtder
a lot of pressure," said
Tarmer. "He's tired, he's
playing with a lot of hurts . ...
I also think the pressure
really has him tired."
Tamer was alluding to
more than pennant-race
tension .
Parker , who had no
comment to reporters after
Ure game, received a death
threat before Monday night's
game, but that didn't stop
him from belting his 25th and
26th homers Tuesday night .
John Milner added a solo
shot for Pittsburgh II&gt; support
the combined seven-hit
pitching of John CandelariB,
11-11, and Kent Tekulve, who
recorded his 29th save. Larry
Christenson, 11-13, took the

Montreal trinuned St. Louis,
5-I, San Diego downed
Atlanta, ~1. and Los Angeles
routed San Francisco, 8-0.
Chicago at New York was
rained out.
, Expos 5, Cardinals I:
Rudy May tossed a threehitter and Gary Carter drove
in two runs II&gt; pace Montreal.
May, 7-9, pitched his third
complete game of the season .
Padres 3, Braves 1:
Gaylord Perry, four days
short of his 40th 'birthday,
Improved his record to IU
with a five-hitter and Dave
Winfield collected three hits,
lncludlng his 22nd homer, to
lead San Diego over
Atlanta.
Dodgers 8, Glanto 0:
Burt Hooton pitched a five' hitter for his third shutout
and Dave Lopes drove in four
runs with a double and a
homer, as Los Angeles
loss. ~
,
Increased its lead to six
In other NL games, Cincin- games In the National League
nati edged Houston, 4-3 , West.

One league encounter
on tap· Friday night
One league eontest and four Huntington of Ross County
non-league encounters are on Saturday afternoon .
tap this weekend in the
In another Class A battle,
Southern Valley Athletic Symmes Valley IS at home
Conference.
against Manchester.
Southwestern, fresh off a
Southwestern was the only
29-14
victory
over league team postmg a win
Southeastern, travels to last weekend.
Southern in the only league
Sophomores Joe Potter and
game. Seeing action In non· Dale Newberry were Inleague engagements will be strumental ln the HighlanKyger
Creek
vtsiting ders' vrctory at Rich·
Aleunder; North GaUia wiU mondale. Potter had three
host Zanesville's Rosecrans touchdowns while Newberry
arid Hannan Trace goes to made several clutch catches.

Royals pick up fUll
game over Angels
By FRED McMAjiiE
UPI Sports Writer
The Larry Gura who ooce
wu ridiculed by Billy Martin
u nothing moce than a
batting practice pitcher hu
vanished, llld In his place Is a
stylish lefthander who has
been one of the more
coosllltent pitchers in the
league Uris season.
And Tuesday night, Gura
gave the Kanaas City Royals'
pennant hopes another boost
by toulng a five-hitter and
stopping the Oakland A's, 8-1,
for hla 14th victory.
n .... the alxth complete
game - a career high - for
. Gura and he lowered hla
earned run aver111e to a
, llllnll)' 2.70, the alxth belt In
the league. Hla IH record
also l!gurea out to the third
bell winning percentage at
.7'18.
Gura '1 performance
enabled the Royall to pick up
a full game on Callfomla In
tha American League West
Dlvllloo race. The Angels
· were beaten by Texu, 7-5,
llld trill IM Royals by 2¥a
game~ .

''Golnllilte thla, being ,on
lbe team apln and -lng ua
win makll me real hlrppy,"
, said Gura. "Befcre, the 111ly
, time 1pitched waaln the lui
part of the - . but Whitey
' (Herq) pn me
~ arb' thll year."

a lhol

" Oa-lend'• bell bltl8r. Rleo

C&amp;rty, waa quick to
complbNmt Gura.
"Be'l I lllllri pitcher,"
: uld CartJ. "He'a very
IIIIa llld pula lbt ball
•
wbtn
ht Wlllllll."
(
.
1

Gura wu supported by a
18-blt attack, which Included
Urree apiece by Pete LaCock,
Amos Otis, George Brett llld
Hal McRae. LaCock drove In
three runs and also scored
one.
Elsewhere In the AL, Bal·
limll'e nipped Boston, 3-2,
Detroit trimmed New York,
7-4,
Chicago
topped
Mimeaota, 8-1, and Seattle
edged Milwaukee, 6-5 .
Toronto at Cleveland was
rained out.
Rangers 7, Allgeill 5:
Juan Benlquez' two-run
homer and Jim Sundber11's
three-run double sparked a
five-run fifth Inning that gave
the Rangers their victory.
Orioles I, Red Sox !:
Dennla Martinez toued a
three-bitter and Lee May
drove In the wlminl run with
a fielder's choice grolllder in
the lli:rr:th Inning u Baltimore
edged Bolton.
Tllen 7, Yar' ea t:
Steve Kemp hit a tJu-ee.nm
homer llld Ron LaF1ore llld
Rusty Staub added BOlo lhota
In helping the 'llgen -P the
Yankees' slx1!1me winning

rrtreak.
WbiW 8ft .. Twill 1
Lamar JCibiiiOII balled In
four nma with a pair of
llinlllea llld Rich Hlnlm, 2-1,
pltdled a camplete 111111e In
onl)' hla aecond 1111'1 of the
rreaaon to lead the White Soli.
MariMn ' . . . . . 1:
Tll'n Paclcrek of Seattle bit
a lwiH'wl ainllle In the ninth
lnninlto keep Mllwauk• tit
118J1111 behind lbe flrati)llce
11o1111a Red Sox In the AL
Eut.
'
j

,I

chuned rn Henderson .
It could be Auerbach will
start the two games against
the Padres.
"The only thing Is we're
going to face Bob Owchlnko
and Bob Shirley, and Concepcion hits left handers so well I
had to keep him out of the
lineup," Anderson said.
Doubles by Joe Morgan and
George Poster gave the Reds
a 1-0 lead 111 Ure hrst mrung
Tuesday njght.' After Enos
Cabell matched the run with
a homer in the top of the
second, the Reds went ahead
2-lln the bottom of the frame
on sin gles by Champ
Summers
and
CSAR

Geronimo and Mo skau's should have won 5-l ,"
Anderson repeated .
infield out
Trailing 3-1, the Astros tred
Moskau 's fatlure to bunt
Auerbach to third after he led the score in the eighth when
off the fifth with a douzle off Cabell followed a bunt hit by
Astra
starter
Mark Puhl and a double by Jose
LemongeUo cost Ure Reds a Cruz wtth a two-run single to
run m the mntng, when a center .
subsequent srngle by Pete
" ff Paul doesn 't lake time
lhrowmg to ftrsl after ftelding
Rose was wasted.
. Summer's stxlh 111ntng Puhl 's bunt. the guy 's out."
homer, a smash Into the Anderson said "And w tell
toptrer seats in right field , you the truth , I thick Puhl
gave the Reds a 3-llead m the was out anyway "
sixth
,
But after Henderson
Moskau 's
failur e
to romped horne wnh the
sacrifice after Auerbach led wmnmg run m the bultom o(
off the seventh with a smgle the mnth , the Reds player
and stole second cost the conceded Jl didn 't m ake lou
much drflerence aft e1 all
Reds another run.
"That rs why l say we

Anderson
to miss 4 more tilts
.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major Leag"' Standings
By Un•ted PreU lnte .. nat•onal
Niltional League
Ph1ta
P1ttsbrgh
Chicago
Montreal
51 LO UIS
New York

East
W L Pet
GB
79 65 549
75 69 521
4
73 71 507
6
6~ 77
473 11
62 84 425 18
59 86 407 201 1
W est

LA
000 100 025- 8 6 0
Sa n F r an
000 000 000- 0 50
Hooton and Ferguson , Grote
!81 , Yeager (91, Mon1 efusco ,
L a~Je lle ( 8) and Ta mar go , H •ll
!8 1
W- Hoo ton
(18 8)
LMon t ef usco
( 11 7)
HR - Los
Anq eles Lopes ( 16 1

CINCINNATI (UP!) lineba cker Bo Harris and
Quarterback Ken Anderson fir st-ro und draft chotce Ross
will have the cast removed Browner, remain out of
from his right hand Thursday action wttllmjunes Harri S IS
for an examination , but he is "some time away" from
expected to miss at least four seerng action, accordrng to
more games for the wtnless coa ch B1U,Johnson
Bengals, who fa ce Pittsburgh
Some ' ca rtrl age
was
Sunday
tn
Riverfron t removed from Harrrs· left
Stadium.
knee Aug . 11, and Johnson
Dr. Harold Klelnert wtil said the left-stde lmebacker
examine Ander so n' s "has been gettrng a great
• fractured finger , operated on
Aug . 30. Kleinert, a nationally
kn own
hand
surgeon ,

Amcncan L eagu e
W L Pet. GB
Tor at Cleve , ppd , ram
Los Ang
87 58 600
mserted two srriall screws
San Fran
81 64 559 6
000 012 000- 3 50 mto the back of Anderson's
c, n c ma t l
eo 64 556 61 1 Ball
..
1
Bas
100
010
ooo2
3
3
San Otego
74 72 507 13 1
CANCELLED
D Martmez and Demp~ev , hand to help it heal after the
Ho uston
67 77 465 19 1 •
Torrez and F1s k W- 0 Mar
Atla nta
63 82 434 24
29-year-old
quarterba ck
CLEVELAND I UP! 1
t1 nez ( IJ 11 ) L - Tor r ez ( 15 10 )
Tuesday ' s Result$
it
durmg
a preseason The Cleveland lndtans
injured
HR Basion H obson ( 17 )
Chi at N Y . ppd . ra •n
victory over Green Bay.
Cincmnat1 4 , Ho us ton 3
canceled Tuesday mght 's
N Y
000 001 030 - 4 8 1
Mon1tr eal 5, Sl LOUIS 1
Two
other
key
Bengals,
scheduled
game against tbe
Det
302 010 01x - 7 10 0
PittSburgh 5, Ph1la 1
T1drow , L• ndb lad (3), DainS
Toronto Blue Jays ~cause of
Sa n 01ego 3, Atlan ta 1
(8), Lyl e (8) and M unson .
L OS An g a. Sa n Fr anCI SCO 0
rain
Heath (8)
Young, H1ller ( 8 ) - - - - - - - - - Today's Probable P1tchers
and May w -- Youn g (6 5) L The game wrll not be
(All Times E OT)
H Rs- Detroit ,
Atlanta ( Ntekro 18 15 ) at Sa n T•d r ow (7 10)
reschedul
ed ,
a
club
.105 , T hornton . Cl ev 95 , Ca rt y ,
Franc1sco ( Knepper 15 10 ), 4 05 Kemp ( 131, Staub (21) , LeFlore
Oak 9'2
spokesman
sa1d
.
(
I
ll
New
York
,
JacKso
n
(22J
pm
Stolen Bases
Chicago { Krukow 7 2)
at
Nahonal League · Moreno ,
0 10 000 000- I 7 0
PhiladelPh ia ( Rufh~Jen 13 101, Mmn
Ch1
200 040 OOx - 6 10 1 P1tt 03 L opes , LA 41 , 'ia ve ra s ,
7 35 p m
Ser u m, Per za nowski (5).
S l LOUIS (Fat cone 1 6 ) at
P1ll
37
Sm1 th ,
SO
35 , ~~~~~~-~--. .
Pittsburgh ( Bl y l even 12 9 l. 7 35 Jackson ( 8), T John son (8) an d
R•cha rds , so 34
~~
Amencan
League
:
LeFlo
r
e,
~
Borgman n H1nlon and Col bern
pm
Del
63.
C'
ul
.
Sea
49
.
Wdl5
l
ex
/&lt;liOn t reat (Sander son 1 2) at W- H1nlon (2 4) L - Serum ( 8
48. D1l 0ne , Oak 44, Wilson , KC
New York ( Hau sman 3 3 1. 8OS 81
38
pm
,...... '
PitCh lOg
100 000 000- 1 5 o
C•nc •nnali &lt;LaCo ss 3 7l at Oak
V1cton es
200111 21x - 8160
San D iego (Owchmko 8 121 10 KC
Nat1onal L eagu e Per ry , SO
L angford , Heaverl o (6) and
pm
18 6 Hooton , LA 18 8 . G r 1m
Houston ( Fors ctl 9 5 I at L os Hos l ey , Gura and Port er ws1ey, Mil 18 9, N•eKro, All 18
Ange l es (Rhoden 8 1J, 10 30 Gura ( 14 4) L - Lang for d ( 7
15, Blu e, SF 16 8 , John, L A 16
Il
l
pm
10 , R1c har d , Ho u 16 11
Thursday's Games
Am encan League
Gu 1d ry ,
Ca l if
200 200 100- 5 9 o
A tlanta at San Franc•sc o
001 150 oox - 7 1 2 NY 21 2, Caldw el l. Mil 18·9 ,
Montreal at New Yor k, n1 ght Texas
Tan ana , D M1ller (5) and Palm er , Batt 18 12, Tana na,
7'12 Pet. per year on
Chicllgo at Phil a , n1ght
Downmg . Med1ch . Cleveland Ca l and So rensen M1l 17 10 ,
Sl LOUIS at P1f1Sbgh , n1ght
Flanagan. Ball 17 12
4 year certificate of
(7l
and
Sun
dbe"rg
WMed1ch
Houston at Los Ang , n •ght
Earned Run A\lerage
(8 81 L - Tanana { 17 10 ) HR sCi n c t at San 0 1ego , n• ght
deposit.
.
lBased on 135 tnnmgs p1tched)
Texas, Bonds ' (27) , Ben•auez
National
L
ea
gue
Roger
s
,
Mtt
$1,000.00
minimum
( 10 ) , Ca llforn 1a , Fatr!y ( 10)
2 47
Swan , NY 2 49
Vuck
deposit
.
Mdw
010 130 000- 5 9 2.,. 0\IICh , St L 2 54 , Hoo ton . LA
Amencan League
Sea
300
100 002- 6 12 1 2 64 , Slu e, SF 2 70
A substantial penalty · ·
East
Amer~can
League: Gu•dry .
Bomback,
Rodr1guez
(2 ),
mvoked on all certificate
W L Pet . -GB M cCl ure (9). Castro (9) and
NY 1 71 , Caldwell. M.t i 32
87 57 604
Boston
accounts Withdrawn pr1or
Matla cK. T ex 2 42 , G,oltz , M1nn
86 57 601
112 Moore . M•tc hell , Todd (51 and 2 51 , Palmer , Bait 2.S'J
New York
lo the date of maturity .
St
1
n
son
WTodd
!3
4l
L
83 62 572
41 '2
Milwauk e
Stnkeouts
McCiure (2 6J
H Rs M 1!
81 63 563
6
Bal t•m r e
Nat
ion
at
League
·
R
•cha
r
d
,
waukee , Ogilvie ( 18 ), H1sle
78 65 .545 Bh (]1) Seattle . Jones (5)
Oetro1t
Hou 267 .
Nielc.ro . All
21 9 ,
62 81 434 24 1";1
Clevet nd
Sea\ler , c 1n 188 . M ont efusco ,
57 89 .390 31
Toronto
S~ 160 , Blvt e\lcn , P111 158
West
American League · Ryan , Cal
W L Pet. GB
226 Gu1dry , NY 220 Leonar d
Ma1or
~eague
L
ead
er
s
Kan (IIV
79 64 552
K C 164
F lan agan , Ba tt 145
By Umted Pre ss I nternallonal
Cat•t
78 68 534 2' 2
Kra\lec Ch1 14J
1
Battmg
Texas
71 71 500 7 1
(Based on ~oo at bats)
Oakland
66 79 455 14
Nat •o nal Lea gue
M1nesota
64 81 .441 16
The Alllons County
G AB H Pet
Ch1c ago
62 83 428 18
Savings &amp; Lo~n Co.
1
13 1 518 164 317
Seattl e
54 88 380 24 ~ Park.er P •t
Sports Transacftons
Cruz Hou
138 516 161 312
296 Second St.
Tuesdily 's Resulh
Burr ogh s All
138 443 138 3 17
To r at Cleve , ppd , ra1 n
By Un1ted Pr ess lnternat1onal
Pomeroy , Ohio
Tuesday
Madlock SF
109 406 1'26 310
Ba lli m ore 3. sosron 2
Clark SF
141 535 164 307
Foolban
Der ro11 7, New York 4
Garvey LA
145 579 175 302
Cleve la nd - S• gned off ens1ve
Ch lcaQo 6, Mmnesota 1
guard Greg Fa 1rchl!d as a fr ee
Ros e C1 n
142 589177 301
Kansas C•ty a. Oa'ktand 1
Cromrt • Mil
143 550 165 300 agent and pla ced guard Leo
T exas 7, C!d1forn1a S
Wtnf1eld SD
142 526 158 300
Seattle 6, Milwau kee 5
on wa.vers
St Lou•s
- Tr aded runnmg
Sm ith LA
123 434 130 300 T•erney
Today •s ProbAble Pitcher~ .
ba ck
Jerr y
Latm
to
Los
American League
( All Time~ EDTI
Angeles tor an un di SClosed
GAB H. Pet
Ball 1more ( Flana gan 17 12 ) at
137 506 169 334 Cr all cho1ce . r eleased w•de
Milwau kee (Replogle B 2l. 6 JO Carew Min
R1ce Bo s
144 594 193 375 rece 1ver Tomm y South ard, and
P !TI
11 2 403 129 320 signed w1de rece1ver W1 llard
Boston (Eckersley 16-71 at P1niella N Y
11 5 454145 3 19 Harrell and de f enS I\Ie tackle
Cleveland (Clyde 6 10), 7 JO Ol 1ver Tel(
Yount M il
111 435 131 301 Ke•th S1mons
pm
Washmgton S1g n ed fr ee
114 415 115 301
New York 1 Beatt1e 4
at 0g! 1vie M1l
117 409 123 301 agenT qu arterba.ck K1m
Oetroil ( BIIfmgha m ts 7l. 8 Rober ts Sea
Munson N Y
130 549 163 297 M c QUIIken and released ru n .
pm
135 52 4 155 296 n1ng back JacK Delop ta•ne .
Oakland ( Johnson 10 7 or Tho mp sn Dt
Oakland
Trad ed reserve
138 533 157 295
La ngford 7-101 ftt Kansas Ci tY Bost ock Cal
M 1ke
Rae
to
Reynold s Se
130 478 141 295 quarterba ck
CGale u 8l. 8 : 30p .m
131 457 135 295 Ta m pa Bay l or un d iSClo sed
California (Knapp 14 71 at Page Oak
f uture drall chOICeS
Home Runs
Te)ll,as ( Matlack 1'2 131, 8 35
Oelro 1t Released w1de
NatiOnal League : Fost er , C1n
p .!11
32 , LUZ in Skl, Phil 30 , Sm1th , LA r ece•~Jer Ray Jarv 1s
Tl'lursdav•s Ga,mes
Ba sketball
29 ; Pa rker , P1H 26 . K1ngman .
New Yo rk at Delro• t. ntoht
Portland
S1gn ed center
Boston at Clevelan d, ni ght
Ch 1 25
My cha 1 Thom pson ,
American League : R1ce , Bos forward
Ca l•forn•a at Texas, n1 ght
40 : Ba ylor . Cal 31 , H1s(e and th e.r No l d r af t choiCe from
Oakland at Kan C1 ty , n1 gh t
Thomas, Mil 31; Thornton , Cl ev Mmnesota
Ba1t1m ore at Milw, n 1ght
Ch•cago - s.g n ed cen ter Tom
Ch 1cago at Seattle, n ight
30
BoerwmKi e to a mu lti yea r
Runs Batted In
National League : Foster , C•n con tract
Ba seball
104 , Car..-ey, LA 101, Park er,
Toronto - Traded o utf ield er
P1tt 100 , Clark, SF 94 , Sm i th ,
Andy Dy es to San Otego lor
LA and Winfield , SO 92
M11jor Le11gue Results
p 11Ch er
M ar k
Amer.can League : RICe. Bos r ight . h and ed
By United Press International
124 , Staub , Oet 108 ; H ISle , Mil W1ley
National League
Chi at NY .. ppd ., ra1n

2

IL_r~~~~i_J

McKinney had ~. and Rob
Davis had 52. Fred Young
carded a 54.
For the visitors, Greg
Patton led aU 11olfers on the
night with his 41. Joe Holte!
had 43, Tim Smith a 46, Mike
Hoffman a 54, and David
Koon a 80.
'.I

Aug . !3 after he ruptUred the
brcep muscle m Ins nght arm
durmg an exhtbltron gam e
agatnst Detro1l Browner

SIGN FREE AGENT
CLEVE LA ND I UP! I The Cleve land Brow ns
Tuesday signed free agent
Greg Fatrchild , a three-year
ve teran offensive guard , and
put fi rst-yea r g uard L eo
Tierney on watvers.
Fairchild, 24, 6-foot-4 and ·
'IIJ7 pounds, was Cinctnnati ·s
fourth-round draft ch01ce m
1976. He can also pi a)
offensrve tackle and center.

~~-------~. . .

• Fishing Tackl e
and Rods
and Reels;
• Gun s and
Reloading
•Ball Glov es
Camping
Equrpment
• Archery
• Indoor Gam es
• We
have Git;
Certtficates
601 Ma in St .
.Pt. Pl e asant. W.Va .
VIS.4 '
Across from Courthou sf

PHONE

675-2988

Open Sunaay 1- p .m .-6 p m

s

M on d ay th ru a tu rday
9 ;am 1o 8 P m
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•

CARRI
.
~

WA
•

~ FOR

.•
'

POMEROY &amp;
MASON, W.VA. AREA

PHONE

THE ·

IS

expected to start runmn g
agam rn about two weeks

NEWSPAPER

Meigs golfers edge Buclu!yes
'l1le Meip Golf team had to
wall untU the lut man was ln
last night before finding out
u.ey had downed visiting
Nelsonville-York 1&amp;3-184 at
Muon at the Riverside Golf
Club.
For Meigs, Chudl Kennedy
turned In the low score of 42.
J. R. Wamaley had 44, Scott

recovermg from surgery

0

a

The biggest surprise was
recorded at North GaUra
where Coach John Blake's
Pirates dropped a 9-9 contest
to Huntington of Ross County.
Huntington is not known for
winning football games, but,
the Ross Countians have won
their first two outings this
year, 6-0 ove r Frankfort
Adena and 9--9 over North
GaUia.
Saturday, the Frontiers·
men tangle with Coach Larry
Cremeens' Hannan Trace
Wildcats. HTHS h's lost its
first two games 30-0 at
Symmes Valley ana 30-14 to
Hannan , W. Va.
Todd Sibley, a 135 pound
sophomore back, scored both
Wildcat touchdowns against
n
the West Virginia school. He
had runs of 85 and 70 yards
respectively on two counter
plays.
Kyger Creek I-I will try to
bounce back from last week's
33-0 drubbmg at the hands of
Wahama against Coach Dave
Snipes' always rugged
Alexander Spartans.
Alexander won its season
opener last week at Oak Hill,
6-0.
Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats, a 14-3 winner In
their season opener at
Federal Hocking, snapped a
010 000 0'2o- 3 9 1
long losing streak to Hous
1\0 001 001 - • 10 0
Alexander last fall . However, Cinci
Lemongello , Bann1ster I 7),
Coach Snipes, In an effort to sa m b 1 to 19 ) and Boch y ,
8a 1r (91 and Bench ,
avenge that loss, has already Moskau,
Correll ( 9) . W - Ba •r (7.5) L scouted KC at least lour Sa mblto ( 4·81 HR s- Houston.
Cl!lbell (71 ; C1ncinnat1 , Sum
times .
mers (1 l
Eastern is Idle this
000 100 ODO- I 3 0
weekend while Southern puts St. L
Mtl
010 IJO OOQ---- 5 10 0
Its ~I record on the line
Vuckovich . Bruno 15), Ltttell
(IS) and Simmons ; May and
against Southwestern.
W- May (7 91
LThe Tornadoes of Coach Carter
Vuckov •ch (12 1\ l
John Duddin&amp;
battled
001 002 002- 5 7 2
Federal Hocking to a score- P!&gt;bOh
Philo
100 000 ooo- 1 3 o
less draw last Friday night.
Candelaria , Tekulve (7 ) an d
Symmes VaUey , which has Ott , Christenson, Reed {·]} ,
191 and Foote wwithdrawn from the SV AC McGraw
Candelaria (11 -11 ). L - Chrislen ·
but wtU continue to play son (11 13 ) HRs- Ph lladelphia ,
MaddO )II. ( 11 ). P I tl S bu r g h ,
league schools this fall, lost Milner
(6) , Pllrker 2 126 l.
Its first game of the year last
000 001 OOD- l 52
weekend to Fort Gay, W. Va. Arlo
San OQo
010 011 00•- 3 8 1
Coach Joe Bokovitch's ImMllhler , Cllmpbell (7) and
proved Vikings host Man- Nollln ; Perry and Roberts . wPerry (116 1. L - Mahler ( -4 11)
chester of Adams County.

deal of fluid on tt He 's got
some kind of rnflanunatwn ."
Browner, meanwhlle , Is

�!;.!,-~~.2:.~!'port-Porneroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept.13, 1978

4- The DaUy Sentinel, MiddleP.,rt-Pameroy, 0., Wednesday , Sept. 13, 1978

Browns eye third straight .victory

Football

Forecast

-

.

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Premier Predictor
Egad, friends, have we gol some games - heh-heh -for you
U1is week .
In the Game of the Week, super-powers Penn Sl.llte and Ohio
Sta te collide on the Buckeyes' home turf in football-mad Columbus . Jove, !bat will be some affair'
And in some very, very interesting intersectional matchups
we have Colorado vs. Miami of Florida; Oklahoma Stale at
Florida Stale; I.SU entertaining Indiana; Washington at home
against Kansas; Auburn visiting Kansas State ; . Georgia Tech
vs . California; Tennessee hosting UCLA, and Missouri
journeying south to meet Alabama .
In conference play, the Big 10 features three contests between Miclrigan and Illinois, Iowa and Northwestern, and
Michigan Stale and Purdue. In the Pacific IO, ·Southern
California meets Oregon and Arizona t.kes on Oregon State. ·
The clash between Penn St.te and Ohio State features nut
only two exeellent fuotba lllealns but also two of the all-tinie

By ROBERT SANGEORGE

much of a scoring attack !hili

CLEVELAND (UPI ) The surprising Cleveland
Browns wiD be looking to
extend their unbeaten string
to three g~es when they
take on one of the strongest
defensive teams in the league
Sunday, the Atlanta Falcons.

season.

The Browns, who have

jumped out to a 2-4 record on
the strength of borne victories
over the San Francisco 49ers
and Cincinnati Bengals, leave
. the confines of Municipal
Stadium this Stu1day for their
first road game of tbe regular
season.
The Falcms sport a 1-1
record - having upset the
Houston Oilers on opening
day, followed by a 1().0 loss to
the Los Angeles Rams last
Sunday.
Being discreet, Cleveland
Coach Sam Rutigliano
wouldn 't say it directly , but
he acknowledged Atlanta
hasn 't been able to muster

The Falcon defense,
however, is another story.
" Atlanta is one of the
strongest defensive teams in
the
National Football
League ,"
Rutigliano
dedared. "They do a lot of
blitzing. They are a very
physical, dominating
defense. "
Statistics bear him out Atlanta gave · up only 129
point~ last season.
The stingy Falc&lt;in defense
is led hy veteran aU-pro
Claude
Humphrey,
a
ferocious passrusher, and one
of best defensive lineman in
the NFL. " Our offensive
linemen are going to need
help himdling him, there's no
doubt," said Rutigliano, who
indicated he ili planning to
double-team Humphrey.
Rutigliano has predicted,
not surprisingly, that the
BrownsFa!Cillls contest will

c";'nc~~;e:,r~a~~~~~{c~=~~.:';yde~~a~8t~~;itedawinning :r&lt;&gt; &lt;T~d&gt; ~; &gt;&gt;&gt; &gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;·&gt;· &gt;&gt;: &gt;&gt;&gt;:: :,:

:.,

be a lowscoring affair.
Cleveland's defense proved
itself tough against both the
49ers and the Bengals, whUe
the Browns' offense has had
its problems - though
coming up with enough points
to win in the last two weeks.
The Browns' rookie head
coach said he expects Atlanta
to do two things Sunday :"They're going to just run the
ball and play strong
defense. ''
As for his club, Rutigliano
said he is looking to put more
·variety - and along with it
more scoring punch - in his
offense.
"Mike Pruitt and Larry
Collins will play more in the
heart of the game," the coach
said. Pruitt, a fuUback, is
Cleo Miller's backup, while
Collins, a running back.

====:

sport p arade .;·:·:

Sports

briefs• •.

99e

5th &amp; Pearl

Red

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PHEBE'S STOR£
Thursday, Sept. 14 through Sept. 16
We G .. dly Accept Fed. Food Stamp•
Monday thru Friday
9:00tll7:00
Saturday 9 :00-9: 00

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SUNDAYS

valley Bell

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POTATOES MACARONI &amp; atEESE ..... ~;:.~~·.... 31'1.00
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cial

I Harrisonville
Society News

I

l · ~endar 1

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Middlepori Lions Club, Wednesda)l noon, at the Meigs Inn.
Uf;ITED. . METHODIST
Wolnen,
Letart
Falls
Chilrch, 7:30 Wednesday at
the Letart Falls Church. Mrs.
·Andrew Cross will present
the program .
EMMA CIRCLE, United
Methodist Women, Rutland
Church, 7&gt;30 Wednesday
night at the,church with Mrs.
Janet Nakomoto as hostess.
MI'S. Harold Sauer will have
tile'
program.
C!lurch
prngrams will be outlined.
~MEROY CHAPTER 80
Royal Arch Masons Wed. nesday 7:30 p.m. Bosworth
eor1ncu Royal and Select
MaJons 8:15 p.m. All com·
paillons invited.
REVIVAL, all week ;
Chester Church of the
NaZarene; 7:30 each evening
thtough Sept. 24. John
LBi!ier, evangelist.
'
~AST COUNCILORS Club,
Chester Council 323,
Daughters of Ameriea, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the hall. Laura
Mae Nke 'and Leda Mae
Kraeuter will he hrn;tesses.
THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA
BET A Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, luncheon,
Titursdlly, noon at the home
of Mrs . Mary Murris.
Members are asked to take
gifts for their secret sisters.

Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas
visited Sunday evening w{th
Mrs. Bess Russell, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob J ewell,
Mrs. Ruby HaUiday and Mrs.
Pauline Atkins spent a week
camping at Lake Erie.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire
went to Cross Lane, W.Va. to
Country Western dance camp
out over weekend.
Dr. and ·Mrs. Don Gibson,
Maryland, spent the weekend
with Mr . and Mrs. Bud
Douglas .and ·Mrs .. Lana
. Gibson. Dr. Gibson had just
got back from a two weeks
business trip to Japan.
Miss BB'rbara Sieple of

SHERIDAN

BARBARA
will be speaker when the
Pomeroy Chapter of · the
Women's Aglow Fellowship
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 noon at U1e home of
Mrs. Mary Morris, Lincoln
Hill, for a luncheon.
Members are to take gifts
for tl1eir secret sisters.
MEIGS COUNTY GIRL
Scout Leaders, ullter
volunteers, 10 a.m. lo noon
at the Meigs Inn. Program
and activities fur fall to be
discussed.
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
meeting room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.,
Pomeroy.
RIO VALLEY Grange
2 will meet at the hall in
. art Falls, 8 p.m. Thurs; potluck refreshments.
;_:
SATURDAY
W HAVEN - The New
en Volunteer Fire
rtment and Its auxiliary
ld a chicken barbecue
, urdaY at the fire station
ing ' at 11 a.m. Com·
!te dinners will be served.

CRISCO .............................. !.'.~·.~~ •1.79

WHIPPED BLUE BONNET........•~.~~~~~. 59'

HAMS

WHOLE
OR HAlf
SLICED

SHOULDER PORK ROAST. ••••••••••••••~·••

$1 ~

PORK SHOULDER STEAK ••••••••••••••• ~;.$} It
•

JOWL BACON ............ ~..~~........ !.~~. $J&amp;9
Old FalhlaniCI or_Jack1011

IQLOGNA ...................... !~;

Indiana spent the weekend

'

with her aunt , Mrs. Frances

Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Nelson,
Marion, called on Stella
Atkins apd Ruby Diehl
recently .
Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs
and family were Sunday
dinner guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Riggs,
Darwin.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Alkire
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Stella Atkins and Ruby
Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Corrall
spent weekend in Tennessee
to Bluegrass Festival.
Rev. and Mrs. David
Wiseman and famUy of Lima
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Wiseman recently.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
fqnn a mahogany table. I am

Water spots

sm·e you

on wood

!&gt;ave publishc..J

i:iu mclhing

remem ber

but cc:trwot
what it was .

DEAR POLLY - I read in -MRS. F.B.F.
DEAR l.OI.A and MRS.F.
walnut table with cold B.F,: The dgm·ctte ashes and
dg:an~lte ashes and butter or butter treatment is still my
U1c column about rubbing a

margarine to remove white

fi:J vuritc and has worked Wt!ll

water marks. Would this fur me on walnut, mahugcmy
would work on an oak table?

and cherry . I do nut see why it

-LOLA
OE.AR POLLY - I wuuid
Uke to know what would

would nut do equa lly wellnn
uak. Give it a try , rubbing

remove a five-inch wale!·. soot

with the grain 'of the WfH)d . H

it dues nol do the job spread

You Can Depend On

Pillsbury
Flour

Each ol theM adver1'Md •temr. 1s r11Qu11ed 10 be •e&lt;Ul••v
tvtllable for MLe on e•ch Kroger Stou~ . e•cept as
IC)ttdUIIy no ted '" th•• ad \t .,..e do run ou t ot &lt;ln aCJver
tiMid Jtlll"" , we woll ofie r you vour cho•' ~ o l a comvaraole
•wm ,
avaol.lbHI . refhtctong the same s-avmg s a• a '"'"

wn.n

check wh•ch - 11ent•tl1 you to pure hue tne a over1o~d •te..,

CO,VI\GHT 1t71- THl KltOGUI CO . IU:M5 AND
GOOD SUNDAY SEP1 . 10 THIU SATUIDA'f SE"- 1• . 1971

IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY .

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

Krager Welcomes
Your Federal ·
Food Stamps

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

PINT lnUINAIU BOnUS

Lodge 164,
bouse, 5:3(f.7 :30.
ereryone welcome.
::J'OMEROY
MASONIC
:~D&lt;~Ke 164, F&amp;AM, observing
bouse at the temple 5:30
:30 p:m. Saturday. Ohio
nd Lodge film, " A
· · ious Heritage" wiD be
wn and representatives of
nry, Job's Daughters
d DeMolay will give
sentatlons on their
ups. Public Invited.
SUNDAY
::touNTY WIDE prayer
lng, 2 p.m. Sunday at the
and Community Church
Glen Bissell, clasa
er.
•
SUNDAY
OMECOMING, Wesley
apel Church, Sunday,
sket lunch, 12:30 p.m.

WISCONSIN

Russet
.
Baking
Potatoes .. .. .. .. .. .
Flame Red

1

•

IO:aaa

99

·lb.
Can

29

..

SIJIJ£[110 t"LICIIl[ STIH &amp; IOU! l UU

"""'

HB. ROll ... $2.37

1
1

I!

2

, IMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMI! y

0.5% Lowfat
Kroger Milk

Wi" Deli 's
Mot htfl Auilllllt II AI·71'1

BoneleJs 1op
Sirloin Steak

9
USDA

CHOICE

$

Whole Fresh
Porte
Loin ..................~;;;;.;,;:;~
•l

5;,~~. ,·t;:

EACH

9

$

Virginia

Tail-Less ·
T-Bone
Steaks ...............lb.
14·17-LI,

Plastic
Ctn.

~uila-lt DRI! lo Slllfll

•••• 01

· Mr. and Mrs. Dale Knott of
1111 City, Pa. visited with
ra. Clara William• on
fWICII:y, a,nd vialted during
weekend with Mrs'. Ora
~glalln Pt. Pleasant.

11
II
I
I
1

Gal,

SLICED IONELESS

JJ .S. GOV'T GIIAOEO CHOICE

• ' ·

SWIUC1 10 u rl.ltll l! STill &amp; l DUl lUIS

Ctn.

HOlLY FAIIMS, U.S.O.A. INSPECTED

yIn Muon.

I
I

co~POM , 00 osu•on Sl" 10 n t~ sm~ou S!~ T !i /til

Of

~-$
,.,.,

Monte
Fruit . 11.
Cocktail ....... C•n•

Jiffy
Pot Pies
...•....
...$

:

0
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

Lowfat Milk

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

I

lilliJT 2 liS. WITH COUPON ~ND Sl .SO ~DO!TiONAi PURCH~Sl
(UClUOINC THIS IIEM )

Hi Nu 2%

(HICKIN

:

1-lb.
Roll

KROGER

$

1

$ 19

I
I
I
I

Crisco
Oil

"'"'"'HIMIAI
JIOllN TUIKIY .

1
1
1

I

Gunnoe's
Country Sausage

I

~.open

'

I

:

couro• CooDsu•on !I" ro TIIIU $Umanm 1&amp; 1m

I
I

LIMIT • ,KGS. PLEASE

I
I

INCLUDES:
Ice Cream Sondwiches, Fudge Bars,
Twin Cremes And Many Others

co\1
cou•o"

IPMEROY

Evelyn Stewart
letumed home with her son
fnd dllughteri-ln·law, Major
Mrs. Jack Stewart and
y after a two week visit
Major and&lt;Mre. Stewart
t their , ·home at Fort
arrhon, Indiana. The .
ewartl remained for a few
ys vWt wit b hia niother
vlllted with his brother,
ge Robert Stewart and

I
I
I

Freezer Pleezer
Frozen Novelties

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

C!
:

Grapes .... ........ ;.Iii.

Kroger
Cottage
Cheese ....... :.. ..ctn.
ltason Area ·Mixed
Fryer ·
~ews Notes Parts ................ lb.

I
I
I

·lb.

Toke~y

Kroger
Grade A
Large Eggs .... Doz.

I
I

12

WITH COUPON AND
THE PURCHASE OF ANY

I
I

$.

I
I

40COFF

co\1
couro"
.:=;...---

$

Diet Pepsi or
Pe Cola
Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

liMIT ONE COU PO N PER FAM/1 V
CGIJ 'O• COOO ~U IDU Slrl 10 IIIIU SAI\IItOU S!'l 1' 1911
. SMIHCI TO I'I'Ut U H SIIH 1 LOUL Um

Of

WE lfSIIVE THliUGHT TO liMIT QUANnliiS . NONI SOlD
TO DIA LERS .

E....-.;thinQ 'fOU buy 11 Kroger •• guiln.tnteoea lor your 101&amp;1
•llsftcuon r~r dleN of malli.Jflcluref. I' ~ou arP. not
•rilt'-d, K1~ .,.o repl•ce your item wrth the aame braPrJ
a comperable brand or refu nd ~our purch•se prrce

a

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

lllliiT I UC WITH COUPON ~NO S7 .SO ~OOIIION~l PURCH.sl
(ElCiUOINC !HIS 11[111 )

.. ttw ldvel1tMd priCe wo thon J0 d1ys

E

••

c

·lb.
Bag

ADVEA TISEO ITEM POLICY

I
I
I
I
I

12

5

tMra.

PRODUCE

APPLES

substitutes' for Greg Pruitt.
With speedy Greg Pruitt,
By RICK GO&amp;'IELIN
direCted Washin8100 State te
the key to Cleveland's attack,
UP! Sports Writer
a 1&amp;-10 road victory apinlt
expected to miss some
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) Nebraska, hla alma mater.
practice this week as a result . - Warren Powers paid
"I had about the of a leg injury, Collins may $55,000 for the opportunity to feeling after both pmea," •
see even more action. Pruitt, coach footbaU at MIBaouri said Powere of hil
howe~~er, Is el&lt;Jl"C(ed to play
this year. And after one week season-opening victorlel.
against Atlanta.
of the 1978 season the 37- was a similar
Rutigliano said he also year-old former 'oakland, You're new on the Job
wants Greg Pruitt "more Raiders defensive back baa you're trying to lead! the
involved in our passing gotten his 'money's worth.
a new phUoeophy, a new
game," where he will likely
Powers was forced by You are trying to fl«lbem
take less physical abuse than Washington State, whm~ he have faith and confidence
on running plays.
guided to a 6-S record In his what they are doln.. A win;
The only other injury of college head coaching debut like this helpa." .
note suffered by a Cleveland last year, to buy hil way out
Sophm~ore Jeff Br&lt;lckiiBw.;.
player against Cincinnati last of the final three years of !Jis supplied Misaourl with
Sunday was a quarterback contract before he could lone points of the 18111e ,....'II ..
Brian Slpe's sprained left depart lor Missouri. The two he booted a 33-yard field
wrist, the club has disclosed. parties reached agreement at with 12:50 .left In the foiuth ;;
But the injury is not on his $55,000 to he paid over a quarter. JUII as im111011:ant
passing arm and he is three-year period.
factor in the win was
expected to be ready for the
But that money suddenly Missouri defense, whlc~:•.
Falcons.
seems a pittance after three times held on ·fourth:~ ..
Powers guided his Tigers to a and-one situations In
shocking 3-0 victory over second half - once when
defending national champion baD was restin8 12 inches.
Notre Dame at South Bend from the Tiger end zone. .
Saturday in the season"The kids were ready,"
opener for both teams. For Powers said. "I didn't bave 14'
master-minding the victory, say much totbem.ltold them '.
Powers today was named not to go out there a11d think ; ,
UPI
's·Coach of !he Week. · just go out and react and play
Williams, a senior from
lrunlcally, Powers abo re- as · weD as they could. IColwnbus, was a unanimous
choice for the defensive ceived UPI's Coach ol the thought if we played well,
player award after being Week honors in the opener of Notre Dame would have to go .
credited with 11 solo tackles the 1977 season when he a ways to beat us.
and five assists. One of hili
solos was behind the line of
scrirrunage, accounting for
an 11-yard Miami loss.
It was the first such award
for both players.
'U:JD.
&lt;U '
Bowling
Green
quarterback Mike Wright,
"
who set a school record of 342
DO
.
ID
yards in total offense in the
Falcons' 35-28 loss to
Villanova, also received
support as the tOp offensive
player.
Other offensive nominees
DO
llt:J
were split end Brian Blank of
Central Michigan; tailback
BobbY. Windom of . Eastern
Michigan;
center Jeff
Hrenya of Kent State; tight
end Paul Warth of Miami,
Ohio Uiversity quarterback
DO Why not install a King Wood or
CD
··
Nigel Turpin; and Western
OCJ .,
0
Michigan quarterback Albert
~- Coal Heater and gel maximum
0
Little.
Warmtn
for
less!
•
Also nominated for the
defensive honor were linebacker Bob Cummins of
DO
Bowling Green, Joe Farais of
Now Available
D
Miami and Eric Manns of
Western Michigan; linemen
Mike Zele of Kent State,
DO
DO
Steve Groves of OU and Joo ·
DP
D
Gotwald of Toledo; and backs
D
DO
· Mason, W.Va .
Robert Jackson of Central
I I I I
Michigan and Buster Johnson
c=o==c:- . ====~=o
of Eastern Michigan.

~
Do

So

t

Cardinal aces
.sweep honors

·'
:-:!Jercentage of .765 with 32I vieluries, 68 defeats and 91ies.·. In a :&gt;,..
.·.•.· .·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) ·
shorter span of 12 seasons as head man, Paterno's winning
BaU State quarterback Dave
percentage is .821 with 112 wins, 24 defeats and I tie. They've
Wilson ·and noseman Larry
··:madewinningawayuf hfe,sotospeak.
In their past two meetings, 1975 and 1976, the Hayes forces (
':': Williams have given the
ts
.
1 1
b t 7 9 d 12 7
···
{
Cardinals a sweep of the first
l
won ex reme y e use games y - an - cuun · respee11ve- ;:::
,.. Mid-American Conference
ly. This week,,ve ean expect more of the same, except, it will ·.·
} player-of-the-week selecbe Paterno's men on the long end of the 17-10 final seore- har- :;:;
By MILTON RICHMAN
,.,.
1 •
UPI Sports Editor
·:·: lions.
b
.
f h
&lt;::
:;::
Wilson, a junior from Findrwinp 1s." ba . M' .
· n s 1am1 e1u , p1aymg another o t eir suicide .·.·
····
.ou
sehedules, will give the Colorado Buffaloes a rough . afternoon
NEW YORK (UPI) _ Striding purposefuUy across the hotel lay • Ohio • earned the
before falling , 27-21. The Florida State Seminoles will uphold Jobhy, Jugging awn of new ;papers under each ann as always, offensive player · award for
llle good name of Florida footba ll O) ' upending Oklahoma the man who has mitiated,
·
guiding the
to their
negotiated and perpetuated more decisive
3S-14Cards
victory
over
State, 23-17.
baseball trades in his time than anybody else, suddenly
1 ite Mi ·
Louisiana State's Tigers, lea d by the swift Charles Alex- rea Jized the one be ing a ddress ed was him.
preo~~eason
amJ
last Saturday.avor
Wilson passed
ander 19.4 in the 100 ) will squeeze past a good Indiana club,
"There goes the feUow wbo turned tbe wbole league around for three touchdowns and ran
:&gt;2-18, while out in Seattle the Washington Huskies should have with one deal," called out another hotel guest, loudly and for another.
little trouble taking Kansas, 28-7.
laughingly.
Auburn will have a lot to eeietirate on its long trip home from
"Not the WHOLE league," Frank Lane acknowledged, with
Manhattan. Kan . The Ti gers get the Hoople nu&lt;l to edge the his characteristic uncommoo modesty.
Wildcats. 17-12. Fur UCLA it will be just the reverse as they
Lane does special assignment scouting for the california
are the victims of Johnny Majors' Tennessee Volunteers. The Angels, reporting to head man Buzzy Bavasi, and the trade he
Hoople System sees Tennessee in an upset, 24-21.
was being reminded of was the one he engineered last winter in
Georgia Tech will prevail over California, 28-14; and which the Angels sent' slugger Bobby Bonds, Thad Bosley,
Ala bama ·s Crimson Tide will contmue its drive fur the na- another outfielder, and Dick Dotson, a right-handed fastbaUer
TORONTO (UP!) - The
li11nai crown by thwnping Missouri, 35-10.
with a big future, to the White Sox for pitchers Chris Knapp
Toronto
Blue Jays Tuesday
In the Big Ten fra ys, look fur Michigan to wann up for its big and Dave Frost and catcher Brian Downing.
acquired
righthander Mark
one next week against Notre Dame by toying with Illinois.
Everybody in basebsU thought Lane had lost his marbles for
Wiley
from
the San Diego
:J:J-21; Iowa will - ahem - do in Northwestern, 28-t2, and putting that one together and that Bavasi, his boss, bad lost his
Padres
in
exchange for
Michigan State will outscore Purdue, 31-26, in a wild-and- sense of balance, for letting him do it.
outfielder
Andy
Dyes.
wooly affair .
But look at the way things have turned out.
Wiley has pitched with
The pair of games in the Pat 10 will go to Southern .
The White Snx, who finished third in the Western Division
HawaU of the Pacific Coast
Ca1,.35-14. over Oregon, and Arizona will take the measure of last year, presently are sixth.
Oregon State, 26-17. U'nder the lights in fri endly Tucson.
Meanwhile, the Angels, who were 181': games out a year ago League for the paSt two
Now go on with my forecast :
and ultimately wound up fifth in the same division, are In seasons. Dyes, a rightBoston Col32 Air Force 15
second place only 21': games back of the first-place Royals and handed hitting outfielder,
was transferred to San Jose
Alat&gt;ama 35 Missouri 10 (N)
still have a chance of catching them.
of
the PCL and later, Hawaii.
Arizona 26 Oregon St 171N l
· Beyond any question, that deal they made with the White Snx
Arizona St 31 BYU 14 1NI
has made aU the difference for the Angels.
Ark . 28, Vanderbilt 7 (N)
Nonetheless, the White Snx claim they're happy with the
Ark . St 22 NE La . 12 IN 1
deal . Vice President Roland Hemond points out they got
TULSA, Okla. (UP!) - The
Anny 30 Lafayette 7
ClaudeU WashingtOn for Bonds and feel they have two comers 1982 PGA championship
Auburn 17KansasSt t2
in the 21-year-()id Bosley and the 19-year-old Dotson, who was tournament will he played at
fla il St 30 Kent St 18
11-10 with KnoxvUie this year. But he concedes the swap has Southern HUls Country Club,
Baylor 2t Georgia 14
been "instrumental" in !he Angels' dramatic move-up this . PGA officials announced
F. M1ch. 15 Bowling Green H IN)
season .
Tuesday.
VM I 24 Bueknell1 3
For that, Lane can take a weU.&lt;[eserved bow .
Mark Cox, encutive
Ga Tech 26 Calif. 14
During his time as general manager for the White Sox, director of the PGA, said the
Miami 10. ) 35 C1enl. Mieh. 6
Indians, A's and Brewers, he made more than 600 deals. He course was selected because
Cincinnati 2t So. Miss. 20
caused a civic sionn of protest by trading Cleveland's fair- of the "kind of challenge It
Clemson 33 Ciladel1 2
haired hero, Rocky Colavito, to Detroit for Harvey Kuenn and offers" professional golfers.
Colgate 21 Holy Cross 7
did much the same thing in St. Louis when he dealt away Red Southern HUls was the ·slte of
Term 24 UCLA 21 (N)
Schoendienst. He also was said to be ready to swap Stan Musial the 1970 PGA tournament and
Mary land 17 Louisville 14 1N)
to the Philliesfor Robin Roberts but he denies that one.
the 19TI U.S. Open.
Mass. 19 Villanova 7
Lane always enjoyed making a trade. He enjoyed it so much,
KIRKLAND, Wash. (UP!)
"'lich. St 31 Purdue 26
he occasionaUy dealt a player back and forth more than once.
Minn27 Toledo 13
"I never kept count, but I must've traded Willy Miranda at - The Seattle Seahawks have
Montana 43 Portland St 2t
least 400 times," he cracks.
ooly 500 tickets remaining for
Navy 38 Virginia 20
In recent years, he has scouted for the Orioles, Brewers, their Oct. 22 game with the
Nebraska 24 Hawaii 7
Rangers and Angels, working from his home in Acapulco, Oakland Raiders , team
New Mexico 26 W1ehita 8
Mexico, as well as Chicago. When Bavasi took over the Angels' officials announced Tuesday.
Syraeuse 22 No Carolina St t9
job last December after nearly 30years in the Nations! League
Seattle ticket director
Penn St 17 Ohio StoJte 10
with the Dodgers and Padres, he was aware Lane knew the Chuck Velte said individual
Oklahoma 20 WVa. 12
American League better,so he let him serve as architect In the game ticket sales are up over
So. Cai 35 Oregon 14
deal with the White Sox:
70 percent over a year ago
Pacific 42 Cal-Davts 7
"He's been Invaluable to us," Bavasi says. "He's got a lot of and a number of other games
Pitt 4{) Tulane 2t (N)
friends and a lot of contacts and he learns more about are on a seUout pace.
Texas 49 Rice 14 (N)
ballplayers from Acapulco than most other people do in this
Wisconsin 28 R1ctunund 6
country . The only thing I don't like is he always calls me 6:30 in
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y .
Stanford 26 San Jose St 2t
the morning."
(
UPI)
- Mario Andrettl , with
Kentucky 32 Sn. Carolina 24 (N)
J.&gt;epending on whether you talk to him or to the office Ulal
the
world
drivers'
Colorado 'n Miami IFla .) 2t
keeps those records, Lane is either 79 or 82. Whichever it is, he
'champimship
safely
tucked
Colo. St 23 Uta h Sill
has more energy and enthusiasm than many of those 50 years
away,
will
take
part
In the
Wm. &amp; Mary 18 Conn . 7
younger. The only thing that ever upsets him is the suggestion
United
States
Grand
Prix
at
Dayton 30 Otterbein t2 1N1
people are through after they hit 65.
Watkins
Glen
Oct.
1
as
part
of
Temple 28 Drake 6
"What in heU difference does it make how old you are?" he
a
new
two-car
Lotus
team,
it
No . Caro. 21 E. Caro. 20
snaps peevishly. "Maybe you can't hit a curve ball after 40
was
announced
Tuesday.
New Mex. Sl 12 UTEP i 1N)
anymore, but I know some 25-year-()lds who can't either, and
Andretti, who clinched the
SMU 23 Florida 21
you know where you can find them? Playing In the major
ti
tie
In last Sunday's
Florida Sl23 Oklahoma SI I7
leagues."
accident-marred
Italian
SW La. 31 Tulsa 21 (N l
Grand
Prix,
said
he
wanted
to
Houston 3t Memphis St 211N)
"r~linch
the
title
In
the
Iowa St 33 San Diego St 23
Wa sh. St42 Idaho 13 (N)
United States without
No. Arizona 281dahoSt l4 1Nl
Washington 28 Kansas 7
backing into it." The U.S.
I
.,high
25
Slippery
Rock
18
Michigan 33 Dlinois 21
Grand
Prix Is spoosored by
Va. Tech 17 Wake Forest 8
l.SU 22 Indiana 18
Toyota.
WMich 34 No. lli14 1Nl
Iowa 28 Northwestern 12

Delicious

Powers named UPI's
grid coach of week

rmncm!Jt!r we arc nul all ca~t would ask your readers to
from tile same mold . - POL- Uuuk aboullhat the next time
a smlill chilli ads friendly
LY
wrung uut of a wt!ak ~ol'ution
DEAR POI.t.V - I wan.llo 'and they do nut respond . Peoof ammonia and watel' will d.u tell Marion lhali had a while ple •ay the world is rotten
tl1is , lou.- POI.l.Y
Wtjtcr mctrk f rum i:i putted mow . It will not get any better
DEAR POLLY - I am plant on my maple desk. I us- wllcss our children learn · to
wr iting in re sponse tu t...'(J cssc rlt:l: uf peppcrrnint etratJ care.- MARILYN
DEAR POLLY - When I
Marion's letter com..:erning tu rli.y su rpris~ removed the
water stains on a t.a iJie. You spot i&gt;caulifuliy. Just keep want to n~move the union
&lt;-l n s we r ed . ·· u se
t:O id 111bbing with jJ he,avy piece ur smell from my hands I piek
dgaretlc asheS C:~ nd butler ur dulh and it will disappear. - up a stain less steel spoon and
mb it with my hands . Tr·y this
margorinc a11d ruiJ vigorous- VERA
ly with the grain of the
DEAR POLLY - My Pet because it works amazingly
wmKI ." The part that cuu 1uytll Pc cvc
t..:Uilt:t: l"l lS
th e well . I have June it ror so lung
me was · ·Have a man do tin s, friend li ness of my 2-year-oltl that I always thought
if possible, as old stains will son and how this i~ at.:cc pted everyone else knew about it.
t.ke a iut of hard rubbing ." by straugcn:i. Wlrc11 we ~u -MAE
Pully will send you une of
Get up wiUt the limes, Polly.&lt; shopping he smiles and says
Women · a re nut the rraH ··Hi" tu people and mcmy of her :; igned thank-you
dclic(lte c r~i:ilurcs they were till' Ill ~i l;nore him or frown CJt r1ewspapcr coupon clip~rs if
OIH..'cthuughttubt: ! -W.P.
him . l ,, -mt him to lea rn to she uses yo ur fct vQri tc
Thanko fur your letter, sec the g110d in peuplc IJut if Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
W.P. , Uut you are nnl st.a rti11g i:ili ults arc so busy ami impel'· her euiu'mn. Wnle POLLY'S
an argument with rn~! I was sonal how rw u l'hi!Liren leah1 POINTERS nt eare of this
spt~ aking fur
rnyself and to cct rc fo_r others·~ I wi sh you newspaper.

petrolewn Jelly on lhil'kly,

leave about 24 huu rs aud tht!ll
rub uff. Somt:!limes a doth

Baked Ham ........ rb.

,~::::::.u... . .'. . . 6. ,99 c
~~:~~~....

2
THIN SLICED MEATS
. ..

.. ........ lb .

5 99

Roast Beef .................. .. ... . .. $39~

H1rdSallml........ ..... ..... .. .. . ••.· $299
Porhr IMfBBQ .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. $299

$ II

Save Sliced
1•111 •
Bacon ..................... ~•.

IMFtltAIII' iiiiCI

TW. e fl............... tiMe rhlt It I ,.....

ewt , • aMI/ I 11'"""' ........ OIIM wtM ~

......... . . . ,........ ......... ltMfl
,.., h . . . . .,... ttMfl ...., .

..w.

•

�•

"

I

'

} - 1'111 Dllil7 lon&amp;IMI, Midcllporl-Pwiefoy, 0., Wednuday, Sept. 13, 1171

6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 13, 1978

-

Ohio State React Council held '" .
: Helen Help
![ ! Us ••• By Helen Hottel·: special meeting at Circleville

~{:::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::; :::::;;;: ;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;::::: :~;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;})

I.

'

Mrs, joseph Friedman

Miss Kristen Rupp
marries Sept. 10
Miss Krist·en Rupp,
daughter of Clarence Rupp
and the late Mrs. Veva Rupp,
formerly of Middleport, was
married Sui1day, Sept. 10 to
Steve!! Friedman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph F1·iedman,
Arkville, N. Y.
The bride, eseorled by her
fat her who now resides in

Wood Dale, Ill ., wore an ivm·y
chiffon garden dress. She earlied a cascade of plwlaenopsis orchids and eucalyptus.
Miss Susie Erard-Coupe,

WARNING TO ADVENTUROUS YOUTHS
DEAR HELEN :
Last week we got a collect call from our 18-year-old son who
was stranded 1,000 miles from home, broke and hungry. We
wired money . He's back now with a story that might help other
kids avoid trouble.
In a nutshell it is : Don't trus~ ads that shout, "Good salary,
expense-paid travel to fun place~ ... ~· He fell for the pitch and
joined a crew of magazine salespeople. Left us a note saying he
&lt;'Ouldn 'l get work in town and "Don 't worry, l have a great
job. " I gather the crew chief who persuaded the applicants emphasized ~ed, or the opportunity would go to someone else.
Nonn only had time to come home and paek a suitcase- while
we were away on business.
·
It was pure hell, he's told us. If the young people didn't make
sales any way they could -by persisten&lt;"e, harassment, veiled
threats ; you know how miseral)le door-l&lt;Kioor magazine
salesmen ean he - they were shamed and degraded by their
erew leaders. "Salary" was on commission " to be paid later."
Food and hotels? Awful.
Finally the leader "fired" them and disappeared with the
few profits they'd accwnulated. The kids were dwnped in a
strange town with no money to get home . The company owes
t'Oirunissions to these gullible 18- and 19-year-old.s. lt should be
sued for false representation. Does our sun have any recourse?
-FIGHTING MAD
DEAR MAD :
The Federal T~ade Commission is currently investigating
1nagazine sates crew companies, for complaints about them
etre numerous.
Conta ct your regional FTC office or national headquarters
at Washington, D.C. Your son's story will provide them additioniil a mmunition.
As for recovering sales commissions, lots of luek : He'll need

State of Ohio, joining other
states to total 1,900 teams In
the national orga nization.
Also included in this total are
teams from Canada and
various foreign countries.
The offices responsible for
'"-_,..,.,.. the governing of these teams
are located in C\Jicago.

The Ohio State React
Co uncil held a special
meeting September 10 at
Circleville.
The Ohio React Council is
comprised of llO teams in the

Fisher and Mason F' ishe r was

honorary pa llbeare1·s.
Out-of- town people coming
fur e funera l se rvices we re

Mr. and Mrs . Richard Lowe,
Traey and Stevei1 , Mr. and
Mrs. Rollin Wolfe, Miss
Jea nne Hines, Mr. and Mrs.

Robert .Jay, Mrs. Susa n
Rawlings, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Spence, M1·. and Mrs.
Howard Spence, Mrs. Hel en
Maag, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.

Marion Snider, Jr.

years or m ore than 19 yea rs

of age prior to May 31, 1979.
Contestant must be of good
character , and possess poise,
personal ity, mtelligence,
chann, attractiveness, and

.

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD•••••••••••••• ~~. s1.09

Tbe ann1111 Johnaon
relllliGn •wu held Sundly,
Sept. a, at Portllnd Park,
Portland. Door prtzea were
llnri to . Art and laabel
Jobnaon; Mr. and Mn.
Vernal Johnlon, Mary and

taraorit' GilliAn.

~

OIM ~ allo liven to the
oldell woman, Olga Lewis;

oldell ~n. Pete Johnlon ;
yoq• baby, Bry111t Dale
i John10n,:. laraeat family,
•' '1!¥1 ' IIOIIIb; traveling the
t lartbeat 1 wu Georgie
•-Weekllnl" Ds.tance traveled
: wu 470 inlln.
: ' Tbere · l'll linglng and
•·' palllle prpvlded under the
1 )taclenhlp of BW Smith.
J
Attendlnl were Mable
(Jobnapn, ' Leater Johnaon,
' S..unne ~wla; Katie Balli,
\ :. awdl ·Jolllllon, George R.
John10n, ' Sr., Ch~rlea F.
Johnlon, Mr. and Mn. Iaaac
Lewis, Wa. Olp Lewla, Mn.
~ A. Lewis, au of Clifton.
:;. Mr.lllll Mra. Earl Johnlon,
! Mf, IIIII Mra; Geocae J.
Johnaon, Jr., Mn. Larry Ffy,
Pauline , J, Cunnlnaham,
t 'Raidean Glbba, Eulah
I: Redman, Mr. and Mn. Ray
I Redman, Ray and Lori,
: bonna llli4 Dorothy John.lon,
JaneU Can, Terri Johnson,

I

BULK WIENERS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1
. •'1·g
,
MARGARINE............ 2/.49·
lb.

i.

' Methodlat Women annual

[ .-tin~ wW be held Sllllllly,

. September 17, at Tbe Plalna
; United Mltbodllt Chllrdl.
, Jleclanlnl at 1 p.m. there
; wW be i period of felloWihlp,
and , re1i1tratlon . The
lltntun room wW be open
for,Uie purdiiM of yow 1979
pi'OiriDI material. At 2 p.m.
Mn. Harold (Betty) Rou,

,

·

CHICKEN NOODLE SOU!•••••••••••••••••• ~/4f,
2 lb. GRANULATED SUGAR••••••••••••••':'.x..&amp;f

NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE. •••••••
~.)~;.:- s4.49
·
'

&amp;SERVE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·7·94

.,..............

ol OtUoo!e,

NCenl lllmdly

$}895
RED WING

· HARTLEY SHOES, IN •
Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0.
9 a .m .-5 p.m.
Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9
Fri .

'·

I

family.

.

~~ra. aerlld HaJIIIIII apenl

·a weekllld wllb Mr. IIIII 111'1.
I, ·Ted
RaJIIIIII IIIII
at
w...mn..
famll)'

t . Tbi blrtbdaJ uf Erwin
~

Oludner wu ee1ebrlted at
b)' 1111
family.

I bla 'bailie Tuelday

r

a.. ..... .....

ElaJII 'WIIblrltr, Clblldren,
A. J., RudJ IIIII DIIDI, Mr.
IIIII ..... Roy DcillobeW, Mr.
111111 Mra. DaYid Glueelalll',

I
I

I

·~ came, Mr.

I·1

IIIII

llln. ErwiD Qloet:lrrw. I~
en~~~~ IIIII eake..,. ~eeL
llr, ud 11r1. WUIIam
Wktllalllld 1011 ltyla apent
1111 wnlllllll wllb Mr. IIIII
Mn. ~- Price IIIII family
' • It CGllJIIIblll. 8eiJU Wlcllllne
· C11Dt 11C11M w11b 1111 pannla,
.• ....., 1ft.- IDIIIdlnl a
·' WM11 wllb 1b1 Prtca -IIIII
=.111Wolfe
ColtunMI
:.
ntumed

I

~~~~
CLIP &amp; MAIL
Dai~

•.

'

"t::

, 111m1 W•tiD•daJ 1ft.- !l

: wetll'l Yillt wltll her
da11C)tter, llr. a11d Mra.

EXPIRES

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

NAME................................ ......................
ADDRESS •••••••••••.
'
.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••

a.s .,_ •

SEPtoiBU
'

- ·
ZIP CODE ···········
STATE..................................
'

'

[J CHECK .............. 0 MONEY ORDER ..... ~ .......,
I l AMT•.•••••••••••••• : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••·••••••• ,.

'30,
' 1171
·~

'

.

REfUNDS

•'

'l

r

[,

IJ

m.

• IIIII lllek ,_. b)' pluua.
·! :. Mn. Mae Dtlnt II I
~ mr·n· P"'E' ll V...._
llelphal. Mrl. : aurp 11orr11 of Jtr 'war
~ •d
Larry Dvlt of
: IJrlqfteld •lilted their
•· nat ..., till •r I "'·
' .... " llorrtl It · · - Ill
_- llr.Uti, Mn. BID Ilmlth
.......... Doalll of

,...._...
I

. SOIRY,
. '

, . NO

om.,

............. Jd .. om.

C:llrf .•.....•.........•...............•.......••.•......•...• ,

·

'-·

were

IIIII 111'1. Da1111 Hill and

1

lltEY WIU
RECEIVE
9 MONlltS OF
THE HOMETOWN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

IN THE
UNITED
STATES

Va.

,_u of Mr.

•

I

I·

The

w.

...:
••

.: . ......... wwtLAirerDIJ
J ' { . . . . . . . . ol Mr. w
!1. ...... .., ........ lr.
,. : llr......... 14 . . . ol
'

\ll

"

.'

1

_

,

•
Teuu;
J ,Jz·ng
annzversary

TI
J'J'

j

PT. PLEASANT - Women
of Hic)&lt;ory Chapel Church
recently hosted the 60th
wedding anniversry of Mr.
and Mrs. A. L. Stewart on
Sunday, Aug. 27 from 2 to 4
p.m. at their home on Ohio St.
The former Grace McDaniel, Pt. Pleasant, and A.
L. Stewart , of Collinsville,
lllinois were mar-ried in Pt.
Pleasant, while the latter was
stationed in the Army there in
1918.
The ladies brought two
large cakes for the occasion.
Also served were pun ch,
mints and nuts.
Those registering were Ina
L. Brewer, Phyllis· and
Willard Collins, Marj orie

I&amp;'"""'
I)

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walbu rn,
and other relatives . He i~ a
se nior Hl the Vi rginia lntermllnt College at Bristol, mojo r ing in busi ness t:H.Iministratiun and . management.

Connolly, Sa rah Mattox,
Roberta Myers, Louise
Bennett Roush, Mrs. Brenda
Bla ck, Twila Beth Black,
Mrs. R. D. Oseland , Helen
Oseland , Nancy Carter ,
Karen Peters, Th elm a
Ca rt er, Rev . Orville White,
Warren and Adda Baker and
David, Walden Roush, Nellie
Bennett , Violet Harmon ,
Maudellen Henry, Mr. and
Mrs . Andrew McG owan,
Gena Webb, Mary Webb,
Bobbie Webb , Rhonda Craig,
·Jenny and Jeffrey Carpenter.
The honorees, Mr. and Mrs.
Stewart , are well known and
admired throughout Mason
County.

At Inlcn nunt he is

president

of

guvl'rnmcnt .

Hoschar, Lauren e Lewis ,

Ba rbara Huffm an, ·Alice
and yellow was use~. The McDermitt, Mr . and Mrs.
cake was deco rated in Charles Anson, Mr. and Mrs.
similar colors. A stork Lew Wiley, Karyn and Phil,
centered the table, and gifts Dot Schwarz, Helen Fisher,
were placed in a bassinette. Gertrude P'r'eston, Martha
Refreshments of cake, ice Young , Hichard ana Mike
cream, punch, mints and nuts Young, Charles M. Lathey
were served to the following : and Glady s Roush .
Jane Johnson , Lucy Johnson,

Dianne

J ohn son,

Betty

VanMeter, Jane Ann Van·

Meter, Patty VanMeter and
Ruby Young, all of West
Columbia.
Leona Golf, Ali ce Ann
Lath ey, Gera ldin e Lewi s,
Tammy Fisher, Petie Lewis,

HOMECOMING SET
Annual homet.:uming uf the
Wesley Chapel Church will be
held Sunday with a basket
dlnner lt t 12 :30 and '-' service
nt 2 p.m . The publk· is in·

vited.

\ ')&gt;

•

the student
Whil e

here

Steve tra veled to St. l.ouJS,
MiL

hosted Sunday

fm a short visit with Bill

Vaughetn .
The Walbums' daughter .
.hll, a 1978 graduate of Meigs
High Sehoul, is iu Lincolnton ,
:.1 . C. where she is working in
cl1ild ca re, which includes
assis tance wtth a readi ng
pro~ra m

fo r fi rsl grmlc rs

011

a um··tlHJill' ba sis .

8 GREAT MACHINES THAT
MAKE SEWING EASY I

REVIVAL
Revival services a re

in

progress at the Morse Chapel
Church on the RacinePortla nd Road at 7:30 each
evening. The Hev. Robert
Salser of Glasgow, W. Va ., is
the speaker and there are
special voca l numbers each

evening. The public is invited
lo the ser vi ces.

• Athens 2000 machine
• Stylist machine model 533
Futura II machine model 920
*Stylist machine model 534
*Fashion Mate maching model 360
*Touch &amp; Sew II machine model 770
· •Stylist maehine model 776
*Fashion Male machine model 247

*

All Sale Priced

Law School Admission Test to be given
The Law School Admission deadlines are Nov . 6, Jan. 4,
Test (!.SAT) will he given at March 22, and May 24,
Marshall University on Oct. respectively.
The I.SAT is requ ired by
14, according to Dr. Soo Bock
Choi, coordinator for the most American law schools
Marshall .!.SAT Center and for admission, said Choi,,who
professor of political scienc e. also serves as advisor to the
Registrations for the Oc- J ohn Marsha ll Pre-Law
tober test must he post- Association.
"Candidates for admission
marked no later than Sept. 14
or be accompanied by a $5' to law school in the fall of 1979
non-refundable lat e should register for either the
registration fee . During the October or December I.SAT,
1978-79 academic year, the since many schoo ls select
!.SAT will he administered at their freshman law cla sses in
Marshall on four other dates : the spring," Choi sa id.
Copies of the "Law School
Dec. 2, Feb. 3, April 21 and
June 23. The registration Admissions Bulletin ," con-

Benji raises funds for Dystrophy

Benji, the canine star of
motion
pictures
and
Summerville, N. J ., Mr. and l!pellt Labor Day weekend at television , recently joined Ed
Mra. Hout ferCIIIOD of Pt. their c:abln.
McMahon, Dan Haggert y,
Plnaart were Sunday
Mr- and Mra. BW Chapman · Billy Carter, J.oe Frazier and
of Mra. Pearl Norrlllllll Mra. of Elilabetbton, Tenn. vialted other celebrities for The
Ett Warner.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Great American Hot Air
Mra: .Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Dora Paraona.
Balloon Race in Longview,
Mra. Carl Wolfe, Jr. and
Mr. and Mra. Dorsa Par- Texas, a benefit for the
family were vlaltors at sons, Mr. and Mrs. RuaseU Muscular Dystr o phy
Marietta SundaYRoush
attended
the Association.
Mra. E11!1 Wolfe and homecoming Sunday at
The floppy-eared star was
Herllert tolllh were In Athena Jaebon Chapel Olurch at chosen Grand Parade
Friday on bllllnell. Mn. Ml- Alto, W, Va.
Marshal and rode to the
Wolfe IIIII aon Aaron were In
Bobby Jewell of Letart, W. balloon race atop a chauffeur
Athena Labor Day and did Va. spent Tuesday till - driven limousine as
10me painting on their Saturday with 1111 grand- thousands of admirers lined
realdancel tbilre.
parents, Mr . and Mrs. the parade route. The race,
Mn. EW. Wolfe, 1011 Aaron Gerald Hayman, Mrs. Unda billed as "The Battle of the
attended the reunion of the Jewell, dallghter Barbara, Beers," featured McMahon
deacendanta of the late apent Satllrday evening with aboard the Budweiser balloon
Geofle and SUIIOIII Rolllh II the Haymans and Bobby
Union Camp Grotmda at New accompanied them · to his
Haven Sunday. Tbe)' alan home.
caUed on Rev. and Mn.
Mrs. Robert Hart of Racine
Jamea Lewla, al Point apent the weekend with Mr.
Pleaunt and vlllted the and Mra. Bruce Hart at
Silver ~· Pilla.
Colwnblll- On Satllrday they Mrs. Bill fox and David.
Mille aJiiiilla ol Griffin Air were joined It the Hart home
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Bearhs
Force BUt, Indiana apent by Mr. and Mra. Ted of Portsmouth, Va. spent
the Labor Day ..tlllli with Hayman,
Mra.
Focie Labor Day weekend with
IIIJpaNli;Mr.andMn. Bob Hayman.
Mrs . Kathryn Hunt and
Rllo4Jel. M. IIIII Mra. BW Mra. Eileen Buck and family and visited her
Daridllon of SyracuM alan father, Early Roush spent a mother, Mrs. Erma Wilson at
vlalted the Rbodea.
recent weekend with Rev. the Arcadia Nursing Home at
Mr.'and Mra. Lilt• Rolllh, IIIII Mrs. Petrick Greene at Coolville.
Johnnl,, r,tike and Vicld, . Loullvllle, Ky.
G~orge Hunt of Point
Grel (:IMIH, Mr. IIIII Mra.
Mr. and Mrs. Dona Pleasant spent Sunday with
Jim COnnolly, Brian 111d Par10111, Mr. and Mra. Mrs. Margie Hunt. They also
SbeJIJ, Mr. 11111 Mn- Boler Rllllell Roum, Mandy and visited Mr. and Mrs. Wimpy
Manni 111d cblldren _ at- Mldlael Rwilell, Cindy and Hunt and family.
tended the ancinllltl Radl 14 Roum, Mn. Sbaroll Hupp
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley
IIIII a.teqo CUbl blllbaD ' lltlilded the Dunt reunion at and children of Columbus
pme at Clnclmatl J'ridl)' 1t1ra Land at Ravenawood spent Labor Off weekend
ewenlnl. Mr. and 111'1. IAittr Saturday.
with his parents, Mr. and
Roultb lllllftt 1111 wMII:end
Mn. Margaret Gloeclmer. Mrs. Russell Findley and
with llr. and Mn.. Walter niece Roulee Story of (amlly and attended Sunday
U"ad1 at 'l'loyllltllbl nit Darwin Cllelnted the birth- School at the local Methodist
nl ... II'OQP rillted JCJap day of Mn. Gloeclmer b)' dlurch.
lllllld tmr lbl UNikend.
dlnlnl IJill lboppinl It the
Mra. Clifford (Pauline) Hill
Mr. and Mr1. SteYllll Mall.at PlrW'Ibarl Friday. wu returned to her home
IIIIIJ, lind and •epbpllla,. Sunday dinner pelll of recently after bring
Mr. and lira. Bob R-'1 ol Mr, 111d Mra. Erwin hoapita~ed due to a car
W.U PtD ttplllllltvdaY wllb Oloeellner Sunday were accident at Holzer Medical
Mr, ..S )In, RGDaltl R..U. aannce story and daul!hter, Center. She Ia Improving
"Hir . . Mille.
. . . . of Darwin.
Sililfactorlly. Her dau)lhterllr. •lln.llll On'
,
Mr. 11!4 Mtl. Ray R-11 ln-law, Mrs. Peggy Hill is
Mr. IIIII Mn. Mille a.Jadl cl Newark were Labor Day -lltlng In her care.
IIIII dllldnll of
art nell•d Ptlll of Mr. and

cu••

Mr. and Mn. Dull stevena

'17.50

OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY
COLLEGE

.

Ret.'O!Initlon was given to
Mrs. MiteheU who organized
the local club in Feburary,
1967. Mrs. Edna Slusher
registered the guests. Thanks
were extended to Mrs. Byers
who made the identification
~gs and the mints. Mrs.
Bowen made the banquet
reservation arrangements.
Mrs. Ewing and Mrs. Cleek
provided the favors.
A sympathy card was signed for Mrs. Iris Kelton and a
get-well card for Mrs. Clara
Adams.

10

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

THIS

vi siti n ~ her e with his pal't!llL":i,

at the Meip Im for llllln,
Members of the Twin City
rnemllln ol 'nlea Court,
·0ri4111111 Shrine of Nurth Shrlnetees attending were
America, and honorinll Qlra Beegle, president ; Lora
· J:lorot,by,BIIIIr, hillh prieateaa. Byers, vk"e prellident; Mary
' ' Altencllnll were Evelyn Bowen, treasurer; Anges L.
BalltJW, prlnceu; Mary Ali~'e Brown, Mary H. Cleek, Mary
Whartan. II.UO(.iale prlnc:elll ; Huglles, Beulah Ewing,
, ·~Olin A1new, recorder ; Shirley Beegle, 1nd Gertrude
. . Freda Jay, tnuwer ; Annll Mitchell.
The prayer Willi given by
• FUlmore, flnt t.-eremunllll
Mrs.
Hu11hes with Mrs.
· lady; Loulae Wallera,IM!COild
Bee11le
extendlnll the
· ~reiDonlal lady; Vern1
welcume.
She
also presented
·Zeitler, junior put high
a
cul'liiiJie
lo
Mrlf,
Blair who
pri.._; Rhoda J . Hille,
g1ve
her
annual
lne!lllllge.
'nlea Court 5; Dorothy Ham-

I

and

RECAPPED
SNOW TIRES

Steve Walburn has rctum-

c&lt;l· to Bristol , Va . after

Table arrangements carried

Apple Grove
N~s Notes

lltE DAILY SENTINEL

INSULATED

Steve Walburn
returns
'·

J. !)' . r:,.
•
'
· ''ftle Twin Clly Shrinett.ea mans, pilst high priesles!J ;

:1n1

FRUIT COCKTAIL. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/9f

,WATER
REPELLENTI

.

Worklhop training for local
offl~rs wW be held October
9, 1978 at Malta UM Church,
beglnnlng at 6 p.m.; Qstober
11, Rutland lJM Church
beginning at · 1 p.m., and
October i8, 1978 at Nelsonville UM Church at I p.m. All
officers of UMW units should
attend one of the scheduled
workshops.

hatted 1 dinner Monday even- Edith Howell, banquet chair- out hen'Oiors for the year .

PORK W/BEANS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/Sf
•
1
BEENIE WEENIE•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/6f
, ,

[liS

gramlpanmts arc Mrs. I.u ld

Twin City Shrinettes host dinner
Monday for members of Thea Court

TOILET TISSUE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 55~

(~rc&lt;:t l -

Glo us ter .

United ·Methodist Women
Conference Christian Social
Involvement Officer, will
speak on "Women In Rural
Devel$nent." Election and
Installation of offl~rs will be
held. Eadl United Methodist
Women'• unit Ia encouraaect
to partlc:tpate In the Parade
of BaMen, sponsored by
membership committee
theme "Come Alive."

prize .
The color scheme of green

4, Pomeroy, &lt;:Hid Mr. ami
Mrs. John ,J. Downs.

'

i Tbe Athena Dlatrlc:t United

Me Bride, Mrs. Hclcu Ouwns,
Gluu:;tt!l' , ami Mrs. Iva
,J0Illlsun, Houle 4, P01nery.

cmd

Mrs . .John H. Muq1hy , Route

... ...

CUFTON - Mrs. George
R. (A udrey ) Young was
honored with a stork shower
on September 7, ·at Clifton
United Methodist Annex.
Ho~tesses were Mrs. Harold
Young, Alice Ann Lathey, Sue
Schwarz and Roberta Young.
Games were played and

Sandra VanMeter , all of Pt.
Pleasant.
Eve lyn and Gladdie
Stewart, Sue Schwarz, Helen•
Roush, all of Mason.
Kathy Young, Vickie Lynn
Clark, and Kristin Clark, all
of New Haven . Also attending
were Wilma Blake and
prizes won by Jane J ohnson Margie Cart wright , both of
and Betty VanMeter. Mrs. Clifton.
Wilma Blake won the door
Sending gifts were Alice

sun , J ohn Adam , two.
Grand(&gt;arcnts Hrc Mr.

I

SHORTENING ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s1.49

HEAT

Brandl, Mr.· and Mrs. Roy
Gillilan, Chester, Ohio; Mr.
and ·Mrs. Henry Deem ,
Carolyn Dyer and Travis
Dyer, Belpre, Ohio; Mr. and
Mra. Jake Jobnaon, Toronto,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Bass, Louisville, Ky .;
Georgia Weekley, Mt. Holly,
New Jersey ; Mr. and Mrs.
Carl J. Gillilan, Canton,
,Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Paul.
Caldwell, East Uverpool, 0.;
Llllirl Brady, Pt. Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Joh1110n, Parkersburg ; Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Roush ,
Letart, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Roush, GaWpolis, 0 .;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis
and Tina, MlnersvWe, Ohio;
Allee Faye, Stephanie and
Tiffany Gardner, Pomeroy,
0. ; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Stewart, Chris and Jared,
Syracuse, Ohio; George and
Linda Gillilan and Lee,
Pomeroy; Patty Baker,
Columbus, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene v. White, Logan, o.;
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F.
Joh1110n, HWiard, Ohio ; Mr.
and Mrs. Slldon R. Johnson,
Torch, 0.; Esta Roush, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Anthony
Williams, Cochranton, Pa.

Mrs. George Young
honored with shower

Athuus . The baby wci~ht!d
£i vc pu.umls, seven ounces
ami was 19 inches long . Mr .
cmtl Mrs. Dvwns havc etnother

!:· wcirkshop training held for

12 oz. REENES NOODLES ..................... ~~~;·.. 7f

Senior Citizens ' Chorus
enjoys Tuesday picnic

~n. W.Va., Brent Hart,
Letart, W."Va.
Lucy E. Jobnaon, Mr. and
Mn. JQbn C. Jolmaon, John,
Travla, Bryant, Mr. and Mra.
Vernal Johnaon, Gewama
Johnson, Lorna Johnson, and
Maggie Johnaon, all of West
Columbia.
Mr. ' and Mrs. · David
Johnlon, Mr. and Mn. Brian
Joh1110n, Donna and Cindy
Glue, and Bettf · Combs,
Middleport.
Survllla Gilland, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Gilland and
Bethany, New Haven.
Mr. Clyde W. Johnlon,
Dennia ~ Ethel Johnlon,
IIIah an~ BW !lolllh, Mr. and
Mrs. Don RoUib, Mr. and
Mn. Roier Johnlon, Mra.
Ethel Johnson, Mr. and Mra.
Lester 'Pri~. Portland, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund
Tober, Ruth Johnson, Toledo,
Ohio; Mr. 111d Mra. Eugene
E. Davia, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert H. Rolllh, Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Johnaon, Racine,
Ohio.
Mr. IIIli Mn. Jack Rolllh,
Kathy, Carrie and Jackie,
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Johnson,
Cheater, W. Va.
· Marjqrle Reeves and

Gluustl!J', ure aJJIHIUII-

the bu'lh of a son. Ju~c ph

Erie, burn on Saturday , .July
t.! at O'Biene.s Hospital in

I

SLICED CHEESE..~.~~:..S1.29

OUR SNOW
TIRES ARE ·R EADY
FOR WINTER!

Any Size Plus
Recappable 1 ire
&amp; F . E. T. Black
Or White Wall
No charg e for mounting

.

'

A birthday party was held
for Marion Snider, Jr., Thm·sFrench City
day at the home of his grandit !
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Actually , he's luckier than many : His boss merely left him Cha rles Snider, Filicine.
fi red and unpaid. It is alleged that some crew leaders enCake and ice cream were
&lt;'Ourage prostitution, burglary, and drug dealing for extra pro- served to his parents, Mr. and
Chicago, Ill. was maid of fits . (And prospective customers can be dangerous too.
hunur. ami the bridesmaids Everything from rape to dog bites -these are risks magazine · Mrs. Marion Snider, Sr., his
great-grandmother, Mrs. Edwere Miss Suzanne Apple, sales men and women face .) - H
'12 lb- Southern
"" Pickens, Ollie Mae Cozart,
Athens, and · Melinda An. Patrick Snider, Betty
drews, Atlanta, Ga.
DEAR HELEN.
Williams, Pam Bal·ber, and
The groom's fathe1·, Joseph
I'm drowning in junk mail. l've heard you can have your Ke11ny Reed. Gifts were
12 oz. Kraft deh,nte
Friedman , se1-vcd as best name removed from most mailing lists, but how'- Jo
presented to the youngster.
man, oml tht! ushers were DEARJO:
Craig Cambna, Vail , Colo.,
Pimento or
Write to Direct Mail Marketing Association, Inc., 6 East 43rd
and Ji1runy Rutland , Bangor, Street, New York, N.Y., 10017. They 'll have your name removMC~. ine.
ed from members' lists if you request it. Of course, aU adver,
Following on aftemoon tisers don't belong to the association but nevertheless you 'II
The Almanar
reception, the couple left em see a marked decrease in third-dass " junk."- H.
United Press International
lhtil' honeymoo11 to Australia
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
P.S, Nut everyone feels as you do. Read on :
and Tahiti.
3 lb. Teen Queen
13, the 256th day of 1978 with
109 to follow.
DEAR HELEN:
The moon is approaching
I'm 70, live alone, and feel terrible when the mailman passes
me by as usuaL I guess they cross off old people from adver- its full phase.
101/2 oz. Campbell's
The morning stars are
tisers' mailing lists, but we still have money to buy, and I love
and
to gel mail, even if it's what other people call ''junk," Tell me Mercury, Jupiter
Henry , all of Columbus.
Saturn
.
Leu Cru se r. I.ea t ha huw.- LONELY
The evening stars are Mars
Grueser . Mrs. S. W. Bailey, DEAR LONELY;
and
Venus.
I'm sure the DMMA will add as well as subtract names from
J ohn
P.
G ru ese r ,
Those
born on this date are
Parkersburg, W. Va .: Mrs. its lists. Write to the above address. May your mailbox soon under the sign of Virgo.
Nao m i Bai ley, Mr s. overllow!- H.
2 Pkg . Soft Weave
John J . "Black Jark" PerM:uga ret Whiteacre , Mrs.
shing, illustrious American
Earl Eichinge r, Mr. and Mrs.
general of World War I, was
AI Davis. Girard; Mrs. T. C.
born Sept. 13, 1860.
Fisher. Jan and Mark F1sher,
On this day in ·history :
New Ridunoml ; Mr. and
In
1788,
Congress
Mn;. E lme r Grueser , Mr. and
authorized the first U.S.
Mrs. Kei th G ruese r . Point
14112 oz. Showboat
The Meigs Senior Citizens Beulah Ulterbach, Freda national election, to he held
Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs.
Chorus etljoyc&lt;.l et pi(;ni c Tues· ljev ing , Early Roush, Ber- "the first Wednesday in
W1lliam D. Grueser, Akron;
day at the Ameriean Legion ni ce Winn, Joyce Bunch, January next (1789)."
Mr . a nd Mrs . Mitchell
In
1966,
Ameriran
Millard , Mansfi eld : Mr . and Memorial Park on Mi ll St, Wanda Vining , Clara
8 ox . Van Camp
astronaut Richard G&lt;lrdon's
Midtllcporl.
Thomas,
Alice
Wamsley,
Mrs. Shelby Kin g, La nsgin ,
Atle ndin ~
were Bess ie Caryl Cook, Aleda Worner, scheduled 115-minute "space
Mich .; Mr . and Mrs . Milton
Still, Bertha llobinson, Marie Jessie Houchins, Ruth Circle, walk" was cut to 44 minutes
Houda s hclt:
St a nl ey
when perspiration in his suit
11 oz . Stokely's
· Huudashelt. Ro1.&gt;e11 Harlen- Chapma n, William Watson, Florence Canaday , I n:ne .
partially blinded him.
Gem·gia
Watson,
Ralph
Kern.
Christy,
Cli
ffo
rd
Ch1·isty,
bach Mr. and Mrs. Jim Shatu
In i971, New York state
and' dau glller . all of Betty . Lou Kern , Ruse Haze l Thomson, and Cedi
forces stormed and regained
MeDade.
Et
hel
Hughes,
Bradbu1·y
.
Gallipolis.
12112 oz. Morton's
Eli zabe th Slav in , Mae Weber.
control of Attica State Prison.
Twenty-eight convicts and
nine hostages they held were
Brewers bave out-ofto wn visitors
killed.
Rer cnl v1si ti m·s at tile nan and Eric, Newburgh,
home
of Mrs. Allen Brewe1· Ind.; Mrs. Marilyn Beall, Colgood grooming.
and
David
at Stivcl'sville wnbus; Mrs. Clyde Close and
Contestant must possess
and display a talent. This have been Mrs. Arnold Don- Roy, Waterford; Mr. and
Mr s. Edgar Brewer ,
talent may take the form of ·
singing. dancing , playing a - - - - - - - - - - Portland: Mr. and Mrs.
mu sic8 1 in s trument, in the loca l, state or national Harold Brewer, Long But- 1
tum ; M1·s. Lottie Bradford,
dr ama t ic
reading ,
a rt
contest because of race, FUleine, and Berry Bradford ,
display, dress designing, or creed or co lor. Contestant
WHY NOT SEND ALONG
she may give a talk on a mu;t be a bona fide resident Wooster.
subject of her choice. It is of the State of Ohio. Conex press ly und er stood that test ant must recognize the- ·
should any contestant 's talent ex istance of a supreme being.
REVIVAL
routine at the Southeast Ohio
John Lanier, Junction City ,
1nose high school senior
Junior Miss finals exceed girls wishin g more in- is evangelist for a revival bethree and one-hall minutes, formalin on the Southeast ing held this week at the
such contestant will be Ohio Junior Miss Program Chester Church of tile
disqualified from receiving ca n receive information by Na1.a'rene. Serviees begin
FOR ONLY
any points in the creative and wnting; So utheast Ohio each evening at 7:30 p.m. and
performing arts category .
Junior Miss, Inc., P. 0. Box will continue through Sept.
No con testant shall be 104, Pomeroy, 45769.
24. Herbert Grate is pastor.
denied the right to participate

junior Miss rules announced
Rules for the 1979 Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss final s were
announced today by contestants chai&lt;man, Miss
Calista Searls.
Rules · are : Cont est ant
must be single and never
have been married, divorced
or had a marriage annull ed.
Contestant must be a bona
fi de hi gh school senior and
shall not graduate prior to
May 1, 1979.
Contestant's age on March
1, 1979 shall not he less than 16

.

f)(,wrls,
l'l!lg

.

SLICED BACON •• ~ •••••• ,••••••••••••••••~~~·••s1.39

Funeral seroices held
Funeral s~ rvices fur Bradforrd Metag were conducted
Friday at the Ewi1ig Funeral
Home by the Rev. Ha rvey
Koch, J r. Bunal was in the
Minersville Hill Cemetery .
Pallbearers were Fred
Wolfe, William D. Grueser,
Danny Brown. J ohn 1'.
Grueser , Allen Williams, and
Kenneth Wiggins. Hi ram

\

After the meetln&amp;, the,
Three families represented
group
enjoyed .dinner .In
the Meigs County React
Team at Sunday ',s meeting. downtown CirclevWe belpre ·
Those attending were Mr. ·traveling home to· Melg• •
and Mrs. Bob Bowles and son, County. The group wiD be
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Biggs, reporting back to the ~.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell and members, relating their' .
.Mrs. Francis Biggs a guest of experiences of meeting wlth .
other teams throughout Ohio.
the team .
-.

. Golden Isle Lb. Vacuum

Annual johnson reunion
';.held Sunday, ·Sept. 3

Mr. and Mrs. John L.

'

fill

·.·.

Announce birth

and Ca rter aboard the ·'Billy
Beer'' ba lloon and was th e
culm ination of the fundraising at1ivities which in- ·
eluded two . days of starstudded entertainm en t by
Benji and other lop stars.
AI a press conferenc e
where a special plaque was
presented to the lovabl e
canine honoring him for the
help and joy he has brought to
children with muscular
dystrophy, Ed McMahon was
asked to comment on Benji's
overwhelming popularity . He
retorted, "Nevet share a
scene with dogs or children,
they'll ileal it from you every
time ."

THE FABRIC SHOP

taining test informati on and
registration forms, may be
obtained from Choi in Smit h
Hall Room 741.

0.

ACE HARDWARE

..!..] Autom atic thermostat controls thP
combustion air intake by means of a
hi ghly sc ns iti v.e bi-metal coil. .J u~t set

MEIGS PLAZA

thr comforl level you dcsir(' .

9~

New. thicker l i ~in i{S of hi~h
temrx•rature rrfractory brick .

0

'[Q Cast. iron

Pomer~rt,

Second St.

MIS 12~ Sun.

~t rll tcs with sciC'ntifically

d cs ignPd. hcavy duly ribhL•d w ns tru c ti on

for years of ha rd use.
Cost iron rototinl' duplex s huker
gratf's for coa l hur ning (Model
[J Cast iro n ush &amp; fe-ed
arc war p n~sistanl and
airtight seal with
GJ Cast iron ash &amp; feed

0

wil hsta nd high lA•n'f&gt;Errf
warp s te~ l doors. A
gasket maintains an
matc hing frame .
[J Cast iron rlue collar
trril pcratun•s in st ride
('Xtrnckd flange for-easy
CJ E.11tra lorJte ash
and r a:-;v ash r('moval.
G Fu II ~ nd cabinet
a C('t'S!:i to ash and
[] Hea\' y du (y firebox 1
·tit·si gnt•d .. wrap" rm" l. o-u rl:. .r
an (•rnboss('(l cooking surface .
[DJ Co nte mporary s tyled cabinet with
hand~onw wood ·graincd panel. gold
nwsh grill to acce n t the dark brown
cahinl't color. and porcelain fi ni sh

~

a

lasting hr auty.

l!] Luunred lop t hat lifls off
L' rn rr·gc n c~· coo king o n l he
· firl'b(p:. top.

our chance to get the convenience and
dependability of Frigidaire and get special
S8Vi

tOO!

I

DURING OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE

•

..•

.
'

�•

a-

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Sept.13,1978

t- '1111 DailY Senllnel, Mlddleport·Pcrneroy, 0., Wednelday, Sept.13, 1978
~ • L .,J._
·
For Thursdoy. Sept. 1C
should have no trouble recog·

Buckeye state 46th in receiving federal aid
(EDITOR 'a NOTE :
Followlllglo the flnt of three
artlclea prepered "" seven
graduate atudnts In tbe
Kiplinger· Public Affair•
llqHlrtblc Program at the
Ohio State Unlvenlty School
of JoarnaliAm dealing with
the Impact of federal
covemmeDI on Ohio.)
COLUMBUS (UP!) -: Ohio

"

is the sixth most populolll! Kiplinger program at the
state but ranks 46th in the OOU School of Journalism .
proportion ¢ federal aid to
The articles surveyed the
state and local govemments impact of the federal governit received In 1977, according . menton Ohio, bow much faith
ID a report by six graduate Ohioans have in their elected
students at Ohio State officials and why Ohio does
not receive moce federal
University.
The
statistics
were funds .
The report showed that
contained in a series of
articles prepared by six Ohio was 49th in education in
graduate students in the federal funds received. C7th

in transportatiOn, 44th in
agriculture and 39th in
welfare, after the .2 .~ billion
in grants Ohio received was
calculated on a per person
basis among the state's 10.7
million residents.
However, Ohio has left
unclaimed literally millions
of dollars In federal funds It
could have had over the past

..

A link between hard water
and low heart disease rates?
By CHARLES S. AUllNGER
WASHINGTON (UPI) Residents of west Texas may
have a harder time washing
clothes
than
other
Americans, but they also
reportedly have the lowest
death rate frnm heart disease
in the United Si ·tes.
Experimental
Biology
reported on a recent study
which suggests there may be
a link between the hard water
and the low heart disease
rates. It indicates that hard
water may protect the heart
and arteries fro m high
sodium levels.

The
Federation
of
American Societies for
.The report from a group
headed by Dr. Earl B.
Dawson at the University of
Texas Medical Branch in
Galvestrn looked at metal
levels in urine samoles and in
the drinking water of 24 west
Texas. communities and
compared those levels ID
car diovascular mortality
rates.
" The Upper Rio Grande
Valley has the hardest water
with the highest lithium
content in the United States,"
Dawson said in a telephone

interview. "It also has the
lowest
cardiovascular
mortality rate in the United

States."
The Texas report, earlier
printed in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition ,
was another in a number of
studies from around the
world searching for a
relationship between water
hardness aoo heart disease .
The previous reports have
been crnflicting.
The Texas group hypothe·
sized that high levels of
lithium,
magnesium,
strontium ane silicon in the

excess

New phase announced
The Am erican Electric
Power System and STAir
Laval Turbin AB of Sweden
announced today entry of a
new phase in their continuing
joint research into an ef· .
ficient method of burning
high-sulfur coal to produce
electricity while safeguar·
ding the environment.
The American utility and
t he Swedish gas-turb ine
manufacturer, a subsidiary
of ASEA, have signed an
ag re ement covering· the
second pha se of their
development
of
the
pressurized fluidized-bed
combustion process (PFBC) .
Its
object ive
is
the
operation
of
a
170,·
000
kilowatt PFBC
combined-cycle generating
unit at the deactivated Tidd
Plant of Ohio Power Com·
pany at Brilliant, 0 . Ohio
Pow er is one of seven
operating companies in the
AEP System. '
The new work will take
about a year and will cost the
two partners, together, in
excess of $2 milli on to
complete .
AEP Chairman W. S.
White, Jr. explained that the
second phase would con·
centrate on va rious design
aspects of the PFBC
"combustor " and gas turbine
through the conduct of cold
and hot test work . This work
will involve combustion tests
at a PFBC pilot plant owned
by the British National Coal
Board in Leat herhead ,
England, inc luding participati on in a 1,OOO· hour
combu stion test to study
possibl e
erosion
and
eorrosion of turbine blades.
This test will be funded by the
U. S. Department of Energy

and the Electric Power
Research Institute, for wtllch
AEP will provide the test
coa l.
White said that the aim of
the second phase is t o
demonstrate, 11 85 we believe
that it will," that PFBC can
work on an efficient and
economical basis and that its
projec.ted
capital
and
operating costs will be ac·
''When
that
ce pt able,
determination is made," he
added, "we will be in a
position to design and build
an engineering system
development pl ant. Successf ul test operatiOn ol
PFBC would then open the
door for the design· and
construction of a commercial
PFBC plant of 500,000
kilowatts ."
First phase of the program ,
recently completed, took 15
months .
It
involved
feasibility
studies and
combustion tests of high·
sulfur Ohio coal and Ohio
dolomite at th e Leatllerhead
facility .
Purpose behind PFBC
deve lopm ent , White explained , is to have "a sound
alternative to costly and
inefficient flue-gas scrubber
systems on generating units,
to add to the efficiency of the
generating cy cle and t o
provide an enlarged market
for high-sulfur coal, notably
from Ohio ."
The PFBC unit envisioned
for Tidd Plant would operate
on a combined cycle, using
both hot gases and steam to
generate electric energy .
High-sulfur coal would be
burned at high pressure in a
bed of inert material dolomite in this case,
limestone in others - which

EPA adopts new
land use policy
By DICK KIMMINS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) ~
The decrease In prime farmland acreage in the United
States ha s pr ompted the
Environmental
Protection
Agency to ad~l a policy
geared tDward evaluating its
pr ograms
to
pr otect
America 's breadbasket.
EPA
Adminis tra tor
Douglas M. Costle announced
the new policy Tuesday in a
9peech befoce the National
Associatio n
of
State
Departments of Agriculture
meeting here.
"It is the EPA's policy to
prote ct ,
t'hrough
the
administration
and
implementation its programs
and regulations, the nation's
envirorunentally significant
agricultural land from
Irreversible conversion to
tileS which result In its loss as
an environmental or essential
food production resource," he
said.
Costleadded that the policy
Hmakes sense II becatJae lithe
Jli01It productive farm lands
are al8o the ones that are the
most
environmertally
Uleful."
He quoted Agriculture

,

'

behaves, under such con·
ditions, as a fluid .
The dolomite captures the
sulfur given off in com·
bust ion . while the hot gases
expand through a gas tur·
bine, which produces elec·
tricity. At the same time,
steam, produced from water
in tubing submerged in the
bed, would be fed to Tidd's
conventional I urbine
generator to generate more
electricity.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mn. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs . Russell
Roush and son, Ed, Mr. and
Mrs . Dana Lewis, Mrs.
Brenda Hagey, Stephanie and
Brad , spent Monday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. R&lt;&gt;nald
Russell and family .
Mr. and Mrs. J oe Manuel, ·
Mr . and Mrs. Sid Manuel,
Tiin Manuel, Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Hudson, Mr . and Mrs.
Marvin McGuire, Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Bailey, Cheryl and
Michael Bailey all enjoyed a
picnic Sunday at the home of
Mr . and Mrs. Harry Roush at
Mmersv11le.
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of
Long Bottom, Donnette
Talbott of Portland visited
Mrs. Edith Manuel on her
birthday and presented her a
cake decorated in white icing
trimmed with pink roses,
green leaves with " Happy
Birthday Edith ." Other
guests were Joe Manuel and
son, Tim.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pyles
of Racine visited Mr. and
Mrs. Don Manuel and family
Monday.
Deanna Shuler was an
overnight guest of Donnita
an d Robin Manuel Wed·
nesday . They all had dinner
at the Syracuse Dairy Bar,
Syracuse .
Mrs . Joyce
Manuel ,
Donnita and R&lt;&gt;bin visited
Mr . and Mrs. Cha;les Me·
Nickles Sunday .
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Roy , son Rex, Thomas
Warner of Racine visited
their mother, Mrs . Ett
Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush
assisted Mr and Mrs. Jacob
Bu sh with their potato
digging Mmday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of
Long Bottom visited Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Manuel and Tim .
Saturday and Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Miller,
Amy and Jason , of Bellvue,
0 ., spent a recent weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lawson and family

Secretary Bob Bergland as
saying the United States bad
lost rn the average 1 mlllion
acres of prime farmland in
each of the last 3C years,
primarily to interstate
highways, suburban sprawl
and sewage treatment
facilities , " all of which
require flat farmland ."
.
" EPA wants to make sure
that its programs have a
minimal impact on the loss of
agricultural land," he said.
"The Agricultural Lands
Protection Polley,"
continued Costle, "calls for
tile same ldnd of procedure the type of thoughtful review
- to be used to protect the
counlry's most productive
farmlands " as ·President
Carter national urban policy
review.
" H they (prime farmlands )
are taken out of production to
LOS ANGELES ( UPI) be used as the sites for new
Second-year
wide receiver
homes or sh~ping centers,
suffered a
Billy
Waddy
or
other
kinds
of
broken
rib
in
'the
Los Angeles
development, farmers wtU be
Rams'
1~ win over Atlanta
forced to turn . to more
marginal lands," said Costle. Sunday and won 't be able to
"The result wlll be more play against Dallas, the
use of energy and fertilizers , Rams reported Monday.
Waddy could rntu several
and more runoff, In other
games,
a Ram spokesman
words, more pollution."
said.

•.

west Texas water help
protect residents against
heart and circulatory disease
by removing excess water,
sodiwn and potassium from
the body .
" lithium, which seems ID
have the greatest f.'!fect on
cardiovascular
disease,
judging from the number of
significant correlations with
disease rates , has been
recognized for years as a
diuretic," said the report.
The researchers noted that
sodium intake has
been associated with exce';'!l
water retention. A diuretic
promotes the excretion of
urine and body salts.
Too much sodium, which
we get from eating salt, is
considered harmful to heart
disease patients and clinical
studies imply that excessive
body sodium can adversely
affect heart tissue in humans,
the federation said.
Dawson noted that Finland,
·whichbassomeof the wocld's
softest water, also bas the
highest cardiovascular death
rate.
•' The
h i g ·h e s t
cardiovascular death rate in
the country is around
Washingtrn, D.C.; New York
and the Piedmont Plateau
stretching from southern Vir·
ginia, down threugh North
Carolina, covering virtually
all of South Carolina and iniD
the southern
half of
Georgia," he said.
" Those are very soft water
areas."
Many Americans crave soft
water because, for me thing,
it makes better soap suds for
washing hair and clothing.
AlthoughDawsonsaidbard
water may help remove
sodium from the body, he did
not suggest that Americans
begin adding chemicals to
soft water in·ocder ID help rid
th'e ir bodies of high amounts
of salt.
" It would probably be
easier to remove sodiwn
from soft water than to add,
say, lithium, calcium and
magnesium," he said.

several years.
There are several reasons
for lliis, the report said. One
is that some state officials
don't feel the effoct is worth
the money and the other Is
that numeroiiS local officials
don't know bow to ·apply for
the funds that would be
available ID them.
"Ohio is perhaps the most
unaggressive state in the
nation in going afler federal
funds," said Ralph Widner,
president of the Academy for
Contemporary Problems in
Columbus.
. "Ohio has been a stingy
· slate and as a result has lost a
lot of federal money," said

R~p .

Charles Vanik, D·
Cleveland.
"Ohio is a rather conserva:
live state," said Slate
Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey. "They would
rather not go to the federal
government. They figure the
government"is going to come
in and tell them bow to spend
it anyway ."
Gov. James A. Rhodes, a
critic of a number of federal
policies , disputed these
assertions, saying many
federal programs . don't suit
Ohio. '
"Co ngress sometimes
enacts programs that are
simply not worth perbming

Ohio Senate reconvenes

no.

~OoF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , s•ll

impact fer our citizens," said
Rhodes.
1ltere are numerous examples of money the state bas

missed.

In 1976, the report .said,
Ohio became eligible for •121
million under a new federal
program proVIding a variety
of adult and chUd care
services. The state was '
required ID put up $42 mWlon
to get the full BJilOUI1t. II
didn •t and at least S60 mlJllon
was forfeited .
·
Aides to Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, Mhio,, .have
c.o mpiled a list showing
nearly f5 mlllion rellnqulahed
for seVeral programs aimed
at helping handicapped
children and adults.
However, Ohio loses some
federal money because many
olficais simply don 'I know
it is available.
The report said 42 Ohio
counties have lost out en
'millions available from the
Economic Development
Adminsitration
because
they've · failed to draft the
required overall econcrnic
development proRrams
required by the feder.al
government.
But the federal government
is still Ohio's largest
employer with 92,000 perliOIIS
rn the payroll.
The ffderal government Is
also one of the stale's largest
tenants by leasing 6 million
square feel of building space
in Ohio. It also owns ~.239
structures with a combined 80
million square feet' of floor
space and 300,000 acres of
land.

United Press 1ntematloaal
SIDNEY, Neb. (UPI} Overc&lt;rolng a blizzard of red
tape, . this often . snowbound
town of 6:500 lD . western
Nebraska fln&amp;lly wt11 ~et a
new snowplow for liS airport
at a cost tl can affocd.
The city had mly $9,800 ID
speoo to replace its ~936
vmtage dump truck which,
with its detachable blade,
cost only $50 two decades ago .
The price tag oo a new
snowplow . proved to be
~.ooo. so ctty offlctals asked
the federal ·government for
help.
The government said it
would help, but only if Sidney
agreed to spend $113,000 for
the plow, aoo bullda$106,000
building ID house it. The
Nebraska Department of
Aeronautics, which serves aa
haison between Nebraska
cities and the FAA, also
wanted Sidney to ask for
money to update its airport
layout plan.
Since the city's share of all
that would come to 10 percent
- nearly double the expense
pr~posed in the first place-;officials said they couldn t
afford lt.
Sen. Edward Zorinsky, !).
Neb., announced Tuesday the
FederaI
A v l a I i on
Administration
baa
compromised- granting the
town $9e,900 both to buy a new
snowplow and construct 1
buDding for it. The city's 10
percent thus was reduced to
J9,990.
City Manager Merle
Strouse said he still Ia not
sure what conditions the
government may have
attached to the offer, but thai
the city wl!1 accept It.
"I personally -.,auld like to
aee it in writl"ll," oaid
Strouse. "OUr Intent Ia to buy
tile best snowplow for the
least money . We're llittin&amp;

,

light, but we're happy that a
snowplow is in the grant
application . So we'll take it."
Sidney's headaches · with
the bureaucracy, which
drove Ita effort to buy a
small, inellpellsive snowplow
into a •189,000 project, drew
national attention late in
August . AI t'hat time, the FAA
issued an ultimatum for
Sidney to decide by Sept. 8
whether oc not It wanted any
of the federal money.
In an effort to make a fiscal
end run around federal inalst·
ence that a small fortune be
spent, Zorinsky said he went
shopping for a govenunent·
surplus dump truck that
could be converted into
snowplow and donated to the
city.
Such trucks were available,
he fo111d, but eight other
Nebraska cities already were
in line for them.

a

.· · G
trade or tra in. New and used
.addt 11 . Ruth Reeve•. Albany

Maryland has primary upset

PlJ

·•-c

7

SIIOd lUT1

class ring
sole

$5495so;e

+

-

-

•

•

•

-

•

CHOICE

•

8&amp;JfJ~

FEATURES

Germ warfare specialists called

'

\t•

~-~-~

j

Workers remain on job

·

- -

'

--~

PARK RESERVED

"FAMILY OUTING"

"AUTUMN
SHADES"
Dudley's
has
designed this all
occasion bouquet In
autumn's
beautiful
shades. Makes any
occasion a brighter
happier one. Send one

eJR. ACCOUNTING
eEXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
eGENERAL OFFICE
eSECROARIAL

today.

'12
Cash

ST. NO. 75.02.04728

Carry
Vase

may .not
ex~ctly as illustrated
Use your Charge Cards
As Cash at Dudley's

i '
\

446~367

15

5

and

CALL TODAY FOR
FREE INFORMATION

79~

opportunitie s

Bernice Bede Osol

eBUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

1

15.3 Cu. Ft. .
IC111tF1. . whll
Llt•DIIf Bllklt .

ModeifC1UP

•

BURMUDA

your

today . Now don 't forget 10 be

bold and enterpris ing so that
• you can claim them . Find out to
lbl&lt;) b98·J290 .
whom you ' re romantically
suiled by sending tor your cOAy
RISING ST I&lt;R Kennel• . l!oatding
\ lj
ol Astro-Graph Leiter . Mail 50
In Colorado, .Rep. William ~ '
was trailing Councilman crowd was in Nevada, where Democratic Sen . Thomas
1111
and grooming, all breeds .
Ul..:J\!.1
cents lor each and a long , self~ By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
Armstrong beat former as- -:
Mcintyre
handily
disposed
or
Lt.
Gov
.
Robert
Rose
won
the
Marion
Barry
in
the
Cheshire ; 367-00q::l or 367-0106.
addressed . stamped envelope United Prell IDternatioaal
lronaut Jack Swigert for the ·
u)vABLE WHITE snow dr ift great
I :)Ar. · x~''~' · f ~ ~( i.l \'J to Astto-Graph, P.O. Boll 489,
Maryland Democrats Democratic primary . Democratic nominatim and Ray Caughlan and will run
GOP
nomina lion to oppose ' •
Nixon
ad- Attorney General Robert Ust against tile GOP's Gordon
~YNENHS ~uppies . ~hone
~IJU UWll.ll.:J l.J Radoo City Station. N. V. 10019. dumped the state's acting Former
Sen.
Floyd
Haskell , who had ~
l·b1Ho7 ·38J8.
Be sure to specify birth sign .. governor Tuesday in me of ministration official Arthur the GMP nod to seek the Humphrey.
no
primary
opposition .
••
Rhode Island - Sen . ClaiAKC . REGISTERED poodles" I
September 1C, t978
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Mem- the year's biggest primary Fletcher was the GOP office being va cated by
1
ln
Vermon
t,
state
Rep.
·
choco lat e .
1
apr ic o t. ~he re are C)(Cellent possibili- bers of the opposite sex lind upsets, but palace revolts mayoral candidate.
retiring Democratic Gov . borne
P ell
won
the
1-304-882-32.c2.
t1es. that )'Ou co uld open up you especially appea ling
Edwi n Gra na i won the '~
In
New
York,
Hugh
Carey
Demo
crati
c
nomina
tion
Mike
O'Callaghan.
add11ional channe ls this co m- loday. Be a little assertive if fizzled in New York and
Democraticnomination to' ,J ,
Other
primaries
where
in·
heat
u
.
Gov
.
Mary
Anne
!rouble
and
will
be
without
TWO IRISH Sener pupp1es for ing year to add to your income . th ere 1
·s one 1n
· part'1cuIar w hose Coo nectl'cul .
oppose
Re
publican
Go v. ·..,·
sole.~JO&lt;t
-773·5538.
·
t
'd
l'k
t
tt
t
I
Krupsak
and
will
face
cumbenl
governors
and
senaopposed
by
Republican
- . . . . .
Be en terprising in areas where 1n erest you 1 e o ~ rae ·
Blair Lee was the politics
Richard Snelling, who was ,
SLACK' LABRADOR tettiev et pup· you can .tu m a ptofit .
SCpRPIO (Oct. 2C·Nov. 22) victim of the day as 14 states Republican Assembly leader tors turned back primary James G. Reynolds.
'
pie• . AKC regl•toted. Chom· VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) You Loved ones less courageous and the District of Columbia Perry Duryea in November; opposition :
Wyoming - Democratic unopposed
pion bloodline : Whelped
than· yourself will be glad you
In Utah , only House seats
Minnesota - Sen . Wendell Gov . Ed Herschler beat
8 -4-78 . Phone 614 ·b67 -:m ::s9 .
are in their corner today. Your held party primaries to in Connecticut, Ella Grasso
at slake .
were
easily
won
the
Anderson
turned
back
Lt.
Gov
.
Robert
Margaret
McKinstry;
John
e-venings or w~kends .
courag e is contagiou s . It choose candidates for the
Killian and will be opposed by Democratic primary and will Ostlund won a close race for
FOR sALE: ~rder coll ie puppies. COUNTY: MEIGS
sho res up their strength .
Nov. ?,general elections.
~hono~92-Sl06 .
PUBLIC NOTICE
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
Lee, Marvin Mandel's run- GOP Rep. Ronald Sarasin . fa ce Rudy Boschwitz, who the GOP nomination . Ala n
The fo.llow ing docum enfS 21) Keep an open .mind today , · nln
·
4 d ctin
One of the most heavily beat Harold Stassen in the Simpson , son of a former
as you may discover a stimulatg.aate tn 197 an a
g
AI&lt;( REG1SH:Rl:D Siberian Hu110lo.V . were received or prepared by
The
Ohio
Env
ironmental
·
M
d
1
popul
ated and lavishly GOP primary . Democratic se nator , won the GOP
q months old. E... en ings . coli Protect ion Aoencv dur ino the ing new interest .. It could come governor stnce an e was
financed
primaries ·was held Gov. Rudy Perpich won his nomination for the Senate j
9&lt;9·l222 .
previous week . The eff ecti-ve about through a detailed dis- convicted oo. corruption char-·
da te at each final act ion is cus sion with a pal of yours .
ges, lost to Harry Hughes, in F1orida, where drugstore primary to stand against attorney Raymond Whitaker
stat•d . The issuonoe dote of CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J•n. 191 who resigned as state magnate Jack Eckerd beat Rep . Albert Quie , the won the Democrati c race .
ea cr. proposed action is E
1
f
asy outs wi I be 0 no concern transportation secretary Rep. Wou Frey for · the GOP Republican candidale .
stated . Anyone aggrieved or
Arizona - Gov. Hruce
mroination.
Rep . Donald Fraser led
1q72 DATSUN 4 door stoti on - adversely atfected by a final to you today . You 'll be pre~ claiming he had been gubernatorial
to Issue , cteny , mod ify , pared to put forth whatever
wogon , 26,000 mi le§, 4 cvl.. action
Babbitt
beat Dave Moss in
businesSman
Robert
Short
Former
Sen.
Edward
Gurney
good gtn mileage. 250 N. 3rd . revoke , or renew a perm it , effort is necessary to achieve pressured to play favorites in came back from acquittal on for
the
Democ
ratic primary;
the
Democratic
license . or variance ; or to your purposes.
.awarding Baltimore subway
Middleporl . Phone 9'12-7'J29 approve
Evan Mecham was the GOP
or disapprove plans AQUARIUS [J
•nF b 19)
slush
fund
indictments
to
win
nomination
to
seek
tile
Senate
and specificat ions , may file
an. '"'"' e ·
cmtracts.
_o 1 !•~ 4p ._m ~ _ ..
~F~. C'f
L _. ·o
an appea l with The En - This is a good day to line up
Lee jol'ned Texas Gov · the GOP primary for Frey 's seat of Hubert and Muriel leader in a three-man fi eld .
19H DATSUN PICKUP . Phone vi ronment l!ll
Board
of allies who could be benefi cial
· seal - which he held 16 years Humphrey .
Coll
ege
Wiscon
si
n
Dave
9'12·b192 after Spm.
Review , Suite 305, 395 E . to your plans. You'll Come up Dolph Briscoe as the only
Durenberger
won
th e administrator Lee Dreyfus
ago.
197&lt;t JEEP CJS , AM -FM rodlo . fog Broad St., Co lumbu s, Ohio with the right twist -to ass~re other state chief executive
upended Rep . Robert Kasten
Attorney General . Robert Republican nomination .
&lt;Jll6, within thir!y !301· days them they are part of the act . ousted in 1978 primaries.
lights, Jumbo 12' Muddef tires ol
the
·effe
ct
iwe
da
te,
pur
.
for
the
Re pu bli can
New Hampshire - GOP
Goo d
shop'e .
Phon e suont to Ohio Revised Code PISCES (Feb. 20-March ZO' In Hughes' Republican Shevin and state Sen. Robert
nomination
to
oppose
actin g
ot&lt;.753 ·2869 .
Section 3745 .07. Unless such business today the indirect' opponentinNovemberwi1Jbe Graham led the Democratic Gov. Meldrim Thomson beat
who
Gov.
Martin
Schreiber,
fina
l
action
was
preceded
by
approach
will
prove
more
sueformer
Sen.
J
.
Glenn
Beall.
Gov
.
Wesley
P
owell
former
field and will m eet in a runoff
A lTENTION MUSTANG l a 11 er ~
the same or substantially the cess fu1 fo r ·Y0 u. Do n't be devi .
beat
David
Carley
in
the
197 1 Mach I. Excellent ~ hop e ,
and
will
face
Democratic
In the Distrl'ct of Columbl'a , Oct. 5.
me . ,proposed action . All ous. but at the same time don't
olr , 302. S1700. 98S -330l dov ~ !.a
Another contest that drew a Stale Se n . Hugh Call en. Democrat ic primary .
~uch final actions are . so
Ma
Wall
Washington
Ident ified . s uch persons mav be too obvious regarding your
yor
er
985-4140 oher S pm.
·"
. - -· - reQuest an adjudication aims . ·
l qb9 CHEVY ~OVA . V-8 slondord hearing before The Ohio EPA
ARIES (March 21-Aprfl 19) To
trans . ~ un s good. SbSO on a proposed action to issue , salisfy your urges today, try to
9B5·&lt;t271 .
den y. modify . revoke, or
If 'th
t.
renew a perm it , license, or involve yourse w•
ac IVe,
1974 VW BUS. 7 passenger . 1975 varianc e ; or to approve or progressive people. You'l be
Ford Granado . Free mo n disappr ove
plans
and ct1arged with ' energy that
Williams . Minersvi lle . Oh io ·s.peci ft cations , within thirtv needs releasing .
were following him since he death
caused
under following behind the Iron
LONDON
( UP!)
I30J days of the issuance TAURUS (April 211-May 20) This
&lt;19? :~b!2_ ~f~e~ 5_pm
Curtain, but angered the
fled
to
tile
West
in
1969.
suspicious
circtunstances,''
date . OR C 3745 .07 does nat
ScoUand Yard has called in
is a line day to tackle an
1975 PINlO ·RUNABOUI' 4 cyl provide tor adjudicat ion
Sofia
regime .
Earlier
reports
said
he
died
Nevil
said
.
ambitious task . You 'll want a germ warfare specialists ID
.o!4 ,000 miles . SISOO qq7 . ::J61 1 hel!lring requests or appeals
As
he lay dymg in a
of
blood
poisoning
.
in
The
Bulgarian
exile
died
on orders , ve rified com - challenge to stimulate you and study the death of a
or 9&lt;J2-2719 .
hospital,
Markov told his
plaint s , or enforcement you'll be, mar~ !han up to Bulgarian
Markov,
who
was
a
south
London
hospital
exile
and
1975 MONTI: CARLO. loi s of ~· ­ .compliance schedule letters .
handling the job.
,
doC"tors
:
"
I am poisoned ."
sentenced
a
6\l-year
prison
Monday
,
four
day
s
afler
what
tros . S2900 . 992 -1689 , alt erS .
Within 30 days of publicat ion GEMINI (May 21 -June ZO) You broadcaster for Radio Free term in absentia in Bulgaria
He
said
his
assa$-Sin struck
- - - he
said
was
an
attack
on
him
in a newspaper In the af .
1970 Pl VMOUTH 6 cyl , ou lo tection county , any per son have Ihe ability to make the Europe whO said an assassin after he defected, also had with
Thursday
evening
as he left
a
needle-Lipped
C•dar wardrobe , IJ\I tn9 room may also : ( 1 submit written best of any situation today, poisoned him with a jab from
hi
s
BBC
offi
ce
to
move his
English
wife
,
told
his
in
Lhe
Aldwych,
a
umbrella
suit• . ireodle , sewtng moch1ne, commen ts relating to actions , both in the mental and physical a needle-tipped umbrella.
porch swing . Iorge pttcher ond prop osed a ct io ns , -verified sense. This could be an invig- Detectives wocking with Annabel. 34, he had received busy thoroughfare outside the parked car .
compla ints. or enforcement
f
bowl . 992 -7114 .
As he passed a bus stop.
private lips from contacts headquarters of the British
com pl iance ~c hedule leHers ; oraling day or you.
the aid of agents of Mr.:;· 1 1.1"
(2)
request
a
publ
ic
meeting
CANCER
~June
Z1.July
Z2)
Con~
recounted, he felt a
Markov
behind the Iron Curtain that Broadcasting Corp .
1971 BRONCO 4-wheel drt 'o'e
1 ,-,
regarding proposed actions ; centrale on directing your en- Britain's counter-espimage he
SlS50. 991·705&lt;
in
the
back
of
his
ri
ght
jab
was . ma rk ed
for
Markov worked in the
I •lol "'
and -or (3) request notice at ergles toward organizing your force- said they have called
,,, ' . i 'I&lt;
elimination.
BBC's East
European thigh . He said the assailant
1 ~75
VW
Rf\8511
S1000 fur ther
act
io
ns
or
1
ff · t d
d
t
in
a
variety
of
forensic
Automati( washer and dryer proceed ings . All requests tor persona a a~rs o, ay an pu · scientists ID investigate the
Commander Jim Nevill, section , where he put out a dropped the umbrella , picked
ad judicat ion hear ings and ting your house in order. A ton
S7S. 9'12.:NB7.
head
of Scotland Yard's anti· weeklv arts orogram and it up , apologized In a " heavy
public meet ings . and other 'Of work can be accomplished at death of Georgia Ivanov
comm unicat ions concer ning this time.
Bulgarian·language foreign accent. .. hurriedly
terrorist
squad,
sa id iead
public meetings . adiudlca tion LEO (July 23-Aug. 22} You 'll be Markov .
....... '
• ' ' .,
o•. - •
dea
th
"
does
not
Markov's
newscasts. The BBC said he hailed a taxi and drove off.
o•G' ,,,..,
'""
• .. ,
A post-mortem Tu~sday
t1earings , verif ied com · the motivating · force today
seem
to
be
from
natural
Markov
felt
ill
within
a
fe«'
had
no
editorial
control
over
COUNHIY MOBIH Ho me Parle pla ints , and re gulat ions , when deal i n~ with associates failed to fiX a precise cause of
be addressed to The
Route 33. north ol Pom @ro y should
hours and was rushed to a
tile newscasts .
Legal Records Section. ,Ohio or partners. ou won't let any death for the 49-year-old causes at this stage .
large lots . Colf9qj.7.ol 79
.~· · . .
" We are dealing with it as a
The dead man , one of hospital in serious condition
EPA. P . o . 80 )( 1049 , grassgrowunderyourfeet- writer, who had frequently
3 AND 4 RM . furnished ond u n- Columbus, Ohio 43216, (614) or theirs.
Bulgaria's
most
influential
early
the
next
day
.
complained Bulgarian agents
-603 7. Un Iess otherwi Se
INEWSP,t,PEIHNTERPRISE ASSN )
fur nished aph . Pho ne 466
Teo Lirkoff. a colleague at
aut~ors a nd playwrights
jOHN I\013EP
TS
st~ted in particular notlc:es ,
'1'12·5&lt;3&lt; .
,_ l .xs:, •• .
all other comm unicati ons
before he defected. also was a tile BBC. said Markov told
TWO BEDROOM troile, Adults including comments on
freelance contributor to him of tile umbrella incident
proposed actions , should be
ontv . 992-332.4.
adaressed either to Tht Air
Radio Free Europe, an anti- right after it occurred .
-RIVERSIDE APARTMI:NT~ .
1 Permi ts and Compliance
'·He said he wa s in great
Communist
station based in
Divis ion or
The membership the n
bedroom opt , $11J mo. plu~ Monitorino
Tuesday night Burrus,
CLEVELAND (UPil pain
, and he asked me to look
Perm
it
and
Approval
Section
.
West
Germany
.
electr ic. Month ly leoses . E:quol whichever Is appropr iate , et
leader of an ad-hoc group of voted against holding any
at
his
leg . I could see an
Reports
in
London
said
his
Opportun ily Hous •ng Coli The Ohio EPA . P. 0 . 8o x Postal workers wtU stay on
the job in Greater Cleveland, blg-dty postal union chapters wildcat strike unless strikes disclosures over this station angry red spot like a pimple
~:l - 771 l tor oppomtmenl.
10.49, Columbus , Oh io &lt;t3216 .
develop in other major cities.
Issuance of certification ignoring calls for a wildcat drumming up support foc a
ONE BEDROOM mobde home
Before Healy made his of alleged scandals among on tile back on his right
Svracust
.
Ra
ci
ne
Regional
strike tonight, because union strike, told members of his
'1'11·2S•B
Comm u nist thigh," Lirkoff said .
Sewer Oistr lct
announcement
Tuesday , Bulgaria ' s
Racine , Oh io, effective date leaders say a strike would be local a strike would be Burrus said he had lined up leaders won him a loyal
TWO BEDROOM trailer 992 -2530
()9 .05-78
"suicidal."
pointless.
;a':·~~ _P'!' . - Per t a ins to 401 Cer " What you're facing now is almost 50 big-city locals in
William
Burrus,
president
FOUR ROOMS and both Al l new tificat ion Grant .
an
arbitrated decision," he favor of a strike if workers
of the Cleveland chapter of
point . New carpet .. No 1n:s+de
not
given
the
(91 13 , lie
said.
" Once the arbitratDr were
the American Postal Workers
pe~~;. P!o_n~ 9_?2: 3090
opportunity
to
vote
on
a
new
makes
his
decision,
it's
over.
Union, said a federal media•
SATURDAY- SEPTEMBER 16th
.
tor's decision _to impose his You can strike ·until agreement.
. By Tuesday night, Burrus
59 N. Second St.
own settlement in the postal doomsday , but his decision is
UNTIL 6 P.M.
said,
only five locals bindfng."
Phone
contract dispute made a
Cleveland,
New
York,
When a union member
992-5560
strike senseless.
asked
about alternatives, Detroit, Pittsburgh and
Mediator James J . Healy
Philadelphia
still
has promised a final national Burrus said:
OF
remained
in
favor
of
a
strike
.
" I don 'l think you have any
contract
dicision
by
SEMEl SOLVAY DIVISION
• ~lion at this point. "
Saturday.
EXCLUSIVELY DUDLEY'S
-

New Quarter Begins
Sept. 18, 1978
Choose a Career in. • •

SPECIALS

n1Z1ng

·~-

This Week's
Dairy Valley

BURMUDA
STEAK

...

ASTRO•GIAPH

j

REGISTER NOW,

'

The Leading Creek Water .
Shed Association, Inc . is
committed to equal em·
ployment opportunities lor all
applicants, participants and
employees in all facets of its
operations ; and where
deficiencies are noted to take
affirmative action to correct
such deficiimcies .
In addition, it is a policy to
recruit, hire and promote in
all job classifications without
regard to' race, color ,
national origin , sex (except
where sex is a bona fide
occupational qualification),
age, political afflliJition,
ancestry, handicap (provided
physical limitation does not
prevent job performance) or
beliefs.
It Is the policy to take af·
firma tive action to insure
that all training programs
and all personnel actions
such as a rate or compensation, benefits, trans·
fers, and promotions, layoff
and terminations be ad·
ministered without regard to·
race, color, national origin,
sex, age, polilical affiliation,
handicap or beliefs.
Glenna Crisp, director , will
have the overall respon·
slbility of administering the
program. If a program
participant or appllca"nt feels
he·she
has
been
dis criminated against in
employment, seeking em·
ploymtnt , and·or training
with this agency , he-she
should immediately contact
Charles Ruasell at 742-2200 to
pursue
the
proper
discrimination complaint
procedure.

I

By LEE LEONARD
or no knowledge of what speak in much softer tones
should be done when a · than I have as a senator."
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The torna~o is sighted or a · SenatDrs from both parties
Ohio Senate reconvened its tornado warning is sounded," voted unaillmously in favor of
brief pre-election session said Freeman.
Gillmcr and Aronoff ID the
·IDday, having passed a pair of
The blll would require Republican leadership team,
bills Tuesday aimed at annual inspection of tornado but Van Meter ran iniD vocal
a 11 e vi at in g
natura! · shelters by the state fire ~position from Collins and
emergencies.
•marshal's office. A &amp;chool . Freeman, with whom he has
The session was 1D begin at administrator or principal disagreed in the past.
Rep. llichard H. Finan, R·
1:30 p.m.
failing to designate such an
In addition to passing the area would be subject to a Cincinnati ; who is ID replace
Maloney in the Senate Isler
bills - the first following a fine of f5 to
lengthy summer recess - the
Adopted on a 31·1 vote was this week, observed his new
Senate officially changed its a bill permitting township role from the sidelines. He
Republican leadership.
lrustees to .exercise unusual cannot become a senator
Minority Leader Michael J. powers In an emergency ID until the House accepts his
Maloney, R-Cincinnati, clear snow, ice and debris resignation Thursday.
The House, which held a
formally resigned after 14' from undedicated roads in
"skeleton" session, does not
years in the Senate to become unincorporated areas.
Ha m iIton
CounIY
Sen. Oakley c. Collins, R· meet in full session until
administrator·
Ironton, the floor manager, Thursday at 1:30 p.m.
He was Immediately said that during the last two '
reolaced by Sen. Paul E. winters people have been
Gi!imor, R·Port Clinton, as stranded in new subdivisions
the minority party floor because the township offlcers
leader.
were not empowered to
Moving up in the GOP remove snow, and the
leadership chain were Sens. developers were unable to.
Thomas A. Van Metet· of
The bill would require the
Ashland, named assis tant developers ID pay for the cost
minority leader • and Stanley of any emergency snow
J . Aronoff of Cincinnati, removal.
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New
chosen whip.
Pa~ and returned to the Concord, attempted to extend
House for concurrence in the emergency snow removal
am e n d me n t s
were powers to farm lanes, but he ·
bills calling for greater was oppooed by senaiDrs who
protection at public schools thought it would be a way for
from
tornadoes,
and a few " influential" ' people to
authorizing township lrustees get their lanes plowed out. •
1D plow out . new housing
In accepting Maloney's
developments in blizzards resignation "with regret,"
and heavy snowstorms.
Senate . President
Pro
G i v en
u n a n I m o u s Tempore Oliver Ocasek, !).
clearance was the bill Northfield,
hailed
the
sponsored by Sen. Robert D. Cincinnatian as a "tough
Fre e man, D -C anton, adversary ... who has an
requiring schOol principals honest wocd t'hat is consistent
and
administrators
to from day to day."
designate tornado shelters in
Maloney, who brought his
public and privale schools. family ID the chamber foc the
Freeman
said
that farewell, called his Senate
although a law was enacted , service "one of the great
last
session
requiring experiences of my life."
periodic tocnado drills in
He promised to return ID
schools, "it has never been lobby foc county officials
enforced ."
" and I'tlssure you that when I
" Many schools have litUe come back to lobby you, I'll
•
0

F eds think spend bl-e·
0'
Employment
statement
presented

In Ohio, even if we were paid
to do them," said Rhodes ..
"Freq uently
the
Umilations, requirements
and regulations governing a
particular federal program
or grant makes It very
unecooomical oc impractical
to perfonn," said Rhodes.
" WhUe the Admlnlstratlon
wtll actively pursue federal
funds, even in cases where
state financial matches may
be required, that benefit the
social or economic well-being
of Ohioans, we will not send
good state dollars after bad
federal dollars simply ID lure
a few federal dollars which
would have a very minimal

~~~

$•1' 09 :

&amp; FRIES '•"....

o'tnflnlte-poeltlon tempera·
lure control with rec:eued
ltnob
0 Lift-qui beaket
O=Wad clellan-foamed·
lneuiallon tor
maN ap1Ce IMide
0 Counterbllanced Seal·Tile

11c1 w1111 maonetlc gMitet

0 Balled anamel Interior 111111
exterior

0 Defroat drain
R8g. Price S37US

Speclei

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Price

Hill.: 10:00 A.M. 11111 :Cit P.M. Sun.-Thura. 11:00A.M. IIIII tot P.M. Friday 11111
. .tvrtlay .
·
SMUtAittle
llttMIIrNtl

I

.,

,

.

$IJIMM5
'~~--

' Cincinnati paper has $$ problem
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Cincinnati Post ''not only is In
probable danger of financial
failure, but.., has already
failed," an attorney for the
newspaper's owners said
Tuesday.
Jonathan Thackeray.
lawyer fer the E .W. Scripps
Co., made the comment in his
opening statement at a
federal hearing on the
proposed business merger
between the Post and Its
financially successful com·
petitor, the Cincinnati En·
. qulrer . .
In arguing for federal
permission for the merger, he
said the Post has mly been
kept alive by Scripps
cmtributing more than f8
mlJllcn to the paper, with no

hope of repayment.
Thackeray said that during
the course of the hearing,
which is expected to continue
!fir the next several weeks, he
wtll "demonstrale the Post
a lready
is
a
failed

enterprise."
Opposing the proposed
business merger, In which aU
but the editorial operations of ·
the city's only two daily
newspapers
would
be
combined, were several
lawyers representing Post
employees who stand to lose
their· jobs if the proposal Is
approved.
Jeffrey Fruend, attorney
foc various Post employee
IUiions, called the propoaal
"the product of corporation
greed and avarice ."
Nancy
Lawson ,
representing Post composing
room workers, contended
that Scripps "maneuvered
the Cincinnati Post into .its
present financial posltlm" to
make it appear to be a falling
newspaper and therefore
qualify
for
anti-trust
exemptions."
The hearing , which will
help Attorney General Griffin
Bell decide late this year or
early next year whether to
approve the Post-Enquirer
proposal, was called a

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS ( UPI) -Dark
Eacle took the lead at the top
ollhe stretch In the featured
ninth race at Scioto Downs'
meet
ending
program
Tuaday night and beat Linda
Faye to the wire "" a neck.
Better Had WIS third.
Dark Eagle was timed at
2:02 1-:i In the f4,000 Trot and
returned S3.80, P .40, f2.80.
The first trifecta of 10+7
worth 16.315. The 8,510
barness racing fans bet

"u
NewHIYtft,W,

ALL! E[) CH EMlCAL CORP.
ASHLAND PLANT

1158,439.

\•

OPENALLDAYSUNDAYll AMTIL9 PM

"majoc anti-trust case," by
attorney Terrence Murphy,
who repres ents s uburba n
newspapers opposed to the
Post-Enquirer proposal.

CAMDEN PARK
HUNTINGTON

U.S. 60WEST

~-----------------------,,

MEIGS COUNTY-VOTERS
• the
In Order to Vote 1n

November 7th General Election
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED
BY OCTOBER 7TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: Visit the Board's Office in Person
_ OR -

Phone the Board of Elections -OR- Mall the Board

a Card.

.
you are In doubt ai to whether you are properly registered,
ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county oHice, Or If
'

Phone the Board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS
MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
P. 0; BOX 488, POMEROY, OHIO 45769
PHONE 992-2697
HOURS 9:()0..4:00 - SATURDAYS 9:00-12:00

�•
10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,Sept. 13, 1978

Want Ads Turn
WANT AD
CHARGES
15 WL1rth 1•r Undt'r
l · a~h

1. '1\i.ll'~t'

I da ~

100

12:;

~dm· ~

I 50
I 8IJ

1.!10

:h l;1; ~

:!.2J

:t oo

6ll,,s~
f.&lt;~dl ~'\ ll"l\l/\'\'1"

lilt'

II UIIllliWII );j

"LII bL'

dl&lt;ll"~t·d

at

Hl l'

In

1\lt• n wr~ .

IIILIIUIIWII

C.trd t lf Th,;m k .~ and
6 l'I'IIL' lJCI "' UI11. $:100
Cash Ill ath·;u wt•

Lmt'l
PuU I~ htw

n •..t•rn·~

ll~t• n~ ht

t.o t•d t\ •• r n •Jt'l'l au .• o•tb dt'&lt;'lllt'd t ll.r
j\'l.llllltlll Tht• Pllbl t~ llt!J' "'ll nl\t I.M•
I'C~]}OII\Mb\t' f11r I11111'L' lliHII \l ilt' llll'HI'-

11'1'\

l'fi-'I:Wilti !: ~~ · PUi.1Atlll ~

b r o~ s

OLO CO IN~
poc ke t wotcht&gt; s
cla ss n ng s. wedd•ng bonds
d 1omon ds Gold or Silver Call
f.l oge t Wamsley '1 42 -2331

M&lt;~btlt' Hunw ~~~~·~ ~nd Y;ml .-.ult•;,
un· ;;n't• pt t•tl unl} Wltl i t';t:.h With
unlet· l5 .:t&gt;111 d 1argl' flw ad.~ l'll l'l" j ·
111 ~ Btl~ Numlwr In Cart' 111 Tlw Si.•IJ-

Thl'

CHIP
WOOD .
Po l es
mo ~e .
diameter 10 on largest e11d , SH
pet ton . Bundled slob S6 pe c
ton . Oel1ve red to Ohto Po lle t
Co loll 'l . Pomeroy Q9'J .'}b8q

beds •ron beds de sk s e tc..
co mpl ete househo lds
Wn te
M 0 Miller , Rt 4 1-'omeroy o r
coil 991 -7i'b0 .

ruk
O!Jilu;11'~

t'or~"

OLD FURNITURe . ice boxes .

I tl a)

IIL~l' l'IIUII

Plhlllt' ~r!-!1 ;,~;

WAN TH.l TO buy any o ld motor
cycles o r par t s Doe s not ho ve
to run
Rea sona ble prtces
9Q2 0)45 ,
WI: PI CK up 1unk
1ng 1un k cars
ter re s and
~olv ag e
5R
Q9'] 5408 .

auto boduH buv
snap iron . bo t·
metals
Rtder s
124
Pome-roy

Phone

PLAIL) LO Vt: seat and mo tchmg
chou and o il oman Hed t co rn
~ u1t e A ll lol.e new 111 e•cellon t
cond1t•on 949 2l bl
N
~( AU II OI!l\t w tt h l ty pe
layout Co,.pple l e w1 th all ~w ll
dre ~ . house ch Ui ch la( tOIICS
ti enuttfu l )ell or ~ wop for
cam pco1 o l equo l value ~ce
Hot vey l c o!nond . PO Hox b3 .
foia( me Ohio by Wogne1 Hord
ware St ore .

NEED A W ATER
SOFTENER?
let Pomerov Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co·op water
softener . Model UC· SVI.

•289.95
vour water

Pomef'tl'J Landmark
If Y&lt;.DU hove a serv1ce to olf e, .
w on t to buy or sell somelhmg .
ae look •ng l or wo•k
or
who teve1
. you II ge t re~ults
fo ste r w i th o Scntmel Wo nt Ad .
Coll991 .2156 .

MutHIUI

~ II\JilUilSi1tim\; ,l

YARD SA l C M on thr u ~ ri. Sept.
11 thr u IS Syhr~o Zwe lling
~r r o c us e Ohto

Tut· ~ ditl

thru ~ -, ai.11
41 ' :1.1
tlw d&lt;Jy ~f••rt·t-&gt;ublu · ;,l ""'

YARD SAL ~ Clo thes. d1 s he ~ . elec ·
ho c opplto nce~ L•nen s. Hours 9
to 5 . 11 to 10 of Sepl I rm le
!r om tong!&gt;11 dle CR 10. Phone
742 -2008

:\urti!a\
~I' \(

;,ft.·rn·"'ll

YARO SALI: Tues day ~ep t 12
thr u Fr iday Har o ld Brewer

. Notices

~ g Bottom

SHOOTI NG MA I CH For k ed Run
Sportsman Club )cpl 3 and (A'f"PORl SALC . Wed and lhur s
474 tir oodway . M•ddleport q ttl
eve r y Sunday there a ft er . Foe
3.
tor y cho k e, gun~ cml y
NO HUNllNG or t re~pm~ 1119 o n
rny p•ope r ty wtlhou l perrru s·
SIO" · Judy M cC t-aw
GUN ~ H OO T Ronne Gun Club
!::very Sund ay I pm Factory
choke guns only

FRU: ClOTHING
Who do you
k now
thOt
l 1 ke ~
beaut1ful
clo rhcs that t on ' pay t o day ~
pr •c e:. G1 eat deoh now be1ng
olt c1 Pd 9.J Cl Tl 18 991 394 1 o r
99') 2317
NO
HU NTING
on
George
F1eeland pr o perty
Sy rocvse ~
Oh to
ORI V ER
A V AI LA!.H~
t o bv s
d1 1ldren to and l ro 111. G oll1 0
(hro~ too n School V 1n ton Ohoo
lro v~l N ew l om o Rd
to Her
r ~~onvdle 14J to Rt 7 to f.lt 1:74
and :.J'l~ ,n to Vrn ton '1 4 / 2008

Lost and t'onnd
FO UND '" M on key Ru•' area
Iorge w h1te 1nole dog Po!os•bly
Ger man Shepherd 9cn 2602
YOU NG MALl: - po rt beegle dog
lound t. v tdently so meone s pel
.... h,te wtth br ow n a nd blo ck
rn nrk.ngs Martha Hus ted Rt
jj

Help W anted
D ~ l:.A MING or a

wh ile C hrt ~ l mo s
w tt h no b ,ll5?' W on derfu l to
ll m1 ~ oboul but d cot.old co me
t ru ~ l:le o Toy l odoe') hos tess 1
In your home or by ocd e r~ h o rn
you r lr1"nd.., f-or n toy s and g.t ts
t' "'e
Name
brand
to ys
1eo~ On obly
pr1ced
wllh
guaro" tce Gd t ~ fo r the whole
lam1ly
l-- or 1n l ormo l •on call
t ~I 2377 m qq7 'fOSb

WOJ./ 1&lt;
OV~ R 51: A )
A us tr o l1 o
) Al r1&lt;0 Sou t h Arner•co turope
r.oc
Con~tru1 t 1o rt
Soil!')
tnq,nce r~ (IPr or ol Plr S8000
r" $ )0 000 plu ~ brpcnse~ pood
I ot
f' ll tplo ym ~:n t
1n l or rno tron
wr•t fl Over~eo~ l:m ploymer1 t
Bn s 1011 Bos ton Mo 0210/
!-XP~ R I ~NGD

tlil74 [)AI~UN PI CKUP
qQ2 -o 19i olt c • ~P",

L et us t es t
Free

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Fndu~

l.'l \.' 1

tt oc go tng to ltC'II 01 II ad e !hem
IOO ft l e 11 ) 31 rf
Moddll:'flOJI
qq7 l 4q4

Now Only

NOTICE

Items Into Cash

M~C HANI (

Own
l '&gt;C'I&lt;. requne d Apply •r1 pe r
'.on l-! 1v N~'d" VW AM C Je ep
Goll1 pal1s

YARO S AL~.. lb6l l mco ln Hetgh ts.
Thurs. 9to4 . Sep1.14 .

WlO ' AND Thur s
neJol t · ta
Hr o wn s Tro t lec Cou1l , Mini
b1ke . record player alumi num
storm door
baby chest of
drawers . clothing . 1n fo nts and

..... Jack W. carsey, Mgr.

~-

Phone99'2 -2181

GRIM!:~

GOlOtN . Hed Oel• c,ou'&gt;
8. Golden l&gt;el• c1ou~ opplt- ~ h11
potr1 ck
Or ( hord
J R b8 9
614 -bO&lt;J 378~

MHJ1 All V Rl: l AR DI:O oduh ~ ore
n ·rr·0d o t f o~ t(•r cme homes A
\alar t and benel ot) woll be
pnorl I 1"-.1&lt;, t~ on,, home 10 b that
woll hene f ,r rhe Ide chan ce'&gt; of o
rno"n toll y r otord(&gt;d f·o1 IT10 re 1n
l orr1101 on wn rc o r co il
~ o~ t (• • Co re
beO f Mo •n ~ ~
Joc \.. son O H 4~0 4 0
61 4 JH~ 1/61 l l ogon:
o r Ol&lt;l 597 6608 AtherlS )
~ qual Op p o•lunlly bnployer

,On t W Vo besodf' Hec f, !&gt;
1'1l:J ih o adm o1e 14 ~e 04 '1
bed roo m
I '173 Oar1 011 14 x bO 1 bedroo m
1Yi'7 Vtc toloOII l&lt;l X oi' :J bedr oom
'l bolh
1971 Cove ntt y I 'I • 0~] bedr oo m
I '169 ~tol~ ~m on 17 ~ bO '1
bedroom
COAL ltMI:SlONI: sand . g rove l ,
colt:-tUill chl ortdc lec 1ili1er dag
l oa d. and all types of !&gt;Oi l h
c&lt;e lstor ~olt W o d~.s . Inc .. ~ Mour
~t 1-'0ilH! I O f 9&lt;/2 JINl
H;Uiif/OUGH~

$ 2~ . 00

TWO FAMILY Yar d Sole So tu• ·
day Sep t 16 ~ t ortmg ot9 orn ol
J04 We t zgo ll Street Pomeroy
Many 1tems espec1al ly cloth1 ng
a l all S1 1es Ro m o r sh•ne

Powe r ,

aura dual tank s
l- ~e ce lle n t
runnmg condt l1on
1475. q9'}. 2J92
OH

Di scount
Prices
DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT
oiNSIDE PAINT
OUTSIDE WHITE
eROOF PAINT

s

1%8 (HCVRO LI::T CARRYAll

•,
tan6cyl.std Hos19'12eng me
t ully m!oula ted and· corpeled
Goad !Ires $750. Call992 oJ98

~WI:~T

MUSICAL IN~ l ~UMl:Nl~ . hor n!&gt; .
_gu •to r s. fl utes . cl ortneh . !r om ·
bones e tc l o se ll or h ade .
~il e~ . 5 . ;Jrd . M1ddl eporl

-

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

Any U. S. made

car - parts
extra if needed. Excludes
tront -wheel drive cars.

s·

R~ C I Sli: IUD

AM~RI ( AN

saddle
b1ed
Geld 1ng
Aut orn ol1r
' wo she c 61.4 69!:1 &lt;J290

Whit~·Wall

Co-Op

Custom · Po~

A78xl3

$~OFF
Expires
Se pt . 17 , 1978

Call now ~r appointment:·

Pomei'OJ Landmark
......~~ck

w. caney, Mgr.

--

ll1iil

Phone 992-2181

ffi.al &amp;tab&gt; for Sale "
VA f.HA JO yr hnonr mg ol!&gt;o
re hnonc• ng Ir el a nd Mo 11 gogc
n t: ~!atoP A lh(·n~ phone 16I .S )

'::NJ

JO~I

IHRH Bl:O~ OO M h orne horne on
M·ddlepa•t (all 99'] 345 7
IN

~YRA C U ~ I_ I bedroo 111 h o u ~ e .
New storrn w1ndo w ~
N ew
olurmnum booldu1g 7 porche s
992 -J219

ACJ?~

LOI on 1-/t 7 N1 cc bu ddu1g
st te 992 "157 4

IHRH BI:OI-IO OM ho u~e 3 acre'&gt;
land Close to ~c h ool prtced
re o ~o nobly l.jr.rJ ~I/o

day,

Jack Ginther 985·3806
VIRGIL B. 'R .. 1 ~~-!'i
. 992 - ~3 25
'H 6 E . second Stree•

NEW

LISTING

- 3

bedro om fr ame home . Just
off Rt . 33 near Roc k Spr ·
in gs. Ni ce k i tc hen wi th to t s
of cabi nets , new gas fur ·
nace, u ti litv room. dining
and leve l l ot. $29,500 .
4 ACRES 3 bedrooms,
en c losed bath , new na tural
gas furn.;~ce with cen tral
air,
full
ba se m e nt ,
ca rp e t i ng ,
and
o ul
bu i ld in gs . N ice fi s h pond
r ea d y f or you t o stock

$35,000.
NEWSPAPERS S ELL
ADL SALESMEN SELL
HOUSES . CALL 992·3325
FOR RESULTS.
Helen L . Teaford
G. Bruce Teatord

Sue P ; MurPhy
Associates

109 High St.

DB APPAhiiGHIAN

· 8'10\'6 GOIIPANY

QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

Muffler
Brakes
Tires
Shocks
Battery.
Installation Service

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mill Street just behind
Tony's Carry

EXPERIENCED
Radiator c:::::!::::..
Service ,.,..
IBifll
..................
.,.....,.

•-30-ttc

·

-...

H. L WRITESa
ROOFING

992-2174

. 9-7· 1 mo.

Housin g
Headquarters

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

SYRACUSE (Ru sti c Hill s)
,.... 3 bed r oom ron c h , equip
ped kit c hen, hardwood
fl oors, ni r co nd , c arporf
and sto r ag e. $18 ,500.00 .
SYRACUSE
-- Close to
sc h ool. 3 bed room s, fu ll
basem en ! , 2 l ev el tot s .

LET ART

- Br ick r a nc h
fy p e. 1' 1 balh5, fir ep lace,
cen tral air , m,ode rn kif ·
chen, po r c hes . S31 ,600.00 .

NEAR

FORKED

RUN

--ov·er I acre, 4 bedrooms,
ba th , n-a t . ga s F .A . neat ,
la r ge ga r ge &amp; work shop ,
ot h er bu i lding . S29,500 .00 .

CLOSE

- 5

acres ,

3

bed r ooms, bath, n ice k i t
cnen , c h icke n hOu se , barn ,
all f ence d , parf ba5e ment .
DUPLEX ,- in Po m e roy ,
good cp n difion , 1 ha s 2
bedroom s,
1 h as
3
bedrooms , r ea dy to move
inl o . $15.000 .00 .

MANY OTHER PROPER ·
CALL TODAY
TIES FOR YOUR NEEDS . THE
HOME OF REAL ESTATE
IN MEIGS COUNTY .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cl e land
Realtor A ssociates

992·22S9- m ·2S68

GeorgeS. Hobstet1er Jr.,
Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-6333
Office Hrs.

9 a .r'n. -5 p.m .
Closed Thursdays &amp;
Saturdays at noon
Your Full Time
Real Estate Broker

H Vt- ROOM house and bo th
rem odeled l u llyco,peled May
be -.een alter J prn Ph anoP
991 393:J
~AHM

J4 acre!&gt; li m bet Ur died
wel l
blo ck buddong
oldc t
hotfer
Old J? t -,
C h e~ t e r
Oh 1o qas Jf:l97 be tw e-en 4 and 6
pm

COU NI'Ii'f HOM !: 4 bedroom 1
bath s
l r ec go ~
) I{
I 74
Pe nla nd ~ 43 - 1111
Mu ~ t ~el l

5ubdiiii~IOil .

l'HJ./1::£ 01-1 fo ur bedr oom house 1n
Pa111e r oy Both and ', Cen t ral
lwot 1ng . 997 'l0'!4
HOU~I: IN M lner svdle overloo k

ong flYer 4 bedr oom l1v mg
rrmm
kiT che n both . ut,l.ty
toom and ba sem en t . l orry
l te ld s Qq'] ')8lJ
~ AHM f. O R safe

H ou~e 7 bar n&lt;,
!i o, Je, l arge pon d 10 ac res or
87 ac res '147 2560

Au ctioneer , Com plete Service . Phone Q4Y-748l
oi 949 -2000 . Racine . Oh io . Cri tt
Bradfo rd .

H WOOD

BOWERS RE PAIR
~weepe r s . to asters , ir ons all
sm all ap pli a nces l a wn mower .
ne~et to ~Tote Hi ghway Garage
o n Route '1 . Ph one {6 14 ) q!J.') ,

JB2S .

Woman 6,13; Movie " The V.I . P.'s" 10; ABC News
33.
12 :DO-Janakl 33; 12 :40--SWAT 6,13: I :DO-Tomorrow
3,4: 1: SG-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Island of Dr . Moreau (PGI
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Damnation Alley ( PG)

DRIVE THIS 1&lt;1&amp; flACK
T' THF: PLANT l

'fll}l/N} fi;}1t

Unscramble These four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form

Asking 513,500.

detached garage. Situated
on one-third of an acre . Will
sell at 530.000.
RACINE- This beautlful3

I

rJ

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolle. Assoc .
Home Pllone 9U-2489
George A. Hobstener, Jr.,
Broker

Home Phone 992-5739
WOOD . Free
Q.49. 253 1 ev enings .
- - .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Price $12 ,500.
11 ACRES - More or IHs, '
bath,

modern

fireplace.

several

out buildings . C&gt;Nnor being
transferred .

Price

$35,000.00
CALL US FOR A~~ YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804W. Main
Pomeroy
991-2291
After Hours

C. II "1-71!3
CONTACT:
Lois Poulty
Braft(h Mln1ger

WAS O Nl'(

A LI1Tl£ WH ILE

BACK"· I DON'T
QUITE RECALL

r'I::'
-:::L::E:::Y;OO;::_P=-=::-:--:=.:=:::=-"'T'---==-I
'THiii~ MUST ss;; AN&lt;nHSit
WAY OUT!

Je8~ 11 WAS
OVEt&lt; A YEAR

WAI'ER WH L dr illing . Wi lli am T.
C. rant. 742 -:l87q .

dining room with shdifll glass doors leMing out to

·--------·-

large deck. Large living room and family room, and to
finish this well -laid out home we have five bedrooms,

WILl DO baby silting in my ho m e
tn Ra ci ne a reo . 8 to 4 .
Weekda y s. Donn a Wolle .

utility room and gonge. Very low holing bill. Thtl's
not all, we have strawberries, raspberrltl and g1rden

space . Red barn. like storage building. Located tboul
len minutes north ot Pomeroy lull oH Rt, 7, C. II for

q49· 2156.

mor~ details and appointment. Asking $55,00.

AGO·· ·

~"19B:[£~~~(~!:i~i§~~JliE"2)
I Out
of
~
fashion

C 'MON!

MIOD~EPORT- This well cared for
newer home has ·3 brs. ,living ~oom , bath, · mostly

carpeted, kitc hen Is equirped w1th refrigerator and
stove, utility room , netura gas forced air heat, outs i de

1970 NA SHUA 14 • 65 3 bedroom
l ' 1 both . underpinnir;tg . SI S00
and assume loon . 949-2b8J or
843·33 11

storage bu ilding. Price S27.000.
6 ACRES - Nice w, story home mostly carpeted wllh 3
or 4 bedrms .• livln'g rm ., family rm , with fireplace.

l 'i\7 4 MOBILE HOME. Campletefv
furnished with underpinning,
, ~ f o rage bu ilding, on owning.
Qq7.7J.7Q .

bas ement . fuel oil furnace, garage and outbuildings .
Some fenci ng, plenty of road frontage and garden
space . Ci ty water and drilled well. Loc. close to

hospital and school at Laurel Cliff. Asking $42.500.
TWO ACRES- A beautlful4 year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen. 3 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted , 2 baths , lull baseml!flt with TV room. Many

1 have to
And wh4
qo to worl4!
car wash? me? It
There are could take
hours!
a jillion!

9iW

EXCE~~ENT

FARM BUY -

141 ACRES

The

owner ' s age prevents her from continuing to operate
the farm a"d she desires an Immediate sale. SO to 60
acres lllla~le with some very good creek bottom -

hilltop land. The balance Is In posture &amp; woodo. The 6
room home Is gQ9d (does need some moderntzettonl.
large all purpose barn &amp; several . outbuildings. Tho ,
minerals go with II and It's located In ~n area where
gas, oil &amp; coal have been found to be plentiful. Near
Rutland . 60's.

CAl! THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

Wednl' sd ay, St· pt . U

BRIDGE

v ..tenlay'• ~wer
Z1 Ouistopher
or Peggy

zz Spanish

painter
Z3 Bed canopy

Z4

~pture

anew .
%5 Frogllke
Zl Jargoo

Z7 High-

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

schooler

za American O
ctergyman
n
za See 1 Aero&amp;!

31 Saucy
H Soprano

. - - - - - -- - - . ,
NORTH

YAK6

35 Sea: Fr,

• J 8 53

+ K 52

mattresa

Z3 Extra-base

+Al09 2

• Q 975 4

• 10 9 2
+Qi0 91 643

+A 8

Z3 Traitor

+

KJ665
Y 10 8 3
t KQ 76
+J

UOne -time

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : West
Weot North East
3+
Pass Pass Db!.
Pass 3 NT Db!. 4+
Pass · Pass Db!. Pass
Pass Pass

UFeellng
M Dutch river

ll'lTake

FRANK &amp; ER~!E

wnbrage

Floor Cowering In Skdl

FL.I\NAC.Af\1-

\NH!N

WANT
YouR .OPINION
:r•L.L lhiO. YOU~
Off'IGe~

C.II74H211
TALK TO
Wonctoll or Htrb Grato
or GonUmllll

RUnAND
FURNITURE

e•"'~""' .. ·'-"·"''·''"·"'

T~~l~

MCK A';; f:&gt;OON A~
l CAN 1 0KAY?

deal

Opening lead : ¥ J

1 Role
for George

c. Scott

1.-..L......L.-

By Oswald Jacoby

,
CRYPTOQUOTE- Here • how to work
A X Y D L II A A X a
1a L o N G F 1: L L 0 w

1

..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;:...;.;'...1
111

Ruttaiiil

Before
Sueball
DOWN

:::1:.

Ud Alan Sontag
DAILY
It: , Some great players say
they always play the percen·
lages ..Do not believe them.
They would not be great
One letter aimply otands for another. In thl1 sample Ala playersiftheyfoUowedthelr
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale letters, own advice . In bridge there
opoolrophea, the lenath and formation ol the worda are, all Is a tjrne for almost every·
thing.
hlots. Eoch doy the code letters are dllerenl.
caYPTQqUOTES
, West's three-dub preempt
was hair-raising and not rec·
ommended. He wanted to
N
IF M S
0
IN V QGJA
V F B · generate action and in that
respect he was successful.
K G L M S Smith's double was unusu·
SFV
FA
VWGGA
IIDJ
ally light ; he was s hort in
D
B
V
D
•
'li
clubs and afraid West was
SN H VGKDGAD
QLM
FM
•trying to s~al the contract.

• ,.---.....;:---:-j

'
WHAT ARE
\ THESE !'(1TC~E5
IN Lt'OVR. .
ROOF FOR?

4)

~

l..J

I'LL 6ET THAT'S IT,
ISN'T IT? ONE NOTCH
PROBABL'( 5TAND5 FOR
FIFT'i PIZZAS !

MA~6E

r 5~0VLI/

PUT THE NOTCHES
IN HER HEAD...

spades a nd East boomed out
a second double .
West 's opening lead of the

hea rt jack was a continualion of his une lig hlened tac·
lies that ha d begun with the

unwise preempt.

D ecl arer

won th e opening lead with
the king and led th e queen of
trumps from dummy , won
by East's ace. South's plan
difficult to execute, was to
k•'&lt;P his losers to the three

outstanding aces .
East led a heart which was
won by South's 10. East had
.gi ven

his

partner more

credit than he deserved and
assumed that the opening
lead of the heart jack also
indicated the 10.
Declarer plared the sin·
glelon jack o clubs and
when West covered with the

queen decla rer, knew East
had the · ace. He allowed
West's queen to win. West
led the 10 of diamonds which
East l"on with the ace. East
returned a d1amond to
dummy's jack.

When [ive cards in a suit

are outstanding there is a 60
percent chance the suit will
break 3·2. Percentages die·
tate that declarer, upon win·
ning the 10 of hearts, should
draw lrwnps by playing the
king-jack. Against a 3·2
break this will work, but it
will fail against the act]lal
holding .
Fortunately, declarer was
no slavish follower of conventional wisdom. It was
obvious to him from East's
emphatic double, that
t rumps were not going to
break, 3·2. He led the four of
trumps from dummy and
when East covered with the
F AF MF N BV , - VGL J E D
L A R A G I A ~:~dbJg pol~~.n:Jdu:,n~lub two he won the trick with the
Yetterdly'a Crypt. ..oao: THERE IS MANY A GOOD MAN Tl" stopper - and East rocked five. The king-jack of
BE FOUND UNDER A SHABBY HAT.-CHINESE PRO~~'"
the table with .his double. · t rumps now drew East's 1011nm Klll( FooL-IIJndiwo, lac.
South retreated to four nine.

liAR 'lEY

•

t A4

SOUTH

30 Bar legally b-+~"­
S%Scope

__

~ 1 3·A

• Q 43

Ponselle

'-"""J ZO aTake
chance

Buy w!Mro you con c:omo hi
tnd- whtl you'ro gottlng
-Good Hlodlons- Fully
.;__
stocked.

.
pIaymg
percentages

EAST

sv,::;

Largist Stlectl• Ill Tile V_lllltl

Cable Channel 5 7:00 P.M. - Paul Gaudino
7:30 - Supersports
IO :D0-700 Club .

guild

• 7
• J 2

~ow As

15 IN STOCK

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Late Show (PHI
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - Confessions of a Pop Performer ( R)

Z8 Equal

All carpet lnstaiiM wllll
paddln, ot no chargt,
hpert nsltllttlon .

'

The World's Fair" 10.
12 :0o-Janakl33; 12 :4G-SWAT 6,13; 1:DO-Tomorrow
3,4; 1:SG-News 13.

WEST

~·r-v.'-

,IF YOU NEID
A SOFA r~Al
MAKIS A
BED FOR
YOU

.

Gunsmoke8 ; ABC News 33; Movie "I t Happened At

r:;J;t;J ZZ Free-lor..U

I ... I HAVE A COLO/
TEl. I. WINNIE I 'L LGET

Fums
ond Many typn of PMPtl'fY
CAL~ JIMMY DEEM, Associate, 949-2311

Performance At Wolf Trap 33; 9 :30---Thraclan Gold

20.
10 :oo-WEB 3,4,15; Soap 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8.10;
News 20 ; Mayor of Caslerbrldge 33.
10 :3()-()ver Easy 30; 11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8,10,13,1 5;
Dick Cavell 20 : Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
11:3o-Johnny Carson 34,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6.13;

wallop

more extras, low heat bill with nat . gas for ced air
fur nace . All this arKI two ncie acres of land in a good

We need large &amp; small

D "ITJ-D"

3 Logger's

6 Free from
vehicle
9 Sport fish
• Knightly
10 Uncle: Scot.
title
Design
5Sicilian
Floor
city
covering
I Extract
- up (fed
7 Turkish inn
the kitty)
I Tum
If Cherish
aside
16 strin8ed
9 Craze
lnstrwnent 11 Prepare
17 Incessant
a path
1B Ending
15 Editor's
for Caesar
direction
or EucUd
11 Vitality
1--=:"::':":: 11 straw
ZO WboUy

SAVE ALOT

JUST LIST EO

Hollywood 10; Nashville On The Road 13: Dolly 15;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33,
8:DO-Movle "Clone Master " 3,4,15; Mork &amp; Mindy
6,13 : Once Upon A Classic 20.33: Magical. ·Musical
World of Julie Andrews 10.
8: 3G-Piease Stand By 8; Thraclan Gold 33; Once Upon
A C lassi C 20 .
•
Q:QO-Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii Flve -0 8.10; In

WHEN ···

Which

9' and 12' Vinyl

cabinets, stove, refriverator and dishwasher. Beautiful

Camera 6; Julie Andrews &amp; R obert Goulet 8; That's

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
Z Russian

SAVE ON
CARPETING

a4.ae

Kit 33.
7:3G-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4: Candid

Ye:Sie&lt;da]iS I Jumbles ' WEARY LOFTY SWERVE INBORN
Answer· For these opera singers -could be no
resi- "TENORS"

WI: DO pa int mg . gutter . cedin g
tde . paneling, fOo l repair ,
plum bing and concre te work .
~ t ee es t imates . Ca ll 9q2.7785
o\ k for Wolloce Morris

As

Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20 : Consumer Surv!11al

A ~NO, " AND rT
Mtc:.Hi I!IE YE5.

(Answers tomorrow)

l iTTLE WHILE~

AUTOMOBIU INSUR ANC£ been
can ce lled? l o~ t you r o p era tors
l1cense? Phone992 -2143 .

manure .

JUST LISTEO - SPACIOUS BI·LEVE~. This moy be
your ·dream home. 11 has a large kitchen with lots of

WANT EO : We have a qualified buyer for a few acres
a good home with at least 3 bedrooms
located on good load .

.h ome. some remodel ing ,
beauti f ul view of the r iver,
must see to appreciate ,

WHY ... n

A

Rubber Back carpet
HIH:

6. 13; Family Feud 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15;

ADD 50METHIN6 iO

~

&amp;.

AUCTION . Fnda y and Sa turday ot
l pm . New and used merc hon ·
drSE' o t Ohio R111e r A uction , 53"1
High St .. M iddleport . Ohio .

7 :0Q-Cross-W i ts 3; PM Magazine 4 ; New lywed Gam e

I

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK,, 1 wlth110 puzzles Ia 1¥111able for $t35 poalpa. ld from Jumble, cfo lt'lls newspaper, P.O . Box 34,
Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your name, address, l ip c ode and make
checks payable to Newspaperbooks.

_25 lb. o~ dojl loo_d . s_~ s~ . _

Aill'tiun

of land with

Older

BEEH SO L~G

StHCE WE'VE
PAID AH'fTHII'IG ···

DRIVE ALITTLE

location. Will go quick for $35.000 .
40 Acres of land In Sulton Twp. Nice building sites.
small barn . Priced at only S21.500 .

3 BEOROOMS -

NO ··· BUT 11'5

RI::I:VES TRADING Po st . Pogev1lle
Crocerie~ . dry good~ . hard ·
ware , feed, lock shop. Special

WHEEl CAM PER , sleeps o. f ~etras .
011en .
lu r no ce .
owning .
loleosonoble . 949 -2225

Tyler Moore 10 ; Hogan 's Heroes 15 .

! :DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:3G-NBC News 3,4,1S: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .

Prlnl answer here:

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-TIME MARCHES ON

AN D MARTIN
h·
HOWERY
co vot in g ,
~e pt ic
~ys t e m !. ,
doze1 . back hoe dump tr uck ,
. limestone . gravel . bla cktop
pav mg , Rt. 14 3. Phone I (6U)
b% -7331 .

Route 338. Sells for $30,000.
RIGGS CREST MANORBeaut iful 12 room split

20.33 ;Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One 13;
Petticoat Junction IS .
5:3!&gt;-News 6; Santord &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20.33; Mary

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the ab011e cartoon .

Will do roo f ing . cons tru ction .
plumbi ng and heat ing . N o job
too Iorge or tao smalL Phone
'1 42· '1348 .

3; Superman 4; For R icher. For

Poorer 15; Merv Gritfln 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Sesame St . 20.33; Batman 10: Dinah 13.
4: 3G-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch
10; Little Rasca ls 15.
s :oo.-Bonanza 3 ; Beverly Hi llb illies 8; Mister Rogers

I I I J

fu lty insured
FrH Est.
Call 992-1172
8-10-1mo. (Pd. I

CHIM NC Y FI~ES ore no fun ! Ha11e
voo.H'.i cleaned lh~ dustless way
TRAVI:l TRAIUR far sole 1972
Th e
Chi m ney
Sweep ,
M orl. l'w oi n ICI It i'A'l ·2566.
614 -373 -6057 .

19/4 PROWLI:R 18 I t
~el f .
con ta ined . Sleeps o, 741-25l7

-·'

IDANAGEt

on hetttng cost

bedroom home has dining
room. family room and sun
porch . Plenty of storage
space. Garage and patio
with a canopy. Situated on
almost 1 acre on State

level
colonial ,
has
S
bedrooms, 3 full baths and
much, much more! CaH
today for more info and
make an offer .
We have other listings to
choose from . Please stop in
or call us.

4 :QO--Mister Cartoon

I KANLY I

,.

I:X(AVATtNC. . dozer . bock hoe
and ditcher . Charles R Hot·
l 1eld , Sock Hoe
Serv 1c e
Rutland . Oh •o Phone ·147-2008

s

Well ... maybe ... If ... ?7?

POZAT

Experience and

PULLIN S EXC A VAT ING , Complete
~e r vice . Phone 991·2rl /8 .

Midd l eport - Nice
room
homse with
bath and

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

rour ordinary words .

S.ve 30 pc:t. to so pc:t.

· ~XC A VATI NG , d01er . lo ad er and

frame ho me with natural
gas heat . Situated on nice
si ze lot on Main Street .

8,10; 2:oo-one Life to Live 6,13.
2 :JG-Doclors 3,4,15; Guiding Light 8,1 0; 3:DOAnot her World 3,4.15; General Hospllal 6,13 : ~llias .
. Yoga &amp; You 20.
.
3:3G-MASH 8; Joker 's Wild 10; You Bet Your Life 20.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

JIM KEESEE

BATHRO O M S AND
Kit chens
remodeled . ceramic tile . plum ·
bing, co rpen trr . and general
maintenance . I J y'eors e~e ·
pe r ience . 991 -3t&gt;85 .

RUTLAND ::: 3 bedroom

1 : 30-0ays of Our Ll\les 34,15; As The World Turns

I KJ

5fWIN G MACHIN!: Repo1r5 . ser ·
v tce . oil make s. 992 -2'184 . l'he
f-a b r ic
Sh o p .
Pomer o y .
Au thor ized Singer Soles and
)erv i ce . We sh m pen S c i ~so 1 s .
backhoe work . dump !ruck!&gt;
and la·bays l or h1 r e . will haul
l ilt dir t . to so d, limestone and
gro ve l. Co li ·Bob 01 Roger Jel ·
l ers. day phone 992· "1089. nigh t
phone 991.3575 or 991· 5232 ,

James

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 : Gunsmoke 8; Poll ee

J&amp;L

SERVICE

SMITH NELSONMOTORS, INC.

AI.MOST ClUITTIN' TIME!• '""iii~

I&gt;ASY ~ Y'WANIJA &lt;30 SEEMRS, SAN C H~Z SOON M WE-

8·20·1 mo, (Pd.)

Cellulosic (woocffiberl
Thermal insulation

All types of roofing, gu«ers
&amp; downspouh. 20 ytirs
experience .
All
work
guaranteed. Call Tom
Hoskins , 949· 2160. Fre~
Estimates.

CAPTAIN EASY
eASY ANP WAi~ D!"IVER A SHIPMEt.JT
TO THE PIER !!&gt; WARE;HOU5E ,,

33 ;

Heroes 8; Inner Tenn is 33.

9:3o-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10; Bit With Knit
33.
.
lO :oo-Card Sharks 3,1S; My Three Sons 4; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8.10; Dating Game 13 ;
Bit With Knit 33.
10:3G-Hollywood Squa res 3~.15 ; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,1 0; S20.000 Pyram id 13.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3.4.15; Happy Days 6,13 : 11:30...
Wheel 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.
12: 0Q--Newscenter J: News 4,6,10; Ame rica A live 1S;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6.13 ; Bob Braun 4; Search fo r
TOmorrow 8; .10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:DO-For Richer . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the RestlesS 10; Not for Women
Only 15,

8:3G-Movle " Bulfalo Bill and the Indians" 8,10.
9:DO-Charlle's Angels 6,13; Mayor of Casterbrldge 20.
IO :Oo-WEB 3,4,15; News 20: 10:3o-Danlel Fosler
M.D. 20i Mystery Murals of Bala California 33.
li :OG-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ·Dick Cavell 20 ; Lilias
Yolga &amp; You 33.

Free Est i(n ales
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Blown Insulation

........

Popeye 8, 10; Great Performanc es
Michener' s World 20.

New or R_
epair
Gutters and
Downspouts

OHIO VAllEY miNG
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

c-.

p~

Out.

Open Salurdoy 10-4 p.m.
Sundty 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8-31 -1 mo.

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-1 5-lfc

IIM'-tot to the

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

8· 2·1 mo.

MOORE'S

Ph . 992 -2848

GARMiE
o/• milt off Rt. 7 bY·P'III on
51. Rt. 124 toword Rutland,
0,

Pomeroy

For The Best
Price In Town
·
See
Denver Kapple
At

- 4

bed r ooms, ba lh, na tur a l
gas hea t. fir ep l ace. ci t y
wa t er and ext ra tot on Rt .
124. Want $ 14,000

(Bob Ho.eflictl)

10·30 -c

lu l l basemen t , gara ge a n d
nearly 2 a c res . $48 ,500 .
NEW LISTING
50 a c r es
in Lel;lan'on Townsh ip on
good grav e l road . Old 4 r m .
ho u se w i th e l ec tri c. $20.000 .

HOME

T11e Photo Place

Chester, Ohio

NEW LISTING
Ni ce 4
bedroo.m o l der 110m e with
modern kit c he n a nd bafll .
E l ec tr ic · baseboard heat .
ci t y wa ter, second bath in

FAMILY

Call Us Toctov

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

l'HHH Bt:OJ.IOOM car pe ted home
lully 1n suloted w1 th I , both ')
111 Pom e ro y . Rea sonably pr1ced
Ph one 99 2 3ti7J

large kitchen &amp; dining

JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
PHONE m-2111

tor estimate . 24

a nytime.
Phone 9ttS-3806

$27 ,300.00

room .

'

Call

Hour Service. Any

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.

SPECIAL
PRICE

bedrooms,

POMEROY .
LANDMARK

cial.

SENIORS

We are currently mak ing
appointments tor senior
portraits. We use tradi ·
tional s~ttings and also
fe ature
outdoor
por ·
traiture .

4

Club 1S; Summer Semester 10 .

6: 3Q--Ooctors on Call 4; N~ws 6 ; Summer Semester B;
For You ... Black Woman 10.
·
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:SG-Good Morning. West
Virginia 13; 6:S5-News 13 . .
7:GO-Todoy 3,,, 1S; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10; 7:25-Chuck White Reports !O J
7:3!&gt;-SchoolleslO; 8:oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame
St . 3f
9 :oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Hogan's

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,1971
7.DO-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magaz ine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha Na Na 8: News 10; Gilligan 's Is. 15; Dick
Cavett 20; Big Green· Magazine 33.
7:3G-AII -Siar AnythlnQ Goes 3; Dating Game 4;
Wolfman Jack 6; Price Is Right 8: The Judge 10:
That's Hollywood 13: Wild Kingdom 15: MacNe il Lehrer Report 20,33.
.
s :oo-World ot Disney 3,4,15: Eight Is Enough 6,13;

RooER HYSEll

~RADFOPO .

19lb CHI: V'f VAN J~ out o lu tl v
c u~ r a mi2 ed
1nte11 Qr
whrte
')pok e whee ls Good con d.t oon
!:i ee otlSr o wn 's Tr ad e r Park . l ot
10. Mmer s... dle , Oh1 o
1.913 THI:R Y TRA ileR 2"1 h . A .C
ro ll out o w nmg . pow er &lt;on
II!H te r
C1((el lent
candihon .
S4500ftrm 4Goodyeorl ·'l f:l15
tu es and wh eel~ opp ro~e . 100
miles . $300. Conn tr urn pe t w 1th
CO!&gt;e , e• cetlent con dl1 1on SIOO
/ 4'J -2b07 .

High School

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Residential and commer

.BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

M o rl'l lllg '&gt; tor
949 2424

19F/ KC 1000 Kawa sak1 m otorcy
de E~e celle nt cond •t 1on ~ome
MATERIA L p1eces
e ~t r a !&gt; .
pncedrea son ably
cheap
Sy l v1o s
9920100
across tram Te xaco
Sy ro c u ~e
O H GRAVI::L Y TRACTOR w1l h rnower
and sulkey
Alt er
coli
l 4') 7971:1

l o • ~ole I oC•P on e.
up Middleport IICOI Hu tla t td
Cal l flq'J. / 4l:t1

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14,1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:SG-PTL Club 13; 6:DO-PTL

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I JTTI.E ORPIIM\ ,\ NN IE

J bed! oam Al l c lectdr home,,

Red wh1t e
and y-e ll o w . Phone 84 3 243;?
!-I ober! W lew1 s. Rt 7 l-loc&gt;~~e .
) R 124.

$92ll

Sl295

SPECIAL

O WN t R TIIAN5HR RI:: D.

POTA T O~S

UPHOLSl' I:RY
Wdl
sell
Upho lstery .
St att on
991 -516'1

i'brn

J ', acres wtl h wat er ond ~ew oge
on P~a coc k A ve
PomE'IOY
Oh to S 1000 down Malanc Ec&gt; ol
Sb6 /0 per month 10 qualtf,cd
p er~on Q92 57 l:t6

GIGAN11( YARD Sale . (htld ren s
clo thlllg d l'jhe!o . gloH . rn1s c
~oturdoy Sept 16 _ Mary Mar·
1111 s restdence besid e Burger
Che l

1971 FORD ' • ton t amper spe c1 ol

'~'n ·

GUNS AND am rn a l arge d• scoun t
on sho t shells 21 Lf.l 2'1 Mag
etr Al l ktnd s at ne w and u!oed
shot gun s lt ft c s ho nd gun s
~Oille lu ne s you don I e11en ne ed
money . We tr ad e l o r olrn as l
O!l ylhing hie s ) Jrd M1d
dleport . 991 i' 494

adult ~

WIN TI:R POT A TO~S . grade I and
1 C W f-'r olhtt Po rt land Ohro

wheoPb . p,

-,

K 16 W1 nter I lie'&gt;

1'IO l (t:H V'f J:OJ.I parr:; I q1 3 Vega
mo l al' . Ho y f or !&gt;Ole S . B~ o
bo le Q.&lt;~ 9 'l. 4 1] ar 94 q·2849 ,

1976 1 • lon Chev ro le t p1 cl&lt;.yp 4
speed , J~ engtne . 3 1nCh J.l ee~e
h ll ch
l:: xcel len t
cor~d o t. on
Phone 99'} 5::!48

KI NG ~ t ZI: wal e tbed ! rome . mO t.
ness . pede stal . l•ner heater
YARD AND Bake sale ott he l ong
1970 Kt 1l5 Kowo !&gt;o k• on oft
Bo tt om Co mmunity Bu ildmg.
road
1100 oCiuat
mdes
Fndoy . Sept 15.
9r-17 562 4. Wrtl ~ o c lrd ,c t- Ap l
YA RO SA L!: 7 th St . Syracuse.
100 R• vervtew Mtdd te port
Oh1 o . !.ept . II thru 14. 1 eenoge
ON!:
DOUBL ~ bow l p o o c l\.~111 top
clat h11'1 Q s h oe~ cheap .
sm k cab1ne t und l 1k e new
YA RD SAL!: Fri . Sep t IS at
S I ~0 , One go~ dr ye r 1U lb
l eon a
Ste wart s r es•den ce
r opo( rty gold l1l.e ne w SI~U
Mulber1y Heights
Pome~tJ y
'l p• opon e ga s h e- ot c f ~ good
ham 9 to ~ Fl o wer po ts
co ndd,on One SJOU one S'lOU
d• shelt . dresses 16 to ']0 ' .•
7 .&lt;~ :t J 11 "1 o fl e r 5 pm
" ecor d!. and m 1sc
O NI: PAIJ.I 1 J chon ntol J woll.1e
l HRH
FAMIL Y Yard
Sole .
Tolk 1cs . L1k c new foi c ol ,st •c
Wednesday
a nd
Thur sday
R eo ~o nobl e Col i 9Wl ~~06
No nh on New 33. l elt mt o CR
1977
VO LARi:: PRI:MII:~ &lt;1 dam 318
I q Peach Fr o k Rd I st house on
engine aut o f.' S P ll ijOCl(j
r1gh t . Real tHCe clo thing . in ·
actual mdes SJOOO 19'lJ N ovo
elu d in g coot~ lur no! vr e pl umb·
' 1-dr auto t~e &lt;e lhml co r~d•llon
1ng odd s and end s
P ~ - P B 5. 1800 19"1 4 Apa che
C ARACt SALE. Clo thing . cor lug ·
corn per fold down lr vec glo~'&gt;
gag e r amer gall bog . bow and
poneb Sl i'I:IS 991 -3611
arrow . cuno ins . bedspread and
R~O ~KIN
m 1sc lh ur~doy and Fndoy PI CK YOUR OWN
Pt A C H~ ~ S 12 lb M o n
lue ~
10 J . O ne mi le no rth ol Che~ter
Thors h1 . 9 to b Wed~at
on C~82 .
~u n 1 I a b . Br ,ng cort!OIIIIJI~ .t
TWO FAM ILY 'ford Sole 560 S
you wo,, t to use '&gt; l ep l add er~
J1d Middleport Sa turday 9.?
br ong your ' own You p1 ck ap
Boys cla thtng 12 18 . Women s
p l f'~ COming ~ 0011 Wn g11Pr hull
clo thmg 14 · lb . Men s ~uo t s e-"
~arm , loyrno n Oh1o '1 1 11Hie~
c_e ll en t
co n dtt.on
Med turn
o il
~~
')')0
0" Ck' o
MI SC.
bl 4-749 3311
YA RD SAL!: of Th elma Moor e s ~l ~C lRIC 1--IR~PlAO outomot. c
r e\1 dence , 342t:O New l•mo Rd
co rner mode l q91 i'U51
J?utland Thu rsdov and Frrdoy
Proceed s ta go t o ward~ buytng (OMBINl: ALLI ~ ( h el m e t ~ C w.th
J head s 8 drag ty pe d •sc f1 on t
bu~ lo1 Freewill Bop t 1sl Chur ch
en d loode1 I a• o Ml-- 3~ !&gt;0 It
Fl Y!: FA M il'( 't'ord Sole Thu1sdoy
e leva l o t
b r u '&gt; h
hog
f. rt doy , &amp; Saturday Q to 4 138
cu l•po ck e r
A ndt ew
(ro!.s
Con dor St . Beh1nd l andmark
l eiOI I f-ol b / 4'/ /8~2
Po mer oy . ~a 1n o r ~hme

a

1. 700

p• $)0 .00 Ca ll

I:.AR CORN S2 per bu , Co rn
sheller s ~so J 0 No . 5 tn Q WIIlQ
rnor h111e S10U tnt Baler S140U
Alt er 0 pm ca ll Qt) ;, &lt;1 1]1 o r
4HS 3537
I'H-1 ~CHUll'Z to ro l eiN IIIC ')
bed1 oo m washer o n cl rh yC&gt;r
lunu shed . u11d er p1nn ed
01
tol ic •ollor('place e"c ellent con
dt t 1o n StO.OO&lt;J or be:. r otfe,
!J7S ~ . 7nd Ave , M iddlepor t 15
cu ft. dep·p freere S200 1969
Chevy Im pala $7~0 .

16

2 tJ by

HOMI:~III: ~

~ tN ~ I

MA 11(
a&lt;
l oun ttng
ma r hmc
PhonP
991 -2156 fhe Dolly ~cntlllel
! 11 Co url ~l ,et? t Po •n e1 cy
Ohto

NEW Jee p AT I r ock et l tres
S71J 99'1~1~ 7

IN m y horne lor
wQI~onq rn o ther
10 day ) o
n.on th Mv st hovo&lt;&gt; e " pEH•ence
ro CJ9') 2444 al• e' 5 00 pm
AUfO bod r and
prt•pPr a!tan rnon Apply rn per
'-Or&gt; at Htll ~ Oual1ty Bod y Sho p
M rrlcilf"pOII

B &amp; ~ MOBIL~ HOMC!:I . Pt Pl ed

~ l V I:

I:'.AHY'-,11 If-f(

!--&lt;PI:.fH~NClO

Business Servi.ces

lt&lt;·al .Eo tall' f11r &amp;I&lt;·

Wanted to-Buy

TIMHCR . POME'ROV Forest Pr o
du(h Top pn ce l or stond 111g
sow t1 mber . Colt 992-SQb5 or
Ken t Hanby . l - 44b · H~ i' O

:1 ;;,

1
W1J1'tb I!&gt; -l ('t•ut;. Jk! l" Wpnl Jk.'l' da y
r\tb runrtmt: u1twr lh;m t'tlllst.'l'Uli\'t'
(Ia) !&gt;

Unwant~d

_'I' he uauy Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pcrneroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 13, 1978

ELVINEV STUBBED HER
TOE ON A ROCK AN'
NOW LUKE'/ '5 GOT TO
DO FILL TH' PLOWIN'

THAT'S

A

PLUMB
SHAME

·-

-

�12 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednellday, Sept. 13, 1971

•

·President Carter, Begin hold secret session
By JIM ANDERSON
residence.
_governed by Jordan.
CAMP DAVID. Md. (UPI )
Carter met Tuesday
'Since Sunday's Carter- President Carter and morning with Sadat fir an BeglnmeeUng, thebulkofthe
Israeli Prime Minister hour and 35 minutes.
discussions have Involved the
Menachem Begin met for 90
There was no explanation Americsns and the Egyptians
minutes Tuesday night in a for the official secrecy about as Carter apparently sought
secret session held as the the Carter-Begin meeting, to refine and clarify areas of
camp David summit con- which took place oo the agreement.
ference weighed proposals on eighth day of the summit at
As a kind of holding pattern
the future of Israeli - oc- this secluded mountaintop develops with each side
cupiedlandontheWestBank retreat.
reviewing proposals ,
of the Jordan River.
There was no Indication coolerence officials say the
W1rd of the Begin-Carter 'that a meeting between final outcome of the summit
meeting _ their first since Carter, Begin and Egyptian · remains in the hands of
. Sunday - was first relayed President Anwar Sadat was Sadat.
by conference sources and In the offing today .
Officials now consider it
~firmed by officials this
Summit sources said it was likely the cooference will end
morning ooly after they were major - although not by any · by Thursday at the earli~st .
Confronted with the news by means the only - problem ..Tite first meetings of the
reporters.
remaining in the way of more principals began a week a•o.
. A White House spokesman, direct negotiations is Sadat's
Israeli sources said it is not
Jerrold Schecter, eventually Insistence that the Israelis true, as reported by
. ~cknowledged that the unan- commit. themselves to an televi~on reporters, that the
nounced, private meeting had eventual wilhdrawallrom the Israelis have put forward
taken place fill' 90 minutes in occupied
West
Bank new proposals on the
Aspen Lodge, carter's territories, formerl y Palestinian question.
But the Israelis, Americans
and Egyptians agree the
Israeli delegation has put
forward a series of new ideas
m the West Banlt, and Sadat
has checked those ideas by
telephone with King Hussein
of Jordan.
The conference sources
RING anO PENDANT In
said the holding pattern; a
diamonds at unbelievably
series of cootinuing dialogues
low priCeS . Sl'll!l'll love 10
between the delegations, has
wn r this h1gh lu hlon
turned the tightly secluded
matcnll'lg 111.
Camp David meeting place
into kind of a Middle East .

bazaar with ideas being a s ' ' u n in f o r rn e d
changed and
modlfed speculation," but since he is
coostantly in the inf&lt;ll'mal the only authoritative official
coolacts which are possible 1n source, there can be no
the JX"esidential retreat.
determination
of
the
The security remains ·accuracy of the rep1r1s untU
apparently perfect. Powell the participants . leave the
has described several reports compound.

Ap'/)al team ends
summer
The early weeks of Sep!ember mark the return to
school of not only the Meigs
County students, but also the
students who were members
of the Appal Corps Health
Team Project in Meigs
County during the summer.
The Appal Corps project Is a
continuing program condueled by the Consortium for
Health Education in Appalachia Ohio (CHEAOI to
provide actual working experiences in a community
setting for health discipline
students.
The Meigs team members'
were part of a rigorous
competition before their
selection ll)! CHEAO to
become members of the
Appal Corps program. The
students on the Meigs team

115 CARAT

Of DIAMONDS

114 CARAT
nF n t AMmm~

rn 14 Kt. two

'8

t oll~ ~o ld

CANDY'S CLASSIC
COLLECTION
In

.,
;·:' ·
&amp;.: :

,

. Jl ... .' ~\
'

INGLES FURNITURE

· Special
S.lt

Prices!
The new featherweight S\'IW in the line.
general purpose handyman work ... but a cut above the
rest . The new Husky 32 is quiet and easy to work with .
A 32 cc engine gives it enough power to pull the chain

.

.

CIIAII SAWS

quickly through the wood . Handles are designed for

·

easy gripping and for the professional tree trimmer It' s
a one·handed saw . A kickback guard is standard .
Chain brake is optional .
•

"Two·in One Store''
Middleport, 0.

Wilkinson Small Engine Sales &amp; Service

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0 .

498 Locust St.

It is expected that both
Sadat aJid Begin will. spend
tw~ or three days Ill the
Umted. Slates after the
conclUSion of the conference.
Among the most relia~le
sou~ces of lnformallon
continue to be the carefully

selected olflclal pholograp~
that ~e put out by the
delegallons In Camp David.
They.show the atmosphere ID
be relued and Informal.
The three JX"Incipala have
not. mel together since last
Thursday • but Powell

HOSPITAL NEWS

csutloned not to draw any
eonciUIIons from the abllence
of such a meeting.
carter and Sadat met f1r 1
hour and 36 min.utes Tuellday
and the , Egyptian and
American delegatlona mel
later, but there has been no
meeting Involving the lsraell
delegatloo In the iaat :u
ho~s,lndicatlnglhependlnde g
decialons mUll be ma by
the Egyptians.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pleasant Valley Hoopltal
ADMITTED - Herbert
DISCHARGES - Freda
Gilkey , Middleport; Howard Woyan, Southside; Jackie
J
Nutter, Reedsville; Sandra Hudson, ·Pt. Pjeasant; Mrs.
Two defendants forfeited
Reed, Pomeroy ; Flora Bobby Kinnaird, Southside;
were: Roy Gandolfi, medical Dono h u e, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Bobby
Sturgill, bonds and two others were
student ,
Ann
Arbor, Jacquelyn.Ginther, Portland; Jackson ; Mrs . William fined In the court of Pomeroy
Michigan; Bob Smith, Violet Stover, Cheshire; Kinnaird, Gallipolis Feri'y; Mayor Clarence Andrews
medical student , Cincinnati ; Thomas Gibbs, Coolville; Robert
German,
Pt. Tuesday night .
Carl King, Jr., New Haven,
Mary Kay Grimm, nursing Edna Belew, Cheshire; Pleasant ; Lj&gt;nnie Toney,
forfeited
a $50 bond posted on
student , Milwaukee; Mary Myrtle' Hayes, Pomeroy; Ashton; Rebecca Laudera
improper
passing charge
Ellen Beardmore, medical Denise Qualls, Pomeroy ; milt, Mason ; Charles Hesson,
and Danny Zirkle, Pomeroy,
dietitian, Newark , Ohio: and Mary Roush, Phoenix, Ariz. Pt. Pleasant.
John McCartney, health
DISCHARGED - Melanie
BIRTH - A daughter to forfeited a $50 bond posted on
education, Toledo. During the Grueser , William Stephen- Mr. and Mrs. Jackie a charge of discharging a
firearm in the village.
students' eight-week stay in son, Marguerite !!Iaker, Donohue, Pliny.
Fined were Don Hill, Point
Meigs County, housing was Brady Knapp, Erma Wilson,
Pleasant .l!o and costs, and
provided by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nunn, William RiehRichard Peyton, Dexter, $33
Mike Otto of Racine, Ohio and mond .
and costs, both on speeding,
by Marty Geyer, the com- ·
charges.
munity coordinator.
The team · conducted
Five defendants were fined
diabetic screenings in conIn
Middleport Mayor Fred
junction with the Meigs
Hoffman's
court Tuesday
County Health Department, ·
night.
the Meigs Senior Citizens
They were Paul E. Clark,
Center, Meigs County Mental
29, Middleport, and James A.
Health Center and the Ohio
Pennestri, 29, Delsey, Md.,
Depaltment of Health. They
Minnie Marie Abbott to
conducted diabetic education Martin Gene Abbott, Carroll
$225 and costs each and three
classes, and assisted the L. Abbott, 100 acre lot, I acre,
days in jail, each on charges
county health department in Salisbury.
of driving while intoxicated;
blood pressure screening.
Narsa L. Moodispaugh, 19,
Marvin W. Reed, Darlene
After working three days ·a M. Reed to Monongahela
Middleport, $15 and costs,
· week on the community Power Co., Easement, Olive.
speeding ; George A. McDarilel, 50, Middleport, and
project, the team members
Clifford B. Lamp, ·Edna C.
D~tnald Lovett, 55, Midspent two days with local Lamp to Leroy Hendrix, Judy
preceptors . Preceptors for E . Hendrix, 1.919 acres,
dleport, $100 and costs each
the team members were Dr. Orange.
on disorderly manner
Lewis Telle ; Dr. John
charges.
Earl W. Owens, ·Betty J.
Forfeiting bonds in the
Ridgway; Diana Eberts of Owens to Paul A. English,
RETIRES- Clareace R.
court
posted on speeding
the Meigs County Extension Brenda L. English, Lot 14,
Casella has herome the
Office ; Opal Grueser, Meigs Hickory Acres, Orange.
charges
were Sherry L.
first maa to retire lrom
County Health Department:
Lusher,
18,
Langsville, and
Drema Roach, Raymond
Ohio Power Company's
and Nancy Kohlreiser , Roach to Raymond Roach,
Fae
R.
Reibel.
20, Pomeroy,
Gavin Plaat. Mr. Casella, a
Community Mental Health in Drema Roaoh, 2.35 acres,
$27
each.
maintenance man·B,
Gallipolis.
Salisbury.
began his 31-year company
The team unanimously
Kathryn Denison to Jack L.
career at Philo Plant. He
expressed appreciation for Bart rum, V. Joyce Bart rum,
wag transferred to Gavin
the time and guidance given 4 acres, Rutland.
Plant In 1915. Co-workers
to them by the preceptors and
Evelyn Perry to James R.
presented him with a
they also noted that Marty Posler, Beverly Marlene
bicycle
upon
his
Geyer, the community Posler, Palmer's 2nd Add.,
retirement, figuring be bas
coordinator, was invaluable Middleport.
walked enough around
A judgment action in the
in her help to them.
Leo
Kennedy,
Jr .,
power plants during his amount ol $5,916.07 was flied
During the debriefing held Executor ; Leo Kennedy, Sr.,
career. He Is a bowling in Meigs County Common
by CHEAO for the student dec. to James E. Reynolds,
enthusiast, and Is a Pleas Court by George E.
teams at Lake Hope in late Patricia Ann Reynolds ,
member of lbe compaay's . Morris and Mary Elizabeth
August , the Mei gs team Parcels, Middleport.
Veteran
Employees' · Morris, Pomeroy, against,
agreed that its experience in
William Chase, Eunice
Assoclallon. The Casellas Kenna Bu.sh, Cheshire, and
the community had been Chase to Dalton B. Grover,
wlll move to 9U Seborn George Collins, county
outstanding, not only in Barbara Ann Grover, ParAve., Zaaesvllle.
treasurer. The suit Is for
learning skills but in cels, Salisbury.
money due on a prirnlssory
discovering the realities of
Thomas E. Fowler, Mary
note.
rural medicine which cannot Fowler to Stephen H. Taylor,
Judge John C. Bacon has
he taught in a school. They Brenda K. Taylor, I acre,
ASSUME CONTROL
dissolved
the following
also agreed that it had not Rutland.
KENT, Ohio (UPI)
marriages:
·
been all work; there had been
Employees of the nation's
Patricia
Triplett,
Rt. I,
time for a lot of fun in Meigs
largest tree service comPortland
and
David
Triplett,
j)!lny, Davey Tree Expert Co.
County, too.
p
d
The students had several
omeroy squa
of Kent , will take over the no address recorded;
Patricia A. Woodyard and
business.
regrets in leaving Pomeroy, answerS 3 calls
James
.H. Woodyard ;
however; the summer was
Davey Board Chairman
Margaret
Barrett
and James
over too soon ; there was no
The Pomeroy Emergency Alexander M. Smith , a Barrett; Auston Newsome
way for them to personally Squad answered three calls member of the board for 32
thank the many people who Tuesday . At I : 10 p.m. the years, said the board decided and Sandy Newsome ; Unda
had helped them; and there squad went to Union Ave. for to tum over the company to Sue Wolfe and Monte Ray
was no way to personally say Ben Eblin who ·was taken to its 3,000 employees because It Wolfe; Mltzlann McCilntock
·and John Finley McClintock;
goodbye to all the friends Holzer Medical Center.
wants continuity.
Paul Roush and Nancy
they had made in Meigs
Davey
will
buy
ba·
c
k
outAt 5:37 p.m ., the squad
Roush; John Tillis and Wilma
County.
standing
common
stock
and
went to Route 143, the Charles
Tlllis.
an
employee
stock
ownership
Mash residence, where a
subject was treated for a plan and trust will be
hand laceration, and at 5:31 established.
p.m., the squad took Myrtle
Hayes of New St. to Veteran"
(Continued from page I )
FUNDS DISTRWUTED
Memorial Hospital.
program in its seventh year
State Auditor Thomas E.
NOW YOU KNOW
had 170 foster gran9parents,
Ferguson's office announced
Thomas
Jefferson collected the
aiding In child .9.-Y care
SQUAD RUN
September,
1978,
The
Middleport a library of 6,000 books In his distribution of $35,398,811 In
centers as well as schools and
Institutions for retarded Emergency Squad was called lifetime, but owned none Aid to Dependent Chlldre:t to
children and youth.
to 790 S. Third Ave. at. 2:06 published by the fashionable 465,078 recipients in Ohio's 88
Robert Pitts, director, p.m. Tuesday for Hubert Oxford University Press counties.
COAD Energy Conservation Stewart who had fallen. l;le because he considered them
Meigs County received
too expensive.
Program, said the member was treated on the scene.
f/4,227 for 1,032 claimants.
CA agencies had winterized
I ,800 homes in the counties
where the program operates.
He noted the current budget ·
for the activity Is $1,985,000
with I ,800 additional persons
receiving
energy
bill
assistance last year.
The Senior Nutrition
Program report was given by
Its program director, Marilyn
Grant, Wellston . She noted it
aerved 700,000 meals to some
6,010 senior citizens at 82
congregate sites in 26 COAD
counties this year, with 10
more sites scheduled to open
1100n. The operating budget Is
about S2 million, with a staff
of four persons plus Mrs.
•CAMOUFLAGE OUTER SHEU REVERSES TO O.D.
Grant administering the
program. She said 19 counties
•ROOMY ADJUSTABLE DRAW STRING .HOOD
have " meals at home"
•
programs, and that all sites
•2
SNAP
CLOSURE
STORM
FLAP
POCKm
hopefully will be accessible to
handicapped persons In the
•ZIPPER FRONT
future .
Roger McCauley, COAD
•UNDERARM VENTILATION
planner and grantsman gave
a report showing his planning
•ADJUSTABLE SNAPS ON SLEEVES &amp; PANT CUFFS
office had been directly in·
valved with negotiating
federal and state contracts
•IDEAL RAINSUIT FOR WORK OR SPORT
,lor over $6,000,000 In the past
year. That Included obtaining
•SIZES M, L, AND XL
grants to operate the COAD
.MEN'S DEPT. 1ST fLOOR
programs including Senior
Companions, · youth employment, food stamp outreach, energy conservation
among other programs.

t
pro•ec
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 14, 1978

'

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Fonner President booed ·
NEW YORK (UPI) -About 400 people booed Richard
·M. NW!n as he entered and left the New York University
Ulrary Wedneeday f~r a memorial service. for his old friend
and maj1r financial backer, Elmer Holmes Bobst. Nixon came
to New York from his San Clemente, Calif., home to attend the
service but also took the occasion to sign a contract Tuesday
fir a new book about the challenges the nation will face during
the remainder of the century.

Appeal campaign launched
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The 1978 Cincinnati-area United
Appeal campaign has been launched with a goal of '18.4
mUJion . Wedneeday 's start of the campaign w~ symbolized by
a gigantic flag ralalng - United Appeal campaign manager
Raymond F. Letts hoisting a 67Hqullre foot flag in opening
ceremooles. The '18.4 mUllan goal is a 10.4 percent Increase
over last year's e&amp;m!JIIIgn which ralaed '16.7 million.

Free spending means aitests
PALMA, Spain (UPI)- II was lhelr free spending that led
pollee to the gang that made off with the billford. Learning that
three boys, 5, 6, and 12, had bought about $40 worth of candy
and other trllles, pollee Investigated further and found they
were respCIIsible fir the theft of a wallet containing fl8 from a
parked car. The boyua were turned over to Juvenile Court.

Point Plo•Mnt or M•10n
I

'1095

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

CAROL TANNEHILL
NAMED
COORDINATOR- Carol Bachtel
Tannehill, RN, Middleport,
h&amp;s been named coor·
dlnator of the ChUd Health
Services Well Child Clinics
of the Meigs County
Department of Health .
Employed In the offices of
Dr. J. J. Davis In Middleport for the past 18
years, Mrs. Tannehill In
her aew post will coordluate the clinics at which
pediatric evaluation Is
determined through
examination of young
people. The clinics held
twice monthly, are free to
age groups running from
small babies to youag
people Zl years old.

pickets to rell!/rt to picket
lines and picket captains
today with the apparent
intention of defying the order.
Representatives of the 500mem ber DPSU were to meet
with their attorney at 9 a.m.
today to discuss the judge's
order regarding picketing.
Meanwhile, Kessler, who
has been overseeing talks
between the teachers and !he
hoard of education, received
a study don e by Sinclair
Co mmunity
College
supporting the board 's
contention that il does not
have the money to provide
pay raises for the striking
tea chers.
Kessler said if when
federally-mediat ed talks
resume Friday the DEA does
not change its position that
there is money fo r pay raises
)le will enjoin its members
from striking Monday .

Vol. 29, No . 106

Congressional sources said Sadat and Begin are expected to main points in dispute but leaves open some points that could
talk to members of Congress and other American leaders riot he settled.
·Israeli sources said the detailed fra mework uses as its basis
before returning home. On Capitol Hill the mood was also
Begin's
26-poinl plan for "self-rule" in the West Bank, but
upbeat.
significantly
modified by American ideas and leaving open the
Sen. Richard, Stone, D-'li'la., who released fi&lt;st word that the
.
.
.
Camp David summit was to be held , said Wednesday, " I question of soverignty of the area.
It was learned that the decision to seek the comprehensive
believe they are going Ill succeed." Sen. Jacob Ja,vits, R-N.Y.,
said plans are heing made for a report to the nation by Carter, ptan was Carter's. He had decided that important political
an apparent indication that the administration believes decisions should be made when Ule political leaders were in a
position to negotiate directly with each other.
success is near .
An agreement would restore the momentum of the negotiaAcomprehensive blueprint would serve as a guideline for a
tions,
which were broken off in July by the Egyptians because
comprehensive Middle East settlement that would haVe ID
the
Israelis
refused to commit themselves to a withdrawal
include Jordan, since the occupied West Bank is a key issue.
from
the
West
Bank and other occupied territories.
The final details would be worked out by the foreign
The
past
two
days have reached a crescendo of intense and
ministers of the countries, perhaps beginning within two
detailed
negotiations
involving all Ule delegations in tbP
weeks .
mountaintop
retreat.
The ·sources said the comprehensive blueprint covers the

•

Middleport's North Second Ave . (Picture by Dorsel
Thomas)

Widow gives testimony
.
Lee

Th e Rev . Dwight Zavitz,
pa•1or of the Middleport and
Syracu se Presbyterian
G'hurches, was presented a
life memb ership in the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club when the club met for a
luncheon Wednesday at the
Meigs Inn.
Regret was expressed in
losing the Rev. Mr. Zavitz,
one of the club's active
.members. who will soon be
moving to Virginia.
Durin g th e meeting,
presided over by President
Hobert Hill, it was announced
the local club will host the
next zone meeting in
November. Hill also gave a
report on a zone meeting held
in November.
A report was given on the
sale of small car tickets. The
car went to Charles Dowler,
Middleport. It was reported
two
applicati ons
for
eyeglasses for needy children
in Meigs County were approved by the directors at
their recent meeting. A new
member, David Jenkins, was
welcomed .

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - President Carter's visit to
Columbullbis weekend hu been [IOIItponed for a week because
of whatlbe White House said Wedneeday was "uncertainty" at
the Camp David summit on the Mideast. Instead of arriving In
Columlius Saturday afternoon, Ohio Democratic P"arty
41fector Patrick Leahy said Carter would have "exactly the
same schedllle" Cll Sept. 23.

Poor credit, no new plows
ClEVELAND (UPI)- Frozen In Ita trackl by two severe
Wtnteraln a row, the city has no new snow equipment to avert a
11m1Jar fate this winter because of Its poor credit raUng.
Edward Walllll8n, Maylr Dennla .Kuclnlch'a head of snow
I'IIJIDIIal, aald anow removal will be al;lequate 'even If I have to
get out there and shovel mytelf'. But Councilman Robert Getz
retorted, ''The only way Cleveland will avoid a snow removal
dlauter thll winter Is If there Is no snow."

Fol-d Motor denies charges
DETROrr (UPII - F~rd Molfr Co. ha8 denied chlrgea
leftled by an Indllna ll'and jury that the finn commllled
redd- bamlclde and 'WU criminally rec:kl• In tha dllign of
a Fard Pinto In wlllch three teenqe l!lrll wwe killed. A
~amm for the No. 2 automaller aald the firm will take
apprapr1ate action" In reapan1e to a four&lt;our~t lndlc:tment
bMdld down Wednelday by the EIJdlart County grand jury.

Cteckoff system forthcoming
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Beginntrw In ltll2, Ohio'a 1-11

tillellclll cw"'P'IIJII for IOYernor and the other four llltawfde

..._ could be hllded by a dollar "Check~" IYIIem lbrotilh
Qdo ,....aJ lnCGIIM tupa;r.ra. An Oblo floule.pu11d blU to
lit up ladla 111••m - tlmiJar to tile r.dlra1 "check~" to
llld pruldcillll e11ct1ana •eli four ,_,. - reeelnd the
~~ W~ of the S..ta Wa)'l and M11111
~·
. ~

ADDITION UNDERWAY - Pictured above is a
drive-through facility ~?eing added to the Royal Flush on

Lions life
membership
•WASHINGTON (UPI ) Harvey Oswald's widow
in public and
presented acknowledged
under oath today that she

Columbus visit postponed

MEN'S REVERSIIU CAMOUFlAGE

PARKA RAINSUIT

budget-cutting plan to fund custodians and food service
saiary increases lor the personnel.
system's striking employees.
A union spokesman said
The district's 175 schools attempts would be made to
remained shut down to pupils get bus drivers to honor
while Cuyahoga County picket tines.
Common Pleas Court Judge
· on
Wednesday,
Harry A. Hanna considered a Montgomery County
request by school board Common Pleas Judge Carl
attorneys to order the Kessler issued .an order
teachers and
support forbidding all picketing
personnel back to work.
between 7:30 a .m. and 4:30
Hanna refused the request, p.m. Monday through Fridsy
but James O'Meara,leader of · at Dayton public school
the Unity Committee, a coali· buildings by striking teachers
lion of school work groups, and nonacademic employees.
said unions would have
Last week the judge had
ignor~ the order anyway.
Issued an order allowing no
Logan instructors and more than one picket at each
school administrators mel entrance to school buildings
with a federal mediator in around the city.
Columbus. Superintendent
However, Roberta Hunter,
Richard Nace said Board of president of the Dayton
Education negotiators are Teachers Association, late
prepared to meet cootlnually Wednesday called on DEA
untU the dispute is settled .
A strike conUnued In the
Tallmage school district in
Summit County today and
Substitute teachers and
supervisory personnel ran
classrooms on a limited
basis.
·
• The Daytoo teacher strike
was joined at midnight by
DayiDn Public Service Uilloil
Local 101, which represents
maintenance
workers,

j_.)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_·_ro_d_a_r_

ELBERFELDS

PAINT
ROLLIR
COVERS

Fifteen Cents

Agreement reached .on with-drawal, difficulties still exist

UDited Pre10 International
A strike by non-academic
workers In the Buckeye Local
School District in Ashtabula
County ended early today and
striking teachers In the Uma
Shawnee school district voted
today on 1 a new cool:tact to
end a strike In that district.
The strike by 80-nonacademlc employees began
Sept. 5 In the Buckeye Local
School district and most of
the syatem's 150 teachers
honored picket lines although
schools were open for tht:
system's 3,400 students.
The new contract Includes
a new classlflcallon lor
overtime @lld pay increases
ranging from 11 to 47 cents an
hour over the two-year length
of the new agreement.
The 180 teachers in the
lima Shawnee district, who
have also been on strike since
Sept. 5, voted today on a new
contract following a lengthy
meeting ~·ith the Board of
Education. The district has
3,500 students.
In Cleveland, a state court
· hearing continued Cll the
' school strike there. Board of
Ecb:atlon Clerk-Treasurer
Michael Halfman testllled
that school administrators
are drawing up a huge

CAA•••

Style, basic . Prt·WIIt\ed - They a !!

en tine

Two strikes end today

Meigs
Property
Transfers

filed in cowt

BATHROOM TOILET
TISSUE

aty

By JIM ANDERSON
Jordan River because he view.s ii as the Biblical homelimd of
the Jews.
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) - Israel has apparently agreed to
, Jordan had previously governed the West Bank territory .
the principle of eventual withdrawal from the West Bank and
Egypt
had looSe control over the Gaza Strip in southern Israel.
the Gaza Strip territories they have occupied since 1967. But
Estimates
that ·the conference would end t.oday appeared
sourcea at .the Camp David summit said loday substantial
JX'ematW'e and a better guess seemed to be Friday.
diffiCUlties are stillln·the way of a formal peace accord.
And Carter will deliver a nationally televised report to the
. Souz:cee confirmed that agreement on th~ principle of
Withdrawal from the lands Israel has controlled since the 1967 . American people some time following the conclusion of the
Middle East war is coming Into clearer focqs, but stipulations sununit, sources said.
It was clear as the summit moved into its lOth day that many
and reservations oo both sides still must he worked out.
of the sticking points dividing the Egyptians and Israelis
The sources said two key obstacles are the future of the
l'!llestlnlans and the Israeli settlements ~ occupied Arab throughout the swnmit were being ironed out and a new air of
optimism was dominating Ule conference.
lands.
The desire of Carter, Begin , Egyptian President Anwar
Israeli agreement ID the principle of withdrawal, as
esplalned by these sources, would be a giant leap forward as Sadal and their delegations to reach an amicable conclusion to
the sununit prompted Carter to postpone for a week a fourwell aa a major accomplishment for President Carter.
state
political tour of North and South Carolina, Ohio and
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin has been adamant
Pennsylv•nia
he intended Ill make this weekend.
In the past in refusing to relinquish the West Bank of the

Money action

SALE ENDS SUNDAY - ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT NOW

e

•

SYRACUSE BOY IOOUT Traop

~

were buay

recemly llllldn1111d teDlnl homemlde Ice cream. Orden
bpt ccming ao fast the boyw could not keep up. '""' are

1964. Her testimony today . up with an explanation," she

was more qualified, however.
1n an aggressive examinalion , Dodd pressed Mrs .
personally believes Oswald Porter for the reasons she
killed President John F . believes Oswald acted alone
Kennedy, and that he was not in Kennedy' s murder , Nov.
part of a conspiracy.
22, 1963.
Marina Oswald Porter, the
"Maybe just intuition ," she
Russian-born widow of Ken- said softly .
nedy's accused assassin,
" I do not believe he would
made expressed her beliefs confide in someone," she said
under direct questioning by of her late husband. "He was
Rep. Christopher Dodd, D- not that open (al person ."
Conn., a member of the Oswald, she said, "wanted to
House Assassinations be somebody - wanted to be
Committee.
re&lt;.'O~nized. "
On Wednesday, her first
"The whole matter is so
day before the panel, she irrational , it's hard to come
resisted making such a
statement, saying she was
not qualified for such a
Judgment.
BOND SALES
But Dodd pressed today for
August 1978 sales of Series
her personal opinion, and the E &amp; H United States Savings
37-year , old witness Bonds m Ohio were $38.1
answered. " Yes, 1 do. 1 million. At the end of August,
believe the man was capable the State attained 63 .8 per
of doing such a thing ."
cent of its 1978 Sales GoaL
Did she believe Oswald
Theodore T. Reed, Mei~ s
acted alone ? Dodd asked. Co unt y Volunteer Savings
"Yes," Mrs. Porter said, HI Bonds Chainnan, reported
do."
August sales of Sa vin gs
Her public answers today Bonds in the County were
were similar to testimony she $34 ,541 . The county achieved
gave in closed interrogations 4ll.6 percent of its annual
to the Warren Commission In sa les goal August 31.

continued.
.
She also satd she was
wrong to originally withhold
information about the case
from the FBI, but had acted
out of a variety of motives"
When Rep . Harold Ford, DTenn. ! asked why the
comffilttee should believ~ ~er
today, she rephed , I ~
telllllg absolute!~ the b'uth :
To a later questwn she satd
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ENTENDED FORECAST
Saturday thru Monday
United Press International
Showers and thundershowers Saturday and
Sunday and clearnlng
Monday. Highs will be in
the upper 70s or lower 80s
Saturday and Sunday and
In the 70s Monday .
0
l ht I
·u be in
vern g ows wt
the mid or upper 50s.
:.:~:.::::::::::::::: : ::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::·:&lt;&lt;·&gt;:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:.;.;.;.:;::

Ulat as time went by she felt
she . must satisfy her
consctence and ·tell all.
In 51&gt; hours of questioning
on Wednesday, Mrs. Porter
sa id Oswalk "always spoke
complimentary of Kennedy
... how young and attracttve·
the presid e~! of the United
States was. . .
And she satd, m answe~ to
questwns, 1t was posstble
Os wald could have been
aunmg onl y at Texas Gov .
John Connally·
Co nnall y
was . navy .
secretary at the tune the
Marllle' Corps downgraded
Oswald s dtscharge because
of his defectiOn to the Sovtet
Uruon. Oswald had wrttten
the Navy for a revtew but was
turned down.
"I thought for some reason
he was angry at Co~nally ,"
Mrs. Porter S8ld. It was
hard for .me to believe he. was
ang ry
at
Pre stdent
Kennedy ."

Celebration has

..

tragic ending

MANILA, Philippines
(UPI) A Philippine
presidential plane carrying
celelrators from President
Marcos ' birthday party
crashed near Manila airport
in a rainstorm t.oday and
ploughed through a row of
houses.
The police and Air Force
said 24 persons were killed 15 persons on the plane and
nine villagers on the ground,
including a child. Six persons
aboard the plane survived.
Witnesses said Ule' plane
was. trying to land in a
torrential monsoon downpour
when it clipped the tops off
lour coconut trees, ploughed
through 20 homes and
exploded In a fish pond, a
mile short of the runway.
" It was like thunder," said
village chief Luis Marquez of
the explosion .
Among six known survivors
of the crash was Gen .
Francisco Romualdes , A
cousin of Marcos ' wife
Imelda.
The Marcos family was to
return to Manila Friday from
the birthday party in the
JX"esident's hane province.
· shown making a fresh batch of Ice cream that was very
Spokesmen said the Phlllpgood, according to the many cusiOIMI'I. The scouts did all · plne air l~rce plane left
the w~rk without the help of any adul~
Laoag, 250 miles ;;north of

Manila, for the flight back to
th e capital.
There wa s no official
indication of the cause of the
crash. But it appeared the
had weather may have been a
factor .
Resc ue workers at the
cra sh site worked under
gru es ome co nd ition s,
recovering bodies which had
been torn apari.
The plane itself broke in
two just back of the nose , and
the two parts were separated
by 20 feet.
Marcos and dozens of
friends and preSidential aides
flew to Laoag late last week
for the Monday brithday
celelrations in Batac, his
hometown.
His family and friends also
celelrated the birthday of his
son Wednesday ·and were to
mark his younger daughter's
birthday Friday.

Weather
Highs today and Friday
·bet ween 75 and 80. Lows
tonight in mid or upper 80s.
Probability of precipitation
70 percent today, 80 percent
,
tonight and triday.

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