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'•
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10 - Tho Daily S.•ntmrl. Mllldleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'uesduy, Dt'l . 4. 1977

•

•

•

Speaking at the opening of
lly JOSEI'HL. GALLQWAY
a
fOilr-day special session of
MOSCOW
(U PI )
the
Svpreme
Soviet.
President Leonid Brczhnev
Brezhnev
defended
the
new
said toda y the Soviet Union
charter
against
critics
who
has entered a stage of
said
it
would
stifle
diMent
.. mature sOcialism" and
urged • adoption of a new 'and curb human rights.
"It seems that from the
constitu"tion that reflects "our
galns, our aspirations and our standpoint of our class adversaries Soviet citizens
hopes."
should evidently be granted

Hockenberry Pham1ad
Inc. of Point Pleasant an·
noun oed toda)' that ·John
David Morgan of New Haven
has accepted a p&lt;~sition as
registered pharmacist .
Morgan will be a pharrnacist
at Phatma.cy North. · whloh

Hospital News

will open in early October ln

Borbon· faces

you

----e--·· ·
..

ko~w

for 8SSault

By RICK VAN SANT
WAYNESVILLE,Ohio(UPI) - The late
Cap Stubbs had sauerkraut for dinner one
evening a few years ago and because of it
upwards of 50,000prople wiU be eating
sauerkraut In this little community this
weekend.
Waynesville's "Sauerkraut Festival,"
which has grown by leaps and bounds in
recent years, has one of the strangest
ociglns of any festive) anywhere.
This southwestern Ohio commW\ity is
not a big cabbage producing · area and
there are no sauerkraut carmers her~.
There isn't even much of a German
heritage about
But there was· Cap stubbs and his
memorable sauerkraut dinner.
"We were trying to figure out what to do
to liven up the town a lew years ago, so we
held a ' meeting and decided to have a
festival,'' Cap recalled in an interview
before hi!! recent death.
''Everybody agreed that'd be a good
idea and ,then someone asked, 'What kind
of festival?'
r
" WeU, I'd just had sauerkraut for din 0er
a couple of nights before, so I said. 'Why

Downtown

was-hemgton·
.
·.

f

R ep·o·rt .

~

a Safe Deposit Box.

$8 TROUSERS

$7 MATCHING SHIRTS

a

.._".b

.

to 20). twQ..pockets, full cut,long shirttails. ,

-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

APPLY FOR I:ICENSE
Making application for a
rnarri(:tge license Monday in
Ga Ilia County Probate Courf
were Norman Jerold
, Schoonover, 38, Middleport,
fal'lory wnrker, and Margie

J·.lt··&lt;t llor

Tllo11tas ,

, ( 'IH·sllln·. IHiiiSCk et•pcr.
'

.

.tl ,

.

OUr, llJth Anniversarv Sale continues alllhis week.
You'll find lots of bargains during this special sales
event. Visit every floor . Shop every department. You'll
really save this week.

•

at

ei~Lion, "

Hught'S said ..

C u yahoga

Cnunty

Demoaatic lead ers chu se

F'eighan iti a special July

Democrats in Tuesday's non-

nominatin g

partisan primary despite an

despite the fact that
Kucinich , the Clerk of
Municipal Courts, wa s
co nceded to be Perk 's
s trongest cha ll enger.
Kucinich, 30, who barely lost
a bid t.o unseat former U.S.
Rep. William Minshall in
1972, had angered the party
by supporting Perk at. one
point .
·
Feighan, 29, ran wei) in the
black community with the aid

intense campaign based on .a

so-called

" War

on

Pornography .' 1

,Maverick Democrat
Dennis Kuci~ich and State
Rep . Edward f'eighan, a
party regular, polled 40,003
and

39,724

votes,

respectively , to Perk's 36,389
to take the two spots in a Nov.
a runoff.
''Governor, it looks like

Ralph lost it 1" county
Republican chairm;m Robert
Hughes told Gov. James A.
Rhodes, a Republican , by
telephone as Feigban pulled
ahead of Perk with 600 of 645
p&lt;JIIing places reporting .
"Perk has fa ced some
rough problems in the past
six years and it looks like
they came together in this

conventio11

Weatherof showers early
tonight followed by partial
clearing. Lows in the lower
40s. Cloudy Thursday, highs
to 65. Probability of
precipitation 40 percent today ·
and tonight, 20 percent
Thursday.
Chan~

••

uf City Cowtcil !'resident
George For.bes, who is black .
Two weeks before th e
primary, Forbes, criticized
by Ku cinich for :working
closely with Perk, announced
he would campaig n for
Feighan against Kucinit h.
The mayQI''s pornography
campaign started during the
swnmer before he declared
he would seek a fourth twoyear term . He began by
banning the sale of so-called
adult magazines at the city's
airports.
Later Perk, 63, had city
garbagemen circulate a
" Porno Poll" to each
hoEid. The poll, which
gain

issue which could appear on

next month 's ballot.
Kucinich also campaigned
against tax abatements gi ven
to downtown. developments. ,
Feighan opposed the sale of

national attention, got

~ po

r response but Perk said
it
~d help establish
"co
nity standards on
obs~ y" for court fights
against pornography dealers.
The mayor also ordered
raids on adult bookstores and
movie houses and gave his

.·
•

enttne
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER 5, 197.7
I

•

police fort'e 40 days to rid the
streets of prosti tutes.
Kucinich ign orad the
por nog raphy issue and
campaigned heavily against
Perk's sa le of the city's
Municipal Light Plant to its
prl va.te competitor, th e
C I e v e I' a 11 d E I e c t r i c
Jlluminatin g
Co .
Hl
cirnu\ated petitions for a vote
on the $158 million sale, an

..

PRICE FIFrEEN CENTS

the power plant but favored
limited abatements in return

for promises of neighborhood
development.
In his con cession speech
Perk did not rule out another
try for public office, but said
he felt his first duty was lD be
with his fami ly . be said his

}

new goa! was ;rto be a civic
leader in the community,

with furth er responsibil ities
t.u see that this city_ I!J.Oves
forward.

~

[j

He blamed his loss· on
having
made
" tough
decisions for the good of the
city" that cost him votes.

Coal big cog in
future e~onomy
PITTsBURGH (UP!) Warren Davis, Gulf Oil Corp.
chief economist, predicts the
United States will be
producing from 4-5 billion-tons of coal each year by 201~,
compared with a present
output of 645 million tons.
Most of the coal will be used
for oil and synthetic gas,
Martin said in a speech
Tuesday before The Society
of American Engineers,
Pittsburgh Post.
He said the oil and synthetic gas would be P!ll to use .
mainly for commercial and

industrial purposes, with the ·
main problem being air
pollution resulting from the
extraction.

Davis estimated the real
price of fuel will double between 1985 and 2000, . "if the
economy can stand it."
He said synthetic fuels will
then become available.
Geologists estimate that
one-third of the natural gas in ,.
the world had been located by
1971, he said, adding that he
believes it ·is likely more gas
will be found rather than
rnore oil.

'

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.... ,.

· .' · '~:'~~'~'~w~-~-:,,-..tt.tl

JNews • •.•zn BrzefSI
By Uoited PreoslnternaUooal
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER'S chief
economic a'.iviser sees some disappointments in tlle pace of

economic recovery, but says fears of a slowdown in economic
growth next year are "unwarranted ." ·
Charles Schultze, chairman of President Carter's Council
of Economic Advisers, ·said Tuesday "the present recovery is
likely to continue foc some~\ime. Ample resources are
available to permit further expansion' and the recovery shows
few if any signs of economic aging." His remarks were
prepared for the Economic Club of Detroit, but made available
in Wa$ington .
WASHINGTON- CONGRESS HAS AGREED TO boost
the nation's debt ceiling to $752 billion, restoring the govern·
ment's authocity to borrow money to pay its biUs.
The House Tuesday, overcoming grumbling by
conservatives, passed and sent to President Carter legislation
boosting the debt ceiling. A 223-194 vote of approval came four
days after expiration of the old $700 billion debt. All Treasury
'"'rrowihg was called off pending passage of the debt bill.
Normally the government can operate for a week or go without
any new borrowing. The new ceiling will expire March 31.
BOISE, IDAHO~ THE BIRTH OF A PREMATURE baby
at St. Luke's Hospital has resulted in a hospital bill totaling
$34,148 foc an Idaho couple.
· .H95pit.al ~uthorities said the father and mother are unable
to pay the bill from last January and have been declared
medically indigent by OIY)Ihee County officials. The county, in
declaring the couple medically indigent, assumed
responsibility for the hospital bUI ln accordance with Idaho
law.
CINCINNATI - COMEDIAN-ACTOR SHELLY Berrnan
has revealed that his 12-year old son Josh is seriously lU at
Cincinnati's Children's Medical Center with a malignant brain
tumor. Berman, appearing in the play "Don't Drink the
Water," said he had written a letter for his son that also
Slll!liiled up what he wanted to say to other parentll in ,similar

ELBERFELDS

ANNIVERSARY WEEK
SALE!
MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS

area,'' said· Estes. ''Anyway,

we have a big time each year .
"The festival has grown to where we
even now have a Sauerkraut Princess. Of
course, we have big sauerkraut &lt;tnners,
sauerkraut cake and we even bake up
t2,000 sauerkraut coqkies. Believe me,
they taste good and tl\ey'U all be gone. "
Estes said Cap and his precedent-setting
sauerkraut di~r will never be forgotten
here.
"Cap was a mllfl of a lot of foresight," he
said. "He and his dinner and his bright
idea put this town on the map."

'~~~-~~~~~"''':'.&lt;:' &lt;«&lt;•:•:«•"""""'~~~~-~--~,--

News •• in Briefs

We Suggest

sau~rkra4t

CI.EVEI.AND I UP! ) Three-term Republican
Mayor Ralph J . Perk was
bounced out of office by two

recommended
in..ac·cess ·t o .hospital

GOESSI.ER'S .
JEWELRl STORE

,.

Today, two tons of sauerkraut was
trucked in from neatby Cincinnati for
Saturday and Sunday 's eighth annual
festival ano chairman Jack Estes
conceded that a !Qt of th£ people planning
to visit here probably aren't aware of the
whim upon which the festival is based.
"U people ask, we tell them the truth,
but I know a lot of them just figure this has
alwaysbbeen .a big cabbage and

Chang~s

.

J

sauerkraut (own ever since ."

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII . NO. 121

i.fiss ·

t
t.

not a sauerkraut festlVat'l ' Everybody
liked the idea and Waynesville 's been a

e

.

I

Perk defeated· in ·cleveland

Sauerkraut Festival traced back to a
meroorable dinner of Cap Stubbs ..
.

-~

on a watch
can

'"

only the right to fight against
the Soviet state and the
socialist system so as to
gladden the hearts of the
imperialists," he said.
" However, we must disaJr
point suoh critics of- our
constitution : Their Wish will
never be · aatlJfied by the
Soviet peo;~le ."
The ~emark brought a long
round of applause by the 1,~17
delegates, who .applauded
more than ~Himes during the
address.
"The rights of citizens may
not be used to the detriment
of social society and the
state," he said.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
•
ADMITTED · - Wilbur
Perrin, Pomeroy; Mary
Hackney, Racine ; Jennie Al"l"llllDnTnf!nt
lies, Pomeroy; Thomas
Roush, Middleport; Lena
Brinker, Racine; Opal Wlll,
Pomeroy; Harold Jeffers,
· Pomeroy; Owen Watson,
Pomeroy; 'Leslie Wheeler,
Rutland; Joyce Jawley,
(Continued IHm pqe 1)
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Pomeroy;. General Halt, Pedro Borbon, a .Cincinnati ber!l'for their_fine work.
DAVID MORGAN
Racine;
Carol Wines, Reds relief pitcher, faces
It was noted that persons . .
Athens; Charles Can.t er, · arraignment Friday on wishing to send donations to
north Point Pleasant.
Syracuse ; Raymond Lam· assault charges filed by two the squad may send them to
David is t.he son of E. Jolin
bert, Rutland,
men he allegedly attacked at P. 0 . Box 247, Pomeroy.
Morgan and the late Mable
DISCHARGED - Lucy a disciltheque.
Marty Walden, Pomeroy,
Morgan of New Haven.
Markin, Betty Spaun. John
Borbon, 30, of Valverde, asked permission to sell
Grandparents are Mr. and
Wolverton, John Fry, Bar- Domin[can Republic, was ar- cleaning pi'OIIucts, vitamins,
bara Gilland, Eli•abeth rested Monday at the Greater and beauty aids door to door
Mts. Warren Stewart of Leon,
Bartoe, Oscar Imboden, Paul Cincinnati
and Mrs. Louie Coote of
Airport
in in Pomeroy. Permission wsa
Burton.
Basset, Va. He is married to
suburban northern Kentucky granted.
the forrner Marion Woodrum,
as he prepared to fly home
Following a long study on
daughter of Mrs , ' Reba
following the end of the three bids for a new cruiser,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Woodrum of Point Pleasant,
baseball season Sunday . He council rejected them as they
DISCHARGES
- Rev. was later released on hi!! own did · not
and H. G. "Woody" Woodrum
meet
the
Joseph
Godwin,
Sr., recognizance.
of Charleston.
specifications. It was agreed
Gatnpolis; Mrs . . Harold · Borbon
voluntarily to readvertlse.
He is a graduate of Wahama
Whittington, ,Point Pleasant; appeared before a Boone
Council also agreed to have
High School where be was a
Joseph
Godwin,
Jr., eounty' Ky., magistrate and the post office qepartment
two·year
letterm•n· In
Gallipolis; Mrs. Richard waived extradition to move the mailbox from the
wrestling, football . and track.
Cogar, Shade, 0.; Marlnda Cincinnati, where the assault north side of Second Street to
He was a member of the
Stewart, Gallipolis; Herbert charges were fijed.
the south Side and move· the
National Honor Society,
Amick, New Haven; Willlam
The complaints fUed by meter from zhe south side to
.
president of hJs senior clals,
McDaniel, Point Pleasant;
GOOSETOWN ASTONISHERS - A new addition this year at the seventh annuH I Bob Michael Brooks, Letart; Mrs. Marshall Biddle, 36, and John the north sidel of the street.
and Usted in. "Who's Wbo in
K. MaJl~dy, 23, both of
This will.put the two boxes
Evans Farm Festival iS the Goosetown Astonishers. who will provide fflot -t; t ompia~ .
American High Schools". A
Carl Hood, Mason; VIrginia Cincinnati, stemmed from an side by side; one will be for
entertainment during six festival appearances. The group will perform at 4 : 15 p.m. F'riday;
graduate of W..t Virginia
alleged Incident at about 2 local mall and one for out of
12 noon on Saturday; 2:15p.m. Saturday: 12 noon Sunday; 2: 45p.m. Sunday and 4:15p.m. Williams, Point Pleasant;
University School of Phar·
Mrs.
Claude
Hale,
daughter,
Monday at Lucy's In town. This action was taken
a.m.
Sunday .
macy, David was a member of
Wilkesville, 0 .; Mrs. Earl The Sky, a . diaco atop the for the convenience of senior
the Student Branch of the
Breeden, Mason; Gary downtown Holiday fnn motel. citizens.
Posten,
Ravenswood; Mrs:
American ·Pharmaceutical ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.:~:·:::::::::::::::::,~,.,.,~:o:::.~,*'*"'-~""""''-"&lt;~~~!in; ·s:1 · 1~: BRAINS OVER BEAliTY
Biddle told pollee Borbon
lOu Osborne, councilmail:,
David·
Fetty
; Poiiit Pleasant; lied been dancing with aald the viUage i.s noi going to
:rhink of all you give
Aosociation,theW,Y.U.Scitba .*;
DENVER lUPI) ::...
Mrs. Bert Stover, Point Biddle's girl friend and that receive aqy federal grants for
wh~n you give a
Club, and Is 8 Y.M.C.A. ~,~··
.
_
!. America of 1974 is starting
Pleasant.
Certified
Scuba
Diver
and
a
~~
"
h
tor
d
when the girl began talking to a new city building tuid told
Bulova Natch. A
P .A.D.I. Certified Scuba ':':
::~ er caree" as an at . ney an
BIRTH -A son to Mr. and Biddle, Borbon grabbed council that he had been .
precise dnd prac·
~'
. ,
By c· .Iarence .,.'·'.', says
she is happy to be
Dl·ver.
&lt;··
making a livlng with her Mrs. Jimmy Wood , Point Biddle and hit him twice in looking ill a mobile lrome that
tical timepiece. A
the face with his hand.
A Dean's List student in
~ bra'ins instead of her beauty. Pleasant.
could be used for ·a city
flattering piece bl
Mahedy Said he became building. Cost of the mobile
pharmacy school, David ;:;:
Miller
:;
:
;
"I'm pretty tired of using
jewelry. A lifetime
involved when he pulled a borne, according to Osborne,
worked three years at
my physical attributes," said
Holzer Medical Center
gift.
chair from Borbon's hands. is $27,000. He pointed out that
McCracken Pharmacy In
Alarrned by increasing tax fund to supplement Social Reb€cca Ann King , one of 416
(Discharges Od. 3) ·
Mahedy said Borbon grabbed the waUs could be moved and
Waynesburg, PA before deficits in the Social Seevlty Securiiy revenues, the "self- persons notified this past
There's never beer
Travis
Arnold, Teresa him by the throat and "said rooms arranged to suit needs.
joining
Hockenberry
Phartr~st
funds,
Congress
Is
IU!taining,'
'
and
"insurance
"
weekend
they
passed
the
a better time to buy
Cerlterbury , Nancy Clark, he would kill me."
macies. He and his wife are currently considering several ,j::()Q~eptofthe program would Colorado bar exam.
They also disc~ the
a Bulova . The styles
Juanita
Colemau, Tonia
"He grabbed me and was . possibility of tearing dolll!
currently residing at Haven controversial proposals to put be destroyed as benef its
TI1e ex-beauty queen is
are exeiting, our
Heights ln New Haven.
the program on a stronger would no lqnger be related to constdering offers fr om Dulaney, John Elardo, Cecil slinging me around and there the old senior high and
selection is exten• -~,
financial base. U Congress em~loyee
contributions. several law firms and said Elliott, Ercel Fellure, Ester were some things said,"'' placing the unit on that lot on
sive and the price .is
does not act, the disability Using general treasury she probably will stay in Fowler, Audia Haffelt, Tomi Mahedy
said.
"Then Pomeroy's East Main street.
right. From $49.95
trust lund would be depleted revenues would also merely Colorado where a political Helm, Recie Oiler, Ahene somebody broke us loose. I It was agreed to give ~e
by next year and the substitute one defic it for . career may be in the offing. Raike, Brenda Williams, was shook up pretty good." matter' further study.
Use Ou'r Co'nvenient
. David Wolford Jr.
retirement
trust fund would another and create additional
· Cincinnati Police Sgt.
The meeting was opened, by
-UY·Awn Pion
(Births Oct. 3)
be exhausted by 1983.
Inflation for everyone.
Joseph IOine said Borbon was prayer by the Rev. Willlam
Mr . and Mrs. ' William surprised when he was Mlddleswart)). Attending
The problems plaguing the
Secretary of Com!Derce·
DEPUTY NAMED
Conger, a daughter, Jackson; arrested at the airport were Mayor Clarence AnAccording to an entry 'in Social Security system are Juanita M. Kreps also LOGAN REMEMBERS
·Mr. and Mrs. Michael shortly befoce noon Monday. drews, Rev, Mlddleswarth, '
NEW YORK (UPI)
Meigs County Common Pleas both long·tenn -and short· · proposed a postponement
a daughter,
Court Rankin Ray Pickens term . Its immediate dif- of the Social Securily . Broadway and Hollywood Markins,
"He didn 'I know the Harry Davis, Ralph Werry,
has bfen appointed a deputy flculties stem from tpe retirement age. Tbls would director Josh Logan, 68, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Paul warrant was out," said the Dr. Harold Brown, Osborne
Pomeroy, 0 .
992-mo
combination of inflation, the require older workers to made his supper club debut Rice, a son, Rutland.
policeman. "He said he and Larry Powell, counsheriff.
recent recession, and the remain In the labor force Monday night at Rockefeller
thought it was setUed last cilmen, and Jane Walton,
.unemployment whl1ch ontO they reach age 68. Center's Rainbow Grille,
•
night."
clerk.
together raise benefit costs This proposal Is unfair, and celebrating 40 years of the SEX. SEllS IT
and reduce 'tax receipts. The In my ludgment totally musical theater.
ALBION 1 Mich. (UPI) Logan recounted highlights Former PreSident
Social -Security program Is unacceptable. It Is a clear
Gerald R.
also underfinanced in the breach of contract between of his long career, singing Ford said tongue-in-cheek
'long·run due to the shifting the federal government memorable songs (rom Monday
that
fierce
age pattern which is requlrng and those who have paid various Rrpductions and competition has developed
.
(Continued frGm pqe 1)
.
fewer workers ·to support their full share Into the .setting the scene for three between him · and his wife
and
Dogpatch,
U.S.A.
Cartoonist
AI
Capp
is
retiring
and
his
.
'.
more beneficiaries .
systemexpecllngtheltjust young singers - Suellen Betty, because they
both are satirical'comic strip, "U'I Abner," will end next month. ··
In 1947 there were more
return at age 65, or at 62 If Estey, Jeff Richards, and writing books about their
The strip, whic~ began in 1934, will be run in daily papers
tbltn 22 worlt;en for every
they
elect
early Howard Ross. His nosialgic ' liVes in politics.
across the COWltry foc the last time on Nov. ~ and in Sunday
S..lal Securlly reelplent.
retirement. · To defer rendition of ';September . . "That's an internal famUy
papers on 111\v. '13.
·
Today, 1 beneficiary Ia
payment for three ad- Song" from "Knickerbocker dispu~e." Ford told students
Nothing &gt;ras sacred in Capp's cartoons, which rapped
supported by about 3
dltlonal years would Holiday, " brought the during a talk at Albion
everyone and everything from corporate chiefs (General
workers, and by ZOJO, the
seriously threaten the audience to its feet in a storm OJllege. "Betty says hers will
Bullmoose) to the institution of marriage (Sadie Hawkins
will
be
one
flnaoclal security of our ·.of applause.
ratio
outsell mine because she's
Day). Capp enraged feminists with his portrayal of bigbeneficiary for every two
older ciU•eu.
going to throw a little sex in
chested, leggy women who ranged from the All•American
iL'.l.
worlt;en.
Combining the present
sweetheart, Daisy Mae, to the earthy M,oonbeam McSwine.
Another long-tenD problem · federal retirement system
with the program Is the ex· Into the Social Security QUEEN OF RINGS
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
panded number of people now program and placing all
(UPI)
- Queen Margrethe
eligible for Social Security government workers has
been
identified as ' the
payments. Barely one half of federal, state and local and
"fngahild
Grathmer" woo
1
the over 33 million people' Social Security coverage is
has
drawn
70
illustrations for
•
r _..::; .::---._,. •~:'~ti ·
·
currently receiving Social also being considered.
a
three-volume
collection
of
Security checks are actually However, it .has the same
retired,'
.
basic problem the previous J.R.R. Tolklen 's "Lord of the
- .. Many proposals are being prop&lt;~sal has : it breaks a Rings. "
Under the Grathmer ·
offered to deal with the crisis. contract the government has
pseudonym,
the queen drew
The traditional solution, like made under whjch many
the
illustrations
for the 1,~00:
T h eu~· ~re m " ny co rwmtmg r~.\SOns for &lt;1 5-'lfe depoSif bo11. Bur the
the one the Carter Ad· worke.rs accepted emcopy
limited
edition
to be
l)(&gt;~t o ne we know rs rhe c o mp l~te- ~i\Ce ol m ind rl gives you ro
ministration is currentl'y ployment. The government
re.lltz~ rh...: yo ur ... ., l u&lt;~ b lt'~ .ue s&lt;lfeguMde d d &lt;~y rn. do\)1 ou r. f!Vfi!:ty
released
Friday.
proposing, is to rasle payroll has a clear and unmistakable
d .t:y of t he YE'&lt;If 1 The CO':ol 1S 111~1gnillcilntly sm.\H when you compAre
The collection, with a face
It W11h rhe l t' [)l&lt;~c e ment ..,,,lue of your po~~e)sion~ .. 11 indeed they
taxes and-or ltse general obligation to keep their end of
value
of $180, is sold out.
1
c.m be 1ep lilcr c1 We w 1ll be n.tppy to .ur.lnge for the renlc\1 of a box
treasury funds to pump more the contract with all workers.
•
With you Voihen )'O ll re here . .u"' &lt;~00ut our other ~efVI(es.
95
money into the system.
To solve the .current Qri.sis,
'!be problem with higher we must ·return Social .
social security taxes Is that . Security t&lt;&gt; ll:t original contheir regresstye nature ' cept of being supplement to '~NASTY" BANNED
SALE $719
LONDON (UP!) - Die
WALK-UP TELLE--R WINDOW AND
burdens mo4( heavily low and the earnings arid savings of
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
middle income families. •those who otherwise might Nastase, the bad-tempered
tennis star known
H.E.W. estimates that inilre not be able to support Rwrianian
FRI. EVENINGS5 To 7 P.M.
95
as 11 Nasty" to critics on the
than 50 per cent of U. S. themselves.
pro circuit, has been banned
taxpayers already pay more
fro!n
next year's Davis Cup
'In Social Security taxes than'
competition.
SALE '619
they pay in income taxes.
NOW YOU KNOW
"THE
fn
announcing
·
its
ruling,
.'
Higher taxes wiU also cause
From aboyt A.D. 700 to
slower · rate of economic llOO, the Moors who then the Davis Cup Committee
growth, further aggravating ruled . Spain forbade non- said he prought the game
Pants and Shirts match per~ectly in khaki, oliVe,
FRIENDLY BANK"
the problem.
Moors to eat or@nges, Under "into disrepute " during· a
forest g~een , navy. blue and charcoal.
Rumanian-British match in
By dipping into the general pain of death.
June. Spanish . referee Jaime
Pants come .in sizes 291o 50 (slightly higher sizes 46
'
•
Bartroli complained Nastase
to SOL· polyester cotton blend, p·ermanent p_
ress, large
roomy pockets plus watch pocket.
used "very base and vulgar
language" and "gross finger
gestures to the crowd. ' 1
Shirts are "u1 5izes 14112 to 20 Csllghtly higher siztS 18

BULOVA.
A name

•

.

New kind of Socialism defended

Morgan Employed By . . . .:.
Hockenberry Pharmacies\'

situations.

·· ·

'

,r;-

.

,

"It says \hat everything you could ever hoPe to be, you
have already beeli. You have been a teacher, a hero, a·poet, a
painter of pictures and, heaven help us, you've even been a
critic," he said. Added. Berman, "! think parents ahould see
their children always not as a promise, but as a fuUillment.
Not as something that will be, but as something that is."

-

CINCINNATI - "AS AN EXPRESSION of my
appreciation and love for these-United Slates of America," a
POlish- immigrant has willed more than $100,000 to the
American government, lt was disclosed Tuesday. Assistant U.
S. Attorney Anthooy Nyktas said he received a check made out
to the Treasw-y of the United States for $116,125 from the estate
of the late Sarah After of Cincinnati.
Jim Kilgariff, attorney for the estate, said Mrs, After
explained in her wUI, "1 do this 115 an expression of IJlY
appreciation and love for these United, States of America,
which is my home and which has been so good to me and to my
late husband." Mrs. After immigrated from Poland in the

192os.
TOKYO - JU!ITICE MINISTER HA.IIME Fukuda has
· resigned in a . furious controversy over the government's
handling of the hijacking of a Japan Air Unes jet by Red Army
extremists. Flukuda·, 72, resigned at a meeting near·midnigltt
Tuesday with Prime Minister Takeo Fuknda . They are not
related.
.
The justice minister resigned over Japan's decision to pay
the Japanese Red Arrny hijackers $6 million in ransom and
release six prisoners, the condition set by the terrorist:t to save
the lives of 151 hostages aboard the plane. What sparked the
national outcry was the di.sclosw-e that Foreign Ministry
ofticlals waived the right to seek extradition of the hijackers
and return of the ransom money from Algeria, where the sixday hijack drama ended Monday.
WASHINGTON - AMERICAN SPY SATELLITES that
watcti the Soviet Union for signs of war now are vulnerable to
attack from a new Russia! "killer satellite" and the United
states does not yet have the ablllty to retaliate in kind. Defense
SecretarY Harold Brown disclosed at a news conference
Tuesday the soviet weapons, previously described as only
partially successful in recent tesl:t, now is ready for use in case
of hostUlties.
"That's my judgment - . they have an operational
capability that could be used against_some kinds of satellites,"
~
. (Continued on Nt 12)
"'

Changes ln th.e access Mary Thayer, RN, and Mrs.
system to Veterans Memorial Nancy Reed of the Planned
Hospital were suggested by Parenthood board, to request
Herbert Shields, chainnan of space in the old Children's
the Veterans Memorial home building for the Family
Hospital Commission, in a Planning office and for its
· meeting with the Meigs . weekly clinics. The com·
County Commissioners missioners agreed to meet
Tuesday night. Parking with Mrs. Reed and Mrs.
facUlties aroWld the hospital thayer"&amp;\" a convenient time
and the proposed new health fbi' all parties, go to the .
center were reviewed.
building, and . inspect the
Shields suggested the rooms.
roadway in front of the
Mildred Jacobs, matron of
hospital be moved back four the County· Infirmary, also
feet from trees there which met with the commissioners
would relieve the ' two-way to discuss some necessary
traffic problem and parking · transfers in her budget and
would remain the same.
· also to request additional
Shields a!Sii suggested the help at the infirmary.
Three positions provided by
existing curb from the
hospital front entrance, the Leading · Creek CETA
south, be removed and inoved program were abolished
back to within lour feet of the when the program was
existing trees and the parking discontinued last week. The
spaces in front of the medical commi.ssioners agreed to try
·building that had originally to place one person ternbeen taken away in the ar- porarlly at the home and also
chitect's
drawing
be to transfer Ann Ebersbach,
reestablished as they now courthouse janitress, to the
exist. The board agreed with Infirmary on a temporary
Shields' proposal.
basis to help fl!lieve the help
Also meeting wltli' the problem.
commissioners were Mrs.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones, and
Jim Roush, commissioners
and Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

· Phone book draw
brought some
really bad luck

SAN DIEGO (UPI) The luck ollhe phone book
. draw was not with Edward
·Torres, 18. , Pollee said
Torres called a phone
number, reached Gayle
Murrell, and made obscene
SUfteoliODI.
Miss Murrell, unlike
moot recipients of such
~
pbone calls, was lnlereated. She agreed to
meet Torres on an east side
street corner.
Torres, abe aald, oftered
her money lor sex, and
gave her bls drlversllceose
to hold for securtly whUe be
went 18 get the cash.
When Torres returned,
she bad a surprise for him.
Pollee Officer Gayle
Murrell arreoted blm on
, charges of making an
obscene phoae call, In·
decent exposure, sollclllnl
· prostitution and ' lewd
conduct. -

BOND.S FORFEITED
Four defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence . Andrews
Tuesday night. They are John
Warner, Pomeroy, $30 p&lt;~sted
on a speeding charge; Donald
Fowler, Letart, W. Va., $50,
posted on· a charge of
squealing tires; Okey Kiser,
Letart Falls, $50, intoxication, and Randall
Hayes,
Marietta, $30,
speeding.

Homecoming
.
candidates
are named
One of these four seniors
above of Eastern High School
will be named homecoming
queen for 1977 on Oct. 14 when
the Eastern Eagles play
Southwestern.
•
Left·to-rlght are Sandy
Hensley, daughter of George
Hensley, Jr.,'Route 1, Reedsville;
Debbie Shields,
· daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Shields, Tuppers
Plains;
Sonia
White,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Grover White, Jr., Route 1,
Long Bottom, and Karen
Flck, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. RichardFick,Sr., Route
1,, Long Bottom.

Gas company's Koebel
would end regulatio:g

At right, members of the
court for the annual Eastern
High School homecoming on
Oct. 14 were selected, one
from each of the three lower
classes of the high school.
"" .. ..lfJft-t&lt;&gt;-rlght ate Pebbles
Blake, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Eldon Blake, Jr.,
John (jake) Koebel; local
Working hard to attain Reedsville, freshman; Janet
their $3,000 goal, the Meigs Brooks, daughter of MrS. manager of the Columbia Gas
Countlans for Wildlife Con· Mildred Brooks, Route 1, of Ohio was the guest speaker
servation are still fighting Reedsville, junior, and Angel when the Pomeroy Chamber
Issue Two that will appear on Blake, daughter of ·Mr. and of Commerce met Tuesday at
Mrs. Eldon Blake, Jr., noon at the Meigs Inn: Koebel
the November ballot.
spoke on the deregulation of
The Ohioans for Wildlife sophomore:
gas and the. Importance of
Conservation have branched
deregulation.
Cost of new gas
each
county
out to
that
i.s
not
regulated
will be
organization an~ have asked
far
less
expensive
than
gas
the local chapters to conthat
has
been
regulated
tribute as much as they can to
Koebel afgued, because
combat the anti-trapping and
production can be developed
hunting forces.
and expand!'(~.
·
Grant'Young, chalrn!an of
_
O
n
possible
winter
shorthe
Meigs
County
tages of natural gas Koebel
organization, announced . a
PIKETON - The socio- said •goitig Into November
fund drive is underway.
economic impact study for
Young and the other the U.' S. Department of there won't be any curmembers of the Meigs County Energy (DOE) centrifuge tailment of fuel and recalled
group are asking for help. On plant here is expected to be that Gov. Rhodes was very
Saturday, bctoher 8, they are ready for public review In critical last summer because
the gas company , hasn't
having an auction at the late January 197,8.
developed more st_orage
Young farm, located on
Battelle ' Colu111bus fields .
ROute 124, the first house Laboratories of Columbus
Letters have already been
south of Forked Run Lake. are under contract to produce
mailed notifying · businesses
The
MCWC
welcom~ the stud~ for DOE . Prior to
what their allotment will be.
anything you have to con- the Administration's decision
Gas for schools will not be
tribute, except clothing, to switch from diffusion to
allocated
on the same b~sis 1
Young is asking contributors centrifuge technology the.
as
last
year
since they will
- to bring their articles to his draft study was to be ready
not be considered a com1\ouse, or call him at 37~76 this month. \
,
mercial operation Koebel
and arrange for pick-up.
Change .in technology stated.
,
The sale will begin at 10 necessitated extensive
Asked
about
gas supplies
a.m. with I. 0. McCoy as revisions of data for the
for
residential
customers,
auctioneer. Dinner will be report including manpower
Kobel
r~plied that human
served, and the sale will be requirements,- construction
held rain or ahine. Baked materials ' and project
goods are also needed as a scheduling. These revisions
E·R CALLED
bake sale wlU be held on the resulted in the new timetable . The Pomeroy Emergency
grounds.
lor completton of the study . Squad was called to Route 143
The Meigs Countlans for
In late January the report for Cletus Arnett 'who was
Wildlife Conservation will will be presented to the public taken from his home to
keep the public inforrned of
its activities In the fight to at a series of open meetin~s Veterans Memorial Hospital
(Continued on pqe 12)
'Nbere he was admitted.
help wildlife stay J&gt;e.althy.
.

Fight against
Issue Two
is continuing

Impact study
expected in
late January

..

needs have top priority and Only adults will participate.
gas supplies for homes wlll
Ed Kennedy displayed a
last 30 to 50 years.
ChriStmas frame· that he and
Bill Mayer exhibited a Jim Frecker made featuring
model he has made showing Christmas lights and tinsel.
how the old coal tipple can be They will make 20 of them,
.l,leautlfied. It showed a each seven feet high similar
'lighted fountain, and lights on to the lights on Main St. last
top of the tipple. Mayer was year.
complimented on his work. . Attending were Crow,
The property is owned by Simon, Koebel·, Kennedy,
Paul Simon, vice president of Mayer, John Anderson, Mary
the chamP.r .
· Ault, Bill Quickel, Mr. and
Simon, reporting on the Mrs. Virgil Teaford, N. W.
paint up and clean-up going Compton, Wendell Hoover,
on in Pomeroy, said it is Leo Vaughan, Mr. and Mrs.
"progressilflrvery well."
Dale Warner, Blll Grueser,
Fred Crow, president, . Ted Reed, Wesley Buehl,
announced a talent show will Stan Houdashelt, Jack
be presented the latter part of Carsey, Joe Young, Thereon
October or first of November. Johnson and Hank Cleland.

Scouting story
is being.told
eligible boys and their
parenis.
Programs held to date
include these school corn- ·
munities In Mason County,
Central School, Beale School,
Sunnyside School, Ordnance
S~hool, and the North Point
School.
Scheduled for this week are
the West Columbia, Mason
and Ne'l' Haven· Elementary
School areas:
All.bOys or parents desiring
information should catl ·am
Wise at 675-3652.

"'

The M-G-M District of the
Tri·S.tate Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America, is conducting Open Houses in every
community (o provide every
boy between the ages of 8 and .
18 an opportunity of
becoming a Cub Scout or a
Scout.
Scout Executive W. Robert
Cree and Commissioner
William Wise are working
directly with local school
principals und community
leaders in conducting In·
formation meetings for
~

,\1

�~

)

2-The Da1l1 Sentinel Middleport Pomer l 0 \h'&lt;in&lt; sdal lkl 5 1977

Natural gas issue goes to compromise group
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASH!N GTO:-l tU Pi l Wtth the Sena1e hal mg
!mall) stated ItS posl!lon on
natural gas pr1ce regulation
the 1ssue no'-' got&gt;s to a

Shortll afler the &amp;nate
\ ote Carter reney.ffi h1s
threat to «to am b11l that
ends federal control of
natural gas prtres
In other acuon on Cap1tol
SenaJ:P Houst&gt; con ference H11l orgamzed labor \\On an
romnuttee for a compronuse unportant test l ole as the
plan
House took up a b1ll proposmg
The Tuesdav vote to phase major ( hanges m federal
out federal pnce controls on 'labor Ia" The House ' oted

natural gas came after a

b11ter Senale struggle that
tncluded
a
t"o \loeek
filibuster b) oppone 1!s of

agamst a Republican effort
that " ould ha\e alloY.ed an
antt union
substttu te
n easure to be offered on the

floor
The rules vote was seen as
has
appro\ed Prestdent Carter s an md1catwn that labor ma)
plan to ra1se the federal priCe be successful m Its effort to
level and to extend regulatidn wm passage of the h1gh
to natural gas thai ts sold priority b1ll
Wlthm a producmg stale It
Durmg another 1ote the
gale
ftnal
'lnll be the con ference House
congressional
approval
to
the
comnuttee s task to work out
plan acceptable to both bill that ra•ses the nat•on s
chambers and to the debt ce~lmg from the present
Pres1den1
$700 b1lllon to $752 b1lhon The
deregulation
The House alreadv

\ ote y, as n~edt&gt;d to pt'flll t tht'
federal

~u\ernmt&gt;nt

to

resnn e burrowmg mont&gt;~
The Senate Foretgn
Relations Committee opened.
ts second wt't'k of hearmgs
on the ne" Panama Canal
treabes and promptly heard
rnt1c1sn1 of the pact from
Sen Strom Thurmond of
South Carolma Thurmond
charged that thQ Jomt Ch1efs
of Staff ha\0 g1ven their
public support to the treatws
m order to protect their
nuhtar) r:areers
The House Wavs and
Means Committee got down

to some sertous dectston
makmg on the future of the
Soc1al Secur~ty program The
comm1ttee voted for steep
mcrea,ses m Soc1al Secunty
pa) roll ta x.es as a means bf

{eltmg the fund on a sound
fmanctal basts The new tax
sc hedules

wo uld

nea rlv

dovbl' !he b1ll for somr high
m&lt;:onw " 11 kers b) 1981
House pnd SE&gt;nate con
feret&gt;s l amr to t('ffi1S on an
aepropnatwn of $80 m•llion
for the Clmch R1ver Tenn
breeder reactor project
Carter as part of hiS effort o
lmut thr ~ orld s supply of
plutomum has sa1d he wants
the project closed down but
some members of Congress
particularly 111 the House
hale supported full funding to
keep the proJect m busmess
A bill to revamp the Postal
S&lt;&gt;rv1ce won the unanmnous
approval of two House subcomnuttees The leg•slatlon
Will return to the Prestdent
the authonty to appomt the
PQstmaster general . It also
will allow Congress to veto
postage rate htkes or service
cutbacks The full House Post
Off1ce Comm tttee will take up
the bill Oct 12

Geneva conference believed closer
By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House
Reportrr
NEW YORK (UPl )
Prestdent Carter 'oiPI!lds up a

t

tw&lt;Hiay whirlwmd fora) mto
mternatwnal
d1plomac)
today wtlh md1cat1ons he
may have nudged Israel and
the Arab natwns closer to the
Geneva peace table
Carter held three hours of
talks w1th Israel• Fore1gn
Minister Moshe Dayan that
lasted
until
m1dmght
Tuesday after whtch the
Pres1dent went to bed
The prolo nged meetmg
came as a surpnse because
Dayan had been scheduled to
meet w1th Ca rter for little
more than an hour
The Wh1te House late r
1ssued a Jomt U S Israeti
statement saymg the two
allies had agreed on

Geneva
Before heading back to
Wa shmgto n today Carter
was scheduled to go back to
the Umted Nations to Sign tw o
co venants on ctvtl a nd
po litica l n ghts m a ceremony
at 11 30 a m EDT
After\\ard
Carter
arranged to host a luncheon
for the heads of Asian U N
delegations and a reception
for
Lattn
AmeriCan
diplomats
The President began h1s
two days of mternat1onal
diplomacy with a speech to
the U N General Assembl)
Tuesday mornmg 111 which
he vowed the Umted States
"'ll use nuclear weapons onl)
m self-&lt;iefense and offered to
slash the U S nuclear ar
senal by oO per cent
He also hosted a lunch at
the American mtsston for

African d1gn1tanes and met
wtth a long senes of
delegatiOn heads mcludmg
Eg) pt1an Foretgn Mm1ster
Ismail Fahm1
Fahm1 gave him a letter
from Eg) ptlan President
Anwar Sadat and Carter sa1d
the meeting was
con
strucuve and pos1t1ve but
he declmed to g1ve details
By the end of hiS two-&lt;iay
v1sit Carter had touched
bases w1th diplomats from
every contment
It was extraordinary for an
Amencan preSident to
spend. as much t1me
spotllghtmg
the Unlt
ed Natlons wh ich has
lost prest1ge m the eyes of the
Amencan public In recent
years
In off the c uff remarks
Carter sa1d he has a deep

comm itment to the United
Nations and wants to see tts
role expanded Ill the future
Carter appeared to have
fun teaSing U N Am
bassador Andrew Young a
fellow Georgian apparently
aware there are a few
congressmen on Cap1tol Hill
who \\ant to unpeach Young
In case you are wondermg
who I am I am the one who
works for Andy Young
Carter quipped to U S of
ftc1als
In another light moment
Carter sa1d a few months ago
he had doubts about Young and hts populanty w1th the
Amencan people
But I thmk all of vou have
seen very clearly that he 1s
one of the greatest 111
ternatwnal assets that we
and the American people
have

proposals for removmg
remaining obstacles to

reconvening the Geneva
conference
The statem~nt was unclear
however on the ptvotal
dtspute over who would
represent the Palestmtans at

Flynt friend of R nth?
COlU MBUS (UP!) Hustler Magazme publisher
l.arrv Flvnt sa1d Tuesday he

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M 0

Abe Lincoln's
'

syndrome?

By Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB- Would
you mmd g1vmg us some m
formatwn on Marfan s syn
drome ? This has struck close
m our fa1111ly and yet we know
so little about 1t
DEAR READER - A good
place to start- and one which
Will be of particular mterest
to you - IS to pomt out !bat
medical ev1dence suggests
that Abe Lincoln was a Mar
fan These people often have
long legs and arms m com
parlSon to the length of the
trunk of the body They may
be quite tall
The lens m the eye may be
displaced The chest may be
deformed and the hands are
often large With long fmgers
The disease may be !muted
to the eyes the skeleton or
the heart and blood vessels or
1t may mvolve all three
systems The aorta may
enlarge or dilate The valves
m the heart may become
defo rmed causmg ab
normah\les m c1rculatwn not
unlike that seen from aorttc
valve damage from
rheumallc heart disease
Some historians think that
Abe Lmcoln would havedied
very soon from heart mvolvement 1f he had not been
assassmated Apparently he
already had s1gfllf1cant
changes m the valves m his
heart and there was no way !D
proper y treat that proplem
m those days
Half of the sons and
daughters of a person With
Marian s diSease will mher1t
the disorder About 15 per
cent of the IJ!'Ople w1th Mar
fan s are new diseases and
neither parent has the
disease In this mswnce there
is a new mula! on of the gene
during genetic development
th 1 causes the disorder
Ot ce that IJ!'rson starts hav
mg offspnng though half of
his children may have the
dtsease
DEAR DR LAMB - My
dau!lhter
has. kidney

malfuncticn She must dnnk
a lot of "ater The only thing
she tikes to drink IS tea She
also does not like 1111lk
She makes enough tea for~
few days She takes three tea
bags and fills the 20 cup ele£
tnc percolator and percolates
1t for one hour The tea ts as
dark as black coffee The doc
tor knows she drinks tea but
doesn t know she IJ!'rcolates 11
one hour This bothers me I
am afra1d she 1s hurtmg her
kidneys She also has her
cocktails
Please tell me what you
think about tea and eSIJ!'Clally
this strong brew
DEAR READER - Your
daughter may not be gettmg
enough llqwds She should
drink enough water to pass a
large volume of dilute unne
each day This helps to prevent kidney stones About
four quarts of hqwd a day 1s
oft en recommended or
enough hqwd to ensure for
mat10n of two to three quarts
of unne a day The flwd
keeps the unabsorbable par
t1cles that may form a stone
from clumpmg together
Tea beer fruit JUices cola
drinks all may contam solu
ble oxalate that IS absorbed
mto the blood stream and
mav make 1t eas1er to form
some types of kidney stones
One of the best fluids for
kidney patients wbo-11eed to
consijllle lots of liquid to
mamtam a constantly dilute
urme IS alSo the chea!J!'St plam water Alcohol IS hard
on ktdneys and IS n"Ot a very
good way for your daughter
to get flmd e1ther
Too much rest can be
harmful For mfonnatlon
send 50 cents w1th a long
sta mped
s elf addre ssed
envelope for The Health Let
ter number 6-6 Effects of Jn
act1v1ty Including Bed Rest
Send your request to Dr
Lamb m ca re of thiS
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
RadiO City Stat10n New
York NY 1 ~19

has become fnends With
President Carters SISter
Ruth Carter Stapleton and
her husband Robert wbo
spent the weekend w1th the
publisher and his wife at their
manswn m suburban Bexley
Flynt sa1d he met Mrs
Stapleton
who IS an
evangeliSt throughthe CBS
televisiOn executive who
produced segments for 60
mmutes on each of them
Last month Flynt VISited
the Stapletons at their
Fayetteville N c home He
and the Presidents sister
discussed subjects such as
human behavtor and sexual
repression particularly to 1ts
link to chtld abuse

Not many people know
about all the work Mrs
Stapleton does Flynt satd
mcludmg
settmg
up
workshops around the
country to help people deal
w1th
th eir
emotiOna l
problems
Flynt sa1d he InVIted the
Stapletons to VISit hun here
when they returned from a
European tr1p They arnved
Saturday and left Monday
rught f9r Los Angeles
While here they VISited
Ch1ldren s Hosp1wl
We have become fnends
sa1d Flynt
I thmk her
husband Bob Stapleton IS an
equally wonderful person
They are very sens1t1ve
wonderful people

by

1
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the editor) and m111t be alclllld wllb lbe alpee'e ad·
dreu Nam.. may be wltbheld upoa pubUcallon
However oa request, llllmOI will be dllcloled. Lellerl
should be In good taole addresolag luaeo, aol per·
sonalltles

New fight over : 9~..1. ~..: ••• ~.. uuwr.,:
energy opened Retort to '1rouble South em'
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3 The Da1ly Sentmel M•ddleoort Pomerov 0 Wednesday Oct 5 1977

Ma or League Playoffs
By Un ted Preu International
Nat onttl League
Be~t ot Ftve
A IT mu. EDT
la.s Angeles vs Ph IS
( Phlla 1eo1ds 1 o~
OCI 4 Ph ~ 7 LA 5
Oct 5 Ph a nr LA 8 15 p
Oc1 1 L A at Pt a J 15 p m
'X Oct 8 LA ~
Ph Ia
8 15

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Health care cost will
•
h we11•h ee}e d
soon pmc
people one thing IS certam national health msurance IS
gomg to affect every man
woman and child m thiS
counlry every doctor every
hospital every nursmg home
and cluuc Califano sa1d
The HEW secretary
••turned recently from a tnp
to Canada to study that
country s national health
care plan He plans future_
health msuran ce study tr1ps
to West Germany England
and possibly Iwly
Ca tifano satd the public has
mdtcated 1t wants national
health msurance the health
care industry has mdicated
1ts Willingness to partiCipate
and Congress IS ready to
de hate (he ISSUe
For 26 million Americans
poor health carnes an
unusually heavy pnce tag
They don t have health
msurance

Bl CRAIG A PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Even fmanCially comfortable
persons soon will be unable to
afford the nsmg cost of
health care HEW Secretary
Joseph Califano S8ld today
Our people need national
health msurance he sa1d
Even the affluent cannot
afford the h1gh cost of hea lth
care much longer
Opemng
a
day long
meetmg on national health
Insurance 1ssues Cahfano
sa1d the Department of
Health
Education and
Welfare has made no
deciSions on details of the
national hea lth plan tt will
recommend to Prestdent
Carter
Carter IS expected to send a
health m~urance proposal to
remarked Speaker Thomas Congress early next year
Although the term means
P 0 N~ U Labor has put 1ts
different thmgs w different
eggs m this basket
Rep Frank Thom1=n [).
N J floor manager of the
b1ll sa1d he was convmced by
a preliminary vote Tuesday
be has enough support to pass
the measure m the House
We did infuntely better than
we expected he srud
He referred to a '/JJ7 to 152
by Cbet Tannebill
House vote Tuesday to defeat
The fact that the adminiStratiOn of Southern Local School
a Republican move to offer Distnct has determmed-to date-to keep to 1tself whatever
an anti umon substitute ]uslif1cahon eXISts for 1ts 6 5 1111Us levy for school OIJ!'rallon at
measure Labor s support on a special elechon October 2:i suggests to us the levy cannot be
this vote far exceeded the 218 Justified
The fact that the Southern Local administratiOn asked for 10
votes needed for fmal
passage w1th all members 1111lls without spelling out where the additiOnal dollars would
go m a spectal election m August and lost should have been a
present
Thompson and labor s lob- lesson Taxpayers have every logical r1ght on their s1de to
byists nonetheless feared assume that 10 1111lls was not essenhal because havmg tt refussome key proVISIOns of the ed only 6 5 " asked now m the Oct 25 vote And if the ad
biD nught be damaged by nuniStration s request for 10 1111Us was an act m bad faith IS not
amendments some of which 6 5111llls of the same stnpe•
are popular on both s1des of
For the sunple fact IS that taxpayers are through forever
the aiSle
voling levy mcreases for whatever purpose Without bemg con
In the Senate labor was vtnced of the need
seekmg to restore many of
After talkmg With some Southern Local Citizens I m convmc
the provisiOns House deleted ed the dlStnct IS not about to have 1ts schools closed for good
from the 1111nlmum wage b1ll But ne1ther will they give carte blanche penmsswn for the preAlthough the House blll sent adminiStratiOn to SIJ!'nd any of their hard-earned dollars
promised a $3 05 mmunum fnvously
Me1gs CoWlty s voters have a long history of USing good
wage by 1980 labor was
seekmg $3 40 by 1981 from the sense m votmg tax lev1es Most notable In this area was when
Senate
repeated requests for additiOnal mone~ to bwld Veterans
Memorial Hospital durmg the 1950s prOduced failure after
failure When the whole story fmally was told to the voters a
levy was approved
Unfortunately m the case of Southern Local School DIStrict
ATLANTA (UP! ) - Center
lt
1s
the yoWlg people who w1ll suffer trreparable damage while
Greg Carroll scored two goals
some
of their elders are playing games
to lead the New England
Whalers of the World Hockey
And while I m on the top1c of games how about the mess at
Association to a 5-4 exhtbltlon
Pomt
Pleasant where the S1!ver Memonal Bndge remams
vtctory over the Natwnal
Hockey League Atlanta closed after three months of what at best has to be labeled fld
dlmg l"•th the prosperity and well bemg of a three-county
Flames Tuesday mght
Tom Lys1ak had two goals regwn wherem roughly 75 000 people reside Consider this
and one assist for the Flames About e1ght years ago all the steel was ratsed to erect the
Alan Hangsleben Mark br~dge m 60 days Already three months-90 days-have been
Howe and Tom Wehster got used up trymg to repair 16 faults or cracks m that steel
Obvwusly for whatever reason the State of West VIrgmia
shots past Atlanta goabe Phil
may
nave tor perm1thng such shennamgans 1! does not con
Myre to score for New
s1der
reopemng of the bndge a VItal concern
England Atlanta s oth er
Come
to thmk of 1t reopemng of the bndge 1s not vital when
scorers were CUrt Ben nett
peoples
welfare 1sn t regarded VItal
ar d Guy Cboumard

the day after

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Dear Su
Mr Pnce was my math teacher when I attended Racine
H1gh School and was an lnOue]lce on my maJonng m
mathematlt'S 'al Olno Uruverslty He was a master teacher and
l1 espect tum very mu ch Howe\er I must take exceptlon to
some of the content of h1s letter of Oct 3 1977 to The Dally
Sentinel
Mr Price states that he obJects to the burden bemg placed
on property owners So do I but IS voting no the proper
response? The taxpayers did 1t once and schools are gmng to
be closed for three weeks The result of a no vote on Oct 25
w1ll cause schools to be dosed until Jan 2 1978
ThiS mav be a proper response i1 you do not have children
m school 1 do and I object to my chtldren not be1ng able to
attend school
My children and I experienced .go1ng to school on two
Saturdays last year and I dread the thought of havtng to go
every Saturday and the whole month of June
Mr Price says not wallow your emotions to get mvolved I
can t help but get emotwnal when my children are bemg
depnved of their education and are suffermg the hardship
bemg placed upon them due to U1e objec tion of proper!) taxes
Why not vmce your obJection by Writing or calling your swte
offiCials ' This method wtll not cause a hardship on our
children
Mr Price wlks aiiOut the State of Ohio not abandoning our
educational system and the only change Will be a
reorgaruzatton t f the admuustrat10n if consolidation occurs
Consolidation does not threaten me IJ!'rSOnally nor our school
employees We know we w1ll still have our JObs and we Will be
makmg more mane} than we are mak.mg now because we will
be on the other district s salary schedule We know that our
high school butldmg w1ll still be used What concerns me IS
wheTher my chtldren will be able to rece1ve their high school
education at the present school or w1ll they have to go toha
larger school 1 know first hand the problems of a small hig
school and other principals have told me the problems m large
high schools If 11IS possible I want my children educated at a
small h1gh school
W1llthere be consolidation If the school district goes hank
rup[? Dr Phyllis assistant Swte Supermlendent of Public
InstructiOn has stated nobody knows No sc hool d1stnct
has ever gone bankrupt before He says that ch1ldren m the
district may have the1r educatiOn mterrupted for a year 'or
more
Do we want to face thiS next September?
Voting oo cames a lot of unce rtomty w1th 1t
There 1s no uncertamty by votmg yes
The 61&gt; mill levy ts for two years 9nly Maybe by that time
the burden Will be taken off the property owners
The two most unportant worldly possessiOn we have are
our children and our pocketbooks For the next two years we
will have to dec1de wh1ch 1s more unportanl Im votmg for my
ch1ldren How are you voting? - J1m Adams Parent property
""e.'' and H S P~mc1pal
P S There will be a meeting of all Southern Local !p'Os
wmght ata 30m the H1gh School Cafeteria to answer questions
about the levy

Chlldren held rn ransom
Dear Su
I heheve my past teachmg experience of 31 years reflects
dedication to our young folks The answer rests m the mmds of
those whom I lr!ed to teach I am retired of a childless couple
I believe the children of our school d1sll'Ict are the
hostages bemg held by the e&gt;&lt;haushon of all legal sources of
funds due w the state mandates and mnumum sta ndards for
the ransom of SIX and one half m1lls
When may \\e elunmate such contmumg and repeating
demands for the operating of our schools?
Should the 42 reported school d1str1cts m Ohw to have
exhausted all legal sources of funds contmue to vote NO on
operating levies those responsible for these def1clts w1ll get
the message
As long as voters respond to the passmg of such levtes
those responstble for state mandates and m1rumum sta ndards
w1ll contmue w believe they are domg the nght thing asking
we voters to support lev1es iO meet def1c1ts of school d1str1cts
When may we be gtven the opportumty to vote for roads
welfare and other funds?
I was most fortuna te to be present to a meeting w1th Supt
Bob Ord m Columbus Ohto Tuesday Sept 27 We met w1th
state legtslators dealmg With securmg addttional funds for
schools and r ~llef from state mandated educational programs
Response by the several cash def1c1t school dtstr1cts present
certamly mformed the legislators present they hav~ not
planned well enough and maybe from their notes taken w1ll
start bellevmg they have not been dmng the r~ght !lung for all
sc hool d1stncts m Ohw
It IS most unfortunate our young folks of school age
become the hostages to school operatmg levies of the many
cash defiCit school d1str1cts of Ohto
If there ts a better way to solve these many school deftc1ts
I am sure all concerned would apprectate learnmg of 1t now
I hoP!' th1s mes&amp;age shows a s1lver tinmg to the cloud of
school def1c1ts The ransom local school OIJ!'rating leVIes may
be repeated lime and tune agam or until tt be understood
there must be a better method of f1nancmg our schools
Since there were 1 030 NO votes cast on the 10 m1ll levy m
August I fmd 1t hard to believe the retired and chtldless
couples would have voted down the school operatmg levy
I believe there were 242 YES votes cast m a total of 1 262
votes reported - Howard Nolan 30 years teachtng m
Southern Local School Dist

Taxpayers get sennon
on responsibilities
COLUMBUS(UPI) -State
Supermtendent of Public In
struction Franklin B Walter
sa td today that although
some Oh1o school diStricts
have ser1ous fmanc1al
difftculttes only four have
been autbomed by his office
to close thts year
The four school diStncts
are the Toledo City School
D1slrtct of 54 000 students the
Eastern Local m Metgs
County Monroeville Local m
Huron CoWlty and the Scwto
Valley Local m P1ke County
Approximately 57 000
students m the four districts
would be affected although~
the Scwto Valley Local has
reopened after the passage of
an 8 4 mill levy Sept 6
Walter sa1d 44 school
d1stncts have requested
aud1ts by the state auditor s
off1ce as a fust step toward

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possible closmg The 44
d1stncts encompass
approxunately 12 per cent of
the state s 2 175 million public
school students
School closmgs In the
distncts facmg fiSCal criSis
may be averted by pos1tlve
voter reaction to school levies
th1s fall
Walter sald
School fmance IS a shared
responsibility between the
state and local commWllty
The Cleveland and Toledo
City school diStricts ane the
two largest systems facin8
closmg befor e the end of 1977
Twenty four diStricts have
belftt""Cert•f•ed as eligtble for
closmg by the state atMhtor s
office Four have passed
lev1es to avmd closmg The
remammg 20 have or are
expected to have lev1es oo
thttlallot this fall according
to Walter

•

By JIM COUR
UPI Sports Writer
pm
WS ANGELES (UP!)
x Oct 8- NY ar Kan C ty
For
a Oeetmg moment the
1 15 p m
x Ocr 9 NY a Kan C v Ph iladelphia Ph1ll1es must
B 5p m
have thought 11 was the 1976
x t nec:esury
National League playoffs all
over agam
NL lmescores
The Phllhes were swept
Nl Playoff Results
\llree stra1ght after leadmg m
By Un l ed Press lnfernahonal
Ph a
200 0:21 001-.- 1 9 o all three games agamst the
l A
000 010 400- S 9 1 Cmcmna!l Reds a year ago
Car ton Garber (7 M cGraw
In the opener of the 1977 NL
(9 and McCarver Boone (B)
playoffs
at Dodger StadiUm
John Garman (Sl Hough (6
Sosa (8) and Yeager
WTuesday mght Steve- Carlton
Ga ber 1 0 L - Sosa 0 1 HRsPh adelph a
Luz nsk
L.os was leadmg the Los Angeles
An9e es Cey
Dodge):$ 5-l when presto

Playoffs results

m

By WILLIAM E CLAYTON
Backers l'Ontend the higher
WASHINGTON tU PI ) _ Ptu:t: Bnthnd of controls will
Senate approval of IE!"gtslatwn g1ve producers enough
to phase out federal priCe money to fmd hard to-get gas
controls on natural gas ended m deep wells and distant
one hattle enlivened by anger f1elds Opponents warn l!ftmg
and accusation but Signa led federal controls Will cost
the start of another
l'Onsumers billions of dollars
A two week filibuster and prov1de unfair profits to
brok~n the Senate Tuesday the ml £ompames who would
approved 50 to 46 a measure get a b1g mcrease on gas that
to gradually hft federal pr1ce IS costm g no add! Ilona!
controls and hike the con mone) to prnduce
trolled pnce on natural gas
Sens James Abourezk [).
almost 70 percent 111 the S D and Howard Met
meantmne
zenbaum Dh1o who blocked
The fate of the bill now Senate action on the
rests 1n a House Senate legislation w1th a 13 day
conference committee whhe filibuster jomed 100 steel
vast differences m the House worl&lt;ers from Cleveland
and Senate verSions of the Oh1o and about 300 other
leg !Slatton w11l be negotiated persons outSide the Capitol to
The House approved the challenge the Senate dec1s1on
Carter energy plan to boost wtth song
the federal pr1ce 29 cents to
As Abourezk strwruned the
$1 75 per thousand cub1c feet gUitar Metzenbaum and
and to Impose federal con others and sang
trois on rntrastate gas- that
All l need IS Just a little
which 1s prnduced and sold bit more Just a penny here or
Wlthtn the same state
three or four Ill g1ve you all
The Senate s Bentsen the gas you need if you II
Pearson btl! would elunmate tOlerate just a little greed
federal pr1ce linuts m two
Predictably busmess
)ears on newly produced gas groups and natural gas
from onshore wells hike the producers pra1sed the Senate
federal pnce per thousand vote Richard L Lesher
cub1c feet from $1 46 to $2 48 pres1dent of the Chamber of
and free offshore gas from Commerce
ca lled the
controls m five years
dec1s1on a posit1ve step 20
Senate approval of the years of regulation has
deregulatiOn
leg 1slat1o n provided conclus1ve evidence
sparked qu1ck reaction as • of the folly of pr1ce controls
both s1des rallied for fmal
Dav1d H Foster v1ce
pres1dent of the Natural Gas
negotta tions
~
The b1U 1s an m)ustlce to Supply Commlttee sa1d the
the workmg_people of thiS Senate measure took a giant
country Pres1denl Carter step forward In prov1dlng
with
the
declared
labeling
1t consumers
maxunum
assurance
of
a
unacceptable and vowing
future
supply
of
natural
gas
I will not s1gn an unfair
at reasonable prices
bill

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- Phillies edge Dodgers 7-5
in
playoff
opener
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Unions win test
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Orgaruzed labor encouraged
by VIctory on a maJor test
vote st11l must do hours of
battle w1th supporters of b1g
busmess to wm House
approval of a bill to overhaul
federal labor law
A fmal House vote on the
bill was expected today once
the congressmen constder as
many as 150 Republican
amendments that would
s•gmhcantly weaken the
labor law measure
Labor meanwhile was
bracmg for another b1g battle
with busmess m the Senate
wh1ch was prepanng to
consider a House passed
J;fleasu re to mcrease the
current $2 3{) 1111nunum wage
Drafted by the AFL-CIO
and endorsed by President
Carter the labor law bill
would help umon orgaruzmg
and crack down on employers
who persiStently are accused
of v1olatmg federal labor law
- among them J P Stevens
and Co
Th1s 1s a b1g b1ll

•

i1---------------------------.
!.etten of optnloa are welcomed Tbey lh•ld be 1
less than 300wordlloac (or be eubJeet lo redaell1111
I
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o n

LA at Pn a 5 p m

Oct 9

ll.

Oct

o n

American league
N Y VS Kat C tv
o; Kan c ty a N y

3

5

Ocr 6

Kan C ,.,. a N,1 a 5

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Oct

NY al t&lt;an c

1

tv

a

5

lion Cey Jut a dran1at1c
grand-slam homer and 11 was

vti:tory
w1lh Schmidt
dehvermg the game wmnmg

a new game

hit

I thought Oh no we re
r1ght bad&lt; at Riverfront
StadiUm
sa1d Phllhcs
third baseman M1ke Schmidt
I don t thmk I cciUld put
mto wor ds what I was
thmkmg then Philadelphia
Manager Danny Ozark sa1d
At least you couldn t print
them
But the Ph1lbes refused w

W1th one out m the top of
the 1mth Bake McBr~de
l.arry Bowa and Sch1111dt had
l'Onsecut1ve smglea and Sosa
committed a balk Gene
Garber and Tug McGraw
p1tched 2 1-3 mnmgs of hitless
relief for Philadelphia
Before the best of five
ser1es began the Philbes
contended that they had a b1g
edge over the Dodgers m the
bullpen and that was the case
Tuesday mght The Phillie•

~~~;~~~~r~~~~rw~~a.! ~~
m the nmth mrung for a 7-5

also had a b1g edge m
defense
Two cr uc1al errors by
Dodger shortstop Bill Russell
gave the Ph1llles four
unearned runs and a W lead
after 4\2 mnmgs Greg
Luzmsky slammed a two-run
homer ove1&gt; the center.f1eld
fen ce m the openmg mmng
after Schm1dt reached on
Russell s error In the fifth
Dave Johnson came through
With a tw&lt;H"un smgle after
Russell neglected to ·touch
second base on the nuddle leg
of a would be double play

In the Dodger fifth pmch
hitte• Lee Lacy smgled was
balked to second by Carlton
and came home on Davey
Lopes smgle
The Philhes made 1t 5-1 m
the Sixth with a run off
knuckleballer Ghi'.rtie Hough
on a smgle by Tun McCarver
Ted SIZemore s sacr1f1ce and
a smgle by Carlton
In the seventh the Dodgers
loaded the bases on a one-&lt;&gt;ul
walk to Jerry Grote a smgle
by Lopes Russell s f1elder s
cho1ce and a wa lk to 1\egg~e
SmltJ! On a 3-2 p•tch.._Cey put

the crowd of ~~ 9611 on •ts feet
With a lme4r~ve shot mto the
left field pavthon
Mter Steve Garvey smgled
for his third hit of U1e game
Ozark removed Carlton hiS
23-game ace and brought m
Garber who struck out Dusty
Baker With Garvey on second
after a stolen base
Lu'*"k' and Ozark sa1d all
the pressure IS on the
Dodgers now
Game No 2 of the senes
tomght agam at Dodger
Stadmm gets under way a\
8 15 p m EDT Ozark w11l go
w1th J1m Lonborg 11-4
against Don Sutton 14-ll

Yankees relaxed, determined Three SVAC tilts
set this weekend

t»rohahle start~rs

NEW YORK fU PI ) - The
probab e s arr g 1 n(lups tor
Wedne.sda y s f st gan e of the
1\rncr can
League
p ayott~
Kan sas City
New York
Zdcb f
Rvers cf
McRae dh
Ne es 3b
Brc t 3b
Munson c
Jac~son

Cowen'j I
Mayberry b

Po c c
0

rf

P n e Ia f
Chan bl ss b

s cr

Jot~nson

Patek ss
Wh te 1b
Sp lo f! p
Umpires

dh

Rando ph 2b
Dent ss
Gulle t p

Spr ngslead Neu
dec~er
Goetc
Deegan
McKean Srem gan

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
NE W YORK (UP!)
Amidst a new controversy
111 vol vmg Manager Billy
Martin the New York
Yankees w11t send Do11,
Gullett agamst the Kansas
C1 ty Royals and Paul
Sph ttorff today m the first
game of the Amencan
League playoffs
Favored at 7-5 m both the
first game and the best-&lt;&gt;f
f1ve ga me
the

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Spol'tl Editor
1\EW \ OHK I UPI 1 Those who cannot remember the
are doomed to re!J!'a t 1t
But Billy Martm ob110usly doesn t put much stock m George
&amp;-1n~n anil s class1c p1ece of w1sdmn
M 1\ be he 1 IS forgotten how Rogers Hornsby lost his JOb as
manager of tl eSt IAuiS Cardma ls In 19'/JJ after leadmg them
u theu fir st world champ10nsh 1p because he ms1sted on a
longer contract Or ho" Charlie Dressen was f1red for the
same rc '"'" afte1 he won the pennant w1th the Brooklyn
D ld gers m 1953
II hIS 11 c tl er constant renunder rtght 111 front of hun Yog1
Ben a c~n c 'r I s O\Ul coaches was canned by the Yankees
lite• he led them to the pennanlln 1964
If tun1ng 1s e1er )1llllg 111 hfe then Martm picked the worst
J" ss blc tune o push lor an extension on hiS three-) ear
H u 1;1ct y, tncl has two more years to run
n1c Y mkc cs ha\c JUst fm 1shcd one of the most turbulent and
sl fe rJddcn ~Qsons m thelf h story The} won thetr dtvlston
ttth
td beg n a best~ £ five playoff with the Kansas C1ty
H 1 Is at Y mkee Stadium tomght Club owner George
Stc •b c ne1 a d president Gabe Paul both feel Martm s mmd
n I enm g1es sl ould be concentrated solely on that but \\hen
U1e; p1cked up the nell spapers Tuesday mornmg they read
l '"' e theu 11anager was qu oted as saymg he felt he should
p,ct
ew co tract
0 • Werl esdav Martmtned to brush off the whole thmg by
fei)U g
II wa s aUm fWl but he added If we wm 11 all I
U1 1k I dese rve another yea r (Earl ) Weaver and (Don)
Z1 1Jne1 h"d good seasons and got rewarded
Rack n 19&gt;3 Charlie Dressen used the same approach after
wu u g w1th tl e Dodgers t cost hun hls JOb The Dodgers were
fferu g 11m a on e year contract and he tnststed on three He
was so pers stent Walter 0 Malley fma lly sa1d that was
enough aJ d let him go
Ste nb1 e me1 and Paul are becommg equally annoyed
Netlher s ready to off er Martm any concrete a ssw-a nee he \\li\1
be back to manage the Yank ees even 1f the club does go on to
wu boll the pia) off and the World Series
On t c contrar) when Stem brenner spoke With me Tuesday
he w lk ~d a whole lot more about what Whitey Herzog
lfcompl1shed "'th the Roya ls thiS season than what Martm
acl eved l\llh the Yankees
~
1tl mk Wh ite) Herzog has put together one of the smoothest
balanced and funcfionm ~ teams I ve ever seen m any sport
5i.Ucl Ule Yankees prmctpal owner
Steinbrenner and Martm weren (.,exactly bosom buddies
c1the• th s season When I asked Stembrenner pomt blank
"1 ether Martm would be back 1f the \vanks go a Uthe way he
rl cl not answer aff~rmallvely
.&gt; 1
( abe IS gomg to make the dec1s10n he satd The reason
fo that IS I don t want 11 to be made on an emollonal or
I"'' sonalii) baSIS
Gabe Paul the Yankees No 2man was no more encourag
"g about Martm s future
1 nl not gomg to say anything he sa1d We ll settle all
problems at the proper ttme R1ght now my mam concern 1s m
heatmg Kansas Cltl
Paul wl o has been associated w1th baseball more than 50
years IS a past master at concealing h1s feelmgs from the
, cdw The (act IS he leans more loward mak ng a managenal
change next season than Ste10brenner
I ven should the Yankees wm 1! all there s no guarantee
Mal tm will be back Wmmng a champ10nsh1p d1dn t deter the
(',ardinals from Jettmg Hornsby go m 26 when he ms1sted on a
longer contract Owner Sam Breadon w1th whom he hadn t
~olten along w1th all season was offenng a one year contract
md Hornsby a playerlna nager at the t1me kept hammermg
&lt;Jwoy for three years
We had a meetmg after the senes and I got steamed up
HJrnsby said late r 1 told hun where to go slammed the door
[ h s offiCe as I walked out and the next thmg I knew I was
11 Hded to the G1ants for Frank FriSch and Jmuny Rmg
11•e• e s one big difference m the cases of Martm and
llm sby Mm tm ISn t playmg now For that matter ne1ther 1s
Stcu brenner
P&lt;~&gt;l

•

'ian~ees were relaxed but
determmed to make up for
thell'TOlD' game World Senes
sweep at the hands of the
Cincmnatt Reds last year by
bea lmg the Ro) als and
wmnmg thetr second straight
pennant
Gullett who had a 14-4
record durmg the season was
scheduled to take the mound
"t 3 1~ p m EDT m today s
opener w1th the secon d game
sched uled for 8 15 p m
Thursday mght
A veteran of 17 previoUs
appearanees m post-season
com!J!'tltlon w1't)l the Reds
Gullett sa1d h1s objective
would be to keep the Kansas
City speed men off the bases
and then go one-&lt;&gt;n-&lt;&gt;ne With
Ute pow~r men
Asked about the pressure of
post se ason pla y Gullett
S8ld 1t IS a lot of fun to
part1ctpate m post season
play I m physiCally fit and
ready to go
Spbttorff a 3()-year old left
hander who beat the Yankees
once m the 1976 playoffs and
had a 11Hi record thiS season
sa1d the Roya ls were a
stronger team this year
We ve done this before
he noted That s unportant
Secondly we don t have the
mJuries we had last season
Martm
\\ ho seemed
obliVIOUS to the fact that club
owner Geor~e Stembrenner

was upset over his b1d for
an extenswn of h1s cootract
S8ld all h1s startmg p1tchers
Three league lilts mcludlng
At Vmton Coach John North Ga II a 2
$100 00 over cost on an:y
38 38
are okay
the headlmer Eastern at Dud&lt;llng s Southern Tor Hannan T race
1977 AMC car now In st ock
1 think they scheduled the Kyger Creek p1gh11ght action nadoes a 13.{) loser last
1 3 0 53 11 5
All cars have the exclusive
senes backwards he sa1d
thiS weekend m the Southern Fnday to Wahama wtll try to So u1hwester:n o 4 o 18 96 AMC Two Yea r Warranty
I d ratller play !be mght Valley AthletiC Con{erence bounce back m what appears Sy m Valley 0 4 0 18 103
SVACONLY
game tomght and the day
In
addition
to
the
Eagle
to
be
their
last
game
of
the
TEAM
W l POP
game tomorrow because of
Kyger Creek
2 0 82 18
Bobcat
showdown
Southern
season
agamst
the
Ptrates
of
the ~ravel problem I d also
2 0 32 12
North Ga II a
hke to see at least three days VISitS North Gallla and Coach John Blake
Sou thern
l 0 32 6
Valley plays at
Southern Local wtll close Eastern
I 0 32
6
between the playoffs and the Symmes
down Fr~day followmg the Hara,.;l)n Tra ce 0 1 12 48
Southwestern
446 9800
World Senes You gotta get
Gall tpolt s 0
/alley
0 2 12 40
In a non-conference game regular school day Unless a
up for the playoffs Then you
So
es tern
0 3 18 90
travel one day and boom you Hannan Trace w11l host the spectal tax levy IS approved
Reserves Saturday Oct 25 the school will remam , . .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . ,
gotta get up for the World Fairland
night
closed the rest of 1977
Senes
Coach Joe Mitchem s hot
Accordmg to a spokesman
Martm expressed surpnse
Eastern
Eagles
move
mto
the
for
the Ohio Athletic
that the Royals chose not to
Bobcat
den
with
three
Assoc1at1on
Southern s
work out Tuesday m New
stra1ght
vtctones
after
an
schedule
m
the
state s
York and qu1pped We were op&lt;!mng loss to Caldwell The computer standU!gs w11l
gonna let them have the field Eagles own wms ov\r count Those games will gonot
as
from mHinight to 4 am but I Symmes Valley Alexander games not played Wahama
)
guess they d1dn t hke the
posted 1ts fourth VIctory m
and Federal Hockmg
offer
Last Fnday mght Eastern five starts behind a fme
Yankee slugger Regg1e for the second straight week passing game
agamst
Jackoon bes1eged by the
won
m
the
fmal
two
1111nutes
Southern
The
Tornadoes
new s med1a dunng the
workout noted tllat th1s was The Eagles scored wtth 6 15 were held to just 114 total
to go m the fourth penod to yards 69 on the ground
his s xth appearance m post
take
an 11-0 lead
Michael Warner led Southern
season play
W1th
1
30
left
Eastern
wtth 65 yards m 11 cames
I II be more relaxed
scored
what
proved
to
be
the
North Gallta IS fresh off a
because I ve already been m
wmnmg
TD
on
a
14
yard
pass
clo~e
8 6 triUmph over
fi ve, he sa•d, referrmgto h1s
from
Bnan
B1ssell
to
Joe
Symmes
Valley The P~rates
years "'th the Oakland A s
Kuhn
KUhn
had
scored
scored
an
earlier TD then
I know what to expect
earlier
on
an
18
yard
run
added
the
all
Important extra
We re playmg for money but
The
Eagles
Ia$!
team
to
pomts
for
their
second wm
we re also playmg for more
put
a
blem1sh
on
Kyger
lhls
season
The
Ptrates are
than that The best players
Creek
s
SV
AC
record
w1th
a
led
offensively
by
semors
Rex
ca n t play unless they love
20-20
\le
two
years
ago
at
Justtce
and
B1ll
Lookadoo
th e game They couldn t play
Cheshtre, would like nothmg
At Southwestern 1t Will be
JUst-for money
better than to spoil the hosts a battle to escape the
Decbrat1ve wood pane11ng g1ves a new
homecommg
basement m the South
look to any room of the house • Many
Eastern s grotlnd game 1s western Symmes
Valley
led
by
fullback
Dan
Spencer
struggle
Both
teams
go
mto
colors and flmshes ava1lable from tra
'
and tatlback Kuhn
the game wtth 0-4 records
clitloAal dark woods to textured rustle
'
Coach Bob
Ashley s
Last week the Eagle
/
defense held Federal Hockmg Highlanders have been beset
fln1shes
to 187 yards rushmg and JUst by tnJUnes this fall SWHS
22 yards vta the atr
rebes on the passing arms of
This Week's
:.J{yger Creek the defenolng Gene Layton and Barry
SV AC champs has also won Jenkms Their favonte target
three stra1ght after an IS Larry Carter
openmg loss 13 10 at
Coach Joe Bokov1tz s
Wahama
V1kmgs bounced back m the
Coach J1m Sprague s North Gallia game to score
Bobcats have compiled 137 Wllh 6 021eft m the contest on
pomts m fo ur outmgs a 34 2 a 44 yard pass from Ron
a\lg wl&gt;il.. &lt;lllow~g 38 pomts Broham to Allen Burcham
M1ll Seconds
Saturday mght Coach
a 9 5 avg
The Bobcats sentor run Larry Cremeens Hannan
mng back M1ke Casey has Trace Wildcats wtll attempt
SHEET
had three straight 100 yard to snap a two game losmg
plus rushmg games wh1le streak agamst the Fa1rland
scormg 10 touchdowns
Reserves The Wildcats after
Casey was jollied last edgmg Waterford 11-0 have
Fnday mght at Southwestern lost to Kyger Creek and
by semor Marcus Ge1ger Green Local
Ge1ger who had been out
SVAC STANDINGS
With a leg mjury rush~d (or
ALL GAMES
105 yards and one touchdo\Vn--+. EAM
W L T P DP
773-5554
MASON, W VA
Kyger Creek
against the Highlanders
3 1 o 137 38
Semor quarterback Greg Southern
3 t o 64 3t
Mulford has unproved durmg Eastern
3 t 0 64 68
the last three games H1s
passmg attack seems to be
Jelling w1th ends Roger
Spauldlpg Tun Nibert and
J(e ··schmtidt, Ohw Umvers1ty
-Scott Richards as the t9p
alumnus who got the game wmmng hit a smgle m the wp
recetvers
of the mnth dnvm~ m Bake McBnde to break a 5-5
Kyger Creek s defense has
deadlock w1th the Dodgers m the ftrst game of the
been very tough for the
National League playoffs w1ll be master of ceremomes
runmng game however the
when Bob Hope performs at Ohio Umvers1ty s
Bobcat secondary has been
Homecommg Oct 29 Schmidt class of 1972. Will be
vulnerable to the pass
mducted mto the OU Hall of Fame that same \\ eekend

Pro Football

Atlanta - Reca ll ed runn ng
back B y Ray Pr tchett to
rep ace n ured Bubba Bean
M am
React vt~fed Were
ece ve spec i'l eams P aver
Tt&gt;rrv Andf! son waved guard
Metv n M tche
Soccer
Ch cago ...... Nam eQ Ma com

Musgrove

of

t1

e Con ect c:u t

8 tcntenn PI IS dS head coach
r:! easPc:l tour loan IJ ayers
rorwards Ron Moore and 8 l y
Jenn ngs
m df e de
Bobby
Tvna n and def ender
Dave
Roberts
p aced m df elde s
Steve Ra boVsky and Benny
A on on wa vers
Hockey
E)uffa 0 Loaned de fense

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Terry and guard Nor on Barn
h

The Premier Showing Of

MIAMI (UP!) - After a
flurry of pubhctty Umvers1ty
of M1am1 footba II Coach I ou
Saban announced Tuesday
denymg players meal money
as pumshment for m~ssmg
practice or breakmg rules
will be discontinued
Saban satd earber Tuesday
he didn t thmk withholding
any money ever kept
anybody from eatmg
It
was more of a slap on the
wnst than anythmg else And
I sure dtdn t thmk 1t would
~

The 1978 Buicks, 1978 Pontiac

Shinn's Tractor Sales

•

We are announcmg our New Clay
Equ pment dealership Glay IS F1rst
m Farm Systems Stop m or ca ll us
today and let s VISit about your farm
eqwpment needs We offer a full lme
of pushbutton farm equ1pment for
hog beef and da1 ry operations
WE SERVICE WHAT WE SElLIII
Clay Equipment has been
servmg farmers smce 1899

Baseball

- S gned cen ter
Cesar Geron mo to a
four year contract extend ng

•2••

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

...

C nt: nna t

e der

·~

SPRING OAK
PANELING

man Pau M e nt osh ro Spr ng
f eld
L os Ange les (NHL)
Sent to
Spr ngf e d w ngers Bob Berry
Steve
Cl pp ngda e
Chari e
S mmer and Russ Wa ker an d
defensemen Ste ve Short and
Per Kar lsson
New Eng land (W HA)
Sen t
to Spr ngf e d centers Andre
Peloffy and St eve Car son and
goa tend er Cap Raeder
f

)?

SPECIAL

•
sv un ted Press lnternat onal
Tuesday

Beautiful
Wood
Paneling

...

m~ehM~m~

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•
Wrmger Washers
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•

You must see the all New Bu1 ck
Regal and the All New 1978 Ront1a c
Lemans We are celebrc;ttmg our 6th year
w1th some great deals on all new Pont1ac
and Butcks 1n stock So come on m and
see for yourself The All New 1978
models Plus you may w1n 100 gallons of
gas No purchase necessary to wm need
not be present to wm Don t forget Oct 6
7, 8 Drawmg for 100 gallons of gas will
be Oct 11 4 p m

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500 E Mam St

BAKER FURNITURE
992 3307

and 1978 GMC Trucks

n

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�'

•

•

4--TheDally~ntlnel.Middleport-Pomeroy,O. , Wednesday,Od.!J,l9n

.

,·

nh

•

erg,
~ace are
ranked one, two m DiVIsion III ·

Hoople: - Texas over Oklahoma,Wttte
·

Trojans

'

·

fav~red

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Up.srt Spt""daUst
Egad , friends, 1977 has
indeed been the "Year of the
Upset:' in cullege football1l'nd
this week will be no ex-

the first time . Bouncing back
from their early·srason loss
of
quarterback
Matt
Cavanaugh. the Panthers
have put it back together
behind freshman quar-

ception.

terback Rick Trocano and

over Alabama·

In fact we have such a All-Ameiica fullback Elliot
startling prediction for you Walker and will prevail, 36-22
that we will mwe right into it - kaff-kaff!
without further ado ! The
Some other big ones on this
Texas Longhorns will stun ~·ee k's card find a full-slate
the Oklahoma Sooners by in the Big Ten with Michigan
storming to a 35-24 victory · visiting Michiga n State ; Ohio
before a packed house in State hosting Purdue ;
Dallas. The Texas att~ck Minnesota taking on Iowa,
shaped by new coach Fred nlinois at Wisconsin. and
Akers and spearheaded by Indiana journeying to NorthEarl Campbell wm outscore western.
the potent Sooner offense ilia
In 'the Big Eight , It will be
real old-fashioned cliff· Colorado vs. Okla homa
hanger whi ch will keep State ; Iowa State vs .
everyone glued to their seats Mirrouri, and Nebraska vs.
until the last whistle. Jove, ~ansas State. A,trio of good
who will ever forget the ones.
Sooners' winning lield goal
Here ' s how the Hoople
against Ohio State •i th only System calls 'em In their 7oth .
three seconds remaining on renewal the Wolverines wiU '28, Missouri 21, and Nebraska
the clock - um·kumph '
edge the Michigan State
Oklahoma under coach Spartans. 24-14; Ohio State 42, Kansa• State 18.
Out on · the west coast,
Barry Switzer ha~on
three · will win a bruising battle with Southern Califo rnia will
and tied one with a -rival Purdue, 32-28; Minnesota will
entertain Alabama in what
Texas, but this is the " Yea of romp over Iowa, 11-7;
should be a very close con·
the Upset'' and Texas will do Wisconsin will slip by Illinois,
test . The home · field adit - har·rumph !
31-28, and in-and-out Indiana
va ntage will ca rry the
The Hoople cha rts show will take Northwestern; ~2Q.
Trojans to a six-point ma rgin
another upset in the offing as
The Big Eight contests will
over the Tide in a free. Pitt travels to Gainesville to go like ttiis: Colorado 25,
scoring affair. We make it
meet the FloriP. Gators for Oklahoma St . 15; Iowa Stat~
Southern Californi a 38,
Ala bam a 32 ::_ ha r-rumph !
Now go on with my

I

MISSION , Kan . l UP II _
South Carolina State has
replaced Montana State in
this week's NCAA Division
11 fo otball poll, while

Colorado !5, Oklahoma St. 15
Rutgers 24, Conn. %%
Cornell 23, Harvard 21
E. Carolina 39, So. Ill. 25
E. Mlrhlgan :13, Ohto U. 27
, Pitt j16, Florida 22
Florida St. 26, ClnclnnaU 24
Georgia 8; Miss 1
Colgate 21, Holy Cross 14
Minnesota 41, Iowa 7
Iowa St. 28, Missouri 21

Witt enberg

its
leadership in Division Ill ,

retained

acco rding . to the latest
ratings released '1\tesday.
Montana · State (3-1)
suffered its first loss in H
games, di'Opping a 26-0
decision to Boise State to fall
to fifth in the poll. Boise State
( 3-1 ) is fourth 'in its first poll
appearance this season while
South Carolina State Ll-U I.

Nebraska t2 1 Kansas St. 18
Kentucky 32, Miss, St. 21

•••

rated second the past two
weeks , jumped into first
following its 31-l win against
Alcorn State.
·
New ·Hampshire l ~-0 )
moved into second by virtue
of a 42-7 win over Connecticut
and Jacksonv ille State (!Hll
took over third with a 14-10
decision over Southeastern
L&lt;misiana ·
...
Wittenberg (3-0) retained
its Division lllleadership for
the third consecutive we~k·.
following a 35-7 wm over Ohio
• We:ileyan .. Baldwm-Wallace
l~) remamed ~cond after a
21).!0 wm agamst Ashland .
Wittenberg hosts BaldwinWallace- thjs weekend in a
battle for Division Ill

~ - Boi se

St. 13·11

6. N. Dakota St. 13-1-1l

7:1'10rth. Michigan' [4· tl

.-.B. N\assachuse1ts (3-1J
9. Akron 13-1-t)

28

...

Team
Points ,
1. S. Carolina St. (4-0)
60
2. New Hampshire (4-01
56
J, Jaci&lt;sonvllle S_L.!s.Ol
52 10. Hobart (3-0)

Longhorns
dominate
statzshcs

21 .

. 'tlJSTOM MEAT CurrtNG"
Sides of Beef,
Hinds, Fronts,
Patties and
Ground Beef
For Sale

...

Warriors victims
•

of fum·blitis zn

losing to Gallia ·
By Greg Bailey
vastly improved Big
Be Warrior semi·pro team
too the field Sunday against
the arch rival Gallia
Disciples, but a series of
costly mistak.e s and bad
breaks frustrated them
again, 32~ .
A fumble on the first play

~

fr om scrimmage gave the

'

Gal! ia team good ·fi eld
position and led to a 35-yard
....... drive ending with a seven·
'yard run around the.left side.
The two point conversion was
good for an 1!-0 lead.
The Warrior defense got
tough after another fumble,
aga in on the first play from
scrimmage, giving ihe Gal!ia
boys the ball in almost the
same place, but the Disciples
failed to score.
The second score came
when outside coverage on a
punt allowed Keith Sayre to
race 73 yards on a scamper

\Ip the sidelines. The extra
points failed .
The second period was
better balanced, but a costly
tumov~r

inside the 20, gave
GaUia Bnother chance tO push
. across a score in the closing

1---------"f
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'

'

39e

. LB.

MASON - A going-away surprise dinner- ws held on
Monday at Mason's Historic Home in honor of Mrs. Megee, a
member of the Sunshine Class of Mason United Methodist
many years, arxi a resi~nt here more than 26 years, was given
a floral bouquet centerptece by members of the Sunshine Class
and several other gilts. - -·
Attending the dinner were the Rev. Roher! M. Maring ,
pastor of Mason United Methodist· Church, the Rev . Evelyn
Marmg, Mrs. Helen Barton, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Mrs. Evelyn
.Proffitt, Mrs. VlVlan Fry, Mrs. E~tlene Bumgardner, Mrs.
Margaret Pickens, Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs. Cecilia Harris
Mrs. Claudia Thomas an\1 Robbie, Mrs. Gladys ·Thomas, Mrs:
Lots Test, Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs. Jane Chapman, Mrs.
Pearl Roush, Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mrs. Catherine Smith and
Mrs. Alma Marshall.

Pe~son

imprisoned confessed , via
tape
recordings . their
remorse and contritlon over
having participated in

h d

scandal.
The original sentences of 30
months to 8 years in prison
were redueed from 1-4 years,
afterSirica listened to impassioned pleas for immediate
freedom from the men who

three
m_en
Ultemewed by a probatwn
department official, and t!.e
tapes of .the interviews were
played Ul a federal -- court
hearing _on t.heir request to
have thetr sentenc-es reduced
to tune already served.
The three were convicted
Jan . 1... 1975, of perjury;
obstructton . of JUstice and
eonsptracy m the Watergate

were once Richard Nixoo's

'ments.''

cover-up.

America's wors t political

tnp aides.

·

In an unusual order Sirica
'

.u

. the

·

Mitchell, who says he may
iieed his arthritic hip
surgically replaced declared
ius· "considerable ' remorse
and distress" over his part in
Watergate.
~
Haldeman called the
scandal a "tragedy, and
said he felt "very real
remorse."
Ehrlichman told Sirica "!
abdicated my moral j~dg-

eyes pole position

Eh r l1ehman,
Nixon's
domest ic affairS adviser
began his sentence 0 Gt. 10:
1976, at the fede ral prison
camp in Safford, Ariz.
Haldeman, former White

it again .ot not but we sure
can't complain if we don't win
it," Pearson said Tuesday.
.The $10,000 awaiting the
winner of the pole position is
added incentive to put In top
speeds today.
_
Cale Yarborough, who has

~

··~

_..,_.,

";II

:' .

MASON- The Rev . Roher! M. Maring, pastor -of MaSon
Methodist Church and his wife, the · Rev .· Evelyn
Maring, who serves Grabam, Hartford and Letart churches,
and six mell)bers of Mason United Methodist Church attended
the Celebration 77, .COnvocation on Evangelism at Municipal
• Auditorium in Charleston Saturday, ·
·
Attending were Mrs. Maxine Arnold, Mrs. Frances
Stewart, Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt, Mrs. Helen. Barton, Mr. and
Mrs. William Zerkle .

·~ -united

Curci encounters his share of

the typical problems that
face a college football team,
but m,otivating his players is
no[ one of them .
The Wildcats are ineligible
for any OOwl or television
appearan .:es or rankings in
the UPl poll this year ·
because they are on
probation by the NCAA, but
Curci said that has not
affected his coaching staff or
his players.
"We just don't talk · about
it,~~ he sa'id. ''We go out and

play the best we can in each
· game and don't get sidelined
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. Evelyn with things like that. "
Kentucky proved ' last
Proffitt and Mrs. Helen Bartoo visited with the Rev. and Mrs .
Saturday
they had little else
Clarence .McCloud alter attending . the Convocation on
on
'their
mind besides
Evangelism in Charleston Saturday.
upsetting what was then the
POMEROY (Ohio! -Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Hayes, fourth-ranked team in the
Pomerox. are announcing the birth of a daughter Sept. 16 at nation, Penn State. The
Holzer MediCal Center. The infant, named Catherine· Denise, Wildcats, after ·spotting the
weighed 7 pounds and 81&gt; ounces. The mother is
former Nittany Lions a,10-0, rallied to
the
previously
Rita Ryan. Grandpar~ts are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ryan , upset
24-2Q.
unbeaten
team,
Mason, and Mrs. Mildred R. Hayes, Pomeroy; greatThe victory over the highly
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. R.ussell Roush, New Haven,
_l'egarded
Nittany Lions
and Mr. and Mrs. Eber Roush and Mrs. Emma Ryan, all of
earned
Curci
the United
Mason.
(
Press International coach of
the week honors this week.
Kentucky's vicrory was all
LEBANON RESULTS .
Orioles' Weav.er
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) - the more surprising since UK
Farve! Boy won the featured had whipped Pellll State .the
•
': best '77 manager
$1,000 claiming pllce at Leba- year before in Lexington and
non Raceway '1\tesday night, had lost its top halfback in
covering the !llile ih 2;06 2- Rod Stewarkearlier in the
season an4 its top defensive ·
5,
ST. WUIS (UPl) - Earl
The winner, driven . by
: Weaver of the Baltimore Kevin Colston, returned $8.40,
• Orioles today was named $3.80 and $3.20 .. Chuck B. ·
• Maj&lt;r League Mlinager of the came second and paid $4.20
: Year by The Sporling News. and $3.40, while Star Tassel
Also receiving votes in the finished third and returned
balloting were Whitey Herwg $4.40.
ol the Kansas City Royals,
The
daily
double
: Bob Lemon of the Chicago combination of Mighty Betsy
: White Sox, Herman Franks of (l)andB.M.Melburn (I) was
:·t he Chicago Cubs, Tom worth $77.40.
: U.sorda of the Los Angeles
A crowd of 1,154 wagered
• DOdgers, Billy Martin of the $105,312.
New York Y81\kees and Gene
Mauch of the · Minnesota
Twins.
In 1975, Idaho Democratic
Despite losing four starters
Sen.
Frank Church charged ·
in the free-agent re-entry
that
the CIA tried to kill
draft, Weav.e r kept the
Cuban
&lt;;:ommunist Premier ·
~ Orioles In the. American
YOU GET ALL THIS
Fidel
Castro
during the ad·
-="-League's Eastern Division
ministrations
of
three
championship race until the
AND ALL COLOR
last three days of the season . presidents.
3-8X10's

the

Pearson 1s Wood Brothers

Mercury had a lap clocked at
158.936 Tuesday, while Yarborough wasn't much slower.
won more money and has
more Winston Cup points ""'Richard Petty toured the
than an)'body else on tbe track at 158.145 mpH:
Darrell Waltrip, winner of
NASCAR circuit so far this
season, predicted it would five races this year, did not
take a speed of ·about 180 practice Tuesday because his
crew was working on his car
at the Charlotte shop .
uwe'll have it over
tomorrow (Wednesday} in
time · to qualify," Waltrip
said .
But Waltrip said he has
only an "outside chance" of
wi.rming tlle pole and is more
interested in making a good
player, linebacker Jeff showing in the race Sunday.
Kovach.
" I think Richard (Petty) is
''There was just no way going to he the man to beat
Pellll State was overlooking for the pole," said Waltrip .
us after the way we beat them
Petty has the edge,
in Lexington the year thecriz_ed Waltrip, because
before," Curci recalled. "I the official qualifyinli speed
frankly didn't give our team will be the average of two
much chance against them laps rather than the fastest
this year. considering the lap.
injuries arid the type of
Pearson said Petty would
personnel Joe Paterno had. " have won the pole for the
Curci's philosophy used in World 600 in the spring if an
preJlilring his team for any average had been used rather
given game is unchanging . than the fastest lap.
"The best way to get
Tom Sneva, who has made.
prepared is to play each a nall\e for himself as a \J .S. &lt;':. ---~
game as if it is the major one Auto Club driver, was trying
of tbe year and do the best to qualify for his first
with what talent you have,"
NASC R. race today.
Curci explained.
--~
Kentucky football has been
overshadowed by the SU&lt;;ci!ss
of the basketball team for
many yea~s. But la~t year,
Curci took his team to its hest
season in decades,' capping
off the year.with a win in the
Peach Bowl.
The enthusiasm from last
season has spilled over to this
year with nearly all ·home
games sold out.
"Certainly a win over a
Grand new lo.oks.
team like Penn State isn't
going to hurt us any, but
we've got a lot of other tough
games coming up, like
Mississippi
State
this

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'lf'

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Phone 992-2107
Pomeroy, Ohio

Bell

I

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.... ___..._ .... -

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NOW is the time to get those Christmas gift
portra1ts - so personal and so unique started. For your appointment call :

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109 High St., Pomeroy
992 -5292
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Fall

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Fri•.&amp;Sat. October 7th &amp;.8th
HRS •.11:00 AM TO '4:30PM

G. C. MURPHY CO.
Point

·A

weekend, Florida, and Georgia," Curci said. uwe can't
afford to rest on the Penn
State game by any means."

$10.95
TOTAL COST

••

I

1

genera . llu.w. _campaign
director, began his sentef\~;e
the following day at Miil&lt;l\'l!ll
Air Force Base, Ala.

Introducing Pontiac!;
------"""''- · best year yet ! ·

3-5X7's
15-WALLETS

ONLY

11

suttsare
smart
this

miles per hour to win the
pole. He said seyeral of the 60
drivers entered in the $250,000
event are capable of wirtning
the front slot.

grid coach of week
By RANDY MINKOFF
LEXINGTON, Ky . (UP!)
- Kentucky Coach Fran

h. f f

ouse c 1e o sta , slarted
his term ':June 21 at Lompoc,
Ollif.
Mitchell, Nixon's attorney
-~...;.. _ _ ,
w

•

Curci named UPI's

:
POINT PLEASANT - The Huntington District of the
: ..United Methodist Church will present a Mission Study
:; Workshop SUnday, Oct. 9, at the Trinity United Methodist
:· Church in Point Pleasant, 3-5 p.m.
-:
This workshop is being organ ized and sponsored by the
: Robert M. Maring, District Missionary Secretary for all
: pastors, mission work area chairpersons, United Methodist
:,Wcmen Christian Global Concerns coordinators, and all
• per9011s who will 1M: leading mission study groups.
:.
The 1977-78 Mission Study is on "The Caribbean Cresce nt, "
:, "The Local Church in God's Mission" and " Women and the
:,;.Bible." It will be led by a district mission study team from
: Huntingtoo .

H

.._..._. --~-~--------..-­

in National 500 event today'

By JERRY MITCHELL
CHARWTTE, N.C. (UPI )
- David Pearson is one of
those drivers rated as a top
contender to win the pole
position at the National 500
today. But having won the
pole nine consecutive times
at · Charlotte
Motor
Speedway, Pearson figures
MASON - The Rev. Mrs. Evelyn L. Maring is attending he shouldn't gripe if he
the 22nd annual West Virginia Conference of United Methodist doesn't do it again.
Ministers' Wives Fellowship at Cedar U.kes Oct. 4-0. As the
''I don't know if we can win
second vice president of the conference Mrs. Maring . will
conduct and speak at a memorial service entitled
~~Celebration of We" for Ole 19 wives and widows who hav~
died during this past year.
.
The main speaker at the meetings will be the Rev. David
:·Redding, son of a West Virginia circuit rider, a pastor in
..,• Delaware,. Ohio and author
. .61 14 books. ·

OR
ARMOUR

c

.

rt.

TURKEYS

2

Pride

I

.,.,':::

B

HAMS

0
: ••

Martha White

j

PICNIC

•

VIa siC

Prices EHedive Thursday, 29 thru Oct. ht
Right ~eserved To limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
'
9 , t; 11 ,
Saturday 9:00-9:00

By
Alma
MarshaU
·
·

.

Dixie

•

News. . .Notes. . \1~. Sente!lces reduced for Mitchell .and cohorts

WASHINGf!,lN (UPJ) WESTOOI UM
.
..
J udge John Smca Tuesday
Army 1st U
f!A - A group of relatives and fr1ends met reduced the J'l}l terms of
Airport Sun~ r~~ L. Clar)t upon his am val at Charleston W~tergate pri soners J ohn
past22monUl y ~ hernoon .
Clark, ~tattoned Ill Germany the Mttchell, H. R. Haldeman
Mel Clark.' s, IS mneon eave. He IS the son uf Mr. and Mrs . and John Ehrlichman to one
Meeting h'
M
yea r.
Leonard Fie!: :re
Mel Cla rk and Sally , Mr. and Mrs.
Sirica's decision meant
• Gordon Clark •Che'stan R rs. Jeff Harbrecht, State Trooper Ehr liclu nan would be eligible
Zerkle.
•
er ou.sh_!lnd Mr. a nd Mrs. Wtlharn for parole after Oct . 28, and
Mitchell and Haldeman are
eligible next Jun• .
MASON - Librarian Mrs. Ray (Eve lyn ) Proffitt has
His decision came after the
announced the library will have a book sale starting Saturday only Watergate figur"'i still
Oct.ll·l~ U1 the garage adjoining from 1 to5 p.m. daily.
'
H anyone has paperback boo'ks or old hardback volumes to
donate, they wUl·be accepted . H useable, the library will keep
.lhem; the ones which cannot will be &gt;Old.
.

HAM
~B. $}39

TOILET TISSUE •••••••• ::~~:~:·. 79'
·' ARINE •••••••••••••••••••
· quart.;;-, ,b.39'
MA.R·G
4
5th &amp; Pearl. Racine, 0.
LONGHORN
SAUERKRAUT. •••••••••••••
':.
59
___.
PHEBE' STORE'
-- '
CHEESE
SELF RISING. FLOUR.:~.~~- $3.29
SLICED $159
o~ ao
"diiiiiiiiii~
.GS
.
10
ct.
894
~
LB.
TRASH BA .. •.••.••
CLOSED
CHUNK . $}39
GREER PEACHES ••• ~~::~':. 2/994
LB•
4
.SALTINE CRACKERS ••••• ~~!~.39
3 lb.
Idaho
ROUND
· Bartlett
SLICED
0
YELLOW
POTATOES
KIDNEY
BEANS
•••
'
.
~:::: 4/$1.00 BEEF
.STEAK
.PEARS
ONIONS 10 lb. bag COFFEE MATE •••••••••••2:.o;~ $1.59 LIVER
3 lb.
LB. $}39
Valley
$}29
0
$} ()0
4 LB. 29e
BUTTERMILK
•••
·
.
~
•••••••
~:~:'~
~.69
,

~"'

••

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---rHE SHOP

~-

'"

~-·

-~«:;;&gt;.:::::::,-:;:;;:;:;:;;~;;(:;:;(:;.;-;.;.;.;.•.-.;.;.;.;.-.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,...•·.·.·

Masan ('.()unty

:~.

S, St . Joh n ' sMinn . U -1}
6. Frank. &amp; Marshalr (3-0) 43
7. Hampden. Sydney (3· 11 34 '
8. Glassboro St. (J-tl •·
31 '
22
9. Chico St.ote (2-01

Division II

·1.,

~1 ....
36 ~·
32 ....

10. !tiel Nor(h Ala . 14·01
24 ..
10. !tiel Tenn. Tech 14·01 24 .
Division Ill
Points
·
h
h
Team
·
etg t , ninth and lOth, 1. Wltienberg !3-0!
60
respeclil•ely,
2. Baldwin· Walla ce 13·01
56
50 ,
MISSION , Kan .· (UPII J. lthaca !3-01
The NCAA Oi\l lsi on II and 4. Concordia Minn . (40-0} 47 '
Oi'll ision fll . ratlngs :

!&gt;.~dll ~

&lt;Ill '

.Q :J

5. Montano St. 13·11

Louisville 24, Tulsa 29
Maryland IS, Syracuse 13
Kansas %2, Miami (Fla.} 17
1\llaml (0.·1 35, Marshall 6
Michigan %4, Mich. St. 14
supremacy.
Navy 20, Air Force It
Ithaca (~) moved up one
Arizona St. 36, Ne" Mexico 7
notch to third following its 17-.
No. Carolina %3, Wake Forest
8 wpt over.bJfred. Concordia
16
14-0) is rateo fciurth in its first
'
Indiana 30, Northwestern 20
poll appearance of the season
Ohio Sl. 3%, Punlue-28
• •
while Glassboro State (3-1) ,
Texas 35, Oklahoma 24
Chico State (2-0) and Hobart
Washtngtoo 27.. Oregon 10
(~) also are newcomers to ,
CUT -WRA,PED-FROZE~
,Brigham Young 21, Oregon
the pnll and are ranked
MISSION,
Kan.
~
UP!
)
St. 6
Call Dick Vaughan At
Penn State 44, Utah St. !.f • Unbeaten Texas, on the heels . ~.
of a 72-15 triumph over Rice
' The
Brown 28, Peon 17
9,~2-3374-992-3426-992-3471
MIAMI (UPII
Saturday, Continues to domi·
Colum bla 24, Prtaceton 13
For An Appointment
nate the NCAA Di,•ision I Miami Dolphins reactivated
TCU 22, Rice 1.2
Terrv Anderson Tuesday,
San Jose St. 42, Santa Clara team statistics this week wifu.
Our aim . is to serve the people of the Big
first place s tan dings in plan,;;ng to use the Bethune·
Bend Area .
13
rushin g, Scorin g, rush ing Co9kman graduate as a
Duke 25, So. Carolina 21
·' _,_
. . -, .
defense and scoring defense. backup wide receiver and
Idaho 21, Idaho St. 17
The Longhorns have now special teams man .
So. Calli. ;IS, Alabama 32
No. Tex. St. 26, So. Miss. 18 outsco red their opponents
184-15 in thr ee ga mes,
Staoford 33, UCLA 27 •
averaging 6!.3 points per
Teon 21, Georgi~~ Tech %0
game agajnst an average of
Grambling 31, Tenn. St. 21
just five . Texas, with its
Colo. St. 27, UTEP 14
multip
le set off ense, is
Wyoming 24, Utah 6
forecast :
392.3 yards per
averaging
Saturday, Oct. 8
Vanderbllt 28, LSU 21
game
on
the
ground while
Arizona 27, Texas Tech 13
Richmond 14, VMI 13
)ielding an average rush of
Army 21, Villanova 17
Calif. %2, Wash. St. 21
just 38.3 yards pet· game.
Auburn 18, No. Carolina St. H W. VIrginia 36, Temple 7
But the fourth-ranked
W. Mich. 28, Kent St. 22
Baylor 36, SMU 14
Boston College %8, Tulane 21 Va. Tech 19, Wm. &amp; Mary 17 Longhorns will be hard
pressed to maintain their
Bowling Green 18, Toledo 7 Wisconsin 31, llllnols 28
incredible offensive and
Clemson 35, VIrginia 15
Yale 21; Dartmouth 15
defensive pace when it plays
th ird -ranked Oklahoma
Saturday in Dallas .
Grambling has .displaced
Brigham Young in two offenminutes of play. The half
sive ca tegories, taking· over
ended~.
By DAVID COWELL
four years with a tough tie the total offense lead with a
The third quarter produced
VIRGINIA WATER , against Peter Oosterhuis of
NO OBLIOA 'JION.·
a tally for Gallia alter a England · (UP! ) - · B,ritish Britain, who along with Faldo 536-yard average and passing
wit
h
a
374-yard
offense
blocked punt pot them on the Open and U.S . Masters went unbeaten during the
70 8UYI
average.
eight yard line, first and goal. champion Tom Watson will Ryder Cup.
Louis
iana
Tech
is
this
The last score came when a be gunning to beat his matchPGA champion Lanny
Gallia player picked up a play jinx Wednesday when he Wadkins, plagued by a sore . week 's total defense leader
• Chi ldren or adults
fumble and raced 62 yards for tees off as the 4-1 favorite for throat and a heavy cold, was with an average yield of 152.7
posed individually or
yards per game (three yards
pay dirt .
the $225,000 World Matchplay a doubtful starter in his
in groups
The Warriors threatened Golf Championships.
match against Britain's Neil· less than what Texas !las
many times but could not
Watson , who needs the Coles,' a . 100-1 outsider. But allowed! while Southern
• Limit one free"
punch it across . The closest to $52,5oo first prize to erase Green, who turned down the University . is tops in pass
portrait per family
paydirt the Meigs team came Johnny Miller 's 1974 single- chance to practice Tuesday, defense by allowing just 14
all day was when a Gerald se.ason earnings record of was all set to tackle completions in four games for
Mills pass to Scott Reuter $353,000, was upset by Australia;s Graham Marsh. an average yield of 49.5 yards
• Choose your llx14 from
· ·
per game.
was barely out of the · Britain 's rookie Nick Faldo in
several poses
In the other matches, Ray
Tennessee is the .net
receiver 's reach in the end the singles during the U.S. Floyd was paired against
zone.
Ryder Cup triumph over . Ernesto Acosta of Mexico punllng leader with a 45.2
• Excellent quality and
There was excitement all Britain and Ireland last while Australia's David yard average, Gram,bling
color reproduction
through the contest even month .
Graham, who edged Irwin for leads in !&gt;Jill ret\u'ns wtill a
though the score seemed
Now he joins a !&amp;-strong the title in 1976, was playing :&gt;Jl.2 average and Minneso""is
··e' Portraits will be
lopsided. The game was hard- field and faces a possible 144 South African Hugh Baiocchi. No. 1 in kickoff returns with a
dellvere&lt;J to' our
36-yard average .
fought and interesting. Coach holes of golf in four days over
Baiocc hi 's countryman,
· store
Ned 'Moxon of the Warriors the 6,969-yard Burma Road ..livetimewinnerGary Player,
said, " When this team cuurse at Wentworth if he is was out to make the case for
elimihates those costly turn- to clinch the title for the first an older generation of golfing
overs, somebody is going to time.
superstars with his match
be surprised. "
... . . .
For the first Iinne in its 14- against Spain's Manuel
The Warriors . invite all year history, the competition Pinero, the European PGA
area football fans to come out has heen doubled .in size to .· · champion, while Faldo, a
Saturday night to see what cater to 16 players. But U.S. professional ·for only 18
kind of football these young Open championHubert Green · months , was trying to best
adults play . when the has criticized tournament or- Spain's Severiano BallesWashington County 16ers , ganizer Mark McCormack,- !eros.
come to Middleport at 7:30 who manages 11 of the 16
p.m.
taking part.
CORNWALL, Ontario
'G
14 6 12 .0
" I don 't think it's right for (UP!) ~ The Indianapolis
0 0 0 0 the man who controls golfers
w
M G to run the tournaments too. It Racers fell behind early to
FD
14 !6 leads to favoritism, " said the Birmingham Bulls
Pen.
125 45 Green. "! don't think what Tuesday night and lost their
Rush
303 291 McCormack does is always -in only preseason tuneup game
for the World Hockey
Pass
35 53 golf'1i~st . interests. ''~..•li-''"•·
season, 4-2.
OVAFL Staodtngs
In the open'ing round , Association
Vaciav Nedomansky, Joe
L L T Watson took on Taiwan 's
WMPO
2 0 0 Chinese Open champion Nor is, Tony Cassolato . and
Wood County
2 'I 0 Hs\eh Min Nam while Hale Tim Sheehy tallied the goals
Gallia C~unty
SATURDAYS
Washington County I 2 0 Irwin , posted at odds of 6-1, for the Bulls while Dale
9 til N ....
0 2 0 looked for his third victory in Smedsmo and Dave Fortier
MIDDLEPORT STORE ONLY
Meigs County
hit the nets for the Racers. L._.-:....::...:.:..::.:....:0:...":..."_--J

Football
Forecast .

l

Bald • Wall

.~~ Da.lly Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesdav. Oct.~, 1977

W.Va.

Redesigned. Resized. Remarkable Grand LeMans!

Pontiac

YThe Mark of Great Cars
•

·-'.

··-

�•

.'

•

•
6- The Da•ly Sentmel,lol•~dleport·Pomero;• . 0 .. Wednesday, 0&lt;-t . ~. 1977

~r·~::::::::::=:=x-::=:=:::~:::=:::::·:...~:·:·:·=·=·=·=·=·~=·:·=::::::.:::::::;:=:=:=:=:=:~:====::;=:====:=;=;=·=·~·:·:·:·:-:-:·=·:·=-i:~

Alcoholism topic for sorority meeting ,[ Helen I;Ielp
A program on akohohsm
was presented at the TUt'Sdi.~Y
ru~ht mei&gt;ttn~

of the Xa Gam-

ma Mu Chapter vf Beta
S1~ma Ph1 Sorority .held in
the ColW11bus and Southern
Oluo Electm· Co.
Bruer Pu:krns, program
de \·el o pcr
for
the
Southeastern Ottlo ""Regaonal
Cuun&lt;'ll on Alcoholism. and

Norma Jarrell who auended
the alcoholism workshop at
!Nnu;on Um\'ers1t1· this swn·
mer under sp01u;orslup of the
sororit)· .were the speakers
for the meeting.
Jane Daggell transferred
into the Chapter and received
her exemplie·r rituals. Carol
Jean Ada.1m reported that the

mt&gt;ans,. ''hainnan renundrd

I

f

Hanover College Campus.

Us. • •

By llt·len Bott el · . :~\

_,•
MOMS.IN·LAW. ONCE REMOV£D!
or tht' sorority .
DEAR HELEN :
You asked how ex-wives got along with friendly ex-mothers·
which will ~ at Uw home of · Dor&gt;s E win ~ and.-.\tartha
McPhail were hoslcsse&gt;.
and
fathers·in·law ; how_, conflict was 3\'ottled with new
Dcbb&gt;e FiJ1!aw.
.
· spouses, etc.
Donatloru) will be taken nn
[may h;lvethetopper in such stones.
When! was divorced, my mother-in-law said I was "still he r
•
daughter.'' When I m~rried again five yeaJS later, she l'ame.to
vi's it me and my new husband.

CHOICES.
'
.

Karen B.laker Ph.D.
If in tbe past you have been

By Karen Blaker. Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
chapter has n.•t-eived three
absolutely cannot get my
star rartng ·· from internal!ona l. Karen Stanley, socaal children to pitch in with
chain nan, reported that a chores around the ho~ . I
skating party will be held at come _home from work !?:X·
the Skate-a-way Rink on hausted and try to convince
Route 7 on Oct. 16 from l::W to them to help. They obje&lt;:t.
4 p.m. for members of the complain and even cry. Over
the years, to tell you the
cha pter and their familie~.
A thank you letter was read · truth, I have found that it actually take less energy just to
do everything myself. They
are 10 and 12 years old.
Shouldn't they be old enough
to understand since their
father and I were divorced,
•
and I've had to go to work
myself, it JUS! isn't like the
good old days ' Why do they
keep making my life so
unbearable? ·
DEAR READER .,. I im·
agine that in the ·'good old
Third place trophy in the .days" you did all the
· first annua l sta tewide household work. Instead of
Wurlitzer . Piano competition punishing yourself for the
held recently in Indianapolis, changed
circ umstances
Ind., went to Anna Elberfeld, however, you need to ask
granddaughter of the late yourself whether or not the
AJfred Elberfeld, Pomeroy. " good old days" way was in
and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. fact the best approach for
Richard
Elberfeld
of raising your children. I
Hamilton.
believe that · when children
The competition, a national adapt to doing certain
event, is held in every major household chores, they are
city across the United States. preparing themselves for the
A total of 55 entrants com· repetitive, sometimes boring,
peted in the Indianapolis but necessary tasks of
event, All contestants were · adulthood.
placed into three division
.Surely you wouldn 't want
with a Jirst 1 second and third them to tuf!l out like a fonner
prize being a warded in each patient of mine who never
category . Miss Elberfeld had to take responsibilities at
part icipated in the Young home. He grew up believing
Artist-Collegiate Division instead, in the "infinite varie, consisting of 23 extremely ty of life 's experiences," ' jlut
gifted pianists representing be encountered severe proseveral colleges throughout blerns in his job as a
the state .
carpenter. · While he loved
Miss Elberfeld who studies carving the first leg of a
with C. Kimm Hollis at chair, he could not bring
Hanover College, presented, himself to finish the other
"Doctor Gradus Ad Par· three. It went against his
nassum" by Debussy in the grain, so to speak.
competition . She plans to
compete this winter in the
annual Aspen Competition to
be held at Butler University
and in.the spring Will present
a sophomore recital on the

~j

rt•ported on •the combmcd
projt't'l of all thret&gt; ehaph.·r~

members of ilt&gt;n\.S for ihe "tayour..()"''" thing·· a U(..'t ton to Ue
held at the next meet\ng

able to influence your
children not to play with
knives,.-or not to take rides
with strangers, or not to
cheat on exams. you CAN in·
fluence them to help you
around e house. You can . .ff
you really want help.
It may be that you are more
doubtful of your children's
love since the divorce and
need to continue the "old"
kinds of mothering tasks to
reassure yourself that. you
are still a lovable mother.
You ask their help but they
sense that you are not
serious.
A solution: Hold a family
meeting. Make a list of the
chores. Divide them up . ·A
matter-of-fact approach is
the most helpful. Expect
them to follow through
faithfully and have certain
consequences ready for the
times they will test you; - as
they most certainly will. The
less ambivalent you are, the
less struggle you will en·
counter from them. And
believe it or not, you will be
loved more than before.
A martyred mother clut·
ters a household with guilt,
pain and anger. Her anger ill
a major obstacle to freely ex·
changed love. Even if your
children don 't provide you
with a spotless house
(remember they are not yet
adults), !he change will have
a cleansing effe&lt;:t · - emotionally. Good luck.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O . ..Box.
489, Radio City Station, New
York NY 10019, Due to
volume of mail she carmot
reply personally,. but ques·
lions of general -interest wl.ll
1le discussed in future ,col·

A tea girl
wtns
trophy

'

af~han

to be awardetl on
Oct. 22. wtth pi't~eettS to go h•
ltw Pulllt'rt.l}' t'lllf' r j!t..' IH.')'
squa'd . Jant•t Pt·adt•y
an

from the St&gt;mor Cnauns
Center for a cuntnbu tum.
Charlotte Hanning, ways and

WIUlS .

Fall festival promises fun for all

1

The only problem was that his mother was stayi ng with us at
the tirne . I went into trauma at the idea of having the two meet,
but there was no Y1ay out .
The first mornmg I rose early to try and prevent catastrophe
(former ··Morn'' arri\'ed late so ihtrodu ctions were avoided). I

S\' HACUSJ-:
A fall
fcsll v~d Wlillx lldli Thunilla)'
mght begmrung at 7 p . lll . al
the Srntl'USl' Elt•mL·nt.ary

St:hvul.

ComnuttL·e~

fur th(• !l.·~tival

to whtl'h llll\ pllbill' IS iiiVIlc&lt;i
arl' as full uws :
Door - -t tt'kl'ls Syracuse
tl·~u·lwrs .

li&lt;-~.nH'S

Tl ckt•ts : Joyce

S1sson. Marilyn Deemer.
CouJJtry kitcht•n : l .ouisl'

Frank. Pat Philsoll, Cla ude
Owens, SusieGnJrser. Sarah
Housh. and Na nl'y Pattefson.
Cider, donuts and pop:
carol Adams, &amp;mdy Cobu,
Carol Jett, and Joy Bentley .
Sa11dwiehes: Wanda St"f.

found them already at table together, cha tting happily away· ford, Darlene Ritchie.
they had discov.ered they were both early risers, enjoyed the Jeanette Duffy , Ed1e
same kind of breakfast and had many fnemories and ex.periences m cmrunon.

Rush party
was enjoyed

They became fast friends, corresponded over the years and
timed their visits to us so they could be here together.
Moral : Pick a husband with a great moth~r! ·LUCKY
P.S. To serioUSI)"answer your question, I think It depends on
the quality of the relationship with thein·laws. My own mO't'fier
died when I was a child so I appreciated and love&lt;) my mother·
in·law. When. her son and I were divorced she did not take
sides. She told him she loved us both, and even though she had .
four daughters of her own, none was closer to her than I was.
When he remarried and his new wife objected to our rela·
tionship, she was a gulsy lady and told them hoth she intended
to stay friends with me. She had enough love for both past and
present daughters·in·law ·
My new M·in· L is also a special lady who accepts people as
they are a nd does not sit in judgment. She has a wonderful wit
andsenseofhumo~ .
The two are now 86 and 89 years young. I will be content if I
ca n q.g:e as gracefully as they have a nd be as good an in~ law to
my children's spouses.· RUTH P .

•

DEAR HELEN :
Here 's another e.-parents·in·law story. I married at 16; he
was 18. We broke up two years later. He'd always lived with his
legal guardians, his real mother being in the South. We kept in
touch with all his '·parents."·
Though divorced for"three years, I'm welcome in their
homes. They love to baby si\ my ;.year-old, and are really
·
great.
They even treat my boyfriend as " family. " My Souipern M·
in·L invited us down to visit her,.and we had a marvelous time.
My Northern parents-in-law see us often. .
Same thing happened with my 'brother after he divorced.
Our family still sees his e'x, and she's remarried. Her parents
and my folks are best friends. though they didn't knoworie
another before the wedding, The whole families are congenia l.
I think it's wonderful that in-laws remain friends after 3
break-up. Why not, if you're compatible ? · DAUGHTER WITH
THREEMOMS
.

DINNER SET
Harrisonville Lodge 411
I'&amp;AM and Eastern Star
·chapter 2~5 will hold a
potluck dinner Saturday at
6::W p.m. to honor the widows
and widowers of both the
lodge and chapter. Members
are urged (o·attend. Meat will
be provided.

THE CLASS
PEOPLE
REMEMBER.
1 Hl: I\

l t1 tl ~'i

Got a problem? An adult subject for tliscussion? You can
talk it over in' her column if you write to Helen Bottel, care of
this .n~wspaper. Copyright, 1977, by King Features Syndicate,
DENVER ( UPI ) - Rookie
Inc.
-·forward Walter Davis scored
16 points and teammate
Curtis Perr y added 13
Tuesday as the Phoenix Suns
defeated Seattfe, 1!1).9~. in an'
NBA preseason game .

RIVERSIDE
VOLKSWAGEN

•

(:I -\ "lSIC

'"
r h,. tul( ~~m ll h 111 l L1

~·•n"uu .t n\tl.ll\;

WENT VISITING •
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush
and granddaughter, Christi .
Smith, visited several days in
Col umbus with Mr. and Mrs:
Larry Flowers. They wen!
especia lly fur Christi' s
checkup.

::::J

ruil.! h ,1, , h l'

c' om k' 11 Jp•1f ·l r\

.!c·l~l,
··:.. \.1t !

th.11 J' r c~ t n pt, l'l'urlt' w .1 .~.
&lt;. ~'c '. •l Uf nn ~!'' :5 t} !ccll n .l ur. 1hlr1

\',\l ,l Jiu !H' ~ , (!H: pcrkq .nt• wcr !11
pl .ttlnwn, .nhll' li ~I! Hnt: • ·,l w11 h 1lw

~&lt;:num r cl l,l ll ll &gt;nJ &lt;•T htr l h • tl •ll l" '.'1
l ••t•r ~ h ;1 1..: e ·~ .1!' 4\ll ~ :.. lr .1uhl

If tlw r m~ \ t ,md~ oui , it \

.111

H. . ) ll hn ~.

R.JOHNS.
LTI\
-· "'

CHAP MANS
.SHOES

.

Next to
Elberfelds in
Pomeroy

~0\9&gt;
~Jnelers

m E. Main, Pomeroy

M.a in St. Pomeroy, 0 .
l eat her re lers 10 uppers

varlous projects for the ing her recent hospitaliza·
holiday season were planned lion.
during a meeting of the
•
American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
recently at tho hall.
It was noted that the unit
has several girt items for the
Athens Mental Health Center
veterans and the Chillicothe ·
Veterans Hospital. The junior
unit is making note pads to be
sent to the hospitals. Arcadia
Nursing Home and the Gallia
County Children's Home will
~!so be remembered during
the holiday season.
Mrs. Freda Clark presided
with several members of the
unit and . the post biing
reported ill. Those reported
ill were Thelma Sayre,
Louise

DEAR RUTH :
tivity . Games were pla yed
You omitted one thing : it takes a great daughter-in-law to and refresluncntsserved dur·
produ~e a great mother·m-law, and v1ce versa. ~he cherrustry ing the evening .
was nght here. and I'm s.ure much of the credit goes to you:,
~. H .

Pomeroy Polfce Chief Jed
Webster monthly report to
Pomeroy Coun.cil Monday
night showed the department
investi~ated 15 accidents
during September and made
31 arrests ; including one

CLOSED
UNTIL

L.ookfor
ha ppy trails ahead
in Pedwin bool s.
Wilh weslem stitching,
s moot h leather,
slacked up heels.

F or the party members and
g uests came" attired in the
co~twne of thei r favorite ac·

-

.Hawkins,

Other activities inCluded
issuing 1,134 parking tickets,
collecting $3,260 !rom meters
and driving 4,100 miles.
Arrests for the month ·and
the number of each

Qrganizational
·meeting held
An organizational meeting
of the Junior High Forum of
MeigsJ.unior High School's
eXecutive conunittee was
held recently and plans made
for the'first session in late Oc·
tober.
,. .
The board member~
discussed membership and
the possibility of having
membership cards printed.
Programs and room visita·
tion along "ith money mak·
ing projects were also
discussed. It was ·noted that
the speaker for the first
meeting will be John Mora,
principal of Meigs Junior
High.

•

.

ANGELAIRES

Bible study will begin
A 1\ible study class was by Helen Steiner Rice was applanned for Thursday even· proved by the class, after being at 7::W over a several,_ipg ,.· prese nted by Mary
week period when the Golden Brewer. : •.
Rule Class met Tuesday night
Mrs. Louise. Thompson
at the Middleport First Bap- opened the meeting with
, tist Church.
prayer. Mrs. Doris Car&lt;jer
Leader for the Bible discus- read a poem concerning the
sion will be James Brewer. Bible and entitled • "How
The ditlller of the class usual· Readeth Thou." There was a
ly. held in. November was question and answer sheet
discussed and it was decided from Billy Graham presented
that Mrs. Katheryn Metzger, by Mrs. Thompson. For Bible
president, will bring the mal· study, Brewer presented a
ter before the Sunday School ·portion of a sennon by Dr.
class !his Sunday. Purchase John Rice about the thief on
of · the hook, "Somebody the cross.
l.oves You", a book of p'?"try

GRAND
OPENING
. SPECIAL

Chateau Beauty.Salon
'30, '25, •20.5U and

'18.~0

PERMANENTS
Special for the Month of October

' s3.00 OFF

. On"'"'~~ the Above

CHATEAU BEAUlY SALON
&gt;andy Miller, Owner
214 E. 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 997-7606

~C

WESTBROOK BLANKET

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
United Press International
Mid· Amerlcan Conference
conference All Games

(

ge
3

5ge

BARnETT ·
lb
Blue Bonnett
PEARS •••••••••••• ~ MARGARINE.........
OHIO COLBY By the
s· .
16 oz. .BAG CELO
49~
LONGHORN
PieceLB. 1.49
PARSNIPS ..... !.~~.
LB. s159
CHEE.SE •••• Sliced• • •••
•

2 lb. Ba

Fried Chicken

Dinner.~~~s2.19

20 OZ. WEL'CHES

GRAPE
JELLY•••••••••••••••••••••
~·····~········
79t..
15'1• OZ. CH E F·s .
.
.
CHEESE.PIZZA~ •••••••.•••••••••••••••.~ ••••••••• sse
JUMBO
·
·
3
.BOUNTY TOWELS •• ;.~~ .. .'.................·••• 67~
·46 OZ. WELCH AID
\
GRAPE DRINK ................................... 59*
12 OZ. DJNTY MOORE
•
·
"CORN BEEF••••••••••-......·••••••••••••••••••• $1.09
1511• OZ . VIETTA
CHill WITH BEANS.... ~ ...............·........ 59~
22 oz.
PALMOLIVE ·UOUID............................J9~
28 OZ. TEEN QUEEN
,
CUT GREEN '&amp; SHELLY BEANS ......... 2/89c
6 OZ . MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••• :•••••••. 53.59
'•

Kent Stale
Eastern Mlch
Central Mlch
Ball State
Bowling Green
Western Mlch
·Miami
Ohio Unlv
Toledo
Nor.lll

a

Blue Division

Conference All Games
·
w.l.l. w.J.I.
Baldwln-Wallc 0 0 0 3 0 0
Otterbein ·
·000 300

Marietta
Ohio Wes.
Mount Union
Denison

o' o 0 " 0 3 0
o oo 1 2 o
o oo 1 2 o

• . Kenyon

1xx

) GIANT
FACE

Fils
9 to 11

x.Oberlin

x.not competing for' title
Hoosier-Buckeye

Conference
Conference All Games
w.l.l. w.l.t.
Hanover
300 300
Defiance
l o 1 2 O· 1
Findlay
2 o 1 2 o1
Wilmington
11o 1 2 o
Bluffton
12o 2 20
Earlham
120 120

Anderson
Taylor
Manchester

120 13 0
0 20 1 20
0 20 0 30

Akron
Cincinnati
Ohlo'State
Central St.
Ashland
Youngs. St.
Dayton

3 2 0
2 2 0

Others

Case Western

lrarri

I

•.
w.J.t
3 0 I
3 01
3 10
2 2 0
3 7 0
3 10

130
0 3 0

MOCK TURTLE

,--------!~~

MENS
BROWN JERSEY

PLAYING
CARDS

ON SALE!.We Need Room .
Holiday Flowers Are Arriving
Reg. JOe

se

'FLANNEL
SHIRTS

$12 .99

DISH
CLOTHS

5For

4

STORM
WINDOWS

24e

pai1

2 Pair $100

2

soe

HANGING
PLANTER

.

Woven
Wood

REGULAR PRICE

~and Mens
WINTER
0liTERWEAR

• 3 household sizes In
heavy' plastic. Assorted ·
colora.
·

TUCKER
PLASTICS

and

WDMENsSWEATERS

'

BED
PILLOWS
Quitted Covers

-

for

Jacquards, Florals, Solids, Prints

VELOUR
BATH TOWELS

3

.

FOR

Poly

ARTIFICIAL
FRUIT .
REGULAR 11.00

MENS

TUBE

socKS

.

4

Giant values! Thick , absorbent
towels. If perfect, you'd pay $3."
· each. Stock your nnen closets now.

300 SHEUS

N~':::K ss~ ~

Firestene
Foam

FOR

6" SALAD BOWLS

OFF

.SOLID
COLORS
'

Knee-Hi Sox.

7" Butcher ' Knives, utility of Paring
Knives, Citrus Khife, 8" Ham Slicer, Roast
Slicer, 5andwich Knits. Stainless steel
blades.

20%D

-MATTRESS
COVERS

SHOWER
CURTAlNS

Ceramrc Clay

KITCHEN KNIFES

VinyfPiaslic

Fitted-Twin
Plastic

6ft. x6ft .

'200

tbs . to 160 tbs.

$100

99e

$3~

HANGING PLANTER

Fils
91o 11
Girls

cantrece.
our regu\a.r S9~ose in beige
seam\ess Pa.dentvone sin ms 90
orfaupe st\a . .
. .

14x14xl4

Woven MeSh

3ft.x9tt .

'

LARGE ·8" DEEP

PRICE

PAKll HOSE

Reg.
39c

' Plas;tic

3fl .x7ft.

Aluminum Gold or Silver

~OMENS

Sizes S to ,XL

TREASURED MEMORIES
SCHOOL PHOTO FRAME

RUN,N·ERS

sge

GR01 SA\IINGS!

REG. 15.99

Reg .

JOe

iEV4ElR~

lsi Quality

Rustic wood frame glass
with mats for Kindergarten
thru Senior in high schoo1.
A unique gift for the
grandparents.

Save

All .
toSlUME

MENS

CUSHIONED VINYL

Limit 4 Pair "

13e

to~

Rug
to
$6 .99

GLOVES

Reg. 19c

Reg . 15c

SET OF 3

WOODEN
KITCHEN
SPOONS
Save
30c

39~

f' its 9 to 11

000 0 30

0 30
x x x 1 20

. ~~ '222

FALL FLOWERS

I

Red Division

Conference All Games
w.l.l w.t.l.
Wittenberg
0 00 3 00
Capllal
0 00 3 00
Wooster
b Q. 0 3 0 0
- Musklngum
0 0 2 I 0
Ohio Northern 0 0 0 1.2 0
Heidelberg
.0 0 0 0 3 0

LONG SLEEVE NYLONS
TURTLENECK

Entire Stock Artificial

020 ' 050
Ohio Conference

John Carroll

I

w.t.l. w.l.t.
20 0 3 I 0
3 1·0 · 4 1 0
210 • 10
2 1o 2 20
1 10 2 20
1 10 1 3 0
0 0 0 3 1 0
0 20 1 3 0
0 20 0 4 0

PANT TOPS

SALE STARTS THURSDAY 10 A.M.

MIXING BOWL'SET

standings

Women's and Teens

Pink, blue , mint or yellow .
Acrilan and polyester blend .
Irregulars of 69c value.

'

Ermano

Polyester

72X84 FOR FUU OR TWIN BEDS

· 2 colors ..•
Regular 39c

mechanic

a.wghi Sunday and there now
was on ly one chief mechanic
to service the three Ferrari
entries in the Canadian race,
and he was worried his own
performance could suffer as
a result.

Long Sleeve
Size 4 to 7

OH
BOYI

NYLONS

Lauda said Ferrari fired
chief

KNIT SHIRTS

'

KNEE~HI

Ferrari team.

Our Holiday Mdse. Is ln-W.E NEEO ROOM-So We Must Sacrifice Other Items. Plan Now To Attend This Sale EventYOU'LL SAVE!
.. ~
. ' BOYS OR GIRLS

PCTOBER

Ohio grid·

. .. .
LB . 99~
SALAD
.
·······~······
·······················
1 LB. GOLDEN ISLE V
PAK
. PKG $
SLICED BACON .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·• 1•39
SUPERIOR PAK WIENERS.1•2.?.Z~;; ......~~.&lt;:·.89~
3 LB. AGAR
EACH s
4.69
CANNE.D HAMS .............................

repeated phone calls, I;
assau.Jt, 6; running red light,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
1; driving while intoxicated,
RACINE - The Racine ER
3; disorderly CQ~duct, I ; Squad Monday traMported
destruction of property, I; Owen Watson, RD, Racine, a
failure to pay, 1i intoxi.c ation,
medical patient, to Veterans
3; petty · theft, 2 ; assured Memorial HospitaL

'

As You KnOI'I-The Bridge HaS- Been ClOsed 3 Months; and the Powers To Be Don't Seem To Know The Opening Date.

TABLE
•

tires. 1.

TORONTO (UPI )
Aus1rian Niki Lauda, wbo
already has cli nched the
world auto racing driving
championship , Tues1lay
denied he was pulling out of
next weekend 's Canadian
Grand Prix, but said he might
refuse 'to drive if he does not
~t proper support from th•

AN·D. ..... • WE'RE HURTING!
WE MUST MOVE MDSE. NOW AND FASTII

PARSONS

UMoi::.IVI~UE

clear di•'lance, I ; squealing

END OF

AyaneU

Bass, Etta Will, Amanda
Murray, William Wyatt, and
Raytnond Baker.
The fall conference was an·
nounced for Thursday at
Junction City with a school of
instruction to be conducted
by the district chairman. The
roll call of units will be held
with each unit reporting their
paid membership to date.
Unit 128 has 14 paid members .
Thqse who have not paid their
dues are urged to send them
to Mrs. AJbert Roush at Route
4, Box 288, Pomeroy as soon .
as possible. Junior dues are
$3and senior dues at $5. ~
The Eighth District Legion
picnic was announced for
Saturday al the Rutland Post
home . Each family is to take
.a casserole, with hotdogs and
hamburgers to be furnished
by the district.
The Veterans Day dinner
was discussed with post
members of Racine, Mid·
dleport, Pomeroy, and
Rutland and the Auxiliary
units to host the dirmer for the
boxcar roundup.
A thank you note was read
from Mrs. Will for cards dur·

respectively were : leaving
scene, 1; speedin g, ·8;

15 accidents injvuv.eens!tleig'
. .ated '

SILVER BRIDGE
PROBABLY

Meter, and Wanda Teaford.
Clown · toss: Jo Ell en

'

FUEL SAVERS

..

P enny Drop : Donna Nease,
dinna Arnott , Betty VCJn

Gospel group· will
appear in Rutland

A program.of gospel and in· love offering will be taken .
spirational music will be Pictured in the center of the
presented by the Angelaires group is Rosemary Dupler,
Qospel Team ·of Lancaster, leader, who was in charge of
Sunday, 7 p.m. at the Rutland the music at the United
Methodist Women's Mission
United Methodist Church.
WEDNESDAY
&amp;hool
heid in July on the
UNITED METHODIST . _,!;, typical Angelaire p~o­
of Ohio Northern
campus
gram
consists
of
a
selection
WOMEN of the Letart Falls
University,
Ada.
of
gospel
and
inspirational
United Methodist Church,
songs
interwoven with scripWednesay_7 :30 p.m. with.
Mrs. Don Bell. Misoellaneous ture, meditations, insPirasale will be planned. Mrs. tional recitations, dramatizations, etc.
Bell to have the program.
The Angelaires have been
Pomeroy Bowlin9 Lanes
MIDDLEPORT FIRE
singing
for over _IO__i:I!!!_TS_
Tuesday Triphcate
DEPARTMENT AUX·
League
·
preseQting
their
unique
IUARY will meet Wednes·
Sept. 27, 1977
gospel
message
throughout
. day at 7:30 at the fire hall.
Standings
..
Pis.
Plans will be made for a the midwest to churches, Team
revivals, in concerts or . Roy&amp;! Crown Bottling
26
Halloween party.
24
wherever ~ailed on to do so. t. Royal Oak Park
Shamrock Motel
20
POMEROY, LODGE 164,
Fr'ancis Florist •
20
F&amp;AM regular meeting,
David Brickles,
·wednesday, 7::W p.m.; AU citizens center. All ·members . Gen . Contractor
16
Master Masons invited.
Mark
V
.
15
· urged to attend.
.
High individual game
REVIVAL at Zion Free WiU
YOUTH REVIVAL Faith
Cars·on 186 ; Annette
Baptist Church, Lower Plains Tabernacle Church, Bailey Pa.t
Phalin 182.
·
·
on Route 682, 7:30 each Run Road, Thursday through
High series- Helen PhelpS
evening beginning Wed- Sunday with hymn sing on 485 ; Betty Smith 474.
Team high game
nesday. Rev . John Jeffrey, Saturday at 7: :W p.m. nightly.
Shamrock
Motel 454.
Gallipolis, evangelist; Errunett Rawson is pastor.
Team high series ·
special music each evning; Public invited.
' Shamrock Motel 1321.
public welcome.
SATURDAY
• THURSDAY
HYMN SING at Rutland
P9,.MEROY Wesleyan Freewill Baptist Church,
Holiness Church, State Route Saturday, 7:30 p.m. All
L43, revival, Thursday singers invited. Leland
PORTLAND, Maine (UPI)
thiough Oct. 16 with Rev. Haley, pastor, invites the - Dave Cowens scored 16
Mathew ijarden evangelist. public.
points and pulled down a
He is general superintendent . LETART FALLS PTO dozen rebounds to lead the
of Wesleyan Holiness Church sponsored dinner Saturday at Boston Celtics to a 10S.IO~
in Phoenix, Ariz. Rev. Dewey Letart Falls Community Hall overtime win over the Buffalo·
King, pastor, invites public to serving starting at 5 . p.m.; BraVes in 3n NBA exhibition
services at 7:30p.m.
turkey, meatloaf and trim· game Tuesday night.
Charlie
REVIVAL now in progress mings. A country store
Scott
also
at Apple Grove United featuring handcrafted work contributed 16 points for the
Methodist Chur,ch now will be held at same time: Cellics, while Nate Archibald
through Saturday. The Rev: : door prizes. and homemade and Randy Smith scored 19
each for the Braves. '
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr., candy.
Belpre, speaker. Special
SUNDAV
singing each evening. The
CARLETON Church
Rev. Tim Smith is pastor.
ROcK SPRING Grange, homecoming, Kingsbury Rd.,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Sunday, Oct. 9 begins with
The economy car leader in
hall . Practice for t~e first Sunday School at 9: :W a.m.,
Gallipolis has lust received
basket
lunch
at
noon.
AI·
degree.
.
• full lrui:load of me
Program at 2, special
EV ANGEUNE CHAPTI'..R ternoon
V.W.'s. Now in stock - 7
172 O.E.S., 7:30p.m. Thurs· singi ng by the Gospel Tones· Rabbits, 1 Scirocco, 1 Bus:
.
day at the Middleport of Charleston. Other singers
and the pul)lic
Masonic Temple. Dues are payable. New officers will be · welcomed .
elected.
POMONA
GRANGE
FRIDAY
De~ree DCJy. Hemlock Grove
MEIGS Co unty REACT Gr•ngo h•ll. 1:.10 p.m. Sun·
Ga Jlipolis, 0 .
446·9800
l'riday 8 p.m. at senior· day. Potluck dinner tu folluw.

Ifolitfay projects,are made
•
-at auxt'l'14ry 'f!leettn:g

Pendulum : Bob Oe~mer,
l..clvcndl•r, and Sharou Kulm.
Clarence
Frank,
Rush
Pop: Jc(mnic Allen, Jrtme
Philson,
and
John
Pape.
Dill, Ann Hemsley. and Susan
Membership lllble : Susie
Wi11cbrenner.
Nancy Hubbard.
Murphy,
Fish pond: Karen Connblly,
Pmc
table:
Carolyn Me·
Nancy Neutzhnl!. Phyllis
Coy,
Sal)y
Ebersbach.
Terri
Hendricks. J l' fUI IC l .ou o~vis,
Miehacl,
Jm1ice
Lisle;
Judy
Mt~ry _ J.aniee
LavendPr,
Papc,
and
Donna
Aleshire.
Peggy Stout , Mrs.· Larry
Ca ke walk : Carolyn Me·
'l'aylur. ,
Cotton Candy : Mildred Coy .
Pierce , Jamce Lawson, · Spook House : Janet
Peav lcy, Marcia Arnold, Pat
Charlotte Nease.
Ci:l ne Toss : J onetta Davis. Philson, and Martha
Marc1a Arn old, Hilda McPhail.
l)vnations will be taken on
Weaver, Angie Harden,
a
ceramic
Christ.Jrws tree and
Basketball throw: J im
a
door
prize
will be a¥/arded
Adams, 1.8rry Ebersbach.,
Mike· Fry. R. C. toss: Don
Harden, John Lisle, BlJ.I'Q'.
Ml'Coy, and Jerry Aleshire. ·
Dar1 throw : Hugh McPhail ,
Gordon Winebrenner, Millon
Roush, and John Arnott
Bean . bag toss : Pete
Micha el, Ernie Sisson. ·

Mrs. Maidie Mora , MI'S . Housh, Bennie Freeman,
l.oeta Young, Mrs. Thelma Janice Deem, and Daisy Pat·
Lytle. Mrs. Nancy Teije. Mrs. terstm.
June Freed, and Jane l Hill .
were guests for a rush paliy
held Thursday night at the
home of Mrs. Lill ian Moor('
by Prcl'eptur Bela Beta
Chapter of Beu1• Sigm0:::1 . Phi
Sururity.
.

•

7- The Daily Sentinel. MiddlePOrt· Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, OCt. 5, 19'17

$1.00 if

QUEEN SIZE

- ·'

perl~ct

2 PAIR . $100.

PANTY
HOSE
Fits up to 40" hip.
f:»anel seat. Beige
color. Reg. 99c ~

.LAMP SHADES

13 oz.

INSULATED
TUMBLERS

JUst arrived. Drum shad.es, bOudoir
shades, va'nity, pinup, ovals. We
have them all in several fabrics .

TO
eSILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
ePT. PLEASANT .
•MASON

··-· .~

�...

•

•

'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday. Oct. 5. 1977

M fs. Marjorie Goett
\

welcomed as new partner
Mrs. Marjorie Goett was
welcomed as a new partne-r

when Me1gs Cotmty Salon.
E1ghtand Forty. met Monday
rught at the home of Mrs.
Florence Richards. chapeau.
During the me&lt;&gt;ting she was
iniuated as petite Ia archi\•iste.

Mrs.

Ruby

Marshall ,

pouvior member , reported

that the pouvior will be held
on Oct. 15 m Columbus at II
a.m. Representing the salon
at the reception honoring the
new Departemental Chapeau
at Independence were Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Pearl
Knapp, Mrs. Zuelelia Smith,
3/ld Mrs. Mary Martin. A gift
was presented to the new
stale chapeau from the salon.
along with personal gifts
from those attending.
Members 'turned in clip!&gt;'
ings to be used in the publici·
ty . scaapbook . A thank you
note was read from the
Howery family for flowers.
Birthday cards anct $5 for

dintes+were sent to the Na·
tiona! Jewish Hospital at
Denver. Colo. Pearl Knapp,
nurses scholar.dlip cha1nnan~
rnnducted a' drawing for a

door pnze •·on by Mrs. Goett.
Donations will be \&lt;!ken on a
gun dlll'IJlg the ne&lt;t several'
we&lt;&gt;ks as a special fund raising project.
Plans were made for a
Christmas dinner and party
•ith members to take their
children and grandchildren.
Mrs. Richards noted that
Meigs IS a goal salon now. It
was voted to buy a Hallowe&lt;&gt;n
costume for Sherri Marshall.
cvstic fibrosis child. Mrs.
Eunie Brinker was welcomed
back after an injury. Mrs.
Welsh received a gift from
her secret sister. Candy,
Christmas cards, jewelry,
knives. and dishclothswere
or&lt;;lered for sale.
J\l:rs. .Richards served a
salad course (.\Yith crackers,
mints and coffee.

In hospital

,

Mrs. Wilma G. (Jenny)
Well, Pomeroy, has been a
patien t
in
Columbus'
Riverside
Hospital
for the past
weeks where
she underwe hip surgery.,
Olive Smith, Elizabeth Duffy
and Evelyn Smith visited her

!iodist

I

Sunday. She would appreciate receiving cards or

letters from her friends at
home which may be sent to
her in care of the hospital,
Oientangy River Road, zip
43214, room No. 5020.

POLLY"S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL'
AMENDMENT

To adopt new Article X IX of the
Constitution of Ohio
1. TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
USING IN THIS STATE LEG-HOLD
TRAPS IN THE TRAPPING OF WILD
BIRDS OR WILD FOUR- LEGGED
ANIMALS CQUADRUPEDSl AND ALSO
TO PROHIBIT ANY . PER~ON FROM
USING ANY TRAPPING DEVICE IN A
MANNER . WHICH
WILL
CAUSE
CONTINUED, PROLONGED SUFFERING
TO SUCH BIRDS OR ANIMALS;
2. TO PROVIDE THAT EACH SEPARATE

VIOLATION OF THIS AMENDMENT IS ACRIME; AND3. TO PROVIDE THAT ANY PERSON
MAY BRING A CJVJL ACTION FOR AN
INJUNCTION TO STOP A VIOLATION
A.ND TO · RECOVER COSTS AND
ATTORNEYS FEES.
(Proposed by Jniative Petition)
A majority affirmative vote is necessary for
passage,

·YEs
NO

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

\RGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Passage of Issue 2 will prevent needless
and extreme pain and suffering for untold ·
numbers. of animals . The effect of Issue 2 is
similar to the long accepte'd and· humane
practice of putting a horse out of its misery
rather than permitting it to suffer after it
br.eaks a log .
Issue 2 in no way ba~s trapping as either
a sport or profession in Ohio. Jt does
eliminate the . use of the leghold trap, a
device which severely injures its victim and
then continues to hold the creature in a
continuing, and often long period of extreme
pain .
.
Several types of quick kill traps are
available which do not inflict such
suffering . These traps would still be legal
and available to all persons wishing to
engage in trapping .
Persons who wish to trap for pest or
disease control or for wildlife management
purposes may also contin'ue to do so,
prov rding that any of the many . quick kill
traps available are used .
Issue 2 also prohibits the use of any
trapping device if it is used in a manner
which .will cause continued. prolonged
suffering. This prohibition will not affect the
proper use of any of the quick kill traps .
Simply put, passage of Issue 2 will end
suffering for animals whose pelts are a
valuable natural resource. And, as more
humane traps are used. fewer non -valuable
animals and pets will be accidentally
trapped. in Ohio. However. while protecting
Ohio animals, humane trapping will still be
permitted as a sport or profession in this
, state.
Committee for the Amendment: Robert
E. Cape, ~ichael J . Donohue, Athony A.
Kleinschmidt, Bruce Rouch. and Sandra E.
Rowland .

ntL'C

and dean. l~he.

~vun~e hold~

all the water

Utey stay

dr1ps from the soap and IS
eaSily nnsed out. The ·soap
stays dryer and doos not melt
away so quick!)'. 1Polly's
note- l have found that there
is enough soap in such a
side, which •·ould show when sponge that it is good for a
the neck was open. A fabrir homd scrubbi ng or two berore

DEAR POllY- Could you
or any of your readers tell me
how to make a T·shirt with a
V-neck and pointed collar out
of a turtleneck sweater•· J.R.
DEAR J .R.- I have never
done this but I think I could
and would go about it the •
following way. I would
machine stitch around the
neck just below the seam that
joins the turtleneck ~nd to
the 'sweater. Then on the
other side of the seam, on the
turtleneck band, 'stitch
around again so they would
not stretch when cut. Next I
would ravel the seam joining
them or, if · necessary, c ut

t)iem apart. The sweater
would be of a knit of some
sort so would have some
stretch to the wide neckband
that could make the new col·
lar. Split the present sweater
down the front as far as you
wish the neck to open - also
stitching on ~ach side of
where you intend to cut. Most
turtleneck bands would be
wide enough that there would
be plenty of material for a
narrow collar, a ctangle, that
could be fitted around the
neckline and the remaining
piece used for facing at either

collar could not be made fr.om

being washed - MRS. 0 .8.

a straight piece of fabric. but
there should be enough
"give" in a sweater knit that
it would fit. The ends would
naturally be pointed. When
the front is slit do not cut in a
V but turn the two ends open•
and fasten ends of collar to
them. Hope this is clear, It
should be a fairly simple job.

Polly.._wiil send you one _of
her s tgned thank-you
·newsp;1per coupon clippers if
sltr uses vour fa vo rite
Pointer, Peeii'e or Problem 1n
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
J'Q!NTERS in care of this
newspaper.

-POlLY. •

DEAR POllY- When cotling or setting a child:s hair.
do it where the child can
watch TV. As y~u work. there
will be less squirming around
or even crying,
I folded and sewed a terry
cloth hand towel so that it has
three pockets that come in
handy for holding my brush,
ptns and other odds and ends
when hung beside my mirror.
It IS much easier to keep

TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
BE IT REiSOLVED e.Y THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIOTHATART ICLE XIX OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION BE ENACTEO AS FOLLOWS·
Section I. No person shall use in any manner in t he
trapping of wild birds or wild quadruped s and leghol d
frap in the state. No person shall use any trapping
device in a manner which will cause continued,
prolonged suffering to a wild bird or wild quadruped in
this state .
'
Section 2. Each separate violation of th is
amendment constitutes a crime In addlfion , any
person may bring a civil ac tio"n in any Common Pleas
Court for an injunction to,. stop violations of th ts
amendment. Such person may recover t he cost s of
acrton and reasonable attorneys fees .

UNITEO STATES OF AMERICA .
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF ST·ATE
•
I. TED W. BROWN, Secretary ol State, do hereby

cert i fy that the foregoing are true and ~orrect copies of
• the amendment to Section 1 of Article V of the Ohio
Constitution proposed by init iat ive petition an~d the
amendment to the Ohio Constitution adopting new
Article XIX proposed by in i.tiative pet it ion, together
with the arguments for and against each amendment
as submitted by the appropriate .c ommittee. and th e

ballot language.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF , I have hereunto

subscribed my name and aff ixed my of f ic ia l sea l at
Columbus ·th is 12th day of September , 1977

TEDW BROWN
Secre tary of State

(9) 2a (1 0) 4, 11. 18. 25. 5tc

of

Be-lly

Jo rdan ,
lato of Route 3,
Jean

de ceased
A l bany 0r1 10 J5710

that I have organized things
and keep them separated m t"
boxes that I covered with
bright scraps of sttck-&lt;&gt;n
paper.
I suspended a chain from
the ceiling and use it as a
stash for my jewelry "and
scarves. Bangled bracelets
are hooked to chain links as IS·

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Opponents of Issue 2. the anti -trapping
amendment, urge Ohioans to vole " NO'.' fo r
three primary reasons :
·
l. The . amendment . would ban a! I
trapping activities, not just the leg hold trap.
2. Trapping , including the use of the
leghold .trap , is necessary for proper
wildlife management and conservation .
3. The subject = allowable devices for.
catching wifd anima ls - should not be
included in the Constitution of the State of
Ohio .
•
The proposal !Is written, seeks to outlaw
the use of "any trapping devi ce, " which
may even include mouse traps and rat
traps. cages and nets . No distinction is
made among devices. Any melhod that
traps an animal or bird can be said to
produce suffering . Scientists t.rap" certa in
wild animals for rabies research and birds
for encephalitis tests . Opponents of Issue 2
believe this important wor k on di sease
control would be curtailed by passage of the
amendment .
Good wildlife management requires
that wild animal populations be controlled
at levels consistent with the space and food
ava ilable to sustain them . An absence of
trapping to aide population control will
resu(t. first in burgeoning populations o't.
for . example, fast · breeding muskrats and
raccoons ; . followed ·by destruction of the
species through starvation and disease. The
trapping of wild animals in Ohio is
regulated by the 'Division of Wildlife to
protect domestic pets from the ravages of
contagious diseases and to limit the tak ing
of wild animals to surplus animal
populatjon and pests. Trapping for pest
control must also be carried on by farmers
to protect their crops from rodents.
The COnstitution of this state is t he
basic document which establishes our form
of- government and delineates the rights of
our citizens . It should not be cluttered ~·th
issues. which, if to be legislated at a
should be enacted into law by the .,Oh i
General Assembly .
Committee :, against the Amendment :
Ronald James, Bob McEwen. Ronald K.
Milleson, Jerome Stano, and M. Ben Gaeth.

A thought for the day :

British historian C eor ge
Mai'Auley Trevelyan said,
.. ~;ctucation has produced a
"\•a;1 population-able to read
- but unable to distinguish
what ls worth reading ."
NOTICE OF
ELECTIO N ON TAX

LEVY IN E&gt;CCESS
OF THE TEN MILL

LIMITAnON
NOTICE tS hereby g1ven
lh&lt;tt tn pursuance of ·..Rt&gt;Solution ot th e Board ot

EducatJon of the Southern
L~l_
SChOo l
O i s t rtct ,
Rae~ . Ohio . pas seO on the

71nd day of Sep tembe r , 1971 ,
!here will be submifted to a
votf' ot !he people of sa id
School D 1Si r,cl at a Speo;;iat
ELEC T IO N to t:l£' held 1n th e

School Distr1ct, Ohio, at the
place o f voting
there1n , on Tuesday. the 25th

regular

day of

October ,

1977,

th e

tevy,tg , in excess
rplll 1 mitatlon . for

ques tion Of

of the t en

th e t:lenetit ot S uthern Local
School D1s tri c t for the pur
pose o t ma int ena nce and
oper a tfon of schOo ls
PRO B ATE· CQU RT OF
Sai d tallltbe1ng : an ad
MEIGS CO UN"f·V , OHIO • 1
ditiona l tax of 6.5 Mil ls tO r un
ESTATE OF SETTY JEAN
for two years . wh ich Wtll
JORDAN , DECEASE D
ra1se a minimum of S11 ,500.00
Ca se No . ·222 17
""~" a'hnuatly , at a rat e nor ex
NOTICE OF
c.eeding 6 .5 mill s for eac h one
AFtFtOINTMEN T
dollar of ... alua t ton , wh 1c h
OF FID .U C IARY
amo unts to S 1x t y . Five Cents
for eac h on e hundred d o llars
01'1 S('p TPmb cr :n, 1977 , in o f valuatioh , for T\IYO years .
the Me1gs County Probate
The Po1t s for ~id Elect ion
Courr . Cas(' No 2:22 17 , Mary
w 11! open at 6 :30 o'c loc" A.M
Jordan
Route 3. Alb an y,
and remain ' open u nt il '7:JO
Dh10 .157 1(} was appofnfed
O'C lOCk PM ot said di.'IY .
Adm 1h1stratnx of the esta te
Bv o rder of the Board of

1S

Probate D tv is1on
Me1gs Coun ty , OhiO
( 10) 5, 12 , Jt c

· For Thur-y, Oct. I , 1171

ASTRO GRAPH
•

Bernice Bede Osol

e

!

oc" e, 1871

LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Fresh
new proJects are favored tor you
today. especially It they're In tM
early stages. Lay a solid loundatlon. They'll produce. Hav ing
tfbuble selec ting a ca.-eer? Send
tor your copy of Astra-Graph
Letter. Malt 50 cen ts for eacn
and a tong . sett-aQdressed ,
starnped envelope rO AstraGraph, P 0 . Box 489 . RSd16 City
Statron . N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify your birth sign

Ohio .

Er ne st A . Wingett

thinking A ch$nce remark could
spark It

Micldleiport:·Pomer·oy , 0 .. Wednesday, Oct. 5, 1977

AQUARIUS CJon. 20-Pob. 11)
'· Even II you have to modify your
opinion, It's vital that you main-

taln harmonious relations today
with th ose Important to you.

!lie FBI and Other federal
agencies join local police to

SCORPiO COct. 24-Nov. 22) Insigh ts or hunches regarding
your career or financial ma«ers
are reliable today They can put
you a step or two ahead of the
pack

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc.

~1}

Your strength lies in your
phlloSOphtc al approach today.
You see thing s as a part ot th e
whole, not ln their limited and
narrow scope.

Cha irman

CAPRICORN COoc. 22-Jon. 11)

Dorothy M . Johnston
D irector
Dated Se pr 26, 19 77

Be alert today as to the posslbill·
ty of embarking on a venture
with a person In IUne with your

pose as fences in nmled

.

thieves and robbers swarm in

ARIES CMorch 21--Aprll

Take time to think thln9s out very
ca refully tOday The more you
dwell o.n a subject. the more
YO!J 'I I be aware of al l I ts
ram ttlcetlons,

•
•

'

I

GEMINI CMoy 21.Juno :!OJ People lind you 're fur'! to be around
today You can show tnem the
lig hter side of thtngs they find
serious or worrisome.

CANCER

C~une

21.Jui}'

22)

In

LEO CJuly2:i-Aug. 22) You have
a nawrat flair tor the dramatic.
and today that quality Is even
more pronounced . This will help
you most in selling or P&amp;Jbllc ,.._::.
speaking.

2S-Bopt. 22)

Be

patient today , particularly If
you're waiting for somethln.Q to
hatch that Involves material gain.
Shtps com e In over calm sees.
4NEWSI'AI-'t::R

ENT~ RPIU SE

. :..,//
7

&lt;\

co mmerc i al or bl:lslness
dealings today . you'r&amp; very Imaginative. The prorlt picture you
see In your mind's eye could be
even better IQ.. reality.

VIRGO CAug.

shower of gifts. The coupl e
were serenaded at their
trailer home late in the
evemng here.
~
Word has been receiv-

to sell stolen wares.
WorshiP services were held
ThQ/ sting headquarters is .at 10 :45 with the~ Rev.
rigged so each purchase is Thomas spea king from I John
recorded on sound and fi~n . 4 on ·the subject " Moments
This provides such good evi- For Sp~ritua i ·Reflections."
dence that most of the "God loves all people, ail
criminals a rrested la ter races, educated and not and
plead guilty raU1er than ·fa ee all colors,t&gt;. a comm union
trial, the 1·eport said .
message. Attendance at 'this
·n1e criminals are so eager service was 37. The choir
.
to fence U1e cars, jewe Is, sang "Because He Lives" as
I v dru
gs, checks and other
special number with
!l'&lt; ' . property they stea l that aFlore
nce Spencer, pianist
·\ .~ second and third stmgs have and Howard Flanders song
~
succeeded ·in some cities leader. Communion was
\'
despite the widespread observed and special com'
publicity earlier operations munion offering of $15.50 was
received.
NEW OWNER - Bill Quickel is the new .owner of
received.
In the 32 stings the U:AA
Davis Insurance located at 114 Court Street, Pomeroy .
has helped flnan.ce in 23
Quickel took over the operation last Saturday. The firm
A large crowd attended the
cities, the agents have wedding of ~oger Pullins and
was known as Davis Insw-ance for the last fow- years and
recovered an estimated $57 Susan Henderson at th e
prior to that for 26 years was Davis-Warner Insurance.
miillon worth of stolen goods, church here Saturday at
Quickel is the son of Delinar and Hilda Quickel, Cheshire.
using on ly $1.5 million "buy 2:30 with Rev. Charles
A graduate of Kyger· Creek High School, he has an
money,''
and have made Domigan performing the
associate degree from .Hocking Technical College, is
more
than
3,000 arre~ts .
secretary-lreasw-er of the Meigs-Gallia-Mason Life
ceremony and Ida Boggs
Uooerwriters Association, chapter advisor of Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMoiay, Middleport; associate
guardian Bethel 62, Jobs Daughters, Pomeroy, and soon
will have be&lt;'n in the life insurance business three years.
He will represenf Lightning Rod Mutual Jnsw-ance Co

11)
Associate today with people who
are of a creallve bent You 'll find
you·11 come up with some 11ery
bright Ideas yourself.

TAURUS CAprll 20-Miy ·201

reception foll"wcd
in the church baseme11t ~ml f-1

Monday, Oct. 3 - Sunday
School attendanee on Oct. 2 ed here of the hosplt ahzatlOn
of
Thelma
was 38, the offering $20.35.
Carr White formerly of th1s

storefronts. Word ge ts
around to !lie underworld and

beneficial

ASSN I

Western Res~rve , Republic and Foremost .

(9 ) 28 ( 10 ) 5, 1:2, 31C

·

•

piani~t. A

Alfred
SOcial Notes

during the period of Ol)Crat ion
w~n compared to the year
prior to Ule operations."
ln a typica l sting, agenL'i uf

\Ybmr;t
· PISCES CFob. 20-Morch 20)
1
Vl.!JI..!JU
Cond 11ions look very promising
today 1n matters affecting your
G1Rrd1'\r{l(jl\11 career aJld Income. Be readv to
l.!JUliUWl!J\.!.1 tJ move on situations tha t cOuld bt

Don't be afraid to ~ a dreamer
this co ming ytl,Br Dreams can
become wishes . wishes can
become ambitions and ambitions can become goals that
ca n be aualned .

Elec t to ns , ot Me1gs Cou nty ,

Mdnn ing D Webster
Cornman Pleas Cou rt ,

my dresser drawers nea t now

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION
2

ot11er J&lt;• cir) and ,•aeh scarf
IS slipped through a hnk 111 the
tha111.- BARBARA.
DEAR POLLY.- I cui a
household sponge toft! u1the
bottoms of my soo p trays so

From turtle to V-neck
POlLY'S PROBLEM

'•

•

•

area.

The "Gospel Tones" will be
singing at the church here on
Oct. 22 at 7:30p.m. This is a

· Badgley
.
Mrs. .;.ltha AlLar~&lt;lo of
Mtiwauke&lt;', W1s \'iSild ~lr
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mr. Delbert Van Meter of ami Mrs Ho~&lt;·l Adkim and
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt Gahanna was a rete"nt Mr and Mr Dou~ Alan In

Racine Social Events
underwent

surgery

at

weekend gue:-.1 of Mrs. Laura
Ry~r!i_ and other relati\ es.
Mrs . •Joyc:e Manuel and
patien t at Holzer Medic•! daughters spent an evenmg
Center.
•- With Mrs. Laura Byers.
Mr. Owen Watson entered
Mr. and Mrs . Ed1son Brace
Veterans Memonal Hospital. VISited Mrs. Jim Brace and

ltaune .md • 'herr ·lutlve:-; Jn

-Veterans Memori&lt;.~ l Hospital
Mrs. Ann Cue is' a mc\Jit·C:JI

S)'r8l'U!;f'

Mr aud

~tr

ll 1 !&lt;all .wd

of !'ll

;.\dJ.HnS. \V
·1• TurlPJ,
p·nlh \1r
and Mrs Shf'lld&lt;Jn lLJs~ell,
Jr and Pault~ 11f ~1 aS(1n W.
Chlldt'('JI

Va. , Mrs Ui.in
son Eddtr, uf (;

Mrs . Douglas Johnson , children at Cruwn City
Thursday..
Va , MlSS l.mda H1ll. Larry
special song and everyone is Donna Johnson and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Price Wolfe uf Turley, M1 uut .,tr~ Kenwelcome to.attend.
Jaek Adams attended the Lexington spent several days neth Turlt•:r ami S4JrtS 'rAt'r~
Mid-week services here at funeral ora cousin, Mr. John with his SISter, Mrs. Hazel \ pn•sent h,H· a f.uml} gt•t~
Alfred Church Wednesday Mann ion at Beaver Falls, Pa. Carnahan.
together to twwn lht' bwtll·
evening at 7:45 p.m.
Mrs. Gretta Simpson, Mrs.
Miss Jennifer Badgley of day of M1 s. ( tat t•IK~' 1 urky
Mr. a nd Mrs. Deibert Yost, Helen Simpson and her guest, New Haven. W.Va. , spent the at the home of Mr. und Mrs
Ella Yost and Beth and Mrs. Max Wolfe, visited Mr. weekend ·with her grand- Kenneth Tutl'-")' Sur.day Ot't,
daughter of Sugar GroYe, 0 ., and Mrs. Bill Rice at St. parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph 2.
'
sp~nt the weekend here with Mary 's, W. Va. Mr. Ric'e is ill
Genevieve· Guthrie and at- due to a !&gt;1roke.
tended the Pullins-Henderson
wedding on Saturday.
NEW ORLEANS (UPI ) Mr. and Mr.§. Charles D. The New Orleans Saints are ·
Woode attendea the afternoon 'trying to re-sign the man who
program at Hemlock Grove ~ored the team 's first touchMrs. Gloria Manuel, Mrs.

Church . Homecoming was on down more than a decade

Sunday, Oct. 2.
Mmls
Elliott
is
recuperating at his home
here following surgery
recently.

Emerson Guthrie remains

in Veterans Hospital.

ago.
Saints ' Coach Hank Stram
said Tuesday he was trying to
co nta ct

veteran

wide

rece1ver John Gi lham, who
was cu t earlier this year by

!lie Chicago Bears.

'

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! II·

lI

.---------------- ---- ----·- i

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t2

"ifr;ge;'G

I

PROPOSED AMENDM.ENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
·To amend Section 1 of Article Vol the·
Con st itution of Ohio
TO PROVIDE THAT A . PERSON IS
ENTITLED TO
VOTE
AT
A'LLELECTIONS · IF
HE
HAS
BEEN
REGISTERED TO V.O TE FOR THIRTY
DAYS , AND
HAS
THE
OTHER
QUALIFICATIONS OF AN ELECTOR,
AND TO PROVIDE THAT A PERSON
WHO IS REGISTERED AND FAILS TO
V0TE IN AT LEAST ONE ELECTION
DURING . ANY PERIOD OF , FOUR
CONSECUTIVE
YEARS
MUST
REGISTER AGAIN BEFORE BEING
ENTITLED TO VOTE.

1

(Proposed by Initiative Petition J
A majority affirmative vote is necessary for
passage .
~

TEXT OF PROPOSED AMENDMENT
(The 'proposed new language is capitalized
and underlined)
'
ARTICLE V
SECTION 1. Every citizen of the United
States. of the age of eighteen years, who has
been a r'e sident of the state, county,
township, or 'ijard, such time as may be
pro vided by law. AND HAS BEEN
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THIRTY
DAYS, ha s the qualifications of an elector ,
and is en t itled to vote at all elections. ANY
ELECTOR WHO FAILS TO VOTE JN AT
LEAST ONE ELECTION DURING ANY.
PER IOD OF FO.UR CONSECUTIVE
YEARS SHALL CEASE TO BE AN
ELf;:CTOR
UNLESS
HE
AGAIN
REGI STE RS TO VOTE .
YES
NO

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

ARGUMENT FOR\ THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
VOTE YES ON HONEST ELECTIONS
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
SAFEGUARD YOUR VOTE. VOTE YES ·
ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 restores the 30-day residency •
sa feg uard to voter registration and requires
anyone who has not voted in four years to
re-regi ste r ..This prevents some~ne from
vot ing fa lsely in an area where they do not
res ide or fro m wrongfully attempting to us~
th e name of registration of someone who
has moved away or died .
See that your vote is not stolen or cancelled
by a tom bstone.
··
Vote YES on. Iss ue l.
'

PROTECT YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL
RIGHT TO VOTE.
VOTE YESO)IIISSUE 1.
You ' have th.e constitutionally guaranteed
right to be counted on every vote you cast.
Issue 1 protects that right by lnsisti~g on
safeguards against multiple or fraudulenl
voting. Without it, the U. S. Justice
Depar1ment has warned, there is almost no
way to trace the wide open vote fraud that
could &lt;:rec ur . Instant registration can mean
instant fraud. Vote yes for integrity in ,.
government. Vote YES on Issue 1.
ISSUE 1 SAVES-~'f'HE T'AXPAYER'S
MONEY. VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 will prevent the' squandering. of over
$2.3 million of t axpayer's money. These
funds w ill be auto matically spent if Issue 1
i~ n"i fJ&lt;Jssc d.and the cur rent law is allowed
·lo -:;t,Jnd.

ISSUE I CAN PREVENT THE BOSSES
AND MACHINES FROM TAKING OVER.
VOTE YES ON !SSU E 1.
Issue .1 keeps elections in the hands of the
people and out of the pockets of the big
machine bosses, by protecting the integrity
of the individual vote. • lt guarantees every
Ohioan a voice in government 'by denying
the bosses the opportunity for easy and
undetected mass vote fraud . Vote for your
right to vote. Votes YES on Issue 1.

~Criminal
, By ED.ROGERS
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Under co ver fencing
operations do not encourage
;crime by providing a market
·for stolen goods, according to

an independent
study
'released today by the Law
Enforcement

Ass1stance

Administration.
Tile l.EAA has provided
" buy money " for phony

:tencing projects -

called

: ..Sting Operations" after a

I
I
I
I
I

unhelped
movie by that name -

m

·lb.
Bag

which agents posing as
crimmais buy stolen property
from thieves and burglars
mhom they later arrest.

I

I
I

'.'There have been several
news reports that critics of

!lie sting operations have
suggested they might lead
people to commit crimes they

___ ... _________

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMll Y
t iMII'OI "'Oi IIIII D.! I tcTDtE1 1 U !¥ 10AII'(TOI(I l IS

MIIJ(tiTC .miU.Ill mn I ltltAllUU

OF

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT.
• .
Ohioans.deserve elections systems that
make it easy to register and vote. Ohio' s
new election Ia I'! does that through Election
Day and permanent reg istration .
In 22 Ohio counties. residents have
always had the right to vote on Election Day·
without registering in · ;~dvance . Now all
elig ible Ohioans may register on Election
Day.
,
·
.
· Issue 1 would prohibit Election Day
registration · for all of us. It continues
restrictions that shut out potential voters.
&lt;Ner two million elgible Ohioans are not
registered. Last fall only 56 percent voted.
YOU SHOULD KNOW:
· 1. Separate lines for registration and
voting makes Election Day registration
convenient for voters.
2. States that have it report turnouts of
between 65 percent and 76 per cent.
3. Ev~n_!)le FBI couldn't find any fraud
in the five slates . with Election Day
registration, and the people of Ohio are,
every bit as honest as they are.
4. Ohio's new Election Law strengthens
the protection against fraud by requiring
registrants to show identification and
providing for five year prison terms for
anyone votir)g twice.
5. It requires automatic purging from
registration lists when people move or die.
6 . Election Day registration is the
cheapest way to register voters.
ISSUE I .
... denies Ohioans the right to use Election
Day registration even through it works in
other states.
... makes it more difficult for political
independents to have a voice In
government .
. .. . freezes the ban on Eloction Day
registration into our Constitution before we
have a chance to see how it works.
Election Day registration works
without fraud . Even Cuyafloga County's
GOP Chairman admits the claims of fraud
are "pure baloney" . What really worries .
them is not fraud - It's more voters.
VOTE NO ON ISSUE 1
Committee against the Amendment:
Don Maddux, J. Leonard . Camera, C. J.
Mclin. Tony P. Hall. Roberf E.
O'Shaughnessy, and John K. Mahoney.
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
{The proposed new language Is that set forth in capital

letters and underlined.)

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIO THAT ARTICLE V, SECTION 1 OF
THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE AMENDEO T,O
READ AS FOLLOWS:
·
Every citizen of the Unl1ed States, of lhe age of
eighteen years, .who ha,s been' a re.sident of the state,
county. townshtp, or ward, such time as may be

provided by law, AND HAS BEEN REGISTERED TO
VOTE FOR THI~TY DAYS, has the qualifications of

an elector , and is entitled to vote at all elections. ANY

ELECTOR WHO FAILS TO VOTE IN AT LEAST ONE
ELECTION DURING ANY PERIOD OF ' FOUR
.CONSECUTIVE YEARS SHALL CEA~E TO BE AN
ELECTOR UNLESS HE AGAIN REGISTERS TO
VOTE.

~ KingsburY

..;News Notes

20' OFF

otherwise wouldn 't Commit/ '

WITH COU PON

said
Acting
LEAA
Administrator James Cregg.
. "l hope this report will lay
such unfounded charges to

AWC Tlll P'IIICII.u4

.
'.

:~

The Carleton Church will

"'' have its homecoming Sun·

in eight urban areas .
Instead, the. center said, the
study showed "most reported

;,. day, Oct. 9 starting with
••·Sunday School at 9:30 a.m .. crime
!~followed wilh a basket lunch
:; at noon. l(fternoon services
' · will start at 2 with special
''singing featuring The Gospel
; : Tones of Charleston, W. Va.
~~ All other singers are invited
to attend. An, mvitation to all

Aid
Mix

Drink

=
COf'YitGH1 1'17- THI UOGill CO
I"IICU GOOO SUNOAY OCTO•U l
IATUIIOA'I' OCJQalt I

""IN

ITEMS AND
1tf7 TfiUt

;.," is extended . ·

·, ;· Frank Douglas, who has
: . be&lt;'n a patient at Veterans
·~ Memorial Hosp1tai, has

was stable or down

'

KROGER

Fruit
Cocktail ...

Eskimos

.; ~ now Jives in Pomeroy, visited
~: in her neighborhood recently.
;.' ~ Mrs . Neva King has

WASHINGTON (UP! ) The battle pitted the
endangered Eskunos against
the endangered bowhead
whale; one department of
g0verrunent aga,inst another,

:::! Cannel Hospital where she

conservationist.

&lt;·• returned

home from Mt . and conservationist against

••
.- . underwent surgery.

·~ · Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl
: : and family spent a recent
~ , weekend with hev parents,
' • Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barnett
': ·. and family at Reynoldsburg ..
;~
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
~ had as recent visitors Mr. and
.. ' Mrs. Carold Gilkey and
··'I Tammy of Athens, Mr. and
~~ Mrs. Kenneth Markins of
~.:. Racine, Mr. Junior Smalley,
~ Dale and Hobie of Weirton,
•.; W.Va., Mr. Walter Terrell of
• • Pataskala and Miss Juantta
~; Terrell of Pataskala.
'! Several from this com·
munlty attended a toy party
·• at the home of Mr. 'lnd Mrs.
~: John Lyons at Burlingham.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brickies

?,

1:

..:!

~ had as recent visitors Mr. and

• · Mrs.

··i

Blaine

Farley of.

Michigan.

Mr. and Mrs. Galen Young
;1~ and son, David of Da¥lon
~; were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
~: Wayne Beai and Mr. and Mrs.
,.1. Roger . Young, Wesley and
"v Yevete.
·
;!:;. Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
"'&lt; riean had ·as recent visitors
""l' Mrs. Edward Weekly and
:l'children ,' Mr. and Mrs.
:!'walter Terrell, Miss Juanita
;: Terrell, Mrs. Anna Mae
~' Terrell, all of Pataskala, Mr.
:: .. and Mu. Kenneth Markins of
,..,., Racine, Bruce Re1d and

:!;. Edith and Bruce Jr . of

;:o.;~ Columbus.
~ Trevor Harrison spent
~; several days recently with his

lrlt•

2. 77 c
4 :k~:· $1
3 ·$1
7 $1
Cans

'

~~~g~~s '' .. .. ..

&amp;·9C
99 C

MARVAL OF VIRGINIA U.S.O A. INSPECTED

Country Fresh
Turkeys :.. .... ....lb.
•

Ole Carolina .
Sliced Bacon .... )~~:

Kroger
French Fries

t7·oz.

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread ..
Kroger
Gelatin ..

2

PlAIN OR SEWED

CIIIP'OI ;ooo I(; lOll t

..,_ l.lllit1 IC IPI'I. lUt&amp;i

GRADE AA LARGE MARkET 8ASI&lt;ET ..

CR INKLE CUT

Folg er's •
Instan t CoHee

Kroger

DOZ . t.3'

5
·3 $1

Kroger
Krusty Rolls ...

·lb $129
Bog
~t::.

Cup Of Soup

3

01

Jl~c-.s

SJ

WITH COUPON
l' MIT 1 WITH

COUJJO~

~liVI'Il- '\laD 0( !Jill I OCIQI~ II l
~Ui ifC' 10 ll'f' liUIU m I I IOU

.. " ..
10' OFF
W I TH COUI'GN

~;~'

• u

·~

Vanish
Cryst~ls
CO,I'OII I.(I(r• &lt; ,111
\UIIHI 'O l l'l' H !f

3·01.

,. 1110 1t ..
&amp;•I l lUll

I

I I

Pkg1 .

Tuesday the bowhead
whale appeared to be the
winner .

Sow-ces said the Commerce
Department decided not to
file an objection to a bowhead
whaling ban imposed in June
by scientists of the
International Whaling
Commission - a group of
whaling nations.
One State Department
official who had been holding
out for the objection assistant secretary for
oceans Patsy Mink apparently decided not to
fight the Commerce Department, sources said, leaving

the reported government
decision uncontested.
The JWC scientists found
the stock- of bowhead whales
has been so depleted by
Eskimo hunters 'that the
mammal 's existence would

be threatened by further
killing:
Its ban was to go into effect
at !lie start of the new
calender year. Under IWC
rules , the government would
have had to file an objection
to the prQposed ban by Oct.
24 . •
Eskimos are the only
Americans allowed to kill
whales under a provision of
the
Marine
Mammal
Protection Act which allows
native subsistence hunting.
COMPLICATIONS

LONDON (UP! ) - The 44year-old
Duchess .of Kent,
"' :. Harrtson.
expecting
her fourth child in
~-: Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brickles
February,
has been taken to
- visited recently with Mr. and
King
Edward
VII Hospital for
:::!' Mrs . Donald Brickies at
observations
because of
·~ Glouster.
complications
in
her
•.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles King,
pregn,ancy.
~ · Susan and Charlie, visited
The Duke of Kent cut short
Mr. and Mrs. Edward King
and sons at Harrisonviiie a four-day visit to Iran to be
at his wtfe's bedside.
"r~nuy.
N"

g

Grade A
Large Eggs

: • returned horne and is im·

; : proving. Recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas were
.,•••'· Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Bailey,
:· : Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young
!: and family and Mrs. Janeth
:.~ seal, local.
• &lt; Mrs. Hazel Arnold, -who

="
KROGER

•
wm
over

40• OFF
WI TH COUPON
A"'ll1 Ml ,UltMI\l 1.N !)Ill
10 'JI IH

wt IUitVl JHI « IGHT TO UMIT OUANTITIU .
NONI SOlO 10 OI,A\UIS

Whales

.1;

o•u

l)f

IS 01 OW j iii.A.U! i IMJUT\1

The .Westinghouse Corp.'s
National Issues Center,
which .conducted the $19,000
study for the LEAA, said 1t
found no ~&lt; pattern '' of ·
mc rease d property crime
while slings were underway

,

Vlli•JU~IC0..-

rest, r r he said.

ELECTION
DAY · REGISTRATION
MEANS ELECTION FRAUD. VOTE YES
ON ISSUE 1.
Committee for lhe Amendment : Jean
M. Barren , William A Miller , Jr., W. C.
Channell , and "Viiliam H. Schneider.

I

liMIT I BIG WITH COUPONAND S1.50 ADDITIONAl
PURCHASE (EXClUDING THIS IT!M)

grandmother' Mrs. Louise
'

;1:

U.S . GOV 'T GKAOEO CHOICE

Boneless Rib
"
Eye
Steak .........

a~~;i~;;·i;;~;~
Rump Roast ....

$13
9
lb.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , BEEF CHUCK
SHOULDER POT ROAST

::::!:•:on . . . . $1 39

Wagner's Orange &amp; 2
Grape Drink ...... .. ~t';.

lb.

B~~;I';;;·B~H~m

Round Steak. ... .

$12
9
lb.

88 C

99C

Coast

Idaho Baking
1-lb.
0
Potatoes .............. Bog .

Bar

Ye~low ,;.;~:~~·~,. 25-lb$299
On1ons .............. Bag

~~~:::~~:

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

E~ch 99 C

lOT Al SAfiSFACTION GUARANTEED
We Howe What We Adverti se if at all poU1ble. II cl've to
dltionl beyond our conhal wv run g ut of on od ~•Htited

con ·
spe·

ciol, we 1ubstitute a comparable brand at a Simil a r saving or
.~ ... g'rve you Q RAIN OlfCK for the adv•rl iJed spvciot ol the
l pe ~;iol priu. ony tim e within 30 days We Guoronlee What We
Sell If you ore ever d1natisfoed wlfh o I&lt; roger p urtho~e . we
will reptate your item or refund ~ouo money .

Soap

~6
Bars

'·

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1

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It}-The Da1ll' Sentm&lt;l. Mtddleport-Pomero~. 0 ., Wednesday . Oct. 5, 1977
('

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'••I'll" ... t u

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tit
P,,""
~·

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\\rE WOUlD lilo.e to rhcnk rhose FO~ SALE or trade or 1ond con
... t'lo 1Hpreued thtHr sympathy
rract '2 bedroom hous e rn
or the rune to rhe deorh of our ".
Rutland 992 S85B
rnlonl doughto&gt;-r and ~lstf!r --fWG l-().f5 '" Pomeroy for good
Jess te a Jdl Sho 1n
Spec tal
bulldOJer dr end loade r Wnte
rha11!..S to Ewmg Funeral Home
Mthon Bo rtrom Fort Gay W
and Rev Eorl Shuler Dove
vo 25 114
Terr.y ond Jason Sham
FOR SALE or R ~n t . House td~l
lor s1ngte person or coup le
Notice!i
wal lo. mg dtstan ce to town
991 3405 or 9&lt;1'1 - 53 14
GUN SHOOT
evtt• v Sun afternoon Fodor A'\OBILE HOME lor sole or rent.
Ntce locolton
Albert Htll .
Chock gu01s onl y, Assorted
949-2261 .
meets
MEIGS COU NTY 'Ftsh a nd Game Cam - c~lp--.;m.,
"" dl !)old o meettng Wed .. Oc t
Pl.D!f
-- 5 7 pm aJ Shade Rrv er Cl1.1b
1912 ARISTOCRA f
TRA VEl
house
Trotler t8 h . oeH -con lom£'.:1
)OHN KECK wdl ha ve open -hear t
Excellenl condttion . Coli
surgery soon a nd wou ld l, lo;,e for
&lt;;:q2-2477 doy t•me, or' 991-3580
blood donors to give 1n hts
alter 4 pm
name Than!.. you . Oct . 10
STARCR AFT FAll Sale Mtn t·
Bloodmob• le
mo tors :20 ond 22 . Tra Ve l
NO HUNTING or trespasstng on
Trailers, 18 S S3 799 25 7
Fnend prope rty tn Bashon
Bunk house $4 875. Fold dow n,
$1,700 up We sell servtc e and
FULLER BRUSH products for sole
quoftty Open Sundays Camp
W2 -3410.
Con ley Storcralt SpJes . At 6'1 ,
N. of Pt. Pleasant

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NOTICE

~~~-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

lHE
JONES
BOYS
NOW OPEN
9 A.M. til 9 r.M.
SUNDAY
12 til 8 P.M.

\h.. nd .• \

\ • •, ..1 s.•lttl"tl•h
r1J&lt; · d.11

!- n,1ul
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IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COUIU ,
J"VV EN I LE CIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN

THE

ADRIA

O.F

MAT TER

ANN

BLAIR

ALL EGED
NEGLECTED
AND DEPENDENT CHILD
PROBATE NOTICE
A

To · 1-iaro to Eugene· Blai r
whose last known pl ace of
res tdence and address was
Fort Eust is , Vir g i n i ~ and
who se present address 1S
unknown
you are her eb y
notified that a co mpl a int was
filed in the Com men Pleas
Co u rt, Juventle O i VIStcn ,
Me tgs Cou nty , Ohto , Case No .
&lt;2208 , b y Cynth 1a M 1ll s of the
Me gs
County
Welfare
Oepa rrmenf a ll eg ing that
Adr i a
Ann
Bl a ir I s a
neglec ted a.nd dependen t
ch il d . The compla int req uests
th a t pe r m a nent custody be
gr"nled Permanent custod y
m ea n s tnat the paren!s ;
guard ian or other cu sto d1an
be
p-er m a nen tly
m ay
depr i Yed of a ll parental
r tghrs
The com p la tnt a lleg es th at
you are the fa•her of sa id
child
.
.
The comp la int wi ll be for
he ar ing before th e above
courr on the 2nd da y of
NOYemoer , 1977 . at 10: 00
o'clock AM . a nd you are
requ ired to appear before
sa id cour t a t th e t im e of
he ar ing .
W ,tn ess rny h a nd and sea l
of sa1d court lh ts 1st day of
OClober , 1q77 _

I

ADDRESSERS
WANTED
lm med-lalely! Work ot home . no
e.- pe rte nce necess ary ·· ex ce;llent pay. "write Amertcon
Service 8350 Pork lone , Suite
269 . Dol tos , TX 75231
FEMALE COM PANION lor !:!'lderly
lady lor CQmp~~y . to ltve in
Reference Phone 9B5 3967 .
WAITRESS APPLY 11, person .
Craw's Steak House'. Pom erOy .
Ohio

3 AND 4 RM furnished . and ufl ·

lurn tshed · opts .
5434 .

992- -

FOUR ROOMS and both. Adults
only No pets 992-5908
TV\10 BEDROOM Trotler4
only 992 3324

By Janet E Morr1s
Cht el DepUty Cl~:r k
{ 1,0 1 5. lie

Adults

COUNT RY MOBlLE Home Pork
Rou te 33 . no rth of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots Cal l 992 7479

NOTICE OF
APPO INTM E NT

'

Phone

AVAilABlE AT Rtv ers•de Apts . l
bedroom 5 105 per month . 5150
security deposi t. 992 -()()qB

Mann1ng D . 'Webs te r
·
Juven ll eJudge

•

CAREER with a future for a man
or woman who wonts the best
in lite A poy check E&gt;verv
week , lontosflc lrtnge benef 1fs
a ll loca l wo rk. Gtve us a colt at
992-2480 or wrrte , Wester n
Southern Li fe Ins uran ce. 218 1 1
E Mom , Pomeroy Oh io lor rn la rmat•on

' Ca se No 2~22 7
Estat e of Ja m es W . Farme-r,
De cea sed.
Not tee tS hereov g ve n thaT
Helen R Farme r of 207
Sourn
Second
Avenue,
Middleporl Oh 1o , has been
duly
appo inted
Ad m i'n tstralrtx of the Esl a le of
James W Farme r , dec eased ,
lare of MeJQS County, Oh10
Creditors are requ tr ed to
ffle the tr c-1a1ms w tth .said
f tdUC 1a r y . wtlh 1n
three
months
Da t ed this 28th day o~
Septembe r 1977.

ONE BEDROOM Qpt. , air condi ltoned For I or 2 people 111
Coots Building Olo'er Columbta
Gos. Also 1 small olf,ce roo ro
£..r re nt Col i at opt 16 or
'~ phone 992 3641
THREE BEDROOM Mobrle Home
Lo rge co untry yard and garde n
space 2 chtl dre n permitted
Near school . Referen ces and
depOSit requ ired 742-31'12 ,
TWO BEDROOM Mob tl e Home ,
fu rnish e~ . in Ro cmu . 9~9~
TWO BEDROOM Mobtle Home
un furntshed , rura l and secluded , 4 mt east of Dorwtn
985 ·3974 .

-s Milnn tng D Wel;lste r
Ju dge
Cou rt of Common Pleas ,
Probate DlvtSIOn
(lOJ 5, 11, 19, Jtc

p,;,

~ at s
CASH po•d lor oil rnoh. es and AUCTION EVERY Frt 7
ol new and used merc handi se
models of mobtle homes
ot Oh1o Rtver Auclton Meig s
Phone a reo wde 614 423 q53 I
Plaza Mtddleporl Ohta HonHt
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fores1 Pro
Phone (304 ) 773 5471
ducts Top ,.P/tce for stondmg
DEALE~
S AUCTION publrc in
so wll mOEu Coli ~2 5965 or
v1 ted f hu rs , Oct b ' 11 arn All
Kenl Hanby . 1 446 8570 ·
new merchandise 111 quonttty at
COI NS CURRENCV tokens old
Ohio R•ver Aurlton , Meigs
poclo.~:~t watches ond chot ns
P!ozo , Mtd dleport , OhiQ.
Stl-,er and gold . We need 1964
(lnd oldttr sdver co ms Buy sell
or trade Col i Roge r Woms ley
7 &lt;~ 2 · ::?331.
NEW O NE 'lleor o ld btlevel home
3 bedroom . I 'l both, goroge
OlO FUR Nil URE tee bo~o:es b1as s
beds
e f t , co rnpler e , rec reation room I . 1 ott es
house holds. Write M. 0 M1ller
Eo9le Rrdge 949-2745.
RL 4 Pomero.y. Ohto or coil
THR EE HEOR OOM home Rat:;me
9'12.77 6JJ.
alum inu m siding storm win CASH ! 1 Junk cars . Fry sTruck &amp;
dow s , gos forced air furno.ce ,
Auto , Rutland . Phone 7.t.2 -1081 ~ argeyo rd . 512 .500. 949 ~5~~
or 742·9575. Closed Mondays .
SPACIOUS THR EE bedroom home .
'
4 yrs . old . Feoture5 oil rhe ex - I
tras. B&amp;outdul locolton on I 4
We would l ike to buy J oc res 992 -2996 for more in
lorrnot to n,
Choice Grade 400·500

YOU ho ve o serv iCf! to oiler ,
wont to buy or se ll someth tng .
oe looking fo r work .. or
w_t,ote ver .
you "ll get resul ts
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coil 991-2156

lb . Heifer Feeder
Calves in Jots of 10 or
more direct from the
producer .

WARREN PICKENS

'. '

srnour

Location: The Twin City Shrine Club.
Racine. Ohio, just off Slate Rllule 338 .

TRACTOR AND FARM MACHINERY
1969 Massey Ferguson I raclor with front
end loader, 2· Barrel Corn Sprayer, 2 Row
Cultivator Plow, 3 point hitch ; 1 Lime or
Fertilizer Spreader , 1 Corn Grinder or Mill,
1 Supplement Feeder - lick tank , 1- 1974
Ford Brush Hog, 5 fl.; 1 Three Cylinder,
Eighteen Horse Power Stationery Lister
Engine, 1- 6 Cylinder Dodge Swinger Car,
1-1963 Chevro let Dump Truck, ·1 New
Su bmersible Water Pump , ·1 Gravely
Tractor &amp; Mowers. Household goods and
many other articles too numerous ' to
mention .
Refreshments served. Not responsible for
accidents.

~~~~----~----------~·
•

SUBWAY EXPERIENCE

NCOI'II"'OI'I~T..C

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

Miller Produce

MEIGS COUNTY l;tumone Soc•ety ,
Coreline and adoption Service .
99'1-7680, 7A2-3162. 992-5427 .
REGISTERED FEMAlE St. Bernard
to give awoy to good home .
Phone 742-2123 .
HORSES FOR Sale 59 mch port
Morgan Geldmg . 9 years old .
very gentle , $275 . ,58 inch
Polommo more. due: to foa l tn
March . 4 years old ond very
gentle . $350 . Phone (614 )
667-3336
AKC POODLE puppy . Apri~ot
mole . Ha ve stJJrted shots,
wormed . Has puppy d1p .
949-'1571

Wonted to Buy
~0 ITEM TOO la rge or too small
Will buy 1 piece or complete
household New , used . or on II ·
ques Martin 's Furniture, 20 N.
2nd Sf. , Middleport . Phone
992-6370

Superior
Sleam Eltraction

Let Pbmeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-op water
Model UC-XVL...
1sottener,
Now Only
'

'279.95
Let

us test

-Fre·e.

your water

. FOR SALE
New Co-Op water and
softeners, model VC-SVI .
Only $279.95
Save $50 .00 on a new
Hotpoint bfrigerator
1 New 20 cubic fl. Chest
Freeier
$25.00 Discount
Cil Good Refrigerator $200
1 Good Used McCullough
Chain Saw , S7S.OO
1 Good Us.ed Amana
UprJ;Vht Freezer, $250.00 .

· Pomeroy Landmark

'1'. ~jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Ail

BEAT UP BY ONE OF TfiOSE
UTTLE BUTCHERS LAST FALL.
HE'LL BE •FAIR BUT FIRM~

·Young's
Carpeting
loote 3 Pomt1;vs 0.
Carpet &amp;u pho tery
Phone Mike Youn&amp;

Residential
and
Ca II for
commercial.
estimate, 24 nour servicre.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 985-3806

992·2206 or 992·7630

-

''Tht OriJinatDil
ltlol The lmitJtDrs

BoK J4
UJl~

_ EXPERIENCED

~utomatic

Service
'•r- Ike a...,.., lntdt
t14oa..M

Transmission Serrice

....

PARTS· LABOR
GUARANTEED REASONABLE
RATES

&lt;Mo.

BIG FLAT LOT - ·6 room
home, bath, F .A. furnace,
on Rt, 33 . Lots of room for
the Krddies $23,000
WE DON't PROMISE A
MIRACLE, BUT WE CAN
SURE LEND A HAND .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES

,~

992·2174

..

Pllft'lei'O)'

lteed:sYillt. 0

~Ull-0250

OH, N 0~ ... DON'T
YOU SUPPOS.E'
WLADEOK MAY
wONDS R WHY YOU
DID YO UR. Be~T TO

REPI.ICIMEN1

WINDOWS
AlUMINUM
SIDINC·SOffiTT
CUTIIRS-AWNINCS

ME HIS
F'ISHTER DES161&lt;J
WAS NO GOOD~

Sy!KUM, Ohio

SAVE ON IOI)R fUEl BILL TillS
WIN fiR INO BEAUIIII YOUR MOBilE
HOlt!£. We ~att .U.Itlible In a fllltt)' of
~ olo"J life·tlmt alumrnum u11derptn~
In(. tOf yw1 pene of «~ i nd 1nd to
s.tisfJ JOVt msurJnct compa~ lei us
tie down 1001 mobilt home. These tie
downs 11e mechan.c.all) ins11lled to
U:S\111 mu imum ufet,. Conti~ I us IM
1

quality awnint- Don't

fOI'ms oo JOU I roof, Itt
i!Ad Jlop potential
992·7034 OR SlOP BY
Sl.j PO~IROY . OHIO
ES IMA1E.

•

'lilt! !til Itt

. '.

l}jl\fN'tiDlt

~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

Time for you-know-what

one lener 10 each square, to form

Kingsbury Home Sales

four ordinary words:

9191

9 :oo-Merv Griffin 3; Ph il Dol'l'ahue 4, 13, 15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair B; Family
Altair 10.
·

•

us c ~t 11 now
ltib. CAL l
1100 E. MAIN
FOR ! fREE

1·2/fFC

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6,1 977
S:45-Farm Repqrt 13 ; 5 :5!f-PTL Club 13; 5 :55S\mrlse Semester 10; '6 ·25-Urban League 10.
"6 :3o-Doctors on Cail 4/ News 6; Sunrise Sem·ester 8;
6 : 45-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50--Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13 ; 6 :55-Chuck Wh ite Reports 10;
Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7 :00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7: 30--Schoolles 10.
B:OD-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.

B:OQ-Baseball Play·Off 3,4, 15; Eight Is Enough 6,13
Good Times 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
8:31}-Busflng Loose8,10i~ : ~harlle's Angels 6,1J;
Movie '' Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night" 8,10;
Great Performances 33; American Short Story 20.
lO :oo-Baretla 6,13. ; 10 :31}-News 20.

Ph. 99;1.Jg,J

/

~

Mil.

Husiiiess Senic:es·
BRADFORD
Aucttonoor CCI;n .
ple te .:;crvtce Phone 949 2487
or 94 9 2000. Ra cine Oh to Cn tt
Bradl ord

-

SMAll farm for sole . 10°c down
o~ ner ftnonced Monroe COI.Hl
ty . W . Vo Phone [304 ) 772
3 102 or (304 ) 772-3227

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED - NEWER
RANCH TYPE , 3·4 bdrm s ..
modern kit . and ba t h,
approx . 2 acres, barn . cold
storage,
shed,
patio ,
carport, garden space,
FREE
, GAS .
FREE
WATER . LOOKS NICi' for
$35.000 .00.
JUST LISTED Ni ce .
older home In Rut land,
W. B f . P ., fenced lot , 3
bdrms ., carpet1ng and
remodeled~· Lots of newer
features . Orily $14,000 .00.
JUST
LISTED
2
fireplaces, 2-3 bdrms , good
neighborhood
in
Middleport .
N tc e.
remodelmg , 1 floor plan ,
off street parking . Cheap at
$13,000 00
JUS:r . kiST EO Extra
income with this 10 room
rooming house. 2 1.(-;~ batlls,
lobby, ltv1ng room , dinipg
room . The net income
should pa y the mortgage.
$16,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT This
imi)Osing older home has
everything
from
W. B. F . P . to a large two
garage . 4 bdrm s., modern
kit ., 2 baths, large rec .
room , etc:. A bargain at
139,500.00.
HOW ABOUT - l 112 acres
in the country with a nicel y
remodeled 2 bdrm . home,
barn and other buildings .
Steal !his for $11 ,500 .00 .
4 ACRES - .4 home sites,
Near Mines, good gravel
road $4,600.00
RANCH · TYP~ 3
bdrms., large eat-in kit.
with bar. · Large Master
bdrm ., full baement, many
features . $23,500.00.
W£
STILL
HAVE
BUYERS FOR . YOUR
HOME . LEl' OUR PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR •
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELA~O
ASSOCIATES
992-2259, 992 ·6191
!92-256B

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
FREE GAS - Why worry about the high cos! of
heating your home, outside lig hts, heating your water,
drying your clothes, etc. We ' ll sell you yQur own gas
well. Not only that we' II throw in a good 1•12 story house .
with 3 bedrooms end bath , nice dinrng room and full
basement, also over SO, acres of land with a large
beautiful pond stocked with fish . Call for appointment
Priced for quick sa le at $37,500.00.
, KIDS INo YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE Five
bedrooms, nice 1'12 story hoiJse, large livmg room with
shinrng oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area...2
full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs. Completely
insu lated with F .A. nat . gas furnace. Large porches&amp;"'
garage Loc. in Chester. Price Sl9,8~.

CO UNTRY farmla nd w1th seclud
ed woods , wa te r and go od a c
cess '"Monroe Coun ty W Vo
$1.000 down . coli {304 ) 77'1
3102 o r (304 ) 772-3277
VA-FHA . 30 yr . lino ncmg . Ireland
Mor tgage 77 E Sta te Athen ~
phone (6141 592 3051 •
2 STO RY 3 bed room frame
house . F.A. fur noC'e . stor m win
dews , fireplace in Middleport
Phone 9q'l-3451
.
·. ::.:___

DUJEG

() I

ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
Sweo pers t O(H~ ter s tf(H1S oil
.,moll appliances . l awn mower
ne xt to ~to t e H1ghw ay Cor ogt!l
on Roure 7 Phor1e {61( 985
3825
REMODEL ING Plumb mg heortng
and oil types of general repou
Wor lo. guoron te~d 20 yeo r'&gt; e ~&gt;.
per1ence Phone 992 2409
SEWI NG MACHINE Repons seer
v11;e otl ma kes 992 1784. The
Fab 11 c Shop
Pomeroy
Aulhor•u:-d Stnger Sales and
Service We sharpen SctssorS;,

IF I wERE SHE -- WHERE
WOUlD 1 SCUTTLE 10 ESCAPE&gt;
HO! HERE SHE SHOULD
.
PAUSE TO LOOK BACK--

EXCA VA11N G doz~r loader and
backhoe work dump rrucks
and lo boys. for h1re w1tl haul
hl l dtrt to sod lt mc'i tone and
g1ovel. Call. Bob or Rog er Jet
lers day phone 992 7089 ntghl
SIX ~OO M house o t 613 M ill St
J.?hone 992-3525 or 997 5232
Midd leport. Good condJiion . In
qutre at 439 Lincoln St ., M• d EXCAVA liNG dozer boclo;hoe
~ dlepor t.
_
and dttcher Charles R. Hor
f u~ld
Bock
Hoe Servtc e
MUST SELL thrs -:3C'b~e-dC'roont , 1' 1
Ru
tland
Oh1o
Phone
742 2008.
both . sp lit -lbyer w11 h Qll thc ex
tros' Priced for belov.. a ctual Will do roolmg CQmlruc fton '
real es tate value lor qutck
plumbing an d heeling No job •
sole 1 Nice drive to powe r
toO Iorge or too small Phone
plonrs $44 ,o0o 9q2 · '149~.
742 2348.
~URAL HOME lor sa le by owner . CARPENl ~R
lloorrng
cerltng .
Kitchen , d1 n1n g room double
pa ne~n~ __ Phone 9n -2759.
li ving ro om four bedrooms
ups lotrs., both coom on each HOWER.Y AND MA RTI N Ex ·
colo'ot in g . sep !t c s ysterns
floor lull baseme-n t. coal fu rdozer , backho-e , dump truc: k.
nace . fuel otl furnoce , -ci ty
ltm ostone , grovel
black top
woter Also well and c~s. t ern ,
po vmg , ~~ 143 . Phone 1 (614 )
Cellar house wtth 2 room dwe ll ·.
698-733 1
ing ove rhead . Lorge barn On
apj:&gt;r ox 3 'l OCre s ollond Pr tc BA-TH ROOM S AN D Kltcheru
ed at $35 .000 fir m . Shown by
re mod eled . ceromtc trl e plum· ,
oppomtment on ly 992 -3469 or
bin g carpentry, ond ge11erol
992·3551
molfllenon ce 13 years experience 992 3685

Own and. operate whO lesa le
popcorn ', rcute
Pleasant
bus iness . Hig h prof it 1tem .
Part ttme or full ti me. Cash
inves tment of Sl, qJo and up
depend ing on number of
a cco unts you wish lo
service . We establ ish
in11ial acco unt s. For details
write rand inc lude your
phoi-le number . o . M .
Eagle, 3938 Meadowbrook
Rd ., Minneapolis, Mtnn .
SS4a.

EXC AVATI NG , BACK HO E dozer
trenc her . lo w boy
du mp
trucks, sep tic sys tem s 8111
P~l i n s , phone W2 -2478 . day Or·
~ lght .
.

l FBI'!.- U KtO A f.IE'W MAIL.

fOW Mtx.H IS 1\1/&gt;.T

LOST '30 FO\JtJDS I

1972 VINDALE 14 x 70 . 2 bedroom
with
walk - a - boy
in
mas tcrbedroom , 7 x 1.4 pullout ,
eMtro insulatton , Central air .
Excellent condition 1 owner .
992-3439

.
••.

top1c
13 Chessman
14 Kittens or
pupp1es
15 Go astray
16 Nourished
17 Cap s tyle
- ,8 Menu
listmg
20 Racing's
- War
21 Cut down
22 Greek
athletic
contest
23 Royal

•

,.-~

His tail curl

soon as I lal.l
'im in th'
basll.et!

l lANO TUNING ond Repair. l one
Daniels, 992-2082 . 12yeors se rvice to Tr i- County Reference :
Elberfelds.
TRtNCHIIIIG WORK done : Coli
992·5524 or 992-:)917 .
HIGH SCHOOl Sfmrors. wtl l do
babysitting while Southern
loc,ql Schoo l is dosed . Hove
own tran sportation and plenty
of good references, 949 2677,
after A 30 pm

24 Mal de 25 Hindu hero
26Buy on (take a
chancel
28 Seed
coating
29 Nut
32 Get- of
33 Dennis or.
Doris
Memorable

zone
{3 wds. 1

16 Hardly
any
19 Stately
20 Famed
auntie and
others
23 Sailor
25 Hardest
to find

35 Football
play
(2 wds.)
37 Relay race
38 Chosen
39 Abstract
being

~HIM

'·

.

WINNIE

• OH,W1NNI!'/ji'Vf
GOTIHEM

oT

WONDE12FUL
NEW5 FOil
YOU!

7t!M ()OoLE~ 1!-IE
HEAD OF YoUR

&amp;TOCKROOM I
JU(]T ASKED ME
mMAR~V

WEND,?jWf:.Vf

ANDJUDGIN&amp;

OOT

TALK!
I. CANJT GO ON
LIKE l'Hio MUCH
LONGER!

I3Y YOUI2

E)( PRESSION , 1
TAKE IT yOU'VE

ACCEPTED I

' HIM/

Call Jimmy Deem At 949·238B

Phone992-2 181

'

t•

I~

"'OU!ii: QUESTION 15
Al30liT THE CEILING, I
CAN AN5W€R IT

. - - =, . . . . . - - - : - - -

• 978

· ·2

t AK8S
•KQJ97

WEST

EAST

• A83 2

• KQS4
., J 10 3

.1196
tlO 94 3

... s 4

tQJle
... 32

SOUTH
.JIO
•KQ875~

m--t-+--+-+--+-

t2
• A 10 8 8
Both vulnerable

it:

I. 0 N G F E L J, 0 W

One letter simply stands for anothE'r. In this sample A is
used fo r the three L's. X for the two O's, £·tc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length rtnd for mati on of t he words are all

AWAKE ... SUT I CAN'T
RAISE M'i HE'AD...

Close Sat. At 5 P.M.

- .-=-=aR=ID:::-:::G=-=--1

- .

NORTH (Di

Is

~E5, MA'AM,.I'M

.'

37 Marchmg

l;c--t-+--

Wesl:

North E111

14

Pass

Pus
Pass

2•
Pass

Pan

Pan

diamond. SOUUl lOt to discard
one spade on a hilh -diamond
and with trumps breaking 3-3
wound up wl th an overtrick
and a top score of plus 170.
At all other tables in the
game, South chose to raise
clubs as his second bld. Same
North players got all the way
to five. Others stopped short
of game. West had a natural
spade lead. The club bidders
made 10 tricks for either plus
130 or minus 100 depending on
how they had bid.
This hand is another example of duplicate luck. That
jump to three hear:ts ranges
an abaolute force with aome
experts all the way doWn to a
mere Invitation to partner to
bid again.

Opening lead - lOt

Otwald &amp; Jome• Jacoby .

A Nevada reader wantl. to
know if notrump has always
aon a certain S&lt;&gt;llp was first - been scored at 40 for the lirlt
hints. Eafh d&lt;1Y the code letters are different.
trick and 30 for each subseadvertised as 90.44 per cent
CRVPTOQUOTES
quent
trick .
pure. Ely didn't like to have
No, it hasn ' t. In VanderK G W K E H too many forcing bids. At the
T G BSE
H 0¥ L' C V Y L H
bilt's original scoring It
same time, he described some
counted 35 a trick. II was
C N L
X L H C Culbertson sy•tem bids aa
PBSSVLG
ODELH
CNWS
changed to eliminate five
99.44 per cent forclns.
point scores.
ApparenUy South's iliiiiP to
·K D Y L T V W S H . QWBQLSWGMBLH
three hearts waa one of those
(For ;, copy or JACOBY
Yesterday's Cryploquote: WHEN WE DO NOT FIND PEACE almost forcl111 bids. In any
MODERN, nnd $1 lo: "Wfn II
Bridge. '' clo thlt nowapapar, •
OF MIND IN OURSELVES IT IS USELESS TO LOOK FOR ·I'F-- ~ent, North did-pass. A spade
El.SEWHERK-LA ROCHEFOUCAULD
lead would have held South to P.O. Box 488, Radio City Staffon,
Now York, 'N.Y. 10018}
his contract but West opened a

Back lri the days of Culbert-

w

(") 1977 KIRI fntUrf' s S~nd iUt f, In c .

UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
bath . Two more smal l bedrooms could be finished
upstairs. Also garage, storage building, straw be r ry
patch and garden space Driveway Is electric heated .
Nrce Oh10 River view. Furniture can be bought extra .
Price for quick cal e. House and lot, $12,600.

36 Turmeric

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

·- - - - - - - .
Call742-2211
TALK TO
WE NOELL GR.ATE
CARPET CONSULTANT .

FRIDAY Tit 5

31 Dilute

33 Canal

.

9:00-Barney Miller 6,13; Drought 33; Poisoning of
Michigan 20 .
9 :31}-Carter Country 6,13; 10:0D-Redd Foxx 6,13;
Dickens of London 33; News 20.
10::»---Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 :00-News J,4,6,B,10,13,15; MacNeii · Lehrer Report
33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Pollee Story 6, 13 ; Movie
"Dirfy Dingus Magee" 8; Movie "Petulla" 10; ABC
News 33; 12:00---Janakl 33.
12:40--World Series of Trivia ~.13; 1: 01}-Tomorrow
3,4; 1 : 31}-Mary Hartman 10; 2: 11}-J)Iews .)3.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Mother. Jugund Speed (PGI
9 &amp; 11 P.M. -The Women ( R)
Cable Channel 5 7:00 P.M. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 :30 - Coach' s Corner
8 :00 - Cable Journal
•
9 :00 - Home Digest
1.0:00- 7110 Club

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

MINERSVILCE - 4 bedroom house, mostly carpeted,
wrap around porch, gaf-age, large lot , all oyerlooking
the "Ohio River. Asking $16,500 .
EASTERN DISTRICT - 1'h acres at' level la nd , nice
12x64 all carpeted m obile home with 2 BRs, living
room, ki tchen and bath, 2 rooms built on, nice family
room with firep)ace, plenty of garden space, some fruit
trees. Large workshop and block ce llar Ci ty water and
septic tank . Nice cou ntry setting on County Rd . 28 .
Price $15,900

26 Meager
21 Wages
30 Obliterate

call

-

Rutiand

Yesterday's Answer

years

4.88 sq. yd.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

an

strike

4 Sea eagle
5 Vent
one's 6 Salaried
7 ObJet d' 8 Da1ry
product
(2 wds . 1
9 - Steber
10 Mount
discourse

9 :30--Edgeof Nlgh l6 ; Andy Grlfi111J8; Joker's Wild 10.
10:00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; MagatJne. B, 10;
Mike Douglas 13 .
·
10: 31}-Hollywood Squares 3,~. 15; 11· 00---Wheel of
Fortune 3,15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Marcus Welby,
M . D. 4t'Pr1ce Is Right 8,10.
11 : 3o-Knockout 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13 ; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St. 20 .
·
11 :55-CB S News 8; Loving Free 10.
]2 : 0~ews 3,~,6,10; To Say the Least 15; Divorce
Cour B; tJIIdday 13.
12 : 3
Chic&lt;&gt; &amp; the Man 3, 15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search fo'r Tomorrow 8, 10.
1.00-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not Fof Women Only 15 .
1 :30--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2.00---520,000 Pyramid 6,13; 2:30--Doctors
3,4,15; One Lite to Llve6,13; Guiding Llght8,10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,15;' All In The Family 6, 10;
Antiques 20.
3 : 15-General Hospital 6,13; J :30--Match Game B, lO;
Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals. Qur Gang 4;
"
G'ong Show 15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is. 8; ·
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13 .
4::»---My Three Sons 3r Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8; Brady Bunch 10; Little Rascals 15.
S:QO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
[ Mister R09ers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency '(
One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5 :.3G-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3.4.8, 10.13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:31}-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Bur neff &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; As We See 1120.
7:0&lt;f-Trufh or Cons. 3; Cross·Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Gong Show B; News 10; To Tell the ''truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Coping with Kids 20; Anyone for
Tennyson? 33.
. _ •
7:30--Hollywood Squares 3,4; $100,000 Name Thaf
Tune6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeii · Lehrer Report
20,33; That's Hollywood! 10; Nashville on the Road
13; Marty Robbins Spotlight 15.
8 :00-BasebaU Play -Of! 3,4,15; Welcome Back. Kotter
6, 13; Movie "Paplllon" 8, 10; Once Upon A Classic
20,33.
8:31}-What's Happening!! 6,13; Best of Ernie Kovacs

ni(:kname

-1
Keg. U .IJs.not installed

PENNZOIL RUTLAND open datly
rolls of carpet in stock.
till
10. Closed Mondays , l&lt;&gt;oo•d selection all an sale.
wrecker servtce, tire re po tr .
lied with padding, no
Phone 7-42-9575 or 7.42-2081.
to pay.

Jumbles GLOAT BUSHY, FORBID POLICY
Answer. When a girl addr- you by your first
name,ohe may be out lor thl&amp;-YOUR LAST

ACROSS
40 Compact
I Do a steve· 41 Equal
dore's job
· DOWN
5 Keeps
1 Backslide
apart
2 Violently
11 Cupid
3 In the

12 Prison

IlL ABNER
)L "&gt;t::li'IG LADYIF I REL-EA5G
)a!- WIJ...L &gt;bU

12 Md 15 fl. width Carpel .
r:ubber back .

(Answers tomorrow)

by THOM"S JOSEPH

IIJ COL-L-ARS z

-

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
Regu Ia r S6.95
Save S4.8B Sq . Yd .

,I

His

~,,

. SAVE ON
,. .CARPETING
MUST SELL 12 M60 trailer on lo t tn
Mtddleport . 99'1-7386 .

r xr rxxrx IJ

•

BORN LOSER

TWO OR th ree bedroo m home
Mason , New Ho ven or in Ohio,
'
(3041 773·56A3.

---

HOW TO R'EMIND HIM
10 DO Hl5 DAILY

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sugges1ed by lhe above cartoon.

YeSleTday s

His tail was

·

10-5

E.)(ERCI~E.

'

straiqht
as a
spike!

I []

LEAPIN ' LIZARDSLJ.I:I AT.GUY
MUST BE PART BLOODHOUND-DON'T MOVE, SM4DY.. BLOODHO!JMDS CAN'T SFE TOO WELL--

Answer:'t

You seen it, Joel!

· BLOWN INSUlA TIO N. Ge t three
es tim ates Call 667 6479 for
lree estimate .

wllll_ii!~u_R~~~,i- :~ '~

tAMIDDY

UTII.E ORPHAN ANNIE

·'

••

CONVI~C E

LARRY LAVENDER

Chester, Ohio
6·29· pd .

SWAIN

Radiator~

'·

WINDOWS' DOORS

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

AI

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5.1977
5:00---Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Nelqllftptbood
20,33 : H09an's Heroes 10; Emergency One 13.
5 :30--News 6; Elec. Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10.
6 :00---News 3,4.8.10,13, 15; ABCNews6; Zoom 20 ; 6 :30-. NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 1J; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B, lO; Pests, Pestlcl&lt;'es &amp;
Salety 2!1.
7:00---Truth or Cons. 3; Cross. Wits 4 ; Liar' s elub 6:·
Sha Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Americana 2!1; Big Green Machine
33.
7 :3()-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; MacNeil· Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge.10; In Search of 13; Wil d Kingdom 15 .

Blown
.lnswlltlon Sti'YICts:
fiunclnJ AnHibM
Blown Into Walh &amp; •«in
STORM

11 :00-News 3,~,6,8.10, 13.15;.
.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Sl.orsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Hawaii Five-0 . 8; Movie "Ca.s tle Keep" 10.
12 :30--ABC News 33; 12 :41}-Myslery ot the Week 6,13;
Movie "See the Man Run" 8.
1: 00-Tomorrow 3.4 ; 1:30--Mary Hartman 10; 2 :10-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Swashbuckler (PGI
' 7 &amp; 11 P.M .-Silent Movie (PG)
.Cable Channel S 7:00 P . M. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness '
. • 7 ·30 - Marshall Football
10:00 - 700 Club.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.[10N1T WORRY, THE
..JUDCiE OOT MUG OED AND

I TOLD OF MY

FREE ESTIMATES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INCr

TEAFORD(B

SOFTENER?

. i

h4111tor to lhil

w.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1977,

I·

THREE BEDROOM house for sa te
near Eastern high school. Ful l
basement lorgf! livin9 room
wtth fire pl.ace , 2 cor goroge .
985-3867

Reedsv ille. Ohio
378·6289

CONSIGNMENT
PUBLIC AUCTION

.I

-

-

GARAGE SALE , O ct . .5 thru 8 from
9 to 5 daily loco ted off Routa 7
Na. 216 Her~ ' s your
Bypass on old Route 143 South
nee to I ive in the
of Jo cks Club . Reas onable
rc:ountT V With conveniences.
pr1ces .
COAL , limestone ond cok1um
3 Bedrooms, large kitchen,
chloridi! and colc tum brr ne for
THREE FAMil V Garage Sale , "Wed
carpeted
throughout ,
dust control a nd special ml~~. t ng
and Th urs Oct . 5 and 6. 810 W.
attached garage. 100x&lt;OO
salt lor farmers , E.l'l:celsior Soft
Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 9-4
lot. Pri ce reduced to
Works . Mmn .Street, Po me roy.
Children s ond adult clothing ,
S26,500 . FHA approve.d . ·
Ohio or phone ~~9 1
antique furniturE! . mts~; jlems .
CAMPER , S600
Also
horse
No. 212 43 acres Qf
SIX FAMIL '( Ga rage Sate . Oct 3
trailer , $450 Phon e (614 ) 698- . vacant land close to mines .
4, 5. Me n s ,
women "s ,
3290
Pr ice $6,700.
chtldren 's clothing . dtshes
mtsc. Dorothy Calaway s near ECONOMY TRACTOR with all atCALL US AND CHECK 10
Alfred Turn on 681 follow
tachments l rke • nf!w asKtng
SEE
IF
WE · HAVE
$2250. Phone (614) o96·3290.
signs .
SOMETHING
YOU
THREE FAMILY Vord Sole Oct 6 ALADDIN KEROSINE lamp a nd
MIGHT NEED .
heaters replacement ports.
ond 7. Adult and Ch tldren 's
cp.mney, mantels. wtcks etc
clorh ing , household ite ms . At
804
Main
Stop in .lor demons trat1011 ond
Cltnt Johnson s res1dence on
Pomeroy
992-2298
free
cat
alogue
.
Mo
unta
in
old Portland Rood
After Hours Call
Leather end Ge neral Stare ,
THREE FAMILY Yordc-:SC"o'Cie~
o-,:cP-oul
992-7ll3
104 ·1 06 W. Unt on St. , Athens ,
Boer res1dence , 1st for m on
CONTACT :
Ohro. sn 5478
rtght pastH•9hwoy Gorogf! on
Lois Pauley
Rt. 7. Lorge variety olttems , in APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchards
Branch Manager
eludes 2 TV's , brass ltreploce
Stofe Rou te 68q
Ph one
screen and ondtrons~ Avon botWil kesvi lle . 669 - ~785
tles . cos t Cme -- jewelry ,
GOATS 6 weeks old 2 .mole
glassware . plenty of kntck $15 . 2 female $25. (614 )
knock s and odds and ends ,
696·123.4 .
some dothtng Thu rs , Oct 6th
and Fri. , Oct . 7, 10-&lt;1 . 985-JSJO. TROMBONE . VERY good condt ·
lion Used only for symphontc
YARD SALE Household Items .
band Phone 992 5267 . aher 4
IHA"L TOR
toys , books . baby furn1ture ond
pm
bedding, old Vtctrolo and rock VIRGIL B. TEA FOliO, SR.
ing choir . clothing and mtsc. FI VE YEAR · old Appaloosa
REAlTOR
,
Gelding
.
Blocl
o
;
with
w~tt
e
items . 3 mi : soufli taf Tuppers
216 E. SecontiStreel
Plolns on CR 28 , '1. mt oft Rt 7.
b lanket ,
good
looking
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
9'12 ·7735 .
•
1st house on rtght. Oct .6. 7. 8
Phone 992·3325
YARD SALE . lues , Wed Thurs .. T.(tACK OF TIMBER . Also . Hall"and Fri , 4th, 5th , 6th , and 7th
runner beans , $2 75 bu . you
HEAR SCHOOL - Sma ll
pick . 843-2353
10-dark at Joan Stewart's '
village.
3 pedroom home
Depot St ., Rutla nd , Ohto
SWEET POTATOES . Robert lew1s ,
with barn, T.P water and
YARD SALE , 16 am Wed ., Oct . 5th
843-2432 .
near stores . S14,000
thr u
Sol.
Don
Harde n
fAKING ORp~RS fo r ltrewood and
r&amp;stdence ,
Rust1c
Htlls
stovewood . Call 843-2933.
72
ACRES
Good
Syracuse . Boys' clothtng , lire
remodeled 8 room home
rtms and stereo cOmponent set . 18FT FIBERGLASS boat wtth 75 hp
with 2 ' baths . modern
motor and trailer wtth 6 life
YAR D SALE , Sot., Oct. 8 at Elva
kitchen, F.A Furnace and
iackets, 2 ski boards and a set
Dot ley 's r,estdence across .from
of sk ts $700. Smtth -Corona od garage. New fences. Only
Fire Station in Syracuse .
digg ma chine , work s good ,
$37,500 .
BASEMENT SALE 9· 3 located ot
$20. Huffy coaster btke Iorge .
Sandy Might's residence on
men 's , $25 . 992-3792 .
WASTE LANO 100
County Rd . 3, leadi ng Creelo.
TWENTY -FIVE HEAD ol feedet
acres, 60 acres of coal.
Rd. ,Mtsc. tfems .
steers . 7-42 ·2274'or. 742 2221.
some woods and m inerals .
TH~EE FAMILY Yard Sole , lues .
Wed , and Thurs ., 9 to 5. North
QUIET STREET
J
3rd St ., Middleport,
bedroom frame home .
YARD SALE . 258 fear! St., Mtd Fireplace
1n
living,
dleport . Nice ,school dothes .
carpetirlg and 2 car garage.
Ocl 7 and 8, Fri and Sot
Want only S15.SOO.
YARD SALE. Three family . Lots of ·· Strickly wholesale to all.
Not less than '12 case.
cloth1.ng Boy s" slzi!s .il-6 g•r ls '
PDME ROY- J bedrooms.
10 12 . extra large women 's and
i •12 baths carpeting,
men 's clothing , many exlros
centred heating , garage
3rd house on New l tma Rd . a
and corner lot. Sl25,000
Hutchison
Sub -div ision '
Rutland . Wed . thru Frt. 9-3,
145 · ACRES - Remote 4
YAR D SALE . He nry Hortman ,
bedroom home with large
Chester , Ohro. Sot only Mtn tbarn . Some fencing . Ask1ng
bike , clothes. bottles . lamps .
1210 Washington Blvd.
$45,000.
.
toys
Belpre, Ohio

HOOF HOLLOW t1orses Buy . sell
rrade or tra in .. New and used
saddles Horse Shoeing . Ruth
Reeves , Albany . (614 ) 698 3290.

-

-

APPOINTMENT
Case No . 22202
Estat e of James Walter
PARTS FOR 't971 Galaxie Ford for
Archer De ceased .
sole . Pho ne 992 ·5858
Notice is here by g iv-e n that
Lerha Morr is of Route ·2 ,
197.3 CHEVROLET IMPAlA Station RUMMAGE SALE. Oct . 7 and 8. St .
Racme , Oh10 . has been duly
Wagon . 8-po!isf!nger , atr cond .,
Poul"s Un tied Method tst Church
appo tnted Executrix of the
AM -FM radio , excellent shape
AnneM . Tuppers Plains , corner GREEN BEANS , holf -run ner!i ond
Estate of James Walte r
64
,000
mdes
Coii9A9-2273
.
bunch . Pick your own, bring
of
Rt . 7 and 681.
Archer , dece ased , la te of
container Davis Forin Phone
Rac ine , Me iqs County , Ohio .
1972 CHRYSlER NEWPORT . 4·dr . FIVE FAMILY Yard Sole . Fn . ond
247 2198 .
Credito r s are reaul red to
sedan 174 Mulberry or call
Sot. , I0-3 , Corner of Forest Run
file the~r clatms wtlh' sa id
992-6222
.
Road
ond
Rou
te
7
Cancelled
tf
FIVE
MONTH old wh t l~.:.fpc e~_c alf
f iduc1a r y
Wifh1n
t hr ee
rotn
.
Wh
ite -faced cow 1n Boshan .
mo nt hs
1973 BU!C K CENTURY , V-8, aut o ,
949-2417 .
Dal l' d th is 17th day of
P.S.
p
B
$1995
992-7059,
after
FOUR
FAM!L
Y
Yard
Sale
Clo!hes
,
Sep te mbe r 1977
- - -5 pm
infant to adult Books , records , GAS CIRCULATING heater .
=~
mtsc Co Rd 25 . 1ust off Rt 7 at
9'12 ·3090.
Manoin g D Webste r
1975 FORD PINTO M P G, GOOD
Judge
GAS MILEAGE . CAtt 992-7512·.. Cheste r. Wed .. Th urs .. and Fr1.
FIREWOOD
. CAll 9'12-5537 or
Court o f Commo n P leas ,
AFTE,R 6 PM .
992·7291 .
Probate Division
{9} 71 , 28. ( 101 5, Jtc
YAMAHA. HARtEY ·DAVIDSON :
Con -AM Motorcycles . Complete
RISING STAR Kennel Boa rding ,
sales ond lonto ~tl c servtce!
lndoor-Ou1door runs . gra,o mmg
Hours M-T. T 9·6; W-F, 9-7. Sat.
oil breeds , clean sanitary
9-5. "'The Motorcycle People ol
locllthes oe 367-7112 Chesh tr e .
Southeastern Ohio" Athens
Phone (614 1 367·0292.
Sport Cycles , In c 20 W Sltmson
Ave:. Ahtens . Ohio . ( 6~4 ) Ave ..
AKC SHETLAND !!iheep dogs .
Athens , Ohio. (61A ) 59'1-1692 .
(Min.) Collies . 2 females , 7
wee ks old Shots ond worm,d .
Phone (614 ) 367 0292 or
NEED A WATER
367 ·7112 .

11:00 A. M.

•"" · • •

1977

·Business Services

'

.

&amp;
Garden Center

NOTICE OF

.,

""I •

Anclion

Wwted to Bur

Contact
IF

'

•
Wednesday

AND THE JUDGE

For Sale. lil!lll m- T~de

I 'l.U 1.1'

"'

_....,

: ,j,j\ ...

,;. J.H"

TR~CY

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items ·Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
I ,I,

11-The Dan~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy o

CNEW5PAPER EN1't."-PIUSE ASSN. I

�'

·'

•
12~The

Daily Sentinrl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Od. 5, 1977
Sun&lt;hly at the Flatwoods
United Methodist Ch ur ch
with Sund ay sch&lt;KJI at10 a.m .
RUTLAND - Me~ting tn the Rutland Volunteer Fire lo be fa llow!'(l by a basket
regular
""ssion
- - Monda1·. ni ht O.partment dectded not h&gt; dinner at 12:30 p.m. The Rev.
ehd,•rse Stat~ Issue 2. The Prarl Casto ·ocill be speaker
issue deals with baMin~ leg· f0r the afternoon . sen •ice
hold traps.
which begins at 2 p .m .
Singers will be present from
RACINE - Parents and West Virgirtia . The pu blic is
patrons of the Southern local in\'iled.
School Distri('( are Invited to
attend a rnet&gt;ting on tht'
A rwnmage sale wit! be
INTEREST
Spt'l 'ial election and tl'\ 6.5 held at the St. P au l's United
m1ll sch(l("'ll operatmg le\ y. to 1\li;·tlwdist Church an nex in
~held at 7:30 this tt\'Cnmg Ill 'I'uppPrs Plains. Corner of
the l'aft&gt;h.•ria &lt;:~f Southt•rn UPUtl? 7 and fiB\.
I hgh &amp;: hoot. The SP&lt;' &lt;'ial
rlect&lt;•n in the district will be•
held on Oct. 25. The meeting

Notices~ local briefs

---------------------------,
l Area Deaths 1!' .

Accord broken, is claim

I
.
'
ALICE CAPEHART
l emetery. Friends
may
cal
.BELGIIADJo;, Yugoslavia people who are ..subjected to other questions , because they
SYRACUSE - Alice lo11lst · at Ewtno Funeral Home aller
(UPll - Sweden accused humiliation and perse&lt;.·ution . want to practice their religion
Capehart, 79, of Syracuse, 7 p.m. this even ing .
e astern E ur o p ea n beca use they want to express or because they want to work d ied unoxpecledly Tuesday
Communist countries toda y their views on social and together for political , trade afternoon . Mrs . C•pehort
NELLIE COCKRAN
union or other rights.' '
was preceded In death by her
AlBANY - Nellie Trader
of ser iously Violating the
parents, Elmer and Mbraaret Cockran , 60, of Route 2,
human ~ights provisions of
Harr Swea ri ngen ;
her Albany, died T~esday night
the 1975 Helsink i Accocd .
husband Frap lc. ; one son , and at
Veterans ·Memorial
Sweden. said tha t people in
a brother . ~
Hospital. She was born In
the Eastern bloc are. subJect
She was a member of _Preston County , W. Va .,
Syracuse
Asbury United daughter of Artley and
to
" humiliation
and
·Ali Wins Ratings Championship
Method ist Church ond the D . Elizabeth Pyles Pr.ott .
. By JOAN HANAUER
·
per secution" jus t because
of A. She was ·the first Girl
Survi ving are four sons,
they want to enjoy their
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The most popular s how on telev ision Scout leader In Syracuse and Charles and Robert Trader of
fundamen tal rights.
for the week ending Oct . 2 was Ute Muhanunad Ali-Earnie a past president of the PTA . Albany ; William Kenneth of
She Is surv ived by one Blrmlngton , Wash ., and
Swedish Undersecretary of Sha vers fi ght on Sept . 29.
.
doughier , Betty Capehart James, of New Marshfield ; •
State Lei! leifland made the
Ali and frie nd on NBC were in first place on the Ntelsen Friend of Bashan ; one son , d!vghter , Doris Zeigler .
accusation iil the second day . ratings .'NFL Football was in 13th place for ABC. If·that hlgh Bi ll , Plckel'lngton ; four Albany ;
two
brothers,
of the Belgrade Conference· interest in television sports contmues, tl could result m grandchildren, and several Charles and Donald Pratt,
is being sponsored by several
and nephews.
Grafton , W. Va .; three sisters
being held to review the phenomenally high numbers for u;e baseball playoffs and the n ieces
Funeral services will be Betty Delaney, wa-shington,
PTO units of the Southern
Helsinki agreement .
World Series.
(ConUnued from pact I)
Friday at 2 p .m . at the O..C~i.. ArJna Liston, ReynoldsDistrict. I'
It
was
a
continuation
of
CBS, without a strong sports entry , had to content itseU with Asbury ChJJrch with the Rev . burg , and Jean Martin,
in the impacted area . A SON1ne1 y -iliv .nterest-peniJHy
what has emerged .as--&lt;~- thefine Sunday showing of S.n1e,of its old favorite sitcoms that Harvey Koch - oHlcl'otlng . -· Grlfllc&gt;n,- w . Voc;-10-grand~--~
. SYRACUSE
The day comment period. will concerted Weste.m dztve to premiered Oct. 2.
Burial wilt be In Gilmore children, and three greatd
wdlldra~n
b e f o re
'
ma1untw date
Syracuse ER Squad was follow during whlch DOE will
A special " Best of All in the Family " was in flfth place , ~:::-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::;;.:::::::::::::::;:::;:::::::: grF~~~~~;=~~Ices wi l l be at
comments
and get the Communist coun_tries
ca lled at 4:10p.m. Monday to accept
EXTENDED QUTLOOK
1 p.m. Friday ot the Btgonyto liv~ up .to...human rtghts " Alice " was in seventh, and " Rhoda" tied for 16th with ABC 's
the home of Anna Grace Oi ler suggest ions on the report.
Frltlly through Sunday,
Jordan
Funeral Home In
~~ptents
undertaken
at
•"love
·Boat,"
which
is
a
lot
better
than
the
Valerie
Harper
A final report, including
for Alice Capehart who was
moatly
fair
IDd
eool
Albany
ond
the Rev . Donald
comedy did last year. The difference may be the return of
Helsinki two ~~s ago.
dt'ad Qn arri\'al of the squad. suggested changes, will be
lhro
..
•h
the
-rlod,
with
Shue
officiating
. Burial will
!;"ifland satd:
Na(lcy Walker as Ida Morgenstern.
-e
.be In Alexander Cemetery.
At 7 :10p.m . Uwy were Palled published in late spring of
.W e fe el strongly far
Another CBS comedy made its season debut last week btgha In the 50t or lower · Friends moy colt ot the
to the park for Bubby Rnush 1978 .
801. Lowo will be In the 308 funeral home otter 2 p.m.
"One Day AlA Time," which firushed 19th, although it came in
who hart been injured "ht'n
early Friday and In the 308 Thursday .
second in it.s time period, trailing ABC 's "Soap ."
·
he felJ · H e was take n tn
Tt} e Ath ens Counh
or lower tes by Sunday.
Among the speci:ls, NBC's "In. The Matter of J{aren Ann
Say1ngs &amp; LOan Co
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Quinlan" look the best numbers, tying for eighth with ABC's
296 Second sr
In cas£' of emergency
( ConUnued !1'0111 paae 1)
Dome r o)t . Oh10
"Baretta ." The "Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald" was a
residents may ca ll these. th e secretar y said when questioned. He said " I find that
t o AB.C. rating in the 32--33 spots for its twodisappointment
additional nwnbers, gjj:l--2239
somewha t tro!Wlesome." Brown declined to give further
part performan ce.
.
or 992·20-! l.
·
details, but other sources indicated the Russians are able to
The Ali fight wasn't enough to put NBC over the top - ABC
send their kiUer satellite against targets witliliiabotlt 550 miles was first again this week, closely followed by NBC, with CBS a
Homecoming
will
be
held
of Earth , dest roying them with efplosives.
1
~
dismal third . CBS had a lock on 12 of the bottom 20 shows.
For the record, the 10 top network shows for Ufe week ending
Oct. 2,according to theA.C. Nielsen Co., were :
1: Ali-Shavers fight; 2: " Laverne &amp; Shirley "; 3: "Happy
Days" ; 4: " Charlie'sAngels"; 5: " Best of Allin The Famil~";
Don 't m iss out on a rerresniRQ IVcolorful spring .
6: "Three'sCompany" ; 7: "Alice"; 8: (tie ) "Baretta " and "In
· Holzer MedJcal Center
Plant your lavor.ite ttowe r" bulbs now
UteMatler of Karen Ann Quinlan" ; 10 : "What 's Happenin2! !"
(Discharges, Oct. 4 )
VETERANS MEMORIA~.
... you r neighbors will love you .
Admitted .- Osby .Martm , Alva· Albert, Thomas Back,
While Ute networks batUe for prime time ratings , millions of
Pomeroy ; Cletus Arnell, Garnet
Betz,
Connie
Pomeroy ; Margaret Parc~ll, Bumgarner, Eddie Canter, people and dollars are involved in daytime television, much of
· SEE OUR NEW SELECTION
Pomeroy ; Martha Mustam , Frank
Clark,
Dreama it soap opera , game shows and sitcom reruns.
Tulips,
hyacinths, daffodils, . crocus and
A majoc exception is CBS' "Magazine," with the first ed!tion
P~meroy ; Sylvta Parsons , Eastman, Pearl Edwards,
many
others.
Danling beauty imported
Middleport; Inez Randolph, Bertha Epstein, Charles of the season scheduled for Oct. 6, 1~11 a.m. Eastern time,
from Holland .
Pomeroy; Besste Silt!, Frazier, Janet Hall, Mrs. anchored by Sharron Lovejoy . "Magazine" will be broadcast
Ute
first
Thursday
of
every
month.
Ractne.
/
.
Francis Harris and son, Mrs.
The October issue investigates three subjects. First there is
Dtscharged . Stille Joseph Holtz and son, Wesley
the
sad situation in which the families of convicts find
Brewer, Melvtn Mulhns, Jackson, Mrs . ..· Edward
themselves
. Next comes a profile of Bob Barker, host of the
Floyd Spence, Mabel Swan, Martin and son, Mrs. Dennie
frenzied
"
The
Price Is Right," and finaUy a touchlng,
Linda Hudson, Peter But· ..McConnick and daughter,
frustrating,
agonizing
story of a couple with the double burden
cher, Belva Mohler, . Cheryl Delbert Milam, Pamela
of
worrying
about
their
baby.'s survival - and his $100,000
Laudenruit.
Morris, Pamela Napper,
medical
bills.
Keith # Ousley. Rebecca
It is the final segment on little Danny Dayhoff, his battle for
Pasquale, Helen Robinson,
life
and his parents' battle to pay for it, that rivets a viewer's
Mrs. Robert Shaffer ·and
·
attention.
, - - - - - - - -. . daughter, .M ary Sparks,
Bobby
Stringer,
Jack
Sweesy, Sr., Mary Thomas,
Wilma Wamsley, MarshaU.
Wolle.
" Free
(Births, Oct. Cl
ol
Middle of Upper Block .
Frost"
Mr. and Mrs . lfarold
Pomeroy, Ohio
Dtllon,
a
daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
Open : 9 a .m . to 5 p.m . Mon . thru Thurs . 9 a.m. to 8 p.m . Friday. Saturday 9 a.m . lo 5
William Daily, a daughter ,
p.m.
Coalton; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
~nterbury I a son, Mason, w'
Va.; Mr. · and Mrs. Louis
Ah! The l.;Omfort Joyce has added more than a dash of
Green , a son, Leon, W. Va.; ily MAT111.EW c. QUINN
ATLANTA (UP! ) - Mayor
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Queen,
you've always comfort to these sportslers! You'll
a son, Mason, W. Va.; ·Mr. Maynard Jacks on won
. dreamed of ... discover all-over softness. all-oyer
and Mrs. Antho~y (iriffin, a lan~lide re-election over
comfort and flexibility! From glove·sofl
dau ght er, Wilkesvl'ile and four opponepts,, two of them
in
not
one,
bllt
leather, to inside cushioning and layer
Mr . and Mrs. Michael white, TUesday night as the
Energy Saving 'Refrigerator.
two sport looks! of pillowy crepe .. . they're companion
only black mayor of a major
Johnson, a son, Ewingto".
Engineered to save mon~.Y ..~n your electiic bills.
Southern city .
looks 10 liven up your casual wardrooe!
With or
A light , 41 per ltnt turnout
Without Fiber
of the city's voters on a cool,
PLEASANT VALLEY
clear
day gave Jackson, 39,
DISCHARGES Rev.
5 Gal. Bucket
his
second
four-year tenn
Dale
Bass,
Syracuse;
without
having
to go through
Minerva Hodges, Point
non-partisan
a
runoff.
The
Pleasant; Mrs. Terry Powell,
elections
were
the
first in
Racine; Mr.s. Fred Jackson,
Rust Leather
which
Atlanta
's
black.
voter
Buffalo; . Judy Crabtree ,
Leon; Jeremy Imboden, registration exceeded white
voters.
Racine; Roscoe Escue, Point
MASON, W.VA.
With all 194 precincts
Pleasant; Guyla Roush,
reporting ; Jacksori . received
Mason; Hattie Jordan, Point
HOURS :
53,694 votes for 63.6 per cent
M~n ., Thurs., &amp; Sat.
Pleasant; Willis Hauck,
by
northside
8:00-5,30
in operating costs compared
Gallipolis, and Richard followed
businessman Harold Dye
Friday. a ,oo.a ,oo
Bateman, Gallipolis Ferry.
to o ther major brands of
with 14,877 votes or 17.6
...
percent.
·
co mparable refrigerators ! *
Navy and
Fulton
County
Commissioner Miltoo Farris
Amoer
*Savings based on electric
was third with II, 764 votes for
13.9 percent and fonner city
rate of 4¢ - that you
Leather
administrative
services
pay in this area - and the
director Enuna Darnell was
ave rage 15 year life of a ·
a distant fourth with 3,536
votes or 4,1 percent.
refrigerator . .
Socialist Workers' !"arty
candidate Vince Eagan was
fifth with 483 votes or 0.5
percent. There were two
other
write·in candidates.
As Low As

On Certificates
Of Deposit
$1.000 Minimum

TV. ·••in Review

Impact ·

1 Yr. Term

Meigs eo.

Branch

_@

News •• in Briefs

~

...

HOSPITAL NEWS

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY .

BELKNAP
BLACk .
ROOF PAINT

HARTLEY'S SHOES,

Atlanta
reelects
•
1ts mayor

BELKNAP

a

J

CAN SAVE

$850

.

Pickens Hardware

..

~

Fabric fi·nds·
•
'•
•
•

AMANA REFRIGERATOR

0

P~lyester

Suede
Qiana Nylon -·
Sweater Knits
Quilted Bedspread
Fabric ·

Stylest Machine"··
Moclel533

I

..

Only

9

95_

.. ,

(Regularly 69.95)
When You Buy An

Middleport, 0 .
Phone 992-2635

t

YOU ARE INVITED:~ ·f

t
+
+
+

Monte Carlo Landau Coupe

ONLY ~169 95
THE FABRIC SHOP
W.2nd

P,omeroy

Malibu 4·Door Sedan

CH.EVROLET FOR '78
AT

..........

.~

t

\

~ . ~··

t

TO OUR •

NEW,CAR
SHOWING
,
.
O{:TOBER 6-7-8

..L

INGLES FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

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

+
f..

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

Malibu Wagon (Wagon Rear Open]

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8 P.M.

t

Rail~ Sport Coupe ~

...........
Camlro

Wholesale
•

- -

p~IC~S

Up

Increase may signal
end of stability for _
.
s.ummer inflation rate

MINIATURE INDIAN artifacts created by Eastern seventh gradt!ll, I tO r , include
Becky Eichinger, totem pole; Pam Murphy, tepee ;o-Silaron Griffith, a totem pple and a
shadow box featuring an Indian war dance ; Scott Justis with types of dwellings, and Becky
By JAMEs HIWRETif- . inflation is mOderating and-~Aii\lfrose with a lravois.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) ~ ha ve expressed c autious
Wholesale prices rose 0.5 per optimism of continued good .
cent in September, the Labor perfonnance.,
·
~
... Depattment reported today.
The Wholesale Price Index
The
seventh
grade
literature
class
of
Mrs.
Maida
Long
at Eastern Junior High School
It was the largest inc rease in September · Stood at 195.3
since April and a signal that from the 1967 base of 100. may have gotten a little off Ute track , but they learned .
. The class, reading a story about Indians, became extremely interested in the ways-of
swnmer~ong stability in the That means wholesalers paid
.
inflati011 rate may be nearin g $1,953 for goods Jast monttt the Indian.
Mrs. Long suggested the group get involved on a study of Indians as a project. The class
an end.
that would have cost $1,000 a
agreed and came up with replicas of totem poles, tepees, weapons, and even a real buffalo
Pr'ices paid to fanners for decade earlier..
their products fell 0.2 per
The
WPI
measures hlde from fa culty member, Mrs. NeUie Parker, whose grandfather kiUed the animal out
.
· I
, .
cent, the fifth consecutive average changes in prices on West.
Both
Mrs
.
Long
and
the
class
members
agreed
"
it
was
a
great
project".
The two
month decline. But that dip a seasonally adjusted basis of
the
variety
of
work
done
by
the
S!udent.s
.
..
pictures
suggest
was considerably less that a commodities sold in large
' 4.3 per cent dzop in· August quantitites by producers . The
farm prices.
survey covers 9,000 firms
. Of more cop cern to dealing in 2,700 products .
administratlon economists
The index is considered a
was an 0.8 per cent rise in the valuable tool by the govern closely watched industrial men! lo gauge prices that
price index , the biggest jump 'conswners will pay in coniing
in that c ategory s ince months. It had increased by a.
October, 1976.
scant 0.1 per cent in August
The overall September in- after drops of 0.1 per cent in
crease was in contrast to the July and 0.7 percent in June.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
VOL. XXVIII NO. 122
summer months of June , July
.DUrinT(" the period, food
and August when wholesale prices were on a rapid
prices turned in their best descent. Farm prices has
performance for any three· posted large drops as did
month period since the first prices paid for processed.
quarter of 1975. In that 9(klay foods and feeds .
Conswner. foods declined
period, the index declined at
WASHINGTON ~UPI) -Add ground bone to the
By BJORN EDLUND
a 2.6 per cent annual rate 0.3 per cent last month, a
list of Ingredients to your favorite hot dog.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden
despite a 0.1 per cent increase considerable slippage from
The Agriculture Department announced plans
(UP!) _ The 1977 Novel Prize
in August.
the large declines in June
Weduesday to allow use of meat cootatniug 3 per cent
for Literature was awarded
through August.
grmmd booe In processed loods such as ho! dogs. and
today to Spanish writer
The 0.5 per cent climb in
During September, prices
bologna .
Vicente Aleixandre for his
September was the largest of consumer finished goods,
poetic
writing
that
The blend of meat ,aad bone, to be called ''tissue
since a 1.1 per cent increase exclulling·foods, increased 0.3
from groond bone", is made by grinding bones wllll
"illuminates man's condition
•• last Apd
: per cent, the department
attached meal scraps and the~Jorctng the mixture
in the cosmos ·and ·present
President Carter and other sind, the first climb in .that
thi;'Ough a sieve ~o scree)! out booe chips larger thao a
. day society."
administration econom ic important category since
grain of pepper ·
·
The Swedish Acaaemy an·
officials have been sayin ~ May .
Labels on products cootatntng the substaoce mu.st
nounced the surprise award
carry the words ''tissue from ground bone added" In
to Aleixandre., 79, a member
type at least hall as large as the printing used for the
of the Spanish academy.
name of the product, sald Assistant ~grlculture
It cited him ''for a creative
Secretary Carol Foremao.
poetic writing, which, with
No food product could contain ·more than 20 per
roots in the traditions of
cent of the meat and bone bleod.
Spanish lyric and in modern
Backers ol the product say It can add hundreds of
currents, illuminates man's
mUIIooa of po101ds of cheap, heathy protein to the
condition in the ;:osmoa and
nation's food supply by rescuing meat which cannot be
saved after the meat Is booed bv hand. ·
• present day society."
.
.
&lt;
Aleixandre was cited for
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' . such
works . as
"La
A Meigs County . woman · her 'l)acks and raped her.
Destruccion o el Amor"
was allegedly raped WednesThe assailant allegedly
(Destruction or love) writteq
day night alter leaving. a threw her car keys away but Cy~le
in 1935, "Sombra del
restroOm at the roadside rest she was .able. to find them.
Paraiso" (The Shadow of
north of Crown City.
The victim then dzove to a
Paradise)
written in 194-1,
According to a report from · nearby home and called her
"Nacimiento
mtlmo" (The
the Gallia County sheriff's husband and the police.
Last
Birth)
written
in 1953,
department, the woman stopThe case is being handled
and "En Un Vasto Dominio"
ped at the roadside rest to use by the Gallia·Meigs Post
I (In a Vast Dominion) writien
the restroom. When she State Highway Patrol since it
in 1962.
started lo enter her car, a occurred at a roadside park:
- COLUM'BUS
State
The Academy said the one
man described as :&gt;-9 with
The victim was taken to the
Senator Oakley C. Collins .(r·
PARIS (UP!) - The United theme throughout
slender build, grabbed her, Holzer Medical Center for ex·
Ironton ) has announced that states and 18 industrialized Aleixandre's work is ~~T~
threw her to the ground, tore affiination.
the State Highway Patrol has nations announced plans strength to Survive·."
agreed to begin s~heduling today for sharp cut·backs in
The Swedish Academy kept
'*'~~~~;:::~::!:O::~~'!.~'*:~:::::~~'!:~~'*'~~::.\\.~:~~~~~.::..-..."&lt;»":-.....\~
mot?J.f2 driver's license oil imports and rapid this year's Nobel literature
exa~~s
in Meigs development of nuclear and prize a welliluarded secret.
Co.unlY once a month in other energy resources to American
w.riter
Saul
November . More frequent. head off the risk ·of power Be.llow's award last year was
exams will be scheduled if the shortages in coming years. leaked a few days in advance, ·
need arises.
The plans were decided at a much to the anger of tbe
By United Press Iiltemanonal
At present, persons in cabinet-level session of the Academy .
MADISON, OHIO - NEGOTIATIONS .WERE to resume
today between representatives of striking teachers and the Meigs County who want to governing board of the In·
The 1977 Nobel prizes are
Madison School Board under order of Lake County Common take a motorcycle dziver's ternatinal Energy Agency - worth
$145,000.
Three
Pleas Judge John M. Parks. The two sides met Wednesday for license test must travel to a U. S. ' · sponsored organ: devaluations in Sweden's
lour hours although a representative of Ute Ohio Education either A,lllens or Gallipolis. ization seeking a joint kroner within a year have
Association working with the teachers claimed the board was This situation was brought to Western strategy in the face reduced Ute equivalent value
Senator Collins' attention by of soaring oil prices and of the prize from '150,000 last
not bargaining in good faith .
Meigs County Sheriff James dwindling energy sources. year, despite a hike in actual
in
the
dispute
was
salaries,
with
the
two
A
major
issue
'
Energy ministers from 19 prize money.
sides about $750 apart at last report. Wednesday members of . J. Proffitt. Collins contacted
nations
endorsed
the Madison Education Association were served with copies of the Highway Patrol and, lEA
The literature award was
a temporary restraining order the judge Issued Tuesday after discussing the problem, proposals to keep their total \he first of this year's $eries
forbidding them to picket the six schools and the the Patrol agreed to schedule . oil imports down to 26 million a! Nobel Prizes to be
·administration building. About 700 of .the 4,700 students came motorcycle examinations in .barrels a day by 1985.
announced.
The 19 countries currently · Alexaindre was born in
' to classes Wednesday as school bus drivers honored picket Meigs County.
"Specific information import 22-23 million barrels a
lines.
about the date, time and · day and if current con·
ALGIERS, ALGERIA- ALGERIA HAS TURNED down a place of these exams will be sumption and import were
Japanese request for the return of five Red Army hijackers; released as soon as these · not checked that figure could
six terrorists and $6 million that Japan exchanged for .their 151 arrangements are finalized be expected"to rise to 44-52
bastages. The Algerian News Agency, the voice of government by the Highway Patrol," Sen. million barrels a day -. a
policy, said Wednesday Algeria only agreed to accept the Collins said.
figure oil exporting countrtes
RIO GRANDE - Student
· hljackers after Japan promised it would not seek return of the
might not be able or willing to . enrollment a\ Rio Grande
· 11 terrorists and the ransom .
'
'
,I
meet.
College and Community
· The two-day conferenc·e College increased for the
.
"AI~eria iJltervened in this affair. only at t~e. official
demlif\d of the Japanese government and tn conditions latd
cautioned that only in- fourth consecutive academic
down in common with Japan," the agency said. "Algeria will
NOW YOU KNOW
ternational cooperation can quarter establishing another
not tolerate that its good faith and goad will be exploited," it
Chinese is spoken by twice insure that all nations around record for the school.
said. "This intervention was taken .in a strictly humanitarian as many people than. any the world enjoy adequate
There are 1,085 students
framework in order to save seriously menaced hwnan.lives." other language in the world . energy supplies.
attending RGC.CC according
· to faU enrollment figures
1
DETROIT - THE LEAQERSHIP ' OF the 1.5-rniUion
released today , by Dean S.
member United Auto Workers union has rejected reaffiliatior• .
with the ARJA:IO lot the time being, thus keeping the :·House
of Labor" divided nin~ years after its initial split.
.
Citing majority opposition from rank-and.file union
members, who prefer an independent UAW, the union's 25member International Executive Board unanimously rejected
Absentee and disabled referendu111 action in regard
Discovery of a free-loading
a proposal for a special fall convention on the reaffiliation
voting for the Nov. 8 election to .a $5 · permlssive .~uto calf, two breaking and en·
question. UAW President Douglas A. Fraser told a news
is underway at the Meigs license fee invoked by council terings, a report of damagfld
conference that 20 mel!lbers of the board origiilally favored
County Board of Elections and the sale of beer will be property and a traffic ac·
rejoining the-AFL-CIO but voted against the move after a office, Mulberry Ave. , VQ!ed upon in Columbia and cident · were included in the
region-by-region review "!'owed a rank-&amp;Jd:f.ile_support was
Pomeroy.
Salem Townships in addition .Thursday report by Sheriff
Jacking. He said nine regwns favored reafftbatton and etght
At the November eleetion, to four -other "wet and dry " James :r. Proffit's Depart·
opposed , but that the eight regi~ns opposed represented the voters will elect two trustees questia~s in Salem Township. ment . ,
majority of the UAW rank-and-ftle.
· ·
·
The board of elections " A Chester area fanner
in each township, officials in
each village, school boards in office will be open from 9 a. notified the sheriff's offlce he
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER is being asked all three districts and on the m. to fp. m . Monday through has a Holstein calf in hls field.
by Republican leaders in Congress to support a tax cut to spark county level, ·besides voting Friday for the convenience of He has contacted · aU ad·
the economy similar to one pushed in 1963 by Prestdent on state issues .
voters . In recent years, rules joining landowners and none
Kenijedy.
.
·
governing
absente e and has missing stock . The
County·wide, voters will
House GOP Leader John Rhodes, R-Ariz., and Senate decide on two tax measures disabled voting have became animal has been In the
leader Howard Baker, R-Tem., said the proposal would besides the tax questions in more lax . Due to Columbus pasture the past two months.
provide an immediate 30 per cent across-the-board tax ,cut the various subdivisions.
Day on Monday, the board
The sheriff asks any
office
will
be
closed
Oct.
10.
In
Pomeroy,
there
is
a
)
(ConUnued
on
PICe
,,'
Ghcster
Townsh'ip farmer
2
1
)

A -Sf:()ry led to project about Indians
'

e

Ground hone in new hotdog

Meigs ~ ~oman

·charges rape

exams to

be given in

Meigs Cmmty

INews. ·.. in Brief~

18 nations
to reduce
oil imports

.

PARK~R: Easterlj High School faculty member; provided the buffalo .

seventh graders at the Eastern Junior High School. Her
skin for the Indian study of
grandfather killed the b.tffalo out West many years· ago. With Mrs, Parker is a class
member Eddie Werry wearing an Indian costume he assembled for the study. J ewelry worn
by Werry was made from cow ribs. He and hls mother created Ute c-ostume.

•

a.t y

en tine

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, .1977

Literat~re

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

prize to Spaniard ·

Seville, Spain, in 1898. He
suffered from tuberculosis,
which forced him to move out
to ilie country for convalescence and it was during this
time, in 1928, that his first
work, ~&lt;Ambito," appeared .
The oAeil'tlemy
said
Aleixantlre belongs to a ·group
o~ about 25 · contemporary
Spanish wrl ters "a kin to

surrealism · but
also
1nfluenced by the Spanilil
golden age in the 16th and
17th centuries and by popular
writing that is usually known
as the 1927 Generation."'
Although Aleixandze had
no sympathy with Ute Franco
government, he remained in
Spain unlike many "of his
contemporaries and

"gradually became the key
figure for the young post-war
poets in Spain," the Academy
said .

1

The Nobel

prizes are

awarded " to those who ,

during the preceding year ,
shall have conferred the
greatest
benefits
to
·mankind," Nobel's will said .
The physics ·and chemistry
prizes will be revealed
TUesday Oct. 11 by the Royal
Swedish Academy of Science, .
which will also annowtce the
economics prize on Friday,
public is welcome.
Oct. 14 . Karolinska Institute
A su1t ask-ln_g_$-72,027 .23 has,' wiJ.l announce the prize [or
been ·flied In Meigs County medicine on Thursday, Oct.
Common Pleas Court by Roy 13.
Proffitt, Racine, against
The peace prize will be
John's ·Oil Co ., Parkersburg: announced Monday Oct. 10 by'
Filing lor dissolution of . the Nobel com~•ttee of the ·
marriage were Gregory .
uu
Bruce Roush, Syracuse, and NOrwegian Parliament.
Julia Ann Roush, Gallipolis.
The live original prizes medicine,
A revival I~ In progress at lite,ratur.c,
Hope Baptist Chapel, 570 chemistry , physics and peace
Grant
St .,
Middleport - were first awarded in 1901,
through Sunday, 7:30 p. m. endowed by Alfred Nobel , a
nightly . Earl Dingus , pastor
of the Chillicothe Baptist chemical engineer and the
Church,
Is
evangelist . inventor of dynamite, who
Everyone Is Invited .
died in 1896. .The economy
prize was established in 1968 . ..

Notices, .local briefs
The f.Aeigs Cour\tlans for
Wildlife Conservation will
hold an auction Saturday at
10 a . m. at the Gene Young

resident lust south of Forked .
Run lake on S R 124. Purpose
of this sale Is to raise funds
for the Ohioans lor Wlldttle
Conservation.

Everyone

having anything to contribute'
may call Young at 378-6376.
LETART FAlLS- Letart
Township Trustees wiH meet
in regular sessior"J at 7 p. m.
Tuesday at the residence of
To~ Norris ,

·The Punt, Pass and Kick
competition will be held
Saturday beginning at 10 a.
m . at the Meigs Junior High

School football field ln
Middleport . Boys and girls
from 8 through 1J may enter .
Registration Is being held at
Dan

Thomps9n

Ford ·In

Middleport and at Country
Cousins

. .In
Pomeroy .
R~_gisfratlon and competition
oare free _of charge.

A meeting of the Meigs
County PTA .Council has been
postponed until Oct. 12 at 7:30
p. m. in the Bradbury
Elementary School.

Yearbooks at . Southern
High School are In and must

be picked up Friday as the
last day of school Is Friday.
A back-to-school day will be
observed Sunday morning,
Oct. 9, at the Middleport

United Pentecostal Church.
Each child from
kin ·
1 dergarten through the 12th
grade will be presented with
a back to school gift. The

Call f~r help was real thing
A Sunday night call
received by both the Mid·
dleport
and
Pomeroy
Emergency Squads was
authent.ic although neither
group could pinpoint it at the
time. ·
Mrs. Clifford Murray, 118
Lourel St., Pomeroy, said
that the call for help was
made from her house when
her grandson, Steven Knapp,
three months old,- was
choking. Last March, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Knapp, Steven;s
parents, had a baby .die
unexpectedly, and theY were
extremely disturbed Monday.
evening when Steven ap-

peared to · be .choking at the
home of Mrs. Murray.
Mrs. Murray was caring
for the child and others in the
house were summoning help.
In the confusion, the first call
was recorded as 118 Mill St.,
Middleport, and then 116
Laurel St., Middleport, and
squadmen there, unable to
find the a ddress , asked
Pomeroy to check it out since
both towns have Laurel Sts.
In the m eantime , Mrs.
.Murray got the c hoking
problem straightened out and
there was no need for a squad
and so she cancelled the call.

College enrollment at
record high .
.
.

Brown, director of ad· here," Brown said. Rio
missions and records. Brown Grande combines a two year
said this was an increase of 58 community college and a four
students over .last year's year private coUege sharing
enrollment
of · ),027, the same faculty and campus
representing a steady growth off,ering both technical and
throughout tl)e year.
liberal arts programs.
"! think the increase
Part of the college's growth
continues
people around is atiributed to lin increase in
the state become more aware !loth commuter students who
olthe unique concept we have live in the community

as

college 's four county district
and night students who are
taking advantage of expanded evening programs.
To serve th e enlarged
student body II full time
teachers were added to the
staff this fall a nd ground wiJI
be broken soon for a new
technical careers ce nter.

Voting underway Free-loading· calf found in pasture

•

.

p

that · has 'a missing Holstein School, that the building had He believes the damage was
c•lf to calL him.. and .... been entered during the done by renters that have
arrangements will be made night. Entry was made by sinte moved out. Mr. Batey
to recover the animal.
removing a window on the was advised of ty,e procedure
· to follow.
The
La ural
Grange north side of the building.
·Deputies took an accident .
The' janitor's cupboard was
building near Point Rock has
had its hasp knocked off the forced open and desks ran· report from Thomas J .
door. Nothing was taken this sacked. The ·only things Gaspers, Rt. I, Reedsville,
time. The building was en· mi~ing wer.e the hinge pins who said Tuesday evening
tered last month and several from a classroom door and a arou~d 7 p. m . in Lebanon
"ntique
items
stolen. smaU amount of workbook Township he was traveling
down a narrow road, got too
Deputies are checking this money .
, case.
Ben
Batey,
Rt.
I, close to tl]e edge and his
Tuesday morning sheriff's Li111gsvllle, reported to vehicle went into the ditch
dupties took a report from deputies a house he has as striking the embankment.
Greg McCall, principal of the rental property on Bailey There was heavy damage to
Harrisonville Elementary Run Road has been damaged. his truck but no injuries or
citations.
,I

'I

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