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! 2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , ()('t . 18, 1977

Reprinting order refused
TOLEDO , Ohio 1UPil - A
federa l judge has refused to
order a ,reprinting of the Nov.
P Ohio election ballot but a
dispute over t h~ la~gua ge
used to swrunarize State
Issue No. I .may not • bo
resolv ed until after the
election .
U.S.
Di st rict
J udg~
Nic holas Wa linski late
Monday turn.e d down a sui\
by. Toledo-area Democrat s,
who had sought a permanent
injWJction to stop Secreta r y
of State Ted W. Brown from
and
using
unde rli ned
cap! ta lize d word s in the
ballot s umma ry of th e
issue .
If a pproved, Issue No . 1
would repeal the elect ion day
voter registration law.
Attorneys for Lucas CQWltV
'residents bring ing the s uit
C()Otended Brown used the
under li ni ng a n d
capitalization in such a way
as, to enru ur·age voter s to
approve the issue and repeal
" instant " voter r egistration.
They also objected to the

mannt&gt;r in- which Bro" n had
"Tttten a SWlunar·y of thP
Issue appearing at the lOp of
the ballot , dain1in~ it was
nnsleadtng and did not fairly
characterii t&gt; the refer endum

issue.

wuuld be made tnda )' on
whether It&gt; appeal Walinski's
rulin ~ to the 6th ll.S. Circuit
C't&gt; urt
of
Appea ls
in
Cincinnati.
Lawyers for the Secretary
of Stat e had contended that
" ilh the election less than a
mmtil away, it was m uch too
late to reprin t ballots in a ll 88
Ohio t'Ounti es,
·
Lac key. in ar gument s
befor e th e court last
Thursday, said repea l of the
inst ant voter registration ~aw
wo uld
mak e
voter
registration Iiocedures mor e

rest n ehve . When persuns are
not registered to vote. they
h'se st'Vrral other rights,
s u&lt;·h.,. the right to hold office
and sign electioo petitions, he
said .
" We believe that these
facts sh ould bo included in
the inform ation at th e lOp of
the ballot ," Lackey said. A
text of the entire issue is
printed at the ballot 's botl&lt;lm ,
but the law ye r sa id he
believed most people will
vote for o&lt; aga in st the
referendum based on the ir
reading of the summary at
the top .
Democrats
had
The
pr oposed gluin g a pa per
sticker with a modified
swnmary at the ballot 's top ,
replac ing the WJderlined and
capitalized version written by
Brown.
Assistant Sec retary of
State James Marsh testified
in the federal court hearing
last week that absent ee
ballot s already were in the
mail with the original
summary .
Last Thursday , the Ohio
Supreme Court rejected an
attempt to remove Issue No. 1
from the ballot .
Organized labor and the
Ohio Democratic Party·;
which pushed election day
registration and permanent
registration through the
legislature' over Gov. James
A. Rhodes' veto last MfY, are
strongly opposed to Issue No .
1.

Committee approves appropriation ·
tly LEE LEONARD
UPI Slate house Reporter
COLUMBUS I UPil - The
Ohio Senate Finance l:om·
mittee early today a pproved
a $523 nuMion ca pital con·
struction appropriation after
adopting co mpromise
lan guage encour aging t he
st a te to hire minor ity and
sm a ll business contractors.
The pa ckage, adopted Sept .
20 in different fonn by the
House, received unanimous
a pproval of the committee at
the end of a six-hour meeting
and was fo rw arded to t he
Rules Committ ee .
It is scheduled to be taken
up by the full Senate later this
week .
In · adopt ing n ea rl y 40
amendments, the committee
added a net of more than $10
million to the appropriation.
But the mobt controversial
amendm e nts inv o l v ed
language changes .
Faced with certain defeat
of a provision requiring the
state to funnel 10 perce nt of
the capita I constru cti on
contracts to minority !inns,
bla cks on the comm itt ee
quick!~ came .up with com·
promise langua ge.
As finally adopted, the
provision defines minority
and small busine s s en·
terprises and requires the
st~te De~artment of Ad·
mtnlstrattve S.ervtces a~d
!Joard of Regents to tdenttfy
. proJects fQr wh1 ch su ch

In handing do"n the r uling,
Walinski also dissolved a
temporary restraining order
issued last week by U.S.
Distr ict J udge Don Young,
which had halted printing of
th e e la •tion ballots in Luca s
Olunty until the dispute was
r esolved .
But Gerald Lacke y , a
la wye r for the T oledo
Democr a ts, noted that
Wa l i n s k i
"re tain e d
jur isdiction in the ca se," and
could rule after the election
on the constitutionality of
(Ccnllnued !rein pill 1)
Br own 's ac tions. ··This se c reta·ry·tre a s urer
or
decision is by no means the athletic programs.
Pam Ogdin was namM a
e nd of his looking at the case
to
det ermi ne
if
it 's · substitute bus driver and
const itutiona l or not," Laura Harrison was em·
ployed .as a full time bus
Lackey said .
He added that a decision driver .
Morris reviewed the status
ofthe" AppleCrate,"tbevan
formerly used by the
teachers corps . He said the
vehicle will bo used to transport materials to the various
arrival.
schools and indicated that it
Seve ral hundred police
(Ccntlnued h'flln pace l)
may be used for the talented
Ensslin, Ra,Pe , Moeller and agents carrying submachine and gifted student program if
seven oth~ t ja iled terrorists guns guarded the hostages it is approved.
in e&lt; chang e for th e 86 and mingled with the crowd .
Supt . Charles Dowler
The scene was transmitted
hosta ges th ey held aft e r
reviewed
a report on the
killing the plane 's pilot in live by German television . State
Department
of
Closeup pictures of the
Mogadishu , Somalia.
Education
's
inspection
of
Baader and the others were rescued hostages as they elementary schools. Overall,
jubilant. when word of the came down the steps sliowed the reports of the evaluation
hijackers' demand reached the!Th lined with fatigue and were very good and 51Jme of
them . " We 'll soon bo fr ee," emotion . The 31 women had the deficiencies in the report
HEARS NEWS
bodraggled hair. Only a few
Baader crowed .
already have been corrected,
Mrs.
Clara Adams has
But a crack platoon of mana ged feeble waves.
he
said.
received
word of the death of
The seven children were
German commando s flown
Karen
•
Goins.
Leda
her
sister,
Mrs. Harvey
into Mogadishu rushed the ca rried off the plane .
Kraeuter
and
Frances
(Georgie
)
Milliron
at Beaver
Taken in the buses to a
Boeing 737 early today and
·
Roberts
were
aut)lorized
to
Falls,
Pa
.
Funeral
services
shot t o death the four Arab cafeteria, the hostages were attend a regional meeting on
at
1
p.m
. Wedwill
be
held
given clothing , shoes and
and German hijackers child abuse at the Tri.County nesday at the (:ampbe!l
apparently two men and two toilet kits .
were
sobbing J oint Vocational School on Funeral Home in Beaver
women ~ and freed all the · There
.
o
r
Nov . 3. Rick and Mike Falls.
hosta ge s,
the
Bonn ·reuruons.
Chancey
were added to the
" My God, my God," was all
government said .
approved
list of tuition
CHILD BORN
The 34-year-old Baader was one ma n could say when
students. '
Mr. and Mrs. John Atkins
co-leader of the Baa der - em bracing his returned wife .
Dr . Keith Riggs, board · of Pataskala are announcing
The
hostag
es
were
Meinhof gang " "th Ulrike
members,' was authorized to the birth of a seven pound,
Me inhof. who was found officiall y welcomed by five
draft
a letter to State Auditor · seven 04 nce son, John
hanged in her cell last May. cabinet ministers sent from
Thomas
Ferguson in answer Matthew, on Oct. 2 at Licking
Miss Ensslin later bec ame Bonn by Chancellor Helmut
COljiiiilents about Memorial
Hospital
in
to
his
recent
Schmidt .
co-leader with Baader.
board of education members Newark. Grandparents are
and administrators.
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Sauvage,
Jr. High Prinipcal John Pomeroy, and Mr . and Mrs.
Mora reported that a dosed John 0 . Atkins of Clifftop, W.
lunch program at his school is va.
going well. Charles Downie,
buildings. "
who is assisting with the
Tipton noted the law in Kentucky required a sprinkler program, reported · likewise.
PLEASANT VALLEY
system but the bUilding was in violation of the law ,
A request from Hershel
Discharges - Mrs. Virgil
McClure for use of a 2il foot Weaver,
New
Haven;
WASffiNGTON - DESPITE WHITE HOUSE opposition, 's trip of land behind' hi~ new Virginia . Snodgrass, Hen·
an effort is underway in the Senat~ to amend the Panama establishment on E. Main St., derson ; Donald Brown,
Canal pacts to include the joint clarification Issued last week Pomeroy, was received . The Gallipolis; Mrs. Donald
by President Cart.er and Gen. Omar Torrijos.
board will study the matter . Nichols. Point Pleasant; Mrs .
White House spokesman Jody Powell says• the The board also agreed to Michael Craig, Leon; Dewey
administration would oppose any effort to amend the treaties oppose tentative plans of the Coleman, Henderson, and
in light of the 14 years of difficult negotiations it took to achieve Pomeroy
Village
ad. Oidia
Fridley,
Point
the present pacts .
ministration to tear down the Pleasant.
former Pomeroy Senior High
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
bUilding . 'The deed to the and Mrs . Terry Powell,
property was read and states Racine.
that the village of Pomeroy
has five years in which to
occupy the senior high
building and the property
MEDICAL PATIENT
reverts to the board if it is not
. The P omeroy emergency
used by that time.
squad was called to Spr'
ft was reported that there is ing.Ave. at 1:40 Tuesday
a tentative plan for razing the morning for George Foss who
senior high 'building and was taken to Veterans
placing a modular building on Meniurial Hospital fur
the site, for use as a village medical treatment.
hall. The board Indicated it
was against razing the
building and that public
PARTY PLANNED
sentiment also is against such
The past presidents parley
action.
Also attending the meeting Drew Webster Post 39
were board tiJembers, Virgil Auxiliary will hold a costume
King, Wendell Hoover, Mrs. party at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
Jennifer
Sheets, •' ·. ad· at !he hqme o! Marjorie Goett
with Iva Powell as hostess.
ministrative
ass~tant
Dwight Goins, James Diehl,
high school principal and his
assistant
Fenton Taylor, and It takes only a minute or two to
Charles Downie .
complete a transaction at our driveBILL SIGNED
up window. Open Monday , thru
COLUMBUS (UPI l - Gov .
James A. Rhodes has signed
Thursday from 9 A.M. until 3" P.M.
legislation
requiring
Friday from 9 ·A:M. to 3 P.M. and 5
Hamilton County com·
P.M. to 7 P.M. and Saturday 9 A.M.
m1ss1oners
to
operate
Hamilton
County
Municipal
' to 12 noon for your convenience.
Olurt with shared revenues
from the city of Cincinnati.
The city and county
WALK-UP TELLERWINDOW AND
'currently share respon·
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
sibllities for operating the
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.
court .

Meigs •••

86 .freed • • •

Gang ..•

News •• in Briefs
.

busmesses are available.
St otr agencies cont racting
for s ur h· projects would then
have to mnsider the compctitive bids of the minority
and sm a ll bu siness firm s .
The Controlling Board would
oversee the process .
The compromise langua ge
was a pproved , 9 to 2.
The committee also agr ee ~
to an emergency provision
a uth ori zin g
the
st a t e
De pa rtment
of
Publi c
Welfare to make Medicaid
pa yment s through November
to 74 de-cert ified nursing
hom es whjl• att empts are
mad e · to find alternative
housing for 1,828 patients.
The department said unless
the language was added, it
would have to stop payments
. at once. It said the state
sta nds t o lose $500,000 a
month in fede ral reimbursements if it continues to
pa)' unsafe and unhealthy
facilities .
The committee alsn added
$2 million for classrooms and
Ia borat ories at Sinclair
Technical College and $1
million for additional cost of
construction of a business
and administration building
at Wright State University .
Also added was a provision
requirin g the use
of
American steel in all Slate
construction projects.
- The committee ratified a
subcommittee insertion of
$4.5 million for the Oepart-

•

ac1ne I am gets power p ant

men t of Economic a n d
Th e s ubcomm ittee also
Co111munity Dev elopment to appropriated $1.5 million lo
use for industria l develoJ&gt;- en co urage energy cdn·
ment and to help cover servation in state facilities by
economic losses s ustained by converting their boilers to
mmmunities abandoned by alternate fuels .
industries.
These 'other items were
That money wouldbeintwo added to the bill :
separate funds ove rseen by
million for repairs to
the state Controlling Board. the Akron sewer system
One fund would contain $2.5 dsmaged by an e~plosi on last
million for the department to June .
spend , subject t o board aJ&gt;- $4.5mlllionfor0llwnbus
proval, on communities Technical Institute and $4
s ufferin g , losses· from million for ClarkoGeneral and
departing plants. The other T"f'hnical College.
would contain $2 million to
- S2 million for parking
us~ for land purchases and facilities at Youngstown
water and sewer lines to State University , and a like
attract new industries.
amoWlt for the law library at
The latter purpose drew the University of Toledo.
$2.5 million from the Con·
- $40,QOO for disaster relief
trolling Board last week for in Hamilton County, which
location of a Honda motor· was struck by a tornado Sept.
cycle factory near MaryS' 30.
ville.
- $480,000· for educational
The subcommittee, which television in northeastern
refined the bill earlier in the Ohio and Cincinnati.
day, was able to make a
--$500,000 for construction
number of additions to the at the East Uverpool branch
app•opristion by knocking of Kent State University.
out a SIS million allocation lor
- $130,000 for an education
a· world trade center in hall of fame in YoWlgstown .
Cleveland.
The committee voted down
Sen. Harry MesHel, D-:,.. an amendment which would
Youngstown ,
committee have attached a requirement
chainnan, said another $6 for a cost analysis and debt
million to $10 million will be financing plan to a $750,000
available because claims for appropriation for planning
winter heating discounts by renovation of a field house
' the elderly and disabled will and construction of a SJlllrlS
not reach tbe amount aJ&gt;- complex at the Un\versiiYQf
propriated in a recently- Cincinnati.
enacted law.

A .~illion hydroelectric P.DWer project will be installed
by Ohio Power Olmpany at Radne Da m on the Ohio River in
southern Ohio.
The Racine project will be the first of its kind in the
eastern United States, the second in the country, and the third
m North America .
.
. In making the a nnouncement of the two-unit, 48,000kilowatt hydro installation, C. A. Heller, Ohio Power's
executiVe vtce president, said that work would begin on a
coffer dam at Racine later this year , with construction of the
pOwerhouse to follow in the spring.

n.s

innovative programing, more
popular programing and
niore quality programing.''
While Backe, the number
two man "at GBS, made the
statement , the power still
resides with William S.
Paley , CBS chairman of the
board and very much in
charge .

~'ollowing Paley and Backe
in the chain of command is a
new man in the third position.

HeisGeneF . Jankowslti, who
has been named president of
the CBS Broadcast Group,

which includes television and
radio netwocks and owned
and operated stations.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depo s it In s urance
Corporation

WON 'T INTERVENE '
MONTEGO BAY , Jamaica
~ Cuban President Fidel
Castro . saying his regime
intervened in Angola only
after South Africa joined the

civi1 war. has vowed he never
will interfere in the internal
affairs nf any nation ..

Fifteen C ents
Vol. 28, No. 13 1

unable to use the ferry and
had to make the long ' trip ·
upriver to the Mason·
Pomeroy
Bridge,
was
reportedly lined up and ready
to use the bridge when it
opened at 6 a.m .
With the bridge's opening,
the free ferry service was
discontinued . .1
" The main . reason I am
here is to thank the people on
both sides of the bridge for
their patience. I am aware of
their frustrations," stated the

apologetic governor.
Rockefeller, alon g with
newly appointed Department
of Highways Commissioner
Charles.[,. Miller, new onto a
bridge ramp in a West
Virginia
State
Poli ce
helicopter. Once off the air
vehicle, the two, along with
other highway officials,
Delegate Charles Damron ,
Vernon Board, construction
supervisor with American
Bridge Co . and a contin~ent
of media personnel walked

'

the length of the bridge and
back.
Jumping back and forth
over the con c rete wall ,
dividing the four Janes of the
bridge , Rockefeller stopped
passersby to apologize for
the bridge's closlng and then
telling them that this was last
walk they will have to take on
the bridge.
One woman gave the
governor some comforting
words when she t old him the
(Continued on page 10)

..

,~

Crosby laid to rest
.,

heart a,!tack Friday,
LOS ANGELES ( UPI) Mrs. Crosby met him a\ the
The family of singer Bing
Crosby, saying he "hated airport with her other
funerals," hoped to hold children, Mary Frances, 17,
small, · simple Catholic and Nathaniel , 15.
The family asked that ·serservices for him today and
lay his body to rest boside vices be kept private in
those of his parents an,d first accord with Crosby's wishes,
although, the widow said she
wife.
.
'
A family spokesman said a realized that was difficUlt
funeral mass would be held at because ''everytxxly loved
St. Paul's Catholic church in him ."
Westwood at 6 a.m. PDT - She said she found tbe
services
at
today, with burial to follow memorial
immediately afterward in London's Westminister
Holy Cross . Cemetery in Cathedral and St. Patrick's
Inglewood, seven miles Cathedral in New York "a
away ' in a plot rontaining the joYful thing .. . exactly the
graves of his parents and first kind of service he would have
liked.
wile , actress Dixie Lee .
''Bing forbade me to give a
The singer's body, accompanied by Harry Crosby, 19, memorial service of any
his eldest son by his widow , kind. You see he hated
Kathryn, arrived in Los An· funerals and he didn ~ plan to
geles Monday night from come to this one."
Mrs. Crosby was solemn
Spain, where he died of a
but composed at an airport

news C()Oference, appearing
near tears only when asked
ber feelings when the· coffin
arrived.
" I haven t seen the ceffin
yet," she replied: "Most of
me doesn't realize yet he
won't be coming home next

week."
She had remained in the
airport terminal while
wockers removed the coffin
from the plane before the
pa"Uengers emerged. Mary
Frances had tears in her eyes
and held Nathaniel's hand'.
Th~'Crosbys said they had
p!ild little attention to
differing reports o! hiS age.
uHe was 73, at least. to me,"
Mrs. Crosby said, ' though he
acted like SO."
"He was just daddy to us,"
Mary Frances said. "We
didnt check his age. He was
just our daddy.' '

VIEWING CORHECI'ED AREAS-While walking
across the Silver Memoiral Bridge late Tuesday
afternoon, West Virginia Gov. Jay Rockefeller stopped to
look at many o! the corrected defects in the upper-tension

JOHN C; WOI.FE,Ph. D., was the prindpal speaker
at Tuesday s dedtcation . of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Mental Health Olmmumty Center. He is executive

200 persons attend
.dedication ceremony

(

S\Neater Perfection.
Warm, cuddly and fashion·right , , ,
they're just what's happening in
sweater styles today! Shawl eollared pull.
overs, cable wraps, and cowl neck
!:lousons ... beauliful wardrobe additions!

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY.
v

director of the National Council for CommWlity Mental
Health Ce)lters, Inc ., Washington D.. C. With him on the
speakers' platform are members of the Center board and
the "648" board.
·
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ELBERFELDS

i

areas ·of the span. Pictured, left to right, viewing a
. particular area, are Del. Charles Damron, Gov.
Rockefeller. Department of Highways Commissioner
Charles L. Miller ; and Vernon Board , supervisor lor
American Bridge 01 .

Chamber elated over new industry

AT CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

·FRIENDLY BANK"

or

en tine
"

The Silver Memorial
Bridge wa! inspected and
then pronounced safe by none
less than West Virginia
Governor Jay Rockefeller
late Tuesday afternoon .
Early this morning, as
promised a week ago by the
governor, two lanes of the
span were ·again open to
motorized traffic. It had been
closed for 15 weeks to make
repairs in the upper-tension
areas of the bridge.
Truck traffic , which was ·

WITH
DRIVE-UP BANKING

VISIT SET
COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
Ohio delegation will visit
Washington later thi~ week
for a U. S. Department of
Olmmerce seminar outlining
help available to com·
munities affected by steel
industry closings and layoffs.

and

Wlit will be installed within a bulb.,;haped housing under water
and beneath the powerhouse.
This arrangement, Heller said, will provide both improved
plan t design and ideal enviroilmental conditions. Among tbe
largest bulb.type unit.-; in the wor ld, the Racine turbinegenerators will employ turbine blades 25 feet in diamete r and
rotating a t the r elativ•ly slow speed of abo ut one r evo]ution
·
per second .
Ohio Power also holds a preliminary permit to study the
a similar hydroelectric facility at the governfeasi bility
ment's nea rby ~ a ll ipol is Dam .

·B ridge reopened today

ON TIME•..

''1'1/E

existing river dams .
He ller said that Sulzer Brothers , Inc .• New York, will serve
as prune contractor for th e equipmen~ for the Racine Dam
and will deliver the two units, each consisting of a turbine
a generator, for installa tion in tbe s ummer of !979. Th~ two
turbines will be ma nufactured by Escher Wyss, of
Sw!lierland , a Sulze r affil iate, and the two generators by E lin
Uruon AG, an Austria n company.
. Similar hydraulic turbines for a powerhouse on the
Ollumbia River in Washington came from France those for an
insta llation in Manitoba ca me from Russia. Ea&lt;·h genera ting

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday. Oct , 19, 1977

CBS reorganizes executive suite
By JOAN HANAUER
NE;W YORK (UPI ) - CBS
announced a
sweeping
reorganization
in
its
executive suite Monday in an
effort by the television
network to move out of third
place in the audience ratings .
The numbor three man at
CBS has been replaced, the
television network has a pew
president, and entertainment
and sports have boen split off
into divisions of their own .
The new structure strongly
resembles the set-up at ABC,
which now is the No . I
network, a position CBS
dominated for 20 years until the 1976-77 season .
John D. Backe, president of
CBS,
annnounced
the
changes and said :
"The ultimate purpose, of
course, is to accelerate the
generation
o!
more

He .aid tha t the plan t's annual production of 235-m illion
ki,lo'!a\thours of electricity is the equiva lent of the power
reqwrements of more tha n 25,000 aver age residential
customers.
•
" All this will be accom plished without the consumption of
any ratw'!il resources a nd with no detrimental effect on the
environment ," H~ller sai~ .
.
The planned mstallatton at Ra cm~ Dam, a governmentoperated navigational and (IO?d-&lt;:ontrol facility, is totally
compatible with a portion of President Carter's energy
program whic h specifically encourages such irU,tallations a t

\

Two hundred people attended
Tuesday'sthe dedication of
the new Community Mental
Health Center across SR 160
from the Holzer Medical
Center and heard Dr. John C.
Wolfe laud tbe " citizen involvement'' in atta.inment..of
"the project .
Th~ executive director of
the National Council for Community Mental Health
Centers, Washington, D. C.,
said that there are, have
been, and will be " complex
problems" to solve. He urged
the staff membefs always tu
bear in mind the " dignity of
the people for whom yuu work
and fur whom whom you
work! '
Five or six dignataries in·
eluding- County Cummissioners Paul Dean Niday and
James C. Saunders cut the
ribbon at the end of the formal program.
The Rio Grande Chorale
from Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College, under
direction of Merlyn Ross,
sang. Invocation was ' by
David Strang, director of col·
lege relations of Rio Grande
College-Oltrununity College,
and then two chairmen
welcomed the crowd.
'
Thomas Moulton, Center
board chainnan, and Harold
McClurg, "648" buard chairman, not only delivered the
welcome addresses but als&lt;&gt;
introduced the members of
their boards. Ma&lt;ine S.
Plummer, executive director
of the "648" board, introduced and recognized public of·
ficials and dignitaries.
Dr. George R Greaves ,
Center director, introduced
Dr. Wolfe . Both Greavesand
Wolfe 11a ve the Ph . D. degree.
McClurg, in his closing
comments, thanked the pe&lt;&gt;pie for coming to the •vent ,
billed as a day of celebrati• &gt;n
and dedication , running from ·
lOa .•• · to8p.m.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Friday and a chance
of rain Saturday and
Sunday. Highs will be In the
60s Friday and Saturday
and ln"lhe upper 50s ·or mid
60s Sunday. Lows wUl be in
the 40s.
:: :::::: :::~:;;::~:::;~::::: :::::::::; .;:;::::::: :::::::=: ::::::;::: ::: :::

No objections
made by Judge
No objections were voiced
Tuesday night to the proposal
of the Meigs County Com- ·
mi.Sion to move the law
library. from Judge John C.
Bacon's office to the large
room presently occupied by
CETA.
Meeting
with
commissioners, Judge Bacon said
he had no objections and
could see no reason why the
noor of the room would not
hold the weight of the law
books since it supported the
old photostat machine for
many years.
Also meeting with the
commissioners was Bill
Wickline, deputy auditor and
grants administrator, to
outline auditing procedures
for a HUD grant. Wickline
was instructed lo contact a
certified public accolmtant
(CPA) and have the senior
citizens grant audited. The
remainder of the block grant
will be audited later .
Barbara Sargent met
regarding a job on the CETA
program. Mrs. Sargent ad·
vised the board that she was
presently · unemployed and
available should there be an
.opening .
A discussion was held
concerning the intersection of
SR 7 and county road 24 .
(Union Ave.). It was pointed
out that due to insufficient
marking and poor visibility,
the intersection is very dif·
ficult to see at night. It was
decided to contact the State
Highway
Department,
Division 10, Marietta , to see if
it would be possible to ~et

better lighting at night.
The commissioners, in
other business, designated
the following 'additional job
slots · under the CETA
program: one bus driver for
the · .Community Action
Agency; one cook for the
county home; one in·
vestigator for the prosecuting
attorney .
One job slot was left open
for additional study.
Gary Aspin, sanitarian,
submitted a proposal lor the
Wldertaking" of private trash
hauling to replace the trash
collection boxes presently
provided by the coWlty. The
board discussed the proposal
briefly then took it under
advisement for further study,
A meeting with the health
department is slated in the
near future .

By unanimous" vote, Mrs.
Jane Brown, Pomeroy, was
re-appointed ,as a member of
the Community · Mental
·Health &amp; Mental Retardation
648 Board.for a period of louryears.
Wesley Buehl, county
engineer, reported that the
Ohio Bridge Co., will make
the necessary repairs to the
bridge on county road 29.
Buehl stated that the work
will be done in approximately
30 days.
The commissioners voted
to re-schedule their regular
meeting of Oct . :!lito Oct. 26 at
6:30 p.m .
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush , commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter. clerk.

Oteshire man
•
•
IS giVen
jail sentence
Clifford
Plants,
54,
Chesbire, was fined $1,000
and costs and was given a 150
day jail sentence when he
appeared before Middleport
Fred
Hoffman
Mayor
Tuesday night to lace
telephone
harassment
charges.
Middleport police said that
Plants was questioned about
the calls . on Oct. 13, but
denied making any harassing
calls. However, pollee said on
Oci. 17, he confessed to
making 33 calls to residences
in the 992, 742 and 949 number
areas. The calls were obscene
in nature ahd were made over
the past few months.
Others fined in Mayor
Hoflffian's court were Robert
Redman, 26 , New Haven, $50
and eosts, reckless operaiion
and Tony Bradbury, 25,
Middleport, $200 andCosts
and three days in \ail on· ch,arges of . driving while
intoxicated, and $25 and
costs, on a charge of driv·ing
without a license.
Forfeitirlg bonds in the
court were James M. Tanner,
54, Lan~sville, $27, posted on
speeding charges; Gregory
L. Johnson, 19, Racine, $25,
squealing tires, and Mary Jo
Robbins, Point Pleasant, $28,
speeding .

Fred
Morrow,
local keeping it trimmed down .. Bill suggested possibilities of a
manager of the Ohio Power Meyer reported on his project sternwheeler boat · race and
Company, announced a $54 of moving a large tree near possible boat rides for the
million hydroelectric power the . former coal tipple on E. annual Big Bend Regatta.
Librarian Miss Susan
plant will be constructed at • Mam St. and displayed a copy
Fleshman
explained
a
the Racine Dam in Meigs of "Go/ ' the Goodyear tire
County.
dealer magazine, in which program of the library in
The aruJouncement came at there is a feature storY on providing free films, a screen
the luncheon meeting of the John Fultz and the operation and even a projector free of
Pomeroy
Chamber
of of the Meigs Tire Center in charge to organiiations ,
Commerce .
Chamber Pomeroy. Several good local . churches and business people
members were elated over photos are featured with the free of charge. She showed
lists · of films which are
.
the project and its profound article.
available
through
the
economic effect on the
Qutckel announced that the
program
provided
'by
the
county. ·
Chaperone, aD· excu~sion
Ohio
Valley
Association
of
Fred Crow Jr ., chambeo boat, will ~e coming to
Libraries.
president, reported that the Pomeroy in May. ,. He
chamber has $3,138.45 in the
regatta fund; $2,082.80 in the
,
general fund; $2,355.28 in the
Christmas lighting fund,
$76.07 in the banquet fund and
over $200 in the cleanup fund.
Crow said more contributions
will be needed for the
Christmas lighting fund.
Jim Frecker reported that
materials for the Christmas
decorations are expected to
arrive by the first of the
month. Crow named John
Anderson, Vera Van Meter,
Ada Nease and Allie.Simon to
serve on the annual Christ·
mas promotional program .
A ''gong show," to be
conducted by the chamber in
conjunction with a dinner
meeting, was discussed. Bill
Quickel was named to work
with Crow and Joe Young on
the project. Crow indicated
that some experienced talent
will be available, but he
hopes most of the talent will
be people, who have not
performed much in the 1past.
Paul Simon, vice preSident,_
said two young men are
working on the river bank

:•

,..

r\

'\

f.

• ••

•

THREE FINED
Fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night were
Jeffrey Haw!ey, Mi&lt;!dleport.
$250 and costs on reckless
operation charges ; Joyce E.
Riley , Clifton, W. Va., $30and
costs, improper backing, and
Charles K. Hall, Rutland, $50
and costs, squealing tires.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight, with
lows near 40. Sunny Thurs·
day, with highs in the low 60s .
Probability of precipitation is
20 percent ioday and 10
percent tonight and Thurs·
day.

Some 30 films were loaned
through the. program in
Meigs County last month
Miss Fleshman reported . In
conclusion, Miss Fleslunan
showed one of the color,
sound films, this one dealing
with glider flying .
Attending were Crow ,
Simon, Quickel, Mayer, Miss
Fleshman, Young, Bill
Grueser, Leo Vaughan, Dale
Warner , Allen Richards,
Frecker, Stanley Houdashelt,
Morrow , and
Barbara
Chapman,
c hamber
secretary.

SEEKS LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Thomas McGuire,
24 , Reedsville and Darlene
Sue Harris, 25 , Reedsville.
Tu esda y.

•

.
NATIONAL BPW WEEK OBSERVED - Highlighting the Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club observance of National BPW Week was the selection of Eloise
Wilson , " Woman of the Year," left, and Terrie Miller Walker, "Woman of the Week ,"
center . They were presented with gifts and corsages following the annoWJcement by the
committee of Janet Korn, Eva Hobson , and Dortha Salser at Monday night's meeting held
at the Meigs Inn . Speaker for the dinner meeting .was Richard Jones, Meigs CoWltY
Commissioner , seated , who talked of accomplishments in the multi-purpose building to be
constructed on Mulborry Heights, of the return of the employment office to Meigs County,
and of the five year pian for hard surfacing roads in Meigs Olunty . Mrs . Edith Forrest,
right, legislative chairman , wa s program chairman .

•

•

,

�~-'--~e_E:_'1~~U~e2_ ~l~d~~~~~~r~I-0_ ~ ~~~:'_0.: t 19 19;;
Letter:s of opinion are " elromed Th&lt;y should bo
less than:IOO" ordslong {orbe subjt&lt;tto rednctlonby
the edliOr ) and must be slgued 111111 the signee's address Names .,., be .. lthh eld upon publication
Ho'tle\'er on requrst nam~s wtll bfo disclosed LeHen
should be lD good taste addresolng Issues, not per
sonahtles

I
I
I

1

1

I
I
I

tell!

1

hurt farmers

Dear Srr
Res1dents of Southern Loca l Dl&gt;-tn ct
Do ) ou knoY. ho" man) students m our school dist ract earn
spendmg mane \ and mane) for school clothes b) working In
the tomato fie lds m the Letart bottoms m the swruner ?

call Harn !-lilt Chllord Hlll J ohn H1ll Doll'Rlcha rd Hlll
Jack Cumnuns Andre" Cross Ea rl Adams Jack Adams or
Aaron Wolle Ask them how ma m students work m thetr fields
after school and durmg the mont h of June
You " ould be surprtsed at the number
The month of June lS the tuue that reqUU"es a tremendous
amount of " or k to get the plant s to produce the famous Letart

1
1

We ~ ould like to thank the Senunel for their mvttauon to
allow us to pubhsh the articles abou t the 6 5 null lev;
We have attempted to answer the questwns that have been
asked most frequently coocerning th&lt; upconnng leV)
Hopeful!) we have answered your questwns to the degree
, that you can support the levy
Mr Fred Walter State Department of Educatwn has
informed us that the last 10 school d1stncts that were faced
With closmg or were already closed ha\ e voted and hcl\ e
passed thw lev1es
Southern Local 1nll be the lith school distn ct attempting
to pass a leV) under these c1rcwnstances
~
If the levy fails and the leg1slature does not pass leg1slatwn
to allow distncts to borrow money on future foundatlon funds,
1t 1s projected that we will run out of mone) next Aprtl Th1s
will not permll us to complete th1s present school year
The levy will have to be run agam but as expla med m a
preVIOus article 11 w1ll have to boat a h1gher nullage
The debate of whether 11 lS the teachers respons1b1hl) to
put the children m school by teachmg 1\ 1thout a payda) or
whether tt IS the commumty s responsihiltt\ to put thP r htlcire n

m school and then the teachers respons1b1hty to leilch them 1s
of httle stgmficance smce It does not pro\'lde a .svlutwn to the
problem
The ool~ solut10n to uur d1stnct s chtldren gett1ng back m
school lS to PASS the le1'Y
ITIS TH E CHEAPEST WAY AND THE EARLIEST WAY
Our dlSin ct has a long standmg trad1 t1on of rail) mg
together and putt mg persona l differences astde 11 hen there
was a need to save our distrtct The need now 1s to put our
chtldren m schO&lt;&gt;l
There " 1ll have to be an all out effor t by everyone
mterested m our dtstnct s ch1ldren to o\en:ome the 800 votes
by wh1ch the levy was defeated the last llme
Mr Ord and Mr Ada ms w1ll be at the H1gh School on
Thursday e\ emng from 6 until 8 p rn to ans" er any questions
that people n ul ) still have concermng the lev\
lnformatwn furmshed bv Comnuttee to Pass the Levy
J1m Adams Chau-person Bobby Ord Superintendent L1nda
~~~~~~~n Clerk Treasul'f' Souther n Local Board of

HEALTH

Urges 'Yes' vote Oct. 25
I am wntmg to urge the rest dents of Southern Local School
DlStnct to vote YES on the emergency 6\2 mill operaung
levy at the spec1al election on Tuesda) October 25 1977
I do not want m) child gomg to school SIX days a week and
all the month of June SIX days a week wtll be Just too
exhaustmg on the children
I do not partwularl) want to pay more taxes but seemg
my son Slttmg- home when he should be m school
then
thmkmg about hun havmg to go to school thiS June 1s very
dist w-bmg
I know that the mcrease m taxes for the people on fll&lt;ed
mcomes wtll be hard but we must get our children back m
school We must approve the levy then work to get the General
Assembly to change the way that tlie schools are funded so that
all the burden lS not on the property owner
Please vote YES on the Southern Local School Dtstnct
Emergency Schoo l Operatmg Levy on Tuesday, October 25
1977 - Gar) Wolfe fulcme Ohw 45771

Lawrence E Lamb,M 11.

How to train, not strain
By Lawrenee a lamb, M.D

DEAR DR LAMB - I am
an uunate m a correctwnal
mstltut10n and have put a lot
of effort mto becommg a
better person phys1cally and
mentally La tely I have
become dtscouraged over my
wetght trammg program
I would like to ask you a
questton pertamtng to your
statement a person should
tram not stram How do you
kno" lOU have done enough
"h1le trammg but not tb the
pomt of strammg ?

tomat.oeS

If the Southern Local School D1strtct emergenc) 6'-z mlll
operatmg Ie1) lS not appro; ed at the spec1al election on
Tuesda) Oct 25 the students will be gomg to school to make
up 52 days The) "111 be gomg to school 6 davs a week all
durmg the mon th of June whe n they w1ll be needed m the
tomato f ~elds
As you see a NO vote on the lev) will be aflectmg the
letart Farmers as well as the schools and students
In the long run everyone Will suffer
The farmers Will not be able to put out as many plants as
they no rmalh do beca use there ought not be enough labor
available
A large number of students Will not have money lor school
clothing the next ' ear
Lack of spendmg mone y could cause more gasolme
stealmg etc
There ar~ a number of other thmgs that could be listed
Why won t the students beavrulable to work m June'
Because State law requtres school distncts to be open a
mUlUUum nwnber of days before June 30m order to rece1ve
state fo undation mone) for the next school year
A YES VOTE will open our schools w1th onl) 13 da)s to
make up making lt poss1ble for the students to work m the
fields th1s June and
Assure the Letart fanners that there wiU be a work force
available to take care of the plants
Vote YES for the Southern Local D1stnct emergency
operating le\y on Tuesdav October 25 - Robert E Beegle,
Box 72 ful cme 0

$$$ finally pays of£,
Yanks capture series

e

J

.•. .8~..1~~6?Jtt. uuurc.,:J - -

No vote

3- The Dally Sentlnel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Oct 19 1977

. 0 f 6 5 mz•ttlevy
h e necesszty
I

Are schizophrenic births seasonal?
By AL ROSSITER JR
UPI Sctence Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Three researchers ha ve
found that more Amertcans
With schtzophrema are born
m wmter and sprmg months
than any other time of the
year
A seasonal link to the most
common of the nation s
sermus mental Illnesses has
been reported smce 1929 But
most of the earlier studies
were madequately carrted
out and they had little uupact
oo mental health research
Wtthm the past three years
how eve r, several more
thoroughly conducted studies
have verif1ed a wm ter and
spnng
excess
of
sch1zophremc births m
Northern Europe
In SouUl Afnca , where the
seasons are reversed two
sctent1sts reported m 1974 a
stgnlftcant
excess
of
schlZOphreruc births for May
through October
Dr E Fuller Torre) of St
Elizaboth s Hosptlal m Wash
mgton and coworkers dec1ded
to see if the seasonal Sttuahon

was the same m the Umted
States The y stud1ed the
cases of 53 584 people w1th
schlZOphrerua m 19 states and
found a s1m1lar seasonal
relationship
Reportmg the !mdings m
the September 1ssue of
Arch1ves
of
Genera!
Psychtatry the researchers
srud there was a clustermg of
b1rths m Januaf) March
April and May of people who
eventually developed
sch1zophrema March and
April appeared to be the peak
months
A sinking exception to th1s
pattern was an elevation of
schlZOphremc births m June
m South carolma and m July
10
Georgia and North
Carolma In South carolina
for example b~rths of people
who eventually developed the
illness were 91 per cent
higher m June than would be
expected from the overall
monthly average
The outstandmg questton
the researchers sa1d lS why
do these seasonal b1rth
patterns occur ?
One poss1blltty they sa1d

Innocent plea entered
in knife-slaying case

ANNAPOLIS, Md (UP! ) repeatedly - one of them as
The 15-year"()ld high school many as 40 t1mes
student who IS accused m the
After Kremer - the son of
brutal knife-&amp;aymgs of three Edward. Kremer former
young netghborhood grrls has execullve dtrector of the
pleaded mnocent by reason of Maryland Classi!ted
School spirit still there
msamty to hrst degree Employes Assoctation -was
murder
charges
arrested last Wednesday
The cheerful building of my past looked dark and rather
Stuart
Kremer
entered
the
pollee sa1d they confiscated a
gloomy as I approached the doors I entered the bwldmg and
plea
at
h1s
arra1gnment
hunung
kmfe. a bloody Jacket
looked to my left at the empty glass enclosed shelves where
Monday
and
ass1stant
State
s
and
bther
pteces of evtdence
once symbols of vtctory shmy statues and awards had stood
Attorney
DaVId
R
Guttier
from
hlS
home
Now they were gone most likely stored away m some
The day before the arrest
damp box where past adrmrers couldn t v1ew them any longer satd ' Th1s case ts the most
tragtc
to
occur
mowcounty
s
pollee
found a brown leather
I looked at the dark olfwe which had once been the mecca of
history'
sheath
des1gned to hold a
schoolof!lclals I peered mto the now s1lent classrooms my
Earlier
Monday
Kremer
huntmg
knife m the woods
mmd revertmg back to moce cheerful days
was
named
m
an
Anne
near
the
murder scene
I jOurneyed through the lonely balls rem1mscmg about thts
Arundel
County
grand
Jury
and that carefully exammmg the portwns of my mmd where
the memones lingered I traveled back and forth through the llldlctment that charged hun Federal rules
rooms each holding a spec1al memory for me The Grafftttt on With three counts of frrst change planning
degree mw-der
the walls st1ll there and the blackboards blank
Kremer who has been held
KENT, Ohio (UP! ) - In
My small JOurne) took me mto the gym and for a moment,
Without
bail at the County flextble federal rules for
Just a fleeung moment I could see the crowd leapmg to therr
feet cheermg on another Southern vtctory but alas thts too Detention Center smce has veterans benefits have
arrest last Wednesday will scrapped
Kent
State
was JUSt a memory
The echoes of the past rang from the stone walls, the foot- be sent to Chiton T Perkms Umvers1ty s plans for a
worn pathway of the graduating Seruors was trodden upon m State Hosp1tal for a longer wmter break to save
my mmd This democracy thts freedom of the popular vote psych1atr1c evaluation before energy 1n response to
Prestdent Carter s plea for
had won over our school we had been beaten at the polls but his trtal date 1s scheduled
The Martm Spauldmg energy conservahon
our school spmt had not been broken We are and wtll always
Ca thollc High School Juruor,
A one-week extenSion of the
remam the students of Southern Htgh
The ghosts of my past walked m front of my eyes but I descrtbed as a qutet youth fall quarter was ordered
knew they weren t there the votces were gone but tbe who kept to htmself, 1s Tuesday by Kent State
memones weren t I slammed the door and stlence re1gned accused of murdermg Debbte Umverslty Prestdent Brage
Hogan, 10, her B-year"()ld Goldmg Some 1,800 students
once more - Brent Patterson,
stster Terry, and thetr would lose more than $500 000
schoolmate,
Ann m veterans benefits wtthout
Resident asks: Define education?
Brzeszkiewtcz 6
the extenston
The gtrls ' bodtes were
Earller th1s year the
found face down m a stream Veterans Adm1mstratlon
Dear Ed1tor
It doesn t take me long to stze up the bombast bemg shot m a wooded area near thetr ruled Kent s planned stx
homes
m
suburban week wmter break would
Qut of those paper cannons at Southern Local rest~ents
Southgate
about
15 miles have made Kent students
You would thmk wtth all thelr trumped up crtstses
from Balllmore
statlshcs overworked staff supplementary personnel, atds
mellgtble for December
Autops1es showed they beneftl checks Numerous
federal programs and poor mouthmg they had somethmg to
were killed Oct 9 - the day students untvers1ty offtcials
offer the stmg) tax pa) ers
Let s turn that estate down on Elm Street mto a country before thetr bod1es were and some congressmen asked
found
club and furn1sh free dues
the VA to relax the rulmg but
The grrls had been stabbed were rebuffed
Most of the stuff ~emg shot m the paper cannons IS ptped m
for when you get them out m the open all they got IS a puff ball
I have a questwn for our sonorous free wheelers Define
EducatiOn?
~.
I am Slgnmg my name to th1s for tbe benefit of that SLSD
educator who broke hiS penc1l at a crttical moment- to tell Seeks support of levy
him by all means marry nch - Gayle Pr\ce
Dear Str
We would like to vmce our support for the 6 5 mtll
emergency
levy The Southern Local School Dtstrtct must
Student asks, Please wake up'
have this levy approved Just to keep operatmg the next two
\
years By then thts d1stnct could begm recetvmg addttwnal
Dear Srr
revenue
Ute new hydroelectric plant at the Racme Locks
I am 14 years old and a freshman at Southern Htgh School and Damfrom
The future lS a bnght one lor Southern Local Why
I as well as others m my class, don t want our school to close
up the future by votmg no '
forever If our levy doesn t pass we wtll have no Southern Htgh cloudLast
August the voters turned down a 10 null levy that
School next year and there wtll be the problem of would have provtded money for badly needed textbooks
consolidation I think Southern 1s a very mce school and I don t bUIIdmg repairs, an art program at the high school (a state
want to see tt close 1ts doors If we have to consolidate wtth reqwrement), and bought new buses (voters must prefer
Me~gs 1t w1ll make our taxes even h1gher My parents don t
want to pay h1gher taxes JUSt hke some of the other parents m havmg the chtldren rtdmg on buses wtth over 100,000 mtles on
them) When the books begm tQ fall apart, the buses break
our dtstn cl but they hav e no other choice
down
and the bulldmgs contmue to leak who w1ll get the
M) mother and fa ther are votmg Yes on the levy because
blame'
But thmk a gam - who really should be blamed?
they want me and thm gra ndson to get a good education I
Thts
6 5 emergency levy wlll allow th1s dtstnct to exiSt for
espec1all) want a good one because I plan on gomg to college
2
years
wtthout
havmg to close therr doors Nothmg Else' If
and get a good JOb
you
can't
vote
for
th1s then what do you want?
The only way our schools are gomg to stay open 1s tf all of
We
must
vote
YES on October 25 tf we want to keep our
you people m Southern Local School Dtstnct wake up and go to
distnct
gomg
Former
Southern Graduates Megan and
the polls on October 25th and vote YES' - MellSSa Yorker,
John
Manuel
BQ1&lt;
323
fulcme
Ohw 45771
stullent of Soulh~rn Local
•

"as pregnant women m1ght
not receive proper nutntton
at some times of the yea r and
thls m1ght be respons1ble for
bram damage m therr unborn
chlldren One 1dea IS that
protem defici ency occur s
most commonly m swruner
months - the ftrst three
months of pregnancy for
wmter brrths - and thiS
m1ght
produce
more
schlZOphreruc and mentall)
retarded mdlvtduals
Another theory lS that a
seoasonal environmental
factor plays a role One
sc1enllst propo sed tha t
clamattc

fact o r~

somehow

mtght
mterfere
w1th
development of the egg
The report sa1d smce many
infectious agents are more
common m one season or
another they must be constd
ered
as
poss1ble
explanations The scaentists
saJd v~ruses are of parttcular
mterest because of thetr
abil1ty to disrupt the functwn
of cells w1thout affectmg
thm structure

*. . .

&amp;.,~,:;,:::::,~:::::::::::::::::::;::;:;:;::::;:::::::::::::;-:

,' Mason County

They also noted th at
seasonal1ty has been reported
for some complica tions of
preg nancy and for some
1nherrt e d p ro bl e m s
Miscarnages for ex.ample
were reported to be more
frequ ent m late wmter and
early spnng m New York
Citv Stillblrths m the nat1on
have been fo und to bo more
common m March in Apnl
What 1s clear at thiS pomt
1s that more stud1es are
needed m attempts to 1dent1fy
th e ell ologlcal factors
producmg the seasonahly of
schizo phrenic b1rths the
report sa1d
Hippocrates noted long
ago that the seasonality of a
disease may prov1de clues to
lis cause ThiS would appear
to be as val1d now as 11 was
then
In addition to Torrey the
study was earned out by
Barbara Torrey of the Offtce
of Management mtd Budget
and Dr M1 chael Peterson of
the
Food and
Drug
Admin tstr ation

:;:::::::::::::;:;:;::::&lt;:::;:;,;:;:;:;::::::-;::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::

News Notes

By Alma Marshall
MRS RUSSELL (Mary ) capehart presented the lesson
when the Mason Umted Methodist Women met at the church on
October 10 The lesson was Am I Talkmg to Myself - Do I
Listen' Mrs Maxme Arnold read Scnpture wh1ch applied to
ourselves as hsterung lovmg Chrtst1ans
The group sang Open My Eyes and the remamder of
the program was a skit m the form of a person talkmg and
listenmg to one s self A question and answer penod followed
Mrs Capehart closed the program w1th prayer
Mrs catherme Smtih, prestded durmg the busmess
meetmg and bnefed the group on the D1stnct Meetmg and
announced that the !lscal year for tlmted Methodist Women
will be from Novembor to November
Durmg the busmess meeting a thank you note was read
from Rev Evelyn Marmg, expressmg apprectatton for
financmg her tnp and expenses to the Mm1sters Wtves Retreat
1
at Cedar Lakes Rtpley W Va
Women of the Btble will be the study lor 1976 They also
discussed the new programs for next )ear and membership
committee responstbllittes
Refreshments were served by Mrs Capehart to Frances
Stewart Flora Board Margaret P1ckens, Maxtne Arnold,
LaVer a Yeager, Catherme Smtth Evelyn Praffttt Lots Test
Gladys R1ley Mildred Riley, Helen Barton and June
VanMatre

Are h1gh repe\ttlons better
for developmonl
th an
hea \ ywe1ght low repebt1ons

for example hftmg 150 pounds
10 tunes for 10 sets or 200
pounds three tunes for 10
sets

DEAR READER - Most
wetght trammg authorities
agree that yo ur maxunum
qeneftt from res istance
exercises or weaghts IS o ~
tamed by llftmg the wetght no
more than 10 tuues then
restmg and repeatmg such a
set of 10 no more than three
tuues Apparently domg thts
every other da)
pro\lde
the maxtrnum benefit you can
get for any wetght To
mamtam your muscles one
such exerc1se sesston a week
appears to be adequate
The cho1ce of a wetght
should be one that lou ca n hit
easily three tunes m sue
eess10n but not one so hght
that you can hft 1t 10 or more
hmes In suc~ess10n wtthout
dilfwulty As soon as you can
lift a g1ven we1ght 10 llmes m
successton for three sets (a
total of 30) you should cer
tamly progress to a heavter
wetght ExcessiVe repetttlons
w1ll not speed muscle gro"th
or development of muscle
• strength A hghter exemse m
any form that 1s repeated as
occurs wtth runmng 1s
constdered an endurance
exerctse as opposed to
strength exerctses Obvtously
there IS a great deal of
overlap though wtth many
fonns of exerctse
Some authorthes believe
you can obtam progressive
muscle growth l'lth only two
sets at each exercise sessmn
If you send me your address
I ll send you the Health Letter
number 5-4 Wetght Trammg
for Energy and We1ght
Control Others who want thls
1ssue can send 50 cents w1th a
long
stamped
sell
addressed envelope lor 1! to
P D Box 1551 rad1o C1ty
Stahon, New York N Y
10019
DEAR DR LAMB - I read
all of your wrttmgs I am 91
years old and have had mne
operations, mostly hermas
gall bladder and appendiX
years ago
I live w1th my daughter m
Oregon now and she s a

"'11

wonderful person and cook
We eat lots of vegetables pot
roasts wtth vegetables
arou nd the roast m a steam
cooker - no grease
1 eat four to ftve tomatoes
every day and one banana I
want to kn ow 1! these
tomatoes are all rtghl I put
sugar on them
DEAR READER - You
sound like you are domg
great I want to take thts
opportumty to comment that
lxulmg or usmg a pressure
cooker 1s a good way to avotd
grease Particularly 1! all of
the excess fat IS removed
before cookmg
A good pressure coo ker can
result m very tender meat
and help people avo1d fat wtth
1ts excess- calortes and 1ts
effects on obestty or fatty
cholesterol depostts m ar
tertes that cause heart at
tacks and strokes
Fresh tomatoes are great
for you The sugar IS all nght
tf you are not overwetght
Su gar ma y cause dental
problems so 11 1s a good tdea
to brush the teeth well after
eatmg sweets of any kmd

•

River testing
to be stopped
CINCINNATI (UP!) - U
S Environmental Protect1on
Agency personnel are gomg
to d1scontlnue emergency
testmg of Oh1o River water
lor a sp1ll of 200 000 gallons ol
diluted cleanmg solvents
from a Cmcmnall Gas &amp;
Electnc power plant
EPA sctent1sts had set up
an on scene command post
near the stte of the sp1ll and
had sent personnel w1th two
portable
rlver
water
samplers to the U S Coast
Guard Dtstnct Office 111.
LouiSville Ky accordmg to •
Phtlhs K1eng an EPA
spokeswoman

THE DAII Y SE{'IlTlNEl
llr\ll1EDTOTHE
INTER•::sT Of
MEIC.S.MA.SON ARF.A
CHESTER L TANNEHIU
F :ttl' Ed
ROBERT UOEF LICII
Cit) l- dltor
Pl. U sl 1.:d ! • 1~ cxn pt S: tur I a~
b~ Tht Oluu Vu U ~ y Pu b h ~ l u !I
Cu~J&lt;~ V Mulll lwd a

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Cuur t St Pu c ru~ 0 o ""759
B ~ t ss l)ff . _,_ Pl u 1 99'1 2! [)6
F.tl tturw \11 UTil 99'1 215
&amp; t ul d d a s..-1 p stagc pa id HI

PuT1cruv OhTU
N &lt;~hu al
h ~r tL~ ng r JlfL
'Scn
Ut \ 1\ ~ WHrd
G 1rhth Cu npa 1 ~
B ll 1c I 1d Gullat-= hcr Dl\
57 Tl r l A c N~ '.l' Y JCk. N 'k

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0011
Sullscnptlun r

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Dd i\c r ~d b~

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11 ~ k H) Mu u1 Huutc " I cr ~ a rr1 cr
StJ '\ Ct
I ;I Va l bit One \IIUllh
~ 2l By
I
01 &lt;\llli W Va
Ot
Yca 1 S2'l 00 S x nunll s
Jll ;.~O
I t rcc mot hs $7 00
El'lt Whctc $WOO yea r SL"( TUI!ll s
$1 I
Tl1 cc
unt s $7 5[)
Subst 1 pllul p ll c 1 Iulie!; Su nlHy
T
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&lt;1

.,o

TV•••in Review

Miss Jane Schwarz was honored w1th a pre brtdal shower
on Sept 'll at the City Building m Mason Weddmg bells were
By JOAN HANAUER
used m the decorahons M1ss Schwarz 1s br1de-elect cf Steve
UP! Television Writer
Morns
Games were played and pnzes won by Lor1e Chapman and
NEW YORK (UP!) -To the surprtse of absolutely no one
Vickie Clark Betty Hanun won the door pnze Hostesses Sue
the
World Ser~es led the Ntelsen ratmgs for the past week
Schwarz and Dot Schwarz served refreshments to Beulah
The
flrst three games of the Sertes were the top three m the
Bocook Leota Roush D1ane Johnson, Mary Nollege, Mmdy
Ntelsen
lmeup gtvmg ABC a hefty edge 10 the weekly
Kearns, Ruby Gtbbs, Hattie Ftsher Opal Hughs, •Mmme
compellhon
-a 23 9ratmgsfor ABCvs 17 6for NBC and 17 4
Hooaker, Karen Fmrucum Joyce Mills, Marwn Arnold
Manlyn McDamel, Barbara McDamel, V1rglma for CBS
That thtrd place rating for CBS wh1ch 1s gettmg to seem like
Grmstead Julia Capehart, Trecta Wmter Jane and Lots
Chapman, Kathy Farr, Pearl Roush, Jarue G1ll1Sp1e Jeanette hoflle to the network th1s season, explams the shakeup at CBS
fuldford Helen and Conme Ellison, Cmdy Warner J1ll Hobbs thlSweek Not only are 1ts senes laggmg but It needs to bolster
Mary Jo Lambert Mane Roush, Nancy VanMeter Lorme 1ts hve sports coverage w1th some of the btg ticket 1tems of the
sports world mstead of bemg content w1th weekend football
Harless Coca! Alexander
That need mc1dentally was stressed by Robert Wussler
Karen Queen Roberta Young, Evelyn Stewart, Vtckie
who
on Monday went from pres1dent of CBS Televtston
Lievmg, Betty Hupp, Betty Hamm V1ckie Clark, Ruth Walker
Network
to pres1dent, CBS Sports DiVISIOn
and Sharon Loyd
Wussler,
who had been v1ce prestdent for sports before he
The honoree recetved many gifts Sendmg gt!ts were
ascended
to
the network prestdency m April 1976, told a closed
PeggySebaugh Mary Workman Joan Lake V~rgtma Yonker,
qrcmt
broadcast
to CBS aff1hates that events such as tbe
Kathy Young Erma Jones Sue Erwm, Nelda Wetss, Margaret
World
Sertes
were
what the network should be mvolved m ~
Pickens Patty Roush Betty Burrts, Alma and Walter R1ggs
actuality
programmg,
hve - m prune time
Mary Bumgarner LucUle Schwarz Juantta Clark, Cinderella
In
case
anyone
1s
woodermg
what happened to games four
Bater Letha Belle Bumgarner, Suste and Mary Fox, Ruth and
and
f1ve
of
the
Ser~es,
those
were
weekend day games whtch
Elizabeth Mcintosh, Betty Hess, Mayme Noble, Patty Leach
are
not
mcluded
m
the
regular
prune
ttrne ratmgs ABC hopes
Ruth Thompson, Allee Lievmg Glenna Mttchell Betty Frye
to
have
total
Sertes
vtewmg
ftgures
later
tins week
Glenna Fruth Margaret Dodson Frances Young, Martha
Beyond
the
Yankees
and
Dodgers,
the
second
b1ggest contest
Newell
was
Sunday
mght
between
CBS'
spec1al
hour
long
All m the
Mrs Dtck Turnbull Judy Murphy, Colleen F1elds Betty
Famtly;
m
whtch
Edtth
Bunker
was
almost
raped
by Davtd
Marshall June VanMeter, Nancy F1elds Yolanda King
Dukes
and
the
frrst
eptsode
of
79
Park
Avenue,
m whtch
Joanna Clark and Libby Roush
Dav1d
Dukes
was
almost
raped
by
Lesley
Ann
Warren
Mason Personals
'All m the Family' won earnmg fifth place m the ratings,
Mr and Mrs Delmar Alexander VISited several days wtth
which
made 11 CBS htghest rankmg show for the week, while
therr son and wtfe, Mr and Mrs Bruce Alexander and baby at
'79
Park
' was m lOth place In additton, ABC s Sunday movte
cambrtdge, Ohto
1
White
Lrne
Fever, ' came m sevenUl m the ratings Sunda~
The Alexanders also vtstted Mrs Alexander s SISter and
rught
by
far
draws
the largest televtston audience whtch ~~
husband, Mr and Mrs Gene Heyman and her brother and
why
tis
competmg
shows
can all do well
wtfe, Mr and Mrs Roy Thompson, at Tiffm, Ohw Mr
ABC,
mctdentally,
pulled
a sbrewd schedulmg trtck last
Thompson ts recuperatmg from a heart attack
week
by
atrmg
'
Three's
Company
and 'Soap' - both of
Mr and Mrs John Hughes of Raceland Ky and nephew
which
were
bumped
by
the
World
Series
- on Thursday mght
Ernest Crafcraft of Cmcmnati Ohio vtslted over the weekend
Company
'
came
m.
fourth
and
"Soap
was a r.,.pectable
With Mr and Mrs Sherman Ford m Mason
15th
This
week
the
network
plans
to
sttck
to 1t. regular
Mr John Robert Roach who has been a patient at
schedule
Veterans Hospttal at Chillicothe Ohlo 1s expected to come
home thls week
The 10 top network programs lor the week end10g Oct 16,
Mr and Mrs Calvtn McDantel Chrtstme and C R , Mr
accordmg
to the A C N1elsen Co , were
and Mrs James Loyd and sons of PI Pleasant were dmner
I
World
Series game 2, 2 World Ser~es, game 1 3 World
guests of Mr and Mrs Curtts McDaruel Sr on Sunday
Senes
game
3 4 ' Three s Company ' 5 All 10 the
The Fa1th Baptist Church of Mason held Baptismal
Famtly,
'
6
'
D1ck
Clark s Good 01' Days, ' 7 Whtte 'Lme
servtces recently at the Hershel McClure farm near Pomeroy
Fever
(ABC
Sunday
mov1e ), 8 ' 60 Mmutes 9 What's
Ivan Cardwell Tbe Plams Ohw bapt1zed Mr and Mrs Gene
11 ' 10
Hajlpemng
79
Park Avenue
f
Hill R1fil&lt; Ohlmger and Mrs Jackie Ohlinger

7

~

:1
•

By FRED McMANK
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
!eudln and fussm New York
Yankees won the1r first
World Sertes smce 1962
Tuesday rught when thetr No
I problem ch1ld , Regg1e
Jackson, came through m hts
customary October style wtth
a recor&lt;kletttng three home
runs and five RBI Ill an 8-1
triumph over the Los Angeles
Dodgers
In wtnntng the best-ofseven Senes m SIX games the
Yankees thus notched tberr
21st World Champ1onshtp m
31 appearances and defeated
Ute Dodgers for the seventh
time m rune World Ser1es
meel10gs
Jackson , a bero of past
World Sertes wtth the
Oakland A's, put the Yankees
ahead wtth a tw&lt;&gt;run homer
off r~ght.nander Burt Hooton
m Ute fourth tnrung, belted a
tw&lt;&gt;run homer m thffiftlt an&lt;t
added the coupde-gras, - a
solo shot 440 feet mto the
center field bleachers m the
etghth- as he Uved up to hlS
reputahon as one of
baseball s top ' money"
players
Jackson s three home runs
equalled the World Senes
smgle game record held by
the legendary Babe Ruth and
his ftve homers for the Ser1es
set a record
Mike Torrez also played a
promment

role

m

the

clincher The rtght.n.nder
stopped the Dodgers on nme
hits m Ilea ung them for the
second ttrne m four days, both
complete games He gave up
two unearned first tnntng
runs and a 425-loot homer to
Reggte Smith his thrrd of the
Sertes, m the thrrd but gave
up only four hits and one run
over the last !tve 10nmgs
The Yankees' vtctory was
perhaps msptred b~ the vote
of confidence given to
Manager Btlly Martm earlier
U1 the day Club Prestdent
Gabe Paul ended speculatwn

that Marun would be fired by
saymg he would return for
the !mal two years of his
contract - and wtth a
substantial bonus
When the game ended on a
popout bunt to Torrez by
pmchhttler Lee Lacy, the
fans
who
began ,
congregatmg m the atsles m
• the etghth lnnmg, rushed onto
the held and Jackson and hts
teanunates had all they could
do 10 ztg zag their way to the
dugout
wtthout
being
molested Grrug Nettles and
Thurman Munson were the
last two 1010 the dugout and
they had to Uterally ftght off
the fans In hand-to hand
combat
The Yankees fell behind 2-0
m the !1rst tnnmg but ChriS
Chambliss showed qUickly
that 11 was gomg to be the
Yankees' mghl when he hit a
two-run homer to tie the
game m the second Snuth s
homer put tjle Dodgers ahead
m the thrrd, but then Jackson
took over
It was rronlc but perhaps
flttmg that Jackson should
emerge as the battmg hero of
the fmale Jackson was at the
center of many of the
Yankees controversies
dnrmg the year and he had
repeated run~ns wtth Martin
that threatened to disrupt the
sptrtt of the club
But when the money was on
the line - as 11 was down the
stretch and m the post...,ason
competition - 1t was Jackson
who most often came through
m the clutch for the Yankees
And the crowd loved him
Each time Jackson btl a
borne run Tuesday mght the
crowd screamed Reggte'
Reggte' Reggte' ' and
Jackson acknowledged the
cheer:s by wavmg his cap to
the more than 56,000 fans
After his !mal homer the
crowd would not qwet down
until Jackson came out of the
dugout and made an
appearance He smiled at the

crowd , and llpped his cap,
much m the manner of the
legendary Ruth
The Dodgers, who had
bombed the_Yankees 11&gt;-4 on
Sunday had expressed conft
dence they could send the
sertes mto a deciSive seventh
game and they started out the
way they had m each of the
prevtous two games at
Yankee Stad1wn - wtth a
patr of runs In the first truUng
But if 1t hadn t been for an
error by shortstop Bucky
Dent Torrez would have
escaped the mmng Without
trouble
Tqrrez retired the f1rst two
hatters and seemingly had
Sm1th out on a grounder to
Dent, but the Yankee
shortstop bobbled the ball
while trymg to backhand 11 on
a htgh bounce and Sm1th was
safe at ltrst
Run Cey walked and Steve
Garvey drove borne both
runners by nppmg a tr1ple
mto the nght f1eld corner
It didn t take long lor the
Yankees to get those runs
back however Hooton got
huuse II m trouble by walking
Jackson on four p1tches to
start the Yankees second
and Chambliss then unloaded
a 4oo.foot homer to rtght
center held
Sm1th s homer put the
Dodgers m front m the th1rd
3-2 but Los Angeles missed
an opportun1ty to budd 1ts
lead m the fourth wben Steve
Yeager gambled In trymg to
stretch a smgle mto a double
and was thrown out at second
by left f1elder Lou Pmtella
Rtck Monday had smgled
wtth one out when Yeager
drove a shot JUS! lns1de the
th~rd base bag down the left
held !me Monday made thtrd
eastly, but Plmella played the
carom perfectly and cut down
Yeager at second Torrez
then struck out Hooton to end
the lfUHng
Th at seemed to be the
unpetus the Yankees needed

Today's

Sport Parade
'

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Wtth Hooton not nearly as
sharp as he had been m
defeabng the Yankees m the
second game, the Bronx
Bombers knocked hun out m
the fourth
Thurman Munson started
the mrung by linmg a sharp
smgle to left and Jackson
followed by depos1hng
Hooton s ltrst pttch mto the
rtght fteld stands lor a home
run
After gomg to 2-1 on the
next batter Chambliss,
Hooton was relieved by Ehas
Sosa, who was trnmed1ately
vtcllmized by some shoddy
!teldmg which led to another
Yankee run
Sosa gQt Chambltss to hit a
high pop fly to medtum left
fteld toward the line and
shortstop Bill Russell called
left ftelder Dusty Baker off
the ball as he tracked 11 down
Then at the last second,
Russell sh1ed away from the
hall and 11 dropped fer a
double
Gra1g Nettles moved
Chambhss to thrrd wtth an
inf1eld out and PUllella got
him home wtth a long fly to
left
Jackson s blast m the fifth,
wtth Willie Randolph aboard
on a !telder s cbotce put the
Yankees ahead 7-3 and hts
solo shot m the etghth closed
out thetr scormg to make
Jackson the orily player m
Sertes history ever to h1t four
home runs m four successive
offtclal at-bats Jackson had
homered m the e1ghth mrung
of Game 5 m h1s last at-bat
SUnday
The Dodgers duln t score
agam unttl the runth when
wtth one out, Garvey beat out
an mfleld htl and Baker
singled to left, sendmg
Garvey to second Garvey
took third on a long fly In
nght by Monday, then scored
on
pmch-h1tter
V1c
Davahllo s squeeze bunt
Lacy, however, !ned the
same thmg but popped to
Torrez to end the season

Happy ending: Jackson
MVP, Martin rehired

Series
box:

NEW YORK (UP!) - To the rest of the world perhaps
Reggte Jackson is the btggest thmg m pmstrtpes today smce
Babe Ruth To the man who knows him best, Ulough hts
father he's still the same kid who'd do anythmg to get out of
working m his tailor shop
Martll!ez Jackson 1s enormously proud of hts son You can
tell that by the way he talks about him and by lhe way he shows
you the 1974 W.rld Senes rmg Reggte gave him after earmng tt
wtth the Oakland A s that year
Never was that prtde more obvtous than 1t was Tuesday
mght when Reggte Jackson s father stood silently beside his
son practically sandwtched mstde his locker by the great wall
of humaruty posttioned m Iron~ of tt, listerung mtently to the
phymcally and emotionally etthausted Yankee slugger
Everyone wanted to hear what ReggJe Jackson had 10 say
about those three home runs he had just hit to equal Babe
Ruth's World Series record and muscle the YllOI&lt;ees to lhetr
first world championship m 15 years His 63-year-old father
wanted to hear, too
When Martinez Jackson fmally &lt;;merged from the locker
he stood off to the stde and talked about his son
"It's the best I ve ever seen him play in a World Sertes and
I ve seen him piny m four of Ulem now, • he satd 'I couldn't
believe tl The lrrst thmg he SBld to me was dtd 11 for you
Pop He hasn t changed that much smce he was a ktd growmg
up m Philadelphta He liked to play all kinds of sports so be
could avotd working m my tailor shop
'Ortginally. football was hts btg sport He was a !our-letter
man m high school you know football, baseball, basketball
and track, and I d always ms1st be help me in the tailor shop if
he dtdn t make the !trst team '
Martmez Jackson glanced over toward hts son agam The
crowd of newsmen around h1m had grown even htrger and the
Yankee right ftelder was so weary, he moved back tnstde hts
locker and sat down Some of the writers now were asking
Reggte Jackson's father hts feelmgs about havmg such a
celebrated son
'Well, his ego ts mflated to a certam extent but I think
that makes him a more competent performer ' satd Ute elder
Jackson 'He IS smuhtr 10 casstus Clay 10 that be s a great
public relatwns man and he ts capable of rtsmg to an occas10n
like this one '
Without realizing tt, Martinez Jackson was saymg tbo
same thmg about his son the Dodger scouts satd about hun m
thelf reports before he wound up hitting 450 in the Sertes and
bemg named Ute Most Valuable Player
'Our scouting report on him satd he had certam
weaknesses but the one btg thing It emphaSIZed was that he
could rtse to the occaston,' said Dodger outfielder Regg~e
Smith There was a certam way we were supposed to pttch
him, 1ns1de We tried It and weren t successful, especuilly m
thts last game Our pttchers got tbe ball over the plate too
much But you can't take anything away from Jackson He put
on the greatest perfonnance I've ever seen m a World Sertes '
Jackson never saw Ute Dodgers' scouung report on him,
but from the l~rst game oq he knew thetr pttchers were trymg
to short-c~rcutt his power by ]Bmmmg him wtth mstde pitches,
so be adjusted and wound up by hittmg five home runs durmg
the Senes
His first homer m Tuesday mght's 8-1 finale came off loser
Burl Hooten wtlh one man aboard m Ute fourth tnnUlg, hts
second one, also With one on off EUas Sosa m the fifUl and hts
thtrd off knuckleballer Charlle Hough leading off the elghtlt
He drove m !1ve runs wtth those three homers and a total of
etght durmg the Blx.game Sertes

LOS ANGELES
IS xth Gamel
ab r h bl
4 0 1 0
Lopes 2b
Russell ss

3
4
3
4
4
4
3
1
2

0
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
0

0
1
1
2
1
1
I
1
0

0
1
0
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0
0
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0

rf
the thrrd But our Reggte was Sm1th
Cey Jb
JUS! OUia Sight '
Garvey lb
Torrez wasn 1t as sharp as Baker If
he was when he beat us m Los M011day cf
c
Angeles, ' sa1d Dodger Yeager
Daval11l ph
second baseman Davey Hooton p
0 0 0 0
Lopes "He got away wtth a Sosa p
0 0 0 0
lot of mtstakes, but 1t was Rau p
1 0 0 0
Goodsn ph
good enough to wm '
0 0 0 0
Hough p
I feel pretty bad,' sa1d the Lacy ph
t 0 0 0
34 4 9 4
usually effervescent Dodger Totals
NEW YORK
Manager Tommy Lasorda
ab r h b•
"Our club battled bot we lost R1vers of
4 0 2 0
to a hell11va club If I could Rndlph 2b
4 1 0 0
have done anything different, Munsonc
4 1 1 0
3 4 3 5
I wouldn t have gotten up th1s Jackson rf
Chmbls
1
b
4 2 2 2
mornmg
Nettles 3d
4 0 o 0
But Stembrenner srud he P1mella If
3 o 0 1
The happy enditig to the wouldn't have done anything Dent ss
2 0 0 0
3 o o 0
JacksonMartm.Stembrenner
different m thts unforgettable Torrezp
31 8 8 B
soap opera practically over- year m whtch the Yankees Totals
Ang
201 000 001 - 4
shadowed the dogged, route- batted battled, and brawled Los
New York
020 320 Olx-8
gomg pttchmg of M1ke to
the tr
21st
world
E- Dent DP- New York
2 LOB- Los Angeles 5 New
Torrez, who spaced nine hits champwnshtp
to stop the Dodgers for the
No, all the turmoil was York 2 2B - Chambliss JB
Garvey HR - Chambliss
second time in the sertes
probably worth It, ' satd -Sm1th
Jackson 3 SF Torrez, the 6-5 :z20.pound Stetnbrenner,
hugging Pln1ella
''Jackson
was
IP H R ER BB SO
sensallonal,' said Martm of Mex1can rtght.hander was Martm It made our guys
Hoot011
ILl
roughed
up
for
a
patr
of
runs
JUst
a
ltttle
btl
tougher
And
the man whom he nearly
J "'
3 4 4 1 1
punched out in Boston m nud m the !1rst on Steve Garvey's B1lly he did what he had to do Sosa
12333310
June and most deflllltely !me drtve trtple mto when he had to do 11 He was Rau
1 13 0 0 0 0 l
2 21 1 0 3
cussed out only ftve days ago Jackson's r1ght held corner, one helluva manager down Hough
Torrez IW) 9
9 4 2 2 6
He was really up for thts and a solo homer by Reggte the stretch
Hooton
p1tched
to 2 batters
No, tt was all worth every
game and he s a super guy I Smith m the third which gave
'"4th
and
every
know next year wtll be much the Dodgers a short-lived 3-2 penny
PB- Munson T - 2 18 A
- 56 407
headache '
lead
easter for him '
But Torrez was stmgy when
Jackson was mdeed up '
for Wednesday mght s tt counted, bwldm~ his own
storybook flmsh to the case for a huge salary ra1se m
Yankees' most turbulent negotiations whtch continue
season The controverstal m earnest wtth Stembrenner
rtght fielder for who!JI today
NEW YORK (UP II - Follow
Most home runs consecutive
'It was a strugglmg-type
mg are records broken and tied at bats more than one game Stembrenner paid $3 mUlton
by Regg e Jackson n the 1977 tour
to obtain m last Winter's free game, ' sa1d Torrez, who
world Seres
Records hed game
walked
only
two
I
really
agent sweepstakes, walked
Records broken game
Most home runs - three
Most hOme runs consecutive tymg record bv Babe R:uth on
on four pttches m the first threw only one bad pttch - three (previous best two Oct 6 1926 at St Louts and
the
home
run
ball
to
Sm1th
m
mnm~ and saw only Ulree
accomplished 13 t mes )
Oct 9 1928 at St LOUIS

By BilL MAIJDEN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)
George Stembrenner htmSelf
couldn t have wrttten the
!mal scrtpt any better
Reggte Jackson makmg Btlly
Martm s day
Billy Martin's day began
wtth a $M,OOO borius, a new
car and the securtty that,
aiter nearly bemg ftred three
ti1oes th1s season by
Steinbrenner, hiS contract Is
still good for two more years
It ended wtth his most vocal
antagonist of thts long and
agomzmg season - Jackson
- slammmg a record-tymg
three homers and driving m
five runs to provtde Martin
and the New York Yankees
wtth an 8-1 vtctory over the
Los Angeles Dodgers and
thetr first World Sertes
championship smce 1962

strikes thereafter - aU of
which were depostted m the
outer reaches of Yankee
Stadtum s 55,000 seats
Wtth the tltlrd blast he lied
Babe Ruth's record for most
series homers 10 one game
' The guys throw the word
superstar' around' satd
Jackson m the Yankee
clubhouse afterward but at
least for one day I can say I
am"
Indeed Jackson was voted
the most valuable player of
the sertes w1th a 450 average,
f1ve homers and e~Jtltt RBI

Ptstons 110, Nets 93
Ralph Stmpson s 23 pomts
and Bob Lam~r s 22 camed
lletrott past New Jersey The
Pistons had bwlt as much as
a 29-potnt lead but then
played slopp1ly m the second
half B1rd Avent! led the Nets
w1th 23 pomts while only
three of h1s teammates could
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A manage double ltgures
Dec 14trtal date has been set
for Cmcmnatt Reds pttcher
Pedro Borbon, who faces two
Suns 110 Warriors 83
mtsdemean or a s sault
Alvan Adams ftred m a
charges
game-h1gh 27 pomts as the
A Jury trtal will be m
took advantage of 28
Hamtlton County Munlc1pal Phoerux
turovers
by the Golden State
Court w1th Judge Norbert A
Rookie
Walter
Davts added 20
Nadel prestdmg
pomts
lor
the
Slll\S while
The nusdemeanor assault veteran guard Paul
Westphal
counts stem from an Oct 3 had 18 Golden State's Phtl
mculent at a Cincmnatt d1sco Smith and Sonny Parker
theque Lucy s m the Sky
scored 18 pomts wh1le Rtck
Two CmcmnatJ men have
Barry was held to 6
accused Borbon of attacking
I
them at tbe mght spot
John K Mahedy, 23 told
pollee the ace relief pttcher
allegedly grabbed hlm by the
throat and threatened to kill
him Mahedy satd he was
trymg to break up a f1ght
between Borbon and another
man Marshall Btddle 36
At a pre lrtal hearmg Tues
day, Borbon s attorneys
Eugene J Utz and John J
Kelley Jr , satd they will
present seven or etght Wll·
7'12 Pet per year on a
nesses for the defense
4 year cerltflcate of
AsSIStant Ctty Prosecutor
de post!
Ann Tracey satd she wtll call
$5,000 00
mmlmilm
about SIX wttnesses for the
prosecutwn
depos•t
Utz srud he has not dec1ded
A substantial penalty IS
mvoked on all certificate
whether he will ask Borbon
accounts w1thdrawn pnor
and Reds shortstop Dave
to the date of matunty
ConcepclOn, one of several
fr1end Borbon was wtth at the
time of the mc1dent to return
from Latm Amenca for the
trlBI Borbon and ConcepciOn
are m Lattn Amencan
playmg wmter league
baseball

Borbon's
triJJl dBte
Dec. 14

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) DefenSive back Erme
Jackson, w~o suffered a
dislocated shoulder a month
ago has returnd to practlce
and may play m next week s
New Orleans Samts-st Loms
cardinals game

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RESULTS
United Presslnternat1onal
M1d Amer1can Conference
Conference All Games

Miami

x Kenyon K K K
x Oberlin K x x

0

3t0

Western Mich

~

5 1 0
4

2 0

5t0
4 2 0
420

t

:

, 2,. ~ ~ ~

0 4 f' 0 6 0
0 4 0 0 7 0

Oh1o Conference

Red DIYISIOD
Conference All Games

WLT
t 0 0
1 0 0
1 0 0
OtO

Ohio Northern

0 rii.1 0

Heidelberg 0 1 0

WLT
5 0 0
4 1 0
4 1 0
320
1 4 0

1

4 0

Blue DIVISion
Conference All Games

Baldwin Walle
Marietta

010
0 1 0

4

Bowl ng Green

Wittenberg
Capital
Musklngum
Wooster

Ohio Wesleyan

Denison

Kent Stale 3
0
Central Mlch
3 10
Ball Slate 3 1 0

Ol&gt;lo Unlv
Toledo
Nor Ill

Mount Union
100
Otterbein 0 l 0

WLT WL T
1 0 0 5 1 0

Eastern Mlch

f

110
1 0 0

MISSION i&lt;an (UPII Weekly NCAA Football
Rellngs
Oovlslon II
Teo~

1 oulh Carot1na St
(6 0)
2 New Ham~shlre (6 0)
3 Montano I
(51)
4 Northern Michigan
(6 ll
5 North Dakota State
( 4 1 11
(5 1)
6 Massachu!eHs
7 Tennessee Tech (6-01
(5 ')
8 Nevada Reno
9 Jacksonville 51 (Ala)
(5 11
(5 11
10 Austin Peay
10 Winston Salem (7 0)
OIYISIOR

Ill

PIS
60
S6

51
49

42

Shoes and Boots

16 ll

~0

Marshall
(50) 50
4 St John s (M~nn I
(4 11 48
5 Montclair St
(5 1) 46
6 Baldwin Wallace (4 1) 35
7 Hampden Sydney
15 1) 34
8 Central t Iowa) 16 0) 32
9 Rochester IN Y I
I 5 01 27
(5 1) 22
1[ Wabash
&amp;

32 0
1 0

4

230
0 5 0
2

o

3

Defiance
Findlay

WLT WLT
0 4 0 1
3 0 1 3 1 1

Hanover

3 1 0

4 1

Wilmington 3 1 0
Bluffton
2 3 o
Earlham 2 3 o
Taylor
1 3 0
Anderson 1 4 0
Manchester 0 4 o
Olhero
Ol&gt;lo Slate

4 1 0

3 2 0
3 3 0
2 3 o
2 3
1 5

0

w
5

4

Akron

Case Western
Youngstown State

Cincinnati
Dayton
Centra I State
Ashland
Hiram

4
4
3

4

3

3
2
0

5

o

0
0

L T
1 0
2 t
2 0
2 0
2 1
3 0
3 0
3 0
4 0
5 0

30
25
25

CONVERTIBLE'"
Upright Vacuum Cleaner
LOW

i

RUGGED

Complete with
PowerSeal
attachment aet!

RUGGED

BOOT
Insulated
comfort
for huntmg
and ftshtng

IRED WING 1.,1

37
33
NORMAN Okla (UP!) Two first-team Sooner
football players returned
from injurtes Tuesday and
Coach Barry Swttzer satd
tltey wet _ 1mprovtng
"

-

Carpet selector

38

Pis
IS 0) 60
2 Minnesota Morris

Tum
t Wollenberg

3 Franklin

.....

1 4 0
x- not competi ng for title
Hoos1er Buckeye
Conference
Conference All Games

410 John Carroll
1 4 o

Complete Selection
of RED WING

Rec:ords. brOken Senes
Most runs four tying
home runs ,- five record accomplished four

hmes prey ousl y Latest by
Enos Slaughter St LOUIS of
Nat onal League Oct 10 1946
Most total bases - 12 tymg
record by Babe Ruth Oct 6
19'26 at St LOUIS and Oct 9
1928 at St Lou s

----·--

NORMAL

Most

Cprev1ous record four shared
by t1ve players )
Most total
bases 25
(prev1ous record 74 shared by
lwo players )
Most runs 10 (prev ous
record nme shared by two
players )

FSLtc

Ohio grid standings

Records broken or tried ...

Small coUege grid ratings

-

The Athens County
Savmgs &amp; Loan Co
296 Second St
Pomeroy Ohto

..

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.

YOUR HOOVER DEALER

Mtddle of Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohto

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PlAZA
407 PEARL STREET

Open 9a m taSp m Mon thru Thurs 9a m to a p m

Fnday Saturday 9 a m to S p m

'

ACE
HARDWARE

'd

4

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�,

•

5- The Dailv S.ntinel Mirldleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Oct. 19, t977
r:s=~:~:~:~:::.~~~"%~~~:.:·=-:·:·:·:::::::-:::::::::!:::::::::::=:=:=:::::::=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::~~=;:;:;::::;o;::.~

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomern). 0 .. 1\'ednesclay. Oct . 19. 19;;

Old Puffy takes a few bows,
likes Nebraska over Colorado
B)' Major Amos B. Hoople
Sage ol tbe Sldelliles
Egad , friends ,
your
generosity - hak - kafl overwhelms me t The outpouring ol complimentary
letters re my forecast of two
weeks back correctly pegging
the upset triumphs of Texa s
ov er Oklahoma and Stanford
over UCLA was not, of

Major
Hoople's

a

co urse-,

necessar y
but
nevertheless, let me say, it

·.· .

Football
Forecast
swept over the country's
gridirons this fall by stopping
the Buffaloes charge, 35-26.
The duel between premier
running backs I. M. Hipp of

Nebraska and Colorado's
James Mayberry should be
one of the most exciting of the
year. Either one of them can
rip off 200 ya rds on any given
continues.
Saturday and once they get in
Major
interest
this the clear it's bye-bye !
Sat urday will center on
Despite t heir winning
Jjncoln. Neb., where the record to date. Notre Dame's
Comhuskers host the ram- Irish have not lived up to prepaging Colorado Buffaloes in season predictions and need
a very important Big Eight to win this week to assure a
engagement, and at South place in the Top Ten for 1977 ..
Bend where Notre Dame will The Irish potential .is great
entertain Southern Califoi-nia and the feeling in this corner
in the 49th renewal of one of · is they are about to put it all
the nation's great collegiate together. and surprise John
rivalries.
.
RobinSQn's excellent Trojan
Out in Lincoln, we look for eleven. But make no mistake
the Comhuskers to co ntioue about it: Notre Dame will
the wave of upsets which has have to play· its best ga me of
•

..

Green 11
Clorlnnall 33, Tulsa II
E. Carolina 28. Citadel 1
Clemson 21, No. Carolina St.

the yrar to contain Rob
Hertel amfCharles White, or
else. quicker than you can
say Mosi Tatupu, the
Southern California lads will
blow them out of the park.
The Hoople System gives it to
N. D. in a hardfought
struggle, 27-22! Would that I
were twins and could be at
Lincoln and South Bend
simultaneously!

was not unappreciated by
your faithful correspondent
- um-kumph !
Also, in that forecast. as
many of you noted, we had
the exact score. 24-H. of the
Michigan win over Michigan
Sta te. and Duke's 25-21
triumph over South Carolina.
And. oh, yes, our prediction
on the Stanford Upset over
UCLA was 33-27, and the final
tall)' was 32-28. I must ask my
assistant Dr. Izzy A.
Bumgesser to check his work
sheets to see if he can
determine how that errant
point wound up on the UCLA
side of the ledger - harrumph !
But enough of that chit-chat
and down to the serious
business of this week. And
seriouS business it is, as the
mad scramble for high spot s
in the national rankin gs

I

Hopscotching. around the
country, your correspon·
dent's assistants see Ohio
State and Michigan romping
over Northwestern and
Minnesota
respectively.
Make it : Ohio State 46. Northwestern 7; Michigan 36,
Minnesota 12.
The top contest in the East
will be at University Park
where host Penn State will be
hard-pressed to hold off the
West Virginia MOuntaineers,
28-21. And down soutll, Duke
will prevail over Maryland in
an important Atlantic Co!lit
co nte st, 21-13. Meanwhile,
Louisville goes out of its
league to challenge Alabama
with disastrous results. We
see it: Alabama 35, Lo uisville
8.
Out on the West Co ast the
Pac-a, Washington State's
J ack Thompson a nd hi s
mates will surpri se t he ·
Stanford Cardinals. 17-14. In
33 previous meetings these
clubs stand 16-16-1, just abo ut
as close as you can gel- harrumph .
No w go on with my
forecast:
Games of Oct. 22
Alabama 35, Loulsv!Ue 8
Arizona 23, Utah 15
Arizona St. 32, UTEP 7
Arkansas 26, H.ouston 21
Army 38, Lafayette 10
Baylor 21, Air Foree 13
Boston Col 21, Villanova 21
Miami ( 0.) 28, Bowlin~

Coach J im Sprague's
Kyger Creek Bobcats,
20
pacesetters .in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference,
Colo. St. 8, New Mexico 0
will seek sweet revenge
Colgate 28. Columbia 7
Dartmouth 13, ~ornell 10
Friday night in a non-league
Kent St. 24, E. Mich. 20
game with the Alexander
Florida 31. t eM. 24
Spartans.
Kyger Creek has not beaten
Florida St. 11. Auburn II
Kentucky 10, Georgia 8
Alexander since the 1972
Harvard 14, Princeton IS
season . The Iollowing year at
Brown 21. Roly Cross 15
Cheshire , the two strong
Indiana 28, Illinois 20
teams battled to a 20-20 tie·.
Grambling 31. Jackson St. 13 Since that year, Coach Dave
Oklahoma St. 26, Kansas 1
Snipes' Spartans have
VMI IS, Lehigh 1
soundly defeated the SV AC
Long Beach St. 26, Pacific 0 champs.
LSU 22, Oregon 20
The Bobcats were idle last
Friday due to Southern's
Duke 21, Maryland 13
Memphis S\. 31, No. Tex. St. closing. The Gallians have
scored 185 points in five
18
Michigan 36, Minnesota 12
games for a 37 point avg. the
Miss. 33, VanderbUt 28
top offensive average in the
Miss. St. II, So. Miss 12
area prior to last week 's
Missouri 27, Kansas St. 10
games. KC's defense has
Navy 32, IWm. &amp; Mary 17
been rugged yiel~ing 38
points
or a 7.6 point avg .' per
Nebraska 35, Colorado 26
No. Carolina 24, So. Carolina outing:
On the ot her hand ,
22
Ohio State 18, Northwestern 7 Alexander while playing a
Notre Dame 27, So. CaUl. 22 very unfamiliar role 1 a loser,
has an ()4.1 record going into
Okiaboina !8, Iowa St. 21
Penn St. 28, West Va. 21
the contest.
Last week, t he Spnrtans
Pill 22, Syracuse 14
Purdue 24, Iowa 7
Texas A&amp;M 63, Rice 7
Va. Tech 16, Rlchmo~d 6
San Diego St. 31, Nevada-Las Nitionai -Hockey League Stand . lngs
Vegas 12
By United Press tnterna1ional
Texas 34, SMU 14
Campbell Conference
Patri ck Division
Wasb. St. 17. Stanford II
W. L. T. Pts.
Miami (Fla.) 24, TCU 18
Ph ilade lphia
3 0 0
6
NY Rangers
2 1 0
4
Oblo U. 22. Toledo 14
Atlanta
1 0 1
3
Ga. Tech 37, Tulane 21
NY l!:&gt;landers
1 1
1
J
Calif. 27. UCLA 23
Smy th e Divis ion
W . L. T. Pts:
Wake Forest 16, Virginia 13 Vancouv~ r
'2 1 1
5
Washing1oo 29, Oregon St. 24 Chic ago
1 l
1
3
Co lorado
0 0 2
1
W. lllieh. 13, Marshall 7
Minnesota
0 2 0
0
Wichita St. 37, Drake 31
St . LouiS
0 3 0
0
WaleS Contere'nce
. Wisconsin 28, Mich. St. II
Norris Division
BYU 22, Wyoming 20
W. t:.. T. Pts .
Yale 23, Peon 20
Montreal
3 0 0
6

joss lin g for
defensive
position.
Then , according to Benson,
"the next thing I got was hit
in the face ."
Abdui-Jabbar, at 7-loot-3
and with the wingspan of a
Concorde SST, leveled the
blond native of New .Castle,
Ind ., and at 9:51 of the
quarter was ejected from the
season-opening game, Which.
the Bucks went on to .win 117112.
'
Benson was attended to oo
the floor a nd it was several
minutes befo r e he was
escorted to the locker room.
He wa s later taken to a loca l
hospital for X:rays and two

CUSTOMER
APPRECIA

Los Ange le s
2 0
Washington
1 1
Pit tsb u rgh
l
2
Detroit
0 2
Adams Division

1
0
0

5

1

1

2
2

W. L. T. Pts.

stitches around his eye.
players in double figures .
Apart from the heavy Scott Wedman had a gamehitting, Brian Winter.-mJred-- high 29 points for the Kings
26 points and Alex English and Ron Boone and Richard
and rookie Marques Johnson
Washington followed with 23
Z1 each to lead the Bucks .
each.
Elsewhere in the NBA on
Bulls 91, Cavaliers· 88
opening night, New York beat
Artis Giimore hit 15-of-24
Kansas City 120-113, ChicagQ shots fr om the field and
beat Cleveland 91-ll8, Detroit scored a game-high 34 points
dumped New Jersey 110-93 to spark Chicago. Mickey
and Phoenix whipped Golden Johnson added 22 points and
State 100-113.
"grabbed 18 rebounds for
Knicks 120, Kings 113
Bulls, who were one of the
Earl Monroe scored 27 strongest finishing teams in
points as tlle Knicks provided the NBA last year . Campy
Willis Reed with a victory in Russell led Cleveland with 21
his coaching debut . Phil points, while Walt Frazier,
Jackson added 16 points for recently obtained from New
New York, who had six York, had 20.

Selected Sport Shoes

SALE 3D-% OFF

SVAC STANDINGS

of the Pirate attack, had his
ALL GAMES
W L T P OP
be•i offensive night ever with TEAM
four t ouchd~wns and 266 Kyger Cleek 4 1 0 187 38
Southern
3 1 0 103 51
yards rushing .
North Gall Ia 3 1 1 70 55
The Pirates lace a team Eastern
3 3 0 70 124
crushed by Symmes Valley Hannan Trace
3 3 0 97 165
last Friday night , :MHl. Going
Southwestern 2 4 0 S6 122
into this week's action, Coach Sum. Valley 1 5 0 76 t35
Randy Clark's Wildcats own
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP
a 3-3 record.
3 0 130 18
Coach Bob Ashley's Soutll- Kyger Creek
North
Gallia
3 o 71 21
western Highland_rrs seek Southwestern
1 2 SO 86
their third win of the season Eastern
I 2 38 66
on the road against a tough Hannan T race 0 2 21 88
Sym . Va lley
0 3 34 6l&gt;
Green Bobcat squad.
Southern
X
X X X
Southl\'estern won a
X - Not eligible for league
thrilling 12-6 game last title.
Friday on a 20 yard pass from
junior signal ca ller to Barry
Jenkins. The play capped a
55-yard march and came in
the last 12 seconds.
Eastern moves into Hannan Trace with a 3-3 overaU
record and 1-2 slate in the
SVAC. Hannan Trace has a 33 mark in all games and 0-2
league slate.
Joe Mitchem's Eagles have
had offensive problems since
senior running back Joe Kuhn
Mr. H. W. Mattingly
was inj ured in the first
Will Be At
. quarter of the Kyger Creek
Meigs Inn
game two weeks ago.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Coach Larry Crelmeens'
On
Wildcats were in the North
Thursday,
Oct. 20,
Gallia game last week uiltil
1977
the final period. In fact , the
Wednesday 's Game
From
New Eng at Edmonton
Wildca ts jumped into a 9-6
Thu rsday 's Ga mes
9
A.
M.
to 12 Noon
lead
in
the
second
quarter
( No games scheduled)
only to see the Pirates rega in
To repair and service
the advantage, 12-9 at the' hearing aids.
NBA Standings
half .
Batt eries
and
By Uni1ed Press International
supplies for all make.s
Eastern conference
Atlantic Di v ision
for sa le.
W. L. Pet.

losi their first grid game ever
to Vinton County. Alexander's offense has scored just
over rive points per outing
while yielding over 11 points
per game.
Kyger Creek goes into the
ga me with one of the area's
leading point-maker s, 5-5
runni ng back Mike Casey.
Casey Is joined in the backfield by speedy senior Marcus
Geiger.
Quarterback Greg Mulford,
a senior, directs the offense.
His favorite passing targets
are Roger Spaulding, Tim
Nibert and Scott Richards.
In the only league contest
Friday night, Eastern, a.t2-6
upset victim Friday night
goes to Hannan Trace. Southwestern visits Green Local
and Hannan, W. Va. is at
North GaUia in the other non·
league encounters.
Coach John Blake's North
Gallia Pirates broke open a
close gan\e at HalUlan Trace
with a ~ point fourtH period
enroute to a 40-9 conference
win last week .
Rex Justice , the main cog

Connie and FootwO!'ks

Buffalo

2

1. 0

4

Cl eveland

1

1

2

0

Toronto
0 1 1
1
0 2 1
1
Boston
Tuesday's Results
LOs A ngeles 0, NV Islanders 0
Vancuver 3, Detro i t 2
Wedne\day •s Games
Pitt sbgh at NY Rangers
Minn at Atl anta
Montrl at wash
Los A ng at CJevel nd
Buffalo at ChiC.:'!Q6
Bost.on at St. Louis
Colorado at Toron to
Thursday ' s Games
Montrea l at Detroit
C91o rado at Buffa lo
.Pilfsbgh at Phila
Cleveland at M inn

N.Y.

I
0
0

Phil a
Boston
Buffalo
N .J .

0

0

0 1.000
0 .000
0 .000

Hearing Aid

Service Center

0 .000

1 .000

Centr.al Divi sion
w. L. Pet .
Hous ton .
· 0 0 .000
Wash
o 0 .000
San Antonio
0 0 .000
NeW Or lens
0 0 .000
Atlanta
0 0 .000
Cle\IE!I and
0 1 .000
Western Conf erence
Midwest Di-vision
.W. L . Pet .
De troit
1 0 1.000
Chicago
1 0 1.000
Mitwauke
1 0 1.000
Den ver
0 0 .000
Indiana
0 0 .000
i&lt;an City
0 1 .000
Pacific O ivisi on
W . L. Pet.
PhOenl~~:
1 0 1.000
Po rtland ~ .
b 0 .000
Seattle
0 0 .000
GOlden Stat
0
l ·.000
Los Ang
.
0 1 .000

,,' ,'
1

Ga

•

transactwns

' -1

GB

Tuesday's Sports Transac:tions
By united Press International
Hockey
Buffalo Sent goalie Bob
SaUve to Hershey o f
The
Ame r ic an Hockey League .
Cincinn'tli - Signed goal tend .
er Michel Dian lo one.year
cont ract.

CHAPMAN SHOES
Ne xt to Elberfelds in Pomeroy
Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BELTONE

'1
'1

1
GB

·

12
'2

1

1

Indiana Acquired guard
John Neumann from Bu ffalo for
f utu r e consider at ions.
Chica go Acquired guard
Glenn
Ha nsen
from
New
Orleans tor a fourtn -rou nd draft.
pick next ye ar .
·
Foo1ball
Washington Signed free
agent fullback Edd ie Moss .

Hearing Aid Center
601 Sixth Ave.
Huntington, W.Va .
Phone 525-7221

Tuesday 's Results

N .Y . 120, Kan Ci ty 113 .
Chicago 91. Cleveland 88
Detroit 110, N .J . 93
M ilwau kee 117 , !,..OS Ang 11 2
Phoenix 100 , Golden Stat e BJ
Wednesday's Games
Kan Cily al Buffa lo
Det ro it at Ph il a
Chicago at Ho uslon
Boston at San An to nio
M il waukee at Denver
Los Angeles at Indiana
Seat11e ·a1 Golden State
Thursday's Game
Cleveland at Nt::w Orleans

world

H o c k e v Association
·standings
By Un i1ed Press Internat ional
w . L r. Pt s.
Wi nni peg
4 0 0
8
New England
"2
I 1
5
4
Quebec
2 2 0
Indianapolis '
1 2 1
3
Birmingham
1 1 0
2
Houston
1 2 0 .2
Edmonton
1 2 . o.
2
Cincin·nali
1 3 0
2
Tuesday ' s Result~
Qu ebec 5,. Cincinna !i l
New Eng 2 lndpl s 2, ot

~ Sew·l(

s~!!!
Now Is The Time To-Layaway
For Christmas W~h Our

-20% OFF SALE
ON All A.OOR MODEL
SEWING MACHINES

Meigs tops
Miller team

Home Ec. Students
Receive 10% Off
On All Items

On Monday, Oct. 17 at
Miller the Meigs High
Volleyball team defeated the
Miller team by the scores of
11-15, 15-9 and 15·13.
Next away game is at
Athens Oct. 19 at 5, a tri-

• Easy To Do Bazaar Items
I

Casey K

~:~.withAlhensandKyger

THE FAB.RIC SHOP . riJ~
~~

WMP:m
yS
SATURDA
9 til Noon

On Monday at Miller the
Miller High Volleyball team
defeated the Meigs team by
the scores of 15-7 and 15-11. L - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - 1

~

Sati~:.,

,.w•.•

2n•d-------•P•o•m•e•ro.v_ _ _ __ .

CHARM IN

TOILET TISSUE
.MAC. &amp; CHEESE
DINNER
Racine, 0.

5th &amp; Pearl

PHEBE' STORE
Jlnce erfective Oct. 20 thru Oct . 22
R1gh f Reserved T o Limit Quantifies

We G.la dly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
1Aon day fhru Friday

3

for

Saturday 9:00-9 :00

CLOSED

COTTAGE CHEESE'
24 OL

BETTY ZANE

ONIONS

79~

39~

10 LB.

BAG

3 Lf'•.

BOLOGNA

PALMOLIVE BATH SIZE

EACH 25c

PANCAKE MIX

59~

GREEN GIANT

303

TOMATO

SOU~

DIXIE

MARGARINE .

CUBE
STEAK

I,

19 OZ. CAN

4/'1 00
Quarters 39c

'139

POLLY"$ POINTERS

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Polly Cramer

'

.

He is so addicted to cigarettes he lights one from another,
goes to bed puffing, has tllem in the middle of the night, and
starts again before he's out of bed in the morning. Then he
spends 30 minutes in the bathroom hacking and-gagging. He
sounda like a pregnant woman with morning sickness.
Our house reeks of smoke. The children can't stand to eat
with him. Nor can l stand to kiss him . .He says everyone
deserves one bad habit. Any hope'- VERY DISGUSTED
DE:AR V.D.:
Your husband's doct 0 ~ is your best hope. When he Insists
cigarettes will surely kill him, perhaps Smokey the Barker will
try to cure his cough. ·H.

Ladies attend school of·
.Eight~ and Forty Salon
Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs,
Pearl Knapp, and Mrs. Lula
Hampton of Meigs County
Sa lon 710, Eight and Forty.
and Miss Enna Smith, Gallia
County Sa lon 612, were in ColwnbuS Saturday fur the annua l school of instruction uf
the Departemenlal de Ohio
held at the Holiday Inn.
The informal meeting was
conducted by Elizabeth Horvath, chapeau with Jocelyn
Bowman, l'aumo,ni'er giving
the prayer. Distinguished
guests were introduced, in·
eluding Mrs. Audrey Glaub,
naliunal puuvior member.
borothy Vitaz, ·partnership
chairman, conunented on the
na tional chapeau's membership theme, ··Gatherin g
Jewels for Julia 's Children "
and noted that the quuta this
year is 1823. Catherine Baker
__reminded members lhat she
needs three copies of publicity, and Joy Bowman asked
each partner to send a prayer
fo r o Children's book of
prayers which. sbe is compiling, a lon ~ With a pray_e r for

the depa rtementa l cllapea u.

Items to be sold this year,
Work on the historyatld con-

tributions fo r the children
and youth work were discussed. A goal of 11500 for the
nurses st:hu larship fund was

set and sa lons were t~sked to

rcview

a nd

rev ise

if

necessary their cons tiluliun

and'bv-la ws.
MiSs Smith, trophies and
;;twa1;ds

t:hainna n,

'139
LB.

$139 .
LB.

Home, not heart, Polly's turf

" Fleeing the singles 'scene '
Hy Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BI.AKER- The
singles scene sure got me
down . After four years, I was
fast becoming a barfly. I
gave it up to try something
else. So, I enrolled in a journalism class, nut only to meet
people, but because I thought
l lmd a certa in amuunt of wit
a nd wisdom that could be put
in writi11g. Well, much to my
hotTor·, tlie stories I tell with
such flair at parties just don 't
make it when I put them on

paper.

Maybe

it's

my

typewriter, or maybe it's me.

t:um-

mented on the competition
fur trophies and introduced
Mrs. Knapp, second J)lember
on the oonunittee. She also introduced Violet Aichholz,
Central Division chapeau.
Mrs. Ma rtin announced the
Area D MidWestern ChildJ'en
and You\11 Conference to he
held Oct. 27 and 28 at
Midla nd, Mich. Program emphasis will be on alcohol,
dope, child abuse and child
· neglect.

teller doesn't also mean that
POLLY 'S PROBLEM
you lwve a talent for writing.
DEAR
POI;LY - 1 am a 16When you tell stories you
year-old
boy
who l'eally has a
gel constant attention; give
prubiem
that
I du not know
and take, and praise (or
how
to
handle.
Please help
criticism ) from your aume.
l
was
going
with a 14dience.
Y""r-old
girl
all
last
year and
Yuu probably enjoy that
then
we
broke
up.
However
f
moment when you are the
still
took
her
uut
iH."Cause
l
l'enter of attention. That 's nut
bad - in fact, that's good if still love her and know she
loves me. I have been seeing
you can entertain people in a
an
18-year-old girl. She tells
way that gives evervone
me
she loves me so whCIL
pleasure.
·
should
I do' !love them both.
But these are gratifications
Please
help me. -W.S.B.
that are missing when one
DEAR
W.S.B. - You seem
writes. Writing is a solitary
to
be
caught
between one girl
endeavor, something that you
who
is
too
young
and another
may nut be interested in just
now.
However, before you give
up on writing entirely, conDAUGHTER BORN
sider another possible reason
Mr.
and Mrs. J effrey
for your problem. Maybe you
Gibbs,
255 Halligan Ave.,
react poorly when an authoriWorthington,
are announci ng
ty figure tells you to do
the
Monday
evening
birth of a
something. Do you tend to
10
pound,
two
uunce
daughter,
rebel or withdraw in confusion because you feel inade- Lauren Elizabeth, at Univerquate to the task' Try writing sity Hospital. She is their first
a story by yourself for ch ild. Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Alexander,
yourself and sec how you do.
Whatever you do, continue , Berkley Heighls , N. J . and
to tell stories- it's a wonder· Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gibbs ,
Pomeroy, Routg 2.
lui talent.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
489, Radiu City Station, New
MEETING CANCELLED
York NY t00t9. Due to
A meeting of the American
volwne of mail she cann ot
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew
reply personally, but uestions
Post
39, scheduled
Webster
of general interest will be
for
Tuesday
night
has been
discussed in future columns.
cancelled due to the special
elect ion. Membe rs a
reminded that dues
payable by Nov . I.

plans lor the 1978 program
year and to work on problems
affecting the children and
youth of their respective
communities.
The theme for the 1978
Children and Youtll Program
is "Making the Pieces Fit Accept the ChaUenge."
Specific areas of interest to
he considered at the conferen~e include ; Alcohol and
Youth, Immunization, ChUd
Abuse and Neglect and
Education ·and Scholarships.
hi the · Eight and Forty
Program is Tuberculos,is,
Cystic Fibrosis, I,ung, and
other Resplra.tory Diseases.
Purpose of the conference
is directed toward ImHERE V.ISITING
plementing in the 1976
Roger Dixon, a petroleum Children and Youth Program
engineer with Continental at the community level.
Oil, Corpus Christi, Texas, is · Mrs. Martin Is a member of
here fo r a several days visit Unit 39 Drew-Webster
with his parents, Mr. and
American Legion Auxlliary
Mrs. Herbert Dixon and Mr. and the Eight and Forty
and Mrs. Ray Pullins, Scott Meigs County Salon 710 in
· and Lisa. He arrived by plane
Saturday and was met in Cul- Pomeroy. ·
wnbus by his mother and the
Pullins family . He will return
to Texas Friday,

i&lt;·c

trijy~

u1

our

refrigerator. So [ make it iJ
point to always empty the
is too uld foi· a 16-year-old
trays at night and refill them
DEAR POLLY - My Pet so they are frozen the next
Peeve concerns r·esh.iurants morning. These extra cubes
that include cuffee witli the · are kept in plastic · bread
price of a meal. When you ask' wrappers. -VIHGINIA.
them tu i;ubstitute a cola
DEAR VIRGINIA - There
drink , they charge the total e:trc many wl10 think a bruwn
price of the cola, not just the paper bag Wl)rks even better
di fference between the pric~ than a plastic bread bag. It is
of it and coffee. -ClNDY .
a pt!rsonal choice but shuuld
DEAR POLLY - I !lave you not have a bread bag
been helped many times by sometime, try a brown paper
your column su I hope someone else will be helpt'li by

my Pointers. l recently
helped my son pack for his

one. -POLLY .

DEAR POLLY - 1save 1ny
coffee cans during the good
Weather. Wl1en winter comes

•

dresser has largt:! drawers

which I have divided into
small eompartments. Jt is
much easier to keep things
JJca t and sep3ra1ed this WC£y.
I wt some of the cardboards
that bolts of fabric come on so
they fit tightly in the d.-awers.
Nvw I tJave six cornpa.rt·
mCnts in caeh dmwer. - KIM .
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank·you
newspaper coupon dippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column' Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Candy Ingles
Ingles ·Furniture·

Among those attending The
Am erican Leg iop , . the
American Legion Auxiliary
and the E{ight and Forty's
Annual Midwestern Area
Conference on Children and
Youth will be Mrs. Osby A.
. Marti n, Eight a nd Forty
National Children and Youtll
Chainnan of Pomeroy.
The meeting is being held
in Midland, Michigan, Oc·
Iober 27-29. Children and
Youth leaders of The
American Legion, the
American Leg ion Au~iliary
and the Eight anll Forty from
twelve Midwestern states are
meeting to discuss program

.Will ·Be In The
Store Thursday,
October 20, 7:30 PM

U' lOLL

PICKENS
HARDWARE

,.

--

Candy wi II demo nstrate th e magic of Amana Raclarange cookihg .
Also, if you own a range ( any brand), s he will expertly a n swer any
question s you may: hav e regarding coo king tec hniques and special
recipes.

Mason, W. Va.
HOURS:

Mon ., Thurs .. &amp; Sat.
8 :00-5 : 30

ONLY
FROM
~Jm,.,,.®

Friday, B:00-8 :00

IN HOSPITAL
Ronald
Marlin
of
Latropolis, Ill. underwent
surgery on his back recently
at the Western Baptist
Hospital, 25th and Kentucky
Ave. Paducah, Ky. Son of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Martin, Sr.,
Route 3, Pomeroy, Ronald
would appreciate cards . •

.•_,,

•"
•'
'·
••,.'
,.
,.

..
..''..
Puts you in comp let e contro l of everyt hin g you coo k. Provid es
versatility - not ava il able in any other range. You cook in infinite
variations - 67 watts to 675 watt s !
•

Children or Mlulll
poMd IQdlvidually or

m ""'"
• 'Limit ooe free
portrait per I~

•

Mrs. Glaze
-in hospital
Mrs. Bessie Glaze Hill is in
cr itical condition at the Mt.
Carme l West Hospital, Cardiac Care Unit, Fifth · Floor;
Columbus. Mrs. Hill enjoys
cards and would like to hear
from her (riends in Meigs .
County.
.
There to visit her .this pa~t
weekend were her sister,
Mrs . Lou ise Radford ,
Pomeroy; brothers, Virgil
Glaze, Middleport,_ Harry
Glaze Ft. Benning, Ga.;
HarrY Glaze, Indianapolis,
Ind. Mrs. Grace Glaz.e, Middleporl, has been in Culunl·
bus with her .da ughter and
family since Mrs. Hill's recent surgery.

three.

I fill them with a cmbmatiun
of sand and salt and put in the
trunk of my car. Place a
plastic lid over the bottom of
the can as well as over the top
because they tend to rust
aflt!r a time. If such cans are
placed in a· carton with little
space to spare they will not
tip over. - DOROTHY.
DEAR POLLY -- My

Will attend conference ·

•

---

CMoM JUUf 111:14 from
bcelat quality aDd

HGUM.
Three Big Days At

THE KIDDIE SHOP
IN POMEROY
Q.c•• 20th-21st·22nd
Thurs.; 10 AM to 5 PM
Fri. 10 AM to 7 PM
Sat. 10 AM to 5 PM

Star of the Month
Gold Rings
Your choice of 12 brilliant
birth star colors enhanced
by genuine d iamonds .

KS

raN··--

CUT GREEN BEANS3/'1 00
TALL BOY

1

·HAM
,..
DELICACY LB. $1 39
LONGHORN
CHEESE
LB.

2¥2 SIZE49c
.PEACHES
LONG CABIN BUmRft11lK 32 OZ.

POTATOES

TASTEE
2 LB. TRAY

GREER

YEU..OW

9~

POPCORN _ _
2-l_B. 59c
SOAP-

9:00 tit7 :00 .

'100

BELL -~

.

~~

4 ROll PKG. 79c
KRAFT

ill\

By Hclt·n Bottel

Basketball

Co-ordinating Be ige
Values
to$12.00

.

l US. • •

CHOICES

was!

Gas

Mr . Mattingly will be
glad to g ive you a free
hear ing lest with the
latest
Bellone
Electronic
equipment.

I!

W11at do you think' DEAR
READER- Your idea of trying to meet people in some
sdting other than a bHr is
commendable . Many single
'
pt!uplc fi nd l11e "scene" painDEAR HELEN :
ful because one is looked over
Mrs. V.W. makes a valid point when she says supplying birth and acceptc'li or rejeCted on
control pills legally to a minor is "moral manipulation by the most superficia l criteria.
government." It's taking away the right of parents to bring There is not sufficient time to
their children up according to their principles.
get to know people or to
II government agencies know befter than we what our young gracefully engage or
people need in the way ol birth control and abortion, then let . disengage from each other.
them have tlle otlle r responsibilities that go with raising The amount of time and
children: those ol providing clothes, food , shelter, college. q1m lity of talk with any one
person is not predictable. EnJEAN
DEAR JEAN:
counters tend tu ~· Hbruut
The availibility of birth control devices and abortion doesn't and frightening.
inspire a young teenager from a loving, caring, responsive
It lakes resourcefulness to
family to run right out and have sex. Her parents' role is to see involve oneself in other kinds
tllat their child makes wise choices. II they don't accomplish of atlivities in order tu meet
• this, they shouldn't blame public agencies for at least making people. You did !hal!
her safe. - H.
Yuu enrolled in a juurnalism class because yuu·
DEAR HELEN :
thoug ht you were a great
When 111!1husband and I were married three years ago, he story teller and you found
told me he had a coughing problem and his ex-wife raised the that your ta lent as a story
roof about it. I thought at the time she was mean. How wrong I

BELTONE

,, ports ·

l~: Helen Help

IS HE TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE!
DEAR HELEN.
I've been divorced a year, have a good job and a !!).year-old
son.
I recently met a divorced man with a 12-year-old son. He is
· quiet, kind, a bit shy, good company, and I'm getting serious
about him. Our sons like each other. He has a beautiful home in
the suburbs - evcrytlting a woman would want. ·
But my best girlfriend says it's too good to lie true and suggested I find out why his wife and he split up. He told me he
gave her everything, but she ran up bills lor extravagances,
then asked her freedom so she could run ar~und, pick up men,
etc. (He has custody of the boy.)
My girlfriend think» there's more to the story. She asks why
would any woman leave a good set-up like this? Is she just
jealous because l got him first '- C.E . O~AR C.:
Possibly.
,
F ollow your instincls. And reassure yourself by meeting this
man's neighbors and friends . They're much better judges of
character than is a suspicious person who scarcely knows him.
Another plus : Would he have gained custody of his son had
his wife not been a run-around who didn't want responsibitily?
To her, he may have se.emed a bore, but-one woman's drudge
is another woman's doll. Ehjoy !- H.

Pro Standings

Bucks drop Lakers 117-112 in opener
National Basketball Roundup
By FRED UE.F
UPI Sports Writer
It 's not the Big Ten .
Kent , Benson,
the
ba llyhooed All-America from
Indiana, was decked by a
Kareem Abdu!Jabbar punch
in his first NBA game,
leaving him with a puffy eye,
a possible concussion and
memo rie s of less brutal
games at Assembly Hall in
Bloomington, Ind.
Early in the first period
Tuesday night, AbdulJabbar , the Los Angeles
Lakers' center, and Benson,
the Milwaukee Buck's first
pick in the college draft, were

Bobcats seek reyenge
in non-league outing

f1rst tnp tu camp. Hather
than put all the pants
to~cthcr &lt;HH.l so on I rull~d
~ach day's supply of clothes
up tugdher. Tt1i.s saved him
fl·om luwmg to root through
all his duthes to fmd the
various pieces needed.
We often run short of H.:e
cubes bceHuse we only have

·WHILE' YOU'RE THERE
SAVE ON •

• Factory' s pecialists and Home Econo
1 I ustrate by actual
de mon strat ion. th e do's and the don't s of microwave cooking.
e ·Th ey wi ll exp la in the many benefits and advantages of mi c rowave
cooking , including how you can save energy and money ·on you r
e lec tr ic bi ll.

-

• Th ey will cook a comple te course dinner and explain the cooking
pro ~e dur e of each ty pe food .
• See how you can brown, sear , grill. fry , bake and sa ute · with a
microwave oven browning skil let.
• There will be a question and answer period so you c an g el the
stra ig ht facts about microwave cook ing .

.

• Windbreakers (Lined and Unlined)
• Long sleeve shirts, sizes 12 mo. -4 yrs.
• Boys Pants, sizes 5-16

SALE SLATED
The United Methodist
Women of the Apple Grove
Chu rch will hold a rwnmage
' sa le Oct. 21, 25 and 26, at the
church starting at g a.m. each
day and continuing until 4
p.m .

All Greatly Reduced
Also
Winter Coats Are In!!!

I

.

'

• You will receive literatur e e xplaining how microwaves .actually
cook: It is comp letely d iff eren t from conventional methods .

�•

Social

J

(

1.11 plans carnival
-

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and it
t, kl tlnl !tut tht' mut \'&gt;Ill
~ t~~ttut~ and cvfft•t• un
i· 11.1

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Thursda ~--

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b.tr1 1ra Logan's St'-

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a 12 ;w p 'l'

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presen r c n

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ltitb awards

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a speciJI ::;ervr
Frida\· rit thl• L't; •.. 't&gt;t
,Jf th~ \'ar:arerr • "•t
\'ited.

'r
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SOl'P S\ Pri'
5 p.m ~rid.a~

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llJtirdr s.:ru.l
n•getah1t; \tHJ/l

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cont:tm~'

Take
-.uup

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beans . .r-:LS,J

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mo.t1~Y

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CHCS'i'EH p·, I
r &lt;Jmn·riJ anrj · tr: '
with supp.t·r De;.; I. "
and ranuval c.H= 1
Satl;rda~\ ,&lt;!l

The mnnlhl \' pa '
. held ,,,, Sun.l.'
O('tr)ber 2.1 ".;~li
last Sun Ja:•
be~·au"i::,.
U!'.'ICt.F I)! l\
October ·10

,

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' •'1

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• R) \'ER:O..()\ SO•.

new r••;:l t:fl.

trnlig

Sn~dL'r,ctnd Ka thyllnud

Judy Cruw's first g radt•:
Donna Pul\ms, Susantll' Biehmvnd,

Kav Kmg, lh'bt.;t:nl

'l'L•afnnl, ~;lary Woll~l.

Hl'\&lt;t

Bmtt:t'.
Barl.J_ara Lugan '.s .Sl'L'ttlld
grad~ JCHH:' FrymyL'r. Duntw
PuJIIIIS, ~usan l:lat'l'. Hulh
Mar~

Rrt:\H'r.

ikatnce Fmk. Sandy llannmg. und Cmolyn Freneh.
Twil&lt;1 Childs' Sl'l'tlfll..l
t.:rade : Rl'verly l.ung. funnll'
Dodson. and Sc~pdra ~-Il-ndt.•rsun.

Jan H1ll's third grath1: Pal
f\1tl'ill'n, Rosemary Jly SL•ll.
Maurisha Nttlson. Wilma
Mees. Susie Stl•wart. and
Peggy Stcvcns.

l

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II

wl'nr wl nh· tl_( d
Tht.•lr n'qtl • Sb .
gltlflg U!loiHS'A. t

brt"atL~l' l dStl•II
(lid nul add 1b1
R:.?.D2 ht tht•ir m
Ill the .i-t'' IS •I' 1:

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stort.'S \\ tlll t rl

for H"lllllh t r1 ,
tnsh'i- ld Jlld (
St'tthO!;!. f{l[" Oflt'

h
1.,_,

:-;uits and ln
masks that tun
\ll' !'tlS ::;u~_·l1

r

1!: ,

fiutdt c·r Ch.
Angcb 11r tiupL. r~
WondN W orP;u~
und Tlw

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Bttlflll' \\

Harts Fam:lv

l'11lumbus h.r ... :1
thm whiif \\'Jr,.
btg, P11lK ~. vnlul
bP
ttw:r
It

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F\ENT Ol.
Tl.!!'PF:HS PI ' "

Trlc.'k o.r
~rs

tr~,'u! Id_1~ 1 ·

Plau l~

'•

Thursday Oct :)7: · 1
p.m~ 'l hC' (l ron~ 1 l
l
\'oluntrl~r

\\Ill

F;r;

~.unJ-

.. ..,

jll

\.1 1.

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th\ ;-,it-1

the opcnin!, .:w:

1

obsen·ancL

JanBu sk trk.

~1argaret Barr's four th
t:rad{': Ma\· f\turrtst•n. Dwnc
Ge~.Jrge, F:lfti.ne :'Vli llcr. !.md&lt;t
;'\lartln, and Lmda llulJUc.trcl .
7\lr.'i. Luc\' \VI11tc's fourth
~r&lt;~de:
Phyllis Bakl'l', ·
Marilyn Epple. 1\ (tth~
Chadwell. Patsy Ogdin. atu.l
Du n~ Bailey ..
Rdreslunents wt•re sen:ed
. by the fn'st gh.tde roiJill

mothers.

CAH'il\ -\1 S.l t
l'l!F~I

PTA aruwal

·,,__

and j1tney .sapp•:r
Smurda~

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11

. I

ar thl' .•

The supper • ·'l,

wtth th~ c.urniY 1 r
,7":30. Proceed$. ,,1~1
sellGol r·£"lrHt!d \
Bak('d steak and \ I•
be the tnL'at cm;;~·t

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4

11

for

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VA LLEY li

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FRIDA

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classics.
trv tc: pla:1 Jessica. as an
-,r· ,. rt -:ut-of--toueh woman
th•" th;m d\unl&gt;, "·she said.
·1

II .. !;• ...

1

\·

t~ur2

muml. ~l'l'k)' BL1 l'k~.-•r. :'\la m·~

Dt•pal'lll lt'U~

• .~t~~ ~h t•

!'t!pllfelt I' If] •
fi:llltl\_~
•!' 'rr iT'

in:r:.

grade . l'ht•ruk HurdL11h&gt;,
Kathy t'huthn•ll. Calltl' Hlch-

. r·!ft-''-S who was trnmed in
..;t- '.tk~srear e. Shaw and
t
·r-; tl·\ Rnt ~·he has tackled
h~r 'idd\· h')usewife role with
tl': an,-P delermmation she

!lOll ywr •• 1
f\ atheri:ntl tj
the ~1a~·-,

I

day

t.ne

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.cpeda l

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~h·

~~~~~

rr'

\e.;HTJI!\,1:!, t'-Xf

The

lhl'rt''ll 1 •

nuruaturr

rh.:tlrW)ffiAn for the P~rent
t t1 l"J. Wnrkshops of the
F nch \rt Colony, and in" ' all ch&gt;ldren who are
Hl"
&gt;h~ to .!':lttend and 1 of
&lt; lllr..: .. t• 6ring a parent with

'' n

J!i-:~,1,

r:olkt tlflfl

Hut

·lrl will be in
pl~.,t~, uf t mH: for tht! children
vi-t1~ ,iu,~~uc to enjoy thetr Oi,.·n
\~ . ;(_~ ~r art for (I full week
• -re HHllo\~l'l'n.
\:rS, Penn) Moore is the

~

instruet.l1r
spe&lt;'lil

Sill'

Pt•gg~
Ste\'l'll~.
Dt~llll il
(;tlt..' l'll. (llld Tl'rl'S\1 Wwd .
D~.-•Ubte Ohltngt•r's flr:-;t

,.

tht•lf ~h~1r:-. ll•~H~ \u t.:

tht· ~tate n~~ i
t'tl"'tWlh.: -..!1 '(~!'l'l
o " ~t.11
W.tr~ . l

~;till'\
:\Lt!llt·~. Su~it• St.L'\\ill'l , \I;H.
nt.· Qualls, Do111la Byt'r, .lud~
t'ro~ks, and Huth Dur!'&gt;t.
Aft!!rnuoll i.'\a:-~s: Mc-ml~ 11 Ep·
pk. Pals~ Ogdm. nl?wt•

•

fUllnwec·.1

M~H·t:·u·t.
]1, ~;1
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th~s

WI:!

rnb,•rs .md

II

sc her:lttled

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workshflp sptm~ •. ~t ·1 r.
F(ench .\ !t ( \ t "''\

\lrs.

\\ Jl
f

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Hatlou'e

kno,1n

JOO people

Cou nties \.
· ·' ''rc_ will. be no charge for
· :~nV!JI1t' (']:;;c who wants to sing
~-·. ,;.
.t•fh nw group.
'flv, r~·qut.?~ted that anyone
r
:n !
;rlir.· h?S a ('opy- of the stah·
1ard t1 d1t1on 1Jf the :'i-lessiah
l) f'
·nn~ it tL· .. chcarsal
fl·1f more informa tion.
ph.m e 24o-5.101.

firr dep,1 rtnlf,

t

as

\, ·t~~- &lt;1n1,l \ inton

'"

r.-.r \

nJany

.n tht• dH.&gt;o have p~1r• 11• ,f '" the el'ent.
If, 'll~o11 r may bt• taken as
, d
r(Jr one hour of college
.rrt·~~h &lt;ll ,-t $1J tuttwn fee \for
.., ... t.1r-:1ts of Jat'kson. Gallia,

\lt:Ht~. OIUP,Jl'"
an onsl~w~h
o,;tl

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l:llkt'\.

Wdm~t

Bc~ky

pettorrn

\tc1IS .ls

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Th~mk ::. ld

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ami ~·.,t-rah .F "

'l'nplclt 's lh 1rd
COnceftgr&lt;~dt·: Hmh Hifnl'. Pat Hin•
ch-. Judv Broome. l'all~t.•
n.~ted that 111 past Rtctunon(l, Nancy Manit') .

Htt:-.s

t

1

rtw 'I'HIIl~H:·r

•

""/hlt iU

J f~- I

gravy. nvn';()· Hl
•.
'salad, t•JUs, rr~•. p_l h
coffee Sp. '!l ,, J
r 1l •
BlaLns ,(, ·r:tmun,ti

rarse

.tu. .:, \Ill' r

s

Tl'RKF , ' ,
4.30 to~ pir ~ u
Tuppers ;)l,uf1 F
Turk el. dre,

l

Q;u·q·u~·t lwl.~ .tt

.

. . .nt·ttn "t"

(

ht' .ds11 ~L·ne~ as
,.~ nn!t'l!dt'llt. Thl' m:m·ds
' ·:· p'h·'-tllll'd ill ltll' Ulllllla l

··.···

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Spnn~ ;r~·u
Women·~ Fell''Vi,

I

1 11 1Jit' \.:Jilnll rhun:h

,, .c:r

~tl,,

sandwtche-,.:;

(

i-. a:-. .:t SmHla~ ~L'illktl

\",1,1

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Mr:-. :\l&lt;tn

llnilt•d P rn.:-,. ltl

/Jig 10 wra

•

A•

H.41SI· "'\H t•

Hu!'il', u wrn lllg l'l;~:-.s Bl'tt~
~kKwky. Jud~
Hruuttlt'.

Ann Plants,

IlllSSl Oihtn' t St l

(

Ktndl'i·_L:dl'h'll,

1 !.111d ~;m lu:-.1
Jlt \ &lt;IU't't•d ltl put··
t '
.utd J.! 1 111ll'.S tor raruth~.·r:-:, GtHI lhl\'att l' r,
11 .. r" 1
1'/w tll.ht'n·artct'. Pull~ HyselL ShirlP~ T~n'l',

Prrsuk
\ \

ht~ dn\ '-'" ;n

t

ud 1
-.d111fl. and 1hl•
I,..,, ,, 1 tJ:..,, litl-..t· up tlw
·tv ht:dt• t 'tt• atll tht•

r.,'

Orr..t WP b~tt'r
..\men L.tn l.t·~~~
; 30p.m \\('d:ot~s
~~f )1a r j\ltlt' 1
Powell. h1 "t

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JJ,. PI'.\ \\Ill pur-

~~ ~~ '' t'l l•
11..

h1!1Jf
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l:!S, \\ 1\l I. u t
\tl l\jl, l-l tH'
t'\uh. \\ t•,f:w"

u~

~Jill .1 btl&lt; II dfur 'dt•;~dlt!lt', IIU HI H.' \\Ill ;tl\l'lld
•II •T \h'rt• H[~
l'ht'l'l' \\ti:.O H ftilll f111" till'
111 ·tt;.t!-.t.' It \\,Is duldn•Jt \dUlt.• lhl• p;m~nt-.
1 \t \l.n til' Frnl . had r•1oi11 \' tsltatwn
,
IITiU\~t' fo~t tht•
I{HUilllllllt/\l'l'!'&gt; 114111\t.'d \\t'l't'
j• '\'Ilk f_ll l\ t•J 11'1'
.IS fnlld\\S

Calenda
!

Wbat 's b'

1_1c:1 J 1 }1~ 1.013takt'n, it's a
.t'n rv&lt;1l ctu·\ller1ge for me.

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1

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!he OpMmg of the

K;Jlh ·•

'I:i'e rl1msioP. V.W. in

Catu 1•
ht{·

s:

WflU.i·:l

.1 ~

w l;ntj;l
tJ ·hand::.:.rl'IT.'

wb;,

.-~b·

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~1 1 ~p

J:.~ to'\; I

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r3dios with

l

between now and

'I

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dmH!hte
;

.'1; 1;1~1

I-,,

httv LTJi(H
setn•Urr

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~-1~

mrJilir. ;.~

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societ1es C\'t'fl

on the air.

"] was really ~u
when I started
te k!ph one cal' · fr

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Gatltpohs

4 24 M ain

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uri ea rll1

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her husb: '
She aiS&lt;•
dSOap" ref\1.
life contre{l'J
people are 111 ·
Katherine.
sedate rrwrril
sc ulptorhusbc• n
Olristiar1 in "trw
am:u d ~
"S11ilp

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M" ~~~ ,(! Hee of charge or
·t st'c

f,

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ne p • , o. the radio

bl •

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10 - The Da1h S..ntmel ~hddl•port ·Pomer&lt;'' 0 • 1\'ednesdl" 0&lt; t 19 1977

l'

Explorers seek new members

'Ill

The Tr1.State Area Council,
Ro} Scouts of Amenca ,
seekmt: to expand 1ts Ex·
plorer membership, has
recentl) completed a career
mterest surve) among area

h•gh school students
Explonng lS the BSA's
ca reer-o n ented and h1gh
adventure program for young
adults. male and female.
ages 1:;.2t
The ca reer mterest survey.
accord ing to R Michael
Hyma n, D ~re c t or of 'Explormg,' tells us ~hat yo}lng
adults want m the waj( of
opporturubes to look mto
possible careers for them
selves Based on the results,
we go lookmg for busmess or
professiOnal orgaruzattons to

sponsor posts - or help
establiShed P&lt;lstS enroll new

Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Oct 19, 1977

Whtle we have some pos1S 1n
these fields, we can always
use more Persons mterested
m S}lonsormg posts m those and other f1elds - should
contact R M1chael Hyman at
the Tn.State Area Connell
Ave, Huntmgton, W Va
25701 , phone (304) 523-3408
Explorers, m addttlon to
thetr own urut programs,
have the opportumty to
part1c1pate m many local
con nell, reg10nal,
and
nation al acttviileS Local
council Explorer highlights
durmg the commg yea!" m·
elude Explorer Road Rally,
l.eaderslup Conferences, and
the Explorer Ball
Nat10nal highlights m 1978
mclude the National Explorer
Congress

est
mterest
1n
a uta
mecharucs, la\\, secretarLal

trauung, nursmg, law en-

can

Hymansa1dthat thlS years
h1gh·
survey
showed

forcemellt w1th some 200
youth mterested m each

also plan

trtps

oars
ed lee
Boa t
rental
and
nlscel laneou$
r efreshment
conc ession at Strouds Run
r.. tale park Athens County
O h i O The Olvis1on of Parks
and Recreat ion w tll fvrn1sh s
r o wboats with oars ana
aiS igned land tor mobile un1t
( to be provtded by con

HAS JUST ARRIVED

BUY NOW WHILE SUPPLIES lAST

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

MASON, W. VA.

kill m three years of effort

Bridge .. .

co,.t%.1\t!
~

~

111111 I IIIII

Ill I !IIIII \H IIIIIHH I I IIIH II' UHH 1

._,~

DO YOU WANT
TO WORK FOR
CRISISUNE?

I lUI' IIIII III 1

I ' I III H '

~ SUPERBURGER

\

\r

OME CEMl

~

When You Buy

\;

;
;

\
=

~

1\IIUIIIII!IUIII\IIIIIIIUIIIIIII

~lfttiiUIIIIIIUIIIUUIIIIIUIIIUtllltllll

I

3 LB. ARGO CANNED HAM ••••••••• ;.a.c:••s4.69
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••L.~ ••• 99'
1 lb Gl VAC PAK
SLICED
BACON ........................... ~~•• sl.39
FRENCH CITY
LB.
LK
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• 98'

5 lb

12 oz .
Kraft P1mento Smgles

$}19
CHEESE SLICES •••••••

Bag

FLORIDA

B

$}19

ORANGES •••••••••a.9••

Perch Fish •.••.•••••• •••.. ••• • .59

Regular
Super burger
Regular Frres
Regular Dnnk

29

oz.

&amp;$

25

10 oz . MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE ........................... s4.99

•

pure thopped
beeL steak wtth fnes

$

40

or baked pota1o, ho1
bread and all you tan
eat sa lad bar

011111111,111111

IIIUIII III I II III IIIIIIIIHIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIt lllll l ll

Btg ftsh sandwich,
regular
frtes
&amp;
regular drtnk

$

S 1 59 VJIUe

With ThiS Coupon

SAVE 10•

SAVE 35•

SALAD BAR

FISH FILLET
PlATTER
2 Deep fned llsh
fillets or
baked
potato, hot bread and
cole slaw or all you
can eat salad bar

$-

40

lARGE FRENCH
FRIES
Hot golden brown
french frtes 1n a
large conta1ner

Wrth Thts Coupon

Exp1res 10-31 77
II

I

I

Wtth Thrs Coupon

With Th1s Coupon

Exp1res 10-31 -77

Exp1re. 10-31 -77

o

I

POM
Open 'Til9 : 15
'

I

I

25~

~ 111 '""""""""" 1~E~;x~!P: ~,r~1:e;~s; ,~1:~0';·,3~; 1)1,,·; ~1;~1,'" "''" "''""""~"'"' """"'"""" "~E~:f.,!~~~~~~~ :~;~~~~~;;.;:""Inn""'""

SAVE 20•

Come 1n and hx 1t the
way you way you hlce
1t Dtnmg room only

~

'BIG FISH
MEAL

Value S1 40 Wtth ThiS Coupon

STOKEL YS

STOKLEYS PEACHES ........................2/$l 19

A one th1rd lb 100

Wtth Thts Coupon

Ex p1res 10-3J. 77

SAVE 34•

BIG BEEF
PlATTER

,1 59 Value

32 oz

WAGNERS
DRINKS .........................2/79'
29 oz
LIBBYS PUMPKIN.......................... 2/99'
200 ct
WHilE PUFFS................................... 65~
l7 oz . DEL MONTE
•
FRUIT COCKTAIL. ............................ 2/99'
16 oz
WESSON OIL ••• ~•••••••••••••••• ,•••••••••••••••. 79"
15'12 oz L I BB YS
CORN BEEF HASH ..............................69e
ll'llo oz. CAMPBELLS
TOMATO SOUP.......................~ ••••••• 3/69'

SAVE 35•

pet

I

I

I

I

NEAR THE POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
Sun thru Thurs. and 'hill: 15
I

until

2 00

Nave mt)er 16 1977

p m
B tds w ill

be publicly opened thereafter
by th e Chtef or his authorized
egent The nght tS ·reserved
to reject any and all b id s
Reques1 for b•d proposal
forms shou ld be made to the
Ol.v•s•on o f
Park s Clnd
R ecrea !ton
Conce sst ons
Untt
Foun tain
S(luare ,
Bulldmg C Thtrd Floor
Co l umbus
Ohio
43224
Te lephone (61-41 466 3277

•ROBERT W TEATER

D ir ec tor

(10) 19 26

( \I I 2, 9 4tc

PUBLI C NOTIC E
1n

• Fn. &amp; Sat.
I

I

=
=

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT

VIOLATION OF THIS AMENDMENT IS A
CRIME; AND
3 TO PROVIDE THAT ANY PERSON
MAY BRING A CIVIL ACTION f:OR AN
INJUNCTION TO STOP A VIOLATION
AND TO RECOVER
COSTS AND
ATTORNEYS FEES.
(Proposed by lmative Pet1hon)
A ma (only afftrmallve vote is necessary for
passage .

NO

SUPERBURGER
'
MEAL

Sect ton ,

Parks and

Concessions

2 TO PROVIDE THAT EACH SEPARATE

YES

CELLO
Each 19~
CARROTS .•••••••••••

Recreation ,

To adopt new Arhcle X IX of the
Const1lul1on of Oh1o
I TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
USING IN THIS STATE LEG - HOLD
TRAPS IN THE TRAPPING OF WILD
BIRDS O,R
WILD FOUR - LEGGED
ANIMALS (QUADRUPEDS! AND ALSO
TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
USING ANY TRAPPING DEVICE IN A
MANNER
WHICH
WILL
CAUSE
CONTINUED, PROLONGED SUFFERING
TO SUCH BIRDS OR ANIMALS;

EXPIRES 10.31-77 "'"""'"""""""""J

;;

sge

the Dtv ls.t on of

Se ated btds w ill be r eceived
the office of the Vi ll age
~ ess.on alrel
Clerk Pomeroy Oh10 until
The
Department
Wtll 12 o clock noon on October 31
tvrn lsh ex•sllng State owned 1977 on any of the tollowmg
nulld1ngs and equiP.m en t as proposa Is
l1 sted In b•d spec •f•cat lons
1 For the purchase by the
Mob•le concession un i t to be Village of Pomeroy of a new
prov lded
by
the
con
1978 tour door f•ve passenger
l t'SS1ona1re must conform to sedan with the f oltow •ng
!ot anda r ds as llstect 1n b 1d added equipment
specf f •catlons
J.SO Cubic Inc h eng.ne 4
The Concessiona~re will . ba r rel ca r buretor M m va
I urn sh ell other equi pmen t
Power Steer 1ng and Power
lH!r Ch&amp;ndlse
m.aterlals
Br akes
utllllles
I eba r
etc .
5 black t.res
necessery to ope r a t e the
Foam rubber fro nt seat
conc e$SIOns to epproved
Spotl ight on left han d side
!tl ande r ds
Heavy du ty 011 f1tt er
I f shall be the mtent of the
Heavy duh ba11er y 80 AM P
con trac t th a t t he se.:Json of
A.r Con d tioner &amp; 61 AMP
uperet10n fo r t he manna at
Altern a tor
Forked Run ~ S t a t e Park w il l
Pos 1t1ve tract 1on r ea r axle
oe from Apr il 1S t o October
Au tom a t1c
transm lss•on
1st The seeson of opera t ion
Viny l uphol stery
tor the beac h concession at
Roof Dr 1p Mo ldings
)tro uds RlJn State Park w il l
11 6 Whee lbase
oe .. from May 1, through
Cal br a ted
Speedometer
Labor Day
Pol ce Body Packa ge
The above dates are m
Transfer Pol 1ce Rad 10,
ten ded 10 estab l i Sh only
Si r en Flashi ng L1ghts F• r e
mi nimum
gu•del,nes
Ex t •n9U1Stter and proteC t i ve
re gard 1ng
seaso n
ot
shteld f ro m pr esent car to
oper at•on
Ce rt a in
c1r'
new car
cu mstances mAy necess i ta tf;'
2 Fo r sa le b y the VIl la ge of
E' llt~nd•ng or sho r teni ng the
Po mer oy 1IS 1976 Chevro let
operati ng seaso n ~ for the
l mpa4a fo u r door 8 cy linder
~ar . ous r aclll t •es
In any
without ra dio equipment fi r e
Pvent season and hou r s Of
exl• ng u 1sher si r en fla sh mg
Qperat.on wil l be sub 1ect to
11gna 1s and prot ec tnte Shiel d
annua l r e ~ le w
The bidder m ay sta te e1 th er
The cont ra ct will be tor a
wha t he W•ll g1ve for th e 1976

2

Asuperburger
At Our
Regu\ar Price.

~

SAVE 34•

1912
Offtclal b id proposa ls wdl
be rece•ved in t he Otltce of

364, Sheryl Gibbs 350

Local Bowling
Wednesday Afternoon

League
September 28

Mann•n9 0 Webster
Judge
By c aro lyn G Thomas

Deputy Clerk

(10) 19 26, 2tc

W L
30 2
Ed's Crossr oads Gr oc (6)

14 Manley 188, Lena Howa rd
16 166, Selby Manley 161
Ruth's Beaut y Shop
High Se rr es Se lb y
Tea m No 5
16
18 Manl ey 494, Lena Howard
WMPD
429 Phyllis Cline 405
Ed's Crossroad s Groc (1)
2 30
18
16
16
14

H tg h

Gam e

Lena

Howard 205, Ella Roush 154
Selby Manley 145
Ht gh Senes
Lena
Howard 475. Selby Manley
413 Delma Ka rr 399
O&lt;tober 5
W L
Team 2
32 8
22 18
Ruth's Beau1y Shop
Ed's Crossroads.(6)
20 20
WMPO
20 20
20 20
Teams
Ed's Crossroads (1)
6 34
Htgl'l Game
Selby

H i gh

For Thurldar Dc1 20, 1177

Game and

Series - Shamrock Motel
1286 and 447
Pomeroy Bowlin g t.a nes

Early Sunday
Standtngs

Team
Tom's Carry (l!Jt

• 40
37
27

Jack s Dairy Bar
Cline's Constructton
Town Kiln
26
R
Bot tling Co
24
Gibbs Grocery
1-4
High 1ndlvldual game
Men, Ed Voss 196, women,
Mary Vo$S 190 Ed Voss 193
Betty Sm ttl'llBL Bill Wt ll ford _
190, Bett y Sm ith 178
H1gh series- Ed Voss 570,

c

Belly Smith 520

Larr y

Dugan 542, Mar y Voss 460 ,

Bil l Wi llford 529

Marlene

W1lson 435
Team h1gh game -

Carr,tt Out 669

T~0',1 1 h t gh senes Da1 r y Bar 1910

Tom ' s
Jack's

LAFF . A . DAY

Sunday M1ners

Week of Seol 25

W L

Hot Sho1s

35

5

Count ry Bumpkms
Sunday Duds

26
21

14

Alley CaIs
Team 5
Team 3

22

SMAI.L THE PROPOSEID
AMENDMENT BE

ARGUMENT
FOR THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Passage of Issue 2 wtll prevent needless
and extreme pain and suffenng for untold
numbers of ammals The effect of Issue 2 ts
s1m 1lar to the long accepted and humane
p~act1ce of puttmg a horse out ollts mtsery
rather than permttttng 1t to suffer after 1t
breaks a log
Issue 2 m no way bans trappmg as etther
a sport or profess1on m Ohio It does
elimtnate the use of the leghold trap. a
devtce wh1ch severely tn jures tis v1cf1m and
then contmues to hold the creature m a
contmuing, and often long period of extreme
pain
Several types of qUick kill traps are
ava1lable which do not tnfl1ct such
suffenng . These traps would st1ll be legal
and avatlable to all person s wtshmg to
~ngage m lrappmg
Persons who wish to trap for pest or
d1sease control or for wtldl1fe management
purposes may also conhnue to do so,
providing that any of the many qu1 ck ktll
traps available are used.
Issue 2 also prohibits the use of any
trapptng dev1ce tf 1t ts used in a manner
whtch will cause conttnued, prolonged
suffenng This proh1blf1on wtll not affect the
proper use of any of the qu i ck ktlltraps
S1mply put . passage of Issue 2 will end
suffering for an1mals whose pelts are a
valuable natural resource . And . as more
humane traps are used, fewer non valuable
ammals and pels will be accidentally
trapped In Ohto . However, while protecting
Ohio animals, humane trappmg will st1ll be
permitted as a sport or professiOn tn thi s
state.
Committee for the Amendment . Robert
E Cape, Mtchael J Donohue, Athony A
KlemschmtdL Bruce Rouch, and Sandra E
Rowland

Les

Gibbs 181, Rick Martin 174,
Rtck Mar tin 158
Men's Htgh Sen es - Les
Gtbbs 469, R1ck Mart1n 449

•

'

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
•
Opponents of Issue 2, the ant1 trapp1ng
amendment, urge Oh1oans to vote " NO" for
three pnmary reasons
1 The am endment would ban all
tr app.ng achvtties, not tustthe leghold trap .
2 Trappmg , mcludmg the use of the
leghold trap, ts necessar y for proper
w1ldllfe management and conservatton
3 The sub}ecl - allowabl e dev1ces for
catchmg w1ld an1mals - should not be
mcluded 1n the Const1tut1on of the State of
Oh 10
The proposal as wntten. seeks to outlaw
the use ol "any trapping dev1ce," whtch
may even mel ude mouse traps and rat
traps. cages and nets No d1stmct1on 1s
made among devtces Any method that
traps an animal or b1rd can be sa1d to
produce suffenng Sc1entists trap certa1n
wtld antmals for rab1es r esearch and birds
for encephalitis tests. Opponents of Issue 2
bel1eve th1s 1mportant work on d1 sease
control would be curtail ed by passage of th e
amendment
Good wildltfe management requ~re s
that w•ld an1mal populat1ons be controlled
at levels consistent with the space and food
avatlable to sustam them. An absence of
trappmg to aide populat1on control w1ll
result, ftrst m burgeonmg populations of,
for example, fast breedmg muskrats and
raccoons, followed by destruction of the
spec1es through starvat1on and d1sease The
trapptng of wtld animals m Ohio IS
regulated by the Dtvls1on of \\(lldlife to
prolecl .domest•c pets from the ravages of
contagious diseases and to limtt the takmg
of w1ld an1mals to surplus antmal
populat1on and pests Trappmg for pest
control must also be carried on by farmers
to protect their crops from rodenls
.
The Constitutton of this state 1s the
bas1c document wh1ch establishes our form
of government and delineates the nghts of
our citizens It should not be cluttered w1th
1ssues, wh1ch. 1f to be legislated at all,
should be enacted mto law by the Oh1o
General Assembly
Comm1ttee agamst the Amendment:
Ronald James, Bob Me Ewen, Ronald K
Mtlleson, Jerome Stano, and M . Ben Gaeth.
TEXl' OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIO THAT ARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS
Sect1on I No person shall use rn any manner In the

1rapplng of wlld blrds or wild quadrupeds and leghold
trap In the state No person shall use any trapprng
devi ce In a manner which will cause continued ,

prolonged suffering to a wild bird or w1ld quadruped 1n

thts state
Sechon 2 Each separate v rol atlqn of fht s
amendment con stitutes a cr1m e In add rt1on any
person may bring a civil ecfton In an y Common Pleas
Court for an lntunct lon to stop v tolatrons of tht s
amendment Such pefson may recover the cost s o f
acTion and reasonable altorneys fee s

UNITED STATE S OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFF ICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE
I, TED W BROWN, Secretary ol Stale, do hereby
certify that t he foregoing are true and correct copie s o f
the amendment to Sechon 1 of Articl e V of th e Ohro

Con stltullon proposed by 1n1t1a11ve petition and 1he
amendment to the Ohio Const1tutlon adopting new
Article XI'X proposed by Initiative pettlton toge t her
with the arguments for and aga inst each amendment
as subm lfted by th e appropriate comm1ttee and t he

ballot language
IN TE STIMONY WHER EOF . l have hereunto
subscnbed m)' name and affi xe d m y offr c•al seal at
Columbus this 12th day of Septem be r 1977

TEDW BR OWN
(91 28 (10) 4, 11. 18, 25. 5tc

Secr etary of Slate

20, 1177

LIBRA (Sopl. 23·0cl. 23) ThiSIS
not a good day to press people
you Mnow on a purely social
bas1s tor lmenctal or busmess
favors Request or thrs nature
;eopard lzes relatiOnShiPS Hav~
1ng trouble selecting a career?
Send for your copy of Astro
Graph Letter Marl 50 cems for
each and a long self addressed
stamped envelope to Astra~
Graph P 0 Box 489 Aad ro C1ty
Statton NY 10019 Be sure to
spectly )'Our blrttl srgn

ARIE S (March 21 · Aprll 19)
Friends w1 11 cooperate today bu t
on ly 11 you treat them wtttl k1d
gloves Throwrng your we1ght
around could cause a serrous
problem

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20) An
enormous amount o f perSIStence Is requ1red 11 goals are
to be atta1ned today Don t let
down I

GEMINI (Mar 21 -Juno 20) Some
of your tdeas are qu1te clever
and 1ngen•ous today However
tt'le .ones you have regard .ng
money wont be mcluded In the
group

CANCER (Juno 21 -Julr 22)
1n to

no

busines s

Your mater.al prospects Joo~
rather encouragmg today but
theresa chance you coUld mess
thtngs up by doing somethmg
errat1c Watch your temper

SAGinARlUS (Nov

26

.""H e llo , Houst on'

23-Doc

21) You re a bi t too gullible to
day and you could be decerved
by someo n e wi t h u l ter or
mottves Don t take everyone at
Hello , face value

Ma rk V
16
H1 gh lnd Game - Belly Houslon' Second stage sepCAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon 19)
Sm 1lh 179, Pat Carson, t69
Keep prying noses ou t of your
H1gh Series - Betty Smith ~rated success fully , bu t
we're m 1l' •

1manc1al and business affa.rs t o~

problem persons 1rom the past
Old wounds could be reopened

. eo (Julr 23 -Aug 22) Be
cooperattve wi th others t od~;~y
but don t make Impulsive con
cesstons you might reg ret
Sound Judgment ts essential

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt. 22) Make
slowly today tf worktng on
or unram 11er pro ject
errors are possrble •I
careless

t;EWSF'APICRENTERPR ISE ASSN

I

19

20 20
10 30
8 32

Men's Hrgh Game -

Franci s Florist

oc:t.

M ore a1tent10n should be
devoted thrs com•ng year to ar
tist•c musrcal or creat l\le pur
su•ts involvements In these
areas wHt broaden your per spec~
t•ve ar'ld could even provtde a
so urce or prorrt

Although your .ntentlons are no
ble tOday you r tactiCS may leave
something to be desued To
achteve resulls the means must
be of equally h1gh standards

enter

Pis.
30

Davld Brlckles. Gen Cont 24

AQUARIU S (J on 20-Fob 11)
Normall)' you rea very easy person to get along w•th You usual
I)' treat others w•th obrechv•IY
and frrendliness Today
however your methods could be
drctatonal

SCORPIO (Oot 24-Nov 22) a r rangemen t s t oday wrth

Tuesday TnpU,ate
October 4. 1977
26

day- espectally those who offer
abundant bvt unsound adv•ce

PI SCES (Fob 20· March 201

Pis.

Team 5, 281
Team High Series - Team
5 859 Sunday Dud~ 759,

Shamrock Mot el
Royal Crown Bottling

Bernice Bede Osol

0&lt;1 '· 1977

Team High Game - Team
S, 298 Count ry Bu m pk tns 290

Royal Qak Park

ASTRO•GRAPH

M txed lea gue

Coun try B u mpk m ~ 742

rea m 2

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

~

fOR

=

oz

)\

Women ' s High Game Chevrolet or what amount he
P,I O TICE O ~L ili N G
Ann Morris 145. Sue Searles
w ltl al low as a trade m lor the
OF INVE"•OR Y
129. Gwen Gibbs 122
AND APP RI ASEtAENT
new pOl•ce cru•Se r described
Women ' s Hi gh Series
T h e State of Oh io Mei gs
above
Ann Morris 360 Sheryl Gibbs
Each btdder may bid tor coun t y, Court of Common
either the purchase of the Plen, Pr obate 01 vis•on
352 Gwen Gibbs 342
To the Ewec utor or Ad
1976 Che~ rolet or tor the sate
TPol'm Hlnh c;.,.m• to the Village of Pomeroy of a mm•strator of the estate, to Country
Bumpkins
293,
such
ot
the
follow
ing
as
are
new pol•ce cru •ser descr ibed
Team
5,
286,
Hot
Sho1s
282
abo~e or bot h Ea ch b1d must, res td ents ot the State ot Oh1o
Team
High
Series
conta in the full name of e~ery viz ~ the surviving spouse
person or company mterested the
next
of
k 1n
the Country BumpkinS 821 , Hot
Shols 791 Team 5 749
1n th e same and the b•d must beneflclar"les under the w ill
be accompanted by a ch eck and to the attorney or at
or bond In the sum of S1 00 00 torneys represen ti ng any of
Week of ()(Iober 2
to the sa tl sfactlon of the the aforemenfloned per sons
w L
VIllage Council as a guaranty
Frank
M
Fugate
Hot Sho1s
35 13
that if th! bi d is accepted
Pomeroy , Oh•o
Country Bumpkins
34 14
contract w ill be en t eretl Into
You are hereby not1f1ed
Alley Ca1s
26 22
and 1ts performance prOperly
that the Inven tory and Ap
Sunday Duds
23 25
pratsement of the Estate of
sec ured
These checks or bonds will the aforementtoned
Team 5
14 32
be returned a t once jo all deceased , late of sa1d County
Team 3
10 38
were tiled n this court Sa•d
except the successful b idder
Men s High Gam e - Les
Inventory and Appra1sement
HIS checks or bond will be
Grbbs 156, Charles Searles
be
t
or
hearing
bef
ore
this
Will
held until the contract or bid
154, Roland Morns 146
1S properl y e&gt;cecuted by him
Court on the 27ttl day ot
M en's H ig h Series The ngh t Is reserved to October 1917 at to 00 o clo c k
Charles Sea rl es 421, Rol and
re t ect any and fill btds 90 day AM
Any person desiri ng to I de
Morn s 407, Jeff Martin 395
delivery rrom date of ac
e)(cepttons therefo mpst t il e "
ceptance
Wom en's Hrgh Game - Sue
them at leas t ftve days pnor
Jane Walton
Sea rl es 163, Sue Sea rl es 148,
Clerk to the date sef tor heanhg
Luetta Riggs 144
Given under my hanct and
VILLAGE OF
Wom en s Hrgh Seri es POMEROY sea l of serd court th•s 14th .._ Sue
Sea r les 438, Luet te R1ggs
( 10 ) 19 26 nc
dey of October 1977

Team

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

I

\

~"

term of ftve (5) veers from
January I 1978 to December

. '"'""""""""'"""""'""""""""'""'""""'
lllllllll\:\::ll::::::::l:\::::llllllilHiil
lllllllllll
llllll' ill ~

"""'""';~~~~~UpON \S GOOD fOR A

J

PARKAY
LB
MARGARINE ....... :

,_"'·~~-~ ~ e•c!~·~01 jiV~I 0s :I :OnWI[!Of
ctmg

'

seven year'"()ld bndge
crev-:s from Amertcan Bndge
M1ller added that the Co deserved a much needed
reason tt would not open untll rest
(Continued from page 1)
th1s mornmg was because of
At t he same ttme, he
people here understand why the safety factor mvolved He oralSed the 10b suoerv1sor
the bridge had to be closed referred to possible tra£flc Vern Board, to the governor
Another man mv1ted the tle.ups due to the large for completmg the work on
governor over for a steak numbers of ca rs parked on tune as well as for workmg 12
dinner wh1ch was declmed the oppos1te Sides of the hours a day seven days a
Wlth words of regret
bn dge
week
, However, many people d1d
Both the governor and
not stop m lhelr length) Miller sa1d that they expected OFFICER LOSES EYE
JO Urney across the bndge
the remam1ng repair work to
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
' The bradge 1s safe for our take onl y a short ume
Cmcmnah police sergeant
pe o ple ,
declared However the) would not shot m the face Fnday by a
Rockefeller when he r eached offer any tunetable for 1ts robbery suspect has lost hlS
the Oh10 s1de of the bridge completiOn
r1ght eye
and looked back at Pomt
Meanwhile, motonsts w1ll
Surgeons worked for thr~
Pleasant
have to contend w1th only two hours to save Sgt David
Also m t he governor's vteY. lanes of traffic mstead of the Watson s InJUred eve, but
was the Shadle Bndge, which normal four Department ot were forced to remove It
1s also scheduled for repairs Hi g h way p ersonnel durmg sW"gery liJonda)
" The Shadle Br1dge will barricaded the t wo outer
probably be put off until next lanes
spring , although work 15
M1ller sa1d he did not think
scheduled for 1t this wmter," that ha\ mg only two lanes
sa1d Comm1ss10ner M1Uer open would hmder traf£1c He
When M1ller was asked 1f sa1 d an estimate d 12,000
s1mllar cracks as those found vehicles cross the bndge
thiS summer on the bndge daily
co uld reappear by next
Volunteer Traimng
The additiOn al defects
sprmg, he declmed to answer lound on the bndge have been
Classes Starting Soon.
He did say test mg wtll descn bed as bemg located
contmue and that a highly underneath m what 1s called
Call 992-5554
regarded pnvate company the compresston ar eas
has been contracted to make
M1ller sa1d he d1d not know
For Information.
tests to determme what exactly when i hlS work would
caused the cracks on the begm He S3ld he felt the

1

by 20

~OF. . . .

Scout1ng-USA s Slx h1gh

Bill. BAER , ROUTE 1 Mmersvllle, ~1th an e1ght-pomt buck deer wh1ch he bagged
w1Ul a bow and arrow m back of Ractne Monday evemng Thts ts Baer s first bow and arro"

Ren1a1
esh
~~~~~~:~.7';~Boetusrkat refr
Forkect
Mergs

--vOUR TRUCK LOA ....
D-

to

advent ure bases

·-,,,,,,bed

JUST RECEIVED

m

Washmgton. D C, April 12·
16, and the Explorer Olympics, July 36-August 5, at
Colorado State UmverSlty,
Fort Collms Ohio Explorers

members"

INSUlATIM

Ser vtt'e Center, 733 Seventh

Prestdents'

NOTICE TO B IDDERS
The
IO Department ot
esources th rou gh
0"•1Sil ,on ot Parks ana
rsuant to and
Wlfh Sec t 1ons
c·~, ;··,;,.;;;;ed 1501 091 of the
Jt
Code proposes
t he operat1on
publ ic serv•ce
l oca tect
ana
r11
as follows

506 Pal Carson 494

Ralph Gobbs 443

PROPOSED CONSTITUTION AI:.
AMENDMENT
To amend Sect1on 1 of Arhcle Vol the
Const1tuhon of Ohm
TO PROVIDE THAT A PERSON IS
ENTITLED
TO
VOTE
AT
ALL
ELECTIONS
IF
HE
HAS
BEEN
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THIRTY
DAYS
AND
HAS
THE
OTHER
QUALIFICATIONS OF AN ELECTOR,
AND TO PROVIDE THAT A PERSON
WHO IS REGISTERED AND FAILS TO
VOTE IN AT LEAST ONE ELECTION
DURING ANY PERIOD OF FOUR
CONSECUTIVE
YEARS
MUST
REGISTER AGAIN BEFORE BEING
ENTITLED TO VOTE.

ISSUE 1 CAN PREVENT THE BOSSES
AND MACHINES FROM TAKING OVER
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 keeps elections in the hands of the
people and out of the pockets of the b1g
mach me bosses, by protectmg the mtegnty
of the 1nd1vldual vote . It guarantees every
Oh1oan a vo1ce tn governme')t by deny mg
the bosses the opportun tty for easy and
undetected mass vote fraud Vote for your
nght to vote Votes YES on Issue 1
ELECTION
DAY
REGISTRATION
MEANS ELECTION FRAUD. VOTE YES
ON ISSUE 1.
Comm tttee for the Amendment Jean
M Barren , Wtlltam A Miller, Jr, W C
Channell. and W1ll lam H. Schne1der .

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT.
Ohtoans deserve elect tons systems that
A ma jonty affirmative vote is necessary for
make it easy to reg1ster and vote. Oh1o' s
passage.
new electton law does that through Election
Day and permanent reg1straflon
TEXT OF PROPOSED AMENDMENT
In 22 Oh1o counties. residents have ·
(The proposed new language IS capitalized
always had the nght to vote on Elect1on Day
and underlined)
without registering i n advance Now all
ARTICLEV
ellg1ble Oh1oans may regtster on El ect1on
SECTION 1 Every cit1zen of the Un1ted
Day.
States, ofthe age of eighteen years , who has
Issue 1 would prohibit Elect1on Day
been a res1dent of the state, county,
reg1strat1on for all of us II conltnues
township, or ward. such ttme as may be
restnct1ons that shut out potenttal voters
prov1ded by law, AND HAS BEEN
&lt;Ner two mtll1on elg1ble Oh1oans are not
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THIRTY
reg1stered . La~t fall only 56 percent voted
DAYS, has the qualtf1cat1ons of an elector ,
YOU SHOULD KNOW
1
and 1s ent1tled to vote at all electton s. ANY
1 Separate lmes for regtstrat10n and
ELECTOR WHO FAILS TO VOTE IN J\T
votmg makes Elect1on Day reg1 strat•on
LEAST ONE ELECTION DURING ANY
convenient for voters.
PERIOD OF FOUR CONSECUTIVE
2. States that have 1t r eport turnout s of
YEARS SHALL CEASE TO BE AN
between 65 percent and 76 percent
ELECTOR
UNtESS
HE
AGAIN
3 Even the FBI couldn ' t find any fraud
REGISTERS TO VOTE
m the five - states with Election Da y
reg1strat1on, and th e peopl e of Oh1o ar e
YES
every
b1t as honest as they are
SHALL THE PROPOSED
4. Oh1o's new El ectton law str engthen s
'
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?
NO
the protection agamst fraud by requtnng
reg1strants to show 1denttftcat1on and
prov1dtng for f1ve year pnson term s for
ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED
anyone vot1ng twtce.
AMENDMENT
5 It requ1res automatiC purgmg from
VOTE YES ON HONEST ELECTIONS
reg1strat1on l•sts when people move or d1 e.
VOTE YES ON ISSUE I
6 Elect1on Day reg1stratton ts f.he
SAFEGUARD YOUR VOTE. VOTE YES
cheapest way to reg1ster voters
ON ISSUE 1.
ISSUE 1
Issue 1 restores the 30-day res1dency
. denies Oh1oan s th e nght to use Elect1on
safeguard to voter registration and requ1res
Day reg;stratton even through 1t works m
anyone who has not voted m four years to
other states.
re reg1ster. Th1s prevents someone from
makes tt more d1fflcult for poltf1 cal
voting falsely in an area where they do not
mdependents to have a votce 1n
res1de or from wrongfully attemptmg to use
government
the name of registration of someone who
freezes the ban on Electton Day
has moved away or d led .
reg1stralton into our Constttutton before we
See that your vote 1s not stolen or cancelled
have a chance to see how 1f works
by a tombstone
"'
El echon Day r eg1strat1on work s
Vote YES on Issue 1
wtthout fraud . Even Cuyahoga County' s
GOP Chairman admtts the clatms of fraud
PROTECT YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL
are " pure baloney" . What really worn es
RIGHT TO VOTE.
- them IS not fraud - 1t's more voters
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.-VOTE NO ON ISSUE 1
You have the constituttonally guaranteed
Comm i ttee agamst the Amendm ent
nght to be counted on ever y vote &gt;/tJu cast .
Don Maddu x, J Leonar d camera , C J
Issue 1 protects that right by tns1stmg on
M c Ltn t Tony P
Hall , Robert
E
O'Shaughnessy, and John K . M;thoney
safeguards aga1nst multtple or fraudulent
votmg
W1lhout 1t. the US
Just1ce
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
Department has warned . there Is almost no
AMENDMENTway to trace the Wtde open vote fraud that
(The proposed new languJge 1s that set forth'" tap•tal
could oc c ur Instant reg1strat1on can mean
letters and undertined )
BE IT RE SOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
mstant fraud Vote yes for mtegnty m
STATE
OF OHIO THAT AR TICLE V, SECTI ON 1 OF
government Vote YES on Issue l
THE OHIO CON STITUTI ON BE AMEND ED TO
READ AS FOLLOWS
E'ler y ci ti zen of th e United States, of the age of
ISSUE 1 SAVES THE TAXrAYER'S
eighteen years, who has been a r esident of t ile state.
MONEY VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
county townsh ip, or war d , sut h t1me as ma y be
provided
by law, AND HAS BEEN REGI STERED TO
Issue 1 will prevent the squandering of over
VOTE
FOR
THIRTY DAY S, ha s 1he qloall flcatiOn s ot
$2 3 million of taxpa yer 's money These
an elec tor and I$ entitled t o vote at al l elect rons A NY
funds will be automat1 call y spent tf Issue 1
EL ECTOR WH O FAILS TO VOTE IN AT LEAST ONE
ELECTION DURING ANY PER IOD OF FOUR
t5._n.ot passed and the current law ts al lowed
CON SECUTIVE YEARS SHALL CEASE TO BE AN
to ~land
ELE CTOR UNLESS HE AGAIN REGISTERS TO
• (Proposed by lmtiative Petition l

�•

- - --

'
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P001er oy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 19, 1977

d

l ~ Wunh otl Undt:'t

l'&lt;bh

lthl~
I! tid~!&gt;

LOO

Jtla~~
6tla~.ll

15(1

it$
1 !0

1!0

~~

-~~

:

•

In lllt'lllut·~. Ccml lA Thunk.~ IHKI
OUt twu~ 5 l 't'III.S P\'1 \l lltd, J;i OO

tmttunwn Cash m Jt t.h·an&lt;'t'

Mub1lt- Hvn.w SC!it·s arhl \'al'tl :.u\u;
OU't' :IH't'J)Il'&lt;l Of\)) ~ llh L'&lt;t:,h 'W llh
vt\lt'l' :!:ll't·nl l'h&lt;Hl~'t· f lit .uL.; t'fl:·n ·
Ul~ Box Nwnbt'r In C'.&lt;ttt&gt; ,tf Tl ~t• So•i1·
lint&gt; I.

The Publblk'r tt'~n l'l- tl~o.· 11,t.:lt.
\u t'l.!Jtt•r t t' }l'Ll a n: ad~ dt'l'tn••&lt;t , ,!).
]t'(' UOlUi l. Tilt' PutJ ! ~!~r 1n U tll•l La&gt;
rt'~IJI.Ifl:&gt;iblt'

k•r

~

L1wr.:t'

J "'
Ea ch w"nJ u\ 'l't Ulot' muuuiUln t;,
.,. u~ 1.:. i t'l.'tll.i. ~r wut'd P•'l ,J,n
~r\tb n.1111111~ olllt'r Uwn UHb&lt;'\.UU\t'
&lt;Ju~ .s Wi ll bt' dL&lt;I(ttt'&lt;l &lt;t! lilt' 1 J&lt;4\
'rntt·

Ul..•l"l' than l•ttl ltl t'&lt;~ t ·

rt't't l.l l!.t'i'\1\111

Phone 99'!·21:16

I WISH to e•press. my son(:ere op·
preCiallon to o il those ~ho 01d
ed us du11ng thE&gt; .linen and
death ol my husband George F.
Conde Spec1ol thonk!iO to the
staff of Veteren s Memor1al
Hosp1tal Dr R1dgewo~ Dr
Conde
R&amp;v
Father Paul
Welton , fam dy lr1¥nds and
the Ew1ng Funeral Home and all
th,pse who sent flowers cords
aod helped •n any way W1fe,
Bonn1e Conde
WE WISH to thank everyone for
the many k indnesses and con s1derot.ons shown to us at the
l 1me of th e death of our son
and brother , Ju-nn1y Wiles Your
thoughtfulness wJII never be
for gott en . Mr. and Mrs . Orval
Wde5-· and A nno Kathryn . Mr .
and Mrs . te rry Wiles and Fomi 1 ~ and Mr and M rs John W des

&amp;.r: -=:;,__ =

- = = _!

A HIDE A BED &lt;m 60'7 _
CHIP WOOD . Pole s max .
dtameter I 0 on largest end $8
per ron Bu ndled slob $6 per
ton. Del1ve18d to Oh1o Pollet
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy. ~2 2089.

-

---

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer,
wont to buy or sell someth1ng ,
ae l oo~ i ng l or wor k .
or
whatever . . you II get results
laster wtth a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coli 997 -21.56.

---C ARAGE AND Yard
._

Sale 536
Hogh St. M1ddleport Sot . Oct .
22 10 om to ? (lothmg , ant iques , toys , com1c book&amp; . mise
Priced to sell.

_c:-

COAL lunoutone and cok tum NICE ONE acre bu tld1ng soleli .
port ly wooded
near Metg!tl
chlot•de and colc1um bnne tor
H1gh School. 997 55'23
dust co!'hol and specml mtxmg .
salt lot lo rmers hcels1or Solt NICE THREE bedroom home
WOtks Moon Sheet , Pomeroy
Rust11: Htlls . Syron.J!ie , Oh1o.
Oh1o or phone 9'17 3891
949 2559 .
CAMPER , $600
Also
horse SEVEN VEAR old house J acr es . 0
trader , $&lt;450. Phone {614 ] 698
10a1T1S and both '1 mda fr om
3290 .
Che~ ter . Pr.ced lor qu1ck sole .
985 3950 ,
.
ECONOMY T-RACTOR with oil at
tochment5 li ke new askmg HOUSf FOR Sole ot 16S1 lincoln
52250. Phone (614 ) 698·3290
Hts Call99214 71. bttfore 3 pm .
and alter 5 coli Q'9-2·j376 .
APPL ES FITZPATRICK Or cha r ds .
State
Route 689 . Phone
Wilkesv1lle. 669 -3765 .
- R:EAL ESTATE
1975 J)O JOHN DEERE. dozet w tth
FOR SALE
368 hours . 27 ton se t of new
tr uck sc ales 22 long . 99'1·5468
Good
Bus i n ess
Bldg .
CUl HEATING Costs i Shenandoah
located at 60S w Main St.,
bas1c
woad healer
Mike
Pomeroy , Ohio . Presently
Borgen
Authenzed Dealer
occupied
by
a going
business . Bldg . has deluxe
Hornson" dle . 742 -2704 .
apartment • o'o(erhead
SHOT SHEL LS Wholesale , deer
bnnglng in good i ncome.
slu gs, $1.49 Federal 3 dram ,
Priced on in spection only .
SJ 10 or $57 case 22 l R. 82 22
Can be seen any time from
10 a .m . to 6 p.m . Inqu ire at
mag HP $2 .90. 8 MM Mouser
60S W . Ma i n St , Pomerov.
$2 40 bo• ammo all Cal New
Oh io 45769 .
an d used . compound and
recurve bows Ots.;ounl on al l
We trade for anything . Fifes L - - - - - - - - - - _ _ J
M iddleport . Ohto . We need o
Gravely , GoKo r ts mu11 b1kes.
~
motor cycles , O lr compressors
__?~~ot r-.o_-:~~u..:__._ _
_,_
ROUtE
7
RIGGS
CRE S T MANOR -· Th is
new ranch tv oe home can
be
yours .
3
lovely
bedrooms, 2 bathS, dini ng
roo m , lovely kttc hen, ve r y
large lt ving room , cen tral
i..et Pomeroy Landmark
heat &amp; a ir . Full basement
needs concrete floor , 2 car
soften &amp; condition your
ga rage wi th workshop . All
wa1er and Co.op water
carpeted . PRICED TO
softener , Model UC · XVL.
SELL - $27 1 709_.00 .
.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING '
DEADUNES
Mrnttla\
:\',1011 on SatUro.ht~
Tu\•Mla\

thru Frt da)
-tPi\1 .

lilt" till) Ut'furt' pubil l'BI IIIIl
Swhhn
~P. \f

dftt'!liOOII

~UaLIC

NOTICE
b ids will bt received
in the offi c e of tt\e Village
Clerk , Pomeroy . Oh iO, until
12 o' c lock. noon o, Octobei J,
1977 on any of the 'follow ing
proposals .
I . 'F1Sf'" 'The pu·rchase bY thl'
VIllage Of Pomeroy of 'a new
1978 tour dOOr five pasnnger
sedan with the tol lo win;
added equ ipment ·
400 Cub i c inch engine 4
barrel carburetor , Min . VI
Powtr Steulng end Power
Stal~

Brek~

s black

tlrM
Foam rubber front seat
Spotllght on l ett hand side
Heavy duty Oil filter
Heavy dut., battery BO AMP
Air Conditioner &amp;. 61 :A.MP
Alternator
Positi ve traction rear a•le
Automatic
transmission
Vinyl upho~tHy
Roof Drip Mold ingt
116 Wheelbase
Calibrated
Spl'edorneter
Pollee Body Package
TranSfer Pollee Radio ,
Siren, Flashing Lights. Fire
Extinguisher and protectl vt
shield from presen t car t o
new car.
2. For ule by the Village of
Pomeror Its 1976 Chevrolet
Impala tour door. I cylinder ,
without radio tqulpment, flrt
extl ngulshl!r , siren . flashing
signals and protective shield .
The bidder mar state either
what ht will g ive tor the 1976
Chevrolet or what amount ht
will allow as a trade· in tor tht
new pollee cruiser ~esc:rlbed
above .
Each bidder may b id for
either th, purchase of the
1976 Chevrolet or tor the sale
to the VIllage of Pomeroy of 1
new police c;rullfr described
above or both . Each bld muat
contain the full name of every
peraon or company lntec:ested
In the same, end tht bid' must
be ICCOI'Tl:PIInl ed by a Cttt'Ck
or bond In the sum of $100.00
to the saflsfac:tlon of the
VIllage council as 1 guaranh
that if the b id is accepted,
contract will be entered Into
and lts/.erformence properly

secure .

Thtle checks or bonds will

be retu rnea at onct to Ill

except the successful b idder.
His checks or bond will bt
held vntll the contract or bid
Is properly uec::uttd by him .
The right Is r:eserved to
reiMtlny and all bids . 90 da-y
delivery from date Of IC ·
.,.. ceptance
JIM Wilton ,
Clerk

VILLAGE OF
POM.EMY
~ 10 ) 12, 19, 2tc

•
"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT.
'0
Case No . 22227
~s tate of James W . Farmer,
Oeceiued .
NOtt ce tS hereby given that
1-teten R
F .;lrmer , of 7:07
,fiou th
Seco nd
Avenue ,
.M iddlepor t, Ohio , has been
'du l y
appointed
Ad
lninistratr 1x of the E sfate of
,Ja.mes W Farmer , deceased,
late of Me1gs County , Ohio .
Cred 1tors are req ut red to
Jile their claims with said
.&amp;i duciarv
w ithi n
th r ee
1"nonths .
.: Dated this 28th day of
,iiep tember 1977

.

~

' '

'\ v

"

-s- Manning 0 . Webster
... ' ' ' ' ·
J udge
court of comm 'dn P lea s,
Probate D1v 1sion
5, ,.2 ,... 19

'H r

,_

GUN SHOOT . Roc •ne Cvn Club
evEuy Sun afternoon Foetor
Chock guns only Asso r ted
me&lt;Jts .
FlJllER BRUSH products for sole ,

&lt;92-3410.
THERE Will be no hunting , no
trespass•ng , and no exceptions
_? n my properly. Bob McGrow .
SKA TE A ·WAY Schedule Ho llo ·
ween Party Sot., Oct . 29th .
Races , Priu ts , Balloons
Open We-d . Fr1 . and Sot. n1tes .
7·30
10:00. A vailable tar
pr1vote parti e!. . Mon . Tues .,
Thurs. . n11es ; Sot oi- Sun . after·
noons.
Bu s trons porl ohon
cancelled Ph one 985 39:29 or

'"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
case No . 22237
Esta1e of Nell1e R . Vale
oecused .
".\ Not rc e tS hereby g ive n that
olin F." Va l e of Colu mbus ,
1'Uh io, has been duly appointed
:· Administrator of the Esta t e
. ~t Ne l lie R . Vale , deceased ,
late of Salem Street. Rutland ,
Oh io , M etgs c ounly , Oh io.
Creditors ~re requir ed to
file their c la ims w ith sat d
with i n
three
f i duc1ary
months
Dated th 1S 15th day of
October 1977 .
Manning 0 . Webster
Judge
( 10 ) "HI , 26, ( 11) 2, 3tc

THE RACINE
Volunteer Fire
Deportment will sponsor a gun
shoot every Saturday Ql 7 p.m .
at fhe.r build tng in Boshon Foe ·
, ~ cry choke guns only .........__

THE

"Pa~ t"

1927.

was

bor,p Oct. , '8,-

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Core line and adoption Service .
'X12 ·1b80 , 742·3162, 992·5.427

TWO PONIES , more and gelding
One brok e to harness . Ha rness
tncl uded . 742·2833 .
GIVE AWAY good possible
coonhound , 3 mo. female .
M o the r
was a b lu ellck .

9'12-7370.
FREE KITTE NS . Three tobb1es . l
black . 4 cots, I cal ico, 1 block. .
1-6J4 .8B2 -2562

PIANO TUNING and Repair . lone
Danie ls, 992 208:1. 12 years ser VICe ro Tri -County. Reference
Elberfelds .

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

Let us
Free.

.

test

your

water

VC..SVI .
Only$279 .95

soheners, ....niodel

525.00 Oiscoun1
( 1) Good Refrigerator $:ZOO

1972 PINTO . 949·276 1, alter 5 dur ing the week ond any time

1

I 976

MERCURY

B08CA T'

Runabout. A ~tomo l1 c ,
4.
cy linder, $2,600 Ca ll 949 2112 .
after 4.00 pm.

1974 MONTE CARLO . Bur ghondy .
Good
condi tion.
$2 ,300 .
985 -&lt;4 117

Good
Used
Amana
Upright Freezer( nso.oo.

1 Good Used McCullough
10-lOchainsaw
$1:ZS
1 Good used Me (ullough
l10 E Chain Saw .
S95
1 Good Used Homelite
XL12 Chain Saw
S125
1 Good Used McCullough

Pomeroy Landmark

-

EXPER IENCED REFRIGERATOR ond
appli an ce servicem an . Paid
ho lidays ,
voc ations
and
hosplfoltZo t ion
Goll i a
Refrigerator Co ., 611 3rd Avrt .,
G alltpo lis , Ohio.

Incred ible I Why pay high elec tr ic
bills rhts wmter? Let us pay
them for you! One bedroom
fro m $130 now ovodoble
Vi llage Manor. Third ond M ill
Slreets , M1ddleport. Teleph one
992-7787 . Equal Hou smg Op portunity .

EXPERIENCED GROCERY or Pro·
dute Clerk . Only those w ith ex ·
perience ne-ed app ly . See store LAR GE MOBILE Home lot Country
manager at Twtn City Gateway . · Setting . Meigs Schools . A ll
ut1hl 1e5 ovotlable Bottle go!.
NEED BABYSITTER ot home in
heating only 742-3122 .
Portland . 7 om to 6 pm $35 o
week . Call Donny Rpvsh.
FOR RENT. Tra iler
adult .
8•3 -n92 .
992 -3 181.

LARGE VEL VET so fo Exce llent
• condition . Beautdu l glass top
co iff!-e table 992 -32B3

CASH po td for oil makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phoneor~acode61 4 423·953 1.

-~-

ONE BEDROOM Mobile Home .

_!' d~~~~r_~2~----

IS LIVING
A HOME
YOU CAN AFFORD
TO OWN
We need listings of all
kinds . Farms, vacant land
and residential property.

something you might need .
FOR SALE Or trade or land con·
l roct
2 bedroom house in
Rutland. 992-5858.

FOR SALE or Trade 1967 Ford T·
B1rd . Full power . 01r new ex ·
hausl syste m Glenn R. Bissell ,
Boshon Rood . 949·260 1 or

stROUT

·949-2860.
-----...-------'---- - -

TWO 10 ten acres wi th good
building sile or older home
wi tobl e for remodeling ; water
and electricity available; close
to hardtop wad . Call 99'1·7036,
after 5 pm

843 2933.
NEW HOl lAND Bol er and Mowe1 .
M F Corn Planter 992 7084 .
WOOD FOR Sole . Phon e 985 .4103 .

.

-

LOTS OF siEc 16 and 18 dre,s.ses .
some new, New shoes , 5 and
5 ' 1 . Odd s nnd en~ . 949-2679
Pr etty cheap for w~le th tng

10-14-1 mo. pd.

living room and d in mg fam ily room , lo t s of
closets, fully ca rpeted ,
clo se to town , approx. 1
acre ground Help wi th VA
and
FHA
financi ng .
537 .300.00.
SMALL FARM - 6 acres,
several buildings, garage,
lots of garden space, keep
animals
here ,
nicely
remodeled home, 3 bdrms.,
formal din1ng, modern k it .•
family
room .
full
basement, fully carpe ted ,
looks nice . $29, 500.00.

HUNTING LAND -

135

acres ,
m os t
hllls
all·
minerals, close t o good
fishing , $149 .00 per acre,

UJ. l me.

•

FREE ESTIMATES

Blo••

IMIIIIhtll Stmcts

Fia•dna AwaiaW.

int For , .... puce of mind arid to

Bloo • Into Wills &amp;Alii«
SIORM
Ill NDOllS &amp; DOORS
!EPLIC£MEIIT

Sltis.,

JCI'I f iftturJIICI COIIt~J tit

liS

tit down JOlt Mit Mme. .Thaf til
dowM Itt mtehanicllr iMtalltd to
aswrt ma•Mnwn safety. ContKt" fof
1 ~oolily onio~ Ooo'l ooit till ic•
fanM on ,_, ralf, lit 111 p;Oft it ...
IOd Silf poltlllill luis. CAtJ.

WINIIOIIS

ALIIMINUM
SIDI"'-SOffiTT
GIITTt!S..IWNIIIGS

LARRY LAVENDER
SJfiCtaSt, Ohio

~inpbuiJ

PU!H99l

Wood Stoves
M:l F

VA-FHA . 30 yr ftnoncmg Ireland
Mortgage . 77 E. Stote . Ath ens,
) 5::_9,_.2._,·3::0:.-S:_
'-'----'-~-ph one (614::_
2 STORY 3 bedroom frome
house, F,A . furnace , storm w1n ·
dews , firepla ce in Mtddlepor t.
Phone 992 -3457
·----:--'-c-MUST SEll thts 3 bed room 2 1 1
bath , spli t-{9yer w1th ali the e• ·
Ires I Pn ced far below oc tuol
real estate value for quick
sale I Nice dnve to power
plants . $44,6oo. 992 2492.
NEW O NE year old bilevel home
3 bedroom . I • , bath , garage,
recreation room l _1 acres
Eagle Ridge . 94 9-2745 .

----

TEAFORDm·

Z

We

ha ve sever a I

BUSINESSES -

We ha ve

several .

ACREAGE -

We have

some.

OUT
OF
COUNTY
BUYERS
USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE , WHY DON' T
YOU?
. HENRY E. CLELAND
REALT.OR
HANK, KATHY,&amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 -2259,992-6191 ,

REALTOR

flMJ'Utn

.

EFEL

·

RNR

·

·:.

773-5955

RATES

-·

Llk i n, W . VI .

•..-.... o.

10. 18. 1 mo . ..

4 apartments,
has 2 bedroom apt , one 1
bedroom and a studio apt .
Large yard near stores.

Only $23,000.
NEW TRI· LEVEL 3
b e; drooms ,
l'h
baths,

742·2348 .
HOWERY AND

family
room ,
Utility ,
garage, and one acre of

land . $41,000 .
10 ROOMS- 4 bedrooms, 2
baths ,
f amily
room s,
natural gas forced air
f u rnace, shop , garage and

f u rna ce, firepla ce, full
ba se ment, large din i ng ,
porch . and nice corner lot .

522.500. .
LOT - In town . 50 x 100

~ndy Strip
Rubber Back
Regulor S6.9S
S..vo $4.11 Sq. Yd.

.

EXCAVATING , BACKHOE , dozer .
trencher , low boy , dump
trucks . septic systems. Bill
Pullins , phone 992·2478 , dov or
ntght
:
BLOWN INSULATION , Get three
estimates . Coli bb7 ·6479 for
free estimate.

-

with water , sewerage, and
electric. Has 2 bedroom
mobile home included . All

4.88 sq. yd.

BRIDGE

II. A wide nriety of scores
""o

·-

-·

•

RUnAND
FURNITURE .
Rullo net

...;..._ _Oiw::..o,;.:.:ald and Jim Jacoby

qot
th'

742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

742-2211

'

'

for $6,000.
IF YOU HAVE GOOD
CREDIT,
CAN
PAY
RENT, YOU CAN BUYI

s.

w ith sl iding glass doors, family room with fireplace,
nice dining r oom, kitchen with lots of cabinets. All
remode led Inside &amp; Ottt . Corne r lot. Close to schools &amp;

by

Why worry about lhe high cost of

YOUR • HAIR ,

LOOK

HERE

-

Five

bedrooms, ni ce Ph st ory house. large li ving r oom with
sh ini ng oak flooring , large k itchen with d inina area. 2 .
· ·~··lul l baths , 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstai rs . Completely
insulated w ith F .A. nat . gas fUrnace. Large por ches &amp;
garage. Loc . in Chester . Price 519,800.

room with f ireplace. plenty of garden space, some fruit
trees. Large workshop a nd bloc k ce llar City water and

804 W. Main
Pomeroy

99:Z-2:Z98

After Hours Call

992-713l
CONTACT :
lois Pauley
Branch Manager

WI·N HE 00T M:C
IN HIS OFF'CE .. _
AND KISSED ME .I

heating your home, outsi de lights, heating your water ,
dryi ng your clot hes, et c . We'll se ll you your own gas
well. Not only tha1 we ' ll throw in a good 1'12 story house
with 3 bedrooms and bath, nice dining r oom and full
base ment. also over 50 acres of land with a large
beautiful pond stocked with fish . Ca l l for appoint ment .
Priced for qu ick sale at $37,500 .00.

IN

-seplic tan k . Nice cou ntry sett ing on County Rd . 28 .
Pri ce $15,900.

UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house with
bath . T wo mpre small bedrooms coul d be finished
upst atrs. Also garage, storage building, st rawberry
patch and garden space Driveway is-electric heated .
Nice Ohio River v iew . F urn iture can be bought e)(fra .
Price for quick sale. House and lot, $12 ,600.

••

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

__

c , ~ ,.., ­

a ppointm ent only .

FREE GAS -

Here's how to

work It :

Jacoby
In this duplrcale hand there
Is I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W
were just-about •• many bid·
One l et t er sim ply stands for another In this sample A la dine sequences ia there were
used for th e three L's. X for I he two O's, etc Si ngle lettera. pairs. The mOll popular final
apostro phes, the l engt h :md fo rm&lt;~t t on o f lhe words are aA contract wa! live h ear ts
played by SouiiL
hi nts. Ear h d&lt;~ Y t he code letlers are different
When a club was opened
CRYPTOQUOTES
Soulh would rtff in dummy
and lead a spaA: Some Easts
RJB
DKMRC CE,
XHII
QMT
SBK
rose with the .. .de ace and
led a trump. SOMir would then
'
WXBBC
ORGXE,
QMT
s' t;~ K
.mate the rest Ill the tric ks by •
N
M
8
the oimple e x . n t of draw· ·
T Z
CJTD..G
RJB
.
in« trumps and ftentuall y diS·
R F N
0 B J N J R K G
J D W W B X lt · carding his laot\flub and third
,
,
RE' diamond on goall spades . ,
Yesterdays Cryptoquote: DON T PUT UP YOUR UMB
..,.
Other Easts would duck
LA UN1'1L IT BEGINS TO RAIN .- I.ORD SAMUEL
Soulh would will, ruff his las t
Ct 1977 Kinl Fun.u-es Sy ndtute , lnt
club , cash dv,mm y ' S last
trump and lead a second

AXYDLBAAXR

MIDDLEPORT - SPACIOUS HOME TO FIT YOUR
BUDGE T. 3 Bedroom, lovely c arpeted living room,

shopp&gt;ng area . A "steal " a t 521.500. Shown

'.

•

mice

Reg. S6.9S-not lnslollid

'

I I I II I IJ ..

that wh4 4ou

12 and 15 ft. width Corpet .
rubber btck.
1

~II

t
I J I

~

JO rolls of carpet In sloek.'
Good selecUon all on sole.
BATHROOM S AND Kitchens
lnstollid woth podding, no
remodeled . ce ramic tile . plvm - l lkfr• to pay.
•

whole

place. Asking just 59,600.
BRICK- 4 bedrooms. 1111
balhs. nalural gas FA

SAVE ON
CARPETING

bing, carpentry , and general ,
maintenance . 13 years ex ·
perience . 992-3685.

'*'

~

-·

Ex

Antiques~-

3: rs-General l!bspllal 6, 13.
3:30-Match Gtlne 8,10, Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4 :oo-Mister c.rtoon 3; Little Rascals .Our Gang 4;
.,.
Gong Show 1; 5; Merv Griff in 6; Gilligan's Is. 8;
Sesame St. :11,33; Gomer Py le, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
&lt;t:3!f-My Throt Sons 3; Portrldge Family 4; Brady
Bunch a.H)&lt;.. ~IItle Rascals 15.
.
5:00-Bonana
My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mls1er Rdllttrs' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan' s
Heroes 10: Emergency One 131 My Three Sons 15.
5:30-Ddd Co..... 4: News 6; Elec . Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moo!! 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6:QO-News 34ol,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
WHAiiHE MAN
6 :30-NBC N - 3,4, 15; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6;
WHO WORKED ON A
CBS Newof,IO; As We See II 20; ABC News 13.
7:oo-Truth or'Cons. 3; Cross-WIIs 4; Liars Club 6;
SiEAMI&lt;OLLEI&lt; SAil/
~U l OH IW SIDE IOWARD
Gong ShoW I ; News 10 ; To _Tell the Truth 13;
HISW~WA&amp;.
TH' AVfNUE ARE WH AT
Gilligan' s 11. 15; Coping with Kids 20; Anyone for
U5E D fO BE 5TAEIL E5 FOR
Tennyson? .l!J_
l H' S WELL HOUSES-7:30:..Holl~ Squares 3,4; $100,000 Name Thot
Now arrange the circled letters to , ·
form the surprise answer, aa &amp;ug·
Tune 6; 11&amp;5.000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
gested by the above cartoon.
~eport 20,Jl; That' s Hollywood 10; Nashville on
the Road 1a. Marty Robbi ns Spotllght 1S .
a:QO.-Ch )ps 3,.,15 ; Wel come Back , Kotter 6,13;
Waltons 8,1J; Once Upon A Classic 20,33
·
(Answers tomo"ow}
8: 30-What's Happening 6, 13; Best of Ernie Kovacs
Jumbles. VENOM TULIP ADJOIN UNWISE
20,33.
'
'
9 :oo-Richard Pryor 3,4, 15; Barney . Miller 6, 13;
Yesterda y's Answer Wflat happened when Inflation hll the prl.,_
Hawaii FI~O 8, 10; Hurry Tomorrow 20,l3.
ol feathers?-DOWN WAS UP
9::JG--&lt;:arler C..mtry 6, 13; 10 ·oo-Rosett1 &amp; Ryan
3,4, 15; Rflll Foxx 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10;
BORN LOSER
Dickens of London 33.
'
·
10:31f-Lock, -..,k &amp; Barrel 20.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
11 :oo-News J;:U,8,10, 13, 15; Dick Cavell 20; MacNeil ll1AT I'Dl'T
Lehrer RtjiOrt 33 .
DOWN
ACROSS
11
:
3!f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13; Movie
I Two-legged
1 Green
Be
MlS'SIIJ(O •
"Hurrlca,." 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie " The Young
stand
pigment
Rebel " 10; 12 :O!f-Janakl 33.
PeRSOOS
2 " - hwnble
5G-men's
12:4!f-Besl Years of "Your Hit Parade" 6,13; 1:ooopinion''
group
Tomorrow 3.4; 1: 31f-Mary Hartman 10; 2 : 11f(2 wds. )
8 Let News 13.
3 National
(divulge,
Mrwle Chanlllt4· 5 &amp; 7 P .M. -'Nickelodeon ( PGI
index
2 wds . )·
9&amp; 11 I" .M. -lion Who Fell to Ear1h (Rl
(3
wds.)
9 Actor, Coble Chanlllll Five i
Opposite
Cleel
Yesterday's Amlwer
6
:30 P .M. - t ..tlmony Time
of
WSW
(2 wds.)
10
7:00
- Paul ~udlno Family Fitness
16 Bowler's
25 Sword part
5 Make a
13 Pretend
7:30
Coadl!a Corner
target
27 Patched11J
~
show
14 Get to
8 : 00-Cel~
19 Parrot's
30 Cut
or
9 :00 ~ Cabll'.1r&gt;otllght
L---L---~==~~ · L-------L-==~~ 15 Inoperative 6 Lahr
name
31 Bring 10
Wheeler
I&amp; Situate
1D :OQ-700 Cl. ..
20 Roman
bear
7 Ending
17lnsect
W~dnesday, OCIObtr 19
garb
33 Buster
with cash
18 Pay a visit
GASOUNE ALLEY
23 Sumptuous
Brown's
10 Horror
(2 wds .)
residence
bulldog
star (2 wds.)
20 Shoo!
I needs
24 -, one
36 Pat
II
Fly
21
Type
had 4ers1ck
4erI• basket
vote (2 wds. ) 37 Sassy
12 Ensnared
collection
aqm,
40U
22 Head(Fr. )
%3 Gallup and
!it.i II
Harris
spade to East 's ace.
19
25 Sharpened
East could then give his
NORT!l' 1DI
Z6lndigo
partner a spade ruff.
9 6U
plant
Otherwise South would make
• KQI• .
27 cartoonist
six.
tAKtl2
When North played In
Ganiff
spades
he always had to lose a
28 Tax
s
pa
de
and
a diamond, but ·a
·WEST
EAST
29 Go by
couple
of
North
players were
•AJ
5
.8 3
32 Friend
doubled at live spades for
..
82
•
10
6
3
(Fr.)
• Q 10 6 4
very good scores .
t8
33 Explosive
Those Easl·West pairs who
•KQJ109 74 • A 8 3 2
SOUTB
sacrificed at six clubs came
UL ABNE R
initials
out near the tllp . They would
;::::=:.:.=.:..:___________"".,....- \\;5:NC;:ru!E'i~~:;,;:jFijfAj~H;;G(;F9~;T;~::l('--::;l34 " Oedipus
"'K Q7
•AJU4
Jose a spade, two hearts and a
MY PR\~!Js&lt;- 15 SAUNTS&lt;I'IG our
e
"
tJ7! -10 Cci.\W.IT ~e OTHI:R CRIME;, N:J
35 Frank
diamond lor minus 500 and
• 65 •
near tops .
·
POU8T."'- I MUST HG LP HIM CAAP.Y
37 Exist
North-South
vulilltable
A few North-South pair~
THELOOT-AND
HIM38Hire
went to six . One went down
GQoOB~ 1'
39 Bakery
Well North Iikt South
one
lor a bottllm ; the other~
worker
l•
Plls 2¥
we re lucky enough til get their
40 Oyster's
Wo
4•
..
opponents to seven clubs down
home
Pass Pass P'lati
700.
I
41 Saucy
()~&gt;orting lead ~ K•

I

698-7331 '

large lol. Want $27,500 .
2 APARTMENTS Let
the

MARTIN

unscramble these toor Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

Answer: "[ II

773-5471 '

cavot i ng , septi c systems,
dozer , backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone, gr ovel
blacktop
, pov1ng, Rt . 1.43 Phone I (614)

tt:r

'

WELDIM

AUCTION SALE , every Tues and
Fri. at 7 pm . New and ' used
merchandise at Oh to Riv er Auc·
l ion , Meigs Plaza , Mtddleport ,
0~10
Home Phone (30.1! )

WILL do roofin}; construction ,
plumbing and eo ltng No 1ob
too Iorge or IQO small . Phone

SOMEONE$
n&lt;E(:l()OR !

I K)

Ph.I7U%50
1-21-TrC

sa

an d ditcher Charles R. Hot·
fie ld , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rul lond , Ohio Phone 742·2008.

SEE ...

-m

•=30

I HARDIS

BRADF.O RD . Auctioneer . Com - 8 x 35 TRAVEtiTE , fuel oi l furnace.
plete Service . Phone 949 -2487
to nk goes with unit , You won 't
find o home 1n better condit ton
or 949·2000. Raci ne, Oht o , Cr ill
Bradford.
for the price . Pre'lious owner
says !.he paid on overage pf
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAI R
per month to heat lost winter.
Sweepers , toasters , 4rons ,_ all
K•ngsburv Home Sol ~u. I 100 E.
sma ll oppliances . lowQJ.f!pwer
Moin St. . Pomeroy . Ohio.
nex t to State Highway Garage
on Reule 7 Phone {61ot) 985 - TWO BEDROOM 1964 Mobile
3825 .
Home with el(tension. $1600.
'-'--~----~
1975
Suzuki
380 , $900.
REMODELING , Plumb ing, heating
9B5-42 6S . after b .
and all t~ pes of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 yeQrs e• perience . Phone 992 -2409.
SEWING MAd-liNE Rej,ons , ser vice. all makes , 992 -2284 . The
Fabric
Sho p
P. o meroy .
Author ized Singer Soles and
Service . We sharpen Scissors

ALWA'IS WAN'TED

lllt~N't \])'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHenri ArnoldandBobl"

HOLD IT, AMOS !

·,•

[] I

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE

'

Y5S. AS A MATTE&gt;1 OF
FACT, iHEJ2:(;: tS ! I 1VE

12 :4b-Myslery rlthe Week 6. 13: 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4;
1 :Os-Movlo ~ I me Knows No Age" 8; 1:Ss-Marv
Hortman 10; 2: 1!f-News 13.
Movie CIYonnel 4i &amp;. 7 P .M . - Mllller,Jugs and Speed.
9 &amp;. II P .M. - l'W4 11ghl's Last Gleaming .
Calolo Chonnol S.o..
p.m . - Telllmony Time
7 :QO.C-Pau l Gaudlrlo Family Fitness
7:»-,Marsha ll Ulllverslly Foolball
10:oo-7oo Club . •
THUinDAY, OCTOBER20, 1977
S : ~Farm R - t 1} .
5 : ~PTL CIU/&gt; t3; 5 :Ss-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:7}-New Wor!lt,IO; 6 :31f-Doctors on Call 4; News 6;
Sunr ise Se"'-iter 8; 6 : 4s-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50--Good MGI'Illng , West VIrginia 13: 6 : 55-&lt;:huck
White Repoo'll10 ; Good Morning, Tr l State 13.
7: oo-Today 3,4,.!5; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8 ; Bull¥tlnkle 10.
7 : 30-Schoolltrt 10 .; 8_: 00-C apt . Kangaroo B,10;
Sesame St . U .
--· · · 9 :oo-Merv Grlll1n 3; Ph il Donahue 4,1 3,15; New
Mickey M - Club 6; Family Aflalr 8,10.
9 : ~Edge of .,.,t 6, Andy Grlffllh 8; Here's Lucy
10.
·.
.
10:oo-Sanford I. Son 3,4, 1S; Big Valley 6;; Here' s
Lucy B; JaW' s Wil d 10; M ike Oouglas 13.
10 :3!f-Hollyw. . Squares 3,4, 15; Price Is Right 8, 10.
n :oo-Wheel of fortune 3,15 ; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4;
Happy Day • .&amp;-13 .
ll :JO-,Knockcrol 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
B, 10; Sesome S . 20; No va 33.
11 :ss-e as N - 8; Lovi ng Free 10.
12 : oo-Newsc~r 3; News 4,6, 10; To Say The Least
15; Dlvorct&lt; C::ourt 8; Midday 13 .
12:30-Bob Br- 4; Chico &amp; the Man 15; Ryan' s Hope
6,13 ; Seard't for Tomorrow a,10.
1:oo-Gong S~ 3; News 8; ; All My Children 6, 13;
Young &amp; the llestress 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
1:30-Days of OUr Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10.
'
2·00-S20,1100 lfYram ld 6,13; 2:3o-Doctors 3,4,1S; One
Life to Llv• 6, 13; Gui d ing Lighl 8, 10.
3 :oo-Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family 8,10;

GNUST

Automtlic
Trtnsmission Stl'lict

· :: : "' ·._-. 1?' ·
~
· , ,· .,

CAIT I'ON

ITOYIIAND

BRICK -

one pay .for

'TI ME 'y()U WISH 1p GO?

SWAIN

II!': :E'W"

EXCAVATING , doz:er, backhoe

NEWER HOMES -

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

t31-

phone. 992-3325

ha ve several

TELL Ml:, AMOS , IS
AN V f'III&lt;TICULAR AREA IN

Home Sile5

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

complete, bath , kil. ONLY •
$6,725.00
OLDER HOMES We

ALLEYOOP

992-7034 011 SlOP IT 1100 l M!IN
ST., POIIEIIOT. 01110 rot A rillE
lStiMATL

lot . N tce appea r ance, new

- 2 story frame, 4 bdrm s .•
some
remodeling

-

EXPERIENCED

SAVE ON TOOl fUEl Bill THIS
WI Nit! AND BLIUflrT YOOR IIOIILE
HOMl fh .._millbll in 1 nntl)' of
colus, lif•tilnt aluminum underpinn-

VIRGIL B. TEA FOliC, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Secontl Street

YOU
BEL I EVE?
$11 .250.00 .
HANDY MAN'S s'PECIAL

'/'NESD IIISTIWCTIOIJ
T' FLY A JET~

l.5T'5 PUT IT THI5
WAY·· IF I HAV5N'T,
W5'1'!c IN BIG
TROU8l.e, Rl ll&gt;HT~

•

total $20,000 00.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - 3 bdrins.,
wood burning F .P ., n ice

story home has up to 5
bdrms. , enc losed porch, l'h
baths, l iving, d ining, two
car garage, storage bldg .•
level corner lot. WOULD

Y·Y·YA Mf'AN YOU' VE
HAO INSTRUCTION ON
FL.YIN(!; THI5 THING 'f

NOW WA IT A MINU TE:
TH IS I!&gt; A JH PLAAIE :
'IOU 5A ID ' 'IOUR$El.F

Chester. Ohio
8-29·pd ,

Boxl•

EXCAVATING dozer . loader and
back hoe work ; dump trucks
on d Io-bo ys for hire· w dl haul
fil l dtrl , to soil , limestone and
' "ra . . el. Call Bob or Roger Jef ers , day phone 992·7089, night
phone 992 -3525 or 992· 5232

fealures . ONL Y $14,000.00.
GIANT HOME - Th is 2

ond

Jack's Septic
Tank Sert'ice

"IIMDri........
NaHllo lmilalon

~11667 -6479

EASTERN DISTRICT - l'h acres of level land, nice
12x64 all carpeled mobile home with 2 BRs. li v ing
room . k itchen and bath, 2 rooms built on, nice family

------ -·-·
FIREWOOD . S40 co rd . Split and
de li vered
and
sto cked .

JUST LISTED - Spacious
3 year old ranC:h"ly pe home,
3 Bdrms .. 2 baths'. large

KIDS

·- --------------

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too smal l.
Will buy 1 piece or comp lete
hous ehold . New , used , or on II ·
ques . Marlin 's Furn1fure, 20 N
7nd St .' M1ddleport
Phone

Experience and
fully i nsured
Free Est.

~

Anyd4y, onytime.
Phone 915-3106

Carpet • UpholsteiJ
Pirone Mike Youna
At
992-2206 01992·7630

on heating cost

\

'i

commercia l .
Call
far
estimate, 24 hour service.

R001tol,r-. o.

Saves JO pel, to 50 pet.

COUNTRY form lond w ith seclud·
ed ~oods , water and good ac cess 111 Monroe Counfy , W. Vo.
SI .COO down , call (304 ) 772·
3102 or (304 ) 772 -3227 .

MAIN
POMEROY. 0 .

Residentlol

Carpeting

Thermal Insulation

•

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Call us to see if we have

O LD FURNITURE , ' ice boxes , brass
beds , tron bed s etc., complete
hou seholds. Write M . 0 . Mil ler ,
Rt .' 4, Pomeroy, Ohio o r call

Young's·

Cellulosic (wood fiber)

..

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 19. 1t77
5:QO-Bonanza 3: My Three Sons 4 ; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; E mergency•
· One 13; My Three Sons 15 .
5:3o-odd Couple ~ ; News 6; !:lee. Co. _20,3l; Mary
Tyler Moore 10;, Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6:oo-News 3,4.8.10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,1S; Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 1,10: ABC News 13; Pests, Pest ici des&amp;.
Safety 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross·Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Sho
Na Na 8; To Tell the Truth 13; News 10 ; Gilligan's
Is. 15; Daniel Foster, M.D. 20 ; Big Green Magazine
)3.
7:30-F unny Farm·J ; Sha Na Na ~ ; Malch Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33 ; The
Judge10; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8 ·oo-Grlzzly Adams 3,4, 15; Eight Is Enough 6,13;
Good Times 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
B:3!f-Bustlng Loose 8, 10 .
·
9:1)()--()regon Trail 3,4,15; Charlie' s Angels 6, 13; Movie
" The Killer Elite" 8,10i Great Performances 33;
American Short S1ory 20.
10:oo-Big fiawall 3,4,1 5; Breetta 6,13; News 20.
10 :Jo-:A,_I IIa 33 ; As -we See It 20 .
11 :Oif-News 3,4.6. 13, 15; Dick Ca"etl 20; Ma cN'e ll·
Lehrer Report 33.
'
11 : 25- News 8, 10; 11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ;
Starsky &amp; fiutch 6, 13; ABC News 33.
11 : 5s-Hawall Flve-0 8; Mo"le " The Comic" 10;
12 · oo-Jonokl 33 .

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

--:_--=---c----c-~~~

BEAUTIFUL HOME . 9 rooms. 2
b a ths ,
d ou ble
garag e
Reference r equtred. Write to
Do1ly Sen tini , Box 729·'!".
Pomeroy , Ohro 45769

Blown Insulation

SMAll form for sale, 10•1. down ,
owner fin anced M onroe Coun ·
tv . W . Vo. Phone' (304) 772·
3 102 or {304 ) 772· 3227 .

Save $50 .00 on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator

PARTS FOR 1.971 Golo~~: t e Ford for
sole. Phone 991 ' )858

.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Superiot
Steam Eltllclion

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths ,
all elec., 1 acre , Middleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992 7481 .

C8..op wate r and

DEAL WITH and independent
dealer where your money 1s
Chain Saw
sso
spent local ly with other mer
1974 Ol DS 88 ROYALE . AM -FM
ch ants . Bo dey's Ashland , Tup·
tope. crutse cont rol 1971 VW
pers Plains the only mdepen ·
Super Bee tle
new tires .
dent in town , not o company ·
jack W. Carsey,·Mgr .
992·2987 .
run stot1on . Oct. Spec10i.
Phone 992-2181
Amer ican mode cars. lu bes 5 CHEVY WAGON. Std ., 283 eng .
Pnce
reduced
.
992
3408
qts . Vaivoli ne AC od ond ftlter ,
ONEANT10Ue0ok ·dres ser $150
SIO lox i.1c luded . In stock . new 1969 CHEVROLET STATION Wagon
3 pc'" be,droom su1 te $12 5,
and re&lt;:apped snow !•res ., bot·
Townsmen 327 New po int ,
Cedar wordrobe . $50. 4 drawer
teries , hoses. belts , plugs ,
good co ndit10n. 9-possenger .
chest
drawer {pine ), S50
pomts end other accessories.
$695 or best offer . 949·2124.
Dresser (p1ne), '$ 60 Meta l bose:
Plenty of Vo lvollne antifreeze
kitchen cob tnel , $35 . These ar Open 7 to 8:30 Mon . thru Fri. 1974 PIN TO STATION Wagon ,
ticles ore oil 1n excellent condt ·
1300 cc engtne . otr cond itioned ,
Sot . 6 30 to r"oo Closed Sun
tton and can be seen at 102
autom
atic
new
tires
low
Other work done by oppomt
Por k St , M idd leport , Oh to only
m1leoge . e)(cellent condition
ment .
If really Interested .
Coli 992 2208.
NO HUNTING on George
1976
HONDA 750 SU PER Spo rt. Ex 1970 M,ERCUJ;!Y ENGINE and
Freeland 's proper tY, Syr acuse .
tras
$1495 . ftrm . 992 -5240.
Tron
smtssion
.
Good
condition
.
'
992·6030 or 742 -29b-4.
19b6 CHEVROLET for ports. Good
283 V 8 motor . $75 . 992 -2747 ,
after 5 pm.
GRAY AND white t1ger stnped
1963 CHEVRO! ET DUMP Truck .
cot . 5 mo. old . lost ar ound
900 x 20 l 1res, almost new with
STARCRAFT FAll Sole . Mini Mulberry A'le 992 -6060.
o 1968 motor in ex cell en t co ndi·
motors , 20' and 22' TraVel
lion·. $1200 or besl off er .
LOST IN Rock Springs area: Red
Trotters , 18' 5" $3,799 , 25 ' 7"
fema le lr1sh Setter Answers to
949-2124
Bunkh ouse $.4 ,875 . Fold -d own ,
the nome Brand y. II found
$1 ,700 up. We 5ell servtce and CAST IRON FRANKLIN Stove wi th
please coil R1chord lee But cher
quality . Open Sundays Camp
blower Phone 992 -3670
992 7B1 B or 992 5116 .
COnley Starcroft Soles , Rl. 62,
1976 GRAVELY TRAC TOR wit ft
N . of Pt . Pleasont
gearbox , ro tary cultivators .
ARISTOCRAT
TRA VEL
1972
sulk ey. 30"· ro tary mower .
Tra iler 18 ft . self -contomed .
7.42·2573
.•
Excellent
condi tion . Coil
A CAREER wi th a future for a man
99 2-2427. day time, or 992·3580, YAMAHA HARLEY-DAVIDSON &amp;
o~ woman who wonts the best
Con ·AM Motor ~ ycles Complete
after 4 pm .
in life . A pay check every
soles and fantastic service!
week . fontosf1 r fnnge.beneflh ,
Hours M -T, T 9·6 , W-F , 9·7.
all local work . G1ve us o call at
So t Q.5 "The Motorcycle Peo992 -2480 or wrote . Western
ple of Southea ster n Ohio '
1
Sou ther n l1fe ln ~ur o nce , 218 11 3 A ND 4 RM . furnished and un
A the n~ Spor t Cycles , In c 20 W.
E Matn , Pomeroy . Oh1o , for in ·
furn1shed opts , PhonEt 992 Stimson Ave , Athe ns, Ohio.
formation
5434
Phone (6 14 ) 592· 1692
ADDRESSERS WANTED lm · AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts. 1
1976 KAWASAKI KX 125 Ex ·
med1ately ! Work at home .. no
bedroom $105 per month $150
celierH
condit1on
$.400
e11per 1ence necessary .• e ~~; ·
security deposit 992-6098
9'12 3016
cellen t pay Wnte Amertcon
Ser\l ice . 8350 Po rk lone , Suite FOUR ROOMS and both Adult s ELECTRIC MULCHER alm os t new
only . No pets . 992-5908
269, Dall as . TX 7523 1
Used very lill ie. $100, cash .
Paul Voll , Worchester St ,
NEED LADY to toke care of 3 CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Syracu se. Below Hubbard's
Route 33, nor th of Pomeroy
school •oge .boys , e1ther full Greenhouse.
_..!: orge lots Coll992 ·7479
li me or just of n1ght 985 412~

9'12·77W

992-2259

Freei:er

w~Mtkends .

J&amp;L

HOMES!TES l or sole . I acre and
up M1ddleport, near Rutland .
Call q92 -7481

1 N..., 20 cubic fl. Chest

-

-·- .... ~---·

PHONE
CLElAND REALTY

FOR SALE
New ;-

Business Services

'------------------------------------...1

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•279.95

J

.

FOR SALE ·

Now Only

Will BABYSIT m m~ home by the
hour or week . Any age
welcome 7A2·2833

992 b370.
American actor George C.
Scott, who won an Academy
Award for his role in

(6" ) 69~
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&lt;85-9'1
.:_9:::6:_.-~-,----

;•

"'

HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy . sell
trade or train . New and used
saddles Ru th Reev es , Albany

I

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ISA

TRE6l.E
CLEF

TH IS IS AN

AMPE~SAND

&amp;

A California reader wants to
know if West's two-spade bid
is forcing in the partnership
sequence : West, one spade ;
East , two clubs ; West, two
spades.
It is not forcing in standard

American nor in many expert
partnerships . On lhe other
hand .some players use the
convention that a player who
responds at the two level
promises to bid again.
t NE W S t'A PI-~ H ENTt::RPRI SE ASSN . I

(For a copy o l JACOBY
MODERN. sand Sl lo: "Win

ar

New York , N Y. 1001 9)

'

Bridge." c/o this newspa~r.
P. 0 . Bo• 489, Radio Clfy Sial/on,

�•

H - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeror. 0 .. Wednesday. Oct. 19. 1977

Union Bank of · Harrisville

12 ·persons face federal charges-

I W,Val. the FBI said.

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
LOU ISVILLE. Ky. (UP! \
- Twelve persoqs have been
indicted on federa l charges of
trying to defraud banks in
Kentucky. Ohio, and West
Virginia out of $S .o million.
the FBI announced Tuesday.
In addition, sik of the men
were charged in an elaborate
scheme · to defraud the late
Ell;s Presley of more than
Sl38,000,
Bob Pence. assistant agent
in charge of the FBI in
Louisville, ' said Tuesday
federal grand juries here and

in Nashville. Tenn., cHarged
the suspects with taking part
in a year~ong plot to defraud
the banks bY using a phony

Bannon Jr ., curr enty in
federal ('UStody ,in Terminal
Island. Calif. , John B.
Calandrella. 42. of Attleboro,
certificate of deposit.
Mass .. Phillip K. Kilzer Jr .,
The certificate was drawn 44, of Ellendale , Mipn ., John
from. Seven Oaks Finance D. Packman, 4:i, of Kent,
Umited of Kent. England, England, and Jean.claude
and the IZ tried to vouch for Cornaz. 51. and Pascal
its authenticity ID U.S. banks Cornai, 26, both of Geneva ,
through
letters
of Switzerland.
Pence said Kaye used the
introduction. telephone calls
and telegrams, according to fake $100,000 certificate of
deposit in an unsuccessful
Pence.
Those indicted in Louisville attempt to obtain a loan from
were John A. Kaye, 72, of the Louisville Trust Bank.
However, bank officials
Marietta. Ohio , Carl T.

re&lt;:&lt;&gt;gnized the fraud scheme
and ooti(ied t)je FlU. ,Pence .
said. Banl&lt;s around the nation
had been alerted ID be on the
lookout for such a scheme,
accocding to Pence.
The alleged conspirators
planned ID use an initial
$70,000 loan from the bani&lt; as
collateral for $S.o million in
further loans.
The other banks which
were intended targets of the
plot were the Matewan
(W.Va .) National Bank, the
Lowndes Bank in Clarksburg,
W.Va., the First Bank of
Marietta (Ohio) and the

$3,100 judgment

"This is a large, multi·
faceted fraud," said Pence .
who described the alleged
plot as "very organized ."
However, he declined to say if
the alleged conspirators were
known underworld figures .
The indictments were un·
sealed moments after
Kilzer's arrest as he stepped
off a flight from Panama to
Miami, ace&lt;&gt;rding to Pence .
The Nashville grand jury
returned indictments against
Frederick P. Pro of Palm
Beach. Fla, J. Lawrence
Wolfson of North Miami,
Fla ., Raymoo W. Bazner of
Boston, Gabriel R. Caggiano
of Boston and Roy E . Smith of
Miami.
A grand jury in Memphis,
Tenn., also indicted Pro,
Kilzer; Wolfson, Bazner,

sought in court

WE ARE THE
HOTDOG
PEOPLE
THAT WAY!

Misdemeanor is charged in case
CLEVEf.AND (UPI) - side. ·
The jury chose not to lndlct
The Cuyahoga County Grand
Patrolman
Paul Ocilka, 2S,
Jury, indicted Cleveland
Patrolman David Kavutic, 29, who was with Kavulic during
on a misdemeanor charge of the chase. A charge of
neglige~t.J10mlcide Tuesday felonious ·assault had been
.
in the Sept. 3 shooting death sought.
The Trawick boy was slam
of Wadell Trawick. 14.
Trawick, the son of Billy when patrolmen opened fire
and !do Trawick of on the car he was driving
Cleveland, was 'killed at the after it sideswiped a pollee
climax of a 40.block car chase car and ran through a
through the city's southeast ro•dblock.
:Now you know
Prince Charles' full title is:
upgrade the aircraft to meet Charles Philip · Arthur
FAA specifications for . Goerge, His Royal Highness,
commercial aircraft, work the Prince of Wales, Earl of
which
allegedly
cost Chester. Duke of Cornwall,
$338,048.33.
Duke of Rolhesay, Earl of
"Although the defendants Garrick, Baron Renfrew.,
had agreed to upgrade the Lord· of the Isles, Great
aircraft they never intended steward of Scotland, Knight
to do so," .agents said.
of the Garter.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A suit in the amount of
$3,100 has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Dennis M. Parker, RD ,
Long Bottom , against Carl E.
Smith, Inc., in care of J .
Sterling Lamp, Tri County
Bank. Coolville ..
The suit is for cutting and
destroying a large number of
hardwood trees and other
vegetation and damaging
premises of plaintiff.
Filing for dissolution of
marriage were Donald Ed·
ward Whaley, Rt . I, Shade
and Virginia Gail Whaley,
Middleport.

THINK OF US

Ca~giano and Smith on
charges of mail fraud, fraud
by
wire,
interstate
transportation of stolen
property and cq,nspirljCY in
the alleged scheme to
defraud Presley .
,
FBI agents said the scheme
revolved
around
a
complicated agreement
whereby Presley agreed to
sell one of his aircraft and
lease it back , and then
sublease it to another
company .
The government claims
Presley sold his Lockheed
Jetstar in the sununer of 1976
to W.W .P . AirlTaft Corp.,
which leased the aircraft
back to the entertainer.
Presley in tum sub-leased the
plane to Air Cargo Express,
which was headed by Pro.
The indictment cootends
Air Cargo Express agreed ID

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Formers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Sub~idi;jries, at the CltJ!~ of
business September 30. 1977, a s•:Ite banking histitulion organized and
operating under the banking laws uf tl&lt;is State and a member of the Federal
Reserve System. Published in accordance wllh a call made by the State Bank·_
lng Author.ities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash anddue [rum ba nks . .. . . .. . .. . .. . . ... . .. .. .. ... . . . .. ..... 1,946,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ....... . ........... . .. . ....... . . . ..... 4,798,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations ... .. ........... . .. . .. ...... . . . .. .... 114,000.00

Obligations of Swles and political subdivisions . . . _. ___ . .... . . .. -. 2,425,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . . . ........ ... . . ....... . 24,000.00
Feder::t l funds suld and securities purchased under

agreements to resell in domestic offices ............ . ...... . . .... 600,000.00
a. Loans, Tow! (excluding urtearned income ) . . ......... 9,700,000.00
b. Less • Reserve for possible loan losses . .......... .' . .. ... 70,000.00
c. Loans, net. ......... . ...................................... 9,630,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and Hxtures, and

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED - Warren
Black, Rutland: George
Foss, Pomeroy ; Pauline
Cunningham, Minersville;
MaFcia
Hobstetter,
Pomeroy ; Lena Pullins,
Reedsville ; Michael Nice,
Albany; Michael Heck ,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Patricia
Bowser, Richard Glasgow,
Jeffrey Hawley, Laura
Robert Price.ll.

other assets representin~ bank premises ..... : : . ..... ... . ·..... ... 428,000.j)O

J, Ruger W. Hysell. Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare

tha l this report of condition is true tu the best of my knowledge and behef.
Roger W. Hysell
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare t.ha( it has been examined by us and tu the best uf our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
E. Robert Schellhase ,
Ferman E. Moure - Directors

Lingerie Dept., 2nd Floor

ELBERFELDS

COLUMBUS -OHIO COULD SAVE nearly $1.8 billion if it
would resurface now 14,400 miles of roads which are expected
ID be worn out by 1982, according to a report distributed
Wednesday by the Ohio Contractors Association. The report
was cmtpUed bY The Road Information Program, a
Washington-based research and information agency.
0

·~T-.IRR.TPT.nN
--- ..._ .. ---

~--- ...--- ... IILJ

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'
Co lu mbus and Southern customers in par ts o f Alhens Wash ingi on and Maigs Counties wi ll soon
be served from a new substation at Coolville, Ohio . Th is new station wil l allow the Compa ny
to properly supply the increasmg requir ements of customers· electrical demands, provide more
·
'
reliable service to the area and improve voltage regu lation.

A major swi tchover to the station is planned

OQ

SUNDAY MORNING,· OCTOBER 23
. ·~
'
'\
It wil l be necessary to interrupt service for about 2 hours (from 5 :00AM . to 7.00 AM .) for
Columbus an'tt Sout hern customers in the'vicmity of BASHAN; EAGLE RIDGI;, KENO,
ALONG STATE ROUTE 248, TUPPERS PLAINS, ALFRED, COOLVILLE, TORCH and
HOCKINGPORT.
'

I

We hope th1s outage will not cause you any major 'inco nven·ience .

J

In case of ra in the work and outage wi ll be postponed until S UNDA Y, OCTOBI; R 30 at
. .
~
the same hour.
•

Thereon Johnson

•

St;Jle of Ohiu C11U11 ly of Meigs, ss :
Swum

t 11c:tlld s u b~c ri iJe d

bdm·e 111e l.h1s ll th day of O(;toUt!r. 1977.

'.
My Commission Expires July 17,1978.

JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public

ATLANTA - TWENTY·EIGIIT PERSONS have died
from Legionnaires disease and 93 cases of the ailment have
been coofirmed in 22 stales since an outbreak in Philadelphia
claimed 29lives last sununer, the national Center for Disease
COOtrol sai~ Wednesday.
The CDC's latest report indicates 'J:/ more cases of the
disease and lour more d"!'thS have occurred since its previous
Oct. 3 report .

WILUAMSON, KY . - RALPH DEAN, 20, Mansfield,
Ohio, has begun serving a prison term after he pleaded guilty
ID a reduced charge of first-degree manslaughter in the 1976
slaying of a Clarence Siegman, 70, Cincinnati.
Dean was sentenced lll20 years in prison by Grant County,
Ky., Circuit Judge James R. Ford, after he pleaded guilty to
the reduced count. He had been charged with murd~r in
coonection with the killing of Siegman last November in this
Northern Kentucky county.

ELECTBIC SEB VICE

Common siock:
b. No. sHares out.wnding 12,000 ..... . .. . .• . . . ... (par va lue )
300,000.00
Surplus . ......... . .. .. .... .. ... . .... .. .. . . : ................. .. oOO,OOO.OO
' 'ded prof't
Und1v1
1 s . . . . .... ... .. . ...• . .•. . . . . . .......... ... .. 436 000 00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . . .' . .. .. . .. ... .. ... . ... .. ... .. . . .... 1,236,000.0
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ... . .. . ........ -...... -- -.- ... ... . .. . 20,166,000.00
MEMORANDA
Average for,l5 or 30 calendar days endin g with call date:
a. Cash and due from banks...... . . .. ............... . .. , . . .. ... 2,070,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell. ...... . ......... . ....... .,.. ... ... . ...... 1,!52,000.00,
c. Tutalluans . . ........ . . , . . ..... _....... _. _, ....... _. ... .. -. 9,698,000.00
e. Total deposits in domestic and foreign offices ..... ... . .. , .... .'19,124,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledgl'!l assets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pl edged to secure deposits and other liabilities ........ .. . .... ..... 889,163.80
TOTAL. . . . , ... ...... .... . ... . __ . ... . - .. . ... . . - .. .. . . _.. . .. .... 889,163,80

By United Press IJitei'IUltional
WASHINGTON - SENS. RICHARDS. SCHWEIKER and '
H. John Heinz ID, both R·Pa ., and Howard Metzenbaum, DOhio, joined a handful of senators Wednesday in urging the
Carter administration to keep quotas on foreign specialty steel
Import.'! into the United States.
The International Trade Commission voted earlier this
month to advise President Carter ID keep the three-year quotas
imposed in June 1976 on stainless and other speclal~y steels.

CIRCLEVIlLE - MARK COON OF ASHVILLE, grew the
largest pumpkin and the largest squash this year in the annual
welg!Hn held in conjunction with the Pumpkin Festival, Ohio's
oldest and .largest festival. Coon's pumpkin entry weighed
2101!. pounds, beating out the entry of Ray Chiesa of Hall Moon
Bay, Calif., which tipped the scales at 200 poWJds.

•

Other assets .. . ..... : . . .' ............ - - ....... -- .. -. . - ........... 1,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .......................... .. ................ 20,166,000.00
LIABILITIES
.
Demand deposit. of individuals,
.
partnerships and corporations .. ............... . .... ... . .. ... 4,988,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations ........ -. .. . . .. , . . .......... . 13,228,000.00
Deposits uf United SUi tes Government. . . ......... ... . ... ......... . 30,000.00
Deposits of Slates and political subdivisions ... _._ ...... .. .. .. .... . 430,000.00
DepOsits uf cummcrd al banks .... . .. .. ... . ... . .... . . , 1, •• • •••••••• 5,000.00
Certified and officers· checks .. .. ... -. . ..... . ............. . .... . 145,000.00
· Tota l Deposits In Domestic Offices . ......... . . . ...... !8,826,ooo,OO
a . Total demand deposits .. ... ..... .. .. . .. ... .... ... . . -5,533 000 00
b. Tuwl time and savings deposits .. ... . . ... ... . ...... 13,293,000.00 .
TotaiDeposits in Domestic and Foreign Offices . ... --- ... - .... . . 16 826,000 00
Other liabilities ..... .. !.. ........ . .............. . .......... .'. , , 104 000 00
TOTAL LIABILITIES . . . .. .. . ... ...... .' . .. . . .... : ..... -.. 16,930,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL

fNews. • •in Briefs!

COLUMBUS - THE EXECUTIVE BOARD of the Ohio
Cmference of Teamsters, which represent.'! 130,000 members,
came out Wednesday in support of Stale Issue I, the instant
voter registration repeal alnendment.
This contrasts with the other major labor unions, including
the Ohio AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers, which oppose
the issue.

Be sure to see all the other styles
women's flannel and brushed
gowns, pajamas, and_ robes - A
truly excellent selection.

Co(&amp;iiftbu,
'-----~----~~-----l~n------.---------&lt;'- .

at

en tine

F'ifteen Cents

Vol. 28, No. 132

·'

~t':'~~,.,~~~:;::;:.~,~::::::::· :·:·~::;::,:,;,~:·:·:·:&gt;·:,:·:·:::,:::,~:::,:,:·::~::::::::.::;:;:::::*::&gt;;;:;::::::;:

WASffiNGTON - SEN. JOHN GLENN, [).OHIO. Has
urged the Veter;ms Administration not to suspend GI bill
payments to veterans attending colleges which have scheduled
lengthy winter breaks to blunt the effect.'! of possible energy
shortages.
Glen said Wednesday VA regulations deny GI bill benefits
ID any student-veterlll! who inlerropts his studies for 31 days or
mere.

Roush , Mary Bonecutter,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Harold
Robert
Clark,
Point
Pleasant; William Duncan,
Gallipolis Ferry; Glenville
Hill, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Dave Meadows. Ghent, W.
Va.; Mrs. Harold Provins,
Rio Grande; Mrs. Bruce
Wray, ·Ashton; John Oshel,
Point Pleasant ; Lolita
Bennett, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Wiley Morgan ,. and
daughter, GalllpQ.ji_s;
Vanessa Reed, Lakin ; Luke
Coffee, Vinton ; -Anne Davis,
Middleport ; Pauline Cam·
den, Point Pleasant; James
Farrell, Point Pleasant;
Jerry Reed, Buffalo; Jamie
Woomer, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Joe McComas, Ashton;
Mrs.
James
Thomas,
Charleston; Wilma Wilson,
Leon; Robert Jones, Point
Pleasant ; and Mrs. C. E.
Woodard, Apple Grove.

Thursday, October 20, 1977

e

CINCINNATI - A NEW METHOD of detecting blood
vessel abnormalities in strokeiJrone persons before they
develop aerious health problems has ~o:Jl developed by a
University of Cincinnati research team.
Neurology Professor Dr. Charles P. Olinger, and
Mechanical Engineering Professor Dr . Jack F. Wasserman
have created a stethoacope-&lt;:omputer system that picks up and
analyzes previously undetected sounds that warn of a cerebral
aneurysm -a ballooning weak spot in a blood vessel.

Rev. Graham
denies charges ·
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The move·, and bougnt some
Rev. Billy Graham denied farms lor his children,'' he
charges Wednesday he said.
"I suppose. I could almost
attempted ID conceal · the
existence of a $25 million fund at t.his point live on .the
buill up through donations to . income from what I
inherited,'' he added.
his organization.
·
' The deniill came in a hews , Turnirig to the crusade,
conference shortly after Graham said he hoped the Graham arrived here to ·event would better the life of
·begin a 10-day crusade at the city in several ways.
"I would like Ill see. a new
, Riverfront Coliseum Friday.
working
relationship among
Graham said he had told a
of this city and I
the
churches
reporter for a Charlotte,
would
like
see the civic
N.C., newspaper four years
ago about the fund's leaders of the city become
aware of what they
existence.
The evangelist admitted he personally can do in the
had made a mistake 'by not . social areas," he said.
Also saying he hoped to
cal!lng the fund a foundation,
but said nonetheless he provide understanding about
believed he had properly ihe volatile issue of school
announced its formation at desegregation, Giaham
said, "We have as I
the time it was created.
Graham
also understand it, a race
acknowledged his private situation in the schools here,
and I hope this crusade can
wealth.
"I inherited some money. make some small contribuMy lather was wise enough to tion, even though it's
Invest in the direction that he symbolic, in the direction of
t110ught our area was going ID proJtlOting hannony.•,.,

Execution avenged massacre

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of showers
daily. Highs Saturday will
range from the 60s to the
mid 70s, but cooling to the
mid 50s or mid 60s by
Monday. Lows wDI be In
the upper 40s or low 50s
Saturday and In the mid 40s
by Monday.

Fairboard
election is

Nov. 10

WASiflNGTON - PROMPTED BY GROWING layoffs
The annual election of the
Md closures In the steel Industry, the Treasury Department Meigs County Falrboard has
said Wednesday it will investigate charges Japanese been set for Nov. 10 from o to
steelmakers have been dumping steel products in the United 9 p. m. at the- Meigs County
States at prices below cost.
· Courthouse.
· The department acted on a complaint filed Sept. 20by U.S.
Members whose terms
Steel Corp. alleging six Japanese steel finns have been selling expire this year are Bill
carbon steel products in the U. S. market at a loss.
Smith, David Koblentz, Hugh
Custer and Lucille Leifheit,
PITTSBURGH - ELMER CHATAK, ORGANIZING' all of the Pomeroy area, and
dlrector of the United Steelworkers of America, today Gerald . Douglas, Rt . 2,
announced an independent union executive board for .the Coolville.
DuPont plant in Belle, W. Va., has voted to affiliate with tbe
Residents who wish to file
USWA.
.
for a pOst on the board may
The executive board of the Association of Chemical contact Mrs. Muriel Brad·
Employes, which represents about 50 laboratory analysts, ford, secretary of the board,
voted unanimously to join the USWA and is the 17th of 31 at 985-3974, or Route 2,
executive union boards representing DuPont workers to Coolville, lor a petition.
choose that union.
Signed petitions must be In
Mrs. Bradford's hand by Nov.
SANTO DOMINGO, DOM!Nl!;AN REPUBUC - WITH 3. Terms for the five posts are
press freedom under attafk in much of the Western for three years. Those filing
Hemisphere, D&lt;minican Piesident Joaquin Balaguer has must be residents of the
assured newspaper erecutives he is committed to uphuldlng county and they must hold-a
that freedom in his Caribbean nation .
membership ticket in the
Balaguer Wednesday formally opened the' 33rd annual Meigs County Agriclutural
meeting of the Inter-American Press Association, whose Society. Those voting for
sessions end Friday with the publication of Its semi..annual board members must also be
report oo press freedom in tl)e Americas .
members of the society.

Hospital News

State No. 223X

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

MULHOUSE, France
(UPI)- A gang of kidnapers
says it executed West German industraiist HannsMartin Schleyer - with one
bullet to the head - to avenge
the 11 massacre" of six leftist
terrorists in Stuttgart and
Somalia.
Schleyer's body· was found
Wednesday in the trunk of a
car in a quiet sidestreet in
Mulhouse, France. near the
Genna~ border. The 62-year
old Schleyer was killed by a
single gunshot to the head
and had another wound in the
skull. officials said. No other

.., ·

Wells, Jones
support No. 1
County Commissioners
Henry Wells and Richard E.
Jones today called upon aU
Meigs County voters to
support State Issue I this
November.
Mr. Wells said the so-&lt;:alled
"election·day registration
law", passed by the Ohio
Legislature earli~r this year,
opens the door not only to
possible fraud · and inconvenience for voters, but to.
the possibility of increased
costs in • conducting the
election.
..
"If it costs more to hold the
election because of the
checking
and double·
checking that will be required
at the polling places and for
more people to work in the
polling places to try to avoid
long waiting lines, then those
costs will have to come from
the pockets of Meigs County
taxpayers," Jones said.
"I believe this law.is a bad
une," Wells said. "I'm going
to vote in favor of its repeal
by casting my vote in favor of
State lssue No. I and I am
asking all the voters ·of Meigs
County to vote yes on State
Issue No. 1."

Weather

Mogadlshu early Tuesday.
Hours later, three of the
jailed terrorists - including .,
Red Army founder Andreas
Baader - died in prison.
Bonn authorities said they
killed themselves. but
Baader's lawyer said he was

killed by a gunshot to the base
oflhe skull, an unlikely place
for a self-inflicted wound.
Schleyer, a member of
Hitler 's feared S.S. unit
during World War II, later
won a reputation as a tough
bargainer with unions and
joined the board of directors
of Daimler-Benz, makers of
Mercedes vehicles.

'

Columbia Gas
must answer
•

i

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio told Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp.
Wednesday it must answer
charges of mismanagement
filed by Ohio Attorney
General William J. Brown.
"This means that Columbia
Gas Transmission has to
answer to the people of Ohio,
and it's about time they did,"

saiT~~rownPUCO

I' ·

(
'

IT'S APPLE BUTTER MAKIN' TIME at the Senior Citizens Cepter and Wednesday
Blythe Theiss of the Racine area was one of three operators of apple peelers. The apple
bu tier is being made today in copper kettles over open fires at the rear of the Center.
.

Carter will .c~cel trip
"·

to ride herd on congress

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASl!INGTON (UPI) President Carter means it
when he .says he will cancel
his. nine-nation global trip
next month to ride herd on
Congress if it fails to
complete a comprehensi Ye
energy program by then, top
aides say.
They said Ca~ter , told
House Democrallc energy
conferees Wednesday that he
is willing to stay in
Washington untii they wrap
up the bill, so there could be
no stalling as trip time
approached in an effort to
slat~
force Carter to =promise.
Carter's trip to .four conli:
A.1976 new car "jamboree" nenls is scheduled to begin
will be held Friday from noon Nov. 22. But he said he thinks
until 8 p. m. on Crow's Steak Congress will produce an
House lot (former Rawlings acceplable energy bill before
lot) in Middleport.
then.
.
The purpose is to intro duce
He also predicted he will
area residents to the new 1978 not need to compromise
automobiles . It is being because the final version
sponsored by the Middleport probably will be close to the
Chamber of Commerce.
proposals he introduced in
Dealers participating will April.
The President also had a
include Tom Rue Motors,
Dan Thompson Ford, both of lunch date planned today
Middleport, and Smith· with Trus~ry Secretary
Nelson Motors and 'Pomeroy Michael Blumenthal and the
Motor.Co., both of Pomeroy. question of a tax cut sooner
- The Middleport Fire - than originally intended was
Department will hold a fish to be discussed. Figures
fry in conjunction with the showed Wednesday the
jamboree. Middleport economy has grown only 3.8
merchants will also be per cent in the past three
featuring sales that day .
months.
Carter had another series
of energy pep talks on his
schedule today. starting with
-Highs today in the low 60s Sen. Edward Kennedy, Dand highs Friday in the upper Mass., who has sharply criti··
60s. Clear tonight, '!'ith lows cized oil and gas company
in the mid 40s. Probability of profits.• .
precipitation near zero
The President also was
percent today, tonight and meeting with Sens. James
Friday.
Abourezk, D-S.D., and
Howard J. Metzenbaum, DOh in, who . conducted a
filibuster to try to defeat the
SERVICES SET
Racine Chapter 134 OES Senate move to deregulate
will held services for Mrs. natural gas.
Feme B. Hayman at 7:30 p. When Vice President
m. Friday at the Ewing Walter Mon~ale joined with
Funeral Home. All officers Senate Maj ority Leader Bob
and members are asked to be Byrd to break the filibuster,
Abourezk indicated
present.
., he had

Car jamboree
Friday

details were released.
man
who Stammheim .'' it said,
speaking
A police officer who saw the- telephoned the leftist Paris referring to the terrorists
body said it had traces of newspaper Liberation.
who died in the Somali capital
blood around the neck and
"After 43 days, we have put and Stuttgart's Stamrnhelm
there were welts on the neck an end to the miserable and prison.
.
and ears, apparently caused corrupt existence of Hanns" We shall never forget the
by a tight gag . .
Martin Schleyer," sa id the blood spilled," it said. "the
Security along the border co mmunique from the fight is only beginning."
was tightened quickly and the ' ' Siegfriend Haussner
Schleyer's kidnapers and
Bonn government, vowing Commando" of the anarchist - fo,ur German and Arab
the kidnapers "will have no Red Army, which abducted terrorists who last week
rest ... no chance," released Schleyer Sept. o in Cologne in hijacked a Lufthana jetliner
photographs of 16 suspects in an ambush that killed his four with 87 persons aboard had
the abduction.
demanded the release of 11
bodyguards.
Police were directed to the
"His death is without any Red Army terrorists jailed in
body of the president of the comparison with our sorrow Germany.
West German Employers' lll!d our anger after the
Three hijackers were killed
Association by a German- massacre of Mogadishu and when German commandos
stormed the craft in

' by Carter.
been betrayed
Sen. Dale Bumpers, DArk., was invited to that
session.
In addition, the President
was meeting with U.S.
ambassador to Saudi Arabia
John WeSt. Carter announced
this week that he would make
a refueling stop in Saudi
Arabia on his world tour.
Carter told reporters the
energy bill is "important
enough that if Congress does
not complete its deliberations
I would put it above the trip ID
work for the legislation."
However. he added, "I

Deer blamed
for accident
Two deer caused a minor
traffic accident at I p, m.
Wednesday on SR 681, one
tenth of a mile east of CR 49.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
two deer ran into the path of &amp;
car operated by Richard L.
·Beitzel, 22, Rt. I, Albany.
Beitzel swerved his vehicle to
miss the deer but )lis car
struck a section of fence
causing minor damage.
David H. Mohler, 26,
Gallipolis, was charged with
assured clear distance
following an accident at 3:05
p. m. on US 35, one and three
tenths of a mile west of SR
588.
The patrol said the Mohler
car swerved to miss an
unknown vehicle then struck
a parked auto owned by John
W. Russell, 42, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis.
~ hit-skip accident oc·
curred at4:20 p.m. on Old Rt.
160, two tenths of a mile north
of SR 160.
The patrol said a vehicle
driven by Ronald J . Voreh,
18, Rt. I, Gallipolis, pulled
into the right side of a truck
driven by Richard A. Lakin,
o3, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, then
continued on . Voreh was cited
for hit-skip. There was
moderate dama.!l.~:...

don't anticipate that being
necessary because I believe
Congress is as deeply
committed as I am to an
expeditious passage of a
comprehensive package,"
Asked about compromises
that might be needed as the
final multi-billion dollar
energy bill is formed, Carter
sai&lt;l, "I think the Senate and
the House will get IDgether on
a good policy and I believe it
will be compatible with what
we proposed,
"My guess is
the
conference committee will
still meet the goals we
established back when I
made my April speech,'' he
said. "I haven't changed on
that .''
Carter also said he slill
plans another "fireside chat"
on energy but has not set a
dale for it.

.

Columbia LNG is still
pending before the PUCO.
Brown said the PUCO deci sion me3ns the transmission
company can be monitored
by the state.
Brrown has also asked the.
PUCO to order Columbia Gas
Co. to lower rates to reflect
the damage sustained by
Ohio's economy last winter.

Plans made
for event

denied
Columbia's motion to be "
dismissed from the case and
I ordered the. transmission
company to answer the
, charges before Nov. 4.
Plans for sponsoring the
"I hope this decision brings
an end to the legal maneuver- "dough for dough" , program
ing that has delayed this case to raise funds for the "Gifts
for the past six months,'' said for the Yanks who gave"
Brown. "I'm ready to get to program were outlined ··
the facts of the case and I Tuesday night at the regular
hope ·
the
Columbia meeting of Drew Webster
companie.s are ready to do Post 39.
Through tlie program,
the same."
Brown last April charged members of the post move
that mismanagement and through the community and
mistakes within the gas leave loaves of bread at
compa nie s
directly homes and accept, in ex·
contributed to last Miller's change, donations for the
" Gifts lor the Yanks"
energy crisis.
Columbia G!iS of Ohio, program. Proceeds go to
Columbia Gas Transmission veterans confined to veterans
Corp,. and Columbia LNG hospitals. The program will
(liquid natural gas) were be held Oct. 26 with all post
named in the complaint.
members being asked to
Last month, the PUCO report to the hallat6:30 p. m.
denied Columbia Gas of
During the meeting, World
Ohio's request to be War! veterans were honored.
dismissed from the case and The group included Homer
ordered the utility to alJSwer Willard, Lincoln Russell, Asa
Brown's charges before Oct. Hoskins, Robert Burnem,
27.
Herman
Warner,
Ben
A similar request from Neutzling and Fred Goeglein.
Roy Reuter, a member,
was reported confined to
Schools of the Eastern Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Local District will be Welcomed as a new member
closed Friday for parent- was Kenneth Law.son.
teochCr conlereDces.
Commander Clarence Sch·
mucker was in charge of the
meeting with Charles Hayes
OPEN HOUSE
and
Bob Vaughan preparing
An Open House will be held
oyster
stew served during the
at the Wahama High School
evening.
on Tuesday, Oct. 2S, from 71o
8:30p. m.
During this time, parents
will have the opportunity to
FISH FRY
meet and speak with the
The Middleport Fire
teachers.
Department will hold a fish
A business meeting will fry Friday from 4toT p. m. In
follow the open bouse in the cooperation
with
the
gym, and during this time a automobile show being held
PTO will be formed . Guest on the Crow lot by the Midspeakers will be Lowell Cook, dleport Chamber of Comsuperintendent, and John merce. Fish sandwiches and
Kaznoski, principal Refresh- french fries will be available .
ments will be served.
at the fire station on Race St.

APPROXIMATELY 60 senior citizens and members of the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program helped peel approximately 13 bushels of appl~s which will yield about 160 quarts of
app le butter to be -;old at $2a quari.Some orders are sttll.bemg taken at the Center today for
the apple butter. Proceeds will go toward providing the local share needed to cuntmue the
Senior Citizens program in Meigs County.
•

...

'"

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