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                  <text>10--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oel. 3l, l!m

Area D eath S

---------------------------I
I

I

I

1
Steve John Barhorst. 23.
Bidwell , was killed'" a plane
crash a t 2· 30 p m . Saturday
at
the
Green
County
Parachute Club whtch he
oWhed and opt&gt;rated near
Bidwel L
A licensed oitot. he was
employed by the Slate
Forestr y Service and had
made 2,500 jv mps . Barhorst
had par tic1p ated several
times in the July 4 . R1ver
Recreation
Fest ival
ln
Gallipol is.,
He:· was a member of the
Green County Parachute
Cl ub and had been a licensed
pilot five years. He graduated
from West Carrollton High
School l n 1972.
He was born Ma y 10, 1954,
son of Norbert and Anna
Werling Ba rhost of Day ton
In addit ion to hi s parents , he
is survived by his w ife , Robin
Deli lle Barhorst whom he
marr ied Sept. 10. 1977 .
Other survivors are his
father and mather -In -law .
Raymond
and
Rosalie
Deli lie of Rodnt&gt;y ; grand parents , M r . and Mrs. Bern ie
Barhorst of Dayton and Mr .
and Mrs . Anlhohv Werl ing of
Fort M yers, Fla ; a brother~
Joseph of Dayton ; f iv e
sisl~rs ,
Mrs .
M ic hael
l Mar ilyn l Kerr , Dayton ;
Sha ron Ba rhorst. Columbus ;
Betse . Ann . and Teresa . all of
Da y ton . He attended t he
Rodne y Methodist Chur ch.
Last rites will be held at 2
p .m . Tuesday from the
Wa ugh -Hal ley -Wood Funeral
Home w ith Rev .
Damon
Stapleton officiati nQ . Buri al
will be " in the. Ohio Valley
/V\emory Gardens .·
Fr iends may cal l at the
funeral home from 7 f(l9 p.m .

toda y.

·

1

Mrs . Hazel Rowley Reed
I died Sund•y evening. Oct. JO,
1 at her hom e a t 143 North

Front SI , Middleport. ·
1 following
a lingering illness.

STEVEN BARHORST

•

T. A. DICKERSON

HAZELR . REED

Pallbea-;;;:s-will be Andy

Spurloc~ . Danny Joe MQrris ,
Mike Spurgeon . Ken Bright.
Pat
Arnold
an d
Bob
Browning .

LELIA VOLLBORN

Lel ia E. Vollborn , 89 , a
resident of Thurber Vi llage
Care Center in Columbus, a
fnrrTuor•

,.-,.c. irl,.nt

nf

(";;.ll i C~

County . died at 2 a.m . today .
She was born Dec . 6, 18811 in
Cheshire Twp . one of five
chi ldren -born to the la1e A." E.
Gor-don
and
Mary
Cougheno~r Gordon .
She was the last of her
fam ily. Mr s. Vol lborn attended school in Chesh ire
Twp.

She married Carl Vollborn
in Gallia County in 1917.. He
preceded her"' i n death in

the SO's.

Mrs

Reed was born In

Middleport , a daughter of tt)e
la te Oliver A . and M yra
VanZandt Rowley , She was
also preceded in death by her

"4

· and temperatures were
She was a member of the
seasonably mild to slighUy
husband
,
Elm..A. Reed. •
ThWlderstorms
nshered
in
Poplar Ridge Baptist Church .
M iddleport businessman. and
cool.
Halloween
with
a
spooky
The family formt:rly owne-d~
a sister .
farm in the vicini ty of the
touch
in
the
Mississippi'
Surviving is a daughter.
church .
Nancy Reed . of 143 North the Columbia Gas System of Valley and eastern Great
SurvhnnQ are six nieces
West Virginia .
Front St., Middleport.
and nephews, Carl Gordon.
Funeral services will be at Pla ins today and a tornado
Graves l ~ services will be
Columbus : Glenn Roush .
•
p. m . Wednesday at the left residents of Melbourne,
held at 2 p, m. Wednesday at l&lt;.llngei
Gallipolis ; Myrtle Goetting of
-Carpenter N«tuary, Flu , with a good scare, but no
the M iddl eport Hi ll Cemetery
• •
Huntington
with pr iv ate calamity.
Waco. Texas ; George Roush,
with the Rev . Harold Deeth - burial to ,follow
f.Aarion , 0 .; Madge Frazier of
In
the
ofticlatlng . Friends may call
The
storms,
which
Gallipolis ; Lu cille Brannon of
at the residence at any time Woodmere Memorial Park . _produced a good de&amp;t of
Gallipolis.
·
after l p. m . Tuesday . The Fr iends may call at the
mortuary from .4 to Sand 1 to lightning, thunder and rain
Last rites will be held at 2
Rawl ings -Coats
t=uneral
p.m . Wednesdav rtf M iiiPr- ''
9
p, m . Tuesday . --··-" but did little damage,
Home Is In ch arge of
Home tor Funerals wlth
Local arr angements were .
arrangements.
extended
from Texas and
under the direct ion of the
Rev . Joseph Godwi n of oorthern Louisiana through
The ~Class .M Sectional
Cremeens Funeral Home.
ficiating . Buri al w ill be In
Mound
Hill
Ceme ter y .
Minnesota
and
eastern
LULASOUTHERN
Volleyb11H Tournament
Call ing hours will M held at
portions of the Dakotas.
F. E. GERSTNER
Funeral services for Mrs .
the funeral horne from 2·,. and
drawing
took place Sunday at
Frank
E
.
Gerstner
.
22
,
a
Storms also rumbled
Lula Ethel Southern. 79, 90
1-9 p.m Tuesda y.
Park St., Middleport. who resident of 828 Wainwr ight across eastern Floclda where Meigs High School.
Ol-ive, Columbus. Ohio, died
died Saturday at Veterans
Sheridan , last year's
Memor ial ~ospltal , will be Saturday afternoon in the a tornado touched down near defending champion again
WILBERT F. OWENS
Melbourne
airplane
crash
at
the
Greene
late
Sunday
.
COOLV ILLE - Wil bert F . held Tuesday at Richlands , County Sport Parachute
rates a number 1 seed,
There were oo reports of coming into the tourney with
Owens . Sr ., 60 . Rt . 1. Va.
Club.
Mrs . Southern was born at
Coolville , was dead on arrlval
He is survived by ~Is injuries or damage, however.
13-2 overall record.
at Camden Clark IY.erilor ial Honaker , Va ., a da ughter of
Less horrifying ra in
mother , Margarlet Gerstner ;
Hosp it al Saturda y morning . the late Henry and Martha
Gallipolis
was voted the
were
widely
He had been ill for several Hess . She was also preceded one sister, Ann, and one showers
number
2
seed,
claimini! a lllbrother,
Michael
,
both
at
In death by her husband,
sea tiered from the Gull Coast
months .
6
season
record.
home.
Hv
also
has
several
Beriny
,
Among
the
survi
vors
Mr . ON ens was born in
across South Texas, east of
Tournament play will begin
Parkersburg , the son of the Is a daughter . Mrs. Phyllis close friends In the Gattla the Centra l Rockies and from
County
area
.
Blake. Middleport , with
late Benjamin F. and Pearl
on
Tuesday, ' Nov. I, at4:30
He was a st1.1dent In the
the northern Rockies to the
whom Mrs. Southern made
Allen OtYens .
with
Meigs playing Vinton.
paramed
ic
program
at
the'
coast of Washington State.
He was a member of her home .
Hocking
Valley
Technical
The
winner
of this match will
Bur ial will be in Clinch
Cool, il le Lodge 337 F&amp;AM,
Snow fell In the higher
College
at
Nelsonville.
Memorial
Cemetery
take
on
Gallipolis
al6:30 p.m.
Valley
the Anc ient Accepted Scottish
Last rites will be held elevations. ·
Rite Valley of Columbus and at Rictdands.
the
same
evening.
Wednesday at the St. James
N&lt;rfolk, Neb., recorded the
VFW 1212 , Parkersburg . He
DAVID GALLIMORE
On Tuesday also, New
The
Less
Catholic
Church
In
heaviest
raillfall during the
was a retired employe of
David Gallimore, 20, a Columbus . Interment will
Leltington•w.ill
play Warren
Un ion Carbide , Mar ietta and r esident of 19 Twin Valle y
night with 1.03 inches.
follow in the Ressuredi on
at
5:30:
At
7:30,
the
winner of
a na vy veteran of W.W. II .
Dr ive, R.I . • · Huntington . W.
Some fog patches formed
He is survi ved by his wife . Va ., died Saturday afternoon Cemetery . Friends may call
this
match
will
play
Wellston.
over rain-60aked portions of
Pauline D. Owens ; five sons . in the eras~ of an airplane at at the Southwick Funeral
On
Thursday,
Nov. 3,
Chapel
,
3100
North
High
the Plains, rut otherwise
James of Guysville ; Wilbert the Greene County Sport
Street,
Columbus,
frorn
2
to
4
Sheridan
will
play
F. Jr .• Cool11ille ; Frederick Parachute Club .
skies were parUy cloudy to
and 7 to 9 p. m. Tu..day .
Chesapeake
at
5:30,
A .• Little Hocking ; Clarence
Born in Columbus, Ohio, an
clear over most of the nation
Local arrangements were
L. and ·Stephen R.• both of October 27, 1957, he Is the son under
Belpre will p.lay Alexander
of
the
the
d
irection
Ma rlon ; one d~_ ughter , Mrs . of David R. and Wyoma T. Cremeens Funeral Home .
at6:30,
Fairland will play the
Tr ess a ~
0.
McMullen . Gallimore of Huntington.
winner
of the BelpreParkersburg , three brothers.
He was a machine operator
Clarence V . and Earle. both for the Norfolk and Western
HOWARD ROUSH
· daughters , Mrs. Ruth D. Alexander match at 7: 30.
of Littl.e- ~OGking and Howard Ra il road in Huntingtor1 .
Howard W. Roush , 76, Hom·an, Syracuse, 0 .; Mrs .
The admission price for the
E.. Coolville, and 20 grandSusannah J . Lewis, Letart ;
Surviving in addition to the Vernon Community , was
is $1 for both
ehildren.
'
dead on arrival Sunday at the Mrs. Mary M. Roush , Mason ; tournament
~arents are two si sters ,
students
and
adults. The
Funeral serv ices w ill be Deborah , at home ; and Mrs . Ploasant Valley ~ospltat.
two sisters, Mrs . Fannie W.
public
is
invited
to come out
held Tuesday at 1 p. m . at the Roger Lyons, Ceredo, W. Va .
Born March 6, 1901. In Roush , Letart ; Mrs. Eula J .
White Funeral Home in A brothe r. Dewlght , of Letart, he was the son .of the
Wolfe. Letart Falls, Ohio, and and support girls' athletics.
Coo lvil le w i th the Re v . Huntington, also survives . late Thomo;ls B. and ~ry M .
11 grandchildren.
l'wo winners will advance
Fry Roush .
Herman Jordan officiating .
Funeral services will be
Funeia
i
~~VIces
will
be
to
the district playoffs at
He was a farmer , attended
Burial will be i n Mei gs held at 10 a. m. Tuesday at
held at the Foglesong Minford on Nov : 9.
the
St
.
Mark
Lutheran
County Memor ial Gardens . the Rollins Funeral Home In
Funeral Home Wednesday at
""a sonic rites will be held this Kenova . W. Va . Burial will be Church, and was a member of
1:30 p. m . with the Rev .
the Jun ior OUAM Lodge .of George
evening at 7: 30 p. m . by In the White Chapel Memor ial
Wei rick officiat ing
New Haven .
Coolv ille Lodge 3J7 . Friends Garrlens , Fr iends may call
B
.
u
rial
will
follow In the Fry
He was preceded In dea th
may call at t he funeral home tron1 6 to 9 p. m . Monday a.t
Cemetery .
United Preaaluteruatlooal

parnngs

announced

.

the Rollins Funeral Home .
Local arrangements were
by the Cremeens Funeral
Home.

••

b y one daughter , Bei Ve
Lewis .
1
Surviving are his wife,
Garnet Hurlow Roush ; three

Friends may call at the
tureral home Tuesday, from 2
to 4p . m. and rto 9 p. m .
'

.AT THE FARMERS

•

lHIS YEAR WE MAILED $153,511.50
TO OUR 1977 FARMERS BANK DIRISTMAS
CLUB MEMBERS. BE SURE 10 GET YOUR
SHARE NEXT YEAR. SlOP BY NOW AND.
,.

~

Year For
Christmas

U 50c

S25.DO

w$1.00

550.00
5100.00
s150.00

~ $2 .00

u

$3.00

\i ss .oo

1!1 510.00
U S20 .00

$250.00

.

.
.

ssoo.oo
SIOOO.OO

W

WE WILL

~
I(

w

.

..••
••
••

•
•••
.,.,••
••
:;••

•

Beverly

Brown ,

The evening star Is
Cottageville; SUBie Watkin ,
Point Pleasani ; Sandra Mercury.
Those born on this date are
Dolly, Ravenswood; MJ?.
under
the sign of Scorpio.
Ancil Cross and son, M1d-

ELBERFELDS IN

0

I(

r
"'

.

must be
dEVON"'
labeled

~

YOUR
STRIPES!
There's noth ing
basic about this
long sleeve striped
-shi•t,
by Devon.
In pale Holiday
neutrals of oot1ae•e
bisque or peach ,

the sweater top
features thick
·n thin stripes at
waist and sleeves.
Match brushed
flannel cull-on
pants.
. of·
HlO% polyester
knit.

Shirt Sizes
81o 18

Pants Sizes
8 to 18
Be sure to see iill the

other styles · in Devon

·-A" record

43 mill ion
Americans, or one out of
"every five of the population
spent $270 million on state
hunting and fishing licenses
in 1914.

and
ather
famous
makes women's sports.

·~e~e

YOUR FULL SERVICE BANK

f
'

.

. '

•

•.

work

·0/U! tw

.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November 1, 1977

CAIRO, EGYPT - PRESIDENT CARTER'S MIDDLE
East peace efforts have won approval from an unlikely quarter
-Cairo's hashish smugglers.
Cair!&gt; newspapers said smugglers tried over the weekend
.to-flOod the market with a brand of hashish dubbed "Carter
'the man of peace." Pulice said they foiled the attempt.
'

e

MARION, OHIO - INMATES AT TilE MARION
Correctional Institution were to decide this morning whether
to con~ue a sit-&lt;lown strike that began early Monday.
Officials of the correctional institution mel with 25
members of the Resident Council, an inmate organization late
Monday am they discussed the list of 19 qemands made by the
Inmates.
•

flOod 'f'ood(f; ·
.. ·

concerning demons and that
all else, including his
personal
property
is
secondary," Schwartz told
the makeshift !!Ourlroom in
the Kings CoW1ty Hospital,
where BerkoWitz has been
held since his arrest Aug. 10.
GitUeson, citipg Schwartz's
report to .the court that
Berkowitz's judgment was
"impaired," agreed with the
doctor's finding that a
conservator should be
appointed.
He said, 'there was a good
relation,ship between David
· and his lather ... who seemed
\0 have a very deep affection
for him . I
strongly
recommend the appointment
of his'father as conservator."
Berkowitz has only a few
hundred dollars now, but this
Court~ppointed
could increase considerably
psychiatrist Dr . Daniel hecause of the potential lor
Schwartz and retired state film and literary contracts .
Supreme Court Justice Harry ~ut state law allows
Gittleson, appointed by viclil;ns and their families to
Ventiera in September to be seek part of a convicted
Berkowitz's . temporary assailan t's
assets
as
guardian, testified that compensation lor injury or
Nathan Berkowitz should suffering . Sll far , relatives of
have permanent control over those killed nr wounded have
his son 's assets.
filed four lawsuits claiming
"Berkowitz's overriding $20 million in damages.
concern is with his belief
}

s id eratio n ,_" r-said Pound .

"School employees became
covered by unemployment
compensation in 1974, but it is
a question of whether they
are e ligible under these
conditions."
Chester Devenow. chief ex-

ary

ecutive officer of ShellerGlohe Corp., and leader of a
drive to enact the tax levy,
sa id

the

question

of

WI employment benefits

could
cause a problem in passage of
the levy .
" I certainly doo'l think it
will help," he said. "Th ere
has been a lot of confusion
that has been raised by this
and it hasn 't helped any at
all .
"On the other hand, our
school teachers are one of the

lowest paid groups in the~
state," said Devenuw. 11 1
don't think that has been

start collecting canned goods
and foodstuffs for some of
tllese people so they can have

made particulary clear. Our
tax level is sixth among the
state's eight major cities.')

Chri st mas , "
said
Lawrence said a single a
teacher would receive $1l5 a Lawrence.
Devenow is hopeful the levy
week in unemployment
benefit s and a married will pass and said it was tl\e.
teacher with three children first time "we have had total
would receive tlle maximum community support" for a
tax issue.
of $150 a week.
1
" We have a massive, city' 0ur
tea c her s are out
looking for jobs right now," wi.de organized ca mpaign
said Lawrence. "But that 's a which includes ail aspects of
condition of filin g for the community ," he said,
compen· "labor, management , cler~
unemployment
and profe ssional people and
sation.
" If this levy doesn 'l pass, we have even organized
then we are going to have to senior citizens ."

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28 No. 140

::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:; : ;: ;:; :;:;:;:; :; :;:;:~ ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:: ·

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday, lair Thursday
and Saturday wllh a
chance of showers Friday.
Highs In the 50s aod low
60s, and a low In the 40s.

eatm•g

Uolt'l,ll Press lnlernallonal
The U. S. dollar took
another heating in the world
money markeis today,· again
losing to the British poiUld
an4 hitting a postwar low
against the Japanese yen .
The British pound, which
London allowed to float
Monday, began rising in
early trading today and
gained three cents to reach
$1.8&amp; before falling back and
bolding steady at around
$1 .8540.
Dealers attributed the
decline to news that miners
had voted . against a new
productivity deal. They said
they would not he surprised to
see a further downtrend when
continental dealers returned
fr om· lunch and when
American markets began
operating ..

velle. '' This whole thing
is up to the Bureau of
Employment Services."
Beman Pound, director of
the Divsion of Unemployment
Compensation of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services, said the problem is
a ' "nO comment" situation.
"The matter is under con-

•

~~?.~:~
b'

By EDWARD W. BASSETf
NEW YORK (UPI) -"Son
of Sam" suspect DavJd
Berkowitz told a Brooklyn
Supreme Court justice
Monday he canool control his
own affairs because he was
"an animal" and was "less
than human."
Justice Carmine Venliera
appointed Nathan Berkowitz
to control the financial assets
of his adopted son David,
accused of killing six people
with a .Wcaliber revolver.
"1 have no right to control
my affalfs as a prisoner and
an animal and as less than
human," Berkowitz said. He
added, "I love my dad."
It was the first time the
suspect had testified in
C&lt;lnnection with the year-long
shooting spree.

~~~~3g;I#iL#Jt.:iL,fi.#Jl;:OUI#'ii::JI:i~l:Jl.:JII#'U#j¥

'•'

'' We

Berkowitz says
he's an animal

wear.
•

Farmers Bank
-

La wrence.

overtime to make up the days
we
received
the
IUlemp!oyment benefits. It is
as simple as that ."
The teachers in the Toledo
school district recei ved
IUlemployment benefits when
city schools were closed for 13
days last yea r.

" But we worked 13 days Wllil Jan. 3.
longer
when
classes
" If the teachers are laid off
reswned , we made up the due to a cash flow shortage,
tim"e in overtime and were we were asked if they can
never paid the overtime. We they get une~pioyment
fulfilled our conlractural compensation," said James
obligations," said Lawrence . Gravelle, a spo kesman for
"There was no double Brown . " We replied by
payment and there will be no saying they can get
double payment this lime." Wlemploymenl compensation
Toledo residents will x.ote as long as they do not receive
Nov. 8 on a 6.1 mill levy that their regular· salary.
would provide the district
"No one has asked us if
"'ith $10 million.
they_worked extra Saturdays
II the levy passes, .!)Je or ' work ed through the
teachers will probably return summer can they Re\
to work Nov. 9 and if it fails Wlernployment
com·
they won't return to work pensation,'' sai rl r.rn .

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

JUry
gets case

Dr. Amsbary
pleads oot
guilty today

MIAMI BEACH, FLA. - A GROUP of United Steel
Dr. Gordoh. K. Amsbary
Wockers of America officials ratified a new contract Monday,
this
morning in Gallia County
averting a threatened strike today by 30,000 workers at four
Couunon Pleas Court pleaded
maj&lt;r can manu!acturmg companies.
·
1l)e agreement, covering 40 monthS, was reached by not gUilty to seven counts of
negotiators just before midnight Sunday after a month of welfare fraud on an indictbarl!aining. II grants a raise of 97 cents an hour across the ment, the first count of which
board, quarterly · rnst of living adjustments, plus fringe was Iinder section 2913.02 and
the other six under section
henefits.
2921.13 of the Ohio Revised
HARTFORD, CONN. - THREE LAWYERS HAVE been Code.
·'
The first was a felony
'appointed guardians for three blind, deaf and retarded girls
whose parents want them sterilized because they would be charge of theft over a period
from Jan. 1, 1916, to Feb. 15,
Wlable to cope with pregnancy.
U. S. District Judge M. Joseph Blumenfeld previously had 1971, and the other six chargsuggested guardians '1or the helter protection of all concerned Ing falsification on these
in this matter." CoW1sel for. the parents agreed and filed the ·dates: Jan. 9, Feb. 11, July 6,
July 21, Aug. 2, and Sept. 20,
motion the judge implemented Monday.
1976.
COLUMBUS - BECAUSE TilE governor will not allow
Atty. Warren F. Sheets is
him to spend the money, Lt. Gov. Richard Celeste will turn counsel for the defendant.
over to the Ohio Department of Health a $50,000 federal grant Pros. Atty. Joseph L. Cain is
rnunsel for the State of Ohio.
awarded to his office.
Celeste was awarded the grant from ACTION, a federal
The defendant, a Gallipolis
voiW1leer agency, to mobilize citizen volunteers that would dentist, made $5,000 bond.
assist county and local health · departments in providing
Dennis James Fillinger,
Immunization shots to children throughout Ohio.
with Ally. William D. Conley
Gov. James A. Rhodes said Keleste is not eligible to spend his counce!, pleaded guilty to
_ the money for such a program because it was not cleared by a charge of unlawful
restraint. Sentencing will
Ute governor's office in advance.
await the report of Probation
Officer Maury Middleman.

CHANGE

THAT WAY!

POMEROY, OHIO

A spokesman for Ohio
Attorney General William J .
Brown said the teachers
should not be paid boU1
unemployment compensation
and their regular salaries.
" But there should be no ·
argument there, .. said'

MONTGOMERY,
. ALA.--{;ORN)':L!A
WAlLACE,
.estranged wife of Gov. George Wallace 's, wants the cOurt of
Civil Appeals to appoint a new judge to hear the couple's
·
divorce complaints.
Mrs. Wallace 's ,lawyers charged Monday that Circuit
Court Judge John Davis III and his family are too closely
associated with the governor to be impartial in the proceeding.
They asked the court to disqualify Davis, appoint a new
· judg~ and require the proceedings to be public .

THINK OF US

PAY THE 50TH

~

TOLEOO, Ohio (UP]) The president of the Toledo
Federation of Teachers said
today teachers who are idled
when a school district closes
hecause of financial reasons
should
be
paid
un employment compensation
because they make up the
extra time.
Dal Lawrence, a leacher
for 16 years whose wife is also
a teacher, said the 2,500
teachers and about 2,000 nonleaching personnel in the
Toledo school district, which
closed Friday, had begwt
applying for unemployment
bi!nefits.

DUQUESNE, UTAH - TEN ENGINEERS from China
have ended a visit to Utah, where they inspected a giant laser
directed drill being used to bore a sevenfllile tWlnel throulih
the Uinlah MoWltalns.
·
The state Bureau of Reclamation took the visiting
engineers on a lour of the Vat Tunnel near Duchesne over the
weekend . This was the fifth twmel inspected by the delegation,
sponsored by the Committee on Scholaraly Communication
with the People's Republio·of China .
·

II!

'l.lr.:I'&lt;:&lt;B:&lt;l!&lt;I:!~I&lt;:&lt;'!S:&lt;t=&lt;""'--""'""'-

.

I

wood ;

WE ARE THE
HOTDOG
PEOPLE

YOU PAY 49 PAYMENTS

\i

Leader feels teachers entitled to benefits

on Ohio roads

••

JOIN OUR 1978 CHRIST·M AS CLUB

-

••

PLEASANT VALLEY
At least 10 persons were •
Discharges
Arleph killed in nine weekend traffic •
Casto, Robertsburg ; Floyd
around the state, ·
BUsh, Letart; Mrs. Wendell accidents
an
Ohio
Patrol
Gaslin, Bidwell;
J ohn . spokesman Highway
said today.
Bem esterfer, Mason ;
The only d o uble-fatallt~
Francis Sayre, Jr., Point mishap
occurred Saturday
Pleasant ; Basil Dewe·ese,
when
Christopher
28,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Joe New Carlisle, andHuff,
Victor
Foster, Minersvillei James
Nan, 19, Fairborn, died in a
Hopllte, Point Pleasant; Ada three-automobile
crash on
Engfield, Point Pleasant ;
Ohio
4
in
Delaware
County.
Sarah Byus, Point Pleasant;
Ohio's
nonholiday
weekend
Charles Rogers, Point · roadway death count runs
Pleasant; Mrs. Melvin
6 p.m. Fridays until
Forshee, Gallipolis Ferry; from
midnight
Sundays.
Orville Ballanger, Addison;
0.; Verlin Meadows, Glen-

Mils

or cosmetics packaged in
aerosol spray cans powered
by fluorocarbon gas must
have a label warning that the
gas could be harmful to the
upper atmosphere.
But consumers may not
notice much difference. The
industry already has largely
switched from fluorocarboos
to other gases.
The required warning .
comes after years of
controversy over whether the
gas can erode the ozone layer
and allow more ultraviolet
rays from the sWl to filter
through, increasing the risk
of skin cancer.
The lahel is an interim step
leading . to a phase-&lt;&gt;ul of
fluorcarbon gases in spray
products by April, 1979, under
the curent timetable.
The FDA labeling requirement does not apply to
products where the use of
fluorocarbons is considered
essential. These Include
vaginal foams and drugs used
for inhalation therapy by
asthma sufferers.

NOW

Week For
49 Weeks

10 persons die

ley ·

WASHINGTON (UPl ) -

.....uLuiSTMAS CLUBI

·-~PICK
--~""'-=~~
YOUR CLUB NOW
1'&lt;::1 ...
""'""'""
~
~Deposit E;ach
Recieve Nex_t W

dleport; charles Thompson, •
New Haven; WiWam Powell, ·
New Haven ; James Queen ,
Bidwell ; Glenna Cheesebrew, :
Point Pleasant; Kenneth
Cundiff, · Point Pleasant ;
Amanda Murray , Mid- :
dleport ; Vera Martin, Point :
Pleasant ; Mrs. James •
Woomer, Point Pleasant; •
Charles Decker, West ~
Columbia; Lee Criscmar, :
Cheshire; Elizabeth Shinn, :
Mt. Alto ; Michelle Stover, :
Gallipolis 'Ferry; Grace •
Rogers, Henderson ; Marilyn :
Adkins, Leon; Mrs. DaMy •
Bonecutter, GaUipolis Ferry; ~
Mrs. Bay Beaver, Crown
City; Ernest Rarden, Leon, •
and Keith Dye, Glenwood. :
Birth - A son to Mr. and :
Mrs. · Birdie
Queen,
Southside.

As of today most food, drugs

TODAY

PLAN AHEAD

~

I.

a

,.

.lOIN OUR

Veteraoslilemorlal Hospital
Saturday Admissions - Ida
While, Rutland ; Archie Rlfe,
Chesh ire ; Aida Faudree,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Jonathan Rees, Crystal
McCoy, Clara White, Sharon
~¥onne, Constance Roush,
ry Howell, Valsia Roush,
Frances King, Juon Clair.
Harold Massar, Donald
Eynon.
Sunday Admissions Bernice Roush, Racine;
Denise Hendrix, Syracuse;
Beverly Faulkner, Pomeroy ;
Hattie Armes, Syracuse;
Louise
Rosenbaum,
Pomeroy; Charles W. Jones,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges _ Joan
Carnahan, Pamela Barber,
Bruce Fisher, Archie Rile,
Freda Grueser, Freda Hart-

Tournament

any ti me .

•

HOSPITAL NEWS

Thunderstorms
hit south area

T. Ronda LaRue •Dicker
son , JO , a res•dent of
Baer
Street . Hunt ington, W. Va .,
died Saturday afternoon in
the airplane crash at 11le
Greene
County
Sport
Par-achute Club near- Bidwell .
He is survived by hl5 wife,
Jane Ellen Terrv Dickerson,
and a son , Brandon , at home.
He is also surv i ved by many
fr iends In Gallia County·.
He was employed In the
Transmission Department of

PRECINCT NAMED
CHESTER - Voters in the
newly created West Chester
Precinct will vote in the
auditorium of the Chester
Elementary School on
Tuesda'y, Nov. 8. Voters are
requested to use the back
entrance to the auditorium.

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) The. trial of two men charged
with the 1976 car -bomb
murder of reporter Don
Bolles went to the jury
Monday
evening
but
deliberations were delay·ed
until this morning.
After Attorneys for Max
Dunlap and . J aines Robison
and prosec utor William .
Sch&amp;efer III completed their
fi nal arguments on Monday,
Superior Court Judge
Howard Thompson instructed
the
jurors to · begin
deliberations at 9:30 a .m .
today
Thompson told the jurors
they could consider only the
charges filed 'against Robi50n
and Dunlap - murder in the
first degree and COI!Spiracy to
murder.
In closing arguments, the
prosecutor said Bolles "was
killed in a horrifying way"
and " died from literally
heing ripped apart." A bomb
exploded Wider his car on
June 2, 1916 and he died 11
days later.
''Max Dunlap supplied the
incentive, the motive and the
money ," Schaefer said.
"James Robison supplied the
hardware and .the actual

act."
Defense attorneys, in their
closing arguments, attacked
the credibility of the John
Harvey Adamson, the state's
chief witness ..
Adamson, who ·admitted
placing the bomb under
Bolles's car, pleaded guilty to
a charge of second-&lt;legree
murder and was sentenced to
20 years in prison . He said
Dunlap arranged for the
killing and Robison detonated
tlle explosive by radio signal.
Adamson testified that
Dunlap hired him on behalf of
' liquor wholesaler (i:emper
Marley Sr. to kill Bolles and
two other persons.
Marley, who has not been
charged,_ testified he had
nothing to do with the slaying.
Robison testified that at the
time of the slaying he was
buying plumbing supplies.

Elderly man -is
traffic victim
_Fred B. Cornwell, 77,
Bidwell, died Monday afternoon at the Holzer Medical
Center of injuries suffered in
a car-truck accident at2 p.m.
at the inters~ion of SR 160
and
554
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Cornwell's car failed to stop
for a stop sign. His vehicle
pulled into the path of a coal
truck traveling south on SR
160 operated by Ernest J .
Edwards, 33, Gallipolis .
Edwards aitempted to
swerve his tractor-trailer to
mi ss the Cornwell car.
However, his vehicle ran off
the left side of the roadway
then overturned. There wa s
heavy damage to the truck.
Cornwell 's
ca r
was
demolished.

Dr. Donald D. Warehime
Gallla County Coroner,. ruled
death was accidental caused
by a crushed chest and internal bleeding.
Two other traffic accidents
were investigated Monday in
Gallia County. '
Th e first occ urred at
Cadmus Elemenlary School
-where a Gallia Local school
bus driven by Eloise
Thompson, 39, Northup;
pulled from a parking space
striking another bus driven
by Merrill Hively, 57, Patriot.
There was slight damage.
· .A single car accident occurred at 2 p.m. on SR 160,
ncirth of Vinton where the fan
bell broke on a car operated
by Lesa J . Harder, 17, Ctl ,
Ew inglon. Her ca r struck a
guardrail.

$1,665,000 nursing home is
on ~rawing boards for Meigs
.

A major step was taken
Monday night for possible
construction of a $1,665,000
nursing home · in Meigs .
County.
·
The Ameritel Corporation
of Columbus requested· the
Meigs County Community
Improvement Corp. be
reorganized for the purpose
of issuing industrial revenue
bonds, tax free , to construct a
nursing home.
The anna uncement was

made today by Bernard
Fultz, president of the ·ere.
The C~C had to be
reorganized to act as an
agent for Meigs County .
Commissioners.
Prior to the action, trustees
were appointed. They were·
Pete Shields, Jim RoUBh,
Carson Crow, Harold Brown,
Richard Oweri, Lee Mc-

.........

elected Fultz, president;
Brown, vice president, Baker
secretary and Vernon Weber;
treasurer .

It was reported that the 100
bed nursing home could be
under construction next
spring with completion slated
for next fall. The home will
require doctors and nurses
for the private, semi private
and ward rooms.
When completed, there will
be 95 employees, 65 pet. of
them on a parttime basis.
It was indicated the 0 ursing
home . could possibly be
located near Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
It will be a private en-.
terprise. The only purpose of
the CIC and coWJty ·commission entering the project
is to assure tax free bonds. No
local funds will he spent.
The CIC passed a resolution
asking the county commissioners to designate it as

agent for the project. The
next step will be taken by the
commissioners as to whether
they ppprove the resolution
and agree to sell the bonds.
Attending were Fultz,
Howard Frank, Pete Shields,
E. E. Blakeslee, Willis Anthony, Mary Hobstetter, Lee
McComas, E. F. Robinson,
Fred Hoffman, James RoUBh,
Richard J ones, Clarence

Weather
Mostly cloudy tonight with
a low in ~he(ill~ Cloudy
and contu\'uoo mild Wednesday with a chance of
showers and high ternperatures In the upper 60s:

Andrews , Harold Brown,
Walter Grueser , Edison
Bak"er, Dick Owen, Carson
Crow and Fred Crow.

Sherifrs
deputies
kept busy

A deer was killed at 12 :30
a.m . Monday when it ran into
the path of auto driven by
Clarence L. Atherson, 41,
Long Bottom.
OW
OU
OW · According to Meigs County
A sheet of paper that could Sheriff Jallles J . Proffitt,
be folded in half 50 times Alberson was traveling east
would have to he as large as "n SR 124, one hall mile south
the
North American con- of Portland when the accident
Comas,
Edison
Baker ,
tinenl
- 8 million square happened. The driver
George Collins and Mary
miles.
escaped without injuries, but
Hobsletter. The trustees
there was heavy damage to
the vehicle.
Deputies are also In·
· ves\lga\ing ll broken window
pane at Salem Center School.
It was reported that a small
hole was in the window near
the window latch. No entry
was made into the school.
The sheriff's department
also received a report from
Mary Smith, Rt. 2, Racine,
that she had a three-month
old Doberman dog stolen
· from her residence sometime
between 5 p.m. and 6:15p.m.
Monday. The dog was valued
between $150 and $200.
Anyone having any information leading to the
recovery of the animal are to
contact
the
sheriff's
department.
Freda Buchanan, Letart
Falls, reported her home was
again vandalized. At approximately 7:45 p.m.
Monday subjects going by In
a !!Br or pickup truck threw a
.,. pumpkin at the house and
broke out one of the front
windows.
Also under investigation Is
damage to a mailbox owned
by John Newell, Rt. l, Long
Bottom. Two juveniles are
scheduled to report to the
juvenile officer, It was
reported.
Monday evening in Reedsville, during the community
trick or treat, a couple of
subjects were reported to
have taken candy from some
younger children.
According to Information
THESE 14 MEMBERS of Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249 enjoyed the beautiful outdoor
obtained from witnesses the
weather for camping at Camp Kiashuta near Chester. Culminatiug the weekend was
subjects were yoWlg adults.
conferring the Eagle Scout rank on Jeff Couch Sunday afternoon. Troop members camping
The Belpre Police also furlor the weekend include front,llo r, Chad Williams, Mike Hatfield, Mike Stone; second row,
nished additional information
Ito r, Terry Snowden, Greg Thomas, Craig Bolin; third row, John Morris, Charlie Stone,
that should prove helpful in
BiUy Colmer, David Barr; back row, Brent Bolin, Randy Murray, Dan Thomas and Jeff
the investigation.
Couch.

N

Y

Kn

·l

President '.signs. wage hill-~.

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Car-ter today
signed legislation raising the
minimum wage to $3.35 an
hour by 1981 - a $1.05
in crease representing the
biggest pay hike for low-wage
workers in history .
Government official s
estimate the bill, prqviding
an initial raise to $2.65 next
Jan . 1, will putah additional
$1l billion ·into the pockets of
some 5.3 million American
wnrkers over the next rowyears.
U represented a major
victory for organized labor.
Never~ befor e ha s Congress
appr11vt~l H minimum wage
increa~c as b1g ~~ $1.05 WI

hour. Big business strenously
fought the increase, warning
it would contribute to
inilalion and unemployment.
Labor Department
analysts predicted 4.3 million
persons
would
enjoy
increased wages totaling $2.6
billion from · the initial a:;.

depend on tips. Hotel and
restaurant workers also
would gel better overtime
covera,e. But an estimated
800,000 jobs in small
businesses will be removed
from
m1mmum
wage
protection ..
Tipped employees
rent-a n-hour increase
in c ludin g r es taurant
provided in the bill nexl year . workers, porters ·and other
Subsequent in cr eases se n ·ice
employees
promise $2.90 an hour in 1979, currently receive only 50
$3.10 in 1980 and $3.35 In 1981 percent of the minimum
- affecting anothe, I million wage. The new law provides
workers at a cost of $6.3 them with at least 55 percent
bilHrm fJVer a three year by Jan . 1, 1979, and 60 percent
period .
by 1980.
The measun.• also provides
Some 2.4 million hotel and
" better deal for workers who restaurant workers currently
I

•

must work 46 hours in one
week to get overtime rates .
·The limit would be reduced to
44 hours next Jan . 1 and 40
hours in 1979.
Employers with annual
sales under $250,000 currently
are not required to pay the
minimum wage. That
exemption will he increased
to $275,000 by July 1, 1978, and
$325,000 on July 1, 1919, and
$362,500 on Dec. 31, 1981.
The current minimum
wage is $2.30 for nonagricultural workers and
$2.20 for farm workers. The
new bill provides an identical
minimum wage for both farm
and non-farm workers.

'

�2- The Datil s.&gt;nunel

~hdcUeport

Pumero• 0

l'uesda\ N \ I 19

3- The Daily Sentmel 1tddleport Pomeroy

PARENTS: What do you

Washington window

really know about drug abuse?

The troubles of an 'outsider' president

B• Chlrl J J Cremeans
What poSSible \alue could there be to parents to know that
a child-{een died of an 'erdose f DMT PSfi OCYBIN or
IBOGAINE • Knowmg the nan e •auld not lessen the a~on\ of
the loss but the parents ""ho arm themseh es ~ 1th as much
in/orn au on about drugs, f abuse as posstble certainlnstand a
better chance of recogmzmg mdtcauons that a drug of S&lt;lme
kind ts bemg used Ob• tously parental awareness to the
Sttuatton could mean the d fference bet,.een catchmg the us.r
before tt mtght bee&lt; me too late to pre\ ent a life l'Qnstantl\
dependent on drugs or
thE" v.:orst
an av 1dable earlv
death I For thts reascn • r • ill co• er a few other little knowns
DMT IS a synthruc compound of trypta n ne wtth affects
about the same as LSD but the} do not last as long - 2-3 hours
ts the usual htgh dependmg on the dosage It comes from
the seeds of a' artet) of plants that ongmate m thr West Indies
and South Amenca and usual!) appears on the street m the
form of an orange! qmd or cr)stals It can be tn)ected dtrectly
mto the blood &amp;ream or mtramuscularl} MarlJuana users
sometunes soak thetr ctgarettes m DMT before smokmg to
gi\0 added reaction Street terms
Busmessman s Special
The Lunch Hour Tr p both probabl) gi\ en due to
the shortness of reacuon time
PSILOCYBfN IS another drug }OU seldom hear about It IS
made from mushroomsnattve to Mex1co and priilllllve people
beheve 1t gave supernatural pov.:ers and sim lar reaehons
mcludillg hallucmogemc trtps lastmg S., hours depending
on the amount taken Here agam htstory books that tell of
anctent wavs of life can olant a osvchologtcal seed whtch
rrught cause a l oungster to lee! that tf those who bved m olden
wnes - and thereb) close to nature and natural foods and
medtctnes - found these drugs acceptable then surely there
couldn t be too much danger ill ustng them Some ch tldren
would be thnlled wtth stmplv the thought of takmg the same
drugs the Indians used to take
BUFOTENINE IS another drug carr)mg the earl)
Indtan use label and commg from pods and seeds of shrubs
grown m South Amenca and the West lnd1es Olemtcall)
related to DMT 11 IS used as a sn uff and causes a type of
illtmucatlOn and halluctnattons follow Indians supposed!)
used tl to make themsel.es fearless m battle and able to
tolerate great pam Taken orally tt ts seemillgly meffecttve
but sn uffed or g1ven mtravenously reactiOns occur
unmedtately
IBOGAINE on the other hand comes from a different
part of the world - Afnca It too can be romanced by a
drug pusher tn that tt ong&gt;nally was used by native hunters to
enable them to rematn motionless for long penods while
matntatnmg mental alertness a nd to combat fattgue on the
long march Wtth today s back-to-&lt;1ature movement among so
many }oung people the use of drugs that come from plants
shrubs cactus etc co uld eas ly be mtsconstrued to be
perfectly safe espectall) tf tt was not known that the average
life span among the anc ent.s who habttually used these drugs
\\as verv short compared to modern man
What co uld be tn ckier and harder to trace than a drug that
can be Sllloked along w th a conventton al tobacco ctgarette
and cannot be smelled' Not many drugs that are smoked do
not have an out of the ordmary aroma but TIIC s an
except on It IS a synthettc mariJuana used m med1cal
research IS colorless and produces no odor m smoke 2-3 drops
on a regular tobacco ctgarette w1ll produce the same r esult.s as
true man)uana The high lasts ~ hours It s not easy to
come by but pushers do have thetr sources
One of the most common mdtcators that a youngster
may be on drugs of some type IS a sudden cbange m atl tudes
toward school achtevement and toward acbvtt es that had
preVIously been favor tes ThiS IS not to say that the parent
nottcmg such changes sho uld Jump to conclusmns about drugs
beillg mvolved but these things should serve as early warnmg
stgns and be cause for close attent10n to all of the cltild-teen s
actlv lles The hang4.oose approach lS fme - sometunesbut one should be able to recogmze when hang-tight should
apply
Need help or advtce on a posstble drug abuse problem '
Call tltis local number 992-3145

B\ m I EN THOMi\S
l Pl Whnr H tu~ Rf'p rtt r

WASHINGI'ON 1UPil PTTsller'lt Cartfr IS learmng

U 1

\\ash

n~t

be ~n Ul.S

n t s better
der than an

0ut.s1d~r

Cartt'l

m hts C"dmpa1gn

sa1d
msaders
tn
Washmgt011 had I st the r
p pellne u the people and
"~ re ~ \ ernmg bv renat te

c "lfltr

I He blamed the bu
re uocrac) 11 Wa!SimgtJn
and the arr g UJCe f those m
pow t'l f r n a y of the
nall r !S problems
But s nee he has been m
Washm~t :&gt;n

the Prest dent
f und that 'ou have to be
an tnSJder to know the le\ers
of po"er HIS frustrauons are
apparent He realizes now
that he has to retrench and to
take one step at a tune
Some of the goals he set
be free takmg office have had
to be put on the slrelf
temporartly as hiS fu-st year
ts co nmg tAJ a close Now
Carter apparently will be
sat1sf ed to achteve a strong
energv probram to start the
co untry on the road to
consenatJ m
Bemg a outsider he has
not had the clout wtth the
Independent mmded Senate
and the mfluence on the
leadtrs who can make or
break hts program From any

has

v tew
the
"Ontrolled
Senate has Shunned hts

potnt

uf

Oemocra tc

BOWLING

••
•

low cholesterol d et ts
If you are on tl e n ghl

I t t may help prevent
case of the artenes that

ten accompa.mes gout
1 suspect that y&lt; u need to

,

be treated regularlv before
you develop an attack W1th a
good program that you sttck
to you can control the level of
unc actd and probably prevent your attacks But you
must constder tl a lifetune
program if you want to get
good result.s
DEAR DR LAMB-I have
hlgh cholesterol and I haven I
been able to get my
cholesterol down by diet The
doctor gave me Atrorrud.S
and one capsule a day dtdn t
do 11 etther Now I am taking
two I read where you can get
reacttons from Atrorrud.S
What IS a normal cholesterol
count~ My blood pressure IS
high too
DEAR READER You can
get mtu trouble wtlh almost
any medicme Even too much
oxygen can harm you but you
can I live wtthout tl Usually
the way to filld out if you
tolerate a medicme ts to use
tt Atronntd.S ca n be used
safely by most pe&lt;Jp!e but 11
do es n t always lower
chvlesterollevels
II you have any excess fat
at all under your skm get rtd
of tl That may help your
cholesterol level a great deal
and may help your blood
pressure
We usually think that the
people wtth a cholesterol
level below 220 have the least
nsk of havmg a heart attack
all other factors bemg nor
mal Ofltce and clim e
readmgs are often done by
different techntques and may
be normal even when they
are 2W to 250
If you have both htgh blood
pr~ssure
and a ht gh
cholesterol vou certamly
should do something about
both Wetght control IS ex
tremely tmportant a nd of
course tf you smoke you
should stop at once

1 ~~

nber!S

w, h I aH·has
1

part\
l 1 tnbuted vast )
p1 blems
\UI

Pomeroy Bowhng Lanes
Sunday M ners
Week of 10 9 77

upon WJl I next year

Son e of Carter s cw-rent
problems may be due to hts
o" n htgh hopes and
ca mpatgn promtses As
Prestdent he finds It ts not
that easy to deliver but hts
constituents all expect the
most As a consequence the

The Odd Ba II League
L
S8 14
48 24
43 29

38 34
33 39
0 72

H gh nd 11 dua game Wa nda Teaford 187 Sh rley

M tche I 180 Wanda Tea ford
166
Sla~'"{'
H gh nd v dua se es Hot ~hots
37 9 Wanda Teaford 490 Sh rley
488
Barbara
AI ey Cats
34 22 M tc hel
Count r y Bu mpk. ns
34 22 Wh tt ng ton 446
H gh team ga r;ne - Team
Sunda y Duds
31 25
Team No 5
22 34 No 4 722 Team No 4 693
Team No 3
10 46 Team No 2 68
H gh team ser es - Team
Men s h gh game- Roland
Mor s 57 Charles Searles No 4 2090 Team No 2 995
Qual ty Pr nt Shop 1939
155 Les G bbs 155
Men s h gh ser es
Cha rles Sea rles 414

R ck

Mart n 413 Ralph G bbs 397
Women s h gh game- Ann

s 45 Ann Morr s 143
Sheryl G bbs 143
Women s h gh ser es- Ann

Science today

l'h:Jrr

Morr s 428 Ahery G bbs 389
Sue Searles 358
Team h1gh game
A ley
Cats 302 Country Bumpk ns
286 A ley Cats &amp; Team 5 264
Team h gh ser es
A ley
Cats 807 Team No S 772
Country Bumpk ns 734
77

W L

Hot Shots

43 21

Country Bumpk ns

38 26

Sunday Duds
Team No S

35 29
30 34

Alley Cats

36 28
10 54

Men s h gh game - R ck
Mart n 177 Jeff Mart n 163
Charles Searles 161
Men s h g h se r es
Charles Searles 468 R ck

Mart n 455 Ralph G bbs 428
Women s h gh game - Ann

Moo s 165 Sue Sear es 159
Anh Morr s 143
Women s h gh ser es - Ann
Morr s 418 Sue Sea es 40 1
Sheryl G bbs 313
Team h gh game - Team

No 5 312

AI ey Cats 296

Team No 5 287
Team No 5 869 A ey
176 Hot Shots 762

~ats

Sunday Millers

Week of 10 23 77
Standtngs
Cou nt ry Bumpk ns

Hot Shots

Sunda y Duds

W L
46 26

45 27
41 J

Alley Cats

38 34

Team No 5

30 42

Team No 3
16 56
Men s h gh game - Ra ph
G bbs 166 Jeff Mart n 165
Ralph G bbs 148
Men s h gh series -

Jeff

Mart n 434 Ra ph G bbs 42t

Charles Searles 420
Wom en s high game Shery G bbs 159 Ann Morr s
136 Ann and Shery 131
Women s h gh series
Sher y G bbs 411 Ann Morris
384 Gwen Mart n 287
Team h gh game
Team
No 3 292 Country Bumpk ns
287 Sunday Duds 279
Team hgh seres Country Bumpk ns 810 Alley
Ca s 716 Sunday Duds 7 4
Pomeroy Bowlmg Lanes
Early Sunday M xed
League

Oct

23 1977

Standmgs
Pis
Team
Tom s Carry Out
50
Jack s Da ry Bar
47
Town K n
38
Cl ne s Cons truct on
33
Roya C own Botti ng Co 30
G bbs Grocery
18
H gh nd v dua gam~
Men Ed Voss 232 women

Be t y Sm th 98 men Jeff
W lson 93 women Mar er:~e
W lson 195 men Da r e I

Dugan 191 wome n He en
Phelps 188
H gh ser es - Men
Ed
Voss 573 women Betty Sm th
542 men Jeff W lson 529
wome n Mary Voss 533 men
Darrel Dugan 519 women
Helen Phelps 506
Team h gh game
Town
K In 720

Team h gh ser es
Car y Out 1073

Toms

groups Carter "PP" J!e&lt;l to lite
m sl tl c bl k" the p 11 r
tmd lab r an s newhat
dist: 1 chm ted

Wht 1 he tJ ;n eled across
the
untrv la:&gt;t weekend

Carter found thilt he was
betng faulted for n&lt; t
Carters top Whtte H use espPusmg mstant Sflluttons
a1des ha\€' ~gun P '~Pries ~r He had come to listen and
neetmgs chatred l ; V re found that was n&lt; t enough
Wtth I ts suceesses bemg
PrcStd~nt Waltet Mondale to
fmd &lt; ut ~hat "' ent wr01 g ca lled m questim by his ""
al ng the "ay and to get the part; the Prestdent ts also
admu str 111 n back on lhe bemg branded mept b} the
Republ {a IS
who
are
track
begmmng
t
•
e
U
a
se
ver
At thetr f rst meetmg the)
thetr
own
p&lt;
httcal
prospects
dectded that the Prestdent
As an o uts ad er who
had baSically trted u go after
too much n has fJisl vear suddenly appeared rn the
Smce
then
the
ad Washan gton scene Ca rter
nuntstratiOn has tned to also lacks the unswerVIng
set more reahshc goals and dedicated loya lists tn hts 6wn
some matlatl ves are bemg left party who can help hun over
b) the "ayStde The proposal the rough spots unul he does
get hts be ~ rmRS
The
for a co nsumer agency
which IS opposed by btg Democrats are mdivtdua11
busmess and wtll take an all marching to thetr own drums
out admtrustratton battle ts
bemg temporarily set astde
Carter sull tntends to
unve1l a tax reform program
before Congress adjourns
FUNNY BUSINESS
accordmg to atdes even
though tt could not be acled

Qual ty Pr nt Shop
Team 5
Team6

Team No 3

By Lawrence Lamb M p
DEAR DR LAMB-Each
year at this tune I get the
gout 111 my toes and my
Achilles heel and ankle I am
takmg Colbenenntd tablets
which don t seem to be very
effecttve I take a vttarrun p1ll
datly and also 100 un1ts of
Vllarrun E I am on a low
cholesterol diet and am
wondermg if tt has any effect
on my gout What causes the
gout' Is there any value m
takmg vtlamm E lor tl as that
seems very controverSial today '
DEAR READER-Gout 1s
caused by an overproductiOn
of unc acid by your own body
cells It is really a defect m
the way your cells functiOn
Medtcmes are deSigned to
reheve the acute attack to
help the body flush out excess
urtc actd through the ktdneys
or to hm t the product on of
unc actd by your own cells I
am send ng you The Health
Letter number 2 3 Gout Urtc
Acid to g1ve you much more
mfonnat o 1 on what gout ts
and what to do about tl
Others who wal)l this m
format on ca n send 50 cents
wtlh a long stamped se lf
addressed envelope for t to
me 111 care of thiS newspaper
P 0 Box 1551 Radio C ty Sta
t on New York NY 10019
~
No vltarrun E wtll not help
It has no effect on how your
body produces unc actd This
tsagoodexampleofwhylget
annoyed wtth outlandtsh
cia ms adverttsmg vttanntn
E It prevents people from
gett ng the medtcal ca re they
e&lt;l whtle wast ng nm cv on
h 1g t1 at w II ot help

has hre ag, 11 st
Ius

Team 2
Team 4
Team 1

Standmgs

Gout a defect in cells

trg,\ pr p stls
Mea tunc t sa lva~e "hat
he.: L u Carter h ts I 1d t ll ld

W

Sunday Mmers

Lawrence E Lamb M D

e

Mason Bowling Center
October 28 1U7

Week of 10 16

HEALTH

•ppea ls and de\astated his

mste~ f hsterun~ to 1he
Whtte H use trumpeter
F I r all that
tn&lt; st
presidents would prefer Umt
thw (J ccon phs I m~nls be
JUd~ed 111 the pages of
hibtory and nd( so mstantl)
But Carter appears to
remam fatrly phtlosophtcal
about hiS own prestdency He
behevesthat he has walked n
wl ore other PreSidents
feared to tread and that hts
own new mtttatives the behef
m chan ge mstead of the
sta tus quo - m foretgn poll c)

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

11111Ue O~te-- 'No'
In an tssue of your paper the week of October 17th there
appeared an arttele oo the front page attrtbuted to Mr Wells
and Mr Jones members of th e county commiSSion ThfY
recommended that Metgs Countians vote Yes on Issue I
parhculaHy
where t1 e
Thts pertams to a change m the new electloo laws even before
problems have been arow d
they have been tned out many general electton
for a loog Ume - has been the
Knowu g Ulese two men as personal frtends m private life
cause of many or hts pohttcal as well as thetr pubhc duttes we along wtth others have
headaches
discussed over the past months the subject of the new
So he continues to say I 111
regtstratton law ThiS concerns our county as well as 21 others
learmng I meager to leam
(The other 66munttes m Ohto have had regiStration for years)
and as he does he feels he
The general consensus from our discusstons was leave
will be able to rack up a
11
like
tt ts and as near practtcalto confonn to the regtstrataon
record he ca n run on m four
law that goes illto effect Nov 7 1978
years
Like tl IS has meant m the past that any qualified elector
m the precmct could go to the polls stgn the pollbook receive
the ballots and exprC$s hts or her vtews m secret
Now wtth thts new law the only difference !rom our old
Uke 11 1s ts thts Each elector Is requtred to s1gn the proper
regtstratton forms and gtve the reqwred mformatton These
Bollen forms wtll be processed later at the county election board and
ftled permanently or as long as the cttlzen restdes tn the
precmct Just that Simple
..,/...V:rJ~,.l.-..l----....::;-~,'1
Thts wtll be the frrst tune 10 the hiStory of our county that
1
·'
the director and board members wtll know the actual count of
quallfted voters m the 33 precmcts Thts knowledge will be
very helpful m supplymg the ballots and other supplies to the
TrlE Rx.lUiiCN
PreSiding Jodges and other mterested persons These forms
C.O{)\lr Ml.lST
wtth stgnature and other mfo rmaton will assure the proper
of each vot er
BE ~E:ffCIALLY tdenttty
Gett ng back to the subject of the ftrst paragraph where 11
HI~H
mentioned my frtends and Issue I I wish if I may to clarify
some po nts Issue 1 naturally will be the ftrst on the tssue
ballot The voters of the entire state must dec1de Issue I
U dectded by a Yes vote tt will reqwre regiStration at
least 30 days before an election and also requtre the casual
voter to rereg1ster 1! he or she doesn t vote tn a penod of four
years ThiS ts not the like tt IS that we are used to
Let us take an example Suppose a newcomer establishes
restdence ill a prectnct more than 30 days before an election or
a youth reaches 18 years of age they naturally gtve no
unmedtate thought to votmg unttl the campatgn warms up
some two or three weeks before the election They are demed
the rtght to vote because they hadn t reg tstered 30 days before
The commtSStoners also mentioned about the long and
mstly lines at tpe polls caused b) cttlzens wa1ting to regiSter
As of now more than one.thtrd of the voters m Metgs County
have been regtstered by volunteer workers Next Tuesday election day - 53 tramed regts!rars will be 111 the 33 precillcts
to regtster electors EnthusiastiC volunteers will work
throughout the wmter and sprmg to contmue th1s effort In the
June Primary 66 party comnuttee members will be on the JOb
to see that thetr voter fnends will be regiStered and legally
ehgtble to vote Nov 7 1978
Gentlemen where ill the w1de wtde world wtll these long
and costly lines of CJttzens wa1tmg to register come from '
They will be onl} the newcomer and youth and scme few who
have wruted to the last mmute to reg&gt;ster A vote yes on
Issue I makes the PreSiding Judge tell them tbey can t vote
You dtdn t regtster 30 days ago
Now lor the word fraud and the phrase keep our
Thts brace ts made of conform prec1sel} enough to elections honest which s bemg constantly used to encourage
polyprop) lene wetghs about body mntours
a yes vote on Issue I The word Fraud IS not 111 the
The Gt!lette orthosts s a dictionary of the electton system here
four pounds and unlike the
plaster cast can be removed lh n pla st c shell whtch
Metgs County has knowledgeable alert and honest
conforms to the child s body election offtctals throughout the county who do thetr job ill a
for bath s or JUSt to scratch
Postttonmg systems for allow ng the arms to hang by faar a nd consctenltous manner
cerebral palsy and advanced the sides m com£ ort
Anyway where ts the person that would gamble on
In a slumpillg postt on a
muscular dystrophy pattents
fraud for a few votes when if caught and convicted would be
who don t have the strength pattent can t learn and can t sentenced to ftve years m prlscm ? Thts 1s wntten as part ofthe
to stt m a good posture have try to learn Carls9n satd Electon Law
But this brace gtves the
come under the scrutmy of
When the new election laws were proposed reqwrmg
with some fmesse
necessttte's
!he orth ottcs laborat ory
Instant regtstrat1on I was rather dubtous about tl properly
resultmg m deve lopment of It provtdes a head restramt working After readmg the entire bill I saw the sunpllctty and
and allows the patient to stt
the stltmg supp&lt; rt rthosts
sunilar1ty to what we have had m the non-regtstered counties
Thts polypropylene shell s UQflght w1th spmal support In many of the reg1strat1on counties m Ohto specta!
wtth the head up m a posthon
made to conform to the ch ld
and prunary elections have been held recently and very lew
For l ears people have lor eat mg learnmg and problems and no frauds have occurred accordmg to the
been upholstermg cha1rs to observmg
Durmg the past three years news media
buttress such a handicapped
Don t vote Yes to change a new law before tt has been
chtld Carlson satd but the about 125 pattenls from Mm
tr1ed
out
homemade efforts dtdn t nesota have been fttted wtth
Vote
No on Issue I - E A Wmgett
control the pelviS and did not s1ttmg support braces

lDDAY

Lighter side

TV•••in Review

Picketing Peter
to protest Paul
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP!) Recently stenc led m red nn
s tdc walks
at
several
downtown street corners
were the words Free All
Political Pr soners In Iran
A casual pedestrtan
walkmg over

thts

bit

of

graffiti may have wondered
why the gralflttans enscnbed
the stdewalks here rather
than m the country were the
p o I 1 t 1c 1a n s
were
Inca rcerated There are two
posstble explanatiOns
I They were a httle weak m
makes for a more normal
geography
appearance because It ftts
2 They wanted to get the
mto a shoe and the ch1ld can
wear the same ktnd of m•ssage to the Shah of Iran
footgear the other kuls are who ts commg here soon for a
vtstt and dtdn t trust the
wearmg
A handtcapped chtld s postal servtce to dehver tt on
ttme
cnnsctous of his looks
Wh a tever the rattonal e
Carlson saul and tlle more
off-center
protests of thiS sort
normal hiS appearance the
appear
to
be
catch mg on To
healthier h IS
ctte
jUSt
one
other example
Crtppled chtldret als&lt; are
every
day
for
about a month
suscepttble to deform1t1es as
la
st
summ
er
a group
they grow and m &lt;'l"der to
tppea
ed
nn
the
U
S Capttol
prevent these deformtttes 10
st~J
s
wath
a
stgn
readmg
the ankle and f &gt;Ot you need
Strp
tl
e
Torture
m
(as I
an extremely g lOd ftt You
recall
)
Ch
le
ca n t get that m a shoe but
Wet e they trymg t I bbv
you &lt;an m a preciSely molded
Cfnglt~ss
t ~ nact leg ls latton
shell
mak
mg
lm tur e tn Ch le
Ot her tnn vat1ve braces
llc gi:tl
Or were they
be mg produced at Gtllette
n ply ng th•t C ngress was
tclude 1 tw -ptece body
Jac kel that ca n be used after t 1tunng Ch tle perhaps IJy
sp nal sw ger) 111 place f a se n Jm~ t ( p1es f the
Jl sl 1 &lt;aot Ttus Jackel a l ~ CongressiOnal Record
II s curt us out II the
ts useful f r J tiily 1
n
u 1 sl 1 es I was n t
d1
It I
sup 1sed by wha Wtlha11

By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer

Ntlly a well known pohttca l
ac!lvtsl totd me when I ran
mto hun at a party the other
evenmg

Hetgh ho Wtlhe
I
hailed
Where have you
been keepmg yourself?
I JUSt got back from a
fl f

couple

weeks

m

England
Ah lllat must be a great
place for a vacatton thts time
of year
1 dtdn I go there for a
vacatiOn I was m London
takmg
part
m
a
demonstratiOn agatnst the
Panama Canal treaty We
went around pamtmg Stop
the
Panama
C~nal
Gtveaway on the sidewalks
But Wtlhe the canaliSn t
England s to gtve away I
pomted out That treaty ts
between Panama and the
Uruted States
Ntlly
shot
me
a,n
exasperated look I m well
aware of who the stgnatortes
are Th&gt; you thtnk we would
have been demonstrating m
l;mdnn tf the Panama Canal
belonged to En~ land'
I sad Oka) Where would
v u have g ne f En~land
wnt.:d the canal?
T Pans f c urse H&lt; w
else c uld we a1nuse French
pp&lt; s It t t1 e treat)•
Wtll e 1 satd 1 m n t
u t~..:

I

unci

st md

the

1eas nrr g bt:huKI a ll th1s

Whv ltd y u I a ppen to ptck
I d 111 f r 1 ant• tre 'ty
Je1 nstrat on

surpr smgly strong defenstve

game

Cards blank Giants, 28-0

Braces for crippled children
By Jo-ANNE BYRNE
Sl' PAUL Mmn ( UPI) When Gtllette Chtldren s
Hospttal was founded m 1897
wtth funds appropnated for
the free ca re of handicapped
children Mmnesota tiecame
the ltrst state m 1he nation to
work with crtppled chtldren
Wtth each pass10g year the
work has beco me more
refmed Now the hosp!talts a
leader 10 the development of
braces called orthoses that
help support the lunbs and
trunks of handtcapped
yoWlgsters
Docto rs and engrneers
draw on modern technolog~
to build strong but light
braces to help chtldren wtth a
broad range of problems
For many years for exam
pie a h•avy steel alumillum
and leather brace was
mounted to the bottom of the
shoe of a handtcapped child
Now 18 of 20 braces made for
lower lunbs at Gillette are
constructed
m
a
polypropylene shell deStgn
Marty
Carlson
an
aeronautical engmeer at the
hospitals orthotiCS and
pr os thettcs laboratory
explatned thiS destgn IS much
more wetght efftctent and
ca n provtde a wetght saVIng
of 12 ounces for a s1x year
old
For a crtppled chtld to
behave hke a normal ch ld
Carlson satd
he has to
behave ltke an athlete so too
much wetght sticks htm
further n the hole
The hgh te r brace also

u 1\lestlay Nov I 1977

NEW YORK (UP!) - The bikini..: lad tattooed go-godancer
holds up her palm so the VIewer can see the words Do 11
Do what' Maybe swttcll channels TeleVISion people
shouldn t be sc trustmg
The girl was part of the fastmovmg action on NBC s thtrd
Laugh In of the seascn scheduled for Nov 2 11-9 p m
Eastern tune
It appears only a questiOn or time before Laugh In
becomes a regular weekly series as It was back 10 1968 after
havmg been preVIewed as a spectal several months earher
Laugh In m tis current remcarnatton ts a show w1th so
much happenmg lllere s somethmg for everybody - except
possibly the younger members of the audtence seemg 11 m
family vtewmg tune
Parents may have a little trouble explammg all those Amta
Bryant Jokes the heavy emphasis on Washmgton D C
secretanes whose talenls lie outstde the typmg pool and other
btts of mnuendo or worse
Other name performers mclude James Garner Cindy
Wt!llams of Laverne &amp; Sltirley
Flip Wilscn Barry
Goldwater (yep the senator) and Ralph Nader the conswner
acbvtst
Wilson as televtston htstortans might care to note appeared
on etght ofthe ftrst 14 of the ortgmal Laugh In shows where
he mtroduced the vmces of Geraldme a~ the Rev LeRoy
There s also the coarse-votced NeW'York tough type who
turns out to be Jtlly Rtzzo Sillatra s restaurateur buddy
When the JOkes aren t sexual or VISual they often center on
politiCS parttcularly Junmy and Billy Carter jokes Nobody
]Okes about Mtss Lllltan There s alsc a swtpe or two at former
Prestdent Gerald Ford (by fellow Republican Goldwater) and
Nader s cracks at b1g business (he calls new sharp auto hood
ornaments another hwnane effort to protect cars from pede
stnans )
The regular cast of comparative unknowns are talented
eager and fun to watch and undoubtedly a nwnber of them w1ll
become Household names once Laugh In becomes a senes
For those who grew up m the Olarlle McCarthy Edgar
Bergen era tt ts dtsturbmg to watch Wayland Flowers Ups
move as he makes hiS clever puppets talk He ts a puppeteer
not a ventriloqutst but we are accustomed to mvtstble puppeteers who pull the strings but avoid the lunellght
Some of the most pointed lilles are dragged across the
bottom of the screen- ABC s Soap leaves a ring around the
mmd or Crune doesn t pay Netther does Social Secunty

NEW YORK (UPI ) - Two years ago rtght alter the Golden
State Warrtors had wtped out the Washmgton Bullets m lour
stratghl for llle National Basketball Assoctatlon title Rtck
Barry felt he had enough
One morel ear and he was gmng to hang up hts sneakers he
srud
_ Two weeks ago tllooked as If it was high tune &amp;rry should
He turned m an absolutely mtse.able performance tn the
season opener wtth the Phoemx Suns againSt whom the 33year-&lt;&gt;ld usually self-assured Barry seemed to be runnmg m
the same place too long and was shut down wtth only siX pomts
by the rookie guarding him
Age and the calendar fillally seemed to have caught up with
Rick Barry the one-tune Boy Wonder of the Basketball Court
What a shame tl was he d have to go out thts way ill hiS !mal
year alter 12 splendid seasons
Yeah what a shame
So look who s leadmg all the NBA scorers today w1th a 31 6
point average Rtck Barry that s who
Am lleadillg• he asks laughmg I dtdn t even realJZe tl
'That lsn t what I m trymg to do t'OnscJously anyway I don t
feel f have anythtng to prov~ I was fortu nate enough to esta b
lish my credentials early m the game
One thmg Barry would like to get stratghtened out ts how
much longer he ll be playmg professtonal basketball
He admtts he sa1d he d hke to ret(l"e after the Warrtors won
the world champwnshtp two years ago but says a man ts a pt to
say a lot of things when he s m a state of euphorta !tke that
Once I came down to earth I felt that as long as I could play
at a high leve l of efftctency 1t would be foolish tf I qutt he
says I thillk I would regret that deciSion
Similarly he confesses he en joys the type o! color
commentary work he has been dotng more and more of for
teleVIston Barry IS excepllonally good at 11 too
I have not announced that this IS my last year be says
regarding his playmg career It s the last year of my contract
but whether or not I keep playmg depends on vanous factors
Like what?
One of the things 11 depends on ts my mental attitude and
that s as good as tl has ever been And physically I feel as !me
as I ve felt n !he last fourftve years I m leanmg toward
continumg to play but the Warnors wtll have to be w1l110g to
g&gt;ve me a contract that would make me feel they want me to
continue

Loosely translated that means Rtck Barry will be playmg
for the Warnors next season tf they sweeten the pot come up
wtth more money Rick Barry doesn t come nght out and say
that but that s okay I m saymg tt for hun There s only one
hitch I m not paymg hun Franklin M~euh the Warrtor s
owner

I.S

Barry who has scored more than 20 000 pomts countmg all
the teams he has played for In the NBA and ABA had two
extraordillary mght.s last week pumpmg m 51 pomts m a game
wtth Philadelphia Saturday and 44 against Chicago lour even
mgs earlier
I m playmg for a new contract Barry ktdded M1eul1 and
Scotty Stirltng Mieuh s asststant
He was ooly teastng them though
As for hts poor performance m the season opener wtth
Phoenix Barry doesn t like the Idea of anyone saymg he was
held to stx pomts by Suns roo kie Walt DaviS
That s the kind of thmg newspaper pe&lt;Jple like to wr1te
says the Warrtors veteran 6-7 forward I don t feel I was
held I just dldn t look for my shot and a llowed the fact I
wasn t feeling good phySically to affect me mentally I couldn t
get my second wmd and fell I was runmng uphill all game It s
not that I d1dn t get some shots The ball stmply didn t drop m
Another factor also was mvolved In the setup our team
has I moved over to what we call the passmg forward stde to
allow Jamaal Wilkes (another Golden Gate forward) to get
more involved m the offense That dtdn t take me out of the
offense but tt cut down my responstbthty Smce then I ve
moved back to the passmg forward stde That s why I m
scormg more

Bucks are improving
according to Hayes
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio
State Coach Woody Hayes
had some bad news Monday
for hts focmer captam
We thmk we re an
unprovmg ballclub Hayes
told hts weekly press
luncheon and thts time of
the year that s a unportant
thmg
It may be unportant for
Hayes and his fourth-ranked
Buckeyes as they march on
towards a Nov 19 showdown
wtth Michigan foc the Btg Ten
tttle and Rose Bowl berth
But for IllillOlS Coach Gary
Moeller a former Buckeye
captatn and the new head
coach at lllillOIS tis bad
news
The F1ght mg Ilhm are
comillg off a 49 20 drubbmg
Saturday at the hands of
Mtchtgan State and surely
don t need an tmprovtng Ohio
State team to rwn !herr
homecommg celebration
But according to Hayes
that s what they re gomg to
get and he ll even tell you
why

The reason

IS

we re m

good health
sa1d Hayes
(Fullback) Jeff Logan ran
real well last Saturday after
betng hurt for etght week s
Most of our players had a
good week s work That s
when you unprove
Hayes also Cited personal
prtde as another factor m
the unprovement
Our k1ds have a lot of
personal prtde
he satd
They want to unprove And
we defmttely are a n
tmprovmg football team
The Buckeyes who Vlstt
Illmots thiS Saturday, ran
thetr record to 7 I overall and
~ m the Big Ten wtth last
week s 42 0 wm over
Wtsconstn and escaped the
Badger game wtth a
mmtmum or tn]unes

One exception however
was the knee illjury suffered
by
reserve
freshman
defenSive
back
Vmce
Sklllmgs of Brenizer Pa
who was operated on Sunday
and IS out for the season
It was a ligament satd
Hayes sunllar to the one
(former all Amertca) John
H1cks had several years ago
and he went on to be all
Amertca 1\\'ll'l!"'llfter that
He (Skillings) ts a
youngster wtth an excellent
attitude
added Hayes
He ll bounce back and play
a lot of football here at Ohio
state He has a lot of abiltty
and of course that great
speed (9 6 m the 100)
DefenSl ve tackle Eddte
Beamon who mtssed two full
games w1th an ankle spram
played
some
agamst
WtsconStn
He-was about 80 percent
satd Hayes but he stuck ill
there though
Back Mtke Guess and
tackle Byron Cato were the
top defens1ve award wmners
for thetr performances
agamst Wtscnnsm although
lmebackers Tom Cousmeau
and Dave Adkins were the
leading tacklers wtth 18 and
15 respecltvely
Ttght end Junmy Moore
slowly regammg top form
after a patr of knee
operations was selected the
top offenstve lmeman agamst
Wts constn whtle ta tlba ck
Ron Sprmgs who had 1114
yards m 17 carnes was
named the outstandmg back

The last male scveretgn of
The Netherlands was the
grandfather of the present
Queen Juhana Wtlham III
who retgned from 1849 to 1890

By 1OM UHLENBROCK
Sl' LOUIS ( UPil - New
York Gtanls defenstve tackle
John Mendenhall fferc'll the
St l.cws 'ffemave hne a
complunent m a back!tanded
sort of way
Thetr offenSive hne IS
good bot tt s not the best
Mendenhall said after the
Cardinals shut out Ule Gtants
~ Monday mght
Mendenhall and hts New
York cohorts had sacked
Washmgton s Btlly Ktlmer
SIX ttmes ill thetr last game
a nd hoped to treat the
Cardinals Jtm Hart n I ke

manner
Wtth both teams J.3 and
vymg to stay m coh tent1on lor
a wtld..:ard spot tn lhe NFC
East a battle royal loomed
between the New York pass
rushers
and
Hart s
protech rs TI1e o utcome was
reflected on the scoreboard
We pretty much forced
them to keep to the ground
Mendenhall satd
!'rue Hart f ntshed wtth
w1th nme eomplet ons m 13
attet tpts for 113 yards a low
total for t! e NFC s leader 111
passmg ya1ds H1s best aer al

dtsplay came early m the
gat e when he htt 5-&lt;lf-&lt;i
passes f ..- 44 yards m a 611yard sconng dnve capped by
Steve
Jones
5 yard
touchdown run lor a 7-il St
l.nuts lead
After that St Louts found
other ways to grmd the
Giants mto subrmsston
A patr of pass mterference ..
calls on New York defenders
moved the Cardmals 58 yards
to the Gtants 20 late n the
f rst half Seven plays later
Wayne Morns fumbled
divmg tn from the one and St
IJJms guard Conrad Dobler

re&lt;..'Overed tn the end zone for

the ftrst touchdown of hiS stx
year pn career and a H.{)
halftune lead
While most scorers sp1ke
the ball Dobler celebrated by
startmg a ftght
I saw the ball grabbed tt
and they trted to grab tt from
me Dobler satd Two guys
kicked at me and I ktcked
back
The St louts defense shut
down the New York runmng
game and forced quarterback
Joe Ptsarctk to throw the
ball He completed 12-&lt;&gt;f 26

W ahama routs Hannan, 66-0
BYGARYCLARK
MASON - As was ex
pected the Wahama Whtte
Falcons rollod to an easy
66-0 vtctory over the tn(ury
nddled Hannan Wtldcats at
Pomt Pleasant Saturday
night for thetr SIXth Win In
etght dectstons
For Hannan 11 was thetr
ftfth loss thtrd m a row
aga mst three VIctOrLCS SO far
thts season Both teams have
two contests r e mammg
durmg the 1977 Grtd Seascn
Wahama travels to Buffalo of
Putnam Saturday mght "htle
Hannan hosts Southwestern
The Whtt e Falcons com
pletely domtnated the contest
as the ftna I score md 1cates m
whtch stattst tcs were vtr
tually unposstble to keep
Unofllclally the bend area
eleven rushed for more than
333 yards and passed lor 139
more for a whoppmg 472 total
yardage They scored a total

of ten

touchdo~ns

and con

verted stx pomt after at
tempts to up thetr season
scormg average to 23 2 per

game
Wahama s defense also
played a superb 48 millutes
b) llmttmg the Wtldcats to 27
total yards (30 by passmg
and a minus ( 13) on the
ground)
Desptt e the score the
courageous Wtldcats kept
plugg ng away trymg to
sustam a drtve but the more
expenenced Fa lcons proved
to be \()() much for thetr
southern netghbors
Hannan suffered another
crush ng blow during the
second perwd when another
one of 1ts starters rece ived a
ser10us InJUry Keith Dye
extted the game wtth a
posstble broken colla rbone
and left the W Ideals mmus
stjll another player m a
season wluch has plagued the
small Class A school wtlh

IDJUrleS
A look at the scormg shows
the Wh1te Falcons reachng
paydtrt lwtce m the ftrst
quarter on a one yard run by
Jack Smtih and a 45 yard
gallop by Kevm Roush Davtd
Elias booted the PAT on both
occastons to make It 14-0
In the second stanza
Wahama scored 27 points on
four touchdowns to break the
game open and take a 41~
halftune lead
Ken Hankmson hit Greg
Blessmg w1th a 35 yard strtke
lor the first stx pomter of the
quarter followed by a two
yard run by Hankmscn and
another 23-yard touchdown
by Roush Vmce Weaver
closed out the ftrst half
scormg wtth hts ftrst vars1ty
touchdown on a 93 yard run
Ehas made good on three of
h1s extra pomt ktcks to make
1t 41-{1 at mtermiSSIOn
Wahama scored only twtce

tn the thtrd pertod on two long

Chiefs fire Wiggin
By RICK GOSSELfN
UPI Sports Wriler
KANSi\S CITY Mo (UPI)
- Paul Wt ggm weeded
through a mass of papers a nd
notebooks stacked on hts
soon to be vacated desk a nd
pulled out a thiCk red bmder
that housed hts dtary of the
1977 football seascn
Wtggm stood ll on end at

the corner of hts desk and
pomted to the dates scnbbled
on the stde of the billder July IS.October 31 W1ggm
had been ltred as head coach
of the Kansas City Ol1efs on
the f10al day of h1s d1ary
I usually use two bmders a
seascn said W1ggm Now
they won t even have to buy
me another one
W1ggill s ftrmg the first of
a head coach m the National
Football League this seascn
came less than 24 hours alter
Kansas C1ty s most em
barrassmg performance of
the season - a 44 7 defeat at
the hands of the Cleveland
Browns It was the stxth loss
111 seven games this year for
Kansas Ctty
The 42 year-&lt;&gt;ld former All
Pro defenSive end with the
Browns was called mto the
office of Ch1efs President
Jack Steadman at 10 30 a m
Monday When he arrtved he
also found chairman of the
board Lamar Hunt
Monday mornmg ts
relatively sacred to a head
expla10ed
football coach
W1ggm The deadlme for
your preparatton for that
week s game JS 1 p m I knew
when I was called m 11 was
gomg to be somethmg of
great magnitude When I saw
Lamar there I knew they
weren t gomg to wtsh me
happy Halloween They told
me I lost the football team by
tjletr standards they told me
I was ltred
I was s hocked _ It s
pamful I love Kansas City I
love the Kansas Ctty Ol1efs I
have a lot of respect for thts
organizatiOn I thmk what
they are domg - the
rebuildmg - IS the nght thmg
to do even If I won t be around
for tt
The Chiefs were unpresstve
desptte losmg thetr season
opener at New England 21 17
But they followed that wtth
losses to San Otego Oakland
Denver and Baltunore before
postmg a fluke 21 16 vtctory
m a rematch wtth the
Olargers
Kansas
Ctty
twtce
recovered San Dtego fumbles
mStde the 15 yard hne tn the
!mal three mmutes and
turned them mto touchdowns
to salvage the vtctorv But
then came the Cleveland
game m whtch the Browns
rolled up a club record 34 ftrst
downs and 526 total yards
We felt Paul was no longer
a poStttve force Hunt ex
plamed We are dedtcated to
seetng the Ch tefs compe\lttve

wtth the best In pro football
and we felt we were no longer
headmg m that directton
Hunt named Kansas City
defenstve backfield coach
Tom
Bettts
tntertm
replacement for Wtggm
Hunt sa td Bettts per
formance would be evaluated
at the end of the seascn to
determme tf he should be
g1ven the job on a full hme

baSIS
I did a damn good job
W1ggm satd And I ll tell you
somethmg else - I m a damn
good man Whether I m
handmg out tnck or treat
candy tomght or here
tomorrow loadmg my stuff m
the car I ll be holding my
head up
Maybe the match up of
Paul Wtggm and the Kansas
C1ty Chtefs dtdn t flt But I m
not embarrassed I truly
believe the Kansas Ctty
Ol1efs are better off now as a
football team than they were
when I came here three years
ago
W1ggm was tn the first year
of a new three year contract
Hts Oltefs were plotted the
toughest schedule m the NFL
thts year and he was at
tackmg tt wtth 27 players wtth
less than two yea rs ex
pe nence The combmed
records of the teams the
Chiefs played thiS year IS 32
10
The Kansas Ctty players
met for 20 mmutes when they
learned of W1ggm s dismiSsal
and tssued the foll ow mg
statement
We are shocked and
saddened by what has hap-

pened here Every man on
thts football team feels a deep
sense of guilt for the acttons
!hat have been taken It ts our
fault that we lost a fme man
and a great illdtvtdual Paul
W ggill One of the great
crtmes tn life 1s to have
someone suffer the con
sequences of your actions We
feel thts was the case today

passes by quarterback
Ken Hankmson The ftrst 11 as
a 5~ yard pass run to semor
end Greg Blessmg with the
second gotng to flanker Bob
Barnttz who scored for the
ltrst tune this season Both
PAT kiCks "ent w1de and
after three quarters tt was 53
0
Mtke Kmg made 11 59~ wtth
hts ltrst touchdown of the
year on a 37 yard run that was
one of the best of the evenmg
as the semor fullback broke
tackles and literally cam ed
Wtldcat defenders mlo the
end zone Ehas ktck made It

passes f r 126 yards but was

VALUE
RATEC

mtercepted tw1ce an the
second half both limes
leading tn Cardmal scores
Cardinal defemi ve back

Lee Nelson p eked off a
Pisarctk pass at the Cardinal
42 m the thtrd quarter Jerry
Latm scored from 4 yards out
to end the dnve and gtve St
lJJuts a commanding 21~
lead
St Louts safety Mtke Sen
SJbaugh nabbed another
Pisarctk throw m the fourth
quarter and returned t 79
yards for a touchdown
Pisarc k was replaced by
Jerry Golsteyn mtdway
Ulrough llle fillal quarter and
his ftrst pass was ptcked of£
by Roger Wehrli
We re a long long way
from bemg a strong offenstve
team satd New York Coach
John McVay The) played a

USED CARS

74 CHEVY NOVA
4 OR, V8
Automat c v nyl
power steer ng

roof

'2495
74 MONTE CARLO
Loaded Clean

'3495

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You II Ltke Ou1' Quality
Way of Dong Busmess

GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Even1ngs t 16 00
T
p m Sat

s

No Need To Worry!

60-0

The hnal scor e came
seconds later when Rack
Barnttz went over from one

ya rd out to make 11 6&amp;-0 The
conve rSion attempt fatted
and Wahama clauned the
ga me by a lopSided margm
Score by quarters
14 27 12 13--66
Wahama
Hannan
0 0 0 0- 0
Wahama - Sm1th I yd run
(Ehas ktck )
Wahama Roush 45 yd run
(Eitas k1ck)
Wahama Blessmg 35 yd
pass from Hanktnson (ktck
failed)
Wahama Hankillson 2 yd
run (Ehas ktck)
Wahama Roush 23 yard
run (Elias ktck)
Wahama Weaver 93 yd
run (Elias k1ck)
Wahama Blessmg 55 yd
pass from Hankmson (kick
failed)
Wahama B Barn1tz 44
yd

Meigs opens
tourney play

TH IS weeKS &gt;~c~

pass from Hankinson

(ktck fatled)
Wahama Kmg 37 yd run
(Elias ktck)
Wahama R Barn1tz I yd
run (PAT pass failed)

You con be assured coverage
of even mtnor acc1dents
w1th our full .:.uto tnsurance
pohcy Get complete deta1ls
Minimal Rates

Dowmng Ch\\ds

&lt;Qig

Insurance Agency, Inc.

The Me1gs Gtrls Volleyball
team tuned lor tis Sect10nal
opener by &lt;lroppmg two close
matches w1th Galltpobs 15 10
and 15 12 The team drew
pratse from Coach Karen
Waiker on the1r good rallies
and excellent team work The
team ended tis league season
wtth a 4-3 record wtth an
overall 9-3 mark
Metgs salvaged the JV
co ntest by takmg two
stratght 15 13 and 17 15 In
the hrst game Chene
Lightfoot served ten pomts
while m the second game
Kathy Elkms served eleven
pomts
Tomght at 4 30 Metgs wtll
open tournament play at
Metgs H1gh School when they
play Vmton County II Metgs
wms they Wlll play Gallipolis
at 6 30 Semors on thiS year s
squad are Tracy Burdette
Pat Vaughan
Marcta
Holcomb Kathy Howard
Vtcky
Epple
Peggy
G1rolam1 and Kathy Elkills

Henderson
sold by Reds
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincmnatt Reds have sold
veteran rebel pttcher J oe
Henderscn to the Toronto
a
Reds
Blue Jays
spokesman announced late
Monday
Henderson a 31 year-&lt;&gt;ld
right hander
was w1th
CillCillnatl only bnefly durmg
the 1977 season appearmg m
seven ganoes and comptlmg
an ().2 record
Wtth the Reds Cl•ss AAA
lndtanapohs farm club thiS
year he appeared m 29
games postmg a 5-5 r ecord
wlth I0 saves

Cook uP.

a new kitchen
at City Loan.
When you need money f01 a new kitchen othet home Improvement~
or for any good reason call us Well handle your loan qwckly and with
constderatwn Amounts up to $15 000 avallable
We fmd ways to help

CITY LOAN
COMPANY
125 E Mam Street 992 2171

�4- The Dall)' Sent L!l&lt;'l, Middleport-Pomeroy,~-· Tuesday, Nm·. 1, 1977

Howsam indicates Reds not finished trading

Texas retains
number o·n e
:'lEW \'ORK t UPll Tt&gt;xas has rt&gt;tained its ~pot
at op the UPl Boa rd of
C.'aches ratings by polling 36'
fi rst-placP \ ' otl"S and 3i8
p..!i nts Monday following its
2!Hl shutout over Texas Tech
h&lt;t weekend.
·
The top six teams retained
1heir positions as all of last
week's top 10 teams were
' .
rrctor1ous
.
Alabama
rema lnE.&gt;d in second with one
first -place vote and 309
pc•ints; Oklahoma was third
With 281 ; Ohio State held onto
fourth with 257; Notre Dame,
the un ly other team to re&lt;..-eive
a first1Jiace vote, was fifth
wiU1 219 i and Michigan was
sixt h with 177.
Pe\Ul State and Arkansas
reversed positions, with Penn
State moving into the seventh
spot and Arkansas dropping
to eighth, while Nebraska
held onw the lOth spot.
The only new team in the
wp 10 was Pittsburgh, the
defending national champion
whic:h mo1•ed into ninth place
following its !3-0 victory ove r
Tulane. Texas A&amp;M, No. 9
lost week, dropped out of the
top 10.

Amer •c an
Football
Coa cnes
A.ssoc• atlon teams on probat1on
b)l the N CAA are tnPI Ig tbiP tor
top 20 and nat .onal ch amp•On
ship constder a t iqn by the UP 1
Board of Coaches Thost&gt; teams
currenflv on probat ion for 1971
are Kentucky , M •chJgan Ste~lt&gt;
Redlands i (alif ), Western
5ttlte- {C olo L Houston

Nick ~!Jus

H\ tu.nn:RT SANG~-:ORGE . nghthamll'r _ Btl I JHunham

mc..ht..:t liUJiills d ub rna) nHt I.A.•

tlw :-.1ar-t uf a llli.l!iS IJIUVt'lill'nl

l'lNCINNATl 1UPll - Tht• from the l'luc-ag" Cubs
('uwumati Reds ha\·c me~d~" Mnndo.n f11r hurl~rs W(ll)(tie
111ajnr add it illll to theu· Fn nuln ~md. Ri\1 Caudill , plus
pndunt! staff, but the1r (Iff· some l'.ash.

flm sllt•d treading . " We'd lrkl'
tn l~lk\.'l.l l111 lk ami lllet) l.Jl' gt\'t.'

(lf pla}'l'I'S in th(' off-season ."
M 1•ncluy'~ trade was an

S(lllil' mort• dt•plh tu uur relll'f

attt•mpt by the lted s to
b1lstt•r thetr naut·h·mali~ned
eorps of piu·hers. In trading
Fryman, Cincinnati let go a
37-yt•ar -(l )d \'l'tl•ran whn

Sl'ason dea!Ul~ may havr just
begun .
Ute Reds atquired veteran

After lh~ deal was am1oun·
l'e&lt;l , Heds Prcsill.t•nt B1'b
H11 wsa m
gavt!
smtH.'

Monday
Football
City

Bdl Cavddl
Toronto
Acqu,red r ight
handed p iichN Joe H enderson '
trom Cincinn~tl "

Bettis as interim nead coach ro

Hockey

repla ce Paul W1991n who was
l 1red
Baseball
C•nc.nnat i
Acqu.red p 1tch
er
Bi ll
Bonham
from
the
ChiCago Cubs in p~er~~nCJ(' •c-.-

NORTH Pi\LM BEACH,
Fla. (UP!)- Jack Nickla'us
says he wants to devote more
tin1e to his family. himself,
his businesses - and yes, to
the major wurnaments.
So · golf's famed "Golden
Bear" is cutting ba ck on his
future tournament schedules,
beginning with next year.
But the game's all-time
leading money winner isn't
saying yet how many or
which events he· is goi ng to
skip
in
1978.
Tha t
announ ce ment will come
later.
.. As I've S&lt;~id many times
NEW YORK ( UP.I) The
U n i 1 e d Press International before , 1 intend to go on
Board of Coaches toP 20 1eams playing as long as 1 enjoy
dfler the eighth. week of lh~
. college football seasOn with competing and can do so
Nicklaus
: first .place voles and record in successfully ,"
~J reottwses ·
said.
Team
POints
1 Texas 136 1 (7 0 )
378
qHow ever , there would
2. Aiat~amail ) 11 · 1)
309 havetobeacutbackatsome
J. Ok lahOma (7 . 1 )
281
d. Ohio st. (7 · 1)
251 point, and I've decided to
5. Notre Dame (lJ ( 6 . 1)
219 rnakeitnow,' ' hesaid. !;That
177 way I can horw=&gt;fuUy keep my
6. Michigan (7 . 1)
7. Penn St. (7 1)
136
~"''"
B. Arkansas (6 1)
128 enthusiasm and desire at the
9. Pmsburgh (6· 1 11
39 same pitch as my actual
10. Nebraska (6.2)
36
11 Texas A&amp;M ( 6. 11
JS playing capabilities for along
12. Iowa St . ( 6 2)
15 time to come in addition to
13 . Brigham Young ( 6.1)
12
13 . Clemson &lt;7 · 0
12 better
meeting
my
15. Flor;da St. 16 11
7 responsibilities to my famil y,
16. Arizona St . (6-ll
J
f If
b ·
16 . Callfornia ( 6.2)
4 thegameo go , my usmess
18. stanford (6·2J· .
J associates, and myself."
19 . No . Carolina (6.2)
2
Tl)e move mo;~y also spell
20 . No .Texas St. ( 6·2l
1
for
the tour
Note : Bv agreement wit h the tr ouble

In

what w~ ('an do about
illlpt'•Wing uW' tx•nl'h "

St'l'

But. he c-tddcd, "1,tis 'lS not

ByUn;tedP=~~.~;o~.~~:~:~~SFryn"n "'~ Veeck named top executive
Kansas
Namt&lt;&gt;d
defensi ve bac~fie!d coac11 To m

cutting
back play

staff. And we'Ll alsu hkr

·,
wuuldn 't play f01r them
i.Ulymurt•, But they also gave
up a promising young
nghtlwnder in Caudill,
Uauu~h he had no major
INt~Ul' experienl'e_
('mdn nati has bi~ plcms for

New York Rangers
Called
up letl w1ng Beno1t Gossel in
fron' New Ha..,en ot the A.HL
and sent qown le tt w1ngs .N 1c k
Fot iu and Dan Newman

•

•

By ~' KED llOWN
UP I Sp&lt;trts Writt·r
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Bill
Vecck. the \•ld " music man"

of the 1940s and 50s wl~'
returned after a 14·yet~r
absence from baseball to lead

Garcia remains at helm
manager lor the JX!St two
LOS ANGE lES (UP i l
seasons, has threatened to sit
Dave Garcia, by default, is
still the manager of the .out U1e final season of his
three-year co ntract in 1978.
California Angels, but on ly
"His heart was set on
because Angel owner Ge ne
· managing the Angels next
Autry cou ldn 't pry Gene
year," Griffith said when
Mauch away from the re·ached in Minnesclta.
Minnesota Twins.
"But the fact is he has a
That became obvio us
eon
tract with me . I went uut
Monday night when Twins'
and paid dearly to get him .
ow ner Calvin
Griffith
confirmed that Mauch, his I'm aware of the fact that
we've . got a very unhappy
manager. He's talking abo ut
professionals who share sitting out next year. He's
Nicklaus' well known taste told me he'U give me a week
to think it over and let me
for winning the big ones.
He said his hectic schedule know.''
Gar cia , 57,
became
of the past two years has not
manager
of
the
Angels
jUst
allo wed him Hto prepare as
before
the
All-star
break
last
fully for the majo"' champion·
season
.
after
Norm
Sherry
ships as I feel is necessary to
be tot ally ready for them was fired and was given ·a
contract through 1978, but is
physically and mentally."
Nicklaus. 37, has won 16 of reportedly not sure he'U be
the majors and is the only retained in that capacity.
The Angels were the
go lfer to have won the
Masters, the U.S . and British biggest flops in baseball last
()pens and the PGA twice season. finish ing 2B games
each for sort of a career out of fir st place in the
America n League West with
double grand sl am .
But Nicklaus' last wins in a 75-88 record. They were J6.
major toW1laments was the . 46 under Garcia, who was the
Masters and the PGA in 1975, club's third-base coach at the
and that apparently has him start of last season.
Mauch smmded the Angels
concilrned.

out about the job but Griffith
denied California owner Gene
Autry pern1isSion _to talk to
Mauch , 51.
··I "'0Uldn't w ~ml Gene
Autry to be put into a position
having
to
give
of
compensation for me, "' said
Mauch , who resides in lhe off
season at Palm Springs.
Calif. " My guess is that the
thing is dead ."
Asked about next season,
he replied :
''! told Calvin I didn't feel
like managing ex pansion
teams any longer . I went to
Minnesota und ~r the premise
that we were goi ng to win
games. But if the team is
going to be decimated by
losing good players, maybe
the pr emise I went up there
under has changed.
" l will see how things
develop in the nel&lt;l couple of
weeks. I don't think I'm in a
position where I have .to be
definitive."
Tb.e. ma jor shakeup in the
ruigels' front office wit h the
hiring of E .J . "Buzzie"
&amp;ll'asi as !he club 's new
executive vice president, a
job Harry Dalton has held,
touched off speculation .that

}':
..li"'-:_.f#.. '
"

:.:

Ute Ch1cago White Sox bltck
tn rcspcetability , today was
named the UPI's majo1·
league cx:e&lt;.:utive of the year.
111e 63-year old Veeck was
Uw choic-e of 16 of the 24
spnrts
writers
who
participated in the UPI 's
annual po&amp;~eaSon survey
and W(lll the award in a
landslide vote. Gabe P11ul,
p1·esident of the New York
Yankees, received two vutes
and six other executives got
(IJl e each.

" I'm pleased," Veeck said
when he learned that he had
wt1n the award . .;But I can
thi nk 'of more deserving
people."
Veeck then listed business
manager Rudie Schafer,
treasurer Leo Breen, vice
president Rowland Hemond
and his wife, Mary Francis,
as ··ones who should share in
the award .
" Rudie Schafer would
Garcia was also on the way
out.

Autry himself has been
m'mcommi.t al, saying, ''We
may make a change and we
may not."
Autry went out an d poured
an estin1ated $8 million into
the Ange ls last season in
order to make them into
c0ntcnders and was bitterfly
disappointed at the results.
He relegated Dalton into
the No. 2 spot in his front
office and made himself the
cl ub's president. replacing
Arthur " Red " Patterson.
Like · .Dalton, Patterson
rema ined with the team.

rcHlly be a more lugit:al
l'huice/' said Veeck. "He
clues all the work and l lake
the bows.
''1 honestly believe this
honor should go to a club
instead of an individual,"
Veeck con tinued. "It' s a team
nperatiolo(l'he way !look at it
is that l' m honor.ed that the
club won it."
A promotional wizard who
has repeatedly offended the
baseball establishment
during a 44-year year in
baseba ll , Veeck •1arted out in
baseball mailing out tickets
for the Chicago Cubs' Ladies

Day ga mes.
"Then l branched out," he
recalls. " I was a stockroom
boy in the concession
department.
I
sold
concessions ... I worked with
the ground crew .. .! painted
and cleaned up the park .. .!
did ever)1hing-4lut play shortstop ... ) was a
lo usy
ballplayer."
Veeck enjoyed his greatest
success with the Cleveland
Indians from 1946 through
1949. The Indians, who hadn't
won a peiUlant s in ce~l920,
doubled their attendance in
his first year and set an
attendance record in 1948.
They capped that season by
defeating the Boston Braves
in the World Series.
Veeck, wlio also won a
pe1mant with the White Sox in
1959 before ill health forced
him ou{ of the game two
years la ter, returned to
baseball after a H· yea r
absence in 1975.

, SUPERMARKET
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

. ' ...-~ COINER MILl. &amp; SECOND .IT.

~

MIDDLEPORT,

Bonham. The club made the
trade with the idea lhat
Bonham. 29, will move Into
U1eir startilll! rotation next
season,
H o wsam
acknowledged .
"We think ·Bill Bonham will
gi"c us the experience and
the depth we need among our
starters,''tiowsam said. 4 'We
were looking to balance our
staff between experience and
yoUth. "
Bonham. was J0-13 for the
Cubs last s.ason with a u~
EllA in 34 starts. He was with
Oticago for five seasons and
in !heir. starting rotation for
U1e last four years. He has
agreed to a four -year
contract with U1e Reds.
fry man came to Cincinnati
from the Montreal Expos last
season as part of a
controversia l deal . for
popular first baseman Tony
Perl!'L. 111e Reds' front offic-e
too k adde d heal when
Fryman got off to a
disa ppoin tin g start last
season, then announced his
retirement in mid-July.
A few days later, Fryman
told the Reds he would return
w baseball, bul not with
Cincinnati. The lefthander
was 5-5 with a 5.40 ERA when
he left the club. He since has
been on the disqualified list .
Fryman said fr om his
Ewing, Ky., home Monday he
didn't
anticipate
any
problems agreeing to a
contract with Chicago.
Caudill, the third player in
the trade, pitched in lhe
Cincinnati farm · system this
season. He began at Three
Rivers of the Class AA
Eastern League, compiling a
13-4 recoid in 19 starts for a
4.42 ERA .
Promoted to Indianapolis
of the Class AAA American
As&gt;&lt;~ciation later in the year,
Caudill was 2-2 with a 3.65
ERA in eight ·starts. The 21·
year-old originally came w
the Reds during spring
training in a trade with St .
Llluis for Joel Youngblood.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities

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BROUGHTON'S

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MILK ....... ?~.~?.N..•.

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US GRADE B
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COFFE E•••••••••••••••••
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BANANAS
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$1

READEROEFENDSANGELDUST
DEAR RAP :
Someone wrote you asking what "Angel Dust" was. You
gave the typical answer: The correct chemical name and exaggerated horror stories about the effect. You know absolutely
nothing when it comes right down to facts! So you resort to
scare taclics.
You never told the questioner what PCP (Phencyclidine)
looks like, how it's taken or what it reaDy does. So I'Uput you
• both straight.
First of all, Angel Dust is smoked. The so-called animal tranquilizer is sprayed or " dusted" on mint leaves, then ground up.
It alrnostlool\5 like pot but much greener.
There is a distinct mint-like after-taste, even with a small
puff, and it smells minty before it's lit up.
It can't be passed off as pot or other drugs, and who would
want to anyway, as it's more expensive. Some people add it a
pinch at a timetoajoint.
Second, though Angel Dust is quite strong, I've smoked it on
at least four occasions and was not "sent up the waU', or
knocked cold or killed, nor did I have prolonged after-ilffect.s.
· Only one guy I know went kind of psychotic, and he was having
emotional problems before he took PCP. Besides, he smoked
pure Angel Dust.
.
I do not reconunend that anyone try: It's .nothing to fool
ar(!und with, but Helen and Sue, if you .want to keep kida away
from chemicals, tell them the facts, not scare stuff. It almost
becomes a dare, in the same way those wild lies about pot
helped make it No. 1. PCP is much stronger than booze or
marijuana. It could be dangerous. Leave it at that. . TRUTH

nJESDAY
REVIVAL AT THE
COOLVILLE
Alleghany
Wesleyan Church, with
Evangelist Rev. Murray
Mayle, 7:30 each evening.
Rev. Robert Brooks, pastor.
Church is-located on Route 7
north of Tuppers Plains.
'
· POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn . Representatives from division of
forestry wlll attend.
SUTTON Township
Trustees Tuesday 8 p.m. at
Syracuse Municipal Building.
REVIVAL UNDERWAY at
the Racine First Baptist
Church, beginning Oct. 30 ani!
running through the week,
7;30 each evening with the
Rev. Mark McClung, Leon,
W. Va ., Baptist Church
pastor speaking . Special
music each evening, public
invited.

i

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'

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Kimberly Knight

"
POMEROY Chapter 186,
TO
WED
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl Dean Knight of New Haven
7;4~ p.m. Tuesday at the
announce
the
elll!agement
and
approaching marriage of their
Temple. . Past matrons and
Kiml¥'rly
Ren~,
to
Danny Lee Litchfield, son of
daughter,
past patrons will be honored.
and
Manon
Leo
Litchfield, New Haven .
June
Litchfield
There will be initiation.
Miss
Knight
Is
a
1976
graduate
of Wahama High School
XI
GAMMA
MU
CHAPTER OF Beta Sigma and 1977 graduate of West Virginia Career College, Huntington, where she received a degree In Secretarial Science.
Phi Sorotity, 7;30 Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Carol She is now employed as a secretary with the Bay-Con corAdams, Syracuse, with Mrs. poration. Her fiance is a 1974 graduate of Wahama Hi&amp;h
Ruth Riffle and Mrs. Susan School, attended West Virginia University,and Parkersburg.
Oliver to present the cultural . Community College where he is working toward a degree in
report. Mrs. Sharon Bailey Electrical Engineering. He is presently employed as a
and Mrs. Charlotte Hanning
bollennaker with the Union Boiler Co. ·
will be co-hostesses for the
The wedding will be an event of Nov . 12, 2:30 p.m. at the
card party to be held in conNew Haven United Methodist Church. The gracious custom of
juntion with the meeting.
open church will be observed.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE
363, F. and A. M. 7:30 Tuesday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
WEDNESDAY

'

UNITED METHODIST
WOMEN, Letart Falls
Methodist Church 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. John Hill. Program by
Mrs. Don Bell.
UNITED
Methodist
Women, 7;30 Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. John Hill,
Letart Falls Chilrch. Mrs.
Don Bell to have the program.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
members plan to eat out Oct.
'tl at &amp;:SO p.m. at. Bob Evans
Restaurant at Rio Grande.
TIIURSDAY
EVANGEUNE Chapter,
OES, 7;30 Thursday at the
·
Temple.

~
~

·w

w
w

Things that go
I do in the night
NEW ROADS, La. (UP[).:..
Patty Gremillion and RObert
Wendt celebrated Halloween
by treating their friends to a
costwne party and tricking
them into attending a
wedding.
" It was her idea," said
Marilyn O'Brien, who served
as a bridesmaid Monday
night at the GremillionWendt wedding . "I asked her
why she chose Halloween and
,she said it was the most
pleasurable day of. the year
for her as a child - it held
more meaning even than
Christmas. And she wanted
everybody w remember it."
The coupl e invited 200
friends to a Halloween
costwne party. Most of the
guests, who dressed as
ballerinas, clowns, monsters
and other characters, knew •
nothing of the wedding plans
in advance.
0 This
is a surprise
wedding," Miss O'Brien said .'
"They think they're here for
a masquerade ·party. The
groom is Frankenstein and
the bride is the bride of
Frankenstein.
'
"She is in an ivory-eolored
Victorian gown typical of
Frankenstein 's bride. Her
face is white with the bright
red lipstick and hollow uru wn

..
wer
e
h /d
Sho

A bridal shower was held
recently for Miss Darlene
Roush, bridHlect of Jim McClure, by the women of the
First Southern Baptist
Church, Pomeroy.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Carolyn
Daily and Mrs. Bobbie
Pauley. The cake was made
by Mrs. Do!UI8 Spencer and
was decorated with doves and
roses and inscribed "Darlene
and Jim."
Attending were Mrs.
Rachael Lefebre,.Mrs. Sylvia
1 Zwilling, Miss Betty Gilmore,
Mrs. Clara White, Miss
Cheryl Lefebre, Miss Jeanie
McClure, Miss Kim BaSham,
Mrs. Rhojean McClure, Mrs.
Lean Basham and Ray Lynn,
Mrs. Carolyn Dailey, Mrs.
Carol Russell, Mrs.Donna
Spencer, and Mrs. Corena
Farmer.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Iva
Cremeans, Mrs. Helen
Handley, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Sams, Mr, and Mrs. Purl Van
Meter, and Miss Georgene
Gr11te.

"

'

. 89¢

$2.48 Value
F.I . P . Price .

$1 .79 Value

f_r.f . Price.

SELSUN BLUE
Shampoo

Lo tion - 4 oz.

~:;~. ~:;~:. ~1

$139

SIJ!"BF.t.lT£0

BASIS'
SOAP

WOO LITE
Travel Pack
20's

~
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~

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Y.i

.W

Shaaow ali around the eyes
and jet-black eyebrows. The Vi
groom is dressed in a black
tuxedo and his face is green." ~
Wendt , 27, works a welder W
and commercial diver. His
bride, 22, is director of W
respiratory therapy at Pointe
Coupee General Hospital. ·
The wedding was held at
the home of a hospital co- ?1
worker. It was decorated
with orange and black
candles, palm branches and a ·
Vi
canopied ceiling.
The Rev , Charles Stim'ac, a Y.i
Neo-American preacher, Vi
presided at the ceremony.
" He thinks that people
should be married as they
feel, just whatever they feel
like doing," said Wendt.
The bride and groorri met
about eight months ago at a
party. He asked her several ~
weeks ago to marry him and
she pic~ed Halloween as the
w
date.
I
''Oh, he: was aU for it,'' the
bride said. "He loved it."
The Wendts remained at
the party after the wedding to
~
celebrate with their friends.
Yi
Their host planned a steak,
V1
cha mpagne
and
eggs
breakfast today bef&lt;.-e the
W
couple · began a honeymnnn
trip to Florida .

v;

Vi

~

$1.13 Value
F.I.P. Price •. .

69¢
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
'

Bubble Bath

~

·~

16oz.

Yl l

"""'*ii.IJ. .
·~

, 11(3' I

""'' 11'1 1

.:;.-

$1 .19 Value
'
F.I.P. Price·- ·

65¢

WIZARD

·•~''

Ki;·H

l tb~

Solid Deodorant

. lemon - Evergreen
• American Beauty

. 79' Value '
F.I.P- Price . • •

39¢

Fall Ftstiual of-

V1

~
V1

To Our 1977 Christmas
Club Members To Help
Provide Them With A Wony.free
Holiday Season.

-

Christmas Corsage
For Every Lady Who
Opens A Christmas
Club Account

Reg .• Unscented Spring ,

Liqu i d - 16 oz .

-~

Baby Powder

~

$1 .39 Value
F.I.P. Price • .•

69¢

Protein Power Diet

$7 .95 Value
F.I.P. Price ·- -

$499

I

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CHRISTMAS
CLUB
OPEN YOUR NEW ACCOUNTS
AS OF NOVEMBER 1, 1977

SLIM FAST

Super Roll-On Deodorant

~·

~R'1III&amp;!ll
,......- JOIN ~
OUR

SUAVE

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PRINGLES

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Twin Pack
' 9 oz .

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Lozenges
24's

I
$113,000.00 I

'78

~

CEPACOL

MORE THAN
WILL BE GOING IN THE-MAIL
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1977

V1

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Riffle, Sr., Rt . I, Leon,
announce the engagement of their daughter, Anna Belle, to
Marvin Allen Benson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Ben~on,
Redmond Ridge, Gallipolis Ferry.
Miss Riffie Is a 1977 graduate of Point Pleasant High
School and is employed by L. H. Putz of Point Pleasant. Her
fiance Is a 1975 graduate of Point Pleasant High School and is
employed by the .West Virginia Malleable Iron Co. ·
Wedding plans are incomplete.
•

Tablets - 500 mg . 60's

20 Count

DEART.T.:
Your letter sent me to the Aquarian Effort, a Sacramento
drug-help center, and to the crime lab at our county district attorney's office. Experts there agreed your "little knowledge"
could be a very dangerous thing. I learned:
PCP or Angel Dust is recognized by counter-culture clinics
and law enforcement agencies alike as loday's most
dangerous and unpredictable illegal drug. (My Aquarian advisor says only alcohol is more potentially damaging, and of
course it's legal.)
No one knows exactly why Angel Dust (Magic Mist, Super·
joint, Wobble Weed, Hog) makes some users psychotic, but
researchers often blame contaminates left in or added to the
mixture by back-alley chemists (who put it together cheap,
fast and unlawfully) . .
"We've even found cyanide in street PCP," says Ken Mack
of the crime lab.
At an average $f.OO per "high," PCP is sold as an inexpensive substitute for cocaine, heroin or I:BD; and it isn't
always smoked. People who take it in pill fonn run greater
risks than do those who dust it into herb or marijuana cigarettes • orsoak cigarettes in liquid PCP, then dry and try.
Not every Angel Dust experimenter "climbs the walls," but
Ulose so-Called ''Scare stories" are true:
"I've seen guys who were still hallucinating three weeks
later," says the Aquarian Effort medical advisor. "We get
three or four a- month in real trouble with PCP." Both men insist it can cause brain damage with short-term use. It also produces comas, schizophrenic behavior, delirium, convulsions
and euphorias· and you can die from an overdose, sometimes
from self-inflicted injuries. It has no antidote. One last correction, T.T.: Jim Lavine, Cook County (Chicago) assistant
state's attorney, estimates only 25 percent of buyers know
what they're getting. In hls area (and probably elsewhere)
PCP is sold as "tic" (TIIC, the active ingredient in pot, I.SD,
mescaline ... or even "cheap cocaine." MY last word: don't
mess with it! -HELEN
r-~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~~~

w

Anna Riffle

TYLENOL
Extra Strength

FESCO. SE-43
Trash Bags

TElLER

~

FRIDAY
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
Friday night at the Rock Springs hall. Fifth degree will be
conferred. Ohio Valley
Grange will be host.

Mr. and Mrs. Alan Mills
(Mary GaUagher) Syracuse,
are announcing the birth of a
six pound, 14 ounce son, Oci.
26 at the Holzer Hospital. The
baby has been named Mark
Alan.
Gran-dparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Smith, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Mills, Rutland. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Carroll Johnson,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Kloes, Syracuse, Mrs.
Frankie AUen, Huntington,
W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. C, D.
Gallagher, College Park, Ga.
Great-great-grandparents
are Mrs. Ger!J:ude KLoes,
Middleport; C. P. GaUagher,
CoUege Park, Ga.; Franklin
Utile, Pomeroy, and Mrs.An. . tha Mjlls, Syracuse.

GROUND 99~
CHUCK •••L~~.
.'

Social
Calendar

Son born

FRESH &amp; LEAN

-·'

_5 - .The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'uesday, Nov. I, 1977

1

89' Value

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'11

W

WALK-UP TELLER WIND()W AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M. .

ROLAIDS
hblets
Peppermint . 150's

"THE

w

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FRIENDLY BANK"

J

•

&amp;J

Cotton Swabs
200's

I

$1 31 Val ue
F .I.P. Price ...

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit lnsuran,~:e
Corporation

L~~OSITS

INSURED TO

'40,0~~ ...

75

~~.~;.~:;~: ...~139

•

�7 The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 1, 1977

6- The Daily Sentuwl, Mtddlep..&gt;rt-Pomorc&gt;y, 0 ,, Tuesday, No\'. I, t9i7

.

POLLYS POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Spots a famili&lt;Jr problem
espectally true of wet or
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Have 1ou damp things. There are many
a solution for a person O\'E'j. 40 things that can be used In·
who has several dark brown stead of newspaper.
After r ead in g the
spots that look like frPCkles
on the face and hands ? After newspaper look at your hands
working with.office machines and the ink that has rubbed
and getting a lot of blue car- off on lhem. Wash them and
bon on my hands, my finger· see how dirty and'"gray the
nails began splitting and peel· lather looks. That shows what
ing. They are in a very bad you are doing to your ca~t,
condition. I have tried furniture and even clothing
everything they suggested at when they are subject to
the drug store and nothing repea ted co nta ct with
helped, so 1 hope you can of· 11ewspapers. - PHYllJS.
DEAR READERS
fer something.- RUBY.
DEAR RUBY- You failed to Phyllis failed to mention the
say how much over· 40 vou

are, but as one aqes there is a
tendency to get brown spots
on the skin.· Evidently you
have missed the conunercia l
on TV that pictures a lady
eating lunch with her gloves
on hecause she is ashamed of
the brown spots on her hands.
The ad is for a product that is
supposed to elinninate them
but 1 have never tried it. 1 just
live with them.
Have you asked your doctor
about the splitting and peel·
ing nails ? You should; you
might have some sort of
1~tamin deficiency. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is ·with those who sug·gest using newspapers on
carpets for protection when
painting or on pathways after
the carpet has been shampooed . Newspaper is very a~

sorbent, but the ink is easily
transferred to everything it
comes in contact with. This is

many things one ra n lise in·

stead of newspapers so here
goes. Old shower curtains or
plastic drop cloths are good.
Brown paper works, or even

plastic dry cleaners bags if
you have no heavi·e r plastic.
Discarded plastic tablecloths
and even worn sheets can be
kept to use for such purposes,
too. - POL\ Y.
DEAR POLLY - It takes
quite a bit of flour to try
chicken and the same goes
for cornmeal used to fry fish.
I put the flour or cornmeal in
a plastic bag and shake the
pieces to be cooked in the
bag. When finished 1 tie off
the remainder of the flour oc
cornmeal left in the bag and
out it in the freezer until i am
ready to fry again. I find I
canuse the contents of such a
bag two or three times
without it going stale. -

Mary Martin attends conference
Mrs..

.
fe&lt;·ts.of alcoholtn th;• tanuly

Mary Marton,
Pomeroy, naltonal ~hi ldren life. classroom. and social at'
and )~Outh chainnan of Eight t.tvities and blamed much of
and Forty Nahunale, return- the probletns on parent in·
ed Saturday night from fluence and "homes where
Midland. Mit·h. where she at· alco,hol,!s a_way of life in the
tended that nudwestern area famtly . He eaUed for firmt'Onferences of the Amencan · ness and diScipline tn the
l .egoon. tts AtLxthary , and the famli)', expressed hjs opposiEi!(ht and Forty.
lion to the legal privileges of
Represeniallves from 12 the 18 year old and called for
states were present for the the PTA'sof the coWltry, the
conferences with emphases parents. the courts, and
of the . conference being on organizations to work toward
educatoon and scholarship, some action which would
the alcohol and drug pro- make it illegal for 18 year olds
blenlS of youth, and child to buy hquor. He listed
alcohol as the first problem of
abuse and neglect.
Participating on a panel teenagers and drugs as sediscussion for education and

scholarship were George
Worden, executive director of
the Michigan Education
Association ; Thomas Blesch,
coordinator of scholarship
and tuition grants for the
Michigan Department of
Education; Mrs. James Starr
national chairman of educalion and scholarship for the
Auxiliary, who talked on the
observance of American
Educatton Week. Other
representatives of the Legion
and the Auxiliary took part in
. the discussions. .
Veterans rehabilitation and
voiWJteers involved in the
programs was a!so discussed
during the conferences with
Mrs. Alvin Moltzen of North
Dakota, national pr~ident of
the Auxiliary, speaking at a
banquet on the needs of
veterans. Both Mrs. Martin
and Miss Julia Mullan, na·
tionale chapeau of the Eight
and Forty, brought greetings
several times during the cqnferences .

JEAN.

Keynote speaker ror the
program on alcohol and youth
was Dr. John E. Mayer, NOrthwestern
Memorial
Hospital , Institute of
Psychiatry, Chicago. The
program also featured a
" Hist orical Highlights , panel discussion with
American Baptist ·Mission in students, PTA members and
Haiti. ro
an alcoholic taking part.
The Love -Gift program by · Dr. Mayer talked on the ef·
Frances Wilcoxen followed.
She used the hymn, "Love :!:::::::~-:···r~.:.: :: ±xa-·····
Divine, All Loves Excelling"
and the scripture II Cor. 9:~
following by a meditation,
"What Makes a Gift of Love"
and closed with the
dedication pra yer for the
offering. The word "power"

--Esther Circle meets
MISSIOnary t:JrCie

The Esther Missionary
Circle met Thursday evenin~
Oct. 20 with Mrs. Frances
Wilcoxen as hostess at her

home. Devotions by Vera
Beegle opened the meeting
with group singing of "Will
Jesus .Find Us Watching ?"
scripture and a
Prayer,
reading " Something Won·
derful Has Happened" were
included in the devotionals.
Mrs . Gretta Sim pson,
chairman, . presided at t~e
business session when White
Cross work was discussed
and reports give 0 . The
program by Mrs. Mildred
Hart was · on ~"Ha iti "· .
Readings by members were
from the st udy book

I Social
I Calendar

cond.

The speaker also com'
mented on the role of AA in
assisting alcoholics of all
ages and encouraged parents
to look objec'tively at their
children and do the ·right
thing by providing them with
the help they need toward
solving their problems.
Also speaking at ' the
meeting was a representative
of the . Division of Health,
Education and Weifare who
talked about Immunizing
children. There were also sessions on child abuse and
neglect , including a film, and
information on reporting incidents.
Mrs. Martin, a memher of
the Meigs County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty, talked on
respiratory diseases. She
noted that tuberculosis con-

RAKE·A·THON SET
What with the harvest crop
of fall leaves, members of the
Southern High School Band
should do well with their
rake·a·thon to be held
Saturday starting at 9 a.m.
Band members will rake
leaves at homes in the area

charging $2 for small ya rds
and $5 for big ones. Into the
bargain, the students will
dispose of the· leaves.
Residents wishing the service
may call 992-5241 in the
Syracuse area; 993-3038 in the
Racine area; 247-2401 in the
Letart area and 843-3009 in
the Portland area.

- REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at the
Freedom Gospel Mission ,
was discussed with Bible
Bald Knob, Nov. 6 through
WEDNESDAY
verses by Helen Sinnpson.
REVIVAL at Pomeroy Nov. 20, at 7:30 tach evening.
The meeting closetf with the
Church
of the Nazarene Speakers will be the Rev. L.
gro up singing "My Prayer"
beginning
Nov. 2 continuing R. Gluesencamp and James
and prayer by Helen SimpNov.
6 at 7:30. p.m. Cundiff. The Rev . Wi&gt;ody
through
son. Mrs. Wilcoxen served
each
evening
with ttie Rev. Harper, Big Chimney, W.
refreshments. The Halloween
John
Elswick,
Athens, as Va., will be speaker on Nov.
theme was carried out in the·
evangelist. The Rev. Clyde 11 and 12 an&lt;! the Joy Beams
decorations and favors.
Henderson, pastor, invites vocal group from Charleston
public to services which will will sing on Nov. 11 with the
f~ature special vocal num· Gospel Tones of Chester to
sing on Nov. 12. There will be
bers each evening.
singing each evening.
special
POMEROY LODGE 164,
The
public
is invited.
F&amp;AM, regular meeting, 7: 30
p.m. Wednesday; all Master
work always is reflected on Masons invited.
His patients' faces.
THURSDAY
HOMECOMING SLATED
During the business
BOARD
OF
Meigs
The annual homecoming of
session, various reports were . American Cance r Society the Enterprise United
given and a letter read from ' Chapter n:teeting, 1:30 .p.m. Methodist Church will be held
. aacone Co llege. Also a Thursday m east-west dimng Sunday. A potluck dinner will ,
Thanksgiving dinner was room. of Veterans Memorial _ be held at noon . '!'he afplanned for the November Hospttal; speaker wiU be · ternoon program starting at
meeting to be at the home of present.
'
1:30 P'm. will feature the
the teacher, Mrs. Marjorie
. FRANCISCAN MEALS for Gospel Tones.
Grimm. The hymn , ''Give Me sock
and
shut-in s
Thy Heart ", wassung and the organizational meeting , 7:30
BAZAAR PLANNED
meeting closed with The p.m. Thursday at St. Paul
A Christmas bazaar and
Lord's Prayer in unison. Lutheran Church; anyone bake sale will be held ThursDuring a fellowship hour, interested please attend.
day from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at
Mrs. Ervine served refresh·
ANNUAL SACRED Heart the Enterprise United
ments using the Halloween Church Bazaar Thu rsday Methodist Church. Christmas
motif in decorati ons and starting with dinner at 4:30 cOokies, candies, baked goods
favors.
p.m.; games and fancy and tree ornaments will be
stands.
for sale.
REVIVAL Nov. 3 through
Nov. 6, 7:30 each evening
TAPE PL1\YED
with Elder Donald Barnette
SALE SLATED
A tape entitled · " Born as evangelist at Faith
A
rummage
sale will be
Again" by Dr. Johll Rice was Tabernacle Church, Bailey
held
by
the
Grace
Episcopal
played at a recent meeting of Run Road, Pastor E. A.
Church
Women
at
the
parish
the Golden Rule Class of the Rawson invites the public.
house in Pomeroy from 10
Middleport First Baptist
Church. During the meeting
TWENTY-FIVE member a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday and
plans were made for the an· choir (rom Scary Creek First Saturday. In conjunction with
nual Thanksgiving dinller to Church of God, Scott Depot, ij&gt;e event a bake sale will be
be held on Thursday, Nov. 10. W. Va. will be featured at held on Saturtlay.
New officers will he elected Syr~cuse First Church of God
then.
1'iiu?sday, at 7:30 p.m. Public
invited.
SALE SLATED
REVIVAL at Pomeroy
There , will be rummage
\Church of the Nazarene now sale Tuesday, Nov. 8 from 9 to
through Sunday. The Rev. 3 at the Heath Uniied
, REVIVAL SLATED
Johnny Elswick, ·Ath ens , Methodist Church In Mid·
· There will be ·a revival at evangelist. Public invited. dleport . Any member wishing
the MI. Union Baptist Church The Rev. Clyde Henderson is to donate rummage are to
Nov. 7 through the 13th at 7:30 pastor.
ca U 992-2901 .
p.m. nightly. Evangeiist will
be Merlin Teets. On Friday,
Nov. 11 th e New Life quartet
will be featured. John Els·
wick is the pastor.
'

Boosters gather
The Booster Sunday School
Class was hosted by Mrs.
Garnet Ervine at her home
Friday evening, Oct. 21.
Group singing of " I Know
Who Holds Tomorrow"
opened the meeting with '
prayer · by Vera Beegle. The
scripture was The Vine and
Branches from Johll 15, read
responsively, Helen Simpson
leading . A duet, "Each Step I
Ta ke" by Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm and Miss Vera
Beegle,
followed;
The
program
consisted
of
readings on Halloween,
brought by the members. It
was noted that Halloween is a
ntght for make-believe with
costu me and makeup o.r
mask. Hiding behind masks
ond pretending to be someone
we aren't is great fun for a
night but it's best that we
confine them to the one day a
year, rether than trying to
cover up jealousy, hatred;
greed, or anger. But to
confess those fee lings to God
and ask Him to help us deal
woth the m. He is the
ppysician of the heart whose

SLIDES TO RE SEEN
A series of slides will he
. shown for the next fiv e SWl·
day evenings at 7 p.m. at the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Da y Sai nts,
Portland-Racine Branc h.
These slides will be 'shown
and narrated by Joe Stobart. ·

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J. C. WOOFTER, M.D.
DEMATOLOGIST
(DISEASES &amp; TUMORS OF SKIN)
When: l s i &amp; Jrd Thursdays
9 A.M. Until Finished
Where : Dr. Ridgeway' s Office
Mulberry Height s
(Across from Vet. Mem . Hos pital)
Pomeroy. Ohio -99n3BO ·

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'1 00

00

TRADE-IN .

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON' FURNITURE
Mon. , Tues., Wed. &amp; SaL-8:30 Iii 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-SS92

'Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va .

a senous health · the children .and youth pro-

tinues to be
problems and strikes about
50,000 Americans each year.
She said that more than 30
million Amencans are carriers of the tubercular germ,
and that 750,000young people
Wider the age of 15 now has or
.will have tuberculosis.
Mrs. Martin also spok
about · cystic fibrosis noting
thatoneinevery1500livebir·
ths have CF. She tlllked about
the symptoms of CF as well
a s asthma and other
respiratory diseases. As for

grams ofthe Eight and Forty,
Mrs. Martin stressed promolion of programs on the local
level, then the COllllty level,
then the state and finally the
NationaiJewishHosp;tai.
A plaque was presented to
Miss Mullan for Eunice
Staley, the 1976 natinal
children and youth chainnan,
for 100 percent reporting
across the. nation. Approximately 350 persons attended
theconferences.
·

Sorority meets
A goal of $500 for expenses
of reprinting the Hardesty
History of Meigs Cowoty was
set when the 'Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority met Thursday
night at the home of Mrs.
Lillian Moore.
Dale Harrison was a guest
at the meeting and spoke on
Issue 2 which would ban the
use of the leghold trap. The
chapter voted to oppose Issue
2 to be voted on in the
November genera l election.
The preferential tea was
set for Nov. 20 with the place
to be annollllced later. It was
noted that the afghan used in
a flllld raising project was
won by a Mason, W. ya. man.
The girl of the year pin was
presented to Mrs. , Jane
Walton. Refreshments were
served.

Nancy J. Mykel, sp&lt;lkesperson for the sponsoring
group, now urges all
persons in the area wbo are
interested In women's
right, of every race, creed
and economic level, to
attend an open meeting
toolgbt at 7 p.m. In the
multi-purpose room of the
Colllmuoity Mental Health
Center. Atty. Debbie
Badonsky, vice president
of
· tbe
National
Organization of Women of
Obto and worker wltb
Legal Aid In Dayton, wffi
speak to the group on the
goals and objectives of Ibis
organization wbicb is
work.iog for equal rights for
women everywhere.
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MEETING SLATED
The ladies auxiliary of the
Middleport Fire Department
will meet Wedllesday, Nov. 2
at 7:30 p.m. at the fire
station. Members are asked
to bring favorite recipes,
craft or art work that they
would like to demonstrate
and share with others. Plans
for Christmas party will be
made. Workers are also
needed. Donations will be
accepted lor F.O.P. dinller ..
ADDRESS GIVEN
Persons who wish to write.
to , James E. Holman his
address is Pvt. James E.
Holman, 272-60-9572, SVC
Battery 3 - 21st, Fort Polk,
Louisiana 71459.
Stiversvilfe
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Sneed, Massillon, and
Patricia Pauley, Portland,
visited Mr. and Mrs. W. S.
Long, on Wednesday.
Clint Birch and Leota,
local, and Mrs. Elva Dailey,
Syracuse, called on Mr. and
Mrs, George Hupp, Letart
Falls on Thursday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lewis
and Sons, Charleston, W. Va.
were weekend guests of his
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Bryant, Debra and David.
. Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Curtis, Mt. Hope, W. Va.
visited her mother, Mrs.
Sylvia Carpenter, over the
weekend .

Mr . and Mrs . F·red
G'o eglein visited
in
MiUersport Thursday with
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Karr.
Miss Mercedes Condon had
as her guests rPCently Mrs. A.
H. Baer of Columbps and
Howard Slack, Westerville,
her cousins. During their visit
they dro'P" to Gallipolis to
view the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell Shahan.

Girl Scouts on the move·

''Awareness of Health Ser·
vice" was the program topic
presented by Mrs. Joan Culp
at the recent meeting of the
MiddleportPomeroy Area
Branch of the American
Association of uiuversity
Women held at the Meigs
High School Library.
Mrs. Culp introduced Mrs.
Gene Lyon5,adft\intstrator of
the Meigs Collllly Health
Departinent, who distributed
folders on the department
services, and solicited voteS
for the public health levy of
one mill for a period of 10
years to be on the November
ballot.

Mrs. Lyons spoke of the
medical and nursing services
of the Health Department
which includes medical
clinics, school health programs and holl)e visits; the
environmental services such
as food service, rabies con·
trol, and sewerage disposal,
and water inspection.
She said that the money
from the levy would go for
salaries for additional per·
SOMel, some now being paid
through federal funds, including the s$ry for the
sanitarian, Gary Aspin. The
department .now has a full·
time administrator, one full·

junior miss finals to be held
Scholastic achievement,
physical weD-being, poise,
groomin g, appearance,
creativity, perception and
ability in hwnan relations are
all among the areas to be
considered by the judges for
the 1978 Southeast Ohio
J unlor Miss finaLS to be .held
at the Meigs junior High
School auditorium , Mid·
dleport, November 20
beginning at 3:30 p.m.
Ralph· H. Werry, general
chainnan of the Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship
Finals, stated today the
Meigs CoWlty High School
senior girls competing for the
1978 title will be competing
for the titles of North Meigs
ColllltY Junior Miss, 1978 ·or
South Meigs ·County Junior
Miss, 1978.
·
The Southeast Ohio Junior
Miss finals Is the only local
Junior . Miss Program that
sends two representatives
from their area. lt is
foreseeing of the ·tinne when
six regiopal Junior Miss
program will be held in the
state with the top four con·
testants attending the state
finals.
'
.The Junior Miss program
seeks to encourage ex·
cellence in yoWlg people by
focusing attention of the
positive achievements of high
school senior , girls. It Is
supported by concerned
parents, educators, civic
groups, business and govern·
ment. Local and state
competitions are organized
and conducted by some 30,000
volllllteers in aU fifty states.
To the girls who take part,
Junior Miss means a chance
at a college education and the

'
cha llenge of competition,
wann friendships with fellow
contestants, excitement and
wholesome, constructive fUll.
The local Junior Miss
Program is sponsored by the
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss,
Inc.,
a
non' proflt
organlzidion.

DINNER HELD
WillJam Roush and his
wife, Ilab, were honored With
an appreciation dinner
foUowing the SUilday morning service at the at the
.church which he pastors, The
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Portland-Racine Branch.
Gilts from the congregation
were presented by Robert
. and Richard McHaffie. Anna
and James McHaffie had
charge of the arrangements
for the turkey, chicken, and
ham dinner with aU thetrim.mings served to memhers
and 'friends of the church.

REUTER-BROGAN
"The Insurance Store"

s. Life InsUrance
0. Boat Insurance

7. Motorcycles
B. Jewelry and Other
Valuables
9. Business Package
Policies
10. Liability Insurance
11 . Farm Insurance

"If You Have It, We "Can Insure It"
PACKAGE POLICY - Put your auto, home, health
and life insurance into ONE pol icy. Save money and
have one premium due dMe for all your insurance .
Som e Of Our Other Services:
Cop-y SerVice · Notary Service · Car LeaSing Service

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

SERVIC~.

"The tnSurance St~re"

214 E. MAIN

·SPECIAL
CUTS
OF

FCJCC ST0r:t&amp;8

STORE HOURS

_ .;;' MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

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SWIFT WAFER SLICED PEPPERONI ~:;

VEAL

PH. 992-5130

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Pound

and

U.S. D.A. CHOICE BLADE CUT

CH CK
SUPEJiJQ.R

ARMOUR

LAMB

12Dl.
PKG.

BRAUNSCHWEIGER
.... ~~~.~~.. 69e
ARMOURS
SAUSAGE Limit With coupon .... ~?~~~- '1 49

69~

l%ttUUt'Ub],1@j
'

WHITE POTATOES

"THE DOG KJDS LOVE TO BITE"

•379

50 LB.

BAG

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\ '

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and Order

..... 79•
Coo

Cuts Of
Meat You

Desire,
Stop In

.

i.f you buy noV#I

Get a free Oster Kitchen Center with the
purchase of any Gehl Mix-Al l. You'll handle
gnndtng and mlx ing chores in a hurry with a
Geh l Mtx·Ail . And the Oster Kitchen Center is
a great torne-saver for yo ur whole farnily. Offer
good for a lomoted t ime on ly. See us .soon:

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FARM EQUIPMENT

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Shinn's Tractor Sales ••
Phone 458-1630
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W.VA. •

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12 OZ. PKG.

1 29

OCEAN PERCH .........

~ ..~~: .. ~asp•$

TANGELm:
........................
99
GOLDEN Ri'lf!r
·
BANANAS
..................~ ..~~:.sse
FRESH· TENDER
CARROTS
.........~.~~:.~~?... 2/49$
FANCY SLICING
TOMATOES ..................:.~:.. 49c

Pft:rwrc 5T'fu

PORK ROAst . "
PORK STEAK

CARNATION COFFEE MATE .... ·~~~· 1 11'

BROOKS CHILl Mll .................. :·c~:· 59•

PEACH PIE FILLING .................... 'g~o,: 75'

~~~·

CON TAOINA

·-·-··

TOMATO PASTE .................... 3

•

KRAFT

~;·:;

85'

'

.. lb

SHORT RIBS .... lb

S1lLE DATES
NOVEMBER 2-5, '1977

APPLE PIE FILLING ..... . ...... . 'g~o,: 59•

MARSHMALLOW CREME ......... 1 ~~~· • 69•

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
&lt;:::::,~0 STOR { S • CARDINA L•FOOtiS TOR! S

::';

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PEACHES,

~

Monarch
c; ... --

!?'"

. ~~t-IJjrltlil

MONARCH .

u.mio , .. u .....n __..., ....

_.wr"'9 .d
. 0~0
"'• "•ooo
"'Cc~...·""'"M
ft. Jltlllill"...........
29·0l
9 ..ow -"'"'

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•

Can

MONARCH YELLOW CLING

PE

wuh c:~upon and $10.~ purch~t&amp;ll

Limil twa

ududlng be 1111 . wine •nd ctgarettes ,

PIN EAPPLE ORANGE OR PINEA PPLE GRAPEFRUIT

DEL MONTE

DEL MONTE JUICE ...................... ·~~~· 49•

FRUIT &amp; PUDDING
CUPS ......... ~:';• 69'

SWEET N SOUR DRESSING ...... ~~;:,: 49'
BETTY CROCKER

ASSORTEO VARIETIES

CAKE
CHEESE

. .;
Limit one with purch~s• o f

18-oz.
Box

two 2 packs of Westmghouse
Soft White Light Bulbs at
regular pr ic~ .

JENOS DOUBLE PIZZA MIXES
.';.:· s I 09 SAUSACE ... .':'.:' 1 119 PEPPERONI .. .':;:~ 1 11·9
M

~&lt;;:,0 SlOAf S . r.AROINAI f0 0DSIO R£ S

FRENCH
FRIEl

s~:

5

OR ADC

or Call

limit one wi.t h ooupon

ARMOUR VIENNA SA US ACE ........ 2 ~;·;; 69'
ARMOUR POnED MEATS ............ 3 ~~o:. s1

....$1

~~
tl

64-oz.
Bottle

1

1

79e

., .,.

5 S9;

OLD FASHION . WIDE OR MEDIUM

· and We'JI
~ Satisfaction

~ ~·:::;;,~;::~::; ,_ ,, .::;. ~~;... ......

HALLWOOD
CUT YAMS

~

~
~

~

~
Ai~
"""' #
Cbo sroRrs ~I lilt !:[!1+!114•l.i cARo•NAt1

~"'~"'~.~;u,',~~$'~~~::"F:,s,
~ o"'s JO{o!l! Jol:!
Can
_,
...
MUELLERS NOODLES ............... •:;;~ 59' L - - - - . . . . , j !~
~

COLLECE INN CHICKEN BROTH .. 3'::":;:•

Pkgs

Cut It
To Your

t
. OR MORE PK G.

~

REG . DRIP
ELECT. PERK

89~

V:t,.liJ ift•J:I

" 20( OFF ON LB .
~ COUNTY LINE
.....-----..., ~ CHEDDAR CHEESt

HOUSE

IDA TREAT Reg. or Crinkle Cut

PILLSBURY

Lb .

8
f'L()'Jl'&gt;

••~

,

Limit one with coupon·

0

9.......9( ;

I~ :;:·:::;.:·~:= !~·.:~.

oo•oo~

ag

"::d Ull ES

I

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79•
SUNSHiNE OATMEAL COO.KIES ...... .':.:· 63'
SUNSHINE PEANUT WAFERS .. .. .. •;;:·

'/.

,~ Z9

1

~0 Sf OR ES

Carton

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99•
MONARCH CATSUP ... :... ,........ 3 ~:;.~:; 1 I
3 DIAMOND PINEAPPLE ......... 'g~~· 49'
1

BACON
09

BEEF FRANKS ........ , ... ••""' 1

THANK YOU

RICHELIEU

EXPECTING .
COMPANY?
Any Special.

KAHNS WIENERS OR

$MUCKERS

SLICED. CHUNK m C RU SHED

PLAZA

ARMOUR

GROUND CHUCK ........... ~~:.99c
SNOWFLOSS
C
SAUERKRAUT. ..............~~G 39

THANK VOU

STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ....
HALLWOOD
CUTYAMS

'

BEEF CUBE STEAK .........,.,. 1 I 59

ST ....,69

ICEBERG f':OSHEA , ICE BERG POliSH , NO GA RLI C

AUNT JANES KOSHER DILLS .. ·~~~· )9•

FRUIT·
BOWLS
at1d ..
BASK.
E
TS
,_
Stop In ·

BEEF LIVER ........................,, 59&lt;'

1

ARMOUR TURKEY BREASTS .••• "~ 1 11'

Poun d

HOT DOGS·

SLICED

BONELESS BEEF STEW .,.,., 111'

'

.

U .S. D A . CHOICE

RIB STEAK .......................,.,, 1 1"'

U.S .D.A. CHOICE

ESS
ROAST

U. S 0 A CHOICE

ARM POT ROAST ........ . ,.,, 89•

••

,Free gift

LEON

79'
69'

.

ENGLISH CUT ROAST ... ,.,, 89'

£,..~,..

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BEEF

SWIFT PEPPERONI PEPKIN ............... ;:;

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WE GlADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

GROCERY CARRY OUT
US 0 A CHOICE

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LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER. - MIDDLEPORT

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FIIEIIDLIIST Sli'#I(E Ill TOWill

LEAN FRESH

time nurse, one fu11.tlme
clerk, and a part-time clerlt~
The levy, If pasted, would
provide for salary lncreuil
as well as foc the salaries ol
those employes· now ~
paJd through a federally funci.
ed program. The AAUW went
on record u supportinl the
levy.
Mrs. Lyona reported that
the department hal made lpplication for a federal grant
which would provide rtnt md
utility monles in the new
building tQ be · constructed
near Veterans MemoriJII
Hospital. .
Mrs. Roj)erta Wilson wu
appointed by the AAUW
president to direct a letter to
President Carter aaking 1111
support for the National
Women's Confem~ee to be
held in Houston, Tens, Nov.
18 to 21. It wu noted that thil
will be the lart~est convoca·
lion of women In the hillory
of the coWltry and one which
will receive comprehenllve
coverage in the press and on
television.
Mrs. Fay Sauer.arinowK:ed
.that Mrs. Dorothy Oliver hal
accepted the position ol
chairman of the community
committee. Mrs. Janice
Enslen and Miss Rebecca
Tate were welcomed as new
members.
A memorial tribute to Mrs.
Nellie Vale wu conducted by
Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Anna
Turner before a table featuring a white r011e and while
candles. Mrs. Sauer read
"Consolation" by Robert
Louis Stephellllon.
The November ~tlnl
will be held at Racine witlt
Mrs. Jean Alkire lnd M1ss
Susan Fleshman to have the
program.
.
Refreslunenta were served
by Mrs. Rachlel DoWDle,
Mrs. Martha Husted, and
Miss Helen Smith.

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LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

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4. Health Insurance

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Health servic_e program given

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I. Auto insurance
2. Home Insurance
l . Mobile Hom es

NOW

On Oct. 31 Girl Scj)uts space that surrounds one celebrated the birthday of whether It's on a !ann, In an
their founder Juliette Low urban apartment, a suburban
with the launching of tbe first house or mobile home.
In the World of Today and
major program change in
·
Tomorrow
chapter, tht
Girl Scouting since 1963.
youngsters
are
Introduced to
"Worlds to Explore" the
the
metric
aystem,
to carnew handbook for BroVinie
pentry,
in
addition
to
slmpl'
and Junior Girl Scouts, ages
scientific
esperinnents,
and
6-11 has six sections: an in·
tnslghts
into
what
the
future
troductton to Girl Scouting,
and five " Worlds to Explore" can hold for them u worklnJ
- World of Well-Being, World women. World of the Aria
of People, World of Today inc\Jides activities In the
and Tomorrow, World of the wbole range of arts, vilual,
Arts and World of the OuHf· performing and literary.
Activities in the World of
Doors. Each illustrated
chapter, including many Well-Being Chapter hiflhlight
pieces of how-to-art, offers a physical and emotional ·
broad range of activities. health. nutrition, the home,
Unlike with the previous safety, and conaumer
separate handbooks , girls awareness among other
ca n choose activities ac· topics. ln the World of People
cording to Interests and section. citizenship projecla
abilities rather than age are geared to developlnl
appreciation of dlfferlnll
level.
•
The World of the Outo()f· cultures and bqlldlnl pride In
Doors section expands on the one's heritage.
Incorporated throughout
traditional Girl Scouting
involvement with camping, the new handbook's five
nature, and conservation . worlds are·certain bulca tha\
Because, for example, girls have made Girl ScoutlnC
are doing more at a younger unique and that hive ltood
age, for the first\ time the test of time, such u the
Brownies are encouraged to principles embodied In the
go troop camping. There is Promise and Law, the congreater emphasis on ecology cept of service and In·
and understanding of the tematlonal friendship.
environment - the living

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�8 ...... Tht' Da1lv Sentmt&gt;l, i\1\ddlt-p;._l rt~PNneroy. u_, l'UesUay, N ll \ '. 1, 1977

W anama honor
ro II re1eaS ed
John Kaznosk1. Princtpal of
Wahama Senior and Jumor
Htgh Schools announces thr
Honor Roll for the fi rst ·s,.
"'eeks. These students ha 1·e
earned a B _g rade or bettt•r
average. 1
Twelfth Grade - Diana
Abel, Bob Barn itt. Greg
Blessi ng,' Bon nie Burto n,
Connie Burton. Cat hy
Breemen, Wayne Ed wards.
Darla Fowler, Ja1· Fields.
J immy Goodnite·. Ke \•in
Knight. Tim Litchfield, Ted
Swartz. Lisa Van Mat re. Lisa
Gilla nd , Keith Goldsberrv.
Chrtstina Green, Brent Hart.
Phil Hobbs , Brett Holbrook.
Ca rol Humphreys, Ktmberly
Javins, Rhonda Kav, Louis
Ken t. Dal e King: Ma r y
Mc f a r la nd .
Mar v
Nic ew a nd e r, · J o hn.n )·
Ohlinger. April Parsons. Ben
Rllus.h, Kurt Sayre, Gary
Siders, John Stevens, Dorsel
Stewart , Ka ren Stodola.
Kathl een · Test, Dwa yne
White. Cha rles Zuspan.
Ele~• enth Grade - Jennifer
Badgley. Rachel Beard. J ohn
Bond, Eric Bumga rdner, J oni
qark. Lisa Davis. Susan
Gerlach , Linda Gillispie; Lisa
Grimm, Pat Kearns, Bonn ie
Marr , Howard Myers. Lisa
Reyq olds , Tracey Roach .
Brenda Roush , Michael
Rllush. Sheryl Roush. Donald
Russell, Melanie Sisson. Greg
Stodola , Randy Thorne.
Chrystal Weaver.
Tenth
Grade
Teresa
Ayers .
Eri c
Barnitz, John Bennett,
Connie Bird, Karen Brown,
Jeff Bumgardner. Regina
Clarke, Yvonne Collier ,
Nellie
Esque ,
Relma
Goodnite, Lisa Hill . J eff
Lathey, Tim Long . Julie
Gibbs, Barbra . Gordon ,
Brenda Gray, Mike Grimm,
Brett Grinstead, Judy Hall,
Micki Hankin son, Lisa
Hayes , Troy Hesson , Leah
Hoffman. Mary Hoffman,
Terri Lynn Johnson, Terri
Lynne Johnson, Kevin Jones,
Debbie MacKnight, Maureen
Morrison, Tammy Ohlinger,
Gary
Angie
Proffitt ,
Richards, Tereasa Richards,
Chris Richardson , Jackie
Ridgway , Teresa Riggs ,
Alice Roush. Tim Arnold
Roush, Tim Roush, Doug
Russ~ll. Joyce Steve~s. Lisa
Stewart, Jill Taylor, Richie
Thornton , Jim Thompson ,
Julie Weaver, Caro l Willett.
Rhonda Young.
Ninth Grade - Scott

By HELEN THO~IAS
the ener~y p~ c k a~&lt; now
UP!
Wh ite
House under re~· H'W b) " Born;eReporter
SeJ!Htr
c·n nf e rence
WASHINGTON (UPl l comnuttec.
Carter. himself. was asked
With his energy bill tied up 00
Capitol
Hill,
President
Carter
today
by reporters whether
Bantitz. Kim Bash. Terr i
today
he
still
does
not
he
had
made up his mind to
said
Bro wn, Rod Bumga rd nu .
know
whether
he
will
have
to
go
on
t
he
four..:ootment trtp .
Bobby Carson. J ulie Clark .
postpone
his
nine-nation
trip
"I
don't
know
yet," was his
Carl Duga n, Patty Estep,
sched~ ed to begin later this response.
Audrey Fields. Peggy Fisher.
month .
In the Rose Ga rden ,
Jeff Fowler. Larry Gibbs,
His
spokesman
said
a
deciReporters
pressed him for a
Ma rk Gilla nd . Sherry
sioo will come at week's end decis ion alte r he sig ned
Ha wkin s. La rry Hesson,
Het di Huber . Tim Kelly, on whether to forego for now leg islati on rais in g the
Ra)•mond Kimes. Todd the 24,IJOO.mile journey and minimum wag&lt; to $3.35 an
Kltt·hen, Beth Knight , Mark cont"entrate instead on the hour by 1981 and $2.65 by Jan .
. .
Ma cKn ig ht , Robert Moss- energy package. The decision · 1.
hinges,
said
press
secretary
Asked
agam
tn the Oval
man, Ma rilyn Myers. Anna
.:!_ody
Powell,
on
passage
of
Office
during
a
picture-taking
Parsons. Denise Riffle, Larry
Roach, Joey Roush , Donald
Roush. Dottie Roush . David
Sisk, Cathy Snyder, Ronald
Kei th
J ohnson ,
Mark
Thompson, Todd Tucker,
Barry Van Matre. J•ff Van
Matre . Melloney White ,
Tammy Young , Martin
Zerkle.
By ED ROGERS
fail " to give the committee
Eighth Grade - Carl
WASHINGTON
(UP!
)
full facts about CIA efforts to
Allensworth, Rhllnda Beard,
Former
CIA
Direct
or
prevent the election of Chile 's
Tim Campbell, Jenny Clark,
Richard
Helms
today
late
Marxi st president .
Alaric Clarke, Venis Clarke.
his
sentence
likely
Salvador
Allende , in !970.
awaited
Jennifer Edwards , Connie
a
fine
with
no
jallterm
-for
Facls
tiu-ned
up later reEllison, Mark ~·owler, Richie
covering
up
1970
covert
vealed
the
CIA
funded and
Fry, Marica Goodnite. Travis
Gray , Tim Greene, Anna political operations in Chile. engaged in propaganda and
Because a trial might directly and indir ec tly
Gri nstead. Mary Hanlon,
"
jeopardize
national financed vari ous Chilean
Jack Hayes. Vikki Hayes,
Helms
was
allowed individuals a nd groups
secrets,"
Tim Haymaker, Mike Hobbs,
to
plead
no
contest
Monday
to opposing Allende 's. camDavid Jones, Tammy Jordan,
two
misdemeanor
counts
of
pai gn,
th e
Justice
Brenda Kent. Tonda Kerfailing
to
give
the
Senate
Department
said.
woo d, Dean Lewis, Scott
de p a r t m e n t
The
Litchfield. Malinda Lo~&gt;man. Foreign Relations Committee
the
complete
facts
in
1973.
recommended
that Heims,
Liz MacKnight, Randy
•
U.S
.
District
Judge
also
former
ambassador
to
Pierce, Regina Rayburn,
Barrington
Parker
was
Iran
,
get
a
suspended
Wally Raynes, Alicia Rllush,
to minimwn sentence and fine
Jeffrey P. Roush, Jeffrey S. believed preparing
sentence
Heims
in
a
day
or_
. in exchange for entering a
Rllush, Jerome Roush, Tena
two.
Asststant
Attorney
plea that means no trial will
Roush. Terry Roush, Lisa
General
Benjamin
Qvile.tti·
take
place.
Russell, Greg · J ohnso n,
revealed
Parker
had
refused
''The
trial of this case
Mariam Sisson, Jeff Stafford,
to
bind
himself
W
the
plea
would
involve
tremendous
Karen Starr, Charles Stodola,
agre-ement
and
could
innpose
costs
to
the
United
States and
Danny Test, Ralph Thompa
)311
sentence
tf
he
so
might
jeopardize
national
son, David Varian, Charles
secrets,
"
th
e
department
decided
.
.
Wilkins, Tammy Yoho, Patty
The ch~ge .~a;d Helms on said , in explaining its
Wyatt.
two.
occastons did refuse and decision not to charge Helms
Seventh Grade - Joan
Carpenter. Sherri Coleman,
John Cundiff, Bruce Decker,
Rebecca Fields, Rhonda

session. U1e pr ~'Stdcn t said he Orga nizati on, the oldest
had several options , which existing U.N. agency. The
suggested he could either UnitedStateswa s anoriginal
postJX"'euntilnext year, put memberwhenitwasfofmed
off to De&lt;-ember or cant-el the in 1919.
tr ip slated to begin Nov. 22.
' AFL-CIO president George
Earlier in the day, Carter Meany wid reporters Carter
met with Sen. Ala n Cranston, has decided the ·United States
D-Calif. 1 on 'the energy bill, will withdraw from the
but Cra nston dec lined to organization oo Saturday.
comment when he left the
White House.
M,e anti m e ,
Lab o r
WILL BE SINGING
Secretary Ray Ma rshall wa s
A 25 member choir from
s&lt;;heduled -to announce at 3 Sea ry Creek First Church of
p.m. EST Ca rter's decision,
God, Scott D.ePQt, W.Va., will
accordin g to so urces , to be featured at the First
withdraw U.S. membership
of the International Labor Church of God, Syracuse,
Thursday , Nov . 3, at 7:30
p.m. The public is cordially
invited to attend .

Former CIA director
awaits his "sentence

Fisher , Melissa Friend 1

'l'im

released sewer funds

with perJury .
The statute carries a max-

unum penalty of a year in jall
and a $1 ,000 fine for each
count, and a minimum of 30
days in jail and a $100 fine .
President Carter and
Attorney General Griffin Bell
had acknowledged security
risks might be involved i(
Helms were charged with a
felony and tr ied in court.
There also had been widespread speculation that if
Heims were tried he might
implicate other major figures
from the Nixon and Ford
administrations.
Bell considered the case for
months before finally
acting .
The charges referred to
Helm's testimony Feb. 7,
1973, when his nomination as
ambassador to Iran was
being considered 1 and on
March 6 that year when the

RETURNS HOME
· MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
James M. Roller, Upper
Marlboro, Md., and Mrs.
Henry Cooper, West Chester,
Pa., have returned to their
homes after being here with
their .mother, Mrs. Eva
Hartley who is a surgical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center.

tivities payments for September have been sent to
Ohio's 88 co untle~ .
Meigs County's share was
$9,168.32.

1\10 DE.~~ERS "PLEASE!

Gulf Coast pipeline
Panama Canal:

';

was determined on the
premise that domestic needs
come before exports.
But when Jose Lopez
Portiilo took over the
·presidency last Dec. 1 -with
a severe economic crisis and
peso devaluation to contend
with - the government began
to talk openly about its oil
wealth.
And to tranquilize those
who believe Mexico might
soon run out of oil if it sells too
much to the United States,
I)iaz Serrano revealed last
week that Mexico has an
estimated 120 billion barrels
in "potentia l reserves" of gas
and oi l - enough to last for
280 years.
If proven true, as oil
experts believe it will be,
Mexico would be second only
to Saudi Arabia among world
petroleum powers. Saudi
Arabia
ha s
estimate d
reserves of 148 billion
barrels.
This latest estimate might
dilute cr iticism from the left
but - given the nationalistic
appeal - it wit! hardly halt it
completely.
"Now we are dependent on
(the United States)for 70 per
Cen( of our trade and if w~ sell
them so much petroleum and
gas our dependence will increase to 86 pe r cent,"
Heberto Castillo, president of
the Mexican Workers Party
wrote recently .
" .. .In my judgement, (the
pipeline ) compromises the
sovereignty of this country,1 '
Cas till n said . " Has (the
gnverrunent ) forgotten about
Pan a ma, Guantanamo,
Puerto Hico, Vietnam, "
Castilln asked .
Pr esid ent Jose l.l&gt;pez
Portilln has ._:qunter'ed ·by
ta ilin g
suc h
rritics
Xl' n11p:111l)CS.
The. govCrnn 1ent. SHys· thHt
tf llu.: g~ll'i
assot'ia tccl with
I'XIq.H"tion nf t1iJ - IS 1111t S4'1 ld,
it wi ll l~&lt;t vt · l" lit' llunw(J.

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p,m.
Open Sunday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

into a bea ut •ful, li llie ala rm clock with a reliable
30-hour key- wou nd moveme nJ. The dec o ra tive ,
embossed ca &gt;n cover swivels aside to reveal a .
regal Roma n-faced clock, ha nd somely
housed m a four -co&gt; n case Satin
gold finis h. 3 3/,o'' d1ame1 er.
1 '14" deep . $24.95

uant1ity Rights

Use Our Convenient lay-away

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1978
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FREEl

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said.
He said although he will not
recommend his group take a
position on the question "I
will urge any member who
feels str ongly to take a
personal psotion on it or to
take a personal stand."

.

CHUCK ROAST

BULOVA conve rt s a repl1co of a $20 gol d piece

the Chile matter directly.

shouldn 't work now," Badef

1:--

PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, NOVEMBER SlH
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

·committee was investigating

doing that .
" But, if they try to
establish
a
labormanagement situation. There
will be problems. It hasn 't
worked in the past and

USDA CHOICE

TIME IS MONEY

•

USDA CHOICE

'•
•
I
•

Farmers strike will be
localized in wheat belt

Gibbs, Scott Greene, Regina
Hill, April Hughes, Laura
James, Scott Kinnes, Melissa
Lathey, Brad Layne, . Mary
Lewis, Jennifer Lieving,
Ellen McDermitt, Carol - By MARIAN E. McQUIDDY Bader said. " However, all
Mitchell, Melanie Mossman,
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP!) those who are concerned with
Lisa Pickens. Pam Riggs, - A national farmers strike, the strike are strongly and
Carolyn Robie, Julie Rllush, if it comes on Dec. 14, emotionally involved in it. "
Mark Roush , Lisa Long, probably will be localized in
Bader said the success of
Angie Northup, Beth Smith, the western wheat oolt, Dr. the proposed strike will be
,J.,erry Spradling, Julia Kenneth .Bader, executiVe measured by the objedives
!itevens, Lisa Thomas, Kristy director of the American which the fanners set for it.
Tucker, Kay Van Fosson, Soybean Association ,
"If they are attempting to
Kim Van Meter, Susan Ward, predicted Monday.
bring attention to their plight,
Thomas Ward, Kelly Weaver,
"From what I can see, the the disasterous marketing'
Rodney Weaver. Beth support for the strike seems and t he problems of
Willoughby, Kim Wright.
to be limited, particularly to agriculture in general, they
the wheat belt. I don't think it should have success. And in
will be Widespread, far.mer some cases, they are already
along with farmer.
11
For example, our state
president in Kansas says he
understands why the association will not take a stand and
yet he has said he personally Jll
•
'
will strike. But the same lf~eXlCQ S
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The for Department of Natural reaction has not .followed in
state C&lt;mtrolling Board has Resources development of a Iowa at this time," Bader By CAROL COOK
$860,000
for coas tal zone management said.
released
MEXICO CITY (UP! )
constructiOn of a new sewer plan for Lake Erie.
The director predicted the Mexico's planned Gulf Coast
in Marysville to serve the
-$97.4 million as th e areas that will be hit hardest pipeline is being turned into a
proposed Honda motorcyle state's school foundation by the strike probably will be political issue by leftists who
in Kan sas, Colorado and are calli ng , the project
plan• in Union County.
payment for October.
·
TI ... ·•ney, appropriated
- Permission for the Ohio Nebraska.
"Mexico's Panama Canal."
in a ·P• ntly-enacted capital Department of Healt h to
"Most of the phooe c~lls we
The pipeline, which should .
const1 ~ tion
bill,
was purchase vaccines through are receiving now about it be pumping natural gas from
released by the board federal contracts at a savings seem to be coming in from Mexico to heat U.S . homes in
Kansas, Nebraska and only a two years time, is g_ood news
Mondov in the form of of $420,000 w the state.
emer:! -, fu,nds. It is to be
fr om Iowa
and for the gas-hungry states -$86,000
for
the few
repaid \0 the state from pepartment of Commerce to Missouri," he said.
especially after the fuel
revenues collected for the use hire additional state arson
Bader said the splintering shortages that resulted from
of the sewer, $640,000 by the examiner s.
of the farmers comes because last year 's pitter winter.
"of the diversity in the corn
city of Marysville.
~Permission for the Ohio
But critics charge it is a
The board also approved Commissio n on Aging to belt.''
giveaway of Mexico's oil
"The corn .producers in riches and will make this
use of emergency funds for spe nd $4.9 million in
Iowa are often hog and cattle country even more dependent
operating the state Personnel incoming federal funds.
. Board of Review , $147,680;
-$85,703 for the Ohio Con- producers as well as growing on the United States.
.
matching funds for the public sumers' Counsel to hire legal some soybeans. And the
Last May, the state oil
defender program, $9,378 ; assistance in rate case prices for those commodities compa n y Petr o leos
and continuing a Highway proceedings involving Toledo at this point are pretty good, Mexi c anos ( Pemex)
so they are perbaps feeling announced it would spend $1.5
Patrol investigation of the Edison.
Bureau
of
Workers'
-$200,000 for the Ohio the pinch a little less.
billion to build an 800-mile, 48.. Farmers in some of the inch pipeline to carry gas
Compensation, $25,000.
Industrial Comm ission to
These other items were administer the " black lWlg " · other areas have their eggs from wells in the Tabascoall in one basket with just Chiapas fields in southeast
approved by the board :
compensation program.
of
state
- Release
- $44,131
for
the wheat or just corn," Bader Mexico w McAllen, Tex.
matching monies for disaster Department · of Natural sal d.
Pemex said it expected to
Also farmers are a very have one billion cubic feet of
se rvice s equiPment, Resources for abandoned
planning, warning systems mine reclamation from last "independent breed."
surplus gas a day available
" Farmers have always for export 'to the United
and personnel training; and July I through Thursday,
when additional money from been independent and States in 1979, and eno•·"h w
severance taxes become absolute about it and don't double that amount i1, 1981.
choose to follow the pack,"
available.
Pemex Jorge Diaz Serrano;
CORRECTION
testified
befo~e the Mex.ican
It was John E . Foreman
Chamber
of · De~uties last
that was fined ·in Meigs
VOTING PLAC.ES NAMED
week
tu
counter
critics of the
County Court Friday by
GETS AWARD
The
voting
'location
for
He
pointed
out it will
pipeline.
Judge Robert E. B'uck for
FT. BENNING, Ga.
voters
in
the
newly
created
earn
MeJUco
$2
billion
a year
expired operator's li cense not
Private Donald E. Bush, son from ga s sal es, and he
Cliff
Precinct,
Laurel
Joe E. Foreman as was
, made up from parts of the ·of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob M. warned that if Mexico does
reporte.:...
Bush, Route 3, _Racine, Ohio, nnt use fuel export,s to finance"'
Bradbury and
Rock
Also , Dennis Marcinko, Rt.
recently received the 50-Mile its developme-nt ," lhe nation
Springs precincts this fall,
I, Ree(isville, posted bond in
Award for participating in will " pay a high politica l and
will
oo
in
the
basement
of
the amount of $32.55 for
the
" Run For Your : :fe social cost."
the Meigs County Inspeeding not for driving while
Program"
at Ft. Benning,
firmary .
But oil ha s always been a
intoxicated .
Ga.
·
.
.
sensitive political issue in
The program !S dest~ned to Mexic!l . AppropriHtion of fnTOURNEY BEGINS
promote· phys1cal htness . • reign oil Ct,mpanics by PresiSeciiona l •.· - ~~:ybal l
CLOTHING DAY .
Awards are presented . for dent I;J7.am C.iJrdenas in 19:!8
tournament begins this
CHESHIRE - The Gallia - running . from 50 through i~ still Ci snurce of great
evening at Meigs High Scnool Meigs Community Action 10,000 mtles.
.
nMinnHI prirlr - n1 1politiciil n
at 4:.30 p.m. with Meigs Agency will hold its free
Pvt. Butih, a truck dnver can aff,,rd to ' hint thHt M~x1cn
playing Vinton County.
clothing day for low income with the 197th Infantry n1ig ht bt• g i v111 g awa y l'onll'll ]
If Meigs wins they will play persons Thursday from 9 E!rigade at the fort , entered
of its r11l rit' h&lt;'~.
Gallipolis at 6:30, New a.m. to 2 p.m . The agency's the Army in March of this
Our·i11g ti1 1 ' Luis El'hl'\' l' rTi&lt;:~
Lexington against Warren at clothing bank is located in the year. The private is a 1975 .r&amp;
tht llnistri.ition . ,,ffkml s we re
5:30 with Wellston playing the old high school building at graduate of Southern Local rt'tit ·ienl ahuu l tht• t::dl'nl of
winner at 7:30p.m.
C11eshire.
High School.
-1\!k:&lt; H '" '~ , ,j ) wt·HI1h .· Polu·y

Controlling hoard has

'' '

President Carter may postpo~e future trip

FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
State Auditor Thomas E.
ferguson 's office r.eported
that Sl6,306.15 in pu~li c
assistance and special ac-

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~~AB BACON .•.•..•.•..•..~~·. 89t

•

Relaxed and carefree ... now? Is that any way to start a Chr•stmas
gifts shopping spree? You bet it is. If you're already a Christmas
Clubmember,youknowwhatwemean . lfnot, join . Simply deposita
small sum each week. Then , when Christmas '78 ralls around and it's
ti'me for gift buying ... welL you'll be off to a flying start.

FRESH &amp;LE~N .

•

••

..

..-••
.
•
~
~

The Easiest Way To Provick For The
Meriiest Christmas Is Christma.c Club Way!
Deposit Each
Week t:or

4f Wieks

soc
I 1.00
I 2.00
1"3.00
s 5.00
$10.00
$20.00

Rectl»e Next

Ye•r For
Chrlstmn

s
s

~1.00

50.00

s 100.00

$ 150.00

s 250.00
I 100.00

$1000.00

LB•

·

. 99~

FRESH SLICED

•.

g~

LB

DUTCH LOAF..•.... ~ ....••. ~~;.

••

...
~

'

EVERY
CHRISTMAS
CLUB
ACCOUNT
FULLY
INSURED

..'•
•.

•

CALGONITE

•
•

Christmas
Club For ·1978

W£ HAVE MAILED
OUR 1977
CHRISTMAS CLUB
MEMBERS CHECKS
TOTALING

____

COUPON

,.,

- sg~

NO. 155 .

,,.'
,.•
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35 oz. box

...•
~

HUNT'S KET(HUP

W/C

NO. 105

W/C

•

WllH COUPON AND 17.50 PURCHASE

~

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COUPON

A TIES CEREAL~~
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15 OZ. CAN

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. ·II 'I· . 100 CT. PKG.
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Co.upon Expires Nov. 5, 1977

: .I
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NO. 85

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12 OZ. BOX

I

Coupon Expires Nov. 5, 1977

:1 .

Coupon Expjres Nov. 5,'1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

1

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Ohio Valley Bank

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COUPON

DIXIE

HUNfS

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(OUR GREATEST YEAR EVER)

W!C

Coupon Expires Nov. 5, 1977
ITYGATEWAY

Coupon Expires Nov. 5, 1977
TW
ITY GATEWAY

COUPON

COUPON

•
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79~

32 OZ. BTL

•
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5 LB. BAG

Coupon Expires Nov. s, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Nov. 5, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

~

39~

NO. 75

LB. CAN

COUPON

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

NO. 305
W/C

-a.- --

COUPON

COyPON r

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE

DISH DETERGENT

•

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FAMILY SIZE

NO. lOS

W/C

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13¥2 OZ. BOX

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C

~u~~~C~TYGATE.WAY

Member FDIC

-.# 1~ .:

~~~~~~~:--

NOW! FOUR GREAT LOCATIONS TO BETTER SERVE YOU!
'•I

- - -- - - - · - - - - -

-

W/C

BOX

•

Coupon Expires Nov. 5, 1977
TWINCITYGATEWAY

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Coupon Expires Nov. 5, 1977
. TWIN CITY GATEWAY

5 1977

Tus:,INC~T Y~AT~-W.AY

_"'"'It' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

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�~!CI,.The Dally Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. t, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

l'ht• .\lmanat.·
1 111l4~ ci
Prt' "'S
l nltt'd rn·s~ lntl' rnllti ouul

B\

Tt"Xi.n '' Tut.•sd.1\ :\ u\ 1.
the 305th do.t\ \,f l~ ii "trh 60 h\
f n,m
.
The rm'Lltt 1:.- npprtli'l;.hln~
tb last

The
~tar~

WANT AD

qu.lrtt.~r
suu~

L

S.'Hurn
t,l\ e111n~

Tht•

swr

ts

\lt&gt;r~r ~

Thosi" b\1rn lltt thts Lint(' an:undrr the s1~1 o{ SL'l1rpw.

J . W Packard, Amencan
lm entllr. manufa,.:tut.•r and
philanthrOpiSt \~,IS born ~ 0\
1. 1863.
On thts da\' m h1.ston ·

I I

,j,

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1 Ill

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H !!h. l!ll lh,
~d'&lt;&lt;Uiolo
o\&lt;1'- L\11\ { ~ t!JU., .. t' IlL I ,111

'·

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tit till

I I

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Ill

l ,_ )

, II

,,

tf

was d1ssol\ ed
V1enna
bet.•ame the capital of Austna

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I ul Olit L

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NOTICE

Truman
In 1970, a total of H5
persons died " hen fire s" ept
a dance hall tn Sa tn t-\ .aurent·

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Amenr an

1.1•

v.e ought to remember that
\l rtue ts not herechtary ·

•'

I' \I
I&lt;

I Ulwh

111 r

:0. \Lit '·''

elevator

He guarantees the lemonscen ted mist wtll make the

smoker stt up and t.1ke notice
- If n ot eome out swmgmg
Wnght alread) has tested
the product tn the Denver
area and has proc\auned tt a
success No11 he's ready to
sellt l to the world - at $3 95 a
can - and he w·ll use the
profits to help laiLoch his antism okin g center s

3rross the

natum
'One fell ow tn Golden
I west of Denver ) cured hts
" tfe of srn okm g m bed by
usmg tt ," salC! Wrtght ,
prestdent of th e Naltonal
Assoc tattOn on Smokmg and
Healt h , a pr oftl-ma ktng
company created to help
people qutl tlte habtt
" He htd a can under hts
ptllnw and when she lrt up, he
sprayed the hell out of her
Sh e's not smoktng tn bed any
more, and tllat's a habtt she
had for stx years And they' re
sttll happtly marrted "
A st~te sena tor who won
passage of Colorado's ftrst
a ntt-sm okmg btll keeps a can
of the spray on his desk And

a can was sent to Gov.
Rt ch ard La mm, a nonsmoker who dtshkes the habtt
but keeps ashtr ays available
m his offt ce
Wrtght, who qwt smoking
18 years ago when a doctor
wid him to stw or dte, sa td
the product IS matnly water
and so safe you can dnnk tt It

wnn't slam clothmg and IS
guaranteed to provtde nonsmokers With ''the u lt imate
of sattsfa ctmn ''
Dir ectiOns, wh1 ch are
wrttte n on the can, tell the
user
- when c1gar, cigarette or
ptpe smoke ts detected, aun
o1tomizer a t source and spray

for one se cond
- 1f smoker becomes Irate,
spt a y agatn

- persistent smoker may
reqwre a lrtple flutterblast
fthree short sprays ) and a
few carefully selected " ords
" We expect to do a lot of
bustness tn New York City
wt th thts product ," s aid
Wn ght , who has been called
the ' Ralfin Nader of the
smokers' world " " Rtght now
there a re some ft st ftghts
breakmg out at limes

beca ust! of smok1ng
subway trams

on

"Someone wtll hghl up a

ctgar or

c igare tte

Som eo ne

and dl sgustmg habtt , ' Wnght
satd " Non-smokers wtll gel
thetr pmnl across wtth tht s
When you threaten them
(s mokers ) tn any shape,

mt:lnner
upset "

Wrt~ht.

or form,

the y

g et

' who looks upon

lo

l!

(1/ii,O

,/i,lofl/111111•~~11'

oriiiJ;•Id~nl

"'

Automattc
TransmiSSion Senttee

NO FUTURE? IN ASS RUT?
ll!ll"idl
1'11\tu."!

,I l'!olfl ""\&lt;11\il \ o\lll\
Hlt.~lt , \ \ , ,,, o~ l '· 1

\,\It' IJ,\1!1111~ ;-..ht oll ••lh J11U! 1
1'\RII IIl!t'*t l ! II lm" lt.ull
Ill)! 1'11~\d(ll lJ \•&gt;!1 ,\h \\Htf..U I\.!
li~•ut (Jwt ' ''Ill Ji•h tllt'lld, tn
\\ t t•l..t ncl lt HIIUI~J""~o'1ll1t lll rt
ttnd,lw ~\\t't' hr\ II !Hilt~, ..
idt nt It umng

Isn 't worried 1f someone gets

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~\]IJ]f!J]
~ O~[flw~m\7
Nov 2. 1917
Your wanderlusl may be lul-

far-re achtng tn bo th areas

,

SCO RPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) You

ests Don t l e t yoursel f get m a
ru t Ftn d out mo re ab ou t your·
se ll by send1ng for yo ur copy o f
Astro·Graph L etter Ma d 50
cen ts fo r each and a ron~ serf.
addressed stam p ed envelope
to As t ra-Graph P 0 Bm 489
RadiO C1 ty Stat ton N Y 1001 9
Be su re to specif y you r bt r l h
s1gn

FOUR ROOM S on d bo th
only No pels 992 5'X&gt;B
--

-

SAGITTARIUS !Nov

13-Dec

211 Your bus1ness ms tmc1s to·
day are lmely h oned an d r~ lt
able You II kno w ho w 10 p ut a
good d ea l to g e th er w1th h u rt1 ng
anyone

CAPRICORN iDee 12·Jan 19)
You handle o n e to one rel allon s h•ps w•th greal ski ll tod a y
Oth er s will fmd you r co mpa n. tonsh•p enJoyable

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb

19)

Th ougn you may not l h1nk so
Nhen the alarm g o es o ff yo u II
hna betng ac t1ve and prod u cuve 1s far more fun than goofi n g
oft Pur ou t soli d e lton tod a y

PISCES (Feb 20-March 10)

To
day yo u ha ve the abrl1t y to turn
an ac qua in tan ce 1n to a fn en d If
th e re s someone yo u d lik e ro
be c lose r to spe nd t1m e ..vtt h
h1m o r her

ARIES !March

21-Apr~l

19) In

stmctr 'Jely you ha ve: a w ay a t
gaug1ng the w ants and needs
of o thers today Th ts IS a b ig
plu s s1nce you re dealmg d l
rectty w tth t he public

RUMMAGE
SALE b y Groce
==
Ep1 sco pol Church Women at
--::;-.
- ·Pam h House from 10 om IO 4 TEMPCO FlOOR furnace 70 000
pm on No v 4th and Sth Boke
BTU Used good condttr an S35
Sol e on Saturday
Phone 1 667 3063

No 16586

NOTICE B Y
PUBLICATION
T o Glenna Joyc e T easley ,
w nose las t known addres s
wa s Route 1, Pomeroy , Ohto ,
.45769 yo u a r e hereby n oil f •ed
tha t you h av e been named
Defendan t •n a l eg a l a c t,on
e nt ~ ll e d
T orn J
Te as le y ,
P la mt 1ff , vs Gle nna Jo y ce
Te asley
Def e ndant
Th1 S
actton ha s b een as stgned
Ca se No 16586 and rs pend 1ng
.n l h ecCourt of Common
Pl e a s of Metg s Count y,
Pom er oy Oh10 45769
The o bte c l of !he com pla int
rs a demand for dtvorce and
tran sf er o f the eq utty ot th e
De fendan t m tile per sonal
prop erty of t h e part .es to t he
Pl a1 nl•ff , and o th er relief
Y o u are r e q u tr ed to answ er
the compla1nt w1lh•n 28 day s
a ft er th e last publi c atton of
thiS nQfi CE', WhtCh Wlll be
publ1 shed on ce each w eek f or
51)( succ ess1ve weeks The
la s t pu b lt c aiiOn will b e made
on Nov e mbe r 1, 19]7 , and the
28 days for an~wer will
com m en ce on thaf dat e
In cas e of yo u r fail u re to
an sw er or o therw 1se rf' spond
as requ rr ed by the Oh to Rule s
of Ctv tl P r ocedure , d1 v or ce
w il l be grant ed

TAURUS (A pril 10-May 20) You
are m ore ad roit to da y at men tal
pu rsui t s than p h ystc al ones
Spe n d t1me balanr.mg th e
books mstead o l ba lanctng :ne
barbells

GEMINI !May 1I·J une 10) Be
lor e th e d ay 1s ove r you cou ld
be s h o w 1ng a pr o f•t It s be
ca us e you manage w tsely and
are s hrew d a t shop p ing or
se ll ing

D a ted 9 24 77
Larr.y Spen ce r
Clerk of Cou rl s
M e1 gs County
c;ommo n Plea s CoUrt
{9 ]27 ! 10 )4 11. 18 25 ( 11) 1

li e

LEO !July 23-A ug 22) Stand a
btl 1n the back ground t o d ay
Le t ot hers be c lose r to tile
loo tltgh ts Tiley tJ ap prec1a te
you m o re tf yo u don 1 ups tage
thern

day re gar d tn g pr o 1ec ts you re
·r m 1Je d m w 1th personc; yo u
hOirl tn lliQh re gar d If th ey
benefi t you Nlll too

LIBRA tSepl 1J.Oct 2J) You
co nsrcl e rAh le inl lu cn~;c
tonay You 11 h and)e yourse lf trl
a manner w l11c h en h an r. f:'~ y our
pres ttge and poput ar•l y
'-1 W ~ l'" I I( I !\,I f 1(1 1 !1~ 1 \S. o'\i 1
flxP. tl

F--&amp;5MP-:

b,Q

(I 1 } I

15 . 1 1C

--

~~

HOOF HOllOW H or se~ Buy sell NEW IDEA one row cornp tcker
trade or trotn New and used
E&gt;e cel lent
condttton
$500
sadd les Ru th Reeves , Albany
742 2359
--"'==~---~ -~
1614 ) 696 32'10
USED COLMAN Tratler Furnace 1n
MEIGS COU NT Y Hurnone Soc1ety
good shape Coli 992 3 139
Carel 1ne and odapt1on Servrce
after 5 pm

992 7680 742 3162. 992- 5427

~~

Kingsbury
Home Sales
•Mob1le
Home
Underpmntng
• Roof Coaltng
• Tte· Downs -'
• Awnings - Carports
• Insurance
Repairs
See us at 1100 East Matn

Street , Pomeroy, Oh1o or
Phone 992 7034 . 10 29 1mo.

99'2 339 1
--~-. POl A TOES A ndrew Cros s Letart
FOUR WHITE kittens to g1ve aw ay
Fall s Ohto 247 2852
3 are 8 weelo:s old Females
1:~ti!3!i
247 2204
.!J

Landmark

1975 FORD F 250 '• ton truck
good
Good cond tl1on 4 sp
lites will toke trade 1968
Chevrolet sto t1 on wagon Run s
good
$25 0
wdl
trade
94q 2770

1q7 \ LTD WAGON P S P B
AM FM stento rod to
A C
~ 9 CKJO
m•l es
99'} .5756 or
992 5477
1965 WAGON
Standard
eng1n e $350 992 3408

283

191:4 GMC SIERRA Gronde '1 ton
heQ'"'Y duty t ruck 992 5896

&amp;
water

cond1tton your

and

Coop

water

softener, Model UC-SVI
Now Only •279,95
Let us test your water Free

FOR SALE
New Co Op water and
so fteners , model VC - SVI.

Only 1279 95

Save

SSO 00

on

a

new

Hotp01nt Refngerator
1 New 20 cub1c ft Chest
Freezer
$25.00 DISCOunt
( 1) Good Refrigerator S200
1 Good
Used
Amana
Upnght Free zer ,
$250 00
1 Good Used Home lite

XL12 Chi!Jn Saw
1125
t Good I.Jsed Home I I
Chatn Saw
$1
1 Good Used Hornell
Cham Saw
$120
1 Good U sed Hot Po1nt
Refngerator
S12S
1 Good U se d Hotpo1nt
Electnc Stove
$100
1 Good Used Umco
Washt:r
$1:25

Pomeroy Landmark

S TARC~AFr

FALl Sole
M1n1
mot or!&gt; LO ond '22
TraVe l
Jack W Carsey ,
Tra1 ler s 18 5 $3 799 25 7
,
Phone 912 2
Hunkhou:. e $4 875 F-old down
$1 700 up We se ll :. e1 1o1 1[e and
quahty O pcm Sunduy s c amp LIKE NEW CLARII&gt;iET and case
Con ley ~ IOt rta f t Sail.•' Rt t;,:2
S100 1614 ) 696 1055
N of Pt Pl('o&lt;.on t
1469 J OHN~ON OUTBOARD 20

__

ARI SI O(RA I HI f1o ... u1 I tol l" '
R ~d·• t o-&gt;d ro , 1 11 l oll Y'l/ :J~tj()

16

~H I

~t ecpo;.

lON I AIN ELl

" . . '197

73 1 ~

( Ull'fJ "

Bissell Siding Co.

It P

Alocal contractor
Phone 949·2801
or 949-2860
free Est1m1tn

992217C

flo S11ndJJ ClltS l'luse

Superior

~,n

Young's

lnsulaOOn

Route 3 PomtrGJ. 0
Carpet &amp;UphotsttJJ
Phone Mike Young
AI

saves 30 P&lt;t to 50 P&lt;t

992-2206 or 992-7630

Free Est
Call 667-6479

I

~-- .

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE
WELL, WHEN A MAN'S
HIS COfFEE AND IS
REtA~ED IS TH' BEST
llf&gt;IE TO ASK FOR SOME·
TtltKG ·•• ISN'T IT~

Now arrange the c1rcled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

IJ
I I
• :"[I IIIJ(IIIDt"

HAD

10- 1.4 1 mo pd

COAL l1mestone and colou m
chlonde ortd cole um bnne l or
dust control and spectol mtxmg
solt tor tanllers , Excels ,or Salt
Worlo:'i Mom Street Pom eroy
Oh1o or phone 992. J891

-------

CAMPE R. SbOO
Al so
hors e
trader , $450 Phone (614 ) 698

3290
ECONOMY TRACTOR w1lh oil at
toc hments L•ke new oskmg
$2250 Phone (614) 69B 3190
APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchard s
State
Ro ute 669
Phone
Wdkes't1 1!1e 669 J7BS
PRECISION
PACER Compound
Bow 55 lb Out ver and 5
olum1num shot! ar rows wtlh
wasp huntmg 11p Ltkc new
JONES MEAT Process1ng freez er
beef and pork Custom pr ocess
mg of beef pork and deer
Re1orl cuts Ltttle Hock 1ng (614 )
6b7 6133

New

gm

to nk

$];.!5

l'fh~ u ~u1 M 30 l'l{lc lt tt ma lo•

S.40 Con l~e sof" n o l Gr o vel v
[ toctol SohJo., (ondru Sltl'O ' 0 1

IN MASON W Vo Bnck home
tw o bedro.om , Jorge living room
w ith ston e f1repla ce Both w1th
sh ower m odern kt!C.hen and
dm1ng room ufthty room wtth
washer and dryer o1r condt
t10111ng o~:~d gas (ur noce
304 77 3 5161

ALLEYOOP
BECAUSE IF HE "D&lt;INI&lt;S
iT:S A TElEVISION SET IT
\ IIGKT kEEP HIM IN ONE

COUNTRV LI VING m a Mobtle
Home 12 x b4 3 bed roo m I
both con cr ete dr 1veway and
s1dewolk s underpmmng front
porch all set11ng on 1 I acres
3' , mdes fr om town Pnced to
sell at $8 500 Phone 742 3107.

S POT LONG ENOUSH FOR

\

LARGE THREE bedr opm 2'1, both
~pht· f oyer wtlh f1rep loce and
acre lol $44 000 992 2492

I·

Good

8ustne5.s
B l dg
located at 605 w Ma1n St ,
Pomeroy , Oh10 Presently
occupH!d
by
a
gorng
busmess Bldg has delu xe
apartment
overhead
brrngtng 1n good mcome
Pnced on 1nspect•on onlY .
Can be seen any ttme from
10 a . m to 4 p m 1nqu1re at
605 W Matn 51 , Pomer oy ,
onlo 45769

,SEVEN YEAR old house , 3 acres 6
rooms and both *11 m tle f rom
Ches ter Prrced for qu1ck so le
985 3950

0 --------::-....,--,

TEAFORDm
•

REAlTOR

VIRGIL B TEAFOII!D, &gt;R
REALTOR
216 E Second Street

Phone 192 3325
DEXTER -

One floor

bu st n ess

bu ild1ng ,
Wtll
se l l on land co nt ra c t

approxtn~ately 30x40

NEW LISTING - 3 acres
w 1t h 3 bedroom h ome
Bath , drr lled we ll m the
coun tr y
Recently
r emod eled
Just $16,000.

NEW LISTING -

N1ce 3

bedroom s.. large ll v ti1Q.
dtn1ng ,
and
equtpped
kttchen Fenced backyard
Inter com, and central air
You ' ll like thts
ACREAGE 40 acres ,
sma ll barn , and elecf rtc rty
close
Excellent hunting
land

MOBILE HOME LOT A.bout one acre, drt! led
well, electnc •ty at Port
!and

NEW LISTING -

E&gt;tra

n1ce execultve home w 1th 3
bedrooms and 2 12 baths
Centra l heatmg and a1r
cond1t tonmg 2 car gar.:tge,
large landscaped lot and
large ~ tone wood burntng
f1reptac e

WATCH THIS AD FOR
NEW REAL ES TATE
ACTION TALK WITH US
ON
BUY lNG
OR
SELLI NG 992 3325
He len l Tea f ord
G Bruce Tea ford
Assoc•a1es

HOWERY

~""""-

_J

AND

MARTIN

A jur4
summons,
boss

sweat it!

Ma4be 40u can

b

--

698 7331

F~repta ce

lo vers wi ll adm1re t he
classtc beauty that m akes
th ts
hom e
hearth
cen ter ed l tv 1ng room , plus
a wood burnmg stove, your
hea t mg bill s hou ld b e
reall y low here ' Newer
home, J Bdrms, ba sem ent,

2
baths
OTHER
FEATURES
$36,900 00
JUST LISTED - Maybe
1t' s t1me to move mto that
h ome
yo u 've
been
promlstng
yourself
3
Bdrm s , J/" acre, formal
d1nmg
roo m ,
ga rage ,

garden LOOKS NICE
$19,500 00
JUST LISTED - ThiS
1nexpens1ve 2 or 3 bedroom
cot tage may be JUSt what
yo u seek , n1 ce ly located rn
Sy ra cuse . ext ra stora ge

spa ce ONLY $11.000 00 .
MOVE RIGHT IN - No
one IS lt vrng m thts modern
ran ch . 3 Bdrm s , 3 Acr~
great loca tron , garag e,
barns, many f ea tures, help
wtt h frnan c mg $3 4.900 00
Jllz ACRES Country
lt v mg 1n tht s r emodel ed
home , barn, ba sem e n t
Cl ose to Forked R un

REDUCED TO $11 ,500 00
$6,900 00 Bdrm

Wtll buy
home

tht s 3
tn

HARRI SONVILLE
$7,000 00 - Will buy thiS 3
Bdrm

ho m e

•n

MIDOLEPORT
$6,800 00 - Will buy thiS 4
Bdrm

home

tn

POMI;:R OY
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR HOME . LET OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE WORK FOR
YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 .2259. 992-6191
992.2568

ULABNER

feotur mg A shleys and COrTJ
plete selecllon of coa l go!
wood c tr cu lot1 ng hea ler ~
~ rp enter [6 14 ) 698-71 9 1

HOM ESITE S for sole 1 acre
up Mtddlepor t near Rutland

"

East given tough choice

1---1--+--+-

SMALL form for so le 10~/,. down
owner fmonced Monroe Coun
ty W Vo Phone [304) 77~

WINNIE
CHILDREN HAVE A WAY
OF BECCMIN0 ADULTB
... IF
LET 11-1EM I

,

COUNTRY far mland w1th sed~
ed woods . wa t er and good oC
cess tn M onroe County W Vd
$1 000 down ca ll (304) 772-

'

Commeroo) property appro,.: 1/
acre$ level land located crt
Tuppers Platn!i on Ohto Ro \!.1 ~
___!_ Ph one (614)667 6304
, ,

SOUTU
• KJ 2

¥QJ9 872
+42
• J7
Ne1ther vulnerabl e

West

Pa ss
Pa ss

698 53 10 698 8690 698 8696 ""
'

I

NEW THREE bedroom house , TuP
per~ Plom s Lorge hvmg room
w1th f •rep!ace d 1nlng roonl ,
Ior ge kttchen carport fufly .
carpeted
Lorge lot
(61~)
667 ·33 49

•
'

to work

It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

OF

DAHQNGRYG

RY

CQ N

R.

A

RPPQA ·
YWOFQY

f) l911 Kinl fntwe1 Syndlnte, Inc:

STORY 3 bedroom \ frame
house F A furnace, 5torm 'tin:·
dews f1re ploce m Mtdd!epCN~ I!
Phone 992 3.457 or 992 5867

FIVE ROOM house on 2'11 acre~
sur~ounded
by woods
At
Carpen tet tn M c tg! Co
lp
mmute
drtve from Me1gr;
Mines Need$ bath and wot@tl'
Also o ctly cool dump lrodef

SHERIFF TAIT !!

WELL ANOTHE~

HALLOWEEN HAS COME
AND GONE

Dl D t./OU NO, AND I
SEE 'JUST DON'T

EVE~

TJ.1E ' GREAT UNDERSTAND
PUMPKIN" 1
IT ..

I THOUGHT MARCIE
WAS WITH 'f'OU ... WHAT
HAPPENED TO MARCIE?

HER PARENTS CAME
AND GOT HER ..SHE'S
BEING OEPR06RAMMED!

D

North East South
Double
Pa ss Pass
1¥

2•

1.

Openmg lead - Ace •

Yesterday's Cryptoquote:l AM NOT CONCERNED THAT l
AM NOT KNOWN, l SEEK TO BE WORTHY TO BE
KNOWN.-CONFUCIUS

NICE ONE acre bu1!dmg sties
por tl y w ooded , near Metg5
H1gh School 992 5523

EAST

• 864

HODFUAWY{Z

VA FHA 30 yr f1noncmg Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State Athen~1
phone (614 ) 592 3051
.~

not forcmg

.10985
¥A I
+ K Q tO
"'K to s l

¥3
+J9 653

CQEYJRGDQY

I

NOR Til tD I
.Q4
¥K 1065

WEST
• A 76 3

One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A 11
used f~ r the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatton of the w?rds are all
hu\ts E-ach day the C"ode letters are different

CRDGU

hearts A slight ' overbtd tn
vtew of the fact that hts
partner 's two-heart call was

+A 8 7
"'A Q 53

Is

7&lt;81

698·6701

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 bolhs
all e lec , 1 ocre , M1ddleporJ
do~e l o Rutland Phone 992

BRIDGE

.

I

Col1992 7481

2

4 Keep going
5Famed
•
Madrid
gallery
6Meander
9 &amp; 11 P M-Two.Mlnute Warning (R)
7 "- Butter·
Cable Channel 5 milk Sky"
6.30 P.M, - Testimony Time
8Sacco and 7.00- Paul Gaudino Fam1ly Ft!ness
9 Casey Jones
7. 30 - Marshall Footba II
Yesterday's Allllwer
was one
1D:Q0-700 Club.
23 Items
31 "I've Got
12 Rely upon
m
- in Kal·
16 Sultan's
Tuesday, November 1
the
amazoo":
· decree
black
2 wds.
19 Exchanging
28 "Give 32 Casa repartee
'
Band
horse . "·
20 Scholars
Oswald and Jim Jacoby
3 wds.
. 33 Famed Scott
21 "An30 Arab
35 Danube
Tragedy"
22 Adhestve
V.I.P.
tributary

29 Silkwonn
,(~w;;TifuTiwm:30 Gem
34 Washington
city
36 Stravmsky
Yalta
conferee
38 Anagram
of amen
39 Prefix w1th
mural
-,.....--~.c~40 Kind
of hand
or eye
DOWN
I Caledoman
2 Venice
resort

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY

3102 O&lt; 1304) 772 3227

30n

;

ANN
DAI LEY S Uphols t ery
Port land OH ,B43·2542

3102or 1304) 772 3227

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~~28Dined

BA THROOMS AND
Krtchens
remodeled cera miC trle plum.
bthg carpentry and general
mamtenance
13 years e&gt;e '
penence 992 3685
,
'
EXCAVATING BACKHOE dozer
trenc her , low boy
dump
trucks
septiC sy ~ tems
Bill
Pulhn s phone 992 2.478 doy or
mght
'

6L,IM~tr

wonder about

qet out of it!

coveting
sept1c system s
doze r back hoe dump truck
~lt mes tone
grovel
blacktop
povtng Rt 143 Phone l [6t4:l
_.......__

JUST LISTED 100 ACRES No bu1ldrngs Tuppers
Platns
Oh1o
Phone (614 )
667 3349

BREATH!

GASOUNE ALLEY

Wi l l do rooftn g construc ttoh I
plumbmg and heating No ta~
too lar~e or too small Ph onet
742 2348
•.,'

OPERA STURDY POCKET
Answer What love ollalrs in the early hours of the
mom1ng might be called -"A M..QURS '

ACROSS
I Rebuff
S Demon·
strate
· 10 Quote
11 Actor,
-Young
13 Redolence
14 Vmdicate
IS On deck
17 Vttality
18 Cockney's
tdol
19 Nota - ·
20 Volcanic
f(;:;;;;:;;f:;;:;;;:;~l:-- spew
mes 22 Eucharist
plate
him! 23 Directed
~~~-m:::: 24 Fed the
kitty.
· 25 Cubic meter
26 Cooking
directiOn
At;:::;;:::;::l27 W1thered

t.JS TO CATCH OUR

NEW SMAll Home
371 Brood·
way
St
M td dlcport
3
bedroom s both k;tchen and
d1n1ng
7 closets
fully
msu!oted
oil eiE!'clrt c heat
lully carpeted sepa rate loun
dry spo ( e Call 992 2236 or
9'92 5304.,. $24 500

TWO BEDR OOM house tra •ler and
3 ac r es on Hysell Run Rood
' Flet cher Wels h

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

OH ! OH ! NOW
7
,._,'-._-.......__WHAT

(Answers tomorrow)

IJumbles· GUMMY

3, News 4,6,1 10; To Say The Least

15, Divorce Court 8; Mlddoy 13.
12 .3&lt;1-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Broun 4; Chico &amp; !he
Man 15, Search for Tomorrow 8, tO, Elec Co 33.
1.()()-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13, News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
\.3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10
2·()()-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13. 2 JO--Ooctors 3,4, 15; One
Life to Live 6,13; Guldln9 Ll~ht 8,10
3.()()-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Fam ily 8, tO;
Ohio Journal 20
3.15--General Hospital 6,13:· 3 3&lt;1-Ma!ch Game 8,10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
4.oo-Mtster Cartoon 3, Utile Rascals-Our Gang 4;
Gong Show 15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is 8,
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Sesame St 20,33; Dinah t3
4.3()-My Three Sons 3, Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8;, 10; Little Rascals t5
5 ()()-Bonanza 3, My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mist~r Rogers' Nteghborhood 20,33;
Hogan's
Heroes 10, Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15
5 3D-Odd Couple 4; News 6; E lee Co. 20,33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Hogan' s Heroes 15
6.oo-News 3,4,8, 10, t3, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6.3&lt;1-NBC News 3,4, 15, Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 8, 10, ABC News 13, To Be Announced 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Liars Club 6, Sha Na Na 8,
News 10, To Tell !he Truth 13; Gilligan's ts t5;
Oanlol Foster, M.D. 33
7.3()-Funny Farm 3, Sha Na No 4, Match Game PM 6,
Family Feud 8, MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 , The
Judge 10; In Search of 13, Wild Kingdom t5 ,
8.()()-Grizzly Adams 3,4, 15, Eight ts Enough 6, 13;
Good Times 8, tO, Nova 20,33
8 3()-Busflng Loose B, 10
9 ()()-Laugh-In 3,4,15; Charlie' s Angels 6,13; Movie
" Breakheart Pass" 8, tO, Great Performances 33;
American Short Story 20.
10:()()-Dean Martin 3,4, 15, Borella 6,13
10.3&lt;1-News 20; Dick Cavett 20
11 3&lt;1-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; S!arsky &amp; Hutch 6, t3;
Hawaii Flve-0 8, Movie " Thunder Alley" 10
12 Oo--MacNeii-Lehrer Report 33.
12·3Q--ABC News 33, 12 :4&lt;1-Mystery of the Week
"Murder Motel " 6, 13; Pollee Story 8
1.oo-Tomo~row 3,4; Janak I 33.
1:3()-Mary Hartman 10, 2 1&lt;1-News 13
Movie Channel 4 s &amp; 7 P .M. - First Traveling Saleslady (Gl

Sc rf.Rl

on heat1ng cost
Exper•ence and
fully insured

''The Orittnllon
Not The lm1t1tors

12 .oo-Newscenter

Fi\f..fvl.J1
FAI&lt;.[[;TT::

Cellulostc (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

Carpeting

10, 6 . 3G-News Conference 4, Sunrise Semester 8

6.45--Mornlng Report 3, 6 SG-Good Morning, West
Virglnla 13, 6 55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good
Morning, Trl State 13.
7 oo-Today 3,4, 15; GOOII Morning America 6, 13 ; CBS
News 8, Bullwtnkle 10
7 3()-Schoolies 10; 8 oo-Cap! Kangaroo 8, tO, Sesame
St. 33
9.oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6, Family Affotr 8
9.JO--EdgeofNight6, Andy Griffith 8, Here's Lucy 10.
10 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6: Here' s Lucy
8; Joker's Wild 10; Mike Douglas 13
10 3&lt;1-Holtywood Squares 3,4, t5, Price Is Right 8,10
11.()()-Wheel of Fortune 3, t5 , Marcus Welby, MD 4,
Elec Co 20
t1·3G-Knockout 3,15, Family Feud 6,13 ; Love of Life
8, 10, Sesame St 20,33; T1, 55--CBS News 8; Loving
Free 10

I'C ~ /&gt;-.:[)
v, ITH

J&amp;L

Sleam htractton

6, Sunrise Semester· 10.

6.()()-Nashvllle U S.A 6, 6 25--Chrisfopher Closeup

' ' ( 'let' VRC,!.IIT
\. 'IOL MH
i Ct...A
I DBE-F.T

Yes1erday s

Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

1972 PINTO 949 276 1 after 5 dur
mg th e week and any t1me
weekends

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding, ~
Storm Windows &amp; Insula-; ;
lion.
f
Call Professionals ~ ~

,

FIREWOOD Co ll 742 2131

AK C REG ISTERED pood le pupptes
9 wk s old Start ed sho ts and LOWERY O RGAN See Mrs John
w ormed
Wdl
hold
unt d
Bogart long Bo ttom Oh1o
Christma s
992 3493
or
843 2094

PARTS FO~ 1971 Gala x•e Ford for
sal e Phone 992 5858

I

-'NY " GOOD'
M A ~ EAT I&gt;JG

10-20 . 1m o

300 BU OLD corn Ca 11 9B5 3928

$2 650 992 5866
ELECTION LEGAL NOTICE,
The O,.h •o Soil and Wa te r
Con ser va l1on
Com m •ss lon
Wi ll cause an elecl •on ot
super vi SOrs of th e Metgs Sod
a nd Wat er
Con se rval•on
D 1st r ,c t to be h eld 1n a c
cordan c e t o chapter 151 5 01
14 o f th e Revt sed Code of
Oh iO at Che ster El em entary
Sch ool on N o y em ber 17. 1977
a t 8 DO p m m conrun ct 1on
wilh our 34th annual m eel11'19
N o m n ees
a re
Curt1 s
Baltha se r
Route 1, Lan~ s
vtl! e , Ohio 45141 , DaY id
G ro ec l&lt;.n c r , Route 2. Rac•nc ,
Oh10 45 77 I
N om Jnat 1on s w dl be a c.
cept ed fro m ''"' " floor a t the
I t m e o t elec t ion
One ( 1)
super vts or wil l b e e l rct ed
You m ay ca s t you r ba llot a t
the.....oJnrhM I r.fiept ,nQ or on th e
nay ot etec t 10n a t th e Me ,g s
SWCD olf, ce seco n d lloo r of
I he r a r mer s Ra n k be tw een
8 00 a m .:tn(l •t 00 p m

P~

~

YARD SALE No v 2 and 3 10·3 • TWO COAl heole~l
I smail
Kay Wo r den s Br oadway. and
ga s heater Refngerator 1967
Vrne
Roctne
Toys ga~
s
Ford PKKup 1965 Ford cor
do thmg rpt sc
:t.l
May tog wa sher 70 000 BlU gas
sto"e 742 2174
GARAGE OR Ya r d Sale at ols
tem s College and Bndgemon STE VENS BR OWN ING 12 go
Syr acuse Thurs on l v
pump A 1 shape $125 locu~ t
post s $1 25 ea ch Ftre wood
$25 per tru ck load 742 2359

1973 GRANO PRIX A C
PS
P 8 bla ck w rth block v•nyltop
AM FM stereo !tit w hee l pos t
track
Good gas mileage

CA NCER (J une 21-July 22) Mol
ters lll al you tak e a hand rn
today shou ld w ork ou t to your
satislac tron Wh e re yo u dele
gate authort ty 11 could be an
Ol her stor y

AUCTION SALE e" ery Tu es ond
Fr1 at 7 pm New and used
merchand1se a t Ohto R1 11er Au1:
twn Me1gs Plora Middleport
Oht o
Home Ph on&amp; {304 )
773 547 1

Route 1
Pome r oy , Ohto 45769
Plamtrff,

Wed

KNOW;;
PAID

-

RUMMAGE SALE 230 South 5th
Ave MiddlEport Man Tues

"

SJfiCUM, Ohto
Ph992l9!3

r

COUNTR Y MOBIL E Hom&amp; Pmk
Route 33 nort h of Pome ro.,.
Lorge lo t s Coll 992 7479

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
TO~E ~Gi~~~LNE\y ,, OHIO

address unknown
D efe ndant

LARRY LAVENDER

Ad ul ts

'lOU K "'-!CW

EVE R YO ~E

LOBB\1 5T5

Chester , Oh1o

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

GUTTERS.AWNINGS

A VAilABL E A T Rt1o1@rs1d e A pts I
bedroom $1 05 per monrh $ 150
_secunty depos11 992 b098

GOOD
L06 B"'I5 T$Z f ,

l'l'f'"'f'~'--T t/ 5HARK5?

from rhtl ler . . •t Tn.tdt or lvllllo.r...,.
hdlator to lhe
Car•

SIDING SOffiTT
3 AND 4 RM furp1shed and un
furnts hed opts Ph one· W2
5434

THAT P"A"!E TO

1HE PENT AGO'-!, EA5 Y,
All:E SOME- GOOD

WINDOWS
AlUMINUM

'

cohco cot
Belongs to
Has part
Rewo rd

~HA T YOtl N~6D TO

5 EL ~

Radiator~
Service ~

$16Q 992 5866

lOST LONG HAIRED
fema le Full grown
M ort1n Va ughan
b lock fa ce 992 782'2

CAPTAlN EASY

EXPERIENCED

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1977
5.45--Farm Report 13, 5 5&lt;1-PTL Club t3 , 5 55-News

Parent Effectiveness 33

10 30 c

fREE ESTIMATES

or Cons. 3; Palm Trees &amp; lncebergs A,

7 3()-Hollywood.Squares 3.4; Wollman Jack 6: Let's Go
To The Races 8; MacNeii· Lehrer Report 20,3J;
Price Is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13; Music Cl!y
15.
s .oo-Man from Allan! Is 3,.1,15, Happy Oays 6, 13, CBS
Reports 8, 10; Belle of Amherst 20,33
8:3&lt;1-Laverne &amp; Shlrley 6,t3; 9:()()-Mulllgan 's Stew
3,4; Three Company 6, 13, Australia for !he Fun of It
.1 5; Mash 8, tO.
9.3&lt;1-Soap 6; One Day a! a Time 8,10, Treasures of
Tutank hamun 33; Mary Tyler Moore 13; VTR 20
10 .()()-Pollce Woman 3,.1, 15; Family 6,13; Lou Granf 8; ·
Eyewitness 33; James Paul McCartney tO; News
20
t0 :3&lt;1-Biack Perspective on the News 20
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, t3, 15; Dick Cavett 20, MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 33
11:3&lt;1-Johnny Carson J,.l,15; Movie " Terror on the
40th Floor" 6, 13, KoJak 8; ABC News 33; Movie
" Five Weeks in a Balloon" 10, 12 oo-Jonakt 33
12 4()-Movle " Cutler" ,8, 1·oo-Tomorrow H' ' t ·3&lt;1'ftf}\}'1.'\..ft fii)'ft ~ TH"T BCR"MBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ "'
byHonrtAmoldandBoblee

..

Bklwn Into 'llbHs l Atbn
STURM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
• REPIACEMENr

CA SH pa1d lor oi l mo~ es and
models o f mobtl e ho mes
Phon&amp; or eo cod e 61 A 423 9531

l4

rrc

lnnlahon Se111&lt;es

h o usecleont n g

GLENNA JOYCE TEASLEY

111

Ftunctnc Awa~able

1·304-422·4080

~·

co uld be a bt l res tless today If
you re not dOtng lh tn gs th at
help 11.11den your scope o f tn ter -

Ph 311.0250

Blown

•• PARKERSBURG

COINS CU RRENCY tokens old
packe r w at ches an d c h ot n ~
"''"er and gold We need I 964
and ol d er stlver couH Buy sell
or trade Co li Ro ge r Woms(c- y
742 1331

••

.

Tank Service
Sox

20.

oo- Truth

Liars Club 6, Pop Goes the Country 8, News 10, To
Tell !he Truth 13; Gilligan's Is t5, French Chef io,

o0!!~Y I 5 T5 !

Jack's Septic

Mary Hartman jO. 1 40-News 13.
Movte Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 PM - Pink Panther Strikes Again (PG )
T&amp; 11 PM - The Front (PG )
Cable Channel 5 6·30 p m - Testimony Time
7}¥! - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7·30- PI Pleasant 8th Grade Foo.tbalt
10 00 - 700 Club

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1977
5 3o-odd Couple 4, News 6, Elec Co 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10. Hogan 's Heroes 15
6 oo-News 34.8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 3&lt;1-NBC News 3,4,15; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends
6; CBS News 8, 10; ABC News t3, Stage of Preston
Jones

Phone 985-3806

REASONABLE
RATES

k, ,,,, fulfl" ' flfllf,,l,&lt;ulml. {w

- --

DO

GUARA~TEED

TV Log for easy viewing

7

Res1dent1al
and
commercial
Call
for
esttmate. 24 hour serv tce
Anyday , anyhme

PARTS · LABOR

Fores t Pro
for sto nd1ng
99 2 5965 or
8570

•

'

Wood Stoves ~

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

SWAIN

992 7070
-----

smokmg as a drug addtclton,

'

1~·1

1
' ' · · ••

Wil l

111

1

$18,300.
L---------------------------------~ .'
'·"''lilt I '
J,,,, ,,.,,,,,1., ''1'1~
..,,... ,,, \ ,, '

1/'I.J ,,.,

WantedJit}ln-r_ ·

TIMBER
Pomeroy
duch Top pr tce
sowt 1mber Co li
Kent Honby I 446

O,

OOVERNOR,

Business Services

"I

/fll•

The moves you make co uld be

t

else tells httn tt's a nosmokmg area The smoker
wtllle l\ hun to shut hts mouth
and take a s\\ tng at him "
VIRGO !Aug lJ.Sept 21) fh1s
" Non-smokers rea ll y lhtnk sho uld p ra .. e to be a fort una te

of smokmg as a vtle, od 1nus

t!oj~lt

.,

ftll ed lh ts comt ng year tn the

ol

upset after bemg htt by a shot
\~ o rld S non-smokers with of spray
· If they do, so what ' " he
six-o unc e spra y ca~ can
asked
·'You get your pomt
be 11 htpped out t~ ~­
across We're trymg to S-Jve
anyone auda cmus en oug h to
\Jght up a · vtle, odious and hves If we can get 10 people
disg ust mg" cigarette or ctgar to qutt smokmg and sa \•e
their hves, we have done our
tn the presence of others
The 42-yea r-o \d former JOb well
Far Wednesday , Nov 2 1977
cham-smoker sa; s It 's the
perfect thtng to use on a
or

S8, 100 (Or educa tion ;
75 per cen t of your
Col lege tutt ton fr ee.
Co lleg e
Leve l
E ~ a mina t t on
Free ,
An Assoc• at e Degree
t h r ou gh
th e
Comm un 1ty
College
of the At r For ce, 30
da ys patd vacalton, 7
paid 3 day weekends,
good starltng pay and
mu c h
more .
Interest ed?
Contact me , Vernon
Zeger, your Atr Force
Represenlallve.
For a~ appotntment
tn the Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592-4592 Collect.
Order No. 9-ct-86

phyStc al and men ta l spheres

I \I

Spray the smokers

cro\rded subway

•

lOST BLACK and wh1te bull dog
German short houed pouller
b1rd do g l os t Wed m01mng
b£!'hmd Odds and Ends Shop
M tddlepon
Reward
Call

BE HELD

, ,..,,,..,. l{tJ\

J''I ' "'II t'i•H• ,J 1,,

OLD FURNITURE IC e boxes b ra ss
TE XAS OIL COMPANY nt:!eds pe r
beds , 1ron bed s e tc co mpl ete
'iOn M over 40 for e xclus tve rn
hous ;:oholds Wr 1te M 0 M il ler
d us tr~al
sloes ternt ory
No
lncred.ble J Wh y pay htgh el eon c
Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto or coli
re locohon We ar e an expon
bdls th 1s w mler? let U'!&gt; pay
992
-77
60
dmg AAA 1 l 1rm established
....
I hem l or you' One bedroof""''
s•nce 1933 We offer full fnnge N O ITEM TOO large o r too small
f ro m $1 30 now ovodoble
bene f itS L1beral commtss•ons
w.l! buy I ptec e or complete
V1lla ge Manor Th~r d and Md l
w1 th opportumty for advance
hous eh ol d New used or ani!
Stree t&lt;&gt; M 1dd lepor t Teleph on e
ment For pe rso nal mterv1 ew
ques Morhn s Furn1ture 20 N
992 77 87 Equal Hous ng Op
w n te a letter and te ll m e about
7nd St
M1ddle por t Phone
portu ni!.,.
vou r !&gt;elf R A Broun Soles
992 6370
TUPPERS
PlAINS N ew 2 bedroo m
Manage r
Southweste r n
TWO TO ten acres wtlh good
f urn opo r rment for r ent (61 4)
Pet ro leum Box 789 Ft Worth
b u•ld1ng s1te o r olde r horr\e
667 33.d9
TX 76101EOE
'iud oble f or remodeltng water
and elec tnct ty o votlable clo 5e ONE TRAILER lo t now available
V1sloPork Sv rocuse 530 mon
t o hardtop rood Coli 992 -7036
th ly Ph one 992 289 7
after 5 pm
.
FOR SALE or trade o r land con
ONE SMALL house w 1t h both o n
CHIP
WOOD
Poles
mo x
tr act
2 bedroom hou se m
on e acre g round on Oh 1o R1ver
dtamerer 10 on lorge st end $8
Rutland 992 5858
NKe gar den spot To tol elec
pe r ton Bundled !lob S6 per
trtc Suttobte for m1ddl e aged
to n Deli vered to Oh1 o Pallet
FOR SA LE or Trade 1967 Ford T
co uple
Oepost t r equ~re d
Co Rt 2 Pomer oy 9C12 2b89
B.rd Full power otr new ex
992 543 3
houst system Glenn R Br sse-11
THREE BEDROOM home Ren tal
Boshon Rood
949 2801
or
purchase or low down pay
949 2860
ment Wrt te 729 T c o Da•ly
Senlln&amp;l Pomero y OH
REGISTERED APPAlOOSA ond
Quarter Horses l or sole or ELECTRIC PUMP E1ther deep o r
tr od&amp; Col e Stables Tuppe rs
shallo w well Must be 1n good NEW 12 &gt;e 44 bu s• ness unll Tw o
Plotns , Oh10 (6 14) 667 3405
work •ng condul lon
Phon e
12 off• ces and 16 recep ti on
11
992 2272
roorn m cent e r
both
carpeted thro ughout drapes
storm w1nd o w~ poliO door o rJd
eleCim heonh Ca n be seen o l
PIANO TUNING and Repau Lane
K1ngsbury Mob•le Home Sale s
Dan1els 992 2082 12 yea r s ~e r
1100 E Mom Sr Pomeroy OH
1o11Ce to ln Cauntv Rele rence •
Phone 992 7034
Elberfeld s

I

I I hl t l

Bl JOHN J . SANKO
DEt\'VER I UP! I - Paul
Wrtght wants to arm the

lOS1 O Ul of cor ladtc s glo sses
around Ftve Pomt Stat•on Fn
nt ght Tom Hoyrnon 985 3509

NEEDS BABY SITTER at hom e Ill
,.ort land 7am 10 6p m $35 a
weelo.
Ca ll Donny
Roush
843 219'2

I IIIli
I

Volunteer
RA CI Nf
0@porlmerH w dl spom.ol u gun
shoot t-ve t y Saturday ot 7 p rn
ot theu buddtng m Bo shon Fo&lt;"
ror v choke guns only

EXPE RIEN CE,D REFR IGERA TOR and
oppl!c nce serv 1cemon
Pa 1d
h oltda y s
v o ca llans
and
h aspti OI I ZOI IOn
Ga l l ta
Reh gerator Co 61! 3rd A'tle
C oll1pal1s Oh1o

I u •d tt
t I hi, II

f homas Pa me satd , · When
v.ea re planmng f or posten t).

IHE

'BP~il?:- =~

\ &gt;tl •I "&gt;.tlUttfoll

patn o t

THERE WILl be no hvn11119 no
lt eS pa!~ !&gt;l ng und no i?'• Cepllans
on 111)' proper• v Bob M cGra w

LOST OUT OF car Remmg ton Rt
t ie 30 06 wtth sco pe 0r1d scope
cove r on Co Rdo 30 and Carme l
Rd
on Sunday at
noon
992 2880 Re ward

\ !,.ud ,,

A thought for the da y·

~ol&gt;:&gt;

'J42 202!_

11c1t1onahsts tned to for Ct"'
U1e1 r "'a\ m to Bl air House ut
W ashmgt on m an attempt to
assassmate Pre&gt;stdent Ha rry

Earl~

l ot

l..o5tand }"ouml

I • I' 11•1 ,, • I ••I '

t

pt.:~duct~

~ 1111

,J

l• · •t\••,, '"Il l

1 t )t L

fUllE R BRUSH
&gt;)q2 341 0

d

nd-.u,,

H• , , [ , , , , 1 \
1

, L

\ '

t.• ,

I , 11,j , t II

tIll I 1

of Austn a-H ungar~

du -Pont ,_ France

1

\ I•

ln 1918 the Hapsburg tnt&gt;·

and Budapest the ra pttal of
Hun gar)
!Jt 1950. tM Puerto Rt(:an

I

I hll . ... f ,,, tt. ltl!UIIHII ~
1&lt;11• ,1,, t lhi\LI&lt;II~ldtl

order

narc h)

l

I

1\ •

Department
nl(lne~

I l~

1\

·''

'

1

In 1864. tho. U.S Post ()ffJL'e
tnlrndur~l the

CUN ~HO O T
C\ ery Sun
oheHlC'On
Fudot
Clw&lt;l. gull!!. onl y A :-~01 t ~d

CHARGES

art&gt;
\'enus. Juptt er and

rthlrllln~

OPPORTUNITIES

;'\otice~

THtNOS ARE
C HECI'IED OU~O YOU'LL.

ELVINEY'S COW
TROMPLED All OVER
MY BLACK· Ell ED
PEAS!!

WHAT CHARGES

'1E BRING IN'
AG'INSTTH'COW
LOWEE7.Y?

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
East's double of North's
one-club opemng was JUst a
bad b1d He dtd have some
htgh cards , but hts best smt
ha~ JUSt been btd by an opponent
South's jump to two hearts
was conventional It shoWed a
good heart suit and from 7 to 9
h1gh-card pomts Thts convention, whtle not a part Of standard Amertcan , IS used by
many match-pomt players '
West mtght well have tried
two spades, but he had seen
examples of ht s partner 's
takeout doubles before and
dectded to stay out of the btd·
dtng
North jumped to four

OISTUR81N'
TH' PEAS~!

-~

Wes t opened the ace of
spades and shtfted to a dta·
mond South took dummv 's
ace and promptly played the
ace and trey of clubs South
was sure that East be td the
club ktng and wanted to put
East nght on the spot
What would yo~ 'do tf you
were East' If you nse wtth
the kmg and South ha s a
smg1eton club you have chuck·
ed a tnck If you duck and
South started w'tth jack-small
vou have c hucked a trick that
way Tht s East dtd play low
and South became the onlv
declarer to make 10 tncks at
hearts

~~~~
A Caliform a 1eader wants to
know what the San Franctsco
1s or was
The convenllon showed aces
and kmgs on lhe basts of two

conven llon

pomts {or an ace and one pomt

for a kmg 10 response to an ar·
t 1fl c lal fou r n o lrump It never
achteved any populanty

(Do you have a question for
the eKperts ? Write " Ask the
Jscobys " care of this
newspaper Thfl Ja cobys wf/1
answer mdlwdu~l questions If

sramped,

sell-arJdresstJd

envelopes are enclosed

The
most interesting questtons will
be used m th1s column and w11/
r BCBI II e copies o l J A CO BY
MODERN I

(_

�12- The Daily Sentmel. ~hddleport-Pomrroy , 0 ., TUesday . l'lO\ ' 1. 1977

A total of 1.967 tullerculm
what the wtthdrawal means.
By SARA FRITZ
test
s were done at th&lt;' Meigs
he replied · "As a practical
UP! Labor Reporter
Cuunty
Tuberculosis Clinic so
ma t ter 1t doesn' t mean
WASHlNGTON t UP!l
far
thi
s
year with 70 positi\'e
AFL-ClO George Meany said anything to us at all."
reactors,
Mrs. Jane Brown,
But he added . " I hope that
today that Prestdent Carter
Meigs
County
Tuberculosis
has decided the United Stales somewhere down the road Nurse. stated in a clinic
will withdraw fr om the · things will change and we can progress report Monday.
Jnte·rnationa l Lab o r get back m." The Uruted , The tuberculin sktn testtng
Organization ne•t Saturday States provides 25 per cent of for pre-school children and
on Ule recommendation of the ftnancial support of the chtldren of all ages, adults
labor and industry leaders. lLO, the oldest U.N. agency and an Meigs County school
" I regret that •t had to m existence.
Mean)· and the U.S. personnel is a large portiOn of
come to this," ~leany told
the tuberculosis cltntc
· reporters at the White House . Chamber of Commerce had program . The clinic is
"I had hoped that tt would not asked Carter to withdraw
· fr om the U.N. agency,
come to this."
'
0
Administra t iOn o fhc~a l s cla imin g it has become ·
~~
refused to confirm the report . dommated by Communist
and
Thtrd
World
nations
that
promising it would be announced later at the White ib'llOre worker rights.
Labor and industry were
House . PreS&lt;dent Carter,
upset
by Soviet bloc efforts to
meanwhlle. mPt with Labor
politictze
the lW, and a vote
Secretary R;ly Marshall to
discuss the matter .
two years ago granting
" I think tt was the right observer status to the
decision, " Corter told Pale s tinian Liberation
MarShall during a · ptcture Organizatwn.
NEW YORK (UP!) - Con·
Headquartered in Geneva, victe d Wa te rgate burglar
taking session. The president
carefully did not mention the the lW ts made up of about Frank Sturgis was arrested
130 government, worker and Monday night on charges of
substance of the dec!sw.n
employer
delegates . It was threatening a woman in order
MarShall replied ''I do too.
establiShed
at the 1919 Pans to keep her from teshfying
It was tough, but nght."
Peace
Con
ference
at the close before the House Committee
Meany discussed the
of
W
orld
War
I1
as
a world on Assassmations, police
matter
wtth
reporters
for
um
for
workers,
following a mtnimum wage
reported today.
bill sigmng tn the White concentrattns on wages and
Poltce said Sturgts was
House Rose Garden . Asked working condttions.
arrested in a Manhattan
apartment at 11:30 p.m. by a
~--------------------------, de tective from the department's Jntelhgence Division.
Pollee said the apartment
I
I was rented to Sturgis.
Police said Sturgis had
Med
.
(enter
_
f::lospdal
•n.
• ' FRED CORNWELL
telep~oned threats to Marila
Fred B. CornwelL 77 , Marion following a one year
Brdwell , was fatally injured Illness
Lorenz. Miss Lorenz is a
He was a nat•ve of Gall•a
in a t raffic accident Monday
form
er CIA and FBI
afternoon tn Springf ield Twp. County and moved to Marion
mformant who tes tified
He was a ret ired employee •n 1947 He was a Gall1a
before the house committee
of the Gallipolis State ln - school bus driver for nme
strtute He was born Jan . 1, years and 1n Marion was
that
she accompanied Lee
1900 In Wayne , W Va son of employed for 23 ye ars as a
Harvey
Oswald. Sturgis and
the late George and Mary wel der w •th the Mario n
others
to
Dallas on Nov. 19,
Power Shovel Co. He ret1red
Ward Cornwell.
in
1968
He
belonged
to
the
1963,
thr
ee days before
Sur\l ivors include his wife ,
Margaret Rose Cornwell. Qakland Un1ted Method1sf
Prestdent Kennedy was
Bidwell whom he married irt Church and was a member: of
assassinated
Ashland , Ky . tn 1960, a the union at Marion Power
Stur gts, ~2. was to be
Shovel
•
l da ughter .
Mrs
Ireland
Su rv 1ving are his w1fe,
arrai gned later today on
(Brenda) Hunt of BidwelL
Four sons and a daughter Thelma R Rose Ward , two
charges of aggrava ted

sturms

arrested

on charge

Area Deaths

!

survive from a pre vious
marr1age. They are Ernest of
Thurman ; Rona ld of Detroit,
M tch .; Homer of Portland,
Ore , and
Winfred
of
Ashland ;
Mrs
Tommy
(Jeanetta) Lindsay of El
Paso . Texas There a.re also
14 grandchildren and tw o
great.grandch tldren
Two sisters and two
brothers ,
Mrs
Mary
Thompson , Mrs . Cora Ayres,
Albert Cornwel L all of
Huntmgton , W . Va . and
Rubtn Cornwell of Ashland,
Ky Four brothers and one
sister preceded him .
Funera l services will be

held at

11

a.m , Thursday

from
the
McCoy.Moore
Funeral Home at V1nton with
Rev. Samuel Thompson of
ficiatmg . Burial will be tn
Mounf Olive Cemetery .
Visitation wtll be held at the
funeral hom e from 7 to 9 p.m
Wednesday .

JAMES N. WARD
MARION - Ja mes N.

Ward, 75, 942 Chatfield Road ,
rv\arion, dted early Tuesda y
morn ing at the Communrtv

!

sons , James Ward , Jr ,
Columbus, and Robert K. of
Nlarysville ; three daughters ,
Mrs . Ilene Barton , Spokane ,
Wash ;
Mrs
Emogene
Spaulding , Pr ospect , and
Mrs .
Beatr1ce
Wood .
Rutland ; two sis ters, Mrs W .
H. Luel len , Prospect , and
Mrs Rex Lamiey . Cedar .
ville, 18 grandchildren and 15
grea t.grandchtldren .
Funeral ser vices wi l l be
held at 1 p.m . Thursda y at the
Snyder Funer al Home in
Manon w1th the Rev . Fra ncis
G Huber offtcta tmg Burta l
will be in Prospect Cemetery .
Fnends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 1
to 9 p.m Wednesday

ROBERT lfi:NRY

Robert Valley Henry, 65, a
resident of 424 Second Ave.,
Kanauga, was pronounced
dead upon arr ival at Holzer
Med1cal Cen ter at 12 15 am .
Tuesday
Mr . Henry operated Bob's
Sal vage tn Kanauga f or
several years.
He was born March 8, 19 12,
10 Mason County, W Va , son
of the late John and F lor ence

Henr y Halley .

He moved to Ohio m the
early 1920s. He marr ied Edna
Nlan e Spires, Jackson, on

Feb. 12.

Let's Update

Your Polley!
See us about revising
your prese nt policy to
meet rising cosls! Call!

•

992·5120
DAVIS
INS. AGENCY
Bill Quickel
Owner
LIGHTNING ROD
INSURANCE CO.
Across from
The Courthouse
in Pomeroy

'936,

Investigation is Underway

1,967 TB tests
given at ·clinic

U.S. withdraws
from ILO group

in Jackson . She

survives, along with eight
chi ldren · Robert H Henry,
Jr., M rs. Kenneth (Sue)
H igley ,
Mrs
Sh i rle y
Fill inger, Da vid Lee Henry,
and Lar ry R. Henry , all of
Kanauga ;
Mrs
Ronald
( Je nnie) White. Chesh1re ;
Bonn1e Henr'y, 'Loshocton ,
Donnie Henr y, Hampton, Va
Five ch ildren preceded him
in
death .
Twe n ty-four
grandchildren and two gr eatgrandchildren survive.

The fol lowi ng brothers and

s1sters survive. Charles ,
Elmer , Richard and Ray , all

of New York : Mrs. Eddy
!Thelma) DeSa lco, New
York: Mr s. RUs sell (Helen)
Reynolds , Bidwel l , Mrs .
Wfll1am (Bo nn ie) Coble,
Homasassa, F la and M rs.
Harold (Pau l ine) B 1n1on,
Hen ry , Wash i ngton, DC
Mr Hen r y also worked for
a pertod of trme with
Gallipolis Ice Co. and also
Burnett's Oatry in Kanauga .
Funer al arrangements will
be announced by Miller's
Home fo,r Funerals

HAZEL REED
Hazel Rowley Reed of 143
North Front Street, Mtd·
dleport , dted Su nday . October
30 at t1er home follow ing a
Ieng thy t1 Iness
Widow of Elmer Aust in
Reed. former Middleport

harassment arid coercion.

located on Mulberry Heights
in the former children's home
building.
SkUl testing is done for the
&lt;jetection of the tuberculosis
germ and is free of charge of
all Meigs County residents.
Positive .reactors to the
skin test are given a free

chest x-ray, which is sent to
Dr . Roy L. Donnerberg,
thoracic department at
University
Hospital.
Columbus, for interpretation.
The 70 reactors have aU been
followed by a chest x-ray and
either prophylactic therapy
giVen for those found with no
lung damage or tuberculin
drugs prescnbed for di-

sease.

By MICHAEL J. CONLON
WASHINGTON {UPI) The government has started
an investigation mto reports
of several deaths among
persons usins the popular
predigested liquid protein
diets, it was learned today .
The deaths, which may
number as many as 11, have
not been confirmed as being
directly linked to the diet fad,
but the Food and Drug
Administration said it is
working with the Center for
Dtsease Control to check
medical records and autopsy
reports, if any, to see if there
is a link between the diets and
deaths.
In !iome cases, an FDA
spokesman said, the agency
has been informed directly of .
suspected problems from the
diet. other cases under
investigation were reported
elsewhere, it said.
One case was reported by a
doctor who had a relative
whose death was supposedly
linked to the diet, the agency
said. "We are working with
the CDC to invesllgate
reports of several deaths
associated with liquid protein
diets," the FDA said.
In recent weeks the FDA
has announced two recalls of
predigested liquid protein
products because they were
packaged in bottles that were
defective and could have
caused bacterial growth.
At the same time "the

Stwgts, of Miami, Fla.,
was char ~ed with threatening
Miss Lorenz to "refrain from
testifymg before legally
constit uted authorittes,"
pol ice said.
Sturgis, wh o has ttes to
anhC~s tr o gro ups 111 the
Miami area, was arrested
June 17, 1972, mside the
Watergate apartment
complex in Washington, D.C .,
with James McCord and
thre e Guba n· Americans
recruited by Sturgis for E .
Howard Hunt and G. Gordon
Liddy.
Sturgts was indicted Sept.
15, 1972, on eight counts of
co ns p iracy , burglary,
Wiretappmg an d unlawful
possession of intercepting___
PLEASANT VALLEY
de Ytces m connection with the
Discharges - Mrs. Dale
plot w burglarize and bug the Lawson, Portland, 0.; Mrs.
National Dem oc ratic &amp;bert McClure and son,
Committee offt ces.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Jeff Donally,
He pleaded gutlty Jan . 15, Crown City; Amy Henry,
1973, and was sentenced to a Gallipolis Ferry; Walter
prison term of one ' to four Shrively, Point Pleasant;
years. He was released by Robert Smith, Henderson;
court order Jan . 18, 1974, and Sommer Fisher, .. Point
'the sentence eventually was Pleasant; George l,ove, Point
reduced to time served.
Pleasant; Josephine Vo&amp;S ,
Mason ; Betty Lake, Mason;
Karen Dotson, Redhouse ;
bus inessman. she Is survived Mrs. Terrance Blankenshtp,
b{ one daughter, Nancy Reed Leon;
Mrs.
Richard
o the Fro n1 Street address
Friends may call at the Sydenstricker, Southside;
residence at any t1me after l
Mrs. Homer Blessing, West
p. m . Tuesday Graveside Columbia and Mrs. George
services will be at 2 p.m .
Wednesday at the M•ddleport Johnson, Point Pleasant.
Hil t Ceme tery with the
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
Reverend Harold Deeth of- and Mrs. John Ross, Jr. ,
fici ating . Th e Ewing Funeral Mason and a daughter to Mr.
Home IS in charge of the
and Mrs. ·Keith DeVault,
arragements .
Gallipolis.

Whatever Your Taste
In Furniture, You Can
Choose With Confidence
From Aexsteel
The de ep seati ng , long last ing comfort of Flexstee1 s
fin e fu rni t ure st arts with the unique Flexsteel spring s,
for med from t he f inest watchsprlng st eel.

...

1ft
Ill

1ft
1ft

c

-..-....
-c
-...

1ft
Ill

1111

,..... ...
- ...

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I(

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0Ill

A.

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'I

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~:

MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPARTMENT
&gt;
'
ON THE 1ST FLOOR
,

~

(
.I

~~~
,

)j;.

~

-.._.

By Unlted PresslnternaUonal
AKRON - A TANKER TRUCK LOADED with raw
sewage overturned after it apparenUy lost a wheel along
IJ;tter~te-76 during the morning rush hour today, police
reported.
,
The crash in the center eastbound lane of the Akron
Expressway caused se~ere traffic backups and some of the
sewage spilled out, but no injuries were reported, according to
pollee.

I hl' louk is we&lt;.lernJ

~

the t.ulorinK dnd qudli ty

r/ fl'_,./;' ~"' , ;, unmimkably WrJn~ler.

,

H ", WJrmly lined and

col ldrcd with poly•

l' ) tcr an d Jcry !'IC

WASffiNGTON - INDUSTRIES AND jobs have increased
in the South, but per capita income in the area remains the

shear1 ing, and the
-.he11 i~ mdde of

Obligations of States and political
subdivisions .... . .... .. ............................... ... . ...... . ..... 2,029,115.09
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .. . . ........... .. .. .... ..... ...... . 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell . . .... . ... . ..... . . . ......... .. , ... ...... . . .. ... 500,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ...... . .. , ............ 6,702,698.26
Less: Reserve for possible loan losses ............ .. ,, ............. 83,070.27
Loans, Net ........... ... . ....... .. . ........... ,. ..................... 6,619,62?.99
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises ..... . .. ........... . . •. .•.... . . . ...... .. 111,219.92
Real estate owned other than bank premises . ....... , , , , ..... , .. ,. .. . ......... 23,455.65
Other assets . .. . .................................. . .... ·. ..... ... , ... . ...... 5,853.00
TOTAL ASSETS . ...... . . ................ . . .. . ......•....... . ... ....... 13,489,79f.~

lowest in the country, according to a congressional study.
The Congressional Research Service study, requested by
Sen. Henry Belbnon, R-()kla ., covers the pattern of regional
changes between 1950 and 1975. It was prepared for the Senate
APpropriations Conunittee.
The study found that the gap between per capita income
levels among slates and regions has narrowed considerably
over those 25 years.

Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 2,000
b. No. sbares outslandings 2,000 (par value) ............................ . 100,000.00
Surplus ............................... : .. ......... .. .................... 900,000.00
Undivtdedprofits ................. .. ....... ... ... , ........ . .. .. ......... . . 306,956.72
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ... ..... : ...... . ....... . .. ............. , . .... 1;306,956.72
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .... .............. ........... 13,489,794.82
Average for 30 calendar days ending with call date:
Cash and due from banks ....................... . ....... , ....... . , ......... 1,035.00
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ..... . ..... .. ...... . . ........................... 1,195.00
Totalloans ...... : .. ............. ............ . ........ ·· .................. 6,469.00
Total deposits of $100,000 or more
in domestic offices .......... . ............. ... .......... .. .... .. ... .'........ 422.00
Total deposits . . ....... .. ............. .. .. .. ... ' .... ,. ..... : . ......... . ... 12,544.00
TOTAL ASSETS . , , . ....... ....... ... ... . .. . ... . ........... , . . . ..... . ..... 13,388.00
Time certificates In denorninatious of $100,000
or more (outstanding as of report date) ...... .. ... .. _. . ...... ... . . . ....... . .... 42\1·00

~

HRS : 10 :00 AM. 11I1T . OO PM. Sun . Thurs. 10 : 00 A . M .

a bill raising Social Security
By DONALD H. MAY
payroll taxes equally for
WASffiNGTON (UPJ )
Congress is certain to raise both.
Sen. Carl Curtis, R ·Neb.,
Social Security taxes sharply
the pending Senate
·says
in the next decade - but
version
- approved Tuesday
whose?
by
the
Senate Finance
The Senate today was
considering a bill puttmg the Committee - is a "soak the
increased tax burden much employer" scheme, which
more heavily on employers would add to inflation as
than employees, breaking the mcreased business costs are
tradillon since Social passed on to consumers,
Security began in 1935 that ·mterfere with employment.
and, retard recovery from
the groups pay equally. .
The House last week passed the recession.

He planned a floor fight for
equal taxation.
Another fight was possible
over how much retirees
should be allowed to earn in
wages without losing Social
Security benefits AI present
they may earn $3,000, above
which they, lose $1 in benefits
for each $2 in wages until
their entire benefit is lost.
The Senate bill would ratse
this "earnings limit" to $4,500
next year, $8,000 in 1979, and
after that it would rise

automatically with national
wage levels.
The House voted to remove
the limit entirely in 1982 for
persons 65 to 72, which would
mean they could earn
unlimited income and still
collect full retirement
benefits. The earnings limit
does not apply above 72 .
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.,
planned to propose the House
provision on the Senate floor.
The Senate bill, as sent to

the floor , would raise the
maximum Social Security tax
for an employee from $965
this year to $2,390 In 1987. The
employer'S maximum tax
per worker would go from
$965 to $'5,287 .~0 . The House
b&gt;ll would make them both
$3,024.60 in 1987.
The reason ts, that under
the Senate bill the wage base
on which an employee's tax is
figured rises from the present $16,500 to $33,900 in 1987,·
while the base nn which the

employer's tax is figured per
worker rises from $16,500 to
$50,000 In 1979 and $7~,000 in
1985. A $10,000-a·year worker
would have a much S!DaUer
increase, rising from $585 this
year to $705 in 1987 under the
Senate bill, $710 in 1987 under
the House bill. Because this is
less than the base, the employer's tax for such a worker
would rise only the same
amount.

Coal negotiations with
Easter11 companies end

NEW YORK - JOAN AZIZ HAS lined up a free heart
valve operation for her !~year-old niece and free transportation from Pakistan. What she hasn 't lined up is a visa
from the Slate Department allowing the girl to come to' •
America.
.. &gt;
....,., :
Shaklla Razak lives in Karachi with her father,
stepmother and two brothers. When Mrs. Aziz vtsited her in
Karachi last year, she said Shaltila's lips and fingernails were
VIC BROWN, one of the Minersville resideiits-affected by the suspension of service at
blue, she had difficulty breathing and weighed between 30 and the Minersville Post Office, stands beside some 26 mailboxes which he is putting up in ac35 pounds.
cordance with the new system to be used in delivery of mail to Minersville residents~Brown
could only find five of the mail boxes he needed and had to make a trip to the Parkersburg
, HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. - A GRAND .n.JRY bas handed up area to locate the balance.
indictments in an Investigation Into charges that salesmen of
medical devices served as assistants in surgery at several
bospitala In Suffolk County. An informed source close to tbe
investigation said at least three indictments were handed up,
EXTENDED OUTWOK
me of them against a hospital.
Friday through Sunday,
SUffolk County District Attorney Henry O'Brien was
a chance of showers dally.
expected to announce. the grand jury action today.
High&amp; will be In the 50&amp; and
A spokesman for Smithtown General Hospital sald
lows will be In the lOR
Tuesday the DA's office had told the hospital to "expect
Friday and In the 30s
indictments."
·Saturday and Sunday.
Vic Brown, well known available for the post office
'
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND - U. N. OFFICIALS say Minersville resident, charges after last Saturday, but no ;:::·:;.;:·:;.;.·:;.;:·:::::..;:·:;.;::;.;:;:;:;:·:;.;:·:::·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·.·,·
President Carte~ 's "drastic" decision to pull the United States the " bureaucrats" have hurt action was taken td secure
out of the International Labor Or~anlzaUon because of its anti- the Mmersville · community another location until just a
badly with the suspension of few days before the Miners·
·
Western stance is unjustified ,
ville Post Office was closed
-The United States pays 25 percent of tbe budget for the the post office.
Partly cloudy tonight and
under the suspension.
Announcement
that
the
Geneva-based U.N. agency, and the decision TUesday by
with lows tonight
Thursday,
Brown
char11es
not
only
will
Minersville
post
office
in
the
President Carter, in Washington, will require sharp cuts in its
the
post
offtce
closing
cause
tn
the
mid
50s and highs
community
was
to
be
programs to train workers in developing nations, the officials
Thursday
in
the
low or mid
Minersville
to
lose
i!s
identity
suspended
as
of
Monday
w~s
said.
made last week . Brown and the people of the town 70s.
BIRMINGHAM, ALA. - RESEARCHERS at the charges the 1lureaucrat s lose the services, but the
FINED, JAILED
University of AJa.bama at Binningham said recent knew 10 months ago the suspension has brought other
William H. Williams, 61,
experiments indicate that immunizing cows to produce present building would not be problems. As owner of
Brown's Trailer Court, he Pomeroy, was fined $200 and
antibodies in milk might help protect bottle-fed babies from
said
it was his responsibility costs and sentenced to three
tooth decay.
to
secqre
some 26 mailboxes days in jail when he appeared
DEADLINE
FRIDAY
Dr. Jerry McGhee said TUesday the experiments ''suggest
for
the
occupants
of the before Middleport Mayor
No letters to the editor on
that bnrnunizing cows might prove a productive method of
mobile
homes
in
the
court. Fred Hoffman TUesday night
any
Issue
or
candldale
for
solving the dental decay problems of developing nations where
Brown
satd
he
was
not on charges of driving while
lbe
Nov.
8
election
wUI
be
little attention is given to the care of teeth."
accepted by lhe Sentinel notified until a bout 10:30 a.m. Intoxicated.
Saturday that the suspension
Forfeiting a $25 bond in the
after 12 noon on Friday.
LANSING, MICH.- A FIVE-WEEK ACCUMULATION of
was to stand. He said he court posted on a charge of
filth has plied up in the corridors of stale office, btJlldings, bUt
began s.:outing for rural type spinning tires was Denver R.
lawmakers have been unable to break an impasse·on the hiring
mailboxes required in the Biggs, 19, Pomeroy.
of janirors.
changeover. Only five could
The House and Senate appropriations committees met
be located. The cost so far has
with Civil Service officials for nearly three hours Tuesday to
FOUR FINED
been $139.33 plus additional
discuss the issue, but there was no finn indication of when the
Four
defendants forfeited
charges that he will have to
mess will be cleaned up.
bonds
in
the court of Pomeroy
pay for hardware needed
The buildings have not been cleaned since Oct. I, when
Mayor
Clarence' Andrews
and, of course, the problem
contracts with private janitorial firms expired.
,Tuesday
night. They were
does not include the time he
Mark
A.
Brown,
Athens, and
wlU have wrapped up in
Cl..EYELAND - VISITING JUVENILE JUDGE Robert
Thomas
L.
Lee,
Route 2,
getting the boxes erected.
Murray of Madison County acquitted Thomas W. Lippitt of
Albany,
$3~0
each,
,POsted
on
The mail boxes were to
Cleveland Tuesday of criminal neglect charges brought by the
charges
of
driving
while
have been put up for use on
South Euclid-Lyndhurst school board.
Monday but· patrons of the mtoxicaled; John Williams,
The charges involved the refusal of Lippitt and his wife,
Minersville Post Office will Syracuse, $30, assured clear
Martha, to send their daughters to a slate-approved public
distance, and Ronald L.
school, instesd educating them in private homes.
An
Ohio
highway be able to use general Dean, Athens, $25, speeding.
patrolman and his wife have delivery for 30 davs:
CINCINNATI - ST. ELIZABETH MEDICAL Center of sued the estate of the late
Dayton has been informed that Blue Cross of Southwest Ohio's Elvin E . Wedge, former
Hospital Care Corp. is terminating its "member hospital Mason County sheriff, for
contract" with the medical center effective Jan. 31, 1978.
$875,000 for injuries the
Blue Cross oficials said Tuesday the move was in patrolman suffered in the
accordance with a Blue Cross board policy which "denies 1976 jail explosion that killed
John Anderson, chairman definite date for the parade
reimbursement to hospitals for services rendered Blue Cross Wedge.
of
the .Christmas promotion has been set as yet. He did
subscribers in new or expanded facilities that failed to gain
In the suit filed in U. S.
for
the Pomeroy Chamber of say that everything lor the
prior approval by an appropriate local planning organization," District Court here Monday,
Commerce
told members at a Christmas decorations is in
Bruce D. and Gloria Wallace
noon
luncheon
Tuesday the except the bulbs. Frecker and
of Lancaster, formerly of
Gold
Star
project
will be used Ed Kennedy are making
Middleport and Gallipolis,
again
this
year.
Christmas decorations that
sued Mrs. Elvin E .' Wedge of
have
Anderson
said
the
program
to be covered.
Point
Pleasant,
adwill
go
into
effect
after
Fred
Crow, chamber
ministratrix of the estate of
Thanksgiving. Persons r'nay president, said Bill Mayer,
her late husband.
Wedge was killed in the partictpate iR--the Gold Star Jim Frecker, Paul Simon,
explosion March 2, 1976, at give-away with no purchase Virgil Teaford, Bill Grueser
the jail. Wallace suffered foot necessary at any Gold Star and Jack Carsey, had been
elected as two-year directors.
and other injuries which later merchant.
The
only
change
m
this
Crow also reported on the
· The board of the Gallia
resulted
In
the
amputation
of
Plumbing contract for
year's promotion will be the proposed nursing home that
County District Library TUes- $11,274 will go to Standard his right leg at the knee.
day accepted $299,153 in bids Plwnbing and Heating.
The suit contends that awarding of prtzes. Prizes may be built in Pomeroy. A
to build the Samuel L.
Wedge
"negligently will be awarded each day story regarding the nursing
Contract for heating, ven·
Bossard Memorial Library tilating, and ai~ conditioning requested and permitted beginning Dec. I, instead of home appeared in Tuesday's
with money out of the late will go to Geiger Brothers Bruce D. Wallace to enter waiting the last few days edition of The Daily Sentinel.
Crow said Meigs County
Col. Bossard's estate, and the Mechanical Contractors for and remain ln the Mason before Christmas. Anderson
signing of the contracts will $24,500.
County jail in a time of ex- contended that it woul&lt;l be Commissioners along with
lake place tentatively next
Electric · contract lor treme danger" and also dtd much better to give smaller representatives of the
Tuesday.
$29,596 will go to Portland not tell Walla ce of the prizes and more of them, Amerttel Corporation of
rather than one or two larger Columbus, who will build and
General contract of $233,783 Electric.
dangers in the jail.
prizes ..
own the nursing ~orne, will go
Wallace sued for $750,000 in
Is from Fick Karr CorultrucWhile alternates were bid,
Jim Frecker, chairman of to Lancaster in the next two
tlon Company, Chester. This -none was accepted. The ar· compensatory and punitive
Is the ba8e bid, and .no alter- chitecl is Robert Grant and damages and his wife for the Christmas parade. &lt;~nd weeks to view a home owned
deco rati ons, reported no by Ameritel there. He also
$125,000.
na~~ were accepted.
Associates, Colwnbus.
t
••

Bureaucrats are
blasted by, Brown-

WASHINGTON (UPI) United Mine
Workers
President Arnold Miller says
he has decided to concentrate
his
wage
contract
negotiations on Western coal
companies because talks with
Eastern producers have
broken down.
Federal mediator Wayne
Horvitz rneanwhtle expressed
concern that the Eastern
negotiations were running out
of time to avert a nationwide
coal strike next Dec. 6.
Miller said he will go to
Denver SUnday to open "continuous" talks with Gulf Oil
Co.'s P and M mines .
" We are also anxious to
b3rgain intensively with
other Western mine owners 1 ' '
he said.
. The union's shift to Western
producers apparently is designed to pressure the
Bituminous Coal Operators
AssociatiOn, which represents the Eastern mine
operators, to return to the
bargaining table.
The
BCOA
leaders
reportedly fear the union will
achieve
more lucrative
contract in the West than they
are wiUmg to offer the United
Mine Workers. Western talks

a

are be\ng conducted on a

company-bycompany basis.
" We are putting great em-

phasis on our negotiations
with Western mine owners,"
Miller said. "Since nothing is
currently going on in our
Eastern negottations with the
BCOA, I have alerted our
entire main bargaining team
to be prepared to go to
Denver on short notice ... "
Horvttz told reporters he
was concerned that the BCOA
and the union have only 3'h

weeks remaining to avert a
walkout. "It's hard to see how
they can complete the job,"
he said.
He said the situation
became "very troublesome"
last week when those
negotiations broke down after
only five meetings when the
two sides could not agree on
an agenda.

Five die in fire
COLUMBIA, Ky . (UPI) At least live elderly persons
died in a hotel fire early
today, authorities said.
More than 60 firemen from
Columbia and surrounding
communities battled the
blaze at the two-story Miller
Hotel for several hours before
bringing it under control.
The top floor of the hotel,
which housed at least 26

Now you know
Medieval England's
Christians courted the devil
only on Halloween eve;
maidens sought his aid in
predicting whom they would
matry.

elderly persons, was gutted
and six business firms, a law

ftrm and an Adair county
comprehensive care center
on the ground floor were
badly damaged .
A spokesman said said
many of the residents
escaped and some spent the
nigbl with relatives.
State ·Fire Marshal's representatives from Frankfort
directed the search through
the ruins for more bodies.
The . names of the victimll
were not immediately
released, but all were elderly.
The cause of the blaze,
which began shortly before
midnight, is not known, but it
is believed to have started in
the hotel laundry room .

Weather

..
'

results from

jail bombing

THE MEIGS COUNTY Commissioners endorsed a resolution Tuesday evening urging a
"NO" vote on Issue Two on the upcoming November ballot. Pictured are the commissioners
and Grant Young, chairmsn of the Meigs Countians for Wildlife Conservation wildlife
group. !J.R, Rich Jones, Young, Henry Wells, and James Rouah.

Gold Star promotion slated

-----r-

, ·I

,B ids accepted
for iihrary (

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge
·'

·.

Firteen Cents
Vol. 28 No. 141

$875,000 suit

til 12 :00 P.M . Frtday and sa rurday .

•

en tine

WAILUKU , HAWAII - ST. ANTHONY'S Catholic Church,
built in 1873 and the largest church on the island of Maul, was
destroyed by fire TUesday.
Police arrested Rollin Palmer Holton, who SBld he was
from Los Angeles, on suspicion of burglary and of causing the
blaze.
The lire swept through the 104-year-old church within
minutes, according to authorities.

----II:

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the beat of oor knowledge and
belief is true ""d correct.
Bernard V. Fultz
'J ay Hall Jr.- Directors
PaulS. Smart

FOODS

at

HOUSTON - MICHAEL ANTHONY CARTER'S desire to
put more realism in his "hansing man" show cost him his tile,
police said.
The 14-year-old was participating in his first church
activity at a Halloween carnival Monday night. He tried to
make his show a bit more realistic by putting the rope around
his neck, rather than under his arms.
Carter was found hanging in the "house of horrors" at the
North Ma!n Baptist Church carnival about 7:15p.m. He was
pronounced dead an hour later. Police said the boy's death was
accidental.

f' . :

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
and corps ....... ... ....... ....... . ........... . .... . . . . ...... . ......... 2,664,836.90
Time and savings deposits of individttals
prtnshps., and corps ..... . . . ........... . ........... .. .... ..... ........ . 8,868,94U8
Deposits of United Stales Government ..... ......... , ..... , , , ..... .. ... .. . 20,242.03
Deposits' of States and political subdivisions ............. . ..... . . . .. .. .. .... .. 584,088.31
Deposits of corrunercial banks . .. .... .... .. .... . , . ....... . ....... .. ..... ... .. 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks . .. . ................... .. ... ... . ............... 37,223.46
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS . .............. . ... . .. . ... ........ ....... 12,1110,334.88
Total demand deposits ... .. .......... .. ... ., , ......... , ....... 3,021,868.07
Total lime and savings deposill! .. ........ .. ......... .. .... .... . 9,158,466.81
Other liabilities ............. ... .. .. .. ... . . ........... .. .• , ....... . ......... 2,503.22
TOTAL LiABILiTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures) .. .. .......................... . ..... ... ... , ..... 12,182,838.10 - - - -

e

•

fN;,~~Whose SS taxes will be raised?

. . .___
.
EL_B_ERF-E~
LD
-5-~l-~.

I, Manning Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-nag~ed bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct lo.the best of'my knowledge and
belief.
Manning Kloes
October 21,19'17

1&lt;/ r./ ·"~
a:l J DAllY ' 0

DAIRY VALLEY

Pomer!'y-Middleporl, Ohio
Wednesday, November 2. 1917

--""T- Cash
and due from banks ........... . ..... ......... ...... . ... ..... . . .. ... 1,112,201.62
U.S. Treasury securities .... ...... ................................... .... 3,067,321.50

~~ESJy

ADOLPH'S

diets under unsupervised
conditions could be a reduced
level of polaS.!Iiurn, which can
result in an irregular
heartbeat.

'

01
;p qualt l y k ll n ·dned ,hardwood, double.
dowell ed "nd corner blocked for extra ·strength and
stabrlrty The beauti fu l upholstery of Flexs teel
fvrnrture is the result of expert attentron to detail, deft
handling of the fr ne Flexsteel fabr ics, and sk.illf'ltl
tailoring.

SANDWICHES

make sure the products
maintain l._he quality required
by law.
Some doctors have said one
potential danger from the

"No-F.tult '' 100%
Meigs Coun ty voters
cott on 14 Ol. denim
renewed the five year
with S.mfor-Se t •.
levy in November, 1976. The
levy fund is used for tuberThi' jJckct
culosis preventi on, ca re,
,1ctu ally comes
hospttaltzation
when
ou t of your
necessary, and chest • ·rays.
dryer
ready
Large cltnics are held at the
to wc.tr wrinkle
Mulberry Heights location
every other month for
,md pucker
patients to be seen by Dr.
free, never
Donner berg.
shrinks out
Pubhc skin testing clinics
of sile.
for ali children and adults .
Nav\
are held there and yearly
clinics are held for aU preschool ch ildren and aU school
in SIZCS
personnel. Mrs. Brown also
5-M -L -XL.
·does tuberculin skin testing in
the schools.
In the near future , there
Holzer Medical Center
FIRE VICTIM
will be a new tuberculosis
(Discbarges, Oct. 31)
AKRON,
Ohio (UP I)
clini c within the multiMrs. Frank Bentley and
Mrs.
Barbara
Morgan, 39,
purpose health center to be daughter
Mrs.
Roge r
built on Mulberry Heights . • Channen' and son Floyd died early today when fire
tentatively blamed on
Mrs. Brow n points out Drwrunonds Amy ' Elkins
careless smoking swept
suggestiOns from th~ public Ross Fulks: Della Henry:
Be sure to see
regardmg ways to unprove Anna Latham
Maudie through her east side home,
ill tho other
authorities said.
the chn ic servtces are always Mahorn Carri~ Powell
styles in men's
Damage was estimated at
welcome. All residents of the Rebecca' Quesenberry, Mrs'
and
bors'
coun ty a re welcome to steve Runyon and son, Joy $18,000. She was pronounced
winter jackets.
dead upon arrival at Akron
An e.:cellent
receive all th e services Thaxton, Jacqueline Toney,
s•lection .
available at the clime at no Clinton Tucker, Ro scoe City Hospital of bums and
cost to the tndividual.
Walker, Sidney Wat son, smoke inhalation.
Carol Weakland.
LINE INSTALLED
t Births, Oct. 31)
A
toll
free telephone line to
veterans Memorial Hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Eugen ~ better serve residents of
I
Admitted - Eber Gillilan, Adkins, a son, Syracuse. Mr.
Meigs
County
has5een
inChester; Herbert Rose , and Mrs. Randy Mitchell, a
Racme; Goldte Lynch, son, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. stalled in the GaUia - Meigs
Athens ; Gladys Gould ing , Gary Sebert , a son, Community Action office in
Mrs .
Hazel
New Haven ; Erwin Gloeck- Gallipolis. Mr and Mrs . Cheshire,
McKelvey
announced
today.
ner, Ra cme; Paul Ours, Jr.,
Wtlliam
Williams.
a The toll free number is 992Portland; . Betty Roush, daughter, Pomeroy'
7000
Mason : Mary, Bonecutter,
Po meroy; Helen Frank,'
REPORT OF CONDIDON
Pomeroy ; Ethel Koen ig,
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
Middleport ; Sylvia Parsons,
Middleport ; Dorothy Earls,
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
Crown City ; John Costanzo,
Minersville; Wayne Powell,
of Middleport in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, 1977 published in
Portland.
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under tiUe 12, United States Code,
Dtscharged - Dores ArSection 161.
nold , Camilla Lewis, Joan
National Bank Region Number 4
Charter number 8441
Edwards, Wilma Parmalee,
Mabel Rumbaugh , James
Hanlon, Jeffrey Tracy, Jamie
I'
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Pennington.

rlp x&lt;; IP!'1 c rf'!f tsm en rnsist on ma terial s of the fi ne st
...... -'c h the 1r sk rlled workma nshrp Frames

TRY OUR DELICIOUS

a~ency has been sa)'lng it
questions the validity o( the
diet to do any thins more than
a simple restriction of caloric
intake would accomplish. It
also said it is conc-erned about
persons using the diet without
medical superviSion.
"This has a rather high
pnority at FDA right now,"
the spokesman said of the
a g e n c y 's o v e r a 11
investigation into
the .
products, their labeling and ''
the claims made for them.
·•we
are
extremely
concerned."
" We remain concerned
about the use of these
products without medical
supervision," he said, adding
that research is going on and
if a usefulness for the diet is
proven it would probably be
"primarily
for
the
management of extremely
obese people under strict
medical supervision."
The agency said there is
now no scientific evidence
that liquid protein diets have
any value in weight reduction
"over any other diet which
involves the same amount of
calories."
"We're not saying there
have been or have not been
deaths," the spokesman
added. Eventually, he said,
state health departments
may be asked to cooperate.
In addition, the FDA is
mvolved in a continuing
investlgation of the booming
liquid protein market to

•

stated bonds for the nursing
home wlll be issued in the
name of the county, but the ·
county has no liability.
Guest speaker was Dave
Schatz of the Ohio Division of
Forestry, who outlined
various services offered by
the forestry division .
·
One offered is service
forestry where assistance is given to individuals and
private land OIYJlers in areas
such as managing--timber,
selling, etc.
Schatz reveaJ,.ed that Shade
River State Forest in Meigs
County has 3,000 acres in
conjunction with Forked Run
State Park, He also stated
that fire control was a large
acttvity of the forestry
division and he ,praised the
assistance of local volunteer
fire departments that assist
the forestry division. He
listed three thmgs for fire
control, prevention. detect ion
and suppression. He showed a

..

fiim of units fightlhg a fire at
Burlingham.
The chamber has been
contemplating planting an
evergreen tree at the old coal
tipple, but Schatz advised not
to plant now as fall is a
critical month In getting an
evergreen of any type to
grow. He suggested that they
post pone planting until
Marcfi.
He did say lump planting
along the river bank would be
very attractive.
Attending were Crow,
Schatz, r.Jr. and Mrs. Dale
Warner, Walter Grueser ,
Anderson, Phil Kelly, Leo
Vaughan, Joe Young, Hank
Cleland, N. W. Compton,
Frecker, Stan Houdashelt,
B a r ti a r ~ C h a p m a n ,
secretary, Blll Mayer ,
Vernon Weber, Bill Quickel,'
Ted Reed, C. E. Blakeslee,
Wesley Buehl and Katie
Crow.

•

Commission
•
opposmg
Issue No.2
Meigs
County Com·
missioners Tuesday night
following a meeting with
Grant Young, chairman of
Wildlife Conservation for
Meigs County, went on record
opposing the enactment of an
anti-trapping amendment to
the Ohio Constitution (Issue
2).
Commissioners urged
Meigs Countians to vote "no"
in the Nov. 8 election on that
proposal.
Fred Hoffman, mayor of
Middleport, also met with the
commissioners to inform
them that the village of
Middleport has been working
with John O'Neill of Bay
Village, Ohio, who has op(ContiiJued on page 14)

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