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                  <text>10- The DailyS..ntmel, Muldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,Nov . 7, 197"1

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

Kanauga!
station hit
We will be closed
Tuesday, Nov. 8,
for the funeral of
mother.
Edison and

Area Deaths

Mor e Service Station · in

Kanauga.
According to a report filed
with James Montg omery ,
Galli&amp;. Cclunty Sheriff, ~two

Mar y' s

telephone. Darst was able to
free himself then notil!ed the
sheriff's department.
One suspect was described
as being 6-3 or 6-1 weighing
250 pounds. He wore a red ski
mask , blue jeans and plaid
shirt.
The other suspect was
described as 5-7, 170 pounds
with blue jeans, a red plaid
shirt, mask and work boots.

Chu r ch,

Ma rtins

Sunday

Ferry. pastor of St . :James

Admissions

-

Duckworth,
Church ,
McConnelsville . Richard
pastor of Sf . Mary's Church , Syracuse ; Shirley Bishop,
Lafferty, Oh io.
Rutland.
On August 18.1 966, Father
Sunday Discharges
F olsom
was
appointed
Donnie
Laudermilt, Goldie
Chapla in of Mount St . N\ary's
Hospital. Nelsonville. where Lynch, Avis.Lawson , Steven

men came to the station at

discennected the station•s

!

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Harvey Ours, Racin~ ~
Melanie Pullen, Middleport ;
where he was a Mathematic: Lillie Adams, Long Bottom ;
Instructor , VIce Rector and
Diocesan Chairman of the Helen Leedy, Athens.
Christian
Entertainment
Saturday Disc h•rgcs Commission .
This
f i rst Clarence Murray, Sally
assignment was served for 10 Savage, Brady Knapp, Nettie
years. Since January 1962 ,
Father
Folsom ' s
other Randolph, Bernit-e Roush,
priestly assignments were St. Albert Hill , Jr.

Ap und~termined amount
of money was reported stolen
in an alleged robbery this
morning at the Ashland Save

2:35a. m. and demanded the
night receipts. They repor.tedly tied up station at·
tendant Mike Darst of Rt. 2,
Leon , W. Va ., and put him In
the back. Before leaving by
way of the back door, they

Hospital News

1

~ recently re f ired this year

Hudson ,

on Ap ri l 30,

F/ITHER FOLSOM

Jones,
Mary
Bonecutter , LesHe Ca rr ,
Myrta Schaefer.
Holzer Medlcla Center
(Discharges, Nov. 41
Mabel Blessing , Paul
Bradbury, Carol Bush, Mary
Christian, Stanley Con ley,
Willard Ellis, Bessie Fell,
Retha Foster, Alzada Halfhill, Bertha Halstead, Clara
Holberg, Polly Holiday , Fred
Howell,
Sherry Johnson ,

Robidoux , Jul iet te

Dube,
Alva
Kl eine r , Rita Seppa and
Father Armand Latraverse.
all fro m Lawrence, Mass.;
also, he is survi ved by second
cousins, Ron Kennis , Bellea ir
Beach , Fla .; Judy Kenn ls
Robi son, Dunedin, Florida,
and Joy Kennls Waldron ,
Rochester , N. Y .
In lieu of flowers, donations
be sen t to : Sister Mary
Wil lam. Mount St. Mory 's
Hosp ital , Nelsonville .
Robidoux ,

mar

Barba ra M annon, Pauline
M cKinniss, Froud Mercer,

Wayne Milhoan, John Miller,
Eva Mills, Mrs. Fred Pettry
Jr. ·and daughter, Wiinla
Pope, Althea Ridenour.
Margaret Rose, Guy Russell.
Mrs. Gary Sebert and son,

Rebecca Anna Baker
Rebecca Anna Baker, 85 ,
South Si)lth Ave., M iddleport ,
. died Saturday evening at
Veterans Memor ia l Hospital ·
ending a li ngering illness .
Mr s. Baker ~as born Aug.
27 , 1892at Harrisville, W. Va .,
a daughter of the late John
and Alcinda Garrison Windon . She was also preceded in
death by tw o brothers a nd a
sister . Mrs. Baker was a
member
of
the
First
Presbyt erian Church at
Weston , W. Va .. and Western
Chapter 40. Order of Eastern
Star, at Weston.
Surviyo ing are her husband ,
Clero M. Baker ; two sons ,
Edison M. and John W., and a

Lawrence

of Middleport; eight grand chil dren and 10 great grandchildren ; a si ster ·in law, Margaret Windon ,
Salem, W. Va .; three nieces
and three nephews.
Funeral serv i ces wi ll be at
2 p. m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings -Coats
Funera l
Home with the Rev . Dw ight
·zavitz officiating . Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Fr iends may call at
ttle funeral nome at anytime .
Pallbearers will be Ronald.

Ray and Joey Hlndy , Tom

Baker . Allen Downie. and
Gene Grate. EY"angel,lne
Chapter 172, OES, Middleport. will conduct rites at 7
this evening at the funeral
home .

FLOYD DRUMMOND
Flo yd Drumm ond , 79 ,
former grocer and service
station operator , died at 9: 30
a. m . Sunday In the Pinecrest
Care Center . He had been ill
for si x months. ser ious for
fou r months, during which

period he was a hospital

Last of the family of Alva
Filmore Drummond and
Mary Jane Baker Drum·
mond. he was one of flv•
children . He was born F•b.
17, 1898, in Walnut Township,
Gallia County . As a young

Ste.wart 1

Mrs.

Walter Stiverson Jr. and son.
Ca rroll Peaford , John
Thompson, Drexel Vance,
Ruth watson, Linda Webb,
Mrs. William Williams and
daughter, Helen Wroblewski.
(Discharges. Nov. 5)
Arron Bail, Sharon Bailey.
Mrs . · Steve Brandau and
daughter, Barbara Brown.
Mrs. Billie Canle and son,
KimCanaday,JohnDunlavy ,
Roy Gilkinson. Jay Hall Sr..
As a Henry , Mrs. Paige
Humphreys and son. James
Hutton, Ruth Johnson , Betty
McCarty, Gloria Morgan
Kevin Pullins, Ronald
Ridenour, Cynthia Russell,
Helen Sheets, J ames Stover,
Leona Trout, John Vorys,
CarletteWears, Mrs. Michael
Williams and son.
tBrlths Nov. Si
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Gilbride, a son, Racine . Mr.
andMrs.DavidMoore.ason,
Oak HilL Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Orender, a son, Jackson . Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Ward, a
Pt PI
son. - easant.
(Disch.arges, Nov. 6)
Kathy Allen, Raymond
Barr, Sara Betz, Kathryn

daughter . Mary E. Hindy, all

pati en t several times .

Bing,

Kathrvn

Father Folsom is survived
by
an
aunt ,
Elthea
Younggebauger of Lawrence,
~ss .; first cou sins , Irene
Jeannie

Bertha

Bonecutter, Mariah Brown,
Edward Cozart, Albert King,
Jeffrey O' Dell , Dorot hy

..

man he worked on the home
farm and surroundi ng farms

Older, ..Shelby

News•• in Briefs
(Continued from Pill I)
including the new 1'-72 battle IJink never before seen in public
- rumbled past lhe brightly de&lt;:orated ~emltn ~alia.
Western military experts focused thetr attenuon on the
two squadrons of 46 T-72 tanks - shorter and broader than the
older T-&lt;i2 - that feature laser range-finders and an automatic
loader .

CHARLESTON, W. VA. - MEMBERS OF UNITED Mine
Workers District 17 will be assessed $10 to keep lhe diStrict
solvent, according to district auditor Maynard Daniel. Daniel
said Sunday the assessment , approved by • the UMW
International Executive Board, will be deducted from the
paychecks of miners in the financially troubled Charlestonbased district. .
He said the district's financia l woes stemmed fron: costly
arbitr~tion cases, dues income lost in last swruner's Wildcats,
an expensive contract education program •nd lhe cost of
district conferences, conventions and elections.
MORE BODIES FOUND
ASHEVILLE, N. C. (UPH
CH CLOSING
The Meigs County Court- - Rescue workers found tbe
house will close Tuesday al bodies of three youths In a
noon for the general election. ralo·swollea creek today,
raising to elcht the number of
vlcUms of Hash Hooding ln
the
Blue Ridge Mountains ol
Keith Taylor, Gallipolis;
weotern
North Carolloa.
Myrtle Thomas, Point
Pollee
In Morganton
Pleasant ; Mrs . . William
reported
thai
the youths,
Phelps, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Hamby,
18,
his brother,
Chris
William Marshall, Mason ;
Tony,
11,
both
of
Valdese,
and
~rs . Larry Cochran, Point
Mark
Hawkins
,
H,
of
Pleasant ; Shaw Wood , Point
Morg•nton,
apparently
tried
Pleasant ; John Oshel, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. John Ross, to swim acros&amp; the creek late
Jr., and daughter, Mason ; Sunday night and drowned In
Teresa Roush, Hartford; Ked the strong current. Their
Marcum, Sr., Ashton ; ,Mrs. bodleo, clad In bathing suits,
J ames Leonard, Poinl were found early today by
rescue teams.
Pleasant ; Greg Hammack,
Letart ; Leland Walters ,
Point Pleasant; Millie
MEETINGS CANCELLED
Hodkins, Clifton ; Leonard
All scheduled meetings and
Corfee, Leon; Mrs. Manford activities of Sacred Heart
Bauer, Point Pleasant ; Edna Church in Pomeroy have
Anderson, Point Pleasant; been cancelled due to the
Mrs . Orville Randolph, death of Father · William
Buffalo ; Michael Swisher, Folsom, especially on
Point Pleasa nt ; Angela Rice, Monday through Thursday.
Poinl Pleasant ; Shelia Perry, Th~ scheduled religious
Leon;
Larry
Oldham, se rvices will remain as
Gallipolis ;
Kathleen planned.
Bemesderfer, Mason ; Mrs.
Edward Willett, New Haven ;
BOARD TO MEET
Mrs . Cecil Sines, Point
The
Meigs County
Pleasant; Mrs. Elza Powell,
Commissioners
will meet
Ashton; Mrs. Charles Holley,
in
special
session
Tuesday
Ashton; Mrs . Thurman
at
2
p.m.
at
their
office in
Hughes, Gai!ipolis Ferry;
the
courthouse
to
review
Jamie Woomer , Point
the
CETA
program
.
· Pleasant; Natasha Hammack, Point Pleasanl;
Russell Slayton, Viriton. 0 .;
ASK TO WED
Na ncy Woodard, Gallipolis
A marriage license has
Ferry; Charles Wri ght .
Middleport;· Mrs. Everett been issued to Virgil Parson,
Thomas ;
Glenwood ; ~9. Pomeroy, and Geraldine
The odore Smith, Mason ; Kess inger, 40 , RL 4,
Mrs . Glen Gibson, Point Pomeroy .
Pleasant;
Mrs .
Ora
Doorham, Jackson , 0 .; Mary
DEPUTY NAMED
Lynn McCoy, Gallipoli s;
James Stout has been
Mark Thomas Clark, Letart ; appointed deputy sheriff
Kevin Barker, New Haven;
according to an entry in
Michael Smith, Pomeroy ; Meigs County Common Pleas
Roger Klein, Clifton; Mark
Court.
~
McGuire,

derson;

Mrs.

Jack Caldwell 1

Albert Sawyer, Jr., Penny
Smith, Mary Thompson, John
Weeks.
(Births, Nov. 6)
T'
h
Mr. and Mrs. !mot Y
Brannon, a daughter, Ripley,
W. Va. Mr. an d Mrs. Ro"U"C"rt

Gallipolis; Kimberly Bayes,
Gallipolis; Cora Bonecutter,
Point Pleasant; Michael
Fink , Middleport ; Tonya
Shaffer , Scottown , 0. ;

Crwnp, 8 son, Clifton,

Harland

w. Va.

Keith

Taylor ,

PLEASANT VALLEY
Morgan Michael Sayre, Leon,
Discharges - Veva Warns- and Mrs. Garland Bostic,
ley. Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Gallipolis Ferry.

Woomer, Point Pleasant ;

and she died in 1969.
He was a member of the
First Baptist Ctlurch, and a
former. member of the
Red men . • He operated a
serv ice station at the corner
of Second Ave . and Sycamore
St., and a grocery and rolling
store just above lt. He also
worked for the Marietta
Manufacturing Co . during
World War II . His last · work
was as owner and operator of
a service station and grocery
store at Addison, which he

sold to the Hills.

Funeral services will be

-

New research

alcholism may be linked to
heredity, according to an
authority on the disease that
has affected nine million
Americans. ''The cause of
alcoholism, in truth, is
Wlknown," said Dr. Donald
Goodwin, '"but it doeS run in

families and this is a starting

point."

ELBERFELD$

2 Qt. Beans 'n Stuff Slow Cooker No. 3299

genuine

stoneware
pot

he 2·4 and 7-9 p. m. Tuesday

'

A Week For .49 weeks and we pay the
50th week for you.

at Miller's.
Pallbearers
w i ll
be
granddaughters and grand ~
sons : JChristie and Cathy
Hess and Jan. Jay. Brian and
Scott Drummond.

pot lifts

from base
for easy

cleaning

132991

.

VOTE 11 YES"
ON STATE
ISSUE 1.

· $40,000 Maxim urn Insurance For Each Depositor

Election day registration, leghold animal traps and an
abundance of public school operating levies and bond issues
topped today's balloting throughout the Buckeye SIJile.
Brown placed 50 mspectors in Cleveland to help handle
election day registration and pledged to be vigilanl of any
abulM!s. The se~retary of state has been a vigorous foe Of
election day regtstration, and for tbe first time in his 26-year

Murder, kidnaping charged
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Akron .
Milton Bryant, 22, Akron, was
The arrest came after a
arrested early loday after he police chase of several miles
allegedly dragged a teenaged in which he crashed into
neighbor girl behind his car se ven ca r s, injuring five
until she died.
persons·. Miss Robinson's
Bryant was arrested on body was found in Akron
aggravated murder •nd about 10 :10 p.m. but Medina
kidnaping charges in the County authorities were lold
death Monday evening of earlier a party of hunters had
Tonia Robinson, 13, who lived seen the car dragging the girl
four houses from Bryant in along a co untry road.

Paid lor by : Ohioans for the Preservation of Honest
Elections. 16 E. Br•&gt;ad St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.'
Jean, Barren, Chairman, 1948 McCauslen Manor,
""'- Steubenville, Ohio 43952.

2QUART
SLOW COOKER.
Ideal size for soups, chili, stews. baked beans and so many
other delicious dishes. Glazed stoneware pot removes from
base for oven cooking and easy cleanup-pot even goes in
tha dishwashar! Low-haat base 1ranslers heat slowly and
evenly to give foods a savory
slow cooked flavor.

HOUSEWARES ON TliE 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

t'Orporations constructing low-and moderate-income bousing,
and eliminating the stale's f/50,000 debt ceiling.
State Issue Lgenerated the most political interest. Placed on
Brown said most of the inspectors, who were trained MOild3y
and will be earning $60 for the day , are "people I have known lhe ballot by Ohioans for the Preservation of Honest Elections,
for years" but are not employed by his office or by boards of it was to eliminate the five-month old program of ell!ctlon day
vo ter registration and pennanent registration .
election.
Democrats and organized labor, which pushed the program
Repeal of "instant " and permanent voter registration was
lhrough the General Assembly last spring, c•mpaigned
State Issue I.
Voters in 222 public school districls in 81 counties de&lt;:ided on heavily f&lt;f a "no" vote to keep election day registration to
property tax quOlltions which could determine the financial increalM! voter participation.
Republicans, with the help of sizable corporate
solvency of their schools.
·
contributions,
fought for "yes" votes to eliminate confusion
Many of tile school districts will be in financial trouble if the
at
the
polling places and to keep the GOP from being
and
fraud
operating levies fall . Some 31 will have to close for the rest of
driven
further
into
the minority in Ohio.
lhe year because of a shortage of operating funds, and at least
Emotionally,
the
hottest
campaign was on Issue 2. The Ohio
16 others will be in difficult cash positions.
Especially crucial was the 6.1-mill operating levy on the Committee for Humane Trapping called for outlawing the
ballot in Toledo, where schools have been closed since Oct. 31. leghold trap on grounds it is cruel to wild animals and
alternative snares and "quickkill" traps are available.
Also on the b8llot were:
Ohioans f&lt;r Wildlife Conservation put on a heavy campaign
- Mayoral contesls in Cleveland, Tole&lt;jo and Youngstown.
-State Issues 2, 3 and 4, prohibiting itse of the steeljawed against Issue 2 on grounds it would hurt the trappipg industry,
leghold trap in Ohio, providing for stale aid to private cause overpopulation , spread disease and result in a
career wok a posttion on a state issue by supportin~ the

constitutional amendment to repeal it.

proliferation of farm pests.
Issue 3, which has been attempted before wilhout success,
called for a bortding program lor private developers
constructing &lt;r rehabilitating housing.
Proponents said it would spur home construction and
improve blighted areas, while opponents maintained it would
set a dangerous precedent, allowing the government to
underwrite loans to private corporations.
Issue 4, also placed on the ballot by the General Assembly,
called for replacing the current 126-year old debt ceiling with a
OoaUng limit deteunined by the state's income.
Proponents claimed It would be a modem method of
Jinancing government coostruction projects, while opponents
warned it would ruin Ohio's credit rating.
The prime mayor 's race in Ohio was in Cleveland, where
stale Rep. Edward F . Feighan and Dennis J. Kucinich, clerk of
municipal courts, squared off. Both Democrats defeated
Republican May&lt;r Ralph J . Perk in the non-partisan primary,
and each had a share of endorsemenls.
Ohio's 13,168 polling places were to clolM! at 7:30p.m.

.

"

r
'

•

entine
NO. 145

VOl. XXVIII

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
:::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::

Pomeroy parade

.

openrng season
set December 4
The annual Christmas
parade In Pomeroy will be
held . Dec. 4 at Z p.m.
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Everyone Interested In
participating Is aoked to
coniJict Barbara Chapman
at the chamber olllce,
located In the courthouse,
or call ber at 992-5005 or
99%--5337.

I

SEVERAL REPRESENTATIVES of the Charleston,
W.Va. office of the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council
were in Pomeroy Monday for the Area lil meeting.
Hosting the meeting were members of the Big Bend
Service Unit with Mrs. Pal Thoma, service unit director,
as chairman. With her, from left to right , are Noby .

By United Pre11SIIlternatlonal
WASHINGTON - CONGRESS HAS ADJOURNED
without adjourning . The Senate and House have ceased normal
operations at least until lhe end of November, an approach
designed to let Senate-House energy negotiators work without
interruption.
The conferees met again Monday, slowly working their
way through the complex, many-faceted package , which was
given top [riority for Ute first session of lhe 95th Congress.
Coogress will not officially adjourn until it sends an energy bill
to the White House and there is no indication when lhat will
bappen.
The House will · meet every Tuesday and Friday in
prelormasesslons untO Nov. 29 when it is scheduled to reswne
regular business. No legislation will be acted on during that
period. The Senate generally will follow the same pattern,
although Byrd has scheduled Nov. 1~ and Nov. 18 as "work"
days to dispose of se-condary bills and conference reporls. ·

the home."

Stop In Today and open your Farmers
'
Bank Christmas Club and Don't Be
Caught In the Reel Next Year.
CLOSED FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 1TH
FOR VETERANS DAYI

better."

NEW YORK - THERE HAS BEEN A 71 PERCENT
increase over the past 9 years in the nwnber of American men
who neither hold nor seek jobs, while the percentage of
employed married women grew from 41.5 to ~2.4 percent.
Business Week magazine said Monday the figures mean more
and more "househusbands" are cooking, mending, washing
dishes and taking care of the kids.
"More married studenls, other young husbands and
middle-aged men are staying home and letting their wives
earn the paycheck," Business Week said. "Increasing
nwnbers have apparently discovered that contemporary
society offers new government and corporate-financed
alternatives to working for a living, or that ... their place is in

Miller's tiome for Funerals.

Cheshire officiating, and
burial will be in Mound Hi ll
Cemetery . Call ing hours wi ll

Brown had forecast a turnout of 2,850,000, exceeding the
record of 2,795,000 in 1965 for a comparable "off-year "
elecUon.
.
"Instant voter registration has been very light," said Brown.
"Some people tried to use birlh certificates, not knowing any

WASHINGTON - THERE HAS BEEN A dramatic decline
in deaths caused by heart disease in recent years and the toll
can be expected to drop even more, says the president of tbe
American Heart Association. Since 1950, the rate of deaths
from heart disealM! in lhe U. S. has dropped 30 percimt, arid
on~ird of that reduction has taken place in the last five
years, said Dr. Harriet Dustan in an interview in U. S. News
and World Report. ·
"Modifications in life style may play a role - keeping your
weight down, giving up smoking and getting exercise. Control
or high blood pressure is very important," she said.

held at 12 p.m. Wednesday at

the Rev . Bill 'Beagle of

indicates

·----------llllliliil..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiill--------------..

H•ss. Middleport ; Joyce

Straight ot Gallipolis in 1960, ,

LINK TO HEREDITY
KANSAS CITY, Kan, (UP!)

Gallipolis ; Mrs. Lloyd Sears,

of the Bethesda community In
1928, and she died in 1959.
They are survived by lour

(Mrs . Alan Jensen}, Akron ; ·
eight grandctlildren. and one
great-grandchi Id.
He then marri ed Rebecca

teU."

Richards , Stephanie Parsons, Hen-

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Davis, a Gallipolis; Sheryl Perry,
Point Pleasant ; Pauline
son, Middleport.

children
Harold
Drummond
of Logan,: Otlio
i Joe,
Add i sOn ;
Mrs . Arthur {Jane Ann)

By United Press International
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown said the early voter turnout
In today's general election was "light to moderate" with " very
Ught" Instant voter registration reported.
"lth~lt is going just about the way we e1pected it to," said
Brown. From light to medium . But it's really too early to

Langsville;

until he went to work. before
he was married , for the Sfafe
Highway Oepartment.
He marri ed Bel va Thornton

Early ·Ohio voting light to moderate

The magazine said 2.2 million men are not wage earners.
About balf of them are disabled and can more easily collect
beQOfits under revised Social Security programs.
WASHINGTON- FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS FOUND
poor ventilation; an inaccurate company map and at least a
dozen ~ety violations contributed to the deaths of 26 men at
tile Scotia Coal Co. mine in 1976, Coal Outlook reported
Monday. The weekly magazine obtained the results of an
unpublished report by the Mining Enforcement and Safety
Administration. Previous publication of the report was halted
by a federal judge on a petition from Scotia Coal Co.
The Scotia victims were killed in two separate explosions.
Eleven men, including three federal inspectors, were killed in
tile second explosion while investigating the first blast March
9, 1976. Coal Outlook reported the victims of . tile second
explosion were using an inaccurate mine map provided by the
Scotia Coal Co.
It quotea the report as saying efforts to increase the
ventilation in the mine "failed primarily because of an
lnaccura\f n'line map which was prepared by the company and
used by the officials as a guide to develop recovery plans."
CLEVELAND- DEMOCRAT EDWARD FEIGHAN, a
state representative backed by the party, and Dennis
. (Cootlnued on Pll(e 12)

Savaile of Alhens, a member of the Council Board, Lura
Watkins, public relations chainnan; Maybelle King,
director of field service; Barbara Murray, development
director ; Shirley Moses, executive director, and Peg
Murdock of Williamstown, W. Va ., a past area chairman
who presided at the meeting. See Charlene Hoeflich 's
report and more pictures on page 6 today .

Utilities stock
coal for 90 days

By
United
Press
Jntematlonal
The state's major electric
utilities Monday
flied
contingency plans with the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio outlining what steps
:;:;:;:;:; :;:;;::::;:!(:::::;::{i''?'f''f~???}f' they would take in the event
of a lengthy coal miners
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
strike next month.
Thurs day throti g h
OhiQ Edison, Ohio Power,
Saturday, a chance of Toledo Edison, Cleveland
Electric
Illuminating,
showers Thursday and
Friday and fair Saturday.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric;
Highs will be In lite 60s
Dayton Power &amp; Light and
Thursday and In the low or
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio
mid 50&amp; by Saturday. Lows
Electric Co. all reported they
will he In the 50s early
have stockpiled enough coal
to last about 90 days.
Thursday and lowering to
the upper 30s or low ·40s by
All the utilities had
Saturday morning.
basically the same plan
,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,:'o':'o':'.''''''''''''''''''''''::;::;;o:o:,::;o:o ;o:,·.,:::

which calls for a monitoring cent.
of supplies and steps to be
At the 20 day level,
taken when the coal supply commercial and industrial
begins dropping off.
customers would be directed
The first step would come to curtail electric usage to
after about 40 days of the plant maintenance leveL
stockpile is used up when
Firms which fall to meet
utilities ·begin in-houuse guidelines under any curtaileconomies such as shutting ment option for longer than .
off lighting, heating and seveh days could face disconcooling systems and requests nectlon for Ute dtD"ation ofthe
for voluntary cutbacks on the emergenC)'. according to the
part of industrial customers. plans filed with PUCO.
When the stockpiles have
"The plan, subject to PUCO
dwindled I to about 30 days, approval, is designed to
then the utllites would ask the extend available fuel supllies
PUCO and Gov. James A. as far as possible in.order to
Rhodes. to order businesses assure basic needs, such as
and Industry to
cut heating
requirements,
consumption by 50 per cent lhrough the winter months,"
and ask residences for said officials of Cincinnati
voluntary cuta of about ?.II per
Gaa &amp; E\ectr\c .

Three
hurt
in
C
_
.
i
l
.
.
b.d
·
. · · ounc. accepts cruiser 1
Wreck On SR 7
•

Three persons were injured
in a three-vehicle collision at
7 a.m. Monday on SR 7 near
the James M. Gavin Plant
south of Cheshire.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto operated by Paul D.
Mitchell, 22, Cheshire, struck
the rear end of a vehicle
driven by Jacqueline K. Case,
24, Middleport. The impact
forced Case's car into a third
driven by Rick J. Morris, 25,
Racine .

·

There was minor damage
to the Morris vehicle. The
Mitchell and Case cars were
demolished. The drivers were
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center by ambulances
provided by the Gallia County
Volunteer
Squad
and
SEOEMS. None was reported
seriously hurt.

An accident occurred at 3
p.m. on SR 124, seven tenths
of a mile east of Pomeroy
where an auto operated by
Loyal M. Ho!man,17, Racine,
attempted to pass another
vehicle when a third and
unidentified vehicle started
to pass Holman.
Holinan' s vehicle went oft
the left side of the highway,
striking a block wall. There
was moderate damage. The
unidentified vehicle con·
tinued on.
Wet pavement was blamed
for an accident at 4:45 p.m.
on SR 7, three tenths of a mile
south of Little Kyger Rd.
where the patrol said Vesta
G. Ham, ~7 . Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
lost control of her car. Her
vehicle ran off the highway
into a ditch . There was minor
damage.

Notices, local briefs
Tickets are on sale for a
turkey dinner te be sponsored

to attend .

The b1d of Smith-Nelson has written Amy Kingsland explain the new equipment
Motors of Pomeroy was Jones on two occasions and was L. B. Vaughan, chief
accepted Monday nightto sell has had no reply a bout operator of the breathalizer
a police cruiser to Pomeroy cleaning up debris beside the test for the Ohio Department
village when council met in ' new Sti~fler building on of Health.
regular session.
Pomeroy s West Main St. The
Vaughan explained thatthe
Council accepted Smith- mayor said the fire marshall intoxilyzer was less exNelson's bid of $4 662 with has given the village per- pensive and can be used by
trade-in and transfer of all mission to clean up the area state police and is more
equipment except the radio . and place a 20 foot fence in accurate. Vaughan .slated
The bid also offered a 10 pet . front of the open space.
tllat the breatha!izer' is as
discount on all work on the
Mrs. Jones will be billed for good as the operator. An IBM
car as long as it is owned by the expenses for the cleanup • card is placed in the inthe village and also 10 per- and if she f~ils to pay, the toxilyzer and records the test
cent on any work done on any money due ~111 be placed on automatically.
other equipmeni owned by· her tax duplicate.
Vaughan also stated that
the village.
Council in other 'business · the health department would
The other bid received was discussed the possibility of decide bow long it would take
for $5 347 from the Pomeroy replacing
its
present to train people to operate the
Motor' Co. with trade and breathalizer for · an in- machine. Cost of the new
transfer of all equipment, tottilizer. The machine is used equipment is $4,000. Council
including the radio.
to determine if a person is showed interest but tabled a
In other matters, Mayor intoxicated.
decision.
Clarence Andrews said he
Meeting with council to
The mayor said Columbus

Improvement study is
accepted by planners

on the matter will be held
Volunteer Firemen at the held all ·day . Friday in th•
overall economic develop- next Monday in Columbus.
SeniOr Citizens Center and basement of Forest Run
ment plan in preparation ~y The local commission voted
New York Clothing House in United Method is t Church
Buckeye Hills for an eight- to send a letter in support of
Pemeroy and Dutton Drugs located on County Road 30.
in M iddleport. Deadl ine fer
Associates, Columbus, was county area . The plan is now the project to Improve the
purchasing tickets is Nov. 15.
Parents interested In Meigs received Monday afternoon in draft form . It is required
land.
Serving will begin at 5 p.m . High School attendan c e by the executive committee
Also discussed was an Ohio
beforo.any
funds
by
HUD
are
policies and practices are
Departmeg$.,_of TransThe Meigs County Court- Invited to attend the PAT of the Meigs County Regional granted, Burt said.
house will be closed Friday, meeting at 7:30 this evening Planning Commission
He pointed out that copies portation discussion to be
Nov. 11 In observance of at the high school. Otis meeting at the Fanners Bank ofthe draft fonn may be seen . held Nov. 29 from I to 7 p.m.
Veterans Day .
Knopp, Fenton Taylor , Sam Building.
at the county ·commissioners at the Meigs Museum in
Crew and Earl Young will
Presenting the final report office in Pomeroy or tit the Pomeroy on the proposed
The Rutland PTO will hOld discuss student attendance ·
extension of the SR 7 by-pass.
a fall festival Saturday, Nov. and will answer questions of for the finn was James Buckeye Hills office in
12 from' 4 to 8 p.m . at the parents ,
·
.
Anyone with input on that
Jennings, Jr., who said it Marietta.
elementary school. There will
should be updated aru:mally.
Projects reported in the project Is invited to the
be games, prizes , crafts, a
Ttlere will be only· one free
during
the
sweet show, general store cervical cancer clinic in He 'invited members and the request stage for priority museum
designated
hours.
A
hearing
public
to
read
the
report
at
and a jai l.
· Meigs
County
dur ing
rating include water and
A door prize of a $25 November. That clinic has their convenience at the sewer extensions in Mid- on the discussion and project
savings bond will be given been set tor Wednesday , Nov. office of the Meigs Counly dleport and a comprehensive will be set for a later time.
away donated by the Rutland 23, at the Trinity Church
It was reported that the
day care program for
Branch of the Pomeroy basement in Pomeroy. Hours Commissioners.
of 4-H plat books is
supply
children
The
committee
also
in
the
county.
E.
F.
National Bank .
for the cl inic will be 8: 30a .m .
A queen , king, prince and to 12 noon and from 1 to 4: 30 reviewed cleari~g house Robinson was named to serve
running low . and it was
prinCess will be named . p.m. All Me igs .area woman items and , approved the as an alternate ·on the in- discussed as to ways through
Winners are chosen by the are invited to make an apwhich the books might be
coin method . Refreshments pointment for the cl ini c by Rutland by-pass proposed by dustrial site committee
revised and republished. The
composed
the
Ohio
Department
of
Highof
representatives
of . vegetable sour· sand - call i ng 992-.5832 in the
wiches and pop wil be sold. evenings or on weekends .
ways in the planned im- from th~ planning com- books were · originally
" Workers are to meet at the ,
provement of Route 124 . missions of both Meigs and compiled in 1969.
school on Friday, Nov . 11. at 7
. The November meeting of However, it was pointed out Athens Counties.
Attending the meeting
•
p.m . to set ur booth s. Kitchen th e Eastern Local Band .
A letter from the Fann presided over by Thereon
workers wi l meet at 8 a .m . Boosters will bt: tonight at that the by-pass south of
· on _Saturday .
Johnson , president , were
7: 30 p.m . in the l.ligh school Rutland is several years Bureau was read pertainiflg
band room . Too ics of away.
Robinson, Orion Roush, C. E.
to
the
Shade
River
RACINE - A special discussion will include the
Blakeslee,
Wesley Buehl,
Pomeroy
native
Jeffrey
Reclamation
Project
which
meeting of Racine American upcom ing Soil and .'W·,--.ter
Fred Hoffman, Charles
Legion Post 602 will be held at Conc;e r vation ba nque1 and Burl of lhe Buckeye Hills calls for .improvement in
Nov . 17 by the Rutland

8 p.m . Thursday to finalize
plans for the Veterans Day
dinner to be held on Nov. 13.
All pos t members are askE:d

A rui;Timage sale w i ll be

possible musical tn slrument
pur chases . All parent s nl

(Continued on Pille 12)

The final draft of a capital
improvement
capability
study prepared in recent
months by Jennings and

Regional Planning Com mission discu::;scd iiH area

land use plan and the area

strip mined lands which are
causing pollution .
The letter noted a hea r ing

'

and Southern Ohio Electric
Co ., has placed a high
pressure sodium 400 watt
light near the fire station to
give council an Idea of what ·
they are like and to let council
decide if it should consider
placing them in other. areas. '
Council must decide as the
light will have to be removed
by Nov . 15.
Council will obtain the cost
of the light in comparison to
pr~sent lights.
Also meeting with council
was John Anderson on behalf
of the. Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce who suggested
free parking should be offered a week before Christ·
mas. Several suggestions
were made as to how and
when the free parking might
be oflered. The Rev. William
Middlesworth suggested It
begin at I p.m. until closing of
the stores. Council thought
the suggestion an excellent
one.

Harry Davis of coiDlcU
· suggested that _Larry Powell
(Continued oa Pll[t 12)

Water sales
app:.;9ved by
Masoncouncll

MASON, W. Va. - Town
Council Monday night approved the sale of water to
the Mason County PubUc
Service District ( PSD) to be
distributed by the PSD to
rural customers In the area of
Foglesong and Hanging Rock
Roads.
• Representing the people
who want water were John
Hobbs and Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Cadle.
Others requesting water
service were Charles H.
Estep, Carolyn Estep,
.Chester Bailey, Carl Ray
Schwarz, Scott Cadle, Harry
Kearns, Joseph Kearns,
Hazel · Hoschar, Bessie
Craddock, Betty Lambert,
Charles J . Lambert, Evelyn
Edwards, Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Russell and the
Provico chicken farm .
Calvin Smith, representing
the PSD, commended council
members lor making It
Dowler, Naemi Brinker ,
Eleanor Thomas and Boyd possible to provide water to
the residents in these areas.
Ruth .

'

•

�2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tue!lda), Nov , 8, 197i

3- The Daily Senllnel, '-iiddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Nov. 8,1977

Ailments of steel .industry deep and obscure, and critical
Jly STE\'EN PROKESCH
PIITSBURGH l UP! I
'!11&lt; steel industry, backbone
l'f
Amenca 's
m1ghtr
industrial machtne ~ is an
a~mg

and aihng g1ant

One major steel company,

Stt"el"orkrrs Clf Amertra and
steel area P&lt;&gt;hllctans blame
the cr1sts Cln a n&gt;cord flow of
foreign steel imports and

what they sa~ are oHr..strk1

antipollutiOn laws_
• Amon~ the 10 big &amp;1eel

&amp; thlehrm Steel, recorded m fmns, third quarter earmngs
tht· tlnrd quarter of 1977 the were disastrous
worst loss t&gt;\'E'r sustaUled by
Bethlehem lost S4n million
American busml'ss - nearly - the worst return m the
h:t If a blllton dollars The industry 's history. Wheehngp.ar-ent hrms of Pspec1ally Pittsburgh Steel Corp. lost
hardhi( Youngstown Sheet $4.56 milhon and Jones &amp;
and Tube Co and Jooes .&amp; Laughlin lost $4 7 m1llion
ulUghhn Steel Corp ha1•e U S
Steel's
quarterly
rumounced plans to merge . ea mmgs declmed 75 percent
Steelworkers have been from those of last year:
Jaul off by the thousand and Nat10nal Steel 's, 54 percent,
st~l furnaces across the
na. tlon are roo ling m d1suse.
The mdustry blames lowt\lst steel unports Others cite
the agmg co ndition of
America's plants and high

wages paid to steelworkers

For
thousands
of
steelworkers across the
country, however, the
1ndustry has reached a crisis
that brmgs the grun prospect
of spending the holiday
&amp;ason on the unemployment
lines.
"! have kids m school and a

house and car to make
payments on," S31d Joseph P
Serrano, 41 I'm out on the
srreets and ma: have to
dump some of It "
Serrano worked 19 years as
" motor attendant for
Youngsto wn Sheet and Tube.
He lost his JOb in September,
nlong wiih 5,000 others. when
the fll1ll decided to shut down
farllllies m the Youngstown,
Oh10. area

'

· Thanksg1v1ng

.I
I

and
Chri~as are not gomg to be
'ery happy times for my
fa mily this year," Serrano
s:uJ
US. steelmakers have announced 20.000 layoffs smce
early August . More layoffs
"1ll come in the fourth
quarter .
Major steelmakers predict
U1ere will be spot shutdowns
when the market IS weak for
a particular product They do
not expect them to be lengthy
beca use they believe the
market Will not change
dramatically m the fourth
quarter.
Natwnal
Steel,
for
example , already
has
announced it may 'shut down
tis Weirton DivtSion m West
Virgima for abo ut three
weeKs before tile end of the
)·ear It em~loys 13,000.

111e mdustry, the United

Systems'
·boss is
named
CINCINNATI (UPI )- Bill
G Razor has been appointed
to oversee establishment of a
system to detect orgaruc
matenals m the Oh1o River
and
notify
nverS!de
communities of possible
danger.
Called the "Early Organics
~teclion
System," the
project 1s being developed by
the Ohio R1ver Valley Water
San1tatlon Commission
(ORSANCO) With a $100,000
grant from the federal
Environmental
Protection
Agency
Organics that might make
the water Impure are to be
• monitored

init ially

Strau~s.

R&lt;'pubiH•'s, H
Otlwr {,J ettJrS han• played a
pw t , the stt•t•bnakt&gt;rs say
tht• \l.tld\_·at l.''oal slnke, the
1ron {lft' nune s1 nke and
pnces kept too lo" by
g,o\'ernment £tat

F1rst "'th masst\t' la}offs
was Bethlehem Steel . In

Augll-'l , &lt;l furloughed 7.300
workers at Lackawanna.

N \' .. and Johnstol'll, Pa .
lt was not unul the Youngsto"n la) offs were announced
Sept , 19' howe,·er. that President

Carter
even
acknowledged there was a

steer cnsts
In August, Carter had
lashed out at the mdustry for
tts latest prtce mcrease and
ordered the

Whtte House

Couoil on Wage and Pr1ce
Stab!hl) to make a stud) of
the mdustry.
Sen. H John Hemz III. RPa ,met with Carter after the
Youngsto"n Sheet and Tube
layoffs
"That was the first time the
preSident realiZed
the
senousness of the problem,"
Hemz said. ''Apparently the
Bethlehem Steel layoffs
hadn 'l affected hun He said
he
had
never
been
approached by U1e mdustry

Apparently, 1t was a failure to
rommumcate on the part of

both stdes."
The umon, the mdustry,
hard h1l steelmaking areas,
a nd eve ntually Congress
tried to force the preSident to
formulate a national stee l
p(ihcy, wh1~h they said was
lacking Al l agreed that the
admmtstratwn should act to
slow the influx of foreign
steel
The a dmmtstrahon

on mamlv

through

Robert

prl•silitmt 's
spedal tradl' repr£"sentah\'t!
- has rt~mmm-d adamant m
oppo~i n~ qm1tas llfl tmports .
It argues tht~ mdusu-y's
problems are more complPx
and
far -rear htng
than
unports

The Cl&lt;'t. i report of the
\Vlute House Council' on Wage
lllld Pn"' Stability wou ld
seem tu substantmtt! Uus
Amon~ other reasons. the

council

attnbuted'

the

mdustry 's poor t·ompe~ltl\'e
poSitiOn m the world market
h) h1gh pwdurtion costs mdudmg tugl1 \loages - and a
fa1lure
to
modernize

A11t~nto "n .

Speer's Vlt'" S Wf'rt' t't:h11€'d
b~
Bt'thlehl'm
Stt•tiJ
Omirwan l.cw1s Foy. who
attJ 1but~tl ·'tht• unpn)\ t'd
uutlt1u k f1lf t~ Anu:J·u.:an

"steel sWlumt .. meetmg Oct

t3 at the Whlte House and a
spl"c1al task
fnrmed .

force

was

from 6,700 eQ1ployes to
2,000 employes," said
St•hrader. WhO IS president of
USW l.oCar :i599. " Ewryone's

down

stet·! mdustrr and •ts 500,000
empl11)es as a result of thP
nlt"ftlng . to the t•fforts of
01e constuuent members nf
C..ongress who make up I he
steel CHUCUS
··These lrg1slators," smd
Jo-.oy, ' brought mto fll(.'Us lhP
need for aL·twn by the
admuustrahon to p1 event a
continued detenmatiOn or
mdlvtdual compamcs. the

talking atxmt job secunty
day We 're JUSt

e\'l'r)'

desperalelr hupmg that
sumcltung eonstructtve Will
come out of the task f01 ce."

The steel mdustry and the
,1dmunstrat.wn seem to agree

Healy, another Wall Street
steel analyst .
domestic
Rudd sa1d
steelmakers already are
disco'unhng their prtces, so " [
would not e&lt;pect to see much,
if any, effect on consunner
prices for articles like cars,
rofngerators and household
appliances.''
Most steel analysts also
feel a crackdown on dumpmg
w!ll have an almost negligible
inflationary effect un the
economy but will result in a '

crack down on dwnping may
stem the now of Imports
fa1rly quickly.
Wall Street steel analyst Al
Rudd said while the enforcement of anti..dumpmg provt·

sions of the Trade Act of 1974
''can be a lengU\y procedure
. the reactiOnS of foreign
l'nmpames to the prospect of

families ··

pnced fore1gn imports and
protect jobs.

present fl ood of imports
within three to four weeks ." f1m1er price structure for
That prediction seems sup- domesllc steel in 1978.
U S. Steel and other
P&lt;lrled by the declaration of
have ' other
European and Japanese producers
goverrunents that they would dumping complaints pending
be willing to negollale before the Treasurv .

But mdustry and labor
leaders have accused the
adnumstrat10n of .dragging
1ts feet m enforcmg those
laws.
"The wheels of JUsttce
grind
too
slow ly ,"
complamed Lloyd McBride,
preSident of the United
Steelworkers of America .
At the Oct 13 meetmg,
Carte r acknowledged the

formation of the steel caucus
and such prosteel groups as
the Steel Cu mmun1hes
Cnaht10ns l t.:ompiiSed of
loca l government offtctal s
frorn stef;!lrnaking areas), are

Carter promised
the
mdustr)
· 'act10ns
and
dec 1swns,'' includmg a

Serrano

governm en t
had
not
aggressively enforce d the
antl-dumpmg proviSions but
sa1d !us ad.numstration would
take re.me&lt;:bal action.
Carter's dec1S1on was sup-

fellow USW local member
"A nd

as

Carter . I voled lor hun last
November But 1 don't care
who runs agamsl him, I'll
never vote for hm1 again .

There's a lot of bitterness
aro und he re, but th ere's

gmng to be a lot more when
the cold weather gets here."
Even those steelworkers

take place m the future," sa1d

who still have jobs a re

Edgar Speer . chairma n of

worried.

US. Steel.

"I'm scared about my job,"
s:ud George Schrader. 57,

MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - Uoivenlty of Wlleo1111in
Alhletic Director Elroy WndJ arrived at blJ Camp
Randall Stadium office at 10:30 Monday mol'lliog 1111d woo
surprised to find football Coach John Jardine walling lor
him .
Jardlne, who last Saturday felt the wrath of
Wlsconsln 's fansas hlJ team wu drubbed by Purdue zz-4,
told Hirsch be was going to ''retire" at the end of the
season.
"The guy hu Integrity comlnJI out of blJ ean," llllid
Hirsch. "I'm sorry to lose him to the wln«-elae
syndrome."
AI a news coaference late Monday, Janll,ne aald his
decision came "u a retail of oeveral ewnt1 dariDC the
past weeks, eopeclally durtnt! and alter Saturday'•
game." What happened Saturday oeemed to have beea
holldlng f.r oeveral weeks. 'The Badgen woa tllelr lint
five gameo aDd Wel't rllllked Utb In the llliUoa , 'Then thea
went Into a tailspin. Saturday's lOIS wa1 tllelr foutb
stralgbt and lrustr•ted Ia'"' responded wltb boo1 and
jeers.
Wbeu tile game ended, oome flll1ll serenaded Janllue
w!tb several verses of "Goodbye Johnny," aDd pelted his
players with apples and toilet paper. It was aD ugly scene.

High-living ways
will be stopped

water treatment process and

By GREGORY GORDON

thetr unpact on organic
matenals m water supplies.

.
.;a•. '
-:: . '·;

.HEALTH

~

f

I

I!

!jA

,_ .
~

; ..

t

jj;f

Miss, Inc. today announced

pursue a career m nursing

three contestants for the 1978
Southeast OhiO Juruor MISs
Fmals Sunday, Nov. 20at 3·30
p.m. at the Me1gs Juruor High
School aud1tonum m Mtd·
dleport
They are Kathy Pullins,
Jud1 Perry and Pamela

and is sponsored by the
Racme Home National Bank
Miss Riffle, planning a

showed:
-They entertained an

Southeast

Oh10

Riffle, all seniors at Eastern

H1gh School.
M1ss Pullms, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Edgar Pullms,
39879 Betzmg rd., Reedsville ,
hopes to furth er her
education m accountmg. For

her talent she will do a vocal
solo. She IS sponsored by the
Racme Home Natwnal Bank
M1ss Perry, daughter of
Mrs. Bess Webster, Tuppers
Plains , will present a
dem onstratton on clothmg

available and are otherwise

!hat.

front·row theater

she has made . She plans to

PAM RIFFLE

KATHY PULLINS

abdomen over the ltver area.

m good health and unlikely to
have complications from
surgery I ffilght add that all
tbe surgeons I know tell me
they are very good, but some
of them seem to have better
results than others.
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 4-9,
Gall Stones and Gall Bladder
Disease, to give you more in·
formalton . Others who want
infonnation on this subject
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for this issue to me
in care of this newspaper,
P .O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta·
lion, New York, NY 10019.
If you have colon com·
plaints, you may need to go
on a program to unprove
your colon functwn, mcludmg
mcreasmg the cereal bulk in
your diet
There is an mcreased inCidence of cancer of gall bladders with stones. Smce yours
has been removed, I think
you don 'I need to worry a bout

parhes ~

Jumor

f '

Eastern High seniors
Looking at gall stones
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
in Junior Miss Finals ·
DEAR DR. LAMB- Will all A spastic colon often causes

you have a good surgeon

WASHINGTON (UPI)
High officials of a federal
banking regulatory agency
used a loosely controlled
millwn-dollar' lund to splurge
on gala office Christmas
tickets and a business jaunt
to a plush mountain resort,
accordmg
to
agency
documents .
The vouchers diSclosed
Monday
detatled
expenditures by some
members of the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board.
Agency officials said the
spending practices would be
curbed by new rules.
The records of the board

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

ev1dence ISm favor of remov·
mg a diseased g~ll bladder if

on

ACTION FILED
The Pomeroy Natwnal
Bank filed su1t for money m
the amount of $703.60 against
Ronald F. and Carolyn Sue
Reynolds, Racine.
THE DAILY SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE
lNTERESTOF
MEIGs-MASON AREA

CHESTERL. TANNEHIU..
Extt Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City EdJtor
Published datly exrept S&lt;tlurdi!Y
by The. Oh1o Valle) Publishing

Compa n}·Multunedta, Inc ,

111

Court St , Pomeroy, OhJO 45769
BU.'Imcss Office Phone 992· 2156
Edilonal Phone99'2-2 1fl7
Seeond cla:.s pOBt.age patd at

Pomeroy, Ohio
National

1uJverhsmg represt:n·

Wtive Ward • Gnfflth Company,

Bollrne lli &lt;:~nd Ga!la~her lltv,
7~7 Third Ave, New York NY .

Inc

10017

'

Subscnpt1on rates · De livered by

C'a rrtcr where av&lt;tililble 75 cents per
week By Motor Houte where earner
9ervtce nul aviulablc, One month,
S3 2!o By ma ll 1u 01110 and W Va,
O'lc Yc&lt;1 r, $2200 Su- 11),0nths,
Ul ~ . T hree months. 17 00

E:lscwhere 126 00 ye&lt;:U, Sex months
113 50 ,

Thrt'l

months

$7 50

Subscr lptwn pm'c tmludu Sund&lt;tv

1

run l;':s...S~nltntl

members ' expenditures
11

career m speech therapy , is

The Jumor Mtss conumttee
also has announced the

Syracuse Jumo• Troop 1204
and the Southern Cadette
:rroop
will
se rve
as
usherettes for the Jumor Mtss

JUDI PERRY

Coal strike certain?
agreement on a new contract
and avert a natiOnWide coal

stnke.
The two stde·s were
sc heduled
to
resume
negot1at1ons today , ending a
nearly two-week stalemate
that kept them a part . It was
on ly their sixth meetmg to
discuss a new contract.
Both the uriion and the
Bittuninous Coal Operators
Association fear a long
national walkout when the
current pact exptres Dec 6.
Con tra ct extensions are
unknown in the coal mc!u,, ry,
where mmers adhere strictly

to a " no contract, no work 11
tradition
Ch1ef fede ral · mediator

Marston ,

-One former board
official, Marshall Burkes,
who helped control the socalled " lmprest fund, " used
some of tbe money to pay :
$207 for lti.r'Clir insurance,
$146.50 for an annual physical
examination, ~I for ftrst-tier
tickets at the Kennedy Center
and $18 to fix a spare tire .
- Burkes was reimbursed
about $2,500 for catered office
Cllristrnas parties in 1974 and
1975.
- Another $697.30 went for
a three-day visit to "The
Homestead" resort in Hot
Springs, Va., by J .J . Finn, the
board's secretary; his
personal secretary Rhonda
Furmanski ; and Donald
Kaplan, the agency's chief
economist, and his wife, to
plan a meeting.
"None of that is going to go
on

anymore,"

Michael

Scanlon, a bank board
spokesman, said after the
documents were made
public.

for women and girls

Nease,
Regma
Nance,
Verontca Provo , Paula
Wmebrenner, Shari Cogar,

WASHINGTON (UPI) The United Mine Workers
a nd the bituminous coal
mdustry are left with less
than three weeks to reach

officials to a recepUoo given
by former chairman Garth

Advancement is slight-

Finals Those taking part wtll
be Sherrie Sisson , Becky
Arnott, Lon Michael, J1ll

Susan Jett and Patty Jeffers.

advisory council" of savings

' and loan industry officials at
regular meetings at the
stately Madison Hotel usually racking up a tab of
more than $5,000, including
about $700 in liquor expenses.
- They
leased
stx
limousines for $324 to carry
savings and loan industry

the daughter of Mr and Mrs
Roy R1ffle, Long Bottom She
w1ll present a vocal solo and a
sk1t to "Puppy Song." She is
sponsored by the Me1gs Inn of
Pomeroy

Wayrte Horov1tz sa1d recently
he sees little hope of averting
a str1ke . He satd the mmers
will undoubtedly wtll walk out
unless a pact IS reached by
Nov . 26 - allowing them 10
days before the deadlme to
ratify any proposal.
,
Talks broke down two
weeks ago when the umon
and the employers !ruled to
agree on the agenda. Tbe
umon wanted to discuss
ben efi ts; the employers
wanted to discuss penalties
for absenteeiSm.
Under the agreement that
brought them back to the
table, all issues will be
diScuss ed -'r mcludm g
benefits "The posturmg has
got to be over / 1 an mdustry
source remarked.

Uruon officials indicated
they w1ll ask the comparues
to "bail out " thetr fmancia lly

ailmg health and pension
funds that have been depleted
seriously by numerous
wildcat strikes.
The industry meanwhile
wants to penalize miners who
participate
in
an
unauthori,zed work stoppage.
A proposal characierized as
hardline by the mdustry's
own offictals would require
mmers to reimburse thetr
health and pe,.;ion funds for
money lost in wildcats.
A strike meanwhile would
bankrupt the health and pen·
sion funds, but ereate little
hardship for Amencan coal
users. About 50 per cent of the
nation 's coal needs currently

are satisfied by non-union
coa l, a nd administration
offi c1als
forese e little
hardship created by a miners
strike of less than three
months .

Colts hand Redskins
10-3 AFC East loss
BALTIMORE (UP)) -To
Baltimore Colts Coach Ted
Marchtbroda the winning
toucMown - a leaping, 12·
yard pass recepllon by wlde
receiver Freddie Scott represented a team effort and
made v1ctory " all the
sweeter.''
The Colts boosted their
record to 7-l and clung to a
one--game lead over Miamt in
the AFC East as they
defeated the Washington
Redskl!ls , ]().3, Monday, in a
rain-soaked battle before a

Winning aU the SWeeter."
'l1 passes for 180 yards, was
Marchibroda said bringing mtercepted twice, whereas in
Scott mto the game in the the first seven games of the
fourth quarter put three wide season he was Intercepted
receivers on the field , a only once.
formation which forced the
Redskm quarterback Joe
Redskins to go one-&lt;&gt;n-one Theismann also was inagamst Scott.
tercepted twice, both times
Lydell•Mitchell carried h1s by Colts linebacker Stan
usua 1 load, running for more White, who returned a first ·
total yardage - l!l yards - quarter theft to the Redskm
lhan the ~edskins olfensive 26, setting up Toni Unhart's
backfield, which made 93 26-yard field goal.
yards on the gro und.
The Redskms bed the score
Mitchell, who pounded out in the second quarter when
the gams m 29 carries1 added Mark Moseley booted 1~ a 46national televtsion audience. another 55 yards offense wtth yard held goal, made
" Scott ca me 111 on a cructaJ three pass receptions.
possible by a 45-ya rd
situation and made the b1g
Quarterback Bert Jones, The1smann to Danny Buggs
play for us," sa1d Mar· who had a harder time of it, bullet that threaded between
ch1broda, who was an sa1d, "The rain hurt me a lot two defensive players.
assista nt to Washtngton - an a wful lot. The ball was
To Allen a key factor m the
Redskms Coach George Allen constantly soakmg wet, and game had nothmg to do w1th
for nine years.
when you're a hard thrower the weather.
" That 's what J mean about like me and you can't gnp it,
" Either the clock was
wrong or the referee called
Colt football - team fool· It 's hard ."
ba~. " he said " That makes
Jones, who comoleted 13 of the game before it was over,"

Win-lose syndrome claims Jardine

Huntington , Portsmouth and
flows mto the Ohio .
The m1t1al phase of the
detection system IS scheduled
to be in opera\ton early next
year . The !mal plan calls for
additional
Sites
and
momtormg seven days a
week .
Razor, an ORSANCO senior
chemist w1th a master 's
degree in environmental
engineering, has been the
prmcipal mvestigator for an
ORSANCO study of drinking

rest raints

Bes1des
the
speedy
processing of dumping
complaints , the mdustry
would like to see the Treasury
take the initiative in
htgher pnees for cooswners. enforcmg the Trade Act,
" It could mean somewhat complauung that the burden
higher prices 1f fore1gn steel of dumpmg proof now rests
producers are dumpmg or with domestic producers.

ported m a rulmg Oct. 3 by
the
U S.
Treasury
Department ,
whi c h
tentatively determined that
five Japanese steelmakers
have been illegally dumpmg
carbon steel plate in the
Umted
States.
The
department ordered the f1ve
to post bonds to cover
dwnpmg dulles amounlmg to
32 percent of the unporis .
Industry sources say the
five Japanese steelmakers

for

expect some sort of actiOn to

vo luntary

exports, If US. firms drop
dumpmg complaints
Removing cheap fore1gn
steel from the U S market
should not mean not1ceably

the Kanawha Rtver , whtch

pam tn this area whether or
not the person has gall stones.
Wllen the gall stones are seen
on X ray , it is then assumed
that tbey are tbe cause of the
pam -which may not be the
case at all
In such a case, after the
gall stones are removed the
spastic colon pers!Sls and the
pam m the upper r1ght abdomen pers!Sis too. The patient may think it IS because
tbe gall bladder disease has
not been cured, but the truth
may be the gall bladder never
had a nythmg to do wtth the
pam.
That doesn't mean tbe gall
bladder should not have
removed. The we1ght of

the market." said Oavtd

the 1974 Trade Act is U1e best
way to ftghl arllhclally-

antl-dumpmg pro\•isions of "' impede or slow down the

_

gall stones show up on X
rays? I had my gall bladder
remov~d a ye'ar ago A year
has passed smce then and I
have lots of pam m the area
where the gall bladder was. I
have had X rays and no
stones show up .
I have heard if one has
•tones that aren 't removed
they can cause cancer. Is
there any other way except
by X ray that they can locate
gall stones?
DEAR READER - In
general, there are two types
oC gall stones but there can be
mixtures of materials that
form stones. The stones formed chiefly from cholesterol
are not opaque on X rays
That is why a person takes
gall bladder dye before a gall
bladder ex311lllllltion
The dye IS opaque and coo·
centrates mside the gall blad·
der . Th e t ransp~ re nt
cholesterol stones then stand
out from the sohd appeanng
dye and can be see n.
The stones made from bile
pigment are small, hard
stones that are VISi ble on X
rays without dye and some
stones
contam other
minerals that make them
visible.
The opaque stones can be
seen by X ray even 1f they are
in the bile system after the
gall bladder has been removed, and if you inject opaq ue
material the others can be
seen as well. There are
techniques to visualize by X
ray the entire bilary tree.
DIScomfort from abnormal
dra mage of the btle may still
be present after an operation.
Then there is that frequent
prol&gt;lem that tbe pam the pa·
tient was bothered w1th may
not have been caused by the
gall stooes at aU, even if
stones were present. The
main offender here is pain m
tbe colon, in tbe upper right

El·tmomlsts
say
the
admlmstrat10n 's plans to

Jobs of the~r employees and
the well-being of employees'

meeting was a big Joke," sa1d

r -

sellmg &gt;teet below cost, if the
cheap steel is removed from

U1at strict enforcement might

\l.lthm weeks ,

CJO c tnnatl ,
Wh eelmg r

have smce eut exports to thiS
eountry .

tl1at stnct enforcement of the

The task force IS headed by
Undersecretary of the
Treasury Anthony Solomon peSSlffi!StlC
" l have no ex:pertHtions of
and
consists of
lop
adnunis trat ion officia ls , the task force," said Vmce
congressmen, mduslry and Bruner, 50, wh o was la1d off
workmg
lor
labor leaders, ectmonusts after
Youngstown
Sheet
and
Tube
and envlronmentahsts It has
prormsed to come Up With ut the Youngstown area for
recommendahons for a almost 30 years.
" I thmk the Washmgton
gove rnm ent steel policy

crac kd own
on fore1gn
producers illegally sellmg or dumping - steel below
cQst m the Un1ted States, tax
reltef .and an even-handed
approach to polluters.
·'lt seemed to me we can

Pa., who works

fur Bethlehem Steel.
" I have seen my local go

La1d-off
stee lworkers ,
facilities.
whose
phghl
led to the
PreSident Carter called a

weekdays at seven pomls Pittsburgh,
LOUISV Ille,

th('

WASHINGTON (UPJ) Lax

government

acctmplishments in over four
years of Title IX were very
small," the report said.
"Astonishingly small, given

enforcement of the law
bannmg sex discrnrunation m
schools has meant little the resources at hand."
PEER's criticism was
progress for g~rls and
directed
at the Department of
women ,
a
National
Organization for Women Health, Education and
Welfare which is charged
study says.
The study was done by witb enfoccing the 1972 law
NOW's Project on .Equal prohibiting sex discrimlna·
Education Rights, which is ' tion in schools and colleges
supported with foundation receiving federal funds.
HEW's civil rights chief,
funds,
and
published
David Tate!, agreed in a
Moo day.
'The report , entitled Stalled written response to the report
at the Start, foiD!d that during tbat it "ls an essentially
accurate analysts of the past
the last four years:
-Only 18 of the nation's administration's failure to
\
16,000 school dlstricts_agreed enforce Title JX."
But he said it fails to
to change employment
practices to treat both sexes recognize "the deliberate and
·
fairly.
continual efforts of the
- 21 agreed to upgrade (HEW) Office for Civil Rights
under
the
Carter
sports programs for girls.
administration
to
reverse
-77 agreed to open up
singlesex courses to both that record ... "
He said the administration
sexes.
has
reduced the number of
- 20 agreed to change sexunanswered inquiri~ on Title
biased student rules.
- 21 Institutions agreed to IX from 410 to fewer than 100
and cut in hall the number of
miscellaneous changes.
"When you add it all up ... pending letters of findlnp In
th e' government ' s alleged discrimination cases.

Sweetwater, Goose , Geese,

Ducky, Gator, Curly and
·
Meadowlark.
And sltll, after 52 years of
travelmg to over 90 countries

playmg before 85 milliOn
fans,
the
Harlem
Globetrotters contmue to
bring laughter and smiles
from the faces of all nat1ons
by communtcating With the
un1versallanguage of basket·
ball
Meadowlark ~mon and
the Harlem Globetrotters wtll
entertam basketball fans of
Southeastern
Ohio
on
November 12 at 7:30 p.m.
when the Mag1c1ans of
Basketball
vistt
Ohio
University m Athens. Ticket
and group rates are available
m Ohio Umversity ticket
outlets or by calling the Ohlo
University Ticket Office at
594-5206.
With the success and
welcome they have received
everywhere, one has to appreciate the fortunate results
of a seemingly ill-fated team
of blacks that once lost the
use of their gym because they
could not draw enough fans .
The team was coached by
Abe Saperstein, an English
immtgrant who loved basket·
ball but saw lun1ts in trymg to
succeed as a player with a
height of 5'3". ShU, he had a
"head" for thee·game and
agreed to ·orgAruze a team of
blacks for Chicago semi-pro
league in 1926.
Named after the ballroom
in which they played, the
Savoy Ii'ig Five proved to be a
success on the court if not in
the stands. Because of the
slim crowds that watched
Saperstein's team play twice
a week, the deal made with
the ballroom was broken and
the team was without a home.
Saperstein, however, felt
that his team could remain
acttve by finishing the rest of
his schedule on the road.
Since the team was no longer
associated with the ballroom,
Saperstein renamed them
Saperstem's New York m an
elfort to promote them as a
well-traveled team from the
East.
Under the new nomen·

a

clature, Saperstein's new

team played 1ts first game in
Hickley, Ill. in 1926 and
earned $75 for the trip.
The 1930s put a damper on
the squad. Faced w1th the
economic depression that hit
the rest of the nation,
Saperstein's New Yorks were
faced wlth daily games that
brought little proftt.
Late in the deacde ,
Saperstein decided to change
the team's image. He
renamed them the Harlem
New York Globetrotters.
Harlem would denote that the
players were black and the
Globetrotters would p~:_omote
their world travels. In actual
fact , the Globetrotters dtd not
play in Harlem unhl 1968 and
up to • thts time they had
traveled in only three midwestern states.
All the whlle, the team
played serious basketball
against local and semi-pro
teams. Since s ports in·
tegra\lon was still a nonsensical idea at this tune, the

all-black Globetrotters were
not fully appreciated by the
media and promoters of b1g
city arenas. But the skill and
ta lent was prevalent and
the1r reputatton grew , as d1d
their v1ctortes
The dommance of the

Globetrotters over their
opponents in the early years

considered seriously.
In defiance of
criticism,

overtime.' '

Allen -was refemng to the
last mmute of the game when
the Redskins drove to the
Baltimore 13 where referee
Chuck Heberlmg ca lled tune
out with two seconds showing
on the clock as the Colts
failed to get onside.
However, the final whistle
was blown before the Red·
skms snapped the ball for
another play. Theismann said
he never heard the whistle on
the play.
"But one play doesn 'I lose a
ball game lor you," sa1d
Thelsmann .

" There

JOHN SI'OUT

are

generally about 65 offenstve
plays in a game. You can 1t

blame it on one. We played
well, but not well enough "

r------------,

:

Meadowlark &amp; Co. at OU
for November 12th match
Collecttvely, they're known
as the Ambassa dors of
Goodwill, the Magicians of
Basketball , and the Wizards
of the Ha rdwood
In·
d1vidually, they've answered
to Showboat, Trick, Babe,

grumbled Allen . "Thelsmann
was scrambling and we think
we could have scored and tied
the game, sending it into

I

Pro

:
I

:Standings !
NFL Standings

such

Saperstein

arranged games wtth the
NBA champ1on Minneapolis
Lakers in 1948 and 1949 and
defeated them each time.
W1th the exposure in
Hawan and the success

By Un1ted Press International
Amencan Conference
East
WL.TPct
"llllflm ore
7 1 0 875
.Aia mr
6 2 0 750
New England
5 3 0 625
NY Jets
260250
Buffalo
260250
Central
W L T Pel
Clevela nd
s J 0 625
Houston
4 4 0 soo
Prttsburgh
0 soo
4
'
Cmc moatr
4
4
0 soo
West
W L T Pc1
Denver
7 1 0 875
Oakland
7 1 o 875
San D 1ego
4 4 0 .500
Kansas C1ty
2 6 0 250
seattle
2 6 0 250
National Conference

agamst the Lakers, th e
was mstrumental ut their Globetrotters' popularity
lormulahon of today ' s contmued to clunb. Thus in
comedy antics. Late m the the ea rly 1950s, the squad
game Wtlh the G!obetrptters added players and then split
far ln the lead, one of the them to man two teams whtch
players would gtve the other traveled m different direc·
East
four a chance to rest up by hons of the country .
W L T Pet
8 0 0 1 000
dribbling and handlmg the
Also at ' thiS time , the Dallas
Sf LO UIS
s J 0 625
ball himself . The fa,.; loved Globetrotters used a new Washmgton
4 ' 0 soo
the show of dnbbling between form of exposure Alter their Phrladel phia
J s 0 375
the legs and rollmg the ball ftrst annual trip to Europe, NY G1ants CentralJ 5 0 .375
up and down their arms. the Trotters !limed their first
W L T Pel
ta
5 ] 0 625
Saperstem was unpressed by af two movtes, appropriately Mmneso
oerro1t
4 4 0 500
the crowd's enthusiasm and tttled
" The
Harlem Ch1cago
3 5 0 375
2 6 0 250
millated the use of comedy Globetrotters." Upon another Gr een Ba y
and showmanship dunng the disembarkment and return Tam pa Bay West 0 8 0 .000
games. Still, the objective from Europe, they filmed
was to win games.
"Go Man Go." Their second
In 1939, tbe Chicago Herald film was followed by a trip to
Ameri c an
newspaper South America.
Monday's Result
sponsored a lourn,a ment
In touring Europe and
Baltimore 10, Wash 3
Sunday's Games
which included established ·south
America,
the
Baltimore at Buffal o
teams tn the country. Globetrotters introduced the
Cleve at Pi1tsburgh
Detro1t at Atlanta
Saperstein's team lost early game along with the humor
Sea ttle at NY Jets
Ill the 1939 tournament but they presented. Fans all over
Wash at Ph il adelphia
were Invited back for the 1940 the world loved them. Their
New England at M 1am1
NY G1ants at Tampa Ba y
tournament and defeated second trip to Europe was so
Kans-as C1ty at Chicago
every team in the field. W1th successful that Saperstein
Los Ang vs Green Bay
at M ilwaukee
the t1tle of World Champions received a telegram from the
Sa n Fran at New Orleans
pinned on them by the Herald State Department: " The
Cmc lnnat , at M innesota
Denver at San D1ego
American, the Globetrotters Globetrotters have proven
Housto n at Oakland
became much more of a themselves ambassadors
Monday's Game
St LO UIS at Dallas, nig ht
marketable item
extraordinary of good wlll
Wttb the tournament IItle, wherever they have gone. On
the Globetrotters were able to any future tours please call
be booked in big city arenas the State Pepartment of the
across the country. Sports United States lf we can be of
promoters put together a tour any help."
in which the Globetrotters
1950 also signified the
NHL Standmgs
would meet teams of college beginning of the "World
By Unrted Press lnterhatronal
Series
all-stars.
of
Basketball"
Campbell Conference
Patrtck Orvis1on
Saperstein continued to wherein the Globetrotters
W. L T Pts.
build on the team's would take on a squad of Ph ila delphia
B 2 1 17
6 4 3 15
prominente. In the early '40s, college all-stars . 'The series NY Islanders
Atlanta
4 3 5
13
he Instituted a number of lasted until1962 and for that NY Rangers
5 7 1 11
Smythe DIVISIOn
ftrs\s in professional basket· time the Globetrotters acW L. T Pts.
ball. He initiated the first pre- cumulated a record of 166-44. Ch1cago
5 2 5 15
season camp, the first
On the eve of the team's Colorado
4 3 3 11
'vancouver
3 6 2
8
scouting system, and also the 25th anniversary in 1951, Minnesota
4 8 o
8
first farm system.
Saperstein and his team St Lours
1 10
2
4
Wales Conference
In 1942 the Globetrotters circled the globe. After tbe
NorriS DIVISIOn
signed "Goose" Tatum. He trip, Saperstein admitted to
W L T Pts .
7 J 3 17
was the first player signed for the media that the reception Montreal
Angeles
6 4 2 14
his ball-handling skU!s and of the team was enthusiastic Los
Oetrort
5 4 2 12
comedy In addition to his all· everywhere in the world, but Pittsburgh
3 8 1
7
2 7
1
5
around basketball ability. In added that the hardshipa of Washmgton
Adams Division
1946, Tatum was joined by travel would prevent them
W l T Pfs
8 2 1 17
another highly touted ball- from mitiating another tour. Buffalo
Toron to
6 2 2 14
handler, Marques Haynes. Actually, the Globetrotters Cleveland
5 6 1 11
4 s 3 11
These two players added a trotted the globe two more Boston
1
Mondar
s
Result
new dimension and style to times.
'
Mmnesota 5, Montreal 3
the play of the Globetrotters
Later in the 1950s, Haynes
Tuesday 1 s Games
Ang
at Wash1ngton
Los
Now their performance and Tatum left the team to
Vancouver at Colorado
became as much a show as it form their own traveling
Wednesday ' s Games
Buffa lo at NY Rangers
was vigorous competition. squads. Showboat Hall took
Washington at Detro1t
The Globetrotters accepted up most of the slack left with
Cleveland at Pittsburgh
Toronto at Atlanta
an invitation to entertain in thetr absence, but in 1954
Minneso t a at Chicago
Hawaii In 1946. Their first Meadowlark Lemon joined
vancouver at St Louis
overseas
performance the squad and within two
brought about a great years became the leading
reception from the ser· "C1own Prince ."
v1cemen stationed there.
Also
in
1~54 ,
the
'Indirectly acting as public Globetrotters made their first
relations men, the ser· television appearapce by
vicemen wrote hime to all performmg on Ed Sullivan's
parts of the country praising "Toast of the Town" sonal management firm. In
the play of tlie' Globetrotters. program. The team limited 1972, Greeson's success m
Upon returning to the their television appearances promoting the Globetrotters
mainland; the team was to one or two each year until became so evident, tbat he
accepted and appreciated as 1970. At that lime )hey was persuaded to dissolve his
never before and the produced one of the most own company to become
highly rated ammated car· pres1dent of the Harlem
revenues mounted .
The antics of Haynes and loon on Saturday morning. · Globetrotters, Inc.
Today under Greeson's
Tatum amused and thrilled
The Globetrotters con·
leadership,
the Globetrotters'
the thousands of fans who tmued their success m the
exposure
and
popularity is
saw them.
1960s. A year after Abe
worldwide.
Telev1slon
ex·
Saperstein booked hts team Saperstein S death in 1966, ·
posure,
world
tours,
a
nd
to perform prior to Natwnal though, the Globetrott ers
capacity
crowds
have
made
Ba sketball Association were sold to three Chicago
games in an effort to boost busmessmen . The team the Globetrotters a tnllJ•on
league attendance. Stlll, the populanty became mur e dollar business. It's been a
long road smce Savoy Ball·
critics said that the evident than ever when Stan
room and Saperstem's New
Globetrotters were merely a Greeson took on the
show tea m that could not be Globetrotters mto hiS per· York .

~t~~ii;;;~

j

DAVID DAVIS

MIKE DREHEL
MARAUDER JUNIORS - F1ve juniOrs playmg on the
Marauder football sq_uad are Btlly Elk1M, John Stout,
Randy Tackett, Mtke Drehel , and Da vid Davis.
Soul, No. 81 is the son of Mr and Mrs. Billie C. Stout of
Rt. 2, Albany. John stands 5'9" and weighs 141 lbs. He ts
starting to look very prom!Smg at an end position.
Tackett, 52, also showmg a lot of promiSe Ill a guard slot,
is 5'll " and weighs 155 lbs. Randy ts the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Randall Tackett of Langsville.
Drehel , 61, has seen actwn this year at middle guard on

defense . He is 6'0", weighs 190 lbs., and 1s the son of Mr ·
and Mrs. James Drehel, Rt. I, Middleport.
Davis, 70, at 6'8" and 230 lbs., probably IS the biggest
Marauder. David plays tack!~ and ts the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Davis of Rutland.
Elkins, 30, is a starter flllmg the tailback or fullba ck
position. Billy IS 5'7" and weighs 160 lbs., the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bobby Joe Elkins of 587 Mam St., Middleport
(His picture wasn't available for prmtmg)

I l T~ pfi~Lasorda honored

as NL's best
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tom
Lasorda , who mhented the

Ozark of the Philadelphia
Phillies, Chuck Tanner of the
Pittsburgh Pirates and Bill
Vwdon nf the Houston Astros

mantle worn by Walter
Alston as manager of the Los

had one each

Angeles Dodgers for 23 years,
Tt!esday was named UPI 's
National League Manager of
the Year .
Lasorda 1 who, as a rookie

manager, gwded the Dodgers
to their second Nalwnal
League

pennant m four

years, was named by 18 of the
24 sports wnters who
participated m tbe annual
post~eason

smvey .

Herman Franks of the
Cll ~eago Cubs fintshed second
w1th three votes qnd Danny
A

.

BG's senior
tackle honored

The Dodgers won the NL 's
Western D1vts1on IItle by 10
games, overthrowmg the
twollme world champion
Cmcmnati Reds, and beat the
Phtlhes, three games to one,
m the playoffs .
. "Naturally, I feel it's a
trem e ndous honor, " said
Lasorda . uBut when you wm

an honor like th1s, m reality,
you have to share the credit
with the men who played
under
you
a nd
the
organization, wh ich made 1t
all posSible.

-

.

II

Sho ~·

VALUE

RATED

I

USED CARS

through 1972 and th en was a
Dodger coach for the next

three years . He f9rmally
succeeded Alston , the most
successful Dodger manager

m h1story, for the last four
games of the 1976 season.
Next year?
" Nothmg comes easy and it
wOn t be easy next season,"
he -sa1d. " Our theme next
season will be 'We did it
before and we can do it
agam .' Wllal you did last yea r
doesn't mean a thmg thiS
year. But we' ve been there
before and we know what it

74 CHEVY NOVA
4 DR. VR
Automa t i c,

roof

'2495
74 MONTE CARLO
' Clean
Loaded

•3495

1

takes."

viny l

power5teermo

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'lll1ke OtJT Quality
Way of Doing Busmess
GMAC FINANCING
992 -53 42

Pomeroy

~Open Evenmgs ' t1l6 · oo

T1l s p.m . Sat

" I am wrtting each and

every Dodger player to thank
th em for what they d1d for

Lasorda contmued. urn
be forever grateful and I

m e~"

want them to know that We
had an orga nizational v1ctory

NEW YORK (UPI ) Fullback Joseph Holland of

and a n argamzational award
I've been very busy since the

Cornell Umvers tty , whose
father once was honored with

World Senes, I've been
traveling all over and I've
had a lot of speakm g

a D1stmgmshed American
award from the Nabonal
Football Foundation and Hall

THIS WEEK 'S

Meigs County's
Oldest and Largest Agency

engagements. I've recetved

hundreds of letters from
of Fame, was among 11 people expressmg their
college semors chosen by that appreciation for such an
sa me group Monday as excitmg season "
Scholar-Athletes for 1977.
The 50-year old Lasorda, a
Also selected was Bowling native of Morristown, Pa ,
Green senior tackle Mark was a journeyman pttche r m
Wichman , of Tallmadge the Dodgers' orgamza twn
Wichman , 6-4, 235-pounds, and had a hfetune major
was one of 11 college football league record of 0-4 m 26
players who w1ll receive a games.
He rel!red as a player m
$1,000 fellowship for graduate
study and Will be honored at 1960 and served as a scout for
the Foundation's 20th annual the Dodge rs fr om 1961
Hail of Fame awards dinner through 1965 He managed
Spokane
and
Dec. 6 at the Waldorf-Astoria Ogden,
Al
buque
rque
from
1966
hotel in New York.

We Write All Form s
of In surance

1

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Middleport. 0 .

992 -2342

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday, Nov. 8, 1977

Countdown to Michigan beginsReporterJury selection underway in
~~~~~.c~~~~

OOLUMBUS (U P!) - The

:;:'~;':~0:~/~~~·.l.t'sjust ~~~~~olli·~;· th;e~~ne n~: ~~b~:~· w:~~ ~~!~st~ can keep John young's murder trial
t hough ts
Hayes was asked whether

scrimmage . But as the game

lineman of the week.

annual two.week. COWltdown

he was C'OI'lcerned about the

w~nt

on, we did control the

Defensively, top honors for

to the Michigan-Ohio State
Btg Ten showdo..n game
began Monday for Buckeye
Coach Woody Hayes.
Hayes. as has been his
custom for many years. an·
nounced a new set of rules for
newsmen to follow until the
Nov. 19 clash at Ann Arbor is
over, incl\xling a ban oo
player interviews and
"maybe the roaches, too ."

punting of Da••e McKee,
whose average in recent
weeks has dwindled to just
o••er 35 yards per game.
"l.s that what you call it,"
snapped the \'eteran Buckeye
coach. who said freshman
Tom Orosz, who has handled
the kiclluffs in superb fashion
for the Buckeyes, also may
get a shot at the punting.
Looking back at the J:Hl

line of scrimmage and
controlled them (Illinois )."
Hayes again liked what he
saw of backup quarterback
Mtke Strahine. who has
m"''ed into the No. 2 positioo
behind Gerald because of an
tnjury to Greg Castignola .
··Strahine has t'llme a long
way," said Hayes. "In a way
we're better off now than we
were before Castignola got

the Illinois ('Qiltest went to
end Paul Ross.
Michigan only pians on two
da)•s of practice on grass this
week prior to its trip to
Purdue and' its second game
on natu.ral turf thls season.
The Wolverines played one
game off an artificial surface
and posted its only loss - a
l!Hl loSs at Minnesota.
"We'vegotto findout what

0\'er Dlinois1 Hayes said

hurt. We have more depth ."

the field is like when we get

quarterback Rod Gerald
played a "very efficient
game. The inter~ pi ion he
had wasn't his fault and he
too k a loss or t~·o instead of
making a bad pitchout . To
me, that 's the epitome of
good football.
"Our defense was spotty
when we started.'' Hayes

Castignola, who was
originally thought t o be
through for the season,
returned to practice last
week and saw brief action
against Illinois.
Almost lost in · the
Wolverine fever is the fact
the Buckeyes ha•·e a
Saturday date with a "good"
Indiana team, which will
bring a 4+1 overall mark
into Ohio Stadiwn and is too
good to overloo k.
Hayes called the Hoosie rs
"a good fotba U team," but
added, "I doo 11ike to talk a
team up . Let them talk
themselves up."
He did label Indiana "one
of the four top teams in the
league right now, adding,
"they're improving, but so
are- we ."
Hayes said the Buckeyes
came through illinois game
with no serious injuries, aithough starting tailback Ron
Springs is likely to miss a
couple days of practice with a
shoulder bruise.
Springs , who gain~ 132
yards against illinois and
now needs only 69 to reach the

there," Coach Bo Schembechler said. "The weather
will have a big effect on it this
time of year. It isn't just us.
Playing on grass seems to
slow everybody down .
Iowa must overcome the
disappointment and
frustraton of its Joss to In·
diana if the Hawkeyes are to
finish the 1977 season on a
strong note.
Coach Bob Commings said
he couldn't find a turning
point in his team's 24-21
s.e tback to the Hoosiers
Saturday and added he
couldn't fault any one player.
"The Indiana game is the
kind of game that gets the
fans , coaches and players
dejected and frustrated, "
Commings said.
IUinotS
· Coach Gary Moeller
said freshman fullback
Wayne Strader and junior
defensive tackle Bruce
Thornton probably will start
against Minnesota Saturday
despite injuries from the Ohio
State game.
Strader suffered a rib
contusion in Saturday's J:Hl
loss to the Buckeyes and

1,000 mark for the year, was

Thornton is recovering from

named the offensive back of

a shoulder bruise.

" For the .rest of the season

we're going to be a little more
reticieni about ghing player
interviews; ' Hayes told his
weekly press · luncheon
Monday, "and maybe the
coaches too.
" We think its to our
advantage." Hayes added .
"Were battening down the
hatches. We doo 't do that for

Will

Longhorns riding herd
NEW YORK (U PI ) Tne
U n i I e d Press Intern ational
Board ot Coacnes top 20 teams
afte-r th e nin th week of the
co ll ege footoall season w itn
f irst -place votes and re&lt;:ord in
parMtheses :
Team
'
Poin ts
1 Te)(aS (38 ) I B-Ol
2 Alabama {1) ( 8-1 )
J Ok lahoma I B-11
304
4 Ohio St. (8-ll
263
S Notre Dame (1 ) (7-1}.
210
6 Mich igan ( 8- I J
199
7 Ar'kansas ( 7-11
ll2
B Per,n St. {8-ll
119
9. P lttsbvr9h (7-1 ,1)
63
10 . Nebraska (7- 2)
57
11 Te)(aSA&amp;M ( 6--ll
•6

..

,m

12 . Brigham Young (7 -11
10
13. Ar i lona St (7 1)
8
14. Soutnern Ca li f . (6-l l
7
15 Colorado ( 6-2- 1)
4
16 Florida St. {7.1)
J
16 Clemson ( 7-1-1)
3
18 No . Teus St . (8 -2)
2
On IV 11 te.ams received votes
Note : Bv agreement with the
Amer ican
Football . Coaches
AssOciation , teams on probation
by the NCAA are inelig ible tor
top 10 and national champion .
sh ip consideration by the UP!
Board ot Coaches . Those teams
currently on probation for 1977
are ,Kentuc ky , M ichi gan State ,
Red I a·n d s (C al if .). Wer;tern
State IColo .J. Houston

Searchers looking for
more victims of floods

i

operated B&amp;B Market in
Mason : Sherry Hoffman, a

daughter: Carole Proffit, one
or the last persons to see Mrs.

second degree murder, later

entered a plea of guilty and
her home the night ol th~ was sentenced to five to 18
slaying, and Neil Frieder, yearS in prison .
Young, indicted last
Point Pleasant Register
January
, escaped f[om the
reporter who took pictures at
Putnam
County Jiil once ,
the Berry home the morning .
since
his
extradition
to West .
the body was discovered .
Virginia.
His
escape
came ,
Defense attorne)'S are
only
hours
before
he
was
Bal'l'y Casto and John Andersi&gt;n: Judge Arthur Gustke schedu led to appear in Mason :
County Circuit Co urt for the :
is hearing the case.
hearing
on change of venue. :
Young,
with
Terry
Young
was recaptured a.
Brainard, 16, were apshort
time
later by the Sheriff
pre hended several hours
of
Putnam
County near.
after Mrs. Berry's body was
Wlitlield
and
the
change of.
found on the morning of
venue
was
granted
later. ••
December I. Both we•e
Berry before she went into

EXPERIENCED
TRAVELERS
BONELESS
LITl ·l l &amp;RM -

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war crimes and atrocities

committed by American

'ROUND STEAK

w1th matchmg

troops in My Lai.
In his $«.7•mJllion damage

suit, Herbert charged that
Barry Lando and Mike
Wallace, producers of CBSTV's· "60 Minutes," depicted
him as a liar in a 1973
program by deliberately
distorting the recocd through
selective investigation,
"skillful" editing and one·
si.ded interviewing.
He also charged Atlantic
Mmthly published Lando's
statements
about. his
research into the matter,
knowing they were false. In
that article, Lando concluded
that the American press had
been deluded by Herbert's
story.
In pre-trial discovery,
consisting of 26 volurr\es,

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI ) .- Cale Yarborough's
fifth-place ftnish Sunday in
the Dixie 500 gives him total
winnings this year of p!8,691,
breaking his own single·
season prize money record
set last year.
Yarborough, woo also is on
the verge of winning his
second straight NASCAR
driving tiUe, surpassed his
1976 record winnings of
$387,173, with one race still
remaining on the 1977
calendar - the Los Angeles
Times 500 Nov . 20.

found, charted

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ROUND STEAK .••••••••••••••.•• ~~; .•

Hundreda of flood refugees House he would seek federal
plodded back to crushed or disaster aid.
Searchers in the Blue Ridge
mll(l-&amp;:arred htiiles iii the
southern Appala~hlan and Mountains of North Carolina
Blue Ridge ,mountains found five more bodies
Monday and searchers poked Mooday, boosting the state's
thro\lgh muck and !!lire for weekend death toll lD 10.
LAFF -A. DAY
The bodies of two 3-year-&lt;&gt;ld
more victims of the deadly
'-r_
brothers - Wtlliam and Paul ·
mountain rains .
-"--Hendrix
were
found
The death toll from the
"---{-~-~ ·
Monday
a
short
distance
weekend r~mpage
by
PASADENA, Calif. ( UP!)
mountain streams climbed to from where their mother's - What is about 1110 to 4110 it Is beyond Its bigger
These smart travel compan 1ons will k·eep you
~ .
49.
body was recovered Sunday. miles around and orbits the neighbor ( 32,000 miles in beliefs, opinions, intent and
diameter
)
"maybe
going
on
time wherever you go. They make greal
conclusions in JX'eparing the
.
Rescue workers searching Authorities said the boys and sun, roughly 2 billion miles
as
far
out
as
Neptune,"
the
gills too'
JX'Ogram on the ground that a
-"~
a flood-ravaged Bible college their mother were thrown out, mce every 115 years or
eighth planet- and at others response
would
be
~..;;_;(
( 1
campus at Toccoa, (;a . from their trailer home, so?
Use Our Convenient L.ay-awav Plan
inside its orbit, Kowal said. incon.s istenl with First
if'
,
'
' ). 1"'
Monday found the body of Dr. which was dislodged and
You don't know ?
By first estimates, the swing Amendment protection of the ... ).,,., .. ((': · · 11' t:
'·
Jerry Sproull, a professor at carried off by floodwaters in
1
.
Relax. Neither does the may take it from 1.3 milliOn editorial Jroces8
r:=
\
'
.
.
.,
•
Toccoa Falls College. Sproull the Candler · area near
astrontiiler who discovered miles from the sun to about
U.S. District Court Jildge z,...-;
:
· ·- ~
was the 38th Victim of the Asheville, N.C. ·
it,
whatever
it
is.
2.7
mJllion
miles.
·
Charles
Haight
dismissed
·---··•·•
Toccoa flooding . Authorities
Flooding also claimed one
haven~ the slightest idea
"I
Kowal,
37,
is
a
veteran
at
that
argument,
but
in
"The
system
works,
the
system
planned to continue the life in Tennessee . A body, so
sear.ch today for another man far unidentified, was found w~t it is," Olarles Kowal of discovering new objects in rev~sing that ruling, the doesn't work, the system
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2920
the solar system, which has majority opinion of the works ... "
still missing and presumed Mooday near Erwin, Tenn., . Callech said Monday.
It is far too small to be a been neglected by many · appeals court held:
drowned.
Doe
and
where the
conventional
planet . The astronomers taking
"Faced with the )IO&amp;'Iibility
Georgia Gov. George Nolichucky rivers drove smallest ~ Mercury
- · is advantage of
modern of such an inquisition ,
Busbee informed the White about 1110 familes from their
about 10 times as big. IM in instruments to study the far reporters and journalists
bomes.
the al&gt;!ence of any better
K8dk.:.c wen
Flooding caused mJllions of descriptioo "you might say it reaches of the universe . would be reluctant to OXJX'ess
. Previously he discovered the their doubts . Indeed, · they
-·
dollars' damage in a wide is a mini-planet," he said.
13th moon of Jupiter, and would be chilled in the verj
area.
"II reaUy doesn't re8emble
another
object which may ·be JX'oces5 of thought. "
Gov .
James
Hunt anything else. It is definitely
the
14th.
Newsnen, the court said,
estimated damages to North not a satellite (moon ) of any
He
found
the
unusual
body
would
be inclined to "follow
Carolina roads and bridges planet or a comet. It will take
while
working
with
the
48the
safe
course of avoiding
alone at $40 mJllion. Officials a long time to establish what
lnch
telescope
at
Mount
contentlm
and controversy,"
said some homes and it is exactly."
Palomar
Oct.
18
and
19,
and
which
Chief
Judge Irving
businesses in North Carolina
...It is about 1110 to 4110 miles . has been trying· to establish KBubnan said in his majority
WEDNESDAY
were total losses. Htint said in diameter, small for a
its trbit so other astronomers opinion "would be the
. EVENING CIRCLE. he would seek federal ·aid .
planet but as big as some can locate it.
antithesis .of the values
United M.ethodist Church of . "The people were poor to asteroids. There are not
'
If
it
eventually
Is
defined
as
by the First
fostered
begin
with
and
many
of
them
Rutland, Wednesday, 7:30
usually asteroids in that area,
· p.m: at the church . .Mrs. have lost. everytiJing they and it's too bright to be a a planet, it would be the lOth Amendment.
in the solar system, and by
In his dissent, Judge
Hazel Hill will show slides of had," Hunt said after a comet."
tradition Kowal would have Thomas Meskill said a
the Holy land. Holy Land.
helicopter tour of the flood
It could be a former moon,
MIDDLEPORT Amateur area . " I've seen a town that escaped from the gravity of the privilege of choosing a judicial review of , a
·
•
name.
newsman's subjective state
Gardeners, Wednesday, 8 was almost completely
its
planet,
or
an
asteroid.
It
That
seems
remote
enough
of mind has a "deterrent
p.m. home of ·Mrs. Walter destroyed."
Hundreds of evacuees re- will take astronomers two to that he hasn 't given it m~ effect .. : and it iS supposed
Crooks with · Mrs. .Daniel
three weeks to determine its
. Thomas, co-hostess. Mrs. turned to their homes trbit, which is in tiM! vicinity thought, Kowal said . '1e . to:"
"The majority attempt to
Charles Kuhl to be the Monday and found them o( Uranus, the seventh planet noted that a fanciful name
from
mytbology
is
considered
eliminate
or reduce that chill
encased in mud oc lilled with
speaker.
from
the
SUI) (Earth is third).
appropriate
for
asteroids,
is
supportable
in neither
MIDDLEPORT muck and debris.
The
orbit
is
beyond
Saturn,
"but
if
it's
a
planet,
we'd
JX'ecedent
.nor
logic,"
Meskill
Schools were closed the sixth planet. It may cross
AMATEUR GARDENERS,
.
have
to
be
mere
fonnal.':
wroie
.
Wednesday 8 p.m. at the · Monday by flooded highways Uranus' orbit so that at times
home·of Mrs. Walter· Crooks. portions of Tennessee and
. Mrs. Daniel Thomas to be co- Virginia. Many bridges were
hostess. Mrs. Charles Kuhl knocked out in the areas.
r;;;;;;;;:-:;;~~ne :;---.-,.--~)
Raip soaked much of the
will be the speaker.
EAST
RUTHERFORD,
·
Northeast Monday and early N.J.
"
( UP[) _ Racing was
· owns a horne, car or b us.ness
s hould .k n11w II
today.
THURSDAY
Flash flood watches were canceled Monday night at
MEIGS
COUNTY
posted
today for southern The Meadowlands due to
HUMANE SOCIETY meeting
t
New
England
and for heavy wind and rain. The I ..
to be held Thursday 7:30p.m.
at Athena Acres, home of Ma· portions of New Ytrk, New stewards' decision to cancel .
selecting your coverag~ . A
I
company' s reputation for
jor Joyce Miller and Miss Jersey and Maryland today. th e program was made after
the
third
race
because
the
The
but
way
to
get
a
true
service
and
claims ·
Nearly four inches at
Marion Crawford.
hazardou
s
weather
bargain on insurance is t o. payme13t · is critical .
Atlantic aty, N.J., Monday,
s"op for it . Buf there are
And if you nave a claim ,
ROCK
SPRINGS shattered the JX'evlous si;lgle· con d1·t·wns threatened the
"
·
more,.tnan
tl'lree thousand your ·•n d epen d en t agent 1S
GRANGE, 7:30 p.m at the day rainfaU record of 2o/• safety of the jockeys and the
companies selling i n - in a po~ition to s upport you .
horses.
s urance policiu to prote!=t' To be o-n your side in
hall. Refreshments will be Inches.
homes.
cars
and helping you obtain a just,
s .e
r •
e d
A wintry western storm
bu sinesses, and it isn ' t equitable
se ttlement
practical tor you fo . check Promp,ty .
dumped up to six Inches of
each and every one .
BecaUse he is a self·
DIVORCE ASKED
FRIDAY
snow In the mountains of
That's why it's a good em ployed local busines s
Nioka
Virginia
Zim·
DAUGHTERS
OF Arizona and Colorado and a
idea to consult an ln- men , an independent agent ·
When you need money for your kid's braces, or any good reason,
American Revolutlon Return heavy snow warning was in merman, Pomeroy, flied suit
dependent ' insura nce knows hi s responsibility is
agent
.
An
i
ndependent
to
his
customers
.
His
~
for
divorce
in
Meigs
County
I
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly; easily and with .
Jonathan Meigs Chapter effect today for portions of
agent does not work tor an success is band on serving
I
Friday at Meigs Musewn, Colorado, where up to four Common Pleas Court against
consideration. You can borrow with trust where people save with
i nsuran ce company . He his customer s in three key
Butternut , Ave., 1:30 p.m. inches of new snow was Lester Ernest Zimmerman,
w,orlu lo r you . Whith areas.
·
trust. City Loan &amp; SaVings.
means he can plan the
1: He provide s the best
Jr., Pomeroy.
. Fihn on Home and County forecast.
coverac;re t hat protects you insurance coverage at the
~~
We ftnd ways to help.
will he shown. Hostesses are
I best . And then place it with low est tr ue cost to you .
Mrs. Clara Lochary, Mrs.
th e m'ost insurance
!Uitable ofcom
the- night
1. Heto
is avail.able
and
sever.al
respond day
to your
!
. Everett Hayes, Mrs. Charles 1'---------------------~
·
needs .
p.anies he deals with .
J , He handj. es all types of
I
Lewis, and Mrs. Robert D.
·
Ma!"lv people make ttl e
Craig.
•
cosiiV mis1ake of assuming insurance ,
and
deals
thi!ll insurance policies ar e through strong, reliable
SATURDAY
CANDIDATE FOR MEIGS LOCAL
. E.SI 1912
MARVIN Kinnard of Ports·
r. "" the same. The truth ;, compan;,,
To make. sure you have
moutti, Ohio wlll be the guest
SCHOOL DISTRICT FOR THE
: :~:· :~~1~:: ~~' ~:·:.~;;; •• ;noepenoen1 ;nsurance I
~ vary trom policy to policY . agent on your si de, toek for
caller Saturday, November
•
BOARD OF EDUCATION
i, but the co•t oflen var;es lh;s
•v mboi or consult your
12 for the French City
Yellow Pages . If he can ' t
Swingers Square Dance
SlfKING Rf-.;1/!!LECTION FOR
i '•':.'.member
'""' pr;ce ;, help vou .
~
not th e onlv bas is tor nobody can .
~
Club's dance. The dance will
'
be !row ].j)tl p.m. at the Tri·
4
SECOND
TfRM
·
"The lnwran&lt;.Siore"
.,-Grande Square Building at
125 E. Main Street 992-217.l
1622 Eastern Avenue. All
Your Vote Greatly Appreciated
Reuter-Brogan Insurance Service
area square dancers are
Pd. By Candidate
~~:4~~::_
_:~:
.~_.::_}
invited to attend.

Mini-planet is

.'

PARKERSBURG, W. Va.
- Selection of a jury started
at 9:30a.m. Monday in Wood
County Circuit Court for the
, NEW YORK (UPI) - A murder trial of Joho Lewis
federal appeals court, in a Young, 32. charged in ..the
landmark decision, has ruled knife-slaying of 58-year-old
that a public figure seeking a Mason businesswoman ·Mary
libel judgment against a Berry December I. 1976.
journalist cannot Inquire into
The trial is being conducted
the thoughts , opinions and here because a change of
cooclusions that led to the venue was granted by Mason
writer's editorial judgment. County Circuit Court Judge
In a split decision Mooday, James Holliday.
the :lnd U.S. Circuit Court of
Mason County Prosecuting
Appeals held that such an Attorney Dan Roll and Asst.
Inquiry would have "grave Prosecutor Bill Woodyard
implications for the vitality of reportedly had 20 witnesses
the editorial process which subpoenaed.
the Supreme Court and this
Expected to be among the
court have !'e&lt;'lgnized must ope ning witnesses of the
be guarded iealously."
prosecution a re Mrs. Flora
The ruling applied to the Board , mother of the
libel suit filed against CBS - deceased
woman
who
and
Atlantic
Monihly
magazine by
Anthony
Herbert, a muchdecorated
Sports Transactions
lieutenant colonel who By \)nlted Press International
Monday
resigned from the Army in
Basketball
Boston - Waived center Jim
1972.
.
Herbert, who commanded Ard
New York Pla ced guard
a battalion of the 173rd Tickv Burden on the In jured
list
and activated
Airborne Brigade, was reserve
rorward Tom McMi llan .
relieved of his conunand in
Hockey
Boston Returned Steve
Vietnam after accusing his
Langdon to Rochester of the
feUow officers of covering up Americ
an League .

4

arrested in Meigs Coonty .::
Ohio authorities in Pomeroy. ~
Brainard, indicted for

POTATOES
NO. 175

16 OZ. BOX

1

69~

W/C

Coupon ~xpires Nov. 12, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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

,,

'·

'·

;,

�6- Thf Daoly Senunel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• 'J'Uesday, Nov. 8, 19n

t

Generation Rap

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~

~

i
~

~·
~

THE REASON IS OBnOUS
RAP:

My best friend Debbie IS acting very strange. She used to be
great but lately aU she does is brag . She talks about expePSive
presents she'll get lor Chrisunas, and the vacations her family
os ·gomg on and the new things they're gettmg for their house.
They·re far from nch. so most of this is "talk."
She also makes nasty rema rks about my boyfriend and she

hardly knows him. I've never done anyt!ung to hurt her. Why is
She hurting me ' . FED UP
DEARF.U.:
Here goes my !.GAP. I I'm guessing again perception\: Is
this your first real bo1iriend. and is Debbie still wit hout one?
So she's jealous. So she brags. Afraid she 's losmg you (to a boy
who takes up most of your tome and-or thoughts ), she's trying
to pro1·e it doesn't matter · after all. she's got so much more...
If I'm right. a good old gorlfnend heart·t()-heart will help.
Could be she is jealous of other "haves" in your tile. At any
rate. she's "competing" and when you find out why , you 'll be
·bark to buddy status agam. ·HELEN
:&gt;IOTE FROM SUE : A double date mi ght help. Does your
boyfnend ha ve a fnend 7
RAP:
This is to "C.M." the mother who resents laws that allow
teenagers to get contracepti ves without parenta l permission.
DearC.M. :
Don't ,·ou think it's about time you faced reality; The rate of
W1Wanted pregnancies is incredibly high. Would you like your
16-year-old daughter to become one of these statistics ? If she is
sexua lly acti\•e, then she has made an intelligent decision by
going on the pilL
It's because of parents like you that organizations furnish
birth control aids " without parents being notified." The pill.
does not mean " easy sex." It means precaution being smart

and taking the right step to prevent disaster .• R.D.
RAP:
When I was 16, l fig ured I had to be experienced because
"everybody else was ... So I got a prescription for the plll. My
boyfriend was only too glad to accommodate.
Let me te ll you: it was nothing ' But after that my b.f. got
very possessive and we finally broke up. I didn 't like him very
well anyway Now I realize I just wasn 't ready for love. But I'm
not sorry. How do you learn if not from experience: I don 't feel
guilty , but I'm sure waiting for the time when I know it's right ,
and not just something to prove you're grown up. · NO MORE
PI LL

.,
I

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I go to visit this elderly woman every day almost because I
like he.r. &amp;he's verv rich and doesn't have relatives. Kids sav
I'm a fortune hWJter. What can I say? · ACCUSED
•
DEAR ACCUSED :
· Ask these accusers along. If they ,won't take time to cheer a
lonely old woman. then they 'd darn well better not play critic !
-SUE

Halloween
party held

I

~

Schoof therapy
program held .

Waid Nicholson, treasurer;
Nina Macomber, secretary;
Ben Rlffe, gatekeeper ;
Crystal Roush , Ceres; Ruby
Riffe, Pomona ; Patty Dy.er,
Flora ; John Holliday, ex·
e&lt;:utive committee; Larry
Montgomery, leg islative
agent ; Maxine Dyer, junior
youth chainnan; Ann HaUi·
day, C.W.A. chairman ; and

Sorority gathers for meeting

I

.
·
l•
An 'or 1ne
~.

,., I'W~ j

·

A
I
C
S
-~-m_•_r_e~a_n....;a_n~e-•_r_o_e_le_ty
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___
A
regu lar
fea t ur e, cancer?"
Prepared by the American
ANS WER l ine : Your
Cancer Society, to help save physician will be glad to
your life from cancer.
teach you this very important
A physician writes : "Your procedure, or check with
.
readers Sh ould be made your local American Cancer
aware of the fact that 1·n
Society ·unit for free in·
a ddition to being tota il y str ucti ons and a free,
wo rthless as a cancer
treatment, Laetrile may also illustrated leaflet.
Awoman writes: "My 13·
b·e con tamin ated
an d
year-old
son has ·developed
"
1
dangerous.
swell
ings
under the nipples of
ANSWE Rl m
· e ·. Laetro·lel·s
his chest. While he is em·
an extract of apricot pits that ba rrasse d, l am worried
has been labeled worthless as because there has been
a cancer remedy by every breast cancer in our family.
major scientific and medical What should 1 do''·'
organization in this country.
ANSWERline: At puberty
While a number of states some boys experience breast
have lega lized its oise, the swelling which then subsides.
Department · of Health, It almos(·-eerta inly is not
Education a nd Welfare an-

no unced in August that tests
on Laetrile in use revealed a
. series of impurities, harmful
solvents, and bacterial
contamination. . Also, when
taken by mouth, Laetrile
releases cya nide, a strong

poison, and that has caused
deaths. According to H.E.W.'
Ass istant Secreta ry, Dr.
Julius Richmond, "those who
persist in the use of Laetrile
Should limit the amount ta ken
by mouth and should, under
no circumstance, drink the
inje&lt;:table form beca use of its
higher concentration. They
shou ld be prepared to seek
prompt medica l attention in
case of any unexpected ef·
fects of Laetrile and should
be aware ofthe possi bility of
chronic cyanide poisoning as
well as acute toxicity which
can result in ·sudden death."
a cosmet ician asks :
" Where can I learn how to do
breast self-examination fo r

cancer. However , it is wise to

have your son checked by a
physician as soon as possible.
The attention ·of a physician .
will protect your son's health
and proba bly ease his em·
ba rr assment through a
discussion of the facts.

An engineer asks: "Is there
My new informa tion on
prostate canc;er?"
ANSWER!ine: The key to
successful t reatment of
prostate ca ncer is early
diagnosis. It is important,
therefore, for men over 50
(those at greatest risk of
developing this form of
cancer ) to have ann ua l
physical checkups including
a prostate exam ination. Any
urina ry problems that occur
between checkups should be
brought to the attention of a
physic ian. As for new
developments, here arc two :
a simple diagnostic test for
prostate cancer that pin·
points cenain biochemical

AT OUR
STORE

•HAMS
•VEAL
•SALT FISH
•FRESH
OYSTERS

Linda Montgomery, leader·
ship of youth.
A hayride and wiener roast
was held for the members
and friends. It W'l$ noted that
ll members attended Degree
Day at Hemlock Grove
recently. Mrs. Hollid ay,
delegate to State Grange,
made her report. Mrs. Holli·
day assisted by Gladys Bar·
rett, Ted Ha tfield and Waid
Nicholson judged the crumb
cake contest wit h Nina
Macom ber

winn ing

first

Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma place among the five entries.
Phi Sorority held at the home
of Mrs. Carol Adams. Mrs.
Debbie Finlaw made the
presentations.
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning
reminded members of a
cookie sale to be held on De&lt;:.
6. The cultural report on the
Mr. and Mrs. James M. life of Queen Victoria was
Milliron of Reedsville, the given by Ml'!!. Riffle and
former Rhonda Roton, are Susan Oliver. A card party
aMOuncing the birth Of their followe d th e mee ti ng .
first child, a son, Matihew Hostesses were Mrs. Adams,
James, born Friday, Nov. 4, Mrs. Hanning , and Mrs.
at Camden Clark Hospital in Sharon Bailey.
Parker sburg, W. Va. He
weighed nine poWJds, six
OW1Ces.
Paternal grandpa rents are
Mr a d M
M ·
·
n
rs.
arvm
•~l lir on,· M.ddl
1 eport , an d t he
t
erna 1 grandparents are
Mr
d M R "~ Bl
· an H rs.
Y of1
L1'ttle
k. o.,.,rt
p t
oc
mg.
a
erna
Bertha Russell was last
grea t·grandpa ren ts are Mrs. week visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
Bertha Rife an d Mrs. Mane
·
Milliron , Middleport , whil e Ronald Russell and family of
th e rna t er na l g r eat· Racine.
Mr. Lincoln Russell was a
dm th · M M 1
gran o er IS rs. eva Sunday evening visitor of Mr.
Wingrove, Walker, W. Va.·
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson.
Mrs. N. Cummins was a
markers in a blood sampl e is Snnday aftern oon visitor of
now being evaluated ; Ex· Mr. and Mrs. Harley T.
tracyt, a compound of an John son.
anti-cancer drug and the
Mrs. Bertha Russell spent.a
hormone estrogen, which was . week with Mr. and Mrs:
developed in Sweden and William Russell at Miner·
Shows promise in treating sv ille.
Kevin Knapp spent Monday
prostate cancer patients who
have not responded to other night with Keith Kenzil.
'
forms of treatment. It is now . Mr. and Mrs. Charley
being evaluated by a number Smith and Charles Knapp
of U. S. medical centers and visited with Mr. and Mrs.
the Federal Food and Drug Ha rl ey Smith Sunday at
Adm inistration.
Kanauga.

roles of women in

~&lt;;"'

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

. Brownies and juniors since

On All Uving Room Suites
'

MASON FURNITURE
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

.FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

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Mason , W. Va .

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O~f!CI .. CIUII,..I llo•" Bluo lito 11,.

JELL·O

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CHOCOLATE PEANUTS •;,;;· 5 119
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- CHOCOLATE RAISIIIS .
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Limit three with cou pon end $ 10.00 purct,ue
ucludi ng beer. wine end c igarettes

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INSTANTCOFFEL ......... 'j:: s5

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STUFFIIIG MIX .......

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STOVE TOP CHICKEN . PORK or CO RN BREAO

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CRAIIBERRY JUICE .......... ~:;:t. 5 1ot
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LEMOIIJUICE ............ ..... .. ., :U·o•
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CAMPBELLS CHICKEN NOOOLE

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MONAR'CH

CARDINAL
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~u~rORI S • tA RorrMliOOOSTORfS

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HEFTY
TRASH BAGS

1

All it takes is a phone call to place you r classified ad . You get cash
and make a moving day profitable. Almost immediately cash buyers
interested in good home furnishings and many other items will be
planning to buy.

~~~~~PAsn ..... ·,:,:; s129

WHITE ONIONS ..................~~~- 5gc

BAKING
POTATOES

20c Qff LABEL

·CONVENIENT

AEG ME N THOL

COlCATI ""'' " ME DICA TED
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SHAVE CREME'~;:; 69c ~

RED R~ISHES ..... :............. 2/29c

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'P~toduce

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BRIDGE MIX ..................... •:;;~ Sl 1'

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WIENERS ..•••..•.................·.

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THANKSGIVING TURKEY

69 $

.

BACON ENDS .; ...................... ,

THANKS
GIVING

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BULK PORK SAUSAGE ............. ''""' 99'

SLICED lAC

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FOR

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GI VING.

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BEEF STEW ....

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CARDINAL EXTRA .FANCY

PJ,.ACE YOUR
ORDER NOW •
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FOR FRESH
'ba
FLORIDA
CITRIS

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CUBE STEAK ..

US 0 A. CHO ICE SI RLOIN

~39~

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Mon ., Tues ., Wed . &amp; Sal.-8: 30ti l 5:00

WE GlADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

QUARTER

u
n

SELL THI·NGS
YOU DON'T WANT
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD!

TRADE~IN

FOODS

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

they make up the bulk of the
membership;

Wolfpen
Ne.ws Notes

'1 00°

D411!

~
Gl

HRS.: 10 :00 A.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun . . Thurs. 10 :00 AM
til 12 :00 P .M. Friday and Saturday .
' ·

son' b. orn

0

~·

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS~ • ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT

-, +

Stop In
and Order

.t,~ES,ty

ment and development of
volunteers and reaching a
significant percentage of the
Council's ethnic groups, both
girl and adult by 1983;
- offering camping pr()grams a nd developin g
facili ties la r ge ly for

fiiEIIDLIEST SEIVI(E Ill TOWill

GROCERY CARRY OUT

FRUIT
BOWLS
and
BASKETS

SANDWiatES

recruit~

STORE HOURS
MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM TO 9 PM

fR'fERS

new volunteers.

FOCD STDR&amp;S

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

~HOlE

EXPECTING
COMPANY?
Any Special
Cuts Of
Meat You
Desire,
.Stop In
or Call
and We'll.
Cut It
To Your
Satisfaction

ina I

N'S

COUNTRY CURED

t

New officers were elected
at
a recent meeting of the
Approximately 50 persons
Therapy programs were
StarGrange778.
attended a halloween party at held recently for the primary
Elected were Ray Midkiff,
the Rutland Church of Chr,ist and . intermediate special
master
; Larry Montgomery,
re&lt;:ently.
· education classes at the
overseer ; Catherine Colwell,
Donuts, cider, candy and . Rut land Elementary School
carmel apples .were served. by the Rutland Friendly lecture r ; Linda Montgomery,
Costwnes were judged with Gardeners.
.
. steward ; Ricky Macombe r,
assistant sfewa•d ; Opai
prizes going to Karla Brown,
the most original ; !'&gt;1issy
The children made jack-&lt;&gt;- Dyer, lady assistant steward;
Sisson, the prettoest, and lanterns from pumpkins fur- Lelia Rurrdield, chaplain;
Jeanette D~vis, the ugliest.
mshe d by Mrs . Ju dy
SWJday evening the church · Snowden. They took the seeds
had the Blue Gra'&gt;S Gospel home to plant next year .
Singers for a program. Nov. Refreshments were provided
Valen ti ne p ins were
19 has been designated as by Mrs. J uanita Lambert and
·family night with eveyone in· Mrs. Lois Walker. Helping presented to Mrs. Ruth Riffle
vited and asked to take a with the therapy work were and Mrs. Judy Crooks at a recovered dish, The · SWJday Mrs. Lambert, Mrs. Margie cent meeting of Xi Garruna
evening services at the Davis, and Mrs. Marvel
Quillen.
....
....._· - - - · , - - - - - -

CANCER

AVAILABLE

•

Proposed goals for the
Coun cil were presented .
These were proposed by a
CoWJcil conunittee in a goal·
setting seminar held recently. They are :
- recognizing the current

'

NOW

Recognition for outstan·
- developing alternate pro- volunteers to serve as
ding service tu girl scouting b'l"alns furulder girls;
delegates, Two service units
and a discussion of goals over
- using innovative scout. received recognition lor
the next five years programs through the United Way action, and Mrs.
highlighted a meeting of Area assistance of specific pnvate Murdock was presented a
U!, a 10-county sectiQn of the and publi c com munity c-ertificate for her work with
/
Black Diamond Girl Scout resources to increase interac· Community Chest. Both conCouncil, held Monday at St. !ion between girl scouts and tribute to girl scouting, Mrs.
Paul's Lutheran Church, thecommunity ;
Murdock announced thai
Pomeroy.
- increasing income from Area Ill had the largest susAbout 75 leaders, assistant current !Widing and develop- taining . membership in the
leaders, other volWJteers and ing alternate sources to ln· Black Diamond Council comrepresentatives from the .. crease operating income at ing to a total of $4,178.
Council office gathered for le~st .W percent over the 1976
Shirley Moses, executive
the mee ting presided over by level of $538,061 by 1983 ;
director for the Black Dis·
- increasing the penetra· mond CoWJcil, talked on long
· Peg Murdock, a past area
director, who was given a tion r~te by five percent by range camp plans and ·pf()standmg ovation of appre&lt;:ia· the end of 1983 with specific posed improvements to San·
!ion for her role in scout attention toward retaining dy Bend and Camp Rotan.
work.
jWJior and cadette members;
A !WJcheon was served at
The ·'Thanks" badge, the
- and improving the CoWl· noon by the St. Paul Lut.heran
highest award which any c it's communications Church Women. Ta bles were
adult can receive in scouting, systems to have them better centered with floral pieces by
was presented to No by portray specific values of girl Mrs. Margaret Blaettnar of
.. BLUE RIBBON CERTIFICATES were presented to mariy troops in Area liJ of the Black
Savage of Athens, long active sco uting .
the Pomeroy Garden Club,
Diamond CounciL Here Pat Thoma, Big Bend Service Unit director, presents certificates to
m g~rl scouting. Lenora
The goals were discussed and Mrs. Allee Thompson of
Mrs. Betty Lane, Pomeroy Jw1iors 1276, and Sandi Rodman, Salisbury Brownies 1220.
Burns, also of Athens, receiv· as to priority with the voting the .Winiling Trail Gal'!len
ed a special certificate of ap- to take place at .the annual Club. Mrn. Merle Johnson led
predation for her interest meeting which will be held at in a song of grace preceding
and support of scouting.
Glenville on April 29. It was the luncheon. There was also
Blue ribbon certificates noted that in Area Ill there singing. of an "Ode to a Girl
were. presented to troops in ,are 220 troops with a &amp;out Leader" during the
lh~ district completing the re- membership of 3639 and adJl]t day.
qu1rements of having. a voliUlteers of 742.
Attending from the Big
leader, C()-leader, troop com·
Lura Watkins, p~blic rela· Bend Unit ol Meigs County
nuttee, sustaining member· tions director from the CoWl· were Mrn. Betty Lane, Mrs.
shop ch a~rman, cooking cil office in Charleston, W. Patty Woodyard Mrs. Esther
chairman, and having par· Va., talked to the group on, &amp;raggs, Mrs. 'Sandi Rodticipated in at least three ser· sec uring " friends for man, Mrs. Carolyn Reeves
vice Wlit activities. Two. scouting" and presented a Mrs . Rhea Norris, ~
Me1gs CoWJty troops were in· slide presentation on "Who's Dillon, Mrs. Pat Philson,
eluded with Mrs. Pat Thoma, WhointheCoWJci!Office."
Mrs. Shirley Gibbs, Mrs.
B1g Bend Unit service direc·
There was a report on the Merle Johnson, Mrs. Pat
tor, presenting the awards to 2li troops represented at the Hysell, Mrs. Judy Eblin, Mrs.
Mrs: Betty Lane of Pomeroy Cadette Weekend on basic Diane Finnicum, Mrs. M. A.
JWJ tors 1276. and Sandy Rod· survival where the National Smallwood, Mrs. Lupe
man . of Sa lisbury ll20 Guard of Parkersburg and Stegall, Mrs. Pat Thoma ,
Browmes.
Huntington, along with some Mrs. Shirley Wi.lson, Mrs.
Discussed d ur i~g . t he boy scouts, gave demonstra· Judy Werry.
.
meetmg was the possobolity of lions. Ann Broadbent, field
Ot her service un it s
settmg .. up some sort of director, spoke on new ser- fepresented were Vie1Ul8,
recogmllon program for the vice units orga nized in Adena, Belprairie, Glouster,
f~rst . class scout award, Athens CoWJty, Ohio, and Spe ncer,
Ra ve nswood,
Sll1llllarto the Eagle award in Wirt County, W.Va.
Tomahawk at Williamsburg
, boy scouting. Adult recogni·
The National Girl &amp;out Alexander
Roadru nner'
tion was also discussed and Council to be held in Oct. 1978 Southwood,' Ritchie CoWJty'
several members were con· at Denver was announced Terrapin, and and Mi~
. SPECIA,L AWARDS were presented to ~nora Burns of Athens, a certificate of apprecia· cerned about the lack of com· and Mrs. Murdock called for dlebourne, W. Va.
lion for spec1al mterest and support, left, and Noby Savage, also of Athens, the "Thanks" mWJ ity awareness as to the
badge, the highest award for adult leadership in scouting programs ..
role of volWJteers working · r---------~-------~~--­
with· scout troops and the in·
fluence this has on attracting
TRY OUR DELICIOUS

Star Grange 778 elects officers

-ch_u~rch n_o~w-sta_rt_a_t6-p~.m

7- The Daily S.nlin.t, Mitl&lt;Ueport·Pumeroy 0 Tu ,._,
•·
· ·· e~ay, Nov. B, 1977

Outstanding service awards
Riven .at council meetinR

*''~~~,,~~''''~~~~~~~~~~~~,,~,~~~':-.".&lt;.-...-.;,-,;,&gt;:i

.

ORAiGE JUICE

.

3 ~~·:;

CARDINAL

itfoJ.~~s,TORI S

BROWN

~

59•

NSERVE

49•

ROLLS •••

5

1

'

x•t.liJ Qef#l

49c

36·(11 .
Bottle

~0 SI OO£ S
'·

$14·~·

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday . Nov. a, 19n

x$-:.~~:tt:::t~m~:: :oacow

1 SociaJ

POLLY·s POINTERS

-~~ Calendar

.Polly Cramer

Oxalic acid rem oves rust

. I

POll \" S PROBLEM
very careful and when! buy a
DEAR POLLY-F'or the pair of shors with plastic
past few months my sheets soles 1 smear on that milky
and towels have been spottrd white all-purpose glue and
with rust after laundering . Is then sprinkle table salt on it.
there something I can do to When dry this gives a rough
prevent this and something surf~ce. To avoid sliding off
sling baek pwnps I put a
else I can use to remove it '
I use a sponge in the pie&lt;·e of moleskin on the inner
bathroom as a soap dish and sole w1der the heel . Hope this
at the end of the day there is helps Ida .- E6INOR.
enough soap in the sponge to
DEAR POLLY -1 work
launder m)' nylons and or where there is water on the
wa sh out the sink .
floor some of the time so to
I use a vegetable brush to eorred slippery soles on my
clean off graters and col· shoes I use non-skid pads
anders and also to remove such as one uses in the
eorn silks from corn on the bathtub to keep from slippcob.- LEE.
ing . This has worked fine for
DEAR LEE-Carefully ex- me. Such pads can be bought
amine your washer as there at the dime store but be sure
may be something in it that to follow the instructions on
causes these rust spots . To the package.- MRS. R.C. D.
DEAR POllY -1 would
remove such stains from
washable fabrics wash in like to tell of my Pet Peeve. I
warm suds, rinse well and if do not mind advertisements
stain persists use a 5 percent . for products being included
oxalic acid solution for a fif. with bills and occasionally
teen minute soaking. Caution purchase some things so
-this is poison and should be advertised, BUT I detest the
handled with extreme care. ones that have to be tom off
Rinse three times and if need· before I ca n seal the
ed a lew drops of household envelope. I rarely buy a proammonia can be added to the duct that is advertised that
last rinse. The proportion ·of way even though I may be in·
oxalic acid to water is one terested in it,- THELMA.
DEAR POLLY -I used to
teaspoon cry&amp;tals to a cup of
be one of those ladies who are
water.
Dampening such spots and constantly having to dig in
then applying ·lemon juice .the drawer or keep folding
and salt may also do the job. socks for the men in the !amiPut in the sun to dry and rinse . . ly. Now I put a rubber band
around a pair of socks alter
well. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -'-One of the they have been folded once so
readers wanted to know what they are stacked neatly and
she could do to make the slip- there is no more hunting for
pery soles on her shors less socks that may be buried
slippery . Being notorious for under everything else. Also
breaking bones I have to be they do not get so stretched
out of shape. -cAROLYN

W

DEMONSTRATING KNOT TYING - Jim Council,
Boy Scout Troopmaster of Troop 239 of Salem Center, 0 .,
Is shown demoautrating knot tying to John Baker, a scout
from Troop 257 of Point Pleasant, during the M-G-M
Oi8trlct Fall Camporee held at Fort Meigs, Rutland, 0. ,
during the past weekend. The Fall Camporee Committee
co!Wsted of Frank Casto, Frank DIClemente and Bob
Matthews.
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Golfers Bruce Uetzke and
~bbie Austin and tennis

players Brian Gottfried and
Turnbull
were
Wendy
hono red by Golf Digest-

SYRACUSE PTO Tueaday
7:30 p.m. Entertalrunent by
Syracuse Brownie Troop.
ELECTION DAY Dinner
Tuesday at the Syracuse
Muni cipal Building spon·
sored by Ladle• Auxlllary of
the fire department . Soup and
sandwicheli, with serving to
begin a ti l : 30. Bring con·
tatners for carry-&lt;&gt;ut.
BELLES AND BEAUS
Western SQuare Dance Clnh
Thursday, 8 to ll, Royal Oak
Recreation building. Jonnnie
Jones, Kingsport, Tenn. will
be the caller. Members to
lake homemade cookies.

TUESDAY
ELEcTION DAY dinner
Tuesday in fellowship room
at Chester United Methodist
Church .
ELECTION DAY dinner, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday at
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
beside Lebanon voting
~DNESDAY
precinct.
POMEROY -Middleport
PAT meeting, 7:30 at Meigs Uons Club, 12 noon WednesHigh School. School at· day at the Meigs Inn.
WIDTE ROSE LODGE,
tendan ce policies will be
discussed. All parents are 1:30 Wednesday at the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Elecinvited to attend.
WINDIN G
TRA IL tric Co. Important meeting
GARDEN CLU B, 7:30 p.m. with all members urged to at·
Tuesday at the home of Mrs. tend.
Wilma Terrell. F'or roll call
POMEROY CHAPTER 80
members are to take a
Royal Arch Masons Weddecorating id ea
lor nesday 7:30 p.m.
Christmas. Mrs. Iris Kelton
BOSWORTH Council 46
will have the program on at- Royal &amp; Select Masters
tracting and feeding wild Wednesday 8:15p.m .
birds. Arrangement of the
CARRIER OF THE WEEK - Tracy Hysell, 13, son of
SPECIAL Meeting, Racine
month will be "Shine on Volunteer Fire Dept., 7;30 p.
Mr . and Mrs. Aaron Hysell, Pomeroy, is a carrier for The
Harvest Moon."
Daily Sentinel in Pomeroy. Tracy attends Meigs Junior
m. Wednesday. All members
High School in Middleport. His only other outside interest
ELECTION DAY soup urged to attend.
is horses.
·
dinner at Racine Methodist
LADIES Audliary Mid·
Church annex II :30 to 5. dleport · Fire . De_partlll_ent
U.M.W. of church selling rag Wednesday at fire station at
rugs . Contact Mrs. Victor 7:30 p.m . Members to bring
Tennis magazines Monday as 26, and Turnbull, a :!:&gt;-year- Wolfe at 949-22M.
favorite recipe, craft or art
ELECTION DAY dinner at they wish to deinonstrate :
the
m ost
improved old Australian, were honored
professionals in their sports at a special awa-rds ceremony Forest Run Methodist Church Plans for. Christmas party
but Gottfried, 25, a nd the 2\J.. 9 to 6. Vegetable and bean will be made. Donations will
in 1977.
. Cash prizes of $5 ,000 were yearold Austin we re out of the soup, sandwiches, pie, cake be made. Donations will be
and coffee.
awarded U1e qua11et . Lietzke, country .
accepted for F.O.P. dinner.

Turns ten
George Carl ·cooper was
honored recently at the home
of his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Reed WW of Pomeroy in
observance of his loth birthday.
A turkey dinner was served
along with cake, ice cream
and punch. Attending were
his parents, George and
Clarinda Cooper, hi$ sister,
Christina, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Reed Will and Sean of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Deem, Kim and
Teresa of Middleport.
Sendin~ gilts ' were his
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clem Cooper ,
Syracuse; -Mr. and Mrs.
Emesl Compson, Mark and
Timmv . Mr. and Mrs. Carl

privacy .
The former president says
the Constitution provides no
basis for allowing copies of
subpoenaed materials, much
. less any right lo sell them til
the public .'

The court's first encoWlter
with the recordings was in
1974, when Nixon was stil!
lighting to remain in the
White House. The 8-ll decision
requiring . him to turn over
sUbpoenaed tapes for use at
the Watergate trial of his

intimate advisers wa s a
major factor in his eventual
deparljiJ'e.
Congress then passed a law
giving the government
custody of all the tapes and
documents turned out during
Nixon's years as president.
On his challenge, the justices
upheld the constitutionality of
that }aw, 7 to 2. Cjovernment

Although previous mention has been made about the
appeal of drugs to teens, throughout this series, it ts my opinion
that this area of consideration cannot be given too much
.attention . There is much to be learned from the results or
national surveys among youth, and it is apparent a great many
of the answers they give eontain more information between the
lines than in the words they use. Here are some additional
11
reasons" given by young drug users :
- Using drugs is a way of "hitting back" at parents getting even with them lor the numerous distasteful things
they make their children do in the growing up process.
- Drugs provide a means of " feeling love, " in general
terms. A way of returning til the simple basics of life.
- Drug experimentation is normal process, modern, the
" in thing" In today 's world. ltisa means and a part of growing
up.
- Using drugs have great satisfaction because, "it makes
parents become genuinely upset about something." It is a way
til ten parents to go til hell with their hypocrisy .
- Drug use offers relief from daily tensions , heavy
demands of school , frustrations, and the feeling of defeat.
Aside from those reasons - each having many facets and
possibUities for broad discusslons _ why wouldn't a child of
today quite naturally feel that drugs cure an ills? They learn
from infancy that the doctor has a " shot" or a pill for almost
any complaint. And television corrunercials enhance this
thinking by drumming it intll the young mind that there is a
chemical to alleviate just about any discomfort that may be
experienced. Thus, the fine line of distinction between the legal
and the illegal drug is hard enough for an adult to remember .
and appreciate, let atone the mind not yet mature.
It is especially difficult for the young til understand why
there must be laws that "dictate" to the individual what he
may or may not put into his own body, particularly now when
so many of the old rockhard beliefs are falling by the wayside.
Parents have, understandably, a very difflcult task in
applying in-home education on the subject of drug abuse
avoidance, because it is not just the " below normal" youngster
who needs this vital and hard-loi)ro.vide guidance. The drug
user often brings h&lt;me tllp grades -before getting very
deeply involved with drugs - so the young person who is just
an "average student" often tells himself, "if the real 'brains'
use the stuff, it must be o.k." The battle for the young mind has
many fronts, and requires long hours of coping that many
, parents do oot have to give .
So, it boils down to a matter of priorities, and greasing the
: wheel that is squeaking the loudest. Little is heard now about
: what we formerly called the generation gap, and whatever you
called it, it certainly has not gone away. But perhaps it has
evolved into something on a higher level of thought something more readily understandable by the old and the
, young, and therefore it may be narrowing, poshing aU of us to
: a more coounon ground.
:
There is again talk in high places today, that continues to
: suggest a minimizing of drug use penalties, for certain. drugs
• and in small quantities. This could prove til he a great mJusttce
: til the concerned parents who, on the " home front, " are trying
. : wholeheartedly to use every too! at their command to
; discourage use of any drugs not professionally prescribed for
: short-term use . -Legalizing small quantities of any drug in

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Press Intema tionaI
TONY'S DAWN: Tony Orlando is coming back to the ~ow
business he quit when his friend , actor Freddie Prinze, killed
himself Orlando threw in the towel in July, saying the
pressw-~ was too much lor him . He says he was suffering
manic depression, but " th rough therapy, love and a m~racle
medicine known as lithium, my manic depresstve epL&lt;Ode has
passed and 1 am cured." Orlando says he'll make h1s
eomeback Nov . 22-21 at the Circle Star Theater at San Carlos,
Calif., followed by two weeks at the Las Vegas Riviera Hotel.

effect says, "don 't get caught with more than the minimum on
you and you'relree til use as much of it as you want."
When an illicit industry - such as drug trafficking ..:..
reaches the point of pulling off $10 BIU..ION in profits
annually, logically the answer to stopping it does not lie in
relaxing the laws that were enaded lor the purpose of
protecting the general public . If the drug " custllmer" is no
longer punished, his supplier will have more business, not less !
How can we discourage the use of dangerous drugs by
decriminalizing the act?
The most resultful answer has til be found in the
knowledge about drug use that we, as adults, impart lo our
···•
children and all children !
NEXT : TiiE HUMAN PRICE OF DRUG /lBUSE.
, Sponsored by : Dut!oo's Drug Store and The Shoe Box ,
Middleport and submitted by Chief J . J . Cremeans.

Mei-eas

Properly
TranS~erS

1'

Bessie H, Russell to Sybil
Ebersbach, 9.04 acres,
Salisbury.
Sybil Ebersbach to Bessie
H. Russell, Wilbur A. Russell,
9.04 acres, Salisbury.
Paul W. Sayre, Jean L.
Sayre to Columbus !ind Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
parcels, Lebanon.
Leonard L. Lentz, Alice
Lentz to Vernon L. Weber,
Margaret B. Weber, Dennis
Weber, Donna Weber, Duane
Weber, parcels, Rutland.
Wilma LeMay, dec . to
. Sylvia Johnston , Harold .
· LeMay, Charles LeMay,
Evangeline F'asholtz, Curtis
LeMay, Leo'nard LeMay ,
Lloyd LeMay , Velma Scherr,
Met hal Kinner, Patricia
Hauger, Juanita Truilzi , cert.
'of trans., Lebanon .
Ralph McCune, Ocie MeCune to Pomeroy Forest
· Products Inc., timber,
Rutland.
Sidney R. Hayman; Carol
A. Hayman to Robert L.
· Ritchie, Darlene Ritchie, 1.10

acres, Chester.
Davey D. Wolfe, Catherine
Y. Wolfe to Larry Laudermilt, Harriett Laudermilt , 5
acres and lots, Antiquity.
James W. Hayman, Jean
H~yman to Donald R .
Jackson, Avis F . Jackson,
l.Ol acre, Chester.
Virgil M. DUI, Pamela Diil
to Jeffrey Hubbard, Melissa
Hubbard, lot, Syracuse.
Otto A. Marcinko to Sandra
K. Marcinko, 1~0 acres ,
Olive .
William L. Denton, Ruth A.
Denton to Richard R. Rupe,
Alta Ann Rupe, Pomeroy.
Farmers Home Adm., to
William T. Fink, Beatrice C.
Fink, parcel, Middleport.
Warren E . Baker, Wilma F.
Baker to Warren E . Baker,
Wilma F'. Baker, parcels,
Olive.

BLEEPED OUT : The family comedy team of Jerry Stiller
and Anna Meara have been bluei)fnciled by the censor . The
NBC Standards and Practices ~partment has chopped two
skits -one of which dealt with a homosexual dog- from their
syndicated show, ' 'Take Five with Stiller and Meara." The
writer - Frank Jacobs - is a regular contributor to Mad
Magazine. Stiller and Meara say they're surprised- that they
consider all their sketches Hfarnily humor."
ANOTHER GETAWAY: steve McQueen and Ali
MacGraw are calling it quits. A Los Angeles spokesman for the
two of them says they're officially separated and that one or
the other soon willlile for a divorce. The 47-year&lt;&gt;ld McQueen
and Miss macGraw, 38, married in 1973, in Cheyenne, Wyo.the second marriage for both.
DO-IT-YOURSELF , Linda Richards has given up on due
process of the law in Fort Wayne, Ind ., where officials admit
her former husband owes $590 in back cltild support, but say
because of a backlog they can't do anything about it. Monday
she decided til do something about it herself . She showed up in
front of the Marshall, Mich ., home of her now remarried ex
with a picket sign saying, "Don Richards neglects his kids. "
Says Mrs. Richards, "When it comes to putting food on the
kids' table I need the money . What I would like to see is every
woman who doesn't get child support to picket their tails off."

/·the Sermoneue
Revelations 1:18 - lam He that liveth, and was dead ; Blld,
behuld, 1 am alive lor evermore, Amen, and have the keys of
hell and of death.

JESUS STILL LIVES
One of the darkest days that was ever In the lives of the
disciples and no doubt the darkest day that our world has ever
known, Jesus was crucified.
For 33 years, Jesus had gone about doing good, He !&amp;ad
healed the sick, He had made the blind to see and the lame to
walk and yet the world wanted to get rid of Him. It wasn't a
surprise that Jesus was crucified, because God only allowed
these men to carry' out His plan, and what this world dorsn't
know, God's plan will go on being done at any cost, or at any
risk.
. But my text today says , J esus stilllives, even after He was
killed all these years have gone by, still He lives.
r..:.t•s look at a few of the ways that we know He live s;
First, He lives where His people are in need or in trouble. (
You know the Christian life is no bed of roses, and
sometimes a Christian has til suffer and a lot of times he's in
trouble but 1 can assure vou. J esus still lives.
Next; He still lives at the place of prayer : You just try and
see if every time you go to prayer, you'll find th~t Jesus still
lives and is there waiting for you lo call. 2nd : Chnst still lives
along the road of Christian Duty. Now I know a lot of Christians
that do not want til work for the Lord, but I believe for those
who do Jesus will walk along the road of duty with you. It's
your Christian duty to be faithful til church , it's your Christia n
duty til pray for the lost . It's your Christian duty to give · til the
work of the Lord, and let me remind you that it's sin if you do
.
not these things.
Next ; Jesus lives with those who bear a cross : When J esus
was on His way to the cross, tradition has it that J esus fell
under the weight of the cross. I don't believe this is true, but I
do believe He knows what it is to bear the cross. And Jesus
said, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and
take up his cross and follow me.
And I believe that you'll never have a cross that you cannot
bear , for Jesus said, My yoke is easy and my burden is light.
Then Last: Jesus lives with those who go down through the
valley of the shadow of death. There's a song that says, The
Lord knows I can'llive on a mountain,so he picked out a vaJley
lor me. He leads me beside still waters, Somewhere in the
valley below. And I'm positive that God knows if I need a
valley or not, and He'll give methat valley if I need it, but He'Jl
go with me all the way, even til the end of the world .
Jesus stllllives. -Don L. Walker, F1rst Baptist Church,
Racine.

• GllMPSES: Jackie Onassis, along with Lily Tomlin Andy
Warhol and other celebrities, staged a benefit Monday night in
New York at an old police stat ion, co nverted to a cultural
center for the Louis Falco Dance Company ... London's Duke
of York Theater is reviving superstar Elvis Presley with a play
that will star three actors - Shakin steven , P . J. Proby and
TimothyWhitnall - all playing the rock 'n ' roll king at various
stagesofhislife
... Miss Wlian, President Carter's 79-year-&lt;&gt;ld
SALT LAKE CITY (UP! )
- · The U.S. · Geological mother, stopped off in Des Moines, Iowa , J\1onda~ for the
Survey has concluded, after overnight stay before flying on to Ireland for a goodwtll tllur ...
more than two years and Edward R. Telling has been elected chairman of the board and
$100,000, the Bonneville Salt chief executive officer in Chicago of Sears Roebuck and Co .,
F1ats raceway has suffered succeeding Arthur M. Wood, who retires Jan. 31,1978 ... Bart:s
steakhouse tn New York is suing New York Times food crtttc
irreversible damage .
The agency, in a report Mimi Sher;too for $2million, claiming she wrote a review that
released Monday, said the was "outright false."
deterioration is due to both
natural and ma n-caused
BOSTON (UP!) - Boston
The 5-foot-9 Sheppsrd, a .
factllrs and any attempt til Bruins
center
Gregg speedy skater • is one of
slop it would ~equire a &gt;battle Sheppard will be sidelined for Boston 's pena lty killers and a .
between mining interests and at least two weeks because of frequ ent member of the .,
racing enthusiasts .
strained knee ligaments.
Boston power play·

NEW YORK (UP!) -The
New York Knicks sued the
New Jersey Nets lor $3.2
million Monday, claiming the
Nets violated an agreement
that allowed the team til play
basketball
in
Knicks'
territory on Long Island.
The Knicks said that under
an agreement reached In July

1976 the Nels were to pay the
Knicks $320,000 a year for 20
years to play at the Nassau
Coliseum in Uniondale .
The suit alleges the Nets,
who now play at Rutgers
University in New Jersey,
have thus far failed to meet
the first instalhnent, due Oct.
21.

GOOD NUTRITION AT

MARKY
SUPE8MARKn
CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

?

•

GEORGE COOPER

Hood, Carla and Angie. Eddie
Lee and Tanunv .fulssell, aU
of Mason, and Mrs. Irene
Hoschar and Tres of New

OPEN DAILY 9 T~ 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

MINUTE
STEAKS

archivistS are screemng the
items in order to return those
that a re purely personal.
On Oct. 3 the court refused
to overturn ari order that
certain tapes be screened for
evidence in a civil suit filed
here on behalf of 1,200
persons, who claim damages
for illegal arrests in 1971
durin g
anti '- war
demonstrations. Full review
was not granted in that case.
The case now before the
court was started by CBS,
NBC, ABC, the Public Broad·
casting Service, the Radio
Television News Directllrs
Associa tion and Warner
Communications, Inc . , ~
record manufacturer.
They say their right to copy
the material is guaranteed by
the First Amendment and
any privacy protection Nixon
might have had was lost when
the tapes were played in open
court in a criminal trial.
The companies have said
·that copies can be made
available by the National
Archives at a cost of from
$3.75 til $5.75 per one-hour
recording
including
transcripts, packaging and
mailing.
A final brief filed by

If you:re comparing plans, sit down

and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
how your health care program
can be strengthened to better
meet your group's specific needs.
It will be worth the tiine ... because

LB.

j'

on, MONTE

·'

'PUMPKIN

GROUND

compartng apples to oranges.
Another comparison you should
look, at is the balance between
benefits and cost ... what you need
versus what you can afford. And,
it's especially important to make
sure you and YO!Jr employees are
·adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could wipe
out a life's savings .

$ 09 HOT COCOA
GROUND
MIX
RO :.:,N,:.:D:.,___LB_.- - - t
BACON

CAN

ENDS

LB.

SAVE 15'
BEST
WITH
COUPON 12 OZ.
BACON_,:.:IMS:;:ID;.E~P~KG......................
SUPERIORS
·'
ALL MEAT
.

in Central Ohio

WIENERS :K~~ 69e
1

PURE PORK
~Registt&gt;red Marks R!ue Cross ASS(x:iation

• ' Registered Service Marks of The National Asso-:iation of Blue Shitl~ Pllni

SAUSAGE

'

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gge

DRINK
oz.

46
CANS

EGGS
DOZ.

,I

$1

&amp;-16

oz. aonus

DOG FOOD
25 LB. BAG .

*3''
TONE

69~

8-16 Ol

COCA-COLA

TOILET SOAP
REG.
SIZE

FRESH RIPE

BANANAS

LB.

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

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lARGE GRADE ·B

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HOME M·ADE

61/z oz.
CANS

$169

ORANGE

4

RC or DIET.RITE

SUNSHINE .

YABBA DABBA DEW

SUPERIORS

Blue Cross
Blue Shield

oz.

24

ONLY

EVERYDAY PRICE

NESTLE'S

KAHN'S

THURSDAY

. LOVIN' SPOONFULS

5

FRESH LEAN

apples to apples, it's awfully
tough for anybody to beat a Blue Cn&gt;ss
and Blue Shield plan.

'

4 NEW FLAVORS

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CAT FOOD

lARGE 2lJz CAN

CHUCK

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ICE CREAM

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99°

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LB.

Nixon 1s lawyers said :
11
Th e personal interest that
Mr. Nixon seeks to protect
here is, put very simply, the
mental anguish of having his
intimate conversation.!) ...
packaged, broadcast and sold
for popular entertai nment
aro und the world."
The U.S. Appeals Court
here , which ruled against the
former president, said:
" The embarrassment Mr.
Nixon anticipates i.&lt; largely
that which results whenever
misconduct or que.&lt;tionable
crmduct is ~xposed . "

BROUGHTON'S

HOMO. MILK

NO WASTE

If you're comparing health care
plans for your company, you should
be aware that although two plans
may look alike, they can still be
quite different. Make sure you're
comparing exactly the same coverages .. . dollar for dollar ... benefit
for benefit .. . service for service.
Otherwise, it's like

WINESAP APPLES ••••••••••••• ~. 5 lb. $1.00

,We ~ccept Federal Food Stamps
We Reserve the Right to Lim if Quantities

Haven.

to be unraveled·

product.ion s" invades hi s

1

•

·More tape snarls
By Cl: ~p LOTTE MOULTON
WN&gt;dl ' GTON (UP! ) The Supreme Court is about
til unravel still another legal
snarl generated by Richard
Nixon's taping of all his
conversations in the Oval
Office .
This time the decision could
bring a selection of those
famous tapes into any home
in the form of recQrds or
cassettes at small cost.
·Transcripts of them have
long been available in book
form .
Arguments are scheduled
lor Tuesday ( 10 a.m ., EST )
on requests by broadcasting
networks and others to
distribute commercially the
Tecordings .played at tile
Watergate coverup .trial.
Nixon contends that to
place the tapes in private
hands " to be played at
oocklail parties and satiric

r;;::;::~::~::;~. ~:ow about drug abuse Peopletalk

5 LB.

PEPSI COLA
BPAK
16 oz.

•

�Sent mel

10 -

T~ OaLI~

for

WednfiSda~ .

M u ldJPport ~Pom~ro ).

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~iJIW

WANT AD
CHARGES

~ jjJl~illlil'j

j,1

\'1

I 1b

Nov . 9, 1977
s..:- eJUSI\e ... 111 not esc apt• \Our

I

tru.s com1ng \t&gt;ar

5 . .~ .... ~,11 and

~et

'f c&gt;u

nJ~

l:lt&gt;t&gt;n

SCORPIO (Oct

14-Nov

I

111

'T"t1 SIS J J,t\ ',', ~1t"ll '..l..lU ~·,111 )i.tlo..l'
l"\C'r\tnmg n S!rl~h-~ \\' Jtnlllil
.._,olo.mq ior .'Hl\One 10 tnrc""
~1o~.. n toe g.Hmflt'' V\"'~U ... oult1

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each :-1Q&lt;'1 ,l,,U
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,l,,h 1,111 bo• dl.lli..:&lt;'il t' lilt I d,t\

11\&lt;lll&lt;&gt;t\

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

It•· l'uUtl •l'•' '''"'I''' t!" 1n.;ht

l&lt;llh•n, ,,

!J-Oec

o-

lu.l"'ub&gt;i•l&lt;l"-llll

l u l lll'tllioH

I'III•IW

211 0.:-cL15l0nJily \'Ou tend to
C'1V' Th!I1QS out ~' 1thou t tn 1r1h
~ .,. ...k!d\ you 11 re~1ra1n yourselt '0 .1.o1J Detra~1ng a confi-

I ·• '
• lloo•l-

CAPR ICO RN (Dec !!-Jan 191

La t mtl""un¥

I

••! ~~"'-

' Cl\ C'f S

AQ UAR IU S (Jan

10-Feb

19)

!.l l•lld&lt;l\
' '"'n"n '.t lultl.t•

"'PL)r\ant ach ievements are
;:Jess ole no.,
partiCular'~ 11
o.:'U tdf.t: pode m ~Ou r worh
v ou
get .... hat .,. ou want ov
'eeo•ng \Our shoulder to !he

(u, ' ''·••
!IIT"ll ~ rtd,l\
~ p \1
lie ,!,tl L\ohlll plll.llllo!lhll

... nee!

.-.und,n

PISC ES (Feb . 10-March 101
Tn11 s haH• a v. ay ol '.'. Ork1ng
Jut 10 your u1t1ma te oenef11
toaay Others ~. . . 111 p1!Ch tfl to
"'E&gt;1D rla l'. e 11 all POSSible
ARIES [Ma rch 21 · Apnl19) Don t
•a\..e 101 grantee the one you
O•e toda~
!f you -Je been
gnQr1ng htm or her ShO N you
.3re C'. u , ng a l1t tle tender"\l

ss

TAURUS (Apr 1120-May 20) Tradt Qnar .a lues or cus toms. al .·. a" s .moortant are more so
·oca . Act iOns an you r pa rt
3 O"'~

;rese nes

w111

oe ex tra

:-teas ng to \Cur fam ily
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) For~et about e&gt;.:penmen!lng Nl\h
Jf'ltrtea proteau re s 1n your
... or~o. toaa) T1me-tested m ethJds will oroduce tne best
~esul ts

CANCER (June 11-July 22) The
specula tive venture mast pral ltabfe far you tod a y IS the on e
~ou ha 1e to put the teast 1nto to
;;et the greatest return

LEO (July 13-Aug 22 ) Thai yo u
take your obllgallons and res:~onslblhlleS

very

ser~f.!usly

to-

day ga~ns ~'Ou added respect
and adm1ral10n fron'1 love d
ones

VIRGO (Aug 13-Sept 22) A
secret adm~rer who has p re v1·
:::Jus\y no t shown any st g n ol h1s
or ner true leetJngs tod a-y may
g"e you an overt md!C ai !On

LI BRA (Se pt 13-0cl. 13) There
are still a few obstacles m the
path ol somethmg fo r whiC h
10u ve worloled long and hard
Tod ay s events co uld re move
all east ene o f them
\EWSP APE R D iTERPR ISE: ASSN

1

Laurel Oiff
News Notes
Smce the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church had a gas
explosion m the ch urch
basement,
the
Sunday
mornmg serv1ce ts bemg held
in the Salisbury grade school
at Rock Spnngss.
Mr. and Mrs. D1ck Karr
have returned home from a
VISit With Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Deconnick and Jelli
Sue , Amona . They were
accompamed there by Mr.
Ted Mathers, Huron.
Mrs. Nora Rtce, Mid·
dleport, Mrs Dorthy Yeager,
Flonda, recently vtsited with
Mr. and Mrs . Dick Karr.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey
visited Sunday evening wtth
Mr and Mrs. Harry Stahl.
Mr and Mrs. Guy Russell,
Ra venna, Mrs . Pauline
Haley, Crooksville, visited
rec ently With Mrs. Georgia
Diehl.
Mr . and Mrs . Hoadley
Caruthers and Mr. Vernon
Howell, Canton, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Howell
Mrs. Bertha Parker has
returned home from a three
weeks VISit w1th her daughter
Geraldine Ferguson, son
James, Col umbus. M1ss Cleo
Parker accomparued Mrs.
Parker to Texas where they
visited Mr and Mrs. Harold
Talley and family In Commerce, Texas and Mr and
Mrs Cedrtc 0 . Parker, Eric
and David, San Antonio ,
Texas.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs visited In
Columbus wtth her daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Jacobs, Mr and Mrs. Bill
Davis and son, Mr. Paul
J aco bs and family in Kentucky.
Mrs Della Curtis received
word of the sudden death of
her son, Otho Curtis of Iowa
Mr Curtis was born m this
commumty
Heartfelt
s ympathy goes out to the
CurtiS f&lt;1m!ly .

~

~

I itlii~

call

por or d11 o pen s 8 am Closes 5
pm Sun 8 12

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

t1 ortun.ate Oa)
bernost p!!ople you deal
-.1th ONh on personal ana
ous1ne~s leve ls want to do you
1

~1re

POMEROY TWI N (\IV Cob tem

NOTICE

J~Pl'.7

s

$ \i lo,.\

olll&lt;i '.lrd -..tk:-

!t•J'-•II~tlol. loflil'l&lt; Ulolil&lt;

s .J'l

Ba seball Team please
81i3 2961 IMPOR lANT

L,u,J • I lltmk, ,uul

l••dlt t••J•.l&lt;~lll.~cl•l .. n.l

Volunteer

FORMER MEMBERS ol BAND ITS

\L ,,

st.'ln~~t&gt;l1 erw t~ lope

RA CI NE

Depo rtment wtll sponsor o gun
skoot eve1y Sorurdoy ot 1 p m
a t th e1 r bu tld1ng 111 Bashon Foe
tor'r' choke gum; only

n. \

::it'lf·

3c SJ..;rt' '&lt;.'~ SJ;"o:&gt;.:d't 't0Uf bHtn

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r,1ort&gt; ,Jt:l,:"ltJ\ h,tlrst:&gt; t tn :-e'1d~l1U(

I

Ro&lt;"•ne Gun Club
focto1
gun~ only
A s!IOI ted
aft oHnoon

THE RE WILL be no h~.Jntmg no
tres pou 1ng ond no ellH•pt+ons
on lll 'f property BobMcG• o- ·

,,,,,

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(Mot ~
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lh,ll brJSS ~~ng 1 Jt ha~ tlet-n
~'.1"1."

OPPORTUNITIES

Noti('f'S

p \1
.tllL' I Ilo~•tl

NOTICE FOR BIDS
Notrce rs h ereby g 1ven that
b 1dS w 111 be rece 1ved by
Coi~.Jmb 1 a
TownSh i P
Tr us tees Me 1gs Coun ty , Rt
3. Sox 82 A l bany , Ot"uo 45 710
until November 30 1977
8 1d s
w ill
be
opened
D ecem ber 1 1977 at 8 PM
8 1ds wrl l be rece1ved tor 1
po l e
type
c onstru c t 1on
bu 1ld 1n g SIZe )8 X 48 ' X IJ ' J"
hig h
'l - JO walk through doors
'l 14 ' s l1 d 1ng doors on
front
1 - 14 ' sl 1d 1ng door on rear
Trusses at le ast 8' on
cent er
Stdmg of Ui gauge stee l or
17 m il a lumm um or better
RQOf of 17 m•l al u m m u m or

better

Color to be chosen by the
trustees
P r 1ce must 1nclude state
perm1t , 3 sets of b l ueprmts
and frec t1 on
Put " Building B 1d " on front
of envelope
The Board of Trustees
reserves the r 1gh t to re1 ec t
an y or al l b•ds
By order of the Board of
Towns h1 p Trustees
Glor 1a Hurron .
Twp Cl erk
( l\ l 8 , He

Carpenter
Personals
Mr . and Mrs . Albert
Qmvey, Dover, vistted hiS
mother I Martha Mays, on a
recent Sunday.
Beulah Crabtree has
moved into her new home on
Columbia Twp. Road 2 near
the Athens • Meigs County
lme.
Mrs. Laura Krebs,mother,
Mrs. Maude Holcomb, local,
and aunt, Mrs. Ruth Swisher,
Radcliff, enjoyed a four day
trip wtuch took them east and
S&lt;lUth. They were as far south
as Cape Hatteras, North
Carolina, and visited pomts of
mterest enroute mcluding
Appomattox Court House
Historical National Park, the
birthplace of VIrgima Dare
and Wright Brothers Museum
as well as travelmg through
the scenic mountain areas
where the autumn colors
were beautiful
Ida Denison was a Sunday
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse Freeman near Salem
Center .
Mr. and Mrs. Orvmf Burt,
Springfield, VISited With Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Smith. '
'" Mr. and Mrs Dwaine
Jordan, Bryan, Ketth and
Sarah Faye and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendall Jordan en joyed the
stghts m West VIrgJma on
Saturday and Sunday. They
traveled Route SO east
throtrg!r"Parkersburg and
aarksburg, on to the edge of
Maryland, then south throifgh
the mountams to Elkins and
Marlinton, W. Va., west to
Gauley Bndge where they
crossed the New River
Bridge, then on to Hawk's
.Nest State Park returning by
Charleston and Ripley on
Sunday evening.
Mr and Mrs. Lewis Sm1th
attended funeral services for
Clyde Russell at Pomt
Pleasant on Tuesday.
Bernice
McKntght,
Columbus, VISited Mr and
Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
ot her relatives here during
the weekend .
Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Jordan and Joshua attended
a birthday party for Jody
Shaner, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Shaner at the
home of her grandparents,
Mr
and Mrs
Marvin
Knowlton m Albany

=

LOST OUT ot cor Lod•es glos ses
orquAd f 1ve Pomt Stot 1on Fn

- nigh~Tti"111~oy_mon qss 3~

T'NO FEMALE Tree,ng Wollo.er
Coon dogs lost .n the Ches ter
· oreo 965 3661 or 985 -412 1

58,100 lor education .
75 per ce nt of your
College tu1tion free ,
College
Level
Examination
Free,
An Associ ate Degree
through
the
Commun1ty
College
of the A1r Force, 30
days paid vacat1on •. 7
pa1d 3 day weekends ,
good starting pay and
much
more .
Interested?
Contact me, Vernon
Zeger , your Atr Force
Representative.
For an appointment
in lh~ Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592 -4592 Collect.
Order No . 9-ct-86

$1 00 REWARD 1 block and wt·u te
c
Bulldog &amp; 1 German shor1 · W"a:iited tu__
-'-=
~hatred pomter (b1 rd dog ) l os t
behmd Odd s and Ends Sh op WANTED olo- -;ano;~cond• ­
llon Paytng $ 10 end $25 each
M1ddleport 742 2022
F1rst floo r o nly EJO.pert tnov•ng
Full y msured co mpany Wrtte
Ql lo'lllQ
d 1rvCIIOns
W1fte n
Pu;m os Bo 11 188 Sord1s Oh1o
4::1946 Phonv 614 -483 ! 60S
EXPERIENCED REFRIGERATOR and
opp l1once servteeman
Po1d
h olid ays ,
v a ca tion s
and
hosp•ta l1 zOI 10n
Go l l 1o
Relngero tor Co 611 Jrd Ave .
Golt,poiiS Oh1o
HOOF HOLLOW Hors es Bu y, uri I
trade or tr am New and used
TEXAS REFINERY CORP offers
saddles Ruth Reev es Alba n y
PLENTY OF MONEY pl us cosh

J\\/h'( ( 1/IJ\
/ Ill; ,'' 1m{llt•\• ,j f&gt;1 ftiiJ..'• frto ~
111~1 fi iii{'WIIt

518,300.
w 1~1, I ''''I"'''' oJit1 Ot&lt; I ' I"'/''
' " I ul' '' /1111! t/11 •I J •I'''' •!&lt;Ill•
/Jo • h1oJII /111 \ ,. J,,; &gt;

LPN NEEDED 3- tl sh1h Good
wages A rcodto Nursmg Home

(614 1667 3196

CASH po•d for all makes and
· models of mob•le homes
Phone area code 61-4 -423 -9531

(6141696 3290

MEIGS COUNTY Humone Soc1ely .
Corel111e and adoplion Serv•ce

992 7680 742 3162 , 992 5427

Kin~ury

NO FUTURE? IN A S$ RUT?
l1 &gt;11.,U it'l ,f J 'T•I(t ""'l•&gt;ll.t\ l ,Ht't 'l
l lm1n~. • HIC~IC \\1 · Ut .d'n
\,lit'

lr:ltnri!K

:-.....h, , , J ,,ff,·nn~

l' mk'lll H ' l l l' utk !'t.LIII
II.!J.: l'ttl~'l .UTI If \ I Ill .tlt' \\ lllh.lll."(
l ~ •n~t l)mt 'l \1\11 Jnh ,1\h•nd 1•llt
\\ t't'kt'IKi l! dJIITIIg);li i'~•IIT\111 d!
h·nd r~trt 1\\t•t •h. H I I. lnnd-:t'"

1' \ lfl

-utomatic
T11nsmi$$ion Service

PARKERSBURG

I ·304-422-4080

FOR SALE or trade 01 fond con·
tract 2 " bedr oom hou se m
Ru tland 992 -5858

AUCTION SALE , every Tues and
Fn . ot 7 pm New end used
merchond1se ot Oh10 R1 Yer Auc hon Me1gs Plola M•ddleport
Ohto
Home
PMone
(304 )
773 5471

Best offer OYer $3 200
avenmgs , 742 -231b

pdls

~205 evanmgs

9927760
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
Wtll buy 1 p1ece or comp le te
household New used or an t1
ques Mart 1n 's Furn1ture .. 20 N
2nd St
Mtddleport, Phone
W2 -b370
TWO TO ten acres w 1th good
bu ddmg 51te or older home
su1tob le for remodelmg water
and electmttv ovo1loble close
to hardtop rood Co li W2 -70Jb
after S pm
CHIP
WOOD
Po le!.
maK
d•ometer 10 ' on lorge~t &amp;nd $8
per ton Bundled sfob S6 per
ton DehYered to Oh1o Pollet
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 268q

AKC IRISH Setter puppy , 6 wks
old
Phone
I 304 682 2397
alter 5 pm
MO FREE pvps , 6 wks old t o
good home Po rt cock -o· poo
and w1re haued terr1er and
also cock ·o -poo dog almost '2
years to give owoy to good
home See at 1672 l1ncol n Hts
Pomeroy

1966 CORVETTE Very good cond1·
!ton 304 882 2040
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
ca seNo22,1S4
Estate of SHIRLEY
0
CUSTER , Decea se d
Not1ce 1s hereby g1ven that
Hugh P Custer of R 0 3,
Pomeroy, Oh1o, has been duly
appo1nted Executor of the
Estale of Sh1rley D Custer ,
deceased, late o f Metgs
CQunty, Oh10
creditOrs are requ~red to
f1le the1r c l a1mS w1 1h sa1d
f1duc1ary w1thin fou r months
Dated th1S 3rd day of
November 1977
Mann 1ng D Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas ,
Probate D1viS10n
( 11 ) 8, 15 , 22, Jtc

THE ALMANAC
United Press International"'
Today IS Tuesday, Nov. 8,
the 312th day of 1977 with S3 w
follow.
The moon IS between its
last quarter and new phase .
The mormng stars are
Mars, Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star is
Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of ScorpiO.
British
astronomer
Edmond Halley was born
Nov . 8, 1~6 Ttus ts actress
Kathartne Hepburn's 68th
bJrthday J
On this day tn htstory ·
In 1837, Mount Holyoke
Semmary in Massachusetts
became the ftrst Amertcan
coll ege founded exclusively
for women
In 1889, Montana was
admitted to the Umon as the
41st state.
In 1943, more than 400,000
Allied soldiers mvaded North
Afnca
In 1974, eight former members of the Ohio National
Guard were aquttted of
charges in the 1970 Kent State
College shootmgs, In wluch
four students were killed a nd
nme wounded durmg a n antiwar demonstration
A thought for the day:
English novelist Samuel
Butler said, " To live IS like
love -all reason IS agamst it
and all healthy instinct 1s for

it.,

s

1964 BUICK SPECIAL V 8 new
pam! 8 trock good t1res Best
offer 742 -2050
1973 BUICK CENTURY Lux:us 1q10
Che ... el le Mol1bu Coli offer 6
pm 949-2249
1973 NOVA HATCHBACK
condt11 on 949 2210

Good

1973 CHEVROLET PICKUP Custom
10 V B 3 speed std trans
Fleet~lde motor JU St ove rha ul
ed fxce/lent condltron F~rst
$1 800 takes 11 992 7675

FIREWOOD for
truckload

sa le $25
99'1 5537

per
or

992 7291

N C R 299 Bookk.eep1ng mochme
Mo1n1enan ce
conlrocl
ova1lo'b le Programmed to do
Sole!.
Reports
Accoun ts
Payable Payroll . Government
Reporh , W-2 forms ond wnte
checks Con be programmed to
do GenerCI ledger ond A c·
counts Rece•,.o ble
Contact
Cora l Wdlc.es ot304 295 -9391

5&lt;J4
AVAILABLE AT Rrvers•de Apts . I
bedroom $105 per mon th, $150
setunty depos1t 992·6098
FOUR ROOMS and both
only No pets 992-5908

Adu l15

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
La rge lots Co11992 -7479
lncred1bfe I Why pay htgh e l e~lnc
bil ls th •s wtnler? let us pay
them for you I One bedroom
from $130 now , ovadoble
Vdloge Manor Hurd and M1ll
Streets , M 1dd leport Telephone
99'1 7797 Equal Hous1ng Op·
portun1ly
BU ILDING FOR Lease 5700 sq It
store bu1ldmg , wilh l ull win·
dows and ownmg m front 40
cor pa r k.ng lot All on mom
thoroughlare m Athens , Oh,o,
close to Oh1o Un1vers1ty Con tact H W1lkes , PO Box 5301 ,
V1enno, West V~tglnto 26;105 or
call i 304•295 93::
52::...,-,---

____

--

FIVE ROOMS and both Lo rge
yard 1 rn1le Racme
992 5858
..._
12 .: 60 MOBIL E HOME Good con
d1llon
Lorge yord
1 mile
Rocme 992 5858

NEWLY REMODELED 7 roo'" l n.)use
plus bathrooms 1 up and 1
down Has all utrht1es plus 10
aocs of ground 5 minu tes 10
Pom eroy
S225
per
ma
997 S970 or 991 b170

5EE:M TO HAVE "-'t5_1UDG ED

Poo Goes the Country 8, News 10; Gilligan's Is 1S;
To Tell the Trulh 13; French Chef 20, Parenl Effectiveness 33.
7 3o-Ho llywood Squares 3,4, Wollman Jack 6. Let's
Go To The Races 8; Price Is Righi 10; That's
Hollywood 13, Music City IS
8.0&lt;&gt;-Man From Allan! is 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13.
Filzpalrl~ks 8, 10, In Performance at Wolf Trap 33;
Eyewitness 20
6 : 3~Laverne a. Shirley 6,13

APPARENTLY YOLJ RE U.\Io\1 · SOMeWHAT BE Tl ER
QUALIFIED AS A JUD&lt;3E
I SUPPOSE
OF AIR CRA FT THA" I
FOR '-~'CU THAT
HAD-AH~ PJ&lt;:EV!OU..;;L.Y
REPI&lt;ESEN TS A
ASSUMED:

Experience and
fully insured
Free Est.
Coli "7-6479

H4ND50ME
APOLOGY:

10 14- lmo pel

2l31mG

"

Wood Stoves,. ,

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

IW lAST

Restdenftal
and
commercial
Call for
estimate, 24 hour sen1ic:e

Anyday, anytime.

.,........
CAIT IK)fll

flRPt.ACll

Chester, Oh1o

~'-'7
•

'

10-30

c

'il'ill)~ ID~ ~THA-T SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ 1.!:!1 ~~ "
byHonriAmoldandBobL..

•

..

·.
-

.

Unscramble these four Jumbfes,
one let1er to each square, to form
four ordenary words

' '
l!ORNLOSER

'
~

I

10 18 1 mo

.

j
K

VIALE

1HP..T ''7 WHO
VJP.,S tJA,U!;D

'

773-5955
Lallln, W. V• .

Mash 8, 10; Men ol Bronze.33; VTR 20.

~.;:

RNR

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Box 34

. ,

9 ro-Mulllgan's Slew 3,4, IS ; Three's Company 6, 13;

'

EFEL .· · .

Phone 96S-J806

37U250

FREE ESTIMATES

1966 CHEVEllE 283 4 barrel mag
wheel~ ond good 11res 3 speed
on the floor $400 Kenmore
gos dryer $.40 992 5297
ClARIN ET 992 bJM
MAYTAG RINGER Washer Good
cond1110n $35 992 6075

THREE HORSES
1 IS Western
Pleasure 2 mores. 1 1s '/ 2 end 1
IS v~ Arob•on 992-708-4
MAYTAG DRYER , $141.10 Only
used tw1ce 78 model 742-3093
ONE NEW G78 )( 1S four p!y hre,
$30 One 678 K I S 6 p ly truck
fire !tke new, $.40 197b truck
camper , ' used once $1400
992 2759
WOOD FOR Sale

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
let Pomeroy

Landmark
your
wa1er and Co-op water
Model UC-SV1.
Now

soften

&amp;

condttion

•279.95

let us test your water Free

FOR SALE
New Co-OP

water and

softeners, model VC-SV I.
Only S279.9S
Save $50 00 on a new
Hotpoint Refrigerator

t New 20 cub1c ft . Chest
Freezer
525.00 Discount
( 1) Good Refrigerator ms
Upnght Freezer
1 Good Used

S225

Homelite
XL12 Chain Saw
sm
1 Good Used Homelite
Cham Saw
S12S
1 Good Used Homeltle
Chain Saw
S120
1 Good Used Hotpoint
Refngerator
1

Good

EXPERIENCED

Blown
II!SIIiation Semces

Radiator~

Fruncirlt A11ilable
Bnn lnlo Walk &amp; Attics

Service

l!IIR
tt.!i14o•_..

,,..._ the ..,..... Trvdl W
..... tor to t ...

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

I I

i\FTBR

ill ' ..'lor-~·-

. . __

'

WINDOWS
AlUMINUM

SIOIIIG-SOffln

$125

Used Hotpo1nf

Electric Stove

S85

1 Good Used Un1co
VVa$her

599

Landmark
W. Carsey,
Phone 992 -2 18 t

AIOCJI contract01
Phone 949-2101

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

GUffiRs-.IWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
SJtKvst.OhiO

I YUPRIF

M1AT RJGHT
HAD YOU TO TELL

Frn Esbn11tls

Na s,.u, Cols ~lo..

Now arrange the CirCled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug..
gested by the above cartoon

ROOMS OVER
THE GARAGE ·"

"'y

Printanswerhere:

We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

Ill'a- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

....

Phone992-218t

3102 oc (30&lt;) 772 3227
COUNTRY farmland w11h utclud·
&amp;d woods water and good ac cess m ~onro&amp; County W Vo .
$1 000 down , col i (30.4 ) 7723102 or (304 ) 772 -3227 ,
Commarc1ol property opprox 17
acres level lend, loca ted at
Tuppers Ploms on Ok•o Route
7 Phone (614) 667 630A
VA-FHA , 30 'fr f,nonc mg Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State, Athens ,
phone (614 ) S92 3051
2

STORV 3 bedroom lrome
house, F A furnace storm win dows , ftreplace 1n M1ddleport
Phone 992 3457 or 992 5867

FIVE ROOM house on 2' 1J acres
5urrounded by woods
At
Carpente r m Metgs Co 10
mmute
dr1ve from Metgs
M1nes Needs both and water
Also o City cool dump tra1ler

696 5310 696 6890 696 6696 or
696 6701
LARGE THREE bedroom 2' , bath
sp hl foyer wtth f~repla ce and
ocr&amp; lot $44 ,000 992 2492
SIX ROOM frame house · garage.
3 bedrooms, full basement,
forced 01r gos furna ce Close lo
Elementary schoo l 992 -2732 .
HOUSE AND 18 acres olong block top rood Tuppers Ploms water

HOMESITES for so le , I ocre end
up Middleport near Rutland
Coll992-748 1
NEW 3 bedroom hou5e 2 both5
all e lec , 1 acre Middleport
dose to Rutland Phone qq2.
7481

985 - 3~ 46 ,

HOUSE FOR Sole 1n Pomeroy
Lorg e lot 992· 7074 or 992 -3&lt;165

Pnced on mspectton only. ,

seen any time trom
10 a.m t0·6 p.m . Inquire at
605 w. Main St., Pomeroy ,

can be

Ohto 45769.

Ranch fype w1th about 7/e
acre . 5 years old 3 very

nice bedrooms W-large
closets. Modern bath ,
dining
excellent
k1
1
all
and

.TEAFORD

rg.

ALONG

Approx 28x32 . Another
building
with
20x100. Lots of fruit

LOW $23,900.00 buys this
JUST LISTED - Route 12&lt;
Reedsvil le (overlooks the
rive r). 2l/4 acres . City
water available Excellent
for Tra il er or Homes THIS
YOU MUST SEE $2,500 00
BEAUTIFUL - Ranch
Type, brick and frame, J
2
baths,
bedrooms,
fireplace, nice kitchen, full

basement, double garage,
located on l/4 acre, about 4
years old YOU MUST SEE
AT JUST $36.900 00
A BUY AT JUST SI&lt;,OOO 00
lots of remodeling, carpeting, paneltng, etc . Ph
story frame , 3 bedrooms,
bath, fireplace, N.G forced
atr heat, stor age bldg .
SO OTHER PROPERTIES
TO CHOOSE FROM COME IN AND TAKE
YOUR CHOICE. YOUR
WISH !SOUR COMMAND.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND'
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992 -2259 or 992 -6191

VIRGIL B: TEAFOIID, &gt;R .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
Phone 992 332S

GASOUNE-AlLEY

don't see an4
I'm th' onl4 one

Will do rooftng , construchon
plumbmg and heat1ng No job
too Iorge or too small Phon e

7&lt;2 n&lt;6
HOWERY AND
MARTIN Ex
covol1 ng
sept1c
systems .
dozer, backhoe dump truck
l1me5tone
grovel
blacktop
pavtng, Rt 143. Phone 1 (61&lt;4)

696-7331

l

NEW BRICK - Country
home
wtth
3
nice
bedrooms, master has a
full bath &amp; db I. closets, nice
kitchen with Ct)Ok and bake
units . ·Dming and family
room, patio and one acre .

""""••Cf&gt;·c-•- ..

$45,000.

'!IJRACUSE - 4 Bedroom
frame home w1tt- nat, gas
F.A. furna ce, ct:y water
and large garden . 3 lots In

all. Only 516,500.
SO ACRES - Near Slate Rt.
33 Good location for. new
home Plenly of wat~r. all
fenced for 1usl $16,500
MIDDLE PORT
2
bedroom modest prtced
home with nat. gas heat,
city water, bath, front
porch, back yard &amp; utility
for 510.500.
4S ACRES - With lea ding
Creek water tap, electric,
septic tank and mrnerals.
Asking S1J,SOO.
' POMEROY Old 3
bedroom frame house with

'"'

.'Lil Abner's Abner, who has entertained millions of Americans

'

"

bath, naf. gas, city water'

and large garden space.
Want only $7,000.
BEST BUYS ARE HERE
TODAY. SEE US OR CALL
992-3325.
..
Gordon D - &amp;
Helen L . Teaford
R~altor

Associates

he wo.u ld retire late in the summer.

dose to Ohio U
b&amp;er
wme corry out hcense doing
good busmeu on heavy tr"'v&amp;ll_ed Athens Street Lorge pcrklmg lot w1th room f&lt;Jr other a~~·
door bustness Perfect busineSs
for lwo people. Selling because
of absentee owner. T&amp;rms for
nght per5on For more mformctlon ca ll or wrrte PO Bol( 5301
V1enna , West V1rg1nio 261 01 ~
1-304-21jl5.9352 .

YARD SALE Wed . No'J 9th CQr.
roll Teaford s, 606 M(un St.,
~rn e. 10-5 One dny only j

29 Ballroom

facts
26Set a
value on
28 Singer

dance
31 Telling
blow
· 33 Laborer
35 Born

AN01l-IER Fl5_tl1 I PRESUME

DINO'S BEEN WURTING ME
WITH TROPICAL FISH AND I
GUE5B 1\-115 15 HIS WAY OF
APOLOGIZING FOR H15 BEHAVIOR EARLIER

WAlTA MINUTE,MOM.THIS
BOX ISN'T RJR YOU... IT'5

FOR. WBIOY! . n - - - ' "

. ruesday. November 8

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Spades great but NT better

·-

• AK Q6
t AK J 9
.. AJ542

-&lt;

WEST

EAST

• 1064 32

A9
.JI0 91
• Q 812
• Q 61 3

• 8 54 2
• 6 53

.. 10
SOUTII

•AKQ.J76 5
• 3

• 10.
.. K 9 6

North-South vulnerable

39 Kind of
collar
DOWN

West

!Low·

Pass
Pass

-

Is

ORLZL

Norlh Easl
24
Pass
G•
Pa~;s

AI C
I

ORLZL'D

SU

T0 .

YL

FHNW

E UUV

PUY-

FHNW

P.

TS

UEVLS

South
3•
Pass

lOA

~B:-y-;o:-,-w-a~ld:-&amp;:-:-Ja_m_e_s_J_a_co_b_v__J

A X Y D L B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

ELOOTSE

TSE

B

~ORTil i lJI

One letter simply stands for another In this sample A i1
used for the three L's. X fo ( the two O's, elc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and] formation of the words are all
hints Each day t he code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES

'"WINNIE

ATHENS,
OHIO btt'i'~·~;:r~~;;~~=j
Small 4000sq

THREE FAMILY Garage Sole Nov
7, 8. 9 11 26 E. Main Strdt
Pomeroy near Mlneravtlle cor:
porotron ,

23 Show ·
24 Known

Voyage \PGl
98.11 P.M. - 92tnTheShadeiRl
Channel Five 6:JO P.M. -Testi mony Time
7·00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fllness
7.30 - Marshall University Football
10·00 - 700 Club

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: , Opemng lead '

YE$ DE'IR, A
DELIVEIZYMAN JUST
DI&lt;OPPED 1\-IIS

Coll992-2156.

I

Yesterday's Answer

p1tched

no more in this space. Author and artist Al Capp announced

Moore 13.
10:0&lt;&gt;-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15, Family 6, IJ, Lou Gran!
8,10, Eyewitness 33 ; News 20.
10, 3~Biack Perspective on lhe New• 20 .
11.0&lt;&gt;-News J,4,6,8,10,1J,I5, ; Dick Cavell 20; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33.
11 .30-Johnny Carson J,4, 1S, Movie " Sireet Killing"
6,1 3; Kolak6; ABC News33, Movie "Rebus" 10.
12.0&lt;&gt;-Janakl 33; 12 •~Pollee Story 6; 1·0&lt;&gt;Tomorrow 3, A; 1 :10---News 13; 1.Jo-Mary Hart
man 10
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1977
s 45-Farm Reporl 13; s so-PTL Club t3 ; s·ssSunrlse Semester 10
6· 2s-Chrlstopher Closeup 10, 6·30---News Conference
4. News 6; Sunrise emester 8 .
6·45-Mornlng Report J, 6:50-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13; 6·S5-Chuck While Reporls 10. Good
Mornlna, Trl Stale IJ.
·
7·0&lt;&gt;-Today 3,4, IS; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bullwinkle 1n
7 . 3~Schoolles 10, 8:00--Capt. Kangaroo8,10, Sesame
s 33
9it»-Merv Griffin J. Phil Donahue 4;,13,15, New
Mickey Mouse Club 6, Family Aflair 6
9 :J~Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffith 8, Price Is Right
10.
IO ·ro-Sanford a. Son J,4,15 ; , Big Valley 6, ·Price Is
Right 8, Mike Douglas 13.
t0 · 3~Hotlywood Squares 3,4,15; Joker's Wild 10
11 .0&lt;&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3.1S; Happy Days 6, 13,
Marcus Welby, MD 4 ; Match Game 6, tO; Etec . Co
20.
11:J~Knockoul 3, IS; Family Feud 6, 13; Love of Life
6,10; Sesame I. 20,3J.
II ·S5-CBS News 8, Loving Free tO
12·0&lt;&gt;-Newscenler 3; News 4,6, IQ, To Say The Least
IS; Divorce Court 8, Midday 13.
12 3~Ryan's Hpe 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp;the Man
15; Search for Tomorrow 8.10; Elec. Co. 33.
I t»-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young a. the Resfless 10; Not for Women Only 15
1 3G-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:()()-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13 , 2.J~Doctors
3,4, 15, One Llfelo Live 6, 13. Guiding Light 8,10
3·0&lt;&gt;-Anolher World J,4,15, Ohio Journa l 20
3. 15-General Hospital 6,13. 3. 3o-AII In The Family
8, 10; Lilias Yoga 8. You 10
4 t»-Mtsler Cartoon 3, Lillie Rascals-Our Gang 4;
Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is 8; Sesame St. 20,33 ;
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Olnah IJ.
4 . 3~My Three Sons 3, Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8; Llltle Rascals IS
s.oo- -Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4, Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10, Emergency One 13, My Three Sons IS.
5·30-0dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec Co 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes tS
·
6:00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6:Jo-N BC News 3,4,15; Carol Burneft &amp; Friends 6,
CBS News 8,10; ABC News 13; Montage 20.
7·0&lt;&gt;-Trulh or Cons. 3; Cross Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Sha
Na Na 8, News 10; To Tetllhe Truth 13; Gilligan's
Is 15; Daniel Fosler, M D. 20; Big Green Machine
33.
7:3G-Funny Form 3; Sha Na Na 4; Malch Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33, The
Judge 10; In Search of 13, Wild Kingdom 15.
8·00-Grlzzty Adams 3,4,1S, Elghl Is Enough 6,13;
Good Times 6,10; Nova 20,33.
8· 3o-Bustlng Loose 6,10, 9 ro-Potlce Story 3,4,15;
Movie "Jacqueline Susann's Once Is Not Enough"
8,10: Great Performarices 33; American Short
Story 20.
IO ·Oil-Charlle's Angels 6,13; News 10; 10·3oWodenhouse Playhouse 20.
11 :00--News 3,4,6, 13, IS; Dick Cavett 20, Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
11 : 15- News 8, 10, 11 30- Johnny Carson 3,4, 15;
Star sky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; ABC News 33.
11 ;45-Hawall Flve-0 8; Movie "last Summer"· 10;
12:00--Janakl 33
12 :4~Mystery of the Week 6,13. 12.55-Movle "Death
Race" 8; 1·45--Mary Hartman 10; 2·1G--News 13
Movie Channel • S &amp; 7 PM -The

unit

ANN
DAILEY S Upholstery
Portland, Ohro 643-2542

IF YOU hov&amp; a serv1ce to
want to buy or se ll somefh~ng'
ae looki ng for wo rk . . or
w hatever
you II get results
faster with a Senhnel Want A,d.

club symbol: 2 wds.
l Cutdown

32 Chance
34 Stagelike
35 Not at aU
36 Cylindrical
37 Therefore
38 Radiation

"'"'""'"'"''""

'from his /Jogpatch hangout for oh, so many years, will be seen

992-252&lt;.

old port

3 Travelers'

9 Good luck
5 ' 1Btg Al"
symbol
6 City in Iraq
rur-~JEI~ 13 Put away
nY
U Prison
7 Peso
10 The. - of
topic
it : 3 wds.
15 Knightly
=~~;!..!!=~~-l&gt;--:.ll
title
11-Stritch
12 Adolescent
16 Haloes
16
Whale
17 Greek
goddess
18 Loathe
suitcases! Look like 19 Sloe- ·-··· 21 Italian
20 Overfill
river
what come prepare'!
21 Airway
ZZFood
22 French
L'=o==== d
annwty
24 Railroad
~===~====~ ~r
25 Wild cry
26 Sidekick
Moslem
samt
=~c 2H Old master
Cather's

DRY WAll HANGERS &amp; FINISHERS
w1th 5 yr5 ex:penence. Co li
(61&lt;) 345-&lt;551 or (6U) J45-7~
between Bam end 5pm
'

Coli

1 Nonsense
5 Bounder
8 English

I_JLABNER

Feotur.ng Ashleys and complete 5e lechon Qf coo l, gas ,
wood c.rculat1ng heaters .
Carp&amp;nter , (61 4) 6qa. 7 191.

housecleanmg

$1.35 palltndude
I
b ;r,a.

"My-"

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY

DO

~~~
oouldnl get. af1or a whle-

poet

backhoe
EXCAVATING , doler
and d1tcher Charle$ R Ho t
held . Ba ck Hoe Ser vtce
Rutland Ohio Phone 742 2008

WILL

palr of-~
DUl.if\.a

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Rome's
ACROSS

"TO RIDE
SHOTGUN?

R F~Ll OR

3.33 acres very nice Rancl1 I
Type Home, 3 bedrooms,
bath , hardwood floors,
d1nlng bar in the kitchen ,
double glass doors 1o patio,
N G. force d a ir heat, new
Ben Franklin coal or wood
stove, 2 sjory bldg for apt

Answer What a guy who put on a cteen

~HJJ'AC-.,e:llf

EVEN
I GO

I"

EXCAVA TING dozer loader ond
backhoe work dump trucks
and to boys for h~re wt/1 haul
f ill d1rt to so1l limestone and
grovel Coli Sob or Roger Jef.
lers day phone 992 7089 n1ght
phone 992 3525 or 'Xl2 5232 :

PIANO TUNING and Reporr lone
D&lt;m1els. 91jl2 2082 12 years ser
vice to Trr County Reference
Elberfelds

MOSQUE OBLIGE

Ai;J..EYUOP

SEWING MACHINE Repcurs ser·
.., 1ce a II male. es , 9'92 2284 Th.
Fobr~c
Shop
Pomeroy
Authorized Smger Sales Oil~
SerY tCe We sharpen Sct5•ors &lt;

Good
Business
Bldg .
located at 605 w. Main St,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Presently
occupied
by
a go1ng

HUSKY

.._....torCJ7M,

REMOOELING , Plurnbmg, heoltng
and all types of general repo1r
Work guaranteed 20 years •)( ·
penence Phone 992 -2409

EXCAVATING, BACKHOE. do1et:,
trencher , low
boy, dump,
trucks
sepltc systems. Bill
Pull1n5 , phone 9'92-2.H8, day or
n1ght

I

Jumbles SHINY

~Book No 10, wtltlthll . . . 110 puzzllil, ..
from ..until, r;Jo 1'111
, 00:1 34, Narwaod, N.J
VfXJ' !'WM, . . , _ , . , c:odlt ll'ld ,...._ chlc:icl ptlfltlllt Cll ~II

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ' _;,;
Sweepers toa5ters irons , ~
small oppl1ance5 lawn mowet."
neKf lo Stole H•ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614) 9853825
II

FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE

business. Bldg . has deluu
apartment
o ver head
bringing m good mcome.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
JUST LISTED - Lovelv

BRADFORD
Aucf1oneer . CQma
p lete ServiCe Phone 949 -24SZ:
or 949 2000 RaCine Oh1o, CriW
Br adford
.,.

BATHROOMS AND
K1tchens
remodeled , ceram1c hie, plumbmg, carpent ry and general
mo1ntenonce
13 years e• •
penence 99'1-3685

"r~ I_ _
X -~j
xY~"
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday's
SMALL form for sole 10 ~ . down ,
owner fmonced Monroe Coun ·
ty . W Va Phone (304 ) 772 -

CRAZY E:NOUC.H TO
60 fMTHIN6 IN
WINTE:FC: WeATHER'

IT'S ONLY 'THE

ANYONE T~EY
rnN MOVE INTO
HOOSE?

10 70 tmo

tiO i lllt.

COAL , limestone, and colc1um
chlor1de and cofc 1um bnne for
dust control and spec1ol miKmg
salt for formers Excels1or Salt
Works Mom Street Pomeroy
Oh1o or phone 9'n- 3891

(]

: UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

01949-2160

,.....,

Pl\.!91 1174

Ph 99!-3993

0

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Sidin&amp;
Storm Windows &amp; tnsul•
tion.
Call Professionals

Bissell Siding Co.

&lt;-•-

RE~lACEMENT

m

696-1072 56,600

3 AND 4 RM furnrshed an&lt;l un
furn1shed opts Phone 992

~h

55 GAllON OIL drums Clean $6
0 pieCe
2478

FOR CHEVROLET or Ponttoc. Two
1976 MONTE CARLO 'S" Coupe
14 mch Keystone mag nms
Vmyl roof P.S brakes. AM FM
Two 15 mch Keystone chrome
tape AC cru1se control , power
stee l
slots.
Phone
door lo(ks 1111 wheel. 5 toctory_
I 30&lt; 773 5725
mo gs -steel
belted rod1a ls
Jljl76 FORO F 250 Custom 17 50 x
Mony more extro!i Excellent
14 00 ttres w1nch Only 14,000
condlt1on $4 400 992 -6243
m1 Headers CB Tape deck
Over SJ 000 m exlras Senous
calls only after 12 noon
STARCRAFT FAll So le
Mm1
motors 20 ond 22' TraVel
Tro 1ler s 18 S $3,799 25 7'
Bunkhouse $.4 .~75 Fold down
S1 700 up We sel l serv1ce and
qua lity Open Sundays Camp
Con ley Star croft Soles Rt 62
N of Pt Pleasant

'

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
l...mille, O

1955
INTERNATIONAL
fRUCK
Good l or houlmg Second Y&amp;hl
cle Th,s Truck con be restored
CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
George Franc•s. 18 Anne St
~2o~er $450 Phone ( ~14 ) 698
Pomeroy Oh1o 992 7497. or
997. 3716
, ECONOMY TRACTOR wtth all at
FIREWOOD A ll red and white \
to chments. l1ke new . askmg
o alc., $40 a cord , split and
$22~ Phone (614 ) 698 3290
del•vered 843 2933
APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchards
Stole Route 689
Phone
A GOOD used lee r camper cob
Wi !kesYtlle 669 3785
for an 8 truck bed Brown and
wh1te 985 3560
1977 CHEVY PICKUP Step$•de 350
4 barrel SS 400 992 2912
1966 HONDA TRAIL 90 s1so Pt
Ple.asonl .304 -b7S 1118

10 ' 1 FT TRUCK camper self·
con tpmed oYen propane floor
heoter
gas
electr1c
refngerato r $550 992 6398
1972 CHEVROl.ET C~PRICE Ex
ce llent cond•llon Jode green
w1th Ymyl top loaded w1th ex tras $1 395 Mr5 Opal Coste,
(JO&lt; ) 372 9262

6 30-NBC News 3,4,15 ; Carol Bur-nett and Friends 6;
CBSNews6.t0, As We See tt20; ABC News 13
7 : ~Truth or Cons 3; Cross Wlts 4; Liars Club 6,

YOU • .\'AJO R MED\'A':.'f

on heating cost

Call

COI NS CURRENCY tokens old
pocket watches and cho•ns
s1fYer ond gold We need 196.4
and older SliYer co1ns Buy ·~self
or trade Cal l Roge r Wamsley
742 2331

TEN WEEK old Beagle pupp•es to
g1ve away Father 1s excellent
r abb1tt dog ~3 - 2961.

--

Sa•es 30 pel to 50 pel.

Gunsmok.e 8;

'

WESTINGHOUSE 18 c;v ft upnght
freezer
L1ke -new
250

OlD FURNITURE 1ce boxes brass
beds 1ron beds etc complete
households Wnte M 0 M1ller
Rt A Pomeroy Oh10 or call

~

.tt ;

Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20,33. Hogan's Heroes
10. Emergency One IJ, My Three Sons IS
5 J~d Couple 4; News 6; E lee . Co. 20.J3, Mary
Tyler Moore 10: Hogan's Heroes 15
6·00--News 3,4,8,10,1J,IS, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.

... ............
,_,
.......

! r UM·

"Tilt Oricinltors

5-17 TfC

Go8ese Tablets &amp; E Vop " water

TO GIVE away to good home m
th e l:'oubtry a male dog Very
gentle Excellen t w1th chil dren
Housebr oken
742 2648
onyt 1me

-·CAPTAIN EASY

Jlot Tht lmtbtors

SWAIN

tdt•nt r r allll ll}.:

MALE PEEK -A POO 1 year old
Very fflendl y $100 992 -3844

Nelson Drug

TUESDAY, liOVEMBER 8, 1977
5 oo-Bonanza J , My Three Sons

'

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce for stondtng
sawl1mber Call 992·5965 or
Kent Hanby 1-446 -85 70

w1th

'·•

Thermalln5ulafton

992-2206 or 992-7630

Phone 992-7034 10 29-tmo.

VIEWING

'

Cellulosic (wood fiber)

R"'t'3i, ~""'~ 0.
Carpet Uph tery
Phone Mike Youna
At

See us at 1100 Eas1 Main
...Street, Pomerov, Ohio or

,t

BEAGLE PUPPIES All Resonob le =--,.,..__
""'~.:::Fr om $20 up , Runnmg and olso- ~~ ¥~~:::...,..:::- :=
wel l tr01ned 742 -2521
- '
COBRA CAM 89 C 8 S t ordust~r
AKC REGISTERED Brittany Spaniel
ontenno 75 ft o f co ax Like
mole 6 mo old , $7S Pt Plea
new $225 992 5546
sont304 675 111 8
:::.:::_....:_ _
RUGS
WALL
Hang1ngs and
NORWEGION HKHOUNO to give
ofgons Nice for Chnstmos
away 98S 3 920
Reasonable Call ljl92 2214
TO GIVE away Four long-ho~red 1976 1• TON Chevrolet truck 4lc.11ten5
John Von
Meter
sp 350 V-8 ang 4 barrel Ex Syrocu5e 992 7288
Ire l1res and nm5 1 year old .

REDUCE SAFE and fast

Young's
Carpeting

•Mobtle
Home
'
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tie - Downs
• Awnings - Carport$
Repatrs
•Insurance

TELEVISION

P:
J&amp;L
Blown Insulation .1-~

Supenor
Slum htrattion

Home Sales

:n_

bo n use~ . fnnge ben efth to
rnoture md1v•duaf 1n Pomeroy
ar ea
Regar dl ess of
eK ·
penence
wnte C L
Pore
Pres
Texas Ref,nery Corp
Bo K 711 Fen Worth TeKos
7610 1

Business Services

' hm/rl•m•totll/1 1 IIIJ!•

'r/IJ/Iil~' " ' 111~1111

9 ;J~Soap 6; One Day AI A Time 8, tO; Mary Tyler

..•

Let-The Want Ads Turn -Un·w anted Items Into Cash

Nov 9, 1977

.,..,,.._ no .... Ob!j1n .,.. hat

1\- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Nov. 8, 1977

U , 1\lesda} , Nuv 8, 1977

TS
YHO

WLLGIZAUHZ

Yesterday'&amp; Cryptoquote: HALF THE FAILURES IN UFE
ARISE FROM Puu.ING IN ONE'S HORSE AS HE IS
LEAPING.-J. HARE

Here IS a hand from a
match between Spain and
Germany . The German bid·
dmg as s hown m the box was
straig ht forward enough
provtded you know that
South's three-spade bid
showed a solid suit
Declarer looked over dum·
my, remark. •d that he
guessed he had underbtd and
Wished he was m seven . He
let the club come around to
his kmg, cashed two high
spades, burst into happy
laughter when East showed
out , played out t he trumps
and made only stx on ac-

() 19'77 lUna Futuru Syndicate, Inc

BARNEY

THIS 15 M'{ REPORT
ON CLEOPATRA ...

ALL M'&lt; L.l FE I f.! AVE
ADMIRED CLEOPATRA

Mi.( ROLE MODEL
L.ET ME DOWN !

TATER JEST KILT
A WHOLE BOTTLE
OF COFF MEDIC:INE
PAW· ·

A WHOLE
BOTTLE~~

HE'S ONLY
S'POSED TO
GIT ONE

TEASPOON

THAT'S ALL
HE GOT

count of th e horrendous
trump break
The Spaniards started
w1th an artJfw1al club and
somehow or other South became declarer at sax notrump a fter North btd all
a round the mulber-ry bush A
heart was opened He won
the track, came to hts hand
with the kmg of c lubS, led
the ace of spades, noted the
spa de mne, then worked out
the play to make six
notrump
, It wasn't a tough one He
Simply cashed the other
three top spades wh1le discardmg one heart a nd three
clubs and then led the 10 of
diamonds for a fmesse

An Oregon reader wants to
know the correct opemng bid
With·
A AKxxx
Kxxx

¥K x

+ x AA

Either one club or one
spade 1s acceptab le We preCer to open one club and then
b1d and rebid spades
INI:. WSPA PEH F.N'll• HPHISF: ASSN 1

(Do you have a questson for
fhe experts? Wnte "Ask rhe
Jacobys' care o f thiS
newspaper The Jscobys will
answer Individual questions ''
sramped, self-addrtJssed
envelopes are enclosed The
most mterestmg questions w1/l
be used m th1s column end w11l
rece tv e cop1es of JACOBY

MODERN I

/

�12 _The Daily Senunel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 8, 19n

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITT'ED Nelli e.
Randolph,
Reedsville ;
Mildred Fisher, Pomeroy;
Hate! Curtis , Reedsville ;
JeMie lies, Pomeroy; Earl
Van Meter, Portland ; Bertha
Zamerano, Shade ; Kell y

Holur Medical Center
(JJlschar~es Nov.71
Ossie Aux ier , Dotti e
Brooks. Mrs. Robert Dye and
so n. Sharon Facemire,
Be1•erl y Grate , Garnett
Johnso n, Marian Murphy ,
Jasper Oli1•er, Mrs, Glenn

Shasteen,

Or r nder a nd

Racine ;

Dan a

Covert, Pomeroy; Ma rie
Watson, Pomeroy ; Edward
Duffy , Pomero)'; Robert
Bishop, Rutland ; Patricia
Collins, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED ~ Ethe l
Koenig, Lena Pullins. Mark
Duerr, Helen Leedy, Ida
White, Charles Jones. Mary
Derenberger, Wayne Powell .

son ,

Ros s

Roush , Ped SJl"akman. Rosy
· Strother , Doretta Wilson,
Velma Young .
!Nov. 7Birthsl
Mr . and Mr s. Donald
Riddle, a daughter , Wellston.

Auto hacked
into another

PROTECTION
PACKAGES
FOR YOU

·BASIC PLAN
• BROAD FORM PLAN
·SPECIAL PLAN
• COMPREHENSIVE
PLAN

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt's department investigated a minor
.-ccident at Meigs High
School parking lot Monday at
.9 p.m.
A vehicle driven by William
R. Barlrurn, Rt . 4, Pomeroy.
hacked into one driven by
Marlene Wilson, Rt . J,
Pomeroy. There was only

By DONAL O'HIGGINS
DUBLIN, Ireland (UPI ) - ,
Dublin housewife Noelle
R~n is the first to admit that
her quiet suburban lifestyle
may change a little during
the next week or so."
" I suppose some change is
inevitable," she said today ,
"but we are absolutely determined to keep it to the
minimum ."
Mrs. Ryan , her lawyer
husband Tim, and their three
teen..agedaughters have been
selected to host Miss Lillian,

C of C officerS
retained for '78
The board of directors of
the Pomeroy Chamber of ·
Commerce met Monday at
the
Meigs
Inn
and
unanimously voted to retain
the present officers.
They are Fred Crow,
president, Paul Simon, vice

president, John Anderson,
second vice president and

lever action rifle was taken

from his trailer. It was undetermined how entry was
made. The incident is under
investigation.

PAPERS MISSING
Beth Gloeckner, car rier
girl in Pomeroy, received no
papers to deliver on her route
Monday evening, she wants
her customers to know. Her
bundle apparently was
stolen.

Hou s es . f arflli.1es an d

fees in the amount of $2,818
were C&lt;Jilected in. the clerk of
court 's office in October
according to Larr)' s~ncer,
•·
clerk. Of the total, $937.2!i
wenttothestateand$1,88().75
to the county.
Collections included, title
fee's. $2,389, county share,
$1,934 .50;
state share,
.$454.50; salvage title inspections, $25, total going to
the state; auto inSJl"Ctions,
$399, state share, $365.75,
co unty share, $3.1.2!i; . boat
title fees, $5, county share $4
and $1 going to the state.

PHONE 992-5120

DAVIS

. INS. AGENCY

"" Weather

Cloudy and mild through
Wednesda)', chan ce of
showers Wednesday. Highs in
the upJl"r 60s, lows tonight in
the upper 50s. Probability of
precipitation 20 Jl"rcent today
. and tonight , 50 percent
Wednesday.

Lightn ing Rod '

River ferry is
not operating

Insurance Co .

who was taken to Veterans

Memorial HospitaL

repairs.

~
'1l

= lo&lt;::m::m ::m :• ""' = ""' =~&lt;::~ ""' """ """ ~=lOci ~ ~&gt;:&lt; !&gt;'::&lt; ""' """""""""""" =

'li

1!

II

W week or so." He said it

t1l
f1

~

«

111

«

'li

~
r&lt;

!!!

·

~

'li
'li

INVEST
$ . .so
$ 1.00
$ 2.00
$ 3.00
$ 5.00
$10.00
$20.00

'li
~

'li
?1

'li
'li
'li

Once again Ohioans who
work at Kaiser Alumirium
tr .. and o.ther West Virginia

a

round-trip
II:
The new bridge crossing
t1l the Ohio River at RavensK wood is not expected t9 be
'li completeduntilthespringof
1979. To date, only the river
11 span piers have been com!!! pleted.

!
~

RECEIVE
$25.00
$50.00
$100.00
$150.00
$250.00
$500.00
$1000.00

Better

p.m . Thurs.day _
a t t he home of
Madeline
Chafin,
168

Holzer

Mr. Rider

was training

to ~

be a ranger for the State of ·

Ohio. He was employed by
Lake Alma State Park .
He was born July .22, 1945,
sen of the late Florence Rider
and John Rider, wko survl\les

!
•

and resides In Wellston.

:

children : Glennette and t
Angellque Lethcoe, Wierton, •

W. Va.

Hugh Gilliam, 68, . Rt . 2,

Hospital. Huntington, around
6: 30p.m . Mon da y .
He was a r eti red coa l
~iner , born Ju ly 13, 1909, In
Elliott County , Ky ., son of the
la te John and Rose lsorn
Gi lliam .
Mr . Gi lliam was twice
m ar r ied , f irst to Irene
Fraley , who preceded him in
death in 1966 and second to
the former Ernestine Neal.
who survives .
In addition, he is surv ived
by t wo daughters, Mrs .
Clifford
(June)
Sco1t ,
Sycamore, Ohio and Mrs .

Joel (Jua nita} Alha, Rt . 2.

Bidwell ; one step-da ughter
and two step -sons : Mrs .
Richard (Carolyn) Clinger ,
Ci nci nnati and Walte r Neal ,
Vinton and Da le Neal.
Wel l ston . One son . Jim ,
preceded him in death .
Seventeen grandchildren and
ei ght great ~ grandchildren
survi ve . One sister , Mrs. Mae
Nelson, Defiance, and one
br ot her , Merida Gilliam,
Logan, surv ive . One sister
and one brother preceded
him in death .
Funeral services will be
I: 30 p.m . Thursday at McCoy ·Moore Fu_n eral Home In
Vinton with Rev . Berkley
Sa unders off iCi ating . Burial

wil l be In

Mound

Hill

·

' The following brothers and

(Butk)

Rider, Chllllcothe J ;

nephews .

'

Funeral arrangements will
be announced by J. P. Rogers
Funeral Home, Wellston .

JAMES T. RtDER
Ja mes T . Rider , · 32, a
former resident of Well ston;
and a res l.dent of Kerr , died at

Nann le B. Rou•h Spencer.

Robert Wayne ..,
Spencer , and a brother , '
M&amp;son Spencer .
"'
Surviving are his wife,
Sarah E . Manuel Spencer,
whom he married .on ~rch ,
19,

ternational

·Union

of

of cnarleston .
Funeral services will be
he ld at the Foglesong
Funera l Home on Wednesday
at 11 a.m. with the Rev . ...

Robert Maring otflclotlng. ,
will

follow

in

the

Kirkland Memorial Carden•. '
. Friends may call at the

funeral home from 4 to 9 p.m .

rites will be netd, and In lieu

W

NOW YOU KNOW
Mexico 's
southeast
peninsula got its name in 1S17
when the conquistadores•
arrived and asked in Spanish•
what the place was called.•
The natives, who knew no
Spanish, replied in their'
tongue : " Yucalan (what do
you want?"

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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MiDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depos it jnsurance
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Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURED T0$40,000

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TABLECLOTH

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100'16 VI&gt;A PO LY ESTER

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COLUMBUS (UP!)
Ohio's Ul-faled five-month old
" instant" registration
program was a thing of the
past today, to the chagrin 'Of
Democrats who enacled it
and the joy of Republicans
who belleved it would drive
their parly .into the ground .
Republicans and
Democrats across the slate
teamed up Tuesday to pass
State Issue I repealing
election day and Jl"rmanent
voter registration, and dealt
a damaging blow to President
Carter's similar plan on a
national scale.
Repeal of the program also
was a ~lab in the heart of
organized labor leaders and

tile Ohio Democra tic Party,
which
had vigorously
campaigned to keep election
day registration as an
incentive for increased voter
participation.
It was the first time since
1949 that a constitutional
amendment initialed by petitioners haS been approved by
Ohio voters.
With 12,957 or 98 percent of
the stat~·· 13,168 polling
places reporting, the vote on
Issue I was 1,931,110 yes and
1,208,787 no.
''This should be a message
ro some of the members of the
General Assembly and the
so-called reformists in
WOshuigton , D.C., that the
people wiU accept nothine
less
than
fraud-free

JN;~~
By United Press International
ISRAEIJ GUNNERS HAMMERED THE BIBLICAL
PORT of Tyre, Palestinian refugee camps aod southern
Lebenese villages killing up to 20 people Tuesday in retaliation
for a Palestinian rocket attack on northern Israel.
"ff bombs fall on Israel, bombs will fall on Lebanoo,"
Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman told reporters. It was
the second maj&lt;r artillery battle across the Lebanese-Israeli
border since the weekend, shattering a six-week cease-fire
negotialed by the Uniled States. In Washington, the Stale
Department urged both sides. to "show restraint.''
· .
The northern Israeli town of Nahariya was hit by several
volleys from more than 10 Soviet-made Katyusha rockets,
killing a as:.year-ol&lt;! woman. She was the third !Braeli to die in
the latest round of rocket attacks.

SAN FRANCISCO -HARVEY MILK SAYS his election as
a San Francisco supervisor Tuesday was a vicrory for all U. S.
homosexuals. Milk captured 30.5 percent of the vote in the 5th
District to become the first known gay officeholder in San
Francisco, where one of every seven persons rwortedly is
homosexual.
"The victory will give hope to minqrities, hope to the
disenfranchised and to people who always felt the govenunent
didn 'I work " said Milk, defeated in two previous campaigns
for supet;is'or and once as a state Assembly candidate. "They ·
feel if a gaycandoit, they cando it."

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FRIENDLY BANK"

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehuuse Reporier

News •• in Briefs

Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
(Continued fr001 Pill 1)
A Jury ca ll for Wednesda y Kucinich, a Democrat in spite of the Jl8r\y organization, went
in the Meigs County Court has into today'smayoral election locked in a dead heat.
been cancel led . Jurors shou ld I
Alate poll published by tbe Cleveland Press gave Feighan,
not report.
the paJl"r's endorsed candidate, 50.4 percent support.
A spe cial mee1ing of Kucinich, end&lt;rsed by The Plain Dealer, rated 49.6 per cent in
Pomeroy Lodge 164. F&amp;AM, the poll. The candidates also spllt the support of Ohio's
will be held at ,7:30 p.m. delegation to the U. S. Senate with Howard Metzenbaum
Thursday . Work will be in the endorsing . Kuclnich and John Glenn backing Felghan. And
Master Mason Degree . All
Master Masons are inVIted . Feighan was endorsed by Rep. Mary Rooe Oakar, while
Kucinich was endorsed by Rep. Louis Stokes.

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A total of 8,274 voters went only two candidates were
to the polls in Tuesday's Gary DIU who received 597
general election C&lt;Jmpared to votes and Ralph W. Ours with ·
7,6116 who voted in Meigs 439.
.
County in the comparable
Six candidates vied for the
election of 1975.
two trustee posts In Coliunbia
Every township except Township
with Carrol
Chester offered a race for Woodgerd, 129 votes, and ·
township trustee posts with . Gordon Perry, 88, winning.
two elected in each yester- Defeated were Thaddeus
day.
Dye, 60; Jimmy C. Haning,
Winners
in
Bedford 81 ; Victor Perry, 72 ; Daniel
Township were Charles E. Wooten, 78.
Williams with 228 votes and
Winners in
Lebanon
Norman Wood with 215. Township
were
Cecil
Defeated was Owen Smith, &amp;seberry who received 239
171.
votes and Robert L. Fitch
Elected
in
Chester who received 182. Defeated
Township where lhere were was Gordon Proffitt who

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AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING SIZES:

52 I 52"
132 x 132 em.
52 X 70"
132 x 178 em.
52 x70" Oval
132 x 178 em.
64 X 84"
162 x 213 em.

64 X 84" Oval
'6.99 162 1 213 em. '15.49
64 I 104"
'9.49 162 x 264 em. '1 B.99
64 X 104" Oval
'9.49 162 x 264 em. '18.99
72" Round
·'13.49
'15.49 183 em.

WHITE AND PASTEL COLORS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.;~~~~;;~~~~.;~~~~--------------~~. . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

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received 121.
In Letart Township, Walter
Herbert Roush with 193 votes
and Don R, Hill with 171 were
winners with Hershel E,
Roush, 103, and Charles R.
Wolfe, 35, losing.
Grant A. Smith with 297
votes and Dohnnan V. Reed
with 335 won the two trustee
posts in Olive Township.
Other candidates were 'Paul
F'. Andrews, 156; Elza W.
Bartimus, 96 ; Bernard
Bennett, 112; William Connolly, 188, and Thomas J .
Marcinko, 78.
Lester Hawk , 195 votes, and
Norman 0. Weber, 183, won

the posts in Orange Township
defeating W. Hennan Henderson, 141 ; Robert Marcinko, 101, and 0 . J . Pennington, 136.
In Rutland Township,
Charles D. Barrett, Jr., 337
votes, and Fred H. George,
327, won the trustee posts
over William Smith, 202, and
Raymond L. Wilcox, 235.
Winners in Salem Township
were Harley E. Grate, 187
votes, and Cecil L. Stacy, 174
with losers being Cecil E.
Johnston, 111, and Earl J.
Wright, 120.
In Salisbury Township, Guy
A. Russell with 937 votes and

Donald L. Moore with 649 won
the trustee seats over Guy V.
Bush, 431 ; Larry R . .Thomas,
566, and Paul F. Thomas, 358.
· Raymond R. 'Cotterill with
255 votes and Earold Dean
with 207 were elected Scipio
Township trustees wilh the
third candidate being Charles
Althouse with Hili.
Sutton Township winners
were Otis· Knopp with 555
votes and Homer M. Circle
with 441. Losing were Forrest
Van Meter with 411 ; Phyllis
Harris , 249; . Jimmy Joe
Hemsley, 22!i; Oris Hubbard,
206, and Jack L. Wolfe, 190.

Easy registration ·loses big

of flowers the fam ily asks
that donat ions be made to the
Heart Fund .

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WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1977

today . Graveside Masonic

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Operating Engineers No. 132

Burial

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
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8,274 vote in Meigs eI e C I 0 D S

Mason United Methodis t ,
Cnurch , Clifton Mo•onlc
Lodge No . 27, ond tn .

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1932 ; o daughter. Mrs . •

June
Spencer
Roush ,
Poughkeepsie, NY ; one son , ,.
Or . Edward M . Spencer ,
Bluefield ; ' fllte sisters, Mrs. ,;
Mary Stadler, Cleveland, 0 .; ""
Mrs . Virg inia Hazelett, New ·
H~ven ; Mrs. Thelma Prlce, ..
East Liverpool , 0 .; Mrs. ,..
Grace Brown , letart ; Mrs . •
Florence Moore, Corning , 0 . ;
and tWo granddaughters, ~
Dawn and Julie Spencer .
•
He was a retired operating·:
eng lne.er , member of the .

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Club Account

VOL XXVIII NO. 146

The Meigs County Board of Commlsslonen today
annoiiJICed a grant of $35,000 luu been awarded to
Buckeye lllllii - lr&lt;&gt;&lt;klllg VaHey Development District
by the Appalachian Regional CoDIIDission lor the
AlheDB-Meigs Industrial Site Selertlon project.
The,projeel coordimlror will be Jeff Burt, deputy
director of planning with the Regional Development
District.
The primary objecUve of this project Is to conduct
a complete analysis of emllng industrial sites identlf):
""d analyze new sties, rank all Identified sites'in te~
ot value, plot primary industrial sites oo maps,
prepare site sketches and sile data aheeta and analyze
market potential by Standard IDdDBtrlal. Classification
(SIC) for eaeh identified site.
In addition a program for attracting prosJl"CUve
industries to iluure effective implaatation of the study
wUI be devised.

.,
enttne

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He was pr!eeded In death ..

by a son,

NICE 'N' EASY

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In Letart Township, 2S3 voters fav&lt;red renewmg a one mill
cemetery levy and 97 disapproved, and in Rutland Township,
W5 voters to 237 approved renewing a .3 of one mill cemetery
levy.
In Sutton Township, a .4 mill levy f&lt;r cemetery
maintenance was approved 879 ro 400. It also was a renewal.
The sale of beer was disapproved in Columbia Township,
193 to lll, while it was approved in Salem Township 190 to 166.
However, three of four questions on the sale of spirits in Salem
Township were defeated.
Here 's how the county voted on stale issues:
YES NO
ISSUE
3,291 4,208
State Issue I
903 6,860
State Issue II
2,174 4,403
State Issue III
1,610 4,793
State Issue IV

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Holzer Medical Center .
:
Born Dec . 8, 1902 , ln ...
Graham Station, he was the ~·
son of the late Harvey M , and "'

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Meigs County voters supported a one mill tax levy for a
Ictal emergency medical service in the county but turned down
a one mill levy that would pay expenses of the Meigs County
Geperal Health Districl Program at Tuesday's election.
Voters cast 2,923 ballots in favor of the general health
district levy f&lt;r the health department compared to 4 7!Hl
against. On the other haixl, 4,831 voters favored the one ,;ull
levy for the emergency squad units of the county compared to
3,122 who opposed it.
In Pomeroy Village, a referendum action turned down a $5
pennisslve auto license tax. There were 581 votes against the
tax, 178111 favor of it. Passed by council, the tax will not stand
as a result of Tuesday 's referendum .action.
Also in Pomeroy, a 1.9 mill current expense renewal levy
was approved 4!M to 278. In Rutland voters renewed a two mill
current expense levy, 146 to 58, as did voters of Racine 166 to
93, on a 1.7 rillll current expense renewal levv.
'

FRED SPENCER

CHARLES HARRISON
Ch arles Harrison , 72 ,
for mer resident of Gallla
County , died early th is
morning in fhe Pike County
Hospita l, Wa verly . Funera l
arrangements wll l be an .
nounced by Mi ller 's Home
for Funerals . .

.

Mrs . Florence 1 Wi c;kie) "
Flggens, Bidwell, and several •
aunts . uncles , nieces and ..

Home Furnishings Dept. on the 1st Floor

Christmas Corsage
For Every Lady Who
Opens A Christmas

'

-s i ste r s survive : VIrginia
Dixon , Washington CH ; John "

Fred Edward Spencer, 74,

Bidwell, 'died In St, Mary's

.,

Rider on Jon . 18, 1976. She •
survives, along with two.step- :

Mason, died Monday at the

HUGH GILLIAM

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1-je married Doris Lethcoe \

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• .A CHECK FROM DiE BANK
EVERY CHRISTMAS COULD HELP YOU!

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Healln Club will meelat 7:30

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BANK WILL MAKE THE 50TH PAYMENT.

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the death of the mother of
Edison and Joh n Bal&lt;er. Mrs.
RebeCca Anna Baker .
The

the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev . Freeland
Notris officiating . Burial will
be in Chester Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
fun~ral home at any time .

today

Medical Center . He hod been •
Ill since Aug . 15.
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FOR EACH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES
'/i 49 PROMPT WEEKLY PAYMENTS, THE

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places must travel as much

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studen ts in band are invited .
Booster off icer s are, Mrs.
Wal ter Brown , pres i dent ;
Mrs. Elton Ri tch ie , vice
president ;
Mrs .
Tom
Hayman , secr eta r y. and Mr s.
Harold Newell , treasurer .

repair the motor of the tow.

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If you received your Christmas
Club check this year, you're in
great shape. If not, we invite you
to '1oin our Christmas Club today
and enjoy your next Christma?
without financial strain.

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WITH .THAT
LONG
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GIFJ Ll ST• • •

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Notices

Ralph Brewer, OJl"rator, .
said he ho Jl"S it will be out of
Baker Furn iture in M idoperation for "no more than a dleport is closed today due to

"'=' = """ "'" ""' = """ ~&lt;::&lt; ~&lt;::~ ="""I!

WE CAN
HELP YOU
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held at I p.m. We1:fnesday ot

Cemetery .
Fr iends may ca ll at the
MCCoy -Moore Funeral Home
2-4 ~ nd 7.9 p.m . W~nesday .

(cOfttlnuld !rQiil pace 1)
RAVENSWOOD - The
Ravenswood ferry, which
crosses the Ohio River here,
is shut down again fo r

6 a .m .

ROLLIN BEARHS

Site selection project
receives 835,000 grant

Health tax fails

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Roll in Bearhs, 77, Route 3,
present it at the next Pomeroy, died MonCay at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
meet ing.
A member of Rock Spr ings
Ronald Davis, of near Nye
Grange , Mr. Bearhs was
Ave. stated that no work has preceded in death, by his
been done on his street for 3!i parents, Herman and Dora
Bearhs ;
three
years, and that il is washing Smith
away. He said it is in.possible brothers , Harry, August and
Elmer
and
an
Infant
for an en1ergency vehicle to daughter
, Maude.
reach his home. He also told
Surviv l n~ are his wife,
C&lt;Juncii that he paid $500 to Mabel Bolin Bearhs ; a son,
have concrete placed on the James of Pomer.o y ; two
daughters, Harriet Pull ins,
road.
Uberty. Pa .. and Mary Evan ,
Davis advised that the road Canal Winchester ; a brother,
is privately owned.
Hugh, Route 2, Pomeroy ;
nine grandchildren , six great.
grandchi ldren and several
owned.
nieces and nephews .
Harry Davis advised that
Funeral services will be

the street crew will look it
over and see what can be
done.
Rolland Neutzling asked
that
fly ash not be put on a
~
flat area near his home this
winter as he has had to clean
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - the street for many years. He
The Huntington District also asked the town to stop
Corps of Engineers today plowing along the ditches· as
announced publication of the they fill the ditches up and he
pian for the joint State of Ohio has to clean them out too.
- Co rps of Engineers Ohio
Neutzling suggested trees
Ril•er Port Development at the bottom of Breezy
Study. The Ohio River Port Heights be trimmed as they
Development Study is a · pose a danger when pulling
cooperative examination of off Breezy Heights onto
riverport and harbor needs Mulberry Ave. He was inalong the State of Ohio's Ohio formed that the trees are on
River shoreline. It documents private proJl"rty. Ne~tzling
efforts already completed also suggested that the no
and outlines a management parking sign on Mulberry be
program for the remaining moved from the intersection
investigations.
at least a ca r length. He
Copies. of the plan of study stated that there have been
can be obtained by remit- accidents at the location and
tance of $7 to the Huntington there will be more if
District, U.S. Anny Corps of something isn't done.
Engineers, ATTN : ORHAS,
Attending . were Ma yor
P. 0 . Box 2127 , Huntington. Andrews, J ane Walton,
West Virginia 25721. Checks Clerk, Davis, Ralph Werry,
should be made payable to Harol4 Brown , Lou Osborne,
the United States Treasury. Larry Powell, coun cil
Copies of the plan of study members,
Rev .
Midalso are available for in- dleswarth who opened the
spection at the office of the meeting with prayer, Jack
Bureau of Planning, Ohio Krautter and Tom Werry.
Department of Transportation, at 2!i South Front
Street, Columbus. Ohio • Rm
416.

E-R CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Route 2
Pomeroy at 6:05 a.m.
Tuesday for Etta Roberts

Bill QUICIIEL OWNER

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and Ra lph Werry meet and
work Qut u program and

Plan of study
sells J.Or 87

DRIVER CHARGED
A car which failed to round
a turn on Front St. and ran
into the yard of John Motley,
Hamilton and Front sts. over
the weekend , was driven by
Harley Blackburn, Columbus, not by Michael Proctor~
Gallipolis. owner of the car,
Middleport police said. The
Motley vehicle, which was in
the ya rd, was demolished.

bu dget s atl va r y tn stzes
an d n e eds . So d o o u r
H o m eo wne r s Pa c k age s
that pro tect t hem . We have
a chotc e of btg Pro t ect ton
Pa cka ges . Let us rev 1ew
yo ur tns uranc e needs and
suggest a plan fo r you .

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are collected

and treasu rer .

(Colltlnuld fnm 11111 1)

Governor . A similar group
from Ireland will fly to Des
Moines two hours later.
The project, known as
Friendship Force, was announced by President Carter
March 11m, and grew out of
a program begun by the
Carters lour years earlier in
Georgia.
The idea behind the
project, according to its
organisers, is lor families
from . various American
states lo swap visits with
groups in other countries,
staying in their homes and
becuning part of the family
during the visit.

Fees of $2,818

Barbara Chapman, secretary

minor damage . There were
no injuries or arrests.

The department also
received a report from W. C.
Hill, Rutland. that in the past
10 days a Winchester .22 cal.

the 7!1-year-&lt;&gt;ld mother of
President Jinuny Carter, for
the next 10 days .
·
Mrs. Carter was. scheduled
ro arrive Tuesday night _
abuut 4:30pm. EDT _ with
253 Americans from Des
Moines. including Mrs. B)lly
Rae. the wife of the Iowa

: · Area Deaths · !

Council

Dublin family will host
Miss Lillian for 10 days

. HOSPITAL NEWS

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CLEVELAND - MAVERICK DEMOCRAT Dennis J.
Kucinich who defeated Edward J. Felghan with the suppori of
the Democratic Party in the Cleveland mayor's race Tuesday
night ·immediately asked the voters to "transform the
energies of a night Uke this into building a greater Cleveland."
Kucinich, 31, who bec&lt;rnes the youngest mayor in the
Uniled Stales in a city with a population of more than 100,000,
defeated Feighan 93,172 to 90,023. ''The people of Cleveland
have spoken," Kucinich said.
· ·
"The people of Clevelsnd have responded ro our political
independence and the lnde.,.,ndent politics of my candidacy,"
be added, giving thanks to the United Auto Workers, &amp;:n,
Howard Melzembaum, D-Ohio, and Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio,
whom all supporled his candidacy.
FORT WORTH, TEX. -THE FIRST OF THE 1977 crops
of basebBll free agents bas found a home for the next 10 years
and not surprisingly the Texas Rangers are already crying

"peMant."

,

Richie Zisk, the power-bitting, right-handed outfielder who
played out his option with the Chicago White So• and was one
of the most sought after members of this year's free agent
class signed with the Rangers Tuesday . And Rangers owner
Brad'corbett said he might have "another surprise in another
day &lt;r so:"The Rangers originally planned a strong campaign
for former Minn...,ta outfielder Larry 1-'isle, but Corbett may
not-pursue him as avidly noi that he has signed Zisk.
'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
turning colder through
period, with a chance of
showen Friday and again
about Suoday. Highs will
he In the 40s, with overnight lows near 40 early
Friday and in the lower 30s
by Sunday mol'lllng.

Highway
lighting
bids set
COLUMBUS - Bids for two
highway lighting upgrading
projects
iQ
· seven
southeastern counties Athens , Galiia, Hocking,
Meigs, Monroe, Noble and

Women get
board seats
Three women candidates
won seats on the Southern

Local School District Board
of Education in Tuesday's
general election.
With three seats to be filled
on the board, the winners in
the district were Shirley A.
Johnson with 1,008 votes,
Janet Sue Grueser with 994,
and Betty Wagner, 957.
Defeated were Charles F.
pyles with 8t4 votes and
Roger E. Brauer with 308. All
three women will be new
buard members. Gene Yost
was unopposed for an
unexpired terrn on the buard,
receiving 1,035.
In the Meigs Local School
District where two buard
members were to be elected,
Wendell Hoover with 1,271
votes and Carol F. Pierce
with 1,436 votes were the
winners. Hoover currently
serves on the board and
Pierce is a former member.
Defeated were incumbent Joe
N. Sayre with 1,180;' Ronald
E. Vance with 833, and Rita
F. Maust with 774.
There were numerous
candidates for board posts in

the Eastern Local School
District where two were to be
elected to full terms and one
to an unexpired terrn,
Winning the two full terrn
seats -'\'ere Dorset E. Larkins
with 749 and Deryl E. Well
with 690. Well , who resides in
Tup.,.,rs Plains, is an English
teacher and asaistant football
roach at Kyger Creek High
School.
Defeated were
Ross
Cleland with 561, Robert .G.
Davis with 427 and Harold
Norton wtth 378.
, . The unexpired terrn went to
Jimmy C. Caldwell who got
700 votes. Defeated were Max
A. Eichinger, 321; Clifford
Longenette, 310, and Thomas
E. Mankin II with 246.
There were no races for the
·county board of education
with in cum bents being
'returned to their posts. They
.are George A. Perry, 2,n9
votes; Harold Lohse, 3,410
and Robert Burdette, 2,980, to
full terms and Oris Smith,
3, 407 votes, for the unexpired
terrn which he had been
filling until election.

Eastern children are losers
Even though it had been announced earlier that Eastern
Local School District schools would close on Dec. 8 for the
remainder of the year if an emergency operating levy were not
passed at Tuesday's election, the levy did fail, 1,006 to 940
yesterday.
Here's how the precincts involved in the levy voted on the
live mill levy:
For Against
PRECINCT
120
104
North Chesler
158
144
South Chester
138
98
West Chester
3
27
Lebanon
184
205
Olive
.161
157
Reedsville
271
176
Orange

Meigs writers to
discuss work

Washington - will be OJl"ned
in Columbus Dee. 6, by the
elections," exuiled Repub- throughout the stale - the 6 or 7 percent of those voting Ohio Department of Transiican Secretary of State Ted total exceeded three million also registered, but many portation.
W. Brown, who had put his and Brown's prediction of must have voted to re.,.,al the
Programmed estimate for
mechanism which allowed engineering
personal stamp of approval • 2,850,000.
and replacement
Foud\Teigs county writers county a ulhors such as
on Issue I.
A $500,000 campaign and them to vote.
costs on the first two projects will speak at a first "Meet Ambrose Bierce are being
Counties dominated by In a state-wide program ts Your
·
"We are very disappointed ' 1 get-out·the.vote" drive
Local
Authors" planned..
in the results, " said Charles mounted by organized labur organized labor., such as $88,000.
program at the Pomeroy
R. Baker, c~hainnan of and · Ohio
Democrats Lorain and Mahuning, voted·
Plans call for replacing . Ubrary Thursday, Nov. 17 at
Citizens ro Save the Right ro apparently succeeded, but heavily in favor of repeal. So existing luminaires with 7:30. The authors a~e Don
Vote, the coalition opposing without the desired effect for did Cuyahoga County, a mercury vapor lamps and . Manuel, Bill Perrin, Bob !'ox
Democratic stronghold.
~e 1.
them.
underpass
fluorescent and Mike G.erlach who .wiD
Of the 17 counties voting
Balloting was heavy
There were indications that
lighting with new luminaires talk about the books they
against repeal, 16 were with high pressure sodium have had published.
· counties where voters had lamps which require 50
The program, free and
never before registered and percent less energy and OJl"n to the public, wiU last
where the opposition said provide equal lighting.
'
Three new councilmen
until 9 p.m. Th~re will be a
passage of Issue 1 would
Projects will be financed panel discusston on how were elected in Pomeroy
disenfranchise people.
with Federal-Air Interstate anyone can get their own Village and an incumbent
Reaction to Issue 1's and Primary Roads program work published and refresh- was returned to office in
success varied, as did the funds and state funds. ments will be served.
Tuesday's general election.
reasons given for the vote . Upgrading sites by counties
Ali
of
the
program
parWith lour council members
CETA
a~­
"I think this definitely sets Include:
The local veterans service Brinker,
ticipants
are
Meigs
county
to
be elected, incumbent
agency got a lift when the IPinistrator, to discuss hiring a precedent for the rest of the . - Athens, US 33-US 50 residents and each has Louis Osborne, Republican,
Meigs County Commissioners procedures under the com- country,'' said Jean M . interchpnge; US 33-0hio 13- , aut~ored at -least one book led the way with 443 votes.
Barren, organizer of Ohioans
met in special session missioner's CETA grants.
550 interchange.
dunng the 70s. Rev. Perrin Also elected were William A.
It
was
decided
by
the
for
the Preservation of Ohio
Tuesday afternoon with
US
:!!i-Ohio
160
wrote "Look Wbo's Killing Young, an independent
Gallia,
that
the Honest Elections (OPHE) · intersections · US 35-0hio 7 God," a defense of Christian candidate
Larry !livnor, department of commiSSIOn
with 401 votes;
administrative
services . remaining slot on CETA be which got . the issue on tile interchange;' Ohio 7 safety beliefs and an expo~ of Larry D. Wehrung, a
representative, and Naomi designated as a secrillary's hallot by collecting 500,000 rest area north of Galllpolis. subversive . forces w1thm Democrat with 369; James
position with the Veterans signatures in 10 days last
- Hocking, US 33, safe(y some denommations. It was Neutzling, a Republican with
swnmer. "I'm glad we won,"
Service Office. .
·
311 votes. Losers were in·
rest
area north of Logan; US published in ~971.
A decision on hiring a cook she said. " We worked hard."
33-0hio
93
interchange.
Bob
Fox
1s
a
poet
a~d
cumbent,
Ralph H. Werry,
"I think this will end the
lor the county infinnary will
Meigs,
US
33
safety
rest
novelist
who
has
worked
m
R.,
268
votes,
and Charles J .
be made at the Nov. 15 national legislation," said
Handley,
Republican,
areas
north
of
Pomeroy;
US
the
"
Poets
in
the
Schools"
277
case~
·meeting. The position as bus Warren J . Smith, secretary- 33-0hio 7 interchange.
programs.
He
has
had
votes.
driver for CAA Outreach treasurer of the Ohio AFLTraffic will be maintained several poems apJl"ar in
Gerl Walton was elected
Three · defendants were · Program was also discussed CIO, _part of the coalition during replacement work. magazines and reviews. One treasurer of Pomeroy as afined and five others forfeited and wiU be filled in the near which mounted a vigorous Estimated completion date ' of his most recent works, write-in candidate, receiving
and heavy-spending
bonds in the courl of Pomeroy future.
for the projects is June 30, "Destiny News,"
was 23 votes. ·
At 6:30 p.m. the com- · campaign agailist re.,.,al.
mayor Clarence Andrews
1978.
published
by
CafJl"nter
Press
In Middleport VlUage, with
Smith blamed allegations
missioners met in regular
Tuesday night.
"
ofRoute4, Pomeroy. Fox will four council members to be
Fined were Grover Booth;- session with Sheriff James J. of 1llection fraud made by the
talk abuut CafJl"riter Press elected, t.hree incumbents
proponents of' Issue 1, plus
Charleston, W. Va., $50 and Proffitt.
and its publication policies. returned were Allen L. King,
Sheriff Proffitt told the confusion at the polls brought
costs intoxication; Lester
Mike Gerlach is the author an independent with 382
Mild through tomorrow.,
Zinunennan, Pome.roy, $200 board that one of the old about by the wording of the Windy,
of
the recent "A Study of The votes; Marvin L. Kelly, R.,
with a chance of rain
and costs, assault and bat- ·department's cruisers had question on the ballot, for the
History
of Meigs County" with 334, and Dewey M.
tonight, lows near 50. Windy
tery, and Roy Boggs, Mar- blown an engine and the cost defeat.
which
wsa
produced through Horton, R. with 331. Leading
As worded on the ballot, a Thursday, rain likely, highs
shallville, $50 and costs, of repair would be "exthe
Meigs
County Pioneer
tremely high." The sheriff yes vote meant repeal of tbe in tbe middle 60s. Probability and Historical Society. This the vote count was the fourth
intoxication.
candidate to be elected,
Forfeiting bonds were was advised to obtain prices election day registration, of precipitation 20 pet. today, book is being used in the local Charles B. Mullen, a
Terry McCure, Rutland, $350, for replacement of the while a no vote was for 50 pet. tonight, 70 pet. Thurs- schopls to give students a Democrat, who received 395
posted ~n a driving while vehicle from local dealers. retaining the law enacted by day.
knoWledge of their own roots. votes. Defeated was Robert
Keith Wood, dog warden, the Qemocratic-controlled
intolicated charge; Floyd
It covers local history up to M. Pooler, Republican,
\Conllnued on page 10)
Cleland, Rutland, $25, told the board that his
the time of the civil War' and whose vote was 237.
RALLY PLANNED
telephone
number
is
985-4236.
speeding; ~yron McCoy,
Eastern High School gives fascinating infonnation
Robert H. Hysell was
Reedsville, $30, speeding; ·Attending bolh meetings
on focal scenes and local elected to the Pomeroy Board
students
will
hold
a
bonfire
BANKS TO CLOSE
Diann Jewell, Raclne, $30, were Henry Wells, Rich~rd
of Public Affairs with 325
and Jl"P raUy Friday at 6 p.m. people.
Jones,
and
Jim
Roush,
All
banks in Meigs County at the high school in
assured clear distance, and
Don Manuel will introduce votes. He was unopposed.
Robert Dugan, Pomeroy, $50, commi~sioners, and Mary will be clo.sed Friday:·-for preparation for the Eastern- the book he wrote based on
Racine Village had five
Hobstetter; clerk.
Veterans' Day.
intoxication.
his oWl) · experiences as a candidates for four seats on
Southern game.
prisoner of war in Korea. His council. Elected were Harry
time in captivity gave him a L.' Willford, 190; Earl E.
series of memories which he Cleland, 170; Clarence A.
has set down and titled, Bradford, In, and Albert
" Love, Hate, and War- Life Hill, 145. Defeated was Grace
of an Ex-P .O.W.' ' It is a look Roush with 106 votes.
There were only two
selection of a jury spanned to question each jurist, bul pected to be called today are at unusual and dramatic
PARKERSBURG
experiences
which
left
deep
also
added
that
some
of
them
Mary
Berry's
mother,
Mrs.
candidates
for four seats on
Testimony began this mor- two days was because each
impressions
on
him.
were
questioned
for
over
a
Flora
Boa;·d
'
and
Mary
the
Ruliand
Village council.
jurist
was
ning in Wood County Circuit potential
These
authors
wiU
share
half
hour.
Berry's
daughter,
Sherry
They
were
Bill
WlUlamson
Court in the lirst·degree questioned separately in
their
knowledge
of
writing
This
procedure
Is
in
direct
Hoffman.
They
reportedly
who
received
152
vOles and
murder lriel of 33 year-old Judge Gustke's chambers.
and
the
problems
of
getting
contrast
to.
When
the
trial
were
the
first
to
find
Mary
Joan
~tewart
who
received
Jolin Lewis Young of Mason. The only Jl"rsons aUowed
work
published.
·
The
initially
began
earlier
this
Berty's
budy.
132.
inside
the
judge's
chambers
Late Wednesday afternoon,
In Syracuse Village there
a 12-member jury was seated during the questioning were year in the Ma5on County, There is also a strong Pomeroy Library especlaUy
welcomes
all
writers
and
Circuit
Court.
·
possibility
that
Terry
was
also a shortage of councU
Young, his attorneys, John
in the case.
After questioning potential Brainard, 17, incarcerated at · people who want to publish candidates with three runYoung is accused of Anderson and Barry Casto;
stabbing 58-year-old Mason Prosecuting Attorney W. Dan jurists in public for less than Huttonsville Prison, may books to this November 17 ning for the four seata. The
three are Eber 0. Pickens,
businesswoman Mary Berry Roil, Assistant Prosecuting a half hour, Circuit Court testify today on behalf of the meeting.
By attending this program :!ll1; Clyde E. Triplett, 221,
to death on the morning of Attorney Bill Woodyard, and Judge James Holliday ruled prosecution . Earlier this
that Young could not receive year, Brainard entered a plea the public will have a chance and Lawrence D. Brogan
Dec. I, 1976. Young has been the judge.
According to Roll, 40 a fair trial here and ordered of guilty to the second degree lo Identify and learn more · with 192. George Holman·
-lound competent to stand
trial by Circuit Court Judge potential jurists were in- the change of venue to Wood murder of Mary Berry and abuut local writers. Future received 258 votes in his
received a five to 18 year progr~ms featuring Meigs . unopposed candidacy for ·
terviewed. lie estimated it County.
Arthur N. Gustke.
sentence
. .,
Among
the
witnesses
exSyra~use , 'Jlllage Treawrer.
One of the reasons the took an average of ~0 minutes

Incwnhents
run well
in villages

Veterans office
•
gtven secretary

Mayor rules in

8 court

Weather

Testimony in Berry murder hegins

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