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ll}lThe DatlySentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Monday, Oct. 3, 1977

.

.----------.- - --------------- : Hospital News

:

Jap plane
in Algiers
ALGI ERS , Algerta tUPI\
- The Japan Airlines DC-ll
hijacked by Japanese Red
Anny terrorist s arnved at

1 -. Algiers toda y on a flight from
Damascus. . Syrta,
the
Algertan .. Press Service an-

noWJced.

•

Earlier today in Damascus
Japanese
Red ' Army
hijackers freed 10 more
hostages and departed for ~ n
unknown destination with $6
million in ransom money a nd
19 remaining prisoners One
Amencan remamed aboard.
The five heaviJy arm~d

terrorists released eight
Japanese and t wo Amencan
hostages at alx&gt;ut I 30 a m

EDT, two hours after landing
In the Syna n capttal on a 700mtle flight from Kuwatl.
They left Damascus 1ft 5: 10
a.m EDT after takmg on new
fuel and food supplies
The hijacking. now m tis

I

commandeered

a

Ther e was no official Word

of the next destmation in the
latest globa l-drama tha t
began when the terrorists
commandeered the Japan Air
Unes DC8 over India last
Wednesday and flew it ~irS! to
Dacca, Bangladesh, where
they traded 115 hostages ·for
six imprisoned comrades and
S6 rmll1on in U. S. $100 bills.
llut a SPQkesman for the
Cyprus Mmistry of Com·
munlcations In Nicosia said
the atrline r wa s headmg
west. He said the captain of
Ute plane mdlcated he was
gorng to Algeria.

(Continued from Nl 1)
roadstde shoulder and careened mto the Cass R1ver early
Sunday. Saate Pollee satd the drtver of the Chevrolet Vega
Hatchback, Charles W Marcoux. 17, of Saginaw. was Ute only
occupant to escape when the vehtde plunged mto eight fee t of
water

Marcoux told pollee he dived mto the water several times
in a futile attempt to rescue the passengers. then ra_n to a
nearby gas statwn for help The vtctuns were Davtd Herrera,
15 , David Vargas, 15 ; Lorena Laporte, 13 ; Rose Zapata, 14 ;
Jesstca Rtvera, 11, and her sister, BeniUl Martinez, 11.

Israeli

$1~-:~
~e .=t::·Ae, Stl\C: 2,)®;~~

'

(Continued from pqe 1)
Israel '·went quite a dislance " toward meetmg the
Amen can p6sttion "But we
wtll take part 111 no Geneva
, Ul lks m which the PLO Ulkes
part," Ehrlich sa1d.
· At the Un it ed Nations ,
Secre tary Gene ral Kurt
Waldheun said 11 may lead to
a "breakthrough ."
Whether it does or not will
depend m part on Vance 's
continuing talks w1th Mtddle
Eastern diplomats at the
Umted
Na ttons
Arab
diplomats querted over the
weekend made tl clear thetr
optlffilsitn was based not only
oo the JOLnt statement but
a ls o on the "co ntlnum g

progress" of those Ullks

.

I

.

Sites picked
for centers
in
"
Butler, Warren

~
. j
~

.

1

\'ETER~NSMEMORIAI.
Satu ntay Adnnssiuns -

Socia.l
Calendar

TU ESDAY
SU tTON TOW NSHIP
Trustees . regular meeting, 8
p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse
Municipa l Hall
f
.. '
,,•,••,·.:········ :···· ·.•':·············· ··:····..·.·..··

RICH AR D FOWLER

Med ical Center .
He w as born A ug 25, 1897.
In Harri son Twp , son of the
late' Victor J ~ nd Nv!ry
Gr aham Nida y
Mr . Niday was a l ifelong
resident of Gal lia County He
marr ie-d t he for mer Margaret
Oonnall y on Apr il 27, 1918. In
Portsmouth . She preceded
h1m In detllth in 1970.
One daughter, Mrs . Martha
B1bb ler, Col umbus, survives
alongw lth twosons , Victor J
N1day, and Paul Dean Niday ,
both of Patr iot Star Route
One da ughter preceded him
In death f ive grandchil dren
Surv i ve
One
brother ,
Ra ymond Niday. Columbus,
surv1ves
Two brothers

Jetliner over the Philippmes
in Apnl 1976 and ended the
drama 111 Senghan, U bya,
eight days and 8,000 miles
later.

News •• in Briefs

..-..

:

Elba Bing, Shllde: Osrar
Im boden. Mmers ••il le:
Vic tor P auL N1d a-, . 80,
R •char d S Fow ler . 56 , Virginia Pie rce, Rutland .
form er coun t')t. treas urer and Mason , was dead on arr i val
,Saturday Dt~l' har~es rettred da iryman. a rest dent at the Plea san t Va lley
of Pa tr iot Sta r Rou te , d ied a t Hosptta l ea rly Sunda v . Bor n Robert DiVietro. Ma rvtn
6· 30 a m Sunda y 1n Holzer J u n e 24 , 192 1 in West McGuire, Vtrginia Meagher.
VICTOR ,NI DAY

sixth day . has logged about
4,800 miles. The record is held
by Fihpino Moslem rebels
who

Area Deaths

precedod h1m in death .

,

,,..,:-:,:-:· ::·:···: :,· :·.·:-:·:·:-::..::·:·:·:·::·.·: :·..·.·: :· ··

Fairview
News Notes

held

at

Clarence Norris. Clarence

Powell, Margaret Mako, Ida
Roush .
Sunday Admisstons - Paul
Burton, Ra ci ne ; Tonda
Walker , Reedsville; Richard
Duckworth. ·Syracuse : Paul
Hoffm an, Pomeroy ; Dewey
Smtih. Jr., Racine. Barbara
Gtlland; New Haven.
Sunday Dtscharges Alexander Fmser . Betty
Coleman, Dorothy Smith,
Paul Burton, Wilma Riggs,
John Mayes, Paulille Wolfe,
Wtlham Morn s, Gilbert
Wtlson
Fogles on g

the

· He served as Ga ll ia County
treasurer frOm 1951 until
1960, and wa i a ret tred
da lryma n and farmer Mr .
Niday was a Wor ld Wa r I

Funeral Home Tuesday af .1: 30 p.m . w1th the Rev .
Holzer Medical Center
George Hoschar and Rev
(Dischar_ges, Sept. 30}
Robert Ma r ing off ici ating
Jani
ce Abbott , Homer
Buri a l wi ll follow in the
veteran
..
Kirkland Memor ial Gardens . Batley, Eva Barcus. George
He was a me mber of the
F riends m ay call at the
Bates, J eannine Borde n, Roy
Centenary United Method ist fu neral home today from 2 to
Burns, Warner CoK, Carrie
Church.
- 4 p.m . and 7 to 9 p,m .
Dale,
Mrs Evan Dav1s and
Funeral ser;viCes will be

daughter, Louella Dea l,
AUGUST GARNES
Kalheleen Earl. Withe Eblin ,
t--uneral Home In Ga ll lpol ts
August Garnes, 85, of 101 Theresa Fellure, Kathy Fry,
with . Rev . Pea rl A Casto New St .. Pomeroy , d ied Dorothy I Grtffis , Fern
Thursd ay
even ing
at
offiGht flng .
Gussler, Georgta Hale, Mrs.
Buria l wHI be 1n Mou nd Hi ll Veterans Memoria l Hospital.
Born Ma rch 20. 1892, he was Delbert Harns a nd so n. Mrs.
Cemeter y . Fri ends may call
at the f uneral home today a son of George and Ei izaheth Thomas
Hut chi ns and
held I p. m Tuesda y at
Wetherholt . Moore

M cCoy -

after 4 p m
In lieu of f lowers, the
family requests contnb utions

to the Gall Ia County Chapter,

American Cancer Soc1ety
Pallbear er s
will
be
L awrence Sp r lege l, Da v1 d
Graha m , Smeltzer Rose ,
Jerry Evans , John Bane and
Walter Northup

W i l l iams Ga rnes. He was also
preceded in death by his w1 fe,

daughter . Armilda Jenkms,

Louise.

W1lliam Justice, Josephme·

He w~s a m em ber of
Pomeroy -MaSOn'iC Lodge and

Kea rns. Audra Kell er, I van

Buck Ridge Ba ptist Church .

Osbor ne, Odes Parso ns,
Lmda
Queen ,
Mahori
Radeler, Eva Shelfer. Sa lly
Sln vley , John Stanley,
Everret Wal bu rn, Hu rl
Westfa ll , Sam Willianls ,

M r Gar nes is survived by
three sons, Pa ul and Harry ,

DALE M. GIBBS
Dale M. Gibbs, 66, Torch.

Pomeroy , ~ nd Owe n, of
Col umbus,
Ga ;
fiv e
daughters, Hattie Mae Oyer .
Mabel Fowler and Frances
Solomon, Colu mbus; Edoth

died Saturd ay evemng at
Cam den Cl ark M emor ial
Hospita l i n Parkersbu r g
fo llow 1ng an extended tllness
Mr . Gi bbs w as born in
Athens Couhty near Hocking
port, · the son of the late
Charl es F and Helen M.a xon

22 gra ndchi ldren, 29 gr eatgrand chil dren , and fo ur
great-great gr andchi tdren .
F uneral services wi ll be
he ld Tuesda y at 3 p. m at
Ewi ng Chapel wi th the Re v

Gi bbs.
.
He att ended the Torch

Bapt1st Chu rch and was a
veteran of W W. II. He wa s
em ployed 18 yea r s for
Thomas Brothers at Belpre
and four years before h1 s
r etir ement In 197.1 at the

Walker

Mach iner y

Co ..

Parker sbu r g.
He is surv1ved by hi s wife,

Hazel Trip iell Gibbs; two

daugh t er s,

Mrs

Ph ll tp

Perd ue, Vincent ,
Oh 1o, and Mrs. Ci 1ff (Helen )
~ Jud y}

EXTENDED OUTLOOK \ Sawards, Bel pre ; three sons,
Da vid M.. L1itle Hocking ,
Weduesday through
James M ., Cool vil le, and
Friday, fair Wednesday
Roger, of Torch; one brother ,
and Friday with a chance
Ha rry S. Gibbs, Coolv ille,
of show ers Thursday. two ststers, Mrs Roy ( Lucy )
Highs In the 60s, and lows Deeter , Cool vil le, and Mrs .
In the 40s.

Colum bia, he was the son of
the tate Grover Cle\l eland
and Evale na F isher Fowler .
A r ura l letter carr ier for
the U. S. Posta l Department ,
he was veteran of World War
II. and a member of the
M as on- Un Ited Method is t
cnurch.
Surviv ing are his w ife,
Donna Brannon Fowler ; two
sons , David and Mark . both
at home ; four sisters , Mrs
Elizabeth Wooten , Col um ·
bu s!. Mrs . Harr iett Van
fw\a \re, West Columbia ; Mrs .
M argaret Rosenb e rger ,
Mason, and Mrs Joseph1ne
Kearns, Point Pleasant, and
a brother, Jack ,.of Mason
1 Funer:al
services w i ll be

E\w l n
{ Mary)
Becker ,
Mar iet ta , and s1 x grand ·
children
Fu neral ser vtces will be
held Tuesday at 2 p m at
White Funeral Home in

Coolville the Rev. Harold F.
Lem ley offic iating Burial

Y , and

Bu rns, Bron x, N

Consta nce Cra ig, Pomeroy ;

GEORGE F. CONDE
Georg e F Conde . 58,
Sy ra cu se , d ied Sat u r day
afternoon
at
Veterans
Memorial Hosp ital.
Mr Conde wa s bOrn April
21 , 1919 the son of the la te
George and Anna Hendr icks
Conde He wa s also pr ecedeO
tn dea t h by a br othe r ,
RJ chard , and a siste r .

Elozabeth

Mr. Conde was a m em ber
of Boi ler Maker s Union 667 ,

the Eagles Lodge, and Sacred

Heart Chu rch
He is survived by his w 1fe,
Bonnie Morrow Conde ; one
daugh t er, Diana Ya ncy ,
Manhattan, · Kan sas ;
a
stepson. John Ash , Pomeroy ,
six. stepda ught ers , Sh 1rle y

Ash , Nancy Reed and Patsy
Warner,

of 6 Pomeroy ;

all

Linda Baker, Middleport, and
Lou VVaggoner and

will be In Stewart cemetery

~ry

call at the funeral home at

Jeanne Waggoner , both of
Ripley ; one brother , Eugene

at HO&lt;kingport. Friends may

any time.
By Mrs. Herbert 'Roush
SAMUEL 0 . SHAFFER
Glen Hayme of Galion
Samuel 0 Shaffer. 73 ,
spent a lew days wtth his Minerai Wells, W. Va . dlod
COLUMBUS (UPI )
cousin, Mr and Mrs. Rod Saturday e,venlng at Fa ~r.
Mason and Fairfield have Sayre.
view Manor Nursing Home at
Ohio, fo l fowlng an
been selected as sites for
Mrs. Betty McGuire, Beverly , Illness
. He was born
menial retardation centers, daughter Ricka, Pomeroy, e)(tended
at Ravenswood, W. Va ., son
to cost $7.5 million apiece, visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe of the late Silas and Nellie
' state Department of Mental Manuel Sunday.
Pickens Shaffer.
was a retlrod employe
Health
and
Mental
Mrs. Edna Roush is visitmg of He
M. J. Belt Transfer Co.,
Retardation Di r e ctor .lllr. and Mrs. Russell Roush· and
Q former employe of
Timothy B. Moritz said while Mrs. Gladys Shields is Kieheff' r Co., Parkersburg .
He Is survived by a
today.
visiting her granddaughters
The facih\y in Mason, m Largo, Fla. Mrs. Debbie daughter. Mrs. Ed (Gloria}
Rood, Coolville ; one son,
Warren County, Will be a Day, son Ricky, returned to Charles
Shaffer, Be veri y ;
prescnptive \raming center Florida where they will make one brother,...Rome Shaffer,
for the mentally retarded , their home.
Parkersburg ; four sisters,
Byers. Ravenswood ,
serving up to 104 residents in
Mr. and Mrs Gary Mil,ler Marie
Mary
Parks
Addle Dills,
an area including Warren , and children, Amy and Jason Parkersburgand
, and Murgie
Hamilton, Butler, Clermont, of Bellvue, are visiting Mr. Walters, Clarington, and si x
Clinton and Brown counties,
grandchlldre11 .
and Mrs. Charles Lawson.
He was also preceded in
Montz sa1d.
Arthur Warner of Racine death
by two brothers and
Adevelopmental center for
visited his parents, Mr. and two s i st~rs.
the . me ntally retarded is
Mrs. Homer Warner Tueoday
Poneral services , wit be
planned for Fatrfie ld , in
held VVednesday at I p.m at
evening.
White Funeral Home in
Butler-County, an&lt;) will serve
Mr . a nd Mrs. Russell the
Cool ville with the Rev .
up to 112 pallents, Moritz
&amp;ush, Mrs. Edna &amp;ush Richard Thomas officiating .
saitf.
dined at Redwood Inn Burial w il l be In Sunset
Both fac iltttes are expected
Restaurant at Belpre Sunday. f-Aemory Garden s, Parkers.
burg . Fnends may c ill at the
to provide 200 new jobs with
funeral home after 7 thts
annua l payrolls of $3 rrulllon .
evening
The
departme nt
is
survey mg several s1tes 111
•
Fatrfiel d for the facility
PLEASANT VALLEY
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Lt.
there, while negotiatwns for
Discharges - Mrs. Jack
Gov. Richard F., Celeste
an already ~ hosen s1 te in. Young, Clifton; Paul Sargent,
announced today hlo office
Mason will begm soon, Moritz Apple Grove ; Tina Rou@., ___ hal- received a $50,000
said
Point Pleasant; Wavie Stone, federal granllo coordinate
LANCE NOT BITIER
Leon ; Mrs. William Black,
a program aimed at gelling
PHOENIX, Ariz (UPI ) - Henderson; Kevin Hughes,
more Ohio cbUdren lm·
Bert La nce says his Ashton ; Kelly Hughes,
munlzed agalnBI cbUdhood
expertence as U.S. budget Ashton ;
Mrs.
Orvill e
dlseasl!s.
director didn't make hun Williamson, Southside ; Katie '
To dramatize receipt of
bt ller and should n't stop Mayes , Southside; J.atnes
the grant, Celeste and his
oloers · ~fr,Qm , see kmg Durbin, Point Pleasant;
wife, Dagmar, look lhelr
governtnent jobs - "I'm not Eulah • Glover, Henderson;
slx·week old son, Stephen,
bitter about the press. I'm not Agatha Gibbs, Mason ;· Nellie
to Wlodior CbUd and Yout.b
bitter abo,u t the Se nate Ken\, Point Pleasant; Carol
ProJect Commlllllty Clinic,
co mmittee /" Lance said Blakeman, Henderson ; Mrs.
where he received his first
durrng a weekend address to Alvin Vester, Leon: Evva
set of shots.
the Young
Presidents Mill er , Po in t Pleasant ;
Celeste sa id he hopes to
Orga nization
&amp; nnie Ohlinger, Jr., West
raise th e Immunization
Columbia ; Mrs . Hansford
. PARTY PLANNED
level to 70 per cent of aU
HARRISONVILLE - The Boles , Point Pleasant ; . pre-acboolers and 82 per
Harrisonville PTO is plan- Charles Varian, Clifton ; Mrs.
cent of all achool·age
ning a Halloween party for Price
Patrick,
Point
cbUdren wlthill the next
year.
the children at 7:30 p. m on Pleasant ; Rpymond Moss,
Oct. 28. All donattohs of App le Grove; Mrs.. Wtlliam :....:::.. ·:·········: · . :·-: .... ,,.., .. ,, .... ,...... ,...,
wrapped candy and money Morgan and daughter, Apple
will be accepted by the group Grove ; Mrs. Thomas Reit·
WILL BE SELLING
with donation• to be taken to mire, Letart; Beulah Oliver,
Pleasant ;
Mrs.
the school from Oct. 23' Point
There will be a rw11111age
Mayes
and sale at the St. Paul felluwshtp
through Oct. 27. Also Timothy
donations will be picked up in daughter, Ga111polls; An· hall from 9 a m to 3 p.m.
the Harrisonville area . Those thony, Roush, Mason; Blain TuesdHV H IS srommr ed by
wishing the pickup service R1ggs, J r., 'Pomt P!casa11t ; !hi.!'' r'"'' J1t•l ~~ l dill dnd St
are to call 742-3048 or 742-264 3 ~ Shawn Wood , Po int Pleasa nt.I Jll( l/1t:JJUI ctll!s,
1

McGutre, E lvie Mizc, Ka thy

Conde. Reedsv ille ; th ree

grandchildren.. tw o nieces

and three nephews.

Funeral services wil l be
held Tuesday at 10 a. m. at
Sacred Heart Church with
the Rev . Father Paul Wel ton

Milky Way likened to
•
•
•
cosmic river m space

Har riS, a son, Btdwell

Mr.
and Mrs . Edward Martin, a

''part of some kind of cosmic

river flowmg through the
untve'rse" at I 3 mJUion mph
The researchers, Lawrence
Laboratory physicist Richard
Muller . phySicist Geo rge
Smoot a nd graduate student
Marc Gorenstein, have
pubhshed thetrfmdmgs m t11e
furrent issue of the jow-nal
"Physical Rev1ew Letters."
Their research i ~ based on
an ongoing NASA study at the ·
Ames Research Center in
Mountain Vtew, Calif., where
meas urem ents of cosmic
"black body" radtalwn have
been taken aE!Jard a high
nymg plane.
Initial results of their researc h,
Muller
says ,
mdicates "there ts a lot more
large scale motion in the
untverse than has generally
been ~op posed "
"I don 't thtnk anybody can
cast serious doubt on the
accuracy of our data,"
Muller, 33, satd
'
The Milky Way 's estunated
speed 1s not surprising to the
Berkely group but the latest
tnfor m atwn indi ca t es the

galaxy is movmg in the
opposite d irection than

~ci en ­

ga lax.tes are m?vmg even

faster than th ~ M1lky Way so
that relattve to them the
Mtlky W~y appears to be
movutg m r everse of •ts
actual du·ectwn.
The
''black
body"
radtatton, a famt radio Signal
111 the nucrowave range of the
spe ctrum, is' beheved In be a
remnant of the onginal "Big
Bang" I explosion that
ph)'sicists beheve marked the
birth of Ute universe some 20
billion years ago.
Proponents of Ute- ''Big
Bang" theory have generally
•

.

Goodma n

and daug hte r ,

William

Hash .

~~

~ktmsan
I

PIANOS

galaxtes out to a distance of
some 300 li~ ht yea rs and
came up with a speed of 600 to
700 kilometers a second,
approximate ly the same

1

(

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ewing
friends
Bunal
family

several uncles, aunts and
cousins . Preceding t he Infant

morning
illness .

dleport. Mr. Caledied Sunda y
foll ow 1ng

a .' long

D8lVING

'

Mifrowave

KVSEUM PJECil.

Cooking
Is Kid. Stuff!

and Wishing You Weren't ·

S

top driving and start lookin g! When you're in the
market for a new or later model car ... see us.
Our Auto Loan s are gea~ed to help you buy that car
you want now ... when you want it . . . and let you
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-it's the same day ... you 'II have the money to drive
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'

It's Safe and Fun ... ·
R~~®

~~~·~0~0.

Fn Farnters Bank

Prices Start A-Prices Start At '19.8.00
11 ro lcttocn 011 lh! rf'o\~\'11111'

wre

~o~rr m~(jn~ l n;lf1

Tn.ot !1'1Viln~

coo,l lotbo• 1 t&gt;.tr~c~

even Uu ~rr~•tcmil" ~ lt!tvlll ~ · f"' " \''1o Ill'
h~e ~''"" And Jh.o l, rei\JI, ompotl.onl
'""''-••U'&gt;f' 11'\l" m.oqnl"t'"" " tlw m""l ,
omnort 1olll rnmpon!'f11 •n '' '"'~'""'~ ..,
oHf'll II p.1v• In ( hNO tho • w;ort onh
f • 'l 1

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"t fol
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&lt;

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....

INGLES
FURNITURE

lo.

Phone: 992-2635
106 N. 2nd Ave.

.........

...._

POMEROY, OHIO

....

$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit

Mi dd lepo rt, 0 .

•
•

..

:~~"'&gt;.~"'&gt;.-~~;:;.,.,.~;;:;:-::~~"""~"'&gt;--'-'0;.'-~--~· $).."&lt;$$

lnsllr~nce

Corporation

..

facelifling. The courthouse has been repainted white by
th e Gheen Printing Co. of Racine. A worker on the left in
the photo is completing work on the winding stairway
leading to the thtrd floor .
•

~,News . . ._in Brief~ Letart ·Falls.'

WASHINGTON - IN THE LAST SESSION of Congress,
both Larry McDonald and Andrew Young were Democratic
congressmen from Georgia. Now Young is U. S. Ambassador
to the United Nations and McDonald wants him unpea!'hed.
McDonald, a conservative, Introduced a resolution Monday
calling lor Young's impeachment under a constitutional
provision that federal officials can be ou:rted lor "high crime
and misdemeanors. "
~
, A spokesman In the offices of Speaker Thomas O'NeUI satd
processing of the resolution had not been completed ..
McDonald told a news conference Young has made "racist"
remarks and "aligned himself with world revolutionary
forces." The resolution cites 21 points against Young,
includlhg his failw-e to oppose admission of Vietnam to the
United Nations. .

Funeral Home where
may call at any time .
will be In the Cogar
cemetery .

m . af K1mes Funeral Home in
Pa r kersburg .
"'" ,
Among his s urv1vors are a
son, Kenne-th Cafe of Mid

.,

NEW FACE - The Me~gs County Courthouse, not
only one of the oldest 111 Ohio bul also unique because of
outside entrances at three levels, is undergoing a

By United Pressliltemalional ·
WASHINGTON - THE SUPREME COURT has cleared
the way lor Richard Nixon's White House tapes to be screened
for evidence in a damage suit stemming from mass arrests
made during 1971 antiwar demonstrations in Washington.
At the same time that Nixon lost his third White 'House
tapes case in the Supreme Court Monday, the justices put an
end to government efforts to prosecute lawyer Frank DeMarco
Jr . who prepared the former President's now-famous 1969 tax
return .

In death wer e a grandmot her ,

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 120

Downtown ·lot declared
nuissnce in Pomeroy

SALE!

Just re cer~·ed a sh1pment of k i mball pianos. For
Anniversary Week buy the piano of your choice at
special sale price. Spinets and consoles in walnut.
Pine, oak . maple and cherry finish Use our sen stble
cred tt se rv1ce .

He said tliat .;,hile ooly· a handful of natioos produce .
sophisticated weapons, the number of nations sil!king ·to
(iurooase them ts increasing rapidly.
In Africa, carter said it is "essential that all outsltk natlooa
exercise restraint in their actions in Zimbabwe and Namibia
so that we can bring about majority rule and avoid,a widening
war that could engulf the southern half of the Afi-ican conflict."
But Carter said "of all the regional cooflicts in the world,
none holds more menace th an the .llliddle cEBst."
"War there has carried the world to the edge of nuclear
· ~fro ntalion " he said; w-grng "good faith negotiations between the Arabs countries and Israel .. . with the recognition
that all have the right to eltist in peace, with early establishment of dtplomatic relations, econqrnic and cultural exchanges!'

at Y- enttne

ANNIVERSARY WEEK

Shtrl ey

Surv iving besides the
parents ~re a grandmother,
Mrs. Edith Coga r, Syracuse ;
a
grctndfather , Herbert

A m ot n~ q1~ t'~ ~ou ~ y~/0" ol lull '"'"'r(lnly

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesda y, October 4, 1977

ELBERFELDS

Shade, died at birth Fr iday at _ Caie. Par k er~bu rg , will be
Pleasanr Valley Hospita l.
held Wednesda y at 10: 30 a

Year
War r iln1y

e

,

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compa r ed to 96 near by

·--!Discharges, Oct. I}
Vtrgene Bolm,, Sa ra Clark, Henthorne, Alta Jenk ins , .
Donna Cobb, Mrs Tex Cor fee ~' ran c t s McCullocl1, Mrs
and daug hte r ,
Ltlltan Eddie Mollett ,and daughte r,.
Edwards, Fred Fields, Mary Dana Rayburn, Mrs. Roger
Ford, Dtane Fredenck, AlUla Rose a nd son , Robert
Hall, Sharon Halley. Rtckie Schul er , Lmda Seymore ,
Ha rvey, Lisa J ohnst on, Carolyn Stewart, Elizabeth
Cha rles Ke ise r , Ruby Thornton.
Mea dows , Minme Mill er,
~Births, Oct. 2)
Worthy Nibert, Hattie Norris,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pugh,
Jeremy Patton. John Peters. a daughter, Wellston : Mr and
K1plm g Reed,
Myrtle Mrs : Charles Doll!l.er, a
Sampso n, Lau ra Scott , daughter , Middleport. Mr.
Cla re nce Shaff er , Mrs and Mrs . Michael Blame, a
Wayne Shoemaker and son, son, Galhpohs. Mr and Mrs
Cnslle Swartz , Mary Wears. Carl Tennant. a son, New
(Births, Oct. I )
Haven, W. Va .
'
Mr, .a nd Mrs. Donald
Vaughn , a son, Pomeroy Mr
and Mrs. Joseph Holtz, a son,
Wellston.
~Discharge s , Oct. 2)
William Bell, Jarvie Burke,
James Carpenter, Mrs. John

W. K. CALE
Funeral serv ices for W K.

Fu ll ~

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LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lod ge 164,
F&amp;AM, will meet in regular
session at 7:30 p. m. Wed·
nesday at the temple. All
Master Masons are lnvit•rl

•

da ughter, Pomeroy .

infant daughter of Richard
and Brenda Whaley Cogar:,

Whaley of Bradbury, and

IiEttN THOMAS

In an address prepared !or the U.N ; General Assembly , the att,u k ' " ' lloc Unlloo States, our terrttorles·or armed forces or
President said " In Strategic Arms Urnitation Talks we and the ~ "uch " " attacl&lt; on ow- allies "
UNITED NA TIO.NS (UPI ) - Declaring that a significant ·Soviets are witl\in sigh\ of a significant agreement on limiting
The Prest dent focused his address on the role the United
arms limitation agreement is · 'Wilhin sight ," President Carter the Inial number ol weapons and in reslrteting t•erta in states mtends to play tn limiting and reducing arms,
today offered to cut the U.S. nuclear arsenal by 50 per cent if categortes of weaJ)O'ls of special concern to each of us ."
coo trolling nuclear technology. restricting the arms trade, and
the Russians do likewise, and pledged America will never use
Hpaid "We can al!ll) start the crucial process of curbing the settlrng disputes by peaceful means.
·
the weapons except in self defense.
relentless march ilf technolgtcal development, which makes
He noted Utat the nuclear club has not expanded 1ts
Carter also said "my country believes that the tim~ has nucle'ar weapons even more difficult to control."
_ memberslup in 25 years and said "by genuine cooperation, we
come to end all explosions of nuclear devices, no matter what
If the two superpowers succeed in limiting weapons, he said, can make certain that it grows no further."
their clauned justification - peaceful or military."
they "will alllo create a foundation for better relations in other
On the subject of conventional arms, Carter said worldwide
Carter, who flew here from Washington for a two-day sta,y , spheres."
military expenditures are now in the neighborhood of $300
had a calendar crowded with speaking engagements, talks
To reduce the reliance of nations on nuclear arms , Carter billion a year.
with heads of delegations from around the world, and crucial said " I hereby so lemnly declare oo behalf of the United States
"Last year the nations of the world spent more than 60 times
consultations With the Egyptian and Israeli foreign ministers that we wUI not use nuclear weapons except m self-defense ; as much equipping each soldier as we did educating each
later today.
•
that is, In circumstances of an actual nuclear or rnnventinnal child," he added

expan~IOn of the uruverse,

Evelyn VVhaley, a nd a
Sacr.·ed Heart Cemetery . grandfather, Lafe Cogar.
Funer al ser vi ces will be
Rosarx ser vices will be held
this evening at 7: 30 p m . at held at 1 p m. Tuesday at the

INFANT COGAR
Angel Elisabeth Cogar,

By

UPl White Houe llepurter

Muller's group was able to
determme an approltimate
speed and direction of the
Milky Way, whi ch they say is
headed ~1ward a spot in the
sky where the constellation
Hydra lies

officiati ng . Burial will be 1n

Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call at any time.

Russians dared to reduce nuclear arms by ¥2

BEitKELEY, Cahf. (UPi l . speed Muller's gl'oup found . believed th e unt ver se is
- New data ga thered by a
But ~e thought Ute ga i~ Y-expa nding at a uruform rate.
grtlup
of
Berkeley moved m nearly the pppos1te
By measuring the strength
resea rchers indicates the directJon Muller says this of the " black body" s1gnal
Milky Way galaxy may be may . mea n 1tha t nea rb y re lative to the- gener a l

tis ts
have
prev tous ly
thought.
Astronom•r Vera Rubm of
Susan WiUtams .
the Carnegte Institu te m
~Births, Sept. 30)
Wash mgton recently clocked
M r . and M r s. Fra nci s the Milky Way's veloc ity

son , Wellston. Mr. and Mrs.
D
·
M C
· k
Edd ie Buffington offi ciati ng .
enm s
c orm1c , a
Burial woi i be in Beech Grove daughter, Oa k Htll ; Mr. and
Cem eter y Friends ma y ca ll . Mrs. Robert Shaffer, a

at !he fu nera l home an y t tme .

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WASHINGTON- FOR 26 MiLLION AMERICANS, poor
health carries an unusually heavy price tag. They don't have
health insurance, Self-employed, unemployed, marginally
employe(!, students or in such p~r h~lth they can't qualify ,
these Americans have neither prtvate msurance nor actess to
public programs like Medicare lor the aged and disabled or
Medicaid for the needy .
While 8 mUiion of them have other sources of aid like the
Ve!l:rans Administration, Ute oUter 18 million are totally
·without protection against the soaring costs of health care, the _
Department of HeaiUt, Education and Welfare says. A\ a
national health insw-ance hearing today, HEW asked for
testimony from politicians, lawmakers, business and medical
groups and others with an interest in drafting a national heaiUt
Insurance plan.
. .
True to form , the Amerkan Medical Assoc1a1ton planned
to testify til favor of private health insurance through the
existing insurance Industry.
MADISON OHIO - SCHOOL TEACHERS in the Madison
district went o~ strike today In a labQr digpute, pickettng the
schQIIIS and administration building.
Superintendent Albert Wilgus told the 4,700 pupils to come
to class and bring their own IWlches. He satd classes would be
handled by .Yolunteers, substitutes, and ~on-&lt;~triking teachers.
The teachers decided Monday mght to strike after the Board of
Education rfijected a proposed compromise. setuement.
CHILLICOTHE - WEAREVER ALUMINUM INC.
Pr'esident R. L. Beauchal:np says a strike by alx&gt;ut 500
'· members of LocalliO of the Aluminum Workers International
• may cause business losses that are "hard \o regain." The
fa ctory woekers, who l)ave rejected a proposed aetUement,
have been picketing the Wearever plant since Saturday
afternoon. Olmpany officials went to court Monday :'""ki~g an
injunction to allow salaried employees to cross the ptckel Im.es.
Beauchamp said' Monday the proposed agreement,
rejected by the workers, "would have put wages and be;teflts
among (he highest in the cooking utensil industry." He satd the
strike comes at "a very bad tune when ·customers are
preparing for fall and Chri~as, " adding, "business losses at
this time are hard to regam .
"Apparently some employees are not concerned with the
continuation of Uteir jobs," Beauchamp said.
NEW YORK - SAY GOODBYE TO TilE YOKU.III famtlv
(Continued on page 1 0)

Amy (Kingsland) Jones,
Jackson, has 15 days to clean
up property she owns next to
the new Stlffier store on Main
St.·or the village will order I\
done at the expense of Mrs.
Jones.
Pomeroy Council Monday
night passed a resolution
declaring the property a
nuisance.
The resolution orders .lllrs.
Jones to correct the "health
hazard" as now, exists,
. remo\re.flammable materials
and 'toose materials that
remain standing, and to fill
Ute lot and-&lt;~r erect a fence or
barricade
to
prevent
pedestrians from falling Into
a hole on the lot.
In the event the village

makeo improvements to the
lot, then Mrs. Jones will
reimburse \he Yillage with
Interest. The vlllage will have
a lien on the lot lor all expenses, Including Interest for .
in'lprovements.
In other business Mid·
dleport village tennlnated its
contract lor water from
Pomeroy Village as of Nov. l.
Council accepted the
reslgnallon of councilman
PhD Globokar effective Oct.
1. Council has 30 days In
which to appoint a person to
council and if It !aU. to do so,
1\ then becomes the
responsibility of the mayor,
who alao has 30 days.
Meeting with council was
Joe Struble who spoke on

behalf of the Pomeroy E·R
Squad.
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Struble explained that
three members are in·
terested In taking advanced
training given by a
representative from Hocking
Technical
College
In
NelsonvUie. The. classes will
be held In .llliddleport three
nights a week lor a period of
three months. When the men
are finished, they will be
certified by the state as
EMTs, or "parame&lt;Ucs."
The cost per person for the .
school Is '100, making a total
of $300. Council approved the
request and commended the
emergency squad members
and fire department mem·
(Continued on Jllllle 10)

Some head j\lst
screwed on wrong

Elderly man hit
·i n rr oad by truck

school entered

An elderly man was los\ 'control of his car when a
hospitalized with fractures of lire blew out. The vehicle ran
the legs.followmg a traffic ac- off the nght stde of the
cident
at 8·40 a.m. Monday on highway striking an embank·
Sheriff's deputies were on Center) at Washington, D. C.
8,
two nules south of SR ment.
the scene o\ler the weekend He asks anyone traveling the
143
in
Meigs
County.
and Monday at lhe tetln Uood road over the weekend
The
Galha-Meigs
Post
Falls Elementary School who observed suspicious
Htghway
Patrol
sa1d
State
where vandalism resulted In vehicles to call his office.
Robert
S.
Scout,
79,
Rt.
2,
heavy property damage and
Middleport Police have
Albany,
was
walking
along
eight cartons of milk were reported missing 1971 John
stolen.
Deere 310 backhoe-front end the highway when struck by a
Sheriff James J. Proffitt'• loader with a roll lop canopy, truck operated . by Jan M.
DepJ. said entry, gamed yellow in color. The backhoe O,Bienness Hospital in
\hrou!lh a coal chute, was was taken from the B &amp; K Athens by a SEOEMS am·
Football games not played
made some ttme since Construction on Pearl St., bulance. Pickett was ctted for
by Southern Local will go
Friday. Nine window panes in believed around September ])it-skip.
Lewis A. Young,27, San· down as forfeits, but will not
the buDding were knocked out 26. Information related to this
dyyille,W.Va.
was charged be counted m the final stanas were all the light bulbs In theft also is needed, the
with
driving
left
of the center dings in the _Southern Valley
the girls' restroom.
sheriff said.
followmg
an
accident
at II : 15 Athletic Conference under a
In other criminal activity,
a.m.
Monday
on
John
's
Creek . resolution approved Monday
Max Davis of the Columbus
Rd.
one
and
one
tenth
miles during the annual fall
and Southern Ohio Electric
wesl of Rocky Fork Rd. The meeting of the league at
Company reported Monday
patrol
said Young's car Kyger Creek High School.
that the company's radio
Sunny today and Wed· sideswiped a car operaied by
According to a league
equipment had been stolen · nesday, highs days between Jerry L. Fillinger, 19, Rt.l,
spokesman,
Southern will
over the weekend from trans- 65 and 70. Clear tonight, lows
Crown
City.
Fillinger
suf·
close
ils
doors
following
miller buDding located on the to , 45 . Probablllty of
fered
minor
injuries.
Follow·
classes
Friday.
All
football
flood road. Entry was gained precipitation near zero
mg
the
impact,
the Young car games scheduled against
by breaking off locks on \he percent today and tonight, 10
ran over an embaltkment league opponents after Fri·
door. Stolen were a mo\rac percent Wednesday.
then
overturned.
day will go as forfeits,
radio, battery charger, two
A
backing
mishap occurred although the losses will.not be
balleries, and an amplifier
at 4:30 p.m. Monday on SR placed in the win-loss col·
valued at approximately
124, one tenth of a mlle east of WIUlS .
F.XTENDED
OUTLOOK
$3,000.
SR681.
State troopers satd an
Thursday
through
It was ~ ~ecided that
The buDding was entered
auto
opera~ by Ray C. Southern will r\ot be eligible
Saturday,
a
chance
of
approximately one year ago
75, Reedsv1lle, backed for the league chomp10nship.
when a radio system also was ohowers mainly north· Sm~th,
into a car ~wned by Nancy At the present time, the Tor·
Thursday
and
lair
Friday
stolen.
Bartimus, 21, Reedsville.
nadoes are 3-1 overall and 1-0
Sheriff Proffitt said lhe and Saturday. Hlflba wW be
A single car accident oc- mtheSVAC.
In
t.be
60s
or
low
70.
and
radio equipment has been
curred at 7:55 p.m. on
League officials reelected
enteFed in , the NCIC lows will be mostly In lbe
Johnson's Rd. nine tenthS of a Gary Minton, Kyger Creek
tOs,
(National Crime Information
::·:·:·:·.::·:·.·:·:::·:·:·: :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:~: ·:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :·· mile north of LitUe Bullskin guidance c ounselor and
Rd . The patrol said Randall assistant· baskethall coach as
D. Caldwell, 16, Gallipolis, president of the SV AC. Other
TAX MEETING SET
Special
meeting
to
discuss
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy Emergency a six point five mill tax levy
Squad answered a call to will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Mulberry Ave. at 10:57 a.m. Wednesday in the cafeteria of
'
Monday for Mrs . Gerald the Southern HigH School. at
Racine.
All
parents
are
In·
Wildermuth who had a
COLU.IIIBUS (UPI) - Ohio with buying the lines, Simons
possible broken wrlsl. She vited to the meeting at which has federal money to acquire said.
was taken to Holzer Medical time questwns on the levy, to rail lines from Marietta to
Federal money to acquire
Center. At 12:23 p.m., the be voted on at a special Minerva in the heart of Ohio's the 120 miles of deactivated
squad went to Chester for election on Oct. 25, wUI be coal fields but is stymied over track of the defunct Penn
Ralph Mathews who was also answered. Several PTO units the issue of who will pay lor · Central is part of the $5.8
taken to Holzer Medical of the district are sponsoring tiUe searches to buy the lines million grant received from
the meeting.
Center.
the
Federal
Railroad
and rlgh\ of ways.
,
Nat Simons, executive Administration (FRA).
Simons and Sen . John
director of the Ohio RaU
Transportation Authority Glenn, D.()hio, jointly
(ORTA), told board members announced the grant last
Monday trustees of the Friday in Washington. lt was
Merilbeis of 4-H and FFA
To be discussed at this bankrupt Penn Central offered through the U.S.
selling animals a\ Ute 1977 ' meeting will, be selection of Railroad \hat controls the · Regional Rail Reorganization
Metg' County. Junior Fair; representatives to serve ~n lines refuse to pay for title Act to ORTA which would
allow the Ohio agency to
along with their parents, are the Sale Committee, a brtef searches.
Since this involves at least acquire vital rail lines not
reminded that the Meigs summary of the sale, review
County Sale Committee will of the expenses and receipts, $500,00o set aside for the legal , now In use.
Simons said the grant
meet on Thursday evening, review of the 1977 sale and work, ORTA may wmd up
would
permit the purchase of
October 6 at 7:3n p.m. at the any other topics needm g paying more for Ute title
the
120
mtles of ra il lines
appratS!tl,
along
search
and
County Extension Offtce.
attenti.m.

:rn

A deer was killed in an acct·
dent at 8·40 p.m. on SR 325.
The anunal ran into the path
of a car operated by Ricky A.
Matheney, 20, Rt.l, Vinton.

- ~~edt.be..a. .

Southern's .g ames
no-count forfeits

Weather

· Three
calls
lor
asohlanee lo t... Mid·
dleporl Volualeeremergency unit were
answered Monday, one of
them proving a fak e.
The squad weul to SR 7
below Middl..,..rt al Z: 54
p.m. lor Gbarlt1 Cuter,
Syracuae who waiUea to
Vel'erana M11morlal
Hoopltal aafleriAI · a
nosebleed. All:tl p.m., the
squad weal lo BruaOway
St. for John Krawscoyn
who was havlnc cbell
paints. He wao \Uea to
Holzer Medical Center.
AI 11: t5 p.m. the men
were caUed to 111 MUJ St.
where a baby waa .~ported
cbotlol. Tbere,... 110 such
address. Later, a telephone
operator caUed vU1a1e hall
to report that lhe mcldenl
wao laking place on
Laurel St. Tlie Middleport
11DH aearched l.aure\ St.,
sliD ceald n~ lind a home
where a baby was cboldll1.
So
the
Pliileroy
Emergency aqaad was
called to chec• l.aunl St.
In Pomeroy for Rdl u
IDcldeDL 'l'lull uM' ftlllld
find 80 lUCia , ~ale ,
Later; • leleJIItone
operat.r called 111•111 1 .

officers named were ·Jtm
Sprague, Kyger Creek head
football coach as vice·
president and Keith Carter,
KC head cage coac h,
secretary-treasurer.
Due to a large defi cit from
the 1976-17 school year, each
school was assessed a $50 an·
nual membership fee.
Due \9 econonucal reasons,
the · alliiual SVAC Cage
Preview was tenta\lvely
scheduled for Friday, Nov. l8
at Kyger Creek High School
instead of the Paul R. Lyrie
Genter. Hannan Trace and
Symmes Valley wlll meet in
the opepmg game at 6:30p.m.
North Gallia and Eastern will
face each other at 7 :30 p.m.
while Kyger Creek and
Southwestern tangle al 8:30
p.m. If. Southern is able to
participate, the Tornadoes
will meet an unnamed opponent at 9:30 p.m. that even·
ing.
'
The next meeting will be
Nov.l5 for the selection of the
aii-SV AC foothall \earn.

Program will
be explained
to candidates
Southeast Ohio Junior Mia•
today aru10unced an arlen· •
tatlon meeting for all high
school senior girls ol110uthel'l\.
Ohio Interested Iii entering "
the 1977-78 Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss Scholarship
finals Nov. 20 at the Metgs
Junior
High · School
auditorium In Mldilli!port.
The meeting wUl be lield at
the Meigs Inn t.nquet room
In Pomeroy, Sunday, Oct. 9 at
2:30 p.m. when the Junior
Mill Program will be ez.·
plalned and date• lor
rehearsals set.
Interested high school
senior girls unable to attend
may write to the Southeast
Ol)lo Junior Miss ~cholarshlp
Program, P. 0. Box 104,
Pomeroy, Ohio t5769.
Members of the board of
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss,
Inc. are Ralph H. Werry,
presiden~ ; Joyce Quillen,
vice president; Tonya Davis,
secretary; Wlllla:m Quickel,
treasurer, and Calllta Searls
and Johl Sellers directors.

Title searches block rail purchase

Sale committee meeting set

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extending !rom Marietta
through Cambridge ,
Newcomerstown, Dover and
Minerva. It would connect
Youngstown and the Lake
Ene ports o( Ashtabula and
Conneat to the &lt;l!io River and
Ute southeastern Ohio coal
fields.
The money would also
allow ORTA to acquire some
12 miles of rail lines vital to
the possible location of Honda
Motor Co. motorcycle plant
near Marysville.
Simona said the proposed
Hooda rail line project south·
west from Peoria was
analyzed. He said the line
would be activated as soon as
a letter of commibnenl is
received from Honda.

· The ORTA board, however,
delayed a vote on a n.~lutlon
which would give lhe Ohio
Altorney Ge~~eral ' s .tall the
right to explore legal avenues ~
for title searching the Penn
Central lines.
A matter that would delay
purchase and a clear lilie to
the sought lines is the amount
PeM Central trllltees owe
Ohio - $80 mlllloil In back·
taxes. The bankruplllne owtl
$4 mUilon to Franklin County
alone.
'
The federal money war
reported to be the Initial
stage of the Ohio rail line •
.ac quisiti on program .
Purchased lines wOllkl •
placed in the state ndl IJaliif
for futw-e revitall&amp;ation .

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- The Da 1\ S. I tnt' I M ddl•pt rl PHI er

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Israelites damn new policy
By WALTER LOGAN
UP! Foreign Editor
Israel pub! clJ has damned
a U S pohcy shtft toward the
Pales!lnlans
but
an
aut.horttatlve Israeli source
says the Jewish state wtll
allow unofflc al PLO par
t ctpat on m Gl!tleva peace
talks

Israel has ~!ways refused
to deal wuh the Palestme
Uberat on Orgaruzation but
the source satd Monday m
New York Palestuuans could
go to Geneva as part of
Jordan s delegation even tf
the r loyalties lay With the
PLO
We are not gomg to check

them
thetr credentials at the door
Israeli oppostllon to Ute U
the so urce sa d
Thetr
sympathies mtght be with the S pollcy shtft was expected to
PLO they mtght have some reach the showdown stage
affiliation wtth the PLO and when Prestdent Carter meets
they m1ght even be m the pay Israeli Foretgn Mtnlster
of the PLO but if they enter Moshe Dayan m New York1
the Geneva conferen ce as today after dellvermg a
members of the Jordantan speech to the U N General
delegation we w ll accept assembly
The U S shift was con
tamed m a JOint U S -Soviet
statement tssued Saturday
saylng a new Geneva con
ference should msure the
legitimate nghts of the
Palestm an people and
es
tablt s h
peac eful
eqwpment such as power
relations
ln
the
Mtddle
East
disk brakes tmted glass and
It
was
the
Urst
time
rear window defrosters as
Washmglon
endorsed
the
standard eqwpment Ford
tdea
of
Palestuuan
rights
srud
The btggest reductions on Previously the IsraeliS and
the subcompacts wtll be Americans rejected the idea
unplemented m e1ght,western though Washington has sa d
states
not
mcludmg the mterests of the 3 mllllon
Cahfor ma where some Palestinian refugees must be
popular Pmto models are constdered
I see m Ute statement a
bemg tagged at $123 below
1977 st cker prtces Pintos great danger for the
and Bobcats m Califorma existence of the state of
Da yan sa d from
already wepe bemg sold at Israel
New
York
m a statement to
lower pr ces than elsewhere
the
Isra~ h
newspaper
Ford s reducmg sttcker
Y
edioth
AhronoUt
pr1ces on tts Bobcat
Authoritative sources sald
Runabout by $31710 $3 415 1ts
U
S Ambassador to Tel Avtv
two-&lt;loor Pinto by Wl to
Samuel
Lewlll told Begm of
$3 338 and the Mustang II b)
the
U
S
-Soviet
statement m a
$128 to an average $3 750
stormy
meetmg
Thursday
Customers wbo already have
and
thai
Begm
flatly
rejected
ordered !hell' new cars will be
u
gt ven rehates Ford sa1d
The sources also expressed
amazement the Umted States
would ptck this tune to brmg
Russia back into Middle East
affairs because Soviet UI
fluence had been waning m
the Middle, East Though
statement clearmg Gullett Moscow and Washmgton are
and members of his family of co-cha1rn1en of the Geneva
any mvolvement 10 the
groWIOg of the mar~juana oo
his farm
At the time state pollee
ISSued a statement saymg
We have made an mvestiga
lion and there IS no eVIdence
to mdicate that Gullett or
anyooe associated wtth the
fann had anythmg to do With
the growmg of the plants
State pollee proceeded to
By STEVE GERSI'EL
confiscate the mariJUana
WASH1NGTON (UP!)
plants that week prmmsmg a Senate Democratic Leader
continued mvest1gation of the Robert Byrd standing behind
nctdent But unttl last h1s front center desk
week s md1ctment no other snatched the amendments
arresta or mdictments were and one by one sent them
handed down against anyone fluttermg to the floor
m the mcldent
F1ve 10 15 20 25 30 and
Gullett who stgned earlier more - one every hve
thiS year With the Yankees seconds - littermg the blue
after several seasons With the patterned carpeting m the
Cmcmnati Reds derued any Senate chamber
knowledge of the discovery of
Two a sles away Sen
the mariJUana plants on hiS James Abourezk D-S D was
fann
shoutmg
Pomt of order
In a prepared statement pomt of order pomt of
Yankees owner George order
Th1s
s
a
Stembrenner ahlo S8ld he dtd stealnroller
not thmk Gullett was
Facmg the Senate VIce
mvolved
PreSident Walter Mondale g
In my 25 years dealing nored the shouts to play a
wtUt athletes as a coach and well rehearsed duet wlth
an owner
Stembrenner Byrd
said I have never met a
Byrd called up an amend
finer young man than Don ment Mondale ruled 11 out of
Gullett If there IS a modern ocder Byrd called up an
day Jack Armstrong Gullett amendment Mondale ruled 1!
IS 11 Anybody who has played out of order And on 11 went as
With him knows that and will most of the senators watched
say the same things about some unpasslvely some With
him Were happy that he s approvaj some m utter diSbeen
completely belief
exonerated
"'
It was the begmning of an

Ford cuts prices
Bl PAUL \ARIAN
DETROIT (UP!)
Ford
Motor Co ts cuttmg sucker
nru:es b' as much as 9 l II"'
cent on ts ~w fuel..,ff tc .~nt
subcompact models m an
escalation of a budd ng 1978
sales

y;

ar

aga nst

the

Japanese mports
Follo\\ ng he lead of
mdustry pacesetter Ge teral
Moto rs Ford ann ounced
reductions Monday of up to
$323 n the suggested retatl
pr1ces of ts 978 Pinto
Mustang II and Mercury
Bobcat models
,\~ so like GM
however
Ford "ill be announcmg prtce
nc reases on the mtermediate

and full-stzed models that go
on dtsplay m dealer
sho wrooms

Fr day

a

company spckesman sa d
GM rrused pr ces an average
::&gt;

Ford vtce prestdent Ben
Btdwell sa1d the small car
reducttons wtll enable the No
2 automaker to compete
agress vely n the prt ce
senstttve smaller car market
- part culaely agamst the
Japanese subcompa cts
and to enco urage the
purchase of more small fuel
eff c1ent cars

GM already has annowteed
prtce cuts on ts popular
Che\Tolet Chevette mm1car
and some of tis downSized
mtermedtates
But Ford latd cl31111 to the
cheapest d&lt;mestlc model on
the market by g vmg ts Pinto
Pony a slicker pr ce of $2 995
JUSt $4 Jess than the bottom
line Chevette
Most of the rollbacks will
be accomplished by offermg
pr ev io u s l y opt a nal

per cent last month

Gullett's brother indicted

I

GREENUP Ky (UP! ) - The brother of New York
Yan ke es left hander Don
Gullett has been mdtcted on a
drug charge m connectiOn
" th the discovery of about
800 mart Juana plants growmg
on the Gullett farm m eastern
Kentucky
ea rher
this
swnmer

Co ur t records show a
formal tndtclment was
handed down Frtday against
Jack Gullett on a charge of
trafficking m a controlled
substance
Jack Gullett who IS
caretaker of hiS brother s
farm m rural Lynn appeared
before Circuit Judge Oscar
Sammons Saturday and

entered a plea of tnllOCent to
the charges
He was released oo hiS own
recogmzance and a Ina! date
of Dec 1 was set
Jack Gullett would not
comment on either the
charges or the mdictments
Don Gullett who IS set to
pttch foc the Yankees m the !I'
Ameri&lt;:Jln League playoff
ser1es thls week With the
Kansas City Royala also
could not be reached for
comment on the charges
Kentucky state pollee
discovered the large field of
mariJuana growmg oo the
Gullett fann July 29 After
two days of mvest galion the
state oohce tssued a

HEALTH
lawrence E lamb M 0:

Good health's
real enemy
By Lawrence E Lamb MD
DEAR DR LAMB - Why
don t doctors do more about
preve nting Illnesses' It
seems to me doctors spend
most of thetr ttme JUS! trymg
to prolong someone s hfe who
s gomg to dte anyway
Wouldn t t be a lot better to
prevent th1s person from get
t ng stck n the ftrst place ' Is
thts because doctors make
more money do ng heart

common cause of death and
lung cancer IS the most com
mon cause of cancer deaths
Did you know that 90 per cent
of all lung cancer could be
stopped tomorrow 1f
everyone would qmt smok
mg Can the doctors outlaw
stnok10g '
Fatal heart attacks are
three tunes as conunon rn

smokers as m nonsmokers

Yet stnoking ts permitted m
s Jrgery and treatmg cancer public places and dunng
tllan they do preventmg tt'
commer ctal travel
In
DEAR READER -Doctors telhgent people who know
~ave discovered the real they are 1ncreas10g lheir rtsk
enemy to health a long tune continu~ to smoke cigarettes
ago and there tsn t much we What can the doctor do'
can do about 11 The enemy IS
There s abundant ev denee
YOU Doctors would love to that linulmg your calor e 10
prevent llnesses but they can take .and keepmg your
only be successful n this area phySical actiVIty up to
to the extent that people elj.minate or prevent obestty
fo low the good advtce they will benefit your health 10
preventmg h1gh blood
I ave been g1ven
I et s look at automobile ac pressure elevated fatly
c d nts In 1974 when lower eholesterol deposits 10 the
au omob le speed llmtts were artertes that lead to heart at
be n&amp;_ obeyed the death rate tacks and strokes and
f om automob lc at'CJdents premature semhty Only you
dropped 17 4 per cent But can lim1t your calortes and
people do not want to slow exerc se
down to save energy let alone
CU'rhosts of the li~e r IS the
the r own or som eone else s fourth most common cause of
death m men between the
life
D d you know that your ages of 35 and 54 and 60 per
chances of surv1vmg an acct
cent of these are caused by
~ dent at 71 nules per ~our are alcohol Doctors have no
only about 5().50 at best' The authonty to make people qmt
chances of surv val unprove ~bus10g thetr bodies wtth
lt e s ower the speed At alcohol
If people follow sens1ble hv
speeds between 51 and 60 the
mg
habits they can live 10
cl ances are 31 to l m your
favor When you are mchned good health longer To gtve
to drtve fast JUS( remember you some more mformatlon
the fig ures Acctdents are the on what we know about ag ng
most common cause of death and how to prevent or slow 1ts
n males and fema les bet occurrence I am send10g you
ween the ages of 1:; and 34 and The Health Letter nwnber
most Qf these are aulomobtle 1 7 Perpetual Youth Ag10g
ace dents There IS little doc Others who want thiS 1ssue •
tors can do to prevent you can send 50 cents w1th along
self addressed
from r~skmg your hfe or stamped
envelope for 1t Just wme to
others You are the problem
Doctors ask people to qu1t me n care of this newspaper
or 1okmg Do they? Who can P 0 Box 1551 Rad1o City Sta
make a person qutt\mok ng? twn New York NY 10019
Yet cancer ts U e second most
1

conference the JO nt actiOn
served only to enhance the
So~tet pos (lon they sa d
Some Israeli sources satd
they believe Carter brought
m Moscow to pave the way
for Improved U S Sovtet
relations at a time the two
nabons are negotiating a new
st rateg r arms l m tatlon
pact
earter refused cgmmenl'on
Ute Israel s cr t1c1sm of the
statement sa) mg
We
really are not mterested right
now lnto gomg mto a public
debate w th Utem

Asylum will
he given to
11 terrorists
By EIRENE FURNESS
ALGIERS Algerta (UP!)
Algeria IS expected to
grant asylum to 11 Japanese
terroriSts who held up to 151
hostages durmg a six-day
6 OOO&lt;nile h!Jackmg but lt IS
unclear whether tt wtll return
a $6 million ransom to the
Japanese government
The Japanese Red Army
members ended the long
hiJacking Without bloodshed
Monday surrendering the
last of thetr 19 hostages and themselves- to Algerian
author1t es
Must observers here S8ld
Algeria probably will grant
political asylum to the
extremists and return the
ransom to Japan as 11 has to
other countries m previous

Filibuster ended

by Byrd-Mondale
orchestrated effort by Ilemo
cratic and Republican
leaders to brmg the filibuster
oo the natural gas bill to an
end 13 days after 11 started
It was also an ugly moment
m the Senate s history
Totally
stymied
by
Abourezk and Sen !ioward
Metzenbaum D-Ohio who
bitterly oppose deregulation
but have fatled to muster
enough votes to killtt m three
test votes Byrd and Senate
GOP Leader Howard ~ker
- wtth an asstst from
Mondale - teamed up to
crush the filibuster
In a series of moves the
Senate approved precedent
sl)attermg rules which allow
the pres ding offtcer to rule
amendments out of order
allow a senator to Pul\ back
his own amendments and
ban mos t tmne consummg
quorum calls
In efft'Ct Baker and Byrd
stripped Abourezk and
Metzenbaum of the weapcns
they have used to stalemate
the Senate even after a
cloture resolution had been
approved to end the de bate

Japanese bUSiness leaders
Ortgmally the delegatiOn
was to mclude about SIX
persons tnclud1ng
Youngstown mayor Jack
Hunter However Hunter
said Mike Mansfield the U S
Ambassador to Japan satd a
smaller delegation would be
more effectiVe at least
durmg m1hal talks
It appears the ma)or
Significance of the tr1p to
Japan l"'JUst to go and say the
commun•t es m the Mabomng
VaUey the media m the
Mahonmg Valley organ zed
labor m the Mabonmg Valley
would welcome Japanese m
vestments m our valley
S81d Hunter
The Japanese are QUite
concerned about steel sa1d
Hunter They are qwte cqn
cerned about Congre~ s
passmg trade and tariff
legislation There 1s great
concern about thiS whole
thmg m Japan
Fumih1ko Togo Japanese
ambassador to the US sald
m Cleveland Monday mght
Japanese steelmakers are
not dumpmg thell' steel m
the Umted States as the
Treasury Department has
charged
The Treasury Department
1ssued a tentat1ve ruhng
Monday that Japanese steel
comparues are seUmg carbon
steel plate at a substantial
loss m the Umted States But
pr or to a speech before a
group of Cleveland busmess

leaders Togo S8ld there IS no
baSis for the charge
There s no such thmg as a
goverrunent subsidy m Japan
for the steel compames he
told an mterVIewer Each
company operates on !Is own
m the free market system m
an open economy
Togo d1d acknowledge
there are economiC problems
between the Umted States
and Japan because of the
dumpmg charge and the
condition of the domestic
steel mdustry
Our steel mdustry IS very
unhappy With your laws he
said I trust that tl IS the
mtention of Ute Japanese
steel mdustry to conduct 1ts
export trade wtth due
constderalton
to
the
conditions prev81lmg in the
overseas markets
Thts IS the area to look for
proper remedies
Meanwhile
Youngstown
Sheet and Tube Co satd the
steel ndustry s currenl
fmanctal problems w1ll not be
greatly Sided by the Treasury
Department s deciSton that
ftve
Japanese
steel
comparues must post bond to
cover dumpmg carbon steel
plate on the U S market
I don t know that 11 ll do
anyone ( .1 producers) any
good but 11 s a step m the
r1ght direction said J R
Butler assistant manager of
commumcat10ns for the
Youngstown Sheet and Tube
Co

•

Phillies without Maddox m

New coal contract talks expected to be
long-drawn-out and bitter too
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Coal leaders
and wuon offiCJals n eel at the bargammg
table Thursday to open talks on a new
bltummous contract With energy troubles
threatenmg and nuners sull seellung from
nudswruner cutbacks m thetr health care
payments
/
Heading a f1ve-man team for the Umted
Mme Workers at the Cap tol Hilton wtll be
Prestdent Arnold Miller Leading the
Bttummous Coal Operators Assoctation
11111 he Its prestdent Joseph Brennan
Miller wtU take along hiS VICe preSident
elect Sam Oturch Dtstr1ct 17 Secretary
Treasurer Joe Duffte Dtstrtct Prestdent
Lou Antal 'and execuUve board members
Wilbur Kilhon and Walter Suba They will
be hacked by the 31knember pchcy
making UMW bargammg council
Boostmg Brennan will be such coal
leaders as Pete Feretti vice president of
mdustnal relations for Consolidation Coal
Co W V Hartman v1ce prestdent of
corporate development 1or Peabody Coal
Corp Jack Kathc execultve vtce
prestdent of Island Creek Coal Co
William M ller VIce president for labor
relaUons U S Steel and counsel for the
conumttee will be Tom Whyte of
Pittsburgh
Peabody and ililsol rank first and
second respectively m coal production

hijackings But there was no
offtc!al assurance that thts
would be the case
In Tokyo the government
acknowledged today that Fo
re1gn Mm1stry officials
w&amp;~ved Japan s rlght to ask
Algeria to return etlher the
extremists or the $6 mllllon
N, for the decision not to
request release of the
priS&lt;mers and return of the
ransom I was not contacted
beforehand Prune Mmtster
Takeo Fu,kuda sa1d at a
cabmet meeting
It IS
tembly regrettable
In the departure lounge at
the Algiers &amp;li'JXlrt the freed
hostages drank toap to each
other wtUt orange jwce the
strongest drmk proVIded by
the prolub1tlooist Algerian
goverrunent
Three gleammg bla ck
limousmes then whisked the
11 hiJ8Ckers to an unknown
destmat1on Pollee broke the
r bs of one TV cameraman
who lrted to ftlm the
departure from the Blfport
and confiscated the cameras
of
several
Japan ese
photographers

The coal pa.ct covers about 110 percent of'
the 277 000 workmg and retired mmers m
the UMW Others are covered by sul'faee
mmmg contracting anthracite and
Canadtan pacts
Each stde generally concedes to a salary
hike and a restoration of the unton s debt
ridden health plan
However talks are expected to drawn
out antagonistic and bitter Uruon leaders
are prepared to ftght for a local optioo
nght to-strike clause and coal owners are
JUSt as determined to prevent tl
Coal operators are expected to bold out
for a strong assurance that the UMW will
ellmmate
wtld cat
strtkes
and
absenteeism whtch have constantly
plagued the eastern coalfields
N, the Dec 6 deadline approaches an
industry w1de strike IS expecled
However the UMW ls still reelmg from a
10 week wildcat m Appalachia last
swruner The unlon doesn t have a strike
fund and the prolonged walkout prevented
rmners from fll'mmg up thelr strtke
PQsture
Millers problems are further
complicated m his home regton where
malcontents have begun a pehtwn drtve
8lffied at recallmg him from the UMW s
top elective post

first two of playoff series
By JIM COUR
UPI SJI' rts Wriler
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
The Ph ladelphta Phtlhes
probably Will be Without thetr
regular center f elder Garry
Maddox for the ftrst two
games'bf the Nat onal League
playoffs but ws Angeles
Dodgers Manager Tommy
Lasorda doesn t think that
g1ves Ius club any advantage
The Philltes have good
replacements
sa d

sooaUtlet

assume

he

won t

Bake

McBnde will do a good JOb m
center and Jerry Martm will
do a good JOb n rtght
The best-&lt;&gt;f five NL senes
gets under way at Dodger
Stadium
tomght
and
continues Wednesday mght
McBr de who JOined the
Phtll es from St Lams m
m d.June f1gures to get the
centerfield
call
from

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

---------------------------1
Letlen of opinion are welcomed They sbeald be 1
less than 308words long (or be subject ID recludloa by
the edltort ll1ld m111t be •lined wltb the sip"" 1 1111
dress Namos may be withheld upon pubUealloa
However on requosl namos wiD be dllelaoed Le«en
should be In good' lasle addr.,.slng lssu"' not per-

Lasorda If Garry Maddox
can t play and I would

Sport Parade
I
I
I
:
1
1

'
I
I

I
I
1
I

There ts no place for thee
Dear Sir
It came to pass one day that the Lord God told Samt
Francis of ASSist the compassiOnate lover of ammals and
btrds to take the place of Sa tnt Peter at the Gates of Heaven
because the date was October 4th which IS celebrated-on the
planet Earth as Wocld Arumal Day by those who labor to
relieve the terr ble suffermgs of anunals at the hands of man
Yes the gentle Samt FranciS from Asslsl was vested wtth
full authortty by our l&lt;Jrd to grant earthly smnersadmiSSlon
mto the Kingdom of Heaven or to deny entrance accordmg to
his JUdgement of the r love or abuse of God s mnocent
creatures during il\etr earthly SOJOurn - Name withheld on
request

The trouble zn Southern Dtstrrct

Dear Sir
Schools to some 111.easure are destroymg themselves
Prolesswnal organiZers have got mto the ranks of the
educators and are makmg them believe that there IS nothing
but pte m the sky and some educators are takmg the ball
MEETING SET
What busmess has any lobby bowever well lntent10ned
A distrtct health meetmg m commg m from oulstde a school d!Str ct and tellmg the people
the Jackson Extens on Area there down to a [me po10t what they must do and then dictate
wlll be held at the Jackson )ust how all these things Will be pa1d foc' ]he force bemg
Area ExtensiOn Center near generated on some school distncts m Ohio and our spectal
Jackson Ohlo from 10 a m to concern ts our own IS part ol a carefully concetved adrmtly
2 30 p m Thursday October executed plan uoder the gu1se of legality to lake away local
13 Details on the enure nghts and centralize power ThiS IS gomg on and at a raptd
program and mformatlon on pacem many facets 'O f our lives ThiS IS a menace to freedom
mak ng reservatwns are and we know 11 The ooe place where what we say will get more
available from the Me1gs than JUSt a handshake and best w1shes IS at the ballot box when
County Extension office we say no
telephone 992-3895
I know the people of Southern Local know somethmg of
their hopes their destres and their asptrallons Our diStrict IS
especially a place of many httle homes and small farms The
owners don t want to be squeezed out of them I thmk these
GOETI' HONORED
people put GOO__and Education at Ute top of thetr list of
John Goett Pomeroy was pnor1t1es
honored recently upon his
The thrust of my obJections to these leVIes IS the burden
retirement from Foote they place on real estate It s a destructive unfair tax
Mineral with a dinner at the especially when heaVIly leVIed I fear what will happen If the
Hobday Inn at Kanauga He gate of taxa! on ts opened agamst our property owners I
was employed at Foote thought I could retire out here mpeace Now I doubt that
Mmeral approximately 25
I never dreamed Southern would be m the trouble 11 s tn
years
Tactics that try to change the school problem mto an emotwnal
lssue are wrong Saying that thiS distnct IS go10g to be taken
away IS a direct appeal to emotion What are they gomg to do
With thiS educational plant ? The state of Ohio will never let 11
be abandoned The jobs w1U still be here And where would
they go' Other d!Stncts have all the problems they want Any
consolldaUon would mean mostly m the event that 11 came
about a reorganiZation of the adminiStration Any smoke
Butler sa1d the Treasury screen devised may fool some o&lt; the people bot not aU the
Departments actions will not people I have heard adnuniStrators and other school people
affect the layoff sttuatlon 10 say the real estate tax was unfair but tactics tearjerkers or
his company s Youngstown whatever are used to unplement'lt
district Sheet and Tube Co
I follow the fortunes of the school closely and espectaUy the
announced last month 11 present and former students Whatever the ,lleclswn of the
would close part of 1ts works people may be I wtll be able to live With One time I read that
m Campbell and lay off 5 ~ old teachers never d1e they just lose thetr class - Gayle
employees
Pr1ce former Chemistry and PhysiCS teacher at Racme H1gh
G H McClure semor v1ce S.hool
prestdent-commerc1al of
Armco Steel headquartered From now on, let 'em fight
m
Mtddletown
said
although the Treasury s Oear Sll'
flndmg applies only to
Everyone asks the question Why won I people get
Japanese plates we are mvol ~ed when someone IS m trouble? Well I would like to g1ve
convtnced
pervaSive you an example of why
dwnpmg 1s takmg place on
About a month ago a IZ-year-&lt;Jld boy and a 26-year-&lt;Jld man
most other steel m1ll products got m an argument outs1de the Racme Pool Hall The man was
from Japan the Umted chokmg the boy My brother pulled the man off the boy and the
Kingdom and other European man started screarmng at my brother to come on and ftght
countries
him My broUter told hlm repeatedly that he would not f1ght
The International Trade him and he d1d not
Comnuss10n should have no
A lawman showed up to see what all the yellmg was about
difficulty
10
hnda.ng He was told what happened but lhe man and my brother were
overwhelmmg evtdence of both told to get mto the pollee car When they asked where they
1n1ury
to
Amencan were gomg they were told to the sheriff s off1ce
steelworkers and compamas
My brother had to post a $50 bond that mghl to be released
as a result of the dwnpmg
They were brought mto court at Racme The other man was
he sa1d
fmed $27 :;o My brother pleaded not gwlty on charges of
The Republic Steel Corp of disturbmg the peace by f1st f1ght10g Another trtal date was set
Cleveland applauded the and the manager of the pool haU test1f1ed for my brother that
tentative ruhng In a he had only broken up the fight It did no good The arrestmg
statement the company officer told my brother he should!) t have mterfered The
srud
officer satd he could break up a fight or the mayor could but
While 11 IS only a partial my brother should not have mterfered He was hned $41 70
answer to the Important
My brother graduated from school last spring Jobs are
problems confront10g the hard to fmd and he worked m the f1elds thiS summer but IS
domest1c steel 10dustry unemployed now My mother (father IS dead) makes about
nevertheless tt ts welcome $300 a month ThiS $41 70 must come out of her check So if you
recogmt10n by our federal see a fight m Racme (though tl may be one-s ded) tf you try to
government of the unfall' stop 1t don t expect a good c1tizensh1p award that ts unless
practices whclh have been yo u are wtll ng to pay $41 10 for tl
giVIng the Japanese an unfall'
Why don t people get Involved' Well here ts your answer
advantage m our markets
Rosemary Randolph Long Bottom Ohio

Ohio wants Japanese industry
Ualled Press International
An ecooomtst and a labor
leader were scheduled to
leave the Youngstown area
today oo an industry seeking
tour to Japan The Japanese
ambassador to the U S
Monday mght dented that
Japanese steel makers were
dumping steel on the
American market
Willllllll Sullivan Warren
head of the Western Reserve
Economic Development
Frank
Agency
and
Lesegantch Youngstown
prestdent of District 26 of the
United Steel Workers Umon
are scheduled to meet wtth
representatiVes of the
Japanese government and

-

3- TheDallySentmel M ddleport Pottctv) l! l'uesd" y l!ct4 1977

Tuesda) Od 4 19

NEW YORK (UP]) - Alth ough the Oakland As have
part Ctpated m more playoff games than any other team th s
year lhey are not nvol ved

AId m a wav t s sa good thmg because Char! e Fmley s
Sltll recuperating from open heart surgery and h s doctors
ha ve caul oned hun aga nst any unnecessa ry excitement
But you know Char! e Noth ng can keep h m do\ln for long
not even t\.\ o naJor heart operat ons u four years And now he
ts restmg m bed for part of the day and \l alkmg as hts doctors
have 1 structed htm to do He IS cheerful and happy
I m com ng along fu e
e says 1 feel grea t and the
doctors tell me I ll be stronger than ever rwo of n v arter es
lfere 95 per cent closed but they sin ply b) passed them and the
operat o turned out f nc
Down through the vears Chari e Ft ley has been charac
temed as an uncommonly self-serYin_g self&lt;entered
u d ' dual and absolutely er less With those he employs
But there ts anotl er" stde to Chari e F n ey
All the flowers cards and letters he received durmg h s
ho p lal stay and s nee returnmg I ome were deeply ap
predated by Charl e Fmley But of all the comn urucalt ons he
rece ved one had a far more pronounced effect upon h1m than
any other
It was a letter wr tten by a young man wl o once played ball
for him and 11 should be satd l e 1ever volunteered to read tl to
n e and dtd so onl) after I asked htm f there had been one
essage whteh moved hm n ore th an the rest
After he read 11 to me I asked him [he had ar y obJectiOn to
havmg t prmled He sad he preferred t not be and.) bel eve
hun Onl) aftEr considerable persuas on he sa1d It would be all
nght prov ding I could se u e the letter wr ter s pern ss on I
did althou gh he also was reluctant to havmg h s letter made
public
!'he letter sa d
Dear Charlie
Now that the world IS conv need that Charlte F nley does
have a heart 1thought I would wr te to tell you bow I appy I an
w hale med cal con!trmat on and support of that I act aftEr
many unsuccessfu l years of attempting to con vince sk ept cs

otherw se
For l ears I have been meanmg to s t down and wr te ) ou a
note to tell you a [ew th ngs I would hk e to tak e th s
opportuni ty to do so
I was \lith many different ball clubs and durmg my
undtst ngu1shed baseball career no one treated me more fa r
Ulan you did nor could yo u have bee

n ore fa ir m your

trealment of me
I found you completely honest and forthr ght and to thiS
day I mamtam a great deal of respect for you not only as a
result of 1 y dealmgs wtth you but due also to other aspects of
your character In my deal ngs "tlh people I would hope that
one day they co uld see of me that I was fa r and hon est and
that they had respect for me
N, one of your former pl ayers t has bothered me for some
t me to kn ow my true feelings about you to he~r and read
thmgs wht ch I knoll to be contrary and not to have told you so
before So tf nothmg else please ndulge me thiS letter because
t makes me feel good
I would like to teUyou to JUmp r ght out of that hosp tal bed
and to keep go ng stronger and harder than ever before for the
thmgs you bel eve m but tl s needless to say because you have
come out swtngmg all your 1 fe
II I contmue to read and hear thmgs about you wh ch do not
reflect tl e Charhe Fmley I know then 1will contmue to have a
stnlle mSide of me because I wtll know something they don t
know Keep ftghUng em Otarl e
Best wtshes
The letter was Signed by Chuck Essegian
You may remember Chuck Essegtan for settmg a World
Sen es record n 1959 as the ftr st p ncl] hitter ever to connect for
two home runs He was playmg for the Dodgers then and his
two homers helped beat th e Wh1te Sox
Esseg1an also pla;ed for the Phillies Card nals Ortoles
Ind ans and A s when they st 11 were m Kansas C ty He s an
attorney m Encmo Cahf now
When I read h1s letter I wanted to do exactfy wha t he
said-Jump rtght out of bed says Char! e F nley I i!On t
thmk he ll ever know how much his letter meant to me

Pltladelphla Manager Danny have to be ptetty lucky
tenst cally
snapped
Ozark because Maddox hit a
Tim McCarver Carlton s at several reporters when he
, ball off hts knee wh le bathng prtvate
catcher
and d d not hke thetr questiOns
m a gan e Sunday and hts deSignated talker adn tied
How do I feel '
he
knee s swollen
Carlton faced a tough
repeated after questiOn ng
In tomght s opener whtch challenge from the 9odgers
I feel Fme How do you
starts at 8 15 p m EDT power loursome of Steve
Steve Carlton 23-10 wtll go Garvey Reggte Sm1Ut Ron feel'
Ozark and Lasorda named
agamst the Dodgers Tommy Cey and Dusty Baker the
John 2().7
'
f1rst quartet !11 maJor league the r tentative startmg
Carlton
the leadmg history to htt 30 or more home lineups Monday The Philhes
n order were lvlcBnde
Nat Jnal League Cy Young r Wls ap1ece m a season
shortstop
Larry Bowa tlurd
Award cand date refused to
People are saymg satd
talk to reporters at Monday s McCarver that Carlton IS baseman Schnudt LIIZmski
workout but John who wtll throwmg the same now as he m left fteld first baseman
talk,.to anyone who wtlllister&gt; did m 1972 but he s not He s Dave Jotinson Martm n
more than made up lor the more of a pitcher now than he nght f1eld McCarver second
Phlladelphta ace left was then (when he had a 27 10 haseman Ted S zemore and
pitcher Carlton The Dodgers
hander s reluctance to record)
comrnumcate
Ozark whose club c-Was 'were second baseman Davey
In order for me to beat the rubbed out m three straight wpes shortstop Bill Russell
Ph1lhes John satd I can t games by the Reds mthe NL Sm th m rtght fteld Cey at
get behind on thetr httlers playoffs a year ago was m a thU'd base Garvey at first
espectally (Greg) LIIZmski relaxed and Joking mood on Baker In left center fielder
and (Mtke) Schmtdt If you the eve of the playoffs while Glenn Burke catcher Steve
uncharac- Yeager and John
don t pttch from m front you Lasorda

Stabler brilliant
By RICK GOSSELIN
UP! Sports Writer
KANSAS CITY Mo (UPI )
- Ken Stabler was the artist
Dave Casper was hi s pamt
brush and the Kansas C1ty
Ch1efs served as the canvas
for
the
Oakland
quarterback s masterpiece
Stabler sptlled some of hts
pamt m the ftrst half m
throwtng three mtercepttons
but he attacked hiS subJect
wtth f erce dec SIVe strokes
m the second half to pass the
Raiders to a 37 28 vtctory
over the upset-mmded Chiefs

¥~!'f.rn~t~me-&lt;&gt;f

10 passes
m the second half for 166
yards wtth key completions
on all three of Oakland s
third-quarter possesSions
when the Ratders scored 21
pomts to w pe out an etght
pomt halftune deficit
Stabler h t Mark van
Eeghen w th a 30-yard pass to
set up the mtttal touchdown of
Ut e thll'd quarter a one yard
run by Pete BI!.!Laszijk he hit
Casper w1th a 2&amp;-yarder on

the secon d possess1on to set

Galha Academy High
School s golfers ftmshed
regular season league play
with a triangular match
VICtory over Me1gs and
Waverly at Waverly Monday
evenmg
Fmal scores were GAHS
163 Melgs 186 and Waverly
200

Gall1pohs IS 9 3 m league
play Meigs 3-9 and Waverly
0.12 Ironton fm1shed regular
season league play last week
w1th a tHi mark
Jackson won the regular
season port1on. of the title
with an II I mark by downmg
Athens and L&lt;Jgan m a threeway match at L&lt;Jgan Monday
Fmal score at Hockmg Htlls
was Jackson 165 Athens 169
and Logan 188 Athens wound
up 9-3 and wgan &lt;HI
OveraU champtonsh p of
th e Southeastern Oh o

Athleltc League will be
determmed at Logan Wed
nesday where the 1977
tournament wtll be conducted
at Hockmg Hills Gall1pchs 1s
defendmg league champion
Monday at Waverly J D
Jones was medalist as the
Blue Devlls captured their
15th regular season VIctory
against !hree setbacks Jones
shot a 37 for the Gall1ans Kev
Hawk had 38 Jeff Clary 43
Dav1d R1ce 45 and Brad
Rodgers 49
For Me gs Lance Ohver
had 41 Chuck Follrod 43
Roldofo D1az 48 Chuck
Kennedy 54 and Dave Ken
nedy 54 and Dave Kennedy
61
For Waverly Tom Depugh
had 46 Troy Banta 49 Rod
Brower 50 Harvey Gll1esp1e
55 and Greg Sturgtll 57

came
The query to the maJOC league s home
run (52 ) and RBI (149) kmg was What did
you feel mstde when the crowd of 40 000
gave you a long and thunderous stand ng
ova!10n as you came to bat for the last tune
m the nmth mmQg'
George smiled edged forward on hts
seat and began the answer he had already
carefully prepared
First I was so afratd I was gotng to
strtke out he said reca Umg his fidget ng
near Ute batter s box dur ng the several
mmute standmg ovatiOn I sta rted
thinkmg that the worst thmg I could do IS
str ke out
Then I thought about the No I thmg I
wanted to do - htt 11 out of the ball park
I wanted to do something rtght then to
show the fans how much I really
apprec ated what they had done for me If
I could have w•lled a home run durmg
anytime tn my life 11 would have been

r gh t then
But home runs usually take the rtght
kind of pitch and 11 JUSt wasn t n the cards
thts ttme for Foster
I could tell from the ltrst p tch that I
wasn t gom g to get anythmg good to h t
he satd so I decided to go to rtght f1eld
w th one and try to get tout of the ballpark
that way
George htt deep to r1ght - but not deep
enough - and there were no more at~ts
left for hun to try to thank the fans
Of course Foster sald tl made hun feel
good to h tall those homers thts year but
he st1U stuck to hts opmton that the
greatest tllmg to happen to hun was the
opporturuty to start playmg regularly
several years ago
He was now chucklmg as he mocked
those hard years as a benchwarmer
There were a lot of good things he
grmned I had a real good seat n the
dugout and each mnmg I got to talk to all
the stars
I could go out on the f eld before games
and sometunes they d let me p tch batting
practtce But I d have to be very careful
not to htl anyone They would have thrown
me out for that
But the stor es ende~ and 11 was tune to
rea lize that the 1977 season - George
Fosters Year was over
I wtsh we had another month to play
sa d George fmally startmg to take h s
uniform off for the last time of the year

Sipe battered, blue,
but says he will play

hit Fred Btletmko!f on a post
pattern
But the second quarter
proved dtsastrous for the
Raiders who watched almost
helplessly as M1ke Uvmgston
directed the Chiefs to three
touchdowns within a span of
520
BEREA Oh o (UP! )
Kansas C1ty drove 60 yards Brtan S1pe s statuSis sttll up
m seven plays wtth m the all' but the Cleveland
L vmgston h11t ng Walter Browns quarterback expects
Wh1te With a 46 yard to be ready to play agamst
touchdown pass to get the the Oakland Ratders next
Chiefs on the boilrd a Gary weekend
Barbaro mterceplton of a
I took a pretty good
stabler pass gave the Chiefs beatmg and I m sore said
the ball at the Raider 21 to set Stpe who was knocked out of
up L1vmgston s I yard the 28-14loss to the Steelers m
scormg toss to Whtte and a the second half but I m
fumble by vali' Eeghen on conf dent I can play next
Oakland s flrst play of tis Si!!Jday agamst Oakland
next possessiOn paved the
Sipe was InJUred on a late
way for Uvmgston s 41 yard hit by Pittsburgh defenSive
touchdown
to
Henry lineman Steve Furness The
Marshall
officials assessed a !:&gt;-yard
Errol Mann rounded out the penalty agrunst Furness for
Oakland scormg wlth field divmg on Stpe out of bounds
goala of 42 34 and 22 yards mJurmg hiS throwtng (rtght)
whtle Lawrence W1lhams shoulder
camed an end-aroWld 13
Th e quarterba ck was
yards for Kansas C1ty s (mal rushed to a hosp1tal but no
came on the very next play
when Ute Alabama southpaw touchdown early m the fourth
quarter

up Clarence DaVIs 37 y$rd
scormg Jaunt and he
connected with Mike S1aru for
a 39-yarder to set up a two
yard scormg plunge by Davts
that resulted m the wlnmng
pomts
Stabler ftmshed w1th 19
completiOns m 28 tr1es for 'lf¥1
yards
Seven of hts
completion~ went to Casper
who fi!Ushed w1th 101 yards
The Snake s the best
there IS
sa1d Casper
Those firsthalf mterceptlons
didn t seem to bother hun He
gave them somethmg and
then took 11 r1ght back
Bemg co ncerned wtth
Utose mterceptions IS hke
bemg concerned when
Rembrandt mls ed a stroke
added Oakland Coach John
Madden No matter what
happens he just keeps
"'qmmg at you
Stabler htt Casper With a
26-yarder to move the baU to
the Kansas C1ty 21 to set up
Oakland s ftrst touchdown m
the openmg quarter which

on AL all-star team
By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
Home run kmg Jun Rtce who
doubled as an outftelder and
des1gnated hitter for the
Boston Red Sox was the only
unammous selectton today on
the
Un ted
Press
International 1977 Amertcan
League All.Star team
Rice who had a 320-39-II4
o ffenst~e performance was
named
the
league s
designated httler 11y Zl
wnters and an outfielder by
five m the votmg by 26 sports

NFL standmgs
By United eress International
Amer can conference

East

Ba

W L T Pc:t

more

J

0
0

0

000

000
333
NY es
1 2 0 333
Buffalo
0 3 0 000
Central
w L T Pet
0 667
P ttsburgh
2
0 667
Hous an
2

Ma m

New Eng and

J
1

C eve and
C nc nna

2

2

0
0

2

0
0

W L

667
333

T

Pet

3 0 0 000
3 0 0 I 000
2
I 0 667
0 3 0 000
0 3 0 000

O.!k end

Denv e

San D ego
Kansas c y

Sea

three-way match

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - George Foster
~till had hiS un1form on even though most
of h s Cincmnatt Reds teammates had
already dressed and left the clubhouse for
the fmal tune th s year
George lmgered wtth reason
He I ad somethmg tmporlant to say but
stnce tt IS not m George s personaltty to
ssue declarations he watted unt 1 a
reporter dropped by to ask hun a certam
quest on
FmaUy the reporter and the questton

fractures or separation were
discovered m X-rays The
m)ury was diagnosed as a
brUise
Sipe ISa Iso flght ng a pulled
gro m muscle and has been
bothered by flwd on hiS rtght
elbow smce the fmal pre
season game
Sipe IS much better a
Browns spokesman

said

Monday His status 1s sttU
up m the eir but it doesn t
a ppear to be a ser ous
ffijury
Dave Mays would take over
should Sipe be unable to play
Coach Forrest Gregg
attrtbuted the loss to uneven
executlon
We put our defense m
tough s tualtons part of the
tmne the men responded part
ol the time they d1dn t he

Bengals in mean
Everybody liked Rice
mood for Packers

West

Meigs second in

Foster wanted, so badly, to thank
RIVerfront fans wuh 53rd homerun

e

Nat onat Conference

Ent

W L T Pet
J
0 0 1000

as

Oat

Wav
Seat

030000
03 0 000

e

Nat onlll Conference

East

W L T

333

Centra
M nneso a
Det o
Ch cago
Green Bay
Tampa Bay

W L T Pet
2 I 0 667
2 1 0 667
I 2 0 333
0 333
0 3 0 000

,

West

W

L

T

Pet

Los Ange es
2 l
0 667
Atlan a
2 1 0 667
New Or eans
1 2 0 333
SanFrenc sc
0 3 0 COO
Monday s R esu t
Oak. and 37 Kansas C ty 28
Sunday 5 Games
A ant a a San Franc sco
c nc nna vs Green Bay
at M lweukee
Oa as at S Lou s
De ro at M nneso a
K&amp;nsas c t y a Denver
M am a Ba more
N Y e at Buffa o
Oak and at C eve a"d
Ph a a NY G an s
P t1sburgh at HotJ ston
San D ego a New Or eans

Sea

e a New Eng and

wash ng on a Tampa Bay
Monday 5 Game

os

An~

a Ch

aqo n gh

CINCINNATI (UP!) This 1s the worst The
absolute worst
Writers from around the and Frank Tanana of the
That s the way Cincmnat1
country The 21 votes for DH Cahforma Angels were Bengals defenstve end Coy
made hun an overwhelming chosen as the starling Bacon descr bes the Bengals
choice for that poSition over pitchers and Sparky Lyle of humiltatmg 24-3 loss to the
Reggte Jackson of the New the Yankees was selected as San Diego Chargers SUndsy
Words like the worst
York Yankees Hal McRae of the relief pitcher
The
team by team have now replaced pre
the Kansas City Royals and
Willie Horton of the Texas breakdown showed the Red se ason banter about the
Sox and Yankees With three Super Bowl tn the wake of
Rangers
Jom10g Rlce on the !:!- players each the Twins and Cincy bemg upset n two of tis
player team were catcher Angels wtth two each and the ftrst three games
In those two losses the
Carlton F1sk and shortstop Or oles and White Sox one
Bengals have scored a grand
Rick Burleson of the Red Sox each
The closest the AL Western total of two fteld goals
first l!aseman Rod Carew and
DlvtSlon
champ on Kansas
Bacon 1s calling on
outfielder Larry Hisle of the
City
Royals
came to placmg a someone to answer for the
Mmnesota Twins second
baseman WUhe Randolph player on the team was at dismal showtng
and thll'd baseman Gra1g th!l'd base where George
Somebody was at fault
Nettles of the New York Brett lost to Nettles IZ-11
and we ve gotto start puttmg
Votmg for other positions the blame where it hes and
Yankees and outftelders Ken
Singleton of the Baltunore was much more clear cut take tl like men he sa1d
Or10les and Richie Zisk of the With the only other really
There IS a reason for
close vote lor the third everything happenmg and tt s
Chicago White Sox
gotta fall on someone
Stri~eout king Nolan Ryan outfteld pcSihon wh1ch Zisk
won over Bobby Bonds of the
I am stck and tired of
Angels by one vote
domg a JOb with nothing
R1ce s W!anunous selectiOn happenmg If I don t do my
mlitks the second tmne m JOb we get a replacement for
three years he has achteved me Ken Johnson comes n
•
the unusual distmction to be and does 11 All I hear IS
named to two pos1t1ons m the
Come on defense L am
same team In 1975 tn UP! s tll'ed of hearmg 11
In WUIS (UP! ) - Mm postseason survey he also
Sa d a member of the
nesota ftrst baseman Rod was named as a regular punchless offense center Bob
Carew today was named outfielder and iles1gnated Johnson There ls obvwulsy
Ma)or League Player of the hitter
somethmg wrong when we
Ye~r by The Sportmg News
Carew the league s SIX
can only score three po nts
The sportmg weekly sa1d tune batting champiOn was We certainly can t put 11 all
Carew also was cnosen tbe most deciSive wmner on the defense
American League Player of exQllpt for Rice Carew got 22
N,ked what was wrong
the Year by a vote of AL of the 25 ballots cast for f rst quarterback Ken Anderson
players
base
sa1d I really dolft know
Cincmnati slugger George
Foster was named National
League Player of the Year
Of !78 ballols subrmtted by
AL players Carew recetved
TRY OUR DELICIOUS
106 votes Jun Rlce of the
Boston Red Sox had 44 and
Carew s teammate on the
'1'\rins Lar~y Hisle received
31
Of the 196 NL players who
took part m the ballotmg 154
p eked Foster Greg LIIZmski
of the Ph•ladelphl'a Philhes
had 24 votes Pittsburgh s
Dave Parker rece ved 16 and
Reggte Sm th of Los Angeles
•
was named on two ballots
Carew 32 won h s stxth
Amertcan League battmg
champ onsh1p this season
HRS 10 OOAM I ill OOPM .lun Thus 10 OOAM
Foster became onl y the lOth
f I 2 00 P M Fnday and Saturday
player n maJOr league
See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bndge
history to htt 50 or more horr e
rw ~ m a season

Each one of us has to reach
down ms1de of us and pull 11
together I hate to say 11 s one
of those days but It s one of
those days
Anderson completed only
14 of 31 passes and was
mtercepted three times
Said Bengals head coach
B1ll Johnson We JUst went
to pieces
Thmgs are falling part
almost by destgn Something
must be so obv ous we don t
see 11 It s pliZzlmg that s the
worst part of lt
The Bengals try to rebound
next Sunday m M Jwaukee
agamst the Green Bay
Packers
We got to get tt gomg
srud Bacon We got II more
games I m tellmg you we
got to get It gong

srud We d1dn t play good
football
Pittsburgh d1d a great JOb
on us And when we tired m

th e fourth quarter they
reaDy pounded op us That s
the first tune ~ t red hke
that
The game was punctuated
by 21 penalltes a dozen of
them agamst the Steelers and
rune agamst the Browns The
bad blo oil ttrat
has
charactenzed recent Steeler
Browns games was very
much m evtdence agam

Ptttsbur.gh s m ddl e
linebacker Jack Lambert
srud I ve satd 11 before and
I ll say It agam - Cleveland s
offenSive lme holds trtps and
chps more than any other
It s not football and I don t
enjoy It
And defensive end Dw ght
White smgled out Cieveland
tackle Doug Dteken as fla
grant
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··:·:·:-::-:-:-:·:-:.:.:-:·····

))pdgers, Yanks
YORK ( UPI ) liked by Greek ·s oNEW
uthPrn Cali for nia ,

Gullett opens for Yankees
.
.

.

pla~· orr . series
~· ith
the
As tlle Reds demonstrated
By FRED DOWN
• Kansas
City
Rova ls last )'ear in the World Ser,ies,
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK l UP!) -The Wednesdav al 3:15 P.M .. • tllis.high~ri()!d Yank.,.. team
pride of the Yankees, EDT, and- Thursday at 8:15 doesn't ha\'t&gt; a really
wounded by tlle Cincinnati P .M., EDT. at Yankee t&gt;xceptiona l dcfrnsi\'e player
at any position except third
Reds in the 1976 World Series Stadiwn .
Gullett. an experienced base, where Graig Nettl es
and besmirched by turmoil
during the 1977 American postseason player , will start may be the best in the
the first game against left- business.
League season , has been
J&gt;Ander
Paul Splittorri.
.
Martin. who becomes even
pla,red in the hands of a
whose
,so
le
Guidry,
more pugnacious than usual
couple of hard·throwing
pre\ious appearance in post~ when dealing with a one-&lt;&gt;n·
newromers.
The\· are left-handers Doo season play. was a~ a pinch- one situation such as the
Gullett and Ron Guidr)', who run ner in last season's playoffs, refused "to buy' ' the
have been named b)'- playoffs with Kansas City, · theor)' Yankee hitters can be
Manager Billy Martin to start will face either Andy Hassler cooled off by · ordinar)' left:
tlle first two games of the AL or Larry Gura in the second handed pitching. '
game.
" We were 20-3 again st
"They're my guys for the lefties since Aug . I," barks
first two games,'' said Martin. 'rl think my team is a
Martin. '• I'm starting them Jot better against lefties than
because they 've been my it was last year ."
most effective pitchers ."
Whitey Her zog, Kansas
Yankee haters of whom Cit)' 'S low-key manager, has
there are many aroWld the indicated that he will start
country, believe the Royals' Hassler in the second game in
•best. . bets are their left- New York if the Royals win
"'!landed pitchers .and !hell' the opener .. but will Sl\i tch to
. L.
artificial turf in Kansas City. Gura if they lose.
COLUMBUS, Ohto (UP! ) Left-handed pitchers figure
Yogi Berra. the . Yankee
It,rmght not be a return to the · to cut do..-n Yankee left- coach, who is appearing in his
three yards and a cloud of handed power toward the 19th
po s t- season
dust offense , 'but Ohio State short porch right field in New extravaganza and oft en is a
Coach W~ dy Hayes warned York and the Royals are quiet voice of reason among
Monda)-, you can expect us exceptionally difficult to beat the strident voices of the
to use our fullbacks con· on their honie turl .
Yankee clubhouse, sums it up
siderably more from now
on. "
Hayes, in attempt to get
.
more speed in his backfield,
has gone this year with the
smaller, speedier backs in
Hockey
By Un ited Preu.International
the likes of Jeff Logan, Ron
Atlanta &lt;NH LJ - Released
Monday
defe-nsem an · Ab DeMarco and
Springs, Ricky Johnson and
- Ba1ketball
rook ie' Br ian ·Hill to Tulsa .
Atlanta - W&amp;s awarded sen!
even ·regular safet)' Ray
Cii")C;innati ~ WHA ) - AS · ·
forward
Ron
~fhagen
and
&lt;Grilfin in Logan's absence. $150,000 by ttH! NBA Office as signed left wing Gene · SobchUk.
Floyd Lat1ache and
But the emergency of com pensat ion for the sign ing bY defensen;an
center Bill Gilligan to Hamp New
Orleans
of
forwl!lrd
Truck
fullbacks Joel Payton and Rob inson .
ton .
" &lt;»
York Islanders
Paul Campbell, along with
Buffalo - Placed on wa ivers AssNeW
ig ned fo llow ing players to
Jackson
,
tt1eir
fourth
·
Mike
Logan's reinjuring an ankle,
round draft choice from !he Fort Worth of the Central
Hayes plans to put his big University of North· Carolln! at Hockey League : lett wing
Bruce Andres , r ight wing
power runners to more use in Charleston , and Melv in Wat - HeC
tor Mar ini , lett wing Garth
kins
,
their
se11enth
-round
pick
Saturday's invasion by from Tennessee.
McGuigan , right wing Alex
, right wing Yvon
Detro it - Placed on wa ivers McKendry
Purdue.
Vautour , left 'lel'ing Da ve Sal ·
Garv. Cole, a 6-foot -9. 21Q,pound vi
"Both Paul and Joel ran free
an , def~semen Ne il Nichol agent forward from
real well Saturday night," Wisconsin -Parks ide who was Son, Bob Lor im er and Mike
Hordy and goaltenders Don
sa fd Hayes. "You can expect Cleveland's No . 3 draft choice Cutts and Anc;lre Lepage .·
in 1976 .
Football
us to use our fullbacks conGolden Stat.e - Signed free
Atlanta - Placed runn ing
siderably more from now agent forward E.C. Coleman . back
Bean on the
from New Orleans. to .a in jured Bubba
on.''
reserve list and re multiyear contract . Cut free
''fut ure ,cons iderations"
Campbell, a 6-1 , 212-pound agents Nate Grang·er an~ Larry ceived
from Tampa Bay to complete
Tounds
.
·
sophomore, gained 92 yards
Ph ll ectelphia ...... Traded for : the deal in wh-iCh the Bucs
in 20 tries against SMU. ward Terr'y Furlow--to Cle11e • obtained place kicker Alan
land tor undi sc losed future Leavitt . B.ueball
'"''",.,,-',"""''"·Payton, a 6-2 , 222-pound draft
choices.
Chicago {All - Signed th ird
treshman,
ripped
the
SeaHie - Clai,ed fOrward
baseman Eric Soderholm to a
Mustangs for 91 years in only Rickey Brown on waivers from two
-year contract .
Port l l!ln~
12 tries, including « and }
Cleveland - Signed Joe
Moeller as bullpen coach for
yard touchdown runs .
1978.

Hayes likes
his 2 new
k
___ ac S
fU·11b

Trojans hold to top

'

1

.
. Sports transactions

maintained its supremacv as .

LAS \' EGAS. Ntv. tUPII
Tbr Los Angrlts
Dodgers and New Yol'lYan.kres wrre estalillshrd ·
as the fa••orllts Monday by
J tmm)' " thr Greek"
Snyder to win their
rtsptrth·e ,penna n\S and
meet In' the World Serlrs.
The Dodgen were llstrd
as 6-S favorites to win
Tuesday night's National
Leagur opr.ner al Los ·
Ang 'e les
against
Philadelphia and also were
6-5 to capture the best-oflh·f seriPs . ·
The Yankees, wbo open

the nation's top-ranked
college football team in the
fourth United Press lnternaMnal Bl.ara · o( roaches
football ratin~s annoW1ced
Monday , but Mirhig an

Systems to

organs

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST•.
'
MIDDLEPORT,
0.

CRACKER
JACKS
BOX

FOOD
ALL VARIETIES
3CANS
FAMilY PAK

PORK
CHOPS

$1

4

I

· KAHN'S
. ALL MEAT

LB.

BOLOGNA
SLICED
·LB.

69~

GROUND
CHUCK ~-

LB.
I .

gge

FRESH. &amp; LEAN

GROUND
BEEF .
5 LB.
or MORE
LB.

69e

$}49

•

'

lJZZIE FANNING. age 70, spfns wool and flax at the l;!_ob Evans Farm festival , Rin
Grande, Oct. 14, 15· and 1 ~.
.

.. ,,

14 OL

EACH

CAN

CANS

10e

CASH SAVER

.E·

PURE PORK
~
SAUSAGE ••~~-. 99
G_ROUND LB $ 09
ROUND•••••••:.!

25 LB;
BAG

$3~9

GRAVY

MIX

lOt

BOX

•

GGS ......•..............
.
....69C
·

'

·

DOZEN

DIET RITE
a- 16 oz. Bottles

'

DAIRY SPECIALS -

ALL WEEK
PRICE

99e

RC
COLA
8-16 oz. BotUe5
.:

99e

BROUGHTONS

I~~~~....;..;;,.~ }39

;;

or

SPRITE
quarts ·

Valley Bell

4/$1

lh gal.
'.

BUITERM ILK ....
•

Edwin
J.
Boadway ,
Nazarene missionary to
Papua, New Guinea; · will
speak at special services at
the Rutland Church of the
-Nazarene at 7:30 o'c lock
tonight and at the Racine
Ch urc h of the ['!a zarene
Wednesday, alsO at 1:30 p.m.
Mr. Boadway is on furlough
after Working four years in
the Western Highlands of
New Guinea. He will give an
audio-visual , preSentation&gt; of
the work in that country and
artifacts will be on display.
His position involves
maintenanCe and 'repair for
the mission station, hospital
and vehicles. This includes
phone· ..- · and
water,
hy&lt;)roelectrical systems, the
air strip and a cattle project.
He alsO teaches religious
instruction and correspon.:
dence courses .
Mrs . Boadway ·servea: as
station hoste.ss, ljyyer and a
teacher fo sewing. She is in
charge or . religious . in·
. stt'uction and correspondence
courses.
Mr. Boadway received his
degree from Olivet Nazarene
College. He alsO graduated
from DeVry Technical In·
stitute and taught at Northwest Oakland Vocational
Center before hi s appointment. The Boadways
have three daughters, Becky,
Patti and Joy. The family is
residing in Flint, Mich., while
on furlough .

NEW YORK (UPI)
Cesar Cedeno of the Houston
Astros is , the National
League's Player of the Month
for September, Le~gue
President Charles Feeney
annouunced Monday.
Cedeno hit .409 for the
month with 47 hits in 115 at
bats. He hit five home runs,
scored 26 runs· and drove in
25. He also stole 16 bases to
give him a c.lub-high total of
· 61 for the season .
.·
tarry Christenson or the_
Philadelphia Phillies was selected as the league's Pitcher
· of the Mon lh . He won six
times without losing with an
ERA of 2.30.

PRICE

..

Meigs Omrcbes

~

ALL WEEK

::~:~;. ~.89¢

Missionary in
2 services at

'

PILLSBURY

DOG
FOOD ·

$1

EDWIN BOADWAY

~-

.. DR.
.PEPPER
.· 8-16 ·oz. bottles

89~
•

''

·Federal-Mogul will. expan~.
local forge plant by 6Q%

•

TR~ET
10 OL

GRADE .B LARGE

-RATH~S

BUCKET
STEAKS

' 10~

Beef, Bacon, Cheese,
Liver &amp; Eggs &amp; Stew

HOMEMADE

NO WASTE

j

ARMOUR

CANDY
BARS

DOG
FOOD

DOG

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We Accept Feder·al Food Stamps
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities

PAYDAY, BUTTERNUT
AND ZERQ, _

"New" Ken-L-Ration

ALPO

$}99_

, &lt;\ .

SUPERMARKET
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

MARKY

79e .

1 LB.
BOX

~~-J~~

RIO GRANDE - A 7~year­
old grandmother from
Gallipolis :will spin flax and
wool and the Goosetown
Astonishers will provide foot'stomping
entertainment
when the Bob Evans Farm
Festival, ·a three-day "ole
country gathering," opens
Friday.
These will be among the
more than 125 old-time crafts,
field demonstrations , and
country entertainers on hand
at the Bob Evans Fann, Rt.
35, between Jackson and
Gallipolis, aboul twn houts
driving time from ColumbUs.
The Festival takes place at
the height of nature's display

'

Geronimo inks new contract

TOWNHOUSE
CRACKERS

'

.•

Moeller signed
as 'pen coach

KEEBLER

LB.

Old-time crafts highlight
seVenth an.n ual Rio festiva!

designed into blood center

SAVE BIG

LOIN PORK
ROAST
.9., ''9
. ~

Hot pass.e r
Okla homa, moving from Oklahoma received 10 !lrst- of Far west
U1ird to secood piaL-e .
...pia«! votes but dropped to
USC roijted Wa shington thll'q after beat'!'&amp; Kansas, •
t
h
k
State, 41-7, Friday night to :14-9. All three teams have~ IS
op ac
garner 15 first-iJlace votes, records.
;

but Michigan earned 14 on the
Texas, ~. - moved . fr?m
strength of an impressive 41-3 eighth to fourth by whtppmg By JOE CARNICELU
victory Saturday over tllen- Rice, 72-15, and Colorado UP! Executive Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
filth-ran ked Texas A&amp;M . advanced one notch to f1ftll
Gifford
Nielsen
Show
place after humblillg Army ,
:"·~· H~ ' · £-d
olM' P.S
with
coolin
ues
at
Brigham
Young
.
31-l).
The
6-foot--5
Nielsen,
the
Penn State , ranked fourth
1&amp;1 week, suffered a 24-20 nation's leading passer, gave
prese~e
loss to unranked Kentucky. to another incredible
fall from the top 10. Texas performance Friday night .
A&amp;M, which held the No. 5 He. threw (ive tnuchdown
spot last week , also dropped passea, giving him II in the
out of the top 10 after its loss past two games and 13
overall , and hit on 19-&lt;&gt;f-23
ranging . from to the Wolverines.
HUNTINGTON - When vices
attempts
to spark the 14thOhio State , 3-1, defeated
the designers of the new Tri- diagnostic testing to organ
ranked
Cougar
s to a 55-19
SMU, 3H, to climb one rung
state Regional Blood Center storage .
at bome
Wednesday
rout
of
New
Mexi
co.
)l oy L. Tbomas, ad- to the No. 6 spot, while
complex . began their job
against Kansas City, were
Nielsen,
who
had
a passing
several yea rs ago, some ministrative directo.r of the Nebraska downed Indiana , percentage of 82.5 for the
listed at 7-5 lor the lint
innovations were included. facility now under con- 31-13, to go from 10\h to game, thus gained UPI 's
game and 13-10 for the
Ninth-ranked
Among them were electrical struction, explained that the seventh .
American League series.
Florida
suffered
its first loss, Backfield o! the Week honors
nei\·
complex
should
be
$ystems
servin g
new
Cllmpleted and operational by 36-14 "to Louisiana State, that for the second consecutive
;:::;::=:: :=:: ;:;:;:: :;:: :;: ::;:::;: ;:;: ;:;:::: :;:;:;: ::;: ::;: : ~:: : :;:;:;::: equipment needed, in th e
dropped the Gators out of the week .
•
laboratory and in other early next spring.
Joining Nielsen in the UPI
, Donations for the $2.9 top 10.
areas.
backfield
are I.M . Hipp of ·
Bear Bryant•s- Crimson
this way :
One such plan was the million flf"ctlitY have been
Nebraska,
Earl Campbell of
" It's tough to beat the kind inclusion of freezers capable received from many a·reas of Tide, which did not make ttil.
Te.as
and
Dwight Ford of
of heat Gullett and Guidry of storing .organs fDr trans· the 53 counties served by the \op 10 last week, beat a tough ,
Southern
California.
throw, especially in the plant in surgery cases. Some blood center. Thomas stated Georgia squad, 18-10, as
Hipp rim ror a scf\ool
playoffs and Wprld Series were skeptical . then and that these donations will also Alabama took over the No . 8
reco
rd 254
yards .iii
spot.
Arkansas
remained
when the bats get a littre perhaps thought those plans help in the •construction of
· Nebraska's 31-13 victory over
undefeated
at
4-0
and
moved
heavy, " says Yogi. " If they too extravagant.
new sub-center facilities in
Indiana. Hipp's yardage in
can beat Gullett and Guidry
However, American Red the Parke•sburg, Beckley, to ninth with a 4U! victory key · situations
helped
over Texas Christian .
they deserve to win because Cross Vice President Robert and Char)eston areas.
Nebraska
hold
off
a
stubborn
they're swell pitchers."
Building fund campaign California ran its record to 4-0
·wick told a conference of
officials
stressed the need to and jumped to lOth with a 52-3 Indiana team .
valunteer consultants
Campbell scored four
recently that he envisions raise the $700 ,000 still demolition of San Jose State, touchdowns , three of them in ·
NEW YORK ( UPi l .......... The
evolution of regional blood required to reach the goal.
n l ted . Press International the first half, to spark Texas
centers into regional health Contributions may be sent to u
Board Of Coaches top 20 teams to a 72-15 rout of Rice .
centers in the coming years. the Blood Center, P. 0. Box after the fourth week ot th.e Ca m·p·bell, named t.o the ·
Huntington · and colleQe fOOtball season with
These centers would provide 605,
designated
for the building first -place votes and record ln Backfield of the Week for 'the
a broad range of volunteer first time this season.·scored'
parentheses
:.
fum
Points
.. .:. involving health care ser· !lind.
1. Southern cat (15H 4-0l
JSB on rwts of one, 16. 21 and six
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
2. Mich igan&lt; 14 l (o&amp;.oJ
355 yards to tie-a-.school record
The Cleveland Indians signed
3. OklahOma (101 (4-0l
333 for touchdowns ;" a game.
4. Texas (3 -0l
:230
""'
Joe Moeller Monday as ·
s. Colorado (4 -0l
:211
Ford scored on runs of 53
191 and 14 )'ards w lead the topbullpen coach for 1978 and
6. Oh ;o Stalo 13-ll
7. Nebraska (3 . 1)
99
invited back all tllree coaches
a. Alabama t3 ·ll
•• ranked Trojans to a 41-7 romp
from 1977.
(4-0 l
81
t W h" t
CINCINNATI (UP!) two errors in 147 games 9.10.Arkansas
California
(4.0 l
40 pas
as mg on State ·
Moeller, 34, has coached Cesar
Geronimo,
the ·' during the 1977 season, his 11. Penn State 13-1)
30 Ford's 53-yard rWl in the
tlle El Camino Junior College Cincinnati Reds' Gold Glove sixth year with the Rl!ds, and 12. Brigham YO Ur:l9 (J.Q)
18 5etQOd period put Southern
13. Notre Dame (J.lJ
16
baseball team the past two winning outfielder, has batted .265.
14. Pittsburgh (J . I)
15 Cal ahead 24-0.
years near his residence in signed a new four-year
Te'!"' of the contract were 1S . Houston · (J . 1)
10
Several other notable
Manhattaij Beach , Calif.
16." TeKasTech (J-1)
B performan ce
earned
contract 'lih ic h extends not disclosed.
17 . TeKas A&amp;M ( 3. 1)
6
" We feel that this year's through the ; 1981 season , it
The signing gives the Reds 18 . Florida (2 -1)
s honorable mention·.
coaches (Joe Nossek, Rocky was announL-ed today .
_...
Oklahom'a quarterba ck
two players under contract 19. Louis iana Sti! te ( 2-0
20. Wisconsin (4.0)
J
Colavito and Harvey Haddix )
Geronimo, 29, is regarded.•, thro~ the 1981 Sl'&amp;son, ·~­
Note : By agreeml'!lf wit ~ the Thomas Lott rtJ.Sh,ed for ' "2 ,.
have· don~ a good job for us as one of the finest defensive cordmg to Dtc k Wagner, Amer ican Footba ll Coaches yards and three touchdm s '
and will continued to do a top- outfielders in the National executive vice president and Assoc iation , 'teams on probat ion in the Sooners' 24-9 vlctorv
by the NCAA are 1nelig1ble for
-?
flight job for the Indians," League and has won a Gold general manager of the club. top
~20 and nat1on al champ1on · ' over
Kansas
and
said general manager Phil Glove . Award for fielding All-St~r · shortstop Dave sh1p consideration by the UPI Grambling's Doug Williams
Board of Coaches Those teams
Seghi. "-They are a hard- excellence the last three . Concepcion inked a five-year Cu
rrently on probat ion tor 197' passed forJriJ29 yards and five
working and knowledgeable years in a row.
are : Kentucky , Mich ig an State, touchdowns .in a 70-7 rout of
pact last spring .
crew.''
Red tan as (Calit.L western Prall'
· 1.e Vl"ew .
He was charged with just
State &lt;toto.).

SHOP US 'N'

FRESH &amp; LEAN

r~k

MILWAUKEE (UP!)
Usually it's what happens on
the basketball floor that is
important;not what's painted
on the basketball floor.
But tonight when the Milwaukee Bucks host the
Chicago Bulls in their firSt·
exhibition game in the new
MUwauk.ee Arena, the floor
probably will be drawing as
much attention as the
players.
The co urt h&lt;!,S been
repainted using a desi
by.
artist Robert Indiana - th
cost Milwaukee Coun
$27,000 .

Manager Edward H.
McGovern of Federal-Mogul
Corporation's precision forge
plant in Gallipolis . today
announced a plarmed expansion or the facility that
will pr_ovide about )25 n~w
jobs over the next .two and a
half years .
McGovern said the present
265-member employee force
would increase to about 380.
Construction on the 37,1100
square foot addition to. the
70,000 square foot plant is
scheduled to begin in midOctober with completion of
the project ned March, he
said. The genera l. contact on
the addition will be awarded
during the first week of
October.
,.
"The ,e&lt;pansion will increase the plant's produc-

used at the Ga llipolis facility field, Mich. the company
to produce high strength, operates 35 plants, more than
precision automotive trans- 5Q distribution centers and
mission parts.
four
major
research
The addition will be con- facilities. Its products range
structed on a steel frame with from a variety of precision
steel siding at the rear of the parts for the transportation,
equipment,
con·
existing plant, which i's farm
located on a 2.3-a~re site on struction and manufacturing
industries to aerospace
Upper River Road.
Headquartered in South- components.
Sports Briefs

Quebec Nordiques,
CHICAGO (UP!) - Eric champions of tlle rival World
Soderholm , the American Hockey Association, to a
League 's top third baseman game in the Canadian team's
this season, has signed a two- rink with .WHA officials.
Max McJ'!ab, genera[
year contract with the
Cllicago White Sox, the club manager of the Capitals, sent
an open letter to • Maurice
announced Monday.
•
Soderholm, 29, led AL third Fillion, head of the Canadian
basemen in fielding with .978, team, and asked to play Oct.
making only one error ·in his 9tl1 or loth.
tivity by 60 percent, n\ainl)' . last 87 games this seaS&lt;1n and
"As an expansion team in
throu~h the addition of three only eight e~rors all year. the National Hockey League ,
new production lines," Soderholm batted .280 in 130 we are most anxious to meet
McGovern• indicated. " We games WI"th 25horne runs
·
an d la st
year's
WHA
will alsO install equipment 67 RBI.
Champions,"
the
letter
said.
that will give us the in-house ·
"We believe the game would
ability to- blend metal
have' great intere~t to hockey'
powders used in the
fans
everywhere."
WASHINGTON (UP!) manufacture of our Sinta
The
Washington
Capitals
.of
Forge products." . .
Sinta Forge is a prqcess the the National Hockey League
.DEARBORN, Mich. (UP!)
company developed which is Monday chalLenged the - The Ladies Professional
Golf Association rour will roU
into this Detroit suburb next
swruner to compete in a
$150,000 tournament to
By JOAN HANAUER
benefit Leader Dogs for the
UP! Television Writer
Blind.
NEW YORK \ UP! )- "Sanford Arms" on NBC and "Yo ung
Peter W. Siroh, president of
the Stroh Brewery Co, anDan '! Boone" on CBS became the first casualties of the new nounced the contest Monday.
television season.
The · four-day,
72-hole
Their respective networks have art'lPunced "Sanford" sans championship event, dubbed
Redd Foxx goes off the a ir as of Oct. 21 , while "Dan'!" has the"LadySttoh'sOpen,"will
already g~ne th~taway :
.
be played at the Dearborn
NBC 's new show to replace " Sanford" m the ~:30 p.m.,
Eastern time slot is less than innovative - it'sold Navy buddy Country Club. The winner
Don Ric kles~~ "CPO Sharkey," who has picked up character · will take home $22,500.
actor Richard X. Slattery as a hard-boiled commanding
offi qer.
NBC hijS another new addition to the schedule - ','James at
DETROIT (UP!-) - Jean
15, the Story of a Teen-Ager" --: which the network tried out as Hamel · ·will · be sidelined
a two-hour movie on Sept. 5, opening night of the new season. indefinitely because of a
The drama, starring Lance Kerwin, hit the toP. of the Nielsen strained muscle in his left
ratings that week, with a 23.8 rating and a 42_ share of the arm and sho~der suff~red
audience which convinced the network to turn 1! mto a regular Saturday mght m Detrmt s 3at the e.;.liest possible date.
· .
3 tie with Washington , the
The time opened up with the end of the "Richard Pryor ' Red Wings said Monday..
Show," although " James" will not occupy the same time slot.
Also , Dennis Hextall and
Instead the network is doing a fast shuffle, moving "Man from Wings' Coach Bobby Kromm
Atlanti;" into Pryor 's old 11-9 p.m. (Eastern time) period on were scheduled tomeet today
Tuesdays, as of Oct. 18.
·
·
with NHL President John
That had previously been announced as the date of the_final Ziegler and Execuh~e
Pryor show which instead will go on the air Oct. 20, 9-10 p.m., Director Brian O'N,e1l m
in the fon~er " Atlantis" slot. "James" moves into the Toronto to discuss Hextall's
Thursday time ~eriod on Oct. 27.
.
.
fight with Washingto~ 's Mike
The move is belated for the Pryor show, whtc~ mtght never Marson m Saturdays game.
have become so controvetsial if it had been scheduled for 9·10,
putting it beyond family viewing titne. "AUanti~," with its
comic.,strip nature, should be right at hOme 11-9 p.m.
NEW YORK (UP!) -John
CBS also is redealing its deck, switching "Logan's Run " Candelaria of the Pittsburgh
from 9-10 p.m. Fridays to 11-9 p.m. Mondays, aU Eastern lime, Pirates is the National
as of Oct. 10. The earlier viewing time plus heavy promotion League's Player of the Week
means \he network hopes a change of scenery will give the for the final week of the
futuristic adventure story a network future for the present.
season," according to NL
There is no news on what series CBS will move into the President Charles Feeney.
Friday slot - on Oct. 14 it will rebroadcast "Smile" from 9-11,
Candelaria woo his 19th
and on Oct. 21 "Switch" will expand \0 two hours. After that,
nobodY knows.
OIIDII
,

TV•• .in Review

- -

'

The tragedy of the battered child- which often inchl&lt;les a
sadly disturbed parent,and a society unable to cope with the·
situation ~ is the subject for "Mary Jane Harper Cried Last
Nigfit, " which CBS broadcasts Oct. 5, 9-11 p.m., Eastern time.
· The film stars Susen Dey ,ofthe "The Partridge Family," as
Rowena Harper, Mary Jane 's mother, whose family" connections allow her to keep her daughler despite the child's broken
arm and suspicious burns . .
_
.
The subject is unpleasant, but it needs to be faced just as the
child-beating mother must learn to face the truth in her own
life - or watch fi dissolve into di~ter .

e •....

-the Astonisher . Goosetown
of fall foliage here in the must have been like to prmt shop.
In the fields are Bradford's was a section of Chillicothe
Appalachian foothill s of wear homemad·e clothes
and
to
wCJlt
with
Border Collies which herd where many G-erma ns noted
southeastern Ohi.o.
mounting
anticipation
while
sh"eep and ducks, horseshoe for raising geese, settled.
or the 80-plus craftsmen to
be on the grounds, .Oct. 14·16, mother follo wed the pain- pitching by the Championship . They play a mixt.ure of
one of the most popular at staking prcteedu\'"s from raw Reno Famil)', logrolling , a trUmpet , h·orn, tuba, ,tromevery festival has ' been 7~ materials to finished gar- turn-of-the· century sawmill b&lt;lne , piano, saxophone and
and steam-powered engines banjo and improvise songs
year-old Lizzie Fanning of ments.
like
those used on farms in like."The D. E. Pe~ry Uptown
nearby Bidwell who spins
In some ways Lizzie is still
th
e
"good
old days.:•
Strut," " When the Saints Go .
flax and wool.
• very much a part of those
The
entertairunent
at
the.
M¥ching In," and ' Basin
Lizzie· with her white hair times. She says she learned to
and long-old- fashioned dress spin nearly 60 'years ago and festival is ' largely "country" Street Blues ."
F estival admi ss ion ,
is the image of the pioneer she still uses a wheel made by with gro ups like West
parking and entertaim:nent
housewife, setting ~onlookers her grandfather when she , Virginia's Cochran Family a popular bluegrass group, are all free, making the event
to imagining what it was only six.
Lizzie sliys .Orne of the the Hillfolk Dancers, the the largeSt free festival of its
toughest work is in the Wagon Wheelers, and a new kind in the U. S.
Friday is usually the least
preparation before spinning. . addition to the 1977 program
Jhe
Gooset&lt;iwn crowded day, so officials are
Her husband, Willie, who is · called
urging groups· such ·as senior
retired. harvests the. flax , a Astonishers.
A seven-member group citizens, schools and tour
grass-like plant similar to
Chillicothe ,
th e buses to '[isit the festival on
alfalfa . Flax must be from
Astonishers
~tir
audiences
, Friday, Oct. 14. Plenty of food
weathered a year after it's
cut, and then dried. Once with their own brand of is always available across the
well dried it is broken , Appalachian !Dixieland, a fall grounds incl uding homemade
.
scuiched
and hackled --' a back to the Dixieland era of pieS, corn bread, bean soup,
DAN THOMPSON
ford league
p;ocess that separates and the 1920s. Audience reaction apple butter, fresh apple
Week of Sept. 27, 1977
combs out the fiber from the -.,usually involves much foot- cider, and of course, sausage
Team
W. L.
stomping, clapping, whistling sandwiches.
.
No.3
&lt;!JB 4 stalk of the plant.
Hours are from 10 a.m .
Nol 5
22 10
Lizzie does the preparation and singing-along.
No. 4
20 12 herself on wool. First she
The Astonishers got their until6 p.m. ·on Friday, from 9
No. 9
·20 12
name from a fonner local 'til6 on Saturday, and from 9
says
she
washes
the
No. 13
20 12
German newspaper called 'til 5 on Sunday.
18 14 shea rings from the sheep and
No. 2
No. 7
18 .14 once dry she pulls it apart
No.1
16 16 and cards the wool which
No. 6
16 16 combs it out in preparation
No. 16
16 , 16
• ·
No. 10
14 18 for spinning.
No. 8 '
12 20
All of this including the
No. 11
12 20 process of weaving clothes is
No. 12
10 22
by LANE.
No 1.4
8 24 demonstrated or explained in
No . 15
~~.·~ .
6 26 detail at the festival. In the
Team 7 won 6 points from 19th century the wool yarn . ,
No. 4. Joyce Robbie was high and flax yarn (now linen )
for No . 7 with a 453. and fligh were woven on a loom into a
for No. 4 was Larry Patrick
with a .506. Team 1 won 6 cloth called linseywoolsey.
points from No . 10 ·with J im
"I can still remember the
Clatworthy witfl a 443 and Dot feel of the clothes my mother
Adams was high for No. 10 .used to make,' ' Lizzie said~ ''!
with a 179. Team 8 won 6
points from No . 12 with Lee only wish I had saved some of
Howell high for No. 8 with 460 them for people to see." .
and Jack Ferguson hia.h for
Among the other early
No. 12 with 457. Team il won American craft demon8 points fro m ·14, with Jerry
Hil l high for No . 11 w'ith a 204 strations are quilters and
.and Roger Hines with a 471 soap ffiakers, furniture
for No . 14. Team 2 won 6 from makers and silversmiths. ·
No . 15, Jack· Mink was high
From 1he "Oak mount" Collection by Lane. ' Th is
for No. 2 with 521 and Wally Also, there's rail splitting,
smartly styled contemporary bedroom suite features 1
Smith high for No. 15with 532 . sheep shearing, sorghum
expert craftsmanship a(ld styling plus Oak Veneers
Team 3 won 8 from No. 16. making
and
corn meal
and Oak Solids, antiques brass, finish hardware,
High for No . 3 was Davi d grinding - all part of a
recessed bases, no sa g drawer glides .
Somerville with 522 and E .
Starling (Sub) was high for memorial to the lives lived by
our forefathers.
~o . 11wlth a 479 . Team 5 won
SALE PRICED AT
6 ROjnts from No. 16 with high
Abe Lincoln would have
for No. S Howard Browning a been at home here showing
197 and Bill Bechtel high tor
No. 16 with a 527 . Team 9 won vfsitors how things were done
back on the !ann in Illinois.
8 points from No . 6 with high
for No. 9 Jerry Dee I a 448 and Other crafts include rug
high for No . 6 was Steve weavll\'ll, quilting, leatlierRichards with a 527.
Garnet Simms had high crafting, broom making ,
ga·me fa the women with a lantern · making , tintype
191. Doris Fitzsimmons had
photography, and an old time
hi~h serie:s for the women
w1th a 480.
· Jerry Hill had high ,game
for the men with a 204. Jerry
had high series with a 547.
Other highs for the night
were, Larry Patrick a 506,
Merida Shaw a 503. Jack
Mink a 521, Wally Sm;tha 532,
Bill Bechtel a 527 , Da ve
Somervil le a 522. Milt
Houdashelt 504, and Steve
Richards a 527.
1

.BOWLING
-"

QUALITY FURNITURE .

•

POMEROY LANES
Morning Glories
September 20. 1977

Pts.

Gibbs Gro.cery
20
Team No. 6
14
Team No . 2
14
Team No .4
_.... u
Team No .5
8
. Karr &amp; VanZandt
2
High Ind. Ga me - Mary
Gillilan 162. Clarice Kennedy ,
159.

High Ind . Three Games Philli s Cline 457 , · Lena
Howard, 423.
High Team Game - Tea m
No. 6, 742.
"High Team Three Games
- Gibbs Grocery . 2145.

and 20th games last week ,
twice defeating the Cllicago
CUbs . He allowed only one
earned nm, 14 hits, struck out
12 and walked none. His ERA
for the week was 0.57. He also
allowed only one run in his 15
2-3 innings pitched .

.....•.•.•.•.•.•.•..
.

,

;

•

REUTER• BROGAN
''The Insurance Store''

Auto insurance
Home Insurance
J . Mobile Homes ·
4. Health Insurance
5. life Insurance
6.. Boat Insurance
1.
2.

7. Motorcycles 8. Jewelry anc.t Other
\/a luables :
9. Business Package
Policies

10. LiabilitY Insurance
11 . Farm Insurance
.
\

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS ·
Make · an appointment for your
senior portraits while -the weather is
sti II nice so that we can Offer you
attj;.ilctive outdoor shots as well as
traditional poses. '

mE PHOTO PLACE
109 High St. 992-5292 Pomeroy, 0.
(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich.)

PACKAGE· P-OLICY - Pul your auto, home, health
and life insurance intQ ONE po licy. Save money and
have one premium dUe date for all your insurance, ·
Some Of Our Other Services:
(opy Service . Notary Service · Car Leasing service

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICL.
"The Insurance Store"

214 E. MAIN

PH. 992-5130

Get bDinthe
.driver's seat
at
'

·L oan.
\

.

When you need money to keep your car running1or for'an_y good
reasop, talk to us. We handle Personal Loans qu1ckly, ~·ly and
with consideration. You can borrow with trust where peopl":_ save
with trust. City Loan &amp; Savings.
·
We find ways to help.

CITYLOAN.

5
&amp;SAVING
ESI 19/Z
r,;lc::::\

,.,,,,.!'ti.,~IW!\II(tOI

~c:l LONTI\0\ DATA COR}'OII.f..TI()N

125 E. Main Street ·992-2171

�•

" _ The Da1h &amp; rttuw'!. 7\tuh Ueport · Ponwrn~ . D.• l'ut&gt;Sd(-1~ . Ot·t . 4. Wi7·
•
. ,
)·:·;::...:::::::_..:_-.~:::;;,..:;=:;_"'&lt;;:;;.:;.,'.o;:::.:·:-:,-.;:;:.':::::.~:~:::~:~::!~:_%!:~~'\:::&gt;:.:.«.-.":::·:-.'~·:·X•:·:•:·:·:-:-~~~

Star gardeners hold
meeting in De-xter

"as nult'&lt;l that tlw dub had
sen! llll.lllt'\' tu tilt' GOt.ld l.ut.·k
t~arden dub at tht.•_ Atht'ns
:'oh:'ntal Ht•alth Centt•r lLI ~
~lrs. Eu):.!.ent: :\ tkm.s .md :\11 ~ ust'd- r o r purdl ' smg
C'hnstmfts - g1-fts for tlw
Rubr Dl"ehl. •
ln. lwr ce rcmQ.rl~ , ~ t rs. lllL'mlx•rs of thr d ub.
Plans wrn.• disrusst'&lt;l for a
\'lrgll At'kmsf. ms tall m~ of. fi1W .Jl.li.:chl lik' cipb "ff1n• rs lhna py program for th1-· dub
to dlff('rl' nt flLl Wt' rs u1 H 1n Ot..'lolH.·r.
A diseu~1un was held un
fllnrt'r a rr n ng ~·nwnt. :\s she
conctuctrd ""c"tht.• tnstallu t iun. · the to pa c . of ' ·o utd.our
slle madt' :m ~-t rra n~e mPn t. Plants." Pictures of g~rdt• z ts
:\1rs. Robert H LI~:-~~·,._ pn•st­ \'isiterl by M rs. F,:ugene
d~n t. was fl'Prt'stm!t•d b~ til£' Atkins and Miss Diehl were
rt•d z m nm. :\trs. Hfmn displayed along with pictures
Turner . f 1rst \ Wt&gt; pres1derit Wken at the OAGC com·en·
ami pr u~ r;un l' hatrman. by tlon .
Mrs. E;ugene Atkins read
thl' pmk zmma: :\lrs. Orien
\ e lso n. St't'r t&gt;tary and the pl\&lt;'m . .. On the Wings of
treasun•r. by· tht'!. wh itt' Pra1•er .. and Miss Diehl read
gladi olu s. MfS . James .. Teit Little Christians:· The
~J c hulso ll. second ,·ice presi- roll call was answered bv 14
members and one gUest. Mrs.
dent. was unable to attend .
Mrs . ~ onna n Will . con- Felix Alkire.
Mr s. George Albe r t
ducted the ll}E'eting during
wh1ch tune the program Radekin bought .the . travel
' books were ,discussed for the . pnze furnished · b}&lt;\•. Mrs.
Hollid ay.
coming year. A conunun ica- Ro b e rt
twn~ was read from the Refreshments . were served
Athens ~l e nW I Health Center br the hos te.s s es. Next
corwen11 ng th e annu~l eoWl- nleeting will be held at the
trl· fair bemg held lhere bnme of Mr'&gt;. Henry Turner .
WednPsda y and Ttwrsc!CJy . It
l nstallatl t)Jl tlf uffu.:_t•r.s
lugh h~ lll L'd a llll't'111l.U \l f the
Sta r (~ a rden Club \lf. D,:xtt•r
held rN't&gt;nt h .It tht• llllll h ' tlf

•

Laute~

Grange 's charter
dmped for Nellie Vale
POINT ROCK - Laurel
Grange, No, 1030 held its
September meeting recently
with seven members participating in the crwnb cake
baking contest and Maud
Holcom b placing first.
The charter was draped for
Nellie Vale, who had been a
continuous member for 52
rears.
It was announced that
Avanel Holliday was a first
'
· place winner in needlepoint
and Judy Holliday pla ced
first With crewel embroiQ.ery
in Meigs · County and will
represent, th'e county at the
State Grange session.
AU comrhittees will meet in
October to plan thei r projects
for the coming year. Plans

were completed to present 5().
year certificates to qualifying
members at the next
meeting,
Officers elected were, Pam
Holco mb, . master; G.

A.
Radekin , overseer; Patty
Casto , lecturer;
Gary
Holliday, steward; &amp;bert
Holliday, assistant steward;
Avanel Holliday, lady
assistant stewart; Dorothy
Bolen, chaplain; Wanetta
Radekin, treasurer; Monica
Maue, secretary; Timothy
Casto, gatekeeper; Aiberta
Montgomery, ceres; Melanie
Montgomery, pomona; Judy
Holliday. flora; ' John Montgomery. legislative agent;
Marcia Holcomb, juvenile
Judy
chairman,
and
Holliday, , youth chairman.

Society receives

I

three new members
. .
'

Three new members were
lnducted into Delta Kappa
Gamma. Honora ry Teachers·
International Society, Mon· ·
day evening d~ring an initia·
tion ceremony at the Lake
Hope Lodge , Zaleski.
Ca rol Eberts, Bernice
Mapes, and J11axine Wells
were received by members of
the Alpha Omicron Chapter
during" the ceremony . conducted by Elizabeth Turner,
cha irman. ass isted by
Pauline Burson, Edit.h
fiollman, a nd Roberta
Wilson.
A chicken dinner preceding
the meeting was hosted by
Lorayne J ones, Mer-ry Simmons, F'crn Felton , Florabell
Fund, anct Judith Matheny
who ga ve the invocation.
Table decorati ons --were in

keeping With the fall season
and consisted of t ed place
mat.5 with baskets of red arr
pies ,and Indian corn. Group
,singing was led by Estlier
Cassill with Pa uline Burson,
at the piano.
The business meeting was
conducted by the chapter

president, Maxine PhilSon.
She announced that dues
should be paid by Dec. I an·
dinformalion concernig ad·
dress changes should be SU!&gt;'
plied. Mrs . Philson also an·
nounced lhat an overseas
study sc holarship is available
to members. Reports of summe• committee meetings
were read.
A mystery ride has been
planned for the October
meeting . Meigs Co unty
members are to meet at the
Meigs Inn at 9 a.m. and the
Vinton and .Jackson County
members are to meet at the
Pomeroy Library. A .lun·
cheqnwill be served at 11 a.m.
Attending from Meigs
County were Betsy Horky,
, Martha Husted, Lee Lee,
Geneva Nolan, Olive
Page,Fay Sauer, Rosalie
·Story,. Rebecca Tate, Anna
Turner, Wykle Whitney,
Carol Wolfe, Vilma Pikkoja,
Roberta Wilson, Jeanne
Bowen, Mrs. Philson, Mrs.
Turner, and Nellie Parker,
secretary.

f

· Violence on television and .Coleman gave the devotions
h'!)j"'it is affecting young pe&lt;&gt;- entitled "One Day at a Time"
ple was the program topic for from Concern magazine for
a meeting of t he Women 's Mrs. Richard . Vaughan who
A.s;;odation of the Middleport was absent. The nominating
First United Presbyterian committee will present a
Church held recently at the slate ,of officers at the
, December meeting. A fall
church.
.
The film, "Television, ~he workshop was announced for
·
Anonymous Teacher'\ was Oct'. 15 at Portsmouth. .
Hostesses for the meeting
shown and foil owed by a
genera l discussion on the ef- were members of Group II.

fects of te levision . Members

Generation Rap

~j

8) HPien anti Sut' Bottt•l

,..

!t

.IJON 'T UEAL1N FUTURES HJ::HE ~
DEAR HEI.E:N AND SUE :
I'd be.!n going with Rick a week when he tolJl me Jus
gi rlfriend was !llOI'ing up from Texas .to li1•e with hun. This
hurt. but I accepted it as the end of a .. beginning" that ncwr
reallv got gcing.
Then he started coming around agaln. Smd he's llll vi11g pr~r
·. blenlS with the G.F :--and ·was-planning on srndm~ her Uack to
Texas, but r•ouldn't'afford it. Maybe in six mouth.'i, he ~ y s ...
We're mcoe or less platonie now. Am l just someone. who'll
llstcn to his troubles, or do you think I h.a \'e a cha nce with him ?
· UKES HIM , BUT ...
DEAR lJ!B :
Like him, but 1.. don't count on him.
Any way you look~~ Rick_he's a poor risk ; lf.it will take ~im
six months to scrape up bus fare for the Texas send-off, he s a
financial failure.'If he ca n afford it now, but does n't act. he's a
procrastinator. Als"b.a liar.
. Stay platoliic ·and open for better boyfriends. · HE I..E:N

I
Tl11; ltt pt l~l \\ tllll; III 'S D;t)
l&gt;l l'r;n l'l '~ '"" annuunn•ll fur

N11 \ .

~ h •nd;t_\ l_pt! ht 's

7 ct l

S; mlk •m
l•f lhl·
F trst. Bapta:-;t

m~·t•t mg

tll till' B II
~11ss1 una n St•l'h'l'

:\11ddl~· ptli"t

BrL' Wt·r.

.

Oa~ l11

( 'hurch \Vuo1cn l ln lt t'tl uf
Mt•tg.'i l'nu nt_\' on :'-l lw. 4.·:\tri.

t!H:• u rg~tn . D~ nlt lul iS ~H·rc L\"
the l ,\1 \'t' J o} l 'trdt• \~lth 1\l rS.·

Mary llug!w:s .Pl'CSt'JlllJlg till'

.

The EJecta Ci rcle serv~'&lt;l a
dl.-&gt;SScrt Course during ;;I l'Ou cluding social hour.

POLLY'S POINTERS

ht• 11bSt' l'\'l'd by

Elil.&lt;lbi.'t h Sl'ft r k•.:. prt'~ Hll•d HI
t lw~ Hll't'llllg wlm·h upt'IIL'&lt; l
\\"lth ttll' ~p n~. " Brmg Thern
In '' I\ 1t h J\l rs. Jan ret• (;IUIJs ~~~

Lt llia n

··The WOt~n Woman uf Ccxl."

lTlu r"·h.
"
Alstl &lt;UIIIlllll\fl'd at tht~
ntl•t'tuh!. wa:- \\' url d l \• m-

murut!

Mr~ .

U.'il!vskc"' M1·s. Ml'lzger,
and Mrs . Owen takmg pa rt m

Polly Cramer

Scrub sticky vinyl
l'OLL \''S PROBLJ"M
llEfl R POLLY - I would

.'

' . peanut 01·
gestt&gt;d that she use

·~:-.::..~~"*

:: ...;:;

..... ........., . . . . .. .. ........ .. ... ·- . ...
_.

j;";J;py ·

~

~

~

· - · ~)

.

....

.........

.

~ -- .; ·

Social ,.
Calendar

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

PRICES GOOD THRU

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8th

.

'

NO DEALERS PLEASE I

TUESDAY
SUTTON
TOWNSHIP
Trustees regular ·meeting, B
p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse
Municipal Hall.
POMEROY CHAPTER 1116,
OES, 7:45 p.m. Tuesday at
the Masonic Temple. Elec·
lion of officers to be held .
MIDDJ.E POKT LODGE
363, F'. ami A, M., will meet at
·7;30 Tuesday night at' the

OPEN SUNDAY .q A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

HAM

Me~Sumc Temple. All MOJster
Mmams arc invited.

vegetable oil on her cutting
topac. '' Plug Into Pmn•r ''
XI &lt;:AMMA MU Chapter.
wllh stTtptun• fnun tht• ll9th. li ke to know if an~~nc hets a board. and I was told by an· Heta Sig ma Phi Sururity, 7 :30
expert in the cooking field
r~ medy that will dean \linyl
Psalm ..
Tuesday at the CulwnUus and
Utat one should only use.
furnit
ure
thi-il
has
bel'ornc
l!ht'l'i.' \HI S a ' ktter fmm
Southern Oluu I-:lc.ctnc Co.
mineral oil on a bread boa rd
(;us Wtl.sun, fo n•a~-:n mis- sti cky. - MRS. C.L.
Mrs. Susan BaPr and Mrs.
urn :
as
it does not become us ranDEAR
MRS.
C.
L.
I
am
I don't think highly of a guy who lives with one woman and SHmar) , &lt;~nd a l'lliiUlllinieu- sure we will be hearin~ from . c,(d as ve~ewble oil. etc. It Oumm Bye1· tu have . the
tlun fru m the Hac.·um· ('ullegt•
l' ultural program ; and Mrs;
unloads hls . complalnts about her on another woman's
thank111g Iht&gt; &amp;l!IUorn .Soeicty some of Otlt~enerous readers works. -Jackie.
Duds Rwin g t-~ntl Mrs. Mar- ·
shoulders.
DEAR Pel.LY- In 1·egard
·fur a gtft uf llllllll'Y - The pnr who have had this sa ine prcr
tha Ml'Phail to be hostesses.
If he decides for you. finally. how long will it be before No.3
post.'&lt;l budget for 1977-78 year bl t•m . Such furniture should to the question asked by
is listening to his problems' -SUE;
·
POMEROY CHAMBER pf
was reatl . Mr s. Sea rles be wiped off with an un- Peggy concerning the rm·e of
Iter
culling
board,
you
sugCommerce
Tuesday at noon
treated
cloth
and
if
you
have
ren~Jidt•d l)lt'lnb~rs to takt•
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
gested
usi
ng
peanut
or
at
Meigs
·Inn
.
bt•e
n
using,
one
with
o_
i
l
o
r
ttwir l'hri:stmtl$ sfut ·king tu
ThankS for defending .. help" organizations in regard to birth
vegetable
oil.
I
think
,
)hat
REV.
JOHN
Lanier will be
pvlish
doublless
·
that
caused
ttw Dt&gt;cetilbt2'r tllt.'t'tlng. Sht·
control pills. When I was 16 I wasn't about \o ask for my
might be steering her tu .a speaker 'a t revival ser&gt;i!ce at •,
_
Cllso noted that th~ slate pr~u­ the stickiness. I would wash
parents' pennission, so I got them on mx own, from Planned
]l'l't this year ts "Powt&gt;r l9 art- with mild suds and then dry , class-A tummy ache. If hers Mt. Hermon United Brethren
Parenthood .
is the butcher type block like Church, Texas Community ,
ners" and that t11e mont'\"Will carefully. If there is grow1d·
My father found them under my mattress (as did the other
be used f o r Cl 'nt•w in dirt. you might try a laun- mine it should be scrubbed Wednesday through Oct. 16.
girl's mother ). So much for teenager's privacy! But my folks
with hot soapy water and Pastor Rev. James Leach
111 a .missiOn- dry detergent· and a brush
accepted the inevitable after some talk and a few tears, and transfunner
that is neither too sti ff nor too rinsed well after ·e:~ ch use. welcomes public.
field .·
!'in sure they were thankful that I wasn't pregnant.
WEDNESDAy
Mrs . Sanah D4:H\"II · Owen soft. .Rinse well and dry sinew cutting boards are ex·
I'm gratefui for the help I got then because at 18 I ma rrie?
UNITED METHODIST
reported
that tht.• whitt.' cross thoroughly with a soft clo.lh. cellent breeding grounds for
my guy. Now, after five years, his college is completed, we
There is a commercia l germs. If she wants to oil 11 WOMEN of the Leta rt Falls
have a beautiful 6-month·:&lt;&gt;ld daugHter, and we couldn 't be haf&gt;' quoHJ tms bet.&gt;n !:0\"Cil out to d ea ner fur vinyl fabrics. after she has scrubbed and United Methodist . Church,
the c1rcles. Mrs. l\'11-trtha
pier. -23 AND GRATEFUL
· -··
rinsed it, that isO. B11tdo ask Wednesay,7;30 p.m. with
Klein had thl• lm't· gift ded i ca~ POLL\' .
DEAR POLLY - When I her to scrub it first. - MRS. Mrs. Don ,Bell. Miscellaneous
.tt Qn on ·· Wouwn of God" and
DEAR HELEN AND SUE;
gm·e out 1111'&lt;' ~ ift JxJxe~ . buy ground mea t I _remove it D.H.S.
sale will be planned. Mrs.
"Cinthy' ' complains about modern times, sayi n~ it's rough . Assistmg ht•r \vt·re Mrs. J une from the wrapper, put itt a
DEAR Mrs. D.H.S. and Beli to have the program.
when ymi ' must be ashamed that you' re a \&gt;irgin . Why be Kloes. Mrs. Knthr rvn Met· freezer bag and flat~cn it intO • .peggy -The advice I gave
M.IJ)DJ. E PORT FIRE
ashamed? Why lie ?
·•
zg~·.• ,. ;md :VII's. ·Gwnmie a thick slab, put the ~tQre P.eggywasgivenmebyanin- DEPARTMENT AUXI'm a college student. I do Jots of dating and I've fought off WitHe.
Jabeltha\ gives the weigtiiorl staller of such ooards when IUAR\' will meet Wednesmy share of guys. But I've never told anyone I've .. gotten
The DlnTas C~rde had the the fr eeze r bag and then • he was putting in a new one day at 7:30 at the fire hall.
down.'' It's stupid to pretend what you're not . I'm not embar- program wilh Mrs. Mary freeze. This sa ve~ space ill fot me. The use of the bleach . Plans will be made for a
rassed. I'm· PROUD OF BEING A VIRGIN
the freezer compartment and , suggested for clean1_ng would. Halloween party.
·c.
thaws faster than a ~ig serve as _ a ~ d1s1nfettant. · ·
RAP ;
-&gt;
«
mound of meat.
Mineral oil is gixxfto use for
POMEROY LODGE 164,
Also. ·! sew an inside pocket oiling I know, and there are F&amp;AM regular meeting ,
I'm 18 and never considered being homosexual. But I was
pressured into an experience. It made me sick and I know it
with that new sticky type often two or three or more Wednesday. 7:30 p.m.; All
won't happen again. But does this mean I'm any kind of gay' ·
closing inside all my coats so good answers to the same Master Masons invited.
WONDERING ·
when I must carry a l¥rger ques tion . Even experts
REVIVAL at Zion Free Will
DEAR WON ;
.
amount of money than usual sometimes disagree as to . Baptist Church, Lower Plains
Of course not! Hom&lt;isexuality is a preference, not the result
Mrs. Adnenne Hubbard 11 is tucked awav and would what is best to use in certain on , &amp;ute 682, 7:30 •each
of a single act. · HELEN AND SUE
_ ~ wa s honored by . ncr fam ily f 1Dt be -.. lost. or _, stolen if · cases. Just scrubbing and no evening beginning Wed·
· ,
. mth a surp nsc btrlhday dm- something happened to my · oiling would. ccrl;lin ly cause nesday . Rev. John Jeffrey,
(GOT A PROBt:EM~ Or a subjeet for discussion, tw&lt;&gt;- ner and cookout Sunday at purse. - MRS. A.C.H.
one to have a dry board. Do Gallipolis, evangelist;
gene&lt;ation style' Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen the h ome of her son, J.atry R.
DEA~ POLLY - In an
r~memb,er that no m~atter -special music each evning ;
Bollel- or ooth, if you want a combination mother-daughter Hu bbard, Route I. Racme.
answer to Peggy you sug· what (ype uil one uses the ex- public welcome.
answer-incareofthisnewspaper.)
Atte nd1n g were her hus· ·
cess is wiped comple tely
THURSDAY
band, Ca rl Hubbard , son.
away. - POLL\' ,
POMEROY Wesleyan
Wilham Wlutlock, hts wif~.
Polly will send you one of Holiness Church, State &amp;ute
· Delores,· L1sa and Bill v,
her _
s ig ned th a nk-you 143 , revival, T.~ursday
Larrv and Maxme Hubba rd.
ESTEPATSEA
newspaper coupon clippers if through Oct. 16 with Rev .
Jerr)•. Angle. Robin a nd
Navy Aviation Boatswain's she uses your favor it e Mathew Harden evangelist.
Rosemary. Harold and Nan- Mate Airman Ronald R. Pointer, Peeve or Problem in "He is geperal superintendent
cy Patterson. Connie, Bub. Estep, son of Ronald R. her colwnn. Write POLLY 'S of Wesleyan Holiness Church
And~- , 1'iln and 'Amy, Ronnie Estep, Sr. of Route · 4, POINTERS in care of· this ln Phoenix, Ariz. Rev . Dewey
and LJnda Hubba rd . Missy Pomeroy, is participating in newspaper.
,
King, pastor, invites public to
and Mandy, Bonnie Ransom, the major NATO exercise
services at 7; 30 p,m.
Sherii, Scotty and Wendy., " Display Determination" as
A bazaar was planned for head it. The class decided tu R&lt;!ger ailll, Nancy Hubbard.
a crewmember aooard the
Oct. 14 and 15 at the Asbury . sack the Christmas candy Roger Lee: and Trary. Mrs . Sixth Fleet aircraft carrier
United Methodist Church in and also to go caroling on Hubbard 's son, James, and USS Independence. He joined
'
Syracuse when the Young Dec. 20.
his fam!ly of L..anc~ster \\'ere the Navy in February,, 1973.
Adult Class meet recently at
A Halloween party was set una ble tu at lend.
for Ocr. 30 for all of lite
the church .
A lso attend ing wer e Jerry
Kimny Buckley presided at children of the church if it IS Hubbard's wife , Kathy, and
the meeting with the bazaar approved by the ch urch their 14 month old da ughter,
being scheduled for 9 a.m. to ooard. On the corrunittee for Cassie, and a gue::;t, Ronnie
ASK TOWED
6 p.m. on both days and to the party are Rose , Ann Cozart of Colum bus. Tr'acy
Marriage licenses were
feature a country , store, a Jenkins, Janice Lisle, Jean Hubbard 's ninth birlltday iss~ed to Duane Kenneth
candy store, a bake sale, a Bucldey, and April Hannon.
was observed. Mrs. Hub- McLaughlin; 18, Pomeroy
second-hand store, and on
Officers elected were Roy bard's sister a nd br-other-i n- and Debra Joyce Williamson,
Saturday, Oct. 15 from noon Jenkins, president ; April Jaw , Mr. and Mrs ..,fiill Wat- 18, Rutland; David Homer
until6 p.m. a soup supper.
Harmon, vice pr ~s iden t ; son of Pomeroy c~ le ated Coleman, 44, Albany, and
Among the many items for Jean Buckley, secretary ; their J2nd wedding anniver- Virginia · Nellie Grissett, 33, ·
sale will be a patch quilt, Judy King. treasurer; Judy sary Monday. They joined tlte Albany; Randy Joe Lee, 20,
afghans, Christmas or- Williams, historian ; Dennis fami ly for Mrs. Hubbard 's Middleport, and Crystai LyM
naments, firewood, stuffed Moore, chaplain. Barry Me· birthday.
Hall , 17, Middleport.
animals, baby sweaters.
Coy closed the meeting with
The Christmas program devotions. Next meeti ng will
was discussed and a commit· be on Oct. 28 at the home of
tee of Judy King, Judy Faye Clifford. ·ll will ~
Williams and Cathy and Den· followed by a Halloween par·
nis Moore was appointed to ty and a hayride.
Mrs. Kathr yn Kni ght , proper nutrition to sUbstitute
Middleport ; Mrs . Evelyn for junk food in dieting.
· Foreman, Portland, arid Mrs. juanita Sayre, Racine, was
June William s, Glouster, commended for a 14 pound
were named to the Forever weight loss during her- first
Slim Program when the week of membership In the
Conway Diet Class met ·at the class.
· Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Newsome conducts
,· Mrs. Jo Ann. Newsome the program in Pomeroy,
conducted the lecture of the Point Pleasant and Athens.
A layette shower was held Eileen Buck, Jan Norris and evening on diet and the ap- Those . having any questions
for Mrs. Barbara Lawrence Tracy , Judy Pape and petite including foods for may contact her at 992-3382.
recently at the home of Mrs. daughters, Kris and Ch ~ ry l,
Don Lisle assisted by Rose Irene Parker, Opal KLoes,
Ann Jenkins and Janice Lisle. Margaret Eichinge r, Iva
Prizes for the games went Lawrence, Betty Ash, Elva
to Mrs. Bob Ord, Mis Brenda Dailey, Donna Sayre, Beulah
,Lawrence, and Mrs. Jill Ward, and Oma Winebren·,
Mrs. Walter Hayes hosted Reynolds, Mrs. Marie
Lawrence. The table was ner.
the September meeting of the Hawkins, Mrs .. Mary Hughes,
decorated with pink and blue ·. Sending gifts were Mrs. Past Matrons of Evangeli ne and Mrs. Bessie King. Others
· streamers and baby replicas. Mildred Crooks and Patricia, Chapter 172, O.E.S. held in the attending were Mrs. Grace
Cake, nuts, ·mtllt.s and Mrs. Lura Crooks, Mrs. Betty social room,of·thc Middleport French, Mrs. Genevee
punch were served. Atten~ Kock, Mrs. Bea Lisle, J oyce · Masonic Temple.
•
· Chesher, Mrs. Emma K. Clatding were those named and Ritchie, Debby Wilson, ChrisMrs. Virginia Buchamm worthy, Mrs. Roma Hawkins,
Mrs. John Redovian and ty Roush, and Mrs. Wanda presided at the meeting with arid Mrs. Evelyn Lewis. Mrs.
Leigh Anne,. Sharlee Evans, Rizer and Milisa.
Mrs. Rosema1·y Lyons giving Hayes served a dessert
Hope Moore, Ben · Codner,
th e sec reta ry's report. course.
Games were played with
Mrs. Hawkins will host the
'prizes going to Mrs. Helen October meeting.

LB.

$}~9

1 lb. 99~
BACON pkg.
~§
COLUMBIA

COCA
COLA
8

.
.,59
RIB STEAKS .................

16 OL BOnLES

CHOICE

~~-.

BONELESS

.

$2 79

DELMONICO
STEAKS
.........
~~-.
SUPERIOR
.
POLISH SAUSAGE~ .............L.8:. 69e
.

honored at patty

.

ffiESH

.

.

,

·

HAM LOAVES ..... ~ ......L~;.~ 1 49
NEW PACK

Bazaar to be held
at Asbury Church

US NO. 1 ·
·YELLOW

GREER . . 29 oz.
PEACHES ••••••• ?.N••

ALL STAR

1% MILK

COOKING
ONIONS

3g~

MIX 'EM &amp; MATCH 'EM &amp; SAVE

.

._

49¢

4

GOLDEN ISLE

59¢

CANS

POTATOES
20 LB. BAG

MACARONI
&amp; CHEESE _
__________

._

4

'

'l ·.(~'
1• ' ~Nu-Maid
Marganne

SOFT BOWL
MARGARINE

.,00

US NO. 1
ALL PURPOSE

r:=-,

NU MAID

GOLDEN ISLE BR:IND NEW PACK SALE
..
.,
;
SWEET PEAS
'
GREEN BEANS
.w.K. OR C.S. CORN
WHOLE POTATOES
MIXED VEGETABLES
I

GALLON CARTON

3 LB. BAG

THIS INFORMATION
IS ...

BOUNTY

70Z. $100
BOXES ·

PAPER
TOWELS
~.

"

·---- --

YtJIISAJII EVEtt 110\l~·
WITH THESE COUPON SV'it~\S
- ... - -· -- - -- -- - -- ~---

Ladies named to slim club

GOLDEN ISl-E

FOLGERS COFFEE
.
N0...305 ,

.

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,$"299

POUND CAN

COUPON

COUPON_ _ j

COUPON .

Mrs. Barbara Lawrence
honore-d with shower

Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy
and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited Tuesday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Harley .T.
Johnson .
'·Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles
. and Darlene Thorton of .
·Dexter attended the Tamworth Type Conference held
in Washington C.H. Darline ·
was Tamworth Queen for 1977
at the Ohio State Fair.
Lincoln Russell was a ·
recent visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
·Harley Johnson .

more you

'SLICESN,.

Mr. Hubb'ntid

Mrs. Geneva Shumate
returned home after spending
some lime with Mr. and Mrs.
John Fisher and Mrs ..Fisher
and oth&lt;;r relatives in Cin·
cinnati.
,
Mrs. Daniel Worley and
Stacy of Beckley, W. Va.,
spent Sunday through
Wednesday with Mr. and
. Mrs. Charley D. Smith.
'
Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Mrs. Daniel Worley,
Stacy and Kail , Kevin · and
Charles Knapp .

~~you buy the.
.

BONELESS CENTER

PEANUT BUTTER

$}49

2% LB. JAR
. W/C
I

Coupon Expires Oct. 8,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

)·

.

NO. 85

24 OZ. BTL

W/C

,•

Coupon Expires Oct. 8,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

(oupon Expires Oct . 8, 1977
...,TWIN CITY GATE
Y

. . . .' : I

. .,1:

~~

COUPON

COUPON

WHEATIES

HUNTS

'

NO. 85

12 OZ. BOX

W/C

. •.... . : ....... -:....
COYPON r ~"'~:.....
~

TOMATO
SAUCE
'
.
· NO. 105
8 OZ.
¢ W/C

·)

5 gg·
CANS

3

NO. 155

.

I

oz.

14

:·1'·~,
WI C .&gt;I

BTLS:

: :1,1
. · I

Coupon Expires Oct. 8,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

····"-···-

.......................................__ .............................................,(:,I
m:;::.PW¥.¥.4--:v.;.::.v.w;.v..v..;o? J I
wt:

\5

1 00°0- TRADE-IN

MASON FURNITURE

But there's nothing hush hush about'
' the results you get with a c lassified ad
in name newspaper. Have our
.
. professional ad taker advise you &lt;md just sit
. back and,watch the results pour in.

Mon ., Tues .. Wed . &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:.00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

CALL 992-2156

On All Living Room Suites

.

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773 -5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va .

HEFTY

TRASH BAGS

$1·5.9

NO. 305
20 CT. BOX
.

...'

0

•

· W/C

Coupon Expires Oct . 8, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
•

0

•

•

.....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

••

•

•

NO. 305

NO. 105

•

20 OZ. CAN
Expir.es Oct. 8,1977
N CITY GATEW~Y

W/C

48 CT.

sox·

Coupon Expires Oct. 8, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

. :&lt;,,
"

.
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•

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.

.

.

.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·.
.

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.

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.

•

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COUPON

'

The Daily Sentinel

1

. :i i

-HUNTS KETCHUP

' Coupon Expires Oct. 8,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Oct. 8, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY,.

'.:...~~.... Wolfpen News Notes

were ~~~couraged to protest
the programming of violence.
TO HOLD REVIVAL
The m~eti n g was preceded 1 The Rev . DOrothy Jago of
by a potluck dinner with Mrs. Malta, former Rutland
()Wight Wallace givmg grace. resident, will conduct a
Mrs. Wallace also ha&lt;l the revival meeting at the
prayer for missionaries. Mrs. Danville Wesleyan Church,
'
Oct . 10-16 at 7:30 each
evening. The Rev. 'R. D.
Brown, pastor, extends an
SEEN VISITING
Mrs. Betty Frazier, Mr. inv itation to the public.
and Mrs. Marvin Krider, Colwnbus; Betty McDaniel anu
HERE VISITING
daughter, Robin, Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe ·Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Oiler and and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Eric, and Charles Frazier. Tu rner, Bucy ru s, spent
spen t Sunday visiting Robert several days in Meigs County
McDaniel, Darwin.
'
vi,&lt;iting relatives and friends.

·The more ·

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. T0: 9 P.M.

Mrs. Hayes hosts OES meeting

Ladies discuss
TV violence
.

I

!\:

~~ Day of Prayer to be observed

'

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.

.

.

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'

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p.o-o-o-.oo-o-.o"&lt;='"G"'&lt;::&gt;«::&gt;o&lt;o-o-oo-o'Qf
9- · The Dady Sentmel , Mtddleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday. Oct. 4, 1977
6,13. Mash a,IO. Mark Russell 20.33 .
9 31&gt;--Soap 6, One Day al a T1 me 8, 10, Poisoning of
Michigan 33. Mar y Tyler Moore 13. VTR 20
10 DO-Fam1ly 6.13. Lou Granl 8,1 0. News 20.
10 3G-A m er lcana 33" Bla c k Pe rspective on the News
20
11 DO-News 3,4.6.8.10, 13.15, MacNeil Lehrer Repo•l
33, As We See It 20
11 3tl-J oh no y Car son 3,4,1 5, Mov ie " Death Sentence"
6, 13. Ko1ak a. Movte " The Baltle of lhe VI lla
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1977
Plortla" 10. ABC News 33, 12 OQ-Janak l 33
12
41&gt;--Movle
" Anatomy of a Crime" 8, 1·oo4 311--My Three Sons 3, Partr idge Fam ily 4, Brady
Tomorrow 3,4, 1 11&gt;--News 13. 1 31&gt;--Mary Hart
Bunch a.10. Lill ie Rascals IS

1

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IN

COMMON P LE AS COU R f
P ROB ATE D IVISIO N
M E I G S COU N TY 0 H l 0

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COU Nl'l'

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ME IGS

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pr or tCI •rto d a le :St" l tor
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JONES BOYS
NOW OPEN
9 A.M. til 9 P.M.
SUNDAY
12 til 8 P.M.

NOTICE

'S

\\ E_!GS COU N ~ Y

'0 ~

OH 0

1-,:

WANT-AD I
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
'1 ~~~

'

For Wednetdly, Oct 5, 1877

n

,, "' ill!!'"
llh ,,, "

U~ 1

ASTROo GRAPH

Oct s. 1977

I

Cna nces for a nse tn srarus or an
ad vance m er&gt;t are ex c ellent IQr
you th• s c:ommg yea r To dc comphsn erther you n eed an all y
on the rns1ae w no w ill stand o y
you rn any eventu ality·

LIBRA (Sopl

23-0ct

SCO~tp

(Oct 24-Nov.

~2~

II

you re too Inte nt o n lorcrn g yo u r
v1 ews upo n o!her s toda y you'H
be askrng for t rou b le They II
work ag arnst you beh tnO you r

bacK
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dee
21) Make no deals today w11h
sh ad y typ es These peop le co uld
cu t a few co r ners a.n d yOU cou ld
be one of them '

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11)

'

Som e on e who se to e s
stomp ed u pon may have
oo duMy to get back at
da y C n ance s are h e
yOlJ re not war y

' •JI! j,[\
I

you ve
th e op you towrll 11

AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob

11~

)_ - :Ji" y sca l st a mtn a r snotan ~t

j

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"
add ress unknown

GLENNA J OY C E TEASLEY

D e f endant
No 16586
NOTICE B Y
PUBLIC A TION

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11)

•F EM A l E-C-G~ N ION

tor eld erl y
ladv for clllm pcmv Ia I!V'e 11'
Rel erence Ph on e 985 3967

WA IT RESS
AP PL Y tn pe rson
Cr ow s Steak Hous e Pom,er oy
OhiO
•

CA SH po1d l or oil mak es ond
mode ls of m obr le home s
Phone area code 61 4 423 9531
TIMBER
Pomeroy
ducts Top p r~c e
sow t1m ber Call
Ken t Hem by 1 446

----~

CURRENCY token s old
p oc k ~e l wa tc hes and cho 1ns
sdver and gold We rn eed 19b4
ond ol der sil ver co 1ns Buy sell
or t rade Coli Roger Wam sl ey
74 2 :.!33 1

18 :75, ( 11), 1,
•

Laurel Oiff

\973 BUICK CENruRY V 8 aut o
P S P B $\ 99 5 992 7059 alter

5 pm

News Notes

Yo u r e g o od at o p en 1n g
n ag ollaliOns today but you re
not a good clo ser Take care o r
you ma y 1mouls l vely d o
so methrn g th at s not rn your be st
mterests

Attendance at the Free
Methodtst Church Sunday Marshfield, son Paul Stahl,
School October 2 was 84
Columbus, VISited recently
Large crowds attended the wtth Mr and Mrs. Nonnan
Me1 gs
Area
Holiness Schaefer
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) In Assoc1at10n at the local
Mrs Gerald Pulltns IS a
yoU! zea l 10 acco m p t!s n thtn gs church over lhe weekend
patient
m Holzer Med1cal
to da y guard agamst bemg too
Mr
and
Mrs
Phtll
Wtse
,
Center.
bos sy Co wo rke r s w tll re sent 1t
ana co uld Oe ou!s p ok en In their Beverly, attended morntng
Wyalt
Mr and Mrs
prote sts
servtce at the local church. Schaefer, Mt Vernon, v1s1ted
Mr Fntz Stahl, New recently with Mr Schaefer's
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) S t r~v e
dilrgently to keep har mony tn an y
parents, Mr and Mrs
p ro trtable arr angement you ma y Wedne sd a l ' aft ernoon wtth
Nonnan Schaefer
1
ha ve wtth so meo ne else Yo u
Mr. Roy Howell underwent
mus t p ulllog~t her and not work Mrs Lmda H olter, Ra c1 n e , a s
surgery at Umvers1ty
heart
h ost ess
at odd s
Hospttal
, Columbus The
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Mr and Mrs Larry F'owler
report
ts
very g ood , room
C han ces are you re a btl over - andfamll y ofLiberty , ¥1 Va .
number ts 402.
p ro te ct rve today The trghte r you Mrs Paul ette Van M eter ,
d r aw the leash the more the Pom eroy , and Mrs VIOlet
lledglr ngs will try to br eak rt
Rltchte and Jac k , Portland ,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your were guests of Mr' and Mrs
usu al app r oach ts o pen an d
above boaFd Today you ma y try
someth rn g a httle dev1ou s ana be
trappea on you r o wn fly paper

B1l1

Bryant,

Meigs
Property
Transfers

and

Debra

Da vid, recentl y .
Mr a nd Mrs L outs DeLuz,

loca l. and Mr and Mrs Mike
YIRGD (Aug . 23-Sopl..-.2.2.1-- Pa r so ns and fa mt lv of

Ufl le ss
b udget
tod ay
d !tures

yo u re ver ~ careful your
will wm d u p wtth a dehc tt
N o ness ent i al e)(pen ~
could become a cr iti cal

dra 1 ~

. ;-. t, \l, sPAJ• tH ~ NTE R PRI ~ EASS:-i

•

Stiversville

News Notes

~

Charlest on , W Va , Htten ded
a Chnst1an Co mmum cators
Telethon ~t WBOY~TV ~~.uo

Cla rksbury, W Va . on
Saturday
Tom J;)urst has returned to
F'ort Lauderdale, ,Fla , and
resumed h1 s employment
Mr a nd Mr s Denve r
Curtts, Mt Hope, W Va
were recent ca llers at the
home of, Mr and Mrs. R R
Durst
Mr and Mrs W S Long
spent a recent Sunday w1th
Mr and l'(l rs Darrell Hoff·
man at Spencer W Va
Mt s l'anm e Durst spent a
week w1th her da ughter. Mr
and Mr s Tun Wtlkmson.

Mrs Mae Van Meter and
Ruby, Long Bottom and Mrs
Mike Evans, loca l, VISited
their father and grandfather
on Wednesday at the llussell
Nursing Hom e In Albany
Mr and Mr s Thonw s S h&lt;:~w n an d K ev m ,
Birch, Waterford , Mrs Hazel Columb us
Shuck, Mtamt , Fla , Freela nd
Delle Boyd Savtmno h .
Norns ,

Raci ne

and Mr s

\Jl

Ct-H~n l lR

NHVPORl
!7J M ulbt• •• } 1 ,

~ edan

.&amp;

dt
&lt;oil

9q2 b'l12

( ,:t

l HRE E FAMI LY Go rog e Sole Wed
ond Thu rs Oc t Sand o SlOW
M o1n
St
Po n1 ero y
9 4
Chddt et" s ' and adul t clo thrng
ont1que l urnt lur e mrsc 1tenu

FIVE FAM!L )' Yard So le Wed
Sept 5 Old Route 33 Do..,,.. s
Grocery • Co pper tone range
krtc hen
table
and cho 1rs
lamps clothes m 1sc
SIX FAM IL Y G arage Sole Oc1 3
J
5
Men s
w ome n s
cht ld ren s do rhr ng
dr shesm•s c Do rothy Calaway s near
A lfred
Turn on 68 1 tallow
s1g ns

tie s
cos l vm e
Jewe l ry
glossw o r e plent y ol kmck
~ nac lo. s and odds an d end s,
so me clo th rng Thur s Oct 6th
and Fn O ct 7 10 &lt;I 985 3830
YA RD SA lE Hous eh old ttem s
toys b oo k s bab y lu rn1ture and
bedd tng old Vrctrolo and r ock
1ng ch o1r clo thmg ond mrsc
tern s 3 m t south of Tuppe rs
Plo tns on CR 28 ' , tn t off Rt 7~
I st hou se on r1ght Oc t 6 7 8
YARD SAl E lues Wed Thurs
and f'n Jth Slh (llh and 7th
10 dark at Joan Stewar t s
Oepo l St Ru tland Oh 1a
YA RD SA l E 10 am Wed Oct 5th
rhru
Sol
Do n
Harden
r e s• de nce
Ru st rc
Hrll s
SyrQcu se Bo vs cl p t h.ng tire
rrm s a nd stere o comp onen t set

---

-

,...._

-

Osr ar Weber , Zelda Weber
1

t o Pom er oy F or es t Products,

AK C SHETLAND sheep dog s
(M rn ) Co flt es 2 female s 7
week s o ld Sho ts and wo rmed
Ph on e
(6 14 } 367 0'192 o r
3677 11 2
HOOF HO LLO W Horses Bu)l sell
trade or tratn New an d used
soddl es Horse Sh oemg Ruth
~~es A lbany (bl4 ) 698 3290
MEI GS COU NTY Humane Soc1ety
Care hne and odop11on Serv tce
992 7680 742 31b2 992 5427
GIVE AW AY lo good home 10
week b loc l.. femal e hound pup
Pll Ve ry lo\l eobl e 992 "7370

--MALE WHITE poodle to gt \le owoy
·--

949 2498
FREE

im d M1 s M :1X!i iL'
fl urst Hud:1 rl tl r " t tllld Mr ~
ltuln Bn n nt [r,r, tl \ !!'d fl'd
Mr -.;
h rt ( t q w n lfr ,JI ,tl

h om e of M r s M1k c F. v(111 s 1111

d .tJt 'il' t 1 ' 1. \-\'• drw.,fl,n

Clc\ cl.md .

·B usiness Services
.

I WO 0 ~ 1h1o••• h,•(l i()Ot rr l ltlt l\('
M al,on J'lf'w tl n•PI1 01 111 Oh111
tJ0 4117 j ~ ~ JJ"

'

3 AND 4 RM

f urr11 shed ond un
opt s Phou&amp; 992

turn shed

SAiE ON YOU! fUEl Bill THIS
WINTER AND BEAUtifY YOII RMOBilE

5•J.I
I

PUPPIE S

M 1)(ed

hounds

'&lt;192 7671
PART BEAGLE pup p es to 9' ""e
aw ay
6 mal e s 2 females
Phone 949 '107 9
REG ISTERED FEMALE St Be rnard
to g 1ve away to good home
Phone 742 '1123
HORSES FOR Sale 59 mch pa r t
Morgan Gel dtng 9 ye ors o ld
very gentle $275 58 Inch
Polommo mor e due to foal m
Mar ch 4 years old and very
gentle • SJ56
Phone (614 )
667 3336

PENN ZO IL RUTLAND open du tly
tdl
10
Closed Mond ay s
wrec k er se rvic e hre re pc 1r
Phone 74 2 9575 or 74 2 2081

timber, Chester
PIAN O TUNING Of\d Repan l ane
Donrels 9Y'l 208 ~ 12 years ser
L Ed gar Reynqlds , dec . to
v•ce to Tn Co un l y Reference
Rose S Reynolds. parcels,
Elberl el d s
Cert Tra ns . Salisbury
G WORK d one Call
Clyde J Morla n Ethel l •RENCHIN
992 5524 or 992 391 7
Man e Morlan to Tu ppers
Platn s
Chesl e'i' Wa t er
Dt strt ct Ri ght of Way , \\anted lo Hu\
Metgs
F1 "'""' II Klem dec. tu . . - - - - - - - - - - _ ,
Oscar P Kletn . cert . of
We would 11 ke" to buy
tra ns Mtddleport
Choice Grade ~00 - 500
Ma rtha E He.s. nka
lb
H e if e r Feeder
Martha E Kk111 Frcdemk
Ca'lves 1n Jots of 10 or
W Kleml n 7\!.trthd E Klf'ln
more
d1rect from the
rr c: dt ! H l' W Kit'lJJ ra r&lt;el
P o rt H' I n \
produc er
Contact

WARREN PICKENS
R:eed svtlle , Ohto

378 6289

FOUR ROOM S and both
on ly N o pels 992 5908

Adu lts

+

TWO BEDROOM Tr ader
on ly 99'1 332-4

Adu lTs

COUNTRY M OBIL E Home Pork ,
Rou te 33 north o f Pomeroy
l arge lots Co ll 992 7479 ,.
-

-

.

-

-

OOME We hMirltLiblt tn ~ v~net, Gl
colors ltle ttme alumtnum un6e1p1nl\:
u,t, FC)( JDI.If putt ol m1nd and to
~ tsft JOU r rnsulil'lct com paR~ Itt us
tte down yaat mobtle home T ese Itt
clowns ~1 e mechan,ulil mstatled to
assure mutmum s.alety ConUtl us 101
a quaNtr awnrnt Don't wa•l 1111 tte
l01ms !HI rour root. let us coat tt now
and slop potentt~l In's CALL
9i2 10~ OR STOP Bl 1100 E. MAIN
STj P1lMEilliY, OHIO fOR I fiE!

Carpet I. Upho story
Phone Mike YOIIRI
At
992-2206 01 992-7630

I

8 29 pd .

Insulation Stn'ICts

STORM

, ,.... 1. . . . . . . . . ,

-...totor to th•

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPIJCEMENT
WINDOWS

'-•

AlUMINUM

SIDIJIG.SOffln

SMITH NEiLSQIN
MOTORS, INC.

GUffi~WNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
SWJI&lt;u-st, Ohto

Ph. 9!11174

Pomtntr

-

s

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

'279.95

FOR SALE \

.

- --·-

9.- ~Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Ail Phone 992 ~ 181

THREE BEDROOM home Ro ctne
alumrnum s1 dmg storm wtn
dows ga s Jor ced o tr fur nace
~~~~!_?r d ~ 2 500 Q49 25 59

APPlES FITZPATRICK Orchard s
Ph on e
Slate Rout'e bB9
Wrlkesv rlle 669 37BS

SPA CI O US THR EE bedr o om home
4 yrs o ld Featur es all th e e x
tro s Beouftlul loco t1 on on 1 4
a cr es 992 2996 fo( more tn
formol 1on

mole
(614 )

BROWNING GOLDEN Eagl e Mork
HI 23 channel AM bo se statr on
CB Ph one 949 2322
18
FT
MAHOGANY
an d
f rbergloss Sit ek Craft boot 80
h p
John son Complete skr
equtpm enl
New ltr es
EM
eel lent condtlrOil 992 7201 or
qq 2 3309

-

'-'--

--

SINGER TOlJ ,;:H and Sew rn
w al n u t conso le lfe
ta b le
Repossessed tn ex cellent ca ndr
lion Pay balan ce ol $110 cos h
or 1erm s 992 5146

THR EE BEDROOM hou se for sole
ne ar Ea stern hrgh sc hool Fu ll
ba sement Iorge l1 v1ng room
wrth firep lace 2 car garage

98S 3867
SEVEN YEAR old hou se 3 acres 6
room s and bolh ', mt from
Chesle r 98 5 3950

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD. SA.
REALTOR

TROMBONE VERY goad cond1
Iron Used only for s)' mphonrc
band Phone 992 5267 after 4

216 E Second Street
Po me roy, Ohio 45 769

---

TRACK OF TIMBER Al so Hall
ru nn er beam $2 75 bu yo u
_p~k ~ 3- 2353
REGISTERED POLLED Her efor d
Bull 4 yr old 992 2867

-

-

-

SEAR S FORCED AIR ctrculotm 9"
f uel o tl heater 91 400 8 T U. 1n
put w 1th '17 5 gall on tank on
', ful l of fuel ond
stand
everythrng needed to rn stoll l or
$'175 Ex1ro good condrtt on
Sears 30 gall on ga s ho t w a ter
tonk tn good condthon $40
lrnley
Har t
Ra cme
OH
949 2384
I
SWEET PO TA TO ES Robert Lew rs
843 243'1
HAY
bu

90c an d up Ear co rn Sl 50
Call Ron ald Cowde ry

'18 5 3581
TAKIN G OR DER S for h rewoo d and
stov ewoo d Cal l 843 '1933
18 FT FIBER GL A SS boo t wllh 75 h p
mo tor and trader wt th 6 Ide
ro cke ts 2 slu boards ond a se t
ol slo.t s $700 Smdh Coro na oJ
drng mo chtne wo r ks good
S'lO Huff y cooslet b1k e Ia • ge
men s $25 99J 3792

NEAR SCHOOL -

Small

v1llage J bedroom home
w 1th barn T' P w ater and
ne ar stores $14,000

-12

ACRES

Good

remodeled 8 room home
wrth 2 baths , _,m odern
ktfchen . FA Furn a ce and
garage New fen ces Onl y

137,500
WASTE

LAND -

100

acres, 60 acres of coal "
some wood s and mtnerals

QUIET

STREET

3

bedroom frame home.
Ftreplace
tn
ltv1ng,
carpetmg and 2 car garage.

Want only Sl5,500
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms.
11' 2
bat hs
carp e ttng "
ce ntral he~ t tng , garage
and corner lot $2 5 000

145 ACRES -

Remote 4
bedroom home w tfh la r ge
barn Some fen c;:tng A s k lng

'

145,000
BIG FLAT LOT - 6 room

TWE NTY FIV E H~AO ol Ieede r
steers 742 "1.274 at 74'1 "121 1

home. bath , F A furnace ,
on Rt 33 Lot s of room f or

GRHN BEAN S hall r u11ner s and
bu nch P1 ck yo ur own bn ng
contarnN Do vt~ For rn Ph one
'1 &lt;17 21'-1H

lh e K1dd1es 123.000

H Vl: M ONI !t ol d wlu tc· l o t ~·d r iJH
Whdc lo•"r&gt; I ' ow Ill Uo shu ••
4411 / 4 11
( _. A_~

( INC!Jl A I !N G

QQ2 ]I )'I(J

I IO"" UI CI

JUST LIST.ED- NEWER
RANCH T'fPE, 3 4 bdrms
modern ktt
and bath ,
appro x 2 E!C r es , barn. 'cold
storage ,
shed ,
patio ,
c arport , garden space ,

JUST
older

WE DON'T PROMISE A
MIRACLE , BUT WE CAN
SURE LEND A HANQ
HELEN l TEAF-ORD
C BRUCE TEA FORO
ASSOCIATES

LISTED home

tn

N1ce

Rutland

W B F P , lenced lot . 3
bdrm s , c arpet1ng and
remodeled Lots of newer
features Only $14 000 00

JUST

Phone 992 3325

pm
FI YE YEAR o ld A p p al oos a
Geldmg
Bloc k w rlh whrt e
bla n ket
go o d
loo k1n g
992 77 35

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

LISTED

2

f 1replacesr 2 3 bdrms , good
n e ighborhood
tn
Middleport
N1ce
remodeltng , 1 floor plan
off street parktng Cheap at

$1 3.000 00
JUST LISTED -

$16.500 00
MIDDLEPORT -

Th iS

Imposing older home has
e v eryfhtng
from
a
W 8 F P too large two car
garage 4 bdrms modern
kd , 2 bath s, large rec
room, etc A bargatn at

$39.500 00
HOW ABOUT - 3•;, acres•
in the c,ountry w 1th a ntcely
remodeled 2 bdrm home,
barn and oth e r bulldtngs
Steal t hts tor S11.500 00

4 ACRES - 4 home Sties.
Near M1nes, good gravel

road 14.600 oo ....
RANCH TYPE

3

bdrms , large eat-tn ktt
With bar
large master
bdrm • full baement, many
features $23,500.00

WE
STILL
HAVE
BUYERS FOR YOUR
HOME. LET OUR PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY&amp; .
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 2259, 992-6191
992 2568

byHenri AmoldandBoblee

tour ordinary words

TAGOL

I I I

--..
-"
"I

•

Ph l7U250
1-17 lfC

ClltlJ ... .... ~·-

1

Busiues.s Set-'"i Ces

... . _ _ _

rx

~

Braun 4; Searc~ for Tomorrow 8,10

KIJ

•
ELWOOD BOWERS REP AIR
Swee pers too slers trans a ll •
small o ppl10 n c e~ lawn mowe1 :
ne• t to State Htg hway Gara ge
on Reu le 7 Ph one (614} 985

'

3825

-

NoW arrange the circled letters to
form the surpftse answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve car1oon

~

RE MODELIN G •Piu rnbmg heo tr ng
and all !ypes ol ge'ner61 repo 11
Work guoron teed 20 yea rs e•
per rene e Phon€! 99'1 2J0'1

' '

SEW ING MACHIN E Repotrs ser
"""e all makes 99'1 22f14 The
Fob dc' Sho p
Pome r oy'
Aul honzed S1ng er Soles a•\d
Ser v tce W e shar pen Sc1ssors

"

MUSTH'T RUN I FOlKS
AlWAYS 5 PECT
A~YEIODY RUNNIN'··

TOUCH AND GO, 5 &lt;\NDY • · BU"T
ESPECIALLY GO I YOU CA~ ~ET
AXEL IS HOT 0~ OUR TRAIL
RIGH"T HOW··

"THIS &lt;\LLE Y ·· 11
THE LOGICAL WAY
AND HER DOG MUST
HAVE. GONE · · ·

Print answer here:

••

..

;
Ye~terday 's

..

-;

(Answers temorrow)

Jumbles NAVAL · GAUGE FIDDLE INJECT
Answer What tta,ppened when she got the bill tor
her lace-lllttng?-IT FELL AGAIN

tnt-

'

'

~

I

10 4 1T

BORN LOSER

IT'S AIJ

ACROSS
DQWN
I Appmnted
I Gtrl's name
'
group Iabb1 1 2 Ctly on
the Oka
5 That
language • 3 Old shdc
pro)eC!ot
8 Parseghmn
and others
12 wds I

l~H.ATABI.-~

w

4 Denver' s

9 Fmally

CA RPE NTER
fl oor mg
ceth ng
pon e l•ng Phone 99 2 27 5q

- -

HOWER Y AN D M ART IN Ex.
co v ot rng
se pflc
sys l em s
do ler ba ckho e dump truck
l m~e s t one
gro v~l
blacktop
pa .., rng Rt 1-4 3 Phone I (6lA )

./»'"
•o

698 7331

•

HA RRI SO N S T V Repo1r Ser "' 'f e
Ca ll s '176 Sycamore St Mtd
dlepo r t P h~ e 99~ 2522
BATHROOM S AN D K1tchens
r emo deled cero m1c tile pl um
b•n g co1pe nt r y and gene ral
ma n te nance
13 years ex
perr ence 992 3685

Zeb.. lool&lt;. Can't be! Once
at his tail! a piq's tali
It's curl! uncurl1t never
curl aq'in!
He's finish!

BL O WN INSULATIO N Gel lhr ee
es l tmo les Ca ll 667 6479 l or
free e st tm ot e

It's curl

aq'in ...
an' he's movin'!

It'5 a
miracle!

·-.•
•'

5ili~~ ·
~

(2 wds 1
clock
13 Colonel's
setting
5 Ctty near
conunand
(abbr )
San D1ego
14 Bette of
GSlanttng
song
7 Ktnd of matd
15 MacGraw
10 Arabian
IG Brooks or
Ntghls
Item i 2 wds )
Blanc
17 !.ate Greek II Arranged
tycoon
rn order
18 Thorax
12 More
Obscure
svelte
l Kansas
ctty
Rtb donor
Sk1 hits
Retinue
Talk btg
Banquet
High
(mus. l
Hides
Ktnd of
hold.

1
Yesterday's Answer

16" try souls"
19 Jazz
trumpeter
21 Layer of
rock

27 Casmo
employee
29 "Peyton
"
33 Lake
port

22 Gastropod
23 Mom's
stster
25 Sedtment

34 •' rUit
36 Monogram
of 37 Down
37 See 36 Down

~

.

,,.,.., .... c...ovo,.....
~~

WEST
• AJ8 3
¥1
t AJ8
.75132
SOUTH

Capita! Financial
Services Inc.
JOO West 2nd Street
Pomeroy , Ohto 45769

AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER

/

subj

ONCE .AND HE
FALLS HEAD
01/EI( HEELS IN
LOI/E. WIIJ-j

you'

QK

EAST (D)
¥AKV86

• 5432

.KJ8

¥Jl073
t K 10
.109 6
Ne1ther

brl---1---+--1--+-

WQ

BY

..

TS

ATSW

HDYEYDD
'

YEDYBRYZY

SQU

KTSW

QHZDYEMYD
UQ

EI.

EQQV

GYLNY
TU

KQZ

TD
TU

ZQNRYKQHNLHEW

Yesterday's Cryploquole : PHILOSOPHIES ARE INTER·
ESTING TO THE MAJORITY Of PEOPLE ONLY "WHILE
THEY ARE NOVELTIES.-ROBER]' LYND
fO 1917 Kfni'Futuru SYhd•ca•~ Inc

vulnerable

l.

East

Soutb

1¥
l NT. 2•
Pass
Double Pass Pass
Opentltl lead - 1¥

Pa95
PaiS

Weat

CRYPTOQUOTES

you MEET A GI.IY

.2

• KQB5

1

BRYS

of tbem got plua, while most
of tbe one notrump bidders did
malle tbe seven tricks they
needed.
The beat East-West score
came when South decided !bat
he had four spadea and was
going to overcall He wound
up at two spades doubled.
West opened his singleton
heart. East casbed two hearts
and gave his partner a ruff.
Back came a club and when
the smoke of battle had
cleared away South had gone
down two and East and West
had acquired a nice ,top score.

• Q987
.AQ

One letter s 1mply stands for another In this sample A is
used f or the three I.'s, X for the two O' s, etc Smgle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the \\ords are all
hmts Each day the &lt;'Ode leUcrs are different

Here 1s a secure JOb m
consumer finance
with an excellent
future . Your ability
and mtftaottve, plus
our fine training
program, assure your
raptd progress to a
Branch
Manager
pos1t1on.

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

----~~==~~==~-----

¥Q52

3Z Dtrected
3511lusory
37 Neighbor
of Arg .
38 Threat
39 Exclude
10 By means
of
II Fencing

Nortb

When".it ;)'pponent opens the
bidding agamst you, there is
no one who palt! a gun to your
bead and orders you to btd
StiU, tf you never compete,
you miss many of the best
things in bridge life
In a recent tournament
abOut half the Eaat players
passed whereupon the bidding
was short. sweet and simple.
The hand was passed out.
When East opened witb a
hea~. the standard procedure
was one spade by We~t, one
notrump by East and three
passes to dose tbe bidding
Some East-We~t pairs got to
two hearts or two or even
!hr.., ootrump. This was un·

The same
reader wants to know If
proper to malle such ....~norlr•
as, "I'll pass and
partner bid."
The answer is tbat such
remarks u 'llfell as doubles
such as-"1'11 crack that four
spades" are decidedly lm·
proper. Nevertheleu, while
!bey are 'forbidden In tour·
naments, they are condoned ln
many so called "friendly"
games.
fNEWSPAPU ENTERPRlSE ASliN J

_ (Do you hav• a queallon for
the experta? Write "Ask the

Jacobys•• car• ol lh/a
newspapar The Jacob'(l will
onawer Individual q,.atlona II
stamped, selt-addraued
onvelopas are enc/ooed Tho
moat /nterealinQ quollfona will
ba uaed In thla column and will
racoive co plea ol JA COSY
MOOERN}

BARNEY

OCT. 8 IS
NATIONAL
JOGGING

DAI(

'

BRIDGE
4

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXK
Is LONGFELLOW

ll WILL PAY YOU •
'
.. to look into this

992-2111.

:&lt;

News 13
Movie Channel 4 s &amp; 9 P.Nt - Swashbuckler (PGl
7 &amp; 1t P M-SIIent Movie (PG)
Cable Channel 5 7 00 PM - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 · 30 - Marshall Football
10 ·00 - 700 Club

NOI\TH
• 10 911

loti

.

We have an opening
for a trainee- who 1s a
high schoo I graduate
wifh , orI
without •
expenence .
Car
required . Relocation •
may be necessary
now or in the future.
Phone Mr. Hays at

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

Mo"le "'Se4! the Man Run" 8
3,4, l 3G-Mary l-\artman \0, 2 \()-

oo-Tomorrow

~~~-~IC~:Orel
belt
fortunate for !bern since none

~ - "~~~~~~,~··School
!

Own a nd. ope ra te w hol esa le
po pcorn ro u t e
Plea san l
bu s rne ss H tg h pr o1 1t rtem
Par t t 1m e or f u ll tr m e Ca sh
rn v es tm en t o f $1. 930 and up
dependrng on nu mbe r of
a cc o u nt s you w rsh to ,.
se r v rce
We
es t ab l iSh
Jll
tnt !tal a cc o u r=~t s F or detatls
wr tte and mc l u d e your
ph o ne nu mbe r
0
M
Eagle, l9 38 Meadowbrook ..-:
Rd , Minneapolis, Mmn • ..,.
55426

•

8 DO-Baseball Play Off 3,4,15. Eight Is Enough 6,13;
Good Times 8.10; Nova 20,33.
•
a 31&gt;--Bustlng Loose 8.10, 9:DO-Charlle's Angels 6, 13;
Movie "Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night" 8, 10;
Great Performances 33; American Short Story 20
10 DO-Baretla 6.13 .. 10:31&gt;--News 20.
11 DO-News 3.4,6.8, 10, 13,15; .
11 31&gt;--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; $1arsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Hawaii Five 0 8; Movie "Castle K~p" 10.
12 31&gt;--ABC News33; 12:41&gt;--Mystery of the Week 6,13 ,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Wil l do roo f tng co nstrv ctron
plumbmg and. h eofmg No reb
roo lor ge or too sma ll Phone
74'1 '1348

-~-

I

(IXIJtiiiJ

JumblltbBook Nc&gt; 10, wltri
110 pul:dM, • •,....., tar 11 35 paMpaid fiom Jumble, r:Jo thll tltii.PIP"', So• 3o', NonwoOd, N J 07848 lnctudt
your name llddrMa, ~COde and ~dllckl ~ltiti!O Ne• r r ibookl

I

-J

EXCA VATI NG dou u , loader ml&amp;
backh oe w or k d u mp lr ucl1s
and Ia boys l or h ire wrll houl
hll d irt tO sod ! 11n es tone o n~
gro \lel Call Bob or Roge r Jef
l ers d ay ph one 992 7089 mgh t
phone q92·352 5 01 99 2 5'132
EXC A VA TIN G
do Hn
ba ckhoe
and drt cher Cha r les R Hal --.
I e ld
Bo ck
Ho e Serv1ce
1
Rut land Oh •o Phone 742 2008
;

~~

1:DO-Gong Show 3, All My Chlldren· 6,13, News 8,
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:31&gt;--Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, As The World Turns
8, 10, 2 D0-$20.000 Pyramid 6,13
2·31&gt;--Doctors 3,4,15, One Lite to Live 6,13, Guiding
Llght8,10, 3 DO-Baseball3,4,15; Allin the Family
8, tO; Consumer Survival K1t 20.
3· 15-General Hospital 6, 13; 3.31&gt;--Match Game 8, 10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
.4·DO-Merv Grlffln6 ; Gilligan's Is I; Sesame St 20,33,
Dinah 13
4·31&gt;--Brady Bunch 8,.10.
5·1)()..-(;unsmoke 8, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33. Hogan' s 'Heroes 10, Emergency One 13.
5 31&gt;--News 6, Elec. Co. 20,33, Mary Tyler Moore 10.
6 DO-News3,4,a, 10.13,15; ABCNews6. Zoom 20; 6:31&gt;-NBC News 3,4.15;. ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8.10, Pests, Pesticides &amp;
Satet11, 20
•
7 I»-truth or Cons 3, Cross·Wits 4, Liar's Club 6;
Sha Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13,
Gilligan's Is. 15, Americana 20, Big Green Machine
33
c •
7 30-Funny Farm 3, Sha Na N• 4. Match Game PM 6;
Family Feud a. MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge 10. In .search of 13; Wild Kingdom 15

BOFRID

Auc Ti oneer
Co m ....
pl e tc Ser vtce Ph one 949 2487 :
0 1 949 'lC()() Ro ctn e Oh• o Cr •lt 11
Bradfor d
:

8 ~A D F O R D

Exi ra

1ncome w1th thts 10 room
room 1ng house 2'12 bath s,
lobby , llvrng room , dtntng
.. room
The net tncome
should pay the mortgage

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble lhese tour Jumbles,

EXCA VA TING BAC KHOE darer
trench er
low
boy' dump
trucks
sept ic sys t.ems Btl!
Pu lltns phon e 992 2478 day or
n ghl

135.000 00

O£ALIOO

Reednillt,

ID1t

10.

6:2S--Chrlstopher Closeup 10, 6.31&gt;--News Conference
4, 6 45-Mornlng Repor1 3, 6 5G--Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10, Good Morning , Trl
Slate t3
•
'r:lkf..-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13, CBS
News 8; Bullwlnk!e 10; 7 31&gt;--Schoolles 10.
·'
8 00--Capt Kangaroo a.10. Sesame 51. 33 .
9.DO-Merv Griffin 3; f'hll Donahue 4,13,15, New
Mickey Mo~se Club 6. Family Affair a,10
9 03-Edge of Nlgh1 6, Andy Griffith a; Here's Lucy 10.
10:DO-sargord &amp; Son 3,4, 15;• Dinah 6, Here's Lucy a,
Joker's Wild 10; Mike Douglas 13
10 :31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15, Price Is Right 8, 10. -..
11 :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Happy Day~ 6, 13,
Marcus WElby, MD 4 , Elec Co 20
11 :30-Knockoul3.15; Family Feud 6,13, Love of Lite
8.10, Sesame St. 20
11 ·55-CIIS News 8; Loving Free 1!!.. ~
12 ·DO-News 3,4,6,10 ; To Say, The Least 1S, Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13
12 31&gt;--Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13, Bob

one letter to each square, to form

-

FREE
GAS .
FREE
WA TER . LOOKS NICE for

TEAFORD(g

PARTS·- LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
0

Sunrl se Semester

~ ~ ~~ -

~

Autom•ttc
Tronsmtsston Senice

F1n1ncrna AnW1ble
Blo•n Into Wall$ &amp; Atbu

CO AL hmestone and ca lc~m
chl011de and colo um br ne for
du st conlrol and spectal m1 11 tng
sa lt fo r ter mer s Ex celsior Soft FOR SALE or Tr ade .H ouse mtd lot HOM ESITES lor sole 1 acr e and
rn Mason W Vo 3 bedroom s.
up Mrdd lepo1t nea r Rutland
Wor k s M a1n Stree t Pomer oy
Call 992 1481
bath IIV'tng ro om kt tchen U.llil
Oh o o r ph on e 992 389 1
ty e)( t ra Ior ge r oom l or re creo
NEW 3 b edroom house 2 bath s
CAM PER
S600
Also
horse
lion or TV r oo m (304 1773 522 7.
all elec
1 ac re M rddlep ort
trader $450 Phone (6 14 ) 698
of! er 5 pm
~
l ose to Rvtlond Phone Q9 2
32'10
FOR SALE or rent Nrce 2 bed roor
7481
ECO NOMY TRACTOR wtth all or
Mob ile Home
un fulll tshed
Ll fa r m for ~ole l O~ o d own
lochmenls Ltl.. e new osk mg
rent d epos •! requtr!N:i Poss rb le
ner tmonced M onr oe ( oun
0
! 2250 Ph011e (614 } 698 3290
lor buyer to lea ve rnob lle home
t)l w Vo Phone (304 ) 77 2
on !at Hl a bea u l• l ul co un try se t
3102 o r {304 ) 77 2 J22i
ALADDI N KER O SINE' lam p an d
I ng 7 42 3122
heaters
replacement pon s
COU N TRY f a~rnlond w 1th sec lud
Ch1m ney mantels w 1 c k~ e tc FOR SAlE or ! rode or land co n
ed w oods wat er and good ac
Sto p tn for demon str ot ron and
tr act
2 bedroom ho vse rn
cess m M onroe Coun ty W Va
free
co lal o gue
M ou n tQHl
Rutland 99'1 585B
$ ! 000 down call (304) 772
Lea ther and Gen er al Store
3 102 or (304) 77'1 321 7
104 106 W Un1an Sl Ath ens TWO l O TS tn Pomeroy lor good
bulldo zer or end loader Wrt l e
Ohto S92 5478
VA FHA 30 yr l moncm g Irela nd
M rll on Bo r l rom Fori Goy W
M or tga ge 77 E Sla te A thens
Vo 25 114
phon e (614 ) 592305 1
FO ~ SA LE or Rent Hous e rdeo l
2
STO RY 3 bedroom f rame •
for srn gle per son or co uple
hous e F A fu11mce storm w n
wa lk ing d•sl on ce to rown
do w,s f~re p loce tn M rddleport
... et Pomeroy Landmark
992 3405 or 991 5314
Ph one 9&lt;/ '2 3457
soften &amp; condthon your
water and Co-op water
SIX ROOM house a t 61 3 M•li St
softener, Model UC XVI
M rdd lepor l Good cor,d1 1ron !n
Now Only
qu •r e a t 439 Lon co ln S! M •d
dlep ort
MUST SELL lh t ~ 3 bed room 2 ,
1972 , A RI STOCR"- T TRA VEl
let us test your water
bo th spir t Ioyer w rth a li the e •
Tra der 18 It self con tor ned
tros 1 P11ced ta r be low actua l
h ce ll e n t
co nd •llon
Call
Free
real
esta te val ue l or qu rck
992 24'17 do)l llme or 992 JSBO
sole \ N 1ce drr v e to pow er
a fter 4 pm
New Co -Op wa1er and
p \on l s SJ ~ 000 991 2492
soHeners. model VC-SVI
RURAL HOME lor sal e by o wne•
Only 5279.95
Kr tche n d1nrng roo m doub le
Save sso.oo on a new
),.., ng r oom four bed•oo ms
Hotpomt Refrtgera1or
upsl orr s bath room on each
fl o or f ull basement coo l f u1
1 New 20 cub1c tt Chest
AU CTI O N EVERY Frr 7 pm l o t s
noce fu el otl fu rn ace crt y
Freezer
of neW' an d used me~ c hond tse
wa fer Also well and o ster n
S25 00 Dtscount
ot Oh •o R1..,er A uc1ron M erg s
Cellar hOIJ Se"w •lh 2 room d we ll
Pla za M rdd leport Oh1o Home
( 1) Good Refngerator S200
1ng overh ead Lo rg e born Oh
Phone (304 ) 773 54 71
app r ox 3 ' 1 0 CI es a t lan d P11 C
1 Gao~ Used McCullough
ed ot $3S 000 f trm Show n by
Charn Saw , S75 00
oppo 1n t menl on ly 992 3469 or
992 355 1
Amana
1 Good , Us e.d
Upnght Freezer , S2SO 00

GOAT'S 6 w eek s old 2
Sl S 2 f emol e
$25
696 1234

--"'
..-·

SWAIN

BloWft

1l'ii11~

•

Paul Gaud 1no Famil y Fitness

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER5, 1917
S 45-Farm Report 13, 5 5G--PTLI Club 13, 5.55-

Thomas Remembers 33.

--

.

7 3().-;Wahama Soulhern Foolball
10 D0-700 Club.

7 31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,4. Woltman Jack 6,
Country Carnival a, MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33,
Price ts Right 10, That's Hollywood 13, Music C1ty •
15
8 DO- Baseball Play Ott 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13;
Fllzpatrlcks 8,10. Making Television Dance 20,33
8·30-Laverne &amp; Shlrlev 6,13, 9 oo-Three' s Company

WLADE'I&lt;'5 DE516" '

Chester, Ohto

?(J I 'NI

7 PM -

6 3o-lNBC News 9,4,15; ABC News 13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8,10; As We See It 2U
1 oo-Truth or Cons 3. Cross Wits 4, Liar's Club 6,
P,op Goes the Country 8, News 10; To t ell the Trulh
13, Gillllgan' s Is. 15. Indian Summer 20, Lowell

C HAt.J CE-IN JUt.Y AGAI~5T

Tank Service
Bo x 34 •

FREE ESTIMATES

Ph. !!2 39il

Pomeroy Landmark

TR \5 CO I'PORATION ~

f!o~ ~ UILDI ~ &amp; THE FALCON
~ I.S HTER WH ICH WOULDN'T
5TAND A 5~0W BA LL ' 5

•

TWO B E D ~OOM Mobrl e Home
furn 1shed tn Roctne 9-49 2340

-

.

, TH AT JUGT HAPPEN$ TO

YEAH ·· SU !S I D I ARIE~ Of
TRIG! WH IC H AL5 0 JU5f
HA PPEN S TO HAVE: AN
AIRCRAFT DI V\ 5-I O N~

Jack's Septic

'TIM Ortt rnaton;
Not The lm1t1tot~

1191"111

~eroes 15. Mary Tyler MQOre 10
'
6 . _News 3,4,8, 10.13.15: ABC News 6, Zoom 20

TH5 HECK WU RE NOT!
VOU'VE DONo THREE TV
COMMERCIAL&gt; •OJ&gt; TME

..

5&amp; 9 P M, - Man Who Knew Too Much (PG l
7 &amp; 11 P.M - The Sting (PG )
Cable Channel S -

13; My Three Sons 15
5 3Q--Odd Couple 4, News 6. Elec Co 20,33, Hogan's

Residenttal
a nd
c omm_ercial
Call
for
esttma1e, 24 hour servrce
Anyday " anyttme
Phone 985 -3800

• Route l Pomtt~, 0

K1ngsbufl Hom ~ Sales

THR EE BEDROOM M ob1 le Home
Lorge country yard and gard en
space 2 ch ildren per mrtted
N ea r s c hoo ~ Re fer ences and
~po ~ requ1r ed 742 3 122

FOR SALE or r en t Three bed room
fu lly carpllted !-rouse on alm ost
1 acr e Wrl ltng Ia corry 'lnd
mor1 goge 11 mt au tsrde fup
pers Ploms {6 1.4 ) 667 641.4

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

.

Young's
Carpeting
!

- -n IMATE

ONE BEDROOM opt orr cond•
l•oned For I or 2 peopl e 1n
Coa l s Butl dr ng over Colu rnb10
G as Also I sm.Jlll off ice room
for · re nt Ca ll a t opt 16 or
phone 992 36-4 1

~-

Supertor
Steam Eltracllon

.

man 10
Movte Channel 4 -

5 oo-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4, Gunsmok e 8, M ist er
Roger s 20.33, Hogan' s H e r oes 10, Em ergenc y One

-

Fo,-Rent

tledroo rn SI O.S per mon th $ !50
sec un ty depos1t 992 6098 '

\'urd Sule

TELEVISION
VIEWING

\\ Ulllt'd In U .. nt

A V Ail~AB L E A T R111ers,cfE. A pls

and g ntnd son f. l en .Julll tStll l

Rt chard Abels. l•mg Bottom,
caUed on Chnt l:!trch
da u~hter, Leota , rc(l·ot ly
; , toy party was held at lhr

""d

11,1 7/

YARD SAL E So l Oct 8 ol El.., o
Dorley s r es1den ce acros s fro m
OLD FU RNI TURE tee bo)[es bra ss
F1~ ~~ t 1o n m Syr ~e
beds
et c
com p l e!e ~
household s Wr te M D M •lle r BAS EMEN T SAl E 9 3 l ocat ed 01
Rt 4 Pome r oy Oh o or .c oli
Sond y M 1gh t s r e srden ce on
992 7760
Cou nty Rd 3 Leod tng Creek
Rd Mrsc tl&amp;ms
- ~ ~~
CA SH It Junk ca rs Fry s Tru ck &amp;
Auto Rutl an d Ph one 742 208 1 THRH FAMILY Yard Sole lues
Wed a nd Thurs 9 to 5 Nor th
or 742 ?575 Cl os:__d ~ando ~s
3rd 51 M tddlepor l
NO ITEM TOO Lorge 01 too sma ll
W1 ll b uy I pt e ce or co mplele
hous eh old New used or ant1
ques Marl tn s Furnrture 20 N
'lnd St
Mtddlep9r1 Phone~ ~IS ING STAR Kert ne l Boordrng
9"1'1 6370
Indo or O utdoor ru ns. g~oo m 1 n g
oil breed s
clean sonttory
loctlt t1es oe 367 711 2 Ch es h ~r e
.\uto ~n.les
Phone (6 14 )367 0292

La r r y Spence r
Cl erk at Cou r t s
Me1gs Cou n ty
Com ma n P leas Co urt

1tc

f or est Pro
for slondm g
991 5965 or
85 70

CO INS

Da t ed 9 24 77
...

( 9 ) 27 . {1 0 ] -t , l l

PI SCES (Ftb 20·MirCh 20) II
.: _ .; · , e ,.... o-t to m a n t p u l ate
:.-· o:: · s 'or oerson al ga tn s to da ~
.-:: w• we ll l a td p l a n s co uld
ba c\ ff r e Th 1s wa u l ~ ca u se you
so me serr ous p r ob lems

··-

To G lenna Jovce T eastey ,
whose l as t Kno w n ad dr ess
was R ou te 1 Pome r oy Oh ro ,
J 5 76 9 yOLJ are her eb y no t f reo
th a t YO!Jt ha ve bee n na med
D elen dard n a !eg a, acl 10n
enlr t l e d T om J
T e a sle y ,
Pl a 1n t lf f, vs Glenna Joyce
Te a sley , D e f en can t
Th rs
art ron has b ee n a ss rgne d
Ca se N o 165 86 a nd sp end ing
1n the c Cou rt o f Common
P leas of Me rgs Co unty
Pomeroy Ot} ro ~ 5 7 69
The obrect o f th e compl a l nt
rS a d ema nd for d rvor ce a nd
t ran sf er o t t he E&gt; Ou rl y o t lht&gt;
De f E&gt;nd a n t m t h e persona l
pr ope rt y o f the parlies to the
P !a tn l rf f and ot her re li ef
You ar e r equr r ed to an swe r
th e comp l arn t w •th rn 18 d a ys
aft er the l a st pu b lic a t ron o f
lh tS not rct' wh t r:h W i ll be
pub l rshe d once e a ch we e k f or
sr ~
success tv e week s
The
la st p u bl cal 1on w tl l be m ad e
on N ovem bE' r 1 1977 an d the
28 d a ys l or a n swer
w I!
comm en c e on t hat date
t n c ase of y ou r ta rlu r e ro
answer or ot her w rs e re sp on d
as re q u rr ed by the Oh ro Rul es
Ol (1V tl P r oc ed u r e d rv orce
w 1ll be gr ant ed

-- : ~ : oe to a ay Don t overtax
_· ~ e ' L eave str enu ou s tasks

( Hl V RO I ~ ! I~\!' A l A ~ t a t run
Wogun fi p u~~ "''l9€'' 0 11 ~\J nd
AM IM •oJ,,, ~· " r t~ lle n l ,t,npo•
t;I J OOO•nll o•s t a ll &gt;/ J V 127J

1-,I)J

•
A CAREER w tlh a future lor a n1 on THR EE FAMil Y Yar d Sole Oct 6
and 7 Adu lt and Ctn ldren s
or wom an who w on ts 1he be st
m Ide ~A ptl\1 checl. e .... ery
cl oth rng house hold rl em s At
Clm t Jo hn son s res 1dence on
w we k fontosl tC f n nge bene f ttS
old Port land Roo d
all local w or k C t\l e vs o call at
992 2480 or w r •te
We ster n
LARGE G AR AGE Sole Rom or
Sou1hern Ltf e Insur an ce 2 \8 ' 1
shone 10
? A r no ld s Wat er
E Mom Pomeroy Oh1o for 1n
Str eet Syra cuse M on r ue s •
for m01 10n
ond Wed
ADD RESSE RS WA NT ED
l m ' THREE FAMil Y Yar d Sole at Pau l
rn ed to tel y I Work at home
no
Boer res tden ce l si form on
e:r pert ence necessa ry
e ,;
rrg ht po stHtghw oy G arage on
cellen l pav Wn te A merte on
Rt 7 Lorge von ety o f tlems 1n
Serv rce 8350 Pork Lane Surte
el udes 2 TV s b rass It replace
'169 Dalla s TX 7523 1
scr een and ondn ons Avon bo t

INTHECOURTOF
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
TOM J TEASLEY
Route 1
Pom erOy , Ohro 4 5769
Ptaml lf f ,

23)

Instead of op er atin g IOg tcall y
anG werg nrng alter n at rves you
n"'a v e a tend ency to do thmg s the
h ard way to day Unl ort u nate bul
t rue Frnd o u t rno re a bo u t
you rsel f b y sen d rng for yo ur
co py of Astr o Grapn Lette r Mall
50 cen ts lor ea ch an d a long
s e l f aa d re ss e d
s t a m ped
envelope to A st ro -Grap n P 0
Box 489 Rad iO Crty Sta tron N Y
1001 9 Be sure to spec1fy yo ur
b rth stgn

d.tl

I \I

Bern1ce Bede Osol

f O R 1'-PI Galo , tt l oni 1\"
.,ha n;:• ~ ~ 1 ~SM

THE

t~e

u~ &gt; S

\.O,a nn.n q 0 \\ t&gt; b ster
JU D G E
C0 \1\' 0 N P L E AS COU RT
PRQB.O..T E D ! \ IS IO N

~ u l t&gt;

IF YOU h ove a SNvrc e to olfe1
wnn t to bu)l 01 s ~!! some Hm1g
oe l oo ~ "'\1 lor worl.. . ~
or
JOHN Kt:CK wt ll h o ~ e open hemt
voo hateve1
you 11 get r £' s.ult!&gt;
11u1 ge-r y 110011 a nd w o vld l!l, e l o 1
lo) ter. w1 th a SerHmel Won t Ad
blood donOI S I O grve rn ht s
Coi\9Q22156
t1 0t1W
Than\. '!' O U O&lt;t
10
Bloodmob ile
TWO FAMILY Yar d Sole Fur
IHtUI(~
Q ll ltqVE"S
do th1119
NO HUN l iNG 01 t; es~p"'u~ s • n g o n
stonewar e and g l os~w a re 174
1-lotend prope1 ly 111 Bllshon
M 1d\'10 y Dr New Ho ven Wed
FUl l ER BR USH p• od ucts Ia• soli:'
Th u rs an d Fn
99'1 3-1 10
wC ARAC E SA LE Oct 5 !hru jJ f rom
9 to 5 do dy Loc:o t!N:i oil Route 7
Bypa ss. o n old Rovte 143 South
of Jock s Club
Rea sonable
pnces

.'In~

~c toun rs
or
•o ,,,(l • tt.~rs
oena n no tc t nt' t' ' t' cu · on o t

and Conre

w •l l hold o nlt,;&gt;t&gt;l1ng Wed Oc t
7
p m ' at Shod t• Rrvc r Clu b
huu.,e

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cll1l ~

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NO HUN 11 NG ,,, 1••";po.,smg on
Ill) IOtln ~H ~)11\'01£&gt; IOOciWOy
Cloud •" [bill~
"

II

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OF
AC

SE T TL E M~T

COU NT S

The ~a.nt 1-ds Turn Unwaeted Items Into c;ash

•
•

WHAT ARE WE GOIN'
TO DO ABOUT Ol.lR
GOSSIP F!£NCE GITTIN'
BLOWED AWAY, ELVINEY?

IMPERVIZE I
LO\\ltEIY ··
IMPERVIIE

•

�' .

'•
I

•

•

•'

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

•

•

•

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

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

Hospital News

will open in early October ln

Borbon· faces

you

----e--·· ·
..

ko~w

for 8SSault

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

Downtown

was-hemgton·
.
·.

f

R ep·o·rt .

~

a Safe Deposit Box.

$8 TROUSERS

$7 MATCHING SHIRTS

a

.._".b

.

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

-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

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

J·.lt··&lt;t llor

Tllo11tas ,

, ( 'IH·sllln·. IHiiiSCk et•pcr.
'

.

.tl ,

.

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

•

at

ei~Lion, "

Hught'S said ..

C u yahoga

Cnunty

Demoaatic lead ers chu se

F'eighan iti a special July

Democrats in Tuesday's non-

nominatin g

partisan primary despite an

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

intense campaign based on .a

so-called

" War

on

Pornography .' 1

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

39,724

votes,

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

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

conventio11

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

••

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

issue which could appear on

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

national attention, got

~ po

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

.·
•

enttne
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER 5, 197.7
I

•

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

..

PRICE FIFrEEN CENTS

the power plant but favored
limited abatements in return

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

}

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

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

~

[j

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

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

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

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

'

'~11'

.. .

.... ,.

· .' · '~:'~~'~'~w~-~-:,,-..tt.tl

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

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

ELBERFELDS

ANNIVERSARY WEEK
SALE!
MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS

area,'' said· Estes. ''Anyway,

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

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

News •• in Briefs

We Suggest

sau~rkra4t

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

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

GOESSI.ER'S .
JEWELRl STORE

,.

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

Chang~s

.

J

sauerkraut (own ever since ."

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII . NO. 121

i.fiss ·

t
t.

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

e

.

I

Perk defeated· in ·cleveland

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

-~

on a watch
can

'"

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

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

BULOVA.
A name

•

.

New kind of Socialism defended

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

situations.

·· ·

'

,r;-

.

,

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

-

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

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

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

· Phone book draw
brought some
really bad luck

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

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

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

Gas company's Koebel
would end regulatio:g

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

Fight against
Issue Two
is continuing

Impact study
expected in
late January

..

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

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

"'

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

,\1

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