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'

.12-The Da1ly Sent mel. Middl ~port-Pomer~y, 0 .• Thursday, Oct. 6, 1•77

Rules listed in
Jt:. Miss Program
Southeast Ohto Jumor
Miss. lee. today released
rules forthe 1977-78 Southeast
Ohio Junior M1ss scholarship
program to ·bP Sunday. Nov .
Funher infom1ation of the
20 at the Meigs Junior High Junior Miss Program may be
School auditorium in Mid- obtain ed by writin g the
The rules:
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
• dleport.
1. Contestant must be Scholarship Program, P. 0.
single and never have been Box 10l . Pom~roy, Ohio,
married , divorced or had a 45769.
mrur.iue annulled .
2. Contestant must be a
bona fide high school senior
and shall not graduate prior
to May 1. 1978.
- - - 3.--Contestant's age on
March I, 1978, shaU not be
less than 14 or more than 19
Allstate Insurance Comyear.! of age prior t&lt;&gt; May 31, panies have invested more
1978.
than $200,000 in bonds in
4. Contestant must be of · Meigs CountY, according to
good charaCter and possess Robert C. Brazer, Associate
poise , personality .
in· Vice President for Ohio.
telligence , charm ,
at- Meigs County investments
good are part of m ore than
·tractiveness and
groomb.g.
$68,000,000 in bonds held by
5. Contestant must possess Allstate in 35 counties in Ohio.
and display a talent . This
Local Allsiate investments
talent may -take the form of have helped make possible
singing , dancing , playing· a educationa l facility exmus ic al i nstrument , pansion \and improvements,
dramat.ic reading , art Brazer said.
display, dress designing: or
she may give a talk on a
" subJect of her choice . It is
expressly unde"rstood that
should any contestant's talent
routine at the Southe'a st Ohio
BUT'l ON CANVAS
Junior Miss FinalS exceed
WASHINGTON
(UP!)- A
thre~ an~ one-half minutes,
such contestant will be $5,000 oil portrait of Earl Butz
disqualified from receiving will adorn the walls of the
Department
any points in the creative and Agriculture
more
than
a
year
after the
performing arts category.
agriculture
secretary
6. No contestant shall be
denied the right to participate resigned from the Ford
in the local contest because of Cabinet amid uproar over a
crude racial joke he told.
race . creed or color.
Agriculture Secretary Bob
7. Contestant must be a
Bergland,
saying "let 's get
bon.a fide resident of the State
in,"
ruled
the portrait
Butz
of Ohio.
be
unveiled
with a
will
8.
Contestant
must
next
week.
ceremony
recognize the existence of a

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7_ ANP "SATURDAY, OC:TQBER 8

LAST TWO -DAYS - 113TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

;~i~c:;;~;ltt;.h1. ~u~ni-itrmediS!IleStateso"ft-

OPE N f RID AY NIGHT
'
TIL 8
ANNIVERSARY SALE

. Boys '7.95 Jeans •••••••••• '5.96 ,
Boys '8.95 Jeans .••.••••••• '6.76
Boys '10.95 Jeans ••••••••• 18.26
Boys '11.95 Jeans ••••••••. '8.96
Boys 113.95 Jeans •••••••• '10.46

oblong . Good overall
selection~

lf2 PRICE
ANNIVERSARY SALE

ANNIVERSAR'Y" SALE

COATS &amp; CLARK

MEN.'S WORK
UNIFORMS

ss.95 PANTS ••••• SALE s7.89
s7.95 SHIRT•••••• SAL£ '6.89

'119

AjiiNIVERSARY SALE

Our entire stock of men's jackels and coats at
special sale prices. Regular and extra large
SIZes. A tremendous selection., waist length
sty-les, car coal lengths and all ·weather coats
with zjpout lining .

.'

MEN'S $19.95 JACKETS _ _ _ _ _ $!5.95
MEN'S $22.95 JACKETS
518.35 ,
$23.95
MEN'S$29.95 JACKETS
MEN'S$37 .95 JACKETS
$30.35
MEN'S$49.95JACKETS
$39.95
MEN'S 559 .95 JACKETS
$47.95
MEN'S $74.95 JACKETS
$59.95
MEN'S$89.95JACKETS
$71.95
- ANNIVERSARY SALE

Sizes 29 to 46 wa ist, flare leg styles,
straight legs and full cut co rduroys for the
more ma ture marJ . Big select ion of solid
colors.

TABLE COVER •••••••••• 354

Missy, junior and half sizes. All weather,
boot length. dress length and car coats.
Leather , wool. imilalion fur, tweed and
fur trim .
·

Knil tops. blouses. skirts,
slacks, vests, jackets and 3 pc.
suits.

sizes.

Tops •••••••••• '1.89

REG. 18.00 ••••• SALE '6.39
· REG. '10.00 •••• SALE 17.99
REG. '14.00 •• • SALE 111.19
EG. '30.00 •• • SALE '23.99
REG. '50.00. SALE 139.99

SERTA MATTRESS AND
BOXSPRING SETS
size with mismatched .

WINTER COATS
- Long or short styles, hooded, fur
trimmed, den ims, nylons, plaids,
snorkels, corduroy .

-Sizes '2 to 6K and 7 to 14.

CHILDREN'S
·sLEEPWEAR
- Blanket sleepers, 2 pc.
pajamas, gowns and robes.
- lnfaiUs thru 7 to 14.

PER. '
SET

Reg. $4.00
Sale $3.19
Reg. S6.00
Sale 54.79
Reg. $9.00
Sale $7.19
Req. $11.00
Sale.$8.79_
Reg. 515.00
Sale $11.99

•

-.

-PORTABLE
COLOR TELEVISION ·
- G. E. 17 inch screen
- 100 per cent solid stafe
- Custom picture control. AFC

$]6goo

GE 19'' COLOR
PORTABLE .custom
Automatic color,

HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

ME~'S

9 inch

picture. - 100 per cent solid state.

.59' Plates

35'

7 inch
-

OHIO

49' Plates

29'

Houseware Dept
lsi Floor

AND BOYS' TUBE SOCKS

.

-· .
C

8
ELBERFELDS IN _POMEROY
Regula·r $1.25 pair . Boys size fils sizes 7 to 11.
Men's sizes 9 to 15. White with stripe tops . Big
selection for this sale.

,

-

NO. 123

•

enttne

at

e
VOL. XXVIII

I'

•

'·

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The present joble,ss rate compares to H recession high of 9 exceeds 2 to I.
While white joblessness has declined over the past year,
per cent in 1975, and a 1976 high of 8 per cent.
there
has beert no reql gains foc blacks. Unemployment among
Last month's modest 150,000 decline in unemployment ocblack
youths has fluctuated between 35 and 40 per cent over the
eurred among workers recalled from layoff. Black unemploypast
three
years.
ment fell to 13.1 per cent, reversing an August rise to 14.5 per
In
September,
unemployment fell slightly to 4.9 per cent for
cent that had created a public furor.
cent rate among women and 18.1 per cent
men,
hut
the
7
per
The nation's jel) rolls, meanwhile, continued to expand to
r~te
among
the
young
reflected little change from August.
91.1 million per51!ns in September, reflecting a near record
The
average
duration
of unemployment rose to 14.5 weeks in
percentage of jobholders in the American population. Employ- ·
an11
there
was
virtually no change during the third
September,
ment was up 320,000.
in
the
natiOn's
1.1
million discouraged workers who
quarter
Black groups are asking Carter to do something more for.
have
even
quit
looking
for
a job.
minorities and September's report is not expected to defuse ,
Employment
rose
:
t
or
both
blacks and whites in September,
their
joblessness now
. complaints. The ratio of black-to-white
.
'

By United Press loternatlooal
STRIKING TEACHERS IN MADISON, LAKE COUNTY,
continued their walkout today with no progress reported in
. court-&lt;&gt;rderetl negotiations, · but public scbool tepchers in
Amherst, Lorain County, returned to work after. reaching
agreement on a new contract that will bOQst base annual pay to
$10,050 in two steps. In Amherst, the leilchers' first raise of
$600 is retroactive to last Sept. I. The second raise will come in
August, 1978.
Amherst teachers , who struck last Sept. 21, also won
binding arbitration for most contract items -a key issue in
the- dispute settled Thursday. The strike by teachers in
Amherst practically shut down the 4,IJOO.student system since
the strike by the 185 teachers was honored by bus drivers and
cafeteria workers . Most of the 200 striking leilchers in Madison
are continuing to picket the 4,700-student system, where
classes are being held even though bus drivers are hon oriqg
the strike.
MIAMI - SPENDING LESS THAN two hours in
deliberation, a jury late Thursday convicted 1:&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld Ronny
Zamora of first degree murder in the "television addiction"
case that drew nationwide attention. in-returning the verdict,
the nine men and three women rejected defense arguments
Zamora killed an elderly widow in a moment of insanity in
which he felt he was playing out a television drama.
The jurors found Zamora guilty of first degree murder in
the shooting death of 82-year-&lt;&gt;ld Elinor Haggart, and alSo
guilty of armed robbery, burglary and possession of a firearm
in the i:ommlssion of a felony . Zamora could receive
maximum sentences of life in prison on the murder and two of
the robbery charges - without possibility of parole for 25
years.-Tbe state did not ask for the death penalty because of
Zamora's age.

·•

·

PAPER
NAPKINS

Birthdays, weddings, all
occasion.
Limited
quantities.
S9c Packages Napkin
6Sc Packages Napkin 39$
49c Packages Napkin
· Houseware Oepl.
hi Floor

35•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1977

unemployment at 6.9%

Sept~mber
By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Unemployment declined to 6.9 per
cent in September with some gains for blacks, but it reflected
no progress in total joblessness in six months, the Labor
Department repcrted today .
The September !~vel was 0.2 per cent below August. Unemployment has hovered around 7 per cent since April, refusing
to go any lower than the post-recession low of 6.9 per cent.
.
This continued Sluggishness in the labor market is likely to
increase pressure on President Carter for some change in the
adnninistration 's economic policy . Joblessness was 7.3 per cent
when he took office in January.

).I

1J
'
.
'
1\f
~
POSTER CONTEST
Racine Elementary pupils
participated in a poster contest to inform the public about the
6.5 mill emergency operating levy to be voted on at a special
election Oct. 25. Racine PTO provided ' th~~prize money . All
children that entered were given a treat. First place winners
were given $1 and second place 50 cents. ABOVE, grades I, 2, 3
winners are, first row, fir'st grade, 1-r, Melanie VanMeter and
Chris Jewell, second row, 2nd grade, Jon Tuttle and Kim
Stobart, and third row, third grade, Wendy Wolfe and Rachei
Reiber. AT RIGHT, grades 4, S, 6, first row, fourth grade, 1-r,
Mike Johnson and Kerri Beegle; second row, grade five, Alan
Crisp and Barbara Rose, and third row ,-g rade six, Laren Wolfe
and Sherry Bell .
'

\.......-: MOSCOW (UPI) ::... The
Soviet
parliament
unanimously adopted a ne)l'
national constitution today .
and elected a former Detroit
auto worker "a.-Russia's new.
vke president.
In a rapid-fire series of
votes, the 1,517-member
Supreme Soviet approved the
new constitution and echoed
President Leonid Brezhnev's
· choice for vice president,
First Deputy Foresigft
Minister Vasily Kuznetsov,
metallurgist and one-time
Ford employe.

creating a 320,000 increase in the job rolls. An unusuatly large
rise of 500,000 lor women was offset somewhat by a 210,000
decline among reenagers.
Jobs in manufacturing increased slightly, but not enough to
teverse an August decline. Most new jobs were created in
service industries - retail trade and government.
Arthur Okun, economic adviser in the Johnson administration, warns that unemployment will not improve unless there
'Is change in government policy.
"Unemploymel]t remains high because production has not
grown enough to generate the jobs required to get us back to
prosperity," he said Thursday .
·

·a

Meigs~

johles_s total at
5.5% during August .
ly wage rates in the following
limits: tinskilled $2.80 to
$4.35; seiniskilledJ3 to $4.75,
skilled $3.50 to $6. Over recent
years average weekly earn·
ings of co unty factory
employees covered by the
unemployment compensation
law have been about twofifths under the average of
the state.
An appendix to the bulletin
reported that unemployment
averaged 5.8 pet. in 1973, 5.4
pet in 1974,7.0 pet in 1975, and
6.5 pet in 1976. During 1976
the highest incident-e of
unemployment was 9.2 pet in
February and the-lowest was
·5.1 pet in October.

Southem·
authorized
to close

CET A chopoff
•

DISTRICT CHAIRMAN -Carl Gheen, left, trainiilg
in Distributive Education at The Daily Sentinel in this, his
senior year ~t Meigs High School, is congratulated by his
Sentinel supervisor, David Buskirk, on being named
chairman of District 13, Distributive Education Class of
America. Carl is working in the advertising department of
the local newspaper. ·

IS

slowed down
Development staff study the
situation and prepare a
proposal to delay ,. the·
reduction of the Leading
Creek · enrollees.
The
Governor has approved an
allocation of $16,592 in federal
CETA funds t o prevent the.
layoffs. Jackson said the
Meigs County group will be
operating on a reduced scale.
The program will be
reduced by four persons a
month until March when the
group will number seven.
Jackson said each person will
be found another job before
their · Leading Creek employment is terml~ated. ·

Meigs' Gheen to ,head
district DECA group

Carl Gheen, son of Mr. and of The Daily Sentinel.
Active In band, wrestling,
Mrs. C. Vincent Gheen, Sr.,
4-H,
and yearbook editor, at
ISRAEL AND THE PALESTINE LIBERATION Route 4, Pomeroy, has been
Meigs
High School, Gheen
ORGANIZATION appear headed toward a compromise that named district chairman for
will
represent
the district and
the Distributive Education
(Continued on page 10)
the
chapter
·
at the State
• Clubs of America, District 13.
Delegates'
Conference
in
A senior at Meigs High
·columbus
Nov
.
4
and
5.
• School
enrolled
in
Schools making up District
Distributive Education, Carl
is president of the local 13 are Buckeye Hills, Athens,
D.E.C.A. Club, and its fir st Chillicoth~, New Lexington, .
member to be a district of- 1l~1oto. fVS, Lancaster,
ficer. His career ,objective C~rclevllle, Logn, PIC,kawaybeing in advertising, his Ross, Meigs, Tri-County V.S.,
present training ·station is in and Jackson High School.
the
advertising department
PARIS (UPI) - It is a grim -consequences .
The ministers pledged their
specter: Western industrial
group
' s . oil imports, now
nations run short of oil,
setting off massive unem..
ployment, rampant inflation
million in 1985.
and riots in the streets.
the reason , they said, was
SYRACUSE - Plans for a system. Wingett said he is
The United States and 18
At
the
present
rate,
sewage
system that would hopeful that Syracuse will
simple
..
other non-Communist in the group's consumption S.rve villages of Syracuse receive a federal grant for
dustrial cOW)tries Thursday
approved drastic · oil·savlng would be up to 52 nlillion and Racine have been · construction at .the next
plans to avert this energy barrels a day, while the oil . completed and specifications. funding by Congress.
Wingett said he is opdoomsday, which they say exporting nations would be are being written, Council
probably
unwilling
to
sell
that
President
Robert
Wingett
timistic
that construction of
could happen in about seven
much, unleashing a . grave said Monday nigh\the system may begin next
years.
Wingett, who pr_e~jdl)d.'. at year.
The two--day cabinet-level economic crisi~ in the con·
There will be a meeting
suming
countries.
the
regular me~ting in the
meeting of the U.S.-Ied · In"We
cannot
afford
to
fail,"
absence
of
Mayor
Herman
with
the councils of Syracuse
ternational Energy Agency
Energy
Secretary
James
.
London,
said
Ed
Tinkle
of
and
Racine
and the Syracuseagreed that all analyses point
Schlesinger
said.
"What
is
at
Commonwealth
Engineering
Racine
Regional
Sewage
up a grim fact - a dramatic
stake
is
the
survival
of
free
Inc.
,
gave
him
the
inDistrict
to
review
plans.
Date
shortage of oil by 1986 with
systems."
formation
on
the
sewaee
of
the
meeting
will
be
andemocratic
dire economic and political

CLOSING MONDAY
ATHENS - The Athens
Social Securi~Y Office,
located at 22i'h Columbus
Road here will be closed all
day Monday, Oct. 10, in observance of Columbus Day_.

. EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, a ebanee ol
showers . Sunday and
Tuesday. Highs will be In .
tbe 60s and lows will be In
tbe 40s.

within 100 air miles of Akron
for location of a brewery to
employ. l ,445 persons.
Rhodes said he met
Monday in ¥ilwaukee with
Milrer officers, and they said
•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::: · the Akron a~ea was their No.
in the filter room. Holman
I choice for a site. ·
·also asked that a load of
OPEN SATURDAYS
Rhodes said the brewery
gravel · be . placed 11ear-4the
Tbe Meigs County Board
would
cost between $150
drain at the pool.
ol Elections office Is
·
million
and $225 million to
The mayor and Millon.
ma)DIIIInlng . office hours · build and equip. lte said the
Varian, chief of pollee, were
lrom 9 a .m. to 4 p.m.
annual payroll would be in
granted permission to hire
Monday through Saturday
excess
of $30 million .
extra "duty officers if needed
lor absentee and disabled
'
In
addition,
the governor
during October . Also at·
voters lor the November 8
1,000
allied
jobs in the
said,
,tendmg were Troy . Zwilling,
election. The board office
ean
and
glass
industries .
"Eber Pickens, Kathryn Crow
wnt be closed this Monday,
would
be
created
to support
and Jimmy Joe Hemsley,
Ocl. 10, however, In obthe
brewery.
These
would not
council merribers ; Mary
servance of Columbus Day.
nel!essarily
be
in
the
Akron
Chancey, Janice Lawson,
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::
area
,
he
pointed
out.,
clerk', and Chief Varian.

PI
I
d
·
~
·
.
:u:i;.g~u;~~!:u~~c~~~e~
ans comp_ete J.Or sewerage

SPECIAL

PAPER
PLATES

Rain likely tonight, lows
between 50 and 55, and again
Saturday with highs 'to mid60s.
Probability
of
precipitation 10 percent
today , 60 percent tonight, 70
percent Saturday.

hovers over Capitol Hill."
Ca rter
specifically
resse rted U.S. committment
to
the · "strength,
independence, Ireedom and
peace of the people of Israel"
and said the recent U.S.
understanding with the Soviet
Union had ended a period of
disruptive Russian actions in
the area .
The administration policy,
he said, is "treating fairly all ·
parties" and that has
resulted "in a much more
flexible and acc'llmhlodating
attitude by the Arabs and ·
Israelis.''

West agrees to
cut oil buying

niversary

RACINE

Weather
.
.,_

CINCINNATI - THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY Water
Sanitation Commission has announced official receipt of a
$100,000 grant to develop the initial phase of an early warning
crganic chemical deteCtion system on the Ohio River . The
grant will be used to purchase gas chromatographs and
accessories needed for water testing at seven sampling sites.
Proposed sites for the first phase of the detection system
are Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Louisville, Ky., and the West
Virginia cities of Wheeling , Huntington and Portsmouth. A
seventh testtng site will be established on the Kanawha River
in West Virginia.

WARE

SPECIAL

United States has not Senate ~'in ance Committee
lessened its supp&lt;rt of Israel, has killed most ol them in
said the clashes between his order to allow a House-Senate
administration and the co nferen ce ' committee to
Democratic Congress "are hash out the differences.
" What we don 't get this
pot a sign of failure ... but a
sign that we as Democrats year, we'll be bOck for next
intend to carry out our year," said Carter, who has
commitments to the people." hinted strongly that he would
"Many of these issues have veto an energy package not to
been avoided for years, for his liking . "I don't intend to
decades, because of a fear of fall."
He said his energy
conb-oversy,u Carter said.
proposals
were framed in an
" But they can'" be avoided
"
to
avoid an almost
effort
any longer ."
.
inevitable
crisis ," and
The House passed a
reminded
his•
audience that
number of the President's
energy proposals, but the "the shadow of the oil lobby

Ex-Ford worker
Russia's Veep

L TTLE BOY-S &amp; GIRLS

Long Sleeve
Sweaters •••• , •• '1.99
Pants •• ~ •••••• 12.50
Jumpers ••••• ~. 12.99
Bib Overalls, Crawlers,
Jumpers ••••••• ·'3.50

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House
Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter said today
his battles with Congress
over energy, the Panama
Canal and other issues "are
not a sign of Ia ilure" by his
t·
administration .
" I don't intend to fail/' he
told the Demoqratic National
ComnnitWe. And with his
energy energy program in
tatters on Capitol H,ill , he
promised to go back to
Congress again next year for
any
needed
energy
legiSlation .
Carter conceded " the
matter is in doubt" on
.. hether the Senate wUl
· approve the Canal treaties,
but he appealed for support.
" Misrepresentation will be
presented to you," he said in
a hard-hitting speech; but
" there is no doubt in my nnind
that our country's best
interests will be served by
these treaties ."
Carter, who reiterated the

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

REG. '40.00 ••••••• •••• SAL('34.00
REG. '60.00·· •• • •• • •• • SALE '51.00
REG. 172.00. •••••••••• SALE '61.20
REG. 1118.00. •••• •••• SALE 1100.30
REG. '170.00 ••••••••• SALE .A'I'I.:JU
REG, '230.00 ••••••••

-Secon ds
- Machine Washable
- Sizes 2 to6x·7 and months

Meigs County
People

54x96

Rei 59'

•

DARNETTES

ONLY

and

Reg. 121.00···. Sale '16.79
· Reg. '31.00· •• Sale 124.79
Reg. '41.00 • .-Sale '32.79

COORDINATED
SPORTSWEAR

For

inches

·Reg. 99'
TABLE COVER ••••••••• 59'

Carhartt Brown Duck Work
Clothes.
Men ' s
,Wembley
Neckt ies, Men 's Sport Shirts.
Boys Winter Jackets. flllen's Sport
· Coats, flllen's Dress Slacks and
Boys Knit Shirts.

CHILQREN'S DEPT~

~~

Sizes 54x88
inches.

REG. 119.00 ••••• SALE 115.'19
REG. '2l.OO •••••SALE 116.79
REG. 123.00· ••• SALE 118.35

PRE-TEEN

Twin or full
covers .

?APER TABLECOVER

MEN'S AND
BOYS' WEAR

REG. 116.00 ••••• SALE 112.79

't~-f;1; Men's 117.95 Cordurojs ••• 113.98

\

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Reg. 114.00 • •••Sale '11.19.
Reg. '17.oo ••• ~ Sale t13.59

Men's '15.95 Cordur1r15 •••• '12.48

~~~ffi~ A Home .Bank

1h PRICE

REG. '12.00 •••••• SALE '9.59

Men's 113.95 Corduroys •••• 110.88
Men's 114.95 _Corduroys •••• '11.68

,So-if you're in a hurry, just drive up
... or_walk up ... to our window, and
w~'ll process your deposit or
Withdrawal as quick as a wink! No
more standing in lines when you're
_pressed for time. You . don't even
have to step one'foot inside the bank!
So next time you want to save time,
come as you are, to our drivethrough window!
'

While They Last

-SIZES 3 TO 15/ 16
-100 PER CENT POLYESTER
-BELTED AND UNBELTED STYLES

. CORDUROY SLACKS

DRIVE.tJP BANKING
HOURS WILl BE ....

and colors . Petite .
average,
fall
and
outs ize.
Made
by'
Kayser - Roth .

- JUNIOR SlACKS

MEN'S &amp; YOUNG MEN'S

, _

WOMEN'S
COAT ' SALE'

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS
AND COATS

FOR YOUR convENIENCE
OUR "NEW'' DRIVE.THROUGH WINDOW.

SAT. E

• A good seledion of ·sizeS

SAVE ON THESE ITEMS

A complete selection of sizes in
pants and matching shirts. Navy,
khak1 , charcoaL dark - olive and
forrest green .
·

Just r~ceived a big new shipmen!
of solid co lors. variegated and
sparkle c olors . Regular $1.49
skein.

SUPP-HOSE
·STOCKINGS
AND PANTY
HOSE

~i1cludes our e~tire stock of boys denim
reans and fash•on jeans. Sizes 8 to 18 In
regularS, slims and husk ies, plus student
sizes '16 to 30 wa lst.

Vinyls and cloth ,
quanti t y .
limited
Ovals , rouhd and

RED HEART
WINTUK ·YARN

s4.95 AND ss.95

BOYS BLUE JEANS
&amp; FASHION JEANS

TABLE
COVERS

NOW OPEN

ANNIVERSARY SALE

ANNIVERSARY SALE

DISCONTINUED
PAITERNS &amp;
......... 1'
'
COLORS

Allstate holds
$200,000 bonds

..

Carter promises t~ get
basic Programs paSsed

ELBE-RFELDS -IN -POMEROY

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nounced.
·
Council set "trick or treat"
night for OCt. 29 from 6 to 7.·
The siren will sound to begin
and end act.ivities.
In other business council
agreed to fill several holes in
streets and place gravel in an
alley located petween Herb
Parker and Mary McAnus.
· George Holman reported
that all locks aMhe pool have
been replaced and the
shutdown for winter is
completed except for a valve

I

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
- James A. Rhodes announced
today that the Mtller Brewing
Co. has · asked the state to
come up with a 500-aere site

,,

,!-

0 •

�~~

2-TheDatll Senunrl Mtddlrport Pon1&lt;r 1 Ll

da) O&lt;t

Conditions found some improved at Orient State Institute
fhey st II are Sttl ng tr w d

R1 I t E 1 E UNARO

Labor claims
big victories
By SI\RA !'RITZ
UPI Labor Report«
WASHINGTON UP! l
Orgaruzed labor no\\ has ts
ltrst b g 1tctor es on Capt to I
Hill thts ) ear "'th House
passage of a btU to 0\erhaul
the labor Ia~ and Senate
apprm:il of a S3 40 nunlmun
wage b1 !981
NetU er Issue \\as settled
!mall) b1 the\otes Thursda1
But Afl-GO offtctals \\ere
01 eqoyed by thetr abtltl) to
re1 erse labor s record of
defeat.&lt;; m legiSlatn e battles
aga mst b g bus ness
A fmal vote ~as expected
tod a) on the Senat es
mm mum \\age proposal
which~ ould raise the current
$2 30 "age floor bv $1 10 01er
the

next

four

years

-

prov1dmg a more generous
rruse than a sm tlar bill
passed earlier b) the House
The House plan for $3 05 b)
1980 was reJeCted m the
Senate and the bt gge r
mcrease "as adopted 76 to
14 The vote ndicated labor
had the po" er to fend off
other consenat ve proposals
mcludmg a lower m nmmm
for teen-agers
Restaurant help and other
workers who depend 'on tips
also got a better deal m the
Senate Tipped workers who
now rece ve oO per cent of the
rrurumurn wage would get 70
per cent bv 1981 The House
had
reJected
anv
Improvement
Some 4 7 mill on workers
would bene! t from the Senate
plan to raJse the m mmum
wage {o 52 65 next Jan 1
$290m 1979 S3 15 n 1980 and
$3 40 n 1981
The labor b II approved
257 163
by the House
Thursda) would severely
penaltze emplo)ers '.\h o
VIolate labor la'.\ s and help
un ons
n
organ ztng
campatgns - parttcularly

UP! Mateh use Rep rltr
OHl~ N r Ohto l UPll Statr

lcglsltt r

u h
persc H.:! and
hl\\SJ en havt: btet shown
tl tt "tul~ cor dtl 1 s arP
sl Ill) m pro1 lg at Ohio s
m~.:nt.ctllealUI

lar gest estdentt tl facthll for
the wntall) retarded 1 uch
re
11 IIttS to be d t:
agamst sta unch!\ anti W1 on
~
gr up f lb ut 100
emplO)Pr&gt; hke J P Stevens
perS&lt;
I s g t I glu pse or I fe
and Co
Rep Frank Thompson O- Thursda1 at Onent SUlic
N J floor leader for the btll Jnst tute a sprawbng 6~
desrrtbed
tt
as
a acre complex Y.h ch dates
tre nendous vtcton for balk tu the I BOOs
Most lame U\\ B) from their
labor - producmg eaSth
gu
oded tour 111th the
the nost pro labor btll s ce
mpnsston
ll a.t. residents
the II agner Act more than
man}
of
then
se.verel)
~0 \ears ago
retarded
e:ust
but
httle
Opponents agreed It s '!I
more
that
that
per cent of what labor
Although cond ttions at the
wanted
saJd Rep John
mst
tute 15 il"ules southwest of
Ashbrook R Oh o A bu.smess
ColumbuS
ha&gt;e
been
coal ttot declared tl the
1ost
o utra geous tn!proved durmg the last four
demonstrat on of unchecked vears the~ sttll fall far short
W1 on power e'er \Utnessed
on Cap tol Htll
Republica n supporters of
busmess
who
tned
unsuccessfully for three days
to drasttcalh weaken the
House btll pronused to ftght
harder - 1nth a filibuster f By ROBERT SANGEORGE
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Just
necessa r) - "hen the
because
mtce ma) get cancer
measure comes u~ m the
from
sacchanne
doesn t
Senate next year
mean
humans
wtll
too
Dr
The labor btU would hasten
un on r epresentation Albert Sab n has charged
Sabm
t he rekrtown
electtons revoke federal
contracts of labo r law discoverer of poltO 1acctne
VIOlators for up to three " ho has turned his a ttentwn
to ca ncer m recent yea rs
years and prov1de as much
as double back pal to Thursday blasted sc enttsts
workers d1sm ssed for umon and federal offtctals "ho
advocate
a ban on
actiVIty
saccharme argwng there IS
Both v ctor es Thursday re
no proo f the arttf eta!
qutred some comprom ses b)
labor Lost rn the batUe was S\\ eetener causes cancer
There ts no ev tdence that
labors plan for future
they
( chemtca ls ltke sac
automatic mmunum wage
ratses whtch the House charme ~ill do the same
thmg n the human body that
rejected
they do m ffi tce and other
laboratorv a rumals Sab n
said
Not everything that
causes a mutat on m ammals
LITfERY WINNERS
Thts week s wmmng Ohio "tll do the same wtth men
V s tmg Cmcmnat for a
Lotter)
numbers
confe rence on tumors Sabm
Gold number - 9
predicted cancer research
Whtte number - o8
wtll focus on two dtrectwns
Blue number - 978
tn
the future
the
Extra Cash
envir onmental factors
149226
leading to cancer and the
mechamsms by whtch
healt hy body cells change m

\

" 1s

gt:ncral

""""tll(l~

tit'
\.1Sttors that further progress
w uld not be actuevcd
w1th uta n tSS H mfustoo of
).! lt' C i l l

addtttot I uney or the
tra tSfer of ntat l of the
mstttute s ? 000 reSidents to
c: 1 nuruty-b&lt; sed centers (or

nnre mdi\ 1du '' care

II s IS substantially
belt I th I I l \la S I !973
sad sta te Rep Mtehael P
&gt;1 1zta o D-Columbus
but
tl s sttll 1ot up to stan &lt;ill rds
St nzta 10 remarked that
th e populat on has bee
reduced by 500 that most

restdents are no

longer

phystcally restrruned that
the) no lon ger lte n thetr o\\ n
feces and that there are
classes to tram thotie tilat are
educable
B t the a vet a~e patient ts
I ttle better off no\\ than he
was then
satd Stmztano

dong

M thmg

Thl vts t sl uwed thiS I be
true The dor mtones :SO to :;o
)ears old conta ned up to 158
res dent s ma t) of them
se vero!) "nd profou nd!)
retarded
The) were spltt amun~ four
dtffere t da) rooms wtth
color televtstOl blann~ Few
patd anv attentton Most
appeared untratnabl~
One attendant compla ned
under questtonu g that she
was looking after 35 res dents
by herself "tlh pertod c
rel ef We dun t ha\e tine to
e~en cha nge the sheet.&lt;; and
ptllowcases
she satd
There s no matntenan~e
personnel We have to mop
the floors and those wmdows
haven t been washed m
ages
WorkeiS oo duty many of
then young women were
pleasant and seemed de1 oted

•

Lawrence E Lamb M 0

False treatment
for gout

used m baste cell metabohsm
but you undoubtedly have
enough
I regard some of the prom~
twn of substances such as
pantothen c ac d as a cure-all
for atlments as ak n to se lhng
snake ml at an old lash oned
tra vetting medtcme show one of our ea rl er fonns of
quackery
The rea l danger m usmg
vttamms tn a host of condt
t10ns whtch add t onal
vttamms do not atd IS that tt
prevents the patent from
seekmg and gethng ea rly
help for unportant med cal
a11inents Better stock woth
your doctor and yo ur
alopunnol which does have
em tmportant actlo
n
treatmg gout
Pantothemc actd has
nothing to do wtlh gout I a n
sending you the Health Letter
number 2 3 Gout Ur c Ac I
s vou can better tmderstll d
ur pt oblem Others wl
,
hts tssue can send 50
n
wtth a long stamped
If addressed enve lope for
II

DEAR DR LAMB - My
I usband I as trntatwn m hts
1 ght eye and the dodur satd
~

..

I
I
I
I
I
t
J

Unfairlless charged

Cancer wo-r k hit

HEALTH

ton n 'war ous foods You can
hardly eat and not get tl It ts
essential m the coenzymes

J

Dear Str
I feel t IS unfatr for Mr Jun Adams to blame the local
taxpayers for the closmg of the Southern Local Sc hools for
Utree weeks m October It IS a known fact that the U!x levy
be ng voted on October 25th c-ou)d have been run any ttme
durmg October and can be run agam before the end of the year
Mr Adams says he becomes e nottonal when he feels hts
cht ldren are bemg depr ved of an educalton and blannes the
local taxpayer for his plight In answer to hts emotiOnal
feelmgs I ask what about the emotwns of others? What about
the emotions of retired people on ftxed mcomes of poor people
trymg to make ends meet of the farmers who may be forced to
waste of time ahd money
We now know that cancer IS sell parts of thetr farms m order to pay taxes?
On the questwn of bankruptcy and consolidation Mr
not caused by a foretgn cell m
Adams quotes Dr Phyllos AsSistant State Supermtendenl of
the body
The " orld fannous sctentost Pubhc lnstructton as saymg Nobody knows no school
satd at a ne11 s conferenc-e he distnct has ever gone bankrupt before Southern Local and
stopped his own laboratoc y the old Racme School Dostnct have nUin) ftrst.&lt;; to be proud of
research mto cancer three but bemg the ftrst to go bankrupt m the SUite of Ohio ts not one
years ago and has been of them
Mr Adams sa) s that the two most tmportant worldly
devotmg hts ttme to
possesswns
are ur cltldren and our pocketbooks The
brmgmg toge ther the
spectahzed findmgs of groups problem as I see tt IS the State has continued to ftll hos pocket
domg cancer research to see book through state mandated raises whtle taking tl away
from the local taxpayers and the r children
If there are patterns
I hme grandchtldren and great.grandchtldren I vmg m
So I m trymg to
thts dtSirtct I have many frtends and em)lloyees who have
synthes ze thetr f ndm gs
rather than tp be a small part ch ldren rn the dtstnct In the past I have always supported our
of the a elton myse If
he schools donatmg to all the different programs I feel the Ume
has mme for people to take a stand agatnst addttional lax
explatned
Desptte all the false hopes 101 tes My famtly and I wtll vote NO October 25 1977 on the
and controversy surrounding Southern Local Tax Levy Roy Proffttt P 0 Box 1211 Racme
Ohto 45771
the search for a cancer cW'e
Sabm satd he was confident
Attenhon, would-be teachers
medtcal sctence would some
dal find tt But he declmed to
be a P&lt;Ophet and try to Dear Str
ATTENTION ALL YOUNG PEOPLE WHO ARE
predict when tl wtll happen
CONTEMPLATING
A CAREER IN EDUCATION
I do believe that tl (a
My advtce to you ts to constder the followmg
cure 1 wtll come he sa d
In the past teachers were accorded a respectful place m
I ve done thts work for half a
the communtty However thmgs have changed so drastically
ce ntury and seen thm gs
that now there IS a questiOn as to whether teachers even enJOY
whtch were seemt ngly
msolvable and they have the same nghts of c11tzenship as others do
If you become a teacher you must etther marry or inhent
been solved
wealth because your salary w11l be less than half the national

...

ca ncer cells
We need to know much
n ore about how our very
complex
human
body
develops from a smgle cell
and wl ) a stngle cell will
n utate
and
become
cancerous th e phyStctan
satd The actual mechan sm
for thts change remams an
emgma

Sab n also asserted that
where env ronme nt IS
concerned the emphasts (tn
research ) should go beyond
mere sta tlsttcs such as
demonstratmg that people tn
some nattons have a low
me dence of certain types of
cancer
It s one thmg to fmd an
enVIronmental factor m our
ltfe style that causes cancer
tt s another thmg to c hange
that life style
he noted
Many th ngs have been
shown to produce cancer
Does that mean " e should
effect a change m all those
areas?
Commenting on ot her
aspects of cancer research
Sabtn sad contmued study of
VIruses as-a: posstble ca use of
the dreaded d seases ts a

:;

By Lawrence E Lamb MD
DEAR DR LAMB Some
fr ends of mme have recom
mended pantothemc actd for
gout and burslt s What IS
your opm on on thts? I am
already takmg alopurmol
Shollld they be miXed?
DEAR READER To use
an old phrase wtth frtends
ltke that who needs
enenues
Pantothemc actd
has no value at all n treatmg
gout bursttts or arthntls
There have been a lot of false
and exaggera ted cia ms
recently n qua s health
publicattons but none of these
are based on legtltmate sc en
tif c facts
Pantothemc comes from a
Greek word meamng from
every" here
" hich aptly
descnbes tts general dtstr bu

t tl&lt; tr J ibs llut II ev were go for better bu !dings ""d
l'QU!piUent more helpers or
frustJ a ted tw
I hey ught to htre more tugher pay
Onent has about 800
pet pie to work bere satd
NanC) Sttlls a eoordmator m staffers workmg dtrecUy wtth
"" f the d rn 1t01 es when restdents lh"t s about 500
tSked whether mu~ey should short of the n uumal number
•
~---------------------------,
Letters of opinion are welfomed They should be 1
1
1 less than 300words long (or be subject to reduction by 1
I the editor 1 and mU5t be slgoed with the slpee s ad
I
I dress Names may be withheld upon publication
I
: However on request names will be disclosed Letters
1 sbollld be 1D good taste addresslDg Issues nol per '"'1
1 sonalltles
1

New crop insurance system
proposed by Sec: Bergland
ER
By B NARD BRENNER
UP! Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! )

Agnculture Secretary Bob
Bergland says he plans to ask
Congress to authome a new
he had a pteryg urn He satd nat!onwtde crop msurance
th1s was a small growth system to replace the govern
s current patcl work
whtch mtght s owly get larger rnent
co llectton of dtsaster a d
and there was nothmg to do
for farmers
but use some kmd of eye programs
Bergland talk ng wtth
wash for rehef Shouldn t t farm edttors recently satd
be 1 emoved? I am concerned
that tl mtght be mahgnant or the c urrent system IS a
M ckey Mouse bundle of
become so Would this condi spectal
dtsaster payments for
!ton eventually damage hts some farmers a nd other
eyes ght
p r 0 grams
n cl u d 1n g
DEAR READER - No a substdtzed
ltvestock feed
pterygturn IS not mahgnant sales and loans
and tt wtll not become mahg
1want to replace tt all by a
nant It IS really a folded over
portton of the thin membrane comprehenstve msurance
program on all ~ rtc e
over the surface of the eye we supported crops and maybe
call the conJUncttva It looks other crops avatlable on all
like somethmg that should be farms m the Untied States
wtped out of the eye but of
course that 1sn t poss1ble It the agrtculture secreta ry
may have a mtlky ap- SaJd
Bergland s deparlment has
pearance and may have pro- opera te d a federal crop
nunent blood vessels m tl
tnsurance progrann for many
As long as tt doesn t grow years But tt does not reach
fast enough to cover a ITii:iJOr all parts of the country and
part or the puptl of the eye the agnculture secretary
and obstruct vtswn 1t wtll not says that even where tl ts
do any harm It ts often a avatlable some farmers fmd
cosme( c problem
tt unsa!tsfactory
Your doctor proba bl y
Under the new program
doesn t want to have tt which ts bemg revtewed by
removed surgtcally unless White House offtctals before
necessar1 because 1t often
bemg presented to Congress
recurs They tend to recur Bergland says farmers would
regardless of the type of be offered thetr cl mce of
surgery tf the patten\ hves n three levels of msurance
J
trop ca l areas and are less
likely to return tf a person
llves m a more temperate
cltmate Smce you hve n the
central mtdwest that IS tn hiS
favor tf tl should become
necessary to remove 1t
Pterygtwns are most hkely
to occur m people exposed to
chrome trrttatton of the con
JUndtva from sun and w nd
Repeated surgery may cause
sea r 1; vi the surface of the
eye and mterfere wtth v ston
which

IS

Yanks even series, 1-1

another r eas for not

ha sttlv dmng surgcrv u less
th I " " g •I ulcallon for
l

Dr
Iamb answers
representative tellers of
gcn~ri:tl mte e::at tn hts t.:t I
urn Wrtte t h m n tare of

lhts newsp per P 0 B x
1551 Hadt Ctty Sta tt 1 New
Y rk N Y 10019

•

year extenSion of disaster
payment programs for
grams cotton and nee to
allow for the posstbiltty that a
new federal
msurance
program mtght soon become
law
A House agnculture
subcommtttee headed by
covermg out-&lt;Jf pocket costs Rep Ed Jones D-Tenn has
plus an allowance for other already begun holdtng
expenses such as machmery hearmgs on posstble new
msurance progranns and the
deprectatton and taxes
Fmally as a thtrd chotce at tsSue ts expected to get
a sttll htgher cost the farmer senous consideratiOn on
could buy a policy covermg Cap tol Htll early next year
all hts costs tncluding land
rental charges or mortgage
payments
Bergland sa1d premium
rates would be set on a crop
by crop bas1s and would be
calculated to make the

protectton
Under a baste pohcy
farmers collld buy protection
covermg thetr out-&lt;1 f-pocket
costs for ttems like fuel
fert ltzer and seed
As a second chotce at a
higher premmm charge pro
ducers could buy a poltcy

program actuarlally sound
over a 20-year penod
If the White House
approves the plan and
Congress adopts tt Bergland
satd the tusurance system
which now operates through a
department corporation the Federal Crop Insurance
Corp - would be handled by
the departments na!tonwtde
network of Agncultural
Stabthzatton and Conser
vatton Commtttee offtces
Swttchmg the program to
the ASCS the Agriculture
Secretary satd would help
correct one of the problems
which has plagued federal
crop msurance m the past set! ng realtsttc msurable
normal
ytelds
for
ndtvtdual farms
In the past Bergland satd
the FCIC has set ytelds m a
computer m Kansas Ctty
"hich often produces result.&lt;;
too low to make farmers
w1llmg to buy msurance
Under the new plan
Bergland sa td msurable
normal per-acre ytelds would
be set m the county Af!l:off ces where offtctals have
good local knowledge of the
produ ct tv ty of mdtv dual
farms
Co ngress has alrea dy
begun paVIng the way for
('OOS!deratl n ora program of
t1 c kind Bergland mtends to
propose soon
In p&lt;:tssm){ a four year om
ml us f nn btll wh ch became
l&lt;:tw rr.:tentl} f&lt;:tr
bl c
lemJer s 11 ludcd on \y a tw

More country
homes receive
their nwnhers

Houses on 28 more roads m
rural Metgs County have
Qeen numbered
They are East Shade (TR
941 Ltckskillet Road (TR
262) Osborn Road (TR 264)
Fredenck Road (TR 618)
Guthene Road (TR 305)
Bndle Road (TR 276) Tucker
Road (TR 306) Henderson
Road (TR 239) Mudsock
Road (TR 304) Callaway
Road (TR 303) Carr Road
(TR 231) Colburn Road (TR
226) Al(redRoad (CR41)and
Sttversv111e Road (TR 29)
Also Tower Road (TR 24)
Lydia Road (TR 313) Brooks
Road (TR 312) West Shade
Road (TR 156 ) Texas Road
&lt;CR 82) Spencer Road (TR
2221 !Oatley Road (TR 220)
Lake Wood Road J TR 85 )
Cherry Rtdge Road (TR 250 )
Stetham Roa d (TR 309)
Mtller Road (T R 308)
Hemlock Grove Road (CR
39) Durst Rtdge Road (TR
30) and Sandy Desert Road
(TR 371 )
Accordmg to engmeer
James Page more roads wtll
follow soon

NOW YOU KNOW
Czar Peter the Great s
subjects wore metal license
ta gs attached to thetr
whoskers to prove they had
patd the tax on beards

•

needed to quahfy for
government asststance
progratl"\5
Most trnpresstve facility on
the grounds ts the two-year
old Frazter Health Center
butll and equtpped at a cost of
$;1 6 mtlhon
The mstltute IS trymg to
fully staff thos center to meet
accredttation standards but
has trouble recrwtmg profes
stonal help because of low
salanes and the sttgma
associated with sUite em
ployment accordmg to Dr
Jolin Harbaugh the hospital
adn mlstrator
One phySical Uterapost w1th
four years of college trauung
IS earnmg $10 000 a year
Among those tourmg the
mstltute was Mrs John H
Glenn Jr wtfe of the U S
senator She repeatedly at
to
make
tempted
conversatto n wtth the
restdents and diSplayed an
mterest m thetr wellbemg
Dr Timothy B Morttz
director of the state Depart
ment of Mental Health and
MenU. I Retardatton satd that
tf all goes well the state will
fmd the money to brmg
Onent up to mtmmal
standards by next June one
year ahead of schedule
But Dr A Z Soforenko
supenntenden t of Onent de
crte d the amount of
bureau cra ttc red tape
mvolved I ve got problems
to take care of rtght now he
satd
J
Ttmothy
Sen
McCormack [).Eucbd who
organtzed the VIStt to tbe
uJStttution sa1d some of the
older butldtng should be
bulldozed
A large percenlage of tbe
people here should not be
here he satd They should
be
tn
their
own
commumtles
McCormack urged county
mental health offtctals to be
more
aggressive
m
promotmg local conunumty
mental retardation centers to
take the load of[ tnstttutlons
hke Orten!

average for college graduates
Enormous amounts of our tax dollars go to subatdtze our
colleges and urull4li'Stltes (Taxpayers do not seem to object as
much to that expenditure as they do to local real estate taxes
They expect the admmostration to take the sanne amount of
money he has used m the past to pay the ti\llated btlls of today
The fa ct that the taxpayers own salanes have mcreased has
no bearmg on thetr voting deCISIOns They expect THE
STATE TO COME THROUGH THE STATE already supphes
73 4percent of the money to educate thetr children )
Future teacher you wtll fmd the publics 1dea that we are
Just glorifted baby sitters ts a fallacy You wtll spend countless
hours of your own litrt~ 'grading papers planmng lessons
creating bulletin boards and thinkmg of spectal ways you can
help that problem child You wtll also fmd that most laymen
purport to know more about teachmg than you ll ever know
As a teacher you will be requtred to restram yourself
when children make obscene gestures or remarks that the
average ctttzen would not tolerate
Just one more btt of adVIce - If you do dectde upon
devptmg your hie to educatton don t upon rettrement turn
bttter and try to wreck the same school dtstnct that has fed you
all those years just for tbe sake of a few paltry dollars on some
valuable real eswte This bttterness seems to stnke former
emmenteducators - An educator at SLSD nanne withheld on
request

'We chlckened out"
Dear Str
In last Fr1day s paper you earned the news that the
Southern Local Board of Education took the olftmal acbon to
close the schools and bar the doors to more than a thousand of
our young boys and gtrls
The reason the board of education has exhausted all legal
sources of funds due to- read the half dozen reasons
Now m my book there could be a few more reasons
We bear and read that dozens of low tax base dts!rtcts
throughout Ohto are also exhaustmg thetr funds but still
operating the1r schools Our school offtmals Just chtckened
out and became the ftrst and only one m the entire state to bar
the doors to our youth
At the football game last Fnday everung the announcer
read a prepared statement whtch he attrtbuted to the high
school prmctpal Mr Adams that th1s would possibly be the
last borne ganne of the season and tf the levy fatled to lie
approved at a special election on October 25 the schools would
not reopen until January 1978
I read m your paper that tbere was a meeting to be held at
the htgh school Wednesday evemng sponsored by the PTO or
the PTA (I don t recall) Bemg an old retired teacher deeply
mortified and ashamed that my school d1stnct was the ftrst m
Oh1o to lock the doors to our boys and g1rls I went to the
meetmg
""'
I sat and squtrmed m my chair for more than an hour All I
heard was money money leVIes lel'les mandates mandates
etc but nary a word about duty to our boys and g1rls
I began to wonder what the schools are for
Fmally I blew my top I 'told the board members
present and the school offtclals they had chickened out I
found out by questtonmg that they have met every payroll In
other terms they have never liad a pay less payday I found
out a fund IS available to pay unemployment at least durmg
October to all employees I found out they are blammg the
taxpayers for the predicament we are m
To thts I must dtsagree The taxpayers haven t exhausted
all legal sources of funds The school offtctals have Any
busmessman wtll tell us that to operate successfully you must
keep within your mcome
I found out there IS very small mput between the school
of!tC&lt;lfS and the taxpayers m Southern Local
I illso found out I made a lot of people mad but that may be
the way to get the doors unlocked
Lets tgnore the mandates the petty laws and the OEA
and get our k1ds back m school where they belong Cooperation
w11l do it
R~member the recent Ftremen strike m Dayton where the
Ftremen stood by at d let the houses burn? It could happen to
our sc hools - E A Wmgett Racme Ohio

For Soturdoly Oct I 1171

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bem1ce Bede Osol

Oct I 1117
Take extra pans this com ng
year to bu d ast ng o sold
f endsh ps They I benet t you
mater all~ and contribu1e to your
self esteem
LIBRA (Sept 23 OcL 23) Hope
should not be tempered w th
pess m sm today Such a forge
p educes a metal whOse temper
w not w thstand the bows of
t me F nd out to whom you re
amant cally su ted by send ng
to your copy of Astra Graph
Lette Mal 50 cents fo each
and a long self addressed
stam ped enve ope to Ast o
G aph P 0 Bpx 489 Reo o City
Stat on NY 10019 Be sure to
specify your b th s Qn

SCORPIO (Oct 24

Noy 22)
Ach ev ng mportant goals swell

w t~ n your reach today Be
aware that the pr ce you have to
pay may be n do ars instead of
pennies

SAGITTARIUS

~NOY

23 Doc

21) Repel I on of m stakes s the
mark of fools wh o have not
p of ted by past exper ence
You re smart enough not to et
th s happen to you

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jon 1t)
Butt out of s tuations today
where you suggest ons are not
welcome f they fai the blame
cou d we I be paced upon you

AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Feb 11)
The t me has passed to dodge a
dllf cu t dec son Make t now
Sette th ngs once and fo all

PISCES

~Fe~20

March 20) Do

ng you duty should be uppe
most n your m nd today It s not
only an obi gat on but you
der ve satisfaction f om a job
we done

ARIES

~Morch

21 Aprll1t) Be a

compassionate leader today
Those In your ret nue w II follow
your example Occupying the
fo ef ont th ough fear s fo ly

TAURUS [April 20 May 20)

Tooday for reasons you re unable to
perce ve you may lind yOurself
coo to those you really love If
you sense this happening do an
about face

GEMINI

~Moy

rehever Mark Littell - the
pttchcr who threw the
playoff wmmng l)omer to
Chrts Chambhss m the 1976
playolfs - but Pmtella
wtld htgh after holdmg the smgled Munson to thtrd and
Yankees to ne htt for 4 1 3 J oh ns ~n followed "tth a
ummgs had two out and d uble that put the Yankees
{'hurman Munson on f rst 1n front 3-2 Chambhss was
base vta a smgle wtth nght purposely walked and then
hander Lou Pint~lla the next Brett let Randolph s sharp
grounder go through hts legs
batter
At that pomt Herzog for a two-run error whtch
brought tn nght handed

•

19

2t-June 20) For

tunately for you today you see
peop e as they actus y are
You re not Ike y to be swaved by
the op nions of those ess n
formed

CANCER (Juoe 21 July 22)
Self shness sa mantle that does
not become ether vou or others
Today unfortunately you may
cloak yourself n such a garment

.\a! (July 23 Aug

22)

Mope and

"8t§''m sm a e ,subdued parts of
your psyche at this po nt Bear n
m nd The sun that sets today will
se tomorrow

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22] To
day you may have predeter
m ned that what you planned
wont wo k out Don t close your

m no
NF.WSI'AI'f R F..NTF HI RISF. ASSN

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!)- Pete Rose dtdn t make the playoffs
but Its okay Someone s usmg hts proxy
Pete kno " ~ the fe llow well He certatnly should because 11 s
one of his old buddies who played w1th htm on the Ctncmnatt
Reds for three years
Now that Hal McRae ts wtth the Kansas Ctty Royals he
hasn t forgotten any of those thmgs Pete Rose taught him He
gav~ the New York Yankees a httle sannple around second
base Thursday mght wtth a rolhng body block m the stxth
mnmg that broke up a double play and nearly broke second
baseman W1lhe Randolph m two as well
You could the bones ratUmg clear up m the bleachers
McRae s sltde tnto Jtandolph was vmtage Pete Rose and
evoked memones o~ tbe way the Reds superstar practtcally
ground up httle Bud Harrelson m a stmilar play dunng the 1973
Nattonal League playoffs wtth the New York Mets
The Yanks won the ballgame 1&gt;-2 squanng thetr Amencan
League playoffs wtth the Royals at one game aptece but
Randolph posstbly may remember the enormous force wtth
which McRae barreled tnto htrn the rest of his hfe
~ext time 1f he s not down I m gomg to throw tt nght at hts
eyes satd the slender 160-pound Randolph referring to what
he a trns to do wtth the ball the next tune the stocky 180-pound
McRae comes bearmg down on hun trymg to break up a double
play
Of course I was angry muttered the Yankee second
baseman He did the same thing to me last year and I
spratned my wnst I don t say he was dehberately trymg to
hurt me but there was no call for what he dtd 1 don t thihk tt
was nght
Yankee Manager Btllv Martm was more upset over the
manner tn whtch Randolph was manhandled than Randolph
was hunself He protested to second base umptre Marty
Sprmgstead that McRae s sltde was tile gal apd that the double
play should have been called Sprmgstead satd he saw nothing
to make him reverse his declston about McRae s shde
I dtdn t thtnk twa very professwna l sa td Mi!J;I n who
knows all about those kind of shdes haVIng played seCl'fld base
once for the Yankees himself If I was the second ba!leman I
would have done something
He paused there &lt;:t moment Then someone asked h1n1 what
he would ve done and Martm told htrn
Last ltrne anyone eve!' did that to me I took the ball and
threw tt nght m hos mouth he satd
The play evolved thts way
With the Ro)als trailmg 2-1 and one out m the stxlh little
Freddy Patek doubled to deep nght-center off Ron Gutdry and
McRae followed wtth a '.\alk George Brett then bounced to
thtrd baseman Grrug Nettles who fired to Randolph for the
second out
Randolph was about to relay the ball to ftrst base when
McRae rocked htrn wtth the kind of tooth ratthng cross body
block that would ve warmed the cockles of Woodie Hayes
heart
In the ensumg confuSion Patek scampered across the plate
bot the vtston of thetr second baseman bemg hit thal way so
aroused the Yanks they ca me back wtth tltree runs m the
bottom of the sixth to wrap up the ballgame
McRae htt Randolph hard but he htt him cleanly
I ve seen Pete do tt hundreds of times satd McRae He
ISil t trymg to hurt anybody he s JUSt looking to break up the
double play The same thmg wtth me I wasn t trymg to hurt
Randolph It was a rollmg shde and there was nothmg dtrty
about tl On a play like that I wa s gom~ to make sure not to
truss him We re not supposed to be buddy-buddy out there
Told that Randolph had tltreatened to throw the ball
squarely between his eyes next time McRae never even
bltnked
If that s what he feels he ought to do then that s w~t he
should do satd McRae I ve been shding th1s same way for
years Today s ballplayers are getting away from tt Maybe
they re concerned about gettmg hurt They ve got long term
contracts and some of them are playmg safety first I ve got a
long-term contract too but I don l play safety ftrst
Hal McRae went to school at Flonda A&amp;IVI where 01 Jake
Grutber always taught hts players to be what he called aglle
mobile and hosttle
He probably would ve com pletely endorsed that rollmg body
block of McRae s
There s no questton at all about Pete Rose

By FREO MrMANF.
UPI Sp11rls Writer
KANSAS CITY (UP!)
Al use&lt;! by a cltp Manager
B lly Martm sa d could have
rwned hiS second baseman s
career the New York
Yankees mvade Kansas Ctty
tomghl confident they 11
overcome the Ro) als home
park advantage and wm a
second stra ght Amencan
l.eague pennant
Havmg squared the best-&lt;l!
hve playoffs wtth Ron
Gmdry s 6-2 vtctory ove"r the
Royals m New York
Thursday mght the Yankees
are sendmg rtghthander Mtke
Torrez agamst 20 game
wmnmg right-hander Denms
Leonatd Jn tomght s thtrd
game Garnes 4 and 5 also are
scheduled for the Royals
home park
Even Manager Wh ttey
Herwg of the Royals soft
pedaled the home fte ld
advantage however wtth the
comment
We have the
advanwge but we sttll have to
play the game and we II need
good pttching
I guess you have to say we
are sattshed wtth a spht m
New York he added wtthout
much en thustasm
The turnmg potnt of the
sen es - and surely the
mctdent whtch awoke the
Yankees m the second game
- was Hal McRae s football
hke shde mto Yankee second
baseman Wtllte Randolph
which sent Randolph head
over heels and enabled Fred
Patek to score from second
base wtth the run that tted the
score at 2-2 m the stxth
mmng
That was no s ltde
snapped Martm after the
game
That was a cltp
That s how a guy can rum a
second baseman s career

!he Yankees wh had
taken a 2 1 lead agamst Andy
Hassler n the fifth on Chff
Johnson s homer Randulph s
smgle a balk and a smgle by
Bucky Dent ther broke open
the game wtth three runs m
the bottom of the Sixth
flassler begmnmg to get

Bucks facing another
freshman shotgunner
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - For
the second stratght week
stxth ranked Ohio State wtll
be starmg down the blazmg
barrel of a hotshot freshman
quarterback
Ftrst tt was Southern Me
thodost s Mike Ford who the
Buckeyes handled wtth ease
ptckm g
off
seven
mtercepttons enroute to a 35-7
Wtn

Now
tts
Purdue s
sensattonal Mark Herrmann
a 6-5 190-pound freshman
who has merely completed 89
of 156 for 1 224 yards and
etght touchdowns m slightly
Jess than four games
We feel we have to have
another good day on defense
to control thiS youngster
satd Ohio State defenstve
coordmator George Htll
We ve got to get pressure on
him

'
'

(3-1 and 0-0 ) and llltnots State
at Ball Sta!A! (2--2 and 2-1)
The Bowlmg Green Toledo
contest matches the two back
yard n vals tn thetr annual
battle of northwestern Ohio
where prevtous records
usually don t mean much
The Falcons are commg off
their nnpressJVe wm over
Western Mt cht ga n whtle
Toledo under new Coach
Chuck Stobart hes been
strugglmg
I m sure Denny 1Stolz BG
coach) ts Stttmg down there
smthng nght now
satd
Stobart and I d smtle too tf
my team had JUSt done what
his did and then looked at ftlm
of us
But Stolz tsn t buymg that
kind of talk
Thts w1ll be a good back
yard feud JUSt hke M1ch1gan
State and MIChtgan smd the
former MSU mentor I know
what those games are all
about 11 s the b1g game for
both teams from a pnde
standpomt I know we II see a
fme Toledo team )Jere on
saturday
Ohto UmverStty after tts
loss last week to Kent ts cast
m the spotters role m tis
game agamst suflli'lsmg
Eastern Mtchigan
The Hurons only loss so far
has )&gt;een to Central Mtchlgan
Mtannl cornmg off back to
back wms over Indiana and
Yale returns home for the
ftrst ttrne stnce Sept 3 m
hostmg Marshall (2 2)
All we have to do ts

remember last year s ganne
wtth Marshall to get us
mentally prepared for Satur
day s game
said M1amt
Coach Dtck Crum Coach
Frank Ellwood has 15
starters back from last year s
team whtch beat us 2116 m
Huntington
In other weekend g~es
Purdue ts at Oh1o SUite
Akron at Dayton Cincmnatl
at Flortda State Youngstown
State at Sagmaw Valley
(Mtch ) and Central State at
Kentucky SUite
Games tnvolvmg Ohto
Conference teams find
BaldwtnWallace at

•

Unlled Press Intern~11onal
Deer season starts Fnday
for those who hunt wtth a
longbow All of the hours
spent practtcmg fme turung
eqwpment and scouting the
countrystde are about to be
put lo the test
Bow season thts year runs
from Oct 7 through Jan 21
and the dally hours are from
one half
hour
tiefore
sunnse to one half hour
If you
before sunset
aren t sure JUst when the
sun nses ana sets a handy
table ts provtded on the
federal brochure outluung
the waterfowl regulations
ThiS ts avatlable free from

bowhunters but most seem to
prefer to concentrate on the
OFFICE HOURS 9 30 to 12 1. to s (CLOSE
male of th e spectes for at
least the first month or so
AT NOON 0 N T HURS I - EAST COURT
Successful hunters know that
IIISiiTiiliitPtiiiOiiiMiiiEiiRiiOiiYiti.----------·unttl u e rut begtns bucks
I

I

I

I

I

(N y )

fullbacks conSiderably from
now on
Campbell gained-112 yards
m 20 !rteti agamst SMU and
Payton 91 tn 12 tnes
mcludmg
a
44 yard
touchdown run
Outstde of 1 ogan Hayes
ex pects the rest of the
Buckeyes to be ready by
Saturday
game
lime
although centers Doug Porter
and Tun Vogler lmebacke r
Tom CouSineau and defenSive
tackle Eddte Beamon are
somewhat questtonable
Oh oStateandPurdue have
met 27 ttrnes prev1usly wtth
the Buckeyes holdmg an 18-7
2 lead m the senes mcluding
a 24 3 wm last year m a ganne
m whtch regular quarterback
Rod Gerald was put out for
the rest of the regular season
wtth a back mJurY

DROP IN SOON!
4-PLY
POLYESTER CORD

S zeA78 13
Blackwell
PusS I 72 F E T
and o d e
dos

Phtladelphla where the
Phtlltes were an mcredtble
80-21 durmg the season
Hooton was ().2 agamst tbe
Phtllles thos seas on but
pttched very well gtvmg up
only four earned runs m 14 2-3
mn ngs And Hooton says he
enJoys the pressure
Thts ts what you are
playmg for sa1d Hooton 127 n 1977 I didn t play that
hard all season to run away
from tt
Gary Maddox who some
say IS the best defenstve
center fielder m baseball
aggravated a knee InJurY on
the fmal day of the season on
a folll bail off h1s own bat He
mtssed the ftrst two playoff
games but Phillles tramer
Don Doc Seger satd he
thought Maddox nught be
a1 ailable today
He
ran
stx
laps
(Wednesday mght) m Los
Angeles and there was no
swellmg
( Thursday
morpmg) Seger satd
If Maddox were unable to
play Bake McBride would be
hiS replacement McBrtde
slanuned mto the center held
wall trymg to hall] down
Reggte Smith s run-!leormg
trtple tn the Dodgers 7 1 wm
Wednesday mght but satd he
was ready to play

WHITEWALL
ADD $2 TO $3

DOUBLE BELTED
Deluxe Champton "

WHITEWALLS

95

S1ze A78 13

Wh tev.ull

P s ST"73""f E T
a dod e

878

t4

•aaso
$•aso

p us$

C78

88

0

t4

FE T andod

P

us $2 80

Athens af Waverly

o S3 I 2

-SNOW TIRES NOW IN STOCK-

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094

Pomeroy, 0

606 E Mam

"".a

f!lvJ gs at Jackson

Coal Grove at Ironton St Joe

APPEARING J&lt;OR THEIR FIRST TIME

N lro at PI Pleasant
Eastern at Kyger Creek
Southern al North Gallla
Symmes Valley at South

AT THE

western

11 s the Skyltne tate modet
speed
spectacular
featunng a S6 000 purse
w1th heat &amp; quahfy~ng on

'INN PLACE'

YT&amp;T
4 PIECE GROU
FROM

Saturday and addtl1onal

quahf1cat1ons and a 51 ooo

BELPRE. OHIO

feature w1n Gates open at

t oo races at 2 00 bolh
days Take R1 7 lo
Coolv•lle turn on SO and
follow lhe stgns

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
10 til 2

THE MEIGS INN
992·3629

2 65
e

FE T and o d t e

Logan at Ironton

at Gallipolis
Fa rland at Rock Hill

-

~j~
~:
L78t5

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W~tlston

e

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p us $ 2 42 10
F E T and o d

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E78

$2 26

games

Mitton at Wahama
Roundmg out the schedule
SATURDAY
ts Amjerson (lnd ) at Fair and B at Hannan Trace
Bluffton Tallor (Ind ) at
at
Deftance
Fmdlay
Manchester (lnd ) Earlham
( Ind ) at Wilmmgton Thiel
CPa ) at Case Western
Htrann at Allegheny (Pa )
and Bethany ( W Va ) at John
SKYLINE SPEEDWAY
Carroll
STEWART OHIO

and does wtll usually not
frequent the same areas The
rut usually begms the second
or thtrd week of thts month
and should be m full swmg by
the end of October
Until then those who want
to bag a buck should scout the
terrttory that they plan to
hunt looking foc such things
as well used tratls and m the
case of bucks the tratls should
Conttnued on page 4

J'trestone
Tire Prices

ces plus trlx and o d

Outdoors

postor offtces
••llll!~liii!!Jl!!I!!JIIli!'J!!I!I!!!I!!~~!!!•ll!'-!!~--.. most
Bucks
does are lega l for

COM PlioN 0 D
N WOPTOMETRIST

Wtttenberg m a battle of the
unbeaten l{e1delberg at
Demson Manetta at Kenyon
Wooster at Mt Uruon Ohio
Wesleyan at Califorma (Pa )
SUite Capttal at Otterbem
Musklngum at Ashland Ohio
Northern at Georgetown
(Ky ) and Oberlin at Canlstus

Ton~ght's

scored thetr ftrst run off hun
rn the thtrd on a walk Frank
Whtte s smgle and Patek s
sacr ftce fly on whtch
center!telder Mtckey Rovers
throw to the plnte was both
weak and off target Gwdry
wound up stnkmg out seven
and walktng three and was m
command throughout

Down-to-Earth

Hooton, Otristenson
on mound in Philly

That may be tougher than tt
sounds smce Hill clatms
they (Purdue) have a good
offenstve hne Herrmann
hasn t been sacked many
times
By TONY WOOD
One thmg 111 the Buckeyes
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) favor however ts that Herr
The
Phtladelphta Phtlhes
mann who has led Purdue to
Larry
Christenson and the
Playoffs record
a 2-2 record ts not a runrung
Los
Angeles
Dodgers Burt
threat
Major League Plevons
Hooton
are
two
pttchers who
The) drop htrn back a
By Un1ted Press lnternat onal
had
to
learn
to
get
thetr heads
Best of F ve
high percentage of the tune
All Times EDT
of
the
way
of thetr
out
sa1d Htll but they do swtng
Nat anal l:.eague
nght
arms
talented
him out on occas1on wtth the
LOS Ang VS Ph Ia
The two who are mound
(Senes Ted 1 I)
express
mtent of passmg
Oct 4- Ph a 7 LOS Ang 5
opponents
for today s cructal
They haven t run htrn
Oct 5- Los Ang 7 Ph a 1
of the Natwnal
thtrd
game
Oct 7- L A a Ph Ia 3 5
Herrmann has a patr of
pm
League
playoffs
took
Oct 8 L A a Ph Ia 8 5 outstandmg recetvers m
drastically
dtfferent
p m
semor Reggte Arnold and
approaches
to
thetr
x oct • - L A a
Ph a 5 sophomore Raymond Struth
pm
they
hoth
sue
problems
but
Smtih has caught 21 passes
A mer can League
ceeded
{ SeresTed 11)
for 297 yards and three
Oc 5- Kan C v 7 New York
Chnstenson whose early
touchdowns while Arnold has
season
pttching was a mess
De 6--- New York 6 Ka n c ty nabbed 20 for 370 yards and
went to ptlching coach Ray
7- N v at K c
8 15 two TDs
De
We feel they have two Rtpplemeyer made a small
pm
adjustment and won 14 of h1s
1 15 very fme Wlde receivers
Oc 8- N Y at K c
pm
9- N y a K c a s sa1d Htll
We re tmpressed last 15 dectstons to fmtsh at
X Oc
pm
wtth their' ability to catch the 1~
:. f necessary
Hooton went to a hypnottst
ball
who
taught hun the JOys of
Fullback John Sktbtnski
poSitiVe
thinkmg and he has
the Botlermakers leadmg
Mator League Playoffs
become
one of the league s
rusher wtth 231 yards m four
By un ted Press International
tougher
pttchers
Amer1can League
games also has caught 17
Second Game
He will have to think very
Kan c:Tty
00 00 1 000- 2 3 1 passes for 132 yards
NY
000 023 Oh:- 6 10
We realllle Purdue ts real positively today Wtth the
Hass er L ttell (6) M ngor
sa1d veteran playoffs !ted at 11 what IS
(8 and Po ter Wathan Gu drv explostve
and Munson W Gu dry L Buckeye Coach Woody left of the best-&lt;Jf.ftve series
be
played
m
Hass er HR New York John
Hayes They have real good will
son

Flashes need victory in Kalamazoo
Unlted Press International
Kent Slate puts tts
unbeaten
Mtd Amertcan
Conference mark on the lme
Saturday against the pre
season favortle - Western
M1chtgan
The Golden Flashes of
Coach Dennis Fttzgerald are
WIn conference play and 3 1
overall and could deal the
Broncos (1-3 and 11) a death
blow w1th ~ vtctory at
Kalamawo
But 11 won t be easy even
though Western s Jerome
Persell second m the natton
m rushmg last year IS a
questwnable starter because
of an ankle m]ury
!.Western Mtch1gan has
more depth at tatlback than
any teann we ve played so
far satd Fttzgerald whose
Broncos bombed Ohio
UmverStty another top pre
season contender for the title
44-23 last weekend
Western Coach Elliot
Uzelac has been htt hard by
mjurtes but refuses to use
that as an excuse for hiS
team s 1-3 start
Injurtes
present
adverSity satd Uzelac but
our team hasn t looked upon
adversity as a challenge
Other MAC games thts
weekend find Ohw Umverstty
(1 3 and 0.:2) at Eastern
M1ch1gan ( 3 1 and 4 1)
Toledo ( 0-4 an &lt;I 0 2) at
Bowling Green ( 2-2 and 1 1)
Central Mtchtgan (4-1 and 21) at Northern fllmots (0-5
and ().2) Marshall at M1amt

personnel and this new coach
(Jtm Young who once played
for Hayes at Ohto Stale) ts
obVIously usmg tt real well
Ohto State 3-1 after the wm
over SMU wtll most likely
agam be without the servtces
of runrung back Jeff Logan
who remjured hts ankle
agamst the Mustangs
Logan s tnJury coupled
wtth the performances turned
m by J&gt;-2 222-pound freshman
Joel Payton and 6-1 212-pound so phomore Paul
Campbell could change the
Buckeye offenstve thmking
Ha~es had been gomg w1th
Logan and Ron Sprmgs both
less than 200-pounders m the
same small but speedy back
lteld
BoUt Paul (Cannpbell) and
Joel (Payton) ran real well
Saturday mght satd Hayes
You can expect us tn us our

gave the Yankees a 5-2 lead
Randolph stngled home the
Yankees SIXth run n the
etghth
Meanwhtle Gutdry was
do ng what came naturally bemg the Yankees most
consistent p tcher
Gwdry hm ted the Royals
to three hits 't'ho Royals

Pomt 1"0},

{

luo

14

�...
•
1 rhe D.ul) Senttnel. \nctdlepo••·Pomeroy, 0:. Friday, Oct. 7. 1977 ).-

~

'

Racketeer killed

. Big clas;h

by THO MAS JOSEPH
I

F \ l). II·

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111.ikr1.11

6 Sm:.l't l '.;ul
,uhi f;lllul:.
11 · r ~·uJI'~H ..
I' ..
1~

Saturday in

3 \ h •llhll'
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b~ fll\'
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IS tl~' t'~m

)4 l'UI"N'

,::n'.\ hl•und
2tl Stt•m from

IS T~ pt' of

thrt•ad
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2:-. ( ;,lllll' tlf

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ork.

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lndi;ws
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30 ~1 0 rt' r\(\
tlw

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llhe bin!

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tlw C rl'&lt;Jl
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shtp

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·

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.

offense

9

''

again .
The annual clash presents a

I!
23

lJ,

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"iiiP
"" JZ.
25

2'

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.35

ha vr virwed/ lh r body and
Uwy tel) me t l\'Y hol\'e knuwn

Greene was questioned

.Danny Grr€nr and 11 is

about thl' Nardi bombing and
an earlier explo sion thal
killed repu ted Cleveland
rackets' czar Alex "Shondor"
Birns.
" Danny Greene has been
suspected in other bombings

Danny Greene,"' said Dave

-~

' ,..,..
¥;-,

l2

!'

l6

.' "

.

.,

37

38

-~·

.#.
39

scoring points furiously and

beating teams without any
trouble. but they haven't
played anybody of repu te.
--either.
"They are a young team
and chey have a new coach
they

and

are

in

C:J

new

formation,' ' said Oklahoma
Coach Barry Switze r .

Pick, driven

by

Record Flyer was third .
.. The winner, owned by Leo
and Esther Leiden of Pepper
Pike, Ohio, returned $3.40,
"$3.40 and $2.40.
1

In !963 , Bobby Baker
r es igned
as
Senate
Democratic secretary after
being charged in a $300,000

civil suit with using his in·
for
personal
wid on what they are doing . fluen ce
and Fred Akers I Texas ' monetary gams:
coach ) has had great success
in doi.ng that. I know one

46

honw ploltl'
10•7

D.\ILY l' RYPTOilliOTE - He n•'s how to work it :
,\XYni.BAAXI\
is L 0 N (; F E L L 0 W

thing. They are exploiting
smne of the best talent there
-they have ever had ." ·

an

exPlosive

device,' ' Edmisten said.
'"Accordmg to my reports,
UJe explosive device was
tri gg ered rem otely ,'
exploding .. . when Danny was
close enough to be killed."
The old Chevro let that
contained the bomb was
demolished, It was parked
next ·to a late-mOdel I .incoln
Cuntinental that authorities
asSumed Greene was lLSing ,
although it was not ,registered
in his name.
• Nardi. a Teamsters Union
off icial, died in a par.king lot

Tilt ends in brawl

Watson
ousted

1

f(

~&amp;(39&gt;

¥0Jetlelers

cross~bow

VAUGHAN'

Look For This Symbol!
~ ·To keep down
·Efl energy bills.
'ENERGY CHECKLIST:

STOCK
Pomeroy
Flower
Shop

LEADING GOSPEL SINGERS

Midd.leport Book Store
M

0.

filter

and wear
•
• Storm w1ndows ·cleanand
repa ir crocks, check frames .
to ke down screens and store
! A1r conditioner · cover it 1f

Adtnlral.

~;hange

• Outs1de faucets · dram

for

freezing weather , check
ca ulk ing around it

• House s1d1ng · check for
crocks and holes
• Humidifier chef;k and clean
• Chimney flue · clean

obstructtoos : moke $ure

-.

damper closes

1

CRISISLINE

992-5554

QUALITY
COLOR T.V.

Have A Problem

BUY NOW

Call Us-We Care

AND SAVEl

Mrs. Cross
honored
•

VINYL &amp; AI..UMINUM

DOORBOnOM

DOOR
WEATHERSTRIP SlT

GOl D OR AlUMINUM

157

IOUI
CHOICE

·

• 1t;, " x 36" long
• Triple v1nyl sweep

REG.
4.99

322

J JIIIOID·II~

REG.
6.89

4'8

• htruded aluminum
strip with 11inyl insen

• Includes nails

• Includes nails

1'12 Pel. per year on a
4 year cerli lie ale of
deposit.
$5,000 .00
minimum
deposit.
A subslanliai ponattv is

5/ i " •lT

ALUMINUM
&amp;VINYL
,L.lSTIC
REG
1.39

36" ALUMINUM
16" )(

166

• Pre-punched for
doors and windows
• Includes nails

MEN'S
FLARE SIZES

REG.
1.09

• Sponge rubber seol
with odhesi11e

.

backing

REG. f l 4 4
4.491. -

'

29-42
9FT.

STRAIGHT
LEG SIZES
29-44

. 16FT.

REG 3.99

REG.. 6.69

272 457
• Toul)h

ll1~iblt

rubber

SALE
. PRICE

166

~~&gt;

0 ~~~ ISIS ObrC,iOII

___,,WS~

.

~ • Ko-e-p~op'pe'

~-

'\(~-"

I

P\LOT LAMP

The Athens County

~HEATER

••

SALE

PRICE

with yellow roses and,
"Happy Birthday, Nora,'' a
beautiful dried flower
arrangement, and a bean
corsage.
Others attending were
David King, Bill Klein, Gene
Klein, Andrew Cross and
Edward Cross. Refreshments
of cake and coffee were
served.

~

I
'V

cake decorated in white icing

Meigs Co. Branch

1
•
/j" high x 30" long
• Set!ls out draf ts

liNCH 1 35 FOQT

. PIPIJNSULATION

invoked on· all certificate
accol!nts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity.

THRESHOlD

77(

LETART FALLS - Mrs.
Mae Durst, Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mrs. Shirley Ables,
Mrs. Carmen Kiser, Mrs.
Violet Bush, Mrs. Cathy
Sayre, Mrs. Phyllis Randolph
and Mrs. Lois Bell, all
workers on the CrosS Fann
here, pleasantly surprised
Mrs. Nora Cross Friday with
a birthday party.
Mrs . Cross was presented' a

DOOR SlT

• Bronze tack-on "sli'ip
• For 7ft. door

Savings &amp; loan Co.

488

t

· 296 Second St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

OTHER SllES

In 1971, President Nixon
announced an economic
control system to follow the·

• Noih il'"(ludtd

-·
0.

!

===-~-~-=·;-;-;:::~90-d;.;ay;,w~a;g~e-~p~ri;c~e~f~re;e~ze::h;e,
imposed in mid-August.
· ·' ',, ·. .NWINTER COMES
f8ed . \ ··-IE PIEPAIID

•J
\11•\J BlfaS
111 U.

ardinaiSTOR_
E

MEDIUM SIZE

·BACON

EGGS

69~

·~ ·•

:;:;
':':

1

"

..,.......-

&amp;10111 \

11

'II

.i

:::: ~::

~~~ l&gt;.~

By Charlene Hoeflich
/

t:

... .... .

-~~f'lll:!0'·;=·...-'1'

~r;o~

$

•

·Social

I Calendar
FRIDAY
MEIGS "county REACT
Friday 8 p.m. at senior
citizens center. All members
urged to attend.
YOUTH REVIVAL Faith
Tabernacle Church, Bailey
Run Road, Thursday through
Sunday with )lymn sing on
Saturday at 7:30p.m. nightly.
En\mctt Rawson is pastor.
Public mvited.
ROUND and ~quare Dance
Friday 8:30 to ll :30 at Senior
Citizens Center. Music by
Stringdusters, cake walk s.
Admission $1. Children under
12 wit!l paren\S ·admitted
free .
SATURDAY
HE A R IN G
Screening Saturday from
10 :30 a. m. until noon at
Pomeroy Elementary School.
There is no age limit. Open to
anyone. Susie Heines is

DOZEN

49~

APPlES

POMEROY·CEMENT

3 VARIETIES $,gs

BLOCK ·co.
The Department Store
of Building Since 1915

VanMeter
992·2039

p

C'r 99? -S721

MODERN

mw... st.
dPurina! SUPPLY

5 lb. bag
PURINA WILD
BLRD FOOD

·Free With
Purdllse of Feeder
. Oiler Good lhru OCiobw

'

.

,.

'

Phone 992·2164

POMEROY, OHIO
Tlte Sfotw With

"All IIliDS OF S'lllfF"
ForP.Is-Sioblttlar;t &amp; 5moH Animols
lawns-Gordtr!s.

·:·:

e

:$

····

DON'T COUNT THOSE WRINKL&amp;'l!
DEAR HELEN :
1 feel like 30, but 1 turned 55 this week. Suddenly my mirror
has become a nag . I look at myse lf and see ,'o ld,
• Am sure 1't' s
.
,
_.,
d
nhlU
too fas t . ,
partly psychological: over 55 JS spe=ng ow
Until I can afford cosmetic surgery (I'm saving for it),
please ,cheer me with some lighthearted advice on holding
steadyat · 55 (andbeginnmgtorountthewrinkles )

met at ;he
Meigs CommunJty Health
Center to make plans and
schedule events for the adults
and youngsters takmg part in
the Persona[ Advocacy
Program this fall and winter.
Scheduled were a film in
October a potluck dinner in
November • a Chrtstmas
party in December and a
lx&gt;wling party in January.
The Middleport Garden Club
has agreed to sponsor an

D~.~R!~

Mr.·". Glaze

eventinth~summ~rmonths.

Three new members were
welcomed and introduced
mt o . the developm en tal
disabilohes program .
Attending the meetmg were
Erma Yoho, Sandi Rodman,
Terri Bahr, Mary Seal)lan,
· Arthur Skinner, Linda
Dayton~ Nora Eason, Jessie
Grueser,
Debbie He in,
p
hyllisSkinner, Rev . William
MJddleswarlh, Ro chard
·Grueser, Cha rlotte Wells ,
Sherri Vining and Helen E.
BaUey.

J

.

goeS

Vt.St.tt·n~ a.
6

. .

GIMrs. MGrdadlce Grtlaze, dV~~gol
aze, . 1 epo . an ~rs.
LouJS Radford, Pomeroy, are
'"Colwnbto;J today to be wJlh
Mrs. Glazes daughter, Mrs.
Bessie Hill, who is "?dergo'"eag heaWrt surgery .at Ml.
rme1 es1
M H'Us;ufered a second
rs. ~
heart . attack . Tuesday
necesSJtatmg a tnple by-pass
surgery . . He~ dau.ghter,
Demse Byers, JS confmed to
Children's Hospital for treat·
ment of her heart condition. A
brother, Donald Glaze of Par·
ma, is recuperating from recent heart surgery.

SALE PLANNED
'fhe Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will hold a
bake sale on Friday, Ocl. 14 in .
the EMS building at the rear
of the hospital. The sale will
start at 9 a.m. In addition to
baked goods there will be
homemade soup, and items
from the gift shop.

~UE

UA AUQ

COURSES OFFERED
A multi-media first aid
course will be offered from 6
to 10 p.m. on Oct. 17 and 19 at
Jonnie's Beauty Shop, in·
tersection of Union Ave. and
the Route 7 by·pasS. Mrs.
Merle Johnson will be the instructor. Those planning to
attend are asked to register
with Mrs. Johnson at 992·7608.
TEST FINISHED .
A program ·of tuberculosis
skin testing has been carried
oul at the Southern .Junior
High School. Mrs. Jane
Brown, Meigs coWJty tuberculosis nurse, assisted by
Mrs. Joyce Thoren, school
nurse, carried out the testing
program.

949-2529

·Ra

~®f:k@DRAFTS

CHOICES

Hope for hyperative
By Karen Blaker, Pb.J;l.
Between 2 an&lt;\ 5 million
children (and their families)
suffer from a childhood
disease called hyperkinesis
or hyperactivity. From my
personal experience on the
crisis phone comes this ex·
cerpt from an interchange
with a motber of a
hyperkinetic child: . .
'
Mrs. K. : I know that I real·
ly should be calling a hot line
for child abuse' but don't give
me the phone noimber and
please don't hang up. I just
wouldn't have the nerve to
call anyone anywhere else
again. I am going to kill my 8year-old boy because I am so
furious and frustrated with
him: I have already hit hipo
with a big wooden spoon ~fil
he is bruised. You aren't going to trace this call or make
me give my name before
you'll help me, are you? ,
Dr. B: No, I'm not. You
have done the right thing to
call here. What's he bee'n domg just now that has made
you so upset?
Mrs. K: He is acting crazy,
violent, li~e he is mad. He set
a fire in the attic, broke two
Windows in the neighbor's
house, cracked the back door
by slammmg it so hard. He
doesn't sit still for a minute.
He can't even go to school
anymore ... they told me to
take him to a doctor. Don't

RALLYDAYSET
CHESTER - Rally Day
will be held this Sunday at the
Chester United ,Methodist
Church. A potluck dinner at
12:30 p.m. will be followed by
an afternoon program of
sporting events for all ages.

FIBER
ALUMINUM
ROOF COAliNG

.for all vour home
Entertainment and
Appliance Needs

50

RIDENOUR'S

____

TV &amp; App lia nee
Gas Servtce

0.

·.._

Racine, Ohio

-., ' , t,-.1 ...... ,')

tell me to take him back .
there. That doctor said we
have a hyperactive child and
that he has to be sedated to
act anything like normal. But
1 don't want tranquilizers, not
for my Jolmny, he has always
been so full of life. It has got·
ten out of hand during the last
year. Did we fall with him?
Why are our other children
perfectly okay?
·
Do;e B·: No wonder you are
so upget. It sounds like a ter·
rible experience you're going
through. But the fact that you
can no longer handle his
behavior, lhat you might
even lose control of your
anger and severely hurl your
own child, means that it is
past · time to do something.
First, you ought to know that
often only one child in a fami·
ly is hyperactive. Since
hyperkinesis affects boys 6.
times more often than girls, it
is not surprising that it.is one
of your sons who is showing
the symptoms.
.
Although the cause of
hyperkinesis is unknown,
there is some new evidence
that tranquilizers may not be
the best treatment. Several
years ago a California physi·
cian discovered a link het·
w!OP" food .additives and
h!!Jeractive bellaviot. Since
then he and other doctors all
over tbe country have been
successfully treating children
with a special diet called the
K·P (Kaiser-Permanente)
regimen . I think there
definitely is' hope for Jolumy.

YOUR
HEADQUARTERS~~~

FOR
MAES
INFLATIONS
'

SUGAR RUN MILLS
MULBERRY AVE.

Pomeroy, 0.

STATE GRAD.ED
FEEDER CALF ·sALE
October 13, 1977 at 8 P.M.
At The

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Albany, Ohio

DOXOL
SERVICE

'26
BAUM TRUE VALUE
(

By Helen Bottel

program scheduJed

...

SUNDAY
HYMN SING at Rutland ·
FIRST HOMECOMING at
Freewill Bapti st Church,
Saturday, 7:30 p,m. All Tuppers Plains United
singers invited. Leland Methodist with basket dinner
Haley, pastor, invites the at noon followed by 2 p.m.
public.
·
·singing program with the
LETART FALLS PTO Temple Gates Quartet from
sponsored dmner Saturday at Davisville, W. Va., singing.
Letart Falls Community Hall Public invite~.
serving starting at 5 p.m.;
MONDAY
o
Rev. Dorothy Jago, Malta,
turkey, meatloaf and trim·
mings. A country store former Rutland resident, will
featuring handcrafted ' work .conduct revival at Danville
will be held at same time; Wesleyan Church Monday
door prizes and homemade through Oct. 16, 7:30 each
evening; public mvited.
candy.
SUNDAY
CARLETON Church
MONDAY
homecoming, Kingsbury Rd .,
BLOODMOBILE Monday
Sunday. Oct. 9 hegins with from I: 30 to 5:30 at Pomeroy
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m., l&lt;:lementary School.
basket lunch at noon . Af·
UNITED
Methodist
'ternoon program at 2, special Women, Heath Church, Mid·
singing by the Gospel Tones dleport, 7:30 Monday evenmg
of Charleston. other smgers with devotions by Mrs. Lettie:
- and the public
Young. Program in charge of·
·welcomed.
Mrs. Ruth Bumgardner.
POMONA
GRANGE Hostesses will be Mrs. Nan
De~ree Day, Hemlock Grove Moore, Mrs. Juanita Bachtel,
Grange hall, 1:30 p.m. Sun· Mrs. Mary Rinehart, and
Mrs. Frances Brewington.
day.
Potluck dinner toatfollow
.
HOMECOMING
Flat·
TUESDAY
BELLES AND Beaus
woods United Methodist
Church with Sunday School at Western Square Dance Club
10 a. m.; basket dmner at will host a dance Tuesday
t2:3o p. m. and afternoon . from 8 to II p.m. in the recrea·
service at 2 with Rev. Pearl lion building at Royal Oak
Casto speaking; singers from Park. Frankie Lane will be
West Virginia ..Public invited . the caller. All western square
dance dub members are in·
REVIVAL now in progress vited.
.
Hope
Baptist
Chapel,
WINDING Trail Garden
570 Grant St., Middleport ·Club, Tuesday 8 p.m. al the
through Sunday 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs. Marjorie
nightly·. Earl Dingus of Walburn. New officers will be
Chillicothe Evangelist . installed.
Public invited.

985·3301

~~:;~

::-:

Social hour
had by choir

coordinator .

5 GAL

I' "Ad~_ocates"

~

beauty care, ,;the lOY of aging," platitudes like
" you're as yoWJg as you, feel," and get down to basics: don't
count the wrinkles. rather avoid reminders of them.
For example :
If a gorgeous 20ish f~male is washing her hands next to you
m front of the mirror at apublic restroom. don't look up!
Shopping for clothes' Whip out your colored glasses as you
enter the dressing room. (And join my campaign to outlaw
double-strength fluorescent lights in those agony chambers.)
Give your magnifying make-up mirror to your worst enemy.
When you see a decorative mirror, look elsewhere. unless
it's behind a dimly lit bar; or you're 20 feet away and near·
. hted
-'
SJ~f yo~ wear glasses part-time, leave ·~min your purse while
visitirrg peers. Fuzzy eyesight softens their harsh lines, and
th ,
·
lik ·
you get this weird reassurance ey re seemg you eWJSe,
even if they aren't.
.
- . ,
·
Seriously, your mirror shows defects becawe you're searching for them in a still reflection. People don't notice age
ks iiJ a healthy outgoing person who "feels 30 , because
mar .
'
mak h
her anomated face and body movements
e er seem
young. Nottoworry. ·H
DEAR HELEN.
I've read·that some f1l per cent of unmarried teenage girls
who have babies, keep them.
• Let me tell yov: if my daughter got pregnant, I wouldn't give
up my present life to care for the baby while she returned to
schooL
This is asking too much of parents. It isn't our job, taking on
a grandchild just as we're almost free of family respon·
sibililies and are starting careers, or coming closer to our
A fellowship hour was held husbands once more.
We¢1esday night . at the
Teens cry to you because they were "pressured" into abor·
Pomeroy United Methodist lions. They'd better grow up and see the parents' side too. UN·
Church for the choir following SACRIFICING MOM
rehearsal.
.
DEAR MOM :
The social was planned by
Many parents feel as you do. Many don 't. Read OQ:
tire worship committee head·
ed by Mrs. Roy Reuter, with DEAR HELEN:
Mrs. Dorothy Downie and
My 16-year-old is an unwed pregnant who needs all the sup-.
Mrs. Myrtis K. · Parker port I can give her. Together we will attend Lamaze classes. '
.assisting.
I'll see her through jalx&gt;r, natural childbirth and motherhood
Cake, cookies and coffee because I love our daughter and do not judge her morally.
were served. Mrs. Jolon
I feel we can contribute much to her success iiJ having and
Werry is the ch9ir direCtor, raising her baby. We haven't "suffered the misery of an Wl·
apd Mrs. Harvey Van wanted pregnancy" at our house . My husband and I and the
Yrankin, the organist. Others , other children are eagerly awaiting the new arrival of the
attending were Mr. and Mrs. newest member of our famiLy.
Kermit Walton, Mr. and Mrs.
Of course, we don't advocate teenage pregnancy, but we've
Allen Downie, Charlene happily adjusted .. MOTHER OF SIX, AGE 34
.,.
Goeglein, Susan Wright, Mrs.
V. D. Edwarr!s, Mrs. James
Wamsley, JY!rs. Glen Dill, Mr.
and Mrs. John Werry, Mark
Werry, Mrs. Hayman Bar·
nitz, Mrs. Everett Thomas,
Mrs. Nancy Telle, Mrs.
Dorothy Will, and Dollie
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
Rousey, and Sherry Wright
and Debbie Downie, acolytes.

BIRD FEEDER

20 LB. BAG

US e · •

« ;;:

A service unit meeting has been schtR!'uled for 7:30 Tuesday
· evening at the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. Mrs.
Pat Thoma, servic'e unit director, reports that there will be an
investiture service for new leaders, and a red.idication
rededication ceremony for other leaders. There will also be a
Wliformexcruingc.
CHESTER.nJNIOR TROOPl04 9
At a meeting of Chester Junior Troop Wednesday several
members presented badge work.
Betty Jo Hunt told of various things · about the pet and
housekeeper badge work; Lori Roush and Lora Wood played a
duet on their musician badge, and Pam !Ulibel whipped the
rope for the foot traveler badge requirement.
Members learned a new song, and collected dues. Patty
Woodyard, assistant leader, had charge of the meetmg.
POMEROY JUNIOR TROOPI276
Carcnyn Casto and Jaye Roberts led in the flag ceremony
and flag pledge a\ 'the Monday night meetmg of the Pomeroy
juniors. Members were reminded that the $2 registration fll" is
due before Oct. 17. Games and songs were enjoyed by the
scouts.
·
SYRACUSE BROWNIES 1120 &lt;
Meetins Thursday after school at the SyracJ1S1' Elementary
&amp;hool, the Brownies made splatter paint pictures ':"ith leaves.
Mrs. Pat Philson, leader, informed the girls that their .
· regJS
· trato'on fee must be m
· by next week and also that toys for.
children in the pediatric ward will be taken td Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
In view of the closing of s~hool, the next·meeting, will be held
Thursday at the home of Mrs. Carol Jean Adams from l to 2
p.m. Brownie Books are .available for $2.75 with the money to
be turned in at next week's meeting. The pledge to the flag was
led by Darla Lambert and Kathy Pickens gave the girl scout
promise. The scouts sang the Brownie smile song.
,- ..,..

···~'·':·:···;:&gt;lli:&gt;,&gt;.:;··&lt;·:&lt;·.·.-.:·:&lt;&gt;''''''''''''~:::::::::::::&lt;'!&lt;&gt;.&gt;.'::::::~:~;-:::*&lt;::~':&lt;' Tvv
J' T • t
:&gt;l_w............~ .... •'""' ......, .
tn er
.,.,.

Gt'rl Scout Dt·ary
' ~ ~~ Helen 'Help

We sloclr many
.sizes and slyJes ~
ChooH onuoon/

JOWL
.LB.

~~

:-:-

.f. R E E

e~

OFF
IN

serviced and checked
including vacuuming and

MIDDLEPORT, ·().

with a separate

All

• Hea tirl9 system · hove tt

domp or in di§repoir
• WeaTher sTripPing and
caulking · lool for crocks

IN THE MEIGS PLAZA, PEARL &amp; LOCUST ST.

season assigned foF the
IaUer,

•

Lebanon Raceway

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

signals the start of the lime
when bucks and does will
begin to be found iiJ the same
areas, and a hunter may ,get a
shot at either sex from the
same stand .
Keep in mmd that deer
hu~ting regulations require
tliat hunters have a valid deer
tag ($10.50 and a valid
hunting license $4.50 ) in their
possession while iiJ the fi~ld. ,
A distincton is also made
between the lon glx&gt;w and the

POLLY'S PROBLEMBy
clothing and the percale
.•: PEAR POLLY - Can rut&gt;- square ca n be popped into the
ber backed draperi es be dyed sewing machine when
successfully ? I have a cream necessary.- ZELMA.
colored pair that I cannot use
DEAR POLLY - I solved
wlless they are dyed another the problem of ink stains on
color.
my clothes after reading the
My husband carries a lunch newspaper by keeping a terry
pail to work and wtth lhe r~&gt;o hand towel, a dark one, •in the
cent high temperatures he arm of my reading chair and
was concerned about the ef· even kee p one on my chair on
feet of foods like mayonnaise, the front porch. I always fold
!Wlch meats, etc. I buy bread it with .soiled side inside and
and snack cakes in large the clean one out so il is laid
quantities direct from lhe . in my lap in the same way. It
bakery and -kedp them in the is ..ll'~s.hed..once. a week'
freezer. Now I put a frozen ·BESSIE.
pie or cake in his lunch pail '
DEAR POLLY -To clean
just before he leaves for work combs aild hair brushes I
eaol&gt;merninq and it keeps the soak them in baking soda and
pail cool as it thaws. So far hot water for a few minutes ..
. Ulis has worked beautifully . - Rinse, shake off the excess
• PliYLUS. ,
'
water and let them dry . I sugDEAR PHYLUS - l have gested this idea . to my hair
been advised that such dresser who thought it was
draperies will not take kindly exce llent and uses it herself.
to dyeing. Perhaps you could - D.E.S. ·
add a band or bands of color
DEAR POLLY .:. I have
·to make them fit into the found another use for old panroom where you want to use tyhose that have a run. Cut
these cream col ored off the legpartaboutfourand
draperies . ·POLLY.
· a half inches from th~ top,
DEAR POLLY - f want to then cut down through the
tell Mrs. L.T. that years ago seam ~nd fold over each half.
when I noticed that my Then sew. down about four in·
-clothing was becoming soiled ches and across the bottom of
from
lhe print on the the fold . 1Turn and wear as
newspaper, I bought a yard of peds.- MRs. G.E.W.
dilrk colored percale and
DEAR POLLY- l pul moth
henuned it all around . I keep balls in nylon net and tie the
this folded under a sofa lop. Then place this near my
cushion when not in use but house plants to keep tbe cal
when I read lhe paper I away.
spread it over my chest and
I save those pressed card·
lap and down to my knees. board containers that fruit
This way ink from the and veget..bles come in to
newspaper never ge!£ on my ., hold those packages of soup
mix gravy makers, season·
ings and so on that have a
way of geling lost being cann·
ed goods in the cupboard . .Nancy.
Polly will send you one of
her s igned th ank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her rolwnn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this .
newspaper .

'

• lnsulotion · mok.e sure 1t isn ' t

•

To dye, or not to dj7e

·--bombings,"

• Hot water pipes · check
insulation

iiii

·
Polly Cramer

Quasar.
DEALER

LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) .. Dick Sauer guided Besta
Money to a one.IJalf length
victory over Good Policy in
the featurecjjace at Lebanon
Racewav Thursday night.
The ;,inner covered the
mile in the conditi on pace in
2:07 2-5 and returned $8.20,
p .BO and $2.80. Good Policy
paid P .21l and $2.40 for second
and the show horse , Steady
Pam, returned P.BO. '
The 5-8 daily double
combmation of Mia Mond and
Lenawee Hal was worth
$184.60.
A crowd of 1,013 wagered
$1116,867.

~

POINTERS
POLIV•s
I. I

YOUR AREA

DENIM JEANS
THE GENUINE
'
WESTERN JEAN

Outdoors .

1

99 Mill Street

other

Se~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Oct. 7, 1977
·
'.
·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:,:::·:,:,:,:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::.:::.:::.:;:&lt;:::,:,·:u:x-.:,:,-~

was entering."

left in window
• Root · ~;heck leaks

A close gam.,.. may be
settled by the kickers, who
are strong for both teams.

making these sites is to
attract does tO the scent. This

device and the car which he

scene. Gerber indicated he

PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) - lasted 19 minutes.
It
all be gan innocuously · The
players
finally
One l e~te-r Si mp ly stanch; for :1nothrr . In tins sam ple A is
enough
Thursday night when returned to the ice, but the
USl'ri for t h l' ,th r e&lt;' l ." :-. X for th~J I\H' 0 ':- . t'tr Si ngl e letters,
junior
Ru ssell author Georg e Plimpton game 'was slopped again at
:t p6s!roptu:s. the len[! t h and form:1t ion uf t he words are all Te·xas'
Erxleben made an . NCAA m&amp;nned the goal for the 8 :06 when a general free-for ht n ts E r~ch d a y lh~· cod e lc!l&lt;•rs are d lflc rcn L
record 67-yard field goal last Boston . Bruins in a . five- all broke out, delaying·play 2ll
C'RYPTOQl'OTES
week against Rice and has minute •·controlled " game more minutes .
In all, 42 penalties were
F T 'l
K:-IA
F'V
I FVD,
SD
XDMV kicked five field goals in the · with the Philadelphia F.lyers.
Longhorns ' three lopsided
But
when
the
real
game
·called
iiJ the second per iod for
J F F: S .
:\AH
FT SD
XDMV
JFES ,
victor.ies.
began
the
contest
evolved
264
minutes.
During the
. S D X D "l V T G G B F V S , G J S F V I F T D
But
Switzer
can
rely
on
inlo
an
out-and-out
brawl
in
game,
55
penalties
totalin g
HGOV .TF'!I BDC
WDM'DJ
HLAAD
longdistance soccer-style the second period, with 17 296 minutes were whistled.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN HUMAN RELATIONS kicker Uwe .von Schamann, players bemg ejected.
In addition to Le'ach, the
LAST LONG El'iOUGH, THE INTOLERABLE BECOMES THE who hails fr om ' West
When the game ended, other Flyers ' goal-scorers·
Germany but went lo high three hours and eight minutes . were Holmgren, Bob Dailey
I NDISPENSAB LE .~ALFRED POLGAR
sc hool in Texas . Von after the opening faceoff, the and Barry Dean. Matti
lnr .
&amp;hamann can match ·the Flyers had taken a 6-2 victory Hagman and Dave Forbes
straight-ahead Erxleben 'for behind a hal trick by Reggie scored for Boston.
·
accuracy and distance .
Lea ch. Bul only
12
Durin g the ''controlled' !
In other games mvolving Philadelphia players were game, Plimpton gave up a
top 10 learns, it is No . 8 around, compared with eight .goal to.Orest Kindrachuk at
Alabama at No. 1 Southern for Boston .
2:54 but he later stopped a
California,
No. 2 Michigan at · The second-period . penally shot by Leach that
By DAVID COWELL
1
Vlf\G.INIA WATER , Michigan 1 State, Oklahoma problems began at 4:56 when ended the mock game. The
State
at
No. 5 Colorado , Wayne Ca shma n of the Flyers took five shots at him.
En gland (UP! ) - · Tom
Purdue
at
No. 6 Ohio Stale, Brums and the Flyers' Paul
Watson, the . man who has
No.
7
Nebraska
at Kansas Holmgren engaged in .a ~ghl.
dominated this season's golf
Stale
and
No
.
10
California
at Both pl~yers were ejected but
circuit, may finally have run
Wa
shingto
n
Slate
.
No.
9 they
continued
their
out of gas.
Arkansas
is
idle.
altercation
in
a
hallway
sepaThe U.S. Masler.s and
rating the two locker
British Open .C,bJ._mpion was
rooms. 'i"'""'
hustled out of the $225,000
...........
:.'The'(51ayers
on the ice then
World
Match play
-·• ·
poured into the hallway,
Champ10nsh1p at Wentworth,
beginning a free-for-all th at
5-and-4, by Spam 's rising star
Severiano Ballesteros.
•
"! had a very poor day. I
tried my hardes t but I
Continued from page 3
couldn't make it happen. He's
be
frequented by solitary .
a terrific putter and did not animals.
Also look for the tellCollllllllilolm,t.: co•t11&lt;'!1l r •lf ,l n cl&lt;', l)! l1
miss a makeable putt under tale 'rubs" where a buck has
Sports Transactions
th,n pr• •n1pt' r~·., rl l.' ,,, , , , ~ . ".'vl .n I
eight feet ," said Watson, who use.d the lower part of a srnall
By United Pres.s International
•t:l' \o•tn rtt\l!'" ~1\ll'J 11 1 ,[u r.tt&gt; lc
Thursday
was plagued by wayward tree to rub the dymg velvet
Hockey
\',t 1. 1,\lli rn '• , I h{' 1'\' Tt'~·ct d 11 w. t:T I I)
driving all day.
Co lorado - Sent to Phpen lx .
from
his
newly
formed
rLHlnum .. lrhl '-·u,r,llm:cJ " Lt h tht
left wing Mike Dwyer , c ent er
'My putt€r is going very
\!~'[l liiiH: ,_!J ,I l!lt&gt;ll,( ll f f"&gt;t \oJ,l, LJilt.' I ,j
antlers.
Usually
these
"
rubs"
Larry
Sk inner , defensem an
well. The music is coming. I will be very obvious to even a Monte Miron
and ri91'1t wing
haven '\ three-putted iiJ four casual observer. The tree 's Brian Ellacott.
New Yo r k &gt;Is land ers - sent
If lh ~ rin~.: -t :mJ, l l UI. It', oln R. Jnhns. rounds,', said Ballesteros,
bark will. be completely ce nt er Richie Hansen to Fort
who tackles Ray Floyd today shredded on one side causing Worth .
.
New York Rangers AsiiJ the semifinals over the
sig ned to New Haven defensetree to stand out .
R.JOHNS. LT I\
6,969-yard, par-73 Burma that
man John Bednarski , left w ing
Later in the season , after
Benoit Gossel in , center Bud
Road course.
the rut begins, hunters should Stefansk i, and right wing J im
In the other semifmal , Hale
Troy .
Irwin, who blasted South search for spots iiJ the forest
Ba seball
cago Cu bs ~ Purchased
African Hugh Baiocchi, S. floor that have been cleared th eChicontract
of second baseman
and-7,
tangles
with of leaves and debris down to Rudy Meol l from Cincinnati.
112 E. Moin, Pomeroy
Pro Footba II
Australian Graham Marsh, bare earth. Many times a ·
New Orlean s - Signed w ide
who dumped Manuel Pinero buck will also leave a foot r eceiver
John Gill iam : pl aced
print in th e center of this wide recei\H!r
Joel Parker on
nf Spain, ;J.and-2.
"scra pe " after he has inj ured reserve.
urinated on it.
The buck's purpose in

THE CLASS RING
PEOPLE
REMEMBER

in

conta ined

Ke nt

5-The Daily

explosive

but we havt:" not named him

victory over Smokey Hope .

the best three.year-old colts
in the state next week iiJ the

t he

as someone to be prosecuted

Wayne Nickells, covered lhe
mile in 2: 02 2-5, which was
good rnough·for a 31\? length

Park . ·

'' Young players need to be

'I

,,

large question mark this
year. The Longhorns are

wl,o went ·tu the ' bombing·

contained

.

about tA.1 entrr his e;;. r, a bomb

Edmisten said.
might make a statement on
" There has been a series of
bombings of people closely
the killing today .
Green,e, 47, forme r boss of a ssociated with Danny
the Cleveland dockworkers Greene, or, on the opposite
un ion, was killed ill a parking · side of the fence ," he sa id.
lot outside an office building. " D'lflny has apparently been
Edmisten said the lx&gt;mbin g m the middle of th is kind of
was similar to last May's business for some time ,~'
remote-control bomb slaymg
Edmisten said he does not
of reputed Cleveland Mafia think Greene was killed while
planting-a bomb .
~
boss John Nardi.
"! would think that Danny
"Dann y's car was parked
alongside another ca r, which

speedy Cardin al Pace , which is the
finale of an Ohio Sires Stakes
series. w be ru n at
st artin g Nm thfield.

the Sooners'
qua 'r terback last season.
Oklahoma ha s not lost to the
Longhorns since 1970 and is a
three..point choice n0t to lose

10

2•

'

features

night, with an easy \ictory in
U1e co-featun&gt;d $1 ,600 May
Company Puce at Northfield
The winner will be m eetiilg

Tl'xas leads tl1e nation in
scorin g; but Ok lah oma's

.

IS

•l

DOWN
l C'ull at

free-scorlng game.

1/

,,

12 wds 1

H Forl'lgn

poet

22

-

blast demolished a car 1.-tter found t&lt;_) have been
stolen - pa•·ked next lo his.

lm wkL•r 's
scatback Ehis Peacock and a
stah• (abbr. l now injury ~free Thomas Lott,

I!

1:! wds .l
Ji

1

•

I

I

t iJll ~'

..

11

5

"At lrast h~·o of my agrnts

of Alcolwl. T o ba ~c o and
Northfield Park
By C!ll\l~ TI;RKEL
Firearms.
UP! Sports Writ&lt;•r
•
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
There was no inunediatc
Dallas' Cotton Bowl wt\1 be - ( UP!l - Kent Pick tuned UJl positive identification of lhe
the ttt•utral site fur a dash for nex t week 's $64. 00 0 body from Cuyahoga County
Saturdav betwcl'n twu South- Cardinal Pare Thursd ay Coroner Dr. Samuel Gerber,

western" powerhous~s . third·
ranked Oklahoma and fourlh·
rat~d
T~xas ,
in
what
promises to be a wide-open.

37 (;(Tu lnt 's

for

'

tabbr

l' X(&gt;f'l' SSi OII

:tj ~l il cl oath

llll l't

J\ HOUS$~'i.lll

35 lmp1:-:h

?6 Endm !-l

22 Ca n bbt•an

,Jll Hapha1urd

Dml)

JZ " HPrnrn)bcr 12 Jn y-

!1 Ht&gt;fore

rh,lfll't'
~~ Tr.m~.tdtvn

t'O I!·

tl'lldf'rt•

l&gt;H'IIl

~

Europt' all

~;

jj

t lVII

'.:,tlll)

\'tllatlll'

I; Wmd

l.und hw·st.

o,u nl'i J . " Danny " Greene,
w ho Slll"\'1\'l'ti &lt;1 bombing that

8

Elllnistcu uf th r U.S. Bureau
:!~ COIIJIIIH'•

i l'l""&gt;\lll

1'1&lt;"'-tr his offu.:e. AS he was

IP\'E'll'&lt; l Iu s

~ j A'llil ~) ["

,"l'. l.~llll

a rcmutt&gt; &lt;'t,n{rol bomb
Thur sdny
in subut'bHn

apartment-office
Bowl
buildlll~
inl9i5,
was kUled bv
Cotton

n'rr,,d~·

d;ll,t~ I~

ll\ Jllil:-1 SPETZ
i'! :EVI-:1 A~D I UP l l
('lt'n' l dml r~H · k ets figun•

very nea r the car that

wa"s the intended victim," he
said. "The blast pinned him
·WJder the wrecksge of the ca r
so that apparently he was

__,

Steer arid Heifer Calves- and Yearlings
, Calves will be received after 3 p~m., October 3rd
and Until 12 Noon on Day of Sale
All Consignors and Buyers Welcome
For Information Call: 592-2322 or 698-7331

.'

I .

�'
&amp;-rne uauy aemme1, Jnauw~IJUn·run~roy, u ., r rtwtJo . uc~-

1,

-

J.~•';------------------------------r----------------------------------------------1
. IT's ABOUT
PLE NTY. r'O LIK E TO
SPONSOR f&lt;IM f'OR "A

THESE MESSAtES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITAGE ARE SPONSORED EACH'WEEK BY lHE FOU.OWING
T~I N ITY

CHU RCH Rev .W H
Pemn pastor Roy Moyer Sun·
do~ school sup l (hurcM S&lt;:hool
q 15 o m wonhtp ser .... •c• 10 30
om Ct'tou rehearsal Tuesday
7 30 p m under d1rechon of M rs
Paul NI!'Ose

Sampson Hall supr
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO
Re"' Jormn p Gull fl" posto,r
Sunday school 10 o m Sunday
w onhtp II om Sunday eve nmg

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.

MEIGS PLAZA

John F. Fulh
Ph . 992 ·1 101

Middleport, Ohfo

Pomeroy

sery•Ce 1 p m Wednesda y wor
st'11p SEHvtce 7 30 p m

LINDA'S LADY FAIR
BEAUTY SALON

EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

WHAT CHANCE HAVE I QOT?

A LIFE SENTENCE!
MIGHT AS WELL BE

HE'S A GeNIUS!

Rainbow Ridge,

Call949.'18l8 For Appomtment

Complete Automotive Service
Locust &amp; Bet&lt;h Sts .
Middleport

Ractne, Ohto

Ph. f92 .9921

~AP~I~III

CODNER'S CAMPERS
Long Bottom , Ohio
Sales . Rental - Service · Supplies
. Swiss Colony or Maple Leo f
Jay co.

involved to understand ... people are

POME'ROV CHU RCH OF THE
HAZEl COMM U N ITY~ CHURCH
so b1g .· . and there are such strange
NAZARENE Comer Un ton and Neor l on g 8oflom Edsel Ha rt
sounds.
Mu.lb.uy Rev Clyde V Hender
poster Sunday school I 0 a m
Vinyl &amp; Alum mum Stding, Storm
son pastor Sunday school 9 30 Church
7 30 p m
p r O'fer
Yet the experts tell us that the natural
W1ndows and Insulation .
q m G len M cClung supt morn
meeh ng ~ 7 30p m Thu rsday .
Phone 949 -2801 ar 949-2160.
WE FILL DOCTORS
fnghts of babyhood dissolve as the
•n g worsh tp 10 30 am a ... enm g
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL
FRE;E ESTIMATES
PRESCRIPTIONS
serv tc e 7 JO mr d-week sei"'t'l'ce
TtHrd Ave the Rev Wdham Kmt
ch1ld realizes he IS loved. Every new
tel pa$tor ~hold Ovgon Sun
Wf!dnesday 7 30 p m
PomerOY
exper1ence takes on happy dimensions
GRACE EPISCOPAL Th~ Re11
dov S&lt;:hool SL•pt Clones for all
Harold Deeth , reeler . Chur ch ser
age s e11enmg ser11•Ce 7 30 Bible
because he has such complete trust in
\/iCes 10 30 am . Holy .commu
study Wednesday , 7 JO p m
those who love him
nion f1r st Sunday of month
you th se~ ... ,ces Fr• doy 7 JO p m
" church school . 10·30 a m , lor
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill SAP
D1scovenng God's 'love for all His
(For a real auct1on call the Real
nursery through 12
"
l iST Cc:trner As h ond Plum, Noe l
children
is what the Christian relig1on 1s
McCoy)
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Herrman pastor Sotufdoy e11en
282 W. Main- Pomeray -992 .9962
I 0 !M.icl McCoy
John McA rthur
pastor B•ble mg serv•ce 7 30 p m
Sunday
about. Men's fears and tensions give
510 N. 2nd , Mlddleporl-9'n-l4S1
985-]944
school , 930a m . worsh tp 1030 School1030 om
way to the reallzaaon that the Creator 1S
a .m. adu lt worsh1p serv•ce ond
MEIGS
someone we can trust.
young peoples meeJ•ng 7 JO
COOPE RATI VE PARISH
p m Comb1ned Bible study and
METHODIST CHURCH
Th1s Jesus stresses when ·He
prayer meet1 ng . Wedne sd ay , 7 JO
Rober! T Bumga, ner
Being a baby must be a fnghtening
pm
,
~K~
teaches H1s followers to pray to the
Nationwide Ins. Cso. of
THE SALVATION ARM Y 115
POMEROY ClUSTER
existence - that IS, 1f v1ewed obtec· ·
Alm1ghty w1th-the same conf1dence lev·
Columbus, 0
Butter nut A ve. Pomeroy Envoy
Rev Robert Hoyden
Rtctne
Ph . 949-9130
t1vely w1th adult mmds New things are
ing parents inspire 1n the1r ch1ld
804 W. Main
Pomeroy
and Mrs Ro y Wm mg off1cers 1n
Rev James Corb1ft
Ph.
992
·2318
c harge
Sunday ho lineu
CHESTER, Worshlp 9 15 am
always happenmg to you .. thmgs too
OUR FATHER!
meetmg 10 a m Sunday School
Church School lOam
10 30 am Sunday school leader
POMEROY Worsh1p 10 JO o m
MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH
YPSM' Eloise Adams 7 p m
Chu rch School 'i1 30 o m UMYF
solvot1o n
meet1ng
vono us 6 30 p m
speofi,.ers and m us•c spac•ols , 7.30
ENTERPRISE, Worst·up q a m
ChurchSchooiiOom
p.m Thu r sday - 10om ta2pm
THE STORE WITH A HEART
Lod1es Home l eague , all wome-n
ROCK SPRINGS, Wors l·up 10
Pomeroy
Racine
Ph. 949-2626
296 W. 2nd
mv1ted 7 30_p.m pra yer meeting om
Chur ch School q !Sa m
Ph
992-3U3
and B•ble stud'!' , Bob Estep , •UMYF b 30 p m
leader
Rev
Noel
Hermon
FLATWOODS Worsh1p 11 am
teQcher
Church S&lt;hool\0 om
BURLINGTO N SOUTHERN BAP
MIDDlEPORT CLUSTER
TIST CHAPEL , Route I ShadeRev Robert Bumcjorner
1 CONVENIENT MARKETS
Pastor Bobby Elk 1ns
Sunday
HEATH
Robert Bumgarner,
Pomerov
sc1'1oo l 5 p m · Sunday 'f'I'Orsi'11p
Past or
Worship
10 JO a m .
Ph
Hl·ll82
5 45 p m Wednesday prayer ser - Churc.h School 9·30 o m . UMVF 6
M.oson
vtee , 7 JOp m
p m
Ph
.
773-5721
- POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
RUTLAND WJibvr H•lt Po• tor .
OF CHRIST 200 W Mo1n St . Jerry Worsh1p 10 30o .m. Churcf1 School
Pqul m1mster , phone 992 -7666
9 30om
CoMen10t1ve non -1nstrumentol
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Sunday worshtp 10 o m B1bl~
Re v Hor"' ey Koch , Jr
ASBURY , Worsh•p
II Q m .
study 11 o m • worship , 6 p m
Wed nesCioy B1ble stvdy , 7 p m
Church ~hool ~ SO o m UMW
THE FINEST IN MOBILE
OLD DE)(fER BIBLE CHRISTIAN f1 rs t Tuesdav Sible Study Thu r s
HOMES
216 E. Second
Pomeroy_
CHURCH , Re v Ro l pf1
Sm1tl'1 , 7 30p m
Pomeroy
Ph
992-3325
pastor Sunday school , 9.30 am ,
FOREST RUN Worsh1p q om
1100 E . Main
Ph. ffl -7034
Mrs Worley Franc•s . supertnlen · · Church School lOa m
dent Preoc5ft
'" serv1ces first &amp;
MINERSVILLE , Worsh•p 10 am
thud Sundays follow•ng Sunday •Church Schoo19 a m
School
SYRACUSE ? Church S&lt;:hool 9 00
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
om Worsh1p serv1ce 7 30 p m
Preochmg 9 JO om , first and se·
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
CARS &amp; TRUCKS
cond Sundays of each month ;
Rev Timothy Sm11h
461 S. 3rd
Middleport
thlfd and fourth Sundays eoch
Cluster leader
Third St.
Rac1ne
Ph. 992-2196
month worship serv1ce at 7 30
Rev Steven Wilson
Ph. f4f.2882
p m Wednesday evenings 01
AssoCiate
7 30 Prayer end B1ble StudY,
BETHAN Y (Dor(:os ). Worsh1p
SEVE NTH -DAY ADVENTIST , 9 30 am Church School 10 30
Mulberry He1ghts Rood Pomeroy
a m
Pastor Albert Ditle s Sobboth
CARMEl Chruch School 9 30
School Supenn tendenl
Claro a m Worsh1p 10,30 a m , 2nd ond
Mcintyr e Sabbath School Sotur
4th Sundays
For The Best 1n TV Viewing
114 E. Matn
Pomeroy
day afternoon at 2 00 w1th War ·
APPLE GROVE Sunday School
Caii992-2SOl
Ph.
m-5130
sh1p Sen11ce tollowmg ot 3 IS
9 30 o .m Worsh1p 7 30 p m 1st
RUTLAND FfRST
BAPTIST and 3rd Sundays , Prayer meeling
CHURCH - Drewy Gor e , supt
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
Sunday School , 9 30 o m , morn· supper f1rst Saturday 6 p .m UMW
mgworsh1p . 10.45o m
2ndluesdoy7 30p m
5-SERVICE
GROCERIES &amp; GENERAL
THE HilAND CHAPEl , George
EAST LETART Chruch School
Fire Extin~uishers
Casto , pastor. Suodoy School , hi , 1nd 3rd Sundays , 9 30 am
~ERCHANOISE
Fire r;Jept. EqUIP
';1 30 a m , e ... emng worsh1p , 7 30
Fourth Sunday 10 30 a m Wor
Ph . 742-2777
Thursday evenmg prayer ser111te, sh1p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m -4th
Racme
Ph. 949-2SSO
7 30 p m.
Sunday 9 30 o m ~royer meellng
POMEROY
FIRST
BAPTIS T, Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW lsi
DoY•d Mann , mm1ster , Will iam Tuesd oy 7 JOp m
Watson Sunday school supt Sun
WESLEYAN (Rocme) , Sunday
Let us capture the st9ry
day schOol 9 JO om mornmg ' School 10 am Worsh1p 11 a .m ..
Featuring
worsh1p 10 30 a m
Jr UMYF WeQnesdov 3 30 p m ,
BAKERS OF GOODBREAD
of your Wedding
Deep Steam Extraction
Middleport,
OhiO
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 182 B1ble Study Thursday 7 p m . Chotr
Huntington, W. Va.
Pll . 992-2206
Ph. 992-7630
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Paul J
Pract1ce Thursday 8 p m
985-4155
Rt.
l,
Pomeroy
Wh1te Pastor, Gor-y Basham . Slln
lETART FAllS Church School
Chester. Ollio 4Sno
day scho"OI supt Sunday school , lsi 2nd, 3rd Sundays 10:15 o .m
9 30 a m , morntng worship , 4th Sunday 9 15 o m , Worsh1p
10·30 evenmgworship b30pm . lsi , 2nd 3rd Sundays 9 ] 5 am
Midweek prayer service , 7 30 4th Sunday 7 30 p m .
pm
MORNING STAR Worst·up 9 30
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER . o m . Church Scl'!ool 10 30 o m
Church &amp; Off1ce Supphes
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Roger Riebel
Ray Riggs
Dexter Rd . Lang sville Oh1o , Rev~ M•d-Week Serv1ce Wednesday 8
Home lite Saws
GIFTS
St . Rt. 7
KERMIT'S KORNER
Chester
, Clyde Ferrell , ' Pastor Sunday p m
Pomeroy , Oh1o
Ph
.
985-3308
Che5ter
99
MillS!.
Middleport
Ph 985-4100
Pomeroy, Oh1o
Schoot
11
am
Saturday
MORSE CHAPEl , Worshp 11
preochmg serviCes 7 30 p m. a m Chu rch School 9 30 o.m
PORTLAN9, Worsh1p 7 30 p m ,
Wednesday evenmg Bible study
of 7 30 p m
_ Church School 9 30 o ril
51 JOHN LU THERAN• CHURCH , Song serviCe, ij p m , Preo~:hmg
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF s~·up service, 7 30 p m Mid Week 7 30 p m ., e1ble Study Thursday
church bo$ement Sunday even·
FAITH TABERNAClE CHURCH ,
SUTTON Church School 9 30 Pme Grove The Re11 W1lhom 8 30 p .m . M1dweek Prayer JESUS CHRl.ST OF LA TTE~ DAY prayer ~ervtCe , Wednesday , 7 30 7 30p .m .
mg serv•ce , 7 p.m , Wednesday
&amp;l iley Run Rood , Rev . Emmett am Worsh1p 1st and 3rd Sundays
Middlesworth , Pastor. Church meet1ng , Wednesday 7 p m Roy SAINTS , Portland Roc1ne RoaCI
pm
POMEROY
WESLEYAN serv~ta , 7 30 p m
Will1om Rou~h
po~tor
Tom
Ro wson po$1or Hendley Dunn , 10 30 o m
stirvices 9 30 a .m Sunday School Adams , loy leoder
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, P HOLINESS - Hamsonv1lle ~ood
JUBilEE CHRISTIAN CENTER Stobort , Sunday School D1rector
~ supl Sunday school , 10 a m Sun NORTH~AST CLUSTER
10 30 a.m .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
0 . Box 487 , Miller St , Mason , W . Dewey Kmg , pastor, Ed1son George's Cree~ Rood Church
doy even tng servtce 7 JO, B1ble
Rev R1cho rd Thomas
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF locoled at Rutland on New l1mo Sunday School , 9 JO a m , Mort'- Vo Sunday B1ble Study 10 am , Weaver , assistant Henry Ebltn , school, 9"30 o m , mornmg wor
mg worsh•p I 0 30 a m Sunday Worsh1p 11 a m and 7 p m. B1b le Jr ., Sun day school sup! Sunday \h1p , 10 30. even1ng serYICe, 7 30
CHRIST,Mr Donald Roley , poster Rood , ne:xt to Forest Ac re Park
teochmg , 7 30 p m Thu rsday .
Pos16r
OYESVILLE
CO MMUNITY
OuoneSydenslrtcker
Sunday school , q 30 o m , wor Rev Ray Rouse pastor Robert even1ng serv1ce 7 p,m Wednes - Study Wednesday 7 p m , Vocal school, 9·30 om , mornmg wor
Prayer meehng Wednesday , 7 30
sh1p serv•ce, 10 30om . Sunday Musser Sunday School supt Sun
day evening prayer serv1ces , 7 30 muSIC
CHURCH Roger C Turner , pastor
John Douglas
sh1p, 11 a m Sunday evening ser :, pm
Assoc1ates
serYices, 7 p m youth group, day school. 10 90 a m , worsh ip pm
Sunday school , 9 30om , Sunday
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Cor · v 1ce , 7 30; prayer meeting, Thu rs ·
ST PAU l lUTHERAN CHURCH ,
BETHlEHEM BAPTIST , Rev EQrl ner of Second and Anderson , day , 7 30p m.
JOPPA , WQrshlp
10 om.
Wednesday , 7 p m
7 JO p m B1ble Study_ Wednes
mornu q wbrsh1p , 10 30. Sunday
Corner of Sycomore and Second
evenm9 setv •ce , 7 30
Church School 9 am . Prayer
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev Earl day , 7 30 p m Saturday n1ght Shuler pastor Wor ~ h•p serv1ce, Mason Pastor , Wolter Cloud
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF Sts , Pomeroy The Rev w 'dhom
IIIDOLEPORT
Meelmg Wednesday 8 p .m
9 30 a m Sunday scnool, 10 30 Sunday school 9 45 a m worsh1p GOO - Not Pe!'1tecosfal. Rev . Middlesworth, Pastor
Shuler, pastor Sunday school proye, service , 7 30 p m .
Sunday
LONG BOTTOM Sunday school
HEMlOCK GROVI:: CHRISTIAN , o m 81ble Study and pmyer ser
MT ,.,•,(. ' lAH BAPTIST, Corner
9 30om , Church serv1ce, 7 p m ,
serv1ce, 11 om ond 7 30 p m
George Oiler . poslor Worship School at 9 45 o m and Churc h
youth meeting, 6 p m Tuesday B•· Roger Watso!'1 pastor· Jess 1e viCe Th ursday, 7·30 p m
Fourth and Mom , M1ddleport
at 9 30om Worsh1p servtees al
Weekly Bible sludv , Wedne~dO'p' , - service Sundav , 9 45 a .m Sun - Ser111Ces II o m
Rev Henry Key , Jr , pas tor Sun· 7 30 p m B1ble study and Youth
ble Stu dy . 7 p m
,
While , Sunday school suptyMorn
CARLETON CHURCH , Kmgsbury 7 30 p.m
, - day sc:hopl 11 a.m . worsh1p ser SACRED HEART Rev , Father
day School , 9 30 am Mrs Erv1n mee11ng
ot
8 p m
on
RACINE CHURCH OF THE ing 'wars hip 9 J0 c m.. Sun
Rood Gory K111g , pas t or Sunday
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOD, viCe , 7·30 p.m Thursday prayer Paul 0 Welton , pastor Phone
NAZARENE Re11 John A, (off doyscf1'cml , 10 JO am , evenmg school 9 30 a m : eYening wor
&amp;umgordner, sup t
Mormng Wednesdays .
Ouddmg lone , Mason , W Vo
meeting, 7 30 p.m
992 ·2825 Saturday E!Yentng Moss
worsh1p , 10 45 om
NORTH BETHEl Worsh1p 11
man , pastor Sunday School , 9 30 service. . 7: 30. Wednesday B1ble sh1p , 7:30 p m. Prayer meet1ng. Chester Tennant Pastor Sunday
MT HERMON Umted Brethren 7 30 ; Sundov Moss , 8 ond 10 am
Wednesday , 7.30p .m
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF om Church School10 o .m
am , Gerold Wells supt Morn· Study , 7 30 p m .
Schobl 9 45 o m . Children 's"' Church. Sunday School 9 30 a m . Confession , Saturday , 7-7 30p m
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
ALFRED Sunday School 9·30
1ng worship , 10 JO om , Sunday
MT UNION BAPTIST , ReY John
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN . Church 6' 45 p m Young Peoples Worship service 10 45 o m .
lawrence Man ley pastor Mrs
am Worship 10 45 a .m ., Prayer evening worship 7 30 Prayer Elswick, pastor Sunday school Bruce Smtth , pastor. Wallace Serv1ce 6 45 p m Evangelistic Preaching serv1ces eYery Sunday
Russell Young Sunday School meeting Wednesday 7.45 p m .,
meetmg Wednesday , 7 30p m • superil'11endent, Don Wds(ln Sun - Damewood Sup! 81ble School, Serv1ce 7 30 p m. Women s Mis- alternating w1th C. E, Wednesday
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 am
UMW 3rd Tuesday 8 p m .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don l
day school '1-45 am .. e11emng 9 30 a.m . Preach1ng serv1ce, s1onary Councd · lO am f1rst and prayer meetmg 7.30 p .m. Rev .
Evenmg worsh1p , 1 30 Wednes
REEDSVIllE Sunday School9 30 Walker Poster Ronn1e Solse, , wor$hlp
7 :30 p .m
Prayer 10 45 o m No eYen•ng serviCe .
th1rd Tuesdays Prayer and B1ble James Leach
pastor
Dov1d
day prayer meeting 7 30 p m
o .m Worsh1p 7 30 p m ., Prayer
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST Studv Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Sun~y school ~ su~t · Sundo'p' meetmg , 7 30 p m Wednesday
Holter , lay leader
MT MORIAH(HURCH OF GOD
Meelmg 7.30 p m . Tuesday
schOol 9 30 a m , mor.nlng war
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN CHURCH . Rev , Herbert Admg,
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
:JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, I m1le
Acts 20:33, I have coveted
Roe~ne Route 2, the Rev . James
VIS•follon7 30 p.m. 1st Thursday
sh1p I 0 40 o m , Sunday evenmg~ CHURCH
Eugene Underwood , pastor . Su nday School 9 30 am ., !N CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev
east of Rutland, wnct1on of Route
no
man's silver, or gold, or
- -M Muncy , pastor Sunday school
SILVER RIDGE Worship 10 Q m
10.30 am, Wilham Campbell, pastor Sunday 124 and Nobill Summ1t Road (T
p&lt;:~stor , Howar d Coldwell, Jr , Mornmg serYice
worsnlr. 7·30; Wednesday eyen
serv1ce
6 45 p m School , 9,30 am James Hughes , 174) Suhdoy B1ble lecture 9 30 apparel,
q 45 a m mornmg worsh ip 11 Church School9 o m
.
Sund..:~y
School Supt ., Sunday yo lith
tng B1,b e study 7 30
o m . even 1ng worship 7 30
TUPPERS PlAINS Worsh•p 9
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev R School, 9 30 a .m. , Mornmg Ser - EYongel1si1C serviCe 7 30 p m
supt eYemng ser¥JCe 7·30 p rl'\. 0 .. Watchtower studv , 10 30
0 Brown , pastor Sunday School. man 10 30 o m , Sunday even1ng Prayer meetmg , Thur•doy , 7 30 Wednesday eyening prayer a .m .. Tuesday . Bible study, 7 and
Prayer meetmg Tuesday , 7 30 o.m ChurchSchoollOo .m .
Many books are being
p m , Young people 's meeting
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , 9:30 am .. mornmg worsh 1p ser«&lt;tce , 7 p m .
p.m.
meeting 7·30 p m . Youth prayer 8 IS p.m , Thursday , theocroltc
written
concerning
the
7 30 p m Thursday
George FrederiCk , supt Serv1ce
FREEDOM
GOSPEl
MISSION
ot
10 •5. youth serv1ce 6 45 p .m ,
lETART
FALLS
UNITED
ser'f'1ceeochTuesdoy.
school , 7 30 p.m , serv1ce
lawrence
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , weekly , 9 30 am on Sunday
evenmg worsh1p , 7 30 p m .. BRETHREN , Rev . Freeland Norm , Bold Knob . Rev
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , meeling , 8 30 p m.
Christian's use of money .
Corner Sixth and Palmer , !he Rev
Preochmg flf.sl and fhlfd Sundays
prayer ond pra1se Wednesday
poster , FI9Y.d Norm , supt. Sunday Glue:lencomp , Sr , pastor, Rog11r letart, W. Va , Rt . l. ReY Charles
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St .
Here are a few suggestions
..
school, 9 30om ., mornmg se r&lt; W1lllord , Sr ., Sund ay school sup!
Peter Granda!, pastor , Monnmg ot month by Cl1fford Sm•th . 9 JO 7.30p m.
Hargraves , pastor. Worsh1p ser- M 1ddlepor t, Bobby Elk1ns , pastor
SILVER RUN FREE SAPTlST , man, 10 30 ~ m , Prayer servtee, Sunday school 9.30 a . Sunday Ylces 9 30 o .m , Sunday school, Sunday School, 10 a m , worsh1p which apply to almost every·
Klees supenntendent Sunday o m
School WMPO Rod1o program
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Miles Trout
e11en1ng serv1ce 7 p m Pr oyer 11 om . ~veni ng worsh•p . 7 30 serv 1ce , 11 o .m , evenmg s&amp;rYICe , one:
pastor
Sunday Wednesday , 7 30 p m
7 45 om
Sunday School 9 15 Rev, Ke1th Ebl1n, pastor Sunday schOCJI 10 a m , Steve l1tlle , supt
Tuesday
7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOO OF PRO - meehng
p m. Tuesday tollage prayer 7,30 p .m . Thursday proyer
To the young· Avoid using
Morni ng Warsh1p 10. 15 School , 9 30 om ,
leonard Evenmg serv1ce, 1 p m ., prayer PHECY , 0 J Wh 1te Rood off 160, Ernest Deeter, cion leader
a.m
meetmg and B1b le study 9 30 mee tmg qnd B1ble stu~y 7 30 credit. Don't buy anything
am
Yo ut h ocflYifleS ond G1lmore f1rst elder . even•ng ser - meetmg, Thursday , 7p .m
ReV George Groyle , posforSun- YoUth meetmg , Wednesday 7 30 am Worsh1p .serv1ce. Wednes· p .m .
th t
•t b
'd ff '!bin
fel/owsh•p l or JUmor ond semor vice , 7 lO~P 'm Wedne~day prayer
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD doy School , 10 a.m. Arthur Hen · p,m. w1th Don and Martha day 7 30 p.m
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
a can
e pal O V.:L
B
Rev Bobby Porter , pastor . Sun
son , Supt , Mornmg Worsh1p , II Meadows , leaders.
h1gh students 6 p.m Sunday meet1ng , 7 30 p m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, 26 N. Church _ telond Holey pastor
month. Don't buy on impulse,
WHITES CHAPEl , Coolv1lle RD
evemng wor sh1p 7 30 p m M1d · • MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO , day school , 9 30 o .m Worsh•p a rn , Young Peoples serYICe, 7
Second
Middleport,
Alan Sunday schoo1 10 a, m . even1ng save and try to pay cash for
week prayer serv 1ces , Wednes
Roc1ne Route 2 The Rev Charles serviCe 11 o,m evening serv iCe, p m , Evemng !erviCe 7 30 p m , Rev Roy Deeter, pastor Sunday Blackw?od pastor Servtees on serv1ce,
7 30, p m . Prayer whatever you buy. It will' be
day , 7 30 p.m
Hand , pastor Sunday school 9·45 7,30: '!'Oulh servtee , Wednesday , Wednesday Mld·Week Prayer school 9 30 a m , worsh1p serv1 ce
Sunday ot 10.30 a.m . and 7 30 meetmg, Wednesday , 7 30p m
dill It t 1 st b
'U
7 JOp m
Serv1ce,
7 30 p m
Youth 10 30 o m B1ble study and prayer p,m with Sunday school at 9 30
CHURCH OF CHRIST , M1d · om , morn1ng wors~·up 11 o m
CHURCH OF GOD at Prophecy
~CU a lr • ut YOU
lANGSVIllE
CHRISTIAN meettng , 6 30 p m Evenmg war. serv1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
dleport , 5th and Main , George~ Evemng serv1ces Tuesday and
a.m . B1ble study , Wednesday , locate~ on the 0 J . Wh1te Rood 8VOld a great many problems
RUTlAND
Gloze , m1n1ster . Mtke Gerlach , Fr1doy , 7 30p m
CHURCH , Robel"t Musser , pastor
sh1p , 7·30 p m
7 30 p m
off highway 160 Sunday School in the future .
RUTLAND CHU~CH OF CHRIST
Terry · Yankey ,
BEARWAtlOW RIDGE CHURCH Sunday school 9 30 o.m , Roy
,CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
5 vpern1tendent
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS 10 am . Sllpenntendent John ) To the middle-aged· Don't
pastor, Fronk CHURCH, INC - Corner Fourth Loveday F1rst Wednesday n1ght ho d
youth m1mster 8•ble sclwol , 9 30 OF CHRIST
Doug Seomon , S•gmci'n , supt mormng worsh1p , NAZARENE , ReY Herbert Grote, Def\nls Sm1 th
lth ' Sh
Young,Sundoy school supt Sun
mormng worsh 1p , 10 30 mm1sler . 81ble study , 9 30 am , , 10 30 Sunday e11en1ng serv1ce , pastor . Worsh1p serv1ce , II d m
o.m
and lmcoln Sts. , M1ddleport ; Rev
of month CPMA serv1ces second
ar
your wea
·
are
o .m , evemng worship , 7 30, mormng worship , 10 30 am .. 7 30, m1d · week serYtee , Wednes· and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday day school and communion , 9 30 ODell Manley, pastor, Son¥ Hud· Wednesday WMB meetl~g , third what you have with others.
om
Worship- . and comunion , son. Sunday School super1nten - through ftfth youth service
School 9 30 a m Rteha rd Borton
prayer serviCe , 7 p m Wednes · evenmg worstup
7 ·30 p. m . day , 7 JO p m
Jesus said that if you have
Wednesday Bible study , 7·30p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE . supt Prayer meet1ng, Wednes - l030am
d
dent,
Sunday
school
,
9
30
o
m
George
Croyle
,
pastor
two ' boats
giVe one tb
1 ay
' :;&gt;,
RUTLAND
COMMUN ITY evemng worsh1p , 7 30 p .m
MIDDLEPORT CHU•CH
OF !HE
KENO CHURC!i OF CHRI ST . NAZARENE , Rev Dole Boss , do'!' . 7 30 p m
HOfE BAPTIST CHAPEl ,.......570
• 1 d
,
Sob Moore, Sundov
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF CHURCI:I
Sunday School 9·30 prayer ond p,rg.1se s&amp;rv"!' · Grant St ., Middleport . ReY Bobby someone I~ nee • AlSO, don t
; NAZARENE . Rev J•m Broome , George Frederick , supt. Sunday pastor
om , worship serv1 ce , II a .m , Wednesday , 7 30p m
, pastor, Mr5. Mary lothey ,• Sundoy mornmg serviCe, 9.30 am , w1th School sup t Sunday school . 9 30 CHRIST , Gobn&amp;l Mtrs, pastor Bi
Elkms·. Sunday school 10 a.m · spend
hke ther.e 1.S• no
morntng worship , 10 45 ble Sunday School 9 30 a m mor
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7·30
school supt Sunday school 9 30 preochmg on fust and third Sun - o.m
THE PEOPLES CHURCH OF • mornlng"= j worsh•p . II : eYen•ng tomorrow. The boat you
am .. mornmg worship 10·30 day ol month by George Pickens
am , evongeiiSfiC serv1ce 7 p m
nmg church 10 30 a m Sunday p.m youth services Sunday 7 POMEROY - Corner Main and worship · 7 30 p m , Thursday today may drag you ·
serv1ce
7·00 p m
p m , Sunday mght worship , 7.30
o .m ,
Sunday
evangel •s t•c
NEW STIV£RSVIllE COMMUNI - W&amp;dnesdoy serv1ces - - prayer evenmg
Court Sts
thtrd floor over evening Bible study and prayer ba
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE l 1ghthouse R&amp;stouront Henry meettng . 7:30pm Affiliated w 1th
meeting.
7 .30 p m
Prayer TY Church Sunday School 'i'er · and pra1se 7 p m ; Nazarene Wednesday serYice 7 30 p m
nkruptcy tomorrow!
meeting Wednesday , 7 30 p m
v•ce . 9 45 om Worsh1p servtee, youth 7 p m
Doily prayer
lAUREl CLIFF FREE METHODIST NAZARENE , Rev . Lloyd 0 Grimm , Cook. pastor Sunday school , 10 S.B c.
_ To the old; Don't hold on to
Jr,, pastor Sunday school, 9.30 o m morn1ng worship , 11 o m ,
UNITED
PRESBYTER IAN 1030 EYangeM'i'tiC Serv,1ce. 730 meeting 8 30 o m Mens prayer CHURCH Rev Floyd F ..Shook
H 't SELL
RUN
FREE property or wealth that isn't
, · po!lor
lloyd Wnght
Sunday om , worship serYke , 10 30 o m . even•ng .serv1ce. 1 30 Wednes
MINISTRY 0~ MEIGS COUNTY
p m ... Wednesday
Prayer . meet1ng Soturdoy 7 p m
METHOD!Sr=--Rev . Herbert Ail · neCessary to your survival •
UNITED
FAITH
NON
School Supt .. Morn1ng Worsh1p Broadcast II Ye OYer WMPO , young doy evemng serYICe 7 30 In
Dwight L. Zav1h , dlfector •
meetmg. 7·30
ing pastor Sunday school, 9.30 y
,
serv •ce
b 45 , terdenommolloncl full gospel.
H A RR1S0 N V I LL E
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST . DENOMINATIONAL Rev Robert 9 30 om · Sunday School 10 20 people 's
a .m .. morning worship , 10, 15 to
ou cant take any of it with
, P~ESBYTERIAN
Rev . Ernes t Pomeroy HorrisonY1IIe Rd. Don Smith , pastor Sundoy School, am Wednesday Prayer ~end Bl- 4"!vongehstiC servtee 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO ~ I 1 am EvongeliSIIC serviCe , 7 30 YOU. 1t WOUld be best for YOU
Prayer meetmg, Wednesday . 7.30 Pastor Denn1s Bales
Stncklin, pastor Sunday chuteh Kennedy pastor , Bill McElroy , 9 30 a m Class leader leo Hill , b!e Study 7.30 p m , Sunday even
Sunday p m , prayer meehng, 7 p m , to invest your rnoney in the
p m MISSIOnary mee tmg 7 30 School. 10om worsh1p serv ice
school, 9 30 a .m ., Mrs . Homer Sunday School supt
Sunday worship ~&amp;rYJce , 10 30 am . mg worship 7 30p m Cho1r Pra c
Thursday .
Lord's work then you'll be
!tee Thursday 7 p m
p m l 1rst Wednesday of month ,
lee supt .
mornmg worship , school 9 30 om mornmg wor - church 7 30 p m
II 30om and 7·30 p m Prayer
BRADFORD
CH URCH
OF
'
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHR IST
MASON COUNTY
10 30
sh1p and commumon , 10 30 a.m ,
meetmg . Wednesday 7 30 p m.
CHRIST - Gobnel Mroz , poslor storing Up treasures in
MASON FIRST BAPTIST Second
Chorle~ Russell , S• , mm1sler
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday achool , Sunday evemng youth Ctmsfton CHRIST Etcfen R Bloke , pastor
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH Sunday school . 9·30 o m , morn- Heaven!
9 30 0 m ., R1chord Vaughan , sllpt
EndeoYor , 6 p m .. worship Sllr· Sunday Sc:hool 10om Howo,d R1ck Mccomber , supt Sunday and Pomeroy Shi , Stan Cra1g , OF JESUS CHRISt, Thomas . L 1ng church , 10.30 a .m Jun1or
To all : Tlthe! Give the top
pa stor Sunday school, 9 ·45 o .m . Holmes , pastor . 81ble s t~a.,.
Mornmg worsh 1p , IO.;JO
·
'o'ICV. 7 p m Wednesday eve.i 1ng McCoy supl .. Morning sermon. sc hoo l , 9 30 o rn , worsh1p ser
church program under d~rechon 10 percent of your income to
wOr.$h1p serv iCE!, 11 o m , trau•ung Soturdoy 7 30 p m ; EYongehsttc ot Koren Mroz tor chddrel) , 2-10,
SYRACUSE, Mormng worsh1p , 9 prayer meelmg ond B1ble study . 11 a m , Sunday n1gh1 serYtces v1ce. 10.30 om B•ble Stud,. lues
(Co Un ed
un1 on , 6 JO p ~ , evef'lmg wor · p m prayer meeting , Tuesday
Christ•on Endeavor 7 30 p m
day 7 30 p .1n
durmg regular church hour In
u
on
10)
o .m ; Sunday school. 10 a .m Mrs . 7 30 P m

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

PARDON AND GIVE HIM
A ..JOB AS A DESIGNER.

DESt11'E TO ~HABILITATE
YOUNG MAN IS LAUDAFJLE .
r 5 Hil.Ll G IV E THIS EVERY
CON5 tDEAATt0N;• S AYS THE
GOVERNOR .

faiSSELL SIDING CO.

11·

•

~ARENTI.

you

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

.

RACINE FOOD MARKET

""iJ RE

1-1CL.C"I~.;. THE TR LJ \\ r CAR D,
E.\~' .. \At-.E: &lt;\\E E-~CK TEJ

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS

~RUIT

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL

C'"-~"' - L.:"C I\-5 L IKE

THE ~ RPORT:

;:•:=:::J.J:

WHEN THERE 'S A COMPA NY
ALL. FUELE:D A~ID R:EAC'Y
FOR TAKEOFF.

'{ MEA!V "''OU JUST
PUT WLADEK.5 (3 1f&lt; L·
FR IEND ON A Pl-ANE
AND 5H IPPED HER ,
flACK TO CALIFORNIA 2o/

' --t--/A

NO NEE D FO R
THAT. TI 5H ... I
\\ ~ULD N 'r DREAM OF
~\AKIN&lt;&amp; &gt;OU WAIT
-\ROUND FOR THe
N~'\T ~ I R LI ~I E
F ~ ,: HT!

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

I

I

~I

!

I 'LL BET DOC Will BE;
HAPP"' TO HEAR .THAT

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

'THINK Hi='S SEE!" ~­

l NG ('N 60MET\.UNG IN 'THE
SHOP, BUT I DON'T K1&lt;J0W

OOP:S ~0 LONGER A I
CAUSE FOR CONCERN ·

WHAT IT IS!

THIS SPACE FOR RENT

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

PHONE 992·2156

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
REALTOR

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

DAN THOMPSON FORD, INC.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

POINTVIIW CABLE TV
SYSTEMS, INC.

Ken Grover Photography

WITH POLICE'? NO '
F"OL LOW HER"

HEINER'S BAKERY

THIS SPACE FQR RENT

MARK V STORE

YOUNG'S CARPETING

HO! THAI MAHHOLE COVER! SEE&lt;
QUICK' AFTER THEM, ANDREI! 'THIS
TIME WE HAVE THEM TRAPPED '

THAT/8/.JYMY

t""BRowifs'F

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

BUT WE'VE GOTTA LOSE THAT
GUY! EVEN SUICIDE IS SETTER
THA~ lElTIN' HIM GET US ··

l fllB EOLE! AND

B~COM c IN VO lVE D

.'

PHONE 992-2156

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

NEW YORK
CLPTHING HOUSE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

POMEROY
BEN FRANKLIN STORE

I WA5 flFi&lt;AID
OF -....AT I MY F::EL-

c:: o
'ITAI"'LY

INGS GDDE EDER ...

D DN'T

MI/CII

YOU ON.
ENCOURAGE

:&gt; ~:O ? Er&lt;

,

L

.EAD

L GUESS I JUST
WANTEtJ IT TO
..!APPEN ... AND
BELIEVED IT

ANOTHER:
DI ~O !

LOOK HOW THE All:CHE-R.
FISH EXPELS PELLETS
OF WATE-fe FIWM IT&amp;

FRoM

Trlltl Tli\AE A PAIR OF

1(/SSING tt:I'JI?AMIS/

MOUTH -TO CATCH IN-

COl/LO/

BECTS WHICH COME

~j§~~~~·

YOU I

(;ASO I.I NE: •II.I EY

This ain't no
time fer
idiot talk!

As

How mam.j times
I te lll}out'fix 4er
fool
'Zeb!

en4

fool

page

THE ALMANAC
Uolled Press Ioteroatlonal
Today is Friday, Oct. 7, the
280th day of 1977 w1th 85 to
follow.
The moon is moving toward
1ts new phase.
The mornmg stars are

Fnday, October 7

kin

see!

BRIDGE

Sennonette

n

INTO R-'\NGE!

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

chance in duplicate

~~~~~~--~N-O~R~T~H----~~7;1
• 743
•QJ 97
tAK654

.

IJUBN LOSER
W~

HI&lt;Vl'tol'T Wo,\

Alt:AMEi ~n! I'M
VOITTI~ THAT
LfiVMM'i WM\ 1

KIJlJT!i ROC.KIJ!; SAID, "IT'S NOT
WHBIH~R
IT'&lt;;

'W Wil-l OR lDSB,
HOW 'jOU F1.-A'I 1!1Ei it;AMf; II

~ v-- --

I (X)f.l'T CAR~ w~t\T
'JOUR FRIBIJD SAID..

.7

WEST
EAST
• 10 5
• 982
• A8542
• 10 6 3
+ 107
+932
o1o A J 10 S
o1o K Q 4 2
SOUTH !DI
•AKQJ6

trumps cashed

• QJ 8
"'9 8 6 3
Both vulnerable ·•

Notl!t Easl

Pass
Pass

2+

Pass

3.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead

~

1.

South

3+

4.

~m~~

A¥

A

BilltNP: Y

BALLS 0' FIRE.!!

Pass

HE CAN'T EVEN
RUN RWA'I BY HISSELF

By Oswald &amp; James
All roads led Lo Rome in the
b1ddmg of today's hand
Every South player opened
one spade · and wh1!e there
were quite a few bidding sequences

from then on . the

final contract was always

the

same

·The b1ddmg in the box
shows the approved sequence
wh1ch was also Lhe most popular one ,
Most West players opened
Lhe ace ol hearts Aller that
IP(Id Lhose who were smart
-i iuu 6 '

to cash th e

·w•·

hve diamonds

and had to lose three tncks in
hearts and clubs
ThiS would have been the
correcL line In rubber bndge
We feel that in match-point
duplicate 11 would have been
better play to lead the king of
hearts and play to make five .

•K

Wes~

Merc ury,

clubs held declarer to hve,
those who looked around for a
miracle and led anythmg else
watched declarer run off the
rest of the tncks with no trou·
ble at all.
A couple of declarers were
held to 10 tncks for very bad
scores West opened the 10 of
diamonds agamst them and
smce they were afra1d of a
ruff. they simply drew

"f

Tex:as reader

wants Lo

know who invented the Texas

convention
Th1s

is

an easy one It was

mvented by Dave Carter of St
Louis .
' N~ WSI-' A1-'~.1-t 1-~ N TCR f!fU S f~ ASSf-0 I

'

(Do you heve a question tor
fhe fuperts ? Wrlfe "Ask the
JacotJys" ·care ot th ts
newspaper The Jacobys
answer individual qusstions 1f
stamped , self - addressed
enye/opes are enclosed The
mosl mferestlng ques:1ons wt/1
oe used m lhis column JJnd w1fl
' 8 ' 81'118 COPI6S of JACOBY
M 1)0f AN )

wm

•

Venus,

Mars ,

Jupiter and Saturn.
There

are no evenmg stars.

Those born on this date are
under the sign of L1bra.

'\fjflfNl ~'if

~

unscramble 1hese lour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, lo form
lour ordinary words

rJCJ
1 1911

Itt'""''"'""" I .,._.,.

.., ,,. , '

poet James

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

\!dJ ~~~ ®

HI DUM

American

Wh1tcomb Riley was born
Oct. 7, 1849.
On this .d;ly 1n history:
In 1916, in the most
staggering footba ll defeat on
record,
Georgia
Tech
humble&lt;!
Cumbetland
University, 222 to nothmg.
In 1961, a British a1rhner
crashed in the French
Pyrenees and 37 persons
were killed .

byHenr~ArnoldandBoble~
11

rJ
,.,... ,,!!

F.UINY
PHAIMS

I KJ

I SLICHE
j
I I K
Answer: THE(
·.
Yesterdays

I

tJ

1 I I l)t
r
I
I
J
~ ! ~---"OWl

Jumbles MOUND
Answer

•

Now arrange !he Circled letlers to
form tM sUrpnse answer as sug ·
gested by the abOve cartoon

CAAFf-iiiiU;&amp;'r

CJ091it£D

What a faulty heating system might provide
vou with - COLD COMFORT

tt... latest 1 to puzzleS IS available for S 1.35 pqe.t·
paid t1omJum~ cJ~thiB ,.,wapaper, Bol{34, Norwood NJ 07&amp;48. ~
your name. addr~. zipoode and makectleCkspevableto Ne "IP'r•
s.

Jumble Book NO 10 wilh

�•

8- TheDa 11 Sennnd \\ ct llepurt PomeM ll

--

'

r r1da)

,

\l&lt;t

9-The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Friday Oct 7 1977

•

•

\l antt&gt;d to Um

Uo&gt;lp \l ant..d

) \ Wl:ll\ oct o v Y"'
B \,1 9 obb dug Jhoi o
beforqJro
.JJ JS71

••

VA IRESS
APPLY ~ pe o
C ow 5 eoJ.. House Po e oy

Oho
RN ORht&gt;p heduoo fo o
rr v y o e ~d hype e
o
p og om Publ
heo h ex
pe e e des able Respo
s b
e
n ude
heo h
each ng lo
d v d~o~o s ond.
g cup p an n g and de e y
of pub c heal h educe on p o
go s po c pa on ns ee
ng p og oms 14 hou s pe
week
lud g e e
gs l o
opp y
on m:: Roy Po me
H o k ng Tach o
Co ege
Ne o
e
Oh o
o
b 4
7 53 359

NOTICE
WAN f-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

HEPHONE
SOL C OR
pe e n e p efe ed bu w
a
Co 992 3'183 be ween 0
on o d 0 pm Co esse l o
hone
n p o eme '!Co
ne es a y Expe ence p efe
ed bu w
a n gh pe son
Good pay Co ~ 992 3283 be
wee n 0 om and 6 pm

o
ode Co
7 4 ) 4'33

0 0 FURN

0

'"

URE

b0 e

beds
e
househo ds W
R 4 Po e oy
99'17760

~

'tl
t&gt;

e o

M D fv le
Oh o o
a

VA FHA 30 y I o c g eo d
Mo gage 77 E S a e A he s
ph o e b 4 S'n 305

2

S X ROOM house o 6 3 M

Two cho1ce bu1ldmg
s1tes
located
1n
parl1ally
wooded
area Close to Rt 7
but secl uded

We woulct 11 ke to buy

Cho ce Grade 400 500
lb
Helfer Feeder
Calves n lots of 10 or
more d reel from the
producer

Phone 985 3595

Con ta ct

WARREN PICKENS

S600

Also
ho se
$450 Phone 6 4) 698

CAMPER

a e
3200

ECONOMY TRACTOR w h o a
a hme .,; L ke ew osk ng
$2:250 Ph o e 6 4 698 3190

~~i~·
~

A ADD N

THE

Clearance Sa'llf.l
On all 977 tra ctor s and
r d ng mowers Save 20
Pet on all models n stock
Exa mples
Mode

Snapper

2652

s HP

Mower

LosI $600
Sale5480
Model 524 Grailely Tractor
8 HP

.

L st 51 6
Mode
B 6000

PUBLIC NOTICE
( R. 33 J 46

for Voca ona
Agr cu u e
Too sand Equ prpent w
be

he o

f

Boa d

ce of the
of

Educ4 on of Southe n Loca

Schoo

Os

c

Megs

County
Oh o un
'2 00
ocock
noon
Easen
S anda d T me October 3
977 and w
be pub c y
opened and ead by he c e k
mmed ate y 1he eaf e a he
usua pace of mee ng of sa d
board of educa on tabu a ed
and a epo
hereof made by
the clerk o sa d boa d a ts
neMf mee n g
Cop es of the spec f ca ons
ns rue ons to b dde s and
p oposa
o ms may be ob
ta ned a
he off ce of he

972 VINOALE 4 • 70 2 bed oom
w
h
we ~ o boy
n
mcs e bed oom 7 x 4 pul ou
e;. a
su at on Cen o o
e.. eel en cond on
owne

204 Condor St

of he
above Boa d o Educa on or
a sa sfac o y b d bon d
e:.:ecu ed by he b dder and a
n an
su ety company
a moun equa of ve pe cen
of the b d Sha be subm t ed
w th each b d
Sa d boa d of edvca on
rese ves he
gt1 to wa ve
nto m al es
o accep or
re ec t a ny and a or par so t
an y and tt b ds
Th e success ful b dde w
be
equ ed
o tv n sh a
sa sfacfo y pe fo mance
bond fo one h undred pe cen
of the con tra ct p ce
Nob dS may be w hd awn
tor at eas t t h r y (30 ) days
at e the schedu ed cas ng
t me o
ece p s of b ds
Boa d of Educat on of
Southern
Loca
Schoo
0 s r ct
By Rober K Say e
Pres den

10

he c e k

TWENTY F VE

1

I
I
I
I

POMEROY 0
PH 992 2176
International
Harvester
New ldu

L~!:"!. _____

I

I
I
I
I

J

"

Pome o y Oh10 45769
Phone 992 3325

992 5537

973 BU CK. CENTU RY V 8 au o
PS PB$99599'1 059oe

NEAR SCHOOL - Smal
v age 3 bed dOm home
w th ba n T P wa e and
near sto es S 4 000

n

I
7

C a ence
MAl BU

307

F onk

~

a

and
Co ege

Rood
Sy a cuse
9 3
G osswo e coo s opp on es
mo..,e l'l y baby women s and
boys c o h r1g and m sc
THREE FAMILY Yo d So e F and
So
9 om
? Hubbo d s
G eenhouse
S~ ocuse
992 577b

STARCRAFT FAll So e M n
moo ! 20 and 22
T aVe
T o e s 8 5 S3 799 25 7
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fo d down
$1 700 up We se se v e o d
quo y Open Sundays Camp
Con ey S o era! So e !i R 62
N of P P eosan

WASTE

AVA A8EAT R vesdeAps
bed oom S OS pe mon h S 50
secu y depos 991 6098

TWO BEDROOM T a le
on y 992 3324

Adu s

10

-

100

QUIET STREET
J
bedroom frame hom e
F.replace
n
hv ng
carpet ng and 2 car garage
Want only s 5 500

0

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

baths
ca Re t ng
cent ra h eat ng ga r age
and co ne at $25 000

v

45 ACRES Remote 4
be droom home w th Ia ge
barn Son e fenc ng Ask ng
$45 000

Str ck
wholesale to all.
Not less than 2 case

Miller Produce

&amp;

BIG FLAT LOT -

6 room
home bath F A fu nace
on Rt 33 Lots o room for

Garden Center

lhe K dd es $23 000
WE DON T PROMISE A
MIRACLE BUT WE CAN
SURE LEND A HAND

MEAT CASE ash eg s e odd ng
mac h ne on que candy show
case
n good
ond on
B eok as
ob e and cho s
Randy Hu mph eys 992 73 18

---

HELEN L TEAFORD
C BRUCE TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES

----

R SING STAR Kenne Boo d ng
lndoo O.:trdoo uns g oom ng
all b eeds
clean sen ta y
fo e es oe 367 71 12 Chesh e
Ph o e 6 14 ) 367 0292

---

sheep dogs
(M
Co es 2 ernoles 7
weeks old Sho s and wo med
Ph one
614
367 0292 o
367 7 2

HOOF HOLLOW Ho ses Buy sell
ode o
a n New and ur;ed
sadd es Ho se Shoe ng Ru h
Ree es Albany 61.4 ) 69B 3290
ME IGS COU NTY Humane Soc;;;
Co el ne ond odop o Se ce
992 7680 742 J 62 992 5477
REG S EREO FEMALE S. Be no d
o g vc away o good home
Phone 742 '1 23

TWO BEDROOM Mob e Home
unfu n hed u o and sec ud
Pd 4 m
eos of Do w n
985 39 4

HORSES FOR Sac 59 11ch po
M o go Ge d g 9 yeo s old
e 'f gen e $275 Sf:!
ll h
Pn om o mo e due o oo
M o h 4 fE!O S I) 1 ox
gen e
S350
Pho
667 3336
AKC POODLE puppy
moe
Ho e
o d
wo m o
Ho ~
pu ppy
949 '1':;1
DA( H!&gt;H L/ND Pl PP ES

4'} JblJ -4

...et Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; c\Snd ton your
water and Coop water
softener Model UC XVI

FREE GAS -

Now Only

'279.95
t es t

your

water

FOR SALE
New Co Op water and
softeners model VC SVI

Only S279 95
Save 5.50 00 on a new
Hotpomt Refrigerator
1 New 20 cub1c ft Chest
Freeter
$25 00 Ot scount

•
"'I

IN

5AVI ON YOUR fUll Bll THIS
WNTER INO BIAUI fl YOUR MOBIL!

Good
Upr ght

UH d
Freeu~ r

A man a
i2S O 00

Pomeroy Landmark

9. ~Jdc k W Ca r sey Mgr
llllil. Phone 991 2181

•

Pome Of

·~

· le

Young's

Automahc
Transm1ss1on Serv1ce

PARTS- LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
Reedswtle 0

Ph Jll-6250
5 17 fC

Restdent al
and
com m erc al
Call
for
est mate 24 hour serv1ce
Anyday anyt me

Carpetmg
RDUtt 3 Pomeroy 0
Carpet &amp;Upholstery
Phone M1ke Young
At

Phone 985 3806

992 7034 011 STOP B! 1100 E MIIN
Sit POMERO! OHIO fOR I FREE
ES IMAIE

992 2206 Of 992 7630

Kmgsbu1y Home Sales

Tht Of 1 n11ton
Not The lm 111t011

! !

BRADFORD
Ave o ee
Con HOWERY AND MAR N Ex
p e e Se ce Pho e 94q 7487
cav a ng
se p c sys emi,.
o 949 2000 Ro c e Oh o C
dare boc~hoe d m p
-..ck
B odfo d
mes one
ga e
b eel&lt; bR
po g R
43 Ph one
{61~
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
698
733
-~
Sweepe s oos e s
o s a
sma opp on es low mowe
BA HROOMS AND K he'riS
e~e
o S o e H gh.Woy Co oge
emode ed ce a
e pun
on Rou e 7 Phone 6 4 985
b ng co pen 'i o d g~:tne t:i
3825
ma n eno ce
3 yeo s ~I(
pe en e 992 3685
REMODE lNG P umb y heo nf;l

FREE
GAS
FREE
WA TE R LOOKS N CE for
S3S 000 DO
JUST LISTED N ce
ode
home n Ru and
W B F P
fenced
o
3
bd ms
ca pet ng and
emodeled Lo s of newe
features Only s .t 000 00

LISTED

SEW ING MACH NE- Repo s
tt o I mokes 992 '1284
Fob
Shop
Pome
A!J ho zed S nge So es
Se ce We sho pen S sso

se
The
oy

ond
s

N ee

ng

H GH SCHOOL Sen a ~ w
do
g
wh le Sou he n
bobys
oco School s c osed Hove
own onspo tot on ond pen y
of good efe en es 949 1677
one 4 30pm

S39 SDO DO
HOW ABOUT- J , acres
n the country w th a n ce y
emt&gt;de ed 2 bdrm home
barn and ot he bu d ngs

Stea l lh s or S 1 500 00
4 ACRES -

4 home

Near M nes
road $4 600 00

RANCH

s

tes
good g ave

TYPE

-

.:

3

992 2259 992 619
992 2568

e

••

$4

tS not nstalled

t

Rutland

Moll , T~;es Wed

•

•

·.:

..
FRIDAY TIL 5 ••
;a
lf.e

.• .

Close Sat At 5 PM

•, :

••••••••••
RlRL'AND
FURNITURE
742 2211

!:

RUt~ NO:(•

Aii'NoLD GRATE

·························~·

AUCTION

SPAC IOUS HOME TO F T YOUR

SATURDAY, OCT. 8th
Sponsored by the Oh1oans for W1ldllfe
'Conservallon 10 AM Ram or Sh1ne

Why wor y about lhe h gh cos t of

YOUR

HAIR

LOOK

HERE

MINER SVILLE - 4 bed oom house mostly carpeted
Nrap around porch ga age a ge o a ll overlook ng
he Oh o R ve
Ask ng $16 500
UPPER SY RACU SE
Good 2 bedFoom house w th
ba h T wo mo c sma bed ooms cou d be f n shed
upsta s A so ga age st orage bu ICJ ng strawbe ry
pa ch and garden space Dr veway s e ect r c heated
N ce Oh o R ver v ew F u n ture can be bough t ex t a
P ce tor qu ck ca e House and lot S12 600

Call Jommy Deem Al949 2388

Household was hers dr ye r s.. gas a nd e ectr c r anges
sweepers m xer s te ev son s a nd rad as N ce fue l 0 1
heating st ove e ectr c hot wate heater ugs cur ta ns .,..
pots and pans A o t of glassware and some depress on
g ass D nette set toffee table sw ve l ocke ant que
on beds 5 of them

F ve

bed oom s n ce 1 story house large v ng room w th
sh n ng oak f oar ng Ia ge k tchen w th d n ng area 2
lu I ba ths 2 bed ooms down and 3 upsta rs Camp e te l y
nsu lated w th F A nat gas furnace La ge porches &amp;
ga age L oc n Chester Pr ce $19 BOO

so

Mtsce llaneous Items J C H ggens 2 ga shotgu n
b pu I Sha~es pea r e bow 40 egho d traps chrome
reve se whee ls and adapters to f t V W New v w
w hee l and t e 6 ga Lee Loade
pocket kn ves
f sh ng tack e old oak desk chai r wooden sta ll catt le
feede r ch ldren s toys and m any many more te m s
too numerous o m en on

a

We have someth ng for everybody 8r1ng the fam 11y
and spend the day Lunch wtll be served.
Auct on w II be held
rmle west of th e entrance tQ
Forked Run Lake at th e hom e of G ant You ng state
Route 124
Terms of the Sale Cash Not respons be for acctdents

I 0 McCOY- AUCTIONEER

ordnance

el'\actect by the v taoe of
Pomeroy
Me QS County
Oh o
n the matter of the
h ereinaft~r descr bed
rn
provemen
wh ch
s
descr bed as fol ows
Applying
an
aspha t
c on~re e surface cou se on
Un ted Sta es Route 3J (Nye
A~t~enue) between the west
corporat on
ne and he
junction of State Route 2.4

Pli&amp;Sed 9 1¥ 1977
At es t Jane Walton
C ertc.

inch To a ength 0 .tOm es
NOW THEREFORE Be
orda ned by he Council of the
v llaoe of Ftomerov Oh o
SECT 0~ 1 Consen l
That t s dec a red o be n
the publ c nterest tha t he
cc;msent of sad v ttage be and
such co nsent s hereby g ven
to the D rec o
of Trans
portal on to cons rue
he
•bove
descr bed
m
provement
n accor$fance
w th pans spec f car ons and
est mates as approved by he
Director
SECTION I (Coo per.at on)
Tha sa d V I age he eby
proposes lo coope ate w th
the State of Oh o n he cost
of the above descr bed m
provemen as follows
A
ump sum of Three
Hundred
F f ty
Do ars
($350 00) wh c h nc udes he
cost ot r a s ng he eiC st ng
cast nos
SECT ION
A
That he 5.350 00 s hereby
approp eted for
he
m
provemen of he h ghwav as
descr bed he e n crbo"e
SECT ION I (A uthority to

Clarence And ews
Mayor
CERTIFICATE OF COPY
STATE OF OHIO
v age of Pomeroy SS
County Me gs
Jane Wal on as c lerk of
the v lage ot Pon eroy Oh o
he
do hereby ce tv tha
forego ng Is a
rue and
co rec t c:opy of ordinance
adopted by he eg s ature
Autho ty of he sa d v llage
on the 9 h day of September
1977 tha
he publ cat on of
such ord nance has been
made and cert fed of reco d
accord ng to taw
that no
p oceedlngs ook ng to a
rete endum upon such o
d nance ha11e been tltlc.en and
ha
such e•d nance and
cer t 't'a I!" of pub lea on
thereof are of ecord n 0
d nance Record No 484 PaQe
136
.......
--

N W TNESS WHER.EOF
I have hereunto subscr bed
by name and aff Ked my
o fc a seal h s 20 th day of
Sep ember qn
Ja nf w~ on
Clerk
V II age of Pomeroy

Oh o

The a forego ng s accep ed
as a bass for p oceed ng w h
mp ovement t1e en
th e
descr bed
he
V lage
of
Fa
Pomeroy Oh o

That th e Mayor ot sa d
lege s hereb~ empowered
end d ected on behalf of the
C y V llage
o en e
nto
(q 23 30
0) 7 3tC
agreements w th the 0 ec or
of Transportal on necessary
to comp e e the pi ann ng and
c ons r uc t on of th s
m
provement
SECT I ON
IV
(Tratf c
Con ol S gna.ls and Dev ces l
ORDINANCE NO 483
That raft c con trol s gna Is AN
ORO NANCE
TO
w 1 not be nsta ect on the PROV DE
FOR
FUR
pr o ec t w thout pr or ap
N SH N G
OPERAT N G
proval by th e St a t e
MA NTAINING
A
A ND
SECT ON V Man enance L GHTIN G SYSTEM TO
and Pa kng)
LIGHT T H E STREETS
Tha t upon com pl et on of ALLEYS
ANO
PUBLIC
sad improvement
sa d
PLACES N THE V LLAGE
v llage w 1 th ereafter keep OF POMEROY
ME GS
sa d h ghway open to tr;~ff c COUNTY OH 0
at al t mes and
(a ) Manta n
the
m
BE IT OROA NED 8Y TH E
provement n acco dance COUNC L
OF
THE
w th he p Oil s ons of he V LLAGE OF POMEROY
stat u te s r e at no there o and
STATE OF OHIO
make amp l e t na n c a and
'ot.he
p ov sons to
such
SECT ON
That
Co umbus and Sou he n Oh o
maintenance and
(b) Manta n t he r ght of
Electr c Company
Is su e
way and keep I free of ob
cess ors and ass gns here n
Company l s
;;nru c t ons
n a manner ca ed th e
..s.at sMc o y to the Sa te of hereby ves ed w h he gh
o gh w th e ec r c ty he
lll()h o and hod sa d r ght of
s teet~ a eys and o her
-'Way nv o ate tor pub c h gh
p aces
n
the
:Way purp oses and perm t no publ c
m un c pa l t y of Pomeroy
..sig n s pas er s b lboa ds
Oh o
(Here n ca l ed
he
~~roa d s de stan d s o
o he
Mun c pal ty
and
he
~rvate
nsalatons w nn
Company shal have he ghl
:;the r ght of way I m ts and
to charge and re ce ve h:om
-. (c) Place'"eand man an all
the Mun c pal y pa ymen t fo
-t r a fl c con r o dev ces con
sa d serv ces n accor dance
..,o m ng to the Oh o Manual o f
w th he schedu e of ra es set
: u nl to m Traff c Con rol
. oav ces on the imp ovement forth below A f x u es sha ll
be maunie ~ on wood po es
llln comp l ance w th
he
un ess o herw se s a ted and
~rov sons of Sect on AS
11
ene g zed
by
Oile head
_a nd re ated sec t ons of the
.Oh o Rev sed Code
d~&gt;&amp;t r bu on
ac t es
N u m~e r 257 S ze
•
d } Regu a epa k ng n th e
n Lumens - 8 000 Type
allow ng ma nn e
OBS Mercury Vapor
Ra e
.. No park ng on t aveled
Per La m p Pe Month 3 75
.por t on of h ghway
5 ze n Lumens 8 000
• SECT ION V I (R gh o f
Type
OBS Mercury Vapor
:W~Y
u 1 'Y Rearrangemen
- New Poe Rate Per La m p
~~d Sav ng the S a e of Oh o
Pe Mon th
S.4 75
.Ha r m le ss of Damages
Num blfr 5 S ze In Lumens
•
a Tha al ex. s ng st ee
25 000 T y pe --.- G ass
~ nd pub c W fJY r gh of way
Mereu y Vapo r
Rae Pe A T TEST
th n th e \; II age which s
Lamp Per Month - 5.6 75
.necessa ry for t he ato esa d
Jane Walton
~ ze
n L umens - 25 000
'Wi m prove m en sha I be mad e
Cler k
Type
G ass Mercury
:a va ab e therefor
Vapo - New Pole Rate Per
A PPR OVED Sep t 19 19 77
• (b)
Tha
he
St ate
Lamp Per Mon th - S7 75
t~Mun c pal ty w I acqu e any
Cia ence A nd ews
Nu m b er 9 S ze n Lumen s
Mayo
-ad d ton a l r ght of way
25 000 Ty pe G !!ISS
:r-eClU r ed to r tne constru ct on
Mercur y Vapo r - Cone ete
tP f
t he
a to resa d
m
9 23 JO
0 7 3 c
Rate Per Lamp Per Mon h ..prolo( emen t
S10 25
•
V

•
••

..•..•.
._
,.
.
..
"• .

~.

:•

142 2211

Thursday 8 hi noon

•~.

ENA~TME~T f

howeiler he I the actual cos t
o the Company n ma k ng
such retocat ons or chltnges
n tne t ~tlures sha I be pad
fo by the Mun clpal ty
SECT ON 7 The Corn
J;~anv sha ll m ake every effort
to keep th e s ree I 91'11 ng
sys tem ('ont racted to
n
oper a on dur ng th e t n e
p ov ded t tor any nason
lhe Com pany fa Is to do so fo
more han an a~gregate of
four 4) hours n any one
mont h
and upon wr tt en
not ce of such aggreg-ate
ou tage turn shed to
ne
Cpmpany by the Mun c pal ty
w lh n ten &lt; 0 days ot I he end
at such man h there sha I be
a pro rat., reduct on fr on the
b II o cover such ou ages No
ab ty sha .! lacr. o th e
Con pany fo any ou Bge
SECTION 8 The Company
sha not be reQu red to nstal
add t ana l stree
1 gh s o
man an or ep o!l ce lamps n
the
e11en
t hat
he
Mun c pal ty s n ar ears r1
paymen
fo
sen ces
en
de ed nor sha I the Company
be requ red o nstal more
than s )C
6 s reet 1 ghts
dur ng he las year wh ch
th s Ord na nce s n effect
SECTION 9 The Company
at its own e:.:pense sha
e.-;e c se reasonablu d gence
ght ng
to nsure tha the
sys em s n good order and
tha
all street
gh s are
burn ng and sha I make
r ep la cements as sOon as
pass b e
to tow ng
nQt f cat on by he customer
of the need for such serv ce
bu the Company sha ll no be
requ red tope orm any such
rep lacemen o ma n l ena nce
excep t
dur ng
regu ar
work ng hou s
SECT ON 10 The Com
pany
sha l
save
he
Mun c pa y ha m less from
any and a
I ab I ty oc
cas oned
by
he
sole
neg gence o he Co mpany n
ma n
t he canst uc on
tenltn ce and ope at on of ts
street gh ng sys em n the
Mun c pa y
SECTION 11 T le o al
w re poles amps and ap
p u rtenances used by he
Compr, ny n turn Sh ng the
seril ce oon emp a ted n th s
Ord nance s and sha be n
H'le Company
SECTION 12 All her ghts
and p; v leges gran ed to
and th e obi gat on m posed
upon t he sa d Company as
rec ted n th s Con rae sha ll
respect ile y nur e o h e
benet of and be b nd ng upon
ts successor s and ass gns
SECT ON 3
Tha a I
ord nances o eso ut ons o
hat a e n
pa s thereof
cons sten t or
n conr c
he ew th be and the same are
he eby epea ed
SEC TION
4
Tha
th s
Ord nance sha I take effect
a nO be n fo ce fr om and af e
h rty days om ts passage
of the earl est per ad a owed
bv aw a nd sh all reman n
effect tor a per od of t ~e 5 l
years t rOITI
s passage
sub ec to pro te m nat on
as here na e prov ded n
Sec on
5
al'\d
p ov ded
further ha
shall have been
accep ed by he Compa ny bv
w ten accep ance f l ed n
the Off ce of he C e k o he
Mun c pa l y
5
Tha
he
SECT ON
Mun c pal y by leg sla ile
~ct on o the Company sha
hav e th e r gh o erm na e as
ot he effect ve da e o h s
Ordnance of any year
commend ng n 1979 and
en d ng n 1987 h s Ord nance
and the r.a e schedu le co n
a ned n Sect on 1 of th s
Ordnance upon wr t en
no ce f ed w h ot her party
herelo !!If eas t th
y 30
days p or to such
e
m na on da e
Passed th s 19 h day of
Sep em b er 1977

;w

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

800t1ISOO

a

bdrms
arge eat n ktt
w th bar Large master
bdrm full baement many
features S23 500 00

WE
STILL
HAVE
BUYERS FOR YOUR
HOME LET OUR PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
I:M N.K KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES

Reg

Calll42 2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

Th s

everyth ng
f om
a
W 8 F P oa argetwocar
garage 4 bdrms modern
kt
2 baths large rec
room etc A barga n a

Candy Str p
Rubber Back
Regula r SO 9S
Save S4 88 Sq Yd

30 rolls of carpet n stockl.
Good se lee hon a on sale
ln stalll!d wtth padd ng no
extra to pay

ncome w th h s 0 r oom
room ng house 2 , ba th s
lobby I v ng oom d n ng
room
The net ncome
shou ld pay the mortgage

mpos ng o der home has

SAVE ON
CARPETING

'4 88 sq yd
CARPENTER

Extra

S16SOOOO
MIDDLEPORT -

BLOWN NSULATION. Ge h .ee
es ma es Co 667 b4 79 fq
t eees moe

12 and 5 ft w dth Carpet
rubber ba c k

emodel ng
f oor plan
off st eet park ng Cheap at

$1300000
JUST LISTED

gh

EXCAVATING
and d che
f e ld
Be k Hoe Se ce
Ru and Oh o Phone 742 100B

2

Mddepot

EXC AVAT NG BACKHOE doter
enche
low boy
d4mp
u ks
sep
ys ems
8
Pul ns phone 9'n 2478 day R

EXCA VATING doze
oade and
u ~s
be khoe wok dunp
and lo 6oy s fo h e w hou
d
o so I
me o e a d
g o el Co Bob o Rage ef
fe s dqy phone ~2 7089
gl
phone 992 ~ o 992 523 ~

States

mprovemen s to p emote
h ghwav safe y end pro v ded
rece ves the aff lrma ve
vote ot two n rds of the
members r ec ed to Counc 1
!ha
ake ettec and be n
force- mmed a ely upon Is
JlltSSage and appro\l'a by th e
Mayor otherw se
t sh all
ake effect and be n fo ce
f om and alter he ea t es t
peqQtf .a lowed bY law

s gn

Chester Ohto
8 29 pd

Bo • 3'1

and cl ypes o gene o epa
Wok guo on eed 20 yeo s e•
pe e e Phone 992 2409

MAIN
POMEROY 0

JUST

Jack's Septic
Tank SeMce

N

HOMESITES o so c
aqe and
up M ddlepo
neo Ru land
Co 992 748

lf77

OF

"

United

Nye

LenQth 5438 4 teet w d h 26
teet approx ma.te th ck ness 1

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Supenor
Steam Exhachon

HOME We hm~ m fable n 11 va et, o
cokln.,~ leI me iii urn num unde p nn
01, tOI rou PfiiU of m nd. 11nd o
satisfy you nsu ante compinJ el us
tie down y011 mob le home These I e
dow ns a e mec h11n cal w nstal ed D
a$5u e mu mum safetJ Contact us fo
a qual ty II'III'A n&amp; Don t 111111 t I ICt
orms on yw ool let us coal I now
and stop po ent a uks CALL

( 1) Good Refrtg erator 5200
Good Us ed McC ullough
Chan Saw S7 5 00

~JI)e(le

PI!. 992 2174

hea t ng your home outs de g hts heat ng your wa t er
d y ng your c lot hes etc We I se I you you own gas
\)ve Not on y hat we I thro w n a good 2 story house
v th 3 bedroomS and ba th n ce d nlng oo m and full
basement also over 50 acres of and w h a large
beau t fu pond stocked w th f sh Cal fo appo nt ment
Pr ced fo qu ck sa e at $37 500 00

KIDS

:. :".:.nl-

.....

AA_T~

STREET

An emergency

.. 0 ,...

BUDGET 3 Bedroom ove l y ca peted v ng r oom
w th sl d ng g ass doors off fa m y oom f eplace n ce
d n ng oom k tctren w h ots of cab nets A ll
r emodeled n s de &amp; ou t Corne r lot Close to school s &amp;
shopp ng area A
stea
a t $2 500 Show n by
a ppo n ment only

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Let u s
Free

Sr 11cuse Oh10
Ph !913993

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
JUST LISTED

lul~1•

fu\o.o

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

CUTTERS IWN NCS

LARRY LAVENDER

----

------

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Po k
o h of Pome oy
Rou e .33
La ge a !t Col 992 7~79

n od b c Why pay h gh e e
h w n e ? e us pay
b I
h en fa you One bed oom
1 om S 30 now aooble
V age Mo ro
h d n d MI
~ ee
M ddlepo
Te upho e
9 778
l:qua Ho s g Op
po u y

LAND

acres 60 ac es of coa l
some woods and m nera s

THREE FA M Y Co po Sole Sot
on ly Rust c H lis Sy ocuse a
~Stew a t es dance Boy s 20 WASHER AND 0 ye $75 o bes
b ke ch ld ens co h ng some
offe b42 'l 76
household opp on es 9 4 Ro n
973 CU B CADET T oc o S o m
o sh ne
doo w th sc een Co Rode ck
8 qn
G nm s 949 2834
Kenne th
Vande hoo f
16 FOO T CRESTL NER 60 hp
Hoge om 10 4
E n ude 197 350 Honda 1969
Novo 949 2526

----AKC SHETLAND
3 AND 4 RM fu n shed ond un
f u n shed op s Phone 992
543&lt;1

Good

SJ7 500

121 0 Wash nglon Blvd
Belpre Ohto

oell on o ned
Ewce en
con d on
Co
992 2427 day me o ~2 3580
of e A pm

ACRES

remade ed 8 oo m home
w h 2 ba th s mode n
k t chen F A Fu nace and
ga age New fences Onl y

POMEROY - 3 bed oom s

5 pm

~...

f ep aces 2 3 bdrms good
ne ghbo-rhood
n

2ns

--r.;-

973 CHEVROLET IMPAlA Sa on
Wagon B possenge o and
AM FM ado e,: e e shape
64 000 m e!i Co 949 4!273

co

VIRGIL B TEAFO~D SR
REAL TOR
216 E Second Street

GREEN BE ANS flo I unne s and
bunch P k you own b ng
Do s Fa m Pho e

FOUR ROOMS and be h Adul s
o y Nope s 992 5908

II Equ1pment Co. II

TEAFORDm

s ee s 742 2'174 o 742 222

CHE VEl lE

' 0n".

SWAIN

ITITITIHt

Service
,_ h• •1••

mode n k t
an.d bath
app ox 2 ac es barn cod
sto ag e
shed
pat a
ca po
ga den s pace

----HEAD o f eede

---

so e
Fu
com
age

r unc na An 11blt
Blown nto WilliS l AU n
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
RIPI.!CI M!Nr
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SDINGSOffiT!

NEW ONE yea old b e e home
3 bed com
bo h go age
e eo on oom
oc es
Eog e R dge 949 2745

TAK NG ORDERS lo I ewood and
s a ewood Col 843 2933

969

AVI"UI

.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

Blown

JUST LISTED - NEWER
RANCH TYPE 3' bd ms

SWEET POTATOES Robe
843 2432

992 34o2

0

----------,
I MEIGS I

Ph 992

FREE ESTIMATES

SEVEN YEAR old house 3 o es 6
ooms and bo h
m f om
Chesfe- 985 3950

p ck 843 23SJ

8 x 30 MAR l ETT HOUSE T a e
w h o opy
Needs epa
$60Q
Col
e en ngs
B

ong Bo

(10679104 c

THREE BEDROOM house fo
nee Eos e n h gh schoo
basemen
a ge v ng
w h I ep o e 1 o go
985 3867

TRACK OF TIMBER
nne bean s. $2 75 b

L nda J Spence
C erk
7 14 2 28 4 c

Bet y B c ~ es
Admns a xo t
Exta eot
na Hoba ck
Dece ased

RURAL HOME fo so e by ow e
K he
d
g oom double
I v ng oom fou bed ooms
ups a s bo h oom 9
eath
oo
J ~Jemen
onl u
noce fue o
fu ac e c y
woe
A so well o d se n
Col a house w h 2 oom dwe I
ng o e head La ge bo n 0
opp ox 3 ac es of and P c
ed o $35 000 f n Show by
oppo n meh on y 99'1 3469 a

-A so
- -Ha I

easu e

FOR SALE
The
es dence and
ea
prope y owned by
na
Hoback a the
me or he
decease
oca ed on S h
Str eet R ac ne Oh o w
be
so d at he off ces of C ow
C ow &amp; Po te
At orneys
Pomeoy Oho a
1000
A M on Wednesday Oc ober
12
977 P oper y appra sed
be so d o
at S7 500 00 and w
the h ghes b dde sub ec to
he app ova o the Probate
Cou t Te ms ot sa e cash n
hand on day of sa e Buyer
howeve
w
hAile
reasonab e me o a ange
nanc ng and nsp.ec t e
Aso
etgeaor
bed oom su e couch char
and tab es o be so d
o
b dder
A.pp a se
h ghes
va ue 5700 00

MUST SE l h s 3 bed co n 2
bo h sp
aye w h o he ex
as P.r ced a be ow ac uol
eo e o e clue lo qu J..
so e
N e d e o powe
pia s $4.:1 000 99'1 2492

APP LES F ZPATR CK 0 ho ds
S a e Rou e 689
Ph one
W kes
e 669 3785

C erk Treasurer
A ce
fed check payab e
o

Sale 12315

Po meroy Oh

992 3439

Good co d o
-4 39 L co
S Md

~ep a

Gravely Tractor
Sales

c

Separa e sealed proposa s

he

qu e a

Sale S893
Kubota

D1ese l Tra c tor

L st S289S

of

M ddlepo

S

KEROSINE Ia np and
heo e s
ep ocemen
po s
Ch n e~ man e s w c;ks e
992 3SSI
S op n to demo s o o o d
SPACIOUS THREE bed oom ho e
I ee co a ague
Mou on
4 y s o d Fee u es o I he ex
l eo he a d Ge e a S o e os Beau fu oca on on 4
04 06 W Un o S
A he s
ac
es 992 2996 fo mo e n
oh a 5n 5478
o mo on

992 3&lt; 0

rece \led al

STORY 3 bed oo
I One
house F A
no e ~ o
w n
dews I ep ace n M dd opo
Phone 99'1 3457

FIVE FOOT S';sh hog Se of 4
p ow!ii Wh pool e ge o o
a se S 00 42 '1 61

s o $0 e

c e k:

Ia olu 0 do
o e I Me oe CQU
Vo Pt o e (304 7 2
304 77'} 3127

COUNl RV o
o d w
e ud
ed wood
wo e n d good o
cess
Mo oe Cou y W Vo
S 000 down
o
(304 777
3101 a 30-4 ) 772 3'127

NO 11 EM fOO o go o oo s al
W I buy
p e e Q.f o pie e
househo d Ne.... used o a
ques Ma r-! ~ Fu
u e 20 N
2 d S
M dd epa
Phone
Q92 6370

mea s

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

w

y
3 O'Jo

BEAUTIFUL
HOME SITES

b o

')

OF

Routlt No
Route l l

Business Services
nsuiJbon Serr~es

SMALl a
0

GUN SHOOT Rae ne Gun C vb
e e y Su
a e noon Fo o
Chod~
guns on y Asso ed

.

••

lo

~Y

Rag

bo t
e M ld epo
I Pho e QQ']
OU!&gt;U

CO NS CURRl:NCY
pocl..e wa ches o d don
e and god We
a do dl:' s I c o

Reedsv lie Oh o
318 6289

odu

NAME

L-----------~--------------- - ---------~1 -

0

ADDRESSERS
WANTED
mi'd a e y Wo to. o hom
o
e .. pe ~' e
e e $0 y
e
pO)&lt; W e A e o
Se
e 6350 Po k lo e Su e
269 Oo as I X 7513

- --

tor Sal"

A 1.... ~fUER

p

ORDINANCE NO 4U

Let The Want-Ads Turn Unwanted
Items Into Cash
...

WAN'l.'AD
CHARGES

FU lER BRUSH

..

(c) Tha
arrange men t s
hav e been or w
be made
. wJ h and agreements ob
llit a ned from al publ c ut I ty
.. com pan es whose 1 nes or
-sf_ru ctu es w
be a ff ec ted by
. tF,e said mprovemen and
- sad com panes ha ve agreed
to ma)te
any
and
a ll
""hecess.! y plan t remoila s or
_,.ea rr angem ent s n such a
....manner as to be clea of eny
construct on ca led to by th e
~ 1ans of sad
mprovem en t
.and sa d com pan es have
.-.gre ed
o
make
suc h
ea rr lt ngement s
necessa ry
-rtnmed ate y
af er
..not t ca on Oy sa d v age or
• the Oepartm ent of Trans
._port at on
d ) That t s h ereby agreed
.. that he v 1 age sha 1 at ts
-ow n ex pen se
m ak e al
r ea rrang eme nts of wat er
..,ma ns serv ce
nes
f re
- hydrant s
va ve
boKes
.-.sa n ary sewers or other
mun cpa ly owned u 1 t es
• and or any appurtenances
- thereto wh ch do no com p y
he
prov sons
of
• with
0 r ec ve 26 A whe her n
.. ride or outs de the corporate
lim ts as m ay be necess ary to
conform
o t he sa d
m
proilem en t
and
sa d
' rearrang ements sha
be
at suc:h
t me
as
1 done
r eq ues ed by th e Depar t m en t
• of T ansportat on Eng neer
(e That the construct on
re co ns ru ct on
a nd or
rearran ge m en t
ot
b oth
pub c y and pr vale y owne d
ut It es referr e d to n su b
... sec Ions (c and (d) above
shall be done
n such a
mann er as not to nterfere
undu y with th e ope a on of
the contractor construct ng
the
mprovement and all
ba ckf ill ng of trenches made
necessa y by such ut I ty
rearrangem e n ts she I b e
p erform ed n acc ordance
w th the prov slons of the
Ohio Department of Trans
porta tl on construct on and
Mater al Spec: f c:a t on s and
• sha be sub ect to approval
by th e Sta e
(f) That he n sta a on of
~ 1 ut 1 ty tacl t es or, th e
'figh of way sha
conform
w th tile r equ irem en s of the
• Fede r a l
H ghway
Ad
mIn stra on
Po cy and
Procedu r e Memorandum 30 4
U t 1 t y Relocat ons a nd
Adlus ments
and
the
• Oepartmen
of
Tran s
portatlon s ru es on Ut I t y
Acc omm oda t on
g
Th a t sa d VI age
h er eby agreC!s th a t he sa d
Oepartmen
of
Tra n
• sporta on o f the sta e ot
Ot1 o sha I be a nd s here by
sailed harm ess from any and
all damages or c a ms thereof
ar s ng f om or grow ng out
of
th e ce rt f ca tio n
or
obi gat ens made o r agreed t o
(d
n Sect ons (a) (b1 &lt;c
• and (e her e nabove
Th s ord nance s hereby
~dec:lared to be an eme gency
measure by reason of
he
need f o eJO;Ded t na h ghway

SEC TION 2 The amo unt of
energy used by eltch amp s
ca cu a ted on lhe bass of a
n ght b urn ng eve r y day of
the year or a ppro:.; mae Y
40 00 hour s per yea r (an
ave age of 333 3 hours per
month) In add on to he
charges se t for h n Sec on
above th e Com pan y w I
eac h mon h
a pp y
he
follow ng
FUEL
COS T
AD
JUSTME~T The f ue cos to
be cha rg ed un d e
ra te
sc hed u les l ha spec fy fu el
ad ustm en t n conform t y
Cos
Ad
w th t h s Fue
1ustme n ca u se shall b e
actua a lowab l e f uel costs
per k lowatt ho"U r determ ned
und er pr ov sons of Rule 260f
he c om m ss on s Code of
R:u es and Regu Iat ons
As of January 5 1977 the
a ow able fue cos s S 010863
per KWH and the target
thermal eft c ency required
by Rule 26 s 91 82 KWH

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS CDURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO

ROBERT EUGENE EBLIN
ET AL
Plllnhffs
Y$

KEITH DOUGLAS ET AL
Defendants
case No 16 561
NOTICE BY

PUBLICATION

TO Keith Doug as whose
last known address was
Route 4 Pomeroy
Oh o
45769
Kenneth M
Hailer
whose as known address
was Route 4 Pomeroy Oh o
45769
Ronald
Harbour
whose last known address
was Route 4 Pomeroy Oh o
.45769
and the unknown
eKecutors
adm nlstrators
heirs legatees dev sees of
MMBTU
The pertinent part of Rule Keith Doug as Decelt!ed
26 of the Comm sslon s CoG• you are hereby notified that
of Rules .,nd Regulat ons s you have been Defendants In
ava lab e upon request
a \ega action ent tied Robert
E:u~ene Eblin H yll a J Eb in
SEC TION 3 Paym en tor
the
service
furn shed and American Economy
ne reund er sha I be mode Insurance Companv vs Ke th
month y n acc ordance w th Douglas Kenneth M Haller
b II ~ endered th eref or by the Ronald Harbour Citizens
Company a he end of each Natlona
Bank
and the
ad
per od each paymen to be unknown ex ecutors
due w h n 1S days of he minlstrators hers ega tees
subm ss on
of
the
b I and
dev sees
of
Ke th
Doug as Deceased This case
ther ef or overdue paymen1s
ro bear n erest at th e rae of has been ass gned Case No
6 per ce nt per annum unt I
16 568 and s pending in the
pa d Shou d the Mun c plt ty
Court of Common Pleas of
default n tou (4 success ve Me os County
Pomeroy
payment s he Com pany may
Oh o 45769
at any t m e dlsc on t nue
The objec of the Com pta n t
serv ce ner eu nder w hout
s to demand a money
not ce so long as any defau t
lodgment
aglllnst
the
e)( sts
pro I/ ded
hQwever
Defendan t s n the amount of
tha no char ge sha I be made
$102 113 ~6 and to se I the
by he ('.,ompany for se v ce
real estate now t tied n the
he reund er dur ng any per od
names of Kenneth M Haler
n wh ch se rvi ce
s so
and Rona d Harbour and to
d scent nu ed In t he ev ent of
apply the proceeds of said
such default the Com pany
rea
estate sa e
o the
upon w ften not ce to th e
damages awarded said rea
Mun c pal y m,ay te m nate
estate be ng lofated In
th s agreement
Columb a Township and the
SECT ON 4 The Company
demand s to foreclose a
agrees du r ng the
erm
nterest owned by you and for
hereof o ns all ad d t ona
costs
s reef I ghts of the typ e and
You are r equired to ansWer
s ze spec fed above when
the Complaint With n twenty
author ze d
o do so by
e ght days after the
lUI
resotut on of
he Coun c I
pub\ cat on of this notice
Prov ded howe'ller that th e
which w I be publi!hed on ce
new s ree
ghts S'lall be
each week for six success ve
located w t h n 250 teet of a
weeks The last publl ca t on
of the
d str bu t on c r ev
w 11 be made on November
Company
11th 1977 and the twenty
SEC TION 5 The min mum
eight days for answer will
number of s reet 1 gh ts sha
commJ~"nce on that date
be not less tha n the sum of th e
In case of your failure to
tot a number sp ec f ed abo\ole
answer or otherw se respond
and wh eneve
add t ona
u requ red by the Oh o Rules
I ghts are
nstal ed
the
of c v 1 Pro ~edure ludomen t
m n mum number of llgh s
bY defa.ul 'w I be rendered
ncreased
ac
sha 1 be
aga nsf you for the r et ef
cord ngly
demanded In the Comp alnt
SECT ION ti
t S further
agreed
hat the Co mpa ny
L arry E Spencer
sha ll move s eet I gh ts o
Me gs c ounty
n ~w loca ons or cha nge he
Common Pleas
type of f x ures to anot her
Clerk of Court
ype spec fed above as
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
reques ted by he Cou nc by
(10 ) 7
4 21 28 (I ) .. 11
r eso l ul o n
p ov ded

RVESTOF BRR~RI
AT

RIGGS USED CARS
Located on St Rt 7

Chesler Oh10

985 4100

ROGER RIEBEL or RAY RIGGS

CARS
Due to t he great response of Karr &amp; Van Zandt s Great Used Car
Slae they are gomg to cont1nue 1t for the1r 11th b1g week to bnng you
the greatest savmgs yet on these value rated used cars

74 CADI
SEDAN DEVILLE

73
73
73
73

DODGE CHARGER LOADED
2195
PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 DR HT - 11895
BUICK CENTURY 4 DR
'1895
11095
PLY FURY I 4 DR
73 PONTIAC LEMANS 2 DR
'2495
73 MERCURY MARQUIS BROUGHAM- 11695
72 PONTIAC GRANVILLE 4 DR. _ _ _ '1295
1

71 BUICK REVERE
'895
71 DODGE DART, 6 CYL, AUTO
'995
71 OPEL 4 CYL 4 SPEED
'895
68 PONTIAC 4 DR. ___:_~-___;,.-:----:'395
67 CORVAIR 4 DR
'500

'3695

•2995

73
COUPE DEVILLE

72 PONTIAC

V nyl roof fu

power
Was S3800

s1ereo

73 FORD CUSTOM F100 AUTO-- 12695
74 FORD F250, ¥4 TON _v ~·~to~~· c - '2895
71 FORD f 350 1 TON Cab &amp; Chass s 11895
70 DODGE % TON, 4 SPD, _ _ _ '995
61 CHEVY ¥4 TON 4 SP~_ _•__ 1395
1
TRUCK TOPPER
195 00

a

leMANS
r

NOW '2595

73 PONTIAC
CATALINA 2 DR

73 PLYMOUTH
SATELLITE

FRIDAY
oj

5 00-Gunsmoke 8 Mister
Rogers Ne ghborhood 20 33 Hogan s Heroes TO

3o-Brady Bunch 8 10
Emergency

t ques 33

7 0()-Truth or Cons 3 Cross W ts 4 Liars Club 6
Muppel Show 8 News 10 To Tell the Truth 3
G ligan sIs 15 Almanac 20 Ma~lng Things Gr ow
33
7 3G-Porler Wagoner 3 Gong Show 4 Candid Camera
6 Proce (S R ghl 8 MacNe I Lehrer Report 20 33
Fam y Feud 10 Name Thl Tune 13 Pop Goes the
Country 15
a 00-Baseball Play Oft 3 IS Donny &amp;Marie 6 13
Wonder Woman 8 10 Washington Week n Revtew
20 33
8 3()-Wall Street Week 20 33
9 00-Movle Black Market Babies 6 13 Canal Zone
33 Lowell Thoma s Rememb ers 20
9 3()-Somethlng Personal 20 10 00-News 20
TO 3()-Monty Python s F lyong C reus 20
II 0()-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 1S
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Baretla 6 13 Mash 8
Movte

Frankenste i n Mulst

Movte Channel 4 -

5 &amp; 1 PM Chino lPG)
9 &amp; 11 PM - Twilights Last Glea"ling I R)
Cable Channel 5 7 PM - Paul Gaudino Family F lness
7 3()-Wrestllng
B 3()-Modern Sporls
9 3()-Test1mony T me
10 OG-700 Club
SATURI:MV OCTOBERS 1977
6 oo-Sunrlse Semester 8 10
6 30-Marlo &amp; the ~glc Movie Machine 4 TV
Classroom 8 U S Farm Report 10 Kenlucky
Afield 13
7 ()()-,Saturday Report 3 Fun for Everyone 6 Ghost
Busters B 'f'~bl c Po Icy Forums 10 Weekend
Special 13
•
7 3G-Pink Panther 3 15 World of Survival 4 Jetsons
6 Ark II 88 oo--&lt;: B Bears 3 4 15 Superfrlends
613 Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10 Sesame St 20
9 DO-Young Sentinels 3 4 15 Scodby s Loll A Lymplcs
6 13 Mr Magroo 8 10 Mister Rogers 20
9 3o-Archle Sabr na,hll5 Skateblras 8 TO Elec Co
20
10 ()(}-()nee Upon a Classic 20
1b ~Muhammad All 3 4 15 Space Academy B TO
Consum~r Survival Kit 20
11 DO-Thunder 3 415 Krofft Supershow 13 Big Blue
Marble 6 Balman Tarzan 8 10 Crocketts Vldory
Garden 20
11 3G-Search 8. Rescue 3 4 15 Hot Dog o
12 OO-Baggy Pants &amp; the Nitwits 3 15 Movie Texas
Across the River 4 Weekend Speclal6 VIewpoint
B In the Know 10 Action News for Kldsl3
12 3G-Ret:ll-iand Gang 3 1S Fat Albert 8 10 American
L fe Style 13
1 oo-Jelsons 3 American Bendstand 13 Point of
V1ew6 Secrelsoflsls8 FamllyAflalr10 Fllm15
Romagnoli sTable 33
1 3G-Frank Ellwood Footbal 3 NFL Ga"'e of the
Week 6 Bob Jones B M ovie S.• of Grass 10
L ckety Spilt 13 Beg nnlng to ~ow 33
2 OO-Th sIs the NFL 3 Wide 'Vjflt,o,; of SROrls 613

Was $1495

'1795

NOW '1295

75 OLDS 88
ROYALE CPE

72 FORD
GALAXIE 500

72 DELTA 88

Ar

2 dr H T

WasSI695

75 PINTO
WAGON
6cy
Was $2995

CPE

A r autQ m at c

'595

NOW '1495

73 CHEVY NOVA
SS COUPE

71 FORD

'4395

LTD

V 8 automat c P S

•

1

NOW '2795

'495

1995

74 CHEVY
NOVA

72 CHEVY IMPAlA

74 CHEVY VEGA
GT CPE

4 DR, A1r

4 speed

V 8 auto v n y l roo
Was $2195

4d r

Was S1995

NOW

NOW '1695

71 OLDS

73 DODGE
CHARGER

VISTA CRUISER
Gold meta I c

Coupe

Power&amp;a r
Was $1995

a r

WasS2195

NOW '1495

NOW '1695

5
72 BUICK ELEC
HT CPE

75 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

73 CUTlASS
4 DR
Ar
Was$2495

Was S2295

Power &amp; A r
Was ~ 469 5

NOW 13995

•

NOW '1

Great Savings

74 BUICK
LESABRE

On 77

75 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT CUSTOM
a r

4 Dr

Ar

Models

'2195

'3495

1-NEW 98 OLDS REGENCY COUPE
2-77 98 OLDS REGENCY 4 DR (DEMO'S)
1-CUTlASS SUPREME 4 DR (DRIVERS ED CAR)
1-ROYALE 4 DR (USED)
1-CUTlASS CRUISER WAGON (USED)
See one of these courteous salesmen
orGeorgKarr

Be Destroyed

10
12 0()-ABC News 33 2 05--Kolak 8 12 3()-Janak
33
12 4G-Lohman 'So Bar k ley 6 Ironside 13 I 00Midn ghl Special 3 4 IS Movie The Tomb of
L ge a 10
1 4G-News 13 2 3G-News 3 Mary Hartman 10
3 oo-Mov1e The Add ng Machine 3 4 4$-Movle
Three Into Two Won t Go 3
6 3G-Bew tched 3

HT CPE

•2095

One 13

s 3()-News 6 Elec Co 20 33 Mary Ty er Moore 10
6 0()-News 3 4 B 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
Cpnsumer Surilival K t 33
6 3oLNBC News J 4 15 ABC News 13 Carol BurneH &amp;
Fr ends 6 CBS News 8 10 As WE See II 20 An

72 CHEVY IMPAlA

Ar

SPCpeAr

72 OLDS

TELEVISION
VIEWING

V ny roof
Wa s S2795

A

NOW '290D

TRUCKS
75 CHEV SCOlTSDALE PKG auto '3295
73 CHEV CUSTOM C/10_ _ _ '2695

COUPE

Low mlleaQe

&amp; Van Zandt

You II Ltke OUr Quahty Way of Domg Busmess

Movie

GMC F nancmg
-

Open Evenongs Unt 16 00- T 15 P m Sal

992 5341

Tower ot TeHor

4

t.!lcers B Film 15

Making Things row 33
2 3G-Movle Pardners B Antiques ~3
3 oo-star Trek :J, Film 15 t{u~ples to Groupers 33
3:-JQ-College Football Pregame Show 6 13 Movi e
Fear n the Night 4 Photogography 33
1 4s--College Football 6 13 4 DO-Movie Escape to
Mindanao 3 lt1,jlque F urn lure Workshop 8 Thai
Nalhv l• Music 10 Wrest I"" 15 Jody s Body Shop
33
1\,
4 36---Spor ~ .:2pectacutar 8 Nasnv lie on tne KudO 10

Catch 33 33
s OO-Siar Trek 4 Pop Goes the Country 7 10 Wally s
Workshop 15 Zoom 33
~
s 3G-WIId Kingdom 15 Porter Wa~oner 10 'Once
Upo""" Classic 33
6 00-News 3 4 10 Lawrence Welk 8 God Has the
Answer 1~ Images of Aging 33
6 30-NBC N.... s 3 4 15 CBS News 10
7 oo-AII Star Anything Goes J Lawrence Welk 4 1S
Hee Haw 6 8 Bugs Bunny ID "wild Kingdom 13
World War I 33
7 3G-WeTh nk You Should Know 3 M us c 33 All Star
Anything Goes !0 Snakes VIllain or VIctim 1J
8 oo-Bion c Woman 3 4 15 Fi sh 6 13 Bob Newharl
8 10 Poisoning ol Mlch gan 33
B 3o-&lt;lperatlon Peltlcdat 6 13 We ve &lt;&gt;RI Each Other
8 10
9 oo-Mov e Rio Lobo 3 4 15 St'"kY 8. Hutch 6 13
Jeffersons 8 10 Making lelevlsion Dance 33
9 3o-Tony Randall 8 )O
10 OO-Love Boat 6 13 Carol Burnell&amp; 0 Della Reese
&amp; Woody Herman In Concerl 33
11 DO-News 6 8 10 13 Marshal Football 33
11 1$-ABC News 6 11 3G-Movle The Hel benders
6 Movie The Blg Game 8 Woody Hayes
Football 0 Movie Thunder Alley 13
11 35--Film 15 11 so-Movie Five Finger Exercise
3 Saturday Night 4 15 12 DO-Move Machine
GunMcCaln 10
1 oo-Janakl 33 1 15--M ov e The Caslle of Terror
13 1 2Q-Mov e In Enemy Country 4 I 3G-Th s
"\ile NFL 6
1 5()-N.ry Hartman 3 2 15-Mary Hartman 3
2 55- ABC
News
13
2
.t ?o-Mov e

ugh

Marvm

R tver of Mysterv

3

6 oo-Fl3i 3

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 PM - Nickelodeon (PG)
9&amp; 11 P M - Man Who Fell to Earth I Rl

Pomeroy

.PUBLIC NOTICE
Fo lo w ng Sec on 5713 0
and 57 15 6 of the Oh o
r ev sed
he cha ng e
t1

va h.la on for he ax year
977 ha s been reil sed
o
comp y w h the o der of he
ta,.; com m ss oner o he State
of Oh o
The change n va lues a lso
re f eel the new cons uct on
for th e tax year 977
Va ues of new cons uc ion
and he change n c:omp ance
w h he o de o t t he ax
com m ss one I' c an now be
v ewed a the off ce of th e
coun y aud or
Howard E Fra nk
Me gs Co Aud or

110 7

3 18 20 Jtc

A thought for the day

Amenca n poet James
Wlutcomb R ley sa1d Th~
npest peach 1s highest on the

tree

LAFF A DAY

T red? Listless? Perhaps you
need a sea voyage lo perk you
up

�I!)-The Daily Sent mel, Mlddlep-;rt-Pomeroy. 0 .. frtday, O.:t . 7,

News •• in Briefs

:'!!'!__ --------------:----.-------:

Area Deaths

l.

:

(Continued from page l)
.
will allow a resumption of the Gene\' a peace talks wtlh West
Rooert
iJ)IOY l .__G,bbs .
CHARLES E. CARROLL
' Bank mayors taking part in a Palestinian delegatwn ._Both
·LONG BOTTOM Charles Syracuse :" Mrs .
Gary
Israeli and PLO officials said Thursday they were wtlhn~ to Edmond Car.roll. 64. d te-d (Gloria) Harbour. Iron
.
Ohio : ·
Mn
accept 'an arrangement in ~hich tlw Pa~~stlman mayors of · unexpectedly at hts Route 1 ~ ton
Ronald tC athy) Zerkle ,
Long Bottom , horne !hurs
un the West Bank of J ordan would jom the talks. perhaps day
Mason ; six sons. John R.,
a.s part of an all-Arab or Jordanian delegation. ·
.
Born tn Mas sachusette, he Gallipolis · Larry E ., N ~w
- · Israel(foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, m appearance m i.vas a retired t-mploye of the Haven Michael L. , Pomt
StalE' of Ot1•o and a mem~r Pleasa'n t; Ronald L. . with tile
Chicago and Atlanta. said the Jewtsh state wtll allow the PLO of
the Veterc1ns ot Foretgn u S. Army in Germany :
to designate delegatC'S to Grnrva. as long as they _are not r1.0 Wars . He was - pt'HNed:- 1-t:! Trmothy R and Joseph F .,
death by his p-arents , five MasOn ; one sister. Mrs. H. P .
members.
brothers and three s i st~rs . {Gladys,) Johnson . Crown
Surv i ving are his w•fe. Ci ty ; three brothers, Jack
VALLE\' FORGE , PA. - THE CHIEf SCIENTIST at the
Minnie ' Ours Carroll ; three and Bil l. Gallipolis ; Ga.rdner ,
federal Center for Disease Control in Atlanta says the_mam sisters, Eleanor Echart , Warren ; 18 grandchildr en
qllestions in studying Legionnaires di_sease i~&lt; .~ etermtmng tts Somfnervllte . Mass .; Martha and one grea4Jrandson . .
Two davghters , Jenmfer
Knowlton . Everett ~~s ,;
"source in nature" lmd " how 1t gets stirred up .
.
. DL David w. frazer, speaking TI1ursday at a senunar on and Rose Carroll , Wm - Lynn anct Beverly Kay, and
brot her,
Herm~n ,
,. Mass .I
sev_en one
respiratory diseaSes. said research done smce the outbreak ?[ chesier
daughters , Barbara Vtp - Campbell , preceded ller rn ,
the disease at an Americim Legion convention tn Pluladelphta perman . Gahann_a ; Mary death .
Mrs. Roush was a member
in July, 1976 has resulted in the _!solation of th&lt;:__?"ctenum Brown , Sommer vtlle ; Kay
of
the Mason Homemakers.
Brown
,
Alaska
;
Margaret
which causes the illness. But sttll. he satd. the;_ sour~ m
Fvneral service5 were held
Givens
.
Walburn
.
Ma~s . :
nature" o[ the disease is not known, although he added, Tbe Jean George . Sommervtlle ; this ilf1ernoon at - the
disease does · not spread fr om one. person to another_. Th~~ Unda Armstrong , Ma ine. and Foglesong Funeral Ho~ e
Gayle 6ilmore. Medford , with the Rev . Robert Marr~g
suggests it is outside o[ man- in a btrd. arumal or [ree hvm~.
Mass .; four sons , John , oflicialing .· Bur:- ial followed_tn
Memorra l
il mington , Mass .; Charles , the · Kirkland
WASHINGTON - THE UN ITED MINE WORKERS W
Eaton, Mass .; Paul. Can) - Gardens .
presented a long list of demands to the bltlnrunous coa.l . bri dge, Mass ., and Robert ,
industry Thursday at the opening of talks on a new co~tract. Sommervi lle . Mass ..· four
President Carter's aides vtew these as the toughest labor talks step -child r en . Kathleen
East Liver poo l 1
of 1977,iggra\'ated by turmoil in \he union~~ a dran1atic nse . Coursin,
Wandc, Donaldson . Findlay ;
SARAH WATSON
in non-union coal production ~as the natwn s energy need s Josep h i ne
Stepf"ie ns o n ,
Sarah Alice Watson , 8J, of
Parke rs burg r
Wa y n e North Canton, formerly ?f
expand The current pact expires Dec. 6.
Th~ demands presented by UMW President Arnold Fle min g. Sy r acuse ; dfl Letart , died Wednes~a~ 1n
daughter , Cindy Lou the ·Akron City Hosp dal,
Miller. called [or ;,.ore tlme off. pay of at least $100 a day. • adopted
F1tch ;
two
step .
.
equal henefits for pensioners and full health beneft_t coverage grandchi ldren , Michae l .Akron
Born Jan . 10, 1694,' 1n
_ including care provided by medicme men Indian mmers Flem ing
and
Ch ar l es \Letart , she was the daughter
in the West. The most controversial. unb~nding demand of the Walbrown ; 60 gr andchildren . of the late Da vid and
ve great -grandchil dren; 14 Elizabeth Butcher Roush .
m,IJQ()-me{ll\)er union would provide •mtners Wlth a lmuted fiother
step -grandch ild ren,
She wils preceded in death
right to strike over local gn eva nces . A strike could he and
eig ht
step -great - by her first husband , Willia m
authorized only by a majority vote of the local members .
grandch ildren .
and
secon~
Gilliland ,
Funeral services wi ll be_at husband , Clyde Wjr;tson .
3 p .m . Saturday at the Ewmg
Survivors are a son,
Funeral Home with t he Rev . Harland Pir l Gill il and , North
O i ler offic iating . Canton ; four grandchi ldren
afford not to. The improper · George
Burial w1l! be in Ba ld Knob and
sev~n
g.reat use of moner will cause great Cemetery . Fr iends .may call grandchi ldren
; four ni eces,
(Continued from page 61
heartache . The wise invest- at the funera l home at any Mrs . Fred (Mildre&lt;ll Tr.lpp.
'
the Lord's work . This is the . ment of. your money in God's ti me . .
Mrs . Cecil (Ha zell Smith .
Mrs . Mary Harris , all of
way to insure yourself a work will lead to blessings in
Mason ; Mrs. Ora McCulloch ,
. successful life. You ca n't this life and treasure in the
MRS . LAWRENCE ROUSH
Wheeling ; two nephews .
outgive God. The more you life to t.'Ome.
Mrs . Lawrence Roush , 59 , Robert Roush . New Haven ;
gi\'e. the more He will give
These words to the wise will ~s on, died Tuesday at her Paul Roush, Po.int Ple~ sa n t .
Funeral serv1ces writ be
back. Some say that they be sufficient. - Rev. Tim residence .
from
"the
Born Feb . 5, 1918, in Swan conducted
can't afford to gi1•e 10 per- Smith, Racine Circuit of
Creek in Gal!ia County . she Foglesong Fun er"l Hom~
cent . The truth is, you ca n't U.M.C .
was the daugh ter of John C. Saturda y at 1 p.m. with _the
and Bel va M . Wavgh Camp - Rev .
Robert
. Mar1~g
bell, Gal li polis.
officiating. Burial w1ll be rn
Surviving in addit ion to her the Beech Grove Cemetery.
parents are her husband , Pomero y.
Lawrence E.; five daughters ,
iends may ca ll Fri da y at
Mr s. Ja ck ((eci!) Johnson . theFrfuneral
home from 7 to 9
Metropolis . Il l. ; Mrs. Ja ck p .m .
fBe ttv) Fox , Cl ifton ; Mrs.

to"""

Golfers in

second at

Ox Bo.w
Meigs Htgll golfers ~ame tn
SCC&lt;Jnd iii a three-team field
Thurt!day playing the Oxbow
Golf Course at Belpre against
Belpre High and Warren
Local High .
Jim Goodwin of Belpre was
medalist with a 38 lor nine
holes. His team finished with
167 strokes; Meigs had 185,
and Warren Local boys
soared to 196. Lance Oliver's
39 led Meigs.
Other Meigs scocing was by
Chuck Follrod 42, Chuck
Kennedy 51 , Rudolfo Diaz 53
and Scott McKinney 63.
Meigs' golfing record stood
at 10-17 going into its next
match whi.ch is today, also on
the OXbow course, in tlhe
sectional tournament against
Gall~lis, Belpre, Warren
Local Chesapeake, New
Lexinliton, Sheridan, South
Point ,
Fairland
and

One-hundred and f\lty-&lt;!lght
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED - Warre n steer calves averaging 447
Baker, Reedsville; Norma .Jl:OUOds sold for an average of
Goodwin , Pomeroy; Janel J!j9 .15 per hundred weight
Sigman, Middleport; Oavtd Tuesday evening during the
Gloeckner, Racine ;· Gilbert aMual SEO Feeder Ca lf Sale
Wilson, The Plains; Linda held at the Ohio Valley
Brunty. Minersville; Grace Uvestock Yards in Gallipolis.
Ond hundred and six
Roush , Racine; Mary Greer,
yearlings steers with an
Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Owen average weight of 642 pounds .
Watson, Dewey Smith, Jr., sold hr $34.74 per hundred
Mabel Niemeyer, Thelma weight .
White, Goldie Carson, Bessie
Barnhart.
Holzer Medical Center
tDIS&lt;harges OcL 81
Norman Baxter, Ruby Bell,
Angela Canterbury, Richard
Cremeans, James Fields, Jo
Anne Ha'rbour, RuUt Harris,
Jones ,
Elelne
Robert
Kingery, Dorothy McClain,
Claudya Muller, Hazel
Phillips, Mrs. Paul Rice and
son, Kathryn Rollins, Donna
Sheline, Dale Sisson, Debra
Sullivan, Mrs. Carl Tennant
and son, Delphia Tribby,
James Waulk , Ruby Work-

Apple Grove
News Notes

A checkbook . . tells who. how much , when.
Open a Checking Acc'?unt soon . .•
At the bank ... where you re the boss.

~pomeror

rutland
, blllt*S plain•
•

r.atlona

bank

the bankd
theceniUrJ
•• tiJhed 1112

SUSPECT HELD
ELYRIA , Ohio (UP[~
Daniel Petroff, 32, Elyri~.
was shot to deaUt at a home
here late Thursday night,
police reported . Police said
one suspect is being held for
questioning . Petroff was shot
once in the head, police said.
•
NAME OMITTED
The name · ' of John
Pa squale, officer in ·charge,
was omitted from the list of
members from the American
Legion, Post '!1, who raises
the flag at Memorial Field
prior to GAHS football
games.

By Mrs. Herbert Ro~sb
Mr . and Mrs . Keueger of
Geissen , Germany, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Smith and daughter
Donna, Millvale, Pa. , spent
Thursday tilt Saturday with
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Smith.
Mrs. Iva Orr was a Sunday
dinner guest of Mrs. ~lice
Balser recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Charl es
Burri , Mr. and · Mrs. Gary
Hysell , Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Wilson and fa mily
were Scmday guests of Mrs.
v '
Kathryn Wilson and fatiJilY .
Mr. and Mrs . Clayton Hill and had not seen her
Roll ins, Parkersburg, Mr. cousin for 30 years.
and Mrs. Dan Barnette of
Mr , and Mrs. Herbert
Langsville visited Mr. and Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr were
Mrs . Dorsa Parsons.
shopping at Heck's Store at
Mr. and Mrs. William Point. _Pleasant . Saturday
Findley and sons Todd and evening.
Ronni e of Lancaster, 0 .,
Mrs. Margaret Gloeckner,
visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elsie Davis, ParkersMrs. Russell Findley and burg; Ros alee Story of
fa.mily recently.
Darwin and Millie Ripley of
Parsons
of Char,leston visited .Mrs. Ada
George
Ashla nd. Ohio, David Hupp of Norris at Chri stia n AnCla rksburg, Va., visited Mr. chorage Nursing ·Home at
and Mrs . Dorsa Parsons.
Marietta Sunday.
Mrs . Dallas Hill .enMrs. John Hill a nd
tertained at dinner Monday · daughter Unda· were shopevening in honor of her ping at Parkersburg Monday.
husband, Dallas, who was
Mr . and Mrs . George
celebrat ing hls birthday . Connolly and daughter of
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Syracuse visited Everette
Marshall Roush, Jody and Connolly Monday.
Cortney ; Mr. and Mrs .
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold An·
Darrell . Norris and Tracy, derson have purchased the
John Hill, Dean and Art Hill. former Johh Quillen home in
Mr. and Mrs. Robert FuUer Letart from Russell Quillen.
of South Point visited Mrs . · The comm unity was sorry
Fuller's cousin, Mr. and Mrs . to hear of the · death of a
Da llas Hill Sunday. Mr$. . former neighbor and friend,
Fuller was the former Julia Edward Miller, who was
buried Saturday at Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Mrs. Violet Bul!h has a
dogwood tree In blooni that
has never bloomed this time
of year before. __
George Hunt of Cheshire
visited Mrs. Ma~gie Hunt
Sunday . Mr. and Mrs. Elza
Birch also visited Mrs. Hunt.

JAYCEEs IN CHARGE
The Meigs Jaycees wUl be
in charge of the punt, pass
and kick competitlon at the
Meigs Junior High field in
Middleport
Saturday
beginning at 10 a .m. for boys
and girls between 8 and 13
inclusive. Registration and
is
free .
competition
Registering is at Dan
Thompson Ford in Mid·
dleport or the Countr y
Cousins in lower Pomeroy .

Harrisonville
Society News

HOTDOG
• PEOP"
LE

A"_.,.,.

FILES SUIT
Leigh A. Cline, Rt. I,
Reedsville, has liled suit for
dlvorce from John Cline, Rt.
I, Reedsville, according to an
entry in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court . Robert
Uoyd Birchfield, Middleport ,
··itnd Unda Diane Birchfield,
for
Middleport,
filed
dlsoolution of their marriage .

POMEROY - Heating bill credits
provided by House Bill230 for some Meigs
and Gallia residents were explained in an
ana lysis Saturday by Meigs Caunty
Auditor Howard Frank.
.
Mr. frank offered these points : '
H.B. 230 provides for a 25 percent
credit on a heating bill for all persons
receiving the homestead exemption and
haVing an income of $7",(Ml0 or'less. Renters
are also eligible for the credit. The utilities
and heating rue\ companies will be
reimbursed for the credit by the State
from a speed up of the collection of the
public utility tax.
Who is eligible?
- Those who have a continuing or

•

\

approved application under s~ctio n 323.152

---------------.-----------;1,
Elberfelds In ·Pqmeroy

GAHS QUEEN AND Al"rENDANTS - Mi» Lisa Niday. ce nter, 1977 Gallia
Academy High School horne-coming -queen, is nanked by her attendants, Don~
Myers,le(t, second runnerup, and Mandy Dalley, right. first runnerup. See deta1ls
on page 2.

OPEN ·FRIDAY TIL 8 _P.M~

•

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE
SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICES
OUR STOREWIDE 113th ANNIVERSARY SALE_

AGENCY TO CLOSE
All Gallla-Meigs Community Action Agency offices
and programs will be closed
on Monday, Oct. 10, in observance of Columbus Day,
according to Joseph D.
Barsotti, director.

(

• You can sa~e plenty on men's and l!oys wear, w.o men's r~ady-to­
wear _children's winier clothing and many other 1tems durtng th1s
once a year sales event ,
·

I~

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

YOU'RE SEE THE NEW 1978 FORDS
· INVITED!
AT

•

DAN THOMPSON FORD
TODAY

...

Ford LTD
Family ... size, room and comfort.

Fo(dLTOD
The L.,TO. of mi d-size c~rs .

'.

Thunderbi rd Ne·w sch!e11ement 1n ttle Thunderb ird tradii io n.

\

v

0
Granada
Compare it with c1us costin g thousands more.

F&amp;irm ont
The Ford in your fu ture..

Mustang D
TakAs you away..l ram an ord inary day.

•

•

Fle!illa

Europe's most a uc cess l.~l

new car In hlalory. •

Cl ub Wagon
The king ol clubs.

F-1 50 Pi ckup
Built tough whe re It matters moiU.

•

Ford LTD Stal•on Wagon

•
Totill toughnen,

Bron co
co mlort,

total

~ahlUy

aize.

BIG SELECTION!. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! REASONABLE PRICES! .
£;{
ACCEPTS ALIAiPORTS TROPHY - Ed Stewart, right, assistant GAHS
principal, accepts 197&amp;-77 AII-SF:OAL Sports Trophy from Wellston. princtp:&lt;\ Buck
I..uckhart during specia l halftime ceremony rm Memorial Field Fridt.y night.
GAl-IS will keep the J\ 11-Sports trophy unti l January at which time it will be transferred to Irorton. 'The Tigers shared the cov~ted award I&lt;Jsl year with the Bl ue
Devils.

Come See, Come Drive a Ford at

MiddiPnnrt

DAN THOM·PSON FORD

.. ...J

I

•

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,!,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Daughter, 15, is
repvrted missing

~.

COLUMBUS (UPII - Residential. real
estate taxes provided 39 per cent of the $1.5
billion levied to operate public schools in
.[ Ohio in 1977, a private research group
r eported Friday·.
The. Ohio Public Expenditure Council
said residentjal property taxpayers in
Greene Cm.iitty furnished the largest
percentage of their schools' operating
money - 57 - while those in Geauga
C&lt;lunty provided 53 per cent.
Homeowners in Adams County
furnished only 10 per cent of their·schools'
oper:ating m oney, the council said,' while
those in Gallia and Morgan County
provided II per cent.
Other counties with high percentages
were Summit, 48 ; Medina, 46; Cuyahoga,
H"n-tilton and Mahooing, 44; Portage, 43;
Franklin, Clermont, Lawrence. ' Warren
and Hocking, 42.
Lucas a nd Stark counties had the lowest
perce nta ge of the · ma jnr to unlies .
Residential taxpayers there furnished !!a
p-•r cent uf the S('h(XJls' operatin1, money,
accordin g to OPEC.

,

get

•

$26,168 m back -pay

His decision, however, was appealed
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Local Board of Eudcation here Saturday with the new court entry ruling that Rusk
apprQved a resolution paying $26,168.26 in was entitled to back pay. With that ruling,
back pay to five former teachers in the old a precedent was set requiring the hoard to
Southwestern School District who· were pay back pay to the other teachers.
given non-renewal notices Mat:ch 20, 1973 . .
In other business, the board approved
Upon a recommendation by Prosecuting a motion granting all local board emAttorney Joseph Cain, legal advisor, the ployee.s and the clerk-trea·surer, the same
lioard agreed to 1 'Y Mrs. Lois Hueholt, additional fringe benefits, previously
Bloomsburg, Pa.~ '1er entire salary of extended to the Gallia County teachers
$9,502.36 [or the 191- &gt;paching year. She including life insura~ce , severanc~ pay,
was one of 11 teachers not rehired by the increased hospitalization insurance
old Southwestern Board of Education in coverage and sick leave.
1973.
The same benefits were given ~o the
"Other amounts agreed upon were: classified employees along with a 4.65
:::;-::;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :::;:;:;:::; :;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;~:::::::::;:::::::::;:
Martha Hopkins, $5,000; Stanley Sohel, percent pay hike.
$7
,853.02 his teaching salacy for 197~;
A resolution was passe&lt;l approving the
BLOODMOB.ILE DAY
Linda
Rusk,
$2,513.88
plus
$300
in
interest,
rates
set by the Gallia County Budget
POMEROY~ Monday is Bloodmobile
and
Orville
White;
$1,000.
The
sums
paid
to
Commission.
· The millage will generate
day in Meigs County. Th e bloodmobile w111 •
Rusk,
White
and
Hopkins
represent
the
$3
,307,800
outside
the 10 milllhnitation and
be at the Pomeroy Elementary School
difference in sa laries they' w.ould have $1,281 ,400 inside the 10 mill limitation.
from 1:30 to 5:30p.m.
received from teaching in the district and
Substitute teachers added to the
pay received from other jobs they had teaching list were Carol Moody, Phyllis ·
after their contracts were not renewed.
Williams and Elaine Rouse.
After the board's action in 1973, the
The board accepted the resignation of
teachers not renewed appealed to the Clyde Donahue as a kindergarten route
Gallia County Common Pleas Court on the . driver and hired Avelene McComas as a
grounds their contracts were not renewed kindergarten driver at $5 per hour.
without a recommendation from the
Educational aides emplOyed were
LONDON (UP!) - A major
county school ·superintendent (at that Brenda George, Bidwell-Porter; Phyllis
supermarket chain canceled orders
thne, Clarence E. Thompson l.
Jean Wright , Vinton ; Mildred M. Nay,
worth $7 mUIIon Friday In boycotting
The
teachers
lost
their
case
in
Com·
Addaville and Barbara Ann Elkins,
two major brands .of coffee as part ,of an
mon Pleas Court on a decision rendered by Hannan Trace. Alice M. Gilbert was hired
effort to drive down prices.
Acting Judge Thomas Mitchell or Jackson as a parttime a~de at Che:1hire-Kyger.
Daisy Hyams. an executive of the
County. However, that decision was later
The board met witb a ~elegation of
Tesco supermarket chains said her 7%0
appealed by tbe Fourth District Court of parents from Vinton Sclioo[ .' regarding
stores will seD no more Maxwell House
Appeals which ruled that the board was playground . equipment and with John
and Nescafe Install coffees except those
wrong and ordered the newly consolidate~ Thomas and Katby Taylor, speech and
already In stock.
Gallia County Local School Board to put hearing therapists and thelr supervisor
"World prices of coffee have
the teachers back to work.
Charla Elliott, regarding speech problems
dropped by half and we feel that this
. At that time; no back pay was in their .schools.
drop should be reDected In the prices
received.
In final action, the hoard agreed to
of tbe leading brands," Miss Hyams
Later, Linda Rusk, a teacher at North place substitute classified employees on
said.
Gallia, filed suit for back pay which was · regular salary sched~les after 30 d~ys of
usince tbey have not, we have
disallowed by Judge Paul E: Riley, sitting continuous Work.
canceled our orders."
on
assi~I1I11ent.
(Continued on page 21
;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;::

Two.major brands
coffee boycotted

Brown reports project review
GALLIPOLIS - City Manager M.
Harold Brown reported Saturday dl/1 ,his
conference. in Columbus last week with
four representatives· of the Ohio Department of Transportation and with the city's
engineering flrm to review Gallipolis's
proposed $300,000 street slgnals project
late in 1978.
Preliminary work has been authorized
on the basis of the prelhninary report by

the engineers - Franklin Consultants Each of the major intersections will
calling for a radical revision of automatic have eight traffic lights, two pointing in
traffic signals at city intersectto~s and of each direction. Parking must parallel the
parking.
curbing.
.
The three Franklin Consultant
Asurvey includes, among other items,
thning of the traffic lights at a vehicular · engineers Included a specialist, Robert
rate to be determined. The total cost of the Brenner, and the D 0 T people with whom
project is divided three per cent or $9,000 the city manager conferred were Howard
for Gallipolis; 27 per cent for the state of Gifford, William James, Glenn Smith, and
Ohio, and 70 per cent for federal.
John Moore.

Kiwanis work keeps Al Durose busy
By J. Sherman Porter
and of the advisory hoard of the Hocking tually took office a week tater. Installing
GALLIPOLIS - It's a busy schedule Technical College at Nelsonville.
· offlcer was Harold Graafmayer of Euclld,
· Albert R. Durose has maintained since
Durose has been-edu&lt;:l\tiQn specialist past governor. Present governor Is John
Oct. I and will maintain for a year · as at the National Executive Housekeepers Johnston of Cincinnatt.
•
lleutenant-governor of the Kiwanis Ninth Association in Gallipolis six years. ·
He is the father is Dr. Galen Durose,
Division which includes 13 clubs located in
The lieutenant-governor is active in D. 0 ., Lancaster ; Mrs . Gretchen Smith,
the arc of Portsmouth to Chillicothe to ocher local civic groups.
Greenville , S. C., and Mrs . Judy
Logan to Ironton.
While he was installed in an elaborate Warehime, wife of Don Warehime, Jr.,
Durose, former superintendent of the , . ceremony Sept. 24 in Cincinnati, he ac- Gallipolis funeral director.
Gallipolis City Schools, pays an official
visit to each of .his clubs several times u
year. October starts the Kiwanis year, and
hls duties right now involve instaUation of
.club officers at many of the cities he visits.
The lieutenan~-gqvernor must call on
the other clubs an average of two or three
times ·a week. Some or Utese clubs hold
breakfast-meetings, others meet at noon,
and the remainder have dinner-meetings.
This year the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club
displays a baMer whi&lt;:h · r.eads, "Home
Club of the Ueutenant-Governor.''
Durose has heen prealdent of two
Kiwanis clubs: Gallipolis, of which he is
now secretary and will continue in that
post, and Malta-McCoMelsv\Ue. He · has
held all offices in Kiwanis.
Prior to coming to Gallipolis, Durose
was superinte~dentof schools at Malta-'
McConnelsville and Pleasant Local.
He has heen a leader in many school and
community ;:.ctivities in the areas where
· he has served the schools. A member of the
NEA, he was active in OEA when in school
work.
·
At present, Durose is president of the
hoard of the Guiding Hand School for
· Mentally Retarded in Gallia County and .
LT. GOV. AL DUROSE of the Kiwanis ' Ninth · Division in southern and
president of the Gallla County Retired
souttt
eas"l.t:!rn Oh10 1~ pictured at his desk in the National Executive Housekeepers
Teachers Assn .
AssociatiM
sui te on Second Ave . in Gallipolis He is the national education
He is member or the hoard of the
consultant.
·
Gallia County Co uncil on the Aging , Inc ..

I

•
•

retaiJ dealer in fuel oil, ~ propane, coat,
wood or kerosene.
The county auditor . will certify on or
before the last day of Novemher, 1977 to
'"iile Tax Commissioner and to the utilities
and energy dealers that serve tt)e county
the list of persons with an income of less
than $7,000 and are homestead exemption
recipients.

r 1ve ·teachers

Middleport, Ohio

992-2196

461 S. 3rd Ave.

'

unequally for ·
Ohio schools ·
•'

THAT WAY!

BOTILJNi, COMPANY

COLUMBUS (UP!) -"' A pair of bills
off'ering immediate aid to school districts
which pass operating levies this fall, and to
families of · persons in state , mental
institutions, have been signed into law by
Gol' . James A. Rhodes.
One bill allows school districtS which
approve operating levies to borrow money
immediately from their anticipated
revenues in 1978 t o keep from closing .
It would apply til some 14 Ohio districts
fa ced with closing if they had to wait three
weeks to advertise f..- competitive bidding
on short-term notes to be sold in order to
operate for the rest of the calendar year .
·The new law, signed Friday, allows such
districts to w~ive the advertising and
. borrow the money hnmediately, provided
they pass their levies. They also must
make repayment before the end of
December.
The legislature adopted the proposal last
week after refusing to expand it to allow
Cleveland city schools to finish.the year in
debt to stay open .
The other bill signed by Rhodes will
furnish between $8 million and $16 million
to families with persons in mental
institutions, and allow the state to attract
federal money for that purpose. That bill
also was passed last week.
In a speech Fridsy before the. Mental
ljeallh Association of Ohio, the governor
said his administration has "laid the
foundation to give Ohio the nation's finest ·
mental heaiUt system."
"Strong professional leadership, good
mana~ement, and bipartisan cooperation
with the Ohio legislature has resulted in
tremendous progress for mental health in
Ohio," said the governor.- ~ We are near to
achieving our goal of developing the
nation's finest mental health system."
Rhodes said his administration has
supported leg islation , now law, "strongly
protecting the rights .of the mentally ill,
· providing for treabnent in state mental
hospitals at national standards, increasing
citizen · involvement in mental health
programs, and more effectively providing
[Or \he development of community mental
health facilities.."

Taxpayers hit

•

ROYAL ':!JOWN

bill ·signed

1

THINK OF US'
.

School aid

1

KYGER CREEK QUEEN AND KING- Miss Cindy Preston, daughter or Mr.
and Mrs. Jwnes Preston, Cheshire, and Greg MulforS, so n qf Mrs. Msrtha
Brunson, l::xlth 'seniors, wen;'! named queen a nd king for the 1977 homecomi~g
Friday night at Kyger Creek. Ceremonies were conducted before Kyg~r Creek s
48-&lt;1 victory over Eastern. See details on Pg. 2.

Benefits a re 25 percent credit on utility or current application for the humestead
bilis during _months of Decemher, 1977, ex:emption under section 323.152 of the
Janua.ry, February, March and April, Revised Code . The questionnaire will ask
1978, or $87.50 for those using fuel oil, coal, the name and address or the customer or a
wood, kerosene and propane gas.
marking or coding sufficient to identify the
The program is under the jurisdiction of customer to the auditor; type of energy
the Tax Commissioner and the Depart- that is the source of the heat used in
ment of Taxation. County Auditors shall heating the residence, and the name of
mail a questionnaire to each person whose utility or energ'y dealer which means any
total income is not more than seven
t~o usanp dollars pndwho has a continuing ~ •
·

.,..
of the Revised Code and receive income or
not more than seven thousand do11ars.
GALLIPOLIS - A missing perlflomestead).
. -son's report bas been IUed with Gallia
- Renters who are 65 years of age or
County lawmen for Tammy Jo Johnson,
older, or permanently and totally disabled
15, daughter of Glenn R. Johnson, Rt. I,
and receiVe income or not more than seven
Northup, and Marlene C. Johnson, 117
thousand dollars .
Mabellne Dr., Gallipolis.
- Persons in house tr ailers are not
Tbe girl, last ieen -a t . 8 a;m .
eligible Ibis year. Th¢y will he eligible in
Tuesday, Is 5-5, weighs liD pounds, and
the fall of 1978.
has dark hBlr. She was last seen
•
wearing blue jeans with a red top and
red plaid jacket.. Miss Johnson wears
brown rim glasses.
Anyone knowlug her whereabouts
Is asked to contact the Gallla County
sheriff's department or county juvenile
authorities.

into law

e SAlURDAY, OCTOBER 8th ANAL DAY OF

Pinto
Am eric a's tra diUonal best-setllnj;!.'
better idee sub-compact .

N-EHI

under Ohio- H. B. 230 explained

rui

Mr. ami Mrs. Dale Baile~,
Marengo, 0. , visited thetr
aunt, Mary Diehl.
Myrta
Wilson ,
Mrs.
Columbus, visited Miss Ruby
Diehl.
Eleanor Updegraff of
Birmingham, Ala.. spent
Wednesday through ·Sunday
with her mother, Anna
Gilkey .
Frances Alkire visited her
son. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gibson Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bressler,
Mr. and Mrs . Clyde Bressler
and Mrs. Ava Lu~ of Lan·
caster recently visited the
Bob Clark and Bob Alkires
and Ava Gilkey.
Mr . Cecil Dewelly of Dade,
Fla., called on Mr . and Mrs.
Dale Williams recently.
· Mrs. Nellie Borgan visited
her sister, Frashier Dowden
in Ft. Ashy, W. Va., for two
weeks and her niece, Mr. and
Mrs. John Mauck brought her
home .
·The Harrisonville Senior
Citizens enjoyed a trip to the
Swiss Festival on Friday at
Sugar Creek.

SUN DAY, OCTOBER 9, 1977__ _ _~___:_::
M.:.:::ID~Dl::::EP...:::O:..:..:RT~
-P.::..:OM:.:..:E::.:R:::..:OY_ _ _ _ _--+_ __ ,;.;PR;::~C~~:...:2;.:.5..:;CE;;;.;N;.;.;T~

ility ,o f heating credits

RUSSELL GETS 20
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP! J
- Campy Russell scored 20
points to lead the Cleveland
Cavaliers to a 111-99 victory
over the Buffalo Braves. in an
CLUB TO MEET
A regular m~eting of tbe NBA exhibition game in
Twin City Shrine Club will be Freedom Hall Thursday
· h
COURT CLOSING
held at 7: 30p.m. Monday at
t~rowd
of
~.962
saw
the
Due
to Monday, Oct 10,
the club. Noble John Clark of
Cavaliers
hand
the
Bra.v.
e
:;
,
,
being
a legal holtday
Athens will be a guest. A
their
fourth
loss
in
five
(Columbus
Day ) \he Courtchicken dinner will be served
exhibition
games.
house
will
be
closed.
foll owing the meeting .

Nelsonyi~York .

3ALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

.
tnitnt
-

tmts

•

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohlo
(UPI) _ Mountain Ash ran
the mUein 1:411-!i Thursday
to capture the featured eighth
·race at T)tistledown .
The winner, ridden by Gary
Madrigal, paid $3.20, $2 .60
and $2.40. Party Garb was
second and Flutterbutt was
thlrd.
The 1-2-8 ninth race trifecta
of Beau Morn, Scott Richard
and Indian Wampum was
worth 11,961.70. The f&gt;-1 daUy
double of Hi 'N Noble and
Nice Co unty returned $37.20.

( Blrth Oct. 6I
Mr. and Mrs . James
Farley, a son, Middleport.

+

uuba
VO. 12 NO. 36

•

WE ARE THE

•

Two-hundred and three
heiferS with an average
weight of 461 poWJds sold for
13().43 per hundred weight.
. Eighteen yearling heifers
averaging 521 pounds sold for
$28.79 per hundred weight ·

man.

to

Sennonette

of sale

Announce results

Hospital News

\

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