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Farley To

l'onhnued from page IH

11w ~nate would
1101 ·~clopt the extension of
,, '"
·• ·
L'Vfllf(\ ls m~' Ylfi&gt; pnruucang

.......

Another proposal with a

Halley , 91. of "''211 Third
Avenue-,. Galllpolls, diE'd at
7:30 a .m. Saturday , at the

wide divergence is the
•· utilit y rate reform bill." The

P iketon
IOhiol
Manor
'Nursin~ Center , after several

Hou se app roved most of

·carter's appfoach, to focce
utilities to redraw their rates.
Wthat no bi~ consunler gets

Prexy
At the tecent Annual meeting of the West Virginia
Hospital Association held at The Greenbrier in White
Sulphur Springs, James L. Farley was elected to serve
.another tem1 as Presidenl .of the Associatioo.
Farley is only the • third
Association President in the~
year history of the Association
to be elected to serve two
consec utive
terms
as
President. He has served as
President of the WVHA since
October 1976.
Farley has served as
of
Executive
Director
Pleasant Valley Hospital since
January 1971 and has been an
active memb&lt;ir of the West
Virginia Hospital Association
, for over 10 years. ·
'
Farley re ce ived nat ion al
recognition this year when he

bar~ain rates and so that
rates rewa,rd use at ''off.
peak'' hours.

The Senate discarded all
that and passed a bill merely
assuring federal intervention
in sta te rate cases, to push for
co nserVa tion through r'ate
reform. The Senate bill also
requires a cut-rate to be

Mrs . Halle{ was a retired

employe o
Bob Evans
restaur ant . St'le been , for
several years , a cook on a
barge ti ne .

Born Sept. 10. 1886, in

Guy{Jn Twp .. Gallia County,
she was the daugt1ter ot

Monroe Sheets and Augusta
Russell Sheets. She was
married in 1905 to A . D.
(Dud } Halley, who died in
t9A t .

Surv ivors
Inclu de
a
brother. four half.brothers,

and two half-sisters. They are
Leonard -sheets ot Hun ·

emerge as one of 'the easier

Cain, Oetroif ;

problems

Richmond, Akron. 011io. and
Monroe and Warren Sheets ,
Gallipolis.
She was a · member of
Bethlehem Church. ·
Last rites will be held at 1
p.m. Tuesday at the Waugh.

co nfer ence

solve

because

in
th.e

!louse bill contains most of
Carter's money-making tax
increases, while tlle Senate
.Fin~n ce Committee is
working on a bill consisting
mainly of money-losing tax

Mrs. Editl'l

MRS. FERDNANT liNK
POMEROY - Mrs. Ferd.

Zink , Cincinnati , the
fl.lrmer Clara Reuter o f
Pomeroy, died Fr iday afternoon in Cincinnati. She
was 93 .
Mts . iink. is survived bY
son , Earl , Cincinnati. crnd a
, sister, Mrs . Louise Hawk inS ,
Pomeroy . Also survivi ng are
1wo granddaught-ers , M rs ,
Donna Lubeck and Mrs. Gail
Lowenstein, Cinc innat i, and
four great -grandchildren .
She was preceded in death by
her husband and two sons.
Ralph and Wa lt er ; her
parents . .Mr . and Mrs .
Willi am Reuter, and three
sisters , Mrs . Emma Leifhei t,
Mrs . Gertrude Neutzling, and
Mrs . Edna Riggs. and three
brothers, Leo, Edward and
Walter,
"Funera l services will be
held Tuesday at 10 a.m . at
the Anderson Funeral Home
at 415 Ludlow, Cinc innat i .
Burial will be in Cincinna t i.

Second
thoughts

JAMES L. FARLEY

c areer ,

VOTE SECRETLY
N!'W ORLEANS (UPJ ) Longshor eme n
vote d
Saturday secretly on whether
to continue the virtual shut·
down of the nation's second·
largest port or go along with
their union officers and limit
their strike to container
ships.
ELECTION HELD
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - .W.
Boyd Sibold, Lima, was
elected Grand Commander of
the Knights Templar of Ohio
.during the 13~th annual
conclave \his weekend.

,.. .....
~

lbJ.n.o

THEY MADE IT
WASffiNGTON (UP!) Wash[jlgton 's social Jist was
out
Saturday, and Jody
Associaiation, an organization
Powell,
Hamuton Jordan and
represe nting in excess of
tlle
rest
of lhe Georgia folks
25,000 alumnL · ·
were alllong the honored.

:.=

.......

!
•

•
••

·:
•
II,

•
•

•

e
e
e
e
e
e
e
•

'

,i[eaJ···:.·. ~~~~£:.~~:·

SEU HOME YOURSELF?

'

FIRST CHIW - Faith Lelia Dawn Dillon is pictured
bere witll her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dillon of 2216
Eastern Ave. She weighed eight pounds and 14 ounces aod
measured 20:Y• inches long.

door .''

e seeks unpaid taxes

S
. t a.t

MADISON, Wis. (UPJ ) The Wisconsin Department of
Revenue is trying to track
down a number of prominent
stars in the entertairunent
world. Not for autographs for ilnpaid taxes.
Jack DeYoung, assistant
admil)istrator of tlle slate
income tax division, said ..
Friday t,jtat " very few" of the
entertainers appearing in
Wisconsin in recent years
filed return
, s on profits they

made from their concerts and
appearances.
That mighi include Frank
Sinatra who performed
before 13,000 fans at the
Milwaukee Arena in 1976 and
who apparently hasn't filed a
tax return . DeYoung would
not -confinn that Sinatra is on
the list but said the state is
looking into the matter of
profits earned by some two
dozen stars in state appearances .

Reverse bias case studied

:

ad·
Medical · school
ministrators
at
the
University of Cincinnati, Ohio
Stale and Ohio Univesrity,
said their schools give some
preference to minority and

economically disadvantaged
students in admissions, but ·
have no set quotas, as at the
Univesrity of California
medical school.

rea! estate, even after the

play a pumpkin in the show.
Does tllis outfit look like what
a pumpkin wears. I never
saw a pumpkin in a beret. I
hope I never do."
He movi:&lt;J his chair so it
faced the entry. "You can
never !!&gt;II who . will walk
through the ·door and get the
drop on 1_you."
.
Well aild· good, but why the
outrageous garb?
1

Cornelia Jacoba Nijssen, 28,
and her steelworker husband,
Simon, 27, are the second
recorded. set of sextuplets to
live beyond a few hours.
Sextuplets born to Mrs. Susan
Jane Rosenkowitz in Cape
Town, Soutll Africa, on Jan .
II , 1974, were the first set to
survive,

"It's a fantasy of mine," he

explained. " Notice the
•
He said it is· highly
• questionable whether
Au stralian tank corps
• "management will have the
insignia on my beret. Has a
_
d
flair doesn:t it.
• Wl 11
an
ability
to
ATLANTA
(UP!)
.
The
number
of
paralytic
" Everybody has fantasies.
• . differentiate those executives
e over 65 who still have it and Federal health officials, polio cases declined from Mine is sitting in a wicker
• tllose who don't."
noting vaccination levels more than 18,000 in 1954 to 32 chair in a chic hotel lobby in
e
against polio have waned in in 1970 and to only eight in Nairobi with a wide bladed
recent years, are urging that 1976.'
fan whirling slowly overhead .
aU children be vaccinated
llut the CDC said a 1976 I'm waiting there for a large
against the crippling disease • survey revealed that 38 American blonde who wants
to prevent epidemics.
percent of children four years to hire me to lead a safari.
The Center for Disease old or younger had . not been
"She's depending on me to ·.-.
Control said in its weekly vaccinated a gainst the ambush a huge white
report Friday that although crippling disease and that elephant in the bush. You
the risk of polio "is generally vaccination rates for infants ' know, jump- right on the
very small in the United and · young children in elephant's back and wrestle it
states today/' vaccinations .d isadvantaged urban and into submission."
should be continued.
rural areas were even lower.
Jonathan sat back and
puffed -his cigar, lost in a • \.
miasma of sn;~oke and · . '-'·
dre9lJls.
He roused himself to add,
gi~en
" It's ·not always the same
CINCINNATI (UPI) hotels to watch some fantasy . Sometimes I wear
WCPO-TV and the city of convention proceedings on cowboy hats and Ifldian moe·
Cincinnati bave signed an TV.
casin s . That way I' m
agreement .which will allow
WCPO-T.V officials said covering both sides in the
the station to make closed· they hope to have their event of a western showdown.
11
circuit
telecasts
at equipment installed by Nov.
l'm a sixteenth Indian ,
Convention Center and I. The station is to contract you know. i have dozens of
transmit them to television independently witll various moccasins from various
sets in three maj or downtown conventions concerning their tribes. Some are from Chief
hotels.
Earl Old Person. He's~ pal Of
particular .needs. '
mine and the oldest chief of ·
It
would
allow
the Blackfoot Nation.
· ,;!
conventioneersslayin~ at the
" I held the first tennis
tournament to . benefit
. Indian s. I .. like Indians.
NOW YOU KNOW
Marlon Brando says he does
LEONARD SHINES
British Lord Chancellor too. But how much good can
ALLIANCE, Ohio (UPI) - Henry Peter Brougham he do'thc Indians in Tahi ti? I
Quarterback Mike Leonard guzzled so much brandy wiJuld n 't lle surprised if
a
marathon Brando was ltalian .
tllrew for · four touchdowns durin g
and ran for a fifth as Mount pa rliamentary speech in 1832
~·so metim es
I
wear
Union defeated Wooster 35-8 that he i~spired the phrase, ba seball caps. Only the
''Dffiiik as a lord ..,'
Saturday.
- authentic kind . Right now I'm
..-..,•

Polio vaccin~- all ~ds' need .

··························'
WE ARE THE
HOTDOG
PEOPLE.
THINK OF US

THAT WAY!

..

Diners looked up , startled.
Winters wore a black beret
and khaki African hunting
ja cket replete with a
cominando ,insignia and a
lancers patch. His corduroy
trousers didn 't match. Indian
beads encircled his wrist. A
black cigar was clenched in
his teetll .
He strode to an empty table
and for 10 minutes regaled
the assemblage playing botll
roles in a vignette of a
rampage over a dinner tab
between a haughty French
waiter and an insulting
Texan. Both accents were ·
cruel and flawless.
The diners applauded and
Winters sat down for lunch as
i( nqthing at all had
happened.
Jonathan is al his most.
hilari ous
. when
he
extemporiz~s for a handful of
persons a t~dd · and
unexpected moments. fl's as
if he is compelled to loose his
spleen on a hostile world .
Asked if his mismatched
costume were part of his
wardrobe for Disney's "Hal·
loween HaU 0' Fame" televisio n
special,
Winters
grimaced biliously.

in mourning. I root for the
Cincinnati Reds and they're
dead tllis year."
God knows how many home
rWls Jonathan, in Cincinnati
cap, has hit out of the park in
rus fantasies. Dressing the
part enhances his dream
world .
" Why not !" he cr ied .
"Shakespeare said 'All the
world's a stage, and
the
men a nd women mere ly
players .' So why not dress for
the parts.
, " Of course you 've got to
pick your shots. Dress up ln a
Robin Hood cost ume and run ·
around during rush hour in
the middle of Wil shire
Boulevard and tlley 'll throw
you in a rubber room for life.
''I was in the Marines in
World War ll. Once in a while
f wear my Marine $irl witll
corporal stripes. But I can 't
put on the whole uniform or
the y'd lock me in the
slairuner for 25 years.
"You 've got to curb your
fantasies . You have to know
your playground."
Winter~' playground Oct. 30
will be "The Wonderful World

Oosed-circuit TV

'

·-

when

merchandise in which they

are totally disint erested is
put on the block.
Breaking the monotony of
auctioneer ,
and
his ·
routine also ls "grab..J!~g
assistants.
Early in the evening, time." Auctinn personnel
auction person nel move circulate among the crowd
among the crowd distributing selling paper sacks filled with
lollipops to the younger set. unknown goodies at about $3
At the back of the large room, each. The customers are
the popcorn machine goes full warned that the contents of
blast and a couple of girls the sack are ' 1junk" but
spend
their .;eve ning (Continued on page 10)

•

e

Pomer!IY·M!ddleporl, Ohio
Monday, October 10, 1977

...

..

••U

of Disnev." He stars ali a
night watchman at the studio
on Ha lloween. In one segment
he plays an animuted
pumpkin, thereby fulfilling
another fantasy .
" I used to put pillows under
the back of my jacket on
Halloween," he said•. "Then I
pulled my eyes askew with
special tape and put a livid
scar on my face and fangs
hanging out of my mouth .
" When people came to my
door trick or. treating, I'd leer
oul at them . Parents
sc rea med and children
fa inted . Saxed a lot of candy
corn that way . .
.
"Just kidding. Halloween
has changed . Used to be an
innocent time when kids pul •
on costwnes and false fa ces
and soaped your windows.
" Now

it' s

at y

en tine
.

ELBERFELDS
MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPARTMENT

·See Our Excellent Selection

~

WESTERN SHIRTS

;;:~e:~~~:~~r~i~~p
pocket s, extra _long
ta il s and choice of
buuo n or snap fron 1s.

~
~

FOR

JMEN

~ ~: ~
l.,. j
··-·~ ; ·

Now availab le in an

.

' ~
easy-care fa br ics
so lids, stripes,
checks, plaids
and colorfu I
fl oral prints.
In all popula r
neck sizes

long
-sleeves

Association .

The city's official Columbus Oay parade - a
five-hour affair ·covering 40 blocks along Fiftll
Avenue ~ is scheduled for today and, with a
mayoral election pending next month, a flock of
candidates wlll be among the tll ousaods of march·
ers.
··
·
In Chicago, Vice President Walter Mondale will
lead the annual Columbus Day parade, which will
be dedicated to such Italian-Americans as Judge
John Sirica and Rep. Peter Rodino, IJ.N.J.
Mondaie also will help lay a wreath at a statute

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 124

~~

J~ ~""

,.

BYUillted Press International
BURBANK, CALIF. - MORE THAN 15,000 machinists
struck three Lockheed aircraft plants today as a result of a
breakdown In negotiations over pay and fringe benefits.
The walkout began today at 12 :01 a.m. PDT at the
Lockheed-California plants in Burbank and Palmdale and the
Lockheed Missile and ~SPace Company in Surutyvale foll owing
an overwhelming strike vote Sunday by tlle · union
membership.

COLUMBUS- COLUMBUS POIJCEMAN ·Jeffrey Lees·
burg narrowly f!S\!aped death in a shoolout with a Lo"""n
Correctional Institute escapee Sunday when a bullet hit his
badge and barely entered his chest. Police said when Leesburg
and his partner stopped a ear and the two occupants tried to
flee on foot, Leesburg traded shots with James H. Thomas, 35,
a fugitive.
Thomas was listed in critical condition at St. Anthony
Hospital after treatment for wounds in the head, stomach,
right shoulder, chest and wrist, while Leesburg was treated at
Grant Hospital and released .
•
BOGOTA
COLOMBIA
THE NATIONAL
'
FEDERATION of Coffee Growers says Colombian coffee
exports fell by 1.7 million sacks over the past year due to
declining consumer demand. Altllough Colombtan coffee
exports fell between September 1976 and September 1977, the
value rose by $549 million in tlle same period, tlle federati on·
said in a report this weekend.
The increase was due to the sharp jump in prices that
made a 'pound of coffee worth $3.38 in New x,ork in May. The
price has now fallen to $1.80 a pound in the unstable market of
the past four months. Selling coffee in lhe United States and
Europe Is very difficult now, industry sources said, in contrast.
.to tlle strong demand only a few months ago.
.

l
.....

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

a church in Chicago's " Little Italy."

Mondale was scheduled to serve as grand
marshal for · San Francisco's Columbus Day
parade on Sunday, but unexpectedly withdrew at
tlle last minute, leaving the event to about 50,000
people who lined the route to watch the floats ,
bands, and bat on-twirlers. Five unicycligts
flanked Mayor George Moscone riding in a 1931
·
Lincoln .
california's celebration continues today with the
aimual festival at Nortll Beach in which
Columbus' landihg - off anotller coast, 3,000 miles
away - is re-enacted.

In New York, at lpst one iconoclast managed to
make his point.
A Manhattan furniture store·advertised a "Lelf
Erickson Day Sale."
.
The nsme of the store, appropriately enough, Is
11
Norsk."

.

.

A Bailey's Run ,molher has
been ordered to send her l!i·
year-old son to school under
bond of $100 and to pay
another $100 for each day he
fails to show up in his classes
without an excuse.
County Court Judge Robert
Buek levied that sentence
Friday on Velva Cade, 41, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, after juvenile
officer Carl Hysell charged
her with failing lo send the
boy to school.
Judge 'Buck withheld
sentencing Mrs. Cade for
offense!; of resisting arrest
and assault until later.
Saturday morning Mrs.
Jack . Ables, Letart Falls,
reported that during the night
someone had torn down her
mailbox and newspaper tube.
In other activities, deputies
investigated four accidents,
two involving deer . The first
occurred early Sunday in
BllSiness Loop 7 just outside
. ·Of Middleport .
.
Paul Ables, Racine, said he
was traveling south out 'of
Mld41eport aild had pulled off
the road on the wide spot on
the left ·side of highway. His
auto was approximately 4
feet from the pavement.
While standing outside of his
. auto, an unidentified 1969 or

.

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;'

Schools close

.

MOSCOW
(UP!)
Unexpected troubles with th~
Soyuz 25 space capsule today
forced tlle two cosmonauts to
cut short tlleir mission and
prepare to return to Eartll,
Moscow Radio announced .
·Moscow Radio said the
Soyuz 25 capsule had
approached to within 120
yards of the Salyut 6 orbiting
space laboratory early today
when unspecified troubles
developed and made a linkup
impossible .

.

.

1970 light colored Chevrolet to the Middleport ·sewage damaged. No citation was
traveling north, ran off the system lagoon.
issued.
roadway, sideswiped his . . J~y Vance, 17, . Rutland,
Sunday evening around
auto, and kept on going.
told deputies he wah raveling 7:30 Jerry Davenport, Mid·
Abeles was not injured, but west,lost control and went off dleport, reported he had
there w1s heavy djlmage to the road and smashed into a struck a deer otT CR 28. At
his auto.
'
tree. He was taken to approximately the same time
The second accident oc· Veterans Memorial Hospital on CR 30 near the Forest Run
curred around 2:30 a.m. by private auto, treated and Church, .Mike Brown, Rt . I,
Sunday on the township road . released.
Racine, struck and killed a
leading to Hobson Yards and
His auto was heavily deer that ran into his patll.

The radio broadcast said
the two cosmonauts aboard
~oyuz
25 have begun
preparations for a return to
earth .
SoyUz 25 - with rookie

t'ebruary and We'slern
observers said it had been
int ended a s a space
spectacular to mark the 20th
anniversary of the' launching
Oct. 4 of the world 's first
.c osmonauts · Vl ad imir satellite - Sputnik I - and
Kovalenok and Valery the Nov. 7 celebrations of the
Ryumen aboard - was 60th anniversar y of the
launched early Sunday on a Russian Revolution.
The announcement that
mission to link up with Salyut
6, which was put into orbit Soyuz 25 was being aborted
was made at tlle end of the
Sept. 29.
It was the first Soviet noon (5 a.m. EDT ) Moscow
manned spaceflight since last Radio news after a 24-hour
silen ce on the mission 's

progress.
.
"The second day of work of
the cosmonauts began at
11:31\ p.m. (4:30 p .m. EDT)
Sunday. The cosmonaut~
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::: checked up th e on-board
sxstems of Soyuz 25 and were
carrying out scheduled work .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
"Today at 7:09 a.m. (12 :09
Wednesday through
a.m. EDT) the automatic
Frtday, chance ol rain
approach of Soyuz 25 with
Wednesday , and fair
space station Salyut 6 was
Thursday and Friday.
begun.
Highs in the 50s and
"Then at a distance of 120
oyemlghl lows 35 to 45.
meters (yards) . because of
:::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: trouble involving the planned •
re gime of docking the
docking was canceled.
"The crew began it s
preparations (or landing.
"'l'he orbital station Solyut
6 is continuing its flight,"
merit as an antidote to
senility
has
become Moscow Radio said.
Almost one year ago
something of a vogue.
exactly
, on Oct. 14, 1976, the
It found such treatment
(Continued on page 10)
offered in well-established
hospitals
and · health
institutions in California ,
F1orida, New York and other
states. One facilitr was
reportedly charging about
$5,000 for two weeks of
treatment.

Costly oxygen 'youth shots' wasted
WASHINGTON (UPI)- A
new medical study says a
couple of martinis probably
produce as much stimulation
as an expensive ' 'fountain of
youth" oxygen technique
us.ed to perk .up mentally
sluggish senior citizens.
The National Institute of
Mental Health study says
countless elderly AmericanS
have paid hundreds of thou.
sands of dollars in recent
years to don masks, climb
into chambers that look like
iron lungs and breatll pure
oxygen in the belief it will
revitalize their brain cells
and reverse senility.
The NIMH study, to be .
published in the Archives of
General
Psychiatry,
concludes that most such

people have wasted their
money.
Allen Raskin, leader of the
NIMH study team, said a few
of the 82 elderly persons who
participated ip the institute's
testing
of
so-called
"hyperbaric oxygenation"
did show improvement on
memory tests.
·
But so. did a few persons
who breathed air· instead of
oxygen for comparisop
purposes, he said.
For most of the NIMH
study patients - average age
72 - each twice.&lt;Jaily jolt of
pure oxygen probably bad
about ·as much temporary
stimulative effect as two
martioisor so, said Raskin .
Dr. robert Butler, director
of the govenunent's National

Institute on Aging, recently
complained to Consumers
Digest about an article that
.appeared to promote oxygen
treatment as a cure for
memory loss and wrinkles.
He said NIMH experiments
found tlle treatment "to be
nothing short of quackery and
· another fruitless attempt to
discover a fountain of youth."
According to tlle the NIMH
research team, oxygen treat-

The two Belfast women had
been given a "People's Peace

Prize" last year.
In giving tlle 1977 award to
Amnesty International, the
committee said: "In tlie
nearly 30 years that have
passed since the declaration
of human rights was agreed
on in the United Nations,·
positive forces in many
countries have struggled to
fulfill its ideals. But tlle world
. !las also witnessed increased
brutality and internationalization of violence,
terrorism and torture.
" In this situalion,.AmJ1esly
International has used its
forces to protect tlle value of
human
life .
Amnesty
Internatio nal has given

VATICAN CITY (UP!) Pope Paul VI cannonized a

religion, or political views."
The citation for tlle women
said : "The· peace m ovement

tlley initialed has as a goal to
end the use of violence which
bas marked the lrl!gic split in
Northern Ireland, and which
has claimed so many
innocent lives.
"Their initiative paved the
way for the strong resistance
against violence and ' misuse
of power which was present
in broad circles of the people .
"Alfred Nobel's wish was
· that the peace prize should be
given to thQse who most
a1tively worked for peace
and brotherhood . Mairead
Corrigan and Betty Williams
acted from a deep conviction
tllat the individual person can
practical hwnanitarian and make
a
meaningful
impartial support to people contribution for peace
who have been imprisoned throu gh · co nstru cti ve
because

of

t h ei r

r ace .

Boy dies
•

Pilgrims claim
miracles occur

Nobel prizes go to amnesty group,
• fior. peace
two Irish women fig.h ttng

RACINE- The Southern
Local School District in
Meigs County closed today
because of financial dll·
flenltles and wlll remain
closed untO lhe flrsl of the
year unless a 6.5 mlll
OSLO, Norway (UP!)
·operatlog levy Is passed
The
Norwegian Nobel
contacted by school nfflcials,
Oct. 25.
Comittee
announ ced two
said it wa ~ probably legal,
Tne district, which has
Nobel
peace'
prizes today but they'd never heard of it.
1,100 students, will reopen
to
Amnesty
one
Fellow teachers just
lf the levy Is passed, the
·
International
,
the
thought she was crazy as she
UPI said.
independent
organization
spent five . montlls making
phone calls, wriling leiters ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;::~:=:~::;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: tllat \ campaigns worldwide
for civil rights , apd the other
and wading tllrough red tape .
to two Northern Ireland
Finally, just before school
women
waging a drive [or .
began this year, the .school
E-R CALLED
peace
in
. tlla t violence-torn
board solved tlle "problem"
The Middleport Emer·
province
.
·
by voting unanimously to . gency squad an~wered a
The 1977 peace prize was
. accept · Mrs. Good's check. . caU to 620 Locust St. at ~ : 46 p. '
given
to
Amnesty
m. Sunday for Martha Clonch
International
for
its
struggle
who had an ann injury. AI
against
mounting
violence,
8:238. m. Monday, the squad
and torture
reported to village hall for · terrorism
PLOT FAILED
throughout
the
world.
BANGKOK , Thailand Gene Oiler who was suffering
The
committee,
which did
(UPI} -, Thai police today from severe abdom inal
not
gi~e any peace prize last
arrested. three Moslems on pains. He was enroutc to the
charges of trying to kill the hospital when hi s illness year, awarded tlle 1976 prize
· king- and queen and plotting worsened. He was taken to rolroactively to Belly
Will iam s and Mairead
the secession of Mos lem Veterans Memorial Hospital
Corrigan
of th~ Northern
provinces from Thailand .
by th e squad .
Ireland Peace Movement .

deed hard work for her

BROOKVIU.E, Ohio (UP I)
.-Ann Good, a teacher for 21
years in the Dayton..,rea
community of Brookville, had
'to work some to do a good
deed .
II all began when Mrs.
Good slipped and fell in a
supermarket last spring and
badly sprained an ankle. She
missed 13 days of school, for
which she collected full sick
pay from tlle school system.
· The
supermarket's
insurance company then
came through and paid her
for the time she lost,·s0 Mrs.
Good decided to return the
,1,004.01 lo the school. .
But an Ohio Educallon
Association official told her
,. nobody in the slate had ever
l done such a thing before.
The stale auditor 's office,

of Colwnbus, then attend a mass and reception at

Soyuz 25 linkup
mission aborted

Mother ordered to keep son.in school

r;v;;,;,,:,,,.,.,.:.,.,.,.,:,,i.~,,, , n;i;tJ

,. Good

.. .

Spanish"'Peaking nations.
The storm dwnped about 2 inches of rain on the
city as the United Hispan ic American Parade
Committee celebrated Spain's sponsorship of
Columbus' voyage 4&amp; years ago.
A second parade in tlle Borough of the Bronx
splashed through the rain with more than :;o floats
and bands under sponsorship of the Columbus
Esca Alliance and the Morris Park Corrununity

.

end less var iety of

OK

'

By KENNETH R. CLARK
Uolled Press lnlernallonal
Not everybody believes Christopher Columbus
discovered the New World.
All far as the Irish are concerned, it was their
own St. Brendan the Navigator who discovered it
sometime between A.D. 484 and 587.
AWelshman will tell you a certain Prince Medoc
did tlle job around A.D. 800, and , of course, every
Norwegian knows it really was l..eif Erickson who
sailed the ocean blue - about 500 vears 'before
"fourteen.!Jundred and ninety-two ." ·
Bu! the voices of such ethnic claimants will be
drowned out today in a flood of parades, speeches
and testimonials, all honoring tlle Italian sailor
generally credited as the first to make the trans·
Atlantic, trip.
New York City's Hispanic community got off In
an early start Sunday, marching down Fifth
Avenue tllroullh a drivin2 rain with 25 floats. 26
bands and costumed representatives of 22

ROI'TERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS- Dennis Nijssen ,
youngest of the Dutch sectuplets born Sept. 18, was in critical
but improving condition today recovering from surgery for a
perforated intestine , doctors said.
"The child is verY ill," said a sp.okesman at the Sophia
Children's Hospital. " But the doctors are not discontent.'.' The .
Leyden University Hospital, where the children were born reported tlle remaining five babies -four girls and one boy were in good condition.

ON THE FIRST FLOOR

Look what Wrangler's rna de
JUSt for you ... super
{
detailed au then tic dre;s

Whatever Columbus did or didn't do this is his day

frightening.

Today they pul razor blades
in the apples and LSD in the
candy. If you leave your car
on the curb you lind il jacked
up and the wheels gone.
" Instead of tittle kids, teenagers come to the door and
say , 'I'm poor. Lay ten bucks
on me or I'll burn your house·
down .,

"Of course not," he said. "I

One sextuplet critically ill !

II there is anything we

area

•

DURING FRIDAY'S HOMECOMING halftime show on Memorial Field. the GARS
band presented selections il will plllf in the Lexington, Ohio contest on Oct. 15.

By VERNON SCOTI
HOLLY WOOD ( UPI )
Jonathan Winters froze in the
door way of the Disney
Studi os commissary and
said, "Oh no you don't ! I
never sit with my back to the

'·

•

'"

Today :

• the opposite is true . Stud ies can do to help you in the
Of real estate please ·
• over a ten year period show field
·
In at
hone or drop
that
the
net
proceeds
tr.om
P
•
LEAD! NGHAM
REAL
e owner.sold propert y are ESTATE, 512 Second Ave.,
• LESS
than
, t he Gallipj&gt;lis. Phone 446-7699.
• REAL TORS.sold piece of We're here to help!

•

1'

·

refreshment

thin gs gel dull or some

Cloudy tonight with chance :,.~::::;=·=;~;;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::;:::'::;:::::;:::::::::;:::::::::;:::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::;::
of shower s later tonight ,
Lows in mid 40s . Chance of
showers Tuesday. Highs in
AT GRAB BAG TIME auction personnedil movede
lower 60s. Chance of rain 10 :.: :. :. tllrough
the crowd selling bags of items of an un sc1os
'
.
:
per cent today, 20 per cent ;:;: nature like hot cakes, generally for about $3 each.
tonight, 50 per cent Tuesday.

AUCTION PERSONNEL SETa friendly tone by dlstribuling lollipops to the younger set
at the Meigs Plaza. Auction.

Scott 's Wurld :
Winters Fantasy

·C£S ta t e:•

e
e sav es NO money when he
e sel ls his own home. In fact ,

Weather

was the Plaza hardware
'tore. They come early and
stay late making their bids on
the varieties of merchandise
which are paraded before
them by Howard Beasley, the

preparing hot dogs, sloppy
joes and-soft drin#s for the
customers who parade to the

in full play. October 30th

COLUMBUS (UPI) league felt extending the
Although interested in what
mandatory retirement age to the U. S. Supreme Court .will
70 would delay by up to five rule in the · "reverse
'!I
years the opening of 150,000 to discrimination'' case of Allan
200,000 jobs annually for
Bakke, administrators of
women, yowtg blacks and some Ohio medical schools
members·
of
other
say they do ·not anticipate the
By
• minorities.
Willis T. Leadingham •
Prof. Eli Ginsberg of Co- court's ruling will have
marked effects on their
Realtor
•• Iumbia University's graduate
current
business school thinks this procedures. admissions
impact might be less than the
I' m sure you·v~ heard It payri.ent of commission. e Urban League feared. Gifls..
sai d: " Why should 1 sell
As a private sel ler you're • berg, however, said the bill
my home 1hrough a at a great disadvantage in ..
O&gt;Uld cause problems in top
REAL TOR? I can sell It the intr icate area s- of • corporate management.
ROTTERDAM, The
myself and save a lot of financing, negotiating and • ' 'unless the Senate holds out Netherlands (UPI)- Dennis
money ." Right? .. . Wrong ! protecting yourself from e for ils amendment to deprive
This kind of t hinking al l sorts of do-it -yourself • executives Of the extra five Nijssen, youngest of the
usually turns out to be pitfa lls . You've got a lot e years protection, he ~ said, 8 Dutch sextuplets born Sept.
18, was reported in critical
fina n cially unw ise . The invested in your home. It e
pro~peCtswi ll usually start makessensetolist itw1tha • company may be forced to condition Saturday following
by mentall y deducting the REAL TOR. He' ll sell it for • keep top managers who have surgery for a perforated
com mission and then start .. you - without hitches - • lost their drive "and· then tbe intestine.
·
nego1iati ng from there. 01 'flo· for the best pr ice arid in the • compa·ny will be in real
T~_e sextuplets born to
the average, a homeowner shortest . amount ·af t ime. • trouble."

:•

Well , one likely spot where
they are found on football
nights is the Meigs Plaza in
low er Middleport. Every
Friday night personnel of the
Ohio River Auction Co. hold
forth .

Jonathan Winters' fantasy

Continued froin page D-1
One of tlle main questions
raised is whether Cmgress is
making a fundamental
change in national social
philoso phy by lifting the
retirement age or simply is
adapting to tlle lengthened
useful
lifespan
this
generatioo enjoys.
"There can be no rule of
tllwnb answer to tba t question ," said Samuel Stone, 83,
head of tlle National Retire· ment Council in New York.
St911e said a great many
more people are mentally
and physically vigorous in
their later years now than in
.the past.
Sen. Jacob Javits, R·N.Y.,
is reported to be preparing an
amendment that would phase
otit mandatory retirement
entirely over five years.
Although it is believed the
Senate will pass tlle bill, the
margin is unlikely to be as
lopsided as in the.House.
Jim Williams of the
National Urban League said

Auction addicts fi ll the
large room which at one time

do for diversions?

a

'•

are jammed

"it wouldn't do for all of us to
lik e the same things '" So
what do the nun·foolball fans

incentives.

"Outstanding Youn g Hospital
Administrator" Hudgens Aw·
ard in the United States and
Canada. This national award
ls · presented
to
an
Administrator under the age
of 36 for outstandi ng

~1adiums

oo Friday nights each week
as residents throng to support
lhe old home team.
Howeveri as has been said,

nanf

was awa rded t he coveted

conunWlity and civic work
and is considered one of tlle
highest honors in !he health
care field.
Since becoming a ·Mason
County resident in January
1971, Farley bas been very
active in numerous civic and
business organizations. Some
of his activities include
President of the Paint
Pleasant-Mason County
Chamber of Commerce in
1971; Rotarian of the Year
(1 972·1973 ) of the 'Point
· Pleasant Rotary Club.; Board
of Directors, Citizens National
Bank; antj Board of Directors
and Treasurer of the Bi·
Centennial Commission.
From 1973 to 1975, he was
President of tlle Marshall
Universit y
Alumni

Are(.!

Holley will ofliciatc .

vears of failing health .

offered the elderly for a ' tington, the brother ; and
ce rtain amount of their these half·brothers and half.
sisters, Wa lter Sheets, san
electricity.
Pedro, Calif.; John, Long
The tax por tions may Beach, Calif.; Mrs. Sadie
to

Halley Wood Funeral HOmt"',
wfth bunal in Mound Hill
Ccmefery Friends may call
2 4 and 1 9 p m Monday at
the funeral home . Rev . Alfred

VIRGIE 5 . HALLEY
GALLIPOLIS
Vorg,e S,

slates' marke\s.

' .

Auction has its crowds
on Friday nights too

I

•

f1v~ \l'~trs .

Continue As

Ln

•

,-------------------------Energy plan:
Area Deaths

M-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 9. 19n

achieve m en t

•

I

conciliation work .' '

mgun

accident r·

POINT PLEASANT - An
11-yea
r-old Appl e Grove boy
19th century Lebanese hermit
died
Saturday
from an apmonk Sunday and pilgrims to
parently
accidental
gunshot
the monk 's her mita ge in
wound,
according
to
West
Lebanon immediately
Virginia
Slate
Police
Cor·
reported miraculous cures of
poral
J
.
L.
Fitzwater
.
·
invalids.
Dead on arrival at St.
The canonization of St .
Marys
Hospital in Huntington
Charbel Makhlouf was the was John
Roger Blain. He
first performed for a memb~r
was
a
;
student
at Sunnyside
of an Eastern Rite church
School.
Elementary
since. the Vatican proclaimed
Acoor din g to Corpor a l
new sainthood procedures
Fitzwater,
Blain
was
four centuries ago .
wounded
in
the
chest
and
Assisting the pope in the
right
arm
from
a
single
two hour, 15 !l1inute
canoniza ti on · rri ass was· discharge of a 20.gauge shot·
Antoine Pierre Khreish, gun. The Incident. occurred '
patriarch of tlie ' Maroni te shortly after noon as the
Christians. It was the first victim and som e friends were
time an Eastern Rite primate target pra ctic in g on the
took part in a Latin rite mass . property. of a neighbor.
From what witnesses told
In Lebanon, tllousands 'of
police,
one of Blain's friends
Maronite Christians traveled
was
loading
a $hotgun when it
to St . Charbel's monastery
'
accidentally
went off.
and hermitage in the town of
The
victim
was a member
Maya , 30 miles north of
Beirut , and many said they · of the Pleasant View Church
in GaUipolls Ferry where .
witnessed miracles.
Ona woman reported a 2- services will be held al 1
year-&lt;)ld child paralyzed fr om p.m. Tuesday, the Rev
·
birth began to move hi s legs O'Dell Bush officiating
.
after they were touched to a Burial will be · in Conco
Henderson .
statue of the saint. Other Cemetery,
pilgrims, many of whom Parents, two brothers, two
wallced barefoot up a .I!Hnile sisters, paternal grand·
parents, and · maternal
(Continued on P&amp;Ct 10)
grandmother survive.

'I

•
:~

I

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomer-oy 10., Monday, Oci. IO, 1977

Bengals hang on,
sting Pack, 17--7

•

\I

- A

GOOD

'"

NEWsPAPEP!
IS' A NATION._
'TAJ..Ktt-JG- -ro
\ I~CSEL.F '' /j

"
,,

-AR'TJ.Iu~ MIL.l.. 6fl.

MILWAUKEE, Wts. (UPI )
- It has been almost a
decade since the mere s1ght
of the Green Bay Packers'
green and gold uniforms
caused opposing teams to
turn mto silly putty.
Boyd Dowler was rer .inded
of that as he made his rounds
Ufrough the visitors' locker
room Sunday, pumping out
handshakes to members of
Uie Cincinnati Bengals.
Moments before, the
Bengals had beaten the

Packers 17-7 and Dowler, the
Bengals' rece1vers coac h,
was in a jubilant mood.
"It was a must v1ctory 'for
us, " he sa1d, smiling. ''We
knew we had to do 11 and we
did.''
And the Packers?
tDowler shrugged. "!
wouldn 't even want to guess
at how long 1t wtll be before
Bart turns it around," he
said. " Or whether he will." •
Bart, of course, is Packer
Coach Bart Starr. A decade

Today's

Sport Parade

.....
~-

'·
'•'

KFS

,,.
.; ,

TliE \1ILWAUKEE JOURNAL
/

Financial crisis -c oncerns Ohio Farm Bureau
demand, " sa1d C Wilham
Swan k.
" We had an ear her meetmg
with lendtng mstttullons to
see what could be done about
helptng these farmers," satd

fede ratiOn said today the
federat1on w1ll hold a senes
of county meetings With
lending agencies 1n Februa ry
m a contmumg effort to he lp
Oh10 farme rs over a fmanc1al
cn .sis
caused
by
overprod uction .
Wtth
bumper
crops
reported m wheat, soybeans
and corn "t t's the old story of

·• we
met
1&lt;1th
representa tt yes of the
Pr od uctton Credit As-

supp\y and denumd , tno much

sociatum, the Federa1 LQ.nd

su pul)

Bank'

and

not enough

SY..ank. ·'The consensus was

that wtth good loan management most of these loans
could be extended to see these
ranners through this crlsts.

ASSOC iatiOn ,

the

HEALTH
Exercise affects
fat levels
rn&lt;:tl &lt;:tmounl ?

DEAR READER -- It
depends upon the method and
U1e state of the pahcnt when
studted fn general tf the patamt l):i m the fasti ng state not ha vmg eC:tten fur al lc11st
12 hou rs - the level should be
below 150 mil ligrams m 100
tmllllltcrs of blood
Hernembe r
tha t
tn glyce ndes arc s&lt;fQply fal&lt;
The amount of fat m the hlood
v&lt;:~nes grea tly wtth what you
~ ve eawn re&lt;.:cn tly. Fa t Js
slowly abS&lt;irbcd and slowly
clea red from the blood
stre~m comp&lt;Jred to su~C:tr Ir
ts much more affected by a
rec.:cnt mea l tha n you r
cholesterol level One rcw;on
you are havmg trouble fmdm~

n ormal

va lu es

IS

becaulit! of IL~ va riC:t b!IJt,y
The tn!,(lyccndc leve l w1ll
also fall 1f yu u exerctse
vu~orously. 'l'hc i:lmou nt of excrc~&gt;c m the preccdmg 48
ho urs moy affec t you r
tngly cen de level
The tnglyccndc level alone
ha s IH!l been found to be (:IS
useful as the cholesterol level
111 predu.: ung the r·1~k of heetrt
- attacks When the stze of the
parttclcs formed by the
tnglycendc-cholestcrol comblflatwn 1s consu.lercd, lhc
riSk calculation lor people
over 50 can be zmproycd. In
tha t age group theamounl' of
parltcles of different stzes
be&lt;.:orne more Importa nt than
ll1e cholesterol level IJ!sme.

newspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
Hadto C1ty Sta ti on, New
York, NY 10019
DEAR DH LAMB - As a
young cht ld I acqutred a hahll
of putting my forc fmgcr m

my navel t~nd dJMgmg as a
WC:tY of gmng to sleep C:tl mght.

When I was about 10 and lfl
lhc hospttal wtth pncumoma
a young nurse told me 1f
d1dn 't stop domg that I weU id
get ca ncel" ThiS has plagued
me day and mght I might
add that I illdn't stop d&lt;,tng
this. J " m now };! n11ture
wvman of 57 and the mother
of 10 hea lthy, ch tld ren
I 11m so worned because
have s tr11n~e feelings an dshootmg sense~twns around
my nC:tvel and the lower pC:trt
of my body My duclm ~my~
you can't get rmu~ c r 11f the
navel, Cou ld you g1vc rnc
your v1cws on this'' I 'm so

frtghtencd of the dtsea sc but
don' t understand cm1eer at
all
DE AR HEADER - YoU!
letter IS (.1 good exmnplc of
why peo ple s hould never try
to c hauge a c htld 's ht~blls hy
fr1ghtemng them of some dire
consequence, other thilll a
good patldhn~ Jf wo rr arlkd

That young nul se LlllWiltmgly
planted the seed fm you to
use In rcspondmg to your anxtety l'C(:It'liOilS .
No no, no, f1n gcnng yo ur
nC::IvCJ w1 1J not cause cmwer
Ca ncer ts "unpl y ~ell gm wth
that has gone berserk all owmg unc.: oritrollcd C:t bn ormC:tl
gro"1h F'or example, ltvcr
cancer IS -a ra p1d dJsorgC:tnJZed growth of lt vcr cel ls M&lt;m)
factors can stunula tc the w1 ld
W owth.
1

'J'hcjse whu want mnre mft;rrnation f;lbo ut tn g/yecr1rles
Why dun ' t you &lt;.L"ik }C1ur
(;CH I ;end fur The HPalth r.cttlodor
tu h;we yull ~!:l' t.1
urnher\ 1-2. Cholcsternl,
psyehwtnst
fur !-iullle profes·
Jyccr(des, BlorKI Fal&lt;,
Stnd

1\ l!lcros cleros ls.

50

c·enl' with a long, stam ped,
· t.:lf-addrcsscd crwclopt: f()r Jt
tq rnc m u.trc uf Uus

•

If yuu I rHI
get Hl the 1rmt of '' 'II' 1ca!
GHIXJt:ty theu its lfi·H IIfes taSlt)fiC:JJ C/J UilSC JJn g:

tJtm, !'X I CSSIVC f~~l f' l lf I OTIC i
uwy bt: • Olllltilled.

•
_._

Busmess Admml5lratmn and

Landmark," satd Swank .
" What we want to do oow,
begmnmg m February, l5 to
have rep resenta.tt ves of tllese

lending mstltutlon.s meet on
the county level to see what
ca n be done to help these
farme rs, ' ' said Swank.
"The real crunch w1ll come
m the sprmg when the farmer
has to borrow money to put
out a new crop," satd Swank
"That is when things wtll get
the ughtest "
" We want to meet w1th
these lendmg IIlStJtutlOns to
make sure the y don't
a rbJtra n ly rub out vo ur

•

I,

solutions to the problem
fa cmg the ~ rpm fanner and
ooe tha t may be the subject of
a feastbthly study by Battelle
Memonal Institute is the use
of gram fo r fuel
"ThiS could solve a lot of
the problem," satd Swank
"Not only wtth the excess of

or

gram but it could al5o help
solve some of the energy
problems."
Another solution would be
the shipment of grain to
needy nations but Swank is
afraid
the
federal
government , man attempt to
balance the federal budget,
will not take thts route.

.

Money stolen
du~g_.B&amp;E

Approximately $550 m
expanded gra m farmers," currency and old corns and
$120 in centenmal dollars was
sa1d Swank
" W,e want to make sure taken in a breakmg and
none of these lendmg people entenng over the weekend at
pamc and start a sp1ral of the home of Merrilt'O'Dell, 10
thmgs happerung that don't Belmont Dr
Accordmg to c1ty · pollee
need to happen, " satd Swank
offtcers,
someone used a
" It' s
an
age-o ld
large
screwdnver
to gam
dilemma ," sa1d Swank. "The
entry
to
the
house,
forcmg
the
consumer doesn' t really
rear
door
open
co mpr ehend the farmers'
The home was ransacked
sltuatton and can 't do much
from
room to room.
about even tf they did.
Fnday
night, ctty pohce
"lJke in brea d, the conofficers
tnvestigated a
swner's price 1s made up
breakmg
and
entering at Carl
mostly of labor, packmg and
Maniskas'
home,
20 Henkle
fuel wh1le the raw farm prtce
Ave
.
The
house
was
entered
IS a very sma ll fa ctor /' sa1d
between
.6:30
a.m.
and
3:45
Swank " The a mount of
p
m.
by
removmg
a
screen
wheat m a loa f of bread has
dropped to 2 6 cents . The from the kitchen wmdow.
Mtssmg was $60 from an
bread wrapper proba bly
costs more than the wheat. envelope which was in a sultWe are m a supply-demand case and $142 from a chest of
Situation and worldwide I"• drawers
Also taken was a .38 caliber
have a big supply ."
pistoL
"Now the same is true with
Jtm Moms, 562 Fourth
livestock," sa1d Swank. "We
Ave.,
reported the theft of a
have so much gram that we
Briggs-stratton
lawn mower
are feedmg our livestock
taken
from
hlS
back
xard.
gra m and producmg more
also
investigated
a
Officers
beef and-pork and poultry and
at
the
apartment
of
shooting
those prtces are also bemg
Wanda liill, 8561&gt; Second
driven down "
Swank sa id the Farm Ave.
Accordmg to the report,
Bu rea u has proposed several
Charles Wilham SisS&lt;ln came
farmers

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR LAMB - have
been unable to ftnd the proper
v ~lu e
fur tng lyce n des
anywhere What IS the nor-

Farmers
H orne
Admtn Jslratton, the Small

recen tly

Freedom in our hands
Joe D. Smith Jr., PubU.ber
The Aleuadrta ( La.) DaDy ToWD Talk
Pnttldeat aad Cbalrman, Amerlcaa
Newspaper Publlsher11 Assoclatioa

'Don 't involve me in your petty bickering!'

COLLIMBUS fUP I) - The

'

In observance of National Newspaper Week:

ibrfll:l~

e:JU.'t1Jllve vice president of
the Oh10 Farm Bureau

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

c: .

•

. It's true !
When you read your local newspaper,
you hold freedom m your hands; and we, 'as
Amenca 's newspaper publishers and
editors hold much of your freedom m our
hands as we exercise freedom of the press.
When a. government des&lt;res to preempt
some or all of the freedoms of 1ts people, 1t
moves lu-st to restrict press freedom so that
its later actions will not draw the scrutiny of
public attention If you value your vote or
your prillllcy, your right to your own
rebgious beliefs or your right to petthon
your government - or any of the many
individual rights we enJOY as Americans then a free press _is essential to • your

"

freedoms . As a people, we are proud of the
American free SOCietY It has afforded a
wider range of personal freedoms for its
people than any other system of government
Publishers and editors value your
freedom too, for we share 1! with you.
Freedom of the press is not ours alone. It Is
yours, too . A free)lress and a free people are
inseparable.
Our burden is lo exerc1se press freedom
responsibl~. fairly and objectively m the
best mteres\ of all the people. It is a goal to
be sought It is an Ideal of perfection not
always attamed. But, we approach the Ideal
much more closely without government
regulation, control or ' 1asststance."
So when newspa per pubhshers - and
newspaper readers think about each other,
1t 1s unportant that both recall , that. indeed,
freedom ts in our hands .

.•.

working- rn one.
potential roadblooks .
WASHINGTON (UP!} But, the energy bill
- A continuing S.enateCo!)gress is runrung pretty
remains
the btggest and most
to the Hill apartment-:'lle 10as much like the old-hme liouse dispute over the use of tune-consummg problem.
'"
federal
funds
for
abortions,
asked to leave by Mrs.' Hill, railroads - late and behind
The
House
has
passed
one
-which
is
blockmg
160
million
but refused to do so He then schedule.
No one is certain when the . in appropriations for the ve rston conlaming all f1ve
shoved her and her son, Joe
fi115t
session · of the 95th Department of Health, major parts of Carter's proHill.
Congress
will close up shop. Education and Welfare and gram. It's not identical, bul "
S1sson reportedly told Mrs.
Its
leaders
originally had the Labat Department The fairly close to what the ,,
Hill, "You'll have to shoot me
hoped
to
be
gone
by now, but House w11l vote on a new adminiStration wants.
to get me to leave." Mrs. Hill
Senate
instead
The
the
most
optimistic
current formula this week in hopes a
then got a 22 pistol and fu-ed,
strong
showing
will
convince
four
separate
bills
approved
tredictions
are
for'
a
Nov.
1
with a bullet strikmg him tn
the Senate to gQ along
with
a
fifth
energy
taxes
adjow-runent
and
there
is
talk
the right leg.
- The need to pass before st1ll to be acted on. The · •
of
the
session
running
to
Thus far, no charges have
Thanksgiving or even later. the end of the year a method Sena\e Finance Committee ' ·
been filed m the incident.
The key is final disposition to put more money into the hopes to vote on the lax bill by
Policemen were called
of
President Carter's Social Secunty trust fund. Friday, but it could take
Sunday to 50 Vinton Ave.
•
omnibus
energy trogram and The House Ways and Means longer.
wh~re Walter Scott was found
Committee approved a bill
Meanwhile
the
Senate
and
·•
how
fast
Congress
can
reach
dead . Dr
Donald R.
last week and the Senate House can act on other ...
Warehtme , GaJlfa County that point - if ever - is
Fmance Colllmtttee is legislation .
Coroner, was caUed rn too. anybody 's guess.
There are at least two other
The House, wh1ch '" taking
Death was ruled by natural
Columbus
Day off today,
causes.
IDIODS 88
comes back Tuesday to •·
The bill would allow the ~ constder a bill to charge
WASHINGTON (UP!) transport
of oll imports mto bar_ge operators for operating
GRANGE TO MEET
Rep. Ralph Regula, R~hio,
Meigs County Pomona has asked his consitutents tD the U.S. in American-flag oo mland waterways to help
pay for construction projects.
Jumor Grange will meet let him know the1r opinions on tankers
In his. "Report Colunm" to
The Ho"!'e al5o plans to act
Tuesday,OcCll,at 7:30p. m. the Cargo Preference Bill.
his home district th1s week , on a $6.8 bllllon supplemental
in the fair board building. AU
Regula said the bill could appropr&lt;atlon with an_ effort · ' ·
members $2 dues.
wind up as' higher heating scheduled to
$1.3 billion a
'"
bills, higher gas trices and Ho.use comrruttee voted to
IN
LOVfNG memory of
TAKENTOVMH
utility rates since )! would build four Bl bombers Carter
Naom 1 Autherson , who
The Pomeroy Emergency
passeel ~way Oct 10, 1976
cost according to the does not want.
Squad was called to Union A precious one fro m us has Gen~ral Accounting Office,
C a r_ t e_r ' s f I r s I
gone
Ave , at 4-{16 a. m Sunday for A \r'OtCe we loved IS Sftlled
$610 million per year 10 ml reorgaruzation ~hlch wipes
Christine Musser, a medical A place Is 11acant m o ur costs by 1985.
out . some mdepende_nt
hearts
pa!lent, who was taken to That
lie
said
the
Councll
of
agenc&lt;es
and cuts the White
never can be filled
Veterans Memorial Hospttal
Sadly
mtssed
by
Economic Advtsors has House stall by 25 per cent,
husband, Cart. children,
de\ermined that bill's effect al5o IS on the docket.
grandchildren , and great
would be to increase inflation
The Senate schedule Is in a
grea t-grandch,ldren
_______
_p_____ _
and thus unemployment and- state of more uncertainty.
to reduce the Gross National But legal services legislation
Notice
Product.
and a bill to cut down on child
REDUCE SAFE and fas t
pornography are scheduled.

ked m
• cargo bill

. rn MemOIJ

Pll!LADELPHIA (UP!) - HIS hair matted down from all
the champagne hts players had poured over 1\, Tommy
Lasorda suddenly remembered someooe he had forgotten in
his ecstatic acltement.
Without a word, he slipped away from the rest of the
celebrants '" the noisy Los Angeles Dodgers' clubhouse some
time after they had beaten the Philadelphia Phillies for the
Nahonal League pennant saturday night to find his wife, Jo.
He found her patiently wa1ting with most of the other Dodger
players' w1ves m _the corridor outside the clubhouse and he
embraced her and kissed her.
Seemg the other wives, Tommy Lasorda said to them, "We
would've never made it if it hadn't been for all of you "
He lingered only a moment or so and then went back m the
clubhouse to be with his players. Mter he left, Jo Lasorda ,
married to the Dodger llUlnager for the past 'll years,
sOinehow found herself thinking of theu- life together .
She thought about how they f1r sl mel a\ the ballpark in
Greenville, S C., where Tommy was one of the pitchers with
the team: how brash he was, asking her for a date before she
even knew his name; how they were married shortly af\erward; how he had struggled for years m the minors and how
much he had lived for thts moment when he would be the
Dodgers' pennant,.winning numager.
Jo Lasorda, a vtbrant, gracious lady whose whole world
revolves around her husband and theu- two children, Lau~a
and Tommy, Jr., thought about all these thmgs and couldn't
keep the tears from commg
'
"Why are you crying'" asked Dodger President Peter
O'Malley, emergmg from the clubhouse and puthng his arm
around her
She tr1ed answermg, but couldn't.
/1

k!ll

Thai's the kmd of chain reaction effect Tommy Lasorda has
on people. Some conSider hun an eif, others a cornball and still
others a better teller offunny stories than Pat Cooper. He has a
way of making you laugh or making you cry. but best of all,
especially from the Dodgers' pom\ of VIew, he 'has a way of
motivating ballplayers, getting them all fired up so that they
can hardly wail to peel off theu- jackets and jump off the bridge
for him.
"The num 531d we were going to win on operung dsy and
never backed up once from that," says Reggie Smith, the
Dodgers' outfielder "There were no 'ifs' the way he said 11 and
no qualifications. All year long, he said the same thmg. He
believed it and he got all of us to believe it . I hadn't heard
coofidence like that in 15 years. It so QVerwhelmed me, I went
to hllll and Wid hllll S&lt;l."
.
Of all the Dodger players, none is a stronger Lasorda
believer than secood baseman Davey Lopes, who played for
him in the minors.
"He started getting us ready to win before we even began
spring training," says Lopes. "Last winter, he made a special
point of taking each one of us to dinner, talking to us, building
up our confidence and untressing us there was nobody any
better.
' 'We're here now and we're gonna go aU the way. You almost
can't help it when you listen to Tommy. Oh, sure, I've heard his
same jokes~ for seven years, but I still laugh at them. It's
like listening to Don Rickles. Everytime you listen to him, you
laugh. We let Tom know when we think he's corny. We tell hun
the .punch llfle before he gets to it and we razz him, but I have
more respect (or hun than any other man m basebalL''
No matter how little or how ·much Tommy Lasorda accomplishes, he always tries for a little more. He never gtves up. A
perfect example of that took place m Uie Dodgers' clubhouse
right after they had clinched.
While all the other Dodgers were ·rejoicing over what they
did, their manager was asking them for little more.
" Four more yards!" he pleaded wiUi them over the noise of
their celebration " We're only four more yards from the
shore. ''
Next time Uie Marmes need someone to recruit for them,
they should come see Tommy Lasorda He can start a war all
by himself.
~

Big 10 wrapup

Other legal remedies may
help ·Beverly fire victims
CINCINN ATI (UP!) - Dr
Ovtd l.ewis, a Chase School of
La w prof essor who ha s
ha ndled the legal Side. of
Kent~cky's mVesliga hon mto
the Beverly Hills Supper Club
ftre, says ftre vtctirns may
win ftnane&lt;al rehef .even if
CIVIl SUits fall.
'To dale, civ tl swts claiming
$1.5 billi on worth of damages,
have been filed against the
family,
the
Schi ll ! ng
nightclub owners , the
commonwealth of Kentucky
and the ctty of Southgate A
total of 164 persons were
kt!lcd m the burning club
:;ut Lew as has compaled an
mvcntory of potential sources
of compensa tiOn, 10 the eve nt
the Vltllms lose t he1r smt , nr

•

the defendants stmply run out
of money
The professor srud that 1f
Kentucky backs up its employes sued for failmg tD
properly perfo rm their
duties, damages would be
paid from unappropr&lt;aled
general funds But he noted
that they are sca rce.
Uruon L1ghl, Heat &amp; Power
Co., he said, might be a
so urce of compensation since
1t apparently violated the '
National Building Code by
supplying power to the
Beverly H1lls without ISSuing
a cerllftcate of inspection .
lie said at least one
Insurance com pany knew of
bUIIdmg code vwlat10ns and

did not report them, and so
may he held civilly liable.
Lewis said Kentucky 's
workman's compensation
law may provide funds to
vict1ms
who
were
entertaining business guests.
or who were employes of the
club when the fire broke out
May 28. He said even those
injured or killed trying to
rescue others may be eligible
for
workmen's
com,
pensation .
He satd if v1ctims who are
Kentucky residents can trove
cruninal conduct on the part
of the Beverly owners, they.
may be ellgtble for awards
under the state's crime
vtc tlm 's cornpensatmn Jaw.

'

w i th GoBese Tablets an,:! E Vap " water pills " Ne lson
Dr~:~g

Only

Schedu le
Halloween Party , Sat , Oct.
29 Races, Pr izes , Ba ll oons.
Open Wed , Frl , anct Sa t
nites, 7 :30 10 . Available for
pr1vate parties Mon ,
Tues ., Thurs . nl tes ; Sat. or'
Sun afternoons Bus trans
portation cancelled Phone
985 3929 or 985 9996

'.

SKATE A WAY

Auto Sales
1977 C HE:VV SCO TTSDALE ,

t w d - tones, sl1d lng glass
w indow 992 5671

----------.--- -For Sale

Only 1n the newspaper does the
1974 YAMAHA 360
19 76 news, entertomment ond features
Kawasak1 .tOO 992 6014
keep unt1l work or chores ore
---- -~-- -----d
one
- a fact •mpor1ont to the
f i E LD
CHOPPER ,
In
ternaf!onal .50 En1ilage nat1on's73 m1li10n wor~Lng worn
blow e r w ith p1pe or silo 40'
bale hay conveyor . used 2 en alone, who m1ght otherw1se
years Large baiPS alfalfa m1ss the news and ad'lert1smg
orc harcf grass hay 84J .
mesmges of local bus1nesses
225 6, after 6 p m

THE DAILY SENTINEl.

INTEREST OF

MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHESTERL. TANNEHILL
E1.ec. Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
CltyEdllflr

Published dally ex.t.:t:pl S01lurday
by The Ohlu Valley Publi.shmg Comany, 111 Court Sl, Pom~truy , Dh10
45769. Busmess Dfflt' ~ Phone 9922156 Ed1turlal Phuoo992·2157.

Second claSIJ pootag c paid

at

Nalmnal a dvc r llllm ~ repre!lenl.ctllve War&lt;.l · Grlfflth Company,
Inc BuUmclh ami Gallagher Dlv ,
757 rlurd Ave, New York , NV

101117

Sullscnpt1on -rates Delivered by

l'amcr where ava 1l11~ 75 cenl.'l per
"e ~k

By Motor Route where CIHl'ler

:-;crv1cc nut I:IVII.Llable, Onf! month,
$3 25 Uy mall in Oli10 a,nd 'W VCL ,

Om.• ye11r, $22 00; SIX months,

$11 ~0 , Three
Elsewhere $26 00
$1 3 50, Three
Subs~ r lptiU n

months, $7 00.
y!!ar, SUL months
mont hs, $7 50.

prlt."t: lndudt_'S Sund ay

Tum•J;.Sentm t:l

cleared the outstretched
arms of linebacker Reggie
W1ll1ams.
But the Bengals, who had
lost two of thtee games and
were coming off a 24-3
drubbing by San Piego ;
Immediately struck back .
~arterback Ken Anderson
completed five of seven
passes and drove them 63
yards to the Packer eight.
Then, with just 19 seconds
left in the hall, he hit Isaac
Curtis over the middle, tying
the game at seven.
In the second ha If ,
Anderson went back to work,
drivmg the Bengals 75 yards
and Tony Davis scored from
the two. Later, Chris Bahr
added a 32.-yard field goal.
Anderson, who overall
completed 15 of 20 for 190
yards, said the Bengals had
decided to "quit monkeymg
around and get back to

basics."
That meant, he srud, that
Cincinnati had to "run the
' ball a lot more and get away
from some of the fancy stuff
. we were using ."
Led by Boob1e Clark's 89
yards in 19 carnes, the
Bengals rushed f&lt;r 159 yards
or just enough to keep the
Packers guessing. And that,
said Dowler, opened up the
passing game.
' We were a little unpatient
m recent weeks," Dow leD
said. 11 You've got to have a
soltil runrung ga'!ne to get
your passmg game gomg.
That 's the key ."
Just as 11 was 10 years ago .
1

Royals
blow AL
-\ pen· nant
·

KANSAS CITY (UPi)
The Kansas City Royals d1ed
with their bullpen.
The failure of Kansas City's
bullpen to get the key outs in
the last two mnings was the
main reasoo the New York
Yankees, and not the Royals,
are champions of the
American League. While Mike Torrez and
Sparky Lyle turned in 6 2-3
innmgs of four-hit reUef for
the
Yankees,
Royals'
Manager Whitey Herzog
paraded five relievers to the
mound in the last two innings
Sunday night and only Steve
Mmgori and Mark Littell
were able to perform
adeouatelv.
The
biggest
disappomtment turned out to
be Dennis Leonard, the
Royals' 2(1-game winner, who
had pitched S&lt;l brilliaqtly in
stopping the Yankees on four
hits Fnday night. Leonard
was given the responslbiUty
of protectmg a 3-2 lead in the
runth mning and ef\ded· UP'
being the loser - as the
Yankees scored three runs
for a 5-3 victory.
He faced only two batters
and both reached base safely.
"! bet Dennis Leonard

United p...,.olnternattonal
In other conference games,
A 5-0 record does not a Iowa beat MinneS&lt;lta 1~,
season make , but positive and
Indiana
dealt
tllinkers seemed to see signs Northwestern its 21st loss in
of a poss1ble "big three" the last 22 games, defeating
a~ng Big Ten football the Wildcats 25-3.
ads , Wisconsin bemg the
Wisconsin will learn
like y new member
wheUier it is a genuine threat
The surprismgly efficient to Michigan and Ohio Slate
Badgers have been making next saturday when it clashes
menacing moves toward w1th the Wolverines al Ann
dropping their unofficial -Arbor. Meantime, Coach
afflltation with the "little John Jardine and his Badgers
e1ght" and joining those two can savor their new s_uccess,
b1ggies Ohio State and and talk of how 1t was
Mich1ga'n.
j-M'hieved.
Sixth-ranked Ohio State ' "Everybody kept saying,
plastered Purdue 46-0 'No respe?l, .~o resp~t,"'
Saturday, and third-ranked Jardme satd. · They said we
Michigan defeated Michigan were the worst 4 and 0 team
State 24-14 the second in the country, and that we
conferen ce 'win for each were nottht
a good ."
team. Wisconsin, ranked No.
Coach Gary Moeper, whose
20 and anxious to gain some fllin1 were crushed 37~ by
respfll'l, upped 1ts rec~d to 5- Mich1gan earlier this fall,
o and set down its thu-d B1g was asked for his appra1sal of
Ten rival of the season with a the oncoming Badgers.
2&amp;-ll shutout of !lltnois.

could pttch to Paul Blair 20
times and he wouldn 'I get two
hits," sa1d Herzog. "I'm not
knocking P4ul Blair ... I 'm
just telling you how good a
pitcher Dennis 1s."
The Royals, though they
lost the war, did win a f1ght;of
sorts in the first inning when
Brett punched out \he
Yankees' Grrug Nettles after
sliding mto third wiUi a tr&lt;ple.
Nettles kicked Brett while
making a late tag and the
Royals' th&lt;rd baseman
leaped to his feat and
punched Nettles 'In Uie side of
the head . The two men
grappled and both benches
cleared but order was
restored quickly and neither
player was ejected.
"I got kicked on purpose for
playing
aggressive
baseball," said Brett. "I have
been taking that stuff all my
life. I wasn't gonna take it in
front of 40,000 people.
"The only guy on the New
York team that didn't hit me
was Thurman Mu1110n. He
landed on me, put his hands
over my lace so I wouldn't get
hit. They all walked by, one
by one, and eiUier hit or
kicked me."

ninth place
at-golfing

Saturday's
high school
grid -scores-

0

The key was Jackson - a the wmning run to score
money player whom Marlin llttell got Thurman Munson
made hungner w1th the ben- to ground out but George
chmg Jackson, pmch-hittlng Brett thre~ wildly kl flrst on
for Cliff Johnson, lifted a fly a ground ball by Lou PtmeUa
ball to shallow center ln let the third run of the
1
followmg smgles by Wtllie IJlllmg cross the pla\e.
Randolph and Lou Pimella to
"Nobody can say anything
pull tlle Yanks withm a run in now,'' satd Jackson. ''We're
\he e1ghth and give them the champs."
reason for QOpe in the mnth. · The tension of the game
"That guy IS a real cham- ex ploded in the ftrst inning
p1on," said Martin, who ex- when Brett slld bard inlq New
plamed thjlt Jackson was not York third baseman Gratg
m the starting hne-up Netlles, who appeared to k1ck
because of a playoff-long the Kansas City baserunner
slump and his dtstaste for Brett came up swingmg and
artificial turf. "Not once on landed one punch to Nettles'
the bench did he stop rootmg jaw before both benches
and
encoura gmg
his emptied.
tearrunates He sure showed
Order was restored and the
me a lot of class. He even Royals went on to bmld a 3-0
called the score. When we lead through three innings
were down 3-1, he sa td. we with AI Cowens knocking m
were gm ng to..,m 1\ 5-3."
two of the runs. That scoring
That fmal two-run margm outburst signaled the ext\ of
came in--the mnUi inrung as Ron Gmdry, who was trying
Kansas C1ty Manager Whitey to pttch on two days' rest for
Herzog pa raded three the flrst time in his life .
pttchers to the mound.
It was a sour endmg to,
Denms Leonard, who Kansas C!ly's best year ever.
ltmtted the Yankees to four The Royals won more games
hits m wmmng Game 3, was than any learn in baseball
summoned after one day of (102) and appeared headed to
rest to pt\ch the ninth, but thetr first pennant when \hey
Paul Blatr blooped a smgle to took 1-0 and 2-1 leads m the
ce nter and Roy Wh1te playoffs
walked. lierzog called in
"It JUSt wasn't JI!eant to
Larry Gura, the Game ~ be," said Kansas Ctty second
starter, who y1elded a smgle - baseman Frank Whtte.
to Rtvers to allow Blair to "When you go mto the mn\h
score the tymg run .
Ullling wtth a lead, you expect
Then Herzog called m Mark to wm 1!. We expected to wm
llttell, who got Randolph to 1\ It just dtdn't happen ."
fl y to dee p center allowmg

Dodgers
NL champs

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
National League champion
Los Angeles Dodgers, fresh
United Press International
Akron Buchtel 15 Akron S 8 from their ram-slogged 4-1
Akron Firestone 24 Akron pennant-clinchmg victory
Hower 6
the
Philadelphia
Alliance 28 East Liverpool 14 over
Phillies,
arrived m New York
Beachwood 22 Cle Lutheran E
today conftdent they are the
6
Bedford Chane! 19 Garfteld luckiest team m all baseball,
Trinity 12 •
Caldwell 27 Zanesville 1f not also the best.
" I prayed to
God
Rosacrans 0
Canton Cent Cath 7 Louisv ille throughout the senes w1th
7
Philadelphia," sa1d Dodgers'
Canton McKinley 35 Bar Manager Tom Lasorda, "and
berton 7
Cln Country Day 14 Ky the way things turned out I
Country Day 0
don't think I should bother
Cle East 12 Cle John Hayes 0 Hun about the World Senes."
Cle John Adams l7 Cle Collln Dodgers' second baseman
wood6
-Cle St Joseph 13 Cle St Davey Lopes, who was ruled
Ignatius 12
safe at first base in the'
Col Watterson 19 Col St incredible moth-inning rally
Charles 6
'
Day Alter 43 Day Jefferson 0 that brought Los Angeles 1ts
Day Fairview 6 Day Cham . third-game victory Fnday,
Julienne 0
credited Lasorda w1Ui the
Kirtland 12 Hawken School 12 Dodgers' sudden run of good
Ledgemont 20 Lake Perry 7
fortune.
Lexington 33 Crestview l4
"That's right, we' re the
Lowellville 12 Mineral Rtdge
0
luckiest, ' ' said Lopes. "But
Minerva 40 Fair~ess 14
wbcn you're around people
Newark Cath 35 Utica 0.
Newcomerstown
26 like Tom Lasorda, S&lt;lme of
his luck rubS off on you .
Tuscar!lwas Cath 0
Nlles 7 Girard 0
Almost everybody on Uiis
Parma Sr 23 East Cleveland club had his best year this
Shaw 0
Parma Valley Forge 22 Cle season and tbat'silo acc1dent.
"Before spring tratning,
Heights 0
R.I'Ver VIew 14 New Concord Tommy took everyone on the
JG 13
Shaker Heights 21 Lakewood team to dmner and told each
of us what he expected of us
12
University School 23 Gi lmour and everyone responded."
Academy 6
One Dodger who espe_£ia!Jy
Warren Hllrding 7 Warren
responded
was left fielder
Western Rsv . 6
·
Dusty Baker, who was nearly
Western
Rsv
Acad 21
traded durmg the winter.
CuyahoQa His 0
Ye low ~pnngs 42 Cln Land
Lasorda pleaded will! the
mark Christ 0
.
'
Youngs Ursuline 7 Howland 0 Dodger front office not to

tunibes in the f1rst half and
we dj,dn't capitalize, but
Miami is a good football team
and well coached," he said .
Fortner completed 12 of 16
pass attempts and connected
with tailback Mark Hunter on
a two-yard scoring TD and
with Tim Warth oo a fouryard tally in the final period.
Hunter gained 124 yards in
15 carries in the game, but
Marshall's C.W. Ge1ger, who
scored on a t'wo-yard run m
the third period to cut the
Redskins' lead to 17-13, was
Uie game's leading rusher
with 149 yards in 23 attempts.
Miami's Kas1er Holman
also rushed for more than 100
yards as the Redskins, now 4I, tntaled 315 yards on the
ground and 130 m the air.
Holrtlan ran for 122 yards m
25 attempts and scored his
ftfth TD of the season on a
three-yard blast 1r the f&lt;rst

'·

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI )
- If you could capture the

Southern in

Elwood says option
United Preas Iaternatloaal
The option play Is hard to
defend against - just ask
Marshall Coach Frank
Elwood.
·
Miami quarterback Larry •
Fortner engineered the
option w1th per_fectlon
saturday as 'he guided the
Redskins to a 29-19 win over
Elwood's Thundering Herd at
Oxford.
Fortner, who passed for 130
yards and two touchdowrut,
broke loose on a 41-yard
scor\{lg jaunt from the option .
m Uie second quarter to give
ti1e Redskins a 17-7 lead.
"It's hard to defend the
option especially when the ·
quarte~ba ck
runs and
Fortner runs tht option very
well," sa1d Elwood.
Elwood smd the Herd gave
the g~me away in the first
hall.
"We had two golden oppor-

It's Yanks vs. Dodgers
•
zn 1977-.World Series

New York Yankees' 1977
season in a three-hour
::::: :·:··: ··: :: :;. : :; •: .·. :·:·.·:·.·:·.·····=· ·: .·:·:·· capsule 1t would strongly
resemble the final game of
the
American League
Champwnship Series.
New York beat the Kansas
Ctty Royals, 5-3, Sunday mghl
am1d the familiar doses of the
controversy, drama, clutch
hittmg and stellar pitching
that charactenzed the
Yankees' turbulent fight to
the top m the Eastern
Division this season.
RACINE - The Southern
The game had controversy
High golf team finished Its - Manager . Btlly Martin
season Friday playing in the dec1ded not to start
Sectional Tournament at the millionatr e nght fielder
Portsmouth Elks Club in Reggie Jac kson ; drama Portsmouth .
Southern the Yankees tratled, 3-2,
finished ninth in the 15 team heading into the ninth mning ;
f1eld with a team score of 406. clutch hitting _ Jackson
Southern missed qualifying came off the bench to deliver
for the district tournament by an eighth-mrung pinch single
21 strokes. Four teams to drive in New York's second
qualified for the District, the run, Mickey Rivers' mnthfourth team fmishing in •385 mmng single bed the game
and Wtilte Randolph' s
score .
Uruoto won the tournament sacrifice fly sent home the
with a 354 team total, winmn g run, and s tellar
followed by Fairfield Htgh pitching ' - MiKe Torrez
School, 370; Crooksville, 375, pttched 5 J-3 mmngs of threeand Peebles, 385 to account hit rehef and Sparky Lyle apfor the four qualifying teams. peared for the third straight
Other local schools' !icores rught wt!h 11-3 mmngs of oneincluded AleJ&lt;Bnder wtth 411 hitrehefto p&lt;ek up his second
and Glouster w1th 403.
VICtory of the playoffs.
Seth Hill and Jim Powell
The Yankees now advance
t1ed for the best round from to the World Series to play the
Southern. Hill turned m a 47- Los
Angeles
Dodgers
50 round while Powell shot 46- beginning Tuesday night m
51, each totaling a 97 for the New York.
day. Other scorers for
Southern were Dwight H1U
with a 55-49 for 104. Paul
Holsinger had a 50-58-108
round, and Tun Thoren was
51Hi4-121&gt;.

play hard to defe;nd

s

DEVOTED'roTIIE

Pomt!roy, Ohm

Dowler, a
gazellelike split end, formed
one of pro football's deadltest
passing combinations and
helped the Packers win Super
Bowls I and II.
Since then - save for a IQ-.4
season in 1972 - the Packers
have suffered through lean
years. And, unless their
offense suddenly comes to
life, this could be another on~
"I think Bart has done a
good JOb," sa1d Dowler. " I
thin!( the Packers are better
\han they were last year. But,
beheve me, it 's a slow
process. And let's face 11, he
didn't inherit a wealth of
talent when he took the job."
The Packers, who have yet
to score m the second htlf this
season, fell into a fi'mU1ar
pattern Sunday. The offense .
troduced a touchdown in the
fu-st half. then JII"Ound to a
halt.
" Prmcipally, it comes back
to that word - and I hate to
keep using it - but it's
conSistency," sald Starr,
wbose team is 1-3.
Green Bay's only score
came late in the second
quarter , shortly after
linebacker Gary Weaver
stripped the ball from Lenvil
Elltott and safety Johnny
Gray recovered on the
Packer 44.
Then, slaying mostly oo the
ground, Green Bay moved 56
yards in a 15-play dnve that
twice was kept altve by
penalltes. On third down,
quarterback Lyn_n Dickey
lofted a 14-yard scoring pass
to Barty Snmth that jUSt

ago, he and

to ·~~:~~~~:;:.~appy," hetnldber.·•!fyou cry,you'~egoing

Congress is running late

Op • •

SPECIAL NOTICE .
The regular meetmg of the
Board ol Directors of the
Izaak Walton League will be
held Tuesday mstead of the
regular Monday meeting due
to the meeting of the Meigs
Counttans for Wildlife ConservatiOn.

Saturday's
Ohio College
Football Resu Its

quarter.
Marshall quarterback Bud
Nelson hurled a 23-yard to
strike to Ray Crisp to open
the acoring in the first pennd
and Herd, now 2-3, closed out
the scoring with Mike
Bailey's three-yard run in the
final period.
Meanwhile, Kent State kept
1ts Mid-American Conference
unbeaten streak alive with a
20-16 win over preseason
favortte Western Michigan.
The Golden Flashes got
second-half touchdowns from
Tom Roper and Skip Wells
and two f1eld goals from Paul
Marchese as they downed the
Broncos at Kalamazoo.
Ken\ State upped its record
to 3-0 in the conference and 41 overall while Western
Mich1gan fell to 1-2 in the loop
and 1-4 overall.
In other MAC action saturday, Eastern Michigan
handed Ohio University its
Uiird 1loss in Conference play
against no wins with a 31-14
setback, and Bowling Green
downed Toledo 21-13. Bowling
Green 1s now 2-1 in tbc
conference and Toledo is
wmless in three decisions.
At Tallahassee, previously
undefea ted Cmcmnati ran
mto a tough Florida State
defense and came away wtth
a 14-11 setback .

United Press International

Ohio State 46 Purdue 0
Akron 31 Dayton 24
Allegheny (Pa l 13 Htram 3
Bethany (W Val 16 John
Carroll 2
Bluffton 13 Anderson lind ! 7
Bowling Green 21 Toledo 13
Canlslus (NY) 29 Oberltn 9
CaseWestern23Thleli Po l 17
Deftance Mlchlgan 31 Ohto U
14
Findlay 41 Manchester (In d)
21
Florida St. 14 Cincinnati 0
Georgegown (Kyl 47 Ohio
Northern 34
Heidelberg 21 Denison 7
Kent St 20 Western Michigan
16
Kentucky St 41 Centra l St B
Kenyqp 1B Ma rtella 6
Mlam f 29 Marshall 19
MI. Un ion 35 Wooster B
Musktngum 37 Ashland 28
Ohio Wesl eyan 47 Cal iforn ia
St(Pa)7
.
Otterbein 24 Capi tal 15
Wllmmgton 24 Earlha m ( tnd)
14

Wittenberg
Wallace 13

24

mclude Baker in any deals.
Baker hit .291 with 86 RBI
thts year and helped the
Dodgers set a major league
record by being one of four
hitters on the club to bell30 or
more homers. But it was in
Uie playoffs that Baker really
payed Lasorda back for hts
conhdence - slugging a
grand slam home rwi to win
the second game and hittmg a
two-run shot to _give TommY
John all the cushion he
needed in the 4-1 clmcher.
"They tol d us we wouldn't
be here and we proved them
wrong," S3ld Baker, who was
the overwhelmmg choice as
the Most Valuable Player of
the playoffs.
Lasorda , who has now
become the 19th manager in
maJ or league h1story to win a
pennant in his first full year,
has - ind eed enj oyed a
storybook first seaso n as a
successor to Walter Alston.
0
8ut it's not over yet,t'
ms1sted Lasorda, who is still
confident Ius "great Dodger
in the sky" will be looking
over h1s troops £or one more
week.
11
Just four more yards to
go We're four yards off \he

1977 AMC car now 1n stock .
All cars have the exclus1ve
AMC Two Year Warranty

IS THE
BEST POLICY
As an ind epende nt in surance
ag ency,
our
primary function IS to
pro vide polic 1es wh 1c h
afford financia l protecf1on
in case of loss.
But , we also have a v1tal
interest in loss protection ,
as should our clients . We •
encourage care, caution
and safe ty .. preventive

measu res which can keep
that car accide nt from

,happen tng , that building
lfire f rom starting , that
home burglary trom bemg
committed

Prevent1on saves life, I1mb

and property .. and helps
control msu rance cos ts and

pre m1ums
When losses do oct:ur , our
pol1cy holders ca n count on
protection and serv ice m
t1me of need But we still
say - prevention IS th e
best poliCy

DALE C.
WARNER INS
992-2143

102 W. Ma1n

Pomeroy

shore."

VOLI&lt;SW AGEN
- SERVICE SPECIAL
SAVE GAS
SAVE MONEY
In these days of ever -increasing prices. it's
good to find a bargain and now Riverside
V.W. has the best bargain m town. A TuneUp special designed to keep your V.W.
runnmg with efficient performance and
economy.

TUNE-UP SPECIAL
ALL BEETLES ·
Without Atr Conditioning

ALLPARTSANDLABORINCLUDED
New Pomts

New Plugs

1

Ad1ust Valves
Set Timmg

Baldw in

FULL DISCOUNTS
SIOO.OO over cost on any

PREVENTION

Adjust Dwell
Ad!USI ldle
Other models slightly higher
.

ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FOR 6 MONTHS OR 6.000MILES

All work is done with genuinl'! V .W. replacement parts
and mstalled by framed V . W. mechan1cs

OH ~ R GOOD OCT 17.31

RiVERSIDE
AMC &amp; JEEP
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446

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"
•

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'•

�•

5-The Datly Sentinel, Mld&lt;lleport-Puoneroy 0 ."Monda), Oct 10,1977

+--The Dati) Sentmel Mtddleport Pomero\ , 0, Monda) , Oct 10 197i

Browns-no match for Oakland
t

CLEVELA:'&gt;D 1 CPl l - tune last ~ ee~ after pia~ mg
The Oal&lt;Jand Ratders rt'St the ~1 ooda1 rught game and
J ohn
Madden
cure ,. ,,..ked and so dtd coach
I "as worned
"'en tlung else the Super admttlod
Bo• 1 champs thre• at the about thP short ~eek and
Cle\ eland Bru" ns Sunda) for ~njurtes fr om out:.. earlier
a 2&amp;-10 \ \Cton their r;th ~ames
So he sa td " e came to
stratght and a ~ ita rt thts
Cle' eland Fnday and dtd
\ear
The Ratders lost pralttce nothmg but rest No practice

or an) thmg This • as a good
game for us !~kept th iS thing
( ""'lnnmg strea k ) gomg '

~

The Ratders got fteld goals
after tntecepttons b) Otts
Sts ~ runk
and Charles
Phrlllps and Mark van
Eeghen' scored one of hts two
touchdown s after Pete
Banaszak re co ver ed Ken

Elhs' fW11bl~ nf the sel'ond

half kickoff on the aeveland
SIX

·Ou r defense pla)ed a
great fcxttball game," satd
C le~•eland Coac h Forrest
Gregg, " hose team ts 2-2.
But "e put them tn bad
sltuauons a number of tunes
Even diVISIOn game

Parsons National 500 winner
•

CFIARLO'ITE t; C 1UP! I
- Cale Yarborough thoughT"
he mt ght be gomg for hts lOth
\1cton of the season Sunda)
b\ mtue of a luck; break
near, the end of the end of the
Nattonal 500 stock car rare
Then he sa"' Benn\ Parsons
fl) b) htm 'hke a rocket
Parsons. who became the
stxth dn ver tn NASCAR
history to earn more than a
rrullion dollars m his career,
ran out of gas wtth 47 laps to
go but recovered to \\1n the
event at the Charlotte Motor
Speed\\ a;

The) told me on the radio
to ptt as I went mto the thtrd
c.orner '

Parsons s.cud

I

thought I would nde around
agam JUSt to make sure
I ran out of gas JUS!
commg off 1turn 1 four I
knew coastmg around would
be real slo" The " orst thing
about 11 was ! thought the car
mLght not restart But It dtd '
Pa rsons \\On $41 ,075 ,
mcludmg $1 2,300 m lap
mone) for leading ?.50 of the
334 laps, and moved Into
second place m the Wmston

CUp potnts standmgs behind
The rare was slowed only
Yarbo):llu~tr.--B o th dnvers
18laps by four cautton flags,
"ere tn Che•Tolets
but mechamcal problems
Yarhorough \\honow has a plagued several of the top
good chance to \\lfl hiS second amers oo the Ctrt'Uit
Wtnston CUp pomts tttle mas
Petty broke a shock
man) years "as second
absorber commg out of the
Davtd Pearson, tn a Mercury
fourth turn and slowed his
was third followed by Budd)
Dodge qmckly 1'1!arson and
Baker tn a Ford and Darrell Bobby Allison got Sideways
Waltnp m a Chevrolet
trymg to avmd Petty and
Pea rson
Baker and spun down the front
Waltrtp were one lap behind stra tghtaway through the
Parsons at the finish of the grass and mild
$250 000 event
When P.etty had that trouEver) dnver m the field ble, tl looked like he JUS!
conceded that Parsons had slanuned on the brakes, '
the fastest car on the track, Pearson sa •d ' I was looking
particularly after Richard for a place to go I slarruned
Petty had to dr&lt;il, out because Into Cale, then headed for the
BENNV PARSONS
of mechamcal 'llouble while hills 1 got grass all over
leading the race
myself when I hit lhe apron
"I knew " e could catch We could never get Lt back
' BeMy JUSt flat put tt on
Cale back because we were after that "
us, 'Yarborough srud ' I &amp;ot
p1cking htm up all da) long,'
Yarboroug h sat&lt;!- hts bump outrun, pure and Simple I
S3ld Pa rsons, I knew " ef
1th Pearson was not a factor l don't believe l've ever seen
' 111 hm flmsh
BeMy s car so nght "
enough laps to catch h

Top co lege powers upset

BY IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Wrtter
After Saturday's collegtate
Brow captures
act ton Alabama 's Bear
Bryant ts happy enough to
danrea
Jlg, FredAkerswalks
20-lap event
pro4dly through the streets of
Austm and G1Hord Ntelsen
GARDENA Calif ( UP! ) Garth Brow, 19, of Flmt reclmes m a lonely Utah
Mtch captured the 2t}.lap hospttal room - hts He1sman
haU nule Saturday mght 111 TrophJ dreams utterly
the $100,000 Nattonal Pro shattered
Bryan t 's Cnm son Ttde
Senes of the Amenc an
off the weekend's most
pulled
Motorcycle Assocta twn at
stuMmg
upset as eighthAscot Park
ranked
Alabama
held off a
Brow won rookte of the lurtous fourth-quarter
rally
)ear honors m the two-day
to
ntp
top-rated
Southern
~al,
event
21-20,
endmg
the
Tro]aps
15Ja) Sprmgstetn of Lapeer,
game
wmnmg
streak
M1ch , who fmtshed second to
11
Tlns was a great wm for
Brow, sol td tfted hts posttlon
our
team,'' saLd an exultant
as AMA Grand Natw na l
Brya
nt , whose team wLil
Champton for the second
move up m the poll
surely
stratght ) ear
after
a
road VICtory over the
Dave Aldana of Santa Ana
na
twn
s
No 1 team "The
Calif took th trd place, Rtck
new
people
we P"t m after the
Hockmg of Fremont, Calif ,
at
Nebraska
have really
loss
too k fourth, Don Goss of
Hartland MLch , fifth and unproved our team '
The Crunson T1de, a mneTed Boody of Royal Oak,
PQLnt
underdog, opened up a
MLCh • SIXth
21~ lead over the staggered

Trojans who gamely rallied
ooly to fat! on the potential
game-wtn nmg two-pomt
converston, when Alabama
def enstve
end Wayne
Hamtl to n pre ss u re d
quarterhack Rob Hertel mto
an mterceptwn
Akers, m his flj'st yea r as
Texas coach succeeding the
legendary Darrell Royal, was
bemrung after hLS fourthranked Longhorns upset
tlurd-rated Ol&lt;lahoma 13-6
m the Cot ton Bowl bebmd ~
thmJ.strmg quarterback
Randy McEachren who
had never played a 'smgle
down for Texas before, led
the Longhorns on the only
scormg dnve of the game
after tn]urtes stdelined the
ftrst two Texas quarterbacks
Earl Campbell rushed for 124
yards mcluding a 25-yard TD
on a draw play, and llussell
Erxleben kicked fteld goals of
64 and 58 yards
"Randy did a great JOb he was smart, pmsed and

cool," satd Akers, after the
LOnghorns' first VICtory over

the score board
Playoff Re sults ,

Saturday's

By Umted Press tnt ernattonat
Amer•un L:eague

"'y

F: tfth Game

001000 013-

Kan C1ty

5

10 0

20 1 000 OOG- 3 10 1

Ohoo College
Football Schedule
Umted Press lnternationa 1

Oh

o 51 at Iowa

Gui dry To rr ez (JJ Lyle (BJ
and Mu nson
Spi •Hor tt
Bird
(8 ) M tngon (8) Leonard (9 )
Gura ( 9) Lttfel l ( 9l and Po r ter

Ashland

W- Lyle L - Leonar d

Capotal at Heodelberg

at

Northwood

(Moch)
Blufflon a1 Taylor (lnd)

NFL Shndmgs
B v Un1 t ed Pr ess International
Am en can Conference
Balt1 more
M1am1
New Englan d

East
W L T Pc1
0 1 000
'
0

NY Jets
Buffa lo

3
l

1
l

2

2

0 '
Central
W L

0 750
0 500
0 500
0 000

T Pet
3 1 0 750
2 2 0 500
2 2 0 500

Houston
P1 f15burgh
Cmc nnat1
Clev&amp;land

2 2 0 500
West

W L T Pet
Oakl and
4 0 0 1 000
Denver
4 0 0 1 000
San D1eg0
3 1 0 750
Ko(.tn5oas C ty
0 4 0 000
Se attle
0 4 0 000
N ah o.al Conf erenc e

I Eas t

W L T Pet
, 4 0 0 1 000
3 I 0 150

Dal las

Wash,ngton
Ph 11adelph1a
2 2 0 500
St LOU S
130250
NY G1ants
13'0250
Cen tr al
W l T Pet
M1nnesota
3 1 0 750
Det ro 1t
2 2 0 500
I 2 0 J33
( h JC aQO
Green Bay
1 3 0 2 50
0 4 0 000
Tampa Bay
West
W L T Pet
A t lanta
3 1 o 750

Los

~ngeles

~

2

1

0

667

New Orleans
1 3 0 250
San Fr an c1 sc
0 4 0 000
Su ndav' s Resu lts
NY Jets 24 Buffalo 19
Oak land 26 Cleve 10
New Eng 31 Seattle 0
Ph1la 28 NY G1alli.S 10
(InC I 11 Green Bay 7
San Dgo l.t New Ortns 0
M1nnesota 1o4 Oetro1t 1
Ba lt Jmor e .tS M 1am1 28
Houston 27 P ltt5bgh 10
Denver 23 Kansa s C1ty 7
Atlan ta 7, San Fr an 0
Da llas 30, Sf Lou's 24
wash 10 Tam pa Say 0
Monday s Game
Los Ang at Ch1cago n 1qht

John Car rol l

(N)

(Pal

at

Case Western at Betha ny (W
Va )
Cmcmnatl at Tu lane
Def 1ance at Hanover (lnd )
F l ndla~ at Waynesburg (Pa l

Louosvo lle at Dayton

Mar ietta at Oemson
Mount Un1on at
Wesleyan
Oberli n at Kenyon
Oh10 Un1 v at M lam 1

Oh 10

Otterbem at Baldwin Wal la ce

In )

Hummer claims
top position
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Humm er , tl1e Hdark
horse " caridtdate for the top
spot m the $10,000 US Open
Jwnpmg Championship at
the Cleveland Nattonal
Horseshow, posted a clean
second round Sunday wtth a
wmmng ltme of 'l/8 seconds
Hummer, last horse m the
JUmpoff wtth Susan Vander
Hyden of GordonsVIlle, Va ,
handlmg the rems, surprtsed
the crowd o( 5 000 by
taking
I
her ftrst Grand PriX event m
a ft cld of 10 top professtonals,
after Berme Traung of
Htr am, Ohto, on Th e
Cardinal, seemmgly had won.
with a 28 3 ILme He was
second m the sconng

Idle Dtce, top horse m the
cou ntry , was e nroute to

VICtory , but knocked down a
rat! at the second last
obstacl e, to flmsh wtth a ttme
of 27 l and seventh place
Th e conc ludm g ntght 's
$2,000 Hunter Derby event
was won by Numbers Game,
ndden by Judy Obesen and
owned by Robert Orrbesen of
Oak Broo k. Ill Rtot Free,
ndden by Hodney Jenkms
and owned by Ed Spruance of
Jam1son,
rWHlt!fUp

Pa

Wilmington'

( lnd)

at

Anderson

Wittenberg af Oh1o Northern

Wooster at Muskmgum

Youngstown Stat Arkon (n)

Bowling Green at Kent St

Carneg1e Mel lon
M ator Leagu e Pla yof fs
By Umted Pr es s lnternat•onal
Nahon al League
( Best of FtYe)
Los Angeles vs Ph 1l a
( Los Angeles wm s, l 1 J
Oct 4- P h il a J L A 5
Oct 5 ~ L A 7 Ph ila 1
Oct 7- L A 6 Phd a 5
Oct B- L A 4 Phi/a I
Amencan League
( New York W1ns , l 2)
Oct 5- K C 7 N Y 2
Oct 6- N Y 6 K C 2
Oc t 7- K C 6 N Y 2
Oct 8- N Y 6 K C 4
' Oct 9- N Y 5 K C 3

Thoel (Pa) at Hiram
Westerm Mlch at Tol edo (n)

was th e

SP.Orh Tr•nsachons
By Umted Press lnternalional
Saturday
Pro Basketball
Ne w Jerse y - S1gned guard
Bubbles Hawk 1ns J,e a mult1
year contract
__. ~

Oklahoma smce 1970 'l m
proud of thts team Our
defense played super
thts
ts something you nught fmd
m a storybook ·
GLfford Nte lsen 's tale
would make a good chapter m
a horror anthology
Brtgham Young's Nielsen,
natton's
leadm g
the
collegiate passer through the
first four weeks of the 1977
sea son, w1ll m1 ss the
COugars bna l seven games

due to a knee LnJury
Dr Robert MetcaU, who
operated on Ntelsen s mJured
left knee Saturday mght, sa1d
Sunday, 'He wtll not play
agaw thLs fa ll, but the
prognosis for a full recover y
lSgood "
The &amp;.foot-0 seruor tn]ured
the knee late m 12th-ranked
BYU 's 24-19 loss at Oregon
State, but - he- contmued to
play and eventually wa s
forced out of the game after
he remJured the knee
In rust four games this year
NLelsen had passed BYU to a
3-t record, throwmg for t,16i
yards and 16 touchdowns He
was named to the UP!
Backfteld of the Week twtce
this fall
Elsewhere m the Top 10,
No 2 Mtch1gan defeated state
rtval Mtchtgan State, 24-14,
ftfth-ranked Colorado won Its
ltfth straight game, whtppmg
Oklahoma State, 29-13, No 6
Ohio State rolled over
Purdue, 46-!l seventh-rated
Nebraska beat Kansas State,
26-9, and Washmgton Sta te
upset 10th-ranked Galiforma,
17-10 Nmth-rated Arkansas
was tdle

College Football Results
lv Un1ted Press International
East
Albr1gl"lt 20 Gettysbg 9
Allegheny 13 Hiram 3
A mh ers t l .t A m Inti 14
Ar mv J4 V Il lanova 32
Bsn Coli 30 Tulane 28
earn Mlln 49 wa sh&amp; Jeft 0
Colgate 31 Hol y Cross 14
Dar t mou t h 3 Yl!lle 0
Delaware 23 C1tadel 7
Del Sl 18 H o ward 0
Ed inboro 3 tnd Pa 3
Fordham 2 1 Seton Hall 10
Harvar d 17 Cornell 7

"e've lost we \ e had fumbles
orr klrkoffs,' SaJd Gregg
• E\ en ('fl(' of the four teams
we \e
played
\\eve

enc-ouraged wtth fumbles
Van Eeghen's lt+yard da)
on 25 rushes carne as no
surpnse to Gregg
TI1at's what they 've been
domg well," he satd They
don't put the ball up unless
the) have to or choose to "
Ratders quarterba ck Ken
Stabler "ho completed 9 of
19 but was mtercepted twwe

Broncos
drop to

1-2 in loop
United Press Iaternatlonal
Kent State kept rollmg and
Western MtchLgan kept
faltert ng Sa tur day m a
cunous
reversal
of
expectations at the start of
t he
M1d-Ame n can
COnference season

The Golden Flashes
remamed undefeated m three
league games wtth a 20-16 wm
over the Broncos, the
presea$0n lltle favorite now
saddled wtth a 1-2 MAC mark
and almost out of contention
Steady ram m Kalamazoo
produced a
defensLve
struggle m the hrst half, wtth
both tea ms tr a dm g fi eld
goals But Tom Roper ran
hve )arda and Sktp Wells
hauled m a n 18-yard
touchdown pass for the
game's deciSIVe touchdawns
La te scores by Western 's
Jerome Persell and Albert
Little were not enough to
avmd establishmg Kent State
as the team now to beat m the
MAC
Bowhng Green, next m lme
to challenge Kent State thLs
weekend, tuned up With a 2113 vtctory over n val Toledo
The Rockets had a surpnsmg
13-7 lead tn the fo urth
quarter, but Mark Mtller's
touchdown run followed by a
two-pmnt converswn ga\ e the
Falcons the lead for good
A Toledo fumbl e on tis own
20 late m the game set up
taLlback John Park's second
touchdown that sealed the

and sacked '"tee, satd
Cleveland had "the best pass
rush we h•\ e seen thLs year

By JOE CARNICELU
aggresSI\e, " 'Satd Stabler , UPI E•e&lt;utive Sports Ed1tor
Offlelally tt was hsted as
who mtssed one senes when
stuMed on a late htt b) Earl John Umtas Day tn
Edwards ' I didn t have time Balllmore, but as far as the
to read the keys 1 usually go " MLamt Dolphtns were
Errol Mann, whom the concerned 11 turned out to be
Ratders cut m the pre-season Bert Jones Day
Urutas, the former slllr
and then reclatmed dnlled
quarterback
for the Colts,
four field goals from '1:/ to 39
had
his
famo
us
No 19 jersey
yards, whtle Don Cockroft hit
at
halfllme
one for the Browns and Bnan rettred
S1pe threw a 20-yard ceremomes And, almost as If
touchdown pass to ReggLe msptred by the feshvLltes,
Jones - the current Colt
Rucker
S1pe credtted the offenSive passmg sensation - threw
ltne wtth "a superb JOb all lor four scores and led a fiveday of protectmg me," but touchdown bhtz that rallted
Oakland defenstve end Pat Baltimore to a 45--28 v1ctory
Toomey saw tt differently over Mtamt m a duel of
"The Browns' line holds as unbeaten clubs
The
tnumph
gave
much as the Jets dtd when
Joe Na math was tn hts Baltimore sole possesston of
pr une, " he S3ld And J ohn ftrst place 111 the AFC East
Matuszak added, It's bad wLth a 4-!l record
In the second half of a wtld ,
enough that they hold while
your ' re rus hmg, but 1t 's wtde-&lt;Jpen game, Jones
really frustratmg when th ey passed for two touchdo" ns
grab you from behind when jllld set up a third wLth a '1:1ya rd pass to the one as the
you're past "
Colts, down 28-24 at the half ,
he ld the Dolphins scoreless
followmg the ceremomes for
Umtas
Upsala 9 W 1lkes '1
Waynesbg 26 Geneva 6
Jones had TD passes of
W Chest er 20 Bloomsbg 7
and ftve yards to Glenn
three
w va 38 Temple 16
South
Dough ty, a 19-yarder to Ray
A Peay '11 Morehed St 7
Chester and a 34-yarder to
Cal Sf Fllrln 31 NE La 10
Don McCap]ey Both teams
Clemson 31 v rg ln a 0
Duke 25 so Car 21
had touchdowns m the !Lrst 41
E Car 33 So Ill 0
seconds of the game and the
E Tenn Sl 38 Appy St 20
Fla St l 4 C1nC1 0
Dolphins took a 28-10 lead m
Geo twn Ky 47 Oh10 No 34
' the ftrst • haU behind the
Georgia 14 MISSiSSip p i 1J
Ga Tech 24 Tenne!see 8
rwmmg of Benny Malone.
Ky St 41 Cent St 8
who had 134 ya rds by
Lou iSv il le 33 Tulsa 0
ha!fttme
LSU 28 vande r bilt 15
La Tech 21 SW La '11
Jones completed llklf.JO
Ma r yv l •2 W ash&amp; Lee 0
passes
for 205 yards and
M1 am1 Fla 14 Kans as 7
No Car 24 Wke For sr 3
Lydell Mttchell racked up 142
No Car Sf 11 Aubrn 15
yards on 17 cames Mttchell
W Te x S f 27 So M ISS U
No A la '18 Al a A&amp; M 7
had 116 yarda tn the ftrst half
P1tt 17 Flonda 17
"We Hke to tlunk we can
Sthr n U 28 Bishop J
score on anybody " satd
Tenn St 28 Gramblmg 6
VM I 25 RIChmOnd 0
Jones, the AFC Player of the
va St 5'1 Sh aw 6
Year last season "! don't
Va Tech 17 Wm &amp;M ary 8
Va Un1on 21 Elll Cty 6
think you can ever count us
W V a Wslyn 6 Gl en vi o
out of a game We have too
ma ny weapo ns
We're
M1dwest
Adr. an 34 A lm a a
co nftdent that we ca n
Akron J 1 Dayton 24
overcome any lead "
Ark Tech 58 Ev angel IS
"The Colts got psyched m
Ba ll St 21 111 St 16
Ba ker 54 Cent Meth 21
the
second quarter " satd
Bwl ng Grn 21 Toledo 13
M1anu
Coach Don Shula
Ca se western 23 Th1el 11
Cent M 1ch 25 No Ill 21
• You could see the guys start
Ch 1cago u 21 Belo1t 14
knocking our feet out We
E M1ch 31 Oh10 U 14
E v an svl 10 DePa uw 0
were ahead and let them
'Th e

Btwwns

F rank lin 31 St Jos 7
H illsda le 7 Wa yne St 6
tnd 28 Norlhwstr n 3
lnd St 23 Drak e 20
Iowa 18 M innesota 6
Iowa St 7 MISSO Uri 0
K ent St 20 W M IC:h 16
M 1am 1 0 29 Marshall 19
M 1ch 24 M 1ch St lo4
Mdlnd Coil 47 Neb Wslyn 0
N ebraska 26 Kan St 9
NO M 1Ch 39 W K Y 0
Oh 10 St 46 Purd ue 0
s Oak St 44 M r n 1ngsdl! 20
Sler l1ng 6 Kan Wsl yn 0
Wheaton 10 Il l Wslyn 9
W 1scons1 n 26 111mo1s 0
Southwest
Angelo 1.t s F Austm 0
A r kansas St 10 L am ar 6
An z St 45 New Mex 2.t
Ba yl or 9 SMU 6
E Tex 31 S Houston 17
No Colo 21 ce nt Okla 7
Pra,ne V1 ew 19 sw rex 7
SW Ok la 17 N.E Okla 14
Sthrn Ark 29 NW Okla 27
Te xas 13 Oklahoma 6
TC U 35 R ce 15
T ex Arl 24 M c Neese St 1
W Tex 17 N M ex Sf 14
West
Ala 21 Southern Cal 20
BOISe Sf 43 Mont 17
Cal Da v1s 6 H ywrd St 0
Ch iCO Sf 32 S F St 0
Colo 29 Oklahoma Sf 13
Idaho St J.t IdahO 14
Fresno St 34 s D St l4
H m bldt St 21 Sa !Zfo St 21
Mont Sf 27 Weber St 24
Oregon St 24 BYU 19
o re Call 42 So Ore 21
Pa c Cal 37 Hawa 11 1

dectston

Eastern Mtchigan and Central MLchLgan also kept pa ce
m the MA C wLth vtctones
over league also-rans Steve
Raklovtts of th e Hurons
scored two touchdowns and
passed -to another, leadin g
Eastern to a 31-14 Win over
Oh w

Mose Rtson got his second
touchdown of the game on a
stzziing 85-yard ktckoff
return to seal Central's 25-21
vtc tory over Northern
DhnoLs
The weekend left perfect
Kent State ahead of Eastern,
Central, Ball State and
Bowling Green. all Wtlh rust
one loss MLamt has yet to
play a league game
In nonconfercnce action,
Mtamt quarterba ck Larry
Forner threw for 130 yards
and two touchdowns m hts
teams 29-19 hand lmg of
Marshall, and Ball State's
Dave WLlson passed and ran
for touchdowns to pull the
Cardinals past Indiana State
27-16

S ~anford

32 UCLA 28

Texas Tec h 32 An l ona 26
Utah 23 Wyom 1ng 13
Wa Sh 1ngton 54 Oregon 0
Wa sh St 17 Calif 10

·~·--~

ATHENS - The Dtvtston of
Wtldlife wtll have huntmg,
fishmg, and trapptng dtsplays
m ft ye locattons m Dtstrtct 4
du ting October when personnel from the DlVlstOn of
Wildlife wtll be present to
answer qu est1ons on hsh and
wildlife Follow mg LS a hst of
dtspla) locations and dates
October 4-8, Coshocton
County Fatr
October 8-9, C B Jamboree (Ross Co J
Oct • 8-10, Paul Bunyan
Show (Nelsonville)
October 14-16 Bob Evans
Faim Festtv•l ( Rtl Grande)
Oct 14-16 Fall Festtval of
Leaves (Bambndge )
Sp()rtsmen are remmded
that deer huntmg permtts are
now ava ilable at most huntmg license agenctes

QUALITY
COLOR T.V.
BUY NOW

AND SAVEl

•

..

BAI&lt;ER :
FURNITURE•
Middleport, 0.,'

'

i'

-----·----..;

..
Each year a m1lhon ch1ldren suffer the
pam of ch1ld abuse And we can do
somethmg to prjlvent 1t. L1sted below are
some of the achons we can take Comm1t
yourself to one and help stop the hurt

r-----------------------,
I I •-Ito stop the hurt.(I'll
check the
commitment I've made and mail it in.)

Deer permits are $!0 plus a
[J()..cent wrttmg fee Deer
hunters must have a 1977
hunting hcense m addtlLOn to
the d,.r permit
This year the applicatiOn
__blank for free antlerless deer
hunting penmts 1s attached
to the hottom of the deer
permLt Hunters wantmg to
apply for antlerless deer
huntmg penmts have unlll
October 21 to mail their
appltcallon to the address
tnd Lcated on the appltcation
blank Successful applicants
wtll be determmed by randomtzed computer selectton
and will be nottfted by matl
Landowner antlerless deer
permLts wtll be Issued m
selected counttes upon the
request of landowners or
thetr chtldren Only one
permit per landowner lanuly
Will be ISSUed ApplicatLOns
for these permtts may be
obt.amed at any local deer
checkmg statton or offices of
the Agrtcultural StabL!tzation
and Conservation Service
Those dtsabled veterans
exempt from purchasmg a
hunt111g hcense or deer
perrmt may request an antlerless deer permtt ay:_
plication from the DlVlston of
W!ldltfe, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224
Antlerless deer permtts

whether 1t s for news
enterta nment or shopptng ttps
- look f1 rs t to newspapers It s
1n one

package Con

Oct . 9th
thru Oct. 15th

people are fon 1ghted

llllt••---•
"C ))

D

a me

Jife insurance!'

A

., 1 u ,, ,. 1 ~

•'

'

I'll praise my ch1ldren
more often.
I'll treat my children the way I wish
I had been treated as a child . .

Nam• ----~------~--~--~----­
Address ---------------~------City____________ Stateo____ Z1p _

s~alfr!lmtJe nsu,~ceo~.;o&gt;~"PJ~~
/'lome O~Cf 8oom ngl0n II nos

i daTry1sle ®
OFFICE
,., • 10 S ceLOS£:
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURl

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) The Phtladelphla Phtlhes
were the National Leagues
best htttmg team m 1977, but
durmg the playoffs they hit
more like the Bad News
Bears
!As Angeles ts gomg to the
World Sertes mamly because
Phtladelphla bats were as
qu1et durmg the playoff
senes as their locker room
after Saturday mght 's ramsoaked 4-1 eltmmalton loss to
the Dodgers "We dtdn't hit the ball,"
satd Phtliies' slugger Greg
Luztnskt " It just came down
to the fact that we didn 't hit '
"We didn't hit very well the
en tar e ser1 es ,'' agr ee d
Manager Danny Ozark
"Dodger pitching ts fun to

D talkmg about it.
I'd hke to start helping right now.
D Here's
my donation.

D

• ocust Street

992-5248

----~'~

~-

swm g

\

I

much ''

f!WI
fl.::l

·~ ~

'
L-----------------------~ "~·
~

s a1d

third

Left.hander Tommy J ohn
all owed the PhLIIIes JUSt
seven ht ts m the Saturda y
game, played m a stead y
downpour, that ended the
besto{lf-ftve sen es

,

'A 'Public Serv1ct ol This Newspaper
&amp; Th11.1 Advertising Council

at, "

baseman M1ke SchmLdt , "but
when you go up there, you
don't come aw ay wtt h

M1dd leport, v.,.. ,., ...

~

wtll be avatlable m two deer
zones In deer zone one
antlerless permtts wtll be
tssued m Defian ce, Fulton,
Henry Lu cas, Pauldmg, and
Wtlhams Counttes In deer
zone fo ur antlerless permLts
Wtll be ISSUed Ill Athens
Belmont , Coshocton, Fairhe ld, Ga lha , Guernsey
Harrison, Hockmg , Jackson,
Li ckm g, Metgs Monr oe,
Morgan, Muskmgum, Noble,
Perry. Tuscarawas, Vmton,
and Washmg ~on Counties
The deer longbow season
opened statewtde, exc ep t
Kelle; s Island, for deer of
etther sex on October 7, and
wtll contmu e
throu gh
January 21, 1978 Hunllng
hours a re on e-ha lf hou r
before sunnse to one-haU
hour after sunset
- The prtmLltve wea pons
deer huntutg season wtll be
31
throu gh
Octob er
November 5 on three
spectally destgnated areas
Bucks only may . be--taken
dunng This season on the
Shawnee Forest m Sctoto and
Adams Counties, Wtldcat
Hollow m Athens, Morgan,
and Perry Counttes, and at
Sah Fork WLldllfe Area m
Guernsey County
The deer crossbow sea$0n
ts open statewtde ex cept
Kelleys Island for deer of
etther se x Decemb er 31
through Janury 21 , 1978
Huntmg pertod ts one-haU
befpre sunnse to one-half
hour after sunset Crosshows
must have a workmg safety
and a one-ptece stock more
than ?.5 mches long
The daylight huntmg of all
WLld ammals ex cept deer and
waterfowl ts prohtblted m
each deer zone durmg the gun
season tn that zone and on the
three prtmtttve weap ons
areas durmg the pnmtltve
weapons

season ~

Dunng the regular dj!er
gun season hunters may use
only a shotgun usmg a smgle
ball or nfled slug, or a smgle
shol muztle loadmg rtfe of 38
caliber or larger Huntmg
hours wLll be 7 a m. untLI 5
p m dally el&lt;cept Sunday '
The seasons for the deer

Phils bats quieted
during NL playoffs

~

lookmg -

•

."~

)

comments

Mtl llken

But the Phtlhes weren 't
exactly
ta kmg
full
responsLbLhty for Saturday's
loss
"It was rammg so hard that
w e had no busmess bemg out

there," Schrmdtsatd "That's
no excuse , beca use th e
Dodgers played under the
same condittons
" It'S a sham e that
teleVIston satd 'Hey, thts IS
the lime we set for the game,
we don't care tf tt's ralDing or
not '"
41

the

The league president and
COJl!,ffilssJ oner ne ve r

played a game m theLr life,"
added Schmtdt. "They ha ve
no tdea what tl 's hke ,
especaally on artlflcml turf "

But Luzm skt satd th e
turmng pomt m the sertes
was Fnday rught's defeat
Wtth the Phtliies holding a 5-4
lead wtlh two outs m the
moth, the tymg run scored
when Davey LOpes beat out
an mfteld hit The Plulhes
clatmed Lopes was out, but
fir st base umpire Bru ce

Froemmm g dLsagreed

Carter 's

approach 'ts a reasonable

and enhghtened one, and I
believe the essential mterests
are bemg protected "
Hammond - "! have some
reservations . but I am not
hghtly disposed to fly m the
fa ce of two prestdents and
secretartes of state "
Snelling - 'Both Prestdent
Carter and former Prestdent
Ford believe Lt ts m the best
mterest of the U S and I
wtt h

thet r

JUdgment "
Godwm - "I do not thmk Ll
lS

m America 's mterests, or

m the mterest of worldwide
trade to pa y what amounts to
blackmail to an unfrtendly
government tn Panama as

gun zones a rc as follows

Zone One - November 28
through December 2 for buck
only "tth a f1ve-mch antler
m1mmum No open season on

Kelleys Island
Zone Two - November 28
for bu ck or doe November 29
through December 2 for buck
onl y wtth a ftve-mch antler
mtmmum
Zone Three - November 28
for bu ck or doe November 29
throu gh December 2 for buck
only "tlh a fiv e mch antler

m1mmum

The four Ohto deer zones
are outlmed m the 1977 Ohto
Huntm g and Tra ppm g
Regula tion s avatlable

Unlled Press lateruatlonal
A preview of the loog
winter to come dumped an
loch or more ol snow on the
northera Rockies Sunday
and the National Weath er
Service p()Sied traveler's
adviso ri es today for
Montana , Wyoming and
Colrado
Other areas, particular!~
the Hurrlcaae Heather dre ached dese rt Southwest, found some respite
from weekead raiDs, whleh
caused flash flooding and
so m e" ev a cuati ons
A heavy snow watch wa s
posled over the Rockies of

CINCINNATI ( UP!) - probably has been be st
Sometune m the early 1980s, known as somethmg barda mammoth Industrial plant core alcoholtcs supposedly
may r1se m western North ca n dnnk wtthout ktlltng
Dakota
themselves
The huRe fa cthty , tf bwlt,
Whether or not that's true,
would constderably alter the -methanol takes on mu ch
economtc ltfe and general greater Slgmflcance when
course of human act1v1ty m constdered as one PQSStble
way to get a fuel-bungry
that upper mtdwest area
Its constructiOn wouid world through the energy
allow restdents of the now- CriSIS
The prop osed methanol
sparsely populated regton to
make a umque clatm - home plant ' 'would produce 25 tons
of the world's largest of the fuel per day, or about
commerctal coal converswn 7'h mtliion gallons," saLd Val
Hab]3n, an offtctal of Wentplant
The awesome proJect ts worth Bros The amount of
shU m tls mfancy, on the actual energy denved from
northern Colorado, where
drawLng boards of a 25 tons of methanol Is equal to
snow show ers migrated
CtncL n natt destgn one-ball btlhon cubLc feet of
aft er covering Casper ,
plpeiil\P"natural gas he
engmeermg ftrm
Wyo., with an loeb of snow .
added
But
If
research ,
"Th at would be enough fuel
deve l opment a n d
to
proVIde electrtcal energy
construct iOn go accordmg to
to
two
mt!IIoo homes a day
schedule, the North Dakota
facLhty wtll begm producmg for 20-plils years," HabJan
an enVIronmentally clean, esltmated The meth anol
hqmd fuel - metha nol - by would fuel certrun types of
tur btn e-j)Owered generating
1982
The coa l-to-me thanol unLts
Ra w matenal for methanol
convers10n process ts bemg
hatled
LIS developers as produclton IS IIgmte, a low~:;::~:;~[ one of the most quahty, htgh-j&gt;Oiluting coal
.h
alternattve energy when burned tn liS natu ral
'sottrco!S for the near futur e state And hgrnte ts the
th e
proposed
people have heard ahout r ea so n
conversiOn plant ~1te ts m
"'](i;~~~~~~~ oth er a ltern ah ve energy North Dakota Depostts of the

pr otect t o n aga tn st
sabatoge "
t
Edwards - "There ts no
doubt the can al ts U S
terntory The U S. should not
g~ve Lt up to a MarXIst
You too ca n tra m your dog to
Pa nama goverrm1ent."
go fetch It $ wo rth th e troub le
Thomson - "It's drafted
for the Intere st ng thmgs you
by the 'gtveaway boys' m the
State Department and tt 's read ma ke you a more conver
sure to basten the rtse of sant and 1nte res t1ng per son The
Co mmumsm
m
the Informed read er IS the news p o
Canbbean "

p er rea der

Bowen - '' I have a number
of concerns
but 1 am not
familiar enough wtth tt to
take a dehmte posillon "
Rhodes - "We have other
thmgs here m Ohio to worry

m1mmum
"'bout "
Zone Four - Novem ber 28

thro ugh December 3 for buck
onl y wtth a ftve-mch antler

l\iammoth methanol plant
projected in North Dakota

Winter arrives
in Rocky Mts.

Mtchtgan and Gov Rtcha rd.
Snelhng of Vermont were the
only ones to come out
strongly m support of the
treahes
Govs James Rhodes of
Ohio, JLm Thompson of
Dhnots, Robert Bennett of
Kansas and Robert Ray of
Iowa took no poSitton
Here Me some of the

concur

Wildlife displays at
4 places this month

.

~

treattes' at Its recent meetmg
10
New Orleans, but
modeL ate Republicans and
GOP leaders m Congress
have av oLded any strong
statements on the matter
Gerald Ford has endorsed
the trealtes, but hiS GOP
rtval last year, Ronald
ISSUe
Regan , IS campa1gmng
"! hope It 's JUSt a fnendly agamst them
meetings . of governors,"
There are three strong
Thomson satd But he satd he treaty opponents here "wouldn'l ru le out" the posst- Thomson , Gov
James
bthty
a
reso lulton Edwards of South Carolma
condemmng the treattes and Gov Mtlls Godwm of
would be proposed
VIrgmta
Alll2 governors responded
In addilton, Gov P~erre
to the UPI survey, although DuPont of Delaware had
four declmed a statement on Hsenous reservatiOns," Gov
the treattes
OILs Bowen of lndLana was
Several md1cated tt would "concerned" ab out some
be best for the conference not pr ovisiOns and Gov Jay
to split on the ISsue
Hammond of Alaska had
The Republican National "some reservations 11
Corruruttee condemned the
Gov WLltiam Mtlhken of
New Hampslure, an arch
conservative, IS hostmg the ,
conference m hts home state
Although he constders the
Panama trealtes "agamst
cverythtng Amencan," he
told UP! he wasn 'I sure he
wanted hts colleagues to get
distracted by debaung the

\

'

I know about child abuse is
D Allhearsay.
I'd hke some facts.
I'll mail m this coupon.
my child as a person,
D I'llI'llnottreat
a possess1on.
volunteer hme to my local child
D abuse
prevent'ion orgamzahon
If there is none, I will try to start one.
spend more hme with my
D I'llI'llch1ldren,
starting tonight.
learn oomless ways to tell my
D child
"No'' .
I have a problem. I'm going to start

CHICAGO (UP! )_ Borje enough to mclude regulorof\ews
Salmmg scored twLce, poper reod rng to help keep them
mcludmg a goal wtth less mformed
than four mmutes left, to lift
the TorDnto Leafs to a 4-4 lte t-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
wtth the Chtcago Black
Hawks Sunday rught "' an Mike Swiger
NHL preseason contest
992 7155
marred by a bench-c!earmg
149 5 Thord 51
brawl 10 the thtrd pertod
Moddteport o
Toronto s Dave Wtiiiams
and ChiCago's Dave LOgan
r.
dropped thetr gloves to Igmte
&amp;Of
a fracas whtch resulted m
referee Alf Lee t Jeun e ,..._;;.;;....,.
assesstng 68 penalty mmutes • "' ,... Lilu! a good netghbor
State Fann IS there
The Leafs POded preseason
1-3~3

BRETTON WOODS, N H
(UP! ) - The natton s
Re pu bltcan
governors
gathered today m the scemc
White Mountains lor, a twoday meeting Smce there are
ooly 12 of them, thetr mam
concern understandably ts
how to mcrease thetr
number
The governors wtll attend
and lead workshops on how to
get elec ted They have
mv1ted to the sesstuu any
Republicans who want to run
for governor m any state m
1978
A UP! survey m advance of
the meeting showed that m a
desire for pol!Leta! umty, the
govern ors mLght avoLd
joining
other
GOP
orgamzattons whtch have
condemned the Panama
Canal treaties
Gov Meldrtm Thomson of

Dan Pastonm broke open a
tte game wtth a 51-yard TD
pass to Btlly Johnson and
Houston's defense caused SLX.
fourth-penod fumbles to take
sole possesston of the AFC
Central lead wtth a wm over
LOJury-ndd led Pittsbur gh
Steelers' quarterback Terry
Bradshaw fractured his wriSt
and Mtke Kruczek suffered a
badly brulsed shoulder
Broncos ,Z3, Chiefs 7.
Jun Turner kicked two 33yard field goals and a 25yarder and Cratg Morton and
Otts Armstrong ran fo~
soooes to lead unbeaten
Denver past wmless Kansa•
City
Falcuns 7, 49ers 0
Alfred Jenkms caught a 39yard deflected pass from
Scott Hunter late m the th trd
pen od for the game s only
score as Atlanta beat San
Franctsco to ta ke over first m
th e NFC West
Redsldns 10, Qurcaneers 01
M1ke Thomas scored on a $yard run and Mark Moseley
kicked a 44-yard fteld go'l),
both m the hrst pertod , as
Washmgton handed Twnpa
Bay tis 18th straight loss
Patriots 31, Seahawks 0
Steve Grogao threw three
TD passes through a sheet ..of
ram to carry New England
past wmless Seattl e, the
Patr10ts' fir st shutout m three
years
Chargers 14, SaloiS 0
Mtke Fuller returned a
punt 88 yarda for a score and
the Sa n DLego defen se
muzzled New Orleans
quarterback Archte Mannmg
to Insure a wm over the
Samts

show my child some love.
D I'll(Sometimes
I forget.)

sPECIAL

versant

Black Hi:iWks were

governors would
.
like to be more than •twelve

14 carrtes
Ollers 27, Stfflers 10·

out "

Cowboys 30, Cardinals 24
Pass mterference calls
agamst Lee Nelson set up two
TDs m the last penoo and
gave unbeaten Dallas tts
VIctory over St LOws Dallas
took the lead for the ftrst time
on Roger Staubach's 17-yard
TD pass to Golden Rtchards
wtth seven nunutes left Tony
Dorsett had a 77-yard run for
a TD and gamed 14jl yards tn

Repu,blic~n

.

THIS WEEK'S

all there

play with a 4-4-2 record The

were

Gnd Scores

La fayette 3"' Bucknell 7

Leh 1gh 42 R I U 16
Mar yl and 24 Syracuse 10
Mass .t1 Bost on U 16
Na vy 10 A1r F or ce 1
Nor w 1ch 24 esn St o
Oh1 0 Wsl yn o4 7 Cal Pa 7
Penn sylvema U Brown 7
Penn St Jo6 Utah Sl 7
Pr inceton 28 Col umbia 7
Rutgers o42 Conn 18
Shoonsbg 20 Slppr y Rc k 12

Colts outlast
Mian:ti, 45-2~

'

Today Is Monday, Oct 10,
the 283rd day of 1977 wtth 82 to
follow
The moon LS approachmg
tis new phase

October'
. · count on wrecked
·vehicles already over 50

Antlerl ess deer permit
(lppllcatwn forms are now

available for the followmg
countLes m Deer Zon e 4
Athens , Belmont, Coshocton,
FairfLeld, GallLa, Guernsey,
Hamson, Hockmg, Jack son,
Ltckm g, Met gs, Monro e,
Morgan, Muskmgum, Noble,

Perry , Tuscarawas Vmton
and Washmgton
Persons desLrmg a landowner antlerless penmt may
ptck up appiicatton form s at
offtcLal checkmg stations and
county Sotl and Water Conservattoo DLstrtct offices m
the antl erl ess counttes
Apphcatwns must be submttted before the October 31
deadline
The applicatiOn for the free
pubhc antlerless deer penmt
ts attached to the $10 50 deer
penmt Only one antlerless
deer county may be apphed
for and the apphcatton
deadlme for pubhc antlerless
deer Permtt app1Icat10ns ts
October 21, 1977
Qualified disabled veterans
may nbtaln an appllcalton for
an antlerless deer permtt by
wrttmg DtvtSLon of Wlldhfe,
PermLt Sect10n , Fountam
Square , Columbus, Ohio
43224
Three step~ to follow to help
assure yourself of a permit
are
(I) Pnnt legtbly or type
appiicalton forms Permtts
that caMot be read will not
be filled
(2) Make sure your address
IS complete and c(\l'rect
(3) Apply well m advance
of deadline dates All ow
sulftctent tune for the mat!
Applicaltons received afU.r
the deadline CANNOT be
(NOTE . Publtc
ftlled
drawmg apphcants should be
sure to buy the•r $10 50 deer
permtt early, so they will
have tune to submtt the
antlerless deer permtt apphca tion )

CRIStSLINE

Nme tr affi c a cc tdents ,
mcludmg three m which there
were personal lllJUrtes, were
mves ttgat ed
over th e
weekend by the Gallta-Meigs
Post State Htghway Patrol
Traf!tc accidents todi\Y
totaled over 50 for the ftrst
mne day of October '
The first m]ury acctdent
occ urred at II 15 a.m on
Kemper Hollow Rd where
Dorothea Campbell, 22,
Galltpohs, dropped off the
edge of the roadway m order
to avmd a passmg motonst.
Her car ran off the htghway,
stnkmg an emhankment She
suffered mmor tnJUrtes.
Thomas H Weston, 66,
Mmersvtlle, had vtstble m·
)Unes m an acctdent at 8 40
p m Saturday on SR 218, two
tenths of a mt!e south of CR 8

Lay persons
in laity senice
(\,

The patrol Satd Weston,
blmded by an approachmg
car, ran off the htghway mto
a tree
Rtcky L Harrts, 21, Btl\,
well, had vtstble InJUries man '
accident at 1 10 a m Sunday
on the Btdwell-Rodney Rd
one mile north of US 35,
Troopers satd Harrts lost
control of hts car m swerving
to avoid a dog There wsa
severe damage; no charge
was filed
Archie E Dtggs, 24, Btdwell , escaped tn]Ury m a
smgle car acctdent at I 30
a m Saturday on SR 160 not
reported unttl Saturday af·
ternoon
Accordmg to the report,
Dtggs, gomg south, ran off
the nght stde of the highway
knockutg down guardratl ,
then overturned twLCe The
vehtcle was demolished
A smgle car accident was
mvestLgated at 12 30 p.m
Sunday, four tenths of a mile
north of Galltpohs where

' Ten tay persons took part m
the worshtp servtce Sunday
mornmg at Heath United
Methodtst Church, each
presentmg brief explanations
of thetr roles m the mmtstry
of the church
Prestding for the Rev .
Robert Bumgarner durmg
the program on Latty Day
was Wendell Hoover, who
mtroduced the followmg
speakers
Phllson
on
Maxme
- CHrtshan Educatton and
Sunday School , Clara
Criswell, Umted Methodist
Women, Beulah Jones, Af.
ternoon Ctrcle and Oass 12 ,
Ruth Bumgarner, Eleanor
Circle, Nan Moore, Counctl
on Minlstrtes, Lee McComas,
Adrnimstrattve Board, Jack
Bechtle, Trustees, Youths,
Julte Byers, and Ben Phtlson,
chotr

HabJan satd
•
In addillon, methanol, or
"Methyl Fuel,'' as1ts known
by Wentworth 's trademark ,
"can be economically stored
and
transported
m
conventiOna l pipelines,
tankers and barges more
safely tha n gasoline, and
without fear of the kmd of
env ir onme n tal dtsast er
which plagues most forms of
otl tr ansport," HabJan
asserted
tl too good to 1 be true '
pr oJect 's developers ,

mclud e 15 maJor uttiity
compames and several
m dust nal corp orations 1n
~ seven mtdwestern s tate s

certwn ly don't tfimk so
But It won't come easy
1

Wen tworth

engmeers

began a $450,000, etght-month
feastbt!Lty study last Ju11e
Second phase of the proJect,
nearly two yeat s lo11g, wtll be
a ltme m wh tch the
" dehmtt ve stud }" of the

7'1fiWI

1978
17"

DlAGONAL

TV CART

IB®~~~

SPECIAL!
S1795value
roll-about TVcart
for only '9.95
when you buy th1s
Zenith TV

DENTURES

DR. RONALD F RIVIERE
OR A J STAEH L

DR G J STO MBAUGH

OR C W BEAL

One or two day full denture
serv1ce. part1al dentures ,
relmes , repatrs

1!1!11!!1.!~949 E

Ave Columbus
AM to 6 30 PM

Weekdays 8 30

T nm d eco ra t ng styllngl
Ca bin et bea utifu ll y fi nished In

s1mulated gramed Am encan
Walnu t on top and e nds w 1th
acce nts ol brushed Nickel-

Go ld h1gh lo ghlo ng the !Jon&lt;

P1cture Contro l A utomatiC
Fm e- tu mng Control
P1cture Con trol

GE T REA DY FO, OLD MAN WI NTE R'

WINTER IS COMING

• 100% Solid-State Chassis
• Powe r Sentry Voltage Regulating System
• Chromacolor Picture Tube

BE PREPARED BY REPLACING
THOSE RUSTED STOVE PIPES NOW.
Cross' Hal dware has
may ne~d: Stove
Collars / Reducers,
Dampers and Stobe

w

992-5S54

A

I

R

Have AProblem

E

C~QSS.

Call lJs..;.We tare

Terry E Johnson, Crown
CLty, ran off the right stde of
the highway mto a fence
Davtd T Crossen , 19,
Gall1pohs, was charged with
failure to stop wtthln the
assured clear dtstance
followmg an accident at 2 ?.5
p m Sunday on SR 588, west
of Bob McCormtck1 Rd
Crossen's car struck the left
rear end of an auto m8kmg a
tum operated by Joseph E
Hill, 19, Addison There was
moderate damage,
A deer was k))led In an
acctdent on SR '· south of
aay Chapel Rd The aruma!
ran mto the path of a vehtc!e
driven by Paul F. McNealy,
74, GaUtpoiis
M•k e W , Petroff, 51,
Gallipolis, was charged with
DWI followmg an accident at
7 05 p m on Ingles Rd. north
fo SR 218 Offtcers reported
Petroff swerved to the rtght
to avotd a collision wtth
another , vehicle. Hts car
struck a brtdge rallmg

r--------------------- ~ ----------------

H,
A
R
D

appreciable air pollutiOn,
Wentw o rth's
experts
contend " It 1s clean burmng,
con tams no sulfur, no heavy
metals and no particulates,"

plant's envtron mental unpact
would
be done Actual
sources - so lar power ,
soft
coal
are
"va
st"
in
North
constructLOn,
the ~h1rd phase,
nuclear power , wmd p ower
Dakota,
HabJan
satd
follow,
fa king three
would
and even ocean llde power
As currently, enviswned, years
But what 's me thanol ?
And the whole thong wtll
Wentworth Bros Inc , the the ton s of methan ol
Cmcmnati engmeermg group produ ce d at the upper cost about $1 5 bllhon
which created the conversion midwest plan t would be
Enroll Now For
process, descrtbes methanol earned by p1pehne to
Mmneapobs
and
Duluth,
New Quarter
as 'a colorless IIqmd wtth a
Mtnn , where tt would be
Secretanal
General Of.
famtl y alcohol odor "
f
1ce
Accounting
&amp;
loaded
on
tankers
and
barges
Also known as "wood alBusmess Managem ent
for
distributiOn
to
mdustnal
cohol, " metha nol up to now
Employment a ss1 stance
complexes on th e Great
to graduates
The mormn g stars ore Lakes and along th e
V1s1t, wnte , or call446 2239
fo r mformahon
Mercur y, Saturn, Mars, MtSSISSLppt Rtver
Perhaps
the
most
Venus and Jupit er
SOUTHERN HILLS
appealmg aspec t of methanol
Th ere are no evemng stars
as an al ternative energy
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
sourc e
con cerns I th e
414 2nd Ave RN0585B
cont1nutn g publt c
Thomas C Breech
controversy over the burmng
01rector

w1t h

each huntmg and trappmg
hcen se The huntm g a nd
trappmg dLgest, Publ1catton
85 may be obtamed by
contactmg the Publtcattons
Center, Ohto Department of
Natural Resources , Fountam
Sq uare, Columbus 43224

of plentiful, but rur'IJollutmg
coal
Methanol prod uces no

• Super Video Range Tuning Syste111
• Synchromalic 70-Posltlon 'uHF Channel
Selector.

everythtng you
Ptpe . Elbows.
Dampers, Tee
Boards.

HARDWARE

O~ n Monday thru Saturday

j'

712

L.-------------

f

9 OOtoS : OO

2nd Ave.

992 3831

HURRY. ••

limited Offer
INGLES FURNITURE

106 N. 2nd Ave.

Mtddleport, 0.

Phone 992 2635

Mtddleport, 0

~ ----------------------' I

�6-The Daily Sentmel M!ddleport-Pomero) . 0. MoMJ\ . U&lt;'t JU

l ~ /J

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

RAC!NE-Mr

tlungs I

look bm k at th""e relation·
bhtps or pn'Jt'\.:ts ' uu began
and tht•n rlruppt.-d bel·ause
' uu tor !Jthl•rto l f~u led to h\ t'
up tu :-;mnt' parttlular ~ard­
st" k of p€rf&lt;'d lun What else
" ci~ hHppenmg e~t about the

don t rea lh "ant to llu at
tunt's that · are mctm\ eruent

sanw l tlllt' that m1ght ha\ e
toUl' tll'd off \ OUr amaet1es

peoplE"

I m ah-\ a }s

talked mt o

dom~

gt•tlm~

PTO committee meets

Willfords celebrate
35th anniversary

CHOICES
DEAR DR BLAKER - I
seemed to 'be mcapable uf
sa} mg no It's not JUSt tLI
fnends \II ho ask fen ur~ of me
but to e\ l'n one t'' en sale~

I

and

Mr&gt;

Ha rn Willford , Raunt! \\t.' rt"

honored "1lh a

part~

at thL'

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Edd\ and Jmw Hees. Athens
Mr and Mr. Mli l,&lt;rd Vm1
M£•leJ

Pumerm

Mr

cUH.I

Shruw bu1ld1ng on Sept 2~ 1n Mrs Mrh 111 Va n Meter Mid·
eelebratwn of th~ 1r !5th " ed- dleporl. Mr dndMrs UO\d
N1ce, Mr and Mrs Bub Hill.
ding unm' ersan
The ewe nt was hosted b• Mrs James lkcs S• , Mr
their cluldren Mr llnd M1 s.. and Mrs 1om lhe1ss, M1
Allen 1Ka; l Graham. W!~n­ and Mrs Ham P1t kens, J1 ,
M1 and Mrs Charles Thc_o;s
m~ton. 0 . and Mr and Mrs
Can Willford and Kevm Mr and Mrs Ruy J ohnson
Willford Racme Mr and Glurla Jean Manm•l
Mrs Willford were marned
Send1ng gifts "ere Doug
un Sept 2B 1942 at the Rees. Mo. and Mrs Corroll
Portland Parsonage by the Teaford. Mr and Mrs GorRev Charles P Cec1l They don West, Raeme
ha• e f" e grandchildren
After the couple ojl€ned
Attendmg from out of town the1r g1fts and cards ,
"ere Mr and Mrs Alfred refreshments \.\ere ~erved
Cozart Youngsto"n Delbert The e\'entng v.as sperl'rllstenVan Meter. 't'_hanna . Pat mg to mu:su.: and dancmg

for me Or I II bu) thmgs 1 al&gt;out SU(h unperfecuons . ,
cant afford don t realh like Were \ ou gettmg a little
duser to someone else. or enor need Wha1 s my prtlblem"
DEAR READER - Your J o~ mg some project 1 Ma~ be
problem IS that you can t sa ' } UU are tr) mg to avmd SucYES - .es to the people 'ou cess
Bet ause no hwnan bemg ts
" ant to see yes to tht' thi ngs
) ou "ant to do The questwn perfett, a comnuunent to
IS ho" vou lost the senslt l\ n' p€rfec t!On IS a sure-f1re path
to )our needs and desires and to [adure To demand perfecestabliShed a pattern of gl\- tion IS to be seU-destructJVe
Tlus m1ght be something to ~~:~~~~e .sue::au ®:~
mg that control to others
It ~ as probably a pattern talk aboul " hen ) ou go back
that "as rewarded m 'our lo see that ver; human
fam1ly "hen ; ou "ere ) oung therapist of yours P S Even
Were you the most lovable ' for those not obsessed by such ~
~ hen ) ou were seriSi1iVe to an extreme driVe for perfecothers 1gnonng ~our o" n tiOn 1t 1s a good tdea to make a
needs and des~res ' This pat- regular practice of trymg
tern could have begun to sometlung lhatyou know you
MONDAY
cause you problems ~hen; ou cannot do well Do It JUSt to
started making close fnends personallv ackno wledge that ' Rev Dorothy Jago, Malta,
success and pleasure need fom1er Rutland restdent, w1ll
outstde) our fanuly
conduct rev tval at Danville
' Man) people have un- not alwavs be synon) mous
Wnte to Dr Blaker 10 care Wesleyan Church Monday
favorable reactwns to sorneone who 1s as other- of this newspaper P 0 Box through Oct 16, 7 30 each
oriented" as vou describe 41!9 Radw C1ty Stal!on, Ne " evemng; public mv1ted
yourself People wantmg York, NY 10019, Due to
BLOODMOBILE M nday
others lo be perfect could be volume of ma1l she cannot from 1 30 to 5 30 at Po~erov
camouflagmg another and repl)' personallY, but ques- Elementary School
•
perhaps more bas1c prl&gt;- tJons of general mterest will
POMEROY PTA. 7 30 p m
blem' It would be a wor- be discussed 111 future colMonday at the Pomeroy
th" hile exerc1se for vou to umns
Elemen t.a ry SChool "Meet
~::-::·:·: .•:·::.·: .·::-::·:·.:-:-··:·· : •;:.•;o • •• :
: ··: :- : '•!•'•'•!•:: ·=: :-·-:-·::-·:::-· X:~ the Teachers mghl w1ll be
:-: observed
,.:·: REGULAR MEETING ,
.•. Twm C1ty Shrme Club ,
..
~ Monday , 7 30 p m at the
Noble J oh n Clark,
By Helen Hottel .:~;&lt; club
Athens, Wlll be a guest,
&gt;: ch1 cken dmner to be served
after meetmg
ACASEOFNIT-PICKING'
UNITED
Meth odist
DEAR HELEN
Women, Heath Church, MidYou told us to ' keep p€Cking away at our Congresspersoru( ' , dleport, 7 30 Monday evenmg
Ire legiSlatiOn to msure medical and retirement benefits as w1th devotions b) Mrs Lettie
well as sa laned compensatiOn for homema kers) Would a man _ YoUitg Program 10 ~harge of
' peck a"ay" 1 Why IS 11 so easy to picture women domg that? Mrs , Ruth Bumgardner
Click' Pecking hens, domesllclty, meffectual, exasperatmg , Hostesses w1ll be Mrs Nan
hen-pecked
. ~ Moore, Mrs. Juamta Bachtel,
Language IS a trap that catches all of us sooner or later ' Mrs Mary Rinehart, and
When you say ' peckmg" you rule out men, and we need Mrs Frances_Brewmgton
everyone we can gelto push this necessary legiSlation
LETART FALl.'&gt; Trustees
Nevertheless, Helen, keep Ull the good work We appreciate at home of Paul Norns at 7
• your support of women's 1ssues -CHRISTINE
pm
DEAR CHRISTINE
,
, ea~~:fters also peck So, for that matter, does the nughty
~EIGSTU~I~ty School

lli:AH POLLY- Ht &lt;t•nll)
mo\ ~d mto H nt. w home

\\llh ,, b &lt;Jtll) ddt kt•ncd ut
!St(ltncd mat blt&gt; smk 111 tht•
bat lu omn

&amp;

~

Helen Help
Us ...

*:

"

Okay, scratch ·;peck," substitute "chippmg away," or
whatever, but aren t you gwlty of a somewhat femmme lra•t
• rut-picking' - H
'
DEAR HELEN
, I too was a battered wife Just as the women 111 a fonner col' umn, I also had children, no JOb skills and felt that I had to stay
home rather than be a burden on soc 1ety We were at the mercy of his temper f1ts and moods, I " ent to the authonlles after
' repeated mc1dents, but he got only a small fme, or our pr1&gt;blerns were shrugged off as " domesttc matters "
I'm glad to see we re fmaUy waking up to this problem Now
the children have gone, I've left my husband and he ts all alone
With h1s meanness An abandoned old age IS madequate pay·
ment for these brutes who use thetr w1ves and children as pun• ching bags - I N
'
' DEAR HELEN
A woman was brutally murdered by her husband who had a
long history of wife beatmg, but had never been penalized for
11. The courts repeatedly set him free on low batl, or gave him
a mere slap on the wnst TypiCally, they didn't act unbl 1t was
too late
y 1f •'lis woman had taken the law mto her own hands, killed c m efore he had a chance to do her m, she nught have sufferec I · fate of Roxanne Gay, Camden, New Jersey, who has
been mdicted for murder She was protectmg herself agamst a
V!olent husband She ktlled him With a kmfe
The Women 's Resource and S urv1val Center of Keyport
N J , IS call!llg for a change m policy and court responses t~
wife assault We are workmg to make Roxanne 's case a precedent for battered w1ves I hope people everywhere will JO!Il us
m mslstmg that mate-assault be recogmzed as a sertous
crune WRSC MEMBER
DEAR WRSC MEMBER
Sodoi 1-H

pa~nts

and teachers
reili\nded of Tuesday rught
meeting of PAT, the newlyorgamzed &amp;roup of M H S
parents and teachers at 7.30
P m at high school Gu1dance
counselors will be present for
an mformattve prog ram
about thelr department Also
PAT memberships, $1 each,
may be purchased at the
meetmg
(
H AR R I S 0 NV I L L E
CHAPTER, 0 E S Tueday, 8
p m at the tiJillple w1th all
members asked to attend
There w1ll be electiOn of offtcers
BELLES AND Beaus
Western Square Dance Club
Will host a dane" Tuesday
from 8 toll p m m the recreation bu1ldmg at Royal Oak
Park Frankie Lane will be
the caller All western square
dance club members are mv1ted
WINDING Trail Garden
Club, Tuesday 8 p m. at the
home of Mrs MarJone
Walburn New officers "Ill be
mstalled
OHIO ETA Pb1 Chapter
model meetmg, 7 30 p m
Tuesday at Columbus and
Southern Oh1o Electric Co.
PERSONAL to v1cttrns of anorexia nei'Vosa (the starvation bU!ldmg , hostesses Peggy
: syndrome ) a nd the1r fanul!es For a copy of the new AnoreXIc Stout and Brenda Haggy.
' Aid Society's first news letter, plus other useful information on
HARRISONVILLE
treatment centers, send 75 cents to Anorex1c Aid, P 0 Box
Chapter,
OES, 8 p m Tues29461, Colwnbus, Ohio, 43229
day at the temple There wtll
be electiOn of off1cers and all
members are requested to attend
WEDNF.'lDAY
Several contnbutwns, m- Veterans Memorial Hospital
WHITE
ROSE LODGE,
Plans were made for a holi: eluding $20 to the Me1gs Coun30
p.m
Wednesday
at the
I
' ty Conservation· Assoc1at10n day bazaar and bake sale on
Columbus
and
Southern
Ohio
: for publlc1ty agamst the trap- Nov 18 and 19m Chester Sara
Electr~c
Co.
social
room.
All
pmg 1ssue, were made by the Batley won the door prize
members
are
urged
to
attend
hostess served
Young Wtves Club of Chester The
• at a recent meelmg w1th Mrs refreshments to those named
MIDDLEPORT
and Ka ren Xoung, Lmda AMATEUR GARDENERS, 8
' Lila Van Meter.
The club also made a dona- Well, Kathy Slone, Marilyn p m Wednesday at the home
liOn of $20 to the Pomeroy Spencer,' Sus1e K1bble, and of Mrs Fennan Moore Mrs
: Emergency Squad, and voted Jane Coates
Harry Moore, M1ss Kathryn
to g1ve $30 worth of toys for
Hysell, and Mrs C E
IN HOSPITAL
, the ch1ld ren '.s ward at
Blakeslee w11l be coJames - Carpenter under-' hostesses Members are to
went surgery Wednesday at take guests
the Umvers1ty Hospital, Col
POMEROY
MIDHlRl HDAY MARKED
wnbus H1s room nwnber ts DLEPORT Lions Club lunRACINE--M rs
Sus 1e 603 H1s w1fe, Suzy Carpenter, cheon at Me1gs Inn, 12 noon
and their son, Jay, and h1s With D1str1ct Go vern or
F ts~her was honored on her
82nd birthday recently at her parents, Mt and Mrs. W1lson possibly to be m attendance
home m Racme Cake and Uirpenter have been m Col- '
coffee were served to he1 urn bus w1th ruin

am s u~ g e st10n s sl101 t uf put-

ttng 111 .1 ne" one?
Also. 1 am a gn.•c.tl one to

nuu k mv U::llendar wtth Hll
O&lt;..Castons birlhd,ays,
and doc tor's appomtmcnts £
kl&gt;t"p ~ud1 c c.tl~mlars for as
long H!\ (1\'C vears so I am

Spt!lldl

able to check back on llungs
I am saved a lot of research
~'&gt;ARAH I F.E
DEAR SARAH LEE - It
n11n be that a new smk IS the
only ans,,er to your problem
There ttre tunes we have to
giVe up and face the facl
there IS no hope Just washmg
off U1e bleach does nol g1ve
the bleach time to work on
an)tlung that 1s as badlv
stamed as vour smk ev1dent1V
IS Fold a cloth several limes,
soa k m chlonne bleach and
lay 1t on the slams Leave 1t
perhaps all day or all mght
Cover 1t w1th a p1ece of
plastic Ia dry cleaner's bag
"ould work\ so the cloth does
nut dr) out Rmse uff If the
stams have not departed but

gtfts

were

presented to her Attendmg
REniRNSHOME
were Mr and Mrs Wilbur
Mr and Mrs Thomas
Frecker, B1ll and Mary Ables of Pomeroy, returned
Porter, J ohn and Mark, recently from a two week
Glona , Roger, Denms and vacr:~tum m Arec1ba, Puerto
Debbie Michael, Brenda, RICO, VISiting their daughter
Shelly and Tara Wolfe, a nd and her f umly , Mr and Mrs
D1ana Kmg
A~w;tm Montoncz

FRIDAY
BAKE SALE by the AuxIliary of Veterans Memonal
Hnsp1tal m the EMS bUI Idmg
l,ack of the hospital Sale to
s!u1t at 9 am There w1ll abo
00 Items from the glf' .shop '
and home mode soup fm sal!'

R dt' IOt'

Have a

sd wo l six d&lt;J y~

a week a nd

Elemental y P'JO met 111

I.:U IIllllUIII~ tfu ough thr 111011th

spetial session rl'Cl'lltl Yctl the
hurn e of Jan Curd uue , p1 es1

uf Jwlf
l'ht! ~ K C&lt;.: UtiVl' &lt;.:Oll UnJttee

dent , to discuss the cmergen·
C) 6 5 m11i Op€ratm~ levy for
the Southern Loc al School
Dtstnct ltu be voted on HI M
Sp€c
ml clcc11011 Oct 2!J
shoes so I "Ill not fall Four
It
wa s pomtt•d out dUlmg
fnends hctve the ~nne complaint and would like the meetmg that •f the levy .,
manufacturers to know they not app10ved on the 25th
a1 e causm~ us a lot of oam - there wtll have to be made up
a toW I of 51 days fhese days
GM
DEAR POLLY - 1 have 1t \'&lt;:as noted , w1ll h&lt;J\ e to Uc
an easy wa y to clean made up by Jutw ~0 rtnd 1his
window scree ns

can be done only b) holdmg

" cnt on re~ord as ~udors tng

the lev) and u r~ ed the
men1bcrslup and residents to
vnlc • yes" on the levy The
t'Onumtt cc also voted to pay
.ca sh awtJrili; fur the f1rst and
second plC! CC "lnncrs 111 th~

school levy

pt

omotwn poster

c.; ontcst A {.ionetlJOn wa :; c.tlsu
ma de to tht• l..evy PI umobon
COI JUIUttcc

Barretts and neighbors
enjoy getting acquainted

bucket of hot sudsy water and
a broom at hand If possible,
choose a windy day so they
w1U dry faster Lay screens
fiat un the ground Sweep
across them one way and
then the other Rmse off With
RUTLAN'b--A
grt 1 at·
the garden hose and prop QU Hl llt Cd "Ith \'O
UI
them agamst a waU or fence nctghbm~ " piCiliC Wci S. held
to help dram dry If you do Saturday mght at tile New
th1s before starmg them for !Jrna Hoad home of Mr and
the wtnter make 1t an early Mrs CharlesBan ett Followmornmg chore When dry mg the
me a ha) 11de was
stack and cover them w1th an enjoyed and after the ha\'ndc
old sheet of plastiC -JAN a wtener roast was held
Polly w11l send you one of
Attendmg were Mr and
her s1g n ed tha11k -you Mrs Ruger Dmg1 ss. Ant hom
newspaper coupon cltppers 1f and Ragle, Mr and Mrs
she uses your favorite Shendan Russell lll, Ang•e
Pmnter, Peeve or Problem m and Ra) Mr and Mrs Paul
her colwnn Wn(e POLLY'S Musser and Kevm, Mr and
POINTERS m care of th1s Mrs Pat ~lllchell John. Pat·
new~paper
ty, Rhonda and Jess1ca Mr
and M1s Ch uck Shephe1d

.me

Gardeners install officers

ahd Leshc , Mr and M1 s
flu!Jcrt Black and Jason. Mrs
Trcs.s•c Staats. Mr and Mrs
Harold H1ce, M1 and 1\'!rs
Marvm Wil~011, Mr dlld Mrs
Paul Hlce, Mr and M1s Gene
Coleman ~nd Jayne ctnd Tom,
Susan Colemm1 , EIIPn L
H1ce, Andy B1 ookc1 , Bna11
Burson, Judy Alexander,
Brild Alexander , John
Gillian, Bnan Tracy, and
Kell)• Holman Carla Snulh ,
Deshn and Doug Jenk111s. Mr
and Mrs Chc~rlcs Rarrett,
Marl ene, Darlene and
Patnc1a
••

r---~-----'--

signs

of un -

ASTRO•GRAPH

SCORPIO (Oct

2-t-Now 22)
Your returns ar e usually rn
proportron to the time effort and
money you ve Invested Don t ex
pe.ct a \"'rndfa ll today from the
prttance yo u gave a fr ren d
SAGITTARIUS (Now

23 • 0 ec

21) Ava rd trnanc tal Involvement

Con 11 ert the energy you d use
makrng excuses rnto a drrve to
get th ngs done
Theresa strong po ssrbll lty your
prror Ires are out of ktlter today
You re Interested m many thrngs
but get itttle done

today wrth tho se yo u know little
about All may appear A-OK on
the su rfa ce but that s not good
enough

CANCER (June 21·JUI1 22) In
family matters today try not to be

C
T:PR!CORN (Doc. 22-Jon 19)
e op rnrons you espouse are

They could be even more fr ul«ul

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Be

•

On th1s day m history
In 1845, the U S Naval
Academy was form ally
opened at Ft Severan, Annapolis, Md

•

His Grandfather did r

'-),
I

HIS

I

MID-WEEK

BARGAINS

so oprn onated that there s no
room fo r t houghts of others

than yours
not popular wrth the m a1orrty to - ~
day Yc.u could get hrt wrt h a ~EO {Julr 23-Aug 22) Be very
tom ato tor your efforts
cautrous today rn drawrng the
line between ratronal thlnk rng
_,AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Fob. t9) and 1rrauo na1 o ptrmrsm Too
Usually you re rn novatrve n much ol th e latter will lead you
developrng new (Tlethods To- awry
day however th6 la bor-savrng
devrces you champron may VIRGO (Aug 23-S.pt. 22)
T here s a strong possrbrllty today
ca use more work
that your overwhelming desire
PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20) for en ObJect may lead you to pay
MaJor changes should not be more for rt than 11 s worth Try to
made rmpulsrvely toda y Sleep cqntrol yo urself
on them You could later be un
happy wrth your deCISIOn
wary of makmg tavlsh prom rs es
today for the sake of e)(pedlency
The m omentary frrends you
ma~e cou ld become long-term
enemres

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA · GAUIPOLIS

GEMINI (May 21 - June 20)

1~1 HIUt
1

ltllt!

nOLO HE

ES!

tUESDAY &amp;WEDNESDAY ONLY
I

ENTIRE STOCK OF SEPARATE

'

Does Not

CHOOSE FROM

Include
Sweaters
in Coordinate
Groups

ABOUT 25
DIFFERENT
STYLES

Cow~,

Cardigans,
Tunics, Turtles,

Crews, Etc..•

I

The jlr&amp;iltetl exposure to our bu5rness soc:rety IS the
handlrn&amp; of a newspaper delivery route Thrs bo)l
lrke his grandpa or father wrlllearn responsrbrhl)l
He wrllgan e!llpenencetharl m~w gurde hrm to great
stat ure 1n he busrness world

Th~

Daily Sentinel

I

' I'

excc utlv,·
the

-r.'

20%
OFF
Layaway Now

For Christmas

7- The DallY Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Oct 10, 1977
IIIOTtCE OF

TUPPERS PLAINS-New Gray read scripture from
officers "ere mstalled by Romans followed by the club
provement you m1ght try- Mrs Gra ce Stout, outgmng members praytng the Lord 's
agam Some stams also res- presiden t, at a recent ' Prayer Mrs Mane Donugau
CHARLES MUG RAGE
pond to a gentle rubbmg w1th meehng of the Rose Garden read the verse of the month
A special arrangement was
TURNS THREE-- Charles ammoma an d hydrogen Club held at the home of Mrs
displayed by Mrs Barnhill,
Tyson Mugrage, son of Mr peroxide Rmse off well Carl Barnhill
Installed " ere Mary Jane a11d Mrs Grace Stout gave a
and Mrs Charles I Mugrage, whatever you use I prefer
Goebel,
pres ident, Anna pt ogram on mass arLetart Falls celebrated h1s trying such thmgs Ill the
RICe,
v1ce
president
, Dorollt)
rangements
tlurd blrthdav on Oct 6 daytm1e Then the cloth can
be redampened 1f 11 dnes Stout, sec reta ry, Helen
Refreslunent;; " ere served F'Yif---1
Dorst,
treasurer,
and
Sally
by
Mrs Barnh•ll to the 15
qu1ckl; After marble 1s
members and three guests,
cleaned a thin coat of col- Caldwell, news reporter
For devotwns Mrs Maude Mam!C Headl e;, Merle Grlforless wax could be applied to
fm, and Ruth Ann Mlilhune L ___::::::;;;;:::=:~~
g~&gt;e 1t a glo" and make 1t
Bernice Bede Osol more sml and spot resistant
Gtven a spec1al \\elcome " as rrend setters - e ... eryfhmg fro m
EVENTS ENJOYED
Mrs John Arbaugh who p o pu lar ~ay,n g 5 fo new fash 1ons
Good luck -POLLY
'
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
recent!) returned to the area
The Me1gs 4-H Pleasure The door pnze \'ias won by can be found 1n the newspaper
Pee;e 1s \&lt;lth the pnce
Even fhe co m1cs ore respons ble
stickers that are put on the Riders had an afternoon trail Mrs Ina Massar, and the
f o r mony populor so y1ngs Good
front covers of books and nde on Sept :&gt;.:; on the traveling pnze by Mrs Mane
gr1
ef , C ha fi ,e Br o wn - newspa
albums I have stopped glv- Elberfeld Fann m Tuppers Dom1 ga n Th e October
Oct t1, 1977
Plains
Regular
meetmg
was
meetmg w1ll be held at the per~ even 1nclude news of latest
tng them for g1fts because ~o
There may be somethrn~ you d
held
followmg
the
nde
ho1r styles
home of Mrs J1m Stout
often the stamps would not
Jrke to Jry as a srdehne hobby or
Prerruum
money
from the
avocatron thrs comr ng year By
come off "1thout taku1g some
Metgs County l'a1r was
all means pursue rt It co uld lead
of the cover paper w1th them
to somethrng far more rn
distnbuted
to the members
Also, shoe sa Iemen leU me
terest ng
The
four
adv1sors
and 10
that A" w1dth women 's
members
attendmg
enjoyed
a
~tBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) An n
shoes are no longer made m
lluentlal fnend who IS usually
foll
owmg
the
potluck
dinner
the pnce range of $35 or
wrllrng to help you may no t be
under I had to g1ve away two meetmg
access Ole today It s best to plan
pa1rs of AA ', wtdth 'as thev
on going It alone to avmd drsap
.,
po1ntment Frnd out who you re
pmched my' feet, but ·B's;,
ro mantically su rted to by sendrng
In
1911 ,
Chmese
fall off, even w1th paddmg m
for your copy ol Ast ro -Graph
overthrew
revolutionaries
the
heels
and
over
the
arch
I
Lette r Marl 50 cen ts tor each
the Manchu Dynast y
hav~ tu keep weal mg my old
srgn and a long self-addressed
In 1963, a dam burst m
stamp ed envelope to Astra
Graph P 0 Box 489 Rad ro C1ty
northern Italy, drownmg an
Sta\ron NY 10019 Be sure to TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) estunated 3,000 persons
specrfy your brrth srgn
You re a be1ter postponer today
than you are a producer
there arc some

Wives club makes contribution

guests .. and

Vun•gm . bleal11

and uthet houst•huld d ciine r :-s
WtH: tml tu.•lped Ou vu u lmve

I

ur

Plight of sklined sink
\\ C

[ Social
Calendar

HA C!N I-: ·-fhl'
t"'lllJllltl~t.'

'

NOTICE OF EI...ECTION

SALE OF BONOS
ON TA)( LEVV IN
Sl"i;' led b rd s tor ltle pur
E~CE!SOFTHETEN
c h ast&gt; o f S2SO 000 b on d s of the
MILL LIMITATION
Cou nt -,. o t Mergs Ohw t her ern
NOTI C E 1~ n ereby g i ven
r e f er rea 10 us th e Issuer 1.., that m pursuance of a
Wrt1 bt' r ece 1ved by 1ne un
Reso l ut1on of th e Board of
d ers1qned oH rcer a t hrs o ft 1 ('t" Trust ee s of th e Townsh 1p of
rn t he County Court House
Sutton , Oh io passed on th e
Pomeroy Ohro 43!69 un td Jnd day of August , 1971 there
I 30 o c loc k p m
E a st ern w rtl b e submrtted ro a vote ot
Da yr,q h t savrng T 1me on th e the peop le ot s a 1d Townsh i p
25t h day of October 1971 a t at a G enera l ELEe'T'ION to
w h ch trnH• the b1d s w, lf be be held 1n fhe 1ownshrp o f
op ened and r ea d publicl y
Sutton , Oh10 . af the regular
B ids I Q.t th e bon ds wh u:h pla ces o1 votmg therern , on
w ere
au t hor rled
bY T u esday
ttre 8th day of
leg,sla t ron on Se p te mber '17
November 1977 , the questron
1977
sh all be sea l ed and of lev-; lng , rn e)( cess of fhe ten
endorse d
B 1d l o r M en tall y m illl1mrtaflon , for the benet1t
Rc tar d~ d Tra m, n g Ce nt er
of Sulton TownshiP for the
Bond s ' and etic h b rd sl}all b e purpose of malntamr ng and
oper atlng cem eterles
mad e only tor a l t or none of
Sa id ta~e be rng .! renewal
su ch bonds
I t rs con temp la t ed lhat ! he ot an e~ 1 sttng ta• ot 0 4 mrll to
Oond lssu,ng au th or rfy w rl l run for ftve years at a rafe
mt:'et at 2 30 o c loc l&lt;. p rn on not e~~.ceed1ng 0 4 m i lls for
th e 15th day ol Oc tob er t977
each one ddlliH of valuatron
fo consi der the br d s and ma ke WhiCh amounts to tour cent s
an awa r d
to r each one hundred doltar:s.
The bon d s w il l b e da fed the of vatuatron for f ive years
The Polls for sa rd Elect 1on
l 1r s t day of No vem ber 1977
wri t ber n th e denom 1r d t1on at w tl l open at 6 30 o'clock AM
St ,OOO each except th e last and rema1n open unt1l 7 30
tw o bonds o f ea c h pr.n c ipa l o c lock P M of said day
Bv order of the Board of
mafu r fy rn ea c h of the y e&lt;Jq;
El ecf1ons ot Mergs County
from 1979 fo 1998 bof h rn
clusrve, Whi Ch sn a i l tle o f th e Oh10.
d c nom rnat 1on a t ss 000,-e--a Gh
Ernest A Wrngett
dr a w
rn t e n~sf
n n d will
Chairman
p ay a bl ~ sem i annu a ll y on t h e
h rs l
d ay of
June and
Dorothy M Johnston
D ecem b er ot ea c n Y e('l r
or rector
b c grnn ng June 1 1978 at fhe
r a t e ot flv e a n d three
Dated Oct I, 1977
qua r t er s per ce ntum (5 3 ~ per
cen tu m l per annum AnyorH! (I OJ 3 10 17 24 4t c
d es ~rrng to do so may present
a b id tor sa rd bon ds based
NOTICE OF ELECTION
upon t he ~r be ar ng a differ ent
ON TA~ ~EVV IN
Si ng le rat e of rn tere s t , but n o t
E~CESS Ot"THE TEN
rn exce $S of er g h f per centum
MILL LIMITATION
(8 pe r cent um) p e r nnnum
NOTICE 1S hereby g1ven
pro vi d ed
f h af
wll e re
a
that rn pursuance of a
tra c t o ne~ I rnf ere s t rat ers b rd
Resolutron of the Board of
such t ractron sha ll be one
er gh t h of one p ercent or a Trus t ees of ttre Too,vnsh rp ot
Rufla nd Onlo passed on the
mul t rp le l he r eo t Spli t rafe
31st dav o f August 1977 there
b1ds a, d b 1ds w d h sup
p lemen fa l cou pon s w ill n o t be wrll be submrtted toe vote of
the people of s ard Town!h lp
co n sr d er ed
T he bond s m a t ure as ar a General ELECTION- to
be held rn ttle 1'ownshrp of
to t to w s \ 13 000 on Dec emb er
Rutland Oh10 a t fhe re{lular
1 111 each o f ttle ye ar s from
places of vltlng therein on
197 9 to 1988 1nc lu sr ve and
t he 8th day of
$1 2 000 rn eac h ot f he years Tuesday
November , 1977 , tn e Questron
f r om 1989 t o 1998 rn c tustye
Th e bon d s a re 1ssued for of l evy ng rn excess ot the t en
the purpose o f con struct1n g a m l lll1m fat on for th e b enefit
for
f he of Rufland 1own sh p tor ttr e
1ra1 nrn g ce nt er
men ta ll y r e tarded prov drnQ purpose of cemetenes
Sa1d tax bemg a renewal
necess ary tu rn rSI"\r ngs and
eq urpmen t fh er~ t o r
and of an exrst rng Ia)( of 0 3 m rll to
tor t 1ve years at a ra t e
ac q u1 r n g and m prov rng fhe run
no t e;.:,ceedr ng 0 3 m ills for
sl f e t he reof
each one do l la r of va luatron
T h e bonds are payable
whrch amounls to three cents
wlihou t dedu ct on lo r the
tor each one hundred dol lars
ser v,c e s o f tne I ssuers
of va1ual1on for f rve years
pa-,. l nq agent at the legal
The Polls fo r sard Electron
de po s nary of th e I ssuer
wdl open at 6 30 o'clocK AM
p rese nfly
Tt1 e
Po m eroy and remarn open unfrl 7 30
Nat 1o na l Bank Pome r oy
o clock P M of sard day
Oh10 and unle ss pa rd from
B y order of the Board of
o t he r sou r ces are to be pard Eleclions o f Meros cou nt y
by th e levy o t ad valorem
Oh10
taxes
wh 1c h
la)(es
are
unlrrn f ed as to am ou nt or
Ernest A Wrn ge tt
ra fe sub lec l to t he provrs ron s
Chairman
of Chapter IX of fh e f ederal
Ba n k rwp tc y A t f and other
Dorothy M Jotrn ston
laws a ft ech n g c r ed fors
0 1r ecfor O.!ted Oc.t 1 1977
rrghts
The proc eed rng s tor t hr s Dated Oct 1, 1977
ssu e h a ve bee n taken u nder
the Su per VISI On Of • Squ f f' ~
(10 ) ,J 10 17 24 4t C
Sander s &amp; De mps ey whos e
apor o11l ng op rn1on will b e
fu r nrshect a t ~ he cos t of Tne
success f ul tll ddl'r and w d l b e
NOTICE ON FILING
prmted on lh£&gt; bonds
Th e
OF INVENTORY
1$sue r will p&lt;Jy t he co s1 of
AND APPRAISEMENT
p r lntln Q t he b on ds A com
plele
1r ans c r.p1
ot Th e State of Ohro M ergs
court ot Common
proc ced1119S w ill be f u rn ,shed county
Pleii'S , Probate DIVISIOn
by fhe ls Juer , together wifh a
T o fhe Executor or Ad
ce r tl f rc ~t e
show r ng
no
1 t lgat on
pend tng
or mmrstrator of the estafe to
t h r eatened i'lt lhe ftmc of fhe such o f the followrng as are
d e l i Very to e n ~ o l n dei 1Ve ry or residents of fhe Stat e of Ohro
to con t est t he val1d1fy of t he vrz - the surviving spouse
ne x t
of
k1n ,
th e
bonds or the power to rssue the
t n c m dr fhe levy or collect ron benef rcr arres under ! he will
and to the attor ney or al
ol ta:.c es f or !herr payment
C U S tP nu111ber s wrll be torn eys representrng any ot
pr rnted on fhe bonds lf th e a forement 1oned persons
Margaret Smdh,
140 ' ~
av ar labl e and rE'Quesled by
lhe ,su ccessH.r t bf dder Any Mulberry Avenue Pomero-,.
de l ay error or omiSSIOn wrlh OhiO
You are hereby not1f red
re s pe c f t hereto shall not
co nstllute c ause f or !he tnat fhe Inventory and Ap
succ es s f u l b rdder to re f use fo prarsement of the es tate of
ato r em e nt l--o ne d
accep t del rv ery of and .pay tor ttre
deceased late o f sai d Co unt y ,
fhe b onds Any CUS I P Ser
v rce Bur ea u c harge f or the were 1 led rn t hrs Cour t Sad
Inventory and A ppr a,sement
ass1gn ment of the numbers
shall b e t he r c spons brlrty of wrll be for heanng before t h rs
Court on the 13th day of
th e su cces sful b1dder
1 he b ds w.t l promptly be O c tob er 1977 at 10 30 o clock
cons Q.er ed and the bonds AM
Any person desrrrng to f ile
w II be sold to the h1~hest exceptions
thereto m us t f rle
b1dder ott er ng fne 1"owes t
rnt er est r a t e af not less fhan them a t l east frve day s prior
p a r and ac crued mterest The to th e date set for t')ea r ng
G ven u nder m y hand an d
lowe st In t erest rate wrl l be
d eterm ned by ca lc ula rr ng sea l of sa rd Co urt 1hts 30t h
the tot al rnferest to sla t ed day of Sep te mber 1977
mafurrt-,. at the raf e brd and
Mann 1ng D Webster
d cductr n g therefrom any
.)udge
pr em lu m brd If eacn of two
or m or e b d s rs the h gnesf brd
oft er rn g th e lowest 1nter es t
By Caro l y n G Thomas
rale
the bonds wrll be
Dep ut y Cler k
awarded on su c h one of the
(10) 3 10, 2tc
hrghesf b d s as rs c hosen b y --------~--­
!of
Al l brds must be ac
FOR SA~E
co mp a nied by cash , bank
The residence and real
c a5hrer s or of f rcral s check
Ina
or cerflfred check payab le to property owned bY
Hoback at the time of her
fh e Issuer
or
any com
brnatron thereof , &lt;Jggregah ng dteease , located on 5th
one percent of the par amount Street, Racine , Ohio, will be
sold at the offices Oi Crow,
of the bond s, upon the c on
Crow &amp; Porter, Attorneys,
d rl ron th a f, rf the brd rs ac
cepted, t he brdder
w II Pomeroy, Ohio , at 10 00
r ecervc and pay for the bonds AM , on Wednesday, October
1n actordance wrth the terms 12, 1977 Property appraised
at S7,SOO 00 and w II be sold to
and provrsron s ot thr s not rce
No bank b rdd rng for th e bonds the highest b idder , subject to
sha l l f rle Its own cashre r s or the approval of the Probate
ottrc1 a l s c heck no r a check Court Terms of sale Cash In
cer t rlred by rt Such sec: urr ty hand on day of sale Buyer,
w i ll
hsve
shal l be h eld by th e Issuer however,
unused pendrng delrvery of reuonable time to arrange
! he bonds and forfe rted as fu ll financing snd lnspe~t title
Also ,
retr l gtrstor ,
I1QU 1dated damages rn the
bedroom suite , couch, chair
event of defau It bY the sue
a"nd tables to be sold to
cessful brdder
Appra rat
In fhe event that , prror to highest b i dder
value S20000
the1r ctelrver y , f he rnterest on
the bonds should by ac t of
Betty Brlckles
Co n g re ss
or
otherw se
Administratrix of
become sub1ec t to Federal
Ex tate of
.ncom e fa xes or any ac t of
tna Hoback
Cong re ss should provrde th at
Deceased
t he rn ter est 1ncorne on tne
bon ds sha ll be tax ab le at a
f ut ur e da t e f or Federal rn
come ta x purposes wh e ther
If su ch notr ce hClS not been
d 1recfly or md,rectly
the g 1v en by the Issuer or warved
su ccessf ul b dder m1av ref use by t he su ccessf ul brdd er and
fo a cce pt delrvery arid n such the bonds
transcr rp t
no
eve nt hrs brd secu r rt y shall be llt ratlon certrficate arid ap
returned wrthou t mterest
p rovr ng oprn ron a r e no t
The
bonds
shal l
be ava rlab le tor delivery to the
de l 1vered for payment wrth 1n
the Staf e ot onro to the sue
cessful b rdd er or to a bank 12 00 o ' clock noon of the 30th
desrgnated by th e success f u l ca lendar day after the day
bid der without ch arge
If fr xed for the recerpt ot brds
delive red a t a place outsrde of and th e
successful b rd der
t he Sfate of Oh1o th e suc
sha ll no,..be In defau lt of any
cessful bid der shalt pay the of hrs oblrga t iQns he shall
e)(pense of delrvery at that ha ve the r g ht thereafter, and
pl ace
The
e)( pen se
of so tong as no such fen der by
delrvery w1thrn t he Stat e o f th e Issue r sha II yet ha ve been
Ohro shall not l:le consrdered
made, to cancel the contra ct
n determlnrng tn e h g hest of purchase Any su c tr rrght
b rdder
sh a ll
be
e )(e rclses
by
Be for e mak rng tender of del rv er,nQ wr1tten notrce of
the bonds a J t he p la ce o f s u ch cancel latron to t he
dclrvery, til e Issuer shal l g rvc und ers rgn ed or to the offrce o f
wr ffen noflce l o the s ue
the
undersrgned
dur1n g
cesst ul bidder n ot later fhan
bus iness hours Suc h br dder
the filth busrness day before shall thereupon be entitled t o
th e proposed tendN of the tn e return of the deposr t
ta ct that the bonds tra n
wh1ch a cc ompanred tlrs brd
scrrp t
no l rt rgatron ce r
and rt sha ll be returned to
tlfr c ate
and
appro v rng h i m rm m ed1 a lely
oprnron wrll be avarlab le for
The rrght rs reser\l.ed to
delivery anlt grvrng the date ret ecf b 1ds
and hour tor t he tender at the
p l ace of del 1very pro11lded,
Coun fy of Me,gs Ohro
however t ha t nofhrn g h erern
By Howard Frank
contamed sh&lt;J II preven t t h e
County Audrfor
mak1ng
of
CJ
mutually
Tel ephope No
agreeable arrangem en t t or
(6 14) 992 2698
the delrvery of fhe bond s
( I O) 3 10 17 Jlc
e 1t her at fhe place fo xed for
de1111 ery or elsewher e

NOliCE OF ELECTION
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON T/\'1( 1 EVY IN
ON TAX LEVY IN
r
X.CES'5 OF THE TEN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
MILL LIMtTATION
N O ll ( [
,s hPreb y g rv en
NOT !C E Is her eb-,. Q1v en
th&lt;J
t
10
pu
rs uan ce o t a
that ,, pursuance o f a
Resolut,on of th e Board o t
Re-,otut1on ot the Board ot
c ounty Com m •ss roner $ o t t he
Educ:at,on ot fhe East ern
County of Me1g s, Pom ('ro y
L~call School Dlstn c t
Ohro
Oh10 pa ssed on the 9Th d~ y of
passed on the 20th day ot
August
1977 th ere w rit b e
September. 1977 !here w d l be
subm,fl cd to a vote of the
submitted to a yotc of the
peop le of sa 1d Co u nty at a
people of said Dlstr rct at a
General ELECTION fo be
Gener&amp;l ELECTION to be
held rn the County pt M erQS
held m the School 0 1str1J:t at
Ohro af the re gu lar pla ces ot
the regular places of votrng
voling there1n , on Tu esda y
ttlereln on Tuesdey the 8th
the 8tt1 day of Novemb«:' r
day of November , 1977 , the
1977 the quesfron of levy.ng
quest ion of levyrng, In excess
rn excess of fhe fen m rl l
of the ten m111 tlm l fatron , for
l ,m,fat,on tor the benefrt of
th e benefit of Eastern Local
Mergs County t or the purpos e
Sc hool Orstrrct for the pur
of
provrd ng
a
tofai
pose of Current eltpenses
emergency medical serv ce
Sa 1d tax being
an ad
In Mergs County
ddional tax of 5 0 m ills to run
Sar d fax berng
an ad
for three yellrs, whrch wrll
d rhonal tax ot one mill to run
rarse a mrnlm um of S5 5 000 00
for f 1ve years at a rate not
annually at a rete not ex
exceedmg 1 0 mdls for ea c h
ceedrng S 0 m1lls for each one
one dollar of valuatron , wh1 Ch
dOl lar of valuation , wh 1Ch
amounts to ten cents for ea c h
amounts to fifty cents for
one hu n drea dollars of
each one hundred dollars of
va luat1on for F 1ve years
valuat ion, for three years •
The Po lls for sard E lec t ron
The Po115 for se rd Election
will open at 6 30 o clock AM
wrll ppen at 6 30 o clock AM
and remain opn unt rl 7 30
and r~mam open unttl 7 30
o clc c k PM of sard day
0 ClOCk PM Of said day
By order ot tt\ e Board of
By order of fhe Board of
Electrons, of Me1gs Cou nt y , _ Elect1ons of Mergs county
Ohro
Ohro
Ernest A W ingett
Ernest A Wrngett
Cha1rma n
Chairman
Dorothy M Johnston
Dorothy
M
Johnston
D.rector
D~rector
Oated Oct 1 1977
Dated Oct 1. 1977
(IO J 3, 10 17, 31c
(101 3 10, 17 24 4tc

NOTICFOF ELE&lt;:lHJN
V "' TAK lEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
NULL LIMITATION
N OTI( l: IS lf~ r e b y q1ven
t h at rn pu r s uan ce o t &lt;t
Re-.o l u fron of the '8 ot~r d o f
Cou n t '( Commrs s roner s of th e
Countv of Me rgs Pomer o y ,
O H 1o, pa ssed on the 2nd day
of A ugu st 1977 there w rit br
sub m rfl ed to a vote of the
pe opl e at sard Cou!ltv at a
G Pnera l ELE CTION fo be
h eld rn fh e County of Mergs,
Ohro , a t fh e reg u lar places of
vol '"g !herem , on TuesdaY 1
tn c 81h d~ of November
1977 th e quesn on of 1evy111g,
In e ~t c e s s ot the ten mIll •
l rmrfa1 ron for the bene f 1f of
Mergs County for the purpose
of pr0¥'1dlng the esll m afed
money to m eet the exp~ses
of Me,gs c ounty General
H e alth Drsfr 1c t Program
Sa 1d lax be rng
an Lad
drtronal tax of one mrll to ! un
for tne years. &lt;Jt a rate not
exc e ed rng 1 0 m 11 1s for each
one dollar of va l uatron whrch
amounts to ten cents lor each
one hundred
dollars o t
valuatron for Ten years
The Polls tor sard Electron
writ open at 6 30 o'clock AM
and remam open until 7 30
o clock PM of sa 1d day
By ord er of the Boerd of
Electrons of Mergs County
Oh10
Ernest A Wmgett
Char rman
Dor othy M Johnston
0 re c: tor
Dated Oc t 1 1977
(101 3

10 17

2.4

NOT!Cl OF ELECTIO"
ON TAX ~EVV IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Mill. LIMITATION

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAK LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

N O l l [ ( rS h erf'by QIV£'n
t h ai t n pursuan c e o t a
Reso l lJt 1on of the Coun c il of
th e V illage o f Rutland Oh10
pass ed on the 6t h day of
Septemb er 1977 there w rll be
s ubm 1ffed to a vote of the
people ot S!Hd Vrllage at a
General ELECTION fo be
held m t he Vil l age of Rutland ,
Ohro, at the regular places of
vot rno therern, on Tuesday,
the 8fh day of November.
1977, the q u est1on of tevy lf'lg,
tn excess of the ten m rll
lrmrtaf1on for the benefrt of
Rutland V11lage for the
purpose of Current E11.penses
Sard tax be ing a renewal
of an e)(1st lng ta x ot 2 0 mr l ls
to run for frve years at a rete
-not e..:ceedrng 2 0 m rl ls tor
each one dollar of valuatron,
WhiCh amounts to Tw enty
cen t s for each one hundred
dollars of valuatron, for Frve
years
The Pol ls for said Electron
will Of! en at 6 30 o'clock AM
and remarn open until 7 30
o'clock PM o f sa1d d!y
B y orde r of the Board of
Elections , of Meigs County
Oh10
· Ernest A Wrngett
Cha 1rman
Dorothy M John5ton

0 ~rector
Datl'!d Oct 1 1977
(10) 3 10 17 , 2.4 1 .oltc

NOTICE QN FILING
,

NOTICE rs her~by g1ven
that
m pursuance of a
Resolut ron of the counc1f of
the V 1 11ao~ at Pomeroy, Ohro ,
passed on the 6th day of
September , 1971 there w rll be
subm•tted to a vofe of the
peopte of Si!l1o V rl lag~ at a
General ELECTION to be
held
rn the Vrl l age
of
Pomeroy Oh10 at !he regular
places of votrng therern , on
Tuesday, the 8th d&amp;y o t
November , 1977, the quest1on
of levyrng, In excess of the ten
mrlllrm1tatron, for the benefit
ot Pomerov Vrllage for ttle
purpose ot Curren t expenses
Sard tax be ing a r enewal
ot an ex 1st ng fa)( of 1 9 mills
fo run tor five years at a rate
not exceeding 1 9 mills for
each one dollar , of valu~tlon ,
Wh1Ch a mounts to nrne teen
c~ nt 5 tor each one hundred
dollars of veluat ron for F1ve
years
The Polls for sard Election
Will open at 6 JO o' clock A M
and rema in open until 7 30
o'cloc~ PM of sa1d day
By order of the Boar'd of
Elec tions, of Meigs County ,
Ohro

~

The St1te• of Ohro, Mthu
County , Court of Common
Pleas, Probate] Dtvrs lon
To the Executor or Ad
mm lstrator of the estate, to
such of the follow ing as are
resi dents of the State of Ohro,
v rz - the surv lvrng spouse,
nexr
of
k 1n .
the
t he
beneficiaries under the w111
and to the attornev or et
fornevs repres~ntrng any of
the aforementioned persons
V loli!l M Jeffers, Salisbury
Townshrp . Meros county~
Ohro
You are hereb y not1tred
tha t the Inventory and Ap
prarsement of the estate of
the
atorementroned,
deceased, late of said County,
were f iled in th1S Court Sard
Inventory and Appraisement
wrll be for hear1ng before th rs
Cou r t on the 13th day o f
October, 1977, at 10 OOo'c lock

AM

Any person deS1r1ng to file
therefo must file
them at least five days pr ror
to the date set for hearrng
Grven under my hand and
seat ot sard Court. th rs 28th
day of September 1977
exc~ptlons

Manntng 0 Webster
Judge

Ernest A Wrnoett
Chair man
D orothy M Johnston
D irector
Da ted Oct I , 1977

ith''tn tory

• Ali'o ll:PPRAISEMENT

BV caro l yn G Thomas
Deput y Clerk

!101 3, 10

~ tc

(10) 3, 10, 17 ' 24 Ate

Ate

''

Hot Off The Press!

ll1RA
IURA

Get the whole
scoop on news, sports and
entertainment . .. every day!
We'll spread your
word all over the community
when you advertise with us!
'

00JA

-"IU
~

Get big buy lines
in our classified pages!

.
'

-

1977

-'

National Newspaper Week

·•

0d.9· 1S

....

.

THE

~Y~~:~~·~~~~~~~~e~n :r' b;f~~~

I

\

DAILY
SENTINEL

•
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'

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II- The Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomero)'. 0 , Munday , &lt;X·t tO , 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted ·Items Into Cash

IN THE
COMMO N PLEAS COUJlT
PR O BAT E OIVtStON ,
MEIGS COU N TY , O M IO

Sti!v e n
T
Sloan
Ad
m rn•stn1tor of th e Estate- ot
Etl1e
Oa v u
Star c h er
decease-d ,
,
Pla tnt 1ft "'
v s. •
Ho l1 1e Sta r che r et a l
Det e nd.lnh
Case No 120!9
LEGAL NOTICE
BY PUBL I CATrON
Jo e- L -, n., Co oper Ro b ert
Al e\
a n~ M rna
R obe r t a
&lt;; or\ge r w ho se &lt;H'ldres.ses M t'
un !o. no w n ana tN e unl..nown
he rr s &lt;'! n tl OP\'rSee s of E H 1e
Oav s St a rch t- r
John R:
Oa v rs Juoson Oa'o' 1S Mar y
Stan\. and Z,e lda Sta le) the
un ~ no 'wl. n Oe1r5 ana dev rse es
of th e un l..no w n F'l f' rrs and
de vr~ e e s
o f Ef fi E' oa . . rs
St ar ch ec
Joh n R
Oavrs
Ju dson D a •n s IIAMY B lank
and
Ze l da
Sla t ey
tne
un Known n e1 rs and dev rsees
of Defendants Ho llr e St ar
cner
Be ul an Ha ll Charl es
Cong er K;e nnE' th Oa'&gt;~ r S M a y
Btu men aur Harold Conger
Ct arer\ce C ong~r . G eorge
St ar ch er . Mary Se ll ers Edna
Mc K r tr 1 c ~
E t, zabeth Ho ff
m an Pa ul Sta l e y R rc h ard
"" St a ley a nd Mar y layer tne
un know n h errs a nd de\l rsees
of t hE' un k no w n he irs ana
dev 1sees of Ho llr e Starcher
Beu l a h Ha ll , Cn ar tt"s Conge-r
Kenn e th
Oa v 1s,
Ma y_
Stum ena u r , H aro ld Conger
Cla re n ce &lt;: o nger , cteorge
St ar cher . Mar 'JI Sel l er s, E dn a
M c K Jtr rc k. , E li za beth H o ff
m etn , Pa ul Sta l ey , R1cha rd
Sta ley a nd Mar y Th e~ yer and
th e u n"-.nown spo use of tM•
de fendant Rober t A ley , all
tn err na m es and la st k now n
addrt"sses a n d res rde nc es
be 1ng unk nown , w ri t t a~e
not rce tha t on th e 13t h day of
September , 1977 , SleiJ en T
Sl oan , Ad m tn rstra tor ot the
Es t ate o f . Eff re Da v rs St ar
cher
D ec eased
f iled a
co m p l a tn t rn t he Cour t of
Co mm on P l eas
P r obate
D 1vr s ron of Me rgs C o ~Jnty ,
Oh ro , at Pomeroy , On ro, c ase
22 059
a g a rn s t Ho ll re
no
St ar c her , et a t. rE'q uest 1ng tne
Co u r t
to
a u thor r ze
t he
Pl am t1 ff ro se ll t ne en1rre
n teres t rn the des cnbed
attached ' EXh ib it A ' real
estate at pu bl 1c sa te, free of
al l c la rms , in terest. t1 en~ and
r 1qhts and expectanc y of
dower t h ere rn of a II parr res to
lh 1S actron for no t l es.s th an
tw o thr rds ( 2 J J of rrs ap
pra 1sed val ue and for suc h
other rel ref as 1s proper
Sa rd
defendants
are
requ rred to answer Wl th rn 18
da y ~ atter th e l ast pub trc at ron
of l h1 s no ll ce

Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pome roy, 0 , Monday, Oct. I0, !977

HI ,CHIEF,A LITTI.E

TELEVISION
VIEWING

r ---:= -, ,_.,._," TOKEN

FROM
OOYERNOR.

1".!.1!1 .for Sale

WANTAD
CHARGES

~

C.U N SHOOT

Racme Gun Club
every Sun aft er noon f-oc 1or
Ct'loclo.. guns only
A s"&gt;orted

lJ \lo ~·al~ ~~ l'm ll'J
ll~ll j.;&lt;

l.'&lt;bh
I'~

hl,n
~ J&lt;i)~

l.!;;t

l&amp;l
'"'

IJ1n ::o
"d.i)~

l'~

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Jl~

dt.llr.:\~1 11 ! lilt'

IJo:

l

Jd \

t!l\t

In

llllllllH

Lli.HIUUI\

Card

nr I h.mk~

t! \ t'llllo ~· 1

ll11 t\ U!IUI !l Cib h IH

l'o \ 1ill

ttl!t l

$..1\l!)

&lt;tJ\ lflll t

;l.h•lulo: i lunw :.&lt;til:. ~rl!.! '1 ar d .&gt;.~~ I~ ~
li lt' al ttph'J on!\ v. tl h l ll&gt; h " lth
•• hl t'l
In~; t.k

!:i \ t'lll

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Fud1 ~ vnl 1'\t' l Ilk 11\llliii' Wll l;,
.,.,.ortb 1:. ~ l t'llk P• l lh &gt;JJ f)&lt; r J.t .,
"-\J.,. IWHilllf! _,(l ll.' f Ll lo.'ll HliiM ' t U ll \ ~'

d. J \ ~ ~t il

FULLER BRUSH products hu ~ol e
oq7 3•10

d lal/&gt;!&lt;' fu1 .td.s l it. 1
\ uml~· J llll.Ho.: , f r/ 10. ~ U·

Ill WI

Till Pu bl1 ~ ht 1 1t"H' l \ , , , !lit' nr.:lll
hl &lt;'tllt t•t ltJt , t i.UI\ .ul• J,, Itt• t •• ~
J• •llvllcil f h o: l'u bhl&gt; ht' l \\ tl[ll•li IJto
lt:. Vt•ll~llll. h•l 1\ \lll l' llldtl ••lh llll\ l
r .... t tt•M•rtr"n
PlMh.' ~2 1 1JO

--.[NOTICE .

JONES BOYS
NOW OPEN
9 A.M. til 9 P.M.
SUNDAY
12 til 8 P.M.
ARE YOUR mvmones crommed
rnto a phot o? Turn them rnto a
wo ll pornflng or gr\1 &amp; that
specro l someone a portror t for
Chrrstmos I do porlroHs and
londscope5 Reasonable rates
Coli Sue ol 992 7006
r-

WANT-AD
ADVER'l'ISING
DEADLINES
~h•ltdo:H

lOST Truck trre , 825 .)1; 20 bet
ween Rut land trash contomer
and eosl end of Rutland on Rt
12A Phone H2 &lt;100J

\llllnun Sdtun.la\

Tu..~.n

rhru F1rJa1
4 P \I
liii.'J .JI lit-fu r~ pullhu m utt

',Sw1da1
4 p \1

r.1u.. ~

Srtu a ted 1n the Covnty of
Me 1gS , Slate Of OhtO an d tn
the Townsh tp of Sutton , to

F 1fte e n acres

more or

less . and
bounded
and
descrtbed a ~ fol l ows , v tz A ll

nor th

ot Hle

FOUND IN Pomeroy Somll , brH'
die long-ho rred mole dog
old
Phone
abou t 3 mo
992 2495

tt ltt'l!Jlltlll

conta •n rng 1 55 100 acres

w1 t

THERE Will be no hunltng no
tresposstng ond no exceptrons
on my proper ty Sob McGrew

road

runntnQ

tnrough the West Half ( West
1 1) of One
H undr ed (100 )
Acres of ra nd on the East end

of Fra cl ton Two Hundred and

Sleven T Sloan ,

Stxty two a cre Lot No Se ven ,
Sect,on
Fourtee n ,
Town
Three Ra ng e Twelve , and
the sa m e havmg b een d ee ded

Adm tn rstratorof

by J acob Ro usn and h i S w •fe

A CAREER wrth o future foro mon
or wom an who wants the bell
rn lr fe A poy check every
week , lontostrc frrnge benefrts
oil loco! work G tv e us o colt ot
992 2480 or wrr te Western
Sou thern lrfe Insurance 218 ' J
E Morn Pomeroy Ohro for m
formotron

Business Services

HOOF HOLL OW HoruS Buy sell CO AL lrmes lone and Ct~ lc lllfn
rr ode or uorn New ' ond used
chlorrde and co lcrum br rne for
saddles .,.. o, ~u ShQe mg Ru th
dust cont ro l or'ld specrol muung
Reeves Albany (0 14 ) 698 3190
salt f01 fo rmers ExcelSIOr Soh
Work s Motn Street Pomt:troy
MEIGS COUNT Y Humane Soc rety
3691
Core lme and odop t1on SeTVICe &lt; OhiO o r phone
9(1'1 7680 747-31 02, Jff/2 5-~7 7
CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
--trade r $-4 50 Ph one {bl4 ) 698
REGISTERED FEMALE St Bernard
3m
to g 1ve owo't to good ho me
, Superiol
Phon e 7412 113
ECONOMY TRACTOR wtth all at
Stt1m
Eltract10n
tachm ents lrke pew , ask mg_
HOR SES FOR Sole 5Q rnch port
$2250
Phone
(614
)
oq9.3290
M organ Geldrng , &lt;I yeors old
$275 58 rnch ALADDIN KEROSINE lamp a nd
very gentle
Polom rno more- due to tool rn
hea ters repla cem ent por t-s
•
March ~ years old and very
Chrmney, mantels. wrcks etc
gent le$350
Phone (lb14)
Stop rn f or demo nstrotro n or.d
llavtt 3 PomtfOJ, 0
6¢,1 3336
f re~ calol ogue
Mou n to rn
Carpet UphOlStery
leother and General Store
Phone Mike Youn 1
AKC POODLE pu'ppy
Apnco t
104 106 W Unron St , Athers
At
mole
Ho va storted shots
Ohro 592 54 78
wormed
Has puppy cl ip
992·2206 01992-7630
9&lt;49 2571
APPLES FITZPATR ICK O rc ho{d ~
Store Route 689
Ph o ne
''ThtOttatnatofl
SEVEN BEAGLE pupp1es to grve
W rl kes-w rl le 669 378S
!tot TIM lmfbrtots
away 6 weeks old wormed
- ~ l Jimo
9A9 2079
SWEET POT A TOES Robe rt lewts \ ' - - - - - - - - - _ ;:.:.:c:::::,-,1
843 2432
FREE TO good home 1 mole whrte
odoroble Sprh puppy 9 wtreks TAKING ORDERS for ftrewood and
o l.d '992 361 B
stovewood Call 843 2933

m

Young's
Carpeting

PARTS FOR 1971 Galoxrv Ford tor
sole Phone ~2 5S58
1973 CHEVROlET IMPALA Sta tron
Wagon 8 passenger, orr cond .,
AM FM rodro ellcellent shape
64 ()(X) mrles Coll949 2273
1973 BUI CK CENTURY V B auto
P S , P B $1 995 99'2 7059, after

5pm
1976 ,• TON CHEVROLET TrucM
13 (),)() mt , extra trres S3 BOO
Coli 742 23 16

GREEN BEAN S, holf-rurmers ond
bunch Prck your own, br 1ng
cont arner 0o '( rs Form Phone
247 2198
FIREWOOD
992 7291

1972 MERCURY MARQUIS 4 de
O!r cond Call 992 7135 or 9
l rberty Ave Pomeroy, OH
1965 CHEVY WAGON 283 eng
stondord $4'15 1126 East Mo rn
St , Pomeroy

ADDRESSERS
W ANTED
lm ·
med to tely I Work at home no
expenence necessary
ex ·
.::ellen t poy Wrtte Amerrcon
Servrce. !1350 Pork Lone Su1 te
269 Dallas TX 75231
AU CTION EVERY Fn , 7 pm Lots
of n@w and used mer chondrse
WAI TRESS
APPL V rn penon
at Oh1o Rrver A uc tron, Me1gs
Crows Steok House Pomeroy
Plaza M rddleport Ohro Home
Ohto
Phone (304 ) 773·5.. 71

th e Estate of to E li as C Ba tcour , J a nuary
Ef h e Da v• s Sttlrcner ..-. 13 , 1869 a nd bY Elt as C
• Balcour and wtfe to John
Henry V an Meter on tne 5fJ'l
Ger a ld A Mo tlr ca
Attor n ey at L aw
, day of March , 1872, and by
• John H V an Meter to George
" EXHIBIT A "
Karr , August 1J, 1973 ...,
PARCEL I Srtu ate 1n the
Mahal1a
Oav 1s,
who
Townsh rp o f Lebo!! non County
reser'o'ed a lrte estate m one
of Me rg5 , St a te o f Oh10 , and
acre m deed record ed 1n Deed
IF YOU hove o sarvrce to offer
located rn Secl•on No 29,
Book 59, pag e 380 , IS ('lOW
Town No 2 and R ange No 12
deceased
wont to blJy or sell somethrng, CASI-t pt~ rd for all m akes and
ot the Oh ro Company ' s
REFERENCE Vo l ume 59,
oe lookrng for work
or
models of mobde homes
Pur c hase and descr 1bed as page 380 Me1gs County Deed
whotever
you II get results
Phone or eo cod e 614 · ~23 953 1
fo l lows
.
Records
foster w1th a Sentinel Won t A d
Beg rn nrng a t a oo rnt on the
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fores t Pro
Coll992
2156
North srd e ot the pubt rc road
( 91 26 { 10 ) J 10. 11 , 24 31 , 6tc
ducts Top pr rc e for stondmg
lead •ng from
Sha r on t o
YARD SALE Tues only from 10 to
sowtrmber Coli 992 5965 or
Sel l ers R rdge , sa 1d pornt
3 Shor t Fourth Street bestde
Kent HonbV l 446 8570
be rng t h e South east corner of
McClure s Oarrly Isle rn M 1d
l and owned by Ken!'le t h
PUBLIC NOTICE
dleport Wrnter dothmg odds COINS CURRENCY tokens old
Coss rn a nd Betty Cosstn and
Elden E Sl ack and Cand1ce
pocket watches and chctns
and endl
sa 1d oo rnt be rng the Sou th
M Sl ack. whose las t known
sdver and gold We need 196-ol
w est cor n er of land owned by
addre ss was Second Slreet
YA:RO SALE Corner Beech and
and older sr lv&amp;r corns Bu y sell
Rtchard Rosenbaum whrch
Syracuse, Ohlo, a nd whose
Olrver
Mtddleport
Tuesday
or trade Call Roger Wamsley
cq rl"'er Ir es on. f he aforesard
pla ce of res 1dence 1S unknow n
ond Wed Oct II th ond 12th
742 2331.
Nor t h s rde of t n e publ rc road
and cannot be ascer t arned ,
10 A Clotkes record plo~er
tl1en c ern
a
no r therly
wtll tak~ not •ce that on the
drre c t ron along the 11ne fence ~ 17th day of August , 19'77 , the
rodro comb rno tron onO mrsc
,, ..~. betw,ee.n Coss rn a nd Ro5.en
Items
Pla11'1ilft, the Athen s Co unt y
baum a- d1stal1 1:e of 400 teet to
Sa'o'lngs and Loan Company,
an ash tree'--rn
rav rr)e on the
GARAGE SA LE Oct 13 14 15
an Oh io Corp orat10n t ries rts
sa 1d
l rne , thence rn a
Thurs thru Sot
10 5 W•de
Compta1nt aga 1nst you rn the
sout n erty d rrect 1on along the
assor tment of dean rtems onh ~ ... .,.
Court of Common Pleas .
m eander 1ngs ,of r h'e sard
Me•gs County , Ohro, the same
ques carn rvo l depres ~ron pot
ra v rne a E! rstance of 354 f eet to
be1ngCauseNo Cl 16SS51. f or
tern gloss old bottles ond
the publ iC road afor es a rCI :
the foreclosure on certarn
rockrng d'1o 1r New sdverwore
thence 205 teet a tong the s&amp; rd
rea l estate and tn s a rd
Avon bottles pumpk•ns Bor·
public road 1n an easterly
Com plain t
descrrbed
as
Bru1g Your Walnuts to
bora Offu1t resrdence Old Rt
d 1rect ron to the place of
follows
Exc:elstor Salt Works, Inc. ,
beg rn ntn g , c onta rn rng 0 83
33 be tween CR 18 and 19
Srtuated m the V1ll age o f
acre . more or tess
Syracuse Cou nty of Me rgs,
E xceptrng , however , al l
and State o r Ohro and
Pomeroy, OH
m 1nera 1 r •ghts
on
and
descrr bed as follows.
beneath th e above desc r rbed
Berng J5 teet off of th e west
Paytng Top Prtce
tract of la nd ro Desha Ha ll by
srde of L ot No 17 m sard
Walnuts Are Cash
her rna deed from sard Desha
1972 ARISTOCRAT TRAVEL
Vrlt agl'! of Sy rac u'!le, rn the
Hal l t o Luther !
Martrn
Tr01ler 18 ft aelf contorned
Starting October I, 1977
County of Mergs, and' State of
dated Oct
17 , 1946, and . Ohro
hcellent
condtllon
Coli
r ecord ed rn d eed booK N o
The pray er of sard Com
992 2427 doytrme or 992 3580
158 at page 415 , o f the d eed
pta rnt rs fo r the foreclosure of
OLD FURNITUR;E , 1ce boxe.s bross
after 4 pm
records of M ergs Cou nt y
th e mor tgage of said real
beds
ate
comp l ete
Dhro
estate, execut1on and sale of STARCRAFT FAll Sale
Mrnr
households Wnte M D M1ller
Th rs berng a part of the
sard real estate and t or other
motors 20 and 22 TrgVel
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh1o or coli
.same real estate as th ai
equttable
re lr et
Sa id
Tro1lers 19 5 $3 ,799 25 7
con'o'eyed
f rom
Mil d red
9'12 771&gt;0
Defendants are requ rre d to
Bunkhouse $4,875 Fold down
T u rner a nd A aron T urner to
ans wer Complar nl on the 28 th
51 700 up We sell serv rc e ond NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
Kennetn (ossrn and Berty
day of No vember . 1977, or
Wtll buy 1 piece or comp lete
quoltty Open Sundoys Camp
Cossrn by deed da t ed May 7,
j udgment w rit be taken
1959 and recorded Ju ly 1,
household New used or ant1
Con ley Storcroff Soles Rt 62
aga 1nst them ,
1959 -m-ct'eed book No 202 at
ques Mor ltn s Furmture 20 N.
N of Pt Pleasan t
pag e 75 of the dePr1 r ecord s o f
The Athens County
2nd St. Mrddleport Phone
M'e1gs Coumy , Ohro
Savmgs &amp; Loan
992 6370
PARCEL II Sr tuated 1n the
Company , an
County of Me rgs , State of
FIVE FOOT Brush hog Set of 14
Ohro CorporattOn ,
Oh ro and rn the Townshrp of
Plarnt1ff
plows Whtrlpool refr•gerator
PI ANO TUNING and Repo1r lane
Lebanon and boun ded as
to sell $100 742 2761
Oontels, 992·,2082 12 years ser
follows Srtuated rn Sec tro n
b y Mr ch ael Ward ,
V IC&amp; to Trr·Cou nty
Reference
29 , Town 2. Range 11 of the
1ts Attorney
Elberfelds
Oh ro Compa n y P urchase
descnbed as fo ll ow s
,9&gt; 26 , (10 1 3, 10. 17 , 2.4 , 31, 6t c
HIGH SCHOOL Sentors wtll do
Begrnnrng at a pos t 80 rods
bobys1ttrng
whrle
Southern
Wes t and 81 rods and 10 li n~ s
locol Sd'1ool rs closvd Hove 3 AND &lt;4 RM furnrshed ond uo
sou th o t the Nortt~ea st corner
furntshed opt s Phone 992 own trontportotron and plenty
of sard Sec t ron N o 29 at what
NOTICE OF ELECTION
5434 .
M• ~,~~
was fo rmer l y known on the
of good references 949·2677,
ON TAX LEVY IN
North Wes t co rn er o f Je f
after o4 30 pm
EX.CESS OF THE TEN
AVAILABLE AT A1 vers1de Apts I
ferson Chase's 40 a c:re lot rn
MILL LIMITATION
bed room $105 per month $150
sa rd Sect ro n , thence West 80
NOTI CE rs hereby grven
secunty depos1t 992 6098
rod s to a s tone corn er (where
that 1n purs u an ce Of a
a hickor y S bears So uth 57
Resol ut ron of the Board o f
FOUR ROOMS and bo th Adults
degrees east 33 links ) , thence
Trustees of the TownSh i P of
only No pets 992 5908
south 31''' degrees west A
Letart , Rt 2, Rac rne Oh ro ,
Charns an d 6811nks to a post rn
passed on the 8th day of
TWO~ BEOR00¥,.1'.r-orler ~ Adults
l h e county road where a p rne
Sep tember , 1977 the re Will be
NOTICE OF ELECTION
OnfY, 992,.3324
6south 59 east 9 lr nk s . thence
svbmtlted to a vote of the
ft ON -TAX LEVY IN
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
south 14 degrees ea st 8 charns
people of sa1d To.,wnsh rp at a
EKCESSOF THE TEN
to a post , thence south 39
General ELECT IO N to be
MILL LIMITATION
Route 33, north of Pomeroy
de grees east 3 ch a 1ns to a
ne l d In the Townshtp of
NOTf"CE rs hereby r;;uve n
Lorge lots Cal1992 7479 .
post ,
thence south 48 1!,
Letart , Oh ro , at l he re gular that rn p u rsuance of a
tn
credrble
t Why pay h 1gh electrrc
~1egrees east 9 cha 1ns and 20
places of v ottn g there 1n , on
Resotutton of the Councrl of
btlls thiS wlnler? Let us pay
l rnks to a post (prne 5 south 46
Tues day, the Bth ctay of
the V illage of Racine , Oh1o,
degrees West 18 p rne 5 north
Novemb er , 1977, the questmn pa ssed on the Bth day ot
them for your One bedroom
70 deg ree s West 19 l rnks )
of levy mg . rn exc ess of the ten
September , 1977, there w rll b e
from S\30 now avarlobla
thence east 6 cha tns and 60
mrllllmttafron. for the benefit submttted to a vote of the
Vrlloge Manor Thtrd and Mrll
tmks to a post south west
of L e ta rt Towns hr p for the
people of sard Village at a
Streets, Middleport T•l•phone
co rner of Jeff er son Cha se's
purpose o f mamlatntng and
General ELEC TION to be
992 · 7787 Equal Hou1 mg Op·
operatmg cemetertes
lot thence w1th sard Chases
held rn the Vil lage of Rac rne .
portun1ty
sard lme n orth 80 rods to th e
Sa•d tax being a renewal OhtO , at the rl'!g u tar p lace 01
of an e)(ISflng ta&gt;c of 1 0 mrll to
p lace of begrnnrng , con
votrng there,n , on Tuesday ,
EFF HOUSE lurn Adults only
ta rnrng JOia acres
run for f1ve years , at a rate
th e 8th day of No'w'ember ,
ldeol for 2 men No pets
not exceed tng 1 0 m rll s tor
PARCEL ! II
Also the
1977 , l he quest1on of le'o'y.ng ,
followrng desl$r l bed real
each one dollar of valuaf rD{J .
992 7791 ' Sun onY.t tme, after.
tn eM. cess of the t en m rll
wh•ch amounts to Ten cents
es t a te , to w rt
Srluated rn
ltmttat lon, fo r the bene f rl o f
Sun any11me dfte-r Spm
Lebanon Townsh1p rn Me1gs
for each on e h und re d dollars
Ra crn e Village for the pur
MOBILE HOME fo r Rent Nrce
of v a lua t ron . tor Frve years
Coun t y and State of Ohro and
pose of Current expenses
descr1Ued as fol lows • The
The Polls for sa1d E lec t ron
locotron Albert H1ll 949-2261
Sai d tax berng a renewal
Southeast quarter of Nor
w HI open a t 6 JO o' cl ock AM
of an eM.rStrng ta x of I 7 mills
TRAILER SPACE for rent 992 3162
thwes t quarter of Sechon No
and rem a rn open unt rl 7 30 to run for f ive yea r s. at a rate
o ' clock PM of satd day
29 rn Town 2, Range 11.
not exceedrl')g 1 7 mr lls for
co nta1n rng 40 acre s, oe the
By order of the Board of
each one dollar~~ val uation
sam e more or less
Elec t rons of Mergs Cou.., t y , whrch amounts to Seventeen
PAR C EL IV
A lso t h e
Ohro
cents for each one h undred
follow . ng
de s cr r bed
do llar s of vatua t ro n , for Ftve
FOR SALE or trade or land con
prem 1ses , St l uated rn the
Ernest A Wingett
years
!roc!
2 bvdroom house m
Cha rrman
County of Mergs , State of
The Polls tor sa1d Elect•on
Rutlond 992 5858
Ohro
and
tn
Lebanon
w rll open at 6 JC. o'c lock AM
Townshrp and tn the Oh ro
Dorothy M Johnst on
and remarn open unt i l 1 JO
SIX ROOM house f or sole or rent ,
Drrec lo r
o' cl ock PM of sa 1d day
Comp any 's Purchase ano
gas furnace Close to grocery
Dated Oc t 1, 1977
boun d ed as follows Berng 1n
By order of t he Board of
992 3592, o!.!!r P!"__ __ • _ _
Electrons, of Mergs Co unty
Sectton 29, T own 2 and Ran ge
( 10 ) 3, 10 17 . 1 A, o:ttc
OhrO
11. commenc rng at the Nort h
west c orner of Jacob Beut
Ern est A WrngeU
ler 's land a t a stone corner
and runnrng sou tl'1 about 29
Charrman
rods to the public road ,
WASHER AND Drye r $75 or best
Dorothy M John s ton
th ence northerly along thl'!
offer 642 2178
Orrector
pubtrc road about 33 rod s to
8 x 30 MARLETT HOUSE Tro1ler
Datea Oc t I 197J
the south line ot the 30 11 acre
wrth canopy Need~ repa ir
16 FOOT CRfSTU NER 6() hp
tract f 1rst descrrbed above ,
$600
Col i everr rngs
Btl!
l::vrnrude 1~?1 350 Hon do 1969
(
10
)
J,
10
,
17,
24,
o~tc
thence east about 16 rods to
fF/2 3461
Novo 94&lt;f l'i1b
the place o f beQrnnlnQ,

WANTED

a

BLACK
WALNUTS

I

~

---

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box 34

S e r v,,.,.
ic
e., hllllo&amp;.,.

AutomatiG
r ransmiSSion Smite

Radiator~
~

c...

or

SMITHNRSON
MOTORS, INC.

15

COMI!f IN Yf'T TH15
MORNII-JEH

Pt!OCoED1~6 ON

A C~A~H SC HEPUL.e' ..

..

,,,,

TECHNICAL. TAL.ENT

'"C.

f01 Jl&amp;l t pun of llltiHI 111d to
tabsfy you r lftSUtllltt tM~J Itt US
Itt down JOUr rwObU1 tlomt fhiM ttt
downs 111 lftKhllll&lt;ltft InStalled It
assure mu1mum 11f1ty Contlcl us 101'

1 ''11~ty awntn ... l*!'t wMI tlll tet
forms 11ft JOU' roOf, lit 111 cOlt tt now
and slop poltntill lub. CAll
!191 7034 011 STOP BY 1100 !. M~IN
Sf! POMEROY , 01110 Rll A FIE!
!! IMAT!

Cl8arance Sale
On illf 1;77

"tractors and
ndmg mowers. Save • 20
Pet on all models tn stoc!c .
Examples

Mower.

2652
S HP

Snapper

Lost S600
Sale 1480
Model 524 Gravely Trac:tor
8 HP
LlStS1116
SaleS893
Model B-6000 Kubota
Diesel Tractor

L1st S289S

Sale 12315

Gravely Tractor

Sales
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy,Oh . Ph. 992 2975

SIX WEEK old to hv&amp; year old
Beag le robbrt dogs 3 head of
beef cottle 1q73 Frot 742· 2521
HEREFORD

HOLSTEI N

•::-'--'----,---

DEAL WITH an •ndependen l
dealer where your mcneil 1s
spent locally w•th other mer
ch ants Bo dey s Ashlond the
only tndependen t tn town not o
company run stot lan October
Spec ro! Amerrcon -mode can
lube Sots Vol..-ol rne AC o rl
ond f1 lter $10 Tox 1ncluded In
st ock new and recapped snow
t r res ~ battertes noses belt s
pl ugs points and other oc
cessorres Plenty of Volvo/me
on trfrnze Open 7 to 8 30
Mon thru Fn Sat 8 30 to 7 00
Closed Sun Other work done

cal f

1975 350 JOHN DEERE dozer w1 tk
368 hours 27 ton set of new
truck scales 22' long 992 S..68

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
...et

Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; conchtion your
water and Co-op waJ.er
softener , Model UC · XVI . '

Now Only

.'279.95
let us
Free.

test

your

water

New

TEAFORD(B
RE ALIOR

VIRGIL B. TEA FOliO, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
PhOne 992 3325

IN "THE SHOP, EH?

YES, 8lJT I'VE

MENTIONED?'-

NO IDEA WHAT
HE'S ~N DOING

four ordinary words

IN THERE !

SIFIN

I I

jr

NEW LISTING -

Co-Op

water

and

softener•, model VC.SVI.
Only 1279.95
Save $50 .00 on a new
Hotpoinf Refrigerator

I New 20 cuboc ft. Chest
Freezer

125.00 Do5count
( 1) Good Refrigerator S200

A

fine quality built tlome ttlts
ts 3 bedrooms ! n r ight
decor , master has bath ,
and patto. One acre . Plenty
room for children $45,000

WAN,.---A

require~ a

Circumstances

10·10 chain saw

$14,000

TERRIFIC ,-

Chain Sow
$50
l Good Used McCullough
Chain SiiW

WOULD YOU -

'

S50

Pomeroy Landmark

9. ~Jack W, Carsey, Mgr .
Ail Phone 992-2181

Like S7

acres, a 3 bedroom tlome,
bath , orl furnace , n lce
gambrel root barn wlttl
electric,
water, - and
concrete floors
Lots of

Phone 985-3595

other buildings
Only
$29,000. . - "'l,
HOW ABOUT f 1HIS - For
ol 613 Mrll St
Mtddleport Good ( ondlt !On In
qu~re of 439 Lrncoln St Mtd ·
dleport
MUST SEll tk rs 3 bedroom 2 11J
both splt t toyer w1th all the u
lrosl Pr1ced for below oct uo l
real estate 'o'olue for qUick
sole • NICe drive to power
plants $.4&lt;4 000 992 2492
SEVEN YEAR old house , 3 acres 6
rooms and bot h 1/~ mr from
Chester 985 3950.
NEW ONE year old b1level home
3 bedroom, 1 'l tboth garage
recreat 1on ro om 1 1 acre s
Eagle Rrdge 949·2745
;-:;;';:';';-;-;;;;';;-;:-;-;";-''-;'~;:--:LARGE MOBILE Home lo t Country
S&amp;ttmg Mergs Schoo ls
A ll
ut 111hes avodable BoHle gas
heatm on l 742·3122,

GASOLINE

I, if it's lost
isn't the end of
the worl

Slim has lost
the doorstep~~'-=--"'""'
basl4et1

11 SLore
specta l
(2 wds )
22 Gndtron
_.----------..
number
At least not 23 Bnef
till Uncle Walt
report
finds out about 27 Like some
...__ ~:::\" it!
notepaper
28 Rambled
29 Anagram
of natl
r-7,.. 30 H1t the

7

2 Lawyer
(abbr )
3 Great
quantity
I Shp up
5 Wtcked ·
6 Last
Supper
cup
7 One-bme
M1deast
8 Motor
9 Employs
10 Spamsh
pamter
14 Algenan
port
17 Cut down
18 Htp bones
19 Itahan
pamter

10·3~Biack Perspective on the News 20.

11 oo-News 3,4,8,10,15, Dick Cavett 20, MacNeilLehrer Report 33
11 311--Johnny Caarson 3,4,15, Koiak B, ABC News 33 ,
Mov\e "The Deadly Aftalr" 10
· ~5--Movle " Melvin Purvis, G Man"

Yesterday's Answer
20 Happenmg 33 Sprnted
21 Ham
horse
lt up
24 S&lt;itamcal
25 Bare
26 European
mer
28 Setback
30 Evaluate
32 Baseball's
Staub

Sarkley 6; 12 0!1--''Jariakl 33

34 Ms. Falana
35 Secede
38 Wttllctsm
39 - d'Aosta,
Italy
40 "-Hamblin'
Wreck" (2 wds. ----:::--:---:=-:=-==::-::;:-=---41 That (Fr l
42 - long
,--

BRIDGE

for that extra chance
lO
NORTH IDI
•AK8
tA 643

horse
33 Prtest's

(olO 94

.2
LILABNER

..

~

•

,:

.........

lA$.,

8:.001115:00

.,

•• .•.

-·

DCJI:'SN'r
INCLLX:&gt;E'

West

is

One letter stmply stands for another In this sample A is
u sed for the three L's, X f or the two O 's, etc Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length and format1on of t he words are all

htnts Each day the code letters are different

YEAH AND AS 80MEONE

KRT

ENOUGH 1 IF YOU

LX 0 P S-&lt;r H,

PLAY YOUR CARDB

AKXTH

Y0 SBCP

RIGHT I 'l'lrr--

:

•e•

Close Sat. At 5 P.M.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

1••-l?ll

•

4RNOLD GI&lt;ATE!

o«UJ'ANL

.-

ROEP

ESKA

J KB

'py

H P p

XKFP~H

Norlh East

It
2•
2•
Pass Pass
OpeAlng reaa -

" The wmning player

South

Pass 14
Pass 6.
Pus

cashes the

ace of dtamonds,

ruffs a dtamond , enters dum·
my wtth the king of trumps
over hts own queen and ruffs
anotlrer dtamond. Everyone
follows and he has a parkmg
place for hts SIX of clubs If
dramonds falled to break he
could sbll try the club play .' :
Oswald · "Note Easley's
btddmg Soulh dtd not use
BlackwOod because he had a
VOld SUlt "

~h.

~

A Cahforma reader wants to

By Oswald &amp; Jamu
Oswald : "One of Ure .real
beneftts denved from
membershrp m the Amencan
Contract Bndge League is the
monthly bulletin that mcludes
a great deal of valuable bndge

1s

a part score

Bndge rules prov1de no
penalty except that the
offender's partner may be
barred . Thus, tf the btddlng
has
gone one club-two-clubsK R T mformatlon "
Jim "Undoubtedly , the three clubs and the three-club
CN P ones of greatest value to the · btdder says, " We have 40 on
ordmary player are Easley score," the offender wants to
p y
Blackwood 's series of hands bar hts partner so the only
showmg baste play Here lS a penalty avatlable 1s to stop
playmg wtth the culP,rtt'
very good one "
Oswald "The slam btd lS a
( For a copy of JA CO BY
perfect one, but many players MODE RN, send $1 Ia ' Wm at
would lose lt because West Bndge, ' cl o Itt!$ newspaper,
holds both the ace ~nd Jack of P 0 Box 489, RadiO C1ty Station

clubs "

Fe-ahlre s Syndicll~.lrw:

A CI&lt;OWD'S

•
~

•e•

•

-

'

HAHAHAHA
'

e&gt;EGINNIN'
T' GA~ER ..-

JUST A LITTLE HUMOR
THERE, MA'AM,13EFORE
WE BREAK FOR LUNCH

.

know what the penalty lS for a
player who reminds partner
during the b1ddmg that there

New York N Y 10019)

BARNEY

M'1 DAD 15 A 13AR6ER,
~OU SEE, AND IF I SO~T
OF FOLLOW IN ""15
FOOT5T€P5, THAT WOULD
6E SHEAR DELIGHT !

·····················- ~ --.,

OH

,J K B

ttl t9771Unl

~

..........

•••e._

I

AXYDLHAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

&gt;....
.t •

:

!'•

·-

•KQ6

•

I

• 8 7 52

North South vulnerable

•

FRIDAY TIL 5

• Q 10 9

oloAJ 3

t7 52

ASSIGN!o'I:NT

•I C4#l lJEL!EVEA1Y.6'1Ro'&gt;.'

:~

• 6 53 2

KJ 8

CHIGF-IfJOF'S
Nrt Nt=XT
AI"-,.?

.\.

. i Tllursaay Bfll noon

•QJI0974

MY BELCJ\"SD

YOU REALLY WANT ID
GOIDA. SINGLEB MR.
AGAIN ·&lt;"

·--··~
'""-~ T ···..-.
W......
-., ,

EAST
• 43

SOUTH
• A Q J lO 9 7 5

AORR

$16,500.
JUST STARTING OUT OR
OWN
PROPERTY
ALREADY, YOU SHOULD
SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO
OFFER .

WEST
t

Jtm

sees an extra chance Maybe
dummy's fourth dtamond can
be estabhshed So he starts
proceedmgs by dlscardmg two
dtamonds on dummy 's ace
and kmg of hearts Then he

4 K 86

WINNIE

Real Estate Broker
Phone 614-985-4186 afte• 4:00 P.M.

---;- - -

and Jim
It

,

GeorgeS . Holhuurcl Jr.

12 45--Mod

Squad 6; 1:011--To.morrow 3,4.
1· 25--News 13 ; 1 311--Mary Hartman 10
Coble Channel 5 6 30 P.M. _ Testimony Time
- 7 00 _ PWJI Gaudino Family Fitness
7 30- Athens Band Fell val
10 00 - 700 Club
Monday, October 11

s;JCk

. ELSE BAlD/'THAT'S

...

13, Lohman &amp;

l h '--Movie "Counnterfelt Green" a,

31 R E Lee's

~1010

bedroom
home
Has
central heating and large
lot In Syracuse and lust

George S. Hobstetter Jr ,
Real Estate Broker,
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 614-985-4 186 after 4 p.m.

ma~e

16 N'--

DODD

HOBSTETTER REALTY

only $7,000
NEW LISTING - River
frontage witH this 4

HOBStmER REALTY

GUlLTY SHOULD
The tea user could be puritamcai"AUSTERE"

DAILY CRYPTeQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

appointment onlv.

your money for a
day. 3 bedrooms,
natural gas, city
and large garden for

no. ·

UTTER

tmbals

ce pas"

Located 3 miles from Rt. 7, past Chester. Ohio, turn leff
on first road past West Shade Rtver. Shown by

Buy this and

utilities available, surveyed, approved by
the planning commission for sewage,
located one mile from Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
on Summerfield road . Ideal for trailer,
double wide, or home. Pr1ced to sell at
54,000

WE HAVE A GOOD
SELECTION
OF
PROPERTY FOR SALE
AT THIS TIME, DROP IN
AND HAVE A LOOK
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259

and tho bt5t opphances. Fireplace with heot-o-laler

1112 acres of secluded home site, wooded. all

ACROSS
t Gave relief to
6 lnd1an
holy men
II Cubic meter
12 Contact
by radw
13 Favored
12 wds )
15 Jackte's
• late

•
l

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

minerals.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Answer

(Answers tomorrow)

MEALY

busmess lor sale For
tnf ormatlon please drop 1n
the office

good

save
rainy
bath ,
water

dl&lt;f'ltln

2 story

good springs,, land lays
$16,500.
WHY NOT -

Ml&gt;7T'V~ WI HCU' CH.
Q!.IVe.
1

bath, n 1ce kitchen . leve l lot.
carpetl11g. some paneltng ,
about
6
years
old

New, 12 room,
4 bedroom brick home with two acres of
1
ground, 2 car garage with carport, 2112 baths, 2500 sq.
ft. of living space, electrtc heat, very modern kitchen

all

5 JQ-Odd Couple 4; News 6, Elec Co 20,33 ; Hogan's
Heroes , Emergency One 13; My Ttlree Sons 15
5 3Q-Odd Couple 4; News 6, Elec Co 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Hogan's Heroes 15
6 oo--News 3,~ , 8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6 31f-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13. Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8. 10, As We See It 20
7 oo--Truth or Cons 3, Cross W1ls 4, Liars Club 6 ,
Pop Goes he Country 8, To Tell the Truth 13, News
10, Gilligan's Is IS ; French Chef 20, STudio See 33
7 31)-Hollywood · Squares 3,4; Wolfman Jack 6,
Country Carnival 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
Price Is Right 10, That's Hollywood 13.
8 .DO--Dick Clark's Good Old Days 3,4,15, Fltzpatrlcks
8,1 0; World Series 6,13, A Good Dissonance Like a
Man 20,33
9 DO-Mash 8, 10; Tour En L' Air-Ballet Adagio 33, VTR
20
9·3!f-One Day at a Time 8,10; IO·oo-R \chard Pryor
3,4, 15, Lou Grant a, 10. Equality 33; News 20

KJ

I

a location on good country
year around ro~d . 53 acreS
w1th coal cropp1ng out, 2
and

I Jumbles

room er

3

SDns 4; Gunsmoke a, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33, Hogan's Heroes 10, Emergency One 13, My
Three Sons 15.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BORN LOSER

131,'100 00
We have 2 good · go1ng

Two cnoice bulldi ng
sites
located
in
partially
wooded
area . Close to Rt . 7;
but secluded.

THEI&lt;'E WA':J AN UR'GE
IN THEIR' SON TO
I!IECOME THIS.

"D-r xxn-ITJ"

Answer: A
Saturday's

3·15--General Hospital 6,1 3, 3 311--Match Game 8,1 0,
L1llas Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 00'--Spcpeclal Treat3,4, IS; Merv Griffin 6, Gilligan' s
1 Is 8; Sesame Sl 20,33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10 ,
Dinah 13 , Merv Griffin 6, Gilligan's Is. 8, Sesame
Sl 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Dinah 13
4 31f-Brady Bunch 8,10: 5·011--Booanza 3, , My Three

~.~

frame
In
excellent
condit ion 3 or 4 bedrooms,
bath . modern kttchen, nat.
gas
hot water
heat

FtnlShed in

Nat i ve Oak Large rooms
tnclude d tnrng
and 4
bedrooms
Attic
for
storage,
wrap around
porch, 2 car garage on
corner lot $35,000

Homehte

'

JUST LISTED - Ranch
type home, 3 bedrooms ,

space. 112,500
JUST LISTED -

water, gas furnac e, corner

I Good Used McCullough

Used

,11

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

bedrooms, bath , dlnmg
room, kitchen Includes
range . &amp; retr 1g Nat gas
heat, basement, garden

fast sale on this 3 bedroom
home. Has bath , city

lots with batt! , crty water ,
natural gas In Rutland

1 Good

THE UTTLE VIPER HAS Pf~ISHfD --

,I

$26.600 00
ONE FLOOR PLAN -

HOME SITES

BARGAIN -

8,10
2·DO--S20,000 Pyramid 6,13, 2 311--Doctors 3,4, 15, One
Lofe to Live 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10
3·DO--Anolher World 3.~,15 , All In The F amily 8,10.

•..,..._...,

Consumer Survival Kit 20

IPREEMTI
[] I

50 -0-- p;f LAST--SHE 15 OFAD-AT ~EAST SHE WAS A WORTHY
FOE - lH A WA'1 l AM SORRY

HOMESITE S lor sole I ocre ond
up Mrddleporl neor Rutland
Col l992 7481

bedrooms , d tn 1ng room ,
modern kttchen , bath ,
carpeting, panel ing, nat
gas
furnace
Asktng

BEAUTIFUL

also ut1llty room, family

1 Good Used
Ama"na
Uprtght Freezer. S~50 00
S125

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE •

SI8,SOO 00
JUST LISTED - Ranch
type about 12 yrs old, 3

fOR SAlE

~

3815

'iOJ VJISW
Lf 'TO 1111;:
TN?TE' Of TIKI%

STORY 3 bedroom frame
hou se F A furnace §t orm win ·
dows ft reploce rn M1ddlepo rt
Phone 992 3457

Thos 3

lot and garage $17 ,500
COMFORTABLE - Old 4
bedroom no uSe on I eve I 2

I Good used McCullough
310 E Chain Saw
$95
1 Good Used Homelite
XL12 Chain Sow
1125

2

1 Jo-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15 , As The World Turn s

KIJ

BOWERS REPAIR -

TIMI'

VA FHA 30yr f rn ancmg lrelattd
M ortgoge 77 E Stole Athe ns
ph one (61o:t ) 592 3051- 1

Braun 4 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10, E lec &lt;: o 33

1 oo--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13: News 8;
Young a. the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15

LYGUL

(l!;U., IT'&lt;7

COUNTRY lo rmlond w rl h seclud
ed woods water and good oc
cess 10 Monroe County W Vo
S l ,000 down, c; all (304j 772
3101 or (304) 772 3227

Court 8, Midday 13
12 31f-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,15, Ryan' s Hope 6,13, Bob

one letter to each square , to form

DID I HEA!it MV NAMe

Sweeper s toaste rs ~rons oil
smoll opp lronces lawn mower
nex t to Stol e Hrghwoy Garoge
on Route 7 Ph one (6f4 ) 985

NEW J bedroom h~ 2 baths
all &amp;lee
1 -ode .· ~·ddleport
dose lo Rut land Phone 992
7481

bedroomer has v tew of the
rrver New gas furnace,
din!rlg , bath, utilrty room ,
large concrete front porch
on nice lot for S16 ,500

EXECUTIVE HOME -

FOR SALE

69a 7331

VIrginia 13, 6 55--Chuck White Reports 10, Good
Morning , Trl State 13.
7.DO-Today 3,~, 15; Good Morning Amer ica 6,13 , CBS
News 8, Bullwlnkle 10.
7. 31f-Schoolles 10; 8 oo-Capt . Kangaroo B, 10, Sesame
St 33
9.oo-Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affa ir 8,10.
9 31f-Edge of Night 6, Andy Griffith 8; Here's Lucy 10.
10 oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S; Dinah 6, Here's Lucy 8;
Joker's Wild 10. Mike Douglas 1310 311--Hollywood
Squares 3 , ~ , 15, Price Is Right 8,10 .
11 DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Happy Days 6, 13,
Marcus Wlby, M D ~
11 31f-Knockout 3,15 , Fam1ly Feud 6,13, Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St 20
1i :55--CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 .oo-News 3,4,6,1 0; To Say the Least 15, D ivorce

ISO DOC$ ~IN6

SMALL form tor sole 10 ~~ down
own er frnanced . Monroe Coun
ly W Va Phon-e (304) 772
3102 or (304) 772 3227

8A3 2353
FOUR HEAD of bu ll calves 600
lbs Hou se tr orler 8 x 50
sur table as a cotnper 992 1307

HOWERY AND
MARTIN h
CO'IIO t rng
sep tic systems
dozer, backhoe, dump truck
l1mestone
grovel
blacktop
p9vr ng Rt 1•3 Phone I (6 14 )

Sunrise Semester 10. •

6 2.s--Con cer n s &amp; Comments 10, 6 : 3o-Focus on
ColUmbus 4, News 6, Sunrise Semester 8. 6 45Mornlng Report 3, 6 so-Good Morn i ng, W est

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,

SEWING MACHINE Rvp01rs ser
vtce all makes 992 228.4 The
Fobrtc
Shop
Pomeroy
Author rze d Srnger Sole§ ond
'Servrce . We sharpen St•ssors

CARPENTER
floonng
earling
po nel•ng Phone 992 2759

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1977
5 45--Farm Report 13; 5 50--PTL Club 13, 5 55-

ALLEYOOP

BRADFORD
Auct1onee r LOm
plete Se rvrce Pho ne 94q 2487
o r 9• 9 1000 Rocrne Ohro Crt!!
Bradford

REMODELING Plumbrng heatrng
end all types of general reporr
Work guaranteed 20 yeo~e)C
penence Phone 992 2.oi09

C.bte Chonnet 5 •
6. 30 P .M - Testimony Time
7·00 - Paul Gaudino Fam ily Fitness
7.30 - PPHS Nitro Football
10·00 - 700 Club

THE ARMED FORCES

t.lH.-.

ELWOOD

5 &amp; 9 PM. - The Sting (PG)
7 &amp; 11 P MM - Man Who Knew Too Much

lO·oo-News 20; VTR 33.

K1npbury Home Sales

BATHROOMS AND Krt chttn s EXCAVATING dozer loader ond
remodeled ceram iC tile plum
backhoe work dump trucks
brng carpentry and general _ anclJo,boys f or htre wrll haul
marntenonce
13 yeo rs ex
fdl drrt to so1l l1mestone dnd
penence 992 3685
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jel
EXCAVATING BACKHOE dozer
l ers doy phOne 992 7089 ntght
trencher
low b oy
dump
phone 992 3525 or 992 5232
tr ucMs
s~pt1c systems
Brl l EXC A V ATING dozer bo ckh oe
Pullml phone 992 2478 doy or
a nd drtrher Charles R Hat
nrgh t
lreld
Bo do,
Hoe Servrce
BL OWN IN SULATION Get three
Rutland Ohro Phone 7422008
es ttmotes Coli 067 6479 far
free estrmote

Mary Hartman 10, News 13
Movie Channel 4 -

9 3Q-Country Music Assoc . Awards 8 ,1 0

HA5 &amp;E~N REcRUITED
I!&gt;OTH FROM OTHEfl
MANUFACTUREI'&lt;S AND

toklf\ ltft.trmt alumln1111 undttptnn-

Ph 371-6250
I-17TFC

!911174

~li!HT~R

SAVE ON YOUR FUll BILL THIS
WINTER AND ILIUTIFV TOOl MOBIL!
HOM[ Wt hi" parllbllrn 1 nrlttJ' of

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

IIMI._tot to tM

p~

SJfKIM,Ohil
Ph. 9!!-3!93

8 29 pd

SWAIN

OR WL.ADEK5
U R~VOL. UTIO~AR¥ ~~W JET

lARRY lAVENDEL

Chester, Ohto

l 'M SO~R ¥, Ml'&lt; TUBBS ...
CAP r~IN oA5Y HA~Hi'T

o;-?H~ S UIL.D I ~IS

~, ,..,.n..c""-'-

. Model

after 6 pm

992 5537

MEAT CASE , cosh reg 1st er oddtng
mochrne on t rque candy show
case
1n
good condrtron
Breakfa st tab le and cha1rs
Randy Humph reys 992 7318

1972 PIN TO 9•9 2761 after S dur
'"9 tke week and onyt1me
weekends

1%7 THUNDERBIRD $.400 Call
9'12 25B9
1975 FORO PINTO M P G. Good
gas m1leage . Ca ll 992 7512

CALL

I·

Anyday , anytime.
Phone 985-3800

EXPERIENCED

,,_ ,.,.

S.Wte•
FinMC:IIIf AnUINt
Bl"' lnlo Wolls &amp; Altii:s
SIORM
WINDOIIS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WIN DOllS
AUIMIIIUM
SIDIII5-SOfi'ITT
IWTTtRAWNINGS

10; Americana 33

Movie, "Lisa"

12 .DO-News 6,1 3, Janak! 33.
12·30--FBI6; Ironside 13, 1 00- Tomorrow 3,4, 1 30--

6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS, ABC News 6. Zoom 20.
6 31f-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8,1 0, Pests, Restlcldes &amp;
Safely 20
7 oo-Trulh or Cons 3; Cross. Wits ~. Liars Club 6,
Marty Robbins' Spotlight 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Gilligan' s Is 15, Prime Time 20, Know
Your Schools 33.
7 »-That Nashville Music 3, New Truth or Cons. 4,
f&lt;luppet 's how 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
Camera 13, Nashville on the Road 15.
8.oo-Laugh In 3,4, 15 ; San Pedro • Beach Bums 13,
Emergency One 6, Young Dan' I Boone 8, 10, Age of
Uncertainly 20,33
9 oo-Movle " Killer on Board" 3,4, 15, NFL Football
6, 13. Betty While 8, 10; Images of Aging 20; Made In
America· Rome, N. Y 33.

l~ts.~lltilll

Residential
and
commerctal.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour serYtce.

ir

TWENTY -FIVE HEAD of Ieeder
steers 742 227.4 or 742 2221

....

FREE ESTIMATES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

11 : 3D-Johnny Carson 3.41. Mo'w'ie " Unwed Father " 8;

5:.0G-Bonanza 3; My Thr~ Sons &lt;4; Gunsmoke 8.
Mlsler ~~ers' Neighborhood - 20,33, Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13, My Three Son s 15.
5 ·J!f-Odd Couple -t, News 6, Elec. Co. ~0,33, Mary
Tyrer Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15~

.

---

Hl 31f-As We See It 20: 11.()(f-News 3.~ . 8 , 10 , Dick
Cavett 20; MacNeii .Lehrer , Report 33.

11'5 GOTTA
e&gt;Fi:INC&gt; IN

SOME.
Bll51NES5.'

IF IT WEI&lt;:EN T
FISH DINNER 1

.

FOR. THE. FR.I:E.
\'XJIJL-ON'f

ALLOW MY CAR TO BE TI4E
OOJECT OF RIDiaiLE .'

•

�·.

•

j

Hospital News
Soyuz

23

\'F.URANS MEMORIAL
Sat urday Admis's ion:s
A.l\'a Rl't'd , PoiJleroy ; Le"is

missiOn . by

&lt;"osm onau ts

Zudov
and
Val er i
llozhdestv ens ky aborted
after a similar failure to hnk
lip with t~ Sa lyut 5 space
mtion.
The Soyuz 23 mission returned safe lv to ea r th afte r

8

Right of oniy 48 hours from
launC'h to tourt1do"11.
The only other manned
spaceflight car ried out by the
Soviets in 19n was on Feb. 7.
Cosmonauts Viktor Gorbatko
and Yuri Glazkov were
launched abcard Sol11Z 24 for
an la..day ·space mission to
the Salyut 5 sta tion.

To high school parents, teachers
Regardless or your sentiments concerning parent-teac~r
groups, PAT welcomes &gt;·ou to our first meeting Tuesday,
October 11 , at 7: 30 at Meigs High School.
U we SOWld d~fens ire , it'S only because we realize that
some teachers and some parents ,Jlave had negative
experiences in th e past with parent-teacher groups, and are
therefore reluctant to gi1•e up one more night a month for a
questionable cause.
·
Won't you be fair and gi1·e PAT a chance?
PAT was organized to serve as a "booster" group for
M.H.S.: we hope to "spread t~ word'' about positive things
going on at the school. PAT intends to be another channel of
communi cation between parent and teacher, hQme and school,
school and community. PAT wants to inforin the public abcut

The latest mission lifted off
fr om '
the
Baikonu r
Cosm odrom e
in
SO\•ie t

Mart in. Shade.
Satu rday Disc harges Helen Gibbs. O'Dell Blake.
Cletu s Arnell. Margare.t
Pareell. Richard Duck·
worth)', Janet Sigman.
Velma Winebrenner, Martha
Mu stain , W. H. Perrin ,
Gladys Morgan, Mildred ·
Workman. David Gloeckner.
Sunday Admissions Thomas Weston, Minersville;
Doris Adams, Racine ;
Brenda Hayes, Galloway ;
DebQra Wander, Shade.
Sunday Discharges Mary Hackney, John Hansun .

.

l

'

..

,.\)

..

Area Deaths

!

been Wldergoing cosmonaut

training since 1967.
·Flight engineer Ryumin is
a ~year~ld , design bur·eau
engineer who had worked oo
developing and testing new
space equipment before ~
began cosmonaut training in
1973.

LEGAL NOTICE

,,.

'

~

Queen nmned
! .Saturday night

mi 5Sto n o f Ohi o has set far
public hea o ng Case N o

77·37S ·EL ·FAC to rev•ew
the fuel procu rement pract ices and po li c ies of the
Colum bus and Southern
Oh io Electr ic' Company ,
the operati o n of its fuel
cost adjustment clause ,
and related mat ters . This
hearing is scheduled to be gm at 10 :0.0 A .M., on

Auction has

off ices of the Commi SSIOn ,
180 East Broad Street ,
Colum bu s, Ohi o . A ll int er-

ested person.s w ill be gi ven
an opportUn i ty t o be
hea rd . Funher m fo rm at lon m ay be ob t ained by
contac tin g
the
Public
Ut1l 1t ies Com mi ssion .

Layoffs made
at Interlock

THE PUBliC UTI LITIE S
COMMISSIO N OF OHIO

by Randall G. Applegate,
·

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

Why shouldlit
a GIRL be a

DRIVING
1\lfiS.z rtrM PIBCB

Newspaper
carrief.?

S

Women's l•b rs here to sla'y. G1rl s
.. are very capable of handli ng a
newspaper del1very route and
more and more grrls around the
country are takmg on a carrier

J.Ob. 11'5 a good way to meet new
people. learn good busrnes s
DraCtices a11d earn a lrttle extra

Farnters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 Maxifl)um Insurance For. Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Pilgrims

Eighty units of
blood received .

'

Eighty units of blood were
received at the Bloodmobile
visit Mooday w Pomeroy
Elementary School.

mone y. Joo learning how to be a
good earner can g1ve you in -

sights that can help you through ·
out your li fe The Sentinel
\\'elcomes fem ale carrrets. Jo•n
you r lnE'ndo; tr&gt;day 1

THE
·

DAILY
SENTINEL

Come early for
best selection.

SIZE 9'Xl2'

'59.00
SI~E

12'Xl2'

'79JJo
SIZE 12'Xl5'

'89.00
.

-

-

SIZE 12'Xl8'

'109.00
SIZE 12'X21'

'129.00

~r~&lt;1itage.

ELBERFELD$· IN POMEROY

,_

There were 85 persons
I .

attending and 64 of the 60
·wtitB were replacements.
First time donors were
Pamela Vaughan, Jack
Sakyonne,' Marie Probert.

Cheryl Abbott, Carol Erwm, gaUon, Robert Vaughan; 12
Wtlliam Middleswarth, ·ga llon ; Walter Couch .
Ernest
Haggy,
Roger . Nurses were Mrs .. Vern
Manley; one gallon donors, Story and , Lenora Letfheit.
Freda Durham, Isabelle · Doctors were Dr. L. D. Telle,
Couch, Leo Loring Vaughan, Dr. E. S. Villaneuva and Dr.
Jr ., Kathy Cummins: two Raymond Boice.
ga llon, Patty Barten ; three
In charge of the canteen
gallon, Ellis Myers; five was the Cbild Conservation
ga llon, Mace! Barton; eight Lea oue. Clerical workers

·:~,,~:;._~'*::::.:..~::..,~:~::*::::::::::~:•.:~~:~:~:!~~!!:::::::.~:.~:...'!:::::::~::~-::::::~:::::::.~::.~:»."~ ~:~~e. ~~~~t:~~~~~ ~~:~

• B •. t. s~,··~ .
.~JVt
~,.~:'· ews. • .zn · rze
"

e

~

By United Pr.esslnternatlonal
WASIDNGTON -CONGRESS FOR THE FIRST time is
moving..to outlaw pocnography featuring children and to crack
down on the use of young beys as prostitutes. The Senate
approved legislation Monday to prohibit the production, sale
and distribution of so.ealled kidporn . It also forbids coercing or
enticing young boys across stale lines IIH' prostiMion.
The1inal vote was 85-1, with Sen. James Abourfzk, D-S.D.,
casting t~ only negative vote. The House has passed almost
identical legiSlation in the form of amendments to child abuse
laws. But the House also plans nell,! week to act on anot~r
· measure whi.ch would not cover distribution aryd sale of child
pornograph.
Despite · warnings the Supreme Court would rule
unconstitutional the part of the bill dealing with distribution
and sales, the Senate by a 73-12 vote approved an amendment
widening t~ scope of the bill.

Sayre, Martha Lou Beegle,
Mace! Barton, Grace Drake,
J oyce
Hoback,
Kathy
Cununings, Pat Engles, Alice
Wolfe, Erna Jesse, Theresa
·Starr, Lula Hampton and
Vernon Nease.
Donations were made by
~ality Print Shop, Meigs
Local School, Daily Sentinel,
Athens Messenger, WMPO
Radio, Pomeroy ER Squad
and Vete rans Memorial
Hospital.
Retired senior volunteer
citizens U1at assisted were ·
Paul Smart, Clarence

Explorer Posi
meeting set
this evening

.I

I

•-

a1

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday
and Friday with a ebance
of showers Saturday. Highs
to the 50s Thursday,
warming to near 60 by
Saturday. Lows Ill tbe 30s.
·.;: ;:; :;:::;:;:;::=::;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;: ; : ;:;:;:;:; :;i : : :::~::::::: ::: :: :: :· .

Weather
Cooler tonight and Wed·
nesday. Lows tonight near 40.
Highs Wednesday to mid 50s . .
Chance of rain 60 per cent
today; 70 per cent tonight arid
Wednesday.

Servi~e

'

Senate leaders COnfer
with President Carter
Zumwalt
said
Soviet
presence would be more
likely to flourish if the
pendin~ treaties are rejected.
Moorer, former chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of St:aff,
said Monday his prediction of
Russian advances was based
on observations over. a 4{).
year naval career.
During that time, he said,
Russia moved into Libya and
took control of Wheelus Air
Force Base, gained control of
bases in Angola and Mozambique and established "an
axis" with Cuba.
(Continued on page 12)

•

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol,. 28, No. 125

Hon!kJ assembly plant
going to Union County
COLUMBUS (UP])
In the spring of 1979.
Honwi Motor Co. Ltd. today Kawashima said construction
announced selection of a ·217· would begin "as soon after ,
· acre site in Union County for the first of the year as
construction of a $25 million possible."
motorcycle assembly plant · The announcement · was
starting in 1978.
made in the governor's
The plant will employ up to · Cabinet Room minutes after
500 persons initially.
majority ~ocrats on the
K. Kawashima, executive state Controlling Board had
ERNEST C. NICHOLSON
vice president of the voted to release $2.5 miUlon
Japanese cofporation, and in state emergency funds to
Gov. James A. Rhodes the Department of Economic
announced the site selectioo a n d · C o m m u n i t y
jointly and said Honda may Development for t~ Honda
follow in several years with project.
an automobile manufactur·
Kawashima said the initial
ing plant. ·
phase would be a jpint
The motorcycle factory, venture of Honda Motor Co.
. occupying . 220,000 square and its American subsidiary,
Village Council, and council feet, is to produce
and would be the company's
president at the time of his motorcycles a ye_a r starting first manufacturing plant in
death, Mrs. Nicholson was a
past commander of Eli
Denison Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland; a member
of the county Veterans AI·
fairs Board ; a former
member of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars; a leader in the
Boy Scouts of America.
He was a member of the
Rutland Church of Christ.
Americans was Sir Nevill F.
By
MORTENSEN
Mr. Nicholson for his time
Molt,
72, of Cambridge
STOCKHOLM, Sweden
in the anned forces received ( UPI) -Two Americans and University, England.
the Africa and Middle a Briton won the 1977 Nobel .
"The three prize winners
Eastern Service Medals with physics prize today for solid are theoreticians within the
two bronze stars and the state research work that field of solid state physics World War II Victory Medal. could make solar heating the branch of physics which
Officiating at ThurSday's systems cheaper in the lies behind essential parts of
services will be the Rev . C. J . . future.
the
current
technical
Lemley. Burial will he in
The Americans honored by development, particularly in
Miles . Cemetery. Friends the Swedish Royal Academy electronics," the Academy
may call at the funeral home of Sciences are Dr. Philip W. said.
Academy member Prof.
from 10 a.m. Wednesday until Anderson, M, of the Bell
time of services on thursday. Telephone Labcratories in Stlg Lundqvist said Mott and
The family wilf receive Mw-ray Hill, N.J., and Prof. Anderson's knowledge of the
friends at the funeral home John H. van Vleck, . 78; of behavior of · crystalllc
meant,
for
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Ha"rv·ard
University, materials
practical
application,
that
Wednesday. Military rites Cambridge, Mass.
\vill be conducted at the
Sharing th~ three-way "solar heating cells may
cemetery by Eli Denison . award - and the $145,000 become cheaper in the future,
It now takes about seven or
Post, American Legion.
prize money - with the

set for ·
Ernes-t Nicholson

RUTLAND - Funeral
services for· Ernest C.
(Dutch) Ni'chol~on, 62,
Rutland Village Council
president who died · unex·
pectedly Monday morning at
the home of a son, Michael,
have been set for 2 p.m .
Thursday at the Walke.t,
Funeral Home.
Mr. Nicholson, a resident of
Salem St., Rutland, was
pronwnced dead upon the
arrival of . the Rutland
SE.OEMS unit at the home of
his son on College St.
Mr. Nicholson was born
Apri125, 1915 in DexteJ, a ·son
of the late M. A. and Clair
Sansbury Nicholson . He
married the former Ethel
Jacks on Feb. 19, 1946 at
London, Ohio. He retired live
years ago from his duties
with the maintenance depart·
men! of the Foote Mine~al­
Corp. He served in the U. S.
Army during World War II
\Vhen he was a prisoner of the
Germans.
·
Surviving besides his wife
are two SOI!.s,~Michael "Carl
and William Roger, both of
Rutland;
two
grand·
daughters, Miranda and
Bridget Dawn, both of
Rutland; a grandson, Ryan
Michael, Rutland; three
brothers, Waid, Dexter ;
Dale, Middleport, and Marion
of Marion; a sister, Mrs.
George (Evelyn) Burkey,
Vermillion , s.everal nieces, .
nephews and cousins.·
A member of Rutland

BAR HARBOR, MAINE - DEWEY REINHARD and CO·
pilot Steve Stephenson drifted slowly across the chilly North
Atlantic today in their giant silver and black balloon "Eagle,"
bcping to be the first ever to make t~ 3,000,mile trip to
Europe.
' After waiting several hOW'S for ~aVy winds to SUbSide, the
Sheriff' James J . Proffitt
two Colorado Springs, Colo., adventurers cast off. from the announced today that an
Maine coast at 5:35 p.m. EDT Monday and headed out to sea. organizational meeting of
Reinhard, 47, and Stephenson, 44, kissed, their families Meigs County Explorer Post
goodbye and waved to a crowd of townspeople before climbing 230, sponsored by the
aboard the yellow, orange and red gondola attached to the base Sheriff's Department, will be
of the 85-loo(-\ligh balloon, .
held this evening at 8 p. m. at
A technical adviser said the two took advantage of a · the sheriff's offi&lt;:e for young
momentary "weather window" between high and low pressure adults, boy~ and girls, age 14
systems.
through 20.
It is to provide a program,
tbrougb, scouting, with oC·
cupational specialty of law
enforcement.
Sheriff Proffitt
'
is
the
institutional
representative;
Milford
Hysell is post advisur and
Several special guests Darrell Slone is assistant post
Over $1,200 profit from an
auction last Saturday con- presented checks to help the advisor.
Committee members are
ducted under sponsorship of organization in its effort to
judge
Robert E. Buck, Larry
the Meigs Countlans for Wild· defeat Issue Two . Tom
Spencer,
clerk of courts; Ron
life Conservation Association Grueser and John Grueser
Hollon
and
Bob Beegle.
put 'the local group' over the represented the Meigs
top in its drive to raise funds County Fish and Game
Association, Jack Westfall
to fight Issue 2.
That was -announced presented a checli on behalf
Monday evening at a meeting of the Western Boots C. B. ·
of the association at ·the local' Club, Rob Bjrchlield gave the f
lairgrounds. The sum ratsed donation of the Rutland G,un
more than met the amount Club and the Rutland i','.
.
assigned to the local group by Volunteer Fire Department,
KeMelh
Knotts
and
Jess
the Ohioans for Wildlife
Conservation to raise money Freeman represented the ~
t·.·.· ·.•J
for a TV carnpaigu in op- Raccoon Valley S]l&lt;irtsman's
-Club, Bill Grueser presented
position to fssue 2.
,
Auction chairman Gene a check from the Big Bend
Young and treasurer RiChard Bass Ariglers, and Larry Well
Coleman, extended their presented checks from the
thimks to all who donated in · Ken Amsba ry Chapter, Izaak
Walton League ol America,
any way.
Thanks was also given to and the Bricklayers and
Young for the use of his Allied Craftsmen.
Anyone wishing to con·
property during the auction.
The Coonhunters' Association tribute to this organization is
.got a hearty round of ap- urged to call Coleman at 985plause for the ·use of its 3376, Karr at 992-2219, or
building on the fairgrounds. Young at 3711-6376.
DONATIONS MADE - Local clubs and organizations
Personal contributions
A financial report was
presented donations Monday night to the Meigs Cou ntians
given by Coleman, and Ray were made last night by
for Wildlife Conservation. Representing their respective
· Karr kept everyone up to date Rufus Cline, Norman Weber,
organizations and presentlng checks were, front, (1-r),
on recent political action and Bill Connelly, !lob Vance , and
Tom Grueser, V.P., Mei~s County Fish and Game; Jack
what is being planned as Larry Well .
Westfall, Western Bqots C.B. Club ; Rob Bil¢hfield,
vot.llg time nears.

$1,200 raised to
oppose Issue 2

First
quality
millend
carpeting in nylon and
acrylon. Bound all around,
·solid colors, patterns, some
shag, some plush.

slope to the site, repeated the
story.
A
13-year-old
boy
reportedly paral)"led by jl(llio
"threw down his crutches and
walked" after being ~ld up
to the statue, witnesses said.
"And I also saw a halo of
light around the statue about
1 ·a.m.,n a seamstress said.
"And. the fingers moved. His
eyes blinked several limes."
About f5,000 persons
crowded into St. Peter's
Basilica, the world's largest
church, for the canonization.
Among them were abcut
12,000 Maronite Christians
from Lebanon . ·
Makhlouf, a monk of the
Maronite order, was born in
1828at Bega' Kafra and spent
the last 23 years of his life as
a hermit. He died on
Christmas Eve, 1898, at the
lige of 70.
While alive , Charbel was
said !0 have :performed a
humber
of .. · miracles,
including turning water into
kerosene and successfully
ordering a poisonous snake to
sli ther away from the ·

But most of the miracles
attributed to him came after
-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.ll ~----------.,1 his deH t11 ·
.

MILL ENDS
ROOM SIZE RUGS

(Continued from page I)

and Wishing You Weren't
top driving. and start looking! When you're in the
market for a new or · later model car ... see us.
c·Our Auto Loans are geared to help you buy that car
you want now ... when you want it ... and let you
repa_1· with a plan that'~ geared to vour budget! Ju st
select the rar yo11 want and tell11 o tlw amo11nl you'll
' need to purcha se it. On approval ... in many ca ses
it's the same day . .. you'll have the money to drive
home in yo ur new set of wheels! Get all the facts soon!

Special Purchase and Safef

'

::: : ;::: :: : :::::;:;:;:;: ; :;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.: ;:; :~ : =::::;:;:;:::;:; :;:;::

~ransfers

go to .58 counties ·

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
· Tue$day. October II. 1977

_Meigs
Property

October 31 , 1977 , at the

The meeting t•ame as the

m~ft: ------------------------~---

Plane crashes in com field

The Pu bli c U til it 1es Cfl m ·

'.

problem," he said he told
·
·
Senate Foreign Relations Carter. " We should do
Coolmittee and the House anything we can, in kn
International Relations economic way, to ~lp them
Coolmittee held hearings on (Panama)- but not to wind
whether to give t~ canal to up giving them the canal."
"The American people are
Panama in the yeir 2000.
Strong controversy has been not going to buy giving that candid discussion he has
raised over w~ther Panama canal away ," Goldwater attended at the Carter White
would allow U.S. Intervention said . "Don't ask me why. It's House .
away."
in a subsequent canal like the American flag . · Senate Democratic Leader
They're wrapped up in it." Robert Byrd said he felt the
" Before I will accept t~ emergency.
"I don't think anbody . tr~ty has gained in public
Goldwater told reporters it
treaty .. . it will have to have
changed
his position," added support. But,"! doo 't knDw,"
sume rather large changes," was an apparent attempt by
Senate
GOP
Le;ider Howard he sa.id, when asked if it has
the Ari2ona Republican told, Carter to clarify the treaties.
Baker,
who
has
not taken a picked up support in the
reporters after he and other but the explanation did not
position
oo
the
issue.
But he Senate.
senators were summoned by change his opinion.
called
it
the
most
frank
and
Carter to talk over the issue.
"It is an economic
. On Monday, Adrn. Thomas·
Moorer appeared before the
Foreign Relations Committee
and
raised the specter of
CHAMPION CORPS - Winning first place in overall competiti~n .as the most
strong
Russian influence over
outstanding rifle corps of all 32 bands taking part in the. third annual Athens Invitational
the
canal
if the treaties are
Marching Band Festival at Peden Stadium Saturday was the ·Meigs High School marching
approved.
band rifle corps. Pictured from the left with their trophy are corps members Stephanie
But retired Adm. Elmo
Radford, Rufh Ann Blake, Carin Bailey, and Rita Bailey.
By NICHOLAS DAND..OFF
WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Carter discussed
the Panama Canal treaties
with Senate leaders today
and a dubious Barry
Goldwater said later it's like
the American flag
Americans "are not going to
b6}1" giving that canal

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Oct. l)
Donald Angel. Frank
Baumgard, Charles Cheesebrew, Re·becca Conger, Myla
Conner, Peggy Dawson,
James Duffy, Dwaine Fain,
HOWARD BEASLEY AND HIS STAFF empty a box
of misceUaneous items on a table with the whole pile of
the various departments and activities of the school, Clyde Floyd, Mrs. AnthonY
whatever
it
turns
out
to
be
going
to
the
highest
bidder.
presenting such information through a program at each Griffin and daughter, Fern
monthly meeting.
Hayman. E.dna Henry, Brian , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.- - - - - - - - - 1
F or example, the Octo.b er meeting will feature Guidailce Hodges, Zella Howell, Robert
Department personnel wbo will briefly discuss their duties and Huddleston. Jay Jagers, Mrs.
then answer questions about registration! testing; counseling, Michael Johnson and son,
1Continued from PIC' I) .
or other matters within their department. Tentatively plaMed Ralph Johnston; Jackie
.
'
I
everybody joins in the pace ·
-.
future programs include a discussion of attendance policies, KerwQOd, Donald Marcum,
WAlTER SCOTT
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - and the bags sell like hot
N~llie Rae Stephenson
school, rules, and the student handbook ; presentations by Mrs. Michael Markins and
Wa lter Scott, 66. a res ident Nancy Lyn Patton or
Mrs .
Nellie
Rae·
variouS academic and vocational departments of the school; daughter, Mahalia Pervatt, Stephenson, Manan , W. Va ., of 50 VInton Ave .. Gall ipol is, Columbus, Ind., was selected cakes.
The real hlghllght comes ..,
and an ppen house during National Education Week.
Ronald Phalin, Cla ra Pullins, 52 , died Saturday In Mont- died unexpectedly at his Miss Columbus USA 19n in when one of tbe purchasers
General Hospital
home around 9 a .m. Sunday · teremonies Saturday night.
Scoffers say no one will come ; tlle cynics say PAT will die Dorothy Rayburn, Norma qomeroy
He was born Aug . 4, 1911 , 1n
A native of Winifrede, W.
finds his sack has a lucky
out. Maybe so .. lf such a group is neither needed nor desirable, Ridgway, Shirley Thacker, Va ., Mrs . Stephenson spent Gallipqlis, son of the late
Miss Patton, 20, chosen number or an item that was
it should "die out.' ' But to prejudge PAT's fate, or toopresume James Tucker, Edith Veaian. the past 31 Jears in Mahan . Charles and Maggie Smedley from among 14 cootestants
She attende the Church of Scott.
from communities in the not in any other sack. This
its motives is patently unfair.
(Births, Oct. 7
luc~y guy or gal may win a
the
Naza
rene
at
Burnwell.
He
never
married
.
t'
d c 1 bu
Teachers, don 't wait until you need to meet a parent;
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Pugh, a
Mr. Scott was a ret ired na ton na,me - o urn s, was
Surviv ing are ller huSband,
valuable
prize or perhaps, a
parents, don't wait until you have to go to the school. Let 's daughter, Pomeroy.
Rothe! ; thr-ee brothers, C. J . employee of Ohio Produce crowned by Antoi!i_ette Borde
choice
selection
from several
meet at PAT. - Dorothy Oliver, M.H.S. teacher, M.H.S..
Cottre ll, Winifrede ; Bill Co. and the Cl ty of Gall ipolls. of New Mexico, last year's
(Discharges, Oct. 8)
items
offered
as
grab bag
He Is survived by two Miss Columbus USA.
parent,' and PAT secretary.
Jlll Barber, James Barlow, Cottrell, Chesapeake, W. Va .,
I
and Jack CottrelL Marmet, brothers ,
prizes.
.
Harry
Scott
,
Rllnnersup
wete:
Terri
Louis Blevins, Mrs. Gary · w. V.a ., and five sisters, Mrs. lrontoo and Raymond Scott L
H d 1 M tan
All in all, it seems that
• _YM
ear o
on a,
Canterbury and son, Mrs. Gwinnie Wh ite, Middleport ; Gallipolis .
everyone
has a great time
;-:=our sisters and brothers ftrst ; Pamela S. Dartt of
William Dailey and daughter, Mrs. Jessie Cooper , Winifred ,
and
the
crowd
keejllt coming
foW1er
l
y
of
Langsvi
lle
;
Mrs.
preceded
him
In
death.
Wisconsin
second·
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP]) Cleveland to Dayton . He said James Fraley, Amy Golds·
Pal
Rumbaugn
,
and
Mrs.
Joe
back
like
a
song,
Friday alter
Three
n
l
~ces
and
one
Constance
M;ans
of
North
Four Cleve land~area he tried to make an bury , Bernard Harris,
Mullins , Win ifrede , and Mrs , nephew survtve.
Ca
th'
d
d La
.
Friday
.
1
residents escaped serious emergency landing but Imogene Henry , Gladys Kitty Ball , Chesapeake, W.
Mr. Scott was a member of
. ro ma,
Lr i an
ura
injury Saturday night when crashed four miles north of McKean, Read Shephard, Va.
Paint Creek Baplist Church R1ce of Nebraska, fow-th.
wc,s preceded in death and served as a member of
their light plane crashed in a Lahm.
Emma Shirley, Helen Strong, byShe
two sisters, one in in fancy , the church ' s board of
corn field north ·or Lahm
Ken Cornell of Maple James Wolford, Belinda and Mrs. Madge Cooper, and deacons. He was also a
QUAKE SENSED
Airport.
Heights was treated for fa cial Wood.
three brothers, Guy CottrelL member of the ushering
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI )
Pilot, Charles Eloshway of lacerations and ~wo othe~
Rome · c ottrel l, and Finley committee .
I Births, Oct. 8)
The University of
Cottrell.
.and her parents,
:-=uneral serviceS will be
Warrensville Heights said the passengers, Patricia. and'
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Byerly, Colohef Jerome
California
Seismographic
Cottrell and held 2,p.m. Wednesday at !he
Cessna 172 developed engine Connie McCabe of Maplj! a daughter, Ra,y, Ohio; Mr. M.aude Fink Cottrell.
LabQratory said today a
Paint Creek Baptist Church
trouble while traveling from Heights,·were unhurt.
and Mrs. Samuel Loganacre,
Funeral services w!ll be wHh Rev . Grover Tu rner
"rilajor earthquake'' w8s
a daughter, New Haven, W. held at 1 p.m . Tuesday at the officiating. Buria l will follow registered at 8'06 a. m. EDT
Pryor Funeral Home in East- in Pine Street Cemetery .
Va.
bank, W. Va., with bur ia l in
1-rlends may cal l at M cCoy in the region of the Tonga
Payme~ts
(Discharges, Oct. 9)
Islands in the South Pacific.
the l ondon Cemetery .
. W,etherholt ~ Moore Funeral
FrNnces Briggs, Am y
Home in G.:,ltipolis from 1 The quake measured 7 on the
Diane Young to Buckeye
until 9 p. m . on Tuesday .
Richter scale.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The felonies .
Rural Electric Coop, Inc.,
He
said Canter, Amy Elkins, Mrs.
1he bOdy will 11e tn stare ar
state auditor's office has sent reimbw-sementfor such costs Louis Green and son, Virginia
the church one hour pr ior to
Right of Way , Meigs.
DON'T LOOK
more than $8(1, 750 in Crinlinal is made by the state after Grinstead , Leon Hutchison,
services.
Pearl Deem, Dec., SybU
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Cost Subsidy Program pay. counties submit bills to the Lowell Jeffers, Margaret
ERNEST NICHOLSON
Astronomer Warren H. Am· Ebershach, Comm. to ~ybal
ments to 511 counties.
Ohio Public
Defender Malone, Mrs. Todd Mlller and
RUTLAND
Ernest
quest warns that the public Deem, Thelma Montgomery,
son, Bryan Molihan, Mrs.
Auditor
Thomas
E . Commission.
(Dutch) Nicholson, 62, Sa lem should not watch the eclipse Sharlene Gray, Jimmy
Ferguson said the payments
Sf ., Rutland , died unex The payments ranged from Francis Queen and son, Fay
of the sun by · the liiQOII Deem, Roger D. Deem,
pectedly Monday morning at
were the result of successful · $71.55 for Medina &lt;lounty to Slone, Blanche Stevers,
home of a son, Mike
Wednesday because it can Robert Deem, Pearl Deem,
Tracy WiUs, Angela Wright.
prosecuti o n
and more than li8,651 for
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI ) - · the
Nicholson ,
College
St .,
perman~nt
eye Jr., Kenneth M. Deem, Carol
(Births, Oet. 9)1
imprisonment of ipdigent Hamilton County.
· Interlake, Inc., willlay off 146 Rutland. Mi-. Nicholson was cause
Willman, Parcel, Sutton:
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Gillin- workers Monday (or eight pronounced dead upon the damage within seconds. .
persons charged with
Jimmy Deem, Carrie L.
Dr.
Arnquest ,
an
water, a son, Vinton.
weeks while its blast furnace arrival of the Ru t land Un it of
Deem,
WiUiam H. Willman,
the
Southeastern
Ohio · astronomer at UCLA, said
operation is closed.
Jr.,
Carol
.Willman, Robert
Emergency Med ical Serv ice.
PLEAsANT VALLEY
Acompany spokesman said ;-:uneral arrangements ·are Sunday the sun's infrared Deem, Roger D. Deem,
DISCHARGES - Mont production is heing halted be i nQ completed by the radiatioo can burn n&gt;l.-entire Kenneth M. Deem, Pearl P.
retina of the eye.
Hill, Leon ; Mrs. Jack temporarily because the steel Wal~er Funeral Home .
A partial eclipse will occur Deem, Jr., Sharlene M. Gray,
Williams, daughter, firm's inventory has grown
in Los Angeles beginning at Thelma Montgomery,
Gallipo lis ; Roy Woomer, !oo large for the current
1:14 p.m. PDT, while t~ Brenda J , Deem to Rubal
Point Pleasant; , Garland demand.
center of the total blackout Deem, Parcel, Sutton.
Buckley, Gallipolis; Mrs.
The company hopes to
Myrtle Stanley to Billie C.
will be abcut 1,200 miles
A thought for the day;
Dwight, DeBoard, Fraziers resume operations pi the
Stout,
Carol J. Stout, Parcels,
suuthwest.
writer
and
Bottom; Irene Kaepell, Point blast furnace in eight weeks American
Scipio.
·
Pleasant; 'Randy Lfvely, when officials believe the philosopher Henry David
DAVTOMEET
Letart; Mrs. Morgan Sayre, inventory will be at a mor ~ Thoreau said, " A:···true ·acTinged tips
Meigs County Chapter 53,
count of the actual is the
son, Leon; Mrs. · Jimmie accepblble level.
The next time you p&lt;&gt;llsh
Disabled
American
Veterans,
Interlake has 500 employes rarest (ioetry, for commOI!. will meet at 7,30 p. m. your nails, give them the look
Wood, son, Point Pleasant;
sense always takes a hasty
Mrs. Charles Guy, daughter, at the affected plant.
Tuesday at the chapter home of now by us)jtg a quarter nall
and
superficial view."
Vinton; Mrs. Jarrell Sigman,
on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. · color to three-quarters clear
son, Gallipolis; Mrs. Albert
polish, for just a tinge of
Tarrls, Gallipolis ; Mrs.
color.
Jerome Baukey, Dayton, 0.;
•
Mrs. William Doolittle, Point Pleasant ; Earl Thornton,
Leon; John Gregory, New
Haven;
Mrs.
John
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasanfi
Diana Parsons, 1 Henderson,
and Darlene Early, Hun· 1
tington·.
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
1
and Mrs. William McKinney,
Point Pleasant.

Kazakhs tan before da wn
Sunday from the same pad
used for the launch of Sputnik
I into orbit 20 years ago.
The Soyuz 25 cosmonauts
lire a pair of rookies . who
never have flown a space
mission bel&lt;re.
The capsule is commanded
'bv Lt . Col. Kovalenok, 35, a
veteran Soviet air force pilot
and paratrooper who has

Sec·retarv

Treaty uniJcceptable in its
present form says Goldwater

La udermiU , Pomr ruy : Carol
G r ee ne , Pom e roy ; Fre da

Vya c hesla \'

s«ooo

the United States.
He said !he firm. has
secured an option to p\jrchase
the 217 acres of land east .of
the Ohio Transportation
Research Center, and that if
all goes well, another 2tiO
acres will he purchased from
the center for an auto plant
sometime in the future.
" If
the
motorcycle
assembly operation , meets
our expectations with respect
to such factors as the product
quality and costs as well as
ow- relations with labor, local
communities and
gove~ents,, and .. ?emwtd
and
other
economic
conditions So warrant, it is
out present intention to start
(Continued on p.ge 12)

Two Americans share·
Nobel Physics prize
KRJS

eight years to gain enough
energy to pay for the energy
you have invested to bulld a
solar heating system."
The Swedish academy said
van Vleck has been called
"the father of modern
magnetism&gt;""and his ideas
have played a key role in
development of the laser.
Anderson was van Vleck's
student at Harvard, and Molt
"bronght to the attention of
r e.searchers
and
popularized' ' Anderson's
inajor
wt'itten
work,
"Absence of Diffusion in
Certain Random Lattices,"
poblished in 19511, Londqvist
said .
(Continued on PICe 12)

Middleport cable .TV rates raised
Middleport Village Council
Monday night amended an
ordinance that increased
local cable television rates.
Representing PointView
Cable Television was Dick
Newell . The .amended

ordinance provides lor a rate
increase to $6 a month from
the present $5.50 for a single
home and a 25 percent
discount for senior citizens.
Senior citizens under . the
new rate will par $4.50 a

'

Rutland Gun. Club and Rutland Volunteel' Fire
Department; front row, Jess Freeman, Raccoon Valley
Sportsman's Club; Bill Grueser, Big Band BASS Anglers ;
Larry Well, lzaak Walton League and Bricklayers and
Allie~ Craftsmen Local, and John Grueser, President,
Fish i!nd Game Assn.
.i

month and disabled persons
will pay $4.50. The amended
ordinance provides for
installation charges of $15 but
Newell indicated that the
company does not have plans
. to Invoke that charge from
ihe present $10 char~e. T~
charge of each additional set
in a home is $l ·a month .
Ne\vell pointed out that
customers wbo hilve paid in
advance will be allowed the
old rate until their payment
runs out. He also pointed out
that residents with the
service can pay one year in
advance with a 10 percent
discount at the old rate if they
pay before Nov. I when the
new prices go into effect.
The amended ordinance
also provides that any flitw-e
rate increases must be filed
1
with council and approved by
counciL
Council approved the
September report of Mayor
Fred Hoffman showing
receipts of $1,656 in fines and
fees and $134 in merchant
police collections for a total of
$1,790. Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate repo•ted the receipt of
$3,848 in federal revenue
sharing funds .
.
Mayor Hoff'";lln reported

construction of the tennis
court is underway at the
community park using a
$7,000 grant. Total cost will be
about $17,800.
He also reported that a new
radar system · has been
received. The equlp111ent is
valued at $1,400 but the
village cost was only $163.
Three police officers already
have received training on the
equipment, the mayor
reported.
Council President Marvin
Kelly reported that he had
discussed with members of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, the former
roadside park whic.h the post
owns. He said the post had
spent a ~eat deal of money ·
at the park, only to have it
vandalized. He said the post
is willing to spend mor'e ·
money but would have to be
assured of police protection
and of some help in
maintenance.
He said also that he
understood . the ' post to be
interested in giving the park
to some organization which
might build on it.
Councilman Dewey Horton,
who is interested in the park
(Continu~ on p.ge li~ ·

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