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12- Tile Daily Sentinel. MtddleP&lt;'rt-P••llt'r••) .ll . '1\~&lt;•sd.t) . tll'l 11.1'';;

! -.-~ Area Deaths

Ualuts Galort

.I,.,......ii
U

I

OMER HESS
Orner Hess . 85 , Da lton ,
Cltl io, formerly oi (/lerry
R idg~ . died Sunday evening

from .

at

~

Wooste r

-

,.

~

l

CLEARASIL

ALCOHOL

Reg. Or Vanishing

Isopropyl

.65 oz . Tube

16 oz Pam eco

52c.Va lu e

33¢

·

F .J. P . Price ...

Mr Hess was born Nov . 24.
1891. the son of the late
Willi am and lov inna Fox
Hess. He was also preceded
1n deafh by?'" infant son. two
brothers and two sisters . Mr .

Hess was -a member-of World

Wide Church of God .
He is su rvi ved by his wife .
Dorothy Randall jHess ; the
foll owi ng children , Jun e
Risley , and Drexel Hess.

Burbank . Ohio ; Eldred Hess ,
Dalton, Oh io ; Prent ice Hess,
Perrysv ille. Ohio ; Bertlme
Saine ,· "Des Moines , Iowa ;

Dorrence

Giant Si1e
1~

Hess ,

Clinton ,

Ohio ; one sister . Lett i e
Midk iff, Beaverton . Mich .;
two brothers, Pearl Hess ,
1\.Aarion , and Chalmer Hess .
Canada ; 25 grandchildren ,
seven
grea t .grandc:,hildren
and several nieces and
nephews .
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1: 30 p . m . at
Ewing Chapel wi .th Joh n
Foster officiating . Burl al wilt

TIDE
49 oz . -

Community

HospitaL

:~;~.:a!~: . . 85~
Off

~ ~\~. :arll~: $139

:-;:-,;:.••

be

in

Cherry

Ridge

Cemetery . Fr.lends may ca ll
at the funera l home at
any ti me . The ·f amily requests
no flowe~S .

·•

..

: Nob~l

SAMUEL E. !&lt;A ETZEL
The Rev . Samuel E.
Kaetzel passed away on Oct.
10
at
Copeland
Oaks
Retirement HOme. Sebring,
Ohio , A retired United
.Method ist . minister,
he
served as pas tor for a
num~r of years of Bethany

CEPACOL

Methodisf

Antiseptic

Pomeroy

and

Church

In

Forest

Run

Methodist Church .

STAYFREE
Maxi pads

He was preceded in death
by ·'his par ents , seve r al
brot hers and sisters ; his f irst
Wife, Agnes Kaetzel , and his
second wife, Bertha Miller
Kaetzel , a native of Pomeroy
who passed away at Copeland
Oaks on Feb. 4, 1917.
He is surv ived by one son,
the Rev . Sa m uel KaetzeL who
has ~n involved for. many

48's
Admiral.

I
I

In Cambridge, van Vleck
years m m•ss•o,ary work in
Afri ca ; c1nd two daughters, • said today his winning a
Esther Kaetzel, Cleveland , share of the physics prlze was
and Mrs . Robert (Esther )
Wlexpected_ "This thing is a
Treg1er, Erie, Pa .
cvmplete surprise to me, " he
~mor i al services tor The
Rev , Kaehel will be held at
said .
the Copeland Oaks Chapel on
Tuesdar , Oct , 17 with in --

termen on Oc t. q In the
Caledonia. Ohio ceme!!ry .

Eighty
Struble, Nelle Werner and
Bernadine Meier .
Oonors were :
POMEROY
Robert
Va ughan . Walter Couch .
George
Nash ,
Pe1r lcla
vaughan . Frank vaughan .
Pam
Vaughan ,
Jack
Sahyonne, Geri Walton , Jane
Walton . Janet Ambrose ,
Mary Starcher , Jeffrey
Hilleary . Harlan Wehrung ,
Deborah Grueser, Mar y
Myers, Rev_. William Middleswarth, Wtll lam Radford ,
Patty Barton , Linda Wyatt,

Nancy J.effers , Marjor ie

Reufer , Denis Gilmore , Mike
Bendlnelll. Bruce Cleland ,
Ann Grycza . Dolores Will ,
B1lly Spencer , E . Jenne
Brown ,

Homer

Van
leek retired from
IA!aching in 196g but still
maintains an o ffice at
Harvard University.
Van Vleck said that
although Anderson studied
for his docto~~ under him at
Harvard, the three winners
·•never
really
work ed
toge ther. " He said their
research was separate but
related .
_
After gaining his bachelor's
de
.
gree at the Umversity of
Wisconsin and his doctorate
at Harvard, \'an Vleck began
his research " in 1927 and I've
be
en publishing papers on it
for almost 50 years. The
. ,eaJ;!ier work tends to be the
most inlportant. "
1 k nd hi
·.f
~an. V ec a
s. wt e,
Abtgml, celebrated thetr 50th
wedding anniversary in June.
They have no children .

Baxter ,

Isabel Couch , Dorothy Oliver ,
Virgil K. Windon , M ichael
Wr ight , Leo Vaughn , Leo

Vaughn II. Ola St. Clair ,
Debbie Buck , John W. Am RUTLAND - · HOMER
PARKER . ......
MINERSVILLE Alice
Jacobs , Caroiyn A. Charles ,
Stacy Arnold , Janet E . Hill.

MIDDLEPORT -

Nor ma

Wilcox , Pat Craig , Kathryn
Oenison , Joyce V. Bartrum.
Sarah Fowler , Steven Craig ,
Freda Durham , Brenda

Haggy , Ernest Haggy , June
Kloes, Marty Ha cke tt , Connie
Dodson . James Whitla ch.
Cl ara J . F r ance, Roger
Manley, Sandra K. Tavlor,
James R. Dailey , Debbie
Carder , M ike Mull em .

RACINE - William H.
Hobach, Dorothy M. Soyre.
Martha Lou Beegle.
SY RACUSE - Cheryl J .
Abbott, Ka thy Cum m ings,
McGrath ,

Howard

LANGSVILLE -

!

Vaseline

M y_ers.

J•1MI1&lt;0)i

~ . . __,

MASON - Phyl lis Knopo .
REEDSVILLE - Linda

99¢

15 oz . Reg .

. , ..... \

$1.79 Value

__ [

·-

F.I.P. Price

·

Searles .

Bath Beads

... n. . s•'• '-... '

Par ker .

Ell is E .

CHESTER - Carol .Erwin .
CHESHIRE- Charles W.

VASELINE IC

W ilson , Bernard Shrivers.
Mar ie Probed , Richard
Barton , Ma cel Barton , ........

QUALITY
COLOR T.V.

GALLI POLIS - Rebe.c ca
Meaige .
EWINGTON - Robert S.'

BUY NOW

money miser memos

Plac ier .

AND SAVEl
DIVORCE ASKED
Kaaron
K.
Hatfield,
Middleport, has filed suit for
divorce from Charles D.
-HaUield, Columbus, in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court .

~
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COLGATE

LISTERIN£
ANTISEPTIC
14 oz .

$1.~ Value
F .I.P. Prltee ...

•

To~thpaste
5 oz. - 10&lt;: Oft

89¢

$1 .15 Value
F.I.P. Price ...

69¢

Liquid Detergent
22 oz. - 13C .Off

Lab~l

~~;~_'~:~~: . . 79¢

being improved to provide
another location for children
to play, asked CoWlcilman
Kelly to check with the post to
see·if it would lease the park
the town. That way, the
wwn could spe.nd money on
improving the facility and
provide police protection for
it more readily.
Cou ncilma n Allen King
said there are too many
heavy trucks passing through
town.
He
urged
lhe
enforcement of an ordinance
which
forbids
heavy
" througll'' truck traffic. He
said residents of Middleport
cannot affocd to maintain
streets torn up by such
traffic . _
He also discussed d,aining
oo Middleport Hill and areas .
that he considers dangerous
w motor1St:n m the hill. The
safety committee and the
may or will check them.
· Council moved into exec-utive
session before adjourning.
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Grate, and council members,
Kelly, King, William Walters,
Carl Horky and Horton .

w

Hospital News
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Ully Adams,
Long Bottom; PhyUis Cline,
Pomeroy ; Gene ·Oiler,
Middleport; Edna Stiles,
Pomeroy ; William Stevens,
Kanauga ; Edith Bickers ,
Racine; Helen Slack, Racine;
Ric.h ard Gilkey , Middleport;
Verdie Keefer; Leon, W. Va. ;
Rolland Smith, Middleport ;
Richard Smith, Long Bottom; Shai Nobel, Pomeroy ;
Alleyne Rees,
Racine ;
Gertrude Woods, Middleport.
Discharged
Leona
Hubbard , Grace Whaley ,
Tonda Walker .
Holzer Medical-Center
(Discharges, Pel. 10)
Anthony
Cana day ,
Christopher Casto, Harold
Dailey, Harold Gibbs, Janelle
J enkins , . Mrs ,
Safl/uel
Loganacre and daughter ,
Robert Ludlum, Robert
Schoffler, Sr ., Romona
Smith, Phyllis Stinson , Bobbl
Sturgill , Henry Taylor,
Elizabeth Welsh, Barbara
Workman.
(Births, Od. 10)
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith,
a daughter, Middleport.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES Mrs .
Oden Austin, Point Pleasitrit ;
Uoyd Durst, Cottageville;
Mrs . Lloyd Burk, Galllpolis;
Herbert Walla ce, . Point
Pleasant ; Jeffrey Patterson ,
Jr ., Point Pleasant: Mark
Hurlow, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
James Walker, Southside ;
Robin 'Bond, Mason ; Sandy
Davis, Glenwood;
and
J anetta Roush, Mason.

Honda
(Continued from paae ll
manufacturing auwmobiles
py expanding the--plantsite,"
said Kawashima.
Attending the news confer-

ence

TALKS TO RESUME
CHILLICOTHE, Oh io
(UPI ) - Negotiations on a
new three-year wage contract are scheduled to resume
Wedn'esday
bet\ve~n
Wearever Alwninum Co. and
striking members of Local
110 of the Aluminum Workers
Union .

were . Democra tic

legislative leaders, who were
singled out for profuse praise
by Rhodes ; the entire state
Controlling Board; Union
County co mmissioners i
Mayor Clifwn H. Brown of
Marysville ; City Manager
Richard
Roberts
ot
Marysville; and Alfred G.
Cochran, chairman of the
TRC board.
Kawashima was joined by ~,­
four other Honda officials in
making the announcement.
He said Ohio was selected for
the p!ant site "after weighing
and • balancing numerous

UNCLE SAM
MmS
THE
DEPOSIT

DAWN

Middleport

brose, Carl F . Hendr i cks Jr .,
Jan K. Holter Oavis .

LONG BOTTOM - Tom my

~

The Gallia - Meigs Post
Slate Highway Patrol announced today that motorcycle driver tests will be
given a t two locations
Monday, Oct . 17.
Tests will be given from
9:30 to 11 :30 a.m . at the Ohio
Department of
Transportation Building north of
Chester in Meigs County and
from I to 4 p.m. at the Public
Use Area in GaUipolis .
Persons are asked to call
the Ohio State Patrol for
appointments.

Robe_t;IFetty. Gera ld Rought ,

Rex F . Cummings .

r;"

Motorcycle
tests scheduled

Treaty

•

Bridge repair
under review

"Cuba' is the Soviet anchor
in the Caribbean in defiance
of the Monroe · Doctrine,"
Moorer said, and warnt;&lt;~:
" Do not be surprised - if
this treaty is ratified in lts
pre~nt form - w see a
Soviet and or Cuban presence
quickly established · in the
country of Panama."
Zwnwalt, former chief of
naval operations,
acknowledged me )IOS.!Iibillty
the Soviet Union may win
power over me canal, but he
argued that rejection of the
controversial treaties was
more likely w' increase Sovlet
influence than to hinder it. :"The loudest cheers will be
in Havana and· Moscow" if .
the treaties are rejected,
Zwnwalt told the committee.
He added:
" I believe it is possible the
Soviet Union wlll have control
over the canal as U.S.
military
continues
to
deteriorate. But I believe it
will take them longer to gain
control" if the treaties are
approved .
•

.

CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UPI ) - State and federal
highways olficia~ met today
to discuss Inspections made
on lhe Silver Memori a l
Brldge at Point Pleasant to
determine .the cause of its 16
fractures and when it may he
reopened.
Highways Commissioner
Charles Miller said the .
session is one of several
meellng s loca l highways
officia ls ha ve had with
representat ives of the
Federal Highways Administration . I' our F'HA .
officlals from the.Washington
research office and two from
the Charleston . o ffi &lt;~e arc
attending the meeting .
-•
"The FHA folks are here at
our invltatlon and request to
offer whatever assistance
they may be able to offer as

CAMPGROUND CLOSED
Iron Ridge Campground in
Lake
Vesuvius
the

.

fa r as ex pertise is conMiller said the team's woi·k
cerned ," said Miller,
should
be
COJTiple ted
''We 're looking at results or ' sometime today.
detailed insp ectio n s,
Asked when the bridge
providing an overview of wo.u ld be open, Miller said,
repa irs that have been made " Just as soon as I possibly
to date," he said . In addition, can consistent with safety ."
the experts are doing
The Silver Memorial
engineering analyses of any Bridge was built in 1970 to
additional work which needs replace the Silver Bridge
to be done on the Span based which fell into the Ohio River
on the inspeetions .
just prior to Christmas 1967,
Unofficial reports by work- killing 46 people. It was
men on the scene indicate closed earlier thi s year when
repairs will be completed this cracks were found to have
weekend.
formed in some of the span's
Miller said the specific weld joints.
objectiv~s of the discussions
A ferry has been operating
are : •·first of all , safety; the in the vicinity on an ofr-andsecond of which is service to on basis since.
get the t hing back in
operation; and the third is to
evaluate, lest and analyze,
pursuant to findin g the ca use
of the problem ."

fNews ..-..in Brief~

Recreation Area, Lawrence

By United Press lnt.e malional
WASHINGTON - MI,IL IONS OF POOR, ELDERLY,
disabled and unem ployed per sons may be deprived of federa l
benefits if Congress fails to enact appropriations for the Labor
and HEW departmenls this week, officials report . The $60.1
bllllon Labor-HEW approprialions measure has been stymied
in Congr ess since J uly 13 because House and Senate conferees
cannot agree on the issue of federal subsidies for abortions.
Both Health, Educations and Welfare Secr etary J oseph
Califano and Labor Secretary Ray Marshall a ppealed to
Congress in separate · le].ters Tuesday to ·pass the
appropriations bill to enact a resolution to permit continued
spending meanwhile .

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, will meet in
regular session, at 7:30 p. m .
Wednesday at the temple. A
meetlng of Bosworth CoWicll
46 , Royal and Select Masters,
will be held at 8: I~ p. m .
Wednesday.

WASHI NGTON - AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Bob
Berglan9 has asked Congress to authorize a flexible new
government farm mortgage syslem to he lp young, low-incm)le
and minority (amilies gel a start in farn1ing.
Bergland outlined his ·pian to a Senate agriculture
subcommittee Tuesday as part or a package of proposed
changes in Agriculture ~partmenl farm and rural develop·
ment credit programs. The proposal also included a request to
double e&lt;isting ceilings on individual farm mortgage and
operating loans insured and guaranteed by the department's
Fanners Home Administration , ~ nd a plan which would result
in raising interest rates for many, flirme r-borrowers .

LOCAL TO MEET
A s pecial m eeting of
Bricklayers Local Union 32
will be held at 7 p. m. Wednesday at the Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy.

. FRANKFURT, WEST GERMANY - A CZECH couple
who hijacked a Clechoslovak Airline jetliner with 29 people
aboard to Frankfurt seeking political asylun1 will stand tr ial in
Germany, - a uthorities say. The man and woma n, whose
identities were not r eleased, surrendered to police without
incldent after hijacking the Soviet-made Yak-40 airliner at
gunpoint and forcing it to land in Frankfurt Tuesday . They told
police they ·acted out of political motives.
But German authorities, determined to fight all forms of
terrorism because their own country has been shaken by
recent terrorists attacks, Said the couple wo,uld be put on trial.
"It is certa in charges will be preferred against the m,"
Frankfurt Police Oef Knut Mueller said . " They have

ASK TOWED

A marriage license was
issued to Benjamin Leonard
Dowell, Jr., 23, Middleport,
and Kimberly Sue Doweil, 21,
Middleport.

ELBERFELD$

committed a serious crime ."

WOMEN'S READY TO WEAR, 2ND FLOOR
•'

Dress

"'About Town

THE MOON CRUISED INTO PO!SIT!ON TODAY to block
out the s un and bring darkness in the afternoon to much of the
Western Hemisphere. The conjunction will cause a partial
eclipse, of varying degree, throughout the United Slates ,
inchxling Hawaii and Alaska, Mexico and Central America
and much of Canada and northern South America .
Scientists set sail days ago for the long, thin strip of t he
~cific Ocean where the . eclipse is total. It a ngles
southeastward from the North Pacific, passing just north of
the Hawaiian islands and exten"ds for 700 miles into central
Continued on page 14

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 126

6' oz.

~~;~.:·;~~: . . 69¢

Just send your deposit along with YQUr
deposit slip by U.S. mail and we'll mail
you your receipt the next day. With
today's busy world time is of the essence.
so let Uncle Sam's letter carrier do the
chore for you. When you have time we
wi II enjoy seeing you.

EARTH BORN
Baby Shampoo
8 oz.
$1 .86 Value
F.I.P. Price ...

99¢
~. · .~:~:~:. ¢
99

Homecoming acltvlltes
for Metgs High School will
gel underway 'Thursday at
7:30p.m. with a parade and
snake dance _ led by the
band from the Pomeroy
parking lot l.o the football
fteld parking lot hehlnd the
Senior Citizens Ce nter .
A pep rally and bonfire
will be held there wf lh the
football ·pla yers, band and
cheerleaders participating.
All ~ !r igs Marauder laos

are

h!

•

L:::.;.:_____ F
_ .t___,
.P. Price .. :

VAPORETIE

.~l"-'1
.~

.....

.._f\_6

.. THE
·FRIENDLY BANK"

MIRfi

Flea Collar
P1

$1 .00 Value
F.I.P. Price ...

59¢
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
M em ber Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
-

DEPOSITS INSURFD Tfl

t ~0,000

Approximately 36 parents,
nine teachers, and Principal
James Diehl heard Meigs
High School Guidance . per-

sonnel

meet across from Sears on
the upper parking · lot In
Pomeroy .
:::::::::;:;:::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::·:;:·:;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;

Weather

OFFICE CLOSING
The offlce of the F anners
Home Administration wiU be
closed the afternoon of the
18th and aU day on the 19th
and 20th due to out of town
meetings.

•

Nine Dimensions
or
guidance, 1 ' that is, nine areas
of involvement.with students,

11

se rvices

paren ts , teachers, and
community.
Principal Diehl described a

"Principal's Coffee Hour"
which the group hopes to help
la un ch soon , Tentatively
pla nned for each week, t hese
tnfonnal meetings of approxlmately 20 parents would
be intended to encourage
more parents to coJI\e into
and to become familiar with
the schools' programs.
In other PAT . business,
President Carol Kennedy

Ten forfeited
bonds to court ·

cheer the Marauders on for
their
Friday
night
Homecoming bottle wltb
the Waverl y Tigers.
A\7 p. m. the band is lo

Clearing and cold tonight,
scattered light frost, lows in
the mid 30s. Sunny Thursday,
hi g hs in th e upper 50s.
Probability of precipitation
6() percent today a nd 10
percent tonight and Thursda y.

explain

Martha Vennari, and John
Redovian described the

provided by that department
at a PAT meeting at the high
school Tuesday night.
Counselors Tim Flesher;

!ted to. attend and

CLASS-REUNITED - Two of the three members of
the class of 1927 at Letart Falls High School (long since
close d) got together recently at the home of their teacher,
Miss Bonnie Brown, in McArthur. Standing are Clare
Carpenter of Belpre and Mrs. Wiima (Roush ) Sargent of
Middleport .

Ten defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Cia renee Andrews
Tuesday night.
They were Henry Price,
Long Bottmn, $30 posted on ·
speeding charges; . Joe
Layne, Shelbina , -Ky ., $50,
Intoxication ; Gregory Roush,
New Haven, $50, open flask;
Coy Nitz, Pomeroy, $50, intoxication; Basil Hayes ,
Pomeroy, -$50, disorderly
conduct; Ralph . Mei ~t er ,
Dexter, $30, speeding ;
William O'Donnell, Pomeroy,$350, driving while intoxicated ; . Thomas Tucker,
Pomeroy, $25, speeding;
Danny Hood, Pomeroy, $25,
speeding, and Deana Peck, ·
Cheshire, $25, speeding.

..

Harold Sargent, Middleport, School in !!JOB. Hel' salary was
and Carpenter resides irl $40 per month. She took bothBelpre.
•
her preparatory work and her
Learning tha t Miss Brown college degree at Rio Grande
now lives in McArthur, the College.
·
·
'two remaining members of · She taught a t Letart Falls
t he class decided it would be High School from 11i22 until
Miss Brown was teacher I interesting to have a 50-year 1931, and also at Chester,
and P . C. Luh was the reunion. So they and their Tuppers Plains and Cheshire.
teaching principal when this spouses visited her at her Her subjects were Latin,
class was in the three-year home where they enjoyed English and Commerce.
rConcerning the other two
high - school. It was a very dinner ~ nd a n afternoon of
members of the class, after
small class, having only three rem iniscing.
members, Wilma Roush ,
Miss Brown was horn near graduating from high school,
Clarence -Barnes and Clare Creol~, Swan Townsh ip, Mrs . -Sargent .attended
1
Caq)en ter .
Barnes
is Vinton County, and began Mountain · State Bu siness
deceased. Wilma is now Mrs . · tea ching at th e Silyerly College in Parkersburg. Sh_e
was employed in the office of
the Meigs County Superintendent of Schools for · 37
years. Since retirement she is
busy with volunteer work and
CHARLESTON , W. Va . , R e publican
turned oth~( dulles and hob(UPI) - West Virginia Gov . Democrat, first entered bies . River boat ca ptain
Jay Rockefeller, who has politics in 1966, after moving Carpenter was r etired from
refused since he flrst enter ed here as a rural ·poverty Union Barge Line Corpolitics in 1966 to S&amp;y how . worker .
He
refused poration in 1972. For 42 years
much money he has , disclosure requests at that he worked on river towboats,
disclosed Tuesday that he is tim~ and through two 32 as master-pilot. He is
worth $19.7 million.
gubernatorial elections; the married to the former Mabel
Rockefeller ·told reporters second of which he won .
Lowe, and they have one
at a news conference he made
daught~r and three sons..
the disclosure because he felt
Since retirement, he is active
CALL ANSWERED •
ln c ivic organizations in
politicians should reveal their
I
The
M i d d I e p I' r t Belpre.
worth pu\&gt;licly and because
As to the question about t he
hi s Wife, Sharon, wHI' face a Emergency squad answered
·senate confirnlation hearing a call to Route 4, Pomeroy, at morning glories blooming· o n
today on her appointment -to 7:45 p. m. Tuesday for Gary · the tomato stakes at Letart
the P ubli c Broadcast ing Hysell . who wa~ taken to FaDs, Miss Brown 's class
Veterans Memorial Hospital. was '.'not prepared." They
Board.
Mrs. Rockefeller, daughter At 3:58 a . m. Wednesday the were n 't sure about the
.of Sen. Charles Per cy , R-111., Middleport Fire Department morning· glori&lt; '" 1 :uch of
may have to make a public answered a mutual aid call to the rich bottom land that
disclosur e of her wea lth at Shenang Springs on .fioute 7 produced tomatoes, cabbages
to assist the Pomer oy F'ire and potatoes 50 years ago is
the Senate hearings.
Department in a fire t here. now in sa nd and gravel pits. ·
Rockef elle,r ,

a

Rocky IV worth $19.7 million ·

TONI TODD
Seen at all the best places ... always po ised and
ve~y impressive. Toni T~ dd ' s smas h in g one ·piece

t un ic-look dress wi th detachable bra id -banded
scar f, skinny se lf-belt. In po ly inte rl ock knif , ma c hi ne was h-dry. Camel top wit h Black or Brow n
s ki rt . 6- 16.
·-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MEIGS HIGH QUEEN CANDIDATES - Five senl?r girls at Meigs High School want to

be homecoming queen . She will be crowned in pre-game ceremonies Friday evening at 7:30
at Meigs Stadiwn in Pomeroy: Candidates are, front 1-r, Velvet Swisher, daughter of Mr .
and MrS. Bill SwiSher, to be escorted by Tony Venoy , and Rhonda Hudson, da ughter (Of Mr .
and Mrs. Paul Hudson , escorted by Gary Basham; back , Kim Krautter, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs. Karl Krautter , to be escorted by Kevin Mc Laughlin ; Susan Wright, daug hter of Mr.
and Mrs. George Wright, to be escorted by Bob Seelig, and Hobin Rathburn, daughter of Mr .
an~ Mrs. Bobby Joe Rathburn, who will J escorted by Ric~ Blevins.

.\o·

•

appointed a committee to
work out -details of National
Education .Week observance,
whicll, is- November 13-19.
· Spirited discussion before
and after the program cent ered on tiie topics of
availability of Guidance t esting results, career
counseling, drug and alcohol
policies,
school
dance
chaperoning, and Math and
Reading levels of high school
student~.

The next PAT meeting is
scheduled Nov . 8 at 7:30p.m .
ln the high school. School
attendance policies, school
rules, and the student handbook will· be discussed,

Pomeroy close to E-R drive goal ·

Morning glories in Letart
LETART FALLS - "Do
the morn ing glories still
, bloom on t_h e tomato stakes at
Letart? ,' ' Miss Bonnie Brown
.asked the Letart Falls High
School class of 1927 during its
50th anniversary reunion.

Southern High
Soph ties for
. dging .first .
JU

?

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Meigs High counselors
explain guidance wor"

remembered by Bonnie.

"We are extremely pleased
to welcome Honda to Ohio,"
said Rhodes. " We will do
everything possilile to assist
them in their first American
manufacturing venture.

RACINE - Rlck F)agg,-a
sophomore Voc-Ag student at
Southern High School here,
son of Mr. and Mrs. David
Flagg, had the highest score
in the District Soil judging
contest held Oct. 4, according
to Aaron Sayre, FFA advisor.
In a five-way tie for first,
Rick scored a total of 290
points out of a )l(&gt;ssible 300.
There were 200 students in
.
the contest.
Rlck was part of !he Racine
Soll judglog team whlch
placed sixth in the district .
other m embers of the team
and their scores were Bob
Lee , 270, Deanna White 203
and. one third, and Albert
Holman 167 and two thirds.
Members of the FF A are
thanking the Federal Land
Bank which sponsored the
event and provided awards .

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1977

Parade, snake
dan ce, rally to
open homecoming

here," said Kawashima.

.WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
. AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSSTo_7 P.M.

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

'

"Our decision to locate in
Ohio has stemmed from our
long-standing desire to
launch
manufacturing
activities in the United
States, coupled with Ohio's
efforts to eQ!:ourage us to
establish industrial facilities

Lotion

•

•

e

...

County, is closed because of
tornado damage which occurred on . Oct. 2. It will
remain closed until next
spring so that the many winddamaged trees can be
removed and other damage
can he repaired.
.
All campgrounds in the
Lake Vesuvillll Recreation
Area are now closed .

undetermined but it was believed to hav.e started in a storage and furnace
room at the side of the -structure . Bill (Skinny) Lehew was operator of the
club and the building was owned by the Ace High Music Co. of Point
Pleasant . Ther e was no insurance on the building or its contents. Most
firemen had left the scene by about 6:~0 a.m. Wednesday but Pomeroy
firemen were there after 9 a . m .

.

~'*'~,~~ ~~'""'~~::=~:::;:;;;:&gt;.~;:;.~i~:~~:::~=~~:::::«o!:-~:-::::».\."=:::::::::::::;::.."~')~~~

economic and other factors.''

DERMASSAGE

THE SHENANGS SPRINGS NITE CLUB on Route 7 north ,of
Pomeroy was gutted by fire about 3:45a.m . today . Pomeroy firemen on
the scene were assisted by tankers from Rutland and Chester and Fire
Departments and the Middleport Fire Department was a lso. on the scene
with a lanker and other equipmenl. Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar
said that
. losses were expecte d to exeeed $30,000. Cause of the fire was

The Pome~y Elementary Mrs. George Warner a nd
Squad is within $2,000 of its Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. Bennie
$13,500 goal in fund drlve to Perry, Mr . a nd Mrs. Leo
gather funds for the purchase Curtis, Mr . and Mrs. Harold
of a new emergency vehicle. H. Smlth, Mr . and Mrs. ArWith the goal in sight, the thur Price; Gertrude Mit·new vehicle has been ordered chell ,' Mr. and Mrs. Emerson
and is expected t o be Poo ler, Trinity Church
delivered in Pomeroy in the S unda y School , Bertha
next 30 days.
Parker, Emma Adams, Paul
Midwest Steel Corp ., Forbes, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
P omeroy; has con tributed Schreiber, Gilbert Zwllling,
$250 to the successful drive . otto }lartenbach Mr. and
other new contributors are Mrs. l'lerbert M~re, WilkesSoars Catalog Store, Mr. and _ ville United Methodist
Mrs . Harold Ebersba ch, Church Minersville United
Helen Lyons, Shade River Methodist Church Women;
Lodge 4!i3, Beulah Ewing, ilusy Bee Class of Middleport
Mr.. and .Mrs. Durward First Baptist Church, Mrs.
Cufnings, Mr . a nd Mrs . Roy Homer Carman, Mr. and
Smith, Mr, and Mrs. Gerald Mr s. Scott Folmer, Mrs.
Wildermuth, Mrs. Leona T. Freda Mltch Mr. and Mrs.
Smith , United Methodist Lloyd Moore: Mr. and Mrs.
Church, Myrtts Ka y Parker, Willard Hines, and the Ken
Mr . and Mrs. Dwtght Parker, Ams bary Chapter of the
Mrs. Rut h A. Barnitz, Mr. Izaak Wa lton Lea gue of
and Mrs. John Mttch , Mr. and America .
Mrs. Henry Wells, Norma
Residents wishing to help
and David Goodwiil , Mr. and put the , drive over the top
Mrs. Donald Yoho, Mr. and may send their contributions .
Mrs. Wtlbur Monroe, Mrs. to t he Pomeroy Emergency
Wilhelmina Roedel, Mr. and Squad, P. 0.' Box 247,
Pomeroy .

a

s·: -

_!)peration ·of Meigs welfare
. department is under review
Meeting in regular session
Tuesday night, the Meigs
Co unty Board of Commi ss ioners -di sc u ssed with
Mrs. Barbara Shuler, welfare
director, overall operating
procedures ~f her depart-

ment.
The commissioners also
reviewed at iength priohties
of placement of persons in job
slots under the CETA
program. A final decision on

selection of applicants wlU be

made soon.
It wa s reported that
painting of the courthouse
exterior and dome has been
completed by the Gheen
Painting Co. of Racine'. This
project was paid fQr com pletely with anti-recession
fWlds, a state program which
furnishes money to co unty
governments for repair or ·
upkeep of county buildings.

Volunteers on 39 missions
The Middleport Fire emergency calls 27 were ln
Department answered 39 town and eight were outside.
calls during the month or The depa rtment spent 136.2
September according to the manhours on t he emergency
monthly reP.rt of C. Robert runs and 15.4 hours on the flre -·
Fisher, chief.
ca lls. Total miles drlven by
'llte department answered the
department
on
three
fire
ca lls,
35 emergency ca lls only totaled
emergency-medical ca lls and - 685.8.
·one miscellaneous call. Of tile

"

•

·•

�2 - The Daily SentineL ~l!ddlt.• pllrl-Pillll t'rt)\ , 0 .. \\'t'\hwsda \ , ( )l'l. l.!.' l~l ji

Higher inierest rates proposed on rural water, sewage ·jobs
By BERNARD BRENNER
UP! FARM EDITO R
WASHINGTON 1 UP!) Fallll and rw-al groups are
making liD happy noises about
a Carter admmtstrat io n
proposal to raise interest
ratps on loans for rural wattr
and iewer systems.

Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland publicly annoUI)ced
the proposal ill · testimony
Tuesday before a Senate
agricul ture

subf'onumt tee .

Cong ress

rejected the

measure last year when it

was offered by the Ford
admuustratwn .
Spokesmen for the Nationa l
Rw-al Electrac Cooperative
Asoociation and the National
Farmers Union promptl) told
the subcommittee that the
idea should be bw-aed agaill .
"I\.1any of our snail towns
would be har d put to sem ce
increased rn terest charged on

water and sewer l&lt;&gt;anS," said
Reuben Johnso n, an NFU
spokesman.
"They would either have to'
forego the im proved 1water

and

sewer I sen1l'E"

ur

seek grants, whirh

C'OOSiderabl)

tw-n

to

w~mld

mcrt&gt;a~

budge t
tcost s ). " Johnson testJ f.ieU. .
The water and sew~ r program has been opennt&gt;d in tts
prt&gt;se nt fo rm a nd on a
sca le
s tead Llymne;oastng

.Hltnuustratwn
bud~,·Un;J kt.• r s wanted
For. tht? 1977 ftSI..' al yea r
wlul'h l'ntl&lt;'&lt;l Sept. 30. for
exa mple.
the
Ford
ad.tmnistr ation as kt.'&lt;i f('r S·HO
nul hon 1n -water..sewer loa ns

prnk!ri.U II tl1dn

funds and &lt;.. ·orq:..'T't&gt;!'.S vnt Nt
S600 nulhon. Fur tlae 1978) ear

wlud1

be ~an

Oct

1. ttl&lt;
Q.irt er adUlllliStratiOn aSk!--'&lt;f
for $600 million and ca.. gress
pru\'id&lt;-d 17&gt;0 nulli on. ·
In arl(lition. $250 mil l1on

Slnce t965 by the Agricultw-e

" insw-ed " basis. In effect , the
Sept
30. About 1,400 agency makes the loan• to
L'ommumlles wtll get the rural cornmunitles and th en
same kind of help ii1 the new re-sells the loan paper to
1978 fi scal ye ar , they private investors who are
qua It fy for Juans.
insured against default. The
Ofh&lt;'lals satd about 1.050 estimated.
Under existing law, the mterest rate, by law, cannot
communitit."s got loans and, in
sornt&gt; cases granrs, under the water-sewer loans are made exceed ~ per cent.
Bergland. seeking to cut
by the agency on an

was provlde&lt;i in ench n( t ht'
fis('al \'t'&lt;-J rS fur du·o..'\:t grants
tu l'\ •nlu mn ities wh ich llet--ded
added help b.ofore they could

pr(~.g nu' l .m

the year ending

•'

Dep a rtm ~ nt 's

F a rmers
Horne Administration as part

of at s packag e of ·rural
develqpmen,!.J!!:.ograms.
Co ngress authorized the
combin ation of loans and

direct grants on the theory
that many dedining rural
co mm unit ie s cou ld mO\·e
toward an econom1c re\&gt;1\·al lf
they had impro1•ed facilities
to make family living more
attractive and attract nonfaml business ahd industry.
The populant) of the pro·
g r am

a mong

rural

j:'Ommumtaes -

and thear

congressm en -

has

been

ev1 dent
unde r
botfi
Republican and Democratic
admill tstrataons. Congress
has repeatedly voted more
money for the water-sewer

Berry's World

·.

the government 's cost • in
making loans at ~ per cent
while paying higher rates to
get the mo ney, proposed
TueSday tllat interest rates
be set at a rate "comparable
to that prevailing in the
munjcapal bond market for
similar projeds."

Bill signed revising
,
block grants system
WASHINGTON (UP I l .Presade nt Carter today
signed a bill authorizing I H.7
btllion ill grants over a th ree·
'Year period for the nation's
f ascal l y
p r essed
communities, particularly
older cities of the Ntlrtheast
and Midwest.
and
The
Housing
Communaty Development Act
of 197i, which authorizes
funds of $6.2 billion for fiscal
1978, revises the formula for
distributmg funds ill the block
gr ant program so that older,
ll,lore distresse d cities

"Wh y can 't YOU be more ltke Lou 'Gran t ?L_

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.O.
,..---·

Diet aids
blood pressure
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a
28-year-&lt;Jld male, 6 feet and
1 80 pounds. My blood
pressure is 160. My doctor
told lne it was a little high but
I did not need to take palls.
He put me on a dtel to lower
it. What as your opinion' Will
a dtet lower blood press ure ?
Is my pressure too hagh'
DEAR - REAI.l£R - Yes,
your pressure is too high
However, pressure f1uctuates

and you need several deter·
nunatwns at different tunes
when you are calm to dete r·
nune tf you have persistently
elevated blood pressure
Diet wtll help lo.wer
moderately elevated blood
pressure. Your doctor IS star·
tmg out right The two things
that help the most are
eluninatmg any excess bod y

fat you can and decreasing or
ehminatmg salt mt.ake.

At your age your pressure
should nul be over 135 and an
young men ill good physical
condition it is often much
lower. Usually the lower It IS
- Wlthm the normal range
·the less chance you havf of
developang heart or vascular
disease in later life.
·J am sending you The
Health Letter number 1-&lt;l,
Blood Pressure, to gtve you
more information on what
controls blood pressure and
the normal ranges. Others
who want thas information
can send liO cents with a long,
s-tamped, self-addressed
envelope for it to me m care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I often
have problems walh a corn on
my foot. I would like to know
what causes it to grow; how
to prevent it if posstble and
how to get rid of it in a better
way. • use corn kremover
•

1

med1cme from the local drug
store but still it grows.
DEAR READER - Corns
are sunply thickened hard
skan, somewhat like a callous,
wath a cone-shaped core that
presses"on livang tissues and
causes pain. The corn a!.self as
dead skin tissue .
You 'll understand what to
do about corns better af you
apprecaate they are caused
by fri ction or contmued
pressure. The most common
cause of the friction is a poor·
ly flttan g shoe or even stock·
ings that allow pressure on
the area . You 'll never be nd
of them until you remove the
source of pressure any more
than you wall be rid of a callus
on the palm of your hand if
you continue to do the work

that caused it in the
first.place.
Usually the problem is with
shoes that are too light and do
not allow enough toe room. A
shoe with a poanled toe IS a
major factor . Get some shoes
that you can waggle your toes

United Press loteroallonal
Four sclentasts who won tbe
1977 Nobel Prizes for physics
and chemistry have two
things in common - their
research as SQ far out on the
edge of science few people
lUlderstand it and they were
all shocked by winning tbe
awards.
Two American s and a
Britort&gt; . ~a red the physics
·pnze and Russ1an-born
Professor Ilya Prigogine ,
who works in universities in
Texas and Brussels, won tbe
chemistry prize. Both
$145,000 awards were an·
nounced Tuesday.
The physi cs prize was
shared by Dr . Philip
Anderson of the Bell
Telephone Laboratories in
Murray Hill, N.J ., Professors
John Van Vleck at Harvard
University in Cambridge,
Mass. , and Nevill Mott, of
Cambridge University in En·
gland.
Their separate but related
.research focused on the field
of solid state physics - the
branch of science that lies
behind essential parts of
technology, especially
electronics - and could lead
to cheaper solar heating cells
ill the future.
Van Vleck, who retired
from Harvard in 1969, said in
Massachussetts that winning
the Nobel Prize had left hun
" in a state of shock ... This Is
very sudden.lt was alii could
do to get dressed tills mor·
ning."

Th e Ame r ica n" Legio n
r e que sts· t h e Ame r icafr Me d ical
As sociatio n to c h ange t h e n a me -·.
o f t h e "legio nn ai r es' d j s ease. "

11

No."

He satd Anderson studied

THE DA ILYSENTI NEl.
DEVOTED TO TilE
lNTERF.ST OF
• 1\U~ I GS. MA Sli N AR EA
CHESTER L TA NNE HII .L

1-: xt•c. Ed .
HOBERT HOfYU&lt;;H
Lily F..dl lur

Pub hsht_-d d,uly ~ x t·c pt Satunlay
by Thu Ohw Vii ll ~x l'ubhMung Com
any. 111 CuUil Sl , Pomcru y, Ohiu
~ ~769

B us mt s~

Ofla..: c Plume ~fl·

2156 E d ltUrla l Phuru.: 99"1-:2 157

St_"t:lliHl lla ~~ pnstl:l~c Jmt d &lt;t l
PooiiWruy, OIIIU
N,tl liti\H ] ad\ C ll i S II\~ f C])I CSCII ·

ta lr \C Wrut.l · lrl tffllh CulllJil lny,
Inc, Botlu td h &lt;t nd (,&lt;t ii&lt;H!ht.: r Dtv ,
7 ~1 Tlu n l 1\w , New Vnrk, N V

10017

!'iubst:ri JJliUII lli \I! S: 1:&gt;\:lrvcreJ by
tu· wlwa ol\illl&lt;thle 7~ t'l'lll.s per

~a n

~~o t ot•k

13) Mulur Hnutc ~A. here Carn e1

, ~ r V I tC llt t1 ;t\ il li,riJII', 1JIIt' 111u11th.

t l &lt;!5 B} 111. 111 111 Ohtn am i W Va .
Yt·;t r. $22.00 : S1x ltlonth s,

Ont ·

$1 1511,
lhr cL: II! Hillhs. $7 00 ,
Eb1 "l'' ''' ' $ ~1!1111 ) r·!i t : S1:&lt; ltl!lnt hs
$J.! '10 , 'l'flrt' t ' IIHt U[Jl ~. $i .51)
~ l iJ~ III Ji ll lfll pr Wl' llll l tult •~ ~t il Kill)
l un l·s-Sl num•l

BESS I. WEINBERGER, the wife of Dr. Jacob
Weinberger, is shown in this photo wearing dark
spectacles, as they celebrate the victory of Panda Bare of
which she is C&lt;HJwner. Panda Bare won the Ohio Classic
1\vo.Year.Old Filly Pace Sept. 20 at Delaware. The
picture is from The Horseman and Fatr World for Sept. 28,
The chtld in the family silks is 2-year-&lt;Jld Chad Riegle,
grandson of the man back of him, Co-Owner Gene Riegle,
and son of Bruce and Ka thi Riegle. Kathi is second from
the right. The man on the right is not Identified Panda
Bare's time was 2: 04 and three-fifths .

,

Series box:
G1me 1

LOS ANGELES

"'

Lopes' 2b - Russell ss
Smith rt
Cey 3b
Garvey lb
Baker If
Burked
Mota ph
Monday cl

'",.

Grote c Sutton p
Rautzhn p

.

ob I h bi

51 00
6

I

I

1

4 0 I 0
3
4
4
3
t

0
0
I
0
0
I 0
3 0
0 0

Yeager c

Landsty pr

0 I
1 0
I ·o
I •0
0 0
0

0

0 0
0 0

1 0 0 0

2 0 0 0
0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0
1 0 I 1
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0

Garmanp

Davl llll ph
Rhoden p
0 0 0 0
Totals
39 3 6 3
NEW YORK
ab r h bi

RIvers cf
Rndlph 2b
Munson c

6 0 0 0
5 3 2 1
4 1 2 1

1 0 1

Jackson rf
Blair rf

••
'

J

.,'
t

;

:

'

M

..
/' How do you say 'legionnaires ' in Latin? "

•

State Patrol takes .gossip,
rumors on local officials
the personal habits of poiice
ch1efs, sheriffs and other
police officers were mcluded.
Each df the officers wbo
provided Scripps-Howard
With copies of tl)e reports said
they were breaking l'atrol
policy because they were told
to make only oneoCQp)' of the
repoct, and that copy was to
be sent only to the Patrol
superintendent's office
Although Col. Adam G.
Reiss
is
now
the
superintendent, copies of the
reports seen by Scripps·
Howard also were addressed
to Oliaramonte, who headed
tile Patrol from 1965 until
1975.
The reports do contain
information about police
activity in the Pattaol
districts, Jli'Oblems that a
local force might be having
with personnel and the
relationship between a c1ty or
county department and the
Patrol.
One

captain's

report

dwelled at length on the
staffing problems of a small
rw-al department . Another
police chief was "very high
on tile Patrol," he reported.
But the same report named
a law enforcement official
who was In trouble with
superiors "for drinking too

"rumor has it" was shown at
a police function . That
captain also named a police
chief in his district who was
suspected of being corrupt. •
"This is only rwnor/' tllat
segment concluded.
The ·reports also detailed
wage negotiations, political ·
ambitions and invariably
mentioned by name the law
enforcement officials who ·
especially
praised or
criticised the Patrol.
The captains said they
were told to have their
reports in Columbus the first
week of each montll, but that
they were given no specific
guidelines on what was to be
mcluded.
They said tlley were never
rold what became of the
reports after they were sent
to the superintendent's office.
Dtiaramonte disputed the
existence of that type of
report.
"You saw reports I never
saw. I can't comment oo
anything I don't know
· anything about.
"I don't recall that kind of

much."

gossip,'' he said.
"If there was any specific
complaint or traffic problem
of some kind; or a personality
problem, then we would dispatch the report to the proper
section to have it taken care

Another captain reported
that a certain officer
supposedly was sleeping with
someone else's wife.
A third captain's report
mentioned a stag film that

of.
.
"I don't think we ever filed
them," Chiaramonte said,
adding that he thought the
rep&lt;rts were tllrown away
after they were read .

·'

I

By GENE BERNHARDT
WASHINGTON (UP!) House members spent taxpayers' money for such
things as an office Cllristmas
party, entertaining
constituents, political club
dues and on one occasion for
a bar bill to entertain
President-elect •Jimmy
Carter.
These items were among
hundreds of
detailed
expenses in the House Clerk's
semiannual report, swollen to
double its usual size because
of reforms voted earlier this
year when unofficlal office
accounts - sometimes called
j!sh.1sh funds" were
abolished.
The teforms were part of
the recommendations of the

repoct showed.
The

refqrm

measure,

managed· by Rep. David
Obey, ]).Wis., chairman of
Ute commission, would create
a House administrator to
handle all the housek:eeping
chores ol the ll,I!Ot).employe
House, with tile help of an
auditor and a cmnptroller.
It also would set up a
grievance panel of three
House members td hear
employe complaints of
discrimination be~ause of
sex, color, age or creed. Tbe
bill would do away with free
plants, picture framing
service and foot lockers for
members.
Rep. Robert Bauman, R·
Md., the clerk's.report in his
hand, recommended in a
Co mmission
on speech Tuesday that all
A!Jministrative Review. The members read it before
panel 's final round of voting on the latest
improvements came to the commission recommend•·
floor today under fire lions. He cited several
because of what the clerk's insta~ces of questionable

spending that members
certified as being for "official
business."
Bawnan did not cite names
hut " listed a $200.77
expenditure for a staff
Christmas party. The report
showed this was claimed by
Rep. Diaries Wiggins, R·
Calif. Another was a $1,291
payment for a "cmstitutent
reception" Jan. t, when
members were sworn in!D the
new Congress, claimed by
Rep. Elizahetll Holtzman, 0N.Y.
"There are hlDldreds of •
· pages of such items that were
· made possible under tile last
round of the so-called Obey
refonns," said Bauman.
Obey saio, "I wonder If Bob
Bawnan is saying he would
prefer things the old way
where no one had to report
such expenditures. What we
did was get rid of tile office
slush funds and made such
spending reportable."

o

2 0 1 1
5 o 1 1

Chmbts tb
Nettles 3b
4 o o o
Plnlellalt
5 0 2 o
Dentss
5 0 2 0
Gullett p
I 0 0 0
Lyle p
2 o o o
Totals
41 4 11 4
LA
200 000 001 D00-3
NY
100 001 010 001 - 4
LOB - Los Angeles 8, New
York

Slush fund capers reported

111.

You can soak your feet tn
warm water which softens
the corn and trun the surface
with a razor blade. The super·
ftcaal hard ltssue can also be
removed with a pumice
stone.
Th ose drugstore prepara·
ttons usually contaan salicylic
acid tha l soften the corn .
They may help relteve
pressure, but there is no way
thiw can compensate for
poorly fitting shoes that don't
provade enough toe room.
I ~hi mention that
diabetics should be par·
ticularly careful w1 th their
feet. So slwuld anyone who
has poor carculalion to the
feet for any rea son. An infection can be dangerous and
has even resulted in mnpota·
11011 in such c&lt;7~es

•

Soup
Lacy ph

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol for
years
has
compiled
perhaps
what
made
my
work
mformation
,
gossip
and
tmder him at Harvard, but
Ule tl'\ree winners 11 never of particular interest to the rumors of misconduct on
"
~
·
state and local officials, it
really worked together " and judges.
11
F or example, a t own was reported today.
their research was related
cannot be m equlibrium. Its
but separate.
Scripps
•
Howard
Anderson , 54, who heads essence is the interaction Newspapers in a copyragmeo
Laboratory's between outsade forces," he article by reporter Gary
the Bell
physical research d1vision said , by way of explanation . Grace said reports on sexual
The 1977 Nobel Peace Prize and personal acttvities of
and teaches at Princeton
University in New Jersey, was awarded Monday to POlice chiefs and sheriffs,
said he was "delighted to win Amnesty International. The along wtth details of staffing
and
other
the prtre with the the two 1976 prize, withheld last year, problems
went
to
the
two
Belfast
professional
problems,
are
people I admire most in the
women
who
formed
the
sent
monthly
to
the
Patrol
world."
Mott , 72, said he was "very Northern Ireland Peace superintendent's office.
Robert M. Chiaramonte,
happy" to share the prize Movement. Spanish poet
Vicente
Aleixandre
won
the
of the state Highway
director
with Anderson and Van
literature
prize
Thw-sday.
Safety
Department, under
Vleck . He Ts professor
which
the
Patrol operates,
emeritus of physics· at
told
Scripps-Howard
Tuesday
Cambndge, England.
SAINT ROSA ·
that
the
monthly
reports are
lo Brussels, Prigogine said
DETROIT (UP! ) - Rosa
only
an
"administrative
tool"
he was surprised he was Parks, who sparked the Mon·
singled out for the Nobel !ornery, Ala., bus boycott 22 to insure that district
award because most past years ago, said Tuesday she captains maintain close
chemistry prizes have been was surprised to learn her contact with law enforcement
awarde&lt;l for practical hometown · friends have agencies in their areas.
He said the reports are not
experimental work, not launched a campaign to raise
kept on file, and that be has
highly abstract work like his. $00,000 for her.
The 00-year old ?rigogine,
Mrs. Parks refused to sit at never seen a report that
an expert on the chemical the rear of the bus in 1955 and detailed anything other than
makeup of the human body, challenged city and state the professional relationship
was clted
·tur
his
segregat10n laws . Her arrest between a local police agency
contributions
to
non·
prompted blacks boycott the and the Patrol.
However, copies of reports
equilibrium thenpodynam·
bus line for more than a year
from
several posts across the .
lcs, 'particularly the the~~ry of until separate seating laws
state
were obtained by
dissipative structures.' '
were held unconstitutional by
Scripps-Howard
NewsPrigogine told reporters al· the Sopreme Cow-t.
papers.
though his research was
The campaign started this
lo virtually every monthly
highly abstract, its results weekend at the urging of
report
that was viewed at
will have social applications. Montgomery
City
random,
accounts of sexual
"My interests lie ... with Councilman Luther Oliver,
11
and tidbits about
escapades
the interaction of parts within who said, The time is past
11
1
the whole, ' he said. As due that we , the people of
such, my work has social Montgomery, help our saint,
implications, which is Rosa .''

Asked if he could ~xplain in
laymen 's language what his
research involved, the 71\.
year old van Vleck grinned

and replied:

.,.'

NEWS I TE M:

Fr-eezing begins ·

Nobel winners·. ·surprised

Yankees claim opener by 4-3 count.

r

•'

recewe substantially more
aid
The legislat ion gives the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development a new

HUD.
The bill also tackle s the
problem of redlining - in
which banks and lending
institutions deny loans to
du a l form u la system fo r illdividuals ·seekin g funds to
dist ributing the fe deral im prove buil dm gs m or
m o ney
meamng bordering sllDll areas.
substantial increases for such
But a proviSion ill the bill t.o
citaes as New York City and encourage inner-c1ty lending
Cll icago.
by banks and savmgs and
The formulas do not help all loans will not take effect for
older Clties. however . Some more Ulan a year .
will have to depend on a new
Under th e dual approach
Urban Devtllopmenl Action for block grants, the formula
Grant that makes $400 million which supplies ? commWltty
ava ilable for distribution by With the highest amolDll of
money would be used . The
origmal formula weig hs
population at 25 'per cent,
over-crowded housing at 25
per Cl!nt and poverty level at
1i0 per cent .
The new formula, which
most benefits older large
ca ties , weighs population
By
United
Press brmging some snow nurries grow!h_ lag - · the rate of
loternational
to Michigan but rain to most population growth compa red
Freezin g temperatures other places. Storms that
with other cities of similar
penetrated the nation 's brought snow to the upper size - at 2Q per cent , poverty
midsection today , reaching Madwest Monday
and at 30 per cent and age of
as far so uth as Tettas but til&lt;' Tuesday dissipated .
current housing at &gt;0 per
early snows that hit the upper
Rains also fell in th e cent.
..
Midwest dissapatetl.
Southeast from the lower
Acc ording to statisti cs
Frost and freeze warnings Mississippi Valley through compiled by HUD, using the
were 1ssued for portions of the Allanit e Coast fr om new formula, New York
Nebras ka , Iowa , Ka nsas, F1orids to New Jersey . The
City' s entitlemrnt in t978 will
Missouri, Oklahoma and west heaviest rams measured be $224,745,000 while under
Texas early today .
more than two-thirds of an · the original formula it would
Trailing the front , gaie- mch at New Bern, N.C.
be $79,563,000.
force winds lashed western
Patches of nighttime fog
For Chicago, the !978 funds
Lake Superior , prompting were forming along th e will be $116 8 million under
storm and gale warnmgs over Pacific Coast, but most of the
the new formula while the
most of the Great Lakes.
nation 's skies , swept clean by figure under the other
Showers were sc attered the latest cold front , were formula would be $73.4
over th e Great Lakes , fair
million. ·

3- ~he Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomert'V, 0 , Wednesday , Oet. 12, 1977

12. 2B

-

pet1tor ." said Mar lin . " 1 via a single, llght-hattmg
By HILL MAU(,lJ,; N
believe ~e wall n se to the &lt;:lenn Burke stroked a single
UP! Sports Writer
j ust like th rough the hule at second
Fact.~ ;md Fil(ures
NEW YORK (UP!) - Billy occasion
Gullett.''
base anto righ t field. Yankee
Martin, wtlose managena l
Gullett
indeed
rose
tu
the
eentcrfielder
Mickey Rtvers
waza rdry has wa ngled
occasto
n
NEW YORK !U P! ) Tuesday
mght
,
sc&lt;K•ped
the
slow-rolling
ball
another m1racle victory from
Facts anf f igures for t he firs t
shaking
off
a
sore
arm
and
up
,
but
Garvey
was
already
his wounded"' New York
ga me of t he Wor ld Ser ies:
Yankee pitching staff , w1ll patching U t·J innangs, while turmng thir(\ and heading for
A1tenda nce - 56,668 .
Net r ecei pts - $6 32,976 43. se nd " forrso tt en" Ca tfish holding the Dodgers to just hom e. Rivers bounced has
Comm tsslo n e r ~ s share throw hom e and Ya nk ee
HlUlte r to he mound today in fiv e hils and three runs.
$94.946 46.
Lasorda
started
his
best
catcher
Th urman Munson
Players pool - $322.81 7.98. an effort to carry a 2-IJ game " m oney " , pitch e r
Don
ran
uut
in
front of the plate to
1
lead in the World Series back
League and cl ubs' shares Sutton,
who
had
never
lost
a
pull
tl
111
and
tag the slidin ~
$53,803 00.
to Los Angeles.
Hun ler, who has not po•t season game and the 32- . Garvey in almost the same
pitched since Sept. )0 because year-&lt;J!d right-hander wasn't motion.
World Series
Garvey said , "From the
of a urological ailment, will far off his customa ry October
a angle I came an and how far
But
oppose Bert Hooton for the brilliance .
schedule. ..
controversaal play in the sixth he (Munso n) ha d to dive, I
Los Angeles Dodgers.
"My control is the only inning, in which the Dodgers thought I was safe. I thought I
Umted Press lnttrnationat
Uting I'm concerned about," tried to steal an insuran c'e _ was there on the outsade of
Best of Seven
said Hunter. "Having been run on the 3-2 lead they forged the plate with my raght leg "
All Times EDT
away from at for a month, th1s for Sutton seemed to be a - Home plate umpire Nestor
New York leads, 1-0
Oct II - New York tALl 4, will be just like spring turnin g 'point fo r th e Chylak thought otherwise,
Los Angeles (NL J 3, 12 In traaning all over again."
Yankees.
however, and the score renthgs
With
Steve
Garvey'
on
first
maa
ned 2·1 - until that is
".Catfish is a great com·
Oct . 12 - Los Angeles tNL I
at New York tAL) , a· t5 p. m.
•Oci.14 - NewYork(AL)at
Los Angeles (NLI , 8· 15 p m.
'
Oct 15 - Now York tALl at n
··
Los Ange les (NL) , 4. 15 p. m .
~a
x·Ocl. 16 - New York IALl
at Los Angeles tNL ), 4:15 p.

Munson ,

m.

x-Oct

ip h

r er bb so

8 3 3 I 4
0 0 0 2 0

o o o o

1

1 0 0 t 3

2 1 1 I 0
5 3 3 6 6
I 0 0 0 2

Sutton pi tched to 2 batters

In 8th ; Rhoden pitched to 3
batters In 12th.
HBP - by Gullett IBaker J:
by Sutton (Jackson) T 3 24 . A - 56,668

l8 -

Los Angel es

i NL J at New York IALJ. 8 15

PI'ITSBURGH (UPI ) Terry
Bradshaw remains
x.Qct . 19 - Los Angeles.
INLI at New York IAL J. 8:15 optimastic that he will be able
to ·play againsf Cincinnati
P m
... x·if necessary .
next Monday despite a

p. m.

World Series Results
United Press International
Gamel
12 innings

Los Angeles INL)
200 000 001 D00-3 6 0
New York IALJ
100 001 010 00 1- 4 11 0
Sutton. Rautzhan (8 1. Sosa
( B). Garman (9), Rhoden (12)
and Yeager , Gro1e (9) ,
Gullett. Lyl e (9) and M unson

W- Ly le L - Rhoden . HR New Yor k (A L) . Randolph .

CINCINNATI (UP!) Fresh from two days off
following their Sunday
victory over the Green Bay
Packers , the Cmcannati
Bengals began preparations
today for a cructal battle with
the Pattsburgh Steelers next
Monday night.
The game, to be played in
Pittsburgh, wall be the thtrd
straight road contest for the
Bengals, whose record stands
, at 2-2.

Houston last Sunday. Shorlly recalled fo rmer third-string
after, Bradshaw 's backup, quarterback Ne il Graff, who
Mike Kruczek, suffered a was cut du ri !l g _ tra i nin g
ri ght shoulde r sepa ratiOn, camp, and Tuesday Graff
de cision on Bradshaw 's forcang the team to use safely reported to be gin studying
Tony Dungy , a coll ege the Steelers' playboo ks with
ability to return to action.
"We won't know anything quarterback, to direct the Coach Chuck No ll. Rookie
about Bradshaw until. he ' offense the rest of the game Cliff Stoudt, a quarterback
Kruczek will he put on the who has been on the taxi
tak es some snaps and
practices- and that won't be injured rese rv e list, the squad, Dungy, Bradsha w and
until • Thursday a t the spokesman said That means Kruczek also were at the
earliest ," a team spokesman U1e second-year quarterback meeting with Noll
If Bradshaw ca nnot play
will be out fo r the season.
saad.
the Bengals, Graff
against
The Stee lers Monday
Bradshaw broke has wnst
would
likely
b• the ' torter
in the Steeler s' 17-1 0 l n ~o:: tn

broken left wrist.
But Pittsburgh Ste'eler offi·
caals say they are several
dsy s away fr om making a

Two SVAC games on
'
~ap this weekend
Two league games and a
non-league
battle
are
scheduled this weekend in the
Southern Valley Athlehc
Conference.
t.eague tilts will feature
North Gallia at Hannan
Trace and Southwestern at
Eastern.· Hannan plays at
Symmes Valley in ' the non·
league game.
The Kyger Creek· Southern
clash wsa cancelled due to
the closing of 'the Southern
School district. The game will
go down as a forfeit to the
league leading Bobcats.
Coach John Blake's North
Gallia Pirates go to Mer·
cerville in an effort to spoil
the Wildcats homecoming .
Last week, North Gallia
dropped an 8-0 decision to
Southern. Hannan Trace, on
Ute other hand, is fresh off a
35-IJ drubbing of the Fairland
reserves.
The Pirates were held to
just seven first downs and 154

rehever who was to wan h1s
thard straight post-seaso n
game.
"! don't care about not
gettmg the win," said Gullett ,
who ka yoed after two annings
in
has
on ly
playo ff
appearance. " I'm JUSt glad I
was able to patch well enough
to keep us an the ballgame."
The YankeeS' sta ged mini·
rallies in the lOth and 11th
illrtngs off Garman , but thetr
11mbllity to execute·· sacrifi ce
bunts blunted them
ln tile 12th • tile Yankees
(inally got a man to second
agal·n the
an d on· Ce
t
s o .. ndolph
t
pro agoms wa '"'
,
who led off wath a dou ble off
Rtc k Rhod en, ll 'e f1'fth pa'tcher
emp loYed b)' I~"sord a •
Rhoden wase ly walked
Mun son inte ntion all y a nd
tha t brough t up Bla ir ,

Marian's other trump card
On a 2-2 count, Blalf swung
away, drillang a single to left
which
brought
home
Randolph wath the wanmng
rlUl .
" I hit a fastball, away,"
saad Bla ir . " But I was
disappoanted ove r not being
able to sacnftce. I was just
hoping not to hit tnto a double
play."
"We'vecome back before,"
said Lasorda plulospohically .
"We lost the farst game of the
nlayoffs too and still won ' ·
•
The oddsmakers have now
lllStalled the Yankees as f,..5
fa vorites to win the series
althoug h the Dndgcrs and
Hooton are 11-10 favorites
ovea· the questionable Hunter
today.
,1..- - - - - - - - - .
Our Inter est Is
Greater Fo r You

•
•
•• •
dshaw remazns
optzmzstzc

Randolph . JB - Russell. HR
- Randolph . S - Gullett 2
SF - Cey .
Sutton
7
Rautzhan 1·3
Sou
2·3
Garman
3
Rhoden (L) 0
Gullett B 1·3
Lyle IW) 3 2·3

Wallie Randolph led off the
IJIJtloan- of the inn ing with a
home run in to the leflfield
seats.
The Yankees took a 3-2lead
m the eighth, when Randolph
led off with a wa lk and scored
on Munson's double: But
reliever Mike Garman came
on to quell any fu rther t;hreat
and left men slrand~d on
every base.
The Dodgers fina lly got to
- Gul lett 10 the ninth when
Dusty Baker led off with a
sangle. Gullett got Mota on a
[! yout , but walk ed Steve
Yeager on fow- pitches.
That brought Ma rtan to the
mound with trump card
Sparky Lyle . Ly le gave up a
smgle to Lee Lacy, which
•cored Baker to ta e it 3-3, but
that was all the Dodgers were
to get off the rubber-armed

total yards against the
Tornadoes last week Rex
Justice continued to be the
Pirates' top ball carrier with
91 yards . Hannan Trace's
offense came to life l!&amp;ainst
the Fairland B squad.
Fullback Dave Campbell
had a fine offensive game for
HTHS ivith two touchdowns
and 86 yards rushmg . David
Swain caught a 30 yard TD
pass from Steve Beaver while
Loren Cox and Archie
Meadows had the other

on the board. Getting SW
touchdowns were Sherman
Potter, Barry Jenkills , Larry
Carter and Gene Layton.
Coach Joe Bokovitz 's
Wtkings are still seeking their;
first :win of the year. The
Vikings got touchdowns from
Brent Miller and Brannon in
the 26·22 loss to South·
western . Hannan goes into
the game with 8 3·2 record.

PITISBURGH (UP! ) The Pittsburgh Pirates say
they finished lhas season
more than $1 million in the
red, and are askin g
permtsswn to ra ise next
year 's ticket prices as much

as $1.
The Pirates said the new
pnces, if approved by the
Stadium Authority , would be:
box seats $6 (up from ~ ) ;
reserved seats $4.25 (up fr om
$3 .50);
and
general

:;:;:;:;:;::.;:;::.:::::·:::::::::::::::::·:::::·:·:;.·:·:::::::::·:·.·:·:=:·:·.::·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·::··:·::·::·:::::·:::·:·:::·:::::·:::·:::::·::::::

Tuesday night the Meigs with the score of 15·9.
In the Jr. VIU'sity contest
girls volleyball team was
Fort
Frye swept the series
defeated by the girls of Fort
Frye in 8 close match. Fort with two straight victories by
Frye took · the, first match outscoring Meigs IIHI and 15·
outscoring the Meigs. girls 15· 6. Both, teams are now 4-4.
10. Then the Meigs six won The next Meigs Girls Volley·
the second in a very close 15· ball match will be held on
13, but the linal game ended Thursday at 6:30 .!'.m. with
with a victory for Fort Frye Meigs hosting Waverly .

DETROIT ( UPI)- Roland
Cloutier, the Red Wings·l4th·
round draft choice, has
signed with the National
Hockey League club.
The French-speaking
skater was assigned to the
Wings' 1' Kansas City farm
club . However, General
Manager Ted Lindsay said
"don 'I be surprised if he is
back up h&lt;re soon."
,~

Rose in Charleston next MondayCHARLESTON, W.Va. Royal Reds," a large, paper·
(UP!)- Pete Rose makes his bolUld chronicle of major
Uving on a diamond, so he'll league baseball's oldest
probably feel right at home professional team.
Mondsy in · West Virginia's
Rose, a former MVP and
perennial
.300 hitter for the
capital.
Rose, the firebrand third former wQrld champions, had
baseman of the Cincinnati been scheduled- In appear at
Reds, will appear at The the same store last year, but
Diamond, but he won't be wa's 'tot~d""t~ cancel, says
rapping out any base hits or book buyer Elaine Powell.
urve been working on this
exhibiting_ IJjs patented head
for
a long time, " she said
first slide.
Rose
will Monday. "But I have been
Instead,
autograph copies of "The successful in getting a lot of
big names to come u! the

Cinci nnati : ru nnin g back
Reggie Ha rnson a nd rookie "

On 90-Day

5.75 per cent pa id on
90 day Cer t ifi ca tes of

Deposit .

J.T. Thomas walh a toe
injw-y and Dave Lacrosse
with an abdomen pull were
listed as probable.

store. Personally, I work
very hard at these things, and
I just don 'I !like no for an
answer.''
Her office, lined with a 11).
year assembly of celebrities'
autographed pictures, is
proal.
.
After
meetin g
with
reporters at the end of tbe
autograph session, Rose wall
head for Huntington in his
silver Rolls Royce for a
simila r department store
appearance.

adm1ssaon $2.50 (up from $2).
There woql9 be no increase
an the pnce of general
admission youth tackets or
ladtes' ni ght and senaor
citizens tickets (both $1 ).
" Even wtth our mcreased
prices, the average price of a
Pirate tacket is still under $4,
whi c h

is

certa mly

competitive

in

today 's
ma r ket , "
Pirate Vice Presadent J oe
O'Toole said. ''Wathout tlus

en te rta inme n t

High school grill notes.
The
second
pr oposed
doubleheader is only half
filled , matching Cleveland St.
Ignatius aga inst Mentor Lake
Catholic.
Third ranked Wyoming
(AA) posted its fifth straight
shutout of the year Friday
rughl with a 20&lt;l decisaon over
North College Hill.
Three touchdown passes
from John Shuler to Bill Ross
and a pair of TD runs by J .C.
Stafford gave Marietta a 3414 win over Cambridge. Ross
hauled in TD tosses of 56, 27
and 41 yards, while Stafford
had 39 a nd one-yard scoring
runs
Trailing 13-0 in the third

mcr:eased revenue, there is

$1

,ooo.oo

M ini mum .
In teres t
Payable Quarterl y .

linebaGker Denms Winston
wath knee mjuries and wide
rece ive r Erni e Po ugh w1Lh a
spramed wrist.

..

Certifica t es

A

o; ub s f,11ll t ill

p r nil ii Y

•S.

1n vok e d on all cer l diCil f ('
W1f hd1 ilW n p nor
fo t h e d i! ll' ot m !ll urot Y

;J C C O U II h

Meigs Co. Branch

-(§)

Pirates want to hike_lt tickets $1

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
SVAC STANDINGS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P OP high school football notes
scores .
Kyger Creek 4 1 0 185 38 from around the state:
4 I 0 72 31
Coach Bob Ashley's South· Southern
Cin c m~h
Top-ranked
J 2 0 64 116
western Highlanders go after Eastern
Moeller
(Class
AAA)
must be
North Gall Ia 2 2 1 38 · 46
their second straight wm Hannan Trace
the envy of every athletic
against the Eastern Eagles.
2 3 0 88 115
director whose budget needs
Southwestern won a rugged Southwestern 1 4 0 44 118 some help. The unbeaten
26·22 game last week to Sym . Val ley' 0 5 0 40 129 Crusaders of Coach Gerry
·
SVAC ONLY
celebrate the school's TEAM
W L P OP Faust have played before
homecoming.
Kyger Creek
3 0 130 18 74,000 persons so far this
2 0 40 6 season, an average of 14,800
Although the Symmes Southern
2 1 32 20
Valley Vikings collected North Gall Ia
Eastern
54 per outing.
more first downs (17 ) and had Hannan Trace 01 1I 32
AU-Ohio tailback Brian
12 48
246·187 in total yardage, the Southwestern
1 J 44 112
Thomas ran for 155 yards and
0 3 34 66 all fow- touchdowns to lead
Highlanders put more points Sum Valley
No. 1 ranked Elyria Catholic
(AA) to a 28-7 win over
Cleveland Central Catholic.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Eastern Michigan
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI )- Thomas now has 74 points
quarterback Steve Raklovits and Miami defensive
Bill
Walton was · released and 580 yard&lt; rushing on the
tackle Mike Rosenberger were tile unanimous
...:
from
Meridian
Park Hospital year.
selections as the Mld·Amerlcan Conference players of
Attemp!.'l.are being made to
m
suburban
Tualatin
the week announced Tuesday.
Tuesday and .coach Jack put together a pair of high
Rosenberger, a S·fool-11, 225-pound junior from
Ramsay said the Portland · school doubleheaders for next
Cincinnati, won the defensive award for making 23
Trail
Blazers' 7-foDt center fall at Cleveland's MlDlicipal
tackles - 15 of them solo - and blocking two punts
may
be back m action tllis Stadium.
against Marshall Saturday.
If details can be worked
weekend.
,
Raklovits, a &amp;-fool 210-P&lt;I)Uid senior from
·out, one of the twinbills (Sept.
Ramsay
said
·
Walton
Kalamazoo, Mich., passed fur one touchdown and ran
probably wlll not play 29) would pit Cleveland St.
for two more against Ohio University. He completed 11
Thursday night agamst Los Joseph against Warren
of 19 passes for 158 yards and ran for 51 yards on 12
and
Angeles but may be ready for Western Reserve
carries.
Lakewood
St.
Edward
the final preseason game
It was the second time Raklov11s had received the
Saturday against Golden against Cmcinnatt Moeller.
offensive honor,
\...
State at Oakland.

,.f ort Frye girls win 2 of 3

and Stoudt the ba&lt;·kup
Three other players tn(U red
in the Houston game were
listed as questionable for

5.75%

T h e A th e n s C ounty
Sa VHHJ S &amp; L o a n Cd

elf orts to build a winner, at

no way tha t the Pirates will th e same time reahzmg the
come close to me.etin g necessaty of keepm g our
operatin g expenses in 1978. ticket prices wi thi n th e
" Admit tedly , pl aye r budget of every Pirate fan "
sa larie s are the maJor
expense in profes sion al
sports today ," O'Toole said.
"B ut we have always
attempted to field a
competitive
team
by
acquiring the best talent
ava alabl e to us, wi thin

2'1 6 Se cond St
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"We will conti nue our

0

0

quarter, Fairborn Baker
rallied in the late stages of
the game for a 21-13 ,victor.)'.
over Sidney, its first wm of
the year . The Flyers' TDs
came on 17 and 25-yard
passes from sub quarterback
Mark Duvall to Dale
Chnstopher and an 81\.yard
run by Mike Foiiano.
No. 2 London and No. 5
Urbana , a pair of unbeaten
Class AA powerhouses, meet
Friday ni ght a t London .
Urbana has won 16 in a row,
while the Red Raiders have
outscored th eir last two
opponents 164&lt;l.
Scott Jensen scored four
Continued on pa ge 4

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5- The Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;\]eport-Pmneroy, 0 ., Wednesday , 0(1. 12. 1977

Southern Local Board
explains levy actions

Circle president elect of OSBA
Dean Ci r cle , cur rent Legislative Committee which
president of the Gallipolis sets inte rim policy and
and
directs
City Schools Board of outlines
Education, was elected legislative programs. He has
president-e lect
of
the further served as Legislative
Chairman of
Southeast Ohio Chapter of the Network
Ohio
School
Boards Southeast Ohio, and is a
Association. Representing 72 ·member of the OSBA
school districts within 17 Executive Committee for the
counties in southeast Ohio, Southeast Region.
Circle is a graduate of
Ci rcl e was elected by
association members at their Nelsonville High School and a
annual Fall Conference held 1955 graduaie of Ohio
Universit y, major in g in
in Athens.
. Circle has been a member business administration , He
of the Gallipolis City Schools is cu rrently in the restaurant
Board ol Education since and catering business in
1974, at which time he served Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Circle live on
as board vice-president. He is
Lower
River Road and have
now serving his third contwo
d~ught
ers currently
secutive one-year term as
attending
college.
Ann, in her
president of the board.
Circle has been active in third year at Miami
the Ohio School Board University and Jane, a freshat
Northwestern
Association. having served on man
the OSBA Policy and University, Illinois.

·~

,

SpQrt Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Editor

Rd. Note : The material below has been prepared and
submitted to The Doily Sentinel following an invitation by this
newspaper to use its columns to explain to the voters of
Southern Loca l School District whx their schools have been
closed and what the board of education. has done .and hop~s to
do about it.
·
·
·
'1
We remind the VQters 9! SPuthern Local Ulaf the type of
exper\(lilures listedfu~'paragraph six are thti only places where
a school board can "cut Costs," with very few exceptions.
Minim~ salaries at all levels, for example, are set by the
stale legislature. As noted, Southern's are the minimum.
Salaries make up a large pertl!ntage of the total cost of.
operating the schools.
_
About the only place where the district could reduce
operating costs would be to close one or more of its elementary
schools, thus further consolidating its operations. Portland's
school was closed for a few terms several years ago but was .
reopened because of local pressure .
.. Furthetmore, _any businessman worth his salt knows that
putting off repairs, and· basic maintenance 0! plant is false
economy. Southern should not cootirlill! such delay ..
And if the people of Southern Local are REALLY
,interested in education , as many of those opposing the present
proposal protest, they would not permit their young people to
_be taking their lessons from 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld textbooks which is
being dooe in Southern because the money to replace them ·is
not available.
The place to work toward change in the way our schools are
finantl!d. is not on the local level where the Southern !JJcal
Board has done its best to operate within its budget to provide
a very minimwn educational program. Rather, their attention
must be directed, if there is to be a change, to the legislature ,
which, with the support. of the State Board of Education, says
the areas that have.been paying only a small percentage of the
total cost of educating their childr~~·will have to pay more.
for example, residentiatreal estaw taxes provided 39 per
cent of the $1.5 billion levied to operate schools in Ohio in 1977.
Some counties provided as much as 57 per cent. Homeowners
in Adams county provided 10 per cent ; in Gallia and Morgan
County, II per cent. Meigs is in the range of the Gallia and
Morgan figure .
It Is here that boards of education and local taxpayers
must fat~! up together the facts that ronfront them. The answer
is not to close the schools, In for ce present members of the
board of education to resign, or to "beat them at the pollS" in
·the next election.
There is a better way. Read on:

~EW YOHK

llPI ) -- :\ othing m tilt' world IS Wilf Sl' tl10111
ft&gt;t'l mg unwanted, and you ean find that ,,ut r,,r y;:JUrself by
\'isttin ~ s~lln~ ,,f tht'Se Llld age r~st ht'lllt'S around the t'OUiljr~ 11r
by hstt"Tllfll! to Pnul Rla~r. who \\!ll .tell you strHi~ht up rmd
down ht' isn't r~ad~- for any plaeC' likr- thut yt&gt;t
•
); (It at :13. and t•ertainly not when he c·an doL he kind of things
he has been d t1in ~ tilt&gt; past i2 hourS f0r the :\ew York Yanket&gt;s .
Last Sunday ni£ht. hr led off thr ninth inning wit h a kt:'y

swgle up tht&gt; [niddlt&gt; agamst Kansas City and

th~n

camt•

arnw1d with the tymg run, in a Cflme from behind. petUlant-

winning, three-run rally .
ln Tuesday mght 's World Series O(K'ner with the Dodgers.

Bla tr entered the game as Reggie Jackson's rig ht field
defenst\'t&gt; rt&gt;placement in the ninth 1nrting with t11e srore tied 3all and it was still that way in-the 12th when Ri&lt;'k Rhoden took
0\·er as the Dodgers' fifth pitcher of the long evening ,
Willie Randolph. whp had homered in ,the sixth 1 irutiatt..."'d
1·~, Willford
Tim Filull.:
Rhoden •·ith a double to right field. after which Thurman
Mtmson .was purposely passed. Now Blair carne ' up with
soq of Clinton I. Fa u'lk of Route 4, Pomer oy, Tim weig hs 1n
THREE 'SOPHOMORES. Tim Fa ulk tabove l. Van
at 158" and stands 5'\''. Vlll1 w'illford, No. 32, son of Bill
instructions tO bunt both runners along . This wa$ his specialty .
Wilford and Hube rt Parker, on the Meigs Marauders
But he nussed one attempt completely and fouled off
Wtllford of Route 1. Middleport. has sl.:~rted all of Meigs '
foot~a ll team have worked their way 'into the starting
games.
At 6'0". 165 poW1dS, Van has been a standout on
another. runnin g the count to 2-and-2. The bunt sigiJ was still on
li neup. Tim Faulk stepped up to fill in for the injured Dave
the
defensive
wtit as well as doing well at an occaswna l
as he stepped back into the batter's box.
Blake at defensive end and ha s done an excellent job. The
At the la st moment. he heard third~base r:oach Dirk Howser
hollering at tum . Howser. getting his instructions from
Pitt 39. Navy t8
\1anage r Billy ~1artin on the Ya nkee ·bench, was telli ng ltim to
Colgate 35, Princeton 17
forget all about bunting and swing awa~.
.
Purdue 31, Illinois 28
Bla ir did. connecting wtth a fast ball on the outside and
Rutgers 24, Lehigh 20
drinng it into left fteld for a smgle that scored Randolph fr om
San Diego St. 26, UTEP 14
second and gav~ the Yankees a first~game jump over the
S. Caltf. 38, Oregon 12
Dodgers, l-3 .
" Peoo St. 27, Syracuse 21
Any credit for what he did , Blair sa id afterward , belonged to
Texas Terh 54, Rice 6
Martin because he vias the one who had restored his
West Mich. It, Toledo 12
confidence after Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver had made
Cinclooatt 28. Tulane n
By Major Amos B. Hoople
hi s
Thompson
a nd
him feel unwanted by not playing him much thepast two years
Utah St. 20, Utah 10
The First Tight End
Washington State mates by
before the Orioles traded him to the Yankees last Ja nuary.
Georgia 23, Vanderbilt 1
.Egad, friends. almost . as winning, 35-33; California will
" I hlwe no hard feelings toward him as a person; · he sa id. "I
VIllanova 35, Delaware 16
quick as a wink, to coin · a topple Oregon St ate, 37-1 7;
golfed with him and I bowled wi th him , but I think he thought I
VM I 28, Cita del 17
phra se. we are at midpoint of Stanfo rd
will
down
was finished as a right-handed hitter against right-handed
Md. 23, Woke Forest 21
the collegiate season - that Washin gt on and Southern
pit chers. What else can I think when he played everyone else point in time where the Ca lifornia. with one cocked
Vo. Tech 13, VIrginia 7
but me in center [ield ? I was ma d ever}' 1day and' you ca n't play
Stanford 2t, Wash. 6 ·
conference clashes dominate toward 1ts annual joust with .
when you're mad ."
UCLA 35, Wash St. 33
Notre Dame next Saturdav.
the schedules.
Looking at it from his perspective, possibly Blmr can't be
West \' a. 12, Boston CoL 22
This week all of the pa cific will pre ,~ail over Oregon, 38blamed for feeling he was unwanted anymore by the Orioles.
8. Big 10 and Big 8 teams will 12.
He does overlook a few fa cts, however .
fa ce league foes and eight •of ·
In the. Big 10, we loo k for
To begin with, he wasn't sitting on the bene)] as much as he
• the nine Sout hwest Con- Ohio State to romp over Iowa.
in1agined. Weaver played him in 140 games in 1975 a nd in 145
ference clu bs will be engaged 47·12: Michigan to triumph
games last season and fo r that, Blair responded with. a .218
in loop warfare - kaff-kaff ! 23-21 over a fine Wisconsi n
batting average in 1976 and a .197figurelast year .
Meanwhile. six o'i the eight agg regation; Michigan State
Still one of the best defensive outfi.elders ar ound , Bla.ir never
Ivy
League elevens will rnee't to t a ke Indiana. 25-1 7:
Continued from pa~e 3
was qUite the same hitte r after being beaned by Ken Tatum of
conference
rivals. And on the Minnesota to thrash North.the Angels in 1970. He suffered serious eye and facial injuries
touchdowns
and gained !24
and was hospitalized 10 days. Blair .admits he was "deeply independent front the t hree western and Purdue to defeat
yards rushing to lead United
serv ice academy teams are nl inois in a close one, 31-28.
frightened .. he was going to lose the sight in his left eye.
Local to its fifth win without a
Jumping t o the Big 8. we
The following season, he tried batting left-handed and then in·for rough sledding as Army
loss, -a 38~ decision over
abandoned the idea. Two years after that , he went for a meets Not re Dame fo r the like co lorado to whip Kansas,
Stanton Local. Jensen's TDs
therapeutic hypn otic session. During all this time, Weaver st ill 43rd time, Navy sails against 35-28: Te•as A&amp;M will slide
came on 9, 4 and 10-yard runs
stuck with him, remembering, among other things, how Blair the Pitt powe rhouse and Air past Baylor : Texas Tech will
and a 50-ya rd pass fr om
had hit a home run to give the Orioles a 1-0 victory over the Force goes up against the cook Rice but good. 54-6. and
Wayne Fennis.
high-scoring Arizona State Houston will whack SMU. 33Dodge rs in third game of the 1966 World Series.
Last weekend had its share
Jovel
' Tis
a 14.
After Tuesday night's game-winning single off Rhoden, un it .
of
kicking heroes , including:
The fvy contests will go to Sun Devi ls. 33-15 - hardream
Blair was asked if that hit gave him more satisfaction than sche dul ema ker 's
- Tony . Donn ally , who
Brown over Cornell. 26-12: · rumph !
w~e k end .
,
Sunday night's blow off Kansas City's Dennis Leonard .
ki cked a 34-yard field goal
Yale over Columbia , 21-7, and . Now go on wtth my
Wading
in
where
lesser
":'&lt;o.' ' he"·said. "\h;ll one'll n Sunday was the biggest hit of
nine se.conds remaining
with
over Harva rd . 28- . for ecast:
my career. It was the fifth and final game of the playoff and·if mortals !.ear. , t 0•. tread, a -Dartmouth
to
give
!JJuis.vi lle St . Thomas
6.
Games of Oct.l5
we lose it, ther e is no World Series. I wanted that one with all Hoople trait I might rem ind
Aquinas
a 3-0 victory over
This - katt-kaff - is not AriZ; St. 33, Air Force 15
yo u, here a re my confident
mv hearl . l refused to strike out. "
Can
ton
Timlien.
l)onna lly
How did he think Earl Weaver fe lt ·about him now after th~t predictions for th is ewe_some the "-;~e k end for the se rvice ~ Ala.-17 , Tenn. 14
ca
ught
a
26-yard
pass
also
sc hedule - har-rump h ' lads. Army will go up against Texas 31, Ark. 28
base hit of his that beat the Dodgers '
irom
Greg
Stranan
to
help
set
UCLA will surprise Jac k Notre Dame in the new Notre Dame 35, Army 12
" ) think he saw it,' ' Blair laughed.
up
his
winning
kick.
Meadowlands Stadium but Ball St. 26, No. Ill. 10
- Rod Mercer, whose 32-.
with the same old result as Texas A&amp;M 24. Baylor 21
yard
field goal with ·no time
the Irish run their all-time Brown 26, Cornell t2
in the ga me gave
remaining
record in the series with the Calif. '37, Ore. St. 17
Perrysburg
a 1&amp;-14 decision
Ca dets to JHI-1 by winning , Brigham Y. 33, Colo. St. 27
over Lake. Perrysburg, 4-1,
35-12 ; the valiant Navy crew Yale. 21, Columbia 7
drove
70 yards · in the final
__
will give their usua l good !JJulsvllle 22, Dayton 15
MISSIOK , Kan. (UP!) 13 1 11 41
win over B;lldwin-Wallace .
· three and ha lf min,utes to set
?. Ma ssachuse tts
(4-1) 37 account of themselves but Cl e mso~ 24, Duke 22 ·
South Carolina State and
Conco rdia., Minn ., 5-0,
up Mercer's kick .
8. (tie l Akron (Ohio) (4·11 30 will be una ble to stem the Pitt E. Carolina 19, Rich 10
Wittenberg retained their No. jumped from folirth to second
- And, Matt Naulel, who
· ·altaclr. We mak e it : Pitt 39, Ga. Te.ch 18, Auburn 14
1 rankings this week in the after a 17-6 win over St. Olaf.
booted
a 21-yard field goal
a. (tie) Tennessee Tech
Navy 18. The Air force is in · Grambling 38, Miss. Val. St. ,
National Collegiate Athletic Franklin and Marshall, 4~,
(5-0) 30
with 1:21 to· go to· give
Association's weeklv Division moved from sixth to fourth 10. (tie) Jacksonvil le State for a rough flight and will fall · 12
Sandusky St. Mary 's a 3~
be fore th e heavy bam- Dartmouth 28, Harvard 6
II and Division rri football following its 44-18 victory A! .
(5-1) 14 ba ~dme nt of Frank Kush's Holy Cross 21, Boston U. 14 victory ove r Fremont St.
polls.
Joseph. It was . the fifth
against Swarthmore.
10. (t ie) North Al,;~bama
Houston 33, SMU 14
Top-r ated for th e second
Fourth-rated Mon tclair
( 5-01 14
straight
win for seventhIdaho 16, Montana 9
Others rece i vi ng votes
co nsecu ti ve week , Sou th State, 4-1, joined the poiJ .for
St.
Mary's (A).
ranked
Ohio State 47, Iowa 12
(4-1) 48 Colorado 35, Kansas 14
Carolina State , 5-0, defeated the first time this season by (listed alphab e t ic al ly!:
Augusta n a (S. D .J; Austin
J . C. Smith University 41Hl to def ea ting Centra l Peay ( Tenn .) ; Beth u ne - 5. Chicago State (Ca li f. )
Kent St. 30, Bowling Gr. 20
(3-0 ) 45
extend its winning str~k to Connecticut State 14-6 while Cookman ( F la.); Ca l ifornia,
Long Beach St. 18, Sao Jose
6. 51. John 's (Minn .) (3· t 1 41
H games.
Chico State, 3-0, moved from Da vis; Lehigh, ( Pa) ; Morgan 7. Itha ca (N.Y.)
(3·11
31
St.
15
New Hampshire, 5~ . re- ninth to fifth with a 33-0 win State (Md . ) ; Ne vada , Reno ; 8. Baldwin-Wallace (Oh io) Kentucky 28, u;u 2~
Northern Ar izona ; Northeast
(3-1) 31
mained second a fter its 54-7 over San Franclsco State.
Missouri State : Puget Sound
9. M innes ota -Mor ris (5-1) 28 MISs St. 18, Memphis St. 15
win over Maine. Boise State,
MIS SION , Kan . . (U PI) (Wash ):
Sant a
Clara 10. Otterbe in !Ohi o) (4 -0) 27 Miami (0) 33, Ohio U. 14
4-1 , moved from fourth to N&lt;:AA D ivision 11 an d (Calif.) ; Sou tl;l west Misso ur i
Othe r s receiving vo t es Michigan 28, Wisconsin 21
State ; Tennessee, Mart in ;
. third following a 43-17 victory DivisiOn 111 ratings :
(listed
a lphabetically) : Minnesota 41, Northwestern 7
Troy State (A l a. ) and Win .
Division II
Albi on ( M ic h) ; Carn egie ag ain .s t
M o nt a na .
Volunteer Training
Poi nts . .....
ston.Salem (N C. I
Mellon (Pal : Central ( Ia .); Miss. 28, S. Carolina 24
Jacksonville State , 5,) , fell
DIVISION Ill
1. South Carolina Sta te
Oklahoma
30,
Missouri
6
(Va. J';
Points Hampden -Sydney
15·01 60
from third to a tie [or lOth
1
Classes Starting SOC!"·
Maryvil l e ( T e nn )"; Mid ' Nebraska 28, Iowa St. 22
I.
Wittenberg
(Ohio
14-0)
60
2.
NeW
Hampshire
(5
-0)
56
after a 27-20 loss to eigh thdleburg
(Vt
.):
Mill
ikin
(I
ll.
)
,
Wi chita St. 15~ New Mex. 13
2. Concord ia (Minn . (S-Ol 56
3. Boi seS tate llda .) 14-1) 51
uskingum (Ohio ) ; Norw ic h
Call 992-5554
ranked Tennessee Tech, 5.{).
3. Franklin and Marsha l M
4. Monta na Sta te
(4-1) 47
(Vt .) ; Rochest er (N.Y.); N. Carolina 17, N. Carolina
Wittenberg, 4-0, kept its No .
(Pa .l
5. Northern Mi chi gan
( s.
State IMd l; Wabash St. 14
For Information.
(4-0l 49 Towson
1 rat ing for the fourth
t ) 43
(Ind.)
;
and Wheaton (Ill. I. Oki.St. 38, Kansas St. 13
4
.
Montclair
Stale
(N
.J
.)
6.
North
Dakota
State
consecutive week with a 24-13

Full conference slates on
•

tap zn Pac 8, Big '10, Big 8

'
R olJert Pur·l&gt;t•r
fullback assignment, On dt•fen.st• ht pla y:; lmcb~1cker .
Kobcrl Parker , Nu. a 6-1. 175 JXILUid tldensive end , hH s
mnre thau !ield !1is own agamst bi~cr oppunen,ts this

vear. Dobis·the svn of :\1r. ami Mrs. Hubert S. Pa1·ker of ~.
Sl\ South Avenue. Middleport.

Sports.,. transactio_ns
Bobby Simpson to Tulsa,
Un ited Press International
defcn srrn an ·Greg Fo-... to
Tuesday
Nova Sco tia ~nd offered free
Pro Ba sket ba II
Phila'delphiil .·.,.c. Pla ce d ag en t dcfense man Pj erre
forward Bob Elliplt and Roy a contract to j11Ci""yett guard Willie Smith on ·Nova Sco1icl
Los Angele!:.
Cut rJ ght
waivers .
Denver ~ ObtaJned rookle winq Jim M oxey
forward , Bo Ell is from
Washington for Denver 's No.
1 drall cholce ne)( I year
Hoc key
Aflanta --'- Sent left wing

Onlr tlw

Newspaper

·•

High school

Football
Forecast

'·

Casey Kasem

Only the new~paper g •ves so
rnuch ottentJon to the ochv• t•es o f
youth ~ w•th mme thon 57 pe•

W MPO
SATURDAYS

til

cent of respondmg new~paper~
9
Noon
pr tntm9 spec1ol youth ~ect 1011S, '·- _ _ __:__:__:_~::_:_:___J

pages or columns .

1

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After carefully studying the financial situation of So~thern
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The Board of Education spent two meetings on May 31 and
June 7 disctlSSing what millage to. bring before the voters.
Their decision was based oo two concerns :
I. The millage necessary to meet the present financial
crisis.
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FITNESS DIRECWR - Ron Hill 21, a graduate of
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Racine , Ohio, and has a degree in physical education wii h
minors in health and safety. he lives on Lake Washi~gton
Road, Parkersburg, with his wile, the former Connie
Smith, and ooe daughter, Tobey. ·

a gas leak.
·But, he also pointed out that
often someone gets a&amp; hiff of
the odor~nt from · the flyer
and, not r ecognizing its
source, calls the gas com·
~ny to report a gas leak. He
said careful handling of the
card in the horne would help
eliminate unnecessary calls ..
Distribution of "scratch
imd sniff" cards is one of
several safety programs
conducted by, Columbia to
assure good service to its
customers .

Tim eless styling . Prem iu m le athers.
Enduring craftsmans hip Classics
updated With the quality of Florsheim .

FLORSHEIM
The one the others can't q'uite copy

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Open: 9 a . m . to S p.m . Mon . thru Thur s. 9 a .m . t o a p . m .
Friday. Saturday 9" a.m. to 5 p.m .

..

BUSINESS
APPRECIATION

JEANS
· VALUES TO

20.00

1

_Nobody

SALE
PRICED

tells you the time -•
•
•

Values To $20.00

-- SALE PRICED
•

• $}000

'

tn as many ways • •
•

•

•

asBULOVA.

•

•
•·
I

•I

SHORT.

•
•
•:

TOPS

• SLEEVE

Nobody!

Bulova makes all kinds
The Tigers, with Division I
of
dig ita) s. And all kinds
rushing leader Charles Alexof
convenJ!o'ha
l watches,
ander leading the way, have
In
every
,price
range .
too.
avpaged 371.7 yards rushing
.in 'fotlf .games with a total
So when you're in the
offense of 487.5 yards per
mark e\ for a watch , see
game. LSU bumped Texas
us ~ W~' ll ·s h'ow you
from the rushing lead and
precisely wha t you wan1
disposed of Grambling for the
"' . . a bea utiful'watch by
total 'offense lead.
Bu lova , the dependab le
Texas, with its stunning 13na me in tim e.
6 upset vi~ tory over
Oklahoma Sa lurday, retained
the .lead in - both scoring
offense ( 49.2) and scoring
defense (5.2).
Brigham Young , with
Gifford Nielson at the
controls,
continue~ to ~::::~~~~~
dominate in team pa~sing '

BUY NOW

~·......LAYAWAY NOW!

•
Heruth-ed meeting Oct. 20th

P"olice make 45 arrests ·

REG. 3.69 A YARD

"'· ' '"" '1.79
24 oz. ctn . 89•

..

Customers alerted..to gas smell

1

••••••••••••••••••••••••
BOILED II·
LINK
I

9:00 til7 :00

'- --L- -- -

· 59•

·

White, ·Ycll'ow, Dc\'il 's Fund. and Ge rman Clut(•n latl'

VAN CAMP

The Board of Education next had to decide when to place
the levy befor"e the voters.
The earliest possible date was 30 days after the resolution
waspassed by the Board, which was September 22,1977. (Ohio
Revise~ Code Sec .. 5705.194 ). This would fall on Saturday
October 22, 1977. Since Mon!lay, October 24 is Veterans Day,
Tuesday, October 25, is the earliest date it could be placed
before the voters.
·
This will cost the school district approximawly $1500 to run
the special election. The board decided this was a worthwhile
risk since unemployment will cost the district approximately
$1700 a day. If the levy passes_on October 25, the ·Board will
save approximately $17,000 in unemployment. Had,\hey waited
W1lll November 8th to run the levy and it passed, there would
have been an additional two weeks of unemployment.
If the levy fails the board will have to wait·another 30 days
before they can run the levy again. This woulcj place the next
1
possible earliest time around the end of November .
ljowever , the Ohio Revised Code 5705.194 does not allow
~oney to lle borrowed on antiCipated tax money if the millage
1S approved after November 8, 1971. Therefore, October 25 is
the last time this year that a YES VQte will reopen schools
~fore January 2, 1978. Information furnished by
Cornrmttee to Pass t.he Levy", Jim Adams, chairperson;
Bobby· J . Ord, Supermtendent; Wnda J . Spencer, ClerkTreasurer, and members of the Southern Board of Education.

QUA LIT~
•
COLOR T.V.

BEFORE YOU KNOW 1~.'·~~
IrS CHRISTMAS.
'

. ,.

The U. S. Department of December 2, provided the sources of necessary credit
Agriculture, Fanners Home designations are based on may apply to FmHA for loans
Administration (FmHA ) has disasters that hove occurred · to offset losses or revive
extended to December 2 the on or after July 1, 1976. The fanning operations. _Under
deadline for farmers in Secretary's octi.on was taken the schedule of interest rates
A special "scratch and mercaptan· to its gas as a
Athens County to apply for under requirements of recent as revised by PL 95-89, loons
sniff" card is being mailed .meaps of. detecting leaking
!ann. emergency loans to emergenc~' loon legislation are made at a rate of 3 per"
gas and · urges each family
cover los!es caused .by this (PL 95-89) signed by cent on the first $250,000 with all .Columbia Gas bills member
especially
borrowed against actual loss, this month to alert customers children - to scratch the
year's drought and other President Carter.
and members of their
natural disasters.
Among deadlines changed 5 percent for additional families to the peculiar odor card and to beCome familiar
The agency ' s county to December 2 is the previous amounts offsetting actual
with the smell of gas.
supervisor, Archie R. Stegall. November 16 deadline to Joss, and 8 percent for loans of natural gas.
A gas company spokesman
Each card is impregnated
lpcated in Pomeroy, said the app~ for emergency loans not based on loss but needed
said
the company nonnally
with a small amount of
extension has been ordered under
th e
Secretarial to continue fanning or make mercaptan - the chemical experiences an increase in
by Secretary of. Ag,riculture &lt;designation because of heavy major adjustments in !ann
agent added to otherwise "gas leak calls" when the
Bob Bergland for ap· snow storms in Ath ens operations.
"scratch and sniff" cards are
Stegall said eltension of odorless natural gas to make mailed. He Indicated many
. plications under drought or County. Forty-seven counties
it smell. Scratching the card ·
other emergency loan- in Ohio were designated earlier . deadlines will give
are legitimate calls from
[anners whose crop returns releases the odor.
eligibility designations that under this declaration.
The gas company adds customers who actually h~ve
would
expire
before
farmer s Jacking other are determined late in the ·
. year a better opportunity to
assess their losses and credit
needs, and enable FnnHA to
speed completion of work on
applications now pending
Forty-five arrests were ea~h for . driving without a that
The quarterly business
need
immediate
CHEAO is a private, nonmade by Middleport Police In license ; permitting an processing.
meeting of the Corporation
profit organization which
· September, according to the unlicensed person to operate
FmHA emergency loan for Health Education in
offers health education
monthly report of Police a motor vehicle; failure to applications from fanners In Appalachia Ohio (CHEAO)
programs to health pracChief J . J . Cremeans filed yield the right of way; Athens County will be will be Thursday, Oct. 20 at
titioners and to the public. It
with Middleport Village reckless operation ahd one received at the agency ' s the Ramada Inn's Brown
serves ' the 28 Ohio ApCouncil Monday night.
each for speeding, assured county office located at 221 Derby Restaurant in Portspalachian counties under
Qf the ,Iota! arrests, six clear distance, improper West Second St., Pomeroy, mouth. Sites of the q'uarterly
funding from the Apw~re for disorderly manner backing, ruhning a red light,
are
rotated
Ohio 45769. Applicants for all meetings
palachian Regional Comand five for driving while hit-skip, spinning tires, and FmHA programs will be throu!lhout Appalachia, Ohio.
mission. Offices are located
Intoxicated and. leaving the contriblng to the delinquency given equal consideration The meeting, open to the
in Athens and Cambridge.
scene of an accident. Seven of a minor.
without regard to race , public, w111 begin at 8 p.m.
Parking meter collections marital status, color, sex,
cases were dismissed and
five were transferred to for the month totaled $841 and creed or national origin.
• county court, with two other the police cruiser was driven
4,500 miles for the month.
cases dropped.
There. were two arrests

BOLOGNA
CORN - - -- - -3-03-s_ize:_c:::a'=' -- 4/'l.OQ

DEAN CIRCLE

WHEN

Deadline to apply for FmHA emergency loans is advanced
.
•

JACKSON

.LIBBY'S WK or CS

2. Additional millage necessary to provide something
better for the children of the district.
Ten mills would have done both.
. Ten mills would have got ten the rriaximurrrout otthe·equal
)'leld formula and put our district in a sound fiscal position. It
would have, a lso, improved the educational programs o[ all
:"'hoots in the district .. repairs to school buildings, bought
mstructional materials, bougl\t new text books started an art
program at the high school and bought at least iour new buses.
The 10 mill levy was rejected by the voters by about 800
votes on August 16, 1977.
"
The Board ol Education decided to wait until the State
Auditor's Office did a cash analysis of the school district to find
out the exact deficit, which is $121,795.14, the district faced
before going to the voters agaj!h_
•
The Auditor's report was received by the Clerk on
September 22,, 1977. The Board of Education met on September
22, 1977 and wtth the voters overwhelming rejection on AugtL'lt
16\h in mind decided to ask the voters for only
. 1. The millage necessary to meet the present financial
crts\S. It was calculated that 6.5 mills would do this.
. . . 2. The 6.5 mill levy now facing voterf is for two years only.
It 1S to be tL'led to pay off our present deficit.
·
. There will be no monies to buy new textbooks, repair any
butldmgs, start an art program at the high school, which is a
state requirement, give any raises to any employees except
the minimum salaries required by the state, oor adv,;,re any
educational pr'l@l'ams in the district.
The 6.5 mill levy wiU allow us to exist for the next two
years without having to close .our doors, nothing else.

•

••
•

Values To $14.00 •

SALE PRICED

Prices in effect this week only,
so don 't wait. Stop ~n today while the selection is f?reat. ·

.

.

;

..

ILLIAN'S FASHION

�-- -----

...

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Oct. 12, 1977

~--

Gardener~

Officers installed at sorority meeting
lnstallatiun of new ufri t'ers
was held and seve1'al projects
we re planned at the Monday
mght ml!l!tJng of the City
Council of Beta Sig ma Phi
Sorority held 'at the home nf
Mrs. Janel Peavley .
After the opening ritual
Debbie Finlaw installed .Mrs:
P~av,ley , . president ; Mary
Pickens, VICe president ;-Rose
_ Sisson, secretary; and Belly
J . Krawsczyn, treasurer.
Plans were made to take
donations on an afghan to be ·
a warded on Oct. 22 with all
p1·oceeds to go to the
Pmneroy Emergency Squad
truck fund . All three chapters
of the Sorority a re participating by having their
men1bers accept donations .
The possibility of erecling a
Beta Sigma Phi sign at the

Pomeroy l:Orpuratiun Umil-':i
welcoming people to the &lt;"0111·
munity was discussed and it
was decided to st&gt;e if permission can be obtained (rom
village officials.
Also discussed during the
meeting was the pussibilit)'nf
assisting with a fund drive for
the Meigs Museum trustees
whu plan to publish the Meigs
County portion of " Hardes--

Pomer oy Ga rd~n Club
members met recently at the
home of Mrs. Wa lter Grueser
for a luncheut1 1i1celing:.
Favors were · hoiricl'tllidc
red raspberry jam prepared
by Mrs. Howard Nolan. A get·
well card was Signed for Mrs.
Tracy Whaley. Mrs. Crueser
ga ve devotions using the Upper Room . It was 'decided
that thr current officers will
o;erve another yea r. They are
Mrs. Fred Blaettnar , president ; Mrs. G rueser, v.ice
oresident : an~ Mrs. Ha rvey

ty'~ · H!tilOry " . The books
would be sokl by tht• Mu:&lt;eum

off icia ls. The three l'ha ptcrs
will eunsidcr tht!' pn•jt.•&lt;.:t. At
the meeting the Couru:il wt•nl
on record as suppurtiug a
" no' t vote on Issue II.
Rcfrestuuent.s were served
by Mrs. Pea vley. Others atlending were Velma Hue,
Kathy . Doidge, ami Kathy
Cwmnings.

,

f ..

Victorian antiques to
be featured at Riverby

/

.··t·_

•I

:! ~

'

F

'

SEEN VISITING
Mr. a nd Mrs . Hetzel W.
Folden, Cha rlotte, N. C., a nd
Mrs. Helen Saxton, Loga n,
were recent vis itors of their
aunt, Mrs. Garnet Williamson, Rutland.
•

'

'rape·
'IYshows
"1
·
n
ow
•••
_
*' "' ,.;.•
enJoy "*helll
&gt; ~

+

~

... -t~ ...
,' '&lt; _~ ' '
'
"'~

the victorian period .
\
r
,' \
Gallery II will display a
/
collection of stoneware and
..; '
yellow-ware from the Ohio
.
.
.
River Valley. The majority of
INSTALLED - Mrs. Janet Peavley, center, was installed as president of City Counc1l,
th~ items on exhibit are -- an organization of representatives of aU three chapters of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority in ~he
locally owned and have been county. Also mstalled w~re Mary P1ctens , nght, v1ce president; and Rose S1sson ,
loaned to the French Art secretary. Treasurer is Betty J ean Krawsczyn, not present for the picture .
Colony for this exhibit.
The two day seminar at

Party planned

Van Vra nken, secretary·
treasUrer . The next m eeting
will be held Nov. I a t I p.m. at
the Van Vranken horne with a
plant' excha nge . Mrs. J . W. McMur ray will have the program.

I

'j
,

meet at Mrs. Grueser 's

'

.

M
H.l
k
·
u
MW
~~~~:i~~ut~llich~~~ ~":J"'! .
rs. ' t t spea s to . Riverby, condu!ied by Mrs.

Ston~ware · and

Mrs. Wilbur Hilt, wife of
She spoke of missions as be· to attend next year's mission
i::~~;;.~e.o:m;~~a~; w~~- t11e Rutland United Methodist ing a service to God and the school and had a prayer.
It wa s decided that the
antique furniture, restoration Church pastor, was guest community incl'uding such
_._, __
,,
speaker at the Monday night things as caring for the elder- UMW members will use
l nd r efinisning. ~·rs. Sue meeting ul the United ly and children in the local world thank boxes for mis·
Bever1Y is in charge of Methodi~t Women of the church, and doing something sions to start in November.
arrangements for the Annual Heath Church, Middleport.
about crime and vandalism. World Community Day was
Sem~r.
Mrs. Hilt, mtroduced by She also talked about the sew· announced for Nov. 4 at
Gallecy.- flours are from 1 Mrs . R ut h B umgarn er, mg
. m1ss1ons. .
rna king Iaye·t Heath Church . Mrs. Maxl·ne
5
1
p.m. unb
p.m. on Satur- re~orted on the School of Mis· les for the missions and work- Philson was appointed
days and Sundays, and from sions held at Ohio Wesleyan; ing in local sewing projects. treasurer to fill a vacancy
10 a .m. until 3 p.m. on Del aware. Mam
· t op1c
· of t he 'f o s t ress accomp
·
1·1s hr nent created by a rest'gna'tt' on .
Tuesdays ·and Thursdays . school was "God's Mi'"ion in through joint efforts, Mrs.
Cards were signed for Mrs.
The Galleries at River by are Our Church." Mrs. Hilt also Hilt showed first blocks of Alma Miller and Mrs. Cecile •
open to the public.
told of 'the Bible study on material separately and then Kincaid, and a card shower
women of the Bible starting sewed together to emphasize was pla nned for Mrs. Zelia
with the Old Testament a nd strength in numbers. She con- Pullins, 90.
continuing through the New eluded by urging the women
At the November meeting
Testament
there will be installa tion of of·
ficers by Mrs. Mae Lambert
and the pledge service by
Mrs. Elizabeth Hibbs .
To open the meeting, Mrs.
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
Kathryn Knight, president,
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Erwin ,
read " October's Bright Blue
began and then dropped
Pon•eroy , are announcing the
By Karen Blaker, i&gt;b.O . .
Weather" and welcomed \be
OEAR DR. BLAKER - I because you (or oth e rs)
birth of their first child , a
Mr. and Mrs. Richard hospitalized. II was noted members and Mrs. Hilt. Mrs.
daUghter, Tara Rene.e . The think I am n~inlog my we·by failed to live~ up- to some Vaughan were eleCted worthy that Georgia Watson broke a Lettie Young introduced Mrs,
haby was born on Sept. 9 at trylog to be perfect. I can't particular yardstick of inatron and .worthy patron of bone in her hand. Thomas Ed· Genevee Chesher who gave a
the Holzer Medical Center stand to !aU so I don't try perfection. What else was Pomeroy Chapter 1116, Order wards gave the trustees meditation e ntitled :' At the
and weighed sev5 n pounds, anything !ball can't do weU. happening at about the same of Eastern Star, at a recent report, Mrs. Vaughan, the Foot of the Cross." There was
eight ounces.
I have been 1o therapy for time that might have touched meeting held a t the Pomeroy budget report; and Richard also lesson from the Upper
Grandparents are Mr. and several years and _ was off y_our anxieties about s uch Masonic Temple.
Room, scripture and prayer.
Vaughan, the audit report.
Mrs. Phil Globokar, Pomeroy making good progress unW imperfections ' Were you
1,\efr~slunents were served
Other officers elected were
Refreshments were served
and Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Er- last month wben I began getting a little closer to Ann Hemsley , associate by Dorothy Woodard, Marie by Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs.
win, New Haven, W.Va. Mrs. noticing thai my lheraplsl someone else, or enjoying matron; Thomas Edwards, Curd, Mrs. Cook, Sylvia Mary Rineha rt, Mrs . Frances
Lufema We\)yer, Ne,l:I'-Haven, . wasp ' l remembering lm· some project ? Maybe you are associate patron; Pauline Midkiff, and Georgia Watson.
Brewingt on, with Mrs.
Mrs. " Ma ulle E[~&lt;1n, - Mid- porlahl lblngs I bad said. trying to avoid success .
Juanita Bachtel a conHysell , conductress; Judith
Because no human being is
dleport , ~nd Mrs . Lena Should I ttust her? Maybe I
Morris, assoc ia te con·
tributing hostess. The doxperfect
, a commitment to
ology closed the meeting.
Huber, H~llilax. Mass . .are didn't choose lbe perfect
ductress;
Marie Curd,
perfection is a sure-fire path
great-grandmothers.
.
lb~rapisl for me .
.
secretary ; Dorothy Woudard,
to
failure. To demand per'
DEAR READER - Maybe
treasurer : a nd Dale Smith,
,your need to have "• ~rfect fection is to be self· truslce: Ella Smith·was judge
SKATING PARTY SEt·
destructive. This might be ·
REVIVAL ' GOING ON
therapist surfaced so quickly
for the .election with Pam . Plans for a skating party at
something to talk about when
Kautz and Ca ryl Cook as the Bird Arena on Oct. 30 were
Revival services are being - (assuming your therapist
you go back to see that very
continued this week at the didn't develop a severe
tellers.
made when Beihel 62, Inter·
human therapist of yours.
ll was announced that past na tional Order of Job's
Mo..unt
Hermon United 11\Cmory impairment over·
P.S. Even for those not obmatrons and past patrons will Daughters met Monday night
Brethren Church In tbe Texas night ), because you had
sessed by such an extreme
community with the Rev . started
talking
about
be honored at the November at the Pomeroy Masonic
drive for perfection it is a
meeting and that initiation Tem ple. Several Council
John H. Lanier as evangelist. something painful. It sounds
as if you " used " your good idea to ·make a regular will be held . A pracliee was members were insta lled.
Services start a t 7:30 each
practice of trying something
set fur Sunday, Oct. 30 at-2: 30
evening and on Thursday preoccupation with . perthat you know you carmot do p.m. at the Temple.
evening s~cial music will be fection to put distance bewell . Do it just to personally
WAS A GUEST
Charldtle Dillard, worthy
·presented by the · Rev . and tween yourself and your
acknowledge that success
matron presided and the pro
Ronald Carman of ColumMrs. James Cotbitt ·of Rock therapist.
and pleasure .need not always
tem officers were Richard · bus was the weekend guest of
Springs. Friday the Briscoe
If you really carmot trust
be synonymous.
Run Singers of Vienna, w. -anyone. who Is not perfect,
Vaughan , worthy patron ; his mother, Mrs. Sylvia CarWrite to Dr. Blaker In care
va., will tk featured and on . why wnte to me and perhaps
Da le Smith, associat"
man and his brothers, Brice
of this newspaper, P . 0. Box
Saturday the Gospel Tones of a_ccept ~y view ?f yo~ 489, Radio City Statton, New patron; Ziba Midkiff, sen- and Don, Rock Springs area.
tinel; , Klhryn Windon, Mar· Ronald has been employed
Chester •will&lt;&gt; present the ' :~.t.l!!'tWn , Jou don t , kno
York, NY 10019. Due to
tha; Mabel Moore, chapla in; for the pastl4 years in Colummusic. The Rev . James me._ Oil what basis d1d ;ou
volume of mail she cannot
Ciara Thomas, organist.
bus with General Motors. He
Leach pastor invites the decJd~ 1 could be trusted _.
personally,
but
Is 11 possible that your reply
blic'
'
Remembrances were sent has four sons by a prior marpu
·
desire to be " perfect" and questions of general Interest to Evelyn Hartley and Grace riage, Ronald, Jr., Richard,
wa9ting others to be perfect will be discussed in future Whaley who have both been Elliot and Ryan.
WENT TO VISIT
coqld ;b&amp; •-camouflaging colUJIUlS.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Hank andther"
'perhaps more
Johnson, Bradbury, s pehtthe ba!fc P~l•lll.\)1 would be a
weekend at Bluffton visiting wotithwhtle exercise for you
her sister, Sherry - King, a to ~~ k back at those
1 lb.
teacher at Bluffton College, rel
sl!lps'1ll""Prolects you
While the re they attended a
ballgame between Bluffton
)&lt; t.l
.!'·I &lt;. •, •
and Anderson College. ·
MARGARIN~;...E
I -••• ' SON 'BORN
1 lb. Kraft
'"M:r. and Mrs. I&gt;Qnald E.
Vaughan, llrospect Hill,
· Pomeroy, ai)IIO'!!Ice the birth
of their fir~.' Child, a son,
Donald Edwa~d Vaughan,
., on Oct. 1: The infant
·~eiiltffid'e)j:ht pllunds and two
ounces :· 'Matern'al grand·
parents are ' Ml-. and Mrs.
46 ·oz. Del Monte
AP.~ ,.Ni~insky, Jr., Rt. I,
THIS WEEK ONLY
rltatlaitd·,.' and
paternal
grandparents lire Mr. and
9'12 oz . Star Kist
MILL FINISH
Mrs. Richard W. Vaughan,
· 100% Waterproof
Sou.t l) • Third Ave ., Mid·
dleport.
study of

Record TV programs in co lor a nd sound ; th e
program you 're wa tch ing-a prog ram other
th an the o ne you're watc hing-or any
program wh il e you 're away . Cabinet fin ished
in simulat ed gra ined Americ a n Walnut with
·
·
Gold co lor trim. '

;I'NirN.

CHOICES

Child born

VIDEO CASSETTE
RECORDER

Vaughans elected to_ post

WATCH WHAJ YOU WANT. . .
WHEN YOU WANT!

STOP IN .TODAY FOR YOUR
FREE DEMONSTRATION

a

ING.ELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.________
Middleport,
0.
L.:::..:.:.;...:.;;:_;.;,:.:
..;....,..;._....J

ana:

1

1 ·· ·~

TEEN QUEEN

~

VELVEETA
CHEESE

TIMBERLINE
RUGGED BOOTS

YEU.OW ONIONS •••• 59
--,----.,..2/89' CARAMEL
APPLES
39~
bOX$1.19
3 lb. baq

~

,

2
'
I
WITH NUTS ••••••

.

MORTON 1V DINNERS-: ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• each 69'

STORM DOQR,S

Insulated to -20 deg. F.

DANCE PLANNED
There
will
be
a
homecoming dance at Meigs
High
Schbol
cafeteria
Jollo&gt;ring the game Friday
night for Meigs students only
' and their guests. The theme
is " Looks Uke We Made It.".
The dan~e will be from 10
p.m. until midnight. Refresh·
ments will be served.

28-68LEFT

OR RIGHT HAND

•3995
·

/

•

INSULATION
I

''
•'

•••
••
••
•
•

•

~

.(:HAPMAN
, SHOES

1 •NeKIIO
Elberfeld•
in Pomeroy
St.

Pomeroy, 0 .

BAZAAR SEr
A hazaar will be held at the
Asbury United Methodist ·
Church in Syracuse from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m . Friday and
Saturday. The bazaar will
feature a second hand store , a
·country store, a hake sale and
a soup supper from 12 noon to
6 p.m . on Saturday.

.

19'12 oz .

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE DlNNER.:~:h.~.:~: •••••• age
. 29112 oz.

.

.

2.lb. POPS-RITE POP CORN ~ ••.•.•••• ~:;. 65c
14'12 oz . Luck's

a

CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS ············c·a·n·· 69c

l

HAS JUST ARRIVED

19 oz . Duncan Hines

REGULAR CAKE MIX ••.•.•••••.•••••••••••~~~- 69c

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Gallon RiCh N Ready

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

TOMATO JUICE ••••••.•••••.••••••••••••••••••. 69c
CHUNK TUNA ......................... ~ •••••• s1.19
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE PIZZA .•..•.•.••·.••••• $1.29

--vOUR TRUCK LOAD.

·

MASON, W. V.A.

.

ORANGE l&gt;RINK ................................ggc

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�-------- - ••~

~

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•

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By Helen Bottel

~

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IS HE SCARRED FOR UFE '
DEAR HELEN . I ""s the \ll'tJJn of sexual molesta tion at
age-4 when a 13-year-&lt;Jid boy forced me to petiorm very
distasteful acls Thts happens to chtldren often enough to warrant 'dJscussion tn \'OUr colwm1.
What are some of !he dtlftculttes ' I'm a man who has lived
28 years without the benefit of female corgpamonship because
I feel sexuall) madequate. What do you ~ondude tl abnonnal
tendenctes surface 111 ) our bram and you don 't know whr
they're there·• !The molest.atwn was burled m my su)).
consctaus, but at 17, It resiitiaced and ran through my nund
like a vtdecrt.ape replay I
Though I lull) understand thai I must now work out my owr
troubles , l lllink 11 helps people to be aware that when a child ts
mittated to sex through the acl of an older, dtsturbed person,
the effects can last lor many years before he or she comes lo
grtps wtth the fact that Jt happened and takes steps (agam
trawnat1c ) toward a solutwn
The effects of that 13-year-&lt;Jld 's rmsplaced unpulses are a
high pnce lor me to pay and my heart goes out to children who
-- each da) suffer before the hands of abusmg adults - SCARREDFORUFE
DEARSFL
Sexual a buse of chtldren lS loathsome, and parents should be
ever watchful that tt doesn 't happen ; or, tltl does, that tl ts
discussed ratwnally so that future trawnas can be averted.
But. belie\ e me.' SFL, " one act wtll not · scar you lor life" if
you seek adequate prolesstonal help - and stop usmg tl as an
excuse lor soctal maladjustment Accept yourself for what you
are and work out your troubles With a psychiatnst.- H
DEAR HELEN
When I catch my husband 111 allatrs (many !) , he swears he'll
reform. blames It on the booze and the easy people he meets at
bars
But he won't stop gomg to bars. The nunute he gets home
from a truck run, he heads lor the tavern, and he won't take
me because he says " ladtes' 1 don'tgo to such places
,
Hts latest woman called me yesterday and told me in great
detati about thetr affair. (He' ll have an excuse, like she caught
him In a weak moment )
Do I keep on takmg this or tell him to leave pennanently' I
owr the house and am self-supporting -UNWANTED WIFE
DEAR WIFE.
Only you can make this dectsJOn, but I suspect 1t's hallway
made already Readmg your letter m print may ttp the scales :
you 've pled a good case lor divorce!- H.
DEAR HELEN
I'd apprectate hearmg from your MeJUcan readers. I'm a
bachelor and not of the old school, so maybe I'm tgnorant. At
soctal gathenngs I go up and mtroduce myself to couples, ask
the Wife to dance, and the husband almost lakes a swmg at me.
Not even a decent, ''No" - he speaks for her, wtth his fists .
Are MeJUcan . women slill so passtve and overtrodden
eve ry,.here ' They use thetr husbands as excuses lor
everything, and do thetr every demand The men seem Jealous
and msecure, so take tl out m bossmg their women. Maybe tl~
because I live m San Antorno, so close to the old coWllry. Or
are all MeXtcan-Amertcans this way ? - CHICANO
··
•! DEAR CHICANO
Not all I predict you'll hear from both types, With perhaps a
good deal of complamt by wtves who WISh thetr husbands
weren't so "old school "- H.
Got a problem? An adult subject.lor discusston• You can
la!k Jt over m her colwruJ tf you wnte to Helen Bottel, care of·
this newspaper

fHl lti.:&gt;IJA \
IIAI'I'Y fiAH VJo:~ 'l EllS RAPS CARTER
l'AKD I' AI!'! Y at lill• t 'I .A...'\S uf '!'runty t 'hur d1., ' CLEVELAND I UPI I ·~l'rt•d
llt•art Cat lh1he 7 .lO p.m. frtday at thl' i hur - Presalent Carter 's fmlur~ to

( 'hurch bast'lllcol, Thur:sda~ ,
7·30 pm \\lthth.: kct:sat$2

Calendar
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE.
I· 30 p m Wednesda) at the
Colwnbus and Soulhern Ohto
Electric Co soctal room All
members are urgeq to attend ,
MI DDLEPOHT
AMATEUR GA RDENERS, 8
p m Wedne&gt;dav at the home
of Mrs Fennan Moo re. Mrs.
Harry Moore, Mtss Kathryn
Hysell, and Mrs C. £
Blakesl ee wtil be euhoslesses Members are to
take guests
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Uons Club !Wlcheon at Metgs Inn , 12 noon
with DIStrict Governor
posstbiy-to -be m attendance.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Bncklayers Local 32, Wednesday , 7 p m. Metgs Inn
REGULAR MEETING,
Pomeroy Chapter 00, RAM ,
7:30 p.m
Wednesday ,
regular meeting of Bosworth
Council 46, R&amp;SM, 8 ·ts p.m

made durma h1s sureessful

Kt:TllllN HOM~:
Mr and Mrs Chc&gt;tet
Kru ght vi Sited la~t wt•ck Ill
Ca.lcdmu.t
I'CCUt/cJ·a(JIIg ~,,.

, l!ppc~ dtsc 111 his back, and
fun uly Here for the weekend
wtth the Chester Knights

v.erl' Mr

POLYESTER KNIT

FALL AND WINTER

REMNANTS

PRINT FABRICS

Spec 1al purchase for th1s sale' Mill
assortm ent of better p1ece goods

remnan ts of a ll ktnd"s colors and
pa ttern s Don 't m1ss th1s group

•

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.
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I II• &lt; IMi&gt;lllr .. u/ I ~-Lllloo '" tl• \l tliU;tl l lot •

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"'~"'"''''"''"'a' • •• •"
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I·~ ~d~ullc~Abdoth• ltloo·,,, It o

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POMEROY'S NEWEST

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~

•
IUMS

f'IKil GOOD SUNDo\¥ OCTOHI f
,lATUIOAT OCTOIII IS 1•11 IN

LADIES' FABULOUS
WARM WINTER

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES' LEATHER LIKE

SALE SELECTION
LADIES' ACRYLIC

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
LADIES' POLYESTER

VINYL COATS·

SWEATERS

KNIT SLACKS

Grand Opening sele group of ladles'
long sofl pliable PVC coals In
assorted fashion colors Valu"es to
S22.99 Save now!

Grand Openmg Sate group of
ladies' warm w1nter sweaters
tn your chotce of assorted
fashton colors All stzes Great
values!

Select your fash ton wtse and
budget wtse coats now and put
tt 1n lay a way . You 'll fmd lust the right style for you'

~
=

POLLY"S POINTIRS

89~

.lb

Boneless Beef .
Loin Strip Steak .. .... . lb
U S GOY f GltAOEO CHOICE

Boneless Beef
Rib Eye Steaks

a,a~l.ablt

10' OFF

:

• 01 I ll

GOV

•t Storu W•tli Deb

$

52

. lb

$119
loch

Virginia
Baked Ham
AMERICAN OR MUST
Potato

WITH COUPON
I liD 1•1 "VICUII Ol 0111
10 . OJ

89

Big

c-=:-:-----...

7~~ w!e:iFR~afe
Please Allow 3 Days Delivery
On These 4 Freezer Beef Items

US GO'.• T GIIAOED CHO ICE
ISS 175 18 A\JG

. ggc

Hindquarter
of Beef
Boneless Top ·
Sirloin Butt . .
Forequarter
of Beef ..
U
GOV T GRADED CHOICE
320 360 LB AVG

Side Of
Beef

3 ~=~859

'

.

lb

.lb

Sh ampoo .. .. ••1
K;~i;;TAGEfOIESOR2

Frene h FfleS . .
0

INOI'JIDUAU V WRAPPED SliCES

Kroger

·lb
Bog

69 c
ggc

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Hll 'UICoi.U I 01 ()1111

:1

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DRAPES

=-Ill

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=
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• WITH COUPON

:;

••o 1111 'Y•cuw: Of

Olll t t oz

ct ~

..,

1111§

. 20' OFF

~

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$189 :~ _Drin~MtxAid

•n , :i

$ 88

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;:_mrte TIO l,..,tC IIJlllrl llotALmll

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~111111111' IIIIIIIIIUIIUUIUUid

69'

. lb.·ssc

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WITH COUPON

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§

I•D t•l 'UIC•.UI Of

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50' OFF

,r&lt; '!JUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUI'IJ

IIH~

~~~~~~N
flllll 1 I C.4HDNJ

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Kroger

:!

TOTAL SAnSfACTION
GUARANTEE

Honeydew
Melons

c
(\__(

-

' _.at wt .nlf'ttH,
Wt hovt
1f at all -possiblt If, due to
condthOns btyond our control, wt run out of on ad-

¥trtised special,

WI

tute o

compe~rable

'l RAIN

CHECK for

·.

o t~m1 !ar sovrng or give you

tht adVIr•

uud Sl)jtciol cl tht IPtclol
price any trmt within 30
day' Wt IMII'IIftt wh.t wt

1ell. rt you ere ever dinotlsfltd with a Krogtr purcho11,
we wrll replace ~our ittm or
refund your nanty

I

.

SPECIAL SELECTION!
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

DRESS &amp; SPORT
'

, SHIRTS
Men's new fall and winter long ·
sleeve dress and sport shirts:

In checks. plaids. stripes and

59~ PAIR

EACH
...
Grand Opening Sale

PANTY HOSE

Just the rtght touch' Beaut1ful
head and neck scarves for fall
Shop early for best select1on
Grand Open1 ng Sale'

Regular $3 99 values Spec•al sale
group of gtrls' Ronn~etogs acrylic
jUmpers Assorted sol•d colors Save
now'

., ••

EACH

·.

•'

,.

EACH

•'

,•

'•''••:''••"'

·:

Stock up now al Sloffler's

33~PAIR
..

EACH

.

SPECIAL SALE ASSORTMENT

.

Lad1es' f1rst qual•ty stretch nylon panty
Best shades One size fits all •

has~

.,00.

:·.
:·,
·.
Stiffler's Grand Opening Sale

·..

:·
Grand Opening Sale

. ..

SCARFS

..

MILL LENGTH ASSORTMENT

.',

BROADLOOM RUG BLOCKS

Big
selectton of paHerns bon ' t miss fh 1s great fall value
from St1ffler's

.•

·.

'

· MILL ASSORTMENT PLAIN &amp; FANCY

Good quality prmted flannelette . Extra W1de

..

,.

Grand Opening Sale

Stiffler's Grand Opening Sale

PRINT FLANNE·L

•244

PAIR

'159

.:&gt;rand Opening Sale

Special mtll assortment of plam and fancy broadloom
rug blocks. Choose from the most popular colors and
patterns. Grand Opentng spec1al'

YARD

.

14~
~CH
·.
'•. '

Stiffler's Grand Opening Sale

Stiffler's Grand Opening Sale

STOCK DP NOW! 36 INCH WIDE

SPECIAL ViLUE! GOOD OUALITY

18"X24" SIZE PLAIN &amp; FANCY

-HOPE BLEACHED MUSLIN

UNBLEAtHED MUSLIN

Stiffler's Grand Openinq Sale

'

Spec1al! ~

JUMPERS

48 X 84 mch s1ze Shop early

solids Outstanding selection

Stock up now and save during our great sale 1 36 mch
w1de genuine Hope bleached muslin. Stock up now
durmg our big Grand Opening Sale!

54~YARD

..

:·

BROADROOM RUG MATS

Sp~c1al

Mother outstandmg sale value ! Good quality and stze
unbleached muslin Stock up now durmg our btg Grand
Opemng Sale!
'

mill assortment for th1s Grand Opening Sale I

18 X 24 tnch stze plam and fancy broadloom rug mats

Your cho1ce 1

59~ EACH

49~YARD

Grand Opening Sale

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
BRIGHT FANCY PLAID

FLANNEL SHIRTS
A qualrty made long sleeve fancy
bnght platd flanne l sh~rt Long
tails Your choiCe of colors, All
sizes. Save now'

MEN'S AMERICAN MADE
LACE TO THE TOE

YOUR CHOICE!
ASSORTED

'•

'

TOYS ·

GYM OXFORDS

Take your choice of a
wide assortment of toys
of all kmds for boys and

Men 's Amencan made lace to the
toe gym oxfords wtfh molulded soles
and cushioned tnsote s Grand
()pemng Spec•al'

girls Shop early for best
selection!

4

'2 ~R

I roger Wo~ltoMII
Y'o"'r Fdtl'll
food Sta111p1

J

batts Unfolds in one piece

LADIES' FIRST QUALITY

Another big assortment of

lub: ti-

brand at

Stock up now' Famous Mt Mist

Grand Opemng Sale special assortment of fancy foam
filled decorator toss pillows Your choice of colors and
patterns.

for best selection

DRESS SOCKS
Men's acrylic nYlon bulky knit
stretch socks •n your choice of
fashion colors Grand Opening

81 X 96 tnch s1ze cotton quilt

FANCY TOSS PILLOWS

~

~IIIIIIIIII.IIIHIIIIIIIIIIItlllll.

QUILT BATTS

lADIES' HEAD &amp; NECK

unlined drapes 48 X 63 and

Milk
~
!~ UIJit!Ja
CGII'H &amp;GOO DC rom t-«'1111 :s IIH i
U'PUtUU mn IIIUL fUii..J

16-oz.
Cans

..

PAIR

UNLINED
DRAPES

toii"DD! ~ kfOill HICIOilt a Jt/ 1 :
._ Ull[CIIO I"'LLC.UU JilT( I t('l".AJ JU!!.a

pnn ·•• . . . ·''""•

DOUBLEKNITS
lot of
yard lengths of

'••

Grand Opening Sale

GIRLS' RONNIETOGS

SPECIAL PURCHASE ASSORTED

~

Cat Litter

81" X 96" COTTON

59~ YARD

Grand Opening Sale

si

OM/JILl UG

Jubilee

=

Spectal purchase for
th1s sale~ Beautiful
assortment of lined
drapes Choose from 48
X 6J or 48 X 84 Inch size

EACH
.··

. Grand Opening Sale

One
1 to 5
60
mch wide polyester doub leknlt
fabrics. Slight irregulars Shop
early

Grand Opening Sale

· 2··

EACH

MILL ASSORTMENT

LINED

rum"'

•2••

...

·BUDGET
PRICED

Sale assortment of qual 1ty_ fancy
broadloom rug runners in your
cho1ce of decorator colors and
patterns

Special!

SPECIAL PURCHASE
BEAUTIFUL ASSORTED

Instant Coffee !
~ eoti'DHCIOOQ(IDflU.OCIIItiU 1111!
,..._ ~tll CI IO l""-JCUU 111111 liiU! IUU~ ~111111111111 111111111111111

§

RUG RUNNERS

Grand Opening Sale

~

Sanko

QUALITY BROADLOOM

Sale group of Perfect Posture
bed pillows Great for sleeping
comfort
Grand Opening

Full s1ze needlewoven blankets
Slrght trregul~rs of much better
blankets Assorted solid co lors

Select a wardrobe of bast e
dresses m natural earthen
hues . Styles m the latest loo.ks,
lust the way_ you like '

it

WITH COUPON

$'1' 59

16·o•

·~ I 1&gt;~&lt;.t •

31)' OFF

LIMIT om BAG PLEASE

B~byNANOJOHNSON

;

'UJ!CIICI,.._ lUlU 11111 &amp; ltc.li. /UU ~ ..I

:

U 5 GOV J GRADED CHOICE
tO 12 LB AVG WHOLE

U S GOV T GRADED CHOICE
16S lBS 18 AVC

AltO

Hunt's
1ohn Bean$

"''"~WJOIIItiiC.IOOU ·~!til

~

2 Pteces of ftsh
4 OJ Cole Sl~•
6 Hush Puppies

•
~
=
I

PERFECT POSTURE FOAM

PILLOWS

BLANKETS

lUI{[

10' OFF

eslll

F:~~t~&amp;::R

~ .....

• ... . .... .

I •

\' ~1111111111111111111111111 IIIIIIIIG

J

Fish
Dinner

~

~UIIIIIttlllllllllltlllllllllllll.

r GRADE D C HOICE

slacks Choose from some of the
season's best fash1on colors

-Grapd Opening Sale

'

DRESSES

!
i

Kroger
Vanilla Extract

Bone In Loin
Str:ip Steak

99

lb

••o1~1 ·~tC•f.SI Of o.1

~

1

COl fOOt tOOOCI 0C ICIU t k IOIU U I t7t
(~ "" ~lJICI I C -~ 1(1111 1 11 1 1 I IOU! lll!l

5269

CAP N LEW S 8A TTER-FRI

liMIT ' PIGS ltlUSl

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

WITH COUPON

FULL SIZE NEEDLEWOVEN

LADIES' BEAUTIFUL
FALL AND WINTER

llllh jl

§

,_--'Odt: S/Udai4 _ __,.

HOU 't FARMS U S 0 A INSPECTED

Mixed
Fryer Parts

:

0( r )~

US GOV T

Boneless Beef
Boston Roll ...

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef ... lb

" " •~. "'..- .......

:

U S GOV T GltADED CHOIC E &amp;EEF CHUCII:
SHOULOU POT ROAST

REGULAR OR CHUI

='Ill

~

\

$ 99

Make a Friendship quilt

11 0 ~ 1 ......... ,01'1

,OF•111111111111111111111111111 Ullll

U S GOY l GIIADEC CHOICE

Polly Cramer

~-I'OIWODK111tlt4C ' .... IT~ 11 11
MIJ!C II D li'I'U~IU IIIII I LIUL lUll

-

..

Grand Opening Sale

Grand Opening Sale

Grand Openmg Sale

P~s~

WITH COUPON

:
:

"H THIU

Boneless Top
-Sirloin Steak

2 '" 51

!

Spec tal sale group of lad1es' new

fall doubleknit polyester flare

BUDGET
PRICED

1111 12

Oul'l'lo

....
.. ·.·.

Grand Opening Sale

Kroger Sliced
luncheon Meat

~

rlHO

WI ftSIIVI lHl liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTtms N(.NE

... '" ••....,,.

~.·.
-r-·.
. ..

Grand Opening Sale

~ &amp;O~OC.NA SPICED OlD
: f A.SHIONEO Olt PICI(LE LOAI

f

•

Grand Opening Sale

COATS
•

0

- SHOP EARLY AND SAVE!

. •,

.!.

IU7- THf . .OGll CO

.

DEPARTMENT STOREI

POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT STORES ONLY

..

•

Miracle Whip
Salad Dress

CoPYI1GHT

.
.·*'. ...

. . .. .

0

,.

USDA
CHOICE

.....
..

• ••

John F. Fultz,
Manager
Phon e 992 -2107
Pomeroy, Ohto

Ill !In IJ l o•~~u '" " " " ' ' H'•l"
" """ ll""nt&lt; , IWJt}'; " • ~ ""'IIIJtr
, , , 1.1'.~ 1'111\\I••IIHH&gt; I~ I
•.... t ••• ~., ........~~ "' ...
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tl) """ ' ty. II&lt; .,1Lo"l •1 I -''~'"' "' o It
It,
, ..l ut..l tt.u J~IJ t I , '
11., '' \
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""t .. ~'''"~"' or''"'~"'"
o• l\1 1

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INC.

AUlOS

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MEIGS
.TIRE CENTER

!Ill lllf\11\T "~ J\,111
' ' ' ' ••Mn• tt lfl ut tullllll~ll Tbr
l.r '•" I '" (!II! I L1 Ill lol
,
t&gt;&lt;
tl~ ~ ,,, ,f m • h«• '.,,, n,, '••I t,.h,u
i!•" I If&lt; II&gt; lo ol l&gt;loa•l• • •t•!o •I

'" ... '""""

..

MILL ASSORTMENT

Spec1at mtll assortment of fa ncy
prtnt fabrtcs ln 1 to 10 yard lengths
Shop early tor best select ton Grand
Opentng Sale Special 1

~'l'l'TI oiF ullll!

I•

....

Grand Opening Sale

MILL LENGTH ASSORTMENT

s\l'ltV. '\l1S

• When the press ts free and
every man able to read . all
lS safr "
- Thomas Jefferson

I•IJU .. I~&lt; &lt;'~PII• I •IIIt\1

Grand Opening Sale

Kong ht uf Bellutre.

raiser which grossed more
than $100,000

1\j lj~lololl ,&gt;ll •.llll&lt;•wi)IFI"'
"'"'~ t ' lf ttlr~""''" Lin 1•1 II ,

'·.·

.•

and Mrs. D1ck

____
-

presidential campaign has
left the American people
cynical, Ulinois Gov . James
R , Thompson, a Republica n,
charged Tuesday rught.
" While 1 applaud him lor
havmg the guts to take on
wugh issues, I re~t he's biling
off a lot and has been Wlabie
w chew I'm not sure he
knows how to handle
Congress," Thompson sa td
prior to a local GOP IWld-

'1977

!(ROGER COST CUTTER COUPO.

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Steak ...

POLLY'S PROBLEM
her a much stronger one. I
DEAR POLLY - I have a cut the seam open to each
large collectton of men 's ties pants leg and trunmed the
that are out of style. I hate to heavy stitched seams off
throw them away when I feel The bottom hem of the pants
sure someone someplace has was used for the top of the
a great tdea as to what could bag and then the three rebe done wtth them Hope mammg stdes of the two
some of the readers have ptec~s were sewr together on
some tdeas they wtll share - the sewing machine A handle
GERRY
was made out of the tnmmed
DEAR GERRY - We have seams I had cut off. She got
many clever and mgenrous qwte a kick out of this bag
readers who wt li probably be and even.sewed on some patconung forth wtth all sorts of ches she had acquired dunng
ideas for you In the mean- vacation tnps. -MRS E.Z
while you could be thinking
DEAR POLLY - I had so
about usmg some of the tt es to many tube socks with elastic
make an old-fashioned pteeed that had no more stretch due
qmlt Have lamtly and to much washmg and
fnends embrutder thetr bleaching I also had some
names on the vanous pieces. old knee high nylons with
Many of our grandmothers good elasttc. I cut off the
made these Frtendshtp qwlts. elasttc tops and slip them mII the project seems a btl stde the loose tops of the tube
large one rrught be made m socks I put a sock over a one
an afghan stze Ttes could pmt peanut butter Jar, wrong
also be made 111 patchwork stde out, so the elastic can be
destgns lor pillows or ctrcular sewn on evenly and so it holds
flour length covers to go on to the nght stze. - MRS.
tables.- POLLY
R.K.R.
DEAR POLLY and E F Polly wtll send you one of
My mother solved the prcr her ' stgned thank-you
blem for me of a mattress left newspaper coupon clippers tl
With an odor alter bed wet- she uses your lavonte
ling , I would like to share 11 Pmnl:er, Peeve or Problem m
She cut out the top of the mat- her colwnn. Wnte POLLY'S
tress cover where the acci- POINTERS m care of ihis
dent had happened, removed newspaper
the affected filling below thts
hole and repacked tl wtth
loam rubber. One could use
OPENINGS SET
old rags, cotton, nylon hose or
There are numerous a[&gt;'
-wl)llte\&lt;er. She..bought a pteee potnlment openings lor the
of llckmg and patched the cut free cervical cancer clinic to
.. out part. Th.S solution was so be held from 8 · 30 a.m to 12
stmple and certamly better noon and from I to 5:30 p.m
than ha vmg to buy a new •on Oct 19 at the basement of
mattress. -MRS. B T B ,
Trtnity Church in Pomeroy
· . DEAR POLLY - I never ., The cltnic is free of charge lor
· throw away old jeans or au Metgs County WQmen.
dungarees if parts of them Only one cllnlc, with excan be used fur somelhmg panded hours, w1U be held
else. My daughter had two this month. Those wishing
patrs that were too short appointments may call 992which I cut off to make 5832 in the evenmgs . or on
shorts I saved the cu(-ofl weekend
pieces lor patches or rags but
found a much belter use for
them I remembered how
.. many ptasttc shoppmg bags
Better bro\t.s
Always
brush brows before
she went through last year as
tweezmg
so
you cn'!i spot the wetght of her school books
caused them to rtp at the but- and remove - any stray ,
tml'· so I proce&lt;;ded to make '1raggling hatrs

enact !he broad promises he

dt
BAKE SALE uy the Auxthar~ of Veter·ans Mt•murial
I..AURF.I.l'IJ~' f' BKI"l'J,;H
HEAi.Tfl CLUB, Thursday, Hospital 111 the EMS iJutldtug
6 30 putlul'k &lt;honer . at the bal'k -of !he hospttal Stile to
home of Mrs Amber l.ohn start at 9 am There will &lt;~lsu
Furty-ltrst anniversary of the be 1tems frum lht&gt; g1fl shup
dub to be t·elcbrated. Sun- O:tm.l hom~maUe suup fur salt•
shtne s1slers to be 1evealed
FREN CH Colony DAR wtll
wtth a gtft exchange
meet wtth the Pomeroy
ELEANOR CIR CLE, Chapter, Return Jonalhan
Heath Methodtsl Church,7 30 Met~s at the home of Mrs.
Thursday wtth Mrs. Jeanne Paul Eich tn Pomeroy at I :30
Cook, Mrs. Audrey Daven- p.m.
'port and Mrs. ~ hartes BradMARY SHRINE 37, Order
bury, hostesses
of While Shrine of Jerusalem
PRECEPTOR BETA regular meetmg, 8 p.m
BETA CHAPTER. Beta Fnday at Pomeroy Masomc
Stgma Phi Soronty, home of Temple.
Mrs Harvey Van Vranken,
SUNDAY
Thursday, 8 p.m Mrs. Pearl
MIDDlEPORT BPW Club,
Mora to be the guest speaker
Monday. 7.30 p.m. at the
MEIGS
COUNTY
Metgs Inn. Nattonai Bustness
HUMANE SOCIETY, 7 30
and
Prufesstor\ Women's
Thursday at the Thrift Shop
Week to be observed wtlh the
across from the Post office.
selectton of a "Woman of the
FRIDAY
INSTAI.LA TION OF ofBack benefit
ftcers of subordmate granges
Bad back ' Avotd any sport,
to lake place at 7 30 p.m. Fri- such as tenms, fencmg, golf,
day al the Rock Sprmgs or squash, that mvolves any
Gt ange Hall All suix&gt;rdinate sudden twtstmg or stdeolltcers mvtted.
steppmg.

'&lt;&gt;tO 10 OlAUH

'

--

n ..

r~~~~..,_~,~&lt;!':·&gt;:&lt;·:·::~: &lt;·:&lt;·:·.&lt;·:::~&gt;~'!-.~")~'-~~~~--~ i'';,m........__,,~A'!&lt;:::::A~I&gt;lt!&lt;

~

-----

"'

'

-.

.,

�'
•

---........---·- ---•
l'h•• Dati; Sen tint&gt;!. Mlddlepori-Pi&gt;mer&lt;')'. 0 ., Wednt&gt;sdal'. Oct. 12. 1977

ihat, in nearly 50 pert-ent of the homes across the natiun, ~he
mother must also hold down a job. TiiiS. plus the lung .standing
• thinking by many that their children should not ha ~: .'t .as
tnugh as they had it when they grew up, makes real d1scapl!"e
or many children nonexistent or at best. haphazru:d. 1he
shifting ol basic discipline, with accompanytng esta?,hshment
lht•ft :-;, and ntlwr illt.•gitimah• me~1tt1ds of obtaining these
of a values foundation, cannot be sul'(!essful if the rectptents of
~u~plies .
,
Barbiturates offer !(l'eat temptation to young people. They these horne responsibilities are cjtiefly the schools and law
are relatn•dy less l"ostly than many drugs of abuse, more enforcement agencies.
.
This department is well aware of its assigned tasks tn the
easily ubtained the first time because so many home medicine
cabinets still contain supplies from past subscriptions, and in community and assures all citizens that our efforts toward
first tries, the reactions can be mild and less frightening than accomplishments will be continual, wholehearted and
mcmy oth er drugs. Must youngsters arc convinced they are unending.
NEXT' " ANGEL DUST" - A LIVING. HEll.!
Wtder gr e-at pressures in school and at home, and this makes
Sponsored by : Downing-Childs Insurance Age~cy Inc.,
Uwm highly susCeptible to experimentation .
Middleport. Provided by Middleport Chief of Pollee J · J ·
.
ln reality, tllere ru:e fewer pressures on children today
than there have t&gt;ver been in thP ~st, onP big reasons bein~
fremeans.

arents: What do you really know about drug
HARBITl:RATES - DEPRESSANTS
&amp;rblturatrs &lt;JtJt as a $t'dauve and al~l a hypnotic , and
tlJll•kr rllany \ltlwr drJ.l,g~ uf abuse. they arr presenbed
h.'L!Ltnnately ror treatm~nt lir"such evnditwns as nen•ous
h ~!..::1\'~n . hypertension. in~Jm nia . Ppalepsy and for many other
!\''·~ .;;1ca l and psyt'hological disturbant&gt;es.
They ralm lhe C'Pntral nervous s&gt;·stem effe cth•rl)' "'hen
p•-. ~rly used, but since- their mclusion in the illicit street
!Har k.~l.

from lhr early 'SCE Wltil now. they are · today
Wt''&gt;l. rtbed .and dispensed with extreme professi ona l care .
\.s with heroin, barbiturates crea te physical and
P&gt;' • hological dependence. Clue! dangers li e in withdrawal
' · lromcs. which often include loss of muscle coordination'
&lt;•pileptir .seizures. and failure of the respiratory system'
· 't t.'UL Therefore , in attempting to take a barbiturate
• ·ff these drugs, he must be under close medical
··'f,l!:il \ln

usual methods of use: orally ,
r &lt;ln.&gt;llllusly and rectally . l'v1ost popular and readily availabl e
· th• ca psule and tablet for ms. among these being such
rilt:'rt&gt;

are

three

~lflt'flt i ons as:

.

- Penc&gt;barbital sodiwn- usually yellow capsules, known
as Yellow Jacke-ts, Nimbys, Yellows.
Amobarbital and Secobarbital - red and blue in color ,
.tnd half. Doublrtrouble, Rainbows, Tu ies, Tuinal.

' the streets

1:.

- Set.\1barb1tal sudJ.um - usu.::tll) n"ll, eapsulc form,
calh.'&lt;r Pmks. St&gt;ccy, Red Devils, Red ll1rds, Heds, by the1r
U&amp;rs.
- Amnbarbital sodiwn - all blue in c..\1lur , strt&gt;Ct-tetmed,
Blue Devtls, Blue 81rds. Hlue H&lt;a\'en . Blues.
" lntoxi eation " f('om barbiturates can result in reactions
rangmg from lethargy to deep coma, depending on how mueh
· has been taken . Extreme danger lies in taki~ too much and
then not remembering how ~much has Deen taken , and
c:ontinuing ingestion until, a coma results .
Also. users frequently ... often pW'posely ... cmnbine these
drugs wltl1 alcoholic beverages, to achieve greater r eactions:
in such applicatlon, barbiturat~s can be deadly! Often, th&lt;'
nwnber of suicides, accidental and intentional , t.Qat arl'
committed through the misuse of barbituni.les, are(gfeater
tllan tlle number accomplished with guns!
Although federal controls have demanded strict
accounting of these drugs. by manufacturers.' doctors and
phannacists. and law enforcement has come down hard on the
illicit suppliers to t,he street user, an unlcnown qbantity still
appears on the street in almost every area of t he country .
Much of t(tis supply has to originate in foreign laboratories, but
some carry U. S. trademarks. This does not, however , indicate
lack of cooper ation on the part of our pharmaceutical
producers, but rather . is very often the result of break ins

.

SEORC awards fete Nov. 10
rwe l,·e

prominent

' 'J de.n ts of southeaste rn
11-.:o ~·til be honored at
ens on Thursday, NJ5i' : l0.
•he Annua l Southeastern
t'l'lLl
Regiona l Co unci l
rrtogmucn and awards
banquet it was armounced
' , 1·1y by Hqbert L. " Bob"
ns: Pre':iJd ent of the

RC

Honorees have heen selected
by committees and the local
Chambers of Commerce from
the counties in which they
reside . The selection is based
on contribution to the · im·
me diate community and
southeastern Ohio in general.
The Regional Council, with
membership in 12 COll/ltles, Is
the oldest development
organization In the United
States. For almost 4{) years it
has been instrumental in the

:nns ·add eo that each
r the Council honors
llitst anding individua ls from
trr mem bers hip and the · proinotion of
L l" Oti es of t h e . re ~io n .

southeastern

Ohio, especially in highways,
t ouri sm, and educational
development. This year the
SEORC Is providing the
leadership and the impetus to
develop grass roots support
for the completion of the
Appalachian Highway from
Cincinnati to Belpre.
Tickets for the Nov. 10
banquet at the Ohio
UniversitY . Inn, which will
begin with a hospitality hour
at 5:30, can be purchased
from Rh od Mills, Logan

Trade Club, NetSonvtlle
Board of Trade, Athens
Chamber of Commerce,
Bernard Fultz,
Roger
Barron, Gallipolis Cl1amber
of
Commerce,
Ironton
Chamber of Commerce,
Portsmouth Chamber of
Commerc~· .
Howard
Thompson, Jackson Cl1amber
of Commerce, George Hilend,
· Charlie Gaskill, Wellston
Cl1amber of Commerce, S. R.
Cline, Gene Engle, Bob Will,
James Blower, and Car r
Dahlberg.
·

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION
2

PROPOSEDCO NSTITUTIONAL
. AMENDMENT

To adopt new Article X IX of the
Const itution of Ohio
I. TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
USJN G IN THIS STATE LEG· HOLD
TRAPS IN THE TRAPPING OF WILD
BIRDS OR
WILD
FOUR-LEGGED
A NIMALS (QUADRUPEDS) AND ALSO
TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
~SING ANY TRAPPING DEVICE IN · A··
MAN NER
WHICH
WILL
CAUSE
CONT INUED. PROLON.G ED SUFFERING
TO SUCH BIRDS O.R ANIMALS;
'

2. TO PROVIDE THAT EACH SEPARATE

V IOLATION OF THIS AMENDMENT IS A
CR IME ; AND

3· TO PROVIDE THAT ANY PERSON
MAY BRING A CIVIL ACTION FOR AN
INJ UNCTION TO STOP A VIOLATION
A ND TO
RECOVER
COSTS
AND
ATTO RNEYS FEES.
.C Proposed by lniative Petition)
A majority affirmative vote is necessary for
pa ss age .
YES
NO

SHALL THE PROPOSED '
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED? ·

ARGUMENT
FOR
THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Passage of Issue 2 w ill prevent needless
and ext re me pain and suffering for untold
numbers of animals . The effect of Issue 2 is
simi lar to the long accepted and humane
practice o f p utt ing a horse out of its misery
ra 1her· I han perm ilfing it to suffer after it
br!~ilkS \l lo g .
Iss ue 2 in no wa y bans trapping as either
a sport or profession in Ohio . . It does
elimin ate the use of the leghold t ra p . a
de vice whic h severel y injures its v ictim and
then con l in ues to hold the creature in a
con t inuing , and often long period of extreme
pain .
Several t ypes of quick k i ll traps are
T&lt;&amp;il able which· do not inf l ict such
wfferi ng. These traps wo uld still be leg al
and avai lable, to al l persons wishing to
~ngage in t rapping.
Persons who wisRie-. trap for pest or
dis e.ase co ntrol or for w Hdlife management
pu r poses may also continue . to do so.
providing that any of the many quick k ill
traps ava il able are used .
,.
Iss ue 2 al so prohibits the use of any
tr,loping dev ic e if it is used in a manner
wr\ICh will
cause cont inued. ' prolonged
.;r iering. This prohibi tion w ill not affect the
l"·oper use of any of the qu ick ki ll traps. •
S1mply put. passage of Issue 2 will end
suffering for an i mals whose pe lts are a _
v aluab le natural resou r ce. And. as more
hum an e t raps ar e used, fewer non -valuable
animals and pets wi ll be a cc identally
tr apped in Ohio . However. while prote.~ting
Ohio animals, humane tr app ing will still be
permi tt ed as a sport or profess ion in thi s
sta t e.
Co mmittee for th e Amendment : Robert
E. Cape, M ichael J . Donohue. Athony A .
'lrinsch mid f. Bruce Rouc h, an d San dra E. ·
&lt;owl and.

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Opponents of Issue 2, the an t i-trapp i ng
amendment . urge Oh ioans to vote " NO" for
three primary reasons :
l. The amendment would ban .all
trapping activit ies . not just the leghold trap .
2. Trapping , includ ing the use of the
leghold trap , is necessary for proper
wi ldl i fe management and conservation .
3. The subject- allowable devices fqr
catehi ng wild animals should n't)t be
included in the Constitution of the State ·af
Ohio.
The proposal as written . seeRs to outlaw
the use of "a ny trapp ing device.' ' which .
may even include mouse traps and rat
t r aps. c~es and nets . No di.stinction is
made among 'f!evices. Any method that
traps an animal or bird can be said Ia
produce suffering . Sc ientists trap certain
wild anim&lt;Jis for rabies resear ch and birds
for encepha l itis tests . Opponent s of Issue 2
believe thi s importar.l work on disease
control would be curtailed by passage of the
amendment .
Good wildlife management r equ ires
that wild animal populations be controlled
' at le vels ' consistent w ith t he 3pace and food
available to sustal'n them . An absence of
trapping to aide population control will
result. first in burgeoning population s of.
for example. fast -breeding muskrats and
raccoons ; followed by destruction of the
species through sti;lrvation and disease . The
trapping of w i ld animals in Oh io is
regulated by the · Division of Wildlife to
protect domestic pels from the ravages of
contagious diseases and to limit the taking
of wild animals to surplus animal
population and · pests . Trapping for pest
control. must &lt;Jiso be carried on by farmers
to protect their crops from rodents.
The Constitution of this state is the
basic document which establishes our form
of government and delineates the rights of
our citizens . It should not be cluttered with
issues. which , if to be legislated at all.
should be enacted into law by the Ohio
General Assembly .
Committee against the Amendment:
Rona ld James. Bob McEwen , Ronald K .
Milleson. Jerome Stano, and M . Ben Gaeth .
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONiAL
TEXT OF
AMENDMENT
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHJ1J THAT ARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO
CONST ITUTION BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS·
5ection 1. No person shall use in any manner in the

trapp.mg of wild birds or wild quadrupeds aJ1d legh~d
tra~ 1n ~he state. No pe~~on sl)arl use any trapping

dev1ce m a manner wh1ch will cause continued,
prolonged suffering to a wild bird or wild quadruped in
th is state .
Section 2. Ea ch separate v iolation of th is
amendment constitu~es a cr ime . In addition , an"y
person may bring a civil action in any Common Pl eas
Court for an injunction to stop vio la tiOns of th is ~·
amendment. Such person may recover the costs of
ac rton and reasonable attorneys tees .

UNITED STA TE S OF AMERICA. .
.
STATE OF OHIO
OFF ICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STA TE
I, TED W. BROWN, Secretary of Sta te, do hereby
ce rt i fy that t he foregoing are true and correct copies of
the amendment to Sec tion 1 of Article V of' the Ohio
Constitution proposed by if"'itiative pe tition . and the
am~ndment to the Ohio ConstitUtion adopting new
Art1cle XIX proposed by Initiative petition, together
with the arguments for and against each amendment
as submitted by the appropriate committee, and the
ba l lot language .

IN TES TIMONY WHEREOF , I have hereunto
subscribed my name and affi xe d my olficia l seal at
Columbus thi s 12th day' of Sepfembe r . 1977 .

· .TED W. BR OWN

Secretary of sfat~

i9l 281 10 1 ' ' 11. 18. 25 , lt c

a~use?

1

....
......

JERUSA L!'M (UP! )
Israel has agreed tD go to a
renewed Middle East peace
conference at Geneva oo the
basis of a joint U.S.·I~aeli
" working
paper "
and
challenged Arab nations tD
follow suit .
The l~aeli Cabinet unani·
mously approved the working
paper Tuesday in a five-hoW'
special meeting chaired by
Prime Minister Menahem
Begin , who was r eleased
from a hospital earlier in the
day . He had spenl II day
undergoing treatment fo
inflammation of the he t
membrane.

se riou s pr oblem and the
Ca binet decisioo was adopted
unanimously, " Begin said.
ln Washington, the State
Department said the Israeli
decision opened the way fc.- a
Geneva conference before the
end of this year and
announced it will transmit
the text of the wc.-king paper
to Arab governments through '
diplomatic channels. •
" We weleome the decision
announced by the Israeli
government/ ' the State
Department said. " We note ,
however, that what has been
accepted is still a working
paper, which may require
further negotiation after the

Arab governments have acceptance of the U.S.-Jsraeli
given their views on it .n.
dOC ument was far frpm
The paper was drafted in a 35sured.
marath on six-hour meeting of
Israeli Cabinet Secretary
President Carter, secretary Arie Naor said Israel is now
of State Cyrus Vance and awaitin g
.Arab
and
Israeli Foreign Mi nister Palestinian respoose and the
Moshe Dayan last week in " the ball is in the Arabs'
New Yc.-k.
court."
Although thtl provisions are
In New York, Israel 's
secret, it is believed ID call · ambassador to the United
for lllrael to negotiate with .a States, Simcha Dinitz, said he '
single all-Arab delegation at was confident of success at
Geneva
consisting
of renewed peace talks provided
Palestinian representatives, the Arabs do not try to 51\lisfy
but no members of the the "e xtreme demands'' of
Palestine
Liberation the PLO or Syrians.
Organization.
" We have done OW' 50 per .
The Arab nations have cent," Dinitz said . ''It is up to
refused to go to Geneva the Arabs to do tlleir part."
without the PLO and their

~

•

Lebanon results
lEBANON, Ohio (UP[) Mary Mel took the early lead
and stayed there for an easy
five-length victory Tuesday
night in the 161,000 Carnation
Pace, finale of the Ohio Sires
Stakea series for three-year-

old filllea.

PRO~OSED AMENDMENT TO THE

OHIO CONSTITUTION
1

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL

AMENDMENT
To amend Section 1 of Article V of I he
Constitution of Ohio
TO PROVIDE THAT A PERSON IS
ENTITLED
TO
VOTE
AT
ALL
ELECTIONS
IF
HE
HAS . BE-ti:N
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THIRtY
DAYS . AND
HAS
THE
OTHER
QUAL!F!CATIONS OF AN ELECTOR,
AND TO PROVIDE THAT A PERSON
WHO IS REGISTERED AND FAILS TO
VOTE lN AT LEAST ONE ELECTION
DURING ANY PERIOD OF FOUR
CONSECUTIVE
YEARS
MUST
REGISTER AGAIN BEFORE BEING"
ENTITLED TO VOTE.
(Proposed by Initiative Petition}

A majority affirmative vote is necessar,y for
passage ..
TEXTOFPRQPOSEDAMENDMENT
(The proposed new language is capitalized
and underlined)
ARTICLE V
SECTION l. · Every citi zen of the United
States, of the age of eighteen years , who has
been a resident of the state, county,
township . or ward. such l ime as may be
provided by la w, AND ' HAS BEEN
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THl.RTY
DAYS, has the qualifications· of an elector.
and is entitled to vot e at all elections. ANY .
ELECTOR WHO FAILS TO VOTE IN AT
LEAST ONE ELECTION DURING ANY
PERIOD OF FOUR CONSECUTIVE
YEARS SHALL CEASE TO B!: AN
ELECTOR
UNLESS
HE
AGAIN
REGISTERS TO VOTE.
YES

SHALLTHEPROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
VOTE YES ON HONEST ELECTIONS
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
SAFEGUARD YOUR VOTE. VOTE YES
ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 restor es the 30-day residency
safeguard to voter registration and requires
anyone who has not voted in four years to
re-register . This prevents someone from
voting falsely i n an area where they do not
reside or from wrongfully attempting to use
the name of registration of someone who
has moved away or died .
See that your vote is not stolen or cancelled
by a tombstone.
·
Vote YES on Issue 1.
PROTECT YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL
RIGHT TO VOTE ,
.
VOTEYESONISSUEl.
You have the constitutionally guaranteed
rig ht to be counted on every vote you cast.
Issue 1 protects that right by insisting on
safeguards against multiple or fraudulent
voting . Without it, the U.S.
Justice
Department has warned. there is almost no
way to trace the wide open vote fraud that
could occur. Instant registration can mean
instant fraud . Vote yes lor integrity in
government . Vote YES on Issue l.
iSSUE I SAVES THE TAXPAYER'S
MONEY. VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 wi'll prevent the squandering of over
$2.3 million of faxpayer's money . These
funds will be automatically spent if Issue 1
is not passed and the CLHent law is allowed
to stand.

Mary Mel, winner of three
quallfylng heats during the
swnmer and the series leader
with 22 points, covered the
mile In 2:01 l..'i, just 4..'i of a
second off the track record.
The winner, OWIIed by O.L .
Burkea of Tiffin , Ohio, and '
B. 0 . Burkes of Me·
Cutchenvllle, Ohio, earned
530,500 for the victory to raise
her season winnings t o

*·000.
She relumed $4, $3.4{) and
$2.20 for the win.

•
Captain's Reef came in
second and paid 56.411 and $4,
while Speedy Pet, the show
borse, returned $2.20.
Impatiens , a pre.race
quaUfier witl1 16 points, was
scratched from the Hl·horse
field because of lameness .
nightly
double
The
combination of Ivy's Cl1arm
(2) and Ima Fashion (8) was
wc.-th $261.
A crowd oY I, 400 wagered
Jl70,613 .·

ISSUE 1 CAN PREVENT THE BOSSES
AND MACHINES FROM TAKING OVER.
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 keeps elections in the hands of the
people and out of the pockets of the b ig
machine bosses. by protecting the integr'ity
of the individual vote. · It· guarantees every
Ohioan a voice in government b y denying
the bosses the opportunity for easy and
undetected mass vote · fraud . Vote 'tor your
right to vote. Vote s YES on Issue l.
ELECTION
DAY
REGISTRATION
MEANS ELECTION FRAUD. VOTE YES
ON ISSUE l.
Committee lor the Amendment : Jean
M . Barren. Will iam A. Miller, Jr .• W . C.
Channel'!. and Willi am H. Schneider .
ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT.
Ohioans deserve election s systems that
make' it easy to register and· vote. Ohio's
new election law does that through Election
Day and permanent registration.
..,
In 22 Ohio counties, r esiden t s have
always h&lt;1d the right to vote on Election Day
without register ing in advance. Now all
elig ible Ohioans may register on Election
Day .
Issue 1 would prohibit Election Day
registration for all of us. It continues
restrictions that shut out potential voters.
Over two million elgible Ohioans are not
registe red . Last fall on.ly 56 percent voted.
YOU SHOULD KNOW:
l. Separate lines for registration and
voting makes Election Day r,egistration
convenient for voters.
2 . States that have it report turnout s of
'between 65 percent and 76 percent.
3, Even t_he FBl couldn't find any fraud
in the five states with Election ' Day
registration, and the people of Ohio are
every bit as honest as tHey are .
4: Ohio's new Election Law strengthens
the . protection against fraud by requiring
reg1strants to show identification and
pr.oviding for five year prison terms for
anyone voting twice. ..
5. It requires automatiC pur$Jing from
registration li sts when people rpove or die .
6. Election Day registration is the
cheapest way to register voters .
ISSUE I
... denies Oh ioa ns the right to use Election
Day registration even through it work s in
other states,
... makes it more difficult for politica l
independents to have a
voice in
government. "
. .. . freezes . the ban on Election Day
regt stratron 1nto our Constitution before we
have a chance to see how it work s.
.
Election Day registration works
. without f.raud . Even Cuyahoga County's
GOP Chatrman \ldmlls the claims of fraud
are "pure baloney".' What really worries
them is not fraud - it's mor e voters .
VOTE NO ON ISSUE 1
.
Committee against the Amendment :
J.
Don . Maddux , J. Leonard Camera,
Me Lin, Tony P . Hall, Robert
E
O'Shaughnessy, and John K. Mahoney.
·
TEXT OF PROPOSED CO~ISTtTUTtONAL
AMENDMENT
.
(The proposed new language is that set forth in capital
1

BE IT RE SD_LVED BY, 1HE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHtOTHATARTICLE V, SECTION 1 OF
THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE AMENDED TO
READ AS FOLLOWS:
. Eyer.v citizen of the United States, of the ·age of
etghteen years, who has been a resident of the state
county , township, or ward, such time as may b~

provided by law, AND HAS BEEN REGISTERED TO
VOTE FOR THIRTY DAYS, has the quatlficatio
f
an elector, and is entitled to vote at all election~ ~sN~
ELECTOR WHO FAILS ttiVOTE IN AT LE-AST ONE
ELECTION DURING ANY PERIOD OF FO
CONSECUTIVE YEARS SHALL CEASE TO BE ~~
ELECTOR UNLESS HE AGAIN REGI STERS ·
VOTE .
·
TO

Wednesday. Ol'l .!

ASTIO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

"

Don't be hesitant this coming
year to expand your ambitions or
even to take a weiJ.c alculated
risk 1f it will help you make your
mark in the world . A sensib le
gamble could pay off.

LIIRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 231 Today
and tomorrow conditions look
bright tor you
regard ing your career and earn.
ing potential. Be alert for un·
usual de&gt;Jelopments . Having
trouble selecting a ca ree r?. Send
IC:)r your cd py of Astra -Graph
Letter by mailing 50 cents for
each and a tong , self-addressed ,
stamped envelope to AstraGraph, P.O. Box 489. Radio City
Station . N .'t'. 10019. Be 'sure to
specify your birth· sign .
eJ~ceptiona ll y

,.,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
Hold posi1ive thoughts regarding
the outcome of a pro ject impor·
tant to you . U your faith doesn 't
waver . the res I) II will be as you
en'w'ision it.

•

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Someone with your best in·
lerest at heart is trying to put
someth ing , beneficial tqgether
for you today. Let this person brIng it about his way.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 191
Treat business assoc iates today
more like pals than mere com~
mercia! acquaintances . Results
will be extremely gratifying.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 181
Vou 're lucky in competitive
si tuat ions today . You won't be
overmatched even against per-.
sons whose track records are
more impressive than yours .

PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20)
Situations as a whole should be
generally for~unate for you 10·
day. The key Ingredients for
success are to feel and act lucky .

ARIES (March 2l·Aprtt 191 A
situallon you 're involved in has
tar greater promise th~n
appears on the surface. Start
looking for the pluses today.
~· TAURU!l

("'prtt 20·Mar 201 This
is one Of those marvelous days

when you ge_t more by being a
; giver . .Be unselfish in all your
dealings .

..

GEMINI (Mar 21-June 20) There
1s a profitable .market for your
wares today. be they services or
goods. Keep In mind : What you
ha¥"e to offer is valuable.

. C~NCER (Juni 21·Jutr 221
Good things shou ld Mppen to
you today In environments th at
are socia bl e and .rela11.ed .
Di scuss business matters in
friendly settings.

LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) 11 you're in
need of assistance today-., go to
one whom you helped in the
past. This person will try in turn
to do more for yQu than you did
for him .

VlfiGO (Aug, 23· tltpt."221 Give
free reign to your imagination to·
day. Don't be intimidated by
blg'f'lgs or big &lt;h:ais. Vou can
cope with both.
tNEWSP,\Pf&lt;:H

t:NTERPRl S ~;

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
'QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective
Thru October 15th

BONELESS

BUCK-ET
..
$}39
CUBE ·STEAKS •••••••••L~•••

GROUND BEEF. •••••••L!·.

SlEW BEEF••••••••••••~~~ }

Deceased .
No t ice IS hereby given that
Helen R Fa rm er , of 107
Sou th
Second
Avenue .
M iddlepo rt. Oh10 . tlas beeri
duty
appolnted
Ad •.
mi nlstra l rill o~_ the Estate ot
James W Farmer , decease d ,

late of Meigs county , Oh io.
CrE&gt;t11!ors are r equl r ed to
I de t hei r claims wi t h . sa od
fiduc i ary
withiri
thr ee
mon th!)
Da·ted th is 78th day ol
Septem bC' r 1977
!) Manning D Webster
Judge
Cou rt o 1 Common P leas.
Probat e Oiv 1sion
{ IOJ 5, 12 , 19 ,.,.. .. '
PROBATE COURT OF "

Oct. 13, 1877

' Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am.10 pm
.Sunday 10 am-10 pm

NOTIC£: OF
APPOINTMENT
Cas e No . 14'27
E s·tatc ol James W . Farmer ,

MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
ESTATE OF 6ETTV~ JEAN
JORDAN . DECEASED

'·

lt2,.,il•9•77illl••••••ill•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~----...--~--:-::~=~~:"---..l!ll•••

$12 ,2 10 . 62, ·$32,430 .88 ;
cemet ery, $1 ,028 , $798.07 ,
$931 .11 ; fire equipment.
$358 .70 , $253 .33, $110 .53 ;
swimming pool, $324 .82,
$873.08, $5 ,531.86; planning
com mission, no receipt s.
$30,70, $124.31 ;
street
maintenan ce, $7 ,772 ..46 ,
$3 ,684.53, $8,622.46; federal
revehue sharing, no receipts,
no disbursements, $11,850.62:
anti::recession assistance, no
receipts, 578.78, $1,058 .28 .
Expenditures totaled
$17,929.1 1 while receipts
totaled $24,916.4{).
The balance on the council's
obligated
funds
amounted to $31 ,521.70 as of
Sept. 30 with receipts totaling
$1,381.17 and dlsburaements,
$31.94. This money is in the
general bond retirement
fund.
The total of all obligated
funds of the board of public
affairs as of .Sept. 30 was
$191 , 353 . 21. Receipts ,
disbursements and the
balance of each segment '
making up the obligated
funds, respectively, include:
sanitary sewer, $4,205 .71,
$4,271.61, $33,689.17; sanitary
sewer escrow, $1,155, no
disburserilerits, $139,840.09 ;
• liater, $7 ,315.06, $7 ,030.59 ,
$10,562 .93; water meter
trusts, $235, $75, $7 ,261.02.
Receipts totaled $12,910.77
and
disbursements,
Sl1,377 .20.
The bonded indebtedness or
the town amounts to
$1,329,893.75 or 12,874 per
capita.

'"' T""rodor. Oct. 13, 1877

c.

letters and underlined. ) ·

The balance of au ex-

according to the
!mo1n\hly report of Clerk -'
surer Gene Grate
submitted to village council
Monday night.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance, respectively, of each
fund making up the total
include: general, 515,482.42,

.,

0.

'""'. . . ,. . I.I..A.Ile funds
r~~~':e$6&amp;,660.08
lunds as of Sept. 30
In Mid-

Israel agrees to renewed conference
Hy AUEN ALTER

- The Daily Sentinel, Middteport-Pumeroy,

.r

Case No . 22217
NOTICE OF

BA~Y BEEF

$}39

BABY BEEF

SJ

19

Sl RLOI N STEAK.••••••L~~-••

LB.
.T·BONE STEAK ••••••••••••

BABY BEEF

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On s·eplem ber 72 . 1977, in
the Me igs County Pr obate
Cour1. Case No . 22217. Mar y
Jordan , Route 3. A l bany ,
Ohio 45710 was appo inted
Ad min isl rat r ix of th e est ate
of
Be rty
Jean Jordan ,
deceased . lat e o t Rou t e 3,

PORTERHOUSE

Albany ,. OhiO d5710 .
Mann ,i ng D. Webster
Common Pl eas Court .
Prob.ate Division
1\1\eigs County, Oh io
(9) 28, ( 10 ) 5, 12 , Jt c

PUILIC NOT.ICE .
.Sealed bids will be r~tcelved
in the office of the Village
Clerk, Pomer9v . Oh io, ~til
12 o'clock noon on October J,
1917 on any of the fol lowing
propose Is .
1. For the purchase by the
Village of Pomeroy of a new
1978 four door five passenger
sedit.n 'with the following
added equ'lpment ;
400 Cubic Inch engine ~
barrel carburetor, Min. VB
f?01Ne.r Steering and Power

YELLOW
3LB.
ON IONS••• ;•••••••• !~G••

(

Brakes

s black

tires
Foam rubber front seat 1
Spotlight on tett nand side
Heevy duty oil filter
Heavy dut)· betterV 80 AMP
Air Conditioner &amp; 61 AMP
Alternator
Positive tract ion rear 1u.le
Automatic
transmission
V.inyl upholstery
Roof Drip Moldings
116 Wheel ben
Calibrated
Speedomeff'!r
Pollee Body Package
Transfer Pollee Rad io,
Siren, Fleshing Lights , F ire
Extinguisher end protec tive
shield from present car to
new car.
2. For sale by the VIllage of
Pomeroy Its 1976 Chevrolet
lmpala ·four door, B cylinder ,
without rodlo eqUipment •. tire
extinguisher, siren, flashing
signals end protective shield.
The bidder may state either
what. he will give for the 1976
Che¥"rolet or what amount he
will allow as a trade . in for the
new pollee cruiser described
above .
Each bidder may bid tor
either the purchese of the
1976 Chevrolet or for the sale
to the Village ot Pomeroy of a
new pollee c'rulser descr ibed
above or both. Each b id must
contain the full name of every
person or company Interested
1n the same, end the, bid must
b~ accom panted by a cneck
or bond In the sum of $100 .00
to the . satisfaction of the
VIllage Council as a guaranty
that If the bid is accep.ted,
contract will be entered Into
a.nd lt~/.ertorm a nee ptoperly
secure .
T-hese checks or bondS will
be returned et once to ell
except the successfut bidder .
H is checks. or bond will be
held until the contract or bid
Is properly executed by him .
The right Is reserved to
refect any and att bids . 90 day
delivery from date of ac .
ceptance .
Jane Walto'l ,
Cltrk
VILLAGE OF
POMEROY
( 10 ) ll

CABBAGE •••·•••••••••• ~ }
VALLEY BELL

TWIN PACK__ ·
$l 29
BABY BEEF
·$}49 2% MILK~ •••••••••• :~~n...
ROUND TIP STEAK •• ;~ ••
BABY BEEF
$ 49 TENNESSEE PRIDE
$ 19
RIB STEAK •••.•••• ~ •••••L~:••
SAUSAGE ••••••••••••• ~~ ••
.

.

•,

COUPON

'

" ~ .;..: :, ,

........+1

$:

OXYDOL
5LB.
1 0~

$}99
·

ZEST
. A

CRACKERS

~:

DETERGENT '

:1

1-LB.

W/C .I.I

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Oct . 15, 1977

)

39¢

WIC

..

ASSN 1

','

COUPON

-,-:...,~:"'1

MAXWELL HOUSE

WELCH'S .. ... :.::

COFFEE

GRAP.E JELLY ::i

2 lb,

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 15, 1977

IQ, 'H r

I

COUPON

· COUPON

$599

W/C

Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer EKpires Oct . 15, 1977

32 OZ.

59¢

&lt;I

w/¢ ::

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
·res Oct. 1s, 1977

'

·'I

. :I

. I

�'.

."
- The Daily Senlim•l, Muldlep~•rt-Pn mcruy , o.. W&lt;~lnesday , Oet. 12. 1977

~2 - The Daily Sentmt'l, :'!ltddJt't).lrt-l\llfit'nl\. 0 . \\\&gt;dnt~sd.t) . Oet. 12. l9'i7

~HAANJC;t~

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l..i'

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l.•jll!

II

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•"li'&lt;&lt;Llllll
lfi,LI.,t~l.L !h. 1 1!.1\

]• l' t lllo•I L \.11\ILI
lllHI\!.111
I&gt; nHI• pol
ill WI

II

l',t•'

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\\••ld

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Lol ,\ L 1

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II L oiL' lj lt'!j
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t.... .•

'I '[, l,d
I'U(ll,•l , ,,
,.,,_ •1{11, l-11 lli••IL \!.t.
" I l. •t J'to'l,
Pl!ull• I;.J'. •; ~·

t"
I

1 •

Auto

..
1

A C&lt;\RE ER .,.. ,th o lulut f' lp1 o "'o"
t't \\ L-.mon wh o wa nh the best
m llh~ A pay checl-. every
,...t&gt;t•l-. lonto$11C lronge benel•h
ell local ... or I.. G t... e us o coli of
9&lt;11 ]480 or' w11te Wesl~rn
Southern Ltle ln:.vrante 21 B ' ,
E M0 111 Pomeroy Oh to lor 111
lor mQIIOfl

ADDRESSERS
WANTED
ltn
med1otely1 Wo1lo, at ho1ne no
ell\
e-..penence nece5scry
cellent pay Wr~te Amen can
Se• Vlt e · 8350 Pork. lone Suote
2b9 Dallas TX 75131 .
MEN FOR eiTlployme-n-t at Sugar
Rvn Flour Mill Pomeroy Oh10
Apply 1n person
J ,
HOUSEKEEPER OR m1ddle -cged
co uple for sem1 1nvahd Free
room and board Small salary
[614 ) 007 6284
or
t6l 4)
989 2303

NOTICE

-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
I DEADLINES

t

\l&lt;•llll,t\
\ "-I I"' ~-tlill\l.,n
TU&lt;--t lool
U,JU

f-

I hi ll

, I' \ 1

-~ ltl

,J,,\

ll ' \1
fi1Jd\,!1hlllu.ll

THt FAMILY of Alice Copehon
w1she~ fa than k
all who sent flowers . We also
want 10 thank the Ew1ng
Funeral Home , Mr Gero ld
Powell for the mus1c and the
Re"' Ha rvey Koch and Re v.
Ste..-e Wds~m for the com for tmg
words The poll bearers and all
the, fri ends and ne1ghbors .
Thonlc'O for your kmdness and
thoughtfulness. . Belly Fnend
and Boys B1U Capehart and
Fom1l~

CASH po1d for all mak•r. end
models ol mob tle homes
Ph one a reO cod i !&lt; 614 -423 -9531
TIMBER Pomerqy Forest Pro
duels Top price for standing
sowl1mb'er Coil 997 59b5 or
Kenl Honby 1 44()-8570.

Ileal &amp;.tat~

Sal.,.

lq70 1 TON Ct-fEV ROlET lrudc.
13 OCO m1 e. tro tore,_ $3 BOO
Call7-42 231tl

COAl luncsr e&gt;ne and colnum
r hlo11de ond cok1um b11n~ !01
dust fOIIttol onci !opeCIOI 1111).1119
~ air lor lonne14 E.. c t!ISJOI Salt
Wo• k.!!. Moon Slreet Po111e ro ~
Oh10 or phone 992 ,JS91

1q71 PINT O
' ~r1g the

CAMPER
S600
Als o
ho1 ~e
tratler 5450 Phone (014) 6q8

PARTS FOR 1971 Gola,ue Ford lo1
~ale Ph one 'N'l S85B
4

'1761 a f te r 5 dur
w•e~ and onyltme
Q.;iQ

wse~ends

3290.

1967 1HUNOER8lRO S-tOO Call
9q2 -2589
1975 FORD PINTO M P G G.ooa
gas mtleage Call ~1 7517
otter 6 pm .
-

ECONOMY IRACIOR w1th all at
ra chmen1s Ltke new , as~1ng
$'2150 Phone (614 ) 698 32QO

JQb7 FASTBACK MUSTANG. 289
Hurst four speed w!lh lcxkout
revvrse $100. Call ~2 - 5943
after 5 00
1972 GRAN TORINO Sport good
condJiton, SlOOO 742-1930.
-~

1972
CHE VROlET
IMPA LA
Custom $500 992-63 10 alter 6
prn ,
1073 PONTIAC GRAND Pn:oc P S
P. B. A C , power seat s. tilt
wheal , AM -FM Uereo w1th tape
player . o the r e1dros
Real
sharp. $2 .800. Call eventngs
992 -7055 or 00'2 -3692.,

LARGE MOBILE Home lot. Country
Setting . Meigs Schools. All
out1ht ies ov cilable Bott le gas
· heating only -_7 -t(:--3122
GUN SHOOT Racme Gun Club
e..-ery Sun ahernoon Foetor
Chock guns only . Assorted
meats
FULlER- BRUSH products for sole .
991 -3-110
ARE ,YOU R meinones crammed
1lllo a photo? Tu rn them into a
wall po1nt1n g or give that
spec ial someone a pprtrait for
Chnstmos I do portraits and
landscapes Reason ab le rates .
Call Sue. at 992 -7066.
THERE WilL be no hun t1ng. no
trespos s1ng and no e~ce pt io n s
on my ,Property. Bob McGraw
SKATE -A WAY Schedule . Ho llo
ween Par ty . Sot ., Oct . 29th
Races , Pnles. Ba lloons ,
Open Wed. Fn . and Sot. n1 te s
7 30 - 10.00 Available for
private par t1es . Man . Tues •
Thurs. n1tes. Sot. or Sun after
noons . Bus tronsport ot 1o n
cancelled Phone 985 -3929 · or

985-9996
FALl SPECIA L Para sol Bout1 que
Beauty Solon neKt to Skate a
Way Roller Rmk announces Per manent Spec1al 10 °1D off on
$15, ~ l? 50. S20 , duMng month
of Oct. Phone 985 -4141 , open
Tues. , Thurs Fri , Sat. Clos&amp;d
Mon . and Wed Operators : Son Ora Ke rn'O an d Cr ystal (Erwin)
Rayb urn Owners · RIC hard ond
Sandra Keens ·~ ,~

THE
JONES BOYS
NOW OPEN
9 A.M. til 9 P.M.
SUNDAY

12 til 8 P.M.
.. '
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LE VY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL

"

LIM IT ATION

"'

.

'

NOTic'E 1S her eby given
that 1-n , (lu.rs..u an ce of a
R.esolul10n of the Bod r d o f
Educat1on o t the SOi.J ihern
Lo ca l
School
D istrict,
Racmc , Ohio. pa sseo on !he
'21nd day at seo temoer . 1977,
thE:re w i ll be subm11ted to a
vote of the people o f sa 1d
SchOol Dtslricl at a Special
ELECTION to be held in th e
School (),strict . Oh iO, .Jr tl'1e
regular place o f vottng
there tn, on Tuesday,' the 25 t h
Clay of October, 1977. the
question of levying , m.. excess
of the ten mil l llm tlat ion. fo r
the benef1t of Southern Loca l
School D is lr ic t for the pu r
pose o f ma1ntenance and
operatton of scnools .
Said tax be i ng · an ad
di t 1ona ll a x o f 6.5 Mills to r u n
to r rwo years, which will
ra 1se a mmimum of $71 ,500.00
an nually , a~ a rat e . ~ot ex
ceeding 6 5 m ilt s tor eac h one
dol la r of valuat 1on, w h tC h
amou n ts to Sixly Five CellfS
tor each one hu ndr ed dollars
o f valualton, tor Tw o years .
The P ofls for sa1d E l ect 1on
will open at 6 30 o'c!ock AM
a,p d r em atn open unt i l 7 . 30
o'clock PM of said day .
Bv order of !he Boa r d of
Elect iori':. . of Metgs Coun t y ,
Oh iO
Ernest A Wmgett
Ch a irman
Dorothy M Johns ton
01rector
Dated Sept /6, 1?77
19!18 ( 10 ) 5, 1!'. JIC

FOR

RENT.

Troller.

adult .

9'12-318 1.

PORCH SALE All SIZes dothmg
d1 shes . l1 nens , set of men's golf
cl ubs , etc 957 Broadway St ,
M iddleport , Oh10 , tu rn r1ght at
pool last house on left. Thurs .
·Fri., and Sat .

..

HOOF HOlLOW. Horse s Buy , sell
trade or train . New and used
saddles Horse Shoemg . Ruth
Reeve s, Albor'ly (6\4) 698-3290
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society ,
Corel1ne ond adoptron Service .

992 7680. 7&lt;2 -3162.-992-5427 ,

1977, CHEVY SCOTTSDAlE , ' twotone s sltding gloss window .
992 -5671 .
197 4 YAMAHA
360
Kawasaki 400. ~2 - 6014 .

FIElD CHOPPER , Interna tional SO
En! llage blower with pipe or
sdo. 40' bole hay con..-eyor , us ·
ed 2 years Lorge bales alfalfa
orchard gross hoy . 843 -2256,
after 6 pm
125.000 STU Farced A1r Fuel Oil
lennox
Fur nace . 992 -2526,
after 5 pm .

CASE LOT
Strick ly wholesale 1o all.
Not less 1han lfz case.

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

PIANO TUNING and Repair. Lane
Daniels. 992 -2082 . 12 yeors serVICe to Tri -Caun1y Reference ·
Elberfeld s.
WILl BABYSIT tn own
Carol yn
Bo vm an .

•279.95

home
{bl4 }

667 -6279,

your

water

FOR SALE
New Co -Op . water and
softeners, model VC-S VI.

Oo11y 1279.95
Save sso .oo on a new
Hotpoint RefrigiratOr ·
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
FreeZer
$25.00 Discount

WESTINGHOUSE UPRIGHT 18 cu .
ft . freezer , new 3 leather
jacke ts ,
st ze
42 ,
new
Shakespeare Wonderbow . 55
lb . test . 992 -7205 , evenmgs.
SEARS wood -burnmg
healing
stove . S150. Coll949"1253

·=-

Sl 125 HONDA on-off rood motor cycle . Exc ellent cond ition .
949·2219 , anytime .

1 Good
Uprtght

Used
Fre~zer , ,

Amana
USD .OO.

1 Good Used McCullough
10-10chainsaw

sus

1 Good used McCullough
310 E Chain Saw
$9S
1 Good

Used

Homelite

XL12ChainSaw
$125
1 Good Used Homelite
Chain Saw
ISO
1 Good Used McCullough
Chain Saw

$50

Pomeroy Landmark

alter 5.

1976

MERCURY

BOB CAT

RtJno b o ut
Aut omat iC
4
cyl1nder . ~'} W0 Col! 949 2112
alter 4·00'pm .

New, 12 room, 4 bedroom brick home with two acres ot
ground, 2 car garage with carport. 21!3 baths, 2500 sq.
ft. of livinQ space. elec1ric heat, very modern kitchen
and the best appliances. Fireplace with heat-a- later .
located 3 miles from Rt. 11 past Chester, Ohio, turn left
on hrst road past West Shade River. Shown by
appointment only.

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS . Hobstelter Jr .
Real Estate Broker
P,h one 6 T4&gt;985-4 186 aner 4 :00 P , M.

I,

.

!192-2206 Of 992-7630

King5bury Home Sales

'1llt Oriltntlol1
MDI Tilt lmiliiM

Superior
EllriCtion

Steam

Young's
Carpeting

HOMESITES for sale. 1 acre and
up, Middleport, near Rut land .
Coll991 -7-48 1.

A

BARGAIN

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
oil elec .. I oc;:re . Mtddleport,
close to Rutland . Phone 992 748 1
SMAll farm for sole . 10 ~'1 down .
own er fi nanced . Monroe Coun ty , W Vo . Phone (30-4 ) 77 2

-

Circumstances require a
fast sa le on this 3 bedroom
home . Has bath, city
water, gas furnace , corner
lot and 9arage . S17 ,.500

3102 or 130-41772 -3227 .

Old 4

TERRIFIC - Fi n1shed in
Native Oak . Large room s
include din ing and 4
bedrooms
Atti c
for
storage, wrap around
porch. 2 car garage on
corner lot. 535,000.
acres . a 3 bedroom home,
bath , 011 furnace. n ice
gambrel ~ roof barn with
e lec tri c ,
water ,
and
concrete floors . Lots of
other buildings .
Only

$26, 600 00.
ONE FLOOR PLAN -

save
ratny
bath ,
water

For

JUST LlST.ED -

2 story

fra m e
in
excellent
con dition . 3 or d bedrooms,
bath. modern kitchen, nat.
gas hot wa ter
heat .

'
Buy this and

$31,900.00
We have ~

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

ooly $7 ,000 .
NEW LISTING -

3

bedrooms . bath ,_ dining
room, k i tchen inch.Jdes
range &amp; refrig . Nat . gas
heat. basement. garden
space. $12,500. •
1

a location on good co untry
year around road 53 acres
with coal cropping out , 2
good spririgs, 'land la ys
good and all minerals .

$16,500.
.
WHY NOT -

JUST LISTED Ranch
type abou1 12 yrs. old , 3
bed roo ms , dining room ,
modern kitchen , bath ,
carpe ting , paneling , nat.
gas
1urnace.
Asking

Like 57

WOULD YOU -

\

•

good

going

business for sale For
information p lease drop in
the office.

WE HAVE A GOOO
SELECTION ' OF
PROPERTY FOR SALE
AT THIS TIME, DROP IN
1\ND HAVE A LOOK .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAiill&gt;
ASSOCIATES
992-2259 - 992-6191

River

frontage with
this
4
bedroom
home .
Has
. central heating and large
tot . In Syracuse and just

$16.500
JUST STARTING OUT OR
OWN
PROP.ERTY
ALREADY, YOU SHOULD
SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO
OFFER.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

9:0Q---Mer v Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15;
M ickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8, 10.

9 :JQ--E dge of Night 6; Andy Gri1f l1h 8; Here's Lucy 10
1 0 : ~Sanfard &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah

Box 34

A!.LEY OOP
'&lt;OU'IlE INDIUII4NING
ll-lE liME-MAO-liNE (!!

BUT...
WHY?

Women Only 15 .

11' SEEMl'i TO
ME 'THAT 5
03\/lOUS, lF

1: 3G-0ays of Our Uves 3,4,1 5: As T he World Turns
8, 10.

YOU'LL LOOK

AROUND YOU,
OSCAR !

8-29-pd .

I

BRADFORD. AuCftone er , Com·
EXCAVATING . dozer . backhoe
plete Se r..-ice. Ph one 949 -2487
and ditcher . Chorle1 R Ho t·
or 94.9 -2000. Roc1ne. Oh1a Crltt
f ield , Bock Hoe Serv ic e ,
Bradford
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 1.42·2008 .
ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
WILL do roo!tng . construct ion.
Sweepers , roosters , iron1 all
~lumbing and heating . No job
small appliances . lown mower .
too large or too small. Phone
ne)l t to Sta te H1ghway Garage
742 -2348
on Route 7. Phone {61.&amp; ) 98 5CARPENTER , floormg . ced1ng,
3825 .
paneling Phone 992 -2759 .
REM ODEliNG. Plumbing, hea ting
HOWERY AND MARTlN h ·
end all types of general repair
coveting . sept1c syslem s ,
Worlo. guaran teed 20 yean e~
dozer. ba ckhoe, dump truck ,
per1ence Phon e 992 2-t09 .
limestone, gravel , blacktop
SEWING MACHINE Repairs. !t8r·
pav1ng. Rt. 1.&amp;3 Ph one 1 1614)
~or tce all makes , 992-2284 . The
69B · 7331.
Fo br,ic
Sho p ,
Pomeroy .
BATHROOMS AND K1t chens
Author ized Singer Sales and
remodeled ceramic tile , plumSer.,lce. We sharpen Scissors .
bing , carpentry, and general
EXCAVATING
, do1e r, loader end
maintenance
13 years eJ~ ­
backhoe work ; dump truck s
per len ce . 992 3685 .
and lo-boys for hire, will haul
EXCAVATING, BACKHOE, do1er 1
!ill dirt , to soil , limestone and
trencher, low boy.' dump
gro.,el Coli Bob o r Roger Jeftruck s, septic systems
!3ill
fers , day phone 9'92 7089 , night
Pullins , phon~ 992-2H8, .doy ot
phone 992 ·3525 or 9'92· 5232
night .

ANN BAilEY 'S Uptiolstery Rt
Portland . Ohio. 8-43 2542.

"

AUCTION SALE , every Tues . and
Fri. at 7 pm . New and used
merchondi!ie at Ohio R1ver AuC:"~­
tion, Meigs Plaza, Middleport ,
Oh1o . Home Chane (304 )

773·5471.

THE ACTOR'S

kSOUTID

AND THE RE IT 16,
JUST OVER TH' BRIDGE··

-IJ

Yesterday's

Now arrange the ctrcled leners to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
, gested by 11'1e above canoon.

A

r.J I I 1 I I J

I

Jumbles MANLY WAGER SCRlBE MOSAIC
Answer · What all the gl~s liked most about 1he
handsome bachalor-HE WAS SINGLEl

8: 30--Wha t's Happening! 6,13 ; Best of Ernie Kova cs

ACROSS
I Labels

TH!;
L,A.ST

&lt;;H()jJ

'10U
WHAT l

5 Dogs ;
hounds
II Seed

0~~-

6oV0HT I

coa tin g
12 Wife of
Pan~

!3 Homan
histonan
14 Charmiog or

·

Charles

4.88 sq~ yd.

15 Avail

Reg. $6.95 -not installed

16 Desse rt
17 Sea call
18 U .S. Navy

30 rolls of carpet In stock.

engineers
GASOLINE ALLEY

9 .0G-Man From At l ant is 3,4, 15; Three ' s Company

6,13; Hawaii Flve-0 B.10; Tour En L' Air -Ballet
Adagio 20 : Advocates 33 .
9 :3Q--Soap 6 , Mary Tyler Moore 13.
lO :QO--Rosettl &amp; Ryan 3,4, 15; Redd Foxx 6. 13. Bar naby Jono B.10; Dickens of London 33 ; News 20.
10 :3o--Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20 : 11 ;0Q--News
3.4,6,B, 10, 13. 15; Dick Cavett 20; MacNeil -Le hrer
Repor1 33.
11 :30--Johnnv Carson 3.4, 15; Pollee Storv 6,13, 'Movie
" Massacre at Fort Holman" 8; 12 :0Q--Janakl 33 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

IT 'JJf...S

I.E! 1,1(;

Good selection all on sale.
Installed with padding 1 no
tdra to pay .

20.33.

~

BORN LOSER

1

742·22 11

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan ' ~ Heroes 15 .

6:QO--News 3,4,8. 10 , 13, 15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6 :3o--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burn e tt &amp;
Friends 6. CBS News B,IO; As We See It 20.
7:DO-Truth or Cons . J ; Three Tower North 4, llars
Club 6; Gong Show B; News tO; To Tell the Truth 13 ,
Gilligan's Is. 15; Coping with Kids 20 ; Anyone lor
Tenn~son 33.
7 .3o--Hollywood Squares 3,4: $100.000 Name · That
Tune 6 ; S25,0QO Pyramid B; MacNeil -Lehrer
Repaort 20.33.; Thai's Hollywood 10; Nashville on
lhe Road 13; Marly Robbins Sootllqht 15 .
B: DO-Chips 3,4, 15; Welcome Back . Kolter 6, 13;
Waltons B. 10; Once Upon a Classic 20,33

' {Answers tomorrow)

,.----,---.,-- ---... 20 Harem

When do we

You men
lt.now LJOur

40 Wa t('ht•d
DOWN

I Ankle·

bone
2 Greet th e
new

day

12 : 40-Assasslnatlqns: An American Nightmare
4,6, 13; 1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4,; 1· 3Q-Mary Hartman

3 Lea\'l'

alonr
{4Wci, .)
4 Cunmn g
5 lmita1or
6 Start of
a toast
7 Cuckoo

K Am.

self-destruct?

Yesterday 's Answer
10 "Two for
25 Criticize
the - "
26 He pitched
16 Mmd th ese
a senes
vegeta~lcs

no-hitter
28 Alarm

19 G lobule

~· renc h

29

Rev

22 Hadamcs'
lover

group

23 E scape ;

30 Ceased

13 wds. l
9 Did secret

a~siqn ­
ment~!

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

992-3-162.
1972 El CONA 12 x 70ft Mobile
Home . bcellent condttlon .
Total electric Air conditionmg.
$15 ,000 val ue new : now 'IJ
price. (304) 773-5%5 .

I

!

Prinranswerhere:

Coll742-22ll
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

8 x 30 MARLETT HOUSE Tra il er
w1th canopy . Needs repa ir,
S600. Coli evenings , B1ll ,

B; Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 20,33;
Gomer Pyle . USMC 10; ; Dinah 1?
4 · 3o--My Three Sons 3; Part r idge Family ·4; Brady
Bunch B, lO ; Little Rascals 15; ·
S: DO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Nleghborhood 20 ,33 ; Hogan ' s
Heroes tO ; Emergency One 13 : My Three Sons 15 .
5 :3Cf-Odd Couple 4. News 6; Elec . Co. 20.33; Mary

"HABII " WAS .

ll and 15 ft. width CarP!'I .

rubber bock.

KI

IJTTI.E ORPHAN AN NIE

Gandy Strip
Rubber Back
Regular SUl
Sav• S4.U Sq. Yd.

AUCTION EVERY Fri. , 7 pm . lots
of new and used merchond1se
at Oh!o R1ver Auction . Meigs
Plato , M 1ddlepart , Ohio . Home
Phone (30&lt;1} 773-5471

Rascals-Our Gang 4: Gong Show 15; Gilligan' s Is

10 -I Z.

SAVE ON
'
CARPETING

1.

2:1l0-$20,000 Pyramld 6,13; 2:3o--Doc1ors 3,4,1 5; One
Life to L ive 6,13; Gu iding Llght 8, 10;
3:DO-Another World 3,4,15 ; All l n The Family 8, 10.
Ant iques 20.
3: 15--General Hospl1al 6. 13; 3 :3o--Match Game B, lO;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 4 :Go-M ister Cartoon 3; Little

I II.,'"",D••_,...... •"'•"'···--)
~ If

BlOWN INSULATION . Ge t th ree
estimates Cell 667 -6479 fo r
free estimate .

wnlmg

35 Type style
(abbr. I
36 - whiz

24 Homer''
m agic herb

6 :30 P .M . - Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 :30 - Coach ' s Corner

8 :00- Home Digest
9 :00 - Cable Journal
lO : Q0--700 Club

nver

evasion

TO; 2:1Q--News 13.
·
Movie Channel 4 5$.7 P.M. - Mother, Jugs and Sped I PGl
9 &amp; 11 P .M . -Twilight' s Las1 Gleaming IR)
Cable Channel 5 -

Weanesa~y,

l

BRIDGE
7-spade bid saves points

.'

Rutland

'•
A FAT!JL!hl

32 "-,the

WEST

Beloved
Cowllry "
33 Age
31 Coronets
36 Network
37 ~ de
Balza c
38 liaison

•AQ9752
• J 106

·¥AK987
~
tQ8 3
•AK86 2

Both vulnerable

FREE GAS -

Why worry ab,out the high cost of

YOUR

HAIR.

LOOK

APARTMENT IN NEW 'KJRK
W1111 A 5T/04NGER AND
1i'.UNT11BES51E 6\N ~IND
la:JMANCE AT H£1&lt; AGE ...

MAYBE I OUGI-iT 10 MEET

NOW THATIO

DINO BARB/\1&lt;151 HALF WAY1

WHAT I CALL

t5EFORE THE PARADE
PASSES ME BYI

1'0.$/TIV£
Th'INKING .'

Partial List : Brass bed, Iron beds, cherry wood
HERE

matching loveseat. rocker and armchair, frost-free
refrigerator, gas range, Westinghouse roaster ave,-.

Five

bedrooms, nice l 1/2 story house, large living room with
shining oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area .. 2
full baths , 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs . Completely
tn sulated with F A nat gas furnace. Large porches &amp;

and cablne1, hide-a -bed I like new), maple&gt; gossip

MINERSVILLE - 4 bedroom house. mostly carpeted.
w rap around por ch, garage,. large lot , ail overlooking
the Ohio Ri ver . Aski ng $16 ,500
• ~

.. MEL WINGROVE, OWNER
HOWARD BEASUY, AUCTIONEER
(304) 773-5471

Good l bedroom house with

bath. Two more small bedrooms could be finished
upsta irs . Also garage, storage building , strawberry
patch and garden space . Driveway ts electric heated.
Ni ce OhiO River view . Furniture can be bought extra.
Pr ice for quick ca le. House and lot, $12,600 .

Call Jimmy Deem Al949-2388

•'

'

w«&gt;rk

OHIO RIVER AUCTION
I

409 PEARL STREET
•MEIGS PLAZA
MIODLEPORT,OHIO

,,
'

••
7•

It:

Pass

PasS

Pass

I WAS RIGHT?

A'60UT TKAT I

WHEN 'i'OU'RE HOT
'{OU'RE HOT !

doubled for minus 1100 points.
That is 810 points less than the

score · for seven diamonds bid
and made.

Opening lead - K t
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

~~~~
This isn' t really an answer.

We answer all questions ac·

z

w

Ktn~ f'nt u rl's 'Sv ndu:~ l• ,

AT WORK RETRIEVING
11-lESE BOTTLES.'

Inc

WHEN WE

RECOVER
OUR

STRENGTH ,

WE: SHALL

RETURN
THEM R::&gt;R
A CASH

REMTE.'

AT

Pass

2t
7t

seven spades , down five

companied by a stamped adWold, Bob Hamman and Bob·
dressed envelope ~rrespec li ve
..·
-~ by ·· .Wolff won the grand
Q F D G national team championship of 1he time involved , but just
IFDD
KNA
I ~· V B
MSil
by beating the Washington don't have the tlme to answ e r
E
team by the smallest possible questions that are nOt accom·
JZFAV
MSB
EW
N sz M · E Z M
panied by that stamped. admargin (I IMP ) in the finals
dressed
envelope.
J Z ·V V F N A Here is one of the most·
T N D N U B. ~ ,
SF V
remarkable hands played ear·
(For a copy of JACOBY
ly in the match .'
MODERN . . send $1 to: " Win af
TJEPBJQ
It is remarkable in that the
Bridge " c/o this newspaper.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONLY WAY TO UNDER- bidding al both tables was , P.O. Box 489. Radio City Ststfon
STAND A WOMAN IS TO LOVE HER - AND THEN IT ISN'T identical. In each instance , New York, NY. 10019)
NECESSARY TO -UNDERSTAND HER.--5YDNEY HARRIS
IN t:WliPA PER E:~n; twtus~. ... ssi\' ,

l PROTEST.' WE
HAVE BEEN HAF-0

.,

1.

South
1¥
5 N.T .
Double

East's jump to four spades put
considerable pressure on
South and each South solved
his problem by bidding five
notrump .
That bid is the old CulbertS«&gt;n grand slam force asking
North to bid seven w1th two of
the three top trump honors. A
very dangerous bid here si nce
if North held j u st SI X
d iamonds the grand slam
would not make.
. Aotu.ally,; it would have
made, but 'ne1ther Soulh got a
chance to play it. Both East
players elec ted to believe
their opponents and saved at

f'RV PTOQI I OH: ~

(?) 19'1'7

bench, two recJJners, vanity dresser, Halllqafter
· radio, qullts, blankets, old kerosene lemps~ color TV.
bleck and white TV , gfass~are, plus boxes of misc.,
and other Items too numerous to llsh
...

garage . Lee. In Chester. Price $19,BOO.

UPPER SYRAC USE -

CAN SHAICE AN

1:00 P.M.

Priced for qv ick sa le at S37 ,500.00.
IN

WINNIE

, WHAT MADE YOU
DECIDE TOOOID
11 DINO'S DEN" IDNIGHT WINNIE?

North Ea11

The Texas team of Curtrs
aposlropllcs. th t' h•n j. ! \11 ,1JHI fnr m:-.tion of the' words nre all
hint li. F.cn· h day the cmlc lett ers arc d irTerrnt
Smith, Dan Morse, Eddie

I~ MY DAUGHTEr(

ESTATE AUCTION -SALE
SATURDAY, OCT. 15·, 1977

he'ating your home, outside l!ghts,'heating your water.
dry ing your clothes. etc. We ' ll se ll you your own gas
well Not only that we'll throw in a good 11h story house
with 3 bedrooms and bath . nice dining room and full
basement , also over 50 acres of lar"d w ith a l.,rge
beautiful pond stocked w ith fish . Call for appointment .

KIDS

to

One lct ll' r simply l-\\,unls for :moth er I n !ht s sample A is
u ~C'cl fnr i'lw thn•t• 1.'"· X f or the I Wi l O's, ett". Si ngle lt.• tters.

••

West
I

DAILY . CKYPTOq liOTE - Here's how
AXVIli.BAAXR
Is I. 0 'N G F E I. I. 0 W

c

.Q 9 7 3
SOUTH IDI

jokest e rs

SPACIOUS HOME TO• FIT .YOUR

¥Q2
tlO

• J 10

~~~!Jl39 Mmstrel

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

EAST
• K J 86 '4 3

tJ2

d'-

B~DGET . 3 Bedroom . lovely car~eted l tving room,
w1th sl ldtng glass doors off family room , f ireplace, nice
dining room . kitchen with lots of cabinets. All
r emode led inside &amp; out Corner lot . Close to schools &amp;
shoppi ng area A " steal" at $1t,500. Shown by
_ appointment only .
.

13

NORTH
•to
• 513
tAK97651
• 51

~&gt;-•·tn·~! AS {)!3SO&lt;fi3EP."-

'

October 13

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

l.IJ.ABNER

JUST LISTED -

6; Here's Lucy ·8;

J oker 's Wild 10; M ike Douglas 13.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Price Is Rlght B,10
11 : DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Marcus Welby, MD. 4.
11 : 3Q--Knackout 3,15; Family Feud 6,13 ; Love of Life
B. lO; Sesame St . 20.
11 :55--CBS News 8; ~ovlng Free 10.
Court 8; Midday 13.
12:30-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,1 5; Ryan ' s Ho pe 6.13; Bob
Braun 4: Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; E lee. Co . 33 .
l:DO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; ; All• My
Children 6,1 3; Young &amp; the Restless 10 ; N ot for

Chester, Ohio

?2Jimo

New

12 :DO----News 3,4,6 ,10: T o Say the least. 15; D ivor ce

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Mike Y011nc
At

1-lHM

St. 31.

Short Slor y 20.
10 ·DO-Big Hawaii 3.4,15; News 20.
10 3Q--As We See It 20; 1l:DO-News 3,4,8,10,1 5; Dick
Cavett. 20; Ma c Neil -Lehrer Repar1 33 .

Phone 915 -3806

Clrpele UpiiGIStery
~hone

' il; MOVI~ rhe Girl Called H at ter
9 :QO-Oregon Tra
Fox " 9,1 0; Great Performances 33 ; American

oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:3D-Marv Hartmal',! 10.

Residential
and
commercial .
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime . •

lootol,~_.,.o.

13.
....
7; QO-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morn ing America 6,13, CBS
News 8; Bullw lnk le 10.
7:3o-Schoolles 10; 9 · 0~Cap1 Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame

13

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

SAVE OM YOOR fUEL BlU lliiS
WIMIER AMO BEAUTlf,l YOUIIIOBllf
HOME. Wt tiM ~~~tilallte..-ial nntiJ of
colo~t lilt-time lhlminum undtrptn•
ina,. F01 1our pUce ol tnifHI 1nd kl
satisfy )'OUt iASUrlnct ~PiftJ' Itt us
tie down rt~~r mMU1 horne. Thtsl Ut
downs 11e mtdlllliciiiJ instaHtd kl
assurt m111m1m safety. Contact liS for
I Clllaity IWnlftl- Don't Wlil till iU
for!fls on JQUr rvef, Itt VS CDII it .,...
ond slop ~nliol ltols. CAll
'l!l-7031 (II STOP BY llOO [ IIAlM
STj I'OIIEIIOY, 01110 Rll l FlEE
ES IMAIE.

Chuck Wh ite Rr,part s 10; Good Morning , Tri Sta te

Tim es 8, 10; N ova 20.33; 8 :3D-Bust ing Loose 9, 10.

Phone 992-21Bl

REAL ESTATE FOR SAL£

l975GRANADA . V-8, Aut o . P.S..
P.B . A C. , AM radio . new
rod 10ls 34,(X)(} miles S3, 100
991 388b

1-17-lfC

'at ....

fi ne quallty built home th is
is. 3 bedrooms in ri ght
decor, maste r ha s bath ,
also ufit1 ty room , family
and patio. One acre. Plent y
room for children . $45,000 .

A

Sun rlse Sem ester 10.
6 : 25--New W orld 10; 6 : 3D-Doctors on Call 4 ; News 6 ;
Sunrise Semester 8; 6 : 4~Mornmg Report 3; .
6 : 5Q-Good Morn ing, West Virginia 13; 6 .55-

ll . ls-N ews 4,6,13: 11:3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ;
Hawaii F rv e -0 8; ABC News 33; Mov ie " The
· Fakers" 10.
11 45--Starsky &amp; Hu1 ch 6,13; 12 ·011-Janakl 33.
12 : 4~Movie "The Gun and t he Nun " 8; 12:Ss-News

9.- ~Jack W . Carsey, Mgr.

....

:

~h .

lltdnillt, O.

992·1!191

NOW l.ET 'S GET 'IT WE LL., .YEAH ...
DOW!J T~ THE
T' TEL.~ YATHE
' !JlTTY·S R ITTY! TRUTH , CAROL.··
SOMETH lNG.' S
rM WORRlED
YOUR MlND,
AeD UT EASY !
R I&lt;?I HT;

D ..\.:

$29 ,000.
"
HOW ABOUT THIS -

(lJ Good Refrigerator 1200

1967 NOVA. 6 cyl. Extra clean ,
$500 . 1971 Hondo CB 350 , e,o: cell ent condttion S500 Three
roil motorcycle traile r . brand' h&amp;w , $350 . 949·2526 .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

$14.000

!'low O,ly
test

·, '

bedroom house on l evel 2
lots with bath , city wa ter,
natural ga_s in Rutland .

REGISTERED F~ALE St Bernard HOOVER SWEEPER . $20 Good
shape . 992 -5501.
to ' g1ve away Ia good home .
Phone 742 -2123 .
WHITE b6 inch Sterhng k1tchen
sink un1t wllh fauce t . II .6 cu ft .
ADORABLE GRAY k'1tten needs
a~ora c ado
Fr~g1doire
good home , Jayne Hoeflich ,
refr1ge r ator . White
G . E.
qq2-5292 .
double -oven • stove
with 2 STORY · 3 bedroom frame
house , F.A . fur nace , slorm win AKC PbOOLE pupp1es , I male , 1
rotiss erie 949 -1788.
dows , fireplace 1n Middleport
fema le , 8 weeks old $75
1976 FORD 1 ton vo n w1th panel Phone 992 -3457 ~, 992-3493 or 992 3391 .
ing. carpet, !railer hitch and
TO GIVE Away : AKC reg1s1ered
electric trot ler brake
1072 Sl X ROOM house at 613 Mill St .
Middleport . Good cond1t1on In
ma le Schnouler, salt ond pep Camper . 22 'Mt. i,Qng wifh air ,
4:1uire at 439 lincoln St .. Midper. Female black Schnauzer antenna . Coli 74-r-2748. Both,
dleport.
type . Little mixed breed ton
$8,800
:::.:._·----~-pup Mole puppy - half pood le ,
1947 CHEVY CAR. 1967 Dodge . . - - - - - - - -holt co llie . 742 -3162 .
pi ckup truck lot 1n M 1ddleport ,
AKC REGISTERED blocl-l and ton
equipped for 2 mobile homes .
female Cocker Spaniel , $100.
Coll992 -632'2 , after 5 pm .
For
stud
se,rvice .
AKC
regis tered bla ck and ton mole ONE 8 h ftbei-glcss shell tor
pickup truck . Good condihon .
Cocker Spaniel . show quality .
949·2656.
A lso all breed dog grOOfl'llng.
JNCO"',.b"A.TilP
742-3 162.
CUT HEATING Costs I Shenandoa h
basi c wood heater
Mil e
Borgen , Authenzed Dealer .
No. 212 43 a cr: es of
Hamsonvitle 742 2704 .
vacant land close to mines.
Pn ce S6, 700.
30 GALLON HOT water tonk , piCture frames , some an t1que
CALL US AND CHECK 1
dishes, other ilems . 7A2 -2078.
STARCRAFT FAL L Sale . MiniSEE
IF. 1 WE
HAV
motors , 10 and 22' TraVel NICE 3-piece set lad1es Som son1te
SOMETHING
YO
Trailer s. 18' 5" $3 ,799, 25' 7"
luggage . $35. Golf carf , seven
MIGHT NEED.
Bunkhouse $4 ,87 5. Fold -down ,
Men's clubs , all new $85
$1.700 up We sell ser..-1ce and
Charlene Hoeflich. 992 -5292.
804 W. Main
quali ty Open Sunday s. Camp
Pomeroy
992-2298
1977
DODGE
''
'
ton
.
Short,
Conley Storcrolt Sa les, Rt. 62,
wheelba§e 6 cyl. ii ld . 20 plus ·
Afler Hours Call
N. of Pt Pleasant
~
M .P.G . white spoke wheels
992-7133
Only 3,500 miles end new con CONTACT :
ditton . Pmed to sell 992 -52-tO
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager
WANT TO rent or rent with option
to bu y Preler out qf towri ,
Children and pet s House or ·
Mob1l e Home . 742 2?84 .

1972 FORD TORlNO . 992-7719,

~h.

~

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES 371-6250

SyrKusa, OhiD

river . P.l ·
· nace,
'din ing,
_, nt ty room ,
large co.,cr ete front porch
on nice lot for $16,500

EXECUTIVE HOME -

THURSOAY, OCTOBER 13 , 1977
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5 : 5Q--PTL Club 13; 5 ·55--

Big Green Magazine

B DO-Grizz ly Adam s 3,4, 15; World Series 6,13; Good

NEW LISTING - This 3
bedroomer ha ' · .' 0 ofthe

S

M.D. 20 ;

7 :JQ--Funn y Fa rm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Mal~h Game PM 6,
Family Feud 8; M acNeil Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge tO; In Search of 13 : W l ld Kingdom 15.

Aulomltic .
Trlntmiuion SerYice

LARRY LAVENDER

210 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PtKJne oa-:. J32S

COMFORTABLE -

... et Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condttton your
water and Co-op water
softener . Model UC -XVI .

7 00----Truth or Cons. 3; Cross -Wi ts 4, Liars Club 6 ; Sha
Na NaB; New s 10; To Telllhe Truth 13; Gilligan ' s

SWAIN

....~.

SlDIIIG-SOrfln
GUTIUS-.lWMliiCS

VlRGIL B. TEAFOIID. SR .
REALTOR

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Let us
Free.

.

laAIIItion Stnices
'~•oiliaAnilllolo
Blown Iiilo Watts &amp; •ffics

~UIIlMUM

I?E AI t OR

WANT

CAN GOODS

FREE ESTIMATES
STOIIII
WIMDOIIH OOOIS
REI'\JC(IIUT
WlMDOIIS

TEAFORDm

1976

•

33.

SEVEN YEAR old house 3 acr eS 6
rooms and both . ' 1 mile from
• ChestPr Prored for quick sole

Belpre, Ohio

YARD SAlE Thurs ., Oct. 13, 10
am D oi A Lod ge Hall , Cherry
Street , Syracuse Rai n or Shine .

TWO FAMilY Garage Sole.
Thurs., 9 om First house past
Memor y Gardens o n Rt 7.
Prices low .

1q75 350 JOHN DEERE dozer with
Jb8 hour s. 17 ton set of new
truck scales, 22' 1ong . ~2 - 5 -468 .

ll

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1•11 •

Is . 15 ; Daniel F oster,

NEW ONE ycot old b1le&gt;~ol home
3 bedroom I ' ,ba th go•oge
I 1 acres .,:. ·•
recrea tion room
Eagle R1dge 949 7745

12~0 Washington Blvd.

CARAGE SALE, Oct . f3 , 14, 15,
Thurs thrv Sot , 10-5 Wide FOR SALE or trade or land con tr ac t. 2 bedroom house 1n
assortmen t of cle an items .. onll Rut land m -5958.
ques . carn ival, depress1on, po ttern gloss , old bottles , and FOR SALE or Rent· three bedroom
rock1ng cha1r New silve rware,
home in Racine. 949-2559.
Avon bottles . pumpktns. Bar bar o Offutl 'residence , Old Rt FOR SAlE or trade . Cheap . 1963
Buick Revtera Vintage car ,
33 betw een CR 18and 19.
good body , goqd steel belted
TWO FAMILY Yard So le . Wed
tires No mo tor in 11 bu t ha ve
Oc t. 12. Storts at 9·30 . Ram or
old block . Inquire at Sohio Sra shine . at Rv stic Hills 1n
tJOrl Hornscnvlll e. Ohio
Syroc uie·'

YA RD SAL E. Corner For est Run
Rd and Rt. 7. Fr1 and Sot. ,
10 3. CB converter . 0 104 mike
and misc .

SEll th1~ 3 bed• oo m 2',
bar h sph t l o)"Cr w11h oil the e:K
11asl P11ced for below actual
real estole value lor qutcl..
sole I NJCe dr1ve 10 power
plants $44 ,000 99'1 1-192

7: 30 - Marshall Football
10 :00 '- 700-j:lub

'

Business Services

MU~I

MEAT CA SE . cash reg1sler , adding
moch1ne , onhque candy show , - - - - - - - - - - case in good condil1on .
Breakfast table and choirs .
Randy Humphreys 991 -7318

COI NS CURRE NCY . tokens old ·- 3 AND 4 RM furnished and unpocket we lches and chams
furn ished 0 ts Phone 991
sdver and gold We need 1964
5434
p
and older s1lver c01ns. Buy sell
·
or trade Cell Roger Wamsley
AVAILABLE A T Rivers1 de Apts I
7-12 -2331
bedroo m . $1 05 per month S1 50
secunty depos1t 992-6098
OlD FURNITURE 1ce boxes . bra ss
FO
UR ROOMS and both . Adults
beds
etc
co m plete
only No peh 992 -5908
household~ Wrile M. 0 M il ler
Rr . 4 Pomeroy Ohio o r call TWO BEDROOM Trader . Adults
Q&lt;/2. "'"60
:.:.__ _~---on ly. 992 -3324
NO ITEM TOO Large or too small
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork .
Will buy I piece or complete
Rou te 33 , north of Pomeroy
household New used . or anti·
Lorge lo ts Call991-7 479
ques Morfm s Furn 1ture , 20 N
Incredible
! Why pay high elec tr ic
2nd St. . M1ddleport Phon e
bdls this w1nte r? Let us pay
992-bJIO
them for you! One bedr oom
TWO TO te n acres w1th good
from S130 now ovodoble,
budd1ng s1te or older home
V1 lla ge Manor . Tturd and Mill
SUIIOble lor remode li ng ; water
Streets , .Y, 1ddleport. Teleph one
and electr1C1ty available . clo se
992 7787 Equal Housm g Opto hardtop rood Call 992 703b
ponun1 ty
after 5 pm
TRAILER SPACE for rent 992 -3 l,tl.2·

IF YOU hove a ser v1ce to offer
want to bu y or se 11 someth tn g ,
oe looking for work
. or
whatever . yo u'll get results
la ster w1th a Senlinel Wont A d
Call 992 -2156

Sale

AlADDIN KEROSINE lon'lp and
heuters replacement ports .
985-3950
Ch1mney monrels w1cks. etc
Srop m for demonslfa11on and NICE ONE acre butldmg s1te ,
portly wooded
near Me1gs
free ca ta logue
Mou1, 101n
leather and Ger~eral Store
tlwh.Sdt~ol. '1'12·S52J.
104-106 W Unton Sf . Atht~ns ,
Ohio sq2 -5478
COUNTRY lormlond with seclud ed woods . water and good OC·
APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orch ards.
cess 1n Monroe County W. Vo
Stale Route b89
Phone
$1,000 down call ( 30o~ ) 77'2 Wilkesville , 6-69 -3785
3102 Of (30 .&amp; ) 772 -3277
GREEN BEANS holt -runners and
bun ch. PICk your own, bnng --VA -FHA , 30 yr. f i,nancmg Ireland
Mortgage , 77 E. State, Athe t;ts
container . Davis Farm . Phone
phone (614 ) 5n 3051 .
2-1 7·2 198

1911 PlNTO . $495 . Coll992 7523

-

for

Movie Channel 11 S &amp; 7 P .M - Chino l P G)
9 &amp; 11 PM - The Women IR)
Cable Channel S 6 : 30P.M - Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Pamlly Fitness

TELEVISION
VIEWING
'

Let .The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
Help Wanted

L

j,J.u

THAC Y

WE PREFER THE TERM
•RECYCLING

~EXP~RT~

v

�1~

15 - The Daily Sentinel, Middieport-Pomer"y, u ., wc,lucsd&lt;iy. Oct. 12. 1977

·,

.

Tht• Dat1~ Sent mt•l. ~ll~Mlt' ~'rt - l'\1.1\ll..'rl' ~ , 0 . \\' t'{tTlt.'sda) . (h·t 1:!. 197i

W altruna t~un
is tops over

(:ontroversy in
,
d
.
C0' •op reporte
.

.

.

nothing is d one shortl y.
Sprague denies that , too .·
Sprag ue invited thi s
newspaper · to rome to the
regular board meeting next '
Tuesday nig ht and see .
Ferguson SB)'S the by-laws
require a monthly meeting of
the membership - there
were ·42 members when he
was president and that the
seven-member boar~ must
meet twice a month. Sprague
says the board does meet

.
C't)ntnwersy
ov.e r
management of a E.\)..._1p is
boilmg ewer at Bidwell and
ma~·
er upt there nPx t
Tuesday mg ht ~
A fomwr president of the
Southeast Ohio Fanners CoOpenlti\·e, Luther Ferguson
of Co ra~Beaver Road, has
charged that the ro-op ijas not
held regular board met;hngs
as requireO by its by-laws.
Herman Sprague, treasurer.
demes the cha rge.
Ferguson thmks tha t

twice a month ,

Ferguson said that i!..the
newsmen did.n 't believe that

farmers who invested in it
~1ay -lo se thetr im·estment If

---------------------------,
i -Area Deaths
I
I

•

MILO E . GUTHRIE
COOLVILL E
MHo
Emerson G u thr i e, 79, of
Coo lville, died Wednesday

morri ing at Holzer Med ica l
Cenf er
ill ness .

fo l lowin g a

br ief
...-'

Born in _f.t'e.igs Coun ty, he
was a son of the late Arthur
and _A lice Landon Guthrie . He
was a schoo' bus driver in

Me iQs County for 15 years . a
member o f th e Hemlock
Grove Grange , and of th e
Meigs Farm Bureau .

Survivors incl ude his wife
Ethel : one da-ughter , Mrs .
Carol Ol ive of Fa irfax , Va .;
one son , Gerard , of Coolv ille ,
a nd Clara Jones . who was
ra1 sed in the Guthr ie home ;
one sister , Amy M idlo;iff ot

Albany , three grandch ildren
and two great-gr andch il dre n.
He was preced ed in d~ath
by two brot hers and one
sister .
Funera l ser vi ces will be
fr iday at 2 p.m . at the White
Funera l Home 1n Coolv ille
with t.he Re v . George ,S i ckens
officiating .· Burial w i ~ l follow
Memory

in.

Gardens

Cemete ry in Athens . F rie nds

I

Florence.'May • Rowe
M is s Flo re nce " Ma y"
Rowe, 64, former Middleport
resi den t, d ied unexpected ly
Tuesday M the home of her
slster , Mrs. M ildred Ho ye.
Reyno ldsb.urg , w ith w.hom

she made her home.
She was born May 31. 1913,
at Langsville, -a daughter of
the late Amos N . and Anna
~r i e Ga bbs Rowe.
· Su rviv ing in addition to her
sister is another siste r, Mrs.
Will iam (Mabel) Lambert ,
Columbus , a lid several nieces
and nephews . ·
She was a member of t he
M i d dle por t
Presb y ter i a n
Chur ch . She had worked in

the

recorder 's

in

offic e

Pomeroy a nd was employed
at Robinson 's Dry Cleaners
for several years .
Funeral serv ices will be
held Fr iday at 1 p . m. at the
Raw I in gs -Coa ts
F unera I
Home witM the Re v. Owignt

Eight fined in
EXTENDED llUl 'I.OOK
f' rlday through Sunday,
fair Friday uud u ••ham-e of
s howt•rs Sa turda y and
Sunday . Highs will be In
lh tt uppl'r SUs or 60s and
lows will be to 30s Friday
and the 40s Sa turday and

Middleport

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admltled Harrison
Rood, Reedsvllle ; Cassie
Baum , Pomeroy ; Hazel
MASON , W. Va .
Eight defendants were Hayes, Syracuse ; William
- wahama H1gh School golfers
fined and three others for- Morris, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Sha i Nobel,
Sunda)'·
feited bonds In the court of
were hot on tht&gt;ir home
Joyce
Hawley , Brenda
co u rse Tuesday against
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hayes
,
Patricia
Schaekel,
Meigs High ar.d NolsonvilleHollman Tuesday night.
Lois
McKenzie
,
George
York High , both of Ohio .
Fined were Norma Beaver,
SCRF.EN lNG SET
Meinhart
,
Norma
Goodwin,
the co-op was in poor
Led by Ty Roush's sub par
44, Crown City , 123 and costs,
The Veterans Mem orial
Edith Bickers.
financial shape, call Bob 35 Wahama carded a team
speeding; John D. McCloud,
Hos
pital
free
hearing
Fleshman , the accountant. score of 158 to !85 for N-Y and •
19, Middleport , 115 and costs,
screening will be held from
Fleshman said , no comment. 199 lor Meigs .
HoberMedleaiCenter
speeding ; William A. Clonch,
Ferguson said that the
This was the last match of 9 a . m. t o 12 noon Saturday
n, Middleport , $50 and rosts,
,
at
the
Pomeroy Elemenshould ca ll the season for Meigs.
ne wspaper
assault and battery ; Kenneth
(Dbcbarges, Od. ll)
tary Sch ool.
Jackson Production Credit to
Other Wahama scoring was
R. Wilt, 18, Minersille , $!0
Ossle Auxj,er, Brian Baker,
see if the Bidwell mill had Ga~y Richards 10, Greg
and costs, speeding ; Harold Monica Brwnfleld, Connie
Dellsch, Mrs . James Fraley
made its payments punc- Stodola 11, Chucl&lt; ,S tanley 42
Rickard, Richard E: Rickard
d
Col
Fl Ida B
tually . No comment there and Jeff Arnold 48.
and Larry R. Grinun, Sr., all an son ,
ene e • ruce
NOW YOU KNOW
either .
For Meigs Lance Oliver
The Pilgrims first la nd ed, of West Virginia , $25 and . Hawley, James Jarrell,
Why would the newspaper had a 39, Rodolfo Diaz 51, not at Plymouth Rock, but at
st
h
charges ol Connie Jeffers, Levie Jolly,_
L Katie Keams, Cora King,
want to kn ow the inner Chuck Kennedy 51 , David thetipo!CapeCodonNov. ll, ro s ~ac on
disturbrng
the
peace
;
Gary
' . Jessica McGuire , WUUam
financia l secrets ol a co-&lt;&gt;p? Kenn edy 58 and Scott 1620. rea chi ng Plymouth
Sunpson , 26, Pomeroy, 1200 M re Ella Mutzlg Pearl
To protect present and future Mc Kinney 63.
Rock more than a month ' and costs and three days In Puookett M s. Alia ~811 and
investors, or to reassure
After return ing from ·the later. on Dec. 21.
jail on charges of driving
c
' r · n
hil . 1 . ted and 1150 daughter, Marla Roush ,
them that the investment is sectional tournament at
w e. m oxlca . •
.
Clara Shamblin, Clara
O.K.
Oxb&lt;Jw last Friday it' was
and
three
days
m
Jail,
dnvlng
.
Sh
efleld Henry Sherman
Elsewhere , investor - discovered that a Meigs
Wlder suspension.
en
•
fanners have suffered losses. golfer
had
inadvertentForfeiting bonds were Joe Jr. ,
Babette
Siewert,
ly
signed
an
m- C.OV HOSPITALIZED
G H f d Jr 23 Hun· Raymond Stewart, Dallas
For instance :
.'"' ans $o2Sr ' post
., ed ' on a Such , Mrs . Earle W!"'d and
A United Press In - correct scorecard . Under
AMAUE, t tn ••on,
GHARLO'ITE
.'.
.
dau8hter.
ternational article by Pa.trick the rules of golf, the
charge of failing to yteld the
(Birtb Oct
U.S. Virgin Islands ( UPI) 111
1•
A. Malone last May 15 said Marauders had no other
•
Gov. Cyril E . King, 56, was in right of way ; Phyllis D.
that up to that time losses in course but to disqualify
Edwards,
Hart
lord,
$25,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Gary
Lane, a
10 states where stale ·omc~'ia;;;lrs.---'t"'
he"'m
"'selves from the dist rict satisfactory condition at speeding, and Carolyn s. son, Pt. .Pleasant, W. \Ia.
Knud Hansen Hospital
have moved against ro-&lt;&gt;ps tournament .
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan
Tu esday after undergoin g French. Middleport , $25,
totaled then $3.8 million.
to
yield
the
right
of
Preston,
a son, VInton.
!ailing
tests for what were officially
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Taylor,
First and largest of the
way.
described as ''mild gastroa son, Gallipolis.
new-style
co·op.s
was
intestinal complaints ."
SET
MEETING
Mr . and Mrs. Joseph
Missouri's Progressive
King entered the hospil&lt;ll
The annual meeting of the
Thomas, a dau8hter, Grlrru!ts
Fanners Association.
Monday evening . While
Landing, W. Va.
Purpose · of the co-&lt;&gt;ps was Meigs OJunty Farm Bureau
CLOTHING OFFERED
there, he also will have his .
been
set
for
Federation
has
to take advantage of state
CHESHIRE - The GaUls·
annual physical checkup . A
and federal laws permitting Tuesday, Oct . 25 , at the
Meigs
Community Action
spokesman for the St.
small groups of farmers to Chester Elementary School
Agency
will hold lis free
IN HOSPITAL
Thomas
Island
ad·
set up co-ops to get wholesale with a steak dinner to be
clothing
day
for
low
income.
Smith, Pomeroy, Is
Sharon
rninistra
t
or's
office
said
prices .on supplies; the laws served at 7:17 p . m . the governor had a reslul
persons
!rom
9
a
.
m
.
to
12
a
surgical
patient at Means
exempted farm co-&lt;&gt;ps !rom Providing entertainment will night and was awaiting
noon
Thursday
at
the
old
high
Hall,
University
Hospital,
registration with state be the Ruthie Roberts singing
school
in
Cheshire.
Columbus.
results
of
the
tests.
group.
securities offices.

golf course

.Zavitz oftJc iating . Burial w~ll
be in the Cheshire Gra ve·! Hll l
Cemetery. Fi-·i ends may call
at the- funera l home on
Thursdcly .from 2-~ and 7-9 p.
m.

O~ganist Dennis James makes

HOSPITAL NEWS

mayor's court

.
muszc zn faTned Ohio theater

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES · - Mrs .
Debner Click, MI . Alto ; Mrs.
Charles Whitt , Pliny ; Mrs .
William Black, Henderson ;
Robert Dlvtetro·, New Haven ;
Mary Durst, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Robert Johnson, Mason ;
Dave
Forshee,
Point
Pleasant; John Wolle, Jr.,
Redhouse ; John Baker, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Neal,
Pomeroy; Eugene .Mullthan,
Syracuse; Dorothy Rhodes;
Polnl Pleasant ; Mrs. Ora
Sturns , Jackson ; Clophas
Wray, Ashton ; Mrs. R. M.
McKinney, Scot Depot; Glenn
Sayre , Point Pleasant; An·
drea Rutherford, Point
Pleasant ; Louis Martin,
Robertsburg ; Mrs . Harland
Taylor
and
daughter ,
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Timothy
Hammack and daughter,
Clillon; Mrs. Robert Van·
Meter and son, Hartford.
Births- A dau8hter lo Mr.
and Mrs . Charles Slanley,
Mason; and a dau8hterto Mr.
and Mrs . Terry Brown ,
Middleport.

0

an interest in nostalgia , Put
him at a grandiose fourkeyboard th eatre organ built
in 1928 in a theater built in the
sam e year and you' ve ~ot •·a
wooderlul marriage".
That's the way Dennis
James, official organist for
the fa med Ohio Theatr~ in
dow ntown
Co lumbu s,
describes his job. ·
James , 'J:l, has been the
organist at the restored Ohio
Theatre since 1975 . He
co nsiders Co lumbu s the
" home base" lor him and his
wife Heidi, an accomplished
pianist and composer .
During
the
summer
months, James plays for't he
Summer Movie Series 'a nd in
U1e winter , he and Heidi
travel throughout the world .
presenting concerts . They

ASK TOWED
Johnny Lee Miller, 22,
Route I, Middleport, and
Janet Elizabeth TllliB, 'J:l,
Rutland.

Ed . Note: Perhaps the
, most lamlllar envoy of your
Health Department Is the
public Health Nurse. The
following article tells how she
serves you and your family.
It also outlines our growing
nurse needs - needs which
can be met by passage ol the ,
health levy .

..

may call after noon on Thurs -

; ,~-~, .._11'11::

-

uer rruce Mae

Pearson , 90, of R&lt;ic ine d ied

Wednesday mo rn ing at
Ma'r ielta Memor ia l Hospital.
She was born April 5. 1887.
a daugllter of the la te Charles
and M inni e ·s oau n Cramlet.
Also preceding her in death
were .her husband . Albert ;
thr ee daug hter.s , He len
Griffith , My r.t le Ben tz and
Lyda Reuter ; tw o infant
Ch il dren ; a brother , Omar
Cramlet ; a sis·ter, Bertha
Adams , a nd a gra nd so n,
Kennet h Gr iff ith.
Survivi ng are a son and
daugnter -i n -law, Ro y and
Nora Pearson of' Rac1ne ; a
son- •n-l aw , Charles Reuter of
Tu-=son, Ariz.. ; two sisters,
Mrs . Oha Adams, Philo, and
Mrs . Goldie Sayre , Rose v il le t
11 grandchil dre n; 24 greafgrandchi ldren , a nd seve ra l
great . gre at . grandchildren.
She was a member of the
Freedom Gospe l Miss ion at
Stivers vill e..
1_

.~

.

,
Funeral serv1ces wi ll be at
p.rn. Fr iday at the Ewing

Funeral Home with the Re v.
LawrenCe
Gluesenc amp
offici at ing. Buria.l will be in
the Letart Falls Cem eter y.
Fr iends may calf at the
funeral home after 7 this
evening

MAGGIE WETHERHOLT
Magg ie J . Wetherhoft, 91.
d ied Sunda~ in West Mem ph is, Ark ., where she had
been res iding with a d~tughter

the past two years .
She was born Oct. 3, 1886, in
Gallipo lis , daughter of tt'le

la te Thomas and Elizabeth
Morg.!ln Jenk ins.
She·
marr ied
Emory
Wetherholt of Gall ipolis on

"''
.

','

-'

visited by the nurse and
referred to Opal Grueser ,
R.N.
PARENTS benefit by the
care their children receive.

Youngster's immUnizations,

ill' the count)'.
· ~uch of her work is
education . An 'example is her
"''rvice to Johnny's mQther.

against diphthetia, whooping
COUgh, tetanus and polio, and
vaccination against smallpox
are given to all children . ·
Crippled children also ar~

A temporary situation ? Not
so,
. say
authorities.
Educators are expecting ~
landslide of pupils in the next
few years. The U. S. Census
Bureau anticipates 8 substantial rise in the nalion's

had never . see"'"''flie
organ, but! hea.td it WaS W be
destroyed along with the

Immunization

Judges Association , Clark
asserted Monday that the
sol ution to clogged co urt
dockets is to remove those
social-medical caseli.from the
courts.

u

"A man Is killed In an
accident. That leaves the
widow and a ehlld who was
critically Injured In the ac·
cldent. Does It really matter
which car was to the In· - - - - -- -_-.:....-'tersectlon llrst?," Clark said. and medical problems. I
The cOurt "doesn't solve the don't think going to jail is the ,
problem. Tbe widow Is still ·answer, " he said. " The·
alone and the ehlld Is still question is, 'Are. we able as a
Injured."
body to create a national
Clark, who served as the health insurance and other
nation's top law enforcement means of handling these
officia l under President problems?' Most cases in
Lyndon B. J ohnson , said court today should not be
" victimless" crimes such as there. The judiciary cannot
" alcoholism, suicide, drug solve the problem.". .
.
addiction and prostitution"
The judges assoctation IS ·
should be removed from the holding
a
nationwide
courts.
gathering this week In Cin·
"These are complex social cmnatl.

Finals
4 Days
Now ·
Thru
Sunday

organ . ·

succwnb to

parents and teachers.

fe rence.
Addressing the American

~1$$1'1~~---

~

~:::

Fu1:1eral sei'vices wil( be
held 10 a .m . Thursday at
M i ller ' s ' HOme for · Funera ls
with Rev. Alfred Holley of -

."

fic i ating . Burial w ill fo llow In
the Rosehill Cemetery in

Spr ingfield .·
Fr iends may call at the
funeral home this afternoon

and this _evening .

News •• in Briefs
(Continued !rem pap I)
OJiombia.
. .
The part ial ecli pse zone ranges from easternmost S1bena
artd Alaska w much of Western Canada, a southern strip of
eastern Canada, and south to the Caribbean a(ld central South
Amer ica .
WASHINGTON - A LABOR DEPARTMENT decision
upholding the re,election of United Mine Wo~ke~s Pr~sident
Arnold Miller was e&gt;&lt;pected to unprove the uruon s posttton at
the bargaining table. The Labor De~rtment ruled Tuesday
tllat complaints of ballot trregulant1es dtd not affect the
outcOme of the June 14 balloting , and officials refused to order

.

a new election.

'.. .

....

;.__ " ..-..;;c ''\ .

.. ''"'

.=~

..

:

.
.......

.... ,

~ ,.,

.

~

.
"

..

·~-~;.

••
'

.

ot

he wa• editor
erman,
"-a• a newlfiOP
· m a subs&lt;nvar'
·veda le"er fro
d asked
M r\c. twain'• days
Ourin9 a O
· ne daY he re&lt;el
. his paper' an
. ...,per.
'--d lud'·
1 pider 1n
all Mi•sOU 11 .. . . held found 0
f good or a sm
•10tin9 mol he
h' ~os an omen o
per is neither
'
•ftts~
.
rnn
I
'd r &amp;n-vou
r·
· 8 pt e
J
·
r pope r
l kini! over on
'ed• "finding a
twain repll ,
.
•""'8 rnerely oo .
ILIIt he could
h ptder ...,..
· ·ng so "
r bad luck- T e s
I tl)(l8 not adveriJSI
d or and lead
good riO
h. h merchan
.
b across the. o '
d"
IO see w IC
spin h&amp;s we
.
.
..
,er afterwar .
__. ...,ace ~
1 store,
disturbeu rgo 10 t ha

a life of ''"

·. · el

•

Tb.e

DailY ?entUl.

. . . froJTI. your door

"der away
will keep the spt

nm~mbering: "An
infonnt:d public d~pend• an

Worth

..

.uc::urate and effeelin repolflnJ
by the netn medi• . No intllvidu•l
c::an obtain for him.ell r.be
infonnalion nuded for r.be
inteiHgenr ditch•l"8e of hl•
polWeal retpontibllifln . . • Tbe
preu thet'@fon ae11 •••n a~nf of
the public at large. " - Ju•f•ce
Lewit ~weU Jr., U.S. Supreme

,,•

..

~

R eport
·

:i:[:.·

By Clarence·
Miller

:;::

Health Department's single
nurse. Yet, even now, she can
only put first things 1irst.
Many now-neglected services
should be part of her nursing

services.

;The House of Represen: security factor is the
The public health levy can
tftlves i~ soon expected to availability and access to oil, help, solve this situation.
take up a bill that could cost not the means to transport it Passed in November, it will
allow future nurses to be
clinsumers an estimated $600 to our shores ,
r!lillion annually in added
(3) The adoption of cargo added
to the Health
energy expenses, under the preference would be a Department staff.
guise of building a stronger, reversal of American policy
This would help bring
more efficient U.S. Merchant which has favored free- Meigs County into line with
Marine. The bill is called competition lor commercial other health department
Cargo Preference (P. R. 1037) cargoes and would result in nursing staffs. According to
and .would require a certain direct violation of more than the American Public Health
percentage of imported oil to 30 treaties with our key Association, a well-rounded
be carried by U.S.·flai! ships. foreign trading partners.- The average pr_ogram needs 8
The White House clailns that State Department has noted minimum of' one nurse lor
such a law is needed to create that if other nations retaliate each 5•000 to 7•500 persons.
.jew Jobs by stimulating a and enact cargo quotas of Population of the county is
rlew
American .• tanker their own, U. S. flexibility 19 •000 ·
Cost of the health levy is
building program, strengthen would be greatly reduced in
·
b
1 d·
t'
· small. This is a I mill levy.
olir national secbrity y future supp y tsrup tons . That conies to 11 lor each
•aving
· more U. S. ships Currently, vessels Of our
1
'
available
in time; of crisis, allies are a1woys avai·1a ble t o $1,000 of property valuation.
•and c urb the burd~nsome
·
This money would be used
oil meet emergency nee d s.
,jpills by foreign /ships with_ . (4) This bill does nothing to to improve nursing servic~s,
ress stringent safety Sfan· ··.end \1\e present world-w1de along with many other
liards .
;
surplus of oil tankers. Ten community health services.
·' Cargo preference quotas ..rcent Qf~\h,. e, world tanker . To pass, the levy must have a
.- is un eremployed at the 51 per cent 14 Yes" vote.
have been before Congress . , fleet
Six times in the last 18 years, present.time , and another ten
4nd each time they.ended in a percent is faid-tip in storage.
well-deserved death . There
(5) Cargo preferen~e is not
are many reasons why this the most effective way to
ilrolectionist, &amp;pecial intetest protect our environment and
legislation should be rejected · end oil spills by foreign ships.
again.
We have one law on the .books
· ~ (I) The cost for the n~:VIY and a~other one coming down
created jobs is incredibly the pike which sets stnct
high. At 10 million barrels of envirimmental standards for
imported oil a day by tanker, all ships entering U . S. ports
~he General Accounting and holds them financially
PORTLAND - Twenty·.
Office estimates that cargo responsible for their actions. lour students at Portland
The challenge before us is Elementary School have been
. preference will cost the U.S.
about $610 million a year : to create a strong, balanced, named to the honor roll.
$300 million fn increased and competitive merchant Pupils' names in ·capital
~ransportation costs, and $310 marine that can survive on its letters received all A's,
plilllon in the ln~reased pri~e own .merit . Passing .a law Named were, grade 2,
:of domestic o1l. For ll)ts requmng the
use
of DONE'ITE TALBOTT and
amount we can expect to American-flag sl)ips will not Dolly .Hill; grade 3, JOYCE
)!enerate about 2,200 new sea· solve the proble'." of lost FOREMAN, KARLA SMITH,
)!olng jobs, which co_mes to , busmess due to high lretght KRIST,_ SELLERS, Lorie
·about · $300 000 per new job charges. The federal govern· Cornell, lll!d Annette Kttch;
:generated!' Hardly what one men! will .subsidize the · grade · 4, CijAII!JI' BOSO,
'would calla good deal lor the American shipping . i~dustry • ·Theresa Barber' ' and Jay ,
;ru.erican consumer.
tothe.tuneof$786miihon this Dodderer; grade 5, Richard··
and
Steve
' (2) Cargo preference· d'&amp;es year ' alone . Further in· McHaffie,
~othing to , strengthen . tervention. In the shipping Teaford; grade 6, MINI A
...national security beca~ 1f market w1th cargo quotas CONGER, VIcky Barber,
:our foreign oil s upply Is will only enco urage more Wade Connolly , Greg DuVall,
turned off at any time, a fleet inefficiency and waste within Patricia
Pauley , John
lor empty. U.S.-flag tankers the maritime industry, which Pickens, Carol Sellers,
)would be of Hille use. Ac· will result In higher con· Danny Weddle , David White,
'c ording to the Defense sumer prices.
special education, Sherrie
:o.,paljtment, .the critica.l
'J ..Law"'?"• and Joey Riffle.

Honor list at

Portland noted

'

trul,l' inexhaustible energy ranmentally attractive" and
so urce," Kintner told a yields
no
combustion
scientific seminar .
products ,
its
rea ctors
Kinter said urge nt develop- "r'elease fewer wastes" and
ment of controlled fusion to they inhefently hiwe a low
generate more e lectr ical probability of a ccidents.
power is being carried o ut in
Describlng the program . as
laboratories at Oak Ridge , "the new order of things'' and
Tei-I n.; Livermore , Calif.; vastly cheaper than · other
Los Alamos, N.M., and nuclear power plans, ~ntner
Princeton , N.J., and at an said fu sion re actions in
industrial fir m , General plasma - ionized gas - are
Atomic, ol La Jolla, Calif.
the basic "energy sources of
fie said plants using fu sion the universe in our sun and
- ·the union of atoms to lhe other stars . ''
release enormous amounts of
ener gy - are preferable w
fi ss ion reactors, which ANTI·ANITA
JACKSON, Miss . (UP I) involve splitting of atoms W
About
20 men and women
achieve the same result.
marched
around a park
" Fusion plants will not
carrying
candl
es Tuesda y
contain plutoniwn or other
materiais which must be night in a " symbolic" protest
sa feguard ed t o prevent of Anita Brya nt's appearance
diversion for clandestine at the state fair .
Miss Bryant, a vocal antinuclear weapons, " Kin te r
said.
homosexual
acti.vis t ·,
He said the smaller amount appeared at the Mississippi
of solid radioactive waste State Fair Tuesday night. She
' 'will mean a decrease in the was scheduled to perform
radioactive dose to the public • aga.in wnight.
in comparison to fission
Gay Alliance President
plants."
Eddie Sandifer said hi s
·As a result, Kinter said, o rganizati on ac tivel y
utility firms which have run s upp o rts " an y oppresse d
into public resistance over group," including blacks and
safety fears will get a major the poor . He said he feels
bonst " in siting and licensing toward Miss Bryant 11 the
when compared with either same way I wo1ild !JJward
fossil or fission pl')llts ."
anyone who oppresses other
Kinter said fusion is ''envi- people."

He went on to Indiana
University to study classical

people

~.:~.::

Sprl ngfield 15 years ago.

•

The nurse tries to teach the
sick to care fOr themselves, a
family member how to help .
The Meigs County Nurse,
Mary .Myers, is a registered
nurse. Your nurse serves the
entire family, thou8h she is
perhaps most concerned with
the young .
Children ol all ages may
receive her help in regard to
dental, hearing, vision , and
ot hers .
.The nurse ma kes regular
visits to the schools to care
for health problems that,
arise . She acts as health
advisor to the children ,

service.

~;:,
f•

YefloWtown . She moVed to

Cour1.

pawn shop," he said . " I
deCided I wanted to learn how
. to olav it."

L INC INNATI 1U PI J
Courts thro~gho ut the United
States are bogged down with
case$ that r ea Uy are social
a nd medical pro blem s,
former · U. S. Attorney
Gene ral Ramsay Clark has
tol d a natiuna I judges con-

ba.~j

the

VALUES TO 79'

FULL BED SIZE CHENILLE
Regular '9.99 And '10.01i

r - _..

00

DESIGNERS ALUMINUM

3 TIER

wrecking,

e

ving items and many more.
Good weight. Decorated
handles .

-~

TEA
KETTLES

METAL WALNUT HUTCH
Ideal For Music Center
40" tall
1 · 9"x24" short
2 · 15"xt4" shelves

Regular 14.99
While

wllh

vegetable.

trim, solid metallic or
enameled. Each one

Reg.

box~d .

14.99

'1

SAVE

indi~iduals
mue

butter knives, large ser-

4 -FOR.$1

theater organ buffs . Although
that group fell apart .
lrn
' ancl'ally, •Lere were stl'll
enough
in tbe
,_
t·
th d .
w _ eon

Teaspoons, ~nives, forks,

Solid Color or · Dot. Peri. rnanent Press, machirie
. washable. Save up to.S4.77.

building," he said. "I heard
about
a
letter-writing
campaign to save the organ
and the theatet, so I joined

group

STAINLESS
FLATWARE

BEDSPREADS

Al

Elizabeth Chapel Church In

.~

con eertina in a window of a

Ry IU ~K DU BROW _
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) A federal official says ."a
truly inexhaustible energy
S4.1 uree" ean easily be derived
from plain water .
Edwin Kintner, director of
the U.S. De partment . ol
Energy's Magneti c Fusion
division, said ')'uesday the
element deuterium , found
na turally in water, also can
help overcome·the protests of
environme ntali sts because It
can lead to reactors with less
solid radioactive waste.
Deuterium has atoms twice
the mass of ordillllry light
hyd rogen atoms and Is used
in nuclear reactions.
It "ca n be easily extracted
from ordinary water" and is
tile primary fuel of fusion , "a

&lt;

' : : : : : :: :a:: : : :s: ::::·&lt;::::::&lt;m
~,_.:~'=_·=:.,: ;:;::::: : :: w::
h ::::x:~-:ogtx·:
·:·:·:·:;~o
:·:~n~~f&amp;&gt;
1:~!~:~~·:e ~:i~;~::~~; =~eo::~~ th;:i;~!r~~

~··

chil dren .
One sister , Mrs . Mary
Francis , New Haven , Conn .,
survives .
She was a member of

·

" [was meandering down a
street in Qeveland and saw a

graduated tu tile accordian,
U1 e fad uf the 5~, ;md
marveled at Myron Floren,
th e accordianisl on th e
Lawrence We lk show.
"Soon I r ealized there
wasn 't much calling for an
accordian player , so si nce I
had been playing the
electronic or gan . at home, I
made the switch wthe organ,
and it went well, " he said .
He is fascinated with nosremembers
ta lgia and
jumping up and down with
excitement as a child wben he
saw an old car. He used !JJ be
glued w the television set w
watch silent movies, a part of
early TV programming.
James began his formal
organ training under the
famed
radio
organis t
Leonard " Melody Mac"
MacCiain. His first formal
concert came in 1967, the first
time he played a the~ter
organ.
" It was the classic. story of
a prof1"50r getting sick and
choosing his star pupil for a
concert," }Je said.
MacC!ain had suffered a
heart attack and asked
James to play for the
National Convention of Organ
Buff&amp; in Detroit and "was
well received. "

Children , she knows from
experience, cannot do their
best work in school when
hearing , sight, or general
health are poor.
Protection · against disease
is yet another vil&lt;ll nursing

i

two great . great · grand-

The rom plain ts were filed two months ago by Lee Roy
Patterson of Kentucky, who finished second in a bitter, threeway election race lor the union pr~sidenfY· Labor Department
off icia ls declined to disclose . their frndrngs rn the case. The
announcement said on ly that investigators found no evide~ce
that the alleged violations a ffe cted the,outcome of the elect ton .
... ' . .
' .. ,, ..
. . """' .... .. .... "'"' .. , . ...... ,.....
,,.
. CLEVELAND - ILLINOIS GOV. JAMES R . Thompson
sa1d Tuesday night he is not a candidate for president in 1980 or
1984, but quickl y added that " it would be loohsh w rule out
anytlling.".
.. n
" My appearance here is not an .effort aimed at 1980,
Thompson said prior to a GOP fund-ra1smg event that gro~
more than $100 ,000. " I'm hereto raise funds lor the Repub!Jcan
'party in the 1978 elections and to hell) repay.the debt I owe to
the Republican Party, whi'Ch helped me the first tune I ran for
office."

seven.

That he did, playing a small
eoneertina theJ amily had at
hom e . FroiD\ there, he

" The Public Health Nurse
was ~!siting y'e sterday," a
Meigs OJ unty mother told her
neighbor . " She showed me
how to care for Johnny while
ha has the measles."
This mother might have
been anywhere in the county.
The Public Health Nurse
visits in the city, village and
fann. Her work takes her out
irr all kinds of weather, on all
types of roads.
!No other member of the
I-4.alth Department is· so
H
bl
'

'

Ohio ; thirteen grandchildren ,
28 grea t.grandcl"lildren and

nostalgia combines for his
billing as a " 20 's musician "
in his concerts. He does not
necessarily play music of the
20s, but rather in the style of
the :IDs, on !heater organs.
There are 160 of the m
throughout the world and his
goal is to play all of them .
A theater organ was
designed to create the many
sounds
ne cessary
to
complement silent movies.
As James'lingers fly over tbe
four keyboards and flips
lever~ 'and puslws buttons,

Best energy source: water

most ·crimes'

for example, also help pnitect
In 1972, he was invited to
the parents, indeed the entire give a concert at the Ohio
cOmmunity.
Theatre and wanted w play
THE EWERLY account "Rhapsody in Blue."
lor most of the nurse's work
"That is a piano number,
in chronic diseases: cancer, not a n organ piece ;" he said.
diabetes, and · other. If
So he begM his search for a
· · Is'
· ev1'd ent, t heY pianist and found one in
hypertenston
·
Heidi. She . was a classical
are referred to Hypertension
· w·ISnts
· kl , R.N. piano
Nurse , N1ta
"" ~student
-c __ ...at the time, and
All oI these act Iv It les · 1111 J. oineo rum in the concert .
• d ay . ·But there 1&gt;
....
They were married in the
the nurses
'll
h
d
1
th
spring
of 1973 and have
sh muc to o, or
e
nursing needs of this county performed many concerts
·
·
Th ere are throuahout
the world. They
contrnue
to r1se.
o
pe
rformed
one in Buffalo,
many reasons for t hi s.
.
h
·
N.Y.,
three
days after they
More ba b 1es t an ever
were
married
.
before are · being born . Th e
In 1969, he heard the Ohio
schools of t h e county are
crowded. Th ere are more old Theatre, built in 1928, was to

::;~:-is :;11-kn~':.nn~r:~t!

Oct. 4, 1905. To this uniori , the
follow ing children were born ~
Dallas, Gallipol is ; Clifford ,
.so uth Charleston , Ohio ; Mrs .
John (Mary) Ellis , West
MemPhis, Ark . and Mrs.
E lsie Plymaie, Springfi eld,

with his fascination with

the · organ produces many
diffe rent
sounds
to
complement his music.
He proposed to officia ls ol
the
Ohio Theatre
by
presenting them with a oneyear plan for his employment
in 1975. They accepted .
The 'wedding ' "exceeded
their ex pectations" and
James-has been drawin g and
electrifying huge crowds with
his
outs t a nAin g
performances at the Theater',
pr oclaimed by .lhe Ohio
General Assembly as the
official theater for the sl&lt;lte ol
Ohio.
His love affair with music
began in 1957 at the. age ol

serves vital function

c;fay
GERTRUDE PEARSON

also find time to cut records.
" I'm bet" ming firmly atta c hed here, " he said .
"Playing the theater organ is
personally gratifying a nd it
contributes to the plan ol the
theater . It's a wo nd erful
marriage .''
His love ol music coupled

Public health nurse ·

DIVORCE GRANTED
Leroy Richards, Route 1,
Reedaville, haa been granted
a divorce on a cbarge of gross '
neglect of duty and willful .
abaence !rom Opal Richards
in the Meigs County OJmmon
Pleas Court.

•

.~

By SANDRA L. LATIM ER
..COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP[) Take a theater or ga nist with

Judiciary. no
place for

2.33

1

9 seperate types.

$266

3 STYLES
3 COLORS

nve

which sa ved the theater one
day before the wrecking ball
was to destroy the building to
make way ' for an offke
building.
" I wrote five letters w the
mayorduringthedrive, using
different pseudonyms and
writing some in longhand,
typing others," he said. "I
like to say that my letters
saved the organ and
theatre."
James' first goal was to.
play in Radio City Music Hall
where he visited in the mid~. Later he realized "you
were in a stable of musicians
playing for a short period of
time;" and decided he didn't
like tbat idea.
He had been a guest
organist for the Ohio
Theatre's Summer Movie
Series a couple ol times and
decided he wanted to
continue bere.
The Summer Movie Series
is 10 old movies shown on
weekends at a low admission
price.
James presents a 30-minute
"organovelty" prior to the
movie program which also
features Laurel and Hardy
silent films for which he
provides the music. He also
plays during the l~inute
intermission and at the
conclusion of the movie. while
the audience files out of the
2,897 seat theater .
He begins his presentation
with · "The Ohio Theatre
March" Heidi compose6 for .
the theatre. The organ rises
up from beneath the lloor as
he strikes the first chords .
His presentahon /las beena .
drawil)g card . He said most
of the audience is seated prinr
to · the start
of his .
"org~ovelty' ' and '?me of
·them vts1t wtth him at the
conclusion of the show.
. The theater used to be an
mtegral part of Amencan
society, but bega n its demise
when talking m ovies hit the
scene. It is now enjoying a
ri se as many commumt1es
are trying to restore t h~Htrt&gt;s
muc h like Columbus ~td .

-'
300 SHEETS .·

25 ASST.
SPONGES

NOTEBOOK .

FILLER

· NATURAL LATEX
WOMENS

PAPER
Reg. '1.29

88

RUBBER
GLOVES

4

'1.39
Value

38~R.

Also 1o pack of large

6~

10~

All that remains goes at
great reduclions. Sizes 4
to 14 .

Reg. 99' Value

50

4

lhPRICE

L.-----....1

MEN'S

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

Entire Fall Stock
Reg. 15'

GIRLS
JEANS

. sponges. Stock up now
while we make space.

ARTIFICAL
FLOWERS
Reg. 10'

CLOSE OUT!
Entire Stock

JUMBO BAG

Reg. 19'

1st Quality

13~

SEAMLESS CANTRECE

WOMENS.PANTY HOSE
Regular 5~'
Beige or Taupe Colors
4PAIR$1 Q()

All Sizes
Kitchen

WOODEN'
SPOONS
Set Of 3
SAVE

30'.L.,

39¢

QUEEN SIZE
PANTY HOSE
For Full Figures
SAVE

22'

NON · STICK - BLACK STEEL

'BAKEWARE
Pie pans, cake pans, piua pans,

cookie pans . Non -stick. Heavy ··
wei~l.t\f bla.t.k steel., Regular S1 ,99 to

$2.49 . .

PRICES IN EFFECT
NOW THRU SUNDAY
;Point Pleasant And Mason Stores
'· -

•

�I

- The- Da tly St?nt nwl . \l n l dlt•p~. •rt l1••Jilt'r•l \

. () .

\\ t.'lo( l rk•sd.:t~

· ' 1 ~,1 1:!. \ ! ~I,

Carter charges oil, gas companies with

.A

ELBERFELDS PRESE·NTS • • ••
d

WASfiJNG'l'ON t UPI I - P

SAVE UPTO
$262 NO\N
.

On beautiful ·furniture
. t?Y Kro~hier in your
ChOICe Of eontemporary,
Traditional or ·
Early American

,{/lalioll

•

•

•

KROEHLfR

-

,

the potential for " the bi
restden~_{, arl t.•r warnt•d ll'&lt;icly nf
secure energy inde ndr~lg est npoff .'" ~~-e nation 's fight l11
flies for wantinJ{ to~ r ce, ~l.enflll{Jetng Oil and ~as cmnpa-

pul'kels.

,

Hiscncr~~ prngram in deep truuiJie 111 ('ong rcss, Carte r s~id

" lllopc the Ame ril"~HJ peup le will

j t ll tl

w1111 mt&gt;" in fighting fnr

pockets or the AI .P~O tt eer and · ·~rab " nwucy from the his proposals.
.
,
.
nencan consumer
Re1teratmg
his cl· · . lh· 1
·• Jn April. wlu~n 11Ur rklti••nal ener~y puilir·y w~t s prescrned tu
·
equivalent of war ~~~~ t at 1 le encr¥Y crisii!i is " the more~ I Congress &lt;:~ncl the f!Cuple , I said this was tile mund equiv'alent
ronferenr e ''The'
. ~ er _told a nationally bm.adl'ast news 11( war . I haven 't changl&gt;d my mind .
.
'
que~tllln IS - who will proft f
h
,
prtces and to what degn-e ?"
I
rum t ese
.. As m tl1e r ase uf war,. there is poten~ial war profi teeri ng in
He said his energy package ... . .
t•
. .
U1c ener~y proc~ss ... th1s could result m the biggest rip11ff in
people will not be rob~d" and ra~~ur~s t lal the .Amen_can energy h1story .'
for domestic oil and ga _e
P IIVIde s adequate lnt'Cntrves
Carter, who makes a lwo-day viSit to the Midwest and West
"But the OJ!- companiessappare
xp1oratron.
• tt us
, month , hopes ,,
, " strong pu bl JC
' pressW"e on a
tl . . •,
. , ..
~ lat t:r
"') brm6'
0
1
are talking ubout enor
Yw&lt;::~nt at a I, he sa1d . We House..Senate conference .comrnittee which must iron nut a
or money ·"
· cumpmmrse
· on h'rs tattered energy program.
He accused industr mons
r l arnounlo.;
.
pockets of American ~or~su ri':ng. ~ tnke _mo~ey out uf the _ The House voted down carter's proposed gasoline tax
rs a puttmg 1t m the1r own
m~re.ase, but passed most or the remainder of his proposals
w1th considerable modification . The Senate Finance
Committee has v&lt;1ted down the gas laK, ·proposed dotnestic

l.'rulk• ut l t.ax and a tax llll lfldu.slnc.l U.St! of Oil and gas.'
And dcspil e White llu~ urging that federal price nm trols
lJc kept on lldt\!ral gas, the rull ~enat e . has also Vf•led to phase
uut thuse controls.

~rter said energy Jlrices have risen e1C:ten:·•ivcly 111 the past
r--·
.
rcw years.
····llle nil emnpanies a pp;.trently want it all ," he sa1d , ''and we
are talk in~ a bout enormous amounts of nwney. The struggle is
intense and it 's going to go em ror a long time, but the basic
question is ~uing to be answered in the next few weeks in tjle
Cnngrc~o.' '
•
' Wc bolil:!yc in the free enterprise system," he said . But llE'!
&lt;Jdded that nil a nd gas "are not part of that system" be ca11~e
domestic energy is so heavily by foreign production and
imp,rts.
"Our proposal would give the oil companies ... the hil',hest
prices fur oil in all the world, but still they want more ," he
said. '·If we deregulate na tural gas prices, then the price will
go to 15- hmes. more than the prices wen' rinring thP oil
1

•

e_

gre~d

emLargv .''
Ca rter sa id international circumstances or the energy crisis
now arc being recognized as ''very, ve ry seri ous ."
Past performances at energy savhlgs by American conswners, he said, have been " very disappointing,"
Responding to a question on taxes , carter said he would
propose a tax cut next year.
He said " the rapidity " with which il would take effect would
be determined by whether the economy needs stimulation.
There have been reports Carter would call ror a $22-billion
tax cut, but he cilt-&gt;d no figure today.
He said any ~ut would be. tied to tax reform . Congressional
obServers have said it is nearly impossible to pass a tax r~form
bill unless it 1s accomparued by a tax cut.
The chief unresolved question in determining the size and
timing of a tax cut, carter said, is how much effect this year's
etonomlc stimulus measures wiJJ have. The answer, he sa id ,
will not be known until Janu'iiry or February ,

e,n tine

at

(~~ ·~

' ''\

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=== Vedra"

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J

VOL XXVIII NO. 127

'

Self expression is perfectly naturaL
Especial ly with Kroehler's c hic contemporary
sofa a nd love seat In durable natural tone flame stitch. Relax into
comfortable, deeply podded c ushions. loose bock pillows and
buoyant bolsters. Buy now and save.

SAVE 1262
SOFA AND LOVE SEAl

•

.....

REGULAR 1961.

1 +-~ERC:ULON I

Bridge wilt be opened
Oct. 19 s~yS Rocky IV
MRS. SHARON PYLES IHLE, R.N. of Racine who
will head new well baby clinics being held by the Meigs
County Departmen t of Health, weigll'l in young F rankie
CornelL

Baby clinics begin on Friday
A new program by the Memorial Hospital in Athens,
Meigs .County Department of weight , height , head cir·
Health - a series of well cumferenCe measurements
baby clinics - will begin on infants; _tests for sugar
Friday.
and protein; immuniz:ations,
Mrs. Sharon Pyles !hie, . R. tu berc ulosis tests, blood
N., Racine, has been na med pressu re monitoring , blood
nurse for the clini c where testing for hematocrit levels,
youngsters will be examined history of the childr
. , en
every two weeks. Mrs. lhle examined,
a nd
Com- .'
will be assisted by depart- pliment a r y
copies " of
ment staff and others . literature _on nutrition a nd
Payment for the varied tnlmumzatron for parents or
services to be provided will guardians of
children
be based on a sliding scale examrned.
,
, _
based on ability to pay.
Hours of the frrst clime wtll
Services available to each --be:-L to 4 P- m. Mothers of
child visiting one of the chrldre? , scheduled for the
clinics inc lude physica l first cltmc are to collect an
examination.
by
a earl~
mcrrni~g . urine
pediatrician from O'Bieness • specrmen and brm g rt to the
clinic.

·Il~r===:~==::===========:=:::::::=========:::=:=:·:·:·=·=;=·=·=·=;=·=·=·=-~·=·=·=·=·= :=~==:.:=:================:=====:=====================\~~

~:·News. _!
~~

{.

Comfy cozy. Our handsome Early
American ensemble by Kroehler.
It's trimmed in honey pine. It's
super cushioned and button ·
tufted And it's the essence of
practicality in floral print o f rust
and browns. protected with
Scotchgard" stain repel lent.

SAVE 1262
SOFA AND
LOVE SEAT.

$A199
Lf .

REGULAR 1761.00
252.00 Chair

1

....

SOFA AND
LOVE SEAT.

188.00

Super Recliner.
Features durable

ZEPEL

Value your leisure.
~------.nEn1oY th1s supremely
c omfortab le
reCliner.

Naugahyde

S269

cover.

:n:
:n:

$.1.._()9.
U'?
I

KROEHLER BUILDS
WITH QUALilY
TO CREAtE
LASTING VALUE·

.... . '. ".' .
"

Elb8rfelds.ln Pomeroy
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT rll

'

OlliER WEEK .DAYS AND SATURDAY lll 5

.

PERFORMANCE
TESTED
FABRIC S

u '• H ..t) l-)1 n

QUALITY
ENGINEERED
FRAMES

All COIL SPRING
UNDER
CONSTRUCTION

I
L

.zn Brzefs)\l

~

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER SAID TODAY
he is "going back to the country" to restate the need for ari
energy program and he forecast "devastating" effects for the
nation if .one Is not adopted. '!'he president IDid Democratic
congressional leaders today he will spend the next two weeks
in "a very intensive campaign" to win approval of key
elements of his tattered energy package, administration
officials said.
1
1
' We re down to the wire on it," said O
f1e official who
disclosed carter plans to enlist.the assistance of his cabinet,
White House staffers and Congress to drum up support fr om
American people. While no forma l agenda was announced,
carter is scheduled for out-of-lawn swings Oct 20 and 21 to
Detroit, Des Moines, Omaha, Denver a nd Los Angeles, with
many public appearances set

REGULAR 1953
1
348.00 Chair .. .. ...1249.00

1

'

...__" .__ By United Press llitematlonal
COLUMBUS - THE STATE DEPARTMENT of
Education has announced that 253 local school-related tax
issues will be on the Nov . 8 bailoL "The elections will provide
voters with the opportunity to alleviale some of the financial
burdens affecting local school districts ," said Ohio School
SUperintendent Franklin B. Walter.
"I am optimistic that the general public will respond
favorably to the financial need of local schools," said Walter.
44 EducaUoA is essential to
an effective government and
efficient economy as well as to the well-being of the students
who are enrolled."

•

SAVE 1254

I

'

','

PRICE FIFrEEN CENTS

'

~"'/

Keep yourself in check. With this
sumptuously comfortable Early American
grouping from Kroehler. Enjoy wing styling.·
Box pleated skirts. And durable He rc ulon '
fabric. A super buy.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LUXURY
WRAPPED
CUSHIONS

defeci s in the steel-concrete
structure.
In
July,
Governor
Rockefeller said it would be
reopened once repairs were
complet ed. However, additional defects were found
which forced the seven-year
old span to remain closed.
" My
main
ebncern

The Silver Memorial
Bridge, closed since July 6,
will be opened at 6 a.m.
Wednesda y, Oct. 19 according to an aMouncement
toda y by West Virg inia
Governor Jay . Rockefeller .
A spokes man for th e
governor sa id that on ly two
lanes of the b_ridge will be
opened so that crews can
continue work on the bridge
to complete a ny additional
· repairsthat m$y be required . .
The bridge h$s been closed
101 days . while American
Bridge Com pany repa ired

Columbia

througho ut the closing has areas of certain welded
been safety. Now I feel joints.
State,
federal,
a nd
confident that the structure is
American
Bridge
Company
safe." the Governor stated.
Additional tests and repair offictals met all day Wed·
work will continue while _nesday to review reports on
traffic is being maintained. work completed to that time,
and further work projected
Defects in the steel of the
bridge have been described before all repa irs and tests
as hairline Cracks in the for safety are complet ~d -

.
J.Or
new gas
·

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Hubert Humphrey
used 345 words to tell the Senate he was left speechless
by its decision to name the new building of the
Department of H e~lth , Educa tion and Welfare in honor
of him.
'
But the MinnesotaJ)emocrat warned his Senate
colleagues not to think his acceptance means he's
ready to assume the role of an elder statesman.
And even though the building may bear his name,
Humphrey warned HEW Secretary Joseph Califano he
won 't be freed from "my finger tapping his shoulder on
matters that I believe could be handled better or more
quickly by his department. "
With these words, Humphrey accepted the honor
bestowed on him Wednesday when the Senate passed a
bill - co-sponsored by his 99 colleagues -to name the
new HEW office building foc him.

. .

Coal mine -strike could come Dec. 6
Talks officially opened last
By SARA FRITZ
week.
UPI Labor Reporter
The Bituminous Coal
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Operators
Association, the
The nation can expecl a coal
industry
's
bargaining
arm,
strike Dec. 6 unless the
responded
to
Miller
by
United Mine Workers union
wins a contractual right to saying : " We stand ready to
strike at any time over local negotiate in good faith. "
grievances , according to · Miller nonetheless
uniOn President Arnold indica ted he was unwilling to
compromise the union's
Miller .
Miller; who resumes right-to-stl'ike demand. He
·. bargaining today with the also denied the union 's
industry, told reporters bargaining power had ·been
Wednesday a strike might be weakened by costly wildcat
avoided if the two sides meet strikes this swnmer.
" There is a misconception
non-stop WJtil the deadline .

lO pay more
£

Speechless, well, almost!

COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Columbia Gas of Ohio has raised
the prices it pays for new
Ohio-produced gas "to
stimulate local production
and provide needed winter
supplies for Columbia of Ohio
and its customers .. Marvin
E. White , . chairm~n of the
board of Co lumbia said
Wednesday.
'
In a letter to Gov. James A.
Seven incidents were added
Rhodes, White said Columbia
to
the "active" log of the
will pay $2.25 per 1,000 cubic
Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept
fee t for new Ohio-produced
over
the
past 24 hours.
gas delivered directly to a
Two
involved
apparent
market served by Columbia
·minor
thefts
and
-two
were
· for winter delivery. Columbia
related
to
early
previously paid $1.90 per 1,000
Halloweening.
cubic feet
Depulie~ are investigating.
White also said Columbia
the
breaking and entering of
will pay $1.9&gt; per 1,000 cubic
the
traller residence of
feel for gas delivered to a
Columbia Gas Transmission Yvonne Garten, Rt I, Reedsline for winter delivery to a · vrlle. N? other tnfonnaUon
Columbia of Ohio market was avatlable at noon today.
The theft of another battery
area.
c 0 1 u m b i a G a s was reported from the Meigs
Transmi ssion transports County Highway Department
Columbia's gas in Ohio. ·
paving machine. This time
In addition, Columbia will the machine was parked
pay $1.75 per 1,000 cubic feet along CR 35 in Lebanon Twp.
when il must build a gas line
Deputies are investigating
to the new well, White said. early ' Halloween pranks in
Columbia also will pay $L 7&gt; Letart Township. One was the
per 1,000 cubic feet for all tomato, egg, and ro ck
sununer gas deliveries .
throwing at the Bert Grimm
residence in Letart Falls

on the part of the industry nationwide strike. But he-.. Thecurrent contrac(has no
that because of the turmoil indicated
the
miner s right to strike, but the miners
we went through in the last . probably would be unwilling oft en stage wildca ts and
few monlll'l that we'd take to work without a contract tr dit' di tate
· k t
just anytlling ;" Miller said . a!
a ton c s one pre e
can shut down any mine. The
ter Dec. 6.
Industry sources claim the
Contract exfensions are 6per3tors often 'resort to
union 's bargaining power has · virtually WJknown in the coal court injunctions to end these
been hurt both by »:lld&lt;;at industry, which operates on a strikes.
y&lt;alkouts ~nd a drall)lltic ~tse "no contract, no work " tradi. .. Miller also acknowledged
tn non-umon coal productton, tion - even in cases where a the miners waht tlle right to
which could continue to tentative settlement has been spread their strikes to other
satisfy th~ nation 's. energy reached . Ratification also mines , but only after a
needs durmg a strike. ' . ' takes about 10 days,
majority vote in those other
Mtller admitted the umon s
Miller insisted there would -mines.
benefit funds - depleted by be
no
new
contract
Miller said many coal .
"";rlier work stoppag~s - settlement unless
the companies
" provoke"
rrught go bankrupt dtirmg a industryr agrees to restore wildcat strikes by refuSing to
recent cutbacks in health settle grievances locally ,
benefits caused by earlier "They arbitrate the same
wildcat strikes. He indicated damn issue time and Ume
the issue would be easy to _again until they get an
arbitrator that wUI 'tlgree
settle.
But
he
acknowledged
the
with them," he -said.
ca r S hood and front end.
operators
are
less
likely
to
The miners also are
Deputies also are looking
into a hitskip report from agree to allow miners to seeking a substantial wage
John Cleek, Rt I, Portland, strike over local grievances. increase and more time off.
that during the night an old Asked if the · miners would Union negotiators argued for
brown colored -car had run off settle without a right to · better pay by citing the risks
involved in mining.
SR 338 a nd tore down his strike, Miller replied :
" I kimLotdoubt it. I'm not
Miller declined; to _say
fence.
Following a CB report from particularly inclined I!&gt; agree whether he would coostder
the Meigs County React Unil, to a contract !hat doesn 't deal extending the present
these
prohlems contract, ending the no
the sheriff's department was with
contract, n01work tradition.
able to preve nt possible (grievances ) we have."
Miller
said
the
union
wants
He said tra,.ition dictates a
serious injury to molorists
a
right
lo
strike
over
settlement
must be reached
and to cattle. The CB call said
by
Nov
.
26
to avoid a strike
grievances
after
a
majority
there were 15 head of
vote
of
the
local
membership
.
duririg
ratification.
Hereford cattle on SR 7 north
'There 's never been
of Five Points. A deputy He contended it would reduce
the
number
of
wildcat
strikes
anyone
who had the guls to do
blocked the road with flasher
in
the
industry.
anything
aboutlhat," be said.
lights while the dispatcher
11They wanted a strlke in
H(
am
confident
it
will
made two telephone calls to
reduce them to a minimum,"
1974.''
area farmers.
he
sa
id.
"You
will
not
get
a
51
An aide added that some
The o~e r, Horace Karr,
per
cent
vote
wrless
there's
a
operators
have indicated they
came to scene and the cattle
serious
problem
at
the
mine
would
be
unwilling
to extend
were returned to their fields.
the contract .
It was not immediately site."
learned how or where they
got out

MOre th e ft S reported

Hypertension
clinics set at
Meigs mines

_
_

.
.

earlier in the wee.k.
The se cond - o~curred
Wednesday evening on Mile
HilL P ersons In a light
colored Pinto stopped and
threw eggs against the Ross
Scarberry residence.
Sheriff Proffitt advised that
his department is getting a
number of complaiitts from
motorists that youngsters are
throwing rocks at passing
autos. The Sheriff asks
parents to caution the ir
children about such acts.
In other activity, David A.
Smith, 25, Reedsville, struck
a deer Tuesday evening while
traveling on SR 248 approximately three miles west
of Long Bottom . The deer
jumped into the path of
Smith's auto . The , deer
jumped over the bank and
disa ppeared . There was
moderate dama ~e to the

1

1

Yacht rammed
Pumpkin Show, Bob Evans' off viet coast
Farm Festival top weekend

DARTMOUTH NOV A SCOTIA - TWO COLORADO
'
balloonists said their landing in lhe stormy Atlantrc left them
cold, wet and tired, but determined to try again next year to
United .
Press
High blood pressure clini ~s B,y
Inte
rnational
become the first to cross the Atlantic in a balloon.
will be hel d at the mines of
Dewey Reinhard, 47, and Steve Stephenson, 44, of Colorado . the Southern Ohio Coal Co. in
Green orange and brown
Springs, Colo., set out frmn Bar Harbor, Maine Monday to early November , Mrs . Nita street displays of pumpkins,
cross !fie Atlantic. But bad weather forced them to abandon Wi sn isky, county health' squash .and gourd - 100,000
the attempt Wednesday and descend into icy waters . The two departm ent hypert ens ion pounds worth .- are being set
up in Circleville for the Oct.
men and the gondola of their 85-foot heliwn-filled " Eagl~" nurse arrnounces.
were fished out of the water by the Canadian Coast Guard sh tp · The clinics are bei ng 19-22 Pumpkin Show, the
Provo Wallis shortly before 6:30p.m. EDT, about 80 miles off sponsored by the Meigs wor ld-famous "G reat est
Co unty Department of Free Show On Earth."
the Nova Scotia coast
The , world 's
lar gest
Health with the cooperation
·
WASHINGTON - FARMERS WILL HARVEST a record of the Southern Ohio Coa l Co. pumpkin pie - a five-foot,
6.303 billion bushels of corn the crop tha t is me bell weather of
On Nov . 2, a clinic will be 300-pound monster - a gala
the nation's farm and 'food ecorunny, the Agriculture . held at Meigs Mine No. 1, .at , parade, beauty contests and'
Department said Wednesday. The estimate, which an e&gt;q&gt;ert . Meigs Mine No. 2 on Nov . r d e li c~ci es rangin g fr om
said foreshadowed a probaple slowdown in food inflation next and at Meigs Mine No . 3 on pumpkin burgers and donuts
year,wasuplpercentfromlast month'sforecasl andaboutl Nov . 4. On Nov . 3, from 12 t o pumpkin waffles and taffy
per cent above last year 's record of6 .216 billion.
noon to 2 p.m. employes of the will be a¥ailable.
The contact is Ned Harden,
The 1977 soybean ctop was estimated at a. reco rd 1.647 central offi ce will hove the ir
billion bushels up fractionally from a month ear her and :!0 per · blood pressu res checked . T1.1c 614-474-3141.
An nld -time har vest
cent above a y~ar ago. The state's corn prod u ~tinn is: fllreca~t clil) ics a t Mine 1 and Mine 2
at 371 million bushels. The servi ce said if realized, yrclcl&lt; wrll will be held at the ~ath festiva l featuring cornstalks
be99bushelsper acre,secondonly to 1976's record yreld of IOL houses. Hours of the clinics f&lt;•r scenery, apples f11r flavur
wjll be 7 a.m. lo 7:511 a.n\ .; a nd banjo, dulcimer a nd
f.XJUJM BUS - STATE AUDITOR THOMAS VERGUSON 8:05a .m. to 9 a.m .; :l p.m. to d rcus caliope music f f•r
:l :50 p.m. and 4:Cl5 lo 5 p.m. snuod is planned r!t:'W .)a lurrl;lv
(Continued on page 2)
'

and Sunday in Roscoe Village churning, rail splitting and
at Coshocton .
sheepshearing. Farm food, of
The village's annual Apple course, will be served in
Butter Stirl'in', will include abundance.
1800-vintage crafts, games
Contact Lee Durieux, 614a nd deco rations , but the 221-7751.
.
attraction expected to bring - Other festiva ls during this
in the crowds are the c'opper season of festivals in Ohio:
kettles along Whitewoman
-T he Fall Festival ol
Street. Rich, brown apple Leaves in Bainbridge Frida y
butler will be simmered all thr ough
Sunday ,
The
day over open fires and sold festivities will include folk
tn onlookers in new glass arts, crafts, . music 1 .flea
jars. .
mark ets and parades .
Cnn tact Pat Brown, 6 14~22- Contact ll&lt;Jb Kilpatrick, Box
9315 .
105, ila.inbridge.
The Bob Evans Farm
- The Antique Show &amp; Sale'
Festival will keep Rio Gra nde in Ba th next Tuesday through
llo~pin g Friday thr ough Thur sday . Mnre than 20
Sunday .
dealers will show their gc•ods .
The -1,100-aeres of the Con ta ct Lily Bender, 2 1 6~66Evan~ fr:trm will be reeling · 3193.
from nmt muous bluegrass
- The ~.n glish Musical
nm~k. m•arly 100 crart Herita ge C6rrcert in Akron
d~Hl"ll~lr.ali 1 1ns a nd displa ys next Friday . Thr Singi n_g
irwlwlJ u l.! ., :dm l in ~ . butt er
{ ContinJjf~ on pag~ 2)

BANGKOK, Thailand waiting to be boarded.
Aboard the boat were the
( UPI ) - A yacht with three
owner,
Cornelia Anne De lien·
Americans aboard, including
baugh,
' of Philadelphia,
one woman ; came under fire
.Leland
Di c kerman,
today and was rammed by
hometown
unknown
, and
anothe r vesse l off the
Charles
Athol,
a
sailmaker
southern tip of Vietnam when
of
Philade lphia, ·
its radio went dead, U.S. also
Embassy offi cials reported. according to friends.
All are In th~ir late 20s and
· A radio broadcast from the
41-foot yacht Brilling said Miss De lle nl&gt;augh and
'earlier the vessel had taken Dickerman are former Peace
seven or eight gunfire hils Cor ps volunteers who worked
before being rammed , that it in Southern Thailand.
In Washington, a State
had lowe red sails a nd that the
thr ee Amer ica ns were Department duty officer said,
&lt;~ we a r~ seekin g information
:::: ·:: : :::: ::: :::::::;: ::::::: ::::::: :::~:::·~:: ·:·: ·:·:·:':·:::::::!: ::;:;:
a nd sin ce the reported
incident was in waters near
_ EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Vietnam,
we have .rsked the
Saturday
through
Vietnamese
if they have any
Monday, a chance of rain
information
about the
Sa turday and fair Sunday
vessel.''
and Monday. Highs will be
He said there had been no
in the 60s Saturday and in
reply
from Hanoi.
the &gt;Os Sunday and MooThe
first distress calls were
day. Lows will be In the 40s
picked
up by Bangkok ham
Saturday and in the 30s
radios.
Sunday and Monday.
(Continued on page 2)
·:: :: : ::: :::: : :::: ::: :: ::::::: :::::::::::::;~.:; : ::; ::•:: ;:;:;:;::: : :: ::: :: :
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