<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15236" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15236?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T10:48:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48358">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2bdff016fb9a771becfd61a5e7e322ba.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d22fbcab74fe8f0daa5f95c5fb510071</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48916">
                  <text>'
D-8 - The Sunday Times-Sentmel.
Sunday. Oct.16. 1977

Ground To
Be Broken
Fo-r Project
system at the same monthlr
MASO~ .
W. Va .
will
hold rate as ther have enjoyed in
Thts town
a gro undbrea king cere· the past, water bills will not
moner fo r the new water increase in the foreseeablr
sys l~w .;,atw uety, Oct. 22 at 11 future.
a m. at the oumohouse on
Work on the water lines will
&lt;;eeond Street ' U.S. Rt . 33), begin on Monday, Uct. 17, by
two blocks above the Ohio the Go leman-Trainor Co n·
Rtver bridge , ~layo r Fred st rurtion Company .
Ta) lor aMounced today.
Mayor Taylor has asked
Congressman John Slack that perS(lns living on Fourth
ond Lynn Daniels of the U.S. Street keep the road clear on
Department of HUD are the Monda y as the construction
scheduled speakers fey- the compan y will be moving
~Ent .
materials ' and equipment on
Robert \Vin~e tt , chairman this road to begin work
of the
Ma son Cou nty
Development Authority, will
serve as
mas ter
of
ceremonie s. and Bob Powers ,
president of the Mason CoWJty
Commission, will introduce
the special guests .
~!usie will be provided by
t he Wahama High School
Band, Wlder the direction of
Cha rles Yeago and Michael
Harbour.
WASHINGTON (UP!) The water project is being
fun ded by a grant from the President Carter says u .S.
U. S. Department of Housing and Soviet negotiators "are
and Urban Development. ·It approaching a settlement'" in
includes the construction of a strategic arms talks, and
\\a ter storage · tank and ap- rejects the claims of S(lme
senators that provisions for
pro xima tely 8,500 fe et of
checking Russian compliance
wDter line.
are inadequate.
Because of this
grant,
'·We are approaching a
persons liv ing in MaS(ln will be settlement with the Soviets, if
able to use this new water they continue to act in . as

Rocky IV To View

APC Filing

Sov-iets, U.,S.
settlement near

of equal concern to us and the
Sovi~ts ...
" I wou ld sa y our
verif ic ati on capability is
adequa~e ... Both we and the
Soviets recognize that if we
ever cheat and get caught,
that the consequences are
very severe. "
FONTAINE BEITER
COLUMBUS (UP! I
Comedian Frank Fontaine is
reported in fair condition in
Mt. Carmel East where he
has been hospitalized since
suffering a heart attack Sept.
18.

statement made July 4" by
anti-Klan forces, and w show
support for anti-Klansmen
who were arrested and await
·
trial.
Hollister said groups participating in the rally
Saturday plan w "oppose the
Kla n in a strong way
wherever the opportunity
presents itself."
Other groups involved in
the , rally included the
National United Workeos
Organization, a pro-labor
group founded on labor Day
in
Chi cago;
defense
committees from Cleveland
Cincinnati ;
the
and
Cincinnati Youth in Action
group ; the Anti-Racist
Alliance
and
the
Revolutionary Student
Brigade .
In speeches on the
stateh ouse steps, group
members warned there has
been "a distincltve upturn in
· the Klan in this country .
They 're opening more
offices, spreading more lea·
!lets ."
Speakers blamed the rich
in society, who they said run
next year to be figured from the government, for using the.
the current salary base, Ku K1ux Klan ~~ as a tool " to
rather than determining the
base from the average of'the.
three highest year's salaries,
which is now in law and which
will resume in January, 1979.
For any House or Senate
member retiring with the
maximwn pension, it means
a one-time $3,426 a year
increase in his pension over
what he would get under the
regular system.
At last coWl\, six Senators
and 11 House members plan
to retire next year and
another nine are seeking
other off ices and could come
Wlder the pension if they lose .
Dan Glickman, a freshman
Democrat from Kansas , said
he wasn 't aware of what
happened until he read about
it . the next day in his
hometown newspaper.
"!was absolutely disgusted
when I foWld out," said
Glickman.
So were Reps . Andy
Jacobs, D-Ind .'; , and Martha
Keys, DKan.
The three immediately
introduced a resolution to
amend the rules of the House
"to require t~at measw-es
affecting the salaries ,
freebies or emoluments of
members
or · former
members · of Congress be
adopted by roll call vote."
Glickman, in his freshman
naiveness, said, nAs far as
other members agreeing with
thts position, I think it would
be very embarrassing if they
don't go along with it."
'
What they pass so quietly in
Congress, they also kill.

Congress ,did it
still once again.

By GENE BERNHARDT
WASHINGTON (UPI) They 've done it again , those
Congressmen who are S(l
concerned about Congress'
public image and complain
that the press is always
taking a cheap shot at them.
For the first time in slighty
more than a decade that this
observer has• covered the
House , a bill was introduced
and called up minutes later
and passed by voice.
No reference to a
committee for hearings , no
debate, QO explanation, no
printed copies of the bill or an
accompanying report, no
record vote .
Even
the
venerable
Congressional Record, in
reporting the previous day 's
activities, showed only that
Rep . William Ford, D-Mich.,
asked and got unanimous
consent "for the immediate
consideration of the bill H.R.
9262 .. ."
•
It was done that way, with

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

EarUer this week, the state
supreme court. rejected the
company's appeal of the May
6 PSC refund order.
Appalachian , which serves
336,000 customers in West
Virginla ana another 300,000 in
Virginia , has already been
granted stays until Ort. 211 to

,oppress minorities. They also
lashed out against the courts
and Columbus police, whom
they blamed for provoking
the July 4th.. confrontation .
After the speeclunaking,
the group marChed three
blocks through WJcrowded
downtown streets to city hall
for mor e chanting and
spfech es. Four motorcycle
policemen and two police
cruisers accompanied the
marchers, wh o chanted ,
"The cops and the Klan go
hand In hand ."
One policeman said he had
been called to help control
traffic along the marchers'
route .
The
demonstrators
referr ed to Klansmen as
"scum," and said they have
no right to spread their
"pciison," or even to exist as a
group. ·
They alsi:&gt; defended their
opposition to the Klan 's
rallies .
· " When
they
(KKK)
lynched the first blaok man ,
they lost their freedom of
speech ,"
said
Paul
Blumberg , a Cleveland steel
worker representing· the
National United Workers Or·

Four terrorists forced a hijacked West German airliner to hostges- including an American woman-and 11 West German
land in the Ea st Mrican country of Somalia today, killed the beauty queens - unless their demands are met.
ptlot and s!Dpped the clock on their deadline for blowing up the
As the new deadline passed, the Bonn government disclosed
plane with 86 hostages aboard .
that West German Chancellor Heltnut Schmidt phoned Somali
West Germany again defied the terrorists and refused to President Mohammed Siad today to discuss the "steps that are
mmply with their demands by the 10 a.m. EDT deadhne, necessary now" after the murder of the pilot of the hijacked
which passed without incident.
jetliner.
·
·
A West Ge_rman official _flew to the scene a nd bega n
"Our goal now as before is to rescue the hostages from the
negottaUng wtth the hijackers .
hijackers who have shown by the murder today what they are
Th~ Arab and German hijackers, demanding the freeing of capable of," West German spokesman Klaus Boelling said.
13 )a tied comrades and $15 million ransom, shot to death the 37The pilot, wbo friends said always feared being hijacked,~
ye&amp;r-&lt;&gt;ld Lu!Utansa- pilot, Capt. Juergen Schumann, and was killed apparently because the terrorists believed he would
dumped h1s body off the plane at Mogadishu airport on the 5th · ,.n ougei Clirry · out their orders, the West Perman news
day of a terror-filled journey across Europe and the Middle agency DPA reported.
East .
·
Schumann, the father of two sons, used to say Uta\ if he ever "
The Somali government said the hijackers had set a 10 a.m. ran into a hijacking be would play it cool. "I'm no type for
EDT deadline for blowing up the plane and the remaining heroic gestures/' he once told his wife, Monika, accordin~ tn

comply with life order.
However, on Friday the
Roanoke, Va.-based company
requested another 90-day stay
starting from the end of the
high court's term. The court
usually adjourns Dec. 20.
Appalachian also suggested
the court to delay the refunds
Wltil 30 days a~er the U.S.
Supreme Court makes its
" final disposition" on the
appeal.
Meanwhile, the Virginia
Corporation
Commission
Friday awarded Appalachian
$25.7 million of a $43 million
rate increase requested in that
state.
The company is arguing In
both states that 11 needs the
mooey -to accelerate construction of a 600-mUIIoo
kllowatt generating plaol 1n
New Haven, W.Va.
Appalachian told the West
Virginia PSC it may not be
able to complete the plant
without a rate Increase, and
that could result in a 15 percent electric generation
shortfall in the early 1980's.

OUIJ.JCOTil.E - MEMBERS OF LOCAL 100 of the
Aluminum Workers International Union approved a contract
off er Saturday from th~ Wear-Ever Aluminum, Inc.
The three-year pact provides for a 75-cent an hour increase
during thai time, including an immedta!e 40 cent raise.
Approval of the contract ended a short strike.

EACH PIZZA
EATEN ON tREMISES
EAT IN OR
CARRY OUT
SERVICE
I

OPEN SUNDAY 4:00 TIL 11:00

MEIGS INN

PIZZA SHACK
PHONE 992-6304

_QUALITY
COLOR T.V.
BUY NOW
AND SAVEl

I

nesday night and Thursday

night.

'

$1.00 OFF

SALE
Hanes

FRANKFORT, KY . - A SINGLE-ENGINE Beechcraft
Bonanza plane :with three unidentified men on board was
repocted missing Sunday on a flight from London Airport in
southeastern kentucky to Hamilton, Ohio.
Gocdon Nichols, spokesman for the state Deparltnent of
Public Infocmation, said the Kentucky Civil Air Patrol would
begin an aerial search early today for the missing 1960 red and
white airplane, which left the airport early SWlday morning .

Blue label

WASHINGTON - REP. RALPH REGOLA, R-&lt;JHIO, says
federal employees and other workers enrolled in sound
retirement programs should not have to bail out the Social
Security program.
In his weekly "Regula Report Colwnn" to 16th District
constituents, the congressman said, "Teachers, postal workers, municipal officials, city employees and many others are
emphatic in urging me not to vote in favor of putting their
retirement money into the Social Security system. 1 agree with
these concerns."

' October 16-30

ELVELAND- MEMBERS OF NATURAL GAS Workers
Union Local 555 vote Tuesday on a prop&lt;ised three-year
contract that could end their 102-&lt;lay strike against the East
Ohio Gas Co.
The tmion 's .leadefs have recommended acceptance, but
they also recommended ratification of an earlier tentative
·····- ·
agreement which was decisively voted dpwn.

•

CINCINNATI - ALREADY IN !ega~ trouble for one
mailing he sent w Hamilton County residents, publisher larry
Flynt has gone to the mailbox again .
Flynt faces trial in Cincinnati for sending to numerous
county residents an illustrated pamphlet depidctlng the
mutilated bodies of Vietnam War victims. The idea was that
such death and suffering were more obscene than his Hustler
magazine. But laced with pending court action on a charge of
disseminating material harmful to minors, Flynt sent out a
new illustrated pamphlet this weekend , This one depicted the
mutilated bodies of abused children.

HANES UNDERWEAR ...
So comfortable
you forget
you have it on!

Hig~

HANES BLUE LABEL®
UNDERWEAR IS NOW ON SALE! _,
Buy any three (3) Hanes Blue Label® blended
underwea·r items and SAVE $1 .00! Offer good
on all comfort,. durable Hanes Blue Label'~
underwear. T-shirts and Briefs,

CROSBY MOURNED
Americans from shpw
•business to the White 1touse
OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 AM TO 8 PM OTHER
mourned the death of Bing
Crosby.
From old friend s and
WEEKDAYS 9:30 AM TO 5 PM
colleagues, like Bob Hope, to
President Carter to singers
wh&lt;J came after him, like
Frank Sinatra , the death of
crooner
reactions- ..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...
the
of shock
andbrought
sorrow.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) The Supreme Court today
cleared the way for the
Concorde supersonic airliner
wstart test flights into New
.yo r k ' s
Ke nnedy
!nterr!ational Airport .
The court set aside the
temporary bar put up Oct. 7
by
Justice
Thurgood
Marahall, -who acted at the
request of the Port Authority
of New York and New Jersey.
MarshaU's order had kept
the jetliner out until .British
Airways and Air France,
operators of the controversial
plane, could file papers in the
longpending case.
The port authority wanted
Ute court to keep the ban in
effect !¥'til it could appeal a

Weather

injured in four minor traffic
accidents investigated over
the weekend by the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
The mishap occurred at
6:45 a.m. on SR 124, east of
Racine where David L. Hill,
42, Racine ~ lost control of his
car which ran off the right
side of the highway, back
across the left side then
struck an embankment
before overturning.
Hill was taken to Veterans
Memoria l Hospital for

16 killed
on Ohio
highways
Uoiled Press International
Three doub le-fatality
crashes Saturday helped
boost the state's weekend
traffic death toll to at least 16,
the State Highway Patrol
said IDday.

·-

.
TO the . heavy vote in the past election in the Rock· Springs and Bradbury
Precmcts, the Me1gs Coun ty Board of Elections has created a new precinct to be known as
laurel Cliff Precinct. Voters in the new district, which makes 33 precincts in the county, wiD
vote m the dtstnct at the Nov. 8 election~ Boundaries for the three precincts involved·
according to the new district formation, include Rock Springs Pet. - Pomeroy Corp. out
Rt. 33 N?rth, Long Hollow Rd., Rt. 7 to Five Points Karl Krautter Linder Dains·
laurel Cltff ~t . -South of Route 33 including WiDow Creek Rd. to Route 124 including
Marvm McG~e out 124 North to the old Hendricks property past Denver Hysell. Route 143
to Dave Cummgs, Ball Run and Wolf Pen included; Bradbury Pet. - Route 7 bypass to
Galha County line, Cross Rds. 124 to Rutland Twp. line. Bailey RWl to the Legion property.

Record breaking cold
temps reported today
readings for Oct. 17.
United Press International
Cincinnati reported a 23Record-breaking· co ld
tempera!ures were reported degree temperature early
in Ohio early today. A high today, that's the lowest
pressure system centered · reading on record in the
over the eastern-third of the Queen City for so early in the
nation caused temperatures fall season. Cincin nati
in the Buckeye State to drop. weathermen say the previous
Clear skies over much of low reading for so ear
Ohio help the tempratures dip season was a 25-degr mark,
into the low 20s, setting or set on Oct .. 11, 1964:
tying several record low
The National W
er
Service in Dayton reported ,

degrees
ear ly
today,
breaking the old mark, set on
Oct. 17 in 1909.
Toledo had a reading of 22
degrees which also breaks a
record low temperature for
this date. Toledo also
recorded a record low for an
. 16 when the temperature
in ~t northwestern Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Ruth
ctty opped to 28 degrees, c. Clusen, president of the
shortl be(ore mtdmght. ~ League of Women Voters of
Sunda ·
·the United States today

!

I

.

-

assistance of a doctor, ~osby
was dead when he arr1ved at
a hosp1tal. Doctors satd he
died of a heart attack. They
sa1d a small wound on hts
forehead when he hit, the
ground was 6f no Importance.
On Sunday his remains
were .emba_lmed at the
Forenstc 11\stttut~ .
.
, Cro~b~, will ~ve a pnvate
falDily serv1ce at St. Pa.!fl
The Apolstle Church m Lo.s
Angeles and Mrs. Kathy
Crosby, the smger's se.cond
wife, has asked for privacy at
·the funeral.
She sa1d only the Crosby
children, herself and a few
close family friends would
attend.
.
Crosby,~ Cathobc, was to
be burted tn a famtly plot at
Hdly Cross Cemetery near his
mother and father and his
former wife, actress Dixie
Lee , who died -in 1952.

juries.

John H. Doss, Jr ., 18,
Crown City, was charged
with having no operator's
license following an accident
at 3 p.m. Sunday on Williams
Ridge Rd. one mile south of
SR 553.
a
The patrol said Doss's car
stt"uck a parked veh\c\e

Windows
hit by
vandals

.

Position distorted

.
·
b
,
'
·
b
d
d
Cros Y S 0 Y returne

treatment of minor tn]urtes
by the Racine Emergency
Sauad. No charges were
fi led . Hill's vehicle had
severe damage .
A single vehicle accident
occurred at 7 p.m. Saturday
on SR 700, one mile west of SR
218 where MarkS. Roberson,
21 , Crown City, lost control of
his car. The vehicle traveled
over an embankment into a
field . There was moderate
damage.
A final Saturday accident
occurred at 10:40 p.m . on CR
77 at the junction to US 35 ln
Jackson County where
Brenton L. Craddock, 30,
Columbus, lost control of his
car on the wet pavement. His
vehicle ran off the highway
striking a guardrail. Fannie
Woods, 39, Columbus, a
passenger, had minor ' in-

The patrol survey showed owned by. Delbert R.
no
deaths Friday night, 13 Williams, 25, Crown City.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::·::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:
Saturday and three Sunday. There
wa s
moderate
Double-fatality crashes were damage.
reported in Columbus, near
Chardon and near Ironton .
A Columbus man and his
wife, Lewis, 61, and Lula
The department of Sheriff Harney, 60, were killed when
James Proffitt was called to their truck crashed on a
the Antiquity Church Sunday Columbus street.
to investigate a breaking and
Herbert B. Mumford, 63,
entering.
Troy, and Cecil Poston Jr.,
Deputies found that entry 50, Huntington, W. V~.,..w.ere ,
had been made through a side killed when thei_r..:_, cars
window. A large coal-wood collided in Lawrence County
stove was removed from the near Ironton.
·
building.
Two Euclid men, John
Several vandalism com·
Sunday night the sheriff's Walsh, .24, and William
plaints
involving broken
department investigated .Renner, 33, were killed in a
windows
were investigated
reports ' of firearms being co llision on U.S . ·322 in
over·
the
weekend by
discharged in the Hobson Geauga County.
Pomeroy
police.
yards below Middleport. The
The city of tolumbus
Windows were broken at
back glass of a pickup truck recorded five of the traffic
Poultry, Elberfelds,
Welker
owned by Dennis Boothe, deaths, for of them Saturday.
Gravely
Tractor, Ohio Valley
parked at . the Red Brush Besides the Harneys, Peter
Plumbing and Warner's
Church, was shot out.
Strathie;-34, Columbus, was
Deputies also reported that hit by a car on the city's west Barber Shop. Several homes
a car driven by Richard side; !.ester A. Wright, 21, in the area were also vanMees, Route 2, Pomeroy, Columbus , was killed when dalized with broken windows.
Police said offenders will
traveling south on Route 33 he fell off a garbage truck;
was struck by a deer running and Fannie Benton, 62, be prosecuted to the fullest
into the side of the vehicle. Columbus, was killed in a exten!l of the law if caught for
The deer was not seriously two-&lt;Jar accident Sunday on such vandalism.
hurt and kept traveling . the city's northeast side .
There was slight damage to
Two pedestrians were also
his auto.
among the victims.

Tirleves get
stove in B&amp;E

·
reporters his father died "tbe
MADRID, Spain (UP!) The body of Bing Crosby, who way he would have wanted to
died "happy and singing" die"- on a golf course.
Spanish go lf champion
after winning a roWJd or gplf,
Valentin
Barrios, who played
is corning home.
with
Crosby
during his last' 18.
decision by the 2nd U.S.
American officials said
boles,
said
the
singer showed
Circuit Court of Appeals Sunday Crosby's remains
no
signs
of
fatigue
and was
declaring illegal the agency's would be flown to New York
happy
before
he
suddenly
fell
resistance to Concorde today aboard a commercial
to
the
ground.
landings.
jet and from there to Los
"We had just finished the .
While the court's action Angeles, where simple
last
hole alid were walking
!Dday lifted the legal ban, the Roman Catho,ic funeral
toward
the clubhouse when
appeals court decision still observances will be held
Bing
had
a seizure and fell.
could be appea led w the Tuesday.
We
first
thought he 1 had
Supreme Court. But this
The 74-year-old "Der
appeared to hold out little Bingle" died of a heart attack tripped," Barrios said .
"Bing was happy and
hope for opponents of the Friday after fininishing .a
singing
as he went aroWld the
plan.
round of golf in Madrid with
course. He was teamed up
three Spanish friends.
The coffin will be accom- with Manuel Pinero (another
panied by Harry Crosby, 19, Spanish champion) and they
Cesar
Zulueta
one of the crooner's seven ' beat
Clear tonight and not as children, who flew w Madrid (president of · the Moraleja
cold with lows in the mid and . w help arrange the transfer golf club) and me by winning
upper 30s . Partly cloudy of the entertainer's remains . the 18th hole."
Despite the immediate
Tuesday with highs in the
The youn g Crosby told
upper 50s and low 60s.

court lifts
ban ·on Con~orde

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·1::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chaoee of showers
Wednesday and Friday.
Fair Thursday. Highs will
be in the upper 50s and iow
60s Wednesday and ·ln the
60s Thursday and Friday.
Lows will be In the 30s
early Wednesday, war·
miog to the 40s by Wed-

DES ~IOINES, IOWA - THE PRICE OF HAMBURGER
should remain stable and the cos\ of pork chops may decrease
this winter, industry officials said Sunday . But the predictions
are shaky, officials admit, because of a number of unknown
facwrs.
. Bill Schermer of Latimer, Iowa, president of the Iowa
Cattlemen's Association, said the beef market should be
"going along at a nice even keel for the next few months. "

'U

FREE FOUNTAIN
SOFT DRINKS WllH

~-1

FOUR ARAB AND GERMAN TERRORISTS executed the
pilot Qf a hijacked West German airliner and dumped his body
onw the runway at Mogadishu Airport, where he was forced to
land with 86 oth er hostages, Somalia 's SoMa news ag ency
said.
'
Mogadishu radio , monitored in Nairobi ,.Kenya , said the
hijackers set a new deadline of 10 a.m. EDT, vowing to blow up
the Boeing 737 with the remaining hostages unless 13 comrades
are freed from Wes\ German and Turkish priS(lns and a $15.5
million ranspm is paid.

Comfort- Blend"
Underwear

the obvious planning of the
Democratic leadership and
the silent acquiesence of the
70 or 80 members on the floor
at the time, because it gave a
one shot increase in
Congressmen's pensions tD
encourage
the
older
members to retire and make
room for yoWJger blood.
It's· the kind of thing that
many members would say
"the press would distort and
not report objectively" if
there had been public debate.
The purpose of the bill had
merit. Even Common Cause,
the citi~ens' lobbying group
which has little favor among
congressmen, supported the
objective. It 's doubtful,
however, that it supported
PURSUIT PLANNED
the method of passage.
MANAGUA,
Nicaragua
What it did was allow
pensions for those retiring (UP!) - The Nicaraguan
National Guard threatened to
cross into neighboring Costa
...,.,... ...,~.,......~~ Ric~ Friday in pursuit of
leftist guerrillas who killed 12
Arl,.,lral...
persons in two . separate ~~­
tacks. Some of -the guerrillas
wounded in the. latest attack
Thursday apparently gav~
themselves up to authorities
in Costa Rica, who quickly
closed parts of the border and
dispatched 25 S(lldiers to the
area .

Two men were killed and a
woman was seriously· injured
in a collision Saturday afternoon on SR .7, just S()Uth of
Athalia in lawrence County.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
identified the dead as Cecil
Poston, 50, Huntington and
Hubert B. Mumford, 63, Troy.
0 . Mumford' s wife, Ma_ry,- 57,
was listed in critical con·
clition at St. Mary's Hospital
in Huntington.
The head-on crash occurred in a curve according
to state troopers for the South
Point Post State Highway
Patrol. It was reported that .
Poston's north-bound car was
left of center.
One . person was slightly

ST . LOUIS - AUTIIORIT!ES in Missouri and Texas are
cirruiating police artists" sketches of two young men in the
Investigation of a sniping at a suburban synagogue which
killed me man and wounded another .
The second sketch depicts a man who paid $200 to a man in
Irving, Tex ., lour weeks ago for ine hunting rifle that was used
"':he shooting Oc t. 8 in suburban Richmond Heights, Mo .

ganization .
Organizers said they were
not disappointed by the
turnout for the rally, which
lasted about two hours .
Holhster
said
he
anticipates more anti -Klan
activities, and said his group
plans to organize for the
November trials of those
arrested July· 4th.

:

Two die near Athalia

By United Press International
LEXINGTON , KY. - NINE MEMBERS OF the cast of
"Oh ! Calcutta !" were arrested SUnday by plainclothes ;
detectives and later released on $100 bond each after two.
showings of the controversial musical at the Lexington Opera
House.
The five men and four women were released on $100 bond
on charges of violating a city ordinance prohibiting indecency,
nudity and obscenity. They were booked and later released .

The Virginia commission

Vol. 28, No. 129

It wa s unclear whether he WaJ1 killed before or .after the plane
the West German newspaper Die Welt.
landed.
.
~ one of the gravest crises in West Germanys po st-war
history moWJted to a climax, the Bonn government's Arab
Somalia, bordering Ethiopia and Kenya, forms the horn of
affairs expert, Juergen Wischnewski, arrived in the Somali Africa which juts out into the Indian Ocean directly south of
capital of Mogadishu. He immediately began negotiating with Saudi A&lt;abia. The hijackers had been in Aden, the capital of
South Yemeni on the so4Utern coast of the Arabian peninsula,
the hijackers.
The short-&lt;ange Boeing 737 jetliner, which was comman- and flew today to the Somali capita [ of Mogadishu , 350 miles
deered last Thursday over southern France, arrived in due south of Aden.
Mogadishu early today after a flight from Aden , southern The Lufthansa airliner was hijacked on a flight from Palma de
Yemen,.wbere.the Marxist government rebuffed the hijackers' ·Majorca , Spain, to Frankfurt last" week. The plane stopped in
request for asylum.
Rome, Cyprus and Bahrain for refuelling stops before landing
Shortly after landing, the hijackers told the Mogadishu in the tiny Persian Gulf sheikdom of Dubai.
control tower to send someone to the plane for the pilot 's body. . The hijackers spent 42 hours in Dubai negotiating with West
Astatement by the official Sanna press agency said the corpse German government and l)ubai officials. The plane took off
was dumped on the runway and Somali officials removed it to Sunday for Oman on the Persian Gulf, then veered off to
·
'
a hospital. ·
Southern Yemen at the tip of the Arabian peninsula .
West German embassy officials said the pilot had been shot .

~

was told about 40 percent of
the plant's output would serve
Virginia customers.

Fifteen Cents

ane's

ers

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!) - The state's highest court is
apparently not high enough for Appalachian Power Co.
The utility said Friday it will go to the U.S. Supreme Court
to appeal a Public Service Conunission order requiring the
refund of $47.7 millio11, and asked the West Virginia Supreme
Court to delay those refunds at least until March 20.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

,.

en tine

High Court

Klansmen march in Columbus
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Approximately 100 anti-Ku Klux
Klan demonstrators marched
a t the statehouse, then
walired U1ree blocks through
downtown to Columbus city
hall Saturday afternoon in an
in cident-free rally against
Klansmen
a nd
the
"capitalists ·· who m the
demonstrators claim support
the Klan .
The rally was spurred by
confrontat ion s betw ee n
Klansmen and anti-Klan
,groups during KKK rallies at
the statehouse July 4th and
Labor Day. APProximately a
dozen persons were arrested
· in skirmishes at those rallies.
Paul
Hollister,
a
spokesman for the Columbus
Defense Committee Against
the Klan, said the rally was
planned "to continue the

at

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday , Oc tober 17. 1977

West Vi rginia GO\'. Jay Rockefeller will make a brief ap- .. MY DEAR GOVERNOR :
.
pearance on the Silver Memorial Bridge late Tuesday·
The wel~o me news of two. lane .traffic on ~e . Sil~er
afternoon, the day before the bridge ts slated to reopen, Memortal Brtdge was greeted wtth rehef and elalton m Pomt
according to an aMouncement made Saturday by Mason Pleasant, Mason County and our neighboring cities in Ohio.
County Delegate Dave O'Neal.
The past 14 weeks have been anxious and depressing ones
O'Neal said the -~overnor will flv in bv helicopter and is for this community which endured the closin g of this massive,
barely B year-old bridge with disbelief .
expected to arrive betwee n 4 and 4: t5 p.m.
Rockefeller announced last week t hat the bridge would
We are grateful for the accelerated steps you have taken
reopen on Wednesday, October 19, at 6 a.m. It has been closed in the past few weeks to expedite the r~pening of the bridge,
since July 6 in order to repair 16 defects in the uppe r-tension and hope you will accept our thanks, both in this letter and its
publication in the Point Pleasant Regtster .
area s.
The bridge will only be open to two-lane traffic so work to
It would be a happy occasion if you could be present for a
correct other less criticial •defects Jm take place.
· r~pening' ceremony either next Tuesday, the 18th, or when
With the bridge's opening, G.A. Biggs, p.resident of the full traffic flow is resumed.
In any event, the Point Pleasant-Mason County Chamber
Point Pleasant-Mason Chamber of Commerce, sent the
following letter to the governor Friday expressing his of Conunerce extends its sincere appreciation to you for your
gratitutde for reopenin g the seven-year-&lt;&gt;ld span :
help.
Sincerely yours,
The letter is as foUows :
G.A. Biggs, ·
President, Chamber of Conunerce

•

'

•
Columbus Metropolitan Club
between Regina O'Leary, cochairman of Citizens to Save
the Right to Vote, and
Peterson, executive director
of
Ohioans
for
the
Preservation of Honest Elections.
During the debate Peterson
claimed, · "the League (of
Women Voters ) nationally is
very much in step with our
position and the Ohio League
is out •I step."

charged Arthur Peterson and
the
Ohioans
lor .• th~t
Preservation of Honest
Elections committee with
. distorting · the league's
position on Election Day
registration .
'
"Mter many years of study
and involvement in the elections system, the League of
Women Voters of the United
States
wholeheartedly
FmEMEN CALLED
endorses electi on day
The
Pomeroy
Fire
registration as one method to Department was called to
expand the voting franchise Route7 at 4:09a.m. Monday
and actively involve more to flush diesel oil from the
Americans
in
their highway. The oil was thrown
government, " Ms. Clusen by a tractor-trailer which
said .
jackknifed, then overturned.
" As president of the The vehicle had traffic
League of Women Voters of blocked for several hours .
the United States, 1 deplore
At 2:16 p.m. Saturday the
the kind of ta ctics Dr . emergency squad went to
PeterS(ln and his group are Veterans Memortal Hospi_fal
using in their attempt to and transported .Floyd
discredit the Lea gue of Spence, to Holzer Medical
Women Voters and eliminate ,Center. At 8:31 p.m. Saturelection day registration in day , the squad went to
Ohio " she added .
Mulberry Ave . for Richard
M;. Clusen was referring to Glasgow who was taken to
a del&gt;ate 0~ 14 at the Veterans Memorial ~~ospital.

Three wrecks
. investigated

Three weekend accidents
were investigated by the
Pomeroy Police Department.
At 3:20 a . m. Sunday on
West Main St., a westbound
car driven by Jeffrey
Hawley, Middleport, ran off
the right side of the road
·· striking a utility pole .
l'"ollowing the acciden t,
Hawley walked to Middleport
then was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. . He was
·allroitted there. There was
heavy damage to the car.
Hawley told officers an on·
coming car was left of center
forcing him to leave the road.
He was charged with reckless
operation.
At 12:25 a. m. Sunday, a car
driven by Joyce Riley,
Clifton, hacked into a parked
car owned by Charlotte
Evans. The accident took
place on Mulberry Ave. Riley '
was · cited for Improper
hacking.
At 10 :\5 a . m. Sunday on
Butternut Ave ., a car driven
by Eirnora Boice, Pomeroy,
pulled from Second St., Into
the left front fender of a car
driven by Regina McGuire,
Pomeroy . There was light
damage , no arrests and no
injuries.
•.

�2- The Dall Sl'n ne

~1

•

ddlepor Pon ero• 0 Mooda) Od 7 19-

Ancient law may determine
legality in nightclub fire
accuse sta e and lora
author es of negl gen&lt;:e n
fa lmg to enfo ce f re and
oo ldmg safe 'Odes
The sw s also charge he
c ub s
oy,: ne s
w h
neg gence m the operauon of
the huge entertamment spot
The !lionday hearmg w
1ocus on a su fled b " o
Cmcmnati a orne) s d rectl)
halleng ng
he

cons

NEWPORT Ky UP
Ail anc ent ega doct me
or gll\all) des gned to pro ec
the King of England f om
legal troubles may determ ne
the ou come of more than $1 '
bill on m c VI su ts stemm ng
fr om he Beve I) H Us
SUpper C ub ftre
Descended from Eng sh
Coounon Law the docu-me of
so e e gn
mmun y
mean that iiL1he courts
The Ktng can do no wrong
In ts modern form the
legal concep p ec udes some
types of damage su ts agal!lS
sta e and local go errunen s
A spec allega ean repre
sennng re atives of viCtims of
~e trag~c n ghtd ub ftre wil
~
ask federal and sta e court
TUESDAY
judges Moo day to s rike down
SALISBURY
PTO mee mg
the doctrme argum g
IS
7
30
p
n
Tuesda
a he
m d ous meqwtab e and
school
Prog
ram
w
ll
ndude
uncons utiona1
The cmplex !ega debate quest on and ans\\e sess on
" h f ve ca nd dates for
wil occur at a a e fede a
\fe gs Loca Board of
s ate o n cou sess on
Educa
on and a d scusson l11
called b) the U S DLS c
ssue
2
Court and Kentucky Circw
REGULAR MEETING
Court judges p es ding o er
W
omen
s Aux I ar) Ve e ans
an a alanche of a" sw s filed
Memor
al
Hosp al m hosp a
as a resul of the blaze
cafeter
a
7 30 p m Tuesda)
The May 28 Southga e Ky
DueB
a
e payab e A
fire killed 1&amp;1 persons and
members
asked
to attend
mJured some 60 othe s
THURSDAY
Sove e gn trnmun l) has
EPISCOl'AL Church
been alffied as a defense m
the Be e y H Us cases bv Women at he home of M s
Ia") ers for
he Com Ph p Kel ) Thu sday w h
mon"eal h of Ken ucky a 12 30 p m uncheon
Prog am by M s Thelma
and the C y of Southgate
D
The maze of egal a t ons

ut ona t

of

he

doctrme F led b Sl&lt;ln e M
Chesle) and John A Uo d
J
he act 011 s untike he
res of he ftre suns n that
seeks no monetan damages
- JUS a n verturnmg of he
doctrme
Ex ep fo the doc r ne of
so ere gn mn uru \ the e s

P umpkin

"t Soc1al
show to
f Calendar
begin

CIRCLEVILLE
Oh o
UP! - There will be p enty
of pumpkins and pumpkm
re a ted food and acnv ties
ava Jab e when the annua

I

l
1
1
I
I
I

Ldlers of opbdoa are welcomed Tbey lhould be
lea than 3QO wordiiOIII (81' be subjeet to reductloll by
the editor) and m,.t be •tcDed wllb the 1ipee 1 Ill
dresa Names may be withheld upon pllllllealh.,
However on requeat namea will be dl.lcleted Letten
obould be Ia good talle addreaolae tuuea noc per
oonalltlea

•

Sport Parade

•

mam topic

these pla nllffs v ctuns
Chesle) and Uoyd asserted m
the r !ega br ef oo the ssue
The at orneys noted hat a
ass ve Kent ucky Sta e
Pol ce nvest gallon of the
fi e placed blame oo swte
and local emp oyees
f re
and bwldlllg nspectors - as
well as the c utrowners
Spec f cally he su t asks
the fede al and state courts
for a ruting that Kentucky
Attornev General Robert F
Stephens s depr vmg those
brmgmg the swts of thetr
canst ut onal r ght.s unde
he
F rsl
and
14th
Amendments
The Cincmnati attorneys
c e among other cases a

1908 U S Supreme Court
declSlon as support for thetr
case In that ru mg the high
court concluded that when a
state off cal acting under
s a e law v ol ates the
Canst ut on he comes mto
COil fl ct W th the super or
au hor t es
of
ha
Cons! ut on
be JUd c al
s)s em

deadline

IJPI Sportl Editor

E nes A W nge
Cha man
Qo o

M

•

Oa ed 0

o ns on

D e o

is Oct. 23

1
I
I
I

I

l
1

I
I
I
I

E nes A W

ge
Cha ma

Do o h
O a ed 0

M

on

o

D e o

9

E

es A w nge
C a man

Do o h M
Da ec:l 0

ohns on

D e o

9

ASTRO·GRAPH

Answers to some questwns
concernmg school cnszs
Quest ons are bemg, asked concemmg the presen c

lS

s of

the Southern Loca School D str ct ThiS a ti e w ll ry to
answe some of them
Why not c ose he Po land Elementarv School to save
money
I would bed ff cult f not unposs ble to c ose th s schoo lt
lS both a federal law and a state law tha an approp ate
educat ona p ogram be proVIded by each schoo d str c fo a
schoo age children Because of these laws Southern a the
Lawrence
present une needs two add tiona c assrooms to
accommodate ts spec a educa on program at the elementa y
eve! Por land Elementary p ov des these add t ona
class oom needs Also Southe n Local must have an
elemen ary schoo that will accommodate cr ppled children It
IS the on y one s ory school bw d ng n the distr ct that would
allow a student m a wheel cha r to attend e ementary schoo
Why can lhe Board of Educa on cut expenditures ra her
than ask for add tonal nuUage
Due to state mandated muumlllffi sa a es and fiXed
Lawrence E Lamb M 0
charges the Board of Educat on has contro over bu a sma
DEAR DR LAMB
My
pe centage of ts general fund expendi ures In 1976 for
husband
had
a
hea
t
bypass
example out of the total expend&gt;tures to operate the schoo
system 87 pet went for mandated salar es and fiXed cha ges ope at on They told us one
Aboard of education cannot pay below the mandated salar es arte y was complete y bock
and st ll ece ve state rud Recently both New Cartisle Belhel ed wo we e pa t al y b ock
Local and Northeastern Local of Clark County were told by he ed They only d d he one
State Department of Educat on that not only wou d hetr a e y tha was comp ete y
foundation payment be w thheld but they would have to pay blocked and never exp a ned
back aU state a locations from July I 1977 o October 20 1977 why they d dn t do a I hree
Also I would I ke o know f
if they did not pay the state mmunum salary
there
s cl oles\e ol n vea
Many of the othe expend lures are beyond the control of
I
ver
the Board of Education The Board buys most of ts energy
DEAR READER
A
needs through competitive b dding to hod down costs
However inflat on has continued to dr&gt;ve thew costs up For lim ed amoun of obs ru on
examp e Southern he a ed the same bwldlllgs and opera ed he of an a \ery does not
de ease he blood flow
same bus outes n 1976 as t did m 1974 but he energy cos
mcreased by 30 pet There s a m nun urn level of expenditures tl ougl l As long as 70 per
en of the open ng s st I
be ow which a school distr ct cannot ope a e
th
re the fatty cho estero!
Why IS Southern bus ng students to Me gs H gh School
depos
ts won make that
every day
mu
I
d fference There s a
I s true that at the present tlffie a bus s transpo t ng
cr
al
eve of blockage ha
s uden s to Me gs High School They are Southern students
starts
caus
ng prob ents The
en oiled lfl a vocal onal program The state has mandated that
doc
or
p
obably
felt on the
each juruor and sen&gt;or must have access to a m nunum of 18
bas
s
of
what
the)
could see
vocational courses Southern H gh School offers 3 vocat onal
a
the
ope
a
on
lha
t
a bypa
courses and must contract w th the Me gs Boa d of Educat on
around
I
e
part
a
y
b ocked
for the add t ona 15 that are requ red These students must
ar
er
es
wou
d
not
attend Me gs H gh School when s m sess on to obta n credit
s
gn
f
Co
tly
mprove
you
for thetr vocational tralillng
Why no vo e agams he schoo levy and send a me sage to husband s rcu a on to the
our egisla u e tha peop e are aga nst property taxes as be ng heart
You can mp ove h cond
the bas s for the fund ng of schools
The at onale for he above ques on s that f enough t o though by he p ng h m
n na
or avo d obes ly
schools shu down he Gene a Asserr bly w
one across
w th addi onal money On September 20 at the State House n and hav ng h m on the prope
Columbus rep esenmt ves from Sou he n Local and nne die f h moke he should
other school d str ct.s were told not o expec any add onal stop The sue ess of many
money from the smte un ess the local schoo d str cts are bypa s opera! ons depe ds on
willmg to tax themselves more At th&gt;s meetlng Senator Sam what k nd of pro~ram a pe
on follows afle su gery If
Speck R New Concord sa d hat t s difficult to explam to
he
person pers sts n eat ng
those school d str ct.s w th high rrullage rates that the
he
wrong
foods be g obese
legislature should do someth ng spec1al to ass st school
and
s
nok
ng
the end resu s
distr cts whose tULane al diff culty &gt;s the resu t of a low m llage
not
so
good
rate The leg&gt;slature does seem to recogruze the problem and
Yes veal ver onta ns
are dong what they can by pass ng leg&gt;slation to make t
holestcrol
about 300
eas er to pass an emergency school levy on wh ch money can
nu
grams
n
a
100 gram
be borrowed aga nst the ant&gt;c paled revenues I t passes
hreeand
a
lafoun
e po
Another senator at th s meeting sUited that he feadersh p m
t
on
of
aw
I
ver
That
small
the General Assembly was not n the mood to ncrease taxes
serv
ng
alone
w
I
take
up
all
1nd the only so ut10n to the I nanc al problem lac ng local
h
a
owed
cholesle
o
fo
.chool d st ell; was for the voters to approve add t onal
he whole d et for one day A I
n
e fo the opera! on of thetr schools Clearly a message
{o
ms of ve are moderate y
he
ready been sen to Colwnbus Our leg slators response
high
n chu estero ontent
as c ear A greater local effort must be made for the
1
o
p you w I a d et plan
uppo t of schools
P epared by the Comm tee to Pass he
I
am
end
ng ) ou he Health
" Y Jlffi Adams chatrperson Bobby Ord Supermtendent
.ell
nwnbe
! D t
d membe s of the Board of Educat on Linda Spencer clerk
easuret
Pr ve ng At etos lcr s s

HEALTH
E Lamb M 11

Many factors
E nest A W nge
Cha ma

affect arteries

•

..

•

Oo o h M
D

1 w g ve you he gene al
pr c pies you need to follow
Others who wan th
ssue
can send 50 cents w th a long
stamped
se lf add essed
envelope for t o P 0 Box
155 Rad o C y Stat on New SAG TTARIUS (Nov 23 Doc
York N Y 10019
21) Bewa e o we mean ng
ends who y o s ee 'iO o
DEAR DR LAMB I am 26
oda y
The
years old but the growth of ba ga ns
e ommenda ons au d be bas
ha on my chest s ve y ed o e oneous nfo ma on
scarce There s more ha r on
(Doc 22 Jon 19]
the r gh half of hest than on CAPRICORN
S mewhe e a ong he ne you e
the eft Is here some wav s epped on he oes a one who
hat mo e ha r w I develop on e e
n uence o e
ou
my eft s de or on my upper ca ee Today ha pe son s n a
chest as a whole Is the e a poooeaae
hem ca
mbalance ha
may reate th s p ob em
Would cult ng or shavmg ne
ha r I have eale more
The ha r growth n other
areas s adequate although
no n large quant tes even n
he pub eg on I hope you
an g ve me some adv ce to
help
DEAR READER
The
be adv e f can g ve you s
to forget about I I suspect
your fr ends don t even not ce

e

Da ed 0
0

3

o

o Da ed 0

9
0

4 4

Da ed o

0 3

0

2

Den Talk

4

E nes A W nge
Cha man

Do o 1'1 y M
Da ed 0

0 3

9

0

3

oh s on

o ec o

In 1975 American scientist
James Rainwater and Damsh
sc entists Aage Bohr and Ben
Mottelson shared the Nobel
Pr ze foc phySLcs

LEO (Julv 23 Aug 22) As ong
as you e ac ng on you own
o on you be easy o get
a ong w h a day
you e
o de ed o do some h ng you

pped o

NEW YORK (U P!)
Hav ng averted an old
lash oned
New York
muggtng oo thetr home
I eld the Los Angeles
Dodget,S came to host le
Yankee Stadium (Qday am d
a new Yankee con roversy
1nvolv ng
a
sudden
sw tchover to Mike Torrez as
the SLxth game World Ser es
p1tcher
Yankees Manager B lly
Martlfl made the change to
Torrez the th rd game
wmner after conferrmg w th.

h s ra ner about the
cond t on of Ed F gue oa s
sore r ght ndex fmger
F gueroa was v s b y upset
at belflg passed over aga n
and efused to ta k to
repor ers as he boarded the
Yankees bu! after Los
Aitgeles drubbed New York
10 4 at Dodger Smd&gt;um
Sunday
On the brlllk of ehnunat on
after hav ng dropped three of
the f rst four games the
Dodgers rose out of the gutter
to batter Don Gul ett ~nd

E nes A W nge
Cha man

Do o hy M Johns on
Da ed

o

9

O l a 7 2 4 4c

D

ec o

three rei evers for 13 hits mcludmg horne runs by Steve
Yeager and Regg e Sm th to send the Sl'r es back to
New York for a s xth game
Tl e Dodgers w&gt;ll start Burt
Hooton lil the s1xth game
Tuesday n ght m an elf ort to
square the Ser es
The Dodgers went to Los
Angeles t ed one game
ap ece then proceeded to
drop tbe ftrst two games on
the r home turf But LA
Manager Tonuny Lasorda
cal ed a meet ng of h s troops

before Sunday s game and
ev dently go h s men going
Davey Lopes the f rst Los
Aitgeles batter of the game
pled and B
Russell
lmmedLately followed w th a
SLngle glVIng the Dodgers a
qu ck 1.0 lead
In the fourth mnmg Steve
Garvey doubled off the r ght
center f eld wall Dusty
Baker SLngled Lee Lacy was
safe on an error and Yeager
homered deep mto the ower
ef f eld stands for a 5.Q lead
They padded that margm

Browns share le11d, win 24-23
HOUSTON UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns and
Houston 0 lers share a slim
lead lfl the AFC Central
D VIS on but thetr respect ve
weaknesses are so glar ng
that even us&gt;ng m rrors
probably would only lfltens fy
thetr problems
The Browns 3 2 are at an
offensive loss wtthout
rmnmg back Greg Pru tt
The Oilers ~2 are stynued
offens vely
when
quarterback Dan Pastorm s
s delmed

L T Pet
0 0 000
0 800
2 0 600
3 a 400
4 0 200

Ba moe
Mam
New Eng and

e

NY

ao

B

Cent a

W L T P 1
310600
3 2 0600
2 0 500
0 500

We

De

W L T Pc
500000
0 800
3 2 0600
" a 200
050000

e

Oak a d
San D ego
Sea e
Kansas C

Na ona Con

Eas

M nneso

De o
(h

a

l!QO

e

~nee

W L T Pc
500000
320600
0 400
2
0
00
230400

•W
32

G een Ba
Tampa Bay

0

A

an a

New 0 eans
Sa F an s

W L T
3 2 0
3 2 0
4 0
0 5 0

sea e 30 Tampa Ba 23
Da as 34 Wash ng on' 0
Mondays Game
C n nna
a
P sb

gh

Warriors
post 12·0
•
VIctory

F rst downs
9
4
Turnovers
4 0
Rush ng yards
190
7
Passmg yards
61 58
Total Yards
251
58
Pena Ues
5-45 6 70
Score by quarters
Wamors
0 0 6 6--12
76es
0001)-1)

was unabl!l to re-enter the
gsme 'O)ose fa~!,;~ were disappomted when the only offense
Had! generated m the secood
ball was a 16-yard dnve
leading to Ton Fr tsch s 36yard f eld goal and a 23-21
Oilers lead w th 4 50 to
play
The Oilers defense wh ch
IS respons ble for Houston s
wmmng record was superb

m wlllnmg a second half
batt e for held pos&gt;l on
Houston held the Browns
ms de the r 16-yardline and
forced a punt to set up the go
ahead f eld goal
W1th Houston s next four
opponents to be Pittsburgh
Cmcmna Chicago and Oak
land
the 0 lers need
Pastor1n1 to get well He sa1d
he aggravated the spram of
his nghl ank e but expected
to play next week
Pru tt srud he would be
fully recuperated for next
Sunday s game at Buffalo

Dodgers

story outright lie

to talks

games th s season He s a
decent smart man but he s
baseball dumb
But an oppostle p ctu e was
drawn Sunday when the two
men jOked w th fans and
threw baseb~lls mto the
swnds before the swrt of the
game
In the clubhouse after the
Yankees loss Jackson sa&gt;d
he and Martin had a mce
little Wlk th s week I can t
wa t to play for the man
Jackson also refuted the
Time Magaz ne report he had
g~ven a
him or me ul
timatum to Stelllbrenner I
have purposely stayed away
from talk ng \Q the owner
because I knew someone
would come up w lh some
weak story like th s and
create controvery
Sa d Mart n I m flatly
angered by all those stor&gt;es I
don t want any part of 11 any
more We are a well-kn tied
club now We need no more of
thLS bleep You have to g ve
the New York wnters credit
for th s

Injuries could
decide big game
PI'ITSBURGH (UP!) Both hobbled by inJUries and
crossmg the&gt;r f ngers m
bopes thetr wounded stars
are able to perform the
Cmcmnal Bengals and
Pittsburgh Steelers rekmdle
thetr seven year&lt;&gt;ld rivalry
ton ght
The wmner of the
nationallyleleV!sed game will
move mto a ftrSii&gt;lace tie m
the AFC Central D VIS on
w th Cleveland and Houston
w th ~2 records The loser
will drop to 2-3 and lflto the
cellar
The Steelers have won the
last ftve meellllgs between
the two learns and lead the
aU-tune senes 10-4 but thetr
hopes for ton ght - and for
poss&gt;bly the rest of the season
as well - are r ding on the
I.:OKRECf!UI'O

Due to an error ln the
reportmg of the game the
w nn ng touchdown In South
western s v ctory over
Eastern was cred&gt;ted to the
wrong player
Barry Jenkllls caught the
w nn ng TD from quar
erback Gene Layton and not
Larry Carter as stated n he
games wr tc up n Sunday s
l mes Sen nel

left wr st of quarterback
Terry Bradshaw
Bradshaw suffered a !rae
lured bone n the wnst
agamst Houston last week
He throws r ghthanded and
pract ced last week w&gt;th the
mJury braced by a plastic
cast but exper enced some
palfl lil talung snaps and
performlflg handoffs
It was expected that
Steelers coach Chuck Noll
who adopted a 'Wa t and see
allltude on h s start ng
quarterback all last week
would sbrt Bradshaw and
bope - JUSt hope - he can
last the duratton
Reserve M&gt;ke Kruczek sui
fered a sh ulder separation
last week and s out for the
season leavmg Noll WLlh only
mexper&gt;ence m Ne 1 Graff
and rook e Cl ff Stoudt
The steelers need a v&gt;ctory
ton ght but w th Houston
Bait more Denver and
Dallas st ll wa t ng to meet
them they I have to play 1t
safe w th B adshaw lest they
lose hun for even longer
Aitd although the Bengals
are also mJury-r ddled &gt;t
doesn t make the Wsk any
eas er for P ttsburgh even
though 11 s currently tops n
the AFC m both offense and

wtth "three more runs m the
I fth knockmg out Gullett lfl
the process Sm th opened
wtth a walk and one out
later Garvey s ngled him to
th rd brmgmg on rook&gt;e Ken
Clay for the Yankees Then
Baker s ngled home one run
Lee Lacy SLngled m another
and Steve Yeager sacr !iced
to shallow center for hts
fourth RBI of the g~
Sm th closed out the
Dodgers scormg w th a two
run homer m the s1xth
Yeager left the game for a
pmch hitter m he seventh
his JOb completed
Dr Jobe (Frank Jobe the
Dodgers phys c an) srud I
stramed the I gaments m my
nght leg Yeager explallled
w th a wink He srud I have
about two more games left m
t

SUtton who blanked the
Yankees on three h t.s over
the ftrst s x 1111mgs seemed
to relax a b t after the Dodger
barrages lil the fourth and
fifth and was touched for a
patr of runs m the seventh
before Thurman Munson and
Regg e Jackson clubbed
back-to back solo homers n
the e ghth
I m not too proud of those
two mnmgs srud SUtton

Game 5
Nt:W YORK
R e s

Rando ph 2b
Munson
ohnson
ack~on

Ch amb ss b
Ne es Jb
Pne a
Den ss
Gu e p
cay p
Wh e ph
H n e p
B a ph

To as

wbo 1s now 5.Q lil postseason
games I made up my mmd
I wasn t gomg to walk
anybody so they d have to hit
more home runs to beat me
Sutton then echoed the
sptr&gt;t wh1ch Lasorda has
str&gt;ved so hard to nst ll m the
Dodgers all year
I ve watched th s team all
year sa d the 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld
r&gt;ght4Lander and I know we
don t believe t s all over unt1l
somebodY tells us to pack our
bags
The Yankees canst ll wrap
up thetr 21st world champ on
sh p w&gt;th a VLctory at home
Tuesday n ght and the
Dodgers adm !ted the r
concern over unruly New
York fans
As long as the fans don t
hit me srud Yeager
I
guess 11 s okay that we have
to go back to New York to wm
th s thing I don t hke t when
they start throwmg things
But t tsn t all the fans It s
Just a couple of rotten apples
m the whole barrel that spo 1
11
Preventton IS
the best policy

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
Young men and women

0
4 0

often ask why they have to
pay
mo e to
her
automob e nsu ance
D ve s n he r eens and
earle went es cause fa
mo e than the sha e of
t aff c ace den s Repo s

40 0 '0
4 2 2
4
2

he Nat ona
Sa ely
Counc I 21 8 pe cent o a
mota s s a e 24 yean of

Series box:

Zebe ph
dow p

respond

LOS ANGELES UP!) Reggie Jacksoo embro led
all season long w th Manage
Billy MaFtm m a ser es of
nmmng controvers es was
Pc
600 repor ed Sunday by Time
600
200 Magazme as ready to qwt he
000 New York Yankees unless
Mart n ts ftred
But both Jackson and
Mart n flatly den ed the
s 0
story In fact they appeared
the best of fr ends and shared
m blastmg the news med a
for allegedly fabr&gt;catlllg the
r ft between the pa rafter the
Yankees 10-4 loss Sunday to
the Los Angeles Dodgers
Jackson labeled the Time
s ory an outr ght 1 e and
sa d the only tune he had ever
been nterv ewed by the
gh
magaz ne was when he was
put on t.s cover
'The story satd Jackson told
Yankees pr nc pal owner
George Stelllbrenner he wdl
not pla) for the team next
season if Martin Is manager
Mart n was quoted lil the
story as saylflg
Jackson
has cost th s club a lot of

BY LARRY FISHER
Well hunters It s gett ng near the time for deer season to
Last Saturday mght on a
open up m the state and I thought I would g ve you some wet f eld lil M ddleport the
information as to the purchasmg of penmt.s and I censes
B g Bend Warr ors ended a 12
Deer perm ts are now ava !able at most hunting hcense
game losing streak and
agenc&gt;es and the pr ce s the same th&gt;s year Permtts are $10 recorded the r first shut out
plus a 50 cent wr ling fee You alSO must have a hunting license v&gt;ctory In their three year
m addit on to the perrmt This year the apphcallon blank for
h&gt;story by blankmg the 76 ers
free antler ess deer perm&gt;ts are attached to the bottom of the
of Mar etta 12.0 The game
deer perm t Hunters wanting to apply have unt 1 Oct 21 to was a well played contest on
rruul thetr application to the address ndicated on the both s des but the defense of
application blank Successflll apphcations are chosen by a
the Warriors was out
random zed computer and you w ll be notified by mail if your standing RandY Faulk and
Terry Barrett led the
name has been chosen
Landowner antlerless deer penmt.s wtll be tssued n defense WLth slx tackles each
selected count es upon the request of landowners or thetr whde the team sacked the
children Appl cations for these penrut.s may be obtamed at quarterback s x tunes
any local deer checkmg stat on or off ces of the ASCS lil the
Offensively the Wamors
Farmers Bank Bullding
racked up 190 yards on the
If you are a qual fled disabled veteran you may obw nan ground due to outstandmg
appticat on for an antlerless deer perrml by wr&gt;l ng D&gt;VLSton blockll\g on the part of the
of Wildlife Pernut Section Founw n Square Columbus Ohio offens ve I ne The passing
department was also good m
43224
Also there LS one last rerrunder to be sure and vote NO on that quarterback M ke
ssue Two the leg hold trap b ll ) There 1s not much tune ...§.ttrnmell threw for 61 yards
before election day and I this ts allowed to pass t cou d hurt lil four complet&gt;ons Scott
farmers as well as people who earn the r lllcome by trapp ng
Ruter pulled n two of the
passes for 41 yards and some
Good huntmg
key f rst downs
Brent Hawk and Gerald
Mdls carr ed the two touch
downs as the ran 26 yards and
21 yards respect&gt;vely
On Oct 22 at 7 30 the
Warnors w II meet the
Gall a team m M ddleport

game was speciJ!cular
because of the play of the
defens ve and spec al teams
Houston s B lly Johnson re
turned a punt 87 yards ea ly
m the ftrst quarter for a
touchdown Bro~ defens ve
back Clarence Scott and Tony
Peters each mtercepted a
Had! pass later m the f rst
quar~er
and Cleveland
overcame the Oilers 10-0
start
The Browns led 14-10 when
Pastorlll forced lllto the fray
desp te a severe y tw sled
ankle fumbled as he lr ed to
pass Cleveland tltflled that
mistake mto a touchdown and
a 21 10 lead as a 19 yard
mterference penalty on
Hous on fueled Cleveland s
ooly touchdown dr ve of the
game
Desp&gt;te a 21 20 halftime
lead Cleveland had gamed
only 54 total yards The
Browns needed Pru tt
He doesn t change us as
much as he changes
defenses Gregg sa d
The earn announced to 1ts
fans however that Pastorlll

Jackson says Time

L T Pc
0 8QO.
0 600
'
0 400
0 200
0 000

West

os Ange es

Both Prutt and Pastorm
sat out most of the SUnday
meet ng between lhe two
r vals until thetr coaches
we e desperate
Two mtercepnons thrown
by Pastorm s backup 37
year&lt;&gt;ld Jolm Had! led to two
Browns touchdowns and
forced Pastorm to hmp onto
the f eld late m the ftrst
quarter
Later w th Cleveland
tratl ng m the clos ng
m nutes Browns coac h
Forrest Gregg was forced to
II\Sert Pruttt
Greggs move pad off as
the !&gt;-foot 9 Pruttt accounted
for 26 yards n a last nunute
march wh ch resulted m a :myard Don Cockroft f eld goal
and a 24-23 win
What s as good as us
wmnmg Gregg sa d s not
gettmg Greg hurt
Ph&gt;lltps desperat on
caused by Hadl s poorly
thrown passes - backftred
He got Paslorm hurt agam
late m the second quarter
Both offenses Sunday
gained 398 total yards but
desp te thetr meptitude he

W 76s

become ve y ba ky

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22)
P o ec he oo s o yO'-!
ade
and possess ons oday An
ounce o p e en on cou d sa e
yo
om he auma o be ng

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - There comes a time w th every
p&gt;lcher when he has to h tch up his pants suck n his belly and
reach back lo that I tle extra the very best he has and
Tommy Lasorda sensed he d better do that r ght now or maybe
n~ver get another chance
In h s day the doughty I tile Los Angeles Dodger manager
had a pretty fa curveball It served him well mak ng h&gt;m a
cons stent w nner n the h&gt;gh mmors and earnmg hun an
eventual opportun ty m the majors
Seventeen )ears have gooe by now s nee Lasorda has gotten
anyone out bul that wasn t the problem Sunday He wasn
mterested m getttllg anybody out Hts b&gt;g job was keep ng hiS
ballclub m the World Seres One more loss to the Yankees and
his Dodgers would be aU flll shed
So he called them toghether for a meettng and Tommy
Lasorda who has a m Uon funny star es didn t tell a s ngle
joke th s time He.wasn lin the mood for that sort of thing and
ne ther were they All he d d was lay tout oo the Jme for them
You heal one helluva club th s year m Cmcmnati he told
them Then came the playoffs and everybody thought Ph Ia
delph a was gonna w pe you off the lace of the ear h We spl
two games Wl h them here and nobody gave us any chance
when we hadda go back to Philadelphia But we beat em
there
Now we re two down w th the Yankees and we ve gotta w n
the next three I know you can do In my heart 1feel we have
the better ball club I honest y bel eve if we beat them today
we re gonna wm all the res of the games But whether we do or
not I want you to hold your heads up high Regard ess of what
happens ou there today I want you all to know how proud of
you I am andi wa1111a thank you for everything you d d h s
year
There was no no se no cheerlllg after Lasorda had f&gt;ntshed
what he had to say Every Dodger player felt the same way the
manager d d optim st c and every one of them had h s own
pr vate react on o what Lasorda had sa d
He was s mply sayll)g thanks to us no matter what
happened sa d Regg&gt;e Sm th whose two run homer mto the
r&gt;ght-center f eld bleachers off rehever D ck Tidrow n he
s1xth f nished off the Dodgers s ormg m the 10-4 lops der
over the Yankees
He was acknowledgmg the fact he didn t throw one p lch or
make a smgle hit all year tha we had done all and he was
grateful lo us
Left-hander Tommy John who ll p tch the seventh game for
the Dodgers Wednesday n ght if there 1S a seventh game sa d
Tommy s talk oosened us up
Davey Lopes sa d the Dodger manager was talk ng from
the heart and all the players reahzed t
Lopes led off the ftrsl mnmg aga nsl Yankee left-hander Don
Gullett and drove an ms de las ball up aga nst he eft f&gt;eld
bullpen fence fo a tr pie
R gh away I felt we were gonna score some runs sad
Lasorda
Lopes only was thinkmg abou he I rst one
All I cared about was trymg to get across hose f nal 90
feet he sad
B ll Russell up next took care of that trnmedtately w1 h a
SLngle to left Jump ng on a sl der Gullett hung
The only concern I had was getting the run n sa&gt;d
Russell I would have been happy to dr ve t n w th a
sacr flee fly or anythlllg else
The Dodgers toremto Gul ett for four more runs n the fourth
when Steve Yeager homered WLih two on then chased the
Yankees solemn southpaw lfl the f fth when they p eked up
three more oo a walk threes ngles and a sacrif&gt;ce fly
When the ball game was ove and his team was st ll al ve
Tommy Lasorda felt a much greater sense of rei ef than
elat on Instead of dwell ng on Game No 5 Just f ntshed he was
already Wlklllg about Game No 6 n Yankee Stad urn Tuesday
rught
We golta keep go ng he sa d What wed d today doesn t
mean a thmg f we don t Wlfl the next one
Some of his p ayers had talked about h s pre game meet ng
and Lasorda sad he had called t because he wanted to tell
them exactly how he felt
One thlflg he d dn t tell h s p aye s about was how he had
nussed go ng to Sunday Mass for the f&gt;rst time m years
Lasorda seth s alarm clock for seven n the morn ng and he
heard t go off but was so tired he fell back and went to sleep
agam after p eking h s head up off the p How
It s the f rst time I nussed Mass lil as ong as I can
remember sa d the Dodger manager I m sure God
understands eally wasn I my fault I didn do t purpose y

9

t

Befo e you have ha r on the
body you have to have ha
fo les I s an mher led
character s for some pct&gt;ple to have fewer fo es
than o hers
A no na male n all
espe ts may have l ttle ha 1
on the body Some rare males
are born w h no s gn f ant
amounts of ha r anywhere so
hormones are not the answe
Shav ng you sparse ha r
w not help It m gl ause
" u sk n lo I but that s
abou a I What ha r here s
may be shorter and st ffer
ke a s ubble but when
g ws ou t w I be the sa ne
Cult ng hair does no affe t
ts growth lesp e the old dea
t a t stmulat gto"th I
pre wne you ave a adequate amount of ha run )OUr
h ad Be g ad you I ave t
h
at e tl an on yo

Stadium for sixth encounter

lly MILTON RIOIMAN

F amP and ns antaneous
con bus on harmless but
effec ve
are exc l ng
teach ng a ds m the gas
sa fet)
and
utll zat on
p ogram schedu led to be
p esen ed to the Area W de
F e and Emergency Soc ely
h s Tuesda) e en ng at the
Sy racuse F re Departmen at
7 30 p n
Us ng a one person por
tab e ab
ex per ments
ha
range
fr om
a
soa p bubb e gn ted Ln
n d
a
to a no sy
discharge from gas gn ted m
a small contamer demon
strate and descr be the
var ous propert&gt;es of both
natural gas and propane
Audiences learn about the
combustlb&gt; tv of he gases
as well as the BTU value the
spec f c grav y and the
nammable ltr11 ts of each
Th~ necess ty for suff c ent
combust on and ventilat on
a r for complete safe burnmg
of gas " ll also be demon
strated by Co umb&gt;S Gas of
Oh o s mstructor Bob Brown
Th s portable lab LS only
one of several methods
cu rrently n use w thin
Co umb a
D str but on
Comparues to comply WLth
the
pub] c
educatiOn
requ en ents promulgated
b) D 0 T Off ce of P pelme
Safety

Pumpk n
Show opens
Wednesda
Bu the s ze of the
pumpkins thts year may not
be as b g as they have been m
the past
Farmers do not antic pate
a ecord breakmg entcy thLS
year smce pumpkins are a b t
late settlllg oo the mes and
have not had qw e the usual
growmg time
Aitvooe from any\\he e lfl
the country can enter a
we gh m where results will be
The morn ng sw s are
announced a 1 pm openmg
Mercury Jup ter Nenus
day
All contestants and n Mars and Saturn
The we gh n results will be
There are no evenmg stars
announced m a cross-eountry erested high school sen or
Those born on thLS day are
phone
cal
be ween g r s who have plans to enter mder the SLgn of Libra
he 978 Southeast Oh o
C rclev 1 e and he Wes
Jumor
M ss f nals should do
Coast purnpkm cap ta Half
so
lffim~
a ely The deadline Me gs Jun&gt;or H gh School
Moon Ba) Calif
for
enter
ng
the Jun or M ss aud tor urn
M ddleport
The mayor of Half Moon
Program
s
October
23
beg
nn
ng
at
3
30
p m The
Bay Cal f says growe rs n
A
pract
ce
sess
on
wil
be
program
s
sponsored
by
hs
commun tv
have
held
Thursday
October
20
Southeast
Oh
o
Jun&gt;or
M&gt;ss
developed a new var e y
a non prof t or
named B g Moon a sure 6 30 p m at the Pomeroy Inc
V
I
age
Ha
1
nstead
of
garuzat
on
wmner named after tha c y
The fest val wil have two Sunda) October 23 due to
parades da y Wednesday band compel ton
A I nterested g rls should
hrough F day w th he
at
end h s p act ce or "T te
queens parade Sa urday
Bern1ce Bede Osol
the
Jun&gt;or M ss Comm ttee
rugh
P
0
Box
104
Pomeroy
Other festival lea u es m
elude pUlffipklll carvmg the 45769 so forms an be sent to
tradi onal huge pUl!Tipkin dLS them
The f nals w ll be held
play and the usual pumpkm
Sunday
November 20 a the
flavo ed I oods

LA rett11-ns to hostile Yankee

Today's

will be

Contest

~---------------------------1

1
I
I

no doub&gt; ha he slate along
" th others would be tiab e to

Gas safety

••4

4 0 2
4 0 0

4 0 0
0 0
0 0 0

0 0

0 0 0

0 0

0 0 0
0 0
36 4 9

••s
4 2
4 0 0
44 '2 3'
2

people

a e

sk ed

responsible
dr vers
aJv ous y though qu e a
ewaenot

s
3

age o unde
yet these
you b,fu ope ato s ~re
nvoved as d ve s n 386
pe cen o a ace dents
and 37 3 pe cen of a t f4la
m shaps
A g ea
many young

2

0 0

There s no subst ute o
deve opment com pete nee
an~ !he r ght a I udes
nc ud ng
a
pos ve
app oach to defens ve
d v ng
Ou
agency prov des
f nanc a p o ec' on and
se v ce n case of ace den s
nvo v ng young d e s
but
many
of
these
ace dents
can
be

0 0
LOS ANGELES UP! 4 0 0
By Steve Garvey s count the
3
0 l
Los Aitgeles Dodgers are 8.Q N Y
000 ooo 2:ro- 4
after team meetings callecl LA
aO.:t3200X
0
e P n e a Ne e~ LOB
by Tommy Lasorda th s
Yo k s Los Ange es S 2B
season So naturally he d New
Ga ey Rando ph Ne es
p evented That s why we
like to see Lasorda call HR Yeage Sm h Munso
say
prevent on s he
Yeage
another one before Game 6 of Ja kson SF PH
best
lc
RERBBSO
the World Ser es at Yankee Gu
4 3 8
6
4
23 2
0 0
c av
Stadium Tuesday mght
2 2 2 0 0
dow
992 2 43
After the results of THun
2
0 0 0
e
102
W
Ma
n
Pomeroy
9
•
4
0
2
Lasorda s pre-game peptalk Su on W
T 2 29 A 55 995
before the f fth game of the
World Ser es at Dodger
Stad&gt;wn Sunday Garvey JUS!
nughl gel h&gt;s w1sh
The Dodgers batting a
lowly 190 m the ftrst four
games of the Ser es
esponded to their manager s
verb age w th a 13-h t atwck
that bur&gt;ed the New York
Yankees 10-4
We may be pro
fess onals
Garvey ex
R gh now
Help w&gt; h
plallled when asked about
nom er
adop ons and
the purpose of team
where you
ch ld day care
meet ngs
but we re also
e there
hunnan bemgs We get tired
Help du ng
phySLcally and menwlly and
Un ted W y
d saste and c v I
we need to be renunded of
gency serv ce clo e t emergenc es
th ngs
We can make
hand In ca e you need
And ment I he lth
nustakes too and meetings
Ia d
p ogr ms by he hun
help us get together
!3ut what k nd of agen
d ed
Most observers agree
cy
Tha
,.,;
hard
to
ay
No o me on ca e
Lasorda s high card s h s
s
nee
there
e
mo
e
han
fo
e a ded h ld en
ab I ty to mot vate his
37
000
dtfferent
Un
ed
Vocat
onal r n ng re
payers and he p eked the
Way
gene
es
And
that
hab I a on and place
r&gt;ght time to tell them their
wha makes Un ted Way
ment for dull s who want
wOl!th Sunday
a I 1 le ha d to unde
Lasorda recalled I Just
to work And erv ce
told them how proud I was of
stand
for the aged and ch on
them and how proud I ve
So we re go ng o ex
ca ly II
been aU year regardless of
pia n And we I keep t
The I st goes on and
what happened today
s mple
on.J.\nd chance are f
Dusty Baker who collected
We rc t y ng o e se
you ve got spec al char
three htt.s and drove lil a patr
people
pa
n
nd
m
ery
tab c mtcre
one of
of runs was smiling h&gt;s
In II t s torm whe
ou nterest too Th t s
biggest sm le ~d Baker
eve we And
And no
n ce to know
leads the Dodgers m sm1les
mat e who we find
n
ThiS IS my f1rst World
It a lso n ce to know
Ser&gt;es he srud and I d go
An I n one way o
ha the he rUn ed W y
to Vietnam to play tf hat s
nothe
a ll of tho e
gene e g ve ava I b e
what the fans wanted I don t
:11 000 hum n e v ce
nyonc cg tl e of
really care f we have to go
agenc e a c et up o do
cc erect! o co o 0
back to New York
JU th
They al opcr
nco ne
Now down three games to
S p ease g ve us as
a e at he local eve o
two the Dodgers will go wtth
p
ov
de
mportant
health
much
help a you can
Burt Hooton a wmner m
It
and
soc
a
se
v
ces
to
II
g
ve you
good
Game 2 at New York but
anyone
who
needs
hem
feel
ng
Lasorda 1s noncomrrutal on
Help w th the prob
And who know s'
who hiS p tcher will be 1f the
Ser es goes seven games
Some day you could get
lems of d ug abu e
famtly st e.ss and alco
back a lot mo c h n you
g ve
hoi sm
defense
Everybody plays like they
can play aga nst us Noll
grmned
Bu that s good
because t makes t more of a
challenge for us
Turnovers have been our
b ggest
problem and
Thanks to you
I wo ks o ALL OF US
scormg wh ch turnovers
inh b t But 1t tells you we re
domg something r ght Of
course t also tells you we re
doing something wrong

DALE C. WARNER

us.

�6- The DaUy Sentinel, Maddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Mooday, Oct. 17, 1977

4- The Oath Sentmel. ~!lddiepori-Pomero)' , 0 , Mooday, Oct 17, 1977

Broncos for real, win 30-7

Satr.uYhly's college scores
·. '

Cr a c e! .. nd 16 Tark 10 14

Gr a nd -va ll ey
Vet ii E''r U
H ram

A "'~ q1 l .t ..., s~ut&gt;"M'rcl "'
...\ 11QI &lt;""· 9 .• a~,.. \ ~ l· tf 7
A
~"f'r9 J~ El.a t-5 '

Hooe

"

;I

51

GPCrQ E'I O""n

~ansf t e l d

6

2J D t. k mson

DC' 41 Gat! au

.!t•l ,

G("• ,St&gt;l..r''q • I w\sn ".' ar, li'lnd
1\)

"

-... u l z t o ~ n?) Ch e , ne y 1-1
Lvcom ng 10 ~v,... ~~~ 0
-\'a ne 9 Connectt cut?
Ma n e Ma r t uT e 13 N cno ls 7
Ma ssac.,usen s J? Rhode ls
J 6
\\as s M imt 1m e 1Q Boston St

M usk,mgum 28 Wooster 18
19 Northern

Neo
Om aha
Iowa 17

•

NOrth Cent ra l J9 North Park

Northeas tern 14 Eureka 13
Northeast M&lt;J 49 Southwest

Mo 0

,,

Vl ddi ebury '20 Tn n ty rconn 1

No

6

M lll to-rs v li e 28 Bloo m sburg '2 1
Ne.,.. Ham iJS !"&gt; r li' J2 Ce11tral
Conn Notr e Da m e 2J Army 0
Norv. en 21 T .J ftS 17
N Y T f'C h 10 Bow te Sf 0
Penn St 31 Syracuse 2J

19

Sov th Dakota 17 Western 111

16

'\Ja ... y 17

Scvth western 33 Sterling 22
Southeast Mo 16 Northwest

RU ' QE'rS 20 L eh gh 0

'Gua to
So

R oc~&lt;.

MO 0

Ste 'llens Pc tnt 31 Oshkosh 16
Stout 14 Ea u Cla1 r e 10
Ta ylo r 35 Bluf1!on 21
V a lparatso 38 DePauw 13
Wa rtburg 35 Upper Iowa 14
Wayn e Sl 50 Evansv dl e 0
Wayne sr 21 Mo Western 15
Wsn M1Ch 1gan 18 Toledo 7
W 111t am Pt=&gt;nn 28 S mpson 16
W•lm mgton 39 Anaerson 31
w ,ttenberg 38 on o NOrthern

JS Ca lt f ( Pa l

ronn ec t 1CU!

19

M1ch gan 38 Wh •t ewa rer

On to St 27 Iowa 6
Okl anoma 1 1 M ISSOUr i 17
Ott awa 7 W ilh am Je we ll 6
P tt1Sburg St 19 Fon Havs SJ

St"&gt; poens bv g 26 L oc k Haven

51 oo er y

the

! Ill 1 7 Gnnnell 5
" Monmouth
Mount Un on 16 OhtO W' yan

HOb"' rt ~ .:l., tr t:&gt;d l .t
f-4owaro JJ 'J ro n a St 0

0

have never won anything m
the1r 18 \'ears of exiStence m
ftrst
Amencan Football
League and now tlle NFL let II be known that tlley are
for real wtth a 3().7 rout of the
World Champaon Oakland
Raiders
And they d1d 11 w1th · a
defense that has become as
unposmg as any an the NFL.
The Broncos antercepted
Raader star Ken Stabler
seven times, coovertmg tllree
of those thefts mto
touchdowns, and held the
higb-ecorang Oakland offense
to JUSt seven pomts The
Broncos have allowed only 33
pomts an wtnrung all hve
ga mes, a club record
11
1t was a team VIctory all
the way ," sa1d Red Miller,
the Broncos' farst-year coach.
"I can't say enough about our
all-out effort "
Th e
vaclory
ended
Oakland's wmnmg streak at
17 ga mes and gave the
Broncos a one-game lead

M o va 11 ev 32 Cenl MethodiSt

H'lr ... drd 3 1 O U '"' "'~'O.rH'I 25

P ~tt s bu r gh ) .;1

The Denver BroncoS - who

IJ

GrQ \ e C ., · ~ CH't&gt;\ et .:
1-la,.... ' On 28 Co o 7 1 ~

•

II\ n() IS CCI II ? 3 IO wa W yan 20
lnd tana 13 M ch qan St 1J

Kea r ney S t 28 Washburn )'1
Lake Forest .t1 Chrtago 6
Manl&lt;.alo St 33 West mar 6
MaranatMa 34 Lo r as 14
Mar 1etta 10 Den iSOn 7
M oam 1 Oh O l 28 Oh 0 U 1.t
M tc h tgaM 56 w scons tn 0
M 1dland JS Ha slmgs 14
M d ton .t9 Concord ta ( Ill 1 14
Mmnesota 13 Norfhy,ester n 1
Mnn MorrsU,Mch Tech7
MO Rol1 a 20 Cent M tSSOU r t

Cot Ga l e 31 Pr nc et an 13
Curr . ,. 1-1 Fra m m:!t"a rr St 10
&amp; &lt;\". a r sr-

11. van

son 7

(a, s''"\ 21 Bufla lo 8
S•"~""o s ou rQ

Tn e! 0
Q lt ver l .i

St 2.1 Nebras ka 21
!'. C
H1S&lt;lS WE's l ~:&gt;yan '21 MCPher

]1 (Or l"' i&gt; I U 3

f".- a n ~

io

~2'

lo w~

t= Jc ~ ne • 1.1 .... e'it Crf'Sier '3
.... /1.. Post 18 Ho fst~a 0

E

Sag ,na w

HI noS 29 P urOUt&gt; 2'2
111 Behed cr ,ne .3:5- HI

f!.oqcn Coli 28 ·•'r \. rq n a :'J
Bos,on U ' .1 Hoi f Cro ss 13
ec.-.do n 1J /-. &lt;~1 a.,.,s '21
B "il'N
!\~a s~
!,
'hsn
Conn "'
Rr
~ por' 6 R:OC" tn5 1 Teen
q c ~~~o

J.l

Co ast

1.1

S pr nQf Pld 76 &lt;Norrn eastern 19
St
John s
{ NY 1
40
F

DtC k tnscn 13
St L aw r e n c ~? 53 Pla tt sburgll oS w a r 1 t- m o .. e 16 Lebanon
Val ley 1.1
Un 1on I NY 1 21 Rensselaer
6

Poly 13
Vdl anova 3 3 Del aware 16
Waynesbu r g 20 ~ ndlay 13
Nesl ey an Conn I 21 Worces
te r iel::h 13
Westm tnster Pa
38 Fr ost
burg 0
Wtdener 17 Johns Hopk.1ns 6
w tl&lt;.es 13 Morav ta 7
Yale J ? Colu rn.b Ja ?0

Irwin captures
$30,000 prize

Youngsto wn St 28 Akron 10
Southw e~t

SAN

Barber, sa1d he was glad to
he lp Whtte
wummg hiS tllard tournament
"I was really pulling for
of the year Sunday, but he him We have a lot of Carlton
too k time to help a struggling Whites on the tour. They're
and
good
golfer trymg to retain has gentlemen
players," Irwin saad. "For
PGA card
Irwan, who shot a 67 Sunday him tt's llliS week or there as
to wm tlle $30,000 ftrst prtze an no next week."
Irwan
finished
the
the Texas Open, was m the
same threesome wtth second- tournament wath a 14-under
year pro Carlton White, 28, of par 266 and rnoved ID f ourtll
Smyrna, Fla
place on tbe year's money list
White needed-a "firth -place wath $221,455 It is the \hard
fm1sh to stay on the tour 'and consecutave year he has
his chances looked bleak passed tlle $200,000 mark
when he doubled bogeyed the
Irwin, 32, of Frontenac,
17th But w1th Irwm's Mo , fared bardie putts of 3, 6,
encouragement he managed 9, 29 and 12 feet an his ,vactory
a par on tlle 18th to finiSh 111 a over Barber on the 6,525-yard
fourth-place 11e and wm Oa k Hitls Country Club
$6,600 - Just $524 more than co urse Ba rber co lle cted
he needed
$17,100 for secood place with
"He (Irwan ) saad, 'Just a 12-under par 268, his second
keep grmdang,'" tlle elated straaght
Tex as
Open
White saad. "He saad. 'No runnerup !mash
matter what happens ,' and he
Barber lost an a playoff last
patted me on the back, 'just year to Butch Baird, who
get wtlh at instead of gettang failed to make tlle cut tlliS
down on yo urself like you year.
have the past four months "'
Tom Kite, who was dead"I think I've got something locked wath Irwm fer the
gomg now," sald White. 111 third-round lead, faltered to a
tllink It's a bag turnaround 1-ove'r 71 Sunday and finished
I 've been lookmg for a thard at 270
tourn ament like t his all
Veteran George Archer
year
tied for fo urth waUl White at
Irwm, who flillshed - two 272
strokes ahead of Maller

Came r on 31 Eastern Ill 10
Hard.ng 1J Arkansas Tech 12
Henderson JO Ark Pme Bluff

Lou1s 1ana Tech 20 Arkansas
sr 1
M tSS Coli 20 Ouach tta 8
South
New Mex •co 22 Wtch 1ta St 17
Alabama 2j Tenn~~see 10
N E Okla 35 E Central Ok la
Acoa la c h1an St 35 Lenot r
1J
Rryne 11
No
TelC.aS St
15 Tex
Aus•q·, Peay 13 Nort h Al aba
Arl tngton 6
ma 6
O~lahoma St '21 Kansas St
Bethaf'ly 16 Case Wsn Re. 1 14
serv e 12
Soutt]ern Ark. 9 Central Ark
B N.ater (Va 1 10 L1b Bapi1S t 1
'\;1.
Southe rn Method tsl J7 Hous
ron
23
Clemso n \7 D uke 11
SW Okla 4\ E New Mextco 0
Concord 23 W V 1rg 1n 1a Tech
SW Tex a s lJ Sam Houston 5
0
Texas 13 Arkansas 9
Dav tdson 31 Guilford 0
Texas A&amp;M 38 Baylor J1
E C~ro l na 35 R fc: hmond !4
Texas Tech 42 R•c e 7
El t z: ( tty Sf .1 1 Ft Bragg 0
W Te:w;as St 31 Dr ake 7 '
Furm an 42 Marsha ll 24
Gardner Webb 27 Ca-tawba /0
West
Georgetown ( Ky J 48 Franklin
Anzona Sl 37 Alr For ce 14
ll
Bngham Young 63 COlorado
Geo r g a 2J v and£&gt;rtlll t 13
St 17
Geo.rg a Tech 38 Auburn 21
Callforn1a 41 Oregon 51 17
Get~yo,b u rg 71 w
Maryland
Calif Oav1s 28 Sacramento
20
~
51 0
Gl assboro St '21 Towson St
Cal Lutheran 35 Uwe rn e 0
18
Cal Poly SLO 29 Northern
Gra m bling d2 M IS'S Vall ey St
Colorado 20
21
Esn Oregon 11 Cent Wash
J a c kson S! 38 Southern U 0
51 7
"&lt; ent ucky JJ Lou 1s tana S:r 13
F ori Lew ts 17 Soutnern Utah
'&lt;.enrucKy St 9 W Va St 0
7
Knox:vd1e 16 Clark 15
F resno St '2J Pac l tc {Cal tf l
L vtngston e 14 J C Smt ih 2
10
N ary land 35 Wake Fo rf's t 7
Humboldt St 5 Santa Clara 0
M aryvdlel l M l lspps 10
I daho 31 Montana 20
Me Neese Sl 29 Nor theast La
Lew1s &amp; Cla rk 48 Wh tl worth
32
Mempn sSt 21 M tss St \3
L1nfleld 34 IdahO Coli \4
M 1SS tSS IPOt 17 So Ca rol tna 10
Montana 51 31 IdahO Sf 0
M v rray St 13 M ddl e Ten n 9
Nev Las Vegas 26 Weber St
No Car '17 No Car St 14
IJ
No Car A&amp; T J9 Md Esn
Nev Reno 28 Bo tse St 10
ShQr e 0
No Anz 24 Fullert on 9
NW L OUISi ana 43 Lama r 0
Northndge 56 UCSO 20
Rand Mac on 24 Emorv &amp;
Oregon Coli 47 Wsn wash ,
Henry 12
Sl 36
Salem lJ w V tr 9 1n a Wes ley
Oreg
Tch
17 51
Mr y's
(H) 1J
(Calt f J 14
Shepherd 17 ..Vest Ltb erfy 6
Pac
Lutheran 45
Pact f c
So Car St 63 Morgan S! 11
(Q reg 1 0
Sov theas t ~ rn La 30 L 11 ng
Porlland St 17 ChiCO St 7
ston 3
•
R:edlands 38 Azusa 10
Sou thwester n La 10 Sou thern
San Otego 51 49 Te)( El Paso
Ill 0
7
South w &lt;; l rn MemOh l5 J7 Se
San Fran St 16 Hayward St
wanee 12
lO
.,.
Tenn Ch attanooga 31 Ill St
Sou thern Cal 33 Oregon 15
'18
So Colorado 42 N M H1gh
Tenn Tec h 31 Wsn Kentucky
lands 6
20
So MtSStSStppt 26 HaWaii 24
Tu lane \6 Ct nc 1nna 11 13
UCLA. 27 Wash tngton St 16
VM I 19 The Ct ladet 3
Utah 20 Utah St 0
V rg n ta Tech 14 V1 rgtn 1a 14
Washtngton 45 Stanford 21
Wsn Ca rotma 35 E Tenn Sf
W mnstr (Utah ) 29 W New
0
Wmslon Salem St 40 F 'vd le MextCO 16
W Montana 34 Montana Tech
18

'

sr

Mtdwest
Alb to n 20 Adr tan 0
Alma '3 4 Kal amazoo l.J

43

Akr Buch tel
Hower 0

JJ

Bowlmg Green 14 Kent St 10
Butl er 17 St Joseph's ( lnd J 7
Buena Vtsla 36 Dubu~ue 12
Cap tt i:JI 2.4 He tdelberg i3
Carroll ( W tS) 37 Mrtl 1k 1n 2

Cle Cath Lalm 29 Cle Holy
Name 28

Cle John Adams 6 Cle JFK o
Cle John Hay 30 Cle Collm

woodO

Cle Rhodes 27 Cle West Tech 0
Cte St Joseph 6 Parma

Padua 0
Cle Un1verstty 28 Buffalo
N1 chols 14
Day ton
Meadowdale
4-4
Dayton K1ser 6
Elyrta W 14 Clyde 0

27
20

Iowa

Dayton 14 Lou rsvdle Ill
Def rance 30 Hanover o
Earlha m li Manchester 3

Bethany IW Val l 6
Weslern 12
Bow Img Green 14 Kent St 10

Ash lan d
(M ich) 16

Htram

26

Th•el I Pa l

14

' Umted Press lme rnaTtona•

Si at Eas tern M1chigan

Unt~t --al Toledo
Tul~a i\• (tnr~ nn atl

Oh to

(n)
Oa ~f ol"' "' l' l)u nqs town St
)I tope r f R or~ at Ashl an"d
(lf''ra l 51 a t v'l('st ern lllmo1S
Or-o We sl e(a "'1 i31 Bal dwtn·
Walle.rrOe:nl'!.on a t O tlerbPtn
Mou nt Un1on a t Mar ella
Oh o ~-~o rl h er n at (ap rtal
MtJ"ktngum a t Helde lber q
Nll tenberq nt Woost e ~
Yi ,m ~~ GrOVf• Ct lf 'P al
u•,nf 'Pa \ a t Ot1•r t...,
H;, OJt-! IINJ at BluHtor
Deftanc-r a t Gral)d Vo l ey

IM• &lt;hl
Ear lham at Ftndlay
Taylor (lnd l Qt Wilm1ngton
Case Western at Geneva ( Pa l

John Carroll at Th1el ( Pa )
n\.-

denotes m,ght game

1ral

Milan
Po l 8

K1ng

•

B

Un1on 16 Oh 1o Wesleyan

.

Taylor (lndl 35 Blufflon 21

Tulane 16 Ctnc1nnaft 13
Waynesburg (Pa l 20 Findlay

13

Western Mtchtgan 28 To ledo 7

Wil mington 39 Anderson
( lndl 31

Wittenberg 28 Ohio Northern
6

Youngstown St 28 Akron 10 ,

scored the tie-breaking TO
and rushed for more than 100
yards for the farst tune"th1s
year to help Los Angeles
defeat New _Orleans Pat
Haden made his fll'st start at
quarterback for the Rams
and set up the wannmg score
rn a 46-yard pass play to
Terry Nel!lon McCutchem
tllen plunged over from tlle 1
to break a 7-7 halftime tie
LHJns 10, Packers 6
Greg Landry's 9-yard TO
Mike Swiger
Umted Preu lnternat tonttl
pass to Ray JarVIs m the ( BV
Best of Seven- All
Ttmes
992-7155
EDT )
corner of the end zone with
149
5 Thtrd Sl
( N ew York leads Senes, l11
II 59 left gave Detroit tts Oct
. M•ddleporl, 0 .•
11 - Ncw York (ALl 4
VIctory over Green Bay
Los Angeles l N L 1 J, 11 1!1ntngs
Oct 12..-Los Ange les ( N L ) 6
BUls 3, Falcons 0 •
New York. (A L ) I
Neil O'Doooghue kicked a Oct l&lt;i - New York (A L J 5,
Angeles ( N L ) 3
30-yard held goal pnd OLOS
c r 15- New York (ALl 4,
,....-_;__;;;,
Buffa lo's defense stopped LOS AngeleS (N L ) 2
Like a 200&lt;1 neighbor,
Atlanta oo a controversial Oct 16- LOS Angeles (N L l 10,
New York {A L l 4
Stue Farm is there.
4tll-and-1 on the Bills' four Oct 18- Los Angeles ( N L) at
Stile Ftr"" L !t lr'IWI..-Gt ~~
late m the game to eke out a New Yorio. (A l ) a 15 p m
- . . Ol'o::t lliooonougo o ., 11015
19- Los Angeles ( N L )
VICtory over the Falcons for &gt;cat Oct
New York !A L ), a 15 p m
ats far st win smce Oct 3, 1976
x 1f necessary
0 J Simpson earned for 138
yards to pass tlle 10,000
career yard mark - making
him only tlle second NFL
player m history ID do so
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
DR ~ J SU.EHLI
DR U J SI 0 M8A WG H
Giants 20, 49ers 17
Ot:t \:; w 8E:. AL.
Joe Ptsarcik fared a 37-yard
TO pass to Gar) Shirk and
One or two day ful l denture
Willie Spencer scored on a 1serv1ce. part1a l dentures,
yard plunge to highlight a 17pomt second quarter wh1ch
relines , repatrs
earned the Gaants past
winless San Francasco
,

World Series
schedule. . .

"Call me for
life insurance."

I

• I

•• .._

DENTU ES

Seahawks 30, Buccaneers 23

Steve Myer threw for four
TDS to lead Seattle past
winless Tampa Bay Key
mtercep twns by Autry
Beamon and Eddae McMillan
m tlle last four mmutes
preserved the Seahawks' first
VICtory Tampa Bay now has
lost all 19 of ats games smce
JOmlng the NFL along w1tll
Seattle m 1976

RIVIERE CENTER
E L1vmg ston Ave 1Col umbus

Weekdays 8 30 AM to 6 30

PM

12

39'"

T rail

Nat lo al

'

Mlss1 st nawa Valley 20
New C ncord JG 24 .Maysville
0
New M1

1

22 Ross 18

Pa lnes v rl le

Rtvers rde

Ashlabuia Harbor 0

24

Parma Normandy 14 Berea

10
Polfsburgh Shadyside 23 Cle
G1l mour

o

S'um mII Co unlry Da y 20

Yellow Springs 8
Warren WR 35 Lorain South
v1ew 0
Wesllak e 17 ~ ocky R1ver

o

Oxford

34 R rchland

VaHey

N

30

1

Newark Cathol1c

7 ( t 1e)
L 1rna Cath 21 Day ton Carroll
16

_

American actresses

Jean

Arthur and Rita Hayworth
were born Oct 17 - Miss
Arthur 111 1908 and MISS
l!ayworth in 1919

SPECIAL STATE GRADED FEEDER SALE

· Your fuel costs~
be gomgthrough the roo£

OCTOBER 27TH,
\1

AT THE

D~IO

VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.,
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
Sale startS at 8 P.M.

Calves will be received after 3:00 P.M. on
October 26th and tin 12 noon on the day
of sale.

MU..AN, Italy (UPI) Stateff of Italy was declared
the WIMer of the Jockey Club
Grand Pnx champ10nshap
here Su nday after New
Zealand s Balmermo was
015GUal!f1ed m the $57,954
race

McCutcheon

4 Garaway 0
dl son 2A Norwalk St

John

r'

Htram at W &amp; J (Pal

ln dra n

' .Musklngum 28 Wooster 18

Green
t&gt; i'ron ~ ~ Central Mrch1gan

Lawrence

Sharon Kennedy 20 Young
Llberly 0

C le

T uscara was Ca th 0
Lakewood St Edward 6 Lake

M1amr 28 Ohro U 24
Mt

25

33

Badrn

Kenyon 54 Oberl in 7
lv\arietta 10 Den 1son 7

Ohio games
Kcnl

He19hts o

Carroll 0
Dayton 14 LoutSIII IIe 10
Def iance 30 Hanover ( lnd) 0

This week's

a' Bowlmg

7

Tnnlty

W6

Ha wk. In Sc hool

Ca lh s
Case Lakewood

Carneg re M eJ!on

'.Ifni

Ham1l ton

Cap1lal 24 He1delberg 13

Empo r1a St 15 Mo So ut hern
13

York rally led by Richard
Todd to defeat the Jets
Maanu builtats early lead on a
5-yard run by Benny Malone
and Griese's TO passes of !yard to Loaard McCreary and
rune ID Nat Moore
Rams 14, Samls 7

Co untry team part1cipaWI 111 Mark Shoneba rger coming
the 1111-0hiO Cross Country off an tn]ury and ruMing for
meet held al Ohio Wesleyan the first time finl!hed 77th
In Delaware. Ohlo Rao w1th a tame of 28 · U Mike
Grande placed I lith out of 2!1 l.aBenne, a senior from Mt.
teams Cleveland State won Vemun. Ohio placed 92nd
the team race "llh 30 pomts With a time of 28 .41 . Other
followed by Oh10 State w1th 57 Rto Grande ruMers ,ere
All Ohio Meel
poants' Mark Hunter of
!\on Dunfee, 57th place
Cleveland State " on the race
wnh an excellent ume of 25 ~7. Don Cook, 129\h place
24 13 9. For Rio Grande 27 22 Ben Junk, IJ2nd place
Archie Mundy , quickly 27 25 , Mark Fo&lt;, I45th place
becommg one of Ohao's best 'll 57, Sam Mohler, l~th
dtstance runners placed stxth place 28 II , Dave Parlin,
172nd place 29 30
wath a tame of 24 ·52
Open Race
Rao Grande also had some
Tab Huff, 91lth place 28 :54 ;
runners m the open rat-e that
Jeff Elick, ll7th place 29.43;
Tom Dorsey, !27th place
30 :28

Ta lawanda 10

Northwood

Ba ldw tn Walla ce 33 Otterbetn

0

N

Garf1eld
Lu lheran

6

7

Oro St a l Northwestern

Fa 1rless 28 Tr lway 0

Unrted Pres s lnternahonal

Oh1o Sta te

Mal ver:

J

Ohio grid
scores

Ad

Mansfield

Cad 1z 14 Newcomerstown 6
Ca nton T1mken 14 Cambndge

Col or ado

Central 21 Luther 0
Chadron Sl 26 Peru 51 0
Coe 4] Kno :w; 7
Co loraelo 17 Kansas 17
Cui s rockton 36 St Ambrose

Lora in

22 Akr Central

Akr N 20 Akr Firestone 6
Be ll a1re 17 Toronto 9

Ashl and 20 Norlhwood 16
Augustana (Ill J 41 Elmhurst
BaKer 19 Bethel ( Kan ) 8
Ball St Jl No l l ltnO s 6
Benedtchne J.d. Colorado Coli

Tex

Cincmna ti lS at &lt;Pittsburgh
tonight
Cardinals 21, Eagles 17
Jim Hart, queshonable all
week with an InJury, passed
;18 yards ID Ike HarriS for one .
'!'D and Terry Metcalf and
Jerry Latin scored (11 runs or
10 and two yards ID hit St
Lows past Philadelphia
Colts 17, Chiefs 6
Farsi -quarter 'I'D plunges
by Ron Lee and Don
McCauley lifted unbeaten
Balt 1more over wtn less
Kansas Caty The scores
came durmg a devastating
first period by the Colts as
tlley reeled off II farst downs,
ran 26 plays ID just four by the
Chiefs and outgaaned Kansas
City 151 yards to a nunus sax
Vikings 22, Bears 16 tot)
Safety Paul Krause passed
II yards ID Stu Voagt f&lt;r a TO
oo a fake field goal attempt
7 4:i miD overtime to 11ft
MUUiesota over Chacago. The
Vikmgs moved ID the Bears'
II and, oo a farst down held
goal try, Krause took the
snap, ran ID his raght and
passed to Vmgt for the TO
Bro"ns Z4, Oilers 23
Don Cockroft , who earlier
became the second leading
scorer m club hiStory waUl
three extra poants, h1t a, 31).
yard held goal on the game's
fmal play to boost Cleveland
past Houston Tona Fratsch hit
a 3&amp;-yard faeld goa l vlith 4.28
left for 1-!ouston but Greg
Pruatt, playang m tlle game
for tlle first tune, sparked ~
fmal drave for tlle score.
Patriots Z4, Chargers 20
Sam Cunningham ran for
142 yards
and
Don
Hasselbeck caught two shortrange TO passes fr om Steve
Grogan as New England beat
San Dae go Hasselbeck 's
second TD catc h of four yards
came late m the !mal penod
to seal tlle wm.
.
Dolphins 21, Jets 17
Bob Griese guaded Maaaru
In a tllree-touchdown lead
and
Maama 's
defense
survaved a second-baH New

The H10 Grande C' r u:&gt;s followed the aU-Ohio meet.

High school

Wdlamette 20 Rocky Mtn l3

19

ANTONIO ,

(UP!)- Hale Irwm was busy

20

Weste r n
M.nes 7

over the Raaders an the AFC
West
In tlle other maJ&lt;r game
Sunday, Roger Stauba ch
threw a 59-yard TO pass to
Drew Pearson early m the
last penod to wrap up the
Dallas Cowboys' ~ 16 vactory
over
the
Washangton
Redskins In a brutal battle
that sent one player ID tbe
hospatal and a half-dozen
more ID the sadelines
Staubach, who hat 1fk&gt;f-29
passes for 250 yards and two
TDs, helped keep Dallas
unbeaten through five games
and open a twOilame lead
over Washmgton an the NFC
East.
Washangtoo quarterbacks
Billy Kilmer and Joe TheiSmann . could manage only
seven completions for 64
yards and were trapped eaghl
times for 63 yards 111 losses.
The net passmg total
amounted to a smgle yard
Elsewhere, at was St. Lows
21 Philadelphia 17, Baltimore
17 Kansas Ctty 6, Mmnesota
22 Ch1cago 16 an overtime,
Cleveland 24 Houston 23, New
England 24 San Diego 20,
M1anu 21 New Y&lt;rk Jets 17,
Los Angeles 14 New Orleans
7, Detroit 10 Green Bay 6,
Buffalo 3Atlanta 0, New York
G1ants 20 San FranciSCO 17
and Seattle 30Tampa Bay 23.

BY JOE CARNICEW
UP l Executhe Sports Edilor
Only one established
:-&lt;auonal Football League
team has ne\er won .a ttUe or
qualif1ed for the playoffs, but
aft2r Sunday's performance
that may be changrng very
soon

F"e-r r s Sl 6 H !I Sda le- 3
r r e-nds H Taoor 0

By"U,---t ed Pr eu JnTernat torull
East
~ r ' 'a nc

Rio runners 18th in meet

All consignmenls welCOme.
For more information
call 446-9760 or 446t9049.

"

I

Literally.

While you heat the mside of your
home,Byou may be heating the outsade, too.
ut preventingothat is easie,r sa1d than
d
one. We have a plan to make domg it
almost as easy as talking about 1t.
We call it our Insulate Now, Pay Later
Plan.And this as how it works
your insulation needs
f
· h We'll discuss
WJt you I you need more insulation or if
storm doors and windows Will help you
save energy and dollars, we'll tell you.
Then, after you quahfy, we'lllend you
the mone;v to help you pay for what you

d U to $750 W
nee
p at on annual
. ith apercentage
finance charge
calculated
rote
of 8%.
,., ,
_So, if you need help k";e ping your
heatmg and cooling costs under control
giVe us a call.
.
'
Meanwhile, there are some other things
you can do on your own.
, '
match
your
the
t
t
·
vv;
rmos a settmgs.
Se~ d~afts tJUt WJth caulking and weatherstnppmg.
Workmg together, we can save energy
and money. And every bit each of us saves
helps us all

~- "ii~};~=·=~H=;l~
p ~~;&lt;ll· Creation of apple dolls demonstrated '
~

~
~

§

uS

•

•

Y

e en

B

1

otle -

:::1

HE CAN'T FORGIVE IN-LAWS
DEAR HELEN
Sax years ago I mamed a great ~uy wath my parents' funous
consent That means, when I reached 18 1 announc-ed 1 would
af they gave 11 or not , so they dad
'
They called hun the "poor n&lt;rgood drunk " Lake any
bachelor, he had a couple of dnnks at part1es
They treated hun rotten, would k1c~ h11n out of the house for
brmgmg me home 15 nunutes after curfew ( w1th good ex··
cuses ).
Attitudes didn't change lllilch lhe farst few years. Then my
famaly saw he was hard-worktng, rcsponsable and becoarun g
successful
They asked his forg iveness and they really try to get along
He agreed to be fraends. But Helen, the mere mentwn of thear
names ITlHkes him funous· Says they ''aren't smcere" and
doesn't want to even see them When he Hoes, things a~e very
tense.
We have two c~aldren, but I can't let them have grandparents because of my husband's batterness Help ' - TORN
APART
DEAR TORN.
Perhaps your husband ISn't ready to forgave JUSt yet
because he needs more tune to prove your parents wrong'
Whach adds up to -liiSecuraty As soon as he IS completely comfortable wath Ius sut!t.-esses, I tlunk he'll mellow.
Meanwhile, don't push Take the children to see their grandparents but make no bag 1ssue about farruly get-togethers.
Smc-e at doos no good tellmg your man has m-laws are smcere
let him learn for hamself He wall, m tame, afthey are.- H
'

The creataon of apple dolls
was demonstrated by Mrs
Beulah Utterback and Miss
Freda Leavmg at a recent
meeting of the Maddleport
Garden Club held at the Columbus and Southern Ohw
Elednc Co socaal room.
Mrs Carl Horky mtroduced
Mrs. Utterback and Mass
Leaving who have gamed a
reputation for thear craft
work along With lhe1r foster
daughter, Patty Edwards.
The two told of the many
hours mvolved m creatmg the
dolls whach they donate to the
Semor CatazensCenter.
The procedqre mvolves
takmg apples," peeling and
cormg them spnnkhng them
wath salt, brushmg With
lemon JUice, and then carvmg
the face before ·agam gavmg
them the salt-lemon JUICe
treatment to prevent
discolmabon. The apple doll
heads are then stuffed an the
center (where the core has
been removed) wath cotton, a
pipe cleaner as put through
the center, and the apple
heads are hung by the pape
cleaner from an oven wlre
rack and baked for three days
and two rughts at 250 degrees
Once the heads are completed then the body as formed wath coathanger ware and
floral ware as used to create
the arms and legs which are
covered w1!h cotton battmg
and encased wath the nylon
from hose Bread dough and
glue are nuxed to form the
hands and feet whach are
pamted, fake fur as used for
the hmr, and the clothmg 1s
handmade The two noted
that the entire tune mvolved
m creatmg one doll IS over sax

ed pair of gold runmea
glasses rested on the book
and along s1de was an ml
wmp wath tmted red o1l
Donations were accepted
on a tray contammg Jars of
applebutter made by Mrs.
RoUer along wath recapes of
good thmgs made from appies by Mrs. Horky.
During the meehng the
club voted to send a monetary
donatwn for the . g1ft for the
outgomg regaonal d1rector,Mrs. R. H Capps, Mane\ta FQr roll call members
paid thear dues. Mrs. Etoala
Cassell, Mrs John Kinca ad,
Mrs. Homer Russell and Mrs.
B B Zeagler were reported

DEAR HELEN :
I went wath this guy for seven years After fmally getting
engaged, things worsened, so we split. I'm lake a whole new
person'
I started seemg Tony and we're great together. But he's
~verything I dadn't want m the f1 rst guy And he tells me I'm
exactly opposite from his fonner garl Are we JUSt havmg reactions or could we both have changed so much'
I was once a serious warner. Now I'm fun-lovmg like Tony
Wall at last' -CONFUSED
DEAR CON
'
Perhaps, underneath, you were always fun-lovmg, but the
first guy fa1led to bnng out that quality.
No one can predict the future However, af you stop worrymg
over " not worrymg" and lruly enjoy "now," I think the new huurs
'J'o carry out the apple
you has a very good chance -H
theme of the meetmg, Mrs.
Horky
mtroduced Mrs
DEARHELEN
.
Walham
Hamm
who ga ve a
I'm a cocktail waitress m a lounge popular wath smgles.
"
As
Ameracan
paper
entitled
Sax garls drank up a tab of $24, then spht without paymg the
as
Apple
Pae",
a
history
of the
b1ll This happens a lot four tunes last week
cultivation
and
propagahon
Maybe tllese kidS don't reahze the wa1tress IS respOIISible I
worked mne hours and went home wath only three cents after of apples by J H. Stark
Mrs Malcolm Roller's arP&lt;tYmg the1r bill+,
mrangement
for the evenmg
Please tell people 1hey aren't steahng from the nch
was
on
a
katchen table
nkeeper, but from the poor waatress -GOING BROKE
wath
red and white
covered
DEAR BROKE
checkered
cloth
The ar1
These people are steahng- penod Your mnkeeper should
rangement
featured
red apdevase a new checkmg system.- H
ples m a clear glass compote
Got a problem ? An adult subject for diSCUSSion' You can wath a partially peeled apple
talk It over m her column 1f you wnte to Helen Butte!, care of and a parmg kmfe at the
base, and a Johnny Apthis newspaper
pleseed book An old fashaon-

American Mothers Commattee begins search for
1978 Ohio Mother of the Year
and urges organizations from
all counties to write for
nomination blanks to enter a
favorite mother
' The mother chosen should
be a leader in the commuruty
In one or more of the
fullowmg areas (education,
the church, civic or government work, cultural arts, and
so forth) . Sh~ must be a
member of a church and her
youngest child must be at
least fifteen (15 ) years of age.
The winner wall be a
t epresentatlve lor all Ohio
mothers at the National
Mothers Conference at Des
Moines, Iowa , May 7-11, week
before Mother's Day. She wall
compete wath other wmners
lrom the States, Puerto Rico
and Wa!hinglon, D. C. for the
title of National American
!'&lt;!other of 1978. Awards at the
State and National Conferenc es (certificates for
runners up or merit
mothers).
Mothers anterested In
entering the Arts, Crafts,
Poetry-Prose Contests and
exhibition (!how and sell)
send in your names. Information wUI be mailed
from interest chairmen m
your partacular interest area.
Certllacates and monetary
prizes. Top award winners
Enroll Now For
New Quarter
Secrtlanal . General Of.
fu:e
ACtounttng
Business Management

&amp;

Employment assistance

fo 11roduates.
Visit. write, or call 446 ·22~9
for inform1tion.

SOUTHERN HILLS .
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
414-2nd Ave. RNOSB5B
Thomos C. Breech,
Dareclor

will be entered an the ·
Nataonal Contests
lnformataon now available
concerning Young Mother
Co uncil Service.

"The Beauty m our Own
Backyard" was the theme of
a program presented by the
Rev. Walham Maddleswarth,
speaker at the mght meetmg
of the Maddleport Amateur
Gardeners held at the home
of Mrs. Ferman Moore
The Rev. Mr M•ddleswarth
presented slides of flowers
famah ar to thas area He also
spoke of the book, "Born m
the Sprmg" by June Carver
Robertson. A gaft wa~
presented to h1m by the club.
Mrs. Elizabeth Burkett,
pres adent , op ened the
meetmg wath members gavmg the Gardeners' Creed
New year books were
distrabuted, and Mrs. Moore
gave devotions usmg the
book, "Flowers oflnsparallon •
an God's Garden" and
reading " Chrysanthemums,

•

Oct.l7thru21 at
7:30 each eve nang
Speaker Paul Keller
of Arkansas

C9me and hear the gospel in its samplicity .

.

the Flower of CompassiOn...
She compared the care of
chrysanthemums to the
spmtual care of people and
concluded wath a prayer of
compassaon.
The regaonal meetmg to be
held At Rao Grande on Nov. 5
was announced
,
The home was decorated m
the Halloween mota!. Mrs
Ferman Moore, Mrs !-larry
Moore and Miss Kathryn
Hysell were the hostesses.
The cherraes jub•lee was
served by Ferman Moore:-Door prazes were \9on by
Mrs Walter Crooks, Mrs.
Burkett Favors wer e
arumature baskets,pf nuts and
arunts Guests were Mrs
Alma Johnson, Spnngfleld,
Mass Erna Jesse, Pomeroy,
and Mrs Pal McCarty, Maddleport.

Ways of raasmg money for
A halloween party at the
basketball unaforms were school was set for Nov. l8 wath
discussed when the Bradbury a theme to be earned out A
PTA mel recently at the committee wall be named to
school
have charge of the party
Mrs. Rachard Vaughan
Next meetmg wall be on
presided w1th the PTA prayer Nov. 10 with an open house to
and the pledge to the flag be- be held. ~embershap cards
mg gaven to open the meetang. are for sale at So'cents Don
Mrs. Bobby Rupe a:esigned as Hamng mtroduced the
treasurer and Mrs. Cinda teachers and employes
Hams was named to fill ~11 soup labels are ~
vacancy It was noted"'ttlat ing eol.lected. Mrs. Corder's
some cookbooks left over room won the attendance
from last year wall be sold count. It was decaded to purnow.
chase a new coffee pot.

200 W. Mam. Pomeroy, 0.

When:

Materaal provided by Mrs
Charles Kuhl, regaonal director, regardmg the fall

regional meetmg to be held
Nov. 5 at RIO Grande College
was distrabuted. Mrs. Allen
Grossman, OAGC Judge, will
presenl tlle program on
weathered wood Reglstrabun wall be 50 cents w1th the
luncheon to be $3 20. Reservalions are to be sent to Mrs.
Homer Brannon, Box 161, Rw
Grande, by Oct. 29.
Apple crasp, coffee, nuts
and mmts were served by
Mrs M C. Walson, Mrs.
Walter Hayes, Mrs. E 0
Tewksbary, to the 17
members and guests attendang. Mrs. Sabley Slack
presided at the salver coffee
servace. The table was
centered with a compote of
apples, bananas, and green
grapes, flanl&lt;ed by yellow
tapers.

Hobos gather for party
A hobo theme was earned
out for tlle Thursday mght
Phalathea Society meetmg
held at the Maddleport
Church of Chnst.
Members came m costume
and prizes were gaven to
tllose best dressed Ther~as
a candy com guessmg ~on­
test, a nd a game to detemune
the Windiest hobo.
The Philathea song opened
the meetang wath all of the
members gavmg the Lord's
Prayer. Mrs Nora Race read
"The L1ght That Shanes" by

Charles R. Loss With scraplure taken from Matt. 6.
Plans were made to serve the
Homebualders dmner Tuesday mght. It was announced
that Monday IS the last day to
contrabute to the specaal pr&lt;&gt;)ect for the Grundy Mountam
Missaon an Grundy, Va.
Mrs. Dorothy Roach, Mrs.
Nora R-ice, Mrs. Ella
Daugherty, Mrs. Coleen Van
Meter, and Mrs. Gertrude
Miller served a variety of
donuts, apple Jlllce, coffee,
and candy corn.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

COnvtnce
• j/eas tO j fin
..:;,e
By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to know if anyone could
tell me how to get rad of fleas
m my carpet.- SHARON M.
DEAR POLLY - Is there
any way I can possibly get
fleas out of my s hag carpet or
dues one have to get nd of the
carpet ' -MILDRED
DEAR SHARON M. and
MILDRED - Some of the msecllrades formerly recommended for this have now
been banned but you maghl
buy one from an extermanatang company that
would be effectave If all else
faals, treatmg by a professaonal extermmator may be
necessary It would certamly
be far less expensive than
replacmg tbe carpel
Fleas really hop around
and doubtless are an your
upholstered furmture af they
are m the rugs. If they are not
too bad you could try spraymg the room wath FLY spray
Close the room for an hour or
perhaps when you are g&lt;&gt;mg shoppmg or wall be away
from home for a while
Repeat m two to three days.POLLY.
DEAR POLLY -I wanted
to cook a roast m my crock
pot but at was too large for the
hd to go on I covered the
roast th;U.extended out of the
pot wa\h alummdm foal and
very carefully sealed at taghtly around the edge of the pot
This worked wonderfully an
place of the lid. -ZOE ANN
DEAR POLLY- M1ss L.'s
Pet Peeve was the sloppy
way that people wnte thear
names and addresses on
'

orders or requests for
catalogues sent to the company she works for. When I
am ordermg anythmg by
maal or wntmg to a company
that would need to send a reply I always enclose a prmted
name and address label such
as most of us have. The company can stack at on the return
mall so I never have any trouble - MRS O.B.
DEAR MRS O.B. - I do
hope you clip this label to
your letter; such smaU bats of
paper could stay m the
envelope or be easaly
overlooked It as a good 1dea. I
well know how hard 1\ often lS
to decipher dafferent hand
wntmg -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- When my
chaldren were ba baes I
removed formula statns from
their clothmg by farst wettmg
the spots and then sprinkling
unseasoned meat tendertzer
on them. Let stand for half an
hour and then launder as
usual.
For years my faathful
standby for removmg black
grease stains or ballpomt mk
staans has been undiluted
pme ml Pour on a small
amount and rub fabrac gently
together. I always test a
small area farst and have
never had eather of these
remedies rlUn a garment. MARYO.
Polly wall send you one of
her sagned thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers af
she uses your favunte
Pomter, Peeve or Problem m
her column Wr1te POLLY'S
POINTERS m care of thiS
newspaper

Bradbury PTA plans
money making projects

..- CHURCH OF CHRIST
Where:

For all information write
State President of Amcracan
Mothers Committee, Mrs
Robert J . Wherry , 1716
Bedford Rd., Columbus, Ohio
43212.

ill

,
.J
M
Garueners meet at ooresso

,!GOSPEL MEETING

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.

• .•

B H 1

~~
~

a·#!*
\~ i
:&amp;~ "-\~
i\'
SNOOPY SAYS "Y'ALLCOME"- It's his invitation
to you to attend Sunday School a\ the Maddleport
. Pentecostal Cburch on South Third Ave on Oct 30, tlle
day when the attendance goal has been set for 200 A: week
ago Sunday tlle school reached an all-time hagh of 185
Make Zarkle m has Snoopy costume wall be nding the bus
and children who would· like to jom h1m are asked to
contact Tom Kelly, the Sunday School superantendent, or
some other member of the church Pictured here wath
Snoopy are Ed1e Zarkle, bus captam; Kelly, and the Rev.
Wilham Kmttel, left to nght.

CHOICES

Calendar

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, Monday 7·30 p m 1n the school
cafetena. Room vts1tat10n
w11l be held ~&lt;hilc a film for
the chi ldren Is shown 1n Jhe

Food complainis a coverup?
DEAR DR. BLAKER I've been married lor more
than 10 yean. Bob and I get
along pretty well, but we
really dlaagree about money.
Our · budget works out
generally, e&lt;cep\ for lhe food
allowance. He complains tbat
we can't have his favorites
often enough. But he won't
Increase the food budget.
DEAR READER - Smce
Bob's behavior m the area of
food complaants seems to be
so mconsastent wath the way
he usually relates to you, he
may not really be complamlng. He may merely be
expressing the d•stress and
frustration of beang on a tight
budget.
I am sure that t~ere are
things you would like to have
but can't afford and that you
complain from t11ne to tune.
You sound as af you feel he is
expectmg you to fax has
favorates even though you're
on a lun•ted budget. But a! he
knows the facts about food
costs (have you discussed
thas wath hun '), then you can
stop mterpretmg his complamts as a communicataon
to make you feel guilty.
Commiserate with him
Try somethmg hke, "I ltke
that dish, too It's too bad that
we can't afford to have at
more often." Then change the
SUbJeCt
• •
However, there is another
way of lookmg at thas
problem Even though you
say that you get along pretty
well, Bob's complaints about
yo ur cookang may be a
leakmg out of dissatisfied
feelmgs about related areas
in your marraage.
F eelmg some sense of not
being taken care of and at the
same tune, not knowing what
to ask for to feel better, he
asks for lhe unpossable Thls

expresses his irratatlon wath
you for not meetmg has
dependency needs
If you take has compla mts cafetena A nurse ry w tll be
about food as an expressaon of provaded
his unmet needs In other
MEIGS COUNTY Churches
areas you maght be mollvated of Chnst Men's Fellowship
to fmd new and more ef- meetmg Monday at Tuppers
fectave ways of expressing Plams Church of Chnst, 7 30
your love You ' maghr find p m Truck to be loaded to
that he wall becpme less send to Grundy Mountatn
demanding about his fa vorite MiSSIOn.
foods
MIDDLEPORT BPW Club,
While dasagreements about Monday, 7.30 p m at the
money m a marr1age are Meags Inn National Busmess
common, some dafferences and ProfessiOn Women's
represent a deeper raft. For Week to be observed wath the
e&lt;ample, a free spender may selectaon of a "Woma" of the
choose a mate whose spenTUESDAY
ding Is more restricted to put
DHEW
WEBSTER Post 39,
lunats on has own Impulses
Amencan
Legaon, wall obAnd vice versa, someone who
serve
World
War I veterans
fmds lt dtffacult to spend
money spontaneously may mght when the annual oyster
marry a free spender hopmg stew supper as held at 8 p m
the mate wall give him Tuesday at the post home
"permisston " to spend World War I veterans
needmg transportation are to
without feelmg guilty.
If such considerations were call Charl es Swatzcl or
crucaal factors in their mallal Leonard Jewell
choace of each other as
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES
mates, one can see the
WILL
honor Lady Verna
conflact that develops Each
Zengler,
high pnestess of
is dependmg on the other to
Thea
Court,
Columbus, at a
curb the respectave neurotic
dinner
meeting
to be held at
trait , yet each has a
the
Meags
Inn,
Tuesday at
tremendous need to express
6·30
p
m
Rescrvatwns
arc to
that tra1t.
GROUP
II
,
Madd
lepoat
Taking some time to
Farst
Umted
Presbytel'!an
dif!CUSS each spouse's expectataons of the other should Church, 7:30 Tuesday at the
help m at least gettang some home of Mrs Mildred Ka1r
of the conflicts out an the wath Mrs Myron Mall ea, c&lt;r
open Some professaonal help hostess Mrs Davad Clllmngs
may be useful an resolving the to be devotwnalleade1 Babk
study on the last half of
problem.
Write to Dr Blaker in care Chapter 3
PAST MATRONS OF
of thas newspaper, P 0. Box
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order
489, Radio Caty Station, New
of
the
Eastern
Star, to ente•York NY 10019. Due to
taan
pas
t
matron
s of
volume of mail she cannot
Evangehnc
Chapter,
Midreply
personally, but
dleport,
7
30
Tuesday
at
the
questions of general mterest
Pomeroy
Masumc
Temple
will be dtscussed in future
columns

Happy Harvesters
plan for projects
Seve ral proJects were
discussed at the Fraday mght
meetang of the Happy
Harvesters Class held at
Tramty Church.
It was noted that frwt
cakes have been ordered and
anyone desaring one should
contact a member of !he
class. Catermg of the

Sorority
gathers
The model meetmg of
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sagma Ph1 Sororaty
was held Thursday mght at
the home of Mrs. June Van
Vranken wath Mrs. Jean
Werry as e&lt;&gt;-hostess.
Mrs Betty Ohhnger, vace
present, gave a brae! m·
troduction to Beta S1gma Pha
to the prospective members
who were guests Mrs Ann
Rupe gave a resume of the
local chapter hastory On
display for the prospectave
members to see,
were
memorabaha of the years.
Mrs. Mary Packens, ways
and means chaarman,
remanded members to take
thear bottle caps to the next
meebng A report on the recent Caty Councal meetmg
was ga ven by Rose Sasson and
members discussed erectmg
a sagn at the Pomeroy CorporatiOn haruts.
Contmumg the study- of
Meags County, the guest
speaker, Mrs. Mae Mora
gave hastory of Meags County
churches A song of fraendshap was sung durmg the program to the prospective
members Refre shments
were served

ATI'ENDING COUNCIL
POMEROY
OhiO
Seventh-day Adventist
Church adn'nnistrators are
)omang leaders from around
the world in Washmgton, D.
C., thas week for the church's
,.-~IJ!IIII!I!~
armual councal.
"The Annual Council meets Albert ' Dittes, pastor of the
each October and is the Pomeroy Seventh-day Adhaghest admmastra\lve body , ventast ehurch, said. The
ofthe church to meet between nest General Conference
General Conferences whach sessaon as set for 1980 m
take place every five years," Dallas, Texas

CRISISUNE
'
992-5554

La.nnmg-Wells wedding on

Dec. 19 was also dascussed.
'Mrs Genevaeve Swartz and
Mrs. Stella Kloes were appomted to the nommatmg
committee. The class
acknowledged a gaft from
Mrs. Ruby Erb who was
reported all along wath Mrs
Mabel Wolfe and Freda
Grueser.
MISs Erma S1111th, president, read a thank you card
from the Ben Neutzlmg faaruly She also thanked those
members who helped wath the
recent rummage sale. The
covered dish dmner to be held
at the church Sunday lollowmg worship servace was announced
Members sang " Happy Barthday" to Mrs. Rose Gmther,
and made plans to remember
Mrs Frances Reabel with barthday cards.
The Lord's Prayer m
unison and the devotwns on
"Courage" by Mrs Stella
Kloes opened the meetmg
She nsed scripture from l
'J'hes. 5 read by Mrs Phalhp
Memhart, the hymn, "Faath
of Our Fathers" and a
medatataon
deseribang

courage as the quality of the
spmt and soul and that wh1ch
gaves the Chns\lan mothe1
strength m tune of a chald's Illness. A story entitled "God
and Cottage Cheese" was
read by Mrs Gmthe1
Members sang "Beneath the
Cross of Jesus" followed b y

prayer by Mrs Memha rt
Mrs Freda Duffy was
paamst
Refreshment' were serve(!
by Mrs. Swartz and Ma s
Wahna Terrell from a table
decorated m the fall motaf

Hurry! Stop
in today!

Ltmlted
time
on_ly!

FURNITURE
Phone 992 2635

THIS WEEK'S

sPECIAL

Cheeseburger
&amp; French Fries

ggc
)II!!!!!IIE

Have A Problem
Call Us-We Care

'i rdauyIsle ~
I.Jicust Street

o.

�~cop~~~.;~~:;;;:~·~···rL
"'""'e"'·ut...,~fhe
...
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

Steven

T

Sloan ,

7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Moodily, Oct 17,1977

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Ad

TELEVISION·

.

.

- ~VIEWING .~

mtnts1rftor ol the Estate of
Eff1e

D• w•J

Surcner,

deceased ,

~

WANT AD
CHARGES

Platnt•ff ,
; · VS ·

Mollie Starcher , et al .
Oetendanh

Cue No 120Sf
lS Y. unlstJI

Conger wnose adoresses are

Clarence Conger . George
Starcher ,
Seller.s Edna
MCK itr iCk , E !Zabeth Hoff
man , Pau l Staley , R1chard
St a ley and Mary Ta yer the
\Jn known he~rs and dev 1sees
of the unknown he1rs and
dev1sees of Holte Starcher ,
Beulah Hall. Charles Conger .
Kenneth
Dav1s ,
May
Blumenaur . Harold Conger .
Clarence Conger .• George
Starcher . Mary Sellers Edna
McK tr1ck , EliZabeth HOff
man, Paul Staley , R1chard
Staley and Mary Thayer and
the unknown spouse of the
defendant Robert Aley , all
thetr names and last known
addresses and res,dences
be1ng unknown , w il l take
not1ce that on the 13th day of
September , 1977 Ste .... en T
Sloan. Adm.n,srrator of the
Estate of Eft 1e Dav1S Star
cher.
Deceased . filed a
comp1a 1nt m the Court ot
Common Pleas . Probate
D IVIS IOn Of MeigS County ,
Oh 10 , at Pomerpy , Oh10, case
no '27059 , aga inst Holtte"
Starcher , et at , request1ng the
Court to author,ze t h e
Plamltff t o sel l the entire
Interest 1n the descr~bec ,
attached ' E xh1b1t A' real
estate at publ1c sale , free of
all cla1ms, 1nterest, l1ens . and
riQht~
and exoectancy of
dOwer there1n of all part 1es to
th1s action for not less than
two th irds (2 3) Of 1ts ap
pra1sed value and for such
other re l1ef as 1S proper
Sa 1d
defendants
are
reQUired to answer w1th1n 28
day!! after the last pub1tc at1on
of thIs not ICe

MarT

Steven T Sloan ,
Admtn strator of
the Estate of
Eftte Da\ltS Starcher
Ge,qald A MOll iCa
Attorney a t Law
11
EXHIB1T A"
PARCEL I Situate 1n the
TownShiP of Lebanon, County
of Meq)S , Sta te of Oh10 , and
located 1n Sect1on No 29,
Town No 2 and Range No 12
of the Oh1 0 Company's
Purchase and descnbed as
fo llows
Be gmn mg at a po lnt on the
North S1de of t he public road
leadmg from Sharon to
Sel l~rs R 1dge , sa1d po1nt
be1nQ the Southeast corne r af
land owned by Kenneth
Cossm and Be tty Cossin and
sa 1d po1n t ben.,o fhe sou th
west cor ner of land owned by
Richard Rosenbaum whtch
corn er l1es on the aforesa1d
Nortl'1 s 1de of the public road
the n c e
1n a
northerly
drrectton along the line fence
between cossm and Rosen
ba um a dtstance of 400 fee t to
an ash tree m a ravtne on the
said l tne
t hence 1n a
southerly d1rec t1o n along the
me ander tngs of the said
ra v1ne a d1stanceof 354 feet to
the p ub ltc road aforesa id
thence 205 teet a lo ng the sa1d
publtc road 1n an easterly

gJ;;~~~o1nng ~ 0~o1n"ta Irft 1;~e 0 ~j

a cre, more or tess
E xceptmg however , all
m1neral r1ghts on and
beneath the ab ove described
tract of rand to Oosha Hal! by
her m a deed from satd Dosha
Hall to Luther I Mart1n ,
dated Oct 17 , 1946 , and
recor ded rn deed book No
158 , at page 415, of t he deed
records of Me 1gs county
Ohio.
ThtS bem-g a part of the
same real estate as that
c on vP re d from
Mildred
Turne1 a nd Aaron Turner to
Kenne h Coss m and Betty
Cossm ,..y ieed dated May 7,
1959 , and record e d Ju ly 1•
1959 tn deed boo k No 202 at
page 75 of the deed re cords of
Meigs County Ohto
PARCEL II Sttu a te d In the
County of Metgs, Sta te of
Ohro , and m the Townsh 1p of
Lebanon and bounded as
follows Sttuated 1n Sec ti on .
29, Town 2, Range 11 of t he
Oh10 Com pany Purchase ,
descr~be d as follows
Beg1nnmg at a post 80 rods
West and 81 rods and 10 ltnks
south of the Northeast corner
of sa1d Sect ton No 2.9. at what
y/~
th
was torme,rty kno
on
e
North West corner of Jef
terson Cha se's 40 a cre lo t tn
sa 1d sect 1on thenc e West 80
rod s to a s tone corne r (where
a h 1ckory 5 bears South 57
•
degr ees east 33 1lnks) thence
south Jp;., deg rees west 4
cha •nsanct6BI1 nkstoapost1n
the county r.oad where a p1ne
6 south 59 east 9 links then ce
so uth 14 degrees east 8 charns
to a post thence south 39
de grees · east 3 cha ms to a
post
thence sovfh 48 1h
degrees east 9 chams and 20
links to a post (p me 5 sou th 46
degrees West 18 , Ptne 5 north
70 degr ees West 19 lt n k.S),
then ce east 6 cha 1ns and 110
lmks to a post south west
corner of Jefferson Chase's
lot thence w1th Siild Chases
Sllid ltne nort h 80 rods tb the
place of beg1nn1ng , con
tatn1ng 30 1ill acres
PARCEL Il l
Also the
follow1ng descr bed real
estlte. to w1t
S1tuated m
Le anon Townsh1p 1n Me1gs
Co unty and State of Oh10 and
descr,bed as follows
The"
1 So utheast quarter
of Nor
thwest quarter of secl10n No
29 1n Town 2. Range II ,
co ntam mg 40 ac r es be the
'Sam e mo re or less
PA RC EL IV
Also the
follOwing
destrtbed
prem lses, Situated tn the
Countv of Meigs, St ate of
Oh 1Q.,
and
1n
Lebf'lnon
Townsh ip and In the Ohto
Co mpany 's Purchase and
bounded as follows Bemg 10
Sect ton 29, Town 2 and Range
11 , commencing at the Nor th
west corner of J acob Bel!t
ler 's land at a stone corner
and rvnnmg south about 29
rods to the publ iC roa d,
thence northerly along the
publtc road about 33 rod s to
the south l1ne of tl)e 30 1h acre
tract f~rst descrtbed abo'w'e,
thence east ab ovt 16 rod s to
the place o f be~1nn 1n q,

ohernoon Foetor
guns only Assor ted

Chock

Ladrr

C~h

BY PUBLICATION

unknown , and th e unknown
l'le •rs and dev .sees of Eft 1e
Dav•s Stercher , John R
Oav l.s Judson Oav rs. Mary
Blank and Ze l da Staley tM
unknown he irs ar'\d dev tsees
ot the~ unknown he fn and
dev tsees of Eff i e Oov ls
Starcher , John R
Oa\I IS,
Judson Oav ts Marv B l anlr.
and
ZetQa
Sta ley • tne
unknown tH•trs and dev tsees
Of Defendan ts HO lli e SUr
cher , Beu lah Hall , Charles
Conger , K~&gt;nneth Oa\o' tS, Ma'(
Blvmenaur Harold Conoer .

--

Raon• -Gun Club

I""'

C1 Wifjl:t'

100

'!do~~ ~~
JJil ) :O
oJ.t\1!'

!::l:i ch

'""
""

JOO

,.,
"'

!~

3 i!l

tJ\t'r Uk' lnli\LIIlwll b

\llil lfd

oUJJ\b Ill ~ \'t'l\11$ pt'l \1' \ll tl IJ'' I \la~

"M.ili; IUIIIU I\1!( ulht•r Uill ll t&lt;M~t'iUll\ t
tL.I ~ ~ 111 bt- d ~&lt;t1 to:....J ~~ lh~ I d11}
l&lt;llt

!11 Ultlll\11\ Card vf T lwnks illtt.
Olntwu o 6 t't'lll1&gt; p.-1 ll' urJ SJ.OI.l
lllUI UilWII (',a,ll\11 &lt;i\J\Iilllt'

\hlbtlt&gt; Hum!." :walt&gt;:. a11l1 V!i rUW:!lt&gt;:.

dH .. ~·t CI)t l'\1 Oil() \li llh ~ l tah ll'll il
vtJtt ~tt'lllthil.rl'!t.'f&lt;ll ddst.:iU n·
Uti! ~~x ~~unllt-r I n C'lirt' lf T tk' St&gt;rr

Fl/llEJI: BRU SH p1od vt;t s tor sal•
'192 3&lt;10
THERE WILL be no hunt+ng , no
trespou 1ng ond no e.~~cepho n s
on

m~

prOp_!riY Bob Mc,.Gr_::w

n:-.pvn,IIJit' fo [ llkolt'

lllitn on&lt;'tmvr

fl.'\.'\ Ulli\'I I IUII

Phvnt' ll9'l 2156

NOTICE

!VJUIIda)

TU!!l&gt;tio:l\

lhru Fndii\
.j p \1
tlw dHI bd m t pul.J!It.:llllun

Swulli)
-I PM

contain ing 1 55 100 acres
s t ullted m the County of
Meigs , Sfllte of Oh10 and 1n
th~ Townsh1D or SuUon . to
Wtt - F ;fteen acres , more or
less. and
bounded and
descrtbed as follows , v1z AU
north of the road runn1ng
through the West Half (West
'•&gt; of One Hundred (1001
Acres of lend on the East end
of Fract1on Two Hundred and
So1 ty two &amp;ere Lot No Seven,
Sect1on Fourtee n , Town
Three , Range Twelve, &amp;nd
the same havmg been d~eded
by Jacob Roush and h iS w 1fe
to El 1as C Balcovr Ja nuary
13
1869 and by Eltas c
Batcour and Wife to John
Hen ry Van Meter on the 5th
day of March . 1872. and by
Jo hn H Van Mete~ to Geo rge
Karr, August 13, 1973
MahalliJ
Da 'w' IS,
who
reserved a life estate m one
acre m deed recorded 1n Deed
Book 59 page 380. 1S now
deceased
REFERENCE Volume 59 ,
page 380 Me1gs County Deed~
Records
~ SI' l-

261101 3 10. 17, H . 31 , 6tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
OMTAXl.EVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 1S hereby 9 1\len
that rn pursuance of a
Resoh,ifiOn of the CounCJI Of
the Village of Rat1ne , Oh10,
passed on the 8th day of
September, 1977 , there wd l be
su bm 1tted to a 'w'Ote of the
people of sa td Village at a
General ELECTION to be
held 10 the Village of Racine,
Oh10, at the reg vl ar place of
vottng there 1n, on Tuesday,
the 8th day of November ,
1977 , the quest1on of 1evy1ng ,
1n excess of the ten m 1l l
llm ltl!lt!On, for the benef 1t of
Racme V1lla ge for the pur
pose of Current expenses
Sat d tax be 1ng a renewal
of an existing tax of 1 7 mills
to run to r fl'lle years at a rate
not eKceedmg I 7 m1lls for
each one dollar of valuatton,
wh 1c h amounts to Seventeen
ce nts tor each one hundred
dollars of \la luahon , for F1ve
years
Th.e Polls for sa1d Elect 10n
Will open at 6 30 o'clock AM
and remain open until 7 30
o'c lo ck PM of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Me1gs Cou nty ,
Oh10

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

SUNDAY
12 til 8 P.M.
FAll SPECIAL Parosol Bouhque
Beauty Solon next" to Skote o
Woy Roller R1nk anno unces Per
monent SpeCial 10 • • off on
$15 $1 7 50 $20, dunng month
of Oct Phone 985 4141 open
Tues Thurs Fn Sot Closed

dro Kerns. ond Crystal (Erw1n )
Rovb1.1rn Owners R1chord ond
Sondra Karns

RACINE Vo lunteer f1re
Deportment w1ll sponsor a gun
shoot every Saturday at 7 p m
ot the•r bulldtnSJ m Boshon Foe
lory choke guns only

THE

WANTED ~OMEONE to move
hovsehold furn1fur~ from New
Hoven to Chfton Call (JO.I)
773 5643

REDUCE D PRICES on rugs ofgons
ond woll hong 1ng5 Et Cetera
Boutrque 105 Nor th Second
Mtddleport .

lbST IN c1ty of Rocme Grey T1ger
k1tten about 2 mo old Coli
949 2679 or contact Mrs Carl
Gheen o&lt;:rou from Cross s
Store

A CAREER w1fh a fut vre for a man
or woman who wonts the best
'" l1f e A pay check every
wvek fontosltc lnnge benef1ts,
a ll local work G1ve us o colt ot
992 2480 or wnte Western
Southern lrfe Insurance 218 'IJ
E Mom Pome roy Oh1o for 10
formoT1on

ADDRESSERS
WANTED
!m
medtotely I Work at home no
e)(perlence necessorv
ex
celle nt poy Wnte Amemon
Ser'w'!Ce 8350 Pork lone Su1te
269 Oollas TX 75231
HOUSEKEEPER OR moddle aged
cOuple for sem1 mval1d Free
room ond board Small salary
lo14 1 o67 62e• ., l o~' l
989 2303
NEED LADY to toke care of 3
school oge boys etther full hmeortusto tmgh t W54 122
HELP WA~TED Mole or femole
lob Technolog tsl Acceptmg
oppl1cOt1ons fo r full lime per·
monent lob personnel Accep·
ltng opphcohons for Ml T MT or
( LA Resumes or opp l1COt1ons
moy be m01led to
Veterans Mernonol Hosp1tol , Box
749
Mulberry
He1ghts
Pomeroy Oh1o (61-t) 992 2104
An
equal
opportun1ty
employer

Ernest A Wtngett

TWO PONIES more ond geldmg
One broke to hornen . Harness
Doro l hv M Johnston
1ncluded 742-'1833
Otrector
TO GIVEAWAY 1 fe...,ole Spoil
Dated Oc t 1. 1977
., .
dog , I long-ho.red Persran cat ,
( 10) 3, 10 17, 24. 4tc
1 port Perstan dork stnped cat ,
Pets of Ah ce Copehort Need
------"------------- _v:.:•:.:'Y
!.-'9'=•=
•d
::..:.h=o:::mc:•::....:9::
•9'-022•:.:•1: c__
~
NOTICE OF ELECTION
GIVE AWAY good poss1ble
ON TAX LEVY IN
coonhound 3 mo female
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Mother was o bluellck
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE 15 hereby g 1ven
992-7370
that In pursuan ce Of a
Resolut ion of the Board of
t
Trustees of the Townshtp o
Letart , Rt 2 Rac1ne, Ohlo,
passed on the 8th day Of
September , 1977 there Will be
PUBLIC NOTICE
su bm 1tted to a vote of t he
Elden E Slack and Candice
peopl e of sai d Townsh 1p at a
M Slack, whose last known
ECT IO N 1 b
General EL
o
e address was s~cond Street,
held 'n the Towns hip ol Syracuse, Oh io, and whose
Leta rt. Ohio . at the-... reguta r plac~ of residence IS unknown
places of votmg the re1n , on
cannot be ascertained.
Tuesday, the 8th day Of and
Novem ber 1977 , the queslton will take not1 ce that on the
17th day of August, 1971 , the
of levytng , 1n e xcessot the ten
f
th b ell Pla in tiff , tne Ath~ns county
1
1
mill l1mr a 10n, or e en 1 Sa \lings and Loan Company.
of Letart TownShip for the an
Ohio Corporarlon flies 1ts
purpose of ma 1ntamtng and,
Complaint agamst you 1n t~e
operat tng cemeter~es
Seld tax bemg a renewe~l Court of Common Pleas ,
of an ex 1stmg tax of 1 o mIll to Meigs County , Otl tO, the same
t
te be1ng Clluse No C1 16~551 , for
run for five years , a a ra
the foreclosure on certain
nol eKceed1ng 1 0 mills for real estate and 1n said
each one dollar of va luat1on
wh 1c h amounts to Ten cents compleJnt' described u
for each one hundred dollars follows
Situated 1n the V!llagt of
of valuatton, tor F1ve years'
Th.e Polls for sa id Etect1on $yra cvse, County of Me1gs ,
and State of Ohio and
o • 1 k AM
will open at 6 3 0 c oc
as follows ·
and r ema1n open unttl 7 30 described
Being 35 feet off of the west
o'clock p M of satct day
BV order of the Soard of stde of Lot No n In said
Electtons of Me 1gs County, VIllage of Syra&lt;:use, •n the
Covnty of Me ig s, and Stat~ of
OhiO
Ohio
The prayer of said Com ~
Ernest A Wingett
pla int Is forth~ foreclosure of
Cha~rman
the mortgage or Sllld real
Dorothy M Johnst on estate, execution and sale of
Director sa ld real estate and for other
equitable
relief
Satd
Dated OCI 1, 1977
Defendants are requ1red to
answer Complaint on t he 28th
(1 01 3 10, 17, 24, 4tc
day of November , 1977, or
judgment will be t aken
against t hem
Cha~rman

A thought foc the day :
Amertcan hum«X"ist, artist
and writer James Thurber
said it this way, "Early lo
rise and early to bed makes a
male healthy and wealthy

and dead"

Sl Bttrnord
to g1vtt owoy to good home
Phone 742 7123

ntE

Mon and Wed Operators Son

ft lday aftt't noun

-------REGISTERED FEMAlE

ween Party

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
~WIL Oil $MtunJH v

MEIGS COUNTY Humane SOCiety
Coreltne ond odophon Ser\'1ce
m 7~ . 7•2 Jlo2. m sm

Schedule Hollo·
- -~ - =--:--:Sot Oct ~rh AI(( POODLE pupptes 1 mole 1
Races Prtt&amp;s !kllloons
fem(lltt 8 w"ks old $75
Open Wed Ftti ond Sot nltes
992 3493 or 99'2 3391
7 30
10 00 Avo •ftble tor AKC REGISf~EO black and fon
private par~1es Mon lues •
female Cocker Sponltl 5100
lhurs nlfes Sot or Sun oher
For
stud
seP11ce
AKC
noons
Bu,s tronsportot1on
registered block and ton male
conceited Phone 985 3929 or
Cocker Spomel show quol11y
9es mo
Also oil breed dog groomtng
7&lt;2 3162
SKATE A WAY

lll\t l

Th... Publt.:.ht'r ri.'!K'P.t:. th.: nf!hl
lu t-ilil vt rt'jrtl ,. II) aJ~ Jnmtd ub.
.ll'llunal Tht• P\JlJhslkr ll' llllt•.ll IJit

HOOF HOllOW Horses Buy sell
rrode or rro1n . New ond vsed
soddles Ruth Reeves Albany
( ol ~~

meot~

LEGAL NOTICE

Joe Lynn cooper , Robert
A ! ey and M m a Roberta

GUN SHOOT
e~ery Sun

The A ttfens County
Savings &amp; Loan
Companv. &amp;n
Oh io Corporat1on.
Pla tntlff
by M1chael ward .
1ts Attorney
'?9) 26, f10 J 3, 10 17 , 24. 31. 6tc

PARTS FOR 1971 Galo~~:1e
sole Phone m 5858

tonk goes w1th untt 'lou won 1
fmd a home In better condt!ton
for the pnce Prev1ous o wner
says she potd on overcg&amp; pf S8
peJ month to heat lost w1nler
Kmgsbury Home Soles I I 00 E
~ Q m St __!omeroy Oh1o_
BEDROOM 1904 Mobile
Home w1th e.:IHnSIOn Sl600
3BO
S900
1975 Suz1,1ld
985 A268 of ler 6

TWO

EXPERIENCED

Service ' -

............
..... ,...

, , _ t .......... Tn.cll

IF YOU hove a !ierv1ce to Qfler
wont to buy or sell somethmg
oe looking for work
or
whatever
you II get results
foster with o Sent mel Wont Ad
Coll 992 2156

er lvtlcl.l.,

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

PARTS -lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES Ph J7U!50

Saves JO pel lo so pel
on he.1tmg cost
Experience and
fully msured
FrH Est
Call667-,479
IO-U1 mo pd

lltdail~. o.

!!2 2174

11/lfC

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANifltG

FREE ESTIMATES

and
Resldenllll
Call tor.
commercial.
esti111ate, 24 hour se ~vice .
Anyday, anyttme.
Phone 985 3806

..... loto Wolb llttico
STOIM
WINDOWS &amp; DOOIS
R£PLM:EM£NT
WINDOWS .,..
ALUMINUM
StOING-SOITIIl
GUTJ[IJS..IIIIIIN'S

S•poiiOf

st- ulraclton

Young's
Carpeting

COAl, l1mestone end calcium
chlonde and colc1um bnne for
dust control and sp1Wcl m1x1ng
salt for fa rmers ExcelSIOr Salt
Works Mom Street Pomeroy I
Ohto or phone m 3891

Blown Insulation

Automatic
Transmiaion StiYict

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
~

J&amp;L

SWAIN

Radlat,or~

1972 PINTO 9A9 2761 after 5 dur HUGE YARD Sole for Gallto Chm
1ng the week ond onyl!me
t1on School , one m1le below
weekends
Hobson
be1 •de Gilberts
Garage Pr~ced low to go'
1%7 FASTBACII; MUSTANG 289
lues ond Wed 9 5
Hvrst fovr speed w1th lockout
reverse $700 Coli 992 59.t3
after 5 00

1973 PONTIAC GRAND Pnx P S
P B A C power seals flit
wheel AM FM stereo w1th tope
player
other edros
Real
sharp $2,800 Coli evemngs
992 7055 or 99'2 369'2

.....

laaulltiOn s.Mc•

FlftlftCifiiA'IIill~

'

••tol ' = 0
c.upot iuph ttry
Phone Mike Younr
AI
"2·2206 Of 992-7630
·~~~~ Oriawton
.... ""lllillton

Jack's Septic
Tank Semce

-

I•

22l-!mo.

WANTED

BLACK
WALNUTS

.

•279.95

FOR SALE

Pomeroy Landmark

lARGE MOBILE Home lot Country
Settmg Me•gs Schools All
utilities availoble Bottle gas
heating only 742 3122
FOR

RENT

Trotler

adult

__
99_2_3~8~1~~~~--~-·
BEAUTIFUL HOME 9 rooms 2
boths
double
garage .
Reference requ~red W11te to
Dody Sentml
Bo~~:
7n W
_!~~V Oh1o ~45769·----

FOR SALE or trade or land con
tract 2 bedroom house 1n
Rutland 992 5858

--

----~--·-

-- -- --

NEW HOlLAND Boler and Mower
M F Corn Planter 992 7084
RABBI TS, All SIZes ond colors
Over 400 to choose from Gene
Wholey
Dorw1n
Oh1 0
9927013
FOUR REG I~ TfREIJ Block Angus
Heref o rd
cal ves
One
registered Block Angu s Bull
coif
Excellent ped1g rees
Harold Sauer 742 2301
FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR 56 x
24
$75 Baby walker. $10
Lcd1es skates stze 9 $10 1973
Olds Delta 88 toke o\ler
payments See ot 1672 lincoln
His Pomeroy Otuo

WHOlESALE WOMEN S wea r
bus mess Requtres $.4510 for 1n
ven tory that IS guorenteed to
sell Por t l1me ( 8 to 10 hours
p.er week ) For mformohon
coU ... Oll FREE I 800 528 6050
e~~:t 30.. 1 or wnte Fosh1ons
PO Bo~~: 128 Polkton NC 28135

BROWN SWISS He1fer 843 2353

PIANO TUNING ond Repa ir lone
Oon1els 992 2082 12 years ser
v1ce to Tn County Reference
Elberfelds

REDUCE: SAFE and fost w1th
Go8esc Tab lets &amp; E Vop water
p~ll s
~e~~Drug _ _ _ _ _

WILL BABYSIT m own
Carolyn
Boumon
607 6278

50 GALLON GAS tank ond tool
box combmohons lq r ptckup
lr uck $200 241- 2302

WILl BABYSIT 1n my home bv the
Any oge
hour or week
welcome 742 2833
:.:..:...._

WOOD FOR Sole Phone 985 4103

home
161&lt; )

•

:

:

Ktnpbury Home Sales

.....

\lfli)Nl ffi1}

CEHEN

t
J I I J

..

-

tDYKLIN

BUT HERE, THIS 15 MORE
OUR. SPEED, I GUESS··
NDBODY'LL PAY ANY
'TENTION TO ONE. MORE STRAY
KID OR 006 ON THIS 5TREET 1

A FINE STREET ·· MAYBE
A lllllE SEEDY· BUT
STILL NICE. AND GENlEEL,
~S 'THEY SAY ·

Saturdays

•

BORN LOSER

AI-ID IJ:JU Dl(;ll'T
Hfo..V~ Al-l'i M():t.'i

I II\ 1\11:: 0lN WHICH ~D
'OJ l.AST WEEK

\OJ WT T11AT 10
B!XKS 'OJ ON€ M~ z

.
'

''•

TEAF~o[B

I

TO C/0.
Now arrange the Circled letters to

No. but be in' marr1.1.
I reckon thin's like
that b01.1n' t'
nappen!

This ·looks
l1ke mLj
doorstep

9 O&lt;f-7
9 Q0-79 Park Avenue 3,4,15, Three Company 6,13,

Mash 8, 10; VTR 20
9 31}-Soap 6. One Day at a Time 8, 10, Mary Tyler
Moore 13, Diamond Rivers 20; 10 OI}-Famlly
6,13, Lou Grant 8,10. News 20.
10 31}-Biack Perspective on the News 20
11 DO-News 3,4.6.8.10.13,15. Dick Cavell 20, II 31}Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie " Hit lady" 6, 13;
Kojak e, Mov ie " Murphy's War" 10, Mac Neil
Lehrer Report 33
12 DO-ABC News 33, 12 31}-Janakl 3J
12 4D---Movle ''Double Image'' 8, 1 QO--Tomor row 3,4,
1 11}-News 13; 1 31}-Mary Hariman 10
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M Sllenl Movie
9 &amp; 11 P M - The Women
Cabltt Channel 5 -

~tm'JW'He
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I We1ght
5 Joy
10 Jal11 Fetid
13 Uncommon
14 Nabve
15 Latd away

State (abbr.)

GASOUNE ALU"Y~

form the surprise answer, as sug-

Jumbles STOIC KNEEL JOYOUS FLIMSY
Answer A glr1 should never let a fool kiss her-or
this-A KISS FOOL HER

20 Kind of
drwn
,%1 Ventilates
23 Fenurune
sufftx

24 "True
Grit"

•

2 FlU With
JOy
3 They have
strangesoUnding

names
4 Bonds

5 Lawyer's

cover-up?

6:30 P M . e Testimony Time. 7.00 - Paul Gaudino
Family Fitness: 7 30 - Tri-State Band Festival ,
IO . D0-700 Club •

6 PUts ashore
Yesterday's Answer
7 Lodge
23 Poet's
30 Purplish
8 Fly the
coop

9 Place
112 Ph.D or

D.D.S.
16 Employ
22Thosem
power

evenillg

24 Bets
25 Usually
(3 wds.)

26 Pinafore
28 German

ruler

color

32 Japanese
ctty

33 Gennan
nver

MOnday, October 17
36 Vegetable
38 uK.razy -"

BRIDGE

star

26 Titter

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Vipers

28 Cattle
29 4 qts.
30 West
31 Success
34 Time

REALTOR

VIRGIL B TEAFOI!O, SR.
REALTOR
21o E. Secontl Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
Phone 992-3325

Simple bidding fares best
17

NORTH

period

BRICK - 4 apartments,
has 2 bedroom apt , one 1
bedroom and a studto apt.
Large yard near stores
Only $23,000
NEW TRI-LEVEL 3
bedrooms,
11h
baths ,
family
room ,
uttlity ,
garage, and one acre of
land $41 ,000
10 ROOMS- 4 bedrooms, 2
baths,
fi:'mtly
rooms ,
natural gas forced a tr
furnace , shop , garage and
large lot Want S27,SOO
2 APARTMENTS Lei
one pay for the whole
place Asking just $9,000
BRICK - -4 bedrooms, 111-.
baths. natural gas F A
furnace, fireplace, full
basement. large d1nmg ,
porch, and ntce corne r lot
$22,500
LOT - In town. SO x 100
wtth water, sewerage, and
electric Has 2 bedroom
mobile home mcluded. All
for $6,000
IF YOU HAVE GOOD
CREDIT,
CAN
PAY
RENT, YOU CAN BUY!

ARNOlD GRATE

MIGHT 8E EXPECTED

(Answers tomorrow)

17 Carry

HOMESITE$ for sol e I acre ond
up Middleport neo r Rutland
Coil 992 748 1
NEW 3 bedroom hou~e '1 baths
oil elec 1 acre Mtddleporl
close fo Rutlond Phone 992
74B_1.

WHAT A DANCER
WHO'S. IN A HUI&lt;:I&lt;:Y

I SPICHYj
.( ) (

18 FeU
19 Insh Free

tion
(2 wds. )
37 Uproar
39 Old notes

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~W~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~ tan~e

41 Sommer of
cinema
Chemical

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Is

:

··················-·······

ho.w to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

work

It:

•

West

Nortb East

Pass

1•

Pass

s

THAT SHORE IS A
CAr&gt;~'T MAKE

ALL

THESE DEC1510N5 ...

IT'S LIKE 61VING

A STARVING MAN
A MENU ...

South
Pass

1.

One letter Simply stands for another In this sample A It Bv Oowald &amp; Jame1 Jacoby
used for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. S1ngle letters,
Oswald "How about some
apostrophes, the lengt'h and !ormation or the words are aU
arttcles
OJ!. hands from match
hmts Each day the code letters are different
wmt duplicate&gt; "
CRYPTOQUOTES
Jtm "Here's a hand where
' "
'
A
M
J
p
South
has almost enough for
8
BL
WM JS
N L H '" ''Q L R ' B
an opening bid If he does open
H R· North and South are almost
8 L
ELAPQ
BWS
MALHRQ
sure to get lo game and go
K
down
If he passes , North will
KVN
BWS
BWMB
QSAKBMRQ
open With one d1amond "
F L S B W S Oswald " North opens one
I P HS
S J S A NE W S A
• dtamond rather than one club
Saturday' s eryptequote: IF ONE CANNOT INVENT A because he wants to 1nd1cate a
REALLY CONVINCING 'LIE, IT IS OFTEN BE'ITER TO lead tn case the opponents buy
STICK TO THE TRUTII - ANGELA TlllRKELL
the contract."
Jom "South should respond
wtth one heart only It ts verv
NF.V

s

FRIGHTFUL SCARECROW
'1E MADE, SNUFFY

I THINK I
OVERDID
IT, LUKEY

IT'S SCARIN'

TH' DADSURN

CORN

bad tactics

to

jump merely

because you have passed
eleven htgh -ca rd pmnts A
jump by a passed hand should
only be made w1th a very good
hand and support for partner's
bid SUit"
- Oswald · "Now ot ts North's
turn to make a good btd He
should pass and lei h1s partner
play one heart "
Jtm "South w1ll make four
hearts if the defense shps He
takes hts ace of c lubs and
Queen of d1amonds Then he
leads a spade to dummy , dts·
cards two clubs and a spade

on good dtamonds, ruUs a club

Pass • Pass Pass
OpentnR lead - Q4

u

I

RU"\'t.AND~:

tQ
"'A9 2
Ne 1tlle r vulnera ble

1 Stringent

,•

.:

tl096 3
.KJ 6

i1JQIOe3

DOWN

WOULD HAVE BET 'l'OU
KI~SED LIKE T1-IAT AT lEA5T
ONCE OR TWICE EoEfOI&lt;E IN YOUIZ &lt;.I FE!

.J4

.K9852

43 Ivan,
for one

REAllY? I

lll9n4

SOUTH (D)

salt

WINNIE

•

EAST

WEST
.KJ2
• A Q73
+8754
.Q4

40 DJ.sell·

:

'a
. •

• A6
• 10 6
t AKJZ
.108 7 53

35 SAC sla·

. •

~

4 00---Mister Cartoon 3; Uttle Rascals Our Gang 4,
Gilligan's Is. 8, Sesame Sl 20,33, Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Dinah 13
4 31}-My Three Sons 3; Partridge F amlly 4, Brady
Bunch 8,10; ' LIItle Rasca ls 15.
5 oo-Bonanza 3, My Three Sons 4, Sunsmoke 8,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33. Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15
5.3o-Qdd Couple 4, News 6, Elec. Co 20,33. Mary
Tyler Moore 10 ~ Hogan's Heroes 15
6 DO-News 3.4.8,10,13,15 , ABC News o, Zoom 20
6 ·31}-NBC News 3,4,15, Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 8, 10 , As We See 1120, ABC News 13
7 00--TruthorCons 3, Cross Wlls4 , LlarsCiub6. Pop
Goes the Country 8, News 10; To Tell the Truth 13,
Gilligan's Is. 15. French Chef 20. Parent Ef
fectlveness 33
7 31}-Hollywood Squares 3,4 .. Wolfman Jack 6. Let's
Go lhe Races 8; Price Is R ight 10 ; That's ,Hollywood
13. Music City 15
8 DO-Man lrom Atlantis 3,4,15, Happy Days 6 ,13, To
Be Announced 8, 10, Live from Lincoln Center 33,
Droughl 20; 8 31}-laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13

I I
L-~P.-'"---~~~~;;~J?~g~e;sl~e~d~b~y;th:•:;abovecartoon
Answer here. r I I I I] A(I I]

HOWERY AND MARTIN h
covot1ng
sep TIC sy-stems
dozer bockhoe dump truck
l1mestone grovel
black top
pMmg Rt 143 Phone 1 (614 )
698 7331

Close Sal At 5 P.M.

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

KJ

I ()

SEWING MACHINE Repo11s ser
v1ce oil makes 9'12 128A The
Fobr1c Shop
Pomeroy
Authomed Smger Soles and
Servlte We shar pen SCISS.O!_S _

lliurtdayBtltnoon

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ tl

I (J

REMODELING Plumbtng heotmg
and oil types of general repo~r
Work guara nteed 20 yeors e.:
per.ence Phone 9'12 2409

~•m••

'

lour ordtnary words

ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers toasters 1rons, oil
smell oppl1onces law n mower
next to Slate Htghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985
382S

....,

1

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square to form

BRADFORD Auct1oneer
Com
plete Ser viCe Phone 949 2487
or 949 1000 Roone ~~o (nit
Brodford

Man., T~~e~., WM,

.
TUESDAY,OCTOBER11,1977
5 ' 45-Farm Report 13, 5 50-PTL Club 13. 5 55Sunrise Semester 10. 6 2.5---COncerns &amp; Comments
10, 6 30-Focus on Columbus 4, News 6, Sunrise
Semester 8
6 45--MornJng Report 3, 6 50---Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13, 6 55-Chuck White Reports 10, Good
Morn ing, Trl State 13
7.0Q-Today 3,4,15, GOOd Morning Am~r lca 6,13, CBS
News 8, Bullwlnkle 10, 7 30-Schoolles 10
8·00--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10, Sesame St 33 , 9 DO-Merv
Griffin 3; Phil Oonahue4,1 3,15, New Mickey Mouse
Club 6, Family Affair 8,10
9 31}-Edge of Night 6, Andy Grlftllh 8 : Here's Lucy 10,
10 00--Santord &amp; Son 3.4,15, Big Valley 6, Here's
Lucy e . Joker's Wild 10, Mike Douglas 13
10 Jll-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, Price Is Right 8, 10,
11 00--Wheel ot Fortune 3, 15; Marcus Welby , "M D
4, Hoppy Days 6,13
11 3G-Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6,13 , Love of Ufe
8, 10, Sesame St. 20, Once Upon a Classic 33
11 5~BS News e . Loving Free 10, 12 ooNewscenter 3; News 4,6,10, To Say The least 15 ,
Dlvor£e Court e. Midday 13, Music 33
12 JI}- Bob Braun 3, Chico &amp; the Man 15. Ryan's Hope
6,13, Elec Co 33, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 00--Gong Show 3. All My Children 6, 13, Young &amp; lhe
Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15
I Jll-'-Days ot Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10; 2 00--$20,000 Pyramid o,13 , 2 3Q.....Doctors
34,15, One Life to L1ve 6 fl. 3 DO-Anolher World
3,4,15; Allin The Family 8,10; Consumer Survival
Kll 20
3 15-General Hospital 6,13

GANYM

Sli£ ON 1001 fUEl 81U !HIS
WINI£1 INO 8£AUTin YOOR MOIIL£
HOME Wt hlllmtllblltn a NrittJ of
cololl, lll•ttme alum1n11m uJtdefptnnln~o for your puce of mutd a•d ta
!ltisly JCI'II IIISI.IfiiKI Cllmpilftf let Ul
he Down JOUf mobtlt holM. 1'Mst he
•ns are meckMIItlily untilled to
mute maJtm•m safety Conllct ItS Ill'
I quPty JWftlftJ. Dolt Wilt ltll Kt
lorms oa JOIIf roOf, lei ttS COlt tt , .
and stop pottt~tlll ltats. CALL
99! 7034 01 SIOI' 81 111)0 E MIIN
ST POMEROY 01110 fUR I flEE
ESIIMITE

RUTLAND fURNilURE

742 -2&gt;11

LAST "11ME:·"TI:ttPI

~ 1 ..1-

.: '•.........
e

S5ND ME ON ONE

A FAVOR.

FRIPAY TIL 5

• •
: ·~

1 WANT YOU 10

WHL, BEFORE 'IOU

SCI&lt;'AP At-N OF -.oJJR
OLD EGUIPM5NT, l'D
APP~IATE IT II"
YOU'D 00 1ME

........ .. .

...

•! •~

.

SJrKIISI. OhD
P~ !t!JH3

Chester, Ohto
e-29 pd.

Box 34

•

lARRY lAVENDER

CAMPER
5600
Also
horse
'
lrotler , $450 Phone (6 14) 6981975 GRANADA V 8 Avlo P S ,
BATHROOMS
AND
K1tchens EXCAVATING , dozer loader and
3290
P8 AC
AM rod10 new
backhoe work dump trucks
remodeled
ceramiC
tile
plum
rod1olli 3.4:000 mtles $3 100
EC,O NOMY TRACTOR w1th oil oT
ond lo•boys for h1re wtll houl
btng
carpent
ry
and
general
992 3886
r- lochments l1ke new oskmg
ft ll d~rt to sot! l1mes tone and
momtenance 13 years ex
$2250 Phone (614) 698 3290
1976
MERCURY
BOBCAT
gro'w'&amp;l Coil Bob or Roger Jef
p~mence m 3685
Runa bout
AutomatiC
4
fers doy phone 992 7089 n1gh t
APPlES FI TZPATR ICK Orchards EXCAVAT ING BACKHOE dozer
phone 992 3525 or 992 S232
cylinde r 52 600 Call 9A9 21 I 2
Stole Route 689
Phone
trenc he r, low boy
dump
alte r,. 00 pm
W lkesv dl e 669 3785
trucks , sephc systems Brit EXCAVATI NG dozer backhoe
~:~~~~~~--------c
1974 MONTE CARLO Burghondy
ond ditcher Charl es R Hot
Pullins , phone 992 24713, dar or
G~EEN BEANS Moll runners and
Caod
cond111on
S2 300
f1 eld
Bock Hoe Servtee
n1ght
bunch Ptck your own bnng
985 .tll7
Rut land Oh1o Phone 742 2008
con fo 1ner Dov1s Form Phone BLOWN INSUlATION Get three
'247 2198
1969CHEVY IMPALA Sport Coupe
est1motes Call b67 6479 fo r Will do roofmg construct1on
Wos oskmg $400 but wdl toke Pil75 350 JOHN DEERE dozer w1th
plumbmg ond healing No 10b
free est1more
~ $300 cosh 9.49-2563
too la rge or too small Phone
368 hours 27 ton set of new ANN DAILEY S UphoJs,te ry Rt 1
142 2348
truck scales Tl long 992 5468
1977 BLACK CORVETTE 4 700
Portland Oh10 843 2542
mtles excellent cond1 l1 on 1%7 WESTINGHOUSE UPRIGHT 18 cu
Comoro new po1nt, good runn
h freeze r new 3 leother
1ng cond1t 1on 1975 Vego good
tackers
s1ze
42
new
body good runmng cond1t1on
Shakespeare Wonderbow 55
good work cor 949 2559
SMALL form for sole 10 ~~ down
lb les t 992 nos evenings
COU NTRY formlond w1th seclvd
owner ftnonced Monroe Coun
1967 MUSTANC 289 engme 3
ed woods , wot~r ond good ac ·
CUT HEATING Costs! Shenandoah
ty W, Vo Phone (:JOA) 772
speed Good work cor $250
cen tn Monroe County W Vo
bos1c wood heater
M1ke
3102 ., 130&lt;)772 3227
14'2 '2A59
$1
000
down
coli
(304)
772
Borgen Au themed Dealer
310'2 or (3().4) 772 3'227,
Hamson.,. file 742 270,.4
1974 OLDS 88 ROYALE AM FM
tape cru1se control 1971 VW 97 Wmchester 16 go pump A 1 VA FHA 30 yr f1noncmg lrelortd
Super Beet le
new t1res
Mortgage 77 E Sta te Athens
shape $225 Stevens Brownmg
'192 2987
phone (614) 592 305--1
1'2 go pump A I shape $125
Locush posts $1 :25 each Ftre
CHEVY WAGON Std 283 eng
wood $25 per truck load
Prtcv redvced 992 3408
REAL ESTATE
742 2359
FOR SALE
HAY $1 25 Corn $1 50 bu
Ronald Cowdery 985 3581
MAIN
GDOd
Buslntss
Bldg .
ONE SET oak bunk beds com
located at 605 w. M•ln St.,
CASH po1d for oil moke1 ond
POMEROY, 0.
plete In ve r y good condtiiOn
Poriieroy, OhiO~ Presently
models of mob ile homes
Phone 992 60.47
occupied
by 1 going
Phone oreo code 6 I A .t23·9531
JUST LISTED - SpaCIOUS
buSiness. Bldg hiS deluxe
1q73 175 YAMAHA Good condt
apartment
gverhtad
3 year old ranch type home .
TteABER Pomeroy Forest Pro
tton 5275 949 2498
bnngtnl in good income .
ducts Top pnce lor stondmg
3 Bdrms , 2 baths. large
Priced on tnspectlon only
1owl1mber Call 992 5965 or SHOT SHELLS Wholesale deer
living room and d1n1ng.
can
be
setn
any
time
from
slugs $1 49 Federal 3 dram
Kent Ha nby 1 446-8570
10a.m
.
tO' p.m. Inquire at
family room. lot 1s of
$3 10 or $57 case 22 l R 82 22
405 w Mlln St., Pomeroy,
closets, fully carpeted,
COINS CURRENCY tokens old
mog HP $2 90 8 MM Mou ser
Ohio 45769.
po&lt;:ket watches and d101ns
close to town. approx 1
S2 40 bo l( ammo oil Col New
srlver and gold We ntted 196-4
acre ground Help with VA
ond used
co mpound ond
and older s1lver corns Buy sell
and
FHA
fmanc lng.
recur ve bows 01scount on oil
or trode Coli Roger Wamsley
$37,300 00
We
trade
for
onyt
hmg
F1fe
s
STORY
bedroom
frame
2
3
742 2331
SMALL FARM- 6 acres ,
Middleport Ohio We need o
house F A furnace storm win
OLD FURNITURE Ice bo xes brass
Grave ly GoKorls m1m b1kes
dowS flrep!oce in Midd lepo rt
several bu1ldmgs, garage,
motor cycles 01r com pressors
beds 1ron beds etc complete
Phone 992 3457
lots of garden space, keep
or who! hove you
households Wnle M D M1lle r,
animals
here ,
n1cely
Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohio- or coli FIREWOOD $40 cord Sphl and SIX ROOM house ot 613 Mdl St
remodeled horne, 3 bdrms ,
M1ddlepo
rt
Good
cond1
1ton
In
m nw
del 1v ered
and
s to cked
formal dining , modern k1t ,
qutre at 439 lmcoln St Mid
8.43 '2933
family
room ,
full
dleport
basement, fully carpeted,
MUST SELL th1s 3 bedroom 2 1/a
looks nice $29,500 00
both spl1t foyer wtth all the e x
NEED A WATER
HUNTING LAND 135
fros' Pncvd for below octuoi
acres,
most
has all
real estate value for quiCk
SOFTENER?
sole' Nrce dnve to power
minerals. close to good
~..et Pomeroy Landmark
pla nts- $4-4 000 99'2 2492
fishing, $149 00 per acre,
soUen &amp; condition your
tol a I $20.000.00
'
water and Co-op water
NEW ONE year old b1level home
IMMEDIATE
3
bed
roCim
I
'!~both
ga
rage
softener,
Model
U
C-X
V
l.
Bring Your Walnuts to
recreation room 1 1 a cres
POSSESSION- 3 bdrms ,
Now Only
Excelsior Sa It Works, Inc.,
Eagle R1dge 949-2745
wood burnmst F ,P, n1ce
lot. Nice appearance, new
Pomeroy, OH.
SEVEN YEAR old house 3 ocres 6
let us test your water
features ONLY S14.000 00
rooms and both h mtle from
Free
1Paying Top Price
Chester Pnced for qu1ck sale
GIANT HOME - ThiS 2
985 3950
Walnuts Are Cash
story · home has up to 5
Starting October 1, 1977
bdrms , enclosed porch, 1112
NICE O NE ocre bu1ld mg s1tes
New Co-Op water and
baths, living, dining , two
portly wooded
neo r Me1gs
softeners. model VCSVI
H1gh School 992 5523
car garage ~ storage bldg ,
NO ITEM TOO large or too small
Only $279.95
level corner lot WOULD
NICE THREE bedroom home
Will buy I pte&lt;:e or complete
Save $50.00 'on a new
YOU
BELIEVE&gt;
Rustic
H1lls
Syracuse,
Ohto
household New used or ont1
Hotpoint Refrigerator
$11 ,250 .00
749 '2559
ques Morttn s Furmture 20 N
1 Now 20 cuboc ft. Chest
HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL
2nd St
Middleport Phone
Free1er
'192 6370
- 2 story frame. 4 'bdrms ,
$25.00 Dtscount
some
remodeling
TWO TO ten acres wrth good
(1)
Good
Refngeralor
S200'
complete. bath. kit. ONLY
bu1ld1ng s1te or older home
AUCTION
SALE,
e'w'ery
Tues
and
•
$6,725 00
suttoble tor remodehng water
fr1 ot 7 pm New and vsed
I Good Used Aman'
and electnc1ty ovodable close
OLDER HOMES We
merchond1se at Ohro River Auc
Upnght Freezer, 1250.00.
to hardtop ro&lt;1d Coli 992 7036
lion, Me1gs Plozo , M1ddleport,
have several
qfter 5 pm
1 ~ - Used McCullough
Home Phone (30-4)
Oh1o
NEWER HOMES We
ltl-10 chain saw
S125
773 5471
have several
I Good used McCullough
BUSINESSES- We have
310ECha~nS.w
$95
several.
1 Good Used Homelite
ACREAGE We have
3 AND -4 RM lurmshed ond un
Xl12 Ctwun Sow
sm STARCRAFT FAll Sale. Mml some
furn.shed opts Phone 992
I Good Used McCullougt
5434
motors, 20 ond 22 TraVel
COUNTY
OUT
OF
Chatn Saw
~·
Trotlers. 18 5 $3,799, 25 7 ·
BUYE AS
USE
OUR
AVAilABLE AT R1vers1de Apts 1
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fold-down
LISTING
PHOTO
bedroom , $lOS per month $150
S I 700 up We sell servtce ond
SERVICE, WHY DON'T
security deposrt 9'92·6098
quohty Open Sundays CCimp
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
YOU?
FOUR ROOMS ond b&lt;1th Adults
Conley Storcroft Soles, Rt 6'2
Phone 992-2181
HENRY E. CLELAND
N of Pt Pleasant
only No pets 992 5908
REALTOR
TWO BEDROOM TroJier Adults
1972
ARISTOCRAT
TRAVEL
HANK, KATHY.&amp;
lAO
000
BTU
BOTTLE
gas
furnoce.
Tro1ler 18 ft self contorned
only 992 3324
LEONA CLELAND
Lennox $135 90 000 BTU fuel
Excellent cond1t1on
Call
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
or! stove Stgler, $65 Portable
ASSOCIATES
992 2427 doyflme or 992 3580
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Remmglon 1 10 40 typewnter
992-2259, "2-4191 ,
after 4 pm
Lorge lots Cotl992 7479
$60 Phot'le 7.t2·2231
Incredib le 1 Why poy h1gk electrtc
b1lls tk1s w1nter? let us poy
them for you I One bedroo m
from $130 now a\IO!Iob le
Vtllage Manor Third ond M1ll
Streefs M1ddleport Telephone
992 7787 Equa l Housmg Op
por tun1 ty

MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1t77
5 :QO--Bonanza 3, My Three Sons 4, Gunsmoke 8, ,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33, Hogan's
Heroes 10, Emergency One 13i My Three Sons 15
S · -.odd Couple 4 ; News 6, Elec Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Hogan's Heroes 15
6 · 00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20,
6 31}-NBC News 3,4,15, Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 6,
CBS News 8, 10, ABC News 13, Pests, Pesticides &amp;
Safely 20
7 00--Truth or Cons. 3, Crou Wits 4. Liars Club 6,
Marty Robbins Spolllght 8, News 10, To Tell the
Truth 13, Gilligan's Is. 15: Prime Time 20, Know
Your schools 33
7 31}-That Nashville Music 3. New Truth or Cons 4;
Muppet Show 6, Match Game PM 8, MacNe il Lehrer Report 20,33, Wild Kingdom 10. Candid
Camera 13, Nashville on the Road 15
S·OO-UIIIe House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; logan' s Run
8, Hl. Age of Uncertainty 20,33, San Pedro Beach
Bums 13
9 .00-79ParkAvenue3,4,15; NFL Football6,13; Belly
· Whlte8,10; lmagesofAglng20; FallofEagles33
9 JCl-Maude 8,1 0. IO.oo-Rafferty 8,10. News ,,ao. ,
SomethIng Persona I 33
;,w.
10 JCl-As We See It 20, VTR 33
11 00-News 3,4,8,10,15; Dick Cavett 20, MacNeJI.
. Lehrer Report 33
11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "The Weekend
Nun" 8. ABC News 33; Movie " Bulllll" 10.
12 00--NeVj• 6.13. Janakl33. 12. 31}-F B I 6; I ronslde 13.

l--------------------------------------------------'

INDOOR YARD Sole 829 South
3rd Ave Middleport Oh1o
Ford lor
Oct 17 , 18 19 Mony 1tems to
choose from

1972
CHEVROLET
IMPALA
Custom SSOO 992-6310 oher 6
pm

•

Business Services

8 x 35 TRAIJEU'TE fuel 01! furnace

1 00- Tomorrow 3,4, 1 3~Mary Hartman 10. News
IJ
Movie CMnnel 4 5 &amp; 9 PM - Chino IPGl
7 &amp; II PM, - Swoshbuckler I PG l
Cable Channel 5 li 30 p m - Testlrnony Time
7 00 Paul Gaud ino Family Fitness
7 30 - PPHS Ook H ill Football
10 00 - 700 Club

and leads the queen of spades
to force the opponent w1th the
kmg wm West does wm and
must play a ce and a low
trump tn order to hold South
to nme frtcks "

~u~~
A Flonda r~ader asks for a
further explanation of when a
player IS allowed to look at the
last tnck
In rubber bndge he reta1ns
that rtght until he or hts
partner has played to the
current tnck , tn duplicate he
must not have turned h1s card
to the previous tn ck
1 N8W~l'AI t.rl ~ r'OTE III'ItiSE lt.SSN I
(Fo r a copy of J ACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to " Win ar
Bridg8 ' clo thiS newspaper,
P 0 80}( 489, Rad10 C1ty Station,
New ' York N Y 100

�-··

f

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomerov. 0., Monda}·. Oct. 17, 1977

Evangelist annoUnce candidacy
COLU MBUS tUP l)
E\•ange li st Leroy J en kins
officially threw his hat into
the 1978 gubernatorial race
Sunda\' when he announced
at a ·church service and
political rally he would ...,ek
the state's higllest elected
off ice as an independent.
Jenkins said he wa s
running as an independent
because he couldn 't change
anything as a Republican or

as a Democrat.
The evange list has been at
odds with the state recently
since it forced hin1 to clase
his Holy Hill ~athedral in
Delaware for building code

start closing d01m churches,
I'll slur! closing some of these
porno shops," he said .

violations.

any actlon.

He said he was not running
for governor because he was
angry or upset with anyone in
state government for closing
his church.
" But as governor, befoce I

jenkins said he wanted to
be governor because "I was
cut out to be a leader " and a
bUsinessman.
On the issue of separation
of church and state. he said

He sa1d he was most

concerned about finding jobs
for people, but did not specify

Vetorans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions ~Mary Bonecutter, Pomeroy;
Robert Price, Chesh ire;
Fl oy d Spence, Pomeroy;
Ernestine
William s,
•
Pomeroy : Eli Vance , Jr.,
Racine ; Shirley Ables ,
Racin e:
Ruth
Smith,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discha rg es Otis Knight. Hazel Haves.
Paul Hoffman. Billy Humph·
rey, Jr.. Inez Randolph,
Verdie Keefe r, Gertrude
Woods, Will ia m Blythe,
Floyd Spence, Cleo DeTray.
CARRIER OF THE WEEK - Brent Houdashelt, 13,
Sunday Admissions son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Houdashelt, Pomeroy , has been
rd Glasgow, Pomeroy;
Richa
a carrier for the Daily Sentinel for three years . He is a
Jeffrey
Hawley, Middleport;
student at Meigs Junior High. His hobbies include
Lula
Southern,
Middleport;
skateboarding and building auto and aircraft models.
Geneva Wells, Vinton; Edith
MAN SHOT
Bickers . Ra cine ; La ura
NEW CORPORATION
CLEVELAND (UP I )
_ Roush, Minersville; Donald
COLUMBUS - Article s of
incorporation have been filed Cleveland police shot and Covert, Pomer?Y: Patrtct~
in Columbus with Secretary killed Harvey Reeser Jr. , 22, Bowser, Southstde, w. Va.,
of State Ted W. Brown by T &amp; of Cleveland Sunday after Emory Cadwell, Gallipolts ;
H Drilling Comoanv of th ey respo~ded to . an Margaret . Allen, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy. Frank Herald, Jr., attempted bteak-in at Lou 's Ttna MuUms, Athens , J oan
Terry Talbott are the in- Furniture on Detroit Avenue. Edwards, Parkersburg.
About 4 a.m. police went to
Su~day Dtscharges . corporators. Agent is Terry
when
a
burglar
Sy
lvta
Parsons,
Rita
the
store
Talbot t , 252 Condo r St. ,
alann
sounded
and
Reeser
Williamson,
E~elyn
Hartley,
Pomeroy. The art icles were
filed by Crow, Crow &amp; Porter, fled up to the roof, police said. Floyd Bush, Rtchard Gtlkey,
Att : F . W. Port er, Jr ., He confronted police there, Grace B,ea bout. Casste
threatened to shoot as they Baum.
Pomeroy.
PLEASANT VALLEY
approached and was killed by
Discharges - Mrs. Elias '·
a shotgun blast, said police .
He had a .25 caliber Da vi s, Buffalo; Tammy
NOW YOU KNOW
automatic, acco rding to Jordan, Letart; Mrs. Terry
The prehistoric 80,000- investigating officers.
Brown and daughter, Mid·
pound stegosaurus - the
dleport ; Aaron Riley , New
world 's largest animal - got
Today is Monday, Oct. 17, Haven : Sylvia Mullins, Point
along with only a 3-ounce
Pleasant: Shawn Hannon,
.. brain in its head; a second the 290\h day of 1977 with 75 to
Point Pleasant; Cathy
brain in its tail controlled the follow .
Greene,
Gallipolis; Donald
The moon is approaching
creature's huge hind legs.
Spu·rt
oc
k,
Leon;
Betty
its fir~ quarter.
Leonard, Point Pleasant ;
Roger James, Gallipolis;
Grace DeVault, Leon; Ada
Engfield, Point Pleasant;
Albert Stephens, Poi nt
Pleasant: James Berkley,
New Haven ; Joseph Van·
sic kl e, Point Pleasant;
Kathlee n Durbin, Point
Plea sant ; John Samson ,
Point Pleasant ; Charles Van
Meter, Letart; Mrs. William
Flora, Apple 'Grove; Tina
Walters, New England, ·w.
Va.; Ralph Greenlee, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Delmer
Wheatcraft , Leon ; Carl
Rardin , Hartford ; Stacie
Grimm, Mason ; Anthony
Smith, Point Pleasant .

---------------------------1
! Area Deaths !

Neutzling, a son, Pomeroy;

This year to help the Pomeroy Fire Dept. and
Emergency Squad we at The Farmers Bank are going to
hold a silent au~tion for our Dress-A-Doll'and Design-AToy.
A silent auction is held by you s~lecting the doll or toy
you would like to buy , You place your bid in a sealed
envelope. ,When the envelopes are open, of course the
highest bidder wins the doll or toy they havl! bid on and
the money goes to the Pomeroy Fire Dept. and
Emergency Squad toward the pur.chase of their new
truck. Any dolls or toys not sold will be given to a
·charitable organization for the under privileged children
of the area .

Stop In Today and Pick Up Your r;»ress·A-Doll or
Deslgn·A·Tov.
·

Fs Far01ers Bank
l'O ME HOY , OHIO

b..,

1

$.40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor

Developmeni . Agency , a nd
Robin T. Turner , vice
president of the North
American Coal Co. and
chairman of the Ohio Coal
Use Conunittee.
Ryan and Turner told
Schlesinger the Coal Use
Committee , consisting of coal
experts and coal company
officials, agreed at a meeting
last Thursday that the
fluidized-bed method of
removing sulfur is "the best
value in coal research
cu rre ntly available ," and

An entry has been filed in ·
the Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court authorizing the
prosecuting attorney and the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners to retain the legal
services of Squire, Sanders
and Dempsey for a fee of •!"
proximately $1,080 to handle
the legal proceedings in COf\·
nection with the issuance and
sale of $250,000 Meigs County
Mentally Retarded Training
Center Bonds.
An entry in the Common
Pleas Court also provides for
the dissolution of the mar·
riage of Jane Runyan, Route.
l, Middleport and Gary
Dwayne Runyan, Monterey,
Calif.

Te x ., a former Albany
residen t, was kil led in a
construction accident in Fort
Worth on Thursday.
He wa s born in Meigs
Cou nty, a son of Everett
Pauley of Albany and Pauline
M cAll i ster
Pauley
of
McAr:thur. Other survivors
are three daughters . Valerie
Ann, Kimberley Lee, and
Venda , all of Pomeroy; two
brothers, .
Larry
of
Jacksonville , N . C., and
He was preceded in death
by one sister , Patricia Ann

Pau ley .

He was a member of Pearl

Re v. Jerry

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Michael Allen Capehart, 28,
Middleport, and Linda Marie
Perkins, 18, Pomeroy. '
Lawrence Elmer Hysell,
38, Rutland, and Dorothy
I..uuisc While, 24, Route 1,
Middleport.

Griffith of .

fi ciating. Buria l will be in
Temple Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 this evening .

MRS. LENNA BRINKER
RACINE - Mrs. Lenna M.
Brinker . 72, Racine, died
Saturday
at
Veterans
Memor ial
Hospital.
A
daughter of t he la te Raymond
R. and Martha Don ohew
Badgley . Mrs. Bri nker was
a ~so preceded in death by two
husbands . Harry Tea ford and
Ches ter
Brinker , three
children, tw o brothers and a

winter.

Under the new calendar,
school will end on June 13.
The earlier schedule had
school ending at th&amp; end of .
May. The revised calendar
has the first six weeks
grading period ending Oct.
28 .
Th e
second
six
weeks will start on Oct. 31
and close Nov. 24 for a long
Thanksgiving weekend which
will include Monday, Nov. 28.
A teachers' meeting will be
held that day. Dec. 9 will end
the second six weeks.
The third six weeks
begins Dec 12. Dec. 22 will be

POMEROY FffiE CHIEF Charles Legar inspects the basement area of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church which was extensively damaged by fire about 3:35 a.m . Tuesday
. morning . Chief Legar said that there W"l! apparently an' explosion in the furnace room
which not only damaged the structure but caused the fire which was brought under control
•·
by the Pomeroy Fire Department. Middleport was called to back up the Pomeroy
CINCINNATI - FEDERAL AND STATE environmental
Department if needed. Damages due to srrloke, water and the explosion were set at about
authorities continued to monitor the path of a hydrochloric
$10,000. Pomeroy firemen were highly commended by church members and others for
acid slug on the Ohio Ri~er today, but officials have concluded
saving the attractive new structure located on the Laurel Cliff Road . There is insurance
the chemical spill poses only a small threat to human hea lth . coverage.
Some 750,000 gll!lons of the poisonous substance flowed
· into the Ohio River after spilling from an earthen dike storage
pond at a Miami Fort, Ohio, power station operated by
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. The accident occurred about 8
p.m. EDT Sunday night, a company spokesman said.
A deer was killed in a . of an auto operated by Daniel was minor damage.
Scientists from the U. S. Environmental Protection
A final accident was in·
traffic
accident at 7:15a.m. Runyon, 34, Radcliff. There
Agency Monday advised municipal drinking water systems
vestigated
on Little Bullskin
Monday
on
CR
124,
two
tenths
was
minor
damage.
downriver from Cincinnati to consider closing their water
Rd. at the junction to SR 218
of
a
mile
west
of
Rutland.
·
cow
was
injured
when
A
intakes "for a few hours" untii the spill passed.
'The Gallia · Meigs ,, Post struck by a car at 7:10 p.m. in Gallia County.
Troopers said cars driven
·State
Highway Patrol said Monday on the Clark Chapel
· ST. LOUIS - THE NATION'S top fire official says the
by Charles G. Price, 16,
into
the
path
the
animal
ran
Rd.,
four
tenths
of
a
mile
east
deaths of 164 persons in a fire. last May, at the Beverly Hills
of SR 160. The animal ran into Gallipolis, and Brenda S.
Supper Club in Southgate, K~ .• probably could have been
the· path of a car operated by Hall, 16, Crown City,
prevented if the buidling had -been equipped with a sprinkler
Alfred E . Cordell, 49, Bidwell. sideswiped at a hillcrest.
system.
It
was owned by Ronald There was minor damage . No
Howard D. Tipton, bead of the National Fire Prevention
Fraley of Lorain, 0. There citiltion was issued.
and. Control Administration, said Monday, "Automatic sprink·
;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;::::
lers could have greatly reduced or prevented the loss of life
there . Sprinkler systems should be required in all public
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
(Continued on )lllle 12)
Saturday, lair Thursday
WORK BEGINS
and Friday and ti chance ur'
WASHINGTON - What
showers Saturday. Highs
President Carter called
will be In the upper 50s or
virtually a separate branch of
All precinct workers and lower 60s and lows will be
government - the House·
presiding judges for the ln. the upper 30s or lower
Senate conference committee
November 8 General Election 40s.
,._ was starting work today on
in Meigs County will undergo
&lt;
:::::•:•:•:::::::::.:::::::::::::::·:::::::::::·:::::·:::::·:::::::::::::::::
a series of bills that will set
training sessions this week in
the
nation's energy policy.
preparation for the fall
S~UADCALLED
The
conferees planned an"
election.
The Middleport emergency
organizational
meeting for
The first session will be squad answered a call at I: 44
this
afternoon.
Then
they will
held tonight at 7:30p.m. with p.m. Munday to the 694 Pearl
tum
to
the
bills,
in
increasing
a second session at 7:30p.m. St., Middleport, residence uf
Wednesday. Both sessions D. A. Milam. Milam, suffer· order of imvortance.
will be held · in the Masonic ing a possible stroke, was
Temple
dining
room, taken to the Holzer Medical.
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy.
Centet'.
Workers, who have not had
STRIKE CALLED
the training within the past
LONDON (UP!) - The
three years and all presiding
Highs today will be he· International Federation of
judges, are to attend one of tween 60 and 65 and lows Airline Pilot's Asso.ciation
the two sessions.
I "
tonight will be between 40 and , today called for a 46-hour
On Thursday evening at 4~ . Varia ble cloudiness strike next week to back
7:30 p.m. in the same Wednesday, with highs in the demands for urgent action to
TANA JOHNSON
TAMMY COZART
location, a training session mid 50s . Probability of prevent fUture
airline '
will be held for workers who precipitation is 20 percent hijackings.
will be ' registering voters at today , tonight and Wed·
An official of. the British
the Nov. 8 election.
Pilots' Association
Airline
nesday.
said it would not conunent on
the strike call until later
today .
·, Sheriff James · Proffitt firemen flushed diesel oil
reports that at 3 a.m. Monday from the highway. Scarberry
Meigs County Sheriff Virgil Cozart.
a Betsy Ross Bakery semi received minor injuries.
James J . Proffitt reported
FILES COMPLAINT
. The sheriff reported the
Both girls are described as driven south on Route 7 by
today two Meigs County :;• 4", 115 pounds, blonde hair, James Scarberry, Ashland, Letart Falls Elementary
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio
juveniles ha-:e been mis.sing · brown eyes. The Johnson girl Ky ., went out of control on a School was broken into over (UP! ) - Armco Steel Corp.
from their homes smce must wear glasses. When last curve north of the Pomeroy the weekend, but apparently has filed complaints with the
Monday, Oct. 3. They failed to seen the girls were wearing corporation limits.
nothin g wa s bothered . U.S. Treasury Department in
return from their classes at blue jeans and no jackets.
The tractor went through a Deputies are investigating Washington , charging that
Meigs High School.
Anyone with a ny in· guardrail alter jackknifing damages to four mailboxes in five Japanese and two Indian
Missing are: Tana Kay formation concerning the then ca me to rest on the the Letart Falls area and companies have been selling
·Johnson, 16, Rt. 1 Reedsville, whereabouts of these girls driver's side. The roadway damage to a fence owned by steel 'wire strand at less than
daughter of Mrs. Carolyn are requested to contact the was blocked from guardrail Paul Paynter, County Road I, fa ir value.
Wire strand is used in the
Johnson and Tammy Lee Meigs County Sheriff's Office to guardrail for several Col umbia Town ship , ap·
Cozart , 16, Tuppers Plains, at 992·3371 or 992·3889.
ma nufadure of prestressed
hours. Traffic was rerout ed parently hit by a vehicle.
f'f•nC r cte .
over Dark Hollow. Pomeroy
,daug(&gt;fer of Mr. and Mrs.

\

Arthur Charles of McArthur.

,Jordan funeral home with the

include any Saturday classes
and should be satisfactory to
students and
parents ,
provided additional makeup
time is not needed due to
inclement 'weather thiS

Election
workers
•
to tram

Tuesday at the Wetherholt ·

at
2 p.m. Tuesday at the Bigony.

A -revised school calendar

for the current year was
adopted Monday night during
the regular October meeting
of the Meigs Local Board of
Education. The revision was
necessitated by the teachers'
strike last month.

Deer, cow accidents are probed

Mc Coy - Moore Funeral
Home with Rev. James
Frazier: officiating .
Bur ia l w il l be in Mound Hil l
Cemetery .
Frien-ds may call at the
funeral home between 2-4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. today.

Raglan Crew with Contrast Sleeve Taping.

Premium Cotton. Assorted Stripes. Sizes:
2to6X/7. 15.25
Zip Front Pants, Saddle Pockets.
Polyester/Cotton Corduroy. Assorted
. Colors. Sizes: 3 to 6X/7. S9.00

Premium Cotton Knil Top. Ruffle Collar and

Sleeves. White , Royal, Gold. Red. Sizes: 2
to 6X/7. S4.89
Heidi JSrint Band Front Pants.
Polyester/Cotton Corduroy. Mulllcolor
Print. Siz s: o6X/7. 17.75
.
Most Bu1ter8rown cotton knits a made of tOO'%
BeBon• . BusterBrowo anklets. socks and kneu·hlgtls
togowllhallensambles.
'

See the complete line of Buster Brown clothes in the children's
department, 2 nd Floor.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

Weather

..

Two Meigs girls
reported missing

co vered

t~e

(Continued on )llllt 12)

Fifteen Cents
VoL 2K, No. 130

r·..

Meigs board ·a pproves·
new school calendar

BARBERTON - BARBERTON CITY Councilman Albert
Can!ora, arrested in a demonstration at Kent State University
last July, faced a special recall election today but hoped to
have the ballots impounded.
Canlora, 51, tired to stop the election Monday but th e 9th
District Ohio Court of Appeals refused to hear his eleventh
hour appeal. The court said there would not be enough time to
hear the case.
Canlora said his attorney intended to go to the Ohio
Supreme Court today in hopes oJ getting the ballots put in
escrow pending a hearing of his appeal . He said the high court
indicated Monday it might entertain a writ of prohibition.

Private funeral services
will"be conducted 10: 30 a .m .

came ramen

•

enttne

hands on Brevard Co unty's beaches.
The human beach Chain will climax four days of world
record breaking attempts designed as a tourist and industry
promotion for the nation 's spaceport community.

and

Chur-ch in Meigs County.
Funeral services will be

'

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. - PROMOTERS ARE hoping

Jerry (Judy Chase) Miller of
Balf1more, Md.; two grand -

Chapel United Method ist

at y

of being ' hijackers.
,
But there was no cheering
because Juergen Schwnann,
FRANKFUHT, West the captain of !he hijacked
Gennany (UP!) - The 86 plane, was Shot in cold blood
freed Lufthansa hostages in front of everyone many
so bbing, drain ed, and hours before the successful
exhausted emotionaily and raid.
.
physically - arrived today
The first to leave the
from Somalia where they Lufthansa Boeing 707 which
were rescued 12 hours earlier brought the hostages back
by
West · German from Mogad ish u was a
commandos.
woman , her ri ght leg
A huge crowd applauded as bandag ed from the knee
the hostages returned after down and blood seeping
five days in the hands of four through.

64,000 people will turn out near this spaceport Saturday to form
the world's longest human chain - 48 miles of people holding

KENNETH PAULEY
ALBANY - Kenneth Lee
Pauley, 30, of Fort Worth,
SYRACUSE,N.Y.(UPI )The $130,000 Schaefer
International
100-mile
modified stock car race ,
scheduled for Sunday at the
New York State Fairgrounds,
· was rained out fot the second
time iii three weeks.
The event has now been
postponed until April15, 1978.
Weather conditions in central
New-York dur)ng November
make racing unfeasible, officials said.

•

Others filed out. many too
emotionally drained an d
physically exhausted to even
smile oc wave .
Two buses took them to a
heavily-guarded
airpo rt
building to be reunited with
their families and relatives.
Police and. Lufthansa
spokesmen said a full news
conference would take place
Wednesday.
More than 1,000 newsmen,
ph o tog rap he r s a nd

had no hope
rescued ."

The new calendar does not

and one brother , Harry,
Crown City.
One step-dauahter . Mrs.
Melissa

who was shut w death several
ho urs before the rescu~.
On e male hostage satd the
~orst m?ment was .. one
Sunday when the htJack
leader, known on ly . as
" Mahmoud ," shot and killed
Schwn.ann.
.
"Th ts was the wo~st
~oment," the hostage . said.
The captam was shot m the
head m front of our eyes,
after bemg forced by the
gangster leader to kneel m
the middle of the aisle .
"From th.at moment nn we

CHICAGO - HELL HAS BECOME such an outmoded
concept that it hru; even lost its oomph as a curse word, the
Rev . James Breig said in the November issue of U. S. Catholic
~azine .
.
Surveys show that , while 70 per cent of Roman Catholics
believe in life alter death, only a third believe in hell, Breig
said. And of those who do believe in hell, only one person in
eight feels hell is a real threat to him , he said.

Jeanne) Walker, Gallipolis

Michele.

e

ago by the llaader-Meinhol
gang.
The 86 hostages of the
Lufth ansa 747. jetliner,
snbbing and exhausted
em&lt;tlonally and physically,
arrived in Frankfurt shortly
after noon today, 12 hours
after their rescue. A huge
crowd applauded as the hos·
!ages returned after fiye
frightening days in the hands
of four hijackers. But there
was no cheering in deference
to Juergen Sch umann
captain of the hijacked plane:

By Unlted Press loternatlonal
RADNOR, PA . - ABOUT HALF of the nation 's 29 million
high school students have gotten drunk once in their lives, and
:; per cent of• them get drunk once a week, according to a
consultant to President Carter .
Dr. Peter llpurne, specim assistant to the president lor
health issues, wrote in this week's issue of TV Guide magazine
that no one knows e&lt;actly what turns teenagers into chronic
drinkers. But he said the three major things that contribute to
teen drinking are the availability of sweet "pop" wines that
taste like soft drinks , peer pressure and a poor e&lt;ample by
their parents, who often drink too much themselves.

mon pleas cotJr! j udge in 194243. He served as probate and
juvenile judge from 1943 until
his retirement in Februarv,
1973, having ·s~rved six
terms .
Judge Howel l was a
member of the Methodist
Church , Elks Lodge, Morn ing
Dawn Lodge and Gall ia
County Bar Association .
He is survived by his wife,
Naomi Chase Howell ; one
sister, Mrs. James (~ry

daughters ,

remmtscenl of the July, 4,
Andre~• Baader, 34, and
1976 .Israeli rescue at Jan Carl Raspe, 33, shot and
Entebbe, Uganda , thr~e killed themselves and
leaders of the West Germ~n Baader's girlfriend, Gudrun
Baader-Memhof ter,ronst Ensslin, 37, hanged herself. a
gang CQJtJmttted swctde m fourth member, Irmgard
their.
speci ally
bu ilt Moeller, 30, sl ashed her
maxtmum secunty pnson throat and was in critical
cells.
condition; the West German
It was the release of .the Justice Ministry reported .
guerrilla leaders an~ etght
West .German officials sa id
other West Ge'!"an prtsoners they feared the commando
that the htJackers had raid and the prison suicides
demanded m exchange for might doom industrialist
the liv es of the plane ·HannsMartin Schleyer,
hostages.
seized· more than six weeks

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. October 18, 1977

Fall forecast: Clear skies ·
for Buster Brown®clothes

MEET TUESDAY
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will meet at 12
noon Tuesday at the Meigs
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
-..~........~.,......,-,.........,~-·--- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .... --- --~11&gt;4 Inn.
Q

West German commandos
stormed
a . ht)acked
Lufthansa Jetlmer m Somalia
~ay li1 a spectacular, sevenmmute ratd that killed three
of the lour terrorists and
rescued all86 hosta~es to end
a fi':'"-day, 6,00i).mile, three·
contment odyssey of Ierro~ .
The fourth terrorist, a sert·
ously wotmded woman, was
ho~ital1zed m the Somali
capttal_of Mogadishu .
Wtthm hours of the news of
rescue operation,
the

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

for bond sale

That's right, folks, The Farman Bank Is going to
have an Auction, but It's not going to be like
any other auction. It's a Silent Auction.

By JOHN A. CALLCO'IT

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gray, a Columbus surv ive along Wi th
daughter, Bidwell ; Mr . and tw o sisters , Mr s. James
(VIrginia)
W indom
of
Mrs. Frederick Wood, a son, Columbus
and Mrs. Louis
Apple Grove, W. Va .
·( Anita) Hur ley of Huntington
(Discharges Oct. 15 )
and four grandda ugh ters .
She attended schools In
Kathy Bowen, Burel
Point
Plea san t and was
Bumheimer, Nelda Caldwell, employed
fo r severa l years
Edna Denney, Nellie Den· as a cook on r iverboats . She
nison , Verna Douglas, Bessie was a member of the Freewi ll
Ellcessor, Homer Elliott, Baptist Church in Kanauga.
Funera l serv ices will be
Kathryn Ha rrop , Melva held
at 11 a .m . T uesdav at the
a ft ernoon
at
Healey, Nell Higgins, Mrs. Silve r Memoria l Freewil l Sunday
He was born June 5, 1906, in
spent
on
actual
Nursing Center . Gallipolis to the late Frank A . are
Charles Huber II and ''"Baptist Church in Kana uga. Pinecrest
construction
facilities
that
She had been m fail ing
daughter, Sophia Huggins, Rev . Andrew Parsons wi ll health for several years , Young Sr . and Minn ie Young . will immediately enhance the
His wife, the former MozeHa
iciate.
Wesley J ac kson, Betty offBurial
serious for seven months .
Ma nns, preceded him in use of Appalachian high
will be in Mina
Born Oct. 5, 1891, in Oh io
Janey, Mrs. Gary Lane and Cha pe l Ceme tery . Call in g
death in 1963.
sulfur coal."
to the late John and
They are survived by two
son, Samuel Lutton, Anna hours wi ll be held at Mil ler 's Township
El izabeth Halley Co&lt;, she
Morris, Nick Morse, Irene Home for Funeral s this af - was marr ied June 5, 1913, in sons and a daughter . They
are Frank A . Young t I I,
ternoon
and
eveni
ng
.
Reed, EI'!Qn Richards, Grace
Ga ll ipolis to Harry A. Boston , Day t on ; John J . Yo1.1ng ,
POWELL PROMOTED
who died Feb. 20, 1959 .
Robb, Michael Roush ,
RACINE
- Ivan C. Powell, .
Detroit
;
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
JUDGE HOWELL
She is survived by two
!Mary
)
Smith,
Gallipol
is.
Rosa li e Sayre , Genevieve
son
of
Mrs.
Wanda D. Powell,
John W. Howell , 73, {or mer
sons , Lowe ll M . Bos ton .
Starcher, Mrs. Roger Taylor Gallia County probate and Ga ll ipolis, and Bue l l H . There are Sl)( grandch ildren has been promoted to senior
and
three
great and son, Anita Thoma s, juvenile i udj:je, prosecutor Boston, Columbus , and a grandch
master sergeant in the U.S.
ildren.
and
common
pleas
cour'
sister,
Mrs
.
Sad
ie
Day
,
Griffith Thompson . Karen judge, died around 6. 15 p.m .
One sis ter, Mrs . Nora Air Force. Sergeant Powell,
Gallipolis.
. Mosley , Gallipol is, sur vives . an
Withrow.
electrical
power
Sa turda y in the Well ston
There _acre six qrand .
Eleven brothers and sisters production superintendent, is
I Births Ocl.l5)
Nursing Home following a children Three sisters and
preceded him in death .
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn long il lness .
two brothers preCeded her in
Services will be he ld at 2:30 assigned at Martina Franca,
Son of the la te Dr. W. E. dea th .
Hudson, a son, Hartford, W. and
p.m
. Wednesday at th e Italy, with a unit of the Air
Nel lie Wood Howel l, he
She was a mem ber of
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis was bor n at Rio Grande on
Waugh-Halle_y-Wood Funeral F orce Com munications
Providence Bapt ist Church .
Home, the Rev. · Eddie Buf· Service. He is a 1958 graduate
Prater, a son, Hampton ; Mr. Aug . 30, 1904.
where servi ces will be held at
fington officiating , and burial
Judge Howel l attended t he I p.m . Wednesday , the Re v
and Mrs. David Rothgeb, a
will be in Pine Stree t of Racine High School. His
Rio Grande elementar y Alfred Holley offici ating, and
daughter. Gallipolis.
, wife. Carolyn, is tne daughter
Cemetery .
schools and graduated from burial wil l be in Prov idence
Fr iends may call 7-9 p.m. of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Discharges Oct. 16 ,
Ga lt ia Academy High Schpol Cemeter y.
Tuesda y.
Harold Adams, Mrs. Forest in 1923. He attended Rio
Cleland of Racine .
Batton and daughter ; Opel Grande College two years,
and graduated from Ohio
Diddl e, Andrew Fields, State
Universi ty with an AB
Lawrence Howa rd, Mrs. degree in· 1900. He rec eived
Douglas Littrell and son, his law degree from Ohio
Wanda Malone , Lois Miller, Northern in 1933.
Howell was admitted
Natasha Mollett , Roberta to Judge
practice law in August,
Sprouse, Elizabeth White.
1933, and admitted to practice
I Births Oct. 16)
before the Federal Court of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bixler, the Southern Distri ct of Ohio
December , 1935 .
a son, Jackson : Mr. and Mrs. in He
was prosecut ing at.
Robert Hersman. a daughter, torney from January , 1937 to
Bidwell.
November , 1942, and com •

Entry is filed

A BANKERS AUCTION!

and Walter Rogers, both of

86 freed hostages back In Frankfurt

that Ohio is ready to proceed
with commercial scale use of
the technology.
"The members of the Ohio
Coal Use Committee'and the
Ohio Energy and Resources
Development Agency request
your assistance in seeing that
Department of Energy coal
research money to be spent in
Ohio is used for direct
funding of commercial scale
coal combustion projects now
in the design phase in Ohio,"
they wrote .
" The Ohio Coal Use
Committee,. which includes
the foremost coal combustion
engineers in the state, has
NAMED PRESIDENT
CHICAGO (UPI) - John concluded alter six months of
Winsor, president of Winsor study that the technology lor
Newspapers of Canton, Ill., the clean burning of high
was elected president of the suUur coal is sufficiently
to
warrant
Press developed
Inland ·• Daily
inunediate construction of
Association toda y.
Winsor succeeds Davis U. new facilities for concurrent
Merwin. publisher of the use and testing."
Ryan and Turner said four
Bloomington , Ill., Daily
Pantagraph. Merwin was re- fluidized bed boilers are
elected to the board of ready foc construction at
state a nd industrial locations
directors as chairman.
at a cost of $30 million, and
could be ready by 1979. They
Church .
F-r iends may call at t he said they would soon apply
Funeral services will be ..... Wt\uoh-Hallev -Wood Funera l for a fed eral grant of f.15 _ ~
he ld at 1 p.m . Tuesday at the
Home 2-4 and 7-9 p .m .
million.
Ewing Funeral Home with
Tuesday.
the Rev . Don Walker of " There already has been
ficia ting . Bur ial will be in
FRANK A YOUNG, JR .
enough academic study of
Letart Falls Cemetery .
Frank A . Young , Jr., 71 ,
Fr iends may call at the
died at 7· JO p .m . Sunday at coal in Ohio, its role in the
funeral home at any time .
hi s home , 107 Pine Street overall energy , picture and
after a fou r -year period of the state of technology for
' fail ing health .
burning coal," th.ey wrote .
CLEMMA F. BOSTON
He was a retired employe
"We respectfully ask that
Clemma F . Boston , 86, ol Grace United Methodist
fo r merly of Eureka Star Ch1Jrch and the Commercial you use your influence to see
t-c;oute , Gallipolis ,
d ie d and Savi ngs Bank.
that available federal funds '

COLU MBUS (U P I)
Ohio's energy agency and
coal companies today asked
the federal government to see
that any feQ.e ral coal
research money is used for
co
mmercial scale coal
there was nothing in the state
combustion
projects and not
constitution against having
for
more
studies
.
••
God in government, .and . .
The
request
was
made in a
noted that the state motto is
letter
to
U.S.
Energy
Holzer Medical Center
"With God,. All Things Are
Secretary
James
R.
(Discharges, Oct. 14)
Possi ble."
·
Schlesinger
from
Robert
S.
Mabel Brewer, Lena
Ryan,
director
of
the
Ohio
Burke, J oann Byers, Mrs.
Energy and
Resour ce
Allen Byler and daughter,
Vicky Danford, Nellie Davis,
Mrs. Harold Dillon and
daughter. Tanya Fulks.
Robert Herdman , Kevin
I
Hunt, Ralph Jeffers, Ferris I
Justins, E ldon Lykins,
sister .
RUTH ROSE
Surviv i ng are a son ,
Marcella Manion, Gerald
Ruth Elizabeth Rose . 64 ,
C.
Teaford .
Michael , Penny Miller, Kanauga , died at 8 a.m. Ra ymo nd
Minersvi lle ; two daughters,
Saturday
at
her
home
She
William Naas. Morrise was born Jul y 19, 1.9 13 In Wilma C. Anderson and
North , Orville Parker, Mary Poin t Pleasant, to the late Ira Mart~a · Meadows, both of
Preston. Roscoe Reynolds, Rogers and M innie Young Long Bottom ; three brothers,
Ralph R. Badgle y, Hershel
·
Leland Riggs, Guy Russell, Rogers .
Badg ley
Vernon
Su
r
vivors
include
her
Shirley Shepard, Martin second husband , Horton Badgley , all~ndof Racin
e,
Stanley Jr., Brent Unroe, Rose, a daughter, VIrginia several grandchildren , four
Paul White. Kathleen Yost. Elizabeth Newma n of Troy, great -gr:andch ildren and
0 . and a son , Sam who severa l nieces and nephews .
IBirths Oct. 14)
Mrs . Brinker was a member
her in death .
Mr . and Mrs. Michael preceded
Two brothers , Bob Rogers of the Raci ne First Baptist

HOSPITAL NEWS

•

Ohio's coal, energy.
officials seek help

Bread truck blocks SR 7·

'

Curfew
•
commg
tonight
A curlew for all persons
under 18 becomes·effective at
9 p.m. this evening under
legislation approved Monday
night by Pomeroy Village
Council.
Council decided to put the
curfew into ·effect at once
following a discussion on
vandalism that occurred over
the weekend. Several large
plate glass windows were
broken at business establish·
ments along with windows in
homes. The siren will sound
at 9 this evening to aMounce
the beginning of the curfew
which will be in effect
through Oct. 31.
Council votes to transfer
$3,000 from the parking meter
fund to the cemetery fund and
voted to purchase a new
check writer lor the clerk.
Council discussed with a
Spring Ave. couple their
request to build a fence . It
was the opinion the village
has no concern about the
matter as long as the fence is
on private property. They
advised the couple to proceed
on the advice of its attorney.
A 1.9 mill operating fund
levy was reviewed. The levy
is up for renewal at the Nov . 8
election. It was agreed to
encourage voters of the town
to support the renewal which
does provide, among other
things, funds for operating
the police department .
A discussion was held on
first aid calls being received
by the Pomeroy squad and
the time' involved sometimes
in answering calls. It was
agreed to ask Chief Don
Mayer to attend the next
meeting and discuss ·the
matter with council. Council
approved the September
report of Mayor Clarence
Andrews showing receipts of
$1,904.40 in fin es and fees:
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Andrews 1 representatives of the water and street
department s, Police Chief
Jed Webster, and council
members, Dr. Harold Brown,
Harry Davis, Lou Osborne,
Ralph Werry and Larry
Powell. Th(&gt; co unci l held an
exec utive session following
the regula r meeting.

"'

the last day of classes before
the Christmas vacation with
school to resume on Jan. 3.
Jan. 16 will be a holiday in
observance of Martin Luther
King Day and the third six
weeks will,end on Feb. 3. The
fourth six weeks begins Feb.
6 and ends March 17.
The fifth six weeks begin
March 20. There will be a
spring break from March 24
through March 27. The fifth
six weeks will end on April 28.
The final six weeks begins
May 1 with May 29, Memorial
Day, to be free of classes and
the six weeks will end J une
13.
The board set graduation
for seniors on June 6 with
baccalaureate to be held on
June 4, both starting at 8 p.m.
Helen Maag was added to
the· substitute teachers list
and the resignation of J ohn
Krawsczyn as.one·half junior
high track coach was ac·
cepted. The board employed

'I

:. f

Roger Birch as seventh grade
intramural coach; Wendy
Carper as eighth .grade girls
basketball coach and Charles
Downie as one-half junior

high school track coach.
The board authorized the
sup erintendent
or
his
designee to make ap·
plications for participation in
the Title IV program, 1a
program for the talented and
gifted , an early childhood
pr ogram for the han·
dicapped, and a youth em·
ployment training program.
Dan Morris, director of
curriculum, outlined aspects
of the programs.
The . board approved ad·
justments .. to th e 1976·77
payroll totaling $4,895 .20 and
decided to purchase bonds for
the
vocational
clerk·
custodian at Meigs High
School, principa ls' aides,
clerk-custodians, assistant to
the boa rd clerk and
(Continued on page 12)

/1

\

.,

THIS IS just one of several large windows in Pomeroy
business houses damaged over the weekend by
·vandalism . This one .was in front of the Elberfeld
Department Store on E. Main St. Not only were there
rocks thrown through windows of several business houses
but also at private homes, particularly in the Lincoln
Heights area .

Qang members_
commit suicide
STUTTGART,
We s t
Germany "(UP!) , Three
imprisoned leaders of West
Germany's Baader-Meinhof
gang committed suicide
upon
learning
today
goverrunent commandos had
smashed a hijacking plot to
free them, justice authorities
said . •
Authorities said Andreas
Baader, 34, and Jan Carl
Raspe, 33, shot themselves to
death
and
Baade r's
girlfriend, Gudrun EMslin,
37, hanged herself, All had
been serving life sentences in
the Stammheim maximwn·
security prison for murder.
A fourth J~iled member of
the band, !rmgard Moeller,
30, tried to cut h~r throat and
was in critical condition,
authorities said.
The four were among 11
jailed terrorists whose
freedom had been a condition
for the release of 86 hostages
aboard a hijacked Lufthansa
737 jetliner. Two of the four

•

hijackers said they were
members of the Baader·
Meinhof
group ,
more
formally known as the Red
Army Faction.
Security officials feared the
co mmando raid and the
prison suicides would doom
industrialist HaMs-Martin
Schleyer, whose kidnapers
acted in league. with
Lufthansa hijackers and who
also demanded the release of
the 11 terrorists.
Justice authorities did not
explain how pistols could be
smuggled into the prison
despite security precautions
so strict that even their
lawyers were barred from
seeing them since the Sept. 5
kidnaping of Schleyer. ·
The four had been held in
an

'' ul t ra· maxim um

secur ity"
prison
area
designed especially for them.
hijackers
had
The
demanded
that
West
Germany lree Baader .
(Continued on ~ 12)

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="795">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11330">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48918">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48917">
              <text>October 17, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2443">
      <name>badgley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="791">
      <name>boston</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2852">
      <name>brinker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="369">
      <name>cox</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="198">
      <name>howell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="681">
      <name>pauley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="557">
      <name>rogers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="719">
      <name>rose</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="109">
      <name>young</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
