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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)

•

�2- The Dati) Sent mel. Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, 1\Jesday, Oct 18 19;;

TV•••in Review
B1 JUAN HANAUF.R
l PI Tt&gt;lt&gt;\ is htn Wrltt"r
NEW YORK l UP! I - G&lt;orge Rubmo has been wntmg
unproduced pia) s lor etght ;ears - and now not onI) "til one
of hts scnpts reret\t&gt; a maJor te)e\'ISton dramatiC' pre·
senumon, but he ts $20,000 rtcher
Rubmo, 45, who teaches Enghsh tn a Brookh·n. N Y , high
school became the ftrst "mner of the ABC Theatre Award ,
auned at d.iscO\ermg new wrners for televisiOn
Thts ts m) ftrst tele\lston pia\ , ' Rubmo sa1d at the
ceremon; tn whtch Fred Sth erman, prestdent. ABC En·
tertrunment, presented hun " 'th a check
The pia)' IS called · The Last Tenant about an old man " ho
must mo\e from the apartment tn whtch he has lt•ed lor more
than 30 ;ears and who "~nds up tn a nursmg home
"Tins was a ston. \ ery close to me , to my own fanuly 1 '
Rubmo srud. " I 'e tr1ed to present all stdes of the problem
nus IS a fathe r Y&lt;ho had fa1led his fanuh m manv wa"s vears
earlier The grown children now conrfont th1s 'probieni and
thetr responstbthttes and must dectd• tn what wa) the) wtll
help thiS man out There are tremendous conflicts and
tremendous gutlt "
Silverman sa1d Rubmo's scnpt would be out on the atr
ij(lmetune next sprmg
U Rubmo makes an appealmg CinderellaiJlay \mght , Stlverman s remarks about the need to brmg new wnters mto the
teleVJSton hus1ness deserve a hearty cheer If there s one thing
that tele\'lston needs most, tt ts WTllers That 's the pomt that
th e PBS Vtstons ' ser tes has trted to make, and has
contrtbuted some fme theater tn the bargam
The award has been set up m conjun(\tton wtth the Eugene
O'Neill Memonal Theatre Center m Waterford, Conn , whtch
each year weeds through 800 to 1.000 scripts m order to choose
12 theater and four televtston scrtpts for productton
Silverman srud he hoped ABC m1ght cull more than one
award·WUUler next year
'It all starts wtth the man at the typewriter, ' Siherman
S81d, complammg that there were no t enough ne\\ people
wrttlng lor televtston, m both spectals and sertes
The proJect seems to underlme lhe two-headed aspect of
tele\llslon m general and ABC m part tcular On the one hand,
thtsts the network that has been accused to gammg popu lartt\
through comtc stnp shows , and whtch ts responstble lor the
woeful " San Pedro Burns '
On the ot her hand, thts ts also the network that rured Eleanor and Franklm " and Roots," and now thts
The audtence ts tn the mtddle

---------

-

•

Soon oufl
t voubles w;//
beove~

_,..,,___,,.,. __(L

ISRAELI
SBtftement

-,.

F

Why the new addition was needed

Southern High School was evaluated by . the state corrective steps tf mterest prevails to mamtrun a secondary
department of educauon on Jan 2, 1975 Thts was the ltrst ume attendance center m this distrtct and more unportanUy, there
IS a deSire to alford students m thts distrtct at least a mmunal
tt had been evaluated smce May 17, 1968.
• secondar) education program "
Excerpts from the Jan 2, 1975, evaluation follow
· The building, constructed m 196!, gtves sufftc1ent
Alter recetvmg Utts report, Ute board of education formed
evtdence of board of educatton, admimstratton , staff, student , an ad-h oc advtsory C&lt;JmmJttee made up of the adrninistratton ,
and communtty mterest to prov1de well-mamtamed facilities . a board member and cttlzens to study the needs of Southern
However, the school plant ts not destgned to unplement a High School Upon ihe recommendatiOn of the ad-hoc
comprebenstve educatton program deservmg to Ute students corruruttee , the board of education made a resolutiOn to allow
of the dtstrtct Among the areas not proVIded or madequate the cittzens of the dtstnct to determme if these needs would be
mclude . library, health servtces, gu1dance, mstructional met by havmg them vote on a building levy This levy was
matertals center , audto-vtsual center, art , phystcal educatton , passed by the voters mUte June prunary elect ton of !976
the combmalton mdus tnal arts-vocattoilal agrtculture
U these steps had not been taken, it was very likeI&gt; that the
laboratory, and spectal educatwn (EMR) A review of the state would have revoked Southern's charter as a secondary
scheduled program tn relatton to room uttltzatton mdtcates attendance center
The closmg statement of Ute April 5, 1977 evaluatton report
that durmg only two pertoda ol the day ts there more than one
room availabl e Thts factor renects the constrrunts affecting 1s eVIdence tbat the add1ttons were necessary
Le\tero of opinion are welcomed. Tbey should be 1 • necessary currtculwn expanston and lurutaltons of the
"Southern High School functions under capable and
less lh111 310 worda l011g (or be subje&lt;:t \0 redue\loa by ) building
dedicated leadershtp. We commend you and your staff for your
!he editor ) and must be slped wilb the signee's ad· I
The librar) tS admimstered and supervtsed by a certifted mterest to proVIde meanmgful educational opporturuttes The
dress Names may be withheld upo11 pubUeaUon. : libranan, however, thts areats severely limited by the totally board of educatton, cttlzens and admimstrators are
However, ou request, namet will be ti!Jcloeed. Letters
madequate facilt!tes Thts ts a v1tal area smce effecttve commended for the new building addttJon to unplement the
should be In good taste, addressing iaues, not per- ~ mstructtOn frequently ts centered m the extenstve use of print mstruction We feel certam that you will work equally hard to
sonalltles
and non-prmt matenals. Unttl a destgned med1a center strengthen thoSe areas m which the school ts not fully m
1
1 mcludmg adequate student stattons, conference room , library compliance wtth the standards. "
1 workroom and related areas ts provtded, thiS facility basically
It ts our belief that because of Ute c1ttzens' posthve
1 functions as a ' depos1tory for books" and not as the mtended response to the phySical needs of Southern High School, we
I servtce center and unifymg agency of the school
were able to keep our schoo l However , thts money must be
I
The shortcommgs of thts school appear to be related to used to build the new addittons and can not be used to operate
I limtted resources and a decllnmg secondary enrollment from the schools
I 337 ( 1968 ) to the present enrollment ( 1975 ) of 289 m grades 9We hope we will be able to meet these other requtrements
12." (Comment Southern High School's present enrollment by the next evaluatton whtch should be 1981
for 1977-78 ts 331 )
However , our unmediate problem ts to PASS the 61&gt; m1ll
Children .being punished
'The madequact es of th1s school m terms of the 1968 levy to get our children back tn school
Mimmwn Standards, as reported on May 17, 1968, and m thiS
lnfonnatton funushed by Comrruttee to Pass the Levy,
Dear Str
report, make 1t unperattve that the Board of Educatton , Jun Adruns, chrurperson , Bobby Ord, Supermtendent , Linda
We have been readmg the pros and cons of \\ hy or why not c11tzenry, and admm1stratwn take unmedtate and postttve Spencer, Clerk-treasurer, Southern Bd of Ed
to vote lor 6"z mill levy These sttll have not solved the problem
of gettmg the children of the dtstrtct back to school
The children m the dtstnct are hemg purushed by those
who refuse to face thetr responstbility of provtding the
necessary revenue needed to meet thts current lmanctal crtsts
Saturday , the sophomore
By KURT FREUDENTHAL
Many of the older reSidents m this d1stnct have prevtously
ATLANTA (UP!)
year
lmebacker from South Bend
INDIANAPOLIS
(UP!)
voted to pass other tax levtes to help educate thetr chtldren,
Crtmm al Court
Jud ge
Flynt
satd
that
Hustler
"
as credtted With 2D tackles,
When
the
la
te
Jack
but tsnow some of these same voters who could care less about
Wilham
Alexander
delayed
"de
als
wtth
realtty,
not
mcludm
g 11 solos, and one of
Mollenkopf
came
to
Purdue
supportmg this levy to educate toda) 's ch tldren
rulmg Monday on whether to fantasy " and he complamed as an asststant football coach
his
"hits"
enabled Purdue to
The most unportant tssue lacmg thiS dtstnct tS to pass thts
bmd Hust ler magaztne that ','I'm gettmg blruned lor m the 1940s, he developed
tte
the
score
at 11&gt;-15
levy and get these students back mto the classroom where the&gt;
to
publisher
Larry
Flynt
over
every
til
embodied
m
thts
Hts overall performance
some of the coun tr y's
belong
the
cnmmal
courts
on
\\
as
so rmpress1ve that Motts,
soc1ety
toughest
lines
you may have read or heard , thts distrtciiS on the verge of
obscemty charges
desptte
a 29-22 loss to the
"Freedom
of
the
press
tS
That has become a
acqwrmg a hydroelectrtc plant at the Racme Locks and Dam
Alexander took under only Important when tt tradt\ton wtth
Dlmt,
earned
UP! Mtdwest
Purdue
Can you tmagme what this constructton wtll do for our d1strtct '
advtsement a reque5l. from protects the ollenstve II coaches and Kevm Michael
"
defenstve
pl
ayer of the
Everyone has wttnessed what Kyger Creek and Gavm d1d lor
on
Coun
ty
Sdhc11or
week"
honors.
Fult
you're
not
gomg
to
offend
Motts
may
be
the
latest
Gallia County · But if thts levy fa ils and we are eventually
While the Botlermakers acplaced mto consoltdatton , the revenue from this plant will be Hmson McAultlfe to bmd an)one, you don 't need the standout tn that mold
Flynt
over
for
prosecutton
on
knowledged
the honor, Utey
"
protection
In
Jun
Young
's
first
year
some other distrtct 's gam and OUR LOSS 1 Do you want to see
char ges of dtstrtbutmg
would have settled lor a
coach
al
the
West
as
head
all that add1ttonal r evenue flowmg on do\\11 the nver to a
obscene materials .
Lafayette,,And. , school, the VIctory instead
netghbormg dtstrtct '
Alexander
satd
he
expected
BOilermakers haven't reaped
We're sure they 'll gladly accept this revenue for thetr
SPECIAL MEETING
to rule on the matter Within a
much
glory so far this season ,
schools If you're still willmg to gtve tt away by votmg no
A spectal metmg uf the
week
but
nobody
was blamm g
Votmg YES wtll help you and the Southern Local School
Hustler, whtch features ex- Soulhet n Local Sehoul Board Motts for the dtsappomtmg 2In 1976, Arab leader s
Distnct We can keep our di!ilrtct operatmg and IN THE
pltctt nude photographs, was has been ca lled for "'Thursday 4 record
stgned
a Lebanese peace
FUTURE PROPERTY OWNERS WON'T HAVE TO TAX
'
plan
banned from dtstnbut1on m mghl at 7 30 p m tn the htgh
Agamst
llltnol
s
last
THEMSELVES AS MUCH We know that last statement ts
school cafeterta
Atlanta
last
swruner
after
unportant to everyone m thts distrtct
McAultffe arrested retailers
Let 's hang m there two more years We 've got something for selling the magazme
to look forward to, but It seems as tl too many of you are bemg
Flynt SBid Monday he had
influenced by those who want to see th1s dtstnct d1ssolved .
mruled 750,000 reprmts of an
Howcan you look at any chtld and then vote no to deny hun
arttcle on child abuse to
an educatton m the Southern Local School Dtstnct' LETART restdents of Atlanta and
- PORTLAND- RACINE- SYRACUSE- Let's vote YES Cmcmnatt to show that
to reopen our schools - Concerned Teachers Parents and
" pho tographs of battered
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Taxpayers, Suzanne Wol fe, Rt 3 Racme , Sandra H11i , FU 3
chtldren are a lot more
•
Racme , Debbte Wilson, Racme
obscene than nude photo·
By Lawrence E~.IL&amp;::i';m~b~.~ML.D~.-;WI;rull-;shhrMinrikk";;a;;;nd:I;;;:;i~~iille mtddle-aged women, 11 you
graphs "
DEAR DR. LAMB- For 26 a leg ts m a case II you want have an enlarged hole m the
The arttcle, wrttten by Dr. years my husband has told to ftrm up your abdommal dtaphragm that allows a
_Trip home ~as safe one
James
Prescott ,
a me gtrdles do absolutely muscles you need to develop small hemta (htatal hernia)
psych1atrtst w~th the U S
nothing lor the ltgure. The a consctous effort to keep through the diaphragm, the
To the Metgs County React people m Po)Tieroy , Oh1o
Departmen t of Health,
body should be free of any your abdomen a little ftrmer mcreased pressure wlll push
In regard to Labor Day Weekend Coffee Break. Thank you Educatton and Welfare,
part of the stomach through
bmdmg garments 1 thought and develop good posture
all so very much for everythmg , the smtles, coffee and friendly appeared m the October tssue
they would help support Abdommal exerc1ses help to the enlarged hole and cause a
hosptt allty we recetved at your all rught coffee break.
of Hustler
stomach muscles Do girdles keep the muscles ftrm The hernta. That can lead to
Our tnp home was a safe one It was a btg help havmg
Flynt satd reprmts of the
do more harm than good' I'd ones you are domg are ltne digestiVe problems
people ltke yourselves out m the mJddle of what seemed arttcle, which lmks child
So away wtth the g1rdles
apprectate a reply to settle for that Consciously keep
nowhere to us, ll tlh a set-up ltke you had
a buse m part to se xual
and
replace them with finn
thts argument between us. your stomach muscles taut
Here are the QSJ cards we promtsed , ours and some extras represston , cos! hun $150,000
abdomtnal
muscles and
Also, for ltrmmg chest whtle dotng them lor better
we had
to mail 350,000 coptes ,m the
elunmatwn
of
fat tnSide and
muscles my husblmd says effect.
Thank s~gam - Brad and Debbte Teeters and Wayne and
Atlanta area and 400,000 takmg deep breaths in as fa r
good
results you
outstde.
Wtth
l am sending you the
Katte Rodebaugh , Ft Wayne, Ind 46808 73's and 88's
coptes m the Cmcmnatt area,
won't
need
to
lake
It with a
as poss1ble will do tt. I say Health Letter number 3·7,
P S Good luck to you all '
where he was convicted of
gtrdle.
pushmg the hands together In Gtrth Control· Avotding The
obscemty charges earher thts
I'm afratd your husband Is
front of the chest ts more Btg Middle, to gtve you more
not
so smart about chest
ellective Which is nght'
details on exerctse and a
muscles
I approve of takmg
I need to lose about 10 word about dietmg Others
deep
breaths
to keep the
pounds but am really more who want thts tssue ca n send
ru E DAII V SF. NT INEI
DE\OTFOTOTH
E
lungs
at
maxunum
capacity
up
1
50
cents
wtth
a
long,
stamped,
mterested
m
ltrmmg
.
INTEREST Of
your'
chest
but
that
won't
help
WASHINGTON (UP!)
have loose skin around my self-addressed envelope lor tt
now a llowed
M E IGS MASON AREA
Pushing
your
hands
muscles
CHE.STf.
H
I
Tt\
NNE
HTI.J
ArnerLcan ctt1zens returnmg
A hrmt of 200 duty.free
abdomen I am 47 , wetgh 155 toP 0. Box 1551, Radto CitY
f.xcr f. d
and am 5 feet 9 I have been Statton, New York, N Y , tightly together while held at
from overseas could brmg tn ctgarettes would be unposed
RORFRT IIUF.fllfH
$250 worth of dut y free Unluntted ctgarette unports
Crt ) &amp;li tur
domg exerctses lor the ab- 10019. Yes, the diet ts un- different levels m front of you
f' ull l t s l~.'d dou lv tXnpt S&lt;tlurtla\
fore1gn goods mstead of the now are allowed lor U S
domen,
letting the legs come portant and tl you don 't wtll help some. Those chest
h) flit: Ohw Vallt 1 Pubh:,lun~
$100 now allowed under ctttzens and a luntt of 300 ts m
down
slowly
while lymg on ehmmate the fat you won't muscles fan out over the
CrJIIlpilt \ Multllllt'(llll lnl
Ill
r , nr t I)L P1111ll ru1 Ohw 4Ji69
enttre antertor surface of the
leg1slalton approved by the ef fect for non-restdent
my back Whtle I am still be able to reduce the pot.
Bu,mt:ss Ufflr ~ Ph 11 n~ 99:! 21:)6
chest You need to do exer·
House and sent to the Senate a! tens
lytng
down
I
ratse
up
to
touch
Even
worse
about
g1rdles,
F.dtl ott&lt;t l Phunt Y'il2 2 1 5 ~
Scr • m.l 1: l,r,.,, I'' st.ogt pmtl pi
The measure, pa ssed
my toes wtthout hendtng my if you have e•tra fat on or m c1ses that mvolve the malton
P,u mr ~ Olu '
Monday on a 386-11 vote, also
knees. Can I actually firm the abdomen, when you of the arms as m a crawl
N runr,d il t hterlt~ Ur f.( r t: pr~ ~lll
Lirlt Vc W,H!l
( ,nffr t lr Cmnp&lt;t ll \
would make van ous othe r
thts pad of loose fa t tl I squee"Ze tt Wl\h a ltght gtrdle stroke ~s tf you were
lnr li&lt; o1\1lt lh ,rnd (,ul l,rJ.d t r l! r\
&lt;hanges m customs law s,
contmue' Wtll dtet help'
tt must go somewhere. It swunming
157 llu rl ~\l l ~ I V. Y ~otk ~ ')
You can always get some
DEAR READER - You usually squeezes t~e ab·
m 1ts and procedures
H)'ll "
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Su
t
~~l
lL
plr
r
r
rrtr
~
D
o
h
l
tl
l
I
IJ1
ltrmmg
effect tf you can
Tn addttion to boostmg the
won't ltke my answer. You dommal contents up agamst
Mark Steven Searls, 18, Rt
t IIIII I 111111 1 t1 V,Hl r iJ \1 •J i i l h)lol
voluntanly
contract and then
,. ree lumt on Clttzens I, Hull" nd "nrl Rebecca An·
ca n htde a certam amount of the
dtaphragm
The
\ \I l k 1 ~1 \l rl"l l!rU \ l ll lt~l t
lllltl
relax
a
muscle
Repeatmg
!&gt;t
i
l
It
,.rr
r
tt
,ll
l
riJII.
Out
rr•lllh
mg fr om foretgn coun· nctle Kmg, 18, Rolule 2,
flab and fat wtth a gtrdle but diaphra gm must r1se to
$:{ tr l h Ill t tl 111 O il t ~&gt; tu•l \\ \. •
thts
wtth
any
muscle,
l1nnly
, ctttzens returrung from Pomeflly
when tt comes oil the truth accommodate the blubber
r )llo ' u $l2 011 ~Ito: 111 n t l t~
contractmg
tl
each
tune,
ts a
$r
1
.J
I
I
I
II
o
lh
IIIIth
f
~
QO
comes out
and organs That decreases
Amencan Samoa, Guam or
James Da vtu Counct l, !9,
l bo\\Utto ~ ~,ntl \ otl 1'&gt; ;,1l~lhh ~
of
1sometrlc
exerctse
form
Anythtng that replaces the the total lung capactt y
the V1rgm !.stands could brmg Langsvil le, and Allcta
$1 ! JO\
I I ll
I
I
~
~. ;.~!1
ck $500 worth of goods Clta t lcne Sc hul e r, 18,
~11 1 1 11p11• I ]1111 l I !r ' ' ~ llt•l J\
"urk of muscle wtll Y. eaken
And as ts so common ln Thts may help vo11
I
U
r
-."' 11 lll o I
duty-free instead of $200 as Rutland
It Tha t ts why leg muscles

---------------------------I

Ruling delayed

_Purdue's line wins praise

HEALTH

Exercise better

than girdle

PARENTS: What do you
really krww about drug abuse?

•

Yanks Sfek series title tonight

"ANGEL DUST - A liVING HELL
F'trst developed tn the IOO(S as an ane!il;hetlc lor hUillllns,
but later r•legated to vctennary medictne , because of
lnghtemng stde ellects, phenc)cltdine, or PCP, ts caustng an
alarmmg num ber of deaths - to say nothing of Ute destruction
of young ltves - as chrome use grows
Called Angel Dust, Elephant TranqUtlizer , etc., tn the
street scene, tt ts a~we of barbtturate , and pushers are usmg It
to "lace martJuana," to sttmulate reacltons and provtde
greater "trtps," thereby sttmulatmg tis demand Thts means,
many who thmk they are bu) mg JUS! pot are gettmg an extra
"beneltt" wtthout advance knowledge, and unttltt 's too late I A
btg part of the danger of use ts that phencyclldme accumulates
m the brrun, Utereby prov tdmg the probability of triggermg
btzarre and vtolent behaviOr after use has been dtscontmued
"The random react tons are lnghterung," said Dr Davtd
Smtth professor of to .. cology at the Uruverstty of Cahlornia
medtc~l school, cttmg cases of study One user was brought to
court on charges of ktlllng a 22-rnonth old baby, by stabbmg 1!
to death , and then wounding senously tts pregnant mother
Others reacted by beatmg thetr heads against stone walls,
1umpt.ng out wmdows drowrung or shooting themselves , and
commttting swc1de m ~ther ways One parttcular metropolitan
area m the west has 20-30 overdose cases reported druly 1
Gomg on the street lor $65-$70 a gram, PCP ts easy to
synthesize and relattvely cheap to make . no doubt
aceounlmg for tts popularU) mcrease runong teens . Use seems
to be spreadm g raptdly m sptte of poltce and sheriff 's
departments, m vartous parts of the country, detecting and
closmg down •lltctt manufacturers nght and left Some
authonlles feel that new tllegal producers sprmg up almost
before th e old ones are put out of busmess Urgeney4s growmg
to dissemmate mformabon to make users aware of the
tremendous dangers of use .
One PCP user, formerly on herom, turned to tt thinlung ~~
was safer - 1t wasn't ! "Suddenly I realized my lrtends were
killm g themselves and thetr own babies, and I was becommg
swctdal myseH " Vtsttmg hospttal wards to see friend-users
brought thts young woman tt the realliatton that she, too, was
last hecommg a "vegetable " as were they
.Most disturbmg to parents w11l be the poss1btltty o~ a'
youn gster gettmg hooked on Angel Dust wtthout betng out on
the prowl lor new kicks II someone ts already usmg
martJuana, the chances of bemg "shot down " by PCP are high,
courtesy of the lree-mtXlllg practtce by pushers
Thts departme nt strongly urges a reVIew of Article No 2
from thts sertes, whtch relates the dangers of martjuana ttseH,
coupling these reasons With the new posstbil1ties proVIded by
PCP, to help add to making a concrete dects1on agamst the
sltghtest tolerance of any illtctt drug appltcatton wtthtn the
family There tS too much at stake to thmk otherwise'
Should anyone m the commuruty have knowledge of
sources lor PCP, or any illegally dtstnbuted drugs , please call
th ts department - anonymously or othe!'Wlse - to relay such
mrormahon
Save a life turn m a Push er '
NEXT· l..'&gt;D AND OTHER HALLUCINOOENS
Sponsored by · Tracy's Ftre and Safety Equtpment,
Mtddleport. and provided by Mtddleport Cluef of Pollee J J .
Cremeans

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Spo11a Editor
NEW YORK (U P!) - At most , Billy Martm has only two
more moun tams to cross, alter which he says he expects to be
back, Win or lose, but hts employers keep saytng notlung and
that's what's known as an ommous stlence m baseball or
•
anywhere else
Slould lhe Yankees beat the Dodgers .lomght m the stxth
game of the World Senes and thereby wra p up thetr ltrst world
champtonsh tp tn 15 years, the next obv1ous question would be
what about Martm for next year' Wtll he or won 't he be the
Yankee manager a~ain '
Owner George Stembrenner tnst sts club prstdent Gabe Paul
will make that dectston Announce tt would be more correct
although Paul tells everybody he's :•not gomg to be a rubbe;
stamp "
'
Actually, Stembrenner and Paul qwte likely Will make the
dectSion together tf they haven 't made tt already I get the
lelhng they bave and that unpresstOjl was strengthened by
Paul hunsell at a news l'Onlerence last Saturday m Los
Angeles
&lt;
Alter tt broke up, a few newsmen lmgered and asked Paul
some questtons about Martm One of those quest tons had to do
with the gwdelmes or "commandments" Paul had set up and
which Martm would ha••e to adhere tom order to keep his JOb
"How has Btlly been domg accordmg to your gutdeles ' " one
wrtter asked hun
"I don 't want to d1scuss that ," rephed Paul _
"II he wm s the World Senes, wtll that change hts status '"
Wlother wraler mqmred
"It dOes not affect our JUdgement ," satd Paul, looking
mcreasmgly unl'Omlortable
Now stop and thmk for a moment If the Yankees already
had mad"' up thetr mmds to ret am Marttn for next year, why
would there be any logtcal reason for them not saymg so now
or even before thts ?
On the other hand , tf they already have dectded to let hun go ,
as a preVIous Yankee adnumstr~tton dtd wtth Yogt Berra even
as he was managmg the terun In the 1964 World Sertes wtth the
Cardinals, thetr stlence now ts readtly understandable
Marlin , however , can draw some encow-agement from the
fact baseball people are notoriOUS for cbangmg thetr mmds
Insofar as he's concerned, he knows ftrst~and, from talks he
has had wtth Stem brenner, that the Yankee owner has changed
his mmd about htm several limes thtsseason alone

-·

On that score, Martm should have a talk wtth Joe Gordon
sometune Gordon also played second ba se for the Yankees,
havmg been Martm's predecessor at that post!ton, and m ]959,
he was managmg Cleveland
~rank Lane was the general manager of the Indians and he
was second-guessms Gordon regularly Gordon got so ttred of
11 , that With the lndtans sttll m contentton only a couple of day s
before the end of the season, he tol)l a \\Ttler he was gomg to
tell Lane he was restgrung
Meanwhtle, Lane already had dectded to htre Leo Durcher
as the Indian manager and had made hun a proposttton
Wtth two days rematntng in the season , Lane mvtted Gordon
to have breakfast w1th hun
"I see by Ute newspapers where you're gomg to restgn ," he
satd to Gordon, "and whenever anybody tells me he 's go mg to
qutt , I never try to stop hun, bull reserve thertght to ptck the
proper tune to accept your restg natton "
'
"It's my own fault, " admitted the charactertstt cally good·
natured Gordon "I shottldv'e kept my mouth shut. I
appreciate you gtvmg me the JOb m the f1rst place and all the
support you gave me "
Before long , he began talking about some of the Cleveland
players and the personal plans he had for them Ute followmg
year Then he caught hunsell, realtzmg he already had told
Lane he was restgnmg
"Hey, I can't let yo u be a better sport than I am," Lane
mterrupted hun " I'm gomg to do some thmg about this."
_ He dtd. Acouple of days later, he called a press conference m
Cleveland for the purpose of annoWJcmg the club's manager
lor the folloWing year Everyone expected It to be Durocher
"Brmg Leo m," Lane waggishly called out io one of the
Indtans' offtctals moments alter the press conference got
underway
In walked Joe Gordon, smtllng
,.
Hewas the ''new' ...manager, and he wasgaven a ratse.
Maybe the same thmg wtll happen wtth B1lly Martm, too

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admttted Ruby Eynon,
Reedsvtlle, Archte Rtfe,
Cheshtre , Thomas Sarver,
Sr , Pomeroy; Cectl Ward ,
Pomeroy, Sylvta Wol fe ;
Rae me
Dts c har ge d
Rt chard
Smtth, General Hall , Monte
Woife, Lewts Laudermtll
Betty Spaun

Ohio DRIVE
opposes No. 2
CLEVELA~ D .(UP!) Ohto DRIVE, the poht1cal
arm of the state's Teamsters
Umon members, Monday
endorsed three state tssues m
the Nov 8 general electton
and opposed a fourth
The orgamzatwn supported
tssue I, repeal of the mstanl
regtstratlon law , tssue 3,
govenunental loans and guarantees for housmg , and 1ssue
4, repealmg the state's debt
luntt
Ohto DRIVE urged a No
vote on tssue 2, to prohtbi.t
leg-hold anunal traps, on the
grounds the matter should be
dectded by legislative actton
rather than by statewtde
vote
Other maJor endorsements
mcluded Edward Fetghan for
mayQ!' of Cleveland and Phil
Richley for mayor of Youngstown, both Democrats

Holzer Medl&lt;al Center
(Olscbarges, Oc\.17)
Harold Aleshtre, Debra
Bailey, Evelyn Chambers,
Betty Crawford, Mary Davts,
Cmdy D~nney , Ryan Dill,
Wlllte Eblm, Rachel Egg~rs ,
John Krarsczyn, Sr , Mrs
Mtchael Neutzlmg and son,
Dorothy Rhodes, Lana Sayre,
John Sttes, Velvet Swisher,
Sharon Wtlson·, Belinda
Wood
( Births, Oct. 171
Mr and Mrs Marshall
Kunmel. a daughter, Bidwell.

O.ildren perish
in house fire
TOLEDO, Oh10 (UP!)
Two children died m a house
f1re m rural Spencer
Townshtp Monday when a
pot-belhed stove apparently
caught thetr bed on fire
Fire offtctals say !-year-old
Davtd Lee Johnson and hts 2year-old brother, Robert,
were dead when Ute lire
ftghters arr1ved The potbellted stove was next to their
bed
OffiCials sa1d the children
were alone m Ute house when
Ute fire broke out No cause
had been detenruned and an
mvesttgallon of the deaths '
was bemg conducted

Berry's World

VOLI&lt;SWAGEN
SERVICE SPECIAL-

By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK l UP!) - The
New York Yankees, l'Onl1dent
that the longest, most
turbulent season tn lhetr
started htstory ts about at an
end, send nghthander Mtke
Torrez to the mound tomght
agamst Burt Hooton mt an
effort to ftmsh off the Los
Angeles Dodgers m the stxth
game of the 1977 World
Senes
" It 's been a long, tough
season," conceded Yankees

Cincy star is
disappointed
CHARLESTON , W Va
(UP!) - Pete Rose thmks tt
would be nwe tf Los Angeles
chased the Cincmnat1 Reds
for a cha nge
Last summer, the Btg Red
Machine sputtered on the
ltrst lap, had to change tis
mound corps by mtdseason,
and by then the Dodgers were
well enough ahea d to
dethrone the two-ttme World
Chrunp1ons
" It seems like every year
the Dodgers go out fr ont and
we end up chasmg them ,"
Rose srud Monday "They
could be 25 games ahead wtth
27 to play and sitU be warned
about us, because we catch
them so many tunes
"The btg word IS to try to be
consistent, day m and day
out Who gtves a damn tl
you're consastent a week,
then play bad lor two weeks•
That was our problem thts
year "

Baseball's
"C harl ey
Hustle" told reporters he
co ns1ders the Dodgers
supertor to New York - the
club the RedS' routed 4.{) m the
fall classtc last year
" ! thought the Dodgers
would really wtpe 'em out,
the way the Yankee pttchmg
staff ts," Rose optned. "But
every ltme they play a good

'

In these days of ever -increasing prtces, tt's
good to find a bargain and now Rtvers1de
V.W. has the best bargatn m town. A Tune·
Up spectal destgned to keep your V.W.
runnt ng w1th efficient performance and
economy.

game, th e next day seems to
be an off day I thought the
Dodgers would blow t he
Yankees nght out of the
ballpark
" Even tf the Yankees wm, I
don 't thmk the Yankees have
got the team the Dodgers
do, '' he sald
Rose thmks the reports that
the Yankees are fraught wtth
unrest is mostly the tmaginalton of sportswnters.
"Not everybody m baseball
has a good year every year ,"
he sa1d 'We get pa1d on what
we do on the fteld Some gu) s
are emotionally dtsturbed at
what they're domg on the
fteld. They're ltght, they 're
htgh You say the wrong thmg
and they m1ght want to ftght
" But they forget tl the next
day . I thmk the Yanks get
along pretty good together '
Dtd success spot! the Red s'
" The only thing that happened to us this year was that
the Dodgers got off to a great
start and they deserved to
wm the pennant. We got our
work done m spnng
trauung."
He promtsed next year wtll
be different - wtth a rebwlt
pttchmg staff anchored by
Tom Seaver - provtded
Cmcmnalt can get off to a
healthy start

Gn•f£ey w ill
h
h
VISit c nrc
•

•

Ken Griffey, Cmctnnalt
Reds' outftelder wtll be guest
speaker at t he Galhpohs
Chnsttan Church, Saturday,
October 22, at 6 p.m He wtll
be g1vmg h1s personal
testimony, how Chnst came
mlo hts ltfe and how h1s hie
changed because of Chnst.
After speakmg, there w1ll
be time lor autographs and to
meet li1m personally He will
also be gtvmg away a lew
balls and bats
Who ts the Reds' top hitter
aga mst left handed pttchmg '
You say Pete Rose, Davll"
Concepcton, George Foster,
or Johnny Bench. If you say
any one of them, you're
wrong He's Ken Grtffey, the
Reds' rtght ltelder. "I guess I
concentrate harder agamst
lefthanders," Griffey says
He 1s respected as one of the
best httters m the game He's
a smart base runner and

SAVE GAS
SAVE MONEY

'

manager Billy Martm
Monday "I know a lot of the
players have expressed thetr
destre to be sornewhe1e else
next year' but alter we wm
th ts thtng tomorrow, l thmk
thetr feelings wtll change "
Martm found himself sur·
rounded by yet one ' more
controversy Monday when
r1ght~ander Ed F1gueroa,
who wa s bypassed m favor of
Tor1ez for ga me s1x, dec1ded
to qutt the team, and then
changed his rnmd
"!asked Btlly (Marttn l tf I

IS

one of the fastest players
acttve today There aren't
many nghtfielders better
than 27-year-old nahve of

Donora, Pa
Even though Ken bats and
throws lefthanded, he writes
and eats w1th his rtght hand

•19'5
All PARTS AND LABOR INCLUDED
New Pomts
NeW Plugs
Ad1ust Valves
Set Ttmmg
Adtust Dwell
Adtu st Idle
Other' models shghtly htgher

'

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All work IS done wlfh genutne V W replacement parts
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OFFER GOOD OCT. 17-31
&lt;)

011

(()r the days tr11en the Pow ! wa s
humorless '

Eagles lin

20-8 win

•

The Eastern Jr Htgh loot·
ball team won thetr ltrst
game of the season last
Thursday night agamst a
very tough Kyger Creek
team
Down IHl, the little Eagles
stormed back tn the second
stanza to tte the score on a 64
yard dnve In the second
half, the Eagles scored on a
thtrd and II Sltuatton when
M1ke B1sselllatd down a key
block to score John Rtebel on
a 54 yard run
The fmal score came when
Eastern reached payd1rt m
the fourth quarter . J ohn
Rtebel passed !5 yards to P
J Rtle to score the touch·
down leavmg the fmal score
at 20-8.
Eastern will be gotng alter
an ot her vtctory Thursday
mght agat nst the South·
western Htghlanders at the
Eastern H1gh School.

By SKIP WACHTER
PITISBURGH (UPI )
The Ctnctnnatt Bengals
thought Utey were gmng t&lt;&gt;
wm their ftrst grune m etght
tnes at Three Ri vers
Stad1wn
Reserve quarterback John
Reaves com pleted a pass to
h1s pnmary recetver at the
IO·yard !me m what everyone
knew was Ute last play of the
game
Pitt~burgh Coach Chuck
Noll satd he hypervenltlated
Steelers tackle "Mean Joe "
Greene was ready to Jump off
a bndge.
But Steeler cornerback J T
Thomas knew he had hts
man
He knew there would be no
v1ctory lor the Bengals
Monday ntght He knew the
superb effort by hts team and
tt s quart erback Terry
Bradshaw - playmg desptte
a broken wr1st -would stand
'up alterall m a 211-14 wm that
put Ute Steelers mto a threeway tte for first place m the
AFC Centr al Dtvtston
" I was runnmg right wtth
Nat1onat Football L ea gue
Stand•ngs
him He wasn't gonna score,
By Untted Press lnternattonal
no way," Thomas srud after
Amencan Conference
Ea st
dumping Bengals wtde
w L T Pet recetver Isaac· Curtts ~t the
Balftmore
5 0 0 1000
4
I
0 800 seven-yard !me to preserve
M tam •
New E ngl and
2 0 600 the Steelers' vtctory before a
3
N Y Jets
2 3 0 400
4 0 200 nattonal televiSIOn audtence.
I
Buffal o
Central
" I knew there was only a
w ~ T Pet
3
2 0 600 second left and l knew I had
Houston
Pt i1Sbu rgh
3 2 0 600 the tackle I wa s just trymg to

FOOTBALL

,

Cleveland
C•n c nnat1

2

3

3

west

0
0

600
400

L T Pel
0 0 1 000
1 0 800
2 0 600
4
0 200
5 0 000

5
4

3
1
0

Nat.onal Conference
East
L T Pel
5 0 0 1 000
Dallas
w ashington
3 2 0 600
Phtla delphla
2 3 0 400
51 LOUtS
2 3 0 400
2 3 0 400
NY Gtant s
Central
L T Pel
4 1 0 800
M.nnesota
Detro1t
3 2 0 600
2 3 0 400
Ch• ca go
I
4 0 200
Green Bay
T ampa Bay
0 5 0 000
West
w L T Pet
Los Angeles
3 2 0 600
Atlanta
3 2 0 600
New Orl eans
1 4 0 200
San Fra nctsc
0 5 0 000
Monday's Result
P ittsburg h 20, C tnc1n nat1
night
Sunday' s Games
Cleveland at Butfalo
Dal las at Phtladelphta
D enver ~t C1ncmna11
Green Bay at Tampll Bay
H ouston at Pttfsburgh
NY Giants at Washmgton
Sea ttl e at M tam •
Oakland at NY Jets
N ew Orleans a t St Louts
A tlanta at Ch1cag o
Kansas C1ty at San D1eg o
Detrot l a t San Franc1sco
Baltimore at New England
Next Monday 's Game
M 1nnesota at Los Ang eles,
ntght

w

"

World Senes Schedule
By Untted Pres s InternatiOnal
(Best of Seven All Ttm es

EDTI

We are announc1ng our New Clay
Equtpment dealership Clay tS Ftrst
m Farm Systems Stop tn or cal l us
today and let s VI Stt about your farm
equ1pment needs We offer a full ltne
of pushbutton farm equ1pment for
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hog beef and da1ry operat1ons

'
WE SERVICE
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Clay Equtpment has been
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starts ''
The temperature lor
tomght 's grune was expected
to dtp mto the 40s, but the
Dodgers ,seemed conftdent
their "L'old '' bats m games
one, three and four, will
rematn "hot" lor the rest of
the season
"There's nothtng left for us
to do now but win / ' satd
Dusty Baker, one of only two
Dodger batt"rs h1ttmg over
300 for the Senes (tate her
Steve Yeager ts the othe.- )
"We may have passed
through our slwnp "

Steelers drop
Bengals, 20-14

w

KEN GRIFFEY
Durmg h1s free tune, Ken
works hard or:'. penctl sketch·
mg and has taken drawmg
lessons. He hopes some day to
become a cartoomst
Ken wtll be a guest of the
Cec tl Vinson lamtly of
Jackson Pike, Galltpohs The
pubhc Is mvtted to hear htm
speak at 6 p.m. at the church
For more informatton call
Jack Perry 446·1863 or 4463179

wanted to be m tl
Meanwhtle,
Dodger
Manager Tommy Lasorda,
has 1n Hooton hts most
l!l'tpresstve pttcher of the
sen es gmng for the second
t1me agamst t he Yanks
Hooton, whose spec tally, the
knuckle curve, baffled the
Yankees m game two, was
equally con ltdent he could
prolong the YBitkees' season
"I feel great and I'm
s peculatmg a wm," satd
Hooton · It's th e btggest
game of my career , but then
agam so were my last two

.

Denver
Oak land
San Otego
Sea1tle
Kansas C• t v

ALL BEETLES
Wtthout Atr Cond1tion1ng

could go home and he satd go p1tch "
ahead ," satd ~' t gueroa, a 16Turrez, the 6-foot--5, 22().
game wmner for the Yankees pound Mextcan rtght~ander
tins year "Then I thought who won 17 games thts year,
about It and deuded tl would overpowered the Dodgers on
be a bad move on my part . I a sevenhtt. mn e-stnl&lt;eo ut
wan t to be part of the club performance m game three of
wtttl the Sertes l$ over ''
U1e sen es last Frtday
Marttn srud he dec1ded to
The controversy mvolvmg
start
Torr ez
beca use Figueroa's defeclton dtdn't
Ftguei'Oa ts pot yet fully seesn to dtsturb htm
recovered from
nerve
" I knew I was gomg to pttch
damage m hts nght tndex etther thes1xth or U1e seventh
lmger ·
gam e," sa1d Torrez " It
"! can understand how the didn 't matter to me whtch
guy feels ,'' S3ld Ma rtm, one
Ftggy_ wOIY'li lot of
" because he :wanted to games for us thts year and he

w

TUNE-UP SPECIAL

Tourists can buy more goods

4

18, 1977

(New York leads Senes, l -2)
Oc t 11 - New York ( A L ) 4,
Los Ange les ( N L I 3, 12 mn lAgs
Oct 12- LOS Angele,S ( N L l 6,'
New York (A L ,l 1
Oct 14- New York t A L } s
Los Angeles ( N L ) 3
Oct 15- New York (A L ) 4,
Los Angeles ( N L ) 2
Oct 16-Los Angeles ( N L J 10,
N ew York (A L J 4
Oct 1B- Los Angeles ( N L 1 at
N ew York ( A L, } B 15 p m
x Oc t 19- L os Angeles ( N L )
at New York (A L ), 8 15 p m
x tf necessary

knock the ball loose. I dtdn't
gtve hun anythmg He had to
force me outside "
' Isaac was my prunary
man commg across," smd
Reaves, who replaced starter
Ken Anderson after the latter
.rnJured hts left knee on a
tackle by Steve Furness "I
was hopmg he'd cut (rom the
mtddle and mto the end zone
tu score the wmner He JUSt
couldn't get there"
The Steelers' defense, as
usual ,
had
excelled
throughout the mght A pass
mteceptton by Jack Ham and
fumble recovery by Mel
Blount set up a patr of second·
quart er touchdown s lor
Pittsburgh, dashes of one and
two yards by Rocky Bleter
Cmcmnatt got a touchdown
baCk m the same pen od when
Reaves lateraled to guard
Glenn Bu)noch, who rambled
the remammg four yards But
m the fourth quarter , wtth a
40-yard pass-play from
Bradshaw
to
Bennte
Cunnmgham setting tb ~
stage, rookte Stdney Thornon
went over from one yard out
From there, Ptttsburgh
crut~d on a 20-7lead unltl the
last t\vo mmutes Bengal Ray
Plulltps blocked a Bobby
Walden punt m the end zone
and Reggte Wtlltams fell on tt
for the touchdown that made
11 211-14 wtth 1·26 to go
And then came an onstde
kick anc;l the !mal drtve by the

Sports transactions

I

vers
Phoen ix Placed guards
Freeman Bla de and
Butch
Feher on wa 1'Vers and put
for wa r d tr o Te r re ll on the
•n tur ed r eserve I st
Buffalo Acqutred guard
Gary Brokaw from Cl eveland
for future cons tder ahons
New
Orl eans
Pla ced
vet era n center Otto Moore on
wa •vers
Cleve land - Watved guards
Steve Grot te and Don Sm 1th
Hockey
Bos ton - Sent defensemen AI
Stms and Doug H alward to
Rochester of the Amen can
Hockey Leagu e
soccer
Sa n Jose Johnny Moor e
r es1gned as asststant general
manager as s stan1 to th e pres•
dent
Pro Football
M 1am Acc epted No 3
draft cho1ce tn 1978 and 1979 as
compensat on from t he New
York Gtan t s for La rry Csonka
T ampa Bay - Cu t runnmg
bac k Ja ck Wender and r e
s tgned ru nnmg ba ck Geor ge
Ra gsda le

ReedsWile
Mr. anq Mrs Davtd G
Sm tth of Ca ldw ell were
weekend guests o( Mr. and
Mrs Davtd A Smtth and
Dtana
Mrs. Gladys Baughman "'f
Gahanna spent several days
wtth her stster, Mrs Rose
Thomas
Mrs. Bess Larkms ts a
patten! at the Camden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W
Va
Terry, John and Mtchael
Smtih, st udents at Ohto
Umvers1ty, Athens, spent the
weekend wtth the1r parents,
Mr. and Mrs Grant• Smtih
- Mrs L Balderson

temporary Jo ss of F1 an co

Harns wtth a hip pomter, and
completed stx of mne passes
lor 1!7 yards
"We always play pretty
tough, but we just got a great
per formance
from
Bradshaw ," Blount smd nwe
didn 't know all week tf he'd
start or " hat He took a lot of
pressure off the defense "

TIU&lt; llilfEK'S SPECIAL

'

Monday 's Spor1s Transactions
By Un•ted Press lnternaftonal
Baseball
Ch•cago
Cubs St gned
Cook 1e Ro 1as Joey Ama lfitano
and Mtke
Roarke to the
coachmg sta ff
Pro Basketball
Los Angeles - Cut veteran
forward Cazz te Russe l l , traded
rookte guard Tony Rol;lertson to
Atla nta for' a fut ure draft
choice and placed r ook1 e Ken
ca rr on Jhe m 1u red reserve list
Seattle Stgned former
Golden State guard G us Wtl
IIams placed forward Dean
Tolson on th e 101ured l 1st and
cut rookte forwards Rickey
Brown and Billy Reynolds and
rook1 e backcourtman Denn 1s
Shaf f er
M ilwaukee Cut rook •e
guard Chuck Goodyear
P6'rtland - Put gu~rd Herm
Gillia m on wa1vers
Put rook1e
Ph l ladelph ta forward Wtls on Washington on
the 1n1ured reser ve list
Denver Placed vetera n
forward Byron Beck on wo 1

Bengals that stopped many a
hearts m the cro\\d of 47,950
not to mentlon a few on the
fteld
' If
yo u
t hmk
I
hyperventilated there at the
end , you 're nght, " Noll
grmned "But I was pleased
wtth the whole game You
betcha I was pleased wtth t he
defensive effort, and our
offense !IS well "
Greene's thmkm g wa s
p1 etty mucl1 the same
" !was thmkmg I'd JUmp off
a damn bndge tf we lost," he
laughed " I was hopmg I
wouldn 't have to do that
beca use I had alr eady
commttted myself to tt I held
my breath a lew tunes Must
be my age Ma ybe I better
start growtng tultps or
somethmg
"But, hey, how about our
quarterback' Isn 't he sm'he thmg '" Greene beamed
Bradshaw , wtth hts left
wnst wrapped m a half-casttype brace , directed a strong
Funnmg game desp1te the

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992 -2342

�.

1- The Da ih S.ntmel. ~llddleoo rt-Pom erov 0 . Tuesda' Orl. 18. t9ii

Bucks not complacent

Lemon is top man·a ger Taylor turns
things around

B~ FRED D(iW~

l ' PI Si&gt;'&gt;rtS Writer
:\Ell' YOR K t l ' Pl I - Bnb
l.Rmon. whtl It'd the- Ch1raKo
\ \1utf' S.n: 1l1 a~ surprismg:

tlll rdpl ace fintsh m the
Western Di \1si&lt;1n. was named

the

Ameri c- an

League's

manager of the )ear today by
l 'mted Prt.&gt;ss International.
Th e for'iner Clev ela n d
ln diun pit cher . woo was
.ud ucted into baseb-11\'s Hall
1,f

Fam e ·m 1976, W(l n the

nJana&amp;.rn•d horwr
, Jte

~wer

b~·

an

11 ~7

Earl Weaver of thf:'

l altimu r-e On olt"s to th&lt;-'
mnual tJ-.)St..season sur,·ry by
"1 l 'P l :;port s Yt'Titers.
Bill,· ~tart m of the New
York ·Yankees firushed Utird
wtth three votes. followed by
Gene Mauch of the Minnesota
'IV.i ns wttli nw ~md Whitey
ller w~ of the Kansa s Cily
Ru ral ~ and Don Zuruner of
the. Boston R~ Su11; with one
'\'ach .

"Jt is a ·~ re.at honor to win
!Jus~ ear

espe·t;.'Jaily in view of

the job Wea\er did m Baltl mCl re, "
said
Lemo n,

rt:&gt;ferrin)! to t ht&gt; Orwles 's mhn~ bot h on tl1e f1 eld and at
finishing in a t ie for second the gate . Tha t yt.&gt;ar the White
plat.'t&gt; m the American Sox flm shed s1xth m the
-MiLAN . Mich . t UPil Leag ue E ast a ft pr bP ing We~-trrn Di\'iswn with a ~·97 Billy Taylor had it all going
\\Tltlen off as contenders m re;.•urd. 25l2 games out o[ fir:&gt;"t for him in 1972. He was a
pr e·SPaso n P\' al ua tio ns . pla ce, and had a home colle ~e f0&lt;1tball hero bound
"Earl did a really fine job:· &lt;tllendance of only 914 ,915. for til e pro ranks.
Turrun g to h1s own club. the
The 1977 White Sox were in
But things went sour . His
57-year nld lemon s ingled out fi rst place in the West as late mother died , his girlfriend
uut f1e lder s Osc ar Ga mble as AU!( . H . before finish ing in was stabbed to death. his
and RIChie Zlsk and third third place 12 games behind uncle killed his aunt. then
bas eman Erie Soderholm for the fi rst-place Kansas City shot himself. Taylor kicked
specia l prai#.
Royals. 11te)' wotlnd up with a aro und from football team to .
"They we re big addit ions," 00-72 rec.,rd and increased football team, unable t o
he said . " Each had a fine the&gt;r home a ttendanl'e 711.190 ·remain with any team for
seas...'n. They were- Strong to 1,656,1 35.
long .
l"\lntributor s throu~ho ut the
Le mon mana ge-d
th e
Finally , he went to jai! for
season.
Royals to one seeond-and two his part in a 1975 robbery at a
"1l te fans ·got behind us fo ur thpla c e fin ish es from bank in his hometo\m of
after about th r ee weeks." 1970 t hro ug h 1972. then Barberton, Ohio .
l.&lt;'mon srud . "They had a lot managed Sacramento in the
lt was in prison that Taylor
to do with o ur success. It also Pacific Coast leag ue and began turning things arowtd .
was very enjoya ble working Richmond
in
the He was to be released from
with !club president ) Bill International League before the Federal Correctional
Veeck and 1vice president) joining the Yankees 3S a Institution south Ann Arbor
'"R'oland Hemond . They are roaCh in 1976.
Wednesday after serving 28
(} Ut standin g baseball· me n . . ~·····. ~ .e~n o n 's dis~inguishrd months o.f hi s eight1year
who understand a manager's pt!chmg career mcluded a term.
1
problems ."
207- 128 .lifetime won-lost
Taylor participated in a
A coach for the Yankees in reco rd. seven 20-victory study release program and is
1976, Lemon took over a seasons. a no-hitter and a 2·2 the first federal prisoner to
White Sox team which was mark in World Series earn a masters degree . He
co mpetition .
He
also has been admitted to the
appeared in four All.Star
University of Michigan ' s
games .
doct o ral
program
in
education . And he has a labor
relations job with . General
Motor s waiting for him.
· He is also writin~ a OOok
about himself - how he went
from football hero to jail in
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP! ) less than four years.
in the la;i Olympic games in
- Guard Gary Brokaw was
Montreal.
"Oh, man, it'll be li ke
In anoouncing the contest . t raded to the Buffalo Braves coming out . of a cocoon .. . "
and guards Steve Grotie and says Taylor.
La nham expressed great
. .
Don Smith were waived
pleasure at having the OJ)' 'Ju'st to· be out and someMonday by the Cleveland where where I can go to the
portunity of participating in
Cavalier s to reach the NBA's refrigerator at night if I'm
such an event and hopes that
12-player limit .
at some future date to be able
hungry, or just sit back and
Cleveland received undis· watch television , or drin k a
to take the Redmen abroad as
closed
~· fut u re
a result of the exchange
cold beer," Taylor sighed.
considerations''
for Brokaw, HThose things seem Like so
program.
23, who appeared in 39 games much now.
Lanham said that one of the
last
season .
highlights of the evening
" Now 1 wanl to get into a
Grotie,
a star at Michigan, situation whe re I can enjoy a
would be the lonna! e&lt;·
change of gifts during pre- was Cleveland's third ro wtd fam ily type situation. It 's
draft pick . Smith. a free time to mellow out, get some
gam~ ceremonies..
played
for
The game will be played agent,
under international rules. Philadelphia in t he 1974-iS
Jim Chones a nd Elmore
Admission wi ll be $2. Ad· season.
Smith ; forwards J im.Brewer,
Brokaw
came
to
the
Cavavanced tickets will go on sale
Cam py Russell, Bobby Smith
soonand will be available at liers in J anuary in a trade
and John Lambert; swing
with
the
Milwaukee
Bucks
Lyne Center on campus or by
man T erry F urlow an d
mail. Deadline fo r ma il order along with center Elmore
guards-- Dick Snyder , Austin
Smith.
He
is
entering
his
tickets will be Nov-: 2. The
Ca rr , Ed Jordan and recenUy
fourth NBA season.
tickets will be sold on a first
acquired Walt Frazier .
The
Cavaliers
kept
centers
come fi rst serve baolis.

All-Star team ·from

a nd

do

SUPERIORS

to changes

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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Iowa or, more specifically ,

the Iowa fans, blastin ~ them
as
." totally
unfa ir.
u ns p o rts iu a nlik e
and
downright dishonest."
Haves' blast stemmed fr om
BEREA , Ohio (UPI )· - A a foiu--down go•dline stand
serious shortage of healthy made Iowa in which the
defensive tackles could for ce Buckeye coach d aims the
the Cleveland Browns to rans' cheering prevented his
make a basic change in their players from hearing signals.
defense (or their . upcoming
" It 's
totally
unfair .
game against the Buffalo un s p o rt s n1anl~ke
an d
d(\\\1Ir ight dishonest not to let
Bills.
The
Browns
learned a team run lis plays at the
Monday that rookie Mickey goalline;" . &amp;;lid Hayes. "I
Sims, who had been filling in hope mir crowd will never do
for injured all·p&lt;o Jerry that as long as I'm here .
Slterk , is "doubtful" for the
·'We'll fi ght like hell to
Buffalo game . He suffered a defend our guallinr ," Haye s
knee injury in Sunday's 24·23 said, '·bul we' ll give th~m the
opportunity ."
. •
triuntph at Houston.
Despite the crowd noise.
'.'I was hit from the side and
my fool taught in th e Hayes claimed--f=hman
fullback Jol!t ·Payton made it
artificial turf, " said Sims.
Without Sints the Browns into the end zone on his third
would have- to move defensive try , alUmugh the officials
end •Mike St. Clair lo ruled otherwise .
" M?ybe it was a good thing
defensive tackle and insert
for
Joel to get stopped ," sa 1d
Mack Mitchell at rig ht
Hayes.
" although on one
de fensive end to keep their
down
everything
was in the
four··man linf.
1
Abandoning the four &lt;n a n end zone but his left fool. So.
line wou ld mea n movin g unless he was carrying the
tackle Earl Edwards to nose · ball with his left foot... "
tackle in a 3-4 setup with St .
Clair and defensive e nd Joe
Jones. Middle linebacker Bob
Babich would be the added
linebacker.
Defensive coordinator Dick
Modzelewski is not an
advocate of t he 3-4 but has
had the defense practicing
the setup just in case.
Slterk . at first Utoughl to be
...
healing well from a wrenched
kn ~ s uffer ed i n the final
Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sa t.- -8 :JO til
exhi bitio n game, is noW
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
expected to miss. at least two
more games.

SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 22
'

On All Uving Room Suites

PICNIC

GROUND
.
LB
CHUCK ........•..........•..-..

may lead _

He said he had the wrong
altitude in training camp and
never really hit it off with
Norm VanBrocklin, then
head coach of the Falcons .
Taylor moved on to the St.
Louis Cardinals, to Calgary
in the Canadian leag ue, to
Memph is of the . World
Football ~ague and, fina lly,
spent a shor t stint with the
Philadelphia Eag les.
Somehow he wound up in
his hometown, driving a
getaway car afte\ an armed
robbery at a bank. On J une 4,
1975, he was sentenced to
eig ht year s in prison for his
part in the robbery. He will
report to a par ole offi~r
regula rl y afte r his release.

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

· FRESH &amp; LEAN

Injuries

money ."

MARKY

SUPERIORS

UPI Sports Writer
CO LUMBUS (UPI ) - Ohio
State Coach Woody Hayes
said Monday he will take
nothing for gra nted when the
Buckey es visit winl ess
Northwestern Saturda y.

so me

meani ngful things ."
Taylor was the premier
bar k on the 1971 Michigan
football team . His college
rushing total of 3.072 yards
still ranks second on
Michigan 's alHime individual rushing list .
He was. draftted by the
Atlanta Falcons in 19i2, but
his pro football career was a
disaster .
Shortly after Michigan 's
1972 Rose Bowl loss to
Stanfo rd, Taylor ' s mother
died . He lost his desire to play
lootball . Later, his girlfriend
was stabbed to death and his
wtcle shot his aunt, then
turned the gun on himself .
" My heart really wasn 't in
it , but I went (to AtlantB) and
accepted my bonus." Taylor
recalls. "I figured I'd just go
and play and make some

Brokaw goes to
Buffalo Braves

Otina to play Rio
RIO GRAN DE A
natwnal .aU·star te-am from
•he Republic of China wUl
meet the Rio Grande Red·
me n. November 9 at i :30 p.m .
•:1 Lyne Center a t Rio Grande
'ol!ege and Community
College Arthur W. Lanham,
athletic direct or a nd basket·
ball coa ch anoounced today.
The 10 game, three week
tour is part of an exchange
program sponsored by the
National Association of In·
ter col le g iate
Athletics
(NAIA I. The to ur will con·
elude with the first a noual
NA!A International Cup
Tournament November 19'21
in Kailsas City .
The team includes the best
basketball players in the
Republic of China based on
open try-&lt;&gt;uts. Several of the
players were members of the
team that represented China

roots

'Otat brought Hayes back to
his long-sta nding crusade to
have tl1e in&gt;i ant replay used
by offi cials on mntroversial
ealls.
" It wutdd only take 110
set, mds at the most ," Hayes _
srud in support of the instant
r e play . " Then , if you're '
wrong, you must be :
pena lited ."
•
Haves said the Buckeyes ·
got ·.. quite a few pllople ·
banged up" in the Iowa game
bUt Hnothing serious." .
Fullba c k-tailback
Jeff
l" gan , hampered since ~he
fir st quarter of the operung
go nte with an ankle sprain,
" had a heck of a game" in
Hayes ' l' ~timation .
.
" He 1Log an ) has been
ho rribly disappointed
because he couldn't play,"
said Hayes . " but he 's tBkeo it
like a man . He ought to have
a hc'l'k of a game this week
(against Northwestern) ."
Quarterback Rad Gerald.
who ran for 101 yards and two
touchdowns and hit 9 of 12
pass attempts. w~s selected
the back of Ute week for hiS
Iowa performan ce, while
l.llckle Chris Ward was the top
offen si ve lineman .
"Chris Ward amazes us
coaches, " said Hayes, "an.d
we're not easy to please . He.,.
a leader in his own quiet ,
magnetic way . When you tBlk
a boul our great tackles, he's
one of them , Right up t here at
the top ."
Defensively, linebac ker
Da ve Adkin s and tac kle
Byr on Cato were picked the
top perfor mers against the
Hawkeyes .

Despite the Wildcats' 0.0
re&lt;.'fl rd and anemic offensive
showing so far ( 27 points 1n
six games), Hayes luld hls
" eekl y pr ess lun cheo n
Monday, ' 1we never . never
fi gure on an e-asy football
ga me. 1ltcy [Northwestern I
arc gt:!tting better . We j~t
want to ma ke sure they don't
get better against us."
But , the veteran Bucke ye
'"ach prefei'rL'Cl to talk a bout
!liSt Saturday 's 27.jl win over

8y GF..NE CAOOES

WE ACCEPT
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Coupon ~A.,.ores Oct . 22, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
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Coupon Expires Oct. 22 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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Tlw D;ul) &amp;'ntuwl. ~11dtU eport- Pomeroy , 0 ., Tl!esday. Oct 18. 1977

t(',.,,,,,,~~~G:;;~~;~T~;;"I{~~P
~~"~w:·:&lt;,~~
~-

·:.:.
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H~

Helen and Sue Bottel

l*~
~

South Africa to· be

Carnival p!anned

~10DER~·DA\' Cl~DERELLA !

,:~ fior

Pomer011
school
J

Getting a swan in s!Jape

i

Social
1 Calendar

persons to talk personally
with the missionary.
·
The missiona ry attended
Canadian Nazarene College,
Winnipeg, and r eceived her
bachelor of theology degree
in 1965. She received her
di ploma in nursing from the
Royal Alexa nd~a Hospital ln
E dmo nt on In 1968. She
received a diploma in public
hea lth nu rs in g from the
University of Alberta in 1969.
Pr ior to being appointed for
missiona r y service Miss
Wiens served as a public
ht!'a lth n urse in northern
Alberta.
The Rev . Herbert Grate,
pastor of the Chester church ,

UM w mee t
to set plans

Hy
United . Pr ess
lntematlonal
The hijacklng,' an,d rescue ,
at a glance :
West
German
cominandos, In a spectacular
raid Monday night , rescued
86 hostages aboard a hijacker
Lufthansa airliner that had
been forced to land in
Mogadishu, the capital of
Somalia in eastern Africa .
- Two men and two women
hiJackers were kUied in the
raid. No commandos or hostages died in tl)e attack. The
pilot, Juergen Schumann ,
was killed by the hijackers
before the Boeing 737 landing
at Mogadishu airport early
Monday.
- The hijackers forced the
plane to fly to six countries in
five days. Among the 86
bostages were 11 participants ,
in a beauty cooU,st and an
ailing American woman ,
Mrs. O!ristine Santiago, 44,
and her :i-vear-old son.
Wifst German commandos
hurllng • -special
flash
grenades stormed a hijacked
Lufthansa airliner today,
. killing all four terrorists .and
rescuing the 86 hostages in a
spectacular seven-minute.
attack
reminiscent
of
Entebbe,
the
Bonn
government said .
Hours later, Andreas
Baader, 34, and his girlfriend
Gudrun Ensslin, 37, leaders of the Baader·
' Meinhof gang killed
themselves in a West German
,priaJn, the Jostice Ministry
announced.
Two other members of the
gang - Jan Carl Raspe, 33,
and lnngard Moeller , 30, held
in the Stamrnlleim prison ,
alSJ tried to kUI themSelves
~U~d were in critical condition, .
justice authorities said .
The four were among 11
terrorists In West German
jails whoae release had been
demanded by the hijackers,
two of whom were selfdeclared members of the
gang.

and the Rev, James Broome,
pastor of the Middleport
church, extend an invitation
to the public of the two
communi! ies to attend the
services.

riage on Oct. 22, 1927 at Clif·
ton, W. Va . by Rev. Gerhart.
They owned and operated a
jewelry store in Middleport
for 36 years and have lived in
Racine most of their married
life.
They ha ve on daughter,
Mrs. J oyce Birch, Waterford.
All fr iends and at"quaintances
are uwitt'd to call during the
open house huurs.

weeke nd with h is grand·
mother , Lena Knapp of
Langsville.
Mr . and Mrs . Carl McElroy
of Columbus were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and Mr and Mrs.
Bill McElroy, Jeff -and Joey.

Officers elected Sunday

World Community
Day .will be observed

Wo}fpen
eWS

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BEGINS ON THE
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All consignments welcome.
For more infOrmation
call 446-9760 or 446-9049.

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Pomeroy

•

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"Certainly they reacted
like other fans would in that
situation,"
he ·• said .
·"Although I was in the press
box and sometimes don't get
the same feeling as being
' down on the field, I don't
think they were that noisy.
''Our fans are just as
enthusiastic as anyone . I like
to see the enthusiasm."
Hayes, who llad his cap
stolen by an Iowa fan after
the game, did not mention the
noise when he talked with
reporters· Saturday. Instead ,
be praised the Iowa defense,
saying "there aren't many
teams that could stop us down
there on the oneyard line or
one.foot line or whatever it
Elliot\ also praised the
Hawkeye defenders for the
goal line stand.
"I thought
it · was

. GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

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MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
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O.CTOBER 27TH,

Octo~er 26th and till 12 n!M)n

'

IOWA CITY, Iowa ( UPI) -_
Iowa Athletic Director BumP-Elliott said Monday Hawkeye
football fans are "no different
~ than anybody else" when it
· comes to cheering and were
not unruly during a goal line
,stand in Saturday's game
;with Ohio State.
i Elliott took exception to
;remarks by Ohio State Coach
1Woody Hayes, who said the
~Iowa fans were "totally
(Unfair, unsportsmanlike and
'downright disllonest " when
!ohio State tried score from
~owa's oneyard' line. Hayes
's aid the cheering of the fans
1!revented his team from
hearing signals .
Ohio State was stopped lour
straight times at the one by
the Iowa defense, but the
~ckeyes still prevailed 27-6.
"In every football game,,
there are times when the
crowd is very enthusiastic,
especially during a goal line
stand,'' Elliott said when
asked to comment on Hayes'
. statement. "Our people are
no different than anybody
else. They get excited. I can
·Cite several instances where
has
happened
.. this
!!lsewhere."
Elliott said it often is
difficult to run plays near the
goal line because of crowd
nolse, but added he always
had high regard for the Iowa
fans and called them

Reibel talks to boosters

SPECIAL STATE GRADED FEEDER SALE

•

:n ot unruly
:says Bump

Mrs. Ruth hosts Salon meeting

,.

'

a glance ·

Golden a:nniversary to be marked

Tea slated

IIG&amp;IST SAVIll$ II TOWII

Hijacking
rescue at

POLLY"$ POINTERS
topic for discussion
.

Polly Cramer
The country of South Africa
A
with its compl~xities and
DE.\R HEJ.E\ At\[1 SUE :
challenges will be presented
r\ ho.tilUWt't'll l:il filiVal WH!'l &lt;hklr prt z~ Will bt' aw;:u·ded
A&gt; a ) c&gt;Wlg ktd, I w;t'd to enjo) readmg about Cinderella.
in a specia,l service to be held
set for (kt . 29 when tht• eaeh month a nd th~ vnc pro\ 1~. all~. I am Cinderella.
at two Meigs County chur·
\'i
d~o.'(i
by
Mrs.
Young
was
W(lll
'&gt;1) real Dad.JIIIt'd thrl'f months ago which left me with a Ponwruy PTA met last week
POLLY'S PROBLEM
The odor us ually leaves. Also ches this week.
b.' Dottoe Wtll.
stepmotllt'r aJ'tti!hree stepbrothers. She never showed much &lt;H the st'hool.
Evelyn Wiens, career
DEAR
POLLY
I
have
a
!find
that dish cloths or other
Cost uml's Will bt! judgt.-d
ltJ\·e for me. but now 1t's double worse. I'm the maid and bab~'
missionary
to the Shangaan
tTocheted
swan
that
could
clea
ning
cloths
seldom
have
a
• •···· · ~~~~
·· ··~•n·· "&amp;~·
.
..;m:..n::...
~
SJtter whtle she goes off to 1\"ew York to buy dothes and see her and \'Vl untet'rs are needed to §"~~"&lt;N
peop le in the Ga~ank ul u
hold
flowers
but
it
is
very
soilbad
smell
if
they
are
wrung
help with the ea rni val.
fnt&gt;nds ,
ed. The neck a nd head are out in COLD wa ter and let homela nd of the Republic of
Dad left her wnh plenty of money. She a nd her sons get Altyonl' intcreslNI in working
South Africa, will be featured
ver y hard. I hope someone dry.
whate\:er the~ want. I got ~ part-tune job so I could buy my i.s askt•d tu l.\Jntart Apr il &lt;:&lt;
in the services to be held at ·
can
tell
me
how
to
wash
m
y
When
blanclting
vegeta
bles
own thmgs and she rt&gt;sents 1t beca use it takes awav from nw Smith allht• school.
~
nd
th!&gt;n
how
to
get
it
or
s
trainmg
food
I
use
a
IS.
7:30
p.m. F r iday at the
swa
n
a
Metnlx·rs \\l'n' re minded to
"'home' ' " ork. !try gettmgalong. It doesn' t work . ·
·
stiff
again.MRS.
V.W.
inc
h
square
of
nylon
net
in·
Chester
Chu rc h of the
Dad gan' me a dog for my btrthda)· eight months ago. Last tum tlie cand\' mune\· 111 soon
MRS.
V.W.
Yours
stea
d
of
acola
nder.
H.R.L.
Nazarene,
and at 7 p.m.
DEAR
w...,k she "'drowned it accidentally .. while gi\'ing tl a bath. 1 1t was reporied thai $78 wa~ ~
that
would
r
eDE
AR
POLLY
..
My
at
the Middleport
is
a
problem
Saturday
cnt'd and she finally beat me with a belt. That happens ofU,n. made un Hat&gt; recent roud sale
bit
of
feeling
one's
Pointe
rs
conce
rn
bridal
Church
of
the
Nazarene.
quire
a
TUESDAY
There are l 5 me;nbers ~~
\\'hat can I do'' · Cl t\DERELLA II
Miss Wiens' fou r a nd one
date.
SALISBURY PTO meeting, way. I presume there is a n showers. When you see an
DEAR CINDERELLA :
Roach 7:30 p.m. Tuesday a t the opening at the top- (the back _ eng agement picture In the ha lf years of service has been
Mrs . Dor·othy
If .'~OU don~t hat·e close relati\'es who wiU take your part, call
presided 'at the meehng schooL Prog ra m will include of the swa n) ifyouplanto use newspaper of someone you spent serving as a nurse in a
the Cluld II elfare Agency and report these beatings. If this
hospital
Her
which opened with Nonna q ~estton and answer sesston it as a flower holder. Find a know well and whose showers 268-bed
doesn't help. contact a lm~:ycr .
glass or plastic container that you will be a ttending, cut it pr ese nt at io n at the two
Ba
ker
leading
m
the
pledge
,
wrt
h
ftve
cand
idat
es
for
Yes. duldren can bring suit aga inst so-called paroots these
fils in this opening and that out and place between sheets churches will employ, " the
days Judgm~ from your letter, I think you have a case.- and Mrs. Mae Young giving Metgs . Loca l Board ?f will hold the flowers. Wash as of clear see-through .plastic. sight~ .11nd sounds of Africa"
the tle\'Utions and scr tpture. Educah on a nd a dascusson an
HELEN
yo u would a ny other Attach this to the gift you are ·and there will be an opThe kinder garten won the Issue 2.
crocheted
article ; use a small taking to a shower. It makes portunity fo r inte r es ted
room award. It was decided
RE GULAR MEETING ,
DEAR CINDERELLA :
on
the
neck and head. a personal touch that is very
brush
to gi ve a pa rty, for the kids Women's Auxiliary, Veterans
Ma n~ st.I:Ites n~w gtve courts discre tionary power to appoint
When
clean
I
would stiffly nice .
·
who win the room cow1t the Memorial Hospit al in hospital
ad\•ocates for children "' custo&lt;ly ba ttles. And sometimes kids
starch the swan, press out the
Also, house plants make
day
after
the
PTA
meeting.
cafeteria.
7:
30
p.m.
Tuesday.
mstlgate the.se battles by conta&lt;;llng a n outside adult - or a
Principa l Robe rt Morris in· D u e~ are pa ya ble . All excess with the hands;1itil the very nice gifts for game play·
lawyer For more inforn1ation, read New West magazine, J une
container in the back to help iQg at showers. Everyone
troduced
the teache rs and members asked to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. F rank J .
20. 1977: " Ktds Are Sumg Parents- And Wtruting,"' by Conme
t.old it is shape as it dries and seems to enjoy getting them ;
the
parents
went
to
the
DREW
WEBSTER
Post
39,
then
Wall
ace, R ac in e, will
Bruc~.
room of Mrs. Jeanette An&gt;erican Legion, will ob- keep shaping it ever so often they are so popular now. You eelebrate lhetr golden wed·
Good luck ! -SUE
durino the drying process. could start your own in ad·
Thomas to vie~w ma terial pur· s~rve World War l veterans
ding a nniversa ry with a n
Perhaps some of the readers vance, or nice plants and pots
chased
with
Tttle
1
funds.
mght
when
the
annual
oyster
open house from 2 to 5 p.m.
R.&gt;.P.
hav&lt;&gt;- better ideas and wiU can usually be found at disSunda y, Oct. 23 at their home.
Se \·eral months ago my uncle moved in with my family after Refreshments wer e served stew supper is held at 8 p. m . share them with us. - count stores. - DAVIE JO.
by the executive conuniltee. Tuesda y at the post home.
F ra nk Wallace and Cora
starting a divorce from hts wofe .
·
POLLY .
DEAR POLLY -I use the
next month will be World War I veterans
Hostesses
Sayre were united in ma rWe ~ on' t have much money a nd Our house is quite small. He
DEAR POLLY - I'm best parts of a worn bath
doesn t pay room or board and has never contributed a penny the sixth grade pa r ents. A needing transportation are to
writing with regard to Alice's towel to niake a bag to hold
call Cha r les Swatzel or
to help out. Now he's brought in my 13-year-old cousin (his
· Pet Peeve about the many worn down and broken soap
Leonard J ewell.
daughrer) because she can't get along woth her mother .
men who do not offer their bits. This is great to use when
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES
• When we mei~tion ~l.S geltmg an a pariment, he changes the
seats to elderly women when laking a bath. You get a good
The preferential tea will be
WI LL honor Lady Verna
s ubject. But he s buymg a sma ll bed to put in my room so my
there are no more.seals on lather and know you are us· held at 2 p.m. on Sunday at
Zerigler,
high
pnestess
of
cousm ca n stay he re!
the bus. I think rt behooves ing up every bit of your soap.
the Pat Brogan home, it was
Thea Court, Colwnbus, at a
What's a nice way to hint t ha t se\'en living in a threeof us, regardless of our ·A.P.W.
any
announced
when t he Ohio Eta
meeting
to
be
held
a
t
din
ner
bedroom house rs at least two too many"· GOING BANANAS
sex, to offer our seals to the · DEAR A.P .W. -I also like Phi Chapter of Beta Sogma
the Meigs Inn, Tuesday a t
AT 15
elderly or any handicapped using such a bag made of Phi Sor ority met recently at
6 · 30 p.m. Reservatwns are to
G.B ..
person regardless of thetr nylon net as suggested by the Meigs Inn
Yourfamily has already tried " nice ways ... We'd say the onRUTLAND-Mrs. Marcia
GROUP II , Middleport sex. We all have tlie equal another reader. - POLLY.
Cheryl Cro\1'. socia l chatr·
ly way left is. "'Sorry, fella.you've got to go ?" . HELEN AND De mson was hostess for a re-Polly wiU send you one of man, also a nnounced the
Forst Umted Presbytenan right to show our lo\'e for our
SUE
ce nt meeting of the United Church, 7:30 Tuesday at the feUowmen.-HELEN
her signed thank-you
couples' Chnstmas party to
Methodist Women of the llome of Mrs. Mtldred Ka r r
DEAR POLLY · - When newspaper coupon clippers if
be held at the Spor tsman m
RAP :
Rutland Church.
with Mrs. Myron Miller, co- vases, cups or other deep con· she uses your favorit e Athens a nd the members'
In my school there are the "'burnouts " i booze a nd drugies)
Mrs. Ma rgaret Eqwa rds IJOsless . Mrs.David Cumings lainers have an odor that is Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
party to be held at the Metgs
and the · st raights." I'm neither, as I'm not smart enough to be presided at the meetmg dur·
to be devotiona l leader. Bible hard to get rid of I rinse them her. colwnn. Write POLLY'S Inn with a pizza pa rty. Ways
in the A-student straight crowd. The burnouts want me as a ing which time it was decided
study on the last half of with COLO water and then POINTERS in care of this and mean::; t.:hainnan Ka thy
1
fnend , bull don't go for .drugs. I want to make something of to give clo thes left fr om a relay the items on their side. newspaper.
'
Chapter 3.
Doidge , noted tha t the
myself, but 1 need friends. Which?· N. F .
·
ce nt rwrun age sale tu the
PAS'!' )IIATRONS OF
chapter will hil\'e a conces·
DEARN .:
Salvati on Army. Plans were Pomer oy Chapter 186, Order
..
..
........
~
sion
stand a l the horror
Where is it written that a "'stra ight " must be an A student ) also made to have some of the
of the Eastern Star, to enter·
movies
to be sponsored by the
Look. for average kids like yourself, who aren 't burnouts. They childre n's chairs repaired . A
ta i n pa st matron s uf
March
of Dimes at Metgs
are n t as eastly spotted, butthey'&gt;e there! HELEN AND SUE
meetmg to be held m Athens Evangeline Chapter , Mid·
Jumor
Higl1
School on Oct. 29.
on Oct. 25 was a nnounced dleport , 7:30 Tuesday at the
It
was
decided
to go to the
New
officers
were
electro
lur
s
t
ees
were
Ed
is
o
n
with sever a l of the members P omeroy Masomc Temple.
Sunday
afternoon
at
the
anHobstetter
and
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Mountaineer
Dmner
Theatre
planning to a ttend. It was
to
see
"We
Kill
Tony"
oh Nov.
meeting
of
the
Meigs
Gerald
Hilferty.
nual
SOUTHERN
LOCAL
noted tha t t he blessmg boxes
•
County
Historica l and
Two books were presented 5. The chapter agreed to work
Band
a re due at the November School . District
Pioneer Society held at t1Je during the 111eetmg. Mrs. with other chapters to raise
Boosters.wiD not meet tonight
meetmg.
Meigs Museum.
Hayes made the presentatron $500 for the Meigs Muse um.
Mrs Denison gave devo- beca use of schools being
The cultural report was a
El ected were c. E . of the day book from the
tions using an artlcle " Reach closed in the district.
questic
mna1re on ma rriage by
Blakeslee ,
president: Pomeroy Salt Co. on behalf of
WEDNESDAY
Out" a nd a poem , " Life's
Peggy South
Mrs.
Brogan.
Michael
Gerlach,
first
vice
Rodney
Downing
,
and
Mrs.
medtta lion was enhtlt'd " The Weav in g" , c lQs ing . with
MIDDLEPORT American
World Co mmunit~ Day to
and
Brenda
Haggy
were
prestdent;
Ketth
Ashley.
seAs
hl
e
y
presented
a
Legion, Feeney-Bennett Post
be bbse rved on :-&lt;ov 4 at the Wome n God Chooses" a nd prayer.
hostesses.
vice
president;
·
geneological
reference
book
co
nd
Heath United Me t hudtst she spoke of three women
The program by Mrs Hazel 128, will meet at 7:30 p.m .
Margaret Parker, secretary ; on behalf of Return Jonathan
chosen of God a nd told. a bout Htll was on the School of Mis- Wednesday at the post home.
Church \\as announced when
work.
One
\\·as
a
pri
n~~
their
Meigs Chapter of the
the Women's Mi ss ionary
SIOns which she a tte nded a t
MIDDLEPORT Literary ' and Dollie Hayes, treasurer .
Trustees electro were Mrs. Daug hters of the Amencan
Soctet) met Thursday ni ght ctpal of a hig h school in l ndta , Ohio Wesleyan, !Jelawar.e. Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m . at
Elizabeth Jordan, Mrs . Revolution.
at t he First Baptist Chu rch, another a woman in Burma She said that the ma in · topic the home of Mrs. Sibley
who
ta
ught
the
scriptures,
Leona Hensley Ms . Norma
A change in membership 1\.T
1\.T
Pomeroy.
was "'God's Misston rn Our Slack.
Newland, Mrs . Thelma dues was approved at the 1 't
1
Mrs . Phvllos Sk tnner and another a women in the Church." She brought some
Campbell , Mrs . Pauline meeting with the adull dues
Mrs. Paul Pierce, Randy
THURSDAY
pres ided a t· the meeung Phi lllptnes. She closed wrth a sewing kits of chrldren's
Atkins, Charles Cornell, Mr. going to $5, the family rate to and Scott, of Mason were
an d s e ve ral
EPISCOPAL Church
whi ch opened by smging the prayer by Marjorie Holmes c lothi ng
memoers look them home to Women at the home of Mrs. and Mrs. Charles Hayes, Mr . . $10, and those Wlder 18, $1. C. weekend visitors of Geneva
new theme song, " Mine are en tolled " Who Am I, God."
and Mrs. Fred Goeglein, Mr. E. Blakeslee talked on ac· Shwnate and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Maria Foster and com plete. Cards were signed . Phillip Kelly' Thursday with
the Hungry.'' rt was announced that the scholarship fund Mrs. Skinner were hostesses. for John Colwell and Beatrice a 12 : 30 p.m . luncheon . and Mrs. Michael Gerlach, complr s hmenls of the Larry Johnson , Gina, Tahnee
wall be taken m Novembe'r. Oth ers attending were Mrs, Rineha rt, both . hospitalized. Program by Mrs. Theima Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smart, museum development dunng and Brady.
Dill.
Mr. and Mrs. Gayle Price, the past year . He mtroduced Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shumate
For the Baptost Women's Day Ma rg are tl a Wtse , Mrs. Prayer closed tile meetmg
Mr.
and Mrs. Dewton Horton, Mrs. Agnes Hill who )!a$_, . ~nd sons of jlantytown were
of Prayer , Mrs. Ha riell Ster· Margaret Ba iley , Mrs. Betty a nd r efreshments we re servMr.andMrs. CariHo~ky,Mr. volunteered
to
do weekend \'isitors of Mrs.
rett will have the program. Wries, and Mrs. Ellen Couch.
ed by the hostess.
and Mrs. Leland Parker, Mr. geneological reserreh for a Geneva Shumate and other
There will be a polluck dmner
and Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, fee as requesred, wtth a por· relallves.
lh con1unct1on w(th lhe obserNOW YOU KNOW
Mr. and Mrs. Charley
\·a m:e.
After 64 horses drew his Mr. and Mrs. Raymond !ton of the fee to be donated to
Oliver,
Mr.
and
Mrs.'Patrick
the
Museum.
.Smith,
Kail Knapp visited
Mrs. Ca ryl Cook had the
bejewelled hearse 1,000 miles
NorMrs.
Parker
talked
about
Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs.
Lochary,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Ga
llra
County
Sa
lon
612,
Gallipolis.
from Babylon to Alexandria,
prog ram using as her topiC,
Will,
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Don
the
library
at
the
museum
Harley
Smith,
Kanailga, 0.
man
E
tght
and
F
orty,
met
a
t
the
The
cha
pea
u
welcomed
Alexander the Great was
" Women of God, Yes." Her
Kevin
the
home of Mrs. Thomas Ruth, Mrs. Goldie Roush, a bsent j ur given the most expensi\'e Adleta, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest and noted that it is nearly
Athens Thursda y night wrth . some tome due to illness. funeral in history, at a cost of Wingett, Mrs. Agnes Hill, completed and ready for use
SON BORN
Mrs Grace Pratt, pet1le Refreshments were served.
Mrs. Seth Nicholson, Mrs. by the public . . The financial
$600-million ,
:'.Ir a nd Mrs. J a mes 'chapea u, prestd ing.
George Morris, Mrs. June report was gl\'en by Mrs.
Wildermuth. 8938 La kefield
Conva lescent ca rds were
Ashley , Mr. and Mrs. Keith Dollie Hayes. Gerla c h
Cou rt, Galloway, are announ- signed for Mrs. Faye Wilder·
Ashley, Mrs. Shirley Huston, reported on exhibits of the
cing the btrlh of llleir firs t muth and Mrs. Jennie Wells.
Mrs. Theodore Reed, Jr., A. past year. He also spoke on
child, a son, Ryan Andrew. A gift wa s presented to Mrs.
R Knight, Wesl~ Buehl, Mrs. Htlferty's role in the ex·
The seveu pound, 12 ounce in· Dorothy Hecker from the
Mrs. Paul Eich, Mrs. Wanda hibrts, and menllont'd the
Ea s te rn Local Sc hool
fan t w e~s born on Su nday, Oct. Sa ion whose home was
Room mothers not earlier Eblin, Mrs. R. R Cutler, Mrs. purchase of the locator as the
16 at the Madtson County r ece ntly destroyed by fire. District Superintendent John listed are Ann Collins, third
Chester Erwin, the Rev. most outstanding a c ·
Hos pttal In London. Grand· Mrs. Hecker also received a Ret bel talked on the and frfth grades, Marj orie William Middleswarth, Mrs. comp!Ishnlenl of the past
operating le\'y to be voted on Wolfe, third grade, and Anna
parents a re Mrs . Hazel gift from Mrs. Rut h
Mane B1chman
Mrs year. Slides on Coloma]
Philltps, Wellston, for merl y
The bulletm was read next month 'during the Oc· Rice, first and thzrd grades. Margaret Butche;, Mrs: W111ia~sburg were shown
of Pomeroy. and Mr. and regarding the school of in- Iober meeting of the Tuppers 1t was decided to wait Wltil
Ruby Halliday, Mrs. Stella followmg the meeting and
:-trs. Milla rd Wildermuth, struction to be held at Colum· Pla ms Sc hool Boosters.
the November meeting . t o Grueser. Named honorary refreshnlents were served
Keith Weber, president, ex· discuss shcool projects. The
\ 1td&lt;UeporL Mrs. Wildermuth bus on Oct. 15. MISs Erma
with Mrs. C. E . Blakeslee in
U,nded
thanks to the commll· sixth grade room mothers
IS
the forme r J ea nette Sm ith, pouvior member, will
charge of that.
Plullips. The gra ndparents a tte nd . Th e Nove m be r tees and parents who helped served refreshments.
Devotions to open the
have return ed home a fter meeting will be held at the make the school carnival a
ordinary financial results, we • meeting were given by Nor·
::;pe ndmg tleveral days with home of Mrs. Mabel Brown, success. The second grade,
are glad to see earnings rna Lee who used Psalm 85
the fa moly.
ha vmg the gr.ea test percen· Cincinnati Bell
moving toward levels more in and talked on the debt to the
tage of parents a ttending,
with
investor past for religwus and other
.line
won
the ba nner and a cash earnings hiked
expectations," R. T. Dugan, freedoms. A moment of silent
,.
'
.
award.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cin- Cincinnati Bell president, prayer was held for departed
lt was decoded to have a cinnati Bell has released said Monday.
members.
s pecial meeting on Oct. 24 at earning figures for the third
7;30 at Whrch time the can- quarter of this year,
dictates fo r the E astern Local announcing earning s of $1.34
- '
School . Boa rd of Education . per common share.
~rll be mv oted to attend. They
Total operating revenues_,
a re J1m Caldwell , Ross for the third quarter were
"The Insurance Store"
Cleland , Tom Mankin, Bob $64 .2 million , 27 perc~nt
Complete
Da vrs, Ma x Ei c hin ger , higher than the sam~ period a
Insurance
Service
Sale starts at 8 P.M.
Dorse l Larkins, Daryl Well, year ago ,
" After
experiencing
Chfford Longin etle and
Ha
rold
North.
several
years
of quite
Calves will be receiVed after 3:00 P.M. on

•

'

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tl!esday, Oct. 18,1977

89"

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DISHWASHER SOAP

SAlE

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VICKS VAPORUB .............. ',::

MED. EGGS ..........
~~~~.49
,

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CHEEZ WHIZ ................. .':.~·

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CAR D IN AL

6-!2 oz. . , , ,
CANS

CARDINAL CAKE DONUTS ..
FRUIT DRINKS .. .. . g~:::: 79'
ALL FLA VO RS

•

H U NTS

S W UT MI LK O R 8 UTT EIIM /llt

TOMATO SAUCE :'

HOMEMAID BISCUITS 2 :,::. 29'

CAR DINA L

SLICED SWISS .................... ~;:

COLBY CHEESE

,RC or DIET RITE

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BLUE BONNET

44;

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MARIIIIIE
kl3(!K Feed&amp; ===========.
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Carton

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99' '""'"' 'u'
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LEMON KRUNCH PIE ...':.:· 89' . ORANU JUICE ' ....

AP"pi,"I' PfE .·........... ......':.;•

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CHICKEN
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BALLOT LANGUAGE EXPLANATION, ARGUMENTS, AND
RESOLUTION FOR AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 8 1977

ems to be

By GENE BERNHARD'l

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
'
3

vcs I eld b}
the rc ta l
g .a s til

PROPOSED CONSTITUTI ON ~L AMEND~IEN1

og

To amend A l c e \III of he C nst ut on of 0
b
dopl g Sec on H
TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE TO LEND ITS AID AND CREDIT
TO INDIVIDUALS ASSOCIATIONS COMPANIES OR COR
PORA TIONS TO BORROW MONEY AND ISSUE BONDS OR
NOTES TO PROVIDE FOR HOUSING' AND THE REHABILITA
TION OF HOUSING AND TO MAKE DIRECT LOANS FOR LOW
AND MODERATE INCOME HOUSING
2 TO AUTHORIZE MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS AND COUNTIES
IN THE ABSENCE OF LAWS PASSED BY THE GENERAL AS
SEMBLY TO THE CONTRARY TO I:O THE SAME AS PARA
~'"RAPH I ABOVE
3 TO VALIDATE AND RATIFY THE BOND AUTHORITY OF SUB
STITUTE HOUSE BILL NO 870 OF THE !lOTH GENERAL AS
SEMBLY
(P oposed b) Resol t on of tl e Ge era! Assen bl) of 0 o)
A n 3 Jot t;., affi
at c o e s ccessa ) for passage

I D F na Pot I E Gt In or C
n 0 Nc II II o as A Van Meter

st

FULL TEXT OF THE RESOLUTION PROPOSING
THE AMENDMENT
SSVI: :II

A
u • 0

I lES

I

SI L\LL THE PROPOSED ,&gt;.MEI'&gt; DMEN1
BE !\DOPlED
NO

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No 3
The Canst tu on p esen l) p o des ha the c ed l of the sate canna
be gnen or loaned except n a li ted n anner Th s an endment 'oul d
create add anal au hor t) fo sta e
un c pal a d county govern ents
to loan or g e erect t as folio &gt;
1 lly author z ng the s ate to len
s a J a d c ed t to nd vtduals

UN TED STATES OF AMERICA

STA.TE OF OHJO

OFF CE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE

assoc at ons compames or co po at ons to borrow money and ssue
bonds or noes to prov de fo ho s ng and he ehab 1 tatton of hou s
ng and to make d eel loa s for lo v and n oderate mcome hous ng
2 B) au ho IZ ng mun c pal corpo at ons and count es n the absence
of la vs pas ed by t1 e General Assembl) o the con\ at) to do the
same as paragraph I above
3 B) val dat ng and rat fy ng the bond au tho ty of Subs\ttute House
B 11 No 8 0 of he !lOth Gene al Assembl)
Moneys rrused by axat on cannot be obi gated or pledged fo the pay
ment of bonds o o her obl gat ons ssued by I e state or to secure the
IllY ng or loa rung of the states c edt Ho e e the General Assemb l)
could appropr ate mane) s nto a reser e lund to be used to ret re the bonds
or to secure the s ate s ob i gat ons 1n h s espec;: Bonds vh ch the state
ssues vou d ha e to be e enue bonds or supported by a spec al reserve
fund o vh ch the state had appropr a ted mone) smce moneys a sed by
taxat on cannot be obi gated or pledged fo h e pa) menl of such bonds or
other obi gattons
Mun c pal corporal ons and count es n the absence of laws to the con
Ira ) can borrow money ssue bonds or n o es and g ve and lend thetr
credit to prov de f or hous ng and hous ng 1 ehab I t at on These govern
menta ent t es can also make d rec loans for low and moderate ncome
housmg to the extent ha such loans do n ot contra ene la vs enacted by
the General Assembl)
Under ex st ng la v mun c pal corpo a ons and metropol tan housmg
authont es a e author zed to canst uct and opera e publ c hous ng fac1l tles
A muruc pal corporat on under ts nhe ent 1 orne rule powers has author
tty to rna nta n pub! c hous n g Under the authonty of the proposed
amendment (new Sect on 14) the mun c pal corporauon or any county
would be aut hot zed to bo ro v mane) and ssue general obligatton bonds
or notes and gtve or lend s cred t to nd v duals corporahons or assoc a
tons to prov de fo pub! c hous ng o fo he rehab h at on of hous ng The
borrow ng of money or lend ng of a d or erect t by a mumc pal corporal on
or county vould not be subJeCt to the I m tat ons present n Secltons 6 or
11 of A ttcle XVlii of he Cons tu on Ho vever they would be subJect
to the I m at ons upon ndebtedness wh ch are other v se pro ded by law
and spec fically o the curren t debt I m tat ons on mumctpa corpora wns
and count es found n Chapter 133 of the Oh10 Rev sed Code,~
The proposed amendment prov des that he lend ng of a d or cred t ts not
subject to the 1 m tat ons o o her sec ons of Art cle Vlii or of Sect ons 6
and 11 of Art cle XII of the Ohto Const tul on
Amended Subs ute House B II No 870 enacted n 1974 by the !lOth
General Assembly s validated bv the amendment That b ll authonzed
the Oh o Hous n g Development Au hor t ;, to sel tax free bonds and notes
to p o de financ al a d to pr vale pe sons and assoc atwns for the rehab 1
tat on and canst uct on of hous ng for lo v and moderate ncome persons
The Supreme Cour held n 1976 that the ssuance of revenue bonds by the
Oh o Hous ng Deve opment Author ty vas not p oper under the Constttu
t on and h at the enac men\ of Amended Subst tute House Btll No 870 dtd
ot qualtfy as a val d exerc se of eg s at ve po ver Consequently the
do ton of new Sect on 14 vo d e m nate the Cons\ tuttonal defects n
nded Subs\ tute House B I No 870 and al date that !974 enactment
b) ne Genera Assembl y

•

-

TED W BROWN

Seeeoyo!Sae

By EILEEN MCNAMARA

HOW WILL IT WORK?
Tax f ee bonds fo hous ng cou ld be sod at ates 2 t o 4
bond s offe red at regu ar nlerest rates
Over the course of a 30 )Oar $45 000 m ortgage a 4 % reduct on on nter
est amounts to $34 500 o a $96 savmgs each month
Th e proJects would be self support ng com ng from the sale of or rent
from he hou s ng Th rly nne sta tes already run such programs
The A r Qu al y and Water De elopment Au hor t es have operated
s m lar p og ram s n Oh o for years at no cost to the taxpayer
CONCLUSION
Hous ng p ob ems are not I m ted o he poo The average
ne home s $48 000 and r s ng ap dl;, Th s h eatens to vreck
and old al ke the Arne can D earn of own ng a home
OHIO NEEDS ISSUE 31
he Amen !men\

Edwa d F Fetghan Kenneth R Cox
M ke St nz ano Oakle) C Col ns

ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Th s Cons\ ut onal proposal would create a Jumbo s ta te agency wtth
authority to •el unl m ted m 11 ons of dolla s of revenue bonds and then
make dtrec
ans to nd v d als even though cxr e ence n other stat es
has been d sas trous lo some s m Ia prog ams
The approp ate v. a y to eal zc our hous ng needs ts to vork through
tradt\tonal lenders not an a he Ia) er of government bureaucracy wh ch
first needs to be put mto p ace a nd hen v II I ave to develop en exper s
to match ts respons b 1 l es
Thts proposed amehdn en to o u
m ned mtll ons of dol ars of bonds
huge state agency to m ke lo ns d ectl y
panes and assoc al!ons Those favo cd b

WASHINGTON (UP!)
The
Food
and Drug
Admtmstrat on would be
blocked from ordermg a ban
oo saccharm for at least \8
months under House and
Senate bills that need only
agreement on labehng
requirements b&amp;rore flnal
act ton
The House approved ts
verSion Monday on a 370.23
vote The Senate voted for the
Ilknonth delay last month
The effect would be that for
18 months after Prestdent
Carter stgns the fmal
Congresstonal verSion the
FDA could not ban use of the
art fictal sweetener despite
tests showing t ca used
bladder cancer m anunals
An FDA spokesman smd no
date has been set for the
order nor has tt made a final
dec Ston to order the ban
It !IOhc ted comments ontts
proposed ban tn Apr I
extended the time ltmtt to
June and wtth a masstve
outpow-mg of letters from
opponents put off the
oomment filing deadline until
Nov I
The only remaUlUlg tsSue
for Congress ts the Senate
prclVIston to reqwre warnmg
labels on products usmg
saccharm The exact wording
would be drafted by the
Department of Health
EducaUon and Welfare
The House verSion would
only reqwre nottces posted at
retail outlets warmng that the
product contamed sacchartn
which tests showed c,aused
cancer m arumals
It ts estunated that 74 per
cent of the saccharm used tn
the Uruted States s m diet
soft drmks another 14 per
cent m dietettc foods and 12
per cent tn tabletop

sweeteners
Rep ~ames Martm R
NC
satd 10 mtll on
Amertcans wtth d abetes
another 10 million suffermg

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATION, ARGUMENTS AND
RESOLUTION FOR AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 8 1977

from hypertenSion 4 million
wtth heart trouble and an
add !tonal • milUon f ghtmg
obestty
depend
on
sacchartn
Rep Paul Rogers D-Fia
chatrman of the House Com
merce Health subcomnuttee
which drafted the bill sa d
his panel was not convmced
from ava !able testtng that
saccharm was dangorous to
health and he satd the bill
would order further testmg
dw-mg the ftrsl year of the Illmonth ban
Rep Tim Lee Carter R
Ky semor GOP member of
Rogers panel arxl a medtcal
doctor satd there tS no

concluslve

ev1dence

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
4

to

support bannmg saccharin
Rep Andrew Magutre DN J crt! c!Zlng the bill satd

we

are

st ckmg

our
2.

collective head m the sand
by gnormg test results and
suggested labels readmg
Sacchann does not cause
cancer Ul the opm oo of yowcongressn an desptte
sctent ftc evidence that tl
does
Rep Samuel DeVtne R
Oh o satd 'not long ago we
had
a
scare
about
cranberrtes Then t was
cyclamates and JUSt th s
weekend someone satd
vegetables m ght cause

3
'

5

cancer
My God are we gomg to
ban vegetables because they

6

nught cause cancer?

I

j

BOSTON (UP!) - Same
wore neatly pressed three
p ece su ts Others were
unshaven and looked as tf
they had JUst been rudely
awakened
They
were
respectable pol cemen
f remen
lawyers
and
busmessmen
All were arrested Monday
m what has been descr bed as
the largest urban ar!IOn for
prof t rmg ever uncovered m
the Umted States - a rmg
that a!legedl) caused the
deaths of three mnocent
people between 1973 and 1976
More than 100 state pollee
and other mvesttgators
spread out through the
Greater Boston area tn the
early mornmg hours and
began arrestmg 33 suspects
tndtcted last week by a
Suffolk County grand JUry
Four of those md cted face
murder charges
Massachusetts
Attorney
General Francts X Bellott
called the mdtctments a
first maJor step tn stampmg
out arson rmgs but satd
there ts much more that has
to be done
At least 21 persons were m
custody by late Monday A
dozen other suspects were
st 11 at large Pa u1 Ze gler of
Barnstead N H and Kevm
Doherty of Boston - each
charged w th one count of
murder -were among those
bemg sought
A total of 121 md ctments
were handed up wtlh charges
rangmg from murder to
arson The charges mclude
burnmg
to
defraud
subm ttlng
fraudulent
msurance clauns consp racy
and bnbery
The mvest gat on lasted
nearly f ve months and dealt
Wllh 35 Boston area ftres that
caused more than $6 milhon
tn property damage Off ctals
satd the probe was atded by
an allege&lt;\ arsomst who
turned state s eVIdence
Bellottt termed t the
largest arson r ng ever
uncovered m the Umted
,;~~~f~~and saJd the case
corrup\ton wtthtn
the state hre marshal s
off ce the Boston Arson
Squad and the suburban
Chelsea Fire Department
The magnitude of the
case as t developed shocked
us because of the number of
respectable people
nvolved
satd asststant
state Attorney General
Stephen Del nsky
wh o
headed the probe
There have been three
deaths I nked
o th s
nvesttgat n
Del nsky
satd fhat s not wh teo&lt;: I ar

crune
three
fatal ties
The
occurred
n
Boston s
fashtonable Back Bay area
Among the vtctuns was a
young baby-s tter who dted
when an apartment hre
escape collapsed A Pulitzer
prtze W\llllUJg photograph of
that tragedy was transm \ted

worldwtde
The obnmuouSpart of the
case was the dtscovery of
corruption
Delmsky satd
Nmeteen of the suspects
pleaded mnocent at arrmgn
ments m Suffolk Supertor
Court and IS were released on
personal recogmzance and
thetr cases contmued until

early November
Among those arrested were
Leo Wetsentaner rettred
captmn of the Boston Fire
Department Arson Squad
and James DeFur a of
Revere Mass a former
State Pol ce trooper asstgned
to the state ftre marshal s
off tee

HOMECOMING SLATED
The annual homecommg of
the Morntng Star Un ted
Methodist Church will be held
Sunda) beg nn ng with
worshtp servtce at 9 30 am
followed by Sunday school at
10 30 There w II be a basket
dinner at 12 I~ p m and an
afternoon program at I 30
pm

It would be an understate
ment to say arson has
reached epldemtc stages not
only Ul metropol tan Boston
but tn other urban areas m
the commonwealth and
throughout the country
Bellottt sa d 'ThiS tS a major
first step but there ts much
more that has to be done

Soviets want reduced stockpiles
UNITED NATIONS (UP!)
The SaVIet Uruon says once
a new agreement lunttmg the
superpower arms race ts
reached l will be ready to
begm
negotiahons
on
reducmg extstmg stockptles
of nuclear weapons
SaYJel U N Ambassador
Oleg Troyanovsky sa d
Monday there has been
apprec able progress
m
recent
talks
between
Pre&amp;dent Carter and Savtet
Fore gn Mlmster Andre
Gromyko toward a new
Strategtc Arms Urn tat 9n
agreement (SALT)
The SaYiet Umon favors
the
earl est
posstble
successful oompletton of the
(SALT) talks he told the
U N General Assembly s
Pol ttcal Commtttee
It ts
prepared then to go even

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Harry E Jol)nson Dolores
M Johnson to John W An
derson Ga 1 A Anderson
I 20 acres Chester
Mtldred Batley Gdn to
James Robert Betz Parcels
Rutland Salem
James R Betz to Ronald
Shepard Sh rley Shepard 56
acres Rutland
Margte Wolfe Duane Wolfe
to V rgtl M D 11 Pamela J
Dtll 2 46 acres Sutton
Marcella S M tchell Pat
E Mttchell to W nfred Lee
Dent Evelyn Mae Dent
Lots 7-8 Claw Mar Rutland
&lt;;larence
Andrews
Margaret M Andrew&lt; to
Jenmngs B Wayland Mary
AI ce Wayland Lots 120 121
C W Dabney s Add
Po

croy

further and start negot attons
on the reductton of the
eXJstmg strategtc anns
Troyanovsky did not elabo
rate on Savtet hopes for
reduc ng the spread of
nuclear weapons
But
referrtng to U S proposals to
develop a neutron bomb he
It also appears
added
useful to us to agree on

remmctation on a reciprocal
bas s of the development of
new even more destruct ve
systems of weapons of mass
annihilatton
The RuSSJan s appearance
emphastzed new U N arms
reports that showed the two
superpowers have 12 000
strategtc thermonuclear

warheads ready to be
released at the push of a
button Together they have
far more than a million tunes
as much destrucUve force as
the atom
bomb that
destroyed Hiroshuna
Hopes for an early SALT
accord were bolstered m
Moscow by a weekend report
m the Sovtet Commumst
party newspaper Pravda that
declared the two nations are
on the road leading to an
agreement
But Troyanovsky warned
the threat of nuclear war

remams real
He asked support for the
Sov ets
Declarallon on
Deepenmg and Consohdatton

of International Detente
mtended
as a ktnd of
compass to gutde nattons
m the stormy sea of current
mterna\tonal pohttcs
Troyanovsky srud the need
for world peace demands
more trust and greater
cooperatton between nahons
mclud ng
non
tnterference m the mternal
alfatrs of other states
In a Jab at Carter s mterna
tonal human rtghts pohcy he
satd 'There are still those
who JUst love to lecture other
people on how to settle thetr
mternal affatrs and at times
even
to intrude
un
ceremomously m the life of
other states

Concorde"will begin
landing in NY Wednesday
By JOHN PRYOR
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
needle nosed Concorde
supersomc ]etlmer Wlll begm
flymg into New York
Wednesday alter nearly two
years of court battles and
b tter publtc demonstrahons
auned at keepmg 11 out
An Air France offtc al sa d
the first of the Parts-based
Concordes wtllleave Charles
de Gaulle atrport at 11 a m
local time Wednesday
land ng
at
Kennedy
lnternattonal Airport at 8 30
a m The retw-~ flight will
leave Kennedy at 10 30 a m
and arrtve m Parts at 8 p.m
Air France and Brttlsh
Airways the operators of the
SST satd the start of
commerctal servtce to New
York from Pans and London
was set to begtn Nov 22
The non-passenger provtng
fl ghts for the I 351J.mph Jet
were made posstble by the
Supreme Court wh ch on
Monday ltfted the temporary
ban tmposed Oct 7 by Justice
Thurgood Marshall at the
request of the Port Authonty

of New York and New Jersey
the airport s operator
The Port Authortty wanted
the ban tt unposed m March
1976 to be matntamed unhl
the Supreme Court dectdes tts
appeal from a lower court
order authortzmg the SST
operatto~

In Par s French Transport
Minister Marcel Cavaille satd
the Supreme Court s actton
confonns to justtce and to
good sense It wtll pertmt us
to show a correct optuntsm
concernmg the obstacles that
rematn for us to hurdle so
that
the
temporary
authonzat on whtch s ow-s
today
can
become
defmtttve
In
London
Gordon
Davtdson head of Brthsh
Airways Concorde project
smd New Yorkers must be
shown Concorde ts not the
terrtble beast they think tt
IS

But community groups and
local pollt c ans
representmg about 500 000
res dents of the mrport area
responded angrily to the high
court dects!On
Qi

PROPOSED CONSTl T U'llONAL ~MENDMENf
To adopt Sect on 1 of Art clc Vlll and epeal Sectwns
1 2 2b 2c 2d 2e 2! 2g 2h 3 7 9 and 10 of
Art cle Vl!I and Sect on ti of Art cle XII of the
Consl!tutton of Oh o
TO REPEAL THE GENERAL STATE CONSTITUTIONAL DEBT
LIMIT OF $750 000 AND REPLACE IT WITH AUTHORITY TO IN
CUR DEBT FOR CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS BY A TWO THIRDS
MAJORITY VOTE OF EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEM
BLY WITHIN SPECIFIED LIMITATIONS DIRECTLY RELATED
TO STATE REVENUES
TO PERMIT THE STATE TO CONTRACT DEBT WITHOUT LIM!
TATION ON AMOUNT OR PURPOSE IN ADDITION TO THE
AUTHORITY SPECIFIED ABOVE IF THAT DEBT IS SUBMITTED
TO A VOTE OF THE ELECTORS BY A THREE FIFTHS MAJOR
ITY VOTE OF EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
AND APPROVED BY A MAJORITY OF THE ELECTORS VOTING
ON THE QUESTION
TO REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO RETIRE Af LEAST
' % OF THE STATES INDEBTEDNESS EACH YEAR
TO PERMIT THE STATE TO BORROW FUNDS TO MEET A CUR
RENT YEARS APPROPRIATIONS IF ANY SUCH LOAN IS RE
PAID OUT OF THAT YEARS REVENUES
TO REPEAL PART OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL REOUIREMEN1S
RELATING TO A SINKING FUND AND TO REQUIRE THAT THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY PROVIDE FOR THE REPAYMENT OF
STATE DEBT
TO ENUMERATE PURPOSES AND AMOUNTS FOR WHICH THE
FIRST S6t0 MILLION OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT DEBT
WOULD HAVE TO BE APPROPRIA1ED
(Proposed by Resolutwn of the General Assembly of Oh10)
A maJO tty aff rmal ve vote ts necessruy fo passage

I

The restdents who have
staged demonstrattons that
stowed automobile tralftc at
Kennedy to dramattze thetr
protest clatm the plane s
notse and vtbrahon levels
would make hie mtolerable
and promtsed to conlillue
demonstratmg
Gov Hugh Carey who IS
opposed to the SST and Port
Authortty Cha rman Alan
Sagner w-ged restr8Ult in the
demonstrations They called
on opponents to observe 1he
rule of law and not seek to
close down Kennedy Airport
The Concorde completed 8
IS-month test pertod at Dulles
Airport outs de Washmgton
m September Tests showed
the SST was as nosy as
conventtonal Jets on landing
but lwtee as loud on takeoff
Early thts month the
Carter
admtntstratton
proposed that Concordes be
allowed to fly mto as many as
13 U S ctt es Many of these
ctttes such as Boston are
strongly opposed to the SST
and some have already
passed notse rules they
beheve w II bar the SST

YES

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENl
BE ADOPTED

NO

Largest urban arson ring uncovered

ARGUMENTS FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Oh o s c t zens a e ent !led t o tve n decent hous ng Yet wt\h sky
rocket ng nterest ales fewe vork ng people can afford to bu; the r own
h omes or to rent safe sound apartments Fewer et ed persons and
others on fixed ncomes can afford to rna nta n adequate hous ng
Issue 3 wtll re tal ze the hous ng ndust y n Oh o It should provtde
many of the 100 000 un ts needed ave the next few years by freemg up
home cons rue \ on money at educed nterest a es More people v 1 be
able to afford the r own homes
It wtll help red uc e bl ght p ese v ng ne ghbo rhoods bela e the;, can
become slums
It w 11 encourage reha b 1 at on of ex st ng hous ng p omotmg more
attract ve ne g hborhoods and bette use of energy
It wt 1 enable Oh o o use s en\ e sha e of federal hous ng dollars
It w 11 complement hous ng programs p o ded through convent anal
loans lo ver ng nterest rates for all
And t v 11 create jobs and put tho sa nd s of people to work

Comm ttee fo

Bills could block
..
ban for 18 months

)

us von

OF
\ !WO Il ii
fst
BO II IOU :&gt;Jo:S
J&gt;
ds u be ssucd and
2 PHINCIP I
IN ANY ONE YEAH EXCEED
on II u t l
e ues f
c 1 ( ed ng t" o
6
o l tl c
yea s
_ .3 lhc DOLLAH A MOUN I 0 I ONDS ISSUED n a ; f sea l ~a
o £ the a c s cvcnues fo th~
CANNO l EXCICI!:D H
f h
p cccd !: vu
I
m: HEP\ID EVERY F !SCAI
ft
4 Al LEi\Sl 4
YEAH
J he adop t n o l I c a en
t o I
c I o v g bot o v ng
I PREVEN I EXCESSIVE llORHOIVING
vt I out u d c del )
2 EXPAND I HJ&lt;: S A r1 S ABIL I Y fO BOBROW n t mo s of r s ng
evenues and o
I cc t n t m s I de:c n ng even ucs
3 PREVENT f HE CLU 11ER!NG Ul 0 1 fHE CONS llfUriON w th
unncccssa y n1.1nc a l ti~la I
4 REDUCE lltE NUMBER AND EXPENSE OF SIA fEWIDE ELEC
li ONS on rna tc s of debt
a UPON APPR OVA m !HE ELECTORATE pe m t long te n bor
row ng ot ts de he d bt I m t
fo purposes o he
ha n cap tal
1m pro ements o r tho e erne gency s tuat ans wf e e such au thoTJty
presently ex sts
6 PROVIDE OHIO Wl!H A SAVJNGS IN INTEREST COSTS by
efl nanc ng some of ts revenue I ond w th ge ne a obl gat10n bonds
7 INCREASE iHE ~!:;CAL FLEXI13JLTY OF IHE S1AIE by per
mttt ng tl to bon ow o meet app opr at ons wh le requ r ng that all
mo ey bo owed f o th s p pose s epa d v th
the fi seal year
n wh h t s bot o ved
Comm ttee o I c Am nd ent Mate s Robe to Anthon) J
Ccl b czze Jr and Geo ge T ablack

ARGUMENTS FOR THE PROPOSEO AMENDMENT
This Consbtutlonal Amendment would REPEAL THE $750 000 DEBT
LIMIT ESTABLISHED IN 1851 and replace t vtlh a flextble debt t cd
dtrectly to the states revenues
The bt part san Ohto Consl!tut on a! Rev s on Conn tss on recommended
thts Amendment mdtcatmg that a flex ble debt I m l respons ve to the
states abtltty to repay ts the best solut on fo mode n z ng the mcchan sm
by whtch Oh o ncurs debt for cap t al mprovement pu poses
Recogmz ng the preference of the people of Oh o for Cons\ tuttonal
control m fiscal matters thts amendment co r t a s the follow ng c

"

TED W BROWN
Se eary o Sate
Sa

ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Senate Jomt Resolut10n '11'3 v 11 set a dangerous p ecedent that cou ld
lead Oh o dow a 1 oad laden v th red nk and nc eased taxes
The amendment would erase a I xed debt 1 mtt that has been part of our
Constttut on smce 1851 It p a poses to 1 eplace I e cu enl 1 m t w th a
flextble debt that would be allowed to soa w th flu tuatmg 1 mttat ons ,.
as lawmaket s respond to publ c p essure for more expens ve serVlces
Leg slators m ndfu of pubhc res stance to new taxes have been bound
by the restr ct ve debt hmtt to the revenue tl ey ou d rase n a btenn al
budget penod Senate J o n Resolut on #3 elm nates th s p ov s on and
nstead tu ns leg sla tots loose v th ou pocketbooks
Not only w I ve I ave he tssua nce o! more bonds for cap t a l tmprove
ments around the state but th s p oposed amend me n allows unl m ted
short te m bo row ng to pay s a e opera\ ng expenses v thm a fiscal
) ear Shott \et m bo ow ng aga nst cu rent deflc ts may be a conven ent
but ce tamly a m sgutd ed vay to !o estall ncreased taxes o reduct ons
m services
The federal gove nmen s
a constant s l uggle to con\ ol a n expand ng
nat anal debt lt has gro vn to t1 e po nt vhere n e est payments on the
$700 btlhon debt no v account for he th rd Ia gest expend lure of the
federal government after nat onal defense and human resources The
New York Ctly debacle has show n us how f ag le a erect t rat ng ts when
tl e oudget can l be balanced Oh o s cur ntl) f scally sound and must
protect herself from iall ng nto such at ap
Proponents of the btll say per entage I m ts w 11 be n effec t and Oh o
through th s la v w 1 ne e fall rret eveab ly nto debt But extstmg Ia v
h3$ an absolute li m that nsUJ es the sta tes l seal n eg ty Current Ia v
nsures the pub! c l at leg slato s a e ot granted b ank c ed t cards to
nc r debts
A nc dmenl M Ben Gaeth F ed B Hadley
Comm ttee Aga nst
Alan E N orr s Tl om as A
Van Mete

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No '
Constttuttonal provtstons cu11enUy 1n effect proh b t ll o stale ftom bor
rowlfig more than $750 000 A number of excepttons to lh s 1 m tat on a e
now m the Cons\t\ul!on
This proposed ConstJtutwnal amendme t provtdes for rev sed hm ttat ons
upon state mdeb cd ess fhe proposed amendment au hor zes the Gene a I
Assembly by two-thtrds concurrence of each house to cunlt act debt 101
cap1tal tmprovements by the state or to p O\ tde funds to local govern
mental entities lor such purposes w th n the I mt at uns that payments
on the states total outstand ng debt shall not exceed 6
of the states
annual revenues and debt contracted many f seal year shall not exceed Bl'v
of the total reven\le that ts sub~ect to he Gene al Assembly s apptop a
ttons
The General Assembly ts required to p ov de lor the ret ement of at
least 4'lo of the states outstandmg mdebtedness each year and prov1de the
method procedures and appropnat10ns for ncurr ng ev denc ng refund
!fig and retmng of state debts
The lill'endment proVIdes add t anal authonty for general obligatton m
debtedness lor capttal tmprovement or other purposes whtch may be con
tracted by 8 three-fifths maJOllty concur ence of each house of the
General Assembly if 11 ts further approved by the vote s Indebtedness
mcurred m this manner would not be subject to lim lattons as to s ze or
purpose or be mcluded m the requ rement to rel!re at least 4% of the
pr nctpal debt each fiscal year
The amendment prov des that the state may contract debt dunng any
fiscal year to meet appropnattons of the General Assembly for such fiscal
year if such debt ts repatd pnor to the end of the fiscal year from state
revenues other than borrowed funds
If the General Assembly should fa I to provtde the equtred approp ta
lions the Treasurer of State shall set as de moneys !tom the General
Revenue Fund to proVIde for the full and l n ely payment of p net pal
and nterest on all state debts
The Treasurer of State would be requ red to determ ne and certtfy the
annual prmctpal and nterest payments on oulstand ng debts the annual
revenues that serve as the bas s for detet m n ng the debt ltmttattons and
any other financ al data necessary for determmmg the I m \a !tons on
borrowmg authonty or the amounts of prmctpal to be ret red The
Treasurers determmatwn would be conclustve for the pu poses of thts
amendment
The amendment would establish the m mmum amounts wh ch shall be
appropnated for vanous purposes from tl e proceeds of bonds or notes
authonzed under the cap tal tmprovement prov stons of thts amendn en\
as follows
(1) $80 mtlbon for state office bu ld ngs mclud ng ret rement of bonds
and notes ,f the Oh o Buildmg Authonty
(2) $8 mtlbon for energy research or demonstrat on proJects
(3) $200 mllhon for transportal on at least one hall of whtch shall be
for roads and br dges mamtruned by coun es townsh ps and
munlctpali t es
(4) $64 mtllion for mental health and retardat on fact! ltes
(5) $80 mtllion for correcltonal mstttutions
(6) $80 mtllion for parks and recreat on
(7) $35 mtll on for water development
(8) $43 mtllion for h gher educat on
(9) $30 nullion for elementaty and secondary educat on school
butld ng moderntzat on 01 replacement
(1 O) $20 mtllion for the multi purpose semor ctttzens center
An amount not exceedmg 157o of the total amounts enumerated above
may be expended for any one of the above enumerated purposes or for
any other purpose wtthout all of the requtred appropnat ons for capt tal
tmprovements hav ng been made
The amendment provtdes for the repeal of the fo low ng present Con
slttuttonal prov s ons
Art cle VIII Sectwn 1- Impos ng a $750 000 1 mttat on upon state m
debtedness
Arttcle VIII Section 2- The authonty for the stale to bo row for the
suppresston of msurrect on or to defend the stale n wart me ts trans
ferred frQm Sectwn 2 to Sect on I and Sechon 2 ts repealed The m
debtedness mcurred for these purposes s not m ade subject to the
revenue linked I mt\atwns or the 4 % ret rement ltmttat on
Other sect ons of Article VIII wh ch provtde for the World War II
Compensabon Fund debt and bond ssu ng author ty for htghway pur
poses the Korean War bonus state cap tal tmprovemen s pubhc works
and the 1ssuance of development bonds are repealed Sect ons of A \Jcle
VIII whtch prohtbtt debt except as authonzed by Sect ons 1 and 2 of
Arttcle VIII requ re creal on of a S nk ng Fund for debt re\Jrement
reqUJre a btenmal report of the Commtss oners of the Stnk ng Fund
and spectfy the duttes of the Comm ss oners to repay debt are a lso
repealed Section 6 of Ar\Jcle XII wh ch p oh b ts the state from
contractmg for mternal mprovements except as othcrwtse provtded m
the Consbtut on ts repealed

stnctlons

APPEARS WITH BAND
Terry
1 ynn
Russell
daughter of Mrs Mtckey
Wtll ams and Guy Russell of
Pomeroy JS appear ng ~ th
the 190 member Eastern
Kentucky Un vers ty Mar
chmg Band at the football
game halfttme shows th s
fall One of the band s maJor
shows each year s the ha f
time
presentat on
of
homecommg to be observed
Oct 22 when Eastern Ken
tucky meets Western Ken
lucky State Umverstty

FUll TEXT OF THE RESOLUTION PROPOSING
THE AMENDMENT
SSUE 4
A

ded S

n Re o u
0 N1

n&lt;~

e

n No

E OLU

ON

RULES ANNOVNCED
CHESTER - Tr ck or treat
ntght at Chester wfll be observed on Saturday Oct 29
The s ren w II blow to mark
the opentng of the observance
at 6 p m and the closmg at 7

Big pumpkin
is storage tank
CIRCLEVILLE
Oh10
(UPI) New York may have
the Emptre State Bu !ding
and London Btg Ben but
netther c ty s skyline can
touch CircleVIlle s
That central Ohto ctl) has
the great pumpkm
Really tt s a new milhon
gallon water storage tank
But no motortst who sees the
80 foot globe of vibrant
orange r smg amtdst the corn
stalks and barns of Oh o 23
near CrrcleYJlle would think
so
The 132-foot high tank
topped off naturally With a
bent green stem and brown
seams not only holds water
t advert ses Ctrclev lie s
annual Pumpkin Show
Thts year s 71st annual
pumpkin carntval Oct 19 22
ts expected to draw 350 000
people Wllh street displays of
pumpkms
squash and
gourds a parade and M ss
Pumpkin Show contest
To gtve the c ty-owned tank

tis d stmcttve look a I
ladders and p p ng were
mstalled mstde a 27 foot
center rtser The gtant frmt s
supported by ntne columns
around ts per phery
The destgn and double
funct on of the pumpkin tank
has won t a nat onal steel
tank of the year award from
the Steel Plate Fabr cators
Assoctatton of Htnsdale Ill
It has also won the ooh s
and aah s of hundred of out
of-town v s tors who have
been pulltng tnto town off 23
for a closer IO&lt; k says c ty
Board of Ut Itt es Manager
Charles T Taylor Taylor
srud he dectded on a tank
pumpkin because of epeale I
requests from the Pumpktn
Sholl Comm ttee to pan a
smaller c ty-owned tank
orange
Off ctals of Jackson Oluo
home of an annual fall apple
fest val had a sun lar tdea
l'hetr wo c ty water tanks
are pamted red

American
yachtsmen
reported safe
BANGKOK
Tha land
( UPI) - Three Amertcan
yachtsmen setzed last week
are safe and well m Ho Ch
Minh Ctty where they are
bemg held for violatmg
V1etnamese waters
An Amer can spokesman

Meigs
Property
Transfers

on

fo

pa ks

and

:lo

WA ~

de

on for h ghe edu a

Russell Qmllen Velm~
Quillen to Arnold Anderson
Wtlma Anderson
Lots
Letart Letart Falls
Robert R Hersman Ruth
E Hersman to Wllham L
Thornton Mmn e L Thorn
ton 17 60 acres Salem
R ta McGtnms R chard
McGtnnts Larry Blake
Cheryl Blake to Edith
Lavonne Blake Parcels
Olive
OtiS K Casto Tel tha Casto
to Garth A Smtih Audrey P
Smtth Lots Reedsv lie
McDole Torrence
Ntcholas R lhle Diana L
lhle to John W Manuel
Megan Manuel I acre
Sutton
Freder ck H Clark dec to
Dorothy M Clark cert for
trans Salisbury
C C Cuckler to Homer
Goodwm Palma L Goodwm
Lot Pomeroy
John E Holley Ruby M
Holley to Howard Damron
Georgta R Damron 33 acres
Sctpto
Kenneth D Cooke Jeanne
Cooke to Marvm T Hlll
Jenn fer J Htll Lot IOI
Behan s Add
Middleport
Albert Htll Jr Ora E Htll
to B Uy Htll Jr V ckte L
Htll Lot Racine
Carl V ncent Gheen Carol
Mar e Gheen to Donald R
Desk ns
Kather e
L
Deskms 2 58 acres Sctpto

WILL BE CELEBRATING
Charles Smtih who hves
wtth hiS stster NeUte Wm
ston 667 S Second Ave
M ddleport wtll he observmg
hts 98th btrthday on Satur
day Oct 22

sa d VtetnA nese off ctals
assw-ed the Uruted States
Monday the three Amer cans

were well and were now m
custody of the V etnamese
author t es m Ho Ch Mtnh
City formerly Sa gon
They stated that the three
crew members are well and
that the V etnamese govern

ment

1s

contmu ng

lts

mvest tgat on
Vtetnam preYJously had not
responded
to
State
Department mqmr es about
the fate of the crew
The French news agency
Agence France Presse sa d
m a bnef d spatch the yacht
Brtlllg s sk pper Cornel a
Ann Dellenbaugh 28 of Vera
Beach Fla had s gned a
statement acknowledgmg her
boat was n V etnamese
waters
M ss Dellenbaugh n the
last
known
radto
transm sston from the 39 foot
yacht reported Fr day mght
t was under tow and
escorted by Vtetna ne se
naval boats was on tts way to
Ho Cht M nh City
On Wednesday the Brill g
crew rad oed tt had been f ed
on etght t mes and was about
to be ranuned by vessels
resemblmg ftshmg boats
The crew reported ts
postt on at that tune to be 44
m les off the southern t p of
Vtetnam - but wt!h n 12
miles of an sland cla11ned by
Hanot
The yacht was on ts ~&lt;ay
from Thatland to Brunet tn
northern Borneo
W th M ss Dellenbau gh
aboard the Brilbg - named
for a hne m a poem n he
book
Abce Through the
- " ere ,
Lookmg Glass
Charles Affe l
30
of
Phtladelph a a nd l e la nd
Dickerman tn h s ate 20s of
Flagstaff Ar z
There was no unmcdiale
explanat on of why the
Brillmg was taken to Ho Ch
Minh City
But some yacht ng en
thus asts famil ar w th the
former Soutl V etnamese
cap tal satd l IS the only
place n V elnam where
repatrs can be do~e on
vessels made of Ierrocement
the matenal from which the
Brill g was made
They sa d l was like!; the
Brilltg was damaged I t was
rammed as the last nessage
mdtcated was unmmept

�,

11- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport·Pomeroy 0 Tuesday ""t 18 1977
TRACY
I
'
.~
I

10 - The D;nly St&gt;ntuk'l ~11ctille1J&lt;lrt·l'&lt;&gt;mt'rn). 0 !Uesd,o). Ott 16 1977

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash -

I N T H E COURT OF

COMMO N F"LE AS
COUNTY OHIO
TOMEIGS
M J fEASLEY
R:ouft" 1

Pomeroy , Oh•o J576'
Pla1nhH
\ !o ·

•

WANT AD
CHARGES

Df."tendant
N o U3U
N OTICE BY
PU B LICATION

To Glenna Jovcr 1 '"'""'''~

WhOSE'

last

lo..nOVI. n

P lamt •tt

\o-S

GIE'rHhl

Jovc t&gt;

Teas lpy' Defe ndant
T t11S
a ct• on h as bl't:lrl
as..,rqnf;'d
Case N o 16586 ana •S pencttrlQ
'" lhecCo u r t o t ron\mCin

P te as

at

M e-•c-t&gt;

Covnt.,.

Pom e roy Oh •o &lt;l57o9
The ob recr of the com pi&lt;" n t

•S a demand tor dn.. orce

~no

transfer o t the eau•tv ot t he
Deten~ant ' "
l he personal
propE!Irty of the pa riles to t he
Pia nlllf and other re lief
You ar e reQu r ea to answe r
the comptamt w t•n tn 18 Odys
at er the l ast pub lic d t on of
!h i S OO! ICf"
Vl. htCh
w II bt'
PUbliS hed once ei't cn wN' k. for
St x succeSS tve week..s
The
ta st pub I c al ton .,., til be fl1 ade
on No\l'ember 1 1~77 and tne
?8 days for answf'r w ~tl
commenn• on that dat('
In caS~;" o f your fa ilu re to
answer CJ r otherw tSe respond
as reQU ire(:! by the On to Rules
Of ( J v t~ Pr ocC'C1ure dtvor c('
w 11 be granted

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I. i~ h

t
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thc1 II~'HIIIII~utl 11

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1.11
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lXUUU\
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IIUI

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IH&lt;l\l\J &lt;i&lt;h " Uh &lt;I'll "Ii i
111&lt;
.!..tul\\th.H ~.:,t I&lt;I 1U!:o11 •

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lll&gt; h \ \umt'o.L lr 1 II • •1 I k ~d
111•1

lilt l'ul.J •lot H " l \ " It • 11,111
1 ~ht 1 tq•d "' tl• 1.uu.. r 0.
Jt&lt;ll HI

lilt

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NOTICE ON FILING

AM

Any P.erson des r 1ng to tile
excepttons thereto must ttle
!hem at least hve days prtor
to the date set for heanng
G1ven un der my nan d and
seat of sa tl Cou rt '!h ts 15th
d a y ot October 19 77
Mann 1n 9 0

Webster
Judge

tl \1
\1 &lt; 1l. \ U&lt; I

I

) Ul lit ill&lt; II

t I' :\1
II 1 Ill

I

PUBLIC NOTlCE
Tne ann u a l electi on of the
M e1g s Cou n ty Ag r cultu r al
Socrety D tr ec tors wtll be he l d
T hu r sd a y , N ov ~ m ber J 1977
a t th e off tc e of th e Me tg s
Coun t y Co m mt ss tone r s tn t t1e
Cour t ho u s e a t P om er ooy .
Onr o fr om 5 to 9 p m
Qualt f Jc at to ns tor dtrector s
a re t ha t th e y m us t be a
qu a l f ted vot e r o f Me gs
C ount y a nd mus t t1a \le a
mem b er sht p t 1cket m sa td
SOCt et y Of 1977
Ca nd1d a t es pe trtt ons mu st
be fil ed w 1th t he Sec retar y no
la t er t h an .S p m Thursd a y
NO V'e mb~r
3
19 77
O n ly
per so n s hold ng m embersht p
t 1c k.e t s at I h e close of the 1977
Co unty Fatr or al l east ( 15 )
c a le nda r da y s bef o re tn e d ate
o f etectt on ar e q u a 1t fted to
vo t e
T he M e tg s A g r tcult u r a l
Soctety
By
M r s W a lla ce
Brad f ord Se c reta ry
( 10 ) 11 18 25 3tc

By carolyn G Thomas
Deputy Clerk
( 10 1 18 ltc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DI V ISION
ME I GS COUNTY OHIO

IN
THE
MATTER
OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
AC
COUNTS
PROBO.TE
COURT MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
Accou n)S and vouct1ers of
the
follow tng
named
f tdUC ltH.tes h ave been t iled tn
the Probate Court
Metgs
Cou nty Ohto lor approval
and sett l emenl
CAS E NO 21'i'Bl F r st an d
Ftnal Account of Frank W
Porter J r 1 Admtn 1strato r of
The ·Estate o t Clyde Davtd
F rye Deceased
•
CASE NO 20833 F 1lth and
F nal Account o f
Be ll y
Donovan Guard1an of the
Guard. ansh p
E state
of
Netlte Smilh an mcompetent
person
CASE
NO
22217
F rst Fma l an d -D lst r lbUt ve
Account o f Ma r y Jor da n
Admlntst r a t rtx o t t he Es ta te
of Setty J Jorda n D eceased
Unless e-.cep t tons ar e t tled
the r eto , sa1d accoun t s wtll be
l or hear tng be f o r e sa d Court
on the 16th day of N ovem b er
1977
at w hr ch ttme Satd
accounts w tll be constdered
and conl•nued fr om day lo
day un!tl fmatly d1sposed of
Any perso n tn terested m a y
Ide wr lien excep,tons to sa td
accounts o r
t o matte r s
pertatn1ng to the e)(ecut1on of
the trust not less than 1 \le
days pr or to the date set tor
he a rtng
~ Manntng

D Webs t er
JU DGE
Com m on P leas Co urt
Pr obate Dtv tsto n
Metgs Count y 0/ltO
I 10 I 18 ltc

PUBLIC NOT I CE
FO I IOW1ng Sec t on 5713 01
and SllS H o f t he Oh 1o
!he ch a nge
tn
re..,.tsed
vat ua lton to r th e ta -. year
1977 haS been r ev1 Sed 10
com p l y wtth rn e ord er ot th e
t ax com m tSS ron er o f the St at e
o f Oh o
The ct1a nge tn v al ues also
r efl ect the n ew con s tr uc t ton
f o r the tax ye ar 1977
V a lues of new con st r uctton
a n d t he ch a nge tn co m p l1ance
wtt h !he o rd er of !h e Ia:-;
com mISS to n e r c a n now be
vrewed a t th e Off tce of t he
county audttor
How ar d E F r ank
Mer g s Co Audrtor

1101 7 13 IB 20 4l c

'

( 10) 18 25

2tc ,

.. Ulli::R BRUSH p•odud) l ot sole
992 J..n o
!HERE Will

Racine
Social
Events

~I

and t'oWKI

col 5 mo o ld lo~t around
Mulbetty A ve ~'J bObO

iMp Wanted
SI\ AIE A WAY Sche-dule Hollo A CAREER wtlh a lutu1e f or a mon
ween Pattv Sat
Oct 19th
or w om011 who wanh the besT
Ra ~es Pn1e~ Balloon!&gt;
tn hie A pay check every
Open Wed Fn and Sot mtes
week fonto sftC l rtng e benefttS
7 30
10 00
A 'llado bleo l or
oil local work c,,,.e us o call at
pn ... a re porites
M on rues
CW'J 2480 or v.; r tle We srer n
fhUI s niles Sol or Sun ofh:H
Southetn Ltfe Insurance 218 •,
noons
Bu$
tron,sporlQttoll
E Mo1n Pome1 oy Oh1a fo r 111
cane oil ed Phone qg5 3929 or
lormalton
lm

RACINE

weekend~

'--------------------------------------1.
r-------~·

1'HS GRANAO..-. V 8 Auto P S
P 8
A C
AM rodto
new
• admb 3J {)(X) mtles $3 I 00
9-=J2r3S8t1
1Q J6
MERCURY
BOB ( A1
Runob ou l
Automolt&lt;
4
cv lmdet $2 600 Cull q49 2 112
after 4 00 pm
1974 MONTE CARLO Bu rghondy
Good
cond l!• on
S2 300
9S5 . 1 11 1
1967 MUS lANG 2BQ eng ne 3
speed Goo.d wo rk cor SJ50
742 2459
1974 OLDS 88 ROYALE AM FM
tope cr utse control 197 1 VW
Super Beetle
new
t1re!io
992 298 7

SWAIN

1974 PI NTO STA TION Wagon
2300 cc eng1ne a1r condttloned
au torno t iC
new fires
low
mdeoge excellent condtl1on
Call 992 2200

Saves 30 ptl. lo 50 P&lt;t

Young's
Carpeting
••It 3 Pom.•f01•0
Carpel I. UpnotSiety

on heat1ng cost

Phone Mike Younc

ExP.ertence and
tu\ly tnsured
Free Est

992·2206 or 992-7630

Thermal lnsulahon

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

.

B~•• Into~~~~ &amp; AH1cs

IHr dawn JOU f mobile home T

he
downs are rntdlilltc:llt, mstllltd to
1ssure m111mum ufetr Contact liS 111

SIOIM
WINDOWS &amp; DOO~S
RmACEMUT
WINDOWS
AlUMINUM
SIDIJIG.SOffiiT
GUmiiUWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER

-

-

------

-

Bernice Bede Osol

----

---

--

w

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER ?

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

23·0oc.

others see yo u You may clanl y
some sl tuatto ns that had bee n
mu ddl ed

PISCES (Fob 20·Morch 20)
S h o w a w tllrngness to make
sacr lf tces to be netrt other s to
day II you d o they ma y be mor e
apt to ac t n yo ur beh a lf tn
proble m areas

ARIES (Morch 21·AP'II 19)

II

you don t really pl a n yo ur move s
carefully today yo u c ould ha\l'e a
\ISry hec lt c tr me wtth IIHie to
sno w f or I! T ry t o b e well
o r ga ntz ed

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)
Be fo re yo u go head ove r heels tn
ques t of some thtn g a sk your selr
tl the end resu lt ts w o rth the e f
to rt If the answer rs no s pare
yo u rse ll the a ngUt st":

GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20) II s
possr ble that you coul d ha¥" e a
rash of r un 1ns w tth dtfferen t
l r1ends today When you ve cool
ed d o w n b e th e fi r s t t o
apo tog tze

CANCER (Juno 21·July 22)
When yo u se n se that a jOint \lenlur e IS gettm g o ut o f your co ntrol
st a nd up and assert your n ghts
You may sa lvage somet htng

her

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) It S posSI ·

discharge fr om Veterans
Memoroal Hospital

bl e yo u II hav e c onstderable
fr ustrati on s early In the day b ut
t a ~ e th em m strtd e
Towar d
eve n in g th ey wo n t seem so
bother some

VIRGO (Aug
In 1776, the boundary
between Maryland and
Pe nnsylvama was fonal!y
settled ll'was to be known as
"The Mason·DIXon I~oe n

23-Sopt 22)

Flna nctal con d tt!ons are m 1Jt: ed
to da y Yo u co u ld tur n up some
pat ns but you 11 pr o bably use
more red mk tha n blac k
• 'll ~ WS I 'AI'~ I( ~

N I~ lt !'HI S" ASSN

IF YOU ho"e a ser'll tCe to offe r
wont to buy or se ll some thtng
oe loo ktng l or w ork
or
who te,. er
you II get resu l ts
fo ster w tth a Sent nel Wont Ad

Call 992 21 5b
INDOOR YAR D Sale 829 South
3rd A ve
M idd leport Oht o
O cl 17 18 19 Mony 1lems to
choose from
HUGE YARD Sale lor Gol! a Chr 15
!tan SctlOo l one mtl e belo w
best de
Gilbe rts
H obson
Goroge Prtced low to g o I
Tues and Wed 9 5

HOOF HOLLOW Hor ses Buy sell
trade o r tratn New and used
!&gt;addles Ru rh Ree,.es Alba n y

lbl4)b98 3290

--------

M EIGS COUNT Y Humane Sooety
Careltne and odoptton Se n nc e
qq2 7b80 742 3162 992 54 27

REGISlERED HMALE St Bernar d
to gt ve away to good h ome
Phone 742 2123
TWO PO NIES mare ond geldmg
One b ro ke to ho rne s!i Harness
.ncluded 742 2833
TO GI VEAWAY I female Spttz
d og I long ha red Pers•on cat
I por t Perst o n dork strtped cot
Pet s of Alice Capehart Need
very good home 94 9 2417

PIANO TUNING and Repair l ane
Dontels 992 208:2 1":2 year s se r
v tce to Trt Co unty Refer e nce
Elberfelds
WI LL BABYSIT tn O~Hn
Car o lyn
Bo umon
667 6278

ho me
lb' 4 )

WI LL BABYSI T tn my hom e by the
hour or w eek
Any
age
welco me 742 2833

--------- -

test

your

water

' fOR SALE
New

CoOp

water

and

softeners, model VC.SVI
Only $279 95
Save SSO 00 on a new
Hotpotnt Refrtgerator

1 New 20 CUbiC ft

Chest

Freezer

S25 00 Dtscount
(I)
NEW HOLLAND Boler and Mower
M F Corn Planter 1?92 7084
RABBIT S All s1r es an d co lo rs
Ove r 400 to choose fr om Gene
Wholey
Dorwtn
Ohto
992 701 3

FOUR REGISTERED Black Angus
He1fe r col.,.es One regt st ered
Block Angus Bull calf Ex cellent
ped 1g r ee s
Haro ld
Sa uer

230 '
FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR 56 '
742

24
S7S Baby wol lo..er $1 0
Lod 1es skate s stze 9 $10 1973
Olds De lta 88
to ke ove r
payme nts Se e at 1672 Ltncoln
His Po meroy Oht o

WOOD FOR Sole Phone 985 4103
~ -~~~--

BROWN SWISS H e ti er 843 2353
50 I{ALLO N GAS tOnk an d 1~
box co mbmott ons for p 1ck up
truck $100 24 7 2302
--~~-

---

LO TS O F si ze 16 and 18 dresses
some new New shoes 5 ond
5 ', Odds an d ends 949 2~7 9
_P re tty ~heap f or who le thm~
ONE ANTIQUE 00 ~ dresser $150
992 7370
3 pc bed room su1te $ 125
FR EE KI TT EN S Three tobbr es 1
Ce dar w ardrobe S50 4 drawe r
b i4J ck &lt;4 cots I calt co 1 block
che st d ra w er (p tne )
$50
I 614
882 2562
-~Dres ser (pt ne ) $60 M etal base'
k1tchen cob1net S35 Thes e. or
t1 des ar e all m e -. c&amp;ll en l con dt
lion and con be see n of 102
Park St Mtddlepor t Oh1 0 only
FOR SAU or trade or land con
d rea lly mfer es ted
1
tra ct
2 bedroom ho use tn
~
---Rutland 992 5858
1976 HONDA 750 SUPER Spbrt E-.
tros $1 495 lr rm 992 52 40

--

Let us
Free

G IV E AWAY
g ood pos stbl e
co onh ound
3 mo
female
M o lh ~ r
w a s a bl u el ic k

1966 CHEVRO LET for port s Y,ood
283 V 8 mo tor $15 992 2747
ofter 5 pm

STARCR AFT FALL Sal e
Mtnt
m oto rs 'JO and 22
TraVe l 1963 CHE VROL ET DUMP Tr uck
1rotler s 18 5 $3 799 25 7
900 If 20 !ires al mos t new w1th
' Bunk house $4 875 f old d o wn
a 1968 rn o tor m excetl enl cond t
$1 700 up We se ll ser...-tce and
It on
S1200 or bes t o ffe r
quo I lv Open Sundays (Oitl p
949 2 124
Conley Morc rott !&gt;ale ... Rt 02
CA Sf IRON FRAN KLIN Sto\le wt rh
N o f Pt Pl eo sa1l l
blowe1 Ph otlC '192 3b70
197"1
AR IS10C WA1
t RA V El
p~,,:- G~ A V H Y
lRAClOR w tl h
l rodt r 16 h o;cll (0nlo1ned
gC(Hilt)&gt;e
11laty
cult , ... ol ors
I- • ld l lt)n l
(OndlltUII
Co il
'u l ~ ~y
]()
r Q IOI \"
IPOWL'I
91.1'} '}4'}7 doy l u•l• 11 19/ l'•HO
14') J':i l I
ullut "pn1

Good Refngeralor S200

1 Good
Used
Amana
Uprtght Freezer, S250 00

1 Good Used Me Cu llough
10-10 chatn saw
1

S11S

Good used McCullough

310 E Cham Saw

1 Good

Used

XL12 Cham Saw

$95
Homehte

S125

1 Good Used McCullough
Cham Saw
$SO

L

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone992-'2181

o====--------J
COUNTRY formlond Wtth sedud
ed wood s water and good a c
cess tn Monroe County W Yo
$ 1 000 down colt (304 ) 772 .
3102 or (304 ) 772 ~ 27 _ _ _
VA FHA 30 yr hn an etng Irel a nd
M ortgag e 77 E Stat e A thens
p ~ne (614 ) 5~ _ ..... _
2
STORY 3 b~d ro om frame
house FA furna ce stor m wtn
dow s f tr epl oce m Mtddle por t
P h~ne 992 ~57
_ _ _ _
MU ST SEll tht s 3 bed room 2'1,
bot h ~pl1tl o yer w th all th e e x
tros • Pnced lor be lo w a ctu al
real es tole val ue lor qutck
'S ole i N 1ce drl ... e to pow er
plan ts $44 000 992 2492
--NEW O NE year old b devel home
3 bedroom 1 ' 1 both garage
rcc realt o n r oom
1 1 acr es
t:: agl e Ridge 949 274_5 _
NICE ONE ce re bu tld 1ng sttes
por tly wooded
near Metg s
H1 gh Sch~o l 992 55 23
NICE THREE bed t oom home
Rus tiC Htlls Svrocuse Ohto
949 255 9
S~V EN

Vl:AR ol d house 3 acres 6
rooms and both 1, m le f rom
Ches ter Pnccd fo1 qu tck sole
985 '1~50

ti OU~ ~

fOR ~o l e n t 1tlS l L1ncoln
Hi s Loii9C/'l7 47 1 bef ore 3 pm
m d ~ ''' '' 5 co ii 4Q2 3 176

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

'ftjp\)f.\hl ~'\l

ltvtng room and d tn tng
family
room ,
lots of
closets , fully carpeted
close to town , approx 1
acre ground Help w1th VA
and
FHA
fmanctng

$37.300 00
SMALL FARM- 6 acres,
several bt.uldrngs garage
lots of garden space, keep
animals
here ,
ntcely
remodeled home, 3 bdrms
formal d tnmg, modern krt ,
famtly
room .
full
basement fully carpeted ,
looks mce S29 ,500 oo

HUNTING LAND -

135

acres ,
most
has
all
minerals, close to good
ftshrng Sl49 00 per acre,

total S20 ,000 oo
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION - 3 bdrms,
wood burnmg F P , n ice
lot ~tee appearance, new

features ONLY $14 000 00
GIANT HOME - ThiS 2
story home has up to 5
bdrms , enclosed porch, 111:.1
baths l l vmg, drntng, two
car garage, storage bldg ,
l evel corner lot WOULD

YOU
BELIEVE&gt;
s11 2so oe
HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL
- 2 story frame, 4 bdrms ,
some
remodelrng

complete. bath, k1l ONLY
$6 725 00
OLDER HOMES
We
ha v e several

NEWER HOMES

We

have several

BUSINESSES -

We have

several

We have

some

OUT
OF
COUNTY
BUYERS
USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE, WHY llON'T
YOU?
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY,&amp;
LEOliA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 2159, 992 6191 ,

Semester 8. 6 4s--Mornlng Report 3
6 50--Good Morning . West VIrgin ia 13, 6' 55-Chuck
Wh ile Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl Stale 13;
7 oo-Today 3,4.15. Good Morning Amer ica 6,13.
CBS News B, Bullwlnkle 10, 7 3D--Schoolles 10
• B oo-&lt;:apl Kongaroo 8.10. Sesame St 33
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15, New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8,10
9 3D-Romper Room 6; Andy Griffith 8, Here's Lucy
10, 10 ()()-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15, Big Valley 6,
Here's L~cy 8, Mike Douglas 13 , Joker ' s Wild 10
lOoJD--Hollvwood Squares 3,4,15, Price Is Right 8,10
11 OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3,15. Marcus Welby , MD 4,
Happy Days 6, d. E lee Co 20
11 3D-Knockout 3,15. Family Feud 6,13; Love of Life
8, 10, Sesame St 20,33

11 ss--CBS News 8, Loving Free 10
12 OQ-Newscenter 3. News 4,6, 10. To Say The Least
15. Divorce Court 8, Mlddoy 13
12 3D-Bob Braun 4. Chico &amp; the Man 15. Ryan's Hope
6,13; Seorch for Tomorrow 8,10, Elec Co 33
oo-Gong Show 3. News 8, All My Children 6,13,
Young &amp; fhe Restless 10. Not for Women Only 15
1 3D-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15. As The World Turns
8, 10, 2 OQ-S20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2 3D--Docotrs 3,4,15, One 'Life to Live 6.13 . Guiding
Light 8,10
3 ()()-Another World 3,4,15. All In The Family 8,10 ,
Ohio Journal 20
3.15--General Hospital 6,13, 3 3D-Match Game 8.10.
'
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3. Little Rascals Our Gang 4.
Gong Show 15, Merv Griffin 6, Gilligan's Is 8.
Sesame St 20.33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, D1nah 13
4·Jo--My Three Sons 3, Partridge Family 4, Brady
Bunch 8,10, Little Rascals 15
5 oo-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4, Gunsmoke 8,
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 , Emergency
One 13, My Three Sons 15
5 Jo-&lt;ldd Couple 4; News ~ ' E lee. Co 20,33, Mory
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15
6 oo-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 JD--NBC News 3,4,15; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6,
CBS News 8,10, ABC News 13; Pests, Pesticides &amp;
Safety 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons J, Cross Wits 4, LIars Club 6, Sha
Na Na 8, 'tp Tell the Truth 13, News 10. Gilligan's
Is 15, Daniel Foster, MD 20; Big Green Magazine

~ TliAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenrlArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one let1er lo each square to form
four ordrnary words

ALLEVOOP
.. . IT'S JUSTA

a q\tllitr ••nllll&amp;- 'Don t w111 till tc:t
folms ort rour roof, Itt us c01t tt n•
and stop potential leaks. CALl

QUESTION OF
TIME~

9'12 7Dl4 OR SlOP BY I tOO E MAIN

STj POMII!OY OHIO fOR A f!EI
IS IMIIE

NOVEM

I I c...._,I ..... . . , ._ .__

•ct~ nl~oor

...

Kmg1bury Home S•les
t tt- r-.

,.

Wood Stoves

il

INDOAJ

NtoREP
CAIT IP'IOH

KJ I

~

ITOVESAND
fiiiEPLACll

rN.fl.,

~

EFEL

RNR FUt
773-5955

HEAT &amp;

L•kln, W Ya

'

WOW 1

WJ;AT A

STILL THE NEXT S TREET OVER

~EI G H BORHOOD 1

IS 100 RillY FOR US ..

11 5 EVEN A lllTLE TOO RICH

FO R MY BLOOD ..

,.HI S ALLEY .. J UST
HALFWAY 8 E1 WEEN -·
11 LOOKS SORT OF
INl ERES TIN '-

Answer here.

BRAD FOR D
Aucltoneer
Com
ple te Ser11'1Ciil Phone 94 9 :2487
01 94Q 2000 Rac10e Ohto Cr'J(I
Br adf ord

VH~R~&lt;; A
~

t'f,Af.)D I
.JtM

~~

SEWING MACHINE , Repo 11 s
v 1ce all ma kes 992 22 8&lt;4 Th e
Fo b rtc
Sho p
Po rne roy
Authortzed S1nger S o le~ anJ
Se r\I JCe We shar pen Sc1ssors '

SQ\,I"oHT
11

--~

do zer load er and
backh oe work dump trucks
and l o bo y ~ l or h11 e wtll hauJ
! til dtrl to so1l ltmes tone a nd
gro ... el Coil Bo b or Roge r J e f~
lers da y phone 992 7089 ntghJ
phone 992 3525 or 992 5:232

----

---do

VA~ ISH. 11

.,e_,
0 ,.

-

A bo4 qive me a
dol Ia'
apiece

HOWER Y AND
MART IN
E..
co,. olmg
sept tc
system s
do1er backhoe dump tru ck
ltm est o ne
gro vel
blackt o p
pO'II tng Rt 143 Phone I (614 )

BLOWN INSULA TlON G et th ree
estt mate.s Coli 667 64 79 ' f or
fr ee esllmot e
ANN DAILEY S Uphol stery Rl •I
Portland Oh1o 843 2542

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
38 Decayed
ACROSS
39 Level
I ChWlk
to Head for
S Spectral
n Trevmo
type
and Tracy
10 Dove's
DOWN
shelter
I I;lurn
11 - resem·
blance (dif- 2 [)e.escalate
fer, 2 wda.) 3 Reference
'
book
!%Tools
Yesterday's ADswer
I Chotcest
13 Pause
1$ Acclatm
26 Poe btrd
5 Actor Will
II Glove
20
"Wha•"
zs AnJanette
and family
matenal
Zl
Hereford
&amp;US.atr
16 Northwest
29 Split
group (abbr ) 22 Angel's
Temtones
30
"Tiny Alice' T,,,&lt;:rJay, Ocrnl}er 1R
soothing
7
N.J
ctty
(abbr )
playwnght
_ __:;,_.:____::_-=--=--=----=--- -- - - - words
8
Responses
17 G P 's
23 Group of
9 "Joys of
IS Salaam's
eight
Ytddish"
steed
36 Restdent
24
Take out
author
19 Kickoff
of (suff l
_ Oswald and Jim Jac::oby _ ___
11 French port 25 Not ours
gadget
20 Sellout
21 Husker's
HHf--f--1---1
the three top hearts and then
otero
18
the ~ce of clubs Then he
%2 Basketball
shofted to the three of spades
NORTH
Infraction
South made the nght guess
• J 9'
24 Rickles
by
playmg dummy's mne ' If
¥109
6
and
you are gomg to open hands ,
•A 1097
Adams
• 9 54
hke thos one you had best
25 Part of
make the best guesses
M.IT
WEST
EAST
Alter thos successful guess
• 10 74 3
• Q8 6
(abbr.)
South struggled along for a
¥542
¥AKQ
26 Bleak
Jong tome , but when the smoke
t62
.KJ853
of battle had cleared away the
Z7 Bowler
.KJ1087
ofoA
defense had pulled m eoght
28 Roof
SOUTH IDI
trocks and 500 pomts
prowler
K2
At most other tables the
29 Chance
• J 8 73
Conal
contract was one
3Z Word with
• Q4
notrump
by East Some
now or long
•Q 632
declarers
made 1t, others
North-South vulnerable
33 Generally brl--ji-went down. but all scores
35Soon
were less than 100 pomts
West North East South
enough
(2 wds.)
Pass
Double Pass Pass
37Italian
Opemng lead - K¥
A Canadoan reader asks 1f a
island
I
btd of etght os legal and of ot
ever was
&amp; Jame• Jacoby
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
The bod os defomtely not
Only one player OJ"'ued tne
AXYDLBAAXR
legal.
but ot was for a few
South hand Normally, you
lo LONGFELLOW
years
on
the early '30s when
don 't expect to get a zero
IO, ft
the law makers goofed
One letter Simply stands for another In this sample A is score because you make that
u sed for the three L s. X for the two O's, etc Single letters, poor openong But South got
tNEWSP!r.PER'"ENTERPRISE ASSN I
apostrophes. the length and formati o n of the words @re all one when he compounded hos
hmts Each day the code letters are d1ft'erent
..
error by not redoubling for
(Do you have a question lor
th&amp; experts? Write "Ask the
East
converted
rescue
after
CRYPTOQUOTES
DINO
hos partner's takeout double to Jacobys ' care ol this
BARBARI S~ YOU 1RE
newspaper The Jacobys will
OCVE
penalty by passong Maybe the answer
VF
FVD
!MPOSo18L£I
N C J 'D
indl\'tdual questions tl
redouble would have JUSt stamped, self · &amp;ddressed
PD ., TMWPJB taken hom from the fryong pan envelopes are en cJGsed The
VJDP&lt;i
TEMGGH
onto the fire - maybe tt would most mterestlng questions will
BHZVMG
GCEN
have gotten h1m off the hook
E
HPJ
be used m this column and will
DC
'
re c etve coptes ot J ACOBY
We'
ll
never
know
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : YOU DON'T HAVE TO TRAVEL
MODERN)
West
started
out
by
cashmg
AROUNDTHEWORIDTOUNDERSTANDTIIATTHESKVIS
BLUE EVERVWHERE.-GOETHE

BRIDGE

I'V!O CAPrLJRED HIM, 5/R-

YaJ LEFT"
~RJ!JY K166tNG
AN HOUR AGO TO O'IPTlJRG
•1-'-'"'"'
OF
11-fi"61RL
cr.ERK'SOOMAT

••

TEAFORDm

..

REA llO A!

VIRGILB TEAFOTID,SR '
REALTOR
•
216 E Second Street ..
Pomeroy, Oheo 4S769

•

Phone t92 lll5

WINNIE
IT'B SOME-m iNG I VE
BEEN WANTING TO
DO SINCE 1!-IE FIRST
TIME I

BRICK - 4 apartment,.,
has 2 bedroom opt , one-,
bedroom and a studio apt
Large yard near stores

On Iy $23,000
NEW TRI LEVEL -

BU T iriiB IS
ONLY 1HE

5ECONO

SEE WHAT A

A PATIENT
MAN I AM ?

TIME WE 'V£
MET I

3

bedrooms ,
l 1/2
baths,
famrly
room.
uttlt1y 1
garage, and one acre o~

land $41.000
10 ROOMS - 4 bedrooms , i'

() 1917 Kin&amp; f'u\\UeJ S7ndac:at• Inc.

large lot Want S27.500
;
2 APARTMENTS ~ Lei
one pay for the whor~
place Asking 1us1 $9,600 ;
BRICK ~ 4 bedrooms, 1'11
baths, natural gas f A

furnace , llreplace. full
S22.500
'
LOT - In town, 50 x 100
wrth water sewerage, and

electric

Has 2 bedrooltl

mobile home tncluded
tor ~.000

Ail

IF YOU HAVE GOOD
tAN
PA¥
RENT, YOU CAN BU'(I

~REDIT ,

~~~~

v z-

baths ,
fam t ly
rooms
natural gas forced a 1 ~
furnace, shop , garage aljd

,basement, large dtnlng ,
porch , and nrce corn~r lot

~

.A

LJLABNER

.FOSPICK!r-

'

7·30-Funny Farm 3, Sha Na No 4, Match Game PM 6,
Family Feud 8. MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20 ,33, The
Judge 10; In Search of 13, Wild Kingdom 15
8 OQ-Grlzzly Adams 3.4,15, Eight Is Enough 6, 13,
Good Times 8,10, Nova 20.33
8 30-"Busflng Loose 8,10
9 ®--Oregon Trail 3,4,15, Charlie's Angels 6,13 , Movie
"The Killer Elite" 8,10; Great Performances 33,
American Short Story 20
10 ·06-Big Hawaii 3,4,15, Breetta 6,13, News 20.
10·3D--Arvllla 33, A~ We See II 20
n·oo-News 3,4,6.13.15, Dick Cavett 20, MacNeil
Lehrer Report 33.
11 25-News 8,10, 11 . 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15,
Starsky S. Hutch 6,13 , ABC News 33
11 · ss--Hawall Five 0 8, Movie "The Comic" 10.
12 oo-Janakl 33
12 4D--Mystery ot the Week 6,13, 1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4,
1 os--Movle "Crime Knows No Age" 8. I 55--Mary
Hartman 10, 2 1o--News 13
Movoe Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 PM - Mother,Jugs and Speed
9 &amp; 11 PM - Twlllght's Last Gleaming
table Channel s 6 30 p m - Testimony Time
7:00,..Paul Gaudtno Family Fitness
7·3D--Marsholl University Football
10 ·06-700 Club

Penalty double scores big

ferth'
fo'

AND
Ki!chen s
remodeled ce ro m c tde p lu m
bmg carpentry and gen eral
mmnten ance
13 years e x
pertence 992 3685

EXCA VATING BACKHOE do z:er
tr encher
lo w
bo y
dump
truck s sept iC sys tems
Btll
Pullt ns phone 992 2478 day or
-~Jl lght

HENCE KINDLY PHYSIC
What
a
dancer
who's In a hurry might be
Answer
expi!cled to do-SHAKE ALEG

~ ~~~ns

GASOUNE ALLEY

roo fmg . com tr uc!Jcn
pl umbm g and heatmg No tb b
too la rge or too small Pho'r:le
74 2 23 48

W ill

GA!UD

-~·

EXCAV AT ING do zer
backh o e
and dttche r Cha rles R Hot
l leld
Sock
Hoe
Se r \ltce
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2008

33.

Jumbles MANGY

~~·~t~

BORN LOSER

REM ODEliNG Plumbtng heottnq
and a ll types of genera l repo1r .
Work gu o ron teed 20 years e-. J
pertence Phone 992 2409

~

r xx xJwAs ITJ

tat.st 110 puzDes e aveltabie for $1 35 poll·
paid trom Jumble, cJo ttn ~~.Box 3', Norwood, N J 07841 lndi.Jidli
YQUr~ addreee zlpcodlandmake~paylbletoNewiiJlap6iboctlol

3825

EXCA VATIN G

OF FEA'THEI&lt;$~

Jumble Boot!: No 10 whtl thl

.

-

I-III iHS PRICE

(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterdays

~

WHAI HAPPI:NED
WI-ISN INFLAilON ,

Now arrange the ctrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug
gested by the above cartoon

JO 18 1 mo

ElWOO D BOWERS REP AIR -.
Sweepe rs to asters trons all
small oppl ton ces l awn mo.\llfer
next l o Sla te H tgh w oy G a rageon Rou te 7 Ph one (614 ) 985

[]

J.JTTLEORPHAN ANNIE

698 733I

JUST LISTED - Spac1ous

7 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4,, Wolfman Jack 6. Let's
Go the Races B. Price Is Right 10. That' s Hollywood
13 Music City 15
8 OQ-Man from Atlanl1s 3,4,15. Happy Days 6,13, To
Be Announced 8.10; Live from Lincoln Center 33;
Drought 20 , B 3D-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13
9 OQ-7
9 ()()-79 Park Avenue 3,4, IS. Three Company 6,13.
Mash 8,10; VTR 20
9 3D-Soap 6, One Day at a Tl me 8,10. Mary Tyler
Moore 13, Diamond Rivers 20. 10 oo-Famlly
6,13. Lou Grant 8,10, News 20
10 3D-Black Perspective on the News 20
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15, D•ck Cavett 20, 11 3DJohnny Carson 3,4,15, Mov ie " Hit Lady" 6,1 3,
Ka lak 8, Movie "Murphy's War" 10, MacNeil
Lehrer Report 33.
1
~ ~ ~~ ®

BA T H~OOMS

J year old ranch 1ype home,
J Bdrms , 2 baths large

ACREAGE -

z

.

----

tttt-

YOUR M OR~ I ~es

HOME We IIJILit l'latllblt n11 a dlltiJ of

•

r

I N ST R UC TIO I&gt;J ~

I f.·~ ltt.. tlmt 1k11ntnum undtrptnr. •
'"{b Of your ptact ol m1nd 111d to ~'
!tl tJ JOUI 111$UIIIICt COfftPIIIr-:.t US~

lnwlatiOII SenKa
flfltiCinl AraW.blt

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22)

JET, VOU NI'E D

SAVE ON YOU! fUEL Bit! !HIS ~
WINJE! AND BE!IJIIfY YOUR MOillE~

'"'•

ASTRO•GRAPH

THIO' l!i'

l2ll,...,

Blown

and
Restdentla I
Call for
com mereta I
esttmate, 24 hour servlct
Anyday , anyttme.

IT

"fht Ol'tllftlto"
Not Jhe ilnttaton

10 14 1 mo pd

FREE ESTIMATES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

TH, IS THI: J ET AGIO,
POD I&gt;JER~ TO FL-Y A

WA $ H 0' 8U DDY 1 REME~6ER
WHEI&gt;J We USE D TO KNOCK
\~H ER E YDU'Vi:
AROUND THE' WOR l-D
i!&gt;I'EON !3PE-~DI NG
TOGeT H E R~
l DON'T G ET

At

tall667 6479

Ph 311-6250
127 TfC

WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER 19, 1977
5 45--Farm Report 13, 5 50--PTL Club 13 . 5 55-Sunrise Semester 10, 6 25-Chrlstopher Closeup 10,
6 30--News Conference 4, News 6; Su nr i se

rectlveness 33

Superior
Steam EllracttOn

Cellulostc (wood fiber)

PARTS -lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

~ttdmlleO

,.......- - - -----,

Blown lnsulaOOn

AJ,tamaltc
Transmmton Service

CHEVY WAGON Std 21:13 eng
Pnce reduced 992 3408
1969 CHEVRO LET STATIO N Wagon
Townsmen 327 New paull
good condtiiOfl 9 pa!isenger
S695 or be~ I aft er q49 2 124

J&amp;L

Phone 985 J806
REDUCED PRI CES on rugs algons HOUSEKEEPER O R nuddle aged
and wall hong1ngs El Celero
co uple l or semt trwa l td Free
Bouttque 205 North Second
room and board Smell sala r y
M 1ddlepo•1
(614 ) bb7 b284
or
{ 014 )
989 2363
DEAl Wtl H and tndependenr
SJfiCut, Oh10
deo ler where your money t$ NEED LAO¥ to loke care of 3
Chester, Ohto
Box 34
~h !!23993
spent local ly w•th other mer
8 29 pd .
sc hool oge boys- i!tLhe r fut~
.. 1.....
chants Ba tl ey s A!&gt;h land fup
ttme or tust ol ntght 985 4 122
3 AND 4 RM lur n1shed ond un
pers Plorns the only tndepen
lurn1shed opts
Phone 992
dent q tow n not a compon'y HELP WA NTED Male or lemo l e
5434
t ab Tttchnologtsr
A c~ep t tng
run
!&gt; ta rtan
Oct
SpeC40I
oppltcal tom. for full ltme per
AVAILABL E AT Rtverstde A pts 1
An,e• tcan mode &lt;:ors lubes S
monenl lob pe r sonn~ l A ccep
bedroom '$ 105 per mon t h $ 150
qts Valvolme A( o I a•,d I Iter
CO AL l11nes tone and cole~um
tmg oppHca) ons f or M LT M T or
secun l y deposot 992 6098
SlO tax Included In stoc k new
~hlor 1d e and co lct um bn ne f or
(
LA
Resu
mes
or
opp
l1c
Ot10ns
ond tecopped snow l tres bo r
dust co n trol ond spec ra l mt x mg
FOVR ROOM S and both Adu lts
m ay be ma1led to
tenes
hoses
belts
plugs
!riOII l or forme rs Exce ls1or Salt
on ly No pe l s 9q2 5908
,,_ ''" '-rw-' trvdt ... kfi!Ae•.,.
po1nts and other accesso r es Ve terans Memorial Ho5 ptlal Box
hll'-tor to tiM
Wor ks M mn Str ee1 Pom e r oy
749
M ul b erry
Her g h t s
COUNTRY M O BIL E Home Pork
Plenty ol Vol,.ol tne anll freez e
O hto or phone 9q2 3891
Pomeroy O tHo (614 1 992 2 104
Reule 33 north ot Pomerov
Ope n 7 to 8 30 M an t hru Frt
An
equ a l
opportunt t., CAMPER
$600
A lso
horse
Lorge lo ts Call 992 7479
Sor 8 30 to 7 00 Closed Su n
trade r $450 Phone {6 14 ) 698!
emp loyer
O ther wor k done by op poml
lncred tble' Why poy htgh elec tnc
32'10
ment
EX PE RIE NCED REF RIGERAT O R ond
bills tht s wm ter? Le t us pay
opplt o nce ser,.rcem on
Potd
th em l or you 1 One bedroom E(ONO M V TRA CTOR w tl h o il at
hol tdO y!'t
...-ocattons
a nd
tochm ents l ke new ask1ng
fr om $1 30 now o vod o ble
hos p 1tol t ra t ton
G o l l to
V1llog e Manor Th1rd and M tll
$2250 Phone (61 4) 69B 3290
Ph. 992 2t74
Relngerotor Co 611 3rd A ve
Streets M rddleport Telephone
A PP LE S FtfZPATRICK Orc hards
A thought for the day
G al ltpohs" O h1 0
992 7787 Equol Hous1ng Op
Sl o te
Rou te
089
Ph one L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J
porf ':m ty
Amertcan poet J oaqum EX PER IENCED
Wtlkesv• ll e 669 3785
G ROC ER Y or Pro
MiiJer saod , "The biggest dog
duce Cler k O nly tho se w 1lh e •
LARGE MO BILE Home lo t Country
1975 350 JOHN DEE RE darer wi!h
penence nee d appl y See _&gt;l ore
Se tltng
Met gs Sc hoo ls
All
h;os been a pup "
3b8 hours 27 ton se t o f new
man ag e r ot Twtn ( tt y Ga tew ay
ullltttes ovotloble Bo Ttle ga s
truck scal es 22 long 992 546a
HOME SITES l or !tole I acre and
heoltng on ly 742 3122
up M tdd lepor t near Rutlan d
CUT HEA TING C'Os l s 1 Shenando ah
I
Co ll Q92 7481
baste
wood hea iE! t
Mtl&lt;. e
-'-'-'
For Wedneaday, Ocl 19, 1977
Trotlet
ad ult
FOR RENT
Bergan
Auth er 1led b ee le r
NEW 3 bed room house . 2 baths
99'1 3181
Harnsonv, ll e 742 2704
a ll e l ec
I acre M tcl dlepor t
CA SH pa1d far o il makes and
BEAUTIF UL HOME 9 room s 2
close to Rur lond Phone 992
models o f mobtle ho me s
SHOT SHELLS Who lesale deer
b a ths
double
ga ra ge
7481
Phone a rea code 614 423 9531
slu gs $1 49 Feder a l 3 dra m
Rel eren&lt;e req u1red Wt tte t o
$3 10 or $57 casa 22 l R 82 22 SMA l l form l or so l e IQ 0 • down
TIM BER Po mer oy Forest Pr o
001l y Se&gt;n t ml
Box
72q W
rnog HP S2 90 8 MM Mouser
owner financed M onroe Cou n
ducts Top p nc e for sto nd m g
Pomeroy Ohto 45709
$2 40 box ammo a!l Col New
ty W Vo Phone (304) 772
saw ttm ber Call 992 5965 01
ond used
compound a nd
3102 o r {304 ) 772 32'17
Kent Hanby I 4&lt;16 8570
-~recur.,.e bo ws D1scoun t on o il
COIN S CURRENCY tokens o l d ~
' ~~---We trade for any 1h1ng Fde s
pock e t wa tches and chot n s
Mtddleporl Oh o We nee d o
AU
CTI
ON
SALE
ever
y
lues
and
s1l.,.er and gold We need 1964
Gravely GoKa r ts mtnl bt k es
REAL ESTATE
Frt a t 7 p m N ew and used
an d older stl..,.er cotns Buv sel l
FOR SALE
mo tor cycl es atr compressors
merchond se ot 01'110 R1 ,.er A uc
or -t rad e Call Roge r Wamsley
Oct 19, 1977
~o t ho,.e y ou
! ton M etgs Plaz a M iddlepor t
742 2331.
Vou w tll meet so m eone wt1 o m
Oh10
Horn e
Phon e
(30-4 ) FIREWOO D $40 cord Spltt ~nd
Good
Buuneu
Bldg
you ll become e )(t remel y fond of OLD FURNITUR E tee boxes brass
773 547 1
st ac k e d
del 1...-ered
an d
louted at 60.5 W Ma1n St ,
ttlrough .a p erson yo u alr eady
bed s 1ron beds etc co mp lete
Pomeroy, Oh1o Presently
84 3 2qJJ
know Thts ne w ac q uamtanc e
household s Wnte M D M1ller
occ:up1ed
by a go.ng
140 000 BTU BOTTLE ga s fu rnac e
w tll usher more f u n m to yo ur l1!e
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh1 o or call
bustneu Bldg has deluxe
Lenno • $1 35 90 000 BTU fuel
apartment
overheud
992 7760 .
lhtS com tng yea r
bringmg 1n good 1nc:ome
o tl stO\I e S1g ler $65 Po rtable
---~-'
8
x
35
TRAV
EUTE
fuel
o
tl
furna
ce
Prtc:ed on 1nspechon only
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23) Try 10 NO ITEM TO O Lo r ge or too sm all
Remmglon ~ 10 40 ty pewriter
tank goes with un I You w ont
can be seen any t1me from
W tll b uy 1 p tece or com plete
let nature take ti s course today tf
$60
Phon
e
742
2231
fmd a home tn better condtll on
10 a m to 6 p m lnqu1re at
hous eho ld New used or on lt
you destre a m e asu re o f
for the pr tce Pre..,. tous owner
605
Mam St , Pomerov ,
q
ues
M
or
ltn
s
Fu
rnilure
20
N
success Attem p ting to I o re e
Ohto 45769
says she po 1d on a.,.erog e pi $8
:2nd
St
Mtddlep
ort
Phone
.;quare pegs 10 10 ro und holes w 11
pe r mon lh t o he al los t wtnter
992 b370
r ob you of any ach evem em
-~~Ktng ~ bur~ Home Sol es 1100 E
F tn d out more about yo ur self by
TWO TO ten acre s w1th good
Ma tn St Pomeroy Oh to
send1ng fo r your copy o f A stra~
bu il d1ng st te or o lder ho rne
'-et Pomeroy Landmark
su ,table lor remodeling w a t er TWO BEDR O OM 1964 M o b tte
Graph Letter Mall 50 ce nts l or
soften
&amp; condthon your
Home wt th e)( l enston SIIIJO
and e lec trt CIIY ovotl oble close
eacn and a ton g s elf ~a dd r e ss ed
water and Coop water
1975
Su
z
uk
t
380
$900
to hor Ctop rood Call 992 7036
stamped envelope to A str a
softener. Model uc XVI
qss 426&amp;: aft er 6
~ t e r 5 pm
Graph P 0 Bo)( 48 9, Radt o City
Now Only
Statron N Y 10019 Be sur e to A HIDE A BED 992 11J47
specify yo u r btr l h s1gn
S t\ Ua ti ons tha t nave t)emmed
you tn w rll b e so m e wh a t
a llevtated toda y On a modest
bass you II be abl e to lessen
pressures and call yo ur ow n
sho ts

Mrs Henry Keoslmg , Robert
and Charles Keoshng , all of
Galhpohs. Mrs Helen Slack,
Mrs Pearl Wtlhs and Russell
Findley of Letart Falls
Mr and Mrs Dale Hart
held a party Saturday
evenmg , Oct 8 m celebration
of the eoghth borthday an·
n1versary of thetr daughter,
Legona Hart Attendmg were
her grandparents, Mr and
Mrs Lmley Hart and Mrs
Mabel Brace Others at·
t endmg were Mrs Pearl
Adams, Mr and Mrs Ronald
Hart and ~on Tuttle She
receoved gifts Cake and Ice
c ream were served
Mrs Agnes Proce of Ledgewood, N J os a guest of Mrs
Albert Paynter and guests on
Thursday, Oct 13, were Mr
and Mrs Charles Volz of
Cleveland
Mrs Margaret Houdashelt
returned home after staytng
several days woth her sisters
after

no

G RAY AND ~htle ttgct Sl rtped

By Mrs. Francis Moorls
to lnm you r sp en d ng tr 1lls
Among relatoves and try
Hold your purc hases to th e bar e
froends from out of town here essen l ta ls to mat nl a m stab rl tty
for the funeral servoces of Mr
CAPRICORN (Oec 22·Jon. 19)
Ed Miller Included Mr and II s ve ry mu c h to your advantage
Mrs Edwm Emery of Buf· today not to be too se tf ~ s erv t ng
falo, N Y , Mr and Mrs Ray Protec t your tnter es ts but don t
Worne and choldren of mal&lt;e the m the ce nter ol the u n
Co lumbus, Mr and Mrs ve rse
Clarence MoHer of Monroe, AOUARIUS (J~n 20·Fob 19)
La , Mr and Mrs Robert Take th e time to day to stand
Cornwell, Mrs Ruth Corcle bac k and loo k at · yourself as

Pomeroy

no hyntm9

l ttl Sposst ng and 11 0 e ~ cE&gt; pl! o ns
on my ptopertv Bob MlGrow

21) Once ag am tod ay yo u sho uld

tn

b~

1917PINI 0 q4~ 2761 ott er 5du•
utg !h~ w('t"!f.,. ond Oil) llr!l('

6 30 PM B Testim ony Ti me, 7 00 - Paul Gaud ino
Fam il y Fitness. 7· 30 - Trl Sta te Band Fest ival;
10 OG-700 Club

TUESDAY.OCTOBER1B,1977
6 oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 3D-NBC News 3.4.15. Carol Bur1101t &amp; Friends 6.
CBS News 8,10; As We See 11 20. ABC News 13
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Crass Wits 4, Lia rs Club 6, Pop
Goes the Country 8. News 10. To Tell the Truth 13,
Gilligan 's Is 15, Fren ch Chef 20; Parent Ef

Business ·Services

fOR 1Q71 Gal a~•£&gt; f ord to o
sale- Phon(' Q92 ~858

•279.95

and sister, Florence, Mr and
PUBLIC NOTICE
N otice tS t1e r eby g t ven that
on the 2n d day o f N ovem b er
19 77 at th e o ft ce o f t he M etgs
County
Board
ol
Com
mISS lone r s , Me rgs County
Co urt house Pomeroy Ohio
a t 12 noon wr 11 let by co n t r act
to the lowes t and best
resp on s i ble
btdder
t he
follo w rng
wo r k
and
mater 1als toW t
F urn tsh a ll tabo r
and
m a l ert als
r equ1red
f or
tea r tn g d ow n two woo d en
bu !ld rngs no w
loca t ed on
p rop e rty ow ne d by Met g s
County
b e1ng
the
old
Child ren s H ome proper l y
a n d r emovtn g al l d eb r tS
(exce p tt n g the foun d ation
r oc k s w h tC h Wtll be remo ... ed
by Metgs Covnty J from the
p re m tses
B tds to be su b mllted on a
l u mp sum basis
T h e a tte nt on o f btader 1S
d tr ec t ed
to
t he spectal
s t a t utory prOV I SIOOS ( R (
411 5 13 et se q ) governmg the
preval!mg rate o f wages to be
pat d
by
laborer s
an d
mech a ntcs
erpp toyed
on
pub liC rm pr ovements
N o b td Wi lt be consider ed
w h rc h 1S t or a g r eater sum
tha n the es t m ated cost nor
u nl ess tl b e a cc o mpanted by a 1
ce r tr f ed c h ec k tn 11-)e sum of
t en p er c ent o f th e b•d p r tCe to
g uarant ee that tf sa td bt d 1s
acce pted a c on t ra c t wtll be
enter ed tn l o and the per
for m a nce o f ' ' prope r ty
secu r ed
T he
Board
o.f
Com
mtSS ton er s rese r ve t he r tgh t
to retect any a nd a ll btds
By o r de r o f t h e Board ot
Me g s
Cou n ty
Corn
m tSS ton er s
M e1gs Cou nt y
Com m tSS tone r s
M a r y Hobs t e ller
Clerk

ltll'O i t.

PAR I ~

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
Service "-1

"'UI I I
~li d,! I

( hod•.

Rocme Cun Clu b
aftet noan Fo1.. 101
gv n"&gt; Otlly
A'&gt;0 ' ted

S1J11

V0 1 1
F ~ADDRESSERS
WA N fED
un eer
tr e
med1ately ' Work ot home
no
Oep01lment wtU sponsor a gun
eJipertence necessa~v
e,.,
shoo! every Saturday ot 7 p m
ceU401nt pay Wrtte Amencon
or 1he1r bu1 ld ng m Bo shon Foe
Ser11 ce 8350 Pork Lalle Su tte
rory choke guns only
269 CoHos TX 75131

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

11

eliel ~

08S&gt;,0q9o

NOTICE

11

GU N SHOOf

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

THE

Larry SocncN
Clerk o t Cou rT S
Me tqs Coun'\
Common P le as Court

OF I NVENTORY
AND APPRAI SEMEN T
Th e State of Ohto
M etg s
Co~nt y
Cou r t ot Common
P le as P r obate Ot'lit Ston
Jo the E xecutor of Ad
mmistrator o f the estate to
sucn ot lhe t oltowtng as are
res tdents ot the State a t OhtO
Vtl - the surv tvtng spouse
the
ne-.1
of
k tn
the
beneftctartes under the w rit
and to tne attorney or at
t orneys represent tng an y of
the a f or emen t oned persons
Leo C
Kennedy , Sr
M i ddleport Oh iO
You are hereby nof tf!ed
that the Inventory and Ap
pri;l lSement of the estate of
th e
aforement t oned
deceas ed Ia te of sa 1d Cou nty
were tiled 1n th tS Court Sad
Inventory and Appra sement
w't11 be l or hear tng before lh 1s
Cou rt on the 28th day of
October 1971 at J.D 00 o clocto.

•

'

l tll.l

I l.o•
.'tl

Datt&gt;d 9 2.1 77

(9 1 27 (10 1 -J II 18 25

I

\\I

&lt;Htdrcss

was Route I Porn erQ\' Oh o
45169 you tlr~ her('b'r n('l t E'd
th~t vov ha\ie oee n nam&lt;'CI
Defendant rn t1 ttaa t .Hr on
('ntrtled Tom J
ll~""'"

i"iotice6

t'\iotices

GLiiNNA JOYCE TEASLEY
aJdress unknown

12 oo-ABC News 33, 12 30-Janakl 33
12.4D--Movle " Double Image" B; I oo-Tomorrow 3.4.
1 10'-News 13, 1 30-Mary Hort mon 10
Movoe Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P M Silent Movie
9 &amp; 11 P M ~ The Women
table Channel 5 -

CJCJCJ
[J[JCJ

11M PRACTICING M'-(
BRACKETS ...

DID L{OU KNOW THAT
BRACKETS ARE ALWAI{5
USED IN PAIR5 '!

WE·UNS JEST
GOT A LEAK
IN OUR ROOF,
LOWEEZV

ONLV
ONE?
WE-UNS

GOT A
HUNNERT!!

I
\

I CAN'T STAND HER
HOLIER-THAN-THOU
ATTITUDE!!

�.

.

! 2- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , ()('t . 18, 1977

Reprinting order refused
TOLEDO , Ohio 1UPil - A
federa l judge has refused to
order a ,reprinting of the Nov.
P Ohio election ballot but a
dispute over t h~ la~gua ge
used to swrunarize State
Issue No. I .may not • bo
resolv ed until after the
election .
U.S.
Di st rict
J udg~
Nic holas Wa linski late
Monday turn.e d down a sui\
by. Toledo-area Democrat s,
who had sought a permanent
injWJction to stop Secreta r y
of State Ted W. Brown from
and
using
unde rli ned
cap! ta lize d word s in the
ballot s umma ry of th e
issue .
If a pproved, Issue No . 1
would repeal the elect ion day
voter registration law.
Attorneys for Lucas CQWltV
'residents bring ing the s uit
C()Otended Brown used the
under li ni ng a n d
capitalization in such a way
as, to enru ur·age voter s to
approve the issue and repeal
" instant " voter r egistration.
They also objected to the

mannt&gt;r in- which Bro" n had
"Tttten a SWlunar·y of thP
Issue appearing at the lOp of
the ballot , dain1in~ it was
nnsleadtng and did not fairly
characterii t&gt; the refer endum

issue.

wuuld be made tnda )' on
whether It&gt; appeal Walinski's
rulin ~ to the 6th ll.S. Circuit
C't&gt; urt
of
Appea ls
in
Cincinnati.
Lawyers for the Secretary
of Stat e had contended that
" ilh the election less than a
mmtil away, it was m uch too
late to reprin t ballots in a ll 88
Ohio t'Ounti es,
·
Lac key. in ar gument s
befor e th e court last
Thursday, said repea l of the
inst ant voter registration ~aw
wo uld
mak e
voter
registration Iiocedures mor e

rest n ehve . When persuns are
not registered to vote. they
h'se st'Vrral other rights,
s u&lt;·h.,. the right to hold office
and sign electioo petitions, he
said .
" We believe that these
facts sh ould bo included in
the inform ation at th e lOp of
the ballot ," Lackey said. A
text of the entire issue is
printed at the ballot 's botl&lt;lm ,
but the law ye r sa id he
believed most people will
vote for o&lt; aga in st the
referendum based on the ir
reading of the summary at
the top .
Democrats
had
The
pr oposed gluin g a pa per
sticker with a modified
swnmary at the ballot 's top ,
replac ing the WJderlined and
capitalized version written by
Brown.
Assistant Sec retary of
State James Marsh testified
in the federal court hearing
last week that absent ee
ballot s already were in the
mail with the original
summary .
Last Thursday , the Ohio
Supreme Court rejected an
attempt to remove Issue No. 1
from the ballot .
Organized labor and the
Ohio Democratic Party·;
which pushed election day
registration and permanent
registration through the
legislature' over Gov. James
A. Rhodes' veto last MfY, are
strongly opposed to Issue No .
1.

Committee approves appropriation ·
tly LEE LEONARD
UPI Slate house Reporter
COLUMBUS I UPil - The
Ohio Senate Finance l:om·
mittee early today a pproved
a $523 nuMion ca pital con·
struction appropriation after
adopting co mpromise
lan guage encour aging t he
st a te to hire minor ity and
sm a ll business contractors.
The pa ckage, adopted Sept .
20 in different fonn by the
House, received unanimous
a pproval of the committee at
the end of a six-hour meeting
and was fo rw arded to t he
Rules Committ ee .
It is scheduled to be taken
up by the full Senate later this
week .
In · adopt ing n ea rl y 40
amendments, the committee
added a net of more than $10
million to the appropriation.
But the mobt controversial
amendm e nts inv o l v ed
language changes .
Faced with certain defeat
of a provision requiring the
state to funnel 10 perce nt of
the capita I constru cti on
contracts to minority !inns,
bla cks on the comm itt ee
quick!~ came .up with com·
promise langua ge.
As finally adopted, the
provision defines minority
and small busine s s en·
terprises and requires the
st~te De~artment of Ad·
mtnlstrattve S.ervtces a~d
!Joard of Regents to tdenttfy
. proJects fQr wh1 ch su ch

In handing do"n the r uling,
Walinski also dissolved a
temporary restraining order
issued last week by U.S.
Distr ict J udge Don Young,
which had halted printing of
th e e la •tion ballots in Luca s
Olunty until the dispute was
r esolved .
But Gerald Lacke y , a
la wye r for the T oledo
Democr a ts, noted that
Wa l i n s k i
"re tain e d
jur isdiction in the ca se," and
could rule after the election
on the constitutionality of
(Ccnllnued !rein pill 1)
Br own 's ac tions. ··This se c reta·ry·tre a s urer
or
decision is by no means the athletic programs.
Pam Ogdin was namM a
e nd of his looking at the case
to
det ermi ne
if
it 's · substitute bus driver and
const itutiona l or not," Laura Harrison was em·
ployed .as a full time bus
Lackey said .
He added that a decision driver .
Morris reviewed the status
ofthe" AppleCrate,"tbevan
formerly used by the
teachers corps . He said the
vehicle will bo used to transport materials to the various
arrival.
schools and indicated that it
Seve ral hundred police
(Ccntlnued h'flln pace l)
may be used for the talented
Ensslin, Ra,Pe , Moeller and agents carrying submachine and gifted student program if
seven oth~ t ja iled terrorists guns guarded the hostages it is approved.
in e&lt; chang e for th e 86 and mingled with the crowd .
Supt . Charles Dowler
The scene was transmitted
hosta ges th ey held aft e r
reviewed
a report on the
killing the plane 's pilot in live by German television . State
Department
of
Closeup pictures of the
Mogadishu , Somalia.
Education
's
inspection
of
Baader and the others were rescued hostages as they elementary schools. Overall,
jubilant. when word of the came down the steps sliowed the reports of the evaluation
hijackers' demand reached the!Th lined with fatigue and were very good and 51Jme of
them . " We 'll soon bo fr ee," emotion . The 31 women had the deficiencies in the report
HEARS NEWS
bodraggled hair. Only a few
Baader crowed .
already have been corrected,
Mrs.
Clara Adams has
But a crack platoon of mana ged feeble waves.
he
said.
received
word of the death of
The seven children were
German commando s flown
Karen
•
Goins.
Leda
her
sister,
Mrs. Harvey
into Mogadishu rushed the ca rried off the plane .
Kraeuter
and
Frances
(Georgie
)
Milliron
at Beaver
Taken in the buses to a
Boeing 737 early today and
·
Roberts
were
aut)lorized
to
Falls,
Pa
.
Funeral
services
shot t o death the four Arab cafeteria, the hostages were attend a regional meeting on
at
1
p.m
. Wedwill
be
held
given clothing , shoes and
and German hijackers child abuse at the Tri.County nesday at the (:ampbe!l
apparently two men and two toilet kits .
were
sobbing J oint Vocational School on Funeral Home in Beaver
women ~ and freed all the · There
.
o
r
Nov . 3. Rick and Mike Falls.
hosta ge s,
the
Bonn ·reuruons.
Chancey
were added to the
" My God, my God," was all
government said .
approved
list of tuition
CHILD BORN
The 34-year-old Baader was one ma n could say when
students. '
Mr. and Mrs. John Atkins
co-leader of the Baa der - em bracing his returned wife .
Dr . Keith Riggs, board · of Pataskala are announcing
The
hostag
es
were
Meinhof gang " "th Ulrike
members,' was authorized to the birth of a seven pound,
Me inhof. who was found officiall y welcomed by five
draft
a letter to State Auditor · seven 04 nce son, John
hanged in her cell last May. cabinet ministers sent from
Thomas
Ferguson in answer Matthew, on Oct. 2 at Licking
Miss Ensslin later bec ame Bonn by Chancellor Helmut
COljiiiilents about Memorial
Hospital
in
to
his
recent
Schmidt .
co-leader with Baader.
board of education members Newark. Grandparents are
and administrators.
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Sauvage,
Jr. High Prinipcal John Pomeroy, and Mr . and Mrs.
Mora reported that a dosed John 0 . Atkins of Clifftop, W.
lunch program at his school is va.
going well. Charles Downie,
buildings. "
who is assisting with the
Tipton noted the law in Kentucky required a sprinkler program, reported · likewise.
PLEASANT VALLEY
system but the bUilding was in violation of the law ,
A request from Hershel
Discharges - Mrs. Virgil
McClure for use of a 2il foot Weaver,
New
Haven;
WASffiNGTON - DESPITE WHITE HOUSE opposition, 's trip of land behind' hi~ new Virginia . Snodgrass, Hen·
an effort is underway in the Senat~ to amend the Panama establishment on E. Main St., derson ; Donald Brown,
Canal pacts to include the joint clarification Issued last week Pomeroy, was received . The Gallipolis; Mrs. Donald
by President Cart.er and Gen. Omar Torrijos.
board will study the matter . Nichols. Point Pleasant; Mrs .
White House spokesman Jody Powell says• the The board also agreed to Michael Craig, Leon; Dewey
administration would oppose any effort to amend the treaties oppose tentative plans of the Coleman, Henderson, and
in light of the 14 years of difficult negotiations it took to achieve Pomeroy
Village
ad. Oidia
Fridley,
Point
the present pacts .
ministration to tear down the Pleasant.
former Pomeroy Senior High
Birth - A daughter to Mr.
bUilding . 'The deed to the and Mrs . Terry Powell,
property was read and states Racine.
that the village of Pomeroy
has five years in which to
occupy the senior high
building and the property
MEDICAL PATIENT
reverts to the board if it is not
. The P omeroy emergency
used by that time.
squad was called to Spr'
ft was reported that there is ing.Ave. at 1:40 Tuesday
a tentative plan for razing the morning for George Foss who
senior high 'building and was taken to Veterans
placing a modular building on Meniurial Hospital fur
the site, for use as a village medical treatment.
hall. The board Indicated it
was against razing the
building and that public
PARTY PLANNED
sentiment also is against such
The past presidents parley
action.
Also attending the meeting Drew Webster Post 39
were board tiJembers, Virgil Auxiliary will hold a costume
King, Wendell Hoover, Mrs. party at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
Jennifer
Sheets, •' ·. ad· at !he hqme o! Marjorie Goett
with Iva Powell as hostess.
ministrative
ass~tant
Dwight Goins, James Diehl,
high school principal and his
assistant
Fenton Taylor, and It takes only a minute or two to
Charles Downie .
complete a transaction at our driveBILL SIGNED
up window. Open Monday , thru
COLUMBUS (UPI l - Gov .
James A. Rhodes has signed
Thursday from 9 A.M. until 3" P.M.
legislation
requiring
Friday from 9 ·A:M. to 3 P.M. and 5
Hamilton County com·
P.M. to 7 P.M. and Saturday 9 A.M.
m1ss1oners
to
operate
Hamilton
County
Municipal
' to 12 noon for your convenience.
Olurt with shared revenues
from the city of Cincinnati.
The city and county
WALK-UP TELLERWINDOW AND
'currently share respon·
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
sibllities for operating the
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.
court .

Meigs •••

86 .freed • • •

Gang ..•

News •• in Briefs
.

busmesses are available.
St otr agencies cont racting
for s ur h· projects would then
have to mnsider the compctitive bids of the minority
and sm a ll bu siness firm s .
The Controlling Board would
oversee the process .
The compromise langua ge
was a pproved , 9 to 2.
The committee also agr ee ~
to an emergency provision
a uth ori zin g
the
st a t e
De pa rtment
of
Publi c
Welfare to make Medicaid
pa yment s through November
to 74 de-cert ified nursing
hom es whjl• att empts are
mad e · to find alternative
housing for 1,828 patients.
The department said unless
the language was added, it
would have to stop payments
. at once. It said the state
sta nds t o lose $500,000 a
month in fede ral reimbursements if it continues to
pa)' unsafe and unhealthy
facilities .
The committee alsn added
$2 million for classrooms and
Ia borat ories at Sinclair
Technical College and $1
million for additional cost of
construction of a business
and administration building
at Wright State University .
Also added was a provision
requirin g the use
of
American steel in all Slate
construction projects.
- The committee ratified a
subcommittee insertion of
$4.5 million for the Oepart-

•

ac1ne I am gets power p ant

men t of Economic a n d
Th e s ubcomm ittee also
Co111munity Dev elopment to appropriated $1.5 million lo
use for industria l develoJ&gt;- en co urage energy cdn·
ment and to help cover servation in state facilities by
economic losses s ustained by converting their boilers to
mmmunities abandoned by alternate fuels .
industries.
These 'other items were
That money wouldbeintwo added to the bill :
separate funds ove rseen by
million for repairs to
the state Controlling Board. the Akron sewer system
One fund would contain $2.5 dsmaged by an e~plosi on last
million for the department to June .
spend , subject t o board aJ&gt;- $4.5mlllionfor0llwnbus
proval, on communities Technical Institute and $4
s ufferin g , losses· from million for ClarkoGeneral and
departing plants. The other T"f'hnical College.
would contain $2 million to
- S2 million for parking
us~ for land purchases and facilities at Youngstown
water and sewer lines to State University , and a like
attract new industries.
amoWlt for the law library at
The latter purpose drew the University of Toledo.
$2.5 million from the Con·
- $40,QOO for disaster relief
trolling Board last week for in Hamilton County, which
location of a Honda motor· was struck by a tornado Sept.
cycle factory near MaryS' 30.
ville.
- $480,000· for educational
The subcommittee, which television in northeastern
refined the bill earlier in the Ohio and Cincinnati.
day, was able to make a
--$500,000 for construction
number of additions to the at the East Uverpool branch
app•opristion by knocking of Kent State University.
out a SIS million allocation lor
- $130,000 for an education
a· world trade center in hall of fame in YoWlgstown .
Cleveland.
The committee voted down
Sen. Harry MesHel, D-:,.. an amendment which would
Youngstown ,
committee have attached a requirement
chainnan, said another $6 for a cost analysis and debt
million to $10 million will be financing plan to a $750,000
available because claims for appropriation for planning
winter heating discounts by renovation of a field house
' the elderly and disabled will and construction of a SJlllrlS
not reach tbe amount aJ&gt;- complex at the Un\versiiYQf
propriated in a recently- Cincinnati.
enacted law.

A .~illion hydroelectric P.DWer project will be installed
by Ohio Power Olmpany at Radne Da m on the Ohio River in
southern Ohio.
The Racine project will be the first of its kind in the
eastern United States, the second in the country, and the third
m North America .
.
. In making the a nnouncement of the two-unit, 48,000kilowatt hydro installation, C. A. Heller, Ohio Power's
executiVe vtce president, said that work would begin on a
coffer dam at Racine later this year , with construction of the
pOwerhouse to follow in the spring.

n.s

innovative programing, more
popular programing and
niore quality programing.''
While Backe, the number
two man "at GBS, made the
statement , the power still
resides with William S.
Paley , CBS chairman of the
board and very much in
charge .

~'ollowing Paley and Backe
in the chain of command is a
new man in the third position.

HeisGeneF . Jankowslti, who
has been named president of
the CBS Broadcast Group,

which includes television and
radio netwocks and owned
and operated stations.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Depo s it In s urance
Corporation

WON 'T INTERVENE '
MONTEGO BAY , Jamaica
~ Cuban President Fidel
Castro . saying his regime
intervened in Angola only
after South Africa joined the

civi1 war. has vowed he never
will interfere in the internal
affairs nf any nation ..

Fifteen C ents
Vol. 28, No. 13 1

unable to use the ferry and
had to make the long ' trip ·
upriver to the Mason·
Pomeroy
Bridge,
was
reportedly lined up and ready
to use the bridge when it
opened at 6 a.m .
With the bridge's opening,
the free ferry service was
discontinued . .1
" The main . reason I am
here is to thank the people on
both sides of the bridge for
their patience. I am aware of
their frustrations," stated the

apologetic governor.
Rockefeller, alon g with
newly appointed Department
of Highways Commissioner
Charles.[,. Miller, new onto a
bridge ramp in a West
Virginia
State
Poli ce
helicopter. Once off the air
vehicle, the two, along with
other highway officials,
Delegate Charles Damron ,
Vernon Board, construction
supervisor with American
Bridge Co . and a contin~ent
of media personnel walked

'

the length of the bridge and
back.
Jumping back and forth
over the con c rete wall ,
dividing the four Janes of the
bridge , Rockefeller stopped
passersby to apologize for
the bridge's closlng and then
telling them that this was last
walk they will have to take on
the bridge.
One woman gave the
governor some comforting
words when she t old him the
(Continued on page 10)

..

,~

Crosby laid to rest
.,

heart a,!tack Friday,
LOS ANGELES ( UPI) Mrs. Crosby met him a\ the
The family of singer Bing
Crosby, saying he "hated airport with her other
funerals," hoped to hold children, Mary Frances, 17,
small, · simple Catholic and Nathaniel , 15.
The family asked that ·serservices for him today and
lay his body to rest boside vices be kept private in
those of his parents an,d first accord with Crosby's wishes,
although, the widow said she
wife.
.
'
A family spokesman said a realized that was difficUlt
funeral mass would be held at because ''everytxxly loved
St. Paul's Catholic church in him ."
Westwood at 6 a.m. PDT - She said she found tbe
services
at
today, with burial to follow memorial
immediately afterward in London's Westminister
Holy Cross . Cemetery in Cathedral and St. Patrick's
Inglewood, seven miles Cathedral in New York "a
away ' in a plot rontaining the joYful thing .. . exactly the
graves of his parents and first kind of service he would have
liked.
wile , actress Dixie Lee .
''Bing forbade me to give a
The singer's body, accompanied by Harry Crosby, 19, memorial service of any
his eldest son by his widow , kind. You see he hated
Kathryn, arrived in Los An· funerals and he didn ~ plan to
geles Monday night from come to this one."
Mrs. Crosby was solemn
Spain, where he died of a
but composed at an airport

news C()Oference, appearing
near tears only when asked
ber feelings when the· coffin
arrived.
" I haven t seen the ceffin
yet," she replied: "Most of
me doesn't realize yet he
won't be coming home next

week."
She had remained in the
airport terminal while
wockers removed the coffin
from the plane before the
pa"Uengers emerged. Mary
Frances had tears in her eyes
and held Nathaniel's hand'.
Th~'Crosbys said they had
p!ild little attention to
differing reports o! hiS age.
uHe was 73, at least. to me,"
Mrs. Crosby said, ' though he
acted like SO."
"He was just daddy to us,"
Mary Frances said. "We
didnt check his age. He was
just our daddy.' '

VIEWING CORHECI'ED AREAS-While walking
across the Silver Memoiral Bridge late Tuesday
afternoon, West Virginia Gov. Jay Rockefeller stopped to
look at many o! the corrected defects in the upper-tension

JOHN C; WOI.FE,Ph. D., was the prindpal speaker
at Tuesday s dedtcation . of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Mental Health Olmmumty Center. He is executive

200 persons attend
.dedication ceremony

(

S\Neater Perfection.
Warm, cuddly and fashion·right , , ,
they're just what's happening in
sweater styles today! Shawl eollared pull.
overs, cable wraps, and cowl neck
!:lousons ... beauliful wardrobe additions!

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY.
v

director of the National Council for CommWlity Mental
Health Ce)lters, Inc ., Washington D.. C. With him on the
speakers' platform are members of the Center board and
the "648" board.
·
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ELBERFELDS

i

areas ·of the span. Pictured, left to right, viewing a
. particular area, are Del. Charles Damron, Gov.
Rockefeller. Department of Highways Commissioner
Charles L. Miller ; and Vernon Board , supervisor lor
American Bridge 01 .

Chamber elated over new industry

AT CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

·FRIENDLY BANK"

or

en tine
"

The Silver Memorial
Bridge wa! inspected and
then pronounced safe by none
less than West Virginia
Governor Jay Rockefeller
late Tuesday afternoon .
Early this morning, as
promised a week ago by the
governor, two lanes of the
span were ·again open to
motorized traffic. It had been
closed for 15 weeks to make
repairs in the upper-tension
areas of the bridge.
Truck traffic , which was ·

WITH
DRIVE-UP BANKING

VISIT SET
COLUMBUS (UPI) - An
Ohio delegation will visit
Washington later thi~ week
for a U. S. Department of
Olmmerce seminar outlining
help available to com·
munities affected by steel
industry closings and layoffs.

and

Wlit will be installed within a bulb.,;haped housing under water
and beneath the powerhouse.
This arrangement, Heller said, will provide both improved
plan t design and ideal enviroilmental conditions. Among tbe
largest bulb.type unit.-; in the wor ld, the Racine turbinegenerators will employ turbine blades 25 feet in diamete r and
rotating a t the r elativ•ly slow speed of abo ut one r evo]ution
·
per second .
Ohio Power also holds a preliminary permit to study the
a similar hydroelectric facility at the governfeasi bility
ment's nea rby ~ a ll ipol is Dam .

·B ridge reopened today

ON TIME•..

''1'1/E

existing river dams .
He ller said that Sulzer Brothers , Inc .• New York, will serve
as prune contractor for th e equipmen~ for the Racine Dam
and will deliver the two units, each consisting of a turbine
a generator, for installa tion in tbe s ummer of !979. Th~ two
turbines will be ma nufactured by Escher Wyss, of
Sw!lierland , a Sulze r affil iate, and the two generators by E lin
Uruon AG, an Austria n company.
. Similar hydraulic turbines for a powerhouse on the
Ollumbia River in Washington came from France those for an
insta llation in Manitoba ca me from Russia. Ea&lt;·h genera ting

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday. Oct , 19, 1977

CBS reorganizes executive suite
By JOAN HANAUER
NE;W YORK (UPI ) - CBS
announced a
sweeping
reorganization
in
its
executive suite Monday in an
effort by the television
network to move out of third
place in the audience ratings .
The numbor three man at
CBS has been replaced, the
television network has a pew
president, and entertainment
and sports have boen split off
into divisions of their own .
The new structure strongly
resembles the set-up at ABC,
which now is the No . I
network, a position CBS
dominated for 20 years until the 1976-77 season .
John D. Backe, president of
CBS,
annnounced
the
changes and said :
"The ultimate purpose, of
course, is to accelerate the
generation
o!
more

He .aid tha t the plan t's annual production of 235-m illion
ki,lo'!a\thours of electricity is the equiva lent of the power
reqwrements of more tha n 25,000 aver age residential
customers.
•
" All this will be accom plished without the consumption of
any ratw'!il resources a nd with no detrimental effect on the
environment ," H~ller sai~ .
.
The planned mstallatton at Ra cm~ Dam, a governmentoperated navigational and (IO?d-&lt;:ontrol facility, is totally
compatible with a portion of President Carter's energy
program whic h specifically encourages such irU,tallations a t

\

Two hundred people attended
Tuesday'sthe dedication of
the new Community Mental
Health Center across SR 160
from the Holzer Medical
Center and heard Dr. John C.
Wolfe laud tbe " citizen involvement'' in atta.inment..of
"the project .
Th~ executive director of
the National Council for Community Mental Health
Centers, Washington, D. C.,
said that there are, have
been, and will be " complex
problems" to solve. He urged
the staff membefs always tu
bear in mind the " dignity of
the people for whom yuu work
and fur whom whom you
work! '
Five or six dignataries in·
eluding- County Cummissioners Paul Dean Niday and
James C. Saunders cut the
ribbon at the end of the formal program.
The Rio Grande Chorale
from Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College, under
direction of Merlyn Ross,
sang. Invocation was ' by
David Strang, director of col·
lege relations of Rio Grande
College-Oltrununity College,
and then two chairmen
welcomed the crowd.
'
Thomas Moulton, Center
board chainnan, and Harold
McClurg, "648" buard chairman, not only delivered the
welcome addresses but als&lt;&gt;
introduced the members of
their boards. Ma&lt;ine S.
Plummer, executive director
of the "648" board, introduced and recognized public of·
ficials and dignitaries.
Dr. George R Greaves ,
Center director, introduced
Dr. Wolfe . Both Greavesand
Wolfe 11a ve the Ph . D. degree.
McClurg, in his closing
comments, thanked the pe&lt;&gt;pie for coming to the •vent ,
billed as a day of celebrati• &gt;n
and dedication , running from ·
lOa .•• · to8p.m.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Friday and a chance
of rain Saturday and
Sunday. Highs will be In the
60s Friday and Saturday
and ln"lhe upper 50s ·or mid
60s Sunday. Lows wUl be in
the 40s.
:: :::::: :::~:;;::~:::;~::::: :::::::::; .;:;::::::: :::::::=: ::::::;::: ::: :::

No objections
made by Judge
No objections were voiced
Tuesday night to the proposal
of the Meigs County Com- ·
mi.Sion to move the law
library. from Judge John C.
Bacon's office to the large
room presently occupied by
CETA.
Meeting
with
commissioners, Judge Bacon said
he had no objections and
could see no reason why the
noor of the room would not
hold the weight of the law
books since it supported the
old photostat machine for
many years.
Also meeting with the
commissioners was Bill
Wickline, deputy auditor and
grants administrator, to
outline auditing procedures
for a HUD grant. Wickline
was instructed lo contact a
certified public accolmtant
(CPA) and have the senior
citizens grant audited. The
remainder of the block grant
will be audited later .
Barbara Sargent met
regarding a job on the CETA
program. Mrs. Sargent ad·
vised the board that she was
presently · unemployed and
available should there be an
.opening .
A discussion was held
concerning the intersection of
SR 7 and county road 24 .
(Union Ave.). It was pointed
out that due to insufficient
marking and poor visibility,
the intersection is very dif·
ficult to see at night. It was
decided to contact the State
Highway
Department,
Division 10, Marietta , to see if
it would be possible to ~et

better lighting at night.
The commissioners, in
other business, designated
the following 'additional job
slots · under the CETA
program: one bus driver for
the · .Community Action
Agency; one cook for the
county home; one in·
vestigator for the prosecuting
attorney .
One job slot was left open
for additional study.
Gary Aspin, sanitarian,
submitted a proposal lor the
Wldertaking" of private trash
hauling to replace the trash
collection boxes presently
provided by the coWlty. The
board discussed the proposal
briefly then took it under
advisement for further study,
A meeting with the health
department is slated in the
near future .

By unanimous" vote, Mrs.
Jane Brown, Pomeroy, was
re-appointed ,as a member of
the Community · Mental
·Health &amp; Mental Retardation
648 Board.for a period of louryears.
Wesley Buehl, county
engineer, reported that the
Ohio Bridge Co., will make
the necessary repairs to the
bridge on county road 29.
Buehl stated that the work
will be done in approximately
30 days.
The commissioners voted
to re-schedule their regular
meeting of Oct . :!lito Oct. 26 at
6:30 p.m .
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush , commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter. clerk.

Oteshire man
•
•
IS giVen
jail sentence
Clifford
Plants,
54,
Chesbire, was fined $1,000
and costs and was given a 150
day jail sentence when he
appeared before Middleport
Fred
Hoffman
Mayor
Tuesday night to lace
telephone
harassment
charges.
Middleport police said that
Plants was questioned about
the calls . on Oct. 13, but
denied making any harassing
calls. However, pollee said on
Oci. 17, he confessed to
making 33 calls to residences
in the 992, 742 and 949 number
areas. The calls were obscene
in nature ahd were made over
the past few months.
Others fined in Mayor
Hoflffian's court were Robert
Redman, 26 , New Haven, $50
and eosts, reckless operaiion
and Tony Bradbury, 25,
Middleport, $200 andCosts
and three days in \ail on· ch,arges of . driving while
intoxicated, and $25 and
costs, on a charge of driv·ing
without a license.
Forfeitirlg bonds in the
court were James M. Tanner,
54, Lan~sville, $27, posted on
speeding charges; Gregory
L. Johnson, 19, Racine, $25,
squealing tires, and Mary Jo
Robbins, Point Pleasant, $28,
speeding .

Fred
Morrow,
local keeping it trimmed down .. Bill suggested possibilities of a
manager of the Ohio Power Meyer reported on his project sternwheeler boat · race and
Company, announced a $54 of moving a large tree near possible boat rides for the
million hydroelectric power the . former coal tipple on E. annual Big Bend Regatta.
Librarian Miss Susan
plant will be constructed at • Mam St. and displayed a copy
Fleshman
explained
a
the Racine Dam in Meigs of "Go/ ' the Goodyear tire
County.
dealer magazine, in which program of the library in
The aruJouncement came at there is a feature storY on providing free films, a screen
the luncheon meeting of the John Fultz and the operation and even a projector free of
Pomeroy
Chamber
of of the Meigs Tire Center in charge to organiiations ,
Commerce .
Chamber Pomeroy. Several good local . churches and business people
members were elated over photos are featured with the free of charge. She showed
lists · of films which are
.
the project and its profound article.
available
through
the
economic effect on the
Qutckel announced that the
program
provided
'by
the
county. ·
Chaperone, aD· excu~sion
Ohio
Valley
Association
of
Fred Crow Jr ., chambeo boat, will ~e coming to
Libraries.
president, reported that the Pomeroy in May. ,. He
chamber has $3,138.45 in the
regatta fund; $2,082.80 in the
,
general fund; $2,355.28 in the
Christmas lighting fund,
$76.07 in the banquet fund and
over $200 in the cleanup fund.
Crow said more contributions
will be needed for the
Christmas lighting fund.
Jim Frecker reported that
materials for the Christmas
decorations are expected to
arrive by the first of the
month. Crow named John
Anderson, Vera Van Meter,
Ada Nease and Allie.Simon to
serve on the annual Christ·
mas promotional program .
A ''gong show," to be
conducted by the chamber in
conjunction with a dinner
meeting, was discussed. Bill
Quickel was named to work
with Crow and Joe Young on
the project. Crow indicated
that some experienced talent
will be available, but he
hopes most of the talent will
be people, who have not
performed much in the 1past.
Paul Simon, vice preSident,_
said two young men are
working on the river bank

:•

,..

r\

'\

f.

• ••

•

THREE FINED
Fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night were
Jeffrey Haw!ey, Mi&lt;!dleport.
$250 and costs on reckless
operation charges ; Joyce E.
Riley , Clifton, W. Va., $30and
costs, improper backing, and
Charles K. Hall, Rutland, $50
and costs, squealing tires.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight, with
lows near 40. Sunny Thurs·
day, with highs in the low 60s .
Probability of precipitation is
20 percent ioday and 10
percent tonight and Thurs·
day.

Some 30 films were loaned
through the. program in
Meigs County last month
Miss Fleshman reported . In
conclusion, Miss Fleslunan
showed one of the color,
sound films, this one dealing
with glider flying .
Attending were Crow ,
Simon, Quickel, Mayer, Miss
Fleshman, Young, Bill
Grueser, Leo Vaughan, Dale
Warner , Allen Richards,
Frecker, Stanley Houdashelt,
Morrow , and
Barbara
Chapman,
c hamber
secretary.

SEEKS LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Thomas McGuire,
24 , Reedsville and Darlene
Sue Harris, 25 , Reedsville.
Tu esda y.

•

.
NATIONAL BPW WEEK OBSERVED - Highlighting the Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club observance of National BPW Week was the selection of Eloise
Wilson , " Woman of the Year," left, and Terrie Miller Walker, "Woman of the Week ,"
center . They were presented with gifts and corsages following the annoWJcement by the
committee of Janet Korn, Eva Hobson , and Dortha Salser at Monday night's meeting held
at the Meigs Inn . Speaker for the dinner meeting .was Richard Jones, Meigs CoWltY
Commissioner , seated , who talked of accomplishments in the multi-purpose building to be
constructed on Mulborry Heights, of the return of the employment office to Meigs County,
and of the five year pian for hard surfacing roads in Meigs Olunty . Mrs . Edith Forrest,
right, legislative chairman , wa s program chairman .

•

•

,

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