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H - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeror. 0 .. Wednesday. Oct. 19. 1977

Union Bank of · Harrisville

12 ·persons face federal charges-

I W,Val. the FBI said.

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
LOU ISVILLE. Ky. (UP! \
- Twelve persoqs have been
indicted on federa l charges of
trying to defraud banks in
Kentucky. Ohio, and West
Virginia out of $S .o million.
the FBI announced Tuesday.
In addition, sik of the men
were charged in an elaborate
scheme · to defraud the late
Ell;s Presley of more than
Sl38,000,
Bob Pence. assistant agent
in charge of the FBI in
Louisville, ' said Tuesday
federal grand juries here and

in Nashville. Tenn., cHarged
the suspects with taking part
in a year~ong plot to defraud
the banks bY using a phony

Bannon Jr ., curr enty in
federal ('UStody ,in Terminal
Island. Calif. , John B.
Calandrella. 42. of Attleboro,
certificate of deposit.
Mass .. Phillip K. Kilzer Jr .,
The certificate was drawn 44, of Ellendale , Mipn ., John
from. Seven Oaks Finance D. Packman, 4:i, of Kent,
Umited of Kent. England, England, and Jean.claude
and the IZ tried to vouch for Cornaz. 51. and Pascal
its authenticity ID U.S. banks Cornai, 26, both of Geneva ,
through
letters
of Switzerland.
Pence said Kaye used the
introduction. telephone calls
and telegrams, according to fake $100,000 certificate of
deposit in an unsuccessful
Pence.
Those indicted in Louisville attempt to obtain a loan from
were John A. Kaye, 72, of the Louisville Trust Bank.
However, bank officials
Marietta. Ohio , Carl T.

re&lt;:&lt;&gt;gnized the fraud scheme
and ooti(ied t)je FlU. ,Pence .
said. Banl&lt;s around the nation
had been alerted ID be on the
lookout for such a scheme,
accocding to Pence.
The alleged conspirators
planned ID use an initial
$70,000 loan from the bani&lt; as
collateral for $S.o million in
further loans.
The other banks which
were intended targets of the
plot were the Matewan
(W.Va .) National Bank, the
Lowndes Bank in Clarksburg,
W.Va., the First Bank of
Marietta (Ohio) and the

$3,100 judgment

"This is a large, multi·
faceted fraud," said Pence .
who described the alleged
plot as "very organized ."
However, he declined to say if
the alleged conspirators were
known underworld figures .
The indictments were un·
sealed moments after
Kilzer's arrest as he stepped
off a flight from Panama to
Miami, ace&lt;&gt;rding to Pence .
The Nashville grand jury
returned indictments against
Frederick P. Pro of Palm
Beach. Fla, J. Lawrence
Wolfson of North Miami,
Fla ., Raymoo W. Bazner of
Boston, Gabriel R. Caggiano
of Boston and Roy E . Smith of
Miami.
A grand jury in Memphis,
Tenn., also indicted Pro,
Kilzer; Wolfson, Bazner,

sought in court

WE ARE THE
HOTDOG
PEOPLE
THAT WAY!

Misdemeanor is charged in case
CLEVEf.AND (UPI) - side. ·
The jury chose not to lndlct
The Cuyahoga County Grand
Patrolman
Paul Ocilka, 2S,
Jury, indicted Cleveland
Patrolman David Kavutic, 29, who was with Kavulic during
on a misdemeanor charge of the chase. A charge of
neglige~t.J10mlcide Tuesday felonious ·assault had been
.
in the Sept. 3 shooting death sought.
The Trawick boy was slam
of Wadell Trawick. 14.
Trawick, the son of Billy when patrolmen opened fire
and !do Trawick of on the car he was driving
Cleveland, was 'killed at the after it sideswiped a pollee
climax of a 40.block car chase car and ran through a
through the city's southeast ro•dblock.
:Now you know
Prince Charles' full title is:
upgrade the aircraft to meet Charles Philip · Arthur
FAA specifications for . Goerge, His Royal Highness,
commercial aircraft, work the Prince of Wales, Earl of
which
allegedly
cost Chester. Duke of Cornwall,
$338,048.33.
Duke of Rolhesay, Earl of
"Although the defendants Garrick, Baron Renfrew.,
had agreed to upgrade the Lord· of the Isles, Great
aircraft they never intended steward of Scotland, Knight
to do so," .agents said.
of the Garter.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A suit in the amount of
$3,100 has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Dennis M. Parker, RD ,
Long Bottom , against Carl E.
Smith, Inc., in care of J .
Sterling Lamp, Tri County
Bank. Coolville ..
The suit is for cutting and
destroying a large number of
hardwood trees and other
vegetation and damaging
premises of plaintiff.
Filing for dissolution of
marriage were Donald Ed·
ward Whaley, Rt . I, Shade
and Virginia Gail Whaley,
Middleport.

THINK OF US

Ca~giano and Smith on
charges of mail fraud, fraud
by
wire,
interstate
transportation of stolen
property and cq,nspirljCY in
the alleged scheme to
defraud Presley .
,
FBI agents said the scheme
revolved
around
a
complicated agreement
whereby Presley agreed to
sell one of his aircraft and
lease it back , and then
sublease it to another
company .
The government claims
Presley sold his Lockheed
Jetstar in the sununer of 1976
to W.W .P . AirlTaft Corp.,
which leased the aircraft
back to the entertainer.
Presley in tum sub-leased the
plane to Air Cargo Express,
which was headed by Pro.
The indictment cootends
Air Cargo Express agreed ID

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Formers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Sub~idi;jries, at the CltJ!~ of
business September 30. 1977, a s•:Ite banking histitulion organized and
operating under the banking laws uf tl&lt;is State and a member of the Federal
Reserve System. Published in accordance wllh a call made by the State Bank·_
lng Author.ities and by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash anddue [rum ba nks . .. . . .. . .. . .. . . ... . .. .. .. ... . . . .. ..... 1,946,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ....... . ........... . .. . ....... . . . ..... 4,798,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations ... .. ........... . .. . .. ...... . . . .. .... 114,000.00

Obligations of Swles and political subdivisions . . . _. ___ . .... . . .. -. 2,425,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . . . ........ ... . . ....... . 24,000.00
Feder::t l funds suld and securities purchased under

agreements to resell in domestic offices ............ . ...... . . .... 600,000.00
a. Loans, Tow! (excluding urtearned income ) . . ......... 9,700,000.00
b. Less • Reserve for possible loan losses . .......... .' . .. ... 70,000.00
c. Loans, net. ......... . ...................................... 9,630,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and Hxtures, and

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED - Warren
Black, Rutland: George
Foss, Pomeroy ; Pauline
Cunningham, Minersville;
MaFcia
Hobstetter,
Pomeroy ; Lena Pullins,
Reedsville ; Michael Nice,
Albany; Michael Heck ,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Patricia
Bowser, Richard Glasgow,
Jeffrey Hawley, Laura
Robert Price.ll.

other assets representin~ bank premises ..... : : . ..... ... . ·..... ... 428,000.j)O

J, Ruger W. Hysell. Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare

tha l this report of condition is true tu the best of my knowledge and behef.
Roger W. Hysell
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare t.ha( it has been examined by us and tu the best uf our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
E. Robert Schellhase ,
Ferman E. Moure - Directors

Lingerie Dept., 2nd Floor

ELBERFELDS

COLUMBUS -OHIO COULD SAVE nearly $1.8 billion if it
would resurface now 14,400 miles of roads which are expected
ID be worn out by 1982, according to a report distributed
Wednesday by the Ohio Contractors Association. The report
was cmtpUed bY The Road Information Program, a
Washington-based research and information agency.
0

·~T-.IRR.TPT.nN
--- ..._ .. ---

~--- ...--- ... IILJ

---

--- --- . . , ..._ •

'
Co lu mbus and Southern customers in par ts o f Alhens Wash ingi on and Maigs Counties wi ll soon
be served from a new substation at Coolville, Ohio . Th is new station wil l allow the Compa ny
to properly supply the increasmg requir ements of customers· electrical demands, provide more
·
'
reliable service to the area and improve voltage regu lation.

A major swi tchover to the station is planned

OQ

SUNDAY MORNING,· OCTOBER 23
. ·~
'
'\
It wil l be necessary to interrupt service for about 2 hours (from 5 :00AM . to 7.00 AM .) for
Columbus an'tt Sout hern customers in the'vicmity of BASHAN; EAGLE RIDGI;, KENO,
ALONG STATE ROUTE 248, TUPPERS PLAINS, ALFRED, COOLVILLE, TORCH and
HOCKINGPORT.
'

I

We hope th1s outage will not cause you any major 'inco nven·ience .

J

In case of ra in the work and outage wi ll be postponed until S UNDA Y, OCTOBI; R 30 at
. .
~
the same hour.
•

Thereon Johnson

•

St;Jle of Ohiu C11U11 ly of Meigs, ss :
Swum

t 11c:tlld s u b~c ri iJe d

bdm·e 111e l.h1s ll th day of O(;toUt!r. 1977.

'.
My Commission Expires July 17,1978.

JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public

ATLANTA - TWENTY·EIGIIT PERSONS have died
from Legionnaires disease and 93 cases of the ailment have
been coofirmed in 22 stales since an outbreak in Philadelphia
claimed 29lives last sununer, the national Center for Disease
COOtrol sai~ Wednesday.
The CDC's latest report indicates 'J:/ more cases of the
disease and lour more d"!'thS have occurred since its previous
Oct. 3 report .

WILUAMSON, KY . - RALPH DEAN, 20, Mansfield,
Ohio, has begun serving a prison term after he pleaded guilty
ID a reduced charge of first-degree manslaughter in the 1976
slaying of a Clarence Siegman, 70, Cincinnati.
Dean was sentenced lll20 years in prison by Grant County,
Ky., Circuit Judge James R. Ford, after he pleaded guilty to
the reduced count. He had been charged with murd~r in
coonection with the killing of Siegman last November in this
Northern Kentucky county.

ELECTBIC SEB VICE

Common siock:
b. No. sHares out.wnding 12,000 ..... . .. . .• . . . ... (par va lue )
300,000.00
Surplus . ......... . .. .. .... .. ... . .... .. .. . . : ................. .. oOO,OOO.OO
' 'ded prof't
Und1v1
1 s . . . . .... ... .. . ...• . .•. . . . . . .......... ... .. 436 000 00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . . .' . .. .. . .. ... .. ... . ... .. ... .. . . .... 1,236,000.0
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ... . .. . ........ -...... -- -.- ... ... . .. . 20,166,000.00
MEMORANDA
Average for,l5 or 30 calendar days endin g with call date:
a. Cash and due from banks...... . . .. ............... . .. , . . .. ... 2,070,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell. ...... . ......... . ....... .,.. ... ... . ...... 1,!52,000.00,
c. Tutalluans . . ........ . . , . . ..... _....... _. _, ....... _. ... .. -. 9,698,000.00
e. Total deposits in domestic and foreign offices ..... ... . .. , .... .'19,124,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledgl'!l assets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pl edged to secure deposits and other liabilities ........ .. . .... ..... 889,163.80
TOTAL. . . . , ... ...... .... . ... . __ . ... . - .. . ... . . - .. .. . . _.. . .. .... 889,163,80

By United Press IJitei'IUltional
WASHINGTON - SENS. RICHARDS. SCHWEIKER and '
H. John Heinz ID, both R·Pa ., and Howard Metzenbaum, DOhio, joined a handful of senators Wednesday in urging the
Carter administration to keep quotas on foreign specialty steel
Import.'! into the United States.
The International Trade Commission voted earlier this
month to advise President Carter ID keep the three-year quotas
imposed in June 1976 on stainless and other speclal~y steels.

CIRCLEVIlLE - MARK COON OF ASHVILLE, grew the
largest pumpkin and the largest squash this year in the annual
welg!Hn held in conjunction with the Pumpkin Festival, Ohio's
oldest and .largest festival. Coon's pumpkin entry weighed
2101!. pounds, beating out the entry of Ray Chiesa of Hall Moon
Bay, Calif., which tipped the scales at 200 poWJds.

•

Other assets .. . ..... : . . .' ............ - - ....... -- .. -. . - ........... 1,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .......................... .. ................ 20,166,000.00
LIABILITIES
.
Demand deposit. of individuals,
.
partnerships and corporations .. ............... . .... ... . .. ... 4,988,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations ........ -. .. . . .. , . . .......... . 13,228,000.00
Deposits uf United SUi tes Government. . . ......... ... . ... ......... . 30,000.00
Deposits of Slates and political subdivisions ... _._ ...... .. .. .. .... . 430,000.00
DepOsits uf cummcrd al banks .... . .. .. ... . ... . .... . . , 1, •• • •••••••• 5,000.00
Certified and officers· checks .. .. ... -. . ..... . ............. . .... . 145,000.00
· Tota l Deposits In Domestic Offices . ......... . . . ...... !8,826,ooo,OO
a . Total demand deposits .. ... ..... .. .. . .. ... .... ... . . -5,533 000 00
b. Tuwl time and savings deposits .. ... . . ... ... . ...... 13,293,000.00 .
TotaiDeposits in Domestic and Foreign Offices . ... --- ... - .... . . 16 826,000 00
Other liabilities ..... .. !.. ........ . .............. . .......... .'. , , 104 000 00
TOTAL LIABILITIES . . . .. .. . ... ...... .' . .. . . .... : ..... -.. 16,930,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL

fNews. • •in Briefs!

COLUMBUS - THE EXECUTIVE BOARD of the Ohio
Cmference of Teamsters, which represent.'! 130,000 members,
came out Wednesday in support of Stale Issue I, the instant
voter registration repeal alnendment.
This contrasts with the other major labor unions, including
the Ohio AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers, which oppose
the issue.

Be sure to see all the other styles
women's flannel and brushed
gowns, pajamas, and_ robes - A
truly excellent selection.

Co(&amp;iiftbu,
'-----~----~~-----l~n------.---------&lt;'- .

at

en tine

F'ifteen Cents

Vol. 28, No. 132

·'

~t':'~~,.,~~~:;::;:.~,~::::::::· :·:·~::;::,:,;,~:·:·:·:&gt;·:,:·:·:::,:::,~:::,:,:·::~::::::::.::;:;:::::*::&gt;;;:;::::::;:

WASffiNGTON - SEN. JOHN GLENN, [).OHIO. Has
urged the Veter;ms Administration not to suspend GI bill
payments to veterans attending colleges which have scheduled
lengthy winter breaks to blunt the effect.'! of possible energy
shortages.
Glen said Wednesday VA regulations deny GI bill benefits
ID any student-veterlll! who inlerropts his studies for 31 days or
mere.

Roush , Mary Bonecutter,

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Harold
Robert
Clark,
Point
Pleasant; William Duncan,
Gallipolis Ferry; Glenville
Hill, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Dave Meadows. Ghent, W.
Va.; Mrs. Harold Provins,
Rio Grande; Mrs. Bruce
Wray, ·Ashton; John Oshel,
Point Pleasant ; Lolita
Bennett, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Wiley Morgan ,. and
daughter, GalllpQ.ji_s;
Vanessa Reed, Lakin ; Luke
Coffee, Vinton ; -Anne Davis,
Middleport ; Pauline Cam·
den, Point Pleasant; James
Farrell, Point Pleasant;
Jerry Reed, Buffalo; Jamie
Woomer, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Joe McComas, Ashton;
Mrs.
James
Thomas,
Charleston; Wilma Wilson,
Leon; Robert Jones, Point
Pleasant ; and Mrs. C. E.
Woodard, Apple Grove.

Thursday, October 20, 1977

e

CINCINNATI - A NEW METHOD of detecting blood
vessel abnormalities in strokeiJrone persons before they
develop aerious health problems has ~o:Jl developed by a
University of Cincinnati research team.
Neurology Professor Dr. Charles P. Olinger, and
Mechanical Engineering Professor Dr . Jack F. Wasserman
have created a stethoacope-&lt;:omputer system that picks up and
analyzes previously undetected sounds that warn of a cerebral
aneurysm -a ballooning weak spot in a blood vessel.

Rev. Graham
denies charges ·
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The move·, and bougnt some
Rev. Billy Graham denied farms lor his children,'' he
charges Wednesday he said.
"I suppose. I could almost
attempted ID conceal · the
existence of a $25 million fund at t.his point live on .the
buill up through donations to . income from what I
inherited,'' he added.
his organization.
·
' The deniill came in a hews , Turnirig to the crusade,
conference shortly after Graham said he hoped the Graham arrived here to ·event would better the life of
·begin a 10-day crusade at the city in several ways.
"I would like Ill see. a new
, Riverfront Coliseum Friday.
working
relationship among
Graham said he had told a
of this city and I
the
churches
reporter for a Charlotte,
would
like
see the civic
N.C., newspaper four years
ago about the fund's leaders of the city become
aware of what they
existence.
The evangelist admitted he personally can do in the
had made a mistake 'by not . social areas," he said.
Also saying he hoped to
cal!lng the fund a foundation,
but said nonetheless he provide understanding about
believed he had properly ihe volatile issue of school
announced its formation at desegregation, Giaham
said, "We have as I
the time it was created.
Graham
also understand it, a race
acknowledged his private situation in the schools here,
and I hope this crusade can
wealth.
"I inherited some money. make some small contribuMy lather was wise enough to tion, even though it's
Invest in the direction that he symbolic, in the direction of
t110ught our area was going ID proJtlOting hannony.•,.,

Execution avenged massacre

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of showers
daily. Highs Saturday will
range from the 60s to the
mid 70s, but cooling to the
mid 50s or mid 60s by
Monday. Lows wDI be In
the upper 40s or low 50s
Saturday and In the mid 40s
by Monday.

Fairboard
election is

Nov. 10

WASiflNGTON - PROMPTED BY GROWING layoffs
The annual election of the
Md closures In the steel Industry, the Treasury Department Meigs County Falrboard has
said Wednesday it will investigate charges Japanese been set for Nov. 10 from o to
steelmakers have been dumping steel products in the United 9 p. m. at the- Meigs County
States at prices below cost.
· Courthouse.
· The department acted on a complaint filed Sept. 20by U.S.
Members whose terms
Steel Corp. alleging six Japanese steel finns have been selling expire this year are Bill
carbon steel products in the U. S. market at a loss.
Smith, David Koblentz, Hugh
Custer and Lucille Leifheit,
PITTSBURGH - ELMER CHATAK, ORGANIZING' all of the Pomeroy area, and
dlrector of the United Steelworkers of America, today Gerald . Douglas, Rt . 2,
announced an independent union executive board for .the Coolville.
DuPont plant in Belle, W. Va., has voted to affiliate with tbe
Residents who wish to file
USWA.
.
for a pOst on the board may
The executive board of the Association of Chemical contact Mrs. Muriel Brad·
Employes, which represents about 50 laboratory analysts, ford, secretary of the board,
voted unanimously to join the USWA and is the 17th of 31 at 985-3974, or Route 2,
executive union boards representing DuPont workers to Coolville, lor a petition.
choose that union.
Signed petitions must be In
Mrs. Bradford's hand by Nov.
SANTO DOMINGO, DOM!Nl!;AN REPUBUC - WITH 3. Terms for the five posts are
press freedom under attafk in much of the Western for three years. Those filing
Hemisphere, D&lt;minican Piesident Joaquin Balaguer has must be residents of the
assured newspaper erecutives he is committed to uphuldlng county and they must hold-a
that freedom in his Caribbean nation .
membership ticket in the
Balaguer Wednesday formally opened the' 33rd annual Meigs County Agriclutural
meeting of the Inter-American Press Association, whose Society. Those voting for
sessions end Friday with the publication of Its semi..annual board members must also be
report oo press freedom in tl)e Americas .
members of the society.

Hospital News

State No. 223X

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

MULHOUSE, France
(UPI)- A gang of kidnapers
says it executed West German industraiist HannsMartin Schleyer - with one
bullet to the head - to avenge
the 11 massacre" of six leftist
terrorists in Stuttgart and
Somalia.
Schleyer's body· was found
Wednesday in the trunk of a
car in a quiet sidestreet in
Mulhouse, France. near the
Genna~ border. The 62-year
old Schleyer was killed by a
single gunshot to the head
and had another wound in the
skull. officials said. No other

.., ·

Wells, Jones
support No. 1
County Commissioners
Henry Wells and Richard E.
Jones today called upon aU
Meigs County voters to
support State Issue I this
November.
Mr. Wells said the so-&lt;:alled
"election·day registration
law", passed by the Ohio
Legislature earli~r this year,
opens the door not only to
possible fraud · and inconvenience for voters, but to.
the possibility of increased
costs in • conducting the
election.
..
"If it costs more to hold the
election because of the
checking
and double·
checking that will be required
at the polling places and for
more people to work in the
polling places to try to avoid
long waiting lines, then those
costs will have to come from
the pockets of Meigs County
taxpayers," Jones said.
"I believe this law.is a bad
une," Wells said. "I'm going
to vote in favor of its repeal
by casting my vote in favor of
State lssue No. I and I am
asking all the voters ·of Meigs
County to vote yes on State
Issue No. 1."

Weather

Mogadlshu early Tuesday.
Hours later, three of the
jailed terrorists - including .,
Red Army founder Andreas
Baader - died in prison.
Bonn authorities said they
killed themselves. but
Baader's lawyer said he was

killed by a gunshot to the base
oflhe skull, an unlikely place
for a self-inflicted wound.
Schleyer, a member of
Hitler 's feared S.S. unit
during World War II, later
won a reputation as a tough
bargainer with unions and
joined the board of directors
of Daimler-Benz, makers of
Mercedes vehicles.

'

Columbia Gas
must answer
•

i

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio told Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp.
Wednesday it must answer
charges of mismanagement
filed by Ohio Attorney
General William J. Brown.
"This means that Columbia
Gas Transmission has to
answer to the people of Ohio,
and it's about time they did,"

saiT~~rownPUCO

I' ·

(
'

IT'S APPLE BUTTER MAKIN' TIME at the Senior Citizens Cepter and Wednesday
Blythe Theiss of the Racine area was one of three operators of apple peelers. The apple
bu tier is being made today in copper kettles over open fires at the rear of the Center.
.

Carter will .c~cel trip
"·

to ride herd on congress

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASl!INGTON (UPI) President Carter means it
when he .says he will cancel
his. nine-nation global trip
next month to ride herd on
Congress if it fails to
complete a comprehensi Ye
energy program by then, top
aides say.
They said Ca~ter , told
House Democrallc energy
conferees Wednesday that he
is willing to stay in
Washington untii they wrap
up the bill, so there could be
no stalling as trip time
approached in an effort to
slat~
force Carter to =promise.
Carter's trip to .four conli:
A.1976 new car "jamboree" nenls is scheduled to begin
will be held Friday from noon Nov. 22. But he said he thinks
until 8 p. m. on Crow's Steak Congress will produce an
House lot (former Rawlings acceplable energy bill before
lot) in Middleport.
then.
.
The purpose is to intro duce
He also predicted he will
area residents to the new 1978 not need to compromise
automobiles . It is being because the final version
sponsored by the Middleport probably will be close to the
Chamber of Commerce.
proposals he introduced in
Dealers participating will April.
The President also had a
include Tom Rue Motors,
Dan Thompson Ford, both of lunch date planned today
Middleport, and Smith· with Trus~ry Secretary
Nelson Motors and 'Pomeroy Michael Blumenthal and the
Motor.Co., both of Pomeroy. question of a tax cut sooner
- The Middleport Fire - than originally intended was
Department will hold a fish to be discussed. Figures
fry in conjunction with the showed Wednesday the
jamboree. Middleport economy has grown only 3.8
merchants will also be per cent in the past three
featuring sales that day .
months.
Carter had another series
of energy pep talks on his
schedule today. starting with
-Highs today in the low 60s Sen. Edward Kennedy, Dand highs Friday in the upper Mass., who has sharply criti··
60s. Clear tonight, '!'ith lows cized oil and gas company
in the mid 40s. Probability of profits.• .
precipitation near zero
The President also was
percent today, tonight and meeting with Sens. James
Friday.
Abourezk, D-S.D., and
Howard J. Metzenbaum, DOh in, who . conducted a
filibuster to try to defeat the
SERVICES SET
Racine Chapter 134 OES Senate move to deregulate
will held services for Mrs. natural gas.
Feme B. Hayman at 7:30 p. When Vice President
m. Friday at the Ewing Walter Mon~ale joined with
Funeral Home. All officers Senate Maj ority Leader Bob
and members are asked to be Byrd to break the filibuster,
Abourezk indicated
present.
., he had

Car jamboree
Friday

details were released.
man
who Stammheim .'' it said,
speaking
A police officer who saw the- telephoned the leftist Paris referring to the terrorists
body said it had traces of newspaper Liberation.
who died in the Somali capital
blood around the neck and
"After 43 days, we have put and Stuttgart's Stamrnhelm
there were welts on the neck an end to the miserable and prison.
.
and ears, apparently caused corrupt existence of Hanns" We shall never forget the
by a tight gag . .
Martin Schleyer," sa id the blood spilled," it said. "the
Security along the border co mmunique from the fight is only beginning."
was tightened quickly and the ' ' Siegfriend Haussner
Schleyer's kidnapers and
Bonn government, vowing Commando" of the anarchist - fo,ur German and Arab
the kidnapers "will have no Red Army, which abducted terrorists who last week
rest ... no chance," released Schleyer Sept. o in Cologne in hijacked a Lufthana jetliner
photographs of 16 suspects in an ambush that killed his four with 87 persons aboard had
the abduction.
demanded the release of 11
bodyguards.
Police were directed to the
"His death is without any Red Army terrorists jailed in
body of the president of the comparison with our sorrow Germany.
West German Employers' lll!d our anger after the
Three hijackers were killed
Association by a German- massacre of Mogadishu and when German commandos
stormed the craft in

' by Carter.
been betrayed
Sen. Dale Bumpers, DArk., was invited to that
session.
In addition, the President
was meeting with U.S.
ambassador to Saudi Arabia
John WeSt. Carter announced
this week that he would make
a refueling stop in Saudi
Arabia on his world tour.
Carter told reporters the
energy bill is "important
enough that if Congress does
not complete its deliberations
I would put it above the trip ID
work for the legislation."
However. he added, "I

Deer blamed
for accident
Two deer caused a minor
traffic accident at I p, m.
Wednesday on SR 681, one
tenth of a mile east of CR 49.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
two deer ran into the path of &amp;
car operated by Richard L.
·Beitzel, 22, Rt. I, Albany.
Beitzel swerved his vehicle to
miss the deer but )lis car
struck a section of fence
causing minor damage.
David H. Mohler, 26,
Gallipolis, was charged with
assured clear distance
following an accident at 3:05
p. m. on US 35, one and three
tenths of a mile west of SR
588.
The patrol said the Mohler
car swerved to miss an
unknown vehicle then struck
a parked auto owned by John
W. Russell, 42, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis.
~ hit-skip accident oc·
curred at4:20 p.m. on Old Rt.
160, two tenths of a mile north
of SR 160.
The patrol said a vehicle
driven by Ronald J . Voreh,
18, Rt. I, Gallipolis, pulled
into the right side of a truck
driven by Richard A. Lakin,
o3, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, then
continued on . Voreh was cited
for hit-skip. There was
moderate dama.!l.~:...

don't anticipate that being
necessary because I believe
Congress is as deeply
committed as I am to an
expeditious passage of a
comprehensive package,"
Asked about compromises
that might be needed as the
final multi-billion dollar
energy bill is formed, Carter
sai&lt;l, "I think the Senate and
the House will get IDgether on
a good policy and I believe it
will be compatible with what
we proposed,
"My guess is
the
conference committee will
still meet the goals we
established back when I
made my April speech,'' he
said. "I haven't changed on
that .''
Carter also said he slill
plans another "fireside chat"
on energy but has not set a
dale for it.

.

Columbia LNG is still
pending before the PUCO.
Brown said the PUCO deci sion me3ns the transmission
company can be monitored
by the state.
Brrown has also asked the.
PUCO to order Columbia Gas
Co. to lower rates to reflect
the damage sustained by
Ohio's economy last winter.

Plans made
for event

denied
Columbia's motion to be "
dismissed from the case and
I ordered the. transmission
company to answer the
, charges before Nov. 4.
Plans for sponsoring the
"I hope this decision brings
an end to the legal maneuver- "dough for dough" , program
ing that has delayed this case to raise funds for the "Gifts
for the past six months,'' said for the Yanks who gave"
Brown. "I'm ready to get to program were outlined ··
the facts of the case and I Tuesday night at the regular
hope ·
the
Columbia meeting of Drew Webster
companie.s are ready to do Post 39.
Through tlie program,
the same."
Brown last April charged members of the post move
that mismanagement and through the community and
mistakes within the gas leave loaves of bread at
compa nie s
directly homes and accept, in ex·
contributed to last Miller's change, donations for the
" Gifts lor the Yanks"
energy crisis.
Columbia G!iS of Ohio, program. Proceeds go to
Columbia Gas Transmission veterans confined to veterans
Corp,. and Columbia LNG hospitals. The program will
(liquid natural gas) were be held Oct. 26 with all post
named in the complaint.
members being asked to
Last month, the PUCO report to the hallat6:30 p. m.
denied Columbia Gas of
During the meeting, World
Ohio's request to be War! veterans were honored.
dismissed from the case and The group included Homer
ordered the utility to alJSwer Willard, Lincoln Russell, Asa
Brown's charges before Oct. Hoskins, Robert Burnem,
27.
Herman
Warner,
Ben
A similar request from Neutzling and Fred Goeglein.
Roy Reuter, a member,
was reported confined to
Schools of the Eastern Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Local District will be Welcomed as a new member
closed Friday for parent- was Kenneth Law.son.
teochCr conlereDces.
Commander Clarence Sch·
mucker was in charge of the
meeting with Charles Hayes
OPEN HOUSE
and
Bob Vaughan preparing
An Open House will be held
oyster
stew served during the
at the Wahama High School
evening.
on Tuesday, Oct. 2S, from 71o
8:30p. m.
During this time, parents
will have the opportunity to
FISH FRY
meet and speak with the
The Middleport Fire
teachers.
Department will hold a fish
A business meeting will fry Friday from 4toT p. m. In
follow the open bouse in the cooperation
with
the
gym, and during this time a automobile show being held
PTO will be formed . Guest on the Crow lot by the Midspeakers will be Lowell Cook, dleport Chamber of Comsuperintendent, and John merce. Fish sandwiches and
Kaznoski, principal Refresh- french fries will be available .
ments will be served.
at the fire station on Race St.

APPROXIMATELY 60 senior citizens and members of the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program helped peel approximately 13 bushels of appl~s which will yield about 160 quarts of
app le butter to be -;old at $2a quari.Some orders are sttll.bemg taken at the Center today for
the apple butter. Proceeds will go toward providing the local share needed to cuntmue the
Senior Citizens program in Meigs County.
•

...

'"

�•

'
3- The Dally Sentt.nel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Thursday, Oct 20,

. 2- The Da1ly &amp;•utinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. O&lt;·t.

Medical examiner to
review Elvis' death

,- ------~ ----------- ------ -- ,

1

•

t
I

I

I
I
I

Lturrs of oplnJon ar. welcomed. They should be
'"' than 300 wordo Jon~ 10r be oubjtrl 1o redu&lt;tloa b)'
the edilon and llluot be si&amp;Dtd with the signee '• address. ~ames may he withheld upon pubUcadon.
Ho~·ever , on re-queat, names will be discl01ed. Uttrn
should be Ia good taste. acldrtSsiDg lsauea, nol personaUIIes .

1

t

"·

•

COL UMBUS IUP I) - This
week's Ohio High School

Atheltlc Assocratlon com .
puter'ized fo otball ra t i ngs

•

More than 2,300 persons·
attend weekend jamboree

Semi-nar planned

Emhahning
fluid is

Lottery winner .is found

with point 'totals :·

CLASSAAA
Region 1
I. Pa,.ma Normandy, 64.05 ;

statement 1s not true ,"
Francisco said when asked
about his preliminary
finding .
Among the drug 's found in
Presley 's
blood,
the
newspaper reporl said, were
several tranquilizers and
pain-killers, such as Valium,
Demerol, Codeine und an
antihistamine.
The report said the drugs
were all within prescribed
levels but the combinatioo of
them affected his heart ,
which was 50 per rent larger
tban norma 1 at the time of hi!
death, weighing 520 gr ,.,n,,
The medical e.aminet told
UP! the night Presley died he
was acutely aware of rumors
that the superstar had

engaged in drug use in the
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI ) mooths before he died. He
Shelby'
Count
y
medical
I
said he conducted the autopsy
examine r
Dr.
Jerry
I
with those rumors in mind,
l"'rancisco will hold a news
I
specifically looking for
I
conference Friday to discuss
of drugs. Six hours
evidence
I
Elvis Presley's death amid
••
after
the
singer's death,
reports the. singer 's fatal
Express appreciation
Francisco
told reporters
heart attack may have been
there were no signs of drug
Oct. 19, 1977
triggered by a combination of
abuse.
!(ear Mr. Editor:
10 drugs.
The medical examiner and
The members and friends of the Laurel Cliff Free
Francisco, who directed
representatives from Baptist
Methodist Church express very sineere appreciation to the
the three-llour autopsy oo
Hospital met wit~ Vernoo
Pomeroy and Middleport Fire Companies, the Emergency
Presley Aug . 16, has refused
Presley , the singer's father
Squad. and the Electric Company for their fast and effieient
to comment on repo_rts
BEST DRESSED outfit during Sunday 's Bean Break Jamboree at the Gallia County
and executor of his estate,
:,erviee ear ly Tuesday, October fa when our church was
co ntradicting his initial
Jumor Fatrgrollllds was tlle Western Boots CB Club, Racine .
·
Tuesday to explain the
damaged by fire .
diagnosis that the singer died
autopsy results to the family .
Seeing these volunteers in action gave us an appreciation
of "cardiac arryttunia, 'J
Sources said the autopsy
Wt&gt; had never known. Had it not been for the quick response of
heart failure.
report took almost two
However, a Memphis newsthe telephone operator and the Fire Companies, our church
months to complete because
would undoubtedly have heen a total loss. We truly thank you.
pa per, the Comme{cial
of
the difficulty in identirying
- Floyd F. Shook, Pastor. Laurel Cliff Free Methodist.Church.
Appeal, wedrlesday- quoted
drugs in the bloodstream.
\lllnamed sources as saying
three separate _laborawries
A renter 's point-of-view.
that examined samples of
Presley's blood, tissue and
Dear Sir :
An estimated 2,300 persons was given to the group by the La;gest C.B. club attending.
urine folllld 10 drugs which
As renters in the Southern Local School District we are
atte
nded
Sunday's
Bean
local
radio
club
.
The
may
have contribuled to his
Mason
County
C.B.
Radio
aware of the many taxes which one must pay whether they are
Break Jamboree sponsored musicians then gave this club. Pt . Pleasant; second death.
a renter or a property owner.
The South East Ohio Lung Muskingum. Perry, Vinton
"If in fact the article is
Our children must be given the same educational by the Gallia County C.B. donation to the Gailia County la rgest C.B. club attending ,
Association, in cooperation and Washington Counties who
opportunities as those in neighborin g districts. We have a n Radio Club at the Gallia Volunteer Emergency Squad. Big Bend Radio Club, Meigs correct in what it implies, with Emergency Medical have completed the initial 6().
Door prizes were awarded County: Farthest traveled then in fad the original
obligation to them ijnd to ourselves to make this a reality for Count)' Fairgrounds.
Services Training, Trade and hcur T&amp;l Emergency VIctim
Those attending came from all day long.
club. Lucky 15, Marion. Ohio ;
the students of So uthern Lora.! District. A yes vote on October
Industry Education Services Ca re Co urse . Interested ·
a wide area of the Tri-5tate.
The main prize which was a farthest traveling C.B.'ers
2&gt; will insure this.
of Ohio' State University and persons, who are eligible and
There were many displays of 40 channel Mark IV- S.S.B.- attending, Carl and Ruth
~we understand it from talking to others, Southern Loca l
the Ohio Lung Association, who have not received in·
C.B. equipment.
AM Base C.B. radio was Keesee, Weirsdale, Fla.
,.1 has many graduatesWliO have been very successfu l and even
are sponsoring a seminar formation regarding this
A good selection of songs awarded to ..Gene Spurlock,
. The local C.B. club thanked
more who will become successful in years to come if they are
may
obtain
''Emergency Care of the course,
and music was played during Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
many people whc wer~ not
given an opportunity.
registration
forms
by
calling
Patient. in Acute Respiratory
, - No one wants more taxes, but if you heard Senator Collins the . Jamboree by " The . Trophies were awarded as club members for their help
the
office
in
Marietta,
373Distress''.
;&gt;unday evening on the news he stated it plainly that if these Co untry Si ngers." A donation follows : Best dressed C. B. in making the Jamboree a
5581, or stopping at the
The
seminar
will
be
held
on
club, Western Boots. Racine ; huge success ..
dist ricts who pay only 20 mills for operating their schools think
Saturday, November 5, 1977, ASS()ciation office at 310 St .
!hey are going w be "baile,d out"·by those districts who pay as
!rom 8:45a.m. to 4:30p.m., at Clair Building, Marietta.
ltigh as 60 mills for operating their schools they a re fooling
The course is open to ad·
the Hocking Techni cal
themselves !
vance
registration only. The
HARRISBURG. Pa. (UPI) College; Nelsonville.
At the present time 30 districts out of a total of 617 school
fee
is
$4.50
and registration
The seminar is bring held
- Police report a gunman
districts in the state of Ohio are payint only 20 operating mills.
to
' the first 50.
limited
2&gt;, 1976.
for emergency squadmen in
and
his
accomplice
held
up
a
But many of these same school districts have already or will By ROBERT SANGEORGE explained she had been deDeadline
for
registration is
"About the only thing left
FT. MITCHELL, Ky . pressed sinee the death of her
downtown funeral home Athens, Fairfield, Gallia, Oct. 31.
probably be asking their voters to approve additional millage
for us to do will be to return
( UPI ) - The mystery of the husband 10 years ago.
Wednesday and escaped with Hocking , Meigs, Morga n,
\ill less they are lucky enough. to have industry .
Mrs. Goedeking won the her property to her, " Holman three bottles of embalming
missing
"
Millionaire
Monroeville which was already paying 28 operating mills
added.
just passed an additional 9 mills for a total of 37 operating Lottery" winner has ended. ''Millionaire Lottery:· March
fluid .
Shirley
Goed
eking,
a
"It 's the only time I heard
tRills. Remember that the $71,500 revenue which Southern
of an a rmed robbery for
Local's 6.5 mill levy would produce will bring a n additional Columbus , Ohio, widow who
embalming fluid.'' a veteran
$1 21,000 from the state. So the State helps those who helps won $1 million in the Ohio
Lottery last year, was fo\llld
police officer said.
·themselves.
,
Police said the two men
Are the children of Monroeville more deserving of an la te Wednesday in a
entered the John Neumyer
·education than ours? Ask yourself this question and let your Covington, Ky ., hcspital, the
Funeral Home about 10 :30
"COnscience be your guide when you gQ to the polls to vote victim of an apparent
a.m . and demanded bottles of
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D'.
October 2&gt;. - Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cardone, Racine, Ohio; Mr. "strong-armed robbery, "
MASON - Miss Cat~y duction Is reduced apMrs. Goedeking had been
embalming
fluid.
An Breeman, Rotary Exchange proximately 50 percent.
and Mrs. R. E . Duvall, Portland, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
admitted to St. Elizabeth's
attendant gave them · three Student from Holland ,
\· Williams, Racine, Ohio .
She pointed out that the
Hospital in the Cincinnati
bottles and the robbers fled showed slides and told about ·•oost fire places are ones thai
suburb by the Boone County,
on loot.
her country at Mason County have glass doors which keep
Ky ., Sheriff's Department
The three 16-ounre bottles Extension
Homemakers the heat in the room and it
!::~, schl ols have advantage
be created nor destroyed but of fluid were valued at only
Oct. 9, Ft . Mitchell Safety By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
on
Tuesday
at the· doesn 't go up the chimney.
meeting
it t'an be transformed into dif. Director Jack Holman said .
about $12, but a spokesman fanner Lewis Home, Mason.
DEAR DR. LA'MB ••
The lesson leader pointed
. I attend high schcol in Southern Local School District. In
ft&gt;rent forms uf energy, inShe was listed in good
the last 10 years I have received a very adequate education . condition by hospital officials Recently I read that most cluding he at , electricl:l l, for the Governor's Council on She was introduced by .Mrs. out many money saving ways
people do nut rea lly know mechanici:ll or c hemica l Alcohol and Drug Abuse said Wm . Zerkle of the In- to economize on the fuel bill.
: 1 !eel tha t students reeeive a more personal type of late Wednesda y.
parsley can be sprinkled with ternational Relations She said storm doors are
what
a c•lurie is. That
'education at a smaller school rather than at a larger one : If the
energy.
Holman
said
Mrs. started me to thinking and it
the
fluid, dried , and then sold
·
Important . Use caulking
levy !ails, .OOner or later Siiuiher!lwill be forced t6 ~nsolidate Goedeking told Boone County
Since " pound of body fat as marijuana lor $40 to $45 an Committee.
is
true
.
I
knoW
it
has
She -showed slides of aro\llld windows · and loun·
wfth Meigs, a much' larger school. This would mean adjusting authorities that she was the
cunt..ains about 3500 ca lories it .
,·.~o the change from a smaller school to a larger one, finding our victim o! a " strong-armed something to do with whether follows that a pound of body ounce.
Rotterdam and Amsterdam, dation of the house.
a food will make you fat or
way aro\llld a new school, and getting used to different robbery. "
and the modern subway
A plastic film can be used
fat h•s lucked in i ~ enough Increased tolls
nut b4ll re• lly du no! widers- energy to heat 35 liters of
station
which
is
under
to
economize. The film can be
:t~achers.
"She had picked up a
has big effect
ground. She showed a put in a lrame and placed in a
, Other students and myself· have formed a group we call hiichhiker on her way !rom tand cx:cu.: tly what ct ~.:alo ne w•ter from the freezing level
shopping
center
with window and caulking used
Southern High School Concerned Students (S.H.S.C.S.). It was Columbus, and somewhere in is. That sounds strange in a to the hulling level.
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
'qrgan ized to try and get the levy passed and get the sch!lj)ls Boone Co\lllty she had been nation of calone c..:uunters but
beautiful
·
flowers
and around wooden frames.
A t•blespuvn of buller, Qr Rep. Ronald M. Mottl, Dhow about telling us in terms
pedestrians
free
to
come
and
AI the conclusion of the
:reopened , for the above and many other reasons .
ma rgarine con tain s 100 Ohio, said today proposed
robbed and put out of her
.' : So help us get the levy passed, vote YES on October 25, automobile," Holman sa id. we e.;an understand what a calories. enough energy if 1l increases on SL Lawrence go and no traffic to interfere. meeting games were played
eH iorie really i::;.
· ~eep us in a school that's working for us . -Debbie Pickens,
0
is released to heat a liter uf Seaway tolls would have a She said almost everyone has \lllder the direction of Mfs.
Her car was later recovered
DEAR READER · -- A
Roberta Young. Mrs. Lester
Junior at SHS, SHSCS member.
~
w• ter !rom the freezing (0 "crippling effect" on Great a bike.
in Covington."
et:J lorie is Simply i:l way of degrees C) to boiling (100 Lakes ports if enacted.
Houses
in
Amsterdam,
Johnson
and Mrs. bandon
Mrs. Goedeking had last me&lt;:tsu ring heal energy _ The
capital
b!
Holland,
are
very
Smith.
each
won a game
spoke
at
a
public
Mottl
degrees
C).
been seen Oct. 6, the day kind of ca lories we use in
narrow
and
high
due
to
the
prize.
hearing
at
Let's consider the situation
the
Federal
Buil·
If
you
walk
one
mile
and
before her clothes, bank tliscussing food cmd your
Attending were Miss
books and $440 in case were body's use uf ca lories is a use 60 extra e~Jories doing ding , one of a series and the fact there is not enough room
Dear Sir,
to
build
houses.
So
the
houses
Breeman,
Mrs. Ray Proffitt,
only
one
held
outside
so,
that
would
use
the
In regard w the school situation in Southern Local • found strewn alorig two Ft. k1l oc•lorie . That is lhe mechunical energy whicll Washington.
are
built
next
to
one
another.
and
Mary
Pickens, guests,
District : In order to r~pen the schools, the 6.5 mill levy must Mitchell streets. Her bank amount of heat you would cuuld be transformed Lo
She
showed
the
space
tower
and
the
following
members,
·he
said,
Present
proposals,
books listed more than $20,000 need to r:1:1ise the temperature
be passed on Oct. 25th.
183
meters
high,
a
palace
in
Matilda
Noble,
Alma
Mar·
call
fo~
wlls
on
general
cargo,
enough
h€at
energy
to
heal
of one liter r" little more th•n abuul two-thirds of a hter of which is a mainstay of the the center of Amsterdam, shall, Evelyn Stewart,
As voters, lei us pause and consider the situation in accollllts.
Ft. Mitchell police traced a qu•rt) of water one degree
rallonally . Instead of trying to place the blame lor the present
the scattered Items to Mrs_..- centigrade. To help you water from freezing to boil- Cleveland-Cuyahoga County and beautiful flowers, just to Roberta Young, Hazel Smith,
financial affairs, we can combine our efforts and work to get
port, w jump from 90 cents mention a lew of the many Dorothy Queen, Lilah Zerkle,
Goe deking' s
Co lumbu s viSUl:lliZe that, 100 Cl:l lories ing.
the schools open.
per ton to $1.95.
slides. She said flowers in Catherine Smith, Laurene
The
energy
stored
111
"
food
· We, the voters, had schools provided lor us and someone address through a bill found would r;.j ise the temperature or in body f•t is released by
Holland are cheap.
Lewis, Nancy VanMeter,
paid the taxes. Can we deny the present generation the same in one of t he purses. But there of one liter of w•ter from rump lex ·chemical actions.
At the conclusion she was Clara Williams and . Mrs.
was no report that the woman freezing leve l tu boiling.
privilege ? It is our duty as responsible adults to see that
presented a gift of jewelry Lester Johnson.
Tllis energy is used to he•t
was missing , and police
The he•t energy absorbed your body. The hea t released
schools are provided for our children and young adults.
•
from the homemakers.
treated
the
matter
"like
a
by the cold water tu re•ch t11e is usually more than we want
Sure, schools cost money . So does most everything else
Mrs.
Laurene
Lewis,
items
report
,"
Holman
found
boiling point can be from
worthwhile. We each pay h\llldreds of dollars in taxes that are
COLUM BU S !UPI I
so the body h•s tv constantly gl ance
~ president of Mason Extension
activity Wednesday 1
electricity. This IS a good exmandated by law . Will we renege on the one tax for the said.
nd itself of the he•t released lhe Oh io Genera l Assemb ly :
Homemakers presided at the
Last
Saturday,
however,
ample uf converting elecsegment of our population that is not old enough to help
.
- - HOUSE
from food. If it is un•ble lu do
meeting which was opened
Holman
read
a
Cincinnati
trica l ene rgy in to heHl
Did not meet.
themselves? As for the added tax working a hardship on older
so
the body heat builds up and
with the Pledge of Allegiance
Post
story
on
lottery
winners
SE;NATE
energy_ Energy can neither
peop le- those peopl~ have reached the time in life when their
may
even
c•use
he•t
stroke.
.
BillS
PASSED
to
our Flag followed by
and learned Mrs. Goedeking
A number of free services
A,-n . HB 618, Shoemaker.
expenses are lessened .·
P•rt
of
the
released
energy
repeati"ng
the National
C a p i t a I improvements bill.
are
offered to the legally
If you vote no, can you look into the faces of the school was a millionaire winner. She
is used tu · build 'important 'Emergency : 30-1. 'Bill : 31 -1.
Homemakers Creed and Club
blind
residents of Meigs
pupils who respect you and trust you to provide sc hools for was among several winners
S B 359, Jackson . Corrects Pledge.
THE OAILV S ENTINEL
chemicals. mcluding entechn ic al errors in budget
Collllty
through the Christian
their education ? How will you !eel when_you meet those pupils featured in the story.
DE\' OTED TO THE
zymes and hormones.
Mrs. Roberta Young
Richard Woodland, Mrs.
language bill . Emergency : 31-1.
INTEREST OF'
Record
Braille Foundation,
in everyday life ? When some pupil says "! depended on you
:Growing children use the Bi ll · 32-0.
presented the devotionals,
MEI Gs-MASON ARF.A
Goedeking's brother, said his
Am . HB
228, Jaskulski.
Inc.,
Lincoln,
Neb.
and you let me dov.'TI '?"
Cllt:STER L. TANNE HILL
energy in building their Makes members of t he Ohio Psalm 15, and closed with
t~ xec . EdAnnouncing
. the servlees
Industry and responsible people will not move inw our sister often would " just take
bodies, which is why they c•n Nat ional Guard eligible for prayer. She also read what
Rl~HERT HOEF'I.ICH
off," but said she usually
was
Robert
L.
Fessenden,
district if the present condition is allowed to continue.
Ohio
instruct
ions
grants
_
Vote
:
Cily
EdiLor
e•t foods containing so much 31 -l .
Halloween means.
l~ubhsllctl t.le:uly ext:~ pt S111urt.lay
district
representative,
Monroeville has already passed their levy and re-opened returned in a few weeks. He
who
energy and still nul get fa t.
Treasurer report was given
Sub. HB 149, Nader . Proh ibi ts
by Tile 0 111 11 V t~!lcy Pu blislnu~
their. schools. We can show Compassion for our children by
pointed
out
that
the
founassi
gnm
ent
of
awards
Of
C. •lll ( J&lt;~ny-i\1ultuncdiB , 1111' .,
Il l
Some o£ the energy i:s conby Mrs. Wm. Zerkle.
reparat ions granted b'y t he
dation offers • to blind
Cuufl St .. Pum cr uy, 0/uu ~5769.
do ing likewise.
verted
lo
mechanical
energy
A community project was
Court
of
Claims
comm
issioners
.
BUSIIIl' ~S Uff iLC 1'1111111.' 992- 2Jf&gt;6 .
residents, books, maazines
If schools don't open until January 2 it will deprive many
to enable you tu du any Vote · 32 -0.' •
F:tli ~U ri&lt;tl PtiUIW 992-2157.
again •discussed and a
and Bibles in Braille;
pupils of spring and surruner jobs, that they co\lll! on to earn '
BILL
DEFEATED
Sc( uml tla!O.~ JWS UI ~c p;.11tl at
physical activity.
SB 375, Jackson . Offer s committee was appointed to
P lllliCI'U)',Oim !
money for expenses.
see
about
names
of
veterans
national cam~u~ for bUnd
If
you
consume
2,000
expanded borrow 1ng powers to
NHliniiHI iJ d\'cl'listr l~ reprL'I:ienThe fine letter, written by a high school junior in the
l&lt;l\ll'l' W ~rt.l - Cillfill i Cum!l&lt;lll)'.
calories a day you are taking school districts . Emergency : to b!i placed on a honor roll in ch!ldren; lull v1ston books for
13 19. Bill : l3·19.
Ill\', Bu llllll'll l and G&lt;.~ ll a ~hcr 01\',,
IN SERVICE
October 16th Sentinel sums it all up very well. Please re-read
Mason. Appointed were Mrs. ;.-bhnd p~rents of sighted
· in enough caloril!s to hl!at 20
BILLS INTRODUCED
757 Tlnr·d Avt , ~cw Y•wk. N V,
1t, the other letters pertaining to the issue, and tbe articles of
David Hubbard, son of Bill
S B 372, Zimmers. Exempts Cecil Smith, Mrs. Wm. Zerkle \ children . home v1sltatton,
1001 7
liters of water from freezing
food .service rotary funds from and Mrs. Landon Smith.
.Subst:ll pllltiL t'Hlc s . Dl'lt\'('l'til by
explanation written ,by the committee for the levy.
Hubbard, Syracuse, is now
and a lendin~ llbr~ry of books
tu boiling_ If you are a nurrnal tfle
new state rotary sur charge.
II ll\'1'\.: U\' U IIabl~ ij- ('CI!I .~ IJCI'
Go to the polls on October 25.
·
serving with the U. S. Air· ,l'Ul'l'l!!l'
The group discussed having and ma~azmes tn Brame,
SB
373,
Bowen . Revi ses
~~·t-k . B~ M,,,.,, H" Ull' Wlllll'l' t'a t net·
person and reasunal.Jly act1ve
f u r I o u g h arrangements, tor a turkey dinner on the next large prmt, tapes, records
Vote YES for the children. - Signed : A taxpayer on a . Force. For those who wish to
SI.'T'\' I ~·t· rr"' av;u l ~tbll', 011c nH,n{h ,
you rrmy usc all of them to mental
patienls.
$l tzi. B,l lllilll 111 Uluo and W VH,
send letters or cards to him
Fixed Income, name withheld by requ est .
kuep yo ur body ~orkin g proSB 374, Q!Shaughnessy. Pro- mej!ting date, Nov. 15, at 5:30 and callll&lt;ttes.
Orr\' Vc&lt;J r , $22 .00 : StK llt•!llllis,
his address is AMN Dav1d A
: $11 ;;~; 'I hrt·t muulh s. $100 : perly, to keep you r body hib
its person s conv icted of th eft p. m. with Mrs. Roberta
The_ camps are held at
fro m the state from dOing
f:bl•\\IUH' i 'lti.00 H•ar; SIX tn• m l li .~
Hubbard, PSC 2, Box 2418
Young
and
Mrs,
Evelyn
Danvtlle,
near Columbus, for
wa
rm
and
to
perform
business
w
i
th
th
e
state
for
five
5ll . ~ •l. Tlir' l't' -m.mtlls, !&lt; .50.
A 'giant task
Hickam Air Force Ba se'
years.
Stewart preparing the youngsters between the ages
Suh ~t'I'I ]JI\ 1 111 ]Jil t c lllt:hllh .,., S u ml&lt;~Y
phystcal i:lctivity,
' l lillf'!&gt;"&gt;"'t •lil llll 'l
Hawaii 96853.
'
turkey. Others were assigned of nme and 19. Ninety-one
If you take m more ce:~lories
The Meigs County Board of Elections started In mid
'
to bring foods .
persons attended_ the camp
than you c•n use tile body
August to register and process more than 10,000 electors in the
s1mply storCs ca lories by for- ·
HIJACKING STOPPED
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart gave last August .. II IS requu:ed
33 Precincts ; a giant task for a limited office staff io compete
ming
l.Jmly
f.:
t
t
.
When
you
are
WARSAW,
Poland
(UPI)
,
an
excellent lesson on t~at the llldtvldual ~rovlde
and
out
they
go
to
perform
a
p~blic
and
patriotic
duty.
by Nov. 7, 1978.
prevented
the Weatherizing Your Home . hts own t~ansportabon to
The result at present: an estimated one-third of the electors ready to use tha t energy the Police
In order to do the job at a minimum cost we sought unpaid
body fat is bi'Uken down to hijacking o! a Polish airliner She pointed out that storm camp, but If traiiSportation
Ill the county are properly registered without one eent cost to
vol\lllteers.
relca:-;c the calories for use.
at Warsaw airport .Tuesday, windows (aluminum type) does become a problem, the
The staff of the Senior Citizens Center was the first to get taxpayers. All don~ in three months.
To giv e yuu murc infm·ma- Polish newspapers reported can reduce the amount of fo\llldatlon can provide it.
Now the future : The Boa rd of Elec tions is placing two
in_the act. They have comp leted far more than 200 senior
infiltration of air 30 to 50 The foundation circulates
citizens and going strong each week . Volunteers at the Meigs trained reg istrars in each of the 20 precincts of Meigs Local tiun I am scndin~ yuu The ~ today. "
llce:t
lth
Lct.Ler·
nu
cr
5-2,
The reports said the at- percent when properly in- ?ver 70,000 articles and books
County Fair turned in at the election office 797. The election and nne in each of Eastern and Southern L11ca l School
Ill Braille each month.
officials of the Eastern and Southern School Districts Distncts. This will cost the taxpayers approx imately $1600. UrH..Icrsti:lrJding Yrmr· P.nl'rgy tempt was made by one or stalled.
~vstc
m
.
Others
wlm
w&lt;nrlllm;
In addition to reducing
Anyo~e kn~wing a bUnd
several persons who wanted
volunteered to assist at their speci•l elections and the TI1e registrars will be at the 33 polling places on Nov. 8. When
presiding judges of the 13 precincts brought to the election U1e com plc.tefl form s ar.c back in uur office on Nov. 20th we iSsu(• fH II semi 50 rl'nts with a to force the crew to fly the infiltration, storm windows person Ill ll_fetgs County who
expect Ol e jj•b 80 per eent dcrne (dependinJ:: nn voter turnout ). If I nn ~{ , stampt• fl , ."i t: lf - aircraft to Vienna. Police and effect a reduction of heat loss mtght be lllterested In the
office approximately 1700 com pleted forms.
Many, many other individuals have ca lled a t our office , Ulis cooperative spirit continues in the future as in the pa'st our culdn ·sscd t'11Vt'lnpe fur il to crewmembers succeeded in through the glass by servlees of the foundation
received training and signed the papers as a registrar. This is director, Mrs. Dorothy J ohnston, can say within the next few I ll\' llr l'CIIT nf ti llS lll'WS(lilpt•r, frustrating the attempt and providing an air space be-- may contact Fessenden at P.
legally permissible. They are returning almost daily with month s "Come nn yn u voters, we're ready &lt;Jnd waiting for you P.O. H11x 15aJ. Hallr 11 CH} S1.1- • no one was hurt in the in· tween the two windows. The 0 . Box 204, Stockport,. Ohio
l!• •ll , N&lt;"w Y ~trk . NY 11'101!1.
cident. they added .
amount of heat loss by con- 43787 ·
com*ted forms fr~m thei r neighbors, ret-eiv}ng more blanks Nnv . 7, 1978. - E.A. Wingett
1
•
•
'

theft item

Homemakers view
slides ·on. HollfJnd

HEALTH

What is a calorie?

Legislation
at a glance

Free services

now available

1

Computer ratings

2. Cleveland St. Joseph, 62.60.
Region 2

.

69.92 ;

2. Cincinna ti R«ger Bacon ,
67 .80 .
CLASSAA
Regions
l. Elyria Cathol ic, &lt;7.00 ; 2.
Beloit West Branch, 46.60.
Region 6
1. SL. Nlory S Memor ia l,

L Lima Sr., 60 .315 : 2.
Toledo Whitmer , 60.00 .

50.50 ; 2. Mansfie ld Ma labar.

•
Region 3 ·
1 Can ton M cKinley, 83.80;

Region 7
1. Canton Central Catholic,

1

2. Barberton , 65 .50 ; 3.
Marietta, 59 .00 ; 4. Zanesville,
48 .80 1 5. Ma ssillon, 54.50; 6.
Stow Wa lsh Jesui t, 54.00; 7.
Akron Spr ingfield . 53.25 ; 8.
Logan, 52 .00 ; 9. Alliance,
49 .20 ; 10. Louisville. 46.50.

.. '

·'Reg ion 4
l. Cincinna t i Moeller,

43.60 .

56.50;

2.

Ph ilo,

&lt;2. 00 ;

Hebron Lakewood,

Minerva,

40.70 ;

36.50 ;

3.
4.

5.

Pi cke ringt on,
35.70; 6.
Joh"hs1own·Monroe 33.50 ; 7.

Hann ibal River . 32.32; 8.
Heath , 30.90 ; 9. ltie) Rich mond Jefferson Union and
Cadiz. 30.00 ea ch.
Reg ion 8
l. Loveland 59.80 ; 2. Ur bana 51.00.
ClASS A
Region'
1.
Dalton, &lt;0.00; 2.
Ashtabula St. John , 36 .70.
Region 10
l. Hamler Patrick Henry ,
38.50 ; 2. Tiffin Calvert 3.4 .00.
Region 11
1. Newark Catho l ic, 30.00;
2. Beallsville, 29 . 80 ; 32 .
Newcomerstown , 26 .00 ; 4.
Lancaster Fisher, 25 .25 ; 5.
Crooksvi lle, 23 .00 ; 6. New
Albany , 22 .80 ; 7 . (tie)

TALLAHASSEE , Fla .
(UP! ) - Florida' State
University baseball Coach
· Woody Woodward said
Wednesday he has turned
GREG BECKER
MARK MAGNOTTA
DAVIE BLAKE
down
an offer to manage the
'
"
St. Louis Cardinals' AAA
St. in Middl~p:&gt;rt. He has held more than his own in his guard position. Mark weighs 150
THESE VARSITY juniors for the Meigs Marauders this year are Greg Becker, Mark
farm team in New ·Orleans.
pollllds and is 5'6" tall. Greg, No. 13, is 5'11" and weighs 145 pounds. He is the son of Don and
M~gnotta , and David Blake. Davtd, a returning letter man , plays fullback and kicks extra
Woodward, a former major
Belly Becker, o£ 462 Fourth St., Middleport,_who should be more than proud of his performpomts for the squad. No. 35 is 6' 1" and· weighs 190 po\lllds. He is the son of John and Sylvia
lea gue infielder who has
ance as tailback.
Blake of Route 2 Pomeroy . Mark , No. 66, is the sQD Qf Mr. and Mrs. Joe Magnotta of Lincoln
compiled a 121·39 record
and Strasburg ,
since becoming the Sem- Shadyside
20 .00 each ; 9. Ca nal Win :;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:; :;:;:;:;:,:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::: :::; :::: : :::: ;:;:;:;:;:;:, :;:; :;:;:;:;:;: : ::::::::::::::: :: ::::;:~;:;:::::::::
inoles' coach in 1974, said chester . 19.50 ; 10. Glouster
he will stay at FSU. But he Trimble , 18.50.
Region 12
did not rule out the possibility
COLUMBUS (UP!~- The BuwUng Green- Kent State
1.
South
Charleston
of accepting a professional South eastern, 35 .00 ; 2. West
football game Saturday produced the Mid-American
managing job in the future . Jefferson, 33 .00.
Cuofereoce's players uf the week - BG's wide receiver.
Jeff Groth and Kent's defensive tackle Mike Zele,
Groth," a junior from Chagrin Falls, was . tbe
unatilmuuo offensive selection for his performance In
BG's 14-10 victory. The ~oot, 171;-pound Groth returned a
punt 51 yards lor a touchdown which tied !he game at.7·7
and the Falcons went 011 to wiD.
'·
Both Coach Denny Stolz o( Bowling Green and Kent's
Dennis Fitzgerald agreed that Groth's return was·.lhe key·
to the game.
By Larry Fisher
snea ked by Waverly 9-0. Walton, has completed 17 of leading the league in
Zele, a 6-foot-3¥.., 236-pound senior from Euclid, was
A live game winning streak Friday's tilt should be a 41 aerials to earn a second receptions with II. He also
";lth 22 tackles ID the contest, 17 of them solos and
credited
may come to an end Friday strong competitive game.
place rapking in the SEOAL. contributed by scoring two
three behind the line of scrimmage for losses of 21 yards,
night when the mighty Meigs
Coach Charles Chancey touchdowns, one on a run and
Athens will create a
Marauders travel to Athens problem of scoring for the stated that his boys played a the other on an interception ;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::::::::::::·::::;:;::::.;:;:;:;::=:·::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
to fa re the' strong Bulldogs. Marauders as the Bulldogs good game against Waverly runback.
Meigs destroyed the have given up only seven and he prasied the defense lor
With Meigs coming off of a
Waverly Tigers last week~ points in three league games. their outstanding job. He also big morale boosting victory
in a fine showing of offense They play a solid 5-2 defense believed that the team would and Athens going after its
and_ defense, while Athens with their front line being the have scored several times sixth straight win, Friday
barely got by the Blue Devils main PQWer. 0£1ensively , the more but the big number of night's game should be an
interesting and physical
of Gallipolis 3~ on a field goal Bulldog's are a running team penalties set them back.
by place kicker John byt their quarterback, Al
Mike Wayland is still match up .
'
.
Schanzenbach .
Athens

Meigs hopes to snap
Athens win streak

76ers humble Pistons, 113-96

Volley ball

team .trips
Logan gals
In recent volleyball action
the Meigs girls defeated
Logan and was beaten by
Athens and Kyger Creek.
Tuesday night the Meigs
girls greeted Logan ~t home
and took the match by win·
ning two out of the three
games. Meigs won the first
game 15-2 by placing several
good bump shots. Logan took
the second game IIH5, but
Meigs came back to win the
final game 15~ 12 with the help
of several good overhand hits
by Pat Vaughan . .
The Jr. Varsity took both of
their games defeating Logan
!5-12, 15-3, with Carol Morris
serving 10 Straight points in
the second game.
La.st night the . girls
traveled to Athens to compete
in a tri-match between Meigs,
Athens and Kyger Creek.
Meigs lost a league match
to Athens with the games
scores 15-6 and 15·12. Meigs
also was defeated by Kyger
Creek, 15·3 and 15·1.
The Jr. Varsity defeated
Athens in both of their games
with the scores· 15-5; 15-2 with
Vicki Pickens serving 8
points in the second game.
This brings Meigs to a
league record of 3-2 and an
overall record of 7-&lt;i. The
o~erall standing of the Jr.
Varsity is 6-6. Their next
m•tch will be Monday at
Ejastem at 4:30 p. m.

113-96 victory in the season- Bulls 107, Rockets 103
Mickey Johnson had 19
opener for Philadelphia .
" I worked very hard points and Artis Gilmore and
because I need ' to," said Nick Weatherspoon added 1.1.
McGinnis, who had a tO'Im- each as Chiellgo stormed
record 13 offensive rebo\lllds . back !rom a 15;&gt;oint deficit to
"My attitude has been that I win their · second -straight
have to be a hard worker . I game. Rudy Tomjanovich led
feel quicker and stronger this all scorers with 29 points
year."
· while Moses Malone added 20
Elsewhere in the NBA, for the Rockets . For Chicago,
Buffalo beat Kansas Ci(y 112- Wilbur Holland had 16 points
108, Chicago edged Houston and John Mengel! 12.
107-103, San Antonio defeated Spurs 114, Celtlcs 109
George Gervin, hitting 17·
Boston ilH09, Denver
whipped Milwaukee 133-115, of-26 shots, fired in 39 points
Los Angeles downed Indiana as San Antonio downed·
133-120 and Golden State Boston for the first lime in the
NBA . Larry Kenon added 18
clobbered Seattle 116-64.
and Billy Paultz 17 lor the
Braves 112, Kings 108
Billy Knight scored a Spurs. Jo Jo White topped
game-high 31 points and Boston with 24.
Chuck Williams had 21 to Nuggets 133, Bucks 115
David Thompson tossed in
spark Buffalo to an opening
36
points, Bobby Jones 26 and
season win in Cotton
Dan
Issei 21 to carry Denver
Fitzsimmons' coac hing
past
Milwaukee. The Bucks,
debut. Knight, the secondwho
led
at 9:32 of the final
leading scorer in the NBA
last year with India na, also period, were paced by rookie
had a game-high 15 rebounds. Marques Johnson with 22
Ron Boone led the Kings with points.
Lakers 133, Pacers 120
20 points.
Rookie Jim Edwards,
playing for the injured
Kareem AbduiJ abbar, scored

Beulah results

GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!)
- llronze Express, ridden by
Mike Ewing, the leading
rider of the meet with 17 wins,
was declared the winner of
the featured race at Beulah
Park Wednesday.
Ziz Boom Bah had first won
tbe race, but was disquaUiied
·after bumping Bronze
Express in the stretch andJ).le
two horses exchanged 1irst
and
second
places .
Gamebreaker was 'third.
The winning time of 2:03 3-5
lor the mile and one quarter
equaled the track record set
in 1956.
Mugsy's Girl and Least of
All won the fir~ two races to
return $140.40 on the dally
double corilbinati6n of 2 and
4.
The
8-61
trifecta
. combination return e d
$7,249.50 to seven ticket
holders.
Th'e crowd of 4,221 wagered
$545,838.

BOSTON (UP!) - The
Boston Celtlcs sigtied Sidney
Wicks to a multi-year
contract less than three hours
before their scheduled
season's opener against the
San
Antonio
Spurs
Wednesday night, a \earn
spokesman said.
Celtics' Vice President Jeff
Cohen said Wicks signed the
contract in a San Antonio,
Tex., hotel room,. No other
terms of the contract were
disclosed and "will never be
disclosed" by the team,
Cohen said.
Wicks, a six-year NBA
veteran, was involved in a
lengthy off.seaso'l contract
dispute with Celtics brass this
year. The 6-foot-9 forward
!rom UCLA was reported
available to play in
Wednesday's game.
To make room for Wicks
the Celtics waived second·
year forward Norm Cook.

''

~

,&lt;

;...~

.:·

and
building materials

.

By FRED LIEF
UPI Sports Wrtter
George McGinnis had all
surruner to think about last
·
spring .
When the Portland Trail
Blazers st\lllned the Philadelphia 76ers tllis past June to
win the NBA championship,
much of the finger-pointing
was directed at McGinnis.
The playoffs were a series
of disasters lor the 6-foot'l!
forward. His outside shot, his
defense, his foul shooting
mystically disappeared, and
no one was more puzzled than
McGinnis. It was as if he was
suddenly a stranger to .
himself.
But Wednesday night
McGinnis began the new
season theway he would have
Uked to end the last one: He
scored 32 points and grabbed
22 rebounds as the 76ers blew
by the Detroit Pistons for a

"

25 points as Los Angeles
evened its record at 1:1- The
!..akers were backed by Earl
Tatum with 22 points, Kermit
Washington with 21 and
Jamaal Wilkes with 20 .
Indiana, got a game-high 34
points from Adrian Dantley.
Abdui-Jabbar was sidelined
with a broken hand he
sustained in a fight with
rookie Kent Benson a~
Milwaukee Tuesday night.
Warriors 116, SuperSoalcs 84
Rick Barry dropped in 28
points and Phil Smith 20 as
Golden State broke away in
the second half lor a n easy
romp over Seattle . Fred
Brown scored 21 points for
Seattle and Mike Green
added 20.

WHERE THE
RUBBER MEETS
THE ROAD!

QUALITY TIRES
AT ·
REASONABLE PRICES
('utwj GENERAL
TIRE SALES

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.
CASH&amp;CARRY
PRICES

rtlf

NORTHSECONDAVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHI045760
PHONE : 992-7 161

we
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, o.
91'2-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00to5:00Mon.thru Fri.
7:00 to 3: oo Saturday

ELECTBIC SEBVICE
•'NT,;RD.TPT.n'N

...... ..,..J... '

Colu mbus and Southern customers in parts of Athens Washtngton and Ma1gs Counties will soon
be served f rom a new su bstation at Codlv tll e. Oh io . Thi s new sta t ion w ill all ow the Company
to properly suppl y the increasing requirements of cus tomers' electri cal demands. prov1de more
rel iable service to the area and improve voltage regulation .

A major swi tchover to the station is pl anned on

SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 23
It wi ll be necessary to interrupt service for about 2 hours (from p 00 A.M . to 7 .00 A.M) for
Colu mbus and Southern customers in the vicinity o f BASHAN,' EAGLE RIDGE, KENO,
ALONG STATE ROUTE 248, TUPPERS PLAINS, ALFRED, COOLVILLE, TORCH and

HOCKINGPORT.
We hope thi s outage wil l not cause you ~ n y major tn convenience .

In case of rain th e work and outage will be postpon ed until SUNDAY . OCTOBER 30 at
the same hou r.

8
Cofum&amp;u.t

_______________________ /~h~n ------~~--------~
r, •

I

J

,,

"

�+-The Daily Senunel. M1ddlepan -Pome roy. 0 .. Thursday . O&lt;·t. 2tl, 19ii

:~~~%t:m~~~~~;a~~~'\:~W~1f~:=~'}1\

~:~ Today S
~

:;~:;:;

~

:::::~

~

~~
~~.
~~
~&gt;.;
~~

~

snort p a.. d· e
•

~

1

:r-'

I

U

~~:~

Cleanup begins in NY following celebration .
BILL MAUUEN
u PI Spurts Writ t•r
H\

NEW YORK 1UPl l - Most
ll f tht-q tr kt&gt;r tape and &lt;.'\mfetti

~=~=~~\
;:;:;:&lt; ~·as still bemg deaned off I he
:l:~t streets from the Nt&gt; w York

Stembrenner. "bojt I tlunk m
lhe long ru11 U:iese things

t '1gucrua a nd deSig na ted
hitter Da\'e Kingman.

Stee le d 11 ur pl aye r s into
per formmg rve n better .

White, the oldest, Y£~nkee 111
the poi nt of se rvire to t~

did ,

~f.' end uf t_he se~son and lust

ready ln d1p heav1ly m.IO the
free agent m.arket this year .
1l1e Ya nkees are known to

:::\;: Yankees' gala ,;ctory parade
;'i::;· Wednesday when George
;~@· Steinbreruwr was back at his

'1 00~

ri~ht-handed relief ace
R1 eh Gossa ~e of the
Plt~s_burgh . P1 rates . an

0

~~~~:/ ~m~:.~:t::~ 0~~j::

Engle had a family gathering
recently to wekume back
their da ught er , Peggy
Dowell, her husba nd and
their ciJildrcn, Roger and
Debbie who have spen t the
past three years in Hawit ii.
Kermit Taylor gave grace

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

" I think maybe it was my Ius left fie ld Jt•b to Lou add1t1on to Mmnesota Twms
fault we had so much turbu- Piniella. He and Figueroa. a t&gt;utJie ldcr Lyman Bostork,
~~
By MILTON RICHMAN
lenc..&gt;e and maybe next yea r l~ame wiru1.er who was wtl(_&gt; ~ould H_t nicely into
~~
UPI Sportl Editor
::;::1 drsk a lready makin~ pla ns l 'U take more al·live steps tn mtffe d over bemg passed
Whites left h eld spot and
prevent it
from
re- o\'er for a World Series start, allow Piniella to go back tu
NEW YORK t UP!l - Baseball's Man of the Moment, for next yt·ar .
.. But all in all , I are likely to be packaged in a
"We'
re
sta
rting
right
now
oceurring.
being a DH.
1
Reggie Jaek.s&lt;&gt;n. freely admits his !aulls. He has never tried
to
make
surt&gt;
we
stay
on
top,"
have
no
regrets.
Jt
was
a
Lntde
for
so1pe
addit
iona
l
Money may buy the
making anytx&gt;dy believe he's a Willie Mays m the l.eld . When
said
Steinbre
nner
,
the
great,
great,
year
and
Billy
pit
ching
help.
Kingman
,
a
Yankees
more good players,
he first reported to Baltimore last year. he told Earl Wea ver,
principlli
owner
of
U1~ n!lWly- Ma rtin did one helluva • late-Season designated hiller
but
it
is
doubtful
it can buy
" l don 't know what you heard abo ut my work m the outfield,
crowned
World
Champ
iO
n
managing
job."
pickup,
failed
to
cume
to
them
happiness,
That ran
but I'm not as good as you think I am." After watching Jackson
New
York
Yan
kees,
victofs
Besides
Jackson,
catche
r
terms
with
Steinbrenner
and
only
l.'ome
from
within
and
in the field awhile , t he Orioles' manag er said. ··he's rig ht. "
over
the
Los
Angeles
in
six
Thurman
Munson
,
the
tea
m
will
be
cut
loose
to
make
his
it's
already
apparent
that,
Likr r \'eryone else, though . Wea \'er is in lovP wi th Jackwn's
games in the World Series. captain. ran a lso be expected own deal.
allhough Steinbrenner may
bal. ..
"We
plan
to
do
ever)1hing
we
back
in
Yankee
pinstripes
lor
Mea
nwhile,
Steinbrenner
is
have no regrets, 1\is world
The Best Team Mone v Can Possibly Buy . isn 'l throug h
can
to
improve
the
team."
the
l
Ot
h
straight
se
ason
bu ying yet. meaning t h~ Yankee dollar will be in great
And although th e Yankees despite hi s request to be
evidence again two wee~s from now when the clubs start
already
have justified Stein- traded to Cleve land so he can
falling all over themselves. see ing which of the free agents
brenner
's
huge expenditures be closer to his family.
thev can make instant millionaires in the re-entry draft. Bow1e
lor
!alent
sueh as Reggie
Center fi elder Mickey
Kuhn , like big brother . is watching lor any signs ol tan1perin g,
Jackson
($3
million
),
Dun
Rivers
has repeatedly asked
so George Steinbrenner is being especially careful about
Gullett
( $1.9 million) and to be traded, but again the
mentioning any fr ee agents who may appeal to him . Bul ~ he
Burk\' Dent t$100,1100 and Yankees don't seem too eager
man who spent all that money to ge t Reggie Jackson, Calf1sh
Osc,;
Gamble ). the happy 10 accomodate him either,
Hunter and Don Gullett thinks any criticism by other owners of
endin g to t he storyb ook save for a super offer. And as
the wav the Yankees went out and hough! themsel,•es a world
champi~nship is nothing more than sour grapes. " Freeagency season is not without some Steinbrenner adds : " I take
more unde rcurrents of everything. Mickey says with
is part of baseball," says Steinbrenner. "J'hal makes 1t every
Wlrest.
..
a. grain of salt. ~'
bit as"much of the game as what takes place on the field. You
Jacks on,
the
sellThen there's Mike Torrez.
'sa\i. San Diego, Montreal, California and Kansas Clly
accla
imed
superstar
right
the
"other'' World Series
competing righl up there with us in the last free agent draft ,
field
er
who
r
apped
his
hero
who pitched two
didn 'l you' I think you 'II see Cincinnati in there this time." ...
stormy
season
with
a
reeord- co mplete-game victories
Last vear, there were ooly 24 free agents to choose from.
This )'e3.r , with six-year players and certain minor leaguers tying three home runs in the over the Dodgers, indnding
thrown in , the total probably will run closer to 100. The lour top Yankees' series-clinching 8-4 Tuesday night 's clincher. The
players available are reliever Rich Gossage, )"ho d1d so well victory over the Dodgers, has big Mexican righthander is
lor the Pirates-Ill is year. outfielders Lyman 1lostock and Larry · said he wants to come back. still unsigned and it's no
Hisle from the Twins and Mike Torrez, who wrapped up the but it r-e mains to be · seen secret Torrez ' performance
Wocld Series finale lor the Yanks Tuesday night. Gossage 's whether his relations with has greatly enhanced his
· asking price with the Pirates was $2.? million over seven Manager Billy Martin will bargaining power . .
improve.
· Among th ose Yankees
years, with $500,1100 of that up front, at which pomt they w1shed
"i
know there was a lot of likelY not to return next year
him luck ...
All dillerenfkinds of conditions are being written into player turbulence on the balldub include left fielder Roy
said While, righthander Ed
contracts these days. One National League club has a this · season."
provision included whereby the salary of one of its players is
reduced $25,1100 if he smokes tobacco of any sort. He ran chew
all he likes, though ...
Dun Sutton claims three men carried the Dodgers all year
long. "You take away Dusty Baker, Reggie Smith and Bill
Russell and we 1d haveflnished in the cellar ,' ' says Sutton ...
-'Tug McGraw knows exactly how the Dodgers feel losing the
World Series, having felt the same way himseU when the
Phillies were beaten by them in the National League playoff .
...,.....__.__
._.• , ,.__
, ..•
"It's like a death· in the lamily," says the Phils' reliever .
, " There are three phases you go through - shock, depression
(}9@9(])
and acceptance, and of the thi'ee, I'm not sure which is

MASON FURNITURE

preceding the dinner. Allen, ding were Mr. and Mrs:

Mon. , Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal .-8 :30til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

Taylo r, Kandi and Krista!,
Mr. and Mrs. Jac k Nelson,
~ ra , Lisa, Brian, and Barry,
Mr . .and Mrs. Ricl1ard
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Fn.'&lt;i
Engle, Freddie a nd Slwwn,
Hicky Kim and son, Mr. and
Mrs: Calvin Dowell , Ruger
. and Debbi e, Mrs. Gary
Cooper and Christy, Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Engle and Pete,
Mr. and MI'S, Clarence
Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Phillips, Mrs. Th uma&gt;
Dianardo and S~ndy , Hex
Hathburn, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Nelson.
Unable lo attend were Gary

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W. Va .

1elh

,. . ~,

worst." ...

,~

young pitcher who said everything was line and ·he had no

Rely On Us For
Fast Service!

trouble at all when he was warming up on the sidelines , but

once he got into a ballgame and became aware of all l~ people
in the ·stands he couldn't throw naturally anymore," relates
McCarver.
"Gibby listened, then pointed to his own arm and said to this
young pitcher, 'there's an artery ~ere that runs all the way up
clear across your shoulder and down the bottom of your back.
When you get into a ballgame, there's a tendency lor the
bottom of your back to become a little tight and even curl up a
lillie. That's because you're getting tense and not relaxing.
Once you become tense, you get caught up in aU the lanfi!fe.
You're a fan now and not a player anymore, and the big thing
you have to remember is that yo u're getting paid to be a
player, not a fan .'" What Gibson was telling Uie young pitcher
was that there are other places he .could choke beside~. lhe
throat...

Our team of experienced p~arma ­
cists strive for precision and accuracy in filling all prescriptions . .. ·
work os quickly as possible .to get
your order to youl

SWISHER LOHSE

PUBLIC INVITED
The public is invited to view
• a one-hour film entilled
Boredom at Work : The
Empty Life, at the Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center in Pomeroy this
Friday at 2 p. m.
A stall member will be on
hand during the showing and
will be available to discuss
the film with interested
viewers. The film is free to
the public. The Mental Health
Clinic is located at 236
Second St .. Pomeroy.

JAMBOREE SPECIALS
LIVING
BIBLES
'

hold meettng ~\\

.

'100

.CANWIFEBEATERSCHANGE?
f ~
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
We get married late last year when I was nearly-18 and he
The least coin offering was
was 20. 1 forgave him fer giving me fat lips and black eyes! but taken at the Tuesday night
when be implied I wasn't as good as his pregnant sister meeting of Group 2 of the
(because I lost our baby), and we got evicted from our apart- Middleport First United
ment, I'd had it. By that time I'd learned lr&lt;m his folks that Presbyterian Church held at
even they couldn't stand his hottemper.
the home of Mrs. Mildred
He said if 1left the state to go live with my parents, he'd send Ka
me there in a casket, but I finally made the move. We've talkworship service on
ed on the phone since, and he swears be's.changed (buUben be Christ's ministries of comalways apologized before too, after beating me). His mother .JliiSSion was conducted in consays he's overdosed tbree times. He threatens to kill himself if junction with the least cmn ofIdon' tcomeback. Sayshe'sseeingacounselor. •
.
ferlng. Mrs. Gladys CummActually, 1 want to return and finish up my cosmetology . lngs had the d~volions using
course, but he'll think I'm coming back to him. It's been three Helen Steiner Rice's "Make
months. Couldhereallycbange,andistherehopelorus7
Your Day Right by Thinking
Oh yes, .we went to a marriage counselor once; but! told the Right" and "Count . Your
truth about us (beating, etc.) and really got knocked around Gains and Not Your Losses.:'
later. Should we try coUJiseling again?- P.H. (WHO'S TEMPMrs . Faye Wallace
TED)
reported that she had turned
DEARP.:
in the bottle caps, the proShould a field mouse try "reforming" a weasel?
ceeds from which go into
You're well out of this mess. Take your cosmetology colll'lle charity projects. Mrs. Helen
" where you are- away from a violent husband who may need Sauer and Mrs. Ethel Lowery
yearsofpsycliiatl'ic·help.- HELEN
were named to · the
nominating committee. The
P:H.:
Thanksgiving dinner will be
Yes, people can change, but an' insecure, sulcldal, irrational- · held at the Kin Folks at Point
ly hot-tempered man isn't liable to improve much in three Pleasant next month.
months , even with professional help.
·
Mrs. Wallace announced
Let someone else take this responsibillty. You're too young World Community Day to he
for it! -SUE
held Nov. 4 at the Heath
United Methodist Church.'
DEARRAP :
Mrs. Sauer reported on the
The young man who guessed he "mUst be bisexual:' (but fall Presbytery meeting to he
didn't care) because he's sensitive, look a home ec. course, held in Portsmouth on Oct. 25.
and is able to cry: I'm glad you made it clear that real men
TUEsDAY
don't have to be unfeeling stereotypes. Your answer was exAMERICAN Legion Aux- cellent, but ·
iliary, Drew Webster Post 39, · I wonder if he Understands what bisexual means? Since he
will meet Tuesday night at felt so deeply about his girlfriend who died, I doubt be's AC- Now you know
the
hall. DC. You should bave pointed out that he's heterosexual, so that
Csardas is a Hungartari folk
•.
·
he wouldn't label himself ''bi" just because he has more sen- dance. .
sitivi(y tluqunacho males.- T.G. ·
DEART.: .
We didn't know what the young man meant when he wrote,
"Even my parents can't accept the way I 81ll, which is probably biSexual." But since he had come tO terms with himself
("disapproving people don't bug me any more" ) we felt it best
to concentrate on reassurance.
In case he misused the word "bisexual," and for others who
don't understand its meaning: the modern definition is: sexual
attraction to beth men and women, with no set preference. •
HELEN AND SUE

off

DURING THIS
SALE

lf2 PRICE

RECORD
ASSORTMENT

Regularly 29995

With Any
Bible
Purchase of

/z PRICE

1

Rea listiC ST A-84 gives you more power.
fe atures and so und for yo ur stereo dol lar'
Come see! Come hear' Come reJoice at 33%
all at The Nationwide Supermarket of Sound®'

•

COLOSSAL SYSTEM SAVINGS!

SAVE 22880

'10.00 or
Mora Yoo

Sale Prices
Effective
Friday 21st
-and Saturday
22nd On~

Gat Your Nama
Imprinted

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

• Reallsflc STA -84 AM-FM stereo receiver as above
• LAB-54 changer with base and magnetic cartridge
• Two Nova "78 " floor/shell speakers with 10" woofers,
3" lweeters. walnut veneer enclosures

Middleport, 0.

99 Mill St.

By United Press International
Pro Football

rest of lhe s.eason , be ing p laced
on injured reser ve ; r epla ced
Pa yne on the roster w it h Wally
Horton .

Cleveland - Cu t ba ckup w ide
receiver and kick re t ~rner
Pro Basketball
Reggie
Cra ig
and
s1gned
Boston Signed forward
defensive tack le John OkonieW Sidney Wicks to a m ult i -year
ski .
Ph iladelphia Anno unced contract ; waived forward Norm
w ide receiver
Ken
Payne Cook .
underw ent an emergen cy ap pendec tomy and w il l m iss the

Lebanon
LEBANON, Ohio (UP! ) Toronado Jeffery came up
from
fourth
in
the
backstretch Wednesday night
to win the featured rare at
· Lebanon Raceway by live
lengths over Vickie Pat.
The three-year-&lt;&gt;ld winner
covered the mile in 2:08 :h'i the best time of his career and paid $5.40, $6.20and $4.40.
Vickie kicked back $7.20 and
$3.80 and the show horse,
OaklaWn Victoria, returned
$4.80.
The
nightly
double
. combination of Winover Will
(7) and Sunrise Lynn (3) was
worUi $22.20.,
•
A crowd of 1,128 wagered
$107,630.

VI~'

Pomeroy, 0 .

Open Nights fill9

rf'!iJ[l]@(jj)!J!Xf@

'

•• .

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)- - - - -

R
D

''

)
·

fi2 N. 2nd Ave.
Our TRC-452 40 channel (not 23') is lhe greatest
CB t:&gt;uy in a ll our 17 years building and selling
America's championship qu al ity lin e . "Bring it
on home!" TODAY!

I

SPECIAL
PURCHASE!

SAVE$25
Reg.
59"

3495

40-1980

Realistic MC· 1000 in
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STANDARD COLORS OR
•
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2~.·
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PLUS AM-FM STEREO

SHOP OUR COMPlETE PAINT DEPARTMENT

Rock . co untry. lolk . pop!

SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY . .. MOST

14-831

U

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Middleport Merchants
New Car Jamboree

''78''

RelJ. 59"'

CASSffiE RECORDER
PLUS FM-AM RADIO!

BATTERY I AC PORTABLE
8-TRACK TAPE PLAYER

OPEN LATE NIGHTS TIL CHRISTMAS

·,.,~:~~;~~

PRICES M"Y VARY AT INDIVIDUAl STORE S

•

Mo" •tems

neighbOrhoQd

39!_!.

Volare Wagon

. -.

See Tom Rue, Ray Douglas, or G. Pat WiHiamson

"

•
•.••
•

TOMR
U
E
MOTORS
..
..

-

' .

399 South 3rd St.
Middleport, Ohio
992-2594

Ir.

CHRYSLER

'

IN HOSPITAL
Danny Harrison, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, who became ill al-his work at Philip Sporn
Tuesday morning, was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the New Haven
ER Squad. He was later
transferred to Camden Clark
Hospital, . Parkersburg. H!s
room nwn!ler is 516-N.

'

..

'

,,

,.

at Your
Home?·

Planning a new addition

to your family? Like a long
awaited new ca r? Why let a
low budget slow down your
plans?

We've been known to

help people like yourselves
w ith auto loans that let you
stop e)(pectlng ... and start
dr i ving! Plus we can wor-k
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won't pu_t a dent in your
budget! See us about It
soon .. . we'll be expecting
you.

Middleport Merchants

NEW CAR JAMBOREE
Friday &amp; Saturday, Oct. 21st &amp; 22nd

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit .Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

.FIX .UP YOUR

Officers to be honored
Receptions lor two officers
were announced at the Friday night meeting of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White
Shrine of Jerilsalem, held at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
.
Nellie Casto, worthy htgh
priestess, conducted . the
meeting. Soj .. Dun Mtller,
supreme organist of Ml. Pleasant S"rine will be honored
with' a receptionn Nov. 20 at
the Holiday Inn at Lan·

LanchesTer
(Phone
614-653-4607) . Second dinner
and reception will be held for
Irene E. Smith, supreme §ecund handmaid of Galilee
Shrine on Dec. 4 at 2 p.m. It
will be held at the Hospitality
Motor Inn at Willoughby.
Reservations are to be sent to
Jack Boyd Smith 256 Erie
Road, Willoughby.
Plans were discussed for
the ceremonial to be held at
the December meeting with a
chester. Reservations are to practice to be held at the
be made by Nov. 12 with Mrs. regular November meeting.
Betty Miller, 1305 E. Allen St.,

Farm Bureau to meet

SAVE
33%

Silver Bridge Plaza

PH. 992-2811

CROSS
HARDWARE.Mtddleport. Ohto.
992-3831

12-18~

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33%

·5995

CORPORATION'

$88

Open Fridaytil8 : 00

NOW ON DISPLAY

CHRYSLER

· · Reg. 139"

Reg.89"

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5195 '

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E

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FRIDAY, OCT. 21st &amp;
SATURDAY, OCT. 22nd

A

..

Reg. 13995

EBERSBACH .HARDWARE

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GALLON

NORTHFIELD ,
Ohio
(UP!) - Red Andy captured,
the featured $1,700 ninth race
at
Northfield
Park
Wednesday night to earn his
thitd victory of the season.
Ule winner; driven by William Leary, was in Iron l all
the way as he (COVered the
mile in 2:116 i.,'i lor a payoff of
$12.20, $5.40 and $3.40.
Final Attack fini shed
$1!COOd, 2:!. lengths back, and
Noivza Time came in third .
Bat Stayle won the lOth
race and kicked off a big
triple combination of 1-3-10
which was worth $152.40. Wen
Her Leslie was secona and
Due Bluegrass finished third .

.

Friendly Servi~e
E . Main

PAINT UP WITH OUR

Northfield

.

Charle5 Riffle, R. Ph.

·Sunday 10:30 '10 12:30 and 5 to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955

By Helen and Sue Hottel

dinner was served at noon.
The weekend""" climued
on Sunday aftemoon when an
area-wide youth rally wu
held. The singers led thlll
inspiring event with song, a
skit and a challenging
message lor people of all
ages.
. The
minister,
John
McArthur, would ·like to
thank all the people oL .the
congregation who helped
behind the scenes in
preparing the food, setting up
tables and making sure
everything went smoothly.

EXPECTING

Offering .
i
-·-·-~~ IYncet'ved

CHESTER--Friendship
night to he observed on Nov. 3
at the Liqns Club building in
Belpre was announced when
Ches ler Co un cil 323,
Daughters of America, met
Tuesday nlght at the hall.
The friendship night will be
. a 6:30 potluck dinner. District
officers are asked to wear
long white dresses. Mrs. Ada
.Bissell presided. It was noted
that Mrs. Mae Spencer ha s a
new great-granddaughter.
Helreshments were served
by Mrs. Duris Koenig, Mrs.
Zelda Weber, a nd Mrs.
· Dorothy Myers lo those naml!d and Mrs. Ada Neulzling,
Mrs. Mabel Van Meter, Mrs.
Belly Roush, Mrs. Letha
Wood, Mrs. Ada Morris, Mrs.
Helen Wolf, Mrs. Doris
Gruese r, . Mrs. L.e ona
Henslery, Mrs. Durutl1y R1tchie, Mrs. Margaret Tuttle,
Mrs. Mary Hayes, Mrs. Ada
Bisse ll , Mrs. Elizabeth
Hayes, Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Miss Julie
Rose, Mrs. Duris Koenig,
Mrs. Laura Mae Nice, Mrs.
Eileen Martin, Mrs. Goldie
Wolfe, and Mrs. Marcia
Keller.

Reg. 110.95

-. -

y.~

. ::

Ronald Hanning, R . Ph
Mon . thru Sat. 8 : 00a .m . to 9 p .m .

•

'

'

· ;r,,,,~,,,~,..~,G;~~;ir~;~ii;;~~*''-·'~'1

D of A to

1978 N

Sports transactions

FRIDAY
OCTOBER 21

Youth weekend held
The Pomeroy Church of
Christ had its first " Youth
Weekend' ' October 14-16. The
New Hope Singers, a group of
live students from the Cincinnati Bible College, led the
weekend.
Friday night the New Hope
Singers, and the youth gr~up
-lrom the church alteQded the
Meigs High School football
game and afterwards they all
gathered at the church
parsonage for refreshments
and games.
Saturday nigbl there was a
"Singsp)ratlon" atthe church
building where New Hope
Singers sang arrangements
of hymns, gospel songs and
choruses which were taught
to the audience. They also
talked about the work of the
Cincinnati Bible College and
ended with a short devotional
thougbt.
Several Bible school
classes were taugbt Sunday
morning by members of the
ensemble and they sang a
special number during the
worship hour. A potluck

MID_DLEPORT. OHIO;_SECOND and MILL STS.

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough , R. Ph .

N EW cAR -

MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

FM-AM HI-FI
RECEIVER

one of the club's minor league camps . "There was this one

~

New York
who lelcphunl!d during the
day, and CIJ&lt;Jrlcs Cooper and
fa mily who reoide in Tampa ,
F'la.

-· NOON UNTIL DARK

.

ThUrman Munson can forget about being traded to Cleveland
so he can be dose to home. To begin with, the Indians don't
have. the players to give the Yanks in return and secondly.
they're having enough trouble paying Wayne Garland 's $2
million salary without taking on another one !ike Munson 's.
Now if Yankee President Gabe Paul wants to go back to
Cleveland. that 's another story _One group interes'ed in buying
the Indians would like 10 have Paul in with them. He was with
Cleveland from 1961 until-1966 and still is fond of the city ...
l like the story Tim McCarver, the Phillies' popu lar
receiver tells about the time he and Bob Gibson were with the
Cardinal~ and went ove~ to talk with sOme of the pitchers at

-:---------------::--::=--:=::-------------

5-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday. Oct. 20:::_,1:'!17::.:.__ _ _ _

basemcm Graig Nt&gt;tt1es. "R ut

t"O_vet

When they had w win ... they dub, slumped • t bat badly at

\

I'd like to do II WltllOUt all the
pro blems we had this
vear."

&lt;·hmnp aon players do.
"I'd like to win this thing
again nex t yea r," &amp;aid tl)i rd

Mrs.
Maida
Mora ,
president of the Meigs County
Farm Bureau Federation,
announced today that the
Farm
Bureau
Annual
Meeting will be held ,next
. Tuesday night, Oct. 25, at the
Chester Grade Schodl at ?:17
p. m .. Mrs, Mora said that a
steak dinner is being served
and the price of tickets Is
$1.50 for adults and $1.00 for
children.
A program is being planned
for the evening with the
highlights being the Ruthie
Roberts Show from Columbus
, presenting
the
entertainment. Mrs. Mora said
!hal there will he a short
business session and will
tncl~de
adopting
the

..

or'ganizatlon · s · I9 7H
Resolutions.
Reservations lor the dinner
can be made by calling
Pomeroy 992-2181 or any of
the following board members. A limited nwnber of
tickets can be purchased at
the door. A list of the board
members and their phone
numbers are as follows :
Maida Mora 992-7765; Oris
Roush 742-2134; Halph Cart •
992-2384; I)IU Carr 985-3882;
Tom Hamm 94&amp;-2574 ; Eula
W&lt;&gt;lle 247-2278; Robert
Burdette 992-3930; Andrew
Cross 247-3852; Mrs. John
Colwell 742-3002; Norman
Will 742-2791; Henry Frank
,992·7895; Mrs. Harold While
742-2889; Sylvia Midkiff 9927216 .

0

SAVE '8

12 V CHARGER 48

MAINTENANCE
FREE

Deliver up to 475
amps
of
cold
cranking power!

Regular $43.99 value

'3599

For Most Cars

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SPARK
PLUG

lloef

..
5

Save90•
CARBURETOR

lA.

~~-·

Most cars. tr~cks.

•·

Regular 2.n

Improve your 1..-1 i&lt;:onomy l

'•::.,::~6~4-~11~00~-~t:e~E~a;..7~1c:.O--I~--~~~=-~='~~~-.--1

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BA:ITERY CHARGER

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88

•

Aufomoflc c~rcuif breaker, 6 ano 12
Baflerl••
·
Regular

TUN E•UP. KIT
.

Save up to $1.33 .
Regular$3.29 values
Tune-up
Now

•1 96

WESTERN AUTO
Ohio

�"
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, 0&lt;-t. 20, 1977

Missionary Society
VtsttatJOn of shutms \\as 111-'

duded on thl' pru)t't't \\ urk tlf
the t'Ircles uf tht&gt; B. H. ~til·
~)rn !\1tssaunaQ S lk.' h!l) vf
. th~ Mtddlt.'l)l..lft · F'tr~t Bo1pt1st
Church lllt't.'tln~ Tut•sday
t'\'emng .

The Dorcas Cm.'it'

ltk't.'lltlt.:

lWlJo-l&gt;\' · lWO

lll

conduc~s
\ ' ISJi

St'\'t•ral

out as a Thanksgiving pru-

Ht&gt;l~n

jt'l.'l '

Bvdnu~r
Kathryn Metz~er.

and M-r.fi.
willeall on

Flurenn• Hannay. Mrs .
f'r,-da Edwards and Mrs.
Martha Khm• will go to the
~1rs .

Kunes Cun\'alcscent Ccnler

Wmebrenner

hust c-s.s

to vtslt Mrs. Irene Cross and

made arrangt·mcnts lu gu

Mrs. Lilhcm Demuttkt·y : and

htllllf'

tlw

Mrs. S;jrah D. Owen will VISit
Mrs. Vl\'laiiTitus. The visiUiuun pr l1gram will ~ carried

shul1;s, Mrs . Clarabelle
R1lt'y ami Mrs. ~1ary Brt~wtr
\\Ill VISit Woodrow Call. Mrs.

l1f )1rs. LUU ISt.'
Thompson wuh Mrs. l.s&lt;.t~llt•

at \he

meeting

Lighthouse Tabernacle to hold
revival with Bill Morris Singers
Special charismatic
meetings will be conducted
nightly at the IJght House
Tabernacle Assembly of God
of Route t60 . The Bill Morris

BrewE·r and Mrs.
Rtlt'\' told uf thetr vistl tu the
Ath~ns Mental Health Center
and 1l was del'ided that Mrs.

R1lev will contact the Center
tu detennine Ute special
na'&lt;is of the men's ward in
the building. and what can be
dune about holding a party
there.
.
Mrs. Owen and Mrs. Eva
comment~

ministry when Bill spoke at
the FuU Gospel Business
Men's
Fellowship
In·
tcmati onal at Rio Grande

worship and adoration of our

Coflege Cafeteria October I,
1977.
The public is invited to
attend all services, October

23 through! October 27 , 7 p.
m.
nig htly .
Nurse ry
provided.

on their

\•isit with Mrs. Cross at
Kimes and noted that Mrs .
Hartley and presented her
with a box of you note was
read frum MrS. Cross. Alsu
interest missionary, t hanking

BRIGHT
STICK

the circle for a gift of money
on his birthday .
Mrs. Owen reported tha t
there are 65 patients at the
A,rcadia Nursi ng Home.
Vis.its there were discuSsed
and Mrs. Freda Edwards will

ed back aft er a long illness.
Refreshments were served tu
those na med and Mrs.
Frances Smar t, Mrs. Oeida
Chase, Mrs. Leora Sigman.
Mrs . Sarah Fowler, Mrs. Hernice Baker, and Mrs. Beulah

Boys , Girls &amp; Infants

SALE

ssoo

FREE PAIR or
TUBE SOCKS
With purchase of any pair. of Jox
or Converse Slioe s

N. 2nd A

vi.

.

P omeroy, and Werldcll Eblin.
MiddJepurt, anti her greatgrandmother, Mrs . Nellie
Eblin, a nd Tim m y J unes .

''78''

son

Monte

~arlo

Sporl

~oupe

"lt1l Drive You Happy"

See and Drive It

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevv Dealer';
Ohio

g

UNOLEUM RUGS

•a••
.•,

Bedroom Suite ·

MEN'S SHOES
Values to 524)9' ·

'9"

SALE

SALE PRICES
ADMIRAL

Men's

WORK BOOTS

'1498

K. D.

FAMOUS NAME
BRANDS OF
FURNITURE AT
SPECiAL SALE PRICES
DURING THIS
2 DAY..SALE

Mrs.

You can make yo ur own
frames and have fun doing it.

CLOTHES HAMPERS

J ohn

LunBolen,

Cleveland; Mr. and Mts.
Richard Bruck and Douglas,
Bellefontaine, Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Stout, Pomeroy; Mr.

and Mrs. Jack Bolen anct
Greg, Dexter, Diane Epple,
Steve and . Ga ry Nelson,
Pomeroy: and Steve Jagers
of Gallipolis who ca lled in the

Prices Effective
Frid~y and
Saturday On~ ·

{. SKIRTS
&amp;

Ocl 21st
&amp; 22nd

Buy some fell in the desired

VALUES

~;:::!i;;:;;z::iifi!i~o:tZ::it!;:S TO S20 .00

JEANS

Cooper

was

celebrated recently wilh a
party at the home of l'dr.
and · !'drs. Gary Cooper,
Route 2, Racine. Cake, ice
cream and koolaid were
served and games were

played. Attending' were
Christina's grandparents,
1\tr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Engle, her uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Engle,
and Freddie, Shawn and
Rickie, Marvin Randolph ,
Karen and Llunie Boggess.
Special guests were
Christina's cousios, Roger
and Debbie Dowell, just
home from Hawaii. Sending gifts and cards were
her grandfather, Clarence
Cooper and her grand·
mother, Ruby Cooper, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Swan, a

ggll
COLOR TV
50 DIFFERENT
MODELS IN STOCK

'·

SALE

$1500

·'

A card party was planned
for Nov. I at the home of Mrs.
Carol J ean Adams when the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
Bela S1 gma Phi Sorority met
Tuesday night at the home of

COW NECK
SWEATERS

TOPS

..

Values to 520

•'

SALE
PRieED

'

Spoc.ial Price

.

c
,.

Mrs. Debbic Finlaw. -·
During the m ee liilg the
chC:ipte r a lso voted to par-

ticipate with the other two ·
chapters of the county in rais· ft!'h5t:dl2:;B~:s;;~~~:!&lt;l:!Z~
ing money toward a reprint of
Sorry, No Lay -Aways on Sale Items
the Hardestry History . Mrs .
Karen Stanley, social chair·
man, report over 60 attended
the recent skating party. The
D
cultu ral program was
..t1.
1'
.I\.
presented by Donna .. Byer,
CarolYn Grueser, and Iris
On the T
Payn'¢.
.
Rclreshmcnts were served
in Middleport
by Mrs. Finlaw and Mrs.
C
Qn_________,
Karen Stanley after which a· , ________
o.m_e__

GJW.AN 'S
F' ASH"TQN CENTE'

do- yuur -u wn-thir~g

a·uction

was held .

Pointer, Peeve or Problem in

Men 's
Sweat Pants
(draw string

variety of colors
and tabards

waist)
S3 .77

with bell

Sweat Shirts
PUllover choice

Large

assortment
Men 's Sweaters,
turtle necks, v.
necks, printed &amp;

of colors
S3 .77

Wood Rockers

S8.95

'5.55

to

Men's Cal"hartt
Blanket lined

•·24~ '

used all-purpose white glue to
attach the strips to the pic·
ture . Be careful not tu over·
glue; a little goes a long way.
Rub a ringer across tu spread
the glue slightly. This keeps

CQAT

COATS

WEEK-END

SPECIAL
Mixed

BOUQUET
Cut Flowers

REVIVAL Pl.ANNED
A revival will be held at the
New Haven First Church of
God, Out. 24 through Oct. 30
at7:30 p.m. nightly. The Rev .
Richard Bradley uf
Charleston, W. Va. will be the
evangelist. The public is_invited.

Fri.
Oct. 21
Sat.
Oct. 22

sizes 8-14

LIVING ROOM SUITE

JAMBOREE
SPECIALS

2-styles to·
· choose from
Sofa, Chair &amp; Love Seat

Reg . $249.95

.POLYESTER
QUILT BATT .
8l"x96" '
Bag

FIBERLOFT

.

'3"

GIRLS

DENIM SHIRTS
SIZE 7-14

$133

FRIGIDAIRE-Admiral-Caloric-Speed Queen-Hoover

•' irst Quality

Double Knits
·•}98 Yd.
Poly-Cotton
I

'188 00

SAVE ON TOP NAME BRAND APPLIANCES

Table

Plaid Flannel
'198 ' Yd.

POLYESTER
KNiT MATERIAL
Values to $3.9$

Group ·
Pkg. of Jpr.

Cottons
.· 98c Yd.
TilE SEWING

l(rea1 unde and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Allan Nels•,n, and

CENTER

great-grandpart·nts,. Mr.

On the T in M~lell"rt

cuul i\1rs . Dt ·xlt•r C011pcr .

•

her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

pidure and th~ width you
would like for the fra,nino , I

•saoo -

· CONSOLE STEREO
AM-FM Radio , tape player,
record changer, cabinet,
only 39" wide.

SALE

Values To $20

MODEL JR9000W
!•~-~.~-"

Dawn

~

.•

'

per lengths fur all sides uf the

Province Town Maple, Flex
Steel.
Bassett,
Lane,
Riverside. National and
' .
More

CHRISTINA COOPER
TURNS TWO - The second birthday of·Chrlstina

GAUCHOS

color. Cut into strips the pro-

SIZE CARPETS

Walnut Finish

3

One Group

1 Group of Men's

32" X 32" X 9/

co-hostess.

Hot water may help brass

have a-lot of muncy tu spend.

BOOKCASE
1

as

Bult!n,

POLLY'S POINTERS Card party
\ 1
Polly Cramer
_'-.:.c
-::.........::::.....:.________________
planned

t he glue f rum running out
POLLY'S PROBLEM
!rum
under the felt and gel·
DEAR POLLY ·- I clea ned
at · the business m eeting.
ling 01\ the picture when
Several games were played. m y brass this morning a nd pressed down to dry. When
Refreshments were served found su m~. marks tha t I making such a frame fur a
t'Ould not remove with brass
by the hostesses.
poster I use colored thumb
Attending were Mrs. Freda polish. J also fuilnd (Jnt:! tray tacks the color of the fell lu
Mitch. Mrs. A~na Miller, had a sort uf green muld un tack it to the wall . -SUSAN.
Mrs. Barbara Mullen, Mrs. the back . I would appreci~:~te
DEAR READERS - This
Rhoda Hackett, Mrs. Helen any etnrune nt.&lt;;. -MRS. S.S.
seems a very good idea, I
DEAR MRS . S.S.
Reynolds, Mrs. Jane Gilkey,
think it would work and look
Mrs. Lillian Smith, and Mrs. Perhaps some of your brGtss even better if the strips were
Marjori e Milhoan. Mrs. pi eces are brass plated and cut un the diagonal at the corMiller won the traveling these marks are where the ners to give a mitered effect.
brass finish has worn off. The
prize.
green on the tray may be -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY ·· My
polish· that remained after a
helpful
hint is for campers. I
Will. BE SELLING
clea ning. Often this happens
Aga in .this year the Meigs and one sees green left, par- always had a problem keepBa nd Boosters Association ti culGt rly in crevices where a lng milk fresh in uur cGtmper
will sell fruit baskets at brush should be used to d ean icebox unt,il I disqJVered that
Christmas time, it was at1d remove the polish. I find if the milk is bought m a
decided at a meeting held it Iiluch better to was h a pi~c~ gallon size plastic bottle and
Monday night at the sc hool. in hot soapy water and then frozen just before leaving it
Pat Wood, president, con- rinse iii hot water a nd rub dry will keep fres h for days. In
duc ted the meeting. Candy to a s hi ne (after l'leaning) to fa ct, after four days in the
will also be sold by the be sure all the polish IS icebox there was still a frozen
chunk in the milk keeping it
band members at a later removed. -POLLY.
very cold. I buy whole milk: I
date. The trip to Fairborn
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
think
milk that has been
. Sunday for a band contest Peeve is with t hose infr
ozen
has a tendency tu be
. was discussed.
dividuals who run all over
watery but by buying whole
town tacking up their ugly
garage sale signs on posts milk . it tasted just fine . MEETING CANCEU.ED
and other people's properly. LUCY.
RACl NE POST 60 2,
·PEAR POLLY - I use the
.Arncricahn Legion Auxiliary, , Then to make matters worse plastic net bag that a turkey
they do not remove them
scheduled fur a meeting
came in to hold the kids'
Tuesday night ha s been when the · sale is over. bathtub toys. l hang it over
cancelled due lo the special Sometimes they would sU!y the (ub su the water drips out.
forever if the propertyowners
eledion .
did nut remove them. - MRS. They are kept dry and du nul
•nildew . -ADELE .
K.N.
Polly will send y"uu. one of
DEAR POLLY - I think I
her s ig ned thank-you
have a great idea for those
newspaper coupon clip~rs if
who have posters or pictures
she
us es your favorite
they want to frame but do not

CHEVY CHEVffiE

•saoo '10 88

·SALE

30% OFF REG,. PftiCE .

PLATFORM ROCKERS

Ruger

-....,.,,

I'

afternoon.

Margaret B. Weber presi ded

SCOPE

DI-GEL
UOUID

Sewing Club
has meeting ·
The Jolly Bunch Sewing
Club mel Monday afternoon
at the home of Mrs. f:ve lyn
Grueser with Mrs. Bea Rob-

&amp;

DRESS .
DINGO BOOTS

Mrs.

The Rulhie Roberts show wiU be presented as the entertairunent at the annual meeting
of the Meigs County Farm Bureau on Tuesday evening, 7:17p.m. at the Chester Eleme ntary
School. The group has just completed a tour of the Hilton and Sheraton Hotels. The quar!"t
provides ve rsatility in the program presentation by playing a number of instruments as well
as doing a variety of musical formats. The program music will range from country and
western, song hits from Broadway. to standards.

WE'LL BE SHOWING
VISIT OUR DISPLAY

.

NEW CAR JAMBOREE SALE

1 Group

CHILDREN'S SHOES

Mrs. Odell Manley, Middleport ; Mrs . Lcorm Eblin,

gge

NEW CAR
JAMBOREE

Group

Judy, Boyd, Bruce, and Jill,
Mrs. Bessie Stout, Luke
Brooks, Albany ; Mr. and
Mrs. Austin Wogan, Picker·
ingtun; Mrs. Linda Dixon,
Kary and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Max Bolen and Rickey,
Rey 11oldsburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard WogC:Jn and Leonard,
Hebron: Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Bolen, Colwnbus; Mr. and

Seud ing gifts were Tn:tey's
gramlpurcnls, the Hev . a'nd

_CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

SALE

tl&lt;tughter, Penny uf Boca
Rulon, Fla .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Allen , .Bunnie,

Kathy Barker, Donna Rol&gt;bins, Steve M~ni~Junior
Manley, Tina Ssnith, Shelly
Smith, Jimniy Junes,M•·s.
Barbara Stahl, Mrs. Barbara
Smith, am! Mrs. Kathy Elias.

$2!95

SOFA .BEDS

•soo

Ricky Gibbs .

OtJH.'rs attending were Erka
Elias , Tammy Hoffman, .

sl6.95

rwo::o.So
. . mel' attiU).

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS

SALE

Door prizes went tu Mary
Jones and

COOK POT

[JJ

(Dress &amp;Casual)
Values to 121.99

A ram11y dinner Wl:iS hchJ

Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Nl'ison,
P01 ncruy ,· RIJutc 3, in honor uf
Dr. &lt;Hld Mrs. D~-t1e J&lt;..~ ~ers and

dl)nderTyj

SALE s15.95

BILL MORRIS SINGERS

Firebird

,·

t o Bremla Rotr

SALE Sl,29

PONTIAC TRADITION.

WOMEN'S SHOES

black st reamer s. The
decorating was handlt'&lt;l by
Tracy's friend, Miss Al'lenc
Scarberry, Mason.
Served at the party was a
cake presen ted lu Tracy as a
gift from Tammy Sta hl in·
scribed '· Happy Birthday,

TYLENOL
TABLETS

Calendar

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
OCTOBER 21st &amp; 22nd
1 Group
,

. carried out with orange and

pnzc.s

~umg

bins, Crystal Manley, Li sa
Huffman , and Tammy StahL

Reg . S21.9S

Plains Community Club to
Reg . $22 .00
raise money for v01unteer
··'
fire department.
·
CHESTER PTA annual
SALE
FIREBIRD FORMULA
carnival and jitney supper
with supper beginning at 5:30
white cross was discussed
No . 49 Reg . $31.95
and
carnival at 7:30 p.m.
and Mrs. Owen noted that it
SALE
had t o be ma il ed in Gl'inun a nd Lynn Kl oes, Saturday at school,
EVELYN
·
Wiens,
career
November. The love gift guests.
THE SHRIMP
missionary to the Shangaan
boxes were distributed by
.
One Pint
people. in th e Gazankutu
Deep ·Fryer
N homeland of the Republic of
Reg. $17
· tiun usmg the poems, ''Salva. South Africa, to be speaker at
'12.99
. .95
the Middleport Church of the
tion, Gained ur Lost" and .
Nazarene, Saturday, 7 p. m.
"Him." The program was by
Public invited.
Mrs. Helen BOOimer and was
entitled,"The ' Hai ti Baptist
SUNDAY
FIREBIRD ESPRIT
FIREBIRD
Convention. ''
THE NEWSMEN Quarter,
Scripture !rum Matthew
Charleston, W. Va., to be at
THURSDAY
and the meditation, " Burden
PAST OFFICERS Club, Pomeroy Church of the
40oz.
of Tomo rrow'' was given by Racine Chapter 134 , OES, Nazarene ,
corner
of
Bayer
Mrs. Owen tu open the Thursday , 7:30p.m. at home Mulberry and Union: Sunday
REG.
meeting . Members .recited of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb. for both Sunday School and
6 oz .
the 23rd Psalm.
·
1
Reg . Sl.39
EPISCOPAL Church morning worship services.
4.29
Refre,s hments were served Women at the home of Mrs. · Rev. Clyde Hender son.
Everything you 'd expect In a fins Ponti/JC road car.
to those named.and Mrs. Phillip Kelly, Thursday with pastor, invites public to both
Elizabeth Slavin.
a 12:30 p.m. luncheon. services.
Reg. 59c
Head fuming styling. Impressive maneuverabilily.
LOVE JOY C_IRCLE .
Program by Mrs. Thelma MONDAY
Sporly interiors. And a variely of el)gines• from a
Mrs. June Kloes hosted a
BEND 0 ' TH E' River
Dill.
meeting of the Love Joy Cir·
V-6 to a 6.6 lilre 4-barrel V-8.
Ga
rden Clu ~, 7:30 Monday
REGUI..AR Meeting, Meigs
cle. Mrs . Louise Davis, chair·
night
at the home uf Mrs.
man, opened the meeting County Democrat Party, 8 p. Bert Grimm. F'ur rull call
TEST DRIVE A FIREBIRD TODAY
with scripture reading from m. Thursday at Episcopal members are to tell how
Psalm
109. Devotions by Mrs. Parish House in Pomeroy
' Firebrrds ar e eq u1pped wrth G M·butlf engmes
nature affi rms the exist ence
prc ouced r&gt;y vanous diVISIOns See us lor detonts
'
,
Ma ry Hughes included with Robert W. Sweeney,
of
God. For the a rra ng~me nt
" Ghosts at the Door" and employe of the state auditor's of the month, the theme will
"The Usher at the Gate " office, to be speaker.
.
f' PONTIAC
be " Harv est Moon."
Ponttac's best year y.e . . .
~FRIDAY
along with scripture from
Psalm 27.
EVELYN Wiens, career
Mrs. Kloes dedicated the missionary to South Africa, to
Stop By and Look At
love gift offering reading present complexities and
000000 000000000 1 9 7 8 00000000~0000000§
"Our Love Giving" and "Our chaUenges of that country at
Our Displi!Y At The Middleport Merchants
Giving of Love."
a special service, 7:30 p.m.
.
P
la
ns
were
mad
e
t
o
Friday at the Chester Church
NEW CAR JAMBOREE
remember one of the Women of the Nazarene. Public in·
at the MeigsCounty In· vited.
finnary on her birthday. A
SOUP SUPPER beginning
.
.
0
. note of thanks was read from 5 p.m. Friday at Dorcas M. E. .
Mrs. Iva Turner for a remem- Church social room. Bean,
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OO OOO OOOODOOOOO OOOOOOOOO
brance on her birthday. The vegetable soup , pie and
white cross quota was filled.
Y
SATURDAY OCTOBER 21
22nd
sandwiches; also a bazaar.
1
The program by Mrs. Katie Take containers for carry out
Anthony was on Haiti and soup. Sponsored by Dorcas
Baptist Women and concern- Women's Fellowship.
992-2174
ed their missi on work. Mrs.
SATURDAY
Pomeroy, Ohio
Alwilda Werner was welcom·
500 E. Main
TURKEY SUPPER from
4:30 to 7 p.m. Saturday at
Tuppers Plains Fire Station.
Turkey, dressing , baked
MIPDLEPORT MERCHANT
beans, mashed potatoes and
··"·'gravy, homemade noodles,
salad, rolls , pie, punch and
9 X 12
coffee. Sponsored by Tuppers
9x12' R00M

~:~iedM~~~el~v~h~if~~~~~~

Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Manley entert.llined recently
with a party for their
daughter, Tracy, in ce lebration of her siKth birthday at
their Riverview Place humc
in Middleport.
A Halloween theme was

100 Ct . Reg . $2.38

about

visiU!tion days and sweets_
which can be taken to the patients. Mrs. Brewer noted
that she had spent an aft.ernoon having a Bible study
with Woodrow Call :
The infants layette for the

]agers honored
with dinner

Birthday celebrated

and Kool·Aid. Favors were
pa ckets of mixed candy.
Games were played w it ~

ELECTRIC
DEEP FRYER

McPherson, son of a special

members

7- '!'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, 0&lt;-t. 20, tm

Tracy" with icc cream bars,

read was a letter from Rubert

contact

area were witnesses to this

I.ord .
The group has sung for Full
Gospel
Business Men's
rallies, the Aglow , and
Singers, consisting of BilJ, various churches ill the Ohio
Debbie, Andrea and Leah, Valley. In the meetings that
are held there are various

Mrs.

Hartlt'y

healings. people filled with
the Holy Spirit, saved,
delivered , and set free . Many
residents or the Gallipolis

' , , , . , I · '•

,_ '(l

1 RECORD THE TV PFfOGRAM YOU'RE WATci-UNG ..
I

RECORD ONE PROGRAM WHILE YOU WATCH ANOtHER,;;

I

RECORD TV PROGRAMS WHILE YOU'RE AWAY

• PRODUCE YOUR OWN HOME B &amp; W SOUND MOVIES
1 MONITOR ANY ROOM IJI! YOUR HOME
Record the prog ram you're watching. Record one program wh ile you watch
anot her. Record programs wh ile you're a way by pre-sett ing the automa tic
,
Digi tal Clock Timer. An optional Video C¥"1e ra allows you to make your own
home sound movies in black-an d- white o n ta pe. Wi th th e camera, you ca n a lso
monitor any room in the hbuse- baby's nursery lor example . Versatile Zentth
blank ta pes provide· high quality color or black-and-wh ite sound record ing In
both one and two hour playing t imes. Tapes can be played over again and
again ... saved for future view in g .. . or erased by re -recordi ng on the
Zenith Video Cassette Recorder. Ca binet bea utllu lly finished in simul ated
grained American Walnut wt1h accents of lus~ ro u s Gold color.

Watch what you want ...
when you want it!
·
Drop in and see our Zenith Selection
During the Middleport New Car Jamboree

INGLES FURNITURE

'"
1

'·

!

�I

9-The Daily Sent~nel, Middleport-Pomeruy, 0 ., Thursday , Ort. 20,1977

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Od . 20, 1977

NFL officials to view
TEAMST::l:GT~~~~li~~~~-~·ss~g 14~8 r- 1P3031s films of 'brutal' play

..

TEAM

36 12 0 t.s
25

Athens

Gallipol is
Ironton

32 10 .7
48 16 0
33 11.0
52 17 .3
33 11 .0
25 8.3
16 5.3

Jackson

Logan
Meigs
Waver-ly
Wel l 1ton

39

29
37
32
58

17 -411

7-27
14-30
1J n
?5-45
12-2&lt;
15-33
9-2&lt;

A28 1A2 .6

144
179

3
1
1
3
4
3

141
135

Waverly
Wellston

'

94

31 .3

166

144

15? 159

174.0

522

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS

Hl

151

101

187

the hardfought Cineinnati

Bengals-Pillsblirgh Steelers
game last Monday ni ght
game, to .-onsider leveling
fmes for overly agressive
play.
Several players on ooth
sides chara cterized t he
on-field action as "brutal.''
The Steelers won the battle,
2().14, holding off a l;~St-gasp
Cincinnati rally in the fourth
quarter .
Cincinnati was penalized
for a personal foul during tile
game when defensive batk
Melvin Morgan was observed
clobbering Pittsburgh wide
receive r JOhn Stallworth in
the head whil e making a
tackle .
.,
•
I.:ater in the contest , Sleeter
cornerback Me l Blount was
seen doing the same thing 1o
Bengal tight end Bob
Trumpy, although no pena lty
was called. Trump)' suffered
a concussion on the play and
did not return to the game.
" You can 't go after a man' s
head . l saw the play on TV .
We will look at the coaching
films and the NFL films,"
--said Ni ciL.Skorich, NFL
assistant ~uper Y.i.so r -of
olhcials. " But -if an official
did not see any inten.tion3.1
hea d shot, he pr obably
wouldn 't have ca ll ed a
penalty ."
. Commenting on another
controversy surrounding the
Bengals-Steelers clash,
Skorich aclmowledged that

551 183.6

Thomas, Ironton

Ydo. C.r. Avg .
48
5.5
263
67
3.8
253
46
• .2
193

Deeds. I rO!l.fon
Becker, Meigs

185
182

RUSHING ·-"

Kemper, Logan
Dabney, Galli!X)Iis

c....

PASSING

N. Jenk ins. Jackson
Will iam s, Ironton

296

1

15-30 5 170
12-28 1 172
9-?1 2 160

I
2

Yds ,No .
288 8
lOS 9
371 11
443 14
32S · 11

Avg .
36.0
33 .9
33 .7
31.6
29.5

PUNTING ('I&lt;..- morel
Deeds, I ron ton
Gasser, Logan
Simms. Gall ipol i s

Crace. J ackson
Adams, Athens

RECEIVING
Wayland , Meigs

5

Schanzenbach, Athens
Fletcher. Ironton
·

213

I

180
6
78
6
74

2

7

6

· Conger, Jack50n
Emerson . Logan

kO RETURNS
Jayjolm, Wellsfon
Schmitter , logan

146

7

0

I

I

55

I
I
3

0
0
0

44

46

?8
28

Walton , Athens

Wayland , Meigs
INTERCEPTIONS

s

0
0

2

0
0
0

4

27

2

"

3
3 ss
2 38
2 30

i

Monfg..-n..-y, Wel lsfon
Athens

Beck er, Meigs

2 28

Walton . Athens

2

OVERALL STANDINGS
!As of Oct. 15)
TEAM .
W L T Pis OP
Logan
6 o 0 226 36
Point Pleasant
. 6 1 0 1-40
Wahama
5 1 0 104

·Athens ·
S 1 0
Kyger Creek

20
36
S6

58

1 0

185

• 1 o

82

38
?8

130

64

o

Trimble
4 , , o 123 65
North Gall Ia
32 1 78SS
· Miller
3 3 0 10&lt;1 67
Eastern , 3 3 0
· Vlnfon Co . 3 3 0

70

124

Logan

0

0
0
0
0
0

Soap

6.0

Wahama

36 6
36 6

Kyger Creek
North Gall ia

38 5
55 6

9.2

6.0
7.6

JO ' s

3 oz.

32' Valu e
F.l.P. Price.

7/ $1

Athens

56

Ironton

64

6
6

9.3
10.7

Trimble

65

6

10.8

Mi ller

67

6

11.2

$119

Shampoo
$1 .79 Value
F.l.P . Price ...

49¢
OLD SPICE

COME IN

Pocket Cologne
Reg ular And Musk

LOOK OVER
OUR -

ANTIFREEZE
Dowgard

SALE TABLE

Gallon

~~;~.v;;,~:-~299

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

l )

DOVE

Meigs

71

6

11.8

Alexander

6
5

12 .7

Belpre

76
66

Nels. ·York

85

6
6
6

Fed . Hocking

102

Vinton Co.

103

Waverly
Gallipolis

Misses &amp; · half sizes , by
B_e rkshire,
Hobnobb-Er',
C1ty Scene

13.2
14.2

17.0

REDUCED 20%

17 2

· 1.07 6 i 7:8
116 6 19.3

Southwestern
Eastern

6

Warren
Hannan Trace

152
165

4 0
2 4 0

S6 122
S6 141
54 85
46 71
46 107

Southwestern
2

Wellsfon
Nels .. York 2 4 0
Meigs
2 4 0
Waverly
2 4 0
Fed . Hocking
1

5 0
5 0
5 0

5 0

0 5 1

30

10?

76
53
so
10
36 ·

135
167
116
152
76

SEOAL Standinas
WLTPis OP
Logan
3 o o m 26
Afhens
3 0 0 24
7
lronfon
2 1 0 63 33
Meigs
2 1 o 40 21
Gallipol is 1 2 0 18 11
Waverly
I 2 0
8 35
0 3 0 31 77
Jackson
Wel lsfon
o 3 o • 6 101
TVC St-ndinas
WLT Pis OP
Nels .-York 1 o o 41
0
Belpre
1 0 0 35
0
Vinton Co. 1 1 0 20 18
1 1 o

10

41

Alexander o 1 1
Fed . Hocking

8

20

0 1 1
0
X· Ti"imble X X X XX

35

SVAC Standings
W L T Pis OP
Kyger Creek
3 0 0 130
18
Norfh Gallia
3 0 0 72 21

6 ·25.3
5 27 .s

78 13.0
Justice, NG 8
48 8.0
Geiger , KC 4
o 24 8.0
Sm ith , W 7
1 43 7.2
Swain, kC 5
2 32 6.4
Kuhn , E
6
2 38 6.3
SEOAL SCORING
Name
TO. PA Pis Avg
Kemper , L 6
o 36 23.0
Boykin , I
3
0 18 6.0
Hallett , L 3
o 18 6.0
Flefcher , I 2
5 17 5.7
Jenkins , J 2
1 13 4.3
Becker, M 2
o 12 4.0
o 12 4.0
Way land , M •
Williams. I 2
o 12 4.0
Armstrong , L
2
0
L. Smith, L o_ . 12

12
12

SVAC SCORING
Name
TO PA Pts
Justi ce, NG
8
0 48
Casey , KC 7
0 42
Geiger, KC 4
0 24
Carfer , SW 4
0 24
Lucas, KC o 15 15
Bissell , E 2
o 12
Spencer , E ? · 0 12
TayiOf' , KC 2
0
12
Niberf , KC 2
0 12
Sutphin ,
2
o- 12
Branham , SV
2

0

"

PANTS
DRESS &amp;CASUAl

Ladies '

BLOUSES &amp;
KNIT TOPS
REDUCED 20%
Rack of
Ladles' Suit s, coat s, slacks ,

pant suits. blouses, dress -&amp;
knit top s, Redu ces up to 60 pet .

JOSEPH
Chil~s

Men's

7.B oz . · 25' OFF

Reg . 515.95

F.J.P. Price... .

Long
Sleeve Color

DRESS &amp; SPORT
SHIRTS ·

White
7 % oz . Jar

REDUCED 20%
$1 .19 Value
F .I.P . Price . . .

65¢
COLGATE 100

USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN
NOW FOR CHRISTMAS SHO.P PING

16.0
14.0
12.0
6.0
s.o
4.0
4.0
4.0'
4.0
. 4.0

·

VASELINE

SALE PRICES GOOD
FRIDAY, OCT. 21st &amp; SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 22 ONLY
·

89¢

$1.56 Valu e

SAL£ $12.88

Mouthwash
12

0~ .

$1 .59 Va lue
F.I.P. Price ...

,

4.0

,?,:~

4'9¢

OXY-5

~;,;1_
Acne Lotion
1 oz .
,.....~v;:~ $2 .49 Value $]29

"
2 2 0 50 86
Eosfern
1 2 0 38 66
Han . -Trace 0 2 0 21 . 88
Symmes Val.
0303466

~.,.;....~,

x .Southern

~___:_-,----

XX

Toothpaste

BIB OVERALLS

XX

· F.I ._P . Price .• ..

x-Nolel iglble tor league fltle
TEAMS RANkED
OFFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pis G
Logan
226 6
Kyger Creek
185 S
Iron fen
130 6
Trimble
123 6
Pl. Pleasant
1-40 7
Miller
111&lt;1 6
Wahama
IDA 6
Southern
82 5
Hannan Trace
97 6
Norfh Gall Ia
78 6
Symmes Val .
76 6
Eastern

Avg .
37.7
37.0
?I , 7

?0.5
?0.0
17.7
17.3'
16.4
16.2
13.0
12 .1
1t.7

70 6
55 5 11.0
58 6 9.7
56 6 9.3
56 6
9.3
54 6 9.0

Belpre
Afnens
Wellstoil
Soufhweslorn
Vinton County
Nels. · York
Jackson
.Gallipolis
Waverly
Meigs
Alexander
Fed . Hocking

30 6

Warren

10 6

54

6 . 9.0

53 6

50 6

-46 6
46 6
36 6

8.8
8.3
7.7

7 .1

6.0
5.0
1.7

TEAMS RANKED
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pis. G Ava
Pl. Pleuanf
20 7 2.9
1
Soufhern
28 6 5.6

WHITE RAIN

New Fairm ont
4-Door Sedan

Shampoo
8 oz . · Herba l
H oneysuckle · l emo n

HERE',S MY PERSONAL INVITATION TO
SEE THE FORD IN YOUR FUTURE •••
'78 FORD ~ AIRMONT"
Dri ve the '78 .Fa irm ont a nd you 'll see why il 's Ihe right
ca r for today s d:1vmg . Ea sy handling . Roomy co mlort.
Fa~rmont ha s 90 Yo of Ihe 1nter1or spa ce ol lod ay's cars
like Chevy Impal a. Fa irmont is righ t for today and the
yea rs ,lo come . Fifl ee n minu les behind lhe whee l wil l
te ll you th1s, a nd much more .

$1 .19 Value
F.I.P . Price ...

FQRD
~

W hpfl 1\mnlc

?•

l .

~ I&gt;P~•h

A IJP!!PI olt.-~

fllto:l fH H \ i ! 0 " "'I'&gt;P1'1\

THE FINEST IN NEW CARS, USED CARS AND SERVICE!
•

· DAN THOMPSON FORD

See .Pat Hill •. Rocky Hupp or Darrell Dodrill for a Good Deal on a New or Used
Vehicle .
·
Open Evenings Till7 : 00 except Thursday and Saturday Clo se d Sunday
992-2196
.
.

~-,

.

~-

'

ULTRA BAN

.~ ~ Roll·?n Deodorant

1 1!11,

1
~-

,
l(jji1
1

2 ~.

'

.

oz .-Reg .

O.r Unsc ente d' ·

~-;~/~:~~:....$165

Ill' were injured in their haste

S1'. LOUIS (UP! ) Authorities investigating the
sniper shooting of two men,
one of them from Akron ,
Ohio, outside a suburban
synagogue earlier this month
Wednesday reported a solid
lead - witnesses who said
they saw a man run through li
ne_.by shopping center
shortly after the shooting.
Lt. Thomas H. Boulch, who
is heading the Major Case
Squad investigation into tile
Oct. 8 shooting at tile Brith
Sholom Kneseth Israe l
Coogregatioo, said tile man
seen at the shopping center
fits the descriptioo of a man
who boughi the high-powered
rifle used in the sniping.
That de scription came

men may have been involved
in the murder of Gerald
Gordon of Chesterfield, Mo.,
and the wounding of William
Ash of Akron,Ohio- the man
who bought the rifle and
another man who had been

minimal."
" There's plenty of time to
stop the car and get out," a

s pokeswoman

said

We dnesday. " The driver
might smell smoke or
'gasoline. If he does, ile should
seen carrying a guitar case 'in just puU over to the side of the
the area an hour before the road a nd get out. And then, if
shooting.
there is a fire under the hood,
Boulch said witnesses who he Should not try to open the
saw the man in the Westroads· hood ."
shopping center said he was
Included in the recaU was
looking over his shoulder as every Cadillac Seville ever
he ran , as if he were sold - a total of 111,000 - and
frightened . He Wall seen ' at 22,000 Coupe DeVille and
the center , a short distance Eldorado models
with
from the synagogue, about 30 electronic fuel injection
or 45 minutes aft e r the systems.
shootin g.
The new Seville model,
" We only know for- sure introduced just 2'h weeks
that this man bought a ago, .is the most expensive
hunting rifle in Texas , Boulch mass-produced car ·"on the
said . " But now he shows up road today. It carries a
running through a parking lot sticker price of over $15,000.
near the' synagogue shorlly
Cadillac described the injuaiter the sniping inCident . It ries reported as the result of
makes you wonder exaclly engine fires "" minor. Most of
what his r ole was."
the victims either burned
themselves 1oucl)ing the hood

59¢

.

'

CLEVELAND ( UPI ) - Ac. ·
cusing Cleveland school offi·
cials of' victimizing everyone
concerned with the schools
through a "foolish" proposal,
U.S. District Court Judge
Frank
Battis ti
denied
pennission Wednesday for
Cleveland schools to close for
financial reasons .
"The Clevela(ld schools will
not close now and they will
not be closed at any time in
the future while public
schools are open and
operating anywhere in the
state of Ohio," Battisti r:uled .
His ruling was on a motion
from the school board, which
is under his orders to
\lesegrega_te the schools , ·
asking him to lift hi s
injunction against closing
any schools in connection
with desegregation.
The injunction would have

JOBLESSNESS DECUNES
COLUMBUS (UP! ) ,
There was an 8.1 per cent
'd ecrease in the 'number . of
jobless Ohioans who filed for
benefits under all programs
last week , compared to the
previous week , according to
Albert G. Giles, administra·
tor o! the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
Giles said an estimated
103,553 Ohioans filed for
benefits under all programs
during the week ending Oct.
15. The previous week , about
112,632 applications were
submitted.
GUes said 11,498 newly
unemployed persons filed
initial claims last week, a
decrease of 18.7 per cent from
the 14,136 total lor the week
·ending oct. 8. He added that
jobless
Ohioans
1,642
exhausted their benefits
under all programs for . the
week ending Oct . 8.

OHIOANS VOTE
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The
Senate
refused
Wednesday, by a 4845 vote ,
to include tenured professors
and high-paid busine ss
executives in a blll that would
raise
the
mandatory
retirement age from 65 1o 70.
Sens . John Glenn and
' ' Howard Metzembaum , ooth
]).Ohio, voted with 29 other
Democrats . and
14
Republicans voting for the
;: issue, but they were on the
:.: 1(\llingside.

Smuts

In,

Q!JeSti ons t1 ~ be suhn utted to

COI.UM~US I UPI I - (;"v.
Jam es A. Rhodes toda y
0:1lluwed tn become law a bill
CjUtho rizin g ('arryuut be e r
:md wine sales un SWlday un a

t.he vnte rs t«~ge th er •~r one at a
time, with 50 per t-ent nf tl\e
vute required for a pprova l
U all three a r e subrwtlt'd &lt;tt
the sam e time a mi •.kfe;1tPd ,
all
Sunda y
sa les
uf
intnx.ieat ing liqu ur will be
prohibited for fuur y~ars 111
the prednd .·

!neal 11plit11l OOsis.

Hhodcs 11eilher sig ned uur
before he was to de part on a
visit to the United States and vetoed the bill , which takes
· effl"Cl next Jan . 18.
,
Australia .
The pnlposal , sponS(•red by
He was served with a fi veyear banning order , confin ing Rep. Patrick A. Swc'Cney, Dhim to his home. Woods had Clevcland, add s carr yo ut
~ Your " E)(tra Touch"
a rra n ge d meetings with beer and wine sales to th e list • ~
Flori.s t Si n ce 1957
Secretary of State Cy rus of questions posed to VHter s in
Vance and · with Sen. Dick local nption elections.
Under current law , tw(l
CI&lt;Jrk, 0-Iowa .
Instea d, Woods was bun- questions may be submitted
dled into a truck and driven simultaneously to the voters
the 750 mi les back to his home ln a precinct on Sunday sales
FLORIST
in East Lond on, on the o£ high-powered beer and
liqu o r in tave rn s, or in
southeast Cape coast.
rcstaunm ts where rnore than
PH. 992-2644
50 per cent of the gross
351 E. 1\o\ain, Pomeroy
receiptS a re in food sales.
Your FTD .fl o• i&lt;t
The new law will add
carryout sa les and enable the

~..--._..~_.. _.. . _ , .._,

w get

out ot'" the car, the
spokeswoman said.
The fuel leak is caused by a
deterioration in the fuel hose
connections between the ~as

tank and engine !uel rail . The
spokeswoman blamed the
proble m on " an unusual
chemical reaction which
apparently occurs in selected
geographical areas.''

Surgery need
for release

I
II
i
1

WASHINGTON (UP! l Former Attorney Gener" l pain killer ) just to try to ease
John Mitchell 's attorney the pain," attorney '"'William
Wednesday asked President G. Hundley said in a letter to
Carter to quickly release the Bell .
Hundley's letter ID Bell was
convicted Waterga te con·
accompa
nied by an officia l
spirator from prison )lecause
petition
fo
r commutation of
of a "compelling need for hip
his sente nce, which was ·
surgery."
turned nver to pardon
The Justice - Department
atlorney John Stanish for
reported the request f or
consider ation, t he Ju sti ce
executive commutation on Department said.
behalf of the 64-year-old
Mitchell, who has been in
Mitchell was filed through
jai1 since early swnmer on
Attorney General Griffin hi s Waterg ate cover-up
Bell. The final decision on conviction,. would be eligible
suc h a move would rest with for parole next June 20 und~ r
·
Carter.
a recent order by U .S ..Distric
Mitchell, confined 1o the Judge J ohn Sirica ..
minimwn security prison at
Sirica reduced Mitchell's
Maxwell Air Force Base near sentence- originally from 30
Montgomery, Ala ., is " in months to eight years - to
&lt;,"Onstarit pain a nd is taking from one to four years.'

1o be iifted before the school system appears to have
enough money to operate
boar~ could close the schools
through late December . The
for financial reasons .
Meanwhile, in Colwnbus, board bad insisted it was
the Ohio Senate defeated · going broke this week.
-The judge accused the
legislation to e xpand the
defendants
·
in
the
borrowing
pow ers
of
desegregation
case
of
either
financially-troubled
school
districts after learning of concealin g a potentially
serious financial difficulty or·.
Battisti 's decision .
misrepresenting its present
Testim ony presented by
seriousness
.
court-appointed special
"The
defendants
have dealt
desegregation master Daniel
in
a
discreditable
manner
McCarthy showed the school

Professor seeks
•
•
no mtervenmg
By LeROY POPE
UP! Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
best thing the federal government could do to create jobs
lor blacks would be to stop
intervening and promote a
freer labor market, says a
black professor of economics
at Philadelphia 's Temple
University .. .
The strongly worded views
of Dr. Walter Williams have
not endeared him to the
NAACP or most other
prominent black leaders. Nor
bave the prominent black
leaders earned a high place iJ\
Dr. Williams' esteem.
'
He told United Press
International the NAACP and
nearly all the blackS In
Olngress are dependent on
financjal support from the
"white liberal establishment
and don 't really represent the
illterests of black people."
Williams said while the
reactions of black leaders to.
his VIews have been highly
negative, "! have had much
support from black groups."
The professor's bete noir is
the minimwn wage law . He
said it is largely respoosible
for high unemployment
among young blacks because
"it sets a labor price so high it
makes it uneconomical for
firms to hire and train the
least skill~d individuals
among whom blacks are a
disproportionate share."
Williams charged that
President George Meany and
the top leaders of the AFLCIO support a minimum
wage increase largely as a
device to keep less skilled
blacks out of work. He said
that as late as 1948, the
jobless rate for black youths
was less '\han the rate for
white youths and the
minimum wage law has
played a bi g part in revl:l'sing

this situation.
The Davis-Bacon Act,
which allows the federal
government to set minimum
wages for federally funded
construction jobs, was
conceived in 1931, he said ; as
a way to force cootraclors 1o
hire white labor at higher
wages instead of non-union
Negroes and to fOrce out ·of
business non-union contractors, many of them black.
Williams
said
the
speculative
med:rllion
taxicab license situations in
New York, Chicago and
Baltimore have had the
practical effect of excluding
blacks from OW!ling their own
cabs, whereas in Washingtoo
a black man or anyone could
become an owner-driver for
$200 over the cost of a car .

IS NOT A HIGHWAY GAME

LOVERShere they are

~r~,
* 4 polyester cord plies
15/32 inch tread depth

$3. 472

F. E.T.

* Wide, open two groove
tread design
* Modern "78 Series" sizinnll-!,~~.;;;;;;;...t-;~-H
Your Compl~te Car SeiVice Center

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
Main St.

878 -13

+ $1.82

metal traction studs

Camel, Brown, and
Rust

400

polyester cord
black wall

* Tread molded to receive
. EQUESTRIAN ·

MOORE'S
STORE

Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy , Ohio

• Impressive ride and handling • Generous trunk space

CARPET

• Available as 4-Door Sedan, 2-Door Sedan , 4-Door Wagon

CLEANING

• As low as

$3589*

*M anu facturers suggested ret a 11 p(ices.
Exc lup'in~ taxes, ti11e and d es11nQti on ch11 rgc s.

You'll also want to see these other new '18·Fords
• Plus the
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Ford Fiesta
... Europe's
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new car.

t\

-rovM f-'t

.

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o.

• Totally n~w '78 Ford Bronco
, . . lqtally Iough . :. lo lally
comforlab le. Slarti ng at
on I y $6543 •

..

.

BOOT

All leather
·boots with
soft tricot
lini ng .
Avai lable in

''

,.

• Good fuel economy • Roomy - seats 5 a(lults comfortably

Rent

\

1

,.

WHY
PAY

!

~­

·-

· ·~,.

"A taxi driver I rodewlth in
New York the other ctay told
me the medallion price there
now is $50,000," Williams
said.
•
He charged there .. is a
Get
professional
curious parallel betwelm the
results at a
I,
llse of the minimum wage law
fraction of the cost. c
in the United States and " in
racist Solllh Africa."
"South Africans were
paying black labor as little as
40 cents an hour against
nearly $2 for white workers
doing the same job," he said, Home Carpet
, .
" but in those trades where Cleaning
· '!..
the white unions wanted the System ..·
-.. ~ '
blacks out, they succeeded in
'
' '
getting special wage equality
l~ws pallsed, Faced with the
·- --- -~ ----- --- choice of paying blacks the
same as whites or firing IUT
fOil
PER HOUR
them , the e mploye rs fired the DIIJ
14 HOUI' _ , . , ,
blacks," he sa id .
· ---~---------~"Now that' George Meany
bas got Congress to raise the
minimum wage again , I
predict the AF.L-CIO will use
. 949 -25~5
that to launch another round
Racine,
of big wage ooosts," Williams
said.
·

l

she said.

with those to whom Uley are
accountable; the state legislature , the financial commW1ity , the teachers and
staff, the court and its special
master, a11!1 Cleveland's parents and children," Battisti
said . " They have victimited
virtually everyone involved
or concerned with the
Cleveland public school•."
The judge said c hrslng·
schools should be the last
resort of a responsible school
ooard . He said he holds the
defendants responsible for
the time and expense of
special hearings and will 1o
assess costs ag~inst them
individually if they do ·it
again .
He ordered the U.S.
Attorney to review of the
conduct 'of Superintendent
Paul Br-iggs and the rest of
the defendants, who include
the state school board, to
determine if any action such
as contempt of court would be
warranted.
Battisti also ordered a
financial study of the system,
directing that any violations
of law uncovered in the
investigation be reported 1o
the state attorney general
and the city law director .

MORE
FOR

~

·----·-·----·---_.._..._.

The problem has bee n most
prevelant in Miami, New
Orleans a nd Tacoma, Wash .,
she said, with only "scattered
re ports" of trouble £rom
Cadillac owners elsewhere .
Cadillac will install new
hose co nnections of a
diff e r e nt c hemical
composition on affected cars,

'

too much valium ( a form or'

1

I a_
I
I p:a;w£4_; I

133,000 Cadillacs recalled

m sniper .case

.

ULTRA BRITE

At;pirin

(UP!)
DE'l'ROIT
General Motors is recalling
133,000 Cadillacs built since
1975 to correct fuel hose leaks
which have caused at leallt
100 engine fires.
The fires have injured at
least seven persons, but
· Cadillac said the " danger is

police at Jan

ternational airport.. minutes

Federal judge· denies school closing

REDUCED 20%

Southwestern

X

79¢

AN ARRAY OF

REDUCED 20%

; i

4.0
4.0
Avg

F . I.P. Price . .

Wools , leather
&amp; blends

Kemper, L.

0
o

$1 . 14 Value

By Catalina , Jantzen,·
Lori Lynn &amp; Coddington

Ja ckson
167 6 ?7 .8
OVERALL SCORING
Name .
TO PA Pis Avg
Casey , KC -11
o 66 13.2
13

1.5 oz .. Reg .

Men

MEN'S JACKETS

20.7

Roii·On Deodorant .

REDUCED 20%

and ordered at least 11 black
or gani:tatlons to Hquidate
themselves.
World editor Percy Qoboza ,
whp studied two years ago at
Harvard. , University .on .. a
Niemann fellowsh'ip, was
dragged from his office to
John Vorster Square police
headquarters a n4 detain ed

•

wbo authorities found by
tracing the serial number on
the Remington -~ ca l.
rifle. He described the man 1o
whom he sold the rifle for $200
four weeks ago.
Auth orities now believe two

ARRID X DRY

SPORT COATS &amp;
lEISURE SUITS

LADIES PANTSUITS

122 6 20.3
12.4

•

Some 100 . while university
students were seized as they
marched in protest of the
actions.
In a television interview,
Kru ger said he was aware
that his at1.ions would have
" t"rnished South Africa's
ima ge overseas."
" But if it's a choice beUnder the country's security tween a tarnished ima ge a nd
peace in my country, 1-choose
laws . .
His wife, Anne, later visited peace in my country," he
Qoboza and said he was calm said.
Dona ld Woods, the while
about the situation. "B ut
editor
of the East London·
Percy's always very cool ,"
Daily
Dispatch,
wa s held by
she said. '

opposition
member
of multiracial · society . u. N.
parliament , said the 70 black Secretary General Kurt
leaders seized under South W ~l dheim warned in a
Africa's strict security laws stat eme nt that
" these
were ' 'the last of the measures will only agg,r~vpte
moderates ."
. ,. the . situ.ation in s&amp;·uth
" If the moderate&amp; tre Afri ca ."
locked up, " Mrs. Suzman
.Plainclothes and uniformed
warned a student protest security police raided homes
meeting, " it leaves the field and offices of black lawyers;
wide open for the real 'wild doctors, teachers, social
men' of Soweto."
workers, newsmen as well as
The crackdown " deeply clergymen of both ra ces
disturbed" the Uniled States. before dawn Wednesday.
State Department spokesman
The government also shut
Hoddlng Carter Ill said in down the nation 's largest
Washington, " Our relations black newspaper, The World ,
will hardly be improved by
what has happened."
Brit a in's
Foreign
Secretary David Owen called
the developments "a tragic
setback"
to
peace ful

Solid lead·made

SHOE BARGAINS

LADIES DRESSES

97 165

4

$1.89 Va lu e

F.I .P . Pd ce . ...

HALO

Skorit'h added .

JAMBOREE

REDUCED 20%

0

· Hannan Trace
2 •

X

180 l1ghl Day Pads

11 oz .

1 lot Ladies Coats,
Car Coals&amp;
Leather Jackets

135 6 2B
141 6 23.5

X

KOTEX

BAyNNEREIKSBVURANGEES
JOH
, South
Africa (U PI) South
Africa 's white regime ,
sharply criticized at home
and abroad ~or virtually
wiping out black dissidentS/"·
warns it will consider " new
mea~ures " if protests wor·
sen .
Pollee Minister Jimmy
Kruger said Wednesday the
crackdown was taken to help·
·maintain public order en·
dangered by a "sma ll group
of anarchists ."
He' also ' warned : " ihe
situation will be watched
closely and, if necessary , new
measures will be con·
sldered."
But Mrs . Helen Suzman, an
·

froiD an Irving, Te:s: ., man

Symmes Va lley
Wellston ·

Warren

what looked like a sure six
points . Cincinnati was given

JERGENS

" 1 was watching the ~ame
on TV and I cerlainly didn'l
se~ where there was any
contat't on • that play,"
Skorich said . " We ask them
(oflicialsi not to put U10se
whistles "in their mouth unless
they're going to use them.
Obvious l y someb o dy
g()(lfed.''
NFL rules state that the
ball must go back to the spot
where it was blown dead,

32 oz . · 20' Otf

.2 3 0

Alexander

as Anderson began to run for

line .

For Dishes

54 · 103
55 66

1

play
when • Pittsburg h
rwming back Rocky Bleier
fumbled and Bengal str&lt;&gt;ng
safety Jerry And erson
grabbed the ball and headed
for th e end zone .
But Keck lOOted his .whistle

lhr ball nn their own 29 yarct

No. Yds TO

' Robinson, Gallia -

Symmes Val.
1
1
Jackson
Gallipol is . 1
Warren
1

ump1r e
J o hn
K~&lt;· k
inadvl•rtenlly whistled dead a
rrurit~l secund-quarter play
which prolwbly cost the
Bengals a. ltlul'hdown . •
The whistle blew during a

Yds. No. TO

Robinson . Gall ipol is '
Kemper . Logan
Linscott ; Athens

A 1

0

83
47

PUNT RETURNS

Ironton

·I

Yds . No. TD

. Elk ins, Meigs
Wayland, Meigs
Osborne, Wellston

Soufilern

2

No . Yds. TO
11 108
0
8 ISS ~ 2
8 100
0

Armstrong, logan
Thompson, Waver ly

•

3.8

I

17 ·41

Wester·, Waverly

Sc~nzenbacl'l ,

6.2

30
48

Yds TO
3
1•·•2 1 · 386

Gasse r . Loga-n
Wal ton , Athens

Belpre

CINCINNATI t UPI ) - National F ')i'lball League
efficials Wffi re'vi l'W films Of

159 145

?93 97 .6 899 m .1 457 152 .3
59.3
sn 190.7 796 ?65 .3
m 1JO.J 1003 JJA.J ol8 1 160.3
11 2 37.3 465 155.0 660 220.0
110 56.7 465 155.0 4-46 148.7
lOS 35.0 291 97.0 10.9 349.7

616 ?05 .3
39• 131.3
58? 194.0
353 117.7
2&lt;5 98.3
186 62 .0

Ironton
Jackson
Logan
Mei9 5

1
·

5
5

RUSH PASS NETOFF. NET DEF .
Yds. Avg . Yds . Avg. Yds. Avg . Yds. Avg .
?ol8 8?.7 206 98.6 544 181.3 471 157.0

TEAM
Afnens
Gallipolis

..

31

8.0

8.3
10.3
n .o
9.7
12.3
10.7
19.3

White regime considers measures

Harvest of "Values

SEO grid statistics

Beer and wine bill now law

• New '78 Ford Pickups
· ... b uilt Ford to ugh lro m lhe
ground up! From $4221'

.See all the new '78 Pord cars and
trucks at your local Pord dealer

lfs ou ts old eve ry new
car name pla t e e11e r
introduced 1n Euro pe.
Based on a com PanSon
of sales in the hrst 6 mont hs .

FORD
•

"

/

�Ill-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Oct. 20, 1977
TIMES F05t HOLD ING
COURTS OF APPEA l. ! ,
A D lt7 1

STATE OF OHIO , FO~

Let
Items Into Cash .,..,. "
__ The Want Ads Turn Unwanted
Help ""anted

WANT AD
CHARGES

1 WISH to fhonlo. all who dono1ed

GU N SHOOT Rar1ne Gun Club
e-.oery Sun ahernoo,n Foclor
Chork guns only Anor led
meots
FUllER BRUSH product!i tor !iole
992 3410

'"'
""

TH£RE Wlll be no hu1111ng no
lres po5S111Q and no e•cephons
on my pr~pe:ty Bob McGraw
SKATE A WAV Schedule Hol lo
ween Party Sot Oct 19th
Races Pn tes Balloons
Open W&amp;d Frt and Sot rules
7 30
10 00 A11odoble lor
pnvo te po rites Mon l ues
Thurs ntles Sot or Sun after
noo ns
Bu s tronspo rtot lon
conceited Phone 965 3919 or
985 999b

thtu ftlda}
.fP M
~fur t' p ubl i ~aliUII

tPM

rdlt'rlluull

IN THE

COMMON~I.EASCOURT,

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ATHENS

COUNTY

SAVINGS

AND LOAN COMPANY

PLAINTIFF

vs

RQNALD 0 . THOMAS.
ET AL ,
dtftndants '
NO . 16,363
PU II.IC NOTICE
Pursuant to a, am@nded
order of sale 1ssued by the
Commo n Pleas Court of
Melos County , Oh 10 , 1 wil l
offer tor so~~te at publ iC auc
t1on on 5th day of November ,
1977 at 10 00 a m at t he t ourt
House steps 1n t he Village of
Pomeroy , CouMy of Meigs ,
State of Oh io, th e followln~
· descr 1b ed real est life s ituated
at 337 North Second Avenue,
Midd leport . Ohio
Sa1d real estate 1s situated
1n the VIllage of M iddlepor t,
Ccun ty of Me igs and Sl1te o f
Oh10
LOt No 21 1n U1d VIllage
located on Second Street be
tween R utl and and Walnut
Streets Also a ll the grantors '
r1gh1 , t1tle and mter~st In a nd
to the s !K 1nch stnp of land
and t he par ry wall therein , off
of the nor t h s ide of Lot 22 .
also 1n said Village of M1d
dleport, sa 1d str1p of land
ad lo 1n 1ng !lnd being con .
ttguous to sa id lot No 21.
Reference Deed Volume
256 page 383 Me igs County
Deed Reco r ds
Terms of sale Cesh for not
less than two thirdS of the
appraised value, subject to
lien for real estate taxes for
1977
Property appratsed 111
se.soo oo
Jam es J Proff1tt ,
Sheriff of
Met~S County , OhtO
'
(10) 6, 13 , 20, 27, (33 ) 3, 5tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
FollOWing Sectton 5713 01
a l)d 5715 ) 6 Of the OhiO
revl9ed , th e c h~:~nge 1n
valuat1on for the tax year
1977 has been rev 1sed to
complv w1th the order of the
tllx commissioner of the State
of Oh 10
The c hange In v11lues a lso
rtf lect the new construc ttOM
fo r the tu year 1977
Val ues of new cons tr uc t 1on
and t he change In comp lianc e
w1th th e order of the ta•
commiss1oner can now be
v1ewed at t he off1ce of the
cou nt v aud itor
Howard E Frank ,
Meigs CO AUditOr
(10) 7 13, 18, 20. 41~
The AlmaDBc
Prell
By
United
Intemalloaal
Today'" Thursday, Oct. 20,
the 293 day of 1977 with 72 to
follow
The moon IS between Its
first quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Jup1ter, Mars, Venus and
Saturn .
The evening star is
Mercury.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Ubra
AmeriCan educator John
Dewey was born Oct. 20, 1859.
On this day 10 history:
In 1918, Germany accepted
American
PreSident
Woodrow Wilson's terms to
end W~rld War L
In 1944, American troops
began
a
campaign to
recapture the Island of Leyte
in the Philippines .
In 19&amp;1, Herbert Hoover,
31st president of the Uruted
stales, died at the age of 90.
In 1973, ,President NIXon
fired special Watergate
ProtleCUtor Archibald Cox ;
Attorney General EUiott
Richardson and deputy
William Ruckelshaus ,
refusing to dllmill Cox, resijP.led their posb.
A thougllt for the day: In a
speech in 1932, Herbert
Hoover said, ':The Jl'BII will

grow In the

streets

1\WJdred citlost

,

af

-----...--- ---TWO TO ten acres w1th good

For Frldlr, Oct. 21, 1177

a

~-~

GRAY AND wh11e ttger stnped
cot 5 mo old los t a round
Mulber ry Ave ~2 6060

ASTRO•GRAPH

-------------

Bernice Bede Osol

REWARD FOR m•ssmg dog Lost 1n
Rock Spfln gs orvo Red fe male
lr •sh SetterJ Answers to the
nome Bran y If lo.und please
ca l! R1chord Lee Butcher
qq2 7818or992 5llb

--------------

Oct . 21 , 1177
Ad11ancement ts likel y thts co mmg year tn your c hosen lleld
You w1u have greater responSlblit ty b ut you W!ll also be
re arded proportionately
w
LIBRA (S..,t. 23·0ct. 23) You
have exce llen t leadershtp
Qual!ttes tOday It would be unWise to leave the management Of
th1ngs personally tmportant In
the hands of othe rs Like to fmd
out mo re of what lies ahead for
you? Send tor your copy ol
Astro-Graph Letter Mall 50
cents tor eacn and a long selfaddressed stamped envelope to
As tro- Graph , P 0 Box 489
Rad10 Ctty Stat10n NY 1001 g
Be su re to s pec1fy your btrth

~

sign

SCORPIO (OCI- 24- Nov. 22) You
m ustn't le t setbacks early In the
day mh1b1t yo ur w1 1\ to wtn They
wont affect the fi nal resu lts
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21 J Make your word your bond
today and tt ll earn :-~ou t he
respect of one whose help you 'll
need at a later date Prom1se
noth1ng for the sake of expedlency
•
CAPRICORN (O.C 22-Jin. 11)
Thlng s should go s mooth ly to- ·
day where your fmam::es and
career are con ce rned If you
adhere to your t rad itional ways
AQUARIUS (J1n. 20·Fib. 11)
Base your Ju dgment s today
upon that Wh iC h you have learned fro"" your experience , rat her
t han from that wh1ch ha~
happened lo olhers
PISCES (F•b- 20-lhrch 20) Use
your common $E!nse today In lleu
of your hunches IntUition ca n
lead you astray but logic wont
.t.RI!I (M•rcll 21-Aprtl 11) In
negotiat ing an Important matter
to day, th e results will be more to
your trk1ng 1f you use an m.
terme d1ary Let a competent ally
speak for you
•
TAURUS (Aprtt 20-MIJ 20)
Don t let t he fear of mak ing mls t akes hold you back today Your
self-assurance Increases with
act111lty

LOST SATURDAY Sept 3 bet
ween 0 and 8 pm on County
Rood 1 near Grange Holl a nd
Cross Roods near Ru tlond Long
ha1r med s1ze block mo le dog
w1th while on chest feet t1p of
to il and nose Answers 10 Pret
ty Paw 1f found he needs
med~eat 1o n
SIOO reward
__9;9'1 ~ 1 1_6 Owner 1fl a nd gne11
mgforrefurnofdog
LOsT IN F;;-Me•gs~;;;H~~etype dog We 1gh 5 obout 110 lb
Br own and brown yellow
~!.word 742 2 ~~~en~ ~ - ~

-

bulid1ng s1fe or olde r home
sulloble lor remodel1n g water
ond e lednc1ty 011odoble close
to hardtop rood Coli 991 7036

-

1970 MERCURV ENCINE end
Transrr11nton Good cond11Jon
991 603Q or 742 296-&lt;4
---~-

-

~----

COAl l1 mes tone and calctum
ch londe and co lc1u m brtne lor
dust con tr ol and spec1al m1•mg
sol! for far mers. hrelslor Soh
Works Mom Street Pomeroy
Oh1o or phone 9q2 3891
-~----

-- -----

CAMPER
S600
Also
horse
tr a1le r $4 50 Phone (bl 4) 098
3290
ECONOMY TRACTOR w1t h oil ot
tochmenls l 1ke new askmg
52250 Phone 1614) 698 3290
-~-------------APP LES FITZPATRICK Orchards
State Route 089
Phone
Wdlo.eslt'llie 669 3785
1975 350 JOHN DEERE dozer w1th
368 hou rs 27 ton set Ql new
~~~.!:ole! 2'1 long 99~~~~
CUT HEATING Cosh I Shenandoah
b~ stc
wood heater
M1ke
Bergan
Authe ru:ed Dealer
Homso nvtlle 7.&amp;2 170&lt;4 1
------------~-

Young's
Carpeting
R•"i';:iso.
Carpet
U
tiiJ

EXPERIENCED GROCERY or Produce Cle rk Only those w1th ell
penencllt need apply See store
manager ot Tw1 n C1ty Gateway

--------- - - - - - NEED BABYSITT ER ot home 1n
Port lond 7 om to b pm $35 0
welltk
Coli Donny Roush
843 2292
~----

- - -- - - - - --

OOMPETENCY TESTS

LOCKLAND, Ohlo ( UPI )-....._
Teacher

and

school

administrators IR thiS small
commumty of suburban
Cincmnati have agreed to
begm a "competency-based
promotiOnal system" for
students In the 1978-79
academic year.
The program 85 apprOVed
by the board of education lS
"
•
aimed at makmg a high
school dlplom~ a n:_ore meanmgfu~
thmg,
SB:ld
supermtendent Boyd Martm.
11
lt means a series of teSts,
probably at the lourtl\, eighth
and 12th grade levels, which
set mmimum requrrernents
m readmg t wrtting and
arithmetic needed to be
promoted or graduated ,"
Martin explained
'
Martm satd he hoped the

'111t Oris""""
!Itt llltiiii!Jion
zll-111111

SAVE ON !OUR fUU IIU ntiS

til .... 1111• -~ ....._ T1leo ~~
daw01 Ill _ . . . , IM!IItd 10
ISMrt ea11n11111 uftt}r, C.tad 11 tw
I
,llftl. Doft'l Wilt till Kl

new system wduld assure
" bllllt-m
accountabthty,

fttiM 011 ,.r niit, lit n colt 11 ""'
11\d
""'01 ~~
~-l M~IN
CALL
t!l-7~
SIOI' IT 1100

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

fREE

K1npbury Home Slles

.·

SWAIN
Tronsmissian SIIVict

Cellulosic

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES "- IIUZSO

- t

PHONE

TEAFORD(H

------ -----

Pomeroy Landmark

•
'
••'

cCAili'ON
a

~ -./

ITOYIIA. .

fi'II'Uetl

~

EFEL
RNR

"

(wood

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one tetter to each square. to form
c;four ordrnary words

SUNEE

0

I I I

VinJI &amp; Aluminum Siding,'!:
Storm Windows &amp; lnsul•

@l fn .. l ... a . . - 1 - ........ - -

..
Bissell Siding C0.1
Call Professionals

liberl

Sovtl30 pet. to SO pel.
Dn huting cost
Experience 1nd ,
tully Insured
Frtt Est
Colt IW7-'4!9
10· 1A·1 mo pd

Aloul contrKtor _

Phont 949-2101
01949-2160

,

....

IN THE POT
WOULD MAKE' IT
VERY oTRONo,

ORPHAN ANNIE

lrotlstioulll
1111 S.U., Colli PINM
10· 20 -l m a

-..-

POOR FOLt&lt;5 M051LY ON THAT
OTHER SIDt, IN THOSE DI~GY
OLD FLAT BLIILDIN(iS AND

A~D 0 COURS E WHERE YUH
HAVE. SLUMS YOU'LL AlWAYS
FIND PI. E ~TY 0 ' PRETTY

OVER 5 !ORES -

"TOUGH CHARACTERS--

- ~INTADE

rJ

::::

• • ••
••
•• •

Prlntanswerhere:

,

FHA , 30 vr f•non c1 n.g lreioru:J
Mortgage 77 E Stole Athens
phor')e (614) 592 305\ ,

VA

-

'~ .

MUST SELL thiS 3 bedroom 2 )'J
ba th spl1t·foyer wttH all the eK
tro s * Pnced far below a ctual
real ettote 110lue for qu tck
sole i N~ee dnve to power
plants $44 000 m 2.&amp;92
. ..!::::.=.:..::..:..::..:c:.::,--=:.:=.c_
NEW ONE year old b1le vel home
3 bedroom 1 1 fbot h garage
recr&amp;otlc n room 1 I acr•s
Eagle R1dge 949 2745

"'

GET ,
AnENTIOII

Yesterdays

COUNTRY HOME 12 K 6.4 Mobtla
Home Three bedroom 1 bath
ll / 10ocre5 Formore1nforma
t1on coli 742 2376
NEW MODERN oil electriC th ree
bed room hom• Built tn k1 t
chen Basement Lorge lot
Gra vel Hd I, Middleport
m 5' 88 or 992 9975

WIN rotJ'T

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED- Spacious
3 year old ranch type home,
3 Bdrms., 2 baths, large
living room and dining .
family room, lots of
closets, fully carpeted,
close to town, approx.. 1
acre ground . Help w ith VA
and
FHA
financing
$37.300 00
SMALL FARM- 6 acres,
several butldings, garage,
tots of garden space, keep
animals
here,
nicely
remodeled home, 3 bdrms ,
formal dining, modern kit. ,
family
room,
full
basement, fully carpeted,
looks nice $29,500 00
HUNTING 1.-ANO 135
acres , most has
all
m inerals, close to good
fishing, S149 00 per acre,
total 520,000 00.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION- 3 bdrms.,
wood burning F P , nice
lot Nice appearance. new
features . ONLY 514,000 00
GIANT HOME - This 2
story home has up to 5
bdrms , enclosed porch1 1~~~
baths, l1vlng, dining, two
c;ar garage, storage bldg.,
level corner lot. WOULD
YQU
BELIEVE?
$11,250.00.
HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL
- t 2 story frame, .4 bdrms.,
some
remodel! ng
complete. bath, kit ONLY

$6,125.00

------'

•

CASOUNE ALLEY

.

Somethinq
awful has
happened,

Has somethinq
happened to
Clovia?

crosswords
38 Beloogmg
to Lucifer
39 Neighbor

BATHROOMS AND K1tchel'\6
remode led ceramiC hie plur)1
bmg corpentry and gentlrql
mamtenonce 13 years w
pertence 99'J 3685
,1I

likeWISe

rank

(2 wda. ) Thur"&lt;'d&amp;v, October 20

Z5 Get rid
of Rex

cottontail
21 "-American 211 John Dixon
Cousm' '
and Vikk1

34 Foot

BRIDGE

Wipers
36 Label

Sophistica110n beaets bottom
a A s4

WEST
a 943
.7652
.75
al0965

aAQ875

•KQJ
• KJ 9
aKQ

1=+---t--

Both vulnerable
West North East

Progeny
Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to

work

It:

WEEK i=I?OM

WILL BABYS\T 1n my bome by rht
hour or week
An:l' •age
welcome 7&lt;42 2833
I

8,. 35 TRAVELIT E fuel
furnoqe
tank goes w1th un1t You wOft:l
find o home 1n better cond111oh
for the pnc.e Prev1ous ownelr
SO)'S she po1d On alt'&amp;rage pf $p
per month to heat ICl!t wmtoM
Kmgsbury Home Sale's 11(10 . ~
Mam St , Pomeroy , Ohto

Pass

.

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
lead -

Soutb
2N T

4.

sa
sa

three tour notrump would
have shown two smce 1t was
Impossible for South to hold 21
h1gh card pomts w1th JUSt one
ace and one king
North's !ive-d1amond bid
asked for South ' s lowest rankmg four-card suit, so North
knew that South could not hold
four cards m any SUit except
spades The f1ve notrump b1d
asked for the m1ssmg kmg so
North could see that a spade
finesse would ~ needed to
make seven He settled for
SIX
At the other tables no one
had this senes of overcomplicated b1ds at h1s diSposal and somehow or other
almost everyone just b1d the
grand slam and wrapped 1t up
when the finesse worked

&gt;a

By Oswald &amp;

We are go1ng w descnbe the
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters, complicated b1ddmg used by
apostrophes, the length and forma ti on of the wo rds are all North and South to get
themselves a bottom score
hmts Each day the C'Ode letters are different
Thelf b1dd1ng was really
CRYPTOQUOTES
bnlbant , but we strongly
recommend that none of you
UQNJI'V
Z I Q C readers
VDN
0 SI
CDQ
try to learn the
sys tem
,
CDSV
¥DN
WIRTNLJN
RJ
South two notrump showed
UQNJI'V
ZIQC
CDNLN
DN a balanced 21 or 22 pomts
North's four clubs was
Gerber
, South' s four hearts
PRTNJ
OSLAWJ
SWLNPRWJ
showed one ace ; North's four
Yesterday's Cryploquote : MEN WHO ARE UNHAPPY, UKE spades asked for kings ,
MEN WHO SLEEP BADLY, ARE ALWAYS PROUD OF THE South ' s five clubs showed
FACf - BERTRAND RUSSELL

One letter s1mply stands for another In this sample A is

SA1URDAY?

EAST
a K 10 2
"8 "43
.1062
aJ732

SOUTH !DI

It

&amp;HALL WE 11E
111!: KNOT?

20

a J6
• A 10 9
.AQ843

Pass

WELL, I'&gt;ESSI_Sr WHEN HOW \OOUT A

'

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

WINNIE

...

the diet

24 Woman of

to Sad verse

n

BLOWN INSULATION Get tpte~
es t1mates Coli b67 6-&lt;479 ~ f•
free es t1mot e

----4---

(1917·24)

10 Road to
the Forum
20 Distaff

of Ala.

EXCAVATING BACK HOE doi·~
trencher , low boy , dum~
tr ucks , septiC systems B1ll
P1..1llms phone 992 2478, day or
n1 gh1
'

v

City VIP

Z3 Went off

10 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15, Big Volley 6, Here' s Lucy
8 . Joker ' s Wild 10, M ike Douglas 13
I0 · 3o---Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, P rice ts Right 8, 10.
11: 00-Wheel of Fortune 3.15, Marcus Welby, MD 4;
Happy Days 6, 13; Elec Co 20
11 · 3o---Knockout 3,15, Family Feud 6. 13; Love of Life
8, 10, Sesame St 20,33
11·5S--CBS News 8; Loving Free 10
l2 .oo-Newscenter 3, News 4,lt, 10, To Say The Least
- 15; Divorce Court 8, Midday 13
12 3D-Bob Braun 4, Chico &amp; the Man 15, Ryan's Hope
6,13; Elec Co 33; Search for Tomorrow 8,10
1 oo-- Gong Show 3, News 8, All My Chlldrer1 6, 13,
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women Only t5
1 30---Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8. 10.
2·00-$2Q,DOO Pyramid 6,13; 2 30-Doctors 3,4,15, One
Life to Live 6;13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
3 00-Another World 3,4, 15, All In The Family 8, 10;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20
3 15-General Hospit al 6,13; 3 3Q---Match Game 8, 10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
,
4 . 0Q--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; Dinah 13
4 30---My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4 ; Br ady
Bunch 8, 10; Little Rascals 15.
S 00-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Ro9ers' ~elghborhood 20, 33 , Ho9an's
Heroes 10, Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15
5 JQ---Odd Couple 4, News 6 ; Elec Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes IS. Mary Tyl~r Moore 10
6 00-News 34,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
6 30-NBC News 3,4,15, Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 8, 10; As We See It 20, ABC News13
7 00-Truth or Cons. 3, Cross Wits 4; Liars Cl b 6,
Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell the Trut
Gilligan' s Is 15, Almanac 20, Making Things Grow
33.
7 · 30---Porter Wagoner 3, Gong Show 4, Candid Camera
6, Price Is Right 8, MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33 ;
Family Feud 10, Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes the
Country 15
8 DO-CPO Sharkey 3,1S; In Search of 4; Donny &amp;
Marie 6, 13; Wonder Woman B, 10, Washington Week
In Review 20,33.
8 30----&lt;hlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9: 00-Rockford Flies 3,4,15, Movie "W.W &amp; the Dixie
Dancektngs" 6, 13; Switch 8, fo; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 20; Song at Twilight 33
9 31)--Qulncy 3,4, 15; News 20; Indian Summer 33
10 3Q---Monty Python' s Fl ying Circus 20, Drought 33.
11 QO-News 3,0,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20.
11 30---Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Beretta 6, 13, Mash 8,
ABC News 33 ; Movie •The Face of Fu Manchu" 10.
12·00-Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.
12 . 05-Kolak 8, 12 3Q---Janakl 33; 12 ·41)--Lohman &amp;
BarKley 6; Ironside 13
1 00-Midnlght Special 3,4,15, Movie "Equinox" 10;
1· 4Q---News 13
2·30---Mory Hartman 10; News 3; 3 :00-Movle
"Strategy of Terror" 3; S· oo-Movle ''Oedipus the
King" 3.
Movie Channel 4 S&amp;9P M -ManWhoKnewToof,luch iPGl
7 &amp; 11 P.M. -Ode to Billy Joe (PG)
C.ble Channel S 6 30 P.M. - Testimony Time
7 00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 30 - Wrestling
8 30 - Sports &amp; Travel World
9 30 - Consultation
10 00 - 700 Club

35 Declaimer
31 Ox of the

HOWERY AND MARTIN ~
covot1 n g
se pt 1c syslt= rn~
dozer , backhoe dump trdt~.
ltmestone grovel
blad(toP
po11mg., Rl 143 Phone 1 (6 1~)
6(,18 7331
.... .

AUCTION SAlE every Tues ond
Frt ol 7 pm. New and uspd
merchond1se at Ot-l1o R1 ver A111c·
t10n Me1gs Plaza M1ddlepott
Oh1o
Home Phone (3Q4 )
773 5471
I

22 Of a

AIIBwer
Z8 InfleXIble
29 Rec1p1enl
30 Forsaken
31 - do
thou

za

WILL do roofmg. construction;
plumbmg and healtng No jOQ
too Iorge or too smoll Phone
7&lt;2 23-48
;-

-----------

9 Ingress
11 Redhead

Y esterday'o

Garroway
Z&amp; "Good
buddy's"
vehicle
27 Private or
evil
U S. missile
ZBFonner
U.N. name
3% For (Sp.)
33 V1brato

EXCAVATING doze r backhoe ~
and d1tcher Chorles R Hot I
held
Bock Hoe ServiCe ~
Rullond , Oh1o Phone 742 2008 ...

TWO BED~OOM 196• Mabile
Home w1th e:dens1on $1600
197 5 Suzuk' 380
$9Qo
985 ~268 otter b
.... •

4CUrve
5Fabnc
6 Sailor
7 UnYielding
80ccupancy

24 It "calls11
Z5 Brubeck or b--t---1,---+--

s1r!

'

OLDER HOf!AES We
have several.
NEWER HOMES We
have several.
BUSINESSES - We have
several.
ACREAGE We have
some.
OUT
OF
COUNTY
BUYERS
USE
OUR
HOTO
LISTING
SERVICE, WHY DON'T
YOU7
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY, &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
"2-2259, "2-6191 ,

3Sarcasm

river
13 Wandenng,
as a knight
U TraiiSIIlllting
16 Spoil
17 District of
England
18 Podunk 7, •
S1wash 7
19 Chemical
sufl1.1
20 Bear's lmr
21 - and
for all
22 Anchor

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -]
Sweepers toasters 1rons all
small oppl1o nces Lown mower :
ne:ocl to State H1ghway Gorogft
on Route 7 Phone (614} 9851
3825
J

PIANO TUNING and Repotr Lo11•
Oontel~ 992 2082 12 years !er:.
v1ce to Tn County Reference
Elberfelds
•

comedy
highlight
%11 8olero"
composer

nlfeavy

EXCAVATING' dor:er loader ai\CI 1'
bockhoe work dump trydcs ;
ond lo bqys for h1re w1ll tiou l.
fill dirt to sod l1 mestone •ond 1
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jet ~
fers doy phone 992 7089 nlght 1
phone 992 3525 or qq2 5231 o...~ ,~:

_

I

12 Bard's

SEWING MACHINE Repa1n ser •
v1ce otl mokes 992 2284 The 1
Fobnc Shop
Pome , a yt •
Aut homed Smger Soles OJld I
Serv1ce We sharpen Sctssor3 .r ,

IYl-D"
_A_

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles EXPEL STUNG RADISH MILDEW
Answer What ttla man who worked on a steamroller
said his work waa-"DEPRESStNG"

Rosemary's
baby
5 Condition
10 Lepor!d

ROOF~

BRADFORD Auchoneer ,
picHe Serv1ce Phone 9'''""'8l
or 9&lt;49 2000 Racme ,
Cnit
Brodford
r

REMODEliNG Plumbmg heot1ng
Clnd oil types of general repa1r
Work guaranteed 1o years &amp;K,
pe r1 ence Phone 992 -2409

"r'V""''j
~ \,

sug ~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
litem lor
1 Slapstick

W FIDDl-e OfJ

TH!'

-

Now arrange the circled letters to

form the surpnse answer, as
gested by the above cartoon

~~... ~·af

BORN LOSER

NICE ONE a cre bu1ld1ng 5ltes
portly woodtil. near Me1gs
H1gh School 992 5513
HOUSE FOR ~'Sole ot 1651 Lincoln
Hts Coll992 7o471 before J pm
and offer 5 ca11992 3376,

3; 6 ~Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6 5S--Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning , Trl
Stale 13.
7 .00-Today 3,4, 15 ; Good Morn ing America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10
7 3o-Schooiles 10, 8 GO-Capt Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St 33
9 00-Merv Griffin 3, Phil Donahue 4,13,15, New
M ic key Mouse Club 6 ; Family Affair 8,10
9 30---Edgeaf Night 6, Andy Grtfllth 8, Here' s Lucy tO

111i'llNt ID'il ~THAT SCRAIIBI.EO WORD GAME
\9 ~~ ® byHenriArnoldandBoblee

773-5955

lion.

S 45-Farm Report 13; S ~PTL Club 13 , s·ssSunrlse Semester 10.
6 25-0verseas Mission 10, 6 30----Columbus Today ~ .
Ne ws6; Sunr ise Semester 8; 6 .t.s-,..Mornlng Report

~

AH , 'CHEllE 'rOLl
ARE! I 'VE FOUND
'y(lU A"r LAST !

HEAT&amp; Fu~

Thermal Insulation

992-2259

-

N

Blown Insulation

Auhllnlt1c

CLElAND REALTY

-- -

''

Wood Stoves

J&amp;L

--------------

-

rft'I!-JHJ

,.----------,r,'

FOR SALE

--

THAT!

LIII:IR, W V•
L - - - - - - . . . . J L---..i=:~;;.;.;...J "

t-lt l -

---------~----

FOR SALE

WeRE
DOW'-l 1'-l ONE
PIECE-- I 1-L$HTLE FOR

"'HZ·Zl74

----------------

-~

UST&amp;N~

S~oc•DIIio

e..

.-IJ ..

--

'279.95

!WMINUE
SIDI510frm
QITJ[RS.IWIItR;!

........... the

-

-------------

T' '/ MEAIJ T~IS IS ~OW
'-IOU'Vt; ~EEI&lt;J SPENDI'-'6
ALl- THOSE MOR&gt;JIIJSS -I.SAIUJI'-!(3 TO FL.'i
A JET f
_.,--.,

LARRY LAVENDER

EXPERIENCED
Radiator c:::!:::::a.
Service, _ tM ...... Trvdl er ..,,.....,

wtNTU AIIO IlLII/TlFT TOUR IIOitU
HOllE WI ..... -IN~ 10 I •riot) ol
~.1 hf•llme liuiiii'IIM II'*'P41'1•
ana. tor flit ,.CI If lllilli anti Ill
11tisfr JOif lftSIKIItCI CCIMPIM' ~ '"

_____________ __

----------------

'

•

~-

---------------

"

llli'UCEMENT
WIN flOWS

Chllsttr. Ohio
8·29 pd .

Box J4

SHO T SHElLS Wholesale deer
slugs S I 49 Federal 3 dra m,
'
_ 3!.!.~~~------ --S3 10 or $57 cose 22 L R 82 22
R-lt.O.
A HID E A BED 992 t:IJ4 7
mag HP S2 90 8 MM Mauser
----------~21 ·TFC
$2 40 box ammo all Cal Naw
CHIP WOOD
Pole! ma)(
a
nd
used
compound
and
diamete r 10 on lorgesl e nd sa
recurve bows Otscount on all
per ton Bundled .slab SO per
We frade for anythmg F1fe s
ton Del1voeHed to Ohto Pollet
Middleport Oh1o We need o
Co RI 2 Pome roy Qq2 2689
- - - - - - - - -- - Crcvely GoKo rh m1n1 b1kes HOMESITES lor sole 1 ocr• and
motor cycles a1r compressors
up M1dd leport near Rvtlo nd
.__
or what have you
Coll1?92 748 1
FIREWOOD $40 cord Spht and NEW 3 b8dr::a:.:a.:.
m-,h:-o-u-, -. ---::
2-:b-a-,lh- ,
IF YOU ha ve o serv1ce to otfer
de lt ve red
and
sto cked
all e lec 1 ocre Middleport
wont lo buy or sell somet h1n g
843 2933
close to Rutlond Phone ~2
oe look1ng tor work
or
7481
whatever
you II get results NEW HOLLAND Boler ond Mower
foste r w1lh o Senhnel Wont Ad
M F Corn Planter 991 7084
SMALL form for sole 10 '1. down
Ca1 1992 2150
owner ltnonced Monroe Coun
--------- - ----- WOOD FOR Sole Phone 985 • 103
ty W Va Plione (304 ) 772
GARAGE AND Yord Sole 530
lOTS OF s•ze 16 and 18 dresses
3102 or 130•) 772 3227
H1gh St M1dd lepor1 Sal Oct
some new New shoes , ~ and
2'2 , 10 om to ? ClottHng ant1
5 ' 1 Odds and end! 9•9 1079 COUNTRY farm lond w1th seclud
ques toys co miC books m1sc
ed woods woter ond good ac
Pretty cheap for who le tl"11ng
Pr iced to sell
--------------cess 1n Monroe County W Vo
S1 CXXl down call (30-4 ) 772
YARD SA LE Oct 20 21 Vme ONE ANTIQUE oalo: dresser St50
3 pc bed room sUite SI25
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227
Street
RaCine
Huddleston
Cedar wardrobe $50 4 dr awer
res1dence 9 om to 4 pm Concel
chest drawer (p1ne ) $50
1f fOin S
Dresser (pine) $60 Meta l bose
---------~---YA RD SALE 8oQ k$ clot h1ng sew~
kitchen cab1ne t $35 These or 1 STORY 3 bedroom frame
house F A lvrnoc&amp; , storm wtn
mg mochme cor otr cond1
t1cles ore oil m eKe e llen! cond1
dows ftreploce m M1ddleport
tioner last wh1te house on
1to n and con be seen a t 102
Phone 992 3-457
nghtm Chester Rt 248 Frt ond
Pork St M1dd lvport Oh1o only
Sa\
__!_f~~lly ~.!.!~s..!._ei._ ____ _
1976HONDA 750SUPER Sport Ex
REAL ESTATE
lros $1495 hrm 992 5240
FOR. SALE
1960 CHEVROLET for ports Good
HOOF HOlLOW Hors es Buy sell
283 V 6 motor $75 992 2747
Good
Business
aldg.
trade or tra tn New and used
louted at 405 W. Main St ,
~!!_~~m- - - - -saddles Rut h Ree 11 es Albony
Pomeroy, Ohio PresentlY
1963 CHEVROLET DUMP~uck
occupied by 1 tolnt
J"2~~1l__~~----- -900 x 20 hres , olmo!i l new w1th
business Bldg . hu deluxe
MEIGS COU NT Y Hum ane Soc1ety
a 19b8 mo lar IQ e xcellent condt
apartment
overhead
Careline ond odopt1on Serv1ce
l1on Sl 200 or best offer
bringing In good Income .
992 7b80 i .:!1 31 62 992 $427
949112&lt;4
Priced on Inspection only .
Can
be uen anv tlmt from
TWO PONIES more ond geld mg CAST IRO N FRANKLIN Stove w1th
10o1m . to6p.m tnqulnat
One broke to harness Ha rness
blower Phon&amp; 992 3670
60S w Main St., Pomtroy ,
mcluded 742 2833
Ohio 4SU9 ,
1(,176 GRAVELY TRACTOR w1th
GIVE AWAY goo d pouoble
gea rbo.rotory cu lli va tors
coo nhou nd 3 mo female
rota ry mower
sulkey 30
Mot her wos o blu et •ck
7.&amp;'11573
992 7370
1976 KAWASAKI KX 125 h
FREE KI TTENS Three tobbtes, I
ce llent
cond1t1on
$400
block 4 cots I cof•co 1 block
992 3016
I 614 882 2562
ROUTE
I
RIGGS
---- - - - - -- - ---- lARGE VEt VET lofo Ellcellent
CREST MANOR This
cond1llon Beaut 1ful gloss top
new ranch tvoe home can
colfee table 992 3283
!be
yours
3
lovely
bedrooms , 2 baths, dlnlno
BRAND NEW go lf cart w1t h seven
room , lovely kitchen. very
ST ARCRAFT FALL Sole Mm1
clubs
mostly Tou rnaments ,
Iaroe l1v lng room , central
motors 20 ond 22 Tra Vel
barely used S85 Charlene
heat &amp; a.r Fu ll basement
Tro1le rs 18' 5 S3 799 2$ 7
Hoethch 992 5292
needs concrete floor, 2 car
Bunkho use S4 675 Fold down
garllge ~lth workshop Al l
COPPERTONE
RANGE
2Q
'
w'de
$1 700 up We sell serv1ce and
carpeted
PRICED TO
opt s1ze G E Refngero to r
SELL - S27 ,70l! OQ
quol1ty Open Sundays Comp
Green l-4cu ft ( 30~ ) 075 5203
Con ley Starcrch Soles Rl 0'1
N of Pt Pleasonl
97 WINCHESTER 16 ga pump A 1
shape $225 Stevens Brcwmng
12 go pump A I shape $125
locu sts posts $1 25 eoch Ftre
wood S25 per truck load
3 AND 4 RM fur mshed and un
742 2359
furn1shed opts Phone 992
1968 THUNDERBIRD l1ke new
543-4
1975 Con Am 115 Mus1c l1ke
AVAIL ABLE AT R1vers1de Apts 1
geese and du cks 742 2376
bedroom , $105permonth $150
!~O!_~~~~f_!_f.!._~~p le~
-~~~~~~~ ~!?3_:60~-REALTOQ
FOU R ROOMS and both Adu lts
VIRGIL 8 . TEAFDIID, SR .
+ ~~!__~r:£'!!~~~~ ---- NEED A WATER
REALTOR
CO UNTRY MOB ILE Home Pork
SOFTENER?
216 E. Secon• Slrttt
Rou te 33 nOfth of Pomeroy
~et Pomeroy Landmark
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
___!. o_..:~e l o~ ..!:,9~1__!9~2_'!:.9___ _ soften &amp; condition your
Phont-992-3325
lnc red1ble' Why pay h1gh electnc water and Co-op water
bdls lht s winter? Let us pay IOftener, Modal UC -XVI.
BR tCK - 4 apartments ,
them for vou I One bed room Now Only
_
has 2 bedroom apt ., one 1
from S 130 now Olio liable
bedroom and a studio apt
V1lloge MOnor Th!fd and M1ll
Large yard near stores .
Streets M1ddleport Telephone Let us test your water
Only 123,000
9&lt;12 7787 Equal Housmg Op
Free.
3
NEW TRI-LEVEL po rtu n1ty
•
- - - - -,- bedrooms , l 1f2 baths,
LA RGE MOBILE Home lo t Coun try
family
room ,
utility,
Set11n g Me1gs School5 All
New Co-Op water and
garage,
and
one
acre
of
util111es ovot loble Bottle gos softeners, mocltt VC.SVI
land . S-41.000.
healing only 741 3122
Only 1271.95
10 ROOMS- 4 bedrooms, 2
Save sso 00 on 1 ne~
- - .----baths,
family
rooms,
BEAUTIFUL HOME ,9 rooms '1 Holpolnt Rllrlgorotor
n1tural gas forced air
baths
doub le goroge
1 Now 20 cubic fl . Chtot
furnace. shop. garage and
Reference requ1red Wnte to FrHatr
Oo1ly Sen tml
Ball 729 W
large tot Want S27,500
125.00 Dlocaunt
Pome roy Oh1o 45769
2 APARTMENTS Let
"
"-------- Ill Good Rtfrlgerolor IlliG
one pay for fhe whole
ONE BEDROOM Mo b1le Home
place Asking (US! $9.600Adults only 992 2598
1 Good Uud Amano1
~
Uprllht Freezer, nso oo
BRtCI&lt;- 4 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, natural gas F A,
~...;-SBJ;,' fi~ Or-Tr,fdf.~~ 1 Good Used McCullough
furnace , flrepi11Ce, full
10· 10 ~hlln IIW
1125
basement, large dining,
f-OR SAL E or trade or land con
1 Good used McCullough
porch , and nice corner lpt .
'' oct 2 bedroo m house 111 310 E Chain Sow
595
122.500
Ru*lond 991 5858
1 Good Used Homellte
LOT - In town, 50 x 100
Xll2
Chain
Saw
5125
FOR ~ALE or Trade 19b7 Ford T
wtth water, sewerage, and
B•rd Full pow&amp;' otr new eK
I Good Used McCullough
electric Has 2 bedroom
ho us f !. V$ 18/ll Glenn R 81 ~!iell
Chatn Saw
S50
mob1le home Included All
Boshon Rood 949 2601 or
tor $6,000
'Y4f,l 286()
IF YOU HAVE GOOD
~O FJ ~At r O f Rcnl b room house
Jack W C•rsey, Mgr.
CREDIT,
CAN
PAY
nca r g• occry store' Call oflc.&gt;r 7
Phone 992-2111
RENT, YOU CAN BUY'
pm 992 35f!J

---------------

w•

Jack's Septic
Tank SeNce

992-2206 01992-7630

fl)l ~

....

tlllllloliol Sri•
lloiO&lt;iol-1111
llaoolnto
&amp; ~tti&lt;•
SIIIIM
WINIIOWS&amp;DOORS

•nd
Resident til
Cot! for
commercial
estimate. 24 hour service .
Anyct.y, 1nytlme.
Phone tU-3106

Phontllikl YDIIRI
At

STI PQIIEROT, OliO
ES IMATl

r-----------------, ••
FREE ESTIMATES
"

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

l

Superior
Stumhbacbon

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 . 1977

THURSDAY, DCTDBER20, 1977
S oo-Bonanza J, My three ~ons .. , Gun smoke 8;
M1 ster Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33, Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13. My Three Sons 15
S JG---{)dd Cou ple 4; News 6; Etee Co 20,33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10, Hogan's Heroes 15.
6 QO-News 3-4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6 •3o---NBC News 3,4, 15, Carol Burnett &amp; Frler1ds 6,
CBS News 8,10, As We See tt 20, ABC News 13
7 oo-Truth or Cons 3, Cross·Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Gong Shaw 8. News 10. To Tett the Truth 13,
Gilligan' s Is IS, Coping wtth Kids 20; Anyone for
Tennyson ' 33
7. 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, S100, 000 Name That
Tune 6; 125,000 Pvramld 8, MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; That' s Hollywood 10; Nashville on
the Road 13; Marty Robbins Spotlight 15
8 OD----&lt;hlps 3,4,15 , Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13,
Waltons 8, 10, Once Upon A Classic 20,33
8 30-Wha1's Happening 6, 13, Best of Ernie Kovacs
20.33
9 oo-Richard Pryor 3,4, 15, B.,ney Miller 6, 13,
Hawait Ftve 0 8, 10, Hurry Tomorrow 20,33
9· 3G-Carter Country 6, 13, 10 QO-Rosettl &amp; Ryan
3.4.15. Redd Foxx 6,13, Barnaby Jones 8,10;
Dickens of London 33
10 3Q---Lock, Stock &amp; Barret 20
11 QO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20, MacNeilLehrer Report 33.
,
11 JQ---Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Pollee Story 6, 13, Movie

~--~.,r---------------~--------!'----------~--------------------------~..

---------------.

GEMINI (MIJ 21-Jun• 20) Vou Teachers will have to work
have the kn ack today to turn very diligently to see all the
negativ e sttuatlons into students meet the c nterta
someth1ng pos1t1ve Its because and standards "
Lockland the s mallest
you II see sunshme where others
H&amp; shadows
school syst~m m ~arnilton
CANCER (Ju . . 21-Jutr 221 Try County, has 900 students.
not to take th mgs you re mvolved
tn fo r granted today Their
p ote ntial can only be ap prec iated through In-depth
evatuat!on
NOT
ORCHESTRA
LOOKING
LEO (Jutr 23-"Aug. 22) Even
though you prefe r s ldesteppmg
CINCINNATI (UP!)- Cins ti cky 1ssues today, you II find a cinnati Symphony Orchestra
pro blem you ve been dodg11119 Is General Manager Steven
more of a paper dragon than you
Mooder sa1d the orchestra IS
1mag1ned
not conductmg a search for a
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lipl. 22) Vour
new conductor
possibtht1es 1or acq uisition look
Monder
responded
to
very good today, tf you don't
leave lhtngs up to c hance Prac- reports Wednesday that the
tical procedures are a must
orchestra was considering
Ur1 Segal , a young Israeli
1NE WSP 4.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
conductor, for the tob
Thomas Schippers, th e orPATIENT IS A MAN
MIDDLETOWN,
Ohio c hestra's current conductor ,
(U PI)- Muldlelown Health has been treated lor IUllg
officials say a local hospital cancer m recent months, atld ·
patient suspected of haVIng has been unable to perfonn so
Legwnnaires disease 1s a 7~ far dunng the symphony's
year-old man and not a fall season,
" Thomas Schippers IS still
woman, as was fu-st reported
our
mus1c d1rector," Mooder
by authorities.
S8ld.
" We haven' t begun a
Middletown
Health
formal
search "
Commissioner
Paul
Segal
w1ll make his third
Asmussen said Wednesday
appearance
m t he past ye•r
the patient, whose 1denl1ty
as
a
Cmcmnall
Symphony
has not been revealed, IS
guest
conductor
on
Nov . 25
progressing satislactor~ly at
and
26
Middletown Hospital

•

l97 b
MERCURV
808 CA T
Ru nobo ul
Automal•c
&lt;4
q!1nder $1 bOO Call q.-9 2117
after 4 00 pm

-

-------- -------

Su.JI(I;n

1972 PINJO 94q 2701 oher Sdur
'"9 the week and onyhme
weekends
.-

-

if!-i~ ~~i~~~

Business Services

PAfHS FOR 1q71 Gala Kilt Ford lor
sale Phone q92 5858

11?7 4 OLDS 88 ROYAU AM·fM
tope cr uls&amp; cqn trol 1971 VW
"super Bee rl e
new fifes
'192 2987
CHE VY WAGON Std 283 eng
Prlce reduced 991 ,3408
NEED lA DY to toke core of 3
school age boys e• th er lull
19b9 CHEVROLET STATION Wogan
trme or IUSI at r,,ghl 985 At72
Townsmen 327 New pomt
good cond1tlon 9 passenger
EXPERIE NCE D REF RIGERATO R and
Sb9S or best off er 9~9 2124
app liance servrcemon
Pmd
h olidays
vocoltons
and 1974 PINTO STATION Wogon
h ospii OII tallon
Goll1a
7300cc engme otr condll!oned
Relngerator Co o tt 3rd Ave
outomattc
11ew f1res low
GallipOliS oruo
m1leoge e xcellen t cond111on
Call 997-2708

- -- -

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

fllllil ~

ADDRESSERS WANTED
lm
med•olelyl Work ol ho1t18 no
e:o~;peroence
necessary • e)(
cellen1 poy W11le Amerocon
Ser111Ce 8350 Pork lane Sut te
'169 Dollos TX 7523 1

THE RACI NE Vo lunteer F1re
Depa r!ment w1ll sponsor o gun
shoo t eve ry S.Oturdoy at 7 p m CAS H po1d for all makes and
models of mob te hom es
ot thetr budd1ng tn Bosho n Foe
Phone oreo code t;.14 423 9531
__!~~~~e__g~~~lx_ - - - - - ------~
DEAL WITH a nd mde pendent TIMBER Pome roy Fares! Pro
du cts Top proce: tor stondtn g
dealer where your money 15
sowt unbe r Coli 992 ~9b 5 or
spe nt locall y wtth other mer
Kvn l Hanby 1 440 8570
chan ts Ba1ley s Ashland Tup
pers Plo 1ns the only mdepen c01'N SCURRENc v token!&gt; old
dent tn town not a company
pocket wolche! ond chams
run station
Oct
Spec•ol
s liver and gold We need 1~
Amencon mode cars lubes 5
and older sdver co1ns Buy sell
qts Volvo!tne AC 011 and fil ter
or trade Coii"Roger Wamsley
Sl O loll 1nclude-d ln stock new
7A2 '133 1
and r&amp;copped snow ltres bot
OLD
FURNITURE tee bo)(es brass
tenes, hoses belts plugs
beds •ron beds etc. com plete
po•n ls and other .occessoPes
households Wt11 e M D M1lle r
Plenty of Vol vo l1ne ontt lreeze
Rt 4 Pomeroy O~ua or coli
Open 7 to 8 30 Man thru Fn
992 77b0
Sol 8 30 to 7 00 Closed Sun
Other wor k done by op pom t NO ITEM TOO large or too smell
men !
Will buy 1 p1ece or complete
house ho ld New used or onh
ques Morlm s Furnllure 20 N
1nd St
Middleport Phone
992 1&gt;370

NOTICE

tht' dll}

CAREER wolh oluture for a man
01 woman who worHs the besl
111 life A pay chec k every
week fantastiC lr~nge benefits
oil local wor~ C1ve us o cotl at
9911-480 or wrtfe Western
Southern l1fe ln$urance 218 ',
E Mom Pome1oy Oh to for •n
lormonon

A

blood m my nome John KNk

,,.

Homer E Abele
Ear lE Stephe nson
Lawrence Gre y
Ju dges
(10) 6 D. 20. Jtc

TELEVISION
·VIEWING

-

,

APPELLATE , O IST R ICT ,
Judic ia l D1strltt Court of
Appu ts
"'::;:::-,.,.,,-,'ftt•t• • ot'~rea tn11t t,e- nm·e • ,r,
ot the btg 1nnlng or the terms
of the Court ot Appn ls of the
uveret CoUnltii!'S m sa 1d
ADAMS County on the Slh
day Of Al)r tl and the 14t n d·H'
of November
ATHENS county on tne
15 Y, u!'l.b ,If lJnlkr
73rd d e y of February a nd lhP
C'a:.h
l1\.ilr~t'
21st aay of Sel)tember
100
lllll\
BROWN County on the 6th
1..
:ZU&lt;i}~
day of Apr il and the lSth day
:!~
JW.~~
of NOvf mber
JOO
J7&gt;
ldl-1\~
GALLI A Countv on th e 14th
day of February a na rne 11tn
!::&lt;~dl 10 ~1"1.1 ,l\~r Ilk' mtnlmwtl.J5
d a y of hptember
\hlftis 1:. ~ I &lt;~IWi \)t'l Wui\J ~I J~)
H IG H LA ND County on 1he
•Alb IUJII\Ul~ utht'r \llo&lt;JI\ ~UIIl&gt;HUI(\ 1;'
4th day of A.pr 1l a nd tl"'f 16th
Wl):. ~Ill lit&gt; d1.111 !It'd a• tht' I dtt)
day of No11ember
[ ·nth
HOCK ING County on tht
18th day of Apr il and the 9th
In nu:mw \ Can! uf Tluullui and
day ot NOII~tmber
OlntlJ.IIIn t1 ~;'t'Ul.~t ~~ "' VId $:100
J ACKSON Countv on the
Ulllllti\WII C:c.hlll.ll.i.h.ll.lllt'
Ht"t dav of March and th~t 27tn
dav of Sep tembrr
Mubllt' Homt' ~lt':a ;md Yartl ~It'::.
LAW REN CE counryon t ne
art' .ll.tl t'pl&lt;'li unl~ Wllh cll~h llt tlil
8t h day of Man;h a n d the 28th
onlt'l 25 l't'lll dldt)lt' fu1 aW. Uf!\
da y of Septe mt:Jer
l;ljlt &amp;.~ :\utnlJ.or In C01rt.&gt; ui flit Sot t ..
M E IGS Co un ty on the 15th
LLnd
day Of February and the lJth
TIM" PuiJibiWt llo'!H. 1 \ ~:. till IIJ.:hl
dey of Stp tember
PICK AWAY CounTy on thtt
tu ,'t.I.Jt Ul rr jlt1 1111) &lt;id:. J,-,. tilt i.lllb19t h da y of Apr il a nd the l Ottl
)l:tlU.tf\01.1 Tlk&gt; Pullh:.htl 'ollli ll"llJt'
1t'Spon:ttlllt' fllr !lint t' tlwn ullt' 1mur
d a y of November
lrt l Ulst'rllun
PIKE coun ty on ttu~ ~1s t
da y ot M~r ch and t he 17th dn
Phuut' 99".! 21 Jll
ot October
ROSS County on the lOth
day of Apr I and the 21St ClliY
of Nov e mber
SC tOTO County on the 22 nd
day of Marc h and t he 18th d a y
of October
VI NTON County on the 16th
da y of Feoru ar y a nd the 14t h
day of Septe m ber
WASH I NGTON County on
th e 22nd day of February and
the 20th day of SeQtember
Mumla)
Sa 1d terms to begm a t 9 30
Nt!oll un &amp;ttu1 tlal\
o'c lock A M
September 2i1, 1977
TutSI.lil\
4

" Hurricane" 8, ABC News 33, Movie " Tne Young
Rebel" 10, 12.QO-Janakt 33
12 40---Best Years of " Your H:t Parade" 6, 13 , I.QOTomorrow 3, .c: 1 lli-Mary Hartman 10; 2· 10- ...
News 13
·

Tennessee re,ad'"
to know If 1n standard
Amencan t a two-heart openIng bid is lorcmg when you
have 40 on score
In standard Amencan and
general expert play th1s two
b1d is treated as a one-round
force and partner should respond once.
tN6WSP.APf. RE:NTERI'ft! St:: ASSN l
( For • copy o l J A COB Y
MODERN, send $1 to ~ ·w1n at
Brictge, ' c/ o this newspaper,
P 0 Box 489, Redlo Ctly S let10n,
New York, N Y 10019)

C'l1977 Kina Feat\lr~s Syndicate Inc:

THROW IN AN
AMPERSAND!

WIFMYTOOTH
FAIRY MONEY··
THIS-UN'S REAL
LOOSE

IT WUZ
LIKE
PULLIN'
TEETH

l

f

,

·.'

•

�•

•

••

r-------------------...........................................,c;
'ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY e

12- The Dl!lly Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. tkl. 20, tm

'

$4 million grant funds assured ·
The six parks are Buck
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Deer · Creek,
The Senate Environment and Creek.
PllbUc Works Committee has Delaware. Dillon. " Paint
Creek and West Branch .
oc~ted an amendment to
Ohifi 'S ~c onstitution
overcome a legal ril8dblock
an)'
state
1111&lt;1 assure $4 million in grant prohibits
from
funds f&lt;r siJ&lt; Ohio recreation administration
!aciU\ies, according to tbe committing future General
ol!lce olSen. John GieM, D- Assemblies lo fina ncial
outlays. This prohibition had
Ohlo ,
Without the amen dment kept the Ohio Department or
proposed by Gl enn, the Natural Reso urces from
mooiH would not have been signing contracts with the
avaUable to Ohio for six state U.S. Army Co rps of
parka projects, for legal Engineers for 50-50 costsharing agreements between
reasons.

the

federal

and

s ta te

gt)\'enunents.

even

though

this fisca l year's funding fvr
proje&lt;'ts was approved in
Columbus.
G l enn ' s

amendment
provides a one-year waiver of
federal requ ire111e nts that
states ma ke such cost·

sha ring assurances.
Both Ohio and the fed eral
gove rnment already have appropriated funds for the six
recreational dev elopment
projects. U the legislation iS
aproved by the Senate and
signed in to la w. Ohio rA n

.....

r

11

to "quarrel" with ToogsWt
·Park and to "give him good

cooperation."
,
c'fongsun Park: the wealthy
rice dealer now in Seoul and
refusing to tesllfy, iS Wtder a
36-couni indictment on
charges
of
bribery ,
conspiracy. racketeering and
mail fraud . He iS said to be
the central figure in the
scheme.
The long-awaited hearing
followed nwnerous official
denials from Seoul and the
session began with Jaw&lt;rski

Area Deaths

!
I

t

former

at Meigs General Hospital for

13 years until illness forced
her retirement .
.
She was a member of

Racine Chapter OES and a

member of the East Letart
United Methodist Church
where she served as a pianist.
Surviving are a daughter ,
Mrs. June Wickersham. of
Racine ; five grandchildren,
Jeff and Marvene Beegle,
both of Racine ; Jim, Jacklyn
Hodge and Mary Wickersham of Columbus ; five
great -grandchildren
and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be at
1 p,

m. Sunday at the Ewing

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Archie · E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Harry E. Johnson, Delores
M. Johnson, 1.15 acre,
Chester.

James 0 . Eynon , Ruby A.

Eynoh to " Ezra Sheets,
Frances M . Sheets, 1.16 acre,

Orange.

NEW CHRISTMAS
CLUBS OPEN NOV. 12th
A Home Bank
For
Meigs County

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

Ralph D. Birch , eta! to Jerry

Murphy, Lebanon .

SQUAD CALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was caUed
to the Haggerty residence in
II! Cheshire at 11 :37 a. m.
1-1 Wednesday
for Christa
W Moody, 2, who had swallowed
~ a. number of pills · from a
.
bottle. . She . was taken to
W Veterans Memorial Hospital
W where she was admitted.

w
w
L ,

PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - · John Rice,
w HW!tingtun; Mary Crabtree,
w Leon; Mrs. Dennis Harris,
w Mason ; Mrs. Frank Long,
Ferry; . Tommy
w Gallipolis
Lane, Evans; Iva Young,
Mason: Loretta Noel. Hen·
w derson; Mrs. Ode Beaver.
1:1('k Hogrrs.
:11 r·, ·
,..
•·
.;,1,
1\•Trs. flt·ryl
Edwa rds, 1&gt;1aso11. and Jasim
Tucker, Grimms -Landing.

BANK •

' RACINE

OHIO

,

James A. Anderson, Wllma
C, Anderson to Dorset
Raridolph, Rosemary Ran dolph. 37.3 acres, Chester .
James J . Proffitt, Sheriff,

~

'169I-·-..

....,....,

Regular Sl.49 Red tieart

Entire Stocks 1.25

Wintuk Knitting Yarn
'

Puckett, Rt .

I,

'

I Betty) , Morgan, Springfield.

One sister preceded her In

death .

She was .a member of the
Mercer&lt;JIIIe Missionary
Baptist Church where fun"eral
services will be held 2 p . m.
Sunday wi th Rev . Bruce
Unroe and Rev . Jack Tem-

pleton officiating .

Burial will follow in
R l dgelawn
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the Will is.
Funeral Home on S~turday
from 4 p. m . until 9 p. m .

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•

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~99~

'14... . .
S;~le!

--w-------------1

MEN'S ANO 10UNG MEN'S

Reg. '5.00---- Sale s4.25
Reg. s1.00
Sale '5.95
Reg. sg,oo
Sale s7.65
Reg. sn.oo
Sale sg,35
Reg. s11.00
Sale '14.45

13.95 JEANS-------SALE 111.00 .
115.95 JEANS
SALE '12.60

1

...

.

Wrangler m.5o

TOBOGGAN SALE

~

DENIM RANCH COAT

One size fits all sizes. Excellent quality solid
colors. Men's and boys' department, 1st
Floor .
·

Wrangler no fault blue denim with warm
sherpa lining. True western style. Hlp
fength, s-izes 36 to 46. ·
F_ridav and Saturday

...

•2977

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GIRL'S SLIPS , ~

Water Pollution Control Act
..
Amendments of im) Citizen
•'
- Technical Advisory Com·
.....
-White Full Slips
mittee for the Southeast Ohio
We carry a complete selection of both
-Sizes 4 to 10
River Tributaries will be held
•••
Kodak
and
Polaroid
film
and
at
sale
priCes.
'
on Wednesday, October 26, at
•
Reg.' •2.50
·
•
For instance Kodak 110-12 regular $1.60,
7:30 p. m. at the Rio Grande
.
sale price $1.28. Polaroid 108, regular $7 .15,
College cafeteria. A panel
sale $6.25 . Sale includes entire stock.
discussion on the mine
•
drainage pollution problem in
Southeast Ohio will take
Furniture Department
~place.
Panel mem.bers Include
David Wright of the Southern
33·1/3
Ohio Coal Company; Joy
•
- Single side drop bed.
Choose from gospel, ~ountry - western, blue •
Fitzgerald,
Ohio · ·En·
- Walnut or white~ fini.sh.
v.lronmental Protection
grass, hard rock, instrumentals, movie ••
Vinyl
covered
mattress
.
•
Agency (Ohio ElPA), Salt
sound tracks or easy listening . .
•
•
Fork Lake Watershed
Project; Joe Davidson, Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Division of
.
.
\
J
···
Reclamation and Richard .---------~~~~~~----~----~~--~·~~-~~~·--~·~-~·~"~~~~--~--·~"~~~-~~~···~~--·-··------.-;
Friday &amp; Saturday Sale Prices
•
Whitt, Ohio EPA, Strip Mine
WlfKEND SALEI
••
•
Inspection Unit. Each panel
member will present a brief
overview Of his or her
respective program and the
"
anticipated impacts of new
Pants in sizes 29 to 50 waist. Shirts in sizes
state and federal legislation.
14112 to 20. Solid colors navy ; charcoal, sun
A question and answer
Sizes 8 to 18 in regulars and slims plus
fan, forest green and dark olive. 65 per cent
session will follow.
student sizes 26 to 30 (choose your length).
polyester, 35 per cent cotton .
, Other _agenda items include Basic
and
fashion
style
.
·
status report on each of the
•...
I
four Citizen • Technical
sa.~
Advisory Subcommittees 'lor
Boys$
9.95
Blue
Denim
Jeans
_
_
_
$
7.76
'
each major watershed;
Boys $10.95 Blue Denim Jeans
'8.56
Status report on !ormation of
S7,95
1
~
Boys $11.95 Blue Denim Jean•
9.36
a Policy Advisory Committee
w
.,
Boys $12.95 Blue Denim Jeans
which began in October, and
10.16
Status report on Ohio EPA
Boys Si3.95 Blue Denim Jeans
10.86
Shirts in sizes 18 to 20 and pants In sizes 46 to
208 planni~g activities.
Boys $14.95 .B lue Denim Jeans
11.66
50 (slightly higher). sale priced also.
~

Kodak and Polaroid Film

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BABY BED SPECIAL"

Special

BOYS
BLUE DENIM JEANS

•1••

•

Sale
-· . . . .,. . ---.-· -· - ..-...-........

·~o--------·

STEREO ALBUMS
STEREO ALBUMS

~

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~-

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Special Sale Prices

MEN'S WORK UNIFORMS ·~

~

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Pants •••• oo. o••••••.Sale '7.77 :
;
Shirts oooooo•oo•ooo Sale 'fj,77

.
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VETERANS MEMORIA.L
Admitted
William
Reitmire, Pomeroy; Christa
Moody, Cheshire ; Linda
Clarke, Letart, W. Va.
I &gt;is.·hn r~cd - Ruby Eynon.
'1' 11111
Mullins , William
Morris, Okey Pullins, Edna
Roush, Adrienne French.

.

~~--We-~vit;;;;~i;i;";;.: new H~;ks;~ti;;~n the First Floor.
More and better selection ~f cards, new candle section, albums,
party goods, Halloween and many more

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.

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Mitchem named

1...
,.
l,

• I

.,

"' I

I

I

I
has taken on a · more attractive'
appearance with the repainting of a ·number of business

buildings over the past few months. Latest to receive a
facehfting
is this structure ·at the corner of Second and
.
r
·. :·:.:.:. :·:.::::::::::::::::::::;::::: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::: :;:

EAST MEI!}S - Joe
Mitchem, head football coach
at Eastern !ligh School was
named athletic director
during a recent meeting of
the Itastern Local Board of
Education.
Other athletic coaches
designated for the 1977-78
school year were John
Perine, boy's track; Sue
Thompson, girls' basketball,
volleyball and track; Pam
Douthitt, junior high gir!s'
basketball and Ralph Wigal,
basebaU.
The board accepted the
resignation of Mrs. Eleanor
Knight, fourth grade teacher
at Chester School, effective
Nov. I. Named to replace her
was Mrs: Jo Ellen Adams,
formerly of Middleport, who
is now living in Montgomery,
W. Va'.

Nancy Larkins, high school
mathematics teacher, was
given a leave of absence until
Jan. 1 and Barbara Hannum
was employed as a study hall
monitor.
Use of the high school for a
Class A sectional . volleyball
tournament on Oct. 27 and
Nov. 1-2 was approved;
The board discussed
(DPPF) disadvantaged pupil
program funds which might
be available from the state. It
decided to request approval
(or a physical education
program in the elementary
schools. The board also
discussed the possibility of
additional funding from the
state for expanding the
vocational agriculture,
progra01 because enrollment
in the course is on the in. crease ..
The resignation of James
Cowdery as a maintenance
man in the district, effective
Oct. 25, was accepted. Persons interested in the position
should contacl Supt. John
Riebel.
Copies of the elementary
schools' evaluation by the
state
department
of
'e&lt;fucation were distributed to

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

Plans have been completed
for Saturday's _groundboard members.
break.ing ceremonies for a
A discussion was also held
$239,000
water project in
on the five.-mill operting levy
Mason.
to be voted on on Nov. 8.
John Laswick, program
· The boa_rd agreed to continue
director
for the U. S.
the safety patrol program at
Department
of Housing and
Chester but will not have the
Urban
Development
(HUD)
program at the Tuppers
will
be
the
featured
speaker.
Plains . and
Riverview
The site of the ground·
Schools.
·breaking will be on Route 33,
two blocks above the bridge.
The program will begin at 11
a.m.
Mayor Fred Taylor has
invited residents of Mason
and the county to attend and
commemorate the beginning
of
a project that means much
'
to the community. The
project will provide a
new water storage tank
and
mains.
It
will
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The replace a large portion of
WtemploymenL.rate in Ohio the present old and outgrown
during September was down system that was installed in'
to 5.7 per cent of the total 1935.
labor force with production
Funds for th~ project are
workers earning a record being provided through
weekly wage, it was HUD's Community Develop.
announced today.
ment Block Grant program.
The Ohio Bureau of .
The
Mason
~ounly
Employment Services said
the corresponding na tiona! Development Authonty and
Senator Robert C. Byrd were
rate was 6.6 per cent.
The bureau also said instru'?ental 1n gmd1ng the
layoffs in the steel. indust~y Town 10 seekmg the grant.
are being spread over several · The Wahama High _Sehool
months and the full impact, Band w_111 provide music for
including secondary effeCts, the festive occasion .
should become more evident
in statewide figures for the
first quarter of 1978.
"Both manufacturing and
non - manufacturing in- dustries reported overall
· Partly cloudy tonight, wit
gains in employment last
lows
in the mid 40s. Mostt·
month, over August, 1977 and
cloudy
Saturday, with high'~
year-earlier levels," lh~
between
60 and 65 . The
Bureau reported. "The
greatest employment in- probability of precipitation is
crease over September, 1976, 10 percent today and 20
in manufacturing industries, percent tonight and Saturoccurred among producers of day .
motor
vehicles
and
equipment ."
The bureau said production
CORRECTION
workers
in
Ohio 's
The Meigs Girls' volleyball
manufacturing industries team won a game over
grossed an average of
Athens. It .was earlier
per •··eck last month whkh reported the team lost the
game.
Includes overtime. · L

Jobless

rate down

in Ohio

Weather

'288

dinner in Des Moine&gt;. Ca rter
will spend the night at the
Woodr ow Diehl farm in
Indianola , Iowa , a slop that
will undoubtedl y invoke
memories of the victories
that launched his drive for '
the presidency in the Iowa
pre·cinct
caucuses
in
January, 1976. Diehl has been
through all th'is before - he
hosted President Lyndon B.
Johnson a decade ago.
Saturday morning
Carter will fly to Offutt Air
Force Base, a SAC facility in
Nebraska. When he took a

trip on a nuclear submarine
earlier thi s year , , th e
President-promised he would
give the Air Force equa l time
at a SAC base on his next trip
west .

In Denver later
Saturda y, Carter will
particip a te ~ in a western
water policy roundtable and
lead a Panama Canal
briefing lor western leaders
before heading for Los
An geles.

- The ma In purpose for
Carter 's trip is a $1,000-a.'
plate !undraislng dinner
staged by the DNC in Los
Angeles Saturday night. The.
appear a nce is in .the
backyard of Gov. Jerry
Brown , · a
potential
Democratic rival of Carter's
in 1980. Brown will attend the
dinner.
to
Carter
returns
Washington Sunday.

I

t

Threat taken

Bonn 's ambassador to Italy.
In a communique on their
murder of the kidnaped
takes ' 'very seriously' ' a industrialist, the guerrillas
threat
made
against called the death of three of
Chancellor Hehnut Schmidt the hijackers of a Lufthansa
by the .Jeflisl terrorists who ... jetliner and of three
killed industrialist Hanns- imprisoned German terMarlin Schleyer.
rorists a umassacre." They
The terroriSts also have' said they never would forget
vowed to carry out 100,000 Sclunidt's "bloody hands."
bombings to "destroy the
''This is a concrete threat
capitalis t ic German which we take very
economy" and threatened to seriously,"
government
, arrange the usuicide" of spokesman Boelling told
reporters.
::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
Sclunidt and other polil.i_oai •.1•
business and civlc le3ders
dEADLINE TODAY
were beiing closly guarded in
Minersville residents
fear that the terrorists, who
were reminded \bat today
vowed "the fight has · just
is the deadline lor all post
office box holders to sub1Jlil begun," might try to strike
again.
letters ol protest agalns\
The country was prepared
the proposed closing or the
Court S\s. Owned by the Odd Fellows Lodge, the structure
for
new terrorist attacks.
Mlnersvllle Post Ofllce.
iS being painted by the Gheen Paint Co., Racine. The Blue
Thousands
of police searched
and Grey Restaurant iS on the first floor of the building.__ Letters should be ad·
for
the
killers
of Schleyer and
dressed io ltalpb, Peyton,
other
terrorists.
postmaster, Zanesvllle,
In Mulhouse, France,
Ohio 43701. Residents are
urged tn write letters'. or where Schlleyer's body was
found in a parked car, French
postcards If they oppose
. police officials said today an
ttie closing.
autopsy suggested Schleyer
was probably killed outdoors
because pine needles and
blades of grass were found oo
payoffs, gifts, enlertairimenl Br~ce Caputo, R-N .Y.,
TWO TRANSFERRED
\he gray trousers and gray ·
·and other favors . to pressed for ·names, Chairman
RACINE - The Racine sweater he was wearing at
congressmen and others in John Flynt, D-Ga., and EJ;Ilergency Squad answered the lime of his death.
government.
Jaworski stopped Kim from calls Wednesday at 3:15p.m.
West German officials said
He first 'mentioned involve- answering. · They said that for Freda Taylor, Route · I, that although the vadous
ment of a Ford aide and a kind of · Information went Racine, who was taken to terrorist threats are being
highranking
congressman beyond the scope of a Veterans Memorial llospital, taken seriously, they will not
under questioning by a resolution for the House and at 10 :05 p.m. to Route 2, deter the the biggest police
committee lawyer; who did investigation.
Racine, lor Evelyn Maynard manhunt in the nation 's
not ask him to identify them .
But Kim said he had given who was taken to Holzer history for the killers ol
When comrriittee member the names to investigators. Medical Center.
Schleyer.

•
I:,
•

Korean influence inay go
high in Ford White House

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Sunday and chance
of showers Monday and
Tuesday. Hlghs wUI range
froni the mid 50s to the low
60s and tows !rom the mid
30s to the low 40s.

Saturday

to_A.D position ·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

BONN , West Germany
(UP!) - The West German
government said today it

scheduled

•

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1977

.

very seriously

Ceremonies

16.95 JEANS -----SALE '13.40
117.95 JEANS
SALE 114.20 ·'

1

--+-----·-------~-.-.-~~·--------~!t

a
a~
SALE PRICES

GOLCONDA, ILL. - MEMORIAL SERVICES were to be
held today at the Golconda Civilian Conservation Center for
Scott H. Prechtl, 19, of Dayton, Ohio, who died after failin~ 60
feet from a cliff.
'
Another corpsman, Michael D. Ellis, 21, Minneapolis,
Mirm., suffered a lower back injury in the fail and was in
Western Baptist Hospital at Paducah 1 Ky ., after undergoing
surgery, a center spokes'l'an said. ·
·
·

Sizes 28 to 42 wai;t, basic styles and fashion
· styles included in this sale. Good sele.ction
of styles. ·
'
·

I

SPECIAL

GROVE CITY - NO CAUSE has been determined for the
.illness of five employes of Robertshaw Controls Wednesday
night. The company and the Columbus office of the
Occupational Safety and Health and Administration were
investigating the incident .
The employes were treated and and released from Mount
Carmel Medical Center in Columbus after they experienced
choking and dizziness on the job.

.l
Pre Washed Denim Jeans
l
Special

Long and short sleeves · and sleevless.
Printed and solid colors .
Sizes 32 to 40 .

r--------.._.. _____ - ,_.._.._.._._ --

MENTOR - LAKE COUNTY prosecutor J ohn E. Shoop
said Thursday he planned to file aggravated vehicular
homicide charges against two Mentor teenagers in the death
Oct. 14 of church trustee Robert Hartman.
Also, Shoop said Thursday, he would ask Lake County
Juvenile Judge Ross D. Avellone to waive jurisdiction so they
could be tried as adults. The judge said he would hear
arguments at 10:30 a .m. today (Friday).

Sturdy blue denim with warm blanket
lining, button front . Corduroy collars. Sizes
36
to
SALE

~inHIS

presidenllal quest.
fur the party a nd its
Carter will not return to the ca ndidates.
White f[ouse until Sunday. On . . The President's sc hed~le
way home from fur the next three da ys
a sentimental and serious the
journey across the country, California Air Force One will includes:
- Alunchtime urban policy
taking his problems to the stop in MiMeapolis to pick up
people and doing a lille Sen. Hubert Humphrey , roundtable in Detroit. The
marking the former vice stop a,lso keeps a promise
politicking along the way.
The serious part of the trip president 's return to th e that Carter would appear
was starting in Detroit today , · capital after surgery which there this year for Mayor
Coleman Young, who is
with a roundtable discussion found inoperable cancer.
Much of the cost of the se eking reelection . . But
of urban problems and unemployment. Sentiment and journey will be paid by the Young is leading heavily and
politics were to take over Democrati c National doesn't need much campaign
· ·
later in the day at Des Committee , which has agreed help.
- A speech at the Iowa
Moines, Iowa - scene of the to pick up the tab when the
firsi
victory
of his President goes campaigning Jefferson-Jackson Day ··
By CLAY F. RICHARDS,
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Carter is launching

I

BLANKET LINED
OVERALL JACKETS

~~~~·"·-~ -~~~---~--~~------~--~~~---·---·-~-·~---·-·~---~--

WOMEN'S TOPS

;

ii

en tine

Carter takes problems to people

•

CINCINNATI - A SURPRISE WITNESS has taken the
stand in the trial of 10 persons accused of participating in a
multimillion dollar drug and stolen property ring - civil rights
activist and entertainer Dick Gregory.
Gregory appeared; in part. as a character witness for one
defendant, Dyeatra Carter of Cleveland. The civil right·s
leader late Wednesday told the U. S. District Court jury in the
case that Ms. Carter "is being prosecuted because of her
association wlth me."

Men's $17.95

~

Stretch to Iii all sizes 10 to 13 . White , solid .
colors and · heather tones . Our very popular
JSI TV brand . .
I.

Water quality
session set

~

~----

RICHMOND - FBI AGENTS talked a · JO.year-&lt;&gt;ld
Dominican national into surren,dering at Riclunond's Byrd
Airport early today after he forced U1e crew of a chartered jet
to make an Wlscheduled.landing at Richmond 's Byrd Airport.
The plane was en route from New York to Santo Domingo.
FBI agents arrested Tomas Arililides Baez Perez on federal
charges of interfering with a flight crew after persuading him
to leave the plane and surrender , the FBI said.

POM-EROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 133

VOL. XXVIII

.
CLEVELAND - PRINCE CHARLES, who says he takes
his position as Prince of Wales "seriously," has encouraged
American businessmen to locate plants in Britain.
"I regret to say lhal l take my position as Prince of Wales
very seriously," the Prince said during a dinner speech to a
select group of businessmen Thursday night at the Western
Reserve Historical Society's Auto-Aviation Musewn. "! do
care about industrial development in Wales."

E

Sale ' 99~

Men's s1.25 Orion Socks

Crown City ;.

~}

Boys sizes 7 to 11 , men ' s sizes 9 to 15. White
with colored tops. Excellent selection for
this sale . .1
•

Special Sale

-

•"

Mens and Boys Tube Sociis

Filie selection of colors, variegated and
sparkle. 31h ounce skeins, pull out skein
ready to use .

1,
Crown
Ci ty ;
Mrs .
Lawrence ( Faye) Sanders,
Eureka
Star
Route ,
Gallipolis ;
Charlwood

Funeral Home with the Rev .
Ti mothy Smith officiating .
Burial will be In the Letart
The next meeting of the
Falls Cemetery. Friends may •
Water
Quality Planning
call at the funeral home after
(Section
208 of. the Federal
'
7 this eve!"'lng.

Plan Now To Open Your 1978
Christmas Club and Receive
Your Free Gift.

Y2 price
___ ........

1

BIRMINGHAM, MICH . ...; THE TIIEATER HOSTING
"Oh ! Calcutta," a stage production which features frontal
nudity and simulated sex, has been shut down by fire officials
SIX days before the play was to open a fiv~ay run .
It would take at least 30 days to correct one of the II
violations cited by the fire department, according to a spokes·
man lor the theater in this Detroit suburb where many auto
company executives reside . The most serious citation noted
the lack of an overhead sprinkler system.

!•
!~

Size 24 x 45 inch . Fringed ends, colorful
pat.t ern . Home Furnishings Department, 1st
Floor. -

Two dis cont inued ,, patterns . Cannon
Fe atherlite no iron sheets and pillow cases .
Mostly twin, king and queen s ize .

PEARL PUCKETT
Mrs . Pv_arl Scarberry

Studie Puckett, Rt. 1, Crown
City ; ...·16 grandchildren, 20
great -grandchildren
and
three
great - great grandchildren survive, along
with one brother, Donald
Scarberry, Springfield and
one Sister , Mrs. Ralph

~

SCATTER RUGS

BED SHEETS

I

inland waterways such as the Ohio River an industry gr&lt;•up
lobby~ has charged.
'
William J , Hull , legislative adviser to the Ohio Valley
hnprovement Association , told a meeting of association
members Wednesday that one proposal before Congress would
makf c()fnmercial river craft pay tOO perce nt of all operating
and mamtenance expenses, plus 50 percent of any new
development on inland water10ays.
·

. ~:••
•
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:

'1o99 REVERSIBLE

CANNON ROYAL FAMILY

Berkley (Judy) Saunders, Rt.

FER·NE"HA YMAN

~
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Reg. 14.00-- - - - - - - - SALE11p9
.
Reg. '6.00
SALE 14.79
Reg. '8.00
SALE '6J9
Reg. 110.00
SALE '7.99
Reg. '12.00
SAlr '9.5.9

Close Out Sale!

!

Her · first husband, Enos
McGuire, preceded her . in
~* death in fv\arch ,, 1918. Her
A
second husband , James
·~· Pucke.tt. preceded her In
death on May 8. 1957.
She is survived by the
following chi.ldr.en : ·Mr$ .
Leonard
(Emma
Lee)
Martin, Eureka Star Route·,
Gall ipolis ; Enos McGuire.
Rt . 1, Ga'tHpolis ; Mrs .
RACINE Ferne If,
Hayman, 16, of Route 2,
Racine , died Wednesday at
Holzer Medical Center . She
was born Jan. 7, 1901, a
daughter of the late Wesley
and Lena Grundy Belles. She
was a Iso preceded in death by
her husband Hobart ; . four'
brothers. Francis, Robert ,
Wesley. and Zurry ; and an
infant daughter, Leila .
Mrs. Hayman was a
practical nurse and ·worked

October 29th, iS the Last Date To Pay
Your 49th Christmas Club Payment To
Receive the 50th Free.

thru 7-14.

1

._.2_5:_!~-U~~-==-=-=-=-==-=-====~lr~~Reg~·~'1~5.~00~~======~~~E~'~11~J9~1s

four months .

miniSter
Wa.shiJ&gt;gtoo •embassy.
Lee recalled a lime when
the ambassador , carrying
about two dozen plain white ·
envelopes loaded with $100
bills, left the embassy saying
he was going to the Capitol.
And he said he once 5aw a
letter · in which · President
Park told the ambassador not

CHRISTMAS
CLUB
MEMBERS

5

54' BULB SAl.E----- -,--41'
39' BULB SALE
29'
30' BU~ SALE
22'

her home Thursday around
3: 45a . m.
She was born in Gal l ia
Covnty on .June 12, 1898,
daughter of the late Clum and
Emma Blake Scarberry , She
had been- seriously Ill the past

information
at
Korea's

.i

.:

~--.-..---------------

McGuire Puckett, 79, die&lt;:! at

hagman" in the scandal was

!egislation requiring a usage tax for L,lmmercial craft on

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM
:
r·--· ~--------·--~~~----~----t·
.
..

Plant now a nd s a ve now on fine quality
Dut ~ h flo we r bulbs. Na rciss us, daffodils ,
tu lips , h ypci nths a nd m a n y oth er s.

---------------------------1

related by Wirm's secretary,
NanElder, andJaiHyonLee, ,
a

promis ing
to
produce
evidence showing that
Korean govenunent officials
co nspired " to ·buy off '
American · congressmen ''
during the 1970S and carried
out the plot ·~ tleasl in part. "
But Jaworski also said it
was too soon to name any
congressmen who may ha""
taken cash, fancy gifts,
entertainm..,t, free travel or
other favors from the
KOCeans in violation of the
Constitution, federal law or
ethical standards.

By United Pr..s lnlernaUonat
CINCINNATI - UJNGRESS IS ABOUT to enact

"~

at

e

I

N

•
••

DUTCHSf~Q;f~ ~ULBS I T~!~~h~c~t~:~nd~~~~~~~~ts ~

I

room and an audience
watching on public television
were shown that the
investigators had found -a
highly complicated scheme
stretchir)g back to the 19605.
The aim evidently was .to
gain favorable U.S. military
and ec onomic policy for
K&lt;rea and Jaworski said the
plan clearly was carried out
"at least in part."
The first · witnesses,
w..-king from a photograph,
identified f o rmer
Ambassador Kim Dong Jo,as.
the man who brought " an
envelQPe holding "an inch·
high " stack of $100 bills to
Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan .. in
1&amp;72 and returned for lbe
money after the apparent
tribe. was rejected.
Kun Dong Jo now is
President Park's assistant
for- foreign affairs. His pasi
role as an apparent

~

SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
OPfN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

First testimony links Korean -President, CIA
By RICHARD E. LERNER
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The llrst formal testimony
and evidence presented to the
HOWle ethics c&lt;mmittee linlul
Korll!I'S &lt;llplomats, its CIA
agents and . Its president,
Park Chung Hee , to
influence-buying efforts m
Capitol Hill.
But the naming of erring
ccngresamen may be mmlhll
away.
With Spedal Cotmsel Lem
Jaworski directing
Wednesday ' s opening
!lellion, the panel heard three
witneaes describe a covert
lobbying operation that
included envelopes full of J!OO
biUs, sec~et letters and
!llrategy meetings and a raft
of
code
names
for
particip&amp;Dts.
Kbn Sang Keun, a lOf!Der
Kor1111n CIA agent, was asked
to testify again today at the
oecond nnmd of hearings
after uying his boss in Seoy.l
sent him letters In UJ7oi"wllh
word that "the chief priest "
knew of the clandestine
activities and "the Patriarch
has
. ezpressed
his
satlllactlon."
Kbn said he was told those
were code names for the.
South Korean president.
In ahnost four hours of
testimony Wednesday, a
crowd of several hundred
per11011s In \he huge hearing

·!! ;News. .• •in Briefs\\! .

~

proceed with const ruction at
lhe re&lt;'reational facilities.
" Without the amendment
Ohio stood to lose the funds lo
some t1thcr state,'' Glenn
said . ;,That struck. me as a
disservice to Ohioans. many
of whom ma ke great use of
sta te pa rks . Penalizing them
because of a twist in the taw
slacked up as Wtfair."
The committe e also
decided to hold hearings next
year to devlse a permanent
solution to the legal problem,
Glenn said .

•

~t:;:;::::::::::::::::-~::::::;:o:;;:;:;::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::t~

By RICHARD E. LERNER
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Hearsay testjmony by a
former Korean CIA agent
raises the possibility that hi~
government's alleged bids to
buy influence in Washington
may have reached high in to
. the Ford While House as we II
as Congress.
That remained a mystery
today because Counsel Leon
Jaworski kept the witness,

Schoo'I assi·stance delayed

Kim Sang Keun, . from
' naming U.S. officials at a
;
Hous_e ethiCS committee ·
hearmg Thursday • and
UJLUMBUS (Ufl) ~ The low-income elderly and
mves\lgators later said Ohio General Assembly has handicapped persons tpis
privately they did not know adjourned until next month winter.
'
howmuchtrulhthereistothe wben it will reconvene for a
At the same lime, the
story he spun.
three-day session to wrestle Senate agreed, 20 to 12, to
. But there seemed little withastateenergypolicy and legislation aUowing banks to
reason to d?ubtthal Koreans revisions in the charitable open branch offices in
tried to give congressmen bingo law.
adjacent counties starting in
m_oney after tesllm?"Y by the
Legislative leaders have 1979, and statewide 10 years
Wives of Reps. Kika de Ia their fingers crossed they will after that. The bill w.S sent tn
Garza, D·Tex., and John not have to tangle with the House, which approved a
Myers, R-Ind. They told the borrowing authority for Similar measure last session.
panel their husbands were rmblic schools again.
The next full sessions of the
offe_red envelopes full of cash
The lawmakers wenl home legislature are Nov. 15-17.
du~lllga 1975 tnploSeoul! but Thursday after sending to There will ~e housekeeping,
reJected the. apparent bribes, . Gov. James A. Rhodes a $524 meetings O&lt;;t.,,fii·
Bef?re
the , :vomen million capital. construction
Supporters of a bill to
d~scnbed those InCidents, ' appropriali(fn "and dealing expand the borrowing powers
Kim Sang KeWt, a defector · with other cleanup matters. of schools running.out of cash
from the Ko_rean CIA last f~ll, They put off until November failed to put together enough
spent several hours depicting the question of whether to votes to try again Thursday
dand~esllne ope~alions th?l assist the slate's financially· on the defeated bill.
he S8ld were. designed 10. ~m troubled schools.
Senate President Oliver
favorable Amencan pohcles
Prior to adjourning, both Ocasek, D-Akron, said he
for. Korea and, suppre~s chambers rushed through an hoped successful school
_cnllclsm 0 ,f Pre:ndent Park emergency bill including levies and resolution of
ChWtg Hee ~ regune.
house trailer owners and Cleveland's difficulties would
h The h•~~hghlKcame ~hen renters among those eligible eliminate the need for a state
be . sa 1
H oreahn- Ko.rn for healing fuel discounts to "bail-out. u
usmessm~n
anc o 1m
~ A motion to reconsider
told him in 1975 an "assistant
to the President" in Gerald
Ford's administration and "a
high official of Congress''
were involved in "the
TongsWt Park affair. "
Hancho Kim has been
indicted in the scandal on
charges of conspiracy and
Bobby R. Mitchell, 25, by Lois M. Bailey, 17, Racine.
lying to a grand jury. Park,
Pomeroy, was cited to Meigs There wa s minor damage.
the now-famo~ Korean rice
Thomas D. Racer, 28,
dealer , has remained in Seoul County Court for driving left
and refused to testify since of the center following a Vinton, was charged wi~h
being charged with mail traffic accident at 10 :15 a.m. failure to yield lollowing an
Thursday on CR 27 at the accident at 3:30p.m. on Mill
fraud , conspiracy , bribery
and racketeering in the case . junction of CR 6 in Meigs Creek Rd. north of Gallipolis.
The Racer car sideswiped an
Justice Department County.
The Gallia ·Meigs Post auto operated by Norma J .
officials announced in SeOul
.Thursday lhey were unable I&lt;• Stale Highway Patrol said Ragland, 36, Gallipolis .
.Marian Varney , 29, RodMitchell's car went left of the
work out terms to question
center striking an auto ney, was charged with failure
Park there for a sepal'llte
operated by Ronald A. to yield following an accident
crimif\al investigation .
Kim Sang Keun , appearin g Whittington, 54 , Albany . at 6:45 p.m. on US 35, four
fnr ct second day, told the There was minor damage. tenths of a mile west of SR
A second Meigs Count)' 160.
House panel he knew little
The patrol said the Varney
abnut Park 's t~c livity but accident occurred on SR 124
spoke in de.Uiil about Hand11:1 north or Racine where an car pulled into the path of a
Kim 's jnU - saying Seoul
unknown truck flipped gravel vehicle operaled by Jane A.
~nt Handw Kim a t leas!
brcB kin14 tht&gt; v. indshield ctnrl Lane, 30. Gallipoli s.
$600,000 In ll ~t·... for ('CJSh
headlight un a car opera ted
- ';

Four mishaps
probed by OSP

REACf month is .dechu-ed

9.

"The purpo¥ of National

REAC.:r Month iS to salute
these dedicated people who
will provide over 25·miUion
volunteer man-hours of
public service during 1977. It
also permits REACT teams
to honor those groups, such as
the Red Cross, National
Weather Service, Police, Fire
and other agencies that have
cooperated with REACT .to
provide greater public ser·
vices."

Retail taxes
show increase
Retail sales tax receipts in
Meigs County for September
1977 were up some 27 P"fcenl
over the same month last
Year,.but motor vehicle sales
tax receipts were down about
18 percent for September
under the receipts for 1978.
According to the ·report of
Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
state treasurer, retail tax
receipts for Sept., 1977,
totaled $57,971.40 compared
to receipts of $45,359.52 for
Sept., 1976, an increase of
$12,611.88.
Motor vehicle receipts for
September 1977 amounted to
$37,150.08 while those receipts
in September 1976 amounted
to $45,522.74, a decrease of
$8,372.66.

i

'·

I

,,

Wednesday 's defeat at a later sion to close because or cash
dale cleared the Senate, 22 to shortages, adding he hopeS
9, permitting the question to they will approve additional
be ·brought up again in operating levies Nov. 8. The
alternative, he predicted,
November.
"We came up with the best would be "massive school
solution we could, and we closings."
Ocasek also said further
couldn't sell it," said Senate
~resident
Pro Tempore legislative action would have
Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron, to await the outcome of an
referring to !he 13-19 defeat of appeal from U.S. District
Court Judge Frank J .
the school borrowing bill.
Ocasek said 46 school dis- Battisti's order to keep
tricts have requested perm is- Cleveland schools open.

The five mayors of Meigs
County have issued a
proclamation. recognizing
November as National
REACT month.
Mayors participating were
Clarence Andrews,
Pomeroy; Fred Hoffman,
Middlepnt; Eugene
Thompson, Rutland; Charles
Pyles, Racine, and Herman
H. London, Syracuse. The
proclamation was presented
to members o! Meigs County
REACT, Inc. It reads :
"REACT (Radio EmerAssociated · Citgency
izens Teams) has ! ,iloo
Volunteer teams with over
150,000 participants nationwide,
who
provide
emergency communication
using Citizens Band radios .
The proclamation recognizes
the spectacular growth of CB
a&amp; a
highway
communications system and the
role REACT plays in.
providing a necessary link
from the highway lo
Hfesaving agencies .
"CB Radio usage has
grown from 6·million sets-in use in January 1975 to 20million in use by January
l977. Most of these units are
installed in vehicles and call
REACT Monitoring stations
on the official emergency and
motorists assistance Channel

•

,,

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