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•

IZ- The DaUy Sentine 1. Mtddleoort·Pllmt&gt;rOI'. 0 .. litesrla,· !\er

'&gt;!i IQ77

.

News •• in Briefs

Leaders huddle over energy bill
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHINGTON (U Pll President Carter sununoned

............ ._
:• The Best :•
: Insurance ... :

.

-~~

:~\

House

Committee approved and the

Democratic leaders to the
White HouS&lt;' today for a
breakfast
hudd le
on
prospects for completing his

adm.inistration opposes.
The
chief executive

blended domestic issues with
foreign affairs. Prince Saud,

romprehensivt&gt;

Saudi

Senate.

UPI While House Reporter

and

ene rg y

package before his global
journey late in November.
Carter's invitation came as

.
. '\- ---l·

thE"

Sl•nate

prepared ... to

eonsi der the whopping tax
credit pr ovisions in 'the

Arabia's

foreign

minister, was invited to the
White House for consultations
on a way to revive the Geneva
peace conferenee and provide
r e pr.esentation

for

Pa lesti nians without
'
sacrificing
participation by
ener"V
bill
wh
ich
the
Finance
.. o.

Israel.
Legislation boosting the pe.
nalties for fraud in the

multibilMn.&lt;Jollar Medicare
and Medicaid program alSo
awaited Carter's signature .
The busy day foUowed a
rela&lt;ed Veterans Day for the
President. Carter made the
traditional pilgrimage to Ar·
lington cemetery where he
said

the

Vietnam

era

sacrifices by his son and

::~,.~.. . ~~
- ':

Energy bill enroute
• to the senate floor
•

f -;,-.,- ;

1 ' ~· :

•

I

'" '

•

•
•
•

•

,

•

.

I

1•

•

~· ·

.

.

• For All Your •
• Farm Need s! a

•e
•
•
•
•

•

l'rot er t vour
farm with a
"o o d o
II
~wli ry. Set' u ~.

""r"

CALL 992·5120

OA S
•••
VI
: INS. AGENCY
:

BIU OUICKEL

e

•

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - ·
Legislation gra ntin g $40
• billion in energy-related lax
• breaks over the next . eight
• years headed for the Senate
e floor today with liberals
preparing a battle to kill most
of its tax credits and

:

••
:

.
:

OWNER
e
I LIGHTNING ROD INS, CO. ;
'

•
•

.........

Across From The
Cou rthouse in Pomeroy

•"~"• · •

e
e

incentives.

The bill is far from the
energy tax biU originaUy
proposed by President Carter
to use tax increases tc make
energy more e&lt;pensive and
thereby cut down on its use.
Carter summoned House
and

Senate

Democratic

others were moce difficult
because they were were
"scor ned" on their return

home. Carter recalled he was
welcomed as "something of a
hero" of Korea and World
War II.
The nation owes Vietnam
veterans "a debt of
gratitude" that has not been
expressed because the war
was unpopular. Carler said.
"I represent the kind of
family that is close to all your
hearts,'' he said in an address
at the fiag.&lt;Jraped Arlington
amphitheater.
" About 140 years after my
own family came to this
country, the first James
Carter in our family who
lived in Georgia fought in the
Revolutionary War . My
· great-grandparents
participated in the War
Between the States.

our country

during

the

Seeond World War and the
Korean War."

Carter was completing a
crash course at the Naval
Academy when World War II
ended.
"Although I came back,
from the wars as something
of a hero- although I was not
a hero - my son came back
unappreciated, sometimes
scorned by his peer group
who did not join in the
conflict," Carter said.
He referred to Jack , who
served in tbe Navy and was

given a general - less than
honorable - discharge for
smoking marijuana.
The President, his wife,
and daughter Amy, rode in a
long processional motorcade
that wound through the
cemetery amid rows of white
markers of the war dead.
Carter placed a red, white
and blue wreath at the Tomb
of the Unknown Soldier as
taps played.

(COnUnued from Pile 1)
protestmg a court order P..ohibiting unauthorized rallies on
campus.
Those arrested were part of a group known . as "The
Portage County Citizer"' for Preservation of Free Speech and
Assembly,''

·

Three of those arrested were idenUfied as Bill ArthreU, 28,
Kent Tom Goldman a student at Kent State and Jerry Alter of
Kent: The other thr;,. were not immediately identified.
CLEVELAND - PLANS FOR GATEWAY Towers, a $12
million apartment-office complex to be built downtown, were
revealed at Monday night 's City Couneil meeting by developer
Howard Shulman, who vowed to break ground within . 18
months·.
The comple&lt; would be located along East Ninth Street
north of the Cleveland Press building and south of the
Memorial Shoreway West and would encompass part of an
edsting parking lot operated by the ciS&gt;'
near the lakefront.
~,~-~

In 1he m.~r he! For il ne·.v CM. or~ goad .i~ new u5ed CM .' Then
you 're look1ng 'or on~ :~nM LJe~r Sl! t~ you r nf'&gt;ed-S. In the milrke t
for il.ufQ ftnil.riCulg? You hii.Ye to be ru~r ,lS cii5CI!m!nnnngl Th.H ~
v-.hyvou ~hould come m Vs Our !O&lt;tn r&lt;~t e s Meloweslil.llownl.:lle
by" til.~ il.nd lo,\n~-Mt' tt'[}iiJ'il.ble tn !O w-cos!. ·con··~nient month ly
rn51i!llrnenrs Our loan sr.~ecrt~ll~r~ &lt;rre g l&lt;~d 10 help 1n rtn)IWil)l11'1cy
c,1n (o'T'Ie 1n &lt;~nd tdlk ro on e of them ro&lt;1,,y And stM1 your loiln
npplicnuon whee-l\ rollmg we II l'lilve you on the roiiC1 in no ume

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5 To 7 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK "

MIDDLEPORT, ' OHIO

Memb er Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

-v-

'DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

WE ARE THE
HOTDOG
PEOPLE
THINJ(OF US

TJIAT WAY!

The proposal was placed on tl)e ballot as a constitutional
amendment by initiative jletitions circulated by the Ohio
Committee for Humane Trapping (0CHT) , which was unable
to get the legislature to enact the language into statute.
OCIIT claims leghold traps are cruel because they cause
prolonged pain and suffering, holding the animals by the limbs
until the trapper arrives to club them io-death'.
The Committee for Hwnane Trapping maintains there are a
By LEE LEONARD
number of alternatives available, including "quick-kill" traps
QPJ Sllltebouoe Reporter
or painless snares, but that the trapping industry and sports·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State Issue 2 would prohibit the use"' men will not use them because they do not want to change their
.
!he steel-jawed "leghold" trap, or any other trapping devi~s habits .
which cause "conUnued, prolonged suffering" to wild birds or
Opponents to Issue 2 are Ohiriaiis for Wildlife Conservation
anbnals.
(OWC) , comprising the fur trapping industry, the Department

•ta_..

INDIANAPOUS, IND. - ESCAPE ARTIST BILL Shirk
by escaping chains, handcuffs and a welded-shut jail cell.
Under the rules, announeed Monday by a Guinness
representative, Shirk must be naked e~cept for an athletic
supporter.
·
Sheriff Larry Cook of Hamilton Counl)l has made the old
jail at Noblesville available to Shirk , who will try to break the
record on the 50th anniversarr of t~ death of Harry Houdini.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wl'llnesday, October 26, 1977

e

a

Appointed

plllililillliiiill--------------------------.
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
KIMBALL PIANOS

QUALITY
COLOR T.V.

SALE PRICED

BUY NOW
AND SAVEl

NOW YOU KNOW
The highest price ever paid
for a sluffed· bird was 9,000
British pqund s - nearly
$25,000 - at a 1971 London
auction at which a specimen
of tpe now extinct great auk
was bought by the Iceland
Natural History Museum.

Bureau Federation.
owe contends that trapping is a valuable industry and a
good wildlife conservation practice; that "quick-kiU" traps
are not a good alternative to legholds because they do not catch
certain fur-bearing animal or else they damage the pelts.
owe also claims farmers need leghold tra.., to keep pests
away from the crops, and that trapping is necessary to.control
diseases transmitted by animals.
The Committee for Hwnane Trapping says leg hold traps,are
indiscrinninate and can catch pets and qomestic animals•as
well as wild animals.
.
Ohioans foc Wildli£e Conservation responds that leghold
Ira!&gt;' a'l'e designed by size and action to caoture spec_ijic

•

at y

•

enttne

"

Firteen Cents
Vol. 28,

No. 136

School leVy approved,
Southern will reopen
RACINE - The 1,100
students in the Southern
weal School District ·are
expected to' return to classes
Thursday after voters approved a 6.5 mill levy in a
special election. The levy
passed by a 115 vo\e margin,
1,026 to 911 .
Classes were closed Oct. 7
because of a lack of funds.
mESE NEW MEMBERS OF the Meigs County Farm
Bureeu Federation were recognized at the annual
meeting held Tuesday night at the Chester Elementary
School. They are front, I tor, Jay Blackwood , Anna -Howell

Blackwood, Ann Williams, Connie Frecker, Barbara
Roush , Martha Gearhart; back row, Matt VanVranken,
Uoyd Blackwood, Ronald Hart, John Williams, George
Frecker, James Roush, Roger Gaul, James Bailey, David
Fox, Vernon Weber.

"'·'
... ..

::::::::: ;:::::: :::;:;: :::::;::: :::::::::·:·:· :::·:·:~: :::: ·:·:=::;:; :; :;:;:;

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday througb Sunday,
a chance of showers Friday
and Sunday and fair
Saturday. Highs will be In
the 50s or the low 60s
through .the period and
lows wlll be In the 40. early
Friday and In the 30s
Saturday and Sunday.

_....;&lt;.--,·J?i'-

1&lt;\ . ..
~

....:... '-·

-"'·-

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

Predicts
record
turnout

Chardon
teachers
returmng
0

The school district will now
be able to borrow money on
the anticipated $190,000 the
.lf\'}\Js expected to generate.
This was the third time·the
issue was put before the
voters Ibis year. It was
rejected in June and in
August.
Yesterday' s . e lection

renected the interest which

has been created in the Issue
over the past few weeks. A
total of 1,942 voters went to
the polls in comparison to
1,295 in August. At the August
special election a 10 mill levy
was defeated about four to
one with 262 voters casting
baUots in favor of the issue
and 1,030 against.
Here's how the precincts

Annual banquet ls' held
. More than 300 persons
attended the annual dinner
meeting Tuesday night of the
Meigo County Farm Bureau
l'ederatlon at Chester
Elementary School.
After a steak 'dinner served
by the Eastern Blind
Boootera, tlie audience en·
joyed the Ruthie Roberts
Show troupe of Columbus.
The group elected trustees
Including Mrs. Mora, district
1; Eula Wolfe, district 2;
Sylvia Midkiff, district 3, and
.Catherine ColweU, district t.
· Henry l'rank was named
delegate to the 1978 state
convention.
Golden Canaday; state
truotee, presented star
awards to Mrs. Mora for
member .liervice.s; Robert
. Burdette for membership;
Juanita · Sayre for women's
. activities, ~nd Henry Frank
for publl~ affairs. The
· organllatlon went on ·record
opposing State Issue 2, which
deals will) animal. trapping.
Burdette · presented
memberohip . pins to new
Farm Bureau members as
. well ai to long time mem·
bers. Resolutions, adopted
. - during the meeting, were
(ConUnued on pile 12)

By HJ?LEN THOMAS.
Strategy talks were
UPt White House Repurter
arranged at the White House
CHARDON, Ohio (UPI) WASHINGTON (UP!) - with Sen. Gaylord Nelson, !)..
Striking teachers in the Jl!ew. bury Township district President. Carter swnmoned Wis., and a group of
returned to their classrooms additional members of Con· congressmen on the energy
as
Carter's
today, ending a six.&lt;Jay gress to the White House package
walkout, under a court order today to hear his pitch for an · lieutenants on Capitol Hill
and fines assessed by Geauga energy program that "will be kept a watchful eye on House
Senate
c onferees
County Common Pleas Judge fair to the consumer and not and
enrich the oil companies." hammering out the final
Robert B. Ford,
version of the bill.
Ford found 41 teachers
"We ·hope and expect to
guilty of contempt of court
have a national energy planTuesday for violating his Mid~eport
before this Congress goes
Sept. 29 restraining order
· home which will meet the
forbidding the walkout, which
goals the President has
took place Oct, 19. ·
established which is fair to
Th·ey were fined between
treat
the conswners and does not
$100 and $300, and 33 teachers
enrich the oil companies,"
were sentenced to 10 days in
jail and one to six days. The
Trick-()r· Treat Night will press secretary Jody Powell
jail terms were suspended be held in Middleport on said.
when the teachers returned to Saturday, Oct. 29, between
carter wants appropriate
school and half the fines were 6 30 ·and 7:30 p.m. The fire incentives for energy producrescinded.
siren will be sounded at the lion . and
meaningful
A negotial!on .session was beginning and closing of this conservation which "do not
scheduled for 7 p. m. Nov. 3 period.ltisrequestedthatall break the budget making
between the school board and participants be 12 years old process," Powell said.
the Newbury, . Teachers or younger.
"We have indicated this Is a
Association.
..
'!'tick-or-Treaters
are top priority and we don't
About half the 1,100 recommended to wear light intend to let other matters
students attended clas~es ' coloredclothingin'orcterto be interfere ," Powell said .
while the teachers were out visible to drivers. Parents
as buses operated on tlieir should accompany sinall
normal schedule.
chlldren. Motorists are urged
to drive with extreme caution
:;:;:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:::;:;:::::::::::: during this time.
Those residents who wish to
SUIT FILED
RACINE - Supt. Bobby
A suit in the amount of
Ord announced thai all · have visits from trick · or ·
schools of the Southern treaters are .asked to leave $5,764.23 has been fUed in
Local School Dlotrlcl will their porch lights on. Meigs County Coirunon Pleas
oP.,n al the · normal time .Children are reminded that Court by Gerald Kimble,
Thuroday. Schoolo have there are some ill and han· Warsaw, Ohio and Katurah
been closed 1D the diotrlct dicapped citizens who cannot Kimble, same address,
since Oct. 7 for flnaodal participate. Houses without against Russell Floyd Shielda
reaoono. The opening porch lights on should not be and Anna Jean Shields,
Tuppers Plains.
·
.
follows PIIB&amp;age of a 6.5 mill disturbed.
Middleport
pollee
wUI
be
The
suit
is
for
breach
of
emergency operating levy
terms on a note and
by voters at ·a special patroling neighborhoods .
delinquent back taxes and
eledion.Tuesday.

to
observe trick
or
night

GOLUMBUS (UP!)
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown predicted Tuesday
that 2,850,000 Ohioans would
visit their polling places Nov.
8 - a record for an off-year
election with only a
scattering of mayors' races,
"InCreased interest in the
candidates
plus · four
statewide issues will aid in
niaking this election tu,rnout
larger than usual;" Brown
said.
Brown explained !bat al·
though their are mayoral
contests in Cleveland, Toledo
and Youngstown, most of the
state's mayors are up for
election in two years.
The secretary of state said
the record turnout for a
cowparable year was
2,795,892 in 1965.
Two years ago, the turnout
. of 3,1152,431 was S)Velled by
mayoral elections and
interest in • nine statewide :;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;
issues, including Gov. James
A. Rhodes' bond issues,
· NOW YOU KNOW
Brown said.
''Thumbs up,'' to Romans
The secretary of stale said watching : gladiators in
that if Issue 1 passes combat, actually meant a
Clearing tonight, with lows
repealing election day voter vanquished fighter was to be
registration , $1 million in slain, not spartl&lt;l; "thumbs in the upper 40s . Mostly
election costs will' be saved. down" - pointed away from sunny and mild Thursday,
Brown said that is the the heart - spared ·his life. with highs between 65 and 70.
amount projected to be spent
on election day registration
for the 1978 general election
and 1979 primary .,
He said the money, part of
a $2.3 million allocation for
administering the election

~surance.

Weather

laws ,

•
PRESENTED 35 year membership pins in the Meigs
County Farm Bureau Tuesday night were seated, 1 to r,
Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mrs. Lettie McCain; back, I to r,
Warren Pickens, John T. Holliday .

would

FOR AGAINST
Lebanon
110
234
. East Letart
85 · 64
Letart
103
64
Racine VUlage
173
98
Syracuse Village 202
168
Minersville
151 108
Racine Precinct 202
175
TOTAL
1,026
911

Congressmen invited
to hear . Carter pitch

=

miRTY YEAR membership pins in the Meigs County Farm Bure~u Tue$lay night
went to .front, I to r, NeacU Carsey, Ruth Smith, Mildred Gaul; back, Jack .Carsey and
Delbert Smith.

voted:

BOARD MEETING
The Southern Local School
Board will meet in regular
session Thursday at 7:30p.m.
in the high school cafeteria.

Carter has vowed to call off
his nine.flation trip in late
November if an energy
program is not wrapped up
by then.
" We're prepared to stay as

long as it lakes," Powell said.
The President plans a news
cOnference at 2:30p.m. EDT

Thursday.
While energy remains a
domestic political problem, it
has
i n ter na tIo na 1
ramifications as weU. Carter
Tuesday urged . Prince Saud,
the Saudi Arabian Foreign
Minister, to ·assist in
preventing another increase
in world oil prices in the
coming year.
In a relate(~ foreign affairs
matter. Carter said he had.
decided what position the
United States will take in
U.N. Security Council
deliberations on possible
sanctions against South
Africa , New restrictions on
arms shipmentS may be
sought, but not economic
sanctions; officials said.
The President's busy week
followed a weekend S(lrtie to
the West and Midwest.
Powell · challenged the
"various and sundry"
interpretations of the reason
for the cross-eountry trip to
Detroit, Des Moines, Denver,

Omaha and Los Angeles.
"It was not our view that in
three days the President
would announce· total and
complete solution on urban
America, farm crops and that
he would deliver untold ·
millions of gallons of water to
the West.
"II was his intent to deal
with these problems directly
and to point out that they are
complicated and
longstanding ... and to give
some indicatio n of the
government ' s intention to

deal with them.
~~There is no fair solution
that makes everyone happy,"
Powell said.

become

available in July, 1979, for the
legislature to reappropriate
to his office or spend
elsewhere.
Brown said counties have
been reimbursed $49,840 for
. election day costs and
another $750;000 is expected
to be spent for that purpose
through next June . .
::::::~:::::::;:; :;:;:: :::;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;::

You'll really likethP. new selection of fine quality Kimball Spinet
and Cor. sole Pianos
- Select. your' ..favorite
and .wood finish.
\
... ... style
..
.
. All
complete with padded benches . You'll like the very low sale prices,
too .
Use our sensible c redit service to budget your paym ents .

KIMBAll PI.ANOS ON THE 3RD R.OOR

animals, and traps larger than 5'hinches are alreadY.barined
in Ohio.
.
' ·owe believes putting a prohibition in the Coostitution is the
first step toward eliminating trapping, and then forbidding
other methods of laking game. OCHTdenies this is true.
The Humane Trapping Committee says it was forced to seek
broad language banning any trapping devices causing
"continued, prolonged suffering" because otherwise trap
manufacturers would have changed the name of the leghold
trap to the "pawhold" trap to skirt the prohibition •.
QCIIT says the interpretation of the constitutional provision,
if it is approved, will be made in the courts under rational
guidelines.
Next: State Issue 3, housing

of Natural Resources, sportsmen 's groups and the Ohio Farm

•

Tear gas, bird
"'
shot needed to : Area Deaths l
quell uprising

School

·Looking for A Car?

(EDITOR'&amp; NOTE: Voten go lo the polio Nov. 8 to vote on
Jooues, more than ZllO ••hool operating levies
aad to dee Ide 10veral mayoral coolest.. Following Is another
Ill a 10r1et of pre-eleetl.., dlsPIItcbes prepared by United Press
la~roatloaal '"' the CIMilesll aad Jooues on the Ohio ballot
Today'• artlde deals with State Issue Z, which would ban th~
- of lecbold traps In the state. 1
lour

will try to enter the Guinness Wor ld Book of Records next week

Robert Byrd warned liberals
!hey could jeopardize the
whole energy bill if .they
" My own father was ... first
WASHINGTON - THE TOP BRASS AT the Transpressed their fight.
lieutenant in the First World
portation
Department is just going to have to listen to the radio
Kennedy, in a statement War. I wore the uniform of
and
read
the newspaper to find out what's goingoon in the
issued on the eve of noor
world
.
action, called the bill "littie
Twelve $375 color television sets bought last month for
tax credits and other more than a bloated $40
senior
officials to "keep them inlormed" are being sent back
incentives to encourage billion grab bag of wasteful
on
orders
of Transportation Secretary Brock Adams.
conversion to fuels other than Ia&lt; subsidies that have no
The
order
followed inquiries last week by a reporter tipped
oil and gas or to beCOlfle more place in a responsible energy
off
about
the
purchaS&lt;' . A department spokesman said the
energy efficient. It contains policy."
television
sets
were to be used by "various senior officials ."
He singled out the centerno ta&lt; increases at aU.
Long's strategy is to take piece of the bill - a 50 per
r--- ~ ----------------------~
the Senate bill to conference cent investment lax lcredit for
with a House-passed bill industries, utilities and
which is more in line with others who convert plants
.I
.
1
Carter's wishes, combining from oil and gas to coal or.
some
other
plenUful
fuel.
the two into a bill that would
LEWIS M. EVANS
Enterprise United M&amp;thodlst
Kennedy said this type of
Lew is Ma ldwyn Evans , 73,
be acceptable to Carter.
Church .
a native of Centerpoint , d ied
'Funeral serv ices will be
Presumably it _ would conversion is feasible only for
Monday In Miam i Bea ch, Fla .
held at 1 p.m. Thursday at lhe
contain some of the House lax about 1,100 of the largest
Mr . Evans , a retired
Ewing Funeral Home with
Johannesburg poli ce businessman,
increases with some of the · firms, and "this huge credit
By NICHOLAS HANKS
was the son of
the Rev . James Corbitt of .
arrested
seven
bla
ck
the late Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Senate lax breaks. However, is thus an undreamed of
JOHANNESBURG, South
flclallng. Burial will be In
Rock . Springs Cemetery .
Long 's strategy has been windfall foc the industrial Africa ( UPI ) - Police fired clergymen, believed to be Evans .
He is survived by his wife,
Friends may call at the
tear gas and bird shot and Roman Catholic priests, in Bess
challenged by a group of giantS of the nation."
; a sister, lv\argaret and funeral home after 7 th is
The bill cootains many charged with batons Monday the downtown area while brother. Phillip.
liberals including Sen. Henry
evening .
Cremation will take place
Jackson, D·Wash., and other credils, including some to break up protests triggered protesting last week'S
Edward Kenn~edy , !).Mass, for individuals such as a by a tough government crackdown with placards that in Florida .
defied the govermnent to
This opposition is expected to credit Of up to $400 for
crackdown oo dissent.
. 'EiiGENE YOUNG
residential
insulalioo
.
stretch debate. through the
One black youth was woun- " Ban the Bible." They w~re " GLENN MATTHEWS
HARRISONVILLE
Glenn Edward Matthews ,
later
freed
on
$23
bail
each.
However,
most
of
the
bill
week and possibly into the
ded, 66 were jailed and 18
Eugene Young, 72 , died
husband
~f
Mrs
.
Rulh
In Stinkwater, a town in the VIrginia Young Matthews. Monday at Veterans Hospital
would benefit industry or official vehicles wer~ set on
weekend.
Baphulhatswana homeland, who resided at 14 West Third ln Ch illi co the . He was -born
Long gained a powerful ally utilities spch as a $3 per fire.
Aug. 10, 1905, lhe son of the
over the weekend when barrel tax credit for oil from
The police unleashed their polict; said 300 black youths St., Frederick, Md .. died at late
Alexander and Verna
the
Frederick
Memor
ial
Senate Democratic Leader shale rock.
barrages of birdshot, tear gas smashed bus windows while Hosp llal on Monday. Oct. 17, C, m pbell" Young . ·
trying
to
keep
workers
fr
om
and baton charges to control
He Is survived. by his wife,
fo llow ing a long Illness . He
the outbreaks in widely sepa· rea.ching their jobs." They was born in Buffalo, W. Va ., Fra nces Welsh Young i one
, Norma Lee of
rate areas of South Africa. disper s~d before police 011 May 29, 1911 , the son of Ihe sister
late John Edward and Verna Harri so nv i lle and several
arrived.
Seven priests were arrested
cousins .
Matthews.
The government alSo an· Warner
while marching on the Johan·
He worked as a farmer
Mr . Matthews spent his
nounced Monday it will in· youth in Gallipolis , He ' before serving In World War
nesburg police statioo.
II. He served at duty stations
The violence came five crease Ule "service charges" graduated from Gallla In
Florida , Puerto Rico and
Academy
High
School
In
1929.
paid
by
the
1.2
million
blacks
days after the while minority
Trinidad
. He was given a
regime ouUawed 18 anti· living in Soweto, a ghetto 15 · For the past 18 years he ciJatlon by then president
miles southwest of the was employed by the Ha rry .Truman. After the war
·
government groups, closed capital,
.
(ConUnued from Pill• i)
beginning Dec. I .
Frederi ck · Construct ion Co. ended he served as a main through 1980 witn tne Issue; ·without it, schools will close early 1 down the nation's top two
at Ohio
He is survi ved by his wife. tenance. man
The government did not
black newspapers, jailed 49
Ruth· Young .Matthews, University.
in the fall of 1978. Superstitiously, no exact date has been opponents of apartheid and specify the size of the hikes Mrs.
~He was a member of the
three sons, Jack ·;.Young
forecast.
but said residents would not
of Potomac ; David American Legion Post . 39,
The Northmore Seh&lt;;ol Districi in Morrow County is asking slapped gag orders on five be asked to pay more than 25 Matthews
Warner Matthews of Mt. Mason ic Lodge 411 and
for the largest levy in terms oi millage in the slate. A l:Hnill others.
i
per cent of their salaries for Airy , Md.; Roger Williams Eastern Star 225 at_
levy to raise $378,677 a year was voted qown 2-llasl spring by
Police said lhey f red
Matthews of Pars ley, Va.; Harr isonville.
several shots at a crowd of rent and municipal services. lwo daughlers, Mrs. Dav id
Funeral serv ices will be
the Northmore voters who haven't passe!! a levy since 1971.
blacks stoning the house ofa
In April, the government (S usan) Epstein, Wayland, Friday at ·11 a.m. at the
Officials said the schools, enroUing 1,546 students, wiU slay police
constable
In announced it would raise Mass.; Mrs. Wil liam (Amyl Ew ing Chapel wllh ' the Rev .
open through the end of the year, regardless of the levy vote, Queenstown, 380 miles south rents in Soweto, but the order Jacobs of Birmingham, Ernest Strick land officiating .
.; one brother, Clare Burial will be In Wells
however, thanks to a f/1 ,000 payment of back taxes. But with. of Johannesburg , One youth s p a r k e d
1 a r g e Mich
Matthews, of Xen ia. Ohio ; Cemetery . Friends ma_y call
no new money, closing early next year is seen as inevitable . was shot in the shoulder and demonstrations and the three sisters, Mrs. Nita at the funeral home on Thurs.
U a 12.11-mill levy to raise $1.4 million a year fails in another 12 were arrested.
increases were poslponoo for Simmons of Jackson ; Miss day from 2to 4and 7 to9 p.m .
Matthews
of
Cambridge, officials said they would request a state auditor's
Police fired birdshot and further study . The hikes Helen
Springfield,
and
Mrs.
Nola
review, the first step to possible closing, in January.
tear gas and launched batoo announced Monday resulted Brabham of Gallipolis; six
. In the 5,75~tudent New Carlisle·Bethellocal district of · chargesonsome300blacksat from that stucty.
grandchildren and several
Clark County, a 9.12-milllevy wiD decide whether schools stay a . township near King
nieces and nephews.
JUANITA HALLEY
Funeral services were held
open past Dec. 6.
Juan
ita Gay Halley, ;40, Rt .
from
the
Smith
,
Fadely,
A !().mill levy in Lancaster, fairfield County, is needed to Williams Town, 45() miles
1,
Crown
City, died at 2: JO
Keeney ana·IBasfo'rd Funeral
raise $1.77 million year to keep schools operating after . south of the capital, who were
Horne in Frederick on Thurs- a.m. today In the HolzerNovember 1978. But officials· said a countywide property throwing rocks at policemen.
Medlcal Center. She had been
day , Oct. 20.
In tailing health since March .
revaluation is responsible for the high figure . They said it
Forty.&lt;Jeven l&gt;lacks were
The Rev . Robert E. Zlm· Mrs.
Halley had been em .
merl l and Rev. Raymond · L.
actually amounls to a 6.2-miU Issue.
arrested, according to Maj.
played
14 years at the GSI
(ConUnued
frooi
Pill'
1)
Roderick
of
the
Calvary
h b 11 · he Gen. Dawid Kriel, in charge
of .·riot control throughout indicated that It Is willing to United Methodist Church prior to her Illness.
Other large levies include a 9.77-milllevy on t e a ot m t
She was born Sept. 28, 1937
Allen East Local of Allen County and a 9.4-miU issue in the
officiated . Interment was In
Northwest Local district of BuUer and HamUton counties.
South Africa. He did not say invest funds in the park, for Mount Olivet Cemetery In In Gallla County, daughter of
Murray Church , Rt . 1, Crown
Levy Sllpporters are counting on the state's new instant what sparked the alleged the second time, even though Frederick . ,
City. and Audr~y Reynolds
major
damage
was
incurred
Church.
voterregistrationlawtoworkforthem.Coupled WI'th ama j or rock
At throwing.
Sibasa , .in the Venda at the facility due to van·
NANCY WALKER
She Is surv ived by her
gekmt-the-vole effort in Amherst this September the Tribal homeland 300 miles daUsm. Kelly said he will
Nancy Dil l Walker , 92, husband, Carl Halley, lhree
registration program pulloo in 1,000 extra voters who passed a
, Randy Halley,
4.&amp;-mill levy that had previously failed.
northeast of the capital, arso- report to the council after he Route 3, Pomeroy, died children
confers with the post com· Monday at lhe Arcadia Crown City; Kevin Halley of
nists
set
fire
to
18
Venda
Also, voters in imperiled school districts have responded
mitt
Nursing Home in Coolville. Columbus and Terry, at
favorably this year to levy requestS. In a nationaUy publicized government vehicles,
ee.
Mrs. Walker , daughter of home; a grandson , Jasen,
Catl Horky, councilman, lhe late Thomas ana Amanda two sisters, Mrs . Lenora
case, the 1,442 voters of Monroeville voted overwhelmingly destroying six of them, Kriel
asked council' to take a stand Byrne
Radford,
was Saunders of Chesapeake and
Oct. 12 for p. $245,000 levy that reopened schools already shut sai,;:;e arsonists alSo tried to at'its next meeting opposing preceded In death by her· first Mrs . Lev ada Harvey " of
for the year, It was the loth try for a new levy since 1!168.
""
husband, Robert Dill and Gallipolis ; two brothers,
The legislature has also been searching for a way to help the torch go\lerrunent buildings the t ra nsfer Of P"b'"' em· three sons, Glerin, Earl . ana Larry Church of Crown City
ployes from the · state Frank Dill, four brothers and and Murr.ay Franklin Church
schools, including a new formula for financing thein. The but caused liitle damage.
retirement plan to social a sister.
of Philadelphia Pa . ond two
lawmakers also approved the largest education appropriation
security
now
being
Surviving are her husband , half -sisters , Mrs . Joyce
in history this year, $1 billion for 1977-79. The extra money has
suggested. Council indicated Walter Walker ; a daughter , Reynolds of Gallipolis and
Edna Howell, Columbus; a Mrs. Joyce Boothe, Eureka
saved the Canton school district, where tWo lsstres for 8.8 mills
College board
the state retirement system sister, Bertha Parker , Star Rt ., Gall ipol is.
are on the ballot, from possible closing this year.
is better than social security Pomeroy; two daughters -in A half -brother , Jerry
which, they said, has too law, Thelma Dill, Syracuse, Church preceded her In
meeting slated
many problems at the and Goldie Dill, Racine ; five death .
MEDICAL PATIENT
grandchildren, 13 great.
She was a member of
The
Middleport
grandchildren and one great . Mercerville Baptist Church.
The Rio Grande Com· present t ime.
Councll discussed a "drop great -grand child . Other Gallipolis Eastern .Star and
· Emergency Squad answered munity College Board of
orr·
at the side of the street survl,ors are tour step. OCSEA. She. was married
a call to 735 Park St. at 4:31 TrWIIees will hold a special
on
Middleport
Hill . and the grandchildren , and 13 slep. Nov. 25 , 1954.
p.m. Monday for Grace meeting Wednesday, Nov. 2
great . grandchildren.
Funeral serVIces will be
Beabout, who was taken to at 7 p.m. in the Rio Grande posslbilltiesofthevlllageha II · Mrs. Walker was a charter held at 1 p.m. Thursday from
exterior being pointed up in member of Pomeroy Chapter fhe
Veterans Memorial Hospital College Board Room .
Waugh -Halley-Wood
near future.
186, Order of Eastern Star, Funeral Home with Rev.
where she was admitted.
Purpose of the meeting Is to theAttending
wete Mayor and a charter member of the Bruce Unroe officiating.
select an architect for the Hoffman and councilmen Daughters of America . . She Burial will be In ·Ridgelawn
Firte Arts Center, and to
belonged to- the past coun- Cemetery at Mercerville.
Friends may call at the
approve program equipment Horky, Kelly, Dewey Horton setors of the · D. of A., the
Allen
King.
American
Legion
Auxiliary
funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9
and
budget for the technical
and the Ladles Aid of the Wednesday.
cateer center.
.
The regular 'monthly
meeting has been changed
from Nov. 9 to Nov. 16 at 7
p.m. ·This is a ]oint meeting
with the executive com·
mittees of Rio Grande
College. ·
leaders to breakfast at the
White House to discuss the
energy package.
The Senate bill, as guided
to the Senate noor by Finance
Committee Chairman Russill
Long, I).La ., would rely oo

Issue 2 would ban leghold traps in Ohio

I

PARADENOV.U
.The annual Christmas
parade _In Middleport,
sponsored by the Middleport
Chamber of CommerCe, will
be held. Monday, Nov. 28 at
6:30p.m.
Anyone Interested ,.. in
pa'i\lclpaUng in the parade
are to caD Mlck Childs at 992·
2142.

THREE. KILLED
GffiARD, Pa. (UP!)
Three persons were j killed
early today in a two-ear
collision on Penrisylvania 18
about three miles so uth of
this Erie 'County community.
Stale police identified the
dead as Alfred P. Dell.licio,
30, Erie, his brother, Francis,

· 31, Olmsted Falls, Ohio, and
Joseph J. Finchio, 18, Erie.
Investigating offi cers said
the acci6ent happened when
a ca r driven by Alfred
Deluccio passed another
vehicle in a curve and stru ck

the Finc hi n ca r

a lmost

headon. The three were dead
;,~t the scene.

Locusts ca nnot fly until
their body temperature
reaches about 70 degrees F.
The Cool night air stiffens
their muscles and they must
bask in the sun before taking
wing.
J

:·:·: ·::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::;:::::;:::::;.;:;.;::::::::'~:::::::::::::

I·
HALLOWEEN CONTEST - The Frmers Bank is
celebrating Halloween by having a. Jack.Q.J..antern
contest. John Karschnik, who is ln charge of the contest, is

shoJVIl with a few of the unusual entrieii that have been

.r

.Ji._

,_

submitted. There are two age groups. The first for
children up to 10 years of age and the second group .for
children from 10 to 16 years of age. The winners in each
age group andptegory will receive ·a f\P prize. Tuellllay
was the deadine for entries.
.
·

.,

�' r

r

~

~-~~;~~;=-~TQVRDC gets $172,997 crime grant
~

~,·,:,'.

R eporl

~

By Oarence

~

Miller

~

The House and Senate are regulation bill, and that the
currently in conference at- President's package abnost
tempting to iron out dll- totally ignored the necessary
ferences in the National incentives to develop new oil
Energy Act. Now is a good and gas supplies and comtime to reflect ~ on what has merciali.z.e alternate energy
happened to the Energy Bill Jources suCh as synthetic
since
the
Ho~se
. of . fuels , solar and geothermal
Representatives _.passed it• energy, breeder reactors,
version in the summer.
and wind and tidal power.
I noted back m August that
One by one the Senate has
Ule President's energy bill removed
or
seriously
was "railroaded through the weakened ea.ch one of the
House witll little or no chance .harmful
energy taus
to vote on most of the con- President
Carter
had
troversia l provisions ." A proposed. As a result, there
rarely ~ modified closed has been a lot of new!
rule w · adopted during recently about the President
debate on e House floor to attacking the Senate for
limit the kind of amendments changing his bill. However,
that could be offered to the energy plan needed
change and imJirnve the bill. I changing very much.
went on to say, "As a result.
The Energy crisis is real,
the House was forced to vote and the U. S. does need a
for or against the total comprehensive energy policy
package with no up or down to keep the American
vote allowed on specific items economy
hea It by
and
such as the : gasgualer TAX, growing. We have needed an
mandatory coal conversion energy policy for a long time .
TAX , crude oil TAX, oil and But America needs an energy
natural gas user TAX, utility policy which puts the
rate reform ... and 30 on."
necessary investment capital
It was noted in that column in the private ""ctor to
that if adequate time and develop new energy Jources
debate bad been set aside to and expand eiisting ones.
look at the negative impact The American taxpayer
the bill would have on our cannot afford any new energy
of taxes or inflation, and the
economy,
instead
railroading it through, the American consumer should
energy package would have not be forced to go through
been recommitted to the another winter of energy
various committees for more shortages because of a bad
work and refinement. I went energy i&gt;olicy. That is why
on to state that " unless the the President's mergy bill
Senate examines the energy needed and still needs
bill in more detail and changing.
changes it to emphasize
As I stated in August on this
energy production, America same subject : ''The only sure
ex peel
more way out of the energy crisis is
can
bureaucracy, higher we~, not by taxing people more,
artificially inflated fuel bills, bul producing more energy to
growing trade deficits , sustain a growing eConomy.
greater dependency . on ·Conservation of existing fuels
foreign energy supplies and along with &lt;;onverSion to new
worsening fuel shQrtages." and dllferent energy sources
Since that article was is absolutely necessary, But
writt;, in August, the senate conservation and conversion
has been working on the imposed through the free
President's energy plan, and market pricing mechani.!m Is
appears to have examined it far preferable to costly
in more detail · and changed energy taxes and govenunent
much of it to emphaSize Imposed regulation and
energy production. For- allocation.
We cannot tax our way out
tunately, the Senate seems to
have recognized in part, as I of the energy shortage. I will
stated in August, that the continue to emphasize this
House version was nothing point as the Hoqse and Senate
more than a glorified l8lt and go to conference.

Scott's World:
Coogan caper
By VERNON Sarrt'
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
What better way to celebrate
Halloween than with the
weirdo ;•Addams Family"
which regrouped fir a 90minute television special to
be seen Oct. 3()'
·
" The. Addams Family"
series left the air in 1966 after
two years and 78 episodes. All
of the original cast, including
J ohn Astin as Gomez,
C;lrolyn Jones as Morticia
and Ted Cassidy, Lurch tbe
butler, are back in their
ghoulish roles.
Only the late Blossom
Rock , who was Jeanette
McDonald's sister and who
played grandma, will be
mJssing . " Thing" and
"Cousin It," along with the
bizarre props (including the
legs of a man being devoured
by a swordfish ), are also
back in the Addams' haunted
house .
Weirdes t of the clan,
ociginated in the New Yorker
magazine by cartoonist
Olarles Addams, is Uncle
Fester, the bald, squeakyvoiced misanthrope played
insanely by the movies ' first
child stai, Jack(e Coogan.
" It was a ·hell of a reunion, "
Coogan obse rved the other
day. "It was the first time '
we 'd been together' in 11
· years·.
"We bad . no trouble reestablishing our roles. Just
like old times but with a fresh
approach. We bad nothing but
laughs.
·
"The old show was done oo
film in a studio. This time we
taped in an abandoned old
mansion. p&gt;e crow. all young
people wHo did . the U.ping ,
kept ruining takes . by
laughing out loud .'·
Coogan has become Uncle
Fester to the younger generabon. But to oldsters he's still
"The Kid," the ragamuffin
who costarred with Char lie
Chaplin in 1920.
"I'll never live down my
image as 'Tbe Kid, "' he ·~d .
"But it's nice to be rerhembered as Fester too.
" Most people think 'The
Kid' Jias my fir!&amp; film. Not
so. Back in 1916, wnen I was 2,
I wocked in 'Skinner's Baby'

at the old Essanay Studios in
Chicago for a guy named Max
Abrams. He 1ater became
Bronco Billy AnderJon .
, " But I became an inslant
child stir witii 'The Kid· and 1
loved every minute of the
work and fun and activity
·
that followed .
"It 's not true that I missed
having a childhood. I had a
wooderful time surrow:ulllll
by knowledgeable peoplewoo
truly cared foc me . .I don't
think it's better to. grow up
'nonnal' and get the measles
and mwnpa and have your
. front teeth knocked out.
"!led a sheliered life \Ultil I
went to coilege. But I WaSI 't
ck&gt;prived and I can't say I
missed anything as a !tid
except a lot of heartaches. If I
had to do it over again, I'd
just do it better.".
·
At 83 Coogan has almost
total recall and is putting his
memocy to use wrilillg an
autobiography. He already
has filled 700 pages of
manuscript and says be 's
Cllly covered his life until the
age of 6 when he made ''Tbe
Kid."
His principal sources of

research are two dozen enor·
mous books of clippings ,
photographs and stories from
newspaper and ll'l8Uirine ac~b.

\

"The books get smaller as I
get older," Coogan said. "I'm
going lit tell the truth arxll 'm
writing it myself. Some
people may be hurt, but I 'm
determined that readers
know the facts ."
Coogan earned a fortufle
making films foc his own
company under the guidance
of his father . But the mooey
was frinered away. ~ a
consequen ce. the " Coogan
Law," protective child Jabot
legi.slati011, was established.
While the ex-&lt;:hild slar isn 't
the multi-millionaire he
might have been bad his
earnings been saved and
properly invested, Coogan is
well off financially.
He owns a home in Palm
Springs, where he sperids
eight moo ths a year, and
another in&lt;l-lalibU where he
lives during the summer.
His youngest child, Christo-

·
COLUMBUS {UPI ) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes has anoounced approval of :H grants
totaling more than $935.000 in
state and federal crime
control funds .
The largest grant, $1n,997

was to the Ohio Valley
Re gional Development
commission to fund an adult
diversion system for the
commissio n's ninecounty
area in southern Ohio. A
majoc project in the system
would be the esU.blishment of
a regional criminal justice
infocmation system.
The SUite of Ohio awarded

the grants unck&gt;r federally
approved provisions of the
state 's
Sl9 .6
million
Comprehensive Criminal
Justice Plan foc 19n.
Other grants approved

the lTime lab facilities at the
Bureau
of
Criminal
Ide n I if i c ation
and
ln\·estigation.
-$i0,000 tv the city of
Warren, Trumbull County, to

were :

initiate the operation ofo~ of

-$100,000 to lhe Academy ''School Within a School," an
for Contemporary Problems. alternative classroom and
Columbus, for polic)' and work experience program for
technical assistance to the delinquent youth .
Ohio Juvenile
Justice
-$50,675 to Clinton Coun ty
Advisory Com,misston for one for the continued lurxling of a
• year .
county youth services
-476.000 to the state bureau.
Atorne)• General 's office for
-$41.667 to the Ohio Youth
the purchase of a gas Commission for the continued
spectrometer for upgrading _funding of the eonununitv

Volunteer Project, which
provides for volunteer
programs within regi onal
office settings.
- S37,972 to Trumbull
County for continued funding
a

living

Mason county school
leader resigns post
County
The
Mason
educational community
received a giant jolt Monday
evening when Superintendent
of Schooilt Lowell Cook announced his resignation.
The
sutprise
an·
nouncement came in the form
of a letter addressed t.o the
Board of Education, which
was r$1d by Board President
HaJTy Siders at the end of the
meeting.
Apparently, Cook, who has
served in that capacity for a
year and a baH, is resigning
strictly for heahh reasons as
he cited in his Jetter.
The announcement came
after the boanl emerged from
a 45·minute executive
session .
In his letter, Cook stated:
" It is with regret that I
must inform yoU-that I am
resigning my pos~jtion as
Superintendent of the Mason
County Schools to be effective
upon the Mason County
Board of Education employing a new superintendent
of schooilt.
" I have enjoyed working
lor the Mason County School
system in the top administrative position in the
system and I have the
greatest admiration and
respect for the five 'most
excellent PfORie who cornpose the Mason County

pher 11, hasn 't done any
acting. But his grandson ,
Keith, at 6 is a veteran of 35
television commercials.
"It 's really Iunny," Coogan
said, laugh ing . " Chris is
Keith 's uncle and they are
great pals. They play
together all the time.
" I'd like to see Keith
continue with acting because
I don 't want a grarxlson who's
a bum . I know he bas talent.
He 's a little old man, really,
vet)' .deep.
·
"He has the right perspective, just like I did. He can go
from the world of grown-up
work to being a child without
being hurt. It's simple to
adjust from the real to the
unreal.
"You can bet his earnings
w1ll be protected, thanks to
the 'Coogan Law.' The only
thing I'm really sorry about
is the finances. I wish I bad
some of that mmey I earned
in the days wben I made
·S20,000 a week and the income
l8lt was only 4\1 percent.
" I think I cOuld have used it
a lot better than it was used.
Kids today have a muCh
better shake. Not just money,
but they work decent hours.
" In the old days we 'd work
day and night to finish
sequences. These days the
kids work only four or five
hours.
"I have only ooe real
regret . In
1923 that
goddamned dog, Rin-Tin-Tin,
beat me out for the honor of
top boxoffice attracti.on in

movies."

nu: DAILY Sf;ll.liNEL
DE\'OTED TO TilE
OOERESTOF
MEJCiS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHIO.
E.nc. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFUCH
City f.djlor
,
Publ~hed jliltl y "ell lTPl SOI!luniay
b} Tik Otuu Valle~ Publeihulg

C.•mp;~n~ ·Mu !Lutll:'dlii . hl(:.
ill
Cuun St. , Pun~r u~· . O!u., ~;69
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":t1 " ' ma ll m Ohw Ot JMI W \- a ,
CJII.· Y~·a 1 . t!.! .OO

~to:

ll &gt;&lt;.lfilt.:o&gt;,
I ll 511 . Tlttt't' m .. ntlh. F 00 .
f: lw o. ilo:n• S;!ri.IIO h'ilf. 51 , tnunt!t•
I ll .J\1 . T hrt·• . lt lf'{t! h ~ . ,s.; 50 .
~lh!-o t n ~ ll"l' prtt ~ H ~ ll h"' Sutkl a ~
"l llti\'....St'll!lllt'l

pretrial

diversion

program designed to reduce
recid'ivisrn among adult
offenders .
-$30,000 to Erie, otU.wa
and Sandusky counties for the
continued funding' of the TriCounty Youth Bureau.
-$30,000 to the Ohio Youth
Commission for initial
fu nding of " Apa rtment
Living Plus," an aparunent
project

inv olving

vouJhful stat us offe nders
between the ages of 16 arxl 18.
-$29,765 to Stark County
for the continued fundin g of
adult volunteer aides in the
county probation office.
-$26,325 to the Department
of
Rehabilitation
and
Correct ion to continue

5, Gallipolis Ferry, wUI be
open for acceptance until
Nov. 14.
Notification of the position
will be statewide and
questions or concerns of the .
position are to be directed to
Assistant Supt. William
Capehart .
In speaking about his own
future, Ca pehart said he
would definitely stay in his
DETROIT I UPI I - More
present capacity and would than
50 local union leaders
not seek the positi on from around the country are
currently being held by Cook. mapping plans to scrap the
The 54-year-old superi n- 4\Hlour work week in the first
tendent is resigning after concerted drive of its kind
fulfilling a year and a half of since the Depression.
a four-year contract.
Delegates represe ntin g
Prior to a cceptin g the more than 200.000 union
position here, Cook was the members in 13 states voted
assistant
principal
at Tuesday to convene a
Ravenswood High School and nationa·l conference next
the former Vocational April in Dearborn to get the
Director of .the Mason County drive for a shorter work week
School.
going lull steam.
He began . hi~ educational
" We have almost 60 million
career in 194e, as an in- ·people who work 40 hours a
structor in the Clay County week· or more . If you reduce
School system. Since then he the workweek one hour, it
has
taught
vocational would provide over 1.5 mlllon
agriculture arxl biology in ne'\\' jO bs ," said Frank
Clay , Wirt , Ja ckson and R\Ulnels, presick&gt;nt of United
Mascn counties.
Auto Workers Local 22, in a
Cook is also well known in keynote speech.
this area for the work he has
Runnels ·was later elected
done with the Mason County president of the spearheading "
Fair, which included being a group ,
" All
Unions'
former president of that Committee to Shorten the
association.
Workweek .:·
He said the. 4!1-bour week,
established. by Congress in
1938 with the passage of the
Fair Labor Standards Act,
now helps keep 10 million
people on the unemployment
rolls.
" It is our positi on that it
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.O:
would be Cheaper to employ
these people than to pay for
· their
unemployment,"

School Board. However, I do
not feel that I can .any longer
endanger my health. as you
are aware, and I refuse .to
give the job any less than one
hundred per cent of my effons ."
Assistant Superintendent
William
Capeha rt .
m
speaking on his immediate
superior and friend ; stated :
0
His ttue concern dealt with
all phases of education, both
cuJTicular and non&lt;urricular
and that same concern extended to both professional
and non-service personnel
whom he saw as people."
One of the highest compliments was paid by Board
· President Siders who said: "I
am deeply concerned about
getting someone as dedicated
to the school system as Mr.
Cook is':'The type of person he
is will be hanl to lind/' ·
Both Siders and Capehart
noted that Cook, a fiscal
conservative. helped to bring
the school . system out of a
financial crisis that had
plagued it when he first took
office.
After the board accepted
the resignation with regret, it
passed a motion to begin
accepting applications for the
position. These applications
which are to be sent to Board
President HaJTy Siders, Box

Unions want to
scrap 40 hour

work week

HEALTH

Fiber found a blessing
By Lawreace Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB-Bless
the woman who wrote you
about 'the pain sbe was suffering from diverticulosis. I
have bad it for years. Four
years ago I went into the
hospital for X rays and a
cure. I was put on a soft diet
along with sulfa pills. It
seemed to heal the colon, then
about five months ago I
started having this awful pain
in the abdomen. I guess I was
never free of it until I read
your column about using
cereals with fiber.
For three weeks now after I
started using All·Bran I
haven 't felt any discomfort. I
have a bowl every other morning with a banana or
peaChes. It isn't easy to take
as I've never liked cereals of
.
any kind.
I am regular and nonnalm
all respects. I can 't think
thank you enough and w1ll
pass on the wonl to friends
who have this trouble.
Also I wanted to thank you
for The Health Letter you
sent me on strokes. I read it
to my husband who bad one
two years ago. He quit smoking and feels much more alert
and better physically.
DEAR READER-I am
glad to hear both you and
your husband ~Jltve improved.
Several years ago when you
were first evaluated for
diverticulosis, those jJesky
pockets of .the colon, the idea
of using fiber or bulk lor
treatment was just beginning . . The concepb of treatrnenl of spastic colon, diverticulosis and related problems has undergone a
drastic change since then. To
give you a more complete appreciation of diverticulosis I
am sending you The Health
Letter nwnber !Hi, Divertirulosis. Others who want inlonna!ion about this common
problem can send 50 cent.&gt;
with a long , sU!mped, selfad&lt;lresSea envelope for it. to
me in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Station , New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB-You

recommended that women
past the menopause should
get at least 1000 milligrams (!
gram ) of calcium a day . I try
to eat foods that contain a
large amount of calcium but I
am one of those who cannot
· tolerate dairy products. I'm
58, in the age gro.!IP you mentioned, and I :{!bn•t want to
start having sbltening of the
spine. I was diagnosed as
having a spastic colon years
ago and have a severe gas
problem.
I am wondering if it is wise
to take calCium with
magnesium as a supplement.
· We have a water softener and
1 understand thtise chemicals
are lost.
I am in a quandry about the
supplement and bad stopped
talting them for fear I could
be getting more than I need
by taking three a day.
DEAR READER-There is
nothing wrong with taking a
calciwn supplement. Some of
the various preparations l4'e
irritati\lg to the - digesti&gt;/e·
sys!elri and others a;e not. A
frequently overiQOked source
of advice on · a good supplement preparation is your
neighborhood pharmacist. He
may be able to help you
choose one that is good for
you.
You wOuldn 't get enough
calciwn in your water even
without the softener to 'really
solve your problem. You may
find that you can . use uncreamed cottage cheese. It
contains far Jess lactose than
ordinary milk and you may
be able to built it build it into
your diet without causing you
to have digestive problems.

Deluge
It takes 27,154 gallons of
rain to wet down an acre of
ground with one inch of
water, sccordng to the U. S.
Geological Survey . This
means a one-inch rainfall in
Washington. D. C. amounts to
1,200,000,000 gallons. For the
city of • New York, that's
5,220,000,000 gallons.

R~~~~~~-

of Tuesday_' s
satd spectftc
meeting
workweek recommendations
would be left up to indivudal
unions. There were no efforts
to set a particular standard ,
such as a 35-hour week.

CHARGES PENDING

CAMBRIDGE , Ohio (UPI )
County
Guernsey
Prosecutor James R. Scott
plans to file an aggravated
murder charge against
Jospeh Mazer, 23, Portland,
Ore., in the death of Debra
Ann Mayer, 18, Mechancisburg, J'a.
Miss Mayer was killed
Sept. 10 and her decomposed
body was found Oct. 7 in Salt
Fork State Park.
Scott s8id Mazer admitted
the ltilling during questioning
by the FBI in El Paso, Texas.
Mazer was arrested Sept.
23, in El Paso in possession of
the wcman's vehicle.
Miss Mayer left her home

·Sept. 10 to 'viSit a friend in
Massillon, Ohio, and was
rep&lt;rted missing after she
failed to arrive.

funding of a researc h
program at the Marion
Correctional Institution on
worker attitude analysis.
-$25,391 to the Ohio Valley
Regional Devel opment
Commission for the continued
funding
of
a
staff
f
development pro gra m or
correctional personnel in that
nine-coUfit'Y area .
- $22,153 to Mahonin~
County for the funding of 8
juvenile services bureau in
Austintown and in the county.
-$2l,nO to Warren County
for continued funding of a
juvenile re s id e ntial
treaunent center.
-$20. 382 to Clark County
for the lurxling of "Operation
· ed
St art , .. a program destgn
to reduce recidivism amon~
unemployed offenders.
_ , 20 .21 2 to Pickaway
Coun ty for the e;tablispment
of a physical evick&gt;nce bureau
in the county sheriff's office .
-$! 9,195 to Locain County
for the funding of the police
juvenile bureau.
-$18,~ to the Ohio Youth
Commission for the initial
furxling of a family therapy
program lor families of
institutionalized youths .
-118 ,394 to
Ath ens,
Hocking and Vinlltll counties
for initial funding for creation

u,J49 to VInton County
for the purchase of courtroom
recording equipment and
c'Ourtroom renovations.
- $10 450 to J efferson
County ' for the continued
Iundin• of le•al aides in the
0
"
l'Ounty l'Ommon pleas court.
-$9,34StoCiermontCounty
for creation of a public
defender pro•ram in that
coun;:.-750 to the llity of
Sheffield Lake, lorain
County ' for the purchase of 8 ·
nigh! vision equipment for .
the city police department .
- $4 ,649 to the city of
Wickliffe, l.ake County, lor
the purchas.e of a new
polygr~ph for the police .
ck&gt;partment.
-$4,000 to the Department
of Liquor Cootrol for the
d Ia
funding of six sta~ewi e w .
enforcement seminars.
~. 862 to Highland County
for the renovation of the
rounty sheriff's offi ce and the
addition of · a prisoner
processing room in that
office.
--$2,850 to Musklngum
County foc the purchase of'an
audiovisual recording system
for the county commoo pleas
court .
-$2,850 to Ucking County
for the purch'a se of a
courtroom recording system
for the.. county juvenile court.

·of a youth services
coordination Clluncil.
-$15,023 to Medina County ·, -$2,820 to Brown County
for the continued funding of lor the purchase of a video
an investigative officer who tape recorder lor use in tbe
works in the coun ty county courts.
prosecutor's office.
-$1 ,774 lit Morgan County
-$14 ,778 to Fairfield for
the purchase of
County foc the continued investigative equipment for
funding of a communications
o n-the-scene
crime
progr am involving parent investigations by the county
and youth effectivness sheriff's office.
training .
-$1,059 to Allen County for
-$13,937 to Scioto County the continued funding of comior the continued furxling of a munity-based
juvenile
juvenile bureau in the county services.
sheriff's office.
,------------------------~--1

1
~..etten of opilllon are welcomed. Tbeylboald be
1 Ieos IUD 3to wordlloag (or be nbject to redtaedetl by
I the editor) and m111t be aigDed wldl tile alpee'a IllI dn!l. Names may be witllbeld apoa lllbllcoU..
I However, 011 ~a.!, IWIIN wlll be dJacloled. Lelten
should be ID good taste, addi-eetfnl illllee, net per-

l
1

I

:

sonalltles.

f)~

..

.

:I ••• ~.. ~:
I

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o·., Wednesday,Oct. 26, 1977

Major

Hoople picks Texas Tech

Hoopte•s

to corral Texas Longhorns

r.

1
l
I

l
l
1 ..
I

:

II
I

Concerned about future trapping
Dear Editor :
I am a native arxllarmer of Ohio. I have been a trapper
and bunter until late years. I am concerned about this future
trapping arxl hunting of this younger generation.
This no trapping issue to be voted on this election is a-very
poor issue to be in the bands of voters of the Ohio community
for humane trapping.
There a.re thousands of fur-bearing animals killed on
highways now whiCh as I see it, is a very inhumane way to
destroy these animailt. I'll say these O.C.H.T. people have.
killed their share now.
·
What will happen in a lew years if not contr.olled by the
Division of Wildlife? There will be so many animals aroun!l
that we people will not be able to be on the roads with cars. You
won 'I be able to raise any crops or grains.
The animals will be so hungry they will raid our buildings
to get their food to eat. Also Utere is a chance that a disease w1ll
take over to ck&gt;stroy these fur animals, pets and our farm
animals.
I don 't think that trapping is any more inhumane than it is
to tie a dog outdoors in the boiling hot sun, day in and day ou~
fighting his leash, wanting loose so he can get to a cooler place.
while his owner is sitting in an air&lt;onditioned house wbere it is
cool. Let them exchange places with these dogs for just a few.
days. Did you know it is just as inhuman to poison an anlinal as it
is to use a trap device. How many of you S~H~~lled human
people have poisoned an animal then watch It suffer death?,
Possibly they will get so many of them that they w1ll have to be
poisoned.
Then the Division of Wildlife will not have enough money
to furnish arxl put out material to poison them (as indivimals
cannot buy the kind of poison needed) unless they put on a levy
lor mooey to do this needed work.
They will lose tllousands of dollars from .hunting and
trapping licenses. Lots of people w1ll not buy them just to hunt .
with .
Poisoning and quick kill traps have no Choice pi w1ld
animailt or peb.-Emmit McCaskey, RR I, Rutland, Ohio
45nS.
.

•

By Major Am01 B. Hoople
Amazln' Ptgokln Prophet
Egad, friends, the upset
trend continues to sweep
across the country and this
week we have another start-·
ling prediction for you Steve Sloan's Texas Tech Red
Raiders will rise to
superlative helj!hts to COITal
the hard-drlv.ing Texas Longhorns and tlieir super runner
Earl Campbell.
Yas, dear readers,' the Red
Raiders will match Campbell
and Errleben point-for-point
and then add three more to
win , 27-24 - har-rumpb !
Anywhere else you care to
look across the country, there
is sensational football on tap
this week. In no particular
order, here are some of the
big ones: Brigham Young
sophomore
quarterback
Marc Wilson, lUling-in lor the
injured great Gifford Nelson,
w1ll lead the Cougars past
Arizona , 42·21, as .BYU
continues Its relentless drive
toward the Western Athletic
throne room . Fanher west,
Southern California will
COIIlinue Its drive to the Rose

· Bowl by stopping a very good
California team, 28-22, at
Berkeley.
In some interesting Big
Eight matcbups, we like
Nebraska over Oklahoma
State, 24-18, Oklahoma over
Kansas State, 38-17, , and
Colorado to whip Missouri,
16-14, in a hard-hitting contest
at Boulder.
Down south, Florida visits
Auburn and will come home
with a 22-12 triumph. And in
an outstanding doubleheader
at Jackson, Miss., the Rebels
of Ole Miss will edge out LSU,
18-15, in the afternoon con·
test, while playing late under
the lights, mighty Alabama
will move another step closer
to the Southeastern title by
defeating Mississippi State,
35-13 - kaff·kall!
Miami, of Florida, showing
Improvement ea ch week,
journeys to University Park
to meet Penn State and will
give the Nlttany Uons a
tussle before falling 31-24.
Also )n the east, Tulane will
find Pitt to be rude hots as the
Panthers win by a 33-16

rS'mall college grid ratings
MISSION, Kan. (UPII NCAA Division II and
Division Ill _, olleoe football
ratings w ith won-lost records

tO . Bethune-Cook man (Fia .l
10. NE Missou ri Sf.

In par&amp;nthesls ;

Division II
Te1m
Points
1. New Hampshire 17-01 59
2. S. C. St.
16-8-tl 56
3. Northern Michigan
I 7-II 48

16-1) 27
16-11 27

Wittenberg (Ohio)
t6-0I 60

2. Minnesota -Morr is (7 -1) S6

3. St. John 's {Minn 1 IS ·ll 51
4.

Come Nov. 8,you will vote on several levies. I would like to
call your attention to one particular levy. A 1 mi!llevyio~ ten
years for the Meigs County Health Department .
This is an agency Utat is vllally needed but has been given
Cancer Qua ckery
a back seat due to the lack of money and personnel. We never
Laetrile is the latest in a give our local health deparlment one thought until there is an ·
long line of heavily promoted outbreak of disease suCh lis the polio epidemic In the nineteen
but unproven cancer treat- ftfties or rabies outbreak a few years ago.
ments . Their ingredients
Does Meigs County have tu wait until there ts an outbreak
have differed ; but these Of something before the health department is even considered?
products have had many
For the past month there have been several articles Cl1 the
things .in common, especially· health department in the local papers, relating to the services
the fact that none of them has available and who performs them. This health depat;tment ts
worked .
working for you. If )\pu have been a recipient of any of the
In its 7!1-year history the
Health Department's ~. or know anyone of those '!"ho
Food and . Drug
Adhave, you know that the services rerxlered protect the health of
ministraiton has · put hun- your family through the programa conducted. .
dreds of such ncures" out of
In Southeast Ohio Meigs County Is the only coontY
business. Today's cancer fad "without" an operating levy for their health department. :
is Laetrile, also kno"'ll as
Why does Meigs County have to be the county "without"?
amygdatin and vitamin B-17 ..
A:l Chairtruln of the committee for the Health Department
Don't bet your life on any levy, I'm urging you to keep in mind the many aervice$
method that has not been supplied to you arxl coming from your local health department·
approved for marketing or A vote for the levy would be a step to building a better and
il'esearch . Write for : "Cancer more reputable Meigs County.
:
{,!uackery :
Past
and
In sickness and in health we need the Health Departi!1,ent.
-Present'' FDA. CR-li, PO Box -:,-'II. L. !,yon~ Chainnan for the Meigs County Hlillltll
4646, Chicago, Ill. 60680.
Dei&gt;artment Levy Committee. .
,

Colgate 21, Bootoa U. IZ
BYU .4%, Arlzoaa !1
Brown 11, Harvard 14
So. Calli. Z8, Calif. zz
Bowling Greea 31, Cent.
Mich. Z8
ClncinlUitl 3t, Temple 6
Clemson %4, Wake Forest 14
Colorado 1&amp;, MIBsourl 14
Dartmoutb Z8, Columbia 1%
Yale 37, Comel11~ ~
E. CarollDB 33 s.W. La. 19
Florida St. ZZ, No. Tex. St. 20
Georgia 35, Richmond 13
Georgia Tecb %4, Duke %1
lndiaoa 27, Minn. 11
Iowa St. 38, KaDJ&amp;I Z8
Olllaboma 38, KaDJ&amp;a XSt. 17
Kent St. 38, No. lll. 15
Kentucky 35, Va. Tecb 12 ·
Loulsvllle Zl, Manball 12
No. CarlllDa 17, Maryland 12
Mempbla St. 38, Sa. MillO. 18
Miami (0.) %9, Toledo 7
rMlcblgan 38, Iowa 7
DllnoiB 21, Micb St. 1B
MIBs 18, L8U 15
Alabama 35, Min. St. 13
New Mes. St. 24, New Mes. %3
No. Carollaa Sl. Z3, So .
Carollu 21 ·
Purdue 34, Northwe&amp;tem Z4
Notre Dame 27, Navy 15
Obio U. 19, We&amp;t Micb. 9
Obio Stale 35, Wiscoasln 17

of Home provementleeds

Football

at the

Forecast

Nebraska 24, Okla. St. 18
Stanford Zl, Oregon St. 11
Penu St. 31, Miami (Fia.t 24
Penu 37, Princetoa 10
Pitt 33, Tulane 16
Arkansas 32, Rice 0
San Diego St. 20, Tulsa 3
San Jose St. 18, Pacific 6
Syracuse 11, Vlrglala 10
Texas Tech Z7, Ten&amp; 24
Texas A&amp;M 31, SMU 11
HoUAton 42, TCU 20
Wasblagton tt, UCLA 34
.\rl!ona St. %3, Utab 14
VMI 21, Davidson 7
Wasb. St. 28, Oregon 7
W. Va. 22, Vlllanova 20
Long Beacb St. 20, Wicblta St.
17
Rutgers 26, .Wm. &amp; Mary 7
Colo. St. 29, Wyomlllg 15

.,

CEILING TILE
LOWEST PRICES EVER!

WHITE
ONLY ·

square foot

Lyle named winner of
'77 Cy Young
Award
.

'

~·

'

I

Hampden -Sydney (Va.)

By FRED DOWN
and Campbell split one thirdplace vote.
&lt;. North Dakota St. ·
s. Baldwin -Wa ll ace (Ohio) UPI Sports )frlter
NEW YORK (UPI) - It
IS- 1 ~ 11 47
"The Cy Young Award is
(&lt; .
43
· took the Cy Young Award .to
s. Massachusetts {6-ll os· 6. C.W. Post (N . Y .)
probably tbe greatest thing
6. Tennessee Tech 17-01 44
{4-1 -tl 40
flip the unflappable Sparky that's ever happened to me
7. Nevada -Reno
16-11 38
7. Central I Iowa )
17-0) 36
·
Lyle. ·
ouiside .of coming to the
8, California-Davis 16·01 28
B.. Middlebury lVI.) 15-0) 32
The New York Yankees' 33- Yankees;" said Lyle. "Now
8. Winston -Salem !N .C.)
9. Maryville 1Tenn .l ·I6-0I 28
16-01 28 10. Albion IMich. )
26
year-old relief pitcher, who people are going to recognize
had a 13-5 record and 2li saves the short relief pitcher who
in 72 appearances in 19n, has .been in. the backgrotind ••
became the first reliever in There never has been a club
American League history ·to which won a pennant or a
ClfiCAGO (UP!) - Northwestern expecb Purdue to use win the award Tuesday in
sparkling quarterback Mark Herrmann in the "shotgun" voting by the Baseball World Series without having ,
a good bullpen ."
f&lt;rmation Saturday, Wildcat Coach Johnny Pont told football Writers Association of
Before Marshall's selecticm
writers Tuesday.
America and promptly as the NL Cy Young winner,
But that will be only another facet of the Builermakers' admitted the announcement
the only reliever honored In
passing attack, be said.
made him nervous fqr the BBWAA post-season voting
"Purdue throws every kind of pass," Pont said, "the delay , first time this year.
was Jim Konstanty of the
)he pick, the drop back, the play action . The shotgun puts him
"I was shaking when I Philadelphia Phillles, who
eight yards back and gives him a split second longer to pick out heard I won the award, it was was voted lhe NL's moat
his receivers.
'
the firSt time I've ever been valuable player In 1950. Bob
"It gives him more time to see his reCeivers; and he ·can see nervous," said Lyle. "There Turley in l!llill arxl Whitey
the whole field . Then it takes the rush men that much longer to had been talk I was a Ford in 1961 are the only
get to him. "
candidate but I knew Ute only Yankee pitchers previolllly
Purdue coach Jim Young, speaking by telephone, conceded other relief pitcher to win a
• honored as Cy Youns
that a week ago he held closed practices in order to put in the Cy Young was Mike
winners.
shotgun formation, arxl added that "this week we'll have open Marshall. "
Lyle has been the Yankees'
practice.'' But be indicated. the shotgun would be part of his
Marshall won the National star reliever in their last two
offensive plan, along with more emphasis on running .
League 's Cy Young Award in American
League
Pont said that Northwestern probably would retain its basic 1974 when he had a 15-12 championship seasona,
defense because he felt the Wildcats must stop the PUrdue record in 106 games foc the winning a total of 20 games
running and "make them pass."
Los Angeles Dodgers.
and saving 49 during that
1
'1 don't think we're going to change our defensive strategy,''
Lyle w011 the award with period. One of the pranksten
Pont adck&gt;d. "We've got to try to blitz. We've got to try 56\1 points compared to 48 for of the Yankee clubhouse, he
everything to get to him.
ZOilame winner Jim Palmer has kept his cool throughout
"I think that even if he was a sophomore or jpnior, he'd be an of the Baltimore Orioles and the tunnoil of the two yean
exceptional passer. He possibly is quicker releasing the ball 46 by Nolan· Ryan of · the · both on the field .arxl In the
Utan any passer I've seen, and he can unload without a windup California Angels. They were clubhouse.
ilnd hit receivers 20 yards away.
·
followed by Dennis Leonard
Lyle also . went 10 l·S
"Then he has another advantage . He's 6 feet 5 and can throw of Kansas City with 45 points, innings without allowing a
over the linemen. We've got to stop their passing, we've got to Bill Campbell of Boston with run in four appearances ln
stop that easy touchdown. We'll try and put pressure on him 25'h, Dave Goltz of Minnesota the Yankees' playoff vicbry
and keep our arms up, and we've got some 6-6 linemen who with 19, Roo Guidry of the over the Royals r allhough
might cause..P..oblems."
·
Yankees with five, Dave that performance was not
Purdue has had games in which it passed 50 times arxl ran 20 Rozema of Detroit wi~ counted by the voters. He is a
but last week in beating Iowa, Herrmann threw only 20 passes and Frank Tanana of tlie pitcher with a rubber arm
and there were 54 running plays.
I
Angels with three.
who beccm.S more effective
' "Our backs are running harder," Young said. "Our running
The voters selected three when. he makes frequent
is improving, and we're getting better protection of our passer, pitchers in order
of appearances and ineffective
so ollr passing situation is good."
preference and poinb were after long layoffs.
The Purdue-Northwestern game will be on regional awarded on the basis of five
Palmer was a 20-game
television, iiiuf'Young thought that would help create emotion for first place, three for
winner for the seventh time
in his players. "They heard it would be on tv," he said, "and second and ooe for third. Lyle
for
the Orioles, Ryan hBd a
they were .happy about getting the exposure .''
·•
Bu~·Purdue might be playing against a jinx too. It bas lost its
last nine appearances' on television.
(6-1) 47

p

Big lO ·roundup

OUR .BOARDING HOUSE

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Division Ill

1.

margin.
Two other big games set for
the Southwest Conference
will pit Texas A&amp;M against
troublesome SMU, and · the
up-and·down Houston
Cougars against TCU. We see
A&amp;M winning 31-17 , and
Houston being on the upswing
. this week to take TCU, 42-211.
The Kentucky Wildcats,
living up to ow' preseason
assessment, wlll roll over the
Virgihla Tech Gobblers, :JS12, to the delight of their
home stadium rooters.
The Big TWo of the Big Ten,
Michigan and Ohlo State, wlll
keep rolling toward their
annual Big Ten showdown,
which is scheduled this year
for Nov. 19 at Ann Arbor. The
Wolverines will have lit·
tie
or
no
trouble whippins Io ~38·
7, and WOo tty llayes Ohio
State lads will turn back
Wisconsin 35-17, in their 47th
renewal.
Now go on with my
forecast :
Saturday, Oct. It
Boston Col. 24, Air Force ZZ
Army 35, Holy Cross 14
Florida %2, Auburn 12

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19-16 record and led the
major leagues with 3U
strikeouts and Leonard
became a ZOilame winner for
the first time this year.
"I was hoping t6 wilt it very
much, " said Lyle .. "Baseball
bas given me everything that
I have· and it's amazing that
you keep getting more and
more.

OPEN

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�S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedriesday, Oct. 28, 1977

~.,~H
·~:s,-

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Oct. :!8, t9n

i~

Frazier shines

Today's

Pro BaskttbeU Rolllldup

Sport Parade
lly MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporl&amp; Editor

NEW YORK l UP! l -Spar icy Lyle is like your neig hborhood
posiman. Walks the same path every day and delivers regular!\".

· Before the ball game 'sums. he heads for the bull pen where
he generally idles a way the time playing word games with the
others out there.
Lyle never watches the game for the first five innings or so.
anyway. From long experience he has a pretty good idea when
he 'sgoing l&lt;l be called into the game and when he's not . All it
takes him is SIX or Si'l'en pitches to heat up and he's ready .
This year he appeared in more games than any other pitcher
in the American League. The Yankees brought him in 72 times
during the r"':ular season, four more times in the playoffs and
twice more in the World Series. That's a total of 78 calls, all of
which he responded to without ever flinching once . A call he
received at his hrote in Demaresl, N.J .. Tuesday, though,
ac tually caused him to start shaking.
When he put the receiver down , the Yankees' left-handed
reliever stuck his thumb up in the air so his wife, Mary , could
see it . She knew tha t meant he had woo the Cy Young Award as
the American League's outstanding pitcher for l9n and that
irrunediately brought the tears to her eyes.
Lyle polled 5().., points amoog those baseball writers who did
the voting , comf&lt;rtably beating out Baltimore 's Jim Paimer.
the runnerup with 48 points. Behind Palmer came Callfornia 's
~ olan Ryan with {6, Kansas City's DeMis Leona rd with 45 and
Boston's Bill Campbell with 25 '1 .
Occasionally, there is some quarreling with th e writers
about their choices, but nobody who saw what Lyle did for the
Yankees this -year can seriously argue ove r his selection. His
2.17earned run average was the best in the league and his 13-;i
woo ~ ost record included 28 saves.
The Cy Young Award takes in only the regular season so the
fact that Lvle added two more victories in the playoffs with the
Royals and another one in the World Series with the Dodgers
had not hing to dO with the voting.
· Wha t makes the award mean so much to Lyle is ihat he 's ·
ooly the second reliever ever ,to win it, Mike Marshall having
been the other ooe over in the National League in 1974.
"I doo't know if this will make them recognize the short
relief pit cher more than they have been, but it'll certainly
help." said Lyle , who called the award "the greatest thing"
that ever happened to him.
"There has never been a ball club that has ever won a
peMant or a World Series without a good relief pitcher . The ·
owners don 'f want to let you know this, but it's true . Maybe
they 're beginning to realize it because they paid better than a
million dollars for relievers like Rollie Fingers and Bill
Campbell and veryclose to that for Dave ,LaRoche." .
M00 ey was rather a sensitive subject with Lyle thiS past.
winter, particularly.after the Yankees paid $2 million for free
agent Don Gullett even though he still was showing some after
effects from a tom tendon in his foot.
•
Lyle started by asking for a half ll)illioo over three years.
"! want what everybody eise is getting," he said at the time.
"! told Gabe Paul if they could pay a guy who has a leg in a cast
two millioo dollars, they can pay me what I think I'm worth."
Eventually, Lyle settled for something a little less than he •
had originally demanded and whatever it was, the Yankees
certalnly got their money's worth .
He has been in th big leagues 11 years oow, having come to
the Yankees from the Red Sox in 1972 and has never started a
single game in lhat time. The last time he ever started was in
1966 with Pittsfield in the Eastern League and he doesn 't care
if he ever starts another one again .

Lyle's best pitch is his slider. It's his only pitch as well.
"My fa st ball is only mediocre and I don't throw a rurve ball
at all ,'' he said. ;iMy slider is excellent, ~ough. ''
That it is.
Ted Williams first put the idea in his head about throwing it
while Lyle still was in the Red Sox' organization.
Good as his slider is, Lyle said Pittsburgh's Terry Forster's
is e·ven better.
"He has the best ooe I've ever seen," said the Yankees '
relief ace. "!think it was clocked at 95 miles per hour ."

Carew eams $10,000 award
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Min:
nesota Twins first baseman

---

·1

winner Wednesday of the
$10,000 Seven Crowns of
Rod Ca r e w was , named Sports baseball computer
evaluation competition.
International
Carew produced an 81.75
Hockey League
Productive
Efficiency
United Press International
Rating
.
Slugger
George
North
Foster
of
the
Cincinnati
Reds
wIt pis . gf go
Fli nt
2 0 0~ 7 5
was secmd at 74.12 and
21 0~ 1 0 1 0
Muskegon
OJ.icago relief pitchef Bruce
Port Hu ron
11 1 3 77
&amp;itter
registered a 73.59 lor
Ka la m azoo
002 2 .a a
third place.
Sa ginaw
02 1 1 9 11
Soulh
carew hit .388 ·in 1977, had
w II pis . gf ga
239 hits, scored 128 runs,
Toledo
2 1 0 ~ 12 I
drove in 100 runs and posted a
Pt. Wayne
11 1 3 10 12
Daytoo
1 1 · o 2 5 6 · .570 slugging percentag.e ; '
Milw.
0 2 I I 9 11
third highest in the American
Tuesday ' s Re!iults
League.
No ga mes scheduled
Tonight ' s Games
M usk eg on at F or 1 Wa y ne

Flint at Da yton

Port Hu ron a t M i lwaukee
Thursda y ' s Games
No game-s schedu led

A thought lor the day: Irish
poet Th&lt;mas Moore wrote_,
"Some flow'rets of Eden ye
still inherit, but the trail of
the
is over them all.11

By GREG AIELLO
UPrSporu Writer
Walt Frazier has been the
focus of many a special nigh!
in New York. f'Bii\ could
anything apJroach the kind of
emotion that filled Frazier
and Madison Sqll8re Garden
Tuesday night ?
It
began
with
an
enthusiastic, three-minute
standing ovation by the
capacity crowd of 19,694, the
same New York fans who
booed Frazier the last two
years and helped make him a
member . of the Cleveland
Cavaliers. The man they call
Clyde thought the cheering
would never stop. He smiled
and acknowledged the crowd
three ,times by holding both
arms aloft .
·
It ended with Frazier
smiling again, this time while
he dribbled the ball to·ltill the
clock. Finally he raised his
fist high to punctuate the

fimsh of h1s tr iumphant
return to New York. He had
cmtributed 28 points, eight

"I'm glad I could play a
game like that oo my return
to New York," Frazier said ,
rebounds, four assists and ,;1 didn 't think I'd get that
five steals in helping the kind of receptioo. There was
Cavaliers beat the New York an electricity in the air . The
Knicks in overtime 117-112. fans were great ... I like
"'I thought the script was prel"'ure situations and this
written just for him,'' Cleve- was the good place for me to
land Coach Bill Fitch said. play i.n ooe."
"He's one of those guys wbo
Elsewhere in the NBA, .
thrives on tha t kind of Boston beat Atlanta IIG-103,
pressure.' '
Philadelpl\ia topped Kansas
Fratier played 10 years for City 112-](K, Golden State
the Knicks, led them to.{heir defeated OJ.icago 106;-9!1, Inooly two NBA championships diana downed Denver129-104,
and became their aU-time Los Angeles edged San
leading scorer. But when his Antonio\~107, Phoenix beat
talent began to f'!de and the Seattle 9~ and Poctland
Knicks started to lose the routed Buffalo 107-80.
past two years , Frazie r Celtics 110, Hawks 103
became a target !,or the
Dave Cowens scored 23
blame and sulked . Whe n the points and helped Bostoo
Knie ks . signed former survive sev~ral second-llalf ·
Cavalier
guard
Jim comeba cks by Atlanta Hawks
Cleamoos as a free agent , the and win their first game of
32-year-old Fr8l!ier was sent the season. Sidney Wicks
to Cleveland as c&lt;rnpensation scored 19 while Jo J o White
00 Oct. 8.
a nd J ohn Havlicek each

Heen
I
Us •••

Cavs victory
third-period
Portland
outburst. Lucas had II points
in the period as Portland,
trailing 39-36, outscored the
previously unbeaten Braves
23-9 in a four-min ute stretch.

added 17 for Bostoo . John and four other Pacers were in
Drew led Atlanta with 24 double figures . David
points.
Th&lt;rnpson scored 24 points
Slxtrs ll%, Kings 104
for Denver.
Doug Collins got 31 points
!.akers 109, Spurs 107
and George McGinnis 28 for
Rookie guard Norm Nixon,
PhiladelPhia, .which grllbbed returning to the lineup after
a 55-36 halftime margin. an ankle injury, scored 24
Julius' Erving, st ill playing in points and handed off 10
a reserve role because of an assists to lead Los Angeles.
injured left knee, added 22 Jamaal Wilkes s&lt;.-ored the
points .
winning basket with 46
Warriors i05, Bulls 98
seconds left on a follow shot
Rick Barry scored a after a missed jwnper by.
season-high 44 points to lead Kermit Washington. George
Golde~ ·State · to its third · Gervin led the Spurs w1th 28
straight victory . Afte r points. .
leading 86-34 early in the
Suns 93, Sonics 86 · . ,
fourth Golden State moved
Phoenix scored the ftrst 12
ahead '94-114 oo two baskets by points of the fourth quarter to
Phil Smith and baskets by overcome a n elght·point
Barry and Sonny Parker.
deficit. Paul W~tphal had .30
Pacers 1%9, Nuggets 104
po_tnts ~ Phoe~tx posted tts
Adrian Dantley pumped in thrrd v1ctory ~1th o ut a lo~ .
32 points to pace Indiana over The SuperSomcs lost the1r
the defending Midwest fourth straight.
Blazers 107, Braves 85
Division cha mp ions. John
Williamson added 29 points
Maurice Lucas scored '!I
points and led a 39-point.

Niekro would like to
manage-Atlanta Braves
ATLANTA (l)Pl) - The
Atlanta Braves ha ve begun a
search for their eighth
manager in 11 seasons ID
replace ousted Dave Bristol.
Former superstar Hank
Aaron apparently doesn' t
want the job, but pitcher Phil
Niekro does.
Bristol, whose team lost 101
games during the past
season , was notified of his

firing Tuesday while en route
from his h&lt;rne in Andrews,
N.C., to Atlanta to attend a
meeting of the Braves' board
of directors.
"Am I going to be late for
the meeting?" Bristol asked
direc!Dr of player personnel
Bill Lucas from a pay ohone
in Gainesville, Ga .. about 45
miles from Atlanta.
"You're already late," replied Lucas, "They met last
night. "

That 's when Bristol got the
bad news. His two-year stint

E uter n Confer ence
Atl•nt ic D ivi ~ i on
Bu ff alo
New York
Flhil adelph
Boston 11",.,

.,

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T P OP
Kyger Creek 5 1- o 209 J8
Southern
3 1 0 103 51

North Gal li a
East ern

~
~

1 .667
1 .66 7

1

'
''

,

'

.m

,

,

''

,''

'' •'

' •

'

''

WHA Standings
By United Press International
W. L T. Pts.
Wi nn ipe-g
5 1 0 10
New Engl11nd
~
1 1
9
Quebec
1
7
l
Ind ianapol is
2 2
6

,

Tuesd•y ' s Sporta Tre nsactlont
&amp;v United Preu tnttrnet lonal

l ne bl ll

Chicago Cubs Ac qu lrrcl
catcher L arry C! ox from Sea tu e
for re lll!t pit cher J trn Todd and
m inor league pitcher Steve
Hamr ic k.
·
New York Mets - AcQuir ed
snor tstop Randy Rooers fr om
Los Ange les to com p lete tne
deal tor catcher Jerry Grote;
adde-d to their ros t er r ight ·
handed pit cher Juan Beren .•
guer . t lrst baseman M arsh all
Bran t and outfielder Ed Cl pot ;
and outrlghted pitchers Jeff
Grost and Denn is SOlar i to
Tidewa ter a nd pl1cher Rand y
Tate and outfielder Terr y Endn
t o Jackson .
Hockey
euth!rto - Ass loned wi ngers
Jacques Ric hard and Ale)(
Tidev fo Hershey ,
Soccer
New YOrk - Gordon Bradl ey
r es igned as vice pr esi de-nt of
the Cosmos to become heed
coach of Wash ington .
Foot bill
New....Vork Giants - Tradecl ·
tight end
Bob Tuc k er 10 ,
M innesota tor an undisclOsed
Hous ton
2 2 0
dr aft cho ice .
Bir ming ham
2 l 0
w ashi ngton - Pieced corner .
Edmonton
3 0
2
ba ck Pat F ischer on th e in lureQ
Cinc fnnllti
0
reserve l ist and sioned sa h~ty .
Tuesd•y ' s Resu lt
Indi anap ol is 5, Birm ingham &lt;4 cornerba ck Windlan Ha ll, a
tr ee agen t .
Wrdnesday •s Games
Quebec at New Er1gland
Edmonton at Houston
W'iM ipeg a t Ind ian a-pol is
Thursday ' s Gam t s
( No ga m es sc h e~ u led l

'

'' •

N H L Standings

'

'

,

,

,

Ego!

3 • 0 100 1a3
Southwestern 2 4 0 6&lt;&amp; 152
Sym. Valley I 5 0 76 13S

SVA( ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP
3 0 130

18

2 2 50

86

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P HEB E ' STO RE

The long es~ suspension
span in the world, the
v errazano Narrows Bridge
between State•L !sland and
Brooklyn, N.Y.; IS 4,21i0 feet,
exceeding San Francisco's
"So! You're my husband's ~e&lt;: ­ Golden Gate Bridge by 60
retary I've heard so bttle feet.
about!"

The anaual Halloween car- Zirkle, arid Ina Meadows.
Fortune tellers: Room 23,
nival of t he Pomeroy
Meeting Mondsy night at
Elementary PTA will be stag- Charlene Gilmore, chainnan , the Pomeroy Masonic Tern"ed Saturday night at the Gene Chaney, ticket taker.
pie, Bethel 62, International
school beginning at 7:30p.m.
Pocket ladies: Judy Werry, Order of J ob's Daughters,
The time was changed from chairman, Sharon Mattox, finalized plans for an ice
6:30 due to trick or treat be- and Rose Werry.
skating party to be held SWIiilg held in Pomeroy.
Ca ke walk : Carolyn day afternoon at Bird Arena ,
Costumes will be judged Reeves, chainnan, Joyce Athens.
with pri2es of silver dollars Brewer, Letla Haggy, and
Members are to meet at the
Lava·less
being awarded to the pret- Bar bara Cobner.
temple at 12 :30 and will go ·rn
Though an erupting
tiest, the ugliest, and the
Engraving shop : Room 24, a group from there. Each girl
vol cano brings to mind
most original in each grade. Rita Fields, Barbara Fields, is to take at least $2. Monday
WE ARE PROUD TO
pictures of flowing rivers of
Pre-schoolers are welcome to chairmen , and Becky Tate.
evening members will travel
boiling
lava,
not
all
active
come in cosi-tune but they will
Sweet shop: Lura Swiger, to Gallipolis for the Bethel inHAVE YOU AS A
volcanoes emit lava. Mount
not be judged.
Elizabeth Lane, ·Janice spectlon there. They are to
Taal in the Philippines, with a
Conunittees have been a!&gt;" Haggy, and Norma Balier.
meet at the office of Bill
DAUGHTER.
hist ory of death and
pointed with the chairman of
Pop sale, Bob and Joan Quickie at 6 p.m. The meeting
destruction, has spewed forth
each one to be responsible foc Morris.
startsat7. Two year planning
LOVE,
noxious gases, steaming mud
setting up his or her own
Flea market and country calendars are again this year
and ash and white-hot rocks
game or booth . Th e store : Carol McCullough, be in• sold by the Bethel.
MOM &amp;.DAD
0
- .but nev.er lava.
decorating and setting up of chainnan, Carolyn Grueser,
DEAR HELEN :
booths wiU begin at I pm. on Dottie Will-, Doris, Ewing,
It's Papa who always pays! My husband has two children by Saturday. A meeting of all Sharon Manley, lyfarrlyn
his first marriage. The lawyer says there is no way he can get committee chairtnen has Wisecup, Sue DeLong, MBll- Jim Sisson.
Door prize: Linda Mayer
them away from his ex-wife. He hands out over $200 a month in been setfor 3:30 Thursday at ine Lee.
Kitchen committee : Sylvia
support payments and we're barely able to make enda meet.
the school at which time
Ticket Committee, Susie Neece, Chairman, Maxine
There's just no justice.- WANTS THE ClllLDREN
plans will be finalized.
and Jim Soulsby, chairmen, Phillips, Dorothy Roach, and
DEAR WANTS:
The activities and the com- ·and Pat Thoma.
Shirley Roush.
Do you want the children for their sakes, or because you 'd mitteesareasfollows:
Jail: Barbara and Jennifer
Emcee for the parade of
avoid support payments if you raised them'
Haunted House: Room :!8, Anderson, chairmen.
costumes
will be Bob MOrris.
5
Remember: klds cost; and upkeep increases as they grow Debbi and Bob Buck,
Prize committee: Susie Carol Wolfe and Jeanette
older. You wouldn't be "ahead" $200-plus a mooth, far from it! chairmen, George and Sandy · Soulsby, carolyn Grueser,
(Unless, as I mentioned above child support becomes coed.) • Korn, Nancy Jeffers, Betty Dottie Musser, Dreams Thomas will handle the bean
bag game in Room lB. .
H.
Wallace, Linda Wyatt, Janet Smith, Sandy Schlass.
AU of the games conducted
and Allen Downie.
Silhouette Shop: Wnedy in the downstairs will cost 10
DEAR HELEN :
Small fish pond: Room 13, Carper and Barbara Shultz,
We got married six days alter we met. Dave said he works Becky and Mark Tanaehill, C&lt;K!hainnen, Paige Smith cents each, while those
upstairs where nicer prizes
nights.
chairmen, Pat and Bob .Bar- andKimKrautter.
will be awarded will cost 20
Yesterday I found out his work is - steallng ! He and two ton, PhilandCarolOillinger.
Popcorn sale : Don Mayer, cents.
other guys break into warehouses and sell the stuff to a fence.
Large fish pond: Room 22,
He won't quit. I've begged him aU day. He says if I'm not Pam Crow, chainnan, Linda
with him on lhi.s, I'd better leave. Should !1- AFRAID
Sheets, Dina and Eric
DEAR AFRAID:
Gryszka.
,
Yes! Unless you want to be a prisoner's wife. -H.
Ring toss ga,me: Room 15,
Corky Kennedy, chairman,
DEAR HELEN :
Marcia Houdashelt, and Kay
RUST AND TAN
A few weeks ago a man cmtacted my husband's mother on a Morris.
W.
2nd
"family tree search." She called us and wanted to know birth
Washer toss game: Room
5
statistics on my side of the family , except about our son who IS 14, Mike and Sharon Wright,
adopted. The research organization stipulates " no adoptees. ";.... -chairmen, Becky and Jon
He's as much ours as if I'd borne him. If he isn't included on Kloes, Ida Diehl.
Lollipop tree games: Room
our family.tree, where will his "roots" come from ? -RESENTFUL
12, Mae Young, Sharon
DEAR RESENTFUL:
Roseberry, and Barbara
This seems a ridiculous ruling, Is your mother-in-law sure Whitlatch.
·
the research organization is legit? - H. ·
Shoot-a-hoot game: Room ,
29, Hank and Kathy Cleland,
Bob and Barbara
chairmen,
n;u • ::u entt.u urnnruRSDAY
Smith,
Grace
Chaney.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Ping-pong
toss: Room ll,
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Roger
and
Gerri
Mowery,
Sorority, 7:45 Thursday night
chairmen,
Jack
and
Janice
at the home of Mrs. Lillian
Small Deposit will hold your Orristmas
BLACK
Haggy.
It's up and away in this busy day
Moore with Mrs. Jane
Layaway.
Room
16,
Nellie
Dart
game:
moe of solt flexible leather .a nd the
Walton, c~rhostess .
AND
and George Wright, Betty
comfort you always eniOY from
FRIDAY
MISCELLANEOUS Sale, Jean and John Krawsczyn,
BROWN
EASY STREET.
United Methodist Women, and Susan Tracy.
.
WED)IESDAY
r
Down
the
hill
game
:
Room
REVIVAt at tM Hazel Letart Falls Church, to be
28, Larry and DoM&amp; Thomas,
·Community Church, off held at the Community HaU, chairmen, Delores Hawk.
Route 124, between Portland lO a .m. to 5 p.m. Ring-a-nose game: Room
and Long Bottom, through
MEIGS POMONA Junior 21, John and Jiriuna Arnott,
Middle of Upper Block
Oct. 30 at 7:30 each evening. Grange Halloween party at chairmen, Darla and Randy
Pomeroy, Ohio
Thoren Durham will be 7:30p.m. Friday at the Rock Hawley.
CHRISTMAS
GIFT
IDEAS
evangelist and there will be Springs
Grange
Hall.
Hide-a-head game: Room
Open: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon. thru Thurs. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
special singing. Edsel Hart, Members are to attend in 25, Keith Ann Sisson and
HOLIDAY
FABRICS
pastor, invites the public.
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 .m .
costume.
Mary Bentz, chairmen, Sue
RACINE Grange will meet ,
HALLOWEEN PARTY for
· at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the Bedford community, Friday,
hall.
7:30p.m. at Hemlock Grange ·
WilDWOOD Garden Club, Hall sponsored by Modem
7:30 Wednesday night at the Woodman of America.
home ol Mrs. Erma Roush Fishing pond, country store,
@
with Mrs. Hilda Yeauger as prizes and refreshments 1
UNITED MINE Workers .
~hostess. Members are to
Sup!iorters
Club Friday, 10
take plants for a sale. .
~'
a.m.
at
Eagles
Club. To sign
AMERICAN
Legion
Feeney·Bennett" Post 128, up for a first aid course
Wednesday night at 7:30p.m. members are to phone 992While Quantities Last- Quantity Rights 'Reserved
6163 or 992~20.
at the hall.
We are not responsible for typographical errors!
HALLOWEEN DANCE
AMERICAN Legion AuxSorry, No Dealer..iliary, Feeney-Bennett Post Friday at senior sitizens
128, Wednesday night, 7:30 at center from 8:30 to 1f:30 p.m:
Music by the Stringdusters
\ the hall.
REVIVAL, New Haven featuring round and square
First Church of God, 7:30 dances and cake walks.
nightly through ~t. 30. Rev. Admission $1. Children under
Get a Bonus From Crest
O.ILY POLiSH REMOVER
Richard Bradley of 12 with parents admitted
Charleston, W. Va ., is the free .
SPECIAL 6 OZ.
REGULAR
LEMON
evangelist.
SATURDAY
SAFID CUSHIONED
P 0 M E' R 0 Y ·
HYMN SING MI. Union
Pleasantly •4 OZ.
400's
MIDDLEPORT
LIONS Baptist Church Saturday 7:30
Scented
FLEXIBLE STICKS
cLUB, Wednesday noon at p.m. Adkins family of East
or
the Meigs Ina. James M. Lynn, W, Va. , will be
Mint
Donavan, district governor, featured.
Pataskala, will niake his annual visit. There will be installation of new members
•
and all Lions are urged to atNelson's Regular 11.69
LIMIT 1 PLEASE
Nelson's
79'
Nelson's
1 PLEASE
LIM IT 1 PLEASE
93'
•tendFEENEY-BENNETT Post
128, American Legion, 7:30
14
this evening at post home.
4ND
Speaker on trapping laws.
1 Pound Package
STATE MEE-TING, Ohio
OTHER
valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar, 7; 30 this
BOOTS
BIT·O·HDN£Y.
evening at temple.
A HONEY OF A ~ANDY !
THURSDAY
PRICED
Nelson's Regular 11.59
FREE CLOTffiNG Day,
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 12 noon
FROM
at
Salvation
Army
Headquarters, Butternut
Sizes Small, Medium, Large
Ave., Pomeroy; all area
13 oz.
TO
Nelson's Reg . $2.59 - $3.49
residents in need of clothing
60
Pieces
\
welcome.
·1
5

THE

5th &amp; Pearl

-="'"'

Prescription Drug Store

POMEROY, OHIO

SUGAR

'm

STARTS TODAY
PRICES GOOD THRU 10/30/77

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

LONGHORN

~

'I.'

.

500 E. MAIN ST.

-

.

'

IT MAY SAVE YOU MONEY.

I

light from various colored
wa~elengths , bumps into the
abnosphere's dust particles,
the component parts are
scattered and deflected. The
shorter wave lengths,
especially the blue, spread
more than the longer waves
like red and yellow.

•

hold meettng

Home Ec. Students
Receive 10% OH
' ' On All Items

Where do you get your car serviced? Do they have.
certified mechanics? Sun Equipment? Do they save your
Eastern
2 2 56 69
Hannan Trace
0 3 24 106
old parts for you? Do they honor the Senior Citizen Gold
Sym . Valley
0 3 34 66
Card for 10 Pet. Discount? Do they order your parts with
Southern
X K XX
XX
X - Not eligible f or league
I teletype? Do they greet you with a smile and really let
championship .
I you know they want your business? Well we do all of this
I at Smith Nelson Motors. Also, we give the Best Buy on a
New or Used Car. So for a II your transportation needs we
. Dusty Wavelengths
A good supply of dust can
. a·re The Friendly Dealer. We care about you. We want
prevent a glowing sunset. 1
When sunlight, comprised of · 1 · you for a Friend &amp; A Customer. So See or Call Us At
North Gal l.ia

Southwestern

'

2 j !"·';"!

20% OFF SALE

! . ·. NOTICE . I

&lt;Hannan Trace

1. b I n
bin
..)' J 0 s uaug. u::-rs

LAST
WEEK

,

•
' ,

Asbury United Methodist
Church, Syracuse.
Meeting at the home of
Mrs. Mary Lisle, gifis were
presented to Miss Karr from
the clasS which she teaches.
Mrs. Helen Teaford presided
at the meeting during which
time a soup supper was plan·
ned for Nov. 19. Also discussed was a canopy for the
church steps. Mrs. Vera Van
Meter gave the treasurer's
report and also read ' the
minutes of the last meeting.
Devotions by Miss Karr ineluded readings from the"Sermon on. the Mount · and
"Judge Not."
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Lisle and Miss Carr
to those named and Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Kloes, Millard Van
• Meter, Mrs. Elma_Louks, Mr.
· and Mrs. Bill Wrnebrenner,
Robert Flanagan, Mrs. Jean
Kloes, Mrs. Betty Ash, Mrs.
Enunogene Holstern, Miss
Eleanor Robson, and Robert
Smith.

PARTY PLANNED
The youth of the Bradbury
Church of Christ will sponsor
a Halloween party Monday,
Oct. 31 from 7 to 9 p.m. for
area youth and adults. Those
attending are asked to come
·; · in costwne •

THE FABRIC SHOP

Diamonds
for a Man's

'

The 87th birthday of -Miss
Marcia Karr was celebraied
at the Monday night meeting
ol the Eagles Class of ihe

l "7.. ··------.---

24.00

Bv United Press Internationa l
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L T. Pts.
Phitad el ph l&amp;
0
8
At lt'l n ta
7
2 1 3
NY Rangers
7
3 3 1
N Y Island ers
l
6
Smythe Division
W. L f . Pt s.
v an couver
3 1
8
Chicago
2 l
l
6
Cot or ado
5
1 l
3
St . Loui s
0 6 1
Minneso ta
0 6 0
0
Willes Conferenc e
Norri s Div ision
W. L. T . Pts.
Mon tre- at
6 0 1 13
Pittsbur gh
7
3 3 1
Los Angeles
2 3 1
5
Detroit
1 l
4
Washi ngton
1 3 0
2
Adams Di vision
W. L·. T. Pts.
Buffa lo
1 1
9
Cl e\iet and
3 0
8
Toronto
7
3 1 1
Boston
7
2
~
Tuesday1 s Results
NY Rang er 5 5, Cleve o
Atl anta 2, Sf. LOUiS 2 •
Boston .4 , Color ado 4
Vancouver 3, Los Ang 1
Wednesd'iy ' s Gilmes
SJ. lou is at NY R.an ger5
Detro it at P \tfsbgl'l
w asn at At lanta
Montreat a t Toro r1to
Pl'l lli!t i!t t Ch icllgO
Boston at Minn
NY Is lander s at Lo s Ang
Thursday ' s Games
M inn at Detro it
NY Ranger s at Vancouver

By Helen Bouel

· Carnival planned at
.
Pomeroy elementari'1J

LAFF - A - DAY

Miss Karr celebrates birthday

·Highland

,•

'
·---------------------~-----------,

1 1 117 55
3 0 88 127

Kyger Creek

l

'

I

Hannan Trace Wildcats seek
their fourth victory of the
year against Coach Bob
Ashley' s Southwestern
Highlanders. The Wildcats
·dropped an 18-3 encounter to
Eastern last Friday night
while Southwestern was ·
beaten, 3IHI at Green.
HaMan Trace relies on the
running of seniors Dave
Campbell and Frank Mooney
and the passing combination
of Steve Beaver and David
Swain.
Southwestern also Ukes to
pass. The Gene' Layton to
Larry Carter duet has
produced several touchdowns
this fall. Eastern may play
Miller Friday night depen- ·
ding on several things while
Southern and North Gallia
are idle.

,,

GB

1 .667
3 .250 1' '
Ne\N Je r s~y
0 3 .000.
Ce ntrill Division
W. L. Pet. GB
New Orlens
2 I .667
A tl an ta
.•• 1 . I .500
'
Wasl'l ing tn--' 1 1 .500
Cleveland
v,
2 .500
San Anton io
2 3 .400 1
Houston
I
1
Western Conference
Midwest Di vi sion
W. L Pet. GB
M it wauke
1 .667
Ch icag o
3 2 .600
Detroit
3 2 .600
Denv er
2
.500
Indiana
.500
Ka nsas City
.200
Pacific Division
w. l . Per. GB
Por tl and
3 0 1.000
Pt'loenix
3 0 1.000
Golden Stat
3 1 .750
~os Ang eles
3 .400
Seaftle
0
.000 Jl ~
Tuesd.Jy ' s Results
BostonJ l O, At lanta 103
Cl ev eland 11 7. NY . n~ . ot
Phll a 112. K an Cit y 10.4
Gorden Sta te lOS. Ch i 98
Ind iana 129 Denver 104
Phoenix 93, Sea tt( e 86
Los Afl g 109 , San Anton io 107
Por t land 107, Buffa lo 85
Wednesday ' s Games
Golden Sti!tte at Detr oit
Att an ta at N .J .
N .Y . at Ne- w Or leans
Por ft M d a t Denver
Buffi!t lo a t Se attl e
Thursday ' s Games
. K an City ar Clevel and
M ilwa ukee at Houston

with the Braves was over.
fa ct, he got . out of town ."
Cleaning out his desk in his · Aaron left for Washingtoo,
Atlanta Stadium office , D.C.
Bristol said he was hurt but
Niekro, a knuckleball
oot bitter, and he called pit cher with the Braves
Braves owner Ted Turner during his 14-year career,
"an impatient man."
said he had applied for the
"I guess he thinks if he can job.
win the America's Cup that
"I'm serious," said the 39quickly and that easily, you year-old Niekro . ."! think I
can do the same thing in · c;~n do the job. I've seen a lot
baseball. You can't," Bristol of things happen here, and I
said, referring to Turner's know wbat the problems are
easy triumph in the in the organization. I think I
America 's Cup sailing races can straighten them out ."
last summer .
Niekro said he would be a
Lucas said there would be playing manager if he got the
oo rush ' to sign a new job.
manager, "We'll try to fmd . Lucas said Niekro would be .
the right man for the job," he cmsidered, along with other
said.
possibilities who include
Lucas said Aaron, the all- former ·Yankee Manager
time home run king who is Yogi Berra, fonner Cardinal
director of minor league Manager Red Schoendienst ,
personnel for the Braves, was former ·Met ManB~~er Joe
on hand wben the news of Frazier, and ex-Yankee
Bristol's firing broke.
player and former University
"He didn 't exactly rush in of South Carolina baseball
to apply, " said Lucas. "In manager Bobby Richardson .

Two SVAC tilts on
tap Friday evening
Kyger Creek visits Symmes Valley and Hannan
Trace plays at Southwestern
in the two league battles this
week in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference (SV AC j.
Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats 5-l will attempt to
move a:· little closer to their
fifth straight championship
against the Vikings. Coach
Joe Bokovitz's eleven is 1-.'i
this fall. SV's only win came
at the hands of Hannan, W.
Va.
Kyger Creek is fresh off a
22~ victory over arch-rival
Alexander. In the non-league
game, the Bobcats' runniilg
twins, Marcus Geiger and
Mike Casey each collected
over 125 yards.
Geiger's longest run of the
night was a ~ yard jaunt
while Casey broke the game
open with an 88 yard kickoff
return to open the third
period.
Coach Larry Cremeens'

W. L. Pet.

ep

·

TODAY'S NON&lt;USTODIALM0111ERS
DEAR HELEN:
My husband wanted the divorce. So did I, finally. But I didn't
see thai old traditional malarkey about the mother always
keeping young children. 1t meant I wouldn't be really free.
Since he was getting married again right away, I stipulated
that I would be a non-cilstodial mother. He "won" the kids - no
contest ! I have an Interesting, great-paying job and am on my
way up. I love our chi1ilren dearly. I see them often via visiting
rights. They're better off· with their father and stepmother
than they would be with a working mother. No traumas. No
guilt. No child support payments for him. So why do people
look at me as if I were some kind of monstor? - LAUNCHED
ON MY CAREER AND HAPPY
DEAR LAUNCHED:
Only a few very traditional people see you as "some kind of
monster." You made a choice that suited everyone. "Talk"
will subside when you stop being defensive.- H.
P .S. Do you pay child support to your ex·husband? Seems to
· · me the ruling should hold for either mate who doesn't keep the
children (especially if she hasagreat-payingjob).
·

Pro Standings
NBA Standings
By Un i t~d Press I nte r national

I

•

Deluxe Hair

MASK

$119
Nelson's

•

FULL MASK
4.

59

Nelson's
79c

89~

ROLLS

r

7 oz.

89~
HALF MASK

194

'1.20 VALUE
BRACH'S

CANDY CORN
12

oz.

49~

•
•

8" PUMPKIN
That Will Carry 'four
Trick or Treat Goodies .

69$
lson's

. 99c

..
•'
•

�- ~-

·6 - The Daily Sentinl'l, Middlrport.PQmeror. 0 ., Wednesday , Oct. 2ii.1977

Area 3 reservations due Friday

Sandy Carleton recently honored
Sandy Carleton. bnd~lect Tanuny, Mrs. Roy Ervm, Linda Foster.
ol Jeff Needs, was recently · MrS. Janet Needs, Mrs.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
honored with a bridal shower Jackie Raban , Mrs. F'rances Susie Pullins, Mrs. Connie
hosted by ·her sister-in-law. Carleton, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Con nolly, Mr s. Nancy
Mrs. Candy Carleton.
Mrs. Sally Ervin, Mrs. Cathy Dorsey, Mrs. Anna w·1..,.,n,
• ~~
A bIue and whi te coIor Sca rberry, Mrs. Connie Mrs. Rhonda Mrs. Linda Van
scheme was carried out and Carleton, Mrs. Sara Dill, Meter, Mrs. Judy Starcher,
~ef reshments of cake, punch. Mrs. Sharon Folmer. Mrs. Mrs. Betty Dill.

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Son has growing pains
By Kareu Bla.ker. Pb.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKE){- Our
. so crue I to our
teenage son IS
H&gt;-year-&lt;Jid daughter. She
adores him but he doesn 't
want her near him. I can't
stand to see her reelings hurt
and I get so angry at him. Is
there some war to convince
my son that she means no
harrn and merel.v loves him?
My husband thinks I am mak·
ing way too much out of this
" run of the mill brother-sister
rivalry ."
DEAR READER - 1 am
struck by how much empathy
you ha1•e for your daughter
and how little you have for
your son. Adolescents can be
obnox ious to be sure,
alienating adults as they try
to balance their contending
needs of remaining a child
and of becoming an adult. It
has been said that how we
feel as an adolescent is the
closest any of us come to a
psychotic state in the normal
lifecycle.
However, as difficult as
this period may be, it is possible to understand and help
your adolescent child. In this
case there 'are probably two
main reasons for your son,s
hosWity toward his sister.
First, she is obviously still a,.
child, clearly dependent on
her parents, a fact that you
all accept. Because your
adolescent, like most, cannot
admit to being anxious or
dependent, it disturbs him to
·see her flourishing in a
secure, comforting situation
which he is in the process of
rejecting. Thus, by steering

1ce crea1n, nuts, potato chips

clear ot her he may be trying were served. Games were
to avoid any reminder of that
Ia ed . h .
.
•·kid'sstuff."
pMrs.
y Mary
Wit Starcher.
priZeS gomg
to
Mrs.
Second, he is at an age Carla Carter, Miss Ginger
where sexual impulses are
powerful, erratic and difficult Cull urns, and Mrs. Faye Wat·
for him to comprehen d' A son.
Others attending were Mrs.
·
· u1a 1
younger SISter, partie r Y a Shirley Hawk, Julie and Lisa,
loving or clinging one , may Mrs. Ma~ Sh~ts and Mandi,
·
thre
·' "
be ta ken as a semus
at Mrs. Sara Cullums. Jim Watif-for example-he is sexually
aroused when she jumps into , son ' Mrs · Nancy Ervin and
his lap or touches him in
some way. Partially, then, he
f5.
may be mean to her sunply ·
6
because the feelings she
Mrs. Ada Ohlinger was
elicits in him are frightening
honored
Saturday afternoon
to him at this stage.
·
with
a
party
in celebration of
· Understanding
his
her
79th
birthday.
The party
behavior may help you suptook
place
at
the
home
of Mr.
port him in, his need to be
and
Mrs.
Joe
Bailey
where
apart !~om his sister much of
Mrs.
Ohlinger
resides.
the time. There will be plenty
Attending were Mrs. Ohlof time for closeness later
If this approach doesn't inger's three daughters, Mrs.
help, however, )' OU might
then ask yourself why it is so
important for your children
to appear so loving and close.
Were these feelings
something you wanted as a :
child but never received in 1
your own home• Would the 1
outward indication of love 1
between you. Children dispel 1
doubts you may have about 1
being a good parent? Trying 1
to,'&lt;answer these questions 1
should guide you in dealing 1
with your problem.
1
Write to Dr. Blaker in care 1
of this newspaper, P.O. Box 1
~. Radio City Station, New 1
York NY 10019. Due to 1
volume of mail she canaot 1
reply personally, but ques- 1 ,Of
lions of general interest will
be discilssed in future col-

7 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wt~lnesday , Oct. 26, 1977

Laryette shower
· held
.

A layette shower was held
for Mrs. Greg .. tf.:·nah)
Stewart, recently at t Middleport Church of Christ.
H
ostesses were Judy Hall and
Ilea Stewart.
Gifts were placed on a table

decorated in a stork motif
with streamers of pink and
blue and centered with a
stork replica · carrying a
baby.
Refreshments of cake
decorated in pink and blue
booties, punch and nuts were
served. Favors were diaper
replicas.
'
Attending were Mrs .
Bailey , M·r s . Albert · Charlotte Erlewine; Mrs.
Schleicher, and Mrs. James Evelyn Murray, Mrs .
Vennari , Mrs . Elsie Virginia Whitlatch, Mrs. JacChambers, Mrs. Vivian Wad- · q~eline Hoover, Miss Trina
dell, Mr. and Mrs. James Ferrell, Mrs. Barbara Prld·
Euler, Mrs. Russell Bailey, dy, Miss Kathy; Phaliil, Mrs . .
and Mrs. Oleva Cotterill.
Blanch Gilkey, Mrs. Lillian
A dessert course was serv- Hubbard, Mrs. Reva Beach,
ed.
Mrs. Faye Manley, Mrs.

M · Qhl'tn aer hon ored

Reservations for the Acea 3
fall meeting to be held in
Pomeroy on Nov. 7atSt. Paul
Lutheran Church are to he
made before Friday.
.
There is no charge for the
meeting but there is a $2.50
charge for the luncheon to be
served by the Lutheran
Church Women. Reservations are to be sent to Mrs.
Shirley Wilson, Route I, Box
76B, RuUana:·~:::'· ..

Also available for the
meeting will be nursery service. Mothers are to pay 25
cents for each child and are to
provide their children with
sack lunches.
The meeting will get underway at 9:30 with registration
and will continue through the
IWlcheon. In the afternoon
several workshops will be
held.
Approxilriately 75 from the

Nora Rice, Mrs. Flo Grueser,
Mrs. Debbie Gerlach, Mrs.
Becky Glaze, Mrs. Sharon
Stewart, Mrs. Arizona
Stewart, Mrs . Lucille '
Stewart, Mrs. Betty Reed,
Mrs. Suzanne Richmond.
. Sending gifts were Mrs.
Mary Stewart, Mrs. Joy
Russell, Mrs. Arline Davts,
Miss Joyce Davis, Mrs. Bernice Winn, Mrs. Hazel Thomson, Mrs: Leo Childs, Mrs.
Debbie Alford, Mrs. Eleanor
Lohse, Mrs. Cyrstal Lee,
Mrs. Lizzie Stewart, Mrs.
Carolyn Searls, and Miss San·
dy Neigler.

area representlrig districb in
both Ohio and West VIrginia
are expected to attend. A
feature will be the recognition of blue ribbon troops.
These are the ones who have
aU been registered by Nov. I,
have both a leader and a ~
leader, a sustalnlng membership drive chainnan, a cookie
chainnan, and have partlcipated in at least three service unit functions.

CITY ,
Sumc 150 · farm ers riding

"

everything we go to buy ,"

For senior citizens who are·
eligible 'under income
guidelines there will be some
relief with their heating bills
for this coming winter for
· those who act now .
The Ohio State Legislature
recently passed H. B. 230
which provides for a 25
percent discount on heating
bills from December 1977
through Aprill978 for persons
heating with gas or electric or
a flat $87.50 for those using
fuel olt, coal, wood, kerosene
. or propane gas.
Persons who are 65 or older
. in 1977 and whose incomes
were $7,000 or less in 1976 are
eligible for this discount .
Persons under 65 who -,vere
permanently and totally
disabled as of January I, 1977
and whose incomes are under
$7,000 are also eligible.
U you are eligible and
receiving the Homestead
Exemption you shoUld have
received a forrn from the
County Auditor's office. If
you are eligible and own your
own home or trailer and have
not received a forrn call the

LEND
AN
ARM
to your community through
the Red Cross blood center.
·alve us your •..

+

'•

H~. D

BLOOD.
LET'B .GETIT
TOGETHER.

CROSS

ressesfor
tqe olidays

0

L\L~t'

pe.ts.tnt. tent . or btousun
cOPYIIGHT 1tn-TH1 K~ll co. lnMS
._......___,.....__,....... AND 'IICIS G000 SUNDAY OCTOIII H .
1mTHIUSATUitDAY OCTOIU 29, 1m IN

CHOICE EAnNG •••
CHOICE SAVINGS ••••

..

'

USDA

CHOICE

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

25' Off

., ....Ga._ . •
WIJHCOUPON

WI RI$UVI T. . RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIU.

--~·-

NONI SOLD TO DIAIIIIS.

··~-. -

U.S. GOV'T GIIADED CHc)iCI~~{~

10-12-ll.

~--=·-IIIIINI

AVG.

Whole Boneless

Winning
compromise foils
'
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY-I hope you
have an answer to my pr()blem. My husband wanted
wall-to-wall carpeting in our
new home and I wanted to
keep our oriental-type area
rugs for the dining room and
living room. He got his
carpeting and I put the rugs
on top of it but these rugs
creep up and will not lay
smooth. Our rug man has no
suggestions and I do not know
what to do.-FLORENCE.
DEAR FLORENCE-I am
afraid you won but you lost,
too, Several rug and carpet
installers have also told me
that yours ts a problem for
which they have no answer.
There are things that can be
done when rugs are on wood
noors but not when on top ot
carpet. How about this,
readers• Have any of you
stumbled on to an answer?POLLY.
DEAR POLLY-When carrying canned drinks in a six
pack cooler I keep them very
cold by making the sixth can
~ ice can by filling an empty
can

three-fourths

full

of

water andfreezing. Better to
have five cold ones than six
lukewarrn ones. -ANNA.
DEAR POLLY-When my
foot socks (footsies ) become
worn on the bottom I apply an
iron-&lt;Jn patch to cover the
hole or even a thin spot. I
prefer blue jean material but
any heavy type can be used
and my socks certainly wear
a lot longer.-MRS. D.F .R.
DEAR POLLY---Before
storing baby shoes make sure
they are clean and very dry,
put in a plastic bag, add a used fabric softener sheet (like
we liSe in the dryer ) and then
seaL
·=·=·:::;:·:·:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::

The MouJtors at Rlverby
for tbe weekend will be
Mrs. Dorotha Suiter sud
Mrs. Flossie Loe for the 1 to
3 Saturday duty aud Mrs.
EmU Janko and Mrs. Ruby
Briggs for the 3 to 5 duty.
On Sunday It wUI he Mrs.
Arl Dambrough sud Mrs.
Gladys Grant for the early
sblft sud Mn. Oren Kyger
aud Mn. A. D. Lusk for the
late duty.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:::~;:;:::;:;:; :;:: :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:; : ;::::::: :

Lucrative Abode
During the silver strike at
Treasure City, Nev., in the
JB?Os, two miners built a
house from rocks picked up at
their claim. Later, when their
mine gave out, the two
" mined" their home for
$75,otWI in silver. :

If you have to fix a lot of
pancakes, waffles or French

IIGULAI 01 CNUI PAl

toast for breakfast for X
number of kids use shears to
cut them into bite size pieces
before adding syrup . .
A new plastic pot scJ:)Ibher
with one or two strings pulled
away for a handle makes a
good quiet toy to amuse a
youngster while in church or
other public gathering.
Used plastic place mats are
great to use to lay baby on
when changing his diapers.EMILY.
DEAR
POLLY---My
Pointer is for those d()-itvourself painters who often
get more paint on themselves
than on what they .are pain·
ling. When using an oil base '"U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
paint I fou : : d clean up is easy IIIFLOIN
when you use petroleum jelly
and a clean cloth. The jelly
takes the paint right off your
skin and even the liilolelim
noor.-JOYK.
DEAR POLLY~·-Mrs. - --~:;;;:(l
J.E.M. wrote that sbe knits
both sleeves of a sweater at
one time. I also knit the fronts
and back of the sweater at the
same time up as far as the
armhoies-that is, one piece
that goes all around. I then
only have the sleeve seams
imd shoulder seams to sew
together and this works out
heautifully.-MRS. L.B.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank -y ou
newspaper coupon clippers if

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef ....... ..... i&amp;.

Boneless Top ·

your

favo rite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in

her coiiiiillt. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
ne":spaper.

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set for
puolic heari ng Case No .
77 · 378 -EL ·FAC to review
the fuel procurement prac ·

t ices and polic'ies of the
Columbus and Southern
Oh io Electric Company,
the operat ion of its fue l

cost

adjustment

$

Bone In
Strip Steak .. .

Brach's Candy
lb.

180

East

Broad Stree(

Colum bus, Ohio . All .i nter ·
ested persons will be given
an opportunity to be
heard . Further informa t ion may be obtained by
contactmg
t he
Public

Ut ilt ties Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
by Randa l l G. Applegate,

Sr'"' r,.tarv

-=~ ----'

ggc

20-oz .

tvs.

highway traffic for an hour
Tuesday , protesting what
they sa id was government
over-rejulation, inflationary
prices on equipment and their
low profit on food.
Th e farmers carried
placa rds saying, HExpenses
up , farm prices down," "Oh,
I wish I could smile like
Carter down on the r~nn."

few years," he said. ~'We just

can't make ends meet."
Borel said farrners intend
to conduct several highway
protests throughout the state.

and "The farmer 's problem
will
be yours
RACE NOV. 6
today
tomorrow."
MARIETTA - The Mid
The California Highway Ohio Valley RidgerunnecsPatrot stopped the procession announced today their 11th
along Interstate 15 at various annual Little Switzerland
times to allow traffic to pass. Road Race to be held In
The caravan began six mil~s • Marietta on Sunday, Nov. 6.
south of Sun C1ty and ended m The featured race will be a 20
a parkmg lot m the city,
kilometer (12.4 miles I road
"Taxes have gone up 200 race over hllly and scenic
per cent for the farmer m the roads oulside of Marieita.

cons
liMIT 10 CANS PllASI

HOLLY fAIMS , U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Kroger
.
C
Pinto Beans .. iosl
BuHerin
$129
100-Ct:
rablefS ........... Btl .

.........

GILLIAN 'S FASHION CENTER

Grade A
large Eggs

Fresh Rib Half or
Qne Quarter
Pork Loin ......... ,. lb.

SJ29 .

49c

3 s529·

........
".......

.

'

WITH COUPON

......
.,...

FRENCH CITY HAMBURGER •••••••••••~o!~.$1.99
LITTLE PIG SAUSAGE ....................~~}l.19
WELKERS CUT UP
·
FROZEN FRYERS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••'~: •• 59

ca~

1

2·

. B 97~
TEEN QUEEN
89~ WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT••••••• ~~
MARGARINE.... /
1 lb. KRAFT
VELVEETA
:~~. $}19 IDAHO

BOOTH'S BREADED OYSTE

··~· s•OCIAI fOIIMUIA l 'qii!IARK AH0$

O(L MONTE CUT

GrHn·
Beans .. .....

~~;i;o"u

1
3 ,.o.. 99 C
4 ' 88

Soup ... ..... ...

'

lvl .

1

can•

lO'It ·oz.

. Cona

.....~r.r~~~$149

C

Pink or White
Grapefruit .. .. .. .. .

10 oz.

Box

CONTEST RULES:

•

I,

Submit pictoral e ntry(s) for any of the three
categories mentioned above.

BORDEN'S CREAMORA •••••••••••••••••J.a:••$1.59
5 ciz, ARMOUR
. .
~
VIENNA SAUSAGE.~n.t.a:f:;.u;.~~~~; ••••••••• 2/89
16 oz. NESTLES .'
. ., '
$1
CHOCOLATE QUIK •.•.••••••••••••..•••• ·•••.• .15

'$

6 1

• OHIO RIVER ACTIVITIES • BOATS • FLOODS

119

22 oz.

fiiiST 0' T.. SIASON
YOUR CHOICE INDIAN RIVER

PASSBOPK .SAVINGS
ACCOUNT FOR THESE.
THREE CATEGORIES

lb

19

16·01.

The Meigs Branch of The Athens County Savings &amp; Loan Company
is searching for pictures . photographs of activities related to the ·
Ohio River. Since the Ohio River has played a major role in our
community's heritage we plan to feature piclures of it as part of the
interior design at our new Pomeroy office opening in December ..
We're interested in all kinds of pictures, photos, or drawings of
River aclivities, boats, or floods which took place. in the past or even.
just last week. We're offering three sso.oq prizes, one for each
category . .

~

Lowfat Milk

Regular ·
RBd
ye rea .. .. .

Modern world production of
esame seed is estimated at
.4 billion pounds, most · of
vhich is .turned into olt.

NewJ of Ohio River Activities.

Hi Nu 2%

5;~i-

~

We're Interested In Pictures tOld or

CttEESE ••••• ;. ••_••••••

$129

..... ..··

1.U..WRC . .

Serve
'N' Save 1
$129
•
.
-l
b
.
Shc:ed Bacon ....... Pkv .

Fries ... .. .... .. .

LEBANON RksULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) IVoolunlteer Doc took the lead
at the three-quarter pole
I'uesday night and held on for
a one-llalf length victory over
Just Time in the featured
eig hth race at Lebanon
Raceway.
The winner covered the
on a slow track in 2:10 1returned $6, $3.20 and
. Just Time kicked back
--11 ~;~~~~ $2.60 for second and
l•
show horse, Scotch Witty,
Jaid $2.80.
The il-2 nightly double of
'ombination of Sunny Art and
3yrd Car Lith was worth
121.40.
A crowd of 1,161 wagered
ill5,892.

SLICED INTO POlK CHOPS

Canned Hams ..

I

Senior

Serve 'N' Save
'
l-Ib..
W1eners
........... Pkv

.

;·;~;~rDAll

office,

Cefftt

Mixed
Fryer Parts
......... tb.
UMIT 4 NGS . • IWI

c:;..~;;;·c·l;~a

.

Auditpr's

M1xaeiHet11

Frozen
Baking Hens ....... lb.

Russer Meat

should he returned to the
Auditor's office.
Fonns for persons who rent
or · trailers are
at the County

~lTHCOUPON

.

16-oa.

.

I.Jt_j'llll'r/)1 J\'o ll' Fv ~· (/Jmt mtlS

USDA
CHOICE

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Fresh Madi
Glazed Donuts

clause,

offices of the Commission ,

-

Mix or Match

and re lated matters . This
hear ing is scheduled to be ·
gin at 10 :00 A .M., on

Oclober 31 , 1977 , al the

:.
· ~;;:~

h...,.ltltlns.itllhli's

SJ
5 s1
99c
4lb89

Wisk Liquid .32·0l .
Detergent ... ..... Btl .

49
1b.s 1

U S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOIQ , IIU lOIN

h•ERF'ECT HALLOWEEN TREATS''

10, 0,. lAIII
LEGAL NOT ICE

::rse~~~~~~~~~~.~
:~~;~,:.k..

,--7)di

;-;rk

49

..
69
.
.
.
.
.
.
1b,$ 2
Sputau,- -

U.S. GOV'T GIADID CHOICI

Rib Eye Steak .... lb.

Bread .. .. ... .. .
IN'
Beans .. .. .. .. ..

Post Office in Pomeroy.
To receive .this discount
these forms should be mailed
by November 15 to the Ohio
Department of Taxation, P .
0. Box 2619, Columbus, Ohip
43216.
The space on the form for
the account number should be
filled in With the complete
number that is on your utility
bilL
Please tell your friends and
neighbors about the utility
discounts and urge them to
take advantage of lt. If you
have any questions or need
any help in filling out the
questionnaire stop in the
Senior Citizens · Center . in
Pomeroy Of call I &amp; R 9927311.
"

Rib Eye

Boneless
39
l
b
.
$
1
Boston Roll ........... .

$ 99

she - uses

69

c

U.S. GOV 'T GU.DID CHOICI , lllf CHUCK
SHOULDII 'OT IOAST

Sirloin Steak

·~;~i...

Citizens Center, Banks, and

said Alex Borel, a farmer
!rpm Murrieta, Calif.
" But the farmer only gets 2
cents on a loaf of bread and
it's been tha t way for the past

ford,' Carl Sauvage, Lillie
Smith, Teresa Steele, Ellen
Stover, Haze.l Swanson,
Vernie Van Dyke, Lillian
Weese, Jessie West, Zetdon
West, Evelyn Young.
• (Births, Oct. Z4)
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Elias,
a daughter, Letart. Mr. and
Mrs . Bernard George, a
daughter, Gallipolis .

officeThese
992-2ii9B
for
r------------------~-, Auditor's
information.
forms

Salad Dressing

umns.

Trailers included in Farmers block highways
last two years and there's
SUN
Calif. (UPI J new heating proposal frartors and trucks clogged high inflation costs for

Hoker Medical Ceuter
(Discharges, Oct. 251
Lando! ph Black burn,
Thomas Campbell, Judith
Cox, Joyce Dillon, Andrew
Garthee, Dottie Henderson,
Mabel Hughes, Mrs. Allen
Jones and son, Daisey
Lawson, Judith Livingston,
Janet Ludnum, Rita Miller,
.Patsv Morris, Louise Rad-

1-

Print "Pict.ure Contest," your name,
address and phone nufllber.. on back of enlry or on
a slip of paper attached to .same. Also, ~ pecify
the category your entry depicts . Enter as .o ften
as you wish ; please submit each entry
separately 1

2 -

20 oz.

Far

Kroger Welcolllts
Your Fetler•l
Food Stamps
TOTAl SATISfACnOII
5UAUiml

w. ...................
If at all passlbti. n, duo It

conditions btyOIMI our c•
frol, we rvn ovt of • ....
10rtlsod spocial, wa
tutt a comparoblt ....,.. ol
a sl'llllar air•ilt or gkot yeo .
a RAIN CHECK far tllo adwr·
!lud '""lot " .... .,..lot
price ony tlrnt wltttln 10
doys. W. paulw .... • ·

•'*'11-

,.nrauara-dluolllfltd ••1111 a Kr,... poKhott,

w• will rtpfou your ltMt •
r•fund your monty.

SHOUT••••••••.•.•••• .-••·••....•..••.•••••:~ •..•••sl.29

3 - Entries may be submitted in person or
mailed to Mr. Richard E. Jones, Vice Pres . and
Branch Mgr ., The Athens Co. Savings ·&amp; Loan
Co ., 296 W. Second St ., Pomeroy, 0. 45769. We
·r eserve all · reproduclion rights , .allhough all
material will be returned to owner after contest.
4- Deadline to submit entries is ·D ecember 1. All
qualified entries will be displayed during the
Grand Openlng.

'

12 oz. JIF CREAMY

PEANUT BUTTER••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.79~
16 oz. lllAHOAN ·

INSTANT
POTATOES.•• ~····················~·· 59~
28
TEEN QUEEN
CUT GREEN BEANS •••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/89~

MEIGS- -.BRANCH
-.
·-

ATHENS CO. SAVINGS

oz ~

4 ROLL WHITE

CHARMIN TISSUE .•••••• ,••••••••••••••••••••• 79~
2 lb. GRANULATED
SUGAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 59

~

''

-·

Mt:••r•

'ESLIC
r....,..ll••"'•••l•••!••... -• C•••

L~-

s.h

,,,.~•e&lt;l

Ia

t•o.oov

&amp; LOAN COMPANY

296 W. SECOND ST.

I

POMEROY, OHIO

RICHARD E. JONES, MGR:

992-3863

EQUAL HOUSING

LENDER

�Washington window

When is a person too ·o ld to work?
By DONAW H. ~lAY
. WASHIGNTON l UPI) - It
all began with Otto Von
Bismarck.
.
. In 1889, in the western
world's first state-&lt;!upported
old age pension system, the
chancellor of the German
Empire, defined "old age" as
65.
Other rountries eventually
adopted the same figure in
setting up their retirement
programs, and so did the
United States when it established Social Security in
1935.
The House Commjttee on
Aging, which rerounts this
hist ory , argues that the
original choice of age 65 must
have

SENIOR BAND MEMBERS HONORED - Senior
band members of the Wahama High School band were
honored during halftime at the Winfield-Wahama football
game on Friday evening. S!iown, front row, )eft to right.

are JeMie James, Donna Marr, Mary McFarland
Rhonda Kay, and April Parsons. Back row, left to right:
Usa Gilland, Kathy Test, CUrtis Morris, Karen Stodola
Brent Hart, and Keith Goldsberry.
'

-~-

$204,059 in funds received
Meigs County's three local
schoo l districts received a

tota l of $204,058.96 as their
share of the October State
School Foundation subsidy

payment, State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson reports.
The state's 611 · city,
eJ&lt;empted and local school611
districts received $96,146.33.

been

somewhat

arbitrary. Bismarck, at the
time. was an active 7·4.
Wilbur Cohen, a former
secretary
of
health,
education and welfare and
. &lt;ine of the drafters of the U.S.
Social Security program, has
written that there was "no
scientific,

Amounts received by each of
the three local district. in·
elude : Eastern Local,
147.281.41 : Mei~s Local,
$114 ,778.07 , and Southern,
$41,999.48 . . The checks are

after deductions for employe
and teacher retirement. In
addition, the county board of
education received a direct

allotment of $14,478.11:i.

soclal,

or

gerontological basis" for the
United States picking 65 "It was the general
consensus that 65 was the
most acceptable age.': He
added that 65 was intended as
the age when benefits would
begin, not as a compulsory
retirement age for everyone.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
To amend Section 1 of Article Vol the
Constitution of Ohio •
'
TO PROVIDE THAT A PERSON IS
-ENTITLED
TO
VOTE
AT
ALL
ELECTIONS
IF.
HE
HAS
BEEN
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THIRTY
DAYS
AND
HAS
THE
OTHER
QUALIFICATIONS OF AN ELECTOR,
AND TO•" PROVIDE THAT A PERSON
WHO IS REGISTERED AND FAILS TO
VOTE IN AT LEAST ONE ELECTION
DURING ANY PERIOD OF FOUR
CONSECUTIVE
YEARS
MUST
REGISTER AGAIN BEFORE BEING
ENTITLED TO VOTE.

1

(Proposed by Initiative Petition l
A majority affirmative vole is"necessary for
ttassage.
TEXT OF PROPOSED AMENDMENT
(The proposed new language is capitalized
and underlined)
ARTICLE V
SECTION 1. Every citizen ot the Un i ted
States, of the age of eighteen years , who has
been a resi dent of the state , county,
township . or ward , such t ime as may be
pro v ided by law, AND HAS BEEN
REGISTERED TO VOTE FOR THIRTY
DAYS, has the qualifications of an elector,
and is entitled to vote at all elections. ANY
ELECTOR WHO FAILS TO VOTE IN AT
LEAS T ONE EOLECTION DURING ANY
PERIOD OF FOUR CON&gt;SECUTIVE;
YEARS SHALL CEASE TO BE AN
&lt;: LECTO R
UNLES"S
HE
AGAIN
&lt; f GISTERS TO VOTE.
YES
NO

-SHP..LL THE PROPOSED.
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

ARGUM.ENT FOR THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
VOTE YES ON HONEST ELECTIONS
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
SAFEGUARD YOUR VOTE. VOTE YES
ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 restores t he 30-day res idency
safeguard to voter registration and requires
anyone who has not voted in four years to
re -r egister. Thi s prevents someone from
.votrng falsely in an area where they do not
resi de or from wrongfully attempting to use
the name of regi stration of someone who
has moved away or died .
See that your vote is not stolen or cancelled
by a tombstone.
Vote YES on Iss ue 1.
PROTECT YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL
RIGHT TO VOTE.
VOTE YES ON IS.SUE 1.
You have the constitutionally guaranteedr igh t to be counted on eve ry vote you cast .
lssue..l protects that r ight by insisti ng ()~
safeguard s aga inst multiple or fraudulent
voting . Wit hout it. the U.S. Justice
Department has warned, th ere is almost no
way to trace the wi de open vote fraud that
co uld occur . Instant reg ist rat ion can rpean
instant fra ud . Vote yes for integrity in
government . Vote YES on Issue 1.

ISSUE 1 SAVES THE TAXPAYER'S
MONEY. VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 will prevent the squandering of over
$2 .3 million of ta xpayer's money. · These
funds will be automatica ll y spent if Issue 1
is not passed and the cL•rr ent law is al lowed
to sti'lnd .

ISSUE 1 CAN PREVENT THE BOSSES
AND MACHINES FROM TAKING OVER.
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1.
Issue 1 keeps elections in the hands of the
people and out of the pockets of the big
machine bosses, by protecting the integrity
of th e individual vote . .It guarantees every
Oh ioan a voi·ce in government by denying
the bosses the opportunity for easy and
undetected mass vote fraud. Vote for your
right . to vote. Votes YES on Issue 1.
ELEI;TION
DAY
REGISTRATION
MEANS ELECTION FRAUD. VOTE YES
ON ISSUE 1.
Committee for the Amendment : Jean
M . Barren , William A. Miller, Jr ., W. C.
Channeff. and Wi l liam H. Schneider .
ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT.
· Ohioans deserve elections systems fhat
make it easy to register and vote. Ohio ' s
new election law does that through Election
Day and permanent registration.
. In 22 Ohio counties, residents have
always had the right to vote on Election Day
Without reg1stering in advance. Now all
eligible Ohioans may register on Election
Day.
_I ssue_ 1 would prohibit Election Day
reg1strat10n for all of us . It continues
restrictions that shut out potential voters.
Over two million elgible Ohioan s are not ·
registered . Last fall only 56 percent voted.
YOU SHOULD KNOW:
1. Separate lines for registrat ion and
voting make.s Election Day registration
convenient for voters .
·
·
2. States that ·have it report turnouts of
between 65 percent and 76 percent .
,
3. Even t_he FBI couldn't find any fraud
in the five states w i th El ection Day
registration, and the people of Ohio are
every bit as honest as they are.
·
4. Ohio's new Election Law strengthens
the . protection against fraud by requiring
reg1strants to show identification and
providing for five year prison terms for
anyone voting twi ce.
5. It requ-ires automatic purging from
registration lists When pe.op le move or die .
6. Election Day registration is the
cheapest way to register voters . ·
ISSUEl
··· · denies Ohioans the right to use Election
Day registration even through it· works in
other stales.
;-- makes it more difficult for political
Independents to have a voice in
government .
·
.. . . freez_es . the ban on Election Day
reg1strat1on mto our Constitution before we
ha~e a chan~e to see how it works.
Election Day registration works
without fr_aud . Even Cu-yahoga County's
GOP Chairman admits the claims of fraud ·
are " pure baloney'_' . What really worri es .
-them is not fraud - it's more voter s.
VOTE NOON ISSUE 1
· Committee against the Amendment :
Don Maddux. J. Leonard Camera , C. J .
M c Lin , Tony
P. Hall, Robert
E.
O' Shaugl"lnessy, and John K. Mahoney.
TEXT OF PROPOSED COtlSTiTUT IONAL
AMENDMENT
.
(The proposed new language is that set forth in capita 1
letters and underlined.)

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIO THAT ARTI-CLE V, SECTION 1 OF
THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE AMENDED TO
READ AS .FOLLOWS :

E ve ry citizen of the United State s, of the age of
.e.ighteen years, who has been a resident of the sfate,
county, township, or ward, such time as may be

provi ded by law, AND HAS BEEN RE GISTERED TO
VOTE FOR THIRTY DAYS, has the qua lifications of
an elec tor, and is entitled to vote at all elec t ions. ANY

ELECTOR WHO FAI LS TO VOTE IN AT LEAST ONE
ELECTION DURING ANY PERIOD OF FOUR
CO NSECU TI-VE YEARS SHALL CEASE " TO BE AN
ELECTOR UNLE SS HE AGAIN REGI ST ERS Tv
VOTE .

Now, Congress is tinkering
with this traditional concept
of "old age.
Different bills have passed
1

'

•

the Housec 359 lo 4, and the
Senate, 88 to 7, raising from
65 to 70 the age at which most
employers can require
workers to retire . A
compromise and final
enactment appeared Ukely by
the end of the year,
·"
Support for these mellllw-es
caught hold in Congress for
severa\reasons:
Senior citizens have gained
political power. Recession
and inflation have cut
retirees··· sam.fii'ratlf living.
And it has become evident
\hat Social Security is becoming increasingly expensive to
finance . One reason · is the
number of retired persons is
growing compared to !he
number of workers paying
into Social Security.
Business group~~ argue that
relaxing mandatory
· retirement will make it
harder· to run efficient
companies that with fewer
openings aithe top, there wlu
befewerpromotionsbelow; it
will be harder to keep good
workers ; vitality and new
ideas will be lost
Civil rights 8roups are
divided on whether the
legislation would result in
fewer jobs and promotion
opportunities for the young,
members of minorities and

old age : they outlive men ;
they frequently enter the job
market after children are
grown; they work for lower
wages and earn lower
pension benefits.
Sponsors of the bills say the
effect on unemployment will
be small because relatively
few elderly persons will work
longer. Most Americans covered
by
mandatory
retirement now are retiring
before the required age. The
trend in the country is toward
earlier retirement.
One study showed that of a
typical 100 retired men, 54
were covered by mandatory
retirement. 24 of those
remained on the job until the ·
fixed retirem~nt age, and. !0
of th&lt;ise went-out to seek other ·
jobs.
Sen. H~rison Wi!U8111S, D. N.J., chief s~sor of the
Senate bill, sind It would add
at mosr 200,000 aMually to
the job m~rket, In an
economy which last year
produced 3 mi!Uon new jobs.
On~ idea to wh1ch
Washmgtoo appears opposed,
however, is raising the agenow _65 - at which people ~e
eligible for . full Soc1al
Se~ty bencl1ts. (They can
retire earher on lower
benefits.)

women.

The National OrganiZation
for Women said women stand
to gain because they hllve a
particular need to work into

Co~merce

·Secretary

Juaruta Krep11 once broached
that subject and got a heated
letter from Rep . Claude
Pepper, D-Fla., head of the

•'
•
.,

Committee on Aging. Kreps '
replied that neither she nor
the

administration

~ \1i)l!)[f

were

proposing such a plan.

vmcrmrflm\']

Ex-champ has
series of tests
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Former
heavyweight
champion Joe Louis' chest
pains have resulted from
blood seepage between layers
of his aorta, doctors at
Sunrise Hospital
said
Tuesday night.
Louis, 63, underwent a
series of tests since being
admitted to the hospital
Saturday. He has 'be$11 in
guarded condition.
·
Doctors said he was
suffering from difecting
aortic aneurysm, or blood
seepage between layers of his
aorta. No decision was made '
as to whether he will need •
surgery.
Louis, who held the heavy·
weight championship for 12
years in the 19309 and 40s
works as a greeter ai
Caesar's Palace HotelCasino.

Nearly all the · Pacilli: "
islands are volcanic in orig&amp;.:•
Many have eroded to sea
level. becoming coral· "
encrusted atollS.

Oct. 27, 1877
There w111 be more th an one palh
ror you to choose from this coml'lg year leading lo material ac. ·
quis1tion. Select the road that
otfeors slaw, steady gains. not the
oM wh ere the prospec ts are
more alluring and risky

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) 11
m&lt;fy tnf· ner:essary to bite the
bullet In order to prevent discord
wllh your mete today . Oo•ng
o th er w i se co uld st l.r •JP
some th l n~ regreltable. Having
uouble selecting a c11reer? Send
lor ~· our copy ol Astra-Graph
Lener by ma iling 50 cents lor
each s1gn and a long , self "ddressed , starroed envelope to
As tra-Graph , P.O. Bo;~~; 489

Radio Clly Slal:on. N.Y. 10019:

Be sure to spec1ty your birth

sign.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) You r In tu ition and logic

should fu rnish clues today to a
lru itlul co4.1rse of &amp;ction . II they 're
1gnored. you could do someth1no
counterproductive.
-

,

AMENDMENT
· To adopt new Article X IX of the
Constitution of Ohio
1. TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
USING IN THIS STATE LEG-HOLD
TRAPS IN THE TRAPPING OF WILD
BIRDS OR
WILD
FOUR-LEGGED
ANIMALS (QUADRUPEDS) AND ALSO
TO PROHIBIT ANY PERSON FROM
USING ANY TRAPPING DEVICE IN A
MANNER
WHICH
WILL
CAUSE
CONTINUED, PROLONGED SUFFERING
TO SUCH BIRDS OR ANIMALS;

2. TO PROVIDE THAT EACH SEPARATE
VIOLATION OF . THIS AMENDMENT IS A
CRIME; AND
.
3. TO PROVIDE THAT ANY PERSON
MAY BRING A CIVIL ACTION FOR AN
INJUNCTION TO STOp A VIOLATION
AND TO RECOVER COSTS
AND
ATTORNEYS FEES.
( Prop_osed by lniative Petition)
A majority affirmative vote is necessary lor
passage.
YES .
NO

SHALL THE PROPOSED
·AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

ARGUMENT
FOR THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Passage of Issue 2 will prevent needless
and extreme pain and suffering for untold
numbers of animals. The effect of Issue 2 is
similar to the long accepted and humane
practice of putting a horse out of its misery
rather than permitting it to suffer after it
breaks a log.
Issue 2 in no way bans trapping as eiffler
a sport or profession in Ohio. It does
elimi.nate the use of the leghold trap, a
device which severely Injures its victim and
then continues to hold the creature in a
continuing , and often long period of extreme
pain .
Several types of quick: kill traps are
available which do not inflict such
suffering. These traps would still be legal
and available to all persons wishing to
~ngage in trapping.
.
Persons who wish to trap for pest or
disease control or for wildlife management
purposes may also continue to do so,
Providing that any of the many quick, kill
' traps available are used .
Issue 2 also prohibits the use of any
trapping device if it is used in a manner
which will ca use continued, prolonged
suffering. This prohibition will not affect the
proper use of any of the quick kill traps.
Simply put , passage of Issue 2 w i ll end
suffering for animalS whose pelts are a
valuable natural resource . And, as more .
humane traps are used, fewer non-valuable
animals and pets will be accidentally
trapped in Ohio. However, while protecting
. Ohio animals, human ~ trapping will still be
perm1tted as a sport or profession in this
state .
·
Committee for the Amendment: Robert
E. Cape, Mi chae l J. Donohue, · Athony A.
Kleinschmidt, Bruce Rouch , and Sandra E.
Rowland .
·

TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIOTHATARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS:
Sect1on 1•. No person shall use in any manner In the
trapping qf wdd birds or wild quadrupeds and leghold
tral? In _the state. No person shall use any trapping
dev1ce in a manner which will cause continued

prolonged suffering hi a wild bird or wild quodruped ;~
this state.

Section 2. Each sepi.raie violation of this
amendment c~nstitu~es a crime. In addalon , an~
perso,n may bnng a c1vil action In· any Common Pleas
Court for an injunctlofl to stop violations of this
amendment. Such person may recover the costs of
acnon and reasonable attorneys tees .

UNITED STATES OF AMERiCA .
STATE OF OHIO
·
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE
I, TED W. BROWN, Secretary of State do hereby
certify that the foregoing are true and corre~t Copies of

the ar:nendment to Section I of Article V of the Ohio

Const1tutlon proposed by Initiative petition and th

ne!

amendment to the Ohio "Constitution adopting
A~tlcle XI X proposed· by initiative petition, together .
With the .arguments fer and against each amendment
as subm1tted by the appropriate committee and the

ballot language.
'
IN TESTIM~NY WHEREOF, I hove hereunto
subscnbed ":IV name and affiJCed my official seal at
Columbus th1 s 12th day of September, 1977.

TEDW. BROWN
Stc

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 181 on Sat~rday and bdrial at

'fou mu st"no~ perm it yourself to
te intlmloatE!d tod11y by persons
1nv~l ved In your ca re~r . Feelings
ol msecurl~y wit! provoke you to
react erratically

SMOKED

Memonal Gardens m Athens . ...
Okey Pullins is a patient in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Gospel Tones q artet
.
I.!

Secretar y of State

TAURUS (Aprii20-Mor 201 This
1s definitely not the day 10 make
Im porta nt dec isions Ur'!der
pressure . Outs1de influences

'
· ' a
7 ..30 p. m. All welcom
e.
Thelma H end erson and

hamper your thoughls. ·
G!MINt (M•r 21-Juno :201 In

your anxiousness to get thi ngs
dQ ne today you mlghl use
methods that will only cause
lurther complic ations Think
before you turn the cra~k

Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Spencer and sons and
El
B 1
· ·
eanor
oy es
VlSited

·
relatives at Grantsville W
CANCER "(Juno 21-July 221 You Va. on Sunday.
' ·

.·

may experience some difficulty
today in communicating as well
as you 'd like to. Should this occur, be consistent. patient and
tolerant .
LEO (July 23-~ug. 221 Don't take
on more .than you ca n r;ompetentty hand le today or stray
too far from your area of exp~r­
tlse. &lt;?ut of your element, you
coulei founder .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)
Usually you 're quick to perceive
the essence of a fresh jdea. ToClay, however, you'll ten d to j ump
to err.oneous co nc lu sio n s .
Triple-check fact s.

LIIIRA (Sopt. 23-Qct. 231 Read
the small print In contracts and
be wary ol assum ing t he
obligations of others . Money
matters are tricky today.
I NEWSP~PER

ENTERPRISE A$SN

·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTM E NT .
Case No . 22 237

Estate of Nellie R. Vale
Deceased .
Not ice is hereby g i ven tha ~
-!ohn F . Vale of Columbus ,
Oh io , has been du l y appointed
Admin ist rat or of the Estate
of Nellie R . Vale , dece ased ,
late of Salem Street, Rutland
Chic , Meigs Coun t y , Ohio . '
Creditors are requ ired to
file the ir clai m s w ith said
f i duciary
within
t hree
months .
Dated th is ISi h day of
Oc tober 1977 .

1.

( 10 )

.

1Each bidder may bid for
either the purchase of tne
1~76 Chevrolet or for the sale
to the V illage of Pomeroy of a
ntw pol lee cru iser descr ibed
above or bot h. Ea ch bid must
c4ntain the full name of every
person or company interested
II"P ihe same, a.nd the bid must
bt accompan ied by a check
o( bond In the sum of S100.00
to. the satisfact ion of the
VUiage Council as a.guaranty
ttf.at If the b id is accepted ,
c~ntract w il l · be entered Into
all\d Its performance properly
secured .
:rhese checks or bonds will
bt returned at once to all
except the successful bidder.
H1s checks or bond w ill be
h41d until the contract or bid
is..propt!rly executed by him.
The right Is reserved to
r ~je c tany and all b ids. 90 day
dtllvery from date of ac ceptance .
Jane Walton ,
Clerk
V"ILLAGE OF
POMEROY
( 10) 19, 2~, 2tc

,,.,

•

•

••

•••
••
•

...

oz.

·-"·' .
'&lt;

·$

QUALITY PLUS

~

PORK BUTT

7
19
~bRK LOIN ••••••••••• !!.~.l

BACON ••••••••••••••••• ~ ••

'•,,.'
..

'·;~

I

09

ROAST..; ••.••••..•••••• !!.
COUNT~Y

•.

.'...
.•.•.
,._
#"

'••

.,,

.'

RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS

Miracle

3-LB.

Whip

APPLES......·........ !~G••

Sa l;od Oress 1ng

FRESH
GOOD VALUE
.

,

SATURDAY!P

9 til Noon

~------

----

'

4 $1
YOGURT:................ I

~a BORDEN'S .

ELF

·

'

~

80Z.

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

ELF

FLAVORITE

GENERAL MillS

JOAN OF ARC

SUGAR

CHEERIOS

KIDNEY BEANS

DOG FOOD
WMPO

VANIUA OR CHOCOLATE

ICE CREAM ,, ............. ,

TOM_ATO JUICE •• ~!:~:

25 LB.

TO

liz GAL

.TOMATOES .......... ~~~z~.

. Casey Kasem

4

PUMPKINS~ ••
DEL MONTE

_$299

W/C

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 29, 1977

5-LB.

_79'

. -10 OZ.
W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 29, 1977

~;~;;; ~~:;-~

49'

W/C

MC 09283400
Limit • Per &lt;;ustomer
Good vnly at Powell's
Offo&gt;r l'vn;,ro&lt; Oct. 29, 1977

;·!

.."''

&gt;

LB.

'"''' "''
KRAFT

'

.,_'

STYLE

SAUSAGE••

.
•• -

Manning D . Webster
Judg e
19, 26, ( 11 ) 2, Jt c

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRIASEMENT
PUBLIC NOTICE
The State of Ohlc, Meigs
Sea led bids w ill be r-eceived
County , Court of Common
jn fhe office of fhe Village
Pleas, Problillfe Division
Clerk, Pomeroy , Oh io, unti l
To the Executor or Ad 12 o'cloc k noon on October 31 ,
mi nistra to r of the estate , to
1977 on any of the follow ing
such Of tne follow in~ as are
residents of the State of Oh io ,
proposals .
'1. For the purchase by the
v i z: - the surviving spo use,
V 1llsge of Pomeroy of a new
next
of
kin ,
the
the
1~78 tour door five passen ger
benefic iaries under th e will ;
and to the attorney or .at .
sedan with the following
torneys repr esen ting any of
added eQuipment :
350 Cub ic inch engine 4 the aforementioned person s :
barrel carburetor, Min . va
Frank
M.
Fugate h
Power St eering and Power · P-om eroy , Ohi o.
You are hereby not ified
Brakes
that the Inv en tory and Ap ·
5 b,la ck t i res
Foam rubber front seat
praisement of the Estate of
Spotlight on left nand side the aforement i oned ,
deceased , Ia te of said County,
Heavy duty oi l f i lter ·
Heavy duty battery 80 AMP were filed in this Ccurt . Said
Inventory and Appraisement
Air Conditioner &amp; 61 AMP
will be for hearing before thi s
AI tern a tor
'Positiv e traction rear aXle Court on the 27 th day of
Au tom a t ic
transmission October, 1977, at lO : OOo'c loc k
A .M.
Vinyl upholstery
Any per son Cleslring to f i le
'Roof Drip Moldings
eHeptions thereto mu st t i le
116 Wheelbase
Ca I ibra ted
Speedometer them at lea st five days prior
to the date set for hear ing
Police Body Package
Transfer Po l i ce Radio , · Given under my hand arid
Siren , Flashing Lights, Fire sea l of sa id Court. this .14th
Extinguisher and protective day of October 1977 .
shield from present car to
Manning D . Webster
new car.
Judge
,2. For sele by the VIllage of
P.omeroy Its 1976 Ct'levrolet
By Carolyn G. Th omas
Impala four door r B cylinder,
Deputy Cl erk
,without radio eQuipment , tire
eXtinguisher, siren, flashing (10) 19, 26, 2tc
si gn43!IS and protec tive sh i eld .
The bidder may state either
••lt,at he will g ive for the 1976
Ch&amp;vr'olet- or what amount hi &lt;:=-::~=====-­
will allow as a trade. ln for the _,
ntw pol le e cru lser descri bed
a~ove .

....•'·.

~.

WIENERS •••••••••••~ ••••

family of

Marietta \YhO aiso called on
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz in the even4ng.

•

·~

,
12

D~nner guests of Nina
Robmson and Clara Follrod
on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Swartz and

:·•

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

Church last Monday evening.
Rev . ·. and Mrs. Richard
thomas
from
Tu~p ers
Pia~~ also ~tt en ded .
·

Gerald

•••

JOWL••••••••••••••••••• ~8~

.
·
_
Will present a muscial
PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20) program here at the Alfred
Make a list ol things wh ich you Church Saturday Oct 22 t

may present you with a hairbrained scheme today that could
separate you from your hard ~
~~~ ~ ~d dollars. Ll~ten not. leap

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
.
Opponents of Issue 2, the anti-trapping
amendment. urge Ohioans to vote" NO" for
three primary reasons:
1. The amendment would ban all
trapping activities, not just the leg hold trap.
2. Trapping , including the use of the
leghold trap. is necessary . for proper
wildHfe management and conservation .
3. The subject - allowable devi ces for
catching wild animals - should not be
inc I uded in the Constitution of the State of
' Ohio.
The proposal as written , seeks to outlaw
the use of "a ny trapping device.' ' which
may even include mouse traps ahd rat
traps , cages and nets. No distinction Is
made . among devices. Any method that
traps an animal or bird can be said to
produce suffering , Scientists trap certain
wild animals for rabies research and birds
for encephalitis tests. Opponents of Issue 2
believe this importar.f work on disease
control would be curtailed by passage of the
amendment . ·
Good wildlife management requires
that wild animal populations be controlled
at levels consistent with the space and food
available to sustain them . An absence of
·trapping to aide population control will
result, first in burgeoning populations of,
for example, fast -breeding muskrats and
raccoons; followed by destruction of the
species through starvation and disease . The
trapping of wild animals in Ohio is
regulated by the Division of Wildlife to
protect domestic pets from the ravages of
contagious diseases and to limit the taking
of wild animals to sur pi us animal
population and pests. Trapping for pest
control must also be carried on by farmers
to protect their crops from rodenK
The Constitution of this stale is the
basic document which establishes our form
. of governmel\t and delineates the rights of
our citizens : It should not be cluttered with
issues, which , if to be legislated at all.
should be enacted into law by the Ohio
General Assembly.
Committee against the Amendment :
Ronald James, Bob McEwen, Ronald K.
Milleson, Jerome Stano, and M. Ben Gaeth.

(9) 28 (10) 4, 11, 18, 25.

298 SECOND ST.

pdorltles.
. Helen Woo de attended the
ARIES (Morch 21 .Aprll 181 Co uncil on
Ministries
Someone you're associated wilh meetmg at Rutland UM

PROPOSED AMENDMENT.. TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSEDCONSTITUTIONAL

Store Hours:
lrlon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 181
Makmg uvre osonabl y heavy Guthrie "" paid thei
1 t
dema nds of a trlend today could
·
r as
d Dm age or even se ver l he -·respects to him at t he White
re lallonsh lp . Unk ind words Funeral H ome in th e evening
could al::o o cut the co rd .
and attended ser vices there

would !Ike to accomplish today .
or you might get off on tangents
a nd
forget
your
real

2

Sunday School attendance
on Oct. 16 was 37. The offering was $1 7.45.
Worship services w~re held
at 10:45 with the Rev.
Thomas speaking fron\
Genesis 5:24 and Heb. li :H
on the subject "Enoch
Walked with God" . At·
tendance was 30. Nina
Robinson was pianist and
Howard Flanders, song
leader.
Thursday, Nov. 17 was
a!Ulounced as picture day at
the church for the Pictorial
Church Directory.
Koehler
of
Edgar
Amesville called on his sister
and brother-in-taw, Mr. and
Mrs. Hobart Swartz one day
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Taylor
and the Lloyd Dillinger
family met their son John
Taylor of the Air Force' for an ·
hour at the home of another
son, Charles Taylor, Sunday
afternoon, on a brief stop in
line of dut v.
Many friends, re latives
and neighbors of Emerson

15.5

oz.

5/$1

w

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell' ~
Offer Expires Oct. 29,1977

'

�•

·-

..,.
Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items ~ Into Cash =.,t

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday ,Oct. 26, 1977

•

-·- I &amp;GF ---=-- •

15 Wol'\b ur ttntkr

tdlo&gt;h

Jda~!&gt; :

,.,'"'

6do6~:.

.I 00

Cluu .:,•

'"

'"'

••1

Eo~~~dl 'olo'ut'tl U\o:r

tllo.· mmUI IWll ).)

-4 t't'fll..s po:r ~ ~·u.l !J'-'1 11.!~
"1\:..b' rtliUill* 1Jtht~ l' U10111 ~-,,1"-Wt\.ltl\ t•
tla~:~- -... 111 t.tt dldQ:~I a t tl~t.• I Jr11

wun.h,

L'&gt;

Tii h•

.

In nwmury, (dM uf Thank:. tltM
()W.tuat') · 6 L't' Jit:. v-:• ~ ··nl. ' 1110
IIIIIIUIIW1 1.

Ca.s.h Ui di.l\'allt't'

~h.Ot lt'

•

Hum.· ~ It'!! illkl ' '" N :!od lt':o
J..ll.rt• at't't'plt."\1 unl~ ~· rt iJ •· r:.l r ""Lth
urtlo•l'l :!5 l't'nl &lt;J_l.Jr~t· iur .. u..-. l'a : 1' •
Ut).!

Bvx Numbu

illl".tn•clTht• S..•i t·

tmd

Th,• PulJh:.lk'l n •:.o.•J\ t':. t l~o..· n,:.ht
tu ~t t• r l't'/t''' 01 11 ~ 1ub d•·t·m,·.t ,!&amp;
jt'I..'IIOIWl Tht: Pulll r;:.lk·r 'oUl\ 11••1 LA•
1\."::.pull.'llbil' r,rr !lh&gt;h 'lill;l llt&gt;lh lllltW•
r~·t Ln!&gt;&lt;'rtl.m

IN MEMORY of our mother Ruby HOOF HOLL OW Hones . Buy , sell
·carter who passed away 1
trade or train. New and used
yet~n ago today
saddles . Ru th Reeves , Albany.
A hecrt ol gold stopped beat ing,
(614) 6'18·32'10 .
Two shinmg eves ot nut.
God broke our heorls 10 prove to MEIGS COU NTY Humane Soc1ety.
Corel ~r'!e and adoption Service .
Ul .

He only tokes the best.
God knows you hod to leave u5,
But you didn I go al one
'
For port of us went w ith us ,
The doy He took you home;:
It's a lonesome house without
you,
And sod has been the woy.
For life and home ore not the
some
Since you were called away. The
Children.

P hunt' 99'!·215b

e\lery Sun.
Chock guns
meats .

NOTICE

Monda~

Nooll 1.111 S..t;•r• l;.n
Tu\·~aj

lhru Fru.la~
th~

~ p .\1
tidy bt&gt;fu1r.&gt; publll'iil iUI 1

~ 2 - 3410 .

THERE WIL L be no hunt1ng. no
tr espa ssing . and no e ~~:c ept io ns
on my property . Bob McCraw .
THE RACINE Volunteer Fire
Deportment wtll sponsor a gun
shoo t every Saturda y at 7 p.m.
at their b1.1 ild ing in 8oshon . Foe:·
tory chok e guns only .
PONY
I;

PUll.

Oct.

1977
Old Rut land
29 ,

Swrtl&lt;l}
I

I

&lt;~P . M .
frKla~ afh·mw n

i

COAl, limestone , and calcium
chloride ond calcium brine for
dust control and spet iolt mi•ing
soh for formers , h:c:els10r Soh
Works, Mo1n StreQt, Pomeroy ,
Ohio or phone 9CI'l· 3891 .

FREE PUPPIES .

5

weeks

old.

~ 2 - 7546 .

PARTS FOR 1971 GaloJC.ie Ford for
sole. Phone 992-5958.
197b FORD GRANADA. Block w ith
•, block vin vt top . AM·FM
radio , P.S. P.B., A.C. EJC.cel lent
cond ition . 20,000""" mites . Coli
after 6 pm, H 2·3187.

1974 GRAN TORINO . Will
sacr ifice fo r quic k sole .
949·2568 .
1973 PONTIAC GRAND Prix . A.C ,
P.S.. P.B., power seats . AM-FM
ster &amp;a with tape player, tilt
wheel, other e~~:tro s . Rea l
sharp . $2 .600. Coli evenings,
992·7055 Of 992-3692 .
1969 vw . $250 . ' caw· \l43-26l.l ,
offer 5.
1955 DODGE PICKUP, V·B engine,
rebu ilt ot 73 ,000 miles . Has
78 ,000 origina l miles. $.450.
992·34 27 .

NICE ONE acre build ing sites.
portly-wooded, necr Meigs

softener, _ Model UC-SVI.
Now Only

'279.95

Let us test your water Fr~e

FOR SALE
New Co - Op water and
softeners, model VC-SV I.

Only 1279.95

Save tsO.OO on a new
Hotpoint Refri9eralof
1 New 20 cubtc ft . Chest
Freezer

525 .00 rilscounl
( 1I Good Refrigerator $200
Good

Used

Amana

Upright Fre01er,

5250.00

1 Good Used Homelite
Xll12
Chain Saw
S125
1

1 Good Used
Cha in Saw

Homelite
-- $125-

1 Good Used

Homelite

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Th e Oh io Departm ent of
Nat ura l Resources , thr o ugh
fhe D i v i si on of Pa r ks and

Re cr eation , pursua n t to anU
in accordance w i th Sect ions
1501.09 and 1501.091 of the
Oh io Revised Code , proposes
to c ontract for the operation
ot two (2 J pub li c serv i ce
facil it i es
locate d
and
descr ibed as follows :
I)

Mar i ne

( Boat

Rental )

and m iscel laneous refresh ment concess ion at Forked
Run St ate
Park, M ei gs
County , Ohi o . T he D i v i si on of

Pa r ks and Re crea ti on w i ll
furn ish dock s, one bu il d ing
appr o ,.; i ma t ely 32 f eet by 20
feet. 15 r owboa ts w ith ·oars ,
and on e r e fr i gerated ice
house .
2)
Boat
renta l
and
m i scellaneous
refreshment
co n cession at Strouds Run
Sta te park . At hens County ,
Oh io The D ivis ion ot Parks
and Recreation will furnish 5
rowboats with oars and
assigned land for mobile un it
(to tle provided by con cess ionaire ).
The
Depart m ent
w il l
furn ish ex ist 1ng Stat e owned
buil d ings and equ ipm ent as
l isted in b id spEk it icat lons .
Mobi le co nc ess ion unit to be
prov itl ed
by
the
c on -ce ss iona ir e m ust coliform to
st a ndards as l isted i n bid
spec i t ic at1ons .
The Conc e ss iona i re w i ll
furn ish a ll o ther eq ui pmen t,
me r ch and i se ,
m a t erials ,
ut i l it ies ,
labor,
e tc .,
n eces sar y to op erate the
co n c es s1 on s t o appro'Jed
standards .
I t shall be the intent of the
contra ct that the season of
ope r a ti on tor the marina at
Forked Run State Park w il l
be from April 15 to October
lst T he season of operation
for the be ach conc ess ion o!J t
Str bu ds Ru () Stat e Park w il l
be from M ay 1, th r ough
La bor Da y
The above dates are in
te n de d to est ab lis h only
min 1mum
gu 1d el i n es
r-ega rd in g
sea son
. ot
operation .
Ce r t a in
cir cumstances m a y necessita te
eJC.tend ing or shor teni ng th e
ope r ating se ason s for t he
'J ar ious f aciliti eS . In an y
event, se ason and hou r s of
ope rat ion wil t b'e sub jec t to
annual r ev ie w .
T he co n t r ac t w i ll be for a
term of f i'Je (5) year s from
Janua r y l. 1 ~78 to Dece mber
31 . 19fl2.
Off ici al b 1d pr op os.,l s Wi l l
be re ce i'Je d in the Off ice of
th e D ivision o f Pai"ks and
Re cr ea t ion,
Concess i ons
Sec t ion , u n t il :l : OO p m ..
Nov ember 1b, 1977 . B1dS w 11 1
be pu b)ICi y opened therea fte r
, by the Ch ie f or his author ized
ag en t. The r1ght 1S reserved
to r eject anv and all bids .
Requ est tor bid pro posal
form s shou ld be made to the
O i 'J isi on
of
Parks an d
Re c reat i on ,
Concessio n s
Un i t.
F o un t ain
Squa r e,
Bu il din g C, Th ir d Floor ,
Co tu m bus ,
01'1 io
43224 .
Telephone ( 614 ) 466.3277 .

ROBER T W . T EATER
D 1r ec tor
( 10 ) 19, 26, ( Il l 2, 9, 41C

lOST OUT of car: Ladies glosses
9round Five Point Stoflon , Fri .
nighl. Tom Hoymon . 985 -3509.
REWARD FOR info rmatio n leading
to the return of Caesar . red
Doberman male . tall and ikin ·
ny . 992·6388.
FOU"4&amp; AROUND Ft .,Meigs area :
Smcill. black femaJe poodle .

7•2·3133.

fur n 1st"!ed
5434,

opts.

PhOr"l e

1

992·

AVAilABlE AT Ri 'JerS1de Apts . 1
bedrQom , $105 per month . $150
$ecurity deposit. 992·6098.
FOUR ROOMS and bath. Adu lt5
only . No pets . 992·5908.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pa rk .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots . Coli 992-7479 .

lnc:redible! Why poy high electric
bills this winter? Le t us poy
them for you! One bedroom
from $130 now a\lailable.
Vi llage Manor , Third on.;! M1ll
Streets , Middl&amp;port . Telephone
9'12-7787 . Eqvol Housing Op·
portunlty.
CASH paid for oil makes and
models of mobile homes . TRAILER SPA~E for rent . Ready for
Phone or90 coQe 614 ·423·9531 .
hookup . 992 -3162 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro- EFF . APARTMENT for rent . Con~
duds . Top price for standing
struction workers preferable .
sawti mber . Coli 992 -5965 or
Call after 4, 992 -3165.
Kent Hanby, 1·446 -8570 .
COUNTRY HOME I mile north of
COINS. CURRENCY . tokens, old
Chester, Ohi o. Pau l Ka rr .
pocket watches ond chains ,
'185·3538.
si l¥er and gold . We need 1964
HOU SE.
Construc:tion
and older silver coins . Buy , sell. EFF .
workers only . 992-n91 , after 4,
or trade" Call Roger Wams ley,

742-2331 .

ONE "BEDROOM oil electric aport·
ment . Main Street . Coli
OlD FURNITURE , 1ce boJC.es, brass
992-'2094 .
.
beds , iron beds , etc. , cCJmp lete
households . Write·M . 0 . Miller.
FIVE ROOM unfurnished apt. CoJI
Rt. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio or co li
992·5434 or 992 -3129.

(614) 592·1692.

HOMESITE$ tor sole. 1 acre and
up. Middleport , near Rut land.

Ccl\992·7•81 .

FOR SAlE or Trade . 1967 Ford T·
Bird . Full power, oir , new ex haust system . Glenn R. Bissell ,
Boshon Rood. 949-2801

TWO TO ten acres With good
building site or older home
su1toble for remodeling; water
and electricity O\loiloble; close
949-2860 .
to hardtop rood Coli 992·7006,
after 5 pm .
REGISTERED APPALOOSA and
Quarter Horses for sa le or
CHIP WOOD . Po Les
ma ~~:.
!rode . Cole Stables , Tuppers
diameter 10"bn largest end , $8
Plains . Ohio, (614) 667·3405,
per ton . Bundled slob, $6 per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pallet IN RACINE; o nice 3 bedroom
Co., Rt. 2. Pomeroy. m -2689 .
home, 'has aluminum siding
and storm windows , gas forced
THREE BEDROOM home. Rental
air furnace , large yard . For salt
purchase or low down pay·
or trade for house in Mid·
ment. Wr~te 129-T, c ~o Daily
dleport . 949-2S59 .
Sentinel. Pomeroy , OH .
FOR SALE or Trade: 1969 Pontiac.
Good work cor. Call 742-2340

o• ~2 - 7094 .

COUNTRY LIVING on hardtop
rood. 6 ac:res, 6 room house
and both, aluminum siding, lots
of outbu ildings, c:ellor, fru it·
trees. $1 7,000, 992-58-45.

JUST LISTED -

JUST LISTED -

NEW 3 15edroom house, 2 boths,
all elec .. I acre . Middleport ,
dose to Rutland. Phone 99'1·
7481 .
.
SMAll form for sole , 10% down ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
ty , W. Va. Phone (304) 772·

3102 o• (304) 772-3227
COUNTRY farmland with seclvd·
ed woods . water and good access in MonrtJe County , W . Vo .
1,000 down , coli (Jo.t) n2·

s

3102 o• (304 ) 772-3227 .

Commercial property oppro~~: . 17
acres , level land, located of
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route

7. Phone (614 ) 667-6304 .

about

Call 992 -2156.
YARD SAlE . Route 338 in Anti qui·
ty , Ohio. Thurs . and Fri. ,
weather permitting . Ruby
gloss . depression. _sandwich,
and Avoft collectables full.
11 ·6.
LOST: [ONG-HAIREO calico cot,
female . Full·grown. Belongs to
Martin Vaughan . Has port·
block foce. 992·7822 . Reword .

YARD SALE . Oc1. 26, 27 . end 28. 9
om·3pm . Rustic Hil ls_ Syroc:us.e.
Ohio. Cloth ing and"'o th er ilems .
THR EE FAMil V Basement Sal e.
Wed. thru Sun . ot Chester on
CR 36. Hove o gas range , or·
fi fici al electri c f 1reploc e.
women 's cl othing, rug· · and
other mlsc:. Home of Mory
Porker .

...::.3:.
290
:.:::.
. -------ECONOMY TRACTOR with all of·
to chments, , like _n ~ , , .g~king
$2250. Phone (614) 698·3290.
APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchards .
~State
Route 689 . Phone
W ilkesY ille, 669-3785
FIREWOOD , $40 cord. Split and
delivered
and
stocked .

843-2933 .
GUN TRADER . Wholesale shot·
'shv ll s, slugs, etc Ove r 200 new
ond used guns Bu y, sell , trade'
Will trade guns l or Grave ly
Trac tors, garden tillers , mot or·
c: ydes, Go Car ts., boots ,
motors, electr ic tool motors .
Any thi ng of value Fi fe"s, South
3rd St .. Mlddlepon . 992 -7494 .
ELECTRIC DOUBLE oven· range m
good condition . 949 -2788 .
~EEK

AUCTION SALE , every Tues . and
Fri . ol 7 pm . New and u$ed
merchandise of Oh1o River Auc·
lion, Meigs Pl010. Middleport,
Ohio
f-fome Ph one (304 )
773·5471.

OLD pigs. 949-2857.

REGISTERED POLLED Herefords .
One 11/ , year old bull. Excellent
Club Steer prospect . readv to
w&amp;on . Als o our herd bull. 7
year old . excellent dispoSttion .
All Superol blood. RRS Forms ,
992·5565 or 992·2826 .

. ..

·------HORSES .. 1 is Western

THREE
CHRIS TMAS AUCTION Sole. Fir~t
' "" nares . I IS ' , ond I
ltl 992-7084
Chnstmos A uction Sol e will be
Fn ., Oct . 28. 7·00 pm. U IU RCH BU _, bO passenger. Con Truck load of toys ."• 8-trock
lOCI 992 -3241 or 992 -529 1.
ploye rr. , cassetTe plo ver ·
recorders. wa tches, rad ios. 1976 360 HONDA.' like new . 1300
miles. 992-3018.
jewelry, plus loh ot other gift
1tems os well os mist:. at Ohio 1976 C·20 TRUCK . ..$3.600. htro
Ri'Jer Au cWm. 409 Peorl St .,
wheel s.
Coil' e'Je nin9 s
_ ~eigs Plo: o, Middleport , Ohio .
74 2·2316.

10

S13, 100.00.
JUST LISTED -

Good
Business
Bldg,
located at oos W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Presently
occupied by
a going
business. Bldg . hu deluxe
ap·artment
overhead
bringing in good income.
Priced on inspection only . ,
Can be seen .-ny time from
10--a.m. to 6 p. m . Inquire at
..16lis w. Main St., Pomeroy ,
Ohio 4.5769 .

I.I~
RFALTOR

VIRGIL B. TEAFO~D. Sil.
REAL·TOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy~

LARGE

HOME

5

bedroom home w ith a full
basement in a good quiet
ne ighborhood. Natu'ral gas
cen tr al heat ing , ci ty water
and large lot. Buy thi s one
f urnished or unfurnished .

A NEW HOME -

Large

eat -i n ki tc hen , ut il ity room ,
J ni ce si ze bedrooms, bath
with shower and atfached
garage on nice lot near

Rutland . S30,200 for FHA
and VA.
RT. JJ ATHENS CO. Split level 3 bedroom home
with bath and central

heating . Equipped kitchen
with L ·shaped bar and
garage . Has its own water
supply . :v. acre for just

acres .

If you

$30 , 000 .

Immediate

possession .

room
frame ,
bath,
workshop, 4 l ots . In

We need listings of · all

Pomeroy . ONLY 512,1100.00.
RANCH - 12 yrs . old, 3

kinds. Farms, vacant land
and residentia I property.

call us to see if we have
something you might need.

good location . $26,600.00 .
OVER 50 PROPERTIES
TO CHOOSE FROM LET
OUR PHOTO LISTING,
SERVICE HELP YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA
ASSOCIATES
992-2259, 992-6191
992-2568

804 W. Main
Porn eroy
992-2298
After Hours Call

992-7133
CONTACT:

•

Lois Pauley
Branch Manager•

purposes. Loc~ted 1262 Powell Street, Middleport,
Ohio, owner William Lowe. A good buy for just
521,000.00. Call or see

HOBSTEnER REALTY

\VLADfK'S

FIGHTER~

FUNNY BUSINESS

SPREADIN~ '&gt;O)R VACATtO~
OJr A BIT P... ,____ _ __,

BORN LOSER

I WAfJTE:D
~CXJR AAME'.
OOT 1'1HIS
I':&gt; A

t.OVfiLLf

... SAY, PERHAP6, AN f.WR
01&lt; Tt.OO /SJ A TIME p ,.._..-

Automatic
Transmission Smite

Roo II 34 '""""· _o.
Carpet • UpniiiS'IIIJ

Phoaellile Ytlllnc
.

11

SWAIN

Young's
Carpeting
At

992·2206 or992-763G
"lllollrici"*"
\lot Tho IMiii\Jin

PARTSt":-tABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Tennyson? 33 .

BIIADFORD,

AND Kitchens
· plate SttJvlce. Phan,e
remodal«t , ceramic tile, plum·
or 949·2000. Roclne, Ohio,
bin;g , carpentry , OQd general
Bradford.
mointenanca. 13 y.on ex·
perie,nc$ . 992·368S .
ElWOOD
SwHpen, tooster~ . lron1 ,
EXCAVATING, BACKHOE, da.e• .
small appl iances . lawn mower ,
trencher , low bo~ , dump
ne»Ct to State Highway Garage.
trucks , septic systems. Bill
on Route 1. Phone (614) 985· ·
Pullins, phone 992-2478 , day or
382S.
~
night .
REMODEliNG, Plumbing, heating
A.NN DAILEY 'S Upholstery .
and all types of general repa ir. •
Portland . OH. 843·25-42.
Work guoront.-d 20 yean ex ·'
perlenc:e . Phone 992 · 2~09 .

ACROSS
41 - fixe
1 Netherlands' 42 Ranked,
capital : abbr.

$2195. Phone992-2082.

hoarsely

11 Faces a
piiCher

12 Lofty

SALE
EVERYDAY
2 PC. LIVING ROOM
SUITES STARTING
AT '39.95
REFRIGERAIDRS
'25.00 AND UP
GAS SPACE HEATERS
Variety to Choose

from '19.95 &amp; UP
DIN~E SETS

'24.95 and up
Var.iety of stands &amp;
tables to choose from
startina from $3.50.

MARTIN
FURNITURE

with sliding glass doors. family room with fireplace ,
nice dining room, kitchen w ith lots of cebinets. All
remodeled inside &amp; out. Corner 11ot. ClOse to schools &amp;
shopping area . A " steal" at $21,500. Shown by
appointment only .

20 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
Phone 992-6370

Will do roofing , construc:tlonr
plumbing and heoting. No jOb
too Iorge or too smalL Phoni

7•2-2348.
HOWERY 'AND

1

13 1954 Tracy
filin: 2 wds.

E~:

cavatlng . septic sy1teml . ,
dozer, backhoa, dump truck r"~
limestone, gravel , blacktop ~
paving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)-~1
698-7331 "
...._

I

/"':-:--,-:---::::--:--.--:-.

Well, I

It:s 4er basket' 'almost have

Wc.lt!

UPPER SYRACUSE -

A REALTOR CAN WEED
OUT A BUYER FROM A
TALKER . LIST WITH US,
AND DON'T BE MISLED.

bath Two more sma l l bedrooms could be fin ished
upstairs Also garage, storage building, strawberry
patch and garden space. Dr i veway is electric heated .
Nice Oh io River view . Furniture can be bought extra .
Price fQr quick sale. House and lot, Sl2 ,600.

Good 2 bedroom house with

ade game

9 Repeated
an ana

.
••
•

notice
30 Took an .11
l)llth
31 - -terre:
2 wds.
32 Alfred or
Luther
33 Certain
24 Uke a bull
irunale
25 Scour;
38 Flop
scrub
39 - Semper
26 Secrete
Tyrannis

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
RegulorS6.95
Save SUI Sq. Yd.

BRIDGE

--l--l--l--1-:-1--;

Cue bid tries men's souls

,.
,.,.

12 and 15 H. wldtll Carpet •
rubber back.
1
sq.

4:88

'

~;Dick:- OR

RUtlincl

"'
¥
•
•

North-South vulnerable
West

certain

•&gt;

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

j,y]:NNIE

One letter simply stands for 3nother. In this sample A is
used for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single lelters,
apostrophes, the Jenglh and formal~on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code l&lt;'tters arc different.

'

••

;!

'

..
'

OH, ITLL BE:
A f&gt;M'ILL AFFA IIl...
ONLY 20 OR .30
OF HER CLOSEST
FR IEND:&gt; .

TIM~;g;~~fi'\E
BAlD 8HE COULD

NEVE!ZlHINKOF
HIM AS ANYTl'INGOUTA KID

e,I2QTHEIZI

Hours

FRIDAY TIL 5
Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

CRYPTOQUOTES
YTTJZHD

H J D

JH

YH M

'
YDDKGFD

DJ

ALXDK

0 J

•

NXOKN

J Q

DSK

AYEDKL

JH

UJDS

FYFKL

YD

NKEEKL

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: X-RAY: A DEVICE WlUCH
ENABLES US TO SEE HOW THE BONES IN THE BACK
ROOM ARE DOJNG.-DON QUJ1!1N

North East

1¥
2¥
Pass
Pass 3 N.T . Pass
Pass
Opening lead - 5•

South
It
2 N .T
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
North 's two-heart call was

one of those modernistic cue
bids that many think are sent
to try men's souls. Anyway , 1t
was a game Ioree tha t asked
South to bid notrump if he had
either a complete or partial
heart stopper or to make his
normal rebid if he didn ' t ha ve

one.
North might ha ve a rea l c ue
bid In that case he could
repeat the c ue bid , blast to a

slam or let his conscience be

••
.••:·•
•:
.,I

.,
·~

e:
~• , 742-2211
ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAN[j e:
••••••••••••••••••••••••••1
'
w

.

't'OU HATE EVEIN60D'l',
DON'T '!'OU? HOW DO
~OU. KEEP TRACK OF
ALL THE PEOPLE
I{OU HATE?

if West held it. So , he played
dummy ' s king and was set two
tricks .
We have no sympathy lor
South . In order for the low
play to cost hfm that overtrick
it was necessary first that
East would hold the queen of
hearts and second that East
would shift to a spade.

A Mississippi reader asks
what is the penalty . He bids
lour notru.mp (Blackwood) ,
partner responds live hearts,
he bids five notrump and
partner responds live
diamonds by mistake.
If partner makes the bid
s uffi c ie nt .by saying six
d1 a monds there is no penalty .
If he makes it su'!!icient any
other way , the no trump bidder
is barred for one round .
(F or

a co p y o f JAC O BY

a,

three notrump and West open·

New Yo r k. N Y 10019)

LAND 0' GOSHEN· IT WON'T BE. WHEN
IT'S 601LIN' HOT,
LOWEEZY!!

sure of an important overtrick

his guide .
Thi s t ime he raised South to

BARNEY

THAR'S '-lORE
COLLARD-GREEN
SOUP,
PARSON

ed the five of hearts.
In a rubber bridge game
South would play dummy's
four spo\ and be certain_ of his
· heart stopper , but this was
matc h point duplicate and
South did have a problem .
He knew he would be risking
his contract if East held the
ace of hearts , but would be

MODE RN, send _$1 to · " Win
Bndge . ·· clo rh is newspaper.
p 0 · Bo Jt 489. Radio C1ty Station,

e tt'n Klnl Fntur~• S~nd~•t•. lne.

.:

RUTLAND FURNITURE
.

• J 76
t A K J 10 3 2
.K 6

2wds.
40 Make

·,'

• Q 10 4 3 2
¥ A9
• 98
... J 8 74

• 76

1.,--+--+--

Amin
137 Fare;
get

·,,

EAST

KJ 9
Q 10 B 5 3 2
4
Q 10 2

SOUTII 101

along:

RUnAND
FURNITURE
. 742-2211

WEST

monogrwn
38 Uganda's

•

Reg. S6.95-not lnstolled

Ca\1742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

• Q 7 6s
... A 95 3

lation

~NGM'/

yd.

30 rolls of carpet In stock.
Good selection all on sele.
Installed wltll padding, no
extra to pay·..
•·

¥ K4

I-;~~~~~~bi~r).~J.0~1T~~~~/,U~~~~~~~CHAR~i'~n!~~W)~~~~~~Fwned
t)e:rrt=R TAKE' ME'
pubUsher's
6EEi YOUR EiO\L.,

26

NOHTU
• A' B 5

defense
group
Tenn for
Joey
~"'~ ·• • Constel·
U L ABNER

I'

Wednesday, October 26

u.s.

.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

l

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

biUs
-de 1~

Thursday &amp;til noon

••
•••

28 Served

Samantha
-21 Popeye's
• Olive
22 Deity
23 Sprays
with
gunfire

28 RoU of

Mon., Tues. , Wed.
8:00ti15 : 00

EASTERN DISTR'ICT - 11!2 acres of levelland, nice
12x64 all carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs. living

Price 515,900.

Yes,m! That j€S 21 Grain
beth' Z2 vaUey_
wee t4k€S name! Z3 ~YSIBSt
~~~
·
26 Ailments
happen~·

JHTK . -

bedrooms, nice 1112 story house, large living room with
shin i ng oak fl.o oring, large kitchen with dlnina area. 2
full baths, 2 bed r ooms down and 3 upstairs. Completely
insulated wfth F.A . nat. gas furnace. Large porches &amp;
ga~age . Lac. in Chester . Price $19,800.

IMg e li vi ng , step sa v er
1-..i tchen, fam i l y r oo m .
eM parl and large lot .

8 PeMy arc·

10 Intensifies
14 Actress

Paix

•••••••••••••
Convenient Shopprny

Five

room, 'kitchen and bath, 2 rooms built on, nice family
room with f ireplace , plenty of garden space, some fruit
trees . Large workshop and block cellar . City water and
septic tank. Nice country seHing on County Rd . 28.

resort

So Fair"

Yesterday's Answer

J1(\ 27 Towering

Priced tor quick sale at $37,500.00.

LOOK HERE -

composition
3 Tend a
furnace
4 Oh my!
5 Ended,
as supplies:
2 wds.
6 Detective
Pinkerton
7 Vacation

20 "You -

GASOUNE AlLEY

beautiful pond stocked with fish. Call for appointment.
IN YOUR HAIR,

2 Sdusa

15 Turkish
weight
18 Once Porto·
. guese India
1i Dizzy Gill·
espie music
18 Common
title word
19 Jwnp the -

Take it if 40L1 /l'r:~ to.
wants. Mister
Joel!

.
MARTIN

tournament
,style
43 Singer
Vikki
DOWN
1 Chief monk

5 Spoke

block•. $&lt;000. 304·882·2•66.

10 x 50 TRAILER. Good condition.

MIDDLEPORT - SPACIOUS HOME TO FIT YOUR
BUDGET. J Bedroom, lovely carpeted living room,

Why worry about the high cost of

by

SEWING .MACHINE Repairs, nr· '
'JiC:e, all makes, 992·2284 . The:
1972 \liNDALE 1.- x 70 with 2
Fabric
Shop , Pomeroy . •
pullouts, centra'! air, kitchen
Authorized Singer Sales and '
appliances with dish washer,
Servicti. We dtarpen Scl11on. :.
underpinning , eJtcellent condi· .
EXCAVATING, dozer. loader ond:
lion . One owner. 992-:U39.
boc:khoe work j dump trucks;
1972 12M60 all·ele&lt;.:tric- 2 bedroom,
and lo·boys for hire; will haul ,
2 full bathS , roiled beam ceil·
fill dirt. to soli. limestone and•
ing , unfurnished. Include•
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef~:
unde rpinning and block .
fers , day phone 992-7089, night1
5&lt; .000. (:JOC) 882·2•66.
phone 992·3525 or 992· 5232. \.;
1972 12 x 60 all electric: 2
EXCAVATING, dozo•. backhoe
bedroom , 2 full boths, raised
and ditcher. Chari•• R. Hatbeam ceiling , unfurnished. In·
field , Back Hoe Servlc8,
dudes underpinning and
Rutland. Ohio, Phone 742·2008..,._

Bedroom Suites
3 pc. 589.95 up

heating your home, outside lights, heating your water,
drying your clothes~ etc. We'll sell you your own gas
well . Not only that we' ll throw In a good l 1f2 story house
with 3 bedrooms and bath, nice dining room and full
basement, also over SO acres of land with a large

li""a:re'6td'
THOMAS JOSEPH
ALLEYOOP

•

7:31f-Hol\ywood Squares 3,4; 5100,1100 Name That
Tune6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33; That's Hollywood 10: Nashville on the Road
13; Marty Robbins ·spotlight 15.
8:0D-Chlps .3,4,15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13;
Waltonss 8, 10; Once Upon A Classie 20,33.
8:31f-Wl1at's Happening 6,13; Best of Ernie Kovacs
··--20,33:
9:1»-James .at 15 J,4, 15; Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii
Flve-0 8;10; Best of Fam1\lles 20,33 .
9:31f-Carfer Country 6,13 .
10:DO-Rosettl &amp; Ryan 3,4,15) Barnaby ones 8; Julie
&amp;Jackie -How Sweet It Is 10.
11 :Oo-News 3,4,6,8 , 10, 13, 15,20; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13; Movie
"Visions" 8; ABC News 33; Mpvle " Light I n the
Piazza" 10; Dick Cavell 20.
.
n:OO-Janak\33; 12 :41f-lt's A fad, Fad, Fad World
6.13 .
!:DO-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:31f-Mary Hartman 10; 2;11fNews 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. -Ode to Billy Joe (PGJ
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Chino (PGI
Cable Channel 5 ·6:30p.m.- Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30 - Coach's Corner
8:00 - Home Digest
9:00 - Cable Journal
10:00 - 700 Club.

~-~.o.
1-UI rno

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

'

By Roger Bollen

··· AS YOU ~OW, HENI&lt;OD, We'I&lt;E:
Ex~EMELY sosy RI@HT ~w ...
SO I Woi-JDE'R IF YOO'D MIND

I'1L m -lt7c

PUIZ·lHl

CHEST OF _DRAWERS
'15.95 UP

Phone 985-4186 after 4:00P.M.

KIOS

ANS WER ' ~

AR R IVI&gt;J(; TODAY, W A~ H :

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

s,.....,ollia

8 rooms, 5 rooms bath down, 3 rooms bath upstairs.
private entrance to upstairs, fu[l basement, aas hot
water heat, large front porch . tan be used as one home
or apartment upstairs and live down .for Income

$2\,500.
.
RACINE AREA - Nice 3
bedroom frame home with

Helen L . Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Associates

\lfPUC£111\IT
WI.DOIIS
IIJJIII.UII
SIDI\fC.$0ff\Tl

Superior
Slum ElllKtion

No. 216 - •"ew 3 Oedroom
ranct'l type home, ful ly
carpeted ,
sing l e
car
garage . 100x400 lot. Price
526.500.
No.
200
Busfness
building, located on 'I:~ acre
partlcal, street Qn three
sides , bath , carpeting ,
paneling, gas heat, city
water, aHached garage,
has additiona I hook-up tor
tra i ler, 12x60 mobile home
to be sold separate. Price

s miles

cal\ , COME IN FOR INFO.
PRICE REDUCED - 6

FREE GAS -

P ILOTI~I.?

NE-W

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

0

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr., Broker
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio

bedroom modern home
with full basement, garage,
large family room that has
a stone f i replace , built· in
bookshelves, sliding glass
doors leading
to the
swim m lng pool . Land scaped lot wi1h Norway
Spruce ,
flowers
and
shrubbery .

~ AV I t.J ' OUT TH15 AIRFIE L- D A DJOI/\1·
tN~ THE- FIGHTER PL. ANT ...

I TOLD YOU THo

·THI S GOTTA DO
WI TH YOU R TEST·

C.Hfi(.K .

STROUt

2 story

W.B.F .P ., 3 Bdrms ., full

A line 3

• .. BUT WHAT'S

~'-""'

GUTTt:II$M•I•GS

one acre In town wlfh water
and electric available .

SECLUDED -

MONE Y

,_,

B~THROOMS

basement , appro)( . 15
acres, barn , fencing . Don ' t

Almost

J NI) IJ~Tf::~ ES

Newer

want a rea l ly allur ng
home that prov ides every
imaginable confenience and if you can affort it! We
have one available. It
features, 2 ~ths , 2 dining
areas, large \ kit., family
rm ., living .....rm ., with

Ohio 45769

BUILDING LOT -

10 -111 • 1- mo . • J·,

LARRY LAVENDER

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

TEAFORD

•

Sl'Oall
WI•DOIIS I 1100115

See us at 1100 East Main
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio or
Phone 992-7034. 10-29-1mo.

tx:trms ., dining rm ., l iv ing
rm., carpeting and really

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

McKEE-

fully Insured
Free Est.
C. II 667-6-479
10-14-1 mo. pd.

-·

r•-•

•Mobile
liome'
Underpinning
• Roof Coaling
•Tie- Downs
• Awnings- Carports
• Insurance
Repairs

JUST LISTED - Beautiful
road ,

CAPTAIN EASY
O KA~. OKAY·· YOU'VE SP E&gt;H A

'·

Thermal Insulation

Experience and

Aloil"o
lllowo loll 111111 &amp;Attics

Fre• EstMnatts

frame business bldg . ,
· convert the upstairs-into an
apartment, open a bus iness
in the down . This location
has always been a money
maker . Sl1 ,200.00.
home sit e or sites .

Cellulosic (wood fiber)

on huting cost

IMUiatiel Slnk.IS

llo s•.., Call,~ ...
10· 20-lma

ranch type home in Middleport ,
3 bedrooms ,
carpeting , paneling , really
nice . $18,500.00.

JUST LISTED -

Blown lnsulamn
Snes 30 pel, to 50 pet.

Blown

Phone 949-2101
01949-2860

70 Nice

J&amp;L

FREE ESTIMATES

• local conllactor

lay ing acres, barn , pond,
nicely remodeled 1 floor
p l an home with
full
basement , wood burning
F.P ., carpeting, garage,
great for weekends, full
f i me home or laJOt deduc ·
t ion . $38,000.00.

'

''·
I
,.I

~ _,iT A

-

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26,1977
7 :00- ·T rutn or Cons. 3; Joshua's Confusion • ; -Li ar s
Club6; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell the Tr uth 13;
Gilligan' s Is. 15; Daniel Foste r , M.D. 20; Big Green
Magazine 33.
7:31f-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; ; Match Game PM
6; Family Feud 8; Mac Neil -Le hrer Report 20,33:
The Judge 10; Donahue ... Ciose-Up 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
8:DO-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,1S; Eight Is Enough 6,13;
Bugs Bunny 8. 10; Nova 20,33.
8:31f-Ted Knight 8.10; 9 oOO-Oregon Trail 3,4,15;
Ch;~rlle' s Angels 6, 13; Movie " The Greatest Thing
· · That Almost Happened" 8, 10; Great Performances .
33; American Short Story 20.
10 : DO-BI~ Hawaii 3,4, 15 ; Baret! a 6, 13.
10:31f-Relal\ons 33 ; News 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4.6,8. 10.13.1 5; Dick Cavett 20; MacNeilLehrer Report 33.
11 :31f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Dully " 10;
12 :DO-Janakl 33.
·

• !L...!..!L

Bissell Siding Co.

0.

.

:.

: ,

Llllln , w. va .

Home Sales
MAIN
POMEROY,

., .

.

,"""-ACII

KingsbuiJ

Phone.f92-332l
IF YOU hoYe a service to offer ,
wo nt to buy or sell som ething,
ae looking for work . . . or CAMPER
S600
AI
ho
wha tever .. , you 'll get results •
. ·
·
so ,
rse
fa$ter with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
troller, $450, Phone (614) 698~

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum Siding.
Sto.rm Windows &amp; Insulation.
Call Prolessionals

from St. Rt. 7 on a paved

~2-776JJ .'

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too smelL
Will buv 1 piece or comp lete
household . New , used . or anti·
ques . Martin's FUrniture, 20 N. FOR SALE or trade or land con·
tract . 2 Qedroom houSe in
2nd St., Middleport . Phone
Rutland . 992 -5858.
992-6370.

NEW RANCH , three bedroom,
carpeted, fireplace , carport .
Tupper • Plains. (614) 667-3327 .

Sill

Con ·Am Motorcycles. Complete
soles and fantastic service !
Hours M· T, T 9-6; W·F, 9-7; Sot .
9-5 '"The Motorcycle People of
Southeastern Ohio " Athens
Spor t Cyc:l es, Inc., 2Q W. Stim1
son A\le,. Athens, Oh io. Phone

ITOVUA..

THREE ACRES on CR -4 . I V, mi. out
12~3::.·_
of Dexter . $2,200. 98'1 ·,.,::

698-5310, 698-8890, 698·88'8 ..
698-6701.

YAMAHA. HARLEY-DAVIDSON &amp;

r -~'7'
~
'-

77l-5955

Chester, Ohio
8-29-pd.

Box 34

"'~•~r..!

RNR

Jack's Septic
Tank Sel1ice

7•2·2965.

WOOd Stoves

EFEL

Ahyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3106

TWO AND on•· holt ac re lot with '1
bu itdings, well water. A ll set
up for total elect r ic troller
located in langsvil le, Oh1o.

SlOO

1 Good Used Unico

Washer

Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estfmate, 24 hour service.

HOUSE FOR Sole at 1651 lincoln
Hts. Coll 992-7,.71, before 3 pm.
and ofter 5 c:oll 992·337b

FIVE ROOM house on 2 ~ acres
surrounded by woods . At
Carpenter in Meigs Co. 10
minute drive from Meigs
Mines . Needs both and water .
A lso . a city cool dump trader .

Chain Saw
S120
1 Good Used Hot Point
Refrigerator
S125
1 Good Used Hotpoint

Electric Stove

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

High School. m -5523 .

Pomeroy Landmark

3 ANO 4 RM . furn ished and un·

frome
house. F,A . furnace , slorm win dows. fireplace in M iddleport
Phone 992-3457 .

2: 11f- News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 1 P .M. - Nickelodeon (PG )
9 &amp; 11 P .M.-Man Who Fell to Ea rfh (RI
Cable Channel 5 •
6:30 P .M.-Testimony T ime
7:00 - Pau l Gaudino Fam ily Fitness
7:30 - Marshall Un iversity Football
10:00 - 100 Club .
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1977
5:45-Farm Report 131 5 : ~PTL Club . 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester ·10; 6:25-New World 10; 6::100octors on Call C; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8.
6: 45--Mornlng Report 3; 6:l lf-Good Morning, West
_
VIrginia 13.
7:DO-Today 3.4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bul\wlnkle 10.
1 : 31f-Schoolles 10.
,
8:0D-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33.
9:DO-Merv Grlffln·3; Phil Donahue 4,15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 61 Family Affair 8; Family Affair 1 0~
9:30-Edge of Nlghl6; Andy Grllfllh 8; Here's Lucy 10.
lO : ~Sanford &amp; Son 34,15; Big Valley 6; Here's Luc y
8; Joker' s Wild 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :31f-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; ; Price Is Rlghte, 10.
11 :DO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Marcus Welby, M.D. A;
Happy Days 6, 13.
·
11 :31f-Knockout 3, 15; Family Feud 6. 13; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St. 20 .
11 :55-CBS News &amp;;' Loving Free 10.
17 :DO-New•center 3: News 4.5.6, 10; To Say the Least
IS ; Divorce Court 8; : Midday 13.
12:30-Bob Braun 4; Chico 8. the Man 15; Ryan's Hope
6,13: Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
I :DO-Gong Show 3; News 8; All My Children 6,13;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15.
1:31f-Days ot our Lives 3,4.15; As The World Turns
8,10.2 :DO-S20,1100 Pyramid 6.13.
2:31f-Doctors 3,4 ,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
' ( Light 8,10 .
3 : ~Another World 3,4, 15; ; All In The Family 8, 10;
Antiques 20. "
3: 15-Genera\ Hospital 6, 13 .
3:30-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals-Our Gang •;
Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan' s Is. 8; Sesame St. 20,33 ;
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13..
4:36'-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8,10; Little Rascals 15.
·
5:~Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Roggers' Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5:3G-Odd Couple ~~ News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore-1~; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom20 .
6:31f-NBC News 3,4,1S; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 8,10; As We See It 20; ABC News 13.
7 : ~Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Gong Show 8: News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Coping with Kids 20; Anyone for

VIEWING

.--

''

Business Services

'1 . STORY 3 bedroom

Let Pomeroy Landmark
sptten &amp; condition your
water , and Co ~ op water

1975 FORD F·250 Y. ton truck .
Good c:ondition, 4·sp . good
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
oppl ion&lt;;e serviceman . Paid
tires, will toke !rode . 1968
Phone 992-2181
hol idays ,
vo cat io ns
and
Chevrolet station wagon. Runs
hospital i zat io n.
Gal!io
good . $250 , w ill !rode .
Refrigeralof Co , 611 3rd Ave.,
KENWOOD · MODEL II AM·FM
949-2770.
Gallipolis. Ohi o,
receiver and power amplifier .
Technics model 1400 furn· toble
EXP~RIENCED El ECTRICIAN , th ree
and Tv,hnics casSette stereo
or more yea r's. Commerci al.
and recorder . 2 Kenwood 120
res1dential and small indust rial
Watt speakers . $1300 , firm .
iobs. Col i collect. 614 -593 -8078. ..STARCRAFT FALL Sole . Mini·
Values nearly $3000. Phone
motors, 2(]" and 22'. TraVel
SOMEONE TO do interior po in992·6395 .
1
Trailer~ . 18' 5" $3 ,799. 25' 7"
ting . Empty Hou se. 985·3885.
Bunkhouse S4,875 Fold-down . DEPRESSION GLASS, var ious
$1.700 up. We sell servic:e and
NEEDS BABYSITT ER ot home in
pieces . Variety of pattern . Will
quality , Open Sundays . Camp . sell
,, Por tland. 7om to 6pm. $35 o
by
p iece
or
lot.
Conley Storo::roft Soles, Rt, 62,
- week . CoU Donny Roush.
614-4.46-2996.
N . of.Pr . Pleasant ,
643 -2292.
HUMPHREY RADIANT Fire Cir·
cu lqtor. Bottled gas or natural
gos . $25 . 992·2385 .

$8,100 for education,
75 per cent of your
College tuition free,
College
Level
Examination
Free,
An Associate Degree
through
the
Community
College
of the Air Force, 30
days paid vacation, 7
paid 3 day weekends,
good starting pay and
much
more . l' PIANO TUNING and Repoi ~;.. Lone
Don 1els. 992 -2082. 12 years ser. Interested?
vice to Tri·County . Reference·
Elberfelds.
Contact me, Vernon
Zeger, your Air Force
Representative.
For an appointment
ANN DA ILEY 'S Up ho lstery
in the Pomeroy or
Portland , OH. 843-2542 .
Athens area phone
GROW EARTHWORMS for prof1t
Free dol o · WORM WORLD.
592-4592 Collect.
1810 S. Josephine, Denver, Col·
Order No. 9-cl-86
aroda 80210 or co li Mr. James
ccllect. (303) n8-1026.

VA ·FHA, JO _.r. financing. Ireland
Mor tgage, n E. State. Athens .
phone (614) 592 -3051.

8; ! : DO-Tom orrow 3,_. ; 1: 30-Mary Hartman 10;

TELEVI~ION

I,.

NEW ONE year old bilevel home.
3 badroo m, I lfr bofh , go roge,
recreation room . 1.1 acres.
Eogle Ridge. 94"1 -'17 45.

1

12: 4t-Mysfe ry of the Week 6,13; Mo vie " Target R isk"

• I

Ileal &amp; tale fur ~

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

EXPERIENCED REFRIGE RATOR end

OPPORTUNITIES

~-=-=

~2 - 7680 ,

1972 PINTO . 949 -2761 , after 5 dur·
ing the week and an ytime
weekends .

FUllER BRUSH produc ts for sole.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

742·3162, ~2 · 5A'12.:...
MAlE SAMOYED. $1 25 . 94 9 - 2 1 ~ .

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1977

'"

'

WANT-AD
CHARGES
I d..\
tda}·s

.!

'IE GIT DONE Wlf
TH ' BLESSIN'

-.

�I

t
f

'.
f

Issue 3 proposes state aid for housing

r

•
1i- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. ll'ednesda• . Ot'l. 26. 197i

Bruriswick youth to
.
have hearing l~ter

•

-

MEDINA , Ohio \ UP!) Medina Municipal Co urt
Judge Carroll Mt&lt;:lure said
t1l&lt;iav he will schedule a date
for preliJninary hearing for
tl1e Brunswick youth charged
with
four
co unts
of
aggravated murder in the
deaths of his parenls and two
younger brothers.
Michae l Swihart, 18, was
charged Tuesday and is being
held in the Medina County
Jail, according to Brunswick
Police Chief Clayton Crook,
who said Swihart admitted
killing and burning the

a

RECEIVING 25 years membership pins in the Meigs County Farm Bureau Tuesday
night were front row,! tor, Mrs . Harold G. Roush, Mrs. Kenneth Welsh , Mrs. Garland R.
CaldweU, Peggy Bush and Marie Bush; back, I tor, Harold G..Roush, Kenneth Welsh, J ohn
Colwell and Charles Bush.
·
~

•'-'
J I
~

I
• I

.. '

-

AWARDS FOR 50 years and over membership in the Meigs County Farm Bureau went
' to these people Tuesday night ; front I tor, Mrs. Everett Colwell, Mrs. Stella Grueser, Mrs.
Ruby Halliday ; back, Ito r, Mrs. Garland Caldwell who received the award for her mother ,
- Mrs, Erruna Findling; Vernon Nease, Sam Michael who received the award for his mother,
Mrs. G. L. Michael, and Mrs. Pauline Atkins.

Annual. • •
(Continued frml PICt 1)
given by Norman Will.
Ken Walters , regional
supervisor, spoke on Farm
Bureau benefits. Mrs. Paul
Gearhart gave a report on
state trustees as did
Canaday .

V. 0.: Make This AChristmas
That Will 'last A Ufetime

CIN CINNATI (UP!) Kroger, the nation's third
largest supermarket cha in,
has reported inc reased
earnings for the third quarter
of 1977.
Ea rnin gs were
$15.9
million, or $1.17 a share, in
the 1977thlrd quarter , up -24 .5
per cent fr om $12.7 million, or
94 cents per share, earned i~
the third quarter 1976. ·
1
Kroger officials noted Uiat
on a ·•comparable operating
basis," the 1977 third quarter
earnings were up 44.4 per
cent.
" Th er e were two no nrecurring items in t he third
quarter of 1976 whi ch
increased net earnings by 13
cents per share," company
officials explained.
Third quarter 1977 sales
were $2 .033 billion, up 11.5 per
cen~ per cent from $1..827 "
billion durin g the same
period a year ago·.
James P . Herring, Kroger
chairman, attributE!\! the increases to nu\e company's
major investment in modernized, more efficient stores

if
wit hdrawn
maturity date .

befor

Meigs Co. Branch

;@
Th e Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Second St .
Po m e roy , Ohio

/!!1

•
JEFFREY L. COUCH,
sou of Mr. aud Mn. Robert
Couch, Pomeroy, will
receive the highest award
lu scoutlag, the Eagle
Award, In a presentation
. ceremoay to take place
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Camp
Klasbuta, aear Chester.
A member of Boy &amp;out
Troop 249, Couch has been
active Ia scoutlag for the
past Dille years. He Is a
senior at Meigs High
School aad a blember of the
Pomeroy Baptlst Church.
Robert Armes, seoul·
master, will be aaallted In
the preseatallou ceremony
by "Haak Cleland aad
Patrick Wood. The pubUc Is
lavlled. Refreshments will
be served.

Meigs Tire
Cen.ter Inc.
Will Stud
Recapped and
New Tires

.---------.1
to Ohio
Virginia

law lhe legal
iod lor studded
start " Nov. _I,

.INGELS FURNITURE

JCJ6

Ohio

whi ch meet shopper needs."
"While gross margins declined during the third
quarter as a result of lowered
prices in an intensely
competitive period in the
supermarket industry," he
sa id , " th e preparations
Kroger ~as been making to
improve retail facilities and
directing our merchandising
emphasis to consumer needs
have enabled Kroger to cope
with these competitive ll'ess ures and to continue to show
progress.
" While
there
is
a
temporary cost impact from
opening new stores and
closing outdated facilities,
the net result is to prepare
Kroger to operate more
efficienUy, to serve .shoppers
better and to improve our
profjt potential."
However, Herring added,
·" We are not yet satisfied with
our results and do plan to
direct our efforts toward
furthe r improvement of
performance iii line with our
capital investment in the
company over tbe past six
years."
Kroger, headquartered in
Cincinnati, has 1,200 stores in
20 states.
..

to reformatory

BETTY WARD .
A Ridgeway floor .
clock will say
something special
for generations of
Christmases
to
come. 4 times each
hour.. When you
give a Ridgeway.
you're giving an
heirloom
of
distinctly
Individual design
and feeling. That
says a lot, .too:
· You'll I ike the
wide variety in
size, .style and
price. Come by
tOday and see 0~
Ridgeway gallery.

Russell , 9.
Three of the bodies and a
~ood p&lt;&gt;r.tion of the interior of
the house had been doused
with a !lammable liquid
before a match was lit to start
a fire and cause an explosion
which leveled the fash ionable
house.
Medina County Coroner Dr.

Woman is taken

INTEREST

Nin e ty day inter es t pe nalty

yoWJgest sons, Brian, 16, and

Third quarter
•
earnmgs
up

Western nations measured
time until 1582 A.D. by the
Julian calendar, authorized
bl' Julius Caesar in 46 B.C.
and based on a year 365.25
days long.

On Certificates
Of DepOSit
s1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

victims. bm has not yet given
a motive for the deaths.
Killed Sw1d_ay night at their
Brunswick home
were
Donald Swihart, 41 , his wife.
Sue, 41, and their two

Tl RE CENTER INc

•

L,:~,!!!~~~~J~o~h~n:.!F~.~F~u~l~tzWP~'~'~;::,~~::.l:.-J

Meigs County sheriff's
deputies this morning transported Freda Middleswart,
40, Rt. 1, Portland, to , the
Marysville Reformatory for
Women .
Yesterday, Mrs . Middleswart was sentenced to 15
years ·to life after entering a
guilty plea to murdering her
husband, William C. Middleswart last July.
Sheriff's deputies Tuesday
investigated vandalism of a
mailbox oWned by Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Relble on CR :za.

Six court cases
are terminated
. Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman
fined
three
defendants and forfeited
three bonds Tuesday night.
Fined were James E .
Kennedy, 20, Middleport, $10
and . costs, speeding and flO
and costs, paiiBing in a no
passing zone; David B.
Jeffers, 24, Mason, $10 and
costs, wrong W/iY on· a one
way street, and , Terry S,
Whitlatch, 00, Middleport, flO
and costs, paiiBing on a yeUow
line on a biD.
Forfeiting bonds, all posted
on speeding j!barges, were
Mark A. Lynch, 20, Point
Pleasant, f28; · Charles D.
Ohlinger, 26, Letart, W. Va.,
f30, and Anita A. Jenkins, 21,
Middleport, $43.
VeteraDB Memorial Hospital .
Admitted - Claude Ran·
dolph, Reedsville; Mary
Howell, Pomeroy; Joan
Carnahan, Long Bottom; ·
Brady Knapp, \ New Haven;
Kathryn Jones, Pomeroy;
Jennifer . Barrett, RuUand;
Crystal McCoy, Shade.
Discharged Dwaine
McDaniel,- CecU Ward,
Dorothy Greathouse, Terry
Whitaker, Sylvia Wolfe,
Cleatua Arnett, Dora Stevens.
ISSUES REMINDER
COLUMBUS . - Director
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
Department of Uquor Con·
trol reminded penrut holders
today ihat Eastern Standard
Time returns to Ohio at2 a.m.
Sunday, Oct. 30. When the
clock •trikes 2 a .m., it will, In
fact, be 1 a.m. The time
change will give an extra
hour of business to pernlil
establishments entitled to be
nprn until '2:30a .m.

Autos
hardest
feature of bill

(EDITOR'S NOTE: Vulers gulu the pulls Nuv. 8 tu vote un
ft~ur atatewlde issues, m11re than 200 srhtlol upt"ratlng levies
and to decide &amp;eHral mayoral contests. Fulluwlng Is anuther
In a series of pre-decllotn dispatches prepared by United Press
lntematloo.al on the coc11ests and Issues un lhe Ohlot ballot.
Today's at1lcle is on State Issue 3, proposing suite aid fotr
huuslng.)

•' •,

By WilLIAM E. CLA\'TON to the ronlerence corrunittee,
WASHING'l'ON "(UP)~ -A which is melding energy
Andrew J . Karson said the House arxl Senate conference plans from the White House
elder Swihart was dead committee has discovered and both branches of
before the fire and the other once again the hardest Congress.
victims either were dead or features of an energy policy ·· Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
are the ones dealing w 111 .the ·D-Ohlo. sponsor of the ban on
Wlconscious.
gaa-tiiiJ&amp;In, uked conferees
The suspect has admitted automobile.
Negotiators could not find a Tu~sday, " Whether It Is
he struck his parents and
compromise
on symhollsm or reallly, what
brothers with a baseba 11 bat ready
before burning them and the whether to outlaw altogether could be so wrong with
minimum
house, according to Crook, the worst gas-guzzling cars . e na cting
Congress
has
three
choices
.
mileages?"
who said the bat allegedly
of
the
energy
House conferees took a vote
used
in
the
killings ,Part
apparently burned in the ronservation bill before the vote on the idea which was
conference would double the not included in the House
blaze.
Crook has declined . to penalty for cars that fail to version of the measure.
certain
federal House members were 23-1
discuss a possible motive for meet
·standards for gasoline against it.
the killings.
The cars that would be
But, according to The mileage .. Tbe same bill has
said
Rep .
Cleveland Press, authorities the outright ban of any 1980 prohibited,
continue
to
dispute model getting fewer than 16 Clarence Brown, R..Ohlo,
speculation that the deaths miles to the gallon. And the would be "the station wagon
were connected . with a energy tax bill the House for the guy who's a salesman,
dispute between the father
passed has a tax 00 cars the big car for the family of II
and Michael over Michael's based oo their gas m·Ueage . six."
Even ambulances and
The Senate Is debating the
use of a family car because of
his lack of involvement in tax bill thiB week. A $40 hearses would be in danger of
. athletics at Miami (Ohio) billion program of energy tax being b&amp;nned, Brown said . I
University, where the suspect breaks prepared by the · "I guess the folks can wallt ,
Senate Finance Qlmmlttee to the hospital lf they are 1
w.S a freshman .
survived its first chaUenge by sick . And maybe the late
Uberals Tuesday and chances departed, I guess, can sit up
appeared good that some for their ride to the
form of the bill would pass the cemetery."
Senate in the next few days.
The conference agreed to
The
measure
then
would
go
delay
further consideration of 1
NEW HAVEN - Charles
a
ban
on gas guzzlers so 1
Wiley, representing the Army
various
compromises could ,
Corps of Engineers, Hunbe
explored.
Areas of ~~
tington Division, spoke to the
PLEASANT VALLEY
compromise
include
New Haven Council at its Discharges...: Mrs. William
regular meeting Tuesday Terry and daughter, Oak Hill, exempting smaU companies ,
evenillg concerning the soU 0 .; Wayne Morris, Point or reducing the minimum :
erosion at the sanitation Pleasant; Della Davis, mileage requirement or ;
plant .
Southside; Ray Queen, postponing the effective dare •
:
The councU agreed to send Letart; Mrs. Kenton Sheline, for an additional year.
The
conference
made
:
a letter of intent to the Point PI-nt; Mn. Sherfurther
progress
oo
energy
I
District Corps of Engineers man Jordan, ~; Monty
so a $84,000 project to solve Davis, Middleport; PhyW. conservation issues, agreeing 1
this ptoblem could get un- Rice, Point Pleaaant; Lee to mileage labels on piclwpa, •
vans and utillly vehicles to :
derway.
Balles, Grimms Landing and
make comparison shopping : ·
Ron Robinson appeared
Eula Clonch, Henderson.
.
eaSJer.
,'
before the councll to uk
.
'
about more parking space for
his new Ben Franklin. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I ~
Robinson wilt" dfaw plans for
more parking and present
them to council at the next I
t
regular meeting~ .
The · council agreed to
REV. KILLINGSWORTH daughter of the late Lee and
enforce new water rates for
Rev . Howard Killings- Arlena Cousins R..... She
non-resldentlai areas of the worth. 72, of 2329 Lincoln was preceded In daall1 also by
Ave., Point Pleasant, a long- two brothers and two sisters.
town , effective Dec. I.
time pastor In Mason County, Miss Reese was a former
B!Wnesses will receive a
died this mor~~ at 2 a.m. al member of the MI. Moriah
letter from the councU as to , the.". Hoi zer
leal Center eaptlst Church In Middleport
the rate increase.
' after a short Illness. · . •·- and belonged to the Betl1any
Church
In
Born In Southside on M&lt;IY Christian
The council would like to
:IG,
1905, he was the son of the Columbus at the time of her
warn residents that anyone
late Wllllllm R. and Mamie death .
caught tampering wlth .water
Surviving are two sisters,
Fields Killingsworth .
meters will be lined . .
A member of the Church of 11.-o. Maraaret L. Bowlu and
Christ In Christian Union, he Mrs. ·IMry Frances BeumAttending were Mayor
pastored churches In Hart- gardnor, both of Middleport.
Charl'es Roush ," Recorder
lord, Point Pleasant. and
Funeral services will be
Wendy Dlvefs, and council,
Leon. w, 'Va ., as well as held at 2 p.m. Saturday aUM..&gt;
Mansfield, South Solan, Rawlings-Coats
Jim Wheeler, Virgil Weaver,
Funeral
Gallipolis, and Hiland, Ohio. Home With Eldtir Donald
William Bird and Harold
He worked at the Marietta Stock of Columbus of.
Moxley.
Manufacturing Co., Ohio llclallng . Burial will be In
River Bus Company, Point Meigs Memory Garden .
Pleasant. U. S. Post Office, Friends may call at the
Resume regular
and as a janitor for the Point funeral home from 21o Und 7
Pleasant Federai ·Savlngs to 9 p.m. Friday.
'
activities here
and Loan for 12 years.
Surviving·are his wile, Mrs.
MARK BRYSON
Florence Gearhart KillingsMINERSVILLE - Mark
Jehovah's Witnesses In
worth; · two daughters, Mrs . James Bryson, 21, Pillsthe Middleport area reT. R. !Alva Jean! Durbin, burgh, Pa., died suddMiy
sume
their
regUlarly
Ravenswood; Mrs. Kenneth Tuesday at his home.
scheduled activities this · IMacy Lou), Cl!rter, HartHe Is survived by his
ford; three sons, Danlal, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cllf·
week
after
attendil)g
Point Pleasant; Howard, Jr., lord H. B•yson,- Pittsburgh
their
circuit
assem·
Point Pleasant, and Okey R.. IMr. Bryson Is a former of
bly in London. TJJ~.xt
Pele(Jburg, Va.; 12 grand- Meigs County I. grandwere 638 in attendance children and five great- mother, Mrs. Hobart Bryson,
·
Pl.flsburgh, formerly ol
Sunday afternoon to bear the grandchildren.
He was preceded In deeth Racine. He was the grandson
public discourse, "Main\ljln
by two sisters. Iva Simpkins of the late Hobar:t Bryson.
Your Confidence Finn to the and VIola Jeffers.
Other survivors are 1
Funeral services will be brother, Clltford Charles,
End." The speaker, John D.
held Friday at 1 ; 30 p.m. at Pittsburgh; two sisters,
Busby of Brooklyn, N. Y.
the Point. Pleasant Church llf Janice Bryson. Philadelphia ,
discussed ihe way of life of the Nazarene with Rev. Ray and Ann Bryson, Boston~
faithful men of old, how.they Whiteman and Rev. Parker /Mas .. an aunt and uncle. Mr.
Husselton officiating. Burial and Mrs. Vernal E. Blacklooked forward lo our day, to
will follow In the Graham wood, Minersville; great
the time in which the Word of Cemetery, New Ha\'en.
uncle, C. C. Cuckler, RD,
God is being fulfilled. He
Friends may call at the Pomeroy, grandmother, Mrs.
Wllco•en Funeral Home after McGuire. Florida and other.·
exhorted the audience io
aunts, uncles and cousins. He
maintain its confidence in ' 4 p,m. Thursday.
was a sludant at Carnegie
Gqd's written word, and to
, ·, JULIA REESE
Tech, PlttJburgh.
continue to proclahn the good
Mlas Julia Ann Reese, 63.
Funeral services · will be
formerly of Middleport, died held Frlclay at 10 a.m. at the
news of the Kingdom, just as
early Wednesday morning. at O'Brien Funeral Home In
their brothers are doing
her. home In Columbus.
. Pittsburgh . Mrs. Vernal
around the earth.
Miss Reese was born Sept. Blackwood will leave today to
There were three baptized
11, 19H In Middleport, a attend the services.
.•
Sunday morning.

By liEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Repot1er
COLUMBUS (UPi)- State Issue 3 would permit state and
local governments to Jnake direct loans for low and moderateincome housing, and to issue bonds or notes to assist private
organizations or individuals wiU1 housing tonstruction and
rehabilitation.
Urxler the current Ohio Constitution, state and local
governments are limited in the ways they can pledge their
credit to private ventures. Industrial development and air and
water pollution control projectas are among thP fWrmic;o;:ihlfl

A nwnlJer ill groups, indudi~ euntnu..:tnrs and ~u i lding
trade unions, have been wurkin~ tn Ket government aid for
housing construction by private corp()ratiuns, associations and'
individual develupers.
In 1974 the Ohio General Assembly enacted legislation
pennitting the Ohio Housin~ Development Authority to sell
tax-free bonds and notes to assist housing t'onstruction and
rehabilitation. But the law was subsequently ruled unconstitutional by the O~io Supreme Court.
An attempt to gain approval for housing assistance failed
again in 197~ when it was part of Gov. James A. Rhodes'
.construction bond issue package.
Now the plan is back on the ballot again. State Issue 3 would
amend the Constitution to allow the state to make direct loans
for low-and moderate-income housing only, and to issue bonds
to provide f..- horne construction and rehabilitation by private
groups.

..
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. October 27, 1977

1
1I

United Press lotero.atloaal
WASHINGTON - A SURVEY OF nearly 1,300 sites in 19
states, including Ohio, showed no sign of soybean rust , feared
because of evidence of the infection in Puerto Rico and Costa
Rica , the Agriculture Department said Wednesday The department's Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service asi!igned 15 inspectors to look at soybean fields in the
states but no evidence of the infection was found . .
Soybean rust, caused by a fungus, iB widespread in the Far
East, causing crop losses of up to 50 percent at times.

W'zley guest
speaker

WASHINGTON - WHEAT STOCKS in the United States
as of Oct. 1 reached a record 2.397 billion bushels, the
Agriculture Department reported Wednesday, up 10 percent
from a year ago.
.
The ~epartment said the figure implies wheat feeding
durinC June-September was around 150 million bushels, the
heaviest for that period since the 1972-73 period .
CLEVELAND
COURT-APPOINTED special
desegregalioo master Daniel R. McCarthy was scheduled to
present ·biB recommendations on desegregating Cleveland
schools to U.S. District Judge Fl'&lt;!l1k Battisti today. McCarthy
aod a team of experts have worked for about five months on
plans submitted by the Cleveland and Ohio Boards of
·
Education.

.

Area -Deaths · !l

CLEVELAND- THE STANDARD OIL CO . reporls net
income of $110.9 million, or $2.82 per share. for the first nine
months of 1977, compared ID net income of $86.2 million, or
$2.49per share, f&lt;J' the first nine months of 1976.
While net income increased 15 percent for the first nine
months of this year, sales and operating revenues for the S8111e
nine months jumped 20 percent to $2.5 billion, compared to $2.1
billion in 1976.

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carterarranged a
meeting today for a group of
senator s and

congressmen

concerned by the plight of tbe

Proposal
presented
Bob Fisher and Cha rles
Legar, representatives of the
co mbin ed voluntary
emergency units, met with
the Me igs Coun ty · Com missioners Wednesday night
presentin g a five-year

comprehensive emergency
medical services plan for

I

&amp;ase Cabinets
.,

/
Elberfelds Warehouse, Mechanic St. ·

ELBERFELQS IN POMEROY

at

en:tine

'lo'irteen Cen ts
Vol . 28 No. 137

depressed steel industry .
Carter has chosen a special
panel to recommend ways to
assist domestic steel workers
without raising prote ctive
barri ers
which
would
alienate the international
community .
The
President
also
sc heduled a nationally
televised news conference at
2:30p.m. EDT during which
he was expected to be quizzed
on what decision he has made
on sanctions against SouUt
Africa in retaliation for its
crackdown against blacks.
Administraiton sources
said the United St;ttes is
circulating a compromise in
which sanctions would be
threate ned against the
regime but deferred to give
South Africa a chance to

all parties a nd still provide
for co nserva tion for the
future. He reassured a group .
members
of
House
Wednesday that he will veto a
bill that " tilts too much to oil .
interests .' '
Six congressmen --met
Carter to stress opposition to

major concessions in

a

compromise between the
House and Senate versions oo
the bill. Til!' congressmen
later reparted Carter said he
is opposed to raising natural
gas prices above $1.75 per
thousand cubic feet .
I
Legislatioo passed by the
Senate would eliminate
federaJ price controls. A
co mpromise suggested
during the debate would have
boosted the price ceiling
beyond the $1.75 lavored · by
Carter, but would have
continued federal control~.
The group handed Carter a .
letter, signed by 67 congressmen, warning him that " the
, clear need to adopt an energy
bill must not lead to a '
capitulation to a conference
rep crt which would amount ,
as the Senate legislation does,
Emerson
Heighton, Christmas parade and
to a bonanaza for the oil and
president
of
the
Middleport promotion were outlined.
gas industry."
Edison Baker and Richard
Chamber
of
Comlflerce,
Rep . Toby Moffett, · DOwen
are co-chairmen of the
Tuesday
night
told
chamber
Conn., said the session was
promotional
committee while
members
that
last
Friday's
prompted by "rumors tha't he
Childs
and George
Mick
·
car
jamboree
was
very
might
be
making
a
successful.
compromise or deal. "
Heighton said dealers were Six persons
"The President told us he
well
pleased as were local
would veto a bad bill," said
It was agreed
merchants.
Moffett .
that the cha!flber should forfeit bonds
sponsor the event as -an anSix d~fendants forfe ited
nual affair.
bonds
in the court of Pomeroy
Final plans for the annual
Mayor Clarence · Andrews
Wednesday night.
TAXES DISTRffiUTED
They include: William
October gasoline excise tax
Reeves,
Pomeroy, $50, posted
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
checks totaling $I0,047 ,025
Fair
Saturday
through
·
on
an
intoxication
charge;
were distributed by the. State
John
Partlow,
Pomeroy,
$350,
Moaday,
with
hl~hs
In
the
Auditor's office to Ohio
DWI;
Denzil
Proctor,
Midmid
50s
or
the
low
60s
counties, townships, cities
dleport,
$350,
OWl;
James
Saturday
and
warmlug
to
and villages. Amounts
Morris, Pomeroy, $50. inthe mid or upper 60s by
received by Meigs comtoxication; Garold Walk,
In
Monday.
Lows
will
be
munities included Mid,
Ashland,
Ky., $350, DWI and
the
40s
Saturday
and
again
dlepor t, $2,160; Pomeroy,
·
Roy
Scarberry,
Mason, $100,
Sunday
wUJ
Monday.
Lows
$2,301;
Racine,
$600;
be
In
the
30s.
leaving
the
scene
of an acRutland, $531, and Syracuse,
cident,
and
$250,
reckless
$701 , a total of $6,293 .
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:· operation.

•

"THANKS" is all that it said . This large painted sign thanking the voters of Sou!llt'rn
Local School District was placed un the front lawn of the hi~h school Tuesday night hy
students after results of the election w~re known. Voters passed a 6.~ null levy win ch wtll
enable the students of the district to r.eturn to Uteir r lassnMiffiS t(1day . It pr1•Vl'~ ,·!Ji lrlrl'n fl'•
'l'.!ml Ill go to school.
\1

----·

;

•

By WIU.IAM E. CLAYTON committee with a free hand to solar energy in the home,
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A negotiate a balance between rejected a van ptKJI program
House -Senate conference the House passed energy President Carter had wanted,
·committee is poised to wind taxes and the Senate plan on and approved a $75-million
program to fit all federal
up ils work on the energy how to spend the mooey.
Uberal efforts to scuttle or buildings with energysaving
conservation section of the
the
Finance equipment by 1990.
modify
new energy package.
Leaders of the conference
More troublesome issues Committee plan appeared
lie ahead in the panel which doomed . Votes on two said they feel the committee
will write the final version of amendments were scheduled will pnstpone one of its
touchiest issues : whether to
an energy plan developed by · today.
With the Senate still ban the worst of the gasthe White House and modified
branc hes
of battling over its energy tax guzzling cars. The Senate
by
both
plan, Hous.:S.nate conferees would ,outlaw any 1980 model
Congress .
eac hed su.bstantial auto that gels under 16 miles
r
The Senate, meanwhile ,
agreement
Wednesday on the per gallon .
continues tinkering with its
1
part of
energy
conservation
Under th e van pool
own version of President
program the rnnference
Carter 's energy tax plan, a Carter's package . .
·
Matter
s
sc
heduled
for
rejened
, the government
blue print which will juin
discussion
today
included
a
would
have
bou~ht 6,000 vans
r•ther ti•uchy issues on the
Senate
proposal
that
would
and
turned
them over fJ1
desk t~f House Semtle .
oven
ur
n
part
of
the
Clean
Air
federal
bureaucrats
to .;har~
negotia tl,rs.
by
prohibiting
a
governor
Act
ride:s
tn
and
f'l'mn
wnrk.
Semite Finance Committee ·
fl·nm
11rdc ring
utility
Sen. Jolon Durkin , D-N.H.,
Ch &lt;:~in nan· Russe ll l;•ng, o.
cumpanies
in
his
state
t11
buril
ca
lle d it "an asinine
I.a., apjJe~I'S likely tu win his
ln&lt;:al
c.·t•al
to
keep
miners
at
pro!!,ram."
••ff ort to pass " $40 billion
Con ferees Hf!rt•f'cl to a
pl an of tax &lt;.'rcd it s and wc•rk . Sul'l1 an ·order wPuld
inca:ntivcs to t.•ncnu ra gt.• '•nly he with the approval of fl•flcral ~t udy "l.!t" w t11 make
industnal machinery mnre
t! ncrgy l 'l•n~a· r· valillll and ttw prc!'iidcnt.
Ill W1•dncsday's St'SSinll , t•ffil'i ent,
a
study
uf
pn •d ui·tir•n.
Long warll s It• gn int 11 the l'••llfl'H'l'~ Cidnpted a $1 00- l'flllscrva tion in n.'c l·eationa l
Hr, usc-Sc.·nall' cull I eiTIIt•t• ll lil li"n l11an prugnm, for 111ntur vellidcs, l;11o.tts and

'

!

Jamboree was very successful_

Conference committee
ends .work on.package

.\

All cabinets are constructed . of
prime quality heavy gauge steel,
· electrically welded, ·oven baked
enam~t;fir(~~~s for lastln!;l beauty.

••

utilizing revenue should Issue mnve toward racial equality.
In other developments. the
27 pass.
. The plan was offered after White House denied CarU:r
weeks of discussion between has any Intention of seeking
members of the five volun- the resignation of Kenneth
tary e mergency units in Curti s, chairman of the
National
Meigs Co unty, Pomeroy, Democrat,rc
A
Carter
Middl e po rt ,
Syracu se, Committee.
SAN FRANCISCO - A GROUP. OF 77 black children
spokeSJnan
labeled
as
" ill
Ra cine
and
Rutla nd
i
n
f
o
r
m
e
d
·
a
n
.d
suffering from sickle cell anemia were inununized with an
SEOEMS unit . A publi c
experimental vaccine that provoid totally successful in
misintentioned"
reports
that
hearing on the . pla n will be
warding off pneumonia, University of California researcbers
Carter is 'unhappy.
held later .
· report.
·
.
Carter,
meanwhile,
Also meeting with the
()ne in I~ young sickle cell patients get pne wnococcal
continued
lobbying
for
commissioners were Mr~ .
infectloo despite, in some .c ases, daily use of antibiotics. Once
passage
of
an
energy
Maxine Plummer , mental
stricken with the illness, a sickle cell patient 's chance of
health director ; Mrs. Jane program that will meet his
survival is only ooe in three.
Brown, .TB nurse; Eleanor specifications of fairness . to
Thomas, senior citizens
UNITED NATIONS-U.N. SOURCES AN oeean away
director ; Mrs. Gene Lyons of
are saying a Middle East peace conference is in UJe works for
the health department, and
December, but it seems as if someone forgot to tell the
Bill Wickline, HUD grants
PIPE STOLEN
Egyptian and Israeli U.N. ambassadors in New York. The
administrator.
Meigs . County Sheriff
occasion was Wednesday's opening of General Assembly
Construction of the multi- James J . Proffitt reported
debate on a resolution condemning Israel's establishment of
purpose health center to be that deputies are innew Jewish settlements in occupied Arab territories.
built near Veterans Memorial vestigating a complaint from
·Hospital was discussed. A W. C. Hill of Hill Gas &amp; Oil
breakdown of the budget. for Co., RuUand. Hill said 30
ATLANTA - I. W. ABEL, THE PRESIDENT of the AFL- the pmject was also joints of pipe valued at $396
CIO's Industrial Union Department, today sharply criticized
reviewed.
had been taken from his
Uie government's " free trade" policies which he sald have led
A. 0 . Powers of A&amp;R Trash property .
to massive job losses .
'
Service met to discuss the
Hill said he heard a noise
"These people (government officials) cling to the concepts · trash c~llection service in the around midnight, but did not
of a theoretical policy of 'free trade ' long afU:r the rea,!tty of . county.
investigate.
.
The
board
informed
free trade has disappeared from the face of this Earth, Abel
- Deputies are also insaid in remarks prepared for defivery at JUD's constitutional Powers that a proposal for vestigating a breaking and
convention.
private trash hauling from entering and theft of antique
the health department is guns from Walt Manley, Rt.
DAYTON - MEN'S MAGAZINE PUBUSHER Larry presently being studied. A
I, Reedsville.
Flynt said Wednesday his Hustler magazine is nolan extension determination will be made
of his attitudes but a reflection of society's attitude.
in the near future as· to
"Hustler oWgazine is not an extension of my attitudes like whether the pickup huxes will
Hugh Heffner claims Playboy is, " Flynt said on a television
continue to be used.
show (WDTN's Morning Show ). "Hustler is a reflection of
Attending .were Henry
society's attitude.
·
Wells, Richard Jones ·and
"It's a statement about the country we live in,'' he~ said.
James
Roush,
com"People shouldn't be figuring out why Larry Flyn publishes, miSSIOners,
and
Mary
'but why 10 million find something of interest in it. !.'
Hobstetter, elerk.

Utilities, Chinas,
Wardrobes and .

•
The bonds would be paid "" tnrougt1 revenues from the U1e 100,000 unils needed over the next few years by fr eeing up
cunstruction projecls . No general tax receipls could be used, home construction money at reduced interest rates ."
although the legislature could set aside a separate revolving
Supporters believe tax-free bonds for housing- could be sold
at rates up to 4 per cent lower than bonds at conventional
fund tn retire the bonds.
County and municipal governments would be afforded the interest rates . They say 39slates already have such programs.
Oppooents warn that Issue 3 would "create a jumbo state
"same borrowing· powers, except they could issue general
obligation bonds fcc housing. However, such transactions agency with authority to sell unlimited millions of dollars of
would be subject to the current le83l debt lilflits on counties revenue bonds and fr1en make direct loans to individuals."
and municipalities .
"Theappr~~riate way to realize our housing n~s is to work
Proponents of Issue 3, including members of both political. through traditiOnal lenders, not another layer of government
I
-bu.~eaucracy," the opponents wrote. •
. .
parties, believe it would solve se•eral problems :
_ Create johs in the construction industry .
The voters of Ohw have recently expressed thetr distaste
- AJlow young couples and older persons on fixed income to for thts type of arr.angement, and at l~ast . two stster sta_tes
afford decent homes arxl safe, well-built apartments.
have been to the brink of default on obhgatwns due resultmg
-Encourage cleanup of residential areas, reducing blight. from the severe stram on lhe1_r reso~rc~s by housing authonty
- Enable Ohio to attract more federal housing money .
programs that are substantially stmdar. The potential for
"Issue 3.will revitalize the housing industry in Ohio," wrote abuse iB staggering, not only due to political currents,,but also
the supporters of the amendJnent. " It should provide many of due to sheer Jack9f expenence res1ding m the agency.
Next: Issue 4, state debt

~~ Steel plight topic
for Carter meeting

I

I·

i.lt'llVltll'S.

airplanes, and expanded
mandatory e nergy use
reporting for industries.
In New York, Defe nse
Secretary Ha rold Brown
warned that failure to adopt
President Carter's energy
conservation
legislation
would lead tQ sec uri ty
problems that ca nnot be
sol ved by the Pent,agnn .
Brown, speaking as part of
the Carter adminstralion 's
drive for cOngressional action
on the president's energy
plan, made his remarks in an
address to the Council for
Financial Aid to Education at
IJ1e· Wa ldorf Astbria Hotel.
In other energy action, the
Federal Trade Commission
voted ~-0 tn have its staff
draw advertisi ng and sales·
rules f'"· the boom ing home
insulati''" marke t. The
re~ulel.ti ohs Wl~uld require ads
l11 usc an "i"'R factnr" t(l
indicate hnw m uch heat the
insulatiun held within the
building instead of the
tllil·kncss uf the insulation .

t•

Ingels are co-chairmen for
the parade. The parade will
be held Nov. 28 at 6:30 p. m.
· Attending were Margaret
Dutton, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Riggs, Mr. and Mrs .
Heighton, Mr. and Mrs. Cash
Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. Mick
Childs, Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes, Mr. and Mrs . Don
Wilson, Candy Ingels and
George Ingels.

Cincinnati

finn is
low bidder
Gradison and Company,
Cincinnati, has been awarded
the bid for construction bonds
for a mentally retarded
building in Meigs County.
Meigs , County
Commissioners Tuesday awarded
the bid following a bid
open'ing in the office of the
Meigs County Auditor .
Gradison and Company
bonds on a premium of
$755.58 to bear interest of 5
and 5-3 percent per annum:
The bid was based Upon the
lowest rate of ·inte[est
received for the bonds. dther · bids were: Magnus .&amp;
Co mpan y, Cinci nnati,
$1,556.50, 5'/o plus accrued
interest; Season good &amp;
Mayer, Cincinnati, $717.50, 6
pet. plus accrued; Sweney
Cartwright &amp; Co ., Columbus,
$363, ~ % pet plus accrued;
McDonald &amp; Co :, Cleveland ,
$255 , 57/s pc.t plus accrued;
Prescott, Ball .&amp; Turben,
Cleveland, $872.50, ~.75 pet.
plus accrued interest.

Weather
dear ton ight , with lows
between 45 and 50. Sunny and
mild Friday, with hi ghs in the
mid or upper 60s.

TRICK OR TREAT
Syracuse Village will observe Trick or Treat
Saturday, Oct. 29, from 6;30
to 7;30 p. m. The siren wlll
sound to begin
, . . and
. end the
evening's achv1t1es.

I

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