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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

�, - - - - -- - . -

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Od. 'EI, 1977
2-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo"-Pome&lt;O)', 0 ., Thui-sday, Oct. '17 1077

congress will retaliate

Miller predicts Carter,
long strike
WASHINGTON \ UPI 1 ~
Ttw mdustr1 ·s demands reUnited
Mine
w .w kers ported}) inrhi cte H pfm·i.si llfl
president Arnold Miller has that would requtre strik.Jng
predicted a lengthy c11al miners to pay tht• UMW
strike in December unless tho Healt h a nd Ret irement
eual industry changE'S its Funds in comt&gt; lust lwcause of
contract proposals, it was wildcat strikes.
reported today .
The fund s are 'fmanced by
F ollowing · a one-hour royalties on coal production
meeting with the Bituminous paid by the coal eompanies.
O&gt;al Operators ASSO&lt;'iation
The Health and Retirement
Wednesday, Miller told tlie Funds cutback benefits as of
Charleston G a z~lte the July I be&lt;'a~se of a variety of
cootract demands presented problems, including rising
by the coal industry last week medical "osls and wildcat
are "hardly realistic, " and stnkes wh tc h depleted
" tantamount to a 1930 income.
cootract proposal. "
The cutbacks, requiring
Miller said a strike when 1 mmers to pay up to $000
the present contract expires \ annually for medical care,
Dec. 6 is " pretty damn .sparked a .)!).week· wildcat
certain if they d~n't gel their strike during the sununer
heads out of the sand . We months.
don 't have all that much
Amon g other reported
time.
BCOA demands are a no''1 told thern it was time to strik~_g uarantee, the right to
get out of the camel manure sche&lt;illk vacations lD permit
and get down to the business continuous operations, and an
end to' the power of mine
at hand," said Miller.
The UMW president · said safety committees to declare
the date for t he next round of a mine ul\'lllfe and close it.
Also, the BCOA repor~l¥
bargaining is up to the coal
operators.
,
wants to require ·the UM to.
A BCOA spokesman said it win bargaining rights at any
was his understanding that new mine by election.
the next round of talks is up to
Miller said, however, ''it 's
the UMW. The BCOA has time to become realistic."
refused to respond to MUier's
" I'm ready to bargain. I
want to know if they are.' '
coffirnents.

B1 Nll:ltu!&gt;AS DANILilFF
U.nitt'ii Prt'SS (Uit•rnational
The Cartt'r :tdmini st ratiou
au d Con t- : ress , ftu· OJlt'e
mtwi nt! m -uni so n . a rt!

pre po,~ r m!-l to r etaliat l' agHinst
tht• gt1ve rnm en t u [ S\1ut h

Afr it' a fM
its
whi te
supremacist P''lil.' il's.
Th e a d m in is tr at i on 's

strat£•gy. wtth n~w deLails
~ xpee wd
today , ble nds
unilat e ra l U.S. a c ti ons ,
support rur a U.N. arms
embargo and encouragement
nf (~ nsurt- by Congress . The
s trategy, however , has
angered America 's European
allies.
In
Congress,
a
subcommittee of the House
Internati onal Relati ons
Co mmittee
unanim ~msly
ad opted
a
resolution
Wednesday "" strongly "
denouncing SouU1 Africa and
calling on President Carter to
take "E!ff ective measures'' to
retaliate .
The full committee meets

&lt;h .•;1 l h

Ill

l'II I\Stdl'r ttw
reSAiullon, whil' h l'Hrr ws the

tuda v

~' P t.' II S. F rHi ay

111

s;,id .

PI'Cltlr ia .

ad mi n 1s 1 r at 111 11 's lllcssi ~~ ~ ­
Cartt·r alStl sduxtult.•tl .~m
aftf'rn non n~ws l'onf erence,
pc rh cips
tu
t•ffi chtlly
a nnoun ct• hiS .sa nl' t in ns
plllil' y .

St•\'t•ral l'llngrt'SSittrn alStl
in tn ,dUt: l'd bi lls tn t'IH.l
gua rnnt et&gt;s
fu r . U . ~ .
("f i!Hp.anies dumg IJusllless m
Suuth Africa, rev1ew nuelcur
cooperat\(ln with South Afrit a
and ban St•Uth African goods
produced by w1tt~rpuid black
labor .
The American reUtliation
wa s prurnpted by S(luth

Africa's crackdown last week
on bla ck disSident s and
new spaper s. An a ut opsy
report
showin g
that
imprisoned bla ck leader
Steven Biko died (l{ severe
brain injuri es cau sed by
blows to the head was
expected to add fuel to the
fire.
.
A fu ll inquest into Biko's

Tht•

system.

Pers~ onnel

.

CECIL BtSSELL

Cec i l E. Bissell , 66, of 807
Locust St ., Parkersburg , died
Wednesday af St. Joseph
Hosp ita i . He was born in
R'oane County , a son of the
late Hi ram and Frona
Spencer Bissett. He was also
preceded 1n death by two
brother s and a sister . He
re t ired f rom
Amer ican
Viscose after forty yea rs
employment and was a
member of the Parkersburg
Fraternal Order of Eag les.
Surviving are his wi fe,
Norma Kel!y B.issel l ; t wo
daughters , Dona Fae Bissell,
at home and Rhea Mae
Henrie of Corapololis, Pa .;
two brothers, a tw1n, Charles
and Joseph both of Long
Bottom ; a sister, Mrs. Mary
Offut1 of Parkersbur~ .
Funera l services will be at
1p.m . Sa turday at the Leavitt
· Funeral Home in Parkersburg with bvrial in Mt. Olivet
Cemetery , Fr iends may call
at the funeral home after .7
this evening .

ROBERT M . TANNER
Robert M . Tanner, of 3649
.. Lancaster Drive, Kalamazoo,
Mi ch ., died on Fr ida y, Oct .
21, in Ka lamazoo.
Mr. Tanner .was born June
7, 1889 in Perry T.ownship,
Ga l lia · County, the son of
Henry and Emma Jones
Tanner and had made his
home in Kalamazoo si nce
1969, pr ior to that livi ng in
Cleveland . . .
He r eti r ed as a ca,-penter
and cabi net -maker, and was
a member of the People 's
Church . He was also a
member of the Masonic
Lodge, Rose Commandery
No. 43 and a Knights Templar
in GaUipolis .

On September 15, 1927 he

was united in marriage to
Helen L. Lewis, whQ sur
vives .
A lso
surv1vinq
IS a

t

and West
Gemumy wen• thus put vn
U1e ~;pnt to either go al nng
with the pr(lp&lt;tsal ur appear to
have an anti .Afric~m posture .

Rritain and F'ran_c:c have

The efforts to forge an
acceptable energy program
were under way in the
Senate, the White House and
in H conference committee
meeting room .
The
H o use-Se n ate

conference committee was
close to finishing its work on
the conservation portion of
Ute energy 'package, but the
r qmmittee faces more
troublesome parts of that
package in corning days.
The committee adopted a
$100 million loan program to
encourage the use of solar
energy in homes. The panel
rejected a van pool program
that President Carter, had
recommended, but dtd
approve a $75 tpillion
program to have all federal ·
buildings fitted with energysaving equipment by 1900.
The Senate, meanwhile,
was dealing with what is
probably the most difficult
por lion of the ener gy
program· - th~ tax quesion.
Senate liberals had hoped to
block approval of the bill
proposing $40 billion wocth of
tax credits for industries, but
they appeared unable to
muster the necessary votes.
Approval of the measure
was urged by Senate Finance
O&gt;mmittee Chaifman RUssel
Loog who expects to have the
final ve r sion of the tax
program worked out by the
House-Senate co nference
committee .
Ca rter, continuing his
eff orts to win votes for his
energy proposal&gt;, met with
.another gr oup of House
members. He told them that ,
con trary to earlier reports,
he does not support raiSing
the natural gas price ceiling

additions
announced .

CLIFFORD NORTIIUP

MICHAEL WOLFE

JOHN EINERSON

I

----:------No way to

HEALTH

lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

SpOt reduce

B y Law renee W, Lamb , M.D. Charact eristic of having very
DEAR DR. LAMB - I large buttocks - a large fat
would like to know if it is pad. It is a racial characpossible
to
lose
a teristic for that group as
"secretary 's spread"? I have opposed to other ethnic
thought about quitting my job groups in Africa . lt is not that
because· ol the sitting down these people are necessarily.
aU day, every day . 1 have faller than another race but.
gained four inches on my rear their inherited characteristic
quarters and thighs in four is to store their fat over the
years since I have had this buttocks.
job.
Because your job requires
I would like to know if my you to sit a lot you probably
hips and legs can be brought use less calories than you.
back to their original size or used in the past.lt is the total
close to It• II so, how do I go inactivity combin ed with
ahout it and if exercise is the your calorie intake that leads
answer, what kind is best? I to fat deposits.
·have cut down on my eating.
You can't "spot reduce "
DEAR READER - The act the area . The way to get rid of
of sitting does not cause in- It is to reverse the "calories
ches to be added to your seat in, calories used" ratio by
or pounds of fat to ac- changing your diet and incumulate over your buttocks creasing your activity. I am
or thighs. The problem is the sending you The Health
same as for the person who Letter number 4-7 , Weight
develops a large waist. It is Losing Diet, which . you can
tliat old problem of con- use as a guide. Others who
suming more calories than want this diet can send 50
your body uses.· The end cents with a long, 'stamped,
result is FAT which is simply addressed envelope for it to
.
I stored energy and it has to be me in care of this newspaper,
P. 0 . Box 1551, Radio City
stored somewhere.
"Somewhere" for you is Station, New York, NY 10019.
daughter, Mrs . Lindsey
{ Al ice) Foote , 2 grand your buttocks and thighs . In · Exercise will help and as I
children, Rober t and Karen
the next person it may be the mentioned in The Health
Foote, all of Ka lamazoo ; one
waist. There are individual Letter I am sending you that
sis ter and one brother , Mrs.
differences
in where the fat is a good way to help protect
Ethel R icha rds of Ria
Grande ; and Dwight of
deposits will locate. You were your muscles while getting
Tuscon , Arizona; Sev eral
probably hom with a ten- rid of fat . I think everyone on
nieces and nephews.
dency
to deposit fat in those a reducing diet should have
Mr . Tanner was cremated .
locations.
some type of exercise
A memoria l service will be
announced later . In lieu of
In one ethnic group in program as well .
flowers memorials may be
Exercisfng your hips and
Africa the people have a

buttocks will not cause fat to
melt away over these areas.
It will simply be part of YQUr
total exercise program to use
caloriesYou can tighten ,the
muscles in that area and firm
them just as you can tighten
and finn any muscle. That
means contracting and
relaxing the muscle groups.
For the seat you can do
bumpa and grinds. You can
also get some benefit from
standing up and volunta rily
tightening your seat muscles
and then relaxing them. Hold
the muscles in the tensed
position for a few seconds
each time . Repeat the
exercise about 10 times and
have at )east two sessions a
day of t~is. By working these
muscles they will become
!inner but the fat will still be
there unless you' regulate
your caiorie balance.

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

dcle~at wn s .
Britain, ~·ranee

NEW HAVEN - WilHam
Beard. Plant Manager,
Graham
Plant ,
Foote
Mineral Com pany , New
Haven, today anaounced new
personn e l added to the
Management staff at the
plant.
Clifford Northup is the new
General Superintendent at
the Graham Plant. Northup
and his wife and two children
rome to the Gra ham Plant
from Silver Peak operations
in Nevada where he was
Operations Manager . Mr .
Northup has a B.S. Degree .in
Chemical Engineering from
the University of. Missouri
and a Master's Degree in
Chemical Engineering from
the Texas A&amp;M University.
Mr . and Mrs. Northop and
their two chi\dren reside in
New Haven. John J;:inerson is the new
Pla nt Metallurgist. Einerson
co mes to the Graham Plant
from Satralloy ,- Inc. in
Steubenville. Mr. Elinerson is
a grad uate of Purdue
University with a degree in
Metallurgical Engineering.
Mr. and Mrs. Einerson and
their three children will soon
be moving to the area .
Michael Wolfe is the new
Production Foreman . Mr.
Wolfe attended West Liberty
State College. He comes to
the Graham Plant from Ohio
Ferro Alloys , Powhattan,
where he was a Production
Foreman . Mr. and Mrs.
Wolfe a nd the ir three
children are residing in New
Haven.

·

Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFUCH
City Edilur
Publishlod da1ly e:~~ce pt St~ tunlay

by TI1e Ohio Vallt!y

Publi!ihlnl(

CumPifii)'·Mu ltunl'tli&lt;l , Inc.,
ll l
Cuur·t St, Pmncruy. Ohi o m&amp;9.
&amp;1!-!mc.'i..'l Office Phunc 992- 2156:
E:..Jit u r~l

Phone 992·2157.
Sel'nlld d&lt;iS-11 posli:lgt' pHkl &lt;tl

Pm m:ruy , Ohi•1. '
N&lt;t \ipnal

cuJver tu;lnl-\

repn:sen·

\aliVe Ward - Griffith Company,
lilt' , ~ 1 1 ll 111clli 111111 G&lt;tllll~her Div..

757 Tlnnl Ave .. Ni:w Yurk. N.Y.
1001 7.

S\lh);l'l'll)l)"l' rates : ~t'ivcrcd lly

&lt;IIICIIJabJc 75 CI;IIIS pt•l'
wct•k . Hy Mul ••r Ruutc wllt!re l&lt;t l'l lei'
Sl·n-11 '' 11 111 &lt;tv:ulal.llc, One m•&gt;nth,
CiJ I'I WI' " !l'l"l.'

$1 .~

Bv rHiolll 111 Ohw and W. Va .,

011t' VC1u·. $2"2.00: Silt

$1 1 an:

11 1tt ·~.:

One We stern diplomat
fumed about Washington
" bla c kmailin~ " the West ,
annther said "we have to
eonsider the new situ&lt;Jtion"
and a U1 ird predicted "a lot of
OOrJtaining before we agree ."

any higher than $1.75 · per
thousa nd cubic feet he
originally proposed . That
figure is much lower than
what. the gas industry and its
supporters want.
Congress and the Carter
administration appeared to
be in agreement on the U.S.
attitude
toward
South
Africa's racial policies. A
subcommittee of the House
lnt er na lio nal Relatio ns
Committee unanimous ly
adopt ed
a
resolution
"strongly" denouncing South
Africa and urging Carter to
take steps to retaliate fnr that
nation's recent crackdown on
blacks.
The sutx·um mittee action
was believed to have the the
administration 's support and
was expected to wig approval
of the full committee today.
The Senate Judiciary Committee
gave
tentative
approval to legislation to
decriminalize the possession
of s mall amounts of
marijuana. The favorable
vote represe nted the first
time a committee of Coogress
has ever approved such a
step.
A proposal to bring some 6
million feder al, state and
local government workers
int o the Soc ial Security .
system was rejected by the
House. With a 386-38 vote, the
House decided to delay such a
move at least until after a
s tudy on the matter is
completed in 1980.
The vote was the firsl"taken
by the House as it began work
on legislat_ion to overhaul the
Social Security system and
put it on a sound financial
basi s.

USED CARS

69 Chevelle Wagon •••••• s699
V-Br automatic

75 Ford Torino4 oR.••••• s2595
Dark green f 1nish , blk . vinyl trim . 35 1 V-8, automat ic,
P.S ., P.B., wheel co-vers, radio, loca l 1 owner .

Sma ll V·8, automatic, P.S., radio , good tires . Clean!

building materials

WHERE THE
RUBBER MEETS
THE ROAD!

$

SALE ON ALL
23 CHANNEL CB'S

1970 FORD LTD
CPE
••
!:~995 ·
v.a,

1

HURRY! - GOING ~AST!

automatic, P.5'., P. B.

MEIGS PLAZA

QUALITY TIRES
.AT
REASONABLE PRICES
~ GENERAL
\::=;:7
TIRE SALES
NORTHSECONDAVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OH 1045760
. PHONE : 992,7161

llH Uilhs,

u wnths.

Travel top. 258 cu. in. 6 cyl. engine. auto. trans ., like .
new tires, radio, 2 wheel drive.

CASH&amp; CARRY
PRICES

WE
DELIVER

l owner, 350, V-8, automatic, power .steering and
brakes , rall y wheels, chrome equ ipment, interior
paneled and insulated, ca rpeted, ready to add your
own camping eq uipm ent .

Middleport, 0 ..
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open : 7:00 to S: oo Mon . thru Fri.
· 1:00 to 3: oo Saturday

1972 DATSUN PICKU•• ~1295
Good tires. Run s out good.

POME:ROY MOTOR' CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126

WOOD BURNING
STOVES

Pomeroy

HURRY IN FOR AGOOD DEAL
•

HUR'R YI

MEIGS PLAZA
PEARL ST.

-~----· ·--•

SALE·ON ALL

Open Evenings Until&amp; p:m.

Su i N · n~IJ" I ~ p1 fl"l' mdud1·~ SunJa~

.

1\

CHEVY.:~:~!·:.••••••••• s3395

913 S. Jrd Ave .

94.50.

ClassAA

Region 5
1. Elyria Ca tholic, 64 .00 ; 2.

Brookfteld, 60.89.

·

Region 6
1. St. Marys Memor ial,
65.50 ; 2. Mansfield Malabar,

59.55.

Region 7
1. Canton Central Catholic.

La kewood, 45.75 , 7. Cadiz ,
44.S6 ,' 8. P ickermgton, 43 50 ;
9. Steubenvi l le Catholic
Centra l , 41. 00 10 (lie) Heath

a nd

Richmond

2.

It

I. Asht ab ula St. John ,
6 1.00 ; 2. Dalt on, 46 .50.
Region 10
1. ( t ie ) Ha m l er Pa tr ic k

a nd

Fr e mon t

St.

Joseph , 41. 50 each .
Region 11 ·
1. B eal lsv ill e, 39.50 ; 2.
Ne wark Cath o li c , 36-.75 : 3.

Crooksv ill e, 35 .00 ; 4. Lancaster Fi sher , 30.25 ; 5. (t ie )
Columbus Bishop Readyand
Newcom er stown, 30.00 each ;

7. New Albany, 26.83; 8.

Shadyside , 26.50 ; 9 Raci ne

Southern , 23 .98 ; 10. (tie)

Dan v i l le and Stra sburg Frankl i n, 23. 00 ' each.
Region 12
l. West Jef fer son , 48.00 ; 2.
South Charl es ton Sou t heastern , 43.00.

4 whee l drive, local one
owner .

SAVE

72 CHEVROLET

72 BUICK
SKYLARK

NOVA .'ss'
Was 11295

~I
GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES
2.0!1 Condor St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
992 -2925

'

75 FORD
PINTO RUNABOUT
" Gas
S a ve r " .
Automatic, 4 cyl , roof
rack .

'2595

73 PL.YMOUTH
·GOLD DUSTER

4 door , A. C. , P S., auto .,
super clean .
Wa s $2295

•1895

f1l t whe el. rad ial s, AM
ta pe, 33, 000 miles .

'2895

(t) 75 BEETL E
(1) 74 BEETL E
(1) 74 SUPER BEEl'LE
(2) . 7P
SUPER
BEETLES

'3195

Auto., P.S., P.B., air
conditioning .

eme•IJE' ''CY vnot"' COISP oTllO "'"' ra ,•
ures ~•re tlo • 18 noon t!l .. ,oe 2• '
deep Door Ope r11ng 9 • !'I Wett;~hl
l~lbs Bac• P•nel .S1a 3•'1 rugn (
4~ .,., ,de 01n e• S•les .hi&lt;laOie

Au to., P.S., P.B., A.C.,
6 cy l., 3 speed, e)(fra
clean .

5 USED
VOLKSWAGENS

Was 13495.00

tne fl•Qnt ..,. ,,, neat vour t&gt;•,me a11::1
COOk -,our meat'
Also qt~'&gt;ill to•
camps £ a tJH\~ silo loo~e! ar&gt;a as af\

C.lO

75 CHEVELlE
MALIBU
tilt wheel, radial s, V-

111erauon'

"' ''1'10111 ma'&gt;Oflr)
~!;' d 'iiQn&lt;PQ WOOO tn•Ol.IQ"Oul

73 BUICK
REGAL

'4895

lop .

Durn~

75 CHEVY

•3295

Auto .. P.S· , P. B.. A.C.,

T'"' u~"•Qu~ comt~•r at •Ofl .. aGIO slo•e
dna r •erldct co~e' oilnel •&lt;~!t il •~ '"
m•r~utl'!o

Class A
Region 9

77 JEEP
CJ-5

NOW

THE f! AEPLA. C£ Sro~E

Love la nd, 68.66.

Hen ry

•Bette( ·f\ 8l'n·'ll

Je ffer so n

Un1on , 39 .00.
Region 8
1. W yom1 ng , 70 .58 .

Slant 6 cyl. , V-top, A. C.,
sunroo f. P.S,
Was $1:495

'1995

'2195

NOW
NOW
NOW
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....

r
76 PACER,6cyt., A.C.

75 MATADOR , A.C.
7lJEEPCHEROKEE
74 PLY. SATELLITE
74 PINTO SQUIRE WAGON
74 MONTE CARLO
74 MUSTANG , t I ,
74 GALAXIE 500
74 CHEV . PICKUP
74 IMPALA, A,C.
71 DART. A. C.. P.S.
73 NOVA,6cyl .
73 CUTLASS SUPREME'

73 MAV ER ICK '/I.C.
72 CHEV. IMPALA
71 CUTLASS SUPREME
72 CHARGER. A.C.
72 NOVA , 6 cyl.
72 PONTIAC CATALINA
72 PLY . SATELLITE
72 FORD PICKUP
7t CHRYSLER NEW YORK ER
10 FORD PICKUP
69 CHRYSLER WAGON
69 CHEV. IMPALA

53495
52495
55095
5249S
51$95
52795
52495
sp95
S3195
52495
$2295
51995

11195
11895
$2 195
$1995
$1495
$1495
$1295
$1495
$!395
1995
1895
1350

'

52695

'

Don't Start the Winter
with a Siek Car

SEE THE EXPERTS, G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Northfield

108" cab to axle, 'extra good 825x20 tires, 15,000 lb .• 2·

LUMBER ~
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

SuperS,nics 97, Braves 92
Fred Brown scored 14 of his
game-high 37 points in the
final period, two free throws
at the 17-second mark~ to
enable Seattle and its rookie
enach , Bob Hopkins, to break
a four-game winless streak
with the first victory of the
season. Billy Knight finish ed
with 22 points and Randy
Smith had 19 for Buffalo,
which scored just 10 points in
the first quarter. New Sonic
center Marvin Webs te r
scored 14 points and grabbed
15 rebounds.

HARDWARE

speed,· 292 t u. in :.. engine. Real solid!

VAL~EY

.ACE

76 CHEVY VAN G2Q ••••s5495
73

Region 2
1. Lima Senior , 88 .20 : 2.
Toledo W hitmer, 84 .58.
Region 3
1. Canton Mc Kinl ey, 101.00;
T Barberton , 90.5() ; J . Zanesvi lle , 77 .00 ; 4. Ma ss ill on ,
75.50; 5. All1ance, 70.25 ; 6.
Akron Springfield , 69 .75 ; 7.
Mariet1a , 66.60 ; 3. Logan ,
65 .00 ; 9. \tie l Louisville and
St ow Wal sh Je su it, 64 .50
each.
Region 4
1. Ci n ci nnat i
Moe I ler ,
106.91 ; 2 ..Cinci nnati Elder ,

66.00 ; 2. Philo. 55.00 ; 3 ( t1e}
M ine r va .;nd Joh ns town
Monr oe, 46.50 each ; 5 St.
Cla irsville, 45 .83 ; 6. Hebron

IOihaeK

74 SCOUT 11 .••••••••••.• s2395
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

Ca thol ic, 85.00.

UPI high school polls

''·

-BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?

week's Ohio Hig h Sc t} ool
At hlet ic Associa t ion co m
pu ler ize d foo tba l l rat i ngs
wilh poi nt totals:
Class AAA
Region 1
1. Cleveland St . Joseph ,
85 .75 ;
2. Ment or Lak e

bench

Coun tr y Squire, V-6 engine, automatic, power steering .
brakes, door locks, w1ndows &amp; seats, 8 pass., air, radio.
'Reduced
Like new tires , many more ex tra s.

Clean body, good tires, air,

C:OLU MBUS (UP!) - This

l'OI.UMBUS I UPI ) - The U1c u•p ten .
Utree defcndin~ &gt;1ale playnff
MoJCIIcr, which rolled over
dJ&lt;.Hnpions once again head rugged Cin(•innati Ruger
the _
Unite d
Press , Bacon 2'1-ll Friday nigh't for
By MitTON RICHMAN
International Ohiu Hi!:.!h its 31st straight win , a~ain
UPI Sporll Edltor
Sch••&gt;l B&lt; oard of Coaches heads the big three in Class
AAA ¥1ilh the Crusaders
NEW YORK (UP!) - Apparently there has been an fo&lt;otball ratings.
Un!J&lt;)atcn Elyria Catholic , amassing 273 points to 236 for
oversight. somewhere, Chuck Bednarik was supposed to have
retired 15 years ago, at least that was what he said and all the after a two-week absence, Canton McKinley and 158 for
lly JA!:K SAUND~
newspapers.around the country carried it, yet here he is ri~ht has recaptured the tnp in Washington Court House
UPI Spnrls Writer
Class AA from, dropping Miami Trace ,
back again with the Philadelphia Eagles.
Coach Elgin Baylor praised
Cincinnati Elder, which has his bench after New Orleans
You remember him, don't you, two-way Chuck Bednarik, Wyoming , also undefeated, to
lost only to Moeller, .moved tnok a 12.1-106 decision over
une of the toughest, hardest-hitting Slovaks ever to pu ll on a st.&gt;eond. ·
The Panthers of Coach Jim into fourt h this week, trading the New Y1&gt;rk Knic ks
pair of football cleats and "the last of U&gt;e 60-minute men."
Dick Vermeil, the Eaglef progressive-minded head coach, Rattay, 52-ll winners over places with Massillon, while Wednesday ·night, but the
brought him back to mingle with the younger players on the Clevela nd Holy Name last Barberton, Gahanna Lineoln, off icials had already given a
ball club, travel with them, listen to them, talk with them, and Friday night, ·returnc&gt;d to the . Cen terv ill e, Lakewood Sl. game ball tn·une of the Jazz
give them the benefit of his t4 years playing experience with No. I position with a 172-160 Edward and Lima Senior subs in the firo1 period.
point margin this week over round out the top ten.
Philadelphia ,
Jazz
starters
Pete
St. Edward dropped its first Maravlcfi and- Len "Truck"
- At every game the Eagles play, you can spot Bednarik on the Coach Bob Lewis' Cowboys.
Meanwhile, Cin cinnati game of the season Saturday RobinSI&gt;n scored 30 and 25
sidelines . He 's listed as an associate coach, but titles don't tell
you everything there is to know aho ut a man. U Vermeil . Mueller and West Jefferson night , 15-6, to Parma points, respective!)', as New
Orleans grabbed the early
searched the whole country over , he couldn't come up with continue to hold comfortable Padua .
West Jefferson, Dalton and Central Division lead in the
anyone tied in more closely with the fabric of the Eagles tha n margins in Class AAA and A,
River Na ti onal Basketball
the rugged, still imposing looking, 52-year-&lt;&gt;ld former center respective ly, a!U10ugh both Su lliva n Bla ck
were remained 1, 2, 3 in the small Association with a 3-1 record .
teams '
margins
and linebacker.
'
·
Bednarik was one of the NFL 's most in,ense performers 51\mew hat smaller than a sch«•l balloting with Coach
But Baylor preferred to
Gene Keel 's R o u ~ hri der s focus nn his reserve players.
from 1949 through 1962. Now his primary job is to help relax the week ago.
Urbana, another unbeaten holding a 173-145 margin over - "! am really pleased with
kids, keep them from getting t.oo tense before a ball game, and
power,
was thi rd again this runnerup Dalton.
he does a go&lt;l11'job, ge ttin g through to.them as easily as he ooc'e
the play that we've been
week in Class · AA and at
So u t h C h a r I e s t o n getting from our bench,"
did the enemy secondary.
·
Bill Bergey, one of the Eagles' linebackers, likes to bug present is the only other team Southeastern moved up to Bay lor
sa id.
"Gale
Bednarik about the 1960 Philadelphia team he played with, the in contention for the top spot . fourth, repladng Hanoverton (Goodrich) played very well .
one which beat Vince Lombardi's Green B'l)' Packers for the The Hill climbers finished this United which lost for the first Aiuon J ames and (Jim)
week ·With 137 points.
time, and West Liberty Salem McElroy came in and did a
world championship.
•
Orrville, unbeate n but ont'e and Sandusky St. Marys took good job and that rea lly helps
"Hey, Chuck, how do you think that 1960 team of yo urs would
our-overall effort.
do against us ?" Bergey needled him before last Sunday's tied, was fourth with 86 over fifth and sixth.
points, followed by Canton
Rounding out_ttie Class A
"When we get good play
game with D&lt;1llas.
"Let me see," said Bednarik, going along with it and Central Ca tholic, St. Ma rys top ten are Ashtabula St. from our bench, it gives me a
pretending he had to think awhile. "l think we'd beat you guys, . Memorial, Loveland, Beloit John in seventh , followed by chance to rest Pete and
West Branch, Ma nsfi e ld Hamler Patrick Henry, Tiffin Truck . If our bench keeps
27-10.
Malabar
a nd Brookfie ld . Calvert and Newark Catholic. · giving us good play then I
Bergey's eyes went way up.
L
oveland
is
a newrnmPr tn
" Really?" he prndded .
know I can rest them more ."
Goodrich, particularly,
" Yeah," Bednarik came right back.
made
an
offensive
''Why ?"
contribution,
scoring
· 25
"Because we ha~ a quarterback named Norm Van Brocklin
who 'd tear yo u guys apa rt. Hey , Marion, isn't that true ?"
points ~ sw'lJaSs 17,000 total
Bednarik called over to defensive cord ina tor Marion Ca mpbell
NBA career pointS. His shot
COLUMBUS (UP t) - Thi s
Second ten : 11 . Trenton
for confirriiation.
week's Un i ted Pre ss In - Edgewood 32 ; 12. London 31i with 7:46 left in the first
" If Chuck says so, you'd better believe it, " said Campl)ell, ternat iona l Ohio High School 13. Ham il ton Badin (1) 37 ; 14. period allowed him to achjeve
Bellevue (I) 22; 15. Upper the milestone and officials
Board of Coaches football
answering Ber gey and winking at Bednarik.
San
dusky 21; 16. (tie) St. stopped the game to award
ratings
(wi
th
first
place
vo
tes
Bergey wasn't convinced.
.an d won lost record s in Clairsvi lle, Pickering ton and him a game ball .
" I'll tell you what," Bedna rik said to him. " If you guys beat
parentheses) :
Cincinnali Mari em o nt , 20
Elsewhere in the · NBA,
the Cowboys today, then lll8ybe ...remember I only said
eac h ; 19 . Marion Ri ver
Class AAA
Team
Points Valley 17 ; 20. Akron St. Detroit blasted Golden Stale
'maybe' .. .l'd consi der you good enough to get a tie with us."
Vincent -St . Mary 14.
l. Cine in. Moeller 22 (7-0) 273
12.1-107, Atlanta edged New
Bergey laug hed .
Others with 10 or more Jersey in overtime 113-110,
2. Can. McKinley 3 (7·0)
236
" You just won't eoncede we're a better team than you were,
L.ima
Cen t ral
3. Miami Trace {7-0)
158 points :
will you?" he said,
·
4. Cin , Elder (6· I)
135 Catholic, Ci nc inna t i M c - Denver nipped Portland 111130 Ni chola s and Tuscarawas 108 a nd Seattle downed
The Eagles played well at times last Sunday but lost a 16:10 5. Massi llon (6.1)
6.
Barberton
(6·
I)
107 Valley (I).
Buffalo 97-92.
decision to Dallas, They have a long way to go before they can
7. Gahan. Lincoln (6·1)
66
approach the 1960 Eagles. Bednarik, 35 then, played all but two 8 Centerville 3 17·01
58
Class A
Team
Points
minutes of that title ga me with Green Bay, .manhandling the
9. Lakewood St.
Edward (5 ..1)
37 I W . Jetterson 10 (6.0· 11 17 3 Pistons 123, Warriors 107
Packers both on offense and defenstl so much that Lombardi
Eric )'doney's three baskets
10. Lima Senior (6:1I
33 2 Dalton 2 17·0)
145
said after the contest, "Tha nk God we don 't see him again for
Second ten: 11. Tol edo 3. Su lli van Blac k River 1 (7in a 26-second span of the
eig ht months ...
"
Whitmer 28 ; 12. Youngstown
0)
t29 third period helped Detroit to
Car d inal Mooney 25 ; 13 . 4. Sout heast . Clark I (7 ~0 ) 101
Bednarik never missed a game with the Eagles. Once.befor~
Garfield Heigh ts 23 ; 14. (tie)
5. W . Liberty Salem 2 (7-0) 87 its third straight victoi'Y· The
a contest wi~h Ole Chicago Cardinals when he was in agony
Dayton
M
ea
dowda
le
and
6.
Sahd. St. Marys (7 OJ
84 Pistons clwtg to a 63-61 lead
with torn cartilage around his.ribs and there was no way 'he
Zanesville , 22 eac h ; 16 . 7. Ashtabula 51 . John I (7-0)76 when Money · scored on a
could possibly play, coach Hughie Dev ore came to him and
Mentor Lake Catholic 21 ; 17. 6. Ham ler Patrick
layup, st ole an inbounds pass
Lou isvi ll e 19; 18. (tie ) San Henry I (6·0·1)
· 56 and connected two seconds
said , ''I k-now you can't play, but suit up so they will think you
dusky and Parma Padua . 18 9. Ti ffin Ca lvert 2 (6-1)
51
will."
each ; 20. L.Qgan 14.
10. NewarkCath. (4·1·11
44 later and then, after Golden
All taped up and shot full of novocaine, Bednarik put on his
Qthers with 10 or more
Second ten: ll Stra sburg State missed, hit a short
uniform.
(1) 30; 12. Mechanicsburg 29 ; jumper. BobLanierscored25
points: Alliance , Clay ton
Nort hmont
and
Akr on
lJ. Hanoverton United 28: 14. points
"Would you believe I went in for two plays ?" he laughs .
and Ralph Simpson 22
St. Henry ; 15. (tie) Mid·
Springfield .
Wtthout being a:;sociated with football in some way,
dle t own
Fenwick
and for Detroit, while Marvin
Bednarik would feel rather naked. Along with working for the
Shadyside (1) , 17 each; 17 . Barnes grabbed a careerClass AA
Eagles, he also does commentary for Home Box,Office pay-TV
Team
Poinfs . Crooksvil le 16 ; lB . {t i e l high 19 rebounds . . Phil
172
1. Elyria Cath . 10 17·0)
Beallsville , Newcomerstown
three times a week' on a show called fnside the NFL, and ·not
160 and Ja mestown Greenev iew , Smith's 32 points and Rick
too long ago he and Jack McCa llum of the Bethlehem, Pa ., 2. Wyoming 4 (6·0)
Barry' s 21 paced the
Urbana 1 (7 .Q)
137
15 each.
Globe-Times collaborated on his biography entitled "The Last . 3.
4. Orrvil le ( 6 · 0 ~ 1)
89_ ....Qthers with 10 or mroe Warriors.
of the 60-Minute Men."
S. Can Cen t Cath 16·0· I) 85 points : La ncaster Fisher ~nd
Everywhere he goes, football fans remember Bednarik be- 6. St. Marys Mem. 3 (7.0) 80 Fremont St. Joseph .
69
cause of the-all-&lt;&gt;ut "determination and ferocity with which he 7. Loveland 1 (6·0·1)
8. Belo1 t W. Branch I (7 .0) 67
Hawks 113, Nets 110 (ul)
always played. He played like a man possessed because he 9. Mans. Malabar 1 (6·0·1) 58
John Brown's three-point
knew no other way,
10. Brookf ield (7 -0)
55
play
with I :08left in overtime
Nuggets 111, Trail Blazers 108
.Brian Taylor 's two free eased Atlanta past ().4 New
throws with 11 seconds to Jersey, which could have won
play helped Denver over in regulation play if Bird
Portland. The Nuggets went Averitt - who scored a
ahead with I :58 left on a shot game-hig h 32 pofnts - had
under the basket by nan Issei made a desperation 25-foot
and held that lead the rest of shot at the buzzer. John Drew
the game. David Thompson led the Hawks, now 2-l, with
toppect Denver with a game- 27 point&lt;: ·
high 24 points. Forward Bob
Gross' 22 points took scoring
honors for the Trail Blazers
and Bobby Jones and Dave
Twardzik had 17 apiece ,

1972 FORD LTD ••••~~~•• 1295

and

Baylor Computer ratings
•
prruses

ASSOCIATE STORE

72 Maverickz oR.•••••••• s1595
Was 51495

Sport Parade

USED TRUCKS

l i 00 ;
Eb L· ~ht• l 'l ' S~i . OO ) l'Hr: Sl~ 1rlunll1s
$1:1 5•1 : T lul·•· l r~&lt; •u t h "', $7 .50 .
' IJI Il• '.~ ..S I'II II IWI

ect •nomies.

Loca l owner, 6 cy t. , automatic, power steering , radi o,
good tires . Clean !

land MemO ri al Chapel.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGs-MASON AREA
CHESTERL. TANNEHILL

major ecunumic interests in
South Africa that they caMot
abandon with out grave
r t!pereussions for their own_

.75 Ply. Valiant •••••.••• s2595

made to the People' s Ch urch.
Arrangements by the Lange-

In 1942, the American
aircraft carrier " Hornet"
was su nk by Japanese
warships in a Tierce naval
engagement off the Solomon
Islands in the Pacific Theater
of World W¥ II.

Today's

Energy program
reiDains dominant

Miners assessed $7
CHARLESTON , W.Va. want a rebate. Any local may
(UP! ) - Doubts linger as to for the unspent share of a
the life of the Coal Miners CO MPAC assessment a nd
Political Action Committee, have it returned Within 12
but it appears working months, he said.
"I don 't know if this (the
members of the United Mine
Workers union must shell out new assessment) is going to
$7 apiece in November to cause any problems or not, "
Ca"er said.
keep it active .
According to Ca"er, his
Criticized by some th1s
year, the committee, known memo was signed by UMW
as COM PAC, .was either President Arnold Miller, Vice
scrapped or placed · on President Mike Trbovich and
standby last Januar y- Secretary Treasurer Harry
depending , on how you Patrick.
However, both Carter and
translated it.
A majority of COMPAC Vernon Massey, newly
District
17
officials in West Virginia elected
Executive
have been disbursed , some International
going back to tbe mines, bui Board (IE B ) ~ member,
District 29 Prestdent Richard assume that COMPAC was
Carter confirmed Wednesday "abolished by. the policythat the special STlevy will be making board this year. With
23,000 miners, District 17 is
collected.
Cai;ter told UPl that his the \Ulion 's lar gest .
" It was abolished until
uffice has been told it would
be colleeted next month, in more money came back in to
keeping with a resolution pick it up again, " Massey
approved by the delegates at declared.
" It is out of existence, but it
the UMW internati onal
convention last year in can be reactivatecl7''\""offered
Cincinnati.
Ca"er.
Carter sa id COMPAC was
His district is based in the
heart of southern West beset with finan cia l problems
Virginia and has 22,500 and complaints of possible
mismana ge ment. But
members.
Carter wasn't SW'e how Miller's press a ide, Paul
miners would take the Fortney , and COM PAC
m
Kentucky
. assessment , but sa id the officials
UMW international-not the maintain it was kept on
district- would use a dues standby, awaiting new
checkoff system to collect it. funding .
Fortney disclaimed a ny
Several locals in his region
hav e co mp1ained a bout . knowledge of the proposed
earlier COMPAC dues and assessment.

U S. .. pr op1•s al ,

Orrid als sa 1d t lw UIU ted nid:.mune&lt;l. Ute ''st ick..andState-s was ft:tr mvn • hkcly to L'arrut"
p liin .
is
a
s uppor t a Sct·urity Council l'om protnise for four ha rsher
n•se~l ut i u n hi tighten 111t~rna ·
Af n c~n n•Sfllutiuns calling
u~,na l anns sa nt tiuns than it
f111' l'umplete e('orHimi(• and
W &lt;~ S
tv
jcc;pard ize a n lllllitar y buy~utt s a g.ainst the
&lt;•s11ma tcd $1 6 ltilli urt in white rC'gim e.
Anll• n ea n i nvestm(• nt s in.
Diplnrnat k so urces said the
Sm1th Afril'a .
Amer ic an prupo st.~l ha s
St•uth Af r ican Dcfr nse tmrwyt.'&lt;i Britain, France and
1\·tinistcr.. Pi ~ ll' f B' 'tha. m u
defiant irfterview with the
New York· times . said
W" lnesday Ius nation had a
strong enough arms industry
to survive a military
cmba.rg(l and t Puld " put up u
fight that will m;t unish" its
critics.
At the United Nations,
Ambassador Andrew Young
was
circulaiing
a
compromise U.S. proposal to
By ROBERT SHEPARD
impose arms san ctions
WASHINGTON (UP!)
against South Africa if it does The
e nerg~
program
not make progress toward remained the dominant iss ue
racial equality within six on Capitol Hill Wednesdax.
months, diplomatic sources but Congress was also busy
with such ' matter s as
decriminaliztion
of
marijuana, censure of South
Africa's racial pohcies and
changes in the Social Security

W ~s t
( ~ e nnan y
because
Washington did not mnfer
wiU1 its staunl'hest NATO
allies before convey ing the
propo""l to black African

Defending champs
head UPI ratings

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NORTHFIELD,
Ohi o
(UP]) - Gene Dupla ga
b'U ided No Sue to a I 1h length
victory over Dart Ros in the
fea tured $1.500 ninth race at
N~orthfie l d Pa rk Wednesday
mght.
.Kania McKiyn was third .
Nn Sue envered the mile in
2: 04 3-5 in pickin g up the
wireto-wirt! victory, her sixth

win nr the.year. ~he returned
$9.110. $4 BO and $4.40.
Nanry·s Delig ht kicked nff
• the l ttL h
bi g triple
(''•IH binatioJJ ,,f 2- 10-3 whi&lt;'h
was worth $915.30. Easy Andy
WHS sel'nn d e~ml Tnp Creed

·,.,,,e

car boobies start when lubrication is CMIIooked;
Our prof~l auto .parts people are always ready to
guide you in selecting exactlj the right lubriCant to protect
all the vital parts of your car.
Cost~

...

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
240 Third Aw., Gallipolis

Yoor Complete AuiDmatM! Store

I

~

•Parts·
V Plus

finish1~1l Ulin l.

1\ c·towd ,,f 2.156 w:tgercd
I

~2filllt l !1

··..

�4-- The DaUy Sentuwl. ~llddleporH'omeroy, 0 .• Thursday, Ort. '!1, 1977

Graduate

Marauders take onGAHS Friday night
By LARRY FISHF.R
The Mt&gt;igs Maraudi'rs 'ull

d~frnse

dunng the se&lt;'ond
half but h1s l,ffrn.st• just
couldn't get tl together to

invade Galilpolts ~·nda)
night looking for thetr thtrd
win in what should be a \rrll

ga"lm•. Both

balanced

make a •.:oml'back.
Tht•re "111 be no major
ehangt•s tn the ltnru p this
\l.t' l'k but Kenn~
Young .
quartt&gt;rbat'k. will be playing
un it more rt'gular basE.'s
no ~\1h at ht• is recon•ring
from an i11jury.

t{'ams

rurunn~ gmne
passing ~am£' that

havt' a strong

•

and have a

ca n comr through

when

needed.
·
Meigs was defeated last
week when the Athens
The Blue Devtls will have
Bulldogs topped them 19.0, the home field advantage but
mainly because of bad breaks that should nQ.t make much
and

several

t urnun~rs ,

ho w e \~.er .

has

as they try not to repeat last
yea r's defeat of 8~.

as~istant

" S.feties - Robinson and
Greg Harrl ngfon (2 · 140) or
Dan Sickles (3 155) .

ltstt~l

LE ·Joe Garnes

Lf . Raney Arnold

135 •
190 3

l,G. Brent Stanl ey

m fwr con&lt;.lttiun at
Uni\'ersity ll os pat~tl t(lday
aftl'l' h~ cnllapsc(_l rrom what
was IJl'licved iu be tt heart

180

spasm ctm·in14

Pos. Player

Wt. Yr .

( .Mark Milch
RG Mark Magnotta

4

160 •
150 3
190 •

R T. Brent Arnold

R e.Bren t Bolin

14.4

3

QB . Kennv Young

LH.Greg Becker

155 •
140 3

RH .M i ke Wayland

140

.t

Linebackers -

.lnd Waylaoo .

IOffense)

'!'r.
180 •

WI.

. Pos- Piayer

the season as thei r young
team is now starting to show
same st rength . TheY have a

strong running attack which
is led by Gary Daliney who is
avera gi ng 3.7 yards per
carry. They play a solid 5-2
defense which will test the
offense of !he Marauders.
Commenting on last week's
game aga inst Athens. Coach
Charles Chancey stated that
his tea:m made tOo many
mistakes an d that t heir
kicking ga me hurt them. He
was impressed by the strong

LE .Steve Wand li ng
L T-T im Chevalier

basketball court and was
mo uth -t o-mo uth
resuscitation twice by Ohi"o

give n

LG -Jan Coll in s
( .Jim Simms

17.2

4

207

2

175 4
165 2

RG·Rob Goble
RT .Dan Staggs
RE.Mi&lt;e Sta~gs
QB.Matt Wil liS '
LH .Gary Dabney

4

140 2
155 4
140 2

RH .Nick Robinson
FB -Scott Morrison

193 2
t Defense&gt;
Ends - Jeff Golden 13·165)

and Chevalier .

Tackles - Charles Roberts
( 3-20S) and Ken Barcus {-4 ·

185) .

Middle

guard

Sta9gs .

Linebackers

~

-

Dan

M. Staggs

and Simms :

Cornerbacks
en l p
Ca l'dwell (3-145) or Dabney

Beulah results

( 4. 145)

J irb me r

and Stdnley.

Safeties - - · Becker and
Garnes.
·
Kickoff Time - a P.M .
Game Site-Memorial Field

210 2
210

THESE ARE the winners of the recent punt and pass competition for Meigs County held
at the Metgs Junior High School field: L TO R: Eddie Kitchen . 8; Darren Wolfe, 9; Ed
Miller. 10; Tim Wamsley, ll; Zane Beegle, 12, and Mike Whitlatch, 13. The Meigs Jaycees
staged the event wtth Greg Gatrell and J. T. Rue in charge. The event fur the six agr groups
was spunsored by Dan Thompson Ford .
'

Van Wilford

Cornerbacks -

Souls by

GAHS .MEIGS HISTORY
'!'EAR
G M
1967
6
8
1968
0 14
1969

B

6

1970
1971
1972
1973
t974
1975
1976

12
12

tO

7

..
19
8
?

1977

TOTALS

124

6

14

6

Committee says ads
on ·issue misleading

14
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
8
0 committee supporting State
6 Issue 2 Wednesday asked
?

radio

~4

and

Ohioans
for
Wildlife
Conservation, said the Center

televisi on stations

Pro Standings

to st op broa dcas ting one
advertisement by
oppllnents, c~ntending they

GAHS won 5, Me igs woM"s .

certa in

lnterna,tional
Hockey League
Unitt-ed Press International

co!l tain ··untruths.''

GROVE CITY, Ohio \ UP! I
- Coq Dor won the featured
ninth race at Beulah Park
Wednesday, tw o lengths
ahead of My Three George's.
Silly Ghost was third .
Coq. timed at 1:12 3-5 in the
$-1.100 event. returned SlHO,
$7.80. $4.60.
The 1().12-9 trifeclil paid
$81 2.7 0 to ho lders of 57

Volleyball roundup
On Monday. Oct. 24 at
Eastern High School. the
Varsity
Meigs
Girls
volleyball team split a trima tc h with Eastern and
Trimble. The Meigs team
defeated Eastern in the first
match. The Maroon and Gold
went down the first game of
the match 15-12 but then

The commercial wa s pulled
from all stations and
replaced with a revised eopy
later in the day, according to
Shelley
Berman
Cornmuni c a tors, which

stands 4-2 on the season. In
overall play the varsity is 9-7
and JV 7.0.
The last match of the
season (a league match ) will
be at Gallipolis at 6:30 TI1Ursday, Oct. 27:

North

W L T Pis GF GA
Muskegon
Pl. Huron

Flint
Ka lama .
Saginaw

'J 1 0

2

17

13

1 I 5 10

9

210

001
0 1 I

6
4
1
1

9

9

8

8

9

11

South

produced the . com rnerica ls .

W L T Pis GF GA
But the opposing group Toledo
2 1 0 4 12
7
2 10 4 9 8
maintains it can document all Dayton
the· informati on in the Ft . Wa y ne I 2 I 3 13 19
.
o 3 1 1 11 14
co mmercials a nd has no Milwau
Wednesday's Results
plans to make any changes. Muskeg on 7. Fort Wa yne 3
Issue 2would ban !he UFO of Dav ton 4, Fl in t 2
tickets.
steel- jawed leghold traps in Por} Huron J, Milwaukee 2
The 3,793 thor oughbred came ba ck in the second an·d Thistledown
Thursday 's Games
third game winning 15-3 and
Ohio.
racing fans bet $-189.913.
No
gam.es
schedu led
15-1. In the second game of
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
The Ohio Committee for
Friday's Games
the match Tracy Burdette (UP! ) -Jockey Lee Hanks · Hwnane Trapping (OrHT ) Toledo at Muskegon
scored 7 straight points and guided Lassie Go Go to said Wednesday it will ask Fort Wayne at Fl in t
Tonia Ash served 6 straight victory in Wednesday's the Federal Communications Dayton at Saginaw
points. Again in the third featured eighth ra ce at Commission to remove the· Kalamazoo (it Mil waukee
game Tonia Ash served 7 Thistledown, covering the 7'' ads fr om the air if they are
NBA Standings
straight points with Marcta furlongs in I :371-!i over a fast , not modified.
B y United Press Internat ional
Holcomb serving 5 straight track to pay $16.20, $6.60 and · Sandra Rowland, president
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
points.
$3.40.
of the committee, accused
w. L. Pet. cis
In the Trimble game,
Build Bridges placed and Ohioans
for
Wildlife Phil a
~~b
Buffalo
Meigs won the first game of Machito showed.
Conservation of " gr ossly N.Y
2 2 soo
the match 15-3 with Sonia Ash
11
The 8-3 combination of inaccurate aiJd false political Boston
1 3 250
:.
N .J.
•Mobile Home
0 " 4 000 2 l
serving 8 straight points. In Here Come The Fonz and advertisements. "
Cenfrat Oi1.·ision
the second and third games of Dollar Gem returned $274 on
Underpinning
S p e c i f i c a II y , s h e
W . L. Pet. GB
the match the Maroi'uders feU the daily double, and there c o m p I a i n e d a b o. u t Nevv Ortens
3 1 ,750
• Roof Coating
Atlanta
2 1 .66 7 1
apart
·
15-!i
and
15-!i.
109
winning
tickets
on
commercials
which
say
Issue
were
• Tie-Downs
Wash
1 1 .soo
1
Meigs
High . School the 11-2-7 grouping of Gullery, • 2 would ban all animal Clevel~nd
2 2 .500
1
• Awnings-Carports
2 3 .400 11&lt;
·volleyball team scored Luck Is Near and Careless trapping in Ohio, including San Anton io
Houston
1 2 .JJJ
11 ,
another
league
victory
INSURANCE
Love in the ninth race trifeclil rat trapping, and that the
Western Conference
MidWest Division
Tuesday night against -each worth $422.40.
Center for Disease Control is
w L Pet . GB
REPAIRS
11
Wellston wilh the game
Attendance was 3,692 and endorsing a 00" vote on DetroH
' 2 .667 · M i twauke
2 1 .667 1,
played at Wellston High the handle was $387,861.
Issue 2:
Chicago
J 2 .600
1,
School.
:'There is no justification Den ver
1
J
2 .600
The Varsity git'ls took the ::::::;:::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; for broadcasting these false Indiana
2 2 .500
1
Kan City
1 4 .200 2' ~
win in 2 games 15-13 and 15-1.
political advertise ments
Pac ific Div is ion
Slildenls in the Southern
The setond game was
which are totally without Phoen i )l:
~- L6
GB
Scbool
District
Local
· marked by 11 stra ight points
basis and fact and are meant Portland
3
1
.750
11
served by Tracy Burdette. returned to the classroom
on ly to appeal to the most Golden Stat
3
2
.600
1
The J .V. match went 3 today, however, the
Los Ang
2 J .JOO 2
basic ,fears of the Hstening Seattle
1 4 .200
J
games with Meigs taking the School's football team will
public," said Mrs. Rowland.
Wednesday's Results
not
see
action
again
until
first game 15-9. The Wellston
Detroit 123, Golden State 10 7
·James Glass, representing
A tlanta 113, N.J . 110; ot
girls then rallied to take a 15- Friday, Nov. I.
New Orleans 123. N.Y 106
1100 E .- Main
Head football coach John
11 win in the second game.
Denver 111. Portland 108
Wednesday 's s'ports Transac- seal!Le
97, Buffalo rn
The Meigs girls came back to Dudding said his team wUi
tions
Pomeroy, Ohio
Thursday's Games
By
United
Press
International
play
Hannan
Trace
and
take the third game and
Kan City at Cleve
Baseball _
Milwau ke e at Houston
match victory by a score of Eastern, the flnal ·two
St . Loui s Acqu ired lett
992-7034
Friday ' s Games
games
this
season.
handed p i tcher Frank Ricell i
15-10.
Boston at N.J .
from
San
Franc
isco
lor
a
Three games, Kyger
In league play Meigs now
Los Ang at Atlanta
player to be nam ed: purchased
Creek, Symm.. Valley and
the contracts ot left-handed Phoen iX' at New Orleans
wash a·ttndi ana ·
pi t cher Frank Riccell i fro m
Miller wiD not be made up.
Buffalo at Golden State
Pho ~ n i x and r ight -handed pjtch .
Southern won (our out of lis
er A:uretio Lopez from Mexico Ph ila at Portland
I
Ci t y .
first five games prior to the
N H L s·tandings
Chicago
White
Sox
Added
closing. However, league
By Un i te~ Press International
catcher -first baseman Marvis
Campbell Co11ference
encounters will not be
Fo l ey to th ei r rost er from
Patrick Ohoision
Sara
sota
.
counted this fall.
· .'1 W. L T . Pts.

We're Just
.
What You're
-·
Looking For

i ;·

-

1

1

ttJo

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

1

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

IS NOT A HIGHWAY GAME ·

ST. WUIS (UP!) - Jimy
Williams Wednesday was
named manager of the · St.
Louis Cardinals' new·-MA
farm club in Springfield, Ill.
The· club, whose nickname

will be announced in a few
days ,

was

m ove d

to

Sprin gfield
from New
Orleans.
Williams, 34, spe.nt the last
four seasons managing in the
Calif or nia Angels' farm
system .

New York Yankees - Signed
outfielder Paul Blair to a three

Ph i ladelPh ia \4 2 1
9
NY Ranger s
4 3 1
9
NY Islanders
2 2 3
7
2 2 3
7
Denver - Signed ru'nn in.g Atlan t a ·
Smythe Di1.·ision
back Jim K iic k .
W, L T . Pfs.
Ta mp a - Re l eased lihebac k 3 1 2
8
er M i ke Lemon and l ight end Vancouver
8
2 2 3
Gary Butter , and re -sig r1ed Chicago
Co lorado
1 2 3
5
l inebacker Steve Maughan.
1 6 0
2
Kansas Ci ty Si9ned wide Minnesota
0 7 1
rece iver Charl ie Wade and St. Louis
Wales Conference
_.. wa ived split end Gerald Butler .
Norris Di v ision
College ·
W. L, T . Pts.
Univ ers ity of San Francisco
6 0 2 14
- Named Dan Belluomi ni to Mon t real
J
4 1
7
replace Bob Gailla rd as head Pit tsburgh
2 'J
2
6
basketball coa ch effective next Detroit
Los-Angeles
2 J
2
6
year .
2 J 0
4
Southern u n i v e r s i t v --' Washi ngton
Adams Di vision
Named ass istaf1 t coach · Ken
W· L T . Pi s,
Tillag e to replace ' Charlie Ba les
Buffa lo
4 1 1
9
as head football coac h.
Toronto
3 1 2
6
Cleveland
4 3 0
6
1
Boston
2 3 3
Wednesday ' s Re5ulfs "
NY .Ra ngers 6, St. L ouis 2
Detroit ·4, Pittsbgh 3
wash 6, Atlanta 2 .
Phila 2. Chicago 2
Minn J, Boston 0
Montreal 2, Toro f1IO 2
NY Islanders 2. Lo s Ang 2
Thursday 's Game s
Minn at Detro it
NY Rangers at Va ncouver
Friday's Games
Ch oc ago at Cleveland
Wash ill Colorado

* 15/32 inch tread depth
*Tread molded to receive
metal traction studs

34

B78-13

polyester cord
blackwall

+ st .B2 F.E .T.

* Wide, open two groove
tread design

*Modern "78 Series" sizing ~;:.:.;.::t-:.::..:.:......t.....:;;~

s•o'mj · -Door:.

;

't

B~tnbH!r .

FciU lkner had I'OIHplained
11£ chest pmns ea rlier in the
day.
Team physidan Dr.·Robcrt
Murphy dcsl'ribed 1t as a
heart sp'!sm.
f&lt;Julkn e'r wa i:i ta ken to
University Hospita l where he
was treated before being
transrcrred tn the coronary ,
L'm·e unit at U1c hospital.

Come harvest
your

Just co me in and pick a
basket -full of terr i fic
Health. tex
c lothes

Lebanon result:!

slac k s, jeans, jumpers.
shir t s, dresses , overalls
and se t s. They ' re easy
afford and easy to take
c are of , l oo ; all are
mach i ne . washable
and
dryable and require no
ironi ng . For boys, Siz.e J
mon th s t o Size 8, and for
girls, Sjz.e 3 months tq .Size

LEBANON , Ohio ( UP II Major Delta won the featured
eighth race at Lebanon Raceway Wedne sday nig ht.
covering th e mile in 2:07 J..S .
He took U1c lead about 100
feet from th e wire and
defeated Besla Money bY. onehalf length . Fuzzy T. Direct
was third .
Liqu ida tor and Meadow
Mar AI won the first and
sect1nd races, respectively. to
return $22.20 in the nightly
dr uble combination o£ 3 and
I. ..
A crowd of 1,116 wagered
1108.698.

6x.

THE
992 ·3586
Pomeroy,O.

Yer~tim.

'

October 31 , 1977, at the

Texas ace

110 W. Main

Pomeroy,

o..

of the Commission,

180 East

Broad Street,
Columbus, Ohio . All inter·
ested persons w i ll be given

top field

an

goal kicker

\.

c&gt;pportunity to be
heard . Further informa·
t ion may be obtained by

.

contacting

Utilities

JEWELRY ·
SALE

MISSION ; Kan . (UP! ) Russell Erxleben of Texas
kicked three field goals in
five t ries against SMU
Saturday to 1110\'e into first

fi eld goal cat egory this week
~ith an average .of two a

lh PRICE

ga m e.

Erxleben, who already has
an NCAA recor d 67 -yarder to
his credit this year, has
assume the Division I lead in
lliat ~ Ci:ltegor y for the fir st
time this season.
Henry White of ' Colgate
maintained his all-purpose
rushing lead with an average
Of -183.7 yards per ga.me, buiJt
primarily on his 794 y~rds
rQ s.h in g and 262 yards
returning kicks this season.
I
n ot her c ategories , Jim
Millt:!r of Mississippi leadS the
'
·
1·
·u 46 8
na t ton
tn pun mg WI 1 a .
average, Jimmy Cefalo of
Penn State is tops in punt
returns with a 19 yard
average, Tony Ball of
Te nn essee-Ch attan o og~ is

Ladies, gel your Jewelry for Fail and
Winter at this sale.
·

Charl~s

Riffle , R. Ph.

Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon. thru sat. 8:00a .m. 1o 9 p.m .

first in kickoff returns with a
33.7 ya rd average, and Bryan
Ferguson of Miami (Fla.)

Sunday tO :JOto t2:30andSio9p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992-2955

leads in interceptions with
seven.

E. Main

Friend IV Service

------

Open Nights til( 9

-

a

~LADYS.

DEAR POLLY-You sug·
gested that Lillian wte masking tape around the edges of
needlepoint canvas. I find
masking tape is very hard to
l'!mlOVe so I reconunend stitching the matertaill on the
sewing machine as the thread
is easier to take o.u t.-MRS.
W.B.
DEAR MRS. W.B.-What is
easy for otie may be more
trouble to another. I find it
more of a bother to get out the
·sewing machine for a small
job. Pull tape off one side and
then the other and It is quick.-POLLY.

FRED WAGGONER
WILL BE PREACHING _: Th.e Pomeroy Ctiurch of
Christ will hold a fall revival November 6-11. The
meetings will be held nighUy in the church building
located at 212 W. Main St. at 7:30. A nursery wili be
provided. Fred Waggoner, from Kentucky Christian
College in Grayson, Kentucky, will be the evangelist.
Along with the inspiring messages presented by Mr ~
Waggoner, there will be special music each evening and
good congregational singing . Everyone is invited to attend
this revival.

Special night set
aside for seniors
A senior's night service
was observed Wednesday at

the Middleport United
Pentecostal Church Wider the
direction of Mrs. Mae Mason
and Mrs. Alice Priddy.
The service opened with a
chorus entitled "I'm on the
Battlefield for my Lord" sung
by the congregation and
followed by prayer requesls
taken by Mrs. Lula Shaffer
with special lestimdnies I}~
Mrs. Virginia McClelland,
Mrs. Ruby Spurlock, and
Mrs. Alice f'l'iddy.

Special recognition was
given to Mrs. Priddy and
Mrs. Mason who noted that
between the two of them.they
have served God for a hundred years. Mrs. Priddy has
been dedicated in the service
Cor 53 years while Mrs. Mason
has been active for 47 years.
Scriptw-es were read and a
brief t.alk was given on the
topic, "Two Kinds of Fear."
Mrs. Virginia Vitatoe lead the
senior members iri a closing
song, "Hold the Fort."

THURSDAY
FREE CLOTHING Day,
Thursday • 10 a .m. to 12 noon
at
Salvation
Army
Headquarters , Butternut
Ave ., Pomeroy; all area
residenls in need of· clothing
welcome.
PRECEPI'OR Beta Beta
Chapler, Bela Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:45 Thursday night
at the home of Mrs. Lillian
Moore with Mrs . Jane
Walton, c&lt;rhostess.
FRIDAY
MISCELLANEOUS Sale,
United Methodist Women,
Letart Falls Church, to be
held at the Communily Hall,
lOa.m. to5 p.m.
MEIGS POMONA Junior
Grange Halloween party at
7:30p.m. Friday at the Rock
Springs
Grange
Hall.
Members are to attend In
costume.
HALJ~OWEEN PARTY for
Bedford community, Friday,
7:30p.m. at Hemlock Grange
Hall sponsored by Modern
Woodman of America.
Fishing pond, country store,

announced later.

prizes and refreshments.
UNITED MINE Workers
Supporters Club Friday, 10
a.m. at Eagles Club. To sign
up for a first aid course
members are to phone 9926163 or 992-6020.
HALLOWEEN DANCE
F r1· day at senior citizens
center from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Music by the . Stringdusters
featuring round and square
dances ~md cake walks .
Admission $1. Children under
12 with parents admitted
free .
SATURDAY
HYMN SING Mt. Union
Baptist Church Saturday 7:30
p.m. Adkins family of East
Lynn, · W. Va., wlll be
featured.
·
MONDAY
RUTLAND Garden Club,
home of Mrs. Roberl Canaday, Monday, 7:30p.m.

•

~omeroy,

As for the county meeting

in the spring it will be hoslc d
by the Bend 0' the River
Garden Club. A discussion
was held on whether or not to
have a Regatta show In 1978
and each club is to advise the
new contact chairman of interes\.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,.
Christmas nower show chairman, discussed lhe show
schedule, '~A Currier and
lves Christmas." It will be
staged on Dec. 3 and 4 al the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Public viewing hours wiD be
from I to 6 on Nov. 3 and from
! to 4 on No"' 4. The public is
invited to enter the show.
The show will featw-e a horticulture division with 13
classes including three
classes for junior exhibitors
and 17 classes in the artistic
designs division.
. In the horticulture division,
the rules specify that exhibitors may make as many
entries in each class as
desired . and that a

sweepstakes aw~rd will be
gtven to the exhtbttors compiling the most potnls for ri!).
tbon awards.
In the artistic ·designs
classes, exhibit ors are
restricted to one entry per
class and are not perm.itted
artiftclal nowers or foliage,
although they may use dried,
painted, glittered or fresh
material in all classes.
As for special awards these
will include a " best of show",
a " " reserve best of show "
and a " creativity award."
There will also be a junior
" best of show" for the
outstanding junior arlislic exhlbit.
.
The artistic design class~s
ashstedbyMrs . Carpenterm
the section for garden club·
members only are as follows: ·
" A Tribute to Currier and .
Ives" , an arrangement made
m a sleight.
" A Colonial Christmas", a
mass destgn.
"Snowed Up", featuring
white . .
"Christmas Aglow", ineluding one or more candles. ·
"Serene and Lovely" with
madonna and child.
"There's a Song in the

wrappmg but must include
plant matertal.
'" Lei's Rate 11 High",
Christmas wall hanging.
i The junior artistic classes
are "Winter Pastime" showing motion, and " Away in a
Man~er, incl uding an animal
ftgunne .
Mrs. Carpenter presented
at the meeting a program on
corn husk crafts and
displayed dolls, flowers, and
a wreath giving pointers on
working with husks.
1 Representing at th e
llneeting were members of the
Rutland Garden Club, the
Winding Trail Club, the
Pomeroy Club, Middleport,
Wildwood, Chester, Middleport
Amateurer
Gardeners, Rutland Friendly
t'lardeners, and lhe Bend 0'
the River Garden Club.

Air'\ a stabile.

.:.'StaFburst," an abstracl
using black light.
"Heartbside", a floor arrangemenl, minimwn height
low- feel to include some
evergreen.
· '"TiS the Season", a door
decoration.
"Spirit of the Day", a table
pictw-e depicting a Christmas
festivity in stated part of the ·
United States.
"Chrisbnas is Forever'\

featuring driftwood or
weathered wood.
In the invitational category
where anyone may enter and
senior citizens are particularly encow-aged to enter, the
classes are:
"Behold a Star", an interpretive design for those who
have not taken a blue ribbon
in a counly show.'
"FWl and Fancy", a class
for iJ:rulgination.
"Let's Wrap it Up", gift

Hayes goes
to Korea

,.: Beautilul
.
:Washable
,.

,.

*

*

,.
,.,.

,.
,.
,.

,.
:Woolens

!

.

THE.

i

*.

CENTER

.
d
On the TIn Mi dleport

0.

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT

JERI J!'AULKNER of Pomeroy is the Meigs High School VICA ClUb'~ 1977 queen. First
nmner-up !11 the contest was Brenda Foster, center, while other conteslilnts were Stephanie
' Rought, left, and Karen DeMoss, right. The contestants were judgedl on the ba'sis of
knowledge of the Vocational and Industrial Clubs of America (VICA) and personality by
Kermit Walton, Principal James Diehl and Janet Williamson.

-

FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

Brown &amp; Blue
SileS 4-11

JOGGING

SUITS
Blue · Green · Red

GYM SHORTS
Red- Blue - Navy .
Green · Black
andWhite
Knit &amp; Cotton

PARTY PLANNED
LETART FALLS - A
Halloween party will be held
at the Letart Community Hall
at 7;30 p.m. Monday for
children of Letart Township.
· No trick or treat night will be
held in the township. All those
attending are to be masked.
Refreshments will be served
and prizes wiD be awarded.

Me? Iguess lm the sport sort
S " I rl1n\ l&lt;kr · rl

111 jl'~ns ~m11J bu l ~.._l!l'..'} h ~lld \1 011 1 ~. \ kut~ ur&gt;il !1 1 Hl l ~. JrlV1llrf1&lt;1

dnd ~~ B~I ""J " 1111' , !HJthu'li ) n•,lk l'\ th" ~ptJt T ~ou t ll,il'ill'l l 11\"" ~ "
alll••3tl l o•r lr1ll !II' \lV I&lt;! Will i f.U\'IbO'I 11&lt;•1'1 IIi li''J-'JII

Over sixty attend
Messiah ·rehearsal
FRIDAY, SATURDAY A'ND MONDAY
GROUP OF LADIES
SHOES, DRESS AND
'
SPORT. Values to s22.oo

NOW 110.99

&gt;

GROUP OF .

CHILDREN'S SHOES

, 30% OFF
ALL LADIES
AUDITIONS, NATURALIZERS
AND VOGUE DRESS
SHOES

10% OFF
Betty Ohlinger

Meigs and Vinton Counties).
There is no charge for anyone
else who wants to sing with
the group.
.
Ross also requested that
anyone who has a copy of the
MCssiah. A community choir, standard edition of the
open to the p~blic, will per- Me$siah bring it to rehearsal.
form the music Sunday,
For more information ,
December II .
phone 245-5353.

POLYESTER KNITS,
WOOL AND

.MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Main St .

more than 60 people participated in the first
rehearsal, held last Sunday,
for a special 'Christmas
season presentation of
se lections from Handel's

WITH OR WITHOUT VEST

DACRON BlENDS
AND All
WOOL
MATERIALS.
sizes
36-50

Merlyn

I

'60.00
to 5185.00

Middleport,

afternoons.

o.

Pomeroy, Ohio

RGC-CC is alsoofferi.ng the

,.
'

BUS, CAR COLI.IDE
MENTOR , Ohio (UP!)
NiJ1c people were injured, one
seriously . when a rom muter ..
hus and a car e&lt;•llided in
Mer.UJr, pnlil'L' said .

Columbus

Waller,

19 .

wh&lt;ise address wits nnt listed
by pnli Ce, wa~ in poor

cu nditinn ar Huron Road

community choir for cullcge - H uspital. Easl Cleveland .
l'rflsli Wt'tincsda y were m•t

rt'Sidcnlli uf J~ckson . (ii:llli~l.

sa 1d

'·

Tht•

~tthen;

credit. Participants 111ay
earn One hnur of credit by
paying a $13 tuition fe1! f£or

'

•

choir

N. 2nd Ave.

.BAHR

CLOTHIERS

PRICED FROM

Ross ,

director, said the next
rehearsal will be held Sunday, Oct. 30, 2 p.m. at Lynne
Center on the Rio Grande
College and Community
College t RGC-CC ) campus.
Ross noted that anyone who
enjoys singing is inVited to
participate. Rehearsals are
scheduled weekly on Sunday

inv11lved in the

UIJUrt·ll lit•riou:-;ly ,

~IUtllHrities

'•·l • v
}

J, ,

~~. ··, ..,(
'

,'/

~*

,.

'*'*************

to many in the area as "Red"

Your Rugs Are
Worn -Your
Uving Room Suite
Is Faded, and
Tom- The
Lamps Are Dingy
And the Stove
Won't Cook-

,.

* SEWING *

JOGGING SHOES

juSt completed a three year
tour with the 3700 Law Enforcement Squadron at
Lockland Air Base, Tex.
Hayes is the son of the late
Frank W. and Stella L.
Hayes. His wife, Mary and
two children, Jacqueline
Lynn and · Franklin Allen,
have moved here io live with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Smith, Racine, while he
is in Korea.
·

:*

:rn plaids and solids. :
:Now for the style
*conscious lady who,.
,._sews.
,.

the
active man

Sgt . Kenneth David Hayes
of San Antonio, Tex., formerly of Middleport, has
been assigned to Kunsan Air
Base, Korea. Hayes, knoWn

Is Lllmpy-

Earrings- Bracelets
Pins - Rings - Necklaces

Kenneth 'McCullough, R. Ph .

Publ ic

would like to pass on my
Pointer that eliminates one
getting cold at a game. Take
along yow- sleeping bag, step
down in it and zip it up. It is
no more trouble to carry than
a blanket and to go further if
it is sleety, raining or snowy
take along two large-size garbage bags, one to gq from the
waist down and the other sUI&gt;"
ped over yow- head and
overlapping the bottom one.
Natw-ally you make a hole for
your face and if you wear
glasses wear a hat
underneath with a visor.B.L.
DEAR POLLY-I often get
runs In my hose, as do we all,
but hated to throw them
away. I ftnally came up with
a .good wte for them. I Uve
with my daughter who~
fow- sons so there l.s always a
lot of trash and garbage to be
put out. When the trash bags.
are ready to be p9t out for the
collector we tie them with
such old stockings and find
they hold mu' ; h better than
twisties or whatever. Make
several kriots and they really
hold the bag tightly c!osed.HEU:N.
DEAR POLLY-I would
like to pass on a canning
Pointer that has been a help
to me for the past two years. I
had been Wling pitter when
canning peaches and decided
to try It for removing the
cores from tomatoes. It
works faster than a knife and
any spots can also be removed with it. I also find this
helpful Cor removing veins
and seeds from bell peppers.·

Holter named chairperson

InstallatiOn of Mrs. Pat
Holter as contact chainnan
for the Me1gs County Garden
C1ubs Association and announcement of plans for the
annual Christmas flower
showlilghlighted the Tuesday
night meeting of lhe Associalion at Trinity Church.
Mrs. Holler, a member of
Chester Garden Club, was installed by Mrs. Suzy
Carpenter ahd presenled a
corsage on bebalf .of Mrs.
Janet Bolin, retiring contact
chairman, who was unable to
attend lhe meeling. Mrs.
Marie Birchfield was real&gt;'
pointed secretary-treasurer
for the nexl two years and
also presented a corsage.
The Winding Trail Garden
Club hosted the meeting with
Mrs. Marjorie Walburn giv'ing the devotions. The constitution and by-laws for the
organization drawn by Mrs.
Bolin were read and approved. Literature on Issue 2 was
distributed, and Mrs. Charles
Kuhl, regional director, announced that the fall meeting
will be held on Nov. 5 at Rio
Grande. The spring meeting
she reported, has been set fo;
May 20, but the place wiD be

. If your Mattress

4

kicked 12 field goals in 18
tries over six ga mes to

the

Commission .

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
by Randall G. Applegate,
Sr"rPtary

COMPLETE STOCK

pla ce in the NCAA Division I

10% OFF
992·2811

the fuel. procurement prac·
tices and pdlicies of the
Columbus and Southern
Oh io Electric Compan-v.
the operation of its fuel
cost adjustment clause .
1nd related matters . This
hearing is scheduled to be·
gin ot 10 :00 A.M., on
offices

ALL MEN'S
WEYENBERG DRESS
·SHOES

1f

LEGAL NOTICE.
The Public Ut ilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set for
77 ·378·EL·FAC to review

KIDDIE SHOPPE
2nd St.

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY-;Could you
please leU me what 1 could
use on a dress ripper to make
it sUde up and down eully?MRS. H.L.S.
DEAR MRS. H.L.S.-There
Ill a crayon-like wax stick that
can be bought in the notions
sections of department stores
to use for this pUill(lSe, The
corner of a candle could also
be nut up and down the ripper
u could petrolewn jelly but
one would have to do this
11108t carefully after the zi!&gt;"
per is already Installed.
Perhaps the folda of cloth at
the sides could be covered
with wued paper pinned on
to protect the Cabrlc.I'OLLY.
DEAR POLLY-When you
want to stand plates on a cui&gt;'
boanl shelf that has no ridge
to hold them use thick white
narrow weather stripping u
It is easy to appl.y and looks
good, too.-ETHEL.
DEAR ETHE~I have
also used thwnbtacks for
this . Slant them a bit u th.y
are pushed into the sbelf.POLLY.
,
DEAR POLLY-The football seuon is upon us so I

puolic hearing Case No .

.

Your Complete Car Servi.ce Center

MOORE'S
STORE
Pomeroy, Ohio

fo r Di sease Cnn tr ol is
opposed to Issue 2 and that
trapping of :~11 wild animals
would be prohibited under the
l angua~e
of
in itiative
petitio ns &lt;'irculated by OCHT
tn get th~ issue un U1e ballot.
Shelley Berman said the
copYwriter · wh o wrote the
L:ornm erc ial apparently
paraprased what tho Center
for Disease.&gt; Control had sa id
which he sa id made tt appear
CDC was en dor sing the
defeat of State Issue 2.
He called it .. an honest
mtstake. '' .
the
new
He
sa id
commer ci al qu otes CDC

State basketball trainer Mike

yea r contract
Football

WE HAVE THE GENUINE

ER-MASTER
* 4 polyester cord plies
$
72

bus kctlwll

prat'lit.'e Wccbwsday at St.
J1•lm Arena .
Faulkner. 24, a native nf
Miamisburg, Ohio. and a
rormer bclskct ba ll player at
Ball Stale Univers ity in
Munc1C.lnd ., l'!•l lapsrd 1111 the

Fe .van Wilford
155 2
I Defense)
Ends - Robert Parker 121751 and Tim Faulk p . t551 or
Dave Blake (J. 185J
Tackles - B. Arnold and

I CaIendar

POLLY"S POINTERS
Wax makes zipper slicker

asslstaJitlklskt.•tball t·nBf'll Ill
Ohtl• StHtl' Umversity, was

tMeigsl

r~%&gt;&amp;;ciaj~&amp;·=- Mrs.

·'

Polly Cramer

COLUMBUS I UP I I
Hnbt•rt Fa~llmvr , a graduate

and Mark Sheets (1. 165}

Middle guard - Magnotta.

( Gallipolis)

5--Tbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: o ., Thursday, Ocl. 'll,

stricken

Dave Willi amson (4·205).

PROBABLE STARTERS

im pro,·ed

greatly since the beginning o[

~·t&lt;Jraudrrs

dtfferencr to the

Gallipolis also lost last week
when the Ironton Tl~ers
running speed and kkking
game proved to be too much
for the Blue Denis to handk.
The Gallipol is (eam.

I'I.A VS MILLF.R
J-:1\ST MEIGS - The
Eastern lhgh School Eagles
Will pl"Y Miller High School
t'rl&lt;hiY, ni~ hl on the Eastern
field. 1
·

l

�•
&amp;---The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct.'%/, 1977

~~:~,~ ···'G··
···· :-~~~~~~~~

~~

,

enerallon

:-:·

~

.

Mora discusses school problems

·~R
~~"'~:;...~~~··=-=-· 0:~~"'~~

ap

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~
~

ltuldl J)\'nod and
t'Ot.'d ~ym \\l'l"l' amon~ lilt•
topt~s disrUSSt'&lt;J by Jotm .
Mora, ~k1gs Jumor Hi~h
S&lt;:hool pronelpal, at u~· 'l'ues-

Ttk• dH..'il 'll

~

1110SE ' W.G.' STATIS!ri a; AGAIN !

RAP :
I read somewhere that one out of every Lhree woman can ex·
peel to be raped sometime during their lives. True? • NOT A
STATISTIC YET
NOT:
We keep telling you and teWng you : Don't believe
everything you read ! This is another " W.G." (Wild Guess)
stlltistic used like the drunk uses a lamp poot : more to lean on
than to shed light. The woodsare!ull of 'em! -SUE

DEAR NOT:
I predict we'll get blaats: '"The woods are full of rapists too ...
Knock off the apathy !" rt happens every time we downgrade
scare-talk.
So before they come, lei me say : We agree rape is a horrible
crime and a serious problem, becoming more serious because
pi!ople think they can get away with it.
We need tougher sentences, more protection, more education in self-defense, but, most of all, we need changed attitudes. When men slop seeing women as objects, to take at
will, or to use·in the "get even" battle of the sexes, rape (of
females ) will no longer be epidemic in our land. - HELEN

-I

dHy night mt•t•tmg of the
Ml'igs Junior lhgh Sl"hool
Po rent Teaeht·r Furwn.
In h1s talk. Mora c-om·
mented on the reasons for in·
t.nxlul' lll~ the closed lunch

•
MICHAEL DARST
HAS BIRTHDAY Michael Dorst celebratt•d
his 14th birthday with a par·
ty given by his mother,
Mrs. Maxine Dorst at 60
Coal St .. · MJ ddleport
recently. Pizza. potato
chips, pop and outs were
ser\'ed to Usa Oiler, Barbara Custer, Brian and
Troy Bauer, John McKin-

pt•nod mtu ihl" seiH.IOI this
)t'a r. Shoplifting, smoklllg,
litteru a ~ .

dcstrudwn uf pl·u-.

pt•rty. truanl'Y, and ti'L'Sp~ls.-;­ null'd that gym is coedualflt.! on pnv&lt;-ilc prope11y w~re · tiunal lo comply with the

liste-d as the reasons ami he
nott'\1 tha i so far this year he
has not rc(·eivrd tht• usual
roUJid of complaints from
busmt•ss tnen and propt.•rty
owners.
Ill' noted t11a t the 440
students mul 2~ staff
mcm~rs

\

SEEN \'!SITING
Miss C..rolvn Searls and
Mr. and ~I r s. Joseph
McA llister, Justin, Jamt•s
and Jared of Colwnbus were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs .. J.eo Seaols, Middleport.

~·
actiVI.ty fund, m1d
the general
im provements to lhe Central
bm lilln~ over the surruner. He

the buildings
havt• three lunch periods, the
first beginni11g at ·10:'56 und
111

the last ending at 12 :5f
Mora ta lked on the 'le&lt;tbook si tuation, uses of the

federal law wh ich provides
that boys and gi rls have the
same opportunity, e&lt;cludi ng
&lt;'On !.act sports.
Allen King presided at the
meeting during which time
teachers ~nd parents were in·

Mary Ellis, his brother,

Ciirulyn

gestion~

were dances e:tnd

bake sajes. Appointed to the
ways and means conunittec

(iruescr,

Lora

Sw1gcr and Mary Wise.
Next IU(.'t!ting was set for

Tuesday, Nov . 22.

J. C. WOOFTER, M.-D.
DEMA TOLOGIST
(DISEASES &amp; TUMORS OF SKIN)_
When : 1st &amp; lrd Thursday s
9 A.M . Unt i l Finish ed
Where : Dr . Ridg eway 's Offi ce
Mulberry Height s
(Across from Vet . Mem . Hospital)
Pomeroy , Ohio - 992 -3380
~~

""t-' •.

I

In The Silver ~ridge Plaza
Four Ways To Shop:

They came esPeeialJy_ to !:iee

the fall foliage of Meigs County.

The
fu gitives
were
captured in the moWJlains
around the remote prison
after a massive manhunt
inv olvin g FBI agents ,
bloodhounds and helicopters
fit ted
wi th
infra red

OE5 officers ekcted

Showtime
Mental Health
Center 2 p.m.

. This week 's mental health

center free film forum of·
.Cering wil~ be " Boredom at

chapter worthy ma tron; Mrs.

Famous Brand
Yes, it's Our Basic Group
of Lady rrrrand It's on Sale
Now Thru
Sunday On~ ·

Belly Bishop, Harrisonville
Chapter worthy matron•, o nol ~•
Mrs. Gracie Wilson, grand

page.
The program included a
skit by the Pomeroy Chapter
saluting Mrs. Midkifi, deputy
grand

matron

with

Mrs.

Dillard, Mrs. Ella Smith.
Mrs. Rose Ginther, and Mrs:
Dorothy Woodard taking
part; a poem by Pauline
Atkins and the song, "He
Touched Me'' by Mrs. Wilson
of the Harrisonville Chapter :
and a medley of organ music
incl uding , ·' Memories",
·' Feelings", " Young and
Restless", "Climb Every
Mountain' '; " I Beli eve" , and

" A

ac~~~st!~k;~~~o;;,~

a ssassination

Ptur.C~

I .FLO~IST

ABOUT
800 PIEC_ES

IN STOCK

sign

21) Some of the re sponsi bilitieS
of others may be shilte'd to your
should e r ~ today, A resentlul at
tltude wil) make t he .t ask s even
tougher.
·

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 181
Outmoded work methods should
be Updated wherever possible.
Be lmag inai ive. Don 't be afra id
io tr y tet M 1qUes with a un iqUetwi st.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 18)

You func tion b est today
e&gt;pe ra h n g independentl y
Assi stant s who are usua lly help- J
ful are apt to get underfoot.

PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20)
One ot your coworkers could be
abrasive today , and a dltlicult
person to deal with . Subdue the
urge to put h er in her
place.

Choose Your Wardrobe
From Colors of Green,
Gray, Black and Burgandy
REG
SA SLACKS •••••••• s14.00 ... s1.00
BLAZERS •••~ ••. s218.00 ... s14.00
VESTS········· s20.00····s10.00
·GAUCHOS ...... sls.oo ..... s7.SO
COWL TOPS .• s14.00 .... s7.0u
.AND MORE AT 1h PRICE

I
I

~

I

L.,.::::~~~~~J

YOU'U FIND THAT

SPECIAL CARD ·

FOR
THAT

SPECIAL

SOMEONE
IN OUR All

NEW
HALLMARK SECTION

DUITON DRUG CO.
122 N. 2nd Ave.

,,

Middleport, 0.

\

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·DOC.

t

Festival held

Sluggrsh all res ar e likely to slow
dow., you r pace a bi t today .
Nevertheless . once you pick up
mo mentum you 'll sw fte p them
alcng at you r speed .. Like tc .f1f)q
out mo re of wh at lies ah.ead !of
you? Sen d for your co p ~ ol
Astr o- Grep h Letter by mail1 ng 50
cen ts tor each and a" tong , sell addressed . stamped envelope to
Astr a- Grap h. P 0 . Bo" 489 .
Radio Ci ty Stat1on, N .Y. 1001 9
Be su re to specify your bi rt h

ONE OF OUR
MOST FAMOUS

BRANDS
SPORTSWEAR SALE

Many More Places Too Numerous To List

AAIES (Morch 21·Aprll 18) In
many ways today you're very giv trig. Where money is an Issue,
however. your generosity has
definite limitations.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) The
not be without
and bruises. but
this won't dismay you . Turning
losers into winners Is your bag

morning will

nominal

bumps

today.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20} Be

prepared to stand up for your
right s, especially If something
owed you is long overdue. The
squeak ing wheel gets the oil to·

round Is yours.

LEO (JUIJ 23·Aug. 22)
Calculating tactics will produce
nothing of real benefit lor you to day. Besides, it's not your style.
You wouldn 't take pride in acraf·
ty \llctory.

VtAGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) The

11" BUFFET SKILLET

a
wesr BEND(F, .

• whore CJrlfl5mc n stil l

.....

,.,...

__..

Poicelain ·~n -aluminum pan
spreads he at evenly to roast
·or hy foods to perfection .
• Fired·On No•Stick
lnter'ior, automatic:
·rem perature
coritrol, high-dome
. cover, tilt leg.
• Avocado or

Harvest; r:ompletcly
immersible.

Bpex is reachable today, but

FREE. EAR
PIERCING

you're a tough customer to con·
vlnce. Don't let s,lf.doubts dilute
your ambitions ..

in

.Blaker, Emory Caldwell,
Dona ld Covert , Eli Vance, Jr.

' ..

· Holzer Medi~al Center
1Discharges Oct. 261
Thomas Abl es, Marga ret
Allen, Kevi n Barr, Linda
Bennett , Olin Blain Jr ., Ella
Burris, Hazel Combs, Earl
Fletcher, Betty Gaul , Jake
Halley, Lloyd Harris, Vera

........
,

THE OHIO VALLEY HEALTH Services Foundation,
Athens, which deSigned and operated a national EMS
demonstration project for the U. S. Department of Health
Education and Welfare beginning in 1972, this week transferred tille to over $1.ffiillion in communications
equipment lo the regional Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service system, headquartered in Gallipolis. Dr .
William H. Allen, president of OVHSF (center left ),
presents .title to James McLain, president of SEOEMS, as
SEOEMS Director William Taylor (left) and OVHSF
Director Einon Plununer (right ) observe.

tool

of a

conspiracy.

.

Tickets go
on sale for
Rio contest

Commissioner, title to the
microwave equipment at the
Foundation's offices in

Athens.
Included in the transfer of
ownership were a nwnber of

RIO GRANDE - Tickets
for the Nov.· 9 basketball
game between the Rio 300 to 400 foot radio towers in
Grande Redmen and the the seven-county SEOEMS
national teatn from the system; central headquar·
Repbulic of China go on sale ters dispatching equipment
today according to an an- at Galltpolis; tower discs,
nounceme nt

from

Art

demonstration

professional and a lay person
from each of he . seven
counties in the sy~1em .

King ,

Kt•ise r,

Brandi

Lambert , Johnr1ie Logan.
Carolyn McConm t' k, William

Oliver, Lila Ousley, Cha rles
Perry, Orpha Peterl'i, Mrs.
David Reed etnd sorlf MHrie
Rogers, Gary Saunders. Mrs.

John Siders and daughter,
Grant Stanley , Hodney
Stapleton, Nol a Tr imble ,
Mrs. Phil Un row and 1&gt;011,
Michael Wi ckline, Harlan
Worner.
Births Oct. 26
Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Bentley,
a
daughter,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Dav1d
Blake, a son, Gallipoli s: _Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip Dunlap, a
son, Leon , W. Va .; Mr . and
Mrs. Allen Mills, a son,
Sy raCUse .

I

Norman ' Rus,'lell, · En·
terprise, was dead on arrival
at
Veterans Memorial

CARPET CLEANING
SYSTEM AT NEW

LOWER
;RATES

Hospital after being found
lying face down in a ditch in
water at Browntown on U. S.
Rt. 33 Wednesday afternoon.
Sheriff James J . Proffitt's
department was ·called to the '
area just. north of' Pomeroy,

along with the l!o111eroy ER
Squad and Rutland SEOEMS.
According to several
motorist.s, Mr. Russell was
lying in the ditch. Rutland
squad members wprked on
the victim and then traw
sported the body to Veterans
Memorial Hospitai.
Dr. R. R. Pic~ens, county
coroner , has not as yet issued

a ruling on the cause of death,
Mr. Russell apparently had
J

For Service
With a Smile
Do-it· yoursefl

and get ptoteSsional
results

---------------IEIIT .$ , 0 0 ~.
ftR
PERHOUR
MT
__, ____________
_

Make us your familv pharmacy
and discover pe1·sonal servire. We
care about our cu stomers ... and
they cat·e ahout us. too!

I4HOUR ......... I

;

been cleaning leaVes from a

ditch. -His cane was found on
the bank by the ditch
alongside his driveway.
Funeral arrangements for
Mr . Russell will be announced by Ewing Funeral
Home.

VILLAGE' PHARMACY

STAR SUPPLY CO.
949-2525
Racine, 0.

271 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

601 5th Street
New Haven , W. Va.

The total SEOEMS com·
transmitters and emergency
muni
cation s equipment is
equipment; ambulance
valued
at about $1.5-million.
station towers, transmitters,
·.
The
Foundation
acquired
receivers and monitors, and

Lanham, athletic director at
Ri o Grande College and
Community College.
Tickets at $2 each may be tel~metry equipment at
·purchased at Lyne Center on headquarters, in ambulances
the Rio Grande Campus or by and area hospitals. .
The Foundation .purchased
maiL A self~addressed
the
equipment during 1972 to
stamped envelope should he
1975
under a $3.6-million
sent with a check or money
contract
a warded it by the U.
. order to : Republic of China
S.
Department
of Health,
Game, Lyne Center, Rio
Education
and
Welfare
to
Grande College, Rio Grande,
deliver
to
the
nation
a
Ohio 45674. Mail order tickets
must .be received by
November 2.
The Republic of China
team, on a ten college
.national tour sponsored by
the National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics
Lena K. Nesselroad, • Af.
(NAIA), includes players fidavit.
who participated in the 1976
Edgar E. Mitch, dec., to
Montreal Olympics.
Lena K. Nesselroad, Carl E.
'Ole game, tq be played Mitch, Cert. of Trans.,
under International rules, is Salisbury.
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
State of Ohio to Meigs Co.,
Wednesday, Nov. 9.
Parcels, Meigs Co.
This will be the first game
Paul Simon, Allie Simon to
~for Lanham's team this year,
Warren G. Farmer, Mildred
and should serve as an exf
h

about $500,000 of this in
grants from the Appalachian
Regional Commission and the
U. S. Department of Trans·
portation. A portion was in
the name of the counties and
·a portion in the name of the
Foundation, which it trans·
!erred
to
SEOEMS
previously.

Property Transfers

citing warm-up or t e
regular season which begi!ls
with the Nov . 25 Lion~
Thanksgiving Tournament.

, season.

Farmer, Parcel, Chester.
James J. Proffitt, Shrl.,
Elizabeth Jones, Elizabeth
• M.fllough, et al, to Thomas J .
Scott, Parcels, Bedford.
Dan C. Arnold, Patricia A.
Arnold to Danny R. White ,
Adell Lee White, Parcels,
Salisbury.
1

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, 0.

1

•
•
~
•

The 4-wheeler that seats six
Total comfort on or off the road
Rugged truck chassi~ for total tougHness
Startingatonly$6543*

Cher-k out these other new Fords for '78, too ...

--

TWO BURNED
CLEVELAND (UP!) Two men were injured, one

seriously, as a flash fire
erupted and short-circuited
the electrical system at the
Ar c ade

downtown
Wednesday as an electrician
worked on some wires.

Archie

Williams,

54,

Cleveland, house electrician

00

TRADE-IN

~Hush

Puppies '
Warm, Fleece Lined
Winter Boots

With th e fr os ty chill of wmt er in !he a1 r .
no w IS a good time to prepare yourse lf w1 t h
pai r Gf snu ggy wa rm f leece 11ned boo ts by
Hu sh Puppies · casua ls Ou r style and s1ze
se lec t l Or:' is at 1ts peak

- ~.
. ...~?-~TA
. ~&amp;;-*
·u,.,...~

.•

• All·new '78 Fairmont- . the family car of the future
that's here now' Choice of 4-door sedan, 2-door
sedan and 4-door wagon.
.
As low as
• New '78 Ford Pick-

ups-built Ford tough
from the ground upl
From only

THE

'

Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va .

$42 21

*

*Manufactu rers suggested retail pr1ces

FORD

MASON FURNITURE
FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

.

Don't miss seeing the all-new Ford Fiestathe great little car with so mat:'JY great
features.
- -·- · -------

COLOR: DOGWOOD

•

Mon., Tues., Wei!. &amp; Sat.-8:301il5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

$3589*

Exc luding taxes . title and d cst1nat1on t;har ges

"FROSTY"

On All ·Uving Room Suites

773-5592

Ch'a rle.li

Nicholas·

unknown

emergency

medical service system for a
rural area. As a result of
successfully performing the
task, which local counties
continue to support through
levies, the Health Services
Administration of DHEW ,
after passage of authorizing
legislation by the Congress,
transferred titre to the
Foundation on l'!ovember 23,
!976.
'
The Foundation was instrumental in creating the
nonprofit SEOEMS corporation. Its Board members
consist' Of one elected public
official, usually a county
commissioner , a medic al

Howard , Spencer Hum , Duell
Jones,

WE'VE LOWERED
THE COST OF
CARPET CLEANING

death is

•

Ownership of about $1·
million in communications
equipment used in the Southeast Ohio emergency Medical
Services system was trans·
!erred
Wednesday
to
SEOEMS by the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation.
Foundation president Dr.
William H. Allen presented
SEOEMS president James
· McLain, a Hocking County

~

Cause of

SEOEMS takes
over equzpment

plea and he was the unwitting

With Purchase of 8.00 Earrings

.
"'
- ...
A Representative from our Jewelry
Distributor will be in our store
Saturday Only from 10:00 until 5:00.
If you've been contemplating getting
your ears pierced, now's . the time
. and all done Free with the purchase
of the earrings.

l :::
• ••

• •

Marguerite

Hixson, John H ogan, In ren

at the building , suffered
LIBAA [Sept. .23-0ct. 23} Bq second and third-degree
selective ot which friends you burns over 40 percent of his
ask lavors of today, Some will go
body and Henry Hopkiris, 35,
all·out. but one pal won't do
anything without expecting more Cleveland. was burned on the
hands.
In return .

'1 00

...~...

.......

j.-

•·,

an

1

SATURDAY OCT. 29th

Discharged -

I

\

day .
The Redmen were MOC and
CANCER (Juno 21-Juty 22} District 22 NAIA Champs las.t · ·
Events could unravel ·in a
manner today to put a severe
strain on your staying power.
Don 't chuck in the tow~l . The last

Jason Blain, Rutland.

""I

·'

abbreviated trial at Memphis. Shortly · thereafter he
Th1s co mmg year should be ~ tun ~
· · t'
h' 1 '
one You 'll be more adve nturous ,. ucg_
an lllSIS mg IS awyers
1han usual and eager to add e ~ - railroaded him into the guilty

you shou ldn't

Hen ion , Letart , W. Va .:

.

... - "'W ..

Ocl. 21, 1977

r

I
I

and civil' .rights

to 99
years in prison alter he
pleaded guilty to King ' s

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·N9v. 221

Friend ' s

about the King assassinatioo ,
"Code Name Zorro " wiUl

Bernice Be de Osol-- ·comedian

wh e r ~

by lhe host chapter.
Euvetta Bechtle read a

po e m ,

As'Ro • GRAPH

cttemrmt to your life You r com mon sense and self-diSci pline
will proteCI yo u from strayi ng

·· Let There Be Peace.''
Games were a lso conducted

''Greeting" and everyone
M"'. Bessie 1\ing was Mrs. French, and Mrs. Work , Search for Zest.'!
The film portrays a man joined in si n"ing " A Bicyde
elected worthy matron and Chesher. Mrs. Evans read te
° 1 ' , " I've Been
Bob King, worthy patr patron the budget .report, and Mrs. who forces himself ~ into an Built for Two
of Evangeline Chapter 172, Wilcox, trustee report. The interview with a psychiatrist Working on the Railroad"
Order of the Eastern Star, at audit report was given by lla because of his feelmgs of and "She 'll be Coming
a recent meeting.
Darnell. Refreshments were boredom. A senes of con· - Around the Mountain."
Mrs. Crisp had closing
Other officers ejected were served by Mr. and Mrs. sultallons . reveal h~w . h1s
subconscious assoc1at1ons remarks before the group
Mrs. Aim Thomas, associate · Harry Chesher:
Wlth the past are wreckmg moved into a friendship circle
matron; Bob Kuhn, associate
hos fam1ly · hls . JOb, . and for prayer by the Rev . Robert
patron; Beatrice Kuhn, conhlo:n~elf as an lnd!VIdual. Knhn. Sandwiches, cookies,
ductress; Betty Van Matre,
Cllrucal treatment eventually potato chips, jello salad and
associate conductress;
RETURNS HOME
~rmgs about a . more normal coffee were served
Maryln Wilcox, secretary;
Mrs.
Nora Mills has return- pattern of life for him and his
·
Kathryn Evans, treasurer;
ed
from
a
two
week
visit
with
family
and
he
himself
finds
andPaul Darnell, trustee.
Tellers for the eleclion Lt. and Mrs. IJ!lle Boring, satisfaction in a type of work
were Genevee Chesher, Syracuse, N. Y. During her he liked through the years,
PULL SLATED
lArena Ault, and Maryln stay they visited many places but avoided because of his
The
Southeastern Ohio
of interest and spent a a wife's distaste for it.
Wilcox.
Pony
Pull
Assn. will hold a
Showtime is 2 p.m. this
Glenna Crisp and Paul weekend on Lake Ontario.
pony
pull
at
1 p.m. Saturday
Friday at the Mental Health
Darnell presided at the
at
the
Rutland
Park. Lunch
Center in Pomeroy at 236
meeting with the pro tern of·
will
be
served
by
the Rutland
West Second St.
ficers being Mrs. Kuhn,
Volunteer Fire Department
organist ; Mrs. Grace French,
and homemade apple butter
The Almanac
Ruth; Evelyn Lewis, warder.
at $2.25 per quart including
By
United
Press
The charter was draped for
PARTY GIVEN
container, will be for sale.
United
Press
International
Ruth Duerr and Jessie
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Today
is
Thursday,
Oct.
Tl
,
Houdashelt. Mrs. Chesher
White entertained with a
the 300th day of 19n with 65 to birthday dinner Tuesday
-------·~l
was the sunshine page.
Yo ur " Extra Touch "
follow
.
Read at the meeting were
night honoring Mrs. Texani
F lor ist Since 1957
·i
The
moon
is
l&gt;etwen
its
full
letters· from Grand Chapter
na Well and Mrs . . Doris
phase
and
last
quarter.
Snowden . .
and the Easter Seal Society.
The mpr11inS: stars are
Thanks were extended by the
Gifts and cards were
Eula Evans family Mlldred · Jupiter, Saturn, Mars and presented to them. AttenHawley, Audrey Theobald, Venus.
ding besides the hosts and
The evening star is the honored guests were
Jessie Houdashelt family,
James and Carla Large, and Mercury.
Howard
WelL
and
Those born on this date are daughter,Amber, Mr. and
Mrs. Chesher.
.Mrs. Eme,.on Well, Terry \ PH. 992-2644
An invitation was read to a Wlder the sign of Scorpio.
26th
Theodore
Roosevelt,
reception honoring the grand
Snowden, Mrs. Kitty Darst
warder of Canton. A donation president of the United and son, Keith, Craig \ 352 E. Main. Pomeroy
was made to the Easter Seal States, was born Oct. 'n, 1858. Darst, Florence Hannay,
On this day in history :
Society. Appointed to the by·
and Mrs. Beulah White.
In 1871, the political chief of
law committee was Bob King,
I
•
••
New York's Tammany Hall
- Boss Tweed-was arrested
on charges of defrauding ·the
city.
In 1904, the first practical
subway began operating in
New York City - from the
The Youth Department of Brooklyn Bridge to !45th St.,
the! l\1iddleport United . in Manhattan .
Pentecostal Church sponIn 1961, the United Nations
sored its annual fall festival adopted
a
reso1\Jtion
Friday night at the Carl Not- protesting Russian
tingham farm near Cbester. detonation of a 56-meg~ton
A wiener roast and covered atomic bo111b.
dish dinner were enjoyed dur·
In 1975, American citizens
ing the evening.
.
were advised to evacuate
A lw&lt;rwagon hay ride. was Beirut as gun battles between
taken with both the children rightists and leftists spread
and adults participating in in the Lebanese capital city.
thdun. Several games were
played by the younger
A thought for the day :
children with prizes being . President. Theodore "Teddy"
awarded to the winners. Ap- Roosevelt said, "No man is
proximately 100 persons at· justified in doing evil on the
tended the outing.
groWJd of expediency."

~-

•:

l.:tne a rgues, he was free to
leave a t any time.
Ray · and J.ap e have
accused Kershaw of pr:ofiting

from the sale of James Earl
Ra y Tshirts and making
$15,000 to $20,000 from an
interview Ray granted to
Playboy magazine. Playboy
scanners.
:later
reported that a lie
" We will fil e • (for
detec
tor
test administered to
dismissal) on the grounds of
double jeopardy ," said Lane, Ray during the interview
Who became Ray's lawyer indicated Ray killed King ;md
this week alter the 49-year- acted alone in Ule assassina·
old convict fired Nashville lion.
Kershaw de nied the
lawyer Jack Kershaw .
charges,
saying, "Any · man
· " He 's been punished
would
be
a
fool to gamble on
already . He has had three
making
much
money out of. a
years of good time taken
case
like
this.''
As for Lane ,
away. This is the same as
sa
id,
" He' s not
Ke
rshaw
adding · three years tn his
doing it for free ."
Lane co-authored a novel

Friends night obseroed

Veterans ~fem ori a l Hospllat
Admitted
Della Proffitt,
Port land; Virgjnia Musser,
lAng Bottom: Leo pold
Hysell, Pomeroy: Mildred
Riley, Midd leport : Valisa
Ro ush, Pomeroy : James

sentence."
By CARL A. VINES
The disciplinary action was
WARTBURG, Tenn . (UP! )
- Even before the lrial began taken in an administrative
loday, James Ea r l Ray's hearing that followed the
lawyer cla imed the charges escape. If convicted, Ray
that he escaped from Brushy could be sentenced to ooe tn
Mountain State Prison June fiv e additional years.
If Circuit Judge Lee Asbury
10 sh ould be dismissed
because Ray already has denies Ule double jeopardy
motion, Lane said he will
been punished .
The lawyer, Mark Lane, contend state authorities and
said he would seek dismissal FBI agents for ced Ray to
of the charge against the plead guilty tn King's 1,968
l;illlvicted assassin of Martin · slaying at a Memphis mote).
Because Rloy should never
Luther King J r., who fled the
have
been scnl to pr ison,
prison along ~ith six o~he r
irunates.

Cash, Charge, Layaway. and Master Charge

SESSION HELD
A planning session for the
World Conununity Day service of the Church Women
United of Meigs County will
be held Friday atl :30 p.m. at
the Heath United Methodist
Church in Middlepori .

HOSPITAL NEWS

Ray's escape
trial begins

Put Kitchen, Flo Snowden,

troduced .-&lt;lbservance of National Ed ucation Week was
noted and Wednesday, Nov. IG
was tentatively set fo r an
open house at 7:30p.m.
Fund raising projects were
&lt;hscussed and among the sug-

ney, Frank Martin, Tim
and Scotty Frazier, Mrs.

Donald Hartung , and
DEAR HEI,J!:N AND SUE :
.
This olde'f fuan is a good friend of my parents and I don't grandmother, Mrs. Nellie
Hanson, , Bringing a gift
want to cause trouble for him, but he's a D.O.M. 1
He gets too close and is always patting or hugging me. I was his father, Mi!Uord
wouldn't dare be alone with him for long. Teenagers can sense Dorst. Gallipolis and a gift
was sent by Mr. and Mrs.
when something's 'WI'Dng. .
.
Pleasant Ellis and family.
My folks think he'sstraight. Should I telllhem? -FRANCIS
DEAR FRANCIS :
Get it across lo this man that you 'll tell your father next
time. If you don't want an outright confrontation (on the off.
chance you've misjudged him) why not pull away from a hug
and say, "Dad wouldn't like that· shall I ask him and see?"
He'll deny vehemently, no doubt, but whether or not your
Friends night of the Meigs
suspicions are true, we'll bet he stays his distance in the County chapte ~s of the Order
future . • HELEN ANE SUE.
'
of Eastern Star was observed
recently at the Middleport
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Ma soni c Temple with
Several of your reade"' accused men of not taking rape Evangeline Chapter 172
seriously enough. How about this? In England a man accused hosting the gathering.
of rape asked for an all-woman jury • and they acquitted him.
Mrs. Glenna Crisp. worthy
· Seems the ladies are on r~pists' sides too, sometimes. • matron, extended t he
READER
welcome and ~ecognized the
DEAR READER:
distinguished guests, Mrs.
Let's cOMider the printed facts : Mr. Y asked for an all- Sylvia Midkiff, deputy grand
female jury (a first for a British rape case) because he felt matron of District 25, Mrs.
that women were better equipped "to examine the credibility Charlotte Dillard, Pomeroy
of one of their own sex." The defense maintained Miss X frequently had sex with Mr. Y. while her boyfriend was at work,
but when silid b.f. became suspicious, she cried, " Rape!"
at
Women jurists bought Mr. Y's version. The fact that Miss X
is a former beauty queen may possibly have swayed them a
bit. HELEN AND SUE

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Oct. '11,1977
•

were Sh~rlc)' Housh, Nola
swoshcr, Jutlyr Judy Crooks,

'

-

· -~·~---

~~~KAMERICARO

Hurry in to your local Ford dealer
and see all the new '78's.

!.

�..
I-'The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 27, 1m

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash --

WANT AD

CHARGES
15 \lt.\1[

''' l'ndt!t

t,"~l1

Ida~

I

6d.t~~

.I llo1

J,ht~:.

&gt;I)

GUN S&gt;&lt;OOl

'"'

F.ddl \lll'hl {!\ ' t'l tht· llliUUIIWII 1;,

~ n·nL::. ~·t v. 1•nJ ,,.., 1\,t\
":-\.d~ rumun~ ...~tht•r uwn n&gt;ll~toi.·uu',

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tid~!&gt; "'111 W d~&lt;~r~t'tl d• tl ·~ 1 ,J,I\

"l~ lt'

llk'tll•on . l'oiirU \•f Tho~ nk:. .tlll.l
Olmuan 6 lCtlb lk'r ~··•!.!. SJL\1

In

!llllllll\Uin Ca1&gt;hll1iit.h,tn1~

~ l ulnlt' lh&gt;!ut' -..tl··~ 11.11J
ltrt' lh'\qJh·o.J ... ,t~ .. ith
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Y.1rJ ~ [,....
~"!'II

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~~~ Bll'\ ~w uU..·· lul'.trt• ,,, rho.• .'-.•it-

llllt'l
~t·~•'l"\t'"" lhl· i![..ht
1'\')t'\'\ .tJl} uJ:. dl \lllo'd ,,t;

Th1.' Pubhl)lk•l
h• t.'llll til'

J•'l.t lL~tdl Tilt' ru 01~:&gt;h•• "1tl1w1 U.·
l'C:.p.!llll!lJio• fo I lll•'tl I' lll..lll 111 1 1:1 ur•
l't't'l U'ht'f"\1\ 111
l'lll•ltt· 9'1:! .;! IS...

r - - - - - - -,

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

.

~ l l•nd.il

Raon &amp; Gun Clu b 1972 )l iNDAlE 14 :.: 70 with 2
every Sun ohernoon Foetor
pu llOu ts , central o•r lo.itchen
Chock guns only~· Assorted
oppltancel wirh d•sh washer.
meots
underpmntng, ••cellent condi l tOn . One owner. 992 -3439.
~U(LER BRUS H products for solv
992' -:M 10
1q72 12xb0 all -electric 2 bedroom .
2 full baths raised beam , _., .
THERE WILL be no huntmg no
ing
, unfurntsh•d . Includes
lresposs tn g and no excepltons
underptnn ing ond block .
on my property Bob McGraw

---

-

~

--

THE RA CINE Volunteer Ftre
Deportment w ill sponsor o gun
s.hoor every Satur day of 7 p.m.
at their budding in Boshan . Foe·
_ tory choke guns only .

ru.·~.tt~~~

thi'U F1tdi!\
~ p \1 .
th .. d.1~ U..•ft•r•· tJUi.Jhlatlc•n
.:iwldi.!!
4 p .\1
fnlla~ .Jfh·mwn

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ATHENS
COUNTY
SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY
PLA I NTIFF

vs
RONALO 0 . T&gt;&lt;OMAS ,

OPPORTUNITIES
$8 ,100 for education ,
75 per cent of your
College tu ition free .
Col le ge
Level
Exam ination
Free ,
An Associate Degree
through ·-_t. ~e
Community College
days paid vacation , 7
paid 3 day weekends,
good starling pay and
much
more .
Interested?
Contact me , Vernon
Zeger, your Air Force
Representative .
For an appointment
in the Pomeroy or
Athens area phone
592-4592 Collect.
Order No. 9-£1-86

Pursuan t to an amended
order of sale issued b y the
Com 1mon P leas Court of
Me igs county . Ohi o . 1 will
tp ffer for sale at public auc tion on 5th di! y of Nove mber ,
' 1977 a t 10 : 00 a .m . a t the Court
·( House steps in the Vill age of
Pomeroy , County of Me igs ,
State of Ohi o, t he fol lowi ng
descr ibed r ea l estate si tua ted
a t 337 North Second Avenue ,
Middleport , Ohio
Said r eal estate is si tuat.ed
in the Vill age of Middleport,
County of Me igs and State of
Oh i o .
..
Lo t No . 21 i n said Village
toe a ted on Second Street be·
t'o",(een R utland lind Walnut
Streets . Also a ll the grantors '
r ight , ti tle·and in terest in and
to t~e si.-; Inch strip of lal1d
and the par ty wall therein , off
of the north side of Lor 22.
also i n sa id Village of M id d l eport , said str ip of l and
adjo i n in g and be i ng con t iguous to said lot No . 21 .
Reference Deed Vo lume
256 page 383 Meigs County
Oeed Records .
Termsotsale : Cash tor no t
less tha n two -th i rds of t ht
appr aised value , sub ject to
li en for rea \ esta t.e taxes tor
1977 .
Proper ty appra is ed at

S8,500.00.

James J . Proffitt ,
Sheriff of
Meigs Count y, Ohio
( 10 1 • • 13 , 20. 27 , (33 ) 3, Sic
IN THE .

COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10
IN THE MATTER OF

SETTLEMENT
OF
AC ·
COUNTS ,
PROBATE

COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,

OHIO
'A cc ounts and vouchers of
the
follow i ng
named
f iduci ar i~ave been f i led In
the Probat~ Court: Meigs
c;ounty , Oh io for ap pr oval
ana sefflement :
CASE NO . · 21829 First and
Final Account of Marjorie A .
Goetf , Adm i nistratr ix WWA
of t he Estate of Mary .c .
Hoffman, Deceased.
CASE NO . 21611 First
Current Account of Bernard
v . F.ultz, Trustee of Trust
creat ed by Item 9 of the Will
of Anderson
B . Kibble,
Deceased .
CASE NO . 22 102 First and
F inal Account of Frank W .
Po r t er , J r .. Administrator of
~~e Estate of Wesley Dale
Musser . Deceased .
Un less exceptions are filed
thereto , sa id accounts will be
for hearing before said Court
an the 25th day of November ,
1977 at wh i ch time said ac counts will be consictered and
cont inued from day to day
unt i l fina ll y disposed of .
Any person interested may
file written exceptions to said
·accounts or to matters
perta lpi ng to the execution of
the trust , not less than five
days prior to the date set for
he ar i ng .
Manning D . Webster

JUDGE

COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OH I O
(1 0 ) 27 , ltc

Property
Transfers

'

Ira Beegle, dec., to Charles
Beegle, Paul Gene Beegle,
Cert. for Trans., Racine.
Charles Stanford Beegle,
dec., to Charles T. Beegle,
Cert. of Trans. , Racine.
Charles T. , Beegle to Joe
Stobart, Lots, Racine.
Paul Gene Beegle, Sarah
Beegle to Joe Stobart,
Racine.
Frederick J . Stobart, aka
Joe Stobart, Earlene Stobart
to Frank Imboden, Lora Mae
Imboden, Lots, Sutton.
Martha Phillips to Walter
White, Margaret White, Lot,
Pomeroy.
Donald E. Smith, Judith A.
Smith to Dale K. Maidens,
Roberta F. Maidens, I A.,
Sutton.

LOST OUT of cor ladies glosses
around F1ve Point Station Fri.
night . Tom Haymon . 985-3509 .
REWARD FOR informat ion leading
fa the return of Coesor, red
Doberman mo le, toll and skin -

(3().1) 882·2466.

blocks. ~000 . :XU·882·2406

PONY PUll
Oct
~.
1977 .
1:00pm . Behind Old Rutland
High School

ET AL ,
defendants

NO . 11 , 303
PUBLIC NOTICE

~ . 000 .

1972 12 x 60 al l elfJttric 2
bedroom , 2 full baths . raised
beam ceding . unfurn ished. 1n clud 9S underpinn in g and

TO THE lody in !he red Novo that
picked up the block poodle in
fr ont of the Ooiry Volley :
Please return to the Shamroc k
Motel , no quest ions asked .
Mrs . Johnson, $homrock Motel.
TWO LOST dogs in Fort MeiQS:
area large Shepherd Husky
types .
. all .7~2 - 2316 or

appliance serviceman. Paid
holidays .
vocat ions
ond
hospitalizat ion .
Gollio
Refr igerator Co ., 611 ·3rd A'le .,
Gol]tpolis . Ohio .

EXPERIENCED ElECTRICIAN. th•ee
or more years . Commercia l,
resident ial and small industrial
·jobs . Call coll~t . 614-593-8078 .
SOMEO NE TO do Interior pamling . Empty House . 985 -3885.
NEEDS BABYSITTER at home in
Portland . 7om to 6pm . $35 a
week . Coli Donny Roush .

843·2292.
WANTED : WAITRESS O\l"er 21 for
e\l"ening shift. Shamrock Motel .
992 -5188 .

1976 FORD GRANADA . Black wllh
1
black vinyl top. AM -FM
·1
radio , P.S., P.B., A.C. E:.cellenl
condition . 20 ,000 miles. can
ofterbpm . 742·3 187.

CABLE RATES FOR
THE VILLAGE OF

MIDDLEPORT

BE .IT ORDAINED BY T&gt;&lt;E
COUNCIL
OF
T&gt;&lt;E

VILLAGE
OF
M ID·
DLEPORT , OHIO ;
a . The company shall
charge reasonable rates , and
shall at all limes mainta in a
copy of such rates w ith the
Off ice of the Mayor of the
Village of Middleport , which
charges sha l l be as follows :
(I) Connection fee , single
tap , not more tha n $25 .00
( non .recurring cha rge) .
(2) Monthly charges as
follows :
[a l "S enior Citirens Ser vice" · Homes in which the
head of the household is 65
years old or older ( " Head of
Househol d being determined
by defin l tions of the U . . S.
Bureau of the Census and U .
S. Internal Revenue Serv1ce),
75 percent of the regular
monthly rate .
( b) " D i sability Special
Service" : Homes in which
the head of the house/'lold , as
deffned above, rs cert ified liS
permanently end total l y
disabled , under definitions of
the U . S. Depar t ment of
Heal t h ,
Educat ion
and
Welfare , or Is sufferinq from
a
service.co nne cted
disabil i ty
eXceeding
60
percent, as def ined by th e U .
S. Veterans Administration,
75 percent of the regular
monthly rate .
(c)
Regu lar
pr i vate
reside nce se rvic e, s1ngte tap ,
$6 .00 per month .
(d) Each additional set In
each dwelling unit, single
family residence . w .oo per
month per set.
(3) Add i tional services for
fre quen tcy modu lat ion and or stereo rad io or other
broadcasting , $1 .00
per
month per set .
2. Ordinance ,No 962 -70,
Section 12, is t'lereby repealed
wi thou t, howe.,.er , affecting
the remt ini ng por t ion of the
Ord inanCe . •
'
PAS SED : 1011'1 day of Oc tober , 1977 ~
M . L. Kelly
President of Cou ncil

ATT ES T :

Fred L Hoffman
Mayor

GENE GRA TE

CLERK

(10) 27 , {( 11 1 3, 2tc

RNR
HE.t.Tr.FUt
• '

773-5955
LeM in, W. V• .

ing thit week, and
weekends .

1969 VW . $250. Coli 843-266-t,
after 5.
1q55 DODGE PICKUP, V ·8 engine,
rebuilt ot 73 .000 miles . Has
78,000 ori ginal miles . SiSO.

992·3427.
1975 FORD F-250 'I• ton truck .
Good condition. 4-sp .. good
tires . w ill toke !rode . 1968
Chevrolet station wagon . Runs
good , $250 , will
trade .

• $2,650' 992·5866.

STARCRAFT FALL Sole . M1n1·
motors . 20' and 22'. TraVel
Traders , 18' 5" $3,799, 25' 7"
Bunkhouse S.C .B75. Fold-down ,
$1 ,700 up. We sell 5ervic e and
quality . Open Sundays. Camp
Conley Storcroft Soles ; Rt. 62,
N. of Pt. PleosOn l .
ARISTOCRAT 18' Travel Trailer .
Reduced to sell Caii992-35BO.

CASH' paid for all makes ond
models · of mobile homes.
Phone area code 614-423 -9531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts . Top price lor standing
sawtimber . Coli 992 -5%5 or
Kent Hanby , 1 -~46·8570 .
COINS. CURRENCY , tokens , old
pockei watche5 and chains,
Stiver and gold. We need 1964
and older silver coins . Buy . sell ,
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
7.42·2331.
OlD FURNITURE, ice bo)(es , brass
beds, iron beds. etc ., complete
households . Write M. D. Mille r,
Rt. 4 , Pomeroy, Ohio or ca ll
992-7760.
• ~NO ITEM TOO large or too sm alL
Will buy 1 piece or complete
household . New, used , or anti·
ques . Martin's Furniture , 20 N.
2nd St. , Middleport . Phone
TWO TO ten ceres with good
building site or older home
suitable for remodeling ; water
and el&amp;ctridty available: dose
to hordtop road , Call 992-7036 .
after 5 pm .

ElECTRIC PUMP. Either deep or
shallow we.ll . Must be in good
working co ndi ition. Phone

992·2272.

Co11992·21 56:

YARD SALE . Route 338 in Anliqui·
ty, Ohio. Thui'S . and Fri. ,
weather permitting . Ruby
gloss . depressiOn. sandwich.
and Avon collectables full.
11 -6.

am -3pm : R:u5tic Hills, Syracuse .
Ohio. Clothing and other items .
tHREE FAMILY Basement Sole ,
Wed . thru Sun. at Chetter on
CR 36. Hove o gas range , ar·
tiflciol
electr ic
fireplace ,
women 's • do thing. rug ontl
other misc. Home of Mory
Porker .
INSIDE YARD Sole at residence of
the late Ethel Jeffers above
Enterprise on old Rt . 33 . Fur·
n1ture \ dishe's . crofrs mode and
to maKe, antiques . what-nots
and many items too numerous
to mention . Fri. and Sat .. Oct .
28th and 2'Jth from 9-?
YARD SALE , Mary Jamrson
residence,
Jrd
Ave .,
Reeds..,ille , Ohio. Fri . 28th ond
Sot . 29th . 10-S.
PORCH SALE . So t. and Sun ., Oct.
29 &amp; JO.Furniture. w inter
clothing , books, music. 4 mi.
south of Portland on Rt . 12.4.
From Racine toke 12• eight mi.
to the stop sign. Turn left ht
_!l.~_?nt~lelt .

,.;;;._

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

s,......,o•Jo
, .. 912-3993

VOUR LIFE

Alocll contractor

THURSDAY .OCTOBER27, 1977
7:01&gt;-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross.Wito 4: Llaro Club 6:
Gong Show 8: News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan' s Is. 15; Coping with Kid• 20: Anyone for
Tennyson? 33.
7:3D--Hollywood Squares 3,4; f\00,000 Name That
Tune 6; 525,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
20,33: That's Hollywood 10: Nashville on the Road
13: Marty Robbins Spotlight 15.
8:01&gt;-Chlps 3,4,15: Welcome Back. Kotter 6.13:
Walton• 8, 10; Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
8:3D--What's Happening 6,13: Best of Ernie Kovacs
20,33.
9:01&gt;-James at 15 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii
Flve-0 8, 10; Best of ·Families 20,33.
9:3D-Carter Country 6, 13.
10 :01&gt;-Rosefll &amp; Ryan 3,4,15; Barnaby ones 8: Julie
&amp;Jackle·How Sweet II Is 10.
11 : 00- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15,20: MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 33.
·
11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13; Movie·
"VIsions" 8: ABC News 33; Movie "Light 1 n the
Piazza" 10; Dick Cavett 20.
12 :0D--Janakl 33; 12:4D-II's A Fad, Fad, Fad World

.
G O A~EI\D ,
PETE ·· SPEAK
YOUIZ. P IECE!

LOO'k , YOU ' RIO IN

GC'CD SHAPE . A~D
YOU

CAN FLY

(=~.._:J:_:ETSF·,·.~~.g

Pho(lt 949·2101
01949-2860

BUT YOU STILL LACK
THE F'-lGHT TIME AND
EXPERI!ON CE FO R TEST
PIL 0rl"'&lt;5 ! ... W~Y 0&lt;!151&lt;.
YOUR WEC I&lt;

~

f1to Estimoles
No Suodoy Calls fll•

I&gt;ECAU~E

SDMEONE'5
&lt;l&gt;OTTA SE"L.
OU R F IG I-I TER

rc TH!O PE~TAGO&gt;J
·- 0"'LY, SELL 19
A PO .. ITJ:'
WORD!

10·10 1m o .

Kinpbury
Home Sales

~u .

.

,.

Bollen

FUNNY BUSINESS

'• Mobile
Home'
· Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tie- Downs
• Awnings - Carports
•Insurance
Repairs

DON'T 61VE ME THAT~ WORN
FI.AMc&amp;AMMET' SiUFt: /
~o

OOtJD6R r~e
WT Af-l

ADWU,._Gt!
WMPI..EX.

See us at 1100 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, OhiQ or
Phone H:l-7034 . 10·29-lmo.

m.

FIR£WOOb , $40 cord. Split and
deliVered
and ' stacked .

843·2933.
GUN TRADER . Wholesale shot·
shells , slugs , etc . Over 200 new
and used guns . Buy , sell , trod&amp;.
HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , sell
Will tr ade guns for Grovely
trade or train . New ond used
Tractors , gorde~ tillers . motor·
saddles . Ruth Reeves , Albany .
boots,
• cycles. Go Carts ..
(614) 698·3290.
motors , electric tool motors.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society ,
Anything of value . Fife's, South
Careline ond adoption Service.
3rdSt ... Middleport. 992.74q4 _
992·7680, 742·3162, 992·5427.
8 WEEK OLD pigs. 949·2857.

MALE SAMOVED. $125. 949·2189.

SupericK
Slum [JtriCtion

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

SWAIN

Joung's
Carpeting

Automltk

Residential

T11nsmissian Ser'fice

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

R1111t l,• ~-·
0.
Clrpet
uphOlStery
Phone Mike Youna •

At

992·2206 or 992·7630
"TIM O!l&amp;i•llon

Tank SeMce

-· ·.. ···-- ...
····-· .. ··--···-VA-FHA, 30 yr. financing. Ireland
Mortgage . 77 E. State. Ath&amp;.ns,

HOMESITES for sole . I acre and
up. Middleport, near Rutlond .

phone (614) S92-3051.

Call992·7481 .

TEAFORD[g

Chain Saw

FOR SALE or trade or land con·
tract. 2 bedroom house in
Rutland . 992-5858 .
FOR SALE or Trade. 1967 Ford T·
Bird. Full power, ·oir, new ex·
houst system. Glenn R. BisselL
Boshon Rood . 949-2801 or

1 Good Used Hot Point
Refrigerator
$125
1 Good Used Hotpoint
Electric Stove

$100

1Good Used Unico
Washer

S125

Pomeroy Landmark

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992-2181

REGISTERED APPALOOSA and
Quarter Horses for sale or
trade . Cole Stables, Tuppers
Plains . Ohio . (61 4) 667 -3405.
IN RACINE; o nice 3 bedroom
home, has aluminum siding
ond storm windows, gas forced
oirfur.noce . Iorge yard. For sole
or trade for house in Mid·
dleport ~49 - 2559 .
FOR SALE or Trade: 1969 Pontiac.
Good work cor. Coli 742-2340
or 992 -709• .

SIX SHEPHERD pups . Goad cattle
dogs and good with children .
Also, old corn. (614) 698-..4499.

NICE ONE acre build.ng sites,
portly -wooded , near Meigs

High School. 992·5523.
HOUSE FOR Sole of 1651 lincoln
Hts . Ca/1992-7471 , before 3~m .
ond oher 5 ca l/992-3376.
TWO AND one-half acre' lot with 2
buildings, well water . All set
up for tola l electric trailer
located in langsville , Ohio.

742·2965.

NEW RANCH , three bedroom,
carpeted. fireplace . carport.
Tuppers Plains . (614) 667·3327 .
COUNTRY LIVING on hardtop
road . 6 acres, 6 room house
and bolh , aluminum siding, lott
of outbuildings , cellar, fruit·
trees 1 $17,000. 992-5845.
FIVE ROOM house on 2 1/ t ·acqu
surrounded by woods . At
Carpenter in Meigs ' Co . 10
minute drive from Meigs
Mines. Needs bath and water.
AI
1d
'I
so , o city coo ump trot er.

- -----

a stone fireplace, bullt.ln
bookshelves, sliding glass
doors leading
to the
swimming pool. Land scaped lot with Norway
Spruce,

and

f lowers

~hrubbery.

LARGE HOME
5
bedroom home with a full

and largl!"fot. Buy this one
furnished or vnfurnished .
A NEW HOME - Large
eat-in kitchen, utility room,
J nice size bedrootns, bath
with shower and-attached
garage on nice .lot near

Rutland . SJ0,200 for FHA
and VA .
RT. 33 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. lf• acre for just

$21,500.
RACINE AREA -

M;ddlepo".

992·5188

o•

067 3349.

Nice 3

bedroom frame home with
large living. step saver

kitchen,

carport

family

room,

and large lot.

A REALTOR CAN WEED
01/T A BUYER FROM A
TALKER. LIST WITH US,
AND DON'T BE MISLED.
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Associates

698·5310, 698·8890( '698·8898 o•

Olt4ETTE TABLE and 6 choirs. $50.
992 -9975 .
W~T:,:H~R':E':E_b_e_d-,o-o_m_h_o-us_e_,_T_u_
p·
Portable kitchen and dish _N_E:,:
washer , $75 . Console color TV . . pers Plains. Lorge li ving room
1970 '/, 1on Ford Pickup . Call
with fireplace . dining room ,
99'2· 3711 .
Iorge kitchen , car port, fully ·
JONES MEAT Processing, freezer
corpeted. Lorge Jot. (614)
beet and pork Custom proces s·
667 ·3349, •
·
ing of beef . r,ork and deer . 200ACRES. No buildings . Tuppers
Retail cuts. litl e Hocking . (61 4)
P!oin~ . Ohio. Phone (61 4)

. 667·6133.

A fine 3

central heating, city water

PRECISION PACER Compound
698·6701 .
.
.
.
Bow. 55 lb. Quiver and 5 NEW MODERN Three-bedroom
al uminum shaft arrows with
home . Built-In kirchen. bose·
wasp hunting tip . l ik~· new .
ment , Iorge lot. Gravel Hill ,

$160. 992·5866.

SECLUDED -

bedroom modern home
with full basement. garage,
large family room that has

basement in a good 'q uiet

of D•••••· $2,200. 982·4123.

H0¥PHREY RADIANT Fire Cir culotor. Bott led gas or natural
gas , $25. 992' -2385..

one acre In town with water
and electric available.

neighborhood. Natural gas

THREEACRESonCR4 . I '/, mi. out

KENWOOD MODEL II AM-FM
receiver ond power amplifier.
Technics modell-400 turn· table
ond Techntes CO !! Sette stereo
and recorder . 2 Kenwood 120
Watt speakers. $1300. firm .
Values near ly $3000. Phone
~2-6395 .

JUST LISTED -

BUILDING LOT - Almost

Newer

ranch type home in Mid·

dleporf , 3 bedrooms,
carpeting, paneling, reallv
nice. 518,500.00 .
JUST LISUD - 2 story
frame business bldg ..
convert the upstairs into an
apartment, open a business

In the down . This location
has always been a money
maker. $11,200.00.
JUST LISTED - Beautiful
home site or sites. s miles
from St. Rf . 1 on a paved
road ,

about

10

acres .

$13,100.00.
JUST LISUD - If you
want. a really alluring
horYle that provides every
Imaginable confenlence -

and If you can after! If I We
have one available . II
featureo, 2 baths, 2 dlnl~g
areas, large kit., famllv
rm . ,

living

rm .,

wi th

W. B. F. P.. 3 Bdrms.. lull
basement, approx .
15
acres, barn, fencing. Don't

call, COME IN FOR INFO.
PRICE REDUCED - 6
room
frame.
bath,
workshop,

4

lots.

In

Pomeroy. ONLY $12,000.00.
RANCH - 12 yrs. old, 3
bdrms., dining rm ., living
rm., carpeting and really
good location . 526,600.00.
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

REAL JSTATE FOR SALE·
a rooms,

5 rooms bath

clown,

Ohio, owner William Lowe.
$211000.00. Call or s.e

A good buy for . tust

HOBST~nER REALTY·
Georges. Hobsletter Jr., Broker
Box101, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 985-4186 after 4:00P.M.

1

-

Sweepers . toasters , irons, oil
small appliances. Lawn mower :·
neJCt to Sta te Highway Garage
' on Route 7. Phone (61.4) 985·

~-"by THOMAS JOSEPH

11-lAT MAY 15E .' .. 8liT .

ACROSS
· '!Iran's ruler
5 Exile
11 Sandwich
favorite
1% lnunediately :
2 wds.
13 ldi It Hwnan being
15 Edwin
Franko 17 Building
wing
18 Fashion anew

HE'S STILl. NOT AS
FAMOUS AS HIS

~CHARLIE

811:oNsoNI

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs , s•r·
.,.,ce. all makes, 992 -2284 . The
Fabr ic
Shop ,
Pomeroy .
Authorized S1nger Soles and
Serv ice . We sharpen Sti ssors ,
EXCAVATING . doter . loader end
backhoe work. dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire:· will h'oul
fill d irt, to soil. limestone ord
grovel. Colt Bob or Roger Jef·
fen, day phone 992 -7089. night
phone 992-3525 or 992 - 5232 .
EXCAVATING , dozer . backhoe
and ditch&amp;r. Chorl~s R Hotfield .. Bock Hoe Ser\l"tce,
Rutland . Ohio . Phon e 742 ·2008 .

GASOIJNE ALLEY

It's just Zeb thinlt. it
on loan. Joel ! qot 'powers"! It
save five cats
from th" sewer' 1'--fJ.---..

Will do roofing , construction .
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone

742·2348.
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Ew·
covat ing . septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone, gro..-el. black top
paving , Rt . 143 Phone I (6H)
69'8 -7331 .

• It'S

A sick piq has
done a worl
been in m4
o' qood !
~asket?

DAILEY ' S

Upholste r y .

..OH. 843·2542.

¥A 9 8 4
+Q J 9

• KQ1

I AM ft:JWERtESS
10.511'/E'Y~ .
TO
UNDS&lt;STAND-

¥ Q LO ~ 3'2

+AK3

•.u

Neither vulnerable

lo

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One tetter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L"s, ]\ for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length artd formation of the ~·ords are all
hints. Each day the eode letters are different.

SALE
EVERYDAY

CRYPTOQUOTilS

WINNIE
.'!i~,_DIMI~ t. AND

I

1&lt;...u&lt;..H UP IHE GRAY .
I 'MGOIN6TOA ·
WEDDINcr RECEPTION
WITH A VEIN CJ.ASf,YlOOKING CHICK!

AT 39.95
1

REFRIGERATORS
125.00 AND UP
GAS SPACE HEATERS

HR

EW

FVJE

OWG

UAUWTO,

OWG

VPWGE

V

OWGT

EW

TAUAUPAT

' FAT A

FWTTOHJ ,~

ETO

FNVE

EAKE

OAVT

VCW.-

DAWJVTL

ENWUVK
Yealerday's Cryptoqaote: DO NOT ON ':ANY ACCOUNT
ATI'EMPT TO WRITE ON BO'i'H SIDES OF THE PAPER AT
ONCE.-WALTER SELLER

. Var1ety to Choose

from 119.95 &amp;UP
biNIDE SETS
124.95 and up

• 85 4

• 10 8 6 43

• K Q 10

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

992·S429.

• A8S4
¥J

SOUTH

1 u~uDagger
of yore

l.P.N . fa do babysitting or care
for elderly lady' 1n their home
In Middleport oreo . Phone

ll~ST

• 6 32

• 9~ 2

Source of .
power
Entltie
Conveyed
by
contract

EMPLOYMENT WANTED. Rel;,ed

WEST

·'• K
1s
1016 2

hr+-t[!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§§~~~~~~~~~~~J\IrW~Ihrou~
h.-+-+. TRY

PIANQ TUNING and Repair . lone
Daniels, 992 -2082 . 12 years ser·
vice to Tri -County . Reference:
Elberfelds.

2 PC. LIVING ROOM
SUITES STARTING .

NORTH 101
•J91

abbr.

29 Quenching .
32 Ending for
serpent
33 Mental
deficients
35 Barrie's
Bell

ANN

swindle adds edge

words
27 O.T. book :

remodeled , ceramic tile . plum·
bing , carpentry and general
maintenance . l;J yea rs ell·
perience. 992-;l685 .
EXCAVATING , BACK HOE , dozer ,
trencher. low boy , dump
trucks , seplic systems. Bill
Pullins, phone 992-2478 . do·y or
night.

mln~d
t Antonym of

BRIDGE

28 Roman 1004

AND

DOWN
1 Deer
2 Play up to
3 Feeble-

manufaclured
5 Capital of Mali
S1ranger" 10.
I E1piale
1:4D-News 13; 2:3D--News 3: Mary Hartman 10.
7 Partner of
Yesterday's Answer
3:Do-Movle "The Man Hunter" 3; 5:0D--Movle "The
neither
21 Early
29 Dramatic
Counterfeit Killer" 3.
segment
8 Whole nwnber Americans
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - The· Sting (PGl
9 Type of
z2 Restricted 30 Hebrew
1 &amp; 11 P.MM. -'- Man Who Knew Too M01ch (PGl
19 Horse
triangle
23 Silly
· month
conunand
II Greek
24 Pay back 31 Dwarf
Thursday, October 2 7
00 GI's address 16 Gas-statim
25 Red Rose 34 Graf 21 Famed
giveaways
1:1 Jolted
38 lambkin; calf
· Quaker
---=----:=:-=.=.;=-:,...:::...:::;::__-,--._ 22 Greases
Oswald and Jim Jacoby
Thick soup
26 Crystalgazer's ~

KHcheri•

BATHROOMS

West Nor&amp;h East
1•
Pass
Pass 2W
Pass
Pass 5•
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opemng lead - a
By Oswald • James Jacoby
Old Man
the expert who
always played the dummy in
the auction bridge columns ,
was back lor another
duplicate game .
It didn 't take him long to get
to six hearts . He simply
checked lor aces with
Blackwood Ia convention that
had not been invented in his
earlv davs 1 and bid the slam
when his partner showed one
ace .
It also didn 't take him long
to make the hand . He won the
diamond lead in his own hand
. and led the queen ol.trumps.
WesL covered with h1s king

z.

and when the jack fell from
East the only loser was the
ace or spades.
Why did Z play the trumps
the way he did ' His play
would succeed if East held the
singleton jack. The play or a
low spade !rom his hand
would work if West held the
singleton , king . Hence, each
play had the same po or
chance for success. yet Z led
the spade queen without
hesitation .
The reason was that he had
a chance lor a successful
swindle. West might well duck
with king-seven or king-six .
Not that he should duck ;
rather that he just might
make a bad play . As Z and all
players have learned , when
there is a chance to make a
mistake there may be a mis·
take .

~~ ·;~~ ~
A F.IDrida reader wants to
know whaL is done when a
small card is exposed in the
deal .
The rule is that if the dealer
exposes any card whatsoever

in dealing it is a misdeal , but
in many friendly social games
this rule is only applied when
the ex posed card is an honor.
1For a copy o f JACOBY
MODERN

send $1 to

" Win lH

Bndge . c l o r111s newspaper
P 0 , Boll 48 9. Radto c, ry Srar,on.
New York . N Y 10019)

of

Variety
stands &amp;
fables to choose from
starting from ·sJ.so:

CHEST OF DRAWERS
1
15.95 UP

3 rooms bath upst• irs,

private entrance to upstairs, lull buomont, gas hot
water heat, l•rge front porch. C.n be used es one home
or apartment upstairs and live dawn for Income
purposes. Located 126:1 Powell Street, Middleport,

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -·

REMODELING, Plu.mbing , heating
and all types of general repoir .
Work guaranteed 20 years •lC:perience . Phone 992 ·2.-09 .

51. 33.

9:Do-Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,15: New
Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8.10.
9':Jo-Edge of Night 6; Andy Grlfflfh 8: Here's Lucy 10.
10:01&gt;-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Big Valley 6; Here's Lucy
B; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 34,15: Price Is Righi 8,10.
11 :01&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4;
Happy Days 6,13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3D-Knockout 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love of Life
8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
- n :5s-CBS News 8; Loving ' Free 10; 12 :01&gt;Newscenfer 3; News 4,6,10; To Say The Least 15;
Divorce Court 8.
12:3Q-Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp; the Man 15; Ryan's Hope
1•
6tll; Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:01&gt;-Gong Sbow 3; News 8; All My Children 6,13;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not tor Women Only 15.
1:3D-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10.
2:0D--$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; 2.:3D-Doctors 3,4,15; One
Life to Live 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
3:01&gt;-Anofher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8.10;
Crockeff's Victory Garden 20.
3: Is-General Hospital 6, 13; 3:Jo-Malch Game 8, 10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Lillie Rascals.Our Gang 4;
Gong Show 15; Merv Grlffln '6; Gilligan's Is. 8:
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10: Dinah 13 .
4:Jo-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Fam ily 4; Brady
Bunch 8; ,10; Lillie Rascals 15.
5: 01&gt;-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13: My nree Sons 15.
5:30-Cdd Couple 4: News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:01&gt;-News 3,4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3D-NBC News 3,4:15; Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 6 ;
CBS News 8,10; As We See If 20: ABC News 13.
7:QQ-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Muppel Show 8; News 10: To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan' s Is. 15; Almanac 20: Making Things Grow
33.

BRADFORD. Auctionee r . Com plete Service. Ph one 949 ·2481
' or 94'l·200l Ra ci ne. Ohto , Crill
Bradford .

3825 .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21,1977
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:so-PTL Club 13: 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:2s-Overseas Mission 10.
6:3G-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:so-Good Morning,
West Virginia ; 6 :55-Chuck While Rports 10; Good
Morning, TrJ State 13.
1 :01&gt;-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
7:3D--Schoolles10; 8:01&gt;-Capt. Kangaroo 8.10: Sesame

7:3D--Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show'4; Candid Camera
6; Price Is Right 8; MacNeil· Lehrer Report 20,33;
Family Feud 10; Pop Goes the Country 15: Name
That Tune 13.
8:01&gt;-Bob Hope 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13: Wonder
Woman 8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
8: 3D-Wall Street Week 20,33.
.
9:oo-Mcvle " Having Babies II " 6,13: Movie "Mil·
chell'' 8,10: Lowell Thomas RemerT)bers 20: Inside
the Cuckoo's Nest 33.
, 9:3D-Rela!lons 20.
,10:oo-Qulncy 3,4,15: News 20.
10:3Q-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20: Hurry
Tomorrow 33.
11:0D--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavell 20.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Bar etta 6,13: NBA
Basketball 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Horror Rises
from the Tomb" 10.
·
12 :0Q-Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.
12 :3D-Janakl 33; 12 :4D-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6: Iron·
side 13.
1:01&gt;-Midnlght Special 3,4,15: Movie "Hands of a

~··

FOR SALE

Homelite
$120

HE'S ALSO VER'f
GAllANT AND ABLE
···B UT "FOR HIM ,
l MIGHT HAVE
SEEN KILLED•· ·

Chester. Ohio
8·29·pd.

Box34

'279.95

1 Good Used

10.'1?

Jack's Septic

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

Upright Freezer,
S2SO.OO
1 Good Used Homelite
XL12 Chain Saw
$125
1 Good Used Homellte
Chain Saw
S12S

:l'J:&gt;&lt;&gt;c I
,.,_,

Phone 985·3806

lttdRillt.O.

11ot lht lmiblols

and

commercial.
C11ll
for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday~ anytime.

REGISTERED POllED Herefords .
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 boths ,
FREE PUPPIES. 5 weeks old .
One 1'h year old bull. Excellent 2. STORY 3 bedroom frame
all elec ., I acre, Middleport.
992.7546.
Club Steer prospect, reody to
house, F.A .durnoce. storm win·
close Ia Rutland . Phone 992 wean Also our herd bul l. 7 '
dows , fireplace in Middleport ,
7481.
AKC ~EGISTERED poodle puppies ,
year old , &amp;xc&amp;llent d isposition . · ,....:P~h-"o"n"e-'92
9 2·.:34.::5:.:7.;-.;:c:;---;-:;-9 wks. old , Started shots and
AII superor blood. RRS Forms . NEW ONE year old bilevel home . SMAll form for salv , 10•1. down,
wormed . Will hold unt il
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
992 5565 or 992-2826.
-.1
3 bedroom , 1 '11 both , goroge,
Chr istmas .
992 -3493
or
ty , W, Vo ? Phone {304) 772·
992·3.191.
TH REE ' HORS~S . 1 is Western
recreolton room . 1.1 acres .
3102 o• (304) 772·3227 .
Pleosyre . 2 mores , I is 1/ , and 1
Eagle Ridge . 9.49-2745.
COUNTRY farmland with sedud·
is 3'1..4 A rabian . 992·7084.
ed Woods, water and good oc·
CHURCH BUS . 60 passenger . Con·
ceu In Monroe County . W. Vo .
tact W2 -324 1 or 991-529 1.
REAL ESTATE
$1 ,0Cl0 down, coli (30ol) 772·
FOR SALE
:... 3 AND ~ RM. furnished and un· 1976 360 HONDA. Like new. 1300
3102 o• (304 ) 772·3227 .
furn ished opts. Phone 992·
miles . 992-3018.
Commercial property appro.: . 17 .
5434 .
acres . level land. located at
Good
Business
Bldg .
....:=..::..._________ 1976 C-10 TRUCK . $3 .600. Extra
IOCilted 1t 605 W. M•in St. ,
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Rou,le
wheels.
Coli
evenings .
AVAILABLE AT Ri.,.erside Apts . I
Pomeroy, Ohio . Presently
bedroom , $105 per month. $150
7, Phone (614 )667·6304,
742·2316,
occupied by
11
going
security deposit . 992 -6098·.
buslnen. Bldg . hu deluxe
ap11rtment
overheld
FOUR ROOMS and bath. Adults
bringing In good income.
only . No pets. 992-5908.
Priced on Inspection only . •
COUNTRY MOBILE HOme Pork .
C•n be seen any time from
Route 33, f'!Orlh of Pomeroy . Let Pomeroy : Landmark
10 11 .m . to 6 p .m. Inquire et
605 W. Main St . , Pomeroy,
Lorge lots. Coli 992 -7479.
soften &amp; con.ditlon your
Ohio 05769 .
ln cr~cllble! Why poy ·high electri c w11ter and · Co -op wa"ter
bills this winter? Let us pay softener, Model uc.svl.
thert' for youl One b~dl-oom Now Only
"from $130 now available.
Let us test your water Free
MAIN
Vi llage Manor , Third and Mill
Streets , Middleport. Te lephone
POMEROY, 0.
992 -7787. Equal Housing OpNew Co -Op water and
portunitv.
JUST
LISTED - 70 Nice
softeners, model VC-SVI.
laying acres, barn , pond,
TRAILER SPACE tor rent . Ready for
Only 1279.95
nicely remodeled 1 floor
hookup. 992·3162.
Save sso.oo on a new
~EALTO~
plan
home with fu ll
Hotpoint
·Refri9erator
EFF .
HOUSE .
Construction
VIRGIL B. TEA FOliO, )R.
basement, wood burning
1 New 20 cub1c ft . Chest
workers only. 992·7791 , offer 4.
REALTOR
F.P., carpeting, garage,
Freezer
great for weekends, full
216
E.
Seconcl
Street
S2S.OO
Olscount
ONE BEDROOM all electric aport·
fh'ne home or tax deduc·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ill Good Refrigerator S200
ment , Main Str9et. Call
lion. $38,000.00.
!'hon,.,92·332S
1 Good Used Amana
992·2094 .

LOST:· LONG -HAIRED . calico cat .
female . Full -grown . Bel ongs to
Martin Vaughan . Has portblock foce . 992-7822 . Reward.

YARD SAtE. Ocl. 26, 27 , and 28. 9

.

'""'·

IWMINUM
SIDilf5.SOffiTT

9&lt;9·2860.
IF YOU hove o service to offer,
wont to buy or sell something.
oe looking for work
or
whatever ... you 'll get results
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.

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

WINDOWS

1

FUEL Oil tonk , call 992 -5106.

Servicerr.t the ........ , ...... - h .......

!f,LACfMEIIT

AUCTION SALE, every Tues . and COAL . l imes tone, and calcium
chloride ond calcium brine for
Fri . at 7 pm . New ond used
dust control and special mixing
merchandise at Ohio Rl.,.er Auc salt for for mers , E11 celsior Salt
tion, Meigs Plato , M iddleport ,
Works , Main Street . Pomeroy .
Ohio. Home Phone (304 )
Ohio or phone
3891 .
773-5471.
CHRISTMAS AUCTION Sole. First CAMPER, $600 . Also . horse
trailer , $450 . Phone {614) 698 Christmas Auction Sole will be
3290
Fri .. Oct . 28 . 7:00 pm .
Truckload of toys , S-trock ECONOMY TRACTOR with 011 atplayers , cossel!e player
tachments . L1ke new, asking
recorders , watches . radios .l
$2250. Phone (614 ) 698.3290.
jewelry , plus lots of other gift
items as we ll as misc. at Ohto APPlES FITZPATRICK Orchards.
Stote Route 689 . Phone
R1ver 'Auction , 409 Pearl St .,
Wilkesvill~t . 669·3785 .
Meigs Plaza . Middleport. Ohio .

Bissell Siding Co.

Radiator~

. 1-tioo Sonic•
f•oodo&amp; Auilobit
lllowo loto _,Attics

PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum Sidin1.
Storm Windows &amp; lnsul•
lion.
Call Professionals

EXPERIENCED

STORM

. CHIP
WOOD , Poles
ma lC.
FIVE ROOM unfurnished opt . Coli
diameter 10'' on largest end, $8 ·
992-5.434 or 992-312'l.
per ton. Bundled slob , $6 per . TUPPERS PlAINS. New 2 bedtoom
furn. oportment for rent . (614)
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pollet
1Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy. 992-2689.
667·33..49.
THREE BEDROOM home . Rental
purchase or low down pay·
ment. Write 729-T, c-o Doily
Sentinel , Pomeroy , OH .

10-18-1 mo. •

WINDOWS l OOO.S

949.2770.
1973 GRAND PRIX. A.C., P.S.,

P.B , block with black \l" lnyl top .
AM -FM stereo , tilt whee l, posl·
trock
Good gos mileage

•

FREE ESTIMATES

anytime

1973 PONTIAC GRAND Pr iw A . C..
P.S., P.8., power nors , AM·FM
stereo with tope player tilt
wheel. other e:.. tros . Real
sharp . $2,600. Coli evenings ,
m~ 7055 or 992-3692.

ft

S.ves 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on hutlng cost
Experience ond
fully Insured
FrM Est.
C. II 667·6479
10· 14·1 mo. pd .

...

POWELL'S HONDA·
EMERSON AVE

Cellulosic (woOd fiber)
Thermal Insulation

~

EFEL

POWELL

Blown Insulation

~
·.
:

,~ell

PHONE (304) 485-1671 ASK

J&amp;L

J'"!\1,0J""
· ·· · '

0

CAITIM)N
aTOYUAie

1q12 PINTO. ~&lt;49 - 2761 , after 5 dur·

~2 - 6370 ,

ORDINANCE N0.10S9·77
ORDINANCE FIXING
RATES FOR TV

M 0

'

PARTS FOR 1971 Gololllie Ford f&lt;H
sale .' Phone 992-5858.

742.2581.

EXPERIENCED REFRIGERAlOR ond

ANY WHERE FROM 1974 TO 1977.

ANN
DAILEY 'S UpholsltHy .
Portland , OH . 8.43 ·7S42.

,--- --------,

Wood Stoves

FOR JIM BlAIR OR FRED

ny . 992·6388.

FOUND AROUND Ft . Me igs area:
Small. block lernole poodle .
742-3133 .

USED HONDA CIVIC OR CVCC

oov:RNOR,

'
••

s~rvices

Business

-

- of the Air Force, 30

.\ •• "' ,,n S:;.ttinJu~

'-

.'

. ---·wANTED

1\~

!U.n~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

IS CiRIFFIN, THE
BUTLI:R. OADfts UVINCi
IN THE: MANSION1S
F.ALLOUT SHELTI:R
THE

CiiVE US ANOT'!IER

••
'

1:01&gt;-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:»-Mary Hartman 10; 2: ID-News 13.
Movie Ch1nnel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Ode to Billy Joe (PGl
7 &amp; 11 P.M. -Chino (PGl
C.blt Ch•nnel s 6:30 p.m. - Testimony Time .
.
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30 - Coach's Corner
•
8:00 - Home Dlgesl
9:00 - Cable Journal
10:00 - 700 Club.

Bed roo·m Suites
3 pc. 589.95 up

MARTIN

LUKE'/ JeST GOT
IN A HASSLE OVER
AT TH' CARD GAME
AN' GOT .BEAT UP
TERRIBLE SAD

IF ~OU WATCH LON6
ENOUGI{ SOMETIMES
"(OU'LL SEE AN OWL
POKE HIS HEAD OUT...
'

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

'

.

'

. '·

•'

�•

'

"4&gt;...:&gt;...,...,....,.,.....,"'&lt;l"'&lt;l__,...,......,...,._--._~..,..--....,...,-...,....,....,...,.____,...._.,_

10-The Daily Senunel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, Od.~ti,:,:':6o.,_'9'_-4'____.....,....,.......,....,_______..,._..,....,..__

Atheist O'Hair,
son fighting
'By ANN ARNOUl
{'tllnputt'r equtpment .
Mur ra~ c..·nlll'&lt;i tlu• news
AUSTIN, Tex. t UPl l
Atheist Mada lyn Mur ray · cnnft&gt;n-rwe til defend thr
O'Hair Wednesdal' ca ll&lt;'&lt;i h&lt;&gt;r ftiJ'mer em ployt&gt; wh~1111 Mrs.
son a liar iri a ne"·s O'Haar &lt;ll't'USt:'d (l( stt-aling
conference shouting matC'h tWtl t'fllnputrr tapt&gt;S from the
and said he has sided with c~.~ntt.•r .
"Madal\11 O'Ha ir has made
people trying to cripple · her
&lt;J
brtlad
r3ngr of aceusations
~erican Ath&lt;&gt;ist Cent r.
William Murray responded a!-! ainst a number of
by accusing his nwther of 111di\'iduals m the past ft&gt;¥1.'
violating dert&gt;ncy standards d•n·s ... Murrav said . ··s(lme
and wr ongly charging a tlf ·those in di;idl.ki ls believe
former employe with theft of ti1at O' Ha ir is using these
a('e.usations
to
cover
managerial problems within

Jury begins

deliberations

'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

CINCINNATI t UP!) - A
federal -jury may begin
deliberations tc&lt;la •· in the
trial of 10 persons accused of
partici pa ting
in
a
multimillion dollar so uthwest
Ohio drug and st~~n property
rmg.
Prosecution and defense
att orneys
bega n
final
argw11ents Wednesday in the
complex six-week-o ld trial.
U.S. District Judge Carl B.
Rubin has ordered the sevenman. five.woman jury in the
case sequestered after seven
jurors reported rece iving
tele ph one calls from a man
who urged them to convict
defenda nts . Rubin
the
quest ioned the jurors and
said he was . convinced the
calls would not influ ence
their verdict.
Thomas W. Kitchens Jr .,
special agent in charge of the
the FBI's Cincinnati office,
said the FBI is investigating
the jury tampering. but said
no suspects have been
arrested .
The 10 defendants, as well
as 18" others awaiting trial,
were indicted last July by a
federal grand jury on 329
In 1974, President Ford
counts, charging them with
agreed
to meet Russian
participating in ~ massi~e
leader
Leonid
Brezhnev Nov ,
drug and stolen property ring
23-24
in
the
Vladivostok
area
· operating out o f Cincinnati,
of
the
Soviet
union.
Middletown and Franklin.
'

ATTENTIONI

CHRISTMAS
CLUB
MEMBER·S·"

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29,9:30 TO 5 P.M.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31,9:30 TO 5 P.M.

'·
• A

•

.

inch
- GE
25
screen .
- 100 pe·r cent solid
state.
- Automatic calor ·
and c ustom picture
controls.
- Maple or p ine
finish.

•GE 17 INCH SCREEN

·perFormance
,

CONSOLE
COLOR TV

PORTABLE
COLOR TV
•100% SOLO STATE

TELEVISION

•CUSTOM PICTURE AND
AFC CONTROLS

SPECIAL

'369

-PERMANENT PRESS
NYLON
.:..soLID COLORS AND
PRINTS
-S, M, L, XL, XXL .

SALE
PRICES
I GIRLS
DRESSES
Excellent selection of
little girls ' dresses In

the latest fall styles and
colors . Sizes 2·4, 4-6x, 714. Buy now for the ·
holidays!

$sggoo

END OF THE MONTH SALE

WALTZ LENGTH

GOWNS
&amp; ROBES

SPECIAL

00

FURNITURE SALE

·s2.95 SCHOOL"NAME
TOBOGGANS
colors and school

names for

Wahama White Falcons, Eastern

Eagles. Meigs Marauders and
Southern

Tornadoes . For

) $233

thi s

sale.

END OF THE MONTH SALE

MEN'S BLUEBELL s34.95
INSULATED COVERALLS
and longs, fully insulated with
red quilted nylon - made by

Wrangler, spruce green.

plaids, good seiecfion.
You' ll really save.

SALE
PRICES

on q1.1alily turniture are tremendous . S•l• prices on
I\, liVing room suites, rec linen, rock-o-loungers, swivel
rockers, wall-a-ways, Kimball pianos, coffee •"d end
tables, bedroom suites and gr1ndfather clocks.

BLUE LABEL T-SHIRTS
AND BRIEFS

&lt;·

From n·ow to Nov . 1. Hanes $5 .19 package knit

briefs, $.4.19 and Hanes $5.39 package T Shirts S4 .39.
styles,

dress

Susan Ann Perkins, a native of MiddleiDwn, arrived here
following an appearance in Mansfield where she won the Miss
Ohio title.

included. A b,ig selection In

'1.39 YARD
COnON FLANNEL

..

&lt;XlLUMBUS - A FEASIBILITY STUDY on natural gas
research and drilling in Lake Erie " indicates that
economically meaningful amoWJts of natural gas" can be
recovered from the lake, state energy director Robert Ryan
said Thursday.
The study was conducted by William E . Shafer, a
geological scientist, and was financed by the Ohio Energy and
Resource Development Agency .

SALE
PRICES

99~

Y2 PRICE

MEN'S CORDUROY
TROUSERS 'AND
FASHION JEANS

'

One rack of junior sportswear and
women's · tops. Assorted styles,
broken sizes.

Y2 PRICE

Flare leg and straight leg
corduroy. Sizes 28 fo 42 walsf.
Styles for young men and fuller
cut styles too, solid colors; plus

CHILDREN'S
·cLOTHING SPECIAL

our entire stock of fashion jeans
In cotton polyester blends. Sizes
29 to 42 waist, solid colorS and

One group of children's pants and jumpers
and girls' full slips.
·

SALE
• PRICES

1f2 PRICE

End of the Month Sale

END OF THE MONTH SALE

MEN'S sl0.95
WESTERN
FlANNEL SHIRTS

MEN'S
WEMBLEY
..
TIES
-

big seiedlon of solid
colors and patterns In

( 1.4· 1411:~), medium
{15-lS V'lL large {16-161h ). extra
large ( 17·17'h ). Snap front, snap
front tab pocket. snaps on sleeve .
True Western sty lir'lg.

Sizes small

four-In-hand and ready
fled lies.
Men's $7 .50 Ties

SALE '5.19
Men's 55.50 Ties
· SALE 14.39

..
I

•

DAYTON, OHIO - THE BODY OF BETH Ann Mote, 14,
Oakwood, Ohio, was found Thursday by groundhog hunters in
a wooded area in nearby Miami Township. Authorities said she
had been stabbed several times.
Police in suburban Oakwood said the girl was reported
missing one-week ago by her mother, the Rev . Doris Mote, the
area's first woman Episcopal priest.
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE THURSDAY gave final
congressional approval to transfer of mine health and safety
enforcement from the Interior Department to the Department
of Labor.
A compromise measure worked out with the Senate and
approved there Oct. 3 was passed on a 376-35 vote and sent ID
President Carter who said he support$ the transfer provision .

WINTER INSPECTION MADE - The equipment at
tlle Stale Highway Department Garage in Meigs County

CINCINNATI - A CINCINNATI BEVERAGE and food
concession finn has received a critical citation from state
liquor C?n trol authorities for allowing nude performances by
actors and actresses during a performance of "Oh ! Calcutta !"
at Cincinnati's Music Hall Oct. 14.
SPOKANE, WASH. - AUTHORITIES ARE waiting to
determine whether a Calgary, Alberta, resident gulped down a
$1,800 diamond.
Police said Henry Jeager, 18, was charged with theft
Wednesday after an employe of Sartori,Jewelers reported the
disappearance of a 1.1-&lt;:arat diamond he had been elfamjning.
A dociDr told detectives it could be several days before the
diamond passes from the man's body If, in fact, he did swallow
it, so Jea~er is being held ~nder $100,000 bond.

Weather
Clear
tonight,
with
widespread dense fog and
lows in the upper 40s or lower
·50s. Partly cloudy Saturday,
with highs in the up~er 60s.
Now you know
One definition of the word
"boor" is small fanner. The
first white settlers of South
Africa - who arrived in the
early 17th century . were
called Boers because they
wl&gt;&gt;
e Dutch small fanners .
'

.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday
through
Tuesday, warm and dry
through the period. Highs
wUI be In the 60s Sunday
and In the upper lOs or the
lo)&gt; 70. Monday and
Tuesday. Lows will he In
the upper tOs . .

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28 No. 1:!8

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Authorities today were
examining the possibility that
the dismem bered sk eletal
remains of a man found in
northeast Pennsylvania last
Monday are those of Jimmy
Hoffa, the Philadelphia
Inquirer reported' today .
The Inquirer quoted Wayne
County Coroner Robert
Jennings as saying Thursday
night that authorities suspect
the body might be Hoffa's
because it contained extensive and expensive gold .
inlays and fillings which
Jennings said, Hoffa 's son
told him his lather had.
Jennings told the Inquirer
he would ask the FBI in
De!roit to forward a chart of
'
underwent a winter inspection
Thursday morning. Shown - Hoffa'• dental work to a clinic
in New York City where the
with some of the several trucks is Bob Clarl!,
body was taken .
superintendent.
Dr. Dominick DiMaio, New

York's
chief
medical
examiner, was quoted as
saying he and four dentists
from his office had studied
the skeleton's dental work .
Jennings told the Inquirer
that the body , discovered
near Honesdale, Pa., by a
turkey hunter, is that of a
white male, about 55 to 60
years old.
The form er Teamsters
Union president disappeared
July 30, 1975. He was 62 at the
time.
The remains were found
stuffed into two plastic bags
an d hidden in thick underbrush, the Inquirer said.
" There is no question in my
opinion that It looked like a·
,ga ngland style killing,"
J ennings told the Inquirer.
Information about the
cause of death was not im·
mediately available.

Earriings limit raised
under new SS ·proposal
•

By DONAW H. MAY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The House says elderly
Americans should be allowed
to earn any amoWJt of 'wages
without losing Social Security
benefits.
If it stands, the decision
could profoundly affeci the
income and working lives of
many of the 22 million
Americans who have reached
the age of 65.
,.
But the proposal still faces
an uncertain future in
SUIT FILED
In Meigs CoWJtY Common
Pleas Court a suit lor pa'r tition of real estate has been
filed by Rqbert C. O'Brien,
Pomeroy, against Onelta
Baker, whose last ·known
address was Akron, et al.
Brenda George, Vinton,
filed suit for divorce against
Terry George, Vinton.

MOCKSVIll..E, N. C. -DANIEL R. WEBSTER, who told
SQUAD CALLED
a jury was was a "cold-blooded murderer" and would think no
Two calls were answered
more about killing them than he did his wife, was sentenced to Thursday morning by the
death Thursday. He said, "I got just what I deserved."
Middleport Emergency
Webster, who had admitted to the brutal slaying of his wife Squad. ·Thomas Sarver,
and asked to be put to death, said, "I think I got a fair and just Beech St., was taken to
verdict in Ibis court."
Veterans Memorial Hospital
The slim 51-year-old man then apologized to his wif~'s as was Barbara Smith, 108
parents, whom he had threatened ID kill also, and said, "I am Pearl St. Both were medical
not afraid to die in the gas chamber for it (the murder). "
patients.

SALE '5.99 ·
Men's $6.50 Tits

SALE
PRICES

&lt;XlSHOCTON
·MEMBERS OF THE TRINITY
EPISCOPAL CHURCH will vote Sunday on a proposal In
secede from the Ohio Diocese of the Episcopal Church.
Members will vote on proposal,s to leave the Ohio diocese
and to affiliate with the San Francisco diocese . .
A dissident group of parishioners at Trinity Episcopal is
·protesting proposed change"S' in the Book of Common Prayer
and the ordination· of women.

'l"ill

coets

en tine

Remains may he
those of Hoffa

By United Presslnternatlooal
&lt;XlLUMBUS - REPORTS FILED Thursday with State
Secretary of State Ted Brown's office show that those opposing
State Issue 2, one of four constitulional amendments on the
November ballot, outspent proponents of tlle ban six to one.
· The opponents to the Issue spent $396,230, while those
favoring the trap ban spent just over $61,000. The reports are
for funds spent through Oct. 19. More mo~ey was spent on
State Issue 2, despite the controversy that has surrounded
State Issue I, which would repeal instant voter registration .

tnday.

sizes 36 to 44 and edra·slze 46
to SO . Our entire stoCk of men's
winter jackets and longer
coats included in this special
sale .

END OF THE MONTH SALE

All' weather and
• winter
coats.
Excellent selection
of junior , missy
and half size?'

at y

J.News • • •in Briefsl

MIDDLETOWN, OHIO - MISS AMERICA RETURNED
be honored with a parade here
home late 11)ursday and

Wai st lengih and longer

Blue Label Hanes is 25 per cent polyester, 75 per cent
cotton.
.

COAT
SALE

e

l '

- The state would have ID pay off at least4 per Ce(\t of the withiri its ability ID pay off the bonds, eliminating the current
inflexible system. Opponents claim it would give the
outstanding principal every fiscal year.
·
- The legislature would have to present a plan for retiring legislature a " blank check," remove the right of the t.'ll&lt;payers
the debt and provide money for ' 'full and timely" payment of ID vote on debt and place Ohio on the road to an unsound credit
the principal and interest. Otherwise, the treasurer would be , rating .
Also in the amendment are the proposed expenditures for the
required to set aside the necessary money . '
- Payments due on the state's debt in any given fi,o/'.al year first $640 million worth of' debt - tile amount which could be
could not exceed 6 per cent of the average annual general l,Iorrowed within current slate income if Issue 4 passes and the
legislature approves by a two-thirds vote :
revenues of the state.
Transportation, $200 million, with at least ha'll going for
- New debt taken on by the leg1slature could not exceed 8
roads and bridges maintained by counties, IDwnships and
per cent of tlle state's average revenue in a given year.
In addition, the stale could continue to go iniD debt for municipalities; parks and recreation, $80 million; correctional
specific projects with a three-fifths vote of the legislature and institutions, $80 million; state office buildings, $80 million.
Also , mental health and retardation fac ilities, $64 million ;
a vote of the people.
And the state would be able In borrow enough money to cover higher education, $43 million i water development, $35 million ;
general appropriations as long as the debt was paid off during modernization and ~eplacement of public school buildings, $30
million ; multipurpose senior citizens' centers, $20 million ; and
the same fiscal year without further borrowing.
Proponents believe Issue 4. would allow the state to borrow energy research and demonstration projects, S8 million.

~~"*''"**~'-''*''':~o;:;;;:;:.::::::.::::;;:;s;:~:·:!:·:·::~~·S·&amp;:~:!o~~::~::::::::~:::..:::::~:*:&gt;~*"-'&gt;:~

CLEVELAND - "I GUESS I'M Jl,JST LUCKY," was the
. Widerst.atement made by Helen McNutt who Thursday night
won the Ohio Lottery's largest prize for the third week in a
row, bringtflg her winnings to $150,000.
Mrs. McNutt, 64, of Ashtabula, won $75,000 Thursday ,
night, $25,000 last week and $50,000 the week before .

,MEN'S
WINTER
COATS

Sizes B Ia 20. Our entire
stock on sale, denims,
quilted nylons , wool

While you're sncipping in our m11n store, lllct ttme
to v'i sillhe Jrd floor furniture deportment . The savjngS

END OF THE MONTH. SALE

SAVE •1.00
A PDMiE. MEN'S HANES

45 inches wide . good
W'
light and dark
plate.. Jnd floral patterns .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday. October 28, 1977

•

I,

"$28~

. Sizes 36 to 48 ·in regulllr, shorts

By LEE LEONARD
l)Pl Statehouse Reporter
&lt;XlLUMB~S (UP!) - State Issue 4 boils down to a case of
brmgmg Ohto out of the 19th century in funding government
construction projects or removing the taxpayer's right to vote
on deficit flllanctng, dependihg on your point of view ,
A 126-year old provision in the Ohlo Constitution forbids the
state to borrow more than $750,000ata time.
Every two years, more than $:;00 million worth of capita l
_construction projects are undertaken by the sta te as approved

by the legislature ·and linanced by Incoming revenues .
In the same manner, highway construction and
improvement projects are lunded through road-user taxes.
But any time tfie state wants to build more college dor·
mitnries, mental health facilities or correctional institutions it
must get the voters In amend the Constitution .
Slate Issue 4, approved by the .General Assembly, would
replace the $750,000 debt limit with a " floating" debt ceiling
according ID the amount of revenue being accumulated by the
state.
The General Assembly would be allowed to contract debt for
capital construction and improvements projects, land ac·
quisitions,ldllns ID local goverrunents and school districts, and
for retiring bonds. It would take a two-thirds vote of each
chamber. Current capital construction appropriations require
onl¥ a simple majority.
The new borrowing plan would be subject tn the following
limitations :

&lt;XlN&lt;XlRD, N: H. - THE NEW HAMPSHIRE House has
voted to give dying patients a chance ID die in peace, without
heing forced to use costly life....,ving machines.
By a 197-112 vote Thursday, House members overrode Gov .
Meldrim Thomson's velD of a bill giving legal status to " living
wills," docwnents in which a person may provide in advance
for the withholding or withdrawal of ,extraordinary means of
tile support in case of mortal injury or tenninal illness .

Ole size fits all sizes. School

WOMEN'S.

'

.,

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

BOYS'
WINTER
JACKETS

Plan Now To Open Your 1978

. ,

•

'

End of the Month Sale

Receive the 50th Free.

!EDITOR'S NOTE : Voters go to the polls Nov. 8 to vote on
lour statewide Issue~, more than ZOO sch110l operating levies
and to dedde ••vera! mayoral contests. FOllowing Is the float
article In a series ol pre-electlon dispatch.. prepared by
United Preas International on the contats and ls1uea on the
Ohio ballot . Today's article Is on State Jssuet, which calls lor a
ftexlble debt limit lor the state.)
·

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 9:30 TO 8 P.M.

SPECIAL
SALE
PRICES

October 29th, is the Last.Date To Pay
Your 49th Christmas Club Payment To

Issue 4 calls for flexible Ohio .d ebt limit

LE

END F THE M NTH

her ll00iJfllfit corporation .''

Mrs. O'Hair , 58, said she
had file comp laints against
Susan Stroebel a nd her
husband witll the cit)'
attor ney's off ice.
But Murray's 'lawyer,
former Austin Mayor Jeffrey
Frie-dman, said no arrest
warrant had been issued
against the Stroebels .
At that point Mrs. O'Hair
retorted, nvou are a liar ."
Austin police said Mrs.
O'Hair reported computer
equipment stolen from her
offi ce
and
said
an
in Jest igali on was being
co~ducted but no c harges had
been !Ued.
"There are boundaries of
decency that I think aU of us
must observe ," Murray said
of Mrs. Stroebel. "She is a
decent human being who is
married a nd has three
children."
Mrs . O'Hair and Murray
qedined to discuss the differences that led In his quitting
his job at the center last
month .
"No matter what Bill
Murray does, I love him ," she
to ld repo rters. ' 'I am
protecting him because I am
his mother ."

•

The Southern ' Local Board
of Education Thursday in
special session . adopted a
revised appropriation
measure including $71,500

Congress.
work
to
maintain
a
Retirees under age 72 now reasonable standard of living
may earn only $3,000in wages and avoid selling . their
without penalty. Above that homes.
·
they lose $1 in benefits for
Opponents argued that the
each $2 in wages WIIil all provision would give an untheir henefit is gone.
deserved windfall to "fat
The House voted, 263-149, cats," since a 6l&gt;-year-old
Thursday, as part of a bill to · doctor or lawyer could earn
finance Social Security into $100,000and collect full Social
the next century, to raise this Security.
"earnings limit" for retirees
Rep . 1\1 Ulbnan, !Ulre.,
between the ages of 65 and 72 floor manager of the bill, said
to $4,000 next year, $5,000 in the provision would add ID
1980, $5,500 in . 1981 and to . national unemployment and
eliminate it entirely in 1982. would change the very nature
The bill raises employer of Social Security from a
and employe Social Security . "retirement program,"
payroll taxes, particularly under which people receive
for high-income workers over benefits after they largely
the next decade, and sets stop working, In an " annunity
benefits for the next 75 years program," under which they
so each generation of retirees are paid just because they
would get about the same reach a certain age.
A version of the bill in the
relative standard of living as
those who retired in 1976.
Senate Finance Committee
Removal of tlle earnings only would raise the earnings
limit not only would allow :::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

aown.

Columbia
denies
charges

·
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UP!) - Columbia Gas of Ohio has
denied all charges brought
against it by Ohio Attorney
General William J. Brown as
a result of last winter's gas
supply problems.
Cclumbia also challenged
the right of the attorney
general to initiate the
litigation. The denials were
· included in a 13-page filing

retirees to work without
DON'T FORGET
made Thursday with the
penalty; it also would permit
The nation returns to
Public Utilities Commission
workerswhoreach65andare · standard time at 2 a.m.
of Ohio.
not covered by mandatory
Sunday, oct. 30. AI that
In
a
statement
retirement to stay in their
time clocks wlll be turned
accompanying , the filing,
jobs and at tlle same time · back one hour. ·Standard
Columbia Gas said that while
time will remain 1n effect
it continues to believe it is not
draw full Social Security.
until Aprll.
proper for the attorney
Rep. William Ketchum, liCalif., author of the p~oposal,
general to bring the action, it
said millions of retirees oo ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::: does not want to appear ID be
i~adequate pensions must
avoiding a reply to the PUCO.

a 6.5 mill operational· levy
Tuesday.
In other matters, the board
That am9unt will be due
Jan. I. It became available approved a leav'e of absence
a~er diStrict voters approved for Charles Wolfe, a bus
drive r; employed Diana
Williams as a substitute
teacher in grades 1·8 ;
In response to a questlon adopted a new school
pertaining to this, Miller said calendar that coincides with
the bridge is. the property of Meigs Local due to vocational
the state of West Virginia and st udents attending Meigs
will remain so.
High School; granted a
The bridge was reopened Brownie Troop permission to
use Racine Elementary
lastWednesdaytotrafflcafter School and set June 13 as the
being shut down for 15 straight last day of school for the 19'17\Veeks to allow for repairs on 78 school year.
·the· uppet-tension areas of it.
The next meeting will be
At the present time, only · Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m.
_two lanes are open In order to
Attending were Robert
give work crews enough room Sayre, president, Dallas Hill,
to complete repairs.
vice president, Jack Bostick,
The cominissioner also said Greg Roushh, David Nease,
that he expected to have a board members, Linda
complete report of the costs Spencer, clerk, Jim Adams,
and repairs made on the principal and Bobby Ord,
bridge sometime next week. superintendent.
borrowed

in

anticipated

revenue.

Bridge rumors are dispelled
West- Virginia Department
of Highways Commissioner
Charles L. Miller dispelled all
rumors Wednesday regarding the possibility t)lat the
Silver Memorial Bridge may
be closed again.
He said tllat the bridge is
safe to travel over and
workers will finish repairing a
few minor defects in the un·
derside of the span.
. One particular rumor,
which has been heard often in
this area, centers around the
possibility that the bridge will
· be turned over to the Federal
Highway Administration and
that they will clo~ it

limit 1D $6,000 in 1979. Wiman
said he hopes "some limit,.,
will be impQSed when tlle bills
gel to a House-Senate
conference.

••

The filing also maintained
that the Public Utilities Commission lacks the jurisdiction
lA:i grant much of the relief
sought by Brown and that
many or all of the complaints
are a direct and unavoidable
result of Colwnbia Gas of
Ohio complying with federal
and
slate
laws and
1regulations.
Brown had accused the
company of failing to provide
adequate storage facilities
which contributed to the
natural gas shortage last
winter.
'
HLast winter's problems
got ou t . of hand when
Columbia Gas of Ohio was not
allowed by PUCO In purchase
emergency
gas
to
supplement its supply,' '
Columbia said . " If Columbia
of Ohio had been allowed that
gas, we would still have had
heavy cur tailment but it
would have been limited to
cu stomers who can use other
fuels and schools and other
sensitive loads would not
have been affected ."

...

CHARLES H. MURRAY

Murray resigns
.
due to health
Charles tl. Murray, 416
Murray and his wife,
Delaware St., Ironton, for- Margaret,
ha ve
four
merly of Pomeroy , ha s children , Chuck, Columbus;
resigned from his duties as Anna, El Pa so, Te xas;
area manager for Columbia Minada ; Gallipolis , and
Gas of Ohio.
Charlotte of Ironton . They
Murray, who completed 35 also have 13 grandchildren .
years , of service lo the
company, requested to be
relieved from his po;t due to
ill health .
The Ironton area office,
Subcommittee to
headed by Murray, · Is
responsible for natural gas
servi ce to over 8,600
customers in Ironton , Coal outline ports
Grove, Hanging Rock, South
Point a nd surrounding areas.
&lt;XlLUMBUS (UP!) - An
Murray joined Columbia in Ohio House Wayg and Means
· 1942 as a serviceman in · subcommittee is expected to
Middleport . He became the meet next month with
Ironton area manager in 1964. representa tives of Ohio
A member of the Ironton business and port authorities
Chamber -of Com merce, ID reline legislation proposed
Masonic Lodge, Iron ton by the Rhodes administration
Country Club, the Lions Club to · , encourage
port
and the Lawrence County development on Lake Erie
Industrial Action Committee, and the Ohio River.
Murray is the son of Otho
The
s ubcommittee,
Murray who resides at 284 meeting during adjournment
Muiberry Ave., Pomeroy.
of the full General Assembly,
Murray plans to spend his heard testimony Thursday on
time gardening , fi shing, the port development bill and
hunting, with bow and gun, decided to work further on it
whittling wooden spoons and after . a three-day session 1n
spatules for his family .
mid-November,

...

~

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      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48945">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48944">
              <text>October 27, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3283">
      <name>bissell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2297">
      <name>tanner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
