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                  <text>1-Tbe Daily SO'ntl"'!L Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Selll. 2&amp;, 1977

r--------------------------~

:

Area Deaths

I

RALPH E. CLARK
BELPRE Ralph E .
Clark. 61 , 1013 Ridge Street,
Belpre,

died

Saturday

morni ng at Camden Clark

Hosp ital , Parkersburg .
following an extended Illness.
Mr. Clark was born at Port·
land . ln Meigs County, a son
of the late Marshall and
Bertha Cotemlln Clark . He
wasatsd preceded in death by

one son. a grandson. and four
brothers.
He attended Belpre schools

and spent 50 years here. He

was

affiliated

with

the

Church of the Nazarene her e

and was ·employed at Crest
Builder s as a carpenter.

He Is survl ~ed by his wlfe,

Dais,. Clark ; three sons,

Chares, of Denn fson , Oh io ;

Jim , Utlfe Hock i ng , and
Ern ie of
Belpre ;
one

I
Falls Cemetery for infant
Jessica Jill Shain, daughter
of David and Terry Hysell
Shain of Raci ne-. who died

Gallia County's Board of
Education Saturday night
vivt'd by her grandparents, approvoo a 4.65 pet. increase
Mr . and Mrs. Ra lph D. Shain in salary for all adof Racine and Mr . and Mrs. ministrative
personnel
Charles M. Hysell of reatroactive to Aug. 29.
Pomeory ; a brother. Jason
Included in the ad·
Dav id ,
and
a
great grandmother, Mrs. Garnet minisb'atlon are County Supt.
Ervine of Racine , The Rev . Thomas Hairston, David
Earl Shuler will officiate .
Campbell, Assistant Supt. for
administration and program;
elementary and
EMR
HARRY THEVENIN
Harry G. Thevenln , 84, a supervisors Adelaide Sanders
resld,ent of 12 Burger St ., and Eugenia Gardner; Jim
Gallipolis. died at 9: .0 p.m.
Satvrday in Holzer Medical Harris, school psychologist;
Center . He had been in failing Clifford Wilson, director of
health several months .
A retired boilermaker and
employee of the Acme Boiler
Works. he was born Nov. 21.

Mrs . Kathy Me·
Dan~el .
Belpre ; 11 grand·
ch tlden and four great .
and

1892. in Putnam County. W.

one

sister, Edith Weaver, Cutler,

Va . son of the late Charles
and
Dora
McGaughlin
Thevenin .
He Is survived by his wife,
Ada Boggs Theveni n, whom
he married Feb. 12, 1912, in
Gallipolis. Two sons survive :
Gordon, Parkersburg , and
Howard, Gallipolis. One son,
Cecil, preceded him in death
in 1968. Ole daughter died in
infancy. Eight grand and 16

011o.

Funeral services will be

held Tuesday at 10 a .m.. at the
Spencer

Funeral

Home In

Belpre with the Rev . Rebert

L.

Stewart

officiating

assisted by Jim Clark, Jr., his

grandson . Additional ser -

vices will be hel d at the
StiversvHie

Community

Church at 2 p.m. Friends may
call at the funeral home at
any time. Burial will be in the
church cemetery.

ADA CUTHBERT
COOLVILLE - Ada M.
Cufnbert, 94, of Coolville,
died early Monday morning
at the Ketchum Nursing

great grandchildren anc two
great great grandchildren
survive .
The following brothers and

sisters survive : Edward ,
Apple Grove , W. Va .;
Everett, Dan and Donald, all
of Winfield, W. Va. ; Arnold,
Dayton;Mrs.MaryCall, aslo

Home
in
Crooksville
followi ng a l·ong illness .'
Mrs. Cuthbert was born In
Be lmont
County,
Ohio,

of Dayton . One brother
preceded him In death.
He was a member of the
Be3r Run Church and a

d•ugnter of tne late William

former member of the Junior

and Carolyne Bower Wir·es .
She was also preceded in
death by her husband ,
James, 1n 19 .. 3 and 10
brothers and sisters. She was
a resident of Coolville the

past 33 years.
She Is survived by six

Order of Mechanics and the
Modern
Woodmen
of
America . He . was also a
former member of the K o'f p
Lodge.
Funeral services will be

held 2 p.m. Tuesday at tne
Waugh· Halley-Wood Funeral

nieces and four nephews.
Home with Rev. Jerry Neal
Funeral services will be ' and Rev . Charles Lusher
Wednesday at 1 p .m . at the officiating. Burial wi ll be in
White Funeral Home here Ohio Valley Memory Gar-

wlth the Re" . Roy Deeter

dens .

officiating . Burial will be In
Valley Cemetery in Reno,
Ohio. Friends may call at
funeral home after noon on
Tuesday.

Friends may call at the
f\meral home from 2·4 and 7-9
p.m . on Monday~
Pallbearers will be Gary
Thevenln, Chick Crites , John
t-lood, Tim Wa""llace and
Rodney Cr:ites, and Arnold

JESSICA JILL SHAIN
Graveside services will be
held todav at 1 o.m. at Letart

Druid .
Honorary pallbearers will

be Junior Thevenin and Jim
Wallace .
·

Laetrile said
useless, harmful
·symptoms vanishoo within 48
CHICAGO
(UP! )
Laetrile not only is useless in hours, the doctors said.
They said that in the second
treating cancer but it can be
case
a 40-year-old man taking
hannful to some persons and
Laetrile orally developed
may have contributed to
progressive muscular
SQme
deaths,
four
and
other
George t own University weakness
symptoms,
all
of
which
doctnrs said in the current
issue of the JoW'nal of. the subsidoo within 48 hours of
American
Medical discootinuance of Laetrile .
" There are no known
Association.
measW'es
to ensW'e quality
Two cases of " Laetrilecontro l of Laetrile. II
associated toxic reactions"
· were cltlld by the doctors in a behooves the advocates
making
claims
of
letter to the Journal.
"II cannot be assumll&lt;l that effectiveness of Laetrile not
Laetrile is nontoxic or that it only to provide data that
demonstrate
objective
has not . already contributed
benefits
from
this
material,
to the death of patients with
but
also
to
funiish
detailoo
malignant disease," they
!Dxicologic information."
said.
The doctors - Frllderick
Smith , Thomas Buder,
Stanley Cohan and Philip
Schein - cited two cases of
what they called "Laetrileassociated toxic reactions" in
MASON, W. V8.- A driver
their letter.
was injurlld in a single car
Laetrile, a substance made wreck on US 33 near here
from apricot pib!, has been Sunday at ~ : 45 p.m .. West
branded by the AMA and the Virginia State Trooper J . L.
Food and
Drug
Ad· Searls said listed in
ministration as worthless satisfactory condition · in
in the treatment of cancer. Pleasant Valley Hospital is
However, more than a dozen Sandy A. Knapp; 22, of New
states have legalizlld its use Haven, taken there by the
in response to public New Haven Rescue Squad.
pressure.
According to Searls, she
The Georgetown physicians was traveling east . when she
cited ooe case in which a 48- lost control and overturned
year-old woman taking her pickup truck. It was
Laetrile both intravenously demolishoo.
.and orally developed high
.
fever, malaise, headache and
E-R CALLED
abdominal cramps:
The
Mid d Ie p or t
Those
symptoms
Emergency Unit answered
disappear~~&lt;~ within two days
when the Laetrile therapy three calls Sunday : at 2:44
was discontinued , but p.m ., to La urel St. for
returned when she reswned Tammy Ferguson, taken to
taking the substance. Again, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
the Laetrile therapy was at 5:56 p.m.; to North Third
suspended and again the Ave., where a· man was
reportoo ill on the street but
was not at the scene when the
squad arrlvlld, and at 6:55
a.m. to North Second Ave. for
Lerena Plllln, taken to VMH.

Driver hurt
in accident

HAVE A

PROBLEM?
.
CALL

CRISISLINE

992-5554 .

finds road .to
•
full accreditation lS tough

Saturday night at Children's
Hospital In Columbus.
Born Sapt. :n. she Is sur.

dau~hter.

grandchildren ,

II Administrator

transportation and maintenance ; Denise .. Shockley,
school cafeteria director and
dietician, and all high school
and elementary principals.
Under a formula adoptoo
last January, administrative
personnel are paid on a ratio
from the. adopted teachers'
salary schedule. Teachers
with a Master's Degree start
at $9,855 and go to $14,607 with
maximum experience.
Under the new administrative salary schooule,
an assistant superintendent
with 12 month service goes to
$21 ,910.50 with II years; a 12
month director gets $20,741.94
with II years experience;
hi~h school principals went

from $19,$39 to $20,4-19.80;
supervisors from $18,618 to
$19,573 .38 ;
a
school
psychologist starts at
$13,205 .70 and goes to
$19,573 .38 with maximum
experience, while elementary
principals on a IOcmonth
contract start at $13,064.49
and go to $18,550.89 with II
years service.
Resignations
accepted
Saturday night includoo those
of Miss Cindy 'l'homp«&gt;n ,

Hoher Mooical Center
( (Dillcharges, Sept.Z3)
Mrs. William Adkins and
daughter, Darla Angel,
Charles Bailey , William
Bowman, James Buttrick,
Gene Childers, Alice Clark,
Roberta Crabtree, Melvin
Cremeans, Christine Dalton,
David Davis, Amy Elkins,
John Fox , Jr. , . Lillian
Graham, Tammy Handley,
Mark Haner, Robert Harper,
Cecil Henry, Joseph Hite,
Sally Holman, Jean Lambert,
Mrs. James Large and
daughter, Ronald Lewis, Acy
McCarty, Clarence · Miller,
Martha Mustain, Mary
Palmer, Ida Preston, Wretha
Rairden, Patricia Rhodes,
Nora Robbinson, Angela
Rowe , Daryl Shoemaker,
Bobby Stringer, Lavada
Swindler, Lester Thompson,
Linda Webb, Mrs. William
Wells and daughter, Frances
Woomer, Mrs. David Wright
and son.
(Births, Sept 23)
Mr. and Mrs. William
Imboden , a
daughter,
Rutland. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Malone, a daughter,
Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. James
Counts, a dau!!hter, Middleport. Mr. and Mrs. Vonley
stanley, a son, Patriot. Mr.
and Mrs. Ollie Adkins, a
daughter, Oak Hill.
(Discharges, Sept 24)
Mamie Brumfield, Sarah
Cain, Carolyn Clark, Eddie
Co leman, Elva Cottrill,
Jennifer Crabtree , Ruth
Cross, Pearl Egnor, Mrs.
Charles Fuller and son,
Sharon Harris, James Hash,
Grace Holter, Catherine
Kisor,
Virginia Mann,
Kathryn McAllister, Ronald
Newsom, Ernest Plnkennan,
.------

Three bands of Bend area
schools competro Saturday
for honors in marching and
playing with two winning a
first in at least one category.
The Meigs Marauder
marching band won second in
AA competition and first with
its drum major in the Point
Pleasant Band·A-Rama.
Also competing was the
Southern High· band. Vinson
High of Huntington was
grand champion. Fifteen
bands competoo.
Mason county's Wahama
High School band went to the

Jay Rowe, Terry Shain, Rev.
Ralph Spires, Mrs. Larry
Thornton and son, Darrell
Tilley Jr., Ovid Trotter, John
Watkins, Earl Yates.
(Births, Sept. 24)
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Potts,
a daughter, Oak Hill. Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Walker , a
daughter, Henderson , W. Va.
(Discharges, Sept 24)
James Bragg III, Mullle
. Clagg, Paul Harris, Mrs.
Robert Hartley and daughter ,
· Chris Iianms, Neil Kuhn,
Raymond Lucy,
Clara
Morgan , Richard Owens,
Billy Reffitt Jr., Mrs. Ken·.
neth RA!ynolds and daughter,
Olive Reynolds, Margaret
Sayre, Shawn Secen, U&gt;ri
Skidmore, Charlotte Smith,
Donald Stapleton , Nolan
Swackhamer.
(Birth, Sept. %5 )
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Dempsey , a daughter ,
Jackson.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Martha
Oldaker, Robertsburg; EdDa
Anderson, Point Pleasant;
Mrs . Young Choi, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Robert
Gordon , Leon ; William
Woodyard, POint Pleasant ;
James McClure, Letart; Mrs.
Melvin
Gillispie
and
daughter, Pliny; Mrs. Gerald
Sigmon, Gallipolis ; Mrs. Ora
Rupe, daughter, Northup, 0.;
Mrs. David Henry and twins,
GaUipolls Ferry; Mrs. Gary
Hupp , Patriot; Margaret
Crawford, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. U&gt;rraine Crump, Leon;
Mrs. Joe Hanunond, Hen·
derson ; Marilyn Adkins,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Morgan, Point
Pleasant ; Kendall Cle n·
denen, New Haven ; Marion
Flores, Pomeroy; Mrs. Terry
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. John Edwarda, Mason.
CARS DAMAGED
Two cars had medium
damages and one driver was
arrested following an accident on E. Main st. atl0:16
p.in. Saturday. Pomeroy
police said a car driven by
Mark Matson, 21 , Rutland,
had stopped to make a left
tum into Kroger's when it
was struck from the rear by a
ca r driven by Larry Sigler,
Tl, Rutland. There were no
injuries. Sigler was to be
charged with driving while
intoxicated, police said.

,"'f': · .-·

-

~~
· • ·"'-' A
~~ •L~ 1.~4
BAKER FU-RNITURE'S
..•:..

,'

•

25th

Ellis, Dev ine (8) and Fahey ;
Langford, Dunn ing (5), Mitchell
C9 l. Lacey C9' &gt; and Hosley. WEIHs, II ~ 12. L- LangfOrd. 8-lP.

HRs -

Oakland,

Gross (22) .

Page

(21),

•

ELBERFELD$

Eastern Kentucky Marching
Band Festival at Ashland
where 20 banda competed and
the
White
Falcon
organization won first place
in "category competition"
and second in its parade
marching.

SEE OUR SELECTION

ti'ments, a serious one
regarding our age which
cannot but be seen as a strong
warning in itself - that is, the
approach of the end of our life
in the temporal order.
" The fear of God 's
judgment at the moment of
death is always present and
full of mystery," he said.
"This obligates us to feel
great humility. We feel the
fragility of human life."
It .was the latest. in a series
of references by the pontiff in
recent months to his own ·
death .

f•"
t '.~
. ~'

Home Furnishings and Major Appliances

at low cost to JOU

3-PIECE

BEDROOM SUITE

.·
'

I
•

$}4800 . ~

JEEUS TODAY

~

BAKER FURNITURE

)

_

see Ohio hardship

at left . ..
. SOUTHERN ffiGH QUEEN CANDIDATES AND A'ITENDANTS - One of three senior

MEN'S 3 PIECE

gil'Is.will be. ~~wned homecoming queen of Southern High Scl)ool Friday night during
halft~e acllV!ties of the Southern-Wahama football game. Shown are, hack (queen
candid~tes) 1.,., Ivanna Powell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Powell, Brindisi, Italy, who

Paul VI
thinking
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Pope Paul VI marked his 80th
birthday today by sending
flowers to the Iomba of his
psrents and contemplating
what he says is his ap- .
preaching death and final
judgment in the eyes of God.
The Vatican spokesman,
the Rev. Romeo Pancirolo,
said the pontiff spent the
morning working as usual
and Instructed the bishop of
his hometown of Brescia to
place Dowers at the Iomba of
his parents.
On Sunday, the pontiff had
a lunch meeting with
relatives, including his only
surviving brother, former
Italian Senator Ludovico
Montini.
Paul, who has been
!IPiritualleader ofthe world's
700 million Roman Catholics
for 14 yea rs, set a somber
.tone for his birthda y
celebration and an address tD
60,000 persons gathered
&amp;lnday in St. Peter's Square.
"We must open our soul to
you," the Pope told the
gathering. " We are di~ided in
our soul by two-fold sen-

~9

By JOHN T. KADY
dletown, al'"' a1111o'!nced I~..J Rhodes, In his telegram to
Ullitoo Press Iateruatluoal
week thalli was laymg off 'ill' .Carter, said "thousands of
Gov. James A. Rhodes persons at ita Middletown and Ohio citizens in the Mahoning
today asked Pr~dent Carter New Miami, Ohio ·wurks.
Valley in northeastern Ohio
to "come to Ohio to see for · . ·}.!&lt;&gt;.!~ st&lt;:tl ,l,JlMing : firms have been left jobless by the
yourself the widesprud ated foretgJJ' llnporls and a n noun c e m e n t of
hardship caused by foreign,, s.tringent :a'~~i-pollution Youngstown Sheet and Tube
steel
imports
and · F!'l!llllat10ns unposed by the Steel company to close its
llllreasonable" anliil(lllutioo U.S. Envu:orunental Agency plant.
time tables.
as the mam reasons for the
"On behalf of the steel
Rhodes senl a telegram to production cutbacks.
workers, I invite you to come ·
Carter, inviting him to the
In a related development, toOhiotoseeforyoW'selfthe
Buckeye State and also asklld Sen. John Glenn and RA!p. widespead hardship caused
.u.bor Secrlary Ray Marshall O!arles Carney, both ~hio, by foreign steel imports anq
tq
make
sure
that urged repesentatives of the unreasonable EPA lime
Youngstown Sheet and Tube· steel industry to pelition"the limits," said Rhodes .
Co. employees who are losing International Trade Commis"I know you are a
their jobs receive every sion ~or relief from foreign companssionate man who
company benefit they are steel Imports.
wants to help the steel
entiUed to.
And in still another workers and their families,"
Youngtown Sheet and Tube development, U.S. District said Rhodes. " Your personal
Co. on Sept. 19 annollllclld it Court Judge Frank J . Battisti observation of the conditions
was closing part of its In Cleveland asked the here will enable you to take
facilities at Campbell in the Justice Department to the action necessary to
Mahoning Valley and laying mvestlg~~le the cutback by preserve the jobs of the
off 5,000 persons.
Youngstown Sheet and Tube workmg people."
Armco Steel Corp., Mid- Co.
Rh&lt;ides, in his telegram 1o

The
Roush
F amlly
Association of America ill
accepting family material
again due to postponement of
publication. Descendants are
Ill send material to Walden
Roush, 2003 MI. Vernon Ave.,
Point Pleasant, W. Va. Full
names, dates and places If
possible are needoo. Also,
Indicate the volume, page
and number a family was last
includoo in order that It be
includoo properly. Deadline
Is Dec. 1.

lives With h':" grandmother, .Wanda Powell, Racine; Joy Neigler, daughter of Sarah
Neigler, Racme, and Cheryl Wilson , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilson Letart Falls·
front, 1-r (atten~nts ) U&gt;rl Chapman, junior, daughter of Mr. ancf Mrs . Ro~rt Chapman'
Syracuse, and Crista Beegle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Beegle, Racine. Absent wa~
Amy Souders, !l(lphomore attendant candidate, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Groggle
Portland.
'

Marshall, said the Labor
Department should make
sure the Youngstown Sheet
and Tube Co. employes get
the benefits coming to them
because there have been
reports tl'tis ill not the case .
" In the past few days we
have heard too many times
that the company is being
rigid and inflexible in
interpreting c ontract
provisions, with the result
workers are not getting the
benefit&amp; they thought Uley
had coming ," Rhodes said .
"~eel and Tube Co. must
realize it has brought about a
major tragedy for thousands
of families in Youngstown ,
Campbell and Struthers.
" RA!asonable people will
not tolerate nit11icking by
~eetand Tube in the wake of
the d~vastating economic
blow 1t has brought on the
area, " Rhodes said.
The governor said the firm
has "had 75 years of highly
successful operation in
Youngstown (and) has an
obligation and a duty to these
families, some now in their
second and third generation
of steelmaking for the
company.
"~eel and Tube Co. should
bend over backwards to
provide every possible
sepa ration and pension
benefit
to
its
loyal

seeking rebel ;rom imports
Ullder the -" ' · .·.d Tariff
Acts.
They said successful
petitions to the International
Trade Comm ission could
" lead to orders that would
llffect import levels, tariffs
an~ pricing."
·
Battisti in his request 111
the Justice Departrnent ,
noted that the federal
government declined to
contest a merger between
Lykes Corp. and Sheet and
Tube in 1969.
"The people of the Unitro
Slates, particularly those
within the Mahoning Valley,
must be assured that the
decision to close is not an
outgrowth of any violation of
the antitrust laws, and that it
does not breach any
expressed
or
implied
representations made by
Lykes lo the government to
secure its approval of the
acquisition and merger of
1969," said Battisti.

employees/' said Rhodes. "If

en tine

y
. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 115

Kidpom bills
may ~e pushed
too rapidly

•

'

'

M~ddlepoJ1 &lt;lelay~d
A request for a rate increase by the P~lntview
Cable TV Co., .to Middleport
Village Council was tablro
Monday night in a regular
llelllon.
Dick Newell preaented the .
proposal, pomtmg out that
the company has had no rate
Increase for cable television
servlc.e ~Jnce : it began
operating m Mi~dleport six
years ago. He said that rates
had been increased in other
toWllB .but not ln. Middleport.
He pomtro out mflaUon and

Stop in and see our selection of me~·s 3
I~

piece Vested Svits In ·solid colors and
patterns. Size 38 to 46 - regulors anc
longs. Kuppenhelmer brand .

.

MEN'S SPORT OOATS
New Fall patterns and colors In men 's
regul~rs and longs. 38 to 46
- Also wool blazers ln navy and brown.

sport coah -

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

plans for improvements lis
making the rate increase
necessary.
Newell said that the
proposal would raise the rate
for television cable service to ·
a home from $5.50 a month to
$6 and that disabloo and
senior citizens would be
combined in the .f uture Into
one category with a 25 per·
cent rllduction being granted.
On the $6 monthly rate
these people would pay $4.50.
At the present time, disabled
persons pay $4 a month for
·

~;w;;:.:=os:::ms;;
e ·.:;&lt;. &amp;,';li'e;:s"l~.-;,:,n·~~~iir~,~~~.;~Si$$!~H
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' .r N
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Size 29 to 42 and extra size 4A to 48 . Solids
and patterns - exceptionally good values .

. By Unltoo Press latematlonal
··
COLUMBUS _ omo OFFICIAl.'&gt; say the state's fire
safety laws are tangloo in a spaghetti-like system that could

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

ANEW IDEA
FOR OUR TOYS

the service and senior
citizens pay $3.50. The in·
crease in rates would be
about 28 percent for the
senior citizens and the
disabled and about eight
percent for other customers.
Installation rates would be
raised from $10 to $15 for a
private home but Newell
indicatro that the company
might never use the higher
installation rate.
He stressed that the
company provides good
service (better than in most
metropolitan areas)·and at a

but the matter · beCame a
problem in the wording of the
measure as it was present~~&lt;~ .
Mayor Froo Hoffman said
that the original agreement
stated that council must
approve all rate hikes by,.Ute
cable company and indicated
that the new proposal uppears to change that.
R li y
Musgrave ,
representing the company,
said the new measure refers
back to the original
agreement which states that
all rate changes must be
presented to council for

Councilrate..
President Marvin
cheaper
Kelly
voiced
his
disagreement with the rate
increase for senior citizens.
H d'
d
e 1sagree with senior

Musgrave said there is no
approval.
public service commission to
regulate television rates and
indicated that he feels the
'
company can mount a legal
~~:~':5e ra~:c~~!~~~Y a:!

f~~~~:ss~Y~~a~ hig~:~~~!~

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1977

Cable TV rate hike in

WASHINGTON (UPI)Congress Is rushing to
make child pornogra·
'phy
a
federal
of'
fense,
rolling
over
warnings from lawyer
members that it may be
playing Into the bands of
smut dealers by passing
unconstltntlonal bills .
A measure passed
Monday by the House on a
· lopsldlld 375·12 vote would
order stiff prison terms and
fines for anyone producing
or
distributing
pornographic material In·
volvlng children under 16.
RA!p. John Conyers, DMicb. , warned the bill
would
Invite
court
challenges that mlgbt be
sustalnoo for faUure to
meet tbe lest of First
Amendment rights of free
speech.

there are gray areas in
interpreting Ule contract, the
Department of Labor shouid
step in and see that they are
resolvoo in favor of the
workers. ' '
Glenn and Carney, in a
letter to both management
and labor steel industry
representatives, said the
Ohio
congressional
delegation would help in

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
. Thursday t hrough
Saturday, fair Thursday
and a chance of showers
Friday and Saturday.
Highs will he in the upper
60s or 70s and lows wm be
In the upper 40s or 50s.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::.::::::::

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and ·
Woonesday, lows to low 50s,
high to 75. Probability of
precipiiation is 20 percent
today and 10 percent tonight
and Woonesday .

O'Neill promises
•
action on energy
•

.

.

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill,
after meeting with President
Carter; said today Congress
will produce a strong energy
bill despite a series of Senate
.s etbacks
for
the
administration.
"The House is not set in
cement ·but it's · going to be
pretty rigid " when the
legislation is sent to a
conference committee of the
two bodies to adjust
differences, O'Neill said.
Carter made a rare
appearance in the White
House press room Monday to
rally public - and Senate op,Qion against "special
interest l?bbys, " which he

•

-

.

..

.

said " are seeking to
deregulate the price of new
natural gas." And he invited
Democratic
congressional

leaders to this morning 's
breakfast fo a'ppeal for
SllPport in rejecting oil and
gas interest "lobbying
pressure" against his
program.
·
Speaking to reporters
outside the White House after
an hour-long breakfast
meeting·, O'Neill refused to
say, for instance, whether the
House conferees would insist
on a wellhead lax, which has
been defeate&lt;!__in the Senate.
" I don't want to get into
what· the conferees are going
to do," O'Neill said. "! just
say we're going to come out

.
. . .. . .
with a strong bill ."
O'Neill also said Congress
probably Will send Carter a
five-bill energy package ,
which would allow the
president to single out and
veto any bill that deregulates
natural gas. .
·
. O'Neill refusoo to criticize
either the Senate or Senate
Democratic .Leader Robert
Byrd of West Virginia for the
difficulties the energy
package has encountered
there.
" Don't judge the leadership
of the Senate until you see the
final package. I have eonfi·
de nee .. . Senator Byrd is a
fine mechanic," O'Neill said.
Byrd himself dodged
reporters on his way back to
(Continull&lt;l on pqe 10)

Awards presente·d 4 H
.
th
.
yoU S
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:,::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::=::::: ·

notpreventaholocausisuchasthatone .thatkilledl64persons
last May 28 in li Southgate, Ky . supper club fire , it was
reported today · Scripps-Howard newspapers said the officials
claim lament there is no single agency or official that has the
respoosibility to head off a potentially dangerous fire .
Yet neither the state fire marshal's of!ice nor any agency
with ties to fire regulations has received a massive report
lasued last week to the governor of Kentucky on the Beverly
Hlllit club fire at Southgate. This work of several Kentucky and
national agencies indicated that "many officials relioo on
someone else to correct the situation. each in turn believing
either that he was without power to act or that the other had

patrons. He said, however,
that the service is not an
essential one and opined that
those dissatisfied could
discontinue the service.
Council did not appear for
the most part to be objectionable to the increase

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. ~ ALABAMA A'ITORNEY General
William J . Baxley says the arrest of a former Ku Klux
Klansnan in the 1963 chW'ch bombing that killoo four teenage
.black girls is "just a start" toward prosecuting the case.
. ROOert Otambliss, 73, became the first person indicted by
the Jefferson County Grand Jury in the 14-year~ld case that
was reopened by Baxley last February. "It's just a start,"
Baxfey said after Cambliss' arrest Monday. "We've got a long
way tD go toward getting there."
Shortly after the bombing of the Sixteenth Str.eet Baptist
Olurch, Chambliss was convicted with two. other men for
illegal possession of dynamite , But the convictions were
overtumoo on appeal.

school probed Honda 'wants to make cycles
in new plant near Columbus

acted."

prog~am to begin for another year. This year we have!
new Idea for our toys.
Each year the Pomeroy Fire De pi. and t:mergency
Squad do more than their share to help our communities

Now we want to help them .

· MIDOL£PORT, 0.

-~

·

This year we will hold a SILENT AUCTION lor the
dolls and toys with the procHds going toward the

!

~

Emergency Squiid's

n~w emergency vehicle.

These men help us if'! our hours of need,

~

noW let's help

them when !hey need us. Do your thing today come in and
PICk up your doll or toy.
'

i
'
0

!

Farmers Bank

l'

~

POMEROY, OHIO

'

$40,000 Ma. im um lnsuranct f&lt;k Each lleposjtor

l•

Member Federal Depos[ Insurance Cori'Of3fi&gt;n

!&lt;

I

ANNIVERSARY Jl
4
SAL&amp;
~;~_'
Featuring the very finest in

004 020 02o---.- 8 10 (I
200 100 03G- 6 11 0

S-Sgt. and Mrs. Roger
Marria ge licenses were
issued to Charles Roland Free, Hopkinsville, Ky .,
Judy Rlghthouse,
Oliver, 20, Pomeroy, and former
Laura Gwen Hoover, 19, announce the birth of a
Middleport; Douglas Alvin daughter, Brandl Joe, on
Byrd, Jr., 19, Clinton, Miss., Sept. 7, at Jennie stuart
and Reamae U&gt;ulse Mohler, Hospital. The infant weighed

Carter invited

·

rejectoo by council.
It was decidoo to have .
Solicitor Bernard Fultz look
· ·
over the paperwork involvoo
intheraiseproposedandtake
One hundred awarda were
up the matter at the next presentoo to Meigs County 4regular meeting. Effective H members at an Awards
(Continued on pqe 10)
Night Monday at Pomeroy
Elementary School. The
campany providing the
medals and the recipients
respectively were :
Achievement (Ford) •.

B&amp; E, theft

at·

•

Virginia Jordan, faul Cross.
Agricultureal (!H), Patty
Dyer, Noah Hysell, David
Thornton, Sonia Carr.
Bread (Standard BrandS) ,
Brenda Boyles, Tammie
Starcher, Judi Perry.
Citizenship
(Coca-Cola ),
Mary Mora, Lester Jeffers.

Clothing (Coats &amp; Clark
Inc.), Dixie Eblin, Jeannie
Welsh , Tammie Starcher,
Raeleen Oliver.
Commodity
Marketing
(Chicago Board of Trade ),
Ed Holter.
Conservation of Natural
Resources (John Deere),

Terri Pullins; Becky Phillips,
Nickey Leonard, Lark
Napier.
Dairy (Insurance Co. of
NA), Stepha!iie Radford, Ed
Holter.
Beef (Meigs Co. 4-H
Comm.), Paula Miller, Regie·
(Continulld on pqe 10)

, It is time lor our Oress.A. Doil and Design-A. To

.

(2nd g11me-)
Texas
Oaklnd

'
'!'he Pomeroy - Middleport 20, Pomeroy, and to Jerry A.
Lions Club will meet at noon Queen, 22, Middleport, and
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn. Paula Queen, 21, Middleport.
All members are urgoo to
Meigs area women wishing
attend.
an appointment for WedOhio Valley Commandery nesday's free cervical cancer
24, Knights Templar, will clinic to be held from 12:30
hold a stated conclave at 7:30 p.m . to 3:30 p.m. at Trinity
p.m. Wednesday at the Church may call 992-5368
Masonic Temple. All Sir daily or 992-5832 In the
Knights are W'goo to attend. evenings.

Bands compete

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions Wiima Riggs, Racine; David
Deem, Racine; Milo Guthrie,
Coolville.
Saturday Discharges Betty Spaun,
Virginia
Musser, Paul Bums, Audria
Arnold, Floyd Bush, Wilma
Parmalee, Clara Paulsen.
Sunday Admissins
George
Betztng,
New
Philadelphia ; Dale Hensley,
Pomeroy ; Marvin McGuire,
Pomeroy; Ro.bert DiVietro,
Pomeroy ; Peter Butcher,
McArthur; Euvetta Bechtle,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges Jeanie Roush, Grace Gloeck·
ner, James Steele.

band director at Kyger Creek
for the past two years and
Anna Salyers, a regular bus
driver.
Charles Wills, Charleston,
W. Va., former hand director
at Eastern High School in
Meigs County, was appointoo·
band director at Kyger
Creek. Wills is a graduate of
Marshall University where
he received his Master's
Degree in Music in August.

Notices, local briefs

aix pounda and 11 oiiJICI!I.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . William Rlghthouse,
Pomeroy and Mrs. and Mrs.
Lafe Free, PortJmouth. Sgt.
and Mrs. Free allo have a
son, William Roger, age three
and a half.

CJ

\

Sheriff James J.. Proffitt
said today his department is
investigating a breaking and
entering and theft of a new
black {lnd white TV at the
Salem Center School. No
other facts can be releasoo,
he said, at this time.
The department also is

'

Investigating a complaint
. from Froo Karshner and
Randall Wilson of Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, that a beagle dog
and a collie were shot
Monday afternoon with a .22
rifle. Wilson had to destroy
his dog. The beagle, ownoo by
Karshner, survived.

LONDON
. IN'l'ERNATIONAL . COFFEE
NEGOTIATORS met Monday without a hope of bringing down
the price of coffee.
"That subject isn't even on the agenda," one delegate said.
The 3l.sl aession of the International Coffee Council, the 66natlon body which oversees the world's' coffee trade; openoo a
A 17 year old girl has been officer.
flvM!ay .meeting which will give housewives little promise of .
returnoo to O.Y.C. (Scioto
rellef from hlgh coffee prices.
The permanent comSchool for Girls), Powell, mitment was filed after
WASHINGTON - BY A HUGE MARGIN, the House of Ohio, on a permanent com· several charges of disorderly
Repr !sentaUves wants the Postlll Service to continue Saturday mitment.
conduct and violation of
The girl 'had been returned probation.
mall deliveries.
The House voted, 371-9, Monday to tell the service not to home in August after being . Also taken to Children's
cut Saturday deliveries. But the measure, which was sent to sentenclld to a temporary 's tudy Center was a 15 year
the Senate, was in the form of a "sense of Congress" commitment· to O.Y.C . that old b;;y on a temporary
consistlld of a 35 day stay at commitment after he and
~WDlullon, which lacks the force of law.
the Children Study Center in others took his father's van
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - WEST VIRGINIA'S CAPITAL Columbus, accordl!lg to Carl and later went to California.
city hu agreed to allow a performance of ''Oh I · Calcutta! " Hysell, juvenile probation
ned MClflth over the objections of one city collllcllman who said
ita nudity might prove too much for those with "excitable

Female juvenile retumed
to Scioto School for Girls

Court actions are reported

teadelidee.''

'l1le city's avtc Center-Municipal Board voted at a half.
boiB' caed meeting Monday to allow an Oct. 14 performance
clelptte al a city ordlnlliCe barring nudity , The only dissent

CIDI8 fl:om Councllmu Y. Howard ~ck, wbo warnlid, "J.feel
IIMniiiiiJ ba indlviduaiB atten~ this musical with excitable
tenckllclel, which could be affected to the point of commlitlng
-

type al crlnie."

.

•

,

,.

AN INVESTIGATION OF LYKES

(Collllllllld on pap 101

Two suits for ·divorce, one against Kenneth E . Lunsford, .
dissolution and a suit for Columbus.
Filing
for
money have been filed in dissolution were Sue Ann
Meigs County Common Pleas Reed, Rt. I, Reedsvllle and
Court. ·
Willard Lee Reed , same
Tom J. Teasley, Rt. 1, address.
Pomeroy, flloo l!llit against
The Elberlelds In Pomeroy
Glenna Joyce Teasley, no Co.
a suit in the amount
address recorded, and Carol of $1,149.09 against Sam R.
S. Lunsford, Pomeroy, Lewis, Rt. 2. Po"lfroy.

flloo

TOKYO (UPI) - Honda
Motor Co., the world's top
motorcycle maker and
Japan's fifth largest car
manufacturer, announced
today it is negotiating with

the state of Ohio over
embarking on motorcycle
production there.
Hldeo SugiW'a, ' managing
director of the company, said
at a news conference Union

Leaikrship likes Honibl 's
· plan to put plant in Ohio
By J. R. KIMMINS
OOLUMBUS (UP I) - The chairman of the Ohio
Senate Finance Committee said late Monday there is
"support among the leadership of the Ohio General
Assembly" to. provide between $1 million and $1.5
million to attract a Honda automobile and motorcycle
manufacturing plant \0 Union county.
"! think that kind of money can he found," said
Sen. Harry Meshel, P.Youngstown. "'lbatls the kind of
investment I favor .
·
"There is no state Indebtedness. You are not giving
away the state treasury. It is realistic," he said, adding
the money might be appropriatoo in the pending, $517
million, capital improvements budget before his
conuntttee.
Meshel said he would not favor tax incentives
authorized by the legislature to attract Honda and that
he had been recently told by Gov. James A' Rhodes
that discussions were under way between Ohio and
Hoods officials to locate the plant in Union COWity.
He indicated that the plant might be placed on or
near the state.()wned Transportation RA!seareh Center
oo the Union-U&gt;gan collllly border and that state
money would be ll$ed Ill improve the site.
..

County in Ohio is the "strongest" choice of locations for
Honda's projected venture in
the Unttoo states.
SugiW'a met with newilmen
in response to local press
reports that the firm plans to
set liP a factory in Ohio to
become the first Japanese
motorcyc le-car maker to
produce vehicles in America.
"We are under negotiations
with the state of Ohio on
conditions (for Honda to
establish its piant)," Suglura
said .
1
'There are two or three
places in Ohio (und er
consideration ) but Union
County is the strongest
possible site. But we calUlOI
say for ~ure because the
negotiations are still under

way/' be said.
He said Honda initially
plans to produce 3,000 to 5,000
motorcycles per month but
wants eventually to go into
production of passenger
cars.
Sugiura said Honda wishes
to establish its factory in Ohio
with a view toward achieving
"eo-existence and co-prosperity" in the midwestern
U.S. state.
He said Honda pickoo Ohio
because of its easy access to
transportation, outstanding
labor and automobile parts.
He also said that "there
seem to be no problems" with
taxation.
SugiW'a said Honda hopes
to hire about JOO to 400 people
(Continulld on pqe 10)

First contracts signed
PIKETON - '!'he first two
construction contracts for the
U. S. Energy Research and
Development Administration
(ERDA) Centrifuge paint
were signed and swarded
here Monday.
James L. Abercrombie
ERDA Portsmouth Are~
Manager, signed coniracts

with Fortec Constructors for
construction of the ERDA
administration building and
with B. G. Danis for
relocation of six existing
warehouses. Work on both
projects will begin in about
two weeks and each will take
approximately one year to
complete.

,

�Z- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 'EI, 1977

.

,

Cut-rate air fare ruling by Carter aids consumers
By EDWARD K. U.WNG

Columbia confident it has
gas for second cold winter
By J.R. KIMMINS

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Natural gas
utility executives assured Gov. James A.
Rllodes Monday that they will be able to
satisfy winter-healing energy demands
even if the weather is s.to-10 percent
colder-than-normal.

uwe've come a long way," said Marvin

White, chairman of the Coh.mbis Gas Co.
of Ohio. "It appears thai we should be able
to get by with no unemployment - no real
hardship."
White said the only curtailments his
utility anticipates would be a 40 percent
cut in supply beginning Jan. 1 to those
industries which could ea'!ily switch to
alternative fuels and a 10 percent
curtailment for conunercial customers
who could, through nonnal conservation,
absorb the loss.
There would continue to be a prohibition
against using natural gas as a boiler fuel,
added White.
Officials of the Dayton Power and tight
Co., the Cincinnati Gas and Electric Co.
and the East Ohio Gas Co. gave Rhodes
similar estimates of an increased supply
situation going into the winter.
Last winter's weather was 17.9 percent
· colder-than-normal.

W.W, FerreU, chainnan of the Colwnbia
Gas Transmission Corp., told Rhodes that
his company, which supphes retailers in
seven states. will have stockpiled 655
billion cubic feet of gas for the winter 22.8 billion cubic feet more than in t976-77.
For Columbia of Ohio, which gets all its
gas from Columbia Transmission, there
will be a total supply of 313.5 billion cubic
feet, about 11.6 billion cubic feet more than
last year.
East Ohio general counsel Robert Corp
said his utility will have 1.4 billion more
cubic feel. DP&amp;L vice president Jim
Trittschuh said he will have an additional 2
bi!Uon cubic feet, an increase of 4.5
percent.
"We're not out of the woods, but we have
more gas supply than last year," summed
up Robert Ryan, director of the Ohio
Energy and Resource Development
Agency.
Rhodes, however, said he would Uke the
gas utilities to be prepared for "50 below"
weather.
"It's still up in the air as far as I'm
concemed," he said. 11 1 hope we never
have to go through another winter as we
did last year."

Pentagon supports treaty
U.S. military view, whiCh he
expected to emphasize also to
the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. 1be Pentagon 's
review the treaties,'' he said. considerations include these
Meanwhile, Brown told the national security factors :
- The treaties accord the
House International
United
States "a preferred
Relations Committee
position"
if it wishes its
Monday: "I am pleased ... to
state that the Department of warships to transit the canal
Defenae wholeheartedly and rapidly.
-The treaties provide for
fuUy supports these treaties,
and to explain why they the long-term effici~nt
operation of the waterway
deserve our - and your through a phased turnover of
full support."
canal
operations to the
Brown testified before the
Panamanians
by 2000.
House panel because the
-Before the end of .the
House wiU play a role in
passing
implementing century, the United States
legislation for the treaties. will carry the majo~ role in
1be treaties will turn over the defending the canal.
-After 2000, the United
canal to Panama by the year
States
will have an
2000 if approved by two-thirds
unimpaired
" unilateral
of the Senate and a plebicisite
right"
to
intervene
militarily
in Panama.
Brown was outlinin~ the to defend the canal and
protect its neutrality.

By NICHOLAS DAND..OFF people

WASHINGTON (UP!) Secretary of Defense Harold
Brown says the Pentagon has
fqur key military reasons for
''wholeheartedly and fuUy"
supporting the Panama
Canal treaties.
Brown was testifying today
iil the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, which
is holding three weeks of
hearings
into
the
controversial pacts.
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance, the first major
administration witness, told
the panel Monday he opposed
a:national referendum by the
A.merican people to approve
the canal treaties.
"In answer to a question
!(om Sen. Robert ·Griffin, RMich., Vance said tlie
Constitution requires the
Senate - not the American

to
ratify
international treaties.
"It seems to me the Senate
is the appropriate body to '

Griffith at
•

•

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Any relief for
ulcer victim?
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Help!
f'm desperate! I'm a ~year­
old female and have suffered
with duodenal ulcers for over
~0 years. ['ve had three major bleeds and doctors
pleading to operate.
; I quit my job as "job
pressures" created a second
ulcer plus a bleed. I could endure the ulcer discomfort but
with it always came an exeruciating backache which
makes me feel weak.
Not working has relieved
my symptoms but has not
been a total cure. Now, I've
read of a new miracle drug
which produces a rapid cure
of ulcers but it's in England.
Is there any hope for me
other than surgery? Does the
drug show promising results?
DEAR READER- A peptic
ulcer may occur in either the
stomach or the duodenum,
but 80 per cent of them are
duodenal- the type you have.
They are much more common in men than in women
and perhaps that is partly
related to "job pressures"
since more men are in high
pressure iobs than women.
Your job experience may be
an example of how this could
change if more and more
women move into high
pressure jobs.
The pain in the back may
be caused by the ulcer location. It may be penetratiug
the back side of the
duodenum or irritating the
pancreas which is Imbedded
against the duodenwn.
I used to advise a period of
hospltalizatiori to treat the
ulcer under controUed conditiona before deciding on
llUillery. That way the doctor
could be sure the medicines
were taken regularly in the
right amOWtta and thaI the
diet was exactly what he
prescribed. It is still a good
idsa but the staggering custs
&lt;X holpltaliJatioo makes it
less altrllclive to go into the
hoapil(ll unless you ~~luldy

have to do so. It is one way to
isolate the patient from the
other environmental stresses
such as some of those related
to the family or job.
The medicine you have ask·
ed about is Clmetidine, also
marketed by Smith Kline as
Tagamet. It is classed as an
investigational drug and is
not available in the United
States or Canada bullS being
used in England. It is .being
investigated in the United
States now and it has a good
press at this point. It is not
the first medicine that has
been proclaimed as the
ultimate answer to ulcers.
'fbe number of studies
available are sWI small and
the experience with it is too
limited to say what its long
term use in ulcer therapy
may prove to be.
It neutralizes histamine
and in that way helps to
decrease the stomach's pr()duction of acid. The decreased acidity is the key to its effectiveness in decreasing
pain ·and promoting healing.
The ulcer problem usually
recurs within seven days
after the medicine is stopped.
A recent repol'! states the
drug is ineffective in stopping
bleeding so I'm not sure that
would be your answer.
I am sending you the
Health Letter number 1-&lt;i,
Ulcers-Duodenal, Stomach,
to point out what you should
be doing for yourself. Others ·
who want ' information on
management of ulcer pr()blerns can send 50 cents for it
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for mailing. If you smoke, stop.
Eliminate all sources of cal·
feine including coffee, tea
and colas and use no alcohol .
Dr . Lamb answers
representative letters of
general interest in his colwon. Write to him in care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York,N.Y.IOOJ9.

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter, saying conswners need the best break
poSSible, · has reversed the
Civil Aeronautics Board's
rejection of two new cut-rate
fare plans for flights between
the United Stales and
L&lt;lndon.
Carter approved a $256
roundtrtp , teserved-seat
budget fare for major airline
flights between New York
and L&lt;lndon. White House
officials said travel at that
price -59 per cent less than
economy fare and 9 per cent

below the previous budget
fare - can start today.
Carter also cleared the way
for airlines to bo:gin seiling
" Super Apex" excursion
fares today between eight
U.S. cities and London at
prices about 20 per cent below
previous excursion rates.
To keep his action from
hurling the charter airlines,
Carter ordered federal
regulators to find new ways
to ease restrictions placed on
charter flights.
Pan American World Airways, Trans World Airlines
and British Alrwavs - who

Utility rate discQunt
promised by Sen. Meshel
'
OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Sen. million, House-passed capital
Harry
Meshel,
D· improvements bill to a
Youngstown, prom ised subcommittee. Meshel
Monday night that his Ohio indicated that no Senate floor
Senate Finance Conunlttee vote would be taken on the
would favorably report a bill until October.
utility rate discount bill today
The Senate committee is
after
the
legislature expected to trim the House
convened for the last time version of the capital
Improvements bill.
this month.
Both chambers were scheHowever, Meshel said the
duled to go into session at J :30 Senate might add language to
p.m. After re&lt;:ess the end of fund site Improvements for a
this week, lawmakers were Union
County
tract
not scheduled to return until apparently being considered
mid-October.
by Honda to build a
1be utility rate bill, a motorcycle and automobile
modified "lifeline" proposai assembly plant.
passed by the House last
Meshel said between $1
July, woUld provide a 25 million and $1.5 million might
discount on winter healing be appropriated to Improve a
fuel bills for about 750,000 site near the Transportation
elderly, disabled and low- Research Center which spans
the Union-Logan County
income Ohioans.
Its main portions were border.
explained by Its sponsor,
Eckart's utility rate
Rep. Dennis Eckart, 0- discount would be given on
Euclid, before Meshel's natural gas and electric bills
committee Monday night. received between December
Not enough senators attended and April. Those eligible who
the committee meeting, primarily use propane, fuel
however ' to provide a oil or coal would be given a
quorum to vote the biD to the flat $87 .50 one-time cash
Senate floor .
~
payment.
Meshel
said
final
1be $92 million estimated
committee action would be cost of the tw()-year program
taken today, probably after would come from a speed-up
· the Senate floor liession.
in the 4 percent utility excise
Two other witnesses, tax, mainly a bookkeeping
Martin Janis, chairm;m of change that would require
the Ohio Commission on utilities to pay the tax faster
Aging, and A.W. Minelli, . than normal.
director of the Teamsters'
"[I would be a 'balloon'
Union lobbying agency, effect, but not inflate the
heartily endorsed Eckart's balloon," said Eckart.
bill.
After 1979, when the
Meshel also announced that discount would expire, the
he would send the $517 legislature would be faced
with the problem of funding
its $92 million cost through
the general revenue fund or
discontinuing it.
Janis
termed
the
legislation
''monumental''
and gave Meshel petitions
endorsing the concept signed

convention Annual meeting
in Georgia set Oct. 16 by
Pomeroy National Bank's
cashier, Maxine Griffith,
attended the 55th annual
convention of the National
Association of Bank Women,
rnc. that convened at the
Atlanta Hilton Hotel , Atlanta,
Ga., September ll-14.
Keyed to the theme,
"Beyond Tomorrow - Your
Place in Banking's Future,"
general
sessions
and
workshops probed the accelerated changes expected
over the next decade in the
economy,
society
and
banking that will shape
future trends in the industry.
Dr. Marina Von Neumann
Whitman, economist and
former member of both the
President's Council of
Economic Advisors and
Federal Price Commission,
delivered the convention
keynote address , .. The
Economy of the Future."
Also featured as speakers
were fanner White House

Aide JiU Ruckelshaus, .who is
advisor to the National
Center for Voluntary Action ;
Gerald Lowrie, executive
director , government
relations, American Bankers
Assn., and Michael H.
Mescon, chairman of the
Department of Management,
College of Business Administration, Georgia State
University.
.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
• INTERESTOF

MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHilL

Ent:. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Clly Edllur
Pubhshet.l tiluly cxt·cpl Satul'!llty

Uy The OhiO Valli:!y Pubhslnn~ Cvu~&gt;
IH Cuurl Sl , Pumcrny, Ohio
457ti!l BllSIIlt:S.."~ Office Phone 99'l·
1!156. F.tlitur\.&amp;11 Phvrtt 99'.!-21[;7
&lt;~tiY,

St"Cond class f)O.'!iagt! pa.td

.~:~ 1

Pmnt•ruy, Ohlu
N&lt;~Uunal
advct·usm.o: rl;!prcsl'nt.atiVt! Wttrd - fln ffJth Company,
In~ , ButUncllt ant! G~:~lla~hd Dtv .•
757 Tlurtl Ave., New Vork, NY.

10017
Suhscnptuwa l'il~ Delwcret.l hy
l 'arrn.~r wht-re 1:1\'Hill:lblt' 7S eent.s ~.: r
wt"t•k. Oy Mutur Huutc where ca1 n~·r'
.sci'V It'l! nnt avatllliJii•, One month,
$:t Ui Hy IU&lt;HI Ill 011111 ant.l W V&lt;i .,
Om· Yeat . $~".! . 110 SlX month;l,
Ill ~0 .

l'hrc•·

ltliiHihs,

$7 .HO :

J•,hi wltctt' $2till0 ;tar , Su tmntU~
$11 an, TIHl'l' l rro•ntlh . Si ~o
St iiJ.~t nptll•fl 111 t• l' "'' littl&lt;·s :-.uwl.a;
I'UIIt'~l'lllllll 'l ,

"

led in proposing the fares
rejected by the CAB but
accepted by Carter ••pressed delight at the
President's action.
Under the new budget fare,
available only between New
York and London, a traveler
must buy his ticket three
weeks in advance and may
specify only the week of
travel. The airline must teD
the traveler 10 days before
departure of the precise date
and nwnber of his flight.
1be $256 budget price replaces a $280 minimum
budget fare set bY the CAB

P&amp;H Society

Jackson in

The Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society has set
its annual meeting at the
museum on Oct. 16 at 2 p.m.
with all members and interested persons invited.
Mrs. Clara l..&lt;lchary, Mrs.
Nancy Reed and Charles ·
Hayes have been appointed to
a nominating committee. and
Max Horton and Charles
Hayes are to come up with a
recommendation for life
membership lo he decided at
the annual meeting.
The trustees have approved
a charge of 25 cents for
children and 50 cents for
adults effective immediately
to visit the museull\, Groups
with prior arrangement will
be admitted with a special
admission. The film of Meigs
County will be available to
groups.

first place
Jackson's surpnsmg
lronmen took over undisputed first place in the
Southeastern Ohio League
golf standings Monday by
turning back previously
unbeaten Athens in a threeway match at Waverly.
Jackson had 166, Athens 170
and Waverly 191. The Iron·
men , with their eighth
straight win since an opening
loss to GAHS, are now 8-1.
Athens is 7-1.
In the only other loop
match Monday, Logan
downed Ironton and Meigs at
Logan. Logan had 186,
Ironton 187 and Meigs 192.
Gallipolis, idle Monday, is
5-3 in league play. Ironton is
6-5, l..&lt;lgan 3~. Meigs 2~ and
Waverly ~9.

by 25,000 elderly Ohioans who
attended the Ohio State Fair.
"We could have picked up a
million signatures if we had
gone out in the state," said
Janis.
The
Senate
Energy
Committee unanimously
recommended passage of
Eckart's bill after it passed
the House, but sent it to
Meshel 's finance committee
for a fiscal analysis prior to a
fuU Senate vote.
Eckart gave the committee
four amendments to his bi118,
one adding residents of
mobile homes who meet
eligibility requirements into
the discount program.
1be program would be
jointly administered by the
Ohio Department of TaxatiM
and
county
auditors .
Recipients of the discount
would only have to fill in
forms mailed to them in
order to receive the
discounts.

:.i,
;.
•"
.._.
.•••'

CHERYL LEHEW

Miss Lehew is
graduate LPN

Ctzlendaf'

Miss Cheryl Lynne Lehew,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Lehew, Pomeroy,
graduated from the Practical
Nursing School of Buckeye
Hills Career Center at Rio
Grande in exercises at 8 p.m.
Saturday at the First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis.
Miss Lehew, a graduate of
Meigs High School, was a
member of the Meigs Mar·
ching Band, served as a
candystrlper at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and is a
member of the Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post, 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy.
Miss Lehew has accepted
employment at the Holzer
Medical Center and will begin
work there Monday.

·'
The menu for · the senior

citizens
center
COAD
program, Pomeroy, for the

remainder of the week will
be:
Wednesday - Meatloaf.

mashed potatoes · gravy, 3beari salad, buttered spinach,
apricots, bread, butter. milk.

Baked

chicken, mixed vegetables,

cranberry salad, chocolate
chip cbokies, bread, butter,
milk .
.

Fish sticks,

buttered potatoes, celery stl~
- peanut butter, buHered
green

beans,

Poor

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI 8[10111 EciJtor

'

•

Sr. Citizens

Thursday

Sport Parade

.Man's

cookie. bread. butter , milk

Coffee, tea and buttermilk

served daily .

Be}pre wms
•
over Me-i as

Leaders

Monday
line scores

AmeriCan League : Rice. Bos Houstn
38. Bonds. Cal 37 ; Nettles. NV Atlanta
Andujar,
l6 ; Scott, Bos 33; Gamble, Chi

302 400 1Q0-10 11 l
021 520 20x-1213 5
McLau9hl in (A),
Thomas (5), Larson {6), Forsch
and Jackson, NY 31.
(8) and Herrmann . Solomon ,
Runs Bette-d In
National League : Foster, Cin Hannah (3), Bradford (ol),
145 , Lozinski. Ph il 127 ; Bur - Capra (S) , Campbell ( 8 ) and
roughs. Atl 114; Garvey, LA Murphy . W-Capra, 6-11 . LLarson . 1-7 HRs- Atlanta, Mat.
112 ; Cey, LA 110
Amer.un Le-1gut: Bonds, Cal thews 2 (17) , Asseltine (ol),
and Hisle, Minn 115; Cowens, B u r r o u 9 h s 141 L Houston.
KC 109 ; Hobson , Bos 108 ; Rtce, watson (201, Cruz (17) .
Bos and Jackson, NY lOS
Mntral
001 100 304-9 13 0
Stolen Bases
000002120-5101
N1tional Lugue : Taveras , S!L
Twitchell, McEnaney &lt;BL
Pitt 67 ; Cedeno,
Hou 58;
Richards, so 52. Moreno , Pitt Stanhouse (B) and Carter;
Rnmussen. Metzger (8). East SO : Morgan. Cin 48.
Amenun League : Patek. KC wick (8), Hrabosky (9) and
51 ; Bonds , Cal -40 ; · Remv. Cal Simmons . W-S tanhOuse, 10-10
and Page. Oak 38 ; LeFlore, Oet L - Eastwick, S-9. HRS - St.
Louis. Templeton (8) . Montreal ,
37 .
Carter {30)
Pitching

to the driver or passenger
without leaving the vehicle.
The rationale for this is that
even if a loaded weapon is
laying openly on the seat, it is
Most Victories
stiU concealed from the view
National League t , Carlton,
of anyone approaching the Phil 23 9, Seaver, Cin and John.
LA 20 -6: R .Reuschel , Chi 20-9,
car, such as an officer, and CandeHma,
P itt 19-S; Forsch,
can be used without warning St L 19 6
American League: Goltz,
the same as If it were truly Mlnn
19-10 ; Palmer, Ball and
hidden.
Leonard, KC 19-H ; Ryan, Cal
Colborn. KC 18-14.
Sheriff Proffitt warned that 1P·16.Etrned
Average
this section also prohibits (based on UJRun
Innings pltchtd)
National League: Candelaria,
discharging a firearm while
Pitt 2.39 ; Hooton , LA 2.58;
in or from 8 motor vehicle. Carlton,
Phil 2.59 ; Seaver, Cin
1bis section is violated by a 2.6.c; John , LA 2.73 .
Le11ue : Tanana,
number of groundhog hun· CalAmerican
2.5..t; Blyleven , Tex 2.72 :
ters.
Guidry, NY 2.69; Ryan. Cal
Bait 2.95.
Penalties for violation of 2.77. Palmer,
Strikeouts
charge "improperly handling
National League : Niekro, Atl
firearms in a motor vehicle" 255.- Rooers. Mtt 195 .- Richard,
and Carlton , Phil ·~•;
arc a fine of no more than Hou
Koosman , NY 192
$250 and-or jail term of no . Amerlnn League : Ryan. Cal
J-40 : Leonard, KC 225 ; Tanana,
mure than :ro dAys. or both. Cal
lOS ; Eckersley , Clev 191;
Palmer, Bait \88

1

SonFrn
LA.

Haltckl

Castillo

.

•'
....

'
•J

•
•'
-~

...

·,
..

•

•

002 010 312- 9 10 6 ,
00100000D-1 60

and
{7).

Hilt ; Rhoden,
Webb (9) and '

Oates. W- Halickt, 15-1 2. L- ..
Rhoden , 16-10. HRs-san Fran - •
cisco, McCove-y (27) , Halicki
[21. Thomasson (17) .

.·

Amtflcan League
Toronto at Boston, ppd ., rain

100 010 ooo- 2 7 1

Cleve

N.Y .
200100 10X- A100
Hood and Kendell; Torrez, '
Lyle (7) and Munson . WTorrez, 17-13. L-HOOd, 2-1.

Kon C/!y

Oaklnd

1

000 100 OOCf--- 1 5 1
010 120 12x- 710 0

an~0~~~"m:~~ ;~~~~~:~~.~~;,

L- ColbOrn, 18-U. HRs-Qaktand , Jorg~sen (5) Newman
j&lt;l.

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer

NEW~ YORK l UP I) - When Freddie Scott takes off his
There's hardly ever been a
je~sey and pads, you look at that physique of his and say to New York Yankee championy_.self,here'sa guy with the perfect build- to run the 220, do ship team which wasn't also
a two-and-a-half backward somersault off the three-meter · characterized by a standout
board or maybe handle the eii'Ctric guitar for some rock group. relief pitcher and now, only
You'd never take him for a professional football player. four games froot their second
Unless you happened to see him play. Then you wouldn't have straight American League
the slightest doubt anymore.
East Iitle, there is Sparky
Freddie Scott is one of the Baltimore Colts' wide receivers Lyle.
:md before the year is over, he could become their most
Indeed, for the 69th time
Important one.
this season, there was Sparky
If the Colts figure on going anywhere this season anywhere Lrle coming out of the
lik~, say, the Super Bowl four months from n~w. they're bullpen Monday night to
resigned to the fact their only way of gelling there is with The preserve the Yankees' 4-2
Bomb.
victory over the Cleveland
Fortunately for them, they have someone to throw it. A Indians, which reduced their
young fellow by the name of Bert Jones. Nobody in the NFL magic clinching number to
can whip the ball like he can, which doesn't mean a thing if four.
there's no one to catch it.
Lyle came on in relief of
In that regard, the obvious name that jumps to mind is winner Mike Torrez, 17-13,
Roger Carr because he and Jones work together with a football and pitched three innings ~ of
the same way Steve Carlton and Tim McCarver do with a one-hit, shutout relief for his
basebaU, so normaUy the Colts wouldn't have any concern in 29th save.
that area.
Thurman Munson singled
1bey do have, though. For one thing, Carr reported to them home Bucky Dent with the
late after holding out and for another, they have no guarantee decisive run in the fourth
the knee problem he has been having won't turn out to be one of
those year-long propositions. That still leaves them Glenn
Doughty, who had his best season last year with 40 catches for
628 yards and five touchdowns. Those aren't such bad
numbers, you say. You're right, but they don 't show all the
passes he dropped either.
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Let
So that brings us right back to Freddie Scott. \he 25-year-old
Tim Fox, New England's
Grady, Ark., speedster.
He's listed as being 6-2 and 170 pounds, but that isn't safety, leU you how the
absolutely accurate because he's at what he laughingly calls Patriots blew this week's
.nationally-te levised NFL
his "all-time high" right now and that's only 1!i,7 pounds.
Forget about his size for a minute. Scott is unusual in a game against the Cleveland
number of other respects as well. He has style, the kind of class Browns.
"We had them on the run
that slicks out all over him.
Named the outstanding teenager in Arkansas in 1970, he many times, but we couldn't
went on to exclusive Amherst CoUege, where he took a premed put them away," he said
course and was so highly thought of, he was named captain of early today in a glum
the footbaU team. And when is the last time you heard of Patriots' dressing room at
Amherst, an aU-white school for years and years, ever electing Municipal Stadium after the
Browns' 3().'EI, come-froma black captain?
behind
victory. "We never
As a senior in 1973, Scott was chosen as UPf's New England
gave
up.
We have nothing to
Player of the Year and after graduating from Amherst cum
be
ashamed
of."
laude, he was drafted by the Colts.
Neither do the Browns, who
During the time he has been with the Colts, Scolt has begun
picked
up their second
his post-graduate work. Last year he completed his second
consecutive
victory as the
year of medical school at the University of Cincinnati and is
Patriots
dropped
their first
determined to become a pbysician.
game
of
the
season
in two
"I've always had a challenge to be No. I because of my size,"
outings.
Scott says. "Ever since the ninth grade, everybody said I was
"rt was a team victory too small ."
offense,
defense, specialty
"I love football," he adds, and from the expression on his
teams,".
said
Forrest Gregg,
face you can tell he honesliy does. "It's a challenge to me, but
medicine is going to be my life ... . And playing for the Colts like the Browns' head coach. "We
this, I'm getting an excellent exposure m orthopedics. Maybe came hack and played tough
when we had to."
that's what l'U specialize in."
Cleveland was suppoe,ed to
While Carr was holding out, he said the Colts seemed to be
lose
to the Patriots but didn't,
doing pretty weD without him, but he didn't see them
thanks
to Don Coclp-oft, who
completing any bombs.
booted
a 35-yard field goal
"Yoy gotta show him," a couple of the Colts needled Scott.
with
10:
15 remaining in
"You gotta catch some long passes."
In Baltimore's very next game, a pre-season contest with sudden death overtime to
Dallas on national TV, Scott grabbed three, one for 45 yards, give the Browns their first
overtime win ever.
and two others of 22 and 18 yards he ran for touchdowns.
"! didn' t feel any
May he it was pure coincidence, but the following day, Carr
pressure,"
Cockroft said
phoned Colts' President Robert Irsay and told him he was
afterwards
in a jubilant
ready to sign.

inning for New York, after
losing Indians' pitcher Don
Hood forced home a pair of
first-inning runs when - with
the bases loaded - he hit
Dave Kingman with a pitch,
then walked Cliff Johnson.
1be Yankee watchers have
been heard touting Lyle for
both the Most Valubale
Player and Cy Young
Awards.
" ... I haven't the least blt of
interest in them," he said.
"Winning the pennant is what
this game is about, not
winning awards.
" I can pitch every day the
rest of the season. r feel
stronger now than I did
at the start of the season."
With Boston being rained
out with Toronto and
Baltimore idle, the victory
increased the Yankees' lead
to 312 games over the Red Sox
and four over the Orioles.

Elsewhere in the AL. run.
Oakland downed Kansas Espos 9, Cardinals 5:
Gary Carter, who earlier
City, 7-J. In the only National
League games, Chicago put hit a three-run homer ,
away Philadelphia, 10·7. delivered a two-run single in
Atlanta outslugged Houston, the ninth inning when the
1:1-JO, Montreal overhauled Cardinals scored four runs to
St. Louis, 9-5 , and San pot the game away.
Francisco drubbed Los Giants 9. Dodgers 1:
Willie McCovey ,
Angeles, 9-l.
celebrating
a night in his own
Cubs 10, Phillles 7:
honor,
clouted
hls 492nd
Larry Biittner pounded out
career
homer
and
Gary
four hits, including his 12th
homer, and Bobby Murcer Thomasson drove in four
and Greg Groos also homered other runs with a homer,
as the Cubs stalled the double and single to stake
PhiUies' NL East clioching. Giants right-hander Ed
1be Cubs accumulated 20 hits Halicki to his 15th win.
off
four
Philadelphia A's 7, Royala 1:
Joe Coleman tossed a fivt
pitchers, leaving the Phillies'
hitter and Mike Jorgensen
magic nwnber at one.
and Jeff Newman hit homers
Braves 12, Astros 10:
Jeff Burroughs belted hiS to help the A's snap an eight41st homer to snap a 1~10 tie game Kansas City winning
in the seventh inning and streak. Jim Colborn, 18-14,
Gary Matthews added hils went all the way in absorbing
second of the game one out the defeat.
later for an Atlanta insurance

Reds open
final home
stand of '77
CINCINNATI (UPI )- The
Cincinnati Reds open their
final homestand of the season
tonight when they host the
San Diego Padres at
Riverfront Stadium.
The Reds, 1dle Monday,
play the Padres tonight and
Wednesday night and then
following another day off
Thursday open their final
senes of the . season Friday
night against the Atlanta
Braves.
Cincinnati wraps up its
season Sunday with an afternoon contest scheduled
against the Braves.
Fred Norman, 14-11 , is due
to work tonight's game
aga inst the Padres' Bob
Shirley, 1~18.

$342,800 grant to assist in
reconstruction of 1.35 miles &lt;X
the Ross County Airport
access
road
near
Chillicothe .
Total cost of the operation
will be $714,000, with state
and local government money
used to complete the project.

1

'

Bacon says Bengals lacking
'killer instinct' thus far
CINcrNNATI (UPI) - A
42-20 victory over the secondyear expansion Seattle
Seahawks has left the
Cincinnati Bengals Jesa than
impressed.
The final score was ' misleading. The Bengals piled up
a 28-0 Jea&lt;J only to let it slip
away to 28-20 before flnaUy
regaining control of the
game.
"We lack that killer
instinct,''
complained
defensive lineman Coy
Bacon. "We relax"!!. We got
flat. We panicked. We let
them catch up. We had them
28-0, we should've destroyed
them. ·
"We have a monster team
here," added Bacon. -'We
have talent stacked up at
every position. We can't
afford to lose leads like this.
"We still have to play the
tough ones yet. Seattle, San
Diego, Green Bay, we've got
to destroy these teams. Pittsburgh, that's our competitor.
That's who we have to
beat."
'
Chimed in defensive back
Lemar Parrish, "I agree with
Coy. We have the kiUers.
Shoot, we have the guys to be
super. But we have to apply
ourselves. When we play a
team we have to keep
runi.shing them. Put 60 or 70
points on the board."
Former Bengal aii-Prq
Mike Reid, who now
analyizes
Bengal
performances fQr a local
newspaper, termed Cincy's
showing "little more than
token revenge" for an
opeQing game loss to the
Cleveland Browns.
"This game provided Uttle
evidenCe in support of the
beljef this Is the year of the
Bengals," Reid wrote
Monday. "Granted, they
were certainly a more unified
team than they showed last
week. But for unity to be real,
it must stand the aevtrel!t test
without trealtlng.

Big 10 roundUp
By United Press lntematiooal

•
'Three Big Ten colleges - Ohio State, IUinois and Purdue came away from the weekend battles with injury problems.
Ohio State Coach Woody Hayes said Monday a head injury
suffered by starting quarterback Rod Gerald in last
Saturday's 2!1-28 loss to Oklahoma "worries me."
"He (Gerald) had headaches aU weekend," Hayes said. "I
always worry about head injuries."
Asked if the injury was unusual, Hayes replied: "[t's a head
injury. It came from being tackled in the head. That's not
unusual when you play Oklahoma."
Linebacker Tom Cousineau also suffered a shoulder separation but Hayes said "it Is not as bad as we first thought. The
doctors say it wiD be seven to 10 days healing."
·
Kurt Steger, Illinois' starting quarterback, is a questionable
starter for this week's home game against Syracuse because of
a jammed thumb he suffered in the Illini loss to Slanford last
weekend.
Coach Gary MoeUer said he does not know yet whether
Steger will start or turn the job over to backup quarterback
Mike McO:ay.
The Purdue Boilermakers also suffered their first significant injuries of the season in their loss to Notre Dame last
weekend.
Coach Jim Young said middle guard Roger Uwe was
questionable for action against Wake Forest beca1;15e of a
shoulder injury.
Defensive tackle Ken Loushin has been ruled out for the rest
of the season because of an inner ear Imbalance, so the
defensive line is "pretty banged up," Young said.
Reggie Arnold, the Boilers' leading receiver, with 17
receptions; is nursing a strsined knee and is doubtful for the
Wake Forest game, Young said.
Elsewhere around the Big Ten, the University of Minnesota
Gophers, who scored a 'E/:13 upset victory over UCLA
Saturday, have turned thetr attention to another Pac-8
cooference member, the University of Washington.
1be squad viewed films of Washington's 22-20 loss to
Syracuse before going out to the practice field Monday
afternoon. 1be Gophers Immediately went to work on aU
phasea of the passing game.
Only one member of the Gopher squad missed Monday's
workout sophomore strong safety Craig Kirtland. Klrtland
suffered a shoUlder separation in the UCLA game and is
probably lost for three lo four weeks.
1be Wisconsin Badgers took a light workout without pads
MMday and worked on aome offensive and defensive align·
ments for use against the Northwestern Wildcats Saturday .
Of the Big Ten, only Wisconsin and Michigan remain
undefeated.
Offerlllve coordinator Mike Stock said ·the Une was very
incGIIIIItent in the flrtt half of the 22-10 win OVI!r Oregon, but
was~ to 111slain a drive for the last six minutes of the g~
and Jive the defenle a real.

Browns' dressing room. "If
you start thinking about the
results before you start,
you're in trouble."
It was nip and tuck aU the
way as both clubs ended
regulation play tied at 'll
after John Smith booted a 24yard field goal with no time
left In the game. The
Patriots' field goal came
after Cockroft had kicked a
37-yarder to rut the Browns
ahead, 'E/-24, with 55 seconda
left in the contest.
1be Patriots played tough
and it was difficult for them
to accept defeat.

"['m ·proud of my team in
defeat," said New England
Coach Chuck Fairbanks. "It
was a bitter loss to take."
But quarterback Brian Sipe
of the Browns relished the
win, saying the victory "will
have a far reaching effect M
(the morale and future
perfonnance of) this club."
"Tonight was Important
because we came from
behind on a good team and
bounced back In the
overtime," added Sipe, who
hit 16-of-25 pa•ees for 199
yards and two touchdoWIW one to scathack Greg~ Pruitt

and the other to tight end
Gary Parris.
"We didn't feel down when
they tied it with one second
left in regulation play," Sipe
said. "We scored the last two
times we got our hands on the

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2Sc off Amission
Price this Fri. &amp;
Sat . 9:30 &amp; 10-1
Open Wed ., Fri.. Sat.
Eve .,

7 : 30-10

Oct. 1.
Available

far

private

Bus

transportation

cancelled. For info call

985·392P. P85·9996.

... FROM RUBBISH

pass to Pruitt and the other
was Cockroft's 37-yard field
goal - his second in the
game, the first time the
Browns had played on
national TV since 1973 when
they lost to the Miami
Dolphins, 19-7.

Check your closets, attics, cellars
and garages for unnecessary piles
of rubbish and litter. Don't be a litter
bug! These areas of homes and
· apartments are the common source
of home fires. Protect your family
and obtain fire insurance today br
calling our agent today.

Downing Childs
Insurance Agency, Inc.
Middlepor1,

o.

Ohio college

grid schedule

- ~ -- ~

United Press International

Ohio Stat Southern Methodist
Western
Green

Mich at

Toledo at Eastern Mlch In)
Kent St at Ohio University

Miami at Yale

Indiana St at Akron lnl

Central St at Tennessee St.
(n)

Southern Mississippi
Cincinnati In)
Dayton at Iowa St
St

Youngstown

VALUE
RATED

Bowling

Massachusetts

at

USED CARS

73 BUICK REGAL
HT CPE., AIR

at

Baldwin-Wallace at Ashland
In l
Marietta at Capital
Mt. Union at Grove City I Pal
Ohip Wesleyan at Wittenberg
Ohio Northern at Otterbein
In)

'2995
73 CUTLASS
4 DR. AIR

-

•1995
Karr &amp; VanZandt

Defiance at Anderson (lndl

You'll Like OUT Quality

Wooster at Hiram
Kenyon at Kalamazoo (Mich}

Carnegie ·Mellon !Pal at
Oberlin

Bluflton at Earlham lind)
Wilmington at Findlay In)
Case Western at W &amp; J 1Pa)
John Carroll at Allegheny
( Pa)
n - denotes n1ght game

Way of Doing Business

GMAC FINANCING

992~ 5342

Pomeroy

Open Evenings 'til6:09

TiiS p.m . Sal.

When you need money for home improvement~, or any good
reason_, talk to. us. W_e handle HomeOwner Loans quickly, easily
and wtth constderat10n. Amounts up to $15,000 _available,
We find ways to help.

CITY LOAN
COMPANY
1::1 c::\

&lt;1

hn,l n(o,ll $f'!' 1 1.~

ot

\~:u:::l CON I R,QI o,.-,r,-, COI'J'OR,ATION

125 E. Main Street 992-2171
•

,

•

I

ball."
One tally was Sipe's TD

leg," said assistant coach
Alex Gibbs . .
Moore, a junior and a
highly touted prospect, has
had knee operations each of
his first two years.
Defensive awards went to
end Paul Ross and linebacker
Dave Adkins, who had 19 solo
tackles and a total of 28
participations in the game.
"That game was no place
for the timid," said assistant
Gary TranquiU. "It was the
kind of football game every
body likes to see, although
certainly not the outcome."

-·

I

Hayes upset at injury to Gerald
By GENE CADDES
said Hayes. "If It's seven
UPI Sports Writer
days, weD, we play five or six
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- Clhlo hours later than 1IIUai this
Stale Coach Woody Hayes is week. He (Cm•••I) may
bitter. Not over the 2!1-28 loss be in the best llhape as any
Saturday to Oklahoma, but coUege footbaU playtr In the
because of a head injury country!'
suffered bY starting quarterTallback..fullbaek Jeff
back Rod Gerald.
l..&lt;lgan, who mi-d the
"He
(Gerald)
had Minnesota l)8llle and )Uyed
headaches all weekend," sparingly against Oklahoma,
Hayes told his weekly press "should be ~ to go fuU
luncheon Monday. "I always speed," while center Tim
worry about head injuries." Vogler, who sat outlast week,
Gerald was hurt In the third will "probably" be back.
quarter when he was tackled
With Logan's return and
near the Ohio State bench. also the likely avallabillty of
His availability for this Ricky, Johnson, another
Saturday night's game · injured tailback, Hayes said
against Southern Methodist Ray Griffin would be
in Dallas, Tex., is uncertain. returned to his regular safety
Asked if the injury was spot. Griffin waa switched to
unusual, Hayes crisply offense for both the
replied : "It's a head injury. Minnesota and Oklahoma
It came from being tackled In , games.
the head. That's not unusual · Talking
about
the
when you play Oklahoma." Oklahoma game, Hayes said,
1be most serious injury "We had it won and then
besides Gerald's appeared to threw it Rway. f'm the head
be
linebacker
Tom coach and f'll take the bhune
Cousineau's shoulder for it."
separation, but Hayes said,
Tight end Jimmy Moore,
"it is not as bad as we first who caught a 16-yard
thought."
touchdown pass from sub
"1be doctors say it wiU be quarterback Greg
seven to 10 days healing," Castignola, earned offensive
lineman of the week honors.
No offensive back selection
had been made.
"He (Moore) Is really
starting to come along and
feeling more secure with his
Saturday's
.
Ohio College
THI~ .. E-.&lt;'5 ~PE&lt;.:IAL
Football Schedule

~

I

parties, Mon . , Tues . •
Thurs. Eve. , Sat. &amp; Sun.
afternoons.

GRANT APPROVED
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Rep. William Har~a, ROhio, said Monday the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission has approved a

••

I

Browns win on Crockroft's toe

Dairymen will
meet Oct. 5th

firearms in vehicles noted
open or which cannot be
easily stripped, in plain sight.
These rules are designed to
include the ways in which
responsible gun hobbyists
and sportsmen agree that
firearms should be transported both for the safety
standpoint and for protecting
the valuable weapons from
damage.
Under the former law a
hunter could not place his gun
in a case inside his car, since
it would then he a concealed
weapon . Under this new
section, the weapon muSt be
pl(iced in a case in order to
carry it inside a motor
vehicle .
A portion of this law
prohibits having a loaded
weaP&lt;"' in a motor vehlcl•,
placed "" lh•t it is acceSSible

•

.

~;,~~;s~~

Lyle records 29th
save in NY victory

~=

just over 8 week ago. A board
spokesman said travelers
who paid $210 for budget
tickets but have not yet uaed
them may collect a $24
refund.
1be new Super Apex fares
to London - ~ from New
York, $285 from Bostm, $313
from Philadelphia, $3$3 from
O!icago, $336 from Detroit,
$«0 from L&lt;ls Angeles or San
Francisco,
$323
from
Washington and $332 frOm
Miami - require a 45-day
advance ticket purchase and
travel lasting between 14 and
45 days.

Friday -

3 -1be Dlilv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 'E1, J,; 1

•

EVEL CHARGED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Daredevil Eve! Knievel was
formally charged Monday
with assault with a deadly
weaoon for allegedly beating
the author of a book about
him with a baseball bat.
He was ordered to appear
for arraignment in West Los
--e
Angeles Municipal Court
Meigs Junior High 's
Wednesday .
Seventh
grade footbaU team
Knievel is free on $1,000
played
the
first half even with
bail foUowing his arrest last
Belpre
at
Middleport
Monday
week on charges he beat
evening,
standing
at
6-6
after
Sjleldon Sallman with a
baseball bat, breaking two quarters. Superior speed
The world's dairymen are Saltman's
of the Belpre baU carriers ..
wrist and arm.
invited to the Curtiss
Knievel has called the book proved too much in the
Breeding Service Production
wrote "a filthy lie," second half, the game ending
Center, Elburn, IU. Wed- Saltman
saying it insults his mother, :111-6 in favor of the visitors. It
nesday, Oct. 5 to celebrate wife and other members of was the team's first game.
"World Dairy Holiday."
Rick Chancey, son of •
his family and portrays him
Billed as a fun-filled af- as 11 811 alcoholic, pill pusher, Marauder head football
ternoon and evening of dairy antiSemite and Immoral coach Charles Chancey,
busintss, entertainment, food person," damaging the quarterbacked the home
and refreshments, World Image he has tried to build. team. Coaches are Jim Crow,
Dairy Holiday is scheduled to
Jon Arnott and John
be one of the biggest and most
Krawsczyn.
exciting dairy events in
Meigs 8th Grade play~
VOTE TO STRIKE
history.
Jackson' at Middleport and·
CLEVELAND (UPf)
Leland Parker, local
the 7th grade goes to Eastern
distributor of Curtiss semen Teachers in suburban Rich· on Oct. 6.
and products, said the mood Heights voted 45-J
evening gets underway Monday night to strike the
at
2 p.m: with
a school system next Monday, BENNY TO BURNS
BEVERLY fiLLS, Calif.
colorful review of the according to Ohio Education
(UP!
) - 1be March of Dimes
World's Greatest Holstein Association spokesman
is
giving
its Jack BeMy
Sirei Paclamar Astronaut, Donald Banas.
Memorial
Award
to
followed by a parade of
comedian George Burns.
out standing Curtiss dairy
The award, named for the
s1res.
late comic because of his
Jody Miller, Grammy
fundraising efforts for the
award-winning country
medical research group, wiD
singer and TV personality
Major League Luders
will headline entertainment. By United Pre$$ ln1ernationll be prese nted 8 t 8 dinner ne xt
Ba!!ing
Tuesday. Bob Hope was
&lt;based on 121 al ba!sJ
scheduled to act as
PIDGEON GOES HOME
NoMnal ~~"!~·H . Pet. toastmaster with Frank
SANTA MONICA, Calif. Parker p;t
15&lt; 623 213 .3&lt;2 - Sinatra presenting the
Pit
116 453 152 .336
rd
(UP!) - Actor Walter Stennell
Foster Ctn
153 598 194 .32-4 awa •
Pidgeon went home Monday Tmpltn St L
146 594 192 . 3~3
after 53 day's in St. John's Simm ns St.L
144 SOO 160 320
c;n
14P 566 180 318
Hospital, where he had a Gro!ley
'
Hendrick SO
147 522 163 312
brush with death from a blood Luznski Phd
145 539 167 .310
157 638 191 309
clot, which eventually was Rose Cin
Smith LA
144 479 147 307
dissolved by drugs.
Amedcan League
G. AB H Pet.
Pidgeon, 78, entered the
Carew Min
149 595 227 382
hospital for surgery to BostockMtn
148 573 192 335
Major League Results
147 516 170 .329
remove a clot - originsUy Singtton Bal
By United Press International
Oet
149 631 207 ,328
formed in his legs bY a LeFlore
National league
Rivers NV
133 547 178 325
phlebitis conditition -lodged Rice Bos
012 130 ooo---111 o
155 624 198 .317 Phila
Chrcgo
20ol
102 Olx-10 20 0
881!0r
Tor
116
468
148
.31
6
in his brain area. The Page Oak
Lonborg , Brusstar ()), Kaat •
141 483 151 .313
operation was a success, but Brett KC
134 545 170 .312 {4), Lerch (9) and Boone
l28 500 156 .3 12 Burris, Moore (5), Sutter (7)
as he was recovering several Bumbry Sa l
and Gordon. W-Moore (4·2}. L •
Home Runs
days later a second clot
HRs- Chicago, •
National Le-ague : Foster, Cin --..Kaat (6 -11)
lodged
in
his . lung, 51 i Burroughs. At I 41; Luzlnskl Bilttner (12) , Maddox (13), · '
and Schm ldt , Phil 37 ; Ga rvey , Murcer (26). Gross (5).
threatening his life.
LA 31

Laws regulating carrying
Inquiries relating to Jaws
• regulating the carrying of
fireanns in motor vehicles
were further explained today
by Sheriff James J . Proffitt.
Section 2923-!6 of the Ohio
Revised Code, "Improperly
handling of firearms in a
motor vehicle is applicable.
In essence, this section
says that firearms in a motor
vehicle must be unloaded,
and must he carried in any of
the following ways: In a
case; in a compartment, such
as the trunk, which can be
reached only by leaving the
vehicle: in plain sight and
St'cured in a rack or holder
rna de for that purpose,
in
plain
sight
with
the
;u:lwn
nfWn
ur
the weapon stripped or. if the
Weapon is of the type un
which the action wi11111~ sta~

..'.

�'

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. Tl, 1977

Trojans No. l in ratings
NEW YORK tU Pil
Southern Cal, a 51.0 wmner
over Texas
Christian
Saturday, has replaced
Michigan as the No. I team in
the
United · Press
International Board of
Coaches college football
ratings,
After the third week of the
season, Southern Cal polled
33:; points to edge Oklahoma
lor the tllp spot by seven
points in the first major
reshuffling of the top teams.
The Sooners, who picked up
328points, moved up from the
fourth spot by upsetting last
week's No.3 team Ohio State,
29-28, on a last-second field
goal. Southern Cal and
Oklahoma each received H
first-place votes.
Michi~an picked up nine

Ma jor League Standings
By United Pres!&gt; International
Nationill League

East
W. L
Phil a

Pet . GB

97 59 .622
91 65 .583
80 75 .516
81 76 .516
72 84 .462

Pi ttsbgh
St. Louis
Chicago
Montreal
New York

60 94 .390

w.

L
Pet. GB
94 62 .603

x , Los Ang

85 12 .541 9 1 2
17 79 .494 17

Houston
San Fran

73 84 .465 2112
67 90 .427 27 1 •
Atlanta
60 97 .382 3411
x-clinched divison title
Monday 's Results
Chicago 10, Ph i ladelphia 7
Atlant a 12. Houston 10
Montreal 9, St. Lou is 5
San Francisco 91 Los Ang 1
Todav ' s Probable Pitchers
{All Times EDT)
Philadelph i a (Ch r istenson 1761 at Chicago {Bonham 10-12),
2: 30p .m.
Houston (Richard 16-12 ) a)
At_lanta (Mah ler Q. l), 7:35p.m.
Montreal (Sch afzeder 2-01 at
St. Louis (Forsch 19-6), 8 : 35
p.m .
San Franc;lsi:o (Barr 12-4) at
Los fl,ngeles (Sutton 14-8) , 10 : 30
p .m.
.
•
New York. (Swan 9-9 ) at
Pittsburgh ·( Kison 9-9L 7 : 35

San

American League
East
Pet. Gl!
W
L
97 59 .622
New York
Boston
93 62 .600 3 12
Bartim re
93 63 .596
4
Detroit
72 84 .462 25
Clevelnd
69 87 .442
M i lw
65 92 .41.4
Toronto
52 103 .335 " ',
West
W L Pc:t. GB
x -Kan City
99 56 .639
Texas
90 67 .573 10
Ch lcago
87 70 .554 13
Minn
8'1 74 .526 171 1
Cali f
72 84 .462 21111
sealfle
61 96 .389 39
Oakland
60 95 .387 39
ll:-cllnched division title
Manday's R esults
TOronto at Boston , ppd .. rain
New York 4 , Cleveland 2
Oakland 7, Kansas City 1
Today' s Probable P itchers
(All Times EDT)
Chicago (Kn app
11 -71
at
Minnesota (Zahn 12-131 , 2 ; 15
p.m .
Toronto
( Byrd
2-12
and
Lemanczvk 12- 151 at Boston
(Tiant 11 -8 or sranl~y 7 -7 and
Aase 5-2L 2, 5 p.m.
Cleveland (Waits 9-7) at New
York. (Tidrow lJ-4}. 8 p.m.
Kansas Citv. (Hassler 9~ 5 and
Leonard 19-lll at oaktand
(Keogh 1-2 and McCarty 0-0), 2,
9 p.m .
Detroit
(Arroyo
8- 17 ) at
Baltimore (Flanagan
13 -10),
7: 30p .m.
California ( Hartzell 8· 11) at
Milwaukee (S laton 10- 1.4 ), 8: 30
p.m.
Wedn·esday's Games
Chicago at M innesota
Toronto at Boston
Kan City at Oaklnd , night
Seat11e 1!111 Texas , n ight
.Detro it at Bait, night
Cleve at New York, night
Calif at Milwaukee. night

O i·e~o

p.m.

San Diego (Shi r ley 10-1 8) at
Cinc innati (Norman 14 -11). 8:05
p .m .
Wednesday's Gam~s
PhiladelPhia ar Chicago
Houston at Atla11ta , night
New York at Pittsbgl1, nigl1t
San Diego at Cinci. night
Montreal at Sl. Louis, night
San Fran at Los Ang, night

.11

a·

Social
Calendar

spot, from No. 10 to No. 9, on .
the strength or a 24-22 viCiory
over Mississippi Slate.
Nebraska, improving its
record to 2-l with a 31·10 win
llJESDAY
over Baylor, closed out the
MIDDLEPORT . POM·
top 10.
EROY Area Branch of !he
NEW YORK &lt;UP I)

-

Tne American

U n i t e d Press International
Board of coac11es 1op 10 teams
atter the third week. of the
college football season Wi th
f i r$1 place ' votes and record in
parentheses:
Team
Points
L Southern Cal ( 14 ) (3 0 )
335
l . Oklahoma
CJ OJ
328
J M ichigan (9l (3 0)
320
4. Penn St. (3 Ol
?47
5. TexasA&amp;M (1) (30)
131
6. Colorado IJ OJ
IJ;i
7- 0hioSt (21)
114
1
06
B Texas {2-0)
9 Flordia (2 Ol
90
10. Neb,.ska (7 11
50
11 Arkansas (3 O)
31
12. Alabaman 1l
30
13. p ;tfsburgh (2.1)
13
14 , Br igham Young (20)
12

Association

of

U
niversity Women, tea, 7:30
Tuesday at the social room of
the M'ddl
I
eport First United

Presbyterian Church honor•
ing fonner and prnc:I"WW'tive
""Y'-'"
members. Any woman who Is
a graduate of aCcredited col·
1
egeoruniversilyisinvitedto
attend. Entertainment and
r err e s b men t s.
SALISBURY PTO, 7:30
p.m.Tuesdayattheschool
PAST MATRONS CLUB
'
Pomeroy Olapter, O.E.S.,
1o home of Mrs. Dorothy
~ Woodard, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
43
SALiSBURY PTO will

cw

~!. ~:;i~~r~ramt3 ~2)1l

17 .
18.
19.
10.

Houston (2-11
Ar;zona 51 (2 OJ
Te)(as, Tech (2 ·-11
W isconsin tJ -Ol
2 meet Tuesday, Sept. "l:/, 7:30
Note : By agreement With the p.m. at the school. lntroduc·
American
Football
Coaches ti
f
h
Association, teams on probat ion
on o teac ers and parents
bv the NCAA are inet i9ible for will be made. Membership
to_p 20 and national champion. du f
th
50
ts
ship consideration by the UPI
es or e year1 cen per
Board of Coaches. Those teams person will be payable, and
currently on probat ion far 1977 OOtUe caps will be collected
are : Kentucky , Michigan f
State.
Redlands ( Calif. ). orafundraisingprojecl.
Western State CColo.J.
AMERICAN LEGION

· ~&gt;.;.~·n

~~',

West

Cinci

lirstplace votes but feli Ill No.
3 after defeating Navy by
only, 14-7.
Penn State ~s impressive '!J.
9 triumph over Atlantic Coast
Conference champion
Maryland helped the Nittany
Lions move up one place to
the No. 4 spot. Texas A&amp;M,
afler downing last week's No.
6 team Texas Tech, J3.!7,
jumped from No. 7 to No. 5
and received the other firstplace vote.
Colorado climbed two positions to No. 6 after handing
New Mexico a 42-7 drubbing
while Ohio State dropped to
No.7 after its one-point loss to
Oklahoma at home.
Texas A&amp;M's triumph over
Texas Tech helped idle Texas
move one spot to No. 8.
Florida also climbed one

:a

""rf

•.. u.cece.:ucccu.:.o~::

SoC I'aI

CaIen dar

i

... ~"NESDAY
" ......
WILDWOOD GARDEN
CLUB, 8 p.m Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Ada Holter.
Each member to take picture
frame with glass and cloth for
a background along with
dried flowers for a plaque
workshop.
AMERICAN LEGION
AUXILIARY,
FeeneyBennett Post 128, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the hall.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Posll28, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the hall.
THURSDAY
BETHEL.62, International
Order or Job's Daughters, inspection Thursday night at
7:30 p.m. There will be a 6
p.m. dinner preceding the
meeting. Donna Bauman,
Belpre, will be the inspecting
officer. Lori Ann Wood is the

AU
~LIARY, t_juniorD and
semor mee mg,
rew
Webster Post 39, 7:30 Tuesday night at the halL Installation of junior otricers will be
held.

MEIGS LOCAL OAPsE 17
meeting, Tuesady, 7:30p.m.
at Meigs Junior High School
In Middleport. .
.
PAST
MATRONS,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
7:30 p.m. Tuesay at home of
Dorothy Woodard, Langs·
ville.
AMERICAN Legion . Aux·
iliary, Racine Post 602, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, Dues are
payable.
AUXIUARY OF Racine
· American Legion Post 602,
.7:30Tuesday at the hall. Dues
are now payable.
WEDNESDAy
OHIO VALLEY ComT , stated
mandery 24 , K..
meeting Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Masonic .
Temple ; all knights urged to .
attend.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club
Meeting, 12 noon Wednesday

Girl Scout Diary

POLLY'SPOINTERS
Polly Cramer
Try borax for water bugs
POU.V'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU.Y- Please tell
us what we can use to get rid
of water bugs. - VTRG INIA.
DEAR VIRGINIA - Borax
is often recommended ror
eliminating water bugs as it
is less dangerous to humans
than many other things. You
might try spreading plain
borax powder around where
the bugs have been seen or
wherever you think they
come in. If this does nol do
the job then mix equal parts
of the borax and powdered
sugar.-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I had a
Pet Peeve that I finally solved myself. When gardening I
wear work gloves, but take
them orr when planting seeds.
I was always finding myself
at one of the garden and my
gloves at the other. Finally I
decidsd to clip a clothespin to
the pocket of my jeans and
this holds my gloves when I
take them orr. I am saved
time and a lot of steps. CLARA.
DEAR POU.Y - We had
the same problem that Mrs.
A. has with mold on a north
wall. It seemed the hasic
cause was poor circulation.
When a furnace has no fan or
blower place a small fan near
the ceiling at the source of
heat and aim it downward.
Sometimes a small shelf can
be put up near the ceiling in a
problem room and the fan set
on it.
As for painting, first
remove all mold possible with
a soft brush and a mold killer
bought at the paint store.
Some mold will remain in the
plaster or wa ll material so il
must be shellacked and then
painted with mildewresistant paint. In addition to
the circillation problem you
at Meigs Inn.
MEIGS AREA women call
992-5368 daytime or 992-5832
evenings ror appointment at

might check the soil outside
the wall as too much moisture
there can also cause mold
and sweating inside. - MRS.
M.
DEAR POLLY - Adding a
quarter cup of cooking oil to
any cake mix will make a
cake just like our grandmothers used to bake.
Those who have small
families can bake and ice a
cake in any size and after the
icing sels cut the cake in
quarters or stices and lay on
paper plates. Cover well and
freeze and then no cake is
wasted or gets stale as the
pieces are thawed individually.-MARYR.
DEAR POLLY - Often
there' are coupons in
magazines or newspapers for

things we want to order and
£or which we must enclose

money. I always write a
check, even ir it is only for 25
cents, then copy the address
of the company on the back of
the check. If I ever need to
make an inquiry about things
not received I have a cancelled check and address. MRS.B.F.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers lf
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

PRICES GOOD THRU
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1st

By Charlene Hoeflich
unison closed the meeting
held on the lawn d. the
Syracuse school with Tracy
Hubbard and Wendy Fry serving refreslunents.
RUI'LAND JUNIORSI29Z
An organization of the
Rutland junior troop was held
at the school recently witJe
Pat Hysell and Chris Bowers
leaders.
The girls organized into
patrols with Jackie Frederick
being elected leader of the
"Slarlighters", Chris Black
her assistant, and Terri
Wilson, Debbie Frederick
and Kathy Dean, members.
Leader of " The Five
Muskateers" elected was
April McGrath, with Terri
Thoma, assistant, and
members, Robin Campbell'
PIED PIPER
Becky Vance, and Greta KenBEVERLY !fiLLS, Calif. nedy.
( UP!)
The
first ' Meetings were Sill for
postllumous Pied Piper Thursdays after school.
Award by ASCAP, the socjety
of music composers, will go
to the late jazz pianist Erroll
Garner.
The award will be
presented Wednesday to
Garner's brother, Vancouver
By combining your Auto
musician Linton Gamer, -in a
and
Homeown-.rs
ceremooy at the Beverly
insurance into ONE policy
Hilton. The board of directors
... You may be able to ..
of the group, the American
Society of Composers,
Authors and Publishers,
On y~ur yearly insurance
voted to honor Garner with
pr emiums.
the organization's sixth Pied
Piper award, because of his
We will review you r
"unique contributions which
insurance program
left a permanent mark on the
with you free of
world of music," an ASCAP charge any day of the
spokesman said.

SYRACUSE BROWNIE
'11\00P 11%0
At Thursday night's
meet:ing of the Brownies,
memben~ are reminded to
take a toy for the pediatric
ward at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At a recent meeting the
troop, the Brownies worked
on toothpick sculpture. The
pledge to the flag was given
by Wendy Fry, the girl scout
promise by Tracy Hubbard
and then all of the Brownies
joined in singing scout songs.
It was decided that they
will participate in the October meeting of the Syracuse
PTO. The Lord's Prayer in

DEALERS PLEASEI
O PEN SUNDA Y 9 A .M . TO 6 P.M .

or

Q U AN TITY RIGHTS RESERV ED
SUPERIOR

FRESH

LB.

STEAKmE
PATTIES

DELICIOUS

CHUCK
STEAK

LB.

MASON FURNITURE

1

773-5592

. Herman Gr ate

.

Mason , W. Va.

GOLDEN ISLE

SHORTENING

.

HEAD
LETTUCE

Phon e 992-5130
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

RC COLA or

3 LB. CAN

8-~60Z.
99~
BOmES •. ·

Heads

MARKY

Whole

lb.

Sliced

59

CORNER M.ILL &amp; SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

SUPERMARKO
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

~

POTATO
CHIPS

Superior

All MEAT

lb . 69~

WIENERS
LB.

TWIN PAK

Rath
Fresh &amp; Lean

BACON

'139
COTTAGE CHEESE ••~~. 8 9 ~
24

Town House

DOG FOOD•••••••••~~.~}.a!.. 69 CRACKERS.~~.o!-.~!.79~-

Arm ours

~~--·

DIET·,RITE

COUPON

GOLD MEDAL

GOLDEN ISE

FLOUR

CANE SUGAR

DOG
~~

FOOD.~1~!~~.......

3

cans

DETERGENt ••••••~~t.~.~.
Medium Grade A
r:dozen
EGGS .,,

Mr. Coffee

$} COFFEE FILTERS••••• ~.~.A9"
G~

7~

39c ROOM DEODORANT•••~•• 59c
59
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~

5 LB. BAG

Please

NO. 235 ·

$138

27 OZ. JAR

Coupon Expires Oct . 1,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

J

SKIPPY

GAINES BURGERS

PILLSBURY ANGEL FOOD

COFFEE

CAKE MIX

PEANUT BUTIER

NO. 305
LB. CAN

W/C

~

C!lUPON

W/C

PILLSBURY

PILLSBURY

GINGERBREAD MIX

PIE CRUST MIX

NO.
W/C

Coupon Expires Oct. 1, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

245

2

}41h

oz. 98~

. BOXES

NO. 255
'I

W/C

Coupoll .:;xpires Oct. 1,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

7
Bf;
2
SVz

oz.

BOXES

Coupon Expires Oct. 1. l977
TWIN CIT.Y GATEWAY

18 OZ. JAR

98f;

W/C

Coupon Expires Oct. I, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

I

COUPON

COUPON

j

GT. SIZE

78f;

W/C

Coupon Expires Oct. I, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY .

Coupon Expires QcJ. 1, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

CHEEF
BOX

$298

NO. 165
15 OZ. BOX

'

W/C

MAXWELL HOUSE

WITH EGG

'

·· ····· ·-:fl

COUPON

•

•

...... .

BREAKFAST DRINK

Coupon Expires Oct. 1, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Qct. 1, 1977
TWIN CITY
TEWAY

Expires Oct. 1, 1977
"'""•' CITY GA
Y

89'

DREAM WHIP
NO. 105
~.
6 OZ. BOX 88
W/C

COyPO N

$1 ~9/

j

CoUPON

36 OZ. PKG.

8-16 oz. bottles

COUPON

TANG

78'

NO. 155

DR.
PEPPER

l

COUPON

LIMIT ONE
5 LB. BAG
PLEASE
WITH COUPON AND OTHER PURCHASE

Coupon Expires Oct. 1, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Scot Lad .

·

38

WITH COUPON AND OTHER PURCHASE

TREET. ••••••••••••••••~~~.~~-99~ SALTINES•••••• !.'~;.~..49~
AJpo

C Limit One

NO. 05

THURSDAY
ONLY

RC.
COLA

l•lll'-•

COUPON

oz.

'

8-16 oz. Bottles

$3

~a\UJ_•n

Broughtons.

GROUND CHUCK •• ~ ••••••• ~b; 99~

Chummie

TOILET TISSUE.

FLOUR

PKG.

HOMO
MILK ••..••.•.••••~.~~~~n••79~

5 lb. or more

GROUND ROUND ••••••••••••• 1~-.! 1 09

SOFT-WEVE

2 ROLL

Broughtons

GROUND BEEF•••••••••••• tb. 69~

1 lb. Pk8-

GOLD MEDAL

·28 OZ. JAR

JlB.

2% LOW
llo
FAT MILK •••••••••••~•• ~ •••••

79C

APPLES

OTHER PURCHASE

DAIRY SPECIALS

Valley Bell

RA CORN

..

We Accept Federal Food Stamps.
We Reserve the Riqht to Limit Quantit ies

DAN DEE

PEANUT
BUTTER

RED or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

5 LB.

WITH COUPON &amp;

Jlf

•••

PICNIC
HAMS

CANE SUGAR

DIET RITE

Large$

'

With Coupon And
Other Purchase

CRISCO

FRESH &amp; CRISP

~·'

"The
Insurance
Store"

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

Prial

~~~·''''· '''"'~

Reuter-Bragan

Mon .• Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00
THURSDAY TI L 12 NOON

99~

LB. 7 9 e

CAL L OR STOP
AND SEE US

On All Uving Room Suites

69C

PURE BEEF

Save 10% to 25%

TRADE-IN

&amp;LEAN

GROUND
BEEF

Personal!

'1 0000

Choice

OPEN MON. THRU SA T. 9. A .M . TO 9 P.M.

week.

free cervical cancer clinic to

be held 12:30 to 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy.

••

-

PILLSBURY HUNGRY JACK

PANCAKE MIX
NO. 155

W/ C

2 LB. BOX

58f;

&lt;!I!C

Coupon Expires Oct. 1, 1977
TWIN CllY GATEWAY

.

�•- u-=: u.uy ~uw.:t,.iVUUWt;!IIIJI"I.·rWu4:rny, u.,

lUedi.UV.~Ot. ~1,

!' ;;
Generation Rap
oon: !il?JT

:AA:*'.Mst®U::h :

J.Vll

,

Gardeners Da Out Museum meeting toptc Plans made by alumni

..

t 0 attraet

By Helen aJJd Sue Bouel
.
DOKIDS ~""""Au•vvuGE•
~...........
' " " " " '6

RAP:
' I read sornewhtire that marriage relatioll8hipo start
deteriorating the minute the first child is born, ud don't improve until the last child leaves home. This because &lt;#.money
•troubles, disputes over bOw to ndse the kids, nol eiiClUgh time
!for mates, favoritism, in-laws, elc.
;n:,f:t;:.~':::i!~~~~~~ it, how come they keep
\DEAR UN:
' I teUyouanil tell you, don't believe everything you read!
' Sure, there are problems when babies arrive, and
sometimes they grow as fast as do the kids. Bull! you keep in
• mind •'marriage comes first; the children are extra dividends
to be shared and enjoyed," your relationship won't
deteriorate.
(Unless, of course, it was destined for failure anywl!y ... or
: you're the type who definitely doesn't want a family. In which
; case, don't stl!rt one, no matter how relatives push.) · HELEN

~

area

Numerous Meigs County
Garden Club members will be
In Marietta 'Ibursday for the
annual Gardeners Day Out, a
state-wide event, this year
plaMed by Mrs. James
Carpenter and Mrs. Joe
Bolin, both of the Rullaod
f'riendly Gardeners.
Approximately 500 reservations bave been mac. · for the
Gardeners Day Out with the
headquarters for the day to
be at Ban Jo.'mson Field
HOWle at Marietts College.
There will be a catered box
lunch there at noon. :
Actlvltleo will include a
.
tour of the Campus Martius
;.UNDECIDED:
Musewn, tbe Riverboat
,. If people looked at marriage as something that always ends Mu.oeum, and the Fenton
" with fighting and divorce, no one would ever marry. lf we loot Glass CG. with a trip on the
• at only the negative aspect of having children, we shouldn't VaUey Gem Riverboat.
• have them!
For both marriages and parenthood, the decision must be
• unanimous, or else one mate wiUhlnte the perfect comeback In
• a fight : "You steamrollered me! " _
P.S. Now, let's get personal: In our first years of marriage,
Mrs. Joe Bolin and Mrs.
Cliff and I set goals : what changes we wanted to make, which James Callltllter &lt;i. the
· parts we should keep the same (i.e., continued "newness," Rutland Friendly Gardeneri,
courtship, appreciation, love... ) and just exactly what kind of both Ohio Assoclatioo &lt;i.
life we want together.
Garden Clubs' accredited
• Now, alter two and one-half years, we feel secure enough judges, attended an ex• with ourselves and our union to share aU this with another: we hibitors and Judges' school at
are expecting our first baby in February.
the Hilton North In Columbus
Again, we have set goals: we'll bring up our child together,
Thursday. Instruction """ in
sharing aU the way (even to 2 a.m. feedings). We agree on basic color In arrangements,
most things, and if we don't· fine : discussion will stimulate tallle settings for flower
growth and cornmwii.cation.
.
shows , and annuals,
• So long as we don't let bad feelings fester, if we talk out the
' rough spots as we go, we believe we'll have 88 happy a family
; as we have a 'll81Tiage. ·SUE
·

.

.

/:
b
C U iJ

Tbe afternoon program will
Include a dulcimer program
by Jennifer Sheets who will
also speak on early Appalachian life.
New Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs accredited
judges from around the state
will attend in the c\)Stwne of
famous American women
and will display floral ar·
rsngements of the period
they represent.
Following the alternoon
program, the entire group
h88 been Invited to the horne
&lt;i. Dr. and Mrs. Sherrill
Cleland, the Marietta College
presidential home, for tea.
Mrs. Bolin is assistant
secretary of the OAGC, and
Mrs. Carpenter is the news
media chainnan.

lAdies attend gardening school
vegetable, and plant iden·
tlfica lion,
PAPER ENDORSES TWO
CLEVELAND (UPI ) Ohio's largest newspaper has
endorsed incumbent
Republican Ralph J . Perk
and Democratic challenger
Edward F . Feighan for
mayor of Cleveland in the

The story of the Meigs
Musewn development and a
preview of plans for the
future were presented to
members of Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority at a meeting al
the Musewn Thursday night.
Mrs. Patrick Lochary talk·
ed on the accomplislunents of
the Musewn trustees over the
past S.veral years and of the
rotating exhibits, the current
one being a display of
wildflower paintings. She
displayed a copy of the rare
Hardestry History, and noted
that the Musuem is hopeful of
havinglhe part pertaining to
Meigs County published. She
noted that this would be an
expensive project and one
Oct. 4 nonparllsan prunary.

''Our endorsements are
based upon whom we think
would guide the city most
capabl.v, not who is favored in
the polls," The Plain Dealer
sta ted editorially Sunday.
The Cleveland Press, the
city's evening newspaper ,
last week endorsed Feighan.
Besides Perk and Feighan,
also in the mayoral primary
are Dennis J. Kucinich. the
Cleveland Municipal Court
clerk, and Alyson Kennedy of
!be Socialist Workers Party.
Under Ohio election law,
the two top voter getters in
the primary oppose each
otber in the November runoff.

which could only be done
lhi-ough contributions from
thegeneralpoblic.
Themusewnisnowope,non
Sunday, Tuesday and Fnday
of each week from 2 to 4 pm.
Mrs. Velma Rue. preSJ~ed
at the meeting durmg which
time plans were made for a
rush party to be held on Sept.
29 at the horne of Mrs. Lillian
Moore. Mrs. Moore was
selected to represent the
Chapter on the Semor
Citizens Council. A plant auclion was held and members
toured the m~wn at the
close of the meeling.
Hostesses were Mrs. P~rl
Weiker, and Mrs. Clance
Krautter.

Planning lot' the 1978 Middleport Alumni Alllociation
reunion wiU begin next
month.
Mrs. Iva Stewart, president, h88 called a meeting for
7 p.m. on Oct. 10 at Kay's
Beauty Shop In Middleport
and all alumni, &lt;i.ficers, past
officers and Interested individuals ·are 'invited to at·
tend to give suggestions or
make complaints.
The Association is now
beginning to accumulate
things in orange and black for
the alumni program. Tbere
will be a monthly meeting of
aU the officers to plan for the
reunion.
The officers

are Mrs.

'
TRY OUR F.RESH

PE.Aai SUNDAES
AND SHAKES

''

BOOTS
14.00 to 112.00·

one year old

,; ~ES,&lt;y

FOODS

Use Our
layaway Now
For Christmas

ADOLPH'S

0'
~
te Dlllf 0

DAIRY VAllEY

SIIVIUI"'S

HRS.; 10 :00 A.M. tilll :00

P.M. Sun .. Thurs. 10 : 00 A.M.

til 12 : 00 P.M. Friday and Saturday.

See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

PICI&lt;-A -PAIR

STORE HOURS
MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM 10 9 PM .

MICHAEL LEE

DRESS SHOES
13.00 to 112.00

16.95
'MANY
PRETTY GIFTS
.99' to 119.95

:Baby turns

•

•
~

(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion, two• generation style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen
:. Bottel - or both, if you want a combination molber-daugbter
: answer ·In care of this newspaper.)

••

~Bridal

u.em:

?
•

'

If you're comparing health care
plans for your company, you should
be aware that although two plans
may look alike, they can still be
quite different. Make sure you're
comparing exactly the same coverages ... dollar for dollar ... benefit
for benefit .. . service for service.
Otherwise, it's like

•~

Racine PTO meet
,.
'

: RACINE - Introduction of
' ' : teachers and parents
: highlighted the first meeting
•. of the Racine Elementary
: PTO held Monday night at the
: school.
:· Mrs. Jan Cordone opened
: the meeting with Mrs. Patty
• Hensler leading In tbe pledge
: to the flag and the Lord's
: Prayer. Mrs. Sue Ann Beegle
: resd the minilles of the last
: meeting with Mrs. Pam Did• die giving the treasurer's
.'
.
• report.
.
: Bob Beegle announced that
: school pictures will he t·•ken
•'
•
•
•
•
•

••
••

•••

••
•••

•••

••

••

••

.E
~

•••
•••
••

~'

Wednesday1.•Sept. 28. It was
also noted inat the school Is
still saving Campbell and
Franco-American product
labels along wolh Post cereal
box tops.
Members voted to conduct
a membership drive, Plans
were made to had a carnival
In the spring Instead of the
fall. Teachers announced
homeroom mothers.
Mrs. Edna Price's third
grade won the room count.
Refreshments were served
by the officers.

•

FEEDER CALF SALE OCT. 4, 8 P.M.
.I

comparing apples to oranges.
Another comparison youshould
look at is the balance between
benefits and cost . .. what you need
versus what you can afford. And,
it's especially important to make
sure you and your employees are .
adequately protected from gaps
in your coverage that could wipe
out a life's savings.
·

149
$
09
PORK ROAST .......................... ..,.. 1
.
Po.nd

LOtN END

Pound

KANIS BIG RED SMOKIES ...... '"""' '1
DILUXE CLUB BOLOGNA ......... ,.,•• '1 2'
KAHNS BRAUN SCHWIEGER ... '"""' 69'

1

KAHNS

WHOLE FRYERS.......... ~~~~.4.~~~ •••• ~:.39~

•1
29
........

BOB EVANS

SAUSAGE.......~~~
a't' HORMELL

HAM PAniES ·~~",' 5

Pomeroy, Ohio

1

lB.

CENTER CUTHAM SLICES ,.,•• s I"

BREASTS &amp; DRUMSTICKS

US NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE

YEUOW ON IONS .......................... 3

WHITE POTATOES
20
baglb.

'159

69•

lttiGHS •••••••••••••••••• LB. 6tc

BONELESS

19

BEST OF THE CHICKEN

CUT UP•••••••••••••••••• LB. 45•
FAMILY PAK .............. LB. 43•

l LB.

'

VALENCIA

49'

CALIFORNIA ORANGES .........8 ,M 99•

CARROTS ... ................. ....... ....... 2 :.0~· 431

CUCUMBERS .............................. 3 ,M 39•

LB

FRESH

LONG GREEN ILICINO

CALIFORNIA

SWEET THICK MEA TED

NECTARINES ., .........................................L.~: .. -~9'

GREEN PEPPERS ....................... 3 ••. 39•

~·.~ ~~;,.._ $ 2''~
c

z

'

WELCHES

GRAPE JAM or JELLY ...............
SUE BEE H()NEY ...........................

PLAZA
SIOR£s, •

tARDI,.At FOoo stOfiES

I Bell) ill•]: 1

\.

BEANS N' ~IXINS

u---.....·-

HARDIN lli!STALLED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dr.
Rexford E. Hardin of Toledo
' was lnsti!Ued as president of
the Ohio Dental Association
at the group's 111th annual
lesSion Sunday.

-~-';"

nt
~·,,_20 '1oOI
.

s·

,

c•.,

~

"5
..

....,..,D11n1.
lloy•l I I&lt;MI 1 • --

e.,.,.;..-

CAc:o;~~ ~#

I

2

89'

~.:-" szt•

ElliCE .53~~z.

HARDI,.S

Ptl., P•n llmoolh 0&lt; Crun.:hr)

$

,

14
$ St
COFFEE MATE ........ .. _. . . ~~~':' 1

PEAIIUT BUnER ................. .'~~:··

1"
SAIIDWICH SPREAD ............'~~:· 79•

:= APPLE CIDER ..... :.... ...............~::.
.,.

J~~

'

1

~
~

el

MUSSELMAN

2

5

KRAfT

CARNATION

'

-.

illiiiPPLER ;g:~:. 44~

BULOVA.
A name
you know
on a watch
can

~­

. ' 0' '~'., '

.......

SJ Zt

DIIO"'EOAAY

COCKTAIL::,,:,~

1

PinED DATES ...........':;;:

P'

CRACKER JACKS ........ ~:;

49'

PRIMGLES .....................~:

19'

•••

·---MIIWVM.UII-KRAFr ·

24oz.f9'

2

VEET1 s~·

Bottle

$1

GOLDEN GRAIN

MAC. &amp; CHEDDAR

, ••. $1
4 Bo•"

Lmtit on• with coupon

limit on• with llOUpon 1nd
Purdl••• txcludinv
betr , wint end CiiJlllrenn.

S,O_OO

l(fiAFT

PILLSBURY SWEETMILK or BUIT£AMILK

'

MIDGET COLBY LOIIGHOIII .. ~:! s1" BISCUITS ............................4 :;::~ 59•

ey:.U StORES • CAROII,Al

·

-'
~
0

WHIPPIIIG CREAM ...... :............ .'::::. 49• CIIIIIAMOII ROLLS ..............·~;;: 49•. 5

.

MILK

CGaartlloonn

$Is'

BIRDS EYE

AWAKE .... 2 ~;::
.

apples to apples, it's awfully.
tough for anybody to beat a Blue Cros$
and Blue Shield plan.

•

89&lt;

Limit lwo willl coupon

2 Lb.
Box
GORTON

,.

FRIED FISH POITIOIIS .. ~::.· s17'
SUIIDAE CUPS .................~~.·

•
p

Blue Cross
Blue Shield
in CeotTal Olio

\

lETTY CP•OCKER

NEWII BIG BA TCII

~
I'

Think of aU you give
when you give a
Bulova watch. A
' precise and practical timepiece. ~
flattering piece Qf
· jewelry. A lifetime ,

•
'Do STORES

PUIUNA

.

$

Sf

MEOW MIX .............................•;;~' 1

•

Choc. Chtp ....... ..

COOKIE MIX
_

'1"

011mltl, Peanu1 Butler

CJr

•

32.·ot

Su111r Pilg ..

$

.
159

MACARONI OR
SPACiHEnl

,~89;

MOP II GLO .............................~!;:.:; s159
II' OFF LAIEL

'

$ ..

LYSOLSPIAY ..................... ·~~'::' s149 BOUIICE ................................... .'~;~·· 1 .
LIQUID DETERGENT

oz. $1 ~!. • •

IK

gift..
There's never been .
· a better time to buy
a Bulova. The atyies
are exciting; our
,eltction 11 exten- ·
siva and the price is
right From $48.95

STEER &amp; HEIFER CALVES
&amp; YEARLINGS

69'

MU,TO $CIIfJtJL FAWJ~

•

n

GAlliPOLIS, 0•

32
Bottle

w"h oo•pon

uie oiw Celmnlellt
'R&lt;Iiottf&lt;d Marks Blue Cross Association

L..:...--.:.'----~..::·---•

Pound

Jf

$

PILlSBURY

'

Calves will be received after 3 p.m. Oct. 3
and until 12 f'OOn on Day o~ Sale. ;All
consignments welcome. For mformatton
phone 4&lt;U-9760 or 446-9049 .

PORK CHOPS ..........................

CARDINAL
HOMOGENIZED

STATE GRADED
AT OHIO VAllEY LIVESTOCK CO.,

If you're comparing plans, sit down
and talk with a Blue Cross and
Blue Shield representative. See
how your health care program ·
can be strengthened to better .
. meet your group's specific needs.
It will be worth the time ... bealuse

$

CENTU CUTIU8

59

BIG JOHNS ·

accenting
Soft drinks,
coffee and 11111118 were served
with the cake.
Attending the llhower were
Drema Roach, Dorothy
Rosch, Kim Payne, Mary G.
Pickens, Megan Miller, Sue
Goeglein, Patty Pickens, and
Mary Pickens, Cllflon, W.Va.
Games were played with
Mrs. Goeglein winiling the
door prize.
Sending gifts were Mrs..
Carole Fox, Columbus; Mary
l'ones, Clifton, . W. Va. ;
Esther Bacon, Alisa Harris,
Sheila Carsey, Marsha
Spalding, Mary Lee, Beth
McKnight, and Bernice Fry.
Mrs. Anna Hoffman, Clif.
ton, W. Va. was unable to attend due to illness.

9 to 11 CHOPS

PORK CHOPS ..........................

•

: Poolslife at the picturesque
' home of Dr. and Mrs. R. R.
~ Pickens was the setting for
; the Sept. 12 bridal shower
~ honoring Barbara Tobin
; Keaton, bride-elect of Ken• nelh L. Hoffman.
: The shower was given by
: Miss Mary Anna Hoffman,
~ sister of the groonH&gt;lect, l\lld
j Miss Becky Fultz with Miss
! Becky Thomas also serving
• as a hostess.
: · Pink and white streamers,
! hearts and · wedding bells
~ decorated the shower area
·, and two bridal cakes, baked
• and designed by Mrs. Ber·
• nard Fultz, carried out the
·: color scberne. Inscribed on
• both cakes were "Barb and
.: Kena:Y" with hearts and roses
•
•
•
•

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT
CARRYOUT SERVICE
WE GLNlY M:CEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
C ENTER CUT LO!N

A party In celebration of
the first birthday of Michael
Lee, Hartford, W; Va. was
held recently at the home of
his grandmother Betty
James, Clifton.
Attending were Sheila Prof·
fltt and son, Bubby Klein,
Tina and Carl Keams, Bobby ·
James, Bonnie Francisco,
andy James, Tucker, Laura
llld Susie James, and Charles
Qlristy.
Refreslunents were served
ed gifts were presented to
tbe honOred guest.

LETART FALLS- Satur·
day Mrs. Pearl WIUis of
Letart F~ was surprised
with a birthday party. She
received gifts along with a
birthday cake. A potluck dinner waa seryed.
Attending were Mrs.
Joeeph Mirarchi, Recbele
and Cindy, Mt. Cannel, Pa.;
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Webb
and Brian, Mr. and Mrs. John
C. Webb, Miss Melody Webb,
West Jefferson; Mrs. Ethel
Buscbesne and William Coff.
man of Worthington; Mr. and
· Mrs. WIIliamJonesandBilly,
Miss Sherry Ehrenberg,
David Ehrenberg, Miss Julie
· Mixer, Columbus.; Mrs.
Helen Slack, Letart Falls.

m.

f_IIEIDUESUIIVI(I .11 TOWa .

QUARTERED

Mrs. Willis,
given party

: PERSONAL to "Anolber Hair 'Em . Scare 'Em" : Waxes,
t creams, razors, tweezers, electrolysis... To belp you find the
; right product, the American Medical Assaclation has pilbllah• ed a booklet caUed "The Hair You Can Do Withoot," which
: describes various methods of eliminating it. For a copy, send
: 25 cents to AMA, 533 N. J)earoom, Chicago, 60610.
: As for me, I'm partial to a fine, sandpaper-like !llitten which
· ! boffs off unwanted hair without leaving a taSh. U you can't
t fiod it In your area, send me a stamped, sell-iiddressed
• envelope for more details .• HELEN

shower hosted for
•
.•~ Miss Barbara Keaton

Boys

1

•

• NOTE FROM HELEN: The patter of little. feet Is becoming a
: stampede in the Bottel clan. Sue's and Cliff's baby will make
: six under-5-year-old grandchildren for Bob and me • pillS one
; teenage step-grandson. Just call us· happy grandparents.

Stewart, president; Mn.
Nancy Morris,vice presldent;
Mrs. Barbara Fry,
!leCretary; and Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan, treasurer.

Ladies Golf Shoes

~

. 7- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TUesday, Sept. Tl, 11.7

• 'Registtf&lt;d S&lt;rviC&lt; Marks of The NatiOnal Assodation of Btut ~ Pllni ·

Lay.u.y ......

REGUI.AII. MIHTHOL .. LIMON -liME

·

GIWTTI FOAMY ............................... '1;~· 99'

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY SIORE

OIUITTI

STAIIILISS BLADES .............................. ;;:: 89•

o.

.,

'

�....,-.'

1 - T'he DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Tuesday, Sept. Z7, 19n

..,.

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
1doy
tdoy&gt;

WE WOULD lik• to e•preu our

Owt~l!'

12&gt;

....

1.00

3dalyli
id•)lli

heortfelt thanks ond gratitude
ro the mony friends , neighbors
ond relatives who gave U$ their
support during the l~s of our
husband ond laH'I • r , Jamei W .
Former . Many thanks for oil the
k indneu .
Jympathy
and
beau tifu l floral which were
rec•ived. A special ·thank )'ou
to Rev . Robart Harrah lor his
touching ceremony , the staff of
the Rawlings-Coots Funeral
Home, and a very speciol1honk
yov to Dr . R. R. Pickens. for his
kindness , and unders tanding at
o time when it was much pp·
precioled . Wif,, Ruth ond
Children , Peggy and Ruth Ann .

101

t23

:too

J,iS

Eac.it won! uver tlw UlUliiiiW)I 15
wvnbi w it"'ll.i ~t vmn.J. p•r Wiy.
"AW. I'UI\1\IIIg ul.ha-:r lhau CUHM't'Ull ~~
days wtH br c har~f'd M1 the I thll
- 't'Mit'.

•

111 tllt.'lllut) ', Card uf Thanks tulll
~ .00

. Olliluary: 6 l'ents per word,
mmuuwn . Cash in advwnl't'.

Mubtlt Home&amp;o~.kllitnkl Y•m.l !&gt;lilt'S
an~ illl'L'\.'ptl!d on!~·

with .._~o~sh wnh
order . 25 t-ent l'har~t' for adl CKJ1'\·

Ut.t&lt;: Bolt Nwnl&gt;t'r lu Cart- vf Tilt' St•i.,.

\ln~l .

GUN SHOOT . Rocina Gun Club
evttl'y Sun afternoon . Factor
Chock guns only , A ssorted
mea rs .

The PuiJh.sht.'r rt"SCI'Vt.'S lht.• lt)!ht
to t'i.ln ot· rejt'1.'t any ttd!&gt; d~'t.'IHt•d ub,it"'.' liUital. Tlk' ?ubh!&gt;ht."f 11. til nut lit
t\!'SpuiUitble fur murt• Ulan um· llll'ur·
ret.1 mse111urL

ATTENTION BOW Huntert! For a
comp lete line of Bow Hunting
supplie s; The Bow Hunter Shop .
New Hoven, W. Vo . Phone

Plwne 99"2-:m.O

(30ot l 882-2827. Ask fa. Dove

NOTICE

Richard$ .

Noon on Saturday
Tuesda.}
Uu"U Fnt.lar

4PM.
tht.' Ut~y tw furto pubh ciHWJ il
Swt!.lay
4 P.M.
F t•i\.l!l}' ilfU&gt; t' I1UOil

For TUHdoy, Sept. 27, 1877

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

-~IJm

~ ITJ~wlbamv
S.pt./27' 1177
If entering !nlo any type of

partnership this coming yea r.
you 'd be wise to join with one
who has more to offer than you
do, Do this even. if you have to
take a smaller percentage.

LIBRA (Sopt. 23·0ct. 23)
Choose carefully those to whom
you would delegate authority to day . Where normally your Instincts are excellent. today you
may pick a loser. Find out to
whom you're romant•cally suited
· by sending for your copy of.
Astra-Graph Letter . Mall 50

cents for each and a long. selfaddressed, stamped envelope to

Astro-Graph, P.O. Bo• 489 ,
Radio City Station , N.Y.' 10019,
Be sure to specify your birth
sign .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·No•- 22)
Poor judgment today could lead
you to get Involved In a situation
where you get all the work and
worry and someone etse reaps
praise and benefits.

SAGinARIUS (No•. 23-0.C.
21) In managerial maners today,
be neither too strict nor too
lentent . The way to disCharge
your dut1es lies somewhere in
between.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. It)
Make it a 'point today to keep out

of family affairs those who don't
belong . Rather tha~ calm ing
troubled waters . they could
cause a tidal wave.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 11)
Keep a cool head today , for pea·
pi e w ill del i ght in thr owing
monkey wrenches Into your
plans. They'll want to do t hings
opposite from what you had In

very Careful In all one-to-one
re lat ionsh ips today . Thi ng s
could get out of k1tter on the
home fro n t , in bu siness or
recreation .

TAURUS (April 20-May 201
MJscalculations at work have a
way of magnifying themselves
today Use great cau tion to avoid
them . They c ould ha ve serious

implications.
mind .
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Ex-

Obligations co1ne first lor any
money you have on hand . A
good buy may seem ehtlclng,
but delaying what you sh ould do
could spell trouble.

travagartce is your nemes1s tO·

day. Curb any tempt1ng wasteful
practices and stifle mstincts to
keep up with the Joneses.

AUCIION EVERY Fn 7 pm . lots
of new ond Ul~ fT'erchondiie
a1 Ohio R1"'er Au(tion, Meigs
Plaza. Middleport, Oh10. Home
Phone (304) 773·5.. 71 ,

NEED WORK
992 S9-49 or

m

Work~&gt;
, Main Str. . t. Pomeroy,
Ohioo,phone9Cn · ~l .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Although
you may feel you hold all the
aces today. count the outsta n·
ding cards before you declare
you rself the w1nner. Someone
may be wa it ing to trump you .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221
Before getting mi xed up In

For 17 to 31 year olds.
Training with lull pay and
benefits PLUS travel &amp;
adventure in the U.S.
Navy . Call or see : 221
Columbus Rd ., Athens,
Ohio. Phone I collect I 5933566.

rnoney· savlng schemes tod~y,
chec k out those who want to Invol ve yo u. They must be just as
respon si ble as you are.
INEWSPo\PER

ENTERPRISE ASSN I

PIANO TU NING and Repair lone
Daniels , 992-2082 , 12 years ser·
'l'ice to Tri ·County . Reference:
Elberfelds .

cauliflower , broccoli,
ond
heod lettuce plants,
yellow, wh1te and "red onion
'ets , onion plants , Kennebet ,
cobbler , Ko rohdln , Red Pontiac
ond Aed Losada 5eed potatoes.
Bulk garden seeds, potting soil,
pect moss , fruit trees and rosa
bushes . M1dway Market ,
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992·2582.
8ob:s Market , Mason, W .Va.

(Min .) Collies. 2 females , 7
weeks old, Shots ond wormed .
Pl'lone
(6l .. ) 36? -029'2 or

3&lt;&gt;7-7112. - - - - - - -

WILl DO babys itting 1n my home. HOOF HOllOW Horses . 8uy , sell
trade or train . New and used
742-2833 .
saddles. Hone Shoeing . Ruth
Will CARE for , or do hght
Ree11es , Albany . (b1 4) 69S ·3790.
housework for the elderly by
the day or week in the Mtd · AKC POODLE puppies . Two
apricot males . 949-2571.
dleport or Pomeroy area .
Phone 992 ·5254 .
MEIGS COl)N TV Humane Society,
Coraline and adoption Service .
Will DO housecleon1ng or off ice
992-76110, 742-3162, 992-5427.
cleaning , Will give ref~rences.
Phone 992 -6208.
AKC REGISTERED Boxer pups. 3
BILLY GOAT l or stud serV it'e.

742-2753.

males. 94 9·2644 .
FOUR ho ff Border coll ie , holt (Ol lie pups . Ho"'e been around
sheep and cows , Will make
good stock dogs. Call 992-5106.

992-6370.

Au tomori c, Good condition .
$750. 992·2995.
WANTED OLD p iano s, ohy condit ion . Paying $10 .00 and $25 .00 1%9 CHEVROLEl , fa ctory stan·
each . Firs t f loor only . Expert
dcrd sh ift , good t ires , good
moVi rlg. Fully insured com runn ing condition, good body ,
pony . Wrife givmg directions .
1967 Chevrolet , standard shift .
Witten Pianos , Bo x 188, Sardis ,
949-2563.
Oh 10 43946 . Ph one (614 )

1965 CHfVROLET WAGON . Sten -

483·16()5,

(304)773-5721 '
ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil at·
tochments . Like new, asking

$2250. Phone (614l698-3290.

•

5:3G-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33: Mary

IF YOU hove o ser ... tce to off er ,
wont to buy or sell something,
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get res ults
laster wi th o Sent inel Won t Ad .
Co li 992-2156 .

THREE FAMILY PORCH SAtE . Skin·
ner's Lone , Pomeroy ' near
Minersville ci ty i iml.ts . Wed •
Ttlurs . Fireplace se t , household
items , toys , maternity and
other cloth ing Ra in or sh ine:

pm.
10 H. TRUCK camper , $950. Unico
2 door large r efrige rator , $85 .

Baby bed, $1 5. 1965 Ford
Cu stom for

parts , $75. Call

'19H I24.
TWO COMPLETE b&amp;d s. Sw 1vel
rocker. new rec li ner , two storm
w indows , Kenm ore dryer. Me·
Cullough cholnsow. 133 Butter nut, Pomeroy.

FOR

985·4104 ,

Sale . 50c . a

doz.

SPECIAL THIS week only : 40 chon·
nel CB's, $79.95. 40 chonne l CB
receiver only S 12.30 . De lco air

• hocks , $29.95. RC . 8 peck , 16
oz:., 99c. Gem flo..,or s. 6 pack.,
79c plus toK ond deposit. FRYE 'S
Pennzoll, Rutl and , Ohi o .
742 ·9575 or 7A2-1081. Wr ecker
Service and Tire Repai r . Open
10 until 10 Daily. Closed Mon·
days .

NEED A WATER
Pomeroy

'279.95
Let

us test

your water

FOR SALE

1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA , A· I
condition , new tires , 56,000 oc ·
tuol mi les , ask ing $2275. For
more information , 992 -7375 .

Hotpoint Refrigerator

1 New 20 cubic fl. Chest
Freezer

6 cyl.

$25.00 Discount
( 11 Good Relrigerator S200

after

5:30.

Pomeroy Landmalk
9..,
lllil..

YARD SALE , Rt. 124 between
Rutland and Rt . 7. Clothes,
~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
glasswar e, electric motors , old
Phone 992·2181
furniture and misc . Sep t. 29 and STARCRAFT lOth ann iversar y sale
on mini-moto rs , trailers , and 1!~~~-------...J
30, 9-6.
lolddowns . Trovelstor 25 ft .
FIVE FAMil Y Yard Sole w ill be
$4400.00; 20 ft. m ini ·motor 1976 KX 125 KAWASAKI. Never
he ld at Libby Fisher's, Racine ,
$10,850 .00 . We sell servi ce and
been raced. EKcellent condi on the hil l post the Leg ion Hall ,
quality . Camp Conley Starcroft
tion . 992·3016 .
1st rood o n the left . Wed . and
Sales , Rt. 62 north of Pt . PleaBUCKSKIN MARE , 12 yean old , 5
Thurs., Sept . 28 and 29 , 9-4.
sant.
gaited , gentle. 992-2250.
FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole , thur s. 17 ' Tra vel Troller, sell -contained.
and Fri., 9-6 ot the lorrY
Sleeps
si x . Furnace and GOATS. 6 weeks old . 2 .male ,
$15, 2 female , $25. (614 l
'O'Br ien residence , Letart Foils .
refr igerator . Stove , 992-7644 .
696· 1234.
Turn left ot first lone after pas sing Racine Locks ond,Dom . Lots 25 FT. TRAVEL Trailer with own· TAKING ORDERS lpr firewood end
ings . Located ot Royal Oaks
of nice children 's and adult
sto..,ewood . Call843·2933 .
Trailer Pork , Lot No. 215.
cl othing. Al so , many household
Owner ot trailer on weekends .
60 ,000 BTU GAS haotmg stove.
items.

Asking $45. 843·2933.

A CAREER with a luture lor oman 3 AND 4 RM. furn ished and un ·
furnished opts . Phone 99:2 or woman who wonts the best
s.t:JA.
in life. A pay check every
week, for:.tast ic l ri nge benefits, AVAILABLE AT Ri11ers ide Apts . 1
all loca l work . Give us o call at
bedroom , $105 per month. $150
m -:2460 or write , Western
security deposit. 99:2-6098.
Southern Life Insurance , 218 1h
E. Main , Pomeroy . Oh io . for in· FOUR , ROOMS and both . Adults
~ only . No pets . 992-5908.
format ion.
ADDRESSERS WANTED Im - TWO BEDROOM tra iler . Real nice .
mediately I Work at home •· no
experience necessary .• ex·
cellent pay. Write American
Service , 8350 Pork lone, Suite
269, Dallas , TX 75231.

FEMALE COMPANION to "live ·

992 -3324 .

FIVE ROOMS and o bath. Upstclrs
opt . In Pomeroy, OH . 992·5621

or 992-2205.

TWO BEDROOM opt , Hot water
heat, buih·in k itchen , 992 -3592 ,
offer 7 pm.

TWP BEDROOM house . Carpeted .
992·3090.

BROWNING GOLDEN Eagle Mark
Ill 23 channel AM base station
CB . Phone 9-49-2322.
ALMOST NEW electric mu lcher ,
$100 cosh. Good shape. Paul E.
Vall , 992·2958 .

1975 HONDA XL 350. Only 2300
\ miles. $750. 992 -73.42,

•

HOW DO YOU STAND?
Do you have a marketable job skill?
Would you be interested in the following?
*Technical training at no cost.
* Full pay &amp; benefits while training.
* 30-day paid vacation each year.
*Free medical care.
*520,000 life insurance for just $3.40 per
month.

FOR SALE or rent: Nice 2 bedroom
Mobile Home , unfurnished,
rent deposit required. Possible
for buyer to leave mobile home
on lot in o beoutitul country setting . 74:2 ·3122.
FOR SALE

trade or land con tract . 2 bedroom house in
Rutland . 992 ·5858 .
.
Of'

TWO LOTS in Pomeroy for good

For all this and more --SFC EASON

bulldozer or end lOader. Write
Milton Bartram , Fort Goy , W.
Vo. 25114

CAU. ARMY OPPORTUNtnES
592-1171

CAMPE~ .

APP . 200 ACRES of ground , no
build ings . Tuppers Plains ,
Ohio. 667 ·33.49 .
NEW THREE bedroom house , tully
carpeted, fireplace , dining
room , carport. 1 acre lot.

667 -3349.
EIGHT ROOM house , 2 car
garage. Reduced to $16,000.
Good locotj on . 232 South 4th,
Middleport .

troil &amp;r .
37'70.

electric ond aluminum siding ,
fully carpeted and well insulated , level fenced lot, owner
leaving state . Only $17 .900.
See ot 169 Beech Sl ., Mid · ._
dleport .
TWO BEDROOM house in
Syracuse . Storm windows , 2
porches . aluminum building ,
partially furnished . 992·5395.
SEVEN YEAR old hous•. 3 acre s. 6
rooms and both . 1/1 mile from
Chester . 985 ·3950.
RURAL HOME for sole by owner ,
Kiichen , dining room , double '
living room , four bedrooms
upstairs , bathroom on each ·
floor , full bcsemenl , cool fur ·
nace , fuel oil furnace , c1ty
water . Also, well and cistern .
Cellar house with :2 room dwell·
in g. vverheod . Lorge born. On
appro)(. 3 '/zacres of land . Pric.·

norse

ed o1' $35,000 lirm. Shown by

$450. Phone (614l 698-

appoin1mer ' only . 992·3469 or

$600.

Also ,

l'*lo liPi'.:holstO.

Residential
and
commercial. Call for
estimate , 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 98S-3806

Young's
Carpeting
Carpet Uph

11J

Annivt111ries

CARSE~-­

~ill Oceosions

pafr icks 8, 10; Upst airs, Downstairs 20,33 .

OTHESR: !

loll Hotflic~

8:3D--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ,
9:oo- Pollce Story 3,4,15; Three's Company 6,13: Mash
8,10; In Perfo rmance at Wolf Trap 20,33.
9:3D--Soap 6; One Day at a Time 8,10; Mar y Tyler

At

992-2206 or 992-7630
"The on~......
2 B-1 mo

•

D. Bumgardner

Pool Sales

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one leiter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

ALIEYOOP

9tH724
Complolo Solos w Sertic:t ootl

o'

plitL

3·14-1 mo.

SEHCS

-·:.

KJ I

I

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

I·'·'·

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

·''
'''

R""'l
Porn...,, Ohio 4575!

~-.,. Oilio

R ustolttlm Paint Products

•we can sttip parts directl';'

U.P .S.

•custom Hydrillulic Hose
Ma(l;ing

PatiOS-

Ph. 992-7119 or 696.1005
Estlmolos opplitd lo joll.
&amp;·11-1 mo. pd.

8-7-lma.

.....

FREE ESTIMATES

KinpbulJ HotQe Sales
b JOUf' 1utltorized de1ler lor Urbln
nninrs and urports. If 1011 •aht 1
quJiitJ rroduct Which will tncrene the

home, Of mobUe home.
enhanu its ltuuty for
fl!IJ$ to come, this will suit,., neects.
Tht Urban lint is all aknninum, httvy
pu~t. anoclileO railin111 1nd posts,

lllowolniD Walls I ~ttics
STOIIM
WI"DOWS I DOORS
R!I'LICEM!NT

plain or -.atM. wt hfl! an e1·
perienctd ern thlt have createcl m1ny
of these fiM qu1lib awniftp and tar·
ports tn this Jte.a. Most ol these pr•

1·28-1 mo.

SIOIIIG-SOifiTT
GIITTEJS.AW"INGS

Alocal contractor
Phone 949-2801

5JfiC1111, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

Frtt fstim1ta
No Sundly Colis P~llt

mo

' .,.-

SIX ROOM house ct 613 Mill St .,
fl!t lddleport . Good conditlon .lrl·
qu ire ot 439 Lincoln St. ,· M iddleport'.

Vesterday's

MUST SELL th is 3 bedroom , 2Vt
both, spl it -foyer w ith oil thee*tros ! Priced for below actua l
real estate value for quick
sole ! Nice dr i11e to power
plan ts. $.f4,000. 992·2492.
THREE BEDROOM ranch masonary
construct ion. 15(() sq. ft . Out of
town . 992 -3684 , 9til5. $16,9((1.

992 -3~5.1 '
~

. ""

-· - .

~---···--"

Coli '192-7481.
NEW J bedroom house, 2 bath s,
all sl ec., 1 acre, Midd leport.
dose to Rutland . Phone 99 2·
' 7481 .
SMALL forni for sa le , 10 ~. down,
owner finan ced . Monroe County, W . Vo . Phone (30A ) 772-

''«
•

3102 or (30ot l 772-3227.

COUNTRY for"mlond w ith seclud·
ed woods , water ond good oc·
ONE ACRE lots , lOOft . Rt. 7. Fran ·
cess in M onroe Coun-ty , W. Vo.
tage . Tuppers Plains , Ohi o ..
$1 ,000 down , coli (304 ) 772-

667·3349. -

TEAFORD(B
Rffll TOR

ViRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street

A fvf.l3-AT STOCK a=
Ba:F. H~Rf', UJN..Vi ...

'10J

LA!&lt;R~

n

phone (614l 592·3051.
2.

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house, F. A . furnace, storm w1n·
dows , fireplace in M iddleport .
Phone 992-3457 .

Phone 992-3325

heating . Nice kitchen and

level lot' $24,000.

i

;
~

• bo~don.

e"
"

Phone 949-2814

·

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
~ 1 ~1 m~

...,;,

.,

APARTMENT HOUSE Has 3 apartments and 1
efficiency in good brick

building. S2&lt;W per month
lull occupancy. ' I block
from heart of town. Just
$23,000.
SYRACUSE- Building lol
with no close neighbors.
150' x 200', electric and
water available. $2,800 .
~

bedrooms, l lf2 baths, and
family room . Has a ladles
kitchen and 1 car garage. 1
acre ,
in
family

neighborhood.
ACRES -

Country
fresh air with nice ranch
style 4 bedroom . Central
heating with free gas . Lots
of fruit trees and close to
town .

BIG - 4 bedroom home
with family room; hot air
furnace , 2 baths , and is on

large lot with garage. Near
woods .

' 2
APARTMENT HOUSEin

Pomeroy.

City water , Ohio Power.
and natural gas. Only
59,600.
70 ACRES - On Rt. 33
North lor less than SISO an
acre.
POMEROY- 2 bedroom
home with low upkeep on
quiet street . Central
heating and garage.
OLD RT. 33- 4.65 acres
lairly level. Electric and
wttter available .

HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES

BRADFORD . Auctionee r , Com-, ·
plete Ser11i ce. Phone 9-49-2487 1'
or 949-?QC(). Racine , Ohio, Critt
Bradford .

Good

pick;n's,

But a manqot
t' know what
he's doin' ~

Joel?

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

JUST

LISTED

2

very good Invest ment at
just $38,888.00.
JUST LISTED- Business
room in good location , w ith
2 apartments over. 2 car
garage, alley in' rear, 40 ft.

frontage. $6,900.00.
JUST LISTED - 2 lloor
plan home with new F.O.
forced
air
furnace,
insulated , storm doors, 3
bedrooms, bath , dining
room . Going at just

$6.900.00.
NEEDS SQME WORK- 2
bedrooms, bath , kitchen
and living. Bedrooms have
been renovated . Front
porch and 2 lots. A lot lor a
little . $4.800.00.
CLOSE TO MEIGS HI - 50
acres, buy ali or half . Lots
of lrontage , good for
building sites.
LOOK, 3.05 ACRES Lovely 3 bedroom home
with equipped kitchen,
d!nlng room. utility, all
carpeted except k lichen
and utility . F.O. forced air
heatJ

entire

home

insulated . large detached
garage and workshop, pole
barn, chick~n house, cold
room, lots ol fruif and
berries. THIS IS TRULY A
BABY fARM_ 535,000.00.
TO
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY QUICK, LIST
WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR - HANK, KATHYLEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
m:22s,, 992-6191
"3-2s.l

phone 992-3525 or 992· 5232.
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe 1.
and d itcher . Charles R. Hoi· :•
field , Bock Hoe Service , ~:
Rutland. Ohio . Phone 7"2 ·2t:XJQ, : 1

lo

CARPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
panel ing . Phone 992-2759.
t

WINNIE

MEAN- ARE

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec~
plumbing and heating . Phone ~

'yOU

WHILE.. ' GOING ID

KEEP DINO'e
GIFT,

E•-

I 71-f/NK I WILL/
IM CURIOUS W8EE
WHAT KIND OF GAME
HE:S. PlAYING!

WINNIE .(?1(.~f-J

covoting , sept ic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump trueR, ,
limestone , grovel , blacktop •
paving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (61•t)l

'

HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair. Service ;
Colis . '176 Sycamore , St., Mid- ;
dleport. Phone 992·2522.
""J

fo r
'

1975 12 • 60 SllULTZ mobi"'
home. Phono 742-2965.
-l

·'

can't tell you
how much I love
you,"he said.

"Try," she said.

"I'm very fond
of you," he sa.id,

"Nice try,"
she said.

----·- -- -

South

23.N. T.

6.

bt•&lt;·a u.•w , lw drew trumps to
s ta rl the plo,Y .
ll1 s ('urrc('l play was to cash
thl' J('(' Jnd king of clubs and
his scrond high diamond He
s hould le•d " trump to dummy
next to check for ,a 4-0 trump
break. When both opponents
followed he shouid ruff a club
in his own hand , lead another

trump to see both opponents
foll ow, ruff dummy's iast ciub
a nd his own last diamond,
lead a heart from dummy and
play his 10. West couid take
his ' jack but would have no
lead back to hurt declarer
lncidentaily, in spite of the
tempting honor combinations,

West 's righ t lead wa s a
trump .

A Ma ssachusetts reader
wants to know if whist was a
very easy game to piay.
No . it wa sn't. Whiie there
was no bidding there were no
biddiijg problems_ There was
aiso no dummy so the piay
wa s in the dark and most difficult.

We are indebted to Victor
Mollo ' s bopk " Test Your
B 'd .. f t 0d .• , h d if
Wn tge or 1i'&gt; s an :
es opens a _ rump agamst
the six-spade contract, South
wiil have to fali back on the
G
R
C
C
-.
T
Q
R
H
H
R
T
doubie
hearl fines se to bring
WQR
BARQR
the slam home . As you
(DO you have a questiOn tor
N X H B
W H readers can see Victor has · the ex p erts? Write " A sk the
J1 R W H
PYYCJHA
given West both the king and J ac o b ys " c are of this
G R C C - T Q R H H R T jack of hearts , so that newspaper. The Jacobys wm
WQR
BARQR
answer in dividua l questions if
declarer loses both finesses, s tampe d, s e lf- addres s ed
'p y y c H - D J 0 Y C W H
0 A W E P Y Q B game , rubber and possibly hi s envelopes are enclosed. The
most interestit;~g questions will
Yesterday's Cryptoquote' HE WHO FOLLOWS ANOTHER temper .
SEES NOTHING, LEARNS NOTHING, NAY, SEEKS At the table , West opened be used in this colu mn and will
the quee~ of d1 a m ond s. r eceiv e c o pies of JACOBY
NOTHING ·-SIR WILLIAM OSLER
.
Declarer stJU lost h1s contract MOD ERN.)

JUGHAID FELL OUT

BACKHOE , dozer, '

667-6-t7~

Pass 2 N.T. Pass
Pass 4•
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - Qt

() 1971 K..in1 Features Syndicate, Inc .

BATHROOMS AND Kitchen ~
remodeled , ceramic tile, plum- !
blng 1 carpentry, and general~
maintenance. 13 yEtors ex- 1
perience . 992·3685.
·~
trencher , low boy, dump.
trucks , septic systems. 8111;
Pullins , phone 992-2478, day or!
4
night .

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

North East

One leller simply- stands for another. In this ,sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for t he tw,o O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatoon of the words are all
hints Each day the code letters are 'different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES ·

WILL do roofing , ·construction 1 :.
plumbing and heating . No job ) •
too large or too small. Phone L•
742·2348.
J/

estimates. Call
lree estimate,

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

BLOWN INSULATION. Get thr..:

1

NORT!I
• Q J 10 8
" 53 2

Nor th-South vulnerable

40 Dwell
41 Gambler's
concern
L-L-..l...J-..L.-1......

---

Clubs can be a problem

WEST
EAST
.4 3
. ,2
•KJ7
"9 8 64
• Q J 10 6
t9 8 3 2
.Jl094
.Q87
SOUTH ID)
.AK976
"A Q 10 :
+AK5
oloAK

:~~~~~ny~-++H-

EXCAVATING , dozer ; loader arK! :
backhoe work ; dump truck t 1 •
• and lo·boys for hire ; will ha!If! ·
fill dirt , t o soli . limestone arld"
gro..,el . Call Bob or Roger Jef-.
fers , day phone 992-7089 , night '

EXCAVAT1~G.

--

+74

32 Malt and
hops
33 Drollery
35 Useless
facts
37 Dreyfus
defender

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser,
vice , all makes , 992-2284 . The
Fo~ric
Shop , Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Salas on~ ,
Service . We sharpen S&lt;;issors." 1

698-7331.

BRIDGE
-----------=0-sw
alc-:d-a~
nd Jim Jacoby -.-

• 6 53 2

guerre

992·5858.
HOWERY AND . MARTIN

Movie Channel 4 5&amp; 7 P.M. - w. C. Fields and Me .
9 &amp; 11 P.M.-The Ne•t Man
Cable Channel 5 - .
7 P.M. -Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:3D--Marshall Football
10:0G-700 Club .

word
2ll Texas city
31-de

i

business buildings with 2
apartments over, each
apartment has 2 bedrooms
and own · bath. This ts a

this- A GOOD CATCH

9:oo-Me rv Griffin 3; P hil Donah ue 4,13,15; Family
Altair 8, 10.
9:3()-Edge of Night 6; Andy Gr lffllh 8; Here's Lucy 10.
IO:oo-Sa nford &amp; Son 3.4.15: Oina h 6: Here' s Lucy 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:3()-Hollywood Squares 3. 4.15: Pr ice Is Right 8.10.
11 :()()-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3D- It' s Anybody's Guess 3, 15; Fam ily Feud 6,13;
Love of Lif e 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-C BS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:()()-News 3, 4,6,10; Shoot lor Th e Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13.
12: 3~Ch l&lt;o &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bot
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1 :DO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,1 3; News 8;
Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not lor Women Only 15.
1 :3D-Days ol Our Lives 3, 4,1 5; As The World Turns
8,1 0; 2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 6.13.
2 :3~Doctors 3.4. 15: One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3: ()()-Another Wor ld 3.4.1 5: All In The Fam ily 8,1 0;
Daniel Foster, M.D. 20.
3: 15-General Hospital 6.13; 3:3D--Match Game 8,10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4:()()-Misler Cartoon 3: Little Rascals.Our Gang 4:
Merv Griffin 6; Gong Show 15; Gilligan's Is. 8;
Sesame 51.20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4 : 3~My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8;, 10; Little Rascals 15.
5:()()-Bonanza 3: My Three Sons 4; Mister Rogers'
Nieghborhood 20,33 ; Hogan ' s Heroes 10:
Emergency One 13: My Three. Sons 15.
5:30--0dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore· IO: Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; :Zoom 20.
6:3()-NBC News3 .4.15; ABC Newsl3 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Pests, Pesti c ides &amp; Salety 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; tross.Wits 41 Liars Club 6; Sha
Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Gllligan ' s
Is. 15; Equal Justice Under Law 20; Big Green
Machine 33.
7:3D--Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4; Match Game PM 6;
Family Feud 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge 10 ; In Search ot 13: Wild Kingdom 15. .
8:()()-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; Eight Is Enough 6,13;
Good Times 8,10; Upstairs. Downstairs 20,33.
8:3D--Bustlng Loose 8.10; 9:00-0regon. Trail 3,4,15;
Charlie's Angels 6,13; Movie "Jackson County
Jail" B. 10; Ch ildhood 20,33.
IO :OD--Big Hawaii3,4,1S; Baretta 6,13; Three Artists i
lhe Northwest 33; News 20.
10 :3D--Book Beat 33.
11 :oo-News. 3,4,6.8, 10,13,1 5; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.
11 : 3~Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,1 3;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; Movie " Return to Peyton Place'' ·
10; ABC News 33: 12:()()-Janakl 33.
12 :4D--Mystery of the Week 6,13; Movie "The Story of
Pretty Boy Floyd' ' 8: 1:oo-Tomorrow 314; 1:3DMary Hartman 10: 2: I~News 13.

exercise

Sweepers . toasters , irons , all
small appliances. Lawn mower,
next to Stole Highway Goroge
on Route 7. Phone {614} 985REMODELING , Plumbing , heating
ond all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years experience . Phone 992·2409.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

I

Jumbles: OCCUR CHAOS AGHAST PARDON

Answer: When you throw ki8888 make sure he's

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I Of aircra ft
J Be sore
2 Three, pr o5 Hid aw ay
verbiaiiy
11 Match3 Hi gh schooi
maker
course
12 Songlike
(2 wds. l
13 '' Eternal
4 Suffix w1th
City"
14 Snakejournal
Jud
ge's
5
haired
. Yesterday'S Answer
cham her
gorgon
2ll Acto.r
16 Row
15 Have debts 6 Mountain
, Cregar
19 Kind of trap
crest
16 Hire
30
Lubri22 Mr. Porter's
7 " El -"
17 Late Mr .
cated
biography
8 Familiar
Mineo
.....,._ __.
34
Moscow news
23
-'s
punch
trade
name
18 Streetcar's
agency
24
Feelings
(
2
wdS
.)
name
36
You (It.)
of
guilt
9 Attempted
20 Watch
37
Children's
25 Vidal
Ul Cas ino
21 Miracle
delight
employees 27 Mouth part
site
Most folks'd end up wi'bh
22 A former
Bono
nothin' but~ pile o' junk!
~~t-~+--+--1
23 Susceptible 1-4-+-4-25 Material
26 Afford
,.---tJ~.;:':J.JJ 27 Vox populi
surv.ey
28 Latin

3825.

MIDDLEPORT - 5 years
old 4 bedroom home with
natural
gas
central

apartments

'I

'•

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

175

I

3102 or (304 )772-3227.
VA-FHA , 30 y~. f inanCI[1g . Ireland
Mortgage ,
E. State , Atkens .

x xI X j

~

..

Continuoos one pit&lt;o &amp;Utttrl. Wo hln1
i1, or do it JOitrMH. Spocill PfKOS ID,

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

[I 1 Jr I

1 ,.~.

1!10

GUTTER
SERVICE

HOMESITES for sole. 1 acre and
up. Midd lepo rt, near Rutland.

Now arrange the ciroted letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested.by the above cartoon.

f.:·

.,
•
li-13-!

RATHER THAN FELT.

(Answers tomorrow)

BORN LOSER

or 949-2860

TO E5E WATCHED

I I

K

Answer here:

.....
~=========~~:
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding. 1;-;,

LARRY LAVENDER

S&amp;L Clll 992·7034 lor J free estimate:
Of stGP by 1100 E. Ma1n Sl~ Pometoy,

K]

........-

SAllS AND SERVICE

Bissell Siding Co.

WIIIOOIIS
ALIIMI"UM

ducts qualify tor low int!rnt home im·
prowemtnt lOans at rour ioul Nnk or
1 ·1~1

tx992-616J
!A.M. lo 4:30P.M.

Storm Windows &amp; Insulalion.
Call Professionals

lnsutltion St!Yius ·
Fltuncina Anillblo

~ue o JOUr
oot that will

I VIEWELj

n;!•••

~-992-6112

New Construction '

Re modeling.

Pomeroy, 0.

Q_

Sidewalks ~

IRUNUTEb
I KI

,.

300M... SL

Kitc hen Cabmet5 · Roofing - Concrete

Phone 992-21f6

'
'·'·

CARTER

DAVID BRICKUS

F"'~-~

-

s.~

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

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

byHenri ArnoldandBoblee

~allil Summnoo•

Ill!
Mid..,..., 0.

Chester, Ohio
8-jq-pd ,

Box34

Not Tile lmitJIM

~ ~ ~~ ®

Confe rence

8; 6 :.t5-Mornl n g

Report 3; 6:5D--Good Morning West Vi rginia 13;
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13.
7:()()-Today 3,4,15; Good Morni ng America 6,13; CBS
News 8: Bullwinkle 10; 7:3D--Schoolles 10.
8oDO-Capt . Kang aroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.

7:3D--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Wo!lman J ack 6;
Counlry Carnival 8; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ;
Price is Right 10; Thai's Hollywood 13: Music Clty
15.
8:()()-Richard Pryor 3,4,15: Happy Days 6,13; Fitz-

He HAD H1!' LAS
WOR K-· AND WE
BOTH HAD EAC H

6 ! 3~News

4; News 6; Sunrise Semester

ltJt~N))e}ljl ~THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAME

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Phone Mike Youne·

NEW TRI -LEVEL -

THREE BEDROOM home . Totai
FOR SALE or Trade : House and lot
in Mason. W , Vo . 3 bedrooms,
both , living room , kitchen , utili·
ty , 8)( trQ Iorge room for recreo·
tion or TV room. {304 ) n3·5227,
after S pm .

l-ONG~

Sunr lse Sem ester 10.

6:25-Chrlstopll er Closeup 10;

Gilligan' s Is. 15.

HAD"'"~~~~
Fil- M
I

·Landmark

soften &amp; condition yOur
water and Co.op water
Model UC-XVI,.
1Sottener.
Now Only

Phone 992-7416 . $795 .

992·2747.

Weddinp
Porlllits
Passports

SOFTENER?
Let

New , Co-Op water and
softeners, model VC-SVI.
Only 1279,95
Save UO .OO on a new

HORNET .

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

992·5510.

1968 CHRYSLER "300" 4-door

AMC

Superior
Steam Ellloction

1968 G .M.C. PICKUP Tru ck, 'stan·
dord , in goo d cond i t ion .

EGGS

WHY t;OT t
WHAT I
HAVE: TO 5AV
WO N'T TA k e

\.21 TfC

to your door by way ol

Fre·e ,

Automatic ,

t9HI74

Trail er . 18 f t. Se lf -contained .
Enellent Condi l ion . Coli
992·2.427 , day time, or 992-3590,
after 4 pm .

1976 y, ton Chevrolet Truck
13,000 mi. , extra tires , $3800.
Coli 742-23 16, evenings.

1970

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

6:()()-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6:JD--NBC News 3,4,15; Andy rilflth 6; CBS News 8,10;
In' Pur suit of Liberty 20.
7ooo-Truth or Cons. 3; Cro.s-Wifs 4; Liar's Club 6:
Pop Goes the Country 8; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33: News 10; To Tel l The Truth 13

'·
''·

.,,

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABU
RATES ,., 37»250

c-.

~II.

THE PHOTO PLACE

Au tam otic
T11nsmission Serwict

............ tho

TRAVEL

FIV E 16" General Motor Truck
Whee ls' wi th 6 ply t ir es and
h~bes .
5 hole ri ms. Call
992-2427 or 992-3580 after 4

SWAIN

Radiator.--..-.
Service
,_
............

APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchards .
Sta te Route
689 . Pho ne
Wilk esvil le , 669·3785.

AR ISTOCRAT

WEDNE SDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1 977
5:.j5-farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55-

Tyler Moore 10 ; Hogan' s Heroes 15.

A LADDIN KEROSINE lamp and
nec tars reploc•men t par1s .
Chimney, mante ls, wick s etc.
Stop in for demonstrofion and
free catal og ue . Mounta in
leol her ond General St ore,
1().4-106 W . Union St ., Athens,
Ohio. 592-.5.478

1972

Sea .

8 ; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.

1 ,•·

FOR THE finest in wood - 11e-Qtlng
stoves, cookstoves ond cool
sto... es , Coli Zion Heot Co ., 8
Pu tnam Drive, Athens . (61.4)
696·1187 or (6 14) 592·6()79.

dard , new t ires , runs good .
Price red uced . Phone 992 ·3-408 .

in" w ith Middle-aged lady , l ight
housekeeping , on 14 acre form
near Pt. Pleasant , W . Vo.
References
required .
(~ )

221 Columbus Road, Athens

TUESDAY, SE PTEMBER 27, 1977
J ; MY ihree Sons A; Mister Rogers·
Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan's Heroes 10; Gunsmoke

l--- ------ -------------------- ------.....1•••'•'

bage .

RISING STA R Kennet Boarding ,
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
all breeds , clean san itary
PENNZOIL RUTLAND open doily
focihties oe 367 ·7112 . Chesh1re .
t ill 10. Closed Mondays ,
Phone (6(4l J&lt;&gt;7.j)jq2 ,
.wrecker $&amp;rvice , tire repo·1r ,
Phone H2 -9575or 742 ·2061 ,
AKC SHETLAND shoep dogs .

675-6999 or (30otl 675-3251 .

593-3022

Tomorrow 3,A .

1:30-Mary Har1man 10; 2:0G-News 13 .
Mov ie Channel 4 S &amp; 1 P.M. - Gumball Rally
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - Sallor Who Fell From Grace With lhe

.s:oo--sonanla

SPRING GARDEN Supplies, Cab-

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11) Be tain v1ews

A FUTURE
TO COUNT ON

chloride ond colc•um brine for
dust contu;sl and special mixing
SQ1t for formen , Exc•lsior Salt

'''·

Business Services

COAL . l1me$fone. ond col&lt;lum

full qr pori hme
32SS .

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Cer you're hold1ng may
no t be too popular generally.
Take care where you promote
them , o r you'll make some
powerful enemies .

I~'

TELEVISION
-VIEWING

'

Kenneth and Robert Dorst form
1972 DODGE CHARGER . A.C . ond
in Storeys Run . Sheep Pasture ,
many more option s. $ 1495 . Coli
Keep dogs ou t ! They 'll live
'992-5169.
CASH paid for oil makes and
longer .
CHE VROLET STATION ·
models of mob1le homes. 1971
ET CETERA Bou t ique featu ring
WAGON . Best off er . P.S., P.B.,
Phone area code 614·423·9531 .
handmade gifts and clo thing is
A .C. Gene M itch . 992 -3&lt;478.
goi ng out of business as of Oct. TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducn . Top price l or standing 1976 CATALINA . $4400 or best of 31. All items redu ced for quic k
fe r , 985 -398 1,
sawtimber. Call 992-5965 or
sole . EtCetera Boutique , 205 N.
Kent
Hanby
,
J
-446-8570.
2nd St. , Middleport, Ohio.
1955 INTERNATIO NAL PICKUP
Truck . R· IOO . •,, ton. 992-7 4rrl
COINS, CURRENCY , token s, old.
'o r 992-37 t6 ,
pocke t wat ches and chains.
si lver and gold . We need 1964 1971 CAMARO V·8, P.S., A .C. ,
MAN ARRAIGNED
and older s1l ver coins . Buy , se ll ,
AM·FM radio . 992·2338.
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
or trade ' Call Roger Wamsley ,
1972 BRONCO Four-wheel drive .
Joseph Van Dyke Ill, whose
742-2331.
Good cond ition . CB and extras .
criminal bond was set at $1 OlD FURNITURE , ice boxes, brass
$'2995 . 985·4227 .
million after he failed to
beds ,
et c .,
co mplet.11
hou seholds . Wri te M. D. M iller , 1972 OLDS DELTA BB w1th lull
appear for arraignment on
power steering , brokes and
Rt
. 4, Pomero y, Ohio or call
mail fraud charges stemming
seats Very good condition .
992-776(),
from his now bankrupt Rings
A sk ing $1,275 or best offer .
949-2031.
N' Things operations, . faced CASH ! I , Junk cars, Fry 's Truck &amp;
Auto , Rutland Phone 742-208 1
arraignment today before ' or 742 -9575. Closed M ondays.
1972 PINTO ROUNDABOUT , Good
condition . $800. 949·2A39, after
U.S. Magistrate Herbert T. NO ITEM' TOO Lorge or too sma ll .
5_
Maher .
Will buy I p iece or complete
Van Dyke, 28, arrested last
household . New , used , or anti - 1971 DATSUN PICKUP. Good
shape . 247-22A5 .
ques. Martin 's Furniture , '20 N.
Friday by U.S. marshals and
St.
,
M
iddleport
.
Phone
2nd
1966
FORD MUSTANG. 351.
postal inspectors in nearby

Kirtland , Ohio; had failed to
show up last Sept. 2 at his
first scheduled arraignment
on a 29-count ,mail fraud
indictment.
Formerly of Jekyll Island,
Ga., Van Dyke was indicted
last Aug . 25 for U8ing false
advertising aod gimmicks to
- induce investors to buy Rings
N' Things distributorships.
Van Dyke is the former
president and chief executive
of the Atlantic-Southern
Corp., parent for Rings N'
Things and other of Van
Dyke's ventures - some of
which never really got off the
ground.
·

RESULTS OF YOUR
LIE TEST.

.

NEW store hours for Radio
Shock , Ace Hardware and
RE G ISTERED Cocke r Spaniel pups .
Meigs Plaza now open Mor"!do y
3 ma les . 2 f ema l es ~ Buff and
t hrough Saturday ~ : 00 to 9:00,
WHOL ESALE WOME N'S wear
w hi te in color . $7S each .
Sunday 12:00 to 6:00 .
business Req uires $4510 for in ~
949-2439, o ffer 5.
SHOOTING MATCH at the Sport·
ventory tha t is guaranteed to
sman Club starting at J pm .
sell. Port t.ime (8 to 10 hours per SHEEPDOG TO give owav. 8 mo.
o ld. Hod sho ts. Very friendly .
Sunday . Factory choked guns
w eek). For information coli
'192·6()54.
only . Shot end slug mete h.
TOl l FREE I ·800-52806050, e•t.
304 1 or wr i te · Fashions, PO Box
MEIGS COUNTY Senmrs. Make
128, Polkton. N .C. 28t 35 .
appointmen ts for your portr aits
at the Pho to Place . 992-Sm .
Bob Hoeflich.
PARTS FOR 197 1 Gola xie Ford f or
· sole . Phone 992-5858.
NO HUNTING day or night on the

Monday

ORAP~

.,...

ANN OU N C IN G

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

BURNED THE

PAPER SHOWING THE

,.

•

he:

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wonk oc U1Kk&gt;r
Dish
1.00

•''

Moore 13.
10:DO-Famlly 6.13; lou Granl t ,10.
1 Loo-News 3.4,6.8,10, 13.15; 11 : 3~Johnny Carson
3,4,15; Movie " Piau Suite" 6,13; Kojak I; Movie
" Rapture" 10: ABC News 33 .
12 ·DO-Janakl 33.
12 :4G-Movle " A Very Mi'!sing Person" 8: t :DO-

OF IH' HA"/LOFT AN'
WRENCHED HIS BACK,HIS
ARM,AN' HIS

LAIG,JAMEY

1

--50 HE \NON'T
BE GOIN'TO

SCHOOLWIF
"/E TODAY

NEWSPAPER ENTE:RP RISE ASSN .l

LUCKY
VARMINT!!

-.

�10-TbeDIIDvSentlnol.Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Tu

Cable TV

:------------------------.--- 1

I

l

Area Deaths

WILMA McCARLEY
E. Wilma McCarley. 81 , a
lifelong ru ident of Rio
Grande , d ied in the Houston

Nursing Home at 1: IS p.m.
Monday.
She was born June 13, 1896,
In Rio Grande, da ughter of
the late Daniel L and Zeli a
Tanner Davis.
She was preceded In death
by her husband , Elmer L.
Mc:Carley, In 1973.

pn&lt;:eded her in deafll .

Mr s . Mc Car ley wa s a
member ol the Rlo Grande

Simpson
Chur ch

Un ited Methodist
an d

Woman 's

Scx:lety. She was a lso a

member of the Rio Grande
Garden Club.
Graveside rites will be held
at Calvar y Ce meter y in Rio
Grande 2 p.m . Wedesday with

Two daughters. s.urvl ve ;

Rev. Robert Domschroder
off iciati ng . Burial will be
under the direct ion of McCoy·

children svrvi ve .
·
Two brothers and one sister

made to the Simpson United
Method ist Ch urch Bu il ding
Fund .

Miss
Rob in M~Carley .
Hamden and No's. Charles
( Nor ma Jean ) Edwa rds ,
Steubenville. Two grand ·

Nv:Jore F unera l Home.
In lieu of rl owers, the
fam i ly requests donations be

Notices, local briefs
-· A'fTSii fry will be held
Saturday beginning at 11 a .m.
at the Middleport fire station
by the fire depar t ment .
Dinners and sandwiches wil l
be available.

In a tudgment filed In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court was reported that Noel
A. and Edith Herrmann ,
Middlepor t, tiled against
Thomas L. and Virgin ia King ,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy , which is
Incorrect. It should have read

Noel A. and Edith Herrmann
aga inst Thomas L King In
&lt;are of Virginia King .
The Middlepor t Youth
Baseball League will meet
Wednesday. Sept. 28 at 7 p.m.
in the vill.age council rooms:
Everyone interested in be1ng
a coach or umpire is urged to

attend . Election of ofl lcers
for the 1978 season will be
held.

Church will be held Sunday
with morning serv ices at 9: 30
a .m. lollowed by a basket

d inner
In
the
chur ch
basement at 12: 30 p.m . Dan
Hayman and _the Coun~ry
Hymntlmers w1ll be sJng1ng
dur i ng
the
afternoon

program which starts al 2
p.m.
SYRACUSE -

The fall

Halloween carnival of the
Syracuse PTO has been set
for Oc:t. 6 at 7: 30 p.m. at the
grade schooL The public is
Invited.

PORTLAND - The Port.
land PTO will have a lall
festival Saturday at the
school with serving starting
at 6 p.m . and games at_7: 15
p.m. There will be chili , hot

dogs, sloppy toes, soft drinks
and coffee. The public is
Invited.

Free Clothing Day will be
held at The Salvation Army,

Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy ,
Thursday from 10 a,. m . til 12
noon . All area reslden1s in
n~ of clothing are welcome .

The
Meigs
County
Department of Welfare will

Men's
2, 4 &amp; 5 Buckle
Work Artics
Men's
Insulated Boots
Boys'
Men's &amp; Ladies'
Jogging Shoes
$10.95 to $12.95
Men's
Engineer Boots
$29.95

Linemen's Boots
$35 .95

Hornets
$29.95

Dress Wellingtons
$23.95

Steel Toed Boots
$21

hold a public hearing on
Thursday from 2 to .4 p.m .
regarding the state 's Title

XX plan. The purpo•• of th is
meeting Is to create an OP·

portunlty for public input
whl&lt;h has not been ava ilable
in previous planning for the

Title XX program .

Valley

.
Grange

Oh io
26i2,
Letart Falls, will meet at 8
p.m. Thursday at the hall for
election of officers and in·
spection . Pot lUc k refresh ·
ments will be served and all
members are aske4 tO be
.present.

O'Neill
(Continued fram pace 1)
the Capitol, where he pledged
today to keep the natural gas
bill before the Senate ,
through allnight sessions .if
need he, until work js
completed. ,
Carter said Monday the
' house had faced " this
lobbying pressure and has
acted both wl sely and
courageously to protect the
integrity of the basic energy
policy" which he proposed to
Congress.

d

war s

c::tinu.d!nm pace l&gt;

d

With direct deposit. the U.S. Treasury
Department mails your monthly Social
Security c.heck directly to us for immedi ate deposit. It can't be pilfered from your
mail box. You can't lose or misplace it.
And our federal insurance of $40,000
safeguards your money.

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AiJTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

fiOn a W8Jl

date of the increase would be
Rabbits (Meigs Co. 4-H
Comrn.
), Renee Kaldor, Rick
Nov. L
Lo
Council accepted the bid of
sn~~ep (Meigs Co . 4.H
Charles Pugh, Long Bottom,
for al97l truck being sold ·bY Comm) , Sonia Carr, Todd
the town . Pugh 's bid at $100 Tripp.
was the higher with only two
Swine (Meigs Co . 4-H
bids submitted.
Comm. ), Brian Windon,
Mayor Hoffman reported Marcia Holcomb.
that the Federal Insurance
Poultry (Meigs Co. 4-H
Administration has a flood . ~r.nm· &gt; . Kevm N~~1er.
insurance !!\tidy completed
I Dare You . a.ward
and will amounce a ll)eeting (Danforth Foundation ), Paul
in M' ddle rt w'th'
V1rgm1a Jordan.
1 Ill 30 da ys Cross,
I
po
Nutrition award (Foley
Manuf. Co.), Mary Colwell.
to di:'&lt;'uss the study..
Trick or Treat mght for
Alumni Recognition ( Oliii
youngsters under 12 m the Corporation ) Doma Thorntown was set foe Oct. 29, on, VI rg il 'w·In d on, J oh n
Sat urday, from_.6.. 30 t o 7..30 . 1Rice
.
p.m. and counc~ dl:'C~ed · Bicycle (Goodyear Tire &amp;
lllllurance _for police offtcers Rubber) , Laura Eichinger,
but no action was taken.
P
R' eb C . Bolin
Also discussed was truck
am 1 e1' ratg
.·
parking on Mill St. CounDotf Care and Traming
cilman Kelly warned that (Pu rma ) •. Ralph Jordan ,
someone is going to be killed Rhonda Rtebel.
in the location because trucks
E 1e ct.r 1 c
En e~gY
block the vision of motorists (Westinghouse), Mark Riggs,
.
Gary Hutton, Carl Gheen.
p~llmg from F~urth onto . Food Nutrition (General
MilL One street stgn request Foods ), Becky Eichinger,
was made and Counctlman Lea Ann Gaul, Beth Ritchie,
Allen Kmg discussed the De , St g ll
·
from M'ddl
· rt
e a · t'
d ratnage
1 epo
Frused Pr
(Kerr
00
Hill in one problem area. A
eserva t~n
sealer over a brick culvert Glass Mfg. )' Jearuue Welsh.
has been suggested.
Forestry ( In~erna~tonal
Council also di:'&lt;'ussed the Paper), Johnnte Rtebel ,
former roadside park owned Mark McG~tre, Sharon Karr,
by the Americ!ln Legion now Kim Btrchfteld.
and it has been indicated
Gardentng . ~C hevr~n
Chemtcal),
Cratg Bohn ,
.
uno f ficiatly that Feeney- Clint, Turner, Angie Spencer,
Bemett Post 128, American De . Lambert
ruse
·
li 1
Legion, is willing to spend
money on park upkeep if the
Dress Rev~e (Simp c ty
village can 'provide better P~ttern ) , .Terrt Stout, Andrea
teet' t
td .
Riggs , US!I Collins, Paula
1.
potcepreo
tonocu own L'f
Debbi
W00 dyard
1 e..
serious vandalisril that has
e
•
taken place at the park in the Connte Stout, Mary Colwell,
past .. Councilman Kelly will Barb!lra Douglas, JeaMmarie
di:'&lt;'uss the matter further Boggs, Brenda Boyes,
y
Le .
Mora.
'th h Am .
WI
t e . encan
gton
State Fair Participants membership.
. Raeteen Oliver, Marco
Tony Fowler of the Feeney Jeffers, Lester Jeffers, Mark
Bennett Post presented the Riggs J 0hnny Riebel Terrie
VIllage a u.s. nag and ID·
.•
' h
.I
di tedth tn g 1
'll be Pulhns, Becky Etc nger ,
. Lea Ann Gaul, Patty Dyer,
.ca
a a sa so WI .
given to the volunteer ftre Billy Dyer, F ae Rei bel,
department and another to Tammie Starcher, Paula
the vtllage to fly at the up- Life Beth Ritchie Terri
JUDGE IMMUNE
town b011t launch off North St 0 ut Co nie Stout Barbara
MIDDLETOWN, Conn.
First Avenue.
'
n
•
d
t'
· Douglas, Mary Mora, Bren a (UPI) - Author Norman
Att d' th
en mg e mee mg were Boyles, Sharon Karr, Mary Dacey's $1 million lawsuit
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk- Colwe.)l, Mlkki Conley,
~~gaiMt Superior Court Judge
.Treasur~r Gene. Grate and . Marcia Dillard:
.
Henry
Naridt· IUiil · been ·
counctl members, . Kelly,
Health (Eli Lilly ), Brenda
thrnwn out d. court because
Kmg, Dewey Horton, William Bentz, Lena Sampson.
judges are protected from
Walters and Carl Horky.
Home Environment (s&amp;H
lawsuits.
Fowtdation), Cheryl John·
Dacey, author of " How to
son, Cindy Pitzer.
Avoid Probate," Initially
,_Home
Management sued the Connecticut Bllr
('l'upperware), Melissa Association in 1967 claiming a
Scarborough.
brochUre cNtlated by the
Leadership ( Reader 's group libeled him. He was
Digest ), Teresa Carr, Marco awarded $60,000 in damages
Jeffers, Brian Windon, . Opal by a Superior Court jury in
Dyer .
1974, but the award later was
CINCINNATI (UP! ) Petroleum power (Amoco · overturned through an appeal
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes, Foundation), David Burt.
by the bar association.
claiming there is no evidenee
Photography (Eastman
Dacey filed the lawsuit
that he caused the shooting Kodak), Lori Louks, Comie ~~gam Naruk in August,
deaths of four Kent State Stout , Carolyn Bowen, · Charging the judge, a
students on May 4, 1970, today Brenda Calaway. .
member . of the bar, should
asked a federal appeals court
Public speaking (Union Oil not have presided over
to reconsider its decision that Co. of Calif.), Patty Dyer, Dacey's libel case ~~gatnst the
he must go on trial again in
bar association because he
the case.
might h!lve had to p!IY some
Seven years ago Rhodes
of the damages.
ordered National Guardsmen
into Kent, Ohio, to quell an
anti-Vietnam War demonstration and the guardsmen
'
LOGAN - The host :'&lt;'hool
shot and killed four students
SENATORS
DISAGREE
edged Ironton 188 to i87 and
and wounded nine others.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
"There is no evidence that Meigs with 192 strokes in a The Senate voted 77 to 17
any action or omission to act three-way SEOAL goal Monday to stop a filibuster
of Gov. Rhodes was the cause match here Monday on the against a proposal to
of any injury ... ," contended Hocking Hilla Golf Course. deregulate natural gas ·
Meigs' overall record went
attorneys on behalf of
prices.
Rhodes. "There is no to 6-8, its league record to U.
Sen. Joon Glem, J){)hio
evidence that Gov. Rhodes Meigs' next match is Sept. Tl voted for stopping the filibusmisused any of his powers. versus Belpre at Oxbow. ter,
Sen .
Howard
" There is no evidence that Scoring at Logan:
Metzenbamn, Mhio, voted
Logan - Dave Stilwell 44, agaiMt stopping lt.
Gov. Rhodes took personal
command of the National Dave 'Lehman 45, John
Guard at Kent . or that he Britton 48, Dave Vaughn 49 ,
Issued any order to the Dave Berry 49.
Ironton - Cary Fairchild
National Guard on May 4,
IN THE COURT OF
1970. "The uncontroverted 44, Bob Osbourne 46, David
COMMON PLEAS ,
evidence in the record can RIIUiff 47 , Jeff Unn 50, Steve
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
TOM J. TEASLEY
lead reasonable minds to only · Hurley 52.
Route 1
Meigs - Lance Oliver 41, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
one conclusion: At all times
PlaintUt,
Gov .
Rhodes
. acted Chuck Follrod 44, David
· 'liS·
reasonably, in good faith and Kemedy 52, Roldofo Diaz 55, GLENNA
JOYCE TEASLEY
address unknown
within the :'&lt;'ope of his duties Chuck Kennedy 58.
Delend•nt .
as governor."
No . 16511

J:

'R hodes pl..ads
innocence in
Kent kiJiings

, OHIO· ' ,
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

MADDOX BETTER
MARIETTA. Ga. (UP[) Fonner Georgia Gov. Lester
Maddox' health is improving,
his &lt;fo!:tors said, .although he
remained in guarded con·
dition today recovering from
a heart attack Sunday.

School districts
plead for help
COLUMBUS (UPI) -About 110 poclpie r~tlng 10 0No
school dilltricts met with alate leglslatnn today, -kin&amp; ~­
tional funds foe their schools and relief from lll8lldated
educational progr!lffiS.
Much of the gathering was made up d. "'l!'""ll:lllatives from
Frontier Local si:hool district In WIIJhington County.
However, there ...,..e representatives from Seneca Eut,
?ymatuning Valley, Mooroevllle, Nor1hwestem, Triad LDcal,
Meigs Local and Stow school dlatrlclll, ammg otberl.
,
Spokesmen for the groups discUMed school financing with ;
legislators on the House and Senate Education and Finance
committees, as well ,as the legislative Education Renew
Committee.
" We feel that average and above average llludents are beinl•
neglected because of state mandated progt'IIDII," aald
Carson a achool board member from Frontier Local.
"The•yowtg men and women coming out of our •edlools,
camot read, communicate, compute oe reaaon," abe aakl. l
"What's good for one school district Ia not good for another
school district ."
K. Wlllillffi Zartman, a farmer from Seneca East dlltrlct in,
Seneca County, drew loud appl8Wie from the group when he
told the legislators It was ''fraud on the people" that state aales,
.and income taxes and lottery revenues have not gone strictlyI
for education.
l
"Uwe want to suwort roads Md welfare," he said, '1et's go ,
out and ask for taxes for roads and welfare."
r

Maryf
•

.

,.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED
Betty
Spaun,
Racine;
Wald .
Nicholson, Jr., Dexter;
Cheryl Haning, Middleport;
Shelby Davis, Pomeroy; Lula
Westfall, Long Bottom; Mary
Bonecutter, Pomeroy; Mabel
Niemeyer, Letart, W. Va.;
Mildred Workman, Rutland;
Margaret
Houdashelt,
Racine;
Helen
Frank,
Pomeroy; Floyd Spence ,
Pomeroy; Lucy Markin ,
Athens ;
Cecelia
H·a rt,
Pomeroy; Gilbert Wilson,
Tuppers Plains ; Donna
Rllndolph, Reedsville; Price
Wolfe, Lexington; Ida Roush,
Proctorville; August Games,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Ralph
Martin, Wanda Roush, Dale
Hensle:~~~ Joonita Chapman,
Sally Hendrix, Bradley
Pooler, Carolyn Deem, Mllo
Guthrie.

Holler Mecllcal Cellter
,
~Diaebarget~Sept.M)
(
Mrs . Ollie Adkins and
daughter, Carolyn AUens-'
worth, Mrs. Richard Blttchef
and son, Terry Capp, Jar!
Clary, Hazel Claytor, Annie ·
Collins, Mrs. James Countl
and daughter, Mrs. John
Dickins and son, Robert~
Eason, Mrs. Wllllam ln!-'
bnden and d!lughter, Thom.u·
Jones, Anthony Uoyd, Mrs.'
Charles - M11lone
and
daughter, Margar~t MeManis, Pearl Puckett, Catrie'
Rife, Tina Saber, Nancy
Sheets, Gary Skidmore, Mrs.
Vonley Stanley and son,
Tilden Thacker, Rebecca
Tilley, Janelle Wolfe.
(Blrlbs Sept. Zl)
,.
Mr. and Mrs. Jolut Le!ich, a
son, Jackson.

. News •• in Briefs

· (Coiltinuedlnm Pale 1)
'
Corp.'s decision to shut down Youngstown Sbeet lc Tube Co.
and thereby eliminate 5,000 jobs was requested Monday by
Otief Judge Frank J. Bllttistl of U. S. District Court foe Northem Ohio. Blltlisti, a native of Youngstown, sent the attontey
general a letter asking for an invealigatlon and that he be
HYMN SING SET
provided with a · summary of the scope and results of the.
There .will be a hymn sing investigation.
Oct. I, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Noting the federal government declined to contest · a •
Freedom Gospel · Mission at merger be~een Lykes and Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube In 1969;
Bald Knobs. Featured will be Battisti said Lykes waited "a mere eight years" to announce
the "Goo&lt;) News Singers" last week a shutdown of a substantial portion d. its Youngt;
from Wa~htngton Court town sheet &amp; Tube facility.
..
House. The public is invited.
. '"'be people of the United States, particularly lhotte wilhlfl
the Maboning Valley, must be aasured that. Ute dect.loo tD
close is not an outgrowth of any violation of the antllru8t tan,
and that it does not breach any expressed or' Implied
&amp;RCALLED
representations made by Lykes to the government to secure ita
Three calls were answered approval of the acquisition and m~rger of 1969.''
,
Monday by the Pomero~
OOLUMBUS- THE OIDO COMMITI'EE for Hwnane
Emergency Sqood: at 2;47 '
p.m . to CR 28 for Louise Trapping said Mond!ly opponents of State lasue 2 !Ire llling an
Delong, taken to Holzer "absurb public relations glmmlck" by maintaining the
Medical Center; at 8:15p.m., constitutional !lffiendment would outlaw mousetraps. ''No ·
to '101 New St. for Peter judge in the state would evf!!' hold that the mousetrap cauae~
Garnes, having chest pains, continued and pflllotlged suffering," said Mn. Sandy
taken to VMH, and at 11:28 Rowland, prestdent of the committee seeking pa•aagP. ol the •
p.m . to the Eagles Club for amendment outlawing Jeghold traps.
•
Doris Hendricks, taken to
Mrs. Rowland said the proposal on the Nov. 8 ballot was"
Veterans Memorial Hospital. worded lroadly to ban all devices ''which C!ll!le cootinued'
prolonged suffertng"'to wild animalJ so the leghold trap could,
oot be used wtder another name. She said "quick kill" traps
should replace the legbold traps, which bold wild anlllia1a until
PLEASANT VALLEY
•
DISCHARGES - Harold thetrapperretums to club or stomp them to death.
"We
are
not
'city
people,"'
said
Mrs.
Rowland,
adding
~.
Davis, Minersville, 0.; Paul
Ritchie, Point Pleasant; !\!rlt. her groitp includes hunters, trappers, flaltermen, scientists,.
Ireland Hwtt and - , Btd- wildlife biologists and rural people. "And we are not a bunch ot
weli ; and Mrs. Timothy namby-p!lffiby d011ooders, 11nd we're tired of being called'
that.'!
Hammack, Clifton.

,....

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
NEW FALL SELECTION

.BLANKETS

NOTICE 8Y
PU.LICATIO,_.

NAVIGATE OVER TO
BAKER/5 ANNIVERSARY

~l..E

personal
~o the
Plaint iff , and other relief . .
You are requ ired to answe'r
the cOmplaint Within 28 days
after the last pubtlcatlon of
Defendant in the

QUALITY MERCHANDISE!
3-Piece

published once each week for
six successive weeks . The
l_ast publication will be made
on Novem b'er 1, 1977, and the
28 days for answer will
commence on that date .
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond

.

$399

BAKER

FURNinJRE

Middleport, 0. ,

this

notice, wh ich

will

be

as required by the Ohio RuleS

of Civil Procedure , divorce
wifl be granted .
Dated 9·24 ·77

Larry

Spen~er

1st
styles · colors · sizes
DlllnK,ers for yourself, family and for
gifts. Twin beds· full beds · king and
queen sizes - Also a complete
selection of electric blankets.
Selections are best now.

Home Fllfllihinp - lit Flaar

191 )7 . 110) . 11 , 18,75, 1111 , 1,
ltc

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

ntet's go out and ask for !Bxes
for roads and welfare. u
Zartman blamed the
Legislature lor "giving the
job (of school financing) to
the local districts. I think the
Legislature should do it
themsleves, " he said . " I
don' t support any new taxes
other than what's voted on ."
He vigorously opposed giving
local control of :'&lt;'hools to the
state.
"When it 's low taxing districts th!lt complain, it's difficult to explain to the
districts that are footing the
bitl,u noted Sen. Sam Speck,
R-New Concord.
Much of the gathering was
made up of representatives
from Frontier Local school
district In Was hington
County .
However, there were also
representatives from
Pyruatuning . Valley ,
Monroeville, Northwestern,
Triad Local, Meigs Local,
Stow and other school
districts.
"Citizens have little say
about how their tax dollars
are spent,'' complained Mary
Carson, a school hoard
member from Frontier
Local. ''We request that you
either fund the mandated
programs for schools or
eliminate them. What's good
for one school district is not
good lor another school dis-

trict."
mandates .''
Charles
Brown ,
Speck
and
Milleson'
superintendent of Frontier continually• asked what the
Local . said his school district school representatives would
is seeking a seven-mill do if they were in the
operating levy for the third Legislatl[re.
time, but that will still make
" I would not support
the district $300,000 to welfare to the extent that lhe
$400,000 short in keeping up Legislature has, " said Brown
with mandated programs.
to loud cheers, adding that he
He said the Legislature would make a 17 percent cut
should end mandate s on and give it to education .
average salaries, training
All the districts said they
experience for teachers and have operating levies on lhe
educational
services ballot from now through
personnel , and remove November to help keep
penalties for failing to meet schools open.
·
these mandates.
Milleson asked how many
" It's a downward spir:il,'' thought it would be easier to
said Brown . "lf we don't pass a tax on income than an
meet the mandates, we are
increase on real estate taxes .
penalized, and that makes us
Only about 10 persons raised
less able to meet the
their hands.

,/
\

RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONIES marked the
grand opening of the new Stiffler Department Store ·in
Pomeroy this morning. In front, I to r, are Billy Joe
Howard, manager of the company's river stores ;
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews, John F . Stiffler, Sr.,
and \VIinnie Rizer, local manager ; in back .l•mes A.

•

at
VOL. XXVIII NO. 116

•

PRICE FIITEEN CENTS

Ferries idled
I

fined : ::: :::::: : : :::::

by mayor

$180,000 grant
announ. ced.
Meigs project

traps ou.t
• Issue 2
m

Weather

TillS IS THE VARSITY SQUAD of the 1977-78 cheerieading sqoods at
E!lslern High School. From the left are M~~ry Mora, Diana Jones, Sonia

'

Both ferries connecting
Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
have broken down, according
to amouncement in Point
Pleasant today .
Ban on vehicular traffic
across the Siiver Memorial
bridge continues, according
to Dean Blake, Charleston,
spokesman for the West

Virginia State Highway be opened for one-way traffic
pending further repairs and
Department.
testing
drew no comment in
Travel between the two
Charleston.
cities has returned to the preThe eight-year-&lt;&gt;id bridge
ferry status. One wallo;s
has
been closed since July 6
across the big bridge and
for
repair of 11 Crack_s " ,
b!lck, or he drives the 32-mile
trip through Middleport and detected in steel chords. A
single crew has been engaged
across the Mason bridge.
Unfounded reports early in repairing them.
today that the bridge would

Two more
schools
'

hurt
Two new tax levies, one
calling for a special election,
have been filed with the
Meigs County tloard of
Elections.
One of the levies will be
voted upori at a special
election on Oct.' 24 in the
Southern Local School
District. It is for 6.5 mills and

mouse K:~~~~~~r~:~:~~rr~ .

Help ·on the way

(contblutd on Pllt 11)

'·

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1977

POM EROY·M IIJDLEPORT, OHIO

approved an emergency 4mili levy by about 500 votes
Tuesday while voters in the
ne!lfby Oberlin school district
turned down a six-mill
•
con tinuing levy by about 50
I
votes, both totals unofficial.
The Amherst vote headed
\
off a threatened Dec. 9 school
closing, and the district's
teachers - on strille since
Wednesda y for a new
contract- are to meet today
or Th~rsday to decide
whether to continue the
walkout.
The Oberlin district also
faces a potentful closing but
NEW t'l.AG - On behalf of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, J\rnerica~ Legion, Tony Fowler,
the
measure
defeated
post service officer, presented Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffmlln a new American flag for
Tuesday is already on the
use at Middleport Village Hall when council met Monday night. Seated is Clerk.Treasurer
Nov. 8 ballot.
Gene Grate. Fowler said the post also will present new flags to the volunteer fire
Voters in Kenston :'&lt;'hool
department and a second flag to the village which will be flown at the boat launching ramp
district in Ge!iuga County
off north First Ave.
approved a 7.5 mill added
levy by nearly 200 votes ,
unofficially , which would ·
':':':': ::::::::::: ::::::::::::: :::::: E v e n
head off a projected $SOO,OOO E i g h t
deficit.
Superintendent George
Groh said the passage would
~Or
allow schools to keep
.
J'
operating at the present
austerity level until Jan. l;
when normal operations may
he reswned.
·
Eight defendants were
WASHINGTON, D. C.
fined and a ninth forfeited a
SPRINGBORO, Ohio (UP!)
(Special) The Ap·
bond in the court of Mid·
An official of Ute Ohio
palachlan
Regional
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Farm
Bureau Federation
Commission today made
said Tuesday a proposed
Tuesday night.
official a grant of $180,000
Fined were James Oliver,
constitutional
amendment
to Meigs County, Ohio as
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze, Jr., D- 18, Mt. Alto, W. Va., $10 and
that would ban the use of
approximately 75 pet. of
Cleveland, said Tuesday quick House action on his Sen~~te­ costs, failure to yield the
leghold traps would also ban
the cost of a multi-purpose
passed bill could prevent unnecessary :'&lt;'hool closings later right of way ; Sharon M.
mousetraps and would make
health facility to be located
this year for about a dozen financially troubled districts.
anybody
using them subject
Newell, 35, Middleport, $200
on Mulberry Heights near
The bill, unanimously sent to the House by the Senate, would and costs and three day~ in
to
prosecution
for a criminal
the Veterans , Memorial
enable districts to immediately borrow operating funds to be jail, driving while in, · Hospital.
violation.
generated by bond sales authorized by approVIIi of :'&lt;'hool toxicated; Elbert L. Murray,
Federation Executive Vice
A spokesman In the office
levies.
· 36, Middleport, $25 and costs, of Congressman Clarence President C. Willi!lffi Swank,
Celebtezze explained that current law, which has been disorderly manner; Bruce W.
in an address to a Farm
MU!er ( R.-lOth) said the
ignored by districts, requires ihat bonds be advertised for Blackston, 19, Pomeroy, $10
Bureau Women 's rally in
grant is to the Meigs
competitive bids for three consecutive weeks. During that and costs, running a red
Springboro
, said if the
County board of com·
time, districts camot use any of the funds to keep schools open. light; Edward Diddle, 20,
amendment
is' adopted it
missioners. Local funding
"This clears up an ambiguity In current law," said Celebrez- Middleport, permitting an
would
cause
numerous
for the project Is projected
ze. He said schools in Toledo, Canton and Franklin County may unlicensed driver to operate a as totaling $58,250.
problems for farm families.
use the law - if enacted in time - to keep schools open later vehicle, $25 and costs; Tim L.
"The amendment would
this year, provided· voters approve November school levies. Crites, Mason, $25 and costs, ;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;::: make it illegal for your
The legislation contains an "emergency" clause that woul.d disorderly manner; Sandy E.
husband to use a leghold trap
make it effective upon the governor's signature .
on your farm," said Swank .
Clonch, 33, Middleport, $35
"This would mean th!lt the
and costs, no operator 's
racoon,
fox; muskrat and the
license, and Bobby C. Rupe,
like,
would
have the run of
18, Dexter, $50 and costs,
.
yoiJr
land
and
feast on your
reckless operation . For·
Clear
tonight,
lows
to
50.
crops
and
poultry."
.
feiting a $150 bond posted on
Swank said not only does
charges of disorderly conduct Increasing cloudiness Thurs·
By Ualted Preroi lnternaUoaal
day,
highs
in
the
low
70s.
the
proposed amendment
DACCA, BANGLADESH - TWO MEMBERS OF and contributing to the
Probability
of
precipitation
make
the use of the leghold
JAPAN'S ultra-leftist Red Army hijacked a Japan Air Lines delinquency of a minor was
10 percent today and tonight, trap illegal it would also b!ln
jelliner with 155 persons aboard today, forced it to. land in John Partlow, 18, Pomeroy.
20 percent Thursday.
(Continued on page 18)
Dacca and thrB!Itened to blow it up unless their demands are
met.
Airport officials said the hijaCkers, negotiating with Bangladesh Air Force Chief of Staff Abdul Gaffur Mahmood,
wllmed they would blow up Ute four-engine jetliner with
themselves and their hostages unless all Red Army guerrillas
)aUed in Jap~~n were released immediately. The Officials said
the hijackers warned th!lt anyone appr011ching with.in 200
yards of the plane would be shot. It was not known what
weapon&amp; or explosives the hijackers were carrying. '

NEW YORK - .A DIAMOND CimER, cl8iming he had

Stiffler, John L. Preston and John F . Stiffler, Jr. A crowd
gathered outside of the Main St. entrance of the store well
before 9 a.m. to get an early start in taking advantage of
opening specials offered by the store. The former store
was destroyed by fire over two years ago , .

en tine

School levy of
2.8 mills lost
Ualted Press International
A 2.8-mill school levy.
which would not have
Increased
taxes,
was
defeated Tuesday by voters
in the suburban Campbell
Local School District.
Superintendent Robert Hedrick said the defeat means
the district will lose $300,000
in taxes when the current 2.8mill levy expires at the end of
the year.
Hedrick said there was
"little doubt " that the
announced closing of the
Youngstown Sheet and Tube
Co.'s Campbell plant was a
COntributing factor to· the
defeat of the levy.
The company said last
week It ·was closing part of
the facility and laying off
5,000 workers.
Officials have estimated
the :'&lt;'hoot district will lose
$1.8 million because of the
plant shut down .
Hedrick S!lid the district
ffi!IY have to consider closing
next year if other ftinds are
not available.
In other levy elections,
Voters iii the Amherst school
district in Lorain Countv

~

~ "' ~--

CINCINNATI - UNRE&amp;:ILVED GRIEVANCES kept
nearly h!llf the 940employea of Longview State mental hospital
011 strib a aecimd straight d!ly Tuesday.
On strike were the 425 members d. the Ohio Civil Service
Employ811 Allllociatloo - housekeeping, dietary, laundry,
clerical and lllll'8lng employes. There are some 1,170 patients
at the mental Institution.
Union officials complained of alleged racial
dlscrlmlnetlon In .per111111nel practices, employea working out
ol their job cl•BI'ifl~ation, Improper job postings, staff
llhortagea and breach of euttract.

r,;..~

Clerk of Courts

Meigs County
Common Pleu Court

,Py LEE LEONARD
UPI Stateb- Repotter
COLUMBUS(UPI) - Slate
legislators
have
told
re presentativ es of
financially-troubled Ohio
school districts there are no
easy answers to their
problems,
except
to ,
encourage more
local
support.
More
than
100
representatives of 10 school
districts
visited
the
statehouse Tuesday, met with
members d. the Education
and Finance committees and
said their areiiS need more
money and fewer man-a(ed
educational programs from
the state.
They said· additional taxes
would not be desirable, but
tha·t welfare expenditures
should be redoced.
"I don't know what we can
da for them, " said Sen.
Kinsey Mtlleson, !).Freeport,
following a two-hour meeting.
K. William Zartman, a
farmer from Seneca E!lsl
distriCI in Seneca County,
drew loud applause from the
group when
he
told
legislators it was "fraud on
the people" that state sales
and income taxes and lottery
revenues have not gone
strictly for education.
"U we want to support
roads and welfare, u he said,

oc.a

The ob ject of the complaint
Is a demand for divorce ~nd
transfer of the equ ity of the

CLEARANCE PRICES
ON

Tax bite on ~roperty owners
for schools must go deeper

~~

To Glenna Joyce Teasley,
whose Jut known address
was Route 1, P.omeroy, Ohio ,
.45769 ; you are hereby notlfled
that you have been named
Defendant in a legal acllon
entitled Tom J . Teasley ,
Plaint iff , vs . Glenna Joyce
Teasley, Defenda'nt . ThiS
action has been assigned
Case No. 16586 and is pending
i n theccourt of Common
Pleas pf Me i gs County,
Pomeroy , Oh io .. 5769.

property of the parties

UVING ONLy
ROOM SUITE
fJ' •' ...

l

Billy · Dyer, Beth Perrin, b
Paula Hysell.
Safety (General Motors),
Patty Parker, Tammie
(CDttiniMII from pqt 1)
Starcher, Ed Holter, Patty and plans ~ mvest about
Dyer.
$37.7 mUJion tn the plant .
Veterinary sCience (Up·
Hoods Ill well known liS the
john ) Angela Myers, Beth manufacturer of passenger
Perrin, Kathy Parker.
cars that.. carTY the t:,rand
Wood
science names of Honda Civic and
(Weyerhaeuser Co. Foun· ''Honda ~cord· ".
dati&lt;&gt;n J, Lester Jeffers,
Honda s 11_10ve tS expected
Rlleleen Oliver, Sharon Karr, to help allevtate 8J;O~ U.S.
Mike McGuire.
concern for fast nsmg Jap!l·
Horses (Meigs Co. 4· H nese automobile exports to
Committee), Mil&lt;ki Conley, America.
Brett Jones.
.
The J~panese ~utomobUe
Meigs county represen· ind~ s production target
tatives were :
~111g 1977 _111 set at about 1.4
Junior Fair King and milllon urut.s . Th19 figure
Queen, Jeamle Boggs and mclud~ vehicles of all types,
Brian Windon.
including buses. About 60
· Outstanding 4-H Boy and percent life fo~ export ~d the
Girl, Virginia Jordan and United States ts JapM s best
Paul Croas
customer for cars.
Citizenshlp Short Course,
The influent~al financial
Mary Mora and Lester newspaper Nthon Ketzal
Jeffers.
e!lflier repo~ that Honda
Junior Leadership C!lmp, was negotiating wtth the Ohio
Opal Dyers and Marco Jef· state governm~tfor rail and
fers.
water . connecttons for the
Conservation Camp, Patty plant stte.
Dyer and Dave Riggs.
Industry sources said the
Ohio
Club
Congress deal would have . to be
Delegates, Terrie Pullins, approved by the Ohto state
Cindy Pitzer, Ed Holter, legislature, wh~ch ts expected
Blair Windon.
to consider it m October..
Camp Counselors, Judy
Japanese auto~obtle
Holliday; Dave Riggs, Opal makers have been invtted by
Dyer Mary Col well Marco more thM 20 American states
Jeff~rs. Paul Cro~s . Fae to set up plants. Other top
~uto ~anufacturers ~ere,
Reibel, Robin Ritchie.
Meigs
county Dairy mcluding Toyota !IDd N1SS811
Princess, Pam Kautz.
( Datsun ),
have
not
Meigs County Sheep Queen, announced . P~ . to accept
Teresa Carr.
any of the mvtta.ttons.
.
Meigs
county
sheep
Hmda made. tts debut 111
Princess, Tammy Ervin.
19~8 when tis. founder,
Ohio Tamworth Queen, Sotchiro ~onda, begs~
Darlene Thornton .
manufllcturmg motorcycle
Safety Speaking Contest m , his small factory in
Winner, Sharon Karr.
Shtzuoka, southwest of
" Outstanding of Day" at , Tokyo.
.
State Fair' Sharon Karr'
The compliny has bee;t m
Patty Dyer, Billy Dyer.
t h e
a ':' t o m _o b I 1 e
Leadership Camp delegate
manufacturmg bUSUless for
, Mill w v
only about 12 ye!lfs.
J
t
kao
a ac n s
' · a.,
In 1976 Ho da built 560 075
Becky Edwards.
• .n
•
Ohio Winner to Commodity cars, an UlCrea.se of 45.4
Marketing Conference in
percent over 1975, Of these,
Chicago iJ1 the spring of 1978,
307,479 . were exported, wtth
Paul Croas.
the Uruted States taking the
largest share.

Meigs in third
place.at Logan

LET
UNCLE
SAM
DOIT

"b

·

&lt;eontinuedlnm pace 1&gt;

A

Southern District voters on
Aug. 16 defeated a 10 mill
emergency levy for three
years, also in a special
election.
The second levy is in the
Eastern Local School District
where last Aug. 25 a five mill
emergency levy went down to
defeat in a special election.
The new propoS!Il in the
Eastern District will be voted
upon at the general election
on Nov. 8. It is for five mills
and would be in effect for
three years. The five mill
emergency levy would bring
in about $55,000 amually to
the district.
E·RCALLED
RACINE - The Racine
Emergency Squad was called
to Route 3 Racine, at 3:25
p.m. Tuesday for Lois
McKenzie, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial·Hospital where she
was admitted.

TAKES TOP HONORS - Lori Guinther, a senior at
Southern High School and field commander for the
Tornado marching h!lnd, was presented a trophy at the
Jackson Apple Festival as " outstanding field
commander." She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Guinther, Syracuse.

Council wanting more
people participation

Ways to increase par· discussion on the length of
ticipation in the Meigs County term for the rotating
Human Resources Council chairpersonship, now three
were explored at a meeting of months. Also discussed was
the cowtcil Tuesday at the the Council chairperson's
expenses for stationery,
Meigs Inn.
,
$10,0000FF
Steve Dawson addressed postage , phone calls and
RACINE - An• earlier
miscellaneous items. The
report on state school the group on participation council's duties and interests
foundation funds for the and discussed plaming a new and ways of presenting them
Southern Local School constitution and by-laws. A to the various organizations
District,
due
to
a steering committee was were reviewed.
typographical error, read authorized to draw up by·
Gene Lyon s took the chair
$51,999.48 while the item laws and present them at the for the next three months,
should have said $41,999.48. next meeting. There was a and the next meeting will be
on the third Tuesday in October at the Meigs Inn.
Vernon Nease, chairman,
presided.
Attending were Nease, Red
'Cross; Judy Ann Lambert,
Leafy Chasteen, Meigs
County Council on Aging;
Margaret Ella Lewis, Council
secretary; the Rev. Wtiliam
Middleswarth, Meigs County
Ministerial
Association ;
David Krasner, John E .
Brammer, Nancy Raming,
Steve Dawson, Nan Myhil,
Gallia - Jackson · Meigs
Mental Health; Mary F .
Skinner, Helen Bailey,
Personal Advocacy; Lee
Norman, OBES Project
Employ; Gene Lyons, Meigs
County Health Department;
and Glenna Crisp, Leading
Beaver, Betsy Riffle, Brenda Frecker and Brenda Boyles. Carol King is
Creek Conservancy District.
faculty advisor.
1

\

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