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                  <text>D-12-The Sw1da ~· Tunes-&amp;nunel. Sunday. Xov. 6. 1977

AAA issues reminder
on metal studded tires

Retired teachers reelect
Al Durose and see slides
GALUPOLIS - Fifty-eight
retired teachers, meeting' for
luncheon Thursday at the
Buckeye Hills Career Center

at Rio • Grande, re-elected
Albert R. Durose president
and saw slides proje&lt;1ed by
Max Tawney and narrated by
him.
The slides were made by
him in Hawati . .~ustra~a , and
the South ·Pacific smaller
islands.
Besid es Dur ose, th e
members of the Gallia County Retired Teaehers 'Associa·
!ion reelected J uhl Brunlfield
vi cepresident and Florence
Trainer treasurer. They

elected Beulah J ohnson
secretary to succeed Mary
Walker.
President purose proceeded to reapP&lt;Jint the conunit. tee chairman who functioned
"i th him during the past year

Church and Edwin E. Higgins.
Calling - J ennie Elliott.
Flower - Margueri te
Hineman.
•
Membership - J ohn Trotter.
Haspitality - Mr. and Mrs.
D. Lester DaviS.

with

Ohio

Retired

Tear hers Association prac-

tice ).
The conuni ttee cha inn en

are :
Registration - Emmett
Legislative - Emmett

nion.

D. Lester Davis read a
poem by Dave Jenkins of
Chi llicothe, fonner Perry
Township principal and
teacher.
A guest was Mrs. Ullian
Program - J . Shennan
Wood
Henderson of Wynne.
Ptlrter.
Ark
..
near
Little Rock, a first
President Durose read a
letter to the retired teachers cousin of D. Lester Davis.
which ·he sent to U. S.
Senators John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum and
Representative Clarence
Miller OpP&lt;Jsing the movement to place teachers'

Miller issues
statement on
Ohio Issu.e 1

TO MEf;l' NOV. 18
GALLIPOLIS
Mrs .
Adelaide $and~rS 1 elemen-

lthe year now changes from ' tary supervisor for the Gallia
November to Jan. 1 to con- County Schools, announced

form

ret1remerit mto the ' SOC'ial
security fund . Thunderous
applause greeted thiis opi-

Saturday the Gallia County
Parent Advisory Council for
Title I will meet for the first
t~e . Nov. 16 at 10 a.m. The
session will be held at the
Central Office on Jackson
Pike.

WAsHINGTON - Tenth
District Ohio Cong. Clarence
Miller Saturday issued the
following statem..,t on State
Issue I, which will appear on
ballots .in Ohio on Tuesday:
A YES vote on Issue I is
absolutely essential if the
honest voters of Ohio are not
to have many of their votes
cancelled out on election day
by the illegal voting invited
by the new instant voter
registration system , particularly

in

our

major

metroP&lt;Jlilan areas. ·
A YES vote on Issue 1 on
Tuesday's ballot will send a
message to Congress that
Ohioans want to preserve the
integrity of the ~lection
system.
There are those in Congress
who are eagerly awaiting the
outcome of Ohio's referendum on instant voter
registration. II the present
law is not repealed on
Tuesday , they plan to quickly
force
Instant
voter
registration upon the rest of
the county.
By voting YES on Issue I,
repealing instant voter
registration and keeping the
state's traditional
registration procedures. Ohio
will keep its elections fair and
honest and insure that other
states will be able to do the

Dr. Betty Yarde (left) , counselor, and Dr. John Malacos (right), director of the new
community educational counseling cenrer on the campus of Rio Grande College and
Community College.

A new

Cluding smoking control

co mmunit y educational
counseling center on the
campus of Rio Grande

RIO GRANDE -

groups , interpersonal
relations workshops and
stress
management

vi.

L.

. 48 16
·Walt's Drive In
46 18
Two River Motors
46 18
Wiseman Agency
46.18
No . 15
46 18
Pt . PleaS . Recapp ing
36 28
Hot Doos
35 29
Ell iott ,.rucking
J4 JO
Va's Bea uty Shop
J2 J2
American Legion

Pr ice' s Gulf &amp;

Construction
Pantasote

R. C. Glasgow &amp;
Associ ates

Miller's

J2 J2
28 J6
28 36

27 37

Luck y IJ

Johnson's Mkt.
Citizens Nat. Bank
l ow Rollers
l es' Tavern

22 42

devel opment j and Mark

ATTENTIONI
No

Hunting~No

Fishing

No Trapping

DON'T
Let Them Take Those
Freedoms From You ·

GALLIA COUNTY CONSERVATION
CLUB URGES ALL VOTERS
TO
'

.

VOTE NO
ON· ISSUE -2
Pd . Pot . Adv.

lssue 3, which has been attempted before without success,

tutional amendment.
Also on tl1e ballot a re :
-Some 280 S(!hool operating levies and bond issues, many of
them calling for additional real estate taxes.
- Mayoral contests in Cleveland, Toled o and Youngstown .

contributions, have fought for "yes" votes to el~inate
confusion and fraud at the P&lt;Jlling places and to keep the GOP
from being driven further into tbe minority in Ohio.
Even Secretary of Stare Brown, a Republican. bas openly
opposed election day and permanent registration and for the
-State Issues 2, 3 and 4, prohibiting use of the steeljawed first time in his 26 years in the office he has taken sides on an
leghold trap in Ohio, providing for state aid to privaw issue for which he is compiling the votes.
corporations constructing low-and moderate-income housing ,
Because of the ballot language on Issue I, it is necessary til
and el~inating the state's $75(1,000 debt ceiling.
vote " yes" to eliminate election day registration and " no" to
State Issue 1 has generawd the most P&lt;Jlitical interest . keep it.
Placed on the ballot by Ohioans for the Preservation of Honest
Emotionally, the hotwst campaign has been on Issue 2. The
Elections (OPHE ). it would rescind the five-month old. Ohio Committee for Humane Trapping has called for outlawprogram of election day voter registration and permanent ing the leghold trap on grounds it is cruel to wild animals and
registration .
•
alternative snares and "quick-kill" traps are available.
Democrais and organized labor, which pushed the program
Ohioans for Wildlife Conservation has put on a heavy
through the General Assembly last spring, have campaigned campaign against Issue 2 on grounds it would hurt the trapping
heavily to urga a "no" vote and to keep election day industry, cause overpopulation, spread disease and result in a
registration to increase voter participation.
proliferation of farm pests.
Republicans, with the help of sizable rn t&gt;nnr~te

calls for a bonding program for private developers
constructing or rehabilitating housing.
Proponents believe it would spur home construction and
~prove blighted areas, while oppon ents maintain it would set
a dangerous precedent, allowing the go1•ernment to underwriw loans to privaw corporations.
Issue 4, also placed on the ballot by the General Assembly,
replaces the current 126--year old debt ceiling with a fl oating
limit derermined by the state's income.
Proponents cla~ it would be a modern methnd of financing
government construction projects, while opponents warn it
would ruin Ohio's credit rating .
The main mayor 's race in Ohio is in Cleveland , where state

Rep. Edward F. Feighan and Dennis Kucinich, clerk of
municipal cotlrts, have a runoff . Both Democrats outdistanced

Republican Mayor Ralph J. Perk in the nonpartisan primary.
Ohio's 13,168 polling places will open at 6:30a .m. Tuesday
and close at 7:30p.m.
'

•

e
en tine
Cost of bridge repair
at about $1.5 million

since 197J. He received his
ba Chelor of science degree

from Ohio University in 1970
and is ,also finishing work for
his master's degree at OU .
The center is located on
campus at the corner of "' · Route 325 and South College Ltf....i::.Y.
='·=
·=
''::-:____1!~~_.!!~fE(~~::J!.!!.:~~..!!.
Avenue .

::SONANZA

POINT PLEASANT - of the department's work to
Highways Commissioner date oo repairirig numerous
Charles Miller estimated defects discove red in welds
Sunday repairs to the Silver on the 8-year-old Ohio River
Memorial Bridge could total span.
He said 16 critical defects
$1.5 million, but the federal
in
the welds were repaired
government will hel p pay the
while the span was closed to
bill.
In
addition.
Miller traffic from July 5 until Oct.
promised if liability for the i9, and another 20 will be
defects can be pinpointed, the repaired in coming months.
department will go to court to Mill er said inspections
showed a total of 108 defects,
recover damageS.
The Joint Committee on but all are not major a nd do
Govern'ment and Finan ce

heard Miller's detailed report

not require repa irs.

·He said defects were

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 144

.

.

Abell has been director of
financial aid at the college

DOC
SMITH'S

By UDIIed Press International
Educators, parents and pupils in more than 200 public school
districts in Ohio will have their eyes on Tuesday's off-year
election to see if voters are willing to provide additiona l
financial support.
Many of the school districts wiU be in financial trouble if the
operating levies !ail. Some 45, including Toledo's, will have to
close for the rest of the year because they have run out of cash .
In addition, Ohio voters will be determining the fate of
election day v~ter registration and leghold animal traps, and
choosing mayors in several major cities.
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown has predicted that 2.~.000
Ohioans will visit their polling places, exceeding the record of
2,795,892 for a comparable off-year election in 1965.
The turnout is expected to be swelled by more than 200,000
election day registrants, many of whom will be ' qnstant
voters" for the first time..
_.,
State Issue I will dewrmine whether that practice, enacted
by the legislature last spring, sh ould be eliminated by consti·
•

Pomeroy-Middleort, Ohio
Monda.v. November 7. 1977

master's degte e at Ohi o
University.

workshops.
The career pla cement
division of the center will
assist students in discovering
vocational and employment
opportunit ies and provide
interview and resume Writing
workshops .
The financial aid division of
the center is designed to help
students. and prospective
students. understand the
kinds of finan cial assistance
available for those who want
to attend college .
Malacos was assistant
director of the counseling
&lt;'enter at the University of
Maryland before coming to
Rio Grande this fall. He
received his Ph. 0. from
Michigan State University in
1974 and hi s M.A. fr om
Michigan State in 1910. He
has held a variety of councenter counselor; Margaret seling positions in Michigan
. Thomas, director of career and Kentucky.

disclose d through use ol
ultrasonic equipment.
Meanwhil e, a new bridge
linking Chester, W. Va. with
cross-river Liverpool, Ohio,

was dedicated today, but
Rep . !Wbert H. Mollohan, DW. Va., rema ined unhappy
with the delay in completing
it. Mollohan said the need for
such a span was ev ident a Full
decade ago.
An existing deteriorated
bridge was closed in 1969, and
demolished a year later, he
noted.

"The causes of delay on Chester span , he said.
this bridge are manifold and · But in the past eight yea rs,
they involve many people, the Chester project was
many agencies, many laws slowed down because of
and many regulations," jurisdictibnal red tape beMollohan said.
tween high officials in Ohio
~ ' Better coordination and and West Virginia.
better cooperation between
Mollohan said he was
all concerned co uld have hopeful that s~ilar delays
eliminated much of the lost won 't hinder other projects,
time.''
such as the proposed new
Legislation was passed in Weirton-Steubenville, and a
1970 by Congress to provide bridge linking Ravenswood,
total financing for emergency W. Va. and Ohio at Great
b&lt;idge construction projects, Bend.
specifically including the

---·

· Dr . Yorde, who is also new

Abell , director of . financial to the Rio Grande staff this
aid.
fall, received her Ph. D. this
c~nter

represents an

year, her Master's in 1974 and

attempt by Rio Grande and
the ~6 Board to jointly expand the availability of
services to both students and
the community.
According to Dr. Mala cos,
the center will offer short
term personal counseling
services for anyone having
difficulty with life sltll8tions.
The center will also · make
available a vatiety of
workshop experiences in:

her ba chelor's in 1969, · all
from Ohio Universi_ty . She
wa s involved in group
counseling at Ohio Univershy , and ha s taught at
Hocking Technical College.
Mrs. Thomas was named
career placement director in
September. She has served on
the Rio Grande staff in · a
number of other positions,
most recently as director of
the learnin~ ce nter. She

• 301 V-8 engine

•
•
•
•

Automatic tran s.
Power sleeri ng
Power brakes
Tinted glass

~;::m:il
i

I·,:::

R'-· •
...-

By Bob Hoeflich

I

•
•
•
•
•

Air conditioning
White-wall Radials
Sport m irrows
Deluxe. wheel covers
Radio accom . pkg.
~~-

ELBERFELD$

.

-

:~~

bazaars are already underway , The Young Wives Club of
Chester will be staging theirs on Nov. !Band 19 at the Masonic
Hall, Chester, behind tbe post office, with a variety of
merchandise including baked goods to 1be offered . Club
members who will tum proceeds over to a charitable cause
urged housewives to pick up their Thanksgiving baked gonds
at the bazaar and freeze the items until needed and also are
encouraging parents tv bririg children tv the bazaar on
Saturday, Nov. 19, to do their shopping.

MEN'S
DEPARTMENT

1ST FLOOR

PHOENIX, ARIZ. - PLUMBER JAMES ROBISON and
contractor Max Dunlap have been convicred of murder and
conspiracy in the car-bomb killing of investigative reporter
Don Bolles.
The eight-man, four-woman jury deliberated nearly 40
hours afrer receiving the case Tuesday and returned the
convictions Sunday alrernoon.
Shortly alrer the verdicts were read, state Attorney
General Bruce Babbitt indicated other arrests might be
forthcoming. "It is our view that there were other people
involved," Babbitt said. "The file is still opeg, and the case will
continue under investigation by the Phoenix police and

The Meigs Fair Board hangs right in there to plan for the
next August county fair . The hoard will meet at6 p. m . Monday .
at the fairgrounds and present for the meeting will be Nick
Dorr from Variety Attractions who will help plan the evening
grandstand attractions for the 1976 fair.
And .:.. we do get letters.
T. A. Rupprecht, 629 North Altadena, Royal Oak, Mich.,
48067, is looking into his genealogy and writes for help. Surely
someone out there will be able to give him some information.
Rupprecht wrires that in 1858 his1 greal-flrandfather
came to Pomeroy as a lad of 18. He moved in with his uncle.
George Rasp, who was a grocer in town . The 1850 federal
census for Pomeroy lists George Rasp, 47, his wife, M. E., age
51 , and their children,Elizabeth, 14'; John, 12, and Magdalene,
9. The value of Rasp's property, the grocery, was listed at
$3,000.
Rupprecht states that he has a copy of George Rasp's
ancestors in the home village of Heuchelhe~. Frankenthal,
Pfalz, Gennany back to the early 1740's. Rupprecht would
appreciaw from Meigs Countians information on Eliz_abeth
Rasp, 1859-1935, and Christina Rasp Rosenbaum, 1865-1008,
both buried in Beech Grove eemerery.
CONGRATULATIONS tv Mrs. Lydia Villanueva on her
new job at the Gallia-Meigs Community Action Head Starr .
program as a consulting nutritionist. The Head Start program
has a cenrer in Racine and one in Gallipolis.
Mrs. Villanueva holds a Master's Degree in nutrition from
Drexel University in .Philadelphia and is a registered dietician
with years of reaching and dieretic experience. Aside fr om her
new post, Mrs. Villanueva is also the consultant-&lt;iietician at
Pinecrest Care Cenrer , a nursing home in GalliP&lt;Jlis. She is the ,
wife of E. S. Villanueva, M; D.
I don 't know if you've missed it since it's gone but I'll bet
you noticed. it while it was there. I'm speaking of the Big Bend
Regatta sign which hung across E. Maiu St. far too long. Meigs
Jaycees, especially John Hu1111el, Jr ., given ·an assist from
Andy Barey, removed the sign. Incideutally, the Jaycees are to
be thanked also tor maintaining a Halloween patrol in
Pomeroy and Middleport. Understand the Jaycees have some
interesting new projects coming up.
J

~~"Briefo1
By United Press International
SPRINGFIELD, OHIO - SOME 280 NON-TEACHING
employees continued to picket 28 city schools today . despire
Friday's Clark County Common Pleas Court injunctions, but
classes continued as usual since the strike started Thursday.
Only part ol the teachers refused to cross the picket line, set up
by the local .chapter ol the Ohio Association ol Public School
Employees after negotiations broke down on a contract for
higher pay and better communications with the Springfield
School Board. No new talks have been scheduled.
Those defying the court. order prohibiting picketing
include building service and maintenance workers, cooks and
school bus dril'!!rs. The lack of transportation left 1,200 public
school and 500 parochial pupils to find other ways to get tv
classes. A majority of the teachers and students have
remained away during the walkout. Supervisory and
· substitute teachers filled in to keep classes going .

::i

20 44
20 4.4
20 4.4
POMEROY - In case you didn't realizo it, time is zippin6
10 54
·
High game of week ~ Men , along.
R. Glasgow 216 ; women , G.
The .Pomeroy Flower Shop has announced its annual
Choquette 198.
. ··
High series of week~ Men , Christmas open house and the observance of its 17th
G. Hennigar 578 ; women , G. anniversary for Dec . 4 from 12 noon to 5 p.m. And, Christmas

Choquette 504.

with Major Hoople

received her bachelor 's
degree from Rio Grande in
1972 and is currently completing requirements for her

College and Communit y
College (RGC-&lt;::C) to serve
both students and the community will open officially
Thursday, Nov. 10.
Sponsored jointly by RGCCC and the Mental Health and
Mental Retardation " 648"
Board, the center was
created to provide personal
couru;eling. career placement
and financial aid services
primarily to Rio Grande
students but also to the
citizens of Gallia, Jackson,
Vinton and Meigs Counties.
An open house, to which the
public is invited, will be held
Thursdayfrom:\.,Jp.m. and 7- 9 p.m.
Dr. John Malacos has been
named director of the center.
He will be assisted by three
other staff members ineluding Dr. Betty Yorde,

The

KINGS&amp;QUEENS
Oct. JO, 1977
Standings

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Rio counseling center will
serve students, residents

same.

Local Bowling

PORTSMOUTH - With the which ban metal studs. 'Illey
onset of winter weather , are Florida, Hawaii, Illinois,
Minnesota.
mot o ri~is in the Buckeye Louisiana,
State should remember the Mississippi, Texas, Utah and ,
regulation s con cerning metal Wisconsin . In Canada, only
studded snow tires in Ohio Ontario has banned metal
and adja cent states, said studs," said Mr. Pack.
1
' 1f motorists are traveling
Cla rence Pa ck, Director ERS
&amp; Safety Department, of the to West VIrginia, Indiana,
Kentucky, or Pennsylvania,
Auto Club.
and
they follow Ohio's
Ohio motorist s are allowed
to use metal studded snow regulations, they will be
tires between Nov. I and within the laws of those
states. But if they are going
April 15.
If traveling out of state. on an extended trip, and have
remember , there are dif- metal studded snow tires on ·
ferent laws in each state. their car, it would be a good'
Michigan permits only soft idea to check the 'laws of the
studs and then only one states they wit! be passing
brand , " Perma·T Gripper ." through before leaving," said
Mr. Pack.
'"l'l"•rP are s.e veral states

School financing in Ohio on the line Tuesday

CAME TUMBLING DOWN - Mrs. Rose Reynolds will forego "P&lt;JrCh sitting" for a
'. while at her apartment over the VU!age Gun Shop, Mill St., Middleport. Supports on the
porch were struck by an auto driven by John D, McCloud, Middleport, at about 12 :30 a.m . .
Sunday. McCloud was not injured but his car was demolished. Police reported a tie rod
fa lied causing the front of the car to go out of control when McCloud attempted to turn off
Mill St.

ROCKING FOR CHILDREN -Members of Eastern High School's FHA were rocking
away Saturday on Kroger's-parking lot. The proceeds from the Rock-A·Thon will be sent to
Children's Hospital in Columbus.

Five drivers charged
Five drivers were charged
in six traffic acciden'ts in-

vestigated over the weekend
by the Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol.
The first was at 3:15 p. m.
Saturday on SR 551 at
Mi)epost 16 in Gallia County
where vehicles operated by
Rick C. Smith, 22, Gallipolis,
and Leoanrd W,. Dobbins , 17,
Gallipolis, collided head on.
Dobbins was cited to juvenile
court for failure to yield.
There

was

moderate

damage .
Clarence J. McNeal, 63,
Middleport, was charged
with failure to stop within
assured clear distance
following an accident at 5 p.
m. on US 35, one tenth of a
mile east of CR 3. His car
struck the rear end of a
vehicle operated by Robin D.
Bales, 20, Newlon Fails, Ohio.

There was slight d~mage to
both vehicles.
A deer was struck in an
accident at 6:45p. m. on SR 7
at Milepost 21 in Meigs
County. The animal ran into
the path of a vehicle operated
by James S. ·Souder, 17,
Portland. There was heavy
damage to his car. The deer
•
ran away.
William P. McCreedy, 34,
GaUipolis, was charged with
excess speed for conditions
following an accident at 7:15
a. m. on SR 141, two miles
west of SR 775.
The patrol said McCreedy
traveling west, lost control of
his car which ran off the highway striking a fence then
overturned . There was heavy
damage. McCreedy was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center lor treatment of minor

Seven autos, porch
damaged in Middleport

injuries.

Jeffery E . Wells , 20 ,
Northup, was Cited to
Gallipolis Municipal Court
for excessive speed following
an accident on SR 7, one mile

north of Eureka. The patrol
said Wells' car struck a
parked truck owned by
William H. Russell, Rt. I,
Gallipolis ~
There
was
moderate da·m age.

Paul D. Halley, 16, Rt. I,
GalliP&lt;Jiis, was charged with
failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at 3:30
p. m. Sunday on SR 554, one
and six tenths miles west of
Cheshire.

State troopers said · the
Halley- car struck the rear
end of a vehicle operated by
Virginia D . Weiman , 16,

Cheshire.
There
moderate damage.

was

ourselves."

•

STYLE No. 7963
from the
CAMPUS ,ollection

campus

Talk about classic!! Campus brings back the duffel coal complete
with toggle closures, roomy patch pockets and drawstring hood. The
coat . is genui ne wool mellon with a zappy plaid acrylic lining . (A
matching plaid scarf is available separately.) You can't beat the
duffel for classic good looks plus practical warmth for the winter
ahead .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ISRAEL
TODAY
WARNED
PALESTINIAN
GUERRILLAS in southern Lebanon if their rocket attacks
persist "return fire will not be enough" - a veiled threat that
Israel may send its troops across the border . In retaliation for
a rocket attack early Sunday on the town ol Nahariya that
kilied two men, israeli gunners pounded guerrilla P&lt;JSitions in
the first major flareup of fighting since a U.S.-mediated cease- ·
f ire took effect in the volatile region six weeks ago.
·
The warning that ·Israel may resort to sending troops into
southern Lebanon was broadcast on the state-run national
radio in a report from the lrontier region. "If the attacks
contl!iue then the return fiie will not be enough," the radio's
corresP&lt;Jndent at the frontier quoted security forces as teiling
him.
But he said Israeli and Lebanese officers still were
meeting with regard to the cease-fire that began Sept. 26. Tbe
retaliatory artillery barrage was ordered by Defense Minister
Ezer Weizman, who visited the families of Shmuel Mintz, 33,
and Louis Levi, 45, the two men killed by shrapnel in t,he rocket
attack.
'

\.

'·

submitted or those which we
already are working on and
have been committed to send
up (tb Congress ) next year,"
the source said.

The source said the White

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday _through
Friday, a chance of showers
Wednesday and . Thursday,
but fair Friday . . Turning
cooler. Highs Wednesday In
the 60,, and in the 50s Thursday and Friday. Lows in the
upper 40s and lower 50s,
cooling by Friday morning
_l_nto__the..lower .40_•·.... .. ..
:~:~t~:r:::;:;~;~;~:~:~:t\{:::~:~t:;:~:~:~:;:;~~:::;:~:;·

struck

went into the yard of . John
Local 6197 of the United
Motley, striking Motley's car.
Steelworkers
union struck the
Medium damages were in- ·
Midwest
Steel
Corp. early
curred to both vehicles and
today
in
a
contract
dispute.
Proctor wlll be charged in
Local
President
Steve
mayor's court. The fourth
Utile
said
the
three
year
accident was at the Village
contract
expired
at
midnight
Gun Shop at 12:30 a.m.
Sunday when a car driven by and contract talks stalled last
with
no
new
John McCloud, Middleport. week
negotiations
scheduled.
He
struck SUPP&lt;JrtS holding UP eli
porch on the upstairs said there had been no
residence of Mrs. Rose agreement on any contract
issues including wages,
Reynolds.
benefits
and
contract
language.
Tom Serey, plant manager
at the firm, said this morning
he had nothiug to say other
than the contract ~xpired the
night of Nov. 6 and they are
trying to get a contract
signed. He indicated there
will be future discussions to
resolve the strike.
Serey said approx~ately
75 men in two shifts are involved.
Two a_~cidents were · investigated by the Mei gs
County Sherifl's department
0 aCCO
Sunday.
According to Sheriff James
J . Proffitt the first occurred
at 2:55a.m. on CR 3
HUNTINGTON W V _
House will follow through on Sunday
• • a.
near Forest Acre Park. , •
proposals already sent _to Charles W. Lance, GalliP&lt;Jlis, John Foster .. sales manager
Congress, such as establish·
was traveling north when he of the Huntmgton Tobacco
Co.. at 14 - 26th St. said
men! of a consumer agency.
went left of center over an 10 d th f'
.11
t
He said Vice President ' embankment
and struck . a
ay ~ •rm wt_
open o
Walter Mondale will be
tree. Lane was cited to Meigs rec e~ve tob~cco Fr~day, Nov.
consulted on whether to push
eo· t Court on chiuges of II and begm selling Noy. 21.
un Y
.
Foster emphasiZed that
the stailed election package,
reckless
operation
.
.
A
:·rumors"
the firm would not
whi ch includes public
passenger,
John
L.
Chaney,
th
'
.
financing for congressional GailiP&lt;Jiis suffered injuries open IS year an d t hat liS
elections and postcard
bt
s' t immediately warehouse has been sold are
u tedwa no
· "altogether unfounded .''
regi~tration of voters.
t rea .
At 11:15 a.m. Sunday on CR
The urban package, the 28 in Sutton Township apsource said, will be based on prox~ately 300 feet north of
ec_onomi c deve lopment Neas~ Hollow Road Douglas
thr ough .job cr eation, as Warden, 18, Racine, was
opposed to a socia l services traveling south when a sm~ll
Somewha t coo ler today
approa ch. He said tax buck deer jumped into the with lows tonight in the 4&amp;.
incentives would be used to path of his car. The deer High Tuesday in the upper
get privare industry to locare apparently wasn't killed. 60s. Chance of rain 80 percent
' in the inner-city and hire There was moderate damage today, 50 percent tonight and
20 percent Tuesday.
to the car.
persons living there.

Middleport Police investigated four accidents
over the weekend.
At 3 p.m. Saturday, a car
driven by Edith M. Woolard,
Pomeroy, pulling from a
parking space, struck a car
owned by Mary Rager,
Gallipolis, incurring light
damages to hoth.
At 10:45 p.m. Saturday, a
car driven by Michael D.
Daven(l9rt, 18, Middleport,
also on Mill St., struck a
parked car owned by Freda
M. Bing, Middleport, incurring medium damages.
He was cited on a charge of
failing to have his vehicle
under control. .
AI 8: 30 a.m. Sunday a car
driven by Michael D.
Proctor, Route I, Gallipolis,
failed to round a curve from
Front St. to Hani'uton St., and

Tree hit

by car

on CR3

Full calendar set

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Walter F . Mondale
President Carter, his nine- ,today and pla1111ed to stop in
nation tow&gt; indefinitely post- on another of a series of
(l9ned, plans an ambitious White House briefings for
calendar in which he wUI out-of-towners
on
the
send Congress the remainder Panama Canal treaties.
of his domestic priorities
The president notified
within the next few months, it foreign governments during
was learned today .
the weekend that he was
An administration source postponing indefinitely his 12told UP! Carter will send day . 24,00t).mile tour because
Congress his programs on:
of his energy program that is
-Tax reform early in the ·· now under a severe test in the
1978 session, probably in Congress. He will address the
nation on energy Tuesday
January.
MOSCOW - THE SOVIET UNION MARKED the' 6oth
- Urban policy by March night.
anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution today with a 15.
Carter said at his most
traditional parade through Red· Square displaying a~ amount
- N a I i on a 1 he a 1 t h recent news conference he
of military hardware unpreceden ted in recent years.
insurance la ter in the session. planned no major inn ovative
With Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev and the entire perhaps during the summer. proposals for 19i8.
Communist Politburo watching from atop Lenin's Tomb,
Carter scheduled hi s
"We do not foresr•, barring
Soviet troops goose-stepped over the cobblestones of Red regular weekly meetings with the unforeseen, •ny global,
Square . For the first time since 1974 , Soviet army tanks - the White House se nior staff, hug e legislative initiatives
(Continued on page 10)
the Cabi net and Vi ce bey ond
th ose
already

Plant

T b

finn

opens Nov. 11

Weather

\

.

I

·.'

�The oa I) Sent nel ~hddleiJ&lt;lrt P ner 1 0 M n L1

No~,1

1977

Six bodies

,_fwo states to elect governors
L'' ( .A Y F

RICHARDS
UP I P hlical Wrlttr
N&lt; J erse) and Vrr~m a
x. ~O\ ernor~ Tut'sda\ n
rr " elecuons that also
II

~ 1:!

fl'Ull Nal C'i.lfltes.ts U1

~

u 38 b1g rtties al r "S the
unu l
V ters also "ill be asked t
&lt;k c d a nwnber of ball t
d~ r ndums - such te ns a:s
pt pt sals to ban b llbo;lrds
w I W ) a hotel n San
lr
tS CO
prhb
1' r graph) m Washm1,~on
rep~ 1
mstant
oter
re gt tra tt on n Oh o and
bot sh SW1da1 blue Ia" s n
th&lt; K nsas Cit1 n etr p !&lt;In
rrea
N~ 1 York Cit
Detrmt
H uot"' Cle eland Seattle
l t tsburg h Buffalo N Y
Jnd M nneapol s are the
largrst of 38 cmes wtth a
r rulallon of more than
00 000 "here
na1ora
let uons are bemg held

La e
p Is
f 1\:. r
Republ cans reta 1 g rtle
~ ernorsh p of V r~m a
be&lt; a use uthough G
M lis
G &gt;d" n a t run agam the
polls fa1 v h s heutenant
~ ernor J &gt;hn DaltOJ as hts
successor The De ocratc;.
are fa\ ored n Ne" Jt&gt;rse}
" 11h
m u1 bent
Go'
Brerdan B Tne expected to
hold on to the Ne" Jerse1
Statehouse But netlher race
ts a certau t\
Should Republ ca ns wtn
both and ncrease thetr
nu ber of go~ernors to 13
the\ "ill dam t s a blow to
PreSJdent Carter "ho w th
li s
" fe
-campa tgned
personalh m both sl&lt;!tes but
polls show local ISSUes not
1\htte House clout
dectde the electim s
Both Ne" Jersey and Vtr
gm a 10ted for Gerald Ford
over Carter last }ear
The pclls also favor Demo

"'11

Peopletalk
By KENNETH R CLARK
United Presslnteroational
REBEL HEADQUARTERS The leading mavenck of the
Ron an Catholic Church ts m New York French Archbishop
Marcel Lefebvre who founded his Roman Cathol c P us X
Soctet} m deftance of the Vatican s ban on the Latm mass
Sunday dedicated hts new MJencan headquarters - on the
0) ste r Bay Cove estate of the late spcrtsman William
Woodward, who was murdered by hts wife

COUNTRY COUSINS Klrk Douglas filming The Fury on
i(l!; ation m Israel says he s learned not all Je11s and Arabs
hate eacb other Douglas hl!1lSelf a Jew says he was most
m pressed by a tour he took of lsraelt-built child care centers
n areas populated b} Arabs Says Douglas
That s an
un portant message to counteract the dramatic terrorist
•!tacks that make people think all Arabs feel that way about
Je"s am he adds The connechon between us (Jews and
\rabs) ts much closer than people think - were almost like
cous ns If you read the Btble you see that our forefathers are
tl err forefathers
GOLDA MEErS GOLDA Former lsraeU Prune Minister
Golda Meir watched her own life unfold Sunday on the stage at
New York Ctty s Moresco Theater The pia) of course ts
Golda wtth Anile Bancroft m the title role Followmg the
show the real Golda and her dramatic counterpart got
tog~ther wtth other celebnties at a party in the Tower Swte of
the Tune-Life buildln"
PRINCE AT PLAY Britam s Prince Charles ISm Sydney
Australia now and his tour schedule tsas heavy as tl was while
he vas VISiting the Umted States He went to church Sunday
then played a polo match attended an outdoor luncheon and a
o certat the Sydney Opera House He even managed to get m
S&lt; me surfin"
ULIMPSES Sell Lowell Welcker R-Conn and Camille
Butler hts former a(lllomtments secretary were mamed
Sunday m New Y orll - both for the second time
Frank
Smatra did the honors Sunday n ght 111 Los Aogeles handing
out the 1977 Scopus Awards of the Amertcan Frtends of Hellre~
t!mversiiy W John Wayne and to Nobel Laureates Milton
t'rledman and Dr Baruch S Blumberg
Br tam s Princess
Am • wanted to have her baby at home - m Buckmgham
Pa a e -but offtctals say she s bowed to doctors orders and
11 heck mto a London hosp tal for the btg event expected m
tl e ne xt few weeks
Reserve ~Ia! Geo Mordechal Hod
former commander of the Israeh Air Force wtll take over as
director of the nation s El Al Atrlme

Five drowned
•

m

flash flood

By JERRY MITCHELL

survey would be done today
ASHEVILLE N C (UPij and esttrnated damage would
Heavy rams sent flash run mto the ffilll ons
floo Is swtrling through the
Were work ng ourselves
8 ue Rtdge Mounta tns W death sad Buncombe
drowmng ftve County Sheriff Fred Waldrop
Sunday
oersons and drtvmg hWldreds
I JUSt hope tt don t ram no
f o hers from thetr homes
more
Tt ree of the vtchms were
Scattered thundershowers
sn U chtl&lt;U:en swept away were reported m the western
os U etr frantic parents tned counties early today but the
to rescue them
Nat onal Weather Servtce
The flood waters wh ch satd the weather system
t u k before dawn Sunday
responSible for the heavy
bega n to recede SUnday eve
thWJdershowers wtuch led W
mng leavmg mud and water the floodmg had left the state
stand ng m roads hmnes and
Hundreds of famil es were
bus nesses wreckmg some so reported d splaced n Bun
badly they have been wr tten combe CoWlty because of
flooding m therr homes or
off as a total loss
I heheve t s all over wtth washed out roans and br dges
but the crymg satd Steve leading to thetr res dences
Ha ll whose Candler Some people were staymg m
furntture store was I ooded to a Nattonal Guard armory
the ceilmg - watch ng the but some churches and
ret.'edlng waters
schools around the county
In Cardler CoWJty near had set up places for people to
Ash eville Carolyn HendriX
spend the rught
and her sons Wtll am 4 and
In other areas familtes
Pa ul Jr 3 were k lied " en generally spl t up and stayed
U ey were llirown !rom he tr w th relat ves and fnends
mobile home dtslodged by
About I 000 workers were
floodwaters
evacuated by boat from the
In the Polk CoWlty town of Amencan Enka textile plant
Saluda 4 year-old Brvan near Ashevtlle when the huge
Scott Hart drowned when the plant was covered by three
nood waters snatched h m feet of water
from his fathers arms whi e
About 60 cars were
the family fled a mob e stranded at the Sun Valley
Courts Motel m Polk County
home
Michael Olarles Townsend when a bndge 1 nkmg the
motel to a htghway fell niAJ
of Boone was ktlled when he
fell mto the water while
the r ver
rescuers were trymg to reach
Hundreds of persons
n m a boat
ncludmg about 90 nurs ng
Off ctals at the Office of home restaents had to be
1 Preparedness
tn
evacuated from Boone a c ty
Ha le gh satd they were
of abo ut 20 000 north of
unable to estimate the
Ashev lle
amount of damage because
AD earthen dam n Tater
washed-out llrtdges and roa~tll Lake north of B 10 ne
and htgh waters had ki
collap""'d about 9 30 a m
authorities from surveym I destr y ng three 1 omes and
lhctr areas fully Jlffi Buffalo
several farm bu ld ngs
of tile Emergency Operattons
Aonthcr dam broke at nearby
Reems Creek
Center satd a more complete

c

•

Clatit RepEl" rl K~t t

pt babl)

be tht' 1 t:W
1\ r of Nrw
\ rk C•
r p i c ng tl e
be caguere I
\braha n
Bem e " ho as del a ed m
a t o u~h a n I
ro" ded
pr ar
Else" here
Detroit
Ma• or Cole nan
Young ts expe cted to " n hiS
seco d ten as the tl sf rst
back na or
Houston - Thrre are a
dozen cand dates In the non
part san battle to succeed
retirmg Ma) r Fred Hofhemz
and a runoff on Nm 22 ma}
be nt&gt;eded
Cle. eland - The n ayor
will be a Den ocrat ar d

Clt\

U1e

1 t} ('lr

uu gest btg
n ttw 1 atlon

Republ c 1 Ma1 or Ralph
Perk " as del ated n the
nonpurt san pru mr) b\ two
Democrats
De• IS
Kucm ck 31 nd Edward
Fegan 30
S.at Uc - The non part san
n 3\ 0rs ro test features two

new comers

ex TV

conuuentator Charles Rover
and Paul Schell an attorney
Runnmg f r ctt) ooWJ cli ts
Ch p Marshall "ho once was
arrested as a en be r of the
ant ""r Seattle Seven and
now has the endorsement of
the Seattle Pollee Gu ld

UMW asking
help for fund
BELLAIRE 01 o UPI) Coa l comparues wtll be asked
to help bail out the Umted
Mme Workers Health and
Rettrement Funds when
contract negotiations reswne
Tuesday the pres dent of
UMW Dtstrtct 6 satd
Saturday
John Guzek head of the
16 000-member dtstrtct that
covers eastern Ohto and the
We st V rgm a P a nhandle
told UPI he has been m
contact wtth UMW Prestdent
Arnold Mtller who told hm1
the proposal would be at the
top of t he agenda when the
Wlton and the Bttummous
Coal Operators Asso-ctalton
meet m Washmgton
Negottations to replace the
UMW contract that exptres
Dec 6 broke off Oct 25
What wewtll tr) to do now
ts get some money mto those
funds We re go ng to spend a
lot of tune !&lt;!lkmg about
health and welfare Guzek
SSld
We re go ng to ask
each company to kick m some
money to get these rums out
of the hole
It could be like a loan You
could put t that way but
he
that s only my opmton
satd I don t know the exact
details of that proposal
The turds fmanced by coal
company royalttes were cut
back last sununer because of
low coal product on That
trtggered a sertes of w Ideal
strikes that died up to 80 000
mmers across Ule country
Guzek satd the strtkes
brought coal product on down
even further brmgmg fewer
royalltes back mto the fWlds
He SSid the mmers m thts
case didn t hurt anybody but
themselves
The unwn offtc al was also
asked about a UMW demand
for a hm ted rtght to str ke
clause m the new contract
They ve been talkmg
about tl but nobody s been
talking really loud about It
Guzek sa d
Personally I
don t see how m the helltt can
help anyth ng We havP

held firmly
•
m
mud
FREEPORT
Bahamas
( UPI) - Bahamas Air Sea
Rescue off c a is satd today
they are not sure h ow long It
may take to free the bod es of
SJX Amer cans - three men
and
three
women
entombed wtth thetr plane m
the mud flats off Freepcrt
International Airport
F ve of the crash Vlchms
mcludmg pilot Ronald E
Marsh were from Ohio The
SJxth was a Flonda woman
Rescue workers satd only
the tail of the twm engtne
Cessna 310 whtch crashed on
takeoff last Saturday n ght
could be seen stickmg up out
of the shallow flats north of
Dover Sound
Marsh was from Navarre
Ohto according to the U S
Coast Guard
His Ohio passengers were
listed by the Coast Guard as
Mary Jane Carpenter
Robecca Sm th Rtchard
Montz and John D Slutz all from the Canton Ohio
area
Carol Carter of Sunrtse
Fla near Fort Lauderdale
was the other passenger who
died m the crash the Coast
Guard srud
Fort Lauderdale only 30
mmutes away was Marsh s
unmedtate destination when
hetookoffat814pm (EST)
Saturday atrport offlctals
SSid
Wtthm seconds after
leavmg the runway however
Marsh realized he was m
trouble and asked for
pemuSSion from lhe Freeport
tower to return offtctals sa d
Then wtth not more than
500 feet altitude the plane
apparently nose-&lt;IIved at high
speed mto the mud flats they
satd and almost dtsappeared
before cmnmg to rest
The Bahamas Atr Sea
Rescue Semce launch an
unmedtal&lt; effort to locate the
atrcraft and called on the U
S Coast Guard for help
A Coast Guard patrol
vessel responded Saturday
rught and Sunday mornmg a
hehcopter surveyed the
scene
A Bahamas rescue party
was unable to reach the
atrcraft some five mtles
from the arrport until early
Sunday afternoon
Freepor-t
on
Grand
Bahama Island IS west
northwest
of
Fort
Lauderdale
Bahamas c vtl aeronautics
authonttes sa d they had no
unmedtate mdicallons as to
what may have caused the
acctdent

enough problems now
Guzek sa d coal comparues
are wtllmg to gtve wage
mcreases and more frmge
bene! ts t! we gtve them
some k nd of clause on
absenteetsm
Operators
bave ns sted on proposals to
curb absentee s m and
wildcat strikes "hich they
claun have se~erely hurt the
mdustry
There s no doubt m rny
there II
be
an
m nd
absenteetsm program m that
contract sa d G11Zek but t
will have to be a reasonable
he
absentee sm program
added
As far as the wildcat
str kes are concerned r only
wish I had the answer
Guzek sa d one reason for
htgh absenteetsm ts the
number of young people who
have been lurred to the mmes
by the high pay
A mmer gets aboul $63 a
day m wages and frmge
benefits push that up to $100
the prestdent satd
Some of these young
mmers who aren t marr ed
and
don t
have
any
dependents can make as
much m three or four days as
far as take-hmne pay m
concern as they could m ftve
They thmk on that ftfth day
they are JUSt workmg for the
goverrunent
Guzek satd there ts no
doubt a lengthy strike would
hurt the Wl on but tl would
also
hurt
operator s
espectally n his dtstrtct
because coal users would
start brmgmg m lowsulfur
content western coal
Dtstr ct 6 coal mmes have
been the center of a battle
between coal operators
and mtners
and
tbe
Envtronmental
Protectton
Agency concerned about arr
pollution
Saturday s
If they start usmg that
Oh10 H 9h School
Western coal durmg the
Football Scores
stnke then we re gomg to
Un ted Press International
bave a problem gettmg them Ak on Kenmore 22 Akron
Buchtel 4
back Guzek sa d
Berksh reo 4 Hawken 12
Canton C C 21 Ak on Sou h 6

Falcons wrap up
season with win
BY GARY CLARK

Led by a devastatmg ground attack the Wahama IYJtile
Falcons of Coach Marcus Rtce rolled to an easy 27 7 wm over
the Buffalo Btsons of Putnam County Saturday night to ratse
thetr season record to an u-npresstve 7 2 on the year
Two White Falcon runnmg backs gamed more than 100
yards on the night wtth much of the credit gomg to the
chargmg Wabama offensive line
Kevm Roush emerged as the games leadmg rusher Wtth
133 yards m 20 carr1es followed by his juntor rWlnmg mate
Jack Srmth who cla111led Ill yards in 21 attempts The two
White Falcon backfteld stars accounted for 244 of 246 total
yards rushing for the local eleven on the evenin~ and scored
three of the four Falcon touchdowns on runs of 14 13 and 3
yards The final siX points came on a 5 yard scamper by Vince
Weaver
Wahama scored on thetr ftrst possession after llmttmg the
BtSOns to just four downs The drive started in ftve plays wtth
a 26 yard line and covered 52 yards m five plays wtth a 26 yard
pass from jWllnr quarterback Ken Hankinson to tlght end
Kelvm Honaker bemg the btg gamer for the Mason Countlans
With 8 05 remaining m the mttial pertod Kevin Roush skirted
around left end for a 14 yard touchdown rW1 David Elias ktck
split the uprtghts to make it 7~ White Falcons
Less than two minutes later the local eleven scored agam on
a 28 yard drtve that took just four plays
Kw1 Sayre set the score up when he made a brusmg
tackle that separated the hall from tis owner resulting Ill a
fumble recovery by Wahama s Buddy Rose Once agam I
was Roush who capped the drtve wtth a 13 yard run W
paydirt Elias ktck made tt 14-0
Another fwnble resulted m the lhtrd score of the half for
Wahama when Mike Kmg ptcked up a Bison bobble and went
40 yards to paydtrt but a cUpping penalty nullified the score
and gave the White Falcons a first down at the Buffalo 2J yard
!me Three plays later Smtih bulled over from the three to
make 1t 2().;) Elias ktck was blocked m the pomt after attempt
and so the White Falcons held a commandmg 27~ lead
Buffalo got on the board just before the half when they
drove 69 yards n etght plays The Btson drtve was atded by
two consecutive 15 yard penalttes which were assessed the
White Falcons Brtan Clendemn reserve quarterback for
toach B'ruce Rhodes went the fmal 8 yards
Wahama will now journey to Parkersburg to take on the
Parkersburg Cathohc Crusaders m the season finale Game
tune ts 7 30 p m next Saturday mght at Parkersburg

Sports
transactions
Bv Un ted Press ntunat ona
Sa1urda.,
Hocke.,
New Vo k Range s -- Re
ca ed ceo e G E'9 Ho s from
New Haven of he AHL

Malone cops
Mid-Ohio title
MalOne College captured
the Mtd Ohto Conference
Champ onshtp cross-eountry
n eet Saturday at Canton Rto
Grande College fin shed
second wtth 37 pomts others
m the top f ve were Walsh
Cedarvtlle and Mt Vernon
Archte Mundy of Rto
Grande had the best lillie for
the hve m le run w th 24 52
Jerry Marshall of Malone
took second at 2S 26 and Rto s
Dave Parlme third at 25 47
R o s next outmg wtll be the
NAIA Dtstrtct 22 Saturday at
II a m on the home track
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Lord K llanm Pres dent of
the Int ernational Olymptc
re mn ttee sa)S the ctty of
Los Angeles may not have to
build an Olymp c Village to
house athletes for the 1984
Olymp c Games
Extsttng
unt verstty
dormttones are better than
many Olymp c Villages built
spectftcall) to house athletes
a nd have only a f e w
shortcommgs Killanm satd
after tourmg the faciltttes

Champ wants
$12 million
By STEVE WW.'I'EIN
UPJ Sports Wrtter
l.ASVEGAS Nev (UPJ )
Sooner or later Muhanunad
Al knows he s gomg be n
the rmg agam " th Ken
Norton and the 35-year-old
champ on ts not overjoyed at
!Jiat prospect
N&lt;rton s spilt dec ston tr
wnph m the 15.&lt;-ounder came
as a pa nful s urpnse to AI
who clauns he 11 sttck to hts
demand of a $12 nullion purse
to soothe the pam
Promoter Don King says he
can get Al $8 mtll on ma) be
$9 nllll on Will that satisfy
the champ '
No satd Ali atttred m a
black three-pte-ce buSJness
swt
I got W have $12
nulhon cause after taxes I
st 11 only get $4 mtll on Jt s
my last f ghtand I got to have
t to ret re
Kmg satd he thmks Herbert
Muhammad Ah s manager
would accept a bout w th the
top contender for May or
June
All
ts
already
scheduled for a title defense
at the Las Vegas Hilton Feb
15 agalllSt the wmner of the
Nov 18 match between 9th
ranked Alfto Rtghettl of Italy
former
Olymptc
and
champton Leon Spmks
I ve never known Muham

w

mad to run from anyone
King sa td
I met wtlh
Herbert H s preference was
Young
But I have whispered to
Muhanunad and rerrunded
him of hts own greatness He
has taken the ball He went
mto the rmg and satd he
would f ght the wmner of the
Norton Young fight
Meanwhtle YoWJg s mana
ger Jack Levm satd he will
take htS f ghter to another
promoter to line up a bout
wtth Ah bef&lt;re Norton
1 m go ng w try to stgn
w th Ali ftrst bef&lt;re Norton
satd Jack Levin Youngs
manager I think Ali nllght
want Ill fight us more than be
wants Nortoo
The WBC has given Ali 80
days to SJgn for a ftght wtth
exMarme Norton King has a
3(klay option wtth Norton and
Manager Bob Biron for
negollat ons for a match wtth
All
I m talkmg about a total
of $12 millioo m purses
King sa d Ali would get $8
1rullion
King sa d he also tS trymg
to lme up a fi ght for YoWJg
who lost a close declSOO
Saturday But he satd he
ctoesn t have anyone in nund
r.et

Redskins all but wrap
up 1977 MAC grid title

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
It s begmn ng to look like
nothmg less than a mmor
mtracle can keep M amt from
wu-mmg the Mtd Amencan
Conference football title
The Redskms of Coach
Dtck Crum ptcked a mong the
also rans when tile season
began got by what should be
thetr last maJor roadblock
Saturday wtth a 1~ VIctory
over pre season favortte
Western Mtchtgan
The wm gave Mtarru wh ch plays only five
conference games - a ~
record with only cr ppled
Kent State standing mtts tiUe
path
While only a couple of
weeks ago Kent State was a
factor m the champtonshtp
race tn]Urtes - espectally to
quarterback Mike Whalen have changed things
The Golden Flashes have
dropped the r last two
mcludmg a 49-10 dectswn
Saturday
to
Central
M chtgan which along wtth
Ball State st ll clings to
hopes of a Mtd Am crown
But the way the Redskms
are play ng under the
d rectwn
of
)Unlor
quarterback Larry Fortner
11 would take some do ng for
Ca roll 4 Day A ter 9
Coach Dennts Fttzgerald s
C e Adams 47 C e East 4
Flashes
to stop the Redsklns
C e Chanel l North Roya ton
Fortner htl etght of 13
7
C e Lat n 2 Parma Padua 1 passes for 101 yards and
C e St lgnal us 30 C e Rhodes scored two first half
0
touchdowns to gtve Mtanu Its
Elyr s West 1A Lora n South
wm over Western
v ew J
Eucl d
S
Joseoh
14
Fortner s
touchdown
Lakewood St Ed J
strtkes came on a 15-yarder
Ham lion Twp 6 Kyger to ttght end Paul Warth m the
Creek 0
ftrst penod and a two-yarder
Ham I ton Bad n 28 C n Me
to flanker Mark Angelo m the
N cho as 14
Zanesv I e
Lucas
19
second quarter
Rosecrans 3
Fortner has now accounted
New Concord JG 27 She dan
for
15 touchdowns m hts last
14
Newa k Cath 7 Johnstown 6 ftve games and his total of 13
Olmsted Fa s 6 Rocky Rver scormg passes breaks the
2
M rum season record of 12 set
R dgewood l4 Ma vern 0
bY
Mel Ohx m 1948
Strasburg 6 Tuscarawas Ca h
Meanwhtle
Central
0
Summ I Count y Day 6 C n Mtchtgan rolled up 421 yards
Country Day 1
West B anch 20 Cle Holy on the groWJd am had seven
different players score m tis
Name 2
West Homes 21 Fa less '20 trouncmg of Kent State
The only htghlight m a long
day for the Golden Flashes
was a 93-yard ktckoff return
for a IA:luchdown by Norman
James I of England,. (IV of Warren m the fourth quarter
Scotland) was the first But t was too httle too late
Central rolled to a I~
monarch to call h1mself Kmg
ftrstquarter lead and a ~
of Great Brttam
halfttrne margm and was
never threatened
In other games mvolvmg
MAC teams Toledo downed
Northern lllm01s 27 9 Ohio
Uruverstty lost to Cincmnatt
38-26 Bowlmg Green dropped
a 37 33 dectswn to Tennessee
Chttanooga
Eastern
Mtchigan
beat
North
Carol rna A &amp; T 21 20 and Sa ll
State beat Indiana State 41
18
Toledo JWllped to a 14~
second quarter lead m Is wm
over Northern Jllmots on a
by Jeff
s x yard run
Hepmstall and lour yard pass
from Frank Luketich to Sk p
Culley
John Gotwald s 65 yard
mterceptton return and a one
yard run by Lukettch woWld
up the Toledo scormg
At Athens th ngs contmued
W be all bad for Ohio

Uruvers!ly
Cincmnati scored on f ve of
ts fLrst seven possessiOns of
the game and then held off a
furtous second-half aer al assault b) OU to do"11 the
Bobcats
Cmcmnau mtercepted two
passes n the ftrst half and
scored on runs of 10 yards by
Napaleon Outlaw and two
yards by Gus Tucker and on a
38-yard fumble return to take
a 31 12 lead at halftime
Bowling Green let a 26-14
third quarter lead shp
through Its fmgers despite a
recordselttng
four
touchdown
passtng
performance by Mark Miller
But 1t was an mtercepton of a
Miller pass whtch fmally put
the Moccasons ahead early Ill
lhe fmal penod
Trailing 33-30 UTC s Dave
McKinney ptcked off a Miller
pass on the BG 25 and ran 11
hack
the 8 I V Reeves
scored hts third touchdown of
the day two plays later to gtve
Tennessee-Chattanooga tis
37-33 lead am the Moccasms
were able to bold on
Miller for the second con
secutive week ftred four
wuchdown passes and ended
up the dsy wtth 289 yards
through the atr on 16
complettons on 28 attempts
In the Ohto Conference
Musklngum and Wittenberg
both won Saturday setting up
a
head to head
battle
between the two next week In
Sprmgfteld for the Red

w

DtvtSJon title
Musk ngum
downed
Capt tal 31 14 behtnd the
rWinmg John McCarty while
Wtttenberg beat Hetdelberg
31 6 behtnd a patr of
touchdowns by flanker Maso
Moon
In other Ohio Conference
games Martella beat Ohio
Wesleyan 30 21 Otterbem
clipped MoWJt Umon 24-17
Baldwm Wallace downed
Deruson 34-7 and Wooster
defeated Ohio Northern 29-9
Fourth-ranked Ohio State
ran tts record to 8-1 With a 350 wm over lllinots while m
other games 11 was Akron 28
Marshall 7 Ashland 13 C W
Post 9 Central State 28
Northeastern llhnots 10
Dayton 52 FerriS St (Mich )
19 Youngstown State 52
Eastern Illinois 22 Kenym 30
Case Western 2 Oberlin 61
Alma ( Mtch ) 18 Wihnlngton
21 Deftance 0 Findlay 41
Taylor (lrd ) 'lfl John Carroll
10 Georgetown ( D C ) 9 and
Bethany (W Va ) Hiram 3

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)
A crowd of 26 474 thtrd
largest m NBA htstory
attended the Washmgton
Bullets New Orleans Jazz
game Sunday rught m tbe
LouiSiana Superdome
The
crowd
included
thousands of Boy Scouts wbo
were at the dome for another
activtty earlier m the day

A b ght 20 Leb Va

3

Amhers 49 Tr n ty 4
Bowdo n 2 Bates 7
Bos on 5 6 New Haven 0
B own 3 Dar mou h 10
Can s us 0 Cath U 3
Cen Conn 40 Am nt 28
Conn 23 Boston U 2
Corne 20 Co umb a 7
Co ga e 49 Buckne 17
Coast Guard 41 Bf o 4
D ck nson 2 Ors nus 7
W L b 2'2 Fa rmont 14
Harv~rd 34 Penn 15
Jun a a 5 W kes 3
Kutztown 35 Mansf d 13
Lycom ng 27 wstrn Md 7
Mass 28 Ho y Cross 6
PI 44W V gna3
Shephe d 17 Salem J
S ppry Rock 28 Lock Hvn 20
s E La 10 De a s
Syracuse 45 Navy 34
Tempe 24 Ru ge s 14
Tu s 17 Co by 11
W dener 50 De va 27
Ya e 44 Pr nee on 8
South
A ebama 24 LSU 3
A banv S 6 A a s 0
C em son J N Car 3
De awa e 4 Dav dson 7
Duke 38 Wake Fo est 14
E M ch 2 N Car A&amp; T 20
E Ca 45 Appy 4
E z C y 17 Shaw 7
Fo da22Geoga 7
F a St 23 Va Tech 21
Ga dne Webb 7 Presby 0
G amb ng 65 Langs on 0
Howard 26 S h n U 6
Ken ucky 28 Vanderb 6
Lou sv 51 W ch a S 21
Ma y and 9 V I anova 13
M ss St 27 Auburn 3
No to k S 2 Va S 21
NE La 9 N cholts S 2
Penn S2NCS7
R chmclnd 19 Fu man 3
Tenn 27 Memph s S 4
Tenn S 55 Tenn M n 7
Tu ane 3 M am F a o
VM 30 v rg n a 6
Va Un on 28 Mo gan St 9
Wm&amp;Ma v 14 C ade 13
Woffo ct 31 Ca awba 0
M dwes1
Ad an 1.4 0 vet 14
Ak on 28 Ma sha 1
Ash and 13 C W Pos 9
Ba S 42 nd St 8
Cent M Ch 49 Ken St 10

CentS 28 NE
10
C nc nnat 38 Oh o U 26
Co o ado 2 owa St 1
Eureka 31 owa Ws yn o
Ham ne 7 Maca ester 6
Hope 35 Ka am a zoo 6
Ws vn 14 No Cent 11
nd ana 24 owa 21
Kansas 29 Kan s 2
Mare ta 30 Oh o ws yn 2
M am o 14 Wstrn M ch 8
M ch 63 No hwestern 20
M ch St 29 M nn 10
M on 3.5 u of Ch 14
Nebraska 2 M ssou 10
Neb Wslyn 23 Hast ngs 19
N 0 S 6.5 Morn ng5 de 6
N thrn owa 34 So Oak 14
N E Mo 45 Centra Mo 23
NW ftho 54 L nco n Mo 26
No e Dame 69 Ga Tech 4
OhoS 351 noso
Purdue 22 W scons n 0
So
'23
517
To ecto 2 No I 9
Tu sa 33 Drake 23
W
31 Neb Omaha o
Yngstwn .52 E
22
Southwest
Ar z 51 45 Wyom ng 0
Arkansas 35 Bay or 9
Ark S1 17 SW La 15
CentOka 31 SE Oka 21
Coo Sf 35 Ar zona 4
East TeKes 7 Te)( A&amp;t 6
Jacksn St 10 Te)(as So o
New Mex 33 Tex E Paso 1
Ok a 61 Ok ahOma st 28
SMU Al R ce 24
So M 5S 20 Tex Ar 3
SW Okla 34 NW Okla 0
Texas 35 Hous on 2
Texas Tech 49 TCU 17
West

Adams S 21 W5 rn N M 20
A my 3 A r Fo ce 6
Bo se St J daho St 7
Br gham Young 38 U ah 8
Ca Oav s 21 S F S 7
Ch co St 36 Sacto St 7
LASt 13 Azusa Pac 0
L n e d 4 Pac Ore 7
Montana 34 No Co o 13
Nev LV 35 IdahO 2
Nev Reno 49 w Mont o
No Ar Z 28 Mont S 21
Ore Co 35 E Wash St 33
Pac Lu h 43 Wh twor h 7
San Ooo St 29 Pac Ca f 7
San Jose Sf 24 Hawa 14
Southe n Ca 49 S anfo d 0
UCLA 21 0 egon 3
U ah St 23 Weber St u
Wash .50 Ca to n a 31
Wash St 24 Ore St 10
W arne te 4 eta Co 6

Bengals get revenge, I 0-7

On SUnday Nov 13 members ol the Southeastern
Ohio Sportswriters and Bruadeaaten AsStJCialion will
meet Jn Jackson w select the 1977 All.SEOAL Football
team

Bill Gray president announced that all of the
league s eight head coaches are Invited to attend the
meeting to make their recommendations for players
whom they feel should be nominated
The meeting Is scheduled for I p m at Jolly Lanes
with the 17 voting members from lheelght league cities
present
Players named to the first team and hooorable
mention will be honored at the all league banquet
scheduled lor December

By BOB PENICK

Hamilton Twp.
blanks KC
The Class AA Haffillton
Townshtp Rangers were held
to JUst seven points m the first
three quarters however the
Franklin CoWJtlans got -mne
potnts In the !mal stanza to
defeat the SV AC champton
Kyger Creek Bobcats 1641
Saturday afternoon
The game was played on
astro turl at Clippers
Stadtwn
Coach Jack Mondell s
Rangers
reached
the
scoreboard In the second
pertod gotng 77 yards wtth
Fred Morgan scormg on a
three yard run Blades added
the extra pomt
A smaller Bobcat defense
held the Rangers until the
fourth per od In that per od

Thrs week's
college games
Saturdays

Oh o College
Football Schedule
United Press lnternat onal

lnd ana •I Oh o Sl

Bow ng G een at Oh o Un v
Cen M lc h1gan at Toledo n

M am at Kent St
West II nos at Ak on
n\1 ana Centra
Ash and a
Cen a St at Yo~mgs own S
Dayton at Eastefn Ken ucky
Mount Uf1 on at Ba dw n
Wa ace
Oh o Wesleyan at Den son
M.ar etta at Otterbe n (n)

Cap tal at Woeste
He de berg at Oh o Northern
Musk ngum

W ttenberg

at

Kenyon at Cen e (Ky)
Oberl n at John Car o
W mlngton at Bluffton
Manchester
( lnd
a
Def ance
F ndlay at Hanover (lnd
n - denotes n ght game
lnternat onal Hockey
League
Un ted Press International

North
wltptsglga
Port Huron

6 1 2 4 35 27

Fl nt
Sag naw
Muskegon
Ka amazoo

5 40
4 3

4

7

0

34

wtlplsglga

Fn t W.wne

Toedo
Milwaukee
Dayton

3 4 4

Blades ktcked a 29 yard fteld
goal and Davtd Crtswell
capped a 61 yard drive wtth a
two-yard run
Kyger Creek had a second
pertod touchdown by sentor
Marcus Getger called hack
The Bobcats later reached
the Ranger 13 yard line but
fatled to punch one across
The large Ranger !me held
the Bobcats to just l'lfl total
yards
Ge ger and senior Mtke
Casey had thetr 100-plus yard
games snapped Geiger
collected 46 yards whtle
Casey had 25 Both found the
footing rough on the astro
turf
Desp te the loss veteran
Bobcat mentor Jun Sprague
praised hts club for a fine
effort
Their overall stze
was too much for us to
overcome he said
Kyger Creek came out of
the non league contest w1th
one ser ous m)ury Sentor end
Scott Rlcharda suffered a
broken ann and separated
elbow
Fr day mght Kyger Creek
goes to North Gallta m a btg
end of the season battle The
Bobcats have already elm
ched at least a share of the
1977 SV AC champtonship
STATISTICS
KC HT
DEPARTMENT
Ftrst Downs
7 18
Yards Rushmg
77 282
Yards Passmg
50 13
Total Yardage
127 295
Passes Attpt
5
6
Passes Compt
2
I
Intercept ons
I
I
Fumbles
0
0
Fwnbles Lost
0
0
5-47 9~
Penalized
By Quarters
0000-0
Kyger Creek
0 7 0 9- 16
Hanlllton Twp

r-----------..,
I Pro
I
IStandings \

0 38 3'1
9 37 33
8 38 4 I
6 28 30

South

Saturday's grid scores
Co lege Footbal Results
By Un ted Press lnternat onal
East
Akron 28 M• sh a 7

MDilda)•,Nt&gt;V. 7 1977

0 36 4

43193127
3 3 J 9 33 28
35
7 23 3

Saturdays Results
Fort Wayne 4 Dayton
Ka amazoo 6 Muskegon
Port Hu on 7 F nt 6

4

Milwaukee 7 Toledo 3
Sunsfay s Results
Flint
Saginaw 8
Dayton 3 Muskegon 2
Fort Wayne 3 Kalamazoo

Milwaukee 6 Toledo 3

Mondays Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday s Games
No games scheduled

NEW YORK (UPI)
The
Amencan
Broadcastmg
Company s coverage of last
year s Sununer Olymptcs m
Montreal captured most of
the 1976-77 Enuny awards for
sports announced Sunday by
the National Academy of
TeleVISIOn Arts and Sctences

I

N.EL Stand ngs
By Un 1ed Press lnternat ona
Amer can Conference
East
W l T Pet
610857
Bait more
6 2 0 150
Mom
New Eng ~nd
530625
NY Jets
260250
260250
Buffa o
Central
W L T Pet
5 3 0. 625
C eve end
4 • 0 500
Hous on
• 4 0 500
P t sburgh
4 • 0 500
C nc nnat
West
W L T Pet
Denve
7
0 875
Oak and
7
0 875
San D ego
4 4 0 500
Kansas c y
2 6 0 250
Seae
260250
N1tlonal Conference
East
W L T Pcf
Da as
8 0 0 1 000
St Lou s
5 3 0 625
• 3 0 571
Wash ng on
Ph lade ph a
3 5 0 375
NY G an S
3 5 0 375
centre

CLEVELAND ( UPI )
The AFC Central DtvtslOn
race ts now close enough to
exctte even the most blase of
football fans after the
Cmcmnati Bengals gntty 11\7 vtctory over Cleveland
Sunday put three teams
wtthm one game of dtv ston
leading Cleveland
Cleveland ts 53 whtle
Pittsburgh Cincmnati and
HousWn are all 4-4 w1th stx
games to go
Cmcmnati Coach Btll John
son who credtted hts team s
defense as the key w the wm
Said I never constdered us
out of the race Over the
years they ve satd the
Bengals don t hang In there
when 11 s tough That s not
true
They started playmg last

week lik~ they should
he
satd of hts team whtch won
tis second stra ght contest
and snapped the Browns
w nnmg streak at three
The Browns outgamed thetr
downstate opponents 290
yards to 237 and ran 62
offenstve plays to 49 for
Cmcmnatt
But the Bengals got on the
board twtce
on Pete
Johnson s 11 yard scormg run
and Chris Bahr s wmnmg 47
yard fteld goal 8 02 mto the
second half while Cleveland
could manage on ly Bnan
Spes 4 yard touchdown pass
to Oscar Roan
The Browns turned over the
ball three ttmes and
comnutted a dozen penalttes
mostly offstdes on the
defensive !me The sloppmess
slowed up many of their-

last season
r hope we bavc some
sa d
momentum go ng
quarterback Ken Anderson
who had a superb day w th 14
complet ons m 19 throws
It was a btg game It
would have been tough tf we

possesstons and gave a boost
W the Bengals
fhey won and they
deserv ed to wm
sa d
Cleveland Coacti Forrest
Gregg We made too many
errors It wa s anybody s
~me Wllll the last ser es
Our team was flat and
penal! es t ook aw ay our
aggresstve play on defense
He potnted out
th e
off ctating crew headed by
referee Red Cash on was the
same one wh ch a week
earl er worked at the
Baltimore-Ptttsburgh game
and
sparked
severe
crttictsms by the Steelers
Joe Greene
Bahr who prov ded the
wmnmg po nts for the second
stra ght game dtd so wtth hts
longest k ck of the year
although he had a 52 yarder

mcludmg nme of 14 shots
from the h eld led the Kmeks
to thetr wm ove r the Lakers
at Inglewood Calif who
dropped thetr s xth of 10
games they have played
w thou! Kareem Abdul
Jabbar James Edwards had
20 pomts and Jamaal Wtlkes
18 fer the L.akers
Kings 99 Soo1cs 83
LUCIUS Allen had 24 pomts
and Scott Wedman added 19
for the Kings who dealt the
Somes thetr loth loss m 12
games Fred Brown had 14
and J oh nny Johnson 13for the
Son cs

Sheridan, GAHS make
district V-B playoffs

Saturday s Resu 1s
NY s nd s 4 P sbgh 3
Ph a 3 Wash ng on
Montrea 5 Boston 2
Ceveand4 Dero 3
Ch cago 5 M nneso a 2
Buffa o J St Lou ! 1
Toron o S Colorado 2
Los Ang 3 NY Range s
Sunday! Results
Boston 5 NY 5 ande s 3
Ph a 3 Vancouve 2
At ant a 3 Ch cago 3
Detro 4 C eve and
Butta o 7 S Lou s 4
Monday s Game
M nnesota a Man ea
Tuesday s Games
Los Ang at wash no on
Vancouver at Co oracto

tremely long smce both
teams ralhed w th few errors
Gallta Academy s Kathy
Damels led her team m
servmg scormg 8 pomts
Janet Groves agam dtd a fme
JOb sprllmg

othc;r team members lor
Gallta Academy are G nny
Young Patty Ntehm Tma
Ntbert and Valerte Fmley
Gallta Academy w ll play
South Potnt m the D str ct
Playoffs at 7 p m Wednesgay
at Mmford
Shendan shut out Belpre
allowmg them only 4 pomts Ill
two games The scores were
15 3 and 15-1
Shertdan
last years
Secttonal and Dtstnct wm
ner ts a well-d sctplmed and
expertenced team
Belpre
had
trouble
returning Shendan s serves
and never really got n the
match Shendan wtll play
Waverly alB p m Wednesday
at M nford

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowl ng Lanes
Early Wednesday

Mtxed League
Oct 26 1977
Stand ngs
Team

Pts

Z de s Spo I Shop
Smith Nelson Motors
Ten h Frame s

46

40
40
36

Young s Super Market

Eagles Club
Ne son D u~ Co
H gh nd v dua

larry

game

Helen
Phe ps 193 John Ty ee 189
WHA Stand ngs
Betty Sm th 79 Charles
By un 1ed Press lnternat onal
W L T Pts
Smith 188 Max ne Dugan 171
w no'peg
0 '
0 20
H gh ser es - Cha es
New Eng and
Sm
th 5 9 Betty Sm th 508
3 2 12 larry Dugan 506
nd anapo s
Helen
5 5 1 11
Quebec
Po te 487
• 6 0
8 Phelps 487 B
Edmonton
Isabelle Couch 483
4 7 0
8
Hous on
Team high game
Eagles
2 B 0
4
Brm ngham
2 Club 677
c nc nnat
8 0
S;tturday s Resu ts
Team h gh ser es - Z des
W nnp eg 6 C nc nna
Sport Shop 19•9
B m ngham 5 Que 4 o
Sundays Results
New Eng .5 C nc nna 2
Oct 25 1977
Edmonton 7 Houston 1
Standtngs
Mondays Games
W L T Pd
No games schedu ed
Team
Pis
530625
M nnesota
Tuesday s Games
Eagles Club
44
• • 0 500
Oelro t
New Eng a B rm ngham
Columba Nat anal
35037.5
Ch cago
Edmonton a Quebec
Insurance Co
38
260250
Green Bay
Cl ne s Const Co
36
Tampa Bay
080000
N BA S1and ngs
B II s Body Shop
26
West
By
Un
ted
Press
tn1ernat
one
Pomeroy
Cemen
Block
W L T Pc1
Eastern Conference
Los Ange es
5 J o 62.5
Co
24
A11ant c D 11 slon
At an a
4 4 0 500
24
___._ W L Pc1 GB H &amp; R F rest one
SanFranc sc
3 5 0 375 NewVo k
H gh nd v dual game 5
3
625
New Orleans
2 6 0 250
Ph a
&lt;i
4 500 1
John Tyree 216 Don Nelson
Sundays Resu 1S
Buffa o
4
5 444
1 2 209 B II Sm th 204
Buffa o 24 New Eng 0
New Jersey
7 12.5 4
H gh ser es - John Ty ee
C nc nna 10 Cleve 7
Boston
7 125 4
579 Ed Voss 548 Bert
Oa las 24 NY G ants 10
Central
Dlv
s
on
M am 14 NY Jets 10
W L Pet GB Bodlmer 530
Scm Fra.n o A lanta 3
Team h gh game
A
anta
7
875
Detro 20 San D ego 0
Pomeroy Cement Block 931
c evetand
7
a 700
Ph a 28 New 0 leans 7
New Or ns
6 3 667
Team
h gh ser es Hous on 47 Ch caoo 0
Houston
5 3 62.5 2
Co umb a Nat onal Ins 2498
Kan c y 20 Green Bay 10
SanAnono
55.500 3
o~nve 2 P ttsburgh 7
washngtn
3 4 429 3 2
Sf Lou s 27 M nn 7
Western Conferenee
Oakland 44 Sea tie 7
M dwest Div s on
Los Ang 31 Tampa Bay 0
W L P&lt;l GB
Monday s Game
M w
5 3 625
Wash at Bat more n ght
Ch cago
6 4 600
Denve
5 5 500
NHL Stand ngs
Deto
4
4 500
By Un ted Press lnttrn•t onal
Kansas c y
5 6 455
2
Campbell Conference
nd ana
3 5 375 2
Patr ck Dlv s on
Pi11Cif c D vis on
W L T Pts
W L
Pd GB
8 2 1 17 Po t and
Ph adelph a
1 1 875
NY 5 anders
6 4 3 15 Golden s
6 .5 545 2 2
At anta
4 3 S 13 Phoen ll
4 5 444 3 2
NYRangers
.5 7 1 "'1
Los Ange es
4 6 400 4
Smythe D v son
{rt
Seate
20677
WLTPts
Satu days Resu ts
Ch cago
.5 2 5 15
Sen An on o 1 Bf o 10
Co or ado
4
3 3 1
Ph a 132 Denver 01
3 6 2
8
Vancouve
At an a 00 Go den St 94
M nneso a
3 B 0
6
c eve OS Nelli Je sev 93
St LOU S
1 0 2
4
Houston 6 Wash 05
wates Conference
Ch cago 11 PhOen x 94
Norr s D 11 son
Port and 6 Sea e 94
1
W ~ T Pis
Sundays Results
Montrea
7 2 3
7
wash 08 New 0 eans 97
LosAnge es
6 4 2
4
New York 106 LOS Ang 102
Detro t
5 4 2
2
Port and 108 nd ana 06
3 8
7
P t sburgh
Kan C y 99 Seat e 83
Wash ngton
2 7
5
Mondays Game$
Adams D v son
No games schedu ed
1
WLTPts
Tuesday s Games
B 2 1 17
Buffa o
San Anton oat New Yo k
6 2 2
4
Toran o
Hous on a Ch cago
I
71
5 6 1 I
Cleveland
Denver a M waukee
I
• 5 3
BQston
Kan C y a Po o"'nd

's

Dugan

30
24

198

'

pulled the ball too mu ch
Browns quarterback Brtan
The referees
S pe satd
called the game awfully
close
but added
We
couldn t move the ball on
thetr defense We controlled
11 and moved t some but
made too many mtstakes

Underdogs come
through Sunday

Hayes paces Bullets
•
to 108-97 NBA wm
By
Unlled
Press
The Portland Trail Blazers
lnternaUonal
defeated the Indiana Pacers
OISappmnted In his early 108-106 the New York Kmcks
season showtng tn the beat the Los Aogeles L.akers
Nat onal Basketball 106-102 and the Kansas Ctty
Assoctatwn Elvtn Hayes Knngs dealt the Seattle
apologtzed to his Washmgton SuperSootcs a 99-aJ defeat m
Bullet teammates before the other NBA games
Sunday night s game and Blazers 108 Pacers 106
pronused Ill start to carry
Dave Twardzik scored 22
the load
po nts and Btll Walwn had 21
Aod the 6-foot 9 240-poWld tn
lead ng
the
NBA
Hayes made good hts champwns to the r 23rd
prom se He scored 21 pomts stratght home vtclory
and collected 20 rebounds m Adrtan Dantley scored 24
leading the Bullets to a 108-97 pomts fer the Blazers
trtumph over the New Knlcks 106 Lakers 102
Orleans Jazz before 26 474 at
Jun McMtll an s 22 po nts
New Orleans - the thtrd
largest crowd m NBA history
I had been standmg
aroWJd and letting somebody
else do the job satd Hayes
who had averaged only 12 7
pomts a game for a shootmg
percentage of 39 per cent m
his previOus games I made
Galhpohs and Shertdan
up my mmd that I was gomg
advanced
to the Dtstrtct
to start domg my fatr share
volleyball
playoffs
at Mm
Larry Wrtght shared the
ford
Wednesday
Nov
9
VICtors honors w th Hayes
Galhpohs
defeated
New
scormg 10 of hts 19 pomts m
Lexington
15
8
15
12
the fourth per od as the
Saturday nlght at Me gs
Bullets erased a sevenopomt
deftcll to wm thetr thtrd game High The match was ex
m seven starts
Pete Maravtch scored 26
pomts fer the Jazz who lost
thetr thtrd game m nme
starts

were three behmd Cleveland
wtth stx games to play he
satd
The Browns Don Cockroft
mtssed a 41\-yard field goal
attempt m the f rst half whtch
would have brought a t e and
Gregg satd Cockroft had

The Houston Aeros league
offtc als and d sgruntled
prospective buyer Kenneth
Schntlzer hope negottallons
bemg resumed today will
settle d fferences tn the
posstble sale of the World
Hockey
Assoctat on
franchise

bulled over from I yard out
the thtrd time Detrott had the
ballm the second half w seal
the Lions ftrst shutout ever
m the Stlverdome and therr
ftrst smce a 34~ blankmg of
Green Bay Oct 28 1973
The Washington Redskms
awa t a VISit from AFC East
leader Baltimore tomght as
10\',-pomt underdogs
In other games t looked
hke this
Patriots 24 Bills 14
Halfback Roland Hooks
emerged from 0 J Sunpson s
shadow to shred New
England for 155 yards and the
Buffalo defense mtercepted
four passes tn tts wm - only
therr second m 17 games
over heavily favored New
England
Cowboys 24 Giants 10
Roger Staubach the NFL s
leading passer tossed 5 yards
wB lly Joe Dupree and Tony
Dorsett plWJged over from I
yard out to carry unbeaten
Dallas 8-0
Dulphlns 14 Jets 10
Bob Gnese 12-of 15 on the
day threw TD passes of 20
and 24 yards to Dur el Harns
The Dolphms 6-2 thus stayed
m the thick of the AFC East

By JACK SAUNDERS
UPI Sports Wrtter
The Cmctnnatt Bengals
Houston Oilers St Louts
Cardinals and Detro t Ltons
entered thetr Sunday games
as underdogs but a ll four
won and took advantage of
losses by other teams to move
mt o post.,;eason content on
The two AFC clubs the
Bengals and Otlers put
th emselves m the thtck of the
Central D VIS on chase
Cmcmnati helped tself and
the Oilers w th a 11\-7 dectston
over the dtv1s on lead ng
Cleveland Br owns wh le
Houston
a
two potnl
underd og
hum ha te d
Chtcago 47-U
Over the years they sa1d
th e Bengals don t hang m
there when t s tough satd
Bengals Coach Bill Johnson
That s not true
It s
gratifymg to wm
Pete Johnson s 11 yard TO
burst for Cmctnnatt was
matched by Br an Sipe s 4yard pass to Oscar Roan but
Chr s Bahr s 47 yard f eld
goal m dway through the
thtrd penod - hts longest
kick thts season -proved the
dec s ve potnts
Ken
And
Houston s
Burrough v cttrntzed Chtcago
cornerback Vtrgtl Ltvers w th
scormg receptton s of 85 and
43 yards from quarterback
Dan Pastormt and caught stx
passes altogether for 180
yards
Btlly
Whtte Shoes
Johnson used Burrough s
clearmg block on Doug Plank
to tum on an end around mto

race
Eagles 28 Saints 7
Ron Jaworski passed for
Harold
two
TD s
to
Cannichael and ran for two
more scores to help the
Eagles to thetr thtrd wm of
the season against ftve losses
49ers 10 Falcons 3
San Francisco s Wtlbur
Jackson p!Wlged across from
2 yards out midway through

and

the \h\rd period tor the first

returned a Chtcago free ktck
after a safety 75 yards for
another TD
Over tn the NFC the
Cardmals two man tandem
of Wayne Morrts - who
rushed for
182 yards
mcludm g a 21 yard TD run
and caught a 4-yard pass for
the Cards second score-and
Terry Metcalf who took a 2) ard TO pass from QB J111l
Hart lor the ftrst score and
then ran m for the fma TO
npped apart the vaunted
Mmnesota defense to boost
St Lows to a 5 3 mark wtth a
27 7 v ctory over the favored
Vk ngs
Mmnesota s only TD came
on a 9-yard pass from Fran
Tarkenton to Sammy Whtte
after the score was already
27-0
Aod Detrott combmed the
Vtkmgs loss w th a 2().;)
shutout over San Otego
Rookte runmn g back Rtck
Kane startmg for InJUred
Dexter Bussey gamed 105
yards m 24 rushes and scored
two second half TDs of 2 and
1 yards on the L ons I rst
two senes of the half
Fullback Marv Hubbard

rushmg touchdown scored
agalllSI Atlanta thts season as
the 49ers won thetr thtrd
game m a row followmg five
stratght losses
Chiefs 20 Packers 10
Ed Podolak ruslied for 98
yards and plunged m from
the I for the dectstve pomts 7
seconds mto the fourth
quarter W make Tom Bettts

61 yard scor ng run

debut as Kansas Ctly s head
coach a successful one He
also caught four passes for 51
yards

Prevent1011 IS the
best policy. • •
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES
You can help cut down on
cr me asses
losses that
d rectly
affect
you
whether they happen to you
or not
Take the crime ot arson
You re
pay ng
an
nc eas ngly heavy subsidy

for del bertly set I res
through your Insurance
prem ums
Insurance
costs
are
adversely affected by
burglaries robber es and

car thefts
plus the
count ess C B rad os and
b cycles

support

You can also make it
toughe
for crooks Use

good strong locks Mark
possess ons w th your
soc a security number
Our

NO IIMI LIMif

Pill IIPLACIMIN

GUARANTEEI

SAYRE
HARDWARE
8822525
126 Matn

NEW HAVEN,
W.VA.

H

~

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.:3"r

•

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~~
·~

MARKEL ELECTRIC HEATERS

w

PRICED FROM '229 5 TO '49 95
The Gift That Wrll Take The Cold
Out of the Wrnter Wrnds

E

I

---------

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Monday thru Saturday
9 oo To s oo
N 2nd Ave
Mtddleport Ohto

992 3831

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

s the

INS.

992 2143

102 w /Min

Pomoror

Let us ex pian Un ted Way Were
more !han a fund ra smg orgamzatton
We re plann ng Were allocattons Were
car ng We re responstve to your needs
md the needs ofyourcommun ty Untted
Way sa system of lund ra smg that
atds over 37 thousand loc tl human servtce
agenc es And for every agency servtce
you know there are dozens of others you
m ght never expect We want you to
know abo II us Because the more you
know about Umted Way the more you
wtll want to gtve

Ifuou doltt like
what were doing,
you don't lrnowWhat
we're doing.
Oft

Na ooa
Na1 ona
SocK
N• un~

K dnc:y Foundatton
Mu pic Sclcros s
Y
Rt re01 KJn ;md

Parii:ASO(aon

Nc ghborhood Ccn c ood
Sen men
PIIIMCd Paren nood Sel"i ce
Re de 11 Tre11 n en Center\
or Ch ldrcn
Sa 11 IOfl Anny
Serv c
he Ag ng
Servacc:5 fo he: Hllfld ~eappcd
Sc:rv c o Unwed Mothc:n
Sllmmc Cam p
Temporary She te s or Ch ldren
T a c: c: Ad
Un ed Ctrcbl'll P11 y

Asocaon

II

Homt He p

Un ed Surncn Sc
e
Un ed Sel"'tcC: Organ a on

uso

Un c:d Way Plum ng

Organ za on

I

Urban League
V ._. ng Nu W. Sc ICC

I

Vo unlCCrs o Ame 1ca
YMC A
YWCA

!I

YMHA
YWHA

II

NatQna A soc a 10n
a~ Spec h A on

Hcanng

nA oho m
Nar. ona Coun on Cnmc and
[k nqucn 'I
Nat ona Cy
F bro
Rc:sc:an:h Foonda on
N~ Klfl~ Els!C: SCI Soc c y
or Cnpplc:d Ch drcn and
Adu !i
N11 ona Hc mophc a

Narona r un

1

I
II
I

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prevention

DALE C. WERNER

""'""' I

110001 1,250, 1,500 BTU

R

I

~

;J

D

A

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)

I '

li~!lo

best policy

--------------------------------------,
(r,
It
1
-&lt;::.._ / .~

pro'V

prevented That s why we
say -

Boy Scou s

l

a~encv

1 "anc a\ pr otec1 on and
serv ce when c me losses
occur.
but many can be

CampF cG
Catho IC Chan IC
Ch ld Adopt 1011 Sc c
Ch d Gu dance C n

~ .! )t':..-

programs

for
wrongdoers
and
proposa s for strengthened
cr me investigation efforts

8 g S SI:CB
Boy C utn

._J \ ' \-."=+ ~¥ ,.__y'~'---r-- ~~

up

provld ng stiffer penalties

A soc at 011
Arth
Fo nda 1U
H 8 BI'Oihcn;

;;::

turn

One th ng you can do is to

Amen an I) aheiCs A5!10C a
Amen an Na 10na Red Cro
Amen an Soc.: a Hea h

~~

that

m ss ng

FoundatiOn

s.

•0

New pep. 6

Th anks o you
two ks
o ALLOFUS

•

Unl' diMly

e.a.oe1oCo~

�•,

Daily Sentmel, 1\hddlepurt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Nov. 'i. 1977

Halloween carnival held .: :
Assoc.,
Farmers

POLLJ •s POINTERS

to. Halloween
carnJ•·at
sponsored
by the PTA
at the
· Pomeroy Elementary School
proved to be a hugP surcess
at'Cording to · April Smith,
secretary, who served as

Polly Cramer

dtainnan .
•The event was welJ at·

Many uses for old sheets
POlLY'S PROBL.F:M
DEAR POLLY -1 ha\'e two
old king size bed sheets wuh a
few tears m them and would
like some idea s for using the
.go&lt;Xl parts. 1 hH\'l' made
pillowcases out of othe rs bul
these have been used for
years and are too far gone for
that. -S.H.
DEAR S.H. - I newr lhrow
away a worn sheet but keep
them and always find a u.se
for every inch. l have used
such ~ood parts for luung
small curtains. They make
great inner Cilvers lo hold the
stuffing for pillows such as
crewel work. needlepoint and
other fancy ones. The lasl bits
can always be used as cleaning and pressing cloths. II you
like to attach bed dust ruffles
to a base that fits between the
springs a nd mattress even

pieced strips of old sheets
work just fine. Save them and
some will surely turn up.
Readers, what suggestions do
you have 7 -POLLY .
DEAR POLLY-An ad. justable ironino board makes
a great stand for a portable
se win g
ma chine
or
typewriter . It allows space
for materials and ca n be rais~
ed or lowered to a com.••••••••••.
• ••
• •• ••••

••••
•:•••ENER
·BE ANGV
•
II :

·,·."• MISER
•

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•••

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••• ••••

•••• ••• • •• •• • •••

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AUTOMATIC :
•
! WOOD HEATER :
•

tended . Mrs. Smith extends
fortablr height when sewtn~~enlhrtre thanks to aU who
ortypmg. - MADEUNE .
helped make the carnival a
DEAR POLLY-My con- success. parents, teachers
tribution is sort of a combina- and people ol the community
tion Pet Prtvr and Pointer. who assisted .
CX course, there are countless
Kindergarten - Prrttiest,
pt'Opll' who have &lt;iquarhuns Dennis Booth: Ugliest,
and evcrv few months the Barbara Co leman: Most
water ha-s to be changed. Original, Shawn Durst.
What a mess. I would always
Grade 1 Pretti est ,
wonder what to do with the Kristan Heines: Ugliest,
water. Should I put it down Scott Barton; Most Original,
the drain or dwnp it in the Mike Will.
toilet ? Now I have learned to
Grade 2 Prettiest,
put this water to good use. I Tammy Johnson; Ugliest.
take a plastic container a nd Eric Spencer: Most Original,
scoop out this water and Steve Tracy.
water my house plants with
Grade 3 Prettiest,
it. I have been doing this for Debbie Downie ; Ugliest.
some time and thev look so Timmy Colmer;
Most
green a nd healthy and grow Original, Huey Eason:
like crazy. This fish water
Grade 4 - Prettiest, Julie
acts like a fertilizer. If you Sisson ; Ugliest , Brian Korn;
are afraid of an odor in the Most Original , Darren
house use such water 011 your Roach .
outdoor garden. My garden
Grade 5 - Presttiest,
has been in bloom all swruner Gayla Hanning ; Ugliest,
long and I have received so Mike Thomas; Most Original,
Inany compliments so what is Suzan Thoma.
there to say but "Keep your
Grade 6 - Prettiest, Laura
fish tank dean and your Horsley; Ugliest, Scott
plants will be green." Hysell : Most Original,
DAVID.
Carolyn Casto.
DEAR DAVID-For years
Oursincere thanks to the
I have used a liquid corruner- merchants who donated
cial fish · fertilizer on my prizes. They were: Pomeroy
plants and think it is great. Flower Shop. Crafty Ladies
The faint odor it leaves soon Craft Shoo. Jones BoyS,
disappears. -POLLY.
Shammy's, Stiffler's,
DEAR POLLY -I would Chapman Shoes, Elberfeld's,
like to share the way I keep Swisher and Lohse, New
flowers brought in from my York Clothing House,
garden for a longer time. I Marguerite Shoes, Country
always cut them in the early Cousins. Modern Supply,
morning or in the evening Nelson's
Drugs,
K&amp;C
after the sun goes down and Jewelers, Pomeroy Pastry
put them in water as they are Shop, Sears, Landmark,
cut. When ready to arrauge Pomeroy Home and Auto,
the flowers I cut each stem on Pomeroy Cement Block,
an angle, remove all leaves Tom's Carry Out, Barton's
below the water line, put Ashland Service Station,
wann water in the contait:~er Sugar Run Flour Mill, G&amp;;J
and add an aspirin. Always Auto Parts, The Fabric Shop,
keep a flower arrangement Ebersb8ch · Hardware ,
out of the direct sunlight and Simon' s Market, Moore 's
change the water about every Store, Pomeroy Wine Store,
three days and always add an Powell's Super Valu, Bob's
aspirin to the fresh warm Market of Mason, Gibb's
water. -JEANS.
Grocery, Goessler's
DEAR POLLY-Always Jewelers, Fashion Beauty
keep a nut pick handy to use Shop , Hartley 's Shoes,
for untying difficult knots or Ewing's Funeral Home, L&amp;Z
removing stubborn corks Shop, Meigs Inn , Meigs Inn
from bottles. - MARY B.
Pizza Shack, R.C. Glasgow &amp;

Surveyors,
Bank &amp; Savings Company,
Pomeroy National Bank,
Athens County Savings &amp;
Loan. Bernard V. Fultz. Crow
· &amp; Porter. Attorneys, James
O'Brien, Attorner, Capital
Savings &amp; Loan, Pomeroy
Firemen for their time and
popcorn, J&amp;R Sport Shop,
Francis Florist , Welker's
Ashland, French's Sunoco,
Certified
Service Station ,
·
Shuler's Market , Horak
Carry Out.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Generation Rap

~

~

DATE OBSERVED
The 40th wedding anniversary ol Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Eblen. SR 143, was
observed at their hom e
Sunday from 2 to 4. The event
was hosted by their children
Mrs . Carl DeLong, Mrs .
Doris McDonald and Kenneth
Eblen. Friends and neighbors
attended. The CilUple was
married in Pomeroy by the
late justice of the peace Earl
Titus.
Football helmets go back to
"the scarlet turbans worn by
Rutgers College players in
the 1870s.
Automobiles run on alcohol
in Madagascar. So much rum
and alcohol are · distilled on
the island off East Africa that
sugar plantation· vehicles
sometimes bum alcohol in
lieu ol gasoline.
The Republic of South
Africa has two capitals,
Pretoria and Cape Town.

Memorial service observed
for Mrs. Feme Hayman
=·:·:·:·

VIEW

• END

SHOW S. :

: Large Feed Door Open ing •
• - Heavy Cas1 Sedional •
Linings - Ribbed ~ast lr01'1 :
• Grate _ cast l ~on Flue •
• Collar - Ash Door - Large:

!

! Ash

•••
•••
•

Pan.

·

Only

·s28!r

..

Optional Blower

•
•
•
:

s4g'!

:

•

,----....;;.----:
•
With the
•
•
'Purchase of
•
This Stove Buy
•
A XL-10" Home lite :

•

•
•

CHAIN SAW
For Only

:
:

•

:

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!
•

•5991

::L..-------SAYRE
•

••

EAST
LETART--A
ca ndlelight memorial service
for Mts. Ferne B. Hayman

Fisher was at the piano.

[n-

stalled were Mrs. Shields,
president; Mrs . Lucy
h. hl' h d th
t Donahue, vice president;
tg tg te
e recen
meeting of the East Letart Mrs. Fisher, secretary ; Mrs.
United Methodist Women Hazel Fox, treasurer; Mrs.
held recently atthe church.
Doris Adams, secretary of
Mrs . Hayman was a program reso urces ; Mrs.
member of the organization Mildred Donahew, Christian
for the past 32 years. Each of personhood ; Mrs. Focie
the members participated in Hayman, supportative oom·
the candlelighting ceremony munity; Mrs. Eileen Roush,
and Mrs. Marlene Fisher Christian social involvement;
gave a tribute to Mrs. Dr. Kathryn Philson, ChrisHayman, always active and tian global concerns and cominvolved in the women's work . mittee on nomination; Mrs.
Belva Fisher, membership;
of the church.
Mrs. Sue Beegle presided Mrs. Roush, historian. Mrs.
at the meeting which opened Eileen Buck closed the in·
with devotions by Mrs. Mabel stallation using the prayer '
Shields. Thank you cards " Convent Prayer" by John
were read from Mrs. June Wesley.
Also conducted at the
Wickersham and the Edna
Stiles family, and from Mrs. meeting was the pledge serMary Roush for cards sent to vice by Dr. Philson. Mrs.
her during her hospitaliza- Fisher was pianist .
tion.

·

Plans for the holiday
season were made with the .
Christmas party to be held on
•
th e firs t Tuesday of
:
_
December. Fruit baskets will
882 2525
•
: be prepared for sever a) of the
•
M
·
• community, and gifts will be
:
· 126 am
! purchased for the Gallipolis
•
• State lnstitute women
remembered by the United
Methodist Women.
Mrs. Roush installed the
•
•• new off.•' cers usmg
. the theme,
••
'••••~•••••••••••••• "A Complicated Yes." Mrs.

• • HARDWARE

t'Thankfulness " was

the

theme with readings including "The Assurance of
the Lord" by Mrs. Roush
followed by the song, "Bless-

ed Assurance";

~' Material

Blessings "
by Focie
Hayman, following by
singing ol "For the Beauty ol
the earth"; " Privilege of Service" · by Belva Fisher,
followed by " The Voice of
God is Calling" ; prayer bj
Mrs. Doris Adams, and
singi!lg of " Now We All
Thank Our God" with prayer
by Dr. Philson,
The birthday of Mrs. Bertha Robinson was celebrated.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Shields and Mrs.
Belva Fisher. The treasurer's
report was given by Mrs.
Hazel Fox.

NOW YOU KNOW
United Press Inlernatloual
When Alexander the Great
founded the city ol
Bucephalia in 326 B.C., he
named it after his favorite
horse, Bucephalus. Traces of
the city - in what is now,
Pakistan - stiU exist.

This is not a ficticlous letter. I hope you'll print'it to let other
people know things get better.
For the last three years, I had no.self-confidence. I turned to
drugs and was known as a cool head. I could get any score I
wanted, and so I let myself be used as a dwruny for people who
needed a connection.
Then I turned to older women who needed companionship
and were willing to pay for it. Fine! I could buy more stuff for
my "friends" and rrzyself. Some friends!
I worked when ·I could, supported half an apartment with
another cop-out to society, and got high all the time. I didn't
care after a while who I slept with; no sex preference ... So long
as they paid.
I got sick, skinny, bad tempered. I'm like a Jot ol those other
people out there: I wanted help but no one could tell me a
thing.
Finally, for no apparent re&amp;on, I really looked at myself. I
said, no more joints, quaaludes, junk. I said good-bye to my socalled friends, who didn't care, since I was no longer their SUI&gt;"
plier.
Now I'm attending junior college, pulling 16 units, have ho~
bies such as scuba diving and jogging. I had help !rom good
people, once I asked for it. You aren't locked into failure. I
know! .jACK

Attendance policy
'to ·be PAT topic
ROCK SPRINGS - Otis
Knopp, County Attendance
Officer, Assistant Principal
Fenton Taylor, Sam Crow

tendance personnel , wm
discuss Meigs High School
attendance policies at the
PAT meeting to be held
Tuesday, November 8, at the
high school.
Beginning at 7: 30 , the
program will feature these
lour men who are responsible
lor student attendance and
attendance records at Meigs
High School. They will also
discuss the law as it pertains
to school attendance, how the
law is being and will be •I&gt;"
plied in regard to chronic
absenteeism, and relevant
sections of the Student
· Handbook. Parents who have
questio.ns concerning school
attendance policies or the
handbook are urged to at·
tend .
Following the program, a
short PAT (Parents and
Teachers) business session is

SEEN VISITING
Mrs. Neva Gary of Columbus ~P.,nt the weekend in Middleport visiting her daughter,
Bess Hendricks and flimily.
Sunday the Hendricks I amily
took Mrs. Gary home and
while in Columbus visited
Esther Martin, Bev Gary and
Maria. Gary . The family also
visited Mrs. Ann Karns and
her family of Creola.

Republican Candidate For

COUNCILMAN
POMEROY VILLAGE
Election- November 8, 1977

Pd . Pol. Adv .

Vote
For

I '

WRITE IN CANDIDATE
ELECTION-NOV, 8, 1977

YOUR VOTE GREAnY APPRECIATED
PD. PL. ADV.

Betty (Shaffer) Wagner
FOR

Southern .Local Sch09l Board
•COUEGE GRADUATE
•EXPERIENCED IN ACCOUNTING
•CONCERNED PARENT-TAXPAYER
Nov. 8 Election

By Roger Bollen

ELECT
'
DONALD .L.
MOORE

@.JiG EN.JOYING lRE' gAME ...

IDT AN EkiPLOY'E f:.ND

HIS

EMPLOYER WHO HOt..DG 1HE

FOR
TRUSTEE
SALISBURY
TWP.

lbtel&lt; a= GRANTIN6 RAISE5 1

-.- --~._..---t

IF
, ,

~1/-7

-

$

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&lt;l) 1917tryN(A lnt IM

Re~ U~ 1'~1

Uti

Children Are My No. 1 Concern

ELECT

JIMMY C. CALDWELL

\

Dr. A. J. S11ehli . . . .

'

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FOR.

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(

,.r

Dr. G. J. Slomb1u1h •

'Remind him Nna! a wonderful excuse giving you a raise would be
lor him to raise prices again! '
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EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
2 YEAR TERM

Your Support
•

and Vote Appreciated

PD. POL. ADV.

,L

Mrs. Mary Elizabeth ·
McMillan, 1315 Joy&lt;1! Dr.
Xenia and Col. T. Lyston
Fultz, 288 N. King St., Xenia,
formerly of Middleport , exchanged marriage vows during the 10:30 a.m. worship

AGAINST
INSTANT VOTER
REGISTRATION,

VOTE YES"
ON STATE
ISSUE 1.
11

Paid lor by: Ohioans for the J&gt;i.eservatlon of Honest

Elections. 16 E. Broad St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Jean Barren, Chairman, 1948' McCauslen Manor,
Steubenville, Ohlo 43952.

Soct'al
ca1endar
•
MONDAY
SALEM Center PTA
Monday, 7:30p.m. with llfth
grade of Mrs . Anna Turner in
. charge ol program. Guests
· will be Charles L. Dowler,
Dwight L. Goins, Dan Morris
and Roi&gt;l&gt;rt Morris.
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
Monday, 7:30 p. m. at
Temple. Dues are payable to
Opal Diddle, secretary.
Initiation will be held •nd
potluck refreshments served.
REVIVAL at Mt. Union
Baptist Chureh now through
Sunday 7:30 p. m · nightly.
Merlin Tests evangelist.
Friday, New Life Quarter,
wUJ be featured. Pastor Is
John Elswick.
TUESDAY
ELECTION DAY dinner
Tuesday in fellowship room
at Chester United Methodist
Church.
ELECTION DAY dinner, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday at
· Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ ol Latter Day Saints,
beside Lebanon voting
precinct.
PAT meeting. 7 ,30 at Meigs
High School. School attendance policles will be

;J.netgs women marK. ~~::~- .~~!"rents
:: wor.·'/-UJ dary ·ce 'e Vf
l.AAntz•on
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"H~art

WINDING ·

Change-Global

jorie Grirrun receiving the of-

Communi ty Day
.
cel~bratton of Church Women
Umted of Metgs County held
at the Heath United
Methodist Church Friday
afternoon.
Mrs. Thomas Bentz e&lt;tended the welcome to the approx, imately 65 women {rom all
: churches of Meigs County at: tending. There was a moment
• of silence in memory of Mrs.
: Ben N~utzling, a past presi"'"'Uen t of Church -- women
.J.lnited followed by a reading.
~ Officers elected and installfor the three yea r term of
~8-ao were Mrs. Bentz,
:presiden t ; Mrs. Arnold
~ichards, vice president;
~s. Ervin Bawngardner,
:&lt;.ecretary, and Mrs. Don Hun::ne1. treasurer. Mrs. Patrick
:;Lochary was the installing of:;fleer. Organist for the service
"Was Mrs. Kale Bach ner.
::: Greeters were Mrs. M. L.
''.F rench and Mrs . Glenn
:~amber! 'Mrs .
Waid
::;spencer,Mrs. Bawngardner,
-Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. Mar:,

feratory prayer was given by
Mrs. Allen Hampton.
Mrs. Hazel Hilt was the
speaker for the meeting
which focused on reaching
out :-oith changed hearts to
the Wllree people throughout
the corrununity, throughout
the nation, throughout the
world by striving for unity
and world peace.
Leadersandreadersforthe
service women representing
various churches o1 Meigs
County, were Mrs. J ames
Criswell, Mrs. Aaron Keltoo,
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
Oleva Cottrill, Mrs. William
· Mrs. Bentz, Mrs.
Dowrue,
Martha Husted, Mrs. Doris
Grueser, Mrs. Dwight
Wallace.'
Taking part in the " Prayer
for Heart Change" were Mrs.
Bobby Payne, Miss Erma
Smith, Mrs. Everett Thomas,
Mrs. George Skinner, Mrs.
Joe Cook, Mrs. Edison Baker,
Mrs.. Buena Grueser, Mrs.
Betty Roush.

are

TRAIL

GARDEN CLUB, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of. Mrs.
Wilma Terrell. For roll call
members are to takef a
decorattng tdea
pr
Chnslmas. Mrs. Ins Kelton
wdl have the program on attracting and feeding wild
b'rds Ar
t 1 th
1 ·.
rangem~ ~ 0
e
month wtll be Shine on

U

! Change" wasthethemeoftlle fering of $68.66. The of·

J.Iarves~.}1._qon._. "

ELECTION DAY soup
dinner at Racine Methodist
Church ann.. 11 :30 to 5.
U.M.W. of chorch selling rag
rugs. Contact Mrs. Victor
Wolfe at 949 .2288.
. Ei.ECTIONDAY dinner at

Forest RWl Methodist Church
9 to 6. Vegetable- and bean
soup, sandwiches, pie, cake
and C&lt;lffee.
SYRACUSE PTO ·Tuesday
7:30 p.m. Enterta~ent
by
T
1
Syracuse Browne roop.
ELECTION DAY Dinner
Tuesday at the Syracuse
Municipal Building spon·
sored by Ladles Auxiliary of
the fire department. Soup and
sandwiches with serving to
begin at 11 :30. Bring con·
tainers for cawy-out.
BELLES AND BEAUS
Western Square Dance Club.
· Thursday, 8 to U, Royal Oak
Recreation building. Jonnnie
l~eets
Jones, Kingsport, Tenn. will
I
fj
11:1
be the caller. Members \0
take homemade cookies.
~ Candy Brothers entertainGolda Roush, Helen Quivey,
WEDNESDAY
~ed at the Hemlock Grove
Mildred Zeigler, Sara
POMEROY-Middleport
• Grange Hall recently with a Cullums, Belva Sloan, Lions Club, 12 noon Wedltes: layette shower honoring Jan Romona Hawk, Sheila Hawk, day at the Meigs Inn.
: Betzing Sheets.
Sherry Welker, Barbara OfWIDTE ROSE LODGE ,
: A pink and blue color futt, Ella Shinn, Clara 1:30 Wednesday at the Colwn• scheme was carried out. The Heines, Leota Smith, Alice bus and Southern Ohio Elec·
: gifts were placed in a Stockton, Donna Stockton, bic Co. Important meeting
: bassinet. The cake was baked Jessie Saunders, Helen with all members urged to at·
: and decorated with a sleeping Milhoan, Ellen Killinger, lend.
Mildred Betzing, and Gladys
~ baby replica by Mrs. Karen
POMEROY CHAPTER 80
• Sloan. Mints, nuts, and punch Brothers.
Royal Arch Masons Wed·
: were served with the cake.
Sending gifts were Avery nesday 7:30 p.m.
: Games were played with and Helene Goeglein, Sylvia
BOSWORTH Council 46
: prizes going to Mrs. Barbara Midkiff, Ginger Cullwns, Royal &amp; Select Masters
: Offutt, Mrs. Belva Sloan, Clarence and Alet!nez Ran- Wednesday 8:15p.m.
• Mrs. Alice Stockton. Mrs. ·dolph, Wayne Milhoan, Belva
SPECIAL Meeting, Racine
: Ella Shinn won the door prize. Willard, Kay Collums, and
Volunteer Fire Dept., 7:30 p.
: Attending were Bernice Edna Clark.
m. Wednesday. All members
: Ha wk , Carolyn Cull urns,
urged to attend.

:::ro

ELECT

tcwt-JTOWN... UE'r&lt;E \rUST lwO

:-i1 If •

World

TREASURER, VILlAGE OF POMEROY

YESSIRi ll.)HEN Ill'{\ Ot..JlHE
LINKS 1 I lEAVE lHE OFFICE

, II~ Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
most canng parental exi)EAR OR. · BLAKER : planation or the best school
lcmetimes children are so health lilm cannot entirely
:luutppreciative, Last night b'Wcep aside the tangle of
lllY 12-year-old daughter fearful and magical thinking
pried talking about a girl's that continuestosurroWld the
!'lime of the month" wit~ subject. A friend of mine told
10me nensense about "full me that her ll·year-old
·inoons CBUSing full figures, daughter returned home one
"-hat ever that means. I day and told her that a friend
~dn't gel the details. but it had just started her period,
10w1ded like some idiotic When her mother pursued the
lheory about menstruation matter, her daughter confess~he picked up I rom · her ed, "She didn't really tell me,
friends . Why does she choose I just knew because ol her
~to believe her friends rather bad underarm smell". A few
•·Ulan me, especially · after I more questions by my
:'.ha.ve tried so hard to tell her curious and dismayed friend
:.Verything about the facts of revealed that her daughter
"life? I just feel like giving up. actually believed that women
•DEAR READER :. Don't give menstruate from the armpit!
""'P - not no)l' ' Whether you Alter aU her carefully plann"know it or not , your daughter ed discussions on the facts of
:has just offered a testimonial life, her daughter had reach,.-no matter how int'onseq uen- ed her own personil1 conclu:;Ual it may appear at the sion -linking a smell vaguely
moment- to your previous cf- associated with her mother's
"iorts at creating an at- menstrual period to her
::mosphere for open com- friend 's perspiration!
'"'mWlicalion on this sensitive
Encourage your daughter
subj ect. She seems to want to share her thinking with
;&gt;{OUR opinion about •the you. Only then will you kno)l'
~·nonsense" she is hearing at whether or not you have been
!ichool, I imagine she is trying a successful teacher - and an
'o piece together information effective and responsible
~hat she has heard from · mother . Write to Dr. Blaker
various sources in orde'r to in care of this newpspaper,
come up with an understan- P.O. Box 4119, Radio City Stading of menstruation that lion, New York NY 10019. Due
;)nakes sense to her . And don't to volwne of mail she cannot
~ discouraged by the bizarreply personally, but quesoreness of some of the myths lions of general .interest will
~and misunderstandings cir- be discussed in future col, ,~:ula ting among youngsters umns.
?bout menstruation . Even the

/tl

Gen. Electi'on ·Nov. 8
Qualified Capable
Pd. Pol. Adv .

Dr.RooaldE
Ave .

CHARLES JACKSON (Jack) HANDLEY

Pd. Pol. Adv.

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in oilly one or two days.

The Riviere Center

VOTE FOR

P!&lt;OMOTiON5 ... HIRING'" ARI~-~6. ..

Dentures

949 E.

Pd. Pol. Adv.

FOR

upper &amp; lower

Dr.c. w.11.. 1

To The Board of Education

GERI WALTON

schedu Jed, durin g whi ch
plans for the November 15
Open House at the high school
will be finalized. Parents are
invited to attend both the
meeting and the Open House,
and to join PAT , a newlyorganized group which hopes
to· promote positive relations
and corrununications between
the school and community.
PAT memberShip is $1 per
year. The group, headed by
President Carol Kennedy,
meets the second Tuesday of
each month at the high
school.

Karen Bla~er Ph.D.

.Period misunder~t4nding

HOOVER, JR.

RAP:

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Tan S.'

J

Mrs. Stewart honored recently

McMillan-Fultz.
vows exchanged

CHOICES

$2211.

For Continuing Support
of Meigs Local Schools
RE-ELECT WENDELL

by Gill Fox

•." NEW HAVEN, :
•• W VA.
••

One or two day full
denture servi~.:e,
partials &amp; reli nes.

$2.80.
The 3-4-1 tenth race trifecta
of Scotty W. , Sununer Turn
and Pawnee Pass returned
$214.80. Scott Richard won
the first race and Boast A'
Share took the second to set
up a 2-7 daily double worth

GUY V. BUSH

FUNNY BUSINESS

SIDE GLANCES

7- The Daily Scntirw:I. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 7, 1977

TRUSTEE

Gloria Peavley to Jack
Peavley, Int . in Parcels,
Rutland.
Fred D. Perry, Cletes C.
Perry to ~oward Damron,
Georgia Damron, 2H., A.,
Bedford.
Athens Co. Savings &amp; Loan
Co. to Pat Mitchell, Marcella
Sue Mitchell, Lot , Rutland.
Athens Co. Savings &amp; Loan
Co. to Pat Mitchell, Marcella
Sue Mitchell, Lot. Rutland .

·&gt;:····

THISTLEDOWN

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
( UPI) - Jet Bupers rocketed
overthe five fur.longs in :59 1By Helen 1utd Suc.Bottel
~
» 5 Sunday to edge Please N
Reason by a head in the
SHE'S PREGNANT AT 14
featured ninth race at ThistRAP:
ledown.
My ex-boy friend is lB. I'm 14 and pregnant. He's only worOdd Time finished third .
ried about one thing- himself. He wanted me to have an abor- The winrw:r. ridden by Mike
tion before my parents foWld out.
Moran, paid $8.60, $3 .60 and
I absolulely refused, so he says I'll have to adopt out the
baby as he won'tpay support. He' ll leave the state lirst.
That's not the worst. My parents refuse to take my baby too.
RE-ELECT
They say it would mess up their lives, as Mom is working and
Dad is the nervous type. I'd stay home with my baby, but they
say I have to finish school, and besides they can't afford both ol
us. (They really can.)
Candidate For
t : Nobody wants my baby. except me, and I can't have him.
Can they make me give him up? - MISERABLY ALONE
DEAR ALONE :
Salisbury
If you have no possible way ol raising your baby, a foster
home (adoptive or state-run) seems the only choice. Without
Township
your signed Cilnsent, however, he can't be adopted. He'U go to
Your Vote Appreciated 1
a "care" facility, and that will be sad.
Nov. 8, 1977
You need to talk this out with an understanding counselor.
Pd . by Candidate
When you face aU the problems- your parents' as well as yours
-perhaps you'll see things differently. It isn't easy, being a 14year-old mother. And it Isn't lair, depriving the baby,ol a permanent adoptive home unless you're sure you can take full
responsibility soon.- HELEN - ALONE:
Here' s a possibility : Perhaps one of your relatives- an aunt
and uncle, older C&lt;lUSins - might want your baby. This way you
Ciluld see him often, but he'd sWI have a good home.
Whether they adopt him or take temorary custody, it seems
a better way than losing him entirely. ·SUE

and Earl Young, school at-

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:~:~:.:::::*:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;;,..;;;x.;.: ~ ~;:~-::::::::::..~:::!;::::x.::::~::~'*"::..~:::.:~"»~:;, ~~==::.:·:·:·:·:-:~;:;

hon01i'"d

Layette shower hosted recently

,. A layette shower honoring · Ann Lemley, the John
.Susie Abbott was held Tues· Seidenabe!' family , Mary
: day night at the Meigs Inn. Hysell, Faye Hamilton, Mrs.
• Hostesses were Tonda Clarence Hill, Lila Mitch,
: Seidenabel, B!!cky Tannehill, Martha Struble, and Sandi
: Vicki Hoffman, Sherry A~ Hamilton, and the hostesses.
others presenting gifts to
: bott.
.
Mrs.
Abbott were Polly
• The game prize was won by
: Mary Hysell, and door prizes Hysell, Pauline, Tami, and
: were won by Faye Will and Bev. Hoffman, Debbie
: Dorothy Roach. The refresh- Young, Ruby and Sherrie
• ment table was covered in Marshall , Eleanor Logan,
: yellow and centered with a
: cake deco~ ated with a
Enroll Now For ·
bassinet which was served
New Quarter
__
with punch, nuts and mints.
Secretarial - General oiAttending were Susie
fice • Accounting &amp;
Soulsby, Grace Abbott, Chris·
Business Management.
ty Rams bury, Nonga
Employment assistance
Roberts, Jane Abbott, Kathy
to gro~duates
'
·ruce, Mrs. Jed Will, Sr.,
Visit, write, orca 11 446· 2239
• Denise Marshall, Dorothy
for information.
: Roach, Barbara Karr, Sue
SOUTHEMN HILlS
: Hodge, Shari Mitch, Mrs.
: Gene Butcher, Peggy Harris,
SCHOOL OF BtJSINESS
":,Faye Will, Ann Rupe, Linda
414-2nd Ave. RN051511
Thomas C. Breech,
F~ulk, Charlene Hoeflich,
Director
Ja ~ne Hoeflich, Leona Smith,

dl~:~~E~1!ux6~:~~:~~;

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

service at Faith Community

United Methodist on Sunday,
Oct. 16. The Rev. Raymond D.
Pope officiated.
Mrs. Fultz is the daughter
of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. 0 .
McDorman of Xenia, and Col.
Fultz is the son of the late Mr.
and Mrs.Fred L. Fultz of Mid·
dleport .
The bride was graduated
from Wittenberg University,
formerly taught in the public

Sugar provides energy

schools, and has been active
in church, community and

servlce organizations including serving as regent of
Catharine Green Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
Col. Fultz served m World
War II and the Korean Conflict and . was adjutant
general of Ohio's 37th Divi·
sion. He formerly taught in
schools at Bexley, Mid·
dleport, and the OSSO Home.
He was superintendent of the
Boys Industrial School at
Lancaster until retirement
and later was ~oordinator of
institutional programs in the
Pennsylvania State Division
ol Children and Youth, Harrisburg, Pa.
They now reside on Joyce
Dr.

The steak and egg are usually
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
still
in the stomach after the
DEAR DR. LAMB-I am
very active a nd my preferred game is over.
Garbohydrates are more
recreation is tennis. I eat two
or three lwnps of sugar bet- rapidly processed by the
ween sets to provide "quick stomach than any other food .
energy." I am t!&gt;ld that this is If they are soluble as sugar is,
in error and that It can ac- the liquid solution is rapidiy
tually cause a decrease . in emptied into the small inblood sugar. Is this correct' testine where it can be broken
down and ~ho;;orbed for im~t is 11 blood sugar" and
mediate : ., c . 'nergy.
how is it produced'
Sugar is glucose and frucDEAR READER-' Most
people seem to forgei there is tose hooked together into one
such a thing as digestion. molecule. The molecule is
Food ol any type has to be broken down in the small in·
processed by the stomach testine and within 30 minule!i
and small intestine before it to one hour after ingesting a
can be absorbed into the solution of sugar water ·you
blood stream.
wiU reach a peak blood level
Protein and fat, particular- of these .1ubstances . The fru~·
ly, are not emptied from the tose is converted to glucose in
stomach very rapidly. Fat . the energy process. All carmay remain in the stomach bohydrates from any and all
lor hours. Food in the sources eventually are con- '
stomach cannot be absorbed verted to glucose for energy.
and hence cannot provide a This incl~des the carsingle calorie of energy. That bohydrates m cereals, fresh
is what is wrong with the fruits and vegetables.
steak and egg meal before
The sugar you eat between
football games and the like. sets does provide energy if
you need it. Blood sugar is a
general term and could inelude glucose and fructose
and even galactose (part of
milk sugar). The major jlor·
lion of it is glucose. We are
particularly interested in
blood glucose in tenns ol
diagnosing diabetes or
ceremonial activity around hypoglycemia (often called
it," Richman said. "He would low blood sugar, but it really
want to go with the quiet beat means low blood glucose
that has been his life aU level ).
It is not true that the sugar
along. 11
Lebert Lombardo, the you eat between sets will
bandleader's brother, said in lower your blood sugar. Some
Bedford , N.H., the Guy sensitive people who have
Lombardo Orchestra would hypoglycemia will have an
excess outpouring of insUlin
not break up .
11
There is no question, we'll which in turn may cause a rego on . The show must go on," bound low blood glucose level
Lombardo said Saturday . because of the insulin action.
Exercise causes the body to
"We'll be known as the Guy
Lombardo Orchestra under burn glucose. This can
the direction of Lebert and significantly lower the blood
Victor Lombardo. It is his glucose level. That is why a
band. It will always have his diabetic who takes insulin
may need to eat more or take
name.'"
_
At the time of Lombardo's less insulin if he is going to
death, his band was exercise. The exercise . and

·Lombardo liked
his corny title
JAMES L. OVERTON
HOUSTON (UP!) - Banctleader Guy Lmnbardo was
proud of the title his
de.tractors hung on him "the King of Corn."
"For years I was known as
the King ·of Corn and I
treasured the title. Really I
did, " he once told an interviewer . "It meant that I was
playing sensible, commercial
By

music."
Lombardo, 75, who made
his Royal Canadians dance
band a New Year's Eve
tradition, died Saturday in
Methodist Hospital of a IWlg
ailment. His body was
scheduled to be returned to
New York today .
A

spokesman

.for

Fairchild's Funeral Home in
Garden City, N.Y., said
viewing hours were set for
noon to 10 p.m. ·today and
Tuesday.
The spokesman said a mass
would be said Wednesday
morning, but a church had
not yet been selected for the
service . Burial will be at Pine ·
Lawn Cemetery on Long
Island.
Saul Richman, a longtime
spokesman
for
the
bandleader, said in keeping
with the musician's style, the
furw:ral probably would be
cOnducted without fanfare .
"Knowing Guy. I don't
think he would go for such
Wednesday at lire station at
7:30 p.m. Members to bring
·favorite recipe, craft or art
they wish to demonstrate.
Plans !or Christmas party
. will be made. Donations will
be made. Donations will be
accepted lor F.O.P. dinner.
MIDDLEPORT
AMATEUR GARDENERS ,
Wednesday 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Walter Crooks.
Mrs. Daniel Thomas to be cohostess. Mrs. Charles Kuhl
wUI_be the speaker.
TIIURSDAY
MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY meeting
to be held Thursday 7:30 p.m.
at Athena Acres, home of Major Joyce Miller and Miss
Marion Crawford.

performing
in
New
Hampshire and·;·was playing

regular arnoWlt of insulin
combined niay cause an m. ·

his theme song,- "Auld Lang

sulin
reaction-hypoglycemia. Diabetics
need to regulate both their
food intake and their exercise
to maintain a reasonably
stable level of blood glucose.
I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnber ~.
Sugar and Starch: Carbohydrates, so you can learn
the facts about sugar,
glucose, starch and why all
carbohydrates are similar
and related. That way you
can avoid being confused by
statements such as being told
your taking a lwnp ol sugar
will lower your bloodsugar.
Others who ·want to know the
facts can send 50 cents with a
long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for this
issue to me in care of this
newspaper, P'O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.

Syne."

His wife of a ·half..,entury,
Liliibell Lombardo, was at
her husband's bedside when
he died, offici~tls said .
Lombardo wlls admitted to
Methodist Hospital Oct. 27.
His condition worsened last
Wednesday from serious to
critical and he was "critical
but stable" until Friday .
He had undergone openbear! surgery performed by
Dr. Michael E. DeBakey on
Sept. 23. He was discharged
Oct. 18 and ·pronounced
recovered and In excellent
conditioo.
A spokesman for DeBakey
said the lung ailment, similar
to but not quite the same as
pnewnonia, had nothing to do
with the surgery and that
further surgery would not
have been appropriate .
Born in Londoo, Ontario,
Lombardo began developing
his own style of swing and
cling dance music with
brothers Carmen and Lebert
in the early 1920s. He came tJJ
the United States in 1923 and
began what proved to be a
long . and
profitable
association with radio the
following year.
His band played at the
Roosevelt Hotel Grill in New
York for 30 years and, for
millions of Americans, the
arrival of New Year with
Lombardo's bam! playing
"Auld Lang Syrw:" was a
tradition.

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N. W. COMPTON, O.D.

OPTOMETRIST
.
.1
Cindy Soulsby, Mazie Han·
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
nahs, Trudi Williams, 1 AT NOON ON THURS.l '- EAST COURT 1
Georgia Wehrwtg, and Glen- · 1 ST. , POMEROY.'
na Soulsby.
L••••••••••••••••••••••••••!~i••••• • '

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A layette shower was held punch were served. Favors
lor Mrs. Greg rDinahJ were diaper replicas.
Attending were Mrs . Rita
Stewart, recently at the home
of Mrs. Charlotte Erlewine Walker, Mrs. Dian Molden,
with Mrs. Regina Erlewine Mrs. Debbie McGuire, Mrs.
and Mrs. Charlotte Erlewine Bernice Garnes, Miss Cindy
as hostesses.
Garnes, Mrs. Vivian Pierce,
A table decorated in a stork Miss Debbie Pierce, Mrs.
motif in pink and blue was Phyllis Dailey, Mrs . Sheila
centered With a stork rep lica Erlewine , Mrs . Jackie
carrying a baby. Gtm1es were Hoover, Mrs. Peggy Hutton,
played with prizes going to Mrs. Evelyn Murray , Mrs.
Cindy Garnes, No,rma Knox, Marsha Barnhart, Mrs. ConDian Molden, and Marsha nie Jones, Mrs. R~ie Burns,
Barnhart.
and Mrs. Nonna Knox .
Sending gilts were Mrs.
Refreshments of cake,
decora ted in pink and blue Sea Stewart, Mrs . Mary
lx(oties, nuts, mints and Hoover, Jim Hutton, Mrs.
Thelma

SO(;IETYTOMEET
The Meigs County Hwnane
Society will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Athena
Acres, the home of Major
Joyce Miller (ret.) and Miss
Marion Crawford.

GRANDSON BORN
Mr. a nd Mrs. Paul Andrews
of Long Bottom are announcing the birth of a grandson,
Oct. 8 at Mt. Carmel Hospital,
Colwnbus. The son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Milliron, the
former Rose Mary Andrews,
the baby has been 11amed
Jerry Michael. Mr. and Mrs.
Milliron have another son,
Mark, age four. Mrs. Andrews spent a week in Columbus assisting in the care of
her grandson ..

:innison, Mrs. Vic-

toria . o0k, Mrs. Bertha
Miller ·:.'iS Donna Thornton,
Mrs. , oye Walker, Mrs.
Gilda Bauer, Miss Melissa
Bauer, Mrs. Jeannie Sayre,
Mrs. Hazel Carter, Mrs.
Katie Miller, Sandy Sines,
and Mrs. Debi Alford.

Mike Swiger
992-7!55
149 S. Third St.

Middleport, 0 .

"Call me for
life insurance!'
•u• t , .. M

Like a good rw:ighbor,
State Farm Is there.
Sltlt~

f•• m loll! tn~u•111Cr .:Om ptn~

HO:ne Ol'llce Bloomington. 1 ~ 1no,s

THIS WEEK'S
NOVEMBER 6 TltRU NOVEMBER 12Tlt

1A POUNDER

SANDWICH
&amp;
FRENCH FRIES
REG. 11.10

TRY OUR
DEUCIOUS

MILKSHAKES
lliE OIJl.FASHION WAY.
NOT PRE-MIXES.
AVAILABLE IN 3 SIZES

65'. 95'. '1.15
Locust Street

Middleport. 0.

992-5248

SEE AND
HEAR IT
NOW!
®

SOUNDS BETTER
THAN EVER!
The
... Mini-Wedge"Zenith Quality
Sound at a Very
Practical Price

•

.

.

,

F&lt;r pe&lt;(Ae.ootheway up.
Ask kids on the grow.
Families on the go. They're

all Quality Chekd homogenized
milk drinkers.

ONLY

$34995 .
Model JA587'W • Features:· the Allegro
Series I Amplifier; AM/FM/Stereo FM Tuner
with AFC on FM; Stereo Precision Record
Changer. Complete with 8-Track Tape
Player/Recorder. Shown with Zenith Allegro
1000 tuned port speakers. Simulated wood
cabinet with handsome grained Wa!m•t
finish.

They expect every glass
of Oualily Chekd milk 10 be
fresh and refreshing .

~ We never let them down .

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�"

"
;:..ntonel. MiddleJl'&gt;ri-Pollll &lt;rO) , 0 , M onday, Nov . 7, !97i

8 - The Daoh

\\hO~e

HUTTON
lt&gt;Qclf('e~

V. "tCI&lt;;;E'

aress

~

.:.tnCt

de•

~N'S

i!Om n sfr!'JIC!rS

P"t&gt;.:: urors i.H''cl or
AL\, J.\RETT t E
do•~

on

l&lt;tSI

s

3~'&gt; qr·~

M

Notic&lt;!ll

~ R'II\,1'\N

lo..nO\\n

R,ldnE'r

~a

GUN SH001
e ... ery Sun

Oh o

ROXANNA
SA l LEY
dt&gt;CE'&lt;Hof"d " hOSt' ast io.O OV\. 0

rs

adaress

Radner

Chocll. guns
meol'S-

Otuo

ALLEN 0580~
deceased
&lt;lka V.
.0.. OSBORN 'hhostt

1.1 \\lid... ..,lUtltl
~

lc'lst 1t.. r1owr1 address rs J90J E
F ftn St
Dc1~ton
On ro

I d.H

OSBOR N
aeceas e d
akc1
w
A
OSBOR N whose tast known

OSBORN
E

ldJ\~

F ifth St

~.H ll

OhrO

OSBORN

WhOSe

14 ;tltl"
",j'

I CIS!

dil•

". no '' " &lt;'!ddress s Coolv rliE'
on o
EDSON
O~BOR N
ot&gt;ceased

a~o,a

E

NOTICE ON FILING

OF INV ENTOR Y
ANO APPRAISEMENTThe
Sfate of Oht o , Meigs County ,
Court of Common P leas ,
Probate O tvts ton
To th e E x ecu tor or Ad
rn• n •~tr ato r of the estate , to
such o f the follow ng as are
restdents Qf tl'le S ta te o f Oh o
v z - the sunnv ng sp o use ,
the
next
of
k n
the
benef 1C1 a rles un de r th e w fl
and ro tne att orney or at
torney s re pre s enhng a n y of
the aforemer1t to ned per sons
Fr teda M Faehn l e~ M 1d
dl e port Oh to
You are hereby not 1f1ed
th at the Inventor y and Ap
pra semen ! of t he Esta te of
t he
af o rem e nt t oned
de c eased , tate ot sa td County
were f tl ed m th ts Cour t Sa td
Inven tory and Appra.se m ent
w ttl b e to r heartng befor e the
Cou rt on t he 9t h day o f
Novembe r
1977 , at 10 00
o clock. AM
Any pe r so n desr r rng to ftle
except ons t he r eto mus t til e
tnem at le a st five da ys p r ro r
to the da te set fo r he a r1 n g
G1ven unde r my ha n d an d
seal o t sa1d c o u r t, t h•s 21th
day of Octobe r 1977
M ann ing D Web s ter
Judge
By Carolyn G Thomas
Deputy Clerk
J 11 (11) 1 2tc

For Tuesd•y. Nov

a. 1917

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~IY0rn~

U

·

mnwllirflm\7

Nov 8, 1977

Q

I~

"'
'"'

\lot•td

t ;'!;i

"""'

Ilk 1\IIIIIII!WII 1~
).ltl 14lllljlo.1 dH\

11. 1

I~ ~ o"t.tll.

!:!:I

1\JIIil lll~ ' lhq UWij t 1 liM. 1 U\llt

IHII

lk tfldl)!t"t.l !l' lht I ,j

11

Rorrne Gun Cl~o~b
afternoon fa( to•
only

Assor!i!'d

THERE Wi ll be no hunttng no
tresposstng and no ~ ... cephon~
~m y proper!)' Bob Mc:Grow

J) jJ

, ,, ,

'"'f• ~

m,"/.•\• d lr\ lw1-•

.Juttf ltl/ltllfl( II
, anllr!J.'' ,., ab. 111
I 1,

o

1 'Ill-: &lt;

111/.. Wit

$18,300.

rii/•I;J lf\1/IHI/!1/fo\fllt

I ...

nf&gt;l

'J J 11~ '1 Jfm1 lilt I J 11fol•1 •f1/fl'
'''' !oulltllll \ ,, 187 •

THE RACI NE Volunteer Ftre
Deportment .,. til iportsor o gun
shoot every Saturday at l p m
at the •r bu ddtn g rn Bos han f at'
lo~y_cho k e guns on I..,

AIHENS
OHIO butt... ,Supennot
... ,"' ..lo.l!'
,. t
SmOII 40(),h~
close to Qh1o U wtth beer and
wme co •• y out ltcer1se domg
good busrqess on heavy trovnll
ed Athens. S1r11et large pori..
•ng lot with roorn lor ot he1 out
door bus•ness Perfect buSHl&amp;SS
for two people Selling becous.e
ol absentee owne r Terms lor
ng ht person For more tnfo1mo
!ton co li or wrne PO Bo:tc 5301
Vte nno We!t Vtrg1nt o 26 1Ol or
1 30 .. 295 9352

Th ts c oming year you may
surp n se o thers and even yourself b y yo ur 1magmat1ve ap·
p reach to money matters Put
those tdeas to work lor you
There ' s a good chanc e for
mc reased 1ncome
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov . 221
Your con c ern for others ts
commendable today However
yo u sho uld be ~Jery c a reful not
lo overe :oct e n d yo urse lf 10 a
mtSQtJtded att e m p t to d o goo d
Fmd ou t wh o yo u re ro m~n tt
cally su rte d to b y s e nding lor
your co p y of As tra G raph Let
ter Ma tI 50 cen ts lo r ea c h and a
lo ng se lf-ad dresse d s ta mp e d
envelope to As tra-Gr aph P 0
Bo)( 489 Ra d10 Ctly S la tt on
N Y 10019 Be su re to spectfy
yo ur b rrth stgn
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) lns tde t ips o n b1g d e al s from
we lt- meanin g frtend s should b e
carefully eyed today
They
could be l1ke a Qllte n ng watch
w1th no mainspring
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19l
Far the s ake of good publ1 c
relaltons today lreat everyone
tmpartlally As S oon a s you
bestow the least b1t of favon t
Ism someone w1 ll be hurt
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb t91
Your advtce s qut le sou nd
today and w111 be ve ry h e lpf u l
The p rob lem IS that you d On I
ta ke to hear t the s arn e wt s d o m
you 1m p a rt
PISCES (Feb 21J.March 201 To
begtn w1tll th iS 1s n I a good day
to take gambles The odds
aga.nst you are even greater 1f
you have no votce tn cal l1ng the
s ho ts
ARIES (March 21-Aprll t91 in
order to 1mpre s s others today

In

llltll\ t f\

( diJ

$.1 11(1

'I bil• 1\, m. ,..,,, ~ •i ll \~ ' arJ :...1 ~to:~

Jnqltl\1
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111

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14 11ll t l• il

01 Uh

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u .. '-•'''ultlit.ll nl •l•••rltlt -., n
Ullt I
rl l\ l'uiJh::.il\ 1 llM I \\~ \lit 11).\hl
h• t'\,L\ tll t]ttl tll, l\ h d otlhd \1 ().

Jtdh•n• l fh• Pullh, l u ~&lt;llltr
!t •j)o.&gt;tl~!lJ!l f&lt;ll)ll111l

liiiHl

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Ill Iill VI

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Pllullt 'l'l.! ~lilt!

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
\lutu.ld\
\ ~'VIIlll&amp;i\Uid&lt;tl
tu.~d~\

lh~

!ilrU fllt\,1\
4P 'I
U.r1 Lit.-fot, pulJ!tt HUutL
~umiH\

tP \I
F11dH\ afill n ~ I I

-

LOST OU T 0~ cor Remm gton Rt
tie 30 06 wllh scope and scope
cover on Co Rd JO and Carmel
Rd
on Svndoy at noon
_ 99_2 _2860
_
Rew ord ~~TWO FEMAL E Treemg Walker
Coo n do gs lost tn th e Chester
oreo qss 38b 1 or 985 _.12 1
$100 REWAR D I blo ck. an d whtfe

Bulldog &amp; 1 Ge rman short
ho tr &amp;d pornte r (btrd dog) Los t
be htnd Odds end Ends Shop
M1ddleport 741 1022

EX PERIENCED REFRIGERATOR a nd
oppl mnce servrcernon
Paid
hoftd oys
VQCO ttOI'IS
a nd
hosprt o lr zot to n
G olho
Relr•ger oto r Co 611 3rd A &gt;~e
Goll1po hs Oht o
TEXAS REF INERY CORP off ers
PL ENTY OF MONEY plvs cosh
bonuses f nnge beneftts to
mature mdwtdUol tn Pome ro y
oreo
Regardless of e:oc
per1e nc:e
wr. tte C L Pole
Pres Te)(OS Ref mery Corp
Box 711 Fort Worth Texas
7b101

NOTICE OF SALE -

By v trtue of an order of sale
d u ty tss u ed out of the Court of
Com mon Pleas m the ca!&gt;e of
E m mogrne
Edwards
Ho lste1n 'V S Mary Crooks
Tu r nbu ll et a l be rng Ca se
No 16 421 1 am offer tn g fo r
s a le at pu b lt c auc 1 1o n a t the
doo r o f t he Cou rt Ho u s e "'"
P om eroy , Me t gs County
Oh o on the 30t h d a y of
Nov ember , 1977, a t 10 00
0 Cl OCk AM
the fOllOW ing
des cr tbed parcels of real
estaie
The fol low •ng descrtbed
rea l estate StllJate 1n the
county of MetQS tn th e State
of Oh to , and tn the Townshtp
of Ot 1ve , and bounded and
descr tbed as fo ll ows , v tz
6e tng a part of lot numbered
three ( J J of the Su b dtv iS on
of the Estate of Ma1or Reed ,
Deceased , beglnnrng at the
Northeast corner of a part of
sa td estate betongtng to A W
Cowdery and 10 the Sou th lrne
of lands of L ydta K Packard
n the tn fEtrsect ton of the
roads lead tng from Reeds
v tlle to Forked Run and
Tu ppers Pla ins, thence Ea~t
w tth South \me ot satd L~d•a
K Packard land 129 fE:et to a
st ake t hence South 99 feet to
a stake thence W~s t 152 ' ~
tee t to the West side of ~aid
Fo rked Run and East ltne of
A W Cowdery ' s land th ence
w tth satd Cowde r y s tr n e •n a
Northerly d 1r ectton to the
place of begtnn•ng
con
latntng one fourth (14th ) of
an ac re , more or tess
.The follow ng descrtbed
r ea 1 estate srtuate •n the
Towns h tp of Ol ive , tn the
County of Me gs a M State. of
Oh 10 , to wtt Bemg a par t of
Lot Number three (3) of the
Subd tv ts ton of the Estate of
Ma ter
Reed ,
Deceased
beg•nn•ng at the Sout h west
corne r of lot deed~d by Si'lld
Mar ra Hoyt to s a id Dell
Arnott i deed beartng da te of
July 15 190]) thence East
w ttl'1 tl'1 e SotJtl'1 lt ne of sa1d tot
152 1 1 feet to the Southeast
corner of satd lot
thence
South 711 :~ leer to a sta~e
t hence West 184 fee t to the
West Stde of the Forked R v n
Roa d and East trne of A W
Cowdery's land thence wtth
sa td A W Cowdery I me rn a
Northerly d1rec t1on to the
place of begtnn1ng
co n
tamrng one fourth { I _.th ) of
an acre more or less
The fot to w rng re al estate
sit u ated m the CotJn t y of
Mergs n'l the Sta te of OhtO
and m the Townshtp o f Oli v e ,
and bounded and descr~bed
as follows Be tng Lot No 53
t n McDole a nd Torrence
Addtlron to Reedsvtlle Me gs
County , Ohto
Refer ence Deed Vo l 224 ,
Page 151 Metgs Coun t y Deed
Re c ords
Upon appltcat on of Em
mogene Edward s Holstem.
sa td proper t y canno t be sold
for less than $2,000 00
Terms ot sa le
Cash 1n
hand on day of sa le
JAMES J PROFFITT
S her iff of
Me tgs County , Oh to
( 10 ) 31 ( ll J 7, u , 21 Jtc

'

CASH po 1d for ott mok~s ond
mode ls of mobtle homes
Phoneo reo codebl 4 423 9531
TIMBER Pomeroy
d uc h To p t&gt;fiC~
so wltmbe r Col i
Ken t Honby I 446

Forest Pro
for st o nd mg
992 59b5 or
8570

CO IN S CURRE NCY toke n s o ld
pocket watches and chams
stlve r ond gold We need 19b4
and older st lve r cotns Bu y sell
or trade Call Roge r Wamsley
742 2331
OLD FU RNITURE tce bo:oces brass
beds tron beds etc complete
househo ld s Wrtle M D Mtlle r
Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohto or colt
992 7761J
NO ITE M TOO l arge or too small

Wtl l bvy 1 ptece or comp lete
household New used or anlt
qves Mo r tm s Furnrtv re 20 N
2nd St
Mtddlepo rt Phone
992 6370
TWO 10 ten ceres w1th good
butldmg srte or older home
5Utlpble for remode!tn g water
and eiectrterty avo loble close
to hardtop road Colt 992 7036
offer 5 pm
CHIP WOOD
Po les
m ax
dtameter I 0 en lorgest e nd $8
per ton Bundled slob S6 per
ton Delivered to Ohto Pollet
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 99.2 2b89
NOT i CE OF OIL &amp;
GAS LEASE FORFEITURE

TO

Atlantic International
0•1 Corp, Summtt Cl'lue 1000 Urhn Ave, Columbus
OhtO 0216
Gen tl emen
You are hereby not tfted
that the u nders tg ne d lessors
h ereby elect to dec lare a
forfe 1ture of th~ followmg o 1
a nd gas tease be twee n you as
lessee a nd the undersrgned as
lessors
Le as e dated Aprtl 10, 1972
be tw een E D Parker and
Veda Parker , htS w tfe , as
lessors ancf At la nttc In
te rn attonal Ott Co rporatto n,
as Lessee , whtch lease tS of
record tn the off 1ce of the
Recorder of Metgs County,
Ohto , m Ot t ar1d Gas Lease
Book 58, a t Page 197 ,
covermg a tract of 121 acres,
more or tess st t uate rn Oltve
Townshrp , M~1QS County ,
Ohto and bounded on the
North by Arthur He rney, e
Grtff tn and Anha Baker,
Hr s , on t he East by Robe r t
Fortney, Clyde Sanders and
A 0 Hetney , on the Sou th by
H and R Rhodes Monty
Sanders and Elza Lando n o n
th e West by D and G Smtth ,
Frank Lantz and R Sanders
Th e above tease tS hereby
d ecla r ed forfe ite d by t he
undersigned lessors beca us e
of your failure to pay lessors
for t he+ r dejayed rental
It Is the mten f to n of the
unders tg ned lessor s to ftle
and record an a fftdavt t of
torfe•t ure for the ab ove tea se
wt th the County Recorder o f
MetgS County, 01'1tO

yo u may resort to e m be llts h m g Signed
E 0 P a rker ,
the fac ts Th !S writ probably
Lesso r
have exact ly the oppo site
Veda Parker ,
e ffe c t
Lessor
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
To da y you des u e g ra ndeur
(11) 7, lfc
Btgness 1sn t always beauti ful
or bes1 so stay ~ tlhm tl'1 e
rea lm of praclt ca ltl y
GEMINI (May 21-June 20l AI
tnough your judgment 1s c:.{l1az·
$8,100 for education,
rng ly accurate 1n many way s In
75 p e r cen t of your
ltnancial affatrs you m1ss tile
College tuition free ,
boat by fat tin g to see th e small
College
Level
par ts tha t make up the who le
CANCER (June 21-July 22l
Examination
Free,
Today, relymg o n Lady Luck
An
Assocrate Degree
and your good looks may be a
through
the
mtstake Both can l'lelp, bu t 11
wtll take some honest e lf o rt to
Community
College
finiSh the jOb
of the Air Force, 30
LEO (July 23-Aug 221 Be abl~
days
paid vacation , 1
today to dt sl lngUtsh between
paid 3 day weekends,
op tt mt s m and fal se hope, or th e
sa nd ca s tles wtll be swept way
good starting pay and
wtlh the ftrst ttde
much
more .
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl. 221 ConInte
res
ted?
dlttons c ontnbut m g to you r
s tab1l 1ty a re a m i)(Bd bag today
Contact me, Vernon
Unfo rtun ate ly mr s ptaced fa1 t h ' Zeger. your Air Force
may lure tn th~ wrong dire cRepresentairve .
tion
For an apporntment
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23l II ' &lt;
ve ry tmportant today that an
in the Pomeroy or
mflu ent1a1 con tact co n t tnu ~ to
Athens area
phone
hold you 1n htgh regard Do
592-4597
Collect.
not h tng that wquld lower you 1n
ht s eye r:.
Order No. 9-ct-86

OPPORTUNITIES

! NF WSPAI'~: Jt fNTF.H.P HI SE ASS N 1

J I

NO FUTURE? tN A$$ RUT?
\.&lt;ttl'lllll

llm ~~~~
\ llt

I

1

!'t• •lt""lt•TI 111

HH ,J,:)(,

l

lll'tl

\\, trt 1 Pn

l1 111111\).( ~h• • l ,,ffnlll&gt;-: ,,

1'\Rilmw.ltH II lm•: 1rut t
111~ PH').."',UH If ,.~u dH \\utkm~
1\•11 t &lt;llut ' our Job .utt'lld uur
\\ ,·t kt'nd Tr.umn~.:- _prul{folm ur AI
tt;'nd11ur HVt't'k FUJ I Tm'lt' Re,.,
tdf'!ll Tr.umn.l{
}('''' " {taor l,. ftatio&gt;t f ,a,,WIJI Jw

PARKERSBURG

1-304-422-4080 .

Kingsbury
Home Sales

&amp; Alumrnum Sidrng,
Storm Wrndows &amp; Insula-

Vinyl
tion.

Aloc:al conbactor
Phone 949 2801
01949 2860

AUCTION SALE e&gt;~ery Tue:s crrd
Fn 01 7 pm New and vsed
merchond1se ol Oh o R1.,.er Ave
lion Metg:s Plolo Mtddlepor 1
Oh1o
Home Phone (304 )
773 5471

i 5 ti-te-::. :-:': _=
~-=~---=~

COAL l•m estone ond cclctum
ch londe ond co lc1u m brr ne !Or
du st co nt rol and sptu:tol mnun g
so li fo r for mers Ex cels1or Salt
Work s Matn Stree t Pomero y
O h1 o or p hone 992 3891

wa nt to bvy or sell somethtng
or
wha tever
you II get resv lts
fos ter wr th a Senttnel Want Ad
Coi l9 92, 2156

LOST LONG HAIRED
femole Full grown
Morl tn Voughor1
b lock fa ce m 7822

coh co cot
Belongs to
Hos p&lt;Jrt
Re.,.ord

THREE FAMILY Goroge Sole Nov
1 8 9 1126 E Motn Street
Pomeroy near Mme r s&gt;~ tl le cor
poro t o n
TWO FAMil Y Ya rd Sole
10 5 698 laurel 51
d leport

Tues
Mod

i¥I&amp;iii£1at
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy sell
!rode o r tro tn Ne w ond use d
s.odd les Ruth Reeves Albony
(614 l 698 3290
MEIGS CO UNT Y Humane Soc1e ty
Core lt ne and odopl lOfl Serv1ce
/fq2 7680 1A2 316:2 992 5427
SM.All WHITE fnendfy male dog
to g tve away to o good home
9927857
BEAGlE P UPP IES All Resonable
From S20 up Runn•ng and o lso
well tro1ned 742 2521

l

Thermal lnsulatron
Saves JO pet to 50 pet.
on heatmg cost
Expenen ce and
fully tnsured
Free Est
C.ll6676479
101 4 1 m o pd

MA LE PEEK A POO 1 year old
Very lrrendly $100 9&lt;12 3844
REDUCE SAFE ond fost wtth
GoBese Ta blets &amp; E Vap water
pills Nelson Drug

1974 GMC SIERRA Gronde IJ, ton
heovy du ty truck 992 5B9b
1972 CHEVROLET CAP RIC E flo:
eel len t co ndtlton Jade green
w th vtnyl top loaded w1th ex
Ires S1 395 Mrs Opal Casto
(3041372 9262
1966 CORVETTE Ve ry good condt
lion 304 882 2040
1964 BU ICK SPECIAl V 8 new
patnt 8 track goo d tt re s Best
offer 741 2050
1973 BUICK CENTlJ RY lu xus 1970
Chevelle Moltbu Call offer 6
pm 949 2249
1973 NO VA HATCHB ACK Good
condtf ton 9_.9 2210
1973 CHEVROLET PIC KUP Custom
10 V 8 3 speed std Irons
Fleefs tde mo tor JUSt overhou(
ed Excellent condtf ton Ftrsl
$1 S'oo to ke s ' ' 992 7675
1976 MONTE CARLO ·s Coupe
Vmyl rool P S brakes AM FM
tape AC cru •se con tro l power
door lo ck s ttl t wheel 5 fa ctory
mags steel be ll ed rodt ols
Many more ex t ra~ Excellen t
condtlron $4 400 992 6243

STARCRA FT FAll Sole Mm1
motors 20 ond 22 TraVel
Trotler s 18 5' $3799 25' 7'
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fo ld down
Sl 700 up We sell se rv1c e a nd
quahty Open Sundays Comp
Con ley Storcr oft Sc:lies Rt 62
N ol Pt Pleosont

197b , • TON Chevrolet trv ck 4
s.p ' 350 V 8 eng 4 ba rrel Ex
tro ttre s a nd r1ms 1 ye a r old
8es r o ff er o.,.er S3 200 Call
even 1n gs 742 2~16
WESTINGHOU SE 18 cu It uprt g ht
fre eze r
Like ne\1
5250
992 7205 evenm gs
INTERNATIONAL TRU CK 1955
Good for houl1 r1 Q Second vehr
de Thts truck con be resto red
George FronCt S 18 An ne St
Pomeroy Ohto
7492 or
qn 37 16

m

FIREWOOD All red and wl·ute
oak $40 o cord spil t a nd
delt vered 8"4~
3_,2:.:
93::3::.__~~WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

1

.

RIEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CAU US
Pomeroy Landmark

9 .a -

Jack W Carsey, Mgr
~ Phone 992-2181

A GOOD u!ed l eer ca mper cab
for on 8 rruck bed Bro wn o nd
wh tte q85 3560

1966 HONDA TRA IL 90 $150 Pt
Pleasant 304 b75 111B
1965 O NE TON truck 283 eng
$550 Al so prgs $25 (614 )
379 6216
FIREWOOD for sole · $25
qq1 5537
tru c kload
992 729 1

AVAILABLE AT Rtver s.1 de Apts. 1
bedro om $105 per mon th $150
__:; ecurrty depcs1 t 99~ 6098
FOUR ROOMS and both Adult s
on ly No peh 9C12 S908
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork
Route 33 nor th of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Co11992 7479
lncred•b lel Why poy htgl-! electrtc
bdls th15 win ter? l e t us pa y
them for yout One ~r oom
from $130 now ovo•lable
Vtlloge Manor Thtrd and M1ll
Stree rs Mrddleport Te lepho ne
992 7787 Equol Hovs tng 0~
portunt ty
~---------,--

--

BUll DIN G FOR lea!!oe 5700 sq It
!-lore but ldlng w tt h full wtn
dow s ond owmng tn fr o nt 40
co r pork ng lot All o n motn
th o roughfare m AthP, s O h1o
c.lose to Oh1o u n.,er-.tty Co n
toct H Wtlkes PO B o ~ 5301
V1 en no Wes t Vorq 111•0 7t.tO'i or
co li I 304 795 q352

r~ sJ;i;.]liPl}t or-·tr.m..
'

.

FOR SAU or lr ociA ..., lan d t:o 1
troc. 1 ~ bedr crn•l• I OU(P "'

qq;t

SH ~ B

RNR
Lltctn ,

w

Va

55 GAL LO N Oil dru ms Clean $6
a ptece 992 - 24.c7B:::..~~~
1966 CHE VHLE 283 4 bar rel mag
whee ls ond good ltres 3 speed
on the floor $400 Kenmore
go s drye r $AO 992 5297.
CLAR INET 992 6309

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soft@n &amp; condition your
Wiler and Co-op water
S&lt;lffener, Model UC-SVI.

'279,95

FOR SALE
New Co-Op water and
softeners, model VC SVt
On ly S279 95
Save $50 00 on a new
Hotpomt Refrtgerator
1 New 20 cubiC ft Chest
Freezer
S2S 00 Discount
I 11 Good Refrigerator S175
Upnght Freezer
S22S
1 Good Used Homeltte
XL12 Chaon Saw
$125
1 Good Used Homehte
Cham Saw
$125
1 Good Used Homellto
Chain Saw
S120
I Good Used Hotpoint
Refrigerator
S12S
1 Good Used Hotpomt
E feet roc Stove
S85
1 Good Used Unico
$'19
Washer

Pomeroy Landmark

9. -Jack W Carsey, Mgr

6il_

Phone m 2181

ftome house j:lOrugl'
bedroo ms full bo ~ ement
lurcr•d n ir go~ lut nore d0sc to
l::h.:&gt;tfllHt iU ry o;d lOCII 'f'1"1 1 !'1

'fl'IJ\if.\fl fi;}'il ~ THATSCIIAIIBLEDWOADGAIIE
c:iJ \9 ~~ ~ byHenriArnoidandBoblee
W~~

Blown
FinlnCIII Anilablt
lllowo into Wilts &amp; AttiCs
SlOIM

•

c

JUST LISTED Lovelv
Ranch fype w tth about 7/e
acre S years old 3 very
ntce bedrooms W large
closets
Modern bath,
du:ung room, eKcellent
ktfchen. stone fi r eplace. all
carpeted, 2 car garage and
storage. S31.500 00
JUST LISTED - Close In,
3 33 acres very nice Ranch
Type Home. 3 bedrooms,
bath, hardwood floors,
donong bar 1n the kitchen.
double glass doors to patio,
N G forced atr heat, new
Ben F ra nk ltn coal or wood
stove. 2 story bldg for apt
Approx 28xJ2
Another
butldtng
wit h
garage
20x1 00 Lots of fruit trees A
LOW $23,900 00 buys 1hls
JUST LISTED- Route 124
Reedsvtlie (overlooks the
nverL 23/• acres City
water available EKcellent
for Tratier or Homes THIS
YOU MUST SEE $2,500.00
BEAUTIFUL Ranch
Type, bnck and frame, 3
bedrooms ,
2
baths ,
II replace. nice kllcher1, full
basement, double gar,age,
located on a;. acre , abOut 4
years old YOU MUST SEE
AT JUST S36.900 00
A BUY AT JUST $14,000 00
Lots of remodeling , car·
peting, paneling. etc . 1'h
story frame, J bedrooms ,
bath , firepla ce. N G forced
atr hea1 storage bldg
50 OTHER PROPERTIES
TO CHOOSE FROM COME IN AND TAKE
YOUR CHOICE . YOUR
WISH IS OUR COMMAND.
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
9'92 2259 or 99::! 6191

NOW VOU BRIHG
IIi THAT REDHEAD

SyrKustt, Ohta
Ph 1923993

AND HER

~H

DOG!

MeliSSA WAS BAD
EMOUGH r BUT THIS IS
TOO MUCH! TAAT BRAT
AND HER MUTT ARE
GETTIMG OUT!

HM M--· WHY HE
iMPRE:SSED ME
AS Beii'IG VERY
COUTH iHDE£Dt

FOR SALE

,.

Good
Bustnns
Bldg .
located •' 60S W Matn St ,
Pomeroy , Otlto Pretently
occup ie d by
a
going
bustness Bldg has drluAe
apartment
overhead
bnngmg In good mcom~ .
Prtced on tn$pec1ton ont~.
Can be se en any t i me trom
10 a m to 6 p m Inquire at
60S W Marn 51, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769

ple1e Sa rvrc:e
Bradford

3825

a.

fec tlveness 33.
,
7 31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Wolfman Jack 6 , Lets
Go To The Races
Price Is Right 10, That's
Hollywood 13, Music City 15
B:OO-Man From Atlantis 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6, 13 ,
Fllzpatrlcks B,10, In Performance at Wolf Trap 33:
E yewllness 20
B 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.

s.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

UNCLE: P££VII.I.
....OU CAN 'T BE

I Household

REMODELING Plumbt ng heo~
ond all types of generol re~
Work guoronteed 20 yeors . .
pertance Phone 991 2409
..

$45,000
SYRACUSE - 4 Bedroom
frame home w ith nat gas
FA. furnace , city wa ter
and large g•rden 3 lo ts In
all O'lly $111,500
50ACRES - Ne arState Rl
33 Good location for new
ho me Plenty of water, a ll
fenced tor rusl $16.500
MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroo m modest prt ced
home with nat ga s heat ,
ci ty water , bath, front
porch, back yard &amp; utility
tor $1 0,500
45 ACRES - With leading
Creek water tap, electric,
septic ta nk and mmerals
Asking $13,500
POMEROY rOld 3
bedroom frame house w1th
bath , nat ga~. city water
and large garden space
Want only $7,000
BEST BUYS ARE HERE
TODAY SEE US OR CALL
992-3325
Gordon B &amp;
Helen L. Teaford
R,.altor Associates

DRY WAll HANGERS &amp; FINISHERS
wrth 5 yrs expenence Call
(6 141345 4551 or (6UI3-15 -768:l
belween 8om and Spm
" ;;;
EXPERIENCED
992 3 170

BLOCKLAVER

ANN DAILEY S Upholstery
Portland , Ohto 643-254 2
•

,....._r,-- Headlmer

AII creation
Tr1fle
With

r----:::--:--:---.....
No~ Jes' t'

Oh, qood

JUr4 dut4, Ntna! l'm
not qoinq 1'----.£1
to pnson!

jur4 dut4!

'

morn1n.

Yesterday's Answer

2wds
4 Gas prefiX
5 Bread dish

12

Salaam
17 Gov Reagan ,
to some
18 W•thctraw

20 El

a revue
30 Tonto's
Scout
34 Approach
36 "Mr.
Tambou-

Bidding foreign to U.S.

Makes
A K 10 6

2S Kind of
beam
26 Corner
27 Mediocre
28 Wooden
c ore

"• -A 53

.. A K J ,B6 52

Z!ISew
31 Asran
hotiday

,••6 ,

32 Germaruc

~"'

•

. .....

Both vulnera ble
~hst
Sorlh East

01:! 0:""

Pass

matenal
39 "Born
•

rw· more zn this space. Author and artist Al Capp anrwunced
--

'

" 17''

-he would retire late in the summer.

Free"
ho11

BTZHKLFW

T LZWF

J U F 'W
HFTOZUQ

OKHHZUQ

BLJ C

-

PJLWF
R

--TIIOUSAND

.•

•Ieeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eee:

TW

PF

zw

PTLF

THINGS

WELL. -HUGH WALPOLE
C) 1977 Kln&amp; futu.RI Syndtcate lne

BARNEY

RUTLAND-

zu

Saturday' s Cryptoquote : TilE WHOLE SECRET OF UFE IS
.:..f'(&amp;..o.L- TO BE INTERESTED IN ONE TiliNG PROFOUNDLY AND A

THAT ISN'T EXACTL'f'
WHAT I MEANT

Close Saturday At 5 P.M.

_f)-_

Pas.s

4•

Pass

Pass

6•

sNT

Pass

B v Oswa ld &amp; James J ac oby

JJm
nc h am pJOn sh lp
br1dge m Amenca IS tough
In

I P F

ARE ~(i)U READq
TO PLAL{?

••

Jt

Opemng lead - Q.,

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

8 til noon

Pass

So uth

Pa5s 4 w
Pass Pass

CRYPTOQUOTES

••

3 ,.

!HAT LOWEEZY SMIF
IS TH' WASH IN' EST
FEMALE IN IH'
NEWNITED
STATES AN'
CANADY

E urop e where almosl
country plays se v eral
compli ca t ed artJfo c Ja l systems a lmos t a nylhtng can
happen a nd u s ually does
Take thos h a nd that d eco d ed
a malc h between E n g land
and Italy The E n g h sh boddmg 1s show n Il l the box "
Oswald 'It started som ply
enough Then No rth Jumped
to four heart s to s how a void
So uth s how e d th e · pade ace
a nd North bid fi ve notrump
to ask South to b1d seve n
diamonds If he h e ld two o f
the three top honors ~
Jim" "W est opened the
queen of h ea r ts South ruffed

every

m dummy Ten mmutes
later he came to h1s hand
w1th the quee n of clubs,
reffeli hos last lo w heart ,
lroe d to discard th e kmg of
hea rts on a club and was
down o n e whe n West ruffed
We have little ero ti c ism of
lhos play, bulof So uth had led
a low dtamond toward hts
ha nd at troc k two h e co uld
ha ve made the sla m."
Oswa ld "The l ta h a n boddong was really we1rd South

sta rted w1th an arhhcml
club to show a mtntmum

•Q

partocle

from his Dogpatch hangout for oh, so many years, will be seen ~ ~~~:~ge

11n I

SOUTH•DI
WK 87
tQJ 964

35 Brute

~11: 1 ,

" A 10 5 3 2
• K 87
• 10 7 4 3

A A97 4

Lil Abner's Abner, who has entertained millions of Americans 33 ~~:torruc

... l .... 'r

Mon., Tues., Wed.
til

ARNOLD GRATE

EAST
•J

1

'

RUnAND FURNITURE

"EST
•Q 8532
WQ J96 &lt;
• 10 2

•s

"'f.l.'L ADNER
,

7

"'ORTH

I

FRIDAY TIL 5

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

- Run"

Ccii
''

Hours

-BRIDGE

37 Ottoman
offiCial

23 "What

PIANO TUNING and Repo 1r lone
Do n•els , 2 2082 12 years terl
VICe to
County Refer 8nC~ 1
Elbe rfeld
Will DO housedeantng
992 252..
" •

Monday, November 1

rme -"

21 Hindu de1ty
22 W1thout
r;--,rF't..--.:;Ger

M1ster

man 10

29 Prepare

One making

repatrs
6 F1nn1sh lake 16 Paper siZe
19 Arrived
7 Lawyer·
22 Large kiln
abbr
23 Of a state
8 Popular
24 Yerevan ts
gathertts cap1tal
Jiigs 2 wds
25 Donnouse
9l.A!admg
27 Fasluons

~~~~~~~~~~~: 16~s

It's JUSt

I

gather mg :

One letter stmply s tand s for a nother In this sample A ls
used for t he three L's, X f or lhe two O's, etc Songle lellers,
apostrophes, the Jength and formation of the words are all
hm1s Each day the code IC'ttcrs are dtffcrent

••••
•• Convenient Shopping
••
•••
8:00
5:00
•••
Thursday

a cast
3 ReligiOUS

-lf-:JJ"'* ll Hymn

m

APPALACHIAN STOVE COMPANY
feo1 urtng Ashleys and com•
ple te se lecfton of coal gas
wood ctrc u lo ltng heaft_A
Carpen ter (614 )698 7 191 • \ \.

2Manm

port

BATHROOMS AND K1tchtn1
remodeled ceromtc file plum
btng carpentry und genen:rl
momtenonce 13 yean eJII
penence
3685
'
EXCAVATING BACKHOE , dozer
trencher
low boy
d tlrl'lp
trucks , aep hc systems BJII
Pulhn s phone 992 2478 do~ yr
ntght
,. ,.

DOWN
I Elapsed

p~~'(J~'" Israeli
~

Moore 13
10 DO-Pollee Woman 3,4, 15. Family 6,13; Lou Grant
B, 10 : Eyewitness 33. News 20 .
10 3()&gt;--Biack Perspective on the News 20.
11 oo-News 3,4.6 .. 8. 10, 13, 15:, Dick Cavett 20, Moe
Neii -Lehrer Repart 33.
' ' 3~Johnny C.arson 3,.,,, s, Mo"'\e "Street K1\l\ng"
6,13; Ko1ak8, AaC News33, N\o"V\e"Rebu'" 'o
12 oo-Janaki 33, 12 4()-Police Story B, 1 DOTomorrow 3,4, 1 1o-News 13. 1 30-Mary Hart.

r 1ver

mck.name

EX CAVATING dozer lcoder qnf •
bockhoe work dump trvt k)
and lo bo)'S for 1-!tre, w11l haul
frll dtrt to sotl l1m•stonUnti
grc11e! Coli Bob or Roge~
fers day phone 992 7()9q ntght
phone 992 3525 o r 992· 5232... ,

NEW BRICK Country
home
w1th
3
nice
bedrooms , mast er has a
full bath &amp; db I closets, nice
kitchen wtth cook and bake
units Dining and fam il y
room , patio and on e acre

Moorehead

41 French

f1gure
5 Part of
Ty Cobb's

SEWING MACHINE Repatn , ~~
v•ce oll makes 992·22&amp;4 Tie
Fabrt c Sho p
Pome•&lt;tZ
Authomed S1ng•r Soles qlll
Ser&gt;~lce We shor~ Sc:l ssors~

9 ·oo-Mulligan's Stew 3,4,15. Three's Company 6,13,
Mash 8, 10, Men of Sronze 33. VTR 20
9· J()-Soap 6. One Day At A Time B, 10; Mary Tyler

40 Actress

ACROSS

se~rous!

I

HOWERY AND MARTIN .,E
x,
covo tmg
sept1c system' 1
dozer backhoe dump tr'Ucl~
li mestone
grovel
blm;lnop
po~Jtng At 143 Phone 1 {6J.41
69B 1331

742-2211

10.
10 .oo-Sanford &amp; son 3,4,15: Big Valley 6 ; Price Is
Right B, Mike Douglas 13
10 3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15. Joker's Wil d 10.
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13 •
Marcus Welby, M D 4, Match Game 8,10
11 31)-Knockout 3,15. Family Feud 6,13, Love of Life
8 ,10: ·once Upon a Classic 33
11 5s-cBS News
Loving Free 10.
12 · 00-Newscenter 3. News 4,6,10, To Say The Least
15; Divorce Court B; Midday 13, Music 33.
12·31)-Ryan's Hope 6,13, Bob Braun 4. Chico &amp; the
Man 15, Search for Tomorrow B, 10 ; Elec Co. 33.
1 oo-Gong Snow 3, All My Children 6,13 . News B; Not
for Women Only 15; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1 30-Days ot Our Lives 3,4, 15; As the World Turns
8,10.
2 OQ-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; 2 31)-Doctors 3,4, 1S, One
Ute to Live 6,13, Guiding Light 8, 10
J .oo-Another World 3,-4, 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20
3 15-General Hospital 6 , 13
3 31)-AIIInTheFamllyB,10, LlllasYoga&amp; You20
4 DO-Mister Cartoon 3. Little Rascals Our Gang 4,
Merv Grlflln 6 , Gong Show 15, Gilligan's Is . B.
Sesame St 20,33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10 , 01nah 13.
4 30-My Three S6ns 3; Partridge Family 4. Brady
Bunch B,10, Little Rascals 15
s·oo--Bonanza 3, My Three Sons 4; Guns,moke 8;
Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20, 33. Hogan s H eroes
10, Emergency One 13. My Three Sons 15.
s 3G-Odd Couple 4, News 6 , Elec Co 20,33. Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
6 DO-News 3,4,8,10, 13,1 5, ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
6 . 31)-NBC News 3,4,15, Carol Burnett and Friends 6 ,
CBS News B,10, As We See 1120; ABC News 13
7 DO-Truth or Cons. 3, Cross Wits 4. Liars Club 6.
Poo Goes the Country 8. News 10; Gilligan ' s Is 15 :
To Tell the Truth 13: French Chef 20. Parent Et

~.. ,:e:,t

BOWERS REPAIR 1 !"T
Sweepers toasters trons dM
small apptla nces Lown moW~
na:tc t 10 Stota Htghway Garage
on Rou1e 7 Phone (61_.) ~~

ElWOOD

VIRGIL B TEAFOIIO, &gt;R.
REALTOR
216 E Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Phone 992-3325

:

St J3
B 309 oo-Merv Grllfln 3. Phil Donahue • . 13, 15; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6 , Family Affair 8, 10
9 . 3()-Edge ol N ight 6, Andy Grllllth B, Price Is Right

or 94q 2000 Racine

RFALTOR

••

I I

VIrginia 13
6 ss--&lt;:huck White Reports 10, Good Morning, Trl
State 13, 7 oo-Today 3,4,15. Good Morning
America 6, 13 ; CBS News 8, Bullwlnkle 10
7 . 31)-Scnoolles 10, B 00-Capt . Kangaroo B,10. Sesame

(Answers lomorrowl
Jumbles lYING WAGON GRASSY BARREL
Answer Kyou have them, you must have daughtOf'IISONS-IN-LAW

Wil l do roofin g . . conslrut'ttOft.'
plvmblng o nd heo t1ng Na...to~
too large or too smoll Phonal
H2 2348
~~ :

•••
••
•

Now arrange the circled _ , . to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above canoon

~. [IIJCIIIJJ[l]

EXCAVAT ING darer boc:khoe.
and dttcher Charle s R H~
f1eld
Bad" Hoe Servi.C,Jt.,
Rutlan d Ohto Phone 742 2008 •

'tEAFORD[H

r

) I

••

REAl ESTATE

M-IAT A GoUY.WHO PUT
ON A CLEAN F'AIR:
01= $0&lt;:JG CYEI&lt;:Y
MOgNING COULDN'T GET,
AF'T!:R' A WHILE.

ISQUOME' ()

~~~~~~~ ~ ~~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC; '
,~
PU922171 '

NICE ONE ocre bvrldmg s ties
por tly wooded
neor Metg s
H1gh School qq2 5523

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

I KYSH~

t
•&gt;

c-.

m

LARGE THREE bedt ,. . om 2 1 bath
sp ltl foyer wt lh ftreplo ce and
acre lo l $.44 000 992 2492

I!IJ..C:O FUU. OFMii&lt;.Aaf'
DRUbS,1H,I.T li.IHWBV~ I '5tlrea;,

I C:VRI' 5Q..If;60D'i

•••u...., ......

LARRY LAVENDER

10 1B lmo

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words

~ ISTm

WHW~

Radlatc,r
Service
,,_,
............

tnMt\ltiOfl Strrices

-

FIVE ROOM house on 2 '' ' ocres
surrounded by wood s
At
Ca rpenter m Met gs Co 10
mmule dn ve from Metg s
Mmes Needs bo th o nd wa te r
Al so o c•ty coal dump tro ler
b98 53 10 698 8890 6q8 8898 or
b98 6701

40VR

FREE ESTIMATES

CUTTUUWNINCS

STORY 3 bed room frame
house F A furnace storm win
dews ftreploce rn Mtddleporl
3_.57' or 992 5867
Phone

WV~R

Chtster, Ohio
10-30 c

SIOING-SOfFITT

Co rnmerctol pr operty appro )( 17
ocres le-,..e l lan d locat ed a t
Tuppers Pkun s on Oh1 o Ro ut e
7 Phone (614 J b6 7 .:1&gt;3::D:::'c:....,-~
VA FHA 30 yr ftnon cmg Irelan d
Mortgage 77 E Stole Athe ns
phone (614 ) 592 3051

00!-!T 'IOU

Jack's Septic
Tank SeMce
Box 34

WINDOWS
ALUMINUM

COUNTRY fa rmla nd w1 th seclud
ed wood s, wo te r and good oc
cess 10 Monroe Co vnty W Vo
Sf 000 down co li (304 ) 772
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227

AI R FORCE
WO&gt;J'T ADMIT IT,
BUT ?HE FLEW
COM BAT Mi~$10N5
ltoJ NAM~ SHES WON
EVE R Y T ROPHY
iN THE 500K!

•

Re s1 denteal
commercial.
Call
nttmate, l4 hour seorvi•co:-1'Anyday , anyt1me.
Phone 98.1-!806

1h 371-6250
s:271fC

•

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8,1977
s · •s---Farm Report 13, S· SIJ.--PTL Club 13. 5 .55Sunrlse Semester 10, 6 00-PTL Club 15
6 · 2s-concerns &amp; Comments 10, 6 J().-,Focus on
Columbus 4, News 6 . Sunrise SemestE!'r 8; 6 45Mornlng Report 3 , 6 so-Good Morn1ng, West

e.

SEPTIC TANK "
CLEANING

HOMESITE$ for sole I cere on d HO USE lRA ILER Two be droom s J
up Mt dd le porl nea r Ruf lond
a cres on Hy s ell Ru n Rood Flet
Coll992 7481
cher Welsh
NEW 3 bedroo m house 2 baths FIVE ROOM house &amp;th glassed
oi l elec 1 ocre Middleport
tn back porch 6 acres g rovnd J
close to Rutlon'd Phone 992
ocre5 good for m rng ground
7481
lo (oted tn Lo ng Bo tto m Jun e
t•on 12_. 2_.8 For more tnf or mo
SMALL form lor so le to•,. do wn
11on
coli 614 378 6330 fr om 5
owner fi nanced Mo nroe Co un
vnt1I J pm
ty W Vo Phone (lOA) 772
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227

2

UphOISIIIJ
Min Yot~n&amp;
AI

5HE 5 AN A ERO E'NGI&gt;JEER AND
TE?T PilOT-- SHES HA~DLE D
E:¥&lt;R&gt;' THING &gt;~OM JUM60 JETS
TO 'COPTE RS'

. ''

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
Reednillr, 0

-

773-5955

'"

··rho Ori&amp;iolton

R£MACEMEN1

10 '1 FT TRUCK camper ~ e lf
contomed oven propane floor
heater
gas
e le c l rt c SEVE N YE AR old house 3 acres 6
rooms end bo th 1/, mde from
refrtgerator SSSO 99:2 6398
Cl-!e!ter Prt ced for qu1ck so le
N C R 299 Bookkeeptng mochm e
985 3950
Motnte n once
c o n troct
ovo1loble Programmed to do
So le s
Repo rt s
Acc o u nts
Payoble Payroll Governmen t
Reports W 2 forms and wr1te
check s Can be programmed to
do Genero l Ledger and Ac
covn ls Rece tvo bl e
Con tact
Carol Wtlk es at 304 295 939 1

let us test yOur water Free

3 AND 4 RM furn ts he d ond un
lurn tshed op ts
Phone 9&lt;12
5434

l{utl'l n ci

--

·

,......,,o

YOU IIEC &gt;J~VER
HE'A RD OF HE R •
.H ER OkD MAN
&gt;NA? A MAR I&gt;JE
ACE' : 5 HE 5 !&gt;E'E~
~ l flBO R: NE SINCE
? HE WA S. lt..l
ROMPERS:

992-2206 .. 992-7630

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

EFEL

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' '

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AutomatiC
fransmiSSJOft Seniti

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r:.,._ACIS

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ofgon s Ntce lor Ch n stmos
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Wood Stoves

COBRA CAM 89 C B Storduster
ontenno 75 h of co ox ltke
new $225 992 5546

AKC REGISTERED Bnttony Spontel
mole 6 mo o ld S75 PI Plea
sont 304 675 1118
NORWEG ION ELKHOUND to g rv e
oway 985 3910
TO GIVE owoy Fou r long ho•red
~ilfen s
John Vo n Me ter
Syracu se 992 72B8

350

1977 CHEVY PICKUP Steps. t
4 barrel $5 400 992 2912

'

Cellulosrc (,wood fiber)

--

NEW IDEA one row cornp1c ker
Exc e lle nt cond lto n
$500
742 2359
FIREWOOD Coll 742 21.31

'te•
'
10 20 lm o

Blown Insulation

APPLES FITZP ATRICK Orchards
Sto le Ro u te 689
Phonv
Wt lk es~Jtlle b69 3785

••tol
C11ptl

Street, Pomeroy, Ohto or
Phone 992-7034 . 10-29-1m o

J&amp;L

ECONOMY TRACTO R wtt h all a t
lachmen ts L1 ke 11ew os l.. 111g
$2150 P hone (61 4) 698 3290

oe loolung fo r wo rk

t

- r-'

Young's
Carpeting

See us at 1100 East M.atn

flet Elt:Jmi1H

No Sund, Clls

Superiol
Stum EalriCtion

Home
•Mobrle
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
• T•e - Downs
• Awnrngs- Carports
Repa1rs
•Insurance

Call Professionals

CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
tro ller $4 50 Phone (614) 698
3290

If YOU hove o serv te e 10 off er

Moster Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33, Hogan ' s
Heroes 10, Emergency One 13; My Three Sons l S
5 3G-Odd Couple 4, News 6, E lee Co 20.33. Mary
Tyler Moor 10, Hogan' s Heroes 15
6 00-News 3,. ,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 JI)-N!lC News 3. 4.15 . Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 6;
CBS News 8, 10, ABC News 13 ; World of Franklin &amp;
J etferson 20
1 00-Trulh or Cons 3, Cross Wits 4 , Liars Club 6,
Marty Robbins Spotlight B, News 10. To Tell the
Truth 13, Gilligan' s Is 15, P.r ime Time 20, Know
Your Schools 33
7 3()-That Nashville Music 3, New Truth or Cons 4,
Muppet Show 6; Match Game PM
MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33, Wild Kingdom 10 ; Candid
Camera 13, Nashville on the Road 15
8 00-Little House on the Prairie 3,4,15. Londsay
Wagner 6, 13, Logan ' s Run B, Hollywood The
Selznlck Years 10, Age ot Uncertainty 20,33
9 DO-Aspen 3.4,15. N FL Football 6, 13, Belly White
B.10, Images of Ag ing 20. Fall of Eagles 33.
9 Jf)-'-Maude 8, 10
10 00-Raflerty a, 10: News 20. Equal Justice Under
law 33.
10 31)-F arm D1gest 20
11 00-News 3.4 B, 10,15, Dick Cavett 20

L--- --------- -------------------------....:.-----------1' '

Bissell Siding Co.
LOST OUT of cor lod•es glosses
a round F1ve Potnl Stat•on Fn
ntght lorn Haymon 985 3509

MONDA'(, NOVEMBER 7, 1971

S ' 00-Bonan za 3: My Three Sons 4, Gunsmoke 8,

•

uf fltl:ll\b 11111.!

liiJILll&lt;i~ l
~ ll~ll~ ·~I IH'I\I
111 liii Uill l 1•l 11\ild .mt o

.

..., ..,,.. "_ ... ,
...................

''
''
''

Bu• ine•• Opportunilieo

1\'oJJ,,'( { " " '

llh

G
O!'JBOR N WhOSE' lclS I lo..no .... n
aoarE'ss s :20J v. Th rd s·
Oavton On o ~ncl NET TIE
BA !o..ER deceasi.'d
You "re nerco~ not ht"d
that r ov navt~ been named
t!t"fenctanrs I' a le oal act ton
t&gt;nt tied Rooerta C 0 Br en
o a ntt tf \S Onr• ta Bato.er
t-&lt; utton et a t dett&gt;ndants
Tt~ ~ ~ct on has oeen asstgned
Case 1\ o 16619 111 tt"le Com
mon P leas Cou rt of Mt&gt;tQS
County 011 •0 Pomeroy Ot"110
.:5769
Tt1e Ob lt'CI Of ttle
comptamt ~ ~ to part 1110n and
qu et Iit ie to real estate
5 tui!led
n Oltve Town Sh tp
Me 1gs County Oh o, wh 1C h s
descr1bed as to tlo ws
Be •ng tn Fract on :JS
Sectron 27 Town J Range 11
Oh to Company s Purchase
beg nnmg at rne soutneast
corner of sad fra ct t on
thence north to a l1ne made as
a d tVtS10n li nt&gt; b~ John Ho rk
1d
Surveyor bclw!'cn ftH.'
sa •d Samvel Osborn and
h ill arn Osoorn runn ng eas t
ana west thetH:e west 10 the
west ltne of sa td secl ton
thence south 106 rods to the
south ltne of sa td fraclton
thence east 1]4 rods to the
soutn.ea st corner o f satd
traction
ana
place
of
bcgmntng
It · ~ hereby tnrended to
con vey a ll the sard land south
of s a d d tvt s on l tn e as
ator e s a td w tlh ttte exce pt on
of th at pa rt ou t of the no rt h
ea st part deeded to Sa muel
War d
Refe r ence Volume 112 pa g e
3.! 8 a n d Volume 21 pag e 289
Me•gs Coun ty Deed Recor ds
You- ar e r eq u tred to ans w e r
ltt e complatnt w th •n 28 d a ys
after The la sr p ubl cat ton o f
!ht s noltc e , wh iCh wtll be
publ1s he(i once e a ch w ee k for
s• "' consecut .ve wee ~ s The
1as r publtCat ton w tlf be made
on December 5 1977 an d t he
28 days to r ansY~;cr w i ll sta r t
on that date
In case o f your fa tlu r e to
answe r or o th erw .se r es p o nd
as requ rr ed bo;- th e Oh to Rv tes
of (p;d P rocedu re tudg m ent
by default w tll be r end ered
ag a tns t
you
fo r
r e t1 e f
demanded 11:1 the comp ta.n t
Larr y E Spen c;e r .
C lerk of Cou rts
Me 1gs Cou n ty, Ohi o
(1 0 ) 31 (11 ) 7 14 21 , 28 ( 12)
5, 61c

(10)

!..llolr).!c

'"',.,

tnln::.

EMORY
dPceased ~lo;it E

Da'(!On

,J:.h
J fill

.• l.n"

ARTHU~

aodress rs 190J E

•

'
•'

ll'Sl ~nO~\ n

dddrt•ss s 41o.ror1
t.ne unk.r,O ~o\n t-u:• rs

~·

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash ...-...
r---------------------~------------------------------------------i·. '
.
.
WANT AD
Busz·ness Ser·vz·ces
CHARGES

PL E'-LIC NOT ICE
TO
ONEil.!\
R.l'\~fR

TELEVISION
VIEWING

NEVER IN THIS WORLD COULD I HAVE
HER AS TAI-&lt;ING MY WIFE'S LIFE,

•

-

11 l h Johnny Carson 3,,., IS, Movie " The. Lo'le Boat"
B, ABC News 33; Mo"le " RoustabOIJt " 10
12-CliJ.- News 6. 13. Janak! 33.
12 . .FBI
" 12 31)-FBi 6, Ironside 13
1 00-Tomorrow l ,.i; 1 30--Mary Hartman 10, News
13

opemng A dmmo nd would
have been a s tro n g bod.
North responded one s pade;
South ra iSed to two and
North Jumped to s tx clubs to
tell partner t o fo rget about

spades

South's

smgleton

club was the quee n and the

sl am rolled m '

~~~~
I

A Canadian reader wants
lo know what we r e bod after

partner respond s one notrump to our one·&lt;ha m o nd
openmg W e hold

. ..

• Kxx ¥K xx

tAK.xxx

The correct rebod IS a
pass We ha ve a mtmmum
balanced h and T h ere os no
good reason to relnd our

f1ve-card su1t
oNF.WSPA Pfo' l{

~

NTt"HI'H! SF. A.'i..'iN l

(For a copy ol J A COBY
MODERN send S1 to 'Wm at
Br~dge
c/ o th1s newspaper
P. 0 Box 489 Rad10 C1 ty Sta t1on

New Yo rk NY 10019)

�10- The DailyS..ntmel, Muldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday,Nov . 7, 197"1

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

Kanauga!
station hit
We will be closed
Tuesday, Nov. 8,
for the funeral of
mother.
Edison and

Area Deaths

Mor e Service Station · in

Kanauga.
According to a report filed
with James Montg omery ,
Galli&amp;. Cclunty Sheriff, ~two

Mar y' s

telephone. Darst was able to
free himself then notil!ed the
sheriff's department.
One suspect was described
as being 6-3 or 6-1 weighing
250 pounds. He wore a red ski
mask , blue jeans and plaid
shirt.
The other suspect was
described as 5-7, 170 pounds
with blue jeans, a red plaid
shirt, mask and work boots.

Chu r ch,

Ma rtins

Sunday

Ferry. pastor of St . :James

Admissions

-

Duckworth,
Church ,
McConnelsville . Richard
pastor of Sf . Mary's Church , Syracuse ; Shirley Bishop,
Lafferty, Oh io.
Rutland.
On August 18.1 966, Father
Sunday Discharges
F olsom
was
appointed
Donnie
Laudermilt, Goldie
Chapla in of Mount St . N\ary's
Hospital. Nelsonville. where Lynch, Avis.Lawson , Steven

men came to the station at

discennected the station•s

!

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Harvey Ours, Racin~ ~
Melanie Pullen, Middleport ;
where he was a Mathematic: Lillie Adams, Long Bottom ;
Instructor , VIce Rector and
Diocesan Chairman of the Helen Leedy, Athens.
Christian
Entertainment
Saturday Disc h•rgcs Commission .
This
f i rst Clarence Murray, Sally
assignment was served for 10 Savage, Brady Knapp, Nettie
years. Since January 1962 ,
Father
Folsom ' s
other Randolph, Bernit-e Roush,
priestly assignments were St. Albert Hill , Jr.

Ap und~termined amount
of money was reported stolen
in an alleged robbery this
morning at the Ashland Save

2:35a. m. and demanded the
night receipts. They repor.tedly tied up station at·
tendant Mike Darst of Rt. 2,
Leon , W. Va ., and put him In
the back. Before leaving by
way of the back door, they

Hospital News

1

~ recently re f ired this year

Hudson ,

on Ap ri l 30,

F/ITHER FOLSOM

Jones,
Mary
Bonecutter , LesHe Ca rr ,
Myrta Schaefer.
Holzer Medlcla Center
(Discharges, Nov. 41
Mabel Blessing , Paul
Bradbury, Carol Bush, Mary
Christian, Stanley Con ley,
Willard Ellis, Bessie Fell,
Retha Foster, Alzada Halfhill, Bertha Halstead, Clara
Holberg, Polly Holiday , Fred
Howell,
Sherry Johnson ,

Robidoux , Jul iet te

Dube,
Alva
Kl eine r , Rita Seppa and
Father Armand Latraverse.
all fro m Lawrence, Mass.;
also, he is survi ved by second
cousins, Ron Kennis , Bellea ir
Beach , Fla .; Judy Kenn ls
Robi son, Dunedin, Florida,
and Joy Kennls Waldron ,
Rochester , N. Y .
In lieu of flowers, donations
be sen t to : Sister Mary
Wil lam. Mount St. Mory 's
Hosp ital , Nelsonville .
Robidoux ,

mar

Barba ra M annon, Pauline
M cKinniss, Froud Mercer,

Wayne Milhoan, John Miller,
Eva Mills, Mrs. Fred Pettry
Jr. ·and daughter, Wiinla
Pope, Althea Ridenour.
Margaret Rose, Guy Russell.
Mrs. Gary Sebert and son,

Rebecca Anna Baker
Rebecca Anna Baker, 85 ,
South Si)lth Ave., M iddleport ,
. died Saturday evening at
Veterans Memor ia l Hospital ·
ending a li ngering illness .
Mr s. Baker ~as born Aug.
27 , 1892at Harrisville, W. Va .,
a daughter of the late John
and Alcinda Garrison Windon . She was also preceded in
death by tw o brothers a nd a
sister . Mrs. Baker was a
member
of
the
First
Presbyt erian Church at
Weston , W. Va .. and Western
Chapter 40. Order of Eastern
Star, at Weston.
Surviyo ing are her husband ,
Clero M. Baker ; two sons ,
Edison M. and John W., and a

Lawrence

of Middleport; eight grand chil dren and 10 great grandchildren ; a si ster ·in law, Margaret Windon ,
Salem, W. Va .; three nieces
and three nephews.
Funeral serv i ces wi ll be at
2 p. m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings -Coats
Funera l
Home with the Rev . Dw ight
·zavitz officiating . Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Fr iends may call at
ttle funeral nome at anytime .
Pallbearers will be Ronald.

Ray and Joey Hlndy , Tom

Baker . Allen Downie. and
Gene Grate. EY"angel,lne
Chapter 172, OES, Middleport. will conduct rites at 7
this evening at the funeral
home .

FLOYD DRUMMOND
Flo yd Drumm ond , 79 ,
former grocer and service
station operator , died at 9: 30
a. m . Sunday In the Pinecrest
Care Center . He had been ill
for si x months. ser ious for
fou r months, during which

period he was a hospital

Last of the family of Alva
Filmore Drummond and
Mary Jane Baker Drum·
mond. he was one of flv•
children . He was born F•b.
17, 1898, in Walnut Township,
Gallia County . As a young

Ste.wart 1

Mrs.

Walter Stiverson Jr. and son.
Ca rroll Peaford , John
Thompson, Drexel Vance,
Ruth watson, Linda Webb,
Mrs. William Williams and
daughter, Helen Wroblewski.
(Discharges. Nov. 5)
Arron Bail, Sharon Bailey.
Mrs . · Steve Brandau and
daughter, Barbara Brown.
Mrs. Billie Canle and son,
KimCanaday,JohnDunlavy ,
Roy Gilkinson. Jay Hall Sr..
As a Henry , Mrs. Paige
Humphreys and son. James
Hutton, Ruth Johnson , Betty
McCarty, Gloria Morgan
Kevin Pullins, Ronald
Ridenour, Cynthia Russell,
Helen Sheets, J ames Stover,
Leona Trout, John Vorys,
CarletteWears, Mrs. Michael
Williams and son.
tBrlths Nov. Si
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Gilbride, a son, Racine . Mr.
andMrs.DavidMoore.ason,
Oak HilL Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Orender, a son, Jackson . Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Ward, a
Pt PI
son. - easant.
(Disch.arges, Nov. 6)
Kathy Allen, Raymond
Barr, Sara Betz, Kathryn

daughter . Mary E. Hindy, all

pati en t several times .

Bing,

Kathrvn

Father Folsom is survived
by
an
aunt ,
Elthea
Younggebauger of Lawrence,
~ss .; first cou sins , Irene
Jeannie

Bertha

Bonecutter, Mariah Brown,
Edward Cozart, Albert King,
Jeffrey O' Dell , Dorot hy

..

man he worked on the home
farm and surroundi ng farms

Older, ..Shelby

News•• in Briefs
(Continued from Pill I)
including the new 1'-72 battle IJink never before seen in public
- rumbled past lhe brightly de&lt;:orated ~emltn ~alia.
Western military experts focused thetr attenuon on the
two squadrons of 46 T-72 tanks - shorter and broader than the
older T-&lt;i2 - that feature laser range-finders and an automatic
loader .

CHARLESTON, W. VA. - MEMBERS OF UNITED Mine
Workers District 17 will be assessed $10 to keep lhe diStrict
solvent, according to district auditor Maynard Daniel. Daniel
said Sunday the assessment , approved by • the UMW
International Executive Board, will be deducted from the
paychecks of miners in the financially troubled Charlestonbased district. .
He said the district's financia l woes stemmed fron: costly
arbitr~tion cases, dues income lost in last swruner's Wildcats,
an expensive contract education program •nd lhe cost of
district conferences, conventions and elections.
MORE BODIES FOUND
ASHEVILLE, N. C. (UPH
CH CLOSING
The Meigs County Court- - Rescue workers found tbe
house will close Tuesday al bodies of three youths In a
noon for the general election. ralo·swollea creek today,
raising to elcht the number of
vlcUms of Hash Hooding ln
the
Blue Ridge Mountains ol
Keith Taylor, Gallipolis;
weotern
North Carolloa.
Myrtle Thomas, Point
Pollee
In Morganton
Pleasant ; Mrs . . William
reported
thai
the youths,
Phelps, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Hamby,
18,
his brother,
Chris
William Marshall, Mason ;
Tony,
11,
both
of
Valdese,
and
~rs . Larry Cochran, Point
Mark
Hawkins
,
H,
of
Pleasant ; Shaw Wood , Point
Morg•nton,
apparently
tried
Pleasant ; John Oshel, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. John Ross, to swim acros&amp; the creek late
Jr., and daughter, Mason ; Sunday night and drowned In
Teresa Roush, Hartford; Ked the strong current. Their
Marcum, Sr., Ashton ; ,Mrs. bodleo, clad In bathing suits,
J ames Leonard, Poinl were found early today by
rescue teams.
Pleasant ; Greg Hammack,
Letart ; Leland Walters ,
Point Pleasant; Millie
MEETINGS CANCELLED
Hodkins, Clifton ; Leonard
All scheduled meetings and
Corfee, Leon; Mrs. Manford activities of Sacred Heart
Bauer, Point Pleasant ; Edna Church in Pomeroy have
Anderson, Point Pleasant; been cancelled due to the
Mrs . Orville Randolph, death of Father · William
Buffalo ; Michael Swisher, Folsom, especially on
Point Pleasa nt ; Angela Rice, Monday through Thursday.
Poinl Pleasant ; Shelia Perry, Th~ scheduled religious
Leon;
Larry
Oldham, se rvices will remain as
Gallipolis ;
Kathleen planned.
Bemesderfer, Mason ; Mrs.
Edward Willett, New Haven ;
BOARD TO MEET
Mrs . Cecil Sines, Point
The
Meigs County
Pleasant; Mrs. Elza Powell,
Commissioners
will meet
Ashton; Mrs. Charles Holley,
in
special
session
Tuesday
Ashton; Mrs . Thurman
at
2
p.m.
at
their
office in
Hughes, Gai!ipolis Ferry;
the
courthouse
to
review
Jamie Woomer , Point
the
CETA
program
.
· Pleasant; Natasha Hammack, Point Pleasanl;
Russell Slayton, Viriton. 0 .;
ASK TO WED
Na ncy Woodard, Gallipolis
A marriage license has
Ferry; Charles Wri ght .
Middleport;· Mrs. Everett been issued to Virgil Parson,
Thomas ;
Glenwood ; ~9. Pomeroy, and Geraldine
The odore Smith, Mason ; Kess inger, 40 , RL 4,
Mrs . Glen Gibson, Point Pomeroy .
Pleasant;
Mrs .
Ora
Doorham, Jackson , 0 .; Mary
DEPUTY NAMED
Lynn McCoy, Gallipoli s;
James Stout has been
Mark Thomas Clark, Letart ; appointed deputy sheriff
Kevin Barker, New Haven;
according to an entry in
Michael Smith, Pomeroy ; Meigs County Common Pleas
Roger Klein, Clifton; Mark
Court.
~
McGuire,

derson;

Mrs.

Jack Caldwell 1

Albert Sawyer, Jr., Penny
Smith, Mary Thompson, John
Weeks.
(Births, Nov. 6)
T'
h
Mr. and Mrs. !mot Y
Brannon, a daughter, Ripley,
W. Va. Mr. an d Mrs. Ro"U"C"rt

Gallipolis; Kimberly Bayes,
Gallipolis; Cora Bonecutter,
Point Pleasant; Michael
Fink , Middleport ; Tonya
Shaffer , Scottown , 0. ;

Crwnp, 8 son, Clifton,

Harland

w. Va.

Keith

Taylor ,

PLEASANT VALLEY
Morgan Michael Sayre, Leon,
Discharges - Veva Warns- and Mrs. Garland Bostic,
ley. Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Gallipolis Ferry.

Woomer, Point Pleasant ;

and she died in 1969.
He was a member of the
First Baptist Ctlurch, and a
former. member of the
Red men . • He operated a
serv ice station at the corner
of Second Ave . and Sycamore
St., and a grocery and rolling
store just above lt. He also
worked for the Marietta
Manufacturing Co . during
World War II . His last · work
was as owner and operator of
a service station and grocery
store at Addison, which he

sold to the Hills.

Funeral services will be

-

New research

alcholism may be linked to
heredity, according to an
authority on the disease that
has affected nine million
Americans. ''The cause of
alcoholism, in truth, is
Wlknown," said Dr. Donald
Goodwin, '"but it doeS run in

families and this is a starting

point."

ELBERFELD$

2 Qt. Beans 'n Stuff Slow Cooker No. 3299

genuine

stoneware
pot

he 2·4 and 7-9 p. m. Tuesday

'

A Week For .49 weeks and we pay the
50th week for you.

at Miller's.
Pallbearers
w i ll
be
granddaughters and grand ~
sons : JChristie and Cathy
Hess and Jan. Jay. Brian and
Scott Drummond.

pot lifts

from base
for easy

cleaning

132991

.

VOTE 11 YES"
ON STATE
ISSUE 1.

· $40,000 Maxim urn Insurance For Each Depositor

Election day registration, leghold animal traps and an
abundance of public school operating levies and bond issues
topped today's balloting throughout the Buckeye SIJile.
Brown placed 50 mspectors in Cleveland to help handle
election day registration and pledged to be vigilanl of any
abulM!s. The se~retary of state has been a vigorous foe Of
election day regtstration, and for tbe first time in his 26-year

Murder, kidnaping charged
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Akron .
Milton Bryant, 22, Akron, was
The arrest came after a
arrested early loday after he police chase of several miles
allegedly dragged a teenaged in which he crashed into
neighbor girl behind his car se ven ca r s, injuring five
until she died.
persons·. Miss Robinson's
Bryant was arrested on body was found in Akron
aggravated murder •nd about 10 :10 p.m. but Medina
kidnaping charges in the County authorities were lold
death Monday evening of earlier a party of hunters had
Tonia Robinson, 13, who lived seen the car dragging the girl
four houses from Bryant in along a co untry road.

Paid lor by : Ohioans for the Preservation of Honest
Elections. 16 E. Br•&gt;ad St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.'
Jean, Barren, Chairman, 1948 McCauslen Manor,
""'- Steubenville, Ohio 43952.

2QUART
SLOW COOKER.
Ideal size for soups, chili, stews. baked beans and so many
other delicious dishes. Glazed stoneware pot removes from
base for oven cooking and easy cleanup-pot even goes in
tha dishwashar! Low-haat base 1ranslers heat slowly and
evenly to give foods a savory
slow cooked flavor.

HOUSEWARES ON TliE 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

t'Orporations constructing low-and moderate-income bousing,
and eliminating the stale's f/50,000 debt ceiling.
State Issue Lgenerated the most political interest. Placed on
Brown said most of the inspectors, who were trained MOild3y
and will be earning $60 for the day , are "people I have known lhe ballot by Ohioans for the Preservation of Honest Elections,
for years" but are not employed by his office or by boards of it was to eliminate the five-month old program of ell!ctlon day
vo ter registration and pennanent registration .
election.
Democrats and organized labor, which pushed the program
Repeal of "instant " and permanent voter registration was
lhrough the General Assembly last spring, c•mpaigned
State Issue I.
Voters in 222 public school districls in 81 counties de&lt;:ided on heavily f&lt;f a "no" vote to keep election day registration to
property tax quOlltions which could determine the financial increalM! voter participation.
Republicans, with the help of sizable corporate
solvency of their schools.
·
contributions,
fought for "yes" votes to eliminate confusion
Many of tile school districts will be in financial trouble if the
at
the
polling places and to keep the GOP from being
and
fraud
operating levies fall . Some 31 will have to close for the rest of
driven
further
into
the minority in Ohio.
lhe year because of a shortage of operating funds, and at least
Emotionally,
the
hottest
campaign was on Issue 2. The Ohio
16 others will be in difficult cash positions.
Especially crucial was the 6.1-mill operating levy on the Committee for Humane Trapping called for outlawing the
ballot in Toledo, where schools have been closed since Oct. 31. leghold trap on grounds it is cruel to wild animals and
alternative snares and "quickkill" traps are available.
Also on the b8llot were:
Ohioans f&lt;r Wildlife Conservation put on a heavy campaign
- Mayoral contesls in Cleveland, Tole&lt;jo and Youngstown.
-State Issues 2, 3 and 4, prohibiting itse of the steeljawed against Issue 2 on grounds it would hurt the trappipg industry,
leghold trap in Ohio, providing for stale aid to private cause overpopulation , spread disease and result in a
career wok a posttion on a state issue by supportin~ the

constitutional amendment to repeal it.

proliferation of farm pests.
Issue 3, which has been attempted before wilhout success,
called for a bortding program lor private developers
constructing &lt;r rehabilitating housing.
Proponents said it would spur home construction and
improve blighted areas, while opponents maintained it would
set a dangerous precedent, allowing the government to
underwrite loans to private corporations.
Issue 4, also placed on the ballot by the General Assembly,
called for replacing the current 126-year old debt ceiling with a
OoaUng limit deteunined by the state's income.
Proponents claimed It would be a modem method of
Jinancing government coostruction projects, while opponents
warned it would ruin Ohio's credit rating.
The prime mayor 's race in Ohio was in Cleveland, where
stale Rep. Edward F . Feighan and Dennis J. Kucinich, clerk of
municipal courts, squared off. Both Democrats defeated
Republican May&lt;r Ralph J . Perk in the non-partisan primary,
and each had a share of endorsemenls.
Ohio's 13,168 polling places were to clolM! at 7:30p.m.

.

"

r
'

•

entine
NO. 145

VOl. XXVIII

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
:::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::::::

Pomeroy parade

.

openrng season
set December 4
The annual Christmas
parade In Pomeroy will be
held . Dec. 4 at Z p.m.
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Everyone Interested In
participating Is aoked to
coniJict Barbara Chapman
at the chamber olllce,
located In the courthouse,
or call ber at 992-5005 or
99%--5337.

I

SEVERAL REPRESENTATIVES of the Charleston,
W.Va. office of the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council
were in Pomeroy Monday for the Area lil meeting.
Hosting the meeting were members of the Big Bend
Service Unit with Mrs. Pal Thoma, service unit director,
as chairman. With her, from left to right , are Noby .

By United Pre11SIIlternatlonal
WASHINGTON - CONGRESS HAS ADJOURNED
without adjourning . The Senate and House have ceased normal
operations at least until lhe end of November, an approach
designed to let Senate-House energy negotiators work without
interruption.
The conferees met again Monday, slowly working their
way through the complex, many-faceted package , which was
given top [riority for Ute first session of lhe 95th Congress.
Coogress will not officially adjourn until it sends an energy bill
to the White House and there is no indication when lhat will
bappen.
The House will · meet every Tuesday and Friday in
prelormasesslons untO Nov. 29 when it is scheduled to reswne
regular business. No legislation will be acted on during that
period. The Senate generally will follow the same pattern,
although Byrd has scheduled Nov. 1~ and Nov. 18 as "work"
days to dispose of se-condary bills and conference reporls. ·

the home."

Stop In Today and open your Farmers
'
Bank Christmas Club and Don't Be
Caught In the Reel Next Year.
CLOSED FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 1TH
FOR VETERANS DAYI

better."

NEW YORK - THERE HAS BEEN A 71 PERCENT
increase over the past 9 years in the nwnber of American men
who neither hold nor seek jobs, while the percentage of
employed married women grew from 41.5 to ~2.4 percent.
Business Week magazine said Monday the figures mean more
and more "househusbands" are cooking, mending, washing
dishes and taking care of the kids.
"More married studenls, other young husbands and
middle-aged men are staying home and letting their wives
earn the paycheck," Business Week said. "Increasing
nwnbers have apparently discovered that contemporary
society offers new government and corporate-financed
alternatives to working for a living, or that ... their place is in

Miller's tiome for Funerals.

Cheshire officiating, and
burial will be in Mound Hi ll
Cemetery . Call ing hours wi ll

Brown had forecast a turnout of 2,850,000, exceeding the
record of 2,795,000 in 1965 for a comparable "off-year "
elecUon.
.
"Instant voter registration has been very light," said Brown.
"Some people tried to use birlh certificates, not knowing any

WASHINGTON - THERE HAS BEEN A dramatic decline
in deaths caused by heart disease in recent years and the toll
can be expected to drop even more, says the president of tbe
American Heart Association. Since 1950, the rate of deaths
from heart disealM! in lhe U. S. has dropped 30 percimt, arid
on~ird of that reduction has taken place in the last five
years, said Dr. Harriet Dustan in an interview in U. S. News
and World Report. ·
"Modifications in life style may play a role - keeping your
weight down, giving up smoking and getting exercise. Control
or high blood pressure is very important," she said.

held at 12 p.m. Wednesday at

the Rev . Bill 'Beagle of

indicates

·----------llllliliil..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiill--------------..

H•ss. Middleport ; Joyce

Straight ot Gallipolis in 1960, ,

LINK TO HEREDITY
KANSAS CITY, Kan, (UP!)

Gallipolis ; Mrs. Lloyd Sears,

of the Bethesda community In
1928, and she died in 1959.
They are survived by lour

(Mrs . Alan Jensen}, Akron ; ·
eight grandctlildren. and one
great-grandchi Id.
He then marri ed Rebecca

teU."

Richards , Stephanie Parsons, Hen-

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Davis, a Gallipolis; Sheryl Perry,
Point Pleasant ; Pauline
son, Middleport.

children
Harold
Drummond
of Logan,: Otlio
i Joe,
Add i sOn ;
Mrs . Arthur {Jane Ann)

By United Press International
Secretary of State Ted W. Brown said the early voter turnout
In today's general election was "light to moderate" with " very
Ught" Instant voter registration reported.
"lth~lt is going just about the way we e1pected it to," said
Brown. From light to medium . But it's really too early to

Langsville;

until he went to work. before
he was married , for the Sfafe
Highway Oepartment.
He marri ed Bel va Thornton

Early ·Ohio voting light to moderate

The magazine said 2.2 million men are not wage earners.
About balf of them are disabled and can more easily collect
beQOfits under revised Social Security programs.
WASHINGTON- FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS FOUND
poor ventilation; an inaccurate company map and at least a
dozen ~ety violations contributed to the deaths of 26 men at
tile Scotia Coal Co. mine in 1976, Coal Outlook reported
Monday. The weekly magazine obtained the results of an
unpublished report by the Mining Enforcement and Safety
Administration. Previous publication of the report was halted
by a federal judge on a petition from Scotia Coal Co.
The Scotia victims were killed in two separate explosions.
Eleven men, including three federal inspectors, were killed in
tile second explosion while investigating the first blast March
9, 1976. Coal Outlook reported the victims of . tile second
explosion were using an inaccurate mine map provided by the
Scotia Coal Co.
It quotea the report as saying efforts to increase the
ventilation in the mine "failed primarily because of an
lnaccura\f n'line map which was prepared by the company and
used by the officials as a guide to develop recovery plans."
CLEVELAND- DEMOCRAT EDWARD FEIGHAN, a
state representative backed by the party, and Dennis
. (Cootlnued on Pll(e 12)

Savaile of Alhens, a member of the Council Board, Lura
Watkins, public relations chainnan; Maybelle King,
director of field service; Barbara Murray, development
director ; Shirley Moses, executive director, and Peg
Murdock of Williamstown, W. Va ., a past area chairman
who presided at the meeting. See Charlene Hoeflich 's
report and more pictures on page 6 today .

Utilities stock
coal for 90 days

By
United
Press
Jntematlonal
The state's major electric
utilities Monday
flied
contingency plans with the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio outlining what steps
:;:;:;:;:; :;:;;::::;:!(:::::;::{i''?'f''f~???}f' they would take in the event
of a lengthy coal miners
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
strike next month.
Thurs day throti g h
OhiQ Edison, Ohio Power,
Saturday, a chance of Toledo Edison, Cleveland
Electric
Illuminating,
showers Thursday and
Friday and fair Saturday.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric;
Highs will be In lite 60s
Dayton Power &amp; Light and
Thursday and In the low or
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio
mid 50&amp; by Saturday. Lows
Electric Co. all reported they
will he In the 50s early
have stockpiled enough coal
to last about 90 days.
Thursday and lowering to
the upper 30s or low ·40s by
All the utilities had
Saturday morning.
basically the same plan
,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,:'o':'o':'.''''''''''''''''''''''::;::;;o:o:,::;o:o ;o:,·.,:::

which calls for a monitoring cent.
of supplies and steps to be
At the 20 day level,
taken when the coal supply commercial and industrial
begins dropping off.
customers would be directed
The first step would come to curtail electric usage to
after about 40 days of the plant maintenance leveL
stockpile is used up when
Firms which fall to meet
utilities ·begin in-houuse guidelines under any curtaileconomies such as shutting ment option for longer than .
off lighting, heating and seveh days could face disconcooling systems and requests nectlon for Ute dtD"ation ofthe
for voluntary cutbacks on the emergenC)'. according to the
part of industrial customers. plans filed with PUCO.
When the stockpiles have
"The plan, subject to PUCO
dwindled I to about 30 days, approval, is designed to
then the utllites would ask the extend available fuel supllies
PUCO and Gov. James A. as far as possible in.order to
Rhodes. to order businesses assure basic needs, such as
and Industry to
cut heating
requirements,
consumption by 50 per cent lhrough the winter months,"
and ask residences for said officials of Cincinnati
voluntary cuta of about ?.II per
Gaa &amp; E\ectr\c .

Three
hurt
in
C
_
.
i
l
.
.
b.d
·
. · · ounc. accepts cruiser 1
Wreck On SR 7
•

Three persons were injured
in a three-vehicle collision at
7 a.m. Monday on SR 7 near
the James M. Gavin Plant
south of Cheshire.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said an
auto operated by Paul D.
Mitchell, 22, Cheshire, struck
the rear end of a vehicle
driven by Jacqueline K. Case,
24, Middleport. The impact
forced Case's car into a third
driven by Rick J. Morris, 25,
Racine .

·

There was minor damage
to the Morris vehicle. The
Mitchell and Case cars were
demolished. The drivers were
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center by ambulances
provided by the Gallia County
Volunteer
Squad
and
SEOEMS. None was reported
seriously hurt.

An accident occurred at 3
p.m. on SR 124, seven tenths
of a mile east of Pomeroy
where an auto operated by
Loyal M. Ho!man,17, Racine,
attempted to pass another
vehicle when a third and
unidentified vehicle started
to pass Holman.
Holinan' s vehicle went oft
the left side of the highway,
striking a block wall. There
was moderate damage. The
unidentified vehicle con·
tinued on.
Wet pavement was blamed
for an accident at 4:45 p.m.
on SR 7, three tenths of a mile
south of Little Kyger Rd.
where the patrol said Vesta
G. Ham, ~7 . Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
lost control of her car. Her
vehicle ran off the highway
into a ditch . There was minor
damage.

Notices, local briefs
Tickets are on sale for a
turkey dinner te be sponsored

to attend .

The b1d of Smith-Nelson has written Amy Kingsland explain the new equipment
Motors of Pomeroy was Jones on two occasions and was L. B. Vaughan, chief
accepted Monday nightto sell has had no reply a bout operator of the breathalizer
a police cruiser to Pomeroy cleaning up debris beside the test for the Ohio Department
village when council met in ' new Sti~fler building on of Health.
regular session.
Pomeroy s West Main St. The
Vaughan explained thatthe
Council accepted Smith- mayor said the fire marshall intoxilyzer was less exNelson's bid of $4 662 with has given the village per- pensive and can be used by
trade-in and transfer of all mission to clean up the area state police and is more
equipment except the radio . and place a 20 foot fence in accurate. Vaughan .slated
The bid also offered a 10 pet . front of the open space.
tllat the breatha!izer' is as
discount on all work on the
Mrs. Jones will be billed for good as the operator. An IBM
car as long as it is owned by the expenses for the cleanup • card is placed in the inthe village and also 10 per- and if she f~ils to pay, the toxilyzer and records the test
cent on any work done on any money due ~111 be placed on automatically.
other equipmeni owned by· her tax duplicate.
Vaughan also stated that
the village.
Council in other 'business · the health department would
The other bid received was discussed the possibility of decide bow long it would take
for $5 347 from the Pomeroy replacing
its
present to train people to operate the
Motor' Co. with trade and breathalizer for · an in- machine. Cost of the new
transfer of all equipment, tottilizer. The machine is used equipment is $4,000. Council
including the radio.
to determine if a person is showed interest but tabled a
In other matters, Mayor intoxicated.
decision.
Clarence Andrews said he
Meeting with council to
The mayor said Columbus

Improvement study is
accepted by planners

on the matter will be held
Volunteer Firemen at the held all ·day . Friday in th•
overall economic develop- next Monday in Columbus.
SeniOr Citizens Center and basement of Forest Run
ment plan in preparation ~y The local commission voted
New York Clothing House in United Method is t Church
Buckeye Hills for an eight- to send a letter in support of
Pemeroy and Dutton Drugs located on County Road 30.
in M iddleport. Deadl ine fer
Associates, Columbus, was county area . The plan is now the project to Improve the
purchasing tickets is Nov. 15.
Parents interested In Meigs received Monday afternoon in draft form . It is required
land.
Serving will begin at 5 p.m . High School attendan c e by the executive committee
Also discussed was an Ohio
beforo.any
funds
by
HUD
are
policies and practices are
Departmeg$.,_of TransThe Meigs County Court- Invited to attend the PAT of the Meigs County Regional granted, Burt said.
house will be closed Friday, meeting at 7:30 this evening Planning Commission
He pointed out that copies portation discussion to be
Nov. 11 In observance of at the high school. Otis meeting at the Fanners Bank ofthe draft fonn may be seen . held Nov. 29 from I to 7 p.m.
Veterans Day .
Knopp, Fenton Taylor , Sam Building.
at the county ·commissioners at the Meigs Museum in
Crew and Earl Young will
Presenting the final report office in Pomeroy or tit the Pomeroy on the proposed
The Rutland PTO will hOld discuss student attendance ·
extension of the SR 7 by-pass.
a fall festival Saturday, Nov. and will answer questions of for the finn was James Buckeye Hills office in
12 from' 4 to 8 p.m . at the parents ,
·
.
Anyone with input on that
Jennings, Jr., who said it Marietta.
elementary school. There will
should be updated aru:mally.
Projects reported in the project Is invited to the
be games, prizes , crafts, a
Ttlere will be only· one free
during
the
sweet show, general store cervical cancer clinic in He 'invited members and the request stage for priority museum
designated
hours.
A
hearing
public
to
read
the
report
at
and a jai l.
· Meigs
County
dur ing
rating include water and
A door prize of a $25 November. That clinic has their convenience at the sewer extensions in Mid- on the discussion and project
savings bond will be given been set tor Wednesday , Nov. office of the Meigs Counly dleport and a comprehensive will be set for a later time.
away donated by the Rutland 23, at the Trinity Church
It was reported that the
day care program for
Branch of the Pomeroy basement in Pomeroy. Hours Commissioners.
of 4-H plat books is
supply
children
The
committee
also
in
the
county.
E.
F.
National Bank .
for the cl inic will be 8: 30a .m .
A queen , king, prince and to 12 noon and from 1 to 4: 30 reviewed cleari~g house Robinson was named to serve
running low . and it was
prinCess will be named . p.m. All Me igs .area woman items and , approved the as an alternate ·on the in- discussed as to ways through
Winners are chosen by the are invited to make an apwhich the books might be
coin method . Refreshments pointment for the cl ini c by Rutland by-pass proposed by dustrial site committee
revised and republished. The
composed
the
Ohio
Department
of
Highof
representatives
of . vegetable sour· sand - call i ng 992-.5832 in the
wiches and pop wil be sold. evenings or on weekends .
ways in the planned im- from th~ planning com- books were · originally
" Workers are to meet at the ,
provement of Route 124 . missions of both Meigs and compiled in 1969.
school on Friday, Nov . 11. at 7
. The November meeting of However, it was pointed out Athens Counties.
Attending the meeting
•
p.m . to set ur booth s. Kitchen th e Eastern Local Band .
A letter from the Fann presided over by Thereon
workers wi l meet at 8 a .m . Boosters will bt: tonight at that the by-pass south of
· on _Saturday .
Johnson , president , were
7: 30 p.m . in the l.ligh school Rutland is several years Bureau was read pertainiflg
band room . Too ics of away.
Robinson, Orion Roush, C. E.
to
the
Shade
River
RACINE - A special discussion will include the
Blakeslee,
Wesley Buehl,
Pomeroy
native
Jeffrey
Reclamation
Project
which
meeting of Racine American upcom ing Soil and .'W·,--.ter
Fred Hoffman, Charles
Legion Post 602 will be held at Conc;e r vation ba nque1 and Burl of lhe Buckeye Hills calls for .improvement in
Nov . 17 by the Rutland

8 p.m . Thursday to finalize
plans for the Veterans Day
dinner to be held on Nov. 13.
All pos t members are askE:d

A rui;Timage sale w i ll be

possible musical tn slrument
pur chases . All parent s nl

(Continued on Pille 12)

The final draft of a capital
improvement
capability
study prepared in recent
months by Jennings and

Regional Planning Com mission discu::;scd iiH area

land use plan and the area

strip mined lands which are
causing pollution .
The letter noted a hea r ing

'

and Southern Ohio Electric
Co ., has placed a high
pressure sodium 400 watt
light near the fire station to
give council an Idea of what ·
they are like and to let council
decide if it should consider
placing them in other. areas. '
Council must decide as the
light will have to be removed
by Nov . 15.
Council will obtain the cost
of the light in comparison to
pr~sent lights.
Also meeting with council
was John Anderson on behalf
of the. Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce who suggested
free parking should be offered a week before Christ·
mas. Several suggestions
were made as to how and
when the free parking might
be oflered. The Rev. William
Middlesworth suggested It
begin at I p.m. until closing of
the stores. Council thought
the suggestion an excellent
one.

Harry Davis of coiDlcU
· suggested that _Larry Powell
(Continued oa Pll[t 12)

Water sales
app:.;9ved by
Masoncouncll

MASON, W. Va. - Town
Council Monday night approved the sale of water to
the Mason County PubUc
Service District ( PSD) to be
distributed by the PSD to
rural customers In the area of
Foglesong and Hanging Rock
Roads.
• Representing the people
who want water were John
Hobbs and Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Cadle.
Others requesting water
service were Charles H.
Estep, Carolyn Estep,
.Chester Bailey, Carl Ray
Schwarz, Scott Cadle, Harry
Kearns, Joseph Kearns,
Hazel · Hoschar, Bessie
Craddock, Betty Lambert,
Charles J . Lambert, Evelyn
Edwards, Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Russell and the
Provico chicken farm .
Calvin Smith, representing
the PSD, commended council
members lor making It
Dowler, Naemi Brinker ,
Eleanor Thomas and Boyd possible to provide water to
the residents in these areas.
Ruth .

'

•

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