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                  <text>II-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, q., Mooday, July 2:i, 1977 _

News •• ,in Briefs

HOSPITAL NEWS

Commanches celebrate
peace treaty signing

(Continued from page I)
Bach, said the U.S. military should experiment with women In
e«nbat roles in Anny and Marine corubat battalions and Navy
Slips, and In Ute Air Force by placing women in missilelaupch
crews, a fighter sq\18dron and a bomber .Squadron .
MILLINOCKET, MAINE - FIREFIGHTERS IN
BAXTER State Park had completed about 85 per cent of a
control line todi!Y around an eight&lt;lay-old forest fire, Ute state
Forest Service said. Tbe encircled area Includes between 5,000
and 6,000 a&lt;res of state land and property owned by the Great
Northern Paper Co., more than half of which has burned, a
spokesman said.
·
To em lain the fire - and to prevent it from sweeping up
the side of 5,2117-foot Mount Katahdin -officials are prepared
to sacrifice all Ute acreage within the control lines, he said.
"Bu• tllat doesn 't necessarlly mean we're going to lose aU
of that area. We ba ve men and planes working to save as much
as we can. We just want to contain Ute fire," he said. Tbe
. Fore5t Service.estimated the blaZe has already consumed 3,500
acres of park land and property owned by tbe paper company.
ALTADENA, CAUF.- WIND-WHIPPED FLAMES have
charred lliOre than 3,000 acres of dense tinder-dry brush in a
remote, uninhabited area of Angeles National Forest and sent
billows of smoke over the Los Angeles Basin. Two helicopters
fi~ting the blaze collided late Sunday while hovering over tile'
Mill Creek Sununit Station 17 miles northeast of Pasadena.
Two fire fighters reportedly suffered head injuries and were
rushed to County-USC Medical Center.
Condition of the injured fire fighters was unknown.
Thirteen aircraft bombarded the flames Sunday aiding tbe
1,000 fire fighters manning three fronts. Low humidity
readings and temperatures nearing 100 degrees were
hampering efforts to douse the blaze.

Bible .school dates are set
The Pomeroy Community
Daily Vacation Bible School
has been set for August 1 ·
through 5 to be held at the
Lutheran
Church
in
Pomeroy. Three churches,
the Trinity, Methodist, and
Lutheran .are associated in

IGNACIO, Colo. (UPI) Comanche braves armed
with lance3, boWl and rlfii!IJ
celebrated the signing of a
historic peace treaty with the
Ute Nation this weekend by
perfmning their Black Knife
Dance for only the fourth
Iinne in nearly 10 yean.
The Tu-w~ (Black Knife)
Dance, perfprmed ID four
parts, honors the crow, whoee
squawking
traditionally
warned Indians of intruders
in their camps.
Leaders of the Comanche
and Ute Nations gathered In a
sacred white tepee Sunday to
sign a treaty officially ending
centuries of warfare between
their trl bes . After the
ceremony, welded from the
eyes of white qten by an

honor guard of warri ors
ringlllg the tepee, a
Comanche
elder
told
- mbled Indians of the
treaty's slgnlllcanee.
''Oar blood Is red and we
are red," aald MelviD ·
'IUEISS ASSIGNED
Kerchee, head of the
RACINE - AlrmaD
Comanche . War Dance
Barry A. Tbelu, seD of
Society, lp"8!riJlg from the
Mn. Betty L Tllelu of
center of an . . - farmed by
BadDe bu - · aulped
a pine-log arbor bowed lrlth
to Lowry. AFB, Colo., after
upen branches.
~mpletiDg Air Force baste
"Now we areaUu me," he
lniiiiiD&amp;. AlrmaD Tbelas
said. "May the gnilil never
will
Dow
receive
grow on the path between ua.
SJIO"Iallzed traiDhlg ID tile
I want you to tell your
mllDIUoaa aad weapoDs
chlbhn whit hapPOIMd here
maiDieDaD« field. He Is a
today."
1174 p-aduate ol Southem
According to folklore, Utes
Loeal Hlcb SehooL His
and Comandlel ptb«ed In
father, Roger G. Tbelsa,
the T - Plnhandle 100
realdet at R.D. ; , RaciDe.
yean qo to sign ·I treaty
elldlnc a century of war. But
~- - - - - - - --- - - - ----- ~ - ~--- -- 1 a rifle sbot, fired . by an
unknown brave, dilpel aed
the Indians and tlie treaty
never Will CODcluded.
I
Before •ter!Dg the tepee,
BOBBY WESTFALL
Bobbv Lee Westfall, 42, a CanaiiCbe and Ute leaden
resldenl of Rt. 1, Gallipolis, were purified by 11110lar from
died in ttle Pine Crest Care a cedar fire, wafted over
Center, Monday morn ing .
them by Cllmancbe medicine
He was born July 5, 1935, In Man Mlltm Sovo Sr. using a
Roane County, W. Va. , son of
Hurl Westfall and the late handful of eagle . feathe111.
Ruby Boggs Westfall . .

!

Area

D~aths

He

married

!

'Patr icia

Ballengee In Virginia on May
24, 1H9. She survives. along
with one son, Brett Lee and
one daughter, Bobbi Jean.
Frank ; Cheshire ; Jack,
Hampton, Va .; Joe, Cold·
water. Mich. ; one sister, Mrs.
Lorrene Bayliss. Belle, W.
Va.
Mr. Westfall was a retired

,.,~N DR. IN
July -25-26

Double Feature

Program
Clint Eastwood
THE
ENFORCER

Ir onworker and a member of
lhe Cheshire F and AM

Lodge, Gallipolis York Riles
and the Columbus Shrine
Club. .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
McCoy . Wetherholt-Moore
Funeral Home In Gallipolis
with Rev. William Uber of·
ficlatlog. Burial will be In
Ohio Valley Memory Gar·
dens.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 2-4 and 6:30 untll9 r .m.
Masonic: services wil be
held 6: 30 p.m. Tuesday.

R

R

KENNETH SOVEL .
REEDSVIl LE The
obituary notice In the Sunday
Tlmes.sentinel for Kenneth

E. Sovel should have Included

as a sur.v lvor the name of 1

half-brother, John Hetzer. of
Reedsville.

American -artist Maxfield
Parrlah and actor Walter
Brennan were born on July
25, the artist In 1870 and
Brennan In 11194.

Youngster home. safely
after Huck Finn trip
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Jason Gusler, 8, Ute object of
a search by hundreds of
pollee and civilians returned
borne Sunday. He had been
miasing since Thursday and
told pollee lie had been In the
company of a man he
identified ooly aa Jalm.
H&lt;moclde Delcllve Tom
JoJ1'!8 lllid the boy had not
been assaulted or held
against his will. Jmes said
the youth walked Into his
borne Sunday and told his
mother he was all right.
" It waa just a Tom sawyer
adventure to the boy," said
Jones.
Jones said the youth had
scratcbes on his legs, anns
and face and bllsten on his
feet and Will still wearing the
green IIWimnlq trunks and
blue tennil m- he had oa
wben he diupeared.
Jones said lbe youth and
the man left the Olentangy
RIYI!I' area where the boy had
been swllliming abollt 9 p.m.
Thunday.
The boy told pollee the man
-~ Friday aulhoritles were
looking for him and waa
afraid to take him home.
Y 0UJ18 Guajer sald he and
John went to Ute borne of a
friend of Jalm's and got a ·
glass of water and . then
walked to a swllliming pool
and watched the IW!mmen
until they cot lunir)'.

They tben went to a ch11rch
and had ftee fish, beans and a
roll for dinner.
Police said Ute boy and Ute
man slept in weeds along the
river Friday night and on
Saturday night they slept In a

wooded area near the old
Ohio Penitentiary.
Tiley had douglillllll for
breakfast and then Jalm told
Ute yoUth to go hanie, pollee
said.
"It II just a matter of time
before we caleb the man,"
said Jones. "He wOald be
better off turning hlmaelf In
at pollee headqllBrters .
Somebody knows hlm and II
going to Call us." .

'

Liquid gas
explodes
m Florida
'

JAcKSONVILLE ,
(UPI) - Two large

Fla .

tanb of

Uquld petroleum
gas
exploded
In
North
Jackaonvllle today, endangering nearby chetillcal
storage tanka. Police ordered
about 2,000 periODS fr(IJII the
area.
First reports indicated
there were PO lnjuriee when
twp LP tanka, each of 30,000
gallon capacity, bunt open
about $ a.m. EDT and sent
names Into the illy that were
visible for two miles.
Pulice Capt. J.w. Wingate
Sllld firemen were holing
down nearby storage tanka,
"but_it's still a powder keg."
The eiJikleion occurred at
the FiarGas Co., acr018 the
street from the Allied
a.emlcal Co. plant.
Pollee and firemen blocked
Off all roads iettdbw to the
area llld beglll orderlog
about l,OQO peraons from the
lndiLitrtal-reslde area.
One of' the LP gu tanU
which broke open waa about
50 per cent fall of the·wlaUie
fuel and the olher waa about
35 per cent full; Qlft~ said.

Inalde

the teDt, the
participant&amp; I!Mted a HI!
~
peace
pipe while nearly 3,500
onlooten waited outalde
under tbreatening stltll.
Ita the Bilek Knife J:lliDot
bepn,thetlntlnvellltoU.
are111 carried a oootle4 hotlr
and arrow to l)rinhollite the
lllnt for villlge dop.
"'lbe crow does not Jib
doss, " aald Leon Motah, .
official historian for tile
Qlrl•t.wna Ovnandles. "Thr
leading brave will shoot any
clog he-. 10 the croft will
be sale."
Behind I pi'\JOeJIIllll of twt
dozen women dr~ In red
and
white
eoatumea
cll!:wated with beadl and
1n11 C11!111 a dozen IU;ea
with blacli: breechclothl,
~ the crow, Thr
braves farmed a wide circle
and DlOWJd fonrard a few
1tep1 and then beck a few ,
denoting the crow'a nmlng
mo;emente tn1m htanch ID
branch.
The WillDen, boldlng Qlpe
in fnmt of them, then ciiJiced
the Scalp Dance to bonor
braves victorious in battle
and the Black KDlfe llllnce
ooncluded with the braves
and squaws joining In tile'
VIctory Dance.
The dance had been perfOl'llled anly three Iinnea sin«
1911.
•

Divers search ·•
for man's body
LANCASI'ER, Ohio ( UPI)
- Scuba divers JrAned ~
search today for Jeffery:
Fletcher, liD, Lancaster, whet
J.a milelng_ and (It fS Ill' '«1
droWDed In a lake at 811
outdoor education anter
IIOUtli of he" which Ia owned
by ano Slate unmrslty.
Authorities said Fletcher
. and aeven other periODS were
at the lake at Barnaby Center
wben ooe man waa lltrldten
with Cl'lllllpll.
Fletcber and the otben
Jumped Into the lalar to .aid
the llricken man. HoWever,
Fletcher went under arid
newr surfaced.
'

.

~

Singh
'

er Tanlny Ol'flando

-~!'

e • retir g rom ....,,
hnot·ea to apend more Ume

. with his family and to bondr
the .....,.,.. 1 a( lila late frleDd,
011 ..,.,.... Fnsddle Prlna
Orlllldo, 33, Wlil 1114 rle
would oa1y per'.um ~r
beneftta In llie futUre made
·
•
the IUI'(Il'la Rllll~
cb1n&amp; a perfcnnance at the
South Shore Mu.lc arcua In

~~~':,\~by sur-

pr11e .. Frank

the

imser•s

Uebenn&amp;n

publlclat,

ilaid:

STEREO ALBUM SALE

•

Special group of albums Including country, classical;.
pop, religious and easy listening music.

REG. '6.79 AllUMS ........... SAU '4.ft
'.

.

REG. '7.79 ALBUMS ........... SAU •s.M

NACOGDOCHES, Tex.
Veteran defenalw
end Elvill Bethea ml rd the
first practice SUnday for
Houston Oilers veterans, and
C9ach BIDil Phillips said he
would be fined $500 for each
day misaed.
·Bethell - the anly player
Ph WP~ M. pl'DI!IICIJ WJI&amp;
tllNagli. ~ 'IJGI'Iriout
in 10Cklel!ree heat•
(UPI) -

•

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 71

By Ulllted Press lnternatlonal
ARAB MEDIATORS ATTEMPI'ING TO PREVENT A
NEW outbreak of warfare between' Ubya and Egypt have
returned to Tripoli to meet Ubyail leader Col. MOiSIIIIIl8r
Knadafy and win his acceptance of a cease-lite. There were no
reports of fighting Monday or today along the ti50&lt;nlle desert
border between the two Arab nations after Egyptian President
.Anwar Sadat Sunday unilaterally declared a cease-flte to end
six days of warfare. ·
·
But Ubya so far has faUed to announce agreement on the
cease.fite .and Arab mediators - Palestinian Chief Vasser
Arafat and Algerian President Houari Boumedienne - met
·
Khadafy Monday.
Political sources in Caito said today Ubya has not yet
agreed · to Ute case-fire because she is still studying an
Egyptian demand that sophisticated Soviet equipment near
the common frontier be pulled hack. The sources said Egypt
had told Ubya through mediators that the only purpose of
highly Sensitive electronic, radar and missile equipment near
the Egyptian .border could be to spy on or attack Egypt and
they must therefore be removed.
N,\JROBI, KENYA ..;. ETffiOPIA'S LEFTIST military
governrnenl and two guerrilla groups have issued new claimS
of victory in conflicts that threaten to tear the country apart.
Less than three years after deposing Emperor Halle Selassle,
the government finds itself cut off from Ute sea to the north by
Eritrean guerrillas and by Somali-backed rebels to the
southeast.
The Eritreans, waging Africa's longest war and the
world's largest ongoing conflict with more than 60,000 troops
on b«h sides, said Monday they captured Ute town of Agordat,
one of the few outposts the government still controlled in the
region. In a series of spectacular v~ctories in recent months,
the Eritreans said they hlid captured at least 110 per cent of the
province and were preparing for a major drive toward a
decisive victory. ·
· '
DETROIT ~ THE U.S. AUTO INDUSTRY, HEADiNG .
toward its second best year ever, stumbled in mid-July with

sales of domestic automobiles slipping 8.3 per cent below last
year's level. Tbe reports, issued Monday by the four U.s , auto
companies, marked the Jir~ year-IO'year sales decline in two
montha and the lowest mid-month sales period since March,
despite record sales by the Ford Motor Co.
· Only Ford among Ute four U. S. compallies was able to
rep«! it topped Its year-«go level in the July 11·20111 period,
mostly because of a sales cantest lhat endedJuly ?Al in Its Ford
Division. General Motor&amp;' Chevrolet Division, on tlie other
hand, saw salee drop 40 per cent tnlm.last year due to a sales
contest that ended In early July. Instead of its normal 2:i per·
cent Of aU domestic auto sales, Oievy took only 16 per cent
compared with a 38 per cent grab in early July. ·
TWO MORE STEEL COMPANIES HAVE FOLLOWED
Ute lead of the industry giants and raised prices on structural
shapes and tin mill l'l'oducts despite criticism frqm the Carter
.administratiOn.
Armco Steel Corp., based in Middletown, Ohio, said
Monday it was boosting prices for structural shapes used in
heavy construction by about $20 a ton, effective Sept. 4. Armco
Sllld the Increase was similar to the 6 per cent hikes announced
last -11: by the two largest steelmakera, U. S. Sieel Corp. 811d
Bethlehem steel Corp. Wheeling - Pittsburgh Steel Corp. of
Plttlburgh Sllld It will hike prices of tin mill products in line
with the 1per cent price boosts on tin products also announced
last week by U. S. Steel and Bethlehem.
..

CHICAGO

•

REG; '10.79 A 1 'UMS ..........SAU ..M

..

JAMIEJOBB

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1977

The board' hired Mrs.
Roberta Maidens as vocal
instructor, Miss Marianne
McQuire 8$ primary special
education teacher at Port·
land, Miss "Daisy Crawley as
French and biology teacher;
Daniel Riffle as regular bus
. driver, Ruth Smith, part-time
custodian at the junior high
and Roger Hill as regular bus
driver.
Bobby Ord, superintendent,
told the board that board
members Denny Evans and
Roger Adams has resigned.
The hoard agreed to enter
into a contract agreement
with the Meigs County Board
of Education for the services

•

(UPI)

·

·
Ho-et, be left lila fluget
belilnd, Pollee were ~
print.l fnm It In an effoJ1 to
identify the gunman.
·
..

fiiiDIIIIII robbing the Pekin
a-.-., ut11 he llbot hll
fllrcer ott. Pollee said the
budlt woandld himaelf
M ay wb1a be ..,. trying .
to 111o1r 1111 Yldlml the .2&amp;~~ automatic was . (Jlesr and cool tonight, !on
to ~ he meant between 56 and 80. Sunny,
Cllli&amp;lnued cool WedDesdliy,
the bllbl_, a. ProliabllltY of
01111- pncl&amp; II ""' ..., 11n1 per
will I t:llllt todaJ ... &amp;PI'fllto 10 per

Weather

~

and

P. ceat Wednelday.

There have ~n 11 speCial
COLUMBUS . (UPI ) Proponents used a sound
!natant voter registration has elections held in parts of 12 truck, reminding residents
not caused any major counties since the court they could go to the polls to
problems so far , but neither ruling. In them , 16,174 re gister and vote. This
was it an instant success, persons cast ballots, and of reminder enticed 228 persons
according to 13 report;&gt; . that total, 690 were instant to take advantage of the law.
submitted to Ohio Secretary registrants.
Even this drive, however,
Ohioans now can register to failed to ensure victory for
of State Ted W. Brown after
special elections around the vote · on election day, ~der Ute tax levy, which lost by
Ute law. In the past, an nearly 3110 votes,
state.
" 'l'here is nothing illegal in
Eleven special elections individual had to register 30
were held following the July 8 days before an election io be using sound equipment to
remind voters they could
Supreme Court of Ohio 111ling eligible to cast a ballot.
that the Instant Voter · The largest turnout of 'register and vote on the same
Registration Law was instant voters occurred in day ," said Brown. "In fact,
County,
where under the law, there are no
effective inunediately. The Clark
residents
in
18
precincts
of restrictions.
effective date of Ute law
Ute
New
CarlisleBethel
Local
" People could be bused to a
became an Issue because
Brown had ruled it would not School District balloted July polling place to register and
go into effect until Aug. 30. 19 on an additional tax levy. vot e. However, use of such
things
( bus,
sound
equipment) must be reported
if an expense is incurred," he
said.
.Assistant Clark County
'Board .of Elections Clerk
Norma Johnson said 201 of
the 228 persons who took

Middleport to
get radar gun

In another 60 to 90 d8ys it
won 'I be so ·much fuq

speeding through Middleport.
That's how long it l'ill he
before the police department
puts Into operation a handheld raJiar gun that records
speed of an approaching or
departing vehicle. What the .
gun records will stand up in
Mayor Fred Hoffman's court.
That's how Mayor Hoffman
described for town council at
a regular meeting Monday
night operation of the radar
gun which is being obtained
through a federal grant
program and the Ohio State
Patrol. A unit, valued at $543
will cost Middleport only $163
under
the
assistance
program.
In other business Mayor
Hoffman reported numerous
complaints being received
from people who contend that
access to the Middleport
Marina is virtually impossible by boat via Leading
Creek. Hoffman said that be
has contacted the u. s. Corps
of Engineers In an effort to
acquire funds for the
dredging and Improvement of
the Leading Creek access but
found that with 25,000 visitors
to the Marina during 1976,
Middleport's fa~y receives

~}~~~~~tr:r:~~:t:::r::::I)f}~:~t~::::g:::t

only li percent of the total
GRIDDERS TO MEET
vlslta.tion to four area
marinaS;
including
There wm be a meeUng
Gallipolis' access levee.
for all boys who want to
An estimated $75,000 would · play vanity football at
have to he appropriated for Meigs High School on
the needed repairs and the Friday, July 29, ai 6:30
Corps cannot forecast when ·p.m. at Meigs High School.

n:~m:r·:rrec::

in
mape, was prepared through
1be cooperation of federJI,
Ule ~local agencies.
• On lt8t everae llide Ia a text
briefly describing characterlslica of the domlnaiK 101ls
1n each of "the collllty's 10ll
areu. AlloiDcluded Ia a table
giving llmllatlons of each soil
area for some selected ~nd

uses.

The
map and accom... nylnll d•crlptml
lttfonali&amp;IGn will b1 of ... ota1
laterelt to qlneera, far.
mets.
bomebuildera,

Plans made

.

A qharge of possession of
Seneca Cowtty Board of ·
Elections
Director Louis F .
WAVE'"Y,
marijuana . filed against
. ,... Ohio (UPI) Vicky Lee, .19 , Middleport, Kummerer . submitted t~~ The $4.5 billion expansion of
was dismissed In Meigs · only adverse report. He sa•
the ur.anium enrichment
Col.lllly Court Monday ac- there . ;was "confusion at plant at Piketon was
cording to Charles Knight, polling places, precinct discussed by about 250
workers were very unhappy" citizens and state officials
attorney.
(cOntinued on page 10)
during a planning session In
·
_ ·
Waverly Mmday.
Acting as co-ehaitmen for
the meeting were Gov. James
.
.
. A. RbodesandHouseSpeaker
S.herlff James J. Profiitt's being questioned by deputies Vernal
Riffe,
D-()jew
Dept.lsloolting.forthe person In connection with a breaking ~ston.
.
and his motive in an early and entering at Hockory
~· and Riffe .SBid the
morning shooting incident Lakes, Reedsville. The owner meeting was held to assme
today.
of the property, Ethel "IX'der~y p~inf for the
· Raymond Priddy, 35, Morlan, said .. a pinball e1J18mnon which IS expected
Rutland; was southbound on machine and pool table were to me~n . about . 6,000
SR 7 at the junction of SR 124 broken up and a small constructioo JObs while the
when lour shots were fired amount of change was stolen ne~ additioos to Ute plant are
into the windshield of his at approximately 9 a.m. hemg buill and about 2,000
vehicle. Priddy was not in- Monday.
permanent J?bs.

Gunman want ed

':,.

if~~~~ll~:!.!~~~ . 1:-'::~n andw~~:~ie?cf.n ~! ·: : : : : : : &gt;.: : : ::::::::m:::::::::::,;::::&lt;::::::::::~,:::::~/ pe:r~ =~~ ":~~

Hoffman.
.

Public offered
Meigs soil map
COLUMBUS - -A map
showing Ute soU areas of
Melga County publlshed by
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR)
is available to the pubDc.

advantage of the law were
"new registrations." The 17
others
had
changed
addresses.
·
" The presiding judge or an
extra worker handled the
people wanting to register. I
think it went pretty well," she
said.
The next largest turnout of
instant voters occurred in the
Lorain County community· of
Avon Lake .July 19 during an
election on an additional lax
levy . The Lorain County
Buard of Elections said 150 of
the 1,976 persons who voted
were instant voters.
The bond issue was
approved by a margin of
nearly 8-1.
Voters in the Southwest
·Local School District in
Hamilton and Butler cowtties
balloted on a bond Issue that
·was soundly trounced four
days after the court ruling.
Of the 1,960 persons who
voted in Hamilton County, 66
were instant voters, while
only four feU in that category
ol Ute 56 persons .who cast
their ballots in the part of the
district that slipped over into
Butler County.
"There was no trouble at
aU, " said Butler County
Board of Elections Pitector
Margaret Coi&lt;. ''Only one was

The possibility loomed
today that the body of Albert
Thompson, 70, Rt. 2,
Cheshire, may be exhumed
from its resting - place at
Gravel Hill Cemetery for
pathological study at the
Franklin County Coroner's
Office in Columbus.
Thompson, a Cheshire
Twp. farmer, may have been
murdered last September.
However, at the time
Thompson's body was found,
the euct cause of death was
not determined. · ·
According to the · death
certificate, no · autopsy was
performed due to decomposition of Ute body because
wild animals had consumed
parts of it .
Thompson was believed to
have died Sept. 14, although
the body was not foWid untU
two weeks later. The head
was not connected to the
body. If the corpse Is
exhumed, an order to do so
would have io be Issued ~y
either Prosecuting Attorney
Joe Cain or Galli&amp; County
Coroner Dr. Donald R.

for 6;000
::~~n~~.: ~~r:~~~~ ::r~~~:;~;::~::;:~:~~~ ~ ~: : ~:::e~:a!~~. .~~~: area jobs

l!lgniflcant reduction In Ute
number of heavy truc.ks
travelling through . town
recently: He said there ts a
need for the posted signs at
all times, not just while the
Silver Memorial Bridge is
closed.
He also comme~ded
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
.Andrews for his recent public
statement which King
thought, "took .a responsible
and intelligent view on the
(traffic) situation."
.
In final business Hoffman
reminded council that street
resurfacing In Middleport
began Monday and will
continue through most of the
week.
· Present were CounCilmen
Carl Horky, WUDam Walters,

dan~~~ge was done to the car.

While the person or persons
responsible are not known at
this time , the Sheriff's
department is conllnulug Its
investigation.
·
Iii other action Sheriff
Proffitt said two juveniles are

EXTENDED OUTLOOK .
.Tb a ra day 1h r oa g b
Saliirdlly, fair 'l'lianday
andS!IIilnlaylllldacliance
of &amp;bowen Friday. Hlgbs
wm be ID Q1e BOa am1 lows
wiD be ID tile 50s 'l'lulraday
and In the 601 by Saturday.

Oldtime fiddlers
A
26
an::~·copiesof"AGeneral compete ug.
developers and realtors in.
County, according to .,
Richard B. Jones, Chief of
ODNR's Division of Lands
Melg~

Soli Map of 1!feig&amp; CoWitY"

can be obtained . without
charge from the Division of
Lands and Soli, Ohio
Department of Natural
Reaolll'l:ell, Fountain Square,
Columboa 43224.
The publication is also
available from the Meigs
County Cooperative Ex~enalon Service. County
Home Building, Pomeroy
417811 and the Meig.l County
Soil and Water Conservation
Dil&amp;rlcl, Agrleal&amp;ural Service
Ctater, Ul West Second
Street, P. 0. Box 432,
Pomtiroy 457811.

.

Netaonvme, home of the
Parade pf the Hilll, wlll again
host the Oblo Slate CllanlpiOiilhlp Old-Time Fiddlers'
Contest; The competition,
sponsored
by
Ohio's
Lieu~ Governor, will be
Friday, Aug. 26, at 8 p.m. on
the Public Square In
Nelsonville.
In case of
the event
will be beld In Ute NelsonvllleYork Jllnlor High School,
near the Square.
The Flddlr e· Coatest flltracta many flnt Dllllk:laiil
from ohio, West Vlrglnla and

rain

· •

Kentucky. Fiddlers from
each state have In years past
won highest awarda at the
gathering, and a crowd ·of
thoUIBnds from Ute Tri-state
area who are admirers of oldtime Appalachian music,
gather for an evening of
entertainment.
Musicians and other Interested persons may obtain
further information by
writing to The Old-Time
Fiddlers' Contest, 334 W.
Wasbliigton Si., Jtlelsonvil'e,
Ohio 45784.

of a work study coordinator.
The short-handed board
adopted the salary schedule
for non..:ertlfied employes,
renewed a depository contract with Racine Home
Natio nal
Bank
and
authorized the clerk to aak for
bids on tires, gas, fuel oU,
coal and lunch room suppUes,
all bids are to be opened Aug.
5 at noon.
The next regular meeting
will he on Aug. 4 at 7: 30p.m.
Attending were Robert
Sayre, president; Jack
Bost ick and Dallas Hill,
board members; Ord, and
Linda Spencer, clerk.

Exhumation of
body p·o ssihle

'

Eftr7t!dlil went fine fGr the

REG. '9.79 ALlUMS............ SAU '7.M

RACINE - William Jewell, head football coach at
Southern High School and Mrs. Lee Lee, vocal music teacher,
and several other staffers resigned Monday night when the
Souttlem Local Board of Education met in regular session.
Mrs. Evelyn Moore resigned as cook, and Chart.. Cornell,
Jr., resigned as bus driver.
·

Instant registration results mixed

.

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Evidence left for the polke ·

REG. '1.79 AI'VMI••••••••••• SAII'th99

scores for a Middleport school basketball tournament. ~·r~m
there f went on to become a sportswriter at the Miami Herald
in Florida."
Pursuing journalism, Jobb worked after graduation from
the University of Florida for the Gainesville, Fla. Sun and was
a stringer fiX' the St. Petersburg Times in Ute same state. He
also worked for a summer in Aspen, Colorado where he was a
photo news photographer.
·
Though jobb has lived in Virgiuia, Alabama, Florida,
Colorado and California, always in centers much larger than
Middleport, he "still considers Middleport his hometown ."
.Today's generation is loose and flexible in its search for '
opportunity. The power estabtishment toda y lame nts that big
government, big philantropby, big industry, big everything,
has erased opportunity for the young man or woman. Jamie
Jobb surely proves {,pportunity only has to be sought out. Said
Jobb:
"When my wife and I moved to California in 1970, I was
wtable to find newspaper work. So I got a job at a teacher
center in San Francisco, where I edited ~ newsletter and
helped teachers with classroom innovations. From there I
(Continued on l"llle 10)
·

enttne

SEOUL, SOtml KOREA- DEFENSE SECRETARY
Harold Brow•*tlded two days of security Ialka today but failed
to allay Soujh Korean fears that U. S. ground troope will be
withdrawn before militacy aid can be pushed through
~gr- .
Senior U. s. officials ·in Seoul said the South Koreans
"obvioiiBiy" were concerned about the reaction in Congressmany of whose memben are under Investigation for receiving
favors from South Kurean lobbyists :.... to a proposal for $2
billion In miUtary aid and credit.

REG. '5.79 ALBUMS .. ~ .........SALE '3.ft. --

'

•

•"

ANEW NAME
RALEIGH, N,C. (UPI) JoaD little, the black WIDIBD
acquitted two years ago of
ldllllitl hrr wlite jalla' ahr
said tried to rape her, Ia
!£ H . . . to duinge her D81De.
The ~:rear-old - - 8J)'
plied to the clsk ct Wne
&amp;lperlar Court to chance her
name Ill Hadlyah Joan N.ur,
an Arabic IIIJIIe. '
"'lbe naaJ ... Is .thai ahr
pref!!l'l
to Wle a 11111111! that
BACK TO 11fE TRACK ... ·
better
describes · her
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
ancestry,"
says
the
- Country and Western
singer Marty ·Robbin!J, who appDcation llli fOe In the
quit racing cars as a bobby clerk's office.
two years ago after three A NEW DAWN
wrecks, has changed his
COHASSET, Mass. _

said this weekend
that he will enter the Aug 7
•
Tlllladega 500. Ironically, it
Will at Talledep two yean
ago that Robblnuulferedbla
,thlrdand .most-- crelb,
which · prompted
bla
announced
retirement from
rkmg
'~'I PO i!pi!ClallligDifi•
cance to llie factlhat I'll be
ending my racing retirement
~t Talladega," Robbins said.
... The Talledega 000 waa the
next race on the schedule."

About ?Al years ago Jamie Jobb delivered copies of The
Daily Sentinel oo ~t, Second and Third Streets in
Middleport. His route led hlm past Ute Middleport Public
Ubrary.
Thia week Jobb, 31, of San Rafael, Calif., drove past the
Middleport Ubrary. The experience led him to tell us:
"I've been busy, but I'm not flllllOU8. Each year 30,000
books are published in the United Slates. Many of them get
buried before they reach Ute bookstore shelves. I don't know if
any of my books can be fowtd around southeastern Ohio,
although they are all published by big east coasl publishing
houses. All I hope is thaLthe library here in Middleport will get
a copy."
Jamie telephoned Monday to inform that he was In
Middleport visiting two llunts, Mrs. WUDam Morris, South
Second St., and Phyllis Mullen, Front St., and an uncle, Roger
Dillard, Pomeroy.
And he recalled another fact that never will make the
Anlholoi!Y of lmp&lt;rtant Events In Ute History of Sports
Writing, to whit:
..... YOUgave me my first journalism experience calling In

Jewell, Lee
resign jobs

.

.

By Cbet Taa.aehlll

Three brothers survi ve :

Elliott Gould
Diane Keaton
I WILL,
I WILL
FOR NOW

Author Ja1nie· Johb .w ants his
hooks in-Middleport Library

Warehime. It would then he
sent for examination by
forensic experts.
First degree . murder
charges were filed over the
weekend against Clyde
Ramey Ratcliff, 50, R( 3
Athens, and Terry McCune,
28 , Columbus. They are
suspects In the alleged
shooting death. Their arrests
were based upon information
given to Gallia County
sherifrs deputies by a woman
informant. Butb men entered
l!Ot guilty pleas Monday In
Gallipolis · Municlapl Court.
A preliminary hearing was
set at 10 a.m. Wednesday for
Ratcliff.
Acting Judge Thomas
Moulton Monday afternoon
set Aug. 1 at 11 a.m. for the
preliminary bearing of
McCune. Atty. Marshall
Douthett of Jackson was
appointed to represent Me. Cune while Ratcliff will be
represented by c.ourt• appOinted Willlarri COnley.
Bonds were fixed at $250,000
In each case.
·
Due to the complexity of
Ute case, Prosecutors "Cain
and his assistant Richard C:
Roderick, Jr. have declined
to give a complete account.
Robbery was ll possible
motive for murder.

Title 9 jobs

available til
A~t8th
The time has been extended
to August 8 for low-Income
pei'SOns to apply for part-time
employment under Title IX of
the Older Americans Act.
These joba will be assisting
elderly persons in areas such
as chore services, bornehealth aides, out-rl!i'ch, cooks
In nutrition program; escort ·
service, clerical and bonkkeeping work in agency offlees. Persons must be 55
years of age or older and
heve an income of $2,970 or
less per year for a single
person, or $3,930 or less for a
couple. An additional $960 is
allowed for . each dependent
other than a couple. According to federal guidelines
persons over 60 will be given
priority consideration;

JSbemg.plaiilled with the construction but be also wanted
them to be part of that
plaRhodnning. ld th
f
es sa
e peop1e o
the area and federal and state ·
offlcllils had worked together
to get the plant to t.he area
now they must agam work
·together ·to assure orderly
These persons will be
planning.
,
placed with different agenThe group was divided into cies which serve-the elderly
about 1$ different committees such as the· Community
to discuss what has been done · Action Agency, Community
so far and what can be Mental Health Center, Home
expec\ed.
Health Services, Leading
Each
committee
is Creek Conservancy District
composed of a state official, a and the Meigs CoWi!y Council
chalnnan from one of Ute five on Aging. AppUcants muBt be
area counties and ·interested able to ,paas a physical, and
citizens. The committees will be willing to work whatever
cover such topics as equal days or bours are specified by
opportunity employment, , Ute agency to which they are
housing, recreation and assigned.
resources , public
This program is adinformation, education and ministered through the
training and public health. Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Counties represented Valley Regional Developinclude Ross, Scioto, Pike, ment District, the · Area
Brown and Adams.
·
Agency on Aging, and will
Aliother meeting has been begin as aoon aa funds are
scheduled for Aug. 4 to available. Applications are
clscU8II what federal aid will available at the- Senior
be avllllable to the area and Citizens Center, East Main
bOw it may be obtained.
street, Pomeroy.

�Harmony covering Cap itol Hill ];_,._,. , , ., ,.,
7 - The Da.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 , TUesday , July :IIi, 1977

,

.! - tne ue.uy ~nlinel, Mi!ldleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. tuesday, July 26, 1917 ·

1
,,,,,,,~
,,,,,,,,~,,,,,,~,,i
,,,,:
,,,,.;,,.,,,:,,,,,,
,a
,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
rfare e
,,,,,,:,:;,,_,,
xpe
.,.,.,-,&lt;~;· ·_~,~.,.,~.~~.i

PreSident's bu&lt;lget director
and personal friend, Bert
Lan&lt;"e, wm a clean bill of
health from the Senate
G ov ernment Atrura
Conunittee .
In
other
events ,
Republtcans battled
Democrats over energy and
pubtic ltnancing lor Senate
elections
And
Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall
urged paSS!Ige of organi%ed
Ia bot's
legtslatton
to
strengthen umon orgamzer's
band m anti-uruon plants
Final congresstonal action
on the $10 4 billton public
works approprtations bill and
tts amendments gave little
indtcation of the controversy
that once surrounded the
measure. The legislatton now
is on the President's desk

WASHING TUN (UP! ) Signs of barmony across a
broad front have replaced the
dlscqrd
that
once
complicated Prestdent
Carter's telattOnshtp wtth
Cap~tol Hill
In a number of areas
Monday , Congress gave
Carter what he sought It
passed and sent to the Whtte
House com prom 1se
leglslatton cutting money for
9of 18 waterproJoc"ls favored
by Congress but opposed by
Carter
•
The
!egtslat10n also
deferred to carter's wishes
and ended funding lor a
nuclear reactor project at
Oak Ridge, Tenn., whtch
would produce weapons '
grade plutoruum.
In a separate action, the

awalung Carter's stgature. UlCiude a $3 4 llUibon loan
lnadditiontoendlngspend- from a Chicago bank.
utg on some waler projects
U.nce wants a deadline for
and a breeder reactor dispo6lng of stock extended to
project, the legtslalion avmd a hnanctal loss
provides funds for neutron Suggestions U.nce's debts
warheads _ an undeployed could conflict wtth public
weapon, which kills With servtce were rejected by
lll8SSlve doses of radiation ClliTlmtttee members
and spares buildings and
The media often ,. so
equipment.
obsessed wtth any htnt of
The House and Senate coverup, Sen Sam Nunn, [).
agreed that if Carter gtves Ga , told the commtltee, It is
Ute production go-ahead next "tn W:nger of covermg up the
month, the deciSion can be presumption of mnocence "
overturned by votes in both
Republicans m the heavUy
the House and Senate.
Democrahc Congress had
" H 0 nest , " " v e r y trouble m two areas House
for!hrtght" and "a man of Republicans compLam~ the
tnlegrtty" were the words Democrats tgnored thetr
used by senators after suggesttons for an energy
Carter's budget chief plan and responded by
dtscussed hts personal publicly propostng Ute1r oWn
lmanctal troubles, whtch The GOP plan caUed for
deregulation of natural gas
prices and establishment of a
trust funds lor mass transtt,
highway matntenance and
development of sy,nthellc
fuels
In the Senate, Republicans
the transttton pertod
began
a filibuster "to the
"For aU pattents currently
taking phenformm, lllSulin death" to block action on
therapy ts an effective legislatton backed by the
alternative
although White House to provtde pubhc
for
Senate
expenence m diabetes clinics lmancmg
campaigns
starting
next
suggests that, for about oneyear
half of !hose on. phenformin,
11
1lUS lS a very spectal
their diabetes can be
mterest
bill - 1t preserves
controlled Wlthout tnsulin by
and
protects
the tncumhent
relymg instead on dietary
senators,"
SaJd
Sen Howard
restrtchons and other
Baker, R-Tenn , leader of the
drugs," satd Catifano.
Wolfe and other cntics of J3.memher llUDortly, which
the drug bad contended tt was ts 'OUtnumbered by 61
being mtSIISed as an excuse to Democrats
av01d dietary restnctions by
CLOTHING OFFERED
doctors or patients who Jl"eCHESIDRE - The Gallia lered a pill tnstead of more Metgs Community Actton
exerCise and less food
Agency will conduct a free
There are 5 million Amen- clothing day for low income
cans wtth diabetes Some 2 persons Thursday, July 28
million take oral diabetic from9am to2pm tnthe
drugs, and or those 385,000 agency's clothlng bank
were on pltenfonntn
located tn the old high school
building at Cheshire

Oral diabetic drug banned
WASHINGTUN (UPI) An oral diabetic drug, which
may, have been responSible
for as many as 1,000 deaths a
year from an often fatal side
effect, ts bemg banned m the
the frrst government action of
tis kind
The
drug,
called
phenformtn and marketed for
Ute past 18 years under the
trand names "DBI" and
"Meltrol.'' '" being taken by
385,000 Americans in the
early stages of dtabetes
Under an order tssued
Monday by HEW Secretary
Joseph A Califano Jr.,
doctors have 90 days to
SWltch such patients to other
drugs or control the disease
wtth strtct diets lllStead of
medication
Dr. Sidney Wolfe, head of
Ralph Nader's Health
Research Group that took the
government to. court earlier
••• thts year to try to get such a

Wolle has satd the death
toll could be as many as 1,000
deaths a year
Ciba-Getgy Corp., whtch
makes DBI, satd the actton
" could present a medical
bazard&gt; to the many patients,
who cannot be treated
satisfactorily by other
available agents "
The company said tt would
study Catifano's order to
dectde wbat action to take
Califano declared the drug
an "ururunent hazard to the
public health," a power
granted HEW by Coogress 15
years ago but never before
used

Manufacturers will be allowed a qwck heartng on the
issue and the drug wlll
continue to he available tn
closely controlled shipments
for lite next 90 days during

7\. T
J: ::g~!!t·::~::~~e~.~ 1 ~ewsmen

!: :

"Hundreds of people have
·&lt;; already died as a result of use
::{, of thts drug and M a result of
;:. the ban, effecttve today,
many people's lives will be
, - spared," he sa:td
: Califano satd if he waited a
;;; year to tmpose the ban, the
~· resuiUOgdeaths would range
an ''unreatisttcaday,
.: ; many people's lives will be
:· spared," he satd
•· : Catifano satd if he waited a
, :; year to impose the ban, the
•· • resulting Sulung man excesa
~: accumulation of lactic actd
• • whtch upsets the body's
,; ; chemtcal balance and
fr
tl
d
~. equen Y causes eath

s·

·&lt; from

....;

'

WASHING TUN (uPI)- A
brewmg controversy over
budget director Bert Lance's
personal fmances has
vamshed,
wtth
Lance
emergmg as the hero and the
news media as the bad guys
Members of the Senate
Government Affatrs
Committee made 11 clear
Monday they considered
Lance to be "honest .. , very
lorthnght .. , hon..-able" and
"a man of mtegrtty "
The news media did not
fare so well.
Sen Abraham Rtbtcoff [).
Conn., told a januned he.;ing
room that mvesttgative

th
b
d
now e a guys

reporters attempt to "get
"You (Lance) have been
everybody_ that's the name smeared from one end of tbe
of the game today "
country to the other, tn my
"iiiiiiii4ii::f!~iii:iiii opuuon unjustly," Rtbtcoff
'l"'sden
Sam Nunn,
a
f
•
Bernice Bede Osol Democrat rom Lances
- - - - - - - - - - home state of Georgia, satd
rep&lt;ll"ters are so obsessed
l:ll:-.mn
wtth any htnl of ..coverup"
lll!J.!Jlf
that they are "tn danger of
f"";)Rnn[l..,Ib\TJ covermg up the presumptton
l!JUI.fU\JJ!J.! lJ of mnocence "
The
c o m m 1t t e e
July 27, 1177
unanimously gave U.nce a
Condltrons In general could be clean btU after two hours of
very pleasant this comrng year
and thals good Take care questtomng about hts
hOwever II doesn t cause you to fi.tlancl31 dealings
coast when you should be rn Rtbtcoff satd the conurut\ee
hrgh gear
would not be .uwolved m the
LEO CJuiJ 23·Aug. 22) You coold Sttuatton anymore "Unless
be lured mto a game of one- something else develops, I
upamanshrp today and you II put see nothmg further for us to

·A·STIO•GRAPH

your heart mto it Only later will

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

:::. Brain. cells can't heal

•
: By Latll'reiiCil E. Lamb, M.D.
How do some of the so•: DEAR DR. LAMB - My called rruracles work? You
.: • son, now 57, was mJured 18 need to look tnto the
~· years ago. He was m a coma background of these to see
,.:..
:::: for twelve weeks then wbal the facts really are
; developed convulsiOns and Sometimes these are not
• • spasms lor which he bad two related to bratn damage at all
- · bram operations Within a but are examples of
year. This left him With bad hystencal paralysiS, or a
double vtston and rtght Side disease that does not kill the
paralysts. He works With han- cells and they recover evendicapped persons, and does tually like a "rruracle "
weU, but his only locomotion
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is
ts his wheel cbarr He thinks drlvmg a car impossible
hypnotism could help him, followmg cataract surgery' I
but how? By whom' Where' can't find a defuute answer to
my question and would aplstt possible'
DEAR READER - Your prectale straight answers.
son needs to understand exDEAR READER - Lots of
actly what his problem IS. people who bave bad cataract
The nervous system IS con- surgery do drive a car
structed like an electrical Without any difficulty at all
system. Our muscles move It depends entirely on how
because unpulses, like elec- good the indivtdual's total VI·
trical current, pass through sion IS after surgery.
nerve ftbers which are much
Some people wtth cataracts
like the wtres for an electncal bave ot.her eye problems as
ctrcwt. The central area well. This may limit thetr
where aU these ctrcwts come results from surgery. The use
together and are mtegrated ts of contact lenses after
m the bratn If you destroy surgery bas helped to limit
certain bram cells the effect .the amount of distortion of VI·
ts the same as if you broke a Ston that occurs. So if a per·
wtre tn an electrical crrcwt
son's eyes are otherwtse nor·
Your son's bram damage mal and WJth the 81d of conbas destroyed celis that af- tact lenses, most patients
fect his vtston and his nght should he able to drive
stde. These cells will not wtthout any real problems
regenerate Usmg hypnotism after surgery I suppose 1
IS a b1t like trying to use the should add !bat I am aaswnpower of suggestion lo get an mg the person could drive
electrical current to move before surgery since the
across a broken mre. It won't • operation won't enable a nondriver toacqwre the skill. ,
; happen
This same problem occurs
Ragweed pollen season ts
' m many stroke Vlctuns The corrung Those who want •ndifference here ts that m the fonnatton on "Hay Fever
early days of the stroke some (Allergtc Rhinitis)" can send
: ri the cells don't work 50 cents for The Health Letter
: be&lt; 1use they are IDJllred but number 8-4 Send a long,
not loiiiUy destroyed. This ts stamped, self-addressed
· 1111U81ly ca•ed by local swell- envelope for ma.tling with
; IIIII· If
cells recover your request to Dr Lamb, m
· rather than die the function care of this newspaper, P.O
; related to
cells may be Box 1561, Radio Ctty Stalioo,
repined.
New York, NY 10019
~

uu-

••

you reahze you scored no pomts

F1nd out more of what lies ahead

do," he

said

The panel became uwolved

for you be sendtng for your copy 1n Lance's finances when he
ot Astro-Graph Letter Mall 50 asked tl to release hun from a

cents for each and a long selfaddressed stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, P 0 Bo• ' 89
Radro Crty Station NY 10019
Be sure to specrty your brrth
srgn
VIRGO CAug. 2:1-llotM- 22) When
you rosily slop to think, you're
not so bad off If you try to keep

wrttten pledge he made tn
January to ~ell about 200,000
shares of stock m the
Naltonal Bank of Georgta by
the end of the year. Lance
was president of NBG before
commg to Washtnglon
The committee was set to

up whh the Joneses today you II giVe Lance more time so that

beCome unhappy with your own he would not mcur a large
lot
loss - reportedly about $1 6
LIBRA Chpl. 23-0cl. 23) The million - on the sale.
temptation to embellish Is strong
However, last Frtday news
In you today If tbe scale shows
reports
S81d Lance borrowed
the fish weighs only 11 ounces
$3
4mmillion
from Ute First
don't make It a three·pounder
National
Bank
of Chicago
8CO!'AIO COot. 24-Nov. 22)
bank
to
buy
stock
m the
Money or other Items of value
should not be loaned with Georgta bank
reckl.,ss abandon today 1f you
Lance's bank opened an
have senous 811p&amp;ctatlons of mterest.free account, called
gelling them beck
a "correspondent
SAGmARIUS CNov. 23-Dec. relatiooship," at the Chtcago
21) Don't take everything to bank last December, JUSI
heart that s prom•sed today This
bel..-e U.Oce got the loan
ts partiCularly true tf your poten·
Lfnce explained the correIta! benefactor has a poor track
record
spondent relattonshtp was
CAPAICOIIN Cllec. 22...1..,_ 11) "normal" in the banking
There is someone who knows industry ''There was nothing
you ra a soft touch today He unusual about 1t," he said,
could seek help Be wary He's and tt had nothing to do Wlth
not asking tor peanuts
the bank loan
AQUARIUS C.lon.- 11) The
On Ute tssue of the stock
easiest way is the route you're sale, Lance's trustee aatd •
likely to take today Much to your Sunday tn Atlanta the block of
dismay you II discover lt leads to
stock wtU soon he sold to an
a dead end
untdentifted
Georgta
PIICE8 CFeb. 20-Morch 20) busmessman. Tom Mitchell
There's a danger today you
could liAderesltmale the caliber of Daltoo, Ga., w_bo has held
of your competition Those you U.nce's stocks m btind trust
thooghl you d vanquiSh 1n ltle Slnce Lance left NBG to
first round may last lhe limit
become Carter's budget
ARII!I CMirch 21-Aprll 11) dtrector, satd Lance will
There are many opportunities repay the Olicago loan as
around you today, but you may soon as hts NBG stock ts sold
not handle them too wisely In
retrospect, you may realize what ANOTHER BULL'8-EYE
you milled
VAIL, Colo. (UPI) - Jessie
Edeen,
a spectator in the
TAUIIUI (April 20·MIJ 21)
Choose carefully anyone you Gerald Ford Invitational Golf
permit to handle your money or Tournment, satd she thought
YIIUiblo pooHUionl today A she was tar enough into the
mistake could be costly to you
rough Monday ID be safe
GEMINI CIIIJ 21...1une 20) Ac- when Ute former presulenl
ting for eaped1ency 1 sake Is a selected a five-Icon for his
blunder for you at thll time A
promile today is a marker that shot from the fltrway
towarda the green :1110 yards
can be recalled tomorrow
away.
CANCIII C"- 21-Julr 22) Only
Ford's Shot !truck Mtss
the unwlae procrastmate on
Edeen
on the ann.
things the)' know. they must
Her llll8C8lculatioo lett her
-ntually do Jrme you thoug~·
you hed today can lly like the wtth a bruised arm and the
darkness before tomorrow's ghll ball, ... ~ Ford let her
dawn
keep

~

•

~

l

8J1XIOUS 0

''
;_
'

1::1

k

lrac

SUSpect

m

•

Oklahoma scout murders
OKI.AHOMA CITY (UPIJ - Tom Kite and hts
frtends. who learned Jungle warfare in Vtetnam, have
offered to use thetr "on-the-Job trauung" to search a
dense forest in northeastern Oklahoma for the man
charged wtth killing three Gtrl Scouts
Kite says he andhts !rtends can catch the suspect,
Gene Leroy Hart, tn less than eight hours
Hart, ~3. ts charged with three counts of frrstdegree murder m the sex-&amp;aytngs of Lort Lee Farmer,
8. Dentse Mtlner, 10, both of TUlsa, Okla • and MtcheUe
Guse, 9, of Broken Arrow, Okla Thetr bodies were
found the morning of June 13 near their tent at Camp
Scott
.
Kite, 32, and hiS "spooks" are Vtetnam veterans,
who say they have kept !herr skills honed through
Nattonal Guard duty SlDCe returnutg from Southeast
Asta.
"I call them spooks because we can do some pretty
spooky thtngs," satd Kite "We're Vtetnam vets who
have had spectal trammg m vartous and sundry types
of jungle warfare "

Tide tums
'* on Brazil
~~
~~

ST. LOUIS {UPI) - Pete
Rose set a switchhlttlng
reCQld and manager Sparky
Anderaon received a new
contract, but the Cincinnati
Reds extended thetr losmg
streak to seven games _ the
longest smce July, 1971
Wtth a tineup of World

~:,

!.:.i

~i

:;:; RIO DE JANEIRO, Bra:ril
.::: {UPI) -A lew months ago,
"'" the Brazilian coffee industry
:~1 was eDjoytng re&lt;)OI"d high
prices, much to the chagrm of
the Amertcan coffee addtct,
;:;: But today, no ooe IS buymg
~j Brazilian coffee because ~f a
.,
glut on the market and the
..
·· consequent drop in prices has
left the nation's exporters
reeting.
Brazilian exporters felt the
··· f~rst shock from the market
·· collapse when the old, esta blished trading firm oi Lette
.. Barreiros Comerctal E
Exportadora m Santos was
unable to bonor tis purchase
contracts early this month
and lost about $44 million
~.:.::· :;.:,:,,.:,:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;,:.::;.:..;:.;::·:·::.;::::::::::'::::::::::::::;:::::::;::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:.;::, .~,,~ Leite BarretrOS was an
extreme case, bijl tis
bankrupcy showed the other
Sanllls exporters the salad
days of the first half of the
year - when sales topped $2
billion - had come to an
abrupt halt
In the last year, coffee
prtces shot up from about
$1.30 a pound tn August 1976
million
the
plan
calls
for.
to a high of $3.40 dollars a
WASHINGTON {UPI ) Among specific steps GAO pound m April 1977.
The General Accountmg
The prtce nse was
Offtce urged Congress today offtctals recommended to
to revtve the controverSial make the energy plan attrtbuted to a July 1975 frost
gasolme tax hike and take tougher were passage of a m Brazil, war and cml unrest
other steps to make PreSident standby gasolme tax wtth tn Afnca, drought m Kenya
Carter's energy plan tougher, some money from that levy and floods m Central
lest 11 fat! to achteve tis gQ'Ils earmarked for mass transtl, Amenca
Accordmg to Brazlllan
GOA energy experts satd and adoption of mandatory
msulatton
standards
for
industry
sources, roasters,
carter's plan - even If not
well
as
new
'
fearmg
even
higher prtces,
e:ustmg
as
watered down by Congress buildings
bought
up
aU
the
coffee they
was too optimistic and would
The GAO, mvesttgattve could get tn late 1976 and
fall far short of tis goal of
cuttmg otl tmports to 6 arm of Congress, also satd early 1977 while Brazilian
million barrels a day by 1985. lawmakers should phase out exporters, hoputg Ill keep
rollmg,
kept
House commtttees have carter's proposed heatmg otl profits
tax
rebate
to
homeowners,
purchasmg
au
the
stocks
weakened a number of
Carter's proposals and-killed make consumers pay htgher available m the mtertor.
Then the Northern Hemtshts plan for a standby natural gas prtces and
to phere summer brought a
gasolme tax that could go as constder measures
high as 50 cents 11. gallon if encourage scrappmg mefft- traditional drop in coffee
consumption, combmed wtth
conservation goals are not ctent used cars
a drop m consumer demand
met. The full House hopes to
due to supermarket coffee
pass tis verSion of the plan by
prtces of more than $4 per
Aug 5 wtth Senate action to
pound. Roasters suddenly
come later.
CHAPl'ER AND VERSE
found
themselves wtth
LOS ANGELES (UP[)
Notmg that even the
stocks
and stopped
surplus
admintstration had doubts Judith Exner, wbo says she
buytng
wbether some of tis targets was the mlstress of Prestdent
the
could be met, the GAO satd · John F Kennedy, bas been' Consequently,
Bra:rilians
found
themselves
"It ts tncongruous to ask ..-dered by a federal judge to
Congress to establish a set of list the dates on whtch she wtth warehouses fuU of coffee
national energy goals and had sex with the late and h1ghpnced purchase
contracts to hon..- and !hell"
then propose a plan thai IS not .p&lt;eSident
U S Distrtct Court Judge losses mounted qutckly
expected to achieve them "
Despite the slack demand,
Wtlliam
Gray satd Monday
Desptle tis crtltctsms,
Ute
Brazilian Coffee Institute
however, the GAO satd the that smce she has wrttten a
has
refused to lower a
baste concepts of the carter book about the Kennedy
minimum
export prtce of
energy plan are sound It satd affair, "I don't see why she
$3
20
and
wtth the world
such a plan ts long overdue should be reticent about
and "prompt passage by answermg ," but he ruled her market hovermg at $2 00,
Congress ts essential if the reply will be kept conftdential Braztlian dealers sunply had
no means or selling coffee.
Uruted States IS to deal wtth under the court's seal.
The complete stop m
The mformahon was
energy problems m the
Brazthan
aales hasn't
remainder of thts century. sought by the pubtishers of
stopped
the
price
decline and
The admtmstratlon was Mtdnight, which published a
last
week
the
New York
much too optimtstic m tis story accusmg Mrs. Exner of
market
suffered
1ts
greatest
esttmates of 1985 coal, spymg on Kennedy for Mafia
natural gas and nuclear figures wtth whom she also Slng!O'day drop in history,
energy production, Ute report bad affarrs. Mrs Exner SQed plummeting 48 cents from
satd As a result, 1t satd, oil for tibel, saymg she does not $2 55 to $2 07
"The basic position of the
tmports m 1985 at best are deny the affairs but the
Braztban
coffee mdustry,
likely to total 10 3 million accusation she was a Mafia
the
farmers,
IS that if
except
barrels a day mstead of the 6 spy is false
wishes could brmg another

t
f

GAO says tough

action is needed

Licensing of accountants
should curb business fraud
NEW YORK (UP!) Licensmg of management
accountants would do much
to reduce fraudulent Juggling
of corporate accounts, a
pracltce m..-e prevalent than
mdicated by the cases whicli
come to public attention, says
Robert Half, a spectalist m
accounttng personnel
pLacement.
As president of Robert Half
Per90nnel Agenctes, Inc , he
testifted recently before a
congresstooal subcommittee
mvesttgating accounting and
auditing practices.
In an mtervtew he satd

Reds ,-pitchers bombed again

fraudulent practtces from
obtatning a poSition at a
suntlar
level
of
responSibility "
"It would also gtve the
honest accountant, who
m1ght be under teorthc
pressure from fear of losing
his JOb, a weapon to use tn his
refusal to agree
to
management requests to
JUggle ftgures."
He tells the story of an
accountant he had placed
with a (Xlblicly-beld company
"who was fired wtthin a lew
months for refusing to alter
figures to show the company
management.d~rected
m a better fmancial posilton
JUggling of figures by than 1t was "
company accountants m
Half aatd tt took several
pubticly held [trms is far months to place the middlemore Widespread than "the aged famtly man w1th
few cases of out and out fraud another firm after taking a
calculated risk m telling the
that come to Ugbt."
The practtce IS moat preva- COOipany why he had been
lent durtng pertods of fired - "his honeaty could
economic recelll!ton, he said, have prevented him from
and "often rights ttself when getting the job ..
business
tmproves
The fll"st firm. Half satd,
somewhat like the embezzler .. reported a good profit for
who ts able to repay what he the next quarter, 90 I asaume
'borrowed' before he ts management folDid someone .
caught."
who would do what It
"But the !act ts that these wanted."
practices still conlltltute a
Licensmg of management
fraud oo the lllockholders, accountants, Half aald, ts
bllnks who lend money to the more important than the now
company, and to the general required licensing !#. stockpublic which often endll up brokers
paying for the cm~pany's
"Stockbrokers, who may
IOSSN," Half aald.
advllle cllentll l'l'hat stock to
Licensing would ''prevent, buf, rely largely ~n
say, a dishonest controller information aupplied by the
frred from one company for management accountants,"

Half sa1d
"The best example I can
think of ts Penn Central Co.,
whtch
was
betng
recommended as a sohd
major
mvestment
by
brokerages shortly before tl
declared bankruptcy."
~ "Even the requited audit ts
ahnost never m detail, but
necessarUy represents a
small sampling and a great
deal of reliance on {tgW"es
supplied by a ccmpany's
accounting department,''
Half sa1d.
He said he looks on his
recommends !tons for
llcensmg or corporation
aceow1tantsas 'po81tive'' for
management accountants,
and for the profession as a
wbole
Half satd a Jl"oposalrntroduced before the New York
State Legislature to reqwre
licensing of management accountants, II passeil, would be
the first in the nation.
Under \be
proposed
measure, a state board for
llllliUl'gement accountancy
would hear chargeo of
WtprofeSSlooal conduct and
would be empowered to
recommend dtsctplinary
action.
''The accounting profelllioo
suffers when a good part of
the blame from recent
adweue (Xlbticlty that llhould.
lle tocu.d on mallllement
accounllnll ripple~ to an
public accountants," Hal'
saki
1

frost there'd be tllree feet !#.
snow tn Parana right now," a
Rto broker said.
Desptte the cw-rent market
downturn,
the broker
predicted coffee will still
rematn m short supply
According to 90urces in the
IBC, Institute President
Camilo calazans has adopted
a strategy of sttting still and
gambting that prices go back

Ulat ''

up.

Maror League Standings
By United Press I nternat1onal
Naflonill League

"Calazans thinks the me ts
strong enough to w811 tt out.
The answer should ccme in
another four or six weeks
· when the market piCks up,"
the broker satd.

Easl

Ch1cago
Phlla
Pltt$bgh
Sf LOUIS
Montreal
New York

1

COMMONPLEASCOUR~

MEIGS COUNTYNOHIO
o U t441
LAVADA WHEELER,
Roule 3, Box 3,
Pomeroy, Ohro 45769,
Plaintiff,

••
UNKNOWN

HEIRS ,
DEVISEES ,
LEGATEES,
DISTRIBUTEE$ ,
AD ·
MINISTRATDRS,
AND
EXECUTORS, IF. ANY, OF
THE ESTATES OF JAMES
DAVIDSON,
DECEASED,
MARY ANNA DAVIDSON.
DECEASED
DANieL
DAVIDSON,
DECEASED,
CORA
CUNNINGHAM,
DECEASED;
DAVID
DAVIDSON,
DECEASED,
SADIE
BELL
DAVIS,

FLORENCE

HOWELL
DAVIDSON
McKAY , aka FLORENCE
HOWELL
DAVIDSON,
DECEASED,

Addresses

Unknown,

DAVJD WAYNE D4YIDSON,

whost tnt koown address

Pomeroy,

was

Oh1o, Address

Now Unknown.
UNKNOWN
HEIRS.
DEVISEES. LEGATEES,
DISTAIBUTEES,
AD·
MINISTRATORS,
AND
EXECUTORS, IF ANY, OF
THE ESTATE OF DAVID
WA'I'NE
DAVIDSON,
DECEASED.
Address

Balt1mre
Boston
New York
Detro•t
Clevelnd
M1IW
Toronto

Defendants

- SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION-

TO THE DEFENDANTS
ABOVE NAMED

hereby

notrflect

that you have been named

delenct!lnt! rn a legal action

56 39
55 42

596
58f
567
526

51 46

46 49
39 5 7

WISt

•.,
2'h
6lf:z

AU lO 'h
406 18

W L

56 .. ,
53 A'2
S3 44
44 52

43

s1

Pet

GB

558

2

577

546 3
4SB ll lh

457 ll ln

.43 54
34 62

.443 13
354 2 Ph

W L
58 36
53 40
55 AJ

Pet
617
570

West

GB

Ch 1cago
Kan C1ty
tl 1/ 2
Mtnn
561 5
Texas
50 44 532 8
Calif
.t6 48 489 12
Sealtle
43 58 A26 IB 1h
Oakland
40 56 41 7 19
Monday's Results
Kan C1ty at N Y , ppd , ra•n
Mmn 2, Oakland 1, 11 .nns
Texas 61 Cleveland 4
Ball• more 4, Mllw 3, 11 1nns
Detro1 t B Toronto 3
Chtcago 8, Boston 7
Cal1forn•a 7, Seattle '2
TodiY't Probable Pitchers
(All T1mes EDTJ
Texas (Biyleven 9 9) at
Toronto (Garvm 1 10) 7 30
pm
M1lwaukee (Caldwell 2 3) at
Boston &lt;Stanley 6 SL 7 30 p m
Baltimore {Grimsley 9 SJ at
New York (Torrez 9 9) , 8 p m
Oetro1t j Roberts 4 9 ) at
Ch1cago (Knapp s 4) , 8 30 p m
Caltforota (Brett 7 Bl at
Oakland (Blue 9~ 11 l. 10 30 p m
M•nnesota (Thormodsgard 7
7 l at seattle (Abbol1 6 n, 10 35
pm
Wednesday's Games
Mmnesota at Seattle, n1ghl
Cat.forn1a at Oakland. n1ghf
Detro1t at Ch•cago, n1ght
Ba1t1more at New York nlgh1
Mtlwaukee at Boston nlght
Cle¥eland at Kansas C1IV

enlltted
" LAVADA
WHEE"LER vs MELVINA
DAVIDSON . ttal" in the
Common Pleas Court of
Me1gs county, Ohio, Case No
16 AA8 The ob1ect of tl'le
Complaint bemg to partition
the followmg descnbed reel
estate, to wlt
Situate In the Township ol
Sal•sbury, In the c;ounty of
Meigs and State of Ohio
sul•ated m sect1on Etght (8) 1
Town Two (2} and Range
Th1rteen (lJ) '" the Oh io
Company's Purchase, and
bounded l!lnd described es
follows, to wtt Beglnn1ng et
the corner of John Folmer's
he~rs property , near the
corporat1on ltne of the Vtllage
of Pomeroy, and on the
Pomeroy and Chester Road,
thence West along the north
hne of John Folmer's heirs
property to the east hne of
Clara M Dow property,
thence along s~id east line of
sa•d Clara M Oow property
north 14 degrees west about
three hundred forty eight
( 148) feet, thence north 82
degrees east one hundred
nmety f1ve (195) feet to the
Pomeroy and Chester road,
thence In a southerly
direct•on along said road to
the place of beg•nn!ng,
containing one and forty
hundredths ( 1 AO) acres,
more or less
Sa¥e and except the coal
and other m •nerals un
derlytng the above descnbed
premises, and the right to
mtne and.remove the same ,
without unnecessary Injury to
the surface
-..Also the right for a dram or
dttCh-.lo the road from the old
bank. rrto~J'I.m front of the
Folmer Homoe •
..
Reference Deed vol 236,
page 867 and vol 236, page
1

Anderson was relerrmg to
a high fly hit by Ted Sunmons
m the third mning wtth St
Louts trailing 3-2. Cincmnatt
centerfield Cesar Gerorumo
raced back at the crack of the
bat only to watch the ball plop
m short center as two runs
scored.
"I've never seen anything
like !bat," Simmms satd
"He thought the ball was over
his head but It was real high,
real high It's a very unusual
play especiaUy lor Geronuno
who's a good helder He went
stratght back but he just went
back too far and •t fell in "
The Cardinals had taken a
U lead m the second on a
two-run homer by Mike
Tyson . Tyson, who had only
seven career hmners prtor to
thts season, has htt siX home
runs smce June 'Z1
Tyson satd hts newfound
power ts the result of a

ttle demand of the
Complaint Is to sell Oefen
dants' mterest •n the above
descr1bed prem 1Ses
You are not1fted that you
are requ,red to answer the
Compla1nl w1lhln twenty
erght days after the last
publ!calion, wh1ch wtll be
pu bllshed once each week for
sue consrcutive weeks The
last publication will be made
on fhe 26 day of July, 1977
In case of your ta•lure to
answer or otherw.se respond
as permitted by the Ohto
~uln of Clvtl Procedure
within the time stated,
judgment by default will be
rende-red aga!Mst you for the
relief demanded 10 the
Compia•nt
~nd

Larr:y E Spencer,
Clerk. of Courts
Me1os County, Ohio
(6J 21, 28 (7J 5. 12. 19, 26, 6tc

,
"f'

'- '
'-

mndtfted hatung stance modeled after Rose's patented
crouch al the plate
""rm havmg a little trouble
wtth the breaking pttch and I
thought til€ crouch would
help that, but II baSI\'1," S81d
the light-btlting Tyson "I'm
not hitung for the average "
Rose stngled to center tn
the fourth truung gtvmg him a
career total of 2,881 hits. The
total put hun past Frankie
Frisch as the major-league's
most productive swttchhttter
Rose added another Slngle m
the etghth
Although Cincmnati IS 1012
games hehmd Los Angeles tn
the NL West race, George
Foster conunues to have a
banner year Foster hit solo
homers m the thtrd and nmth
tnnmgs, giving hun a career
high 31 lor the seaSon.
But the cardinals chased
Reds starter and loser Jack
Biltingham with two out in
the stxth and then feasted on
three Cincinnati relievers
Rehever Buddy Schultz, now
5-1, took the WID for St. Louts.
Simmons homered off Joe
Hoerner m Ute seventh and
Garry Templeton drove tn
wbat proved to be the wtnntng
run wtth a smgle m the etghth
off Manny Sarmiento
Thus. what was supposed to

be

a

celebration

for

Ander!IDn , markmg h1s new

two-year contract&lt;extenston
wtth the Reds, turned mto
another m a strtng or defeats
"There's no questton you
feel good about something
like that," Anderson said of
the new contract "But
you've got to wm some ball
games If you wtn ball games,
you're there a long tune "
Cratg Swan pitched a
threebttter and Steve
Henderson doubledm a run in
the frrst lnnmg, gtving tbe
Mets their triumph at Los
Angeles Henderson's double
followed stogies by Lenny
Randle and Felix Millan and
handed II .game wtnner Doug
Rau his second loss
In other NL games,
Chicago defeated Houston, 97, Philadelphia scored a 6-4,
12-inning victory over Ute San
Dtego Padres, Ptttsburgh
beat Atlanta, 6-3, and
Montreal
shaded San
Francisco, ~Cubs 9, Astros 7:
The Cubs squandered a Hl
lead and then beat the Astros
when U.rry Buttner htt a
tworun"horner in the 'bottom
of the etghth mnmg. The
Astros scored seven runs m
the seventh to tie the score
Buttner's game-wtnnmg blow

came &lt;•ff Mark l~mongello,

who dropped hts 12th decision
for U1e Astros
Plull•es 6, Padres 4
The Phtlhes tied the score
wtth lour runs in the nmth
mnmg and won 11 in Ute 12th
when Garry Maddox trtpled
home a run and scored
another on a single by
rehever Tug r.J_cGraw
McGraw allowed only one hit
over the last lour tnnutgs to
win his fourth game while
Dan SptUner was the loser
Mike Schmidt hit his 27th
homer for Ute Philltes.
Pirates 6, Braves 3:
BtU RobtnSOn' s three-run,
tiebreaktng homer m the
etghth lifted Ute Pirates to
their vtctory Jerry Reuss
pitched a ftve-btlter r... hiS
sixth wm. The loss was
Ntekro's 12th
Expos 4, Giants 3:
Pinch httler Del Unser htt a
two-run homer and Eilts
Valentme a solo homer lor
Ute Expos as Steve Rogers
went 5lx mnmgs for hts 11th
wm Ptnch hitter Gary
Alexander htt a three-run
bomer lor the Gtants in the
ntnth bef..-e Bill Atkinson
retired Ute stde. Ed Halickt
suffered hts mnth loss for San
FranCISCO

annual Kyger Creek Uttle
League baseball tournament wlll be played at
7:30 tonlgbt on the James
B. Harreld Field. Monday
night's unsolatlon and
champlonsbtp games were
wuhed out.

Toolgbt's
consolallon lilt starts at I
p.m. Johnson ' • Market

plays Hannan Trace for
third
place
honon.
Pormroy's Yankees meet
Mason Insurance for the

title.

Martin
survived
Monday

NEW YORK {UP!) - The
skies blazed w•th lightning
The heavens opened and the
rams came And another day
passed that Btlly Martm
wasn 'I ftred
Monday's scheduled game
between the Yankees and
Kansas Ctty Royals was post·
poned by a heavy downpour,
a good tune for Yankee
prmcipal owner George
Stembrenner to call a press
conference
''My mam gnpe," satd
Stembrenner of Martm, "ts
that he's letung the players
get away wtth everything
Martin mtght he surprtsed at
what some players thmk of
scormg smgle by Btlly Smtih
Doug DeCinces and Eddie Ute sttualton "
Stembrenner expressed
Murray
homered
for
Baltimore. Rangers 6, faith tn his team's abiltty to
wm a second straight
Indians f:
ClaudeU Washmgton's two- Amencan League pennant,
but added tl wouldn't be easy.
run Slngle, hts third hit of the
"It will be tough," he satd
game, capped a three-run,
ntnth-innmg rally agamst All- "{Reggte) Jackson and
Star reliever Jun Kern and {Mtckey) Rivers are the keys
enabled the Rangers to defeat to the club They are vttal
the lndtans Ray Fosse had a You can always depend on a
Thurman Munson or a Chrts
'homer lor Cleveland
- ChambliSS because they are
Tigers 8, Blue Jays 3:
Milt Wtlcox pttched seven steady. But Jackson and
tnntngs or shutout ball while Rtvers can make the team
Milt May, Phil Mankowskt, really go I think we can wm
Ron LeF1ore and Rusty Staub but the next two weeks are
each drove m two runs to vttal."
Steinbrenner hesttated
spark the Tigers over the
Blue Jays LeFlore htt the momentarily, as if he dtdn'l
second lllStdethe.park homer enJOY what he was about to
of his career in Ute stxth say
"We thought Martin's love
mnmg, while Steve Staggs
for
the Yankees combmed
homered for Toronto
wtth the fact that this is hts
Twins 2, A's 1:
U.rry Hisle Singled home fourth and posstbly ' last
Rod Carew wtth none out m chance at managmg a major
the lith mrung to gtve the league club would cause all
the pteces to come together I
Twins a vtctory over the A's
Dave Goltz struck out 14 and don't thmk he's worked bard
went the distance for the enough If you look at hts
Twins to WID hts 12th game m record, you'D see that he does
18 dectstons Mtke Cubbage • well m his first year and
worse m the second. Ask the
homered lor Minnesota
Detrott Tigers, Mmnesota
Augels 7, Mariners Z:
Don Baylor drove m stx Twins and Texas Rangers
"I hope he manages here
runs wtth a prur or homers
and a smgle to help Nolan for 15 years but tl ts up to
Ryan become the major {club PreSident Gabe) Paul
league's ftrst 14-game wmner to make that dectston "
as the Angels beat the Stemhrenner added· "There
Marmers. Ryan allowed only are clauses in his contract
five htls and struck out 10 m which would enable us to
r81SlDg his record to 14-9. Dan sever company wtthout
Meyer htl a homer for paying hun tf he VIolated
them''
Seattle

Chisox are winning believers
By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
'
The Chtcago Whtte Sox
actually believe they can wm
the Amertcan
League
pennant, and they sure have a
way or hammering home
!hell" pomt so their opponents'
leads are never safe.
Luts Tiant and the Boston
Red Sox found that out
Monday night when they
watched, m sheer disbelief,
as the White Sox mped out a
6-1 deftctl wtlh three
crunching blows m the final
three mrungs to score an Jl.7
vtctory m a natwnally
televised contest
Held to only one run by
Ttant over the ftrst stx
inntngs, the Whtte Sox began
thetr bombardment when
Ertc Soderholm unloaded a
twO.flln homer tn the seventh

ummg Boston added a run to
take a 7-3 lead, but Jtm
Spencer's three-run homer
capped a lour-run etghth
tnntng that tied the score and
Brtan Dowrung won tl for
Chtcago wtth a solo homer m
Ute etghth
"We're like one gigantic
'Rocky,' we keep thromng
lefts andrlghtsand hopefully,
after mne, we can put you
away," satd Chicago's Riehle
Ztsk. "The way It's been the
whole year I sometunes think
{owner) Btll Veeck sold hts
soul to the devtl."
The White Sox' late-mrung
rally made a wmner out of
Lerrin LaGrow Boston's ace
reliever, BtU Campbell, suffered his seventh loss m 16
decistons Jun Rice hit hts
25th homer for Boston, tymg

him wtth teammate George
Scott for the AL lead.
In other AL games, Baltimore e&lt;lged Mtlwaukee, 4-J,
m II mntngs, Texas topped
Cleveland, 6-4, Detrmt
defeated Toronto, 8-3,
Mmnesota edged Oakland, 21, tn II mnings, and
California downed Seattle, 72. Kansas City at New York
was ramed out
Orioles 4, Brewers 3:
Rookie Dave CriSCIOne, recently recalled from the
llUDors, btl hts first major
league homer with one out m
the 11th mrung to gtve the
Ortoles a vtctory over the
Brewers A twO.flln homer by
Lenn Sakata had given Mtlwaukee a 3-2lead m the nmth,
but the Ormles tied tl m !herr
ball of the inrung on a run-

Sparky's contract extended
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
world champton Cinetnnatt
Reds are slumptng, but Reds'
Prestdent Bob Howsam
certamly IS!l't blallUDg tl on
manager Sparky Anderson
Howsam showed support
Monday for Anderson by
extendmg his contract two
years

If Anderson stays on lor the
1978 and 1979 seasons, tl will
mark 10 straight years
Anderson has headed the
Reds and will!llve the 43-year
old, whiteh811"ed skipper the
longest tenure of any
manager tn the club's

Johnson likes his
top draft choices

869

•

Pet: GB

Enf

Unknown,

You are

W L

• 56 38

W L
Pet. GB
Los Ang
60 37 619
C•nc l
48 46 511 i011?
Houston
46 53 445 15
San Fran
46 54 460 lS'h
San D1ego
42 58 420 191f2
Atlanta
35 61 365 2A'h
Monday's Results
Ch•cago 9, Houston 7
P'!ftSburgh 6 Atlanta 3
Sf LOUIS 9, C1nclnnat18
P.tula 6, San D•ego 4, 12 •nns
New York 1. Los Angeles o
Montreal A, San FranCISCO l
Today•s Probable Pttchen
(All Ttmet EDT)
Cmcannat1 (Norman 9 6 ) at
Chtcago (R Reuschel 13 3)
2 30 p m
Ph1ladelph1a tLonborg A 3 and
Carlton 13 5 ) at Los Angeles
(Rhoden 10 7 and Hooton 8 4)
2735pm
Houston {R•chard 9 7) at
P•llsburgh tCandelana 10 3 ),
7 35 p m
Atlanta (Ruthven 3 6) at St
LOUIS (FOrsch 12 A), 8 JS p m
Montreal (Brown 1 7 and
Holdsworth 0 l) at San D•ego
(Fnesleben 2 5 and D'Acqu tsto
11 J, 2.9pm
New York ( Koosman 7 10) at
San Francisco (Montefusco J
8), 10 35 p m
Wednesday's Games
Ctncmnat1 at Chtcago, 2
New York at San FranCisco
Houston at P1ttsburgh, night
Atlanta at Sf LOUIS, n1ghf
Phtla at Los Angeles, n•Qhl
Montreal at San 01eQO, mght
Amenun League

tN THE

DECEASED;

Olamplons, Anderson shook
his head when asked whether
he ever thought hts team was
capable of such a Iosmg
streak
"No, I never felt they
could," Anderson satll after.
Monday ntghl's 9-8 loas to the
St Louts Cardinab "It's just
everythmg. A fly ball as high
as Ute sky fell m, things llke

RAINED OUT
The finals of the ltth

WILMINGTON,
Ohto
"Eddlejustexplodesoffthe
{UPI) -In moVIe tenns, the ball He freezes you lor that
btggest attrachon at the tenth of a second and he's on
Cincinnati Bengals' trauung your shoulder Then he
camp ts a new production qutckly accelerates like Alan
entitled "The Dynamic Duo." Page (the Mmnesota Vikings'
And It's playmg to rave All-Pro defenstve tineman)
revtews.
"The thmg about both ts
Gettmg star billing are . ' they work so hard," added
rookte defenstve llnemen Lapham "They don't quit
Eddie Edwards and Wilson after the first move. Therr
Whitley -the club's two top second and third moves are
reaDy great. Both of them are
draft cbotces.
"They both look good,'' just good already."
beams Bengals' head coach
One of the btggest suprtses
Bill Johnson, who continued of trauung camp was when
to put his club through two-a- offenstve tackle Ron Hunt,
day drills today "They're who wetghed 274 pounds last
reaDy gtfted
season, showed up with a ~
"The nice thing about them pound wetght loss
is tl comes kind of natural "I bad only one meal a day,
Ute rushing the passer btl. ran SIX nules a day and then
Ne1ther of them requires a did 1212t}.yard wmd sprtnts,"
really
long
teaching explain~ Hunt "But I've got
process."
to put some of 11 back on Edwards,
from
the got no strength."
Universtty of Mianu {Fla ),
Veteran defenstve end Ken
and Whitley, out of the Johnson was hack m camp
University of Houston, were after unexplainably leavmg
drafted to shore up the for a short while unmedtalely
Bengals' defenstve line after camp opened. Thirteenespect11Uy the pass rushing year veteran lineman Bob
Another person unpressed Brown remamed the team's
by the new duo ts veteran only AWOL Club offtctals
Bengals' olfenstve guard had not heard from him and
Dave Lapham, who baa been did not know if he planned to
gotn(l bead-tohead against reparl to camp
the pair In drlUa
Hobbled by early traiiWlll
"They're already really camp mjurtes were fullback
good," praised Lapham. Boobte Clark (toe), defenstve
"Wilson's really strong He back Marvm Cobb, receiver
has exceptionally good lee! Alex Perctval and kick
for "When you're the slightest returner Wtllie Shelby
bit off balance. Then he gives (bamstrmgs)
Defenaive
you that qwck Uttle throw tackle Blll Kollar was stlil
and accelerates to the unable to practice because of
quarterback
loot surgery recuperatton .

history.
The current longevtty mark
IS held by Bill McKechnie,
who managed the Reds for
nme years from 1938 through
1946.
Anderson, who made hts
major league milnagmg
debut wtth the Reds m 1970

and now ts tn his etghth
stratght season, has compiled
a 6Ql jVInntng percentage
mth 731 Wlhs and 485 losses
Hts teams have won f1ve
National League West titles,
four league pennants and two
world cbamptonships

R d

b d d
e s may e ea '
just ask Virginia

CINCINNATI {UP!) ' 'The b u II pen's
Does Red rhyme wtth dead • appropriately named, I
Vrrgtnta England JUst shakes solemnly swear,
"Because there's sure a lot
her head
Since the Cmc11111ati Reds of bull down tbere.
are havmg such a bard time,
"Now, tl's time to tell you
Mrs. England llectded to where the problem reaUy
descrthe thetr problems m Ues,
rhyme
"Who's the pttching coach
She ftgured the club's at (farm team) Indy? Wbat's
pttching staff was just an the name or the guy?
illUSion, and so ended her eptc
"Bring hun up, Sparky, and
to manager Sparky Anderson gtve hun a try.
Wlth a posstble solutton.
"It sttll ISO'\ too late to
Excerpts from Mrs En- catch those guys tn LA,
gland's dtlty {which the Reds
"But if our pltchmg coach
isn't replaced, l'mafratd, the
may notltnd so wttty):
"Hey, Sparky, what's Btg Red Machme has seen tts
wrongwtth the Reds' pitching best days."
staff?
LAS VEGAS, Nev. {UPI)"Each one you send out is The Neyada Equal Rtghts
yet a bigger laugh
CommiSSton dectded Monday
"Like a ftshennan's luck, 1t had jurisdtclion and will
Sparky, alter fishmg all day, ' mvest 1gate
a
sex
"A lot of btg ones bave discrtminattQn complaint
really gotten away.
filed on behalf of about 250
"Don Gullett bad stardom male coaches m Clark
wntten all over his name,
County.
"We fans patiently wailed,
John Chura head coach at
hl,tt hts big season never Cllaparral High School, filed
came
the swt !jist week chargmg
"Pal Darcy's another, who male
coaches
were
.,
dtscrlmtnated
agamst
wtth proper care,
"Could have been a btg because they would not
wmner, but he was shipped recetve pay mcreases this
off somewhere.
year The sutt satd other
"Remember Joaqwn An- school acttvtty advisers,
dujar 7 How he couldp't do tt including female coaches,
anymore?
will receive pay lxioltts.
"Someone mtsled you,
Sparky, because now wtth
Houston he's 10 and 4.
"Hey, I guess Pat Zachry's
had to learn to throw a
spiller,
"He couWt pitch here, but
for the Mell Sunday he
pitched a twOOitter.
"Do I feel sorry for (Jack)
Blllingham' Why man,llkea
alive,
''A game gues nine llliWigJ,
but he •s been taught to pitch
five

L

Sports transactions
Football
Green Bay - S•gned defen
stve end Ezra Johnson, second
f~rst round draft choice from
Morns Brown, to a senes of
one year contracts Also Signed
free agent pvnter Joe Parker of
Appalachran State
Buffalo - Cut guard W1ll
W!ICO)( and free agent kicker
Ron Slovensky and placed
cornerback Robert James on
wa1vers at his own request
New England - Extate
Buffalo - Cut guard Wtll
Wllco&gt;&lt; and free agent k•cker
Ron Slovensky and placed
cornerback Robert James on
wa1versgents - quarterback
Larry Lawrence, punter Bill
Farns defens1ve end Lerov
Hegge, tackle Dave LeBel,
lmeback.er Claude Johnson,
cornerback Joe WastHngton,
ktck returner Steve Mason,
safety Glenn Loft. detens1ve
back Greg Kokal, defensive
back Alvm Brooks and safety
Dopald Roberts
M1nnesota - S1gned rook•e
guard Dennis Sw111ey and
rook•e safety Tom Hannon to a
senes of three one year con
tracts
~
Atlanta - Released tight end
RIChard Reagan from The
Citadel I • neb a c k e r s 8111
Muxtow trom Colorado and Ken
Culbertson from West Vtrgrn•a
plus guard Dave Ostrowskr
from Auburn, all rook•es
College Basketball
Georg•a Southern - Named
J B Scearce new head coach
Hockey
Los Angel~ - Signed right
wmg Dave Taylor of Clarkson
College,
a;c ~1S~th~r:~o:u~nddraft
select10n
m the 1975
to a
multiyear

Manager Sparky Anderson s
con tra ct two years through
1979
Boston - Released veteran
re11ever Tom Murphy and
called up start1n9 p1tcher Oon
Aase from Pawtucket

Ali may fight
'til he loses
NEW YORK {UPI) Muhammad Ali won't admtt
tt, but he may fight until he
loses.
More than anything else,
Alt has always tnsisted he
wants to become the first
black heavywetght champion
to retire wtth hts title mtact
But greed has caught him and
he will take any rtsk Ill reach
his goal of $10 millton In tax·
free bonds before he qwts. So
far , he says, he's "only got
about $7 million "
Ali has ftghts ltned up wtth
knockout spectahst Earrue
Shavers (Sept 29 ), Alho
Rtgheltt (November) and
Ken Norton or Jtnuny Young
{next February ) Monday be
was talking past all of them
and even suggested retired
fOrmer champiOn Floyd
Patterson come back lor a
fast few milhon
Ah's manager, Herbert
Muhammad, says he Wishes
Alt would retire rtghl now
rather tban risk everything
wtth a loss.
Ali IS qwck to dtsagree that
he 'U lose even if he goes on
fightmg another two years
He says he's got the ''power
of Allah" behind htm and
can't lose Maybe But Ali
also has 35 years behmd hun,
20 m the ring, and someday
there may be punches he wtll
be too old to stop
Alt IDSISIS he IS not
mottvated by personal greed.
He says he needs the money
to "help the people of the
world, black, whtte, yellow,

whatever." He says he's the
"evangelist of boxtng 11 or the
"ambassador to the world"
and his current llUSSton wtth
the Nation of Islam is to
change the world's mlBge of

•

Jesus Christ as a white man
Alt's large appratsal of
himself, he aays, is the very
thutg that enables hun to
continue as champton If hiS
ego is, tndeed, hts strength,
perhaps he never will lose.
But even supreme conltdence
can be shattered by a right
cross Ill the mouth
Maybe Alt was just trymg
to con Shavers and the
wrtters gathered at Ute news
conference Monday
And Shavers could make a
mtstake if does what he satd
he mtght .
"I won't try to knock hun
out/' Shavers satd. ''I 'm
tratrung ror 15 rounds "

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Phone 992-2156 For Advertising Service

�4- Tho Daily Selllmel, Mlddleport-POITH!I'oy, O., Tut&gt;Sday, July 26, 1977

5_- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 26, 1977

~--m::::::::::::~:::::=::;:::*:;:::::».'::::~·~W.:~~:::;::::;::.::!~!X:~~:::::x::..~~~

Nelson reunion held ·1 Helen Help

I

was held Sunday, J uly 24, at
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Blosser
Forest Acres Park . Lunch and
Jeff : Odas Nct.un;
was ~rved atl 2:30 p.m. with Mgrilyn George and Tim;
~ra l'e
given by Rit'ha rd Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Nelsw1;
Nelson.
Charles Smith; Mr. and M1·s.
Attending from the local Clifford Gibron and family;
area were Mrs. Bonnie Mr. and Mrs . Buck Stewart
Miller ; Mr. and Mrs. Frank and family; Mr. and Mrs.
Le~c h ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Richard Thompson; Mr. and
Yost, Tina ; Retha, Rick, Don. Mrs. James Gilbo:rt and famiand Peggy Johnson and Ri c~ ly;· Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Cadle; Mr. and Mrs. James Wheeler and family; and Mr.
Miller and Jinuny ; Mr. and and Mrs. Henry Horsley and
Mrs. Eddis Nelson ; Mr. and ramlly.
Mrs. Leland Nelson and
Johnny ; Lillie Smith and
MEETING PLANNED
Ronald Smith; Joan Banks;
The Gallipolis Chapter of
Larry Smith ; Eddie Bishop; lhe Full Gospel Business
Mr. and Mrs. O.J. Andreoni Men's Fellowship will meet
and Rhonda ; Mr, and Mrs .. with the women's Aglow
Roger Atkins, Kelli and Mis- chapter at th.e Meigs Inn on
ty ; Yvonne Tackett, Sherry Friday, Aug. S, at 8 p.m.
and Shauna ; Delbert Speakers will be Jack and
Fridley; Bonnie Morris; Jean Coleman from Lalll'el,
Terry Walker; Billy George; Md.
and Bill Quillen.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Walker, Eric and Shane; Mr. · A thought for the day : Irish
and Mrs. Robert Barrett; An· playwright George Bernard
na Collins, Mike and Barry; Shaw sald, "The test of a man
and William Smith.
or woman's feelings is how
From out-of-town were Mr. they behave in a quarrel."
and Mrs. J.B. Moore; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Nelson; Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip Bigham;
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nelson,
Cathy and Caron; Mr. and
Mrs. Earnest Nelson and
Garrett ; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
West and family ; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth L. Miller and
family; Audrey Miller; Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Carpenter
and family ; Wilma Lee
Becky Edwards has
Knighton and family; Mr. returned home from a week
and Mrs. D.C. Baker; Mr. at Jackson's Mill State 4-H
and Mrs. Jack Nelson, Cara, Conference for older mem~
'Lisa, Brain, and Barry ; bers at Weston, W.Va. where
Amber Tickle; Mr. and Mrs. she represented Ohio as an
alternate delegate.
Chosen for the state
sponsored and planned trip,
Becky was among 3!6 4-H
members who learned the
history of Jackson's Mill and
was briefed on 4-H in West
Virginia.
Becky foun d a very
rewarding experience- in
meeting the other delegates,
two each from each of the
states
of
Kentucky,
Maryland, Pennsylvania ,
Tennessee, Virginia ' and a
representative from San
Paolo, Brazil, and urges all of
her fellow 4-H members to
BECKY EDWARDS
compete for the trip.

~

The an~mal Nebwn Heuntun

?4·
~

(~/4
I

I

' &lt;.

.\~/1/A .
\. ~· '-.,.//aL .l
Bonnie Dailey
TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Billy T. Dailey, Long Bottom,
are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of daughter Bonnie Lou to Mr. Mikel Phlip Milhoan, _
son of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan. Miss Dailey is
employed by Buckley 's Farm in Reedsville while Milhoan
is employed by Blazer Materials, Wilksville. The wedding
will be an event of Saturday, August 13, at 7:30p.m. at the
Mt. Olive Church, Long Bottom.

Cap.ehart reunion enjoyed
The descendants of the Ed
Capehart family held their
reunion Saturday, July 16, at
Oglebay Park at Wheeling,
W.Va.
Russ Capehart was reelected president; Louise
Rosenbaum,
secretarytreasure; and Betty Krauss,
historian . Games were
played and a white elephant
sale was held.
The reunimi Will be held
next year at the Racine Locks
and Dam part the last Sunday
in June and in 1979 in the Warren area.
Attending were Mrs. Lee
Richardson; Mr. and Mrs.
Russ Capehart, Mary Allice
and Marcia Slssion, Mason;

Mrs. John Troy II, Tinuny
and Johnnie, Lexington, Ky. ;
Chris and Todd Self, Mrs.
Leroy Metcall, Jeff and Mike,.
Mrs. Jack Hysell, Columbus ;
Mrs. Ralph Potter and Ann,
Silver Springs, Md. 1 Mr. and
Mrs,, Lee Krauss, Mrs.
Robert Powell, Mariano and
Dede, Warren; Rick Rosenbaun, Mt. Pleasant, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Rasenbaun,
John, Joann, Mary, David,
and Pattie, Glendale Heighls

m.

,

GRANGE TO VISIT
The Rock Springs Grange
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m.
for work in the third and
fourth degrees. The Grange
from Hemlock Grove will
visit.

R.lthard • \:l.Shll aUn O. ;ys~

Returns
home from
4-H meet

USDA

uS

;~

:;:
...

:~

~~

By Helen Hottel
•

•

Snyder reunion held
SYRACUSE - The fourtll

"'

&amp;Mual Snyder reunion waa
held Sunday, July 10 at Portland Park. A delicious basket
lunclrwu lei'Ved at noon to
the ttl attending.
During the afternoon a
buslnesa meeting wu conducted by the president,
Jerry Rowe. The secretary's
report wu given by Lucille
Lawson and the treasurer's
report by Jean Hall.
By WIAnlmous vote next
year's reunion will be on the
third Sunday In July at Portland Park.
.Officers elected for 1978
were president, Goldie
• Holman; vice president,
Evelyn Manuel; secretary,
,Janice Law110n, and Jean
Hall was retained as
treasurer. Committees appointed were, registration,
Ralph Shain; gifts, Janice
l.Aw110n, and entertaimnent,
·Eddie Snyder, Nancy Par111111 and Virginia Rowe.
Gifts were given to Harry
.Shain, oldest man; Hazel
Shain, oldest, lady; Ryan
!Wwe, son of Jay and Cindy
Rowe, youngest boy; Monica
Holman, daughter of !Wger
- and Sally Holman, youngest
girl; Virginia Rowe, having
tile largest family in attendance and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Holman and family, Horn
Lake, Miss. for traveling the
farthest.
Providing entertaimnent
during the day were
Margaret Tuttle, Kim Batey,
Pete Snyder, Maudle Snyder

~1

1

Helen and Sue:
Mom has been dead fll' II years and my sister and 1 have
been trying to get Dad remarried . He's had a lot of girl friends,
but this last one has been !rouble for me.
·
She came over when Dad was out and uked me if 1 would
give her a back rub. Naturally I obliged. She said it was more
effective witJJout clothes (Ill. Then she pulled me down oo the
bed.

Terrified, I r"" out of Ure house and spent the night with 'a
friend (male ). Whenever she comes over, 1 feel guilty and
disgusted. Should l tell myfaiher?- CONFUSED GUY
C. G.:

Yes ! This woman has flunked out as a future stepmother,
and your Dad should know. - HELEN AND SUE

+++

Rap:
Being in an all-boy high school limils your chances of
meeting girls, so I hate to give up on Janice.
She's pretty and all, but she does pot once in a while which
is against my morals. My folks think she is a dun1b blonde •
which, in a way, she is.
I've been more or less seeing her for a year and I know I
shouldn't, but how come deep down inside I really have a need
lor her. And how can I convince my folks that she's basically a
good kid - she just does what all the others do (almost ) these
days. - BUND LOVE
.
B. t

::

.If Janice's worst faults are an occasional toke, I doubt

she'll corrupt your morals.
Stay friends! - HELEN

+++
B.L.:

About coovincing your folks she's something more than a
"dumb blonde ": that's a tough one. Only Janice can
accomplish this,.and she may not feel it's necessary - unless
she really gets serious about you, - SUE

Donna Taylor
ENGAGED - Mr.and Mrs.&amp;mald Taylor, Pomeroy,
announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Donna Colleen to Airman Ronald. L.
Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hoffman,
Middleport. The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate of Meigs
High Schoof and is employed at the Blue and Grey
Restaurant. Mr. Hoffman is a 1974 graduate of Meigs High
School and is presently stationed in Hawaii with the U. S.
Air Force. The open church wedding will be an event of
July 30 at 6:30p.m . at the Trinity Church with the Rev.'
Wilbur Perrin officiating. A reception will follow at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Watson, Ure bride's
grandparents.

+++

Dear Rap:

.
My 17-year-old daughter has a problem of unwanted hair
in the bikini zone . She can't visit the beach "as is" in popular
cut-down beach wear. She doesn't want to prove to the world
she's a real blonde.
Dipilatories are too harsh and cause rashes. Electrolosis
for a large area is very ex..,nsive. What? - HAIR 'EM,
SCARE 'EM

jacks family
reunion is held

MASON FURNITURE

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

Dear Hair..SC.re:
She can eiiher lathe 'em, shave 'em, or' switch to a one.
piece suit: the new bare-hip models are getting very popular.
- HELEN
·
·

RU'!'LAND - The Jacks
famliy reunion was held
Sunday, July 17 at the Forest
11\cres Park near Rutland
with 2118 ip attendance.
They were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Rupe and daughter
Brenda, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
RuJ&gt;' and three children,
Mrs. James Snodgrass and
son James, Mrs. Ralph
Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Jacks, Toni and Carol, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Jacks Jr.
and Penny, Mrs. Lillie MeMillin, Mrs. Virgil E. Jacks,
Shelly, Nicole, and Clay;
Mrs. Dale Eckard, Triaha
· and Lisa, Miss Ranae Jacks,
Mr.andMrs.GeneJacksand
two daughters, Joe Jacks,
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Wade,
Sue, Becky, Lonzo, Grady
and Leanna; Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Jacks, Toots, Barbara,
Alex, Misty, Jeff, Jay, Dean,
Don and Dan; Mrs. Katherine
Justice, April, Billy, Mylie
Lynn, Wayne, .Wayne Jr. and
Johnny ; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Jacks, MeliSsa, Donna Carol
and Robbie; Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Jacks, Bonnie, Karen,
Allen and Mitchell; Mr. and
J'4rs. Ernest Nicholson, Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Nicholson,
Ryan and Bridgitt; Mr. and
Mrs. William Nicholson and
, daughter Miranda, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Mozingo and
three children; Mr. and Mrs.
Chester ·Joluison, Rocky and
Stony, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Lambert and daughter; Mrs.
BaUnda Shuler and daughter,
Eugene Jacks, Mr. aild Mrs.
Victor Gotschall, Mr. and
Mrs. Hanzel Clark, Mr. and
Mrs. L. B. Grimes, Kenny,
Scotty, Phillip, Eric and
Lewis; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Clark, Billy, Don, Kevin and
Kelly; .Mrs. Connie McClung,
Usa and friend; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Merrlll, Theresa,
,finuny, Charles and Tinuny;
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland
Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Hurley

FRIDAY UNTll 8 PM

+++

MASON FURNITURE

NOTE FROM SUE: Or J&gt;'rhaps both. Where is it written a
girl can't shave her legs all the way up ?

Herman Grate

773-5592

Mason , W. \Ia .

ENGLISH OR

CHOICE

=~. . . IJL,.99C

BLADE CUT

.CHUCK
ROAST
LB.

09

:':~~-·· · ~iriri ril~:.- ~.1__-,~

59~

HOMO MILK--·············--------'~--~~~· 79'
.

11 SWISS

GIANT SIZE

FRESH•

ARM
ROAST.....•..•••.•..L~: 79~

SAVE 50•

GROUND
BEEF

BANANAS

'

4QUAittS'1
PEPSI
COLA

5 LB.

.,.oo

TRASH CAN LINERS ............ ~~.~~~.~1•• 99'
SUGAR•••••••••••••••••• ••••••~. ~:. ~-~- •.ggt
CANDY BAR SALE MILKSHAKE PAYDAY
BUTTERNUT..-- ..: .......... ---.: ... 10/11:00
ALL
TOBACCO ................ 14.13

COCA-COLA

.

8-16

oz. 99~

· e&lt;JTTLES

:SUPER
MARKET

Plus Tox

DR. PEPPER
16 oz. bois.
8 PAK
.

- 79~

16 oz.
bots.
8PAK
ALL WEEK
PRICE

THURS. ONLY

DIET RITE COLA

'1'·
8 PAK

SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

10 ro 10
1 .

I'

~detected,

Polly Cramer

Bleach should stop mildew
J'()U.Y'S PROBLEM
bEAR POU.Y - Do you
know of any way l could get
mildew off the bottom of my
bathtub mat? l have tried
washing it in the washer and
using cleansers but with no
help.-TONYA.
DEAR TONYA :.. Sun and
air will help. Also you might
try lemon juice and salt or
even a solution of bleach and
water. -POU.Y.
DEARPOU.Y-Maylsuggest to Mrs. F.L.M. a;,d
others who · have trouble
cleaning kitchen tile and
grout tbat perhaps the pr&lt;&gt;blem is not just a film but
mildew. I always .tell my
friends that a simple way to
remove this is to · apply
diluted liquid bleach with a
pastry or small paint brush.
Be careful not to splash any
of this on the skin. If
necessary leave it on until
dry and then rinse well with
clear water and again using
the brush to get in the cracks.
I also find this works wonders
in the · laundry room or
bathroom where baseboards
have gotten wet.
(Polly's note - I feel sure
our reader mearui if the
baseboards are also tile.) PAT D.
DEAR POU.Y- Pet Peeve
is with the blatant disregard
for the speed limits. on turnpikes. Occasionally, on a recent trip on a well-known
turnpike, I would see a car
pulled over by the patrol but
never a truck. With the CB
radios outfoxing all efforts to
.

c&lt;introl truck speed surely a
new system is called for . I.
think there might be a simple
mileage chart, correlated
with ime elapsed (each ticket
received at the entrance
would be punched with the exact time), would tell exactly
how many miles per hour a
given car was traveling.
· Speeders would be pulled
aside at the exit and given a
ticket that should brook no
argument. This would free
the patrol to search out offenders who would try to beat
the system by stopping lor a
bite to eat thus bringing their
speed down to a respectable
level. They could also pay
more attention to the trucks
that are going 4ll miles an
hour up a hill but 80 dpwn. It
might be suggested that they
be checked on the downside of
the hill not the upside.
Perhaps this should go to the
energy conservationists as it
would be one way to hold the
line on gasoline. -CAROL.
DEAR POU.Y - Mrs.
C.R.J. suggested using a
razor blade to rip seams but I
think my way is easier and
does nat require putting on
old pants to pin the seam to.
Simply clamp the material on
one side of the seam under
the sewing machine presser
foot and use a rij)ping tool
that can be bought for a
quarter at any notion store.
Rip away with no danger of
cutting the material. -MRS.
A.T.G.
Polly will send you one of
her signed . thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her. colwnn . .Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
.newspaper.

4oth weuuzng
""S

allegiance. Devotions- were
read by Eulalie Webster
. whlcb .included a poem
"Airborne." Also read were
dally devotions taken from
the Dally Word. Mrs. Webster
cloaed with prayer.
d
Tbe
secretary
an
treasurer's reportS ~read
and at:cepted. A round ·robin
· card was • sent to Carrie
Neutzllng. The neat meeting
will be In September at the
home of Faye WDdennuth. At
the clole of the · meeting
members 1tood In silent
prayer lor aU members who
are Ill. A aocial hollr folio"!"'~.

.lbe wedding of Gilberta
~ean Harper, daullbter of
Mrs. Ada Harper, 1701
Road, Pomeroy and
Coy Bly Starcher, Jr., 1011 of
Ada Starcber, Rt. s,
WOMEN TO MEET
Pomeroy, 'lriiJ bebeldJuly S1,
The
Meigs Christian
8t 2:30 p.m. at the Flnt
Women's
Fellowlhip will
Soldbara Baptllt Chl!reb,
,...,. . 'l1le CUIIGm of open meet 8t tbe Rldlancl aturdl
Gllurdl 'lriiJ be oblerved. A of Chrllt 011 'ftlunday at 7:30
rlltilltlaa at the churdl will p.m. The [II'Oil'Uil will be on
"Blood PI eaure.''
follow.

a-.

I

. We Accept Federal Food StamPS - We ReseiYe the Riiht To Jmit Quantlti·!S

.,

Weddinl! planned

16 OZ. BOTS.

910 10
.

A covered-dish and hillll•
burger fry preceded the
11!Cent meeting of the Past
Presidents Club of Drew
Webster Unit 39 beld at the
home of Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
pmldent.
FoUowing the picnic the
lileetlng was opened with
·prayer and pledge of

POLLY'S POINTERS

,

PVT. HUBBARD
Marine Private Richard L.
Hubbard, son of Roger Holter
of Route I, Racine, has
completed the infa ntry
combat training course at the
Marine Corps Base, Camp
Pe.ndleton,
Calif.
His
specia~ed training centered
on the operation, 'employment and maintenance of
rifles. He joined the Marine
Corps in February !977 .
ATrEND FUNERAL
SYRACUSE - Mr: and
Mrs. James Teaford, Mrs.
Jean Hall, Mrs. Janice
Lawson, Mrs. Charlotte
Nease and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Teaford, Syracuse, and Mrs.
Martha Grueser, Minersville,
attended memorial services
Monday, July 11 for W. 0.
(Bill) Snider at the EmersonNew Kirk Funeral Home at
Kirkersville, Ohio . Burial
was in Forest Lawn
Memorial Gardens in
Columbus. Mr. Snider was
the uncle of Mrs. James
Teaford. The group visited at
Hebron with Mrs. Allah
· Teaford and Tammy Snider.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN

J ..,J•
Rife,ShirleyandJimmy; Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Rife, Mr. and
Mrs. Cliarles Goheen and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
•
Sylvan Cleland Jr., Jeff and .anntver.•rar~11
.J1
J
Lonnie; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. DaiUly
,
lt;o
Cleland lind Danny Jr.; Mr.
L.~/1ted
and Mrs. Kenny Hurst, Penny
t't . .
v
and Shelly, Darrell Cleland,
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Cleland,
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter
James
Teaford,
Nancy, Deanna, Tina and Mrs .
Danny and Carol of
David Cleland; Mr. and Mrs. Syracuse, celebrated their Morris,
Pomeroy, have returned
George O'.Rourke, John, 1fortieth wedding anniversary from a S,300 mile vacation
Cindy, Teresa, Wally, Randy with ope·n house from 2 tO 4 through Missouri, Oklahoma,
and Becky; Mr. and Mrs. p.m. Sunday, July 3 at the Texas, New Mexico, Arizona
George O'Rourke , Jr., Mr. Syracuse First United
and Mrs. Roy .Priddy, Mr. Presbyterian Church Anne~ . ahd Mexico.
James D. Teaford., son of
While visiting in Mesa,
and Mrs. Clarence Jordan,
Ariz., they were house guests
Mr . and Mrs. James the late James and Augusta of Mr. and Mrs. Woodie
Woodyard;
Tammy, Cumings Teaford ' and Velma Van Cooney, and sons, Steven
Mischelle and Timmy; Mr. Jane Snyder, daughter of the and David. They also visited
and Mrs. Randall Gibbs, Gina late Charles and Alma with Mt. and Mrs. Clyde
S d
were
.
and Rhonda ; Mr. and Mrs. Hmzman
· ny er, ..
VanCooneyandMr. andMrs.
Pat Aelker and . daughter married July 3, 1937 at Donnie Miller.
Places vt' sl'ted while out
Penny, Mr. and Mrs. WUUam CaUettsburg,Kentucky. They
Van Meter, Tony, Ricky, are the parents of two west' were , The Grand
Misty, Shaunda and Taunda ; daughters, Jean HaD and Canyon, Navajo Reservation,
Mrs. Alma Zinunerman, Mr. Janice Lawson, . both of old Tombstone, R;lwhide, The
and Mrs. Charles Rife, Larry, Syracuse·
Metro Center Mall, having
Valeri!\, Debbie, Teresa and
The event wps hosted by approz;imately 1,000 stores
Chuckle; Mr. and Mrs. Basil their daughters, their son-in· and South Mountain where
. Jacks, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth law, Sampson Hall and cities can be seen.
Jacks, Mr. and Mrs: Tim grandson, David Lawson.
Jacks and two children, · During the open house
Charles Friley, Flora Me- · Charlotte Nease presided at
Ciure, Mr. and Mrs. Jlm the punch bowl and cake was Sut:~&gt;rise "icnic held.
r
r
Wells, Estel Johnson and . served by Mildred Pierce.
David Lawson registered
LArry Ashburn.
A'surprise birthday picnic
Receiving a gift for the guests.
eldest member. present was · Presenting gifts, cards and was given for Donald Barrett,
Mrs. Lula Jacks, Springfield, congratulatory wishes to the son of the late Issac H. and
Ohio, and Bridgit Nicholson, couple during the week were Grace Barrett, July 16, at Ft.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Sargent, Meigs Park near Rutland.
Michael Nicholson, Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. John Rowe and , Attending were Mr. and
received a gift for being the Shawn, Mrs. Sadie Thuener, Mrs. Wendell Barrett and
youngest · member present. Eleanor Robson, Boon and children, Ike, Danny, Trina,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Jacks of Aline Weaver, George and Tonimy, Annie, and Peggy,
Buckley, Wash. received a Genevieve Schneider, Mr. and Mrs. C!Uford Might,
gfft for traveling thefarthest .. Mildred and Tina Pierce, Mrs. Patricia Barrett, Sieve ·
Live music was provided John and Eleanor Bahram, and Eva, Salem Center; Mr.
by the " Blue Grass Bill and Margaret Eichinger, and Mrs. Marvin Little, Mr.
Followers." Next year the Pauline Morarity, Tilird and Mrs. Vernon Little, Terry
Jacks reunion will be held on Wednesday Homemakers and Johnny, Middleport;
/ the third Sunday of August at Club, Chuck and Charlotte Mrs. Norman Terrell, James
the Forest Acres park, · .Nease, Bob and Evelyn and Kathy, Glouster; Mrs.
CUMingham, Dick and Helen Naomi Hunter, Rlchy, Shaun
. Shelterhouse No. 1.
Harris, Herb and Irene and Vela Kay, Nelsonville;
Parker, Nancy Adams, Jnez Mrs. Minnie Wise, Teresa,
Hill, Charles and Beatrice Charlotte, Jeanie, Wesley,
Blake, Frankie Mumaw, , Chuckle and Randy, Rutland;
Harry and Eileen Clark, Pinkie and Sissie Wife,

Drew Webster
holds meeting

OPEN DAILY

CORNER MILL ll SECOND ST.

Save 40c

HEFTY

'1.19

5 lb . LB.69~
or

More

SUND8E STYLE YOGURl~-~~:.~!~·.. 4fl1.00
VALLEY BELL
Ct
24
COTTAGE CHEESE .............. ~.~: •.•~: •• 89'
DAWN DISH DETERGENT .....~~~.':.~~~.~.99'

TIDE

&amp;LEAN

and Connie and Wilbur
Ransom, and singing was by
the family group.
Attending were Roger,
SaUy, Bryan, Tracey, Kelley,
Jarrod and Monica Holman;
Tom, Rita, MiJty and Brett
Laudennlti, Rutland; Eddie,
Karen, Venus and Ursula
Snyder, WUUamsport; BID,
Betty, Billy, Bruce and
Belinds Holman, Horn Lake,
Miss.; Terry, Marilyn and
TeiTy, Jr. Powell, Irene,
Co rena and Becky Rhodes;
Evelyn, Charles, Jr., Jill,
Jane and Jenny Manuel,
Lucille, Debora and Kathy
Lawson, Harry, Hazel and
Kathy Shain, Earl and Goldie
Holman, arid Harry and
Helen Smith, all of Racine;
James and Jane . Teaford,
Janice and David LAwson,
Sampson and Jean Hall,
Ralph, Shelia, Belinda and
Billy Shain of Syracuse; Pete
and Maudie Snyder, Wilbur
and Connie Ransom, Kenneth, Thelma, Kenny and
Michele Denny and JohnnY
Lusher, Delaware; Everette
and Gay Ransom, Apple
Grove; Kim Batey, Chester;
Jerry, Gail, Jennifer Rowe,
Virginia, Becky and Donna
Rowe, Pomeroy; Jay, 'Cindy,
Ryan Rowe, Judy Farley,
Andy, Angel and Tract Rowe,
Middleport; Nancy, Joy,
Louella, Perry Parsons,
Richwood; Margaret Tuttle
and John and Brenda Tuttle,
Minersville, and Paul,
Peggy, Rusty and Tony
Snyder, Radnor.

Oil. overcharges largely. ·

celeUfu

Agnes
Rlcha,rd
Duckworth,White,
Rachel
McBride,
Margaret Winebrenner,
Carroll and Eva Teaford,
Herb and Agnes Dixon, Art
and Esther Sylvester,- Edith
Teaford and Cecil, Duke and
Dorothy Bentz, Nancy and
Carla Aeiker, Ben, Jannlne
and Trevor Petrel, Rev. and
Mrs. Dwight Zavitz, Johnny
and Billle Jo Krawsczyn, Don
and Mary Lisle, Florence
Potts, Don and Marpret
Cottrill, Milton · and Sara.
RouSh, Lawrence and Helen
Diddle, Raymond and
Margarete Teaford, Bob and
Esther Harden, Leota
Kendall, Greg and Diana
Neaoe, Mr. and Mrs. Jllllli!S
Stull, Carl and Adrian
Hubbard, Fritz Teaford,
Thelma Wahon, Carl and
Glenna . Davis, Herb and
Doris Sayre, Jim and Clarice
Stewart, VirgU and Helen
Teaford, Harold and Ina
Teaford, Bill and Betty
Hayes, and Roy and Marty
Rowe.

MOms• , ,..,turn
fo"'. m vzs'

MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is herebv given

kheas~luit7onp~~s ~hae" ':oa~~ 0~

Ed.ucatlon of the Southern
Local School DISir ic t,
Racine . Ohl9, passed o the
7th day of June, 1977, her e
will be submitted to a v te of

the people of
Distr ic t
of

said School
a
Spec ial

ELECTION lobe held in the

School District, Ohio, at the

regular pla ces Of voting

t herein, on Tuesday, the 16th
day

of

August,

1977,_ the

question of levy ing , In excess
of -the ten m i ll llmltation, for
the benefit of southern Local
Board of Education for the
purpose of maintenance and

operation of schools.

Said . tax being : an ad·
dit ional tax of 19.0 mills to
run tor three yeflirs, wl11 ch
will _ ra !se a

minimum

of

5110,000.00 annually ot a
·rate not e)(ceee:tlng 10.0
mil ls for each one oolfar' of
valuation, w .... ic h amounts to
one Dollar" for each one
hu.ndred dollars of valuation.
for Three years.
The Polls for said Elect i on
will be 0 pen at 6:30 o'clock

WASHINGTON (UP!) - An independent task force Sporkin report said, "to date
reported Monday the government has failed to make major oil the FEA's efforts to secure
cmnpanies comply with its pricing regulations, leavin~ compliance from our nation's
J&gt;'rhsps billions of dollara in overcharges undetected or majll' refiners have been a
failtu"e ."
unpunished.
The task force formed May 13 by Federal Energy
Administrator John O'Leary, said FEA regulatory compliance
efforts have been "'ineffective" since Ure 1973-74 oil embargo.
It recommended a major overhaul to correct the situation as
soon as possible.
The task f&lt;rce, fonned May said.
13 · by Federal · Energy . •'The farther we get away
Adminislrator John O'Leary, from 1973-74, the less likly we
said
FEA
regulatory are to make major recqveries
compliance eff&lt;rls have been (of overcharges )," Sporkin
uineffective" since the 1973.- said.
The report said between
74 oil
em bar go.
It
July
1,1974, and June 30, 1977,
recommended a major
the
FEA settled cases
overhaul to correct the
involving.
$518.8 million in
situation as soon as possible .
Task force chief Stanley price rule violations. As of
Sporkin, who normally is June 30, It said, there were
director Of enforcement for 3,595 open audils including
the Serurities and Exchange 1,028with potential violations
Commission, recommended totaling $1.7 billlon.
that a special team of · O'Leary said part of the
auditors and lawyers be problem in the-past was that
fanned to investigate the IS Ure FEA was created to deal
largest oil refiners for with an emergency and many
overcharges and pricing rule of its regulatioos, adopted in
a crisis . atmosphere, were
violations .
He said putting the fuzzy. He said oil companies
emphasis on Ure 15 biggest as a result interpreted the
Only :1grandmother wouiJ
refiners would yield the rules in their owo favor.
know lhe be am y u f the
FEA officals idenlllied the
largest return because those
Fili,;ree dinne r ring.. Now
you can know the elegaru:e
companies handle 70 per cent IS largest refining companies
which :~dorned lovely l:tdicli
of the dollar volume of the in the nation as Exxon,
Standard of Indiana, Shell,
gene ration s ~go. Qmtl ity
entire industry.
Texaco,
Standard
of
;JncJ
tradition combine to
Sporkin
said
the
bFing you ~lyle anJ t:ha rm
California,
Mobil,
Gulf,
overcharges to. be found
from the p~ISL
"possibly amount to several Atlantic Richfield, Sun,
Marathon
,
Union;
Conoco,
billions of dollars." O'Leary
Phillips, Cities Service and
agreed .with that figure.
The Sporkin task force GettySkelly.
A spokesman said those
delivered a major indictment
JEWELRY STORE
probably
would be the targets
of efforts under the Nixon and
Pomeroy, 01119
Ford administrations to of Ure new eff&lt;rt.
" Unfortunatly ,"
the
enforce rules adopted to
make sure oil companies did
not reap windfall profits from
the .energy sh&lt;rtage.
It reported finding a large
"The Insurance Store"
. backlog of unaudited firms
Complete
and transactioll8 going all the
Insurance
Service
way back to the 1973-74
embargo. In addition, it said,
there are some 3, 700 audits
that have started but have not
been completed.
Without a "bold new
initiative" to clear up the
audit
backlog,
price
violations dating back to the
embargo may go undected
· 214 E. Main
until the mid-1980s, Ure report ·
Pomeroy
REUNION COMING
"QUALITY and
The annual Matlack
SERVICE"
reunion will be held Sunday,
July 31, at Rising Park,
Lancaster, All relatives and
friends are· welcome. Basket
lunch at noon.

The Old Fashion
is the
New look

GOESSLER'S

~~:;;::;;::;~

Reuter·Brogan Insurance

· A.M .. and remain open unti!
7:30o'c lock P.M. of said day .
By order of the Board of
Electrons, of M ei gs county,

Ohio.

Ernest A . Wingett

Ch·a irman
Dorothy M . John ston
Clerk
Dated July 11, 1971
(1) 26. 181 2, 9. 3tc

.PRE-INVENTORY

SALE
Watch for red tagged
items · throughout
store.

•GIFT WARE
•POTTERY
•VASES
•FOLIAGE PLANTS
UP TO

50% OFF

out at

59 N. ·S econd St.

Ch:est:e~r,•••••••!::::::::::

"IT'S TRUE.

unpunished

••

,
When you need.money for your kid's braces, ·or any good reason,
talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and with.
consideration. You c8:n borrow with trust where people save w1th
trust. City Loan &amp; Savings.
We find ways to help.

..

VALUES
ARE
FO.U ND
AT

BAKER

)

FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

..

aTYLOAN
&amp;.SAVINGS
E.ST: 1912
125 E. Main Street 992-2171

�7

- ;," Daily Sentinel, Mld&lt;lleport-Pomeroy, o ., Tuesday, July 26, 1977

WE ACCEPT

PRICES GOOD THRU
,

FEDERAL

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1977

FOOD STAMPS

•

NO DEALERS PLEASE!
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S) .

STORE HOURS

MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAYJl_AM TO 6 PM

•

"•

.

:
:

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT
CARRYOUT SERVICE - :

HAS BIRTHDAY
Cbrtllopller
Lyo111,

··

·

'

. . otMr.udMn.Leonle

•

Lyoao, Roell Sprlaga.,

•

eelebnletl his lint biJ1b.

:

day Salardlly, July Z3. A
eake dellped like a b'alll
• wllb bOll ears aad
, beiJ!ernade l~e erum wu
~- nrved. Chrhlophor
:
ffi:elved giftl from famny
;::: memben, grandparents,
• frlend1 ud siJter, Lealie.

ARMOUR STAR
·u .S.D .A . CHOICE
BONELESS

:

••

.
• met at church
~

U.S .D.A. CHOICE

ARM POT ROAST ...... •~"'

I

_ClUCK
ADAir

Pound

... Emily Society

LB.

-

- verse.

TURKEYS

'

...
•

PRINGLES

:.POTATO CHIPS ••••••••
•

•••
•

~

•

•

••

•••
'
•••
••

••

GATEWAY

1-LB.,,~

BREAD·····
PIE ,FILLER

.lOAVES

3

.

20 oz.
CAN

JIF CREAMY OR CRUNaiY

PEANUT aunER

VANILLA WAFERS
-

ROYAL

.

L

1

BORDEN\G'RAPE,
LEMONADE, PUNCH MIX
- NO. 205 --· $}49
10 QT. SIZE

,

NO. 125
30L

5/69~ W/C

21/z LB.

· Coupon Expires July 30, 1977

,\). .

o'UoRINGA.

.

COUPON

COUPON

·. PILLSBURY .

·69~

NO. 105
W/C

24

oz.

W!C

Coupon Expires July 30, 1977

TWIN
GATEWAY
. ··CITY
--··
·-

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

~

j

40,-.
BRAN FLAKES '
N0.105 -. 16 OL

59~

,5·9c

W/C

Coupon Expires July 30, 1977

. TWINCITYGATEWAY

•.•

•

'

•
••

••
••
•

••

••
••

BOUNTY

j

. . . .• . . . .. . .

TOWELS::~

2/99~
Coupon Expires July 30, 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C
-

LUUPO~

COUPON

PR.LSBURY

PILLSBURY RICH &amp; EASY

FROSTING MIX
15 OL

4 FLAVORS

2/$109

W/C

- CDUPON

SALE DATES
JULY 27 thru
JULY 30, 1977

.HUNGRY ·JACK POTATOEs·
NO. 365

32 OZ.

99~
.

COFFEE .

W/C ·

$999

GRAPE . ORANGE . RED or V~AY BERRY

IWIIIII

•
'l'UESDAY
•
MEIGS County · Bette1
.... Uvestock Dairy 4-H Clul
:: Tuesday, 8:30 p.m. at Jolu;
~- Colwell Fann .
JOINT Junior and Senio1
Drew Webster Unit 39,
American Legion Auxiliary
;-· Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Con·
• vention reports will be beard.
' :
POMEROY Chamber of
: : Commerce Tuesday at noon
~
at Meigs Inn . Bernie Murphy,
.; coordinator of continuing
• education at Rio Grande
:..... College • Community College
w!ll be guest speaker.

1
$ 1"
WHITE VIIIEGAR ...............=::
7tc

MONAI'IC!'I

O ll

CIDER VIIIEGAR .................:.:.;

MONAACH

•

MOHA:ItC::H

...
~

!
:

••

•

CDCI-CDL320Z. , ,•
'BOTTlES
f
Pills
Deposit
.
I'L.ANTfRS
. 16·01•$1"
PEAIUTS ............................ c'"
I:

:U

•ORON

ez

CJIAICOAL LIGHTER ....... ,:,:

"""'S TO~IS

..LIVU

~

e

J!Hb. J

,UlliN A

DOG CHOW ........ ................. '"

(

.

•'

~

Jar

Umll IWO with coupon •nd
110 pun;h~•• •Qiudlng beer. wine II

RICELAIID RICE ............... .. ~':

elp"'"'"·

53'

f

Litni.t on• wjtl'l ; oupan.

IEIJEA,,....,
~;:· ~,59

r§&gt;'iJ SJOAI S

•a'
z

SWEET 'If LOW
SUGAR SUIISJITUTE .... ~-': s

~

1••

. CREAMORA ...................... 'l,:' •1 n

•

w

PEANUT BUnER LO~S .... .'~;;~
MONAACH ASSORTED

, 18-oo .

GUM DROPS .......................... "•·

75•.
59&lt;

•

5,.

4-ct.
Pkg.

59'

FAIIIAIC SOFTEN£A

·

~~:lH . ,... . . . . . '~;· 69C
Umlt one wilh coupol\

Limit one with coupon ~nd
11 o.DO pun:toe.. e~tcludinQ
bHI'. winto •nd ciprettM .

BANQUET

·

l :lb.

FRIED CHICKEN ...... ""

$199

·
AUHT JEMIMA WAFFLES .. .'~: 59' :
6
J1 .
NAfURAlSUN

,

LEMOIIADE ...... ...................

S-•n.

e~

FRESHLIKE ·VEGETABLES

5,.

20 ·!U. C()fn

18 -0t. OtHn 8Hnt

(

20-01. , ...

20-cn. Ml•ed V•o-tabtu

Phg .

..;_IIEM'IJII IEAIIW Mil-....,..
· BUFFERII . ,....,
TABLETS·............... "'
~ STOIIES • t~IIOINAl fOOD

$1·. ,

99'
.,
SURE IIODORAIIT ................. ·~;:: 2

J &amp; J IAIID AID STRIPS .... ':0:

Z9
HYMN SING PLANNED
outdoor h)'lllll ISing will
bebeldJIIly30at7:30p.m.at
Forest Acres Park (Ft .

10-Lb.

All

weiCOOie. Jlrlng lawn dlllln.
In caae of rain It will ,be

.

32-oz . • •

~ 89(
CAT FOOD .......................4 ·,;.::

&gt;I'

' ~ at Rutland· All ¢aiTI .re

l

PE

INSTANT

. Bag

fi£GUlAit or UNIClhTIO

,

:1-oa. CONCENTtl.di.,J•M. liDUID

'1 ''

PRELL SHAMPOO .......................

u--

FOOTBALLS ...... Smoll ·39' ..".... .-.,. 99' ~~

ffi

~ Melp),New~Rcl.olfl24

.•

LIBBYS

$ 5t

GRAPE JELLY ...................... ';~·

...
~

~

. AT REGULAR PRICE. LIMIT ONE.

SPIIII.EIID

MONDAY

...

TWINCITYGATEWAY

.
S t'

w

••

...

Coupon Expires July 30, 1977

.

,

' WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF TWO 2-PACKS
WESTINGHOUSE SOFT WHITE LIGHT BULBS

HELLMANS

46-oz.
Can

..

'-~

W/C

99«
1.,

21 ·o•
KEEBLER COOKIES .,............ ,., ~

I

5-Lb.
Bag

Cans

~

3 LB. CAN

I WEEr
PEAS
16-oz.

Social
.•
••
Calendar
•'

THE MIDDLEPORT
Garden Club will meet
, Monday, Aug. 1, at 7:30p.m.
• in the garden of Mrs. M. J ·
:. Fry, Cbelhlre. MeJIIbers are
·... Invited to bring guests.

MAXWELL HOUSE

'

SILVER BAR

..
..

;.

I

C:HOC OJIOPI.C C IIGGS or !I IC H ' N (: HIPI

89

REDEEM YOU
KEEBLER COUPON
FROM SUNDAY
SUP.PLEMENT

,•

COUPON

U ·or

COOKIE BREAK .............. ,... ,..,

Pkg.

' • POMEROY • · MID·
'·• DLEPORT Lions Club
'-:: Wednesday at noon at Meigs
• Inn.
THURSDA.Y
THE ROCK . Springs
~ : Grange will meet 11!urscjay
..;: at 8 p.m. when the Hemlock
c Grove Grange will visit and
• ~- there w!ll be work in the third
· "' and fourth degrees.

-

\IANILLA

oo ..

.. o.m .

POST

PANCAKE PACKETS

,

CAKE DONUTS

SALAD DRESSING

. PAST
MATRONS,
Pomeroy chapter, picnic
Tuesday 6 p.m. at home of
• Mrs. (}len Dill, Syracuse.
•
WEDNESDAY
.; CERVICAL CANCER
Clinic Trinity Church Wed·
nesday 10 to 12 and 1 to 6.
Appointments may be made
by calling 992-5832 after 5:30 .

12 oz.
CANS

.

.. .. .. '.-. .. .. .. . "''·I'·

$155

GOLDEN ISLE

Coupon expires July 30, 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•••··~··•••"~

FROZEN
LEMONADE

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.PEA::;t~~~ER I

W/C .

·"

: ·n GOLDEN ISLE

Coupon Expires July 30, 1977

COUPON __j .

5 LB. BAG

oELAri~c~~ MOSHio6Ms'2~~sgc

ASSORTED FLAVORS

59~

- ..-'

.

16 OZ. CAN

12 'OZ. BOX

.

FPIL~OURY

.9 ~ MIXED vEGETABLEs
29
~
1 39
.

28
:•

KEEBLER

COUPON

6
.
,
.
.
~~
L UR .............. . ·
cHow 2S .LB.BAG, ,a .i2 9

'1 00

GOLDEN ISLE

3 FLAVOR LUCKY LEAF .

1

~~~

OREO COOKIES ...... ........... :,:;;~

89(

~

&gt;

NAIISCOSIIIINDwtCHCI'IEMt

BAnER DIP FISH ................. ··~• -

...•

9 oz.

.

CARDINAL

Pound

: and

.

.

., ... "' .. "' • • HUe/OU$ lAKED TREAT$ I C()()KIE$•., • "' ""6&gt;

. ... '1"
IEEF. CUBE STEAKS ..... ....... , ..................
.
IOIIELESS
BEEF STEW ...... ... ............... ~... '12'
IEAITAR

99c

Pound

•

: Frankie Mumaw gave a
: reading for the Least Coin
- collection. A tbaljk you letter
;.: was read by Rachel McBride
: for the children's dresses sent
::; to the missionaries in the
= South.
•• Missionaries prayed for
:::UUS month were from Korea
were read by Agnes
: White. Bible study was from
-·"The Oui5tian Answer to
.=Life's Urgent Problems."
:; Chapters four, five and six
: w!ll be studied when the
;'group meets In September .
.:0, Attending were Ruth
_, Zavltz, Jane Teaford, Rachel
- McBride, Franlde ,Mwnaw,
·~ Agnes White, Launi Pickens, ·
PauuDe Morarity and Janice
Lawson. Rev. Dwight Javitz
• joined the group for the
: potluck.

.•' .

PORK SAUSAGE ............. •~""

59;

ARMOUR STAR

LEAN FRESH

ElF

OECll.ll&amp;

DECKERS IAC:OI ............. ~ ... '1 ..

DECKERS BIG RED ...................... 69'

~

. SYRACUSE - The Emily
Mlaslonary Society of the
Syracuse First United
Presbyterilm Church met at
the church anne-x for its July
meeting. A delicious potluck
dinner was enjoyed at noon
with Ruth ZavitJ as hostess.
The business meeting
followed and was opened by
the president, Laura Pickens
_ reading Psalm 19. Roll can
was answered by a Bible

Jt

$

$ 09

81111&lt;
.,

Pound

SWIFT SIZZLEAII ................ •;;;• 1

~

Dutch Loaf
Boiled Ham...... .
STORE SLICED LUNCHEON MEAT
·GRoUND CHUCK.~99~ Pickle Loat~a99~
SAVES YOU MORE

WE GLADlY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS ·

'•M"

:

PATIO STEAK..........

FIIEIIDliiSI

.

.

.

....

cancelled.

t

'

'

�•

"

1-The'DailvSenUnol. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TUesday, July 26, 1977

WANT AD

CHARGES
1S wuro. « Uu&amp;r
Cash

Owi.t)!e

1 ..

!.2$

1.10

1.90
1.25

~-50

:too

us

Let ·The Want Ads Turn . Unwanted Items lnio Cash
- ..
B USlReSS
•
servlces
•

11\biUUWU. c.sJ1 Ul -.Jv-.ull:eo.

Mobile Home SMt.-s and Ycu"tt sales
are 54(.'(.'epttd Oltl}' wnh o:ash W.'llh
~r. 25 t.-ent d "litrge fur ad.!t ~rry­
utg Box Nwnber In Cane of n.,St&gt;n·
tm~.

Publtsl~r reserves .lhe n~ht
-o i:'i.bt or J~)'!t.'l&lt;ill}' adii ~mt!d,ob­

The

jt.ocl.iunal. Tilt' Publisht!fo will not be
~J.K.NISlbie fur mun• them orw lJil'OI'ret'l UIS«"rtkln.

PhOIIt' !J!tl-2156

-

--

WANT~AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

- ·----

- -

---

--

·
Mouda-y
Noon 011 Satunl11y
T ~a sdll)'

thru Friday
4P.M .

Uw till)' Jx.fore publiCation
SwJ&lt;.Iay
~P. M .

Fmlay afternoon

bora Talbott. nexf building lo

Portland Pork .

.guoranteec;l toys and gifts. No
cosh inves tment - no coHttCting 3 ANO 4 RM. furnished ond unfurn is hed opts. Phone 992·
or delivering · no service
chorge, cor and telephone
SolS..
necessary . Call collec:t to Carol
' ~--,-----Day (518) -489·8395 or write COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt.
Friendly Toy Parties . 20
33,'ten miles north of Pomeroy.
Roil rood Avt. Albany, N.Y.
Lorge lots wlfh concrete patios,

p
la
' ndmark
- OfnefOJ

1:.

J.aclt: W. Clrsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2111

PiGS. TOP Quality, 30. to Ao lb. ,
wormed , castrated , $30. Quy .:===':-----~---'

now

for

winter b1.1tchering. SPRING GARDEN Supplies, CobPhone (61-4) 378·6311.
boge, cauliflower, broccoli,
185CC SUZUKI , trail and roodand head lellue&gt;e plants,
bike . 10 •peed electric s tart.
.yellow, white, and red onion
Still under warranty , $550. Call
sets. onion plants , K4trtnebec ,
992-5601.
cobbler. Katahdin , Red Pontiac
and Red lasoda seed potatoes .
ALLADOIN KEROSENE lAMPS ond
Bulk garden seeds . potting soil ,
heaters. Rep'l acement ports .
peat moss. fruit trees and rose
chimneys, mantles, wicks,
bushes . Midway Morlter .
etc .. Stop ·in lor demonstration
Pomeroy , Ohio, 992· 2582.
and free catalog. Mountain
Bob: s Market, Mason, W,Va.
leather and General store,
(30&lt;)773-5721.
104-106 W. Union St. (614)
592-5478, Athens .

12205.
sidewalks , runners and oft
MERRI-MAC has openings for Par ·
street parking. Phone m -7419.
ty Plan Supervisors and FURNISHED APT. Adults only, no
Demonstrotort In your area .
pets . Phone 992-3874, MidH i~hest commission,
no - "'dc:le:.tp.:o
or':'l'::.-,-~-:-:-::---:-:­
LEARN TO SEW Professional look -·
de iverin g or collecting. AVAILABLE at Village Manor
ing garments with ne~ techniApartmenfs_;.l bedrOO(I'l fully
Demonstrate top quality toys
ques, . E-Z Sew Classes in knits
and g ifts. Call collect lo Ann
carpeted with kitchen apto begin SOQm ot the Sew N'
Baxter, (319) 556-8881 or write
pliances', furnished. Starting a t 0-&lt; CATERPILLAR End loader wilh
Sew Fobr l( Outlet Store in
Dozer blade and removable log
MERRI
-MAC,
801
Jackson
,
$10.C
per mont. Phone992·n21.
Racine . Come in and talk to
loading forks . 1968 Ford F-750 33A FARM. · tree gas , good water
Dubuque, lowo 5.2001 .
· Equol hous ing opport1,.1nity.
Oeriise or t: all 992-7400 or
Cob-Over Heovy duty truck
ond fences . Nice Mobile home,
-3039.
Service station otterldant. Apply TRAILER SP:ACE for rent. 5 miles
wilh 22 fl . bed. both for $7 ,000.
--992
--~-,-------:--:----~~
olso 2 1/~ A 3 miles south of
in person after 4t ·p.m . French s
from Pomeroy and Middleport.
WILL CARE for the elderly in my
Coli 1 (304) 882-3205 Of 1 (304)
Aibony on 681. Ed Holley , 681
Middleport Sunoco. No phone
Phone 992·5858.
home . Trained and experieflc·
882-2990.
South of Albany to Snowville
calls.
eel. Phone 992-73 U .
Store. Toke Grovel rood. V.
BUSINESS BUILDING In New
mile . Phono (61&lt; )698-7255 .
0 &amp; J'! HOUS£ of Fabric Clearance
Haven, W.Vo. , 20 x 45 main
Sole, Now thru August 3, T•
businen corner. Phone (614)
BEAT THE Cost of o Realtor! 3
Shirt knits, reg . $1 .98 yard,
7&lt;2-2255.
bedroom 2 Yt bi-level with aU
now 89•. T-Shirt Knits Reg.
exlros on acre lot. Nice drive to
CB
SPECIAL
FIVE
ROOM Apt. both in
$2.49 now, $1.69 yrd . All our AUCTION , EVERY Friday. 7 p .m.
Power
Plant, $43 ,&lt;00. Phone
Pomeroy . Phone 992-5621 or
ROBYN WV -23
lsi Quality poly. knits reduced
New and used merchandise.
(61&lt; ) m -2&lt;92.
m-2205.
price. one table poly knits,
Ohio River Auction in Meigs
C B Mobile Tr~nsce ive r
$1.00 yard. 0 &amp; J_ 's Fabric , 1
Plozo 409 Poor! 51., Middleport. 3 RM. AND Both furnished opartcomplete with weetl'ler
mile south of Middleport on
rOent
,
all
utilities
paid.
356
N.
Ohio. Phono(304) n3-S.71 .
proof PA speaker, 2 way
State Rt. 7.
Fourth St ., Middleport .
base loade~ CB antenna ,
FORREST ''RUN Methodist Church
TRAILER LOT for rent on Brownell , tor roof top Dr trunk mount .
Power cord , coa)( , antennll
Ice Cr~om • Social in church
Ave .
MiddlepQrt . . Phone
~EALTOil
cable and all. hardware
basement . July 29. Friday ,' 7
992-2625.
included·.
~~
.
VIRGIL 6. TEAFORD, SR.
ONLY
EX.CAVATING, BACKHOE, dQzor.
REALTOR
I WOVL.D like ro )"tork with retardtrencher, L.ow Boy, dump truck
$69 .95
216
E.
Second Street
ed children ·in any way, not post
trucks , septic ·systems. Bill
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
oge 14. Experienced. Phone
Pullins , phone 992-2478 day or RISING STAR, Kennel Boording,
992-7513 .
Phone m-3325
~lght .
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
all brHds, dean sanitary
BfG - 5 bedroom hqme
facilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire.
with
1112 baths , - lull
·Phono [614) 367-0292.
.Jack W. C•rsey.Mgr.
basement. and central
Phone t92 -211l
$200 REWARD for infarmation CASH paid for oil makes ond HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, soil , lrado
heating. Furnished or
or tra in hortes. RUTH REEVES,
leoding .fo return of two male
models of mobile homes.
unfurnished . City water
trainer. Phone(61A}698-3790.
dogs token from Rt. 33 near
Phoneoreocode614-423· 9531 .
11nd large lot.
TRIUMPH Choppe•, good condiDarwin. One German short
lion . SH Dw'ighl Cod. 152 BuiNEW LISTING - 5~ acres
hair pointer. black and white TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro- AKC SHETLAND ·sh"p doga .
(Min .) Collies, 2 females , 7 . ternut Ave ., Pomeroy.
speckl,ed with ·w hite spot on
duels . Top price for standing
of clean fenced pasture.
old . Shots and worm~ .
back . One part Sheppard mutt ,
sawtimber. Coli 992-5965 or • weeks
Nice home site. barn and 2
Phone {61.,1 36?·0292 ot SliDING PATIO 'doOr , 8' wide and
blot!: k with brown feet , Phon&amp; ' :::'K::•c::n_:_
t ,H
_,a'='n-'b:!Y:,·_:
1·__:
4&lt;::b0-'-:8::5::
70
::::·e -.e-._
tprlngs. All minerals .
367-7112.
·
6' 8" high. Thermo-pone , ne-&gt;foer
992-5848.
.
COINS , CURRENCY, lokens , old
LIKE NEW -All eleetrlc 3
been used . Priced sno. PhOne
TAN Beegle , mole weorpocket watches and chains, MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society · 949-2674 .
bedroom ranch style home
Animal Careline. 992-7680; or
ing a collar on Middleport Hill.
silver ond gold . We ne&amp;d 196-C
on quiet street. Fenced
ofter6p,m.. 992·5427.
4 YEAR 0LD small hoi'Je mare
Phone 992-3361 .
·
and older silver coins . Buy, sell ,
back yard and anly 5 years
marked pretty, gentle. good fc;
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley, 6 KITIENS, including their mother
advanced
you,th
.
Colt
9.C9-.2593.
old.
SIB,500.
FOUND. MALE hound dog. Black
742-2331.
to be given to a good home .
with tan markings. Well manLAND - On old Route 33.
Please! Call 992-2983 or FORD TRACTOR with some equipnered. Phone 985 ·-42-44 .
OLD FURNITUR~ . ice boxes , bran
Buy 1 to 41!2 acres. Trailers
992-5504.
. menl. 16 ft . boat with "5 h.p.
beds , etc ., complete
O. K.
motor and ,till trailer. Phone
households . Write M . 0 . Miller, TO GIVE Away, V1 Collie, 'h Ger992-S..C87.
NEW LISTING-105 acres
Rt . " · POmeroy, Ohio or c:oll
inon Shepard puppies. Also , :::::"'--=::':.:c-c:-:---::--:-:--:-::-:--c--lays well. surrounded by
m -n60.
twini , 1 year old qrey striped 1976 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLH
Southern
Ohio Coal. Will
cotl . Grey striped kitten , 4
1200. Block in color with oc 1974 MOBILE Home. 2 bedroom , CASH! ! . Junk cars, Fry's Truck &amp;
sel·
l
lor
less
!han $150 per
12 x 65 Q.reenbrier, totolelec., ·
months old. Phone 7.f2·3162.
~ssories including tour pock .
Auto , Rutland . Phone 7-42-·2081
acre,
One owner, 3000 mile~ . $3600 .
unfurnished, in e~ecellent condi·
or742-9575. Closed Mondays .
TWO FEMALE puppies, port
Phone985-3912.
LUXURIOUS
~
tion. Asking Price, $6500 .
Beagle , 3 months old , short ==~=~-7:'---,-----­
No ITEM TOO Lorge or too smell .
Phone 992-57~1 .
.
bedrooms,
large
dining
,
ha lr, give to good home. Phone GRAVELY TRACTOR , Mower,
W.ill buy 1 piece or complete
modern
kitchen
,
family
992-7085.
dozer
blade
and
dual
wheels,
1971 STAR MOBILE Home, 60xl2
household. New , used, or anti ·
$350. Phone m -5983 ..
room with fireplace and
excelli!nt condition . Coli · ques . Mortin 's Furniture , 20 N·.
BEAGLE PiJPS, 9 weeks ofd, 3
985-3505 after · 5,' or 985-3886
pool table. 2'1• acres.
2nd St ., Middleport . Phone
malel, '1 females , $10 eor;h . 1972 SUZUKI SSO, 51750. Phone
REASONABLE
3
•"
o.nyt ~
im
:.;_e:::·_~--~-m
-6370
.
Phone
949-2590.
9&lt;9-2463
.
·
·
:;·;r- .
bedrooms. bath, fireplace.
SMALL DATSUN Pickup. .Also AKC REGISTERED Old English
utility room, basement,
"
want dry storage spoce for rent
Sheep .dog, papers, Champion NEED A WATER
and
2 car garage. $17.500.
or sale . Phone 992-5370.
blood line, shots and wormed.
NEW
LISTING- Country
Colt daytimes, 992-2696 or
WANTED TO BUY Registered
SO FTENER '
estate of 145 acres. Has a 7
evenings'
992-n62.
female Beagle pup . Call
room house and large barn .
m -7630.
Will give away 5 port Collie pupLei Pomeroy Landmark
Some
tractor land and
v
pies . Phone 992-J.-91
or
soften &amp; condition your
some
fenced
for cattle
Attendance at Sunday
m -2012.
water and a Co-op water
grazing
.
.., , 'morning services July 24 at
·softener. Model UC-XVf.
BROWNELL Nicely
;· the Free Metllodist Church
Mow Only
located 4 bedroom home
STARCRAFT 10th anniversary sole
:!' was 71.
with natural gas. city
on mini-motors . trail~rs . and 1964 FORD 'I• ton pickup, good , Let us · lest your water
•• ' Mr. and Mrs. PhlU Wise,
water, and garage. Owner
folddowns. Trovelstar 25 ft.
Froe.
tires and motor . Contact Elden
;, Beverly, ~!tended church
will sell on land Contract.
$4400.00; 20 ft. mini-motor
Walburn , 380 S. ·Third, Mid·
" ' :services Sunday ~t the Free
$1 ,550 down, balance In
$10,850.00. We sell service and
OH. Phone 992-2805.
dleporf,
"ih • ~1..-..1:.- Ch
quality. Camp Conley Starcraft
monthly payments.
, .M"'-'NWO'
urch.
Soles , Rt . 62 north of Pt. Pleo- 1977F~Dh&lt; . Phone949-2673 .
RACINE AREA 2
~.: Mr. Ed Bauer and Mr.
~ Phone 992-21B1
so·n t.
bedroom
frame
home.
1972 GRAN TORINO Sperl. S..OOO
·; ;.'Clarence Karr were dinner
~YCO~~C~A~M~P~IN~G~~T~r-a~il_e__
r• .
Bath, lull basemen!, clly
miles , $95() . Phone 742-27•6.
" ,guests Wednesday of Mr. and
THE FOLLOWING described items
custom made SWISS COLONY ,
water
and natural gas .
1973 VEGA HATCHBACK. $900.
Mrs. Dick Karr.
will be otfered for public sale to
•moO tandems Maple L.eaf ,
Garage and plenty of
Phone
843-252&lt;
.
Mr .
Paul
Archer,
the highest bidder on the
CODNER'S CAMPERS , Sales ,
garden space. Now $17,500.
premi&amp;es of The City Loan &amp;
1966
FORD
CUSTOM
,
500.
6
cyl.
Rental
,
Service,
Supplies
;
Columbus, visited Saturday
5
POINTS - Nice newer
Sovings
Coinpony
,
125
E.
Main
standard. Good conditiOn,
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bosh an .
'i.;with her mother, Mrs .
home on 1 acre, has 3
St. , Pomeroy, Ohio, on the bth
$375 . Phone m -28-&lt;9.
Owner Robert Codner , L.ong
·• Georgia Diehl and Charles
bedrooms. full basement,
cloy of August, 19n, at 10:30
Bottom , Otlio.
1972 &lt;DR. BUICK LaSabre, 1967 2
garage, and is In a good
a.m. 1975 Kowosok.i motorcycle
-. . .Anthony Diehl.
dr. CheV. Impala . Phone
1975 26FT. ARGOSY Molar Homo,
modo! G4TR, Ser No. G&lt;08536&lt;.
family neighborhood.
... Mr. Vern Story, ColumbWI,
985-3839.
3.600 actual miles , roof air,
TermS of Sole: Cosh . Items may
$32,000.
·~ spent the weekend with wife
motor air, built-in AM-FM, tape 1965 F~D FAIRLANE sOc, 4 doO&lt; ,
be sold in units or in parcels .
SHELT&amp;R
AND
deck , for,c;ed air furnace; gas
and son John. '
Seii~~Pr reserves the ri9l1t to bid
:289 runs .good. $150. Phone
COMF'ORT
IS
WHAT
WE
and elec;tric refrigera·t or.
,., Mrs . Ed Bauer .and
and to reject any and all bids .
985·391&lt;.
ALL
NEED
AT
A
generator pfont. Zeb Qnd Dee
"' ·granddaUghter, Marion, who
Awn ing. crank·up TV antenna. 1968 CHEV. •;, ton pickup, 3"'l 1971 20 H.P. Outboard motor with
REASONABLE
PRICE.
spent a week with Mr. and
conlrol•. S250. Phono (61&lt;)
engine, $350. Phone 985 ... 240.
Phone 742-2211 doy , 7"42-2246
CALL 992·3325. SMALL
M7-6227.
evenings .
""'Mrs. Dick Karr- returned Ill
DOWN PAYMENT .
1974 P-ONTIAC Ventura , 6
"'-their home Saturday.
Helen L. Teaford
cylinder, S18QO. No Sunday CONTROL HUNGER ond lose
1975 CAMPER. 28 "ft. Flexsteel
weight with Ne~ Shope d iet
· sofa bed . 2 gaucho beds . 2 door
coli• . .Phon• 742-2460.
c.
Bruce Teaford .
Plan ·a nd Hydrew: Water Pills. At
·refrigera-tor, furnace , wotlir 1969 OODGE 2 TON Truck with tilt
A5sociat.s
Ourton Drug Middleport .
hegter , roof air, Am-FM Tope
DOES HIS DIJTY
bed and electric wench . Phone
· deck , crank up T.V. antenna,
'.' • LOS ANGELES (UP!)
992-398&lt;1 or985·41.C9 .
6 ACRES WOODED ground, rurol
C.S. ontenno , rollup awning ,
oreo . Call 985-3505 alter S, or
" California Treasurer Jess
dual tanks, spore lire. Phone 1976 CHEVY LAGUNA ·350
985-3886 anytime.
says politicians should
automatic, p.s ., p.b., air condi7&lt;2-295-4.
tioned. om radio tape player.
not dodge, nor be disqualified
CAVALCADE 21 '1• CAMPER,
Real sharp , hcellent condition.
from,
jury
duty.
So 1975
fully self-contained, 6' gas·2=386=;:-:-----,-------;----;-­
electric refrigerator, 3 bu.rner , C::P':'ho:::n-:•=--992~..:
participants in Superior
stove, with oven , forced air fur- 10n Doda-. Von, custom Iced.
Court trials fur the next three
noce , 1leep1 six. 'J:Ihone
Hedders, sl~e pipes, ttripfl
weeks may find Unruh In the
9B5-3356.
and sc•n•. Co\1773-5909.
jury box.
RAFT END Of Yeor Sole on 1968 l,mpolla 9 passenger station
In the past, holders of high ST ARC
mlni·trallers and fold-downs .
wagon , 8 cyl . 327 motor, 20
political olfiee and those in
lowett pricea ever offerad,
miles to gall. Don t tJse oil , air
fold -down•. S\825 up; 2 used
other profeuions were
conditioner. heater, new tir.s .
Storcroft trailers in stock . We
Coll949-21,....
routinely scused from jury
sell service and quality . Camp
duty, but the law was
Conley Starcroft Soles . Rt. 62 N.
recently changed, allowing
Pt. Pleasant.
mly hardship as an excuse. · lq73 .TERR'f' 23 '/t~;;nd ele~­
TRACT~ wilh
Ol·
"I'm no busier than other
refrigerotor. forced air fur- ECONOMY
tochments. like new, otklng
nace, reor both with tub. Ampeople called to serve,"
Ulnh lllid Monday, tbe llrBl . Fm t~;~pe deck built-in; crank up. _S~SO_:_P_hone (614) 6911-3~.:­
l . V. antenna; spring loaded HANGING IAIIClT$, ...... .W
_,. al llil »day atlnt an a
owning ~ roof olr conditioning.
geraniums.
Cletoncl's
pue1 from which jurors are
real good condition. Phone
Gr••nhoute,
Geretldin•
llelect'ed.
.
Cleland, Roc.i~. Ohio,
-~.!; 2025 Of 7.&lt;2-221\ ,

CARTER'S

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Kllchen Cabinets . Roofing

:

Concrete

Patios

Sidewalks
•
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling ..
Ph. m-7119 or lh-1055
Esllmales applied to loti.
6-27-1 mo. pd.

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At

2-23-1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals

GUTTER SERVICE
·continuous

piece

one

gulters. We hang it. or do it
yourself. Speciol prices lo
builders. •
·

RACINE CARPET
SHOP6-16· 1 mo.

or 949-2860
Frte Estil"ates
No Sunday c.lls Please
6· 13· 1 mo.

lHE PHOTO PLACE
10f High St. .
P,omeroy

o.

Ail.

aLACK&amp;,

:r· Laurel Cliff
;:: News Not~

'2T9 ,95

".r:ke:'ea~~.~!~

•.

;;unruh

FOR SALE

,Pilgrim Motel property located on U. S. Route
No. so,

tormeriJ actwes r •d tor sa1e at

$45,000.00, price now reduced. For information

all

conlad Fred W. Clvw, At1omey at Law, Pomen1J1

A80UT M&lt;KE&amp;
INPUSTRIE~l

T~E PRESIPE~r

FE~T

THe ~EEP FOJI:
A MAN OF VISION··
- COURA6E'··TACT··
DRIVe •• VAST
· e'KPERteNce .•.

~ 10-1

'ftft~rul

1:

Bob Hoeflkh

Sales
and
Supplies.
3-14- I

992-5m

6-22-1 mo.

MAIN
POMERO.Y, 0 .
JUST LISTED - This 2
story home has 1'12 baths, 4
Bdrms.:, large· Iivlng room,
dining
room.
10x30
enclosed sitting porch and
garage . Located on a
lot

in

a

Will be sold and partially
financed lo reliable party
or parties. Only fnterasttd
people should 'inquire.
Books shown on request.

good

neighborhood . A STEAL
AT $11 ,250.00 .
PRICE REDUCED -'-- On
this 2 Bdrll'1 . frame home.
Dining
room,
F.A.
Furnace. carpeting, 1 floor
plan .
NOW
ONLY
$13.800.00.
MIDDLEPORT GOOd
older 2 story home, large
lot, garage, up to 4 Bdrms.,
porches. A good buy,
$13,85&lt;1.00.
BACK ON THE MARKET

CAl1992-2259
STORY 3 bedroom frame
house, F.A. furnace, storm win·
dews . fireplace in Middleport.
Phone 992-3457.
2 NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses for
sale. One with 2 cor garage,
one with rec:reolion room , lee
Con$truction. 992-3454 or
2.

m -s.ss.

SEClUDED 2 story older home on
three-quarter acres , lots of
shade, fertile ground for

- 1 acre, modern kitchen,
knotty pine paneling,
carpeting. 2 Bdrm ., dining
room,

part

garden , 2 cor detached goroge .
3 bedrooms , Iorge living room
with brick w.b. fireploce ,

basement.

S16.500.00.
CLOSE TO TOWN - 6'4
acres, 3 Bdrms., great for
kids, 3 acres fenced, pole
barn.
J'IOW
ONLY
$17,200.00.
.
BRICK &amp; FRAME - V.A.
approved, 1h acre groUnd,
about S yrs. old ranch fype.
Up to 4 Bdrms., bar.
carpeting, storage bldg.
$28,500.00.
-PRiVATE- Over 3 acres
nice laying ground, aboul
10 yrs. old ranch type
home. 3 Bdrms., dining
room, 22x23 living room.
large .k·it., carpeting.
Garage,
Insula
fed barns,
cold
otpragebldg.
2 other

carpeting, sunny kitchenette ,
dining room , partial basement
with · forced oir furnace and
neW hot water heater, Located
on Martin Or., P~meroy. Priced
b91ow market value, $17,500 .
Phone m -6328 or 985-3573.
ONE 11i STORY frame hOuse In
Rutland. 3 bedrooms, both,

forced air furnace , new
fireplace, roil fenc•. Phone
7&lt;2-2089.
2 STORY FRAME -houae, 3
bedroom , "garage with 3 room
opl. in Middltporl. Phone(304)
675-4205 before noon.

TECOT

8G4 West Main Street
Just Below the Jones
Boys• in Pomeroy, Ohio
Phonem-:nn
6-lS-1 mo.

• • • • • • • • • •

TELL YQU HOW THIS
SERVICE- CAN HELP
SELL YOUR PROEitTY.
IF YOU REALLY WANT

••

TO
TODAY.
WE SELL.
NEED CALL
PROPERTIES.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR

·••
e

~.:.: tAon•

' PJcl..ll
992-ll!lf tft-JMI

I' I

.

1

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,..Service

-a
IT
60METHINc;;
EXT~A F~OM

A

PE~FORMER.

U'l'l'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

MY ~AIRY FRIEND! IT WOOLP '

SOMeTHlt&lt;'

"-ttl-ll74

FNN ME. DEE PL.'( wERE YOUR
CURIOSITY 1'0 R\JIM YOUR

WOKE ME UP
f.l ll1' NIGHT-L\KE A
~UFfLE OUT
HI!Re• •

SWAIN'S

BEAUTIFUL FRIENDSHIP··

OtlE

AH ··YOU ARE AN OlD
006, AND E).CEEDING WISE --

YOU AND I UNDERSTAND

,_,AN'f lH\tlGS HIDDeN

THERE ARE ~ELLS

TO

BSTIER 16NOI?ED!

WHO

REASONABLE

RAliS
Ph. 371-'250
S-27- TFC

••
'·

L-------------------~ ·'·

r---~----------~--~ •~~
KingsbUIJ ltQme Sales .,.,.
II' YJl'U ulltarta!d dealerlorllrbao
·~• aad ~· ll_y_ou waat a
4J811Utf ~t whleb

GOJDIIU.'/51:6, M"' ~--·

l \llP6 '11.1 ~ THIRD

Belllb H~ B.ll.K FOR ,..,
'-'E:~:M--~'&gt;~n lHc Et.JO Of

ld&lt;.AD!&gt; FOR TWO
n;~ M\f.&gt;I'I.F.

1,

your home, or mablle

,

bome, oDe tb.tit wW ~ U. bellaty lor yun Ia come. tldl wll lu.lt
your aeedl. The Urtiu liDe. ill all
ah&amp;minun, bavy pqe, aaodtzed
raiiiDII and po111, plain or
decorad~.- We bive aa t?feritaced
crew U..t have t'!l"''!!lted maay o1

;_;.'

"'"' t.lhii
, ... qullly
· -.. _, ,.,..
porll
am~. M•t of litHe pro-

,.
•.
,.

t,

'',
l

•
::

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

d&amp;tc&amp;l q..ufy ... lew illkftlt bOme

~-t.ilk
er SAL cau *"11H for a free

aUmatt or 1iop by II. E. MaiDSL,

Pomeroy; o.

~

'

7-20-J mo.

0 - r - . ~~..,

BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Complete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ..:
Sweeper!!&gt;, toasters , irons, ol•
small opplionc~s . lawn mower; •
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone {614) 985·
3825 .
REMODELING . Plumbing, heating
ond oil types ol general repair,
Work guaranteed 20 yean; experience. Phone 992-2409.

....

SEWING MACHINE Repolrs, ser·
vice , oil makes, 992-22~. The
Fabri c Shop ,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
bockhoe work; dump truck~
and IO-boys for hire: will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone on~
groveL Colt Bob or Roger Jefa.
fer1 , day phone 992 .70891"
nigf'lt phone 992-3525 or 992~
EXCAVATING, dozer, bockho;
and ditcher'. Charles A. Holt

Bock

Hoe

Service ,

•

too large or too smalL Phont+
742·234B.

Repair~

•

Elec.,

HOWERY AND MARTIN Excolol'oting, septic systems ,
dozer, bock hoe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel. . blacktop
paving, Rl. 1&lt;3. Phone 1 (614)
69B-7331.
HARRISON'S -T.V. Repoir. Service
Calls. 276 Sycamore, St. , Mid·
dleport. Phone 992·2522.

Yesterday's AIISWer
20 Adress,
31 f!Jlnowned
Loretta ~zard
22 Andes grass 33 Oregon city
25 Toodle - oo 34. Spry
27 Misled
35 Slack
28 Late news 3&amp; Domestic
hour
row
29 Send
42 Final ·
back
t4 Conswned

23 Margery
of song
24 Raise
2&amp; Jean
Cruguet
is one
30 Sandwich
·\·.!1~11--.-'I(V'r- ·~favorite
, 32 Before
cast
or gram
33 Doffs the
cap
27 Moonship
38· Formerly
39 Half
moon
40 Grape
41 Symbol cif
courage
43 Heavy
45 Otherwise
46 Have hi
miild

~'}-SHE'D ONLY

WORtt:r.l MAKE IT
A POINT TO TELL
HER ONLY 410E

IF I DIDN'T, SHE'D
IN61ST I RETURN
10CENTRAL

CITY!

~l'HtNes.

WAAT5 50 \:&gt;AD
AeouTTHAT?
VOUR lv'OM'e ·

SUCCES&amp;Fu L .
I 'M SURe SHE
COULD HELP

vou ...

e• • 1

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby ·
--1--+--1

w

.A

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

work

It: ·

NIHK

CW U ZM

M E K J, E U K H A

FZQPHM
NWZZ

YO

HTFHPVHA

V l H G

WK

·A D

MHH
N DE Z A
VIH

K D N.

UDCHUM

LISTEN TO THE

•
I

SWAP SHOP

e

!•

1

•

e

e

7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM ••

e

!
1

•

'---.....;..":.;.5_4:..;11.;.2_ _---J ' • • •

NOW I SEE WHY OUR
MAIL'S ALWAYS LATE!!

•

e

92 in the Countru

•.e

IIUJ

~ •••••••••••••••••••••• :
•

;

.

'~

ARE 'IOU
ALL SET
1'0 GO?

1

IF t.(OU'RE GOING TO
6E PEPPERMINT PATT'1'5
WATCHD06, 'IOU'D BETTE~
TAKE ALONG A WEAPON

Weal

Norlh Eall

Soutb
I N.T.

Pass

3.N.T. Pass

Pass •

Pass

Yesterdoy's Cryptoqu~te: A HUNGRY PEOPLE LISTENS
NOT TO REASON, NOR CARES FOR JUSTICE, NOR IS
BENT BY ANY PRA YERS.-SENECA

:•

him.
26

WEST
EAST
•9752
•H
•KtO
.Q973
tA91
t87&amp;2
•K632
•854
SOUTH iDl
• A 863
• A 54
• KJ3
109
North-South vulnerablt

A.QG

CHV

·
NORTH
• K Q 10
• J 86 2
• Q 10 6
• QJ 7

KHSHU

VIH

New-tangled lead backfires
·

• • • • • 1 1 1 • • 1 • 1

BUYf SEll QR TRADE,.f

9:30-We Think You Should Know 3; Pilot "Look Out
World" 4,15.
10:00-NBC Reports 3,4,15; Charlie's Angels 6,13;
News 20.
10 :3()-lnternaflonal Anlmaflon Festival 20.
11 :()(}-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20 .
11 :30-Johnny Carsdn 3,4, 15; Rookles6, 13; Movie "The
Prisoner of zenda" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
News 33.
12:()(}-Movle "Pork Chop Hill" 10; Janak! 33.
12 :4()-N\ystery of the Week 6, 13; 1:0G-Tomorrov.: 3,4;
2: 1()-News 13.
Movie Channel4- sand 9 P.M.- Obsession .
7 ond 11 P.M. - The Front.

Fu'st time I throw
-three strikes with
one pitch! ·

CRYPTOQUOTES

CARPENTER , flooring , ce'iling1
ponelin,g . Phone 992-2759.

Home

47 Run intO
48 Indigence
DOWN
I Pseudo11ym
(2 wds. )
2 Youngster
3 Easily seen
4 Punctuation
mark
5 Copy
6 Send
back
7 Animate
8 Metric
measure
9 Gait
10 Furnace
or oven
16 Jack the
quipper

One leiter simply stands for another. In Lhis sample A Is
used lor the three 1..'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and !ormation of lhe words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are d1ffercnl.

WILL do roofing, construction~
plumbing ond heating . No job

plumbing and ' heating·,, Phone
992-5858 .
.

ACROSS
1 Leaky
fau6tt
sound
5 Composer
Khachaturian
9 Gather in
bundles
11 Soccer great
12 Supply boat
· 13 Give off
14 Operated
15 Sunder
17 - had it!
18 Give whirl
(2 wds.)
JJo
19 Kitchen
~
appliance
7.211 · .21 Half
:::;:;;::.,______
(pre!.)

Is

Rutland ) Ohio. Phone 742 ·2008 ~

MOBILE

acti"-"OUTRA~E"

DAILY CRYI'TOQUOTE ~ Here's

5:!32.
field,

I

Jumbles; MOGUL FORAY HUNTER BEDBUG
Answe" "B&lt;eaklng up ·our gale' laa disgraceful

..-----:r--r-----.::-

wm mertue ,.~·

~

Yeste,day's

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GUARANTEED

value

{Answers tomorrow)

t'!!t~NtlfJ~

PARTS • lABOR

~

"(I I J l I)!"

Prir)tanswerhere:

CAME ESOO.PED--

HE WILL COME AGAIN-·SO,
M'f FFI:IENO, GUARD THE
Lt1l~f PRINCESS DOUBLY
WELL.·- UNDERSlAND ~

Automatic
Transmission Service

Reedsville. 0.

Now arrange the circled letters lo
form 1he surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

I KJ .

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-- POINTED WARNING

8,10.

2:110---$20.000 Pyramid 6,13; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
2;311-0ne Life to Live 6,13 ; Doctors 34.15; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
.
3:fi0-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8, 10;
M.D. 20; Romagnoli's Table 33; 3:15-General
Hospital 6,13.
•
3:30-Match Game B,1Q; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Erica
33.
4:fi0-Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; Gilligan's Is.
8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "The Nutty Professor"
lb; Dinah 13.
·
4; 3D-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan's Heroes 15. '
5:fi0-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 1~; Ml~slon:
Impossible 15.
5:3G-Adam -12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20.33.
6;fi0-News 3,4,B,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3D-NBC News3,4,1S; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News B,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7:fi0-Truth or Cons. 3; Probe 4; Liar's Club 6; Pop
Goes the Country 8; News 10; To Tefl the Truth 13;
My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit . 20;
People &amp; Places 33.
7;3D-Dolly 3; Redscene '77 4; Match Game PM 6;
$25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33;
The Judge10; Break the Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8:fi0-Tut: The Boy King 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Good Times 8, 10; Nova 20,33.'
·
8:30-Bustlng Loose 8, 10.
9 :00-CPO Sharkey 3,4, 15 1' Baretta ·6 ; Movfe
"Rhubarb" 8; Theater In America 33; Movie
" When the Legends Ole" 10; Fcx:us On 13;
Documentary Showcase 20.

C) U111 Klnl Features Syndkate, Inc .

many other teetureo. RaiM •
kids and anl~afs hero. , :
ASKING S:W,900.80,
NOW . FEATURINQ. •
PHOTO
LISTING e
SERVICI!tl I LET US e

.......

SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

tour ordinary words.

after 5, 992-3488.

. A-1 BUSINESS
and BUILDING

WEQNESDAY,JULY27, 1J77
6 :fi0-Summer Semester 10 .; 6; U-Farm Repo•l 13;
6:2G-Not for Women Only 13.
6:30-Ag-Usa 4; "News 6; Summer SemMler 8;
Christopher Closeup 10; 6:45-----Mornlng Report 3;
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia; 6:55-Good
Morning, Trl State 13.
?:flO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6.13; CBS
News B; Chuck White Reports 10; 7:05-Porky Pig
10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8;0G-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33 .
B;3o--:.Btg Volley 6:
.9 :oo-Cross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue &lt;.13.15; Andy
Grlllllh 8; Biography 33.
9:JD-A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Concenlratlon B; Unto
the Hills 33.
lO:fiO-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4.15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy B,10;
Mike Douglas l~; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
10;30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Price Is R lght 8, 10;
Walsh's Animals 33.
11 :flO-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 1~; Community of Living
Things 33; 11: 20-Biography 33.
11:30-lt'sAnybady's Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8,10; 11 :45-Measuremetrlc 33.
11:5S-CBS News B; Ms Flxlt 10.
12 :fi0-News 3,4,6.10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court B; Midday 13; Forsyfe Saga 33.
12 :31)-(hlco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob ,
Braun -4; Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
1 :flO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15;
· Opera Theater 33.
1 :JG-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns

Un~amble these lour. Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to:tarm

HANDICRAFT

'

HOMESITES .for salt, I ocre and COUNTRY formlond with secJud.
Up. Middleport, near· ltutlond:
ed woods, water and gaod oc· Caii992-7&lt;8L
cess in Monroe.County, W. Va .
:-='---:--...,.-- Sl ,000 dowo : coli (30&lt;) 772NEW 3 bedroom house., 2 baths,
3102 or (304) 772-3227. ·
all e lec ., 1 acre. Middleport,
dosll! to ~utlond . Phone 992- VA-FHA, 30 vr. financin9. lrelond
7 .. 81 .
Mo.-lgage , n E. State, Ath&amp;ns ,
phone (61&lt;) 592-3051 .
SMALL farm for sole. 10% dawl'\
owner financed . Monroe Coun: 5 ROOM HOUSE, bolh, 2 po'rchos ,
ly , W. Vo. Phone (304) n2one screened in. garage and
3102 or
772-3227.
carport. Walking distance to
Elementary Sc:hool and town.
Forced air furnace . located at
30.C Wetzgall Sf_; Pomeroy. call

corner

rn'il ~-THAT

~ ~ ~~-

CRAm LADIES

Weddings
Portraits
Passports •
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

Nobil Summit Road
Rt. 1
Middleport,

II·~~:r~;i~:.. ~·~·
,
and

HOLIIiE!

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801

TEAFORD

PomeRIJ landmark
9.,

.. FiS
~· ·

WHAT

DUll TO TliE
OIL !!HORTAGE•

BISSEll SIDING co··

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m . to 5 p'.m.

992-5724

I' YE JUST HAD AN
EME:REIENCY CAL~
F~OM THE WHITE

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR •
CRAFT AND ARTiST '
SUPPLIES.
,
:
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS. •
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK, :
10:00 lo 5:00
•

Behind Rutland Grade
School. Evening work by
appointment. Ph. 742-2005.
. 6-5-1 mo. f!d .

Not The Imitators"

-

CAPTAIN EASY

~~~-~~
1£1\ICffiiF!n

'~- ttZ-l!IJI

wheel
balancing, tune·up.
brake work, minor
repair.

''The Origin.ators

-...-

lARRT~eDER

· Aii~nment,

992-2206or 992-7630

''

SIDt5SOifm

DUGAN'S
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

.,

Clll1l:IIUIIIJIIKS

IA.M.Io4:30P. M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6-23-1 mo. Pd.

~rpeting

TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1971 .
5 ;()(}-BigValleyJ; SfarTrek4 ; BradyBunch8; Mister
Rogers' Nei9hburhood 20,33; Emergency One 13 ;
Mission : Impossible 15.
5;30-Adam-12 &lt;; News&amp;; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20.33.
6 :()(}-News 3.4,B,10,13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; Bill
Moyers' Journal 33.
&amp;:3G-NBC News 3.~. 15; ABC News13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:fiO-TruthorCons.3; To Tell fheTrutll&lt; ; Liar's Club
6; Country Carnival 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth
13; My Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20;
Low.ll Thomas Remembers 33.
.7:30-fojollywood Squares 3,4; Lei's Deal Wlfh It 6;
Match Game· PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
. Wild Kingdom 13; Music City 15
8 : ()(}-B~a Baa Black Sheep 3,~,15; 3,~ ,1 5 ; Happy Days.
6,13; CBS News Special B.10; In Performance at
Wolf Trap 20,33.
B:JD-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9 :0G-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Movie 0 Tbe Wrecking
Crew" 6,13; Mash 8, 10; Play ofthe Month 20; Opera
Theater 33.
9:311-0ne Day at a Time B,10.

-IIIW-Uttia

... '

Phone 992-6282

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's

.

:! ~

VIEWING

:li1

!

..'''·
•'

10:0G-PoflcR Story 3,4,15; Kolak 8, 10; News 20; P lc.
cadllly Circus 33.
11 !OG-Ney;s 4,6.1, 10.13.15.3.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,~. 15; Movie "The Red Tent"
6, 13; Mary Hartman 10; .. Movie" " Pat Garrett &amp;
Billy the Kid" 8; ABC Ntws 33.
12:0G-Movle "Honeymoon Hotel" 10; J antkl 33.
. ! :flO-Tomorrow 3.4; 2:fi0-News 13.
Movie Chonnef 4-5 1nd 9 p.m . - Bile tha Bullet.
1 ond II P .M.-Silent Movie.

LITTLE

11111lllill Senices

300Main St.
Pomiro,y ,OhiO-

·

N~.&lt;!T

.....

Electrica I &amp;
Refrigeration ·

Roule2

A

'

'•

.

DAVID BRICKLES

:~r_,_,_,,_,_,_,TELE'VisioN,.,,,,,_,,,.;·:&lt;·i:!

,_,.,:;-r EGG. BEATS
PUI~SI;- SNATO!ING •

•'

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

FOR SALE

--

FRIENDLY TOY Parties hcs open·
ings for managers and
demonstrators. Demonstrate

• ·

-

m -2082.

NOTICE

~lAVE

COAl, limestone. and calcium

a .. rvice to off.,. COAl NUMBER 6, SIOKER ~
son Rick W. Snidttr on hh~ '23rd
wont to buy or sell somethl~.
chloride- ond calcwm brtn. for
lUMP DELIVERED. Call (614)
du" conl&lt;ol ond spe&lt;iol ml•ing
birthday, Julv 26th.
oe looking for work ••. or
:lB-4-2814.
soh Jor fa_rwwtrs , E•celsior Solt
Wouldn't it be wonderful.
w~tever .. , you'll g-et retults
If we could tH, Our deor son .
faster with a Sentlr.el Wonr Ad. JOHN OEEJIE ~20 livl! power, 3
Works , Main Street , Pomeroy.
Ohio M phone 992· 3891 .
As .,. used to be.
point hitch. John Deer No. S
Ca\1992-2156.
W0t.11dn't it be wonderful
mower , 7 pt. cut . John Deer 2 CAMPER, $600. Al5o, hone
YARD SALE Tuesday, Weds .. and
rqw ~ultivotor Ford • two l.f in.
To'" kllm smile
trailer, S.fSO. Phone (61") 698Thursday , corner 5th and Moll') ,
bottom plow. Caii247-719S .
And hove him boclo. for o linle
3290
,
Mlddl•port
.
Taen
girl
's
·
wllile.
YELLOW FREESTONE conning
clothing,
gomcn,
home
furCould we be wrong lor wonting
peaches now in season.
l
nishings , etc . 9 a.m . tillS p.m .
him SO ,
.-·- .
Avoiloble
at any quonitill!s ,
When the angels wanted him too. 5 FAMilY Garage Sole , Children'S
Pleost bring contoiners . Mid·
Coukl we b. wrong for missing
clothing , sewingmochines .
w~ Mkt, Pomeroy, 992-2582 or
him so
.
bicycles , misc. 129 lincoln Hill ,
New Co-Op weter ntBob's Markel , Mason. 773-5721 .
And oil the thing&amp; wt us• to do.
ttnert. mo•tl VC · SVI. ·
July 29th, 9 till 5.
Only 127f.U
No - We would not disturb
ASHLEY STOVE 0.-aters, Running
Save uo .ao on a ntW
$peclol Summer Sale. Lorge
His peoc•ful rest,
Ho-lpolnt Aelrige-r11tur. '
For we know obo\le all
C60, $300. Blowers, $40 . Coli
1 NeW 20 cubic ft. Chest
mornings , (614) 69B-71'H .
Th'ot God knows best.
Freezer
So He- coiled him to his home on
S25 .00 Discount
JOHN DEERE Crawler Backhoe
high .
Now in stoc-k, complete line
PI ANO TUNING . lone Daniels . 12
•nclloader
c;md dump truck .
But we miss our son.
ol bulk garden neds.
years of service . Phone
Phonam-7479.
1 Good McCullough Chain
Everydo.vlholgoes by.
Saw
U!ii
=---,-:----~­ -BACKHOE DUMP truck and trailer
Soon together we will be.
1 Good U setl Poulan CMin
WATER WELL drilling , Pkone
for sole. Phone 7.42-2451 .
Together tor ,eternity.
S•w
·
UO
William P. Grant at 742-2879
Sadly miSsed by Mom, Dad,
1 Good Used Un lco
after
6
p
.m.
LIVE
CATFISH
for
sale
to
stock
sister, brothers and grandDryer
SIO.DD
lakes, ponds, etc. Phone
mother. Ml". and Mrs. Roymond PENNZOIL RUTLAND open doily
E lectrlc Trim -All, cuts
7-42-3167or949- 2~5.
Snider, Mn. Edna Picken.s .
with nylon
'$2P.9S
till 10. Closed Mondays, ...
CI) Good Refrigerator 1200
wrecker service, tire repair. CANNI NG
TOMATOES .
Phone742-9S75 or 7-42·2081.
cucumbers, mangoes, real
cheap. Bring container . Bor-

DICK TRACY
YOU Vf SER\11' D TIME.

l'orSale

forSaJe

l:nllmimly
Yard Sal
IN MEM.ORY ot our son ond grond· IF YOU ~....

--

ln lllell\tJt'Y, Card of Thank!!: anu
Obitual")'- s t-'ftllS per wurd. s:J.OO

1- The DtUv Sentinel,Middl'Poort-Pomeroy, 0., '!'Uesday,July26, 1977

DADBURN

''LIP CODE"

He could now count on two
diamonds, two clubs and one
heart and decided the way to
get four spade tricks would be
to play West for the jack. So
he led a spade from his band,
finessed dummy's 10 and had
to be content with the unhappy
result of down one.
At table two the lead was
the new-fangled seven spot.
South rose with durnrriy's king
and the play proceeded just·
about the same. way as at
table one except that •I this
table South knew where the
jack of spades was. Eventual·
ly he played dummy's queen
ol spades, dropped East's jack
and had his nine tricks and a
l21MP gain .

Opening lead; - 2•
By O.wald &amp; James Jacoby
This business of not leading
. lourth best against notrump
unless yuu hold one of the lour
top honors Is not always
successful. Today's hand
decided · an important IMP
match . The bidding went the
same, way at both tables and
each West player decided to
open a spade.
At table one the lead was
the old·lashioned deuce from
a lour-card suit. Declirer
rose with dummy' s king and
lost the club linesse. West led
back a club. Declarer knocked
out the ace or diamonds and
10t another club led back at

A New Hampshire reader
wants to know il it Is ever
proper tn lead from a king at
trick one .
The a-nswer is that, of
course. il is . What would he do
with :
• K

xx •

K

xx •K-xx •

K

x,qc

More seriously, the lead
from a king is frequently a
very good one .

(Fo' a copy of J"COBY
MODERN. send $1 tq: "Wih 11
8rldgo." clo thlo ,.wspeper,
P.0 . Box 489, Rodio City Stotlon,
Now York, N.Y. 10019}

·

�11-TheO.UySentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday,July 26,1977

Scioto district is
short of cash
COLUMBUS (UPI ) -State
. Auditor ThOOills Ferguson
reported today that Scioto
Valley Local School District
in Pike County should not
begin classroom instruction
until Oct. Zlthis year because
or a financial deficiL
A financial cash analysis
provided
the 1 Sta~
Superintendent of Publtc
Instruction by Ferguson 's
office revealed the school
district had a Sl84,036 deficit
as of June 30, 1977 and, if no
action is taken, a deficit of
$260,715 by Dec. 31, 1977.
Ferguson pointed out that
under state law no school
district can end the calEllldar
year with a deficit in any
fund . Yet, according to the
financial cash analysis, and
the last regular audit, Scioto
Valley Local School district
has ·shown year-&lt;!!ld general
fund deficits since Dec. 31,
1974.
'
" Because Scioto Valley
Local School District has
been running a deficit in its
General Fund, 1 had no
alternative but to certify that
the school distriCt would have

1o delay its opening day for

students until Oct. 21," said
Ferguson .
The fllJ8ncial cash analysis
shows that if the state
Department of Education
allows Scioto Valley schools
1o delay opening Wltil Oct. 21,
and all spending in the
district is reduced to
essentials, the district will
have eliminated its deficit by
Dec. 31, 1977, Ferguson said.
Ferguson lilso reiterated
that Scioto Valley is one of 16
~c hool districts to seek
fmancial cash analyses from
his office as a preliminary
move toward eventual
curtailment of the educatimal programs.
"The financial condition or
a sizeable number of school
districts is
serious,"
Ferguson said. "They are
faced with a 'nO"'win' situation
of rising costs and lower than
anticipated income.
"Unless school district
voters are willing to approve
operating levies, il appears
the' mly solution remaining
for the schools in Ohio is to
drastically redu ce
expenditures," he said.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admissions - Christina
Barber, Langsville; James
Meadows, Long Bottom ;
Martha Searls, Middleport ;·
RaYjDQnd Reitmire; West ·
Columbia; Melanie Grueser,
Pomeroy; Erma Bales ,
Cheshire; Edna !tunnel,
Pomeroy; Phyllis McWllan,
Racine ; Helen Smith,
Pomeroy ; Diane Milliron,
Middleport; Sonya Wtse,
Rutland.
Discharges Robert
Graham, Arnold Johnson,
Emma Douglas, Charles
Eads, Joan Sellers, Beverly
Thompson, Misty King,
George Niclnisky, Maude
Collliolly.
Holzer Medkal Center
(Dlsebarge&amp;, Jaly%5~
Elizabeth Adkins, Jeff
Anderson, Mrs. Greg Bailey
and
daughter,
Hazel
Capehart, Rachel Fox,
Lowell Halfhill, Jr., Mrs.
David Hart and daughter,
Kimberly HW, Mrs. Richard
Schwab and son, Eulah

Williams.
(Birtba, .JalyZ5)
Mr. and Mrs. John
Spaulding, a son, Vinton: Mr.
and Mrs. William Adkins, a
daughter, Albany.

Syracuse ·needs

yard sale goods
SYRACUSE - The Syrcuse
E-R unit and fire department
will hold a yard sale Friday
and Saturday, Aug. 12 and 13,
at the fire station. donations
toward the sale are n!!eded.
Those wishing to contribute
something are asked to call
any of the following nurn·
hers: 992-7181, 992-5888, 9923125, 992-2239. Proceeds will
be used to pay on the new
emergency truck.
On Aug. 13 and 14 the
department will sell barbecued chicken. These
proceeds also will be used lor
the new emergency vehicle.

for .ALL your banking needs

TV•••in Review
NEW YORK (UPil -The Dulelwlescended Afrikaner rules
South Africa. inspired by the Bible am the gun, and living In
lear that his treasured way of life wiU be overthrown by what
he sin&lt;'erely believes to be inferior people.
When Afrikaner fanner Busbie Meiring tells NBC
t-or respondent Garrick Utley, "The black man is not up to the
stamard of the white man.... He Cl!Jlnol be equal in
competition with the white man," the outside observer can't
make a dent by pointing out the way apartheid operates makes
it impossible fu- a black to succeed.
This is the picture NBC News presents July 'rl, I(). II p.m.,
Eastern time, in a special "NBC Reports : Africa's Defiant
White Tribe."
UUie that the viewer sees in the show is really new - South
Africa for some reason is a popular subject for docwnentaries.
But repetition does help pound home .the point - that the
minority white population of South African holds·a privileged
position, believes he deserves it, and intends to retain it.
What makes the repetition valuable is that Americans, with
their own trand of racial COns&lt;;ience, may practice discrimination but seldom preach it. Equality for aU remains
essential to the American dream. For the Afrikaner, the white
man is superior to the man of color, particularly.the black.
The frightening aspect of South Africa's situation is the
potential for violence. Galsha Buthelezi, chief minister of the
Zulus, the largest tribe in South Africa, spoke out at a political
affair, pointing his remarks toward a South African cabinet
minister who was presiding :
" U the present political lunacy of hard liners within your
regime triumphs, as seems to be the case, we black and white
South Africans may at this very moment by poised for a
holocaust whose dimensions have not yet been witnessed by
the world witbin living memory."
The Afrikaner way now, as presented by Utley, is to offer
tribes "homelands," which sounds better on paper than in fact
because the blacks take title to undeveloped land in coutnries
that are small, fragmented and dependent on South Africa.
That means the tribespeople still must work in South :Africa,
but as foreign laborers posing little threat to Afrikaner power.
Utley sums Jlll..!!!e show by saying :
" It is sad to'hote ·that one thing blacks and whites can agree
upon is that South Africa's race problem probably will not be
solved peaceably. Many blacks and whites have told us they
are prepared to ~fie for their cause. Many may have to."

Most Americans can't figure
income tax forms s~ey says
WASHINGTON (UP!) Three out of four American
taxpayers were so confused
by federal income tax forms
that they reliedj on someone
else to prepare their 1976
returns, a survey showed
today.
Interviews conducted by
the Roper Ot:ganization Inc.
· for a professional tax
preparation service .found
widesp!"ead suspicion about
the fairness of the tax
. system, ·an appetite for tax
reform and opposition In tax
increases.
While confused by the

Andreotti and
Carter meeting ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter meetS today
with Italian Prime Minister
Giulio Andreottion a note of
cordiality generated by the
visitor's success in stabilizing
Italy's political situation
without c ommun ist
in
the
participation
government.
U.S. officials said they
don 't expect anything
dramatic to emerge from the
two days of talks, since there
are no urgent problem1 !lOw
between the two countries.
Andreotti's visit Is seen
instead as another in a series
of calls on the new President
by leaders of the United
states' major allies.
But the officials described
the visit as timely because it
will allow the Carter
administration to express its
pleasure
at
recent
improvements in the, Italian
economy and what . the
officials described as
Andreo.tti's " remarkable
performance" in bringing
needed stability to Italian
politics.
In Rome, Italian officials
said before Andreotti 's

Action filed for judgment
A suit for money and a plea interest and costs against the
for dissolution of m,arrlage Grange Mutural Casualty
were filed in Meigs County Co., Columbus.
Common Pleas Court Mqnday.
AID SUPPLEMENTED
Filing for dissolution were
A supplemental Aid to
Sandra Honaker Rice, Long Dependent Children
Bottom, and Herbert Edward distribution for July totaUng
Rice, Ill, Novelty, Ohio. $1,817,808 was sent to 524,665
Ronald L. Miller, Jr., Racine, recipients in Ohio's 88
filed a suit seeking judgment counties, State Auditor
in the amount of S6,6;17 plus Thomas E. Ferguson ·s· office
said Friday. The increase in
ADC payments were a result
of the recent passage of
House Bill 191, which
determined the state's
general appropriations for
the biennium beginning July
I, i977. Coming to Meigs
ADA MACK
County was $2,873 for 846
Ada Roena Grover Mack, persons.
83, a former resident of Gatlia
County and Bucyrus, Ohio,
died Mooday at the Ohio
Pythlan Home In Springfield.

Area
Death.

She was born In Chesh ire

forms, the taxpayers polled
gave a low priority to
simplification.
Only one in four said
ol lax forms
simplification
.
should be a top priority of
government, while 47 per
cent labeled unemployment
the chief problem.
"A majority olthe public
(60per cent) said they have a
'not too good' or •very little'
understanding of how to fill
out the federal tax return,"
said
the
survey
commissioned by H&amp;R Block
Inc. "Even among the college

de~rtureMonday.lhatoneor

Carter's main interests was
likely to be how the ruling
Christian Democrats are
holding on against pressures
from the Communist party.
They predicted Carter
would be particularly
interested in bearing about
the political accord that
pennits the Communists to
vote with the majority on key
parliamentary issues.
Andreotti, who arrived in
Wa~ington Monday night,
had . dates 10 confer with
Carter today and Wednesday
while Foreign Minister
Arnalda Forlani talked with
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance.
Andreotti is on record
favoring Carter's open
human rights crusade. In this
· aspect, he differs from his
French
and
German
!leagues who prefer a more
quiet approach.
·
·
Other issues in the
AndreottiCarter talks include
expansion ·of cultural
exchange; economic,
financial and investment
· relations ; NATO ; the Middle
· East, and Africa.

eo

Another coal mining strike begins

Twp., graduated from the old
Cheshire High School . and
attended Ohio University and
·Marietta College.
She taughtseveral rears In
the rural schools o Gallia
County. She was charter

· Unrest blamed on cutbacks summer vacation ending July
in union medical benefits has 11, the strike swelled to 35,000
spawned another wildcat coal idle miners in Eastern
mining strike in southern Kentucky and West Virginia.
West Virginia and Eastern Since then, the walkout has
member and SO year member Kentucky and no letup is in fluctuated in terms of
and first Worthy Matron of . sight.
numbers.
the Cheshire Chapter of the
A wildcat mine strike that
The · Bituminous Coal
order of Eastern Star, past
chief and 50 year member of frrst erupted in prole~ of Operators Association, which
the Cyrus Temple of Bucyrus cutbacks in health benefits of finances the funds through
and a "'ember of the United Miner Workers mem- royillties on coal tonnage,
Woodlawn United Methodist
Church at Bucyrus . · . bers gained strength Monday refused to reallocate mmey
Surviving are a daughter, with an estimated 22,300 · to make the health fund
Miss E. Eileen Mack of rnlne.r s bOycotting work in solvent.
COlumbus and two brothers, West Virginia. An additional
Ivan A. anQ Raymond W.
10,000 miners were out in
Grover, both of Cheshire.
and
an
Funeral services will be Kentucky,
COLUMBUS (UPI) held at 10 a.m. Thursday undetennined number were
from the Schoedinger Hilltop off the job in western Uvestock auction:
Chapel, 3030 West Broad St.,
Compared with last week :
Columbus with Pastor Pennsylvania due to recent Slaughter steers firm to I
Norman Nilsen officiating. flooding. No miners were out
lower, slaughter heifers 2-3
Graveside services will be in Ohio.
.
held at I p.m. Thur-sday at
higher,
slaughter cows 1-3.50
A delegatiOn from UMW
Oakwood
Cemetery . ~t
higher, slaughter bulls 2-3
Bucyrus.
. District 30 in Eastern higher, bullock&amp; 1-3 higher,
In lieu of flowers, con - Kentucky planhed to g!l . to
tributions may be made to Washington today to confer vealers ~ lower on a light
Zion Lulheran Church , 1500 with the three trustees of tbe supply, too few feeder cattle
to establish market trend.
Broadway. Springfield.
UMW Health and Retirement Crestmlivestock auction was
Fund . about announced not reported last week.
ASK TO WED
reducUons in fund payments. &amp;!pply 50 per cent slaughter
Issued a license to wed in.
" It's the same thing, the
Meigs County Monday were benefits cuthack," said Dan stee!'Si.20 per cent slaughter
Coy Bly Starcher, Jr., 19, and Fields, an official of the West heifers, 18 per cent slaughl!lJ'y
Gilberta Jean Harper, 19, Virginia Coal Association. cows, 3 per cent slaugh~r
both of Pomeroy, and Ronald "Some ·mines have pickets, bulls 7 per cent feeder cattle.
'
Lee Hoffman, 21, Middleport, some mines don't. Many of
Slaughter steers : Choice
and Donna Colleen Taylor, 17, the miners went out on tbe
and
prilne :t-4 950-1300 38Pomeroy.
midnight shift."
40.85;
few 41-41.25; choice 2-3
Miners went back to work
950-1400
38.50-38.80; 2-3 ~
last .wr;ek, but Friday . the
walkout ballooned again, put- 900 35.50-38; good 2-3 950-1475
July 26
ting as many as 14,000 miners 33.60-36.50; high dressing "1738.75.
off the job.
Double Future
Slaughter heifers: OuJice
The wildcat strike began
Pr119ram
few
prime 2-3 lf5G.ll00 37Clint EISIWood
nearly a month ago, shortly
38.25;
string high choice 2-3
THE
after the UMW disclosed that
98&amp;-100
38-39.60; choice 1-2
ENFORCER
its. independently-nm Health
R
and Retirement Funds would · 870.000 "17.25-39.50; choice 2-3
Elliott Gould
cut · its benefits, forcing 7110-825 30.00-34; choice ~
Diane Keaton ·
miners to pay as much as SSOO 1!5G-1030 33-35.50; lot chQice
I WILL,
4's 1000 35; good and choice 2each year.
I WILJ,.
3
765-850 32.96-34.25; good 2-3
Just before miners began
R
FOR NOW
8J5.S85
33-36.
their annual two-week

In the controversy, the
BCOA has maintained that
reallocation would, in effect,.
sanction wildcat strikes
which operators say is the
real cause for the financial
plight.
Members of the UMW's
policy-making International
Executive Board called m
strikers to return to their
jobs, saying the union will
negotiate the situation with
coal owners.

Market Report

MAIL

Think Of A .Mailbox As
A ~eighborhood Branch
Savings, checking, loan pay~
ment transactions can be made
via the mails. Remember our
night depository for after banking hours. Convenient.
• Bill.flaying Loans •

~Money Orders • Christmas Clubs •
• Savillt$ Accounts • Certificate• • ·

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND ·
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVE"NINGS5To.7P.M.

MASON DR. IN

.

"THE
FRIENDLY BA.NK"

TIJ Our Delicious sm.wbeny
.
..
Shortcake, with or without
Whipped

Cream.

~ADOLPH'S
.MIDDL£PORT, OHIO .
Member Feoerat Deposn Insurance
Corporalion

DEPOSits INSURED TO $40.000

v DAIRY VAU.EY

~ESA..

'&lt;/?i~'7~

It

Ulat\ Gl

PDIDS j

~

HRS.: 10:00 A.M. Iiiii :00 P.M. Sun . Thurs. 10:00
tilll :WP.M. l'riday
wturday.
See
The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

,nc1

..'

·"':.

Slaughter cows: UUlity and
commercial M 1151&gt;-1540 2329,50; few high yielding
utility 1-2 l!ro-1500 29.1().
30.25; cutter 1-2 640-1290 26- .
25.25.
Slaughter bulla: l'a l&lt;m:11100 ~; 2'1 m-2120 29.6033.75.
BuUocu: Good 1·2 lf30.1285
34-36.25.
Vealers: Choice and prime
160-235 41.5G-44; choice 90-130
'll-40; Individual choice 200
41; good 1~260 34.-39.
Calves returned to farms:
Medium frame 6$-85 lf&gt;-21

cwt.
Feeder cattle : Few choice
llleel'll. di3WI·IDtcholce
llleera 868 •.'ll; ~bulla
435-QO 30.1Nt.50; good .4$1)-

'----------------..J·
u, ''

570 32-33; heifers choice 450-

62:i 'r/.~. 50.

LO))GE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
will meet Wednesday, July 'll
at 7:30 p.m. Work Will be in
the EA degree. All master
masons are invited.
TAKENTOVMH
The Pometoy E-R squad
went Monday at 9:34 a.m. to
Dexter for C. E. Jordon who

was _ taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
. CLOTIUNG OFFEREJ&gt; .
Free clothing day' will be
held at the Salvation Ai'my
Thursday, July 28 from 10
a.m. until noon. All area
residents in need of clothing ·
are welcome.
DANCE PLANNED
A square dance will be held
at the Senior Cltizell8 Center
on Friday, JUly 29, !rom 1:30
to 11:30 p.m. with music by
the Stringdusters. Cake
walks and round dancing will
be featured throughout the
evening. Admission is $1 per
adult. Children under 12 will
be admitted fl"ee with their
parents.

educated, almost half (47 per
cent)
report
poor
understanding of how to com·
plete .the form."
The em elusions were based
on in-penllll! interviews of
2,003 per8011S over 18 in a
survey cooducted ilt May,
1977.
The. survey showed do-ityourself tax preparation was
limited. f1 those questioned,
only 23 per cent said they
prepared their own returns,
while · 54 per cent turned ·to
outside professionals. The remainder said a friend or
spouse filled out their return.
Despite admitted confusion
about tu fonns and reliance
on others to prepare returns,
the majoclty of persons were
confident they paid the
proper amount or tu.
The average taxpayer
spent 2 hours 38 mirwtes
preparing the 1976 return
which covered the tax year
197$ and was due April 15,
1976.
.
In addition to being
confused by tax formS, the
majority of those surveyed 64 per cent -condemned the
system as unfair Iii most
people.
Tax loopholes to most
people ''mean some obscure
tax rules known only to the
most sophisticated financial
wizards, certainly not those
familiar deductions and
allowances on the tu return
fonns the average taxpayer
is familiar with," the report
said.

But augg~stions that tu
loopholes be cloeed were
resisted when the specillc
exemption.~ deduct.loo was
mentioned.
Tax reform was popil•r in
general, tbe survey found,
Wltil specifics were detailed.

Instant•••
.

.
as 1,335 persons, including 54
instant voters, defeated a 7mill additional iax levy July·
19.
There were no "instant .
voters" in the Clermont
County community of Wayne
Township whel) 179 persons
approved two tax levies July
19. There were IIve instant ·
voters aniong the 61 persons
who balloted on a lax issue in
Newtonsville Village, also in
Clermont County, ·which was
defeated by 17 votes.
The reports also showed :
- &amp;'I instant voters among
2,738 wbo' voted July 19 in
Field Local School District in
Portage County: The bond
issue was defeated.
- 71 instant voters among
2,214 persons who voted July ·
19 in the Paulding Exempted
Village School District.
Voters defeated two i.!sues.
- Eight - instant voters
among the 181 Clearcreek •
Township (Fairfield County)
r e si de n t s
w h o.•
overwhelmingly approved a ·
tax levy July 14.
•

•

Author Jobb
(Continued frclm,...

•
1)

stepped into educational_ ~b~ and worked . on •
textbook classroom materials. These included a series or films •
designed to teach reading, and a multi-media math project.My employer was tbe Amazing Life Games Company or. ·
Sausalito, Calif.
'
"Also at ALG I worked on two hooks that were not for
classrooms. I was just a contributor on th~ books -; ''did
Glory" published by Warner.· Paperback Library and . 'GOod
Cents" published by Houghton Mifflin. "Old Glory" was a do·.
it-yourself historical preservation book. "Good Cents" was
about various ways kids could make money.
·
.
''This spring I became the author ~ my own ~k, •;;-tY
Garden Companion - a Complete Gwde for Begumers. It
was part of a series of books for young readers and was
published by Scribners Sierra Club. This fall, my second bo&lt;!k
will be .published by Little, Brown or Boston. It is titled "Tbe
NigbtSky Book" andispartof 11 series called the Brown Paper
School. The book cmcerns astronomy and navigatim."
Young Jobb, the son of Mr. and Mrs. James T. Jobb,
Miami continued:
·
"My CWTent project is a booll (untitled as yet) about
community gardens in America. It will be based on our current
cross-country tour and will be published next year by WUI!am
Morrow of New York. I am photographing as well as writing
this one."
The Jobbs and their two young children will be returning
shortly to California.

Unions favored
WASHINGTON .(UPI)
prior to tbe first roUective
Labor
Secretary
Ray bargajning agreement. And
Marshall has endorsed he ·supported a requirement
. legislation to strengthen tbe that the NLRB seek
hand of unions organizing immediate reinstatement of
anti-union plants, warning the worker through feder&amp;l
existing safeguards are cOurts.
"woefully inadequate."
"The
delays
and
' 'Our proposal Is intended weaknesses of the NLRB's
to remove tbe obstac;les !bat enforcement powers bave, in
now stand in the way of effect, denied these rights to
achieving the collective thousands of American
bargaining rights already workers," Marshall said.
guaranteed In our labor
Maraball said he is "deeply
laws," MarsbaU IBid Monday . cmcemed" over unlawful fl.
before
the
House rings, which he caUed tl)e
subcommittee on labor most common .abuse in
management relations.
current labor law.
'
The proposal, which makes
' 'The drive by employes for
changes in the operations of union representation may be
the National Labor Relations crushed through illegal
Board, ill one of organized actims in the early stages of
labor's
pet
projects. an ~rganizational campaign
President Carter was elected with no real sanctions being
with substantial imposed"Marshallsald.
organizational and financial
~u·s strong ellkneassistance from IIJI\OIUI and ment of the leRlalatiCIII wu
last week IIIIIIOUIICed IIIJIIIlOrl. countered by Rep. Jolm Albfor the propoul.
brook R.Ohio who attacked
Emling rigbts to "llrganize it f~t faili;..g "to limit
were won by unions in the questionable practices by
1930s.
unions.
Calling present remedies of
"All your bcrror stories are
back pay and reinJtttement addressed against business,
"woefully inade(J!Iatll" Mar- and there are many on the
shall endcrsed double back other side," Albbrook ·said.
pay if a charge of anti-union "It does ileem to be· a onediacrlminaUon occurred traclr. approach."

HOUSIWARIS DIPT.

Com.ing_ Ware Special
Buy a 10 inch

~

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(UPI) -A runaway tnsh
fire, believed to be ''man
&lt;!Bused," today deva.stated a
wealthy suburb overlooking
the Pacific and drove a wall
of flame a half mile wide
toward the heart of the city.
Tbe blaze destroyed 200
houses and damaged 40 more,
Mayor David Shiffman said,
Hundreds of refugees Hed
as whole neighborhoods went
up in flames, but there were
no repol'ts or serious injuries.
Shiffman told reporters the
blaze destroyed 100 homes

sldllet for 'lP_
and receive .a 9 inch pie plate FREE!
OR
Buy a 3 quart
saucepan for •1~
and receive a picnic cooler FREE!

'

business district as a focce or
500 firefighters fought to keep

pace. Reinforcements were
·sent from as far away as Los
Angeles, 100 miles to the
::..t•ll lh .

'

Winili! were grad ua lly
shifting from the ~ast to the
south , raising hopes the
blaze, about one mile from
the oceanside downtown
area, wuuid U.. driven back
into the hills before laying
. waste the businesa district.
. "The nwnber of homes
. destroy~Us going to increase
for sure," saiil U.S. Forest

Service spoke•man Ed
Waldapfel. "The fire is a mile
long and half mile wide and
·t's •going so fast we , can't
keep up with what's
happening. ·JI's unreal."
"We're evacuating like
crazy. It's a madhouse out
there," said police Sgt. Jim
Rochester' as the fury of the
blaze surprised residents in
the!light.
A comma~d post set up by
city and JX&gt;unty fire departmerits was driven ·from its
first localion at Westmont
C',ollege by the encircling

names which scorched tbe
athletic field bef~re changing
direction.
"We have terrific down
canyon winds and the fire is
pushing deep inln the city,"
said Fire lnformatiOlJ Officer
Debbie Gold.
PQiicc said fire damage to
major power lines caused
intermittent blackouts
throughout the city . An
observer on a hiUtop said
"The entire city just .flickers
out every now and then and
remains dark I or a few
seconds or a .minute before

the lights return."
A Southern California
Edison spokesman confirmed
some power losses due to
burned circuits, but said
there appeared to be no
' danger of a general blackout
an d hospitals were well
equipped with emergency
generat~rs .

The Fire Department said
the blaze was first reporled at
7:42 p.m., burning down out
of the brush covered hills,
·
whippedbythe
"sWldowner," a hot wind

from the northeast gusting to

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 27, 1977

45 miles an hour.
The blaze was burning in
many directions, but the
southern flank turned west ,
pushed by the winds IDto the •
sycamore canyon area of
(Continued on 1111e 121

Weather
Clear tonight, lows near 60.
Partly sunny, breezy and
warmer Thursday, highS to
85 .
Probability
of
precipitation neanero today,
10 per cent tonight, 80' per
cent Thursday.
·

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 72

·Ratph BreWer's .death
r

hot under probe
The deatb by palbot of a make tbat he had seen Victim to VeteranS Memorial
57-yeat'-Oid Portland .lli,8JI l,s eaJiler;·After his luiving been · Hospital, Brewer c;lied there a
under 19'Mtlptlon todll)' by .gone (or lOUie time, Mrs. lllort time later.
the Mllp
Sberltf's Brewer wmt to find him for
Deputies said that Mr;
cleparQblnL
lUnd! but was . not able to Brewer was found lying on
Shetlft IPIII J." Proftltt locllte blm.
the ground at the edge of a
said that at 1:5• p.m.
Altbattlmeabe notified the wooded area behind his home
Tueldlly dlllpatles uriv~ at lllerllf's office along with her and bad suffered • a head
the Ral&amp;lh Brewer · m~dellce brother-In-law, Arthur Allen, · wound. He had in his
near StttetfiWe after belag of Newark,
"l!'ho
is poaw"oo at the time his
advised b)' Mrs. Ba ewa; that vacatiolllng in Meigs County. body wa.s discovered, a .22
her huhand 111'11 mtatnc.
B1'6111'er WM foand by Allen caliber revolver.
Mrs. Brewer told deputies lbortly before deputies
The body is at Ewing
her bubllnd •ld. he wu arrived and the Racine Funeral Home In Pomeroy.
going illto the woeded area l!lmergency Squad , was
In other action Tuesday
near their bollle to sl)oot a SUmmoned to transport the afternoon the Sheriff's

COuntr

, 1

department . investigated a
train deraliment on Conran
tracks near County Road 10
about three mUes north of SR
143.
Several loaded coal cars
jumped the tracks and one of
the cars tore up a section of
the county road, resulting in
it being closed temporarily.
The Meigs County Highway
Department was called in to
repair the damage. There
were no injuries.
··
Two Tuppers Plains JunvenUes have been charged in
the Meigs County Juvenile

College services '"c(~::::~inof
.
ounty
" o ffered Pomeroy 19 studY
•
. '

Services -of Rio ·· Grande
Colleg~ and .Rio Grande
Community College were
offered to Pomeroy at a
regular meeting of the
pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn,
Bemie Murphy, coordinator of Continuing
Education told chamber
mernben that be is eager to
team what the public wants
in their respective communitles and how the college
can help.
"Let us know wh!lt· Rio
Grande Commlllllty, College
can do for you," Murphy said.
The enrollment at Rio
Grande last. year was 1,0112
and next year enrollment Is
expected to reach 1,100.
In the past people have
participated in (adult)
continuing edueatlon claaes
such as "parent effectiveness
training," household ancl
family · mana gem~. chalr
caning
and
furniture
·reflnlsbtng. Classes like these
were taught in Jackson,
-- ·-

-

r- -

McArthur, Middleport and
Gallipolis.
The school · is planning
similar classes next fall, and
the school would like to know
what classes people might
take if offered locally.
The college would appreclate knowing what people
are interested in.
Fred Crow, president of the
chamb!!r, suggested that an
expert be available to assist
villages in applying for
federal grant money. Murphy
thou8ht the suggestion a good
one .
ln other businesS Crow told
chamber members that he
had written to Cong. Clarence
Miller in regard to Pomeroy
on weekenda having an ex·
curslon train. Crow also
reported that James Pag~ of
Fleming, Page and Stolte'wfll
be at the next meeting of the
chamber to explain lhe
naming. of roads in the
county. .
. Crow also stated to
chamber plans to paint the

·--

~~~~~~~
. . . .~·
.
- ..

,?C",..'O,."

ews. • . i.,; Brief~
: ' oe; . .

IIJUidted~lilla'au-1

ouour

'

NEW YOJIX- ARCHBI8HOP FULTON J. SHEEN, the
wllt1 leimlloa jkweher w!MM ''Life Ia Wortb Living" seriea
lntD rnl11!cn of American bomee in the 181501,
.... wart open bear! 11111181')' earner this nmth: Dr. Michael
Brw1o, 1be lilllrecl Cltbollc prelate's pa~•l pbysiclan, IBid
TlleldiQ' sa-t•smeration WM perfonned July 15 at .Lenox
Hill Hqapital as a ·r'1Mtter of UJ'IeDt net lty."
·
BraDo l&amp;ld SbetiiW.. "daUII well," but was ''rult out of
diPIF ."
·
.

- *med

notice

former waterworks building
located on Pomeroy's East . · ·
Main Street. Crow added that
The Meigs County Comthe Board of Public Affatrs missioners in a regular
has offered to purchase the .aesalon Tuesday night met
paint, and Mayor Clarence with County Engineer Wesley
Andrews
has
offered Buehl to hear a letter read
volunteer labor, wire from
the
American
brushes, and his ·personal FederaUon of State, County,
services. Crow also volun- and Municipal Employees
leered as did Phil Kelley, Ted Dl!trlct Council 78 advising
Reed, Walter Grueser and that a majority of the highLarry Powell. ·
way department's employees
Kelley is also working on have voted to authorize
signs, a take off on the Burma AFSCME
· as
theit
Shave Idea, in regard to representative in aU matters
relailng to their conditions of
·littering.
Crow announced that a lmployrnent.
.
"gong show" will be
Bllehl was instructed to
presented sometime this fall. c11acuss the matter with the
The chamber is looking for county prosecutor.
talent.
Also meeting with the
Crow, noting that the commission was Ronald
Pomeroy Golf Course is Whittington, trustee of
under new management, Columbia Township, wlio
suggested a chamber tour- di.lcussed a road fenced off in
nament to help the new DyesviJie by some residents
owners get established. He there.
He was told 10 have the
suggested th.llt members,
even though they hilven't : prolecuting attqrneY.. attend
playedinyearsorhavenever the next regular meeting of
played, to participate.
the Trustees which Mrs.
Statements for l)lem- Ronald Estep is to attend.
bersblp dues for .1977-78 are
In other business Jeff Burt
now being mailed Barbara of the Buckeye Hills, Hocking
Chapman, secretary Valley Regional Developreported.
ment District presented a
Attending were Crow, copy
of
"Practices,
Kelley, Mrs . . Chapman, Programs, and Policies of
Mayor Andrews, John An- Land Use in Rural
derson, Dale Warner, But Southeastern Ohio" for
Quickie, N. W. Compton, review by the general public.
John Koebel, Dan Jindra,
Mrs. Nora Rice, Mid·
Stanley Houdashelt, Jack dleport, was appointed by the
Carsey, Vi~g!l Teaford, Leo cornmlaslon to the . Mental
Vaughan, Jim Freck.er, But Retardation 169 Board for the
Grueser, Roger Davis arid term ending Dec. 31, 1981. AU
Joe Young.
members were pres;ent.
~
'·

STREET IMPROVEMENTS - Visible around
Middleport this week are road improvement machines
owned and operated by the Shelley Corporation. This
roller came along after a resurfacer in the alley between
Race and, Coal Sis. Tuesday afternoon as other crews
were resurfacing · parts of Ash, Hamilton, Main. and

Beallo n]med two otblr . . - . "Tbe Life of
and "QaD V8dll, Alllllil'lca" wblcb aired Ill lbe 11i101. For 25
a11o WMIIJIICIII1lll0i with lbe Citholk: Hom: nidlll
An estbna 30,000rniners
biMdiiP.
1
.
"in the Appalachia coalfie!ds
...._,__ u--1 ··... , , . __ _, _ and
still idled by rovmg
.Be aatt.ed eo - · -.one· '"'""""'-"
were
•
01•1* lei ,. of tbe Welt" In 1MB, "'lbrw ta Get Married" In pickets today . a~ Umted
llll,'"l'bei'OWwoflme''lnliNMand"TbeQuolableFultonJ. MlneW11fkers6ffiC18lsfaced
R rn" In 111'1.
CllfaMNATI-TBEAMERJCANFINANCIALCoribl!s,
All .._ Melp ..._.
bJ • Jtl _... rtrlbe -.d q11111er and ftrat Ulf of wen diWa WI morwtq
1
hi •
Ill ...._
""" ...-.. for lbale c111 .. ......,.....,:;. at eeell
Jlr7 . . . lbeprrt
- '" i•'V • -~
.--· ....,
-rlall
liiiUI.
Clrt a. Un+•, dlllrmlll of lbe board and pr8lldent of
"1 dt) or w11en IIIey
--•.... mOII.cm Ill tbe wen rr.n W ..t 11eett
/#C, ... Tir drr • - - . : ; : - . 01011
· lbl of 11'1'1 • • 1
,1&amp;
f . . . . tiU mO!!!II In tbe
' wu r-oted. - c
............... llld • .amiJI!onfGrlbellllllperiocl
......
lllll ;... ' '*IPPII'Iillln . . . tl.llln 11111 ar.t Dlllltha
oflllll,-,apl•PII'-tfllllll 11'11.
::~=:,~';:'C:
' TAIPII TAIWAN .,. TIIOUSANDI or SOLDIERS, in UMW medlcal benefits.
alii 5 . . . , , . . . • sHII Ia TllwP ~ Local preliftllta and mine
.... • - ......_ .. ' oa wllllliadllaf.._ Wlndl callled -mmltt.ee membera of
I ••-e.
w
(Ca $' ; Jt 18 Pill" 11)
District 17, th4!i UMW'i

,_..be

•w.--.. .

.==. .

*

~

largest district, in southern
West
Virginia,
voted
overwhebningly Tuesday to
continue the walkout and
~~lngt;.. march on
· officia1s reporte dl y
The
planned to ask surrounding
regions to Join or support
them In both tbe strike and
the march.
- "All the men from the
committees voted just to stay
out,"oneminer·said,"We're
!!Oint! ta have a big rally
march on Washington _
( UMW President) Arnold
Mlller, the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association, the
worts. The date is not set.
We'D know whm It is by
Frida"."
· '
·
l

Williams St.; N. 4th Ave., Bryan Place, the old cemetery
road and entrance, the alley between Main and Mill Sts.
and several other intersections in town. The $17,000
project was to he completed today. This work is in the
alley between Coal and Race Sts. after the resurfacer
nas &lt;lone its job.·

ATRJGHT-'These meo,
employed· by tbe Shelley
Corporation mast have
bl-ed tbe cooler . temperatures Tuesday as they
worked on the im·
provement of atreeta,
alltiya and lnteneetlona
througboat Middleport.
The project, beg1111 Monday, was to be completed
today. The men are
flnlsblng worll; on the Coal
St. entrance to the aftey between Coal aad Race Sts•.

;l;m~m;m:~;i~~;;;~~~;~;~~~t~;;;~;~1i~mt~j;i~~~r~~1~1~i~;~~j.

Boy reSCUed by

ER. from pon
· ··d
E R Sq d
TIJe Pomeroy •
ua
. Tuesday at 2;40 p.m. rescued
unharmed Steve Musser,
Pomeroy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John M~ser who had fallen
over a cliff into a pond near
the Catholic Cemetery.
~e ·squad was called at
11.23 p.m. for Pennie Smith,
, 19, Welshtown Hut, who bad
fallen. She w~ taken. to
Veterans MemoriBI Hosp1t:'l.
At 2:05 a.m.. today Allee
Amolc!, Rose Hill, was ta~en
to _Veterans Memorial
· Hosp1tal.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday thrOugh Sunday,

·a chanee of shawers Friday
and Sun.day aad fair
Saturday, HIKIU wm be In
·tbe upper '701 or the mid.80s
and 'lows wm range from
tbe upper 50s to tile mid
80s.

.-u:~~-~·r:.::..:.=b=~=::~~r!
g. pt·ckets ··die mines
u,_._
CI..Jst" Ro·~-.

4

".

outside the city limits, and
destroyed 100 and damaged
40 in the city. He appealed to
Gov. Edmum G. Brown Jr.,
10 declare the city a disaster
area and send emergency fire
and police reinforcements.
&amp; gusty winds whipped
cinders and ash through the
area, hundreds or residents
Hed, loading cars with
furniture and valuables .
Some, still in their
underwear, were ·-'- seen
galloping away on hQrses
from their private stables.
The fire flamed toward the

I .
The · Coal Assoc a lion
reported that at least 20,000
West Virginia miners were
out Tuesday, with most strike
activity centered in the
remote and mountainous
southern counti
· es or Mingo,
Logan and McDowell . .
As pickets appeared dW'ing
shift changes Tuesday and
turned miners away as they
· k 10000
reported for wor ,
,
miners were reported out in
Kentucky and 2,100 more
were idled In western
Pennsylvania in mine
closings related . to the
J&lt;&gt;hnstown flOOd.,
West Virginia's total
· Tuesday was about 2,000 less
than it had been 24 hours
(CoaUnlltd on Jill' 12)

Commission reverses
decision on land gift
No action was taken on a··
In other commission
request
by · Mike Swisher,
developments, District
Gallla
County Disaster
Engineer Glenn Smith, high·
way design engineer Howard Services Director, for an
Gifford,_ and ~ C-'...... Roger emergency o~.e!"!ltiolls
.
Barron, Ji:mrtly Allen, Frank center.
Approval was given for a
Mills and Frank Blair met
with : the commission · to grant application for the
review a proposed change in. Crime Alert Prevention
SR 160 and its interchange program and "$8,000 was
with US 35 for the four lane appropriated in supplies and
highway proj~. :!'he high- repair services for the Gallia
way committee officials County Sheriff's Department.
In final action, Joe Allen ·
agreed they could".not ~oresee
was
authorized to attend a
any hanllful effects with the
Water Conference Sept.
Clear
proposal. Barron, Mills, and
7
in
Columbus
and the Aug. 2
Aflen were.appointed several
months ago along with Clyde meeting dllte was changed to
Ramsay and Morris Haskins Monday, Aug. 1.
to represent the eonunlssion
on highway matters.
AIDMElll CALLED
A motion was approved to
The Middleport E·R squad
cooperate with the State was called to the office of Dr.
Department of · Trans- Davis Tuesday at 9 : ~3 a.m.
portation closing Cherrington for Thomas Epperly, who l"!ad
Rd. in Raccoon Twp. when a baclt injury. The squad
the project begins. A motion . transported him to Holzer
was adopted directing County Medical Center. At I: 18 a.m.
timethatnolocaltaxreven•~e Engineer · James .Baird to today the squad' took Jerry
will be involved in the initial resurface 2.6 mUes of Cargo Ward to Veterans Metnorlal
operations.
. · Rd. in Clay Twp.
Hospital.
·
.
·~
~
(;,

In s surpr~ move, GaUls
County ·commissioners
Tuesday rescinded a motion
made at their July 19 meeting
that deeded 2'f.! acres of land
. to the ·Gallla-Meigs.Jackson
Mental Health Board for a·
spacious ranch-type home for
mentally disturbed children.
Commission President
John Belville vacated the
chair to make the motion to
rescind. The other commissioners, Jim Saunders
and Paul Dean Niday were in
agreement. No reason for the
di!clsion was written in the
minutes. .
Last week, Malcolm
Orebaugh, administrator for
the comrnuntty mental health
center, said the horne would
be a residential treatment
facility for children funded
through state. monies
allocated when the Nelsonville Children·s Center
closed. He emphasized at that

(;.

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