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                  <text>12-TIIeDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. AU~:. 3.1977

Notices, news in brief
'The Middleport Chamber of

Commerce will meet Thurs-

day at 12: IS p.m . In the
meeting

tt

room

the

Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.

'

· Toni Jean Little,
dleport ~

6,

Mid-

escaped senous

Injury Tuesday at 7: 15 p.m.
when she ran from a church
located on Third Street,

Syracuse1 in front of a park,ed
car Into the path of an avto

driven west by Sidney Jay
Manuel , ' 20, Racine.

Pollee Chief Milton Varian

said the youngster was taken

to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital where she was
treated and released for
minor injur ies. She was taken

to the' hospital by the

Syracuse E- R squad . No

charges will be filed Varian

murder conviction of James
Ruppert , Hamilton , con .

•feted of the kill ing ol

11

membe-rs of his family on

Easter Sunday In 1975.
Rupert was found guilty by
a majority decision of a
three -judge panel in Butler
County Common Pleal Court
of the murder 0$ his mother,
brothttr. sister-in -law and
elqht nephews and nieces.

Weather

The Af.pellate Court said

Chance of showers or
thundershowers tonight and
Thursday. Highs today and
Thursday In the lower BOs,
and lows tonight in the lower
60s.
Probability
of
precipitation 20 per cent
today, 30 per cent tonight and
Thursday .

Ruppert s waiver of a l"ury
trial was ''not know ng,
voluntary and intelligent
since he had been informed
by counsel and the presid ing

judge that a three judge

panel ' s ver d ic:f must be
unanimous ." Thtt case was

rem,anded back to

th~

Butler

County Common Pleas Court .
The Pomeroy Emergency

said.

Squad was called to SR

CINCINNATI !UP I) - The
First District Ohio Court of

Wednesday for Thomas
Sa rver who had a shoulder
Injury. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospltaJ.

Appeals today reversed the

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday .through Sunday,
chaare of sbowen or
thuodtnbowrn Friday,
Saturday and Sunday.
Hlgbs ill the 110!1. Lows ill
the 110!1.

143

near Pomeroy at J : O a.m .

night In the court of Mid$100 milli"on dleport
Mayor Fred Holtman
..............

(Continued from page I)
Officials said Wednesday.
The officials said Vance
was expected to return to
'Alexandria Aug. II at the end
of his current Middle East
tour · which · includes
Leb~non, Syria, Jordan ,
Saudi Arabia and Israel.
In Beirut, U.S. officials said
Vance, who met with
Lebanese President Elias
Sarlti, was offering ~banon
$25 million in !ore1gn
minitary sales credit this
year and up to $100 million
over a three-year period. U.S.
officials said the money will
equip one mechanized
infantry brigade in the first
year, two brigades in the
second year and another in
the third.

7 Pet. per year on a 4
year certificate of
deposit.
51,000.00

mtmmum

deposit, interest paid
quarterly.
substantial penalty is
invoked on . all C.ertificate
accounts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity.
·A

Meigs Co. Branch

..@·
· The Athens Count y
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Second Sf .

Forfeiting bonds Tuesday

were Lawrence E. Gilmore.
33, Dexter, S300, posted for
driv ing while infa•icated,
and Donald L. Swearingen,
20. Rutland. $25, far following

too closely. Fined

S200 and
costs and given a three day
jail sentence upon conviction
of drivi ng while intoxicated
was William E. Hamon, 29.

Sunbury.
Two su its for divorce and
one dissolution have been

filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Covrf .
Filing

for

divorce

were

Martha Dorst, Middleport,
against
Chester

Thomas
Dorst ,
and Jack Lou is

Delph . Middleport. against

Luella Jean Delph, Elyria .
James Neal, Gallipolis and
Elizabeth Nea l. · Gallipolis,
filed for dissolution.

PAYMENT MADE
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office aMounce
the August distribution of
$34,377,708 in Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) to
521,085 recipients in Ohio's 88
counties. Meigs County
received $54,384 · lor 867
participants in the program.
NOW YOU KNOW
The
oldest
English
language newspaper is the
L&lt;&gt;ndon Gazette, which has
published every day since
1655, except for one day in
1666 during the Great Fire of
L&lt;&gt;ndon.

MOGUL SELLS
SOUTHFIELD, Mich .
(UP!) - Federal-Mogul
Corp. said it completed the
sale Tuesday of the majority
of it. plastic pipe and fittings
operations in Florida and
Kentucky for an undisclosed
amount of cash and notes.
Board Chainnan TI"mas
F. Russell said operations at
Tampa and Fort Pierce, Fla.,
and Middlesboro, Ky., were
sold to three separate groups
made up primarily oi former
company employes.
Federal-Mogul's only other
plastic pipe plant, at Newark,
Ohio, was closed in July and .
the land, building and
remaining equipment will
also be -sold, Russell said.
Federal-Mogul produces a
variety of precision part. for
the transportation , farm
equipment, construction ,
aerospace
and
manufacturing industries.

On~

defendant
forfeits five
court bonds

One defendant forfeited
five bonds Tuesday night in
the court of Pomerot Mayor
Clarence Andrews.
He was Tony

Manley,

Middleport, bonds of $50 lor
operating

while

under

suspension; $30, rwming a
red light; $200, resisting
arrest; $31 speeding, and
$250, reckless operation.
Others forfeiting bonds
were Ann Bellert, Athens,
$50, an oP.~ nask charge ;
Karen Tillis, Rutland. $25,
speeding; William Pooler,
Jr., Pomeroy, $30, speeding;
David Fife, Middleport, $30,
speeding ; Donald Martin,
Gallipolis, $25 , speeding ;
Minford Jewell, Tolen, Ky .,
$25, speeding; Thomas Olson,
Athens, $25, speeding; Harold
Hysell, Pomeroy, $50,
operating under suspension.
Fined $25 and costs on
speeding charges was Mark
Waller, Chester.

County fair

(Continued from page 1)
articles awarded a premiwn
in the past two years are not
eligible for entry. New work
and new ideas are encourag.
ed by the chairman.
To display at the fair, en·
tries must he in the hands of
the Fair Board secretary at
the office on the fairgrounds
by 4p.m. on Friday, Aug. 12.
Premiwns will be awarded
in three places in each class
and range from $3 to 75 cents.
Judge this year will be Mrs.
Nancy Cross, new home
SYMPOSIUM SET
economics teacher at the
MARIE'IT A, Ohio ( UPI) - Southern High School. ArChild care advocates from ticles will he judged on the
the 13-state Appalachian· basis of 10 per cent for ar&gt;regiop will meet Thursday pearance, 50 percent for
and Fr.iday at Marietta workmanship, 10 percent for
College for the fifth annual style, and 30 percent for
Applachlan Child Deve- materials. All exhibit. are to
lopment Sytnposiwn ..
remain on display until4 p.m.
The
symposium
is on the Saturday of fair week.
sponsored by the Ohio
The domestic arts division
Development Department and the classes in each ·are as
·and the
three Ohio follows:
Appalachian development
Children's Clothing : girl's
district. : tbe Buckeye Hills- dress (cotton and blends ),
Hocking Valley Regional girl's better dress, boy's
Development District, the trousers, child's blouse or
·Ohio Valley
Regional shirt, T-shirt, coat or jacket,
Development Commission. nightwear, gown or pajamas,
and the Ohio ·Mid-Eastern androbe.
.
·
Government. Association .. Adult Clothing : one piece
"The primary ·purpose of · dress, two piece dress, better
the symposium,'~ · Said · dress (knits, etc.), long dresil, ·
!X'Ogram manager SuZanne blouse, T-shirt, cape or coat,
Sutter, "is to bring members lacy's shorts, lady's slacks,
of the child care community men's jacket, men's shirt,
together to exchange ideas, ·men's suit, men's trousers, 16
examine problems and, and up, men's garments,
bopefully, discover problem miscellaneous,
and
solutions."
miscellaneous lady ' s
About 500 persons are garments.
expected to attend the
Aprons: kitchen, fancy and
meeting, which will include embroidered.
47 workshops on subjects
Needlecralt: pillow cases
such as .child abuse, !antily with classes lor applique,
planning, television and painted, and embroidered;
aggression, and pending cushions with classes for
federal child care legislation . crocheted, embroidered,
crocheted, embroidered,
needlepoint, patchwork, and
other; tablecloths with
classes for painted, em·
broidered,
crocheted;
pothoiders, two; afghan (no
knit or crochet ) and
miscellaneous (no clothing,
knitting or crochet.)
Knitting: afghan, sweater
(slipover), button front
sweater, cape or poncho,
miscellaneous.
·
Crochet:
afghan,
bedspread, vest, sweater,
cape or poncho, handkerchief
with crochet trim, doily, baby
afghan, baby sweater set,
and miscellaneous.
Quilt. : Applique, cotton
patchwork, painted, antique,
embroidered, and baby quilt.
Rugs : crocheted, h~k.ed;
braided, loom woven by exhibitor, and miscellaneous.
Hobby corner: niodel car
or truck, model other than
car or truck, embroidered
picture,. needlepoint picture,
decoupage picture, 3D picture, crewel picture, paint by
nwnber, liquid embroider,
picture other than those named or an amateur painting,
handmade purse, candle,
ce'ramics (one . by unller 16
year old, and one by over 16
year old), macrame hanger,
macrame of another type,
wood carving, plaster paris
molds, jewelry, and
treasllres from trash.

r•••••••-.. ·
SAVE NOW

DURING OUR

WAREHOUSE

ClEARANCE SALE
Of FINE
APPUANCES

Ppmeroy, Otlio

------

demoostrations · are being plaMed for tile annual
observance arranged by Mrs. Susan Oliver of the center
staff. The Helmicks; who create ''korn kob dolls" and
"nature kritters" in their act, have been featured at
numerous craft lairs and similar event. in several states.

COMING TO POMEROY -Carl and Marg Helmick,
Little Hocking, will he among the attractions for the
second aMual "Yesteryear" observance which has been
set fiX' Sept. 17, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy. A variety of displays and
RENE&amp;'S TEST
NEW YORK (UP!) -Dr.
Renee Richards, the pro
tennis player who underwent
a sex change operation, ·has

won a temporary restraining
order barring the U.S. Tennis
Association from making her
take a test to determine her
gender.
Manhattan Supreme COurt
Justice Hyman Korn Tuesday
enjoined the association, the
Open TeMis Championship
COmmittee and the Women's
Tennis Association Inc., from

barring her qualification in
the U.S. Open in Forest Hills.
Miss Richards said she had
ber sex changed more than
two years ago because she
was "trapped inside the bOdy
·of a man .'-'
WILMINGTON'
Ohio
(UP!) - The Cincinnati
Bengals plan to open with
veterans and then take a look
at rookies later in the game in
the club's first . preseason
contest Saturday night
against the Packers in Green
Bay.

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

TO RECEIVE PIN
Walter
Vaugban
of
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
wiU receive his sixty year pin I
from Pomeroy Masonic
LAFE COGAR
Lodge 164 F&amp;AM at a
SYRACUSECogar,
meeting to be held at 7:30 62 , Syracuse, Lafe
diE-d this
tonight · at the Pomeroy morn i ng
at
Veterans
Masonic Temple.
Memor ial Hospital. Mr .

WEDNESDA Y, AUGUST 3rd
THRU
FRIDAY, AUGUST 5TH

announcement.

"If newsmen still wish to
hear the secretary's words,
they can attend his speech to
the Schofield Barracks '
· Officers Club Wednesday,"
the spokesman said . He
added, how ever, that no
questions from reporters will
be aUo)Yed.

1915.

E

. I

698 W. MAIN ST.

- --- ~-

Sharon

Cogar, Syracuse; a brother,

Roy, Grantsville, W. Va .;
three sisters, Lillie Cogar,
Grantsville; Alma Locke, ,
Toronto, Ohio, and Oda
Trlppllt, Parkersburg, W.
Va.; 29 grandchildren. and
one great-grandchild.'

He was a member of the
Unlled Methodist Church at
Pleasant Hill. W. Va.
Funeral services will be

Friday at 1 p.m.• at Ewing
Chapel with burial In the
Cogar family cemetery.
Friends may call at the .
funeral home after 7 p.m.
Tuesday.

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with a soft lightweight material that
smooths you comfortably, from top to
bottom. So smooth and natural under
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.· ·.

Available in fiberfill, sizes 34-36A, 34-388,C
and soft cup, sizes 34-36A,34-38B,C.

SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY
.
'

.

OFFER$3.00
OFF=ed
retail price
(When you buy 8I1Y Frw Spirit• Beige Body 8Mhlr

before October a, 1m1
OPEN EVERY, WEEKDAY FROM NO TO 5 PM
AND FRIDAY 9s30 AM TO I PM

Allo SlariDg

SuoaDDBh York

" 'P G"

in

Elberfekls-I
'

Accepted by the board was
the resignation of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews as
a trustee member of the
Southeastern
Ohio
Emergency Medical Service
Board effective Aug . I.
.Mayor Andrews stated health
reasons . and an increased
work load in his office in
giving his resignation.
The commissioners
received only one bid on the
exterior painting of the
county courthouse. It was
from the Quality Main·
tenance Co. of Marion lor
$8,900. The matter was
tabled.
A delegation
from
Columbia ToWnship met with
the board to discuss its
disapproval of the county·
wide house numbering
projeCt. A meeting of all
concerned citizens, the
consutitng engineer and the
director of malf processing
will he held soon to discuss
the oroblems.

Sam Colabretta and Ralph
Hazelbaker oi Amerltol
Enterprises and Pomeroy
Attorney Fred Crow, dis- ·
cussed plans lor a nursing
home in Meigs County with
the board. The visitors
recommended tl!at the
Commissfonel's select a site
and make plans lor an access
road to it. It was also
recommended that the
county obtain money for this
project from bonds rather
than applying for an F·.H.A.
loan as was previously
suggested:
Representatives of the
Meigs COunty Fair Board met
with the commissioners to
request that the dog pound be
removed from the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds and that
it be closed during county lair
week . The commissioners

wiU discuss the problems
with the dog warden, Keith
Wood. Wood can be reached
lor pick up of dogs at 91154138.
(Continued on- page IOi

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 78

Harness, pony, horse
running races at fair

Lee, El r a F Martha Jean,

.
.
I)
(Continued 1rom paJe
hypnosis · and
drugs·
· ·
f
· h'
oper?ll?ns
or . t e
acqws1Uons of cherrucals or
drugs ;
"aspects
of
magicians' art useful in
covert operations
lor
•. .
I
examp e, surrepllhous
delivery of drug related
materials·"studies ofhwnan
behavior 'sleep research and
' ·. •
.
behaVioral changes durmg
psychotharpy.

NowthruFrlclay

MOVING VIOLATION ·

and Richard,_of Shade ; seven

advantage of the bridle paths, to take nature walks, or to
seine minnows. The parking area is located at the upper

MASON DRIVE-IN

Al•o

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 4, 197.7

daughters, Mary Jo Coates,
Minersville ; Helen Frank
and Loretta Van Cooney, both
of Pomeroy; Nettle Rae
Short, Rer,noldsburg ; Jud~

W.va .. and

inadequate State Issue I
funds to proceed . The
Commissioners will proceed
at the earliest possible date to
employ
a
qualified
engineering linn to complete
the necessary environmental
survey and will also hire a
qualified firm to do . an archeological survey.
Buehl submilted his
estimate on replacing a
bridge on CR 14 in Bedford
Township which will require
40 feet of six loot diameter
nat arch pipe. The engineer
was instructed to get price
quotes on the cost of the pipe.
Mental Retardation Board
Chairman MaMing Webster
met .with the Commissioners
and presented a letter formally requesting a meeting
between the board and the ~
board in the future to discuss
the county's retardation
program. A tentative date of
Aug. 8 at 7 p. m. was set lor
the session in the Com·
missioners' office.

en tine

Edllh Cogar; tour sons,

Bernard, Lauderdale Lake,

XperillleDl!!cllfton,
·

to increase its appropriations
from their tax revenues.
Should a one mill levy for
operation of the health
department he approved by
voters of the county in
Novemhe(; It was estimated
there would be $103,000
available to the department.
Upon the recommendation
of Meigs County Engineer
Wesley Buehl, the com·
missioners adopted a
resolution to commit county
off-systems money from the
federal governnlent to the
Page Street project in
Middleport inasmuch as
State Issue I money was
originally designated lor this
project and caMot he used on
any other porject without
county matching funds .
The Page Street project-;widening and improving, was
one of the priority projects
and a great amount of work in
securing rights-of-way and
design was invested before it
was found that there were

brothers and a sister .
He Is survived by his wife,

· PARKING AREA BUILT- Aparking area was built

Jamea Coburn ill
"SKY RIDERS"

POMEROY, 0.

Meeting in a long session
Tuesday night, the Meigs
County Board of County
Commissioners agreed to
place a one mill levy for the
benefit of the Meigs County
Department of Health before
county · voters at. this '
November's election.
Present to discuss the need
for additional funds for the
department and to request
the levy were Mrs. Gene
Lyons and board of health
memher Robert Beegle.
The representatives of the
health department explained&gt;
· that in 1976 total available
money to operate was $46,000,
an ••inadequaLe sum." That
money is derived under lal"
by appropriation of the
county budget commission
from real estate revenue
coming to the municipalities
and the townships (inside the
10 mill limitation.)
The towns and townships
have heen in no mood to
signal the budget commission

death by two -Infant sons. two

this year to accommodate persons who wished to take

'

.._

0

.

Parkersburg is the site of a Borg-Warner
plant, a major user of PBBs.
GOvernment officials said there is no
evidence yet the company is responsible
for high levels of the chemical, but the
West Vll'ginia site and Borg Warner plant.
in Ottawa, ru., and Oxnard, calif., will he
tested.
Other manufacturing sites EPA said it
will monitor are the Corry Foam Prnduct,
Co., with plant. in Milan, .TeM ., and
Corry, Pa.; E.A. Burkart Mfg. Co. in
Cairo, Ill.; Cincinnati Chemical
Processing in Cincinnati and General Tire
and Rubber Co., in lona, Mich.

,

t

Fla .; Gerald, Santa Ana,
the son of the late Calif.; William of Minersville

Thomas
and
Rebecca
Bu rrows Cogar.
He was also preceded in

the water.' '

!

Cogar was born. January 31 ,

NO QUESTIONS
HONOLULU (UP! )
, Army Secretary Clifford
Alexander Tuesday changed
his mind about talking ·with
reporters.
Alexander had promised a
Honolulu news con fer ence
after his tour of Pacific
bases, including · Japan and
Korea, but an · Army
spokesman rescinded the

the toxic chemical above the maldmwn
amomt allowed -under !X'Opused federal
standards, Rep. Thomas Luken, Mhio,
told the committee.
Luken, chairman of the oversight
subcommittee of the Interstate and
Foreign Commerce Committee, said the
fish bad 20 parts per million of the
chemical ~ 20 times th!' amount the Food
and Drug Administratim is considering as
a standard, 'an aide said.
The chemical is used commercially as
fire relal:ilants in plastics and textiles.
The EPA official said although the
chemical PoseS a threat tO drinking water
in cities downstream from Parkersburg,
such as Clncirmati, ''we're worried more
about people eating the fish than drinking

Now, for tnat extra smooth look under clothes

TRIPLE TREAT... .... :........... 55' each or 4 for s2.00
REGULAR FRENCH FRIES ......2f1. each or 4 for 75'

TRY COUSINS

WASHINGTON (UP!)
The
Environmental Protection Agency plans to
mmitor water in six states following the
~ery of alarming amount. of a
chemical fire retardant In three Ohio
River catfi.!h.
The chemical, known as PBBs for
Jl(l1ybromlnated biphenyls, &lt;lillY had been
found In Michigan and New Jersey before
investigators found It contained In fish
taken from the Ohio River in West
Virginia.
· The same chemical accidentally was ·
mixed into feed grain in Michigan four
years ago and forced destruction of much
of the state's catUe population.
It can cause nerve and brain damage in
animals and liver and personality
disorders in people.
The EPA recenUy found residues of
PBBs in human hair, fish, plant., soil and
water near the White Chemical Co. in
Bsyoone, N.J . and of the Hexcel Corp. of
Sayreville, N.J.
J. Eugene Wallen, deputy director of the
EPA's office of''toxlc substances, told a
House subcommittee Wednesday the
6ndlngs in New Jersey were the first time
PBBs had been discovered outside
Michigan, home of a company which
(rOduced most Of the chemical until1974 .
The two New Jersey companies are now
the sole producers.
The fish, from the Ohio River near
Parkersburg, W.Va., contained levels of

Elberfelds In Pomeroy ·.·

DOUBLE BURGERS .. ,........ 45' each or 4 for sl.6o
•
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGERS 5«r each or 4 for '1.80

· Please, n~ specials during this three day sale, if you
want specials, order inside "without" and tix'em your
way at our complete sandwich bar. ·No · coupons
necessary.

Area Deaths

·!

Thank You
Big Bend .Area
We are celebrati.nt(
our 1st Anniversarv
in the Bi!( Bend area
and for 3 bi{( .days
..we want j-vu to join
us and save. -

Tax levy or health
.·
on November's ba,l lot

PBBs found in catfish
taken near Parkersburg

end of Forked Run on Shade River Forest land. Shown 1-c
are, Sarah Mase,. environmental awareness instructor'
Randy Sisson, DeMis Wolfe, Rachel Hunter, Chuck
Sterns, director and Jane Smith . .

Conservation .work session
improves forest facilities
By Katie Crow
Sixty young people of Meigs
County have participated in
two sessions of work in the
Youth Conservation Corps at
Shade River Forest located in
Olive Township.

Boys and girls have worked
together this summer
clearing land, building a
parking area, and putting up
fences.
Chuck Sterns, a con·
scientious and dedicated

young man, directs the.
program. Don Baun iii the
forest ranger.
Sterns has on his staff Dave
Jump, Sarah Mase and Diana
Bartlett, work leaders, and
(Continued on page tO)

Three evenings of harness
horse racing again will be
featured at the 1977 Meigs
County Fair.
*
The harness horse racing to
be held on Wednesday,
Thursday and Frtday, Aug.
17·19, beginning at 4 p. m.
Bsnds oUbe Eastern, Meigs
'and Southern Local School
Districts will be on hand for
the evening racing programs
and wiU also· play on the
midway.
The harness racing will be
only a part of the activities
planned Involving horses and
ponies for the fair which
opens Aug. 16.
Again this year there will
be pony and horse rwming
races to be held at I p. m. on
Friday, Aug. 19 and pony
harness racing will be held at
I p. m. on Wednesday, Aug.
17.

The aMual horse show will
he the center field attraction
on Wednesday evening and
this event is open to world
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; competition with some 15
classes to he included. Horse
and pony conformation
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
judging will he held hegin·
Saturday through.·· ning at 10 a. m. on Wednesday
, Monday, a chance of imd entries will not close for
showers or thundenhowers. that judging until thai hour.
Saturday through Monday,
· A, horse pulling contest will
mainly ill the afternoons . be held as the grandstand
aad evenillgs. Highs wW be attraction at 8 p. m. on
In the 80s and near 90 with Friday, Aug. 19. 'It is open to
·lows ill the 60s to near 70. world compeiition and rules.
olthe Buckeye Horse Pullers,
Inc., will govern the event.

Heller defends fuel
.

.

.

CANTON - "The Ohio .
Power Company Is being
attacked for its f,11el
procurement policies In spite
of the fact that our fuel
charges are consistently the ·
lowest, or among the lowest,
In the state," said C. A ..
HeJ1er, executive vice
president of Ohol Power. .
HeUer made tile statement
following the filing of appeals
to the Ohio Supmne Court by
ohio Power and Ohio Attorney General William
Brown as the result of li
~ fuel clause hearing

conducted before the Public Ohio coal industry," he said.
"We do not have io take a
Utilities Commission of Ohio. ·
"Arrangements were made back seat to anyone in our
to obtain some low-sulfur commitment to Ohio coal. It
western coal to comply with may not be generally known
proposed Environmental but Ohio Power consumed
Protection Agency stan- about 20 per cent of all. the
dards, a leils co~y alter- coal produced in the state in
native to consumers than 1976.In that same year, about
installing scrubbers. And we 85 per cent of our ,ci&gt;at came
are being accused of the - from regional sources, with
unnecessary use of western less than 15 per cent coming
coal at the expense of the from the west," Heller said.

Weather

'

·

weight class with the top
prize being $40 in each.
As the grandstand at·
traction on Wednesday
evening, the pony pulling
contest will include three

weight classes, under 1050
pounds,, 1050 to 1350 poUI)ds,
and 1350 and 1650 pounds.
Cash awards with the top
prize being $40 will be
presented the top eight places
in each weight class.

Common sense session
called on ·school levy
RACINE - What a committee terms a ''taxpayers
common sense meeting" in
regard to a 10 mill operating
levy to he voted ·upon at a .
special election ori Aug. 16 in
the Southern Local SchQOI
District will be held at 8 p. m.
T.pesdljy in the Racine Junior
High School.
A spokesman lor the
committee s&amp;id the meeting
has been called because of a
number of requests by
patrons and taxpayers lor a

ucommon sense" answer to
questions hefore the special
Aug. 16 election.
Some of the issues to be
brought ou.t at the meeting
will include why two mem·
bers of the board of education
and two long-term teachers of
the district resigned recently,
why the large levy oliO mills
is required when already 26

.I

Cle
s
P0 1
•

•

~

·

·

..

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·

mills lor ~chools is in force;
a(e the schools being
operated with efficiency and
common sense. and other
inquires, the spokesman said.
The spokesman said that
patrons, taxpayers and
school officials are invited

and urged to attend. Howard
Nolan, retir~, a long-time
teacher in the district will
chair the meeting.
The meeting is heing called .
not to oppose the schools but
to oppose additional costs, the
spokesman said.

Motorcycle
riders wanted
in fair rodeo

Dowler
shocked

The Meigs County Fair·
Board is seeking riders to
compete in an international
motorcycle rodeo to be held
as the Saturday night
grandstand attraction, Aug.
20, at the aMual county lair.
Cash prizes and trophies
will be awarded winners in
each scheduled event of the
rodeo and local ·and area
riders are invited to submit
entries . . Applications are
available at all area
motorcycle sales stores.
Events are open · to both
men and women and new
events this year will include a
slalom race in front of the
grandstand, a broad jumping
contest, a slow race, and the
ultimate skill contest

Charles
L.
Dowler,
superintendent of the Meigs
Local School District, today
reacted to . publication
Wednesday 'of a newsletter
distributed by the Meigs
Local Teachers Association.
In response to the
newsletter, Dowler said:
,..
" .After reading the
'newsletter' entitled 'Com·
munlty Communique' which
was published in area
newspapers yesterday,- I was
very shocked and disap·
pointed in the .Meigs Local
Teachers Association and
their leadership.
"It is truly unfortunate that
they have chosen to launch a
personal attack ·upon the
Superintendent. T.hls un·
warranted attack is clearly in
violation of our current
Bargaining
Collective
Agreen'\ent which reada as
. follows:
'Article V- Procedures for
Conducting
Collective
Bargaining, Section F, News

.

"The attorney general has unduly stringent sulfur · what we felt we had to do to
comply with standards being
access to all of the facts dioxide emission regulations advocated by the EPA.'' ·
presented during the hearing, which could have destroyed
but it seems he has chosen to the Ohio coal mining industry
disregard them, " Heller said. and simt electric bills :;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::
"wheelies".
"He completely ignores the soaring," according to
Trick and fancy exhibitioll
Six Ohio mines
fact that the highest-cost Heller.
riding
will be by "Spirt of
Heller went on tb say that
.
western coal did not appear
.
'78",
a
professional
team and
on the electric bill of the those proposed air pollution closed today
will
be
an
exhibition
on
·
there
company's retail customers · regulations forced Ohio
two wheel driving in an
Power to look to ihe West for
through the fuel clause." ·
by
roving
'pickets
automobile.
conlormlilg
coal,
"and
now
"Brown also neglects to
Show time is 8 p. m. Local
mention that he championed Brown criticizes us lor doing Uolled Pressllllerullooal
riders may secure · ap· Reports:
Six Oblo mluea were
pllcatims also by. calling . 'The parties agree that
closed again today by
iVall ace Bradford, lair board during the period-of collective
rovillg bands of pickets
bargaining and 11rlor to
president, at 985-3974.
protesting cuts In tbe
reaching an agreement to be
United Mine Workers
submitted to the Board and
Union health benellts.
MIDGE NOT WORRIED
the
Association,
the
Racine; James Swaney, Maister, Route I, Dexter;
About
3,000
miners
w.
e
re
WASHINGTON
(UP])
proceedings
of
the
collective
Route I, Macksburg; Robert Brian Johnson, Middleport;
Idled by the mine closings.
White House aide Midge COs- bargaining shall not be
Sheppard, Route 5, Athens; Donald Smith, Route 3,
Pickel&amp; agalu closed two
Ianza says there's been no released to the media unless
Charles Stotts, Route I, Pomeroy; Bruce Hanning,
Coal
Co.
change in President Corter's such an issuance has the
Shade; Terry G. Nell, Route Route 2, Albany; Pearl Peabody
regard for her even though prior approval of both par·
3, BeallsviUe; David Harper, Deem, Jr., Lancaster; Ron operations In Coobocton
she has heen outspoken in ties.'
Route 4, Caldwell; Michael Dalley, Route I, Portland, County, oae Pea body
opposing his stand against
"The Board of Educat.ion
Small, Route l, Dexter; Dave and Ben Quickie, Route I, operation ill Perry Coaniy,
two
Sev.lllern
Olilo
Coal
Co.
subsidized abortions.
and the Superintendent feel
Roush, Route' 2, ·Racine; Coy Pomeroy.
Complete rules and DiiDea In Melg1 County and
Starcher, Jr., Route 3,
carter, she said, has nor ·• that we are honor bolind to
rebuked her lor her position; abide by the negotiated
Pomeroy; Joyce Frye, Route regulations are available at one Soltthern Oblo mine In
and indeed has recently heen contract alld as such we are
1, Rutland; Gregory Dav1s, the business houses where the Vbllo" County.
Pomeroy; Earl Michael applications are located.
"just as kind as he has not · permitted to comment
Ralph
Johnson,
always been."
further~ this time."'

Interest high in demolition derby

Local Interest is running and G. and J. Auto Pars, W.
high In a demolltioo derby to Second, Pomeroy; Pomeroy
be . .ged as the grandstand Sunoco station, 282 W. Main;
attraction at the Meigs Codner's Texaco, Syracuse,County Fair on Tuesday, and Mason Auto Parts,
Mason.
Aug. 18.
Already 22 participants
Warm, humid 'through
Advance registration Is
have
registered with the
Friday, cbance of llhowera Rqulred for participation Meigs
County Fair Board.
ad lbar.deillhowerll.lflclis to wblch II llmlted - In the
upper Ill. Loft ~ to derby. Applications are They are J.ames Stanbery,
upper .... Probatllllty of available at Bob's Gulf Zanesville; Robert Black,
preelpltatloa SO per cent Station, Route 3, POmeroy; Route 3, Pomeroy; Ronald E.
todQ, 48 per eent tonlpt and Kappel's Pen!lzoU, E. Main, · RUllllell, Route 4, Pomeroy;
~)'.
P;etoy; Meigs Auto ~Y Rocky Hupp, Route 2,

There will be competition for
heavyweight teams 3201
pounds and over and middleweight teams, 3200 pounda
and under. Nine cash a warda
will he presented in each

�3-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 4,1977

By STEW .urr P01I'£l..L
WA.SHJNGTOS ( UP1) Coogresa IW8Vefed logjams
threatening to delay Its
•m!T!Pf recess and dealt
Pnsident Carur fresh
victLries in. the rroce::as; '

l\ctl&lt;lll 00 energy CGlliliues .

to hil!hligl&gt;t deve~ls 00
· CaJttol Ifill aslawmaken try
• tD complete work on a
• N•mher of tnal!erS beftn
• lea vmg
. town """"'~·
• The Hoose Wedoeada)', in a
• teat for the White Holl'le,
· narrowly approved Carter's
requost for oontillled federal
. ~controls on natural gao.
: Tbe 227-199 vote was a "great
• victory fer American cm8UIDers, '' Carter said through
a !pOkesm;m. "II saved them
· millions of dollars."
: The House still must
resolve tile unpPIXIlar issue of
incr""""" in federal gaioline
taxes, a second major
inl!redient in the White Holl'le
package to cut American
reliance "" oil.
Carter solll!b! a pha.!ed.U.,
:iO-ceniAI..gallon ta:s increase,
but Democratic leaders have
rallied behind a onwbd $
Cl!nt iru:reasell.' !:Joost federal
taxes to 9 cen!.t a gal.loo.
flouse leaden ar&lt;1 pushing for
a final vote oo the carter
energy program by Friday.
The White House victory 1m
continued federal rtgulatlon
of natural gas came me day
after Congress appr oved
Carter's Cabinet ~el 1!1\ef@Y

&lt;'-,.

depar tment . Carter was
read)· to sign tbe measurt'
today and Cmgress . . . so
sure Wbite Hol1'le energy
advber James Schlesinger
would he the nominH fer new
energy chief, tt called him to
Captilil Hill to testify.
" Your nomination
certainly leaves me with no
doubt in amy mirid that he
(Carter ) bas picked a IDpllight man f&lt;r a very difficult
job," Sen. Clil!ord Hansen. RWyo., told Schleoinger, a
jack~f-all-trades in two
Republican aclminil!tratillos.
Carter warmed up for
today's signing l&gt;'t'finmY by
signing legislation
Wednel!day requiring strip
miners to return the gouged
Jandacape tc its awolimate
or iginaJ con tour.
Coogress rallied quicl&lt;ly
behind a compromise that
ended the deadlock over
clean air legislatioo. Actioo
by !IJe House WB! expected
today and by the Senate
Friday . Automakers had
threatened to close assembly
lines if 1977 emission
standards were not sel before
vacation.
Cal"tel' enjoyed amther victory, with House&amp;nate
' negotiators accepting
compromise crop price
!UppOI'ts that r.selllblj!(j his
own proposal. The agreement
cleared the way for: final
coogressional action on an
$11 billion omnibus package

to provide federal food stamp
subsidies to the poor and crop
!l'ice . _ u to farmers.
Triumph was tempered
with a setback. The Senate
approved federal eleclioo law
legiS.atirin stripped of mast of
the changes Carter .sought,
including public financing of

Senate elections star1ing next
yeat.

House Ethics Committee
Olairman John r!ynt, D-Ga.,

By SARA ·F Rn'Z
UPI Labor Repo11er
WASIDNGTON (UPI) Strikes by nearly 20,000
United Steelwork..-s union
memberS in tbe iroo ore
fields show no prospect for a
prompt
settlement,
acc..-ding tc union president
Uoyd McBride.
"At the moment there
doesn't seem to he any great
pressure on !IJe industry to
settle," McBride told
. repcrters Wednesday at the

Lawrence

By Lawreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - OUr
son is 6 yeal'!l old and is starting school this year. I don't
want to be ·a worried mother
but be has asthma and I'm
. afraid that be will he too acl tive and cause an attack.
His father wants him to he
,•
• : active and hopes he will be a
: good athlete and is always
• • trying to encourage · him to
: : get interested in sports. That
; would he fme if he didn't have
~. · asthma but the fact is be does
~ : and he can't be an athlete and
: : have that kind of problem.
&lt; · We have had several
;: argwnents about this. He
{ claimB David will outgrow it
:. and I claim that if and when
•• be does will he !IJe right time
~ for 11p0rta and not until then.
What do you suggest in this
situation? Can he play with
the other children? Will he he
able to nm and exercise? I
" want him to grow up as a nor•• mal boy butl don't want to do
' anything that will hurt him
. • 'tiler
.
'.
'
.
DEAR READER - This
queStion often comes up when
· : an asUunatic child starts to
• achool. It is true that exercise
: can help set off an asthmatic
· attack. It is also true that
: some of the outstanding per·
· aonalities in sports have been
· : asthmatics. In the 1972 o1ym:
· : . pies, five medal winners were
· : · asthmatics.
You may remember that
• ; Rick DeMoot won a gold
; ' medal for swimming but was
: : dlaqualified because he had
. · · taken medicine to prevent an
· 81tmlatic attack before the
. n~ce. Many asthmatics par·
: tlclpate in sporll.
~ • There are two approaches
: In preventing an asthma attack. the use of medicines
IMt prevent it or llmllin8 the
phylical ~y to abort
barlll at- aertiC!II. Jt .-Dy
!Us monilliD twv • three
... • mllla&amp;el ot · · - eUrd.le
io bldil:e • adRirh · This
1D11f08 that
l.s an

..

.

.,,....!!

·

In amouncing delails of !IJe two

missions, the National Aermautics
and Space Administration said the
four largest satellites &lt;i Jupiter wjlJ

•,rovide a varying and fascinating

1

that planet's aweaaue rings.
Seientisls say the pkaJres of the
innl!r Jovian satellites alone sboUkl
p-ovide a wealth d. iriamatK.l.
Some are belleved to he made up
largely o1 rock, some o1 ice and

some of water.
"Tbeir surfaces probably range
fnm Iunarlike cratered plains, to
salt-awered beds ol atinct se.as, to
landforms crmted out of ice
and mud," NASA said.
Most satellites of Saturn
~Y are composed primarily
of ice. Titan, the largest moon in the
solar sylllem, has a strange, rold
at:maspbere as thidc as Earth's.
Jupiter and Saturn seem to he
immense balls of hydrogen and
he limn . with no appamlt solid
surface. Each has its own internal
~gy BOurces, putting 0111 more

exotic

radiatioo

than it receives from the

Voyager 1 is acheduled to fly
wilhin 173,000 miles &lt;i Jupiter oo·
March 5, 1979, and then swing on to
scout Saturn, coming within 811,000
miles on Nov. 12, 1980. Voyager 2,
which will he launched first on a
slower course, will fly by Jupiier
July 10, 1979, and pass Saturn Aug,
'!1, 1981.
U all goes well, Voyager 2 will lie
sent on to scout Uranus in 1986 and
may continue on to survey Neptune.
Both spacecraft eventually will
coast out o.f the solar system. On the
rem«e ·chance that some space··
faring civilization might. 110meday
encounter them, both probes carry
copper phonograph .records
coot.aining twohoursofthe sounds of
Earth- greetings ih 60 languages,
samples of music and ' natural
sowds such as !IJe surf, wind,
thunder and those of animals.

Mo\or League Standjngs.
Bwo Un ted Press lntern•tional

Eden New

""

.

I

g~J..Y:~~

W. L

Los Ang
Cincl
Houston

San Frcsn
san Diego .,
Allanta

Pet. GB

67 40 .626
53 51 .505 13
50 58 .463 1712

,.II 60 .444 191;,
46 63 .422 22
17 68 .352 29

Wednesday•,· Resuus
New York 4, Los

Ang 3, 14 Inns

Montreal 4, Sin Franci sco 2
Philadelphia 8, San Diego 1
St . Louis s. Anania 1
Cincl S, Chicago J, lO' inns .

·

CAll Times

Eon

San Diego (Freisleben 4·5) at
Ph iladelphia CChr lsten~n 9-S),
1'2 :35 p.m.
Montreal &lt;Bahnsen 6·4) at
Atlanta ( Solomon 2· 1&gt; . 7 :35

:
I

I

I

To the people of Meigs County
The six members of the health team who have .been living

in your contmunity for the past seve! weelai would like to tell
you goodbye and thank you for your friendship. All of us have
made new frimds wb0111 we will long remember when we
Som¢ scholars suggested
the discovery of the reflect on our summer of 77.
Out goals this summer were many: to provide the health
plesiosaurus explains
screening
clinic which was held July 1$-21 at Middleport Junior
Scotland's long-elusive Loch
High,
to
follow
up the clinic by encouraging people to.seek
Ness monster.
further
medical
attentioo where we suspected a problem, and
But otber Japanese
scholars who examined to experience delivery of bealth care and life in a smalltmm.
specimens of the monster's We think our goals were well met &lt;Illy because we had y~
tissue said it resembled that supp&lt;rt and encouragement.
We were graciously invited to attend many churches,
of a sharlr..
granges,
Senior Citizens, and other local club meetings wbere
All13 members of the crew ,
we
were
given
the opportunity to introduce ourselves and our
agreed they saw the "monprojeci.
N&lt;ne
of
.us wiil forget all of the marvelous h&lt;XDester's" cleg.uke flippers.
i:oolr.ed
meals
that
we enjOyed. But perhaps the JDQSt valuable
"I poked it and my fingers
went in, the flesh had become part of the!e meetings WB! meeting and talking with the
·
.
so loose," said decl&lt;hand woo~rful people of Meigs County.
We must extend a special thanks to Eleanor Thomas,
Masahiro Kawano. "We know
all about fish fat and flesh. director of the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, who has
Nobody would have mistaken been our good friend and project organizer. Her devotion to the
success of the screening and her interest in the welfare of the
that for fish meat."
The crew dropped the people of Meigs County was inspiring.
There ar.e so many others who devoted !heir time tc the
''monster'' back into the sea
project,
it is bard to list them all, but Major Joyce Miller,
on the captain's orders,
because he feared it would ClmDlllllity crganizer; Jan Shoots, and our preceptorS, Dr.
contaminate the Zuiyo Harold Brown, Ubby Cherrington, Dr. Gary Clarke, Mary
Meyers, PHN, Dr. John Ridgway, Dr . Telle, and Dr. E. S.
Maru's fish catch.
In Tokyo, where the Villanueva also receive special thanks.
The screening project could never have been successful
creature is called l~essie"
all of tbe volW!teers. To those of you in Meigs County
without
after the Loch Ness monster,
who
volunteered
your services for the sereening - thank you ·
jokes about it have
for
the
good
work.
mushroomed.
There are others in tbe conununity woo made special
"We can't call . it a
Japanese Nessie," a F~eign efforts to make us feel welcomed and to asSure that our
Ministry spokesman quipped. summer was fun. Their hospitality was appreciated by all of
"Under international sea us.
We hope this will not really he goodbye, but just "till we
law, we lost ownership 'l'hen
see
you
again," for it is bard to leave a place that is fllled with
we threw it back."
the charm of Meigs County. - AI Olristenson, Sandy Clar,
Marty Geyer, Paul Haupt, John Lange, Kay Perry.
The state of Minnesota's
motto is in French, "L'Etoile
du Nord," and means "Star Alexander students thank sponsor
· of the North."
Dear Sir:
The Library of Congress was
We would like the local community to know how much we . •
established in 1800.
8! 19'17·78 seruors at Alexander High School benefited fro '
and' appreciate the spooBOrsiJip of !be local American Leg!:
Post 21 at the 1977 Buckeye Boys State.
We had the opportunity to participate in and experience all
phases of state and local government. It was a privilege to
hear the remarks of Governor James Rhodes and all the othe
fine•u~.
r
We
thank
Post
2!
and
all
the
other
pol!ls
for
an
esperience
F ALN was found near
Central Park. II was similar that will be With us 111 our future years ani! help us so much in
to others written by the group pr~parmg for adulthood lit this great state and country 1n
in the past and said which so many are privileged to live.
Ohio Boys State is the largest in !IJe naUon and we are
WednesdaY's bombings were
proud
to have been a part of it. Thank you American Legion
"part of our campaign to
Delegates:
·
dramatize and to Intensify
. Steve Dougan and LUke Brooks.·
our just struggle for the
independenoe of Puerto Rico
and the unconditional Foolish to ban leg-hold.traps
freedom of the five Puerto
Rican Nationalists" held in Dear Sir:
federal prisons.
I was leafing through your paper Friday evening,.Jul,y 29
The letter said tlie lxmbs ~hen I came acr01!8 an article in !IJe paper that was of great
were
directed
at interest to me. It was an article pertaining tc tbe raccoon and
multinational corporations ~ to keep this furhearer out of people's sweet com. It
because they are "using was wr1tten by an employee of District 4 Divisioo ol Wildlife
underhanded and barbaric David Watls.
·
'
tactics" to exploit · Puerto
Be~ a trapper and CC!IIcei'Iled about the attack upon the
RiCo's natural resources, in- leg-bold trap· I made a phme call to George Ledbetter our
cluding olf4ore oil.
. supervisor here in District 4. After talkinl! to Mr. Ledbet~ for
Mayor Abraham Beame a short time I learned lbat the Division had been awamped
told a news cooference FBI with can. fnm citizens &lt;:IIIICeming the damage that wu being
agents "lndlcated they have done to their sweet .corn by the raccooo.
an excellent idea of who the
Even with all !IJe traJ!Ping and h111t1Dg of the raccoon there
terrorists are. The problem Ia is ltlllso many ul thele enlmal,l they are c1eetroy1ng hwldred.l
they haven't been able to and even thousanda of dollara worth of earn. It MaD~~ to me If
catch them with the goods we were to ban the lei hold trap this problem wuuld set
when tbe bombs are placed." cnnplelely· out of hand
The 111011 serious FALN
It mali:el n o - to me at all thai the people of Ohio would
attack to date wu a Jan. 24, even cmalder OltlawiDg the legbold trap.
1975 bomliinll at Fnumces
The ame people wbo are att~ the trap llllll'e lban
Tavern In Manhattan's finan- llbJy plaCed a few of thele calla to the Dlvl.slon of Wildlife
cial district thai klJ)ed lOW' cwnp1a1n1ns about the ·vw;y anlmala !bey are c!elmlns 111
pei 10115ml injured~ otben. 1111«1.-Gr•tC. YCU~~,Rt.l,llaii,I.on8Bottom.
.
-~ ·

,

Friday's Games
San Diego at Chicago
San Pr,!in at New York, n i ght
Los Angeles at Phlle , night
Montreat at Atlanta , night
Pl ttsbgh at Cinci. 2, twl -night
St . Louis a,t Houston. night

American League

\.

EaSI

W. L
Boston
Baltlmre
New York
Detroit
Clevelnd
Mllw
Toronto
Chicago
Mlnn
Kan City

Pet. GB

60 43 .583 -

61 .. .581
59 A7 .557
46
46
41
36

56 .451

57 .447

2 1/~

131f2
14

60 .439 15

67
West
W. L
62 41
62 46
51 45

.350 24
Pet. GB
.602

.574
.559

p.m.

Boston
(Jenk ins
7·7J
al
Oakland !M itchell . 0·31 , 10 :30

Houston J, Pittsburgh 0
Tod11y' s Probable Pitchers

:

: ••• ~.. IMUQ'C,:

,,

55 .-476 ll't,
ol5 59 .AJJ 16

West

·I

Pu·erto Ricans warn of more violence
There were no injuries in the
defense offioe blast.
The ·boml:s went off at the
ground-floor Mobil trave.l
office in tbe oil company's
building on 42nd St., and
outside a 21st floor office of
the Department of Defense a
few blocks away.
''This time it is just a
warning,'' the F ALN said in a
letter to police.
Mrs. Paulina Adkins, 25,
was sitting in the travel office
waiting for a job interview
when she heard a noise "like
a giant frrecracker or some·
. "
th mg.
She said plastic oeiling
material fell. hitting her &lt;n
!be ·head. ''There was glass
a!) over and a lot of blood on
!be Door. I saw a man lying
on the floor. A receptionist
and two men ducked under
desks."
As scores of emergency
vehicles 11trealr.ed through
Manhattan streets, their
sirens wailing, a man
claiming to represent the
FALN called WABC-TV and
claimed responsibility for the
bonibings.
Later~ the letter from the

1

2
J l :r

p.m.

I

TOKYO (UP!) - Thirteen
Japanese fishermen insist the
two-ton carcass they pulled
from the ocean near New
Zealand was the body of a
prehistoric creature.
" It was no shark and it
wasn ~ a whale either," Akira
Tanaka, captain of the 2,40Ston fishing boat Zuiyo Maru,
said Sunday.
"It "'as a monster " be
said. "It _had fo·u- large legs
or flippers on its body. I saw
them clearly from tbe ship's
!ridge."
Tanaka's statement was
made in an interview in the
Yomiuri newspaper of Tokyo,
whose repcrtel'l! boarded the
Zuiyo Maru off New
Zealand.
Cootroversy has raged in
Japan, the United Stales and
~otland since mid.July over
the nature of the dead
creature pulled. up in the
ship's nets off the New
Zealand coast April 25.
The strange catch. did not
come to public attention until
a Tokyo newspaper published
photographs of the partly
decomposed body, along with
drawings of it made by a
Zulyo Maru sailor.
ProfesBOr Tokio Shika.ma,
an authority on prehistoric
plants and animals at
Yokohama National
University, identified the
creature as a plesiosaurus, a
speci~s
of sea ' animal
formerly believed to have
become extinct 140 million to
150 million years ago.

Pet. GB

..so

Montreal
New Vork

57 45 .559 ; v.,
:t9 54 .47lt 13
Seattle
46 63 .&lt;122 19
Oakland
42 61 .404 20'rz
· . Wt&lt;lnesday'l Results
Milwauk.ee 7, Cleveland 4
TeKas 12. Chicago 10. 12 inns .
Minnesota l-1 , Detroit 1
Kansas City 7, Toronto 4
Baltimore 8, Oakland 6; 10 Inn&amp; .
Calllorn la s, New York 3
Boston 12, Seattle A
Todty't Probable Pitchers
I All Times EDT I
Toronto (Jefferson 6·11) at
Kansas City {Leonard 10·9l,
8:30p.m .
Texas (Biyleven 10·9} at
Chicago CStone 10-7 L 8 :30p .m .
.Detro it (Rozema 10·4) at
Minnesota (~edtern 4-6) , 8 :30
CAlli

.581

.577
.566
59 48 .551

Plltsbgn
St . Lou is

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

Fisher1nen sure
of monster.catch

East
W. L
61 &lt;3
60 ..
6046

Ch icago
Ph il a

While of Mariarma; Pa., and
Word was received here Mrs. Mary George of New
that Mary V'orginia (Bentz ) . Jersey.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Hendricks · is a patient in
of Colwnhlls were
Grinun
Uoion . Couhty Memorial
dinner
guests
Friday evening
Hospital
at
Marysville,
Ohio.
cra!lled his car into the
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert Hlll.
Mrs. Mildred Mercer of
· cruiser and then sped .Way.
Rev.
and
Mrs.
Don
Wallter
.McConahY said he fired lour Boca Raton, Fla., is visiting
spent
Friday
in
Grayson,
Ky.
times at Smith and hit him here cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. Edward Hayman of
Bob Beagle and Tom Beegle.
twice.
Columbus
visited his aunt,
Guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
The chase resumed in
Mrs.
Bertha
Robinson
Critt
Bradford
Tuesday,
Aug.
Noble County where Smith
Monday.
2
were
Mrs.
Elsie
lmes,
Mrs.
sideswipedatruck. Helllmed
onto a runil road and then bid Nell Ernest and Miss Hazel
bis car in a barn.
l.ftten of oplaloo are welcemed. ~y abould be
1
Smith, bleeding from his . 1
wounds, was picked up by a 1 lesolluuo 310 worda long (or be 111bject to reducllaa by I
passerby and taken to the I the !&gt;dJtor) and m1t5t he signed wllll lbe alpeio'a ad· · I
Noble ·County sheriff's office I dreu. Names may he wltbbeld apoa pabllc:atian. I
Hown..-, on r~ue.t, names will be dll&lt;;loootl Letters ~
in Caldwell.
·
.
sbould
be Ill good taste, addnsalug luues, ua( pel'·
He was transferred to 1
1
1
Guernsey Memorial H'"'Pital 1 sonalltiet.
in Cambridge where his I
D
I
wounds were treated and
then lodged in the county jail
in lieu of $10,000 bond.

:

Texn

NationAl L119Ut

Murder charged

CAMBRIDGE, ()bjo (UP! )
Presentation of the. trophles _ H..-bert Smith, C»lwnbos,
will he made dunng
tbe was cbargejl with attempted
Thrasher . Brothers concert. llllll'der Wednesday following
Thesmgwillstartat6 :30p.m . a high speed chase in which
on the mam stage and 15 an he wrecl&lt;ed his car and was
event looked forward to with shot twice by a deputy
great anticipation by great sheriff.
numbers of fair..goers.
Guernsey County Sheriff's
However, the winners do not Deputy Dennis McConahy
have to be present to receive said he saw Smith acting
the trophy.
. suspiciously at a service
One special event many of station in Old Washington and
the senior citiuns will be stopped to talk to him.
especially interested in will He said Smith jumped into
he the Gospel Sing under the his car and Ded afd after a
direction of Harry Rbodes. lr1ef chase, Smith s car spun
0111 of control on Interstate n
near here and ended up
facing the cruiser.
S McConahy said Smith

CINClNNATi (UPI) George Foster's 36th homer
of the season, a smash which
landed In the top-tiered red
seats of Riverfront Stadiwn,
created most of the talk.
But it
was Danny
Driessen's 13th homer of the

sun.

RACINE

BY MARTHA HOL'liNGER
The Durst family reunion
was held at Cottageville,
West Vir.ginia . Those at·
tending from this area were
time that doesn't.appear to he Mr. and Mrs. Dawain Durst,
Washington Press Club.
The walkouts ~ firS! unim present. In this case I don 't Charlotte and Bret; ·Mrs.
authorized strikes in the expect that this will be a Geraldine Holsinger, Aleshia
basic steel industry since1959 strike that wiil end in just a and Letilli\, Mr; and Mrs,
- began Monday. Although matter of a few days."
Gary Durst, Jeff and Bryan,
McBride insisted the Mr. and Mrs. William Durst,
most of the iron ore fields
have been shut down, the strikes are legal and will he Debbie, •' Dennis Diane and
industry reportedly has a settled eventually at the David . There were 80
four-month stockpile of ore. bargaining table -and not as members of the family
'"''bey seem to have an a result of threatened court present. Andy Volchlo, a
abundance of iron ore sitting suits by the industry.
friend, also attended from
The local slrilres hinge on Coraopolis, Pa.
around," McBride said.
''There has to be a willing· workers' . demands for
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Webb,
ness on both sides to lind a incentive pay. The industry Guysville, visited Martha
settlement and at the current has refused to bargain on that ll&lt;Jlsinger, Monday evening.
issue, claiming it should have . Susie Kerwin spent Sunday
been settled in · nationat with Mr. and Mrs. 'William
negotiations in April. ·
Hoselton.
McBride insisted
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
incentives have always been Holsinger, Missouri, are
negotiated at the local level, visiting his mother, Martha
but hinted the issue might Holsinger. They are on
ultimately be solved in talks vacation.
,
between top union and
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben
industry negotiators . He Bigley, Ravenswood, visited
E. Lamb, M.D.
volunteered to participate Mr. and Mrs. ·Sol Bigley
"at any level."
recently.
He had no reaction to
Martha Holsinger and Mrs.
claims by some industry . Virgil Hf1lsinger, Aleshia and
officials that the local strikes 1'---etitia visited recently with
could spell an end to the Mr. and Mrs, Jim Eddy,
ideal sport. Why? Because Experimental Negdiating Belpre.
the duration of peak phySical Agreement in basic steel, and
The Eden W.M.A, had their
activity is limited. Even bit· open the way for greater amual picnic at the Belleville
ling a horne run represents a foreign competition. The · Reedsville Locks and Dam
short time to nm the bases. · agreement prohibii.S nation- picnic area Monday evening,
By resting between exercise wide strike shutdowns in the
peaks the exercise won't he industry.
"Positions are being taken
hannful.
KROGH PETI110NS
in
the extreme," he said.
Games of skill that involve
SEATILE (UP!) - Egil
McBride also !l'edicted the
short periods of exercise are
Krogh
Jr., disbarred for his
fine. Your son could probably Labor Department soon will role as chief of the White
do q~listhenics as long as he uphold his election as·unioo House Plwnhers, has asked
does them only !or a short president, which was clull· lhe Washington State Bar
time and then rests before go- lenged by loser Ed Sadiowski. · . Association to reinstate him.
ing oo to the next set of exer· He ac~nowledged some
Krogh's petition will he
cises. That is a better way to election irregularities "here considered at a hearing of the
exercise anyway. In this ·way ·and there," but none that association's Board of Goverhe can do the exerclses-thafti would alter his victory.
nors Aug. 31.
he needs to develop a healthy
body as he grows up.
Long distance running or
any sport that reuires prolonged physical exertion is
not a good choice for the
astlunatic.
I am sending you The By WILLIAM GOLDSCHLAG F ALN, an underground
Puerto Rican nationalist
NEW YORK (UP!) Health Letter 8-6, Asthma to
group
demanding
give you more details about Puerto Rican terrorists have
for
the
this, Including newer bombed two more.Manhattan independence
Caribbean
island
office
buildings
and
warned
inedicines that are being used
to prevent asthmatic attacks, there is more violence to cOO!monwealth.
Wednesday's bombings at
which can he taken before ex· come if authorities don't
buckle
·under
to
their
the
Mobil Oil Co. Building and
ertion. Others who want this
demands.
a
Defense
Department offi~
infonnation can send 50 cents
One man died and seven were the latest in a series Qf
with a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for it. · oth..- perliOns were injured in more than 40 explosions the
has
claimed
You sholikj he sure that the the latest attack by the F ALN
responsibility
for
over
the
teacher - particularly when
111EDAILYSENTINEL
last
several
years
in
New
your boy starts taking
DEVOTED TO THE
York, Chicago, ' Washington
INI'EJIEST OF
physical education classes
MEIGS-MASON AREA
and
Newark, N.J.
-his doctor and both you and
£HESTER L. TANNEJlllJ.
Telephoned
threats -150 of
Elec. Ed.
your husband Wlderstand the
ROBERT HOEnJCII
them- warning of still other
situation. You will need to
·
C~Edll&lt;&gt;r
bombs forced tens of
Pub~
dolly
mep(
SotLmlay
function together as a team ..
by The Ohio v'alley Publishing Coo&gt;- . thousands.of workers to nee
Your boy deserves an opaltl)', lll Court St.., Pomeroy, ~o
Into ram-drenched streets
portunity to develop himself
4$769. BwinHII Office Phone m.
2158.
Edilorild
Phone
192-21~7.
from
Manhattan's tallest
just as much as the boy who
Secood cblsa poi\IMe .paid at
skyscrapers
- the World
has no problem.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Trade Center, the Empire
Natiotu~l advert.ialni rtprtsell"
And I hope that he will
tative Ward • Grlffit6 ConlpMny,
State
Building and the Pan
Outgrow it. About half of the
liM: •• BoUinelli Mnd Giillaghrt Div.,
Am
Building.
7$7
'Mtird
Ave.,
New
York,
N.Y.
children with asthma do not
111017.
Those evacuations
have it as adults. On.ly five to
Sublcription !'lltd: Delivered by
triggered
mauive tra£fic
10 per cent have severe
carrier where MVIilab}t ~ cerdJ ptf
jams
in
New
York streets and
week.
By
MoWr
Rwte
•~
carrier
asthma u adults and these
lla'\'iicl! nol availabk, One month,
jammed
police,
fire and
are usuaUy tbe ones who also
p .25. By mail in Ohio and W. Va.,
ambulance
switchboards
for
·~ Year, $22.118; Sil: months,
have eczema as a child.
Sll .50; Three months, J7.00;
hours.
·
(Dr. Lamb will answer Else~re t2J.OCI year; S11: monlhl
Killed in the Mobil
JI3.S.O; Three months, t7.51).
representative letters of
~bfK:rtptkl!l pria! indudn Sunday
explosion
was Charles
general Interest in his colTimes-Senhru~l.
.
·
26,
of N~ York.
Steinberg,
umn.)
I

Sports and asthma

system.

microcosm of unique werlds."
lbetwin television cameras on !IJe

most

Long steel.strike expected

UPl Sdure FAilor
WA.SHINGTON WPII
Tiro
Voyager ~ft ready to scout
Jupi..,., Salim and possibly Urai!IIS
and 1\eplllne may see a variety of
~e w&lt;rlds inducing the salt
.beds of ertinct seas and exotic
landforms of o..-and mud, the lJP3Ce
agency said today.
The firS of the twin lelevi!i.on
!X'Obes b sdleduled fer launcb from
Cape Canaveral, Fla., Aug. :!0, and
the secood wiD depart Sept. I . &amp;Ill
missioos may last a decade &lt;r
looger and give mil!l bis first close-·
up look at a dozen bodies in the solar·

Co mm i tteee appr ov ed
legisiatioo ')&gt;rohibiting active
duty mili tary personnel ,
reserves
or
ational
Guardsmen from joining
military unions.

Thursday, Augu!l 11, bas oldeSt man and !IJe
been declared a special day at elderly lady who register.

the Mason County Fairdedicated to the Senior
Citiuns of the area.
On this day, an senior
citiuns over 6S years of age
will he admitted free to the
fairgJ'OIIllds so that !!Jey may
enjoy the fair and renew old
acquaintances as well make
new ones.
Arrangements have been
made for these senior citizens
to register at the fair office,
altbough this is not required.
Registration hours will be
from 9:00a.m until 9:00p.m
The Fair Board of Directors
has purchased two beautiful
trophies to he awarded to the

get good 1oob at
all five of Jupiter's inner' satellites,
!IJe major satellites of Salllm and
two Voyagen wiD

By AL RO&amp;'IITER Jr.

said without providing details
" e xtre me ly signific a nt
de \'elopment.s" have cropped
up in the panel's in~esligatim
into alleged South KDrean
influence buying in Coogress.
The Senate Anned Services

Senior Citizens Day
Scheduled At Fair

Driessen' homer defeats Cubs in lOth

Strange scenes will confront space scouts

;New victories won by
:President in Congress

Pittsburgh beginning with a
Friday night doubleheader.

21h
41h

p .m .

International League
United Press lnternilitional

W L Pet. GB

Tidewater

56 49 .533 3'h
57 51 .528 4
56 51 .523 4112
52 52 .491 8
so 54 .481 9
49 60 .450 12112
47 62 .431 14'12

Syracuse
Charleston
Rochester
Richmond
Columbus
Toledo

, Mike Hargrove's tbree-run
harrier, his fourth hit of the
game, highlighted a six-run
12th inning, which gave the
Rangers
their latest victory.
~agers sonnetilnes does
Toby
Harrah
hit his 16th
make a difference.
homer
for
the
Rangers
and
The Texas Rangers outJim
Sundberg
and
Willie
slugged the American
League Western Division~ · Horton drove in a pair of runs
leading Chicago White Sox, apiece.
Elsewhere in the American
12-lo,- ror the tbird straight
League,
Minnesota routed
night Wednesday, giving
them five straight wins and 11 Detroit, 11·1, Kansas City put
in the last 12 games. The loss away Toronto, 7-1, California
was the White Sox' fourth in a ambushed New York, 5-3,
row and cuttheir lead to 3',2 Milwaukee downed
Cleveland, 7·4, Baltimore
games.
11
We're going to win it," topped Oakland, 8-6, and
Hunter said. "I haven't said Boston drubbed Seattle, 12-1.
that before, but maybe this is Twins II, 11gers 1:
Lyman Bostock went 3-forthe first time I've felt it. We
can win it just dofng what 5 and drove home three runs
we've beeh doing. I think wbile Craig Kusick drove in
we've got the best pitching in three others with a. pair of
the league and if the White singles in pacing the Twins to
Sox had our pitching, they'd their fourth straight win. Dan
Ford homered and Rod
waltz in."

By BILl: MA!&gt;DEN
. UPI Spurts Writer
Billy Hunter may just
prove
that
changing

Texas at Oetroll. 2. twl ·nioht
Toronto at Milwaukee , night
Cleveland at Minnesota, night
Ch icago at Kcm!iaS City, night
Ballimore at California , night
Boston at Oakland . night
New York at Seattle, night

60 46 ..566-

Wednesday's Results
Tidewater 5, Columbus 4
Rochester 4 Toledo 1
Syracuse 6, Richmond 1
Charleston 4, Pawtucket 1

Phillies' Carlton better than
.
ever with record now at 15-6
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Steve Car!ton isn't likely to
match his first season 27-10
won-lost record when he
struck out 310batters and had
a 1.98 earned run average to
win the 1972 National
League's Cy YoWlg Award,
but he feels he'sl a heiter
pitcher this year.
"The difference is the
nwnber of pitches I can throw
with control," says Carlton,
who raised his current mark
to 15-6 Wednesday night in the
Phillies' 3-1 triumph over the
San Diego Padres.
Carlton; 'who allowed six
bits and walked three, but
struck out 12 in scoring his
'12th straigh~ win at home
after an opening-&lt;lay loss,
also had three hits in the
game but shrugged them off
as, .. just gravy."
The victory moved ttoe
Phillies to within one game of
the first-place Chicago Cubs
. in the National League's
Eastern Division.
The Cincinnati Reds
defeated the Chicago Cubs, :;..
3, in 10 innmgs, lhe Houston
Astros beat the Pittsburgh
Pirates, J.O, the New Yorlt
Mets scored a 4-3, 14-inning
triwnph over the Los Angeles
Dodgers, the St. Louis
Cardinals topped the AUanta
Braves, S-1, and the Montreal
Expos downed the San
Francisco Giants, 4·2, in
other National League
games .
Astros 3, Pirates 0:
Jose Cruz doubled in two
nms and Joe Niekro pitched a
nine-hltter "for - hls second
straight shutout for the
Astros. Bruce Kison suffered
his sixth loss against six
victories.

Three remain
undefeated in

Mets 4, Dodgen ~:
Lee Mazzilli's pinch single
with one out in the 14tb drove
in Joel Youngblood with the
winning nm in the Mets' raindelayed struggle with the
Dodgers. Dave Lopes
homered for the· Dodgers.
Care\S 5, Braves 1:
Eric Rasmussen pitched a
lour-hitter and Jerry Mum·

WILMINGTON , Ohio
( UPI) - Right in the middle
of a tough, tense training
camp duel for the Cincinnati
Bengals starting fullback
slot, rookie Pete Johnson was
accused of "loafing."
As expected, the former
Ohio state star was greauy·
disappointed at. suggestions
from the Bengals coaching
staff that he may not have

GREENVILLE,
Ohio
( UPI)
Defending
champion Carl Steinfeldt of
Rochester, N.Y., and two
other men had undefeated
records in the first round of
the men's Class A division of
the World Herseshoe Pitching
Olampionshlps.
Stelnfedlt had a 6-0 record,
as did Elmer Hohl of
Wellesley, Ontario, a fourtime champion, and Glen
"Red" Henton of Maquoketa,
Iowa. ·
The field of 36 men wW
compete in :Ill games before .
the finals of tbe 58th annual
tournament are pltcbed
Sunday afternoon . .
Steinfeldt had the highest
ringer percentage of the
round with 87.3 per cent and a
high same of 93.1 per cent.
11001 had an 15.7 per cent
• ringer percentage while
Henton had an 85.2 per cent.
Sl1 more games will he
played Thl!flld&amp;Y evening.
~

given 100 per cent during a
practioe sessioQ at the team's
Wilmington College training
site this week. .
·
According to reports,
Johnson went out for a screen
· pass and waved at it with one
hand as the pigskin sailed
over his head.
Bengals offensive backfield
coach Jack Donaldson

Four winners in Sires
Stakes atNorthfield
NORTHFIELD, . Ohio
(UP!) :... On To Glory, Star
Blend, Linda Fay and
Killbuck Rose were winners
night
as
Wednesday
Northfield Park hosted two
separate divisions of the Obio
Sires Stakes Series.
On To Glory ran the mile in
2:07 14i in a two-year&gt;()Jd
segment for his third victory ·
on the program.
Star mend upset favored
Dark Eagle, going the mile in
2:07 3-li, finishing ahead of M
J Dean and Lollyland with
Dark Eagle in fourth.
The tw~-year&gt;()ld horse has
finished in the money in the

.
. wms game
.

'shoe pitching

phrey had four bits and
scored three runs for the
Cardinals. It was the ninth
win of the year for.
Rasmussen while Dick
Ruthven was the loser. Gary
Matthews homered for the
Braves.
Expos t, Giants Z:
Jackie Brown and Dan
Stanhouse combined in a

seven-hitter and Ellis
Valentine hit his 18th homer
for !IJe Expos, who dealt San
Francisco's Jim Barr his
eighth defeat . Valentine's
homer came iri third inning
and gave the Expos a 4-t.lead
wbich Brown protected until
the Giants scored their
second run in the ninth.

Coaches say Johnson loafs

Rock Springs

by forfeit
Rock Springs advanced
another round in the West
VIrginia Stan Musial In·
dependent Baseball Tourney
by taking a forfeit over
Jimmies Wednesday night at
HWltlngton.
ROck Springs will meet
league foe Mason County
Tuesday, Aug. 9 at 6 p.m. at
the Bill Mire Field. The loser
will he out of the doubleelemlnation tournament.
In Tuellday's ~ lou to
Security Bank, Roclo: Springs'
Eddie Young led the hittera
with two singles while Jon
Buck had ooe.
The meetJns of the Ohio
Valley Stan Musial League
offlcen and managen will he
friday, Aug. Sat 7:30 at the
S)TaCUie Fire Hollie to pick
an All Star Team .ind set
dates for the league tournament, according to league
preSident Charlie 1\lanhall.
~

was only the fifth hit in the
top tier of the stadium since
the Reds moved into their
new home June 30, 1970. Tony
Perez, oow with Montreal,
has hit two. So oow has
Foster. Bob Bailey, now with
lhe Reds, hit the other one
when he was with the

Rangers on ·the move

Friday's Gamet

Pawtucket

sea110n, a line shot over the
right field fence with one out
in the top of the lOth inning
and Foster on bal!e that gave
the Cincinnati Reds a 5-3
victory over the Ollcago
Cubs Wednesday night.
Foster's hom~ last night

three races !iO far IbiS circuit
and could be the colt to he
reckoned with in tbe $to2,ooo
Ohio Trotting Classic
championship round ' Sept. 9
at Scioto Downs in Columbus.
Unda Faye posted a five·
length victocy over Farui
Fancy in the race for three·
year&gt;()ld trotting fillies, going
that mile in 2:05 14i.
Killbuck · Rose trotted the
mile in 2:Q5 14i for a 1'1&lt;1
length win over Lyri~ Hill
with Rol!e Gale third in the
three.year-&lt;&gt;ld division.
Finalists for !IJe $49,000
Capital Trot Championship at
· Scioto Downs, after five
preliminary heats for the
three-year~Jd !Illy trotters,
are Unda Faye, Killbuck
Rose, Lyric Hill, Jeanne's
SUrprise, Ross Gale, Trenton
Queen, Fan's Fancy, Miss
Dolan, Swiss Proxie and
Bunny Club.
·
Robert J, Rilm Valley and
Sunday Creed were the first
th.ree finishers in the trifecta
tenth race whete the 9-3-10
combination was worth
$6,483.30. '
The crowd of 5,~ wagered
$418,889.
' .

Just Arrived

1977 VW'S
We have just rocolved our .
linal lhipment of VW's for
ltlt 1977 m-1 JHr. NOW
IN STOCK! 2 Rabbits - 2
O.lhor Sedans . 1 O.shor
w_.
. 1 Sclroc:at.

RIVERSIDE
VOLKSWAGEN

tenned the play on Johnson's
part "a rather pathetic

Golllpolls-446-9800

" ~ just

hit homers," said a

smiling Driessen . " Now
Foster, he bits long homers."
"I'd like to have seen
Foster hit that same ball
when the wind was blowing
out at Chicago's l'{rigley

GRIDDERS TO MEET
RACINE - All boya
Interested in playing
football at Southern High
School this fall are to meet
at7 p.m. Friday at the high
school.

OVER

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VALUES TO
$9.95 PAIR

WEDN!!SDAY, AUGUST 3rd
THRU
FRIOAY, AUGUST 5TH

DOUBLE BURGERS ........... 45~ each or 4 for suo
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGERS 5(r each or 4 for suo
. TRIPLE TREAT... ................ ss~ each or 4 for 52.00
REGULAR FRENCH FRIES :..'.. :20' each or 4 for 75•
Ple;~se, n~ specials ~uring this three day sale, if you .
want spec• a Is, order 1nside "without" and fix'em your
way at our compl~te sandwich bar. No coupons
necessary .

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We are celebrating
our 1st Anniversary
in the Bit,( Bend area
and for 3 big days
we want you to join
us and save.

But Johnson saw it
differently. "I'm here for a .
starting job and l don't have . LAKE FOREST, Ill. (UP!)
it. I'd be dwnb to lol\f," he -Chicago Bears' Coach Jack ··
said. "It burt me to think Pardee
announced
they'd think I would loaf. I Wednesday Mike Phipps will
can't. afford to."
start at quarterback in
Johnson is battling veteran Saturday night's contest
Boobie Clark Ior the starting against the New Orleans
fullback position on the Saints at Soldier Field.
Cincinnati squad.
Pardee said Phipps will
Donaldson said it was play the first two quarters
possible Johnson "doesn't with Bob Avellini finishing
know when he has extended the game.
Noah Jackson, a two-year
himself on a . pass yet .
Running the football he starter at guard, left camp
probably does, because be's Wednesday for unknown reahad to give that extra under sons. And cornerback Allen
stress before. But he hasn't Ellis became tlJe father of an
caught that many passes." eight-pound girl Wednesday
In other developments, and missed practice.
, eighth-round draft choice
Jose Saint-Victor was moved I
from offensive line to
defensive tackle. Head coach
Bill Johnson said the former
Syracuse University star .
would have had·a tough time ·
making the team on offense.
The team also annoWlCed
that several players probably
won't see action in the
Ben gals' . preseason game
against the Green Bay
Packers Saturday night.
Lenvii Elliott, Bob Trurnpy,
Ken Ander110n, Archie Griffin
and Isaac Curtis all may not
play in the game.

Snap~-·~ce

Field, " exclaimed Reds '
manager Sparky Anderson .
"It'd gone out of sight.
" Wouldn't ,Foster have
been something in old Q-osley
Field hilling the way he is
now," continued the Reds'
manager. "With tbose short
fences, George would be
hitting homers in all
directions, not pulling most of
!bern to left field ."
Rick Reuschel, the Cubs'
pitching ace bidding lor his
·16th victory against three
losses, was working on a J.O
shutOut when the Reds' Mike
.Lorn, subbing for a still ailing
Ken Griffey in right field,
homered in · the seventh
inning . One out later
Reuschel departed after
aggravating an old back
injury,
Rookie right bander Paul
Moskau started for the Reds
and restricted the Cubs to
three runs, two of them
Wleamed, before oomg lifted
for a pinch bitter after seven
innings. He struck out eight
and walked five.
The Reds, idle today, conclude their home stand with a
four game series against

Thank You
··Big Bend Area

effort."

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The Week

. while supply lasts

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Carew raised his average to
.384 for· the Twins.
Royals 7, Blue Jays 4:
Frank White stroked a
three-run,
fourth-inning
homer and two pitches later,
George Brett added a solo
shot off Toronto rookie
starter Jerry Garvin. The
Royals added three more
l11llll in the seventh on a single
by John Mayberry, a double
by Joe Zdeb, a single by Fred
Patek, and a two-run
throwing error by Toronto
second baseman Steve
Staggs.
Angels 5, Yankees 3:
Terry Humphrey singled in
two runs and ex-Yankee
Bobby Bonds added a tworun inside-the-park homer
to make Nolan Ryan the
American League's first !5game winner. Ryan, 15-10,
went the first seven innings
before tiring. Graig Nettles
hit his 25th homer for the
Yankees in the ninth.
.Brewers 7, Indians 4:
Sal Rando's bases-loaded
walk and Jim Wohlford's
two-run single capPed threenm uprising in the seventh
inning that lifted lhe Brewers
over Cleveland.
Orioles 8, A's 6:
Rookie Eddie Murray's
second horner of the game, a
two-run drive with one out in
tbe top of the loth inning
propelled Baltimore to
victory and kept the Orioles
within a percentage point of
. first-place Bol!lon in the AL
· East.
Red Sox 121 Marinen 4:
Jim Rice belted a pair of
solo homers, his 28th and
29th, and Bernie Carbo added
a grand slam to lead a fivehomer Boston onslaught.
George Scott hit his 27th in
the !bird witb Rice aboard
and Butch Hobson had a
three-run shot in the second,
his 21st.

Montreal club.
Willi~ Hernandez, the Cub
left-handed relief pitcher ,
was the victim of both
homers and woWld up with
his fourth loss against his
fifth victory .
The Reds trailed 3-1 when
Foster followed a Joe Morgan
single with his homer in the
bottom of the eighth tc tie the
score.
The homer by Driessen,
hitless until the !O!h inning,
gave Red relief pitcher Pedro
Borbon his seventh victory
against four losses.

C· IOOCHEH·I
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�4-1be DailySentnl&lt;'l, Muldleport-Pumero~. 0 .. Thursday, A~- 4. 1m

Waterfowl areas
open to hunting

Mother's tears accompany

Leaders
Ma1or League Leildl!'rs

By Unt ied Pr•u lnterna1ional

8atfi1119
I based on 275 ;at b.ats}
National Leagve
G AI· H Pet .
Pa rker Pit
105 1134 t j j .336
SJ ~ne-u

P1t

100 3'14 131 332

lUZ in Skl P hil
94 354 116 328
Applicants should include Simmons
COLUMBUS FoQr
St L
99 )47 113 .32&amp;
their
name,
return
address
waterfowl managemen't
Tmpll n St L
101 415 135 .325
ffe v Cin
102 401 no . 314
areas in Ohio, Mosquito and a !976 or 1m hunting Gri
Foster Cin
10-t 40,. no 312
Creek, Killdeer Plains, license number. Two hunters Mora le-s Ch i
102 369 119 312
86 302 '17 .3'21
Magee Marsh, and Ottawa, will be assigned to each blind. Robinson P it
NY
BJ 314 '18 .312
again will be open to con- If you wish to hunt with a Ra ndle
, American League
·
,
G. AB. H. Pc1 .
trolled waterfowl bunting this partner. submit one apCarew .Min
104 406 156 .384
plication plus $10.
fall, according to Dale L.
BostockM tn
103 407139 342
As a special notice the U.S. R!ce Bas
Haney, Chief ot the Depart103 AlB ll6 325
Tex:
95 331 lOS .31 7
ment of Natural Resources' Fish and Wi!dWe Service has Hargrove
R.i vers NV
92 373 llB .316
ruled
,
o
nly.Canada
Geese
may
Division of Wildlife.
Stngleton Sa l
96 JJS 106 .316
91 365 115 .Jrs
" Controlled ·waterfowl be taken at Ottawa National Ba ilor Tar
Page Oak
90 322 101 .314
hunts · are becoming in- Wildlife Refuge and hunters Cowens K C
102 400 125 31 3
101 Ht. 1?7 ~ 307
creasingly popular because must use 12-gauge shotguns Banister Ch l
Yount M il
99 397 122 307
they provide a quality hunt with steel shot.
Zi sk Ch i
93 358 110 :307
At Magee Marsh, ducks
with a controlled harvest ,"
Home Runs
N•tional League : Foster Ci n
and coots may be harvested.
Haney said.
36 ; Schm idt , Ph il 28 ; 'sur The Wildlife Division will Hunters are required to \ISe roughs , AU 27; Garvey. LA and
accept applications for a SO steel shot when hunting with Luz insk i. Phil 26
can L eague : R i ~;e , 8os
waterfowl hunting permit any 12-gauge shotgun. Lead 29 Ameri
; Scott , 6os 27 ; Nettles, NY
through Aug. 31. To apply, shot is permitted in other 25; Bonds . Ce l end H isle. M lnn
23 .
. send a check or- money order legal size shotguns.
Runs Batted In
AU hunters must furnish
payable to the Division of
National League : Foster , Cin
l OS ; Cey , LA 90 : Garvey , LA
Wildlife to : Mosquito Creek their own ammunition 87
; Luzinsk l. Phil 84 ; Bur .
Killdeer Plains, Mage~ regardless of the type of shot roughs , Atl 77 .
:4merican
League :
Hisle,
Marsh, or Ottawa Waterfowl required.
tnn 87 , l isk. Ch i 77 ; Hobson.
A pu_blic drawing will be M
_ Hunt, Division of WildWe,
Bos 76 ; Munson , NY 7S ;
Ohio Department of Natural held a( 9 a.m., September 1 at Thompson , Oet 73 .
STolen Bases
Division
Resources, Building C, Wildlife
NatiOn ill League: . Taveras.
Fountain Square, Columbus headquarters in Columbus to P i tt 38 ; Lopes , LA 35 ;
Richards , SO 33 ; Morgan , Ci n
43224. Persons wanting to determine those eligible to and
Cedeno. Hou 32.
hunt at all four areas must hunt. Those whose names are
Amer ican L.ea9ue : Patek, KC
apply separately for each drawn will be notified by ·33 ; Remy, Cal 31 ; Page. Oak
25 ; Bonds , Cal and L.eFiore,
area. However, those ap- mail.
Det 24 .
Hunting dates will be anPitching
plying more than once per
Most VicTories
area will be disquaWied from nounced in early September
NaTional League : R .Reuschel
receiving a permit to hunt at after the waterfowl season Chi 15 -3; Carlton, Ph il 15
Forsch , St.L 13 -5; Rau , LA 12 has been established.
that particular area.
2; John , LA 12 ·Ai Rhod~ , LA

6:

Mays will backup Sipe
KENT, Ohio (UP!) Starting quarterback Bcian
Sipe will be spelled by Dave
·Mays Monday night when the
Cleveland Bcowns open their
exhibition season against the
Washington Redskins .
Mays was overshadowed in
scrimmages this spring by
newcomer Terry Luck, but
led Cleveland to a comefrom·behind upset victory of
the Pittsburgh Steelers last'
season when Sipe was injured
in the ftrst half.
·
A former Cleveland high
.. school star, Brian Dowling, ·
will share quarterbacking
duties with Joe Theismann
for the Redskins . Dowling, a
standout at St. Ignatius High
and Yale University, is
engaged in an impressive
comellack after four years
away lriiin football.
Greg Pruitt; Cleveland's

one-thousand-yard man, may
not be ready for the
Washington game. He is
listed as "questionable" with
a pulled leg muscle. If Pru itt
is still sidelined, Larry Poole
will take over his spot.
Also on Cleveland's in)ured

list are rece ivers Dave
Logan, Steve Holden and
Mike Budrow and cornerback
Ron Boltpn. Bolton has a back
injUi'y and the others are all
suffering. from leg ailments.

GREENVILLE, S.C. (UP! )
- Atlanta Falcons' Coach
Leeman Bennett Wednesday
named Steve Bartkowski
starting quarterback for
Saturday night's exhibition
game against St. Louis.
Bennett said he thought it
best Ill start his . veteran
players and would not start
any rookies.
The only position that remains unfilled for the preseason game at St. Louis was
running back, where Bennett
said he would use either
Sonny Co llins or Mike
Esposilll.

12.1; Rogers . Mt! 12-9.
American League : Ryan, Cal
15-10; Goltz , M inn 13-6; T .John .
son , M inn 12-3 ; Tanana , Cal 127; R .May anef Pi!llmer . Bait 129.

Earned Run Average
(based on 19 i nnings piTched )
Nati onal League : R.Reuschel.
Ch i 2.25 ; Hooton , LA 2.55 ;
Rogers , Mtl 2.69 : Candelaria ,
Pitt 2.79 ; Carlton. Ph i l 2.92. 1
Ame ri can League : . Tanana .
Ca l 2 J7 ; Blyleven , Tex 2.37 ;
Ryan , Cal 2.61 ; T .Johnson ,
Mtnn 2.62 ; Rozema . Del 2.84.
STriiC.eouts
National League : Niekro. At \
1~ ; Koosm an , NY 144; Rogers ,
Mil 141 ; Richard . Hou - t3 1;
Seaver , Cin 124.
·
.
America" League : Ryan, Ca l
26 1; Tanana . Cal 162; Leonard ,
KC 145 ; Eckersley, Clev 138 ;
Blyleven , Te,c. 136.
· ·
.

story of death by beating
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI ( UP! )
Bceaking down in tears on the
witness stand. Ann Noske
testified Wednesday that her
boyfriend Dr. Stuart Kutler
heat herS-year old son Arthur
1&lt;&gt; death in front of her.
Just a few hours later, said
Ms. Noske, she and Kutler
went to bed and had sexual
relations J An attempt to
dispose of the boy's body and
coverup the cririle began the
next day, she said.
· Ms . Noske,
32,
of
Clevela nd , said Kutler
"threw Arthw- around like a
ragdoll."
"He hit him with his open
hand back and forth and then
he pulled him up from the
floor and started hitting him
again," she sobbed. "! was
shocked. I didn't believe it.
"He kept hitting him and
hitting him. Arthur didn 't say
a thing . Dr. Kutler didn't say
a thing. He just hept hitting
him and finally Arthur fell
limp,"
Ms. Noske, who along with
her son had just moved into
Kutler's house a week before
the alleged beating occurred
Feb. 4, broke into tears time
and time again as she
testified before an eight-man,
four-woman jury at Kutler's
murder trial.

CUyahoga t:ounty U&gt;mmun pushed Arlhur into the
Pleas Court Judge Harry master bedroom ."
Ms. Noske, clutching
Hanna, hearing the case here
tissues
and sobbing, then
on a change of venue from
described
the alleged beating
Cleveland, called
two
scene.
recesses to allow Ms. Noske
She s;~id after Arthur had
to compose herself, but t:ach
time she returned to the finally fallen limp, Kutler
witness stand she quickly carried the boy into the
broke inlll tears when she bathroom and the couple
began answering questloos tried to revive hiin.
. , "We di.d mouth to mouth
about her son .
chest
pressure
Kutler, 31, of the Cleveland arid
suburb of Brecksville, calmly resuscitation and then Dr.
listened Ill his former girl- Kutler did a tracheotomy.
friend's testimony and took There was a fa.int pulse and
then there was no more_ It
notes.
was
useless.
Before Ms. Noske began
"!
put him in bed, put a
her testimony , Kutler 's
rosary
and prayer hook in his
attorney Robert Hanna told
hands
and
wrapped him in a
the jury in his opening
statement that Kutler " will ' blanket. I put tube socks 00
unW his dying day maintain his feet because his !eet were
cold."
his innocence."
S;!id Assistant CUyahoga
Ms. Noske testified that
Kutler had hea len up her .On County Prosecutor Donald
four days before and that she Nugent, " But you knew he
had given Arthur a nickel not was dead."
" Yes," replied a sobbing
to mention the incident when
Ms.
Noske, " bot a mother
her son talked on the
never
gives up hope. 1 just
telephone
with
his
couldn't
believe he was
grandmother.
gone."
Sle said the alleged fatal
Ms. Noske said she
beating occurred after
Arthur told Kotler how he got suggested that Arthur should
be taken to a hospital and that
the nickel.
"He (Kutler) told me, 'I'm the police should be called but
going to show you what 's was told by Kutler that he
going to happen to your would "take care of it in the
precious little boy ,' and morning ....
"And you agreed? " asked
Nugent. ·
·
"Because r was told it
would ruin his career and his
standing in the community
and that he'd never be able to
center
I&lt; ICK
~ur 1 uon
and
practice
medicine again, "
linebacker Steve Krum .
Tampa Bi!IY - Cut quarter . she replied.
back Scott Gardner .
Asked Nugent, " And you
M.
1nneso ta - Acqu ired center accepted this? "
Mike A je!lo on waivers from
" Yes ,". she said.

Sports transactions
By United Press lnTern.Jfional
Wedne-sday
Football
Ne-w Yor"' Jets _ Traded
"
defens ive end Billy Newsome to
Buf!alo for an undisclosed draft
cho•.ce .
San Diego- Cut quarterback
Neal Jeffrey , place -kick.e r John
Ch
F't~t~~:~ .and" sa fet y ChriS
Kansas
c.·ty Wa•' ved
I i n e b a c k e r Rofl Olsohoski,
safety Gary Evans , kiCker Mike
C?y le, running , back Har-ry
Krng. tack le John Lohmann , ·

M i am i. Cut defens ive end M ike
~eske, 11nebacker Gene Ludens.
linebacker Dan Zarazan . punter
Chris Swinbank , wid e receiver
Art Go re and wide receiver
Trent Smock .
.
Basketball
Ph iladelph ia - Signed guard
Jeff Jonas , fourth -round 'd raft
choi_ce ,trom Uti!ih .

MONROE; La. (UP!) Former Louisiana State and
Kansas City Chiefs' star
Johnny Robinson has quit his
defensive backfield coaching
job at Northeast Louisiana
University to become an
assistant ~astor at a Baptist
church.
·
.
Robinson, 39, will continue
part time at Northeast as
tennis coach, university offi·
cials announced Wednesday.
The name of the church was
not revealed.

•

::::s:c·m-..,..:::;:;~&gt;.&gt;.:::~

~

Generation Rap

!§

B H 1
y e en and Sue Bottel

I Card shower to be given
1

:§

j

+++

Rap:

The Eighth Annual
Gilliland Reunion was held
Sunday at the Armco Park in
Zanesville.
Those attending from this
area were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Evans, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. George McKinniss of Wellston.
A basket dinner was held at
I p.m. with Mrs. Eugene Mtli'phy giving grace, She also
conducted the business
meeting . Gifts were
presented to George McKinniss, the eldest attending;
Aaron Eugene Murphy, the
youngest; Phillip Scheider,
the largest family residing
under one roof present, Mr.
and Mrs. George McKinniss,
married the longest, and Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Evans,
traveled the farthest.

There's this dude I love, but since we moved to another
town, he's taken up with a new girl.
JwenttoseehimlastSaturday. He sent his girl home so he
could be with me, and I ended up staying the night:
I haven't heard from him all week and today r called. He
-'I!Ys it's no good going with someone so far away and he'll stay
with the local girl.
After wbat happened Saturday night how could he? WANTS RIM BACK
'

THE

' near Wants :
The dude took what was offered -and ran.
Don't chase a lost cause. - SUE

SHOE BOX

COCA
COLA
6 QUARTS

+++

'Wants:
Do you really want a iluy who sends one girl home so he
can be with another, then chooses the first because she's more
convenient?
This lost cause is your gain. Fo~get him. -HELEN

RC
COLA
8-16

HAS CUT

0~ .

Picnic enjoyed

Polly Cramer

Shower curtain is torn

PANTSUITS
PANTSUITS

Daughter born

NOW

$119

$18 to $46

M rs Roush
·
hosts picnic·

· Missionary SoCiety of· the
Laurel CWf Free Methodist
Church held a picnic Tuesday
'
:~tat the Route 33 roadside · The ann'ual picnic of 'the
Pomeroy Women's Christian
Attending were the Rev
Temperance Union ·was held
and .Mrs. Floyd Shook,
.
TIIURSDAY ·and Mrs. James Gilmore and r~ntly at the home o~ Mrs.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange granddaughter, Lisa, Mr. and Elsie Ro~sh. G~ace was by
Thursday 8 p.m. Vacate hall
Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Wtlllam Sffilth.
for Fair.
Mrs. Steve Eblin, Mrs. BerMrs. Allen Hampton
EVANGELINE Chapter tha Parker, Mr and Mrs. pre.stded at the meetmg
172,. Order of the Eastern Larry Clark ;;td hild
which opened w1th smgmg of
Star, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
c
ren, " He Lives" and prayer by .
the Middleport Masonic Tem- Mrs. Tina Jacobs. Ivan Mrs. Joseph Cook. Mrs.
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Robert Warner reported on
ple.
Powell and grandson, Bukh, th nm
d "0
·
FRIDAY
1 , enftl
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dick
Folmer
e
.
'
e
.
ne
·~
a
WOMEN'S Aglow and children, Mr. and Mrs. .Million placed m Metgs
Fellowship of Pomeroy 7 p.m.
Meigs Inn. Reservations by Frank Martin and children,
Aug. 2 at 446-0046, 993-5845, Mrs. Frances Martin, Mrs.
Della Curtis, Mrs. Ruby
949-2723 or 949-2325.
Frick.
VE VISITORS
POMEROY Chapter, 186,
During a brief business
Recent visitors of Mr. and
OES, will host a reception for meeting, Mrs. Wright read Mrs. E. E. Stiles, South Third
the ·deputy grand matron, Cor. 4, 7 to 12 verses with a
Ave., Middleport were Mr.
V
District 25, Mrs. Sylvia meditation from the Upper Stiles uncle, Lawrence GinrJUrC
Midkiff, on Friday at 8 p.m . Rooin Prayer was by Uoyd !her, Rochester, Pa. and
at the Pomeroy Masonic Wright, and there was group cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry ,,
.
,
,
'J,'emple. AU Eastern .S tar singing.
Ginther and daughter.'
p~embers,
Masons, and
Rochester, Pa., Mr. and Mrs,
friends of Mrs. Midkiff, a~
George Ginther and family of · The Keno Church of Christ
invited to attend.
Sharon, Pa. and Mr. Stiles' held a picnic at the Forked
POMEROY CHAPTER 186
mother, Edna Stiles, Run State Park Sunday.
IN HOSPITAL
OES host a reception !or • Alfred White, Pomeroy, is a Pomeroy.
Attending were Debbie
deputy grand matron, Sylvia patient at the Holzer Medical
Dawson, Cattlettsburg, Ky.,
Midkiff Friday 8 p.m. at Center, Room 419, for medical
· Mrs. Harliss Frank, George
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. treatment. Here visiting with
:Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
AU Eastern Star members him and assisting in his care
DINNER HOSTED
Spencer and son, Jared, Mr.
and frienda are invited to is his daughter, Mrs. Shirley
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Stiles, and Mrs. Gordon Holter and
attend.
Texter of North Canton, ac- Middleport, hosted a family son, Joy Swain, Mrs. Leota
,
SATURDAY
companied by her son, dinnerwhiletheir son and his Massar, Mrs. Maude Gray,
ICE
CREAM
social Shawn. Mr. and Mrs. ,\rchie family, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mr. and Mrs . Starling
Saturday starting at 2 p.m. at Goodwill, also of Canton, E. Stiles and Jason of Lex· Massar, Diana and Chuck,
the Rutland United Methodist Sister and brother-in-law of ington, Ky. were weekend . Mr. and Mrs. George
Church. Ice cream, cake and Mr. White, are also here · visitors. Other 9uests were Frederick, Bill and Beth, Tim
pie will be aerved.
along with their daughter, their daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick, Missy King, Esta
HOUSE TO HOUSE can- Shelly.
Carl (Kay) Platter, Mid- White, Mrs. Louden, Mr. and
vass wW be held.Saturday by
dleport; and Mr. and Mrs. · Mrs. Harold Osborn and son,
members of Southern High
James L. (Barbara) Fry, Gary, Mrs. Lettie McCain,
School Marching Band in an
Ruth and Sue; Pomeroy, Mrs. Gladys Shwnway, and
rlfort to raise $2,000
Route3.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cleland.
ARE VISITING
neceaaary for the purchase of
new percllllion equipment. Mr. and Mrs. William Kish,
HARRISONVILLE Lodge Pittsburgh, Pa., .and Mr. and
,411 FI&amp;AM Saturday 7:30p.m. Mrs. George Freeland,
Work in fellowcraft degree. Syracuse, were Parkersburg,
AU master masons welcome. ·W.Va. visitors Tuesday. Kisb
ZUSPAN family reunion at and Freeland were . co-Krodel Park. Basket lunch at workers for the Union Barge
Line for 20 years.

BAHR CLOTHIERS

27~::,

--,'iood

I

A lew minutes of
converSation with your

personal A.D. pharmacist
can eliminate worry and

h

awehension~. You'll
know what to expect

from your prescriptio~s.

.d

ptcntC enjOJe

FINAL

'

12:30.

ALL

SUNDAY
BEEGLE · family -reunion
Sllnday at Ri&lt;;lne American
· Legion HaiL Registration
11:30, basket lunch at 12:;10,
prograll\ and businesa
aeulon 2 p.m.
EICHINGER reunion
Sunday at U.S. Route 33
roadalde park. Baaket lunch
al noon. ·

The very special way to remember ...

TUESDAY
.- AMERICAN Legion Awt·
Wary, l..ewia Manley Unit 263,
'l'laeaday, 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Melp Inn with Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith 118 hotlless.

t&lt;ennelh McCullough, R. I'll Charlo• Riffle, R. I'll.
Ronald Honning, R. l'h.
lllton thru Slt. I:OOo.m . lo9p .m.
Sund;t lO'JG'o 12:301nd 51119 p.m .
PRE'CRIPTI ·)NS
PH."l -2955 ,
Friondty Service
fl'" MAIN Open Nithlsli" POM'EROY,O.

POLLY"$ POINTERS

'
Dodd, Homer Powell, Mr.
and Mrs. John Ground and
Patricia and Jerry, the hosts,
and the honored guest. A
potluck was held .
Wednesday Mr . Hysell
underwent open heart
surgery at a Columbus
hospital.

A party was held Saturday
evening at the home of Orville and M'drgaret Allen
honoring Charles Hysell on
his birthday anniver!i"ry.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Powell, Mr. and
Mrs. Ivan Eugene Powell and
Butch, Mrs. Charles Hysell
and sons, Jeff, Keith and Robbie, daughter, Linda, and
granddaughter, Jennifer

POLLY'S PROBLEM ·
discoveries f have made.
DEAR POLLY- My plastic
Stackable plastic vegetable
shower curtains have ripped bins will fit into a small space
BAKE SALE SLATED
rightthrough the holes so now and can be added. to when
The
FMV Teenagers of the
I have a lot of loose curtains. more space is needed. I store
Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist
Is there a quick and lasting my food grinder, cook books,
Church
will have a bake sale
way to fix this' -MARGO
plastic lids, extra pot holders,
CARDS DESIRED
Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m.
DEAR MARGO- I suggest .etc. in them. Where to put a
Mrs. Leland Nelson, Laurel at Krogers. On Tuesday at 10
that you apply a· strip of wide recently acquired double Cliff, is a patient at Veterans
adhesive tape on the back of burge r · maker had l"e Memorial Hospital: Cards a.m. they will leave for
each curtain. Place just stumped until I thought of the may he sent to her at Room Camden Park at Huntington,
W.Va. for an all-&lt;lay outing.
beneath the original holes oven. That has proved to be 141.
and carefully bring torn an ideal storage place along
edges together on the top. with ceramic baking dishes
Smooth tape on with a cold that were stored on a shelf
iron after it is in place and way above my head .
you will be sw-e every bit of However a word of caution
the tape fits snugly against goes with this. Put a small
thecurtain.-POLL\'.
piece of masking tape across
DEAR POLLY -A sprinkle the oven burner switch as a
of salt on too sow- grapefruit reminder to remove the oven
is far better than more sugar. contents before turning it on.
-M.E.S., an M.D.
! have only two kitchen
' DEAR POLLY - When drawerssosilver\varegoesin
packing for a trip r slip my one and other necessary
shoes in plastic bags that small items in the other.
bread comes in and find this Things like measuring
is an ideal way to keep dirty spoons, cookie cutters and the
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd soles from touching clothes. - · like are kept in two tw&lt;&gt;-pound
Schrider, Parkersburg were DOROTHY
cheese boxes so they qo not
elected to be president and
DEAR POLLY - Apart- get· mixed up with the large
secretary for the coming ment living necessitates fin- spoons, spatulas, etc. kept in
year. Paul Kerns, Gallipolis, ding storage space for a the same drawer. I have no
was reported ill.
variety of things and I would drawer for dish towels so r
1 RACK
A mock wedding was per- like to pass on a couple of put them in a plas\Jc bag that
formed. in celebration of Mr.
is kept in the linen closet. All
and Mrs. Perry Gilliland's
these have eased the an50th wedding anniversary
noyance of having too little
which was observed earlier
· Reg. $36.00 to snoo
Mr. ancfMrs. Lyle Sinclair, storage space. -EDNA D.
this year. The couple were Tuppers Plains, are announcDEAR POLLY- If the lady
the bride and groom in the ing the birth of a daughter, who has trouble fastening the
00
mock wedding with Joanna Shelly Diane, born July 7, at back supporters on her girdle
Tignor, maid of honor, and St. Joseph Hospital , will lie Oat on her Back on the
John Gilliland, best man. The Parkersburg, W. Va. The bed they will then fasten as
bride's dress was fashioned baby weighed seven pounds, easy as the front ones will
A GOOD SELJ;:CTION
of newspaper and she and the four ounces.
OF FAMOUS BRAN OS.
sta nding. --GRACE.
groom were presented with
JANTZEN, CATALINA,
Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair have
DEAR POLLY- I find my
flowers by their grand- a son, Kyle Sinclair, age five. pizza roller works great for
CODDINGTON &amp; LORI LYNN
children. In the role of the Paternal grandparents are pressing crumbs in pie tins
preacher for the ceremony Mr. and ·Mrs. Alba Sinclair, · and for patting down cookie .
was George McKinniss.
· Shade, and the maternal dougli when .making bars or
STOP IN TODAY
grandparents are . Mr.· and tortes. -KATHRYN.
Mrs. Harry Krautter . Polly will send you one of
FOR THE BEST SELECTION
Minersville. Greatgrand: her ·sig ned thank-you
parents are Mrs. Freda newspaper coupon clippers if
Krautter, Pomeroy.; Harry she uses your favorite
High School, and Mrs. Hamp- Cunningham, Pomeroy; and Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
ton told of the leaflets, Denver Van Nest, Athens.
POINTERS in care of this
Middleport. Ohio
posters and the governor's
newspaper.
NAME
CORRECTED
proclamation placed in
Mrs. Wyatt ( Virginia)
schools, thurches , and
Chadwell, and · not Mrs.
. businesses.
Devotions given by Mrs. Virginia Wyatt, is the new
Hampton were entitled president of the Belles and
· " Righteous .Protesting" with Beaus Western Square Dance
scripture from Matt. 21, 12-16. Club. The name was incorACE COMB
The program by Mrs. Warner rectly listed in an earlier acWith FREE-39 ' ll!C PEN
Mens &amp;'latlrcs '
included an article by Dr . . count of club activities.
Charles Keating,· a Cleveland
attorney, on pornography. ·
Annual reports from the Colfrom YCJII'
umbus WCTU headquarters
ASSOCIATED IIIIUimTS
were distributed. Benediction
AIIGIIST 3 - 9, 1977
closed the meeting.

.l.\..eno C'l.

somEs

.

~Cff~~

putlucl&lt;, along Wtth thetr own
Ialiie service, and the
beverage will be furnished .
The District 13 Past Cuuncilors Club picntc will be held
at Wibon Park, Route 50, on
Sunday al2 p.m.
Mrs. Letha Wood was
reported ill and Mrs. Ina
Massar was reported home
from the hospital.
Attending were Mrs. Ada
Neutzling, Mrs. Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. Ada Morris ,
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Helen
Wolf, Mrs. Goldie Frederick,
Mrs. Leona Hensley, · Mrs.
Mary K. H'olter,. Mrs. ·
Dorothy Ritchie , Mrs .
Margaret ·t uttle, Mrs. Ada
Bissell, Mrs. Mae McPeek,
~uncilor, Mrs. Elizabeth
Hayes, Mrs. Zelda Weber, .
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs. ·
Ethel Orr, Mrs . Doris
Grueser, Mrs. Erma Cleland,
Mrs. Thelma White, Mrs.
Sadie Trussell,
Mrs .
Charlotte Grant, Mrs. Eileen
Martin, Mrs. Mae Spencer,
and Mrs. Mary Showalter.

m

'

•

' .

Hysell honored with party

Gilliland family reunion held

BIRTHDAY
CARDS

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMEff STORE

{

'

Mr:

2"X4"X8'

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

'o'"C''j

Social
Calendar

building materials

NOW.
SAVE
EVEN MORE

.

J!lem

Added Nugent, " Even
though he had just killed your

and

PRICES ON
·SUMMER
MERCHANDISE

~,

CHESTER - Plans for a
card shower honoring Mrs.
~
::::. Hattie Frederick on her birthODe Couple Divided By Two ...
day anniversary, Aug. 19,
were made when the Chester
Dear Rap :
Council,
Daughters of
Hurray for Cheryl who finally told her Mom that s~
America, IT]et Tuesday night
needed a lew holidays just for her and her husband !
at the hall.
My guy and I eat two Thanksgiving Christmas New
Mrs. Frederick is cunfined
Year's, and ~ther _holiday dinners each year, one wiih his to the Pleasant Hill Coovalesfamily, one With rrune. All this stuffing to avoid hurt feelings • cent Center, Box 334, Piketon,
l'!aturally we don't enjoy the days.
·
Ohio 45661, and cards may be
I most resent our Christmas tug of war. Curt's folks heat sent to her there. The charter
oo OW' door (or bedroom window ) before five in the morning was draped in memory of
(so they can be there lor our klds' gift opening) . 1 can' t relax Lettie Meredith and a thank
and enjoy "Santa." I'm too busy serving breakfast coffee ek! you note from the Meredith
. Then we must leave all the new toys and r~h ov~r ..; family was read thanking the
dinner first at Grandparents I, and then at Grandparents 2 Council for services al lhe
(who feel hurt If they aren't alao invited to the early morriing Hughes Funeral Home at
fracas).
Athens and for flowers.
Just once I'd love a Christmas for only - US
Plans were made for the
Council to sell refreshments
Dear Us :
at the Opal Hollon Casto sale
Why don't you get all the parents and in-laws lllgether and to be held Aug. 13 at Chester
tell
how you feel? SUre It will be traumatic, but they'll star-ting at 10 a .m. Members
SUI'VIVe - just as their folks did long ago when they finally are asked to donate pies or
pulled away from force-fed holidays. - SUE
money.
+++
The Past Councilors Club of
Dear Us:
Chester Council will have a
Trouble with parents is- they often continue seeing their picnic at the home of Mrs.
children~ "the kids " long after they're grown and gone.
Betty Roush on Al)g. II at 7
There s no easy way, but they must be told that holiday p.m. Members ar• f o take
get-togethers are great - if they aren't command performances.
I hope you remember 1111s when your chicks are starting
·
families of their own . - HELEN

Major League Results
(12 inni ngs !
By United Press loternitional
Texas
National Lugue
210 210 000 006---12 19 1
( 14 innings}
Chicago
·
Los Angeles
lJO 010 010 004-10 19 1
102 000 000 000
3 14 0
Ellis , Lindblad (6) , Devine
New York
(7) , Knowles (12) and Sund000 DOl 002 000 01 - 4 10 1 berg ;
Bart_i os ,
Kucek
(4),
Rau , Hough ( 7), Sosa (9}, LaGrow ( 10 ), Hamilton (11)
Rautzhan (9), Garman !12) and Kirk.wood ( 11 ), B . Johnson (12)
. Yeager ; E$p inQsa; ~aldw ln (7}, and Es_s ian , Down ing (91 . w~
Apodaca (9), Myrick
( 10 ), Dev in~ . 8-5. L - Kir:kwOod , 2-.1.
Siebert (13) And Stei!lrns. w____, HRs- Texas, Harrah (16}, Har .
Siebert.• 2-0. L-Garman , 4-3. grove {.4 ); Chicago , Lemon
HR-'Los A,n geles, Lope·s, 8.
(15) , Garr (8) ;
.

PRECUTS

,.

~

Massengale Result
·
.
s, line scores
defending
ooin Hartford

By BRVNO V. RANNIELLO
WETHERSFIELD, Conn.
( UP! ) - Rik Massengale,
looking for his first win in six SanF'rn
001 000 001- 2 7 1 Det
000 100 000--- 1 7 1
031 000 .oox- 4 10 o Minn
months, begins defense of his Mntral
40 1 220 20x-11 11 o
SMITHFIELD, R.I . (UP! )
Barr , Lavelle (8) and H ill ;
Ar,.royo. Crawford (1), Grill i
title today in the first round of ·Brown,
- Former Brown University
Stanhouse
{9)
and (5), W ilcox (8} and Wocken ·
the
$210,000
Greater
Hartford
Carter . W-Brown, 8-8. L- fuss ; Thormodsg8rd and W"yne quarterback Bob Bateman
Open at the Wethersfield Barr , 10 -B. H R-Montreal, v ·a . gar.~~W~ Thormoefsgard, 9-S. Land nine other rookies and
Ientine (l~J.
Arroyo,•• 6-10. HR - M innesota ,
Country &lt;;:lub.
; free agents were released on
Ford (11) .
000 000 1~ 1 6 1
The tall Texan was in a San Dgo
• waivers Wednesday by the
i la
022 020 20x- 8 12 0 Tronro
000 010 03o-- 4 10 3
group of six that carded a 3- PhShirley,
New England Patriots.
Sawyer (5) , Jones (7 } Kan Cit y
000 400 J(lx- 7 9 0
over-par 68 for third place on and Tenate ; Car lton and
Garvin, Vuckov ich OJ and
Also released by the
MCCarver . W- Carlton , 15-6. L Ashby ; Spllttorff, Bi r.d (8 ) and
the
6,583-yard
course
Patriots were tight end Mark
- Shlrtey , 6-13.
Wathan . W-Splittortf , 9·S LWednesday in a Pro-AM
Garvin, 7-12. HRs .Ka.ns_as
Seymour, quarterback Rudy
St .L
0020201~5120
City ~ Wh i te (4). Brett (10).
practice round.
McClinon, running ·back Levi
Atlanta
01 0 000 ()()()- 1 4 1
Jim Simons, who gained his
Rasmussen and Simmons ; (10 innings )
Jackson and center George
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP! ) - first lllur win this year ai New Ruthven.
Collins Cb}. Campbell Batt
opo 131 010 2- 8 .tO 1
Sergienko, aU free agents; The ·starting time of Sunday's
(7), Hargan (9) and Pocoroba . Oak
100 200 030 o-,. 6 10 2
wide
receivers
Kenny Boston-Oakland game has Or leans, scored a &gt;-under 66 W- Rasmu!lsen, 9.10. L - Ruth Fi= fanagan , D. Martinez (.4),
ven, 3-,8. HR-Atlanta, Mat - Drago (8), T. Martinez (8) and
Anderson and Tony Perry, -been shifted from 1:30 p.m. to for the day 's low. One stroke th
ews (12 1.
Skaggs, Rudolph ;
Langf9rd ,
behind
was
Wally
Armstrong,
· rilnning back CWford Martin, I p.m . to help ease the Red
Bair (51, Giust i (8), Lacey (9)
and _Newman, Hosley . w - T.
defensive end Dennis Fenton Sox' tight travel schedule the · a native of New London, (10 innings)
000 010 200 o- 3 7 0 Martrnez. 4-0. L - Lacey, 3-6.
Conn., who has yet to win a Chi
and offensive tackle Stan A's said Wednesday·. · '
Cinci
000 000 120 2- 5 9 1 HRs- Baltimore , Singleton (1 4) ,
tournament since he joined
R. Reuschel. Hernandel (7) E. Murray 2 { 18 ) ; Oakland.
Hillier , all rookies.
and Swisher ; Moskau . Billing . Armas ( 11).
the tour in 1973.
( 8). Borbon (10) and
Massengale was in a group ham
Plumm~r . W- Borbon , 1·4. L N Y.
100 000 011 - 3 9 0
with entertainer Sammy He~nandel , S-4. HRs-Chic ago, Calif
003 000 02x- 5 7 3
(3) . Cincinnari, Lum
d ry , Tidrow
(8)
and
Gui _
Davis Jr. who lends his.name SWISher
{3). Fos ter {36), Or-lessen (13) .
Munson
;
Ryan,
LaRoche
(8J
to the Jaycees charity event.
and Humphrey. W-Ryan , 15 -10.
Pttsbgh
000
ooo
~
o
9
1
Proceeds. go toward Jaycee
L - Guidry, 8-6. HRs - New
000 200 lOx- 3 6 0 York,_· Nettles (25); CaHfornia.
halfway houses for the Houstn
_Kison, Tekulve en and over ; Bonds {23 }.
.
N1ekro and Ferguson . wmentally retarded.
Boston
132 015 ()00-12 9 2
Peter Oosterhuis, also In Niekro, 7-3, l - K ison , 6-6.
Seattle
201 010 ~ ll 12 1
Amer'iun League
that group, was e~ger to start
; Stanle-y {61, CleveClev~
000 003 01o- 4 9 0 la.nPaxton
d (8l. Willoughby (9) and
the 72-hole event that Milw
200 001 l1 x- 7 10 2
F1sk.;
Segul (3).
concludes Sunday so that he
Bfbby , Dobson (6). Anderson Kek1Ch Wheelock,
(Sl. Romo (7) , Tallaso
Kendall
;
Haas,
(8)
and
Fosse,
could.return to his expectant McClure (6), Rodr iguez (7) and (9) and St inson. W- Paxton, 5·
L - Wheelock, 6-7. HRswife, Anne, and their 3-year· Moore . W-Rodriguez, 2-4. L -r-- 2.
Boston . ·· Rice 2 (29), Hobson
Dobson
,
3-10.
HR
-Cieveland,
old so n at their Santa
{21) , Scott {27), Carbo (11 ).
Carty (9) .
Barbara , Calif., home.
The
Canadian
Open
runnerup, who did not make ·
the cut in Philadelphia last
week , attributed his failure in
part to concern over his
home, threatened but later
saved by raging forest fires
nearby.
(Economy Gradel
"I was worried. You know,
Buddy Allin (fellow pro and
JUST
neighbor ) saved Il)Y house
and severa1 others with a
garden hose."
Oosterhuis said he wanted
to come home bot his wife
Cash &amp;
told him to remain.
Carry Price
Lee Trevino figures to be a
cootender for his ftrst tour
As wejve mark&amp;d down
victory si'nce last year's
special groups of ladies'
Colonial Classic. The former
s_portswear1 summer dresses
U.S. Canadian and British
and swim wear for the family .
Open champ is recovering
from a severe back problem
Check our $2.00 bargoin toble.
that kept him out for a large
While our Summer
part of th~ tour, but his play
has improved.
C I ear an c,e
Sa I e
Massengale won last year
continues.
with an !S-under-par 266, two
strokes ahead of second
placers J.C . Snead and
Memphis
Classic winner AJ
923 S.lrd Ave.
Middleport. 0.
Geiberger
.
992-2709or 992-6611
· Bruce Uetzke was gunning
Open: 7:00toS:OOMon. thru Fri .
for his third victory of the
7:00to3:oo Saturday
season and the $42,000 top
yancl
Open
tiiii:OO.
prize, eighth richest on the
tour.

'

r:$·

"Yes." she said .
Ms. Noske said the aUeged
fatal heating happened about
7:30p.m. M a ~'riday evening
an&lt;l that after taking some
relaxant medicine she and
Kotler went to bed in the
master bedroom while her
son's body remained in an
adjacent bedroom.
Pedwln soles wear long.
" He (Kutler) decided he
The
leather moves easy.
was going to have sex," said
Ms. Noske . "He said he was
Check out a pair.
sorry bot that he had II&gt; have
sex ."
asked
you?"
" Did
Nugent.
"Yes we did," replied Ms.
Noske.
. . Ms. Noske said· when she .
awoke the next day, Kutler
was talking on the telphone tn
his father and saying,
"There 's a problem, please
come over."
Asked Nugent, " Why was
his father coming over ?"
"To help tell us what to do
with the body," said Ms.
Noske.
She said Kutler told his
father he had " done
something awful - I heat
Arthw- to death ."
" You what?" Ms. Noske
recalled Kutler 's father. William, asking .
She said K . · replied,
" I've killed him."
COLOR:
Ms. Noske said she went to
look at Arthur's body again
BROWNand when she returned, " Stu
(Kutler) was lying with his
GRAIN
head on his 'father's lap and
crying and asking what he
· should do ."
Ms. Noske said it was
decided not to bury the body,
and "he (KuUer's father ) told
him to burn him (Arthur) in
the 'fireplace ."
The prosecution contends
that burning the body failed
and alleges Kutler then drove
the body away in his car to an
Middleport, 0.
undisclosed location.
le.a ther refers 10 up pen
To date, the boy's body has
not_
been
found.
_
__
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,"'!"

.

.

!'-The~ 11-n~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Alii(. 4 1m

son in front or your eyes?"

WEDNESDAY
'WINDING Trail Garden
Cub 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
home

of

Mrs. Jackie
For roll call
nwnberl to dllplay dried
-tariall. Ptog~an• will be
111 "Doach It Yourself'' and
B~ickles.

the IJT8nll8llleldl are to be
•'8ullrlle and Sunlet" featur-tnc nd and yellow Dowers.

...

WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S
CANVAS
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
(UP!) Gov. George
Wallace, in his first meeting
· with reporters since .it was
learned his lawyer has drawn
up a divorce petition, refused
to say whether the petition
wW be filed In court.
Wallace, asked about the
· matter We&lt;klesday at a shopping center ribbon-cutting
·ceremmy, at first said he did
not mderstand the question,
then added, "I think I
understood it." But he
refused to answer II.
Rellable ..urces have confirmed the petition was
authentic .and said Wallace
told hll lawyer he intends to
~· a

divorce. .

·

67~.,3~
TONI HOME WillE
(ientle &amp; Reijular

. ,.$1':63
SUMMER

hi~t 8~

OIL OF OlAY
BEAUTY LOTION

~-,_bd $2':'39

BANDAGESBRAND
•

Family

~ack

_
J..O"Oiasl!c Mig Lrsr $1 39

SOs

73

C

CEPACOL
MOUTHI'IISH

Women's and Men's

12az Mfg . LtSI $1 49

84c

BOAT SHOES
(White or Navy)

•3.50

8RECK SHAMPOO

sac_.

Dry. Nortnill &amp; Oily
7oz Ml~ li5151 .63 e1ch

I

ALL 'CHILDREN'S SANDALS
40% OFF REGUlAR PRICE

hertage OUSe

OF ~HOES

Open: Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30 to 5
Friday 9: 30 to 8
N. 2nd

sse . ".

MuHi rrtament, Be~~e . Taupe
&amp; Caflee , 3 PAIR PACK
Mf~ . Ust $1.49 pi1

SALE •5.00

Many styles for back-to-school
wear. Includes sandals, dress and
loafers.

40% OFF

Reg~ lar or Wrll'l Bo!lv
Sa2 Mig list Sl 55 eaCh

KNEE HI COMFORT
TOP HOSE

Includes sandals and dress shoes.
Values to sn.so

1 GROUP WOMEN SHOES

PRICE
MEN'S WHITE DRESS
SHOES ·

TAME CREAM RINSE

ptush'

.1 GROUP WOMEN'S SHOES

'12 PRICE
WALLACE WON'T SAY

Rent o BLUE LUSTRE shompooer
to get the SCtUDDing octioo vou
neeo to loosen ond 1ilt out
ground-in dirt and grime. And use
BWE WSTRE shompoo to get
your ca1pels bi~hl. cleon ond

'

VILLAGE PHARMACY
271 N. 2nd Ave.
601 5th Street

992-5759
882-2005

Middleport, 0.
New Haven, W.Va .

A

�11-'I'N• n..ilv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 4,

DANIEL F. GILMORE
their knowled~e .
WASHINGTON (UP!) "These Institutions, these
CIA Director Stansfield individuals, have a right to
Turner now is under know who they are and how
congressional pressure to and when they were used ."
idenli!y and Worm hundreds
Turner, who took over as
of institutions, professors, CIA director in February and
doctors and otheJ unw~tting was nol involved in the
subjects that they were "abhorrent" activities of the
''used" by the agency in S.me 195&lt;lo and ·~, said new
25 years of bizarre evidence gave the names .of
experimentation.
185
non.governrnent
Sen. Edward Kennedy, !). researchers and assistants
Mass., Wednesday told and 80 institutions, which, for
Turner during a dramatic , the most part, unknowingly
hearjng:
.
took part in mind and human
''The Central Intelligence behavior experiments on
Agency drugged American humans for the CIA.
·citizens
without their
"It is totally abhorrent to
knowledge or consent. It used me to think of using humans
university facilities and as guinea pigs/' Turner said,
personnel without their assuring the committee
knowledge. It funded leading "there is no experiment .going
researChers, often without on (now) in,any way."
But he opposed notifying
WET FEET
those involved, on the
.HOLLYWOOD (UP! ) grounds of " a\ . moral
While hundreds of "Star obligation
to
these
Wars " fans screamed in researchers and institutions
delighted approval, robots to protect them from any
R2D2 and C3PO entered the unjustified embarrassment
ranks of movie immortals, or damage to their
putting their footprints in the reputations, whiCh revelation
sidewalk outside the Ch.inese of their identities might
Theater .
bring ."
Anthon)l Daniels , the
In a 14-page statement,
British actor who played Turner disclosed new details
C3PO,
lurched
out of the CIA's Cold War era
Wednesday to dab the feet of exp.e riments designed to
h.is golden robot slilt in the counter Russian and Ch.inese
"brainwashlng" techniques.
cement.
Kenny Baker, the dwarf
The experiments included
who
manipulated
the • the
use
of
drugs ,
bleeping and squeaking little ele·ctroshock, poisons ,
R2D2 in the popular space chemicals and germs, both on
fihn, was in London, so 20th volunteers and unwitting
Century-Fox. dispatched one subjects, and the setting up in
of the remote-controlled New York and Sail Francisco
versions also used in the film. or "site houses" which were

· By

By Chel Tannehill
Any resemblance the railroad crossing at Hobson in lhe
road leading from Middleport to the SR 7 bypass has to one just
having been repaired is purely coincidental.
Late in August the County Highway Department
announced the rough , ha:r.ardous crossing would be repaired by
a crew from the PeM Central Railroad out of Coming. The
road would be closed to vehicles from Wednesday, until.
County Engineer Wesley Buehl said, probably the foUowing
Saturday (no more than three days ). The crossing had reached
such a stage of deter.ioration that any speed in excess of five
miles per hour In getting from one side t9 the other was an
exercise in dangerous living. And worse for your automobile .
The road in (!ue time was closed for the railroad crew to do
its work. It was closed the three days antiCipated and four
more besides. The .reopening of the road, however, 'Was a rude
.

.

If anything, the crossing today is worse for motor vehicles
than before its repair. ' · o
The railroad crew may have reduced the possibility of its
tra.ins "jumping" off the track at that point; better that it bad
provided some means for automobiles to jump across it!
About a month ago the State Highway Dept. had the rail
crossing near Oleshire repaired. In two days that crew
(whoever made it up, bless them) completed a beautiful job.
Before the Hobson crossing job was undertaken we
recommended the h.ighway department, all elae lacking, erect
signs warning motorists approaching from bOth directions of
impending danger . That advice was tongue-in-cheek, in part.
Weare forced to repeat that advice, not ·one bit of it tonguein-cheek. After a full week of work in ''repairing" the crossing
it is more dangerous by far than .before.
The repair appears to have been uncommonly botched.
The Ohio Farm Bureau maybe these days is having to eat
some of its own advice and, I'd guess, not liking the taste aU
that well.
The conservative-minded organization, which wheels and
deals for the more well-heeled fanner, according to its
standing image, has been a leader in promoting the return to a
more free kind of market for agricultural products.
"Let the market place determine production and price,"
we have heard down through the years of argwnents over farm
subsidies, crop restrictions, and market controls.
So listen to Wallace Hirschfeld, president of the Ohio
Farm Bureau Wednesday, according to the United Press
International:
·•Ohio farmers have escaped the drought but now are
suffering from an abundance of crops ...Throughout Ohio most
farmers avoided a severe drought but there is an over supply
of wheat and corn, not only in our state, but throughout the
world ...The prices for these commodities have virtuaUy been
cut in half from last season . Soybeans, wheat and corn have
dropped nearly $1 a bushel from last year's prices."
Hirschfeld continued:
"Because of the drop in prices, Ohio farmers are facing
financial troubles. We have been getting reports from farmers,
·bankers and farm leaders of default payment on loans.
Farmers just don't have the money to make payments. Bank!!
are not 'able to take the risk of additional defallits on loans
because of poor farm prices. While the new Federal Farm
Pl:ogram offers temporary financial assistance or support, it
does virtuaUy noth.ing to solve the problem."
Hirschfeld said the Farm Bureau Federation would call
for a set-aside program for wheat and possibly corn to get
these commodities more in line with supply and demand.
This behavior reminds me of the fellow who is always
demanding the government cut down Its spending. Spending
that helps the other guy, . that is, notthat helps him . For
example:
-Spending for darns in our system ol rivers where the
value return is questionable, but don't slow down our dam.
.-Spending for expensive, experimental military aircraft,
at cost plus, that may never be test flown, but don't $hut down
the plant in out state that wolild build them.
-Spending that would build 20 miles of new highW'IY in our
neighbor state but not three miles that would pass our front
door.
And ad finitum.

the

Whatever your baking
speciality, be it breads,
cakes, cookies or pies, there's
a class for displaying your ex·
pertise at the Meigs County
Fair, Aug.l:i-20.
·
The baking division was
one of several innovations to
last yearis fair displays and
the popularity with not only
the exhibitors but the
fairgoers prompted its conti·
nuance th.is year.
Mrs. Lucille Leifheit and
Mrs. Frances Goeglein.have
charge of the division. Baked
goods are to be exhibited on a
di s posable paper or
aluminum plate and wrapped
with a transparent covering.
For the cakes and pies the
rules permit the exhibitor to
take home three-fourths of
the product once the judging

LANCASTER, Oh.io - Four Newark; Lowell and .June
generations of the late Matlack, Stewart ; Carl and
William and Lydia Matlack of Louise Matlack, Reedsville ;
. Long Bottom, gathered at the Clair, Cookie and Jason
Rising Park here for their Cassady, Tuppers Plains ;
annual reunion Sunday.
Hardy and Kathleen Rausch
Attending were . Mrs . and
Chris
Frazee,
Joseph.ine McGhee, Marilyn Marysville; Mlllard . Brooks
and · Woodrow Robinson, of Columbus; Ray Waldon,
Woodstock, Va.; Everett and Coolville; Ralph and Marcia
Laura Matlack, Marion , Keller, Virgil and Betty
Ohio; Emile Matlack, Floyd Roush and grandson, Jeff
and Beth Matlack, Parkers· Roush, Pomeroy, and !\fury
burg, W. Va.; Kent and Beth Louise Morgan, Ravenswood,
Matlack and children, Erin W. Va.
and Aimee, Catlettsburg,
The 1978 reunion will be at
Ky.; Robert and Cheryl the same place on the last
Purdy and Laur~, ColUDJbUS; Sunday in July.
Charles and Louise Brooks,
Mansfield; Marion and Flo
Kim, ·Marietta ; Jack and . Egypt's Great Sphinx was
Madge Mulligan, David and created out of limestone and
·Betty 'Timmers, John and masonry around 2,900 B.C.
Patty Pacak, bncinnati;
John and Ethel Arbaugh,
Logan; John and Shirley
. Oar
0
Hasen and cbildren, Stirling
and Becky, Belleville, Mich.;
Lily and Donna Shultz,
Harold McClurg, chairman
Columbus; Leah Jean of the Community Mental
Hawkins , Worthington ;, Health and Mental Retar·
Harold and Iretta Parker and . dation " 648" Board, an·
children, David and Jhonda, · nounces that the board's ·
Coal Grove; Harley and offices have moved to the new
Jessie Aleshire, Ashley ; Comprehensive Mental
Olloie Ballard, Ray and Jean Health Center located on
O-wen, WesterviUe ; Don and · Routes35and160acrossfroni '
Virginia CampbeU, Foster Holzer Medical Center. The
and Freda Bean, Guysville; new telephone number is 446Nick and Lillian Basse and $525.
children, Kim , and Kitty,
The '~648~' Board is a
Columbus; Bruce and planning and funding boai.-d
Rosalie Humphrey and for mental health and mental
children, Alisa and Lon, retardaUon services and will

Summer

Rare is the bird who
donates his blood during
summer months.
By "bird" we mean people,
of course, and because people
are away on vacation, less
people are donating blood
during the summer. Blood·
related accidents, however,
tend to increase during these
swnmer months and more
hospitals are caUing Tri-State
Red Cross Blood Center for
blood. This .makes the blood
donor a very needed and
special species in this season.
Don't let a blood shortage
happen th.is summer. Before
taking off dn vacation, take a
few minutes to roll up your
sleeve and· share life with
others through the Red Cross
Blood Program . It's im·
portant because blood needs
never take a vacation.
Be a rare bird.

Son born to Finks
Mr. and Mrs. James M.
Fink, 269 Palmer St., Mid·
dleport, the former Vickie
Sutton, are announcing the
birth of their second child,
James Eli, on July 26 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Fink have
another son, Michael Eugene,
who will observe his fourth
birthday on Sept. 7.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Wallace, Route
2, Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Fink, RuUand.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Aldridge,
Pedro.
A family making ~.ooo
before taxes In 11160 needs
more than $10,000 IDday to
maintain the l18111e ltandard
of living, The Conference
Board report~.
)

MASON FURNITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp;

Sat. -8:30til5:00

TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

mtelligence term for a place
for interrogation or hiding of
defectors and cap lured spies,
but the CIA houses were
something else.
Kennedy , reading from still
classified documents, asked
Turner about two-way
mirrors used in residences.
" Yes, the construction was
done to put in two-way
mirrors," he replied.
There were also "rather
elabOrate decorations" in the
S_an FrancisL·o location,
Kennedy said, "of French

Social
Calendar
SATURDAY .
CHICKEN BARBECUE by
Mason Volunteer Fire
·Department, beginning 11 a.
m. Saturday .aJ station; haU ·
chicken, baked beans, cole
slaw and hot rolls. Delivery
number is 773-5832.

can·can dancers, floral
decoraUons and black silk
pants, red bedroom curtains,
recording devices . Your
agent caUed it "Operation
Midnight Cllinax.'
"Did you reach any conclu·
sions on what was going on
out there?'' Kennedy asked
amid general laughter.

NO sir," Turner replied,
'deadpan.
Ken ·nedy
drew
confirmation from another
CIA witn""" that prostitutes
were used in the safe bouses
to slip drugs to unsuspecting
Americans and foreigners
apparenUy lured to the
estabtishments. According to

•

Fer longer lasting
Paint Jobs Use Our

"SUPER
QUALITY"
•RED
•GREEN
•AWMINUM

••

3A\]]m(1

~ wrrm~
~

A&lt;IUUIII, 1877
Love 111tores1s will be strong for
you ti11S comlng year. T hev could
he with ties you tla11e already es"~ tat.JII ~!itd 01 VO\J could form a

:

Herman Grate

Mason •.W. V11.
I
~

,.. somethmg on wnic:n .,.ou 've ex.,, oen ti~d co ns•derab le thoug ht If
h
110u ao 11 now vou should
•.- actHt.Nt: ~alutary res ults . Find out
to whom yau ·te romantically
swteu bt sending lor vour copy
~ of Asiro-Gra ph Latter . Mall 50
.,.. cer1ts lor each and a .Jong, self·
~ ad(.lressed . st8mped envelope to
1'

VI RGO !Allg. 23·S•pt. 221

t

'

f
a:
f

&gt; PI!ICES (Fob. H·M- 21) Uf!'l
your creati vity In your work or
career today. thll could be a big
plus for you in fur1herlng your
dt eams.

:
•

!

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1tl
Heed your Imagination and

•

~

hunches today ln commercial
m a tt ers. There ' s a good
probability lhaf one of these
fa culties Will lead you 10 pay dirt.
TAURUS (Aprtl
10) II
there's someone who can do you
some good, it may benefit you to
treat the person· royalty IOday.
Prime the pump for a. Faster

t

•
•
:
•
:

•

211-_,.

~

!
._

•
•

Flow!
GEMINI (M•r 21·.1~nt'ft}
c ourtesy and consideration are

~

!

your passwords to sue~ In
business today. You might unex·
pectedly reap some lt1teresllng
favors in return.
. '

:

CANI;EA (Juoo 21 -.IUir 22)
There ere talkers ancl there are

"

t

"
•

Under the proposed com· graduall:r stiffen in i!ll!O and
promise, those '77 standards 1981.
The Ford Motor Co. began
were extended through 1978
building
1978 models last
and 1979 and then will
Monday, but bas been storing
the compact Ford Fairmonts
and Mercury Zephyrs until
a weekend with her parents, the new standards become
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill and law and the cara can legaUy
his mother, Mrs. Edna be shipped to dealers. The
Foster.
other three U.S. auto
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edison
Brace
companies begin '78 model
in the new riverfront
and
granddaughter,
Legina
output next Monday.
Renaissance. Center. The
Hart,
visited
Mrs.
Ortha
Chrysler said the future
Anniversary-year cars and
Brace
at
Parkersburg,
W.
emission
standards "go far
trucks will be introduced to
Va.,
Thursday,
JulY
28.
beyond
established·
need."
Ford dealers at Ford
Jim
Brace
and
son,
"
We.'
are
still
concerned
'
Auditorium, home ·of tlie
Michael,
of
Crown
City
spent
about
the
extreme
cost
and
Detroit Symphony Orchestra.
Among the models .the Saturday with h.is parents, fuel penalty of standards
dea lers wiU see are the new Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace. more stringent than required
Mrs. Douglas JohnSon and to protect health," Chrysler
small Fairmont car line and a
Gloria
Jean Manuel visited said in a statement. "These
redesigned Bronco four·
which
the
wheel-drive utility veh.icle. Mrs. Jack Adams Thursday standards,
conferees
agreed
to,
at
Utart
FaUs.
go
HiU also will see the 197&amp;Clarence
(Boone)
Adams
beyond
health
need;
will
model Ford LTD, Thunderbird, LTD II, Granada returned from Veterans unquestionably waste fuel
and will be an additional cost
and Pinto car lines at the Memorial Hospital.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bill
McKen.
z
ie
burden to the American
show.
and
family
of
Gallipolis
were
conswner.''
Public introduction of the
Statements from General
new Ford cars and trucks is · dinner guests Saturd;ly of Mr.
NEW
and
Mrs.
Roy
Riffle.
Motors President Elliott M.
plaMed for early October.
Friday evening, July 29, at Estes and William o. Bourke,
6 p. m. The Bertha M. Sayre Ford executive vice president
Missionary Society was for
North
A~erican
hosted by the Ruth· Circle automotive operations, were
with a picnic, held in the First consi derabl y more
Baptist Church basement due restrained, even though the
to rain. Twenty-two members proposed standards are more
and one guest were present. stringent than automakers
The meeting followed in the had been seeking.
By Mrs. Francia Morris
"Assuming the 1980 and
Mrs. Grace Roush has church sanctuary after the
returned
home
from delicious dinner which 1981-model standards are
Veterans Memorial Hospital opened by singing "Day Is
and is convalescing at her Dying in the West" . Mrs.
home after suffering a stroke. Lillian Hayman was at the
Mrs . Marie Roy has piano.· Mrs. Mary K. Yost,
returned
home
from president, was in charge of
Veterans Memorial Hospital. the business session and
Mrs. Ollie Mae Cozart reported on the Women's
spent a week at Camp Kirk· Conference at Grandville.
wood, Wilmington, Oh.io, as a Mrs. Nondus Hendricks, vice
counselor.
. president of Christian Ser·
Mr. and Mrs. Martin vice, presented the Love Gift
SUBURBAN COALMASTER
Wilcoxen and daughter, program, titled, "Love- The
Helen returned home from a Answer'' , scripture from
vacation trip to Niagara Romans, I Cor. and Isaiah.
FaUs, visted Mr. and Mrs. She bad a poem, "Twas a
Robert Hobbs in Raymond, Sheep, Not A j.amb". The
Maine ; toured thehome of offerings of the Circles,
H e nr y
Wa d sw o r t h presented by Frances
Longfellow in Portland ; Wilcoxen and Ollie Mae
REG. '349.95
Maine; visited Sturbridge Cozart, was . $152. Prayer of
Village in Massachusetts . Dedication was by Mrs.
Their son, Larry, who had Hendricks. Devotions by
been visiting the Hobbs Martha Lou Beegle, "Living
closed
the
family returned home with Proverbs"
meeting.
them.
Mrs. Joseph Foster and
ATH.LETE ' S FOOT GERM
Patty and Anthony of
HOW TO KILL IT .
Livonia, Mich., were guests
IN ONE HOUR,
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Str ohg , qu !ck-d ry ing T -4- L
itch' and burning or
Ralph Webb of Racine and Checks
wur 79c back at any drug
Mrs. Ed Foster at Pomeroy counter . Then , in l-5 days
from
Thursday · until watch -lnfec;te.d skin slough off.
Watch HEALTHY sk in a.P·
Tuesday.'
pear! ' NOW - at NE;LSON ' 5
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster DRUG STORE .
and family of Colwnblis spent

dean air rules prevented
automakers from shipping
1978-model cars that were
calibrated to 1977-model
standards.

&lt;toors. The doers •r• on your
side today. All you heve to do Is
stato your case.

Olessie System's 19 car
steam powered excursion
train will operate eight trips
In tl)e Southern Ohio area between Saturday, August 13
and Sunday, September 11.
The train is making an 8,000
mile, ten state tour of the
Chessle System to celebrate
the !5Ith Anniversary of the
founding of the nation's first
railroad, the Baltimore and
Ohio, wh.ich is a unit of
Chessie System. The train is
powered by former Reading
Railroad steam locomotive
2101, a heavy 4-3-4 type built
in 1946, which traveled widely ·
pulling
the
American
Freedom Train as AFT I. '
The 2101 will pull a 1!1-car
train consisting of modern air
conditioned coaches, old·
fashioned open window
coaches, a parlor car, and an
open platform observation
car. The train will also have a
snack car and a gift shop
from the B&amp;O Museum in
BaltimQre.
The eight area trips \Viii
include four based at Cln· ·
ciMati and four based at
Huntington, W. Va.
Saturday, August 13,
Cincinnati to North Vernon,
Ind. and return.
Sunday, August 14, Cln·
ciMati to Chillicothe, Ohio
and return.

~atu.rday,

August 20,
Cincinnati to Ashland, Ky.
and return.
Sunday, August 21, Cin·
ciMati to Huntington, W. Va.
ferry (one-way).
Saturday ,. August 27,
Huntington to Lexington, Ky .
and return.
Sunday, August 28, Hun·
tington to Hinton, W. Va. and
return.
Saturday, Sept. 10, Hun·
tington to Hinton, W.Va. and
return.
Sunday, Sept. 11, Hun·
tington to Clifton Forge, v,.
ferry (on~way) .
.
I!' ares for the regular 'lrlps
are $20 for adults and $18 for
ch.ildren (under 12), with a $2
reduction on both types for
the one-way ferry moves.
Adllitional information and
ticket order forms for the
Cincinnati based trips can be
obtained by writing : Steam
Special-Cincinnati Chapter
NRHS· P. 0 . Box 15441·
Cincinnati, Ohio 45215. In·
fo(IIIation and forms for the
Huntington based runs can be
obtained by writing Steam
Special, West Vlrgini.a
Railroad
Ma intenance
Authority, 922 Quarrier
Street (No. 422), Charleston,
W. Va. 253lll (phone 304-34110196 ).

Fl NAL CLEARANCE

--CONTINUESDRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON

MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

I

SHOES-

I

FALL SHOES ARRIVING DAILY

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

Racine
Events

BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. Main
Pomer?Y• 0 .

5 HP

HEATING STOVE
WITH BLOWER

SUMMER

GARDEN .
TILLER
REG. 1319.95

SUMMER

SALE

SALE

Point Rock News Notes
BY WANETI'A RADEKIN
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Turner
visited with theit Son and
daughter-in-Jaw, Mr . and .
Mrs. Larry Turner, Nancy
and Jaosn, Mt. Cory. On their
return trip they stopped at
Cardington to visit Miss
Clemma Vale.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. M. Rlfe
were in Gallipolis to consult
their doctors.
VIctor, Brian and Kent,
sons of Fred Morris, Newark,
have returned home after
spending sunmier vacaUon
with their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Morris.
Recent visitors at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Turner were Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Baehr, four chUdren,
Elgin, Ill., Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Turner, Somerset, Mr. · and
Mrs. Roger Turner and
children, Langsville, Don
Turner, Albany. Allee
Phillips and Warren G.
Turner also visited their ·
brother and slster·in·law and
attended church with.them on
Sunday !light. I
David Ne~n. Colwnbils,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Lavern
Peck and Mona Lee.
.
Mrs. Erma Nelson is
confined to Holzer Medical
Center, after undergoing
amputation of her limb.
Edlth Talbert, San Diego,
Calif. is visiting friends and
relatives in this area.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tur·

ner, Joan · 'wooten, local,
Roger Turner, Langsville,
Brent and Craig Bolin,
Rutland went bowling at
Mason,
va. Thursday.

w.

SALE STARTS FRIDAY, AUGUST 5 AT 9:00. ENDS MONDAY; AUGUST 8TH AT 5:00
,_.

BELOW ARE JUST A FEW OF THE
J
MANY ITEMS ON SALE
.. ~
*"'*'~*,;c**"''*~·*,;c**"''*'•*'..***************************~
SELECTED GROUP

MEN'S SUITS
&amp; SPORT COATS

h PRICE

1

MEN'S

LONG SLEEVE
DRESS AND
SPORT SHIRTS .
VALUES TO 116.98

~

••
••
•••
•
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"•
••

MEN'S

•
•
••

....

DBREAKERS

•

•••"

REG. 110.98 TO

s
•

35.00

1

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:•

OPEN

••

••
'•..
•

•
•
•'

•••
•"

'

.'
'
'

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'•

................~.............~_.,....,..........,...·...........................,......J
:,'

-

~

STOP BY AND CHECK ·
OUR LOW PRICES

GENERAL TIRE SALES

•
'j ~
\:J!!:7
!!::-

FRIDAY

SPECIALS

~

••

'

in

pe rlicular ·you 18$1you' d btl! lucky
at It you tried it today . You might
b~ justllied in giving It a go .

·t

c

t

som~lhlng

There coul d be

"

.... ~
c
z

.·

'

~

Theru·s someone distant who
~
has been on vour mind . Call II at
all poss•ble, even if only to tell her
vuu •e thinkmg of !her.
i- LI BRA (Sept 23-0ct. 21) lt ·you
~ mu st choose between doing
ouslness with a new firm for a
.- lower pnce or with one whos~
.. rnents you know. pick the known
• ·~u~ ntity toda y.
:
S C ORPIO (Oct. 24-JIOY. 22)
,.. S•watioos mvolvlng a partner
~ sho•Jid be ver; fortunate f or you
,. toMy . There is both strength
'1fld benef•ts in unity.
: SAGITTARIU 8 (No•. 2a.Doc.
.. 21) Give a pot on the back to
~ DOOple who are doing things for
• vou today. ExpressiOn of ap·
If' oreciatlon could spur them to
~
oerlorm even better.
~ C APR ICORN (Doc. 22-.18n. Ill
~ Tty to enjo~ yourself today. Don't
~
take yourselt or otnars too
r seriously and make light of what
• ordinarily c~uld be dark spots.
, AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fell. 11)

-....

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sign.

:

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-·~~::~~~~---.J ~.~

.,
"1

.

I

Asl ro-~raot:

P.O. BoK 4B9.
~ RadiO l:liv StaliOrl. N. V. 10019.
• Be sure to specify your birth
p;l

....c

352 E. Molin, Pomeroy

new lra•son
LEO (Julr 2a·AUII. 22) Today's
th t! (!av for ac t ,nq upo n

110

Detroit for the first time in 18
years and are part of Ford
Motor Company's 75th. An·
niversary observance. The
&lt;;ompany was founded by
Henry Ford on June 16, 1903.
In the Motor City, Hill and
other Ford dealers and their
wives wiU stay at the 73-story
Detroit Plaza ·Hotel, located

Otessie System train
will tour in region

•

.,....

PH. 992-2644

Patrick Hill, manager of
Ford, Inc., In
MiddlePOrt;' will join hun·
dreds of other Ford dealers
on August 18 traveling to a
. special preview showin8 of
the 1978-model cars and
trucks in Detroit.
The five national dealer
shows are being held in
Da.r"F~tompson

• For Frkf1y, Auglllt 5, 1177

•

All agreed the tailpipe
emissioo law, still to be voted
on by the full Congress, has
ended the threat of a massive
industrywide shutdown, The

Hill· will preview new Ford line .

.... Be'r nice Bede Osol

THE RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

•

compromise legislation,"
said Fraser, whoae unioo 's
earlier compromise plan bad
been embraced by Detroit
automakers.

ASTR0·6RAPH

EBERSBACH.·HARDWARE

Charles D. Yost - Directors

'

By EDWARDS. LECH'l'ZIN
UPI Auto Wriltr
DETROIT (UP! ) - Detroit
automakera now bave a
reasonable clean air goal and
should never again ask
Congr-es5 to weaken or
postpooe tailpipe standards,
United
Auto Workers
President Douglas A. Fraser
· said.
Automakers generally ex·
pressed relief Wednesday
U1at a compromise on new
dean air legislation had been
reached but Chrysler Corp.
said the measlire went too iar
Wid would add to the cost of
American cars.
Michigan's two senators
called it a "workable
aolution."
"Now that this reasonable
agreement has been reached,
we would hope lhe companies
never Rgain wolild go to
CongreSS' seeking to postpone
or weaken these clean air
standards," Fraser said.
"'Ille car makers now have
the extension they need. for
continued production .
"It will be up to them to
meet those standards of the

•

SUNDAY
MEN'S FeUowship, Meigs
County Olurches of Olrist
family potluck summer 5 p.
m. Sunday at Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly campGALVA-GUARD PAI"T5
grounds. Services at 2 p.m.,
supper at 5 p. m.
Extremely durable p ur~t etkyd paints
formulated tor maximum gloss
53RD ANNUAL Hayes·
retention and weather rul,stenc:e .
Young and HoUiday School
Excellent for metal roots, buildings,
wood trim , ·· shutt•rs. lawn fvrntturl! ,
reunion combined Sunday. at
and equl"ment . Prime new galvanized
old Holliday School grounds
surfaces with SP-1361 _ Vlnyi - Z i n ~
wh.ich are now the residence ·
Chromat~ Meta l Conditioner ; badly
rusted surfaces with No: U -A Red Lead
of Mr. and Mrs. Garold
Pr imer .
Hayes. A picnic lunch will be
Spread rate approximately 500 square
served at noon with program
feel per gallon , depend ing on surface
and games to follow .
condition .
Everyone welcome.
ANNUAL WEBER family
reunion, Sunday, at Belleville
Locks and Dam, Reedsville ;
SHOP OUR COMPLETE PAINT DEPARTMENT
has been completed leaving basket dinner at noon.
the remaining one-fourth on Famili~.s bring own table
display for the remainder of service.
the fair.
THE MARTIN and Emma
Entries must be registered Sayre reunion will be held
either Aug. II or 12 from 9.a.m Sunday at the' Shriners Park
to 4 p.m . at the secretary's of· In Racine.
PH; 992-2811
!ice on the fairgrounds. En·
ANNUAL Theodore Smith
tries must he in place on Aug. family reunion, Sunday, at
110 W. MAIN
POMEROY
16 before noon and cannot be park South of Logan on Route
removed from exhibit until 93. Basket dinner at noon.
after 4 o.m. on Aug. 20, the
closinq day of the fair.Ex·
hibitors are permitted only
one exhibit in each class and
mUst hold a fair membership
ticket to enter. ·
.
REPORT OF CONDITION
Premiums of $1.50 fo~ first,
$1 for second, and 75 cents for
th.ird will be awarded in each
Consolidating domestic sulisidiaries of the '
class.
Classes iii the bread clivi·
sion are loaf of whole wheat
bread, loaf of white bread,
banana nut bread, baking
powder biscuits with three on
in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1977 published in response to call
a plate, muffins, whole wheat
made by ComptroUer of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
or bran with three on a plate,
and yeast rolls, three on a
Charter number 9815 .
National Bank Region Number 4
plate.
In the division for cakes the
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Thousands
classes are angel food not ic·
ed, butter cake with yellow·
Cash and due from banks .............. ·.... ... : . . . . , .. , .. , . , .. .... . .... ..... , . ... 559
while frosting, butter cake
U.S. Treasury securities .............. .. ....... ;., .. .. , ......................... 1,661
with choeolate frosting, ch.if·
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't. agencies and corps. . ............. , .................. 11
fon , banana cake, coconut
Obligations of States and politicaisubd.ivisions .......... .. , . ., .' ..•................. 308
with white batter, ·coconut
FederalReservestoekandcorporatestock ... .. .. : ... , .. ... . ..... . . .. . . ............. 8
with yellow batter, devils r
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ........................ . . 6,398
food, pound cake, decorated
Less: Reserve fm' possible loan losses .............. ,. : . .... . , . , , . , . , , . 112
cake, chocolate cake, loaf
Loans, Net ...................... .. .. .... . .. .... .. ...... . .. ... ............. . 6,306
cake, and a class for other
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
kinds of cakes.
other assets representing bank premises ............... , ....... ... , ..... ... ..... 137
Cookie classes, and six are
Other assets ........... . . ..... ..... .. ....... ... ......... , .. ... ......... ... . : . . ... 6
to be exhibited in each entry,
- - + - , TOTAL ASSETS ...............................................................8,996
are brownies, chocolate chip,
ginersnaps, pl~in drop·,Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps........... , . , ...... ...... .... 1,740
molasses and ice box cookies.
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
.
·
The classes for pies are ap.
prtnshps., and corps ............ ... ........ : .. : ......... ..... ................ 5,594
ple, cherry, coconut, custafd,
Deposits of United States Govenunent ... .... .... . .. .. . .................... , .... : , . 29
chocolate, lemon, pecan, ·
!:
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ... . ........... ... ............... :, . .. . 845
peach, pumpkin, raisin, and
Certified and officers' checks ............................ ,. , ...................... 51
mince.
111:1
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS ........... . ............. : ..... .. .. . .. ......... . 8,259
Total demand deposits .. . ......................................... 2,354
Total time and savings deposits ......................... . ..... . .... 5,905
Total Deposits in Domestic and Foreign Offices . .. ................................ 8,259
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures .......... .... . . 8,259
Conunon stock: .
·
'
continue to coordinate ser·
vices within the new Menta.!
a. No. shares authorized 5,000
Health Center and with tbe • &gt;b. No. shares outstanding 5,000
(par value) ....... ......... ..... .. ... . : . .... . . . 125
!:ISurplus .............................. , ... . .... . ... ... ... •. ..... .. .. ..... , ..... 125
Center Board.
;:,Maxine S. Plummer,
Undivided profits ........ . ... . ............... . .... : . , , ....... , ............. .. .. 486
OD.
''
Executive Director of · the
Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves .. ........... ..................... 1
l)oard, said the new facility
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ........... , .......... . ............ ..... ... .. . . .. .... , 736
'
wiU provide the most com·
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .............. ... ................. 8,996
'
prehensive mental health
Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with caU date:
·
•
Q
treatment in Oh.io. The "648"
· Cash and due from banks ... .................. : .. ......... .. ....... . ........... 588
'
Board also has offices in the
Totalloans. ,.: .......................... ..... ...... .... ..... . ......... , .. : . . 6,267
'
B. J. Allison Health Center in
Total deposits ............... , , , ••.. , . ... , .... . ..... .. ... . ... .'........ , .. . .. 8,2:i:4
I
' '
Jackson and in the Meigs·
TOTALASSE'J'S,. ...... . ,-................................. .. ............ , ... ... 9,779
1111
'
County Mental Health Center
'
0
'
I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-named bank do
in Pomeroy.
~
'••
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and cor·
Mrs. Plummer stated that
I
rect to the ~t of my knowledge and belief.
there will be an official
~
'
JohnT. Wolfe
dedication of the GaUipoUs
'
,
July29, um
facility In October.
•
'
. We, the undersigned diredors attest the correctness of this statement of resources imd
'
.Your
--·--------~
II
"Exira Touch''
[
liabilities. We declare that it has.been examined by us, and to the best of our knoWledge and
I
· · .
belief is true and correct. . .
•
:~
Freeland S. Norris
'

5i::!

finaUy approved, we will Bourke.
Estes said the challenge
make every effort to meet
them oo schedule and again "now is to meet the requirewith as litUe impact on me!)ls with cars Jl'hich serve
vehicle price and fuel the wants and needa of our
efficiency as we can," said customers."

Automakers have their needed air standards

other documents, they
apparently were paid $100 a
trick and were billed as
"informers.''
And a sleight of hand
ma~iclan apparently was
h.ired to teach how, as Turner
phrased it, "ID pot the Mickey
in the Finn" without being
discovered.

ROOF PAINT

Ear! Cross

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

"Stlfe hoUSt! " is the usual

d ££iCe moved

648 b

THU~SDAY

upcn for e1ght years.

11

Baking contest to be
featured at Meigs Fair

Matlack family reunion held

Rare birds
needed in

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thlll'Sdlly,Aug.4, 1977

Pressure on CIA's Turner to tell all names

the day after

come-down.

1977

NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT. OHI045760
PHONE: 992·7161 .

'

NEW YORK
CLOTHING
HOUSE
"KERM'S KORNER"

�t-The Daily g..,.tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 4. 1977

1$ Word:s lll' U!Mkr
a~~t'l(t'

""""

I day

. .,

1.0&lt;)

,...,.

115

1...

3do)~

1.80

Each wurd. Oft!'

1.;15
3.7&amp;

'·"'

u~e allHmnwn

n

_wurds is 4 l'l"nt.S per wurd per day.
Ad:J NAI~ ~ ll..an t.'UI5tll'U( IV~
days wlll be chlrt~ed Ill tht• l day

.,....

In 111tmory, Canlli TI\ilrllo ~nd
Obituary: S 1.-ent.s per wurd, SJ,OO
m111Unum ,C¥Sh m l*dvalk.'e.

·Mobile Ho1ne ,sak!.;~nJ Yal'f.l

~)I;!S

lire III Cf.~ only With t:'d:ih With

ror

!'f"der. 2;lt-ent ..:harge
ads l'all'l';.·
u~ Bw; Nwll~r In Cart&gt; uf'The&amp;ntin~

The Publisher rescrvt$ the

ri~ht

tu ~t or re]rt1. any Kds dt•t'llll.-11 tJb.
jeclional. Ttw Pubhslh!r w1U 1101. l,li;!

n!spurLo.;ible rm· 1rurl' than Uhl' meorret1 insertwn.
PhOill' 992-2156

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
1\R&gt;Wlay
thru Friday
4P.M.
the t.lay bt:fure pul.ihcalLuu
Sww:l.a)'

4P.M.
Friday afiA!moon

D &amp; J's HOUSE of Fobnc Clearance
Sola , f'low thru August 3, T-

Shirl knits . reg. $1.98 yard,
now 89' . T-Sh1rt Kmfs Reg .
$2.49 now, $ 1.69 yrd. All our
1st Quality poly, knits reduced
price one table poly knits ,
$1.00 yard. 0 &amp; J 's Fabnc, 1
mile south of Middleport on
State Rt . 7.
---- ~~~~----­
NO HUNTING on Smith pmperties
on Sm1th Rood and Bunker Hill
without
Sm1th
it"

NOW TAKING Applications for :
truck driver (mus t be experienced): service ~lotion at·
tendont . heating and o.c.
repairman, general labor . ~­
plicotions will be token at of·
lice between 8 :30 and .t :JO,
Monday thru Fr~day. Must wont
pet'monent job. Many fringe
benefits. Please apply in person. inteNiews arrong&amp;d later.
Pomeroy landmark , East Main
St ., Pomeroy.

WOMAN NEEDED to stay with me
in my home. Phone 992-5978 ,
MANAGER NEEDED. Must be neat
and 1-!ove high schooldiploma.
To work with figures , s.u~rvise
employees , learn then direct
advertising and merchondi1.ing .
training
lmmediota

·~~~l:r~·~~!~ IGood
b
for

wages
and
interview,
8:30-.t .OO. An

EXCAVATING, BACKHOE. dozer .
trencher, low Boy, dump truck
trucks. septic systems. Bill
Pullins, phone 992-2478 day or
night.
IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT.
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10

THE

MATTER

SETTLEMENT

OF

OF

AC ·

COUNTS.
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,

OHIO

.,

Accounts and vouchers of
the
follow ing
named
fiduciaries have been filed in
the Probate Court, Meigs
_, County, Ohio for approval
· and settlement:
CASE NO
21056 Final
' Account of Donna Young,
Guardian of Teresa Riffle
CASE NO . 22058 First and
--. Final Account pf Mary s.
Roush , 6,)1(ecutrix of the Last
•, Will and Testament ot Virg il
E. Roush, Deceased
CASE NO . 20199 Seventh
and F ina I Account as con .
,~ cerns Gloria M . Sturgeon and
.. • Seventh Annua I Account of
paul 0 , Sturgeon , Guardian
of Kathleen
K. Sturgeon.
John D Sturgeon, Paul w.
Sturgeon.
Dwight
E.
Sturgeon, and Mary L.
Sturgeon.
'1
Unless exceptions are f iled
thereto, said accounts will be
for hearing' before said Court
on the 2nd da v of September ,
,.. 1977; at wh ich time said
.. · accounts w ill be considered
· and continued from day to
.day until f Fnaily disposed of.
·f
Any person Interested may
file writt ne exceptions to said
accounts or to matters
~ perta i ning to the execution of
• the trust. not less than Jive
· days prior to the date set for
hear ing .

.·

Manntng

(8)

o. Webster
JUDGE

Common Pleas court
Probate 0 iv lslon
Meigs Countv, Oh io
.t, l,tc

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

The board of education of
• the Meigs Local School
District des ires to receive
seated bids for the following :
1. Milk and Oairy: Products
2. Bread and
Bakery
Products
3. , Gasoline , 011 , and An·
tifreeze
4, Fuel Oil
5. Coal - Analysis required
6 . Tires and Tubes
7. Produce , Ory Goods .
~8.
Mea1 which Includes
hamburger, hamburger
patties, hotdogs , bacon,
rolled lunchmeat, cheese.
In order to be considered,
ail sealed bfds shall be
received In the Off 1ce of the
Clerk , South Third Avenue,
Middleport , Ohio on or before
12 :00 noon on August 15 , 1977,
The board of education
reserves the right to ac:cept
or reject any pr all bids .
Jane Wagner
Clerk Treasurer
Meigs Local
School DlsfTict
Soutn Third Avenut

Mldd/oport, Ohio

&lt;n

~· U Ill 4, IJ; 41c

t"orRent

Wantedto.Buy
CASH pa1d for oil mokas and IF YOU hove o service to after,
models ol mOOile homes, ' wont to buy or sell something,
o. look ing tor work . . . or
Phone areocodebl4 -4123·9531
whatever . , . you'll get results
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
fo~ler wit t! a Sentinel Wont Ad.
duch . Top price for standing
Call 992-7156.
sowtim_ber. Coli 992-5965 or
GARAGE SALE . August .ti, S,(&gt; from
t&lt;en1 Hanby, l -o4o46·8570.
9 om to S pm . loco led on BradCOINS . CURRENCY. roken5, akl
bury Rood btltwHn Route 7 ond
pocket wotche.s and chains,
the crossroads . Re-cord player,
silve r and gold . We need 1 ~
misc. iretns . maple bedroom
and older silver coins . Buy , sell ,
suite.
or trode~ Call Roger Wom51ey ,
TWO FAMILY yard sole kM!hind
742·2331 '
Country Cousins. Glassware,
OLD FURNITURE , •ce boxes., brcu
chlldr~ ·s dot,lng. n~t~rt~!!rOU$
· beds ,
etc 3 ,
complete
d1. and ends, and other
household5 . Wrile M . 0 Miller, ~ clothing.. Starting ct 9 Sot.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh1o or coli
EIGHT FAMILY Basement sole.
992-776/J.
Pool table. radios , dishes, odds
CASH! I. Junk cars, F.-y 's Truck &amp;
and ends, clothing of o/1 sizes·,
Auto, Rutland. Phone 7412-2081
misc. items Thurs., Fri., ond
or 742-9575. Closed Mondays .
Sat., lOom to 6 pm. 413 Spring
Ave ., Pomeroy . Parking 1n
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small.
front
and bock.
Will buy I piece or comphue ~household, New, used . or onti· YARD SALE . 8~ South lrd . Ave ..
ques. Marti n's Furn iture, 20 N,
Middleport. Wed ., Thurs .. and
2nd St ., M1ddleport , Phone
Fri.
ljl92-6370.
·=-c~c-:-~----:--c-:-YARD SALE . Aug . .t, 5, 6 . Swon
ond lyons , State Route 7, Tup·
pers Plains . Electnc motor and
fon for tuel oil furnace , electric
Moytog motor, oduh and
children 's clothing, · antiques ,
and miK items . Not responsi ·
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
ble for any accidents .
Indoor-Outdoor runs , grooming
oil breeds , dean sanitary CARPORT SALE . next to State
Highway Garage, :J FomiJy .
facilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire,
Throw rugs , children's clothes .
Phone (61~ ) 367-02'12.
mc-nocks. dish&amp;s , 10 till 5,
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell, trode
Thursday and Friday, August .(
or train horses. RUTH REEVES .
&amp; 5.
tra iner. Phone (614) 698-3290 .
FOUR FAMILY Porch Sol•. Thurs. ,
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs .
Fri . ond Sat. 9 o.m . till &lt;1 p m .
(Mm .) Collies, 2 females , 7
lodFes ', man's and teens
weeks old. Shots and wormed .
clothing . Motorcycle helmet .
Phone (614 ) 367-0292 or
and many otber items. 553
367·7112.
South 4th Ave., Middleport.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society YARD SALE at the Tom Grueser
Animal Coraline, 992-7680, or
residence, 1625 lincoln Hts ,
ofterbp. m ., 992-5427.
Thurs., Fri ., and Sot. Children 's
and adult clothing. Misc. items.
WHITE CAT , 2 mo . old. ond 2 yr .
old beagle' mole, to give oway . FOUR FAMIL '1 Yard Sole, Thurs .
Coii992·SA86.
Fri. ond Sot, or the Dorsal Ran dolph residence Turn on SR 248
WANT GOOD HOME for .t yr.
at Chester·go 4 miles, turn
English Setter. female, good
right on CR CR 28. Keno·Bashan
watch dog . loves children.·
Rood . Fourth house on right.
Phone 992-6034 .
Nice clothes and m1sc. 9 untill
WANT GOOD Home, Collie and
6 . Wotch for signs. Coil
B1rd mn~: , male. likes children,
985·3567.
good watch do~ . Phone
BIG
YARD Sole, August o4, 5. &amp;
992·2502.
6th. Gas range, portable
CHAR-MI BEEGLES presents At&lt;C
dishwasher. MICe clothing, lots
Beegle
Srud
Service
ol glassware, tent, 1975
Guaranteed , $25. Hove litter of
Kowosoki. Sl Rt. 12o4, I mile
young pups now. $10 will book
post high school. Cecil Brinoger
yours . 20 years experi&amp;nce
residence .
breeding hunting Beegles .
VARO SALE, Rt. 7 just posl
M1ke Kincaid, (61.4) 667 ·6-ll.t
Beacon . August o4 &amp; 5
AKC RED Irish Setter . 6 me old.
YARD SALE. M1sc. 6th Street
$50 Coli 992.7073
Syracuse , Ohio. McCoy and
Chopmon. August o4th and 5th ,
9to3 .

----

----

NOTICE

IN

r~~TiiLEViSiON"-'1
{ VIEWlNG
Ill

Let The Want·Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
1day&amp;

.

BICYCLE SAFETY FLAGS by MEIGS
JAYCEES . Contoct J . T. Rue.
992·2396 or Charles Wayland ,

992·3912 .
BROWN AND WHITE riding horse ,
safe for children . Phone (6lo4)

667·3A05.

'liARD SALE , Fn. and Sat , from
qom lo 6pm ot 527 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport . Portable T.)l, ;
table lamps, Polotoid camera,
Knick-knacks, clothing ond
much more.

(614)·698·3290,

RING-NECK phaosonts Mrs Chf ford Leifheit. Rt . 33. four-lone .
Rock Springs , Pomeroy , Ohio.
ONE GOOD gas hot water heater .

Coli 992·5501 .

,cAs£ U)J

GARAGE SALE , Top of Union
Ave ., Pomero~ . Fri. ond Sat., 9

to e. ::ccc:--,-c::-c:- - : - - - YARD SALE. 155 Pearl Street 1n
Middleport, Fri. and Sal.

5 FAMIL'f 'fARO Sole, Fndoy and
Saturday. 16n lincoln Hgts.,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

1970 MUSTANG MACH 1. com·
plete rebuilt engine, less thon

500 mil~s. Point job. I year old.
Also ports for o 351 -289
engines . All for $350. · Colt
985-41110 after 5:00 p.IT\.

1970

CHRYSLE~ 300 Sport Model.
Slick shill on floor , e~ecellent
condition. Phone 992-5323.

CHEVROLET IMPALA , 1973, in Ex·
cellent condition. low Mileage.

Call 992-53A8.

GARAGE SALE, SAT. and Sun.,
6th and 7th. :Z miles sm1th pf
Mid~laport on ~torys.Run Rood'. o..~STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sole
Anhques, clolh1ng, d1shes. etc.
on mini-melon. trailers , oncl
YARD SALE at the Jean Stout
folddowns. Trovelstor 25 ft .
residence on College Rood in
$«00 .00; 20 ft. mini-motor
Syracus.e. Fr1. ond Sot., storting
$10,850.00 . We sell service and
at 9.
quality. Camp Conley Storcroft
Soles. Rt . 62 north of Pl . Plea·
YARD SALE at Jean Stout
san I.
residence , College Rood ,
Syracuse, Friday and Saturday, JAYCO CAMPING Trailers.
custom mode SWISS COlONY,
10 till?
small tandems Maple t.eaf,
YARD SALE at the Rebert Sisson
CODNER"S CAMPERS. Sales.
residence, Solem Street, in
Rental , Service. Suppli•s:
Rutland . Winter coots. tools,
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bashon.
misc. items, and childriin's ,
Owner Robert Codner, long
women 's and men's clothing .
GARAGE SALE· Roin or Shine. Fri .
and Sat. Aug, Srh and 6th , q om
until 6 pm ., ot Mrs . Allen
Brewer'&amp;, Stiversville, Portland·
Boshan Rood . Turn an Grovel
Road at foot of Stiversv1lle Hill .
First house on left. Watch lor
signs.

RUMMAGf SALE ' sponsored by
Boy Scout Troop :Z.C9, Fri. ond
Sot . Old Sr. High Auditorium,
Pomeroy.

YARD SALE
TOYS-lOYS-lUYS
to pertect

All~-,.

gMt~-

condition.
Great
for
Christmu. Also roii-IMtds, .
small dlnetlo sot, curved
top trunk, old rof.rlgorlfor
good for NHmtnl or Cln\p

site. Costume l•welry,
some misses, Jr. and
women's ciDthes . L1rge
amount children's school
clothes. From colts to
ponh, IISII toddlers. Vory
good btby furnHuro. Go
tour tonfll Df a mi'- norfllof
Five Polnh. Yellow " - •
signs. 992-J215.
~_

AIIIIISt 5, 6, 7;'
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

-

t'leaters . Replacement ports ·
chimneys , mantles . wicks ,
etc. Stop in for demonstration
and free cotalog. Mocmtoin
Lec•her ond General store,

$138 per . mo. Equal Hou11ng
Phone 992-7598.

Lcoded, with .ww tires and in

..., vooc1 condUton. C.B. d;0 ••
'"'· Col/992-3517.

TOTAl GAS mobile home. 12 111 I b
wilh expondo room. Phone
FOUR ROOM furnished opt, Close
(614)·667-6220.
to Powell's Super Market.

Phone '192·:1658.
TWO 8EDI!OOM. I )\ both irlolllt.
home for
Refer•nc•

r.nt
and

in Racine.
Oepositre•

---

742·3186 or 742·3122.

SOil[NlR 1
:Let Pomeroy ·londmark
soften &amp; condHion your·
water and • Co-op w1ter
~Honer, - 1 UC-XVI.
wow Onh

.......n

AIIH'IISHEI!IWO ,_, elfot*'q "ut

opt. ~ facllltlto and
&amp;howe&lt;.. Suitoble lor one.
-~t;/;tles po~,.c:..n ~573!, __
NEAR DEXTER. 12"". x 60"" mob;Je
llome ,SaiiJ92;.s sr.· __

......

NFFD 1\. WA!IH

qulrod . Co/19~9·2722
3 bedroom mobile home located
in country near Horritonvill•nn
St. Rt. 143. Beautiful location
wilh Iorge yard and garden ,
Depotlt required . Phone

-- -

'279.95

lllf .,.., . . .

. PomiRIJ t..andmarll
~ JocM W. &lt;;ority; Mgr.
Pltont m-211t

~22·1

DUGAN'S

m'i"t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

TYMPE

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

, ,,., ., .... t - . , . 1 - ........ -

...

23

CHANNEL PIERCE S1mpson
Beorcot CB desk model; dock, 3
element beam , 80 lt. Coo~e ,

·CARTER'S

S230. Phone '192·5875.

PLUMBING &amp;

TREE RIPENED Peoches . white or
yellow starting Monday ,
August 1 at Mason P.each Or.
_s'2_ord:_·'-::-:-:c--c-:---:---:6 FT. HANDMADE solid oak porch
swjng . Phone 992-5154.

IOCINE CARPET
SHOP mo.
~16-1

JOOMalnSt.

Phone 992-6282

tSTYJUL , .

'

is&gt;IORE WHERf A BOAT

="'
l'l'f'llf

tUt lam!

•=:, .......

to ,.wy
torltw
li ......
Moot,._,..,.
-"""'"""
.....
1
~bait • SI:L ~ttz.
for a'-1
tree
aUml&amp;e or •"P
E. ltiUI SL,

u•

.-.-------....-, r

MO•Imo.

su.ao Discount

I Good McCullough Chain
s.aw
165
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
S.aw
SSG
1 Good Used Unico

uo.oo

Dryer

Electric Trim-All. culs
with nylon
12t.t5
( 1l Good Rtfrlgerator S200

Pomero, Landmark

9tllil
.. _JackPhone
w. Carsey, Mgr.
992-1181

1975 AllEN 2 bedroom, front liv.
ing room with foc:to.-y Installed
woodburning fireplace. 1975
Hillcrest, 2 bedroom, total
elec. ,like new. 1970 Hometle 2
bedroom . We also have o clean
8 X- 35 for that second hom• or
the riverbank. See these homes
at Kingsbury Home Soles . 1100
E. Main St. Pomef"oy. OH.

STOAV 3 bedroom frome
house, F. A. fUrnace , storm windows, fireplace in Middleport.

2.

BEAT THE ·cptt of a Realtor! 3
bedroom, 2'(1 baths, bi· l•vel
with oil edros on ocrelot. Nice
drive to Power Ptont$, $.43,000.

Phone (614) '192-2492.
HOUSE FOR sole , 6 rooms and
both, 1/tocre, lot fruit trftt,
ahrubbery, 3 bedroonu: built-in
brick cabinets In kitchen , utility
room with storoge, wall-lo·wafl
carpet in living room. Carport.

Aboul 15 yrs. old. Well kept.
good condition,

fOod

tocotlon .

Close lo school. CAll for op·
polntment, 992·32CN.

HOUSE fOil

solo (cheap) 3
bedrooms. fireplace, 2 cor
garage, palio1 fully corpeted
with 1 acre lot. Rutland. Colt

742·2988=. -.....,.,:---:-::-:ONE &amp; y, ocret with mobil• home
on river in Pt. Pl.ascnt, w. Vo.

Photle 992-526-1.

ilf.'ll. ESTATE for - · 19 ouoo

w-2210.,
""" ' - ____
and_.•
1'170 MOBILE Home In

- · Call

s;;;.;

12 ' 60' Hillc,...t, all el~trlc in
exc•llent condition. Asking
. pr;co S5~., Coli 992·7_642.

l

l.II)SeC:D
~DW.D!
l()U \JIJST

~hone

992·3457.

2 NEW 3 BEDROOM Houses for
tole. One with 2 car gorage.
one Wtth recre&lt;:~tion room , LH
Construction , 992·345o4 or

992·5-&lt;55 ,
SECLUDED 2 story older home on

DAVID BRICKL£S
'

CONTRACTING

HANDICRAFT
io4 West Main Stroot

IB

1
'·.· ' E A

Pomt....,.,OIIIa4J76f

,.

NEW LISTING Brick
apartment house, ~ lamlly
size In Middleport for only
123,000.'
BUILDING lOT In
Syracuse. 150x200. Water,
and electric available.

S2800.
57 ACRES Back of
Racine. Good Gambrel roof
barn wlfll concrete floor,
water and electric. Corn
garage, hen

house and old house.
$29,000.
9 ROOMS - 2 baths,
natural gas forced air
furnace, 4 bedrooms, Cl'le
extra large mater size. 2

porches and full basement.
$27.500.
BRICK 1 rooms, 4
bedrooms.11f• baths, large
living with fireplace,
formal dining. natural gos
forced air furnace on nice
corner lot In qu let section
of Middleport. $23,000.
·
lEVEl
LOT
2
- - . . . . modorn belli.
dining. 2 porchu, out of
water. $15,000.
NEW LISTING- Nearly 3 .
acru · of land on Rt. 33
about half way to Athens.
Has a 2 IMtdroom mob/It

home,

stove

•nd

retrlgtr•for. Animal IMd
lind Pflrtly lfi!C8d .••••
NEW LISTING - Houle I
with 2 apartments. One
partly furnished. Near
stores In· Pomeroy. S9.600. •
FREE PARKING FOil
CUSTOMERS.
NOT
EVERYONE CAN SELL

Ull A RIALTOll TO OIT
TNI .lOa OOMR, CALL
•.. 1111.
Clardlll

a.

Tuford,
...........

11111 lleleft L
Auoclatt
I&lt;

~

•
&lt;

'·. r.ASOUNE ALLEY

You idiot! You'rerunninq

the

25 "-Fence
Me Jn"
26 Sea eagle

,.,,,...,._,..

CARPENTER , flooring, ceiling,
poneling. Ph9ne992-2759 .
MOBILE Hom• Re~ir , . Elec ..
plumbing ond heating. Pt.on.

992·5858.
HOWERY AND

' WINNIE
OH-oH

Ex·

GET

'&gt;OUR MOTH£_~ wr BHE

COULD EXPLAIN WHO
I. WA'¢!

I'cl

I

6EiTEIZ
IT
"THIS TIME!

HI, WENDYf~ARLING. lHE
FUNNIES 1H/N6 uU6T
HAPPE NEll' I I71ALED
YOUR. NUWIBfr/2 AND
A MAN ANSWERED
"THE PHONE!
·~

pov;ng, Rt. 143. Phone I (61~)
698-7331.
W;;;RI:SO;;;;N:;.:;:S-:T-:-.v~.-::R-opa--:;r-.""'So&lt;v--k-•
Coli•. 276 Svcomoro. St .. Mid·
dloport. Phone992.2522.

PIANO TUNING. Lone Danielo, 12
' " ' ' of s•rvlc•. Phon•

992-201:1.

t~

btfll. ptlrtly fumlllted.
$13,!00.

WATEll Wt:LL drilling. P~o
Wllllom P. Gront ot 742·2879 •
_ after6p.m .

'

PENNZOIL RUTLAND _ . daily
1111 10. Cloood MonctoYo.
'

~-

MI"Vklf';

tl,.. ,..,. .

' , . _ 742·9575 017-42·:1011. .

~~~"lng In my honje,
Wlll ' DO ' ...., • ..,.( . Pl.lnt

han~ers, wall honatnf•.
~-- ry. lamp ........ ......
mactu. tic. Coii'IIS-4114.

•

•

1

Goin' to Town" 3.

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Blackwood expensive bid

11-IAT'S NOT SO
FUNNY, IK!M.

WERE 15 A
MAN HERE/

I COliL.D HAVE BEEN
MU66ED TWENTY TIMES
NOW! AA.'{WA'I, SNOOf'l(
SO I{OU HAVE TO
~TCI1D06 ...

.2

EAST

• 973
¥ KJ 74
• Q 10 52
• J8
• Q 10 s
.KJ973
•Q86S
SOUTH
.AQBS4
• 88 3
.972
.A2

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

We1t

AXYDLBAAXR
Is .LONGFELLOW

Pass
Pass

vulnerable
North Ea1t
It
Pass

South

Pass
Pass

IN .T.
SN.T.

a.

5¥
II¥

Pass
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 3•

I.

a.

PORE LEETLE PRISSY'S
SCAIRT TO COME DOWN
OUT OF TH' TREE···
I'LL GIT TH' :LA~D=D:ER~=~E

appeal to our slamomaniac.
His partner has opened the
bidding and jumped. Obviously It is time to trot out
Blackwood.
He bids four tiotrump .
Should his partner show one
ace he wouldn't know what to
do, but his partner shows two
aces. It seems appropriate to
ask for kings. North shows
two of those also, , but our
bidder decides to settle lor six
since two kings are still missing.
He receives a favorable
trump lead which gives him
time to set up dummy's long
diamonds, but he still can't
score 12 tricks. He has to lose
a diamond to set the suit up
.and two discards aren't
enouch to take care of all his
losers.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby.

The slamomaniac usually
gets that mania as a re~ult of
Q0 I
BETVG an overdose of Blackwood.
NK ZI
NMDQ
BI
South is entitled to think
about
a slam after his partner
BI
XKU
0 E UFIPET.I
OE Ul DQ
who
has
opened the bidding
"'
jumps
him
from one to three
QE
EMT
IDQVS
DKS
X 0 Y V•
spadett.
•
He also has a way to invite
GTIU
QOKQ
OEUIDQS
YD
the slam. He can bid four
clubs. This bid of an ell Ira suit
QOI FIDQ WEVYXS.- DOKB
after spadett have been raised
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN OUR HATRED IS VIO- enthusiastically is a slam try
lENT, IT SINKS US EVEN BENEATII THOSE WE HATE.- below game which is all that
South's cards warrant.
LA ROCHEFOUCAUW
That quiet · bid doesn ' t
C) 1111 Kin1 P'eaturet Syndicate, lDc.
"'U!NEY

tramt home, 3 btdl•nL

• UCIMII
992-22Sf, 1115-4112
992-U.

MARTIN

'

Neither

CRYPTOQUOTES

HUNG UP i!&gt;EKJRE I

cavating·, septic •ystems ,
dozer. bockl1oe, dump truck,
limestone, grovel. bktcktop

t...+-1-t-:-+-

One letter simply slands for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O"s, e1c. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each da'y the code letters are different.

Service ,

7~2·2348.

build on. City water,
sewage. Just $&lt;1,200.
COMMERCIAL - Corner
Rls. 33·7 Building and 3
lots, going at a low $18,500.
INVEST 1'12 story
frame. 3 BR, bath, N.G.
heat, porches, small lot to
cut. S7,000.
OVERLOOKSTKE liWER
- 2 loh wlfll 2 •tary fr1me
horne,- ~ bedl oom1, beth,
parche, 2 ftrtpliC81, .....
furnace heef, M,IIOO.
SECURE BUSINESS- 25
years In same location. All
oqulpri&gt;enl as listed, stock
Inventory at wholeutle
price.
A
GREAT
INVESTMENT.
ON RT. 7 - Md In town.
Very illrgo lot 2 .tory

~·~

Hoe

Rutland . Ohio. Photlo 7~2·2008.

to

USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE ANOTHER
NEW
SERVICE TO HELP US
SEI,L YOUR PROPERTY.

Bock

WILL do roofing. ccnstrucUon
plu~bing and heating. No job
too large or too small. Phone

N.G. heat. S12,500.
PEACOCK AVE. 3.25 acres
lovely

31 "Astolat"
maid
· 3'1Israeli port
31 Emitted,
as beams

EXCAVATING. dozer. bacl.hoe
ond ditcher~ Charles R. Hot- '
field .

Harfman 10.

1:AI)-News 13; 2 :31)-News 3; 3:00--:Movle "Argentine
N;ghts" 3.
4:31)-Movle " Every Day's a Holiday" 3; 6:oo--Movle

WEST

gowns
(2 wds.)
35 Kind of
poker

~232.

garden, storage, basement,
vacant ground,

BIJITHEY 1.16'Vf3R WILL DARE

EXCAVATING, dozer, looder and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
· ond lo-boys for hire; will haul
.fill dirf, to soli, limestone and
grovel . Coli Bob. or Roger Jef.
fen; , doy phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992-

5 ACRES - . with lovely
newer brick home. • BR. 2
baths. large rec. rm. W·
stone fireplace: cerpetl"ll•
Sflll deck, patio, aorport.
$6,000.
LIVE RENT FREE - ·1
story lrame. 3 BR, bath,

Affair 8.

6:0Q-News 3,4.6,8,10, 13.15; Zoom 20.33.
6:31)-NBC News 3,4. 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Villa Alegre 33; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:0Q-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; $128,000 Quesllon 8; News tO; To Tell the Truth
13; My Three Sons IS; lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
Black Journal 33.
7:31)-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; Treasure Hunt 8; MacN~II · Lehrer Report 20.33;
Andy W/11/ams 10; Pop Goes the Country 15; Name
That Tune 13.
8:00--:Sanlord &amp; Son 3.4.15; Movie "" Lucan" 6,13; Year
at the Top 8.10; Washington Week in Review 20,33 .
8:31)-Ch;co &amp; The Man 3.4,15; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 :00--: Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie " They Call Me
Mister T;bbs! •• 8,10; Ufe &amp; Death : Dawson, Ga. 20;
Documentary Showcase 33 .
9:31)-Movie "'The Legend ol Hell House" 6,13;
Something Personal 20.
IO : ~uincy 3,4,1S; News 20; F;ring Line 33.
10:31)-Woman 20 .
lt :DO-News 3.4,6.8.10,13,15; Fawlty Towers 20; Black
Perspective on the News 33.
11:31)-Johnny Carson 3.4.15: Barella 6,13; Movie
""Zabrisk;e Point"" 8; Movie ""The Oblong Box" 10;
ABC News 33.
12:00--:Janakl 33.
12:41)-Mod Squad 6; lrons;de 13.
I :00- 1 : DO- Midnight Special 3,4,15; I :30-Mary

NORTH IDI
• K J 10 8
¥A9
.AK643
•1o 4

. receiver
33 Like some

Clttm••""'CJO~ •­

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice. oil makes, 992-2284. The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy.
Al,lthorit:ed Singer Sol•s and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.

...-t----+--1

l:QO--Gong Show 3; All My Children 6.13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only IS;
Documentary Showcase 33.
1 : 3~Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,.10.2:00--:$20.000 Pyramid 6.13 ; Een Festival
33.2 :31)-Doctors 3.4, 15; One Life to Live 6,13 ;
Guiding Light 8,10
3·00--:Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockett's Victory Garden 20 ; Romagnoli ' s Table
33.
.
3: 15-General Hospital 6,13.
3:30--Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; M.D.
33.
4:00--:Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gi/1/gan"s Is. 8; Sesame Sf. 20,33;
Movie ··strike Me Pink'" 10; Dinah 13.
4:31)-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
5:oo--Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
I mposslble 1S.
5:31)-Adam 12 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20.33; Family

27 Swamp
fever
30 Urge (on)
31 Undivided
32 Wide

'

Phonefft•m.s

car

•.

~

.

, Just Below the Jones
three-quarter acres , lots of
Boy•' in Pomeroy, Olllo
shade. fertile ground fer
Phone 992-22tl
garden, 2 cor detached garoglt,
~IS-I mo.
3 bedrooms, Iorge living room '
with brick w.b, fireplace ,
carpeting, sunny kitchen•tte ,
dining room. partial basement
with forced oir furnace and
new hot water heater, located ' HOMESITES for sole. 1 acre and BRADFORD , Auctioneer. Com·
plete Service . Phone '9o49-2o487
up. Middleport, near Rutland.
on M!]rtin Or. , Pomeroy. Priced
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Crltt
Call '192·7Alll.
below mork•t value, $17,500.
llradlord.
Phone 992-6328 or 985-3573
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
""""'"'"""'"-'~"""'"f
all . elec. , 1 ocre,. Middleport, ELWOOD BOWERS ~EPAIR Sweepers. toasters, irons, all
close to Rutland. Phone 992·
: FORD
.
small oppllonc&amp;$. Lawn mower ,
7~81 .
ne~ef to State Highwo,. Goroge
SMALL form for sole, 10~. down ,
on Route 7. Phone (61--4) 985owner financed . Monroe Coun·
REALTOi
3825.
ty. W. Vo. Phone (30A) 772·
c==-::c---:---- --REMOOELING, Plumbing, h1t0ting
3102 or (30A) 772·3227 .
·vtRGtlL TEAFORD, S~t;· l
ond all types of generol repair.
· REALTOR
t!
'Work guoranteed 20 yeors ex·
216 E. S.CGIIII Street "'
perience. Phone992-2.((19,

fi"""""'....

-•

I~F:AOCE!

~

Route2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Kitchen Cabinets · Roofing
. Concrete PatioS'
.
Sidewalks
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling .
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-1055
IE•IImates applfid to lOb.
0.27-1 mo. pd.

CRAfJY LADIES

l:AI-l'T I)JIIJ ...

2 Another

time
contest
3 Making
11 Examine
giant strides
cursorily
( 4 wds.)
12 Put to sea
4 Photo-lab
Yesterday's Answer
13 UFO flyers,?
abbr.
14 Bolivian
s Originated 15 Lack
25 -Alighieri
export
6 Cry
18 Horse
27Tom
15 Used to be
7 Girdle
21 Actress
Seaver's
16 Cambodia's
(3 wds.)
Wynter
territory
Angkor8 -of the
22 Covered
28 Habituate
17 Do a
Realm
walk
29Snake
priitting
9 Took a
23 Burrowing
:u Business
job
breather
beast
concern
19 Devoured
11 Teepee
24 Bobby, in
(Fr. abbr.)
20 First-rate
tenant
35 - and Fox
Blighty
21 Colored
22 Town map
23 CoM.'S
neighbor
U Mexican
laborer

1001&lt; CUT SSO,OOO
UJORTh Of Ll FE:

K~l.e

GENERAL

Jumbles · WHEAT TOOTH ECZEMA PENMAN
.
Answer. What a bully m•gtlttryto do-COW ONE

---r-,-----""' 10 Greek
athletic

OflL'I lf6T ~K , He;

;-

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPPLIES.
CLASSES OFFERED IN
DIFFERENT . CRAFTS.
OPEN ' 6 DAYS A WEEK,
10:00 to S:OO

(Answers tomorrow)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Chastity's
1 Carry on
mother ·
5 Daisylike
DOWN
flower
1 Wilderness

era&amp;ed ~ fill

l'llalmly,O.

"(I X1 X )"

~M_. .~~at

":J..

- : . ; ..,Uty

to

gested by the above cartoon.

'I

.._...~

~ners

form the surpnse "nswer. as sug·

Print answer here:
Yesterday's

.......

Now arrange the circled

] I I

SUSP.CT WHO WE ARE··
TILL WE"RE THERE --

WILL PICK US UP-- IT'S
ALL ARRANGED --

New

Freezer

PROBASL Y·· ONLY I
DOUS1 IF 1HEY1 ll

OH , THERE 'S A SPOT ON

C'biJ' tw&lt;JO!oct wbidl
_,~
lilome,
De dlai •tl ~ Hit.•
IY ror yean 1e CMDt, . . ril .ut
-Wa••am,
11le Urliu
oD
bea')'
pqe,
ed
rtJI.iqs lid po.tt, plaill or
dte«'attfe. We Uve u eqN!Sie•OO

llle Orlgin•to.rs
Not The lmlt•ton"
Z·23· 1 mo .

SALES AND SERVICE
6·23·1 mo. Pd.

' UTILE ORPHAN ANNlE

II y... ••~ tbler1.- Urbu

11

BA.M. to 4:30P .M.

BECOMe IN
L..EAP YEAR\5.

._... --.....

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

sooe

i!IACI-IEI.O~

KingsbUIJ Home Sales

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

Pomeroy, Ohio

I

WHA"T

Free Estl,.otes
No Sunday Clllls PINH
·
~ 6-13-lmo.

Youn(s C.rpeting

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

I KJ

BISSEI I SIDING CO ,.

Superior
Steam Extraction

HEAnNG INC.

GEDUN

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

Mike Douglas 13; Solar Energy 33.
10:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price ;, Right 8. 10;
Studio See 33.
li : ~W~eel of For.l~ne 3,4,15; Happy Days 6.13;
French Chef 33.
II : 31)-lt's Anybody"s Guess 3 . ~ . 15 ; Fam /ly Feud 6, 13;
Love ot Life B.IO; Making Things Grow 33.
II :55-CBS News 6; Ms. Fixit 10.
12 :oo-News 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12 .31)-Chico &amp; the Man 3,1S; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 81 , 10.

(]

I (J

mo.

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

GUTTER SERVICE

Behind Rul.l and Grode
School. Evening work by
oppoinlmenl. Ph. 742-2005.
6-5-1 mo. Pd.

COUNTRY formlond- With seclud·
ed woods, water and good OC·
cess in Monroe County, W. Va.

mo. 2 bedrooms sl&lt;lrtlng . ot ~CA-:=::Dfl;:=;-LI&lt;C;:.::-::;C::OUI'£::=:-;de-;-V:;;il;-lo-.-:-1::'17::-0.

WIOLL, 50 FAR, S0

6000, PRINCESS.1

m.sm

Bob Hoeflich

· lO : oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Here's lucy 8, 10;

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to tonn
four ordinary words.

AL_LEYOOP

t--------:---"1

crib, 3

•xcellent condition. &lt;;a!l
992·5832 offer S:JO pm .
FOR SALE: Brond-new boy's bicyde, o Wildfire. Coli 949-268-t
of...-6:00pm.

, _.

MINOLTA SRT-100 35 mm camera
includes 50 mm , 135 mm , 28
mm . and 90-210 zoom lens.
cases included . 5200. Coli

Sl.(IOO , dawn, coli (304) n2·
3102 or (304) 772·3227.
VA-FHA. 30 yr. financing. Ireland
FOR sAle- SearSKenmora Dryer: · Mortgage , n E. Stole, Ath•ns ,
THREE ROOM and both furnished
6 mo. old and Speedqueen
phone (61A) 592·3051 ,
opt. 356 N.' .tth St. in ·MidWasher, 211J yrs, old . Both in
•

Opportuntty. Coli '192·6098 .
MOBILE HOME. Adults only.

PIL !!2-2174

'\fftjlf.\(t

~ ~ ~~ ®

992·572~

Complete
Soles
and
Service and Supplies.

cucumbers. Clelond Farms .
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine
Cleland .

U9.9S

lor campsite. Furmshed. $800.
Phone 992-6248 or 992·5.t63 ..

TWO BEDROOM trailer, odulls on·
ly. Call 992-332o4 .
-· ,
TO RENT . Riverside Aptt. 1
bedroom stOf'ting at $100 per

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

Phone 949-2814
9 a.m. to sJI.m.

Variety of homegrown
vegetables. Athens Produce, AUCTION SALE, Saturday, August
Rt. 50 W., Athens. Ohio . Weoc6.
12:30
pm at on~Ill/om
A.
Clonch
resid•nce
Locust end
cept food sromp,,
Plummer Street neor swimming
FR'EEZER CORN', silver and
pool . Middleport . Small hand
golden , Queen. Pick you awn .
tools , furniture , some ontkaues. j
Also, Potatoes. Great Bend
Not responsible for occidentl.
338. Phone 84J-2o491, Thomas
So"([_e.
M0UNTA~I~
N~E=
ER~T=R~
U~
CK~c-o-m-~
-,.
Jo y, foot, self-contained. Coli
1974 MOBILE Home, 2 bedroom.
667·6227 .
12 x 65 Greenbrier , toto I el&amp;e.,
unfurnished, in excellent condi·
tion. Asking price, $6500.
CB SPECIAL
Phone 992-5nl .

ONLY

I

Middl6port, 0.

Ali1lnment, wheel
balancing, tune-up.
brake work, minor
repair.

FREESTONE CANNING PEACHES.
$6.98 up . ICe COLD
WATERMELONS. Sl.t9" up.

Mobile Tr8"nsce1ver
complete with weather
proof PA speaker, 2 way
base loaded C B antenna ,
for roof top or trunk mQlunt.
Power cord, caax, antenna
cable and 111 hardware
Included.

mil R&lt;*l

6:5G-GoQd Morning , West Virginia ; 6 :55-Good
Morning , Trl State 13.
7:00--:Today 3.4.1S ; GOOd Morning Amer;ca 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10; 7:05-Porky P ;g
10.
7: 31)-Schoolles 10.
6:00--:Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8, tO; Sesame
51. 33 .
8:30--Big Valley 6,'
9:0Q-Cross·WIIs 3; Phil Donahue 4.1 3. 15; Mike
Douglas 10; Mulligan Stew 33.
9:31i-A.M. 3; Edge of Nigh/ 6; Concentration 8;
Commonwealth 33.

Waltons 8, 10; Play ol the Month 20; Pol ark 33.
8:31)-Whal' s Happening!! 6.13 .
9:00--:Bar)lirMII/er 6; Hawaii Flve.O 8; Movie '"The
Spy Who Came In from the Cold" 10; Movie "' Birth
of a Legend" 13; Age of Uncertainly 20.33.
9:31)-Fish 6 .
10 :\»-ABC News Closeup 6: Barnaby Jones 8; News
20; At The Top 33.
II : DO-News 3.4,6,8.10,13,15; MacNei/ .Lehrer Report

i.Al!H

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries ,
Special Occasions

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

8 x --40 NEW MOON trailer, great

.

--

lllA·IOI&gt; W. Union St. (614)

Co-Op wa'tu sof·
teners, model VC-SVI.
Only S279 .95
Save uo.oo ·an a·· new
Ho1polnt Refri91r1tor. ,
I New 20 cubic ft. Ches1

_ Botto=m
~,O
~hi=o~·~--~------

dleport.

F•lloo lqlll
............~IIMI

6 :3G-Columbus Today 4 ; News 6; Summer Semester
. 8; Overseas Mission 10; 6 :45-Morning Report l i

Murder Case" 3,.4, 15; Welcome Back, Kolter 6, 13.;

109 High St.
Pomeroy

Service

592-5.08, Athens.

FOR SALE

cB

DOE!&gt; IT MATTER~...
Lon; FINO SOME. PLACE TO SIT DOWI\J
I!ISFOI!E I TAKE YOU
TO WLADEI&lt;"S

lHE Ptl)lO PIJ£E

Radiator:,.......~

Continuous one pioct
guners. We hi ng II, or do II
yourself. Speclol prlcu to
·builders.

CAN GOODS

ROBYNWV-23

$101-..ml

FRIDAY , AUGUST$, 1977
5:50-PTL Club 13.
6 :0G-Summer Semester 10.

ALLADDIN KEROSENE LAMPS and "

Strid&lt;ly wltolesale to ell.
.Not less Ilion 'lz aose.

992·3709.

CAPTAIN EASY
WiLL, FI!ANt&lt;.LY·- VE!j;l .r .-~:---,..,
l FEEL LIKE
RATHER THINK VOI.J HAVe
At.t IDIOT ASI&lt;II.JIS··
SEEN ME &amp;EFO~E~
/!oUT 1'/fiEI'-E DIP
WE MEElTl

lOOMIInSt.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
Phone ffl-6282
or99H26J
8A.M. lo4 :30 P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE

rMS

EXPERIENCED

992 -6~8daily .

1975 SUZUKI .&lt;~00 Street rraill:tike.
low m1leage in good condition .
$725. Phona992-3191 .

IIIII

Reedsville. 0 . Ph. 371-6250
5·27-TFC

LIVE CATFISH for sole to stock
Iekas. ponds , etc
Phone
742-3167 or 949-2545.

Call ofrer 7:00. 94q·2350.

TRAIL HORSES and ponies. Phone

IEI'\KQiflll'

RATES

1972 SUZUKI 550, $750. Phone
949-2463.
FOR TRAIL or rood. 1972 Yamaha
PEPPERS .
motorcycle with Enduro engine. · TOMATOES .

offer. Phone (614)·698·3290.

HEATING INC.

Sl1llll
I I I - I DOIIIS

REA$0NJA1f

985·3335.

SWEET CORN for sole on Carmel
sale . Photle 992·5858.
Rood, Homer Circle. Phon'
DODGE CHARGER. 1972. Mosl op·
9o49-21n.
tions availoble. 59,000 miles.
$1495. Phone 992-5161jl.

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

JOHN DEERE Crowler Backhoe
endlooder and dump truck ,
Phone 992-74179.

TORINO, 1970-$650. Porked 1
mile east of Chester. Coli

ELECTRIC HYDRAULIC tailgate
from 151f,foot Body Buckeye
von. S 200. Truck. $100 or best

PWMBING &amp;

..... IMt- &amp;Allico

News 13.

6:31)- NBC News 3.~.15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS News 8.1 0; Once Upon a Classic 20,33.
7:0Q-Trufh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Muppel Show 8; News 10; To Tell lhe Truth 13;
My Three Sons 15; Alman~c 20: Consumer Survival
Kit 33.
7:31)-Ho//ywood Squares 3.~ ; Ohio State Lottery 6;
Price Is Right 8: MacNeii · Lehrer Report 20,33:
Wild Kingdom tO ; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
IS.
8:00--:Movle "Guilty or Innocent: The ,Sam S~eppard

CARTER'S

1-'alifll StftkiS '

port ant People 6, 13; Movie " The Executioner" 8.
1:00--Tomorrow .t ,J; 1: Jo-Mary Hartman 10; 2 : to-

THURSDAY , AUGUST 4. 1977

$2250. Phone (61A) 698·3290.

992·2625.:...
. -·----....,-

FOR SALE or Trade. 1'~52 Dodge
truck. one ton flat bed . Storts
and runs good. Excellent tires .
52,000 mil as . Call992-3890.

-. u.-

Automatic
Transmission .~rv_ice

2 BEDROOM Mobile home for JOHN DEERE 420 l1ve power, 3
rent . 1 mile from Recine. Phone
poinl hitch . John Deer No . 5
992·5858,
mower. 1 pt. cut . Jotln Deer :Z
row cultivator Ford · two l.t in .
5 BEDROOM Hom•.
fully
bottom plow. Co/1247·2195.
carpeted , 130 acre farm for
rent. Call (3().11)_ 273· 2566 or ASHLEY STOVE Oaolen, Runn ing
985·4198.
Specie;~/ Summer Sole. Lorge
C60, $300. Blowers , $40. Call
mornings , (614 ) 698·711jll.

~

PARTS FOR 1971 Galoxie Ford for

SWAIN'S

~

YARD SALE in Tuppers Ploi(ls ot
rhe Richard Spencer residenc:e
on Rt 7. Clolhing, 1969 Dodge SEVERAL FAMILY Yard Sole at
cor, old dishes , ond many other·
1691 lincoln Hts. Aug . .t,5,6. 1.
h;cellent
selection
of
items. Aug. 5th and 6th , 9 om
tobpm
clothing,sew1ng machine, meat
grinder, SfT!DII appliances ,
YARD SALE. 619 Page Street, M-iddishes, toys, end glassware.
dleport . Thurs .- 10 om to 8 pm,
Fri. ond Sat ..- 10 to 41 , Lorge TWO FAMILY Yard Soft on Fri.
1210 Washington Blvd.
Women 's women 's blouses,
and Sat, l'h miles norh of
Belpre, Qhia
children's clothing·, chairs, ele&lt;: ·
Chester, first trailer on left on
Sumner Road.
Inc range , dinette set and
other furnJture , Avon bottles ,
FORD PICKUP with topper. 1973.
ond misc. items.
Call 992·3410.
YARD SALE. Fri. . Aug. 5 and Sot .,
DODGE TRUCK. 1969 two ion w;th
Aug . 6. Three family sale. 1976 CHEVY LAGUNA 350 · tilt bed and eiKrnc wench .
automatic, p.s .. p.b .. air condi·
Typewriter, electric rooster,
Phone 992-398.f or 985-41,9.
tioned . om radio tape player.
tools, d ishes, and clothing. 623
Real sharp. Excellent condition . VERY GOOO used copper tone
Russell Street, Gravel Hill, Middouble oveneledric range. Coli
Phone 992-2386.
dleport. From9am toSpm.
PORCH SALE. Thurs. and "Fri. 9 un til/ 9. luggage, doll clothes,
and misc. it&amp;ms. 1643 LincDin
· His .

Business Services

3 AND o4 RM. furnidled and un- COAL , limeslone, ond calcium
furnished opts. Phone 991
chloride and cdlcium brine lor
5-&lt;~ .
dust control and s~ioi milring
soh tor formers . bcelslor Soli
CO\JNTRY Mob+la Home Pork, Rt .
Works, Main Street. Pomeroy ,
33. ten miles nof"lh of Pomeroy.
Oh10 or phon• 992- 3891 .
lorg• loll with CQn(rete pottos-.
sidewalks. runners and oft CAMPER , $600. Also. t\orse
str. .t parking. Phone 99'2·7o479.
trader, So450. Phon• ·(bl4) 6983290.
FURNISHED APT. Adults only. no
pats . Phone 992-387o4 , Mid- SPRING GARDEN Supplies . Cabdleport .
bage, coullflo-er, broccoli,
'-and
heod lettuoa plants;
AVAILABLE ot Villoge Menor
yellow. white. and red onion
Apartments- ! bedroom fully
sers . onion plonu , kennebec,
carpeted with kitchen opcobbler, Katahdin , Red Pontloc
pliances . furn i1.hed. Starting ot.
and Red Losada seed potatoes ..
$104 per mont . Phonem-7721 .
Bulk gorden s..ds, potting soil ,
~Equal bousingb~tunity .
peer moss . fruit trees ond rose '
BUSINESS BUILDING in New
bushes . Midway Morket ,
Hoven, W.Va , 20 x AS moin
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992 ·2582 ,
business corner. Phone {6lo4)
Bob :s Market, Mason , W.Vo.
742·2255.
(30A) 773·5721.
TRAILER LOT lor rent on Brownell ECONOMY TRACTOR with ell alAve . Middleport.
Phol'\e
tachment5. like new, asking

YARD SAL\j, Fr;.ond Sal .. Aug. 5th
and 61/l. Salem Street in
Rutland. 9 om . Nice seiKtion·
odds and ends.

t"orSale

33.
11 ]I)-Johnny Carson J ,• .I S; SWAT 6,13; Kojak S;
Mov;e "'All Hands on Deck'" 10; ABC News 33.
t2 :GO-J anaki 33; 12 :41)--DO!js. Cats and other lm·

A Michigan reader wants to
knO\\' what you should lead
with:
1\ XXX • XXXX + XXX • XXX
bidding has gone one
notrump-pass by you - six
notrump - all pass .
.T his is easy. You open an x.
However. the proper x to lead
is the lowest heart. This lead
.i!! least likely to help declarer.

rile

(For a copy oj JACOBY
MODERN. sond $1 to: ""Win at

Bridge." c/o this naw•pa,.r,

P.O. Box 489. Radio Ci/y StaHory.
Now York. N.Y. 10019)

·

�---------------------------,

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thrusday, Aug. 4, !9n

!

CLEAN LAND -Boys and girls of the Youth Conservation Corps are shown as they
carried logs to clear land on Shade River Forest for regrowth.

Conservation session productive
TIMBER MOVED- Mike Pooler, equipment operator, moves a load of timber that has
been cleared at Shade River Forest that will be taken to the Ohio Pallet Co. White pine will
be planted in the cleared area.

(Continued from page 1)
Teresa Edwards, Michael
Norton and Jeff Hedrick are
senior campers. Senior
campers are youth who have

had previous experience.
Shade River·· Forest Youth
Conservation Program
originated in 1974. There are
13 state camps this year in

Ohio Youth Conservation
Corps Program.
.
Educational courses are
also provided and a student Is
given a half unit of credit at
his or her respective high
school. Students make application for employment
through their respective
schools. They are paid $2.50
an hour.

Tax levy

QUEEN AND CANDIDATES- The 1976 Mason County Fair Queen,
Marilyn Denise McDaniel, and the 10 candidates competing for the 1977
Queen are shown at a reception in their honor given by the Mason County
Bank Tuesday evening. Left to right are Tary Rhea, Suz-Anne Kinney,
Tamara Tolliver', Johanna Scholz, Billianne McCoy, Miss McDaniel,

Investigator called in on fire
Sheriff James J: Proffitt
said today his department Is
investigating a fire t)lat

MASON DRIVE-IN
Now tbru Friday
James Coburn In
"SKY RIDERS"
Also Staring
Susannah York
Also
MOVING VIOLATION

"PG"

heavily damaged the home of
Nancy and Ted Osborne late
Tuesday located on SR 681
approximately four miles
west of Reedsville.
The Reedsville (Olive
Township) Fire Department
responded to the call. The
sheriff said that the State
Fire Marshal's office has
been asked to send an investigator to help determine
the cause of the fire.
In other action, deputies
are investigating the entering
early Wednesday morning of
the Horner Hill Carry Out on
SR 143 south of Harrisonville.
Beer, cigarettes and change
from the cash register were
taken.

ANOTHER FINE HOME
·SOLD BY

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

Julia Dawn Summer, Vickey Moles, Carolyn Rickard, Alice Hunt and
Roxanne Cottrill. Don Foglesong, chairman of the bank's bo!lfd,
welcomed the guests and Walden Roush presented Miss McDaniel whose
reign will end next week with the crowning of one of the 10 beautiful
hopefuls above.
·

JN;;;:"':·:i;;-n;iefoi

REACT TO MEET
Members of the Meigs
County REACT team will
meet at the Senior Citizens
:,:.
By United Press International
'·" Center in Pomeroy at 7 p. m.
WASIDNGTON - A SECOND ROUND OF AIRFARE Friday. .
increases have been approved by the Civil Aeronautics Board,
applying to all flights among the 48 continental states. The
'lbe present Republic of
increases, ranging from 1.5 to 2 per cent for all domestic
flights, become effective between Aug. 7 and Aug. 22, the CAB Italy was established by
national plebiscite on June 2,
said Wednesday.
.
1946.
The board 1asl month voted to raise fares 0. 7 per cent.
·
Wednesday it approved a seci:Jnd round of hikes from 0.8 to 1.3
per cent, meaning the total increases will be 1.5 to 2 per cent
before fares in effect in mid-July. The CAB rejected a
complaint from a consumer group, the National Passenger
Traffic Association, which contended the new increase was not
. justified because it followed the last one so closely. The board
said the group failed to support that claim.

HUNTINGTON, W.VA. -A LAWRENCE County, Ohio,
grand jury has indicted two men in custody at the Cabell
County Jail on murder charges.
The charges against Rodney Dale Stevens, also known as
Edward Martin, Florence, Ky., and William Eugene Martin,
&lt;lnclnnati, stem from the July 4 fatal stabbing of Leo Donald
Talbert, 34, a ticket agent at the Trallways Bus Terminal In
Huntington. An Aug. 12 arraignment In Lawrence Coonty
Conunon Pleas Court Is set foc the two suspectll, who are being
held on fugitive from justice warranls.
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. VA. -WORKMEN KEPT an
all.flight vigil on a storage bin inside the FMC Corp. plant after
a fire erupted Wednesday night, sending billows of white
chlocine smoke through the Kanawha Valley. Traffic was
diverted from the Immediate vicinity but Soulh CharlestonD
police said there·was no need to evacuate any townspeople.
~illiam Curry, a spokesman foc the dry bleach plant,
explamed that a spontaneous combustion took plaCe in the
bleach compound, igniting a small fire and heavy, white
smoke.

District .des ires to receive

Display Lot. There Are 5 H~mes Set Up

HOSPITAL NEWS
HolzerMedlcalCeoter
North, Jeremiah Parsons,
(Discbarges Aug.!)·
Gates Penick, Elizabeth .
Ev.elyn Buttrick, Leona Reese, Ora Reynolds, Veri
Fairchild Sharon Gibson Reynolds, Daner Russell,
Judith Gilliland, Vancii · William Shirey, I.Jllle Smith,
Graham, Lottie Hommes, Marilyn Stevens, Mrs. Larry
· Anna Layne, Wade Loucks, Thomas and son, Lillie
Geraldine Mayo, Gerald Thompson.
.
(Blrtbs Aug. S)
McDaniel III, Ethel MeFadden, James Oney, Olive
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Milam,
Parkinson, Steven Pursley, Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr.
Paul Sanders, Mrs. Kenneth and Mrs. Alex Bryan, Pliny,
Smart and son Harley . W.Va., a son.
'
Thomas.
.

0

MOHLER BEDFAST
John Mohler of Leading
Creek is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center and would
appreciate cards from
friends 11nd well wishers. His
room number is 421.

.

(B~Aug.Z)

Mr. and Mrs. Thom"as
Stutz, Thurman, a son.
(Plscbarges Aug. 3)
Cheryl Adkins, Maggie
Barr, Andrew Beattie II,
Martha Blain, Janice Coon,
Dwight Cullums, Clyde Eblin,
Ruth Flowers, Usa. Hagerty,
Mrs. Gary Hunt and
daughter, Mrs. Ten'y Jenkins
and son, Paul Kerns, Eliza
Kisor, Freeman Lock Jr.,
Mrs. Dennis Martin and
daughter, Rosetta Minnis,
Mrs. David Mitchell and son,
Elmo Norman, Gertrude

VE'l'E&amp;\NS MEMORIAL

Admitted- Thomas Saver,
Sr., Pomeroy; Garfield
Pauley, Portland·; Eva
Lawson, Racine; Glennie
Little, Middleport; Rose
Reynolds, Middleport.
Discharged - Melanie
Grueser, Sherry Tackett,
,!iarbara Grover, Sherry
Sayre, Robert Snowden,
Phyllis McMillan, Bert
Board, Lori McKenzie,
Lillian Walker, Lydia ,
Ebersbach, Early Scarberry,

Margaret Gans.

·

sealed bids for lle·et in ·
surance and student accident
Insurance .
In order to be considered ,
all sealed bids shall be
received in the office of the
superintendent, South Third
Avenue. Middleport, Ohio on
or before 12 :00 noon on·
August 15, 1977.
All bids submitted shall be

valid for a period of at least
si xty days from the date of
bid openings . The. only
alleralio~s which shall be
allowed in a bid alter the bid
openings are changes made
in the publ ished rates after
the bids are opened .
The board of education
reserves the right to accept
or reject any or all bids .
Jane Wagner
Clerk Treasurer
Meigs Local
School District
South Third Avenue
Middleport. Ohio

SPECIAL SALEI

~lluster.Btorv«p

CHILDREN'S WEAR

Discontinued styles in sizes 6 months to 24 months and 2 to 6x. An excellent seledio(of J)i!nts. tops and 2 piece
suits.

REG. s2.59 TO s2.89.................'1.40 REG~ 55.50 TO '6.50 ............. •3.25
REG. S3.00 TO $3.79 .................. '1.89 REG. '6.75 TO '8.00 ......•....•..•3.95
REG•.S4.0() TO ss.oo ................ '2A9

SALE! MEN'S SHORT
SLEEVE
SHIRTS
· Our entire stock included - sport shirts
· PRICE.
in sizes small, medium, large and extra

~

1 2

·

large -:-dress shirts in neck size 14112 to
17112.

SPECIAL SALE ·PRICES ... BOYS' SHI.RTS
Boys short sleeve knit shirts and sport shirts - Sizes I to 20.
Good selection. Perfect for back-to-schoOl wear.

SALEI DISCOUNTINUED S

~~----

LINGERIE DEPARTMENT
'
.

(7) 21. 28 (8) 4, 11, Jtc

Half slips, Slips, Girdles, Bras, Garter Belts, All-ln-One
Girdles - Not every size.

'Goo to sgss

Kingsbury Home
Sale , Inc.

'300

'200

'1 00

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

"For the Finest In
.Manufactured Housing"
1100 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

. I

ELPHA IRION
Elpha Rosilla Irion, 77,
Cheshire, died this morning
at 4:30 at the Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville.
She was born In Northup on
Aug. 11, 1899, daughter of the
late James W. and Lizzie
Hyatt Steele.
She was one of 10 children.
Surviving are Mrs. Guy
( Elvenla) Roberts, Bidwell;
Elvi . Steele, Shelby, Ohio.
She married James Irion,
Rodney, on Feb. 8, 1923, In
Gallipolis . One dllughter
survives, Mrs. Lee (Louise)
McCarley, Cheshire. One
stepson. James G. Irion, Van
Couver, Washington, survives.
Five grllndchlldren lind
four great-grandchildren
survive.
&gt;
She WliS a member of the
Cheshire Baptist Church. Her

ALBERT WHEELER
Albert Wheeler, 88, ll
resident of R11se Hollow Rd.
back of Addison, died Wed'
nesdlly lit &lt;4: 20 p. m. In Holzer
Medltlll Center. He was a
former locomotive engineer
for the C &amp; 0 Rllnroed,
retiring In 19&lt;48.
He was born June 1, 1889, In
Cabell County, W. Va., son of
the late John Henry lind Mary
I. McAllister W!Meler.
One brother, S. M. Wheeler,
Whitesville, W.Va., surviVH.
He llttended. schools In Mud '
River, W.Va.
He married Lucy Martin of
Lincoln County, W. Va. She .
preceded. him In dellth In 1927 . •
His second wife wlls Alpha ·
May Call. She survives.
These children survive: 0.
F. Wheeler, Rt. 1, Glllllpolls;
D. 0. Wheeler, Dunbar, W.
Va., lind Albert Jr., of Pocll ;
eighteen grandchildren and
one stepson, W. H. Call.
Hurricane, W. Vll.
·
· He wlls a former member
of the Locomotive Engineers.
He moved to Galllll County In
1951.
Funeral services will be
held 11 a. m. Saturday at
Miller's Home for Funerals.
The body will be !liken to the
Haven of Rest Memorllll •
Gardens, Hometown, W. Vll.,
near Pocll.
Friends may call lit
Miller's from 2-A lind 7-9 p.m.
Frldlly.
.
Pllllbearers will be 0. F.
Wheeler, Jr.. Cllrl A.
Wheeler, Gene E. Wheeler.
Charles E. Wheeler, W. E.
Wheeler, Don Wheeler. Jr.,
Allen Wheeler lind Larry
Call.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

and Ready For Your Inspection.

I

CLYDE EBLIN
Clyde Edward Eblin, 64, a
resident of Rt. 2, Crown City,
died Wednesday morning In
Holzer Medical Center.
He had been In falling
health the past two years .
Mr. Eblin was a retired
farmer . He was born Oct. 28,
1912, In Ohio Twp .• son of the
late Jesse 0 . Eblin and Erie
Adkins Eblin.
He never married.
Mr. Eblin Is survived by the
following
brothers and
sisters ; Mrs. Maggie Lan·
thorne and Mrs. William
(Effie) Crouse , both of
Gallipolis ; Mrs . Everett
(Naomi) McGuire, and
Russell Eblin, both of
Cheshire;
Mrs.
Ferdie
(Rosie) Jones. Eno, and
Willie and John, both of
Crown City . One sister
preceded him in death.
l'ie attended Clay Chapel
Church In his earlier years .
He was a World War II
veteran.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p. m. Frldlly at WaughHalley -Wood Funeral Home
with Rev . Alfred Holley of·
ficlatlng . Burial will be, In
Providence Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2-A
and 7-9 p. m ..

I

husband preceded her In
death on March 27, 1967.
Shl hid been I r"ldent of
the Arcadia Nursing Home
the past six y11rs.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p. m . Sunday In the
Cheshire Beptlst Church with
Rev. William Ubar of·
flclatlng. Burial will be In
Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at
Miller's Home for Funerals
from 2·4 and 7-9 p. m.
Saturday.

Elberfelds In Po_
meroy

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
FLEET INSURANCE
STUDENT ACCIDENT
INSURANCE
The board .of .educat ion of
the Me i gs Local School

Come In and Browse Through Our Large

(Continued from page 1)
The commissioners toured
the upstairs of the county jail
to inspect improvements
there. CETA employes
painted and cleaned the
section under the supervision
of Sheriff James Proffitt. The
commissioners commended
Sheriff Proffitt for the many
improvements.
All commissioners, Henry
Wells, James E. Roush and
Richard E. Jones and Clerk
Mary Hobstetter attended.
--...
'
PAYMENT MADE
Gov. James A. Rhodes
announced that the state is
releasing a third installment
of 19n vehicle registratiort
revenues for distribution
among Ohio's 88 counties.
Gov. Rhodes said .that the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
Registrar Dean L. Dollison is
in the process of releasing
funds. total.i.ilg $35,755,709.15
with all funds earmarked for
local street and road im·
provement projects. Of the
total Meigs County will
receive $121,723.57.

!

Area Deaths

I

.l

~I

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