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! · Area Deaths !
I

JAMES W. ARCHER
RACINE - James Walle.Archer , 89, Carmel aree . Rt .
1. Racine, d ied Saturday
morn ing at the residence of
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Morris,
Racine .
Mr . Archer was the son ot
the late Andrew Jackson and
Elizabeth Roush Arche.-. He
was also preceded In death 'by
brothers. John, Guy, Charles
and Homer . and sisters ,
Al lee, Margaret, Sadie. Lucy
and Harriett.
Nw . Neher Is survived by
one sister, Eva Archff", Rt. 1,
Racine. 11 nieces and two
nephews and several cousins.
He was a ret ired farmer
and member of the Carmel
United Methodist Church for
72 years .
. ·
Funeral serv ices will be
held Monday at :i p .m . at the
carmel Church with Revs.
Freeland Norris and Steve
Wilson officiating . Burial will
be In the Carmel Cemetery .
Friends may call Ill Ewing
Funeral Home after 1:30p.m .
today .

Rowe Fooce . and tour
children , James. Mark ,
Tammy. and Jenny . all at
home. and these brothers and
sisters, Betty Fooce, Logan :
Charles , [)avid , Raymond,
Larry and Mr·s. Charles
(Viola) Sowards, all In
Columbus .
He had resided In Gall la
County several years .
Funeral arrangements wilt
be announced by lhe WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home .

Center.

. ed
Fans lik

himseH

Whatever your style preference
you'll find a good selection

of fine home furnishings at

the lowest possible prices.

NEW ROTARY PRESIDENT - Sam Longancre,
right, new president of the Bend Rotary Club, is shown
receiving the gavel from outgoing pr~sident, Dick Roush,
during Thursday night's meeting. Other officers for the
year are Steve Halstead, vice president and John Campbell, secretary-treasurer.
' Bring me the dessert, the
legend is hungry'," !!he recalled .
She was almost the last to
(Continued from page D-1)
see
him alive .
In April, writer Nat Perrin,
Warned
Friday afternoon
an old movie friend of
that he was dying, she went to
Marx's, was appointed an
his hospital room as he
interim conservator. He soon
drifted in and out of
begged the judge to be
relieved, saying tbe burden consciousness.
"He wasn't in pain, he
was . unbearable, partly
didn't
suffer, " she said.
because of the enmity
"He held my hand and just
between Miss Fleming and
Arthur Marx, both of whom feU asleep."
She left the room, leaving
COfttinued to visit tbe comic.
Marx with his son, daughterIn July, Arthur's son, songwriter Andrew Matx, 2:1, was in-law and grandson
• ·
named hill grandfather's con- , guardian.
She sal in a chair outside
serviltoc in a compromise the door, a hospital employe
between his father and Miss
Fleming. ·The younger Marx said, and 15 minutes later,
· Marx died .
conunented that he seemed to
That night, at her home,
be a logical choice as one of
she
said, "I was just lookiJtg
the few who could get along
at a poster he signed years
wilh everyone involved.
By that time, Marx was ago . II said:
"'Dear Erin, I cannot live
hospitalized for the lhird time
wilhout
you - oc with you for
this year and becoming
that
matter,
Forever yours,
increasingly . detached from
Groucho. '"
the wocld.
·
"! doo't think he would like
NlPPY NOTICE
for people to see him as he Is
Fall sent oul a nippy notice
now," Pefrin said.
Visitors said he usually of its impending arriva.l
responded to conversations in Saturday as record low
temperatures were broken or
grunts or nods, if at all.
His wit reappeared in tied along lhe northern tier of
flashes. VISitors said most of states from Michigan to New
his comments were too racy York. Furnaces were fued up
for early duty 'and a nwnber
to be printed.
Miss Fleming said he was of home gardens were
aware his reputation and severely damaged in portions
venerable age had made him of northern Lower Michigan
where temperatures plunged
a legend in his lifetime.
"At dinner he would · say into the mld-20s and low 30s.

IN POMEROY

.bur'?

senility if we should live so

1100 East Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

ROGER

DAVIS

Home Phone: 992-7671
Business Phone: 992-7034

-

Is there really any magic in the word Modular when applied to
·
.
· · _
housing?
Some people would have us believe there-~~· H~wever, when we
examine the prints, wiring diagrams, spec1f1cat1ons sheets, and .
bill of material on the modular house, we find it t6 be identical to
··
·
the other manufactured home.
The other home to which we refer, is the mobile home house type
double wide. The one structural difference between these two
products is the floor framing. On the modular, 2x8 floor joists are
used transversely across the width of the halves. These 2x8's are
necessary because there is no metal frame.
_
On the double wide, 2x6 floor joists are used ~nd can run e1ther
transversely or longitudinally because .there IS a metal frame
which remains with the home.
Whether the new home you purchase is a modular or a house
type double wide is of no consequence, ~he_n you co~sider the fact
that like all real estate each type home w1llmcrease m value.
. ·
For a look at what's new in·manufactured housing, I invite you
to come in and see our large lot display.

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.
"For The Finest In Manufactured Housing"

1100 E. MAIN ST.

992-7034

POMEROY, 0.

1971 .

.
Funeral ~rvices wll.i be
conducted Monday at 2 p.m .
at the East Eden Unlle~
Brethren .Church with the
Rev. Eldon Blake In charge
with burial to follow In the
church ce:metery.
The body will lie In state at
the church one hour prior to

services. Friend!. may call at

' the White Funeral Home In
Coolville affe.- noon Sunday .
ARTHUR FOOCE
GALLIPOLIS , - Arthur
Fooce Jr.,~. a resident of Rt.
2. Patriot, drowned In the
Ohio River Saturday around
8:30a.m.
Mr. Foose was a disabled
Vietnam War veteran.
He was born Sept. 19, 1943,
at Moundsville, W.Va .• and Is
survived by his wife,, .~nna

long, those of us who began ·
our journey through Ibis
passage In the depths of the
Great Depression.
We, for example, will
always remember where we
were, what we were doing,
what was said and who was
there on the day they bombed
Pearl
Harbor,
when
President ·Roosevelt died,
when World War U ended, .t he
day President Kemedy was
shot.
And to this we add on~

UNITED NATIONS (UPI)
Cuba Is forcing a
showdo\1!n at the United
Nation• on whether Puerto
Rico should beAmerlca's51st
state, an Independent nation
or remain a "colony" of the
United states.
D,iplomats
said · the
showdown ' may come next
month when the U. N.
Decolonllation ,Committee
decides whether tQ vote on
this year's version of a Cuban
resolution affinning Puerto
Rico's "Inalienable right to
self-determination and independence.'' At issue Ia
whether Puerto Rico Is
technically a U. S. "colony."

but about tO,OOO Alabama miners were to return today, ending
a four day strike in that state.
A disgruntled member of militant Charleston-based Dislcict
17, home district of Miller and the union 's largest with 35,000
acUve and retired members, predicted the J une t7 election
·would overshadow !be IEB meeting.
"They (board members ) have for got thatlhe election is over
wilh," said Darrell Thomas. " It will be just a political battle in
there. Sane people that have lost in the election are nol
satisfied with the winners of lhe election."
Thomas said be doubted the board meeting would prompt a
relurn-to-work movement.
.
"It seems to me we can have meetings, but II doesn 't involve
lhe people that's out there picketing the mines," he said. "The
men out on the picket lines are the ones ca lling the shots·for

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August, 22, 1977

A pretty baby contest, a
·
motorcycle thrill show, and
tractor pulling events
wrapped up the 114th annual
Meigs County Fair Saturday.
The
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds was packed
Saturday night, not only in
the grandstand area but on
the midway, as residents
turned oul to take in the final
evening of the fair. Fair
··-board members felt that the
crowd at the motorcycle thrill
/
'!how Saturday night equalled
•
. ( .f
or was greater than the large
turnout for the demolition
derby on Tuesday evening.
Nineteen non-professional
contestants took part in four
contest&amp; staged in connection
with the professional perfomners at the motorcycle
show and winners received
cash awards. First and
second place winners,
respeCtively, in the events
included Terry L. Cunningham and David Grindstaff, the broad jump; Terry
Cunningham and Tim Roush,
the slow race; Jeff Weaver
and Terry Cwmingha.m in the
GIRL WINNERS- These are the girl winners in the
slalom and Gary Dye and
Walter Arnold in the wheelie.
annual pretty baby contest of the Meigs County Fair
Pretty baby contest winSaturday. From the left, Amber_Danielle Colmer, to three .
ners Were selected by out of
mooths age; Jackie Alisha Bacon, three to six months;
county judges. ~nducUng
the contest were members of
.
.
•
.
I
the · Middleport Business and
U'I'TI.E MISTER, MISS - Tbese are the little Mister and Miss Meigs County contest
Professional
Women's Club ·
winners at the 114th annual Meigs Collnty Flli.r Saturday. They are Emily Johnson, 4,
with
Janet.Korn
as chairman.
daughter of M.r. and Mrs. Allen Duane Johnson, Pomeroy, and Damy Robinson, 4, son of
Each child participating
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Robinson, Route 2, Pomeroy.
received a blue ribbon. First
,.
·place winners in the various
'¥
categories received $5 gift
certificates from Elberfeld's
Department· Store. .
Girl winners were Amber
Danielle, daughter of Mrs.
•
Shari Colmer, Pomeroy, to , •
three months age group;
Jackie Alisha, d&amp;ughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bilcon,.
Middleport, three to six
months;
Kelley
Jean,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Danny Grueser, Route 3,
Pomeroy, six to 12 months; .,
Brandi Joy, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lynn Mallory,
Racine, 12 to 18 months;
Jessica Loshia, daughter of
Mr _ and Mrs. Pat .Mitchell,
Route 1, Rutland, 18 months
to two years; Carla Jeffers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C&amp;rl Jeffers, Bradbury, two
year olds, and Pamela Jean
Haggy, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest . Haggy, Middleport, three year olds.
GIRL DRIVER- In the ladies division,1,000 lb. pull,
·Boy winners were Robert
young
Ruth Ann Fry, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, managed a 95 !1. .
Travis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
pull
in
the garden tractor pull held at the Meigs County
Robert Spaun, Route 2,
Racine, to three months age
group; Larry, sori of Mr. •nd
um•t
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
LEE McCOMAS
(Continued on ·page 10)
Wednesday through
Friday, fair Wednesday
and Friday. A chance of
showers Thursday. Higbs
will be In the 70s and lows
Ill the 50s.
The Middleport E-R Squad,
answering two calls Sunday, ·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::
awards.
Lee
McComas, long- years In the Meigs elemen- school class. ·
at 11:21 a.m. went to 730 High
CI•t·
Mr. McComas has made St.
Mr. McComas shows hill
time superintendent . of tary and served five years as
for Bertha Ebersbach who
Middleport schools, has been elementary school principal. love and concern for the ' life more meaningful for , a was treated on the scene and
named Melgt County's He was superintendent of the youth of the area by making it · number of persons through at 8:08 p.m. to 707 Olive St. OB twO COuntS
outstanding senior citizen Middleport school system for possible, at lrls own expense, his thoughtful and seffiess for Bill Buckley · who was
Pomeroy Police reported
and will be honored at 2 p.m. :U yearit. After retiring as for them to attend Ohio giving of himself to others. taken to Veterans Memorial heavy damage to a car driven
For these reasons, the
Friday at the Ohio !ltate Fair. superintendent, be served as Un\verslty football games,
.
by Jeffrey Hysell, Pomeroy, .
.
Meigs
.County Council on Hospital
the
Ice
Follies,
clerk
of
the
newly
organized
dramas
and
The nomlnlltlon of Mr.
At 9:33 ·p.m. SundBy, the . on Second St. about 8 p:m.
McComas for the honor Meigs Local SchOol District other recreational . .and Aging. feels · that Lee Me· fire department went to Saturday when his car failed
for ten years and retired cultural activities. He takes Comas Is well deserving of Route 7 below the King's •to get through a turn from
readJ:
the time to give his personal the Outstanding Senior Arms Club where a car Butternut Ave. onto Second
The Meigs County Council again in March of 1976.
Mr. McComas was not only recognition to the young men Citizen Award.
on Aglll!l nominates Lee
owned by Joe Paciona, St., lrlttlng the residence of
McComas ·for the Out- an outstanding educator 49 and women of the community
'Princeton, Va, was on fire. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Seyler at
standing Senior Citizen years, he alao worked as a UPon their graduation from ·
NOW YOU KNOW
Damage to the car was the corner of Butternut and
repairman
when
monies
or
lrlgh
school
and
college
by
Because
of winter hazards, estimated at $300.
·Award.
Second. There were minor
Mr. McComas was born in other help was not avaUable writing them personal letters the 14Moot-long bridge over
damages to the building.
190'1 and apent his chlldl)ood In the school system.
congratulating them on their the Kuhmatt Ravine In
Hysell was ' . arrested for
Mr. McComas Ia a member accomplishments · and Switzerland is dismantled
In tbe Columbia Township
driving while Intoxicated and
area. He graclnated from of Phi Alpha Theta National presents them with small every fall and rebuilt every
ppssesslon of marijuana,
AlblnJ High School, received . Honorary Fraternity, a past
spring.
police said.
SQUAD. CALLED
hla B. S. Degree lrom Ohio President of the MiddleportThe
Racine
ER
Squad
was
HIIAl TEMPS
Unlveralty, his )lasters Pomeroy Rotltry Club, past
cailedAug.18at
U:25p.m.
to
NEW
YORK (UP!) - The
UNIT
CALLED
Degree from Ohio State and President of the Soplheastern
Oon
Manuel
residence,
.
the
highest
temperature
reported
The Pomeroy Emergency
baa worked toward his Ohio Teachers Asloclatlon, il ·
Rt.
2,
Racine.
No
aid
was
Sunday to the NaUonal
Clear tonight, lows to iiie Squad was caUed to 1689
member of the Heath United
doetonte.
given.
Qn,
Aug.
20,
at
2:18
upper
508.
Cloudy
Tuesday,
Weather Service, excluding
Lincoln
Heights,
Pomeroy,
at
Mr. McComu bepn his Methodist Church for 32
p.m. Allee Scarberry, Alaska and Hawaii, was 107
highs
around
80.
,Probability
8:33
·a,m.
Monday
for
John
.
teachlnl career at Keepers years, Ia presently Cbalrrnan
a medical patient, degrees at Needles, Calif.
Scboolln ins. He then taUJht of the Admlnlatratlve Bollrd of precipitation 30 per cent Wyatt who was ill. He was Racine,
taken
to Veterans Toda)"slow was 42 degrees at
was
10
per
cent
tonight,
20
today,
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
two yMnln tbe elementary of the QIUI'Ch and Ia Sunday
Memorial
Hospital.
per
cent
Tuesday.
Houlton, Maine.
Center.
ochool In Middleport, three School ·teacher for the high

'

Our great looking separates stage
a perfect campus homecoming ... jumpers.....__
and blazers in eye-catching plaids
... hooded blouson tops and gauchos
make great ieom mates ... see morel

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

oo

---

II

.....

/\

Kelley Jean Grueser, six to 12 months; Brandi Joy
Mallory, 12 to 18 months; Jessica Loshia ¥ttcilell, 18 to 24
moolhs, and Pamela Jean Haggy, three year category.
Not pictured Is Carla Jeffers, winner of the two year old
competition.

'*·

w.

It All10gether!

Vol. 28, No.

. . ..

McComas honored

UfilOfS

Fifteen Cents

Last night of fair a .b ig one

E-R

•

District 17 has attempted to spread the walkout in past
weeks by dispatching pickeLs to four other states , including
Alabama .
The work stoppage began in June, when the union's Heallh
and Retirement Funds amounced cutbacks requiring
beneficiaries to absorb the first $250 of hospitalization bills
plus 40 per cent of doctor's bills, wilh a combined maximum
total of s:;oo.
District 17 Vice President Cecil RoberLs said Sunday he
would propose at the board meeting that miners be assessed
$30 a moothuntil the irconlractexpires Dec. 6.
The money would replenish the Funds, allowing restoration
of the lost benefits, until the current conlcact runs out Dec. 6.
Roberts says miners could then be reimbursed under the
terms of lhe new contract.

this union ."

.

more.

Cubans will go
·for a showdown .

destroyed, leaders warn

•

Marx

'ELBERFELDS

.from an old fruit jar, do

b~ing

Miners milling in and out of the muggy smoke-lilled room
CHARLESToN, W. Va. ( UPI) - . The United Mine
W~kers International E•ecutive Board urged dissident said each member of the hoard made a personal appeallo the
llllllersooce again today ID lay down their pickel signs and end strikers to end the walkout. According to several miters, UMW
President Arnold Miller said the dissidents bent on striking
a nine-week-old wildcat strike.
. Meeting in emergency session in a hotel ballroom jammed could eventually destroy the union.
While the board was meeting, many miners in northern
""th 300 to 400 minero who pushed their way inside, members
of lhe union 's Urnember governing board one-by-ooe told the West Virg!nia returned to ,wiH'k. Although an exact number
miners to end their strike,
'
was unavailable, the West Virginia Coal Association said a
The meeting was closed lo reporters, but Jack Perry, majority of the mines reported some activity, depending on
premdent of UMW District 17 wlrlch has spearheaded the strike buw many miners reported for work. MOll! mining operations
and blunted back.W-w&lt;rk efforta, said the progress has been in Southern West Virginia remained shut down.
slow.
.
The hoard agreed to hold an emergency sesilion here after
"I just think the ,people here want a number of answers dissident miners refused repeated appeals to end their wildcat
and .they don't have them yet," said Perry when he stepped strike, which erupted after cutbacks were announced in
~tside .l,he room momenlarily. "I don't think anything's been miners' health benefits.
pumod do)rn yel."
.
The strik~ at its peak has Idled 90,000 miners in five states

MARY GILMORE
BIDWELL
Mary
Gilmore, 87, a resident of
Bidwell, died Saturday at
1: 55 p.m . in fiolrer Medical

She was born May l. 1890,
In Tablerock , W. Va ..
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mn. Malankford Bragg . 1
She was preceded In deotn
by her first husband, Letcher
Her
second
Redden.
·"
marriage was to William H.
DREDGING BEGINS- Dredging to clear a ferry landing in Henderson site began late this morning and Is expected to
Gilmore. who also preceded
take longer than al first anticipated- possibly several days . M. T. Epling is conducting the dredging ope•ations on behalf of
her In death as did two sons.
RAY J . BRUMLEY
Two sisters and twb
the West Virginia Department of Highways.
PT. PLEASANT - Raf J. brothers survive : Myrtle
Brumley, 69 , a resldan of Byers,
Maude
Moten,
anything you wanted to do, 2811 Jackson Ave ., Pl. Theodore Bragg and John
with one exceptioo. Just stay Pleasant, died Friday at 9: 10 Bragg, all of West \llrolnla . .
p.m. following a two-car
One daughter and three
off of those blue suede shoes. ac!cident
on Rt. 62, north of ·sons survive, Evelyn. HutAnd you would have. You and Pl. Pleasant.
(Continued from page D-1)
chinson, Bidwell; James
He was associated with the Gilmore Lucian Redden and
with other members of the J;:lvis would have gotten
Gallipolis Boat Club and was Harry Redden , all In West
media at both the mansion along just fine.
a rettred employee of thef VIrginia ; 20 grand, and Jl
Her face was oval, straight Ohro River Co .
and late• in the cemetery.
great-grandchildren .
"I liked him," she said. nose set between large green
He was born April 27, 1908,
FU{leral services will be
Why, she was asked. "When I eyes, pretty, sensitive. There In Mason County, son of the held at Cunningham Funeral
Howard and Ro~ Dav fs . Home in Charleston . Burial
was a kid, aboul six, he used was a fresh, unused quality late
Brumley . He Is surv1ved by · will be Jn Tyler Mount
to date a girl across the street there, open, honest you'd his wife, Mildred Young Memorial
Gardens
In
from us. we lived out by the think. And finally, authentic. Brumley ; two daughters, Charleston .
cemetery .. He'd come by on
Like Elvis' music and style, Mrs. Leota Pope, and Mrs .
Smifh,
both
his motorcycle and take her authentic .
Memphis ,, Martha
Gallipolfs ; a son , Howard
CHARLES NEAL
riding . We'd sit out on the Tennessee down home, Brumley, Alexandria, La ..
MIDDLEPORT- Charles
Neal. 68. Lancaster, formerly
curb and watch. He'd .always cornbread, purple hull peas; and iO grandchildren .
Funeral services will be of Middleport. died Friday
wave and smile. I doo't know sweet potato pie authentic.
ed
And that was why, of held 2 p.m. Monday at the afternoon at Doctors Hospital
Crow-Hussell Funeral· Home
North, Columbus.
COW'lll!, he lived bere. These
why . I just Ilk him."
with Rev . A . H. Mac Kenz le
The
middle-aged
Mr . Neal was the son of the
gentleman at the bar wanted were his people. And they offlclotlng. Burial will be in late George and Clara Neal.
He was also preceded In
to know more about the young were all there at the end, as Suncrest Cemetery.·
Friends
may
call
at
the
death
by ~ a son, Robert, a
waitress. "I'm 23. I run off they should be, au· the old funeral home after 2 p.m . on
month ago .
when 1 was 17 and started high school and Army Sunday.
Mr . Neal was employed at
living with this dude. My buddies, all the cousins with
the Fairfield School for Boys
WINNIE HOLSINGER
as an electrician.
momma had died of cancer the double Olrlstian names,
REEDSVILLE - Winnie
He is survived by his wife.
and my dad got killed in a car all the old aunts and uncles in Holslr!Qer, 59, Rt : 1. Reeds- Florence
; one son, George
wreck the next year. All their freshly pressed best villeJ. was dead on arrival
Ray
of
Florida;
one
Fr iCiay afternoon at St .
seven of us kids got farmed who cried real tears.
daughter. Charlene Foster.
Someone oo ooe of the local Joseph's Hospital in Parkers- Lancaster; a brother, Ike
out. I w.a s living with niy aunt papers descn'bed the funeral burg . He was born here af Neal, Middleport ; 10 grand·
and uncle and I hated them. I
Reedsville, the son of Martha
children, one niece and
got pregnant. So we got as moce cotlntry boy than Barber Holsing~r. Rt . 1. several nephews.
married. Now I'm divorced. show business, more plain Reedsville, and the late Alva
Friends may call at the
Frank Smith Funeral Home
My little girl's five .."
_ folks than beautiful people. Holsinger.
A member of the East Eden
in Lancaster after 2 p.m .
Keep up with tomorrow ... This great looking Conte!miJOf,Br~
The piano player started And that may he the most Uolled Brethren church, he todc)y
. Funeral services will
singing "Your Cheating perceptive thought expressed • was a veteran of WW 2, be held Monday.
' chair will dazZle your eyes V~~:ithout diminis;hing your wal
Heart " and Hank Williams in all the mllllons of wocds {armyl and a refired elecBegin with its futuristic style, then add the comfort of
·
would have been that have poured out of here trtclart
bunon·tulted back and padded arms. Rock in style and
He belonged to the DAV
prond of lhe rendition. Tbe in the past fe:" days.
LILLIAN E. SMITH
Ch~pter 008 and of the In u\ed to the· relaxation of years to come .
MIN.ERSVILLE Sur ·
Jliano player bad a nice voice.
Maybe .that s part of what ternational Brotherhood of
Lillian
E.
Smith;
7.1,
vlvors·ot
"He's been singing a lot of . Elvis w~ all about. And Electrical Workers No. 972 of
.of Minersville, who died
Marietta.
Elvis' songs, too," said the lh~re 1s a particular
Survivors
beside
his Thursday, are a son. Maurice
young waitress.
~~~e to those of us mother are hi~ wife Mazie Smith , Minersvi lle; two
And I thought your life is sliding Into our WlCertaln Jot11150n Holsinger, afhome ; sisters, Thelma Hawley and
an Elvis song. It:st.ould be put forti~. We hearken in Elvis' three dauWt1ers, Janet Mrs. Harry (Eileen) Clark,
both of Minersville, and
to blue grass music. Mother pass!llg lhe echOes o! our own Holsinger . Reedsville ; several nieces and nephews.
Brenda Day, Coolvill~ : and
dead of cancer, father killed mortality • ~e last slippage of Pattie fiarr, Springfield.
in a car wreck, wed at 17, youth UTetnevable.
Ohio; two sons, Ronald, and
divocced at 20, and 1,0w, to
Those of us who start~ Douglas, both of Newark.
get by, Berving drinks in a bar ~ether, who~ h~y IS Ohio; six brothers, Clinton,
.and VIrgil, all of
to low Upping customers crlSSCI'Ossed Wl~ hill, whose R.ussell,
ReedsVIlle; Alva, Racine;
down
in
Memphis
milestones are littered along Clifford. Belton. Mo., and
Tennessee. That's why yo~ the same road, feel, I. suspect, Rodney, Greenfield, Ohio ;
like.d him. He was singing to an even sh@llll!l' twmge. We four s1sters, Fannie Bigley,
VIrginia Carter, both of
you. He was singing )Tour have lost one of our own.
Reedsville; Donna Webb,
song
Th~e are certain moments . Guysville, and Emma Ed9y,
Yo~ could burn his house, that mark our lives sharply, Belpre. and five grand ·
steal his car, drink his liquor that
!rightly even mto children.
His father , Alva, died In

COMFORT PLUS

UM

I

made

2 runs Sunday

Driver

Weather

v

"

ed

Fairgrounds Saturday. Wiriner of the event was Mrs. Dale
Kautz. ·See Page 4 today for olher tractor pull pictures by
!Catie ()row.
·

Notices, local briefs
The McElroy reunion will Harry Warner Pickens, Sr.,
be held Sunday, Aug. 28 at Racine, and Gustava May
Portland Park. Basket dinner John.on Pickens, Racine.
at noon.

John Mohler has been
transferred from Holzer
Medical Center to University
Hospital, Means Hall room
513, Coiwnbus. Cards would
be appreciated Sent to him in
care of the hospital. ·
Marriage licenses hav~
been issued to Larry Steven
Pickens, 18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy
and Dreama LaDonna
Jenkins, 18, Racine; Mark
Alan Morris, 20, Rutland, and
Melissa Kay Thomas, 19,
Pomeroy, and to George
Dehner Mullinex, 29, Hartford, W. Va., and Constance
· Lee Reitmire, 35, Rt. 1,
Letart, W. Va.

EAST MEIGS All
Eastern High School girls
interested in playing volleyball are .to meet at the blgh
school at 6 p.m. Tueday.
Those interested who cannot
attend are to contact Miss
Thompson.
EAST MEIGS ...,- A meeting
of aU Eastern Local School
District kindergarten
students and their parents
will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School.

. COFCTODINE
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce will hold a dinner
One suit for dlvocce and meeting for member~ and
another action for dissolution their spouse·s at 6:30 · p.m.
bave been filed in Meigs
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
County Common Pleas Court.
Emerson
Heighton,
Jane ' R]lllyan, Rt. 1, Midpresident, said the group will
dleport, filed for divorce from
make plans· for an autmoblle
. Gary .Dwayne Runyan and
exhibition to be held In ()c.
filing for dissolution were
Iober.

,.

"

�1-The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 21, 1977

New blood

l ,•, ..:·:·:;.·.·:· ..;:;.·.····=::·:···:·:·:·!·:....·:=!·.·.·.::·:·. :·:·:·:·:::,:·:·:::::·:·.·=·=·:·:·: : :·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·:::-:-:-:=:-:::;::;.;:;.;::-:;.;.;::::-:-::;.; :-:··.....;.. • : :-.·:· •: :··;~:;~:;.;::-:·:·:·:·:;:·:;

J
II

Inventor claims cooking oil
-runs his automobile engine

needed by
Republican mf 1972FLOWER
MOUND, Tex. (UP! ) - In
Richard Clem announced the
§~

COLUMBUS (UP! ) Reger L. StcJle Jr., dlairman
o1 the young Republican
Natiulal Federatim, says his
party needa new blood.
In Columbus Saturday to
address the Ohio League of
Young Republican Clubs
State emvention, Stone, 25,
said, "The problem with the
party is that it's floudering at
the local level ... dying at the
grassroots level."
"We're not running strong
local candidates. The parties
don't attract anyone to vote.
People vote for the candidate
... if you run a lousy
candidate, you'll attract no

:;:; Invention of a way to operate automobile
:;:; engines m cooking oil.
~~ He was $tlll making !bat claim today,
~;~; even though his first prototype motor fell
;:;: apart and he had been "strung aloog" by
::;; at least 15 companies before he found
'::; financial backing.
:::: Clem, 48, a heayy equipment operator
:::; for the city of Dallas and part-time
) inventor, says if the automobile industry
:::: adopts his invention motorists could
~:': change the eight milg
allonsndof vegetabbie oil
:;·; m 1y every 150,000 es a never uy any
~:;: gas.
;:;; "We could get away from this expensive
;::: gasolipe," Clem said, and eliminate
:;:: pollutioo.
;:;; . Clem said he uses vegetable oil because
:': his motor runs at 300 degr~ - a
votes."
. ;·, temperature w~ere water has boiled away
He said the GOP has the ;:;: and conventional motor oil breaks down.
same trouble oo the national :': Though he won't divulge many details of

~0~ ~J!

=

0

~s::0:~

::,:::f~~;~~'c.ba~~~e'i.arentlyb~

since 1960 _ NIXOO Rockefel- ;:;.

ler, Goldwater and' Reagan."
Democ ratic Jimmy Carter,
a new face, he said, turned
out to be a winner.
The chairman said the
R e pub li cans '
1980
presidential candidate should
be a moderate cooservative,
~:.1.:~-r:&amp;:~:v:

~:~!:; ~~U:OOA~x:~d[;~

When Clem fi.pished his first vegeta e
;:;:oil engine in 1972, he mapped a 600-mile
;:,::. test trip to Ei Paso for the first engin.e
~;~: model he bad financed through hiS
;:;: earrungs. But he only made 1t as far as
&gt;.::.' Abilene befcre the "shafts and everything
'.:: bent in it."
:::; He blamed the fail ure on poor
:·.
,

constructioo, too small a shaft and the use
of chains instead of gears. Undaunted, he
decided to try again, but said, "I needed
mooey to build this thing better."
Neither the automobile industry rwr the
15 other companies he wrote - some as far
away as Taiwan - were interested in
fin ancing a prototype and then
manufacturing it.
"They saJd this thing is not feasible
according to the laws of physics," Clem
sail! ''But I said, 'Well it does (work), and
if it doesn't work like I said it does, you
doH
n'et 881
have
d ~'oN gi~m,_: anythlng."n'ling t
, 0 c~ ..,.,. y was wa
o
get mto manufacturing of this thing.
Everytime I'd get a good prospect, they'd
kick it aroiD!d four or five months. Seems
~~. somebody was telling them, 'Don't do

0

Then last year, he said, a large coal
company offered to back him. Clem
refused to disclose the name of his
benefactor, but did say the coal company

0

,.,. ,._,,., . ,.,...,. . ,. . . .,.. . , .,...,. ..,...,..._., ..,., .: ' .,:,., ,.,,: . ,.

DEVOTEDT0111E
1N'1'ERFn OF

4:'1769 Bumness Off1ce Phone
2156. EdiConal Phone ~2157

m-

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy. Ohio
National advertising representative Ward ~ Griffith Company,
Inc , &amp; ttinelli aOO Gallagher Dl~; ·
r;,7 Third Ave , Nt:w York, N.Y.
10017.
.Sublcnption rates Delivered by
earner -,vhere available 75 cents per
week. By Motor Roote where eam er
!llei'Vtce not available. One month ,
$3 25 By mall Ul Ohio and W V~~ ·
One Year, $22.00; Sil months,
SlUO, Three months, $1 ~-;
Elsewhere 126 00 year, SlX mooths
$13.50; Three mo nths, 17 50.
Subscript.lon priCe mcludes SurtdBy
Tim..S..tinel.

Wltil Oct. 24 or open as
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Toledo City schools face a scheduled Sept. 6 and close
possible year end cash deficit Oct. 13 fer the remamder of
of over $6.7 million and may 1977.
The analysts showed that
be forced to suspend
classroom mstruct10n to the actual deficit could be as
some 54,000 students for a4 much as $9.8 million rn an
and possibly 43 days to make early closing situation, since
up the deficit, $ole Auditor unemployment compensation
Thomas Ferguson said today. paid teachers and other
employes
rn
Ferguson, in a financial school
analysis, certified to the state December, as well as part of
superintendent of J:Klblic in- the skeletal staff salary, will
struction that, rn order to not become an obligation m
make up the cash defiCit, the district until January,
Toledd city schools would 1978.
Ferguson said the Oct. 24
have to delay class operung
opening date was predicated
on inforn:iation from the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Ser·
vices that Toledo teachers
and school employes would
not
be
eligible
fo r
unemployment compensatton
by delaying openmg of
schools
E. Lamb, M.D.
However, if this should
pr0ve not to be the case,
Fergus on 's
examiners
• estlm3ted an additional 15
days of closing would be
required to offset some $4.9
million m unemployment
compensation and skeletal
staff costs that would have to
be paid by the school district
cancer and sometimes heart before the end of the calendar
problems. l have always
thought !bat 1t would be good
for you because 1t thinned the
blood in order to help pr~tect
agawt hardening of the
artenes. I would like to know
PEKING
( UP! )
if you have any information
Secretary of State Cyrus
on this subject,
Vance conferred today with
DEAR READER
Foreign
Minister Hualll! Hua
Sassafras tea was once a
in
the
Carter
adfavorite spring tome. But like
mi.nistration's
first
hl&amp;h·
many such folk remedies it
was never shown by any level cmtact with China's
sc1entif1c test to provide any new leadership.
Vance took 11 aides into the
health benefits. But who worned about that compared to talks while Hua went m with
the notion that a hot cup of only seven, for what U.S.
tasty tea would signal the end officials said was expected to
of a hard winter and the be a round of tallci on general
world topics such as the
glories of a gentle spring.
Middle
East and Africa.
Then in 1960 the Food and
Later meetings over the
Drug Administration found
out thai the root o{ sassafras next three days will move to
contained flavor oils that specific bilateral issues such
caused liver cancer in rats as Sino-U.S. relations and
and it didn't take too much to U.S. support for the
do the job either. Lung Nationalist Chinese in
tumors were also observed. I Taiwan, the officials said.
Vance and his retinue were
know of no study that links
sassafras tea With heart ·greeted by Huang and a small
disease or !bat show it to be
benefic13l in this regard
either.
But sc1ence has triumphed
WASHINGTON (UPI) in the long run. The root beer
Chip
Carter and his wife
makers have found new
caron
will move out of the
flavonng agents that taste
White
House Tuesday with
more like sassafras than the
their
6-month-old
son to
old sassafras and the candy
travel
hlme
to
Plains,
Ga .,
manufacturers have used
new ·preparations for that where they will take up
distinctive flavor for some residence.
A
White
House
candies. So you can still get
spokesw&lt;man
said
Caroo
is
the sassafras flavor Without
having
"a
few
friends"
to
the cancer - and that is progress - even though you lunch at the White House to
might not think so on an early say farewell.
Chip, 27, spent a week away
spring day when you have a
yen for a hot cup of sassafras frcrn the White House and
tea and frnd out the FDA has friends said he was having
marital problems. Bul last
banned it.
Wednesday
in
a
Because of the volume of
reconciliation
move.
Chip
mail Dr. Lamb cannot
answer your letters personal- joined hill wife at Camp
ly but he will answer uav1d, Md., where the
representative letters of President and Mrs. Carter
general interest m his col- were on vacation . They
umn. Wnte to him in care of returned to die White House
this newspaper, P.O Box Sunday evening.
The White Houae had firBt
1551, Radio City Station, New
announced
Chip would be
York, NY 10019.

HEALTH
Lawrence

Plump cheeks

are a plus
By Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb,
M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
twenty powuis overweight. I
am on a reasonable diet. The
problem is my face. It is
plump and often looks
swollen. It has always been
like !bat even before I
became overweight. l have a
brother that IS like . a
toothpick but has very plump
cheeks. l would like to know
what exercise you could
recommend to slim down my
face.
DEAR READER - Count
your blessings. I know of
large numbers of people wbo
would love to keep their
rounded face when they lose
weight. Usually the fat leaves
the face first and the wai~t
last. If you are lucky enough
to keep this characteristic
through life you may always
look younger and prettier
because of it
I remember one of my early tussles with Lyndon
Johnson regarding his long
struggle With his weight problems. I suggested he needed
to lose some more weight,
and his first reaction was ,
"What would l do about the
photographers?" As a promi·
nent politicUlll he knew that if
his face lost we1ght everyone
would think he was ill desptte
the fact that he would have
improved his health. Politi·
cians can't afford to have
people think they are s1ck.
Concentrate oo losrng YO!If
extra ?Jl pounds first. I'm se"liding you The' Health Letter
number 4-7, Weight Losing
D1et to help you. Do some
facial exerciSes to help you
keep your face muscles
strong and. nature will do the
rest for you. Others who want
thi! diet program can send 50
cr~ts with a long, stamped,
s. •!-addressed envelope for
it.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
read articles and have talked
with many people wbo say
that sa.saafras lea causes

"

'

Sport Parade

]!r
;::

~[

Jly MlL'roN RlaDIAN
UPI Sporlt Editor

:::

;_'=.t..

NEW YORK (UP!) - Ttm 5eaver couldn 'I wait.
This was ooe he wouldn't miss for the world.
It was Homecoming Day, hls first pitching appearance back

;:; '

~~~.

,:,
:.~-.:_f·,:,f·:~.·
.

~:.:.

::::

....

:::

::.

·~.,:',:.
:::
:.:·.:
:·:

:::.:

Toledo schools

THEDAILYSENTINEL .
MEJGSMASON AREA
CH&amp;WEII L TANNEHILL
Eu&lt;. Ecl.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ctlyPuhlillhel! daily except Saturday
by The ~o VaDey Publishing Cornany, 111 Court St., Pamerc;ty, Ohio

1~:

:~~=~m':~:tsf: se~:e~ng:U~ /j

·
thClemotosaidbhethe
expecndts tof fin
'hisish work ondn
e m r Y
e 0 1 year a
""" 000 But h
est.una te s th e fin a 1 cost 8 t """•
·
• e
said, if the engine goes into mass
production , ·~t won't cost any more than a
r-·'"r
6 - en'"ne."
.,....

SIGN OONTRACTS- Officials of the Town of Mason
gathered recently to sign contracts for the $239,000 wate,r
projec t which were awarded at an evening council
meeting. The water line contract was awarded to
Coleman and Trainer of Huntington and the tank contract
to Brown-Steel CMstruction Inc., Newman, Ga. Work will

Zahn firm's

orderly formations as the
procession of official cars
sped down wide boulevards.
In the central Tien An-men
square, thousands of soldiers
paraded in br1ght green
uniforms.
Strmgs of firecrackers
were heard popping in the
hot, humid sunshine and
several trucks were seen
carrying large kettle drums
and cymbal bands.
Vance's arnval came only
hoUI's after Hua was quoted
by the Chinese media as
saying diplomatic relations
cannot be established until
the United States ends its
support of Taiwan and
abrogates the countnes '
mutual defense treaty.

White House losing three of its tenants
'

~

•

returning to Plains alone,
leaving his young family
behind at' the White House,

ToXIc detect1on
e

,,...."t

e

;7~

:~~

founder is

Vance talks with .Hua
but cheerlui welcomrng party
at the airport following a 2'h
hour flight from Tokyo'
aboard a U.S. Air Force
jetliner.
There were no speeches or
ceremonies at the airport and
both groups filed into an
automobile caravan that
swept down deserted roads
and avenues until it ri'Sched
the center of the capital.
There, Vance's party saw
the unposing sight of an
estimated 1 million men,
WOOlen and children in a
miles-long procession
celebrating the end of the 11th
Communist party cmgress,
which ga ve a stamp of
approval to Premier and
party chief Hua Kuo-feng.
The dem(flstrators looked
oo silently in subdued and

~ft:,~g~~ ~~~::,;~;;:eT':~:a~dc~:un~:;

Catherine Smith . Standing, left to right, Carhlotte Jenks
and Dayton Raynes, both servmg on th_e council,_ Calvin
Smith Public Service District Coordmator , Lom Test,
town ; ecorder and Lawrence Roush, councllmanan and
•
water commissioners Absent was councilman Ed Perry.

-------------------------------------------,..J
~.

CHICAGO (UP! ) - Lows
Zahn, founder and chairman
of the board of the Louis Zahn
Drug Co., died Sunday. He
year.
was 67.
The financial cash analysis
The company, based in
was requested by the Toledo Melrose Park, serves more
City Board of Education and than 1,400 retail drugstores in
came after voters defeated three states.
millage issues four times.
Zahn, a member of the
Toledo city schools were Chicago White Sox boai-tl,
closed rn December, 1976, m wa s one of several
order for the district to offset businessmen who prevented
a $3.4 million defiCit by Dec . the White Sox from moving to
31, 1976.
'
another city last year .
Zahn's son , Melvyn,
president of the drug
TESTS UNDERWAY
company, was kidnaped rn
CINCINNATI (UPI )
Testing Ohio River water for 1973 for $1.5 million ransOm
pollutants such as organic but escaped by jumping fr om
chemicals began on a regular a bathroom Window of the
basis last week, the Ohio bouse where he was held.
Zahn began his company rn
Environmental Protection
1931 by borrowing $250 and
Agency has announced.
$1,000
in
Samples will be taken from obtaining
rntakes of SIX Ohio muruc1pal merchandise on credit. He
water works. AnalysiS of the used his bedroom as a
samples will be done by a stockroom and sold to
private contractor, Stilson d.nlggists from the trunk of
his car. In 1976 the firm had
Inc., of Columbus.
annual
sales of $57 million.
The samples will be taken
Other survivors mciude
each Monday through Thursday. If federal funds become Zahn's wife, Frieda ; a
available for the testing , daughter, Mrs . Barbara
more intensive moo1tormg of Gunther; his mother and a
cancerrelation pollutants will sister
Funeral services were
begin in the next few months,
according to Dr. Kenneth L. scheduled Tuesday at west
suburban Temple Har Zion,
Apple~ate , ch1ef of the
OEPA's water quallty, R1ver Forest, with burial rn
Westlawn Cemetery.
section.

BRIDGE OPENS

lphins Whip Cowboys

!if

but now Chip will be taking
Caron and son James Earl
Carter IV.
Chip is golllg to "help out"
in the family 's peanut
busihess, according to Mary
Hoyt, the First Lady 's Press
Secretary, but his eitact role
has not been defined.
The Carter family trustee,
Atlanta attorney Charles
Kirbo, discussed finances
with the President last week
at camp David, and Kirbo
has said he will have an
announcement soon on
disposition of the peanut
warehouse .
Billy
Carter,
the
President's brother, has
decided to give up the day-today running of the family
business.

OOVINGTON,Ky. (UP!)Kentucky Department of
Transportation officials say
all six lanes on the I-75 Brent
Spence Bridge Will be open
for the long Labor Day
weekend.
The bridge, a heavily trav·
eled link acro51! the Ohio
River between Cincinnati and
Northern Kentucky, has been
'·jammed throughout moat of
the summer, as traffick was
restricted for major repair
work.
Wcrk on the bridge's three
northbo!DIIanes is alated for
completion by Sept. 1.
Repairs on the part of the
French cOmposer Claude
southboWICI lanea will reswne Debussy was born Aug. 22,
after Labor Day weekend.
1862.

I! mi.(

series of poisonous chemical wei
spill's whi ch threatened :
dr mking wa ter supplies ' "1
dow nnver from
West-'""
Vu-ginia.
Despite the delay and disa- - ,l
greement, Weaver said he ·. ;
expected an interagency .. ,.,
accord would be reached
soon ' 'The first equipment
Leo Weaver , executive
could be on-hne in four , ;~
director of the eighl-&lt;ltate
months" after a contract is ~
enwonmental organ=tion,
said development of the
signed for EPA support, he '"'
mon1torrng system has been
sa1d, noting such action . "'
would come no sooner than&lt;,.;
delayed
by
technical
1978.
•~
disagreements between
ORSANCO and the U.S.
Weaver added he would be ' '"
meetrng w1th officials of utiJi, '
Environmental Protection
J.g~cy. '&lt;
ties aloog the Ohio River on ""
CINCINNATI (UP!) - · Wednesday, to get their views ,;;
ORSANCO has asked the
EPAiror $520,000 to eqwp and C. A. Harrell, Cincinnati city on the proposed monitoring .:&gt;o
oper.ate 12 monitoring manager from !!15Ua, died system. He explained many~
stations on the Ohlo River for Sunday. He was 84-years-old. utilities and industries lllong ,.~
Harrell was Cincinnati's the waterway Will house the ·,;;
two years, Weaver sa1d in an
fourth
city manager, and staff and equipment for the ..: '
interview, but the federal
after
his
retirement had monitoring stations, in a :
agency has asked ORSANOO
become
a
visiting
professor cooperative effort with ""
for a revised plan, With fewer
stations rperforming more of political science at the ORSANCO.
,""
Uruversity of Cincinnati.
' functions.
After the session this week, "'
Durmg his tenn as city ORSANCO officials will
Another dispute centers m
funding of the project, w1th manager, a City eanungs tax present a modified proposal .::.
ORSANCO members was started, several bond for the early warning system , ~
charging they were led to issues were passed and ex· to the EPA before Sept. 1.
believe more federal mooey pressways and urban
.....
renewal was begun.
A graduate of Randolph:
WO
Macon College, Ashland, V~ .,
he also had served as ctty
manager
of Portsmouth, Ohio
0
....
yfrom t930-3t
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - An
warning system" to
detect toxic chemical spills
oo the Ohio River will not be
installed until next year at
the earliest, according to an
official of the Ohio River
Va lley Water Samtation
Commission.
~~ early

would be available for the
system than has been
forthcoming
The call for an early
warmng water pollutiOn
system began last Winter out
of public concern over a

G 0 Vemment
innovator

passes on

T
driVers
Judges told
d
b
.
are Cite
.msane
can·-. .
Ohio patr~l Skydiver falls
go to polls.~
Two of the drivers involved 7,200 feet
in three weekend accidenta
were Cited by the Gallla·
Meigs Post State High Patrol.
First weekend wreck was
reported at 2: 15 p. m.
Saturday on Rt. 160, one and
e1ght-tenth miles south of Rt.
35. According to the patrol,
17,
Kenneth
Patton ,
Gallipolis, was cited for
assured clear distance after
his vehicle hit one in the rear
driven by Randy L. Brown,
21, B1dwell. There were no
injuries.
Two
mishaps
were
reported in Meigs County.
The first was at 5:30 p. m.
Saturday on Union Ave. at the
intersection of Rt. 7, fivetenths of a mile west of the
Pomeroy corporation limlta.
Terry L. Pickens, 20,
Rutland, was stopped for the
stop sign there when his
vehicle was struck from the
rear by one driven by
Clarence E. Lee, 30, Rutland.
Lee was cited for operating
an unsafe vehicle. There
were no injuries.
At 10:30 p. m. SIUldaY on
Rt. 338, three and one-tenth
miles east of Rt. 124, a vehicle
driven by Ralph E. Rose, 32,
Racine, struck a deer. There
was moderate damage to the
vehicle. No one was injured.

On this day in history:
In 1911, the Mma Usa was
stolen from the Louvre
Museum in Paris. It was
recovered four months later.
In 1973, u.s. Secretary Of
State William Rogers
resigned and German-born
presidential aide Henry
Kissinger was named to
replace lim.
AIJo that day' President
Nixon assailed his Watergate
critics and pledged to stay in
office.

to his death
TURNERS FALLS, Mass.
(UPI) - A skydi_ver fen 7,200
feet to his death Sunday after
he was knocked unconscious
in an rn-air collision with
another skydiver.
Lawrence R. Henry, 25, of
Conway, bad jumped from a
plane flyrng over Turners
Falls Airport when he
collided with Roderick A.
Raubeson, 35, of Northfield.
Pohce said Henry was
knocked unconscious and was
unable to open his
parachute.
Raubeson was reported in
fair condition at Farren
Memcrial Hospital with a
spinal fracture . He was
unable to get his parachute
fully opened following the
rolllslon.
Federal Aviation
Administration officials will
investigate the acc1dent.
Henry fell into a wooded
area near the airport and he
was pronounced dead at the
scene by Dr. Henry Rys.

·--••

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Secretary of State Ted
Brown said today a flaw iii' '~
the election day registratioo-:; •
act apparently gives ''Ohio'i ·.:
committed insane" the rigtil ";

w:

·~'

to vote.

Brown said he sent letters:~
to all Ohio Probate Coort··
judges notifying them" t!tal""
under the new law they
specifically adjudicat~ · ;
persons incanpetent to vote: •
or the Insane already
comnutted, or the mes to ~-~
committed, could vote.
,.
Brown said he testified::
before the House Elections";
Committee and told it of the
problem in early May but iil :
the rush to make thev:
legislation law, his advice.:;

must·:

was ignored.

n

Medina County Probal!!,.
Court Judge H. Dennis, .
Dannley advlaed Brown that;
guardianship journal entries
were of a general nature In!!.
declared
a
perSO/!'
incompetent to take care ol
himseU cr his property, bu~;
not incompetent to vote. " "
" We will never hav! .
persons In !bat category,
CONTRACT AOCEPfED
inasmuch as aU of our joUrnal: '
CINCINNATI (UP!)
entries in guardi!IJtshljls d!r.
Union members employed by not make a specific Ondlln,(,
the University of Cincinnati of Incompetency for the
Hoapltal, General Hospital purpooe of voting," said til(
and Holmea Hospital have judge.
"'
voted to accept a one-year
Brown said he aeea P.
contract for which they bad possible cmfllct in the net::
been bargaining since July 1. instant voter law In which the
• The agreement affects constltutiul aays, ''no ldlol ol"
aome 1,800 members r:i the insane person Bball ~
American Federation of entitled to !be priYileg• r:i an
State, County and MuniciPal elector.
Employee~, who will receive
"We'U jlllt have to walt
full pa)'IDI!IIt of tbelr S250, 000 ID!til tiila is litigated In order
majcr medical plan.
to secure a jadlcl_.
But under the new pact, iuterprelatlon," aald Brown.
many of tile IUiioll members "Until that time, Ohio's
wW not receive an Immediate COIIUDitted lnaane ~...
wqe bike.
have the rlcbt to vote."
: ••
.~ ., '
~

f \1

at Shea Stadium in an enemy uniform since the Mets traded
him to the Reds in mid-June ai'KI.Seaver couldn't gel to the ball
park fast enough.
......_,
He was the first player to arrive Sunday, the first player on
both clubs. The gates weren't even open yet when he got to the
park and walked In through the players' entrance.
The two managers, Sparky Anderson of the Reds and Joe
Torre of the Mets, already were in their offices, wcrking on
their lineupa for the game. Torre was talking about Seaver.
"I expect him to go out there and try to be perfect," he said.
"I expect him to try to strike out a Iotta people. He could be so
anxious, he may overthrow the ball. I remember when I was
With the Cardinals and he'd go against Bob Gibson, Seaver
would get himself up so much, he 'd overthrow the ball. It was
the same thing with me when I got traded !rom the Braves to
the Cardinals. The first time we played the Braves, I tried so
hard, I couldn't see. One thing about this game people
sometimes forget is that the human element is involved."
Without question, it was with Seaver from the moment he g~t
to Shea Stadium Sunday. He was nervous, but tried not show 1t.
''Once the game starts, I'll be okay," he said to Pete Rose
after the rest of the Cincmnati players arrivel!.
Seeing the huge throng of newsmen, television and radio
people in the clubhouse, all bent on asking how he felt, how was
he going to pitch and how had he prepared for this occasion ,
Seaver greeted them amiably but quickly headed for the
trainer's room where he could be by himself.
• Now and then, he ventured out but found the media still
waiting for him and went back inside.
Out m the field, the Mets were taking batting practive. Jerry
Koosman, a good fnend of Seaver's who had specifically asked
Torre for Sunday's pitching assignment, talked about how he
felt facing his old buddy.
"I'm cheering for him today - but to come in second,"
laughed the Mets' southpaw . "We're good friends . Nothing's
gonna change by what happens today . We're still gonna be
good friends ."
.
Ed Kranepool, making his first start since July I, said Torre
had asked him to play Sunday and he was glad of the
opporturuty.
"It's just an ego trip," said Kranepool. "! wanna see what
1t's like to hit against Tom Seaver . I've been in the league 15
years and I'd have to rate him rn my top four . Koufax would be
No. 1; Seaver No.2, then Gibson and Marichal."
Now it was time for the game to start.
The crowd of 46 265 secood largest of the year at Shea where
• •off, cheered loudly when Seaver•s name
attendance has fallen
was announced. They saw the Reds jump in front with a run in
the first inning off Koosman and they gave Seaver another
ov11tion as he ran from the dugout to the mound to start the
bottom of the first.
He was in such a hurry, he nearly ran over the Reds' batboy
picking up some hats near the dugout.
.
Seaver started with a rush . He struck out two men rn the first
rnning, including Bud Harrelson, his former roomma':" and
best friend with the Mets, and struck out two more tn the

'
coolest, tossed a pass

By IRA KAUFMAN

UPI Sporta Writer
When Don Shula's team
dropped to 6-8 in 1976, llOille
foo tba ll writers quickly
began chanUng the Miami
Dolphin's last n tes, but they
may ha ve been a bit
premature.
Saturday night, th ey
defeated the Dallas Cowboys,
20-14, for their third straight
pre-eeason triumph, and they
did it with a new set of "no·
names.''
On offense , reserve
quarterback Don Strock
passed for two long
touchdowns, both to neet
wide receiver Nat Moore,
recalling the golden days of
Griese to Warfield, and
defensively , the game's key
play was provided by ooe of
the
Dolphins
moat
anonymOUII players.
Defensive back Norris
Thomas, a rookie from South·
em Mississippi, stepped in
front of Cowboys' receiver
Golden . Richards at the
Dallas 29 and picked off a
pass
from
backup
quarterback Danny White
late in the third quarter and
scored untouched to bring' the
Dolphins to within 14-13 of
Dallas.
A few minutes later,
Strock, who played the entire

~nd.

He was giving 1t all he had and nobody could touch him until
Steve Henderson one of the four players the Mets got from the
Reds for him, sinSJed With two out in the fourth for New York's
first hit.
By the eighth, the Reds were ahead by four runs and
Koosman was gone. The score was 5-1 and that was the way _it
wound up. For Seaver, it was his 14th VICtory and seventh rn
nine deCisions since joirung the Reds.
When the g811le was over the fans gave him another ovahon
and he acknowledged tt by waving his cap to them near the
Reds' dugout.
"It's awfully ruceto come home," he S8ld. ''Obviously, there
has to be some emotion, but you have to go out there and be a
professional, that's all there is to it."
'fom Seaver was all of that Sunday, and a little more.

the
flat to Moor~, who turned II
into a 69-yard touchdown.
Earlier in the evening Strock
bad teamed up with Moore m
a 5&amp;-yard scoring play.
''This was a good game for
us, because we stayed in
there when we could have let
it slip away from us," said
Slluia.
The Cowboys struck for 14
points in the last six secoods
of the first half. Prestm
Pear!IOn scored from the one
with six seconds remaining
follQwlng a 79-yard drive and,
Immediately after the
kickoff, Char lie Waters
intercepted a pass and
lateraled to Cliff Harr'.s, who
scored.
In other weekend action,
Cincinnati defeated Detroit,
17-13, San Francisco downed
Los Angeles, 23-14, Chicago
edged Houston, 14-10, New
Orleans topped Buffalo, 20-17,
Pittsburgh beat the New
York Jets, 2&amp;-13, Denver took
Atlanta , 10-2, Tampa Bay
nipped Green Bay, 10-7, and
San Diego whipped the New
York Giants, 29-17.
Friday night, Baltimore
routed Minnesota, 29-7, and
Cleveland beat St. Louis, 1910. Washington defeated
Kansas City, 13-7, and Seattle
10

edged Oakland , 12·10, on
Thursday.
49trs %3, Rams 14:
Quarterback Jim Plunkett
tossed a pair of touchdown
paases and San Francisco
outscored Los Angeles, 17~.
in the secood half. Pat Haden
and Vince Ferragamo each
connected for TDs as the
Rams bolted to a 1441 lead,
but the Rams were blanked ih
the second baU with Joe
Namath calling signals.
Bears 14, Oilers 10:
Trailing, 10-7, in the fourth
quarter, Chicago's Bo Rather
caught a (().yard pass and
Roland Harper ran me yard
for a touchdown four plays
later to give the Bears the
victory. Harper's plun ge
iJfted the Bears' pre-season
record to 3-1. Chicago
quarterback Mike Phipps,
playing only the ru-st half,
completed !k&gt;f-13 passes.
Saints ZO, BUls 17:
Archie Manning threw an
ll.yard TO pass to tight end
Henry Childs and Rich Szaro
added two field goals to give
the Saints their third straight
pre-season victory. 0 .J .
Simpson played the ru-st half
for the Bills, gaining 32 yards
m five carries.
Steelers 26, Jets 13:
Terry Bradshaw put on a

Mon trea l a t Cmctnnatl, n 1ght

Detroit rally falls short
as Bengals hold on, 17-13
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI ) - Coach Tommy Hudspeth of
If the Cincinnati Bengals and the Lims said. "! liked the
Detroit Lions were heading way he handled things. We
into their final exhibitioo bad definitely planned before
game next week, both would the game M not playin.g Greg
(Landry) next week.
be in a good bit of trouble.
"It was going to be Joe
Neither team was regular·
(Reed)
and Gary next week
season sharp Sunday ln
Cmcinnati 's 17-13 victory at Seattle. I hadn'tplamed m
over Detroit. But then, starting Gary, but we'll take
a long look at the films and
ne1ther team bad to be.
Third-string quarterback see."
Bengals Coach Bill Johnson
Gary Danielson , one-time
said,
"We weren't as crisp as
World Football Leaguer who
I
wanted
us to be. When we
was cut by the Lions last •
started
oft,
we ran the ball
season and later recalled,
well.
But
then
we ran into
was ooe of the few Lions to
adversity
later
and we
still the jeers of the sparse
couldn't overcome it.
a-owd.
"I'm not confident myself
Danielson rallied Detroit In
about
the team. We can do a
the second half, but could not
lot
better.
We can't tolerate
prevent Cincinnati from
those
mistakes.
all
raiJling its exhibition record
"We'll head back to
to 2-1, while dropping the
training
camp this week and
Lioos to 1·2.
work
on
eliminating our
He hit lOof 15 passes for 104
yards, missing his last two mistakes," Johnson said.
from the Cincinnati 13 in the "We're not at all ready to
last minute of the game. Greg open the regular season.''
Landry clicked on 10 of 15 in , Burly rookie fullback Pete
Johnson and second-year
the first half fer 125 yards.
"I liked Gary Danielson," man Archie Griffin, paired at

Ohio State but running out of
different backfields with the
Bengals, ran well against the
Lions. Johnson gamed 47
yards rn 10 carrtes, while
Griffm pounded out 41 in 7.
Quarterback Ken Anderson
displayed regular-season
fonn, but John Reaves threw
some soft passes as his
backup and wasn't nearly as
sharp at running the team.
Mistakes, includrng several
of over-aggressiveness by
second-year linebacker
Reggie W1lliams, hurt
Cincinnati at critical times.
Anderson marched the
Bengals 71 yards on their first
possession and Griffm 1 who
gamed a4 impressive yards in
the series, bolted six yards

Washhrim
soap box

Seaver beats oldteammates,5-l
one !bing going for me that
Tom doesn't have, I have you
atshortstop."I'hatwas a very
emotimal munent for me.
Then I go and screw up the
game for him."
What was Harrelson's im·
pressim of batting against
Seaver after so many years of
playing behind him at shortstop?
"He makes a lot of pitches
that are hard to foul off,'' said
Harrelson. "He worked me
outside a lot anti the second
time he struck me out he
threw me a hard fastball that
rose. I guess he figured I was
a sucker like everynne else."
Not surprisingly, Seaver's
toughl!st oppooent turned out
to be veteran Ed Kranepool,
who had not started a game
since July I. Kranepool
struck out his first time at bat
but delivered two singles and
a loog sacrifice fly that
scored the Mets' only run.
"Joe (manager Torre)
asked me before the game if I
wanted to play, and I
hesitated at first because I
hadn't played at all in two
weeks," said Kranepool. "I
didn't want to embarass
myself but it's a challenge to
face die great ones, like
Seaver. He's $tlll the best
Pitcher 1n baaeb@ll. Once he
gets a l)-1lead l'drather be m
his side. He's not gonna lleat
himself. Emotionally he had
to be at his peak."
~ mind."
my
.
But maybe Johnny Bench,
Ah yes, the ultimate
who caught Seaver, put
ti}.-of~sslonal. That's what
things In their proper
Seaver was Sunday. The
perspective.
crowd saluted him wid! a
"He's a great Seaver, but
l!landJng ovation wben he ran
c,
he llhould have beaten the
Mets ...and he did."
.•
Elaewhere in the National
League, Philadelphia put
away Houston, 7-3; San
baseman Deli Berra from FranciiCO shaded Pittsburgh,
. , United Prtn lnterniitienal
c 0 1 u m b u 1 of thternational
Iunday
5-4; Loe Angeles · downed
'
League . Pro FootUII
Baltimore Placed tl')lrd
Chicago, :.-1, and Montreal
New England - Traded drubbP.d Atlanta, 10-4.
belemen lrabkl Robinson on
me voluntar'IIY retired list ; running back Harold H1rt to

-

onto the field for batting
practice, gave him another
one when he ran to the mound
in the first inning and topped
it off with a grand finale when
he got the last out.
Seaver, acknowledging the
crowd's reaction, tipped his
bat accordingly each time.
"It's hard to J:Kll into words
how much this game meant to
me" said Seaver. "I can tell
yo~ better in a couple of
weeks if this game ranks up
there with my greatest
victories. I'm just glad it's all
over. It's nice to win, but it's
nice to have it all over."
It was an emotional game
for the Mets' players, too.
Bud Harrelson, Seaver's
closest friend on the Mets,
admitted he purposely
avoided eye contact with
Seaver so as not to dl.srupt his
concentration. Harrelson
~~truck out his first two times
up butbouncedasingleup the
middle in hls third try.
"I tried not to look at him
and look for the ball,'' said
Harrelson. "It ticked him off,
it really dl&lt;l. There was
pressure m him, but there
was a lot oo me, too."
Unfortunately, Harrelson
turned out to be one of the
goat's of the game for the
Mets. His boot of Seaver's
groWlder In the eighth inning
paved the way for three
unearned runs which broke
the game q~en fer the Reds.
"You know in the fifth
inning, after I caught a line
drive off Dan Dtlesaen,
KOOillll8n came over to me
and said, 'You know, 1 have

Sports transactions

.........

returned catcher Rick Dempsey

to th~ pctlve roster.
PltttiiUI'IIh -

Recallld

third

Washington for future consider

at(ons.

Pbilllel 7, Alll'lll 3:

Steve CarltM

J:K~t

on a

dazzl ·rng display of power
pitching and hitting en route
to his 18th victory, striking
out 14 while extending his
personal six-game httting
streak with a solo homer.
,
Carlton, the majcr 1eagues
top winner, was helped by
batterymate Tim McCarver
withathree-nmhomerinthe
f0 urth

·

Giants 5, Pirates 4:
It was an especially bad
day for the Pirates, who not
only fell to 6'k games behind
th e PhlilieS, bUt a!so lost
hard-hitting second baseman
th
Rennie Stennett f or
e
remainder of the season .
Stennett suffered a dislocated
ankle sliding into second
base. Darrell Evans' two-cun
homer off reliever Rich
Gossage snapped a 3-&lt;1 fie in
the eighth inning to give the
Giants the victory.
Dodgers 5, Cabs 1:
Winning . pitcher Rick
Rhoden helped his' own cause
by going 3-for~ includinK a
solo homer and an RBI
single. Rhoden, 14-8, h~mered
In the second to give the
Dodgers a 3-0 lead, but gave
way to rookie reliever Lance
Rautzhan in the ninth.
Rautzhan notched his first
major league save.
Exp&lt;ll 10, Braves 4:
Del Unser knocked in four
runs with a hornet, double
and single, while Dave Cash
and Chris Speier had two RBI
apiece in the Expos' romp
over the Braves , Don
Stanhouse hurled 51-3 innings
of one-hit relief for the
victory.

AKRON, Ohio (UPI ) Fifteen-year-old Steve Wash·
Conn. says .
burn Burlinoton
~
he tried "not to think about
winning " but still guided his
' .
Ia
. th
racer to fu-st P ce tn e
senior division of the 40th
So
annual All-Amer1can
ap
da
Box Derby Satur y.
burn h0 1 b ted
Wash
• w ce e ra
his16thbirthdaytoday,wona
$3,000college scholarship and
a trophy.
He edged Will Scruggs, 13,
Chattanooga, Tenn., whoreceived $2,000andaplaquefor
finishing second. Coming in
tllird was Hope Barber, 13,
Dayton, who won a $1,000
scholarship and a plaque.
The senior division WaS for
sl k tr d'ti 1 soap
the ee er, a 1 ona
box cars, which we~e made
by hand by the participants.
In the junior division,
which is for manufactured
cars the 'winner was Mark
Ferdinand, 10, canton, whose
sister won the senior division
last
year.
He
was
representing Stark and
Portage counties.
Second went to James
Bourque, 10, Waltham,
Mass., and third went to
Mark
Edwards,
12,
Tidewater, Va.. All three
received a plaque and a set of
power tools.
Ferdinand's sister, Joan,
gave him a "Lucky medal" to
wear Saturday, and he said
"it sure worked."
Acrowd of 15,000 turned out
under sunny skies to view the
derby, which race manager
Ron Baker called one of the
best in years.
,.
'

...

1

•

'

Boston
000 030 001- 4 10 I
Ka n City
011 010 03x- 6 11 1
Aase . Ca m pbell (7l and Ftsk ,
Spl iltor ff , Patti n (7) , Gu r a (7 ),
Bird ( 8 ) and Porter W- Bird,
9·4 L - Campbel l , 12 8, HR B&lt;lston, Evans {14 ).

Detroit
(Arroyo 6 13)
at
Cal iforn i a ( Hartzell 61J , 10 30
p m.
T esda v•s Games
Oa kl and , night
Tor on t
De tr o 1 t California , n1ght
M dwa ee at Texas, n ight
Batt •
e at Kan C1ty , n ight
Boston
tnnesota, ni ght
: New
t Chi cago, n 1ght

Sunday's linescores

for the score. Chris Bahr
8 L - Under woo d , 7-9 HR- San
Ma,or League Results
added a 31&gt;-yard field goal Bv United
Press lnternattonal D iego. King m an ( 19)
later m the quarter.
National League
100 100 001 - 3 s 0
100 002 02o- 5 10 3 Houst on
Reaves, piayrng behrnd the San F r n
000 502 OOx- 7 11 0
Pttsbgh
120 000 Olo- 4 6 0 Pht la
No. 1 line, guided the No. 2
Lem ongello, Di xon 14&gt;. Pentz
Montefu sc o, La v e I I e (6),
backs and receivers 50 yards curtis ( 8 ), Moffitt ( 8 ) and (6 ), McLau ghli n ( 8 ) and Fer
Alexander. Klson. Gossage ( 6), guson ; Carl ton and McCar v er
to open the second haU and Teku
W-C arlton. 18-7. L - Lemong el ·
l v e ( 9) and Oyer. W hit rookie Mike Voight of La velle, 7-7 !-- Gossa ge, 8 8 lo, 5 1.4 HR s-Houston . Cabel l 2
(12); Philad el ph ia, M c Carver
HRs- San Franc 1sco , Thom as
North Carolina with a orne- son
(14) , E vans (13).
(5), Carlto.vo!!:;
n~(2:0);;.:o;=-;7"~
yard scoring to.ss. .
Am erican League
100 010 0 3~ s 8 o (1 st game)
Anderson completed half of Cine&gt;
N.Y.
000001
00()- 1 6 2 ChJcgo
000 000 01o- 1 3 o
his 12 passes for 66 yards,
Seaver 8f"'d Bench , Koosman , Milw
001 600 OO x- 7 tO 0
Loc kwood (8) , Apodaca (9) and
Kr avec ,
Kucek
( 4)
and
while Reaves was 3-5-311.
Hodges W- Sea ver , 14 5 LEsstan , Haas and M oore w-...
Pass mterference penalties Koosman , 8 15.
Haas , 9 8 L- K r avec, 7-6 HR s
set up both one-yard scoring
~ C h icago . L emon (17), Mil At lan ta
01 3 000 ooo- 4 6 2 w au kee , Wohl for d (2) , Mc M ul
plunges by Detroit rookie M
ntra l
400 203 lOx- tO 12 0 len ( 4)
Rick Kane. His first was 52
Ruthven , Thei SS (7)
and
seconds from halftime, while Pocoroba , Bahnsen , Stan house (2nd gamel
(4) and Carter . W- Stanhou se, Chicgo
000 101 220-- 6 10 1
his second shaved the score to 9 9 L - R ut hven , -1 10. H Rs- M
1IW
100 10\ OOQ--. 3 1 0
its final margin 2:28 into the Atla.n ta, BurroughS (32l M on
Ren ko , LaGr ow
{8 )
and
t r ea l , Unser (1 2 )
Downing
,
Traver
s.
Rodnguez
ftnal period.
O l. McClure (8) , Ca stro (8)
Detroit was plagued by L A
210 002 ooo- 5 lt 1 and Han ey, Moor e { 8 ) Wcgo
000 100 ooo- 1 10 0 Renko, 1-0 L - Traver s, 4-7
rnconsistency and a poor ChiRhod
en , Raut zhan { 9 ) and HRs-Chlcag o, L. Johnson (15),
kicking game . Piacekicl\er Oates . L amp , Broberg (6 }, P Down ing (4) , M t I w a u k e e,
Bob Wood missed a f1eld goal Reu schel (81 and Mltterweld . W Joshua { 7)
en , 1.4 8 L - Lamp , 0 1
from 28 yards and Ron Sunter --'Rhod
HR- Los A ngel es, Rhoden (3)
Ball
110 120 ooo- 5 10 3
failed from 34 yards. Wood
M 1nn
031 004 01 x- 9 1,. 0
Ogo
SOl 000 1oo- 7 11 l
R , M ay , 0
Marttnez (6 ),
also missed the first of hm San
s• L
ooo ooo ooo--- o 8 1 M cGregor ( 8) and Rudolph ,
two exira point tries.
owchtnk o and Roberts ; Un · Murra y , Zahn, Schueler (5)

champion
-

NEW-YORK (UPI) - They
came by the thousands to
salute T(Jil Seaver Sunday,
and he didn't let them down.
Seaver, mce "The Franchise" of the New York Mets,
returned to Shea Stadium in
the uniform of the enemy the Cincinnati Reds- for the
first time since being traded
June 15 but he received a
hero's welcome from the paid
crowd of 46,265 and he gave
them what they were hoping
tor, a typical Seaver
performance.
The 31-year-old rl.ght·
bander overpowered his extearnnl8tes, allowing only six
hits and striking out 11 in
pitching the Reds to a 5-l
victory over the Mets for his
14th triumph against five
losses. Seaver, who is 7·2
since Joining the Reds, also
hit a double off his close
friend, Jerry Koosman, and
scored two runs in leading the
Reds to the seventh victory in
their last eight glijlles.
"Sure, it was an emotional
game," admitted Seaver,
"but 1 had to block that out of
my mind. Now !bat it's over I
feel better. I had to discipline
Ill)' mind. I didn't '!fant it to
be too emotional ao !bat I
woulcllose cootrol of myself. I
l¥clded that If I kept one
tiling In my mind - that I
IDVe to pitch and love to pitch
well ~ then I could control

Maior Le•gue St ~ndings
Amer iun Le•gue
dazzling passmg display in
By Unttecl Press lntern•t 1ona1
Eut
the first quarter, hitting !k&gt;fNafianal League
w. L Pet. GB
EJII
1l 48 ,5,7 Boston
11 passes for 91 yards and two
Pet . GB NeW YOrk
W L
72 so 590 1f2
TDs to power the Steelers Phi Ia
76 •s 628 - 1 Balt1mre
70 50 583 11h
71 53 573 6 12. Detr oit
over the Jets. Bradshaw, who P1 ttsbgh
57 64 .471 \ 5 1
68 53 562 8
S666 .459 16 12
Clevetnd
played only the first and last Ch1cago
68 55 553 9
St.Lou is
55 73 .430 20lh
Mti W
1
pertods, finished with 13-of-16 Montr eat
57 67 .460 20 h Tor onto
•2 78 .350 29 1h
,402
271!2
49
13
New
York
west
for 125 yards.
w. L Pet. G8
West
Broncos 10, Falcoos %:
W L
Pet. GB Kan Ci t y
69 St 575
74 49 602
Chicago
68 52 561 1
Craig Penrose tossed a 2&amp;- Los Ang
l
65 59 524 9W M lnn
70 54 .565 t
yard TO pass to Riley Odoms cmc
Houston
57 67 460 17 1h Texas
68 53 562 1112
and Jim Turner ktcked a 35- San Fnm
51 68 4S6 18
Caltf
59 60 ~96 9lt:r
D1ego
55 12 ,433 21
Sea ttle
50 76 397 22
yard held goal to lead the San
Atl anta
43 79 352 30 1h Oa ~hm d
4-4 76 .367 25
unbeaten (3-0) Broncos over
saturday's Results
Silfurdly ' s AesuiU
5, Los An geles 4
M 11 wa ukee 4, Chi cago 2
the punchless Falcons - who Ch•cago
C1nc1.nnat 1 8, New Y or k 2
Ba 1t1m ore 6. Minnesota 2
have yet to score a TO th1s Montreat
6, Atlant a 3
Cleve 5., Oakland 4, 1'2 tnr1s
Philadelph ia 5. Houston 4
Kansas City 5, BQSton 2
preseason .
San Fran 5, Pittsburgh 1
New York 6, Texa s 2
Buccaneers 10, Packers 7:
Sl Louts 7, San 0 1ego 1
Toronto s, Cal ltorn 1• 4
Ed Williams plunged one
Su nday's Results
Detro 1t 7, Seattle 3
San Fran 5, Pittsburgh .4
Sunday' s Results
yard for a TD midway Cl
nclnnat• 5. New York t
M il waukee 7, Chic ago 1, 1st
through the final quarter Montreal 10, Atlan t a .t
Ch1cago 6, M ilwaukee 3, 2nd
Minnesota 9 , Balt1more s
wh1le
his
teammates Los Angeles s, Ch icago 1
san
0 1ego 1 , St. Lou rs o
Kansas City 6, Boston 4
inte rce pted three passes, Ph iladelphi a 71 Houst on '3
Cal1 for n1a 3, Tor onto 2
Tod•y' s P ro bable Pttchers
recove.red two fumbles and
Cle&gt;Jela nd 4, Oak.l&amp;nd I
!All Ttmes E D T )
Detro 1t 5, Seattl e 4
sacked Packer QBs five
San Franci SCO I Barr 11 10 ) at New Yor k 2, Texas 1
times for Tampa Bay 's fi rst ChiCago ( R Reuschel 16 Sl.
Today ' l Probable Pitchers
I All Times EDT)
2.30 p.m .
exhibition triumph.
San DutQ O (Shi rley 7 15} at
Balti m or e ( Palmer 13-10) at
Chargers 29, Giants 17:
Ptttsburg h ( Rooker 10 1) , 7 : 35 Kansas Ci ty (leonard 13 10),
8 30 p m.
James Harris fired a pair pm .
Houston ( Richard 12 9) at
Milwaukee (Sorensen 4-6) at
of second-period TO passes to New York (Zachry b·12). 8 05 Texas
( Bl ylev en 11 ll l. 8 35
wide receivers Charlie Jmner P""p.m .
Mont real (Twitchell 2 " ) at
New Y ork { F igueroa 12 8J at
and Johnny Rodgers as the Ctnclnnati
(Billingham
9 9 ), ' ch• cago (Barr ios 11 ·4), 8 .40
Chargers, 2-1, trampled the 8 05 p m
pm
Angeles {Hooton 9 7) at
Boston (Wise 9 5) at Mm
winless G1ants. San Diego St L os
LOUIS (Denny 1·5 ), 8·40 p m
nesota (ThormOdsoa r d 10-9) ,
linebacker Don Goode
Phi ladelph i a {Lonborg B 3) at 8 40pm
Cleveland ( Bibby 9 10 and
returned an interception a4 Atlanta (Hannah 0 l l . 8.40 p m
s Gam es
Hood 1 Ol at Seattle (Galasso, 0
yards for a TO on the game's HoustonTuatesday'
New York
3 and Wheelock 6-9) , 2, 9 ~35
San Franci sco at Ch1 cago
final play.
pm
Toronto (L eman"c zyk 10 10) at
San Otego at P1ftSbgh. n1ght
In tonight's game, New LOS
Ang at St LOU tS, n1ght
Oakland (Tor realba 3 .t) , 10 30
Engla nd IS at Philadelphia . Ph •ladelph l a at Atlanta , n igh t
pm

Ma1or League Leaders
By Un1ted Press International
BaHtng
(based on 325 at bats)
Nat1on a1 League
G AB H Pet.
Parker Pi t
123 505 173 .343

derwood, c ar rol l (3 ), East w lck
(5) , Metzger (8 ) , Hr abosk y (9J
and Stm m on s. w -owchinko, 6

and Wynegar W- Schueter, 6 4
L- R
May,
13· 12.
HRsBalt l more, Maddox (2 ), Mora
(11)", Minnesot a, Bostock (11 )

r---------~~~-=~== --

Stennett P1t
1t6 .1.53 152 336
So mmns St L
115 399 132 .331
Gnffey em
120 46.4 150 .323
Tm pltn st L
11 5469 151 322
Luznsko Phol
111 418 133 318
Foster Cln
120 468 147 314
Morales Ch i
111 421 t3o 309
valent on Mil
104 422 130 308
sm th LA
ttJ 379 116 306
Rob' 1nson Pot
103 372 !14 306
Amencan LeagueG AB H Pet
Carew Mon
120 473 tio 381
BostockM on
119466 155 333
Slnglton Bal
111 390 130 .333
R1ce Bos
ll9 485 157 .324
Baolor Tor
108 435 139 320
R1vers NY
104 426 136 319
LeFiore Det
1t5490 156 318
Zt sk Ch i
109 ·418 130 311
Hargrve Tex
114 398 123 309
Brett KC
100 4!1 126 307
Home Runs
National League : Foster , Cln
41, Burroughs. At I 32 , LullnskJ.
Phd 31. Schm&gt;dt . Ph il JO,
Bench, em 27
American League ' RICO, BOS
and Bonds, Cal 30, Scott, Bos
and Nettles, NY 291 Zisk, Ch•

THEIR
CONTRIBUTIONS
MAY DEPEND
ON YOURS.

26 .

Runs Batted In
National League: Foster, Cln
11 8 , Lu zln sk !, Phil 102. Cey , LA
94 , Burroughs, At l 92 , Bench.
Cin 89
American
League :
H1sle,
Mmn 97,
Bonds, Cal
91 ,
Thom pson , Del 90 . Hob son , Bos
87 , Zi sk , Ch1 84
Stolen Bases
National League : • Cedeno,
Hou 43, Taveras, P1t t 42,
Moreno , Pitt 40; M organ , Ctn
and R 1chards, SO 38
American League Patek, K C
39, Rem y, Cal 32, Page, Oak
29 , LeF lore, Oet 28 ; Bonds, Cal

27.

Pltchmg
Most Victories
National League. Carl ton ,
Phil 18-7, R Reuschel. Ch 1 16-5,
For sch , St .L 15 S; Seaver, C1n
and John, LA 14-S. Rh oden, LA
14-8, Rog .,-s, M t l 13 12
Ame'rican League : Ryan, Cal
1711 ; Tanana , Ca t and Golt z,
M lnn 15 7, Rozema , Oet 14-4,
Torrez , NY l4 10
earned Run Average
(based on 117. innings pitched)
National League: Candelana ,
Pitt 2 63 : Hooton, LA 2 64 ,
R Reuschet , Ch 1 and John , LA
2.79 ; Carlton , Phil 2 83

It's go1 ng to take more than potential to get these h1gh
school students through college. It's gomg to take
money,too
•
When you g1ve to the Untied Negro Col lege Fund,
you help support 41 pnvate, four-year colleges and
graduate schools Colleges that could tratn today's high
school student to be the profess1onal we may njCedotomorrow.
Send your check to United Negro Coll ege Fund,
B. 500 E. 62nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10021. We're
not askmg for a handout, JUSt a hand

Box

No one can do 1! alone.
StrlktoUtl

NatioMI L.eagate: Nl ekro, All
l91 Koosman, NY 162 , Rooers .

Mti' 158. Seever, C1n

154;

GIVE TO THE utUTED nEGRO COLLEGE FUnD.
A m1nd is a ternble thtng to waste.

Carlton. Phil 1!41

Arnertcan League: Rvan. Cal
284; Tanana, cal 190; Leonerd, ·
KC 173. Blvleven , Te)( 157 •
Eckersley , Clev 156

'

A PubliC ServiCe of th1s newsPQpel &amp; The Advert1smg Counc1l~~

,

�,_
~TbeDallySentlnel,Middleport·Pomeroy, O.,Monday,

Fair over

YWALKER

on Sunday

In One More Show Before Retiring
"Oh yes, sure I knew Elvis Presley."
Those words came from 62-year old Jimmy Walker, as
he reflected on the death of the ~'King of Rock."
Maybe the name Jimmy ·Walker does not strike the
right chord of rememberance with most people here, but
just pause a minute and reflect.
'
It was approximately 32 y~rs ago that a song entitled
" Detour" was making it to the top of the country and
western music charts and went on to become a million
selling hit. Yes, that was the same Jimmy Walker who
now remembers Elvis Presley as a pretty nice g~y.
For those who don't go quite that far back but still
remember Little Joe, Hoss, Ben and Adam Cart·
wright on the highly successful western,. Bonanza,_ it ·
was Juumy Walker who played a deputy sheriff for five
years. Yes, this same Jimmy Walker, who remembers
the time ~hen_one of his family members contacted Col.
Tom Parker, manager of Elvis Presley, and sought the
rock and roll star's presense for a few brief moments at
his daughter's birthday party and ended up with the King
almost the entire evenin~.
For those who still don't remember, try to refresh
your minds as Jimmy Walker has had parts in: the
movie, Hello Dolly, alongside Barbara Streisand and
Walter Matthau; on telvision shows such as Cimmaron
Strip, Wild Wild West, Big Valley , F-Troop and Walt
Disney's Wonderful World of Color.
" I've come home to retire, there will be no more
traveling for me," noted the actor, who is currently
residing ln Henders 0n.
,
However, Walker has at least one moreroad to travel
in the show business world.
He was signed on MondaY. by NBC to appear in an
upcoming tw&lt;&gt;-hour dramatic account of the Buffalo
Creel&lt;_ disaster , entitled Ballad of Buffalo Creek.
" It concerns the after affects of what happened to the
people who were effected by the burst of the dam, when

..
.·

ON THE BONANZA SET-For five years Jimmy
:: Walker, on the right, a native of Mason County and now
:~ residing in Henderson, played a deputy sheriff on the
highly successful western , Bonanza. Here he is shown in a
scene with Hoss, played by the late Dan Blocker
According to Walker, this picture was taken short!;
before Blocker's death several years ago.

.··:

..:·
·.
··:
:·:

. . ·.

the governAnt declared it• a disaster area and sent
people from Washington to oversee · the distribution ,''
states Walker.
The Point Pleasant native will play opposite Anthony
"Tony" Perkins, who has the lead role as the big time
Washington lawyer. W(llker plays the small town lawyer
who engages .in a battle of wits with Perkins.
"I wasraised by Lock 11 and when I got old enough to
go school! went to Pittsburgh but I returned here every
summer/' recollects Walker.
It was the river here and not so much a western
scenario that launched him into sho~ business.
" I learned to play the guitar on an old steamboat while
working as a deckhand."
.
Much of his early career centered arounit being a disc
jockey for several local radio stations, including WJEH
where he hosted a show called Chuck Wagon that
ori~inated from Henderson for four hours a day, six days
a week, that was around 1938.
In 1944, he went to California and " I made 12 pictures
with Monogram Pictures, which was the forerunner of
Color Cinema."
One year later, 1945, " Detour" made the big splash
nationally.
·
In those days he received about $35,000 as a direct
result on the sales of " Detour". However, according to
-Walker it was the publicity resulting from the playing of
this record which eventually led to making more money.
Sine~ then he has been starred on the Grande Ole Oprey
Stage 1n Nashville, Tenn.; has appeared in the MidWestern Hayride; as well as many other syndicated
television shows.
.
As a nightclub performer he has played in Las Vegas at
the Frontier and Golden Nugget. His last engagement
was at !he Town House in Atlanta, Ga.
His contribution towards country and western music
over the years has earned him a Golden Guitar Award
!and an induction into the Country-Western Music Hall of
Fame last year at Denver, Col.

:·:

..

'

···::.

0.

Wadkins

in KI tourney
· MASON,Ohio (UP!) - Tbe
1977 i&gt;GA champion, Lanny
Wadkins, says he will play in
the $150,000 Ohio Kings Island
Open, Sept. 19-25.
Wadkins, currently No .. S &lt;il
the pro golf money list with
winnings of $139,000, won the
PGA at Pebble Beach, Calif.,
in a four-bole playoff against
Gene Littler.
Three of the top five PGA
money winners this year are
now committed to play in tbe
Kings Island Open
Wadkins, No. 2 Jack Nicklaus
and ~o. 3 Bruce petzke . .

Robinson

478 ;

CRISISLINE

Marlene

CALL

992-5554

Both races m AL
•
rema1n scrambled
suggestion and with his ·
By MIKE TULLY
consent," Robinson had
UPI Sports Writer
While . American Leag\11! joined the volwitarily retired
teams
sweated
and list, allowing catcher Rick
scrambled in August pennant Dempsey to rejoin the roster
pressure, the announcement after -six weeks on the
of
Brooks
Robinson's disabled list.
" I was planning to relife at
retirement ended a glorious
the
end of this season
23-year career.
anyway/'
said Robinson.
"I once said that I would ·
"I've
just
retired
six weeks
retire as manager when
Brooks Robinson retired,'/ early .... "
" He
has
been
said Baltimore Orioles'
Manager Earl Weaver. "I . unquestiooably the Orioles'
guess I'll have to go back &lt;n most important and best·
that promise now. (But) I'll loved player and will never .
be in Cooperstown five years be replace!~ in the hearts of
from now when Brooks is his fans,'' said Baltimore
inducted into the Hall of General Manager Hank
Peters.
Fame.
Lyman Bostock hcmered
The Orioles announced
and
drove in three runs and
before Sunday's 9-6 loss to
Roy
Smalley capped a fourMinnesota that at . "his
run sixth inning with an RBI
single as Mil)nesota salvaged
. Tbe Almauac
the final game of a three·
United Press Internatlooal gaine series.
Today is Monday, Aug. 22,
· In other games, . Kansas
the 234th d.ily of 1977 with 131
Cjty topped Boston, 8-4, New
to follow.
York edged Texas, 2·1,
The moon is moving from
Chicago beat Mllwaultee. 6-3,
its first quarter to its full
after losing, 7·1, CaU!omla
phase.

nipped Toronto, 3·2, and
Cleveland dropped Oakland,
4-1.
.
.
Royals &amp;, Red §Ox""i': .
Reliever Bill Campbell
walked pinch-hitter Joe
Lahoud with the hases loaded
in the eighth and Tom
Poquette followed with a
single to score two more as
Kansas City won its Uflh
straight game and retained
the lead in the West.
Yankees Z, Ilallgen 1:
Graig Nettles belted a solo
homer and RBI double while
Ron Guidry allow~ only four
Texas hits through seven
innings, giving New York its
eighth straight victory.
Nettles' 29th h!lller helped
the Yankees pull within a half
game of fll'st1&gt;Iace Boston in
the AL East. Ex-Red Sox
Sparky Lyle notched his 20th
save.
Wblte Sox 1-i, Brewen 7-3:
Brian Downing drove in
four runs with a homer and a
single while Steve Renko w&lt;n
his first start for Chicago
after Ken McMullen's tworun homer jlllced Milwaukee
in the opener.
Angela 3, Blue Jays z:
Jerry Remy's third sin~
of the game drove in Terry
Mor.-is, Crawford (5) 1 TayiOi Humphrey from secood bale
(P), ~Iller CPl and M. May ;
with the go-Mead run in the
Mi~cheU, Laxton (6). S8gul (7)
and Jutze. W- Crawford, 5-5 . L seventh and Frank Tanana
- Mitchell. 1-5. HRs-Ottroit,
Oglivle (16), Kemp 1111. earned his l~th victory.
Thomp~ (2.1); Seattle, Mit - lndlanl 4, A's 1:
oourne 121.
Dennis Eckersley hurled a
N. V.
010 100 0D0- 2 6 0 three-bitter to earn hla 12th
Texu
000 000 01o- 1 5 o victory and catcher Fred
Guidry, Lyle- (8) and Munson ;
AleJ&lt;ander and Sundberg w- · Kendalllroke a 1-1 tie with a
Guidry. 10·6. ~-Aio..ndir, .l3· seve~!th-inning sacrifice fly
8. HR ~ New York, NettiM {29).
as Oaklalid lost for the 19th
time in ;1 outings.

DR. RON,O.LD'F. RIVIERE
OR. " · J .

Sl~EHU

DR G J STO MBAU GH

One or two day full denture .
service, part-ial dentures,
rei i nes, repairs

acres,

FoR PRICEscALLIBOn
10 TOLL FREE "
U"

Dqherty., Parcels,

Cleve

001 000 102- 4 6 1

010 000 ooo- 1 3 2.
Ecktrsley and KencMII; Lang ford , ·Balr (9) and Sangull/en .

Oaklnd

W- Eckersley, 12 -10. L- lanoford , 8-14.

Del

Seanle

with reasonable co•l. While
we will continue to serve

those who cannot come to
our offiee we will

282 " 641

fi•ing the price at $275.00
for the best known custom

made and Individua l littOct
hearing
a.ids.
Prior .
medica I and audiological
examination encouraged .
If you have a question or
wish 1n appointment call

me at S92-62J8.

RIVIERE CENTER

RALPH KERN HOLDS HIS "best of show" entry in
the annual art show of the Meigs County Fair. It Is in
pastels. Three best of show awards were given in the
competition.

Vice arrests made

in Cincinnati locality

The free grandstand enter·
tainment Sunday
was
LOCKLAND, Ohio (UPI )- taken to the Hamilton County
provided by singers . Mary Police arrested 38 persons Jail, to be held lor
McGregor
and
Paul during the weekend who al· arraignment Tuesday
Williams, Other highlights le~edly participated in a morning.
. were a boxing tournament bootlegging_ - gambling - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . and a baton twirling contest. operation in the Cincinnati
Today Is Farmers Day, area.
Police from Lockland, the
when all farmers and their
immediate family members Ohio Liquor Control Departwere to be admitted free. A ment, the Cincinnati Vice
highlight will be the sale of Control Unit and the Regional
championship livestock.
Enforcement Narcotics Unit
Also on the program were a took part in the Saturday
morning auctioneers' arrests,
according
to
August 21st
of field. There were 22 entries in this class. Tbe event was
BIG TRACI'OR- Rick Miller, Somerset, Ohio, in the
contest, afternoon and Lockland Police Chief Frank
thru
held
at
the
Meigs
CoiUlty
Fairgrounds
Saturday
tractor pull sponsored by the Southeastern Ohio Tractor
evening circus performances Gruber.
afternoon.
A
large
crowd
was
on
hand
to
view
the
tractor
August 27th
Pullers Assn ., got a pull of 152 feet in the 5,000 lb. class, out
and entertainment by singer
Most of those arrested face
pull.
Lou Rawls, and an evening various charges in connection .
boxing tournament.
with the sale of bootleg liquor
David V. Finley, fair public and Illegal gambling.
relations director, said be
Pollee said one man dived
believed the remaining out a second-story window
events on the schedule had and escaped when the place
does not know what ·position sufficient drawing power, if was raided. A second man
Ford
and
ex-&amp;ecretary
of
a
filibuster
when
the
time
Senate GOP leaders will take the good weather conlillued, fled in the confusion of tbe
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A
State
Henry
Kissinger.
·
comes.
on the issue, there definitely to attract nearly 2. 75 million mass booking of prisoners at
coalition of conservative
The
American will be a filibuster. "You can persons before the state fair the Lockland police station,
President Carter's
groups is undertaking a
Gruber said. Their Identities
ds Aug. 28 .
major advertising and direct campaign to win approval of Conservative · tl&gt;~~ion count on it,'' he said.
en
Hehns made his comments
"It'll be close to that total," are not known.
mail campaign against . the treaty whi,ch took 13 years · announced it was r\mruna an
in ! the · on NBC.TV's Meet the Press. Finley said, "but I might
The subur~ ~clnnati
ratification of the new to complete accelerated last advertisement
Today
Conservatives said they have to back off a little froni pollee ofhc1al said the
Panama Canal agreement, week wben he sought and newspapers of eight cities,
oppose the treaty on groundS that figure. We could still bootle~ging - ., gambling
and one senator is promising received support from Gerald de,claring:
and TIY One of Our
" There is no Panama it is -and should remain- make the 2.75 million if we · .,wera~on has been under
Canal! There is an American . U.S.
property;
that · have · ~ood weather all surveillance for .more than a
canal at Panama. Don't let Panarnanlall leader Omar throUgh the fair. But If there year·
President Carter give· it Toriijos is too leftisi, and that Is a day or so of rain, the total
_Several of th~se charged
away l"
.
H.t I, ..:Q
the canal Is a strategic rnlghtendupintheareaof2.~ mth rrumr misdemeanors
In a television ,in~n\lew military waterway.
.,
million "
were released ,without bond.
Sund.;ly, Sen. Jessie Hehns,
The agreement calls for
The i976 fair drew an all- . The rest of the prisoners were
R·N.C., promised a filibuster reI inq u is hi ng
U.S. time attendance of 2,294,702
m the Senate when the sovereignty over the canal by in 12 days. An extra day was
PLAN TOURNEYS
proposed
treaty
is
put
up
for
a
Court
now
,I
think
my
Archie's
of HuUand will
the year 2000, but retaining added to this fair, as well as
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)
original
finding
would
have
vote.
sponsor
two
slo-pitch softball
the right .to help defend it.
~ The judge who ordered
moving it one week earlier to
Heims
said
although
be
been
upheld,'
'
Gordon
said.
avoid winding up an Labor tournaments over the Labor
busing for Louisville area
"The
Supreme
Court
as
Day as it has in recent years. Day we·ekend. A men's
schools says the Supreme
then
constituted
(in
1975)
felt
State Fair Manager John tourney will be held at Kyger
. Court has changed its
STI~L THE BEST
the(e
ought
to
be
countywide
Evans
still declined Saturday Creek. It will be double
philosophy on desegregation
CHICKEN
DINNER
to make a total fair elimination. Tourney fees are
enough in the past two years remedies. They have, in my
OFFERED
ANYWHERE
..
WHEEUNG, W.Va. (UP!) this year, after eight years on attendance estimate. But he $45; plus two game balls,
that masSive busing would . judgment, changed their
- Debbie Austin scored her the pro tour without a win . noted that . attendanc.e was Four team trophies will be
probably not be ordered if tbe course of movement on
seC&lt;Ind win in a row with a Her two-under-par ~70 gradually picking up "and presented. The tourney ' is
desegregation
...
.''
.
Louisville C!lse- were before
record-breaking
victory amounted to a 54-bole total of -the Ringling Bros. and Sept. 3, 4 and 5. For in·
,
Gordon,
who
went
Into
the high court now.
during the weekend at the 209 and a flrst.piace take of Barnum ~ Bailey Circus, formation, call Ben Dent, 992·
semi-retirement
sQ;
months
U.S. District Judge James
G&lt;rdon, whose 1975 order for alter iSSuing his busing order, $50,000 Wheeling LPGA $7,500. It also broke the which starts Monday, will be 5726, or John Lance, 388-9038.
Classic on the 6,200-yard tournament record Of 212, set a real crowd-getter."
A Class B girls tourney will
the busing of more than 22,600 still oversees tbe operation of
Speidel
course.
by
Carole
Jo
Skala
in
the
the
Jefferson
County
school
Homer
S.
Purdum,
89,
be
held at Rutland on Sept. 3
students was violently
29-year-old
pro,
But
the
tournament
inaugural
in
1974,
district,
the
nation's
18th
Cincinnnati,
was
honored
as
and
4 under the same spon·
Middleport,
resisted in its early stages,
992-5248
l.ocust Street
who
withstand
a
seven-birdie
and
tied
by
Susie
McAllister
a
the
largeSt
.
"Oldest
Vet
Yet"
during
sor.
said in a weekend interview
While saying he believes charge by Hollis Stacy to win year later.
Veterarts and Ohio Nation&amp;I
that recent Supreme Court
by one stroke Sunday, said
Hollis Stacy birdied tbe Guard
Day . Saturday.
decisions indicate the justices the busing plan has been
she'll pass up this week's 18th hole with a 15-foot putt Purdum, who enlisted in the
"successful,"
he
dectined
to
l"'obably would be . satisfied
with desegregating only two say whether the · order Patty Berg Classic in St. from the fringe lor a 67 and Army at Hillsboro, Ohio, in
210. Then she stood by · May, 1918, and served with
local schools instead of tbe achieved the purpose of Paul, Minn.
"I'm mentally tired. I have helplessly as, minutes later, the ht)avy field artillery in
fostering
greater
social
160 Involved in his order.
Austin birdied the hole for the France, was given a plaque
"If the LouiBvWe case was integration and racial to take a break,'' she said.
It
was
Austin's
fifth
victory
victory.
from Brig. Gen. James . M.
coming ·before the Supreme harmony.
Laura Baugh took third Abraham, assistant Ohio
place with a 72 for 213, while adjutant general for Army,
Jan Stephenson placed fourth ·
with a 72 fer 215. M.J. Smith
turned in a 70 for 216 and fifth
All Frigidaire Jet Cone
place. Defending champion
washers have an eJ:clu·
.. PASADENA, CaUl. (UPI) of full deployment, if not fully could be used to reproduce Jane Blalock had a 71 which knocked in a 3114oot putt for a
ilwe up·and~down
31~ photographs of earth tied her for sixth place at 218 birdie at the 12th hole and
Agllator acllon. II gels
· '~ The Voyager 2 spacecraft deployed,'' Wood said.
clothes down to the botA faulty ccmputer memory people and messages from with Bonnie Lauer, who had a followed tha.t by running her
, . ,appeared to be functioning
tom of the tub, where
drive onto the green at the
: •tieD today after a shaky and the maUunction of one of Present Carter and United 73
cleaning power Is greatTI,e final nine was a battle 370-yard No. 13 for a cinch
Superb·
launch that nearly ruined tbe . three gyroscopes also caused Nations' Secretary Kurt
e&amp;t, an ~verage of 9 llm~a
Waldheim.
birdie
that
.
put
her
eight
some
worry
.
cleaning
.
per
regular
wash
cycle.
flight towards Jupiter,
Voyager 2 was actually the between Austin and Stacy • under
And thai's 3 times more
power isn't all
"The faulty computer
par
for
the
which looked like an easy
sclenlists said Sunday.
than lhe best-selling .
you
get with a
·
tournament.
first
to
be
sent
up.
Voyager
1
.
·
Austin
win
.
for
a
while.
She
memory
Is
being
_
~;hecked,''
''Two of the t)lree
brand's best washer. The
Frigidaire
is
to
be
launched
Sept.
1
on
a
·
Wood
said
"The
science
problema, which carne up
result Is cleaner clothes
Jet Cone Washer.
wHh a Frigidaire Jel Cone
during the launch, have instruments' that are on are faster trajectory and should
washer-and Independent
• Unique up and
diminished somewhat," said all working normally. But encounter Jupiter early in
testa
prove It!•
1979,
four
months
ahead
of
down
Agitator action
there
is
practically
no
data
Alan Wood of the Jet
• Tested In accordance with the AHAM
because
the
channels
are
Voyager
2.
e
Flexible1-1Blb
Propuisioo Laboratocy.
standard HLW~ 1 soli removal teat usHowever,
a
JPL
caPacity
. The space 'probe was being used for. engineering to
ing a 15 ib d"f welghl ml•ed coHon
spokesman
said
tbe
Voyager
anslyze
the
problems."
e Rugged Heavy Duty
launched
from
Cape
!tolload.
· Test photographs of the 1 la\Ulch -may be delayed if
components
Canaveral
in
Florida
e Regular, Permanent Press
Saturday morning, but its earth and moon were delayed results from the otber craft
and Automatic Knit cycle
COI!trol was taken over by and may not be performed at indicate a need for more
Pair up your Jet Con•
JPL bere after ·it separated all because by the time it test big.
Washer wllh thlo matchBoth spaceships have 11 Wishes to Announce the Relocatlo
could be done, the craft would
. from the laiUlch rocket.
Ing Frigidaire Dryer.
instruments each to study tbe
''There may have been a be too far away.
• 181b capaclly
of His Office
Voyager 2 and its sister outer planets, their satellites,
rough launch, but It's a very
the
rings
of
Saturn
and
e Delicate piUs Knits, Pervehicles
are
aimed
at
tbe
accurate ooe," Wood said.
manent Press1 Regular
interplanetary
space.
After
outer
planets
of
Saturn
and
"lt'a on an excellent
settings
.
their
studies,
both
will
move
Jupiter,
largest
In
the
solar
trajectory and we have to do
e
Gentle Flowing Heal
into
deep
space.
system,
seeking
information
ooly a minimum maneuver
PAIR
Voyager 1 ·.n11 reach its
• Big over-size door opennellt week or so to bring it of outer space. But Voyager 2
Ing lor easy loading and
" ' - 011 the target point of also has some information to closest point to Jupiter March
unloading
5,
1979,
flying
about
178,000
give, if an alien finds it.
Jupiter."
miles
from
the
planet's
Inside the craft is a gold·
0n11 of the major problema
surface. It also will study tbe
plated
phonograph record • • the .pparent failure of a
~
boom to deploy fully. The designed to last a billion four largest of the planet's 13
boom holds the televillloo years ~ featuring 110 - or maybe 14 - satellites.
. HOURS BY APPOINTMENT
The gravity of Jupiter, will
camera•
and
aclence minutes of the sounds of
inllrtiiJientl, But JPL said It hundreds of animals, the · act like a sling, whirling the
ipplrllnllY did deploy, at .a iel! of a newborn baby and craft toward Salurn, 456
greetings in 55 · earth million miles further away
)M.. partlaOy.
from the sun.
. ·~ nowbelfeve It languages.
It al8o contains data
II Wllhlll a '¥ei'Y few degrees

CHEESEBURGER
&amp; FRENCH ·
FRIES

Austin has second title

.

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8 9 10 11 12 '114
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•

FEBRUARY
MTWTFS

s 6 1
12 13 14
19•20 21
262728

12&lt;'

Wintertime.
And the livin' is freezy.
Kids are sleddin'
And the gas bills are. high.

1 .2 3 4
a 9 10 11
15 1~
· 11
22 2:' . 25 .
•

MARCH
SMTWTFS
1
5 6 7 8

2 3.4
9 10 11

12 13. 14 15 16~1 8
19 20 21 22 2~ ·' !5
262728293

/with Rpo/ogits to lht Gmlrwir~s}

'

•

When the weather turns cold, heating bills go up, right?
Not necessarily. Not if you take advantage of Columbia's 6udget Payment ;
Pian. The Plan lets you spread ne&gt;&lt;t year's estimated gas bill over twelve even ·
monthly payments. We will review all budget accounts periodically and adjust '
them, 1f neces;;ary. to make sure you will not have a large payment at the end of the ;
b~dget year, The last bill will be plus or minus whatever's necessary to correct the
d1fference between the calculated and the actual annual bill. \
You can't take the' shiver out of winter's weather, but you
·
•
b'll
ot;I of wmter s gas 1 s.

can~ake th

.

.

·Wdairy .sle .~

o.

1_ _...:.....-------,------~

JANUARY
,SMTWTFS

"300.00
less •25.00
Cash Discount

High court h~s
shifted its view

E. Livingston Ave. , Columbus
Weekdays 8:30A.M. to 6:30P.M.

DECEMBER
SMTWTFS

now

reward those who can by

Come In

Budget Payment Plan:
:111

and professiona I service

sse

DR C W SEAL

Coln•nbia's
II

combining qualifY 9roduct

Conservatives to mount attack

Four reasons
~hy you should join

•

AL 's line scores

politician.~~

·· Robinson 185.

::
High Individual ser ies :· Bess Hendr icks.
Betty

For 28 years I t-..-,e fil1ed
hearing aids . always

THIS WEEK'S

~~~;h~~~~::~'!;"t:;:;i~ ::~:~~:s~~~~:e:~ lh"e~~~e: :~en~~~~~~~~~ : ~ r--:--------------:----------------

REV . SENATOR?
CONCORD, N.H. (UP!) .:...
The . Rev . Clinton White ,
whose World Radio Mission
declared bankruptcy after
the Securities and Exchange
Commission halted its sale of
land investment plans, is
running far the u.s. Senate as Tronto
100 010 ooo- :1 1 1
Calif
200
000 lOx- 3 71
an independent candidate.
Byrd, M u r p h v (7) and
White, 46, of Lancaster, Cerone; Tanana and Hum N.H., said during the phrev . W- Tanani!, 15-7. LByrd. 2-7. HR- Toronto. Rader
weekend he would run an (10) .

"inspirational campaign' '

: Bess Hendricks 202 1 Barb8ra
187 ;
Betty

.; Whittington

COLUMBUS (UPl) Attendance at the !24th Ohio
State Fair, swelled by
Saturday's one-day record
crowd, went over the 1
million mark just before noon
Sunday.
Tooy Chumbley, a 7-yearold from Cincinnati, was
honored as the mlllionth
visitor when he entered the
· gates with his slater and his
parents, 'Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Chumbley.
Tooy was given a number
of prizes, including a stuffed
animal, a circus drum and
admissi&lt;n and ride tickets.
The sunny ·skies and balmy
temperatures, just .as on
Saturday, brought 210,973
visitocs through the turnstiles ·
Sunday, brlnl:ing the six-day
total to 1,137 ,959.
Officials counted a record
204,0891alr visitors Saturday,
erasing the prior high of
260,843 who entered Aug. 25,
1973. Officials sald visitors
were greatly interested to see
and hear singer Dolly Parton.

~:f:~e~:;~~~wr:.

ON STAGE AT THE GRAND OLE OPRY-Jiiwny Walker got his biggest career

'::· Opry in Nashville, Tenn. His contributions to Country and Western Music earned him a
::. place in the Country and Western Music Hall· of Fame and a Golden Guitar Award
::. ::·:.:
:::
· ::::::
:,·:
·:.·
:-:..
·
·
·
· :::::::: ::::
::
::::

against incumbent oetnocrat
Thomas J . Mcintyre on the
slogan "faith, courage and
common sense" and hopes to
speak "as a prophet, not a

Local Bowling

01

fourth and fifth to move 14under. But he bogeyed the
eighth and felt he "never .hit
any more good shqts after

to pia~

1~

division and first in the 800 lb. class senior division. The ·
event was held Saturday afternoon at tbe Meigs County
Fairgrounds sponsored by the Southeast Ohio Garden
Tractor Pulling Association .

:::::: .

THISTLEDOWN
. NORTH RANDALL, Ohio '
\ UP! ) - Rock Fever, with
Bennie Feliciano up , wm the
TuesdiY Morning Women
featured ninth race at
Aug. 16, 1977
Thistledown Sunday, running •
Mason Bowling lanes
W L the mile in 1: ~ ~ and paying
Strikettes
91 29 $2.80.
. Green Ghost
84 36
The 7-12 dally double of
Gibson Motor City
15 45 Patch of White and Faith and
: : Mason Furniture Co .
n 48
· : Erwin Construction
50 70 Hope paid $163.20.
A crowd of 6,883 bet
· . Quality Print Shop
48 72
·. Slow Pikes
30 90 $759,588.
: Headquarters
30 90
.: ~lgh Individual game -

: :~
G:~trude B. Stiffler: dec. to
·-:: John F. Stiffler , George
Robert Stiffler, Virginia
Stiffler Peters. Cert. for
trans., Pomeroy .
George Robert Stiffler,
Joan R. Stiffler. Virginia
Stillier Peters, Edgar K.
Peters to John F. Stiffler, Sr ..
Lots, Pomeroy.

::::

He managed a birdie on tbe
loth
and bogeyed the 16th and
the 18th green."
Generally, only the players 17th. But Archer, who had six
who finish 1·2 receive their birdies and two bogeys on tbe
checks in person. And Andy first 13, parred the last five
North was confident that holes and never came closer
finally , after almost f ive than 2-under.
Archer, whose . best finish
years on the pro tour. he was
about to win a tournament. this year- prior to Sunday ~
"I really thought. I was had been ninth at San Diego,
going to win startin g received $34,20() for . placing
yesterday (Saturday)/' said second. Weiskopf, whose 1·
North, whose three-&lt;lay total over 72 put him at 11-under 276
of 12-under..par 201 gave him · and into third, picked up
.
a three-stroke lead over Tom $21,300.
Jack
Nicklaus,
who had
Weiskopf and Howard Twitty
been
at
par
or
over
for tbe
going into the last 18 holes. "I
figured that someone · would entire tournament, finally
have to shoot a 65 to beat me. broke through Sunday with a
Then, in the morning, when I 5-under 66. He was tied with
saw the wind I changed my six others at 279.
North, 27, said, " This
mind and I knew after four
victory
really means a lot to
holes that it was mine if I
me.
After
412 years it gets
didn't make any mistakes."
tiring
to
hear
people ask,
Nofth did inakfmistakes'What's
wrong
with him?'
but by that time, only veteran
George Archer had a slim They don 't · realize how
hope of catching him. North difficult it is to win out here."
On Sunday, North finally
finished with a par-71 and a
learned
how it felt to be a
four~y total of 12-under.par
winner.
And
despite the fact
272, picking up $60,000 and
that
he
led
all
the way, he
more than doubling his
thought
of
Archer
and added,
earnings for the year, moving
"I'm
just
glad
we
finally ran
from 45th to 13th with
out of holes."

Beaumont ,

El~ine,

. : ;th

swered. " I'll piCk mine up on

-~- -

Orange.
George W. Taylor, Zelia E.
Taylor to William Long.
Meadle Long , 1 acre, Sulton.
Hubert G. Johnson, Blrdess
M . Johnson to Franklin
Edwin
Ooherty , J~net

$112,687. Archer , who, along
with Twitty, partnered North
Sunday, wound up two :..
strokes off the pace at 274, ::
with a 4-under 67.
:::

that."

JIMMY WALKER

Albert S. Peterson,
Shirley G. Peterson to Kemp
F. Beaumont, Jr ., Elizabeth

·..

wif~t ~~di~~ ~ g~~

:senior division garden tractor pull won first place in the
800 lb. class, junior divi5!on; first in the 1,000 lb. junior

Meigs
Property
Transfers

North claims
WGC with 272
HARRISON, N.Y. (UP! ) Just bt!fore Andy North was
set to tee off for the final
round of play at the $300,000
Westchester Golf Classic
Sun day, a PGA official
approached him - as he had
every other player ~ and
routinely asked him what
address he wanted his check
mailed to.
·
*'Never mind," North an-

GARDEN ~CI'OR WINNER - Bill Kautz in the

Wilson 476 ; Patti Williams
458.
High team series Strikettes 2113 ; Mason
···c;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;.';:~
Furniture Co.2048.
2051 ; Erwin
::::
·:
··:· . Construction
High learn game
Strlkeltes 758; Erwin Con ·
struction 751 ; Quality Print
Shop 714.

REVIEWING COPY- Nearly 40 years ago, Jimmy
Walker, left, and Kenneth "Robbie" Robison wor'ked
together for WJEH Radio of Gallipolis. Apparently,
working for the radio station helped to launch Walker on a
singing and acting career. He has now returned to his
native Mason County after over 3ll years in show business
where he resides in semi-retirement in Henderson.
.:·

n.

1 million

County Native, Longtime Actor, To Be
BY NEIL FRIEDER

In 1941, Nazi troops
advanced to the o~ldrtl of
Russia, during

Aug. 22, l!Trl

h d.d
e s u er
··

To join the Budget Payment Plan, simply pay the " Monthly Budget" amount
shown on your August gas bill.

c(\.uMBIAGAS
•'

Independent laboratory tests prove it!':'

FRIGIDAIRE. All ourJet Cone
washers

, ;Voyager doing better .

·

· than the
best washer.

DR. DONALD S. P~ITT
PODIATRIST ·.

NOW ONLY .

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE

. RT. 2 NORlH

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

PHONE (304) 428 0000

rat

$569

En1lnecred be, General tt otors

•

�7-'!'be Daily Sentine1, Mlddi~·Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Aug. 22, 1977

Shower held

&amp;-The DaUy Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 22, 1977

Carson-Smith reunion

Girl ~Scout awards presented
By CllarleDC Hodllch
~ A trophy for the ·most
outstanding girl scout troop
in Meigs County was
presented to Mrs. Shirley
Cogar, leader , for tbe
Syracuse Junior Troop I2Jl4
Friday at the Meigs County
Fair.
Over I:Jl girl scouts ex·
hibited in the junior fair with
the Syracuse troop being
sillected for the trophy by
judges Mrs. Merle Johnson,
Mrs. Donna Ohlinger, and
Mrs. Pat Thoma on the basis
d. activities, badge work, and
community and civic programs.
As for the fair booths containing the 298 projects of the
scouts, the best junior booth
award went to the BeciiY

Mankin's Chesler Junior
Scout Troop, while the best
Brownie booth award went to .
Mrs. joyce Sisson's Syracuse
troop. Fifteen troops ex·
hibited at the fair.
Scoots and their awards
were as follows :
Troop 1137, Racine Juniors:
' Ruth Frank, leader: Lori
Frank two blue one red·
Laren' Wolfe three blue&gt;'
Brenda Jon~ one each oi
blue, red and 'white; Sandra
Deem, two white, one blue;
Billie Rice, one each blue
and white; one blue.' Lois
Thle, one blue; Tere.;. Hill
one blue.
•
Troop 1254 Pomeroy
Brownies, Shirley Gibba,
leader: Gena · Gibbs, one
each, blue, red and white;
Dena Manley, two blue, one
red.

Troop 1100, Salisbury
Juniors, Margaret Parker
leader: Denise StegaU, tw~
blue one red· Kim Roush
h blue· Kim Eblin tw~
blue, one
Dixie Eblin,
three blue; Angie Hatfield,
one blue; Sandy Hoyt; three
blue: Ruth Fry, three blue,
and Charlotte Lyons, two
blue, one red.
Troop 1049, Chester
Juniors, Becky Mankin,
leader: Pam Riebel, three
blue; Lori Loukes, one each,
blue, red and white; Tamra
Clark, one blu.e, one red; Beth
Teaford, two blue, one red;
Cheryl Folmer, two blue;
Mary Hibbs, one blue, one
red ; .Lori Hudson, one blue,
one red; Penny Ke8terson,
two blue, one red; Linda ·
Stewart,' two blue, one white;
Melinda Mankin, two blue,
one red; Andrea Batey, one
blue, one red.
Troop 1275, Pomeroy
Juniors, Betty Lane, leader;
Trilla Reeves, two blue, one
red; Crystal Lane, one blue, ·
two reds; Suzan Thoma, two
blues, one red; Debbie
Werry, two blues, one red;
Jaye Roberts; one blue, one
red; Teresa Garnes, one
blue; Sandra Cummings, one .
blue. ·
Troop. 1042, Reedsville
Brownies, Lucy Kimes,
leader : Becky Kimes, two
blue, one white; Christy
Newland, one white, Traci
Newland, two blues, one red.
Troop 1180 Pomeroy
Juniors, Patti Woodyard,
leader: Barbara Chappelear,
two blues, one red; Tammy
Capehart, two blues, one red;
KeUy Whitlatch, two blues,
one red; Carolyn Casto, two
blues, one red.
Troop 1002 Harrisonville
Brownies, Esther Scraggs,
leader :
Cindy Bailey, two blues,
one red; Julie Wandling, one
each of blue, red anq white;
Terri Gillian, two blues;
Susan Arnold, Two blues and
a red; Kenda Donahue, two
blues and a red; Darla Nor·
ris, two blues and a red; Tif·
!any Dillon, two blues and a
red; Clarie Whittington, two
blues and a red; Bridget
Largent, two blues and a red;

;.oo;

leader: Amy l...oub, two
blue; Sahnoon Stewart, one
blue, two reds; Melanie
Mankin, one blue, one red;
Janet Werry, two blues, one
red ; Betty Jo Hunt, one each
d. blue, red and white; Laura
BI'O&lt;lks Farley, one red, two
whites; Terri Starcher, one
red ; Larissa Long, three
blues.
Troop 1204, Syracuse
Juniors, Shirley Cogar,
leader: Janie Amberger,
three blues ; Jennie Bentley,
two blues; Sherry Ritchie,
one each, blue, red and.
white; Chri!tlan Arnold, two
blues, one red; Jtille Wells,
one blue, one red; Lisa Wills,
one blue, one red; Becky Ar·
nott, lwo blues, one red; Kim
Morrow, three blues; Debbie
Michael, one blue, one red;
Shari Cogar, two blues; Penny WoUe, two blues, one red;.
Drema Owens, one each,
blue, red and w)lite ; Kim
Sayre, three blues.
Troop 1247, Racine
Brownies , · Charlotte
Wamsley leader: Mandy Hill,
one blue, two reds ; Rachael
Rieber, one blue, two reds;
Tammy WoUe, one each,
blue, red and white; Dixie
Dugan, one blue, two reds;
KeUy Rizer, three blues;
Kenda Rizer, three blues;
Melinda Hill, two blues, one
red; Tammy Holter, one
blue, one white; Wendy
Adkins, one red; Lori Adams,
one blue, one white; Melissa-'
Thle, one blue; Lisa Parsons;
one red; Teresa Teaford, ooe
blue, one red, and Carrie
Beegle, two blues.

Darla Hatfield, one each ol
blue, red and white; Usa
Riggs, two blues and a red:
Robin Patter, one each of
blue, red and white.
Troop 1120, Joyce Sisson,
leader, Syracu:~e Brownies:
Veronica Provo, one blue,
two reds ; Jayne Imboden,
one blue, one red ; Traci_e
Hubbard, one blue and two
reds ; Jane Jett, three blues;
Jill Nease, two blues and a
white, Kim Cogar, two blues
and a red; Alicia Van Meter,
one each of blue, red and
white; Mary 11aldw'in, one
each of blue, red and white;
Cathy Pickens, one each of
blue, red and white, Paula
Winebrenner, three blues;
Shari Sisson, three blues;
Kim Adams, two blues and a
red; Shelly Wolfe, one blue
and one red; Heidi Cobb, one
blue, ~endy Fry, two reds
and a white.
Troop 1067 .Reedsville
Juniors, Charlene Althouse:
Dee Dailey, a red.
Troop 1155, Harrisonville
Juniors, Mary Ash, leader :
Sberri Arnold, two blues and
a red ; Mandy Reeves, one
blue, one red; Dawnette Nor·
ris, one each of blue, red and
while; Linda Ash, one each,
blue, . red and white, and
Margie Ash, one each of blue,
red and white.
Troop 1220, Salisbury
Brownies, Sandi Rodman,
leader:
T~e Eblin, one red,
two whites; Rachael. Rodman, two reds; Melanie Atnold, one blue, one red;
Beverly Kauff, one blue, one
red; Audra Houdaslielt, one
blue, one red; Barbara Hat·
field, one red; Cathy Stotts,
two blue, one red; and Tami
Rodmantwo reds.
Troop 1061 Chester
Brownies, Linda Stewart,

~--~··

Social
Calendar

C''-rJatU3r
' C''
· JUb'
holds meeting
A recent meeting of the
Chatter Club was held at the
camper of Mrs. Lee Enoch at
Royal Oak Park. Members
enjoyed a cookout. and
presented Mrs. Enoch with
hostess gifts.
Mrs. Dorothy Roach conducted the meeting with Mrs.
Enoch and Mrs. Linda Van
Meter giving reports. The birthdays of Mrs. Esther Harden
and Mrs. Linda Van Meter
were observed. Games were
played with prizes going to
Mrs. Van Meter, Mrs. Lola
Harrison, Mrs. Ruth Young
and Elaines Spires. Others attending were Mrs. Mary Star·
cher and Mrs. Marie Leifheit.
TRUDEAUS TOGEfHER

GRAHAM TO . HUNGARY
WASHINGTON (UP!) Evangelist Billy Graham will
make an ''unprecedented"
visit to Hungary Sept. 3-10.
"We are looking forward to
learning more about not only
the churches of Hungary but
the social structure of
H~gary and the people," he
srud when be announced the
!rip Sunday.
Graham accepted an
invitation from the Rt. Rev.
Sandor'Palotay, president of
the Council of Free Churches

Hun8qQ:,. .

Darst family ·enjoys reunion
The 18th reunion of the Rev.
B. L. ani! the late Gertie
Darst was held at the !ann
homeofMr.andMrs.Dayton
Spencer, Chester. Sarah
Spencer was hostess, Rev.
Darst asked the blessing on
the plcillc dinner.
New additions this year
were the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Dayton . Spencer,
MaUhew Ryan, son of AI and
Nina Spencer, Terre Haute,
Ind., and grandsons of Budd
Jr. Dant, Billy Allen, son of
Pearl · and Patricia Smith,
Shade·; Rex. Jr., son of Mr.
and Mn. Rex Darst, MiddllljJOI1; O.vid Jr., son of Mr.
and Mra. David Darst,
ColmDbul.
Puunt
the Rev. B. L.
Darlt, Rev. and.Mrs. Enhel
Curfman, Mr, and Mrs.
Enbel Curfmall, Jr., Cbrlsty
and Scotty, Mr. and ·Mrs.
Elmer Slsman, Cheablre;
111'1. Jolin. Sigman,

were

'*· ....

Johnnie and Randy, Addison;
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Rife,
Ridgeway; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Lemley, . Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Curfman, Kimmey
. and RIChie, Mr. and ·Mrs.
David Curfman and Davey,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Dayton Spencer, Buffalo, W.
Va.; Mrs. Nina Waasel and
Matthew, Terre Haute, Ind.;
Budd Jr. Darst, Mlddleporl;
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Darst
and Usa, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Smith and Shelley and Billy,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob McClure,
Laura Harrl8on, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Spen·
cer, Trishia all!l Donnie, Mrs.
Mae Spencer and Vanee,
Chester; Mrs. Margret Wardr
Tbe Plains; Mrs. Ha1el
SbcMipllker, Hamden.
· After dinner tbe 36th
wedding amiVI!l'l8l'l' of Ray
and Anna Lemley was
celebrated with the couple

receivinl

gift.f.

ASTRO •GRAPH
Bern.lce Bede Osol
\lb.rnl]

Ul.!Jl!J

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jon.

Thf&gt;re ·~

vr ce o f e11.pe rts Such a cou rse ol
actron rs unwrse

AOUARIUS (Jtn. 20·Ftb. 19) To
be hopefu l ts commendable. but
t o b p, optrm ts t rc b e yond
poss thlldy rs se 11 -d ele at ing
, Sir ik e &lt;1 reasonable balance to -

lo)Annfl..illarv·
l!JUIJUW
1 1

nay

Auguat 23, 1977
Larlv Luck 1s prep;ued to devo te
~on5t d erRb l e attenhon
tr:J you
!hi!; VPilr provldecl vOu don 't t ;:~.k e
hpr for qrrmted If vou do. she
mow p r ow~ to vou the truth of that
olc1 adR.ae that women · can be
f tc klt&gt;

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 22} A
si t ur~tton that vou oe rson al ly
ci tt'f&gt;(" t wttl come oil well toda y.
Matter5 that vou deleqate to
('l!herg c;trtnd a qood c hance of
be•na hunqted Ftn d out more ol
What lies ahead lor you by sending for yoUr copy of AstroGr,1ph l f'I!P.r Mild 50 cen ts for
Pach an ct i1 to nQ . sP. If-add ressed .
stRmppc1 Pn velope to Astra Graph P 0 Box 469. Radio City
S t &lt;~tion N Y 100 19 Be su re to
5PI"Cifv vnur btrth StQ n
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 23) Rat her
thr.n boastmo ~=t b out vour accom plishments tod rw . let othe rs
trum PP.t vour pra 1ses If 11 com es
lrnm Vfltl !he horn somehow
soun d s ;1 di scord ant note
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov.22) Put
yCiur !ruth ' tod~V in , lhinqs I he
wnrl ct cannot corrupt . or time
P r:''l~P. S to r e up for vot.irsell
heHsttrP.s to up!1fl th e ~olrit
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. :i3·Dec.
21) Joint venture s are fortunate
today. provided vO~ don't try to
dominatr. thinq s Ta ke a back
Ileal Tn e bus is beinq steered in
th e fiO ht d ir ection ·

Miss Wilson makes plans

111 .

"stronq possi bil ity tod ay

vo" pould w•lllullv iqn ore the ad ·

PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20)
Keep yo u r cal eqor•es well clel inen todav where. frie nds are
c once rn e d Th ose yo u p a t
arou nd w ith sociall y should not

bP. c~ ll e d upon to help vou
bus•nesswise.
ARIES (Moren 21-Aprlt 18) II
rsn 't that you're not qoing to have
your share of opportun ities to·
day Wh ether you' ll be able to
mak e th e most of th em IS the
que&amp;l ton
TAURUS (April 20 - Moy 20),
Business situ at ions are a mixed
bag toda y. In soni a cases yo u'll
pu t together r eal Winners . if':'l •
other s yOLt ' ll lose out by gross ·
miscalculation
GEMINI (Mty 21·Junt 20)
Shot;ld you fail to pull in concert
with your ma te or pa rtner s today . you 'll be self-de fe ating .
Only by joint effo rt can yo u scale
tne mounta1n.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22)
You're pron e to work in tits and
starts today. There are a lot of
top- priority proj ects you·n gloss
over.
LED (July 23·Aug.22) Don 't be
overly concerned with projects
promi~ i ng blg ga ins in the future .
Gather the coins you 're sure of
today . leave the speculative
dollars tor late r.

Smith and Mn. Gladys
Lesch, Akron: Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sweet, Stacl and
Michael, Springfield, Vt.;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brown,
Becky, Amy and Peter,
Lesington,Ky.; Mr. andMra.
James Eads, Debra and
ChriiJtlne, Woodsfield, Ob.;
Mr. and Mrs. Lauren
Chap!11811, Welch; Mrs. H. C.
Chapman, Montgomery; Mr.
and Mrs. Erskine WIUs,
Charlton Heights; Mr. and
Mn. Edward Crooks, Pam,
Cindy and Eddie, Mr. and
Mn. Dan Thomas, Danny
and Cathy, Mr. and Mrt!.'
Walter crooks, Middleport;
Miss Ruth Caraon, Wayne
Gibbons, Bucyrua; Mr. and
Mn. Porter Nicholl, Leon.
Attending from Point
Pleasant were Mr. Ht.tTY
McDermott, Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Akers and famlly,
Reverend and Mrs. Homer
Piercy, Mrs. Ruth Dyer, Mrs.
Mazie Durst, Mrs. Roma
Rothgeb, 'Mr . and Mrs.
&amp;bert Bateman, Sonya and
Sandra; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Piercy and Chris, Mr. and
Mrs. Oral Eads and Mr. and
Mrs. David Eada and J. R.

POMEROY - Plans have
been completed for the open
church wedding of Jan
Wtlson, daughter of Mr. and
. Mrs. Robert K. Wilson, Route
3, Pomeroy, and Don
Eichinger, son of Mrs. Opal
Eichinger and the late Henry
Eichinger, Cl1ester.
The candlelight ceremony
will be an event of Aug. '!/at 7
p.m. at the Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. Pre-nuptial music
will be by Kyle Allen beglnning at6:30 p.m. Soloist will be
Miss Jamie Mcllwain of Ironton. The Rev. Wilbur Perrin
will officiate.
Miss Debbie Wilson will
TAMATHAHOLWN
serve as maid of honor for her
sister. Bridesmaids will be
MiSs ~th Wilson;.sister of
the bride, Miss Laura
Eichinger, sister of the
groom, Miss Denise Dean and
Tamatha Renile Hollon, Miss Pam Kautz, Route 3,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pomeroy, and Mrs. Sherry
Gerald Hollon, celebrated her
sixth birthday recently at the
home of her maternal grandThe families of the late
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Rufus
and Blanche Sigman,
Charles Faulk, Sr. At the
Cheshire,
originally from
celebration were her parents
Poca,
W.Va.
gathered at the
and brother, Jamison Scott,
her uncle and aunt, Linda and . Racine Dam recreation area,
Chuck Faulk, Massilon, Hartford, W. Va. Sunday,
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. August H.
Those attending were Mr.
Charles Faulk, Sr., and her
and
Mrs. Elmer Sigman,
great grandmother, Mrs. EdCheshire;
Mrs. . Leora
na Faulk. A clown cakt!' and
Sigman,
Middleport;
Mr. and
homemade ice cream were
Mrs.
Jack
Slgm~~n, Andy and
served.
Krls!y, Coolville; Mr. and

-

Turns six years

Ridgway, Rio Grande.
Susie Eichinger, Columbus,
niece of the groom, Will be the
Hower girl and Jimmy
Wilson, brother of the bride,
will serve as ring bearer. Ser·
ving as best man will be Jim
Landon, Tuppers Plains.
Ushers will be Charles and
Dennis Eichinger, brothers of
the groom' Mark Mora,
Rnute3,Pomeroy,BrianConde, Reedsville, and Tom
Reed, Reedsville.
Guests will be registered by
Mrs. Tammy Spangler,
Ripley, W.Va.
A reception will be held immediately following the
ceremony in the church
socja] rooms. Hostesses will
be Mrs. Minda K:eams and
Miss Robin Stewart, both of
Mason, W. Va., MisS Debbie
Windon, Pomeroy, and the
women of the Friertdly Circle
of Trinity Church.

Sigman family gathers for a day

~----------------·Mn···D-avld

an d Troy, Hart'.ord,. W, Va.:
Joe Swain, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. James Kersey, Nitro,
W. Va.; Albert Hammack
and Florence, St. Albans, W. ·
Va., Sherrie Dress, Hartford,
W. Va.
Due to illness several of the
Sigman family were m•ssed.
We hope these are much
iqlproved by the second
reunion ·in 1978 to be held near
Cambridge, Ohio.

Sigman, Da.veliy_ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

OTTAWA (UPI) - Prime
Minister Pierre Trudeau and.
his wife Margaret ~re hack
together Sunday and trying to
see if they can live again as1
husband and wife.
The Trudeaus, who agreed
to a separation in their sixyear marriage last May,
were reunited aboard a
government aircraft at
Vancouver International
Airport. The couple and their
three sons new back to
Ottawa together.

of

MONDAY
MEIGS Athletic Boosters
Monday 7:30 P·ID· at the high
school. '
MEIGS JAYCEE meeting
at 8 ·p.m. Monday at Meigs
Inn .
lUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Aux·
iliary, Racine Post 602, 6 p.m:
at the ~· Covered dish dinner. With members to !ak~
· thell' own table service. Dues
are .payable to either Mrs.
Ma~ Roush or Mrs. Julia ·
Noms.
AMERICAN LEGION·
AUXILIARY, Drew Webster
Post39, 7:30Tuesdaynightat
the hall.

Pat Thoma presents Shirley Cogar a trophy for the most outstanding Gill Scout troop in
the county. Mrs. Thoma is service unit director for the Meigs County area. Mrs. Cogar is
accepling the award for the Junior Girl Scout Troop 1204 of Syracuse.

POINT PLEASANT- The ·
Canon and Smith fiiDiilles
held their amual reunion at
Krodd Park club house Aug.
14, at 12 o'clock. A potluck
dlmer was !lei'Ved.
The
clubhouse
was
decorated witb macrame
owla and small 'owls made of
pine cones were given as
favors . Decorations were
made by Becky and Sonya
Bateman and Suzanne and
Cbrla Piercy.
Crafts and hobbles were
displayed by David Eada,
Patty Chapman, Jim Caraon,
Bernadine and Orai'Eada and
Pearl Piercy. Devotions were
led by Pearl Piercy.
Recognl%ed for traveling the
greatest dilta~ 'll'l!l'e Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Sweet. The
door prize waa won by Becky
Brown.
Reelected officers were
Suzanne Piercy, president,
and Jim Eads, secretary·
treasurer.
Relatives and · friends
present were Mr.. lind Mrs..
Nolan Carson, Cincinnati;
Mr. and Mrs. Jam"" Carson.
Columbus; Mrs. Clarice

JIE's '1:00 FtiLL OF MEMORIES
Dear Helen:
AI 19, I married a man who was married before for one
year. (His wife liked other men .)
For the past II years, aU I've heard about was his beautiful
church weding, his honeymoon, how happy he was with "her."
He carries her picture In his wallet, and has a box fuU of
mementos he pores over - alone. I'm always the excluded
one.
He wears jewelry she g!lve' him. He even tells people how
he dido 't want a divorce, but ha4 no choice.
. ·
Are all divorced people like this? What's the matter with
him? - EX REBOUND WIFE
.

'

+++

-

Dear Housewife:
Many wcmen are asking these questlms. The billion-dollar
answer Is: n takes money! Which requires heavier taxation.
Which makel legislators unpopular with voters.
But keeP. pecking away at ynur congresapersons; and see
that your sisters do likewise. When cbmplaints become
massive, action happens. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Is the old saying true: '"There are no frigid women, only
clumsy men." - WONDERING .
Dear Won:
... No truer than saying, "There are no impotent men, only
inadeq1111te women." The right approach works miracles, yes,
but not always. Heavy J11Ychologlcal or physical problems
take lime to cure- much more time than that one beautiful,
daullng explosion~ readaboutirirolnantlcnovels. -H.

Sayres celebrate

Mrs. Bernice Baker attend· ' '
ed a recent meeting of the "1.
l.Dve Joy Circle of the B. H. •
Sanborn Missionary Society •
of the Middleport Church.
Her name was unintentional·
ly omitted.

Alayette shower was given
HILUARD - Mr. and Mrs. Custer, Melinda Custer and
recently honoring Rhooda .Dale Sayre, Hilliard, recently Pat Cruig, all of Middleport.
Roush at the Middleport celebrated their 25th wedding
Mr. and Mrs. James Hug·
American Legion hall by her anniversary with the obser· get, Pam and Mike, Mr. and
POlly Cramer
lllQther, Mrs. Pat Whit· vance being hosted by their Mrs. Harold Jerman, Tom
tington, Joyce Crewer, children, Debbie, Tim, Mr. Sharp and Judy Byrd, Mr.
A thought for the day:
Carolyn Stewart, Betty and Mrs. Mike (Pam) Sayre, and Mrs. KevinBioltam, Mrs.
American writer Brei Harte ••
Hawley, Marge Brewer, at the Brown Community Eva Mae Hugget and Malia,
said, "One big vice in a man •
'
\
Stewart, and Sara Johnson.
is apt to keep out a great ·-:
Hall at Hilliard.
Mr. and r.,rs. Richard Kuhl·
The
room
was
decorated
many smaller ooes."
·7.:
POLLY'S PROBLEM
chewing with their mouths
Mrs. Sarye is the former wein, Hilliard; Mr. and Mrs.
.t ...
with
pink
and
blue
crepe
DEAR POLLY- I am mak· open or eating with their
Jane Custer, daughter of Frank Meredith, Columbus;
•
ing an afghan for each of my fingers. So many of these paper surrounding a stork Mrs. Florence Custer and the Mr. and Mrs. Ben Sayre and
1
Prevention is
~···
I
six grandchildren and will characters are appealing to centerpiece . A cake late Theo Custer of Mid· sons' Scott, Chris, and Rick,
the best policy . ..
give them as wedding the youngsters and I feel it is decorated with pink and blue dleport. Mr. Sayre I~ the son Mr. and Mrs. James Sayre
Mr. and Mrs. Dak Sayre
presents at a much later date. a great disadvantage that booties, PQtato chips, mints, of Mrs. Linna Sayre, New and ; Benji, Hilliard ; Mrs.
"
Two are now finished, block· advertisers cannot lind a and punch · were served. Haven, W. Va. and the late Linne Sayre, New Haven, W.
.·~
....
ed and ready. I wrapped each lllQre appropriate way t9 in- Games were played and Olsen Sayre. They were mar· Va.; Monty Weisheimer, Col- .
ol them In a black plastic troduce their products. - prizes awarded. The door ried on Aug. 9, 1952 at New . umbus; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
U
Young m en and wom en ....,
prize was won by VIcki
trash bag as I thought the SUSIE.
often
ask why they have to ....
ball was decorated
DEAR POLLY -When my Moore. Attending were Freda
black would keep the colors
pay more for thei r ':--""
, from fading. Some of my · son started to school I cut his Laudennllt, Jane GOkey, with silver streamers and Campbell, Mr. and Mrs.
··
·
·
·
automobile insuranc:e.
POMEROY - Mrs. Janice ribbon loaf, nuts, mints, Drivers in thei r teens and -·
· friends think putting them In sandwich for lunch in half. He John Bechtle, Debbie bells along with nora! ar· Johnny Rihle, Mr. and Mrs.
Ave., potato chips and punch were earlier twenties c ause far
plastic was a mistake and came home one day and said Hawley, Darlene Hawley, rangements on each table Lenny Rihle,' Piain City; Mr. Haggy • Spring
made
by
Mrs.
Ben
Sayre.
and
Mrs.
Robert
McCoy,
Pomeroy
,
was
honored
served to the guests." Those in m or e than thei r share of
Judy
and
Angie
White,
Joyce
suggest wrapping them in "I cannot eat a whole aand·
Taylor,
Margie
Taylor,
Don·
Dinner
was
served
to
Mr.
Chillicothe
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
recently
with
a
surpriselbaMby
attendance were Mrs. Brenda tr affic accidents . Report s ......
dark tissue and then heavy wich but my friend brings
he
N ational
Safety ....,..
r. Haggy and Pllm, Mrs. Sylvia tCounc
brown paper. What is your four little sandwiches and be na Manley, Cathy Lauder· and Mrs. Jerry Custer and Wesley Surgert, Hilton Head shower at the home o
il : 21.8 percent of a ll •
opinion? They will be wrap- can eat them all." 1 realized milt, Mildred Hites Teresa children, David and Alisha Island, s. C.; Mrs. Mary andpMrs. c;haThrles Neece, Rt. Neece, 'Rhonda, Deena and motor l$ts are 24 years of • ,
ped for a number of years. - the little boy's mother had cut Stewart, Lellie Stewart, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs: Anne Fowler, Mrs. Phyllis 4, omeroy. e shower was Kathy Dean; Mrs. Donna age or under. yet t hese
one sandwich in quarters and Rhoda Ferguson, Vicki James Custer and children, Harris, Racine ; Esther hosted by her mother, Mrs. Neece, Mrs. Phyllis Drehel youthfu l operators are ""·
HAZELS.
the
small size of each piece Moore, Roger Manley, Jr., Darla and Jackie, Columbus; Joseph, Minersville; Miss Gertrude Neece and by Mrs. and Shari , Mrs. Merle invol ved as dr ivers In 38.6 ;.._~
DEAR HAZELS. - I know
per cent of &lt;;l ll accidents \.:
Manley, Mrs. Pat Neece, ~nd
ol no hard and fast rule for created an IUusion of less Connie Manley, Judy Lauder· Joe Custer and daugh)er, Harris, Mrs. Pat Scoville, Sylvia Neece.
37 . lper cent of all fa1a l .....
A green, white and yellow . Mrs. Sue Metzger , Amy and m istfaps\
such storage but the most im- food. This worked so well that milt, Debra McGuffin, Kay Jody, Jean Custer and Columbus.
•ur
theme was carried out Shelly; Mrs. Carolyn Neece, A great ma ny young people
portant thing is whether or when I had a daughter many and Jessica Hatfield, Tina daughter, Barbara, Florence
throughout the party. Mrs. Gertrude Neece and are.. ak il led, respons i ble
not your wool.was mothproof. years later I made the small Collins, Ilena Van Meter,
streamers
of the colors were Miss Diana Neece, all of dr iver s. Obviously. though,
U not the afghans must be sandjl'iches for her and one of Debbie Van Meter, Betty Van
draped
from
the center of the Middleport and Mrs. Dorrie qu ite a few ar e not .
scrupulously clean before be- her friend 's mother called Meter, Hortense. Humphrey,
room across the bassinet and Lynch, Sharon Smith, Mrs. Ther e's no subst itute for
ing packed In any fashioo as and asked how I made them. Dorothy Williams, Jeanie
the gift table. Some were Eula Haggy, Mrs. Joyce deve lopment competence :,i
one bidden moth egg could She laughed when I told her Roush, Sara Boyles, Terri
attached by bows to a sheet of Baggy, 'Mrs. Terry Neece, and the right attitudes, .,
inc lud ing
a
posi t ive
wreak havoc during the years about my discovery so many Grover, Ge1,1eva Wise, and
yellow flannel. The guests Mrs . Gerri Mowery and approach
SheiT)'
Johnson.
to
defensive
~~
years
before.
It
is
all
in
the
ol storage. They could be
were asked to sign this sheet Colena, Mrs. Janice Baggy dr iv ing .
Sending
gifts
were
Biddy
eyes
of
the
beholder.
Ha!
Ha!
treated first to a moth spray.
which will be made into a and Deanna, Mrs. Tina Ou r agen c y provides •r
Stewart, Tom and Dorothy
U I we're presented with such -VIRGINIA.
quilt
and given to Mrs. Haggy Collins and Tracey, Mrs. Kay f ina nc i a l protection a nd ~ •
DEAR POLLY- Mrs. A.C. Roush, Todd Grover, Lisa
a problem myself I would
as
a
memento of the party. Hatfield and Jessica, Mrs. ser vice in case of accidents ~~;
By
DAVID
E.
ANDERSON
"The
parish
or
local
wrap each afghan in dark gave a lot of good uses for an Stewart, Betty Blande, Terri, UPI ReUglon Writer
inv olv ing y oung dr ivers ... ...
congregation,"
he
said,
"has
Games
were played and Joyce Grover and Terri, Mrs. but
many
of
these .!~
tissue, put in a large suit box old toothbrush but left out one Debbie and Sherri Bumgard· . Martin Marty styles proved
remarkably prizes were won by Mrs. Beverly Roush imd Mrs. accident s
can
be ' ~
so as to have as few folds as that I like so much. I use such ner, Delores Tyree, Mary himself
Beverly.
Roush
.for
the
door
Lelia
Baggy,
aU
of
Pomeroy.
a
"historiandurable
."
prevented.
That·
'
s
wh
y
we
~"-'
possible and then tape the a brush to clean my dish Bechtle, Jack and Euvetta joUrnalist" or a "journalist·
"I
ready
to
look
into
a
say
preventio
n
ls
the
pri2e;
Mr,s.
Lelia
Haggy
for
Those
who
were
unable
to
edges of the boxes securely. drainer and lind it is great for Bechtle, Judy Gilkey, Bar· historian," and while new quarter century and say the diaper game; ·Mrs. Kay attend but later sent gifts best policy.
;::;
getting in those small places bara Smith, Marcia admitting that such a that those who care about Hatfield for the guessing were Mrs. Shirley Meadows,
Good luck! -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet and removing the black off Capehart, Julia Moodishach, description has &lt;X;Casioned Jewish or Christian life had game "How big is it?" and Mason; Mrs. Jean Norton, 1-----1 ~-·
Linda Hawley, Mary Roush,
Peeve is with the many the drainer. -MRS. E.H.J.
~:
worry
about Mrs. Lelia Haggy for Chester;
Mrs. Jackie
Mildred
DeWeese, Darla sneers admits to rather better
Polly will send you one of
advertisements that show
waUowing in enjoyment of synagogue and church on the diapering a baby blind folded. Hampton, Erwin, Tenn., and
992-2143
J •
children with horrid man- her signed thank-you Sheridan, Marge Newell, the dual vocation.
102 W. Main
Pome·roy
local
level."
Refreshments
of
cake,
~s.
Della
Norton,
Pomeroy.
ners. I work with small newspaper couPQn clippers if Mae Roach, Diane, Cathy,
,.
Marty Is many other things
On another major issue, he
children and fmd It very dif. she uses your favorite Sandy and Cora Lee, Linda as well: a teacher, a prolific noted that "the family is
flcult to teach them good Pointer, Peeve or Problem.in and Rachel Proctor and author which has made him praised but not well phrase from the comic strip
manners when they are con- her column. Write POLLY'S Becky, Clara France, Debbie one of the mo~ influential supported" by the churches, character Pogo: "We have
stantly subjected to ads, com- POINTERS in care of this Fink, and Bobbie Johnson.
conunentators on
the "and, while it is not likely to faults which we have hardly
mercials and even children's newspaper.
contemporary American disappear, the family of 1952 used yet."
programs that show them
religious scene, a fair is beset· and beleaguered."
One can expect another 25
humorist (his tongue-lncheek
He says he has no regrets years of provocative and .
· Officers were elected at the jab of the Total Woman cull for the first 25 years but insightfu,l commentary from
recent meeting of the Meigs in conservative, evangelical keeps ·on his office door a Martili Marty.
County Churches of Christ churches,called"Fundiesin r-~~--~~--~------------~------~----------------------------------------~
Men's Fellowship held at the their Undies" has a ·cull
status among liberal readers
Bradbury Church.
Elected were Bill of the Christian Century all
McDaniel, Pomeroy Church, its own) and, for 25 years
president ;
• S,teve . now, an ordained clergyman.
In his biweekly newsletter,
Pickens,Bradford Church,
drugs ... " he said. "Too many vice president; Creston Context, published by
By Patricia MtCormack
antihypertensive drugs are Newland, Tuppers Plains Claretian Publications,
UPI Health Editor
administered
ineffectively
NEW YORK (UP!) - Let's
Church, secretary; and Glen Marty usually combines his
and
the
claim
is
then made Evans, Bradbury Church, roles of journalist and
N)' Jobn Doe and his
patient
is treasurer,; and Edward historian to provide insight on
neighbor' Mary Smith are in that the
unresponsive.''
the high blood pressure
Evans, Middleport ,Church, what is happening in the
Another advantage of home
ranks.
world of religion and how that
news rePQrter.
They take medicine pre- blood pressure reading : the
The meeting closed with · impinges on the more seC)llar
,ICribed, ·avoid salt, cut down patient soon learns those devotions and·fellowship with American scene. It is ustdl""":-1-:
oo sex, beer, liquor and have things in life that elevate the host church in charge.
a spritely and provocative
""'' '' 'otherw'ise modified their blood pressure.
commentary, like his dozen
"This is much more useful
lifestyle to avoid a crippling
or so books.
than
the vague admonition to
or killing stroke. "Marking
the
25th
They "abo steer clear of 'avoid stress and get lots of
anniversary of his ordination,
rest' ," Page said.
arguments.
however, Marty took a rather
"As though one could in a
Tension of . any kind is
personal look back at quarter
vfewed as a bare wire world full. of crime,
century that he:; transpired
·crackling with electricity. terrorists, tax coUeclors, and
since his ordination.
goveMU1'lent \)ureaucrats."
"The theological theme
They keep away.
Page told doctors to avoid
. that has emerged lor many of
But once a · ·month when
John goes .to his doctor and making cardiac cripples out
U:. during these 25 years !Jas
Mary goes to hers to have of per5ons with high blood
. By Mrs. Francis Morris
to do not so much with the
I
their blood preSS\ll'e taken, pressure.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy ~ifne existence of God or the truth
(~~~-.~.
"With all the usual accompanied their son, of christianity as with how
they end up frustrated. The
t'
,f.'
blood pressure In each prescriptions.:.. take·it easy, Melvin Riffle, on a trip to the particular relates to the
patient stm Is not within don't argue, don't hurry, Niagara Falls and Toronto, general, the specific to the
'
avoid competit,ion, avoid Canada, spending several universal," he notes.
normal ranges.
The unspicy lifestyle isn't obesity 11nd salt, and use days.
· In short, he says, the
Mr. Larry Birch and central theological problem
helping. The •medicine isn't alcohol and sex very
helping. Or so it seems. !Sit sparingly - it is easy to see friends of Colorado were has . been less that · of the
worth living like zombies? how life is shorn of much of overniibt guests of Mr. and various fads like the death of
God but the question of "how
Should they inject aome zest its pleasure and a cripple Is Mrs. Elza Birch.
bor.n,"
be
said.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
is God active beyond his work
into life.
"The
Idea
of
a
possible
Dr. Irvir\e Page, Editor of
Turley and son, Kevin, spent in the Christian Gospel and
·
Modern Medicine, a journal str 0ke Is. frightening.
a recent weekend at St. Church."
fot doctors, titttes a look at · "There are some who have Albans; W. Va. with Mr. and
He then notes some basic
the day-IIM!ay treabnent of prolonged their lives by Mrs. Dale Ball. Their son, changes that reflect a partial
such hypertensive patients. becoming zombies. However, Kenny, retumed home with answer.
"In 1952 our class of
· In an editorial titled, ''The most persons would prefer to them after spending a week
Two Worlds of Hyper· · II ve with more 2est by with ,his uncle and aunt.
Protestants were still trained
tension," Page, a dis· Improving their lifestyle
Mr. and Mrs. M~ Wolfe of to be anti-Catholic," he said
tlngulshed cardiologist, sug- Instead."
Sandusky and Mr. and Mrs. · and, a little ruefully,
Page says Brian Simpson Lisa and remembered that he had
P .S.
gests better ways of
avoidance
of
salt,
obesity and Darin of Balt~ore visited prophesied that "little would
monitoring blgh blood
smoking
is
to
be Mrs. Helen Simpson and come" of Vatican 11.
pressure - better probably
recommended
as
is
moderate
than those periodic checks in
attended the Sayre reunion
"Now all is changed," he
pleasurable exercise. and abo visited Mr. and Mrs. said. "The old Catholicism
the doctor's office.
Then make sure you locate your
Unfortunately, your CB base
has been i!emythologized,
And be's not foc people . "Understanding that life is Ralph Badgley.
for living is perbaps the most
living like zombies. .
Mr. and Mrs. Roger WoU:e much of its mystery Is
station antenna will not only help you antenna (including supporting mast
He thinks the doctor imporlant of aU," he said.
of Ashtabula spent SOY.eral dissipated, whatever control
reach more people, it could also put and guy wires) at least one and a
probably should Iitke three 9r
days with his sister, Mrs. it had Is gone, and there is no
half times its tott1l height from all
four measur·ements.
you in touch with our power lines.
Helen Simpson.
way, noway it can put
Mrs. David Wilson, Patty together again the old way. In
Apprehension and POTRArrs . PROTECTED
And the slightest contact between power lines. Which means, a 30-ft.
el&lt;citement may increase the
COLUMBUS (UP!) _State and Teresa of Brooksvffie, Vatican II It took on the
high antenna should be 45 feet away
you, your antenna and our lines
patient's pressure the first or officials have decided it's Florida are vlsillng her burdens of freedom and
second time around,
from all power lines in all directions.
could he fataL
In the seat:ch foc a true about time to get some mother Mrs. Velma Taylor modernity."
and oth~r relatives in Racine . A look at his wrilings of the
That way, if it falls during conSo, before you put up· your
monitoring on the blood protection foc the 58 portraits and Columbus.
1950s .also showed, Marty
presaure, . which often &lt;:1. Ohio Governors that hang
.·•
stl'Uction,·or gets blown down during
Mr .. and Mrs. Don -Wads- said, they were concerned
antenna, here are a few suggestions
U uc t na t es , .p 8 u
in the Statehouse rotimda.
a stonn, it won't hit any lines and
recaiDJilfiDdl; .
It was bad enough when worth daughters Debbie and · with "the puffy prosperity of
•
you should ~ollow.
Diane: and ~. Dorothy mainline churches." In the
- The doctor should take several years ago a vandal Sayre of Pennsylvania ,spent 1960s, those same chur~h~s
First; we recommend you have a endanger you or your neighbors.
wrote "I love John Glenn" all
"
If
I!Veral readlllgs. And the
two weeks with Mrs. Edna sufferred assualt f~ Wtthm
. 'frying to cmTy an antenna, climb
professional do it for you. .
doctor Isn't taking the over a portrait of Ohio's 1836 Pickens and other realtlves. and wltho,ut and •so.~e . of
j&amp;ell!llll'e, the person doing it Gov. Joseph Vance and
them lost purj)OS(:, uefuutlon,
Okay, if you're determined to do a ladder and keep your balance all at
'in
bad better know how. "It Is another sbulhed a painting of
core, energy, vision and
the
same
time
is
risky
business,
too.
it yourself, look out for power lines.
lqlJlOIIed •llat anyone can incum~t James A. Rhodes.
-~ yellded space to
more
.,
'"
Wait
for
a
calm
day,
assemble
The
ones
attached
to
poles.
And
the
measure blood pressure
But the Rhodes picture got
'.
Ohl aggressive if often more
it again this week. Simeone SOITEWFILRIEDCHMOND
•
0 unlovely
•
styles
of
N
the
antenna
where
ld
you
intend
to
put
I
P
ones attached to your house. .
accurate y," age ·s a · stuckabnmberstlckeroothe (UP!) - John Goyne, a Christianity and religion."
"Adually this II far from the
•'
it up, be sure to ground the antenna
If you can't tell a power line from
lruth."
governor's painted chest that candidate loc sheriff of Cler·
But he adds that "for all the
••
_ Home blood ......sure read "Remember Kent State mont County last year, has impressive growth of
propedy
and
~et somebody to
&lt;t
phone
line,
don't
experiment.
.... - Move the Gym".
flied a $750,~ fede~al cmservatlve Protestantism,
help you.
"'dings should be put into
Raymond R. Kohli, head of lawsuit chargmg pohce . the culture is not less
Steer clear.
· ~::cr'::id the dally the Ohio Public Works harrassment and false secularized than before their
"
1'81dinga ~ lbow wblll Dlv181on, said he will const!lt arrest.
as
the
surge.
Only
_. with the state Arts CoWICll
Named 811 defendants in the evangelicals move toward
the right combinat Ion v•
'•
nd ...
Obi0 HI St Or. .lea 1
clrup la baYing aJl llfect OO 8
..,e
actioo are Norborne C. Ward, the exposure that the
Workfng together is the only,,way.
';
.,
blood prllllll'e. '"lbba }ni8J1! · Society about pr,otectlve former Batavia pollee chief, mainUne demanda are they
well pat ._lllGp to the uae ol plaetlc covers for the and George Woods, a Batavia taken seriously in the
pollee sergeant.
culture."
'
lome antihypertensive artwork.

.POLLY·s POINTERS.

.

Wants to store afghans

..
~

Ha~en.

~~~~y~;da~~~~pl:

M

h
rs. llaggy onored

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

.
-·-.
"

Religious author
reviews the past
am

DALE C. WARNER

-

0.0.

Officers elected. .

High blood pressure
is hard to control

Racine
Social
Events.

A

Dear W'lfe:
If all divorced people were like your husband, they'd be
perpetually divorced.
The matter with him is he's locked in a memory capsule.
My question : What's the matter with YOU? If you can't
pull him out of the past, pull out of this masochistic marriage.
-H.
.
Dear Helen:
,
My husband was injured on his job and got workmen's
compensatioo. •
·
I was injured oo ''my job": I fell off a ladder while
scraping Ieaveli from our rain gutter; couldn't carry on my
housewife's duties for near six montha becaUse of a broken leg
and olher complications.
This required a part.tirne housekeeper and babysitter
plus many medical bills, not all covered by insurance.
'·
Why doo't "equal rights" extend to wives who work harder
in the hm1e than women who work out of it? Didn't I rate
4
'workw(IJlen's comJ*t¥.tiOII,'' too?
A1s9: Why can't we housewives have some sort of taxexempt retirement plan.(such as the Keogh for self-employed
people - .which we are), so that we'll have our ·oWll retirement
fundsandnotdependonourhushands? And-.Whymustmany
of us lose our widow'a pension if we remarry? - STILL A
SECOND-CLASS Cl'l1ZEN - A "MERE" HOUSEWIFE

WAS PRESENT

._

MR. RETAILER!
.

If you read this you have just been
exposed to ·the dynamic effect of
newspaper advertising.

Put it to work for you-you'll know it works!
PHONE

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

..

...

Ohio Power

...,

•

•'

�A-The Deilv Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy. 0 .• Moriday , _
Aug. 22, 1977

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

'

100

Lo61 and J&lt;'o und

150

U$
1.!0

1.80

2.25

3.00

375

lF "OU hove o service to ofler ,
wont to buy or sell something .

EAch wocd liVt'f' the- Jnu1bnwn. IS
,.WU«D llll 4 ceuu ~r word per \l.My.

foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.

tdays
3days

&amp;days

:Ads nlliUUlg ollwr UJ,iilll l'Ut~'Uln"
days wlll ' lw l'halr~t!d 111l U~e J da)·
.... \&lt;.

In memory, Card of Th.imb omd

(X)jlua~ : 6 l~ts per wurd, SJ.OO

mimmwn. Cuh madvanlY.
al't'ef'Ced only Wilh t:ltllh Wtlh

orikr. 25 &lt;.-enl charl!te for stls c;u·.-v- '
lllg .Bwo; Nwnber In Cart&gt; uf Tl"lt' St&gt;;a-bnd.
TI'It' 1-'UOU.~Ild' tt'lit!h't'~ lilt: nghl
lU l'!ilil or l"t!Jt•d ;my .-&lt;b ~m~ utr.

jtoi.•twMI.

nr PulillS~'

oe looking for work . . . or
whoteVftf' . . • you 'JI get resohs

Coli 992-2156.
FOUR FAMILY Yard SQie, Mon .

Business'Opportunitii!R

lOST
REOBONE Coon Dog ,
Famole w1th pups. Lost SIMHl in
East Letart area , Call (b14)
1•7-2279 or 2~7·379 4 .

1

LOST-SECOND "'rmored Division
Training Monuol book of Ft .
Hood . Te•os. Hos senlimantal
valva. May hov• been lost at
Eo_!!!rn High Xhool . 9•9.:._2042.

v.1ll nut be

respuns1ble for 1nore than ttlt! mt•ur-

mot insenton.
PhQne992-%J56

- - - -·-

YARD SAtE, Mon. thru Fri .. 9 until
? . Third house up from
Syracuse Fire House. ~icyc le,
end tables , clott-llng, ond other
__!h__fn gs .
~ -~ ~~~- ~-

NOTICF

M... N... GERS
DEMON ·
STR ... TOIIS. SELL GU ... RANTEED
TOYS . GIFTS . NO SERVICE
CHARGE .
PHONE .. CAR
NKESSARY . CJ\ll COLLECl TO
CA~Ol DAY (S18) 4119'1139S .

THE PHOTO PLACE

,_

---

"2·5724

I·r.tto""' Soltl 1M Sonkt IIIII s.,.
J.l 4- l mo.

.

ONE TON 1965. Ooc:fge truck , cab
_gn&lt;!_~ ~ake . 7&lt;42 -;?914.
19b'il MAliBU 2 dr. t-aardtap. Call

$18,300.
iuJH;..f "as_quotedby lh•' U.S. !Jf.'/Jl
rif lAbor. Bun·au of Labor Mat£.;;. .

trrs. bulletin M}. 1875.

~ ~_3?2• ·--=-:---::-~

~ Monday
J'li!'llm on Saturday

985-3886.

1917 FORD Four-Wheel Drive.
P.S., P.B.. 4-speed , threequarter. Still under warranty.

'1\lbdoly '·

Uu11 F'rida)'

COM~~TE~l~Y~F~U~RN~I~S~
HE~O--IO__
x __
W
Colonial mobile home . Reol
good buY. Gene Dunn , Rockspr·
ings Rood, post sawmill , f irst
white trailer ac(oss the little
bridge on left_
. _
-~ _

Coll949·2673.

4P.M.

thl' dar ~fore pul&gt;lkauvn

1972 CHEVROLET Pickup Truck .
New tires , runs good. Call

Sw1day
4P.M.

!...:=====::===
Fritla) ilftenwun

PUBLIC NOTICE

992-6231.

•

1972 FORO GRAN Torino. $850.

NP FUTURE? IN ASS RUT?

Good condition . Call 742-2746 .

Consider a ProfesslOTial Career

, • . 1969 CHEVROLET CAPRICE. P.S ,

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

P.B.. A .C. l ow mileage. $500.

~-Co~~9~23
~·~----~--

Ori\·ing a "BIG RIG ~' We are a Pri·
vate Training School offering a
PARTTimeor FULLTime Train·
ing Program. If yoo are \\'Orking,
Don't Quit Your job, attend our
Weekend TrainiQg program ot al ·
tend our 3 Week FULL Time Res·
ident Training.

3 AND

4 RM . furnished ond un-

furnished opts. Pt-aone 992·
Notice is hereby: g lv!n that
543-i .
sealed proposalS ' will be
rece-Ived at the office of the·
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt.
Board of Me igs County ~
33 , ten miles north of Pomeroy.
Commissioner s at the Court.
STARCR:AFT lOth annivers ary sale
large lots with concrete patios.
ho us~ in Pom~roy , Oh io, until
on mlni-motors , trollers , and
sidewalks , runners and off
Rt~ICO Tr{lf"tQr· Trailtr Training, Inc.
-4:00 P .M . on September 6,
folddown.&amp; . Trovelstor 25 ft .
street
park ing . Phone 992-7479.
1917 with b ids to be· opened at
$-i400 .00; 20 ft . mini-motor
. PARKERSBURG
7:00 P .M . on tha t date , for the
FURNISHED
APT. Adults only , no
$10,850.00. We sell s~rvice and
follow·lng descr ibed county
1·304·422·4080
pets
.
Phone
992-387-i, Mid quality : Camp Conley Staf'craft
work :
~_d)!eo r"'
l._ _ _ _ _ __ _
Soles , Rt . 62 north of Pt. PleaFurnish a ll materials,
ta bor ,
and
appl iances
sont .
WAITRESS &amp; CARHOP apply in TWO BEDROOM troller, oduhs on necessary to complete in a
person . Craw's Steak House , ~~ Coli 992-3324 .
FAIR
MONTH
SPECIAL
on
entire
5 a tisfactory
manner,
Pomeroy , Ohio.
scrap ing or w ire brush ing ,
stock . See them at CODNER'S
TO RENT . Riverside A,ts . 1
painting, reglaz i ng where
CAMPERS on Rainbow ridge. BABYSITTER TO live in . P.O . BoJ~:
bedroom starting ot $100 per
needed ,
ca\Jik
between
From Ri .7, toke Meigs 28 or 32
mo . 2 bedrooms starting at
924 , Gall ipolis , Ohio .
frames and brick, apply one
to Basham. Open evenings.
$138 per mo . Equal Hous ing
(1) coat acrylic masonry
too. Owner , Robert Codner.
Opportunity . Cal1992-6098 .
wnrte
paint
(Sherwin
SAIL THE
long Bottom, Ohio .
Will iams or equal) to the
SEVEN SEAS
TWO BEDROOM oil el~tric aport ·
following exter ior areas of
Visit Hong Kong. Spain , the
mant , close to Pomeroy . Call
the Me igs County Court PUBLIC NOTICE
Carrlbean . We ' ll pav you to
_192-2298 or 992-7666.
house:
·
do It In the U .S. Navy . If
All Of the front "of the TO Opal Rict"lai"ds
No known address
you are 17 to 31, cell or see :
•O· 5() ACRES of cropland at
bu il ding facing Second Street
Y ou are hereby notif i ed
us Navv
Rut land . Call (513) 539-7439.
In the V i llage of Pomeroy . that you have been named
221 Col 11m bus Rd ., Athens.
Appro xi mately .40 feet on the Defendan t In a l egal ac ti on
IN MASON. 2 bedr. apt. with
DH
West side to Whet is known as
stove
and
refrigerator .
PH : 593· 3566 Collect
the " New Addi tion." Ap - ent i tled Leroy R i Ch'ards ,
Carpeted ond clean . No
proximatel y 25 feet on the P l a int i lf,
-vsopa l
East s lcle t o what [s known as .R i chardS . D efendant ; that
ct-l ildren or pets . Coli (304 )
the " New add it i on .-•! Afso to this cause has been ass igned
773-S977. ---------~be included in this Ql d Is one Ca se No . 16.443. and Is pend ·
ing in the Common Pleas
THREE BEDROOM home , unt
I
b
I
G
co at of old Pi!! n
e ap- Court of Meigs County , Oh i o,
furn ished . Coli 992-3090.
RISING ~TAR ,Kennel Boarding ,
piled to the Dome of the Pomeroy , Ohio. 45769. The
lndoor·Outdoor runs , grooming
Mei gs County Courthouse . objec t of this Complaint is for
Work shall beg in not more
all breeds, dean· sanitary
than 10 days after awl!lrdlng d ivorCe, div isi on of proper ty
facil ities oe 367-7.112. Cheshire .
of contract, and completed and other proper rel ief. ,
Phone (614) 367·0292.
You are requ ired to answer
with i n 30 calendar days , witt-lin twenty .eight da ys ,
ONE BROTHER sewing Mockine
weather perm i tting . Pena lty .after t he last publica tion of
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell , trade · with cobinetfor on electric por·
beyond specified time s~atl th i s notice. once eact'l week
or train hones . RUTH 'REEVES;
table argon . Cal1992-2969 .
be S5D.OO per day .
.. T
trainer . Phon• (614) 698-3290 .
All bids must be ac - for six success ive wee"'s. he
c;ompanled by 8 Bond signed last publication Will be on
AKC SHETLANO oheep dog,.
by two sureties approved by Aug . 22 , 1917 ant:l the twenty (Min.) Collie$ , 2 females , · 7
the county commlssloners 1 eight days will commence on
weeks
old . Shots ond wormed.
tha
t
date
.
·
·
.
.
in the amount of 12,000.0.0, for
In case of your fa ilure to
Phone
(614 ) 367-0292 or
the fa ithfu l performance of
wer ,
or
otherw i se
367 -7112,
CASH · paid for all makes ond
th is contract . Bond referred
to i s a Bidders Bond ac d , as re:quireo bY the
models of mobile homes.
MEIGS
COUNTY
Humone
Society
Ru les
of
Civil
company i ng
bid , which
re
ju dgment by
Phon&amp; area code 614-423-9531 .
Animal Coraline, 992-7680; or
becomes a per formance BC?nd default will be rendered
oftar6p .m., 992-~27 .
to Contra ctor
rece l v 1ng
.
.
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
award . All other bonds w ill be . aga.nst y o_
u for the reltef
ducts. Top pr ice for standing
All
BREED
dog
grooming
.
J
.
and
returned to b idders after demanded m this ctafm .
sawtimber. Call 992-5965 or
(?.
Kennels.
Reasonable
rates
.
award of Contra'ct .
LARRY E . SPENCER,
Kent Hanby , 1·,..6·8570.
No
drugs
used
.
Coli
for
apAll emPloyees shall be
Clerk of Courts
pointment , 742-3162 .
CO'Ierecl b y Ohio's Workmen 's
COINS, CURRENCY, tokens, old
Meigs County
Compensation. Your r i sk
pocket wotc11es and chofns,
Cqrn
mon
Pleas
Court
TO
GIVE
oway
·
3
kitte~s
,
3
me.
number shall be furn i shed in •
silver and gold . Wa need 1%4
old
,
1
longholred
.
Colt
your bid,.
(7) 18, 25 (8) 1, ~ . 15, 22, 61c
and ol9er silver coins . Buy, sell ,
992-20'10.
The County &lt;;:omm iss loners
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
reserve the r i ght to accept or
relect any and all b ids .
IN THE COURT
~ 742·233
:::..:;1.' ---.---------0lD
FURNITURE,
ice boxes , brass
MEiGS COUNTY
NOTiCE OF SALE
beds ,
etc .,
complete
COMMISSIONERS ADA YVONNE TACKET T
By virtue of the order of
households-. Write M . 0 . Miller,
Mary Hobstetter , Rutland , Ohio
sale dUly issued out ot thP
Clerk
Court of Common Pleas , In
Rt. -i , Pomeroy, Oh io or coli
Plaintiff ,
(BJ 22 , 29 , 2tc .
rne case ot 1-'omeroy National
No . 15,844
992-7760.
- vsBank and Citizens Nati onal
Bank vs . Fred B . Goegleln , ef
FREO TACKETT
al. , be ing Case No . 16,046, 1
c -o Anna Welch
PUBLIC NOTICE
will offer at public sale at the
l·• Notic e Is hereby g i ven that M idd leport , Ohio,
door of the Court House of
Oefendi!lnf .
•. Case No. 76-837 -E L-CSS bi! ing
· Meigs County , Ohio, on the
Notice by
, \,• In the Matter of the Com 16th day of September , 1977,
Publication
pla int of A . M ichael Schwarz at 10 o'clock A .M ., the
To Fred Tackett, whose
• wa lder . Complainant . vs .
land S'
and
l ast kn own address was C·O lollow l ng
'"' 'Columbus and Southern Oh io
Wanted
to
buy
tenements :
Anna We lch , Middleport,
,;-,, E lectr ic
Com pany , and
Parcel
1
:
Situate
In
Ohio,
you
are
hereby
noti
f
ied
delivered
to
our
mill
I' Cleveland
E l~ctrlc
Salisbury Towi-.shlp', Meigs
tha t you ha'le been named
' ' Illuminat i ng
Company .
oo, Baily Run Rd. off
County, Ohio. and being in
Defendant in a legal ac t ion
·.;: Res)londents, and Case No .
Sect ion 15, Town 2, Range 13,
entitled Ada Yvonne Tack ett,
124
between
Rt.
..... 76-838 -EL -CSS being in In the
and 'being Lot No . 5 of Rock
Plaintiff , vs . Fred TacKett .
Matter of the Complaint of
Pomeroy
&amp;
Rutland.
Springs Subdivision ,' and
Oe~endant . This action has
Oiane Fr i edman and Sandra
recorded
In
Vol.
4,
PJ~ge
36,
been
assigned
Case
No.
15,844
.
~ · .s . Sterrett , Complainants , vs .
37, 38, of Meigs County Plat
and is pend ing in the Court of
't"• COiumbus and SOuthern Ohio
Records .
Cut 6 ft. long w·
Common Pleas of Meigs
,.. Electri c
and
Cl eveland
1
Deed Reference ; Volume
County , Pomeroy , Ohio.
" "Eiectrlc
Ilium lnat l ng
square ends which
256 , Page 451 , Meigs County
'Company ,
Respondents . 45169 .
Oeed
Records
.
Th
e
ob
ject
of
th
e
co
mp
laint
measure no less than
•l'l, rel arive to certain ad .
Parcel 2 : Situated i n
is for d !vorc ,e care, custody,
ver tlsing pract ices have been
in. and no more than
1
Townsh l'/'
of
Salisbury,
and control of th e minor
"" scheduled for public hearing
County.o Mei gs, and State of
10112" outside the
on September 19,1977 , at 9:30 children of the part ies , and
Ohio : Being In Section 15,
ot her relief .
•·• A.M . at the off i ces of the
bark.
Town 2, Range 13 , and
You are requ ired to answer
Comm i ss i on , 180 East Broad
bounded a·nd descr ibed as
the com plain t w if hin 28 da ys
· Strut. Co l umbus, Oh io .
call Pomeroy Forrest
follows: Beginning at the
after the li!l st pub lication of
. Intereste d parti es w itl have
Products for prices
center
of
the
Pomeroy
and
ttlis notice, wh ic h w ill be
· an opportunity to present
Athens Pike Road at a poin t
published once each week for
r el e'lant t est im ony . Fur~ther
and
delivery
about 155 feet north of a
six success i ve weeks . The
informat ion may be obtained
sycamore
tree
{If
the
side
of
instructions.
last
pub
lication
w
i
ll
be
made
by contac ting the com said road ; thence oorlh 80
on Aug . 22 , 1977, and t he 28
·•:.m iu ion.
992.-5965
"- THE P UBL IC UTI LI TIES days for answer witt com . degrees 30' East 220 feet to a
stake; thence south
18
mence on ttl at date .
·• COMMISS ION OF .OH IO
degrees 33 ' east 200 feet .to a
In case of you r f ai lure to
u;~·
By Ran dall G. Applegate,
stake ;" thence south
ao CASH!! ~· Junk con , Fry's. Truck 11:
ans wer or otherwise respond
. Sec retary
Auto , RuthJnd. Phona 7_.2 -2081
1
degrees
30'
west
220
feet
to.
as re(lu ired by the Ohio Ru l es
"' ' (8)22,1tc
·
or 742-9575. Closed Mondays.
the center of t he said
of Civil Pr oce dure , divor ce
Flomeroy and Athens Road ;
w il l be granted .
NO ITEM. TOO Lorge or. too small:
thence west along the center
Will buy 1 piece or complate
of
said
road
200
feet
to
the
Dated
:
Ma
y
24,
1977
•'
household . New, used, or anti·
place of beg inning, con taining One ( 1) Acre, more or
ques. Morfin's Furniture, 20 N.
Larry Spencer
leS5 . EXCEPTING all the
2nd St., . Middleport. Phone
Cler
k
of
Courts
BILLY VS. IRS
coal and all mining rights.
Mi!igs County
992·6370.
including air shafts , air ways ,
r.: WASHINGTON (UP!) Comm on PJeas court
·dra inage and entries to m ine · lATE MODEL Chevy 1/ t ton 4·
, Billy C.,rter says the Internal
coal under the above and
· wheel · ·d rive pic.kup . · Coli
(7) 18, 25 {8) I, 8, 15, 22 , 6tc
Revenue
· Service
is
ot~er land ; as heretofore sold
992-5335. ----------~~~~-by previous grantors .
.. ..dlBcriminating against him
EXCEPTING a certain
.~. because he is the President's MARY IN A COMA
parcel conveyed to ·Helen B .
Collins by deed recorded In
, .brother and he won 't ''make
ARCADIA, Calif. (UP!) -

=.

'

°

~~ ~

::~~~~~w::y~~~~o

--

~-

WANTED

PINE POSTS

a

__________

,.

.'

it easy for them" !D audit his

The prognosis for singer
Mary Ford, who has been In~
returns.
Carter complained in an coma since Aug. 8, is guarded
, interview in U.S. News and and her coma has not eal!ed
•;World Report that the family since her admission, a
hol!pital spokeswoman said
, ilt'areholllll! and farm and Ilia
:;Oit'll aervlce statioo in Plains, SUnday .
Miss. Ford, who sang with
' Ga., had never bef&lt;re "had
; lull.fledged audits except her ex-husband guitarist Les
Paul in the 195011, remained
•)11th Jinuny as President."
.. "I don't mind th em seriously ill in the iniensive
care unit at Methodist
checking Jimmy's, but I
1blnk they've dlacriminated · Hospital of Southern
· fll&amp;lnst me because I'm Callfornia.
.Jimm)''a be~," he said.
''The opinion of her
He lllid he cooperated with . physician Is that the coma is
tbe IRS on one audit, but will related to Insulin reaction,"
not be 10 belpfuJ on others. the spokeswoman aald.

Deed Book 172, Page 263,

Meigs County Deed R:ecords ,
containing . 17 A . more or
less.
Being In section 15, Town 2.
and Range 13, bounded and
described as follows ~ Lots 7, 8
and 9 of the Roc~( Springs
Sub -OivlsiQn , as recorded in
Plat Book No . .. . Page 36, of
the Records In ttle Meigs
County Recorder's Office .
Reference Deed: Volume

216, Pogo 659 and 719, Meigs

County Deed Records .
The real estate Is appraised
at 139.350.00 fOr Parcel 1. and
125,000.00 for Parcel .2.
Terms of sale tre cash In
hand on day ot sale .

JAMES J . PROFFITT

, Sheriff of
Meigs county , Ohio .

(8) IS, 22, 19l 6. lie

.CANNING TOMATOES, PEP~ERS
cucumbers . Cleland Farms '
Greenhouse ,
Geroldin~
Cleland.
·
tREE RIPENED orchard peaches.
White or yellow starting Mon .,
Aug . 1.. Mason Peach Orchard.

1974 TERRAMITE Backhoe, S3000.

Phone (614)446·7150.
CANNING PEACHES , Bring con·
toiner

&amp;

winter

potatoes .

~-~!!one 84:'3·.::26:0:9'=:
3 . .,:----REGISTERED TREEING walker

coon hound pups ond 1973 750
_ c~_Ko~~sak_i.:..~oil ~2·75-48.

FIREWOOD.
truCkload ,

992-6353,
992-7130.

$20

a

pickup

dellver*Cf.

or

9'12·6109 ,

Call

ar
•.

COAL. limestone, and calcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control and spl(iol mixing
salt for formers , Exceitlor Sort
Works, Main Street , Pomeroy,
Ohio o r phone 992 - 3891 .
CAMPER, $600. Also. horse
trailer, S...SO. Phone' {61~ ) 698 3290'-"
mfNG GARDEN Supplies , Cabbage . cauliflower , broccoli .
and head lefluoe plants ,
yellow, wt-.ite, ond red onion
sets.. onion plants , Kennebec,
cobbler . IC:otohdin . Red Pontiac
and Red Losodo seed potatoes.
Bulk garden seeds. potting soil ,
pea t moss , fruit trees and rose
bushes . M i dway Market ,
Pomeroy , Ohio , 992-2582,
Bob:s Ma rket , M,oson , W.Va.

_J304) 773-S721 ' .

l"1'1i;q1

or mobl.le

ra,l~ ~

·C:.:ti
II,

horavy ijaUJe, alkldhed

•nd posu. pl1l1 or
We b.ive u uperielk.'ed
('tt"tt' Uutl bave eruled ~ fll
~r li.ul' qWIUty a~ ud cariD this area. MOI!It ~pro·ts •uUiy for low la.t.ernt biar
impronmt!DI luau a~our local
baU ur SA:L. cau m-7
t... alrM
nUmatt • st.op by n• E. MaW Sl••

C:lli

Pumnv,, O.

7-26-1 mo.

America 33.

I·

il1 ' PRINCESS
ISSAF~I

THE GAGS, BOYS!
HA' THAT DID IT -- THE
WALL IS GIII&lt;NG WAY ..

liiESf AAC1fi4T SECRET
!NUTS WOULD 8E TltE
LIVING TOMB FOR MY
MEN, !H?

MEIGS
.
'
EQUIPMENT
.
.

~

COMPANY

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Misspeak
s "She - ear

ship p•rts directly
'o your door tay WI' of

U.P.S.

lec·ustom Hydraulic H011 .

Making

HZ-7m or 6!11-1005
applittl to jM.
6-U-1 mo. pd.

r~.

Coll992·7481.

Phone tf2·21 ' '
Pomeray, o.
8-7-1.rno . .

·

for music"
(2 wds.)

BORN LOSER

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, C...
plete Service. ~hone 949 -~
or 9-i9-2000 . .RaCine, Ot-lio, 0 .
Bradford .

ELWOOD BOWERS

RE~AIR

!D Huron's

I)JHAT A LOJ9.f liME'
CHI FE' TD t:&gt;t;T ODDS

DID L!OU KtJOW -mAl AT AI:£ 70,
THE'R~ ARE' FIV~ WOME'IJ FOl&lt;
6V!&gt;R'I MAIF:

l-IKE' 11-lAT,
6

-

382S.
REMODELING , Plumbing, MCII int
and oil types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 y.-on ex·
perl ence . Phone 992-2.409.

'

GALlON

Fuel

Oil

tonk.

TEAFORD

'

pounds . $30 per head. Call

98S-35.::88:::·--~--------­

TARGHEE .RAM. Also .- ear corn .

Coli (614) 698·4499.

!"--..,..._-----....·
FOR SALE

New Co-Op water and
softeners , model VC-SVI .

Only 5279.95

Save UO .OO on a new
Hq,polnt Refrigerator.
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest
Freezer
125.00 Discount
1 Good McCullough Chain

Saw

S65

1 Good Used Poulan Ch1ln
~w-

_ _

uo

Electric Trim -All cuts with
nylon
129.95
( 1l Good. Refrigerator szoo

Pomeroy Landmart

9_. -J~ckPhone
W. Carsey , Mgr.
!Ail.:
992-2111
NEW WALL-TYPE lavorotory with
new faucets, $15. Old-type cost
iron kitchen wall sink , $3 .
Cistern pump. very good condi tion , with pipe, $15. Call

992-2969.
REDUCE SAFE and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E-Vop
wOter pills", Nelson Drug.

COPPERTONE

REFRIGERATOR ,

$35 . Coppertone ~~~ Range ,
$50. Two Wheel&amp;eo·rcot garden
tractor
with · plow
and
cu ltl votor.
$70 .
Murray
lownmower ,
$25 .
Coli

949-204
:-:2::·=-------------HOUsE FOR SALE - Must oall
everything, Mon . and Tues ., 1/t
mila below Middleport on Rt. 7.

MAIN
PQMEROY, 0.

~~'!'lli
REALH)ll

RUTLAND-I floor plan. 4
lots about 240 II. fronlage, 2
. bedrooms, · bath. natural
gas. GREAT AT JUST
$12.000.00.
. NICE CORNER LOT Close to shop'plng. 2
bedrooms, bath, carpeting ,
natural gas F. A. heat ,

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Secon- Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
WALK TO STORES
Renovated

J

bedroom

home In Middleport with 2
bolhs, natural gas. Ohio
Power, city water, and

IXJrthes,

metal roof. $17,000.

VIEW OF RIVER Reason'a ble 3 bedroom
house.

bath, 7 rooms,
gas forced air
furnace . Large garage and
n~tural

'4 acre . $19,500.

RUTLAND -

2 . bedroom

!'lome, natural gas, city
water, and 2 lots for

$10,000 . .
NEW LISTING -

Extra

nice nome ·surrounded by ·

shrubbery, swimming pool ,
large family room with
fireplace .
3
lovely
bedrooms.
2
baths,
fireplace in living, full
bosemenl and garage.
NEAR RUTLAND 4
room house. both, well
water. with 2'4 acres of
land. Only $9,500.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,
bath, natural gas. city
water, 2 porches and large
garden. Just $7,000.
POMEROY - Lorge s
bedroomS. 1'12 baths, full
bosemenl, central heatl119,
~nd nice lot. Furnished or
unfurnIshed, you decide.
53 ACRES -- 2 goad
sprlngsf several acres of

tractor land , II Hie born and
all minerals. $16,500.
MIDDLEPORT All
electric 3 bedroom home
just 5 years old. Fully
and well kept up.
Insulated,
·COUNTRY farmland with seclud· ·.
Fenced
bock
yard. A goad
ed woods , water and good ac·
-buy at $18,500.
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
Sl ,000 down, call (304) 772· . 4 ACRES - Building or
trailer lois on old Route 33
3102-or (304) n2-3277.
North .
VA -FHA, ·30 yr. finoncl,ng. Ireland
NEW LISTING - 50xl00
Mortgage, n E. State. Athent .
fool
lot In Pomeroy has a 2
phone (61-l) 592-3051 .
bedroom air conditioned
2. STORY 3 bedroom frome
troller. Only $6,000.
house,. F.A . Iurnoce, storm w in·
WE
HAVE
GOOD
dows. fireploce in Middleport .
PROPERTY
FOR
~hone 992-3457.
SPECIAL PEOPLE.
Helen L. TNford
TRAILER &amp;"LOT for sale, 75Eim St ..
Middleport. Phone 992-7307.
C. Bruce TMIGrd

1

drive.

GOING AT $i3,BOO.OO.
2 STORY FRAME - 'Lots
of ground, 2 baths, 4
bedrooms, dining, porches.
Income. $13,850.00.
ALMOST NEW - Double
wide with ·6 acres, garage
and •tor age bui)dlng. Close
lo recreation . This Is lovely
properly al a very low
price. $17,000.00.
·
MOBILE HOME ~ With
about Vi acre of ground, in
good
condition ,
2
bedrooms, bath, large
ICvlng , storage bu.l ldlng .
$8,000}00.

EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
backhoe work : dump trucb
ond lo-boy' for hire ; will t-.1
fill dirt, to soil , limestone and
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers , day phone 992-7019,
night phone 992-3525 Qr 992·

GASOUNE ALlEY

.

We should
sell

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

742·2348.

CARPENTER, flooring , · ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.

992·5858.
HOWERY AND

MARTIN

r

3 Fann

=~-:::::-:--:-::-:c-:-::-:-:-=-r--~--1 Napoleon
I DCN'rKNOW WHAT
37 Tart
Cl-lOYOW 15 - BIJT; OH
38 Crosses the
BOY!'f- 15 IT
goal line
b--1--+--+~l-+-

MOBILE Home Repair , ElK.,
plumbing ond h&amp;ating. Phone·

D,..E
sc,1""~"'-

Ex·

A

covating', septic systemt.
dozer, backhoe. dump truck,
limestone. grOvel , blacktop
paving. Rt. 143. Pnone 1 (614)

a. Sat. At 5 P.M.

Road ho.,re several chioce Iota ·
fvr sole for rfttct.ncial homes .
Zontd for your prot«tlon. 6 mi .
from Pomeroy , OH. Call or ....
GeorgeS . Hqbtt•tler, Box 101 ,
Pomer~,.·y . Phone 985·4186 .

is an heirloom!

was handed
downtomeb4
m4 father!

field , Bock Hoe Sande•.
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7,.2-.2001.

FRIDAY lll5

992-730-::7.:..-----------WiLDWOOO ESTATES , Flatwoods

M4car

5232.
EXCAVATING , darer , backM.
ond ditcher. Charles R. Hot·

SMALL HOUSE - LOW
698-7331.
GAS Bl LL - small yard,
HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair. Service
this 4 room frame with bath
Colis. 276 Sycomora, St., MidIs Ideal In this · day of
dleport. ~hone 992-2S22.
Inflation. $5,400.00.
DROP IN
LET US
EXPLAIN OUR NEW
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
THEN
PIANO TUNING, lane Oanlalo. 12
DECIDE
WHO · YOU .
veors of service . Phon•
WANT TO SELL YOUR
992-2082.
PROPERTY.
WATER WELL. drilling . Phone
HENRY E. CLELAND
Will tom P. Grant at ·?42· 2879
REALTOR
ofter6p .m .
Honk, Kotlly &amp; Leona
PENNlOIL RUTLAND opero dally
Cleland
till 10. Clasad Mondor• .
A$soclates
wrecker service, tire repair,
99:1-22Shr 992·2561
Phone 742-9575 or 742-2081 .

TRAILER AND LOT for sole on
.Fourth St., Mason, Phone {614 )

I

concrete

SEWING MACHINE Rapolrs, - ·

vice, oil makes , 992-228.4. The
Fobrlc Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles ~
Serv ic e. We sharpen Scluors.

H Unea rthly
DOWN
1Minus
_2 One o£
the Ages

neighbor
structure
11 Silk fabric
4 Gaze
12 Exclusive
5 Medieval
13 Butter-eolomerchants'
Y est erday's AnsWer
ring su!!stance guild
26 Actor
14 Some
6 ''Today I
15 Turn a
Alan sleepers
· - man"
penny
16 Roman
(2 wds.)
19 ·l)ependence 28 Filbert
Bayi, e.g.
sun .god
7 Takes it
20 Political
31 Demolish
17 Suffix for
easy (2 wds. )
event
32 Be dis·
passion
8 Perry Mason, 21 Beverage
tressed
18 Family
e.g.
22 Storage
33
Pinafore
member
9 New word
box
(abbr. )
or phrase
23 Perle Mesta, 34 Whirlpool
36 Hit
19 Prefix for
11 Painter Andrea
e.g .
sign
grade
del 24 Actor Clark
22 Partner of
,..;....,.....,,...-.::--..--.
slam
23 Songstress
Reddy
24 Risky ;
chancy
25 Olive genus
26 Vibna
of the
silents
27 Thus (Lat.)
28 Supply w1u1121
hands
29 Do thread·
work
30 Repeat
35 Isolate, a Ia 1=-+--+--

Sweepers, toasters. irons , . .
small appliances . lawn mower,
next to State Highway Gorop
on Route 7. Phone (61 .. ) 98$.

275

(Answers tomorrow)

•We can

Rel'rl!XH!Iina.

ri IIIJ

- . 1· Jumbles: VALVE GIVEN SLEIGH PLENTY
Salurda s
.
y
Answer: What 1ho photographer kept getling
from his
famale asslstani--"NEGATIVES"

"Rustol•m Plllint PrC!_dUdl

• ' - · Oltit 457it
Kib:hen Cabin&lt;ts . Roolin1 • C.ne1e1e
Pot;o, · Sidmlks . New c....truclion '

Now arrange the circled let1ers to
form the su rpr i~ answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

CIJT OUT

SO YOU l'lANNeD TliAT

l -23-1 •

I

MERMAIDS.

Print answer here:

k ,.
lltl Tloo l•illlln

,.......

PERMANENT,

NO DOUBT-FOR

UTilE ORPHAN ANNIE

"nto.· .

HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport , near. Rutland.

j 8S·35,::
88:::_:________
LIVESTOCK . FEEDER pigo , 40-50

[]

LEVVET

992-2206 Of 992·7&amp;30

..... z

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

VEEP A

1'r
•· ~~~

39 Get rid of
40·Man of
La Mancha L....L.....J-.l.-...1.AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

u sed for the three I .'s, X for the two O's, ctr. Single l etter s.

apostrophes, the length and ·fornw ti?h of the words are all

WELL, I GUE&amp;S '

JOEYGOTlHE
. uOB!

WAS AT DEAlH'S
CD:lR!

I SEE .SP1KE
ARRIVED LAST

Ni611T...

I{ES, POOR GU'f...HE
WAS EXHAUSTED

IT'S NICE

ro KNOW THAT

M'i BROTHER WOULD COME
ALL THE WA'&lt; FROM
NEEDLES TO BE IN
f\A..If WEDDING

OF COURSE, IF I KNOW
SPIKE, HE'D60 AROUND
THE WORLD FOR A
FREE ROOT BEER!

1:OD-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8; .
Young and the Restless 10; Poldark 33; Nol Far
Women Only 15.
1;3Q-Days of our Lives3,4, 15; As lhe World Turns 8, 10.
2:00--$20,000 Pyram id 6, 13; Music In America 33.
2:3o-Doctors 3.4.15; One Llfelo Live 6,13; Guiding
Llghl 8, 10.
3:00--Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Whal' s Cooking? 33.
3:15-General Hospital 6.13.
3:3(}-Match Game 8,10; Lilias. Yoga and You 20;
Anllques 33 .
4:00--Misler Cartoon 3; Stale Fair Gong Show 4; Goog
Shaw IS; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's
Island 8; Sesame Street 20,33; Movie " Beach Ball "

lO; Dinah! 13.
4:3(}-My Thre Sons 3; Slar Trek 4; Emergency One!
6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Expohlo '77 lS.
5:00--Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emerge~cy One! 13; Mission:
Impossible 15.
5:3Q-News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric Company·
20,33.
6:00--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; Bill
Moyers' Journal 33.
~'3(}- NBC News 3.4,15; ABC News 13 ; Anc;fy Griffith
kCBS News 8,1 0; Vegetable Soup 20.
.
7:00--Truth or Consequences 3; Expohllo '77 4; Liars
Club 6 ; Counlry Carnival 8; Lowell Thomas
Remembeu 33; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; My
Three Sons IS ; Anyone for Tennyson? 20.
7:30-&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4:
Let's Deal With II 6; Malch Game PM 8; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33; $25,000 Pyramid 10; Wild
Kingdom 13; Mus ic City 15.
8:00--Baa Baa'Biack Sheep 3,4,1S; Happy Days 6,1J;
Jack Benny 8,10; All-Star Swing Festival 33; Only
Then Regale My Eyes 20 .
8:J&lt;&gt;-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Phyllis 8,10.
9:00--Pollce Woman 3,4,1S; Movie "Smash-Up on
Interstate 5" 6,13: M-A-S-H 8,)0; All-Star Swing
Festival 20; Opera Theater 33.
'
9:30--Qne Day At A Time 8, 10.
10:01}--Pollce Story 3,4,15; JackVan. lt;npe Crusage 8:
Kojak 10; News 20 .
10:31}--Piccadlily Circus 20. .
11 :00--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
11 :3(}-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "Romance of a
Horsefhief" 6,13; Movie " Beg, Borrow .. or Steal",
8; Movie "Anzlo" 10; ABC News 33.
12:0D--Janakl 33.
1 :GO-Tomorrow 3,4.

1:31}--Mary: Hariman 10.
11 :41}--News 13:

BRIDGE

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

When to play trumps out
22

NORTH
4 96j
.. 8 6 3
• 973
4 75j 2

WEST
472
•QJ52

EAST
48 53
.. 10974

tAQlOB
tKJ
&lt;loQJtO
&lt;!o986 3
SOUTH (D)
4 A K Q J 10

West

North East

Pass

2 N.T. Pass

Pa ss

Pass

Pass ·

Openong lead - QoTo

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald : " Declarer in a suit
CRYI'TOQUOTES
contract must decide. what to
DSY D
A X E E do with his trumps as a
FLJOZTD
DSK
starter. Can .he afford to draw
AXDSJZD
Y 0 I K L • all the enemy trumps? Can he
NKEE
HJD
afford one trump lead? Must
NKEE
HJD
AXEE
Q
·
he leave the trumps alone and
F
L
J
DXNXHR
play a side suit?"
AX D S
Y 0 I K L D X N · , Jim : " In general he should
XDYUEM
E y N C K L play as m.any trumps as he
YEU~LD
X H ·R . can afford, but no more. "
.
• Oswald : " South might well
Yesterday's Cryploquote : WE GIVE ADVICE BY THE have bid three notrump , but
BUCKET, BUT TAKE IT BY THE GRAIN.-WILLIAM he wanted the !50-point honor
bqnus. If West had opened a
R,OUNSEYILlE ALGER
trump , South would have
l}ints. Enrh day the code l ct1crs are dtffercnt

WHY, JUST A FEW WEEK&amp;

6=-s-Morn1ng Report 3.
6:51)-.Good Morning, Wesl VIrginia 13.
6;55-Good Morn ing, Trl Slate 13.
7 :00--Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reporls 10 ..
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:3Q-WIIdllfe In Crisis 10.
8:00--Howdy Doody 6; Captain Kangaroo 8,10;
Sesame Streel 33.
8:3Q-Big Valley 6;
9:00--Cross-WIIs 3; Phil Donahue 4,15,13; Andy
Griffith 8; Montage 33.
9:3o-A.M. 3; Edge of Nlghl6 ; Concenlratlon 8; Porky
Pig 10; Jean Shepherd's America 33.
9:55-At The Fair 77 10.
10:00--Sanford and San 3,4,15; Dinah ! 6; Here's Lucy
B; Mike Douglas 10; Studio See 33. ·
10 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4.15; Pr ice Is Right 8;
Jean Shepherd' s America 33.
11;0(}-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Bandstand 10; French Chef 33 .
11 : 3(}-IJ'sAnybo~y's Guess3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Lave of Life 8,1 0; Making Things Grow 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; AI The Fair '77 10.
12 :00-- News 3,4,6,10; Shoot for the Slars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Documentary Showcase 33.
12:3(}-Chico and the Man 3, 15 ; Ryan' s Hope 6.13; Bob

+65 j 2
&lt;!oAK
Both vulnerable

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is

AGO, I l1"0UGHT &amp;HE 7

6 :3G-focus on Columbus .4; News 6; Summer
Semtsfer 8; Concerns and Comments 10.

..AK

DAfLY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

TUESDAY,AUGUST23, 1t77
S:45-Farm Report 13.
5:50-PTL Club 13.
6:00--Summer Semester 10.

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 81 10; .

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

) I I

At

CONTRACT.ING

Pomeroy Landmart

/;lltn.,,.u-.- ,,_

IIIII l• P!'I:"'J. 0.

GENERAL -

Free.

WAI&lt;:t&lt;~·

CI•JIII• UplmlwJ
PhoH llikl T1111n1

'

LARRY LAVENDER

water

I

I SONDY
KJ I

I-llS HIGHNESS YEAH .. . AN' SO
WILL BIG
BE OllER·
JCM!P 10 HEA~ El.A'; '11-\ ',
WILL

Carpeting

IIIIIOOIIS

•279.95

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

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

I'

Young's

M.IIIIIIIUM
SIDIIIG-SOffm
GUTTUUIIIIIIIGS

.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Superior

SIOIIII

HJ.TFC

'flltliNl ID'ft

~ ~ ~~~ ®

Steam UttiCtioft

III•DOIIS &amp; D0D11S
Hrt.ICEIIEIIT

"'-Oitit
"- HZ-3!1!3

11 :GO-News 3,4,61 8, 10, 13,15; Fawlty Towers 20; Inner
Tennis 33.

I K)

DAVID BRICKLES

9.., ~Jack W. C.roey. M!lr.
lllil. Phone 992 -2181

FS.Sl

NOW '/OU'RE ~ UNN IN t;
YOUR OWN AI~LINEI ...
'IOU KNOW PLANES!

9 : OD--Movle " Shamus" 3,4, 15; Movie " Attack on
Terror" 8,10; Shades of Greene 33.

Land mark

yo~r

Mci&lt;EE I'IDUSTI': IE5:

EV1!1&gt;111&gt;16 !

OE51Gf&gt;l··

t.IAME YOL\ 1': OWN

i-lll •

~--·
Aoollllll
· _,
... •ullics

condition your
Water and Co-op water
· softt.ner, Model UC·XVI.

Let us test

A l llC~AFT

FLOWN 11\1

TH~EE WARS.·· AND

,.._
lit....,
c.,.,_

soften &amp;

Now Only

~OU'VE'

PhiMM!I-2101
wMt-2110

.
.
r=

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES l'h. 37U250

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

'{011 A&amp;OL!T A N"W

l!oEI?N A TE5T PILOT- ·

B.

1:3o-Mary Har1man 10.
1:so-News 13.

10; My Three Sons 15; Amer icana 20: Montage 33.
7:J&lt;&gt;-That Good Ole Nashville MuslcJ; In Search Of 4;
Muppel Show 6; Gong Show 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report20.33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Cameral);
Nashville on lhe Road 15.
8:00--Lltfle House on the Prairie 3; Pilot 6, 13; Sale of
Champions 4,15: Jefferson• 8,10: Terints 20: Once
Upon a Classic 33.
8;31}--Baseball 6,13; Szysznyk 8,1 0; Jean Shepherd's

I. WAt.IT 10 CON5L!LT

COLONEL, ~OU'VIi

RIGHT·· 'IOU'I'lE
CAPTAIN EASY,
THE' NEW HEAD OF

AliCit ClllbiCIIIi

FREE ESTIMATES

Transmission Stmce

•--.o.

Bissell Siding Co.

6-16-1 mo.

Autamalic

snw. ~hone (614) 698·32'10.

... pioct ...............

or di H ''"''"· S,.Clol ,.lcoo It

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

SWAIN

'

ortl2-4113
IU. tt4:31rJI.
SM.£S AIID KINJC(
7-28-t mo.

Vinyl l Al1minum Sidin&amp;
Storm WindCiws l hulltion.
tall Professionals

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

dt•t:orallv~ .

JOHN DEERE Crawler Bockhoe
endlooder and dump truck .
Phone 992-74.79.

Pomeroy

ilk:n:.H

/wmt"", DDt" tJa. wllt e*i~Dce ita braLtly for ye~~no to rome, 0111 will 1111U
ywr IM!t!dil. ne Urban lt.e hi aU

ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil at·
tochments . like new , asking

Lei

nd a~. !!djou wuta

al~miuum.

"Hm

6-22·1 mo.

GUTTER
SERVICE

Lli yu..- auiherlled ~aier 't~,~r Urbaa

C"'&gt;'
prflduct wllkh
~·iilur nf r•r llom t•

·

Again"

1:OG-Tomorrow 3,...

7:oo-Truth or Consequences~ Expohio '77 4; Llar 5
Club 6 ; Buck Owens 8; To TeiiThe Truth 13; News

COLO&gt;IEL. TUM
MliLV EN ~ ... I 'M
TH" HOMBRE WHO
'PHONI!O YOL! TH IS

.

33.

12 :00--Janakl 33.
.
12: 4().-Toma 6.13; Movie "You'll Never See 1M

10 :00--Austln City Limils 33.

KingsbulJ Hom~ Sales
1971 STAR Mobile Home, bOx 12,
eJ~:cellent conditlon . gos heat .
many extras. $5 ,500. Coli
985-3505: if no answer , coli

,_,Oitit
,_112-6212

ll :J&lt;&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Streets ot San Francisco
6,13; Koiak 8; Movie "Cry Terror" 10; ABC News

Impossible 15.
5:3(}-News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric Company
20.33.
•
6;00--News 3,4.8, 10.13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Austin City Llmlls 33. ·
6:3(}-NBC News3.4.1S; ABC Newsll; Andy Grlfflth· 6;
CBS News 8,10; VegelableSoup 20.

I.

. . . SL

ILl

An Equal Opportunity Employer

N eighborhood 20,33; Emergency One! 13; M ission ;

PWMBING&amp;
HEATING INC.

..... s-.......
M-,o.t.O.

Pomeroy , Ohio

___MO NPAY , AUGUSTll, 1977
5:110-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers '

CARTER

IHHipSL

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

300 West Second St.

INSTRL'C770N

PARTS FOR 1971 Golaxie Ford lor
sale . Phone 992-5858 .

. ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

•

Business Services

1 m111111(S 1{abuut

WANT-AD

~

Oppmtmntis

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICE

"/Jm'f'"' ~.·mploy(d ~· fafJJ(' tnli"k·
r''J! n"'~Pmries ~ad minuolill't'nrgr

-~

H

We will train you to become a branch
manager. Rapid advancement ; outstanding
salary opportunities and employee benefits.
· Must be at least high school graduate and
have a car. Relocation may be necessary
now or in the future . Phone Mr. Snodgrass
at telephone no. 992·2111 .
·

and Tues. , 2'2nd and 23rd, 9 un til 5. lots of nice items in·
eluding conning iors , lamps and
~~
jeans. First rood to left after
-~ssin~ W. ~~oin ton&lt;:els.
00 VpU HAVE PARTY PLAN EXYARD SALE , Mon .• Tues ., and
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY PAR·
Wed ., Aug. 22,23, and 2A at
TIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
28-A Railroad Street, Mid·
dleport from 9 am to 4 pm. Rain
or shine . Lots of nlce Hems .

Rusin

YOUR OPPORTUNITY

---~

Mobile HQme saues and Yvrd !H:IIes
Qtt'

TELEVISION
VIEW/Nf;

TRA\.'Y

•

U Wordli ur llndrr
c..b
Ctwrxe

1day

9-TheO..Uv~ntin_:l, Mlddl"{'!lrt·Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 22,1977

SNUFFV·· HOW CAN
1../E SAl{ OC BULLET'S
AN AWFUL GOOD
POSSUM
HOUND?

SHORE ·
HE IS

wished that he had settled for
the nine-trick game, but West
had a normal club lead and
made it."
Jim : "South wasn't sure of
his contract but he was sure of '
one thing . He could not afford
the luxury of even one trump
lead so at trick two he .led his
deuce of diamonds."
Oswald: "The play went
f~st from then on . East won ·
and led a trump . South won
and led a second diamorid .
East won and led a second
trump whereupon South led a
third diamond ."
Jim : " West won, but didn 't ·
have a trump to lead , so even·
tually South got tD trump his
last diamond and make the
·
spade game."

- We keep getting
·- · -- asked .if we.
approve a notrump opening
bid with a . five·card maj9r
suit.
The answer is that we do if
our distribution is S-3·3-2. We
have honors on our short soils
and 16 or 17 high-card points.
With 18 high-card points and a
five-eard suit ·our hand is too
strong .
(For • co pr or .JACOBY

MODERN, sond $1 to: :'Win al
Br;dge, " c/ o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Station.
New York. N.Y. 10019)

THIS 15 JEST ONE OF
HIS AWFUL DAYS'

�, --------------------------1

FREEWAY STUDIED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - At&amp;
Instructed
by federal
officials,
Columbus
area
I
t
I planners intend to study mass
b'a1111it alternatives to the
lUCY ROUSH
Gal li pol is; Mrs . J ames
MASON, W. Va . - Lucy (Faye) Young ~ Evergreen proposed 1~0 freeway .
Hilda Roush, 76, of Mason. and Mrs. Myron !Grace)
Urban Mass Transit
diad Sunday at the Pleasanl ' Watters . Chil licothe, Il l. One
Valley Hospital.
son and one daughter
Born November 1.-, 1901, In precedad him In death.
Cl ifton, daughter of the late
Twenty .th r ee grand, Al

Area Deaths

l

William and S..rah Riffl e
, Stewart, she was employed
many years as a cook and

l

A member of the Clifton
United Methodist Church,

Mrs. Roosh was preceded In

death by two sons, Chester R.
and Arbln E. Roush, Jr., one
sister , Bertha Ingles, and two
·brothers, James and Clint
Stewart.

lkCoy . Wetherholt . Moore
Funeral Home wi th Rev .

Estel Hall offlclati nQ . Buri al
was
In Oh io Va ll ey

Survl¥ 1ng are her husband.

Memory Gardens .

Arbln E. Roush, Sr.; three

daughters, Mrs. Clara M.

ARTHUR FOOCE
Arthur Fooce , Jr .. 34. Rt . 2.
·Patr iot, will be held l p. m .
Meter, Mason ; three sons. Tuesday at the Waugh Franklin E., Sarver, Pa .; Halley-Wood Funera l Home
Ha l.l. Gallon, 0. ; Mrs. Billie I.
Valentine, Mrs. Betty J. Van

Thomas R., Middleport, and ' wi th Rev . Tom Williamson
Harry C.• Mason ; two si sters off ici-ating . Burial wlll ·be In

Mrs. Martha Klytta, Mason,

Mt. Tabor Cemetery . Friends

Mrs . Margaret · Wheeler .

BOY .WINNERS - These are the boy wirmers of the
annual pretty baby coolest at the Meigs C&lt;:&gt;unty Fair
Saturday. From the left are Robert Travis Spaun, to three
months category ; Larry Hill, three to six months ; Ronnie

Last night

Middleport, two year olds,
and Kevin Clay, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Arnott,
(Continued from page I)
Syracuse, three year olds.
Mrs. Larry Hall, Reedsville,
Little Mister and Miss
three to six months ; Ronnie Meigs County were also
Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. ·selected from a gro'up of
Ronnie Casto, Pomeroy, six contestants from 4 through 7
to 12 months; Adam, son of years of age with winners
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel receiving $50 gift certificates
Salisbury, Long Bottom, 12 to from 'Elberfeld's. Wirmers
18 months ; Shawn Eric, were Emily Johnson, 4,
son ' of Mrs . Brenda daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Petrie, Middleport, 18 to 24 Allen Duane Johnson,
months; Adam Perry, son of Pomeroy, and DaMy, 4, son
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Little, of Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Robinson, Route 2, Pomeroy.
There were 127 contestants
taking part in the pretty baby
events.

MASON DRIVE IN
SAT. TliRU TUES.

BREAKING POINT
&amp;

A STAR IS BORN

The morning stars are
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and
Saturn . 1
The evening star is
Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Leo.
·

Casto, sir to 12 months; Adam Salisbury, l2 to 18 months ;
Shawn Enc Petrie, 18 to 24 months; Adam Perry Little,
two year old class, and Kevin Clay Arnott, three year old
class.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions Opal Cummins, Middleport ;
Elva Bing, Shade ; Hilah
Jones, Middleport; Minnie
Johnson, Athens; Florence
Johnson, Pomeroy; GUbe,r t
Wilson, The Plains.
Saturday Discharges Michael Nice, William
Williams, Helen Woodyard,
Delores Aelker, Ruth Boyd,
TerrY Proffitt, Catherine
O'Connor, Florence Rhodes,
Marvin Darst, Helen John·
son.
Sunday i\dmissions- Mina
Hart, Pomeroy ; James See,

Pomeroy; Daniel Ru ssell,
Middleport; Charles Gibbs,
Hartford; William Buckley,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges Samuel Robinson , Joyce
Ebersbach, James Chapman,
Effie Watson .
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Aug.l9)
Marshall Bland, Eugene

A
BEST FRIEND May
Be His MOTHER-

A COLLEGE
STUDENT'S BEST

. FRIEND IS HIS

CHECKING
ACCOUNT I
That's why Farmer' s Bank of Pomeroy is introducing
FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS for students.
It's simple.

Boles, Diane Bush, Gandy
Cox, Brian Donley, Mrs .

may call at the funeral home

London , 0 .; 37 grand &lt;;hi ldren,
45
great grandchildren , · ~nd two
great-gre{llf-grandchlldren .
Funeral services will be
held Tuesdav at 1: 30 p.m. at
the Foglesong Funeral HOme
wlfn. tne Rev . George
Hoschar officiating . Burial

from 6 until 9 o'clock this

even ing .

MARGARET GILLS
Mrs . Margaret Griffiths
G/Hs, 88. a resident of 6831
Solon Rd .. Cedarville. died at

8 a. m . Sunday at Green
Nemorlal Hospital at Xenia
following a brief Illness.
She was born July 3, 1889, In
Green Twp ., daughter of the
late Griffi th and Charolette
Evans Griff iths .
She married Austin Gills on
June 1.4, 1916, In Portsmouth .
He surv ives, along with two
sons, John Harold and

Cemetery . Fri.ends may call
at the funeral home after 2

p.m. toda,v.
Melvin Fry and daughter,
JOHN KRACJOVIC
Robert Gordon , Bertha
Word was received In
Martin, Robert Morgan, Mrs. Pomeroy
of the unexpected
Jerry Neal and son, Vickie death Sunday of John
Nonnan, Matilda Northup. Kracjovic at the home of his
Minnie Riffle, Roselle parents, Mr. and Mrs . Peter Wendell. both ot Cedarville,
Russell, Jessie Schuyler, Kracjovic, or Toronto, Ohio . and one sister , AliCe Grff.
He was a brother ot the Rev . fiths . One brother preceded
Helen Strong, Dorothy Father
·
Berhard Kracj,ovlc, . her in death .
Swisher, Mrs. Ernie Tisdale 1ormer pastor of Sacred
She was a member of
Heart Church in Pomeror,. Salem Church and attended
and son.
Funeral services will be he d South Solon United Church of
(Birlhs, Aug.l9)
Wednesday morning
in Christ . The Gi lls were
Mr, and Mrs. John Me· Toronto.
prominent farmers .
Cardy , a daughter, Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
CHARLES L WoODIE
held 2 p. m. Wednesday all he
(Discharges, Aug. 20)
Charles L. Woodie. 88. a Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Mrs. Patrick Bailey and former
resident of 1140112
with Rev . Gera ld
daughter, Teresa Brennan, Second Ave ., Gallipolis, died Home
Brown and Rev . Charles
Mrs. Larry Carpenter and in the Care Health Center, Lusher officiating . Fur lal will
son, Evan Clark, Robert Wheelersburg, at 11 : 40 a.m . be in Salem Cemetery .
Friday following an extended
Friends may call at the
Cooper, Merda Crawford, illnes~.
funeral home from 6 until 9 p.
Carrie Dale, Delmer Foster,
He w.as born Jan . 31 , 1889, m. Tue$day .
William Flower, Mrs. Roy in Ash County, N.C. son of the
Hammon and son, Erwin

just recieved a big shipment of Wrangler
Jeans in flare legs, straight tegs. and
prewashed fashion den'i m jeans. Buy what
you need now for best selection of sizes.

Ths

IS

a cheek boo\(

fora f'ree ~udent
cheek'':'9 account

late Joseph and Rose Marsh

A Farmer's Bank free student checking account will ·
save you money, help you keep track of your pennies and
keep you in touch with your own bank at home.

Farmers
POMER01 f 1WI
'

$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

MANILA, PHIUPPINES-PRESIDENT FERDINAND
Marcos, in a sweeping relaxation of his tough martial-law
regim.e, announced today he will free pOlitical prisoners, lift an
overmght curfew and hold local elections in 1978. "! have no
intention of leaving as a legacy for our people.the institution of
a command society," Marcos told the opening session of the
World Law Conference , whose main topic is human rights.
"We are moving irretrievably . toward nonnalcy as we
come closer to a solution of the southern secessionist
movement as well a,s the leftist and rightist rebellion and the
economic crisis." MarcOs said that as of Stinday, he had
. granted amnesty to COitvicted subversives and ordered the
release of all martial-law prisoners not yet b'iad or placed
. under the jurisdiction of miljtary tribunals.
Government documents show the Marcos regime holds
more than 350 political prisoners, although it was npt known ·
bow many would be affected by the amnesty.

the ailing health funds.
One motion adopted by the erecutive board calls on UMW
President Arnold Miller to appoint a panel of four executive
board members and the union's top officers to meet with the
coal industry to resolve differences that have caused miners to
pay up to $500 for their health, care.
Patrick said while no federal restraints have been imposed
on the funds, the union could say federal legislation requiriitg
pension plans to be actuarially sound within 40 years could
cause some form of restraint.
The coal industry refused comment.
.
"We were confused when we started and we were confused
wben we ended down here, " said local officer D. N. "Jiggs"
Workman of Sylvester, W. Va .

·•we have wasted ahnost 10 weeks for nothing,"
complained Roger Hammack, an angry District 17 local
officer who predicted picketing would resume Oct. 22, if ·
nothing was resolved.

Some mines in northern West Virginia began operation
Monday prior to the back-lo-work decision.
Members of UMW District 31in the qorthern West V).rglnla
coalfields voted last week to return pending a decision by
miners in District 17.
.
The West• Virginia Coal Association said a majority of the
mines in the district were resuming som~ sort of operation.
The strike erupted in late June after the benefit cutbacks
were announced.

•

enttne

a1
L

VOL. XXVIII NO. 91

wash cleaner and dry
ready to wear
without puckers
or wrink les1
never shrink

Mandel is
guilty Of
•
corruption

out of size.

Navy in
sizes 27-38

.....
y

50 YEAR PIN- John T. Holliday,left, ol the Dexter
area was recently presented his 50 year membership pin
and certificate as a member of Star Grange. Making the
· presentation was Ray Midkiff, master. Also present for
the presentation and festi vities were county deputies
Elizabeth and Mendal Jordan.

BULLETIN
BALTIMORE (UPI) Maryland Gov. Marvin
Mandel today was convicted
of corruption In office.

Kober! Franklin Smith,

65,

Presley's father
to divide riches

of Route 1, Proctorville, died
Sat.urday at a Cinc innati
. hospi1aLH.ewas born Jan . .24,
1912 in Pennsyl vania , son of

the late John and Maude

JefferS Smith . He waS a
r i verboat captain . He was
preceded in death by his wife,
Nelli e Cooke Sm ith .
He is surv ived by two
sisters, Mrs. Amelia Love of
Plain Oty, Ohio, and Mrs . Ida
M. Hall ; one step-daughter,
Mrs . Donald Curnutte of

Gallipolis .
The funera l will be Tuesday

at 1 p. m . at Chapman's in
Huntington, W. Va ., with the
Re~ . R. Jackson Haga of.
ficiating . Burial will be In the
Rome Cemtery . Fri ends may
call at the funeral home after

By NANCI C. ALBRrrroN
MEMP!flS, Tenn. (UP!)Elvis Presley's father w:1ll

IN POME

4 p. m. today .

'.

have absolute power to divide
the enormous weal\)t left by
the superstar to his dose
famUy in a will revealed
Monday·.
·
Presley, who died Aug. 16
of heart failure, directed his
father, Vemon Presley, to be
executor and trustee of an
estate expected to be worth
millions of dollars. The will

gave no hint of the value of
the late singing idol's empire.
The 13-page . document,
written ori M!II'Ch 3, was
certified by Shelby C&lt;:&gt;unty
Probate Judge Joseph .W.
Evans "" PresleY's last will
and testament. Evans said he
expects the wiJJ .to be "the
biggest ever filed in the state
of TeMessee."
Presley ordered that his net
wealth, after tares and debts

.

r;v;;;;,=:=~·='=:'='='=':=·i:;:;:;:,B;i;7;1
~

~

.By United Press International
COLUMBUS - UNEMPLOYMENT IN OHIO dropped
from 6.3 to 6.2 per cent of the civilian labor force in July and
the rate would have been lower expect for young people
seeking summer jobs or just entering the labor market for
permanent employment, it was announced today. The Ohio
Bureau of Employn\ent Services said unemployment dropped
from 304,000 in June to 296,000 in July.
The bureau said factory employment declined .5 per cent
from June to 1,341,000 in July. Producers of wiring and metal
stampings for the automotive industry reported lay-offs as
model changeovers began and fewer orders lowered
emploY)llent in plasiic products.
JAKARTA, INDONESIA- - INDONESIAN MIUTARY
aircraft today parachuted food, medical supplies and paramedical teams Into quake-6trlcken areas around Lunyuk in ·
southern Sumbawa, a government spokesman said.
The Anlara news agency quoted officials in eastern
Indonesian provinces as saying 80 persons were killed by last
Friday's earthquake and the tidal waves it stirred. About 65
per!lllls were reported missing and 35 seriously injured. In
Lombok and Sumbawa, the two worst hit islands in the
Nusatenggara group, at least 1,500 head of cattle were killed
and 209 homes destroyed by the quake and tidal waves, the
agency reported.
·

SPECIAL
PURCHASE
PRICE

The LUCERNE

LOS ANGELES - PIANIST JOsE ITURBI, ·whose music
ranged from the classical to lively boogie-woogie, was "doing
fine" today following surgery for an undisclosed illness.
A spokeswoman at St. VIncent's Hospital said Jturbi's
family bad asked that no other information be released
coocerning the 81-year-&lt;&gt;ld pianist's hospitalization. The
Spanish musician, who became a United States citizen In 1941,
was a child prodigy and wsa popular on the concert stage and
in movies in the .l934); and 1114&amp;.

H19408 19"

'

SPECIAL
PURCHASE
PRICE

SANTA MONICA, CAUF. - WALTER Pidgeon,
hospitalized earlier this month for brain surgery, took a turn
for the worse Monday. The distinguished ,cBnadian-born actor
·
( C&lt;:&gt;ntinued on pq. 10)

Pair indicted on
murder charge
-

Four true bliL'I and Ofle
secret Indictment were
returned Monday by tile
Melp County Gl'llld Jury,
aecordlng to Rick Crow,

·Prolecutlni Attorney.

I

tering; George Hoaey, carry·
lng a concealed weapon, and

one eecret Indictment on
trafflcklnl drup.
Serving on the Jury were

Don Wtllon, Ellzabetlll.OOH,

. Indicted were Freda Leora Sigman, Mary Starth·
Mlddhlwart and Jolm Wayne er, Freda Hood, Gal')' P.
Fleilllq on cher1e1 of Norris, Shirley Simpson,
ICifiiVated murder; Calvin Paul om and James F. Ar· Mafle, breaking and en· nold, foreman.
1) ,

are paid, be set · up in an
overall trust for his only
child, ~year-old Lisa Marie
Presley, his 62-year-&lt;&gt;ld
father and his grandmother,
Mirmie Mae Presley, 85.
He gave his father the
ironclad right to decide who
should get how ·much, and
whatever other relatives
might.share in the estate.
"There are no special be·
quests , like giving an
automobile to this one or a
million dollars for that one.

percentages/'
the judge said. "It ls ·left up to

There are no

Mandel, 57, was found
guilty on federal charges of
mail fraud and racketeering
and could be sentenced to
prison. On the day of
sentencing, he is expected to
be stripped of his power
under state law.
Mandel was convicted of
accepting. between $350,000
and $400,000 In gifts and
benefits
from
his
codefendants and, in return,
influencing race · track
legislation for their benefit.
Mandel admitted under
oath !le accepted the gifts, but
he denied having been bribed.
He said he accepted the gifts·
because they were from his
friends.
Among the presents were
expensive business suits, dia·
mond jewelry for his family
and paid vacations.
·
The single biggest item ·
came from a codefendant
Irvin Kovens - $155,000 in
tax free bonds.
.
The bonds were used to pay
off Mandel's first wife, Barbara, when they separated in
1973.
Mandel testified he plwmed
to repay Kovens the money.
plus interest after leaving
politics.
Some of the other gifts and
benefits Mandel was accused
of accepting :
Mandel •dmitted
recetvrng $15,000 from
Security Investment 0:&gt;., a
multimillion dollar firm
which leases buildings to the
federal government. He said
it was for back legal fees.
Prosecutors valued his

Vernon for whatever they
need," Judge Evans said.
On the deaths of Vernon
and Minnie, Presley directed
that the estate be SJ)Iit in half,
.one part for Lisa and the
other for any of her future
children.
No . provisions were made
either lor Presley's fiancee,
raven-haired Memphis
beauty Ginger Alden , or
Presley's former wife, interest 'a t a " conservative
'Priscilla Beaulieu, the
(C&lt;:&gt;ntinued on page 10)
mother of Lisa. And longtinoe
associates of the singer, like
Col. Tom Parker,· who
managed his career, and Joe
Esposito, his road IIIIIitager,
were not mentioned.
Ve1110n Presley appeared
visibly shaken as be signed
C9urt papers agreeing to
become executor and trustee.
The Meigs C&lt;:&gt;unty Sherlfrs
He quietly dectlned comment Department Is investigating
as he left lhl; courthouse.
an act of vandalism and' a
It will be his task to compile breaking and entering.
an Inventory of the enterArt Hess, Rt. I, Middleport,
tainer's assets for. the court 1 teported that sometime
including expected royalties Sunday
afternoon
an
from
all
Presley's unknown person ent~red a
recordings, residuals from house owned by him on
motion
pictures. . and McElhiney Hill and broke oqt
publishing royalties.
several
wtndows
and
Music Industry sources damaged a thennostat.
said the greatest share of his . Mrs. Marie DIV!etro, RD,
estate would be huge Dexter, reported a house she
royalties from dozens of oenwntersedin wSiythlnracusethe htaasstbeetwno
recordings and residuals
from his films.
weeks and several boxes· of
· All of Presley' s work, old Avon products taken as
which spans more than 20 was a pair of men's trousers.
years, is expected to soar in . Deputies are also checking on
value with his death and reap vandalism at the · Russell
miltions of dollars In Cummins Farm, Rt. 2,
worldwide sales.
Racine.

Vandalism .
reported

.
PAINT OPERATION - As part of the "paint up and
clean up" of Pomeroy sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of. Commerce the old waterworks building
located ·On Pomeroy's East Main St. is being painted .
. Shown 1-r, front, Harlan Wehrung, who is supervising the
work, Toney Manley and Kevin Stewart, doing the work;

back row, E. F . Robinson, a member of the board of public
affairs who supplied the paint; Fred Grow, president of
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, and Paul Simon,
vice president of the chamber. Simon is in charge of the
overall program. others helping are John Russell, Jack
Goleman and Dwayne Qualls.

Sc~ool hoard girds for busy week
Special meetings,. subject
td cancellation, were set for
Monday through Friday next
week by the Meigs Local
Board of Education Monday
night.
The special meetings apparently ~re In conneCtion
with ·negotiations - now
officially at Impasse - between the board and the
Meigs Local Teachers ,t.ssn.,
and with the board and Its
non-certified employes .
Classes in Meigs Local are
scheduled to begin Aug. 30.
Teachers' meetings are
scheduled Aug. 29.
The board named the
following to work under the
Title I program for the next

year: · Dan E. Morris, coordina tor, with 25 percent of his
salary coming through the
program ; Sabra Morrison,
Carolyn Mummey, Pauline
Hprton, Carolyn Smith,
Bit.rbara Shultz, Wendy
· Carpeter, Margar~t Teaford,
Emina English, Carol Evans,
Karen Walker, Jane Wagner,
bookkeeper, and Connie
Lanning, halftime secretary.
· Personnel for the Dlsad·
vantaged Pupil Program
were named pending state
approval and include Sharon
Birch as school nurse, Sandy
Garnes, Bette Krawsczyn,
Frances Hunnel, Lois
Hawley, ·Carol Gheen and
Gh~ryl Barnhart. Mrs. Birch

was giveri"a year's leave of
absence
and
Mary
·Krawsczyn, R.N., was em·
ployed as school nurse for one
year.
Named to serve as prln·
cipals' adles pending cer·
tiflcation were Debbie
McGuire, Donna Ohlinger
and Donna C&lt;:&gt;bb. Eric Hart
was named principal (or one
year at the Rutland
Elementary School. Sanda
Korn was named a teacher in
the district pending aeceptance of her resignation
from the Eastern District.
·Approval was given for the
signing by parents for hand·
books for junior and senior
high school students and

passes for use in the closed
lunch at . the junior high
school were approved.
Linda Stewart was em·
ployed as a substitute
secretary. Approved to at·
tend several Distributive
Education meetings was
Jobn Blaettnar, Instructor.
Debbie Roush resigned lUI a
teacher at · Middleport and
Carolyn Smith was given a
maternity leave from Oct. 10
to Nov. 23, pending change.
All board members were
present along with ad·
mlnlstrators including
principals John . Mora and
·Robert Morris, at the
meeting in Middleport Jr.
High building.

Sacco, Vanzetti Day little marked·
By KEN CAFARELL
BOSTON (UP!) - Nicola
Sacco and Bartolomeo
Vanzetti, protesting their
·iruJocence to the end, died 50
years ago today in a dreary
prison room surrounded by
those they regarded as their
persecutors.
The memory of their futile
seven-year struggle against
murder charges and the elec·
b'lc chair would not go away,
and today Massachusetts
itonored their memory - at
least officially.
It is Sacco and VanzeUi
Day, the resUlt of 50 years of
agitation over what has
become one of the most

celebrated legal caSes in the
world.
.
And yet the occasion will
!iass with almost no public
ceremony.
Gov. Michael Dukakis
issued a proclamation last
month declaring the two
ltaliar Immigrants were
denied a fair trial because of
the anti-alien hysteria that
swept the country in the
1920s.

He asked that people set
aside time today to reflect
upon "our susceptibility to
prejudice, our intolerance of
unorthodox ideas and our
failure to defend the rights of

persons who are looked upon

questions revolving around
the
conduct ·of
the
There is much to prosecution, the police ~d
consider.
the trial judge.
Questions which swirled
Researcher Lincoln
about the case are still being Robbins said notes by
debated In the light of new Assistant Norfolk County ·
and potenti.ally damning District Attorney Harold
again,sl
the
evidence
(C&lt;:lntinued on page 10)
prosecution in the 1920
Norfolk County trial which
drew a worldwide audience.
Evidence recently released
Indicates the prosecution,
headed by District Attorney
Frederick Katzmann, may
have fabricated evidenee reg~stenng
against Sacco and Vanzetti. It
is only the latest in a series of

as strangers in our midst.."

r
T ruek will b e bOug
· ht
Co
nh.
.
0
unters
.
'
~
• t
t
d
art
t
.
&lt;;luh plans J.Or S ree ep men

Voters are .
•

•

till Nov. 8

Meigs t;o~y voters have
until the general election In
November, 1978, to complete
voter registration according
to Mrs. Dorothy Johnston,
~
Middleport VUlage Council sold due to family illness.
director of the Meigs C&lt;:&gt;~y
In a brief, regular session
Council conferred with Board of Elections.
Registration Is underway
Monday night voted to pur· several residents who asked
chase a used truck for the what they should do in now at !he senior citlzena
street department· from reference to a neighbor who center in Pomeroy. Voters
William Pugh, Jr., at a price is calling police frequently to also registered at the special
The 1977 U.K.C. Tour· of $2,400. lt was reported that complain against children election in the Soothem Local
nament of Champions will be the vehiCle . on the open using skateboards on Jier · Schoor District iast week and
staged Saturday at the Rock market would cost more, and sidewalk. Jt · was th.e con· there was some registration
Springs Fairgrounds by the then it is in good condition. sensus of Mayor Fred Hoff· at the county fair.
Shade River Goonhunters
A 1974 model, it is being manandcouncllthatcbildren
At the special election In
Club.
must have some plaCe to play the Eastern District on Aug.
All U.K.C. registered dogs
and as long ·as they are not 25 also voters may register.
are eligible to run in the
FERRY BEGINS
creatiiig a "big disturbance"
·However, voters are
event. They will be drawn out
POINT PLEASANT
or damaging any · property, reminded that even though
together and run , under
~ of two ferries, the they should be ~nnitted to the registration deadline Ia
smaller ODe with a capacity use tile sidewalks:'
Gallla Academy High School, championship rules.
not until November, 1978,
Enties will dose at 9 p.m. · of tlgbt·can, begaa
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene they are to register only once.
has
fair
complexion,
regular l'11l1l tbls morning Grate reported that Ashland Having registration at
numerous browu ireckles, . and ' advance entries must
check
l!t
by
that
hour.
Entries
betweea Kaaauga and gasoline has been reduced .5 various locations lncludlnc
blue eyes, and her hair Ia cut
will
be
accepted
only
as
long
Headenoa.
of a cent per gallon as of Aug. the polls at the June and
at the neckline with bangs
as
non.tlunting
judges
are
A
larger
rtg
that
wW
u. Millage of tile village as November elections this year
feathered hack and parted In
avaUable. Manford Craver
carry up to l5 veblclet was outlined by the county budget Is tile method being used for
the middle. ·
.
to be put IIIIo oervtce Ill the · conunission wiUI approved. registration as an economy
The mother Ia Mrs. Betty I. . wilt serve as master of
afteraooa. Tbe !f·bour
Attending the meeting were measure, Mrs. Johnlton said.
Harrtaon, whole telephone hounds.
A
U.K.C.
,
licensed
bench
.
service
Ia
betq
provided
MayorHoffman,ClerkGrate,
number 'is 448·0124. The
Deadline for voting abcrandmother's telephone show will be held Saturday free white tbe Stiver and coqncllmen, George sentee baUots for the apeclal
number Ia 441-0087 (Mrs. also with enttlea closing at 5 Memorllll Bridge Is under M;elnhart, Marvin Kelly, election on Aug. 2S In the
repair.
Allen Lee King, Dewey • Eastern Local School Dlltrlct
Betty Baird); an uncle Ia Do'n p.m. and a non-licensed
Horton and William Walters. . was noon tfonday.
'Baird, at 448-4060 or 44&amp;-1279. · treeing contest will follow.
'•
~
~

Kanauga girl missing
If you see a sandy-baired
girl about 5'·1" and weighing
100 pounds you are aaked to
call any sheriff or police
llbltion. She may be 14-yearold B""""- HarriJon of 418\'o
Pike St., Kanaup.
Brenda baa been mlsaing a
week. No one In her familY
bas aeen her Iince abOut 8:30
a.m. Aug. 11. The mothM' hal
notified mining-person
bureaus In the area.
The llirl, a freshman at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"No- Faul t"l OO% cotton
14 oz. denim wi th
Sanfor-Set• . It wi ll

COLUMBUS - STATE EDUCATION OFFICIALS are
working on a compentency testing system that will insure Ohio
students can read, write and add before they graduate.
Roger J. Lulow, executive director for admlnlatratlon for
the Ohio Department of Education, told a meeting of school
administrators Friday that pressure fTom the public and state
legislators are f&lt;rcing the issue. He said educaiOI'll should take
the lead since lawmakers will enact a test,il they don 't.

I

a

Robe-ri Franklin Smith

MINNEAPOLIS - EVEN DISCOVERY that he has
tertrunal cancer has not slowed the brisk pace Sen. Hubert
Hw;tphrey has maintained in a lifetime of public service.
MaJor surgery las~ Thursday, during which ,doctors said they
· discovered termmal ca ncer, stalled the former vice
preSldent'sscbedule only briefly. He says he ptans·to be back
m the Senate after Labor Day.
. "He. enjoys work," Dr. John Najarian,' chief surgeon at
Uruverstty of Minnesota Hospital, said SUnday. "He gets up at
· &amp;o'clock. in the morning, be wants to go, and if you restrict him
from domg that he doesn't feet well."
" H~ is doing well/' Naiarian said. "The only problem they
havewtth him on the ward IS Uiat he 1S walking so much and so ·
fast that the nurses say they'd like to put some kind of
regulator on him so that he doesn't speed up and down the
halls.' '

a

striking members of the United Mine Workers union began
returning to work today.
Following a stormy meeting in Charleston Monday, local
leaders of UMW District 17, the strike's focal point, !old
reporters they would go back to work for 60days.
.
The announcement came after the union's International
Executive Board agreed to seek meeting with the coal
industry to r1!90lve problems with the union's health plans. Tbe
strike had idled more than 80,000 miners In five states at one
lime.
"We're giving them 60 days," said union Secretary·
Treasurer Harry Patrick. He said It was his understanding the
present labor contract allows the union to call a nationwide
strike on 60days notice if the industry,does not agree to dis&lt;"uss

•

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exce llen t fit, comfortJ expert
tailoring and style details
like flare legs plus swing
pockets. All this plus

No strings attached.
If you are a full ,time college or vocational student, (here
at home, or anywhere) we'll give you a ·free checking
account, with no service charge. We'll even give you your
first 50 personalized checks free . •
·

SAlEM CENTER - David Baker, peri!Onnel manager of
the Southern Ohio C&lt;:&gt;al 0:&gt; . which operates three mines near
here supplying coal to the Gavin Power Plant at Cheshire, said
today all three locals of the United Mine Workers had
schedUled meetings today, apparently to decide whether or not
·to return to work.
Idled approximately eight weeks when miners refused to
pass West Virginia pickets, the walkout has been directly
related to the UMW's protest over cutbacks In union medical
benefits. Two of the local unions were to meet at noon, the third
at I p.m. today.
.
"We won't know until after those meetings what's to
happen," Baker said.
·
ln the Appalachian region generally, accOrding to UP!,

something extra ... ru gged

will follow In the Graham

Kincaid, Gladys Kirk, Helen Woodle.
He_was a retired farmer
Layne , John
Mohler, and
.carpen.ter.
.
·
Stephanie Mul(ord, Mrs. . He . marrr!!d Maude Sev~rt
Timothy Schumann and • •n Ash County on Feb. 13,
daughter, Herbert Sheets, 1909. She preceded him In
rn 1963.
Mary Sheets, Mrs. Donald death
Four daughters s~rv l ve :
Simpson and daughter, _Mrs •. Ca:rol May W•ll lams,
pebra Smith, Penny Smith, Gallrpolrs ; Mrs . Ernest
Elizabeth Watts, Mrs. Jack (Kathleen ) Thompson .
Wears and son.
(Discharges, Aug. 21)
Louise Ellis, Mrs. William
Gorrell and daughter, Bar• .
bara Hayes, David Hill, Kino Henderson; Mrs. William
Gerrell, Dewey Keels, Mfs. Reitmire, Pomeroy; Mrs.
John Lloyd and son, Pearl Carl Gillespie,
Point
. Phalen,, Phyllis Scott, Clara Pleasant; Hollis Brumfield,
Unroe. ·
·
Gallipolis; Angle Bonecutter,
Gallipolis Ferry; Shelly
(Blrtbs, Aug. %1) ,
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin Bonecutter, Gallipolis Ferry;
Gardener, a son, Rutland, Aunita
Point
Baker,
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Pleasant; John Pantaloukas,
Donaldson, a daughter, Point Pleasant; Era Bar·
Jackson.
tram, Catlettsburg, Ky.;
Charles Young,
Point
Pleasoat Valley Hospital
Ple~sant; James Clinton, Jr.,
Discharges - Bradley Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs. James
Bishop, Henderson; Buddy Mattox, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Egnar, Gallipolis Ferry; Bert Thomas Roush, Hartford ;
Rodgers, Point Pleasant; Mrs. John Foreman, Por·
Mrs.
Robert · Watkins tland, 0 .; Mrs. Uoyd Sears,
Gallipolis; Brenda Oliver' Giillipolis; Mrs: Bobby
Jackson, Ohio; Pa ul Bush; Stergill, VInton, 0.; Paul
Sr., Point P)easant; Troy Plantz, Point Pleasant ;
Bonecutter , Kanauga, 0.; · Raymond Atkins , Point'
Juanita Oliver, Gallipolis Pleasant; Mrs. Joseph
Ferry; Elza Martin, Point Oldaker, Hartford ; Mrs .
Pleasant; Mrs. James Me· Orville Williamson ,
Comb, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Southside ; Phyllis Sark,
James Eber , Gallipolis; C&lt;:llutnbus; . Kenny Williams,
Granville
Hill,
Point Grown City; Josephine Boss,
Pleasant : Robert Lisle, Point Point Pleasant, and Arnold
Pleasant; Hilda Dabney, Bush, Point Pleasant.

Miners voting today to work or not

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

great-grand and four greatgrea t - gr andchildren survi ve .
He was a member of the
Primitive Baptist Church In
Lawrence County .
Funeral serv l c:e s were
held 2 p.m. Monday at the

wa itress.

Administration (UMTA)
spokelllllll1 Joel Ettinger said
the agency Ia not coovlnced
the busways that would be
part o1. the 5.7-mlle roaclway
are the best way to handle
transit
in
Columbus'
J}OI'Iheast CU"r!cJ!Jl'.

'

,.

tourn

, e.fit

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