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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

•

Everything a jean shoul d be ...
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

�•

2.- The Daily Senlinrl, Middleport·PornenJy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. ZJ, 1977

~
BASEBALL

Vance visit continues-

I

·I'

By JIM ANDERSON
PEKING
( UP! )
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance conferred with
Foreign Minillter Huang Hua
for a second time today but
mentioned only in passing the
core issue or his visit, the
normalization of Sino-U.S.
relations.
Vance and Huang and their
staffs met lor 2liz hours this

morning at the Great Hall of been scheduled with Premier
the People while Vance's wile Hua Kuo.feng, though one is
and other aides visited the eJ:peC!ed to take place.
Great Wall, a !l().m.inute drive
Vance spokl!sman Hodding
northwest or the city' and lhe Carter m said Vance had
Mjng Tombs.
mentioned the subject of
The negotiations were to Sino-U.S. relations in his
lreak this al'ternooo while latest meeting with Huang,
Vance tours a mll8eWII and but added the "real back and
watches a pe&lt;'fonnance by forth" will not take place
acrobats tonight. U.S. until
Wednesday
or
officials said no meeting has Thursday.

Pana1na·under review
would not be wise to bring the
By HELEN THOMAS
treaty to the floor unless Uley
UPI White HOIUe Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) - bave the necessary 60 votes to
President Carter. faced wiUl rut oil a filibuster .
Outspoken critic Sen. Jesse
stiffen ing opposition from
Helms,
R·li.C., already has
, conserva tive forces, is
promised
a filibuster if
deciding whether to fight lor
ratification
is
demanded this
Senate ratification of the new
year.
Congress
returns from
Panama Canal agreement
during
the
current its summer recess Sept. 6, hut
hopes to adjourn for the year
congressional session.
He arranged to dlacuss by mid-October, which
strategy at dinner tonight means tbat prolonged debate
with Senate Majority Leader over ratification would be
Robert F. Byrd amid growing damaging.
Powell said the decision for
signs Ulat debate on the
a
mass mailing and
controversial treaties will be
newspaper
advertisement
postponed.
campaign
by
a conservative
But Ulere is concern in
coalition
opposing
the treaty
Democratic ranks that it may
become an election issue if was not unexpected.
"The Senate is going to ·
ratification is delayed until
have to make a very difficult
1978.
The President antiCipated
questions on the treaty and Its
timing at a natioMIIY
televised news conference
this afternoon .
Carter also expected to be
asked to comment further on
a Comptroller of Currency
report clearing Budget
Diredor Bert Lance of any
criminal wrongdoing but
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - It
questioning some past was
a profitable day to say
banking practices.
the least for 11;-year-old Anita
White
House
Press Bilhnan pi Ostrander as she
Secretary Jody Powell told sold
the Grand !Champion
reporters Car.ter considers Steer at the Ohio State Fair
Byrd's advice on Ule canal Monday
to
Wendy's
matter
"e xtremely restaurants of Columbus for a
important."
· record price of $32,256.
Byrd has already passed
The winning steer w.eighed
the word to O!airman John 1,225 pounds and Gov. James
Sparkman of the Senate . A. Rhodes helped auction it
Foreign Relations Committee oil.
and the panel's ranking
The wife of the chairman of
Republican, Sen . Jacob the boafd of Wendy's, Mrs.
Javits of New York, that It Loraine Thomas, bought the

decision in what they believe
Is In the national interests of
this country," Powell said.
He said Ule senators will be
subjeded to "a great deal of
pressw-e'' and ''we're relying
oo them to ad in Ule best
interests of Ule country."
Powell rejected as ''wrong
... mcorrect" a report In the
O!icago Tribune that Carter
is · unhappy with the
performances of three
Cabinet officials - Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance,
Treasury Secretary Michael
Blumenthal and . Housing
Secretary Pat Harris.
He said Carter at Ule last
two Cabinet meetings has .
praised the work of his
Cabinet.

Their next session was

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

: ·Diet pills irritate
esophagus

'·

By Law.rence E. Lamb, M.D. fee. So you ai'e defeating your
DEAR DR. LAMB~ 1am 31 doctor's advice to not drink
years old and . I have cilffee by taking these pills. 1
esophagitis. I have had an suggest you stop them at
esophagoscopic examination
and my doctor told me the lin- on~~t a sensible bland diet
ing of my esophagus is in- for a while and start a daily
flamed. He told me to go on a exercise program such as a
bland diet, no tea or coffee. I daily walk. Do exercises that
don't drink or smoke.
· you can do standing up so you
I take antacids all day. long. won't increase any reflux of
I slill have pain below my material froin your stomach
breastbone and burning most · t
1
of the time. This has been g'&amp;- m o your ower esophagus.
If you foilow your doctor's
·ingonforaboutthelaStyear. advice and stay away from
I take diet pills to keep me those diet pills, eat sensibly
from getting so hungry. I
d
·
d
haven'tlost my appetite.
an exerciSe you shoul get
over this pretty soon.
if I don't take the diet pill I
It is important for people
end Up eating more and then I who have a reflux of actd
am even sicker. I'm 5 feet 2. digestive material into the
Nine months ago I weighed lower esophagus to correct
136 pounds. I weigh 116 now. I the ·t · if
look better now than I have in
Sl uation
possible by
diet and living habits. The
years but I don't feel better. prolonged irritation of the
Is there anything else I can do lower esophagus can lead to
to get over this? If not, how scarring and constriction of
long can the esophagus take the lower esophagus. That
this before it turns into makl!s it hard to pass food insomething else?
to the stomach and leads to
. DEAR READER - Why other problems.
are you so obsessed with losQuit concentrating on losing weight? While you have ing ·weight and start taking
an inflamed esophagus is not better care of your
a good time to do that.
esophagus.
· I am sending you The
The esophagus does not
Health Letter number ~. ha
Hi a tal
Hernia
and · ve any protective ·coating ·
to protect it from the action of
Esophageal Reflllx. I doilbt actd digestive juices from !hi!
you have a hiatal hernia but stomach. Repeated exposure
you may have aleak of your ·. ottheloweresophagustoacid
stomach con~ts m to your digestive juices not only
lower. esopliagus_ anyway· causes buniing in the pit of
That IS how the aCid contents the stomach but can cause an
get into the esophagus to ir· ulcer or the lower esophagus.
rita(e 1t and cause the inf1am. This is not unlike an ulcer In
'mation. Try .to f~llow the the duodenum. These also ocprmclples outlined m that let· cur 1&gt;ecause the duodenum
ter and 1t may help relieve doean 't have any protective
your symplmlS. Others who coating as the stomach does
have hiatal hernia and either
aimllar problems and. want
Bec~use of the volwne of
this lsllue cau send 50 cents mail Dr. Lamb cannot
with a long, stamped self· answer your letters perliO!IIll·
2&lt;:1dressed envelope for 1L ly but he will a11.1wer
o tt are hurting yo_ur representative l~tters of
· ~ophagus with those diet general Interest in his col·
pills. MGIIt of 11M* that IIIIP" wnn. Write to him In care of
prellll your ~PI"!'fte contain this newspaper, P.O. Box
dru8l that 111ft • action 1561 Radio City Station New
~to the• rill" ill cof· York,N.Y; IDOI9.
'
A
.
n d

·~United

Press tnternet1on11

Nllional League
East

PhilO
Plt!sbgh
Chicago
St . Louis
N\Ontreel

New York

LOS An9

W. ~ Pet. 01
17 45 .631 ~

71

.568

71Jt

69 53" .566

I

69 55 .556 9
58 61 .ol6ol 20V,

By FRED McMANE
UP! Spun. Writer

50 13 .407 27V,
West

W. L

• Roger Freed, a 31-year-olil
journeyman was the Most
Valuable Player in the
American Association last·
season when he played with
J;len9er under Vern Rapp, but
he had never amounted to
much in the majors.
But, the Cardinals needed a
rlghl-haoded pinch hitter and
Uley took a chance witll
Freed, who has turned out to
be one of the major
contributors on the Cards'
bench.
His ability to come through
in the clutch was clearly
demonstrated Monday night.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
seemed to have .the game

Pet. 01

1• 50 .591

Clncl

65 60 . 520

Houston
San Fran

57 68 .•56
57 69 .•52
58 71 .01

Atlanta

-43 10 .350

San 0 14190

.
Mondl~ 't Rtsulh
Chi-cago 3, San Francisco ·2

San 014190 1, Pittsburgh o

New York 2. Houston 1
AAontreal 5, Cincinnati 1"
St . Louis 1, Los Angeln 6

Pnlladelpflll 5, Atllnta -4
•
TOCIIy's Probable Pitch•rs
(All Times EDTJ

Houston

( O!J&lt;on 1.0) at New
York (Espinosa 6·10) , 2:05p.m .

San Francisco (Knepper 6.7)
at Chicago (Burris 11 ·12), 2: 30
p.m .

Philadelph ia (Ler'Ch 6·3) It
· Atlanta {Niekro 12-15), 7: 35

CHESTER IDGH CLASS OF 1931 (In 1977)- Front, 1..-, Nellie Parker, Betty Fell, Irene
~rker, Vtrg!l McEiro~; ~ row, Martha Rose, Lenora Betzing, Esther Gooch, OpBI
Wtckham, Mildred. Collms and 3rd row, Lucile Smith (ll!acber ), Fred Smith, Pauline
. Rtdenour, Earl Kmght ( teache~), Clifford Hayes.

Chester High Class of '31 reunited
- Members of
Consumers theCHESTER
O!eshire High Class of
1931 held their anoual reunion
at the Chester Firehouse
mtervemng Sunday, July

in Toledo

goes for $32,256

HEALTH

MIIDr L.. twe StlnCU"tt

Herbert Parker whose birth· Fell, Washington Court
day was July 30 were servfd House ; Mildred Collins,
during the afternoon .
• Canton, and Esther Gooch,
•
0
Others present were Gallipolis. Afternoon visitors
31.
Lenora Betzing, Lucile were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
A basket dinner was served Smith, Fred and Bertha Parker, Bobby and KeW,
.
at noon. Raymond Gooch Smith, Clifford Hayes, Marietta.
asked the blessing. Later the Thelma F amsworth, Pauline
The next reunion will be the
group enjoyed visiting and and Buel Ridenour, Virgil last Sunday in JulY, 1978, at
picture-taking . Ice cream McElroy, Earl Knight, and the Che$ier Firehouse. It was
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - A made by Opal and John Nellie Parker, all of Meigs suggested that those at·
notice of invervention before Wickham and a birthday County; Martha Rose, tending bring picti1res of
the
Public
Utilities cake decorated for Irene and Bidwell; Betty and Dana their families.
Commission of Ohio has been
filed by the Officer of
Consumers' Counsel in a case
involving a $6.4 mllllon rate
increase being sought by
Reserve Grand Champion Columbia Gas of Ohio for its
Steer from 11-year-&lt;lld Jason Toledo customers.
Egbert of Anna for $7,200.
Consumers Counsel
The .s teer weighed 1,165 William Spratley said
poWlds.
Monday ·the rate increase
And the hard work of request, filed July 1, wouid
raising livestock also paid off affect
nearly
107,000
The Middleport O!urch of Jackson, Candy Husen, K.
Hall, Ricky Little, Rlchy
for Dan ·Westlake, 1il, of · residential customers In the
Christ
has
dompleted
a
one
Arnot.
Mohler.
·
Marysville as he sold the City of TQiedo and would raise
week
Vacation
Bible
School
Beginner
class,
teacher,
J\,Ulior
class,
teacher, Mrs.
Grand O!ampion lamb and rates 13 percent.
with
a
successful
closing
Ule Reserve Grand Champion
Spratley said his offibe program on August 14. Over Mrs. Betty McKinley; helper, Peggy Brickles; helper,
Judy Hall; students, Jamie Donoa Stout; students, Beth
lamb".
wants to examine the sales
He receiv~ $7,0110 from the figures used by Columbia to 170 persons attended to hear Pettite, Jennifer McKinley, Wolle, Ronda Little, Becky
Pennington 'Bread Co. for the substantiate the rate request the pupils sing songs, recite Cindy Smith, Brenda Wright, Arnott, O!eryl Riffle, Becky
Grand O!ampion and $4,0110 and also plans to question the verses, and display crafts. Michelle Frash, Tracee Roush, Julie Oblinger, Bobby
for the Reserve Grand amoW&gt;t Ule company wants Sharon Stewart, director for Leark, Lori Engles, Amy Southern, Billie Jo Gordon,
1977, presided over the Metzger, Chris Stewart, Scott McKinley, Kenda SUJ
Champion from Rio's to offset inflation.
program,
introduced the Clinton Glaze, Stacey Tyree, Mohler, P. J. Hanis, Tracey
R.e staurant in Cincinnati;
Spratley
also
said
teachers
and
gave out cer· Michael Richmond, Jlnuny McMahon, Jolene Moodispart of which he donated to Columbia is seeking a rate or
tificates.
The
teachers then Hysell.
paugh.
Ule 4-H.
return of 11.36 percent , presented certificates
to all
Primary class, teacher,
Youth class, teacher, Terry
The Grand · Champion· .contpared to a 9.81 percent
weighed 113 poWlds. · The rate of return it was granted the "pupils who were present. Mrs. Dorothy Roach; Yankey; helper, Lynn
During the week various . helpers, Christi Hess and Tolbert; students, John
Reserve weighed 117.
in a slmiliar case in
John Penquite, 15, of Columbus. He said the contests , were conducted Phyllis Baker; students, Blake, Adam Martin, Sheila
manchester sold the Grand difference in the rate would · which generated great en· Sonja Steele, Jeannie · Powell, Ralphie Snyder, Ken
Champion Pen of six meat cost Toledo customers about thusiasm. This was the first Spaulding, Matthew Baker, Haning, Sherry Fox, Shelly
August school attempted in Kelly Neff, Michael Frash, Fox, Craig Darst, Rhonda
chickens, which weighed 64 $932,0110.
several
years . The at- Pete Brickles, Lee ann Snyder, Regina Hawkins,
poWlds, for $5,0110 to Kenney
Spratley said Columbia is
tendance
on
Monday was !ow, Newell, Betty Darst, Tina Tanya Stobart, Bobby Fox,
King's Restaurants of Cleve- also trying to pass on to its
but
increased
substantially to Kaulf, Todd Hood, Trey Trina Hayman, Cindy Smith.
land.
Toledo customers $28,342 in
Other staff members were
Michael Squires, 15, of . charitable contributions , a high of 110 on Thursday. Glaze, Kevin Nott, Angle
Chesterville sold the Reserve $8,172 in dues paid to social Average daily attendance Oblinger, Shanoon· Coates, secretary, Mildred Hawley;
·
Sherry . Cooper, Missy director, Jody Tolbert;
Grand Champion Pen, which and service clubs, and $86;365 was 96.
The Ron Russell family of Snyder, Karen Martin, Patty pianist, Peggy Brickles;
weighed 34 pounds, to to cover advertising.
Evelyn's Restaurant · of "Hearings on th.e request are El Paso, Texas was discUssed· Martin, Eddie Baer, Jody refreshments, Francis
Maude for $2,500.
·
set for January, and the hike, by the mhtlster as the Custer; Ada . King, Candy Roush, Shirley Woodard,
The Grand Champion if ap-oved would become missionaries . lor the week. Laudermilt, Jerry Jackson, Martha Fox, alld Clyda
Those teaching and par- Michael Southern.
Barrow, weighing in at 230 effective April 1.
Allensworth, and Clllla #m,
ticipating were Mrs. Sharon
poWlds, was purchased by
Mlddler class, teacher, Leo Searls.
Stewart, diredor; nursery Cathy Baker; helpers,
Bob Evans Farms for $9,0110
The minister, George
·ooo 001 001- 2 9 o class, · teacher, Mrs. Debl Angela' Baker and Tanuny Glaze, thanks all parents who
from 9-year-old Sherry San Frn
ego
110 000 01x- 3 10 0 Honaker; helper, Cathy Hess,
Wright of New Knoxville. It ChiBarr,
Stobart; students, Darin sent . their children to the
Williams (5). · Lavelle
marked Ule 17th time in the (7 ) and Hill, Sadek (81; Rick students, Brent Stout, Kenny Wolfe, Martin Woodard, school and all.those who were
last 19 ·years Bob Evans Reuschel. Hern~ndez (9) and stout, Tonya Woodard, Jered Cindy Little, Darin Roach, participants.
Mitterwald . WP- Rtuschel (17 Farms has bought the Grand Sl. LP- Barr (11 .11) . HR - Stewart, Sharla Cooper, Amy Judy Mowery, Shane Engel,
Chlcago , Murc..- (W .
Wright, Tricia Baer, Candy Rachel Steele, Jeff Hood,
Olampion.
The winning barrow had to
Cindy Riffle, Paul Brickles,
be destroyed after the auction ---~;.-;;
Vickie
Nott, Shawn Baker, San Ogo
000 100 ooo- 1 1 0
~:~.;;;;;;ed.~y
ooo ooo ooo- o 1 o
because it tested positively as
Artie Leark, Teresa Little, Pttsbgh
Shirley , Fingers (I) and
leas thm 310 wordlltag tW be aubjeet to redllctloa by 1 Terry Rouah, Jeff McMahon, Robert";
a carrier of Aujeszki's
Rooker, Tekulve (9)
the editor) •• mlllt ·be lllped with tile alpee'a ad- 1 Jay Martin, ChriBtle Hysell, and Oyer . W- Shlrley, 8·15. LDisease, which could possibly
Rooker, 10-B. HR-San 014190 ,
dreu. Names may lie wttbbelcl upea pabUcatlon. I Toni Neal, Sherrie S., Sherrie Tenace
have been tr811811iitted to its
Cl•&gt;.
However, oa retaeat, IIIUilOI wiD be dlJclosed. Letters I
ofisrping. A substitute
barrow was given to Bob .
should be In pod tute, addreulng istue., not per:
Evans.
SODalities.
I
The Reserve Grand Olam:
I
pion Barrow was purchased
I
by Rio's Restaurant from
I
Rusty
Coe,
17,
of
I
I
Jeffersonville fer $3",100. It
I
weighed 225 pounds.
~I
The lair drew a crowd of
204,786 persons Monday,
!ringing the seven day total
Lost in a sea of new names
to 1,342,745.
The main attractions today
were the Ringling Bros.
Barnum and Blilley CirCus
and the singing group Sha Na
Na.

Ohio's top steer

Freed's 3-run blast
whips Dodgers, 8•6

'

scheduled for Wednesday at
9:30 a.m . (9:30 p.m. EDT

Tuesday).
Vance has spent his first
two meetings wltll Huang
since arriving in Peking
Monday uplaining to the
Chinese offiCial the broad
outlines of U.S. policy oo Asia
and .Europe.
The only other time Vance
has brought up Ule subject of
Sino.u.s. relations was
Monday at a banquet in his
honor at the Great Hall of the
People, in which he said the
United Stales wants to
"improve relations with
former adversaries" and
urged Chinese leaders to
establish lull diplcmatic reJa.
lions wiUl the United States.
Though Premier and
Conununist party Chairman
Hua recently stressed the
United States must break
with Taiwan before it can
e~tablish relations with
O!lna, Huang skirted the
issue In his ritual toast at the
banquet.

3- The_DIIUySentinel, Middleport·l~&lt;meroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 23~1977

Week-long Bible school
comp~eted.Jn

Middleport
c.

.....

j)~J..Y=*···~·UUW'L=

d.oaJd -;;--:

p .m .

Sin Diego (Wehrmtisttr 1·3)

at P ittsburgh (Reuss 9-lll, 7: 35
p .m .

Los Angeles {Sutton 11 ·7&gt; at
St . Louis (Forsch 15-SJ. 8:35
p .m .
N.ontreal (RogerS 13 -12) at
Cincinn~tl
(Cepllfa
5·5 or

Moskau 3-3),

a ~ os

American League
Ent
New York
Balt lrnre
Detroit ·

Clevelnd
Mllw

Toronto

...

,

w.

~

Pet.

71 .49 .592

72 51 .585
. 70 51 .579
58 .. .. 75
51 67 . A60

55 7• .• 26
•2 79 .347

West

W. L

Pet . GB

Kan City
70 51 .579 ·
Chicago
69 52 .510 1
M inn
71 s• .568 1
Texas
69 53 .566 1111
Calif
59 61 .492 10112
Seatrte
51 77 .398 22V2
Oakland
•s 16 .372 25
Monday' s Results
Cleveland 12. seattle 1. 1st
Seattle •· Cleveland 3, 2nd
Kansas City 8, Bllltimore 1
Texas 8, Milwaukee 7
Chicago 5, Ntw"York 3
M innesota 5, Boston • ·
Oakland 5, Toronto 2 ·
Detroit 5, California 1
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Baltimore (FlanaGan 9-9) at
Kansas City (Colborn 13 -12) ,
8:30p .m .
Boston (Jenkins 10-1) et
Minnesota (Goltz 15-7). 8: 30
p.m .
.
New York (Torrez U-10) at
Ch icago (Wood 6-51. 8:30p .m .
Milwaukee (Caldwell J-6l at
Texas (Ellis 7-9) , 8:35p.m .
Toronto (Clancy 1-4) at
Oak land (Umbarger 1-•L 10 : 3l'l
p .m .
Detroit (Sykes J--4l at Cali forn ia &lt;Simpson 6-9L '10: 30 p.m .
Wednesday's GamH
Chicago at Baltimore, rilght
Minnesota at New York 1 nignt
Texas a,t Boston 1 2, twi -nlght
Ken City at Milwaukee, night
Cleve at ·California. 2. twl -niOht
Oetrolt,at Oakland , 2, twl -nlght
Toronto at Seattle, 2. twl nlght

lnternolional L11gue
Unitod Press International
W l..c Pet. GB
Pawtucket 71 5~ .568
Tidewater
Charleston
Syracuse
Richmond
Rochester

Columbus
Toledo

69 55 .556

66 58 :s&lt;40
65 60 .520
62 62 .500
60 65 . .-180
57 69 .-152
50 77 .3'14

Monday's ResuHs

1'12
4'12
6
8'12
11

14'12

•

CINCINNATI (U PI ) Wayne Twitchell has the
Cincinnati Reds' number.
Twitchell and Joe Kerrigan
teamed up to toss a fourhitter Monday night as the
Montreal Expos handed the
Reds a 1;-1 setback in the
opener of a two-ga!'le series.
" The victory was only
Twitchell's third of the
season against nine losses,
but two of Ulo5e wins have

of Ule game In the fifth

Three crosoed the plate as the
Expos bunched Ulree hits,
one a double by Sam Mejias,
wiUl a walk and a fielders
choice-sacrifice bunt.
Kerrigan, with the help of a
double play, snuffed out the
Red$' last threa! by inducing
George Foster to hit into a
. double play after Ken Griffey
led off the ninth with a walk.
"I dido 't take Twitchell out
of Ule game," said Expo
manager Dick Williams. "He
took himself out. Evidently
there was someUling wrong
with his elbow. He di(!n 'I say
anything to me. He just went
into the clubhouse.
"He did tell Jim Brewer
(Expo pitching coach) hiS
elbow was burning alter the
end of the eighth."
"I don't care what the
standings
show," said Anderonly 12.
son.
"That's
a good, young
Teams from the Far East
club
the
Expos
have. You
have won eight of the last
woo
't
find
three
better
young
nine series, In which they've
·
o
utfielders
In
the
league
than
participated . They were
the}'
have
in
Cromartie,
excluded from the 1975 series.
Last year's winner was (Andre) Dawson and (Ellis)
Japan, which lost, 4-1, to the Valentine. I wouldn't like
Taiwan team in Ule regional playing 'em if they had the
Mets' pitching."
playoffs this year.
Dawson and Valentine,
The series . for 11-and 12·nursing
injuries, weren ' t
year-old players uses a single
even
In
the
lineup Monday
·
elimination setup.
night.
.
All eight teams had their
Unfortunately
for
Ule Reds,
physicals, got their uniforms
Cromartie
was.
and held 3().minute workouts
Monday at Howard J .
Lamade Stadium.
The stadium is named for
the son of one of the founders
of the Williamsport Grit, a
local weekly newspaper .
'
Lamade was active in the
early days of the Little
League and donated land for
Ule stadium.
\

inning.
This was after the Expos
had taken a 2-0 lead in the top
of the fifth when Warren
Cromartie followed a single
by Dave Cash with a homer
off Jack Billingham," who
wound up with his lOth loss
against nine victories.
The Expos added their
clincher runs in the sixth
inning off Pedro Borbon.

World Series is. underway
WILLIAMSPORT ,
Pa. agent in charge of the federal
The 31st Little Drug Enforcement
•: League World Series got Administration in Spain, said
·under way today with his team, &amp;-1, was a Very
, Maracaibo , Venezuela , eager bunch of boys who
playing Madrid and Hatties- would like to go the
• burg, Miss. facing El CaJ· on, distance."
. Calif.
The all-black Hattiesburg
Youngstown, . Ohio, plays team is the first squad from
Rotterdam,
N.Y.
on Mississippi to .ever compete
Wednesday and Taipei , in Ule World Series here.
Taiwan, J1lays J,etchridge, ·They have a &amp;-0 playoff
record.
Canada. I
.·
"They've got grea·l spirit
David Medrano, manager
of the Venezuelan squad, and take an aggressive
which has a 7-0 post season approach to each· game,"
record, said his team ·"likes said Manager Robert Walker.
to play baseball. This is a "I can only let the team speak
team
of
extremely for itself on the field."
enUlusiastic boys."
The highly "rated El Cajon
The Venezuelans will be team is 14-0. Their top
playing ,a squad made up of pitcher, John Osborne, has a
sons of military and civilian 6-0 playoff record, including
personnel at the U.S. Air three no-hitters. The squad
Force base in Madrid.
has scored 90 runs In the
Manager Ben Pierce, an playo~ games and allowed
(UP!) -

11

'

Big 10 football

Tidewater ~. C11arleslon 2
Pawtucket 12, Richmond 4
Syracuse 7, Columbus 6
Toledo S, Rochester 2

Husky Musky tournament

gnne against the Reds.
"True Twitchell hasn't won
many games, " said Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson,
"but pe does have potential.
So you're never really
surprised when he does come
up with a good game."
A walk to Mike LWii, a
single by Davey Concepcion,
Ed Armbrister's sacrifice
and Pete Rose's sacr~ce fly
gave tbe Reds their only run

31st annual Little League

22

SMITHFIELD, R.I. (UPI)
-The New England Patriots,
topheavy in running backs, ·
have dealt away· ooe of them
- Harold Hart.
Hart, picked up only last
month on waivers from the
Tampe Bay Buccaneers, was
traded Sunday to the
Washington ·Redsklns in ·
·future
return
for
cooslderatioos.

wiUl I 2-"1 innings of two-hit
relief to gain his 28th save.
Mets Z, Aslroo 1:
Pinch-hitter
Bruce
Boisclair's two-run double in
the seventh inning enabled
~e Mels to anap a five-giune
losing streak. Pat ·Zachry·
pitched seven innings to gain
his seventh victory against 12
losses and J .R. Richard was
the loser.
Cubs 3, Giants 2:
Bobby Murcer's 24th horner
in Ule eighth inning proved to
be Ule winning run as the
Cubs beat tbe Giants and
helped Rick Reuschel to his
17Ul victory. Reuschel oeeded
the last out relief help from
Willie Hernandez.

Twitchell has Reds number

·I

p.m .

,Wednesday's Games
Los Ano at Pittsburgh , night
Chicago at Atlanta . nlgnt
New York at Cincfnnati , night
Philadel ph ia at Houston, night
San Fran at St. Louis, nioht

Boston

'

wrapped up when they Phlllles 5, Braves 4:
entered the ninth with a 6-1
The Phlllles increased their
lead. Then Freed pincb.hit a lead to 71'.! games over
three-run homer to caP a second·place Pittsburgh
seven-run rally that gave tbe in
the · NL
East
CardiJ;tals an 11-6 triumph.
bf edging the Braves
. "I went down to hit it and I .. on homers by Jay John·
knew I hit it hard but I didn't stone · and Blake M~­
know where it was going " _Bride. Jim Lonborg, Gene
Freed said. "When I look~ Garber and Ron Reed held
up to see it go out of the park, the Braves to seven . hits
I couldn't believe it. I was including a solo homer by
floating."
Rod Gilbreatll.
In other NL games , Padres 1, Pirates 0:
M on t r e a I de f e a ted
Gene Tenace's solo homer
Cincinnati, i;-1, Phlla!lelphia in the fourth Inning and the
edged Allanla, 5-4, San Diego combined seven-hit pitching
blanked Pittsburgh, 1~. New .or Bob Shirley and Rollle
York mpped Houston, 2-1 and Fingers sparked the Padres
Chicago topped San Fran- to victory over the Pirates.
cisco, 3-2.
Fingers protected the lead

.......

Big Ten Football Coaference
·
, Briefs
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPI) - The results of bard work In
summer workouts were seen Monday as 104 Northwestern
University football players _proved ready for the first day of
double drtlls.
. "The team came back 200 per cent," said Coach John Pont. ·
"One-hundred per cent returned and 100 per cent reported at
Uleir prescribed weight."
Monday's stimdouts were senior flanker Mike Taylor and
freshman wide receiver Willie Sydnor.
Taylor, formerly a wide receiver, lnunediately showed he
was comfortable at his new post. Sydnor, a former Pennsylvania high school standout, came as no surplse, In the recent
"Big 33" game in his home state, Syndor scored the only
touchdown for his East team.
• Pont says he may prove to be Nortbewestern's fastest
''receiver in history.
. MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -' A UO-member squad turned out
., for the opening of football practice at Minnesota Monday ·and
Coach Cal Stoll said it may be .Ule fastest in the school's
· history.
.
· "We recruited last spring (9r speed, a quality we needed
badly," Stoll said, "and it was already evident Ule first day of
p-actlce. Nwnerous freshmen players have great speed
potential." .
The squad will wor!t out in shorts and T-shlrts and helmets
but no pads twice a day the first three days, with passing and
ninning drills in the evening.
· One of the main jobs will be to replace quarterback Tony
' Dungy. Sophomore Wendell Avery was quarterback in the
starting backfield Monday: along with sophomore JeF
··Thompson at fullback.
'

lOWACITY, Iowa (UPl) - Iowa Coach Bob Commlngs, still
concerned about injuries which have hit the offensive line, sent
• 'Ule Hawkeyes through two workouts Monday as the team
• began Its second week of fall camp.
· CmuniJigs said-both seasloos concentralell .on "intensity
., and hitting."
'
·· "I was disappointed In both phases Saturday (in a scrim·
. mage) and as it standa now, my biggest concern is still the
• olfenalve llite," ColllltllnP said. .
·
.
Starting tackles Barry Tomasetti and Sl!m Palladino ~
guard Mike Mayer aU missed Monday's workouts. TOIIIIIJetti
· baa been bothered by a pulled hamstring, Mayer has been ill
· and Palladino is nursing a leg injury.
•• Iowa will work out twice on Tuesday and Wednesday, then
'. rut back to one workolit dally on Thursday; when classe8

beft· .

\')•

Sport Parade

PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) days," Vermeil said, "but he
It may not count in the has Ule talent."
standings, but Philadelphia
New England Coach Chuck
By MILTON RICHMAN
Eagles' Coach Dick Vermeil Fairbanks said the Patriots,
UPI Sporta Editor
got what he's been looking for 2-1, played a ''very poor ball
since
he came here - a win · game."
NEW YORK (UP!) - The first time I ever mel Brooks
over
a
good football team.
There were ~ penalties in
Robinson was more Ulan 211 years ago, and what struck me
The
Eagles,
aided
by
outthe
game ror a total of 189
most about him other than that l"Ompletely open friendly way
standing
performai)Ces
from
yards
and New England had
of his was how he'd blus/1 like a terribly embarrassed
some
first-year
players,
n
of
them
for 129 yards.
schoolboy whenever someone had anything complimentary to
upset
the
New
England
"I don 't want to hear about
say about his baseball ability.
He was taking batting practice with the Baltimore Orioles on . Patriots, 21-10, in a pre- the number of penalties we
Ulis particul{lr day and another team member, who had been season game Monday night. had but we deserved .them '"
"Our football teams. have Fairbanks said: .
. .
around the big leagues awhile, also was watching him take his
been
losing
for
a
long
time,"
ruts.
Robinson wasn't even 20 then, and looking at him, the Vermeil said, now in his
veteran player standing near Ule cage said rather quietly to second year as Eagles' head
me, "This kid could turn out to he one helluva ballplayer. He coach. "This was a good win
THIS WEEK ' S SPEC lA '
has a great glove and he hits the curve ball okay, but some of for us, our first against a good
Ulese pttchers are overpowering him, throwing the ball right team. It's ... an indication
past him. That may keep him from ever making it up here .... " Ulat what we are doing is
right.
So much for "inside" scouting reports.
First year safety . Eric
Somewhere along the line Brooks Robinson must have
Johnson,
who played in the
learned to cope with all kinds of pitching because nobody can
World
Football
League ,
possibly question that he made it in the big leagues with
USED CARS
Steve
Grogan ·
intercepted
a
something to spare. He made it for the better part of 23
seasons, accumulating 2,848 hits, picking up 16 Golden Glove pass in the Ulird quarter Ulat
awards and partidpating in 2,896 games, a toialtopped by only led to the Eagles' go-ahead
one other piayer _m Americall League history, Ty Cobb, whom touchdown. That was a 14Robmson qu1te likely will join in the Hall of Fame five yea rs yard pass from rookie
quarterback Mike Cordova to
from now.
,
Last SWlday in Bloomington , Minn., 4Q.year-old Brooks second-year wide receiver
Full power, fadory air.
Robinson, the fines t third baseman of this generation and Vince Papale.
luggage rack. Rookie
corne.r
back
·
possibly the best one who ever played the game, hung up his
Herman
Edwards
grabbed
glove for good. He did it in a manner completely typical of him
stepping aside without any fuss or argument so that the Oriole~ oil another Grogan pass in
could activate a yoW&gt;ger player, Rick Dempsey, for whom the fourth quarter that led to
Ule clinching touchdown, a
they m1ght have great need in their stretch run.
Ulree-yard
plunge by James
· Nobody in. the world loves baseball more than Brooks
Robinson. That goes f&lt;r Ernie Banks, Willie Mays, Pete Rose Betterson.
Venneil said Cordova, the
or anyone else you can think of. He loves it so much, I can
Eagles'
11th-round draft
You'll LikeOin"Quality
remember him teiling me once he wished he could keep
choice
out
of
Stanford
who
is
Way of Doing. Business
playmg forever. He told me the same thing from Kansas City
GMAC FINANCING
·
fighting
to
make
the
roster,
Monday.
.991-5342
Pomeroy
will
get
another
chance·
to
"I would've liked to stay on but I've been in and out of the ·
Open
Evenings'til6
: 09
lineup all year, not really playing for any length of time and play.
Til s p.m. Sat.
"He has good days and bad
being 40, it's impossible for me to help the ball club pl~ying
that way," he said. "When you getto be the oldest guy in either
league like I was, then it's time."
Typically, also, Robinson was concerned for Hank Peters
the Orioles' exceptionally able executive vice-president and
general manager, who in the final analysis was the one who
had to ~ke responsibility for inactivating the most popular
player m Baltunore's baseball history.
"11 was a tough decision for Hank to make, having to ask me
would I step aside and let someone else take my place on the
roster," sympathized Robinson.
Signed as a player-coach Ulis year, Robinson didn't get to
play much this season. He went to bat for the "Orioles only 47
times and had a .149 average with only one home run and four
RBI . These are the customary figures of a player at the end of
his career but Robinson's reputation on defense was such that
even this past winter, Pittsburgh, Seattle and Toronto all
:~:: some interest in him. Robinson wasn't interested,
11

1969 FORD '

LTD WAGON
•395

Karr &amp; VanZandt

We.'ll Update Your
Fire Insurance

"I couldn't see myself leaving the Orioles unless 1 got a
contract for two years," he said. "I live in Maryland and I
didn't want to pick up and move my whole family."
For the rest of the season, Robinson will continue with the
Orioles, but only as a coach, and when it's over, he has no
interest In either coaching or managing.
"I've played so long, I really don't care for any oth.; part of
the game," he said, "But there maybe something else I can do
with the Orioles. I'll probably end up having my finger in
baseball ·.one way or another." .· ·

M

ake sure you've got full
protection in case of fire,
by keeping your policy up to
rising replacement costs. See
us soon for a policy update.

White Sox snap Yanks
winning streak, 5-3·

Bucks
in
·-··
best shape
ever--Hill
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Ohio

training briefs

Eagles finally
beat good team

Today's

State's football team opened
practice Monday and trainer
Billy Hill said the Buckeyes
"are in Ule best overall
condition that I can ever

remember."
Coach Woody Hayes, going
Into his 27th year at Ohio
State,
welcomed . 91
scholarship players plus a
few walk-ons.
The morning session was
devoted to picture taking .and
conditioning drills followed in
Ule afternoon.
Hayes said the early condi·
tlonlng drills gives him a
chance to do several Ulings he
would not be able to do later
In the season.
"I've got to get hold of as
many kids as I can," he said.
"I've got to give them some
attention and let. them know
we are concerned ab()ut
.··
them.
"And I'll start chewing a·
little more,'!.he said. "1 have .
to."
The Buckeyes open the
season here Sept. 10 against
Miami University.
Ttgen 5, Angels 1:

Fernando Arroyo hurled . a
five-bitter for Detroit and
RUsty Staub 11\lpported him
with a three-run h&lt;mer. It
was Staub's 17th homer,
while Arroyo, who hadn't won
since J\lne 13, is now 7-13.
A's 5, Blue Jays Z:
Pinch-hitter
Willie
Crawf&lt;rd smacked his first
homer in an Oakland
uniform, a three-run shot in
the seventh Inning to give the
A's the win, Doc Medlch; 8-8,
went the first seven Innings
lor the win.

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
It was "sweet revenge~~
when
Oscar
Gamble
delivered the run-scoring
single against his former
New
York
Yankee
teammates and enabled the
Chicago White Sox to anap
New York's winning streak at
eight with a 5.:1 victory.
And the Minnesota Twins
savored some of their own
revenge too, greeting their
exmate Bill Campbell with a
pair of ninth-inning singles
that produ~ a 5-4 victory
over the Boston Red Sox.
Gamble, who was peddled
to the White Sox this past
spring after the Yankees
turned his right-field job over
to their new $3 million
celebrity, Reggie Jackson,
delivered his decisive hit oil
reliever Sparky Lyle.
"I'm always trying for a
hit," said Gamble, "but I've
had especially good luck
against the Yankees."
.Francisco Barrios survived
solo homers by Chris Cham·
bliss, Mickey Rivers and Lou
Piniella to gain his 12th
victory against four losses.
Meanwhile, the Twins, who
blew a two-f-un lead in the
ninth on a two-run homer by
Ule Red Sox' Butch Hobson,
pulled the game out in the
bottom of the inning.
Rich O!iles led off for
Minnesota with a single Ulat
helped finish reliever Bill Lee

an&lt;! bring on Campbell, who
gave · up another single to
Butch Wynegar. Two outs
~ler, Larry Hisle deliV~red
his 98th RBI of the season
with a liner up the middle.
"This could be the most
important victory oi Ule year

for us," said Hisle.I "I like a

situation like this wits tonight
because it distinguishes you
from being average or

great."
Elsewhere in the AL,
Kansas City outlasted
Baltimore, 11-7, Texas topped
Milwaukee, 11-7, Oakland put
away Toronto, 1;-2, Detroit
downed California, 1;-1, and
Cleve]lmd blasted Seattle, 12_1. then)ost, 4-3.
Roy ..Is 8, Orioles 7:
Hal McRae's two-out
infield single scored Frank
White from second base to
cap a Ulree-run, ninth-inning
rally for the Royals, who
maintained first place in the
AL West. Jim Palmer, who
blew a 6-2 lead, was tagged
for a solo homer apd an RBI
double by AI Cowens. ·
Rangers 8, Brewers 7:
Jim Sundberg's tw&lt;H"IIn,
seventh-inning single rallied·
the Rangers to their first
victory in four games .
Claudell Washington had a
two-run double and Mike
Hargrove a two-run homer
for Texas. Adrian Devine
hurled 2 1-3 Innings of one-hit
relief for his lOth victory. ·

Indians 12-3, Mariners 1-1:
Jim Bibby hurled
twohitter in Ule first game and
was backed by a grand-slam
homer by Buddy Bell and five
RBI from Rico Carty. In the
nightcap, Cleveland's Wayne
Garland walked home a run
and allowed the winning run
to score on a wild pitch in the
fifth inning. John Montague,
6-10, was Ule winner, ·while
Garland fell to 10.15.

Protect Yourself!

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Insurance Agency, Inc.

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
•

•

Phone; 9?2-2156 For Advertising Service

�•
4_ The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport -Pomeroy, 0., ·ruesday, Aug. 23, 19n

Contribution made

Singers hold reunion
The annual Singer reunion and Mrs. Uoyd Lipps, Toni
was held Sunday, July 31, at Lipps, Little Hocking ; Mr.
Royal Oak Park with a basket and Mrs. J oe Lipps, Mr. and
dinner at noon. Games were Mrs. David Riggens, Sherri
enjoyed by the children. San- Lynn, Gale and Terry Lipps,
dra Long had the blessing.
Vincent ; Mr. and Mrs. Elson
Prizes were presented to Long and fal)lily, Letart, W.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Will iam Va.; Eber and Ruth Reiber,
Krackomberger, Perth Am- Morning Star ; Mr. and Mrs.
boy, New Jersey; Mr. and Roger Bissell and fami ly, •
Mrs. Frank Holter, Racine, Danny Bissell, Mrs. Naomi
the oldest couple present; Bissell and son, Mrs. Ada
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bissell, Jean Randolph and family,
Long Bottom, the family with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ritne
the most children present; and family, Long Bottom ;
Sherry Bissell, the yoWlgest Mrs. Pamela Lipps Enlow,
g~rl ; !llld James Paul. Kimes, Vincent. Afternoon callers
the youngest boy.
·
were Mr. lind Mfs. George
Others present were Mr. Genheirner. It was voted to
and Mrs. Arthur Singer; Mr. have the reunion at the same
and Mrs. William Singer. Mr. vlace nextyear.
and Mrs. Fred Reiber and
daughter, Toledo; Mary and
LA FF _A • 0 A y
Billy Krackomberger, Perth
Amboy, N. J .: Mr. and Mrs.
Lcr--._
Earley Casto, Ripley, W. Va. ;
Susan Gates, Vienna; Ethel ~
Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Hollon, Parkersburg, W. Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. James Kimes,
Tad, Tammy and James
Paul, Key West, Fla.; Clint
Birch and Leota, Mattie
Lawrence, Portland; Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Hollon, Chester; JU«~
Iva Pearl Rayburn, Sterling
and Sammy, Syracuse; Mr. ·-- - - .. __ _ ~~~~
and Mrs. Robert Parker, " Do you know how ma ny
Bobby and Kellt,, Mar1etta ; se parat e. moveabl e par ts a
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight BISSell sew in g machi ne ha s?"
and children, Reedsville; Mr.
·
·

---

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST
Wishes to Announce the Relocation

of His OHlce

'.

~

j

Social
Calendar

•

SATURDA~,

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 • .

BEST

DAIRY SPECIALS
BROUGHTONS .

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
CLOROX

GAL.

~ UG

BLEACH69~ ·
(Li m it 1 Please)
.r

GLAD

. 10 CT. gg~

•

~AIIIII.lli""'-.

TRASH BAGS ........................~~ ..
LOX LIQUID
FOR DISHES
22

oz. aom~

69

FRESHLIKE

VEGETABLE
SALE

4

.

10$

.VALLEY BI;LL

-

....

....

COT,T~GE
. oz. 89~
CHEESE. .................~~!.~~.. ..
24

.-....

~CHOICE...,

CHUCK
VELVEETA

BANANAS
.5 LB.

USDA
CHOICE

·s1oo

BLADE CUT

Plastic Ga l.

9~

CHUCK
ROAST

.CHUCK ROAST. ...... ~~:. sge
ARM ROASt. ......... ~~--

RC
LB.

8PAK

FRESH LEAN

PRICE
FRESH LEAN

..... . .....". .... .....LB.

SUPERIOR

TUNA HELPERS

Carton

•2.59

•413

HO.

IE
DOG FOOD

305

ALL MEAT

WI EN

. . . . ... .~~-. 79~

2

80Z.
BOXES

99~

Beef, liver &amp;
chicken flavors .

09

69~

Price!

oz.

. 33 OZ. .BTL

79

~

MINUTE STEAKS
LB.

W/C

99

BY THE
PI ECE

rue

NO. 255

4

$100

BOTTU:S

5 LB. BAG

89~ '
••

49~

W/C

CD upon Expires Aug . 27, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•

89~LB.

.

.

COUPON

FAMILY SIZE

BETIY CROCKER BROWNIE

MANWICH

SUPREME MIX

89~

27 OZ. CAN

NO. 125
W/C

23 OZ. BOX

1::· ~~ PKG.
5

W/C

69~ ,

Coupon Exptres Aug. 27, \977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

14 OZ. BOX

79

i

' l!

$899

'·

Coupon Expi res Aug . 27 , 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

MIGHTY HIGH _

LUCKY CHARMS CEREAL
NO. 105

.3 LB. CAN

C_OU PUN _ j

GENERAL MILLS

·BATHROOM TISSUE
4 RpLL
PKG. -·

W/&amp;

COL,JPON_ j

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
NO. 755

Coupon Expires Aug. 27, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

WHITE CLOUD

W/C

Coupon Expires Aug . 27,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

L

79~

89

~.

uw;;.W-$1

CHIPS AHOY COOKIES

L

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

69¢

LB.

69
0
COFFEE ......~ .~~!.!4

Coupon Expi res Aug. 27, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·.LIFEBUOY SOAP

$119

UMIT 1 PLEASE

SLAB .BACON

COUPON

.BATH
BARS

POLISH
SAUSAGE

FRESH &amp; LEAN

~

69~

•
SUP ERIOR

LB.

COUPON

Coupon Expires Aug. 27, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

8-16 oz.

LB.

MARGARINE ..•••....•...... ~~~~~ 59~

Coupon Expires Aug . 27,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

FABRIC SOFTENER
N0.155

.

TONY'S
FRESH MA.D E

NO. 105

CAN

DIET RITE COLA

'1 , • .

BEEF...~~-~~~~.......

l . COUPON j

lOTn.ES
Thursday Only

3 lb. Pkg .

• W

'1.00

CHUCK

Mrs. filbert's

3LB.

. Coupon Expires Aug. 27, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

PEPSI
COLA
16

1GROUND

-IN
. STANT

CRISCO SHORTENING

BETIY CROCKER

USDA CHOICE
LEAN &amp;
TENDER

STEAK

COUPON

FINAL TOUCH

8 PAK

oz.sge

nd
v

eli

I.

LB.

CHUCK ROAST
ENGLISH ROAST
-STEW BEEF ·

Nescafe

16 OZ. BOTS.

=~:OW. . . . . .~~ gge ~:~~D . . . . . ...~~:. ~ 109
.,

16 oz.
. bois.

PEANUT
18
BUTTER .........
. FRESH
PEACHES

1%

Carton

(

ROAST

$
199

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

BROUGHTON

WINCHESTER
ALL BRANDS
LimE CIGARS • CHEWING TOBACCO

15
oz.
Cans

CENTER CUT

:x~~:~ . ......... .~.1

99

49~

FAVORITE BREAD
. 3 Loaves $}00

2 LB.

BUFFET ~
21B. 99~
SUPPERS .......~~...
.

TIDES IN
DIRTS OUT

1 lb. Box

$}00

.

BANQUET

Dan-Dee Twin Pak

POTATO CHIPS

.

4LB·$100

79$

SALTINES

Cans

.

CHEESE .............~~.... .

Or ange, Gr ape,
Frui t Punch

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

3

CHOICE

FRUIT DRINK

SCOT LAD

5 oz .

PEPSI
COLA
OR DIET
PEPSI

W.K. Corn, CS Corn, cut green
beans, or French style green
beans.

GAUON
PLASTIC
JUG

ARMOURS

USDA

USDA

REGU~R

8- 16 OZ. BOffiES

BROUGHTONS

Milk Shake
Butter Nut
Zer o and
Payday

HOMO MILK .......:~-~~-~~~-~ ...

AUGUST 27TH

OPEN SUNDAY 9 A .M. TO 6 P.M.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities

79~

.

FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

. SUPERMARKET
. OPEN D;...A.IL Y 9. TO 9
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

CANDY BARS

WE ACCEPT.

NO DEALERS PLEASE I

Mrs. Bessie Fitch is honored

·MARKY

RIOHT

•.•

·- .....
. PRICES GOOD THRU

MASON FURNITURE

PHONE (304) 428-0000

5 .o. or
More.

................

special interest rnissiiiii.Rr
Mrs. Lettie Roush "'
remembered oo her birtltdc
with fruit and candy. Mr
Eloise Wilson read a letli
from Mrs. Anna Grimm wt
enclosed an offering. Plar
were made to visit the Youn
horne for aged at Halloweer
A circle of prayer closed th
meeting.
Refreshments were serveo
by Mrs. Rorna Hawkins, t
those named and Mrs. Fred.
Hood, Mrs. Ethel Hughes.

A contribution of $25 was
made to the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad 's new
truck fund when the Busy Bee
Class met at the Middleport
First Baptist Church Thursday night.
· Mrs. Nelle Werner presided
at the meeting which opened
with the class son~ and dev&lt;&gt;-

~

·---- ~·- · · ~

Program books are distributd

Program books were
lions by Mrs. Gwinnie While distribu!ed at the recent
using the theme "Jesus is meeting of the EJecta Circle
Coming Again."
of the B. H. Sanborn MisMembers sang the birthday sionary Society held at the
Polly Cramer
song for Florence Hannay, Middleport First Baptist
Irene Cross, Mrs. Agnes Church.
.
Isabelle
Mrs.
Beulah
White
presld·
White
,
Mrs
.
.
Winebrenner, and Mts' -Dana ed at the meeting with Mrs.
Hair spr(Jy works on ink
Hamm.
Roma Hawkins giving dev!&gt;The program by Mrs. • lions using Psalm 100. Mrs.
who greet people at parties,
POLLY'S PROB!..EM
Beulah White was on Bible Gwinnie White had the
DEAR POLLY ·· My shake hands, handle pels and t~~~~-lll!IUC~bJIIIC:IIIfi. ;;;sn&gt;.c;l;k"f ¥ characters, Sending money prayer of dedication for the
other
things
and
then
handle
favorite leather shoulder bag
for the class treasury were missionary offering. A gift of
is now stained on the inside food without washing their
Mrs. Lula Mw-ray, Mrs. Iva money will be sent to the
so
often
hands.
This
happens
from a leaky ballpoint pen. ·
Turner,
and Mrs. Elizabeth
and
I
.
w
ooder
if
others
are
as
Ca n this be removed' Slavin.
conscious
of
it
as
I
am.
Also
JANlCE.
Mrs. Gwinnle White, Mrs.
DEAR JANl~ - Hair when l!Bndling food and some
Beulah
White', and Mrs .. Pearl
of
the
-icing
or
juice
gels
on
,.Pray' will usually. remove
LONG !!O'ITOM .:... Mrs. Zoarville: Mr. and Mrs.
Hoffman
served a dessert
such marks. Spray on, let dry their hands they lick a finger
Bessie
Fitch of Long Bottom Carm~l Oiler and Sammy of
course
to
Mrs.
Eva
Hartley,
and then brush orr. Some pe&lt;&gt;- and then continue handling
TIJESDAY
was
honored
oo her 80th bir- Artica; Mrs. Wilma Tillis,
Mrs.
Julia
Grimm,
Mrs.
ple also find cuticle remover food. Don 't tbey realize they · AMERICAN Legion Auxthday
with
a
surprise party Tammy Reedsville.
Lillian
Demoskey,
Mrs.
satisfactory but do test first. put a smidgen or saliva from iliary, Racine Post 602, 6 p.m.
Mrs. Fitch received many
hosted
by
her
children.
·
Winebrenner
,
Mrs
.
in an inconspicuous spot. - their mouths on the food ? at the hall. Covered dish din- Rosemary Lyons, Mrs. Lettie
cards
including one from
A
birthday
cake,
ice
cream,
Many times I have failed to ner with members to take
POLLY.
President
and Mrs. Jimmy
pWlch
and
minis
and
nuls
DEAR POLLY - Those enjoy food just because of lbeir own table service. Dues Roush , Mrs. Edith Sauer,
Carter.
people who are now painting having seen this or to see so- are payable to either Mrs. Mrs. Roma Hawkins, Mrs. were served to her husband,
their houses, garages or fann meone taste food cooking Mary Roush or Mrs. Julia Leora Sigman, Mrs. Freda Raymond, her sister, Helen
Hood, Mrs. Nelle Werner.
Smith, f'.ortland; and Mr. and
buildings should remember with a spoon and then con- Norris.
Mrs. Eddy Price, Mr. and
tinue
stirring
the
food
with
that a good cleanup remedy is
AMERICAN
LEGION
Mrs. Vernon Ridenbaugh, .J'ACKSON FOR YOUNG
baby oil. Baby oil will remove the same spoon. Another un- AUXILIARY, Drew Webster
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
Mrs. Janet' Guthrie and
those splatters of paint from sanilary habit is to stick one's Post 39, 7:30 Tuesday night at BIG WELCOME
Rev.
Jesse Jackson, head of
Jason,
Heath
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
LUCKENBACH, Tex.
your fingers, arms or legs as fingers in cups or glasses so· the hall .
Operation
PUSH, is rWlfling a
Willard'
Price,
Mrs.
Ada
(UPI ) -The three residen,ls
fast as gasoline or any com· as to be able jo carry t\V~ or
petition
drive
to COWlter a
Pratt,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
MIDDLEPORT Lodge, F. of Luckenbach, Tex., haY.
mercial paint remover. Baby three at a time.- VERN.
campaign
to
pressure
Wills,
Keith
and
DeAnna,
Mr.
and A. M., 363, 7:30 Tuesday extended an invitation to
oil is also much safer to use
President
Carter
into
firing
and
Mrs.
Garry
Martin
and
DEAR POLLY ~ I clean my night at the Masonic Temple. Britain's Prince Charles ·to
for cleaning up our little
U.N.
Ambassador
Andrew
bathroom mirror of steam in Entered apprentice degree to visit when he comes to Texas Heather, Newark, Mr. and
helpers, too. - RR.H . .
Douglas Price and Autumn, Young.
a
jiffy simply by using my be presented with all master in October.
DEAR POLLY - I found
"We're going to get 200,000
Jack Harmon, press secre- Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
that nail polish remover is blow type hair dryer for a few masons invited.
signatures
from blacks and
THURSDAY
tary for Ute numerous beer J. E. Gluesencamp of Sungreat to use for removing seconds. It cleans it of steam
whites
to
make
sure we show
CHESTER Council 323, parties celebrating the bury; Ms. Jackie Oberline,
•tickers from car windows. - and leaves no lint and I cerAndy
still
)las
a lot of
tainly save time when dress- Daughters of America, to slightest event here, said
M.S.B.
support, " Jackson said
serve refreshmenls at the Monday a formal invitation
ing for work. -D.C.
DEAR READERS Monday.
DEAR POLLY - When I Richard Copeland sale Thurs- was being prepared for
A lbought for Ute day :
Remember this is for the
Jackson said the drive wts
day
evening,
begining
at
.
4
run
out
of
filters
for
mV"
Chatles,
who
is
planning
a
12British
poet
Thomas
glass and do not let it drip on
initiated
to counteract a camday tour of the United States DeQuincey said : " It is
automatic coffee maker I o.m.
the paint. -POLLY.
paign
l)y
New Hampshire
DISCO STROKE Thursday in the fall .
notorious that the memory
DEAR POLLY - Reading simply substitute a paper
Gov.
Meldrim
Thomson
"We naturally asswne he is strengthens a·s you lay
your column is like a visit towel and it works perfeCtly. London Pool, Syracuse, by
seeking
Ute
ouster
of the
"FantaSY Flash." Admission planning to come to Lucken' burdens upon it, and becomes
with friends and I would like -GEORGIA.
outspoken
Young.
Polly will send you one of $1. Hours 8 to 11 p.m.
bach since Ute Alamo is on his trustworthy as you trust it."
to share . with others, too.
itinerary,
and it's in San
When applying non-skid her signed thank-you
newspaper
coupon
clippers
if
Antonio,
which
is rapidly
strips to a bathtub they
getting fame as the 'Gateway
should be placed lengthwise she uses your favorite
MASON FURNITURE
to Luckenbach, o Hannon
Pointer,
Peeve
or
Problem
in
rather than across the tub as
said.
that tends to hold back the her colwnn. Write POLLY'S of her lovers.
POINTERS
in
care
of
this
A state prison spokesman
water when the tub is emptynewspaper.
said Mooday Mrs. Crimmins,
ing.
Mon., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat. - 8: 30ti i 5: 00
37, married Anlbony Grace REDFORD SWORN IN
I agree with the lady who
PROVO,
Utah
(UP!
)
July 15 at a New York
THURSDAY T IL 12 NOON
finds vulgar language offenActor Robert Redford has
lawyer's office.
sive. Beyond that there are so
been sworn'in as chairman of
She is still serving a &gt;to 2Q,. Ute Provo Canyon Sewer
many words in our huge dic- ALICE CRIMMINS WEI&gt;S
tionaries that give Us one
NEW YORK (UP!) -Alice year prison term for the Service District.
··
good descriptive word in- Crimmins, the former conviction but is enrolled in a
Redford,
who
lives
at
his
stead of several. It is too bad cocktail waitress convicted of work-release program, which Sundance Resort in the
we do not make more use of manslaughter in the death of gives her weekend furloughs 'canyon's North Fork, Chairs
them to add a little variety to her danghter 12 years ago, and free time on weekdays to Ute group that is trying tO get
our speec)l. -ELLEN.
has married a wealthy work as a secretary. She is a sewer system built. Tbe
Ma son , w. va .
DEAR POLLY - My Pet contractor who testified at also seeking release on scenic callyon now relies on
Her man Gr,&lt;~ t e
773-5592
Peeve is with those women her two trials that he was one parole .
septic tanks.

POLLY'SPOINTERS

-·--· ..

'

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

·GROUND

~, -

STORE HOURS

RT. 2 .NORTH
PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

FRESH &amp; L E AN

,.. :. ___

Ill

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE
'

..

I

STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE
NO. 205

~·
W/C

coupon Expires "ug. 27,1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

29 oz.

$1 0~

W/C

Coupon Expires Aug. 27, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'

'

�~-~:;;-~ DAn:;""':~ine;Mid~~:.;7-P..ner;'y. o...;ru~:Y· Mg.2:1.• 977

~~:

Peiforming Arts Centerr to expand
Generati"on Rap · Mrs. Karr hosts club
- ~·y
1

.
~~
. CIIF,STE.R -Seve~al do~- ratmg of.good at the convenBy Helen and Sue Bottel
tions for covic beautifoCI!tion tionJudgtng.
§: projects were made during a
Mrs. Kuhl announced !hal
recent meeting of lhe Chester Gardeners Day Out woll be
Atheist Mother Bans Cburell
Garden Club held at the home held on Sept. 29. at Maroetta
Rap :
oc Mrs. Paul Karr.
.
and ~~ reservations are to
I'm not a religiollll nut but I attend Methodist church and
The club made a donation hem by Sept.l9. .
. .
feel good about it. I'm pretty straight and girls' parents oc $25 to the Chest.,. United
Meigs CoWlty Faor exhibits
usually like me.
Methodist Church for the were doscussed woth a
My girl friend enjoyed attending services with me. We landscape planting to he done workshop bemg ca'!1ed out
agree children should he raised in the church.
around the new addition. by Mrs_. Dean assisted by
Wben Sherry's mother heard what we were doing on Donations oc ~ each were Mrs. William Buckley, M~.
Sundays, she blew up and said if She_rry doesn't~ seein.ol made ·to _the Voctor H. Rees DaleMachir,andMrs.Gurils
me she'll kick her out. She hates rellgton, see. Says 11 sa way Fello~~hip . Fund, the Public King. A spec181 collection for
of 'scaring people into pouring out mooey for ''wealthy Beautification FW1d, and the the Pomeroy Emergency
institutions."
OAGC Waheena Preserve.
Squad's new tru~k was taken.
The Bible .says honor thy father aod mother, but if one or Mrs. Roy Holter, Mrs. Earl . Mrs. Machor thanked
them Is ·a for--breathing atheist,' would God get us for - Dean, Mrs. Beul Ridenour members for a planter at the
SNEAKING AROUND
and Mrs. Charles Kuhl at- birth of her new baby, and
tended the OAGC convention Mra. Ruth Karr extended
S.A. :
held recently wilh Mrs.Holter !hanks . for sympathy cards.
Probably not, but Sherry's mother would !
receiving a blue ribbon for Blue nbbons were goven to
Since you can't sway a confirmed atheist, try her free style Japanese ar- Mrs. Buckley, Mrs. Machir,
comprnmise : You won't push clnorch or religion, if she'll let rangement displayed there. and Mrs. King for aryou see each other. - HELEN
Mrs. Kuhl received the' rangements, and to Mrs. Ada
+++
regional gardener's award. Holter and Mrs.
S.A. :
Mrs. Sally Mora announced
Mts. Karr and Mrs. Kuhl
And if !hat doesn 't work, see each other when yoo can. that the program books for served refreshments.
Sometimes "honor lhy molher and father" needs a IJ!e 1970-76 year received a
qualification : "When they deserve it." -SUE
P.S. How about discussing your problem with the
minister?

The GaUipolls Perfonn!ng
Arts Center will be expandong
into Meigs county in the fall.
It will be called the GalliaMeigs ·Perlormlng Arts
Centers. The original Arts
Center was formed in 1975 by
Mrs. Patty Fellure and Mrs.
Gillian Moore. Mrs. Ann
Rieser joined the Center in
January 1977.
The school's motto is to
teach the appreciation of the
perfonning arts to the youlh
oflheOhio valley . Classes in
ballet, tap, baton, acrobatics,
and jazz will be offered to
four year olds through adults.
Ballet .is taught from the
primary level to advanced
toe. AU baton students march
in local parades and the more
advanced students have the
opportunity to compete in
baton contests. This past year
some of the students traveled
to Charleston, W. Va. for a
Dance Educators workshop
and others attended a three
day baton camp. Each spring
a public recital is held so that

lhe students
demon·
strate their ability and enjoy
working in a professional
type show.
Students develop grace,
beauty, and talent. Dancing '
and baton twirling are
physical adventures as well
as social
adventures.
Students acquire physical
Illness, figure development,
and quick thinking as well as
new friendshij)S, team work,
responsibility, self confidence, and leadership.
Both schools will be
opening in September. The
Gallipo~ branch, located at
61 12
Court St . ever
Brunicardi Mllllic Co., will
have open house Sunday,
August 28 from 2 to 4 p.m. At
that time enrollment will he
taken and the 1977 spring
recital pictures can be ordered. Enrolhnent for the
Meigs branch, which will be
locate9 in downtown Middleport, is being taken at
Gillian's Fashions phone 992li389. For infonnation about

S of S:
Wilh an addition for your molher: "Let go, Mom!" -SUE

+++

Rap :
.
I read that a recent psychological survey says fa !hers on .
an average give only seven and oniHjuarter minutes per week
of real listening to their children. U my futilre husband Isn't
going to work any harder than that to raise our kids, we won't
have any! - FtiTURE NON-MOTHER

Dear FNM:
That mythical''average parent" again? Pick the right gily
and you'll find he's far from it.
Mainiy, don 'I believe everything you read! - HELEN
AND SUE

C. B. picnic to be held

Bzrthday spent

TRACY COLLINS

Bo hopes
Woody will
•
never rettre
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sporta Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)

- Ohio State fans woo 't he
the only ooes to miss Woody
Hayes when the day comes he
no longer coaches the
Buckeyes. So wU1 hls arch foe
at the University of
Michigan, ·Bo Schembechler.
"I hope Woody coaches
forever," Schernbechler said
of the coach wbo broke him
into the bullnesa. The two
were once clole but are no
longer -f&lt;rpenonal reasons
the Michigan ~ has long
rofwted to dllclul.
"He's great for lbe game
and
great · for
our
cmference' " . Scbm'bechler
.
said. "When we play, be g1ves
our' ~• arne · an l added

Tracy Dawn Collins,
daughter of Mr. and · Mra.
Robert E. Collins, was
honored on her second birthday wilh a party at her holile.
Cake, ice cream and soft
drinks were served to Mr.
and Mrs.' Tom Williams,
Chris and Amy, and Phyllis,
Marc, and Brian Nice, all of
Albany; Mrs. Keilh Phalin
and Jeremy; Mrs. Willis
Durst and Shawn and Amy;
Mrs. Cathy Scarberry and
Gina; Mrs. Diane Bachtel,
Ronald, Trina. and Kandi,
Richard and Dawn Kesterson
and Todd, Terri Grover, and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mowery
and Coleen, all of Pomeroy.
Sending gifts were May
Mayleand Mr. and Mrs. Estil
Collins, Tracy's · grand·
parents; and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Ehersbach, Sarah and
Jolene, Denver, Colorado,
and Leo Young, Jr.,
Pomeroy.
1imension. I hope he never
retires.''
He listed WQOdy and Bear
Bryant of Alabama as aniong
the last of the long-time'
colorful college coaches.
• " They're
great
for
coaching and they're great
for the game," he said. "And
I'm not talking about just tbe
fact they've won a lot of
games. They've done a lot of
other thinga, too.
. ''Of course, they don't do as
much individual coaching as
801De of ua yoWlger guys do,"
he added, chuckling. "But
they still do a lot for the
game. They give it a lot ol
color, an added dimensioo it
needs!'
The retirementa of Darrell
Royal and Frank Broyles
from active coaching at
Texas
and
Arkansas,
respectively, took some color
from the college coaching
fraternity, Schembechler
'
said.

\4
16 o•
oz. see!
Vee1
16 ot. Pork
16 oz. Chuck~egon

-··

The sp'ring recital dance group from the Gallipolis Peiforming Arts Center

~--

.......a

oz.

••

f

$179

U S.O.A CHOICE

RIB STEAKS .............................

P\g

Pound

USDA CHOICE

Orumsucks.

ARM POT ROAST """"""""'

~

Pound

,(
7

...

IDIELEII

I'
REGULAR ,
BEEF or
TEXAS

TASTE '0 SEA •

FISH STICKS ..:.......~......

TAsn '0 SEA

CHRDIIT
~-~~-

2

·

PERCH ............................. •:._;~

TASTE '0 SEA

$129

$129

CHICKEN FRIED

$119

$ 149

CHICKEN FRIED

$1 09

HADDOCK ...................... '~;;·

LICED IICGN

FLOUNDER .................... '~;;~

PORK FRITTERS ......... Pound
BEEF FRITTERS ........... Pound

Mrs. Russ Watson, Mrs, cards ~nd visits during her
Henry Salser, and Mrs. recent hospitalization. The
Harry Wyatt entertained the nominating committee will
United Melhod.ist Women of report ·at lhe September
the Forest Run Church at the meeting.
·
home of Mrs. Watson recentTwenty sick and shutin
Jy.
calls were reported during
The meeting opened wilh a lhe past month. Treasurer's
poem and the Lord's Prayer report was given.
by lhe group. Mrs. Kerns
Refreshments
of
Rollllh was devotional leader homemade ice cream and
taking her sct;ipture from Se- cake were served to Mrs.
cond Chronicles with a · Hanson Holter, Mrs. Alfred
meditation imtilied " Days Yea\tger, Mrs . Denver
Holter, Mrs. Vernon Nease,
· AteaFrenzy."
MrS. Fred Nease was pr&lt;&gt;- Mrs. Uswin Nease, Mrs. Er·
gram . ehairman and had as rna Roush, Mrs. Fred Nease,
her theme, "The Bible." Her Mrs. Kerns Roush, Mrs. John
subject compared the 'Scott,
Mrs . Vernal
building of a house of strong, .Blackwood, and Mrs. Edith
stilrdy materials to building a · Sisson.
life centered on the perfect
building plan, the Bible.
J~ted
Mrs. Uswin Nease read
UJ,
"The Influence of the Bible",
Mrs. John Scott, "Inspiration
'I'll• Gospel Road will he
of the Bible", and Mrs. Russ shown on Sunday, August 28
Watson, " Wisdom and . at Cheshire Baptist Church.
!Cnowledge." Each reading The showing will begin at 7:30
was followed by meditations, p.m.
poems, and prayers by other
The
Gospel
Road,
members of the group in- distributed by World Wide
terspercedwithsongs.
. Pictures, was ·conceived and
Mrs. Nease read the produced by Johnny Cash and
thought for lhe month and the his wife, June Carter Cash,
program closed with the miz- whose desire was to tell the
pah benediction by the group. story of Jesua Christ in a·
Mrs. Salser had the special realistic and meaningful
feature entitled "Take way .
Time."
The fllm Is a unique blend
Minutes of the last meeting of scripture-based narrative,
were read and a love offering . an abundant supply of
was received. The 'flower specially written songs, and a
cmrunittee reported on visits ·series of in-depth character
to lll members. Mrs. Wyatt portrayals, with Israel itself
·thanked the gl'oup for the gift, as the. mixing bowl.

IJ;lm
r;,

KELLY JOHNSON

.
5

'
MUUIOILAND NAMED
NEW YORK (UP! )
Robert Mulholland, formerly
vice president in charge of
NBC News and more recenUy
coordinator for network
coverage of the 1980
Olympics ,
has
been
appointed president of the
NBC Television Network.
Herbert
Schlosser ,
president and chief executive
officer of NBC, who made the
announcement Monday, said
NBC Sports will become a
separate network division
under Alvin Rush, executive
vice president for sports.

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

CUFFSTAR JUICES ..................... i!~~~ 59•
IUII\lZ

SA' ~
16·0~ean

Cans

l-

SWEET PEAS .... :..................4·~~~~

214 E. Main

"QUALITY and
SERVICE"

Pomeroy

15-oz.
Can!!

1

14o,. C,oamStvloo•
12 ot. Whole Kernel

CUT CO
~\1SIORES • CAROINALFOOOSTOAES

MRS . FILBERTS ·

·sARAN.
.

lomH """

r •ti.~n ~~,.

1 o .... c""''M&gt;tl

~ ~tir~tt.,: 1.00 -Ft.

Ao

NABI~CO

~f

C0 0 K~~:.r~,

.,.,... ""• ,, .

89~

...~l. ,n~ut ChD~olale Chip

Um"

VERPLATE by ONEIDA

o~ """ "-9!"
";.41'
r..... ; Y
if1' ..,
.•

a .... C(&gt;Uf&gt;&lt;&gt;n " ..
'

• ..U;

.

or
f'lle.

a1

~

GEBHARDT HOT DOG SAUCE ....... 3 'c";::

1
DINTY MOORE BEEF STEW ............... '~:.,· 89&lt;

~,

~

::
o

.
eardin•l llov•l lli.o• S'toril,

t;j

00 10·05

I

ff

\~

5

•

,.

n

~

c

CORONET BATHROOM

,.
z

-a

TISSUE

Vq STORES

8-Ct.
Pkg .

Umit one with coupon lind S10.00 purchase
excluding beer, wine and !J'igarettes.

LOG CABIII PANCAKE MIX ................ ~;:

59'

SHOUT STAll REMOVER ....................'~~~· 89&lt;

8· 0Z . BUTTEMSCOTCH - 49' Of CARAf'IIEL WHtrE SPOTS

MONARCH CANDIES ............................ .',?,;;· 69&lt;

~~\) s tuHiS • CAHOtNALFooosTORf_s

WET OIIES ................................................'~;~~ 99&lt;

$1''

.;;;,.~:;j;':i_~/

.

limtt one wrth coupon and $10.00

e~~;c:luding

~

purcha~e

beer. w ine and cigarettes.

-~

,

. ..
I. w

CARDINAL

•

·

.

BUll

8 -Ct.
Pkgs.

..

7.

f

•

•

•
'

"109
~

-- '--- ~

STORES • CARIDINAI FOOOSTORES
HEINZ

Xllt•liJ ill•':'

B•B., .!!,.,•

Bottle~

Plus Oepostt

~. KEEBLER ELFWICH COOKIES ............ ~~;:• 99&lt;
.~ ,f.io'.l·~ \' - HEAlTH' BEAUTY All$
1:1~~~~~ JAGRifciiiiiiisE . . :~~~ 99c ·
~ ' )
s ,,
SINE-AID TABLETS :............................ .';;~·

a170 STORES

1

RIGHT GUARD ......................................... ~: 79c

..
..

.

6

-oz.

n 0

•

''

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY.
-STORE

8,

i'IQUID BLEACH .................~~~~;39c TAB1 SPRITE OR ·
~
COCA COLA' . .
~

0

rtJONETDA

ZIPLOC BAGS .........:............................... .'~;~ 69&lt;
CHIIIA FOAM PLATES ..........................'~;~· 49&lt;

CRACKE~ JACKS ... :............................... -::!~~ 39 c

Xll(elllilt•l:l

f

.

u

.

KRAFT PREPARED MUSTARD ......... .'~~~· 49&lt;

~

"' 5.

4- '};·~

b!Wn 1/27177

Go-ud

WISHBONE DRESSINGS ........... :;~~~ 55'

XI{ ell Jitt 1 ] : 1

x;eliJ:Zel:l

i5
~
&lt;

$1
Z

ITALIAN , DELUXE FRENCH or SWEET&amp;: SPICY

sro ~rs • t ~R OINAI F~oo .sTORES .

.

1-Lb.
Cartons

Umil one with coupon and 510 .00 purchase
beer, w ine 11nd cigarettes .

e;~~cluding

SPECIAU. Y PRICED FOR
GIFT GIVING

&lt;
z

MARIARIIE

5-Lb.
Bag

/

c~P~:;:L ~$

FINE FURNITURE

$

STAR CROSS TOMATO SAUCE ........ .'~;-.: 29•

~

BAKER'S

$._1

FRESHLIKE CUT SPINACH ..............3'~~;~· 89&lt;

IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!

Reuter-Bropn Insurance ·

59•

VEG' ALL MIXED VEGETABLES ..... 3 1~;~:
FRESHLIKE

'~,U.S lOillS

3·pc. Salad Set .••••••••••• ~·······,..·· ···· $18.00
Low Candlestick, Pr .................... $20.00
sauce Bowl and Ladle .................. $23.50
Vase, 91/2'! ................................. $16.00
Sef.of 4 Napkin Rings ................... $20.00
Butter Dish •••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••• $17.50

~g

S139

MIXED CHINESE VEGETABLES ........ .'~~~·

MONARCH PINK

.

Captains Decanter ...................... $27.50

20

l.ACHOY

i

WORCHESTERSHIRE SAUCE ... ~~~~

~

THAN YUlJ IJO AT

U .S. NO . 1

LACHOY BEAN SPROUTS ...............3 ';;::
LACHOY
'
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, CHOP SUEY VEGETABLES ................. .'~;':: 49•

The Bengals, 2-1 in
preseason play, wU1 face face
the St. Louis Cardinals
Satilrday night in St. Louis.

REG.

79e.

.

offensively."

,

Pound .

(FORMERLY BIG JIM'S)
CARRYOUT SERVICE
PEARL STS. - .ON THE CORNER - MIDDLEPORT .

POU NE or lEMO N or GAAP f

Saturday guests of Mrs.
Beulah White and Mrs.
Florence Hannay, were Mra.'
Betty McCleary,- and her
sister, Mrs. Thomas Wiant
and son, Tom and daughter,
Becky, Akron.

FOR LESS•• .•

~~~l~~~..~-~-~...................

•

.

&amp;

LOCUST

HAVE GUESTS

YOU'LL NEVER BUT QUALITY

U.S.O.A. CHOICE

FMSH MUSHROOM$.8 OL pkg: 59'
U. S. No. 1 Ohio Grown
APPLES 4 VARIETIES........ 3 lbs. 79'

CAMPFIRE MARSHMALLOWS ......... .';;;~ 49'

BUT•••

SUNDAY 11 AM 10 6 PM

swm POTAlOES ............. lb.~

QUALITY. •• •
"The Insurance Store
COmplete
Insurance Service

~:;

89(

Fancy ~uthem
PEAOtES ............................. lb. ~
New Crop

Kelly Johnson
is given party
Mrs. Vonda Johnson enle~­
tained on Aug. 19 with a party
honoring her daughter, Kelly .
Renee Johnson on her birthday.
The party was held at lhe
home of Kelly's grand. mother, Mra. Goldie Ingels. A
Flintstone and Pebbles theme
was carried out in the decora- ·
lions. Ice cream, potato
chips, cake and Kool-Aiil
were served . Prizes were
given to the ~hildren.
Gifts · were prese_nted to
Kelly by Mrs. Ingels, George,
Vonda and Keith Johnson,
Patti, Norm, Lori, Barbie and
Nonnle Laudennllt, Mona
and Jenny Russell, Hedy,
Larry, Herbie, Mike, Mitch,
and Rick Laudennllt, Brian,
Sharon, Sonya and B. W.
Keams, Jeanie and Alex, Ray
and Garnett Varian, Johnnie,
Sunni, and Sean Meadows,
Harry , Games, Jt., John,
·Darlene, Christie and Julie
Johnson.

SWIFT SAUSAGE ..:......................

ALL PURPOSE
WHITE POTATOES

· FRESHLIKE

Methodist women gather

BROWN 'N SERVE

CORN DOGS .................................. Poond $1 Ot

SALE DATES: AUG. 24-27, 1977

1- Lb.
Pkg.

BEEF CUBE STEAK ...................... Pound $159

,,~

$159

TASTE '0 SEA

CARDINAL

Pound

$129

MON. 1HRU SAU 9 AM TO 9 PM

STORE HOURS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(UP!) - The Cincinnati
Bengals returned to the grind
of tw&lt;HI-day practices today,
following a rare day off
Monday.
Coach Bill Johnson said be
was pleased ,wilh the 17-13
victory over the Detroit Lions
Sunday, but was disappointed
in his squad's "lack of
crispness both offensively!
and defensively."
••n-seems as though we ran
into a little adversity and we
let it get to us," Johnson said.
"H we're gonna be the type of
team we think we can be, we
cannot let that happen."
Johnson said he would try
to emphasize more crisp,
alert play during practices
this week. "Flags are simply
killing us, killing us," he
added. "I am not comfortable
with . myself and our
performance and I say !hat
with the knowledge that we .
played a lot of people."
The coach cited as
examples of ragged play by
Cincinnati
•'receive.rs
running ·around loose in our
lloo..,!ll!!!!i! secondary, a lack of
containment in our defensive
line and lining up \VI'Ong

+++

't:.

llll11
1&amp;

BEEF snw ...............................,.... Pound

..".. 69~

KINGSFORD

day off

DearS of S:
.
We'd like to say a lot about married children who "never
leave home," but space limits us to three UtUe words: "Grow
up, kida!" - .HELEN

" 81TESIZE"

ii

-

Bengals
have rare

Dear Helen and SUe :
My married sister drives me bananas. It's like she never
left home. The minute her husband goes to work, she picks up
her two-year-old and heads for our house, where she stays until
he comes by at5:30. Then they have dinner here and go back to.
their apartinent around 9 p.m.
Mcmlhinksthisls great! She takes care of little Joanie all
day, fixes a nice dinner (at her expense), and my sistercis free
to pick at me, just like old times.
·
·
Please say something about married people having lives of
their own. - SICK OF SISI'ER
.

Under sponsorship of the
GaUta County Citizens Band
Radio, Inc., P. 0. Box 178,
Gallipolis, lhe. ~lean break
features a bowl of beans and
crackers -for 15 cents.
Trophies Will he awarded to
lhe best-dressed club, largest
club attendance, club
traveling farthest, CitizenBander traveling farthest,
but no club may receive more
!han one trophy.
No alcoholic beverages are
pennltted.

Bea/ rermifJ1L

lhe Gallla-Melgs Performing
Arts Centers or enrolhnent by
telephone please call Patty
Mr. and Mrs. Noel Young of
Fellure, 256-1392, Gillian Deyton ho6ted the annual
Moore, 446-3632, or Ann Beal reunion at their home.
Rieser, WH&gt;727.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley . Beal and
children, Stanley and Pat,
and grandson of Cleveland;
Mr. and Mra. Maartin Swart
and daughter, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Young and
children, Mr. and Mrs .
HAVE GUESTS
Miss Catherine Warner, 541 Wayne Seal and William
S. Second St., Middleport, has Beal, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
had,as her houseguests Mon- Galen Young and son, Mr.
day through Thursday, Mr. · and Mrs. Bruce Young and
'lllld Mrs. William Blank and children, Mr. &lt;~nd Mrs.
'children, Becky and, Bob of Wesley Young and daughter,
Boulder, Colo. Mrs. Blank Is Mr. and Mra. Bradley Young
the former Janet Russell, and daughter, all of the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dayton area.
Russell. The family was
enroute to Philadelphia, Pa .
to visit Mr. Blank's aged
mother, and then on to Allantic City before returned to
Colorado. This was Mrs.
Blank's first trip to Ohio in 12
years.

+++

GALUPOUS- The Gallta
County C.B. Radio club will
he holding Its annual picnic at
7 p.m. !his ·Friday at the
Kyger Creek shelter holllle. ·
AU club members and their
gueata are invited to attend.
The club Is also promoting
what it calls a "bean break"
at 1 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Gallia
County Junior fairground
wilh the main prize an $800
Browning Mark IV SSB 40
channel radio set to he given
away at 3 p.m.

Youngs host

GLEEM TOOTHPASTE ...........r............... ~;~ 99'

FROZEN 1001$ .

===lt====MIIW

SfORES • CARDINAL FOOD STOR~S~ , ,

APPLE. "EACH or DUTCH APPLE

LLO~D J. NARRIS PIES ..............':;:·. 99c
VAN DE kAMPI

59c
BAnEt FISH FILLETS .......~ ....... .':;:~ s p•

FISH CHIPS .................................... :,·;
VAN DE kAMp

tcAAFT"

· KRAFTSLtCEO

AMERICAN ROUNDS ....... .'~;~· '1'' HALF MOON COLBY.:'~;~
SWEET o' BUTTERMILK

.

4

I

PILLSBURY BISCUITS 2 :~~ 29&lt; YOGURT ..................... . c;;:

$

..
1
S1
•

·1 IJ

ill,,: I

stEiuir
~;y ·
i.
"'"''- ~""'-::% ' \ ~ $149 ~
o...

·

c.oo.~~·~~.,

~

f.'\:'y ·DI

e

~ Bottle

CHOCOLATE DRIIIK ...2 ~;~ 1 51" SHERBET ........................~;~::; 99&lt;
JET BARS ............................. ':;~· 89• ICE MILK ........................~;.&lt;:::; 99c

•

'

�•
0

a-

Tho Daily Sentinel;Middleport-Pomero~. 0 .• 'l'u&lt;'sday, Aug. 23, 1977
sfnllnei.Mlddleoort-POOienly,O., Tuesday,Aug.

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash·

WANT AD

CHARGES
I~ Wv-rd,. tu

Umb.•r

(\.bh
100

ldu~

!I.WU

n11tr~ ,.

150

'hl.t \':;

1.)

tt ll .• ~ )o

100

Its

I"'

:!.~
.I-:"~

..:,y_(i! Wtll'd •&gt;\'¢t UWO IIUilHIJWII 15
llli f u·ut.:o Vt" ~·urtl Pt't tla~
~Alb 1'\llllllllJ! j•~I'J\'r Uk!lll'llliM'I.'Ult\t'
don:'\ ~til be d~.argul ii! t!w I d&lt;i)

w.,•nb

~

·r

1u tn~twn . Cat d uf 1hom'-' atM.l
OlttlloH) 6 l'f'Ub. 1"'1' '•HinJ, $:.1.\-)
ltntm tlll't.l'asltm advllnct·

'1·.Ut!t' llutnt' salt&lt;s &lt;~.till V,wd Slllt&gt;!o

illl' ao'l't'pk',j O!th t~ll h '-'MSh 'oltlh
•onl"' ~ t ml d\otl)-~t· hu ads l'Htrv-

mg Hti.\

~UIPIIt't

tlitd

lni..'&gt;AI't' of 'I bt• :O.t•u-,
.

'

n .. PuGirsht•r n·scn•t•.., thl' n.:ht

ln t'llll11r /'t:~~t'(1 8111' &lt;u.l... til'l'll u•U u!J
J' ·!lvual T 1t' Pull t~ltt· r \l.lll l\ol\ l.lc·
r,·~p~onstblt! fut

nu•n· th.Jit 1nu· mt•or

t \';.'\ !llSt'rtl,ltl.

Phunt&gt;!J!J-l-210lli

NOTICE

lu Memory

Lust and

JN LOVING memory of our De-or
Mother Ma ry Eblin who p.ou
ed away five years ago today
August 23 Wouldn I it be
wonderful tf we covld see our
dear mother os she useO to be
wouldn I 11 be wonderful to see
ner smile and hove hm bock lor
a hllle while we b e wrong for
wonting her so, when the
Angels wanted her. too? Could
we be wrong for m•ssing her
so, ar'd oil the !hmgs she used
l:o cio? No , we wovldn t disturb
her peor:eful rest ,· for we knqw
abo ... e-a ll Ood knpws best, $o
· HE- called her tC His hOrne 01)
high ' but we miss our Deor
Mother every day tho! goes by
Sadly missed by &lt;: hildren £d11h
Art1e
Myrtle , MoJelrne
Grandchildren and CreotGrondchildren.

LOST SECOND Armored Oivi5lon
lrorn lng Manual book of Fr .
Hood Te.:os. Has sentimental
val ue May hove been lost at
Eo's tern High SchooL 949-2042.

~otices-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

NOTICE
'

$50 REWARD

MVIKI&lt;i)
~ll'l!l !HI Sat Tlf'd'l ~

Fer any· information of the
green and white W~ M . P. O
blanket that was donated
then stolen during Friday 's
race program. Contact 992·

TW.sd&lt;!)
UU'U FrH.hl)

4 P .ltl

lhe d;l~ bt!for'l' pulJhl'!J Ulm
SwHia)
4 PM

Fndar aflt' rnuorl

NOTICE OF

PUBLIC SALE
Bids will be rec eiYed at the
Offic es of Fultz and Kn i ght .

on ~ East S£&gt;Cond . S tr eet ,
Pome roy Nat ion a l Ban k·
13-u ildlng , F'onieroy, Ohio,
v ntl l Monday .. th e 29th day of
Au gu:;t , 1·977, at 10 o'cl ock
A.M., for the rea l estate of

Eli zabeth Byer Jackson ,
sit uated on the corner of
Gr~::~n f Street and Broadway
Street, in the Vill age of
Mrdd leport , Meigs County,
Ohio . The real estate was

app ra ised at $2,500 .00, and
c annot be sold tor less than
the appraised value.

1 will also offer for sale, at

the l ime and place above
l:l.lilted , tile fo llow-ing personal
property : 1_ Gold Wedding
Band, 1 White Gold Wedd ing
Bt~.nd , 2 Whhe Gol d D iamond
';;Oi iteire Ring_s, 1 Pearl Ring

in Go ld Selt i n~r .- and 1 Gold
D•a mond Solitaire Ring
(d am aged se.tting). .
T he
Administrator
r eserves the r ight to reiect ·
any and all bids , antl bids are
subjec t to app rova l of court.
Bernard V . Fultz ,
Administrator of
Estate of
El iz.:tbeth Bye r Jac_kson ,
deceased .

Found

Bu sini'SS

Opportunities

W",titj;d to Buy
CASH poid tor all makes . and
models o f mobile home.s
Phone oreo code 614 -423-95.3-l .

742 -2331 .

Aut!) Sales_'"-"-

518,300.

1972 FORD GRAN Torino . $850.
Good condition . Coll742-2H6.
i9o9 CH
- .- V-ROLET-cC
:-A:-:P:::R-:-:
tC::E. P.S.•
P.B., A. C. low mileage. $500.
Ca119S5 -3923 .

-197 1 Plymouth

18 MONTH OlD Polled Hereford
Heifer. Phone 992"·3904 or
992·7168 .

BUILDINGS
1

Farm • Commercial
Industrial • Horse Barns
Ga rages &amp; Workshops

Wickes Buildings
Cifclevltle, Ohio, Box 523
(614 ) 474-8732
1'17S HARLEY DAVIDSON , ex·
cellent condition . Gal~ . has e;c.
tras , less than 1000 miles .
$2700 . Coll (614) 696-3290.
1973 YAMAHA360MX . good con·
dition . 1966 VW. $75 . Call
992·3236.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy

ASTRO•GRAPH

1:6-on~d\'f .

5434 .

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

7·20-l

t'LL LOOI&lt; I'ORWARD
TO H~Al&lt;1N6 'lOUR
l&lt;ePORT, C0LONElMUL.1111;Y!

cOMPUTS~

~1!ADOUT5l

mu.

~ ~ /l1l.li.!J~ ao

SWAIN

FmEilitoolos

.....

~--·

IIINDOIIS &amp;.IIOOIS
IEIUCfll[fll
IIINDOIIS
M.UIIINUM
StOIK-SOffiTT
GUITUSMtllfiGS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

AI

LARRY LAVENDER

992-2206 or 992·7630

I'lL H2-3!93

"'TIIo OriPtoton
flot llo 14oito....

WHEN I G£"T MY
SlRfNGTH BACK,
I'VE GOT SOMETHING
FOR THAT GUY --

fASY-- I I&lt;IIOW
HOW YOU FEEL· ·
BU1 YOU'RE
TOO WEAK ,
NOW ··

2-23-J mo.

Now Only

•279.95
let us test yc;ur
Free.

water

. . . . ~jack
car..,y, Mgr.
Phone 9!&gt;1·21e1

llil. .

w.

I

DAVID BRICKLES
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
Rooto 2 .
. P - . Ohio 451&amp;9
McllieiJ Cabinets · Roolina: • Concrete
Patios· Stdewalks - New Co;nstfuction '

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

A

BAH! STUPID
TALK NEVER
HURT ANYONE --

NoW S•nott Rood

•Custom Hyd-raulfc Hose
Making
Phone "2·2176
Pomeroy 1 o .

·-~0.
!92·5724
C4tttjlloto Sola .... ·plln.

POMEROY,

..
~·

- ::C::-=:=-=:..=c-:-;--:;---

suoo.

-

(J•••

...

0.

•

!

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters. irons, oil
small appliances. lawn mower,
next 1o State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61--4) 9853825 .

SEWING MACHINE Re"pai_rs , service, all makes, 992-228.4 . Tt-re
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales- and
Service. Wf!shorpen Scissors.

RUTLAND--'1 floor plan, 4
lots about 240 tt. frontage, 2
bedrooms. bath, natural
gas. GREAT AT JUST
$12,000 .00.
NICE CORNER LOT Close to shopping, 2
bedrooms, bath, carpeting,
natural gas F.A. heat,
porches, concrete drive.
GOING AT $13,800.00.
2 STORY FRAME - Lo1s
of ground, 2 baths, ~
bedrQOms, dining, porches,
Income: $13,850.00.
ALMOST NEW- Double
wide with 6 aores, garage
and storage building. Close
to recreation . This Is lovely
property at a very low
price. $17.000.00.
MOBILE HOME - With
about '12 acre of ground, ·In
good
condition,
2
bedrooms , bath, large
living , storage building.
$8,000.00.
'SMALL HOUSE - LOW
GAS BILL - small yard,
lh 154 room frame with bath
Is Ideal In this day of
Inflation. $5,400.00.
DROP
IN
LET
US
EXPLAIN OUR NEW
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
THEN
DECIDE
WHO . YOU
WANT TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
H"ENRY E. CLELAND· ·
REALTOR
.
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland

Ail

3

mo

REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
ond ·olllypes of general r'epo ir.
Work1guoronte«J 20 yeors e x·
p4trience . Phone 992-2409.

MAIN

20,33;

ACROSS
2 Shaped like
I Pang; twinge
a dunce cap
At
3
"Sweet
00, E'VT IT TCOK 'KXJ 1\1.0
(perplexed)
Charity"
I'I)()R'? TO MAK~ A M0Jf3 .
(2wds. )
song (3wds.)
10 Traveler
4 Historic age
II Pondered
5 Betwixt
(over)
6 Dueler's
13 Novelist Seton
movement
14 Indian city
7 London's 15 Bird's beak
Bailey
16 Binding(abbr.) 8 Cheap
17 Depression( 4 wds.)
era agency
9 Symbol of
18 Fat
Satan
20 Espouse
12 Unaware
21 Essential
(2 wds.)
part
16 Political
22 Allude to
leader (sl.)
--~-=----:--:"= 23 Acid and I.Q. 19 Be merciful

s

T\11'? Wi~DS M~ OF WH~IJ
Wt&lt; VJE;Re; Di\T\t-10.

HOMESITES· for sole , I acre and p,RAOFORO, AUctioneer, Com ·
up .. Mit;fdleport, near Rutland .
plete Service. Phone 949-2-487
Call992-7-461.
or 949-2000, RociniJ , Ohio. Critt
Bradford .

llf'.

·----

.

6

=::1f-

Answer: Permanent. no doubt-for mermaidsWAVES

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.... Su~
~1 4-1

8-7-1 mo.

PAYEE

~H'Mvwz'

Ill!

U .P .S.

(Answers tomorrow)
WEAKEN VELVET

11 :oo-News 3.U.B.10, 13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33 .
11 : 3D-JohMy Car5011 3,4,15; Movie "Romance at a
Horsethlof" 6, 13; Movie "'l!e&lt;.l, Borrow • . or Steal",
8; Movie " Anzlo" 10; ABC News 33.
12 :01)-Janakl 3:1.
1: 00--Tomorrow 3,.C.
1: 30--Mary Hartman tO.
1: &lt;0-News 13.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1917
.
5:&lt;!&gt;--Farm Report 13.
5 : 50-PTL Club 13.
' .
6 :01)-Summer SemHter 10."
6 : 3D-AG-USA 4; News 6 : Summer Semesfer 8;
Christopher Close&lt;Jp 10.
'
'
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 :50--Good Morning, West VIrginia 13 .
6 :5S-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7 :oo-Today 3,4,15: Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8: Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Ptg 10.
7: 30-WIIdlife In Crisis 10.
a :oo-Howdy Doody 6; Captain Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
S1reet 33.
·
. .
·
8 : 30-Big Valley 6:
9 :0D-Cre&gt;Os-WIIs 3: Phil Donahue 4r Phil Don~ hue 15,
13; Andy Griffith 8; Schoolles 10; Zoom 33.
9 : 30-A.M . 3; Edge ol Night 6; Concentration 8; Porky
Pig 10: Unto The H ills 33 .
9 :55-AI The Fair '77 10.
10:oo-Sanford and SOn 3,4,15; Dinah! 6: Here's Lucy
8; M ike Douglas tO, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembers
33.
10: 3D-Hollywood Sqsuares 3,4,15: Price Is Right 8;
Walsh' s Animals 33.
n :OD-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Bandstand 10; French Chef 33.
11 : 30-1 t' s Anybody's Guess 3,4, 15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Making Things Grow 33.
11 :SS-CBS News 8: AI The Fair '77 10.
12:0G-News 3,4,6;1.0; Shoot for th-eStars 15; U1vorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Documentary Showcase 33.
12 :3()---(hlco and the Man 3,15: Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4 ; Search ·for TomOrrow 8, 10;
1: oo-Gong Show 3: All My Children 6,13: News 8:
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15; Opera Theater 33.
1 :30-Days of our Llves3, ~,15; As tho World Turns8,10.
2 :01)-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2 :30-Doctors 3,4,15: One Llle to Live 6,13 ; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3 :01)-Another World 3,4,15: All In the Family 8,10;
M.D. 20 ; Romagnoli's Table 33.
3: 15-General Hospllal 6,13.
3 :30-Match Game 8,10: Lilias, Yoga and You 20;
Erica 33.
4 :01)-Mister Cartoon 3; Stale Fair Gong Show 4; Gong
Show 15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's
Island 8; Sesame Street 20,33; Movie "VIva Las
Vegas" 10: Dinah! 13.
4:3o--My Three Sons 3; Star Trek~~ Emergency One!
6: Aiuly Griffith 8; Expohlo '77 15.
5:oo--Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,3:1; Emergency One! 13: Mission:
I mposslble 15.
5:30-News 6; Family Affair 8; Electric Company

"Jumb"' Book No. 10, with !he latest 110 ptmlea, ia availab"' for $1.30 postpaid from Newspaperbooks-Jumbt.{ do
this newspope,r, Bo~ 84, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Inc ude
youTnanw, aaaress, zip code and make checks payable W
. Newspaperbooks."

A

1o your door by way of

1 Xr Il XI J

I

I AM NO"! A!'RAID--

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

•we can ship parts directly

A(

Jumbles: SYNOD

Yesterday's

SIIMMII6POOlS

Ruttateum Pelnt Products .

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

Answer here:

water and

softener,

Co-op water
Model UC·XVI.

CASE WAS,

K) I

-

.:urni: ()~PHAN ANNIE

Rooto 36 ''"'-'"'· .0.

s,-oo, Oloio

WHAT THE 6TRIKEK'6

BIMBlE
B·.l3

Clrpet • U~t!J
Phone Mike Younc

Pomeroy Landmark

~--

ITOXICE
j
KJ K

Young's
Carpeting

$101M

1'---f:j-...,

I KJ

Superie&lt;
Slum ulrlction

r..- , W.lllo
lllownlnta Wall! &amp; Attiu

I [J

byHenrtAmoldandBobL"

KICHT

5-27-TfC

i-13-11110.

FREE ESTIMATES

MOCEA

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES ,__37U2541
R-.o.

flo Sin..., Colli Plo•

f&gt;.l f&gt;.l mo.

Unscramble these lour JumbleS ,
one 1ener to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Aullntltic
T11nsmissian Stnict

AIGul canttadaf
P.ltane 949-2101
Dr 949-2860

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Landmark

'"

-o

THEl&gt;l1:

C'""

Bissell Siding Co.

.. itltn.

.TEAFORD

l'

We hivt . . eqacrteuttd

Pomtruy, 0.

FAIR I:NOU13H-, .

~TUDY

THe WIII D
TUNNE~ DATA- AND

rrew lhal Mn Cftaled muy ()(
~e fiar. qulUy ·~ .1nd r•r·
Ia tbil •rn. Mu.l. line,......
liiO q•lify lur n
illternl hilow
llll.pt"!tVC!IIM:II loaDI ·~ toc.J
baiLII. vr Sill.. C.U tft-7
lw .1 frn:
t=~Um.l\e ..-~~by u• E. MaillS&amp;..

FOR SALE

'I"

TO

condition your

soften &amp;

Pomeroy Landmark

3 AND 4 RM . furnished and un·
furni shed opts . Phone 992·

Cottti- 0111 piKopttoiL Wo llallf
it, or do H - "· Spocial pricol to

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt.
R1modeltng.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy. APPALACHIAN STOVE Co ., Sum·
mer Sale. Askley C·60 Wood
I'lL Hz.Jil! or &amp;!li-1105
Lorge lots with concrete potlos ,
Heaters , $3-40 . complete with
&amp;tintota applitd to job.
side wa lks , runners and off
{S) 17, JB , 19, 21, 23, 2S, 28 ,1 tc
blower. Thru Sept . 12 . We ore
&amp;.27-I mo. pd.
street park ing, Phone 992-7.479.
ihe only outheri:zed deoler in
FURNISHED APT . Adults only, no
MeiQs County . We 're in
pets , .Phone 992-3874, Mid·
Carpenter off U3. 698·7191 .
; d~~p~
o,~t=-·==~~~--c::-:-c--­ AlliS-CHALMERS H·d· ll dleoel
TWO BEDROOM trailer , adults on dozer Mod-Yr 66. Ready lor
b~room house , 2 ba,hs ,
ly . Col! 992-3324 .
work . Wt . 15 Ibn . .2 mile south
' I elec., 1 acre..- Middl,port,
Bernice Bede Osof ·
ofTuppers-Pioif'IS, Ohio . Co Rd .
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
TQ RENT. Riverside Apts . 1
&lt;6. Phone (614) 667-3536 .
b_edroom starting at $100 per
7461 c.·- ' - , - - - . . . , - - - - - ' - William Connolly.
NO FUTURE? IN ASS RUT?
mo. 2 bedrooms s tarting at
sMAll form for sole, 10 % down,
$ 138 per mo . Equal Housing ONE REGISTERED mole Redbone
Con~ider a Professional Career 1
owner financed . _Moriroe Coun ·
Opportunity. Coi1992·609B .
coonhound, 6 mo. old . (61 .. )
Urivmg a "BIG RIG :' We are a Pri· """"'-''=
ty. W. Va. Phone (304 ) 772 ·
vale Training Schr.,., l offering a
IF YOU hove o service lo offer , 40- SO ACRES of crop.Jond ot
667-3621.
3102 0' (30&lt;) 772-3227 .
P1\ RTTime&lt;•rFIJLL Time Train·
wont to buy or sell sometking;
Rutlond . Coli (513) 539·7439.
COUNTRY form /and with secluding PrQgram. ff yau are -A'Orking.
oe looking lor work . . . or
ed woods, water and good acIN
MASON
.
2
bedr
.
opt
.
with
Don't
(,Juit
Y
our
job,
attend
our
whatever
...
you'll
get
results
Aug. 24 ," 1977
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo.
stove
and
refrigerator .
Weekend Traioing,progr4I£1 Of at " "\.J Osler with a Sen.lnel Wont Ad.
II vnt,·vf&gt; 1hP.r\rfv chaner1 your
New Co-Op water and
· $1 .000 down . coli (304 ) 772·
Carpe
ted
and
dean.
No
tendour3
Week
FULL
Tnne
Res·
·
~Call
992·
21
56,
cou rs~ lor somelhing you have
VC-SVI .
3102 or (304)772-3227 .
idem Training.
·
YAI'ID SAL":E'-..:;
M.::.o:...n-. t"h~ru--:Fri., 9 until chi ldren or pets. Call (304) softe.n ers. model
Vf'ltt hf'PUI c;r..t on dm,.t cllanqe
Only S279.95
773-5977.
? , Third OOuse up from
VA -FHA, 30 yr . finan cing. Ireland
1!•1• r·rrn pOJ._&lt;; SPtllnQ T h~ Ol"lleC·
'---:-c--c- -~ Save uo .oo on a new
J{el((l Trarto~ Trailer.· Traimttn.
syrocuse Fire House . Bicycle , -.... im.
iMortgoge, 77 E, Stole, Athe.ns,
l1Vf1 t"" nn~&gt;1irhiP th1 t; r.omm q yem
THR EE BEDROOM home , un- Hotpolnt Refrigerator.
end toPles, dot hlng , and other
phone (614 ) 592·3051.
1 New 20 cubic ft . Chest
furnished . Call 992 -3090.
o.! V\11 lo-f'PO 1-1 &lt;;[P~"&lt;1V h l-lnfi On [hP
PARKERSBURG
,,q,.,,
th ings.
·
Freezer
1-304-422-4080
525.00 Discount
VARD~-A~Q . 25'26~Liffle -~~
VIRGO (A og . 23-Sept. 22)
1 Good McCullough Chain
everyth ing incl Uding re-?1 nke
saw
su
t 1'-itl&lt;'lilv '/fill tnvf' th0 i'1hli1 !y In
breakfast SE;!t ond few anHque~ . COAL, lime51one , a nd ca lcium 1 Good Used Poulan Chain
TheAmanac
r·,. thtlltl'' ,.., rtwv -.rr~ Toda y.
From 9"6 each .doy . Oti.s Casto
SSO
United Press Iulernatlonal
chlori de a nd ca lcium brine for Saw
howw·•e r. the SI ZZle may have
re• idence, Reedsville, Ohio ,
Erec.tric
Trim-All
cuts
with
dust
con1rol
and
special
mixing
REAllOll
-''' nrr;•JI'i nnnr&gt;RI th&gt;ln th"! '&gt; lf!t~k
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 23,
$29, 95
soli for farmers, Excelsior Salt nylon
FIVE FAMilY Yard Sole , out Rt. 1
Tl11• 1 nlllfl (nc; t vn11 ;1 IPW Of-'ll·
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
Works , Main Street . Pomeroy , (1~ Good Refrigerator S200
Bypass to Howell Hill Cemetery
r;•f•o-:
F1nd nHt morp '!bout the 235th day of 1977 with 130
REALTOR
Ohio or phone 992· 3891 .
Rood. Watch for signs . Tues .
1•11r• pit !w -';/'lllhnq lo r vntlr to follow.
216
E.
Second Street
thru
Frt
1 np r.t Ao::!fq Gr::1nh LPitP.r Mr11l
The moon is moving from
CAMPER, $600. Also , horse
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S76P
(l 1 ,,,,tr. ln r P;u 11 ,tnci :1 lonq
its first quarter to its full TWO FAM/l Y Yard Sole, Thurs . trailer, $450. Phone (614 ) 698 Phone m-3325
t&gt;+! "ldrlt~&gt;J:;S t'd
&lt;; f;1mO Pri phase.
3290.
.and Fri., Aug. 25 and 26, 9 om.
-Jack w . Carsey, Mgr .
l'fl\1.-fnp•• In A~hn-f1 r::toh P ()
WALK TO STORES
to 4 pm . v, mile ofl 12.4 on SPRING GARDEN StJpplies , Cob·
Phone 992-2111
The morning stars are
nr, , JflQ nilfho rllV Strtttnn NY
Renovated
3 bedroom
Bailey Run Rood. Furniture, gas
boge, cauliflower , broccoli,
~.' JOf) tn H.. &lt;;HrP In .,nr&gt;cr lv I'Ollr Venus, Mars, Jupiter and
stove, electric dryer , antique
home In Middleport with 2 .
end
head
lettuoe
plants
,
.. tiu ! h -&lt;:,•(11•
Saturn.
dishes, tools and clothing, lots
baths, natural gas. Ohio
yellow , white, and red anion
of misc .
·
The
evening
star
is
Power, city water, and
S,!lfs.
onion
plants
.
Kennebec
,
LIB RA (Sept 23.· 0ct. 23) \,::t~rl
metal roof . S1i,ooo,
Mercilry .
cobbler, Katokdin , Red Pontiac 1971 STAR Mobile Home , 60 x 12,
BIGGEST YARD Sale yet , Aug,l23,_
rpull-1 ((ln11 tnrt:p.-·· 111 SOII P nt
e~cellent condition, gas heat ,
VIEW OF RIVER and Red La soda seed potatoes .
2.4 , 25 . School dothes , bed
lHIIt•.:.P!f Oat\l r&gt;ul-1 !()I') rt'"l~n v
Those born on this date are
extras. $5,500, Call
many
Reasonable
3 bedroom
Bulk
garden
·
s
eeds.
potting
saiL
linens
,
some
antiques
,
misc.
l1m1ftf&lt;;, '1• wlm! vo{l rt•~l wrH bP WJder !lie sign of Virgo."
985-3505; if no answer, call
peat moss, fruit tr&amp;es and rose
house, bath, 7 rooms ,
glassware, washer and dryer,
qrp;JtiV ci mn Ht;h~.c1
985·3886 .
American Gen . Jonathan
bushes, Midway Market ,
natural gas forced a1r
One quarter mile out Rt. 143 fJ)
SCORPIO ( Oct. 24 - Nov .22) Wainwright, hero of Bataan
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
,
992-2582
,
•
signs, 992 -5147.
COMPLETELY FURNISHED 10 x 50
furnace. Large garage and
y,,, !I h~1vr· !f1 ht&gt; very clever to- in the racific Theater of
Bob :s Market . Mason , W.Va.
Colonial mobile home. Real
3;,. acre. $19,500.
•,, • flnv In c.uhctup vn111 oppQ-&lt;:;111011
- (304) 773-5721 .
good
buy
.
Gene
Dunn
,
Rockspr·
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
World War II, was born Aug.
ings Rood , post sawmill, first
lju-.y ''' hld1na h"l"hlllf1 thPhome, natural gas. city
ECONOMY
TRACTOR
with
all
ol·
white frailer ocrass the little
r::r t•tr(&gt; s &lt;;n thf'\' 11 hP dnuhlv dtl· 23, 1883. This also is the date
water , and 2 lots for
tochments. like new, asking
of birth
of
American
bridge on lefl .
RISING STAR Kennel Boordin_g ,
$10,000.
.
$2250, Phone (614) 698·3290 .
Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
ba ndleader B ob Crosby
NEW LISTING Extra
1970
HILLCREST
troller,
all
elecSAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec.
all breeds. dean san itary CANNING TOMATOES. PEPPERS ,
( 1913 ) and dancer-actor Gene
tric, two bedrooms , excellent
nice home surrounded by
•a.. • 21) A lr1Pf\rl m&lt;~v lltl.Dtils•vely
cucumbers. CleiOf'ld Forms .
facilities oe 367 -7112 . Cheshire.
priced
.
condition,
reosonably
shrubbery, swimming pool,
Kelly
(
1912).
.. 'vo l tln !P•~r to do some\h•nq !nr
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine
Phone (61.4 ) 367-0292.
Call oiler .C pm. , 992-7642 .
large family room with
.., ,. vn1• tor1rty Accent 1mmedJ.&lt;:~I ely
Cleland.
On this day in history:
HOOF
HOL
LOW.
Buy
,
sell
,
trade
fireplace
.
3
lovely
,; .. Hf• t'0t dcl h;we Sf'r:nnc1.th0uOhls
HOME. 12 x 60. Price
In 1924, Mrs. Miriam r~Ma 1 '
or 1rain horses . RUTH REEVES , TREE RIPENED orchard peaches . MOBtLE
bedrooms ,
2
baths,
$5,500.
Coii992-585B.
won
the
_t!~~e~~ hone (614) 698-3290,
White or yellow starting Mon. ,
CAPRICORN (O.ec . 22-Jan. J') Ferguson
fireplace In living, full
f &lt;, rf~Acl"l vour obiPcti ve todav. Democratic nomination for
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs.
Aug. I. Mason P.ach Orchard. FOR SALE or ren~ . Good location ,
ba..,ment and garage.
gas heat , city water. 949-2269.
--~&gt;~. v£111 mtflhf have to . tn _k P :J t~r- governor
of . Texas. In
NEAR RUTLAND ~
(Min .) Collies , ~ female~. 7 197~ TERRAMITE Backhoe, $3000.
r:w i ('I U&lt;; rot tlf' Work throuqh mroom house, bath, well
weeks old. Shots end wormed.
Phone (614)-446·7150 .
November, she became the
......- (f'tn'tPt ll tplr&gt;&lt;; tf VOtl CArl I re:Jc h
water, with 234 acres of
Phone (61-4 ) 367·0292 or CANNING PEACHES , Bring confirst woman to be elected
thr tor hmsr.
land. On_ly $9,500 .
367~
toiner
&amp;
winter
potatoes.
governor of a state.
POMEROY-- 3 bedrooms.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Societv ,. Phones.l3-2693 .
2. STORY 3 bttdf0onl frame
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
.
In
1926, hundreds of thou1
'
house,
F
.A.
furnaCe
,
storm
win·
bath,
·natvral gas, c ity
T ~rm·· tS ntll Ofl -Vf)l lr '&gt;tl1e IOde!y II
Animp . Ca_reline, 992·7680: or 1975 oiOO Kowoso~i low mileage · dews , fireplace in Middleport.
water, 2 pon::hes and large
·::~·, v(•ll non l mow' wh~'&gt;£"1 thP'"oooor- sands mourned the death of
~ftEir b.p. m.. . :. _.~2-5-427_
. ._ _
992-5510 .
'
.
Phone 992 -3-457 .
garden . Just $7,000.
idol
Rudolph·
!uru tv ,-.,,--.o;~i1\ s 1l'lelf" '' s l1k.P.Iy movie
POMEROY Large 5
A~l
BREED
dog
grooming.
J
.
and
ll,C:E
NEW
Wizard
Refrigerator,
TRAILER
&amp;
LOT
for
sale,
75
Elm
St.,
vr111 w('ln t at&gt;nPrJ'tlr&gt; "nv sonrks
Valentino.
D. Kennel!. Reasonable. rates .
Sl50, Also,e&gt;1955 Ford Pick up,
Middleport . Phone992·7307.
bedrooms. 1'12 baths. full
In 1968, a U .N: resolution
No drugs used . Coli for Op·
$200 and Volkswog'on Fastback
·• · PISCES (FOb. 20-March 20) Do
basement, central healing, •
pointmen t, 7.!12-31 62.
Sedan, $ISO. Coli 9A9-2873.
TRAILER AND LOT for sole on
...,..~ htt~tn~~s lorl"Y onlv wrlh l1rms or condemned the Soviet bloc
and nice lot. Furnished or
Fourth St. , Mason , Phone (61-C)
..... ' •n&lt; l rvrch t ~ l !l vau have found to be invasion of Czechoslovakia,
unfurnished, you decide .
AKC .TOY poodle pUppies. Two SEARS KENMORE Dryer and
992-7307.
·'1
rf'rllt&lt;'lhh• Det~lmq wtlh un- hut Russia vetoed it in the
53 ACRES 2 good
apricot, $100 each . Phone
Speedqueen automatic washer.
,,\· • provPn Pntrlres 15 rl rrsky venture
949-23-40 before 4 pm . , osk for
Excellent
co nd i tion , LARGE PERMA-STONE house In
. springs, several acres, qf
Security
Council.
v •u 1J1 t)P SI
Mr~ . William~ . After 6 pm. call
Reasonably
pri ced . Coli
Tuppers Plains for sale by
tractor land, little barn and
In 1971, agreement was
9-49·2571.
992-5832,
after
5
pm.
owner.
3
bedr.
,
2
bath.
Phone
all
minerals. $16,500.
ARIES (March 2t -April 1!1) reached on the future of West
.
(61&lt;)667·3065.
Mf
.DDLEPORT
All
Thosr• you know e~s Partners or . 6erlin . Russia pledged
MALE CH IHUAHUA . Golden· 275 GALLON Fuel Oil tonk. :-::f.-:-:::::-:,=::--;---:-;--;----;--electric 3 bedroom home
Fown in color. Also , two florses
98S-358a.
· HOUSE FOR Sole, 2 bedr .., modern
n:s&lt;&gt;ocmtes are onfy parity tn . ac lust 5 years old. Fully
===~~------~
kitchen, corpt~~ting, full bose·
wilh colts . 7.42-2962 .
cord wrth your lhrnkrnq today "unhindered" passage of
liVESTOCK.
FEEDER
pigs,
40-!?Q
m•nt
with
office
,
garage.
lnsuto1ed, and well kept up.
traffic
between
West
Bertin
Know WhPrP the qe;us mesh and
pounds . $30 per head . Call
Situated on 1, ocra of land,
•F enced back yard. A good
whf'rt?' thf'v mash 1
and West Germany across
985-3588:.:·--.,.--..,.,-----Good witll plus Leading Cr"k
buy at $18,500.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You East German territory.
4 ACRES Building ar
TAI'IGHEE RAM. Also , ear corn.
Water . Call 992 ·7294 or
,n..-ty QJVfl chrecl!ons hastily tO·
troller lots on old Route 3:1
Coli (~_4) 698._·«= 99
:.:·- ---:-=-c992-5502.
·
.. ' dAy lf your instruclrons aren't
Narth.
~our
New aCquamrances Could took -·
-·expbcit lhe resultS c ould be
COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR , ~N~::I~o~t~:Ui~~ •==~~
NEW LISTING - 50M100
mo re a11taclive !han those
$35. Coppertone Gas Range,
shoddy
PARTS FOR 1971 Goloxie Ford for
foot lot In Pomeroy has a 2
2 'It both bilevel from the
you ve ~nown for a long time.
$50. Two Wheel Bearcot garden
sole
Phone
992·5858
.
bedroom air conditioned
tractor with
plow and
own.,. ond tCNe! Lorge family
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Don"! LEO (July 23-Aug.22) D•ff•culi
troller.
()&gt;ly
cu
lll
vo
tor,
$70
.
Murray
room
with
fireplace
,
eot·i
n
kit·
take a flyer loQay 1f you have only
tasks rni1y q rve you lrts tf'lday 1969 MALIBU 2 dr . ~ordtop. Call
WE
HAVE
GOOD
Lownmower,
$25 . Call
cflen with double-o'llen range
llflllt~rl ml0r ma110n. You coUld
992·2724
.
because you tack perSJsteiice
949-2042
.
and
dishwasher,
formal
dining
PROPER"T:Y
FOR
be hJce a ~ ane tryinq to cle.ar the
Ra the r than b~1ng unpmduc tlye, 1917 FORO Four-Wheel Drive.
room, two car garage, central
SPECIAL
PEOPLE.
runW' fi'l' without a propeller.
air, on etcre lot Nice drive to
P. S., P. 8., 4·speed, thra!J- HOUSE FOR SALE - Mo•l sell
ta~e on those thmgs you can
HelenL.TNfard
everything, Mon. and Tues_., '!,
'' CANCER
power · plants and rhlnet.
quorter . Still under warranty.
21-July 22) Trv handle w1!h ease
C. lrutt TNford
mile belowM'i ddlepOrt"an Rt. 7,
$&lt;3.000. 992·7492.
Coli 949·2b73.
:-:to ·he ·urlpart1al today with aH .
I JIIt: wsP~P~:R fo:NTERPRISF::ASSN 1
in l~i.J '"asquott'd ~l' ihr L'.S. f Jr'f!l
of l.abm: Uutr(llt uf Lobo1 staftsJi(.~. lmll1•fin .\'11 187:i

rr·~•

idumiuum, hu..-y PGCe, uocllitd
tad liar.~ 10d JIIOIIll, phlll · er

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Storm Windows &amp; lnsul•
lion.
Call Profession1ls

GUTTER
SERVICE

~..5:..---='

Pomeroy &amp; Rut land .

WJirll/l~ trf abouJ

mo.

CAPl'AlN EASY
-. HMM
- .. -- ·- ...
TAI&lt;e; TIM&amp;

will wit
YIN ptedJ. 1""M ll rMB liM: ii IU

1ffl~1.\.ft ~1} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

:0::.~

PINE POSTS

Cui 6 ft . long wsquare ends which
measure no less than
8 in. ·and no more than
10&gt;i2" outside the
bark.
ca 11 Pomeroy Forrest
Products for prices
and
delivery
instructions.
992-5965

t.mr, ttlit Uta wiU et~Yiaet lb: btalt-

P-!9Z-121Z
•!9Z.fZil
. nM. to4:lOP...
SM.ES AIID SEJYICf
7-28-1 mo.

!92-$292

waat •

iltd'ni§C
r :r 11om~, If mebiJr

An Equal Opportunity Employer

COI NS , CURRENCY , tokem. , old
pocket wotches and cho rn.s,
silver and gold. We need 1964
and older sil¥er coins. Buy , sel.a;_____
or trode' Coli Roge r Wamsley,

WANTED

llr~tnrmpmr/, •s lindawmol al'r 1af{1'

vallur 11f

~UII

ty fvr yr.t) '' t:umt, lhil

31110 lloitt Sl

6-21·1

---

/,\ S"rll/ IC110-\"
"/Jrirrr~ ouplu.wd hy fat};( fmrl.:

r:till pruOd -~

,_,OIIio

Pomeroy, Ohio

7:1)0-Truth or Consequence:s J; Expohilo ' 77 .4; Liars
Club 6; Country Carnival 8; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Anyone for Tennyson? 20.
7 : 3D-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares 4;
Let' s Del With It 6; Match Game PM 8: MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33: $25,000 Pyramid 10: Wlld
Kingdom 13: Mus ic City 15.
8 :oo-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4,15: Happy Days 6, 13:
Jack Benny 8.10; All-Star Swing Festival 33: Only
Then Regale My Eyes 20. .
B:*-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; PKyllls 8,10.
9 :01)-Pollce Woman 3,4,15: Movie "Smash -Up on
Interstate 5" 6,13: M ·A· S-H 8,10; All-Star Swing
Festlyal 20 : Opera Theater 33.
9 : 3~ne Day At A Time 8,10.
IO:oo-Pollce Story 3,4,1 5: JackVan lmpe Crusage 8;
Kolak 10; News 20.
·
.f0 : 3D-Pit~adlllv Circus 20,

b y...,- ~utMrilllllda!Rr "fur Urbau

•wnilll• ~JHI ca~.

PLUMBING&amp;
HEATING INC.

Weddinp
Port11ils

TUESDAY,AUGUST23, 1977

KingsbuiJ Home Sales

CARTER

300 West Second St-

Pomeroy Forest ProTop price for slonding
sawtimber. "Call 992-5%5 or
Ken t Honby , 1·446-8570.
duct~ .

NO ITEM TOO large or too small.

THE PHOTO PLACE

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICE

TIMBER

CASH!!. Junk cars, Fry's Truck 8i
Auto, Rutland . Phone 742-2081
or 7-42- 957~1osed_ Mondays .

Business Services

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 • .

PUPPV , 10 weeks old ,
lOSI
Brown collie. lost In area bet·
ween Union Ave. and Rt. 7
Bypass . Reward , 992-3976 .

beds ,
etc .,
complete
households. Write M . D. Miller ,
Rt . -4 , Pom.foy , Okio or call
992 -7760.

VOU OAVfi MY

Business OpportmliliPS

YOUR OPPORTUNITY

LOST
YELLOW Collie. Cher.-y
R•dge-Hemlock. Grove area .
Coli98S-J974 ,

OLD FURNITURE , ice boiC~s . brass

TELEVISION
VIEWING

IT's THE SAME FATE

-YOU· "VOu--f

Fury Ill, 1975 air
conditioning, 8 ,000 B.Y.U. Two
Will buy 1 pie&lt;e or complete
15" Rough Tread res , like new ,
hous,ehold . New , "used. or anti· _ .131 Ebenezer Street , Pomeroy .
ques. Martin's Furniture, 2'0 N.
2nd St. , Middleport. Phone 1972 DATSON 2..o.z. imm,oculote,
Specia l Edition . (604 ) 367-7260.
992-6370 .
:c--::--~c~­
""
lf=
effi=·W
="iiilteiT-'"·~~-:-0~~~--~--~ LATE MODEL Chevy 't , ton .4 - 1969 CHEVROLET NOVA, "0- rust ,
e)(fro good cond ition . 949-2269 ,
~ 'l!J - . ~-.
wheel drive pickup . Call
992,5335.
00 YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX PERIENCE? FR lENDl Y TOY PAR- WANTED OLD pianos . dny condiTIE S HAS DP&lt;NINGS FOR
' ion . Paying $10 and $25 each .
MANAGERS
liEM O N·
Firs t fl oor on ly. Expert moving .
STRATORS. SELL GUARANTEED
Fully Insu red company . Wri1e , STARCRAFT .lOth anniversary sole
TOYS - GIFTS. NO SERVICE
giving d lroct ions . Witten
on mini-motors , trailers , and
CHARGE .
PHONE
CAR
Pianos . BoK 188, Sardis , Ohio
folddowns . Trovelsror 25 ft .
NECESSARY . CALL COLLECT TO
6 1414~'-·-"
160
=
5 ._
439-46 ._!hone_(_
$4400.00; 20 ft . mini -motor'
CAROL D~ Y (518) 46~~ -S10,850 .00. We sell service and
WAITRESS &amp; CARHOP Opply m
quali ty. Camp Conle~ Storcroft
person. Craw's Sleok House. , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Soles, Rt . 62 nor th of Pt. Pleo~sont .
!omeroy, Oh i~ - - - _
FAIR MO
~N
c:T::H-:-:S:::P::EC
:-1-A-,lon-e~ntf:-re
BABYSITTER TO live in. P.O . Box
_?24 :...Gallipolis , Okio.:............. _
s t.ock . See them at COONER'S
CAMPE.RS on Rainbow ridge .
$150 WEEKlY POSSIBLE working
From Rt.7, toke Meigs 28 or 32
with advertising campaign . No
to Basham . Open evenings.
to
buy
experienc;;e requi red. Send self- Wanted
top . Owner, Robert Codner,
addressed envplope for op- delivered to our mill
Lpng Bottom . Ohio.
p licali"on.
Cumberland on aaily Run Rd . off
Research , Box 366, Cookeville,
Rt . 124 between
TN 36501.

3668, Sherry _lndestea d or
Sheriff's Office-.

f

.,

23,1977

•

L.....-------- - ---'

~

GASOUNE AILEY

'------------.J
qoinq to be

to sell,

Motor
sounds ·

Clqvia!

qood!

CARPENTER, floOring , ceiling ,
__Baneling. Phone992-27S9 ,

A~wer

30 French
river
31 Bearded,

22 Pianist
Myra
23Goads
24 Intrinsic
nature
25 Average
27 Edit
29 " The food

as grains
36 Chemical
suffix

37 Scottish
explorer

of love"

26 Sight

21 -Hashana 6--++-t28 Peer

Oswald and Jim Jacoby
;;--1---i---1

ULABNER

N--L0/8&lt;. ANCRICA.
- TRt.lCKS ROLL -

AU... OVER AMERICATI-llS SIG/J APf'SA.RS-

37 Destroy
38 Pleasing
to the eye
39 Israeli
40 Construct
tl Just got by,

with "ollt"
DOWN

1-;;...-f---t-+-t---r--

West

AXYDLBAAXR
J,ONGFEL!.OW

WHAT
HAPPENS
NOW,

PENNZOIL RUTLAND open doily
till 10, Closed Mondays ,
wr.cker servic•. flr• repair.
Phono 7&lt;2·9575 or 7&lt;2·2081 .

ENVE

NVPHE

WR

AX ATO

JVEHWJ

EW

SDVHU

ENA

VCCTAKKWT

WATER WELL drilling, Phone
William P. Grant at 7.C2-2979
after 6p.m.

HE

HK

VSEHJC

'
LARAJKHXA . -

-

WJ

ENA

JANTG

RUSSELL?
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE PRODUCT THAT WILL NOT
SELL WlTHOUT ADVERTISING WILL NOT SELL PROFITABLY WITH ADVERTISING.-ALBERT LASKER

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
••
: BUY, SELL OR TRADE? :

4Al03

rolls

C) 1977 Kin&amp; 1n1ur"t SJi ndiulr,

Pass
Pass
Pass

North EaSt

,.
lt

Pass
Pass

,.

South
14

Pass

Opening lead - K¥

CRYPTOQUOTES
HK

¥QJ96
t64

4KQJ6

hints . Each d ay the code letters are different.

HE

¥AK2
tJ107S
.98742

North·S:outh .vulnerable

one letter simply stands for another. ln th is _sample A Is
used f or the three I.: s. X for the two O's, etc. Stngle letters.
apostrophes 1 the len gth and formati on Qf the words are all

WE$TCOAST,_

EAST
.9762

SOUTH IDi
• AQSJ
• 10 4
tQ9 3

It

PIANO TUNING, lane Daniels,. 12
years of ser'llice. Phone
9'12·2082.

WEST

.s

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It;

HARRISON'S T.V. Repair. Service
Calls . 216 Sycamore. St., Mid·
dleport. Phone 992·2522.

hands in case trumps are

In ~ .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
When declarer and dummy
hold eight trumps between
them they have a satisfactory
trump base. Of course, a total
of nine trumps or more is
better, bui when you hold
eight there is a 68 per cent
chance thai the adverse
trumps will divide 3-2 against
you . . At the . same . time you
m~st plan your. play to guard
against such things as a 4-1
break which you will be faced
with 28 per cent of the time
and even to worry about the
0 break which you run into the
remaining 4 per cent.
With four trumps opposite

•

.:
"

:

-:

LISTEN TO THE

•~

SWAP SHOP

•
••
•·
:1 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM •
••
••
:• 92 in the Country
·
.
.
.
. ..••

..,...•......

•

ii'5 601N6 TO 8E A
~T WEDDING, AND
1(011'~ 601N6 TO LOVE
Ml{ MtDE-TO-BE!

AND t{OO'Rf 601N6""ID

BE M'l 6EST-MAN ...
ISN'T nilS

•

~ · ·············

l

.•·

NOW AI30UT

niAf HAT. ..

divided H .
The H trump break doesn't
bother South if he follows this
principle. The defense starts
with three rounds of hearts.
He ruffs the third, cashes his
ace of trumps since he can afford one trump lead and plays
his king of clubs.
East takes his ace and leads
a fourth heart. South
this
with his queen of trumps,
leads his last trump to dummy
to pick up East's remaining
trumps and claims the rest of
the tricks .

.s

!Guam's
capital

~-

four you can plan to ruff in
either hand. but should be
·careful aboot ruffing in both

• 8753
t AK62

plant

992-5858.

Associates

Two 4's can handle one
NORTH
.K"Jl04

34 Stage
35 11 - Man"
. (3 wds.)

MOBILE Home Repoir, Elec ..
plumLk. g and heating. Phone

992-225t or 992-2561

BRIDGE.

25 Bout

33 Celery-like

5232:.,
. ==----:----:-:-:-

~-7·~2~~~6~-~~~--~~

Yesterday's

9:3D-We Think You Should Know 3: Kalllkaks 4,15.
10:01)-Tales of the Unexpected 3,4,15; Baretta 6,13:
News ·20.
. 10 :3()---(oplng V'llh Kids 20. .
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15: MacNell, Lehrer Report
'33: Fawlty Towers 20 . .
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6,13: Movie
"Prisoner In the Middle" 8; Movie "The Tunnel of
Love"IO; ABC News 33. .
12 :01)-Janakl 33.
12 :4D-Mystery of the Week 6,13 .
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,.C .
1 : 30-Mary Hartman 10.
2: 1D-Nows 13.

32 Legis.

EXCAVATING . !Ia&lt;•'· backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat field, Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7.42-2008.
WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too lOrge or too small. Phone

America 33; .Documentary Showcase 20.

Gynt's
mother
_1 .r.r-.o Ben Hur's
betrayer

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
bockhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt , to soil . limestone ond ·
g(ovel. Coli Bob or R~r Jef .
fen , dc.y phone 992·7089,
night phone 992-3525 "' m .

6 :DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 : 3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6: CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 3k&gt;
7 :01)-Truth or Consequences 3; Expohlo '77 4: Liars
Club 6:.· Pop Goes t.h e Country 8; News 10; To Tell
The Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Insight 33.
·
7:3D-Dolly 3; Dante Party Disco 4; Match Game PM
6: $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33; The Judge 10: Break the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
a :oo-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15: Eight Is Enough 6,13:
1
Good T"imes 8,1 0; Nova 20,3:1 .
.
a :JO-Bustlnq Loose a .10.
9:DO-CPO Sharkey 3,4,15; Charlie's AngelS 6,13;
Movie "Attack on Terror" 8.10; Theater in

THAT'S A GOOD BOY,
LEETLE TATER-- GO
TO SWEEPY PIE --

l -- SO'S '10RE MAW
I CAN SWEEPY HOUSE

&gt;-

A California reader wants to
know if we ever make a
takeout double of one major
suit willlout four or more of
the other one.
We don't like to, but never
has no place in contract. If we
have :
'

•AKx¥·xxtAKxx4KQxx
we just have to double an
adverse opening heart bid.
(Do you have a quutiorr lor
·the experts? Write "As.lc the
Ja·c o"tJy·s 1 ' care ot .this
newspaper. The Jacob,. Yrl/1
ans-wer indivtdUIII quNtiofll It

stamped , aelt-addr••••d
envelopes are encloaed. The
most interesting quNtlon. . will
be Used In this COlumn 1nd wilt ·
receive copies of JACOBY

MODERN./

�•

EXTENDED ounAXIK
Tburoday tbroucb
Satarday, fair Tbunday '
and a cbaate of sbowen
Friday aad Saturday.
Highs wiD be lD tbe 70s
Tbunclay, wanntag lo llle
upper 70. or 8h by
Satunlay. La... will be Ia
the 50s Tbunday aDd In the
upper 50s ur IGs Friday and
Saturday.

•

e1gs miners vote to wor
SALEM CENTEH - AU
three mines near here
operated by the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. which supplies
coal to the Gavin Power Plant
at Cheshire in Gallla County
were in ope ration today.
AcC&lt;lrding to United Press
International, all of Ohio's
coal mines appeared to be

Hospital News

u, .

RIDES IN THIS OLD-FASHIONED surrey (with the
fringe on top ) will be offered again this year during the
annual observance of "Yesteeyear" to be held from 11
a.m. to 11 p.m. Sept. 17 at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center

Holzer Medical Center
. (DISCHARGES Aug.
. . A PARADE including a Mlddl~port
truck Saturday afternoon kicked off the annual
Nida Erwin, Gamet Ginnis,
Bible school of the Middleport Church of the Nazarene. Theme of the school which got
Sarah Hawkln.!, Sue Hughes,
IUlderwayMooday evening is "The Family God." The school is being held from 6::W to 8::W
Nora Jones, Jeffrey King,
evenings at the church on Beech St . Children of the comm\Ulity from ages three through the
Liza Martin, Mrs. John
eighth grade level are invited. Classes will be concluded Friday niRJ,t.
McCarty and daughter, Early
Scarberry, Granville Setzer
in Pomeroy. Craft demonstrations, antique displays,
Jr., Howard Tucker, James
entertainment, goods and game booths and other
~--------~-----------------,
Turley
Jr., Hallena Wheeler,
activities are planned.
(Continued from page I)
Michelle Wickline.
(BirtbsAug.Z%,
$140,000" and said it was a
I
Mr. and Mrs. Michael bribe.
McWilliams, a daughter,
CLYDE LYNCH
- Mandel joined a $316,000
CHARLE.S CRINER
COLUMBUS
Clyde
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Eastern Shore, Md.,land deal
Charles S. Cr)ner, 49,
James Bush, a daughter, called Ray's Point, Inc., Athalia, died Sun(lay around Lynch, 82, of 100 North
a.m. In General Hospital . Garfield Ave.. Columbus, a
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. saying he wanted a place to 8Cincinnati.
He had suffered former Middleport resident,
Min~ Workers District 17, the today. Union officials in
Burgess
Riddle,
a
son,
retire
when
·
he
left
public
severe
burns
in an accident In died Sunday morning at Mt.
strike's focal point, voted to District 31 said the northern Jackson.
lawrence
County
last Carmel HospitaL
offiCI!.
Mandel
paid
$150
for
West Virginia C&lt;lalfields were
return to work for 60 days.
Fr
iday.
He Is survived by two
his share in the deal.
" There's
still
a also· returning to normal
He
was
born
Dec. 20. 1927. sisters In Cinc innati, one
PLEASANT VALLEY
Prosecutors placed a $45,000 In Mason County, W. Va. son sister In St. Louis, Mo., a
considerable amount of
DISCHARGES
Capt.
value
on
Mandel's of the late Cl\arles Edward brother In California, and
picketing activity in Di~ict
several nieces and nephews
Charlie
Stone,
Point
investment
and
called
it a and Nona Henry Criner.
17 reported ," said West
He had worked on tow boats including Bill Guthrie of
Pleasant ; Mrs. Ora Durham, bribe.
Virginia Coal Association
and was a riverman all his Middleport
Jackson,
0
.;
Mrs.
Charles
·-In
I974,
Mandel
received
life. He never married .
He was a member of the
spokesman Dan Fields .
Whitt,
Pliny;
Mrs.
Albert
$42,000to
fmance
his
divorce.
(Continued
from
page
I)
Second
Baptist Church In
He
Is
survived
by
three
Pickets were reported in
serving
as
brothers, Lewis, Columbus ; Columbus,
Cremeans,
Milton
;
Kellf
The
money
was
funneled
Logan
and
Kanawha Williams indicate only three
chairman
of
the
usher
'
b
oard
William,
Middleport
.
and
Counties, and one operation bullets were found at the Bonecutter, Kanauga; Mary through several businessmen Leroy. Beckley, W. Va ,; five until his Illness.
Funeral services will' be
was picketed in Boone · scene of the crime. However, McDermitt, Point Pleasant ; from a Catholic missionary sisters , Mrs . Ernest ine
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the
County.
the prosecution showed Mrs. William Smith, Point order - the Pallottine Moodlspaugh , Middleport ; Second
Baptist Church .
Mrs. Harry Fathers. Mandel insisted it Mrs. Les ( Lectal Bush,
Local leaders of the jurors four bullets and that Pleasant;
Gallipolis; Mrs . Hazel Burial will be In Cl nclnn~fl .
Thomas,
Point
Pleasant
;
was
a
loan.
Charleston-based District 17 one of them was fired from
Columbus ; Mrs .
Mrs.
David
Rhodes,
Mandel admitted Walker,
Virginia Allen , Columbus and
voted to return to work after Sacco's gun.
the union's Iniernatioanl
In addition, trial Judge Gallipolis, 0.; Mrs. R. M. accepting another $12,000 Mrs . Jewell Fields, Hartford,
Executive Board agreed to Webster Thayer is reported McKinney, Scotts Depot, W. from the Pallottine Fathers W.HeVa.
aHended schools In West
seek a meeting with the coal to have made many Va .; Clyde Porter, Gallipolis ; for his second wife, Jeanne. Virginia.
ACTOR CABOT DIES
industry to resolve problems disparaging comments about William Gygar, Point He said the money was used
Funeral services will be
Pleasant;
Grace
DeVault,
for
her
legal
expenses
to
seek
VICTORIA,
British
held
2
p.m,
Wednesday
at
with the union's health plans. Sacco and Vanzetti and their
Leon;
James
McClure,
child
support
from
her
first
Miller
's
Home
for
Funerals
Columbia
(UP!)
-Actor
The strike idled more than counsel during the trial.
with Rev . Ron Adams of- Sebastian Cabot, 58, died
Letart;
Floyd
Gordon,
husband.
And there was evidence
80,000 miners in five states at
ficiating. Burial will be In
Amidst these deals, .....,und
early today after suffering a
that
the
prosecution Grimms Landing; lslunael
its peak.
Hill Cemetery.
Thompson,
Henderson,
and
Mandel's
friends
bought
.
stroke.
Cabot is well known
Friends may call at the
distorted ,
District 17 Vice President deliberately
Sandra
Smith,
Gallipolis
Marlboro
Race
Track,
a
nowfuneral
home
from
2-4
and
7-9
for
his
television
roles, which
Cecil Roberts said today that evidence and testimony.
p.m . Tuesday .
.
Ferry.
defunct,
half-mile
track
in
include
the
butler
in "Family .
None of these questions was
some of the pickets
Pallbearers
will
be
Dorsll
Birth - A son to Mr. and . Prince George's County.
apparently came from found by the U.S. Supreme
McCoy. Roger Bush, James Mfalr," as well as "CheckMrs.
Darrell
Stone,
Leon.
Prosecutors
contend
Bush. Robert Bush, Theodore mate" and appearances on
Court or Massachusetts' SuKentucky.
·
M8ndel
influenced
race
track
Ba iley and Doug Bean .
"Stump the Stars." His
One official from the Logan preme Court to be adequate
legislation
to
benefit
major
, movies included
Coal Operators ' Association either for a new trial or for ·
Marlboro
as
a
way
to
pay
off
"Kismet/'
in 1955 and 11 Time
said only nine of 33 mines commutation of sentences.
his frienda for their gifts.
Machine" in 1960.
But these rulings were made
reported partial crews.
&gt;
HUDBOSSOUT
AID RUNS MADE
"We've had pickets over on narrow legal distinctions,
FLASH RETURNING
COLUMBUS (UPIJ- Paul
The Pomeroy Emergency
here again, " he said. not on the overall merits of
SYRACUSE
Fantasy
G.
Lydens, local director of
Squad
answered
the
case.
two
calls
' •They're running _around
Flash
will
return
to
London
U.S.
Housing and DevelopMonday,
at
11:17
a.m.,
to
the
here with ski masks and have
DUCKWORm MOVED
Pool
Thursday
for
an
evening
ment
(HUD ), announced his
Easterri
High
School
for
Don
their license plate.• covered.
NOW YOU KNOW
SYRACUSE
- Harold
of dancing and swimming . resignation Monday.
Seventy-five per cent of the
The Pieta was the only one Eynon· who was taken to Disco stroke, part two, will
Duckworth
Is
C&lt;lnfined
to a
Lydens told his staff he was
field ,is down. "
of Michelangelo's many Veterans Memorial Hospital, be held from 8 to 11 . p.m.
Wellston
Rest'
Home.
Cards
leaving the agency for . perIn District 29, union works that he signed - and and at 3:07 p.m., a patient
may be sent to hiin at the
officials said no piCkets were then only because he was taken from the Meigs Regular adult swinuning will sonal reasons, but did not
Wellston
Rest Home, ~
reported and all miners were overheard a viewer attribute Mental Health Center to not be held. Admission ·is $1. elaborate. His •resignation North Park,
Wellston.
Proceeds to Syracuse will be effective Sept. 29.
expected to return by later the statue to anoiher artist, Holzer Medical Center.
Village.

ru-e

Mandel

!

Area Deaths . !

Kentucky pickets keep ·miners out
ANDREW GALLAGHER
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
( UPf ) - Roving pickets,
some from neighboring
Kentucky, today prevented
thousands of miners fiom
returning tq. work in West
Virginia's mines, prolonging
a wildcat walkout now in its
ninth week.
The pickets stopped coal
trucks in. some areas and
forced drivers to dump their
By

loads .
About

half

of

West

Virginia's 65,000 coal miners

returned to work today but
the rest was prevented from
entering mine sites by the
roving pickets.
The back-to-work
movement started in the
northern

West

Virginia

coalfields Monday and
spread w the southern mines
after local leaders of United

Miller will speak to
district's ·young GOP
NEUlONYILLE - Rep.
Cl.arence E . Miller (lOth
Dist., R-Lancaster) will be
the main speaker at a
of
young
meeting
Republicans of the district
August 30 at the Hocking
Valley Motor Lodge qn Rt. 33
just south of here.
Athens Cou.rity Audito r
Pete Couladis, presently
organizing
young
Republicans into a " lOth
District Federation of Young
Republican.s' 1 said it is open

tO' all interested or young
republicans in the district
which includes Lawrence,

Galtia,
Meigs,
Athens,
Vinton, Washington,
Hocking, Fairfield, Jackson ,
Noble, Morgan, Perry and
Muskingurn C&lt;lunties.
According to Couladis, one
of the goals of the federation .
will be to establish at least
one active club in each of the
13 counties , There are
currently five clubs chartered with the Ohio League of
Young Republican Clubs,
representing four counties.
All interested Republicans
are encouraged to attend this
meeting which will begin at
7:30p.m.

News .• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
IUlderwent a tracheotomy and was c(assed in · critical
Condition. The outlook was uncertain, a hospital spokeswoman
said.
.
Pigeon, 78, was a star for decades, dating back to the silent
film era, and was best known for his pictures with Greer
Garson in the 1931&gt;; and 1940s, including the Academy Award
winning "Mrs. Minniver ." Pidgeon,listed as in good condition
at St. .John's Hospital during the weekend, began having
breathing difficulties Monday morning, a hospital spokes•
woman srud, and was transferred to the intensive care unit .

Sacco

)'
,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~­

•·

COMBINATION OFFER!
~PRIGHT WITH CLEANING TOOLS
ENROUTE TO KENTUCKY - A group of Amish
families in three wagons passed through Meigs County
Monday enroute to Kentucky where land has been

DRIVE-IN BANKING
Banking by car is simple, easy and
prompt. Experienced tellers are on
duty during the regular banking hours
to serve you quickly, courteously, and
efficiently.

'

FREE CLOTHING
Free Qlothing Day will be
held at the Salvation Army,
225 Butternut Ave., Thursday
from 10 a.m. until noon. All
area residents needing
clothing are welcome.

MASON DRIVE .IN
SAT. TltRU TUES.
BREAKING POINT

ASK TO WED
A marriage Ucens.e was
issued to James Bernard
. Miller, 65, .Canton, and
ibelrita Virginia Custer, 61,
Syracuse.

&amp;.
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.

'--f\b

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FRIENDLY BANK"

A STAR IS BORN

TRY OUR f,RESH

PEACH SUNDAES
AND SHAKES ·

~
•

•

'

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&lt;. •

AOOLPH'S

,
1

MIDDLEPORT, OH10
Member Federal Deposit lnsur;mce
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

purchased. Amish, through religious conviction shun
modern technological advances and cling to the old
simple ways of living.
'

DAIRY VAllEY
.

HRS. : 10 :00A.M. Iii11 :00P.M.Sun - Thurs, lO:OOA,M
Iii 12 ;00 P.M. Friday and saturday.
.
See Us AfThe Pomeroy Bend Bridge

ACTIONS FU.ED
Two actions for dissolution
of marriage have been filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court and one divorce
· Filing
for
granted.
dissolution were Marcia
Spaulding and Millard
Spaulding; Middleport, and
Robert C. Bailey, and Irene
Bailey, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Karen Pierce was granted ·a
divorce tram Jon Pierce,

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - UUy Adams,
Long Bottom; Leona Hensley, Long Bottom; Dana
Canter, Syracuse; Winnie
Dailey, Racine; Leslie
· Wheeler, Rutland; Roger
Klein, Clifton, W. Va.; Carol
Coleman, Reedsville; Robert
Dye, Letart, W. Va.; Etta
Will, Pomeroy ; Kevin
Stewart, Pomeroy,
Discharged - Christl
~t, Edith Woolard,
James Scally, Mark Still,
Hazel Phillips, Herman
Warner, Emma Johnson;
Margaret Johnson, Hollie
Starcher, George Foss,,
Sandra Marcinko, Scheryl
Saxon, Gladys Chaffee,
Roberta

~-'

.

TWO RUNS MADE
Two calls were answered
Monday by the Middleport
Emergency Squad, at 10:11
a.m., taking Mildred Hawley,
160 N. Fourth Ave., to the
Holzer Medical Center, and
at . 10:34 p.m., Todd Allen
Lathey, 728 Pearl St,, also to
HMC.
TRAINING Ji;NDS
Marine Private David L.
Tielneyer, son of Mrs:
Loretta Tiemeyer of )06~
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, has
completed the 11-week
recruit training period at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
Parris Island, S. C, He joined
the Corps last. April.

SAVE $29

95

GIVES YOU A CHOICE
SO YOU CAN SET THE
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CARPET NAP.
REG. '69.95 UPRIGHT
. REG. '19.95 ATTACHMENTS
Total Value '89.90

$

95
model
1416

COUNCIL TO MEET
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council will meet
Thursday, Sept. 8, at 7:30
p.m.

::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·

Park denies
·wrongdoing
SEOUL, South Korea
(UPI)
Korean
businessman Tongs\Ul Park
broke nearly 10 months of
silence today to deny there
was a Korean goverment plot
to influence U.S. military and
economic policies with gifts
and favors.
"Whatever I have done in
the United States; especially
in Washington, has been done
on my personal aCC&lt;l\Ult as a
private businessman to
enhance
my
business
situation, " Park told a
jammed news cqnference in
his offitee . . ·
~
"This is the gospel truth
and it also has nothing to do
with foreign governments,
and the Korean government,
of course," he said.
Earlier today, Park, 41,
was called in by Korean
prosecutors who reportedly'
are conducting a probe of
theirownintoPark'spossible
violation of South Korea 's
currency laws stemming
from his American activities.
Park said the American
press h~d distorted the case
and that he was angry at
senior officials of the Justice
Department .with whom be
cooperated
in
the
preliminary investigation of
the case last year.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
lair Friday and Sunday and
a chance ()( showers
Satorday. Highs. wut be lu
the 80s and lows will be In
the upper 50s or 60s.
.;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Virginia's coal min'e rs were

prevented from returning to
work Tuesday by wildcatters,
some of them ll)leged to be
from neighboring Kentucky,
disrupting a scheduled end to
the eight-week work stoppage
begun here.

back to normal as members

A pocket of 5,000 miners,

of the United Mine Workers
Union ended their· wildcat
strike and returned to work. .
Some 1,500 striking UMW
members in southern Ohio
voted Tuesday to end their
wildcat strike and return to
work.
Members of UMW Locals
1980 and 1996 at the two
Southern Ohio Coal Co. mines
in Meigs County voted to
return to work beginning
Tuesday afternoon. Members
of UMW Local 1957 from
SOCC's Raccoon Mine No. 3
in Vinton County voted to
return to work at midnight.
The miners had stayed off
the job sporadically during
the past six weeks mainly
because of picketing miners
from other states.

centered chiefly in Pike
County, Ky., ignored warnings from .United Mine
Workers District 3\1 President
Robert Carter that they will
stand alone against coal
company-sought injunctions
if they continu e their
walkout.
The West Virginia Coal
Association said about 20,000
miners remained out In West
Virginia late Tuesday,
despite a general back-towork movement reported in
northern District 31 and the
22,500-member District 29 in
the .deep southern regions· of
the state.
·seventy five percent of the
production in Logan County,
W. Va., remained idled by
pickets stiorting ski masks,
(Continued on page 14)

LONG WAIT - West Virginians with Ohio their destination this morning via the
Henderson-Kanauga ferry service at 7 a.m. waited approximately one hour arid 15 minutes
to board. Likewise on' the Ohio side, apparently, as indicated by this string of drivers
waiting to get to West Virginia. A principal reason for the delay undoubtedly was the fact
that the larger ( 15 car) of the two ferries in operation temporarily became inoperative at
that hour.

•

•

confidential but what came
out later was gross
exaggeration arid even ugly
things came out.'' be said .
Asked if he would return to
Washington
where
a ·
CongressionalC&lt;lmrnittee and
the Justice Department were
investigating, he said, VOL XXVIII
NO. 92
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1977
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
"Unless I get an absolute
·
guarantee in writing or - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . : . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - -something, I would ,not even
consider going to the States."
Park said It was natural
that he came to know
American political figures .
"Washington is like my
second home. I went there at
17 and went to srhools there
Unless additional ·cracks are disC&lt;lvered, the Silver uncovered eight areas showing defects on the bridge. He said
and started iny business ;:::::::::::::;:;:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::::::::::; :::.::::.·
11
Memorial Bridge may be opened by mid-September, ac- that American Bridge Co., the firm repairing the bridge,
career there," he said. 1
TOUGH
CHIEF
made friends and since I had
cording to Joseph "Speed" Jones, commissioner of the West added an extra crew in an. effort to complete the repairs at the
DANVILLE,
111.
(UP!)
earliest possible time,
been very active in social
Department of Highways Tuesday night.
No
one
In
Pollee
Chief
Jones admitted that they still have not been able to detercircles, I came to know
Jones, along with Deputy Commissioner Dean Blake, made
Anthony
Potter's
departprominent political figures or
an unpublicized appearance at the MasOn County Courthouse mine what is causing the crack.s. He said all but one of the
cabinet ministers . It is . ment Is exempt from his before an estimated 60 people, including many public of- cracks are in the welds.
tough disciplinary stanThe first crack, discovered on July 6, was the largest and
nothing unusal."
ficials, to explain the state's position in closing the eight-year
dards
not
even
Potter.
most
visible. He said the other cracks, which were discovered
He said his departure from
old span and what measures are being taken to reopen it .
thief
was
Recenlly,
the
Washington to London was
through ultra-sonic testing are much smaller and pose no real
trying to load his shotgun Following his presentation, he answered questions from the
for business reasons, and not
.
danger.
•
when It discharged and audience.
because of the brewing
However,
he
said
a
major
problem
could.develop if stress
"There will be approximately two m_ore weeks of testing on·
scandaL
·
·
· blew a hole lD a wall of the
were
placed
on
the
·
bridge
such
as
that
brought about by
polt·ce
station ; the bridge," stated Jones.
Senior prosecutor Ahn
In giving an update on the bridge repair, he said as of this motorized traffic. He said the smaller crkcks could join
Potter docked himself a
Kyungsang of the Seoul
day's salary and said he time two defected areas have been repaired by installing a together.
District Prosecutor's Office
For that reason, the decision was made to keep the span
will pay all damages.
pair of ,splice plates over the areas. He said a third and fourth
said be had called Park in for
closed.
"preliminary questioning" ::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:';:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:, defect will be corrected by the end of the week,
(Continued on page 14)
However, he noted that as of the present time the testing has ·
and that no charges have
ALTER DIES
been filed against the
CINCINNATI (UP! ) Two defendants were fined on a cha.rge of driving while Archbishop Karl J. Alter,
and six others forfeited bonds intoxicated and $100 posted retired head of Cincinnati's
in the court of Pomeroy on a possession of marijuana Roman Catholic diocese, died .
at the age of 92.
ASSURING MEMBERS
Mayor Clarence Andrews charge; Terry Phillips, Tuesday
Alter
died
at
Providence
of
the House Armed SerTuesday night. .
·
Pomeroy, $30, speeding;
Hospital
here
about
4
p.m.
vices
Committee that the
Fined were Templeton Dennis Tillis, . Rutland, ·$25, EDT, a hospital spokesman
U. S. bas given a':"ay
.,.,. Sheriff James J . Proffitt numb~r of items was Grueser, Pomeroy, $31 and speeding ;
Paul
Avis, "!id.
noihing to the U.S;S.R. by
said today Bob Eynon, no age removed to be taken to Lab w ci&gt;sts, speeding, and Thomas Coolville, speeding, $32;
Aller,
ordained
a
priest
in
By United Press International
given, Syracuse, has been obtain flnger_Prints . . This Walters, Pomeroy, $200 and William Boring, Albany, $350, I910, was archbishop of canceling production of the
B-1 bomber, Defense
CINCINNATI- THE CINCINNATI BOARD of•Education charged with the breaking . mctde~t also 1S st1ll under C&lt;lsts, tampering with the driving while intoxicated,
Cincinnati
from
1950
to
1959,
Secretary Harold Brown
has toughened its student discipline code, adding four new and enteriilg of the Made mvesllgatwn.
property of others.
and Paul Maril:ella, Walling- Archbishop Joseph explained that tbe U. S. Is
offenses to the list of those that lead to automatic expulsion . DiVietro residence in that
Forfeiting bonds were Jeff ford, Pa., $32, speeding.
The Middleport Fire
Bernadine currently heads banking on the developOffenses added to the list are selling or transmitting drugs, village the night of August 13. Department and the Meigs Hysell, Pomeroy, $350 posted
tbe diocese .
ment of Its Cruise Missile
breaking and entering, making a false alarm of a fire or bomb Mrs. DiVIetro reported the County Sheriff's Department
fleet as an adequate
threat and extortion. Already punishable by mandatory breaking and entering re~ponded to a fire call to the
bargaining
card In future .
expulsions are arson, physical assault, possessing explosives, Monday afternoon. The in· Delmar Hawley residence at
siTateglc
arms
talks with
carrying a gun, robbery and sexual assault. The discipline' cident . Is still under ih- Silver Run, Rt. 2, Cheshire,
the
Soviets.
code revision \vas approved after the board adopted a list of vestigatlon.
where a 1974 GMC pickup
goals for the city's schools in 1977-78. Among the goals was
Eynon will appear before truck was on fire. The dash of
imptoving discipline and safety in the schools.
Meigs County Court Judge the truck was destroyed, and
Robert Buck later this week. telephone wires to the
NEWTON F ALUl, OHIO - VOTERS in this Trumbull
.In other department ac- Hawley. residence had been
County community rejected a 6.9-mill school operating levy tivlty, two juveniles have (om from the hosu~.
.
m·
George D. Mas5ar, for- elected .to the board of . number of years but will
Tuesday night, and officials fear Newton Falls could become been interviewed about the . Hawley, a coal mmer, sa1d merly of Pomerpy, son of directors in 1963 and became sever his affiliation to devote ·
the latest addition to the list of Ohio schools forced to close vandalism to three tractors· he had received a threat if he Mrs. Clarence Massar, assistant treasurer in 1966. full time to his new executive
early because of firumcial problems . The levy failed for the at the Russell Cummins returned. to work.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, His duties were expanded a duties.
third time, this time by 37 votes, out of nearly 2,000 votes cast. Farm at Plants Letart Twp.
. Massar is a graduate of
A State Arson investigator and the late Mr. Massar, has year later to include those of
Aseparate 0.8mill building improvements levy was approved . . A Farman Cub owned by will be called in to assist in been elected president and assistant secretary. He was Ohio State University 's
School Superintendent Harry Benetis said representatives Floyd Cummins had rocks the Investigation.
of Law. He is a
M· c
uff d !'ttl
chief operating officer of the elected company secretary in College
director of the American
e•gs ounty s ere 1 e
from the state auditor's office will examine the district's books put in the oil, wiring pulled
I973
and
was
advisor
to
vice
damage when a severe
State Automobile Mutual
next month. He said he expects to learn the school system will off, hydraulic line broken;
president and secretary in Automobile Assn ., treasurer thunderstorm hit the county
Co.
Insurance
have to shutdown, probably in early December, because it will caps removed from the .
of the Ohio State AAA, a past early Wednesday morning.
Massar succeeds Ned E. 1976.
be out of money. Benetis said one final attempt may be made
Middleport
Village
The former Pomeroy president of the Columbus
battery, and the seat cut.
Clear tonight, with ·lows Neutzling who is retiring
to pass the levy before the school system goes into the red.
Club
and maintenan ce workers
A John Deere and a Far- near 60, Sunny Thursday, after 49 years with the resident also serves as Automobile
member
and
secretary
of
the reported that some limbs
secretary
and
hoard
.member
mall tractor owned by with hi~hs a~ain around 80. Columbus-based insurance
KENT, OHIO- STATE REP. JOHN BEGALA, D-Kent, Russell Cummins had the fuel Probabuity
Grant
Hospital
board
of were broken from trees but
of
Southern
Home
Insurance
of .prec~pitatlon firm. The change in office is
Tuesday endorsed a suggestion by some.members of the Kent and radiator .caps removed, will be near zero per cent this effective Sept. I.
Co. He has been a partner in trustees. He resides at 4150 no major damages were
State University Board of Trustees that the adjacent and an assortment of tools
Massar. who has been with the Columbus law firm of Chadbourne Drive, Upper caused. Bill .Durst . of the
tonight and Th~rs­
University School be converted into a gym complex instead of taken from a tool box, A afternoon,
department s,aid it would take
day.
State Auto for 20 years, was Gingher &amp; Christensen for a Arlington.
constructing the gym oo a controversial site. The May 4th
a couple of days prol!ably to
Coalition has opposed the trustees' decision to build the gym
get the streets cleaned up . .
annex near the site where four students were killed and nine
In Pomeroy, it · was the
wounded May 4, 1970, during an antiwar demonstration. ·
same story, tree· limbs were
· The trustees made the proposal Monday to. convert the
broken off and streets were
•
University School to a gym complex and compensate the gym
littered
by them and leaves.
The mid-sized models have
for labor and materials , new car prices have
C&lt;lntractors for breach of contract if the current plan is •By EDWARDS. LECHTZIN was tagged at 3,751.90.
On
Second
St. a large limb
The prices are not directly including a 6 per cent steel increased only 28 per cent been shrunk one foot and are
scrapped. Begala emphasized at a news conference it was
UPI Autu Writer
broke
from
a tree near the
while consumer prices about 800 pounds lighter for
DETROIT (UPI) - The comparable since different price hike in June.
mandatory for the trustees to ask for state aid before any state
Courthouse.
The limb tore
"The price increases for geneally have increased 45 '78 as part of the automaker's
price tag of a full-size equipment is offered on the
l~gislative action could be taken to convert the school into a
down
telephone
lines which
massive downsizing program
Chevrolet - still America's '78s, but the price tag on the I978 are substantially less per cent."
(Cootinued on page 14)
were
being
repaired
this ·
most popular .c ar despite the base models - the lowest- · than increases in the cost of • American Motors has set w help it meet ·new fuel · morning. Traffic around the
raw materials and labor · tentative prices $301 to $400 economy standards.
swing to smaller models - priced car available The new models · are the limb was rerouted.
which occurred during the above current models while
has jumped $1,500 in the past jumped 40 per cent.
The department of Sheriff
GM, the auto industry , past year," GM said in a ·Chrysler and Ford said their first in which .each company
four years.
'
Proffitt said it had
James
With Geheral .Motors' an- pricing leader and the first of s t a t e men t . ' 'S tee I , prices will not rise by more mu:;t build a fleet of cars that only one call and that was a
Four defendants were fined disorderly . manner, $25 and
averages 18 mil"" per gallon .
and three others forfeited costs, and John D. Zurcher, no\Ulcement Tuesday it is the four U.S. companies to set aluminwn, lead, gla86 and than 6 per cent.
fuel
economy power outage, Power outages
GM dealers have already The
bonds in the court of Mid- 26, Pomeroy, f200 and costs boosting the price of an firm 1978-model prices, said plastics are all up and GM's
average
increase labor C&lt;lsts have risen more begun selling 1978 models requirement rises to 27.5 did occur but companies were
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman and three days in Jail, driving average-equipped 1978-moilel its
making repairs early tlili1
car by a "modest" $405 over· amo\Ulted to 5.7 'per cent, or than 11 ger cent in the past with Uie exception of the new m.p.g. in 1985.
Tuesday night.
while intoxicated.
GM also withheld price morning. In fact, a spokesmid-sized models-Chevrolet
Fined were Vona Kay
Forfeiting bonds were comparable current models, $387. In addition 1 destination year.
"The increases are modest Malibu and Monte Carlo; tags for its Chevrolet man at the Columbus and
Taylor, Middleport, $25 and Brian D. Walburn, Salem, the four-door Impala will charges wer.e boosted an
in relation to those of other Pontiac LeMa,ns an(l Grand Chevette - the lowest-priced Southern Ohio Electric said
costa, dlaurblng the. peace; Oregon, $37, pQsted on carry a $5,282.55 price tag. · average $18 per car.
The price hike was the first · cnnsumer products," the No. Prix; Buick Century and car in its lineup - and the that some .of the lines
That comparable model in
Keith H. Petrie, 21 1 Mid· speeding charges; James E.
the most damaged were back into
Regal;
and Cadi !lac
dleport, $26 and costs, Counta, 2%, Syracuse, spiil· the ·current model year is major increase in auto prices I automaker said. "Jn the Century
expensive - until they are operation at 10 a.m.
............ and t80 and COlli, nina tln!l, $25; James N. priced at $4,900.86 for a 7.7 since last fall when the '77s past live y.ears, according to Oldsmobile Cutlass. Their released for sale in late
A flash
at Enterprise
drlvlnll
"bile
under Harris, 37, Middleport, $25, per. ~nt price hike in one were introduced. Since then, ' the Bureau ·of Labor price tags won't be September. ·
about
6:30
a.m.
hampered
model y~r. The same.car at automakers have said they Statistics whose indices announced until the cars go
llllpenlion; !Wold Salnmy no eperator's litense. &lt;1).
for
,1
time
on·
U~33.
traffic
the end ofthe 1973-model year were absorbing hi(\ller costs ~ec&lt;•Knize quality changes, on sale in~rly Ocrober.
J.IMe, 40, Middleport,

at y

e

en tine

Bridge opening in 3 weeks?
'·

,

,:,: ,:~: .:,: .:,i,; ,:,: ,:, ., ~: :,.,. .,~~::,::,:,~:m:, , , , , , , , , ,: : B&amp;E charged
j1fNews • •• in Briefs\\ Syracuse man

'

I

!

T~o defendants fined by mayor

Massar named president
of ~uto ins1Irance company Damages

light
Metgs
•

Weather .

Price ·tag.on four door Impala tops $5,000

·F our fined by Mayor Hoffman

Weather
Shower.s
and
thundershowers likely tonight,
lo... around 80. Clance of
thunderlhowers Wednesday,
highs in the 70s. Probability
of precipitation 40 per cent
today, 80 percent tonight, 40
percent .Wednesday.

TAKES TillS, WOMEN'S LIBBERS:-Some male members of Star Grange as they took
part in a recent sewing contest. From the left are Ralph Macomber, John Holliday, Ted
Hatfield, Ben Rife, Ray Midkiff and Waid Nicholson, with Nina Macomber looking on.
Incidentally, if there was a winner, his name wasn 't announced.
.

CHARLESTON , W. Va.
(UPII - About 20,000 West

Home Furnishings Dept.-Jst Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

nooct

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