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                  <text>•

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

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

A STAR IS BORN

TRY OUR f,RESH

PEACH SUNDAES
AND SHAKES ·

~
•

•

'

'&lt;•

r

·~·

&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
CLEANER FOR THE
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

�•

•

2- The Daily Sentmel, Middlel"rt-Pomeroy, 0 .. Woonesday, Aug. 24, 1977

Pre~ident going to 'dolf?n home' grassroots on iss-,.,e of Pa
l)yHELENTHOMAS
UPi Willie House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Concedirtghfhastodoa 'lot of
spadework to sell the

Panama Canal treaty,
Prestdent
Carter
ts
embarkt~ on a maJor grassroots campatgn to wm
support from the American

San Diego vulnerable
to Soviet sub attack
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
LONDON (UPI) - Tbe
Soviet navy has more than
three times as many
submarines as the United
states and packs a 5,600-mile
missile that co~d hit San
Diego or Hawau from Its
home waters, Janes's
Fi~hting Ships ~d !OOay.
'The overall ptclure ts of a
very powerful and well krut
navy, whose capabilities, if
not numbers, are Increasing
m~th by month," . Jane's
Sllld in a foreword to Its 197778 edition by Capt. John E.
Moor~ •. former d~JllltY. chief
of British naval Intelligence
and the publication's editor.
Predicting the Sovtets will
continue to support "national
liberation wars" wherever
they choose, Jane'~ said this
fact! coupled • With growtng
Sovtet power worldwtde .

"could well affect the
availabtlity of raw matenals
and markets for the West."
Wtth its new 40, 000-ton
" Kie v" class atr craft
carriers, the Soviet Union
also has started to challenge
America's long supremacy in
flattops Jane's said It said
' these ' vessels · carry
"formtdable " missil e and
antisubmarine armament in
addition to swutgwing jet
fighters and helicoptl!rs.
The first of these already is
in service, two sister ships
have been launched and a
fourth may be planned,
Jane's said.
However tt satd the United
States wtUt 13 carriers in
cornrnission - two of them
nuclear powered - and two
more nuclear powered
vessels building, still has a
huge lead m this field.

pe&lt;lple.
-.
Carter made a strong pitch
for . t he agreement at a
nat tonally telev tsed and
broadcast news conferen ce
Tuesday afternoon.
Sh~rtly afterwards, he h~ld
a bnefmg for Govs Julian
Carroll of Kentucky and
CIUford !'mch of Misstssi~pi,
along wtth prominent ctvtc
leaders of. ~? state~ t.~
laun cll hls
education

campaign
When it was over, Carroll
announced his support of the
Panama accord whil Fm h
reservedjudgm~nt sa~lng ~e
wanted more fact;.
White House aides said
Carter will hold a series of
suCh briefings to drum u the
public h.1cking he ncJ. to
win Senate ratification of the
treaty.
A coalition of conservative
groups fiercely opposed to the
treaty has tlug in to de(eat the
accord With mass mailings to
the public, newspaper adverttsements opposing il, and
a threatened filibuster in the
Senate.
"! think to a substantial

d

tho

hod h

th

r:~"':.nd '::'a~e st~di~ethi: he~· "no ':lltention" of wit~ private

situati0 n closely cone that
these 1 ali
ur d
vahtageo~: r ;• ~.reCa~ •
said at his
~nferenc~~
.. 11 Is my belief, .. he said,
"that as the American people
become a uainted 'th th
very good ~rms of th:' treat;
they wtlJ shift their support to
the treaty itself..,
To appease members of
Congress, apparently those in
the opposttion ranks, Carter
revealed the administration
had won a commitment that
Panama wtll not build any
future sea-level canal with
any other country except the
Uruted States.
On other fronts, Carter said

neO.s

holdmg mllitary or econormc
support as a means of
blocking
Israel
from
establishing Jewish settle":lents on
occupied
temtories. He said U. S.
pressure would be confined to
info~ Israel that it Is
acting illegally.
Carter also said he had

GM

; UBI§

and
publk
assurances from Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin that these settlements
"are not intended to show
that Israel was to occupy
these
territories permanently."
!n another area, Carter
satd an investigation shows
Budget Director Bert Lance

Holzer fulltime now

did nothin~ •: mega! or even
unethical In his private
banking deals.
He said he sttll has mudt
~onfidence in Lance·.~
bonesty and competence
and the fact that Lance has
had seven overdrafts of his
~nk a~ount "Is no renee;
lion on his basic judgment o~.
competence."

'

spare tire will be small.-..

By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN

UPJ Auto Writer
DETROIT (UPI) - That
spare tire in the trunk of
General Motors' smaller
197lknodel mid~ze car may
look strange, but it will save
you some gas and leave room
for an extra suitcase or
anotber bag of groceries.
Besides, it's easier to
Change.
The new compact spare
tires will be standard
equipment on the redesigned
'78 mid-sized models - tbe
Chevrolet Malibu and Monti!
Carlo; Pontiac LeMans and
Grand Prix; Buick Century
and Century Regal; and
Oldsmobile CUtlass.
Tile cars are a foot shorter
and nearly 1100 pounds lightl!r
than their '77 counterparts as
part of GM's massive
program to redesign its
entire fleet to meet fuel

economy requirements of the
1980s.
Automakers have been
searching frantically for
ways to decrease the size of
spare tires so there still Is
useable space in the smaller
trunks. One temporary
solution has been the
inflatable " Space Saver"
spare, but the ultimate goal is
a "run-flat" tire that wtlJ do
away with the need for a
spare.
Until that goal is reached ,
the compact spare is tbe
midway point in elimina ling
the fifth wheel and tire. It will
remain m the trunk except
when used, eliminatmg the
traditional rotation
procedure, and should be
good for 1,000 to 3,000 miles of
service.
Despitl! its smaller Size and
shorter life, it is not expected
to result in any price

cutting.
GM President E.M. EsteS
said the new spare reduce~
car wetght between 11 and 14
I&gt;'unds and takes up only half
the space reqwred for the
conventional spare tire and
wbeel it replaces. Its out'!i~
diameter is about t incbes
less than a conventional tire
and it's nearly 3 incbes
•
narrower.
With pressures of 60 pounda
- more than double the
standard tires - the compact
spares provide a "stiffer"
ride than a conventional tire
and the corner of the car oo
which the spare Is used will
be slightly lower.
But it was difficult during a
test drive in a new intennediate model equipped with the
compact spare to say on
which wheel the spare walt
installed.
"We are confident that if
anyone should have tire
trou~le hundreds of miles
from horne, these new spare
tires will get them hack home
or
to a tire repair shop just as
leave with his parents and safely
dependably as the
sisters, James was assigned sparesand
people have been
to Camp Pendleton, San acustomed to,'' Estes said.
Diego, Calli., for two weeks "In all respects - suCh as
before going to Okinawa, handling, control response
where he wtll be 12 months. and traction -the new spaceWhile home James also saving spares compare ve.-y
visited with his brother, Reed favorably with a conventional
and family in Flint, Mich.
tire."

A showdown over who will necessary capttulatlon to
own and operate the Panama political blackmail. We have
Canal is fast approaching. protected the canal sucInitial negotiations between cessfuliy for over 60 years
the
U.S. and Panama are through two world wars. We
BRENDA HARRISON,
completed
for the moment, are more than capable of
14, Kanauga, has been
and
the
matter
now goes to defendmg tt today. To give up
missing since Aug. 16. Her
Congress
for
approval.
the canal under such threats
grandmother, Mrs. Lowell
The President indicated would be a needless show of
Harrison, has offered $50
during the 1976 campaign weakness and further erode
reward lor information
that he favored U. S. control American influence
which will lead directly lo
of
the canal ; but there is no throughout the world.
tbe return of the girl. Mrs.
question
· where he stands
The canal belongs to the
Harrison ' s tel ephone
Dr. Raymond L. Jennings,
today
.
His
representatives
Uruted
States and there is no
number is «11-4 1 5~.
a family practitioner from
have
concluded
agreement
on
logtcal
or
legal reason to give
the Atbens area, has joined
a
treaty
requiring
the
U.
S.
to
it
away.
We
bought it, patd
the Holzer Clinic staff full
increase
annual
payments
to
for
it,
and
built
it .. Now we're
SYRACUSE - P.F.C.
time according to Robert E.
Panama
from
the
current
told
to
give
It
to
Panama
and,
James
Ferrell, son of Mr. and
Daniel, Clinic Administrator.
$2
3
million
per
year
to
apin
return,
get
the
right
to
Mrs.
Dilford Ferrell,
Dr. JeMings' full time
proxunately
$50
million,
and
defend
11
forever.
The
whole
Syracuse,
graduated recently
duties wtll continue to include
to
gtve
Panama
complete
Idea
makes
absolutely
no
from
Basic
Engineering
coverage in the Holzer
control
of
the
canal
by
the
sense
at
all.
What
wiU
we
be
Equipment MechaniC!! School
Medical Center Emergency
year 2000.
asked to give up next?
at Camp Lejeune, JacksonRoom, which he started last
In analyzing the proposed
ville, N. C.
fall on a part time basis, and
agreement, the question
After spending a 30-day
seeing private patients in the
anses:
Why should the U. S.
Clinic's Family Practice
relinquish control of the
Department.
can~!?
The U.S. has run the
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Ohio
Born in Condit, Ohio, Dr.
canal
from
its very beginstate Fair officials Tuesday
Jennings received his B.S.
rught attn buted the crowd of ning ; why should we give 1t
degree from Otterbein and
164 for the etghth day of up now? In the weeks and
212,
his M.D. degree from O.S.U.
PORT CLINTON, Ohio Bass Island , Rattlesnake
the
fatr to the Rmgllng months to follow, debate over
in 1946. He continued at
DR. JENNINGS
• O.S.
(UPI)
- A Ford Tri-Motor, Island and Kelley's Island in
these
queStions
wtll
probably
and
Bailey
Brolhers,
Barnum
U. from 1946-47 and
more
affectionately
known as Lake Erie.
become
qutte
heated
as
the
Thril
Circus
served with the U.S. Aimy,
the
Tin
Goose,
could
once
battle
lines
are
drawn.
The airlines lililo operates
Tuesday's performances of
receiving a discharge as a staff at O'Bieness Hospital m
WASHINGTON (UPI)
again
grace
the
skies
over
There
are
many
reasons
an
11-seater DeHavilland
captain in 1949. Between 1949 Athens. Between 195().75, he the Cll'cus marked the second
President Carter, freshen111g Lake Erie.
why
I
favor
U.
S.
control
of
Otter,
an etght-seater
and 1970, Dr. Jennings was in abo was a Clinic Instructor at da y for the circus and "we
personal support lor Budget
Tile
plane
crashed
shortly
the
canal
and
why
l
am
general practice With the Oh10 State University, School had trernendo~ crowds", a
Director Beri Lance, has after takeoff at South Bass Dehavtlland Beaver, and six
against
any
treaty
that
fatr
spokesman
said
Westervtlle Medical Center in of Medicine.
made it clear the former Island July 1 on Its return other smaller planes.
relinquishes
this
control.
In
Martin had just lifted off
Tue
sday'
s
attendance
.Westervtlle. For the period
Atlanta banker is an flight to Its home base at Port
Dr. Jennings and his wife,
1903,
the
U.
S
acquired
the
runway at South Bass
pushed
the
eight-&lt;iay
mark
to
just prior to coming to Helen, are the parents of
indispensi.ble part of the Clinton Airport.
to
own
and
run
Island
wben the main engine
certain
rights
more
than
1.5
million,
up
a
Holzer, Dr. Jennings was an three Children, Karen, John
administration.
The
pilot,
David
Martin,
the
canal
and
paid
lor
those
cut
out
as he was about 400
few
thousand
from
the
same
associate physician with the and Stephen. The Jennings
Carter told a news was senously injured, but his
feet
over
the ~nd of tbe
The
current
treaty
nghts.
last
year.
time
Hudson Health Service at are still residing at their
conference Tuesday that two passengers escaped with
gives
the
U.
S.
control
"in
runway.
MarL;.•
' ' ted to land
Among other attractions at
Ohio University. He also present location in Athens,
"nne of the most crucial ooly cuts and scratches.
111
a
grass
strip
next to tbe
perpetuity"
over
the
canal
the fair were the Dan
elements in the success or
served during this time on the Ohto.
At
tbe
time
of
the
crash,
nmway, but the other two
Fleenor's Auto Thrill Show and canal zone as "if 11 were failure of my own adminisand the musical group Sha Na sovereign. " 11 1n perpetuity" tration" is the post of director Dave Haberman, vtce engines also cut out.
means exactly that : for as of the White House Office of president and general
With no I&gt;'Wer and an
Na.
manager of Island Airlines, adverse wind, the Tin Goose
Wednesday's acttvtties in- long as we want, we can treat Management and Budget.
clude the crrcus and the auto the canal as U. S. property.
The budget chief is the operator of the Ford Tri- hit some power lines and
,
If it had not been lor U. S. intimately involved in Motor, vowed 41tt's going to clipped a utility pole, all on
thrill
show
wtlh
airport property.
entertainment by Anson money, human sacrifice, and administration efforts to fly again."
Tbe
Ohio
General
Martin had a broken
technological
know-how;
Wtlliams of television 's
fulfill one of Carter's Assembly had designated
in his hack and his
vertebra
Happy Days and the Keane there would never be a fundamental campaign
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
Island
Airlines
as
Ohio'
s
hip
was
badly
mangled. Last
Brothers.
Panama Canal. American pledges, the reorganization of
Bicentennial
Airline.
week Martin was transferred
In awards presented taxpayers have invested federal government.
The airlines is the shortest to the Cleveland Clinic for
about $7 billion to build,
Tuesday included .
"My choice, without any
Body SIZe inherited
is 18 months old. The
- David John Perry, Wil- maintain, and defend the competition I might add, was regularly scheduled airline in surgery.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Purt Clinton Mayor John
children's specialist I take Hamsfidd, Ashtabula County canal since the early 1900s, Bert Lance, based on both the world. The Ford TriDEAR DR. LAMB- Dunng him to thinks he has a heart and Greg Untied of Frazeys- and we have operated it fairly ho.
Motor
carried
mail
to Put-In- Fritz has stepped into the
w 'y and competence. I
my four years in hlgh school I munnur which could be inno- burg, Muskingum County, for all nations since it was
still have that kind of faith in Bay on South Bass Island in picture in trying to restore
participated in vars1ty sports cent. My family doctor were named top showmen in first opened. Panama has him.''
Lake Erie and also stopped at the plane whiCh could cost as
Middle
Bass Island, North much as $150,000 for repairs.
and cheerleading year round. disagrees with him. What ts a the Polled Hereford and patd nothing.
Nothing "tllegal or even
From all this activity I heart munnur? How can you Angus Shows.
The canal has great unethical"
has
been
developed big muscles 1n my check tt?
-Karen Weber, 15, Allen militar-; and economic im- uncovered about his friend's
calves and thighs. Is there
My father and father-m-law County, had the cbampion portance for America. Ap- financial activities, Carter
any possible way that I can both died young because of Chester White gilt of the proximately 17 percent of all said. He called Lance "one of
early July.
get rid of these muscles or heart failure - my father at Junior Divion of the Fair.
U. S. trade goes through the the most competent and By J.R. KlMMINS
thin out my legs?
Rhodes did strike three
Although
big
aircraft
canal.
48 and my father-m·law at 50.
- Aaron Blessing, 14,
intelligent people I've ever
COLUMBUS (UPI)- GoV.
James A. Rhodes beld his minor sections of the earlier
DEAR READER -A mus- I am 37 and my wife is 29. My Marysville, Union County, earners and supertankers
nose and said he would have appropriations measure, but
cle stays as large as tt needs blood pressure ts not too high showed the grand champion cannot lit through the locks, known in my life."
"I
think
it's
obvious
be
liked
to bave vetoed some the Legislature overrode tbe
to be to have the strength to and my wife ts in good health. in the Pure Saanen class and around 96 percent of all the
complied
with
not
only
the
parts
of
the measure, but let vetoes seven days into tbe
do the work it is reqwred to Your opimon on this will be the grand champion in the world's ships are small
law and the ethics required, the
biennial
budget
do regularly. That means if a appreciated
Pure Toggenburg Class.
enough to use It. During the but with common banking "language" btll become law new fiscal year.
The "language" bill passed
muscll' is not reqwred to do
DEAR READER - Just as
-Christi and Sherry Bently Vietnam War, close to 70
Carter said.
Tuesday without his sig- the General Assembly July 29
strength work it will begm to a murmuring brook is a rapid of Sabina exhibited the grand percent of all the cargo practices,"
Before
tur
.. joining tbe Carter nae.
and contained, amoog otber
get smaller. We usually say stream that makes a notse a champion boar in the Open destined for the combat zone
d
"It is sttll my opinion that measures,
the school
that to maintain your muscle munnur m the heart ts a Class of the Chester Whttl! went through the Panama a mm1stration Lance got
about $6 million in personal the inclusion of more than 13 foundation fmnula dividing
size and strength you must do sound made from the tur- Show at the fair.
waterway.
loans from New York and single subjects in one btll is
strength exercises at least bulence of blood crrculating.
- Winners m the senior
To compound the problem, Chicago b8.IIkS in which his unconscionable," said Ohio's $2.5 billion in aid to
once a week.
Murmurs m the heart and sheep shearing contest were Panama is a weak and un- own Georgia banks had Rhodes in a message to the public schools among tbe
stare's 617 school districts.
Apparently if you are not blood vessels then represent Walter Wallen, Sprmgfield, stable country presently
opened
interest-free
Ohio
General
Assembly.
It also mandated a new
doing sports now tbe only the vibrations of circulation. Gerald Fife, North Fatrfield, controlled by a military
accounts.
He
added
that
the
reimbursement
schedule for
weight your calves and legs In young children With rapid Davtd Clouser, Wooster and dictator with pro-Communist
The
office
of
the
legislation
was
a
"deliberate
nursing homes which care for
must lift is your own body. heart beats and thin chests Tom Conley of Springfield. leanings. When he came to
Comptroller of Currency attempt" by the Legblature Medicaid recipients.
Under these CirCumstances, these sounds are eastly heard
-Winners in the junior power in 1968, he abolished all
The parts which drew
if you are not obese and have and may have no medical sheep shearing contest were political parties, seized found no grounds for criminal to "deprive the people of
fat over your thighs the stze signifiCance at all. In other Walt Johnson of Alliance, control of the press, drove prosecution arising from Ohio, through tbe Governor"· Rhodes' specific objections,
ol your muscles may be a instances the vibrations are Tom Taylor, Radnor, Greg opponents into ~xile, and those loans or fr9111 other of the right to assess tbe however, would give the state
questionable practices, individual merits (of the bill)
faaiilial charactensttc
caused by defects inside the Gordon , Dover and Bill totally
ruined , the Incl.uding hundreds of and to take action upon each auditor broad authority over
Those genes we inhent do heart or arteries. Such Hardenschield, Kenton.
Panamanian economy. What thousands of dollars In of the separate and distinct state contracts· and auditing
procedures, tbe cootrolling
have their effectS. That is d~fects can be caused from
will keep this dictator from overdrafts rt111 up by Lance's subjects" included in it.
board authority to shift funds
why we have beef cattle and damage to the' heart valves or
using the canal as a pawn in
Rhodes said he would ask within state agencies and
dairy c~ws - one for muscle, arteries or from btrth defects r-----------. mternatlonal politics like the farhily in his own Georgia
·
the Legblature "by the end of language whiCh restricted tbe
the other for milk. Draft In the chambers of the heart.
THE DAO..VSENTIN~L
OPEC nations have done with Lanks.
DEVOTED TO TilE
The
President
said
he
the week" to amend three
horses for work are heavy
Clearly, your pedtatrician
INTERESTOF
the Arab oil? Or what wtll considered Investigations separate parts of the btll im]l!lct ollast year's property
taa roll-back law.
muscular animals while race thinks the murmur he hears
MEIGS.MAsoN AREA
keep hi S government f rom
CHF.STER 1. TANNEHILL
"complete."
Congress
whiCh
he
said
.he
would
have
All three areas which
horses have different bodies'
is not important It is probably
Esec. Ed.
being overthrown with his apparently disagrees.
line-item vetoed "if It were Rhodes said •'probably could
Don't try too hard to not a very loud munnur ot
ROBERTHOEFLICH
successor repudiating the
Two Senate committees clear that the bill cootained not bave been passed on their
CkyElUWT
change your natural state. there would be no disagreePubl~hed dail&gt; .. cept Saturday
treaty and launching out on a plan to review banking an app~riatlon of money." own merits" would be tbe
Just get rid of fat if you ment about its presence. Inby The Ojuo VaUey Publis~ng Colt&gt;
campaign of internatiqnai practices In general and
The Democrat-drafted bill subject
of
separate
811f, 111 Court Sl , Pumero)', Ohlo
bla km il f hi
1
already have some. To gtve cidentally, an innocent mur45769. Business Offu.! e Phone m.
C
8 0
9 own.
Lance's
dealings
In did
not
contain
an legislation Rhodes promised
you a better idea·of wbat con- mur may be present on one
21l6 Edtlona1Phooell92-2157.
U. S. security and world particular. A report Issued app~rlatlon, and thereftre
trols muscle size I am sen· examination and not on
Second ' ""' post.a8• ,.,d • 1
peace
are based in large part last week by tbe cootptroller could not be subjected under he would send to the
Purnt!roy, otuu
Legislature by Friday.
ding you The H~alth Letter another depending on how
National adYertwng repr~
on freedom of the seas and concluded Lance's financial the Ohio Constitutional to a
"I do It also in the irlterest
number S-4, Weight Trairung raptd the Circulation ts "'"' ' Wanl - Griflllh C&lt;Jmpony, preventing bottlenecks at practices raised ''unreaolved line-Item veto.
Inc
,
Boltmelli and G111Iagher 01v ,
of
preventing further
for Energy and Weight Con- which may also be related to
757 Thtrd Ave . N e~ York. N v. critical points around the questions ... as to what
The blemial stale budget litigation," he added.
trol. Others who want this tn- whether the patient ts restmg
10011
•
globe. With the Soviet Navy constitutes . a~ceptable was spUI Into two parta by Democrats were apparently
Sub!Knptfon M:lt.es: Delivered by
•
1
formlltfon can send 50 cents or anxious
ca!Tier where available Th l'ents per
growmg at an a anning rate, banking practice. .
_ majority Democrats for tbe ready to go to court if Rhodes
with a long, stamped, selfDr. Lamb answers repres
~ eek . By M1Jt11r Rou\1!: -'here carrier
it would be very dangerous to
Eight of It queltims dealt firat time this year to attempted a line-item veto of
St'rYICe n~JI tiVIUlabito, OIH! month,
allow such a pr()oo-Marxist with the budget director, and apeciflcally avoid a llne-It~!m
llcldrelled envelope for it. tative letters of general .m~.25 . By mall m Ottio and W. Vll.,
lllelr ''language" tilL •
Keep in mind those IJIUScles, · terest in his column Wnte to
One v~r. f22 00: Su moothll, government to control our Ca_rter bandied them with veto on the aecond,
R~ aald he also was
Sll 50; Three months, 11.00,
canal.
if they are mUIICies and not him in care of this
qwet aplomb but without tbe "lang111ge," part of the two- lrotlbled b7 tile "problem ol
El!rewhere US 00 year. Six month."!
fat,mayhelpkeepyoufrom newspaper, P.Q. Box 1551,
$1 3 OO ; Three munths, 11 au
Finally, to give away the ebullience that chlracterlzed year, •1u billion approprlaGill' •1 fat II._, life.
Suol!Cnp&lt;••• prl'{llll&lt;lu&lt;ks Su.U.y
canal because ol fear of earllerll nationaUy televiaed lions measure enacted In achool cllllinp," a mallet be
Radio (iiity Station, New
IWlted Willi not addnued In
Tune:r.Seutmel
sabotage constitutes un- news cmferencea.
DEAR DR. IAMB- My son York, N.Y. 10019.
tbe bill.

Family practitioner at

.....

•'

Ferrell assigned to Okinawa

Circus big
draw at

state fair

Lance vital
to Carter's Tin Goose may fly once again
programs

HEALTH

He bas been m touCh with
the Ohio Historical · Socleiy
which co.uld help 1n provididg
funds on a 5().50 basis fer tbe
repairs.
" People
are
real\y
concerned a bout the Tin
GOOse," saidHabennan. ~~we
got several letters Inqulrlrlg
, about the pilot and the plane.
"In fact, w~ got ooe letter
from a Canadian woman woo
enclosed $20 toward the
repair of the plane," he said.
"She satd in her letter she
knew it wouldn 'I go very far,
but perhaps every little bit
belp6 ~ ·

Fritz is also hopeful the
plane, once tt is rebuilt, could
be enoored in the National
Register of Historical
Objects.
The cause of the crash is
not know, and Haberman
says it is hard to detl!rmlite
just how much money it will
take before the Tin Goose ·is
ready to pass Federal
Aviation Administration
inspection and be put back
mlo service.

Bjennial budget is now law

•

'

Irish, Wolverines, Bucks (in that order)
•
challenge for nation's ·collegiate grid title
1

Today's

Sport Parade
YORK (UPI) -All the Cosmos had finished dinrter;~
last Saturdsy night in their Rochester
and with a
playoff game oo tap with the Lancers the
day
!hey have another one Wlth them tonight at tbe
\"OSI of the players said good night and headed for their rooms.
- Taking his cue from the others, Gary Etherington, the
Cosmos' 19-year-old little winger and .the youngest player on
· the team, got up and said he lllought he'd go to bed, too. He
loo~edatllis watch and saw tlwasalready alter 10.
"Where you going?" Pele asked him.
"To · bed," answered Etherington, reflecting the
necessary degree of respect in his tone any juntor member
would show such a living legend as Pele.
"Why do you go to sleep now?" said Pele.
'~To get my rest.' '
"That'sgood," Pele nodded, playing it straight. "You go get
your sleep. Get a Iotta sleep. That makes you more tired, slows
you down. You play much better when you're tired.' •
• Gary Etherington laughed.
It was an inside joke, mutually understood, because the
Cosmos' 5-foot4!, 14~ound, first-year man has been so fast
and so eager, his coaches bave been doing all they can to slow
him down a little.
Etherington didn't mind at all being the butt of Pele's little
joke in Rochestl!r. He rather enjoyed it, relillzing this was all
part of being accepted as a fullfledged member of tbe team by
everyone, including Pele, whom he had approacbed wtth
something amounting to trembling reverence less than a year
.ago lor his autograph.
·
. A native Londooer, Etherington, who is a naturalized U.S.
citizen, was only trying out for the Cosmos when he asked for
Pele's autograph but he's a big leaguer himself now. He's not
911ly the Cosmos' yoWJgest player, he's their smallest and most
promising ooe as well.
• In a sense, Etherington's soccer career parallels that of the
game's remarkable r.ecent progress in this country.
, He came over bere from England with his parents when be
was 12, began playing soccer in an organized way for the first
time in high school in Annandale, Va., and with the Annandale
Boys Club and has developed so amazingly since, the Cosmos
regardhnn one of their sure stars ofthe future.
Etherington's chief asset right now is his speed, hts
quickness. The Cosmos are not trymg to harness that so much
as they're looking to refine it.
Eddie Finnani, tbe Cosmos' coach, doesn't believe in
rush111g Etherington. Neither did FirmaniJ:s predecessor,
.. Gordon Bradley, with the result that the yoWtgster has logged
, ~bout 120 IJiinutes of playing tune so far . He was used in four
regular season games and two other recent playoff ones wtth
-Fort Lauderdale.
·
" Etherington Is a pleasure to listen to, not only because of his
• boyish enthusiam but abo because of the slight British accent
lte stt11 retams. He talks animatedly about the first game he
"played with the Cosmos against the Los Angeles Aztecs this
, past June 26. Bradley was still the coach .
' , "We were ahead, 2-1, and he told me to just go out there, lay
. it off in the f!rst couple of touches, sort of get the feel of things
• and then pliiy my own game. I was excited because I was
playing against George Best and Charlie Cooke, who used to
·.play in England, and there were 57,000 people at the game,"
, says Etherington. "How did it feel, you ask me? Oh God, I'll
,t;~ever forget it. I had one shot. It went wide."
, He hasn't started any games so far for the Cosmos, but
Etherington had another shot in one of the playoff games with
"Fort Lauderdale and he made this one for his first professional
; joal. ·
"That has been my biggest thrtll so far," he says, smiling.
''They let him keep my jersey," beams Gary Etherington,
his excitement shpwing all over again merely thinking about
l' rit.
, For the time being the Cosmos' rookie doesn't mind having
, to sit on the bench.
1 •• He says, "I can walt for my time to come because I think it
wtlJ pretty soon now."
; ~ Remember when they said how great it was to be young and
, a Yankee? Well, with soccer catching on tbe way il is in this
country, and all those fans turning out 70,000 strong and more,
it seems even better now to be young and a Cosmo.

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UPI ) - Notre
Dame, Michigan and Ohio
State should be strong
challengers again from !be
Midwest for the national
collegJale football
championship thts year.
It still looks like the Big
Two - Michigan and Ohio
State - and the Uttle Eight
m the Big Ten, although tbe
gap between the two groups
may be less pronounced.
None of the Little Eight
appears ready to challenge
for the crown in 1977, and it's
likely Michigan and Ohio
State will settle the
conference championship
and the Rose Bowl berth as
usual in their season closing
bead and head battle.
Notre Dame, if it can get by
Pittsburgh and Mississippi oo
the road in tbe first two
games of the season, and
Southern California on the
Irish turf Oct. 22, could be
headed for an unbeaten
season, a bowl Chance. and

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The Minnesota Twins'
Dave Goltz, who has never
achteved anything better
than a 14-14 record, checked
the Boston Red Sox on one hit
Tuesday rught for his 16th victory.
Tile 7~ win, which knocked
Boston out of ftrst lace in the
American League East,
enabled the Twins to remam
a game behind Kansas City in
the west. And the Royals
defeated Baltimore, 5-2 for
thetr 18th victory in their last
20 at home. They were sparked by George Brett, who prior
to this season had never hit
more than 11 homers. He
belted his 16th, a three-run
shot, which broke the game
open 111 the fourth iruring.
Brett, who committed an
error 111 tbe top of the fourth
that led to the Orioles' two
runs off winner Jim Colborn,
insisted he Isn't trymg any
harder lor the home nihs but
ts nevertheless happy to get
tbem.
"I told Jim Colborn after 1
hit the homer : 'Now we're
even. I gave them two and got

11
ftmdlllnT
u,

with Rusty Lisch relummg at
quarterback td face the
Challenge of fresh~ Tim
Koegel from Cmcmnatt
Moeller H!J!It School, and
such . rece!vers .as . All
Amenca ltght end Ken
MacAf-:e and Kr'!' Hames.
Mtchtgan has Rtck Leach
back at quarterback and
Harlan Huckl~by and Russ
Davts as runru_ng backs. Tbe
offense has lettermen for
every postlton, two deep UJ
some of them, and the
defense only one berth ~t
whtch a letterman tsn t
av.~ilable .
.
We may be a littl~ '":"all
at the tackles,': Mtchig~n
~ach .Bo Schembechler satd
m pomting out the only
posstble weakness..
Woody Hayes at Ohio State
has quarterback Rod Gerald,
rtlllning backs Ron Springs
~d Jeff Logan and flanker
Jun Harrell returnmg lor a
solid attack , and laughingly
he pointed out "Gerald can
pass, but we don't pass
much." Gerald also can run.

well, and ts dangerous on the
option on every play.
The Buckeyes suffered
more losses on defense tban
offense, but retained Aaron
Brown1 Eddie Beamon and
Kelton Dansler up front and
Tom CouSineau among tbe
hnebackers
plus
an
expenenced backfield led by
Ray GriHm.
One of the classic games of
the season should come on the
third weekend when the
Bu c keyes
ent e rtain
Oklahoma.
Everybody else in lbe Big
Ten expects to be better, and
the front runners could
receive stronger challenges
than usual from Iowa,
Mmnesota, Wisconsin and
lndtana .
The Hawk eyes, winners
over Penn State last year,
bave Ilettermen for every
starting spot and should be
strong on defense again with
an improved offense.
Minnesota could have prob!ems with its passing game
since it must !md a replace-

you three back,'" said Brett.
"I'm not trying to hit homers.
They're just conung."
Meanwhile, · Goltz, who
yielded only a fourth-inrung
single to Jim Rice, struck out
10 and walked only three m
runmng his record to 16-7.
"The one thing I'm dorug
differently this year ts pitching with a little bit of wmdup instead of from a set position," S~J~d Goltz. "Now that
I'm taktng a windup, the battl!rs have to think about
what's coming.''
Rod Carew homered and
Lyman Bostock and Glenn
Adams had three hits aptece
in support of Goltz.
Elsewhere in the AL
Milwaukee ambushed Texas:
4-2, DetrOit downed California :1-1, and Toronto drubbed
Oakland, 8-1.
Yankees 8, Whlte Sox 3:
Micky Rivers went 5-for-,5
and knocked in three runs to
propel the Yankees mto first
place in the AL East over the
slumping Red Sox. Graig Nettles hit a three-rtlll homer in
the etghth - his 30th -to seal
the Yankees' ninth win in the
last 10 games.

Brewers 4, Rangers 2:
A two-run homer by
Milwaukee's Sal Bando and a
solo shot by Cecil Cooper
dropped the Rangers 21'..
games back of Kl!'l'¥18 Ctty 111
the AL West. MikeiCaldwell,
~. got the victory, but needed relief help in the ninth
from Btl! Castro, who notched
his 13th save. Dock Ellis took
the loss for Texas.
Tigers 3, Angels 1:
Detroit's Ron LeFlore hit
his 16th home rt111 and rookie
lefthander. Bob Sykes, 4-4,
combtned with Steve
Foucaulron a five-hitter. The
Tigers scored two runs in the
fourth inning on successive . ·
smgles by Jason Thompson,
Ben Oglivie and Milt May
plus Tom Veryzer's sacrifice
fly.
Blue Jays 8, A's 1:
Otto Velez hit a basesloaded double to key a fivertlll sixth lllniiig, which enabled rookie Jim Clancy to gam
his second major league victory for Toronto. Clancy, ~.
hurled the ftrst eight tnnings
before yielding to Tom Murphy.

ment for Tony Dungy and his
better receivers, hut the running game and defense
should be better.
Wisconsm also is loaded
with lettermen and Ira
Matthews agam mtght be , a ·
standout returnin'\ kickOffs
and punts.
Indiana
wtll
ha ve
expertence everywhere and
tis backfield of quarterback
Scott Arnett and runrung
backs Mtke Harkrader and
Ric Ennis could be
dangerous. Tbe Hoosiers abo
look stronger on defense ,
particularly
in
the
backfield.
Mtchigan Stat~!, since it will
pass, might have the best
aerial game in the league
wtth Ed Smith at quarterback
agam, but freshmen may
have to carry the running
load. Defense features such
stars at Kim Rowekamp,
Larry Bethea and Paul
Rudzmsld.
Northwestern's Johnny
Pont was optimistic because
the Wildcats wtll bave more
depth, size and speed. Hts

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The St. Louis Cardinals'
right-hander, Bob Forsch Is a
dark-horse candidate for tbe
National League Cy Young
Award and is a major reason
the Cards are sttll within
reaeh of the Philadelphia

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Phillies in the NL East.
Forsch, no doubt, picked up
some backing from the Los
Angeles Dodgers, the NL
West leaders, Tuesday night
wben he stopped them on
three hits, 2-1. to register a
career-high 16th victory.
Steve Carlton, an 18i:ame
winner with the Plitllies, and
Rick Reuschel, who has a 17-6
record for the Chicago Cubs,
appear to be the frontnmners for the Cy Young
Award. But, the way Forsch
Is pitching now be could
muster enough supl"rt over
the final month of the season.
"I was in pretty gond
command and the pitches
were just going to the spots
they were supposed to," said
Fbrsch. "My best game? I
tllink so....,
The only mistake Forsch
made was in the second
Inning when Vic Davalillo
stroked a run...coring double
with two out.
Lou Brock figured in both
of the Cardin~.ts· runs. He
singled in the first and scored
on Ted Simmons' single, then
singled home ihe tie-breaking
run i1l the second. He ,also
stole a base.

In other NL games,
Montreal beat Cincinnati, 4-2,
Philadelphia edgeil AUanta,
3-2, · Pittsburgh nipped San
Diego, 7~. San Francisco
edged Chicago, 4-.'l, in 13
innings, and New York beat
Houston. 2-1.
.
Phlllies 3, Braves 2:
The Phillies stretched their
winning streak In six games
and made it 19 vl~tories in 20
starts on Mike Schmidt's 31st
homer in the fifth inning. Phil
Niekro struck out 13 for
Atlanta in a losing effort.
Pirates 7, Padres 6:
AI Oliver homered off
reliever Rollie Fingers to
lead off the bottom of tbe
ninth' as the Pirates remained
71'.. games behind the Phtllies
In .the NL East. Gene
Tenace's two-out homer in
the top of the inning had tied
the score at 6-6. Bill Robinson
also homered lor tbe Pirares.
Giants 4, Cubs 3:
Tim Foli's single with one
out in the 13th lnnin~ knoc)led
ill Jack Clark with the rt111
that gave the Giants tbeir
victory over the CUbs. Tbe
loss dropped the Cubs nine
games behind the Phill1es in
the NL East.

Tigers discover
another pitcher
By RICHARD L. SHOOK

UPJ Sports Writer
DETROIT (UPI) - Jack
Morris doesn't need a college
education to prove he made
the right decision. All he
requires is the Detroit Tigers'
uniform he Is wearing.
Morris, 22, would be two
months out of Brigham
Young University right about
now bad be not decided two
Junes ago to take the 111011ey
and run.
The Detroit Tigers made
the last-balling native of St.
Paul, Mlm., their flflh..-ound
Choice in the free agent craft
and then made hirq an offer
he could have relbaed but

didn't.
"I didn't get the money I
wanted," he confessed, "but I
figured Detroit would be a
good place .to play and I
would have a good chance to
move up quickly. I just
wanred a cbance to play."
He got that all right,
moving up so quickly his
fastball should be as good.
In 12 games with Detroit's
AA affiliate, Montgomery,
after being drafted, Morris
was only 2-3 with a 6.25 ERA.
'The Tigers started him off at
the AAA level thiS.. season
despite th01se obviously
misleading figures and he
(Continued on pge 5)

Wiidclits could surprute a lew
rivals with Scott Stranski
furnishing good passing and
Paul Maly anchoring what
could be a solid defense.
Two''schools with new coa-&lt;Illes, Gary Moeller at Illinois
and '\lim Young at Putdue ,
couid battle for the basement.
Young has to find a
quarterback as well as depth
and some starters. Moeller
bas quarterback Kurt Stl!ger
3J)d rt1110ing back James
Coleman but will have to
up almost every other
sition .
In the Mid America where
all State broke the
omination of Ohio teams
witll
last
year's
champtonshtp, Western Michigan, bolstered by the
nation 's second leading
rusher of a year ago Jerome
Persell ranked 'as the
favori~. Ohio University,
with quarterback Andy
Vetter and tailback Arnold
Welcher, was rated the
leadtng Challenger with Ball
State plso a possibility.

Reds' pride
lowest· ebb
••

CINCINNATI (UPI)

~~:::~~W~o~und:~ed~
prtde can
he more
BOBBY ADJ~MS
JR.
than
a foul
ttp
STEWART, Ohio _ Bob
off an unprotected
Adams, Jr. of Racine, shin hone. Ask Johnny Bench.
above, won the ~0-car
The Cmclnnati Reds
feature race at the Skyline catcher • chin sagging, broad
Speedway here Sunday, shoulders slumped, was a
Aug. 21. Other finishers In portrait of a beaten boxer. "I
the late model race were In feel like one too - pWJchy,''
this order, Bob Oney, Ben he said.
Hickle, Joe Heck, Bernard
And, by his own admission
Triplet, Bob Crace Jr., he was talking like one.
James Hatfield, Bill Lucas,
"Say what ynu want, but
Earl Htll, HUlon Wolfe Jr., there's no denying the fact
Chester Moody, Bob that we'.ve held the (Los
Adams,
Sr.,
Larry Angeles) Dodgers at bay
Brumfield and Ronnie since the AIIStar game. Their
Bond. Adams Jr. came In lead ' ts still 91'.. games,"
second In the first heat won Bench muttered Tuesday
by Gene Adkins. Earl H111 night after the Montreal
won the second heat.
Expos completed a sweep of a
two-game series with a 4-2
victory.
Defeat for the Reds bad
come only minures after tHe
St. Loui~ Cardinals' 2-1
victory over the Dodgers bad
been splashed on the
Mets 2, Astros 1:
Lenny Randle singled home Riverfront Stadium scorethe winning nm in the ninth board.
"It's amazing they aren't
inning to spark the Mets. Leo
Foster singled to start the folding under the pressure
mnth, was sacrificed to we're putting on them ... that
second and took third on a they aren't starting to play
wild pitch by reliever Joe bad,'' he contmued.
Of course, Bench was being
Sambito before Randle
slapped his single past a facetious.
"At least I hope he wa\"
drawn-in infield. Ed Kranepool's pinch-hit double had said Sparky Anderson when
tied the score in the etghth. the Reds' catcber words were

~

Dodgers stopped · 2-~ by Cards

••

PRICES
FROM f

considerati on [or natwnal
honors.
" Notre Dame ts loaded •"
Minnesota Coach Ca I Stoll
said, and he has plenty of
suppqrt in that theory,
The lrish came O)lt a victor
in tbe Gator Bowl last year
with 20 ol22 starters slatl!d to
return . There's been some
losses since then, notably
running backs AI Hunrer and
Wtllard BrownPr, but there
are horses aplenty returrung.
Among tbem are defensive
end Ros Browner, worthy of
Reisman
Trophy
consideration in his fourth
year as a starter; a defense in
which every player is a
lettennan, four of them with
four letters, and an offense
which could he explosive.
To replace Hunter and
Browner's brother Willard,
Irish Coach Dan Devine can
call on Vegas Ferguson, a
freshman standout last year,
and Jerome Heavens,
hopefully back from the
operated kne1! list. The
passing could he notably good

Goltz one-hits Bo'sox ·

•

"Mandated mcreases fit
cost such as the minimudt
salary schedule and the pup;i:.
teacher ratio should halie
been repealed by the Generll
Assembly because they haw
not been properly lunded t '
Sllld Rhodes.
~
Tile school foundation lotmula contains a sectioll
which would require schoe1
districts to levy at least il
equalized mills in re«J
property taxes by 1979 Ill
order for them to be eligible
for basic state aid, which w4S
incl'e&amp;llld $250 million in tl'il
appropriation bill.
•
This will result, sat!
Rhodes, in 38 school distrid;
not able In benefit froin
property tax credits whi~
would have been granted
under tbe real properly tax
roll-back law.
•·
Because the 400-pa~e "lin.o
guage" bill was
comprehensive, Rhodes h.tld
requested
that Houae
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, Jl'.
and Senate Presiding Offl~r
U. Gov. Richard Celeste not
certifY It since he malntainid
it unconstitutionally
addressed more than . oae
subject.
'
Both men refused, sa~
ten days ago they could nOt
"in good faith" fail in wltlt
they
termed
th]
"Constitutional duty"
certify the leglalltlon a
having been duly cmslde
and . passed
by
tie
Letllslature.
l
UnW tbe bill beccmet ~!;
state 8IIDCI• cu ean
allocaUJIC&gt; . .te
amount the7 did In

li.e11Di11111.

3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug 24, 1977

passed along to l!im.
'•If he isn't," added tbe
Reds manager," I would
have to think he's losing his
coconut
1
Allderson, like Bench, was
experiencing the same
feeling
of
complete
frustration.
Back 111 the players lounge
of the Reds clubhouse Bench
continued his mooologue.
"I wish •" he said • "one of
us would wm 20 games in a
row, then one or the other of
us would be put out of our
misery.''

The Expos left 16 runners
stranded even while winning
Tuesday night. The Reds
stranded 11.
"Five
is
not
the
difference," said Anderson.
111
The real difference is we're
the
two-time
world
champions. They aren't.
Rookie rlghtbander Paul
Moskau, started for the Reds
and displayed grit if nothing
else, limiting the Expos to
three runs whlle yielding 10
hits, one a solo homer by
Gary Carter in the fifth
inning.
. Both of the Reds runs came
oif winner Steve Rogers who
departed in the sixth after
weathering a bases-loaded
none-out situation, which
ended with Pete Rose hitting
into a double play .

ATTENTION
SPORTSME·
N
Bow
Fox

TrappeiS, riShermen,
Hunters,
,HunteiS, Cooo
Hunters, Rabbi~ Squirrel, and Deer .Huqters. Your sport,
your right to do the things you lOve to .do in the out of
doors is being threatened.
There are those in Ohio, who have launched the most
vicious attack, in the histoly of this state, on the rights of
the sportsman.
They,have done this by placing before the WJters of
Ohio on th·e November ballot, an amendment ·to ban the
leg-hold trap in the state of Ohio. ~ey have stated verbal~,
that this amendm~t ~ just the first .step of their fight to
ban all sport hunting m the state.
·. •
If you care about your right to hun~ fish, or what ever
"'your sport might ·be and you would help. defend that righ~
there will be a meeting-held Aug. 29 at 7:30 pm,at the
new coon hunters· building kJcated at the 1tock Spring Fiir ·
Grounds.
_
·vour attendance and support is urgently· needed. For more
information contact: Grant E. Young, chairman of the
Ohioans for Wildlife Conservation of Meigs County.

Phone 37"376.

�'

S-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesd.ay, Alii! . 24, 1977

Reds may not ·win it all this
, year but look out next season
By RICK VAN SANT

POMEROY ROYALS - The Pomeroy Royals ended
their season in second place in the Meigs, Mason County
Pony League with a ll-4 re cord. They were 10-4 in regular
play, tied with Mason and won a playoff over Mason 6 to 5.
Front, 1-4, Brian Whaley, Otis Core, Bill Miller , Brian

King, Rick); Smith, Mike Whitlatch, Chris Taylor ; back
row, Bill Ohlinger, coach, Cliff Kennedy, Tom Owens, Ron
Cullwns, Chris Woods, Steve Ohlinger, David Kennedy,
Randy Murray, Brian Swann , and Ed Kennedy, coach.

Big Ten grid notes

Jackson has four
starters returning
JACKSON - A cast of 71 Two assistants from last
grid candidates, including 19 season have gone their
freshmen , are in the midst of separate ways: Jim Reynolds
rugged two-a-&lt;Jay sessions at to Oak Hill High School as
Jackson
High
School, head grid coach and Eric
preparing for the September Humston to Vinton County
9 opener at home against High School where he will be
Logan Elm,
athletic director. ·Sixth-year coach Ron Fenik
This year's assignments
and his staff face a major lind Foglesong handling the
rebuilding task as 18 of 22 wtngbacks, linebackers and
st'arting positions need to he passing . game;
Riffey
filled from last season's in- working with centers ,
jury-riddled 4-6 team.
guards, defensive tackles and
Because of the numerous nose ·guards; Gilders, a first·
injuries last season, seven year coach, responsible for
returnees this year could he the running backs and
considered as returning secondary with Fenik in
starters. B'ut, the watch- charge of the offensive ends
words, however, are most and tackles, defensive ends.
definitely youth and inexROSTER
perience.
Seniors - Don Barnhart,
The squad consists of IS· Nick Bobo, T. J. Conger,
seniors, !6 juniors, 19 David Crawford, Nick Elliott,
sophomores and 20 freshmen. Roger Greer, Rick Haynes,
And although the Ironmen Josh Jenkins, Rand· &gt;Seph,
have been itlto practices just Scott Conley, Tirr .:Ingrey,
a little over a week, it ap- Rick Neal, Steve Trepanier,
pears that underclassmen Jeff Young , AI McKenzie and
will be called on· to man some · Vince Crace.
of the starting positions and
Juniors - Jim Campbell,
perhaps even more of the Brian Hickey, Cliff Fourty,
backup roles.
Joe Malone, Pat McGoon,
Returning starters include Walter Moon, Jeff Music,
linebackers, Roger Greer, Ronnie Ross, Rob Sharp,
Dave Mullins and Josh Walter Woodruff, Don
Jenkins, guard Scott Conley, Yeager, Mike Riley, Mike
defensive back Rich Neal, Waugh, Keith Mullins, John
tackle Randy Joseph and Waugh and Jeff Hall.
- split end John Waugh. Tim
Sophomores -'- Jeff Bolen,
Kingrey, a senior newcomer, Jim Brown, Scot Cook, Carl
started as a center last E'isnaugle, Dale Evans,
season at his former high Stanley Greer, 'Ronnie
school in Iowa.
Henderson, Mark Jenkins,
At the start of the season, Eric Johnson, Eric King,
before all those nagging Brian
Landrum,
Karl
injuries set in, only Jenkins, Newsom, Chuck Reisinger,
Joseph, Greer and Conley Keith Wasmer, Mary Wyant,
were starters.
William Wyant, Lowell
Currently, the Ironmen are Yates, Tommy Stiffler and
practicing 8-9:55 a.m. in the Greg Ervin.
Freshmen- Doug Chance,
morning, have walk-through
pa~ing game drills from
Keith Mullins, Mike Fouty,
10:45-11:30 a.m. and regular Randy Dunn, Dan Morris,
practice again from 6-7:30 Kenny Moon, John Ratliff,
p.m. in the evenings.
David Fouty, Mark HamFen!!&lt; indicated that' early mond, Tlm Muffiey, Chuck
practice sessions were Stapleton, Bo Carter, Norm
coming along well, "The boys Ragland, Craig Souders, RitK
areworkingandlearning real Milburn, John Morrow,
well and performing up to Randy Williams, Pat Reed,
their abilities," he said.
Mike Wolford and Chuck
The Ironmen have two Norris.
scrimmages · scheduled:
Saturday, Aug. Tl at Marietta
and Wednesday, Aug. 31
against Greenfield at home.
BALTIMORE (l,JPI) The regular season opens
Baltimore
Colts' Coach Ted
with three non-SEOAL
Marchi
brnda
said Monday
· games. JHS will host LO_gan
rookie
wide
receiver
Dexter
: Elm and Wheelersburg on
Feaster,
a
free
agent
from
· Sept. 9 and IS, then will hit the
North
Carolina
A&amp;T,
has
quit
. road for a Sept. 23 test at
football and returned to
; Miami Trace.
The seven-game league North Carolina.
The coach said if Feaster
: schedule starts Sept. 30 as the
decides
to return next year he
· Ironmen travel to Athens.
will
he
considered again by
; Assisting Fenik this year
the
Colts.
"He has quite a lot
: are coaches Al Riffey, Buck
of
potential.'
'
; Foglesong and Greg Gilders.

MADISON, Wis: (UP!) - The University of Wisconsin
football team worked out twice amid light showers and 51)..
degree temperatures Tuesday at Holy Name Seminary .
. The Badgers, who began working out Monday, will be
without pads until Thursday. Then the hitting begins in
preparation for the season opener Sept. 10 at Indiana .
There are !09prospects, including 29lettermen, according to
Coach John Jardine. Among the lettermen are 17 starters from
lile team lllatfinished !Hi ( 3-5 in the Big Ten) in 1976.
CHAMPAIGN , Ill. (UPI) - The Unive'rsity of Illinois
football team held its first scrimmage Tuesdsy in preparation
for its Sept. 10 season opener against Michigan at Memorial
Stadium.
·
Dan Melsek, a juni.or offensive tackle from Chicago's Holy
Cross High School, suffered a minor knee il\jury and will be out
seven to 10 days. His injury was the second to'hit the Jllini in
early drills.
Reserve linebacker Bobby Smith, a sophomore from Toledo,
Ohio, suffered a shoulder separation Mondav and will tv&gt; 'lo•t
for at least three
IOWA CITY, Io {or at least three weeks.
_
again Tuesday sire= conamoning as his Hawkeye football
team neared the end of two-a-day drills.
Junior aetens1ve tackle Joe WllllS remained out of practice
with a twisted knee and offensive linemen Sam Palladino,
Barry Tomasetti and Mike Mayer also missed practice.
"It's not determined yet when· those players will be able to
return to practice. It's a questionable thing right now, " said
Ed Crowley, head trainer. ·
Freshman center Jay Hilgenberg, who miSsed Saturday's ·
scrimmage with a leg injury, returned to practice Tuesday.
The Hawkeyes end two-a-&lt;lay practice sessions
Wednesday.
·

CINCINNATI ( UP! )
Bubbly Mike Shannon, the st.
Louis Cardinals' radio
announcer, bounced into
Sparky Anderson 's office to
try to cheer up the crestfallen
manager of the puzzling
Cincinnati Reds.
" You think you' ve got
problems," began Shannon.
"~ I remember· back in '64
when we won the World
Series over the Yankees I hit
a home run off of Whitey
Ford.
" Me ," pro cl aimed
Shannon , " against Whitey
Ford.''
Sparky Anderson just
looked at Mike Shannon.
Shannon went oo.
'~ But Olen, in the season
opener in '65, the score was
lll-10 in extra innings. The
game was called off. It didn't
count. But my batting did. 1
had gone l).for-7 that day.
"So, " said Shannon ,
coming to the point, "I was 1).
for-7 and the season hadn't
even started .
"And that," he told Sparky,
"is just the way it goes."
Now that, Sparky can
believe.
World cham~ions the past
two years, he has watched his
Reds trail the Los Angeles
Dodgers by 10, 12, and
sometimes H games much of
tllis season.
Shannon tried to talk to
Sparky ,about unexplainable
winning and losing streaks.

Snapped Sparky, " I could
ca re less about the Dodgers,
believe me."

What Anderson meant was
that he was only concerned
about getting his Reds to
winning. He wasn 't interested
in hoping or wishing the
Dqdgers would start losing.
or course, Anderson still
indicates to his players that
they can Catch the Dodgers. .
That's !i big part of his job
and he's hard at it.
Catching the Dodgers may
require some of the stuff
posted on Sparky's bulletin
board.
Several parab-aphs written
by Norman Vincent Peale are
headlined,
" Expect a

surpriSed they let (reliever
Rawly ) Eastwick go. Wasn 't
he the one that really helped
them win it last year.
" It's funny, but it always
seems to come down to
money ," add ed Carroll .

DR~

DONALD S. PRITT ·
PODIATRIST

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE '

World. "

RT. 2 NORTH

The reason most often
given for the Reds' problems
is pitching .
Former Reds' reliever Clay
Carroll agrees.
"Maybe they just don't
have the bullpen 'right now,"
he said. "Maybe that's it.
They got good hitters. They
got 15 runs one day in Chicago
and still got beat.
"I think they've gotten rid
of too many pitchers. I was

' i.W e're (the Cardinals ) on

"That was the reaSOil in my
case. They said they couldn't '
afford me - but they couldhave.''
Former National League
President Warren Giles lives
here and has been attending a
lot of Reds games this year. '

of His OHice

But there's another little
note that says "Cruel World."
That's all . Just "Cruel

a six-game win streak:, 11 he
said. "You know when the
last time was that we won six
in a row? Two years ago.
Sparky replied dryly, "You
know when the last time we
lost six in a row - just a few
days ago.

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Tuesday's line scores

119 A3D 1&lt;33 .309

G. AB. H. Pet.
122 .481 182 .378
121 A7A 159 .335

113 396 132 .333

1Hargrve Ttx
1vount Mil

106 435 142 .326
121 492 159 .~23
108 435 139 .320
117 498 158 .317
111 426 132 .310
116 403 12A .308
122 AU 148 .306

Ham• Runs

National league: Foster, Cin

~~: Burroughs, At! 32; Luzinski

Thursday
thru

KIDNEY BEANS. .... ~~~~.~;.~~.~ ........................... 4

lOl

GREEN BEANS.......~~.&lt;:~.·~s.~.~T:.~~~...................... 2
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Scott. Bos 29; Zisk, Chi 26.
Runs BaHed In
·National League: Foster, Cln
119; LutinSki, Phil 104; Cey, LA
95 ; BurroughS, Aft 92; Bench,

Cln.JO.
American

Le.-gue:
Hisle ,
Mlnn 100: Bonds.. Cal 91 ;
ThompsOn, Det 90 ; HOb!oOn, Bos
89; Zisk, Chi 84 .

Stolon Bases

29~

National League: . Taveras,
Pitt ~; Cedeno, Hou .43 i
Ntoreno, Pitt .40; Richards, SO
39; Morga~ ~ Cln and Cruz. Hou

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000 120 000 000 1-. 8 0
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000 200 lOG- 3 10 1
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·

CRONKITE TO SPEAK
WUISVILLE, Ky . . (UPI)
Milwaukee {Slaton 8-13}, 8 :30 _
CBS News anchonnan
p:'m.
Detroit (Rozema 14-4 and Wallet Cronkite will he the
Wllco»'.
) at Oakland (Blue k
t
k
t th U S
11 -15 and5-0Coleman
2-~1 2, 9 p.m. eyno e spea er a
e · ·
Toronto (Garvin 8·13 and Coast Guard Auxiliary's
Jefferson ·7-13) at seattle (Pole annual convention here next
7-10 and Abbott 10-8), 2, 9:35 month.
p.m.
Thursday'• Gomes
Cronkite will address the
Texas al Baston, night
Se 17 t th 1
f
Mlnnesola al New York, night
group pt. a e C OSf 0
Chicago ot Bammore, nignt
the three-&lt;lay meeting, which
Kan Cily at Milwaukee, night . hegins Sept. 15.

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2111 020 O:tx- 7 14 1
Jenkins, Stanley (5} and
F lsk; Goltz and Wynegar. wGoltz, 16·7. L-Jenkins, 10-8.
BOSion
Mlnn

HR - Minnesota, Carew (12).

Jl'llnn :U3 Roiom•. Dot 2.1-1.

N.Y .
Chlcao

Hou 152.
~ld!Jtd,
A!lltrlcoo L - : Ryan, Cal

Downing. W-Torrez, 15.10. LY/OOd, 6·6. HR....-Naw York,

•
51 lllllutl
, NatleMI L...... : Nltkro, Atl
leW; Konman, ltiiY 162; Rogers,
tl
1B; Soovor, Cln 154;

E:

T_,.nl, Cal 190; Leonard,

: .17f• llyl-· Tox

c~y,

Clew 156.

IQs

030 000 140-8 13 1
002 100 ooo- 3 11 1
Torrez and Mun1011: Wood,
~aGrow (IL Kirk- (9) and

..•

NoltiH (30) .
102 DID OD0-4. 10 1
Mllw
IDD DOD 001-. 7 0

,.

INC.
MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN:.

9 a.m. to s p.m. Mon. thru Thurs.
9 a.m. to a p.m. Friday
Saturdav 9 a.m. to s p.m.

SPECIAL
PURCHASE
PRiCE

FONZV

Sutton, Sosa (B) and Ye~ger;
Forsch and Simmons . WForsch, ,14·5. L-S~tton , 11·8.

100 110·001- • 13 b
Clnci
• 000 110 ooo- 2 9 0
Rogers, McEnane-y (7), Stanhouse (8) and Carter: Moskau.

•

368

Prices From

and cornfruiabll:' . S~nd tlwm back· lO~ SCilOO\ ill
010 000 OOi&gt;- 1 3 1

Sarmiento (6}, Murray (7),
Borbon (9} and Bench. wRogers, 1.4-12. L-Moskau, 3·.4.
HR-Monlreel, Carter (22).
....

Phil 11-7; ~ . ~euschel, Chi 17-5:
forsch, St.L 16·5; Seaver, Cln
and John, LA 14-5; Rhoden, LA
~~·li Jl®OrS, Mil 14-12.

11,11 and Brett 10-91.2. e p.m.
Kansas Clly (LIIIell 6-41 at

(13), Giusti (13) and Mltter-

28.

Pitching
Most VIctories
) NatiHal League: . carlton,

Cleveland (Fitzmorris 5·7 and
Walts 7-4) at California (Ryan

wald . W- WIIIIams, 5-A. L-P.
Reuschel, 4-S.

Mntral

Amtrican League: Patek, KC
Ml: Remy, Cal 32; Page, Oak
)o; LeFlore, Oet 29 ; Bonds. Cal

Cooper (15).

(9) and Herrmann. Ferouson
· ·
(7}; Espinosa, Lockwood (8) Tronto
and Stearns, Grote (7). w- Oaklnd
Lockwood, J-6. L-Samblto. 5·5.
Clancy,

38.

f

SLICED

-·.

GILLIAN'S
FASHION CENTER

;Rivers NY
,Rice aos
1Banor Tor
ILeFiore·oet
·ZISk Chi

Effective

IN MIDDLEPORT
AND YOU'LL
SEE WHAT
WE
MEAN.

••

'

SliiCED

g

\{t:1 .

Schmid! (311.
Amerluft League: Rice. Bcs, San Ogo
200 021 001-6 ' 9 3
Bonds, Cal and Nettles, NY 30; Pttsbilh ·
'002 020 021-7 8 1

PHEBE' STORE
ERective Thursday 25th thru Saturelay
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps .
Monday thru Friday
.9:00til7 :00
Saturday 9:00-9:00
CLOSED

BASEBALL

oend Schmidt, Phil · 31 ; Bench ,

BEEF
LIVER

Classes To
Resume Sept 7

out of action
in next game

'Cln 27.

AND

Ballroom Dance

Kidnaping of
store owner
investigated

1Carew Min
•Bostock Min
:slnglton Bal

MASON, W. VA.

Ice Cream Bars

of

''NEW
STORE"

·

MICHAELS

u Principles

_:m

tvalntlne Mtl
104 .42~ 130 .308
l Roblnson Pit
105 381 J11 .307
Amirlcln League

PICKENS HARDWARE

Admission '3.00 at Door. Children 6 to 12 1.00
• Good seats and air-conditioned. See you there.

are

Parents know the drug threat; the
child you save inay be your own

:m

"' By Uni ed Press 1n1ernatlonat
Battlnt
(based on 350 at bats)
National League
11 ·
G. AB. H. Pet.
1
. Parker Pit
x25 512 176 .3-"1
' Stennett Pit
116 A53 152 (336
--simmns St.l
117.406 136 .335
: Griffey Cin
122 .470 152 .323
117.476 153 .321
1Tmpltn St.l
;Luznskl Phil
113 .423 134 .317
•Foster Cln
122 .477 1.49 .312

PURCHASED BETWEEN AUGUST 6 AND SEPTEMBER 5, 1977

1

ooordinator of continuing
&lt;ducatim, said that two other
courses would be olffl'ed at
Jackson High Sdl ool. They

Three Steelers

Hayes raves

1Mor!!le5£hl

AT THE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

3 lb.

Tigers ·

.

••• ON ALL GALLONS OF LUCITE PAINTS

.SATURDAY, SEPT. 3,
7:30P.M.

•

Offensive
line draws

;Leaders

from

FROM NASHVILLE, TENN.

Mrs. Mullins, with her
tauband, ill owner of
" F1owers For You,u and has
mops in both Jackson and
Oak HiU.
A~ residmt d. Jadtson,
Vinton, Meigs or Gallia
Courttes is eligible to regbter
for the cla111. Registration
will be held Tuesday, Sept. 6
from 6-9 p.m. at Lyne Center
&lt;11 the Rio Grande Campus,
cr "uderts may dloose to
regilter at the lint class
sessim SqJI. 13.
Bernard Murphy, Jr ,

Marketing" and "Preretirement Planning ."
Cla!ses in beginning and
Pari I of a
government, in an effort to away.'' but actually con- Middleport , submitted by
advmced cake deccraling
13-porlterltt
cope, was forced to establish tinues to stalk the land and In Middleport Chief of PollOi! J .
.., abo on the !aU schedule
"The present generation of huge, multi-million dollar some ways is worse than il J. Cremeans.
NEXT : "Marijuana, The
~d will be ta~lt In Jad&lt;son. yoWlg people in schools and drug treatment centers, in has ever been. So convinced
Innocent
Drug."
ill
this
office
of
a
need
for
lnfonnltton about any of ' colleses are the best in- addition to pouring millions
resurgence
of
an
all-out
war
these dasses 1s avatlalie by formed, the most intelligent, into drug related law encallin~
the. con\inuing and the most idealistic of any forcement measures. State against drug abuse, that we
education olf1ce (2tHiS53) . we have ever had in this and local government feel it in order to present to
NOTICE
country," .says .a noted .established drug . abuse local citizens the reasons for
, college' proleslior. This is prevention programs, and this need, in · this l~part
generally true, but adults even civic groups joined the serJes over the coming
.
today must realize that massive effort to spread the weeks. It is this writer's hope
that all readers will follow the
awareness and intelligence story of drug abuse.
among our youth do not
A long, hard battle followed material with an openprovide an impregnable and great strides were made. mindedness reserved lor the
AI The
eontlaued from Page 3
shield against the enigmatic Tons of information were most serious discussions
was 6-7 with a 3.60 ERA
ORCHID ROOM
and siren-like offerings of the disseminated ... all good, relating to personal and
LATROBE, Pa. (UPI) before being purchaaed from
family well-being.
necessary
and
factual.
Pomeroy'
S~H:alled
drug
culture.
Three players may not see
Evansville by Detroit. He
Beefed
up
drug
control
laws
Comparatively,
only
a
acti&lt;ll because of injuries
For more information call
rep&lt;rtedtollleTigersJuly26.
SPONSORED BY Freda 992-2622
small minority of young were enacted, and law enanytime.
when the Pittsburgh steelers
The right-hander has
Wyatt, Headquarters · Bar,
play the New Englan Patriots
Major Leogue stondin?•
people are using and abusing forcement was given the
looked re~pectable every
·
B't' United Press lnternahonal drugs, but a minority in this backing it needed \o slow the
time out so far. Morris has a
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Ohio Sunday in an exhibition game
National Leogue
case is still a great number of flow of drugs to the street \ ..-::,..-: ...-=--,.,....., .-,...-:
· ··;
good live fastball plus an state Football Coach Woody at Foxboro, Mass.
EIJI
w. L Pet. GB youngsters - some very markets.
Linebacker Loren Toews, :
outstanding changeup and Is Hayes predicts the Buckeyes'
Phil
a
78
45 .633
young - and the number is
And then it happened; as
just wild enough to keep offensive line "will be safety Glen Edwards and · Pitts.bgh
is wont to do, it
society
~;
~
~'h
still
increasing
rapidly.
considerably better this rookie running back Laverne Chicago
batters loose.
became
calloused to the
70
s•
.560
9
.
Ours
has
been
a
drug:
s~
.·
1r..o.u1s
Smith were excused from . Montreal ·
Mcrris was 1-1 with a 2.97 season".
entire
effort.
There had been
-~ ~~ : ~~ ~"· obsessed society. As far back
ERA in his 6rst 36 innings,
Hayes Tuesday put his practice Tuesday because o( New York
such
a
show
of
for1~; . and so
we"
as
1965,
about
167,000,000
covering rive games and four squad through the second day injuries but runningback
much
had
been
wmten' said
~- ~1 .~iJ· GB prescriptions were written by
starts. He had 2t strikeouts of padless workouts in Reggie Harrison, who bas an · Los Ano
and
done
about
drug abuse,
65 61 .516 9'12 doctors lor psycho-tropic
and just 16walks. He went the preparation for the season injured calf, worked out Cincl
most
l
Americans
lulled
~~~:.~~n
j~. :; ·!~~
distance agailist Seattle Aug. opener Sept. 10 against without equipment.
112 drugs, the kind that cbehange or
themselves
into
a
false
56 73
20 affect mood and
havior.
The Steelers Tuesday son Oleao
16, allowing six hits, but Miami of Florida.
1
43 81 .347 J0 h Adults were the main con· security ... that the whole
suffered his first defeat, 3-2.
Hayes plans to go with two placed rookie tight end Ken .Atlant-aTuetday•s
Results
ba ck then, and so we . problem was under control .. .
swners
"The experience and his tight ends this season which Roy of Rice on waivers, New York 2, Houston 1
Fran .4, Chlcaoo 3. 13 Inns ·must assume that adults have that there was no longer a
control, more than anything, he also used in ihe Orange reducing their roster to 58 san
Philadelphia.
Allanto 2
been high ort the long list of serious threat to our young ...
players. Roy, .a free agent, PiltSbllrgn 7. 3,San
pre responsible for his Bowl against Colorado.
Diego 6 · ·
and perhaps we had become
drl1fl abusers all along.
.
jmprovement this season,"
Battling for those two spots did Jl(\1 play; in any of the st, Louis~. _t;Q&gt; A/1.\J•Ios .1
Montr~al
•·
Cirlclnnati
2
,
ThUs,
parents
and
other
too alarmed about the whole
'63id Detroit Manager Ralph are Jimmy Moore, a 6-S, 2t7 Steelers' th~e~ pre-season
in the firSt place.
·
Houk, who has inserted pound junior; Greg Storer, a games in which they are 2- · Toct•r;l/,.'1~:~~&amp;:,chers . adults must look to lhem- thing
So
complacent
have
we
~os
Angeles
CJohn
14-5)
al
selves
when
trying
to
find
.:Morris into the youngest ~. 211 pound senior and Bill 1.
Pltlsburgh CJones 3·51. 7:35 how·drugs got out of hand in become, now we have
Coach Chuck Noll must p.m.
!ll&amp;rting rotation in the major Jaco, a ~. 253 pound junior.
Chicago CKrukow 8-10) at the first place. But, the listened to the drug adleagues.
Hayes and assistant coach reduce his roster to 52 by Atlanta
(Solomon 3·3l 1 7:35 "purpose of this writing is not vocates, to the extent that we
i All of the Tigers' five Bill Myles, In charge or' the Aug. 30 so a number of p.m .
New
York
CMatlack 6· w at to find a place to lodge blame have allowed ourselves to be
Btarters are 23 or younger linemen, both had praise for rookies are expected to see Cincil'1n natl (Capill.a
5-S), 8 :05 . .. every adult' should know
talked into allowing laws to
)!xcept Fernando Arroyo, 25, tackle Chris Ward,a 6-4, 268 action against the Patriots. p.m.
h
th
li
th
be minimized. In many
Philadelphia (Christenson 12. w ere at es ... ra er, to
)lnd Mark Fidrych's stand-in, pound senior.
states, possession of an
51
at
Houston
CNI•kro
8-51.
8:35
bring
out
into
the
public
He is down from his 28t
Milt Wilcox, who is '¥/.
P·S"an Francisco {Halicki 11 -9) spotlight once again every· 'l!mount of certain drugs i "When he started otr this playing weight last year and
at St . Louis {Urrea 5-31. 8:3S thing that Should have formerly sufficient to put the
)1-ason he was wild," Houk ran his fastest 41l-yaril dash
p.m· Thursd•y•s Games
become common knowledge user behind bars - has
·d, ''but befor
_e he joined us Tuesday.
Phlia
at
Houston,
nlght
among all people, par- become no more serious than
&lt;lJicago he . was the best
Both Hayes and Myles
Los Angele~ at Pittsburgh
ticularly parents
urI cal a motor ·vehicle traffic
cher on their staff the last . agree that Ward may he the
Fran at St. Louis, night·
, SO 0
0
CLEVELAND (UP!) .,-Au- San
youth may have the benefit~ violation. This growing at·
o or three weeks.
· best tackle in the college . tliorlties in 'Clevelinci-' and Ch;caao at Atlanta, nignt
New York al Clncl. night r
that can result only from a titude of leniency has an~ " He impressed me in
game.
, , ,.· Pennsylvania today . were
-;~·' ,
complet~·- and factual un- nounced to tire world's illicit
wring training' even though
investigating~ k!dllipmg of
traffickers
that
derstanding of the national drug
re only pitched him five or
James follak of. Beachwood,
._;'~~~rlcon LUgue
drug problem aS_ it stands American children are still
six innings. He threw well on
Ohio, who · oper11tes a
fair game because respon.
_,,_,._,,.,-,. ~last
.
Joda".·
.·
~e sidelines, weD,'' Houk .
.. · ' ··~ ' ,.. W· L Pet GB ·
.;
downtown jewelry store.
sible
people have become
New vorft~~)'!J~~:n:··. 51. .589. - .
In the late· '60s and early
~d. "you know he must have
last year when I went down to
Police said PQllak ·suffered Boston . !.'··':·~_r }.lr.·.so . ·.s87 v~ . '70s, most children know tired of the struggle and
looked good because we the ( Fl~rida) Instruc~on"! head cuts ·after being
Baltlmre
. -~
sz. ·,574 · 2 more about the mechanics of resigned to the fact that drug
Jl(arted him at the Triple-A League, he said; The _Tig~rs
Detroit
59 64. .480 I3 V'l
abducted by three men Clevelnd
abuse, at least to some
s7 67 .460 16
drugs than their parents,
level with very little. minor league p1tchm~ Monday and driven to
degree, is an accepted fact of
Milw
56
74
.431
20
from
their
associations
on
the
'
~rience. 11
•3
79
.352
29
st
t
Whil
dults
instructor, John Grodzicki, · Edinboro Pa. where he was Toronlo
West
ree .
e a
were life in our country.
On the Tin
helped Morris " with my taken fro~ ~ car trunk and
America
needs
a
w.
L
Pet.
GB
consuming
prescription
t ul got a lot of brO!Iks.'' motion and my r~ease point. duniped along a roadway.
Middleport
~~~nc;tv
;: ~~
1 drugs, losing weight and. reawakening to what drug
J-)otris Raid. "Harrison And confidence was a big
Come On In!
Pollak was treated at an Chicago
,
69
53
.566
2 escaping reality, few knew abuse is all ,about, and the
1Roric, ·. journeyman ex- · part of it.
Erie hospital and returned to m~s . .
~: ~j
li~: the facts behind drug abuse, fact {llat it has not "gone
~)lr league . pitcher who
"I had a good spring lind the Cleveland area.
51 n .398 23 !hough they were part of the
seattle
pulled a groin muscle just as they started me off at TripleAuthorities
said his Oaklan&lt;:f
~5 77 .369 26
problem. Even fewer saw the
Detroit was about to · A," ~orris said. "It's hard to assailants approached Pollak
Tueld11y s Results
. if'
.
h t
s1gn tcance In w a
was
P!fm&amp;Se his contra~) got say if I would have been a as he left work forced him Kansas City s, Baltimore 2
·
M;nnesota
7,
Boston
0
,
happening
....
wHenmillionsof
hurt the same day they were higher draft choice if I had into h~ car ~d tied his New York 8, Chicago 3
i
young Amer cans were
;a&lt;ling to briilg him up and waited until my senior hands. His· watch and $75 in Milwaukee •· Tex.as 2
Toronto 8, Oakland 1
tasting, testing and exey brought me up Instead. season. As it turned out, I cash was taken from him
Detroit
J, California 1
·
t utg
'
Tadly's Probable Pitchers
pertrnen
with every
rything jult kind of fell made the right decision.''
police said.
'
cAll Times EDT I
imaginable drug available.
.place.
1 f,~rtr ~f" 10 eos~~
Bi~feKva:"'
Finally, about ~972'\73,
"The big turnaround came
{Paxton
6·3
ond
Cleveland
8-61,
people
began awakenmg fully
••
2' ~,f;c~oo cstone
13 _8, at to the drug problem, many
Baltimore CGrlmt~ey 12-6). 7:30 stimulated to thls cognizance
p.m .
·
.
by drug catastrophes in their
·
Mlnnesola
(Redfern
S-81
at
famili
Th fed 1
Major
League
Results
Caldwell,
CaStrb
{9)
.and
'
es.
e
era
By United Prest International Moore ;
Ellis, B~_rker (5), New Yor-k (Hunter 8·-n. a. p.m . own
J_
Malar League Leaden

j

..GOSPEL SINGING
HEM PH ILLS"

PWMS

13 and 20 will create
S&gt;mtthing with a fall theme.
Halloween will be the topic
ilr Oct. t and 18 meetings,
and Nov. I md 15 ltudents
Mil make make a Thanl&lt;s·
glviq! decoratiM.
All classes wiD meet In
Jackson High Sdlool frllm 7
to 9 p.m. Regiltration fee wDl
be $IS per person, plus the
cost of materials used. The
dass will be limited to IS
participmts.

•

SEE THE

PEARS

aass sesaions meeting Sept.

~

.HAnd," he added, "we may

he . working on another one
any day now." ·
Someone changed th.e
subject to George Foster's
power hitting and Sparky was
happy.
He got up from his chair
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPI ) - Jon Eickstead, Northwestern
and
finally smiled·.
offensive line coach, predicted Tuesday the Wildcats may
11 ln
Chicago," beamed
sport their best offensive punch in a decade .
Leading the way are senior linemen Tony Ardizzone, Greg Sparky, clapping his hands
together, "he was hitting
Soderberg and Tim Ford, Eickstead said .
Dan Cleary, a 6-loo~. 247 pound tight end, is again ready for rockets. There's no living
ballpark in America that can
action following an ankle injury.
'
hold
his shots."
, Last seasoo 's starting tailback Pat Geegan has been moved
But
soon the , Foster
to defensive back.
conversation died· down and
entered
MINNEAPOLIS· (UP! ) - The !l().member University of someone else
Sparky's
small
office
and ·
Minnesota football squad ran more than four miles in various
asked
the
snow-white
haired
..
drills Tuesday in a pair of practices devoted mainly to
manager about the Dodgers'
conditioning.
·
The squad worked out in shorts and T-&amp;rirts with no pads big lead.
again and will begin drilling in full uniform Thursday.
Sophomore Wendell Avery worked as quarterback with the
. first team backfield; hopeful of filling ihe shoes of veteran
quarterback Tony Dungy, who graduated. Pushing Avery for
the job were junior Marc Trestman and sophomore Mark
Carlson .
Coach Cal Stoll also was trying to replace four offensive
linemen from last year's team, plus last year's top two pass
receivers, Tony Kullas and Mike Jones.

An elperlenced Jacklon
florist, Mrs. Reba Mulllns,
will be teaching a continuing
education course for Rio
Gr111de College and Community College beginning
~ - 13. "Fiowfl'tng Ideas"
'"the name of the sii-6e•lon
dass wlich 11111 give parlldparts a dian~ to crest~
seamnal rome deccratlons
llli~ fresh, dried md silk
Bowers.
The a.urse will be designed
b help ltuderts make three
. rllfere_nt hoine dea.tations.

SHOP THE

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

PRODUCE SPECIALS

5th &amp; Pearl

Mrs. Mullins will teach Rio course

Wishes to Announce the Refocatlo

Miracle.''

The drug scene today

579

�•

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Aug. 24, 1977

ri~~~
·:~

~
"

US. • •

::::

e~cept

in isolated cases (which might

correspond to "Satyr" or " rapist " in men .)

Nymphomania was another label Victorians used to keep
women pure and men dominant. Today the term is more for
jokes than for believing. - H.

+++

Dear Hel&lt;in:
Unlisted telephone numbers are an abomination! If people
feel they're so important that they can't he disturbed, why
don't they put a tape on their phone or take down messages,
then screen out the unwanteds?
... Or bave printed after their names in the book, "No
solicitors." Or "N.S." which would take less room ?
I've read that you, Helen, have a listed number. II you can
manage it, why not others? - AGAINST "UNUSTED"
Dear A.U.:
I get irked at unlisted phone numbers, too - that's why
we've never gone that route.
An editorial in my former home~ounty paper, the Grants
Pass (Oregon ) Daily Courier, suggests an alternative: To save
client time and company money (directory assistants waste
countless hours telling customers "That number is unlisted")
why not insert names of these reticent folk in the phone book,
with "unlisted" where the number should be?
... Simple, effective, not too many additional lines in tbe
book, and for th9se who holler, "invasion of secrecy,'' I'd
suggest no phone at all. - H.

+++

Dear Helen &lt;
I could not contain myself when I read your reply
regarding "handicapped parking. " You forget that all
handicapped people aren 't in wheelchairs.
My father, a strapping, healthy-looking man, had five
major surgeries lor stomach cancer . Chemotherapy and
radiation weakened him so that he could walk no more than a
few yards. He rightfully used the "close-up" spaces, as do
emphysema and heart patients. And observers often ju"lped to
conclusions; as you did.
Incidentally' our state issues "handicapped ' . license
plates. Look before. you condemn. - BARBARA
Readers All:
" Please forgive , if I judged anyone wrongly,
"Martha " a volunteer worker in Marin County, California,
has designed a card for observers like me ; to be placed on
suspect cars:
"If you are handicapped, God bless you. If you are not,
Thank God -and please park somewhere else. - Easter Seal
Society of Marin. '' - H.

Ladies
attend. DAR meetinu
.
.o
CHESTER-MrS. Dorothy '
Ritchie, Mrs. Doris Grueser,
Mrs. Thelma White, and Mrs.
Mary K. Holter attended the
three-daY 83rd Annual Session of the State CoWlcil of
Ohio, Daughters of America,
held last week at the Neil
House Motor Hotel in Colum·
bus.
Mrs. White was the official
.. representative from Chester
Council 323. Mrs. Ritchie
received her coiiUJlission as
deputy for ~trict 13 at the
meeting along with gifts from
the district councils. Installed
as state warden was Mrs.
Faye Hoselton of Belle Prarie
269, Belpre, and she, too,
received council gifts.
Other representatives from
District 13 at the State Session

were Jessie Ryan of Golden

Gleam 254, Marietta ; Essa
Varner of Belle Prairie 269,
Belpre; and Mary Moose
Perry Council 283, New Lex:
ington. Dee . Moyers of
Marietta and Margaret
Stacey of Belpre also attend·
ed.

. ATTEND REUNION
Michael
Grant
Minersville; Mrs. Sharon Rif·
fie and Greta, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Holter
and Wesley, Route 1,
Reedsville, attended the
Davis reunion held on Aug. 7
at Forest Acres Park.
·'

.

descendants of Hiram N. and

.

I

Aug. 7 at the Racine Lock
picnic area · above New
Haven.
This was the fifth annual
reunion for the groull.
The afternoon started with
a picnic lunch enjoyed by all.
Rev.
Wilbur
Barter

Albans; W. J. (Bill) Rollins,
Nathan and Myrtle Rollins,
Kathryn Blessing, Clara
Capehart , Kenneth,
Katherine, John and Nancy
Rollins, Sharon Rodgers,
Fred, Alice and Bill Brink.er,
Goldie!WIIins,Jimand Unda

pronounced "Grace" and- Board, Mason; Florence

Meadows, Joni, Julie and

Sybil (!Wllins) Norris acted
as chairperson for the day,
B~ty (Capehart)·, Moore as
·
secretary.
The group sang "0 Happy
Day" which was Grandpa
(Hiram N.) Rollins' favorite,
accompanied by Floyd
Blaine, Sr. on his guitar.
Everyone also sang "The
West Virginia Hills" and
"Home on the Range."
Officers elected for the
coming year were Catherine
Rollins, president; Floyd
Blaine, vice president ; Clara
Capehart, secre tarytreasurer, and Kathryn
Blessing, Manford Blessing
. and Mary Grinun, program
committee.

-

There was a moment of
silent prayer in memory of
those.who passed away since
last year. " The Golden
Morning" and "The Gospel
Railway" were other pieces
sung. The rest of the afternoon was spent visiting
and picture taking.
The oldest living descen·
dant of the Hiram N. Rollins
family to attend the reunion
was W. J. (Bill) Rollins of
Letart, W. Va. Traveling the
longest distance were Bert
Rollins of Capron, Ill.,
grandson of Hiram N.
Rnllins, and Ronald Blaine, of
Strongsville, Pa.. ~real·
grandson of Hiram N.
l!ollins.
The youngest descendant
was Kara Rollins (15
months, daughter of Joseph
and Chris Rollins from
Belvidere, Ill., a great-great·
granddaughter of Hiram N.
and Sarah Rollins.
The Rollins families plan to
meet the first Sllilday next

HOME AGAIN
Mr. and Mrs. Luke Casto
·and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Bowman have returned from
a trip to England. Mrs. Casto
is the former Mary Bishop of
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Bowman
the former Jane Owens of
' Middleport. The trip was a
Lazarus courtesy for Casto
and Bowman, Despite strikes
at the London Airport, the
flight was not delayed and tile
families were back in Cincinnati Monday after a week in
England.

PICNIC SET
Sunday, Sept. 11, has been
set as the date for the picnic
of Mary Shrine 37, White
Shrine of Jerusalem begin•
nlng at I p.m. The event will
be held at the Racine Locks
and Dam park between New
Haven and Letart, W. Va.
Those attending are to take a
covered·dish, a beverage and
their own table service.

.

.

.

...

Eastern

Grinun, Lawrence and Carla Jennie Clark, Ross and Irene
Winebrenner, Allen Winebrenner, Tom, Donna,
Capehart, Okey, Unda, Unda Tommy and Christopher
Louise, Joe, Eddie and Knapp, Edna· Rollins, Ralph,
Mechelle Capehart, aU of Linda, Annette, Shawn and
Columbus; Carl and Sybil Karen Grimm, Harry
Norris, Junction City, Ohio; Klingensmith, B~ty Shields,
Paul and Opal Williams, Don, Sandra and Shane
Belpre; Lewis Blessing, Shields, Webster, Mabel and
Lockbourne, Ohio; Connie Don Pauley, W.S. Baxter, all
and Dionne Busse, Kingston, of Letart; Sarah and Dane
Ill.; Sharon Brinker and Hannum, · Arlington, Va.;
friend, Harry and Joan !Wbert Ashley, Letart Falls,
Kurtz, Parkersburg; Walter Ohio; Stanley Shields, East
and Mary !WIIins, Loren, Liverpool; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Betty, Carl and Chris Moore, Owens, Middleport; tillie
and Tom McGovern, all of Kinzel, Mt. Alto, and Edith
Gallipolis; Belt and Mary Allison, ·Nitro.
·

·

.

.

Relatives and friends at· Blessing, Robert and Leota

Chris, Amy and Kara Rnllins,
Belvidere, ru.; Hort Rollins
of Ft. Myers, Fla. and
Lancaster, Pa.; Thomas and
Audrey Blaine, Akron:
Ronald Blaine of Strongsville, Pa.; Floyd Blaine, Sr.,
North Canton, Ohio; Flora

A REMINDER TO THE
· CITJZENS OF THE
EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL
·DISTRICT.
VOTE FOR THE
SCHOOL LEVY
ON THURSDAY, AUG. 25·
OUR CHILDREN'S
EDUCATION DEPENDS
ON YOU. '
Pd. for By
.

..~,

0.~ - ~'lri',.~~~it~e~~~s ;:;)."fa~ ~~'ft::. ~~~~~:,~~-idJ:!~~~ i!~!o~,nd~a~~a~;;~in~,'~~:

\By Helen Hottel

Nu Male Nymphomaniacs?
Deat Helen:
Here's another why-oh-why. Women who wholeheartedly
enjoy se11 are called nymphomaniacs. as if they had some kind
of bad disease.
Yet males with the same "problem" build up envied
reputations and go down in hiStory as great lovers, Cf!'efree
wCIDanizers, etc. You could call a man "Casanova" and it's a
compliment, but if you whisper "She's a nympho," even guys
· get scared off.
.
·
· ·
Tell me, is there really such a tiling as nymphomania? NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL EQUAL
Dear NTSE:
Probably not,

1
~C:.! ~: Ja..rr:!~~:.::.r:.. r~~f!~~

johnson family gathers
'11le Johnson family reunion was held Aug. 7 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. ~y
Johnson, Dublin.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. A. Ray Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Ron Hateley, Mrs.
William Byrd, son, Ray, John
Shoup, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Johnson, Megan, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Derrin,g, Tom, Mr.
and Mrs. Hennan Derring,
Steve Evans, Jodee· Henry,
Mr. and ·Mrs. Tom Johnson,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans,
Mrs. Cheryl Preston and
Heidi, Mr. and .Mrs. J,arry
Belford, Rich Lewis, Mr. and

Birth announced
Mr. al!d Mrs.

third child, a son, Ben o.r.
ret!, welghin(l 10 pound~, niDe
ounces. Grandparl!rlla are
Mr. and Mrs. CharlU Mull,
Jr., Pomeroy, and the maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Brunson, London,
Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Maall
have a daughter, Sharline,
five, and a son, Chuckle,

•

DATE SET
The Walter Gilmore

reu-

nion will be held Sept. 10 at
the roadside park on State
!Wute 33. The gathering wiU
begin around 10 a.m. and
there wiU be a covered dlah
dinner at noon. Those attending, are to take covered
disl)iit and their own table
service.

SUMMER '
CLEARANCE
•
GOES ON

FAU
FABRICS
GALORE
POLYESTER FLEECE, CHALLIS, CORDUROY,
WOOL BLENDS, SWEATER KNITS, POLYESTER

on

SHOP ~..;
Pomeroy

W.2nd

Social
Calendar
•

'
~AY
I

Council 323,

49"'
•

MARGARINE ........ .

$189

CHEESE SPREAD .....

Box

Frozen 1 lb. Booth Perch Fillet ..............•.
· · 51.59

a

Mrs. Tene Werry, Mrs. Faye
Wallace, Mrs. Wade Windon,
Miss Zandra Vaughan, Mrs.
Lucille Vaughan, Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan, Mrs. Corky Werry,
Mrs. Teresa Davis, Mrs.
Becky Maynard, Mrs. Usa
Pierce and Travis, Miss
Angie Sisson, Miss Kim
Jon&amp;S. Mrs. Mary Jane
Herald, Miss Betsy Herald,
and Miss J aYJ!e Hutchison.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
.Micky Maynard, Mrs. Dwigbt
Zavitz, Mrs. Cheryl Lemley,
Mrs. Tammy Pickens, Mrs.
Jessie Rodgers, Missy and
Danyan Majors.
Game prizes were won by
Mrs. Tene Werry and Lisa
Thomas, with Mra. Velma
Nicinsky winning the door
prize.

NA
SAUSAGE
......
;
..
~ .......................... 2/69* .
28 oz. TEEN QUEEN
CUT'
GREEN
&amp;
SHELLY
BEANS
...
;
..........
2/89*
28 oz. HUNTS
.
WHOLE TOMATOES........................~ .........~~... 69*
10"1• oz. CAMPBELLS
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP.......................... 2149'
20oz.
l
HUNTS CATSUP. ........................................~.~!~ 59*
1 ,•,.

10 oz. CASTLEBERRY
-

. .,

..

HOT
DOG SAUCE ..................................~?.'. 2159'
18 oz. PLANTERS
'•
PEANUT
BUTTER ......................................!.~~... 99'
24 oz. DINTY. MOORE
.' '
BEEF STEW ....,. ....................................~ .... :~~-~ 9~
'

3 oz.

.'

m America, · to

CUT UP FROZEN FRYERS ...................... ~~: .. 69*
BOILED HAM ...........:.......................:..... :~~.~.~:. 51.29
. •
BULK WIENERS...........................................!~:..97~
HOME MADE HAM SALAD....................... ~~;. 9~

Joyce Hutchinson enter·
tained at the Meigs Inn banquet room recently with a
layette shower honoring Pam
Nicinsky Vaughan.
A yellow and green color
scheme was carried out and
the gift table was accented
with a stork centerpiece. The
. cake was
bootie replica
with booties on each piece.
Yellow candles in white
Fostoria candleholders on a
green tablecloth were on the
serving table. Mints, nuts,
and punch were served with
thecake
.
'' Attending ,rere Mrs. John
Nicinsky, Mrs. Diane Har·
rison, Mrs. Betty Hutchison,
Miss Uaa Thomas, Mrs.
Kathy Price and Stephanie,

weeks in Texas enjoyed

KNITS, ETC.

THE FABRIC

NESTEA INSTANT TEA .............

Store Hours:

time. -MRS.G.C.
DEAR POLLY- Last year
my husband was asked to br·
ing deviled eggs to the
Christmas office party and
we were in a quandary as to
how he could transport );hem
arid have them arrive intact ·
with their Christmas tree ·
(parsley) and red paprika
decorations. Our solution
worked so well I want to pass
It on as this is the picnic
season.
Cook eggs as usual and
while they are cooking
prepare the carton or cartons
in which they were PIU'Chased. The eggs should not touch
the carton so they should be
lined with clear pastic wrap.
cut a length about twice ·as
long as the carton plus three
or lour inches. Center the
strip of wrap over the inside
bottom of the carton and using a clean ~cooked egg
genUy push the wrap down into each egg holder. When the
eggs are cooked and peeled
lay them on their sides and
cut in two, opposite the usual
lengthwise fashion. As each
yolk is emptied into a bowl·for
"deviling" set the white in its
nest in the carton and
eliminate further handling as
it can be filled there. Garnish
after eggs are filled, overlap
plastic at the center and seal.
Refrigerate inunediately and
leave there until cartons are
put in a small ice chest to be
transported. -M.G.B.
Polly will send you one of
her signed !hank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS ill care of this
newspaper.

s~m

Mrs. Hollon weds

Layette shower hosted

Water ruined inlaid table

and Garriet Polk Hayman' will
be held on Sept. 4 at the home •
of Clarence Hayman, Sr., A&amp;
tlquity. C. E. Hayman, Sr. IJ .
president. Friends and
relatives of the family are in-"'
vited to attend. Achicken and
ham dinner wiU be served at
noon.

Wedfling set
LETART, W. Va. Wedding plana have been
. completed lor the marriage
of Miss JoAnne Young to·
David Lee Siders.
Miss Young is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James
Young, Letart, and David is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Siders, Gallipolis Ferry.
Mr. and Mrs. Early Casto
The wedding ceremony will
take place Aug. 26, 7:.30 p.m.
at the Vernon United
Methodist Church, with the
gracious custom of open
church being observed.
·A reception will follow in
Miss Tanunie Hollov. Col· the church social hall.
Mrs. Opal Hollon, Chester,
and Earley Casto, Ripley, w. umbus, granddaughter of the
Va., were united in marriage bride, was the flower girl and
in a double ring open church she wore a .floor length dress
ceremony on July 24 at the of mint green with a white •
Chester Nazarene Church. picture hat. Her corsage was
The Rev. Herpert Grate of· of green tipped carnations
and she carried a wicker
ficiated at the wedding.
The sanctuary . was basket of red rose petals.
Arthur Casto, Columbus,
decorated with altar flowers
served
as best man for his
ci. yellow gladioli, white
daisies tipped in blue, and father. Ushers were Rick
baby's breath. The family Hollon, son of the bride, and
Robert Parker, son-in-law of
· pews were marked with white the bride.
satin bows. Mrs. Jenny
A reception . was held
Machir was pianist, and Mrs.
following
th~ c~remony at the
Rick Hollon registered the
Chester
Lodge
Hall which
guests.
was
decorated
in
the color
The bride was escorted to
scheme
of
the
wedding.
The
SUPERIORS
the altar by her oldest son,
James, and given in mar· four tiered wedding cake was
riage by her family. She was decorated with yellow
SUPERIORS
•
in a street length dress in pale daisies, doves, wedding bells
and
featured
swan
tier
blue with a matching jacket
and matching accessories. seperators. It was topped
Her shoulder length veil of with doves and double wed·
pale blue wrui held by a floral ding rings. The cake was bak·
headpiece. It was made by ed by .Mrs. Sheila Hollon,
her sister, Mrs. GQ!da daughter-in-law of the bride.
Guests were served cake,
Krackomherger.
punch,
nuts, mints, coffee
The bride's only jewelry
and
fancy
sandwiches by
was a pair of pearl earrings,
TEEN
QUEEN
Lonna
Hollon
and Sheila
1 lb.
a gift of the groom. Her bou·
Hollon,
daughters-in-Jaw
of
quet was a blue Upped daisies
and baby's breath with the bride, and Miss Mary
streamers tied in lover's Krackomberger . Also
2 lb. DELIGHT
assisting were Mrs. Jim King
knots.
CHEF
and
Mrs.
Pearl
Rayburn,
Mrs. Robert Parker,
Marietta, served as matron nieces of the bride.
Mr. and Mrs. Earley Casto
of honor for her mother. She
spent
a week at Hawk's Nest
. wore a street length dress of
Lodge
and toured scenic West
yellow with a matching
Virgiia.
They are residing at
yellow picture hat and white
accessories. Her bouquet was Ripley, W. Va.
AK.MO·UR
Attending were guests from
of yellow daisies, baby's
breath and yellow streamers the Bend area, Columbus,
and New Jersey .
.tled in lover's knots.

Polly Cramer

REUNION HELD
The third annual reunion of
the descendan\8 of ~·1..

and on Saturday a picnic was
held at Uberty Park. Roush
families from Z3 states were
present for the reunion. Sunday morning Mrs. Warner
and Mr. and Mrs. Roush at·
tended the Monnan Taber·
nacle service to hear the Morman Choir.
Others from this area at·
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Cleland, Mrs. Frances
Roush, Racine, and Mrs.
Elma Louks, Syracuse.

Members of the French
City Square Dance Club or
Gallipolis will he celebrating
the anniversary of tbeir club
Saturday, August 27, with an
Anniversary Dance. The
dance will be held at the Tri·
Grande Square BuUding on
Eastern Avenue in Gallipolis.
Caller for the dance will be ·
the club caller, Bill Gene
Evans. The hours will be
from 8-11 p.m. Refreshments
of homemade ice cream and
cake will be served, All area
square dancers are invited.

1977

POLLY'S POINTERS

three.

Utah setting for reunion

Dance the night away

7.., 1111 O.Uy Srntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,

m announce the birth !lllleir

Mrs. Lawrence Belford, aU of
Grove City.
Mrs. Myrta Wilson, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Johnson of Col·
umbus ; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Corbin, Kelly of Westerville;
Mr. and Mrs. Lee !Wush,
Rodney, Cheryl, Joey and
Beth; Kenneth Johnson, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Johnson,
Gina, Tahnee and Brady,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Joseph R.
(Helen) Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Jacob Johnson, Mona,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Johnson,
carrie and Sonya, Rutland. A
potluck dinner was served at
noon. ·

Mrs. Robert Warner and
Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush
have returned from Salt Lake
City, Utah where they went to
attend the Roush reunion.
They left Thursday and
returned Monday. It was
Mrs. Warner's first flight.
On Friday a banquet was
held at the Utah! Utah Hotel

oJ..IIuh

•

at the

slile Thursbegining at 4

Mrs. Hayman Barnitz,
Pomeroy.
During the first 10 days of
August, Mrs. Barnitz became
a great-grandmother three
timeS bringing the total
nwnber of her grandchildren
to 16, eigbt boys, and eight
girls.
Cynthia Kathleen was born ·
Aug. I to Mr. and Mrs.
William Young of Warren,
with Mi. and Mrs. Harry
Young (Julia Barnitz) of
Galion being the grandparents. · Andrew Wilson was
born to Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
carroll, Cincinnati, on Aug. 2,
with Mr. and Mrs. Wilson '
carpenter (Bernice Barnitz)
!I Pomeroy lleing grand·
parents; and Jason Chad was
born on Aug. 10 to Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Hulcy of Borger,
Texas, with Dr. and Mrs. N.
W. Kramer (Thanet Barnitz)
of Plainview, Texas being the
grandparents.

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST. .
POMEROY, 0.
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective
Thru August 27th

GRADE A

MIXED
FRYER PARTS •••••••• ~8~.
GRADE A
'

CHICKEN BREASTS ••L!-.
GRADE A

4

WHOLE FRYERS•••••• ~~
GRADE A·CHICKEN

·DRUMSTICKS ••••••••• ;~·.
USDA CHOICE ·BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST.........L~

.•

GROUND CHUCK••••••L~

.•

WHOLE
DAUGHTER BORN
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Fry are
annoWlclng the birth of their
second child, a 6 pound 10
oWlce girl, Andrea Marie,
Aug.l7 at the Holzer Medical
Center. Maternal grand·
parents are Mr. and· Mrs. "
DUford Ferrell of Syracuse.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fry,
New Haven. Maternal great·
grandmother is Mrs. .Mary
Jarrell, Sharples, W.Va., and
amua1 Swartz family paternal great·grandmolhera
be held at Alfred are Mrs. Panay FrY and Mrs.
. Aug. 28; In the Helen Knapp, both of New
Andrea
was
There will be a Haven.
welcomed
home
by
her
sister.
dlnher at 12::10 p.m.
other activities Melanie Rae, age 4.
In the afternoon.
HOMECOMING SET
The Hazel Community
Church homecoming will be
held Sunday with morning
services at 10 am. followed
by a balket dinner at noon.
The afternoon service will
begin at 1 p.m. with the
Goapel
Messenger
of
Parkersburg singing and
a-ge HoiChar as speaker.
The Rev. Edsel Hart, pastor,
welcomes the public.

BAD GUESTS
RUTLAND-Mr. and Mrs,
Efwttt Earl Hultoen, erat-

llnl. Oblo. ..... .... 1111
• I ql t 1111 JDCJther.
..... Wt.aq YOIIIII ..S Mr.
....., ¥il!ill • llaiiAnd.
1'111J atlo attended the
Huttoo reiUilon on ~y.
I

WATERMELONS •••••••••~;.
'

LETTUCE ••••••••• ~?~~.
·BORDEN'S
'

.

$ 19 FRUIT PUNCH••••••••G!~-.
TOILET TISSUE ••• :~!~G! ...

CORONET

.

GOOD VALU VAN. &amp; CHOC• .

DAN DEE

POTAifO
L

COUPON

8 ROLL

8 OL

GAL
CREAM
·ICE
•••••••••••••

CHIPS.~~~~ •.
_j

1/2

COUPON

GERBER STRAINED

DOMINO

BABY FOOD

SUGAR

~~~z10/$1 W/C

5 LB.

BAG

79~ WtC

I

L -COUPON

MAXWELL HOUSE.

CHEER
SLB.

4 oz.

COUPOt::~

$189.
W/C

COFFEE

W/C

$150PRICE
R~~ULAR
'7.99

2 LB.

.

Limit 1 Per Customer ·
Good Only At Powell's
Offer

1977

�n - ••~

t~ ThiJDaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

.

Crime lab needs
.
y
mone
new local
.

th
•
,TOMORROW~ .FRIDA v AND SATURDA v·, AUGUST 25-26-27
9 AM TIL 7 PM

AMBLESIDE GARDENS IN.C.
Route 35 West

Gallipolis, Ohio

It's Sam Neal's 38th Birthday, and.
He's Celebrating With A 3 Day
Happy Birthday Sale.

%

SAVE

OFF

ON EVERYTHING IN THE STORE

0R1Ho

I

NE L S0 N Vl L L E
The Crime Lab currently disadvantage •
Soulheaatern Ohio faces the provides technical assistance Yates. With?ut ready JICet;SS
lou ol the services and and laboratory services to to lab faclbhes, crunes m·
equipment provided by the law enforcement agencies in volving physical evidence are
SEO
Regional
Crime Athens, Fairfield, Gallia, d1fhcult to prosecute.
The Southeastern Ohio
Laboratory.
Hocking, Jackson, Licking,
Regional
Crime Laboratory
John Yates grant ad- · Meigs, Morgan, Perry,
has
the
ability
to process all
mlnlatrator of' the lab and Vinton and . Washington
types
of
evidence
such as
director of the public service Counties.
·
department at Hocking
The services include crime drugs, firearms, ballistics,
photographs,
Technical College explained scene investigation, evidence fingerprints,
that tbe problem due to a . collection, laboratory composites and sketches as
~line in federal funds.
analyses of materials and well as trace evidence in·
"Two years ago, the college drugs, evldenc~ preparation eluding hair, fibers and glass.
The fulltime lab staff inreceived a grant from the and presentahon in court
cludes
a chemist, who is also
Law Enforcement Assistance proceedings.
its
director,
and a secretary.
Admtnlatration to establish
"During the 18 month
the Crime Lab," Yates said. period from Jan. I, 1976, to In addition, instructors in law
"The LEAA provided 95 June 30, 1977, we have enforcement at Hocking Tech
percent of the costs with the assisted local' law en- serve as evidence technicians
remaining 5 percent coming forcement agencies with 331 to provide 24 hour service.
In its two year history, the
from Hocking Tech."
evidence collection calls by
Now ~ginning Its third the Mobile Crime Lab, 4361', lab has also acquired
year of operation federal hours of court appearance~ $34,756.04 worth of equipment
funding will cover ~nly two- and 5,993 evidence analyses," to perform the sophisticated
thirds of the lab's total Yates said. "All of these tests and analyses necessary
budget. The remaining one- services were made possible to process and substantiate
third, amounting to $23,000, by the federal support at no evidence that is collected.
A committee of local en·
mUJI be provided from local cost to local law enforcement
agencies."
forcement
personnel and
"' .:&gt;urces.
"During the next two
Before the local lab was interested citizens has been
years, the federal money will established, all evidence had established to work toward
continue to drop," Yates to be sent to London, Ohio for the development .of a local
pointed out. "Next year, processing by the State fund to continue the Crime
federal funds will provide Bureau of Investigation and Lab. Roy Kelch, former
Logan Police Chief, is
only one-third of the budget Identification.
while two-thirds will have to
The distance, time lag and chairman. Persons.interested
come from local sources. crowded schedule of the in' working with the group are
Finally, by 1979, all funding London lab put Jaw en- urged to call Kelch at (814)
.mUJI be totally provided from forcement agencies in 3115-4404, or Yates at (614) 753local sources."
Southeastern Ohio at a 3591, ext. ~4.

b

LAWN &amp;.GARDEN

PRooucrs

Gifts

•

~

Sundial

25°/o

•

•

SHELVES, RACKS
.,.,.; f
.&amp; STANDS .

••

••

•••

:
••

.•

BALL POINT
PENS

THEME

By Blc

Size 8" x 10"

2 Fine ·Points
. 1 Med. Point

9 Colors

Tools

SAVE

4'1c!

•
•

'

..
•
300 Sheets

---

Pocket Size

SIDE COIL

NOTEBOOK
•
PAPER

THEME
BOOK

•

s Hole

Regular 49c
30 Sheets

Regular $1.29

Webster's
Dictionary
$1.98 Value
Perfect for
the Student!

Baskets
Macarame Hangers

GIRLS' KNEE HI SOCKS
. '2.00 VALUES
ATS SIZES 9 10 11

Pot
Holders

PEAT MOSS

POITED
FRUIT TREES
Ready To

38~

Plant

BONUS GIFT

10 lbs.

now thru Sunday. Save two

bucks on these S h
Shoes.
c ool

1 .,9 • •6.95

Canvas not included

$520

69t

School . Girls
Favorites.
Olleroll Argyle Patterns in
many colors. Nylone blend
fabric. A real

B?ys &amp; Girls Toddler lhr
Size Big 3. Prlcec in eff~t

LAWN FOOD
SM.E .

,,

•
••

•

•

Middleport, 0.

205 N. 2nd Ave .

COVERS

SOME WORTH

Terrariums '

••••

Et Cetera Boutique

MEN'S
COnON BRIEFS
OR T-SHIRTS

· warrens

WROUGHT IRO.N

has new handmade gift
items arriving weekly.
Also arriving are the
latest fashions for the
back-to -school girls and
for the ladies in the area.
Stop in and sign for our
drawing of $25.00 free
merchandise of
your
choice. Drawing is closing
time August 31.

Permanent .
.Arrangements

...- '
.•
....

Gift &amp; jean Shop

15'

l:
.....
•

•••
•
•

Enrollment Now Through
September 1st. Call 992-6389
Or stop by Gillians on the T in Middleport
for more information .

local school hoards without
providing the money ."
" It's going to be a disaster
area with the schools because
or too much mandatiog," said
the governor. "You're going
to have to pay the school
teachers. Until you pay the
school teachers, you're going
to have constant trouble all
over this state.''
The governor did say,
however , that he opposes a
collective bargaining bill for
public ,employes now unde
consideration
in
the
legislature, because it
"doesn't look any different"
from the one he vetoed last
session.

Et Ceterq Boutique

BALLET, TAP, JA'IZ,
.ACROBATICS AND BATON

fountains

CLAY
POTS

Plant ·
Food

Of~f

_He has eased up on his
use of the veto this session not
because of the "veto-proof"
Democratic legislature, but
because "they're• sending
much better legislation to us
than they did the last time."
- The state probably will
have to pick up tbe cost or
public school integration in
various urban 'areas.
- As many as 50 school
districts may have to dose
because of a lack of mooey
this fall, and it is the fault of
the
legislature
for
"mandating $800 million
·worth of new programs on

The Performing Arts are Now Offering
Classes In

•10.00

. \M sAAOE HOUSE

money for relocation of the

gym,

:NOW OFFERING CLASSES
TO MEIGS COUNTY

•1.00
MYSTERY PACKAGE

~

~e?.\ ~

·"ll .
St\RU8S &amp; lREES

vehicle to be registered.
"The statute of limitations
on bringing suit for bodily
Injury should be reduced to
six months following the date
of accident. This would allow
the Insurance companies to
know more quickly whether
their rating structures are
adequate or not.
"We need an expanded
court system to handle the
implementation of the laws
already on the books to
control the motor vehicle
problem. Perhaps we even
~eed a special court system
to handle noth'ing but
automobile problems,
especiaUy for violations, so
matters could be adjudicated
more quickly. In an too many
Instances court staffs are so
loaded with work and shortstaffed that offenses are
dismissed fnr lack of time to
pursue them properly.
"Legislation should be
enacted which prevents any
automobile from being sold
which can be opened from the
outside by any of the tricka
now in use by car thieves,
Including skeleton keys and
coat hangers."

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov. 'speculation about possible
J•mes A. Rhodes has come running mates RhOdes might
out in favor of preiJrimary choose for next year.
pairing of candidates for
He said Tuesday, however,
governor and lieutenant he has not yet made up his
own mind whetherto seek regovernor .
The governor voiq,t.d his election
next
year .
endorsement
under Previously, he has said it Ia
a too early to discuss the 1978
questioning . dbring
television news panel show governor's contest but has
taped Tuesday ~t the Ohio not indicated be is undecided
Slate Fair for viewing about · running.
Most
Sunday (on WCMH-TV) in observers believe he will run .
Columbus.
Rhodes said if he retires, be
In the past, Rhodes has will donate the proceeds of
been reluctant to take sides his upcoming fund-t"aiser to
on issues before the the Republican gubernatorial
legislature Involving the 1978 oominee.
A testimonial to the gover•
gubernatorial contest.
"A candidate for governor, oor•seffortain behalf of black
if be has somebody in mind, people is planned for next
he ought to have the month in Cleveland.
"U I decide not to run, tbe
opportunity to select him as a
running mate before the money will be used for tbe
primary," said Rhodes, Republican candidate for
adding he favors the concept governor," he said.
"in principle."
On other matters, Rhodes
The Ohio Senate voted said:
'
earlier this year to have the
- He will vote for a
party's candidates f•o r constitutiooal amendment to
governor and lieutenant forbid eiectioo day voter
governor pair up for the registration, but will not help
general election after campaign for it.
independent nominations.
- His legal couns~l ba~·
But the House reversed this advised
against
his
idea last June, voting for a commenting on why he
bill which calls for pre- refused to meet with persons
primary pairing. The entire wbo want a gymnasium site
issue Ia now before a joint moved at Kent State
Senate-House conference University and on. whether
coounittee.
the ~tate would furnish
There has been widespread _

Shirls. lrr19ul•r• of our
nationally
advertised
brand. Sizes S-M-L-XL

25% OFF
GLOVES

~e thing he stressed, at a
news conference Tuesday'
was stepped up
grams t
. . pro
o
employ artists m governm~nt
projects such as mtroducm.g
art to buses and other transit
systems.

Rhodes in favor of pairing candidates

While artton Briefs. v.
neck or crew neck, T-

HOUSE
PLANTS

WORK .

arts

..

STOCK UP NOW

2.5% 01F
J ;',.,

HARRIS ON ART

WASHINGTON (UP!)
poll·
Public
opinion
ster
Louis
Harris
wants the government to
step up employment of
artists - "one of the most
severaly underemployed
sectors of our t.oeiety."
Harris, chairman of the
American Council for the
Arts, urged President Carter
to name " a kind of watchdog
ace0 rdlng to within government" for the

... .......... .. .... .... . .
~

0 .. Wednesday ,Aug . 24, 1977

MEft AND JOYS'

TENNIS SHOES
With Racer Stripes
Regular $4.99 and $5.99

ENTIRE STOCK DRASTICALY REDUCEDf~

MEN'S
DRESS •
SHOES

loo\s

Mittens

Valuesto$19.99

Matb\e tb\~

'

"•..

..

• IIIII
II

,·

'

•

.

A

�.... -•

••
-1.0- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, Aug. 2~. 1977

'

Dudding takes football at Southern

Independent candidate offers to
put God hack in government

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) - lbe Rev.
Leroy Jenkins, stating ''I feel we need to
put God back into government," said
Tuesday be would run for governor as an
independent.
Jenkins, whose church in Delaware
County, Ohio, was closed last week by the
state, said in a telephone interview with
UPI from his hometown of Greenwood, S,
C., that he still maintains a residence in
Delaware and is eligible to run for office.
His Holy HUI chu.reb ln Delaware
County was elosed last week by ·the state
because of structural deficiencies.
"I feel we need to put God back into
government and over government like it
used to be," said Jenkins.
Jenkins said the closing of his church
was one of the reasons be decided to enter
the gubernatorial race.
"It took them one day to close my
church but the pornography shops in Ohio

are still open," said Jenkins. '"They closed
my church but it was in better shape than
those buildings with the pornography
shops."

"That helped me make the decision to
run but I had been thinking about it for a
long time,'' said Jenkins.
"I thlnk I am going to wiD, as a matter
ollacl, I know Jam," said Jenkins. "And I
am not going to bave to spend as much as
the rest of them because I am well known.
All the people have to know Is what I am .
doing.
"I think they played right into my
hands when they shut my church door,"
said Jenkins. "People know if they can
shut my church doors they will shut theirs
too. I have received thousands of telephone
calls a bout this.
''I am in this to stay,'' he said. ''I am
not getting in and then getting back out."

:Regents say projects not needed
- By J.R. KIMMINS
-Buy $10 million worth of
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The property near !be Clevelan&lt;
Chancellor of the Ohio Board State University.
of Regents said Tuesday that
-Purchase five underused
one third of the new higher dorms at Ohio University.
education capital
-Expand physical
improvement
projects education facilities at Akron
recommended by Gov. James and Youngstown universities.
A. Rhodes was
not
-Build a Black CUltural
inunediately needed.
Center at Centrai State.
Included in Rhodes'
-Help
finance
the
• pending $642.6 million slate proposed World Trade Center
capital improvements plan in Cleveland.
. are recommendations for
If university boards of
$202.4 million in projects at . trustees decide that the prostate
colleges
and jects are justified, they ought
, universities.
to fund them through local
"We only need $133 bond issues, said Norton.
million," said Dr. James A.
"You know that the board
Norton.
of regents lias not been
Norton testified before the reticent about asking for
llknember joint legislative large amounts when we felt
Public Improvements they were warranted; we are
Inspection Committee. Tbe equally
careful
in
committee periodically recommending a restrained
makes unannounced capital budget," he said.
inspection trips to state
"I get the feeling we have
· facilities to review their overbuilt
on
college
campuses," said Rep.' Fred
construction plans.
The committee is required B. Hadley, R-Bryan. "We
to make a report on prior ought to slow down and use
capital improvement the facilities we have."
expenditures to the General
Norton said that the state
Assembly every biennium. has provided about $1 billion
"We are placed in a since 1968 for new university
• difficult position by the facilities. The funds were
Executive recommendations needed at the time because of
beyond our capital plan," expanding
college
• said Norton. "A number of enrollments.
ihese (new) projects were not
However, . the regents
requested by the institutions expect a sharp decline in the
in their ·• requests to the number of high school
Regents for capital fundings. graduates ·beginning In 1900
"Some of these Involve and a sharp increase in the
areas of expenditure in which number of older students.
• the state does not ordinarily
cOllege campuses, he said,
_ provide higher education fun- must be tailored to suit these
-. ding. Included in _ this changing needs.
category
are
airport
"The probable net effect of
expansion at Bowling Green; these changes is expected to
dairy, horse and sheep lead to some enrollment defacilities at the State clines at the primarily
Fairgrounds; and six acres of r&lt;isidential institutions and a
• artificial
turf
at stabilization of ·enroilnuints
YoungstOwn.''
at urban and two-year
Committee chairman Rep. institutions," said Nor,ton.
William E. Hinig, D-New
Philadelphia,' admitted that
his inspection committee had
no power to reduce the higher
education capital spending
plan as suggested by Norton.
Hinig said that Norton's
recommendations, however,
might "rub off on members
CLEVELAND (UP!) .
, of Ills committee who also
lbe
Electric Co.
, served on the finance todayGeneral
revealed
a 35-watt ·
•. committees
of
either
fluorescent
lamp
said to
· · chamber.
produee
f!1
percent
as
much
The proposed higher
light
as
the
widelyused
40education spending proposals ·
watt
fluorescent
lamp
in
·"- that Norton said colleges and
'. universities in Ohio did not addition to saving 14 percent
in energy costs.
~ inunediately need included
GE said the new reduced
plans to:
wattage
lamp represents the
·• - Build a new con tinning
greatest
single boost in
education ooilding at Miami
fluorescent
lamp efficiency
• Univerc.ity.
since the 19508, adding that
it's made possible by a new
fluorescent substance coinvented at . the firm's
research and development
center in SchnectadY, N.Y.,
and
the local la10p
components division.
If the 800 million, 40-watt
fluorescent lamps now in use
• COLUMBUS (UPI)- Two throughout the country were
• West Virginia men were ·beld replaced with the new "Watt· in the Franklin County jail in Miser". fluorescent lamps,
:- Ueu of $50,000 bond after GE says it would save 22
being arrested Tuesday .in billion kilowatt hours of
connection
with
the electricity annually. · ·
•
kidnaping Sunday of two
That, according to the com- ·
West Virginia men.
pany, is enough power to light
Arrested in the capital city 22 lnillion h9mes for a year
on a federal complaint filed in and reduce the nation's
Portsmouth, Ohio; were power bill by $770 million
. Glenn Hall, 43, and his SOil annually.
;. Bill, 24, both ofMingo County, .
.
• . W.Va.
The FBI said the Hall men DELONG CHOSEN
. · were arrested for kidnaping . LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI)
Doyle Franklin Napier and - Mike Delong, former
'. Tony Keith Lemaster at Fort acting admilllloos director at
~ Gay, W.Va., about 2:30
Capital
University · in
Sunday morning and forcing Columbus, Ohio, has been
them to drive them to the named as
admissions
Portsmouth, Ohio, area director at the Transylvania
where the victims were University.
abandoned later Sunday
DeLong allo served aa
" lll(JI'IIjng.
admissions counselor and
1 • The Hall men were ordered dean of men at Urbana, Ohio,
held In the jail after they College and received his
appeared before U.S. Magis- bachelors degree from ·
trate -Mark R. Abel.
Capital Un~verslty .
.,
t

GE announces
35-watt lamp
is achieved

11

Two men held
·at Portsmouth
: for kidnaping

II- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport;POOleroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 24, 1977

John Dudding, a native of
Middleport, was named bead
football coach at Southern
Local High School by the
school board which met in
recessed session Mnoay
night
Dudding, who has been golf
coach, resigned that post and
the board agreed to drop the
golf program for the eqming
year due to lack of finances.
Miss Daisy Crawley was
employed as girls' athletic
varsity assistant
Other actions included :
-Employed Mrs. Deborah
Roush as seventh and eighth
grade science teacher and
John ·Costanzo as Title I
teacher and coordinator for
the 1977-78 school year.
- Employed as substitute
teachers, Alice Brauer, John
Coffman, Dorotha Petrel,
Betty Hutchison, Ruth
Tucker, and DaUqs A. Hill.
- Employed as substitute
bus drivers, Thomas Hill,
Earl Adams, Bill Cornell,
Ray Proffitt, Dennis Richard,
William Downie, Jr., Hilton

. and Harold Circle.
Wolfe, Jr.,
- Employed as substitute
cooks Linda Grindley, Mrs.
Harold Davis,SbarleeEvans,
June Ashley,
Dorothy
Johnson, Hazel Sellers and
Anna Wines.
- Instructed the clerk,
Linda Spencer, to borrow on
the December Foundation
subsidy to meet August 2ti
and September 9, payrolls.
Prices for lunches will be 50
cents, elementary; 55 cents,
junior and senior high ;
breakfast, 20 cents; reduced
lunch, 20 cents, reduced
breakfast, 10 cents, and milk

~~·--------~~~

Robert L. .White.
Attending were board
members, Dallas Hill, vice
president ; Jack Bostic,
David Ne¥e and Greg
Roush,
Bobby
Ord,
'Superintendent, and Linda
Spencer, clerk.

JUST RECEIVED
I

There wen 436 exhibiu
made by MelgJ County achool
studentll featured at the lltth
Meigs County Fair.
or the total number of
entries 76 studentB received
lint place blue ribbons and
will receive a $1.50 premium
later. Fifty seven studenu
received red second place
ribbons and will receive a U
premium. Sixty-five studentB
received white third place
ribbons, and will receive a 50
cent premium later. All
students received green.
·
. participation ribbons.
Premium winners included
by school:
Bradbury - Steve Bunce,
blue; Justin King, red, and
Adam Martin, white.
Chester - Sheila Koenig,
Pam Riebel, Tammy Sayre,
Slacy Crow, Jodie Thomas,
Jennl Burke, all blue; Sheryl
Folmer, Linda Thoma, Betty
Hunt, all red; Todd Clay,

• .__

LARGE SHIPMENT

NOW YOU KNOW
In ancient China, a man
sentenced to die could pay
another man to be executed
instead. The money went to
the substitute's family. ·

Be ready for winter,

get where you want

seven cents.

In still other business they
accepted the following bids,
lunch room supplies from
Valley Bell and Betsy Ross ;
tires, from Meigs Tire
Center; coal, Jeffers Coal
Co., gasoline, Ashland; motor
oil, PennZQi!; bus supplies,
Standard Oil, and fuel oil,
City Ice and Fuel.
Substitute custodians
employed were Everett
Connolly, Ann Cozart and

to go safe~ with a ·

CRISISLINE

good set of snow tires.

CALL

Students place 436 exhibit~ in 114th Meigs County Fair

992-5554

wont to buy or sell something,

'

ae looking for work , . . or
whatever ... vou'll get results
touer with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
Coll'1'12-2156.
YARD SALE. Aug . 25'26 . little ol
everything including real nice
breakfast S:et and few ontique5 .
From 9-6 eoch day. Otis Casto
residence, ~eedSville , Ohio .

COSl CUTTIIt COUPON

FIVE FAMILY Yord ,Sale : out Rl . 1
Bypass to Howell Hill. Cemetery
Rood. Watch for sigru . Tues .

thru Fri.
TWO FAMilY Yard Sole . Thurs .
and Fri .. Aug. 25 and ·26; 9 am .
to -4 pm . V., mile off 124 on
Bailey Run Rood. Furniture. gas
stove, ele&lt;:tric dryer, antique

dishes , tools and clothing. lots
of misc .

~ '" lf77-M ICIOOit CO. niMI AND llltCII GOOD

~"

AUOUII 11 .

-·

-·

rm 'fMBf . .....,...., I.UGiaT u , rm

BUY ONE $-LB. CTN.

Center Blade

g•t on•

Cut Chuck Roast

KIOGII

Grade A
Large Eggs

.

Catsup ............. .

65 C
3~····· S1

ALL VAtnOIU

Kroger Cake

BoHiess
Boston Roll ........... ..

Mixes.... .......
KltOGII

20-oz. lvs~
White Bread .. .. .. · .

2

·

~:~·

o..-:.~,.Root. B;;r or
q/,

U.S. GO\fT GIADED CHOICI

lb .

PINT_.IOmll,

CI'Ush ·

Hawaiian Punch
Drink Mix

u .s.GOv'TGIADEDCHOta .IEtF

:

E

!.~ :!f~N

••~WaW~••
U·ti. IOI

U.S. GOV'T GIADIO CHOfCl . 11-1 S·ll.

,.... -C1 II IPPUCMU nan I t.ICil T11D

=-~~nS:~i. ~~~- ........
1

California
•
.
Nectannes ............ Jb.

(ltoooriiiMI

lb.

99 C

Bartlett Pears .......

3 $1

WITH COUPON

.~::::· ~~=~~-~-~1.~~- 59 c
sac
••c

Ul.fU.

TAlliS, COnAGI PIIU , IIGULAI ~

HiiatiSpam
•.
L II IH Meat .... n-o
ean
Kroger
I
I

·4 $1

Pork N Beans..
Banquet Buffet

·

14•01.,

ean•

YARD SALE , 269 N. Jrd , Mid·
dlaport . Clothing . guns. and
misc . items. Thurs . , Fri .. and
Saf. , 9·7.

YARD SALE , Thurs . and Fri .. 9.to
4. 698 Laurel Street. Middleport.

FRIDA'(, 7 pm. Lots of neW
material and other new ond us·
ed merchandise ot Ohio Ri'¥er
Auction , Meigs Plaza , Middleport , Ohio. Phon_e (304)
773-5.71 .

PARTS FOR 1971 Galaxie Ford for
sole , Phone992-5858.

..........

111o.

YARD SALE, Wed .. . Thurs;, and
Fri . 12 Pork Street , Middleport .

~IMIIIMIIIIH.M

Califomia Red or
Blue Plums ............ Jb.
.

:

$ J29 ~~ Instant
Hungry Jeck i
Potatoes i
Roalt ..................... lb.
= --·-·-·::=j
·""
AYIIAGE , liEf CHUCK

·Fresh

.iJ

Boneless Pot

Eoch

Stork
Hill ,

'r'AAD SALE , Thurs . on Fri. 338
William Str'eet , Middleport . /

1...,u•·•&amp;anJ

~

FRONT PORCH Sale .
residence.
lincoln
Pomeroy . All week .

THREE FAMilY Yard Sole , Aug .
25, 26, and 27 at Don Walker's
residence on 5th Street, Racine ,
Ohio . Lots of nice items .
Children's clothing and mise ,
articles. Starts at 8:30.
'

s139
· CPI•'"'""O';"'·''.""'"~
.

l

UtHn IIOlLID

California
Honeydew Melons

Canning Spicas

l

Boneless Shoulde.r
Swiss Steak... .. .. ... .. . !b.

Thompson White
Seedless Grapes ..... Jb.

~
~

5 19

Boneless Rill
$299
Eye Steak ............ ,.. . lb .
liD , ll.UE 01

ll.lt

Kroger

•anuMn.Y-UUUJ i
e,:.._C1 Tt»f'UCCIUSTIR lliQl TUU'

U.S . GOV'TGaADI.DCHC»CI

,

ll'ft•OI.
Pke•·

~
i

. . . . . ""CIIolHCW·

I~IIIIHllll!llUHINlllt!!!!!! I

CHUOC , SHOULDII POT IOAST

1

2 99 ~
3·
$1
......... ,

C§

U.$. GOVT GIAOID CHOICE.Illf

~Ill.

.

.7
· .9

Chuck Steak .............lb.

. . . . . 3l=:· ~1

LARGE THREE Family Yard Sale in
Tuppers Plains across from Post
Office . 9 to 5, Thurs ., Fri ,. and
Sot:.:.·_ __

29• OFF . i
,: .
WITH COUPON
!!
=
=
.om . !
:

(;;;~ Blade Cut

'

'WHo&amp;.llliiiNB. 01 CHAM STYLI

~=~~~~~

lWO FAMILY Yard Sale. Thurs ..
Fri. , and Sat. , '9·5. 453 Grant
Street , Middleport .

~

U.S. GOV"T GIADEDCHOICI ,

2 ·1/ 1 mil8s on 143.

Jtoby , children and adult
clothing. Thurs . and Fri. '9 to 5.

. . . .f:'.OoY Uot o~!..·'"' "-!!:1~ I

..............o••.

Kroger

YARD SALE.

WITH COUPON.

monttyatKrog.r.

2. ~;.89c

$3 .
JAR

FREE

be-l lilt , boM and Wotte ere ,.,...wed
occordl,.. to r!Jid Kree- tte*rd•
beofo,.. MKh cut 11 . •lthoiHII end pricM.
No wenftf Y04.1 ,.. moor. .....t lor your

Fleece
Paper Towels ... '·

ID·OZ~

Kroger Grape
Jelly

IIRoGfl TIIM MEANS
lmfl YALUIIN OUI MEATS

112 SHim PIIIOU.

YARD SALE. Thurs. and Fri. , Aug.
25 and 26 . Children's clothing
and misc . ortlcles. ·l04 1/ ) S. 2nd
A'¥&amp;. 10om . to dark.

Kroger Paanut
. Rutter .tt
AT SP,ti'At PRICE OF

II!Ef CHUCK

=-=-::-:-~--

BIGGEST YARD Sole yet , Aug. 23 ,
24 , 25 . School clothes . bed
linens, some antiques , misc .
glosswora , wosher ond dryer .
One quarter mile out Rt . 143 to
signs . m .su7 .

WI . . - v i JNIIIONf TO lMT ~. JiiOMI tolD fO

KROGER
.MEANS
BEnER MEAT

Little Frisldes
Cat food

1969 MALIBU 2 de. hardlop. Call
_992·2~7~2·~------­
'1977 FORO Four-Wheel Drive,
P.S., P.B.. 4-speed, three·
quarter . Still under warranty.
Call9•9·2673.
1969 CHEVROLET CAPRICE. P ,S.,
P.B. , A.C . Low mileage. $500.
Call985·3923.
1971 Plymouth Fury Ill, 1975 air
conditioning, 8,000 B.Y.U . Two
15" Rough Tread rea. like new.
131 Ebenezer Street, ·Pomeroy.

-===--,--::cc--:1972 OATSON 2rii0-Z, immaculate,
Special Edition. (6114) 367-7260 ,

1969' CHEVROLET NOVA , no ruSt,
extra good coridltion. 949-2261.
'" l'HII'IICI

WITH COUPON .
w,.,.....MY

Kroger

'

1111 ,_., HCU111

Meat Bologna .......... Jb.

,

II'OIIIrSiiced

,.• • • • zt Y a,,

20• OFF

.............
WITH COUI'ON
..... all,

• 0

•....., ••~c....

,.., ........
foo4SI•Ips

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

MI110.,
CetUtt.

• 0 •••••• 0 •••••••••

1971 CHEVROLET
WAGON. 992-3-478

STATION ·

197• VEGA . 992-2775 .
1975 GRANADA. V -8. outomotlc ,
A .C. , 2 door. 31,000 miles. ex·
c:ellent condition . $3,500.
.....:
992:;_:,·6300=::.:·---~---

.Qippetl
'Ha. ·····················

Jl'i. $ 12~

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIOPROBATE DIVISION
BETTY BRICKLE$,

Admlnistruor of

the Estate of

Ina Hoback , Deceued,
Pllintlff,

vs.

BRUCE HOBACK ,
Address Unknown ;

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES,
DISTRIBUTEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS. IF ANY,
If YOU hove o service •o offer,

CW I

Mary Hibbs, white.
Eastern Junior High and
Senior High -Randy Batey,
VIda Weber, Keith Brooks, all
blue·• Brian Bailey , Laura
Provence, Leonard Myers,
red; Kathy Pooler, Becky
Edwards, both white.
Harrisonville - Phillip
Morgan, blue; Tiffony Dillon,
white.
Meigs High School- David
Burt, blue.
MeigsJuniorHigh-Jayne
Hoeflich.
· Midjlleport Elementary Gene Fink, Billie Gordon.

lb.

........

u-.c....-.-,.._...,

..............
....... Alii

OF BRUCK HOBACK ,

DECEASED,
Et al.,
Defendants
NOTICE

both blue;
Eddie Baer,
LeAnna Plants, both red;
Natalie Brewer,
Lisa
Frymyer, Jobn Swanson, all
-'-'te
1
wul •
Portland _ Mina Conger,
Carol Sellers, Cindy Evans,
Tammy Meadows, Kathie
Sellers, all blue; Greg
DuVale, Troy Ward, David
White, Dave Talbott, Danette
Weddle, all red; Debra
Bryant, Sandy Lee, Robert
McHaffie, Danny Pickens;
Steve Souders, Kim White,
.. Charlie Boso, aU ' white.
Racine · Elementary Annette Cordone, Linda
Curtill, David McMillan, Sara
Rose, Timmy Teaford,
Wendy Wolfe, Kerry Beegle,
Kelly Rizer, Kenda Rizer,
Robin
Savage,
David
Salmons, Tonya Salser, all
blue;
Patricia Circle,
Charles Cleland, Marty
Cleland, Paula Justis, Rol)ble
Delong, James Hensler,
Matthew Jewell, Rachel
Reiber, Harold Rose, Billy
LeMaster, Alana Lyons,
Douglas Powell, Sandra
Deem, Debbie Holter, Terry
Bell, Becky Johnson, Lori
Adams, aU red; Tanny
Holter, Larry PoweJI,

SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
The Defendant , Bruce
Hoback whose address is
unknown ana whose last
place of residence or address
is unknown and cannot with
reasonable diligence be
~sceni!llned is hereby notified
that PFalntiH has brought thiS
action naming each of you as
one of the defendants in the
above -named court by filing
her complaint on Jvly 2nd,
1977.
The ob[ect of the complaint
is that the real estate
hereinafter described be sold
in its entirety, and to pay the
debts of the decedent, Ina
Hoback , deceased ; that the
rights, interests and liens of
all parties may be tully
dEiterm ined, adjusted and
protected ; that plaintiff be
authori zed and ordered to sell
said real estate according to
the statutes in such case
made and provided, and for
such other and further relief
as she ma.y be entitled to;
that said reat estate is
described as follows :
.
The following described
real estate situated in the
State of Ohio, . County Of
Meigs and Village of Rac tne,
to .wit : All of Lot No. eighty .
one 1811 in said Village of
Racine , Ohio, u :cept seven
{7) feet off the West end of
said Lot. Said lot is bounded
on the East by Fifth Street.
Refere,ce Oeed : V.ol. 155,
Page 45. Deed Records,
Meigs County, Oh io
You are reQuired to answer
the complaint within twenty·
eight days after the last
publication of this nOHce,
Which w i ll be publ_isl'led once
each week for six ·succ::esslve'
Weeks ,
and
the
last
publication will be made on
AuQUSt 31SL 1977 .
In caSe of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as permitted by the Oh io
Rules of Civil Procedure
with i n the time stated,
judgment by default will be
rendered against you fol" ·the
relief demanded in the
complaint .

Tamera Theiss, Sandra Smith, all red ; Danny
Blackson, Melody Burnem.
Harden. all white.
Rutland - Todd Doczi, Melinda Roble, aU white.
Southern Junior High David Lambert, red.
Kim
Follrod, Bob Lee, Vicky
Riverview - Diana Con·
Deem
, Janet Middleswari,
nolly, Scott Reed, Joe Young,
Scott
Frederick,
Peggy Bush,
Ricky Bay, Sibyl Foster,
Melisa
Yonker,
Kelly
Scott Justis, David Young, all
Pickens
,
Sherry
Beegle,
blue; Arlene Ritchie, Scott
Hauber, Jell Newell, red ; Jenny Manual, Minday
Kelly Thompson, Rebecca Morris, David Lawson ,
Kimes, Burl Putman, Aleshla Bonnie Boso, Billy Parsons,
Holsinger, Amy Young , Laura Wolfe, all blue;
Angie
Young,
Teresa Tammy Ervin, Charlotte
Barringer, Clell LaBonte, Pickens, Rick Allen, Wayne
Kathy Ritchie, Jodi Smith,
Syntbia White, A. J . -~--'--,-----Willbarger, all white.
Tuppers Plains - Missy
Calaway, Jeff Sayre, Susan
Swain, Mark Gaddis, Floyd
Ridenour, Howle Lawrence,
Christi Hoffman, all blue;
Edward
Collins,
Joy
Reynolds, Amy Hagger, all
red; Amy Connolly, Steve
Welch, Robyn Barnett, Kristi
Hawk, Brenda Reed, Marie
Scyoc, Shelly Lemley, Trisha
Spencer, Doreen Hadsell,
Chris Spencer, all white ..
Salem Center - ·Mike
Campbell, David Mould,
Anita Basham, Teresa
R.JOHNS
Carter, Tammy Ward, all
blue; Lorie Tanner, Jeff
CLASSIC.
Gilkey, Keith Johnston ,
Roberta Myers, Brenda THE PRIDE OF

for Ttluraday, Aug. 251 1977

ASTRO•GRAPH

I Holzer Medical Center
(Discltarges Aug. 23)

Bernice Bede Osol

Aug. 25 , 1977
F • Cil•un

cir&gt;v~tnnmrnts

c oul&lt;1 he

•n c;.t(lr(' trrr VOII flll&lt;lllr:t &lt;"'IIV ;md
• lalti '&gt;Wio.;P

th io:;

r ·nmtiHl

1/P::tr

Hr•w••vt&gt;r vnu ·d hf' w•~P In bP
n 111! 1' r·(Ul r: f'rfll"d Wl!h !hP Ci'ISh
•ha•, uw r.pott•oht

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt 22) You
f111qhl t llwllnr!'lciPric:.tu: r:tllv ~ w~en

•ll•d••• thr&gt; tr1Q •; nm~thlliO thai
\I' l l prnn11~f'rl In clo nnrt rl~votP.
\' 1•111 1'11P t fll~'&gt; lh lull -SP.P.ktllQ torbv T ·~ k tc;k Hnvmq troub le
&lt;;f'lpr·t •no :'1 r:ttrf'Pt1 SP.n(1 for
vl'tl' 1'(1f1V of Astro -Grao ? l.P.lter

Ralph Amos, Louis Belvins,

Lyons,
David
Vance,
Rebecca Rhodes, Diana
Nease, all red; Eric Harris,
Jack Wolfe, C. T. Chapman,
Brian Ash, Mary Wein ·
brenner, all white.
Salisbury - Douglas Eblin,
Cindy Hazelton, Shawn

Johnson, Mary Moore, Terry
Hysell, Greg Taylor, Scott
Pullins, aU blue; Kim Eblin,
Sandy Holt, Kelly Clark;
Paula Swindell, Jim Holt,
Georgia Johnson , Tammy
Terry, aU red; Mary Cunningham, Rodney Harrison,

Anita Smith, Tim Gilkey, Joy
Hemsley, Charlotte Lyons,
Mark Mayes, Teresa Pratt,
Jack Howett, Dennis Stegall,
Christy Laudermilt, Gary
Terry, Tim Slone, David
Worth and David Undaker,
all white.

FRISBEE MEAL
DEAL AT
COUNTRY
COUSINS
-1b.: -

For a
me. buy a Triple Treat, Double
r, or
Double Hamburger with a large order of French Fries and a large
Soft Drink for $1.99 ano;l take home a Whom-0 Heavy Duty Frisbee.
You'll enjoy fine food and have hours of fun with your Country
Cousins Frisbee. Fresbees may be purchased separately for $1.49.

DIAMONDS AT
NO EXTRA COST.
l1\ a dllss hy t t ~c l f. rhis·holdl,.
aJ\'Mtt.'Cd cleSij.!!l is maJc t)nh.p u;ly
yuu r~ 1-&gt;y 1 he ~cll!c!wr) ~1f J,!enumc
JianmnJ t~t gt· nhtonc 11f }uur choice

Open:

Ruth BoWITlan, Maude But~
cher, Phillip Byrd, Henry
- wJthtJut t:Xtrcl co't.
Catnink, Robert Clark, Gene F.1 ~hi ,med m ~urwrlativL• whne
Dodson, Jewell Evans~ V11 1.nl•u m '" w ht· the rin)! o f a
Elizabeth Gillispie, Eva hininH'.
Gilmore, Karen Goins,
· ..
.,
Mamie Harris, Lavada lf lhl' rm g stanJ~ out, II!&gt; an R. Johns.
Harvey, James Johnson,
R.JOHNS,LTD.
Lawrence Lewis 1 Tara
Lucas, James Maynard II,
Melvin · Morgan, Carrie
.·
~
Smith, Donna Stewart, John
Thompson, John Towner, ·
~eflel·ers
Deloras Wall, Albert Welch,
212 E. Moln, Pomeroy
Myrtle Wilkinson, · Lucy
Williams, Virginia Williams.
"

10:00 A.M. to 9:15 ' P.M.

Sunday thru Thursday
10:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M.

Friday and Saturday

.

t•v mnd1 nq ~0 conts for Par.h anrt
;• il'lnn !"f"ll -ndc1mssm1. st&lt;'lmoed
•·• •vr•IO!lf' l('l Ac;tro- flr::inh . P 0
1\n-. &gt;IWI Rarlin l.il'¥ Stnllon . NY
1()(11() .R" ''" " ' In -;nnr:• tv vour

hi!'"

.,,qp

ONLY AT

LIBRA (Sept 23·Dct 23) RAihm
lhnn l •f'l llfl (tr,qtoltri tnr wh~t VOII

"· '"'' ·1nrt whnt vo11 arP. . v.o••

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,

"" tno •:l)nc;rtrnf'd with
n• tlfHi"'f!"'Sions
lh:ll•kJu l f •ll ,•Ill If ;)rj\l;ltlf;H)rifi

nuqht

o~ nnthP.r &lt;;.;till ti C.

n..

SCORPIO ~Oct . 24-No•.22) II
llu•rr&gt; •; &lt;:n mf"nnP vnu·rP. fond ot.
•;ppk thPH ntfPOIInll ohlif1\IP,Iv !n d nv Af' •nn &lt;:uh ll'' ;u1rlc; tn vnm
rl1n' rn

SAGITTARIUS (No• . 23-Doc.
21) In fw!hP.nno vnur Pllrooses
ll&gt;fl:IV

ll"iP

,'tlllv

VOIIt

Oto~O

. Mannirtg 0. Webster - rl'&lt;;f&gt;Uir:Pt.; It V,OII r:Cln ' l (}0 il
. Probate JUd~e alone. think twice before aHempMe•gs County, Otuo 11nn it
{7) 27 I B) J. 10, 17,_24 , 31, 6lc
CAPRICORN (D~. 22-Jon. 191
You ·, ,.. :1 I"JOnc1 ~A i flsperson todnV hu1 vo11 must sAil vour
IN THE
' Pil'lcltlt.t nn its mf'!rits II vou qflc1
COMMON PLE.AS COURT,
lhp .lilv
runo;uP. to mfiP.ct on
MEIGS COU!'ITY, OHIO
ATHENS
COUNTY
whr~l m•nhl h.::&amp;VP. befln
SAVINGS
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1t)
AND LOAN COMPANY ,
PLAINTIFF
l&lt;f'l'ilnH1 ~ncr~ts will he difficult
vs
lpr vnu toc1av Unfortunately. the
RONALD D. THOMAS,
pf!r&lt;;nn V('ltl spill the beans to
ET AL ,
mioht t"&gt;ra the hiqqest brot~d­
DEFENDANTS
rn~tf"t
NO . 16,363
LEGAL . NOTICE
PISCES ~Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Pvnuant to an order of
sale issued by the common - Hr&gt;N1 thf1 words of a friend who
Pleas Court of Meigs County,
pnints out somethinq you 're doOhio ; I w ill offer for sale at
nlQ lhflt is offensive socially .
public auction on the 21st
OthPr., wnulc1 jus t l:tlk hehind
day of September, 1977 at
vnur
hnr:~
10 :00 a .m ,, at the C,o urt House
steps In the VIllage of
ARIES (Morch 21 , Aprl! 19)
Pomeroy, County of Meigs,
Yr'!u'll t"tr n•ce to people today so
State of Ohio, the following
lt'1nO a!' thov are doinq your bid~
described real estate situated
at 337 North Second Avenue-.
rt1na 11 thfw·rf! a li1tle balky you'll
Middleport, Ohio.
snnn lo~e plllience with lhem .
Said real estqJte Is situated
in the Village of Middleport.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
County of Meigs and State of
man;'IQ•nQ vounqsters today . be
Ohio:
fflir hut firm TllP.V could take too
Lot No . 21 In said Village
mm:h inciulqence as weakness
located on Second Street be·
nn vopr part
tween Rutland and Walnut
Streets. Also all the grantors '
GE.MINI ~Moy 21-Juno 20j
right, ti tle and Interest In and
Thmp 's R stronQ possibility today
to the six inch strip ot land
and the party wall therein, off
Althf!r VOH or your mate co uld
of the north Side of Lot 22, ~ rtP.nt thP. budQet by buying
also In said Village of Mid ·
somethinq you aqreed to do dleport, said strip of tend
adiolnlng and being con · without at pre~ent
tlguous to said lot No. 21 .
CANCER (Juntt 21-Julr ~~ An
Reter.ence Oeed Vot.ume
associate could be more astute
256 page 383 Meigs County
than you today . It it's your
Deed Records .
Terms of sale: C&amp;s.h tor not
Pllrtner. listen closely to his or
tess than lwo:tntrds of the her ideas before 'IOU make a
appraised value, subject to decision.
Hen tor real estate taxes for
1977 .
LEO (July 23·Aug.22} This is
Property appraised at one of those days when you
$8,500.00 .
won't qet somethinQ for nothing.
James J . PI"Offltt
Sheriff of Don't expect a Windfall when
Meigs County. you've contributed zip.
Ohio
. (8) 17, 2A, 31 (91 7, lA, 21, 61c · 1NE'WS'p,t;PER f:i:ITERPRISE ASSN. 1

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, AUGUST 27TH
UNTIL 5 P.M.

I !

t

. \'--- -

I

I

I

The best thing that ever happened to a pickup truck!
Protects - and kee ps your truck bed looking like new
Prevents denting, rusting . corrosion
.
Strengthens
Shock proofs
.
insulates against hot + cold
Reduces vibration noise
Cleans easily
Beautifies -your truck always looks sharpt
Makes older trucks look like new
·

FOR

.. ..
.__

11\11 ......

......,Stir
'It'

ANNUAL OUTING
Of
INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD Of
ElfctRICAL WORKERS· LOCAL 317

.CAMDEN PARK
Huntington

Get your investment back-and more-when you trade in
your truck .with a new looking bed .

�Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

12 - Tho! Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Ponl&lt;'rOY. 0 ., Wednesday , AU!(. 24, 1977

WANT AD
CHARGES
b \\ .w~l" .1, Un&lt;kt

•

,.•

l1~o.m:•·

{ ;l.'&gt;lt

,...

I tla\

l:!;t

l'els

~·or H e nt

for Sale

l.!da)~

•

'i

NOTICE

-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

-

'50 REWARD

"/Jn'r•t••-s (' i/lpbJ)'fd h)' larJ!t tmrkiJIJ!rumpauii'S had ammal ul'f'mJ?t'
l'amfJI~ of oboul

$18,300.
i 11 1914 "asqtiotrd by ihr U.S.

.,
t
'

!'Jcp_t

vf Labm; Brm·a, of La/'lor s!a tJ.~ ­
iir~. bulh-fi,l.'\'o. 1875.

NO FIITURI!? IN'AS$ AUT?
Consider a Professional Career
Dri,ing a ·• BIGRJG:· We are a Pri·
va1e Training School offering a
PA RTTi me"r FULL Time Train·

For the return of our
dog , Rascal. which
disappeared from our
home on County Rd .
18 (Kingsbury Road).
Phone Paul Lach at
992-7205 evenings or
collect any time at
446-7090 and ask tor
., Christy.
Thank You

ing Program. If you are working.
Don't Quit Your job, attend our
Weekend Training program or atlendour 3Week FULL Time Resident Training.
Rt1Xo Tractor-Trailer Trai, ing. /N: ,

PARKERSBURG
1-304-422-4080

...

USED 015 Stil11 Chain Saw , 12 inch
blode .
good
condition.
Pomeroy Home ·ond Auto .
'1'12·2094 "

CASE LOT

models of ·mobile ·llomes .
Phone area code 61 .. ·-423-9531 .

Wagons

Economy

Cars

Luxury
Cars

"•.

"Strlckly wholesale lo all.
Not less than lf2 case.

Miller Produce
&amp;-

"

Garden Center

---- -

WANTED

's .

..

GOODS.

CAN

1210 Washington Blvd .
OLD FURNITURE . ic.e boxes, brass
Belpre, Ohio
beds . etc ..
comp l ete
households. WrileM . 0 . Miller ,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Ohio or cci ll RAY'S USED Furniture . Addison,
99H760.
Ohio. (614) 367-06::17. oi piece
breakfast set, $39 .95; e lectric
CASH! ! . Junk cars, Fry's Truck· &amp;
, $-49 .95; cook machine ,
range
Auto , Rutland. Pi"lone 7,.2·2081
$35 ; rototiller , $45; drauer ,
or 742 -9575 . Closed Mpndoys . ·
$22.50: Maytog Ringer Wastier ,
NO ITEM TOO large or roo small. · $65: many rocking choirs and
Will buy 1 pie&lt;e or complete
old beds . Depression glass ,
houiehold . New , used , or antiflower pols . Open 9 to 6:30.
qUes . Martin's Furniture, 20 N.
2nd St. , Middleport . Phone 10 WEEK OlD pigs for sole.
7.2"2S.5.
992"1,37"0'-.:-cc--~--LATE MODH Chevy V, ton 4- NEW IDEA No. 310 one row Superp icker In excellent condition.
wheel drive picku p. Col!
J3 04 l 67~'6908
::::_·----"---~
992-5335.
·-.-SET OF Smith gouges, Torch. and'
__R
_ o_$!_b_u_d . 74~2_,"2c:4::
85:c·c._~~­
YAMAHA , HARLEY-DAVIDSON &amp;
Con · AM Motorcycles. Complete
soles and fantastic . service!
Hours M-T. T 9-~ ; W-F, 9-7: Sot.
9-5. "The MotOrcycle People of
Southeastern Ohio'' Athens
Wanted
to
buy
Spori Cycles , Inc. 20 W. Stimson
delivered to our mill
AYe., Athens, Ohio . Phone

--

•~n

•rD·· LOST · YELlOW Coltie, Cherry
Ridge-Hemlock Gro~o~e area .
Call985"397 • "
• lOST - PUPPY, 10 weeks ol d.
Brown collie . lost in oreo bet ween Union Ave: and Rt. 7
Bypass. Rew~~ - 9'92:3976.
LOST IN Co. Rd. 35 area: 10 mo .
old Norwegian Elk Hound,'
block and gray . Bro wn collar
wirtl silver studs. Anli wers to
the name of Ru,fy . If found ,
Please call , 9-49-281 4 o r
" 9•9"2705.
o

,

~1i'1,1f!.R_erit.m- Trade

"

SAlE OR • T'ad"" 1970 Plymo;oth
n. 6 cyl, std . $600. 0 '
or
lo' aulo w~gon at .ctual
uo. 7•2·307. .

r:e

PINE

POSTS

on Baily Run Rd. Dff
Rt .
124
between
Pomeroy &amp; Rutland.

Cut 6 fl. long wsquare ends which
measure no less than
8 in . and no more than
10112" outside the
bark .
Call Pomeroy Forrest
Products · for prices
a n d
deIiv er y
instructions.
- .5965
1---__;""~~;...:;.;,.;;.;;__ __,

CARTER

New Co -Op water and
sof1eners, model VC -SVI.
Only 5279 .95

Save $~.00 DR a 11ew
Hotpoint Refrigerator.
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest
Freezer
S2S .00 Discount
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
US
l Good Used Poulan Chain

uo

Slw

Electric Trim -All cuts with
nylon
S29.tS
&lt;11 Good R efrigV.ttor 5200

•

•

Pomeroy Landmark

9.
-Jack w . Carsey, Mgr .
~ Phone 992 -2181
•

RUTLAND- 1 floor plan, 4
lots about 240 ft . frontage, 2
bedrooms, batll , natural
gas" GREAT• AT JUST
S12,000 .00"
.
NICE CORNER LOT Close lo shopping. 2
bedrooms, bath, carpeting,
natura l gas F .A. heat.
porches. c on crete dr ive.
GOING AT $13,800 .00 .
2 STORY FRAME - Lots
of ground , 1 baths . 4
bedrooms, dining , porches,
Income. 513,850 .00 .
ALMOST NEW - Double
wide with 6 acres, garage
and storage building. Close
to recreation . Til is is lovely
property at a very low
price. S17 ,000 .00.
MOBILE HOME - With
about lh acre of ground, ln
good
condition ,
2
bedrooms . ba .t h. large
liv ing ,· storage bu ild ing .

se.doo"oo.
SMALL HOUSE LOW
GAS BILL - small yard,
this .4 room frame w itll bath
is Ideal in this da y of
inflat ion . 55.400 .00.
DROP
IN
LET
US
EXPLAIN OUR
NEW
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
THEN
DECIDE
WHO
YOU
WANT TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
. Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland
Associates
992"2259 or 992-2568

(6~~9?:.!~!3~-

-

NEED A WATER
- SOFTENER?
Let

Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your

water and Co.op water
t.Oftentr, Model UC · XVI.
Now Only

.

•270,95

Let us t..t

yOur water .

Fret.

· Pomeroy Landmllk
9.., ~Jock W. C.rsey, Mgr.

Ail

p

-2111

tractor land, little barn and
all mlnerajs. 516,500 .
MIDDLEPORT
All
electric 3 bedroom home
just S years old . Fully
insulated. and well kept up"
Fenced back yard . A good
buy al $18,500 .
4 ACRES Building or
lraller lots on old Route 33
North.
NEW LISTING ~ 50xl00
foot lot in Pomerov has a 2
bedroom air conditioned
trailer. Olly $6,000"
WE
HAVE
GOOD
PROPERTY
FOR
SPECIAL PEOPLE .
Helen L. Teaford
C. Bruco THiord

, •our

''" 'tt"ll.,,
~r uebu~

. ~-«~~

rbe_• rb.llt·

liM' h

b"~

lb.

·

S:"
'·
Ul

""!'253
U .M. to I:JG , ,II,

I'!Jm tf'+•y,O .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding,
Sto1m Windows &amp; Insula-

7-~1 !1141.

r.-,-...
w•

ALLEYOOP

Willi RUM
· SIOIJIG.$0FFIIT

COME WI'Tl-1 ME, FA~Eil!

Roull 3,

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

SINUM

.. - .

I. II I t_D.
NUDJOC

. ,......,, Ol1io 4576!
Kitctlen Cabinets - Roofina - Concrete
Pat~~Js - Sidewalks - New Construction'
Remodetina.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

At

992-2206 or 992-7630
''The Oricinalors
Not The i11iblors

LJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

,h. 192·711! "'"-11105
Ellitlootos . , . . to job"
6-17·1 mo. pd.

IT Yllll BE SHORT
REPAIRIMG ALL THE
DAMAGE AXEL THINIG

Prlntanswerhere:

HE DIP-·
Yesterday 's

.

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

THE PHOTO PLACE

,......,

IOSHilltSL

D. Bumgardner

Pool Sales

R:ustoleum Paint Products
•we can ship parts directly
to your ·door by way of
U"P.S"
•Custom Hydrau lic Hose
Miking
Phone t92· 211•
Pomeroy, 0 .
8-1-1 mo .

t:iOMESITES ·fo'r sOle , 1 ocre and
up . Middle~rl , near Rut land.
Coii992-7A81 .

INCORPORATED

Passports
AnniYt1$1ries
Special Occasions

Rll
Miciolloport, 0.
99H724
Camp~ft Solto and Stnlco and So~
plies.

lob llaollich

3"14-1 mo.

EX,CAVATIIING , dozer. backhoe · sRAOFORD , Auctioneer, Coman&lt;i dltcher. · Charles R. Hotplete Ser.-ice. Phone 949-2,.87
field , Bock Hoe Service ,
or 949·2000. Racine. OhiO. Critt
Rutland, Ohio. Pho"e 742-2008.
Bradford.

CARPENTER , flooring , ceiling.
paneling, Phone 992-2759.
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..
plumbing ond healing. Phone
992-5858 .

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toas ters, irons, all
small appliances . Lown mow.r,
next to State Highway Garage
on Roufe 7. Phone (614 ) 9853825 .

~

.

REMOOELING , Plumbing, heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 years e)C perience . Phonem-.2..09 .

HOWERY AND MARTIN f- .
coveting, septic 5ystems , SEWING MACHINE Rep.air:s , ser vice , oil makes, 992-228-tl . The
dozer. backhoe. dump truck ,
Fabric ShOp , Pomeroy .
limestone, grovel. blacktop
Authorited Singer Soles ond
poYihg, Rt. 1.. 3. Phone 1 (61-i)
SerYice . We sharpt!n Scissors.
69n331 .
HARRISON'S T.V. Repair . Service EXCAVATING. dozer, loader o,d
bockhoe work ; dump trucks
Calls . 276 Sycamore, St .. Mid·
and to-boys for hire; will haul
dlepoi'l ~ Phone 992-'1522.
fill dirt , to soil, limestone ond
gro~o~el. Call Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992-7089 ,
night phone 992-35'15 or 992PIANO TUNING, lone Daniels . 12
5232.
years of 5er~o~ice . Phone
9'7H082.

And it

costs less

to repair!

... we're qoinq
to need a
family c~r!

11.&gt;-r--~

WILLING TO clean land up for
chipwood . (6 14) 2oi7-2S..2.
BATHROOMS AND kitchens
remodeled. Ceramic tile, plumbipg . carpentry, and general
maintenance. 13 1n. experience. 99'2·3685.

EASTERN DISTRICT Hero's whal you've been
asking tor . Beautlful6 yr . old, all carpeted home with 3
bedrooms. l Vz baths. utility roorn. Nice kitchen with
d ining area . Concrete porches. Nat . gas F .A. furnace .
Nice country setting with approx. 33/• acre land In
Easlern District. 2 mi. ott Rt . 7. Asking $29,800.
Five
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE bedroom5, nke 1112 story ~ouse, la~ge living room wlth
Shining oak · flooring, large kitchen with dining ar:-ea .. ~
fvll baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upslalrs . Completely
ins ulated with F .A. nat. gas furnace. ·Large porches &amp;
garage . Loc. In Chester. Price $19,800 .
'

MINERSVILLE - 4 bedroom - ho~se, mostly carpeted,
wrap around porch, garage·, l,a rge lot, all overlooking
lhe Ohio River. Asking $16,500.
EASTERN DISTRICT - w, acres of level land, nice
12•6' all carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs, living
room, kitchen and bath, 2 room5 built on, nice family
room with fireplace , plenty of garden space. some fruit
trees. Large workshop and block cellar . City wat~r and
septic tank . Nice country setting on Counly Rd. 28.
Price $15,900 .
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom hoose with
bllth . Two more small bedrooms could be finished
upstairs. Also garage, storage building, strawberry
~tch and garden space . Driveway Is electric heated .
Nlc:e Ohio River view. Furniture can be bovght extra.
Price for: quick cale. House and lot, $12,600.

Call Jimmy. Deem Al949-2311

FAIR MONTH SPECIAL on entire
stock. See them at COONER'S
CAMPERS on Rainbow ridge.
From Rt.7, toke Meigs 28 or 32
to Basham . Open evenings ,
too. Owner, Robert Codn•r.
. long .Bottom, Ohio.
19H "FOLDOUT CAMPER , sleeps

~

six . Call (304) b75-A829. '.

e

1

1

1

".

a

"' '

CARS U:SS n"-

4.88 sq. yd.

,.
·:

3 French
author

' 2 wds.)
4 Holy Land
(abbr.)

Yesterday's Answer

25 Vex

9 .Ciimbs

5 Insult

12 "Grasps

26 Wine

6 Top off

16 Run like mad
a room ·
19 Actor
7 A little
Markham
- time (2 wds.) 28 Discover
8 Place for
23 Stairway
win,-tapping
feature
equipment
24 " Knock off"
(2 wds. 1
(2 wds.)

29 Clean the
board
30 Allude
32 Arizona
city
35 Mobster's
weapon
36 Garland

receivers
23 Split
24 Honored
guests'

BRIDGE

~pot

Oswald and Jim Jacoby "

:;;-1---t-t--t

• 2
"
• AQ 5 2
"' K 10 9 6 2

.54

XI

11"1$

742-22il

_...,1

.864
.QJ 8

X I

WH '
F DC

A ' NFWXA
KXLCKF

FDC

it:

TNKHDNU-

YXAHYWCAYC
FX

TXUE

w'FH

VCCU

'

I

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT IS THE HABIT OF EVERY
AGGRESSOR NATION TO CLAIM THAT IT IS ACTING ON
TilE DEFENS!VE.-NE:HRU

•.•

~
".

N

.A 7 3
SOUTH
• A J97
• A75

NOWFNFWXA

DONE 'Tl-IE BEST WE .

•KQJ96
• K 109

". J 7 3

apostrophes , the length and formation of th e words are a11
hints. Each .day th ~ code letters are different.

•i

• 84

910843

time '
37 Sheathe

UWAO

EAST

WEST
• 10 6 3 2

used for the threr L's, X for the two. 0 \, etc. Single letters,

'M &amp;A115FIED WE1VE

24

NORTH 101
• K Qs

how to work
AXYDI.BAAXR
LONGFE "I , LOW

Both vulnerable

West

North East

Pass

2•
Pass

p~....

'"' ,.Pass

Opening lead -

three of hearts. East plays the
jack and now declarer can·
bring home the , bacon if .he
makes a very unusll'lil " play.
He .must duck that heart.
This play leaves the defense
in a hopeless JMISition. In fact,
if East )eads a secolid hear t
declarer will make five odd.
He .will ruff in dummy, cash
the king and queen of trumps
and lead a club . Eventually,
that ace of clubs "will be the
only other trick . for ·the
defense, since South will he
able lo discard two diamonds
o·n dummy' s long clubs to
wind up with four clubs, four
trumps , two red aces and a
heart ruff- in dummy .

Pass

3•

By Oswll1d &amp; James Jacoby
Once in a while you will find
yourself in a 4-3trump fit for a

game contract. This isn't a
fate wars• than death .
Sometimes trumps break 3·3
( 36 per cent of the time according to Ute mathematicians ).
Sometimes .c~reful play can
handle the expected 4-2 break .
Four spades is the only
game that can be made
· against good defense . Even
that would lose against a jack
of diamonds lead, but West
. makes his normal lead of the

A Wisconsin reader wants to
know the meaning of the
c liche . "Not thru the iron
duke."
. ,.
It is used by a defender
when playing a high card to
win the trick in fourth seat, or
occasionally when played in
second seat. Like all remarks
by defenders it should not be
made"
(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. sand $1 to: "Win· at
Bridge/' c/o . this newspaper,
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Station,
New Yor~. N.Y. 10019)

e·

•

I "

• •·

_.,- ~-

RUTLAND' FURMilVRE

.: ili~'jj~~

·-~·· ~-···· ··,-·

WAKE VI'!

'fi.IIS IS L/OiiR
WEDDING
DAL{!

0

I CANT 60 1HROLI6fol .
WITH IT! I'M TOO
L{OUNG TO DIE !

CQ\\E ON .:JHI5 WILL ·
6E lJ.IE HAPPIEST [;loW
OF L(OIJR LIFE!

EVER' TIME MY
NOSE ITCHES, PAW ..
WE-UNS ALWAYS
GITCOMPANY

· .·

Careful play insures_game
"

One letter simply stands for anolh.er. In this sample A is

WINNIE

.,,;

--~~~~~~~~~

CRYPTOQUOTES

RURAND
FURNITURE

ARNOLD GRAtl!'

2 Embankment

Is

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELLGRATE .
CARPET CONSULTANT

"~

742-22il

DOWN .
1 Like a snake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

30 rolls of carpel In it.CiC:
Good selection all on Silo.
Installed with padding, no
extra lo poy.

Close Sal At 5 p.M.

'·

being

~

·=· ....

(2 wds. I
Roman
road

38 Abstract

1

: ;~

4b

. ~~CEN~~15~A~Pa.JN~~D~~~~3436 Waste
Vocalist
•1~A~~~n=N~
.....
1 'EY couu:&gt;· tiT-

12 ond 15 ft. widttl Carpet •
rubber beck.

·Mon., Tws., Wid.
1:00ti15:00
T11uriCI1y Ulllioon

6 :0G--News 3.4.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 : 31)-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlfflth6;
CBSNews8,10; OnceUponaCiasslc20,33.
"
7 : 0G--Trulh or Consequences 3; Expohlo '77 4; Liars
Club 6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15. 15;
Almanac 20;
Consumer Survival Kit 33 .
7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Match Game PM 6;
Price Is Righi 81 MacNeii "Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 101 Nashville on the Road "13; Dolly
15.
.
.
8 :!Kf-'-Pllot 3,4; Welcome . Back. Klttoer 6.13; GE
Theater 6. 10; Jack VOan lmpe Crusa~ 15; Chat
With Country Music Artist Doc Williams 10;
Poldark 33 .
8 ;31)-Pllot 3,4; Couloi r 1 MOOds 20.
9 :0()---..Movie 11 Escape From Coldltz" 3,4,15i Barney
Miller 6; Movie "Oaklahoma !" 13; Harry S.
Truman : Plain Speaking 20,33.
9 ;31)-Three' s Company 6; Pllol " The Banana Co." 8;
In Conquest of the Sea 10.
IO :OG--Westslde Medical 6; Barnaby Jones 8; News20;
E-yewitness 33.
.
10:31)-From Out of Somewhere 10; Lowell "' Thomas
Remembers 20.
11:0G--News 3,4.6.8,10.15; MacNeli .. Lehrer, Report 33;
'omethlng Special 20.

39 Ascertain

land
28 Tarry
31 Cotton
Sl!lte
(abbr.) ,
32 Fortify
33 Before
(pref. )

..,

.

ACROSS
1 Shall' rebuke
5 Florida city
10 Last Supper
picture
11 Talisman
13 Grandparenl!ll
14 Complete
· failure
IS Allow
I&amp; Diamond
" State (abbr.)
17 - Aviv
18 U .S . Navy
petty
officer
20 Extend
credit
Zl Ruler ;
master
22 Wide

Feiner's

·----------·

.

10; Dinah! 13.
4 :3Q--My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergenc'y One!
6; Andy Griffith 8; Expohlo '77 15.
5 : 0G--Big Valley 31 Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'"
Neghborhood 20,33; Emergency One! 13; Mission :
I mposslble 15.
5 : 31)-News 6; Family Affair 81 Electric Company
20.33.

Answer: What the striker's case wasA MATCHBOX

%7 Sinn

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
Regular U .9S
Sovo$4.88 Sq. Yd.

·",......... •. .
.•
•. ,.
.
.
.... FRIDAY TIL 5 "
••
,A.,.•
.:•- ·-..............&lt;
..
.
. .. .J::.
,. ,,._
..........".

·:.•

(Answers tomorrow)
EXOTIC IMBIBE

THICK

president

SAVE ON
CARPETING

••

I

Jumbles : CAMEO

I I J rI I I J

26Toe woe

Reg. S6.95-not installod
STARCRAFT 10th anniversary sole
on mini-motors, trailers. and
lolddown5 . Travelstar 25 ft .
$--4 ..00.00; 20 ft . .mini-motor
$10,850 .00. We sell service and
quality. Conip Conley · Storcroft
Soles , Rt . 62 north of Pt. Pleasant .

rI

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

25 27th u.s.

WATER WEll drilling. Phone·---.....- - - - - ·
William . P. Grant at 7"'2·2879
after 6 p. f11 .
PENNZOIL · RUTLANO open doily
till 10. Closed Mondays,
wrecker service, tire repair.
Phone 742-9575 or 742-2081 .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

IN A
~EAUTY PAR:LO~ .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Portroits

Nobi Sum"'~ Road

.

NO. 216 - 3 Bedroom, large kJtchen, single car
attached garage, all electric, carpeted throughout,
large IOOxAOO lol. FHA approved. Price $28.500 in
Tuppers Plains area.
Pomeroy
992-2298
804 W. Main
After Hours Ca11992-7133
Contad: Louis Pauley; Br1nch Manager

CAN 60

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1977
5 : 4S...Farm Report 13 .
5 :50--PTL Club 13. 6 :0G--Summer Semesler 10 .
6 : Js()-Oo,et.ors on Call4; News 6: Summer Semester 8;
Urba1i Leagues 10.
·
6 : AS...Morn lng Report J .
6 : 50--Good Morn ing, West VIrginia 13.
6"•55-Good Morning , Trl State 13"
7: 0G--Toctay 3:4.15; Good Morning ·A merica 6,1 3; cas·
News 8; C huck White Reporls 10.
7 :0s-Porky Pig 10.
7 ;31)-Wildllte In Crlssls 10;
8 : 01}-Howdy Doody 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
Slreel 33.
8 : 31)-Blg Valley 6.
9 :0G--C ross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue 4,15. 13; Andy
Griffith B; Schoolles 10; Zoom 33 .
9 : 3o-A.M . 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8; Porky
Pig 10; Unlo the HUis 33 "
9 , 5~At the Fair '77 10.
10: oo-Sanford and Son l,A, lS; Dinah!! 6: Hereis Lucy
8; Mike Douglas 10, 13; World War I 33 .
10 : 31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,1SI Pr ice Is R ight 8;
Turning Points 33 .
ll : OG--Wheel ol Fortulne 3s,&lt;.15; Happy Days 6.1 3;
Bands land 10 ; French Chef 33"
11 :31)-lt' s Anybocty 's Guess 3,.,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Making Things Grow 33.
11 ,5s-&lt;: BS News 8; At The Fair ' 77 10.
12 :0G--News 3,4, 10 ; Shoot for t he Stars 15; Midday 13;
Henry Ford's America .
12:3o-&lt;:h!co and the Man 3,15; Ryan' s Hope 6,13 1 Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 ' oo-Gong Show 3; AI I My Children 6,1 3; News 8;
MacNeil-Lehrer Rep&lt;&gt;r
1 :OG--Gong Show 31 All My Ch ildren 6, 13; News 8;
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15: Nova 33 .
1 ' 31)-Days of our Lives 3.4.15: As the World T ""' 8,10.
2 : 0G--S20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Austin City Limit. :!3.
2 :31)-Doctors 3s.4.15; One Lite to Live 6. 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3 :0G--Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Antiques 20; Whal's Cooking? 33.
3 :1 S...General Hospllal 6, 13 .
3 :31)-Malch Game 8,10; Lilias, Yoga and You 10;
College for Canines 33.
4 ' 00 - Misler Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4, 15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 61 Gilligan' s Island 8; Sesame Street
20,33; Movie " The Mystery ot lhe Wax Museum"

~

Weddinas

Will do, roofing, construction.
plumb ing and healing. No job
too large or too smalf. Phone
7&lt;12-2348 .

STROUT

A5 FAI'I: A5 THEY

-2

C1rpet• Upholstery
Phone Mike Youna

I

1--:--o'

I [J

I K~

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

&lt;-•·

romo,.,,0.

byHennArnoldandBoblee

I I... ,..._I.._,....,..._....

,~!!2·3"3

Service
,,_ the ...,.., '

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~~ ®

PEELO

WAiofT

DAVID BRICKLES

Young's
Carpeting

1

~,., ..,.

~;

•

,r

'rOW 1'0 MaT SOMIEONE ·

GUTT£RUWIIIIKS

LARRY LAVENDER
s,.c-. Ol1io

Superior
Ste1m'EdrKtion

l,.9

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

WIIIDOIISIIIOIIH
. REPLACEIIEIIT
WIN DOllS

&gt;1nFC

S-Jl.lmo

l}\1\)Nf fii}~

~

llowo 1tott
I Altiet
510111

RHifhil~.o.

No Sun.U, C.lls "'"'

PATE-- AT CAPTAIN EASY'S MOTEL.!

.....

PARTS -lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
• RATES ,h, 371-6!50

Frtt WillllftS

WELL, WHADDA 'fA KNOW ~ ... 50
WLAPEK'S FIANCtse ~A!&gt; A MIDIJit;HT

IMOiotiooo-•

Transmission Semce

Phoile 949,2801
or 949·2860

T· TAKE A

"NBC News 3,&lt;.1S; ABC News 13 ; Andy Grllllth
61 CBS News 8,101 Vegetable Soup 20; Lilias. Yoga
a nd You 33.
l':oo- Truth or Consequences 3; Expohio ' 77 4; Liars
Club 6 ; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 101 To Tell
The Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Insight 33 .
7: Jo-Oolly J ; Dance Party D isco 4; Match Game PM
6 ; S25,000 Pyramid 81 MacNeil -Lehrer Report
20,33; The J udge 10; Break the Bank 13; Wild
King~om 15.
8 ;0G--Grlzzly Adams .3',4,15; Eight Is Enough 6, !31
Good T imes 8, 10; Nova 20,33 .
8 :30--Busling Loose 8.10.
.'i' :QO-CPO Sh arkey' 3,,.,15 ; Chai-lie's Angels 6,13;
Movie " Attack on Terror" 8, 10; Theater in
America 33; Documentary Showcase 20.
• : 31)-We Think You Should Know 3; Kallikaks 4,15.
IO :oo-Tales of I he Unoxpecled 3,4, 15; Barelta 6, 13 ;
News 20.

FREE ESTIMAJES

Automatic

A 1~1 contr1ctor

IT'~L

WHILE TO E~PLAIIJ ...
C~ WE GO IN!&gt;! DE
AND TALlo&lt;~

""''"lm•

SWAIN

tion.
Call Professionals

Pholle949-2814

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

,..,un•att" ur • t.p bl 1110 E. Mam $l,

1-28-1 mo.

0

CAPTAIN EASY
T15 H A PAl~~ ... W~T A'liie'E
VOU DOINE; HERE~

9a.m.to5p.ll.

fir tJUillrly a"uill~ itnd c• rin I• " ana . Mu~t
lllc~tt~ pr11qWI Iil)' fm lffW lldCI'dl hOme

_,_

..,. . . . , . . F . . ..... ' • '

~ ,.r.~l.

Ill U.S.

imp· .,.raw nl IU&lt;~tli it J«K~r kltal
tllllh ··r'Si l .. CllU ~- m· far tt lree

WI:S ANO SERVICE

.,_., ...

Coob•..-. ,.u.
w. 11M&amp;
il. ... ... '""' S,.Ciol
..

all

ilfUmJ• .m. · :tV) .;iiUJtt•, alltKhzed
r-,, li h ~o:• 11..1 pu)&gt;U, p1•i• ur

'""""·Oh~

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Stroet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992"3325

Springs, several acres of

r"· hun··.

hon •tlk' l .:t ~ ··· t bhlll tt'eit·•~ ~r
,. fu. "t'1U 11.1 • • mt, 11m ,.Ill sull

P010,...99Z·UIZ

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

ihn· .

,~ , •tnlU• e. Wt• 1\a\'1.' li D ~lp!Tir ltl• rd
('. •-..: thai ha\.'f' Cf't";jit.ed lnMD}' u(

REALTOR

WALK TO STORES
Reno:vated ~ bedroom
home In Mlddleporl with 2
baths, natural gas. Ohio
Power, city water, and
metal root $17,000.
VIEW OF RIVER
..
Reasonable J bedroom
house, batll, 7 rooms ,
natural gas forced air
furnace . Large garage and
34 acre. $19,500.
RUTLAND - 2 bedroom
home, natural gas, City
water , and 2 lots for
$10.000.
NEW LISTING - Extra
nice .h ome surrounded by
shrubbery, swimming pool,
large family room with
fireplace.
3
lovely
' bedrooms ,
2
baths,
fireplace In living. · full
basement and garage.
NEAR RUTLAND 4
room house, bath, well
wafer, with 2lt.. acreS of
land . Only $9,500.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,
bath, natural gu, city
wafer, 2 pbrches and large
garden . Just $7,000.
POMEROY Large 5
bedrooms, P/2 baths, full
basement, central heating.
and nice lof. Furnished or
unfurnished, you decide. 53 ACRES 2 good

l'

Bissell Siding Co.

Pho~e (614 )__~6·7~50.____.._,__

FOR SALE

lU..I .I V J" •-IIIIL'l 'Ahk·l1 "'

lOOMoitoSl

•

LIKE NEW Wi:zord Refrigerator ,
$150. Also. 1955 Ford Pickup ,
$200 and Volkswagen Fastback
Sedan , $150. Cofl9-49-2873.

I • .- ~~&amp;r •••lbonlt'll dt•lllc.r'lwr Url1&lt;111
• V. h ii!K~ •d CIII- IJ41Tl~ . If d t l WM.Il[ il

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC•. •

•

CANNING PEACHES, Bring con tainer &amp; winter pototoe5 .
Phone 8-43·2693 .
1975 AOO l&lt;awosoki , lo w mileage .
992 "5510.

AT THe FOOT &lt;JF fHE
MANNIQIIIN .

WEONlSOAY , AUGUST 24, 1977

GUnER
SERVICE

Kingsbury Home Sales

TELEVISION
·v iEWING

tv-.... ~ t.l .. ..»

-

J-

TREE RIPENED orchard peaches .
While cr yellow sta rting Mon.,
Aug. 1. Mo~on_!eoch Orc;_~o!d_:_
1974 TERRAMITE Bock11oa , $3000.

.-'I' J ~- l

l!FS TA IH~ A I,{) C.JL ''W"£"'

r.~LL

THF.
BuTLER.

Business Services

bt.·~r!, .. , 110~. ~'both-, .

TEAFORD

'

COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches and chains,
~ ilver and gold . We need 1964
and older si.lver coins . Buy , sell ,
o.r trade' Colt Rogel- Wamsley ,
742"233L

NtW :S

oil elec ., I one~rddleport.
clo"' to Rutland Pllone W"J.
748 1.
SMAll lcrm lor' sole 10•. down .
owner Fnonced Monroe ~oun­
CAMPER , $600. Also, horse
.
ty , W. VO . Phone .j:JO.i ) 171·
trailer . 5A50. Phone (61A} b~a 3107 oc(3!M) 777-3227 .
3290.
SPRING (fAROEN Supplies , C:ab- COU NTRY farmland with secluded woods , water and good ocboge . coulillower ,. bra:ccoli ,
cess in, Monroe Counly , W. ),/¢
and head le ftuoe plonh.,
51
,0CXl down , colt (304) 77'1yeilow, .white, and red onion
3102 o' 130•1 nn221 "
sets, onion plants , Ke-nnebe&lt;.
cobbler, Kotahdin r Red Pon1ioc VA - FHA ~ 3Q yr . financing. Ire land
and Red Losada seed pototoe5 .
Mortgage . 77 E. Stole, Athens ,
Bulk garden seeds, poHing soil ,
phone {ol•l 592-3051.
peol moss , fruit frees and rpse
2.
STORY 3 bedroom frame
bushes . Midway Market ,
house.
F.A. furnace , storm win·
Pomeroy, Ohio . 992·2582 ,
dow5 , fireplace in Middleport.
Bob:s Market , Mason . W.Va .
Phone 992-3457 .
{JOAI 1n5n1 "
ECONOMY TRACTOR witt! oll of - TRAILER &amp; LOT for sole. 75 Elm Sf..
Middleport. Phone 99'1-7307.
lacl-lmenls . like new , eliking
$2250. Phone{61•1 698"3290"
TRAILER AND lOl- for sole on
Fourth St. , Mason, Phone (614)
CANNING TOMATOES , PEPPERS .
99H307
"
cucumbers, Clelood Form.s ,
Greenhou.se , • Geraldine
Cleland .

LARGE PERMA-STONE house in
Tuppers Plains for so le by
owner . 3 bedr .. 2 both, Phone
{61A I b67"306S"
HOUSE FOR Sate . 2 bedr. . modern
1975 HARLEY DAVIDSON . e)C·
kitchen , ca rpeting , full basecellent condition . Gold, has exment with office. garage.
tras , ,less than 1000 miles .
SitUated On 1 acre of land .
· $2700. Call {6141 698·3290 .
Good w'ell plus leadinQ ' Creek
water . Call '992-7294 or
1973 YAMAHA 360 MX : goOd con992-5502 . .
dition . 1966 VW , 575 . Coli
'1'12 ·32~ .
DON'T PAY fhe odded expense of
a Realtor! Buy this 3 bedroom,
APPALACHIAN STOVE Co., Sum 2 '/, both bilevel from the
mer Sole. Ashley C-60 Wood
H~&amp;Qters , $340 complete with
owner and save! large family
room with fireplace, eat-in kitblower. Thru Sept . 12. We ore
chen with double-oven range
the only outherized de9ler in
and, d ishwosher. formal dining
Meigs County. We' re in
room , two cor garage, central
Carpenter off U3 . 698-71_91.
air, on acre lot. Nice drive to
AlliS -C HALMERS H-d-11 diesel
power plants and mines .
dozer Mod -Yr 66 . Ready for
$43 .000. '1'12-2&lt;92 .
wor k. Wt. 15 ton . 2 mile soyth
of Tuppers Plains . Ohio. Co Rd . 59 AC,RE FARM . 11 miles from
new . Ravenswood Bridge .
A6" Phone {6141 b6n536.
Modern .home hds 3 bedrooms .
William Connolly .
l i~o~ing room with wood buining
ONE REGISTE" ED mole. Redbone
fireplace and beamed ceiling,
coonhound; 6 mo . old . (blA }
born , outbuildings , and fenc667&lt;362 1.
ing. $-43 ,500 . 9.49-2.466.
LIGHTEST AUTOMATIC shotgun
· mode . 20 go. Franchi. lmpro~o~ed
cyl. 26 in . vented rib barrel. Excellent grouse gun . Coli
992-2781 .

CASH paid for oil .makes and

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price for standing
sawtimber . Call '992-5965 or
Kent Hanby, 1-4-46-9570 .

COAl. limestone-, and colcrum
chlonde and cald u. ri ne for
dusl control arld . .&lt;rol m~
salt for formers .
celsrorW-»11
Work~ . Moin Street . Pomeroy,
Ohio or phone 992 3891 .

-

lim-;Sal~~=~~"

Tv

Ht-lislntt&gt; fnr SrtJ.,. •

t 'or Sal•

3 AND -4 RM . f~rmshed end un·
RISI NG STAR Kennel 8oard1ng
lurn•,hed opb . Phone 992
;! tb&amp;\-.
!.1J
lndoor·Outdoor runs , grooming
~~·
5AJ.&lt;
ltlta~ ·!&gt;
.Hill
.t 7.J
a ll br.teds
clean sonttary
focd.ttes oe 307-71 12. Chesh1re . COUNTRY Mobile Home Portr. At
J.~ ·h \Inn] 11\l'l ' tht• llltlllii:WII !;I
33. ten miles norlh of Pomef'Oy.
Phone l61A} 367 0292
II!Utlb \:) ~ H, l~ Pt'l 111•1\lfll'l ILl\
Lor-ge lot• w•th concrete pattM
'.\tb rumm~ o!llk'r ttun n&gt;ll."'-'''llll~•'
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , lell , 1rade
tlol~s 1nll l&gt;t· i·l\dt"i:t'l.l n: liM' ! tl.t,l
S1de-walks . runnet"s and off
train
horse$
.
RUTH
REEVES.
or
Till\'
str:eet porlting. Phone 992 -7479.
Hainer... Pkone (61-4 ) 698-32'90.
FURNISHED APT . Adults pnly , no
In ttWH\I!t;. . COI!'d 1.•£ Th.mk:, ill Ill
AKc SHETLAND sh~ep dogs.
pels . Phone 997-387,. , Mid·
OIJ•twtr~·: ti (,·nb J.Jl'l ""ortl.
tlil
(Min ,l Collies , 2 lemale$ , 7
llllmmum. C'ash m ad n utn·
dleport.
we-eks old. Shots and wormed.
Phone (61-. ) 367 -02'92 or TWO BEDROOM traile,-, adults onr.h•l.ll\&lt;.• H&lt;lll\t' ~ lt'li anti ' ' &lt;HI.I Hl••5
lll'l' i;U'I'I 'pl ~·~~ 1)11)~ ~~~~~ l.o 1Sl1 \I IIIJ
ly . Coli 992·332•"
367 -7 112.
••nkr ~ t't'nt l'iMr,l!t' f,,, o~ 1.b Gltt.}·
MEIGS COU NTY Hul'!'anll't Society TO RENT . Ri verside Apts . · 1
10.: &amp;IX Numlx:r In Cilr •· ..r t'l••• ~., ..
bedroom starting at $ 100 per
ll!tt·l
1
Aniniol Careline , 992-7b80; or
mo. 2 b&amp;drooms starting at
oher6p .m ., 992-5(127 .
T l tt.• Pullh~&gt;.iwr tl·M.·n··~ lilt' lt~o:ht
$138 per mo . Equol Housing
I•• •'!.IlL ,,,. l't'Jt't.'t .1111~ wt)o 1!~'\'lll~· tl 1•i;
All BREED dog grooming. J. and
Opportunit y. Co119'12-6096 .
J''''\hli Litl Tht• J&gt;ubh~ht • l v. 111 uul l•·
0 . Kennels . Reasonable rates.
n•:.put ~JOI•· f1•r 1111•1 ,. t/...,u ,,n, 1111 ••r·
SMAll
APARTMENT . 2nd Street in
No drugs used . Coli for aprt'l.1 Ul!ol'fllllll
Middleport . Su itable for 1 or 1
·
pointment, 742-3162 .
Ph1lllt' 9!12·21~
people. 99B262.
AKC TOY poodle puppies. Two
apricot, $100 eoch . Phone TWO BEDROOM opt ., unfurnished , SOtJih 2nd , Middleporl .
949-2340 before 4 pm .. ask for
Close to Business District . b
tf. rs. Willibms . Alter 6 pm . call
rooms and a basement . (6U)
949"2.'71.
367 -7514 . _.._,..
.... MAlE CHIHUAHUA . Golden·
Fawn in color . Also . two horses
with colts . 742-2962.
~Obile§~ ·'(~ - &amp;le
AKC SPAYED Female Irish Setter ,
2 yrs . old . hcellent watchdog 1971 STAR Mobile Home, 60 x 12,
and pel . Ca11992-2781 .
&amp;lCcellent cond ition,· gas heat ,
Munday .
many extras . $5.500. Call
NOO!Illll Saturd_a.}
GIVE AWAY . Adorable Cock-e985-3505; if no answer . coli
Poo puppy . (S mo. old) to a
Tutstht)
985"3886 .
special home. Black with white
thru Ft•td&lt;t\
COMPl-~
ET:'E':'LcY-::FC:UO"RNc:I:S,-:
:: HE::O
:-c-:
10 o 50
lip
tail
,
and
toes
.
{Female)
.
Hos
~P . M . .
had all ,-,ecessary !ihots and
Colonial mob ile home . Reo!
tlwday~(un· puOhc&lt;IIMI
wormed . Will be given to a
good buy . Gene Dunn . RocksprSuod ;,~ )
mature person, who lo~o~es
ings Road, past sawmill , first
~ P.M
animals . (this is o must ). Con
white tra iler acro ss the li ttle
Fntla) t~ftt'rniKHI
be seen ot 367 Grant Street ,
~i_?ge on left ,
MiddlePort . Ohio.
1970 . HILLCREST trailer. all electric , two bedrooms ; excellent
condition . reasonab ly priced.
Call alter 4 pm .. 992-7642.
---.--,.....
IN MEMORY of my Father who
MOBILE HOME. 12 x 60. Price
was killed in the coal mines .
$5 ,500 . Coii99B858.
Aug us t
23 ,
1920 , Cr is 00 YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX- - . - - .___..-.,.1.... - - HOME for sale or rent .
Schneider . Memor ies I wr i t~ _.,pERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY PAR- MOBILE
Good location, gas heat , city
about him , Songs tell of h i~TI ES HAS OPENINGS FOR
water . 949·2761 .
wonderfu.l love . b~t th~ _lonely
MANAGERS
• D-EMON ·
years w1tilout hn"':l · .''$ my
STRATORS . SELL GUARANTEED
Father I am th1n k1ng of.
TOYS _ GIFTS . NO SERVICE
Daughters , Ed ith end Hefen .
CHARGE .
PHONE
CAR
NECESSARY . CAll COLlECT TO SEARS KENMORE Dryer and
CAROL DAY {5181489"8395 "
Speed queen au tomatic washer.
E)(cellent
condition .
BABYSITTER
TO
live
in.
P.O.
Box
SOUTHERN
HIGH
SCHOOL
Reasonably
pr iced . Coli
924
,
Gallipolis
,
Ohio.
SENIORS - calf Souther11 High
992-5832, after 5 pm.:_ --~ __
lE-.-w-o-,k"'"l_n_g
School now, 9-49-2600 to make $;50"weEKLY P"o""s"si:::B::.
you r appointment for your
with advertising compolgn . No 275 GALLON Fuel Oil tonk .
Senior pictu,-es . Pictures will be
985-3588"
e xperience required . Send self:
token at _the High School , So1. .
addressed envelope for ap· UVE~TOCK " FEEDER pigs , 40-50
~ug . 27 and Mon ., Aug . 29.
Cumbe rl and
pl ic ation . ·.
poun,Ps .' $3Q per head . Call
Moke your appointment now !
Research, Box 366. Cookeville,
985-3588"'
Ken Grover Photography , your
TN 38501.
COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR .
offic i al
yearbook
BABYSITTER
IN Syracuse oreo for
S3S. Coppertone Gas Range,
photographer.
·
6 yr. o ld boy . Coll992-751,. bet$50. Two Wheel Beorcot garden
ween 6 :30 and 9:30.
tractor with
plow
ond
cutti~o~ etor ,
$70 .
Murray
NEED BRAKE Mechanic. Send ap·
Lawnmower ,
525 . Colt
plication to Box 729-A, c-o Doily
949-20.2.
Sentinel, Pomeroy . Ollie.
IB MONTH OLD Polled Hereford
Heifer. Pllone 992-390-4 or
1.\'S TRUCTI01\'
992-7168.
1 "'

N O, rll:

10 :JO Coping with Kids 10 .
II 00 Ne ws 3.4.6.8.10.13.15; MacNeil -Lehrer RepOrt
)3; Fawlty Towers 20.
II 30--- Johnny ·Carson J,4, 15; Rookies 6,13; Movie
" Prisoner in the Middle" 8; Movie "TheTunnel o1
Love"lO; ABC News 33.
12 ·0G--Janaki 33.
12 ;41)-Mystery of the Week 6.13 .
1·00---- Tomorrow 3,4 .
I ·Jo--Mary Hartman 10.
1 · l(}- News 1:1

EVER' TIME Ot.: BULLET
ITCHES ·" HE's ALREADY

.GOT COMPANY

�•

14-The Daily Sentinel, Middle'Port-P,&gt;meroy, 0., Wednesday , Au~ . 24.1977

~-----Ar~~ -oe~th~---- ! Bridge opening

Vance in tough talks
with Teng Hsiao-ping
•

By JIM ANDERSON
PEKING
( UP I)
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance takes up the thorny
subject of Sin&lt;&gt;-U.S. relatiOflS
in a meeting today with
Deputy Premier Teng Hsiaoping, considered less antiAmerican than most Chinese
leaders.
Senior U.S. officials said
Vance would use the session
to open· serious talks on the
establisluneni of diplomatic
relations, stalled by Peking's
. ,demands that Washington
break its commitment to the
Nationalist Chinese on
Taiwan.
The Vance meeting with

said neither s1de was In a
hurry to tackle the key issue
of V""ce's trip - how to
establish
Sino-U . S .
diplomatic relations without
forcing a Washington break
with Taiwan, which Peking
claims is part of China.
It is regarded as likely,
therefore, that Vance will

1
RUSSELL JENKINS
B1DWELL
Russell
Jenkins. 74, of Route 2.
Brdwe-11 , dred

Vance would meet Premier

and Communist Party
Chairman Hua Kuo-feng , who
along with Teng and Defense
Minister ,Yeh Chien-ying
form the
triumvirate
approved last week at the
party 's
lith
National
Congress.
U.S. officials said they

leave Peking Friday without
a clear answer to that
problem.
While Vance has spent
mos( of his time In meetings
or preparing for them , his
wife, Grace, toured an
agricultural commune near
Peking today and visited the
Great Wall and the Ming
Tombs Thesday.

a native of the Mtlton. W. Va.

than 20 years.
~uneral services will be
Thursday al tl'le Heck ' s

Funeral Home in Mi Iton
where friends may call
Wednesday !rom 2 lo 9 p.m.

DAVID McKNIGHT
David 0 . McKnight, 81 , a
former Pomeroy resident.

died Tuesday at his res!~ence
7604
Black's Road ,
Pataskala . He was preceded
in death by his parents, Mr.

a!

(Continued from page 1)
gym complex.
Be gala noted .his father, former KSU wrestling coach Joe
Be gala, had made a similar proposal in July, a couple months
after the board decided to expand Memorial Gym on the
campus.

and

WASHINGTON - COMMISSIONERS HEADING federal
regulatory agencies meet with industry representatives 10
times more often than with consumer spokesmen, according to
a survey released today. Common Cause, which conducted the
study, said it proves there is a "gross imbalance" in the
regulatory process.
"What is urgently required is the esta blishment of a new
philosophy of citizen particpation in the regulatory process,"
said David Cohen, president of the public interest
organization. "The regulatory world will stop being the
playground of regulated industries only if it includes the
public. Without major changes ... citizens will continue to be
unrepresented," he said.
Common Cause used the survey results to make a pitch for
legislation to create an agency for consumer advocacy, a
propoSlll now stalled in Congress despite endorsement by .
President Carter and hel\VY backing from Ralph Nader and
other activists. ·
LOS ANGELES - THE VALLEY NEWS BANNED sex
movies ads Thesday, becoming the third Southern Calilornia
daily newspaper in two weeks to banish or sharply restrict.
such ads. "The han will include all motion pictures that are
either rated X or unrated and whose prtmar)' purpose is to
partray sex acts,". said J . Scott Schmidt, president of the
Valley News.
The action by the suburban daily, which circulates
throughout the populous san Fernando Valley and other parts
of Los Angeles, followed by only hours a similar announcement
by Otis Chandler, publisher of the Los Angeles Times, one of
the largest newspapers in the United States.
CLEVELAND - A SUBURBAN GARFIELD Heights,
Ohio, man has sued the H. J . Heinz cO., Pittsburgh, fo r $35,000
- claiming he found a cooked mouse in a can of vegetable soup
manufactured by the firm. Ronald E. Kalin, 33, said he bought
a can of Heinz ''ready to serve" soup from vending machine
last Nov. 5 to go with his lunchtime sandwich .
When he had consumed about three-fourths of ,the soup,
.which he was eating out of the can, he looked into. the container
and saw the head .of a mouse and two feet, a'ccording to the
lawsuit, which charges the firm with negligence· and breach of
warranty. Kalin became so violently, ill ·he had to be
hospitalized and his hospital and medical bills exceeded $1,000,
according to attorney Richard B. Steur, who said a lab report.
confirmed the can co'ntained the head, feet and perhaps other
parts of ' 'a cooked mouse.''

Notices, local briefs
7 112 Pet. per year on a
4 year certificate of
deposit.
$5,000.00
minimum
deposit.
A substantial penaltv is
· on a II certificate
1acco.un:ts withdrawn prior

to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch
~
__,.WS~
The Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
2¥6

Second St.

Pomerov, OhiO

F8fJC

------

•
RACINE - The Southern
High School cheerleaders will
hold a car wash beginning at
10 a .m. saturday ' at Eber's
Golf Station.

There will be a revival at
the Hobson Christian Union
Church Sept. 12 with
evangejist Rev . George
Jones , Indiana as guest
·speaker.
There will be an emergency
meeting of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association this
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn meeting room to
consider
the
recoin·
mendation of the executive
.- committee to ratify the
impasse panel report.
Linda Stobart instead of
Linda Stewart has been
employed as a substitute
secretary in the Meigs Local

Classy comfort-in chrome!
Th1s folding Celebnti" furn iture is so beautiful,
you ' ll never want to told It away! Chrome makes it
especially beautiful -and Samson1 te" makes it
especially practical for a hundred different uses .
• padded 34 x 34" washable vinyl tabletop
• p1HOw cha1r seat and padded backrest
• strong all-steel lramework
• scratch-resistant "
chrome finish
Fmecasuallurnl\ure
• handsome decorator

0

Samsonlte ·

School District for the new
year.

-.- -

af

area but had lived here more

News •. in Briefs

would regard it as a severe

• setback if Hua does not
receive Vance, whose fourday trip is the ffrst high-level
contact between the Carter
administration and China 's
new leaders.
Although Vance was glad to
confer with Teng - regarded
as being more disposed to
deali1Jg With Americans and
the West than most Chinese
leaders- the deputy premier
is clearly No. 2 behind Hua,
they said.
.
In Washington , President
Carter said he does not yet
know what the results of
Vance's talks may be, and
added he would withhold
crnrunentuntiiVancereports
back to him.
U.S. officials with Vance

Monday

ternoon at his ~-tome with the
S. B..Stowers fa~ily . He was

Teng 1 a member of China's

newly endorsed ruling triumvirate, signaled the end of
two days of lower-level
meetings, during which
Vance liniited himself to
broad explanations of U.S.
foreign policy.
It was not known whether

•

Mrs .

Willi am

~~~~-i ght, and his wife,
Surviving are a son.
Charles w.. Pataskala : eight
grandch i ldren , and seven
great-grandchildren.
A veteran of World War I.
he belonged to Drew Webster
Po•t 39 Amer ican Legion. 01
Pomeroy .
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funerai .Home with the Re v.
Cecil Cox officiating. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home during the hour
preceding the service.

St"dewaJkS
can.not be

New auto show
will be staged

l

(Continued from page 1)
" We never had an)' problems with the bridge until this
Planning was begun to
LUTHER MINOR
summer." stated .Innes. "Two weeks into the tcstin~ we found
Luther Min0f'.84. o resident that visual crack."
stage a "new automobile
of VInton. died at 8:45 p.m.
.
.
.
·
Tuesd"y
~n
Veterans
When asked what th1s project IS ('OSting the ~ tat e, Jones satd show" in cooperation with
Memo r i a 1
H o s pi t a 1, he could not say beeause it reflects a continual cost of Meigs County auto dealers
the
Middleport
Pomeroy. following an ex - repairing the cracks as they are discovered and he has not after
tended illness.
.
.
·
Chamber
of
Commerce
He was born March 8 1B9J tabulated the b11ls.
members
and
their
spo~
in Rodney . He was a nielon9
However, it cost the state an estimated $100,000 to repair the
dined
at
the
Meigs
Inn
resident of Gall fa Coonty.
first crack and Gov. Jay Rockefeller at a press conference a
He was a retired sawmill
'
· ·
1
·
ed Tuesday night .
operator. He married the late couple oJ weeks .ago, said ll wou d
the state an estlmat
The show will be staged in
Fannie Oiler. She preceded $250,000 to provtde free [erty serv1ce.
Emerson Heighton,
him in death In 1969.
Jones also said the State of Ohio is sharing some of the costs October.
president,
was in charge of
Two srsters survive, Mrs. but he did not say how much.
.Ethyl Ball and Mrs. Floro
.
..
.
the meeting . Attending were
Bostic, both of Columbus.
When asked 1£ there were plans lor addtbonal ferry serv1ce Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes,
. One brother preceded him besides the two currently in operation, Jones said "no." He Mr. and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mr.
•n Fd~~~al arrangements will also gave a negati~e respons~ to the possibili~y of allowing a and Mrs. George Ingels, Mr.
be announced ~Y M~Coy · set al!"ountoltrafltc on the br~dge at a g1v_en tune, bestdes the and Mrs. Richard S. Owen,
Moore Funeral Home In .operation ol lhe ferry.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wilson, and
Vinton.
However, Jones did give a positive response to motorcycles Mi. and Mrs. Eqison Bak~.
being pushed across the bridge. He said he did not want them
driven across since they pose a hazard to pedestrians.
"The Shadle Bridge, ' which was slated to be closed for
(Continued from page 1)
repairs, will not be closed not even to one lane traffic," Jones
industry officials said.
said.
In addition, pickets struck
VETERANS MEMORIAL
But his answer meant it will not be closed until the work on
hard in the eastern sections of
Admitted - Kethel Hat·
Kanawha and Boone coon- the other bridge is completed. " If we have some time left to field , Dexter ; Kathryn
ties, forcing three trucks at begin repairs on it we will," the Commissioners added.
O'Connor, Racine; Andria
However, he indicated it is doubtful this will occur since bad Arnold, Pomeroy; Clarence
one operation to dump their
loads and warning miners at weather may hinder repair operations on that bridge,
Spurrier, Pomeroy; Oct$
Jones also said the structural design on the bridge was sale Ward, Columbus; Martha
another location that their
cars would be set on fire if and the work that would be done on it would be to install Bailey, Reedsville ; Eric .
concrete flooring, which would stop the continual main· Stover, Racine; Roy Nelson,
they did not halt work.
State palice at Glasgow, W. tanence repair that has been experienced lately.
Rutland.
Vf'., near the intersection of
In regards to a question alledging the sinking of a bridge
Discharged - James
picket-infested Paint Creek . pier three inches into quicksand, Jones denied this rumor Juhling, Hilah Jones, Juanita
and .Cabin Creek in eastern and stated that the pier probably has sa nk its normal i~ch Justis, Harold Gilmore, John
Kanawha County, said some only.
Hinkel, Edna Hart, Gilbert
reports of armed bands of
Can the problem of cracks in the bridge steel continue to Wilson.
miners !lad reached them, happen'
.
but the reports had not been - "Yes, since we don't know what c8used them at this time/'
PLEASANT VALLEY
confirmed.
'
Jones responded to a question.
Discharges
Wayne
"I think some blood's going
In response to another question, he said the bridge will he Gibson, Point Pleasant; Toby
to be shed," one frustrated
Myers, Letart ; Mrs. El}lil
District 17 local officer said. reinspected in another nine months.
He
gave
an
almost
absolute
no
to
the
J)ossibility
of
building
Gray,
Letart·;
John
The flourish of new
an
additional
bridge
in
this
area.
Jones
sai&lt;l
this
would
be
Mason;
Clara
Bemesderfer,
picketing activity caught
union and industry officials improbable at this time, mainly 'due to the cost. He said a Lavender, Syracuse ; Vada
off guard and stymied a bridge of the magnitude of the Silver Memorial Bridge would King, .Henderson, and Pearl
Elliott, New Haven.
return-to-work shift that cost approximately $35 million .
The
appearance
of
Jones,
who
has
been
with
the
Departstarted 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.
Leaders of ·102 locals in ment oFHighways for 29 years, was arranged by G.A. Biggs,
UMW District 17 Monday said president of the Point Pleasant-Mason County Chamber of
they would return to work Commerce.
after the union:s governing
Among those in attendance were State Senator Orton Jons,
council,
meeting
in Delegate Dave O'Neal, Commission President Bob Powers
Charleston, agreed to seek a and Point Pleasant Mayor John Musgrave.
SHIPPING FIGURES
meeting with the Bituminous
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - AgCoal Operators Association in
volume
for
gregate
an attempt to ·bolster the
shipments of iron· ore, coal
union's sagging health plans.
and grain in Great Lakes
. Botjl union and indilslry
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - become available.
commerce for the year as of
officials said the new pickets
Toledo schools have tried Aug. 1 totaled 74.1 million net
in West Virginia came from . Students in the Toledo public
Kentucky, while Kentucky schools will have a shortened four times to pass an tons, the le1'51 for the perind
officials said the strikers school year after the Board of operating levy to raise in the past three years.
During
July ,
bulk
there came fro m . the Education voted Tuesday to sufficient funds.
A
report
Monday
from
go
along
with
the
commodity shipments of the
Mountain State.
of State Auditor Thomas three commodities totaled
About half the 10,000 re comme ndation
miners in Kentucky, which Superintendent Frank Dick Ferguson said the schools 20.3 . million net . tons ,
borders West Virginia, have about closing schools early would face a deficit of nearly according to the Lake
$6.7 lllillion dollars.
because of a lack of funds .
Carriers' Assoclatioo , which
returned to the pits.
The schools were closed for Tuesday said tonnages of
·The hoard agreed with the
"! think it's all .in UMW
President Arnold Miller's lap proposed schedule to open 13 days last December each commodity was the best
now/' said one West Virginia schools Sept. 6 and close Oct. because of another, but ever for the month in the past
three years.
·
UMW local official. " Miller 13. Schools will reopen in smalier, deficit.
January
when
funds
for
1978
ought to take a hard st'and."

:ost

Meigs miners

Hospital News

p Iayground S
Numerous complaints were
received Tuesday by the
Middleport mayor's office
reference to the discussion by
council on children playing on
sidewalks.
It was not the intention of
Mayor Fred Hoffman or
council to imply that village
sidewalks should be used as
playgrounds.
Sidewalks should be kept
clear of toys and bicycles so
they can be used by
pedestrians . P,arents are
asked not to permit their
children to create disturbances which bother their
neighbors and not permit the
riding of -skateboards where
damages to property might
occur, or the child's safety
might be endangered:
Parents are reminded that
thex are responsible for any
damage which their children
may do to the property of
others.

Firm told to
finish design

RACINE - Cheerleaders
of Southern High School are
sponsored a bake sale
The Meigs County Combeginning at 10 a.m. Saturday missioners Tuesday night
in front of the Racine Home authorized Jim Page of
National Bank.
Fleming Page and Stolte to
proceed on the final design
The Middleport Fire for one of three alternates on
Department was . called to an access road to the multiformer Route 7 below Mid- purpose health facility that
dleport at 11:07 p.m. Thesday will be located near Veterans
Where a pickup truck owried Memorial Hospital.
by Delmar Hawley was on
It was reported that . soil
fire. Damages were light. At borings have been made at
6:11a.m. Wednesday, the fire the site but the report on the
department went to the John tests have not been returned.
Elias home on County Hoad 3 Attending were Henry Wells,
where a minor blaze had been Richard Jones and Jim
Housh, commissioners and
caused by lightning.
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called io the
Rutland.area at 5:20a.m. for
SCIOTO DOWNS
!Wy Nelson who was ill. He
COLUMBUS
(UP! )
was taken to Veterans
Tuxedo
Honor
charged
up
Memorial Hospital where he
from
fourth
in
the
stretch
to
was admitted.
capture the featured eighth
Eighth grade football race at Scioto Downs
practice at Meigs Junior High Thesday night by a neck over
will begin after school on Pravocator.
Tuesday, Aug. 30. All . The winner covered the
students interested in playing mile in 2:03 and returned
football should bring tennis $11.40, $4.80 and $4. Prince K
was third.
shoes and· gym trunks for Ave.
The
nightly
double
practice.
combination of Mudges Creed
RACINE - The Racine E- (6) and S\tperb Freight (6)
worth $25.40. ·
R Squad was called Monday was
A
crowd
or' 6,684 wagered
at 3 a.m. for Dewayne
$359,510.
Dowell, ·Rt. 3, Racine, who.
had swrtained a laceration to
his left leg. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
CAROLINE WRrrES
NEW. YORK (UP!)
Caroline Kennedy ,- who
. PARENTS ARRESTED
worked as a copy person at
CLF;VELAND (UP!) - the New York Daily News
The parents of a six-year-old this summer, wiD debut as a
West Side boy found beaten to reporter in the next issue of
death at his hol)le have been Holling Stones magazine with ·
arrested; homicide detective! a story on Elvis Presley's
said today.
funeral. ·

"

'

Shortened year assured

ELBERFELDS IN. POMEROY
JUST RECEIVED1--11BIG SHIPMENT
M(~lf&gt;- 7112 )

Two Racine residents were facial Injuries. She was Meigs Post State Highway hospital t(lday in good conPatrol, WiUiam Eakins was dition. He suffered a broken
admitted to Holzer Medical reported in [air condition.
and
several
ea!t
bound on Rt. 124 In finger
Another passenger in
Center Wednetlday afternoon
lacerations.
Murphy
is to be
followinc lnjurlee received in Eakins' vehicle, William Syracuse and Betty Van
discharged
today.
He
was
1 beadGn automobile crash in Eakins, 2, was taken to Meter" was headed west. The
held
overnight
for
obVeterans Memorial Hospital two vehicles met head-on.
SyraCUM It 1:35 p. m.
servation
of
possible
conBoth autos were demolished.
Wllll.am Eaklna, 22, Racine, in Pomeroy. ,
Waugh
was
Injured In the other car Patrol charged Eakins with cus.sion.
suffered a dial-ted hip and
~barged this morning. He
severe facial lacerations. He were Betty Van Meter, 5t; left of center.
Wednesday morning, three was also held overnight for
was reported In good con- Eunle Brinker,, 79, and
dition today.
Margaret John90n, 33, aU of teen aged boys were injured observation lor possible
His sister, Charlotte Racine. They were taken to in a one-car accident on Rt. concussion.
Fulks' father, &amp;ss Fulks,
Eaklna, 12, suffered fractures Veterans Memorial Hospital. 218 in Gallia County.
According to the patrol, a was charged with permitting
of both legs and mouth and
According to the Galliavehicle driven south by Curtis an unlicensed minor to drive.
Patrol investigated a
A. Fulks, 15, Crown City,
went out of control, oll the mishap at 6:32a. m. today on
road and smashtd into a tree. Rt. 325. Clarence R.
The vehi.cle was demollshed . . Southern; 38, Parkersburg,
Taken to Holzer Medical · was charged with left of
Center by the Volunteer center after his vehicle
By United PreosiDteraatlonal
Emergency Squad were collided with one driven by
WASHINGTON - CHIEF COUNSEL LEON Jaworski Fulks, and two passengers, Eugene Hersman, 48, Vinton.
aays tbe House Ethics Committee is encountering "active Timothy
Murphy,
14, Hersman claimed injuries,
evasion" oo its Korean bribery investigation similar to that in Gallipolis, and Bruce Waugh, and was taken to Holzer
the Watergate scandal, and hearings may have to wait until H, Scottown.
Medical Center. Both
next year. But Jaworski, put in charge of the inquiry a month
Fulks remained in the vehicles were damaged.
ago, also said at his first meeting with the committee
WednesdJiy that he is coovinced "the pertinent facts will
ultimately come to light" and anyone holding back
inf&lt;rmation would be weD advised to come forward
voluntarily.
NOT MUCH LEFT - Not much identifiable as an
The lonner Watergate prosecutor, welcomed like a
automobile remained of this car driv~n by Dennis Eakina
rescuing knight, said he still has "a measure of real
of Racine which coll!ded with another car in Syraause
confidence" the panel can get testimony from Tongsun Park
Wednesday lnJurmg SIX persons.-Katie Crow picture.
even though the Korean businessman, alleged paymaster in
teh covert lobbying operations in Congress, said hours earlier
in Seoul he will not cooperate. So sweet was the reception that
Rep. Richardson Preyer, D-N.C., cautioned the new man
jokingly: "You'll feel like a pancake after the syrup is poured
over it before this is over."
MINNEAPOLIS - DELEGATES TO THE Veterans of
Foreign Wars national convention ha ve decided
overwhelmingly to remain a "fighting men's outfit "~ with no
w&lt;men members. National Commander R. D. "Bulldog"
Smith of Alabama and other VFW officials had recommended
changing the bi-laws to admit women and pointed out many
women have . served in combat zones 'and many have been
killed.
But when the subject came up for a vote Wednesday after
a fiery debate at group's 78th national convention; only a few b[
the 8,000 delegates stood to support it. The great majority then
stood, shouting and cheering, to vote " No."

KENT, OIDO - THE THHEE MEMBERS of the Kent
State University Board of Trustees who met Wednesday with
two members of the state legislature on the controversy
surrounding the constructloo of a gym complex on the KSU
campus said the discussions were "fruitful. " No decisions
were made since a quorum was not pr.Sent. The board has
nine members.
Meeting with the board were Rep. John Begala, D-Kent, and
Sen. Marcus Roberto , 0-Ravenna . Just prior to tbe meeting,
the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of .,\ppeals in Cincinll8ti dismissed a
suit filed by the May 4th Coalition which had tried to halt
coostruction of the gym near the site where four students were
killed and nine wounded .by the Ohio National Guard May 4,
1970, during an antiwar demonstration. The court said it
dismissed the suit because it (the court) did not have
jurisdiction.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 93

Teachers
accept
report
The Meigs Local School
District Teachers Assn. today
issued .a statement to ihe
effect that a report .of an
iinpasse panel, resulting
from negotiations between
the association and the
di!trict's board of educatlon,
has been accepted by the
teachers.

•

L(S-9) XL(9Y2·10'h)

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press International
lUis the air this weekend In the Marietta area,
coming from the decks from the W.P. Snyder boat on the
Ohio River.
.
Th~ folk music is just part o[ the enterialnment for the
Huck Fihn Days Sunday. The festival also featured old-time .
contests, lnclttdlng frog jumping and square dance
·
demonstrations.
Other festivals. this weekend Include the Apple Festival
at Rltiman which begins Thursday and runs through Sunday
and the Threshermen's Convention ·and Hlstortcal Engine
Show at tbe Century Village in Burton Friday through
Sonday. ·
·

as'!':tt.tf~t:.::,t by the
~ne
CLEVELAND , ;-- LAWYER F. LEE BAILEY
"At an emergency meeting
·
recommended Wednesday lhatthe bill of rights beset aside for
m" Bt
police investigating heroin dealers. Bailey spoke to about 350 Wednesday, Aug. 24, the
Meig~
Local Teachers
person~ attending the Cleveland Automobile Club's pedestrian
r.
Association ratified the
safety awards luncheon.
JU
While he would like to see use of marijuana and cocaine impasSe panel report just
~
decriminalized, Bailey said, he sees no justification for the received. Although this third
w·mners for the· f'rst
sale of )leroin. Another step that could help, he said, is for the pa rty report does not live up
' thr ee
WASIDN
UP!) _•
·
country to stop using cash and make ali transactions on credit to all the teachers' ex- evenmgs
of th e annua1 h0 le- The nation
n trade
pectations,
it
is
the
end
result
m
·
-ne
contest
bern
' g con
car&lt;b so untraceable payoffs ·could not be made.
~
• deficit totaled $2.3 billion in.
of ·the expensive, time· dueled by the Pomeroy• July, const' derably below
: ;:;:::;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::
consuming collective Middleport uo·ns Club at the
bargaining procedure as it Pomeroy Golf Course were . 'June's record level but still
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
presently exists between the reported today. One con- the fourth highest in history,
Saturd·ay through
teachers and· the Board of testant achieved the feat of the Commerce Department
Monday, a chance of
hilling a hole -in-one.
said today.
Education .
showers or thundershowers
Therefore, the teachers
Monday evening winner
Americans bought less oil
dally, wltb blgba In the 80s
voted to accept the report as was Chris Wolfe, 15, who and coffee last month than
and lows to the upper 50s or
a· compromise, which in- came within three feet and they did in June, accounting
80s.
for the slowdown in the
eludes a number of teacher three inches of the hole.
There will be two free
concessions but by which the
Tuesday evening Mike deficit's growth rate, the
showings of the movie,
·teachers intend to abide.
Nesselroad was winner, department said.
Between·Man and Woman, at Plymouth gets
In the ·interest of Meigs coming to four feet, five inThe' · monthly report
the Meigs Community Mental
Local students and schools, ches away. Each received a measures the value of U. S.
H.,.lth Center Friday at 10 a. help from guard . the MLTA anticipates that gift of golf halls and were exports against the value of
m. and2 p.m.
the Board of Education will · presented trophies. . On the nation's imparts.
Thla 33-minute color film
COLUMBUS (UP!) ....:Gov.
discusses the many roles that James A. Rhodes today also accept and abide by the Wednesday evening, Walter
&amp;uahmade a hole in one and
are played by people in ordered Ohio National Guard impasse report."
0
marriage. These roles ·are water tankers to the town of
of ·
given by Dr . Everett Plymouth, located in both
·
additional prizes to be
Shostrom and Interviewer Huron and Richland counties. negotiations.
awarded
in the contest whjch
The town of 2,000 has .been
Howard Miller of ABC-TV
Congressm'an Clarence
continues
from 5to 9 p.m. this Miller today released the
Chicago. The doctor and short of water due to repairs
YOUTH TAKEN OFF
evening and Friday and from
Miller discuss such roles as being made in the water
A 15-yearo(l!d male was I to 9 p.m. saturday. There resuhs of a public opinion poll
"The Mother-Son" mains. The waterwill)le used removed to the Ohio Youth
conducted at his mobile office
relatlonabtp, the "Daddy for drinking and cooking Commission in Columbus are prizes for women, men during the Meigs County
· an~ youth.
Doll" relationship aJid others. purposes.
today after commitment in
Each of the roles are acted
An Ohio Air National Guard
out by actors and discussed tank.e r supplying 1,500 juvenile ~ourt for violation of
Clear and cool tonight, lows
Individually. The Meigs galloos was to be sent from probation which he w.as ordered
for
commission
of
a
between
55 and 60. Cloudier
Mental Health Center is Mansfield and an Army
delinquent
act,
according
to
Friday,
highs
in the low 80s.
located on W. Znd Street in Natiooal Guard unlt from
Carl
Hysell,
juvenile
Probabillty
of
precipitation
Pomeroy. The public Is In· Norwalk was to supply a 501).
The
length
probation
officer.
near
zero
percent
today,
vlted.
galloo tanker.
of his stay is Wtdetermined. tonight and Friday.

Hole.:in
Deficit stands
acht"eved·.
$2.3 billion
d '
l
Lio'ns ·p lay unng r

Free showings
twice Friday

ATIOS

·Beige, ~lack, Burgundy, Gold.
Peacock. Pink.
sugg. re tail 4.50

CollY

Navy. Red. White.
sugg. retail7.00

.11'055 0......
V4lour Scaff

Satin lasre.x gussets

Beige, Blue,
Pink, While.
suqg. retail 4.00

·

AT003 Ellaabeth
Embroidered Valour Seulf
Blue, Navy, Pink, White.
augg. retail 4.50
COM110RT, BEAIJTY

&amp;

UIXIJRY

Ulllllietakably
Aaael Treads(R).
They're washable, tool

DANA WALBUfiN IIIII hil two lOlli, Brian, 18 (front
llllllllreycle), IIIII Kevin, left Mldcmport Tuesday for
Salem, Oregoo plamlng to take In the sights along the

I

.

'

southern route Ill the Pacific Northwest. The past 10 days
they spent visiting relatives in Meigs County.

at Leewood mine.
•

.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UP! ) - Al:iout 100 miners
seeking to end a wildcat
strike exchanged gunshots
Wednesday night with 40
pickets and early today one
miner was hauled from his
truck and beaten.
The exchange of gunfire
near the community of
Leewood apparently was
initiated by the pickets trying
to prolong the nine-week-old
walkout over cutbacks in
health benefits.
The pickets charged that
United ' Mine Workers
President Arnold Miller had
dispatched "thugs" to keep
the pits open.
Opposing the pickets was a
group of about 100 miners,
some from outside the
militant Charleston-based
District 17, who said their
presence was sanctioned by
the union. The smaller group
dispersed when state police
ar~ived.

No injuries were reported.
In today's incident, a miner
at the Cedar Coal Co. near
Whitesville was dragged
from a truck and beaten by
three or four pickets, state
police said·. Bullets were

c

reportedly fired into the
truck.
State police could not immediately confirm other
reports or early-morning
violence.
In a related development,
Miller officially notified the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association he wants .a
meeting to discuss restoring
the lost medical benefits miners must now pay $500
towards m~ical costs where
there was no charge before
July 1.
Last Monday the · miners
agreed to return to work for
60 days so the UMW and the
coal
operators
could
renegotiate .the benefit
cutbacks. The contract is due
to expire Dec. 6.
"We were asked to come
down here by our local union
president," said Talmadge
Dean, a rank-and-file miner
from Dis!Fict 5 in Ellsworth,
Pa ., who appeared .at
Leewood.
''We found it's brother
against brother," he added .
While the back-to-work
trend stepped up in West
Virginia, the strike worsenl'd
in Kentucky.

In Pikeville, Ky. , which has
10,000 UMW members, J .B.
Trout, a member of the
union 's Executive Board,
(Continued on page 9)

Winterization
program funds
are exhausted
Authorities said today the
energy crisis program of the
Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency has run out of
funds.
The energy program has
currently expended its
allocation of money for
winterization activities and is
waiting to be refunded by the
Community Services Ad·
ministration . . The agency's ·
winterization crew wUI be
hack on the job as soon as
funds are available.
The · delay is regretted.
Pending refunding , the
agency will complete as
many homes as possible
before cold weather begins.
Numerous calls. for the
assistance
have
been
received.

L ocal opm1on exposed m
•
poll
e

e

Fair. Local opinion proved as
follows (all figures are
percentages ):
Performance of the
Congress good, 16; 42 rated it

fair, and 42 rated it poor.
Performance of the
President good by 25, 43 [air,
32 poor.
Federal Judiciary, 9 good,

35 fair, 56 poor.
U. S. should withdraw
military troops from .South
Korea, 40 yes, and 60 rio.
Federal Government ad-'
ministering and .financing
public welfar, programs, 33
yes, 67 no.
Breaking up the major oil
companies would increase oil
supplies and lower prices,' 55
yes, 45 no.
A program requiring every
·federal program to rejustify
its existence at least every
f1ve years or be abolished, 84
yes, 16 no.
.
How
should
postal
operations be financed, 1 of
the respondents favored rate
increasesi 26 supported increased Federal subsidies, 31
.indicated the elmination of
saturday deliveries, and 17
favored 'closing smaU post
offices.
.
On whether Income · tax
'mo·ney froni the general
treasury should be transferred into the Social Security
Trwrt Fund to maintain its
solvency, 61 yes; 39 no. ·
On what national health
insurance program Is
favored, 36 ind.icated support
for
a
comprehensive
program for everyone administered and financed like
Social Security, 17 supported
a program limited to catstrophic illness coverage, and .
9 favored a voluntary
program using tax credits to
help individuals purchase
private Insurance coverage,
and 38 want no federal
program at aU.

Vacation of fun
I
,
.
on 2 mot.Orcyc es .

· By CHARLENE HOEFIJCH

Valour BuHoa Boot
Solt sole.' Brown,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

F"!~- inuslc

Weather

AT108 Valeacia

THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1977

Folksy music in the air

heNo!~~ ;u~~i~~~r~~~ w~~~:p~~~e~f=ber

Velour Balleriaa

en tine

a1

ofnwvie set

WOMENS ANGEL TREADS HOUSE SLIPPERS
Sizes: 5(5-6)

Six injured in headon crash

Traveling 7,000 miles on
motorcycles may not be your
idea of vacation fun, but for
Dana Walbum and his two
teenage · sons, it's .the
ugreatest.,
The . trio traveled from
Oregon to Ohio to visit Daha 's
parents p.nd Brian · and
KeVIri's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Walburri,
Sr., of Middleport, as well as
other relatives in the Bend
area.
It was their first visit here
in nine years, anlf, of Course,
a "finW' on motorcycle.
When it comes to .traveling
everyone has that "dream
vacation." For Dana a trip
home on motorcycle with his
.two sona Was a dream of
many years.
He didn't want to just get on
the motorcycles and keep
moving toward Ohio, but
rather to combine the visit
with sightseelnt! along the

·

',

·

way so that his sons could get and the laundromat, and
a "feel of the country." And gained an appreciation for
he knew that would take time, the woman's touch in getting
and this was the year he had everything clean.
, They found traveling
the time.
Having worked as a across the county on motormedical technologist for the cycles a fascinating way to
State of Oregon for 20 years, , meet new people, and soon .
· .his vacation this ·sUII)IIIer discovered that !.here's
went to 'five weeks - enough alniost a frat~rnal thing with
other riders.
to make the trip East.
Dana and his two sons are
Leaving his wife, Beverly,
who works in a bank in on their way back to Oregon
Oregon, and hill daughter, now, this time traveling the
Kathy Sue, big in show horses southern route with stops
at this time of the year, the scheduled in Oklahoma to
. three packed light and moved visit Gordon Ihlf, a former
0
.
u
t
Meigs area resident, and a
They took U days to reach relative or t)Vo.
Ohio; lraveting the northern Once back, Dana will rejoin
route, occasionally stopping the barbershop quartet and 35
at a motel buting at a motel man chorus he's been with for
but for the most part pitching the past 21 years and begin a
their two small tents and us- fall series of shows.
And ·.the day after · Labor
ing sleeping bags.
• With only three changes of Day, he'll be back on the job,
clothing each, they soon this year with the satl.sfaction
learne~ about dirty clothes
of a vacation dream fulfilled.

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