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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.

�3-Tho Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 25, 1977

· ~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Th.u-sday, Allll. 25, 197i

Gobbledegook untouched except
for one Washington, D.C. bank
such ac~'Ounts or property be
WASHINGTON !UP! ) - During
the
presidential
campaign, ' indivulually or jointly owned."
The new form says: "U for any
President Carter promised a
simplification - of government
reason I fail to make any payment
on time, 1 shall be in default. The
language .
Early
in
'his
bank can then demand munediate
administration he dtrected his
payment of the entire remainmg
Cabinet to make an effort on it.
unpaid balance of this loan, wtthout
The gobbledegook remains
giving anyone further notice."
virtually un!Ducbed so far . But one
Or, then: " Each of the
Washington bank has ad'opted
undersigned, together with any
simple,
declarative
English
surety, guarantoc, or any other
sentences on its loan focms, and is
pilrty, hereto each hereby severally
crowing about it a bit. ,
waives presentment hereof for
The National Bank of Washington
payment, protest, and notice of
says it bas abandoned "legalese" on
protest, notice of dishonor, and all
consumer loans, and it cites these
defenses by reason of any extenston
""iunples Ill prove it:
of time Ill its payment that may or
The old form said : " Upon default
shall be given by the bolder or
hereunder, whether by acceleration
holders to them or any of them .... "
or otherwise, the holder shall have
the right, immediately and without
• And now : "If this loan becomes
past due, the bank will have the rtght
any notice of any kind, Ill seto(lff any
Ill pay. this loan from any dep&lt;JSit or
and all swns due hereunder against
any accounts of, or any oUter
security I have at this bank without
property of the undersigned, held by
telling me ahead of time . Even if the
the holder, regardless of whether
bank gives me an extension of time
Ill pay this loan, I still must repay

j

page ad in the Washing!Dn Star to
boast of its "plain talk" as opposed
w "double talk," and, against a
&gt;:llackground picture of the White
l'fouse, to remind the President of
what he hl!d said about rewriting
governmentese into . language
anyone can understand.
The Star, Ul a story about the bank
and its project, satd the old loan
language was in a single block of
unbroken type of a tiny sire spread
aJl the way across the page of the
documents.
The new note IS printed in easy-toread sire type m short sentences and
short paragraphs dtvtded by a
center column and by brief boldfaced descriptive paragraph
headings .
The Star said both versions of the
note were tested with 750 customers
and nearly 80 per cent - includmg
some lawyers - preferred the
stmplilied f&lt;rm .

New scholarship
program readied

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Boal-d of Regents will
administer a new scbolarshtp
agmgprogramsetupinabillGov.
James A. Rhodes signed
,
hormones for you that might Wednesday.
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
bill
created
a Merit
The
DEAR DR. LAMB- A cou- help some. Of the two female
Scholarship
Program
where
ple ol years ago you had a col· hormones, sometimes more
1,000
scholarships
in
the
urnn regarding women with estrogen and less pro$1,000
each
will
be
amount
of
problems after menopause, gesterone helps unprove the
annually,
beginrung
awarded
specifically regarding agmg complexion - m terms of
wrinkles of the face and a decreasmg a tendency to with the 1978-79 academtc
year. Winners will be known
medication to ask yow- doctor have acne and facial hair.
as
Ohio Merit Scholars.
for that would retard this ag- Every woman is different and
"This
program is destgned
ing. Any information on this the doctor has to ,e valuate her
to
identtfy
h1gh school
overall hormone balance to
would really be appreciated.
students
with
highest
I bad a partial hysterec· dectde what combination of
capability
for
college
study
torny about five Yl'"rs ago medicines in what amounts
and
to
give
them
an
added
and I have a great deal of barr are bestfor her.
I am sending you The incentive for continued good
showing on my face. Can
work as college students,"
anything be done about this? Health Letter number rr12,
I am taking Pretllarin at the Menopause, to gtve you a Rhodes said. "Also we would
review of the basic things like to keep these good
present time for Hashes.
students in Ohio colleges and
DEAR READER - I think that happen dunng this
Wliversities.''
you might be disappointed by penod of a wnman's lile and
The Board of Regents will
any medicines or salves to what she can do about tliem.
prevent wrinkles of the face. Others who want this ill·
1lie hormone creams really formation can send 50 cents
do very little more than you wtth a long, stamped, self- adwould be able to do for drE.sscd envelope for it.
If your facial hair problem
CLEVELAND (UP!) yourself with any gond
is !Do bothersome you may U.S. District Court Judge
moisturizer.
What is a moistunzer? Any beneftl from electrolysis. By Robert Krupansky has ruled
oily substance that forms a literally electrocuting the the city of Cleveland cannot
fihn over the surface of the tiny hair follicles so they bar sale of "girlie"
skin to prevent the escape of • don't continue to function, the magazines at airports unless
the normal moistw-e of the excess hair IS permanently a court rules they are
skin. As the skin moisture eliminated. More than one actua!ly obscene.
Krupansky made hts rulmg
builds up the water content treatment IS usually needed.
in
a case brought by lawyers
fills out wrinkles and does im- Your dermatologist could
prove a person's appearance help you wtth this problem - for "Penthouse" magazine
or in finding a competent after a Cleveland Hopkins
-at least temporarily.
Some doctors think that trained person to do the pro- International Airport
concessionaire removed it
female hormones help to pre- cedw-e for you.
and
others from the racks at
I
do
not
know
what
you
vent wrinkles but the
Mayor
Ralph Perk's demand.
mean
by
a
parttal
hysterecevtdence for this is meager at
judge ruled the
The
tomy
in
your
case.
If
the
cerbest. Some female hormones
mayor's
demands violated
will sometimes help prevent vix remains you will need to
the
First
Amendment
have regular examinations to
prominent facial hatr.
When a woman goes be sure you are not develoj)- because the magaztnes had
through the menopause the mg any changes there. If part not been ruled obscene and
ovaries stop producmg of the body of the uterus re- had no chance w defend
female hormones. The mains you should he certain themselves.
The ruling also prohibtts
pituitary gland under the to have regular follow-up
evaluations
while
you
are
brain sell$0S this and starts
pouring out additional hor- taking female hormones. ·
mones to stimulate the .That may help prevent any
ovaries. The increased action complications that might ocof the pituitary may also cur.
Beea use of the volume of
stimulate the adrenal glands.
These may produce both mail Dr. Lamb cannot
male and female hormones. answer your letters personal1lie increased ratio of male ]~· but he will answer
hormones may contribute tr ·epresentatlve letters of
1eral interest in his colfacisl hair. Then ther•
familiar tendency to develop wnn. Write to him in care of
Bryan Harris, Betty Harris
this newspaper, P.O." Box to Gary Bauman, Carolyn I.
facial hair, too.
You might ask your doctor 1051, Radio Ctty Station, New Bouman, 2.035 acres, Olive.
if there IS a better balance of York, N.Y 10019.
Mary Smith Sowards,
Albert W. Sowards to Clyde
E. Davis, Alice Louise Davis,
.28 acre, Rutland.
Dennis M. Hackett, Martha
J. Hackett to . Thomas D.

SalVeS WOnt' retard

•

establish a formula for
selecting a~ard wtnners wtth
the "highest capabiltly" by
weighing the factor of
achievement as measured by
performance in competitive
examination.
At least one scholarship
shall be awarded annually to
a student in each public high
school, joint vocational
school and each noni&gt;ubllc
high school foc which the
State Board of Educalton
prescribes
minimum
standards.
To recetve the award, a
Wlllller must enroll full time
as an undergraduate m an
Ohio institution of higher
education. The $1,000 award
may be contmued for lowyears if the student main tams
a satisfactory record of
achievementaas determined
by the Board of Regents.

Girlies' mags aren't barred

Meigs

Property

Transfers

Berrys World

Cl 1i71byHE4.1nc

~(f;Q~~-

"Hive you ever stop(Jfld . IQ JhirziL.llbout hol'V
much CLOUT you heve around here?"

signs 7

the en tire loan ." •
'!be bank tnok out a huge, double-

the city from retahatmg
against
the
airport
concessiOn-holder 1f tt
resumes offerillg the maga-

zmes again.

County court
has its judge

Sport·Parade

Mt1Dr Leilgue Sf1ndlngs

lr United Pnu lnternatlonll

N1tion1t Lugue
EAst
W L Pel. ' GB

new laws
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes signed iniD
law Wednesday seven bills,
to
including measures
establish a new college
scholarship program,
readjust the use of state funds
m nonpublic $Choois and
.emend Ohio's medical
malpractice law.
The nonpublic school a1d
bill
was
effective
munedtately .
A Supreme Court decision
earlier this year voided
Ohio's use of state funds m
several categories of aid Ill
nonpublic schools. The funds
which were aUocated to
adminiSter various text book
distribotion programs and
pay for field lrtps for
nonpublic school students
were redirected in the
legislatiOn
to
other
categories.
The other six bills would
become effective Nov. 24.
The change in medical
malpractice law concerned
the " informed consent" form
which was designed to illsure
that patients were aware of
the P"tential hazards of
medical treatment, including
surgery.
Under the new law,
hospitals would he exempted
from liability if nonstaff
physicians failed to obtain
'

4

informed consent" from

thetr patients, either in
writing or verbaJly.
Rhodes also signed bills
to:
Permtt
local
goverrunents to contribute
funds to area arts councils
- Automcatically extend
group medical msurance
coverage after Jan. 1, 1978, Ill
newly born children of
parents already covered
under group policies.
- Require persons or businesses whtch do busmess
under ftctitious names to
registered with Ohto's
secretary of state.
- Allow landmarks stgns
or signs of artistic or
historical significance to be
maintained along interstate
roads provided they were ill
existence on or before Oct. 22,

1965.

Phil a
P iltsbgh
St. Lours
Chicago
Montreal
New York

Los Ang
Cine!

Houston

San Fran
San Dieoo
Atlanta

78 46 619
72 55 567
7l 55 .563 8
69' 55 556
59 61 .&amp;68 XI
51 1-4 408 27 1' 2

1''

'

West
W L
7S 51
66 61

Pet
595
520

69

457

sa

58 70
56 73
44 81

GB
91 :z

171,,

453 18
434 201h
352 301/:z

. Wednuday 's Results

Los Ang 2. PlttsbQn 1, 10 .nns

Atlanta~. Chicago 3
Cincinnnatl11, New York 4
Houston 3. Philedelphla 1
St Louis 3, San Francrsco 2
TOday's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT.)
Los Angeles (R.,u 1J.J) at
Pittsburg~

12:35 p

m.

(Candtlarra

lJ .4),

Chicago (Bonham 10-10 ) at
Atlanta (Cepra 2·101 , 7: 35p.m .
New York (Swim B Bl at
Cincinnati (Norman 11. 10), 9 OS
pm.
Phrladelphra (Kaat 57) at
Houston (Larson 1-6) , 8 35 p "' ·
San Francisco (Montefusco 6
9) at St . Louis (Schultz 51).
8 35 p m .

Friday's G1mes

New York at Atlanta , night
P~lfadelphla at Cincl, n rght
Montreal at Houston:- night
Ptltsburgh at San Olego , n ight
St Louis at Los Ang , nrght
Cnlcaoo at san Francrsco, night

American Lngue
East
W L Pet GB
New York
74 51 592
Boston
71 52 577 2
Baltlmre
1l 52 517 2
Detroit
59 66 -472 15
Ctevelnd
58 68 A60 W l:l

"You did that behind the barn when you were six?"

Riches in Presley's legend
By SUSAN WHITE
special 12-page Presley
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!)- tribute edition Tuesday.
A spokesman for ScrippsThe King ts dead, but his
legend ts making more Howard, which owns both
papers, said the demaod for
mcney than ever befoce.
It was only rune days ago the edition has been
that the heart of Elvis " unreal ," with requests
Presley suddenly stopped commg in ala rate of 50,000 a
beatmg, plunging a wocld lull day in Memphis and similar
of fans miD mourning for requests of Scripps-Howard
their irreplacable idol, who papers elsewhere in the
sold more than 400 million country.
records durmg his rags-toThe death of the 42-yeaNid
nches career.
$Ir also sparked a rush on
Now hts memory may his records. A UP! survey of
generate even more wealth. record stores across the
The Memphis Commercial nation unmediately after hrs
Appeal was the hrst death showed he was more
,
hometown newspaper to popular than ever.
report Presley 's death Aug.
And m AUanta, a classified
16, and copies of its ftrst ads offered " ortginal" Elvis
edttion were snapped up by 4S rpm records at pr'ices
mowners outside his man- " ranging from $500 Ill $1,200
ston. They sold for the each.
Floral arrangements still
newsstaod price of 15 cents.
Because their editions for arrive daily and are placed
Aug. 17 sold out and there onagrassyplotmfrontofthe
were reports of those same mausolewn where the copper
papers being resold for more cofftn of Presley was
than $200, the morning entombed. They are grabbed
newspaper and the Press- by souvenir-seeking fans
Scimitar, Memphts' after- almost as soon as they touch
noon newS]Japer, printed a the ground.
Local florists ran out of

Mrlw

Toronto

flowers for a time last week
but are still filling orders.
Most are sent to children's
hospitals at the request of the
Presleys.
Wtth the fans looking anywhere and everywhere for
shU another memento of their
king - and many willing to
pay any pnCIJ - Col. Tom
Parker, Presley's longtime
business manager and friend,
sold the rights Ill Elvis' name
to Factors Etc. Inc. of Bear,
Del, on behall of Presley's
family for an undisclosed
sum.
Members of the Presley
family also were busy
!Dialing the smger's worth at
the time of his death. This
mcludes recordings, movie
residuals aod publications on
his life.
An inven!Dry of Presley's
assets now is under way. His
associates will not even
speculate on the wealth of the
singer who owned a fleet of
airplanes
and
luxury
automobiles, an 18-room
mansion valued at $500,000
and several plots of land
worth about $260,000.

Kan Crty
Mrnn
Texas
Chicago
Calif
Seatfle
Oakland

56 75
45 79
West

427 21
363 28 lf:z

W L Pel. GB
72 51 585
72 55 .567 2
71 54 .568 2
69 54 .561
J
6(1 63 .488 12

51 79 392 2.4 'h
47 77 379 25112
. . Wednesday's Results
Texas J, Boston 0, 1st
Texas 6, Boston 3, 2nd
CleveS, California 3, 1st
C.ailt 5, Cleveland 2, 2nd
Oakland 3, Detroit 1. lst
Oak 6, Del 5. 2nd, 10 [nns
Toronto 7, Seattle 0, lsi
Toronto 9, Seattle 3. 2nd
Baltimore 10, Chicago 5
New York 11. M rnnesota 1
Kan City 4, Mllw 3, 15 mns .
Today 1 s Probable Pitchers
{All Ttmes EDT)
Texas (Alexander 13 8 } at
Boston {Tiant B-8), 1 · 30 p m
Chrcago
CKravec: 76) , at
Baltimore (May 13 12), 7 .30

p.m .

Mmnesota (Zahn 11 to ) at
New York (Tidrow 8--4) , 8 p rn
Kansas City (SplltfOrff 10-6)
at Milwaukee {Augustine 1114) ,
8 .30pm
Friday's Games
Seattle at Cleveland, night
Oakland at Toronto, night
Minnesota at Boston. n1ght
Kan City at eafl rmore, OIQht
Texas at New York, n1ght
California at Oetrort, night
Mrtwaukee at Chlca;o. ntght

THE DAilY SENTINEL

COLUMBUS (Upi)
Robert E. Schaeffer of
Ctncinnati was named
Wednesday by Gov. James A.
Rhodes Ill be a judge of the
County Court of Clermont
County.
He will fill the unexpired
term of Russell G. Speidel
who resigned.
Schaeffer has practiced
law m Batavia since 1972. He
is also chauman of the Mass
Transit Board of Clermont
County .

NOW YOU KNOW
A healthy dairy cow has a
body temperature of 101.5
degrees.

DEVOTED TO DIE
INTEREST Of'
MEIGS..MASON AREA
CHESTERL TANNEHilL
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edllor
Published da1ly except Saturday
by The ~to V1:1lley Publishint: Cumany, ill Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Busmess OffJt:e Phone 992,.

2156. Edttonal Phone 992-.2157

Se&lt;rond class

PQ,\it.a~e

p;ud at

Pumeroy, Ohio
N~Ucrutl ad~;erusing represenI.HUve Ward - Griffith Company,
Inc, Bolhoclli and Gallagher D1v.,

7~7

Thll'd Ave, New York, N.Y.

10017

Subscnptwn rates· Delivered by
earner where available 7~ f..'~nUi per

week By Mntur Ruule wttere C&lt;lrrler
sen. tee nut av~ulable, One munth,
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One Year, U2 00, Stx months,
$lJ .SO,

Three

months,

$7 00,

F.lsewhere 126.00 ye11.r; SIX months
$13 SO, Three months, S7.SO.
SUbscription pm:e includes Swtday
Times-Sentinel

By J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Officials of several Ohio
industries Wednesday satd a
btll pendmg before a
legislative committee
liberalizing unemployment
compensation benefits would
cause htgher product prices
and create an "unwholesome" business climate in
the state.
''Une'!nployment
~ompensation
was
never
mtended to reach out and pay
people for not working," said
Frank Manak of the Ohio
Manufacturers Association in

testimony
before
a
subcommittee of the Ohio
Senate Commerce and Labor
Committee.
" It IS a sad day when we
have ro sertously constder
this type of legislation. It's a
sad day for the taxpayers of
Ohio," said Manak, who
predicted that the bill's cost
to industry would be passed
on to all Ohioans through
higher prtces.
The bill " would mcrease
unemployment compensahon
from a minimum of 50 per
cent of the worker's average
weekly wage to 60 per cent
while retaining maximum
weekly benefits amowtts of
$102 for a worker with no
dependents, $154 for one or
two dependents and $161 if the

A wards for disabled workers fewer
1975- '76 and continuing downward :::e~~d

arne

'

Major League Lnders
By United Press International
B•Hing
(based on 350 at bats )
Natrona! League
G AB H Pet.
Parker Pll
126 517 177 342
Stennett Plt
116 453 152 .336
Srmmns St . L
118 408 137 336
Griffey Cln
123 475 153 322
Tmpltn 51 L
118 480 154 .321
Foster C.rn
123 481 151 314
Luznskl Phil
114 427 13.11 .314
Morales Chi
120 434 134 309
Valnt1ne Mtl
104 422 130 .308
Smith LA
117 3'10 120 JOB
American League
G AB H Pet
123 484 183 378
carewMrn
122 477 16(1 .335
Bostock Min
114 401 133 332
Singlton Bal
107 439 145 .330
Rivers NY
108 '35 139 .320
Sailor Tor
123 500 159 318
R1ce eos
1l9 506 159 .31 4
LeFlore Oet
ll2 430 133 309
ZISk Chi
1l8 411 127 309
Har~rve Tex
123 487 148 304
Yount Mit
103 425 129 304
Brett KC
Home Runs
National League · Foster, Cln
&amp;2, Burroughs. All 32, Luzinskl
and Schmidt, Phil 31; Bench.
Cin 27
American League: R rce. Bos,
Bonds , Cal and Nettles, NY JO,
Scott, Bos 29. Zrsk, Chi 26
R: uns BaHed 1n
National League· Foster, C1n
120, LuzlnSki , Pnll 104, Cey, LA
95. Burrougns, Atl and Bench ,
Crn 92
American
League :
Hisle.
Mrnn 100; Bonds, Cal 91.
Thompson, Det 90. Hobson , Bos
89 , Zisk, Chi o~~nd Nett les, NY
85
Stolen Bases
National Le1gue : Taveras ,
Pitt 47 , Cedeno, Hou 43.
Moreno, Pitt 41 , Rlcnards , so
39; Mor!ilan, Cln and Cruz. Hou
38.
•
Amerlun League. Patek, KC
.40. Remv, Cal 33, Page, Oak
31; LeFlore, Det 29; Bonds, Cal

Jobless benefits bill hit

By LEE LEONARD
year," satd Wehner, adding five days in the future, he
UPI Slatehouse Reporter
that the commission is added.
COLUMBU's UPI
The • I kin
t
h
Computer processing has
(
) . oo g a eac case more
state Bureau of Workers' critica!ly and referring many been responsible for speeding
Kirkham, Stephanie Gail Compensation has reported of them foc rehabilitation up delt\lery of payments and
Kirkham, Lot 96, Mtd&lt;!Jeport. that awards tor disabled instead of awarding disabillty auditing bills properly,
Edward Stark, Jr., Sharon workers dropped by almost 25 payments."
Wehner said.
Stark to Mila Woods, Lot 523, per cent between 1975 and
Wehner said this change in
The reform legislation
Pomeroy.
1976, and are continuing Ill policy coincided with Rhodes' developed by the General
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee decline by another 25 per dismissal of Gregory J . Steb- Assembly
after
an
tJo disthtepNhen He .. Harrison, cent.
,.
bins, a Democrat, as investigation into improper
u
·
amson, 1.023
The information was con· chairman of the commission awards resulted in a
acres, Sutton.
tained m the 1976 annual and the appomtment of supplemental appropriation
Bruce Swartwout, Ellen report of the bureau and the William W. Johnston in April of $1.6 million and a staff
Swartwout to Howard V. Ohio Industrial Comrnisston of last year.
increase of 200 in the bureau
Tile tntal number of claims since last March, Wehner
Wolfe, Alice ·M. Wolfe, (OIC), issued Wednesday and
Parcels, Sutton.
sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes ftled
for
worker's said.
John H. Mohler to Anna by Robert . c. Daugherty, compensation rose slightly
The new law reduced the
Mohler, Parcel, Salisbury. bureau administrator. .
. from 357,140 in 1975 to 380,987 conuiusston workload by reLucille C. story, Leo R. ·
The two agencies iia11dle ' last year.
qulring
appeals
from
Story, Janice story Lochary, claims
for
medical
Daugherty described the decisions of the 16 regional
Charles P . Lochary to payments, loss of time and past year as "a period of workers' compensation
Richard E . McDonald, Jackie other benefits for Ohto attention, concern, and great boards Ill go directly Ill court
K. McDonald; 13.9 acres, workers injured on the job. stress."
instead ot the ore.
Bedford.
. • The report showed that
But he said the bureau and
In addition, abuses and
Bertha B. Tuttle, Affidavtl, awards totaled $400 million in cornrnis&amp;on came through an shortcuts in approving
Orange.
1975 and only $322 million in intensive investigation by the awards
have
been
Virgil Parsons to Larry V. 1976. 'Awards for permanent Ohio General Aaaembly in elln!inated, Welller said.
Parsons, Soma E. Parsons, and total disability dropped good shape and are operating
Daugherty's report showed
Par~els, Rutland. .
from $1116 million in 1975 to under a new law which the
stale's
workers'
Mtllard Spa~ldmg to $93 million last year.
provided controls "to guard cm~pensatlm insurance fund
. Marcta Spauldmg, Lots,
Neil Wehner, director of against neglect, dlaorcler and balanceat,l.378bUIIon (b) in
. 1971 compared with .1.243
Middleport.
public affatrs for the bureau
ill-conceived chan&amp;•·"
Anna Louise . '!pires to pointed out there were 3,SGB .. Webner said the time btllion (b) the prior year.
Timothy Mark Sptres, Lot 12, new declaratims of eligibility period foe
dng Initial
He said fnVl!lllrnent Income
Rutland.
for permanent total disability workers' compensation was up from • millioo in
· Beulah M. Crabtree to payment in 1975 and only claims has been redDCed 19'15 Ill $103 mlllioa last year,
DaMy Ray Cottrell, Vonda 2,018 last year.
from 35 days to between 12 a record-eettlng 7.2 per cent
Lee Cottrell, 3.737 acres,
"We think this will decline and 15 days. It may be cut to return on investments.
Columbia.
by another 25 per cent this

•

Yankees back in first place

~
BASEBALL

Rhodes

three or more

The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Thomas I;:. Carney, DGirard, would also allow a
worker who quit his job, or
who was fired for "just
cause," to be eligible for
unemployment compensation
after a specified number of
"penalty " weeks during
which he would he ineligible.
"It is shocking Ill read in
the bill that an employe fired
for stealing from the
company IS still eligible for
unemployment
compensation," said Raymond
Manley, a Cincinnati con·
struction ftrm official.
"Incompetence is its own
rewa~.

"If you don't want business

in Ohio, enact 1t," said
Manley, addmg that the bill
create
an
would
"unwholesome" business
climate m the state.

Contributions coming

for E-R's fund drive
Former residents
of
Pomeroy, realizing the
services provided by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad,
are sending contributions
hack home to assist with the
squad's $13,500 fund drive for
a new emergency vehicle.
Among the latest former
residents to give is Rosalie
Parfitt Claar now living in
Chillicothe. Latest ' contributors to the drive are
Janeth M.. Beal, Mr. and Mrs.
Oris Frederick, the Fabric
Shop, Mr. and ' Mrs. Louis
Reibel, Dorothy E. Reibel,
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton,
Loulaa Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold, Marie Bleb·
man, S1111ar Run Mill,' Fick
and Karr Construction Co.,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P.
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Sisson, Bertha Wetzen and
the Leonard Jewell Family,
Sew·Rite Sewing Club, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Kautz, Mr. and
Mrs. James Cornell, Thelma
Dill, StlfHer Department
store, Mr. and Mrs. · Clyde
Wlnel, Mr. and Mn. Jim
~

Lyons, Dorothy Gloeekner,
Guy R. Sargent, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl 0 . Thoma, Mr. and Mrs.
R. S. Graves, Mary Ann
Baird, Mr. and Mrs. F. J.
Ryther, Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
Follrod, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Lohse, Mr. tJld Mrs.
Charles Evans, Mr. ilnd Mrs.
Joseph Sisson, Dorothy Long,
Eleanor and Carolyn Smith,
Enuna Hood, Mr. and Mrs. E.
E, Follrod, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Tewkabary, Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Thompson, Mr.
and Mrs. George W. Kauff,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kapteina, Sr., Marie Hauck, Mr.
and Mrs. Cbilrlee strauaa,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Keetenon,
Mr. and Mn. Gerald E.
Shuster, E. R. Hollm, C. B.
Longstreth, Mr. and Mrs.

William Grueser, Mr. and
Mrs. Weld Smith, the Trinity,
Methodist and
Bible Sc:bool.

Lutheran

Cmtrtbutlona may be Mit
to the Pomeroy Em.-glllC!)'
Squad, P. o. Boll 247,
Pomeroy,

28.

Pitching
Most Victories
National League: Carlton.
Phil187 ; R.Reuschel, Chi 175 ;
Forscn , St.L 16 5-.:.John, LA 15·
5; Seaver, Cln 14-5:--Rhoden, LA
,,..8; Rogers, Mil 1.4-12.
American- League : Ryan, Cal
17-12; Goltz, Mrnn 167 ; Tanana,
cal 1S 7; Torrez, NY 15 10,
.Rozema, Oet 14 5. Colborn, KC
14-12.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - 'lllere are all dtfferent ways nf making
a hving, but how would you hke Ill spend most of your hie
looking•at the back end of a horse ? Don't knock 11.
Del Miller bas made more than $6 million doing that !01· the
he~r part of 50 years now and " kept a pretty good part of tt,
too," he says, which right there stamps him as a breed apart
from so many others who have done all right for themselves
competmg .m sports.
As by far the outstanding figure in all harness racing history .
the sel(-made, unostentatious 64-yearo()Jd Miller sllll drives,
trains and breeds his own horses, and what's more, he does 1t
virtually every day.
Miller is the type who ltkes to keep moving. Today ,and
Friday, for example, he's driving in the Indtana State Fair at
Indtanapolis. On Saturday he's handling his own Speed In
Action in the $241,500 Yonkers Trot at Yonkers Raceway and a
week from Sunday he'll be sttting in the sulky wtth the same
horse in DuQuoin, ill., for the blg one, the Hambletoman.
Money isn't what makes Miller keep drtviog anymore. Then
what does?
"A Iotta people ask me that," he laughs. "You ask Sam
Snead why he tees it up every week . lt's your life. It keeps you
yowtg . I don't feel old, anyway. Hell, you take a fellow like Bt
Shively. He was still driving when he was over 80. I remember
Fred Egan beating me in the Kentucky Futurity at Lextngton
one year. He was a guy who never showed any emotion and
when we pulled up, it was the first time I ever saw that he dtd.
'Well, that wasn't a bad 75th birthday present, was It?' he satd

.'

Intematlonal and

u.s. Clay

Courta tennis tournaments.
The A.T.T. ccmpllter rank-

place to stay/' sa1d Rivers.
Elsewhere in the American
League, Texas swept Boston,
3-0 and 6-3, Baltimore
crushed Chicago, 10·5,
Kansas
Ctly
shaded
Milwaukee, 4-3, in 15 innings,
California bested Cleveland,
5-2, after
losing
the
doubleheader opener to the

to me.11
Owiler and operator of his own farm at Meadowlands, Pa ,
outside of Pittsburgh, Mtller threw a little clambake there last
week. Usually the guests at one of these get-IDgethers read like
something out of Who's Who in Sports Present at last week's
gathermg were some people you may have heard of such as
Stan Musial, Eddie ·Arcaro, Terry Bradshaw, Whitey Ford,
Charlie Keller, Lew Worsham and George "Twmkletoes"
Selkirk among others. All are good frtends of Miller's, who met
them somewhere along the way dunng his career.
" It seems on my days off I play golf or go to a ball game and
on their days off, they go wthe race tracks," he says.
Arnold Palmer, another of his friends, is the ,most
outstanding athlete he has ever met in Mtller's opm ion.
"He also has more personality than any man I have ever
known. If Arme gets beat, he doesn't run and jump nght mto
his car. He gives of hunself, spends lime with people. I think
when you're successful many game, you gotta put something
back into it, and Palmer IS one who does."
So does Miller.
.
Winner of nearly 2,000 races and once owner of the Immortal
Achos, whom he bought for $21,000 m 1948 and sold twothtrds of
m 1905for $333,000, MtUer and his wife, Mary Lib, each August
serve as hosts to Grand Circuit Adios week at the Meadows,
and part of it all mcludes the Adios mvitational golf
tournament.
No matter where he goes, and he has drtven in France, Italy,
Denmark, G~rmany, New Zealand, Australia, &lt;;anada and
Sweden, Mtller always has time, or makes lime, to talk about
harness racing with hts enormous legion of fans. He has been
to Russia, too, and was all set to compete but there was no
racmg at the time of his visit
·
In his travels, Mtller came to know Honus Wagner and Earle
Sande also Wagner would stt in a netghborhood Pittsburgh
restaurant when he was with the Pirates and tell baseball
stortes to Mtller, who was a youngster then. Later, Miller m~t
Sande, the premier JOCkey of his day. Sande eventually qwt
riding and then tried a comeback at 53, but never ~de 1~. ,
"I knew Sande well," says Miller, "and I told him, Earle,
the best thing you can do if you want to get back IS dnve
trotters . You don'thave ro make the weight and you don't have
to crouch. Ali you have to do is be sharp with your hands and
yow- mind.' He said, 'What I should've done when I qwt riding
was get mto your game.' I told him it was never !Do late but I
guess he ftgured 11 was."

den talk

lnd1ans, 5-3; Oakland took a in the 15th mmng, then scored
pair from Detroit, ~land~. , what proved to be the
and Toronto drubbed SeatUe decisive Kansas City run on a
single by&gt; Amos Otts . It
twtce, 7.0 and 9-3.
enabled the surging Royals Ill
Rangers :14, f\ed Sox Cl-3:
Jim Mason stroked his first tncrease the1r AL West lead
home run since the 1976 ro two ga!lJ"S. Doug B1rd
World Senes to snap a 3-3 tte hurled 5 1-3 mnings of one-hit
in the mghtcap, whtch helped relief for his lOth vic!Dry.
complete the doubleheader Angels 3-5, Jndlaos $-2:
Dave Chalk drove in three
sweep £or Texas. Tom Gr1eve
also drove in a pair of rwts in runs in the nightcap with a
the second game, won by pair of singles to give Ken
rookie Len Barker, who Br.ett his lith wm . The
hurled 3 1·3 innings of no-hit Indians beat Nolan Ryan in
relief In the opener, Gaylord the opener with a pair of
Perry and 1\dnan Devine unearned runs m the fifth
combined on a three-hitter

~o~~ J:e s:::;~he:,.~ d~~J~
~rl~r:·IO, White Sox 5:

Doug DeCtnces and Dave
Skaags each ripped two-run
doubles to highlight a 19-hil
attack, which vaulted the
Urtoles inro a second-place tie
with Boston m the AL East.
AI Bumbry and Rich Dauer
collected four smgles apiece,
while Lee May contriboted a

~~eof·~~to
stngles for a
Royals 4, Brewers 3:

~

ings will be used as a
guideline f&lt;r seeding at the
upcoming U.S . Open at
Forest
Hills,
N.Y.
Consequently, Borg, who
plays for the Cleveland Nets
of World Team Tennis, will he
top seeded, even though
Connors took a four-set
victory over the toJHI!Iinnlng
Swede last year at lliat
tournament.
Connors vaulted iniD the
top spot in the rankings in
July !974, after he heal Ken

Rosewall
to
win
at
Wimbledon.
Brian Gottfried, one of the
tour's hottest players,
jumped ahead of Argentina's
Guillermo Vilas in third
place.
The top 10 is rounded out by
Spain's Manual Orantes;
Mexico's Raul Ramirez;
Romaruan me Nastase and
U.S. players Vitas Gerulaitis,
Eddie Dibbs and Dick
Stockton.

RBI m the rughtcap with a
double and a single in the
A's :14, Tigers 1-5:
Detrmt shorslop Tom mghtcap . Rook1e Jerry
Veryzer muffed Tim Hosley 's Garvm and Jesse Jefferson
routine grounder with two out were the wmrung pitchers for
ill the lOth innmg to allow Toronto.
Mitchell Page to score the
winnmg run and complete the
A's sweep. Oakland won the
opener behind Vi((a Blue's
J?r&amp;
~f~~
four-hitter and a homer and
COSTS
two RBI from rookie Jerry
UIIWII,_ fiiiPUCA •liM lffi(J(IJ- •1
Tabb.
Blue Jays 7-9, Mariners U-3:
Hector Torres hit a threerun homer in the first game
and then contriboted three

60%

:I:'

a gift to

Anderson

John Wathan snapped a 2-2
tie with a one-out RBI double

Big Ten Notes . ..

Fall pracltce is less than a week old and contact drills tn Btg
Ten football camps have barely begun. But inJurtes- nemesis
to that champtonship season - are quickly biting mto talent .
Illinois, Ohio State, WISconsm and Iowa so far have felt their
sting in various degrees. Northwestern Coach John Pont IS
keepmg his fmgers crossed.
"Although inJuries cannot be predicted, there IS some pattern," Pont said. "When athletes are playing their hardest
acctdents occw-. But few ta~e place when the players perform
wtlh total commitment and they are well coached."
At Ohio State Jun Savoca, a startmg left guard last season
and battling for a starting spot this year, was hospttalized
Wednesday with a possible dtsc problem. Its severity was not
urunedtately determined.
Four key Iowa players were stdeimed - offensive linemen
Barry Tomasetti, Mtke Mayer aod Sam Paliadmo and defenstve tackle Joe Wtlhs, all listed as starters Mayer has been til
and the three others have been nursing an assortment of
mjuries.
Coach Bob Comrnings was not certain when the four would
return, saymg it will be a "day to day thmg ."
Ftve Wtsconsin players did not join their teammates m pads
for the start of contract dr)lls today. Tom Schremp injured a
groin muscle on Monday. Henry Addy, Kasey Cabral, Steve
Link and Jun Kozlowski are recovering from various inJuries
.1
and illnesses, none of which a;e considered sertous.
In Champaign, ill., nunor injuries contmued to hamper ftrst
year Coach Gary Moeller's illini Freshman fullback Wayne
Strader suffered from an tnHamed elbow, while another
freshman, defenstve tackle Tim Norman, was out wtth a groin
injw-y.
•
On the brtghter side, Coach Cal Stoll said the Mumesota
football squad looked "awfully good" m the first three days of
practtee, m shorts and T-shlrts, but the real test will come
when they put on pads and start con lad work today .
"A whole lot of people have looked awfully good the last
three days but thst doesn't mean a thing until theY get m the
trenches," Stoll said. "Like in the case of our new offensive
backs. The first time they get slacked up by . the defensive
veterans, that's when we find out bow btg their eyes get."

Anti-trapping issue ,reviewed
By Greg Bailey
November election time is gettmg nearer and nearer, and
Jun Daube! of the AP reviewed facts of the anti-trappmg tssue
qmte clearly published Sunday.
Wrote Mr. Daube! :
' "Anti-trapping forces in Ohio have filed petiltons calling
for a statewtde vote on a constitutional amendment to outlaw
the leghold trap.
"The action was long expected. A total of 401,728
signatures were submitted to the secretary of state. The
necessary 307,000 valid stgnatures are certain to be confirmed
and the issue will be on the November 8 ballot.
"Sportsmen who oppose the amendment are clearly the
underdogs m this one." (Over 100,000 signatures were obtamed
in Otyahoga County, alone, a county not well-versed in
trapping and its role in wildlile ,)
"The typical voter doesn't uoderstand the comp!eldhes of
wildlile management and doesn't care to learn. He will be
difficult to approach with logical argwnents.
"To the average layman the question and answer will be
simple: Should an animal suffer to become a fur coat? No.
"On a Jess emotional plane, however, sportsmen and
wildlife managers will argue that the issue is nowhere near
·
that clearcut. Few subjects ever are.
"Regardless, the battle over trapping has been gQing on
for years. It was initiated in Ohio, but outside interests are now
calling the shots.
"The Ohto Committee for Humane Trapping is a front for
well-financed nallonal organizations that oppose aJ1 trapping
and hunting, and some that have issued literatw-e condemning
fishing as cruel to fish.
"The money for this anti-trapping campaign comes from
such groups as the Internatiortal Fwtd for Animal Welfare and
the Fund for Animals.
· "Brian Davies, who heads the former group, is not bashful
about wbyOhiowas singled out as a target state. It is an urban
state with masses of people who know little and care less about
animal behavior, wildlife management or about the outdoors
in general. .
"What Davies meal)S is that a relatively high percentage
of Ohio restdenls can be easily swayed by emotional
arguments against trapping. And · Davies admitted in a

1M mg.

ca n l•tla like

•

Borg is World's No. one
BROOKLINE, Mass, (UPl)
- Sweden's Bjorn Borg has
supplanted Jimmy Connors
as tbe world's top ranked
tennia player, the Association
of Tennis Professionals
announced Wednesday.
The association said
Cmncra of BeUevllle, Ill.,
dnipped to aecmd when he
failed to repeat aa champlm
this year of the Volvo

By Bill. MADDEN
UP! Spo&gt;rls Writer
Those previously feudm '
and
fussin'
" Bronx
Bombers" swept back inro
first place m the American
IA&gt;ague East Tuesday mght,
and Wednesday night gave
every indication they intend
Ill remain there.
The Yankees are now
hitting, pitching and, most of
all, wmrung . They bombed
the Mumesota Twins, 11-1,
Wednesday rught for their
15th vic!Dry in the last 16
games aod increased their
first-place lead to two games.
Chns ChamblisS, Bucky
Dent, Mickey Rtvers and Roy
White all smashed &lt;home runs
and Catfish Hunter went aU
the way for his third straight
win, spacing !ow- hits - none
of them homers.
" We're defmttely in first

televtswn enterview last year that all trapping, not JUSt the leghold trap, IS the real target.
"The proposed constitutional amendment is likely Ill be
bitterly contested. It has been already, primarily m the
General Assembly where the anlitrapping forces lost badly.
" Proponent~ of the amendment will argue that banmng
the leghold trap wtil not put trappers out of busmess, that
other. more humane traps can be used .
" Opponents will disagree. Muskrats can be trapped with
other rr.ore expensive devtces, but foxes , raccoon and other
species cannot.
" Wildltfe management experts agree that the amendment
is so loosely worded that even the trapping of the common
alley 1 at would be prohtbtted if it IS adopted
"They also dispute the notion that wildlife would be spared
sufferillg 1! the leg-hold trap were banned. Natural condittons
support only so many anunals, they note. If tbe excess IS not
harvested by man, the anunals will dte anyway, often under
the more pamful stresses of disease and starvatiOn."
My hat's off to Mr. Daube!. Stay ~wake, voters. Vote NO on
Issue Two tf you want to keep trappmg and save our wildlife .

CINCINNATI (UPI) When Cincinnati
Reds
Manager Sparky Anderson
looks at Doug Capilla be
thmks of Santa Claus.
Sounds ridiculous?

'

fHE FIREPlACE STD~E
TII !S uruque &lt;:omo1n at 10n wood stp ...e
a~ n o

lueplace co ... er panel tnsl aJis In

mtnutes wtthout masonry a llt t lllOfll
II burn• seesoned wood thiOilliJhout
tne n ognt w n1 r.eat vour I"IGme and
cook your meals AISQ great 'or
camps c ab1ns sloa lodgea and u an
emergenc y unit In Ciil&amp;e ot power tat'·
ures F1rebo- 18 h1gh J8 w1de , 14
deep OoorOpen1ng 9 x13 We~gtll
l~lbs

42

EliCk Pinel Std 34 \? nrgn.,.w;

Wtd~

01ner SI~U ewa1liilble

&amp;l

Bench
and
Davey
Concepcton, to send Matlack
to the showers with his 15th
loss against six vtctories.
Concepcion's ' fourth
204 Condor St.
straight hit of the night, a
Pomeroy, Ohio
"Maybe so,·: concedes the triple Ill right center, and
992-2925
Reds' manager, ' 1but when Captlla's sacrifice fly gave
we acquired Capiila m the the Reds their final rwt of the
Rawly Eastwick deal with the game in the seventh.
St. Lows Cardinals it was like
having Santa Claus drop a
package at your doorstep."
Anderson's comment came
Wednesday night after
Capilla pitched the Reds to an
II-4 victory over the New
York Mets to notch his sixth
victory against five defeats
since his June 15 acquisition
from the Cardinals.
"I'm not down-gradmg
Rawly," Anderson hastened
to explain. "It's just that he
had made it clear that he
planned Ill play out hts option.
So when you thmk m terms of
next year we got Captila
while gtving up nothing."
U there's anyone happter
7- Novas
over the trade than Anderson,
it's Capilla who was pitching
1-Monza Spider
for the Cardinals' New
3-Chevelles, 2 dr., 4 dr.,
Orleans farm club when he
learned he'd been swapped to
Wagon
the Reds.
7-Monte Carlos
Through the first six
innmgs Wednesday night
2-lmpalas, Cpe., 4 dr.
Capilla blanked the Mets wtth
two hiis. He lost his btd for a
shutout in tlie seventh when
John Stearns walked with one
away and raced home on Lee
3-LUV Pickups
Mozztlli 's double to left
center
6-ClO Pickups
Meanwhile, the Reds
3- 3/• Ton 4W. Drive
pounded Met lefty Jon
Matlack and Rick Baldwm
1-CE65 -2% T. H. Duty
for 12hits which added up to a
I~! lead.
1-G20 Beauville Sport Van
It was a lead which
probably cost Capilla his
2-TEC, Raised &amp; Pop Roof
second straight route-going
performance against the
1-22'/2' Mini Home
Mets, but the 25-yearo()Jd lefty
wasn't about to complam.
"You get a · comfortable
lead, though," explained
Capilla, "and you always
seem to have a tendency to
ptlch dtfferently.
Homers by Joe Morgan and
(;eorge Foster, the former's
coming following a leadoff
smgle by Pete Rose,
accounted for three of the
four runs the Reds scored in
the first inning.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Ten batters paraded to the
992 -2 126
Pomeroy
plate in the sixth illnin~ when
Qpen Evenings UntiiB p . m.
the Reds pounded out six hits,
including doubles by Johnny

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Warriors begin
drills Monday
The Big Bend Warrior Rutland gym. Before the
football team of Metgs film , questions will he anCounty will begin drills at 5 swered about the Wamor
Monday evening, August 29, Club.
If any person cannot attend
at the old Rutland High
this first week of practice and
School Field.
Tryouts for the cheerleader desires to try out for the
squad will also be held at thjs squad, he should call Charles
time. Drills will continue Neece or C. D. Mcintyre as
tbroQghout the week from soon as possible for alternate
5:00 to 7:00 Monday through tryout arrangements.
Friday. All players must sign
The schedule:
up during this first week.
Sept II 76ers at
Pads wtll he Issued promptly Waterford.
to those players willmg to
Sept. 17 - Raiders at
commit themselves to Middleport.
practice schedules and
Oct. 2 -Disciples at Kyger
games.
Creek
.
Cheerleaders wtll ' be
Oct. 8 - 76ers at Midchosen from applicants dleport
trying out · during this same
Oct. 16 - Raiders at
period of time . Young women Sisterville, W. Va.
between the ages of 18 and 80
Oct. 22 - Disciples at
are eligible for the squad.
Middleport .
Team members, fans and
Oct. 29 - Cougars at
all others wondering who and Moundstvlle, W.Va.
what the Warriors are all
Home games are at 7:311 p.
about are invited to ' free m. at Meigs Jr. High, Mid·
viewing of a film about Pro dieport. In case of scheduling
Football " Mayhem on a conHict home games may be
Sunday Afternoon'.' to be played on following date at 2
shown Monday at 9:311 m the p. m

'llettef ·I\ ~en~

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�4-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday , Aug.:!:&gt;, tm

"
FIRST
PLACE TEAM was the Strikettes. With their trophies,! tor, are Patty Williams,
team member and sponsor trophy ; Sue Searls, Ann Grover, Barbara Whittington.
•

•

•

Baseball ·sets new ra
gate record .
NEW YORK ( UPI J _ The
all-time, single-se.aSOII major
league baseball attendance
record was broken this week ,
'th
than five weeks
=~d ";;~~e 489 games
the regular
· ·
remauunghedooule
·
season
sc attendaoce
Th 1977
count
eed
,
..
Tuesday
31 384
ch
rea
breaking ' the·"""record of•
31,318,331 set lasi year.
E
ion clubs at Toronto
and~~le have helped swell
th total b t the impressive
figeuressho: an increase of 12
. per cent for the 24 ~blished
clubs by themselves. The
jump is 18 per cent over two
years
ago at this time .
TilE GREEN CHOSTS team won second place n the Tuesday Women 's League at the
"
While
1
expected
Mason Bowling Alley. Team members from the left are Connie Dodson, Shirley Mitchell,
attendance gains this year,
Connie Chapman and Wanda Teaford, who is holding the high average individual trophy ,
the·record set last night just
the sponsor trophy and her second place trophy.
has
to
be
called
phenomenal," said Baseball
Commi'SSI'oner Bowie Kuhn
,
~ h I.J ,
THISTLE DOWN
Wednesday. "The fun and
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio excitement of the ballpark,
I UP I) - Favored Clendenin, particularly for families, is
wilh Tony Rlni In lhe irons, probably the key factor.
won Wednesday's featured
•
Pa k he 1
eighth race al Th islledown, White Sox r , w re was
covering the mile and 40 last night with aimost 40,000
,Q

Team and individual winners have been
announced in the Mason Bowling Alley's
Tuesday Women ' s League . They are
pictured here, the first three highest teams ,
and two individual champions.

~t}~~~~~~:~~~:~;~~:~~::~~::~~:::~~~~:::::::~:~;~~~:::::::}:::::::?::~::::::~:::::~:~:~~~~~~:~:;:;~~:?:::::~~:::~::::~~:~:::::;::;::::::::::r~:::::\::~::~::;~~?~~:t:~:::::::r:~:::

'

Ma)~ league crowds are
averagllli!The20,702 for feveryU
~mng.
average or a •
of 1976 was 17,409.
I
Los Angeles (2,184,811) and
Cincinnati (2,013,293) have '
already gooe over the two
rnillioo mark at h(llle while
16 other clubs have reached •
one million. Three other clubs
will
' rea ch one ·:
.. m ost I'~
...c.;·
million a~.
In addition, 16 teams are
ahe~d or last year's total for a ,
sunilar number of operungs.
Eight of the 16 have .already
surpassed !hell' entiJ'e . 1976
total count.

yards in 1: 42 over a fast track

exuberant fans, is a perfect

lo pay $4, S3.60 and $2 .40 .
Jolly Jolly placed and Lois
of Lark showed .
In lhe daily double , the 3-8
combination of Laughing Don

example.
And
don't
Wlderrate the significance of
those attendance jumps in
minor league and college

and Age of Protest returned
$83 .80 and there were Sl

baseball.tl

I

•

Wagons

Luxur-y

Economy

cars

Cars

20
There has been a
per
grouping of Gene's Glen, cent inc.rease in the minor
Sassy Lassie and Determine leagues and 13 per cent,
Katie in the ninth race according to the best figures
lrilecla, each worth S927.90. ' available, at the college level.
. Attendance was 4,321 and
lhe handle was S428,396.
Counting the ~xpansion
clubs, current attendance IS
up by 5,695,026 (22 per cent)
over comparable figures last
year. The increase for the 24
established clubs alone is
3,150,738 (12 per cent).
SCIOTO. DOW NS
COLUMBUS (UP I) - Tom
winn ing tickets on lhe 7. 3_9

!NO!VIDUAL WINNERS FROM AMONG the teams
of the Tuesday Women's League at the Mason Bowling
Alley are pictured from the left, Debbie Grueser, hi~h
series with a handicap, and Ann Grover. high game, h1gh
game with handicap and high series.

MEIGS INN
PIZZA SHACK

nesday .night to win the
featured pace at Scioto
Downs.
Baron Del came frQm third

al lhe stretch lo defeat 011
Well by a head . M iss Rhonda

was third . E. C. 'Girl won the

Watson favored

first race and Wen Her Oalcs
the second to · return $169.80
on the ·nightly double combination of 1 and 4.

A crowd of 3.668

THJRO PLACE WINNER was the Gibson Motor City team. From the left are Ann
Carroll, holding also the trophy of Lena Howard, who was not present; Opal Hupp and Ruby .
Hupp , who also holds the sponsor's trophy.

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--

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
ACROSS 'FROM THE AIRPORT
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

By JERRY MITCHElL
PINEHURST, N.C. (UP! )
- Tom Watson, the leading
money winner on the PGA
tour this year, takes the
favored role going into
today's first roWld of the Hall
of Fame Golf Classic, his first
appearance in North carolina
this year.
The $250,000 event replaces
the World Open, which lost
money during its four-year
tenure. The new tournament'
is being played a month.
earlier than the World Open
and has a national television
audience .
The famed No . 2 course at
the Pinehurst Country Club,
proclaimed as one or the top
10 in the world, is tlie site.!or
the tournament. Although
there have been no drastic
changes since last year's
event, the grass in the roughs
is being replaced by the sand
and wiry grass, which were
part of the
original
architecture of the 7,007-yard
layout.
"It's one of my favorite golf
cvurses," said Watson as he
prepared to tee off in the pro•
am Wednesday . "They're
restoring it like it was in the
1900s and '60s, and that's
good, II
Raymond Floyd, the
defending ch~mp!on by

Sports

T r ans~cti on s

By United Press 1nternal iOnal
Wednesday

virtue of his playoff victory
over Jerry McGee in last
year's World Open, said : "l
·guess about the onll
advantage of being a
defending champion is that
you have proven that you can
win on the golf course and
that gives you· confidence."
"J'ven par could win at this
·course," FlOyd said. "If you
have four perfect days · of
weather, scores will not be

'"

!l··d

• ~ '

w~gered

POMEROY, 0 .
PHONE
992-6304
,,,,

., i

d

t '

',,

SATURDAY, AUGUST 27TH
UNTIL 5 P.M. ·.

FOR

ANNUAL OUTING .

· Jack Nicklaus and Bruce
Lietzke, who trail Watson on
the money list, passed up this
week 's tournament, even
though Nicklaus procla!Jns
the course among his
favorites. Other top 10 money
winners competing include
Tom
Weiskopf,
Rik
Massengale and Andy Bean.

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and Texas of the American night game also will be held
League and Chicago, Cin· in the E astern city Oct. 6,
cinn atl,
Los
Angeles, then the action will switch to
Philadelphia, Pittsburgh a nd the Western winner's park
st. Louts of the National for a night game Oct. 7, a day
League,
Oct. 8 and , If necessary, a
The fir st wto Nationa l night game Oct. 9.
Lea gue playoff games will be
at n i ~t Oct. 4-0 at tHe home
The Sat ur day, Oct . 8
of the Weste rn Division sc hedule in t h e National
winner. The series then will • League will be changed If the
switch to the city of the Chica go Cubs are t he
Eastem Division winner for a Ea.stern winne r . W rigley
da y game 'Oct. 7, a night F ield, the Cubs' park, has no
ga me Oct. 8 a nd, if lights. The night gam e
necessary, a day game Oct. 9. Thursday, Oct. 6, in the
A day game Oct. s·at the
American Lea gue will be
home of the Easten1 winner switched to the aft ernoon If
will open the AL playoffs. A t ravel to the West Coast Is

By M1XE Tl)LLY
UPI Sports Writer
With a lead of 9'h games
over their stagnant Westem
J;&gt;ivision foes, the Los Angeles
Dodgers should be dancing
into the National League
playoffs.
,But the Dodgers bear little
re,sernblanc e to the team,
which won 22 of its first 26
gl!mes ljlld their pennant
drive is more like a stagger .
• They beat the Pittsburgh
Pirates, 2-1, in 10 innings
Wednesday night ,. but not
before losing catcher Steve
Yeage r for a n indefini te
period in a home plate
collision.

" With (Dave) Park~r's
speed," said Manager Tom
LaSorda , "Steve had a better
chance against a bleeping
pickup truck ."
Pa rker tried to break a 1·1,
eighth-inning tie by scoring
from second on AI Oliver's
single to right. Yeager took
Reggie Smith's throw and
na iled Pa.rker, · but not
without a price. _
" ! saw him coming and 1
!mew 1 had him dead," said
Yeager, "but all I saw wer e
sta rs when he hit me. I'll
probably miss a few games,
but not many."
R egg ie
Smith,
who
homered in the third inning,

., CLE VELAND (UP! ) Mike Phipps, meet Brian Sipe
.,... again !
Phipps, now calling signals ·
for the Chicago Bears, brings
his club to Municipal Stadium
to
face
his
former
leammates, the Cleveland
~ ro.w n s, whos e No . I
lluarter ha ck is Sipe.
"' The Bea rs a r e 3-1 going into
to n ig ht 's
pr e ,s ea so n
~counter and tbe Browns
1-3.
· It also will be Phipps' fir st
showing in Cleveland since he
was traded earlier th is
...Y,ear.
:;: Although the Phipps-Sipe
'onfrontation will prove
' ter esting, both clubs .. opin g to move into
:&amp;ntender status this season
.,- have some key performers
ho are not slated to see
" .
waction.
:::' Only Walter
Payto~.
.,Roland Harper and rookie
• Robin Earl are fully healthy
.. among the Bears' running
" backs and linebacker Ross
:.s r upbacher r etired la st
.-eek, forcing changes in the
secondary.
• Defensive lineman Wally

are

Chambers is still recovering
from a knee problem and has
practiced little this season
whlle tackle Uonel Antoine

WILLIAMSPORT, . Pa.
(UP! )- Th&lt;l Taipei, Taiwan
team is a heavy favorite to.
win the 31st Little League
World Ser ies and Wednesday,
everybody found out why .
Taipei buried Lethbridge ,
Canada, 19-G in a game that
was about as close as 'the
score indicated.
Taipei pitcher Tsai Tsungbein threw a no-hitter, facing
only 19 batters in the ~hr.·
inning game.
two
Taiwan • raked
Canadian pltchera for 18 hits,
including three home runs,
one of them a fifth4nriing
grand slam by reser ve
catcher Chen Hsin-ltu.
The Maracaibo, Venezuela,
team ·gets the privilege of
tr y ing to stop Taipei in

OIL fiLTIR
B'l" PUAOL ATOA
&amp;

VAI.U!
PRIC£0

Notre Dame Promoted
Dan Nee to assistant basketball

Pro Football

Buffalo - , Traded offensive
tackle Donnie Green to Phila-

delphia for undisclosed ruture
draft choices. ·
Green Bay - Waived veteran
guard Larron• Jackson and wide
rece iver Gerald Tinker .
New
York
Jets CUt
cornerback earl Taylor ; ac Quired cornerback Owen Smith .
Phili)delphia -:-r· Released veteran detensive tackle Walter
Johnson .
.
Hocke y
Atlanta (NHL) Signed
forward Tim Ecc lestone as a
free agent .
Cincinnaf i (WHA) - Signed
free agent veteran goalie Ernie
Wakely .
Soccer
San Jose (NASLl - Rehired
former General Manager Oick
Berg .
Ba ske1ball
.
Philadelphia ...- Signed swing
man Teko Wynder. their fifth ·
r ounQ draft choice from Tulsa
Univel"sify.

Baseball

Oakland -

Sold pitcher Jim
Umbarger to Te~as , which
assianed him to tt'leir Tucson,
Ariz .• farm team .

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Willie Qulnlflty l...utl

stroked a tw&lt;HJut single to
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winiling run off reliever Rich
Gossage, ~9. The 'Pirates
scored in the third when
Frank Taveras singled, stole .
second a nd third a nd
continued h&lt;n1e when catcher
Yeager threw wildly to
third.
In other NL games, st.
Loll\s.edged San Francisco, 32, Cincinnati drubbed New
York, 11-4, Atlanta nipped
Chicago, 4-3, and Houston
topped Philadelphia, 3-1. .
Ca rdinals 3, Giants 2:
Mike Anderson scored the
winning run on a wild pitch as
St. Louis clim bed past

"z

Corduroy
Quilted Nylon

also is trying to come back
from a knee injury.
Browns ace s catback Greg

Taiwanese Iookin
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· e
Ll"ttle League champs

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today's semi-finals. In
today 's semifinal opener,
Rotterdam, N.Y., meets El
Cajoo , CaW.
In the opening game of
Wednesday 's doubleheader,
Wrandy Seaberg pitched a
twohitter and Bob Schroll
clouted a two-run h&lt;n1er to
lead.Rotterdam, N.Y., to a 4-1
win over Youngstown, Ohio.
That game was cllllpetitlve
Wltll the New Yorkers four·
rW1 fifth.
Youngstown's Ron Jones
had a t-G lead and was
breezing along with a onehitter going into the fifth,
when the New Yorkers
exploded for all ·their runs.
Dave Hartman and Joe
Milazzo singled and scored on ,
Joe Ziobrowski's double.
Schroll then followed with his
homer over tbe centerfield
fence .
Youngstown scored in the
second when John Copeland,
who had walked, advanced 111
a Vince Miller single and
scored on a fielder's choice.
Jones, who went the
distance for the losers, struck
out seven.

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TINKER THROUGH
GREEN BAY, Wls, (UP!)
- The Green Bay Packers
Wednesday put speedster _
wide receiver Gerald Tinker
on waivers. Tinker, a
graduate of Kent State who
has been clocked at 9.1 in the
IOO.yard dash, was nagged
wlth Injuries and sat out last.
' year wlth a bad leg.

Men's and Women's

PAINTER PANTS
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He defeated Adion Town
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A crowd of •· 93 t wagered
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MORE AT

,BAHR CLOtHIERS

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

N. 2nd Ave .

1\'.: ' H •art, 0 .

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•BIRTHDAY CARDS
•ANNIVERSARY
•CONTEM PORARY

DENIM
SHIRTS

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (UPil
5'!1okln' Pro, r idden by Vince
Clark, won the featured race
Wednesday at River Downs,
going lhe mile and 70 yards In
I: &lt;16 4·5.

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS CO.

I\\

}Sipe opposing Phipps agai.it

• Bicycle, Truck

t, Ht "'"' 11. l h~•
true• A..,llc•t~'·

DEDICATION SET -The $76 million Willow Island Route 7. Federal, state and local dignitaries will
necessary.
Locks and Dam project will be dedicated Saturday, participate in the dedication . Free boat rides will be
The World Serl"" will open
September 10 at 4 p.m . The ceremony will take place at provided by the Huntington, W. Va. District of the Army
the night of Tuesday, Oct. 11
the lock site 10 miles upstream from Marietta j~st off Ohio Corps of Engineers, supervisor of the design and
in the American League clty
construction of the project.
and Game 2·will be played at
the same site the next night.
is the best answer to the
After a day · oil lor travel,
problem of rising costs.
Game 3 will be played F riday
"Because only one of every
five motorists uses seat belts,
night, Oct. 14, and Game 5 the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) next afternoon in the National
companies nearly broke even improvement and higher it's imperative that · we
League city. If a fifth game is The president of Natiowide on their insurance operations employee productivity and provide automatic sa fety
necessary, it will be played Mutual Insurance Companies in the first half of 1977 but concerted office expense equipment that will cushion
Wednesday
the automobile
and
fire control considerably helped motorists in a collision," said
Sunday afternoon, Oct. 16, In said
Fisher . "The most reliable,
the National League city.
insurance claims continue to the improvement.
"But
claims . costs · the most effeetive automatic 1
Garnes 6 and 7, If
be "a nagging problem."
John E. Fisher reported continued to increase far equipment yet developed is
necessary, would be played In
the American League city the
that Nationwide's auto and faster than the general cost· the auto air bag."
Fisher
noted
the
fire insurance companies had of-living index," said Fisher.
night s of T uesday and
a combined loss of $400,000 in "Unless checked, the rising D e p a r t m e n t
o f
Wed ~esday, Oct. 18-19.
the first half, a dramatic cost of claims will continue to Transportation predicts tbe
bnprovementovertherecord place pressure on the price a air bag would save 12,000
pays
for lives a year, once the
loss of $37.5 million in the first policyholder
insurance."
equipment has been installed
half of 1976.
Fisher said loss prevention in all cars.
Fisher said insurance price
adjustments
were
the
primary
cause
for
the
Chicago into third place in the
ST. P AUL, Minn. (UPI) East . "It's starting to get Defending champion Kathy
interesting now," said third Whitwor th , all-time top
baseman Ken Reil.j:. " We're money winner and third top
gaining ·on everybody now ." moneym aker this season ,
Bnives 4, Chicago a:
heads a field of 83 women
Jeff Burroughs scored on golfers into the Patty Berg
CINCINNATI (UP I ) Junior Moore's fie lder 's Classic starting Friday at Booming
thunder
a nd
choice off Dave Giusti in Keller Golf Course.
·
d
Hollis Stacy, who won the , lightning accompanie a
relief of Willie Hernandez, 7·
Severe thunderstorm through
5. Dan Collins , 3-9, earned the u.s. Women's Open at Hazel- the
Cincinna ti
area
victory.
line near Chaska, Minn., last Wednesday morning, causing
Astros 3, Pbillles 1:
month , also is on hand but da mage to neighboring
Enos Cabell drove in two rookie pro Na ncy Lopez, Clermont County.
runs and set up a third as runnerup in the open, is out
and you ban ma ke
Two houses in Clermont
Houston sna pped a six-game with an injury.
the action in soft burnis h~
h I'
ft
Five of the top 10 money Coun ty cau g t Ire a er
losing streak and halted a
leather and thick
winners_
Judy Rankin (I), beingstruckbylightning,and
si x-g am e
Philad elph ia
wedge soles.
the Clermont County Hospital
winning streak.
J o Anne Carner (2), ·Debbie near Batavia was without
Austin (6), Pat Bradley (7) electricity. Police said
and Sally Little (9) - are not electr ical
wires
were
entering the $55,000 event .' knocked down in sever al
Sponsor ing J aycees a re areas of the county.
Only minor damage was
looking for more money for
next year to a ttract all the top reported in Hamilton County
players. -·
- - -· and Northern Kentucky .
Seventy · • seven profes·
' Pruitt suffer ed a muscle pull ·; · sionals ·and six amateurs
or nerve injury in his lower have entered the three-&lt;lay,
54-hole tournament.
LPG
. A to
. ornament official
·back in the first scrimmage ,
a week after he arrived at
camp, and has been unable to Jim Morgan spent several
TAYWR CUT
do much since then except hours at Keller inspecting
NEW YORK (U P!) - The
club fa ces with an instrument New York Jets said. Wed·
j1ius week he· was able to that looked like a jeweler's
nesday they have cut cor·
practice some and said " The eye piece to see if grooves in nerback E arl Ta ylor of
pain has subsided again. I the players' club faces were Youn gstown, Ohio. Taylor
feelgoodjogging.l'mhoping legal . Some of the clubs
was r eleased to make room
to work into other things examined will be barred.
fo r r ecently-acquir ed cor·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
soon," but he w.a s not
At the request of players, nerback Owen Smith.
LeOthcr refers to uppe r ~
-pected to play Thursday the LPGA began checking
~
·
. clubs after
night.
f thit was discovered
had
The former University of some o . e men pros
· Oklahoma star, who rushed some illega 1irons at the PGA
for 1,000 yards on the nose championship tournament.
Last season; finished the last
Whitworth , a 38-year-&lt;&gt;ld
half of the year with severe veteran of 18 years on the pro
sprains of both ankles that tour , is considered the
Has expanded their Hallmark section so they have the largest selection
limited his !''.Inning.
favorite , . espe cially with
He thinks' the ..-esent pull Camer not entered.
in Meigs County. - Formerly 16 feet, expanded to 56 feet. This
came because he had favored
Asked if shl' is concerned
ooe leg last year and added, · about the r ising young
expansion includes:
. " ! actually wasn 't hit that players, she said, "No, it's
hard in the scrimmage when good lor tbe game. But I'm
it happened."
not going to step aside .
They'll have to push me."

pennant drive sputtering

$~
Air Shacks
. 20· t 20 lbs. range

..

Announce Playoff, serres dates

• Autamatlve
6·50 lbs . range

• Universal solderless type '~" '
. • Fits all standard posts ' ~. ·

Chuck Miller. Ken Moore,
Mike Roe. Bill Shaw, Dave
Shaw and Terry Sheafer.
Award3
will
include
jackets, individual trophi.,, a
state championship trophy tq
the winner and trophl"" for
the first five teams.
Any team supporters
wishing to attend the tour·
nament are encouraged to do
so. No admission will be
charged.

•

. ..

HEAVY DUTY
LEAD

Saturday and five on Sunday,
depending upon elimination
as the tournament procee&lt;D.
Members of the hospital's
team Include Don Shaw,
manager; Ron Jackson,
assi$1ant manager; Charles
Adkins, Jeff Adkins, Tim
. Betz, Rick Boone, Steve
Brown, Carl Cox, Larry
Hemby, Lee Hickman, Mike
Jenkins, Ken Kugbn, Terry
Lucas. Henry Meadow,

•

PARK RESERVED

low."

College
Cre ighton - Dan Oftenburger
resigned as assistant attlleric

coach .

'f.

'• • ·•Od \ •

$229,161.

Ohio. Competition will ' take
place at the Southview Park
in Columbus.
The Holzer team plays its
first game at 9 Saturday
morning against the team
from Guernsey Memorial
Hospital of Cambridge. If the
Holzer team wins the first
game and continues a win·
ntng streak, they could then
have the opportunity to play
in three additional games on

,_

Davis drove Baron Del over
the mile in 2: 04 2·5 Wed-

Holzer Medical Center's
saftball team will travel to
Columbus Saturday to
compete in the Fifth Annual
Statewide Hospital Softball
Tournament, sponsored by
the Columbus Hospital
League, Inc.
Tealll8 from 64 hospitals
located aU over Ohlo will be
in Columbus for the two day
event, said to be the largest
weekend tournament ever in

~Dodgers'
!

~;~;~;):::~~~~~=~:~~~:~:~:~:::~:::~t:~:::::;:;:;.; ..

Holzer Medical Center softball
team to compete in state event

NEW YORK (UP!) - lbe
best-of-five
playoff to
determine the National
League champion will begin
Tuesday, Oct. 4, and the
American League playoff will
start Oct. 5, Baseball Com·
mi8sioner Bowie Kuhn an·
nounced yester day. ·
He said the World Series
would open Oct. 11.
The dates were announced
at the annual · playoff-Word
Se ries plann ing meeting
attended by a record 14 clubs.
Clubs represented we re
Baltimore,
B_osto n ,
California, Chicago, Kansas
City, Minnesota, New York

•

'..J

~The Daily Sentinel, Mijldleport·Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 25, 19T1

-

•THANK YOU CARDS
•COO.RDINATED PARTY SUP.PLIES
•LARGE ASSORTMENT OF GIFT
WRAP FOR AU OCCASIONS
•BRIDGE TALLIES A"D SCORE
PADS
•AND MANY, MANY MORE

DUTTON DRUG CO.

122 N. 2ND AVE.

.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
(,

�•
6-Tile Daily SMtinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday, Aug. 25, 1m

~~.. .;..
. :::x;::'9X.-:.;.;-.::.;-:•.·,-~·:·:~(;:..-e-..'}._"o})~~~::~!:::::;:::~::~S!:::::::::~::::;:.;.:-:

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New cars selling.at hot pace
By EDWARD S. LEClfl'ZIN

last year and strong enough
UPI Auto Wri~r
to erase a recocd established
DETROIT (UP[) - New .in 1973 before the start of the
car sales in mid-August were Arab oil embargo.
at record levels and the pace
For General Motors, the
could continue for the next sale of 136,179 cars in mid·
few months as Americans try August was an increase of 31
to beat price hikes averaging per rent over a year ago and
around $400 a car m the 1978 eclipsed a record for the
models.
period that had stood since
·•The thought of price hikes 1965.
will cause some people to buy
Ford sales were up 6 per
now rather than wait lor the cent and Chrysler increased
'78s," says Arvid Jouppi, an nearly 5 per cent while AMC
analyst for Colin Hochstin Co . sold only 3,741 cars in the
"But I don 't think the price perioo - just 416 a day and 44
hikes will scare many people per cent below last year.
away from the new wodels."
Truck sales also continued
With only American Motors their strong pace, with the
reporting a decline in the Big Three reporting a record
Aug. 11•20 period, the four 81 ,018 tr-ucks and commercial
domestic automakers vehicles delivered in the
Wednesday reported sales of period, up 16 per cent from a
235,584 new cars. It was an
increase of 17 per cent over

year ago .
Jouppi, along with industry
and other financial analysis,
eJ&lt;pects the rush for the last
Of the 'Tis and the desire for
the

new

' 78s,

due

in

September and October, to
keep sales at their near·
record levels despite price
increases.
GMthis week said the price
tag on its '7&amp;&lt; is being
increased an average ~05 a
car in a move that -.ill mean
the average car, loaded with
the options most people are
buying, will top the $7,000
mark foc the first time ever.
" In this boom that .we' ve
been Seeing since December
of 1975, the buyer has been
pretty price-insensitive,''
Jouppi said . " He's been

willing to buy a lot of car,

including oplions, without
regard to price."
The industry's traditional
cyclical sales pattern, rather
than prices , points to a
gradual slowdown next year,
Jouppi said.
New car sales this year
should reach the 11.3 million
mark, just shy of the record
II.~ million cars sold in 1973,
Jouppisaid. Foc next year, he
predicts sales no better than
10.3 million cars, Including
1.6 miUion imports.
•'The slowdown won't come
about because the consumer
is impoverished," Jouppi
said. "But he'll he spending
his money on other things like
homes and rising household

expenses.''

Marketing class is scheduled
For Frlder, Aug.

~e.

1977

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~f!Jl

Willllwlli~m\7
Aug . 26, 1977
A dvanwqes yo u've d reamed

RIO GHANDE - "Principles of Marketing," a class
with built·in special interest
to area businessmen and
merchants. wiU be offered in
Jackson beginning Sep·
!ember 6 by Rio Grande
College and Community
College.
Bernard E. Goldstayn will
teach the four credit hour
course Tuesdays and Thurs·
days, 7·9 p.m., at Jackson

&lt;tbOtJ t m your wo rk o r career

could become a rea lity th1s com JnQ ye ar Th1s would en able you
to be tl~ r v o ur l1vi nq cond itions
ttn d aet more lov ou t of 'life.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22)
Somel hinq you 're Vl(O ik. ,nq on
CAn bf' done more efficientlY and

('ronomically

You could

diS-

co vf'r lh1s shortcu t throuq h the

un u !'i ual happen stan ce of a
prol llablf' · m 1slake . Fmd o ut
m or e ~bo u t y-ourself by sendi ng
lor yOLH copy of Astra -Graph

letter Mal l 50 cents tor each
a nd a lonq . self·addressed .
st ampAd envelope to AstraGraph , P 0 . Box 489 . Rad iO City
StatiOn . NY 10019. Be sure to
spec1fv vour b1rth s1qn

LIBRA (Stpt. 23·0ct, 23) Don·t
b P a IIQhtwad .with your pals to c1av . but don 't soend money \Ike
11' s QO\nO out of style. You .cowld
hdP of! more than yo u c an chew
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22) Jn a
m n ller where there IS much of

value &lt;tl stake, thinq s m•ght no t
work out well at first toda y. Be of
StOl l! heart You should end up
w 1th tMe lion's share

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) Todny you may unth1nk lng1y
blurt out somethmq .to hurt
;:m oth er You will have a.chance
tCl recl!fv vow m istake and
perhaps ·even strenq th en th e
bQnd '

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
That wh1ch yolJ qal.n today will
e xceed that w h1ch you lo se
~owever ' if you can avoid acting
erratically you could realize no
losses at all

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19)
Fnends hold you in high esteem
today If some thing im tate s you .
don 't make an issue of it. It could
tarn1sh your 1mage.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Yo ur chances for success ar e
very strong 'today. provided you
don 't swap horses in midstream
St1ck with .those pl8ns you've
made aft er lengthy deliberation .

Masm OJunty

News Notes \.~:

·
By Alma Marshall
::::
' Mr. '!lid Mrs. Norman Sh•"'f arid family. Teressa, Sherr!
an&lt;J David uf Palatine.lll., visited last week with Mrs. Slvlaf's
parents. Mr and Mrs. T. R. Davis or Mas.1n~ While here they
alsu visil&lt;'d Mrs. Shoaf's brother, Mr. and Mrs. Hearold Davis
and """· Christopher.
Mr . an&lt;l Mrs. Hobert Keyes visil&lt;'d Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hobert Roach, Larry and Roger.
Rubin Martin and brother .KJP Martin enjoyed visiting their
~'l"andpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lewis last week, Mr.
Lewis is recuperating at h&lt;Xne after having major surgery.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence Lewis were Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Lewis of Dunbar and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Martin
and Doug of Sandyville, W. Va.
Miss Kim Johnson of Westerville, Ohio visited last week with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis and uncle,Mr . and
Mrs. Hearold Davis and son.
Sunday dinner ~uests of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wolfe were ·
Mrs. Grace Kirkpatrick of Leroy Rt. , W. Va.; Mrs. Kathleen
Rowan and daughter Kara , Vienna, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Vance Addisorrand son Jeff of Durham, Nocth Carolina.
. Mrs. Eula Wolle of Racine Rt., Ohio visil&lt;'d Wednesday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. J . Robert Roach.
Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ord were Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Humphries of Huntington, W. Va. and Mrs. FaMy
Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis· Burton Jr. and daughter Pain have
returned from a two weeks vacation in Florida . They were at
Treasure Island Beach one week. They visited with Mrs.
Burton's brother, Mr. and Mrs . C. E. KJncaid of St. Petersburg; Fla.
Mrs. Patricia Burton and Pam Burton went to Montgomery,
W. Va. ~Qday. Pam enroUed at West Virginia Tech for•a week
of orientation. She is majoring in Physical Ed. Pam's
roommate is Lois Peters of Clifton .

7-The _Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thuroday, Aug. 25,1m

Rotary's student exchanges
singled out for high praise
WASIUNGTON (UPI ) Preeident Carter met todaY
with top officials of Rotary
International and said, "I
don't know any organization
that has done more for in·
ternational eichange."
W. Jack Davis, president of
the worldwide service club
association, told Carter that
Rotary International will
spend nearly $9 million next
year to provide overseas
study opportunities lor more
than l ,500 young men and
women of some 6Cl nations.
Among those who will
receive the scholarships' are
50 journalists and 90 teachers
of the handicapped.
" We have an open door
policy," Davis SJid.

Biggs reunion held

Uons Club, but that he was
"proud" of what Rotary had
done in im proving International understanding.
"I'd like to reserve the
right to call on you for help,"
Carter said.

r

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Yovr 11 Extra Touch1 '

~~~

lI

~

FLORIST

PH. 992·2.44 . !

Ii 352 E. Main, Pom..-ov

iI

Your FTD Flr-ri-;f
Carter told the delegation ,._._,.._...._.._..._._.__.....;
that he was a member of the

designed to acquaint students
with the functions involved in
the flow of goods and services
from production to con·
sumption with special at·
tentlon. to the work of
•
WOLFE REUNION
wholesalers, merchants and
On Sunday, Aug. 14, the Marshall Wolle reunion was held at
retailers.
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ord of Letart, Rt. I.
The course, limited to 25, is
Before the picnic dinner Harry Love gave a prayer, after
open to anyone with a high dinner Pastor James Lewis gave a talk. Those receiving gifts
school diploma or its were the oldest woman, Mrs. Eula Wolfe; oldest man, Harry
equivalent. Tuition for G. Loye; youngest child, R. F. Stein and the person traveling
residents of the lour county the farthest, Sidney Kane of Beaver Falls, Pa.
Community College district
The one with the most in family present receiving a gift was
(Jackson, Vinton, Meigs, Mrs. Eulah Wolle.
Gallia) is $52. Ohio residents
·Next year the reunion will be held at the home of Mr. and
living outside the district will l\frs. Thomas Wolfe, Racine, Ohio.
.
pay $68. A$13.9S textbook will
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Johnie Ord, Wilkesville, Ohio;
studied law and now runs an also ·
be
required . Mr. and Mrs. Carrol Norris, Syracuse, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
insurance business.
Registration will be held at James Lewis and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Stein, Wendi and R. F.
He is a descendant of the the first class session .
of Point Pleasant; Mr. Arion Wolfe and Mrs, Eula Wolfe,
family of Gen . Andoche
Racine Rl. I, Ohio ; Mrs. Susie Wolle, New Haven; Mr. and
Juno!, Duke of Abrantes, who
Mrs. Carrol Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Brarry Cox, Camp Conley,
fought under Napoleon early
W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs, Tom Wolle, Racine, Ohio; Mr. Early
in the 19th century.
Roush, Mrs. lrlene Buck, Racine Rt. 1, Ohio; Mr. Harry G.
His father , Michel, is an
Love, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Love and Teressa,
aldennan and ombudsman in
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Love and
the Paris municipal govern·
grandson, Albany, Rt. I, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Lester Love,
ment. His mother is of Danish
Columbus, Ohio; Mr. Sidney Kane, Beaver Fruls, Pa.; Mr. and
origin.
' Mrs. Lawrence R. Wolfe and Tinuny, Letart, W. Va. and Mr.
Our prescription service is available
·caroline is the eldest child
and Mrs. Jack Ord.
·
of Prince Rainier and
when you need it, seven days a week.
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Princess Grace, the former
MASON - Miss Arlene Scarberry was honored with a Sweet
Grace Kelly of Philadelphia, The Civil Aeronautics Board 16 birthday party on Aug. 3 at her home on Third St., Mason.
who won an Oscar in 1955 lor . said Wednesday it has Hostesses were Darlene Cunningham and Dottie Scar,berry.
her acting in the movie approved a $299 " fly Ice cream and cake, punch and caody were served. She
"Country Girl" with Bing anywhere" excursion fare lor received many gills.
.
Eastern Airlines on a one·
Crosby .
Attending were Mrs. Zelma Hunter, Miss Bob Reynolds,
The princess is second in year experimental basis.
Mrs.
Louise Laudennilt, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Scarberry, Mr.
A CAB gpokesman said the
line to the throne of Monaco
and
Mrs.
Harold Scarberry and children of Middleport and
- the second smallest fare allows unlimited travel hostess, Mrs. Darlene Cunningham.
ven,. ,.th ' lcc;utlouqh, R Ph Charle s Riffle, R. Ph .
country in the world with only lor between seven and 21
Sending cards and money were Harold Cunningham, Letart;
Ron" ld Hannong, R Ph
392 acres and 25,000 people days throughout the Eastern Louise Laudermilt, Mason and Dotty Scarberry, Middleport.
\\on thru Sat 8: 0oa.m to9o .m.
nestled on the French Riviera system, which covers most of
Gifts were sent by Tanya Cundiff, Mason; Janet Hall and
s -nda ' 10 JO to 12:l and s 1o' p.n- behind Prince Albert, 19. the Unitecf States. Travelers Debbie Staats, Pl. Pleasant. Games were played and pnze· s
. u : R' ~T• )NSFr•endly &gt;,, rvice
PH . '197 -2951
Monaco Is half the size of must make a minimum of won by Miss Bob Reynolds, Mrs. Louise Laudermilt, Mrs.
z E MA ·N Open Noghts til9
POMEROY,O.
three stopovers along the
New York's Central 'Park.
way,
he
said.
·
The - palace communique
Under the guidelines apsaid:
(Coptinued
proved
by the CAB,
PffiLADELPHIA (UP! )" His Serene Highness
Prince Rainier' Ill and passengers using the new The Philadelphia Eagles rePrincess Grace of Monaco fare must travel in groups of turned to the practice field
are happy to announce the at least two adults or one Wednesday with their confi·
engagement of their eldest adult and two children. The dence boosted from Monday's
daughter Princess Caroline spokesman said children's upset victory over the New
aroun~
tickets, costing $199 each, will England Patriots.
with Mr. Philippe Junot."
be :SOld for travelers under
After a rain-drenched
the age of 12.
afternoon workout, Coach
Tickets must be bought at Dick Venneil said he would
least 14 days in advance, the again use Ron Ja~ksi as
spokesman said.
· his starting quarterback far
The ·CAB said the first Sunday night's game against
tickets under the new plan
Slate
Police · from can go on ilale Saturday for the undefeated Denver
Broncos
at
Veterans
Michigan., Ohio, Indiana ana travel starting Sept. 11.
Stadium.
illinois will join forces in a
special Labor Day boliday
weekend traffic patrol aimed
at - improving interstate
highway travel safety.
The federally funded
patrol , called Operation
Care, is an expansion of a
GIRLS
The Performing Arts are Now Offering
July 4 weekend patrol by
80"1S
·
.Classes In
Michigan and l.ndiana stare
police.
.
About 30() cars and eight
aircraft will patrol interstate
highways within their own
Enrollment Now Through
borders. Those highways in·
September lsi. Call992-6389
elude 1-94 in Michigan and
Or stop by Gillians on the T in Middleport
Indiana, 1-75 and U.S. 23 in .
for more information.
Michigan and Ohio, and 1.00
in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois.
•
High School. Goldstayn has 30
years experience in retailing
and merchandising with
department and discount
stores. He received a
business
administration
degree from
Western
Reserve University and has
bad extensive experience
teaching adult education
courses in marketing, ac·
counting and advertising.
The marketing · course is

Carmel News,

By the Day

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris of
ARIES (March 21-April 19) To- Springfield, Ohio, Mr. and
day you may learn of something Mrs. Doyle Mutti and family
exciting that you cou ld get into of Mansfield, Ohio spent the
w•th a modest cash outlay. Consult el(perts before writing a weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Circle and Verna.
check
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20) You
Johnson
of Racine, Ohio
lake setback s m stride tOday
spent
an
evening with
Don't pan ic' if someone throws a
monkey wrench into your plans . Margaret Ann Johnson,
You 'll bounce back with alacrity . Patrick and Sheryl LeAnn
GEMINI (May 21 -Juno 20) II and Betty VanMeter.
you 're planning something soc ial
Rev. and Mrs. Richard
today don 't invite co workers. Young and family of Sidney,
Steer clear of . mixmg business
Ohio spent a few days at the
types with regular pa ts.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Edson
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II Roush.
may be necessary -to cancel
Roger arid Pearl Deem, Jr.
some leisure-time plans today to
take care of a matter vital to you called at the Homer Circle
and other s. Don't hesitate to do home recently.
so.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle
of
New Haven, W. Va. spent
LEO (July 23·Aug.22) The mak·
1ng of important decisions won 't Sunday at the home of Mary
be left entirely in your hands to· Circle.
day . but you must frnd a way to
Jenny Jo Grueser of Logan,
vo•Ce your opinion wilhout rockOhio
spent a few days with
ing the boat.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Lee and
!NEWSP-' PER ENTERPRISE ASSN l
attended the fair.

Turns seven

approved by
Eastern board

PRElTY
PEASANT
PRINTS

Olrn:pa:g:e~9~
I )~~~;":~~-;~~~==~§§.§.~~-~~~~~~F=~
School is just
the corner!
And so is the Kiddie Shoppe in Pomeroy,

Safety forces
to"cooperate

with clothes to fit your child for back-to-school.

NOW OFFERING CLASSES
TO MEIGS COUNTY

BALLE)', TAP, JAZZ,
ACROBATICS AND BATON

JEANS

SHIR1S

SWEATERS

CO'IERALLS

TltE bold ONE51tEAd bAck
Toscltool

BRIEFS
1-SHIR1S
JUMPSUITS
'IJES1S

JUMPSUITS
DRESSES

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE
RT. 2 NOR1H

SlACKS

PANT SUITS
SOCKS
, PANTIES

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

PHONE (304) 428-0000

MARGU

UNDERSHIRTS

Hours :

(

POMEROY,O.

'I

2ND ST.

POMEROY, O.

v

WE
· ' DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923
·

9:30 to 1:00
l'riday

!lETTY OHLINGER
MAIN ST.

Dear Helen and Sue:
I'm 26, single, an ftalian-American female and very
independent. I live and wock in a multi-racial city and as often
as not my dates- and my friends- are black. My apartment
door is always open to guests. A few, white and black, try to
nurture their prejudices in my living room, but when they do it
op~nly the rest of us point out how silly they're being , and
thmgs work themselves out. .
Not S&lt;) with my parents. They are uncomfortable aroWld
my black friends, especially the males. The crazy t!ting is that
they raised me to light prejudice. Now, they use the words they
taught me never to say. In fairness to them, they have been
plagued with urban crime and racial intolerance from a few
non-whites.
Most important, it is economic injustice, not color, that
creates exploitation, slwns and myths. Racism isn't
insurmountable. But it has destroyed some line relationships
and cost people their lives.
This violent, vicious "ism" must be fought. And parents,
please practice what you preach! - JUDY

.

+++

Dear Rap:
Interracial marriage is a decision each person must make
for him or herself. If two mature people sincerely believe they
can hurdle all the obslacles bound to be thrown in their path,
then it may be okay. Many enjoy the challenge of independent
thinking and choosing.
But children of such unions -as of now -may suffer. It
would be great if this wasn't so, but we're a long way from an
unprejudiced world. - A. J.

+++

Rap :
I have never dated interraCially, but I know many who do
and will.
To those who do, I say, if you like the guy go with him - it
will be tn YO\JI' benefit. Life gives us a lot of rough times, but
matches them with much good. - AU&gt;O UNPREJUDICED

s. 3rd Ave.

· Middleport.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00to5:00 Mon. thru Fri .
7:00to3:011 Saturday

o.

The Asbury

The families of the late
Thomas Gilkey . held their
seventh annual reunion
recently at the Route 33 South
Roadside Park.
A basket dinner was served
at noon. Music for the reunion
was provided by Junior
Wiblin, Ronald Wiblin, Penny
Wiblin, Kennlt Gilkey. and
Jackie Steck.
Attending were Myrtle
Gilkey, Athens; Joanne .
Gilkey, Athens; L;llll81l and
Faye Stanley, Albany; Ker·
· mit and Martha Gilkey and
family, Shade; Frank and
Susie Gilkey and family,
Malia; Jordie and Martha

' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " Varner and family, Duncan

FaUa; Jackie Steck, McConnelsviUe; Mrs. Richard
Kerns, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
D,arreU Young and 1!11I)ily,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sargent, The Plains;
Glen Stanley, Albany; Anita
and Annette White, Hendricks, W. Va. ; Russel
Sargent and son, The Plains;
Malinda Sargent and son, The
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Wiblin, Glouster, Penny
Wiblin, Glouster; Ronald
Wiblln, Sr. and Shawna,
Chauncey; Mr. and Mrs.
William Young, RuUand;
Ellen Thoma, Terri, Kevin,
and Sheryl, Rutland; and
Virgil Gilkey, The Plains.
.

!

'

' 1

RACINE - Members of the
Uml&lt;'d Methodist Women of
the H~!cinc Wesleyan Church
met at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 22 lor
their annual picnic at the
summer home of Margaret
and, Gordon West. Grace was
given by Mrs. Maxine
Wingett.
During the business
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Alice Wolfe, new officers
were elected. They are Mrs.
Wolfe president; Mrs. Libby
Wilford, first vice p~esident ;
Mrs. Etta Mae Hill ,
treasurer ; Mrs. West,
secretary. Plans were made
for a tiake sale to be held
Sept.I7.A soup dinner will he

held at the church aMex
every month during the
winter beginning in October.
Members are to meet at 9a.m. each Thursday to cut
and sew carpet rags. A'white
elephant sale was held with
proceeds com~ng to $23.
Cards were signed for the
sick. A social hour concluded
the evening. Mrs. Reithmiller
of Sarsota, Fla. was a guest.

MR. K'S
PRESENTS
STEVE YATES
Dancing 6 nights a
week .
Happy Hour 4-9
Rl. 7, Kanauga
Mr . K's Patio Club

Photo Enlargement

SALE

Recognized were fonn.e r

pastors and their wives, the
Rev. and Mrs. Richard Jar·
vis, the Rev. and Mrs. Carl
He rrin, and the Rev. Wendell
Stutler. Letters were read
from the Rev. Dean Copley,
and the Rev. Forest Donley.
Aiso recognized were those
members who attended that
old church which burned,
Miss Marcia Karr, Mrs.
Sadie Thuener, and Ted
Mills. Recognition was also
given to officials, past and
present, of the Sunday school.
The congregation sang
" Bless Be the Tie that Binds"
and the Rev. Mr. Herring had
the benediction.

Purchase of new maps for
the.Sunday school classroom
was discussed at the Tuesday
night meet,ing of the Loyal
Berearu; Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.·
Mrs. Kathem Ervin presid·
ed at the meeting which open·
ed with the Lord's Prayer in
unison and devotions by Mrs.
Louise· McElhinny. She read
a poem by Helen Steiner
Rice, "Too Short the Day."
Mrs. Martha Haggerty read
the 96th psalm.
Reported iU were Miss .
Mildred' Hawley, Mrs. Rose
Reynolds, Mrs. Grace Pratt,
and Mrs. Ann Barnitz. A
thank you card was read
lrom Nelle Ohlinger who is
now residing in Florida with a
niece. A gift as a memorial to
Mrs. ·Mary Meinhart on her
birthday from Mr. and Mrs.
John Mayer was acknowledged. A ·round· robin card was
signed for George Meinhart
whose birthday is Aug. 25.
Members sang ''Happy Bir·
thday" to Mrs. Alice
Robeson.
The · program by · Mrs.
Robtison included poetry,
"City of Dreams", "House by
the Side of the Road", and
" An Ancient Prayer." She
also had several Bible quizes.
Mrs. Martha Haggerty and
Mrs. McElhinny served
refreshments.

Seventh Gilkey reunion held ·

Methodist women gather

Hoback,Robcrt &lt;'lanagan,
Mr. and Mrs. Denms Moore,
Jared, Amy and Andrea,
Mrs. Helen Damewood,
Kathy Fry, Stacy and Wendy,
Mr. and Mrs. William
Wtnebrenner, Mr. and Mrs.
Allred Yeauger, Mrs. Anna
Hilldore, Veronica Provo,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Teaford,
Mrs. Margaret Eichinger,
Tracy Hubbard, Mrs. Linda
lloyd and Mandy, Miss Mar·
cia Karr, Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Kloes, Mr. and Mrs. AI Harmon, Wendy and Crystal, and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lisle.
For the afternoon program
in the church sanctuary , the
Rev. Mr. Koch, pastor, ex·
tended the welcome, WiUiam
Winebrenner gave the
prayer, and Charles Hoback
read the scripture.
There was special music by
members of the church choir
directed by Ann Sauvage·with
Mrs. Rose Ann Jenkins at the
organ and John Lisle on the
guilar. other selections were
a duet by Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenkins, and solois by John
Lisle, Dennis Moore, and the
Rev. Mr. Stutler. Several
former members of the choir
joined the regular church
choir fo r " How Great Thou
Art."

Class
meeting
POLLY·s POINTERS. held

POU.Y'S PROBLEM
many such shirts. Take a
DEAR
POLL
V
The
glass
length
of nylon thread or
RACINE A house
door
on
my
oven
gels
very
twine
a
bit over twice as long
warming was held at the new
greasy.
I
would
like
to
hear
as
you
want
the band extend·
home of Mr. and Mrs. James
some
suggestions
for
clean·
ed,
slip
it
through
the holes in
Hupp and sons, Jimmy and
ing
it.
-JO.
the
button
and
then
knot the
Billy , at RD 2, Racine,
DEAR JO- When the oven two ends together. this
Sunday.
is
cool try washing the gla&amp;S makes a loop of nylon to go
A picnic dinner and cookout
doors
with hot water and a over the original and the new
was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs.
dishwashing
detergent or am· button is used for buttoning . .
Ernest Bush, who were also
mania.
Do
this
inside and out. It can truly make from onecelebrating their 31st wed·
As
a
preventive
measure hall to a full size difference in
ding anniversary; Mr. and
wipe
the
glass
with
a paper a . shirt neck band. Most
Mrs. Arnold Hupp and Rocky,
. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp, towel (also inside and out) anyonehasafewbuttonssav_.
ed for pos~Jble use and it is'so
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, sori after each use. -POLLY.
DEAR
POLLY
I
have
a
simple
for anyone to do. Tim; Jim and Freddie
.simple
and
swift
solutiQn
for
R.R.R.
Colburn, Louie Bonnoni, ·
DEAR POLLY ~ I like
Larry Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. cleaning carbon. from the
glass
door
to
my
oven.
I
use
a
gelatin
salads for cook~uts
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
gadget
that
holds
a
single
and
buffets
but had trouble
Jim Hupp and sons.
edge razor blade such as one with them melting, until! hit
~~~"'"'~'""'_ _ _ _ _ _ _..__ _._ _ _ _._~. uses to remove excess paint on the following solution. I
from windows. I really do not make the salad in a glass con·
stop with the glass doors but talner, fill some plastic zipuse this on the entire oven per lock bags with ice cubes,
surface. -ANNE.
put bags in a pretty basket
Polly's note- Use carefully t,he same size as the. glass
to prevent any nicks.
· dish and then place the salad
DEAR POLLY - When the container oil the bags of ice.
straps broke on my purse I It not only stays cold but
sewed a leather belt that had looks attractive. -ANNA
been on a dress to the· purse
DEAR POLLY - when I
and it looked and worked as need to melt shortening or
well as the original strap. - · chocolate to add to a recipe I
TERESA.
put it in a Slll8ll melal conDEAR POLLY - I am in· lainer (a metal measuring
teresled in reading the cup iS great) and then set this
Pointers but have not seen a on the \fanning element to
; simple aid to calm a man's my coffee maker. It really
frustration on finding he has works! -MRS. K.S.
outgrown s&lt;Xne particular ar·
Polly wiU send you one of
ticle of clothing. Many of us her signel) thank -yo u
have had to put fine shirts newspaper coupon clippers if
aside because of uncomfor- she uses your favorite
!able neckbands, yet shirts ·Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
are very expensive now·a· her column. Write POLLY'S
days. I have found an easy POINTERS in care of this
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
way to save and be able to use newspaper.
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

&lt;'

9:30 to 5:00
Mon . thru S.t.

•s SHOES
.

Dear Helen and Sue :
Re interracial dating, which of course can lead to
marriage. Birds of a feather flock together. Will a robin move
into a sparrow's nest?
·
U whit chooses black or vice versa, it can only mean they
can't find anyone of their own kind. sad.
I think if aU society accepted such arrangements it would
he okay, but Wltil it does - nodice.-JOHN

BUilDING OR REMODEUNG?

WE HAVE TltKETS AVAILABLE FOR
ANNIE OAKLEY BUFFALO BILL PERFORMANCE, AUGUST 27

Big bottoms are the big thing .
Ours team up with jeans,
pants or skirts. Big fall looks.
ln fact, everything is big
but the pric_e.

On lnterraciai .Marrtage
Readers All:
"Unprejudiced in a Prejudiced World" wrote, "Would you
please ask other kids how they feel about interra cial dating
(and marriage)? We did. And the answers poured in.
Atlas! count, those in favor are ahead, three to two, with a
like. number reporting mixed views: " Blacks and whites,
especially in the well~ucal&lt;'d grourw;, should have no
insurmountable problems - unless children are involved."
About eight years ago, we asked the same question of our
readers. Percentage then was over three-fourths against
interracial mingling, under any circumstances. We've come a
farther distance than many of us realize in the last ten yea rs.
Here are samples:

and
bnilding materials

TOPS

PWS - A BARGAIN RACK AND TABLE
OF SUMMER STOCK '72 PRICE

PORTLAND··Jori Beth
Bailey, daughter of T~ and
Linda Bailey, Patriot; recent·
ly observed her seventh birthday at the home of her grand·
parents, the Rev. and Mrs.
Lawrence Giuesencamp,
Porlland.
A decorated cake was serv·
ed following a dinner and
gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Bailey,
Michael and Christa, the Rev.
"and Mrs. Gluesencarnp, Nicki
Van Meter, Robert Wilson,
Elaine Eskey, Paul D. Evans,
Jr. Sending gifts were Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence. Theiss,
Route I, Vinton, and Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Bailey and
daughter, Racine.

:SYttAt.:US!-;

United Methodist Church
observed its ~nnual
homec-oming Sunday.
At the regular morning
worship servic-e the Rev.
Harvey Koch · adn•inistered
the sacrament of baptism to
Angela and Melissa Clifford,
children Of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Clifford, and Crystal Har·
mon, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Al Hannon.
For the homecoming floral
arrangements on the commu·
nion table were donated by
Mr. and Mrs. Millard. Van
Meter, who also placed arranb'l"llents of flowers on the
alt;lr. The basket dinner was
served at 12 :30 in the church
social room with ~rs . Helen
Teaford, Mrs. Beulah Ward,
and Mrs. Mary Lisle in
charge of arrangements. The
tables were decoral&lt;'d in a
fall decor by Judy Pape, Hose
Ann Jenkins and April Har·
mon..
Attending the l!lllcheon
were the Rev. and Mrs.
Harvey Koch, !-he Hev. anct
Mrs. Richard Jarvis, June·
!ion City; the Rev._and Mrs.
Paul Herring, Cincinnati; the
Rev. Wendell Stutler, Nelson·
ville; Mr. and Mrs. William
Arnott, Shawn and Jason,
Chillicothe ; Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Mills, Beaver Falls, Pa.;
Mrs. Eileen Jewell;' Debbie
Jewell, Beaver Falls, Mrs.
Lillian Wood, Columbus;
Mrs . Ava Zo Sisson, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Buckley and
Tammy, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Moore, Mrs. Oma
Winebrenner, Mrs. Beulah
Ward, Mrs. Gladys Robson,
Miss
Eleanor
Robson, Mrs. Jean Kloes, Mr.
and Mrs. Millard Van Meter
and Buddy, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenkins and Kimberly, Mr.
and Mrs. John Lisle, Scott
and Todd, Mrs. Judy King,
Kevin and Kristen, Robert
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Charles

House warming
Polly Cramer
is held at
Oven door gets greasy
new home

CASH&amp;CARRY
. PRICES

of His OHlce

with Dursel l:l1ggs g1vmg
grace. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsel Biggs, Janet
Biggs, Denver Biggs, Mr. and
Mrs. Nathan Biees. Francis
Biggs Adkins, Mr : and Mrs.
Wilford Biggs arid sons
Michael and Brian Biggs, Mr:
and Mrs. John Schlott Schlot·
terbeck, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence E. Randolph, Sr.,
Donnie Handolph, Jr.,
Margaret Province, Timothy
Paul Hazelton, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Betzing, Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Randolph, Mr. and
Mrs. Jewell Story, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald W. Randolph,
Sr.

JORIBAILEY

Wishes to Announce· the Relocation

,

DAY CELEBRATED
SYRACUSE- The 90th bir·
thday anniversary of Ben
Quisenberry of Syracuse was
celebrated at the Grace Bible
Baptist Church at Point Pleasant at the Sunday service.
He was presented wi.th a
pocket watch by the con·
gregation and birthday cake
and beverages were served in
his honor. Joining Mr.
Quisenberry Wednesqay fora
birthday dinner was his
·granddaughter,
Joy
Quisenberry of Athens.

$299 fare is

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST

J

The Raridolph Biggs reunion was held Aug. 21 at the
southbound Route 33 roadside
park near Pomeroy.
The reunion honored Mr.
and Mrs. Wilford Biggs and
sons, Michael AUan and
Brian David. Mr. Biggs
recently returned to the
United States after having
spent three and one-half
years in Gennany on a tour of
duty with the U. S. Air Force.
He and his family are on their
way lo Tucson, Arizona
where he will be slationed.
Diruter was served at noon

Princess Caroline to wed
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(UP! ) - Princess Caroline,
the 2fl.year~ld daughter of
Prince Rainier of Monaco
and former movie queen
Grace Kelly, will marry a
French businessman 17 years
her senior.
The palace aMouncement
early this morning set no date
for the wedding of the royal
couple's eldest child and
Philippe Junot, 37, the scion
of a wealthy French family
who describes himself as a
financial counselor.
The statement confirmed
newspaper reports a lew
months ago, especially from
Britain, on the impending
engagement. At the time, the
palace admitted the princess
knew JWlot, but said they
were only friends.
Princess Caroline met
Junot at the home of mutual
friends in December 1975 in
Paris, where the princess
was studying philosophy at
the Sorbonqe, the palace
announcement said..
·
The princess has been a
member of the jet-set society
lor many years and is often
seen in exclusive resort
areas.
Juno!, a dark-haired
athletic and_handsome man,

Asbury 1narks
homecoming

Hymn sing p!tJnned

ONE

8"x10"
or
TWO

S"x7"
f1 om your favor•te
color negattve

COLOR
ENLARGEMENTS
i Bx.1 0

Old-fashioned
outdoor
hymn singing will be held at
6:30p. m. Saturday at Forest
Acres Park on the New Lima
Road near Rutland .
The Joyfulairs, Gospel
Travelers, Joyful Tones,
Midway Trio, Chapman
Family, Fai,view Singers
and others wiU be featured.
Those attending are to take
their.own seating: In case of
rain the hymn sing will he
held at the Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church. Women
attending are asked to wear
lqng dresses and bonnets.

OR

2 5x7

St29

FROM COLOR SLIDE ... 1 1.99
COUPON '~lU ST ACCOMPUIV OROER
offer good Aug 17th .. 28th

VILI-"GE PHARMACY
217N . 2nd

Middleport,
992-5759

o.

'

END OF
SUMME:R
One Select Group

WOMEN'S &amp;
CHILDREN'S
·_SHOES

5
A

v

ALL WOMEN'S

SUMMER
SHOES

E
heritage house
$200

PAIR

•

1h PRICE
'

OF SHOES

Open: Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday 9:30 to)
Friday9:30to8
Middleport,
N. 2nd Ave.

o.

�•

•

Dazzling gifts, perhaps some missing jewel~
By ED ROGERS
WASHINGTON (UP!) - It
was only a preview of the
lon g-awa ited opening or

stored in the Naliona l
Archives.
"Opening the box ... may

Richard Nixon's gove nunent -

whether there were gifts to
tht Nixons lhat were never
reported ... or whether
certain gilts are missing
!rom the 124 boxes a nd
crates," said Jay Solomon,
head of the GSA.
But the news media did not
have to wait until next week
lor a peek at something never
before seen publicly - a
"sampling" of lhe 2,000 gifts
valued at 12 million lo Nixm

irnpounded belongings, and
th ere were no shocki ng
disclosures from tapes or
doc uments. Only dazzli ng
gifts and hints or missing
jewels.
U.S. District Judge Aubrey
Robinson ruled Wednesday
the State Department can
check mysterious Box 118c
for photos and discriptions or
gifts Nixon and his family
re,eived ·from foreign
goverrunents and heads or
state while he
president .
As a result, the General
Ser vices Administration
says, it will make lhe "first
archival incursion" next
week in an effort to complete
an inventory of lhe foreign
gifts, which may be among
lhe Nixon belon~ing s now

ans wer

qu estions

a bout

and his family, which now
belong lo the government.
Television lights danced
over a dazzling display diamond neckla ces, bla ck
pearl earrings, a diamondencrusted .wristwatc h,
LTockery, statuary and a big
clock - all laid out on a table
in the National Arcltives.
The State Department says
there might be dozens of
items it is unable to account
for, either because of poor
record keeping or becalll!e
they have been removed.

Bul Solomon told a news
cooference he has no reason
1o believe any of the gifts are
missing. He said the check is
simply a matter of being
businesslike.
Among the items the
department cannot account
for are an Iranian carpet,
watches, elegant art objects
and jeweled bracelets, pins
and necklaces given to Mrs.
Nixon, Tricia and Julie.
state Department records
show many of the missing
gifts were from Iran, with
others !rorr Italy, West

t-The Dllll)' SentiDel, Mlddleport-P&lt;mei"O)', 0., Thursday, Aug. 25, 1977

~-----A~e~-D~ath~---- l
I

Ge r man y, Nic aragua ,
Ireland, Gha~ , Indonesia,
India, the Sov1el Union and
Taiwan.
I n cour t Wednesday,
Nixon's lawyers tried to block
the search f..- the gifts until
more courts provide more
safeguards for Niion ' s ·
privacy. Bulthe judge turned
them down.
Lawyer Stan Mortenson
said Nixon "would be happy"
1o have a gii\ inventory
made, but not until more
safeguards are prov ided.

DENNI$1(NfGHT

col lision at autom6blles on
the Saa Diego fr eeway la st
Mondav . 2P·vear .old Cp l.

Sunday .

Corporal

APPLE BUTI'ER TIME - This scene will be repeated at the second annual observa nce
... of Yesteryear to be held on Sept. 17 al the Meigs Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Apple

. butter is being made in a large iron pol. The product will be sold at this year's observance.

••

Social Mac Davis entertains at fair .
Calendar .

~ Hua,

V8nce promise
'
. friendship in future

TV

By JIM ANDERSON
PEKING
( UPI )
! Secretary. of State Cyrus
Vance opel)ed talks today
with Chinese Communist
' party Chalnnan Hua Kuofeng in apparent harmony
with Hua telling Vance the
Shanghai Communique must
remain the basis for future
relations between the two
countries.
The
Shanghai
Corrununique, signed in 1972
by fanner President Richard ·
Nixon and the late Premier
Chou En-lai is also accepted
by the Carter administration
as the basis for its relations
with China.
Although il sets no
timetable, the communique
says "progress toward the
normalization ol relations
between Cbina and the United
States is in the interests of all
countries."
Signed Feb. 27, 1972, the
1,800-word Shanghai Com·
munique among other things
said the United Stales would
eventually withdraw all U.S.
forces
and
military
installations from Taiwan.
The canmunique did not
• challenge Peking.'s .concept
' . that there is one China and
thai Taiwan is a part of it.
The meeting with Hua,
.) which has been arranged in

OUR MOST POPULAR
40 CH. MOBILE CB

1

F ilm slar Charles Napier
modulated a Realistic CB in a
recent Paramount movie . Says
Chuck, "" Love those new 40 's,
mine in particular ."" .

Money coming into schools

ANOTHER FINE HOME
SOLD BY

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

Judges named
to. court jobs

•

...••

CUT 60

WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter Wednesday
appointed two federll,l
judges.
Gilbert S. Merritt, 41, of
Franklin, Tenn., was chosen
to sit oil the U.S. Sib Circuit
Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati, replacing the late
William E. Miller.
Edward H. Johnstone, 55,
of Princeton, l(y., was named
to be U.S. District Judge for
the Western District of
Kentucky, replacing James
F. Gordon who has retired.
Merritt iS a partner in a
Nashville law firm and
served as U.S. attorney for
the · Middle District of
TeMessee from 1966 Ia 1969.
Johnstone has been a judge
on the 56th Judicial Circuit of ·
the Commonwealth of
Kentucky since 1976.

95

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POMEROY, 0.

W. MAIN

f

I"

Mason Q&gt;unty

News Notes, :\ \
~~~j

50~/o

Continued from Page 6
L Dottie Scarberry, Mrs. Bernard Scarberry and Mrs. Zeirna
Hunter.

!

29•

,
;
'

Made-by-us Archer'" "Twin
Trunker." Improves signal pattern, ahead and behind! at-4143

Silver Bridge Plaza
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13995

NEW HAVEN - The New Haven lions Club has voted to
present the New Haven Librar.y with subscriptions to large
type editions o[ the Readers Digest and the Sunshine
Magazine. The club also has presented the library with a large
type dictionary and a number of large books.
The Lions are offering a new service through the New Haven
library to deliver and pick up library books or periodicals for
those unable to make the calls themselves. Anyone interested
In this service may call the New Haven Public library, 8823252.

,

Most •t•m•
also avaulabla •t
A11d1o Shaek

Oeal•r•
Look fO' '"'"

••1n •n !~~'OUr
netahborhood.

,.
'

I

NEW HAVEN- A picnic was held on Sunday, August 7, at
1 the Larry Roush Beach for Mitchell and Michael Harbour's
' fifth birthday. They are the twin sons of Mr. anti Mrs. Dannie
• Harbour, New Haven.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Harbour, Wendy, Mitchell and
Michael; Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Yonker and Kelly; Mr. and
Mrs. Brian Yrmker and son; Bill Slump and Michelle; Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Karschnik, Kevin and Keith; Mandy Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Roush and sons; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yonker, and
~ the hrm~rees' grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Miller, •
• Mrs. Stanley Harbour and great-grandmother, Mrs. Matilda
Noble.

M rs .
Les t er
(Katie)
Walburn , 70, of Route 4,
Pomeroy , died Wednesday at
Holzer Medica l Cen ter .
aorn July 3, 1907, she was a

daughter of the late David

and Oll ie Moore Stowe. She
was also preceded by one
daughter , Mar y Kat hleen
Eblin, and three sister s..
Mrs . Ma ry Sm i th , Mrs .
Jamie Snider and Mr s.. Ina

died

Tipple.

She is survived by her
husband, L.ester : a d.atJght er,
· Mrs : Everett ( Ger ald ine)
Lightfoot of Pomeroy i five
grandchildr en , two g reat.
grandchildren.
She was .a member of the

Knight is a former res ident of
Morgan Township.
Corporal Knight married
Pamela Jean Jackson of
lawton. Ok Ja ., who survives
with a baby daughter .
·
Two brothers also survive :
Jay and Barry Knight. and a
sister, Chris, all af home In
Albuquerque . A grandfather,

tnday .

LUTHER MINOR

Funeral services for Luther
Minor will be held 10 a .m.

GLENN LANIER

Funeral Home In Vinton wi th
Rev . Jerry Neal officiating ,
Friends ma y call at the
funeral home today from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Burial wi ll be in
Vi"nton Memorial Park .

gomery , W. Va .• sundves .

Glenn

Lanier, 54,

D.

Friday at the McCay.Moore

a

res ident of Rt. 2, Bidwell
(Adamsville

community}

died at 2: 30 p.m. Wednesday

In Holzer Medical Center
following a brief illness.
He was born Feb. 19, 1923,
in MasOn County , W. Va .• son
of the late John P. and Marie

Black Lanier.

Mr. Lanier graduated from

Rio Grande High School in
1942. He was a member of
Calvary Baptist Cpurch ~nd a
dairyman .
He .married

the

former

Helen Weed on June 22,

1945,

in .RIO Grande. She survives,
along with three daughters,
Mrs . William &lt;Patricia)
Fletcher, Rio Grande; Sheila
and Brenda , both at home ;
three brothers: Menphis R.
Lanier and Carl E. Lanier .

both

of

Columbus

and

Garland 0 . Lanier, Rt. 2,
Bidwell. One sister survives.

Mrs .

Robert

Robinson ,

Ohio.

(Mildred)

Mechanicsburg,

One brother preceded him

In death.

Funeral services will

held

1

be

p.m. Saturday at the

McCoy.Moore Funeral Hom.e
with Rev . Charles Lusher and
Rev . Luther Tracy of.

Gunshots

(Continued from page I)
said, "We're down solid
again.
"We had about . a third of
them back this morning
(Wednesday), but some were
stopped by pickets on the way
to work, and others left when
pickets arrived at mines."
Mines were reported
operating normally in Ohio
and Pennsylvania, but the
West
Virginia
Coal
Association reported 18,400 of
the state's 65,000 miners still
VETERANS MEMORIAL
on strike.
ADMITTED Wilma
"I believe it is dyirig
Riggs, Racine; Minnie down," said Cecil Roberts,
Johnson, Athens; Mary . vice president of CharlestonHowell, Pomeroy; Rebecca ·based District 17, the hard
Ward, Pomeroy; William core or picketing. He siad
Eakins, R~ine ; Margaret 7,000 of the 23,000-member
Johnson, Racine; Betty Van work force in his district was
Meter, Racine;
Eunie on teh job Wednesday.
Brinker, Racine; Pamela
"They haven't got otrong
Barber, Racine; Wayne support to keep this thing
Powell, Pomeroy; Robert going," a District 17 miner
Pullins, Coolville.
said of pickets in his region.
DISCHARGED - James He said he didn't think the
See, Linda Wheeler, James pickets' "terrorist tactics"
Hawley, Minnie Johnson, would keep miners from
Flore!lce Johnson, ,George working.
Conde, William Buckley,
Richard Carter, president
Kevin Stewart, Opal Cum- of the Beckly, W. Va.·based
mins.
District 29, said production in
the southern region district
was running at 90 percent.
HoherMedlcalCenter
"Our people are meking an
(DiscbargesAug. 24 1
attempt .to return to work.
Dorothy Amberger • Glenna. Those not working are those
Ball, Barbara Betzi~g. picketed out," he said.
Garland Bostick, Sharon
Miners agreed Monday at a
Brewer, Jeffrey Brumfield, Charleston meeting to call a
Leonard Conner • Ercell Day, temporary halt to the
Naomi Edwards, Glenna walkout, which erupted in
Frey, Dl!llie Hayes, Charles June when the union anKeplar, Hollier Legg, Pamela nounced It would have to cut
Messer, Opal Metheny, back health benefits.
Luther Pittenger, Carrol
Russ, Williard Thomas.
(Bh11is Aug. %4)
Mr. and Mrs. Bentley Dana Sword, Point Pleasant;
McCarty, a son, Jaclison; Mr. Mrs. Homer Blessing, West
and Mrs. Lee Williams, a son, Columbia; Christopher Kapp,
Point Pleasant·; Annette
GaUipolis.
Grinun, Letart; Mrs. Herbert
King, Letart; Hazel Johnson,
West Columbill; Beverly
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Click, Mt. Alto, and Carl
William ·zuspan, · Maso~; Irvin, Point Pleasant.
'

Bradford Chu rch of Chri st.

Funera l ser vices w ill be
Saturday at 3 p.m . at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Ja ck
Perry off ic iating . Bvrial will
be in M iles Cemetery .
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral horne after 7 p.m.

Royal McConnell , Mont-

Hospital News

By Abna Marshall

SUBURBAN COAL MASTER
REG. '349.95

-y-u;;

Notices, local briefs

Hua, 56, was wearing a
gray Mao-style suit and went
out of his way to chat with
rep(rtersandmembersofthe
Vance party.
The leader, who .comes
from Mao Tse·Tung's native
province of Hunan, bears
someresemblance to the late
chairman, with the same high
forehead and the . same
ponderous tall physique.
U. S. officials have been
saying Vance's four-day
China visit would be a failure
unless he met Hua Ia discuss
the resumption of diplomatic
ties between the two nations,
which were .broken in 1950.
The meeting of the Great
Hall of the People meant
Vance, on the Carter administration's first high-level
mission to Peking, has met
with China's top two leaders
- Hua-, who also i~ premier,
and Vice Premier Teng
Hsiao-ping.
Vance and Teng opened
"nitty gritty" negotiatoins on
the core topic of the trip
during two lengthy conferences Wednesday that U.
S. officials said · had gone
"better than expected."
But diplomatic sources said
Washington's commibneqt to
the Natloanlist Chinese in
Taiwan remained a niajo~
stumbling \llock in the talks,
and Vance probably will not
win a final settlement with
Peking on this trip.

1 The Meigs Local Board of been issued to Timothy
·•
· will meet in James Bearhs, 19, Rt. 3,
• Education
special session at 7:30 p. m. Pomeroy, and Tamela Sue
Thursday and Friday nights Bowers, 17, Rt. 1, Reedsville; . ·
to hire any needed personnel Robert Franklin Lawson, 36,
'' and to discuss negotiations Rt. I, Portland, and Lottie
.; with employes of the district. ·Lee Smith, 28, Rt. I, ReedLyle Bruce Haning, 19,
' Classes will resume in sville;
Albany, and Linda Joyce
Southern Local School Dearth•. 16, Athens.
District Tuesday, Aug. 30.
'l'woactionsfordivorceand
Classes for studenls and bus
schedules will remain the one for support were filed in
same as last year according Meigs County Common Pleas
to Bobby Ord, superin- Court. Filing for divorce were
tendent. Anyone having any Herman Taylor, Rt. 1, Long
questions may contact Ord. Bottom against Vona Taylor,
Pomeroy; David Edward
State Auditor Thomas E. 1\oss, Middleport, against
Fergl180n's office reported Belinda Sue Ross, Pomeroy.
Michigan Department of
the
distribution
of
$107,112,892.45 in 1977 in- Social Services, Delta
tangible taxes on financial County, Mich., filed for
institutions and securities support under the ·reciprocal
dealers to Ohio's 88 counties. agreement act against John
Meigs County received Jack Carrinton, Reedsville.
Doona Halfhill was granted
Sll2,210.32 of the total.
a divorce from Douglas
Marriage licenses have Halfhill.
'• fi:l~·$1.- ~,~~~'=:=:::::::&gt;.:::.-::."$::::;::;.-;:;~:::::;.~?..:.:!.'!:::i:::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::x::::::::::::::::::::::~~~:

Reg.

Use car CB as a base unil
or car stereo tape player at
home! Regulated 13.8
volts. Operates most
12V-14V DC equipment on
regular, 120V house cur·
rent. 22·124

the last 24 hours, after Vance
had mel a series of lower
ranking Chinese officials, is
the climax of Vance's visit 1o
China,,which had been billed
as exploratory.
Hua, speaking in a soft
voice through an interpreter,
!old Vance, "I have read
reports in the press that your
trip is exploratory . We think
it is good also to do some
exploring, we think il is good
thai · the
Carter
administration should send
someone to explore and to get
to know our leaders."
The Chinese leader, who
also holds the goverrunenl
position of premier, said,
''the Chinese position is lhat.
the Shanghai Communique is
the basis for developing
relationt."
..
The two men met in the
cavernous Great Hall of the
People in Greal East Hall,a
room which measures about
60 yards by 20 yards.
The
meeting
began
punctuaily at 5 p.m. with Hua
welcoming Vance in an even
larger reception hall. Then,
in a procedure wl)ich is
becoming routine for such
meetings, the whole party
went to an elevated platform
in lhe' meeting room where
.they had a formal group
photograph taken.

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Corrie In and Browse Through Our Large
Display lot. There Are S Homes Set Up
and Ready For Your lnsj&gt;ection.

Kn ight

in New York to Master.Sgt.
David (Sonny) Kn ight and
Connie McConnell Knight of
Albuquerque. N. M. Sgt .

as
seen on
national

MRS . LESTER WALBURN

Mc Cov -Moor e
F vne rit l
Home of Vinton tomorrow
w ill announce the place for
the fvnera l. which wi ll be
c ondu cted b y
Chap Ia in
Leonard with an honor guar d
from Charl est on.
Burial w ill be In Morgan
Center cemeter y,
· Tuesday In a hospital there .
He had been stationed at
Kirtland Air Force Base, Sa n
Di ego. Another car got Into
the wrong lane and smashed
lnt.o the young Mari'ne 's
veh icle .
He was born April 'J!i, 1957,

I~

Bur&gt;al
will , beRio
Cemetery

F rlend 5 may call at lhe
funeral home from 2· 4 and 7-9
p.m . Fri day .

Marine Corps will have h is
m ilitar y funer al at 1 p. m .

..

Wendy's bid a record Vernon ; Lucille Dukes of
$32,256 for lhe steer at the Marion ; Mabel Wells Burns
Sale of Champions . The of Mt. Gilead; Huett Ught of
animal was exhibited by Mansfield and David Siefert
Anita Billman of Ostrander in of Tiffin.
Delaware County.
The Community Service
Miss Billman , a 4-H Award went to WBCO Radio
member, said she will donate of Bucyrus.
$1,000 to the 4-H Foundation
The Ohio Expositions Comand use the rest of the money mission said thai c.losing day
for her education at Ohio .Sunday will be Golden
Buckeye Card Day at the fair.
Stale University.
James E. Douga)l, state All .senior citizens showing
advisor to lhe Ohio FFA their Golden :auckeye card
Association, and Dr. Charles will be admitted free .
W. Ufer, Ohio State 4-H
Janet
and
Jayne
leader, are working on details Greenbaum of irwin in Union
for planning the future use or County woo the champion
the steer.
and reserve champlon
Wednesday's program al awards in the junior Poland
the fair also saw senior show .
citizens groups attending
Janet , 18, is the Ohio
from Ashland, Crawford, Poland China Queen and a
Huron, Knox, Marion, member of the Darby Valley
Morrow, Richland, seneca Producers 4-H Club. This is
and Wyandot counties. The lhe second lime she has won
traveled to the fair in 21 buses the grand champion trophy
and one van.
with lhe Poland China swine.
Outstanding senior citizen
Her sister Jayne; 13, is a
awards went to Rilymond and member of the same 4-H club
Gladys Ryland of Ashland ; and had the reserve
Charles Eisinger of Galion ; champion gill.
Gladys Stark of Bellevue ;
They took the top honors iJ;l
Fred Pargeon of Mount the January gilt category.
In the February gilt
category, Lori Graham of
Xenia was the lop exhibitor
while Pam and Usa Mapes of .
Unionville Center in Union
exempted village school County were top exhibitors in
districts shared $2.7 million. the March gilt category.
The
Stale ·
School
Foundation Subsidy
paaments are sent to the 88
county auditors who district
the money to. the districts. .
Payments to the JVS districts
are sent" directly to the
districts' clerk-treasurers.

Grande .

Dennis kn ight of lhe U.S.

~~~~~·~~,.~·~·~-~.u~·~·~~~·«®«t·~t~·

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Officials of the Ohio Expositions
Commission are gearing up
THURSDAY
for a big weekend at lhe !24th
CHESTER Council 323, Ohio State Fair which winds
Daughters or America, to up Sunday.
serve refreshments at the
Wednesday's attendance
Richard Copeland sale Thurs· was 182,366, boosting this
day evening, begining at 4 year's overall attendance to
P.m.
1,737,ZIS through nine days,
DISCO STROKE Thursda y which is slightly ahead of last
London Pool, Syracuse, by year's figures.
"Fantasy Flash ..'' Admission · Fair officials said the
$1. Hours 8 to 11 p.m.
attendance on Wednesday's
FRIDAY
is traditionally at low ebb,
UMWA SUPPORTERS then picks up for . the
Club Friday at 10 a.m. at weekend.
Forest Acres Park, Rutland.
The program for the rest of
All miners and miners' wives the week features the
welcome.
Ringling Bros. and Barnum &amp;
SATURDAY
Bailey Thrill Circus, a strong
FAMILY REUNION of drawing crowd.
descendants of James and
Singer
Mac
Davis
Bertha Cremeans Saturday, entertains tnday, the Sylvers
Meigs Forest Acres Park, Friday, and Bob Hope
New Lima Road, Rutland. Saturday alld Sunday.
Dinner at noon.
Wendy's Old Fashioned
Hamburgers,
headquartered
SATURDAY
in
Columbus,
said
Wednesday
OLD FASIUONED outdoor
it
donated
lhe
Ohio.State
Fair
hymn sing Saturday 6:30 p.
grand
champion
steer
it
pur·
m. at Forest Acres Park, Ft.
chased
Monday
to
the
4-H
Meigs, New Lima Road,
Foundation
and
the
Future
Rutland. There will be
Fanners of America.
special singing.
SOUTHERN LOCAL High
School cheerleaders will
stage a car wash beginning at
10 a. m. Saturday at Eber's
Gulf Station. Also at 10 a. m.
COLUMBUS (UPI ) -State
Saturday the cheerleaders · Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
will sponsor a bake sale in today distributed $80 million
front of the Racine Home to 611 city, exempted village
National Baqk.
and local school districts and
. SUNDAY
87 county boards of
HOMECOMING Sunday at education .
Hazel Community Church.
The money represents the
Morning service at 10 a. m. August
State
School
followed by basket dinner at F ound a li on Subsidy
noon and afternoon service at payment.
I. Gospel Messengers from
Another $3.1 million was
Parkersburg will sing and distributed to 48 joint
George Hoschar will be vocational school districts for
speaker. Pastor, the Rev. August. The boards of
Edsel Hart, invites the education received $2.6
public.
million of that amount.
RACINE OES ' annual
The State Teachers •
family picnic Sunday at Retirement System will
Shrine Park in Racine. Bring receive $17.8 million and the
covered dish and table ser· School Employees '
vice .
Retirement System will
The annual Swartz family receive $4.3 million as the
reunion will be held at Aifred employers' share of the
on Sunday, Aug. 28, in the pension program for August.
The 185 city school districtS
Woode Grove. There will be a
divided
$30.1 million while the
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
m
local
school districts split
Games and other activities
$22.2 million. The 49
will be held in lhe afternoon.

llclaflng.
Ca
l vary

Ftall y InJured In head-on

W"''

THE SINGING HEMPHILLS of Nashville, t enn., will appear al the Eastern High
School at 7:30 p. m. on Saturday, Sept. 3. Appearing at 7 will be the Davis Trio. Joel
Hemphill, his wife, LaBreeska ; his two sons, Joel, Jr., and Trent and daughter, Candy, are
a part of the group. Their program will he versatile, ranging from the light, " Preacher's
Boys", to lhe touching, "Lord, Show Me Your Hands." Other members of the group are
John Foster on lhe drums; Harold Timmons, piano, and the guitar, violin and banjo work of
Bruce Watkins. The group appears freque ntly on television and records often.

l

ROY C. NELSON

RUTLAND -

Roy

COLUMB US ( UP!) -The
Public Ulllilies Commission
of Ohio Wednesday ruled that
Attorney General William J .
Brown was within his rights
in filing an official complaint
against Columbia Gas of Ohio
and gave the utility 30 days to
answer the charges.
The PUCO ruled that
Brown could not me his
complaint on behalf of all
residential customers o(
natural gas in the state and
could only appear before the
comm ission because his ·
Fremont offi ce was a
Columbia custo m~ r.
Brown charged last April 22
thai during lhe height of last

Born Dec. 10, 1910, the son

of the late Freeman and
Maggie Cremeans Nelson, he
was also preceded in death by
a brother .
He is survived by his w ife
Belva Lowe Nelson ; one son
Darrell , of Middleport ; three
daughters. Mrs . Roger

IWandal Gilbert, Gal lipoli s,

and Mrs. Wilma Gilmore and

Mrs. John (June) Yost. both

of Rutland ; four sisters, Li llie
Smith and Bonnie Miller ,

B.

(Hazel) Moore and Mrs .

Pomeroy, and

emergency

supplies of natural gas from a
Louisiana producer.
Brown said that the
Columbia of Ohio's action
was ~&gt; part or a scheme to
maximize the company's
profits withOut regard to its
obligation
to
provide
a dequate service to its

customers."
Before the PUCO ruling,
chairman
C.
Luther
Heckman said Brown filed
the complaint only to lioost
his political ambitions.
After Columbia answers
the complaint, the PUCO is
expected to schedule a public

After the public hearing,
which Brown predicted would
validate his complaint, he
recommended that the PUCO
initiate court action to
remove the Columbia of Ohio
board of directors.
Brown further suggested
that th~ commission be
prohibited from charging its
customers for lhe higher cost
of synthetic gas produced at
its Green Springs plant.
Columbia uses synthetic
natural gas to augment
supply deficits during the ·
winter months when the
utility is unable to secure
of
large
quantities
" emergency " gas from
southwestern United States
suppliers.

Before
you Paint
... prepare the surface w1th the BLUE LUSTRE
DIRT BUSTE R high pressure washer. No more
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u~e. it hooks up loa n ordinary garden hOse ..
Before yo u paint. rent the BLU E LUST RE DIRr
BUSTER .. and let it do the dirty work for you .

Raply (Gladys) Blosser, both

of Groveport ;·t. hree brothers,
. Otis, of Columbus. Leland of

Lloyd of

Proctorville ; 19 · grand .
children, several nieces and
nephews .
F·vneral services will be

Friday at 3 p.m. at the

Wesleyan Holiness Church
wi th the Rev , Dewey King
officiating . Burial in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Ewing Funeral Home
any time.

BURRUD'S STAR
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - A
star bearing the name of Bill
BUrrud, producer of travel
and
adventure
·documentaries, was unveiled
Wednesday in the Hollywood
~·walk
of Fame" in
ceremonies ·postponed from
last week because o[ the
death of Elvis Presley.

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purchase

CALL ANSWERED
The ·Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call for
Minnie Johnson at 10:57 a. m.
Wednesday at the Grim
residence, E. Main St. She
was taken . to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted. At 1:42 p. m.,
the squad went to Syracuse to
assist in transporting the
injured !rom a highway
accident
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

On All Uving Room Suites

Herman Grate

to

winter ."

BffiTH ANNOUNCED
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Miller of Bellville, Ohio,
are announcing the birth of a
son at Mansfield General
Hospital named Jason Allen
and weighing 6lbs. plus. Mrs.
Miller is the fanner Evelyn
Lawson . Grandparents are
Mr .. and Mrs . Charl es
Lawson , Rt. 2 Racine, and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller,
Bellville ;
the
greatgrandmother is Mrs. Miller,
also of Bellville.

•·10000 . TRADE-IN

773·5592

winter's energy crisis, Co·
lumbia of Ohio cootributed to
the energy deficit by refusing

C.

Nelson, 66, Route 1 Rutla nd,
died Tuesday at Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.

Middleport; Mrs . J.

Brown cleared to
challenge utili•ty

hearing on its merit.
Brown prallled the PUCO
ruling and said that "Ohioans
now should gel some or the
answers they deserve from
Columbia" and "bring to
light the policies thai caused
Ohioans to shiver last

\

.••• .
••
I

•
_,

I

'

�•
I

'

lG- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug . 25, 19'17

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted-Items Into Cash

WANT AD

CHARGES
l;;ol'••n1-.uJ Utul11
t".L.. h

1 dd~

1 ...

Jlb'~r~

""
'"'

d~\r;

' f'-dl'h ~1•rtJ ll\l'f

,,.,

:"'otict's

·~·

SOUTH ERN

l 'hd.ll!\

""

1d.ah

.!!;J
.If=!

tl1o..• lltllllU

Wll

J;;o

'tl.uHb l!t .f (t't•L) p..•1 \hHtJ IJII'I ~ Ln

'roth·
llll:'ltlt•' ·

OIJHUOtl)

,o{ Tho~nk~ tlllll

C"rd

6 L~ll~

J)l! 1\LJCt!, J.l

mmunum. L'ash 1.ll ,..~ •• aile."'

HPip \\"an led
HIGH

SCHOOl ' '50

SENIORS
coli Southern H1gh
School now CiJ4Gl 2600 to molo.e
your oppomtmenl for your
Semor p-~ctures PKtures w1ll be
roken ot the H1gh School. Sot
Aug. 27 ond Mon . Aug . ~
Make your oppo1ntment now!
Ken GrovE!r Photography , your
offlc1ol
yearbook
photographer.

',\tk rwmu~ &lt;~tht•r t•~o.•n t'lofbt'&lt;. Utl~ 1
don-s Will lJto dw.r,~a~l a' lht• I ti.LI

lu

11.1

\1•1bllt•ll\llllt' !tall·~ and Y41\1 ~k,o ..
&lt;tit• OiU't' IJIL•tJ 11111\ llll h t i~h Wl!h
IJI1k'l' 2:) l~l( ~hatt:t f o•l &lt;ttl'S l'&lt;I IT~ ·
Ulg Bo.u. ?/mul,N.:J 111 ( ' ,ill' oiTI ~t•St•tt­

50 REWARD

5

l ltl.-j

Tl k.· Publblk.•f Jo'M'I"\t•.~ lli1• I LJ.:hl'

n'I.(UI:.~·lll••ll

PhHt\t' '1')"2-.! J;~~,

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
11,.,;,dd\
1Ua~

-1PM

).m bilt,lllun

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 for
Christy .
Thank You

SUJ11 Ia '
.JPI\1 :
,rft ~

truto\IJ

.

- NOTICE OF SALEBy &gt;o~irtueof an order of sa le
cluly rs sued out of the Court of
Common P l eas, m the case of
Emmogene
Edwards

Ho lstein , vs . Mar~ Crooks
Turnbull , et a l, berng Case

No. 16,A2l, 1 am offering tor
sa le at pub lic auction at the
door of the Court House 1n
Pomeroy , Meigs County ,
Ohro, on the 17ft) daY ot

September .

1977.

at

estate ·

Parcel No 1· The following

described rea l estate srtuated
rn Sutton Townsh i p , in the
County of Me1gs and State of

LOST · YHLOW Coll1e . Cherry
R1dge-Hem lock Grove are a

Cg11995·3974.

Ohro. to-wrt · Commenc1ng at
a stake: due North 14'12 rods

from the North East corner of
a lot tour rods square sold by
Wlillam Crooks to James
Ashworth . the same be1ng a
part of 100 acre lot No . 296,
Town 2 i!lhd Range 12 1n the
Ohio t:ompany's Purchase ;
thence runnrng West 22 rods
to a stake . thence North 22
rods ; thence East 22 rods ;
thence South 22 rods to the

~~ ac'6n~~ ~e~~~~~n ~ 3rs1 ~~e~te~
Reference Deed Vol 488 .
Deed Records , Me1gs County
OhiO ,
Parcel No 2 The fol lowmg
desc ribed real estate si tuate
1n the County of Meigs , 1n the
State of Ohio . and 1n the
Township of O l1ve, and
bounded and described as
fol lows , viz Be i ng a part of
lot numbered three { Jl of the
Sub -d i VISIOn ot the Estate of
Major
Reed ,
Deceased ,
beginning at the Northeast
corner of a part of said estate
belong1ng to A W Cowdery
and in t he South l.ne of lands
of Lydia K Packard is the
mtersection of the roads
leading from Reedsville to
Forked Run and Tuppers
Pl ams . thence East W1th
South l tne of sa id Lydia K .
Pa ckard land 129 feet to a
stake, thence South 99 fl!!et to
a stake, thence West 152112
feet to the west Side of said
Forked Run and East I me of
A W Cowdery ' s land ; thence
w 1th s1t1d Cowdery 's l1ne in a
Norther ly direction 1o the
place of beginning , con
ta 1ning one foUrth 0 -4th ) of
an acre , more or less
Parcel No 3 T/'l 1e fOIIow1ng
described real estate s1tuate
m t he Township of Olive, 1n
t he County of Meigs and State
of Ohio , to -wit : 6e1ng a part
· or Lot Number three (3 } of
the Subd 1V1S10n of the Estate
of Maior Reed , Deceased,
beg inn ing at the Southwest
corner of lot deeded by sa 1d
Mar ia Hoyt to sa i d Dell
Arnott (d eed bearmg date of
Juty 15, 1900 , t hence east
vnth the South l!ne of said lot
1521/:z feet to the Southeast
corner of sa1d lot. thence
South 711/2 feet to a stake ,
thence yYest lSA feet to tl1e
West side of t he Forked Run
Road and East l 1ne of A W
Cowdery's l and , tl1ence W1th
sa 1d A W. Cowdery ll ne in a
Northerly d1rection to tl1e
place of beg1nn 1ng , con ta in i ng one -fourth ( 1-4) of an
acre more or less
Parcel No A The fOllOW lOg
real estate situated in the
Cou nty of Meigs , m the State
of 011 l o. and 1n t l1e Township
of Ol 1ve , and bou,nded and
descr1bed as fo l lows Be ing
Lot No 53 1n Me Dole and
Torrence Addit 1on to R-eeds ·
v1 11e, Me1gs County , Oh 10
Reference Deed Vol 224 ,
Page 151, Mei gs County Oeed
Records
Parcel No .1 1S appre1sed at
Sl8,300 and cannot be sold for
l ess than two thirds or
SI2.200.00 Parce l s Nos 2. 3
and J are appra 1sed at
56,000 00 and cannot be sold
tor less than two th irds or
$4,000 00
Terms of !.ale
Cash In
hand crt day of sale ,

LOST · PUPPY. 10 ,teek s old
Brown coll1e los.t tn oreo bet·
ween Un1on Ave and Rt, 7
Syposs Reword. 992·3976

-

'

LOST IN Co Rd , 35 oreo 10 mo
old Norwegian Elk Hound
block and groy Brown col lar
w1th sdver studs. Answers to
the nome of Rusty If found ,
Please colt 949-2814
or
949·2705
LOST · TWO block ond wh1te
fema le b.eogles weormp cham
collars
992 3652
SoTl Run
area

--

for
shoppina sprees

•

•

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or ro6 small.
W1ll buy 1 ptece or complete
household New used , or anti
ques Morfin s Furmfure, 20 N
2nd St. Middleport Phone

992-6370.
lATE MODEL Chevy '12 ton 4·
wheel drive p1ckup
Coli

1•.-ts for

WANTED
Wanted
to
buy
delivered to our mill
on Baily Run Rd . off
Rt.
124
between
Pomeroy &amp; Rutland.
Cut 6 ft. long w·
square ends which
measure no less than
8 in. and no more than
10 '1•" outside the
bark .
Ca II Pomeroy Forrest
Products for prices
and
delivery
instructions.

PERIENCE? FR1ENOL Y TOY PAR

liES HAS OPENINGS FOR
MANAGERS
DEMON STRATORS. SEll GUARANTEED
TOYS
GIFTS NO SERVICE
CHARGE
PHONE
CAR

NECESSARY. CAll COllECT TO
CAROl DAY (SIS) 489-8395

--- '

-c---:-c:--

BABYSITTER TO live 1n. P.O. Box
924 , Galhpoils . Oh1o

-----· "--""'-"'-'-.-~--~

NOTICE

OF
PUBLIC SALE
B1dS Will be received at the
Offices of Fultz and Knight ,
on East Second Street ,
Pomeroy Nat1onal Bank
Bu1ld 1ng , - Pom eroy, Oh10 ,
until Monday , the 29th day of
August , 1971, at 10 o'clock
AM ., tor the real estate of
Elizabeth Byer Jackson.
sitJ.Jated on the corner of
Grant Street and Broadway
Street, in the Village of
Middleport , Me1gs County ,
Ohio The re31 estate was
appraised at $2,500 00, and
cannot be sold for less tl1an
lhe appraised value .
• I will also offer for sale , at
the time _and place above
stated. the following personal
property · 1 Gold Wedding
Band. 1 Wh1te Gold Wedding
Band , 2 Wh1te Gold D iamond
Sol1ta 1re Rmgs , 1 Pearl Ring
1n Geld Sett1ng . and 1 Gold
Diamond
Solita1re
Ring
(ltamaged setf1ng l.
The
Adm i nistrator
reserves the nght to reject
any and allQ1dS , and b1dS are
sublect to approva l of court

Bernard V Fultz.
Adm 101st rator of
Estate of
EHzabeth Byer Jackson.
deceased

Coll992 2156. "
-FIVE
FAMIL V Yard Sole

out Rt 7
Bypou lo Howell Httl Cemetory
Rood Watch for signs Tues
~th1u Fr1.

YARD SALE . Thurs . and Fn ., Aug.
25 ond 26. Chrldren's cloth1ng
and m1sc orllcles. 104 '/, S. 2nd
Ave lOom todark .,.
YARD SALE 2 Y3 m1les on 143.
Baby . children and adLdt
clorl·ung Thurs and Fn . 9to 5
TVY'O FAMil V Yard Sole Thurs.,
Fri , ond So t . 9-5 453 Grant
Street M1ddleport
LARGE THREE Family Yard Solem
Tuppers Ploms across from Post
Off1ce . 9 to 5, Thurs Fn . and
Sot.
FRONT PORCH Sole Stark
Hd l.
res1dence ,
l 1ncoln
Pomeroy All week .
YARD SALE , Wed , Thurs . ond
Fr i. 12 Pork Street. Middleport .
YARD SALE , 269 N 3rd , Mid·
dleport. Clothing , guns , and
misc . 1tems Thurs., Fn , and
Sot 9 7
THREE FAMILY Yard Sole. Aug.
25. 26 and 27 at Don Walker's
res1dence on 5th Street , Roonll!'.
Ohio
lots of n1ce 1tems.
Children s cloth.ng ond mise,
arhcles Storts at 8 30
YARD SALE , Thurs on Fri 338
W1lliom Street Middleport.

(i l 17. 18, 19. 21 . 23. 25. 28.7 tc

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soctety
Animal Cor•line 992·7b80 or ·
alter 6 p m. , 992-5.427 .
A ll BREED dog groomtng J and
D. Kennels Reasonable rates
Ncr drugs used Coli for ~OP·
pointment , 742~3 162

II.

In 1950, President Harry
Truman ordered government
seizure
of
American
railroads to prevent a general
strike.
l"

FOUR FAMILY Yord Sole, Aug.
25 ·27 on New l1mo Rood . Route
1, Rutland Children's clothmg
and other m1sc 1lems.

(

.-u-

-

•lnll - . ...,......., ..... t4 .... ltUI

SWAIN
Aulomalic

Transmission Service

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEEP
REASONABLE
RATES

-----.--

SO".!~-~-nc-ii
3 AND .tl RM furnished end un ·
furn1shed opts . Phone 992 ·
5-43.&lt;1

SMITH NELSQN
MOTORS,

1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

p~

ltlc.

Now Only

. D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

m

3874 .

·--

llicld~pct&lt;t.

0.

991-5714
Complett Sales 1nd S.mct and Sup-

pltes.

- --------

(614)&amp;67 3065
HOUSE FOR Sole, 2 bedr . modern
kitchen carpeting , full bose
men! w1th off1ce , garoge '
Situated on 1 acre of lond
Good well plus lead ing Creek
water
Call 991 · 7294 or

Ail

:.:--.,....---

TWO BEDROOM op f., unfu rnish REGENCY CR -142 CB 8os~ Stot1on ,
ed South 2nd , Middleport
$85 Used very little. Wi ll trade
Close to Business Oistnct . 6
for CB Tower sections Call
rooms and a basement. (614)
9&lt;9·2202
TWO WHEEl Beorcot garden tree·
tor w1th plow and cultivator .
$70 Murray Lownmower , $25.

Coll9&lt;9-2042

TENOR SAX (Selmor POr~s) c~
plete With case. Used very little, l1ke new . v, price (304)
SALE OR Trode. 1970 Plymouth
675 5776 , dovt1me or {304 )
773 ·5405, alter 5,
Wagon. 6 cvl . std $600, or
frode lor auto wagon ol equal
value . 7-42-3074 .
0 ----------,
New Co - Op water and
softeners, model VC-SVt.
Only S.279. 95
Save ua . oo on a new
Hotpoin1 RelriSierator .
I New 20 cubic II . Chest
Freezer
S25.aa Discount
1 Good M~Cullough Cha1n

:275

GALLON

Fuel

Orl

tonk

995-3598
liVESTOCK. FEEOER p;gs. &lt;0·50
pounds . $30 per head

91!5-3588.

.

Call

Saw

S65

1 Good Used Poulan Chatn

S_aw

sso

Electric Trlm·AII cuts with
nylon
$29.95
( 1) Good Refrlgera1or $200

.

Pqmeroy landmark

1

9,. -Jilek w . caney. M9r.

Ail

Phone t92·2111

FRIDAY, 7 pm . Lots of new
mot enol and other new and us·
ed merchond1sa of Oh1o R1ver
Auct ion , Me1gs Plaza , Mid·
dleport , Ohio , Phone {304]
773 ·5471

59 ACRE FARM. 1 I miles from
new Ravenswood Bndge .
Mod ~rn home hos 3 bedrooms,
l1 v1ng room w1th wood burnmg
fireplace ond beamed ce1hng.
born, outbuild1ngs ond fenc ·
1119 $43.500 9A9-24bb

I

b

SOSAB
POAKK

KJ

I I I

MEIGS

I 1. I

EQUIPMENT

INAUMUTI

Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

"1 Oil-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young and the Restless 10; Not For Women Only
15; Documentary Showcase 33 .
1 : ~Days of our L l ves 3..4. 15; As the World Turns

Rustoleum Paint Prodt.tCtl.
ewe un shtp p1rts directly
to your door by way of

K1tchen Gabmets Roof1ng . Concrete
Pat1es Sidewalks -.New ConstJuct10n '

{Answers tomorrow)
A~D

All SORTS

OF COMM UNICA110N
SYSTEMS ·-

8-7-1 mo . .

CARTER

109 H~h Sl

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pornti'Of

Weddings
PortraiiS

30GM.. Sl
,......,,Oit~

,......,991-6112

orm-42l3
SAlES ANO SERVICE

991 5191

1-28-1 mo

mo

HOME$1TES tor sole 1 acre and
up Middleport , near Rutlond ,

Cqll992 7481
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 balMs ,
oil elec . 1 ocre. Middleport ,
close to Rut land Phone 992
7481

SMAll fa rm

-~~--~-

for sole , JO % down .
owner financed Monroe Coun·
ty W Va Phone (30.&lt;1) 772 3102 or (3o4) 772 3227.

POMEROY, 0.

3102 "'._(304)__772_:?227

TEAFORDmRJ:ALTOR

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD; SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street

Renovated

3

ALMOST NEW -

Double

bedroom

home In Middleport woth 2

WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbmg ond heating . No jOb
too Iorge or too small Phone

BUT IF ALL THIS IS

POSSI E!lE , WHY
HASN 'T THE PUBLIC
HEARD ABOUT

HARRISON~S;-c:Tc:.V-:-.c:R::-e-p o.,-;r-:5-o-rvc-;c-o

NEAR

PIANO TUNING, Lane Dan1els . 12
years of serv1ce
Phone

53

$8,000.00.
SMALL HOUSE - LOW
GAS BILL - small yard,

all minerals. $16,500.
MIDDLE PORT

Associates

991-2259

or 992-l$61

ACRES -

2 goOd

springs, several acres of
tractor land, little barn and

All

electnc 3 bedroom home

just 5 years old. Fully
insulated, and well kept up.

Fenced back yard. A good
buy at $18,500.
4 ACRES - Building or
trailer lots on old Roole 33
North.
NEW LISTING - 50x100
foot lot in Pomeroy has a 2

bedroom air conditioned
troller. Only S6,000.
WE
HAVE
GOOD
PROPERTY
FOR
SPECIAL PEOPLE.
Holen L. Tuferd
c. Bruc:t Tuferd

DOWN

Andy Williams 10; Pop Goes The Country 15; Name
That Tune 13
8:0Cl-Sanford and Son 3,&lt;,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Keane Brothers 8, 10; Washington Week In Review
...n '2'll

8:30-Chlco and the Man 3,4,15; Year at the Top 8.10;
20; Black Perspective on 1he News 33. ~

9:01l-Rockford Flies 3.4.15; NFL Football 6, 13;
Shark's Treasure" 8,10; Eyewitness 20;
DOcumentary Showcase 33.

lO:oo-Qulncy 3,4.15; N.-·•s "20; Firing Line 33.
10:30-lmage Makers 20.
·
11 :oo-News 3,4,8,10,15; Monty Python's Flying Circus
20; Black Perspective on the News 33t.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Movie "Miracles Still
Happen"

a, Movie

11

From the Earth to the Moon"

10; ABC News 33.
12:01l-News 6,13; Janakl 33.
12 :3o-Baretta 6,13.
1 QO-Midnight Special 3,4,15.
1. 30-Mary Hariman 10.
1·40-Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby
25
NORTH
• A K 62

WEST

·-

EAST

• J3

• Q95 4

.98432

. A K 10 7 54
• J 75

tJe
A lO 6 4

o1o

SOUTH

·-

¥KI076

Is

A X Y D I. B A A X R
J. ONGFELLOW

•KQ9832

Both vulnera~Je

West

One l etter s1mply st.mds for another ln this sample A i1
us_cd for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes, the length .'lnd form:~tion
the words are all
hm ts. Ead1 day the rode lctl crs arc different.

or

Sycamore, St , Ml4·

·-

• AQJ5
tQ9632

• 10 8 7

DAILY CRYJ'TOQUOTE- Here's how to work It!

Pass
Pass

North East

South

lt

Pass

1•

4¥

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead - Kt

South notices the bad trump
break. but sees that he can
come to 10 tricks with the
cross-ruff He has two tricks
m, can make his last two
trumps and dummy's three
trumps separately and 1s look·
mg a I two good spades and one
good club.
However , there is one cross·
ruff prmc1ple that South must
not overlook If you plan to
cross-ruff. take your S1de-su1t
winners first. He must cash
dummy's two spades and his
club separately
So South takes his queen of
clubs and dummy 's ace and
king of spades. Then he ruffs a
diamonds in his hand, ruffs a
club m dummy, ruffs a diamond w1th h1s last trump for
tnck eight and still has two
top trumps m dummy

('Rl'PTOQUOTES.

WILliNG TO dean land up for

chtpwood. (61 ~) 2•7-2142. · •

8A THROOMS AND k1tchens
remodeled . Cerom1c tile, plum·
bing, carpentry , ond general
maintenance
13 yrs
ex_ __eerience. 992·3685. ,

OPW

X

MAW -- CAN I HAVE A

Free

Colonial mobile home. Real
good buy, Gene Dunn, •ockspr·
ln!JI Rood, pa1t tOwmill llrtt
white troiler ocr01s the' llttle
brrdge on left.
•

ZBW

DSUSVJ

X

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

ZXWGBZ

"~RNEY

WILL DO babysitting in my home.
- .!'~onable. 742-3063.

COMPlETEly FURNISHED 10 • 50

GL

South ruffs the diamond
BT lead and if he wants to lose
this contract he can do so at
ZXWGBZL .
VJZQBZ
OXGZSL trick two All he has to do is to
lead a trump!
He shouldn ' t lead th1s
ABMZLBZ
trump The hand looks as 1f a
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: AGITATION lS THE MARSHAL- cross-ruff will be needed and
UNG OF THE CONSCIENCE OF A NATION TO MOLD ITS 1f you plan to cross-ruff you
don't play any trumps
LAWS -oROBERT PEEL
yourself
ftl 1971 Kin&amp; Ff'aiures S'&gt;~ndu:ate,lfl..:.
So, South leads h1s kmg of
clubs and chucks one of dummy's spades East wms and
makes his best return - a
Irump
ZXWGBZ

PENNZOil RUTLAND open doily
t1ll
10. Closed Mondoys.
wrec:ker servtce. tire repair .
Phone 7A2-9575 or 742-2081.

NElSON'S

3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera

6; Treasure Hunt 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;"

daughter

-~L~~2~-~~~--~r

·

20; Inner Tennis 33.

7 :30-Porter Wagoner

I Chester
Riley's

' WATER WELL drilling . Phone
William i P. Grant at 742-2879
after6p.m .

Large 5

6, Expohlo '77 15; Andy Griffith 8.
5:0Cl-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33. Emergency One! 13; Mission :
lmoosslble 15.
5·30-Family Affair 8; News 6; Electric Company
29aJ•.
6:0Cl-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6. Zoom 20.33.
6:30-NBC News3,4, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8 , 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:0Cl-Truth or Consequences J; Expohlo '77 4; Liars
Club 6; $128,000 Ques!lon 8; News 10; To Tell 'The
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel

Make 'best use of trump

XDSUGHX

land. Only S9.500.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms.

POMEROY -

L

992-2522

room house. bath. welt
water , with 23!• acres of

about 112 acre of ground, in
good
cond1t1ort,
2
bedrooms, bath , large
liv i ng, storage budding.

inflation. $5.400.00
DROP IN LET US
EXPLAIN OUR NEW
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
THEN
DECIDE
WHO
YOU
WANT TO 5ELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HE!'IRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kaltly &amp; Leona
Cleland

Colts

4

bedrooms, llf2 baths, full
basement, central heating ,
ana nice lot . Furnished or
unfurnished, you decide .

••

699-7331.

nice home
shrubbery, swimming pool,
large family room with
ftreplace.
J
lovely
bedrooms,
2
baths,
fireplace In living, full
basement and garage.

price. $17,000.00.
MOBILE HOME -

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

992-5858

Extra
surrounded by

Dlnahl 13.
A:JO-My Thee Sons 3; Ster Trek 4; Emergency One! .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Soil
ACROSS
1 Dough man
(comb. form)
6 Islamic deity 3 German canal
II Nimble
4 Old note
12 Dutch cheese 5 House of
13 F•gurat1vely.
Lancaster
the stomach
.symbol
15 Music note
{2 wds.)
16 Slum pest
6 Playing marble
17 USNA grad- 7 Spamsh
I GCIJ'T, 6UT '10U t&lt;BEW
I DJDIJ'T 11-ilf.li&lt;. ~OU MlfJDW
uate (abbr. )
Yesterday's Answer
article
TUIZf.lil.l0 ll-IG P~ 1
IS Heston f1lm
M~ Rt;ADif.l/t:&gt; 'lOUR 11 01Rl.lt::"
8 Gospel
role
33 It's in a
21 Greek
author
l.ll1TI1 'K)J •..
20 Remove
poke (2 wds.)
9 An Arab
letter
from
land
22 Kind of shot 34 Mahjongg
off1ce
piece
10 Cloakroom 24 Schedule
' 3 Takes the
1tems
. abbr.
35 Author Uris
sun
14 Mean; vlle 25 - Dinh Diem 37 Concermng
7
Answer
for 18 In the 26 Implant
(2 wds .)
&gt;
Ship's
off)
28
Come
from
(well
38
Pelt
.(
burden
&lt;
19 Rigel and
behind
39 The pro votes
!9 Cornerstone
Vega
(2 wds .)
41 Once - while
20
Family
30
Foolish;
silly
42 Helm
inscription
~~~_j ; :_~~==~~~~~=::==:_~r-'""~.,j~ oScopes
member 32 Miss Millay 's
direction
tnal
f1gure
31 IriSh poet
33 Home
Oovia, are 40U tr4inq ... and qaininq
oflhe
an
offsprinq·
?
to tell me I'm
Braves
(abbr.)
losinq a truck ... ·
36 Airman's
medal
37 Sly- fo1
40 Political
promises
14 wds .)
43 Actress
Massey
\-"""'- 44 Loosen
45 Ms.
Rowlands
and others
46 Mex1can 1;:;;--t-t----f.':
laborers

HOWERY AND MARTIN Excavating , sepllc systems.
dozer, backhoe, dump truck .
l1mestone. grovel , blacktop
povmg , Rt. 143 Phone I (61 .. )

$10,000
NEW LISTING -

ZQ.~~; Mov1e "The Feminist and the Fuzz" 10;

Jumbles· ELOPE MINUS JOCUND INVOKE
•
\ Answer· As far as they can go 1n a beauty
parlor-SKIN DEEP

~

_J'I,--,1\

MOBILE Home Repair . Elec ..
plumb1ng ond heot1ng. Phone

2 bedroom

RUTLAND -

't t.:,terday's

CARPENTER , flooring , ceiltng,
paneling. Phone 992-2759

Reasonable 3 bedroom
house, bath, 7 rooms,
natural gas forced air
furnace. Large garage and
31.&amp; acre. $19,500

bath. natural gas, city
wa1er, 2 porches and large
garden. Just S7,000 .

this 4 room frame with bath
is ideal ill this day of

m.

742-2349.

wide with 6 acres, garage
and storage bu ilding . Close
to recreation . This is lovely
property at a very low

With

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
ond lo-boys for h1re . wilt haul
' fill d1rt , to so1l , limestone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fen , day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992 3525 or
EXCAVATING , do:r:er , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot·
field , Bock Hoe Serv1ce .
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 7.tl2-2008.

Phone 992-JJ25
WALK TO STORES

home, natural gas , city
water, and 2 lots for

of ground , 2 ba1hs. 4
bedrooms, dining , porches.
income. $13,850.00

3825

5232

Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;45769

lots about 240ft frontage, 2
bedrooms , bath, natural

GOING AT $13,800 .00.
2 STORY FRAME - Lots

Sweepers , toasters, arons , ol(
small oppl1cnces . Lawn mower.
neKt to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

v1ce, oil makes. 992·2284 . Tl'le
Fobnc
Shop,
Pomerov .
Authorized Singer Soles and
ServiCe We sharpen Scissors

RUTLAND -

bedrooms, bath. carpeting,
natural gas F A . heat.
porches, concrete drive.

ElWOOO BOWERS REPAIR -

S 1.000 down . coli {304) 772- SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·

RUTLAND - 111oor plan, 4
gas. GREAT AT JUST
$12.000.00.
NICE CORNER LOT Close to shopping . 2

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com ·.
plete Serv1ce. Phone '9.&amp;9-2-487
or 9.tl9-2000. Racine . Ohib Cntt
Bradford.

REMODELING. Plumbing. heotl.ng
and all types of general repo~r.
COUNTRY farmland w1th secludWork guaranteed 20 years eJC ·
ed woods , water end good acpenence. Phone 991 2.tl09 .
cess 1n Monroe County , W Vo.

metal roof. $17.000.
VIEW OF RIVER

MAIN

BORN LOSER

JU. lo4~P.M.
~22- 1

I

"V'
b.. "Y
A_ 'rY:"
AA.Ll

U.P.S

Ph. 991·1119 0&lt; 6!16-1005
EltimltHapplied to job.
627-lmo.pd

Bob Hoofttch

New arrange the orc1ed letters to
fdnn the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by lhe above canoon.

Printanswerhere :

•custom Hydriilullc Hose
Making
Phone tf2 ·21fi
Pomeroy , 0 .

Remodeling

8.10.
2:0Cl-S20.000 Pyramid 61,13; Fesllval 33
2:3o-Doctors 3,4,15, One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:0Cl-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,1 0;
Crockett's VIctory Garden 20; Romagnoli's Table
33.
•
3: 15-General Hosoltal 6,13.
3:30-Match Game 8,10; MD. 33; Lilias, Yog_a and
You 20.
4:01l-Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4.15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gllllaan's Island 8; Sesame Street

FOUNt7 POETRY
IN 5-TEAK!

I KJ

COMPANY

baths, natural gas . Ohio
Power, city water, and

-~6_7_·~~~~
· ·--~--~---­ =:.,=::.:~ ~~ ~-

SPRING GARDEN Supplies Cob·
boge • cauliflower, broccoh,
and head lettuoe plants .
yellow, wh1te, and red on10n
sets . oman plants, Kennebec ,
cobbler. Katahdin, Red Pontiac
ond Red Losodo seed polotollts,
Bulle. garden seeds . pott1ng so1l ,
peat moss frUit trees and rose
bushes .
Midway Market
Pomeroy , Ohio, 992-2582
8ob·1 Market, Meson , W Vo ~

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

l-14-1 mo

9-. ~Jack

(pUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots . Call992-7479 .

DAVID BRICKLES

AnniYeiSaries
Special Occasions

Rll

Pomeroy Landmark

-- -

byHenrrArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one lener to each square, to form
four ord1nary words.

'1he Qricioatots
llot The IOtilalorl

Passpom

Notlil Summit R01d

OON·TPAYt'he added expe,;se of
Let us test your water
a Reoltorl Suy th1 s J bedroom ,
Free.
2 1h both b1levet from the
owner ond save! Lorge fam1ly
TWO BEDROOM troller, odults on room w1th f1reploce, eot·m ~ut
_ly: Coll992-332&lt;
chen w1th double-oven range
W . Carsey, Mgr.
TO RENT
R1vers1de Apts
and dishwasher , formal dmtng
Phone "2·2181 •
bedroom starting at $100 per
room two cor garage central
me 2 bedrooms starhng ol
01r, on acre lot. Nice dnve to
$138 per mo Equal Housmg NEW IDEA No . 310 one row Supe r.
pow~
plants and
mines
Opportumty Col1992-6098 .
$43 000 '992· 2492.
p1clc.er in excellent cond1flon
(304) &amp;75-6908.
SMALL APARTMENT. 2nd Street 1n
Middleport . Su1tcble for 1 or 2 SET OF Sm1th gauges , Torc::h ond
people. 992-5262. --c~Rosebud 742-2485
pets. Phone
dleport .

992-2206 Of 992-7&amp;30

Syrtcuse, Ohio

992 -5502.

'279.95

no
M1d·

LARRY LAVENDER

AWIIINUII

THE PHOTO PLACE

--

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and Co-op water
softener, Model UC · XVI.

Carson 3,4, 15; S.W.A. T. 6; Kojak S;

'il'Jt~'i.\hl ~'il ~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

IT "

RA:t'S USED Furmlure. Add1son
Oh 1o (614 ) 367 -0637 4 piece
breakfas t set, $39.95 : electm
range , $49.95, cook mochme . VA FHA , 30 yr fmon cmg Ireland
$35, rotQI1IIer, $45, dresser ,
Mortgage, 77 E State , Athens
S22 .50 Moytog R1nger Washer,
phone (614) 592-3051 .
$65. many rock 1n g choirs and
STORY 3 bedroom fro me
old beds , Depress1on gloss 2
house , F.A . furnpce , storm wm flower pols, Open 9 to 6 30
dows. f1reploce 1n Middleport .
10 WEEK OLD p1gs for sale
Phone 992 3457
7.42-2545
lARGE PERMA-STONE housto in
Tuppers Plains for so le by
owner 3 bedr . 2 both Phone

FUR~ISHEO APT. Adulfs only

SIDING-SOffiTT
GUTTERS-AWIIINGS

C..rpet • Upholslery
. Phone Mike YOII~I
At

in

Somelhlng Special 20

Hl5 P L ANE~

11 : 3()-Johnny

d1ese l

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

5HOULD BUILD

IM PRACTI C AL.~

l01tt3,r-.o.

WINDOWS

991·1174

dozer Mod-Yr 66 Ready forh
work Wt. 15 ton 2 mile soul
of Tuppers Plo 1ns. Oh10. Co Rd .
46
Phone (614 ) 667-3536
W111 1o_t:n Conno~ ly

COUNTRY Mob1le Home Pork. Rt.
33 , ten m1les north of Pomeroy
large lots with concrete pot1os,
Sidewalks, runners and off
~ street porlc.1ng Phone 992- ~7'}

REPLACEMENT

R01t~ 1

-STARCRAFT IOfh anniversary sole
on m1ni -motors traders, ond
folddowns TrovE!Istor 25 ft
$4400 00. 20 ft . mml· motor ONE REGISTERED mol e Redbone
coonhound , 6 mo old. (614)
$10,850 00 We sell serv 1ce and
quality . Cornp Conley Starcroft
b6~· 3621. ~- _
-·
Soles . Rt 62 north of Pt Pleo " LIGHTEST AUTOMATIC sholgun
·
mode 20go . Franchi Improved
san!
FAIR MONTHSPECIAlon- ~~
cyl 26m vented r1b ba rrel ' E~~:
stock See them of CODNER·s
cel lent grouse gun
Coli
CAMPERS on Rainbow ridge.
992-2781. ~· _ _
From Rt .7, toke Me1gs 28 or 32 USED 015 Stihl Chain Sow , 12 1nch
to Basham Open evenmgs,
blade
good
cond1t 1on
too Owner, Robert Codner,
PomE!roy Home and Auto
_ long Bottom , Oh1o
992-2094

STARCRAFT MINI Motocs , tro1lers
and fold -downs End of yeor
sole Sove $ J ,700 on 1977
tra1lers 1978 trollers in stock
Used un1ts. We sell serv1ce and
quol1tv Comp Conley Storcroft
Soles . Rt 62 , norl~ of Pt Plea·

THAT

Carpeting

Pomo..,. Oh~ 45769

Garden Center

~

RECO ~ND

McKEE INDLI5TRIE5

Young's

WINDOWS UIOORS

6· 50-Good Morning, West VIrg inia 13.
6:55-Good Morning , Tr l Stale 13.
7:01l-Today 3,&lt;,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; Ces
News 8; Chuck While. Reoorls 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
1 3o-WIIdllfe
Crisis io .
8 · oo-Howdy Doody 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
Streel n
8: 30-Big Valley 6
9:01l-Cross-Wits 3, "Phil Donahue 4. 15.13; Andy
Grlffllh 8; Schoolles 10; Zoom 33.
9:3o-A M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration 8; Porky
Pig 10; Unto the Hills 33
9:55-At the Fair '77 10.
IO :OCl-Sanford and Son 3.4.15; Dinah! 4 ; Here's Lucy
8: Mike Douglas 10.13; Solar Energy 33
10 30-Hollywood Squares 3.4.15. Price is Right 8;
Sludlo See 33
11 Oil-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15. Happy Days 6,13.
Bondstand 10; French Chef 33.
11 · 3(hll's Anybody's Guess 3.4.15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of Life 8.10; Making Things Grow 33
11 :55-CBS News 8; At lhe Fair '77 10.
12 oo-News 3.4.10; Shoot for the Stars 15, Divorce
Court B. Midday 13, Abdication 33
12 :30--Chlco and the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob

Eyewitness 33
10 .3G-From Out ot Somewhen! 10; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 20
11 Oil-News 3.4.6.8.1 0,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl 33.

1 MEAN·· l M&gt;UME
YOU' Re;' NOT GOIN(; TO

Slum EllrKlioll

STORM

0&lt;r

.....

Miller Produce
&amp;

,.~i~Ji~~~~~;;~~~
-_ guY![
=1:"
• •
'
~·

IT 5 ABOUT WLAD!iK!
I·.L HOP!i YOU WON'T
HURT HIS F!i!ii.INS5 ··
EVO'N THOUoH Hl5
AIRCRAFT DE51GN':;

Superior

Ph 9!1-lHl

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
S e r v i chllllloa.,.
e, , _ the !.r...t Trlld!
htl!.tOf" to .... -'"!.'.'

Slrickly wholesale to all.
Not less than V2 case.

H d-11

NO THAN I&lt;$ ,
THI? I~N 'T A
50CIAI. CALL~

'-H·IIIII

IIID••
Insulation Stmt•
r'""'~l-..ublt
IIID•• Into Wolh 'Altic1

10
6 . 45-Mornlng Report l .

10 00-Westslde Medlcal6; Barnaby Jones 8; News 20;

lloSo.U,C:.P-

FREE ESTIMATES

20.

9 oo-Movie " Escape From Colditz" 3,4,15; Barney
Miller 6. MaYle " Oaklahoma! " 13; Harry S
Truman : Plain Speaking 20.33.
·
9 · 3!)-Three's Company 6; P rlot "The Banana Co ." 8;
tn Conquest of lhe Sea 10.

r... Estioolla

mo

Mood~

6 : oo-Summer Semesler 10,
6 3G-News 6; Summer Semester 8; Overseas Mission

COIPLE

CAN GOQDS

AlliS-CHALMERS

• local ctntractDr
PI\OM 949-2101
. • Of 949-2160

-RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Ro.omllo.O.

cAsE LOT

1975 GRANADA. V 8 outomollc,
A .C., 2 door . 31 000 miles . ex·
cellent
condtl1on . $3 500.
992 b303

8 30-Pi lol 3,4; Country

-

FRIDAY, AUGUST26, ft77
5:45-Farm Reporl 13.
5:50-PTL Club 13.

Back. Kittoer 6,1 3; GE

~~~~at

APPALACHIAN STO VE Co • Sum
mer Sole A shle v C 6IJ Wood
PARTS FOR I'm Golox1e Ford for
Heate rs $340 complete with
sa le Phone 992-5858.
blower Th ru Sep t 12. We ore
the only outhenzed dea ler 1n
196q MALIB U 2 dr. hardtop Call
We 're 1n
M e1 gs Coun ty
992-2724.
Carpenter off 143 698 -7191
1917 FORD Four-Wheel Dri ve
P.S , P 8 ., A·speed , three·
quarter . Stilt under warranty
Coli CiJ49-2673

...,.,-'-'--~~~'

Pholle 949-2814
9 a.m. lo 5 ,.m.

of W ife .. anQ Death" 8.

l :00-Tomorrow 3,.4.
I : Jo-M.,ry Hartman 10.
'2 : ID-News 13

Thea1er 8.1 0: Jack VOan lmpe Crusade 15. Chat
With Country Music Art1st Doc W tlliams 20;
Poldark JJ

'
• CAPTAIN EASY
! CAN OFFER '/01)
SOME&lt; CANNED COLA-

Bissell Siding Co.

bu~d....

12 Ill---Hogan's. Heroes 13.

12 :•o-Peyton Place Revlslled 6.13; Movie "A Matt.,.

AUGUST 25, 1917

We l com~

8.DO-Pflot 3.4 .

tion .
Call Professionals

c.tiniiiU'I one piece pttelt. Wtlwll
il,. er 6o 11 rourwll. Spetial twitts tfll

~1~1

992-3236

WAGON . 992-3-478
197&lt; VEGA . 992-2775

f'" ttl-* II

t

110fii!' U00 llllt~•1t. P__, 0

992-7168.

1972 DATSON 240-Z. 1mmoculote ,
S__P!Cioi _E~~~~ ~604) 367 · 7~
1969 CHEVROLET NOVA no rust,
_ e~ tr~~oo~condition~9- 226~
1971
CHEVRO LET STATION·

...

.... • S&amp;l Gill Mt 7Dl4 llf

MALE CHIHUAHUA . Golden ·
Fawn tn color Also , two horses 1975 HARLEY DAVIDSON , excellent cond1tion . Gold , has e..
w1th colts . 742-2962
tros , less than 1000 m1les
AKC SPAYED Female Ins~ Setter ,
$2700 Coli (6 14 ) &amp;98 3290
~ yrs old . E,..cellent wat chdog
1973 'YAMAHA 360 MX , good con
and pet Coli 992-2781 .
d1tion 1966 VW, $75 Coli

Coli 985-3'123

"

illw

QMtM..., Ill .... , .. filii'J ....... til
,.... "ail ......
~....,

Circleville, O, io, BoK 523
AK C TOY poodle pupp1es Two
(614) 474-8732
apricot, $100 ea ch
Phone
9A9-23.tl0 before A pm •. ask tor
18 MONTH OLD Polled Hereford
Mrs. Wi thams. After 6 pm . call
Heifer . Phone 992·3904 or
9&lt;9·2571

THREE FAMILY Yard Sole of
Steversvdle, Ohio Boys, 6-14.
(304) 773-S721
g1rls 8; 12, priced 10' through -~$2.00 Free douschound pup· ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th oil at
p1-:s . Aug. 26ond 77.
ta~hments , like new . asking
$2250 Pho~".[6~698 - 3290 . _
GARAGE SALE here 11 IS again ot
Log Cabin between Keno and CANNING lOMATOES. PEPPERS
long Boltom , twp, Rd. 26 I.
cucumbers . Cleland
Forms
Come all lots of mdse
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine
Cleland.
=-=-~--,----­
TREE RIPENED orchard peaches ,
White or yellow stortmg Mon ,
_Au_9 1 ~o_s}ln Peach Or~hon~­
GIVE AWAY. Adorable Cock-e· LIKE NEW Wizard Refngerotor ,
d
Poo puppy , {5 mo. old) to o
speclol home Block With white
$150. Also, 1955 For Pickup .
$200 and Volkswogon Fastback
t1p toil . ond toes . (Female) Has
Sedan $ 150 . Cell 949.2973
hod all necessary shots and ·
. '
- ---wormed Will be given to o SEARS KENMORE Dryer ortd
mature person , who loves
Speedqueen automatic washer
ommols (th1s IS a must) . Con
Excellent
condit1on .
be seen of 367 &lt;.rani Street,
Reasonably
priced .
Coli
Middleport , Ohio._
992·5832, after 5 prn
TO GIVE away, One mole dog, 1
yr old terrier -type , black ond
wh1te. 5 mo old gray female
k1tten . 3 mote k1ttens, 5 .,,
weeks old. 742-:)162

...., pilfl, - - - lliiltp H4 IIIlA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t l , . _ . . " " ...

Wickes Buildings

19b9 CHEVROL ET CAPRICE P S ,
P 8 , A C Low m1leage $500

{11M 1t1 ,.... ._,., ., ..,... ...., 111

tNt ~ ....... iii ..., '" ,....... - . 111M
.. •rt,_l _., Tlltii!UII liM II M .......

Farm • Commercial
lndustna l • Horse Barns
Garages &amp; W orkshops

FOR SALE

---

ae• lilt

BUILDINGS

367-7112 .

~Call (304) 6?5-4829.

IF YOU hove a service to otter,
wont to buy or seil somettling,
oe looktng for work . . or
whatever
you 'll get results
faster with a Sent,ne! Wont Ad.

• ,.,.IMRM . _ t.ll~ _... IHW~

"""- " ,. ........." fiN'IIKt ....... --

~ Y,

THUR Sl

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Sidina.
Storm Windows &amp; Insula-

GUTTER
SERVICE

Kingsbury Home Sales

Movie " Assignment to Kill" 10; ABC Nows 33.
11 :40-New. ll.
12 :01l-Janakl 33.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Business Services

3290

AKC SHETLAND sh4Htp dogs .
(W11n .) Coll ies , 2 females , 7
weeks old. Shots Ol)d wormed
Phone {614 ) 367 · 0292 or

1974 FOLDOUT CAMPER , sleeps

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PlAN EX

DICKTRAGY

~alt"

RISING Sl AR Kffnnel Boordmg, COAl. hme~fonE! an~ c::aloum
chlor~do and ca lol"'' br~ne l or
Indoor Outdoor run5 groom•ng
duf-1 cont rol and sp,'&lt;IOI muCing
oil breeds dean !On1tory
soh for former \. b£elstor Soh
IOCIIifles oe367 7112. Chesht ra
W ork~ . Moln ~treef Pomerov ,
Pilon• (ol&lt;) 367·02'12
Oh•o or phone Yfi'J 3HCiJI .
HOOf HOLLOW Buy, sell. trade
Also
horseor tro10 hors•s RUTH REEVE S, CAMPER , S600
trolle-r . 5450 Pl!one (b14 ) OWl
tra1ne r, Phone (b 14) b98-3190.

992-5335.

992-5965

the Almanac
United Press1olernallooal
Today is Thursday, Aug. 25,
the 237th day of 1977 with 128
w follow .
The moon 1s moving from
its first quarter to its fuU
phase.
The morning stars are
JAMES J PROFF I TT
Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and
Sher~ff of
Me1gs County , 01110 Saturn.
The evening stars is
(8) 25. ( 9) 1, 8, 15, 4t c
Mercury.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of VU"go.
Piamst«&gt;mposer Leonard
- A thought for the day : Fifth
Bernstein
and acror Sean
American President James
Connery
were
born on Aug. 25
Monroe said, "National honor ·
is national property of the - the former in 1918, the
latter in 1930.
highest value."
On this day in history:
In 1718, the city of New
Orleans was founded.
In 1921, World War £
officially ended as the United
states signed a peace treaty
Classified Ads
with Gennany.
In 1944, American troops
brinJ you
liberated Paris m World War

extrt cash

OLD FURNITURE 1ce bo)(es . brou
beds ,
et c. ,
com plete
households Wrlfe M 0 M1ller
Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh10 or call
992-776() -:-~-:-~
CASH I!. Junk cars, Fry's TrLKk &amp;
Auro , Rutland Phone 742 -2081
or 742-9575. Closed Mondays .

PINE POSTS

10 00

o'cl ock A M , the following
descr i bed parcels of real

l

-

742-2331.

Munda•
Novn on SatiH tla'

Fr rdaj

NEED BRAKE Mechontc. Send ap
phcot1on to 8o x 729-A , c o Oo1ly
S&amp;ntinel . Pomeroy Oh10

COINS . CURRENCY, tokens , old
pocket watches and ch ams
s1lvar and gold We need 1964
and older silver cams Buy, sell
or trade ' Call Roger Wamsley

WANT-AD

~fur t

BABYSITTER IN Syracuse area for
6 yr old boy. Colt 992- 751~ between 6.30 ond 9.30.

TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce tor standing
$owtimber Coli 992-5%5 or
Kent Hanby , 1··U6·8S70.

NOTICE

lht&lt;tla\

lN 38501.

CASH paid Por all makes and
models o f mob1le ho!T1es
Phone oreo code 614-A23 9531

}l:tth~Wl thL f&gt;ub~L:~J·n 14L illwt llt•
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WEEKlY POSSI6U. worktng
w11h odvert1s1Mg (OmJxugn No
exper1ence r~u1red Send sel f
oddren.d envelope tor ap·
pl,cot10n
Cumberland
Research, 8o:w 3o6, CO:Okev1lle

Wo.oted to Buy~

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11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 25, 1977

I'VE GOT SOME GOOD
NEW5 FOR i{OU AND
SOME SAO NEWS... ·

TI-lE GOOD NEW5 15
TI-IAT -mE BRIDE AND
8E5T-MAN ARE HERE

THE BAD NEWS 15
THEY JUST RAN
OFF T06ETHER1

QUARTER TO GO TO
TH' MOVIN' PITCHERS
WI F JUGHAID?

I RECKON
50, JAMEV··
IF JUGHAID'S
GO IN'

A Maine reader sent us the
South hand shown above a11d
asked us what we bid With it in
response to partner's one·
diamond opemng.
The answer IS that we respond one heart m sp1 te of the
SIX·card club SUit We try to
avoid biddmg two of a lower
su1t w1th less than nine o: 10
hlgh'&lt;!ard points
(For 8 copy of JACOBY
MODERN. sond $1 to· "Win al

Bndge," clo thts newspaper,
P 0 . Box 489, Rodlo City Stollon,
Now York. NY. 10019)

AUNT LOWEEZY- -- CAN I
HAVE A QLIARTER TO GO TO
TH' MOVIN' PITCHERS
WIF JAMEY?

MOBILE HOME, 12 x 60, Price

$5c500. Coll992-5858.
TRAILER FOR Solo, 60 x 12. Phone
992-6()72.

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12-The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 2S, 1977

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Gala treaty signing planned
ceremomal Slgrung of the the Treaty of Neutrality to be
Panama Canal treaties, signed by all members of lhe
expected on September, with Organization of American
a glittering array of Latin States.
American leaders par The date for the ceremony
ticipating.
was unclear. While the White
The event apparently is House has not yet announced .
designed to dramatize a date, State Department
intense Latin American sources said the ceremony
NOW THRU FRIDAY
support for two treaties, would be in Washington Sept.
under which the United 7 under the auspices of the
Robert Show
States will relinquish control OAS.
Bruce Oorn In ·
of the Canal by the year 2000
A
gove r nme n 1
but maintain defense rights announcement in Bogota said
Indefinitely.
cc1tumbian President Alfonso
Carter and Gen. Oma r Lopez
Mi chelsen
had
R Torrij os, Panama ' s · accepted Carter's lnvitatioo
ALSO
governm.ent chief, .were to attend the signing
expected to sign the rruiln ceremony in Washington
Panama Canal Treaty with sometime between Sept. !5
'
and Sept. 30.
The White House wa s
focusing heavily on strategy
to win approval of the canal
treaty by the American
people and the Senate, an
uphill battle in view of strong
THE YOUTH
conser¥ative opposition .
Ellsworth
Ne gotiators
Bunker and Sol Linowitz were
briefing former California
The Racine Home Nationa l
Gov . Ronald Reagan today in
New York in an apparent
Bank believes in the youth of Meigs
effort to dissuade him from
County . That is why we supported
leading the cOnservative fight
the 4-H and F FA Livestock Sale and
against ratification.
purchase 8 animals from
Scott
Presidential
assistant
Hamilton
Jordan
is
Bearhs , Randy Wolfe , Charles
coordinating White House
Cala way, Brian Windon , Ed Rou sh ,
efforts to drum up bacltin~
Mike Roush and Me igs County
Junior
Fair Building
Fund for

By HELEN THOMAS
UPl White House Report~r
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter is planning
an extrava~anza . for the

MASON DRIVE IN

"BlACK SUNDAY"

THE DON. IS DEAD

MEIGS COUNTY

for the ll'eaty.
"It 's just the beginning,"
Jordan tal~ UPI, making it
dear that the administration
is aware it will be Iough to
win
popular
and
congressional acceptance of
the pact. " It's a tremendous
challenge to present the facts
and clear up !fliSconceptions."
On Wednesday, Bunker
said the agreement allows the
United States to use "any
means.necessary to maintam
the neutrality o( the canal."
lfe disputed
Reagan's
contention that Panama ·
might-decide wilhin a year to
say : "To hell With the treaty,
I'm national~ing the canal:"
The ambassador did not
rule out military intervention
in such a case, but said
possible need for such action
"seems to me quite remote it is in Panama's interest to
keep the canal open as a
major sourc-e of income."
Senate Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd was wooed by
the President with a private
dinner In the White House
family quarters Tuesday
night, but he said In a
statement Wednesday , "I
personally have not made a
commitment on the treaty."
He also said ratification
would be "an uphill road."

h'e's Son of Sam
By JOHN MOODY
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
man police say is David R.
Berkowitz says he is not
David R. Berkowitz.
The "Son of Sam" suspect
Wednesday
startled
a
hospital c.o urtroom by
denying that he Is David R.
Berkowitz, the name he has
freely used since his arrest
two weeks ago . .
Even Berkowitz' lawyer
appeared stunned, and he
quickly asked that his client
"stand mute" for the rest or
his · arraignment on three
murder charges in the
makeshift courtroom at the
hospital where he was ordered for .psychiatric tests.
The surprise development

came one minute afier
.Berkowitz, dressed In priSon
iss~e pajamas and bathrObe,
was led from his special
prison cell into the hospital's
sixth-floor day room and
pleaded innocent to murder
charges returned by a Bronx
County grand jury In the .44caliber killer case.
Berkowitz stood hunchshouldered, his eyes bUnking
as if just aroused from sleep,
before State Supreme Court
JustiCe Alexander Chananau.
" Are you David · R.
Berkowitz? " the judge asked.

CHAMPION HOG. owned by Brian
Windon was purchased by Tom Wolfe, on
behalf of the Racine Home National Bank
for 52 .60 a pound. L· r are. Wolfe, Windon
and Jeannie Boggs, Junior Fai r Queen.

~~~~~~~A Home
Bank
For
Meigs County

People

" No, your honor, I ain not,"
the suspect said. His face was

expressionless, his voice

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
OHIO

RACINE

without Inflection.
Defense · lawyer Mark
Heller Intervened before the
astounded justice could speak
again. He said, "Your honor,
I request that no further
questions be asked of the
defendant arid that he be
allowed to stand mute."
During the rest of the eightminute arraignment, Heller
said co-counsel Leon Stern

Great Looking
Back-to-Schoolers .
by Hush Puppies "
CASUAlS

\\/,, h(tw Hu:-i I )~IPIJI•'·'i • h¥h

1, 1 . ..,,·h{.J( 1ll't-.

I, ll'&gt;frli"lllld!'). ..;! 1 ].' (Hid...,ll•

\;tU)!lldi..·l11'i' -i

Ill(. pl_'iu l 1 1q• ._,·~~I' •I'J)li'L .l&lt;!h

Pric·~s From

"I o11qh
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replied " Not guilty " for
Berkowitz as the court clerk
read the specifics of the indictments.
In all, Berkowitz bas been
charged with six counts of
second-degree murder, nine
counts of attempted murder,
six counts of assault and eight
counts·of illegal possession of
a weapon as the .44-&lt;:aliber
killer, who stalked New
York's lovers' lanes for a
year.
His lawyers have entered
Innocent pleas on aU the
counts and say they will offer
a defense of insanity if
Berkowitz is found mentally
competent to stand trial.
" I think his statement
today may be of more
relevance to determining his
capacity to stand trial than to
a defense of insanity," Heller·
said.
The first report on
Berkowitz' mental condition
by Kings County Hospital
psychiatrists is due Aug. 30.

COLUMBUS (UPI )
Classes in the Monroeville
Local School District in
Huron County, which began
Monday, will close Friday
because
of
financial
difficulties, State Auditor
Thomas Ferguson said
Wednesday.
A financial cash analysis
requested by the school board
showed the district would
have a $120,122 deficit by the
end of the calendar year and
said ·schools would have to
close Oct . .6:
But state examiners said
paying school employes
thro4gh Oct. 6 would create
an additional
$100,820
obligation and the only way to
offset the debts would be to
halt instruction Friday.
The closing date was
certified to the State
Superintendent for Public
Instruction who has the sole
authority for
granting
permission for schools to
close.
Voters have rejected two
operating levies this year.

FO NZ V

LATROBE, Pa. (UP!) Coach Chuck Noll excused ,
two more ruilning backs from
heavy drills Wednesday becatise of minor injuries and
· said both were doubtful for
Sunday's game with the New
England Patriots.
. Rocky Bleier had . a
sprained knee and Reggie
Harrison a sore calf.

HiKEA

HARTLEY'S SH ES, INC.
MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMERQ.Y, OHIO
OP!N:
9 a.m. to s p.m. Mon . thru Thurs .
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday
Saturday 9 a.m. to Sp.m .

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lHRIFT SHOP
SUMMER

CLEARANCE
All ITEMS 5'
MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY

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Pomeroy, Ohio
t

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

1-~----------------------~~~-Final Clearance Sale!

SALE! BEDSPREADS

Men's Short Sleeve
Sport and Dress Shirts

. Quilted spreads. permanent press. 50 per
cent polyester, 50 per cenf rayon. Rome
Furnishings Department: 1st floor . Good
Selection of colors .

Solids and fancy patterns, sizes small.
medium. large and extra large. While they

I

TUG OF WAR TRAINING - This tug of war team from the Adult
Mining Class in Pomeroy of Meigs and Gallia. men is challenging all
comers to the annual tug of war on Sept. 17 when " Yesteryear" is held at
the Meigs Senior Citizens Ceriter In Pomeroy. There will be events in the
tug of war for three age groups, adults, high scbuol and junior high , in
addition to youth teams. Teams wishing to enter should call the senior

.l
'19.49
FULL
BED
SIZE
.....
~.
:
.....
'15.99
.
1
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'5.95 to :8·95 Shi~................&lt;l.OO '17.49 lWIN BED SIZE ............'14.99 ...
'9.95 to 12.95 Sh1r1s........... ... .. 4.00 1
·
'24 99 ...·•"
last.

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'1~~5 ~!~~~~:.:::.:::.:: .. :·:~~~~~~!~~-~ED .s~~· :~· .... "_:.
FINAL CLEAitANCEI

·. MEN'S
Just a few to sell from our regular stock .
Not every size in every color or pattern .

i

.... _

· - ,._.

.&amp;

WEEKEND SALE

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'

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

· ·

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$58.00.

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SALE PltiCESI .

~!Q~!d ~~~~J~cellent lI

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JEA~S

Sizes
patterns . Cotton polyester blends, all
permanent press. perfect for school year. 112

j

AND FASHION
Regular sizes. slim sizes and husky sizes 8
to 18. Plus student sizes 26 to 32 waist. .

I
price.
I
JEANS
93
BOYS 13.95 SHIRTS...........................11.98 I BOYS '8.95
.......................... '6.

BOYS 14.95 SHIRTS. ........................ 12.48 1 BOYS '9.95 JEANS ............. ~ ........... '7.83
BOYS 15.95 SHIRTS ......................... '2.98 I BOYS '10.95 JEANS ...................... :. '8.63
BOYS '6.95 SHIRTS ......................... '3.48
BOYS 112 95 JEANS
'10 13·
~~~~j!ll!.l],. :.:;.;.:.:.;..·~:.::.;,;:;.;.•;,;".;.~:;.;.;.'._3...;.9.-;8~.~--·~...-~---~--...~·---·_
... :.::::::::::_~~ :
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WOMEN'S COORDINATES
-New fall styles by Dotty Mann .
Match plaids and' solids.
-

I

-Skirts, ·jackets. slacks and long skirls.
- Sizes 8 to 20.

- Sizes small thru XXL.

SALE
$12.00 .•..•.•..•.....•..•.••..•..••.••.••. '10.79

REGULAR

REG. '3.50 .............................. SALE '3.15
REG. 15.00. ................... : ......... SALE '4.50
REG. '9.00............................. SALE '8.10
REG. '13.00 ... r .... T ................. SALE '11.70
REG. '18.00 ........... .-..... ·.......... SALE '16.20

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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'30.00 •.....•..................•.....•.....
'26.99
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,=._,=:;;;.+--··'"~~,---·-----

~-...:..............

Final Clearance

REG. $1.99

BOYS SHORT SLEEVE

SCATTER RUGS
Reversible, sizes 24x45, washable; colorful
pat.terns. Home Furnishings Department,
1st floor.

,

L

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K N i t SHIRTS

Sizes B to 20. Limited quantity, while :
,they last.

'169

1/2 ·PRICE

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Si~~G~l!l~~~n~l J~fa~a~!~ I~ Regula~~i~s~.~s~nl~s~!!~
..-~.-.-------~·-----------·--+---._._

MEN'S

Boys

''
~

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Light Weight

on

to 18.

remaining stock.

Limited quantity.

lh PRICE
l
lh PRICE ·-- .
---·-·-·----+-----I
HANES FREE
si!s~~~a~~~~~
l T·SHIRT OFFER

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Regular 5 1.2 5

Boys
9 to 15.
White with color .tops. excellent selection of
colors. Stock up on· your .back-to-school
needs now .
~
PAl R '
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Buy any. three Hanes underwear items and t
Hanes will mail you a free T shirt. Get your -~
mailing form at the men's and boys :
department, 1st floor.
.
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99

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REG.
'22.00___
..... -. ....__.._.._
·.............•.....
..,._
_.._.._..
__ SALE '19.80

~~·-4

''

'14.00 ................................... '12.59
'16 00
'14. 39 ·
'18.00 ................ :..... :.............. 116.19 :
126.Q0 ..................................... '23.39 :
0

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•

lall~!~~~nd~~~~~ES

- New
·
-Excellent selection of sizes, 2 to 4, 4 to 6x,
-and 7 to 14.

CH~~~~~:~wl~~rfs~~EAR

..

REG. '6.00 ........................ ;••••••• SALE '5.39

REG. ss.oo ............................ SALE '7.19
REG. '9.00. ...................... ;.... SALE '8.09
REG. '10.00 .......................... SALE '8.99
REG. '16.00 .................... _
...... SALE 114.39
REG. S2Q.OO••••••••••••••••••••••••••.SALE '17.99

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-'-Flannel and cotton.
-Qui11ed robes . .
-Sizes 9 months to 24 month·s , 2 to 4, 4 to 6x.
and 7 to 14.

REG.$ 4.00 .............. ·......... SALE$ 3.59
REG. S 4.50....................... SALES 3.99
REG.$ 6.0o .................... ... SALE $ 5.39
REG. s 8.75 ....................... SALE S 7.19
REG. $10.0(). ...................... SALES 8.99
REG. S12.80 ••••••••••••••••••·••••. sALES10.1f

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9a30 A.M. T0-5 P.M.

........_Eiberfelds In

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Pomeroy-.,'·'· .....,·~
~

By United Press International
WASIITNGTON - FEDERAL INVESTIGATORS have
discovered New York City officials misled the public for years
about the city's true financial condition, UPI has learned .
Sources near the investigation said the city's financial records
were based on two systems of accounting -an accrual basis
for income and a cash basis for eJqJenS.s. The mixed system
misled the (lllblic about the true size of the city's debt.
The cost of city employes, welfare and other operating
expenses were calculated on a cash from pocket basis. But the
city calculated income on the basis of hoped-for tax collections
and revenue from the state and fooeral governments, the
sources said. The cily covered up its growing debt by everrising income expectations, and city officials issued annual
budgets and made quarterly revisions without informing the
public that revenue fell below expectations, the sources said.
NEW YORK - FORMER CAUFORNIA Gov. Ronald
Reagan has rejected President Carter's proposed Panama
Canaltreaty;saying it "could threaten our security and that of
the entire Western Hemisphere.''
·
Reagan !Qid several hundred cheering people at the Young
Americans for Freedom convention Thursday 'night at the
Statler Hilton Hotel; " I do not believe we should ratify this
treaty." The young conservatives jumped to their feet and

PIea rna
· de

:hd~;;;~o;;~::;.~~~~~~:.~c~p~~g~a~te;:: 'Innocent! '
·

...,.,

t•l~&lt;}

Tuesday is
first day for
Meigs Local

increased more than $1 billion in the past fiscal year despite a
Meigs County Cllmmon Pleas Judge John C. Bacon today
sfualler GI bill caseload , Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., said
accepted
a plea of not guilty of aggravated murder from Freda
today.
Schools of the Meigs
Middleswarth,
age 40, Rt. 1, Rutland, · and set her bond at
Proxmire, chairinan of the Senate subcommittee on VA
Local
School District are
appropriations, said in a statement that "despite a substantial $50,000, down by half that set in county court.
Then in subsequent rulings from the bench, following scheduled to open for the
decrease in the Gl bill caseload since fiscal year 1976
new school year next
identified overpayments in the Veterans Administration 's requests by the defendant's counsel, Atty. Bernard Fultz, Tuesday with teachers· to
education assistance program have increased by nearly $1.1 Judge Bacon reduced bond first to $40,000, then later to $30,000. meet on Monday.
Her bond had been-set at the time of her arrest by County
billion since January, !976, to a total of $2.6 billion." He said it
Hours of the several
Court
Judge Robert Buck at $100,000.
appears the overpayment problem is too big for the VA to cope
schools
of the district will
Judge Bacon reduced the bond to $ii0,000 but Fultz again ·
with.
be
Bradbury,
8 to 2:30;
"To date ," he said, "the VA'sonly success of note has been asked that it be reduced to a lesser amount, pointing out that Harrisonvllle, 8:15 to 3:30;
to identify another $1.1 billion in overpayments in addition to bond is set to assure the defendant's appearance in court at -the Middleport Elementary,
the $1.4 billion identified by the General Accounting Office ." . time of the tr"ial.
8:30 to 3:30; Pomeroy
Judge Bacon reduced the C. Middleswarth, liS.
William Clayton Mid- Elementary, 8:30 to 2:45;
LONDON- "THE MOST CHAOTIC HOUDAY weekend bond to $40,000 and set trial
dleswarth died shortly after Rutland, 8:30 to 3:30;
in the history of night" today confronted millions of European date on Oct. 25.
Court was recessed and his arrival at the Veterans Salem Center, 8:20 to 3:30;
ll'avelers faced with a strike by British air traffic control
when it resumed Judge Hospital in Cincinnati on July Salisbury, 8:30 to 3:29;
assistants and a slowdown by French air conll'ollers.
Meigs Junior High, 8:%0 to
The four-day strike by the 800 British assistants alone Bacon again reduced bond 4.
3:10,
and Meigs High
Request for an autopsy was
promised to disrupt travel foc I million passengers flying this ttme to $30,000. The
School,
8:30 to 3:15.
(Continued on page 10)
tbrough British air space, a major corridor to Europe, defendant must pay 10 per:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~::::: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~:::::::::::::
Officials asked (oreign airlines to cut their flights by 40 per cent of the $30,000, or $3,000,
cent. In France, the National Air ControllerS' Union called to be released from jail.
John Wayne Fleming who
their own Slowdown to press wage and other demands. The
controllers intend to handle-· 12 planes per hour during the was arrested at the same
time and al!ip charged with
action Instead of the usual 18.
aggravated murder , was
THEDEATHOFELVIS
LOS ANGELES - GROUCHO MARX left· most of his without counsel at his
arraignment.
His
case
was
It
is
a
tragic
part of life when we must face the
multimillion dollar estate to his three children, with $150.000
continued
until
Tuesday
at
10·
reality that one d_ay this life we have must cease. This
and a lifetime job as curator of his. comic legacy for Erin
tragedy is even greater when d~ath comes to a person
Fleming- three times as much as he left to brother Zeppo, the a.m.
The pair are charged with
at an early age, such as has recently occurred at the
(Continued on page 10)
aggravated murder in the , death of Elvis Presley. Such events testify to the fact
Fourth of July, 1977 death by
that we are all mortal, that we too must one day "give
arsenic- poisoning of Wllliam
up the ghost."
'11\ere is a greater tragedy which occurs day after
day . Sadly, this tragedy goes by unmourned. People In
all walks of ltfe daily meet their day of death without -·
ever knowing Jesus Christ as their Lord and Saviour.
The truth is that there is no life without Christ. The
truth is that with Him their is no death.
Many people live a sad and lonely existence - a
By JIM ANDERSON
for East Asian affairs,
living death - because they refuse to accept the reality
TOKYO (UPI ) -Secretary Richard Holbrooke, flew to
that Jesus is Lord. If the accounts of Elvis Presley
of State Cyrus Vance Taiwan and to ln~orm the
are true, they pai.l'lt a picture of a man who had
alive
rea'ssured Japanese officials Nationalist Chinese Prennier
gained everything in the world except a reason for
today that the new American leaders about the Peking
EAST MEIGS.- A five mill
.living: I truly wonder !;ow many persons, rich and
contacts with China will not meeting. He was also going to new operating levy in the
poor, walk this.earth day after day never knowing any
·affect stability in Korea or Seoul to brief South Korean Eastern Local School Dislrict
purpose or reason In their life. .
.
Japan:
leaders.
lost ~ 58 votes in .a special
Jesus tells us that He eame so that we could have
Vance, fresh from four
American officials have in- eli'Ciion Thursday.
life, and that in abundance. The life he offers is one
days of ·talks with ~ew ·formed Fukuda that no
The closeness was a conwhich has great meaning and purpose, The person who
Chinese leadership, met agreement was reached on trast to Aug. 16 when a levy in
participates in this life will never be bored, and
Japanese Prime Minister the method of setting up the Southern Local District
certainly will never stagnate. Rather, his life will grow
Takeo Fukuda and Foreign diplomatic 'relations between was defeated by about a four
and flourish. .
.
Minister Jichiro · Hat.Oyama, Peking and Washington, and to one vote.
your own life. Is it happy or
Consider if you
before heading back to ·.that the United States
There were 1,104 voters
sad? Are you joyous or j:JSt pretending to be? Do you
Washington to report to , believes
that
the going to the polls in the
have divine purpose in your life? Jesus offers you the
President Carte,.
normalization will benefit Eastern District yesterday
water of life, abWJdant life. Drink from this water and
After the ociglnal shock other Asian nations by with 523 voters favoring the ,
you shall neyer thirst. Death of the spirit will be no
a-eated by the surprise of the recognizing a reality that has levy and 581 voting against it.
more.
original U .S.-Chinese existed for some time.
Here's the vote by precinct
In closing I wish to leave you .with this thought:
U.S. officials believe in- (for and against):
contacts, the Americans have
Do mourn for the death of one such as Elvis, but
madeitq practice to report to creased contacts between the
North Chester, 124-llii.
even more, mourn for those who walk day by day in the
their Asian allies 8fter United States · and the
South Chester, 98-116 .
living death of not knowinR Jesus Christ as J.prd. meetings with the Peking People's Republic of China
Lebanon, 1-H.
Rev
. Timothy J. Smith, Racine Circuit of U.M . Church,
leaders.
can only be helpful to the U.S.
Olive, 107-107.
Box 338, Racine, Ohio.
As Vance spoke with Japa- allies in the Pacific area.
Reedsville, 87-54.
ne110 o~clals, his assiStant
Orange 106-175.

the Sermonette

Japan, Korea 'no
reason. to worry

Levy loses
in Eastern
district

will

REG. $15.00, .................. ; ... SALE $13.49 ::
~-~~----~~-~~---~--------~-"------~~~~~~~------~~~~~~~~~~~

OPEN SATURDAY

The Meigs Local Board of education have also bee.n in expense in order for us to
Education today held to its violation of our agreement negotiate on an equal basis
previous salary offer in a but we can now answer some with a professional outside
statement
on
current of them . We are well in- negotiator from the Ohio
negotiations with the Meigs formed, contrary to what Education Assn. Reliance of
Local Teachers' Assn. The may he heard.
MLTA on
professional
statement:
" Charles Dowler and negotiators
keeps our
Whalen,
''As you know, the report of Dennis
our problems from being handled
the impasse panel has been representatives, have never locally and costs our taxissued and the Meigs Local acted without full knowledge payers the extra money to
Teachers Assn. has voted to of this board and we fully protect the district.
support them. We are con"As to the report of the
ratify it in its entirety.
"The buard of education is cerned about our children in impasse panel findings, on
2ii
the
board
disappointed that MLTA has this district and we are Aug .
taken this action without espe_c1ally alarmed about · unanimou.sly agreed to ratify
giving neKotiatlng teains the makmg ends meet. We ar~ th[!l report with the exception
five days agreed to in our
concerned
ai&gt;Qut
attacks by
on ofchangeinindexandsalary
school
authority
" We do stand on our last..
(!Urrent negotiations contract local
to consider the report and o ut side professIon a I offer of $8,800 base salary on
negotiators.
I. 7 index and $10 000 term life
resolve any differences.
1
''!!e ar~ crit.icized for insurance policy:
"This leaves the lloard but
"This represents a $400
with one alternative, to sayong nothmg while w~~ry to
our negot1a1ton Increase on the base and $680
repo:-1. our position · to the honor
emp loy es , taxpayers, and a~r~~ment . We are also at the top, a considerable
patrons of this school district . cnt1c1zed for spendmg money movement and is a sincere
" Recent public charges for a school labor negotiator. attempt to 'give our employes
against the board of We feel thts IS a necessary · a fair raise .
"The difference between
the board's offer and the
;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
·

..'

· BOYS'. BLUE DENIM

.I

- Large selection of short gowns and robes.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 26. 1977

er

0

•
•

ONLY

_.._._.,_,-~----·-

oar

-~

PANTSUITS

-Misses and half sizes.

WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR

POMERbY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

~

Virginia 's 65,000 working
miners remained on strike
Thursday, an increase of
more than 3,000 over
Wednesday. In the eastern
Kentucky coalflelda, 10,000

miners were idle.
The Charleston Gazette reported today that United
Mine Workers . President
Arnold Miller accused cecil
Roberts, vice president of
District 17, the largest in the
union, of fomenting the
strike .
"He's right in the middle of
(Continued on page 10)

Fuzzbusters defended

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.•••

-Large rack of summer styles.

$25995

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

NO. 94

By ANDREW GALLAGHER to "observe that civil rights
CHARLESTON , W. Va . are protected In the area of
(UP! ) - The U.S. Justice Interstate travel across state
Department has sent an lines with the potential of ill
undisclosed number of FBI purpose."
agents to the West Virginia
Roving pickets, some of
coalfields to investigate the them said to be (rom
possibility of violations of a Kentucky, have hindered
fed era I statute prohibiting efforts to halt the nine-week!he crossing of state lines to · old
,.ildcat
strike
· incite a riot, according to
sparked
by
cutbacks
Gov. Jay Rockefelter.
in union health beneRockefeller said FBI fits. A Rockefeller aide
agents were being dispatched said the FBI Investigation
would bestrictly limited to
. the riot question.
An estimated 21,700 of West

•

SYSTEM SPECIAL
Channel Master component system with
AM, FM, FM Stereo radio, 8 track tape
player and recorder, 3 speed record
changer and 2 speakers. Walnut finish

~------. -

"VOL XXVIII

:

COMPONENT

REG. '274.90

..••

'8''
-·- --·-w-oM._E_N;s-·-D-R--Es_s_E_s--- ~

••

stereSPEaAL

••••

.BLUE JEANS

Waist sizes 28 to 42 lengths. JO to 36 inches.
Pre- ~ashed blue denim. Our Mr. Leggs
qualoty , flare leg or straight leg style. ·

s49.95 SPORT COATS ...............'16.00
'41.95 SPORT COATS .............. '10.00
~-----------Musi.c Department

$11.95

at

4

MEN'S AND YOUNG
MEN'S SPORT COATS

citizens centet, 992-7686. The adult team will receive a large trophy and
individUal trophies for each tugger. Other winning teams willalsi&gt; receive
prizes. Making up the mine maintenance team from the left are Chuck
Fowler, John Moore, Junior Engle, Jim Rake, Wayne Green , Robert
McClaskey, Bruce Hively, Denver Bush, Pam Factor, Ike Hively and
Dave Carsey.

•

•

••
••

WEEKEND SALI'I

-Nylon and permanent press.

Oasses will
close at once

FBI watching
mine pickets

•

BACK TO SCHOOL
WEEKEND SPECIALS

I

Suspect denies

:t

e

panel report is considerable..
To accept the panel report
. would cost $86,000 above our
last offer. We cannot and will
not accept this. We fully
expect responsible acceptance of this offer by our
employes.
"It Is fair and · it is aU we
can do at this time."

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UP!) - The inventor of the
a device which detects police radar,
satd Thursday there are several ways to misuse police
radar so it will renect incorrect speeds and lead to
fraudulent speeding charges .
. Dale Smith, founder of Electrolert, Inc., of Troy,
Ohw, also said a legal ban on his invention would
probably be unconstitutional.
He showed that radar units can be locked into a
certain reading, and also demonstrated how an officer.
can whistle into the microphone a! a citizens band
radio~ causing the r~dar unit to register excessive
speeds.
State Rep. Dale Locker, [).Anna, has inll'oduced a
bill to outlaw "Fuzzbusters", which warn a driver if he
is approaching a radar speed trap.
Smith said other states considering similar
legislation learned from the Federal Communications
Conunission that such laws would be struck down in
federal court. They are the "stuff of totalitarianisrri,"
he satd.
"~zzbuster",

Local school boards
hold voter··s' m·terest

.

Races are . forthcoming m
the November election for all
three local school boards,
following the filing deadline
p.m.
Thursday
There will be no races for
the Meigs County Board of
Education w,ith four candidates filing for the four
posts on that board to be fllled
· this year.
This fall three full term
II)embers are to he named
and one unexpired term
·candidate wlll be elected on
the Meigs County Board of
Education. The full term
candidates are George A.
Perry, Harold Lohse, and
Burdette,
inRobert

an

cumbents, and Oris Smith is
the unexpired term can·
didate. All are incumbents.
In the Eastern Local School
District there are to he two
full term members elected
and one unexpired term
member. There are five
candidates for the full term
posts. .They are Ross Cleland,
Robert G. · Davis, Dorsel
Larkins,- Deryl E. Well and ·
Harold Norton. Four can~
didates for the one unexpired
term are Clifford Longenette,
Max A. Eichinger, Thomas
E. Mankin II and Jimmy C. ·
Caldwell. Davis, Larkins and
Longenette are incumbents.
In the Southern Local

District there are three lull
terms and one unexpired
term to be filled this fall.
Candidates for the three full
terms are Charles F. Pyles,
Shirley Johnson, Betty
Wagner, Roger E . Brauer,
and Janet Sue Grueser. The
single candidate for the
unexpired term is Gene Yost.
Meigs Local School District
voters will elect two full term
board members for which
there are five candidates,
Rita Maust, · Joe N. Sayre,
Wendell Hoover, Jr., Carol F.
Pierce and Ronald E. Vance.
Sayre and Hoover are incumbenta.

Surgery may stop Johnson
By . JAMF.'l L. OVERTON
declined to give any details of about two and one-half
HOUSTON (UPI) - FBI the surgery preformed by Dr. hours," · said
Justice
director-designate Frank M. Michael E. DeBakey but said Department spokesman
Johnson Jr. today underwent a report would be ·made Robert Havel.
surgery to correct an "following surgery.
"Any medical evaluation
abdominal aneurysm - a · "Judge Johnson went into will have to he made by Dr.
ballooning of a blood vessel in surgery about 9 o'clock DeBakey," said Methodist
his stomach.
(COT). It's expected to take
(Continued on page 10)
Johnson issued a statement
saying he would withdraw as
a candidate !Of FBI director
if · health problems ~
dictated.
Senator Oakley CaJUns has notified the Meigs
"If any delay that is
Countlans for Wildlife Conservation organhation that he
occasioned by my illness
· will attend its special meeting oext Monday In the coon .
opera~s to the prejudice of
hunters' clubhouse at the county fairgrounds siartlng at
the governmeni, particularly
7:30p.m.
the FBI, then I request the
All sportsmen, farmers, and other Interested persons
President secure someone
are Invited to learn more about tbls new organization.
else for the directorship," the
Discussion will center on the anti-trapping issue that will
statement said.
appear on tbe November ballot. Senator Collins will state
Officials of Methodist
his position on the Issue,
Hospital and a spokeSlnan for
the Justice Department

Sen. Collins to take stand

Plans for signing proceed
By HELEN THOMAS
public -Thursday Carter's few smiles around the White
re(!IY to a letter from a group House Thursday.
,
UPI While House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UPI) of Senators leading the fight
Powell, who has become
President Carter's mail is against the treaties. The Lance's public defender, said
running heavily against the Senators, including Strom Carter has "no information"
Panama Canal treaty as the Thurmond, R-S.C.; Jesse which would have caused him
White House goes ahead with Helms, R-N.C.; Harry Byrd, to reject Lance as head of the
arrangements for a formal I-Va., and John McClellan,[). Office of Management and
·signing of the controversial Ark ., forwarded to Carter a Budget last winter .
agreement.
letter of Opposition signed by .· "!don't ~riow of any reason
Press Secretary Jody four former. chiefs .of naval to believe the matter would
PoweU said the ceremony operations, including Adm. have
been
handled
will be held in Washington · Thomas Moorer.
· differently.," Powell said,
around Sept. 7. Other aides · . "My goals are the same when asked if Carter wishes
5aid it may be a day or two to preserve unfettered access he had waited for "fuller
later.
tothecanalforournavaland information"
before
"The mail and phone calls merchant fleets," Carter re- announcing the
Lance
are heavily against us," said plied. "But I l.oelieve the appointment.
Powell. "It's pretty heavy." prospects for attaining those
Powell indicated he did not
While the opposition forces objectives are poor if we expect the Lance matter to go
appeared to be picking up simply insist on maintaining away. He said Carter and
steam, Carter has been on the the status quo."
Lance discussed "routine"
telephone with a number of
With the continuing high affairs at lunch but "I would
members of
Congress visibility of press stories certainly he surprised if the
whatever
seeking support for the two concerning budget director subject
treaties which would yield Bert
Lance's
banking euphemism I can find to use
. U.S. sovereignty of the canal activities,
and
tough here- did not c&lt;me up. The
to Panama by 2000, but retain decisions pending in a late unplesantness, late and
defense rights Indefinitely. number of areas, there were future ."
The White House made

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