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1-Tbe Oail)' Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 29,1977

State fair drew
2.6 million

--- ~~;;;;;;..,-,-;,::;,:~.-ney ;;.ld"be--:
leu tlulll 30t woniiiOIIJ (DI" be nbjed to redadl011 by
the editor) alld miMI be 1lped wllb tile olpee's addreu. Name~ may be wltbbdd 11po11 pabllaolloa.
However, on request, IWilel will be cllaeloHd. Ldten
ohould be In good taste, addreulag luuea, IIOI per-

Hospital News

1

~--------------------------(

l

Area Deaths . !

I VETERANS MEMORIAL
.
I
I Saturday Admissions I Rebecca Ward, Pomeroy;
a son, was unintentionally
DONA YON W. BLAKE
Donavan W. Blak&amp;, 80, a omitted from the Beulah F.
Anna Hartenbach, Miner'
Daniels obituary In Sunday's
sville;
Neva Grimm, retired Rt . 2, Crown City, Times.Sentinel.
sonallllea.
1
S&amp;rvlcn for
farmer,
died
at
2:
30
a
.
m.
! Pomeroy; Mary Hackney, Sunday In the Pike COunty
/Ws. Daniels are slahld for 1
1 Racine; Teresa Riffle, Hospital In Waverly . He had p . m. Tuesday af the Waugh·
Ida Marie Sullivan to BIUy
OOLUMBUS (UPI) -In 12 the Miss Ohio State Fair title
1 Minersville; William been In falling health for five Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with
Rev.
Alfred
Holley
ot
H.
Sullivan,
parcels,
years . He was born Nov. 26,
days, the longest Ohio State Saturday in the Queen of
1 Williams, Racine.
·
Burial
will
~
In
flclaflng
.
1896
In
Ohio
Twp_,
son
of
the
Fair in hist"'7 with features Queen Pageant in a field or 31
I
Saturday Discharges - late Alfonso and Elltabeth Good Hope Cemetery . SIIUsbuey.
Wendelyn Sue Wooten to
like the Ringling Bros. and queens. She was crowned by
I Jeffrey Stone, Jesse Swan, Pollock Blake.
VlsltatiM will be held at the
Daan
R. Wooten, ' divorce
funeral
home
from
.4
to
9
p.
m.
Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus and Holly Sttefanyk, the 1976
I Floyd Bush. Leona Henaley,
He was preceded In -th
today
.
by
two
brothers
and
was
the
decree,
Salem.
Bob Hope, attracted just over State Fair Queen, in
, Roger Klein, Kethel Hatfield.
last
of
his
fam11y
.
Survivors
Henry
E. Bahr, Eileen
grandstand ceremonies.
2.6 million visiU!rs.
Sunday Admissions - Tina Include several cousins.
Status of drive explained
lEE
BEll
Bahr
to
Greenup
Miss Gilbert, daughter or
SUnday, the last day of the
Pierce, Syracuse, Anna
In hi s earlier years, Mr.
Lee Bell. 88. Coal Grove,
Reclamation
Service,
1.48
fair, officials said 201,000 Mrs. Maxine Gilbert, is in- Dear Sir :
Hawk, Albany ; Jo . Ann Blake attended the Swan died Saturday evening In the
Creek
and
Mt.
Zion
Churches.
volved
with
varsity
The American Federation or State, County MD Municipal Wears, Pomeroy; MOdred
pe~le passed through tbe
Lawrence Countv Gef'leral acre, Chester.
cheerleading and girls' track, Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO and the employees of Holzer Hart, Racine ; Michael He was a past mas1er of the Hospital ending an e~tended
Henry E. Bahr, EUeen
turnstiles.
Crown City Masonic Lodge
·
Bahr
to Howard Neal Bahr,
In 1976, an 11-day mixed churus and Future Medical Center began an organizing drive Ill obtain union Priddy . Rutland; Lui a and member of Lafayette illness.
A native of Lawrence
exposition drew 2.3 million Homemakers of America.
recognition in September ~f 1976.
Phillips, Pomeroy; Fred Post 27rAmerlca,n Legion , t-lls County, he was a retired Kimberly Lynn Bahr, 10
The runnersup . in order
AFSCME signed the majority of employees on linion .Cunningham. East Liver- ,father donated land · and palnfer. Survivors Include his acrea, Chester:
viewers. Officials had h~ed
bulld .the Mt. Zion wife, Mabel; four sons, Frank
Freda Middleswart, aftoo; .as many as 2.75 million were.Terri Mason, Miss Ohio authorization cards and requested that Hl!lzer Medical Center pool; Doris Haynes, helped
Church
.
Arthur Bell. Gallipolis; fidavit, Lebanon.
th1s year.
•
Holstein; Marci Haulk, Miss recognize the "union. Holzer ref)ISed.
•
·
•
Pomeroy ; Robert Moore,
Funeral services will be Clarence, As~land,
Ohio
County
and
Independent
AFSCME
petitioned
the
National
Labor
Relations
B&lt;iard
George
E.
Bowers,
Willa
Syracuse
;
Lee
Shepherd,
held at 11 a. m. Wednesday Howard, Ironton, and Ear of
Higher tiCket charges, a 10
from the Waugh .Halley-Wood Beckley , W, Va .; three Bowers to George E. Booth,
per cent boost in the Fair; Marijo DeRamo, Miss (NLRB) f&lt;r an election to determine if the employees wanted Cleveland.
Home with Rev . daughters , Eloise Spain , Dorothy H. Booth, parcels, •
Sunday Discharges - Mina Funeral
concession rentals, new Junior Achievement; and AFSCME to represent htem. Holzer challenged the petitien.
Alfred
Holley
offlclatln? .
,
Ky .:
Betty
Hearings were scheduled in Gallipolis by the NLRB to Hart, Daisy Taylor, Martha Burial will follow. 1n Ashland
parking tickets and service Rebecca Lynn White, Miss
Hamrick, San Rosa, Calif ., Scipio.
determine the scope of the bargaining unit on February 22, 23, Bailey.
Ridgelawn Cemetery In and Carol Bryant, Ironton.
charges on passes boosted the Ohio State VICA.
Huntington . Frl~ds may call
March
15,16andconcluded
en
March
29,
1977.
Funeral services will be
1977 income.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
at
the funeral home from 6 to held at 1 p.m. Wednesday
As
the
campaign
heated
and
the
date
for
an
election
Holzer Medical Center
While fair officials wonder
Meigs Athletic Boosters
9 p. m. Tuesday. Masonic from Phillips F"neral Home
approached, the union received reports from the organizing
il they &amp;re in the red ink
(Discharges, Aug. %61
services will be held by with Rev , JenninSJs Deeds will meet at the high school,
committee
and from the employees, which led the union to
AT
65,
NOT
68
Nancy Angles, Evalene Crown City ·Lodge at 7:30 p. and Rev. Clarence Corn of- 7:30 Tuesday.
again, coocessionaires "say
WASHll'IGTON (UPI ) believe there was a basis for filing unfair labor charges Corbin, Kathy Cremeans, m. Tuesday .
ficiating . Burial will follow In
they are making money and
Zoar Cemetery . VIs itation
HEW
Secretary
Joseph
against
Holzer.
.
beving the best-&lt;!ver sales,"
Elaine Cruise, Gloria Davies,
will
be held at the funeral
ASK TOWED
The
union
rued
the
uofair
labor
charges
with
the
NLRB,
an
Califano
disagrees
with
FRED J. HILl
Fair Manager John Evans
Sylvia Day, Wretha Finley,
home
from 6 to 10 p.m.
A
marriage
license was
Commerce
Secretary
Juanita
agency
with
the
.
function
or
protecting
impartial
federal
ALBANY - Fred J . Hill, Tuesday. ·
Goldie
Fraley,
Brian
said Saturday.
1
issued
to
Basil
Lawrence
114.
of
Albanr·
tormerly
of
employees'
rights
Kreps'
proposal
last
month
to
Ill
engage
or
not
to
engsge
in
activities
Bonny Gilbert, a 16-yearFrederick, Curtis Fauks, Jackson Coun y. '/'1. Va .: died
Haynes,
~.
Pomeroy,
and
RALPH
CARMEN
concerning
their
withhold
full
Social
Security
w&lt;rking
conditions,
including
the
right
of
old Greenville girl wbo was
Samuel Gibbs, Jr., RandaU Thursday afternoon In
Ralph
R.
Carmen,
77,
of
Doris
Jean
Haynes,
44,
the Miss Chick Queen, wen benefits until recipients employees to vote for or against having a union represent Green, Jeffrey Halley, Ed- Veterans Memorial Hospital, Minersville, died Sunday at
reach age 68.
them.
ward Hayes, Barbsra Hill, Pomeroy. A veteran of World O'Bieness Hospital in Athens . Pomeroy.
The NLRB issued a complaint againat Holzer on two union Kevin Humphreys, Kate War I. he was a refired Born Dec. 11, 1899, he was the
"I absolutely don't agree
farmer.a son of the I ale John son of the late Jacob and RE11JRNS FAVOR
with that," said Califano in
charges. Holzer then filed a charge against the union and the Knotts, Sharon Lewis, N.
MASON DR. IN
and Lusetta Ward Hill. His
WASHINGTON (UPII
NLRB issued a complaint against the union. Hearings have Eleanore Markley, Edna wlfe:"--tena Sayre Hill , Florence Davis Carmen. He
an interview scheduled for
Now Thru Tuesday
is survived by a sister , President Carter's mother,
radio broadcast Sept. 26. A been scheduled in all three of these charges. An additional Menshouse, Ruth Northup, precedetl him In death .
Blanche Saum.
·
Sur-viving are three sons,
uMiss Lillian.'' will reCeive
"THE OTHER
transcript of the interview · charge filed by the union has been appealed by the union to tbe Lawrence Pistore, Marta
Grave side services will be
Hill, Baden, Pa. : Ar· Tuesday at 1 p .m . at Miners - the vice president of
SIDE OF THE
was distributed this weekend NLRB in Washington D. C. The union .will carry the charges Prose, Madeline Rees, John
nold , Aliquippa, Pa.: and ville Hill Cemetery. Ewing Bangladesh as a visitor at her ;
through and will defend against the charges made by Holzer. Forrest Roach, Marion Harold,
by the American Association
MOUNTAIN"
Albany :
four Funer·a l Home ls In charge of
borne in Plains, Ga., today. •
The employees or Holzer have asked AFSCME to represent Roberts, Martha Rose, Leslie daughters . Mrs . Isabelle arrangements.
of Retired Persons.
Also ·
There will be
Campbell,
AliqUippa
:
/Ws.
The - visit apparently ::
them
and
theunien
fully
intends
to
provide
that
representation
"We should not break our
Henry Fonda
Rowland, Peggy Rucker, Hazel Larrick, Baden ; Mrs. no calling hours.
stemmed
from Mrs. Carter's
promise to the American
and to WCI"k toward recognition or the union.
Betty Saltsman , Charles Cecelia Freshour , Sandyville,
Teren&lt;:e Hill
MRS.
ALMA
HOUCK
work
as
a Peace Corps
AFSCME is the largest .union in the nation representing Shirley Sr., Kimberly Slone, and Mrs. Alvene Chapman,
workers that · they will be
in.
Mrs
.
Alma
!Arthurs)
volunteer
in
India in the late
private hospital employees and tbe largest public employee Betty Smith, Goldie Swick, Reedy: a brother. Mark Hill, Houck, 56, w_lfe of former
permitted to retire at 65 if
_ "MY NAME
they so choose under- the
union in the nation, with over 750,1100 members. The District 78 Deborah "Taylor, Glenda Ripley, W. Va .; two sisters, Gallla County resident. 19110&amp;, a Bangladesh Embassy '
M.rs. Verna Staats. Akron and
IS NOBODY"
servicing council fCI" eastern and southeastern Ohio is tbe Townsend.
current-system;"-be-said.
Raymond E. Houck lson of spokesman said.
Mrs . Lou
Arrowsmith , Jasper Houck. Garfield,
The spokesman said Vice
largest AFSCME council in the state of Ohio.
Columbus ; 28 grandchlldrren Ave.) died Wednesday at
(Births Aug. 261
President
Abdus Sattar, a
and
16
great-g
randchildren.
-Fred Haynes, Representative, rlistrict 78.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Elliott, Funeral services were held at Mercy Hospital in Ports- former justice of Pakistan's
mouth, Ohio from a short
a daughter, Gallipolis.
2 p. m. Sunday at Longv iew illness of 12 days. She was
SUPreme court, would Dy
1Discharges Aug. %71
United Methodist Church buried Friday at South from Washington to Albany,
POOLCWSING
Curtis Baisden, Barbara near Evans, W. Va., with the Webster, Ohio. She left one Ga., and drive to Plains. •
OPTOMETRIST
SYRACUSE- London Pool
Rev . · Gerald Sayre of - son. Phil : daughter·fn.law.
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 {CLOSE
Beegle, Saylor Berridge, ficiating
in Syracuse will be closed this
. Burial was In the
Sattar was in Washington for
Kevin Boyles, Wavie Circle, church cemetery. The Casto Ellen, and a grandson, Brad, · the weekend after attending a
AT NOON ON THURS.l- EAST COURT
week but will open Saturday,
Miami, .Fla .
.
Hollis Clark, Florence Coon, Funeral Ho.m e at · Evans was of Attending
ST., POME.ROY.'
Sunday and Monday, Sept. 3,
the funeral and
law cenference in Winnipeg,
Rhonda Doss, Minnie Hale, in charge .
4, and 5.
·
calling at the funeral home at
Canada.
Dora Hash, Julie Kennedy,
SciotoviUe were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Myers. Mr. and
Wanita Kosier, Paul Martin,
MRS. HELEN MURPHY
Survivors Include her .
Mrs.
Jerry Myers, Roscoe
Teresa McCarty, Roberta
Mrs. Helen Murphy, 70, Houck, Roma Baker, Faye husband, Roy H. Pooler, Rt.
· McWilliams, Elmer Miller, Akron. formerly of Vinton, Reese, Mr. and /Ws. Floyd J, Pomeroy i two daughters.
died unexpectedly Sunday Clary and Clar~nce Clary, Jean Sexton, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Charles Murray, Grace afternoon
at her ~ome . She
and Phyllis Reed of ReedPratt, Betty Queen, Rupert was born March 20, 1907, In Mr . and Mrs. John Mitchell, sville;
a son, Emerson L.
Wall~ce
Houck,
Ha1ei
Sayre, Ethel Sebring, Carol Vinton. daughter of the late Thlvener and Mr . and Mrs. Pooler, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ; nine
Sisson, Mary Wears, Mrs. lincoln and Nettle Walters Leslie Clary of Flor ida . grandchildren ; three
McGhee. She married George Buford Houck, Ironton, and brothers. Edwin E. Bailey,
BEST FRIEND May
Lee Williams and son.
DETROIT (UP!) -Mark
Murphy who d led in 1962.
Thomas
Houck, Alliance; Autmer A. Bailey,
tB111hs, Aug. %'7)
Survivors include two sons, Mr's .
"The
Bird"
Fidryich,
a
Fort Ritchie, Fla.. and
Catherine
Davis
and
Be His MOTHERMr . and Mrs . Kirk George of Akron , Robert · P~rslnger, Columbus. Mae Howard
classic victim of the
C.
Bailey,
IBob)
Murphy
of
Akron.
Chevalier,
a
.
daughter,
Jacksonville
,
Fla
.,
and
Raymond
and
his
family
"Sophomore Jinx," has .beim
.s even grandchildren , a
·sever
atnieces
and
nephews.
Chester;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ray
reside
at
1220,
21th
St.,
Ports.
sent home by the Detroit
brother. Walter:.._McGhee of
· She was 'a member of the
Chaplljsn, a daughter, San Bernardlno;Callf., .and a · mouth. Ohio, 45662.
Tigers in hopes rest will cure
MI. Herman E·UB Church.
.,
Ina Harmon pf
Funeral services will be held
the tendonitis in his right Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Earl half-sister,
Cedarville.
Ar:rangements ·
Thomas,
a
daughter,
Rio
at
10 a. m; Tuesday from the
ELSIE
J.
POOLER
'a.J.'Til.
will be announced by the
Ewing Funeral Home with
Elsie
J
.
Pooler,
65,
dl~
Grande;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Martin
" A knee injury and a sore
McCoy·Moof-e Funeral Home Sunday morning In Veterans Rev . James Leach cif.
Reynolds, a son, Pt. in Vinton .
right arm have left the future
Memorial Hospllal. She was flclallng . '
Pleasani; Mr. · and Mrs.
of one or baseball's brightest
Burial will be In Mt. Her·
preceded In death by her
Vincent Knight, a daughter,
parents. Herbert and Francis man Cemetery. Calling hours
yoitng stars in doubt.
BEULAH OANIELS
Young Bailey, and an Infant will be held anytime today at
.
The
name
of
Gary
Fidrych, 23, and the Tigers Pomeroy.
Ewings.
sister .
Treadway
of
Point
Pleasant,
(Discharges
Aug.
%81
hope to dispel those doubts
A COLLEGE
Denver Co·x,
Victor
with a rookie league test after
STUDENT'S BEST
the two months of complete George, June Hubbard, Ethel
Nicholas, Patricia Scites,
arm rest.
FRIEND IS HIS
"We hope that after this Mrs. Mark Silcott and son,
rest," · Tiger
General Edna Thompson , Wilma
Manager Jim campbell said Wiseman.
(BIJ1hs Aug. 281
Sund!!y, "Mark will be able Ill
Mr.
and
Mrs. James Jones,
join our Florida lnatructional.
League team at St. a son, Wellston.
Petersburg, perhaps in late
PLEASANT VALLEY
Visit our Housewares Department on the 1st floor for Freezer Bags and Boxes ..
October ."
DISCHARGES
- Mrs.
11 lt's like the season's over
Pressure
Cookers . Strainers - Foley Foad Mills • Funnels • Food Presses - Apple
That's why Farmer's Bank of Pomeroy is introducing
Charles Stewart, Arbuckle;
Corers and Slicers - Jelly Kettles· Regular Conners. Timers. Corn Cutters. Paring
for
him,"
·
Manager
Ralph
FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS for students.
Knives- and many ather items you'll need to mike your canning.and freezing easier
Houk said. "We told
to go Mrs. James Long, Apple.
and more enioyabla.
Grove;
Lyle
McCormick,
borne, rest and do aU the
It's simple.
thing1he normally does when~ Point Pleasant; Gwendolyn
the ·ason's over, but don't Legg, Ravenswood; Cora
mak any motions - like . Bonecutter, Point Pleasant;
No strings attached.
throwing
a
baseball . Adam McClure, Letart;,
•
Hopefully, he'll be able to Steven Derenberger, Hen·
pitch a game in the Florida derson; Jeffrey Clark, Point
If you are a full-t.ime college or vocational student, (here
Ifistructional League in late · Pleasant; Mrs. Robert
at home, or anywhere) we'll give you a free checking
Masson, Reedaville; Joseph
October."
Oldaker,
II, Hartford;- Ralph
account, with no service charge. We'll even give you your
Fidrych, whose mound
Willett,
Cheshire; Shane
antics and boyish enthusiasm
first 50 personalized checks free.
·
Glenn,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs.
made him the biggest single
Clarence
Vickers,
Point
draw in baseball history in
Pleasant;
Harold
Bright,
1976, compiled a 19-9 record
and 2.34 earned run average Point Pleasant; Mrs. Edith
that got him voted Rookie or Simpkins, Point Pleasant;
the Year. His ERA was tops Mrs. L. R. Slmpkina, West
Columbia;
Mrs. Ruth
among starters.
Daugherty,
Gallipolis;
But his 1977 statistics will
Hubert
Friend,
Hom~wn,
show a 6-4 recCI"d and 2.89
·.·~
W.
Va.;
Ransom
Kelly, ArERA for 11 starts.
buckle;
Mrs.
Ernest
CliU, Sr.,
"The Bird" was grounded
Point
Pleasant';
Mrs.
WIUiam
first by a knee injury, which
Marshall,
Mason;
Jesse
required surgery March 31
and delayed his season's An~erson, Vinton; Mrs.
debut until May 'ZI. He tore Calvin Wright, Leon; Mrs.
cartilage in his left knee Olarles Holley, Ashton; Mrs.
shagging Dy balls on March George Clark, Gallipolis;
Charles Sphenson, Point
10 during spring training.
Fidrych removed himself Pleasant; James Simpkins,.
after making 15 pitches in a West Co.lumbia; Barbara ,
game against the Toronto Demesderrer, Mason;
Blue Jays July 12. Rest and Georgina Van Meter, Mason;
medication have failed to Mrs. Dallas stewart, Letart;
A Farmer's Bank free student checking account will
noticeably improve his cendi- David Gilbert, Bidwelh Mary
ticm.
'- Long, GaUipoliB.
save you money, help you keep track of your pennies and
BIRTHS- A son to Mr. and
"He couldn't get ready that
keep you in touch with your own bank at home.
Mrs.
Thoinas Roush, Hartquick to pitch much before
ford;
a
daughter to Mr. and
the end of the season/' Houk
Mrs
..
Harold
Taylor, Leon,
said, "so we decided it was
and a daughter to Mr. and
best to rest him."
Mrs. ctiarles Fletcher,
Fraziers Bottom.

l

Transfers

Pickel
lines
were
established at all ochools in
the Meigs LOcal School
District Tuesday morning as
teachers of the &lt;Wtrlct moved
into the first day of a strike.
Classes normally would
have opened for the first day
or tbe new school year this
morning. However, teachers
of the Meigs Local Teachers
Association voted Monday to

go on strike.
District Supt. Charles
Dowler has declared that
ochools or the district are
officially opened. He said that
some teachers are at . their
posts, that some school buses
made runa this morning and
that there are some students

in the buildings.
All of the principals of the
buildings wtre at their posts,

Dowler said.
The district's board of
education meeting Monday
night heard Dowler review
the dispute for Mrs. Robert
Buck and Mrs. Allen Downie
who appeared before the
board.
The hoard then _ met in

Morris,
director
of
curriculum; Dwight Goins,
administrative assistant ;
Carson Crow. representing
the county prosecutor's ofrice; Mark Foley and Ted
Bibler of the Ohio Education
Association ; Charles Downie.
Rita Slavin, Jack Slavin,
executive session until about John
Redovian, David
10 p. m. From 10 :30 p.m. to Bowen,
Don
Dixon,
I :30 a. m., Dowler, Dan representing local teachers,

•

Kr.:

WILDUFE CONSERVATION • '- Olairmen for
"Meigs Countians for Wildlife Conaervation" reviewed
their program for the evening Monday night in a meeting
at the new Coonhunters Clubhouse to organize a door-todoor campaign to inform voters or the proposed
amendment to the Ohio Constitution that would ban the

had arm

CANNING· AND FREEZING SUPPLIES

tor a f'ree 9tvdent
Check '':'9 account

Farmers-

POMEROY. OHIO
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor .
·Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiOn

NOW YOU KNOW
Although movies show
bankers jumping out Wall
Street windows, the suicide
rate in tbe United States did
not increase during the Great
Depression; it remained the
same as in preVious years.

AIDME!II CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 144
Mulberry Ave.; at 6:10 p. m.
Sunday for Dotla Haynea whO
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where abe
was admitted.

PAYS

LITER

'ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
.
'

i

'

"

~~ ~

.,..

o chec.k'ooo\(

I·

recession.

Commerce analyist Feliks
Tanun was hesitant to make
a gloomy forecast ror the
economy. But he said it was
"definitely an interruption Ill
the early trend or strong
growth ·the economy experienced last winter and
Another analyst said before
the.July statistics were made

J/lijV;;;;;==:'''''':·;,;=:•::=,,i,;''''''jj;i;~;l
»

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The government's barometer
of future economic activity
fell 0.2 per cent for the third
consecutive month in July,
the Commerce Department
said today. That could signal
a drab job and production
outlook for the remainder of
197'1.
The three straight declines
in the Index of Leading
Indicators was the longest
since the depths or the 1974-73

spring."

He

YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR

rum

IS

leg-hold trap. Voters are asked to vote "no" on Issue Two
if they want to keep trapping. Left to right, Grant Young,
county chainnan; Dan Sayre, fund raising chairman;
Ray Karr, political action chairrrodll; Richard Coleman,
secretary-treasurer; Tom Karr, volunteer, and special
interest groups, l\Dd Greg Bailey, media.

By Greg BaDey
The Meigs Countians for
Wildlife Conservation in a
special meeting Monday
night at the new Coonhunters
Clubhouse organized a door.to-door campaign against the
proposed amendment to' the
Ohio Constitution that would
ban the leghold trap.
-A special guest of the
evening was Stale Senator
Oakley Collins who was
warmly welcomed by the
large crowd or approximately
175 concerned sportsmen,
SENATOR OAKLEY COLIJNS, State Senator, attended the meeting Monday night held
· farmers, and wildlife lovers. · by the Meigs Countians for Wildlife Conservation. CoUins assured everyone he would "do all
Grant Young, Meigs
he could" to help the MCWC . Approximately 175 concerned sportsmen, farmers, and wilflife
County chainnan for the
lovers attended.
·
Ohioans for WUdllfe· Conservation,
welcomed
..
~Weryone.
stressed that .
Farm
Bureau
also
has enSenator Collins expressed trolling forbearers. Collins ·
the battle on the November
dorsed
keepiiig
tlie
leg·hold
ballot is an emotional one,
hls appreciation for ·being added that the · Division
trap
legal.
invited to the meeting and people are professionals Who
anc! that the goal or the
In
other
remarks
Young
assured everyone present know what they are doing.
MCWC is to get the "real
Chairmen reports were
facts" across to the voters. indicated approximately 21 that he would do all he could
It was reported and well- percent of the screened to help the MCWC in their given, and Ray Karr ,
received, that the Ohio signatures on the petition to fight. He said the Department chairman of the political
Veterinarians Association put the issue on the ballot of Natural Resources, action rommittee, drew up
has adopted a resolution In were invalid. It was also Division of Wildlife, believes plans and got volunteers to
respective
support of the leg-hold trap as pointed out thai trappers the leg·hold trap Is the most . scan their
precincts.
must
now
check
their
traps
effective wildlife
an effective means or conserving wildlife. The Ohio every 24 hours instead of 30. management tool in con-

MAKE . ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ths

en tine

Trap han
opposed
in Meigs

to rest

ACC~~NTI

The strike began alter the
board of education refuaed to
accept rna jority report or the
impasse panel which was
assembled to consider
problema between the board
or education and the teachers
association. However, it was
reported that the report of the
panel was not accepted in its
entirety by its three members.

teachers and that he would
report to the board or
education at a meeting
tonight.
Teachers at one school in
the district this morning
objected to a photograph
being taken of their picket
line. This is the second
consecutive fall that teachers
or th~ district have gone on
strike.
·

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28. No. 96

Economic barometer iJ
skid for third ·month

Fidrych

CHECkiNG

at

'

___.....

OY'S

Act . The teachers know that
discussed the problem.
No solution apparently was it is i)legallor them to strike
and yet they do so In open
reached.
Dowler stated today the defiance of the law."
Dowler said this morning
board or education believes
that a lair offer has been students reporting to school
made to the teachers on are being provided food, but
salary. Dowler further he added that it would be
better if such students
commented:
"So far, the board has brought lunches.
He said also that he would
declined to invoke the harsh
confer
further today wjth the
provisions of the Ferguson

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. August 30, 1977

._

A

•

eac ers p1c et1ng sc

Property

1!11

N. W. COMPTON. 0.0. ·

•

•

Meigs

ByUnlledPresslnternational
'"'
WASHINGTON- WATERGATE BURGLAR G. Gordon
Liddy. "has served long enough," and will go free Sept. 7 if he
pays a $40,000 fine - perhaps in installments - or takes a
pauper's oath.
.
Regienal parole commission~r Joseph A. Nardoza 111
Philadelphia sa!d Monday Liddy kept a club and pipe in his ceil
ror protection, but prison officials did not consider that or
Liddy's participation in a prison hunger strike serious enough
to recommend ~elaying his parole.
·
"I think he has served Ion~ enouldl." Nardoza said in a
telephone interview. "He has paid his debt to society. I
hone&amp;PY think he is going tQ be a good citizen when, he gets
out." Nordoza said Liddy had a "top rating" for parole.

NEW YORK-KINGS COUNTY HOSPITAL psychiatrists
reportedly have found"Son of Sam" susperl David Berkowitz
mentally competent to stand trial. WPIX-TV said Monday
night it had l!l8flled of the psychiatric findings, but did not
· il\dicate its spurce.
. ·
The psychll!trists' report was delivered Monday to state
&amp;tpreme Court Justice .Gerald Held in Brooklyn and will be
opened today at a hearing before Held. The pudgy 24-year-old
foniler postal worker, charged with the .44-caliber killings of
six people was ordered to be presnt at the hearing.
' Held will make a decisjon on whether Berkowitz is (it to
stand trial m the basis of the report. perenae attorney Mark
Jay Heller already baa said il Berkowitz is found competent to
be tried, he will advance a defense of inaamty.

public that # is going. to be
difficult
' for
the
administration Ill explain the
declining indicawrs."
Six or the IO indicators
available for July dropped,
while lour increased.
Prior to May, the index had
risen for three months in a
row after a drop in January
when cold weather brought
fuel shortages That curbed
activity and paralyzed some
regions of the country.
There have been several
bits of depressing economic
news this month, in~luding a
steep fall in the stock market
and an announcement Aug. 18
by Bethlehem Steel Corp. of
drastic reductions in capacity
and capital spending .
Some .private economists
and analyists on Wall Street
have even predicted a nearrecession early ne)!t year.
The
Commerce

Towboat
POINT PLEASANT - The
Producers, a towboat that
caught fire . while traveling
down the Kanawha River
Monday at about 78. m., sank
some 12 hours later.
The boat, owned by
Chaplin Towing Company of
Sardis, 0., was pushing seven
empty barges on a return trip
from the Marmet area when
it caught fire.
Crew members Richard
Kinney of New Matamoras,
Ohio and Mike Doyle, Jr. of
Gallipolis, said the fire broke

::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Reed appointed
to chairmanship ·

COLUMBUS - James A.
Duerk, director, Ohio
Department of Economic and
CommunitY Development,
has announced election of
ll!eodore T. Reed, Jr. of
Pomeroy as chairman of the
Ohio Development FinanCing
Commission and James Imes
as vice chainnan for the 197778 term.
WASHINGTON - ·PREsiDENT CARTER will tajte a
l}eed is president and
per1011al role in the accelerated search for a neogtlated Middle director of The Farmers
Ellt 10lution, accordirfg to diplomatic officials. The officials Bank and Savings Co.,
said Mondliy the fCI"eign ministers of Israel, Egypt, Syria and Pomeroy. He wa&amp; appointed
Jordan will cm1e to Washington "soon after the middle or to the commission in January
Sepiember" to meet the President and Secretary of SLate 1973. lmes is president of the
First tlational Bank or
Cyrus Vmce.
·
.
It hlld been planned that Vance would see the foreign Cambridge and was ap·
ministers aeP&amp;rately in New York dur(ng the U. N. General pointed to the commission in
August 1974.
· (Continued on page 10)
. l

Weather

out in the engine room of the the middle of the river. :·
boat which had a motor of
Kinney and Doyle said
about 400 horsepower. Marlin they, along with Chaplin,
Chaplin, owner or the towing struggled to entinguish the
compsny, · was serving as blaze but were Unable to put
· captain.
the fire out. The boat was
· The boat was In the vicinitY · built in 1927, but had unof Mile 17 or the river, which dergone renovations at
is near the area of the Gus vaijous timeS.
Douglass farm . when It
caught fire. The Leon
Volunteer Fire Department
was summoned but was
unable to battle the blaze due
to the fact the boat was out in
•

Elberfeld appointed Curate
Richard B. Elberfeld, Jr., will assume his duties in
grandson or the late Alfred. Missouri on Sept. 1.
Elberfeld, and son of Mr. and
Mr. Elberfeld graduated
Mrs. Richard E. Elberfeld of from the Virginia Theological
Hamilton, Ohio, has been Seminary and was ordained
appointed curate at St . . to the deaconate at St.
Peter's Epis&amp;lpal Church in Christopher's
Church,
Kansas City, Mo., after a Springfield, Va. He and his
summer or service in the U. wife, Katherine Ann, have
S. Air Force Reserve as been residing In Alexandria,
chaplain at the Homestead Va., for t,he past several
Air Base in Florida. Richard years.

Ohio Environmental District, has done a fine job of
Protection Agency making sure that your in·
(O.E .P.A.) will explain how terests
have
been
the Water Quality Planning
(Continued on page 10)
Program will affect you. As a
citizen and employee of the
Soil Conservation .Service, I Fire~mergency
have been involved with this
program for seven months to
help keep the proposed
program practical and
workable, while reaching the
clear water goal. And Roy
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Miller, secretary of the Meigs
Department
and
E-R
Squad
Soil and Water Conservation
answered five
alarms
Monday and Tuesday mor-.

The Ohio · Development
Financing Commission adPool will stay
ministers Ohio's two basic
finance programs for in• open afternoons .
dustry : the guaranteed loan
,program and industrial . The Middleport swimming
revenue bonds
pool will remain open, Mrs.
The com~lssion was Cherole Burdette, manager,
established to help emerging said today OJ) the days when
and expanding industriai school is in session; from 3 to
firms obtain growth capital 6 p.m. Saturday, Sunday and
and th·us increase em· · Monday it will be open from 1
ployment oppm'tunities llDd to 6 p. m. with Monday being
economic development the final day of pool
within the state. The ODFC is operation.
·
a bipartisan commission
Mrs.
Burdette
said
composed of seven members . progress reports on the
of the business and indusirial children who are enrolled in
community appointed by the swimming classes this
governor for seven year summer are at the pool for
terms.
interested parents.

A cold front moving into the
area . will bring showers,
thundershowers and high
humidity
today
and ·
tomorrow, temperatures to
remain warm. High today
and tomorro~ near 90 (32C),
overnight lows near 70.(21G.).

Public meeti.J:rg, airing of ·
school issues is proposed

.

Wednesday, 8 p. m., August
31, at the Meigs Agriculture
Service Center Conference
Room on the second floor of
the Farmers' Bank Building
(2nd street entrance) in
Pomeroy.
. A representative of the

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of
showers or thundershowers
Thursday and Friday and
fair and cooler Saturday.
Highs will be In lbe 80s or
near 90 Thursday and
Friday and In the upper 70s
or low 80s Saturday. Lows
wUI be In the 60s.

b~rns, . sinks

Public invited to become involved
in problems .of water quality here
ByBoydRulb
Conservation Service
Are you concerned about
present or future· water
quality of our streams in
Meigs County.
If so, you should atteQd the
upcoming public meeting on

July decline, the department
said, was the change in
sensitive prices, which is
based on the Wholesale Price
Index of 1 crude materials
excluding tood and feeds.
Other indicators that decreased last · month were
average workweek, ·layoff
rate, contracts and orders for
plant and equipment in 1972
dollars, new or·ders in 1972
dollars and building· permits.
The four that increased
were vendor performance,
change in total liquid assets,
stock prices and money
balance in 1972 dollars, the
department said.
In another important
economic development
today, the Federal Reserve
Board increased the cost or
the money it lends for the
first time since AprU, 1974.

Department said the July
indelt stood at 129.7 per cent
or the 1967 average,
compared with an upwardrevised 129.9 ·per cent lor
June.
The June figure was
revised from an originally
reported 0.6 per cent decline
to an 0.2 per cent drop from
May.
A major contributor to the

rescue.units
called 5 times

ning:

At 1: 10· p. in. Monday to
the Senior Citizens Center
for Carroll Tyler, who was ill,
and taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 4: I&amp; p.
m. to Chester where Charles
Spaun and Dave Hannum had
been injured In an accident;
taken to VMH; at 7:31 p. m. to
231 Mulberry Ave. ror David
Kesterson, who was ill, taken
to VMH; at 1:57 a. m. to the
county jail for . Pat Martin,
taken to VMH, and at 8:06 a.
m. Tuesday, the fire
department to Eva Hysell
home at Harrisonville where
a defective furnace had
caused a fire .causing damage
of about $1500.

An open letter.to Meigs Local School Board, Meigs
Local Teachers Association, and Citizens of Meigs
. Local School District.
After numerous conversations with residents of
Meigs Local School District, I would like to take this
opportunity to offer the foUowing suggestions and
observations concerning the present problems in
Meigs Local in the hope that an inunediate solution
could bemad·e to the school opening (?)situation.
I would like to challenge the Board of Education
· and ihe Meigs Local Teachers Association to conduct a
public meeting and answer questions which citizens of
the school district have in regard to the impasse which
exists. I would also like to challenge the citizens of the
district to attend such a meeting, "if it were held, and
express their opinions to the board and teachers.
School board, teachers and citizens are all local
people and we should certainly be able Ill discuss the
situation and reach an agreement which could be
accepted by aU .
Many sad situations are occurring and will
continue to' occur as long as this situation exists.
Monday night the Middleport Police Dispatcher
received many calls asking the same question, "Will
there be !jChool wmorrow?"
"How would you answer this? Of course, the only
answer was, "Yes, there will i"l school, but no teachers
will be avaUable."
To me this sounds rather ridiculous. After all,
school is where our children go to be taught by their
teachers. Without teachers, how do you have schooiJ
· The question or sports and other activities keeps
coming up. But, after all, school is supposed to be first
for education. There seems to be an interest in holding
extra-eurricular practices even though teachers are on
strike. But I haven't heard any suggestion of having a
history or math class in someone's home.:To me, it
should be no school, no extra-eurricular activities.
It seems as if the main issue now comes down to
the salary schedule
· . According to board members, the money \S Mt
available. While on the other hand, teachers contend
that it is.Someone'sfiguresevidently must be wrong! I
believe cttizena should be made aware of the
percentage or increase which was recommended by
the impasse panel and why it was recommended il the
inoney was not there to pay it. ·
In any negotiations, we all know that some
coocessions have to be made by both sides. If both
sides are willing w negotiate in good faith, !'in sure
both realize they will have to make some concessions.
For many years Meigs Local School District
operated very smoothly. It can once again, but citizens
of the district are going to have to make their wishes
known w the hoard and to the teachers.
This is not meant as criticism to either the board or
the teachers, only to express concern as a JX!blic
official ·and parent to what has and is happening in
Meigs Local. :- Fred Hoffman, MayCI", Village of
Middleport-.

•

�,._'l'be Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Aug. 30, 19'n

E~dorsement

key
Hemry rescued ·
from life in sideshow to Young's plan

Guzek solid for Miller
By
United
Preas means .''
Two
other
district
lakruUoaal
Arnold Miller's ability to p-esidents, whose regioos lit
run the United Mine Workers within West Vtrginia, were
committal
when
unioo has been questioned by less
questioned
about
Friday
's
aome since the wildcat coal
call
by
District
17
President
strike began, but one of three
district leaders questioned Jack Perry and Vice
Monday emphatically stood President Cecil Roberts for
Miller to resign .
by the wtion p-esident.
Roberts read a statement
John Guzek, whose Ohioto
reporters
at his
blllled District. 6 covers the
Charleston,
W.Va.,
office,
four- coun ty Northern
charging
.Miller
with
"weak,
Panhandle of West Virginia,
responded with a blunt ineffective and incorrect
synonym for horse manure leadership" in a l().week
when asked for his opinion oo stri ke that . erupted alter
demands that Miller step Miller annowtced cutbacks
June 20 in health care
down.
·benefits.
·
"I thihk the men e)ected
Roberts
,
whose
23,000·
him by a
and honest
worker
district
is
the
largest
vote," Guzek declafed. uAnd
I think we should all get of the UMW's 21 regions,
behind him and get the supported Miller in his recent
United Mine Workers r~lection bid . Miller hand·
picked Perry lor the offi ce he
together again ."
" I'm a United Mine · holds.
"There's nothing surprises
Worker,'' said Guzek, a
friend of the UMW chief. me anymore," Guzek sighed,
"And that's what the 'United' when reminded of the Perry-

·r.w-

-Berrys World.
.

© 19 77bv NEA

Inc ~~

HULTH
Lawrence E.lamb, M.Q.

How to keep muscles
By La"IITtlnce E. lamb, M.D.

·I

DEAR DR. LAMB -I want
to do .weightlifting and
strength exercises to really
build up my muscles over a
year or two. I don't want to he
a "Mr. Universe" but would
like to have good muscles. If I
stop the exercises later, and
have an office job, will my
muscles retain their shape or
will they be prone to "fall" in
a shorter·than-nonnal period
of time compared to a person
who developed muscles by
nonnal hard-working labor?
Or does the method of
muscular development matter? .
DEAR READER- It reaDy
doesn 't matter how the
muscles were developed - by
an exercise program in the
gym, at home, or exercise
resulting from physical
labor.
The point ,is thit the more
muscular development you
have as a result of the work·
exercise if you then stop and
do vecy little it will look like
the muscles disappear faster
than in a person who has
smaUer muscles to start with.
That is because the person
with less developed muscles
has less to lose to get to the
same inactive level so the
change is not as striking.
Yoo could maintain your
muscles, though, with a
reasonable program of exer·cise one daya week. While we
think endurance exercises
such as walking and jogging
should be maintained more
often than once a week to
maintain optimal fitness,
muscle strength can be main·
tained with a once a week
proqram.
To give you more infonnation about muscle development and strength and how to"
maintain what you've got I
am sending you The Health
Letter nwnber 5-4, Weight
Training for Energy and
Weight Control. Others who
want thia information can
send 50 cents wltb • long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it to P.O. Box

.

'

1551, Radio City S!Jition, New
York, NY 10019. As that issue
explains, by maintaining
your muscle mass you can
help prevent obesity. A shOrt
period of strength exercises
once a week alter you develop
your muscles will 'be as effective in preventing obesitY as
long lime intervals spent in
walking and jogging. The
secret is in developing
muscles and main!Jiining
them. It makes a difference
whether the body weight is
from fat or muscle.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can
you leU me what the difference is, if any, in taking
regular thyroid tablets and
taking kelp tablets?
I've heard and read that
both have iodine and help the
thyroid gland to manufacture
thyroxine which an underactive thyroid needs. I'm !Jiking
two grains of thyroid daily
but would prefer to take kelp
if it would do the job as well.
DEAR READER - Kelp is
a sea weed and il con!Jiins
iodine. If a person is deficient
in iodine it is a useful source
for 'It. However, it is not the
same thing ali thyroid !Jiblets
at all · and cannot be
substituted lor them.
Thyroid !Jiblets do not conwin iodine. They are replacement hormone for the natural
thyroid honrone, thyroxine,
produced by the thyroid
gland.. The r~son f(ir giVing
thyroid !Jiblels is because a
pe rson'S own thyroid gland
does not produce enough
thyroid honnone, That condi·
tion is seldom related to
iodine deficiency - although
iodine deficiency can cause
goiters of 'the thyroid gland.
Usua lly low thyroid f unction
is an aftennath of an inflarn·
rnatiOn of the thyroid gland,
often unrecognized. I think
you bad better stay with your
thyrol'd ,Lod·blets if your doctor
thinks you need them.
Dr. Lamb· . answers
representative letters of
general interest in his colWM.

j

Roberts
ststement.
"'Sometimes persons should
listen, UIStead of keeping
their mouths open again."
Guzek said District6hasn't
supported the current strike
and doesn't mtend tn .

Carter eleeted to withhold
rnmment on the PerryRoberts demand WJtil the
scheduled Wednesday end of
the UMW International
Executive Board meeting in
Indiana , Pa.
~~They 've been
haVing
"! d011't want to jump the
some problems in (District) gun on anybody," Carter
17," offered District 29 explained.
President Richard Carter at '
Burdette frowe , who heads
~ckley . Carter defeated a
up District 31 in northern
Miller-backed candidate four West Virginia , likewise
years ago to win the head declined to comment saying
position and is up for re- "I will not get involv~ in th~
election.
issue ."

(UPI) - The American Hwnane
Associatioo has rescued Hermy, the hermaphroditic
burro, from an early grave or life as a sideshow freak .
The Bureau of Land Management captured Hermy
during a California roundup intended to thin the burro
population and prevent further damage to rangeland
from overgrazing.
Captured animals normally are off&lt;fed for adoption,
but Hermy'sunusual traits prompted tests which found
the animal has both male and female sex organs.
Hermaphroditic burros are rare, occurring in less
than .I per cent of the population . The University of
California · at Davis' department of reproduction
researclt planned to rwt more tests, then kill Hermy '
and perform an autopsy.
The American Humane Association and the
American Donkey and Mule Society ·blocked the
proposal and the BLM said the animal would be placed
in a location selected by . the Humane Association.
"We did not want the burro killed and none of the
parties interested in its welfare wanted the burro to
become a sideshow freak," said Milton Searle, the
Humane Association's executive director .
·
DENVEH

Driver injured
in car sm8;shup
.
.
William L. George, 18, Rt.
'2, Cheshire, was admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
at Pomeroy lor head and
chest injuries following an
accident at 1:40 a. m. today
on CR 5, one-tenth of a mile
east of SR 1 in Meigs County.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
. State Highway Patrol said
George, traveling east, lost
control of his car which ran
off the left side of the highway
·striking a mailbox and tree
stump, then overturned onto
its lop and slid into two
parked cars owned by Gary
Mitch of Rt. I, Middleport.
George was taken to the
hospital by the Middleport
Emergency Squad. His car
was demolished; there was
moderate damage to the
parked vehicles. The accident is still under investigation.
David Hannum, 19, U!ng
Bollom, was cited to Meigs
County Court for driving left
of the center following an
accident al 4 p. m. Monday
on SR 248, one-tenth of mile
east of SR 7.
The patrol said HaJ1llum's
car struck a westbound
vehicle operated by Charles
Spaun, 34, Rt. I, Racine. Both
drivers complained of injuries and were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for treabnent. There was
moderate damage.
• No one was injured or cited
in an accident at lh50 a. m.
Monday on U:S. 35, one-tenth
of a mile east of Rio Grande.
According
to
state
troopers, an auto driven by

Indianapolis
police make
life miserable

Barbara
13oone,
17,
Gallipolis, was struck by a
car pulling out of Bob Evans
Sausage Shop operated by
David Rice, 16, Gallipolis.
R1ce told officers his view
was blocked by a semi. There
was moderate damage.
A final accident occurred at
8 a. m. Monday in Meigs
CoWJty on CR 35, one and six-.
tenths miles north of SR 124.
Officers said Charles K.
Nunn, 67, Racine , going
north, lost control of his car
which ran off the roadway
. striking a ditch and embankment . There was
moderate damage. No
citation was issued.

NOW YOU KNOW
II all the sparks produced

by all the dynamos in the
United Stales were fused
together, the result would be
only a hall-sized Dash of
lightning.

PRETORIA , South Africa
(UP!) - South Africa has
given no sign whether it will
give its crucial endorsement
to a Rhodesian peace plan wt·
veiled by U.N. Ambassador
Andrew Young and British
Foreign Secretary David
Owen.
Young aod Owen conlerred
lor nearly six hours Monday
with Prime Minister John
Vorster to explain details of
the plan, which Owen has
called Rhodesia's last chance
for a peaceful shift to .black
majcdty rule.
Bot Vorster did not meet
reporters after the talks and
his foreign minister, Roelof
Botha, who was at the
session, did not comment on
Vorster's reaction to the plan.
Young and Owen declined to
characterize the talks in any

Seed CrOSSing produceS w~~shington and London
want Vorster's endorsement
of the plan because South
me
ODS
Africa provides .
I
monster garden
military and econonuc aid to
h~avy

By
United
Press
International
TARBORO, N.C. (UP!) Can you top this, Texas ?
Watermelons t)le size of
washtubs. Pumpkins as big
as armchairs. Carrot-size
peanuts . Volleyball-size
tomatoes: ·
No brag, just fact. Edward
Weeks can back it up.
He calls his watermelons

E·R UNIT CALLED
RACINE - The Racine ER
Squad was called Sunday at
6: t5 p. m. to U!ng Bottom lor
Richard R. Smith, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On MoQday at 10:25 a. m.
they were again called to
U!ng Bottom for Virginia
Pickens. No aid was given,
however. At 2:02 a. m. today
Bessie Stilts, Rt. 2, Racine, a
medical patient, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

By ERIK VAN EES

it on official scales," Weeks
said proudly .
Somebody has made an
attempt to steal some of
Weeks ' melons ' too, but
dropped them in the field.
"Too doggone heavy for
'em/ ' he said.

Dozens of gargantuan
melons have overtaken
Weeks' back pasture and they
sell lor $20 to $75 each . But
that's not&gt;howWeeks makes a
liVing.
.
He sells seeds. The 197pounder produced 1,717
seeds. Weeks sells them and
thousands of others in 100
seed stores across North
Carolina and by mail order In
49 states.
Since
Weeks
began

. ~~monster. mel ons, " and
rightly so - they tend to grow
to the .size of washtubs.
In fact , the folks at Guiness
Book of World Records in
their 1978 edition have
·certified his 197-pound
watermelon as the biggest
grown in the world.
"Yep, the county agent and
Congressman L.H. Fowttain "crossin ' up seeds" back in
stood right here "'!d weighed 1964, his fields have drawn
crowds from such places as
New Jersey and Chicago.
They come to look at 100.
powtd purnpkins the size of
. '
annchairs, ears of 'corn 15
REVIV ALGOING
inches long, a peanut the size
A revival is underway each of a small .carrot, a 3!1i&gt;ound
evening at 7 at the Syracuse cantaloupe and threei&gt;ound
.Church of the Nazarene, tomatoes the size of
Bridgeman St ., Syracuse , volleyballs.
with the Rev. 0. G. McKinney · Hit's a challen ge, I
speaking. The public is in· reckon," Weeks said.
vited.
Weeks started crossing

Prime Minister Ian Smith's
while regime in neighboring
Rhodesia.
·
In Salisbury, Smith
predicted
the
AngloAmerican plan would p-ove
to be ' 'unnacep!Jible" and
said
the
Wednesday
parliamentary elections were

seeds as a hobby after
watching his father develop
the p-ocess.
" Daddy was
never
interested in seeing how big
he could go," Weeks said .
"He just had fwt with it."
But Weeks is fascinated
with his ability to grow giant
plants. He saves seeds from
year to year, strategically
planting larger and larger
strains which are pollinated
by bees. He mixes his own
special brand of fertilizer an
adheres to a lew simple
growing secrets.
Watermelons grown from
Weeks ' seeds have set
re.cords in Flor'lda and
Alabama. A F1orida man
claimed to have grown six
melons totaling 1,480 pounds
on a single Vine from Weeks'
seeds.

Mother Jones mag's
criticism
·of Pinto ·as fire trap denied
.

.

a,. MILTON RICHMAN

Bengals back to two-a-day drills

~

.

1

Page dims Rice's great bat

Legendary ·mark

broken by BcEock

President
not backing
off Lance
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter

WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Carter is standing
in
defense
of
firm
beleaguered Budget Director
Bert Lance arid has shown no
paranoia, exasperation or
upset
stomach"
over
11

persistent news stories,
according to a spokesman.
Press Secretary ..Jody ,
Powell told rep&lt;irters Lance's
problems did not come up at
Carter's Cabinet meeting
Monday - his first in three
weeks - but said there were
some Hbarbed" comments.
"I think I've made it clear
that there is no feeling on our
part Lance has !Jiken any
action that would merit his
being rwt out of government
and that;s still our position, "
!'OweD said.
Under qileslioning, he said
Carter "has not appeared to
me to be visibly disturbed,

I

'

Pisarcik leads Giants to
victory over·Buffalo Bills

Big Ten notes

1972' BUICK
ELEC.HARDTOP

COUPE

S}995

Karr &amp; VanZandt

No Need To Worry!

·.Ferrell owns two-shot

lead in 53rd Ohio open

·=~~a!~sr~i;u~~ ,

br!ehn

"

NEW-YORK (UP! ) - Billy HWJter clasped both arms behind
when he addressed the crowd Raulzhan and Mike Garman .
By FRED DOWN
the swivel chair inside the private
of
19,6fl6 in front of the first- ExpoS 7, Reds Z:
St,:r they provide for the visiting team manager at Yankee UP! Sporla Wrlter
base
stands. " ll is a most
Tony Perez drove in three
ll was in 1972 when Lou
!'m and was as happy as he possibly could be considering
fulfilling
thing
to
better
the
runs with a. two..-un homer
the Clralmstances.
·
Brock heard the tall}lts that
Two Bengals suffered serious injuries in
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!) - The
" belonged
in
a record of a great player such and a single as Montreal
His Texas Rangers have been doing relatively well since he he
the game . Thirdyear linebacker Chris
Cincinnati Bengals were sel In return to
snapped Cincinnati's fivetook them over two months ago. Naturally, he wished they wheelchair" and began to as Cobb."
Devlin ruptured an Achilles tendon and
the two-a-day practice grind today, fresh
The Cardinals scored three game winning streak. Fred
were oo top in the American League West instead of struggling think seriously of breaking
WJderwent surgery SWJday at Christ
from their 33-9 drubbing of the St. Louis
as~ to shake themselves loose from the Kansas City Royals, Ty Cobb's modern major rwts in the first inning and Holdsworth wen.t five innings
Hospital in Cincinnati.
Cardinals.
carried ·a 3-2 lead into the for the victory, wiUJ Don
Chicago White Sox and Minnesota Twins, but they still have a league stolen base record.
Devlin had been bothered by a sore
Despite the score, Bengals head coach
" l was 33 and et ti)e age eighth when the Padres won Stanhouse shutting out the
month to dothatandhel&lt;eepa hoping they will. .
• .
Achilles tendon earlier in training camp,
Bill
Johnson
said
he
didn't
think
h~ team's
For the moment, he wu at peace with himself and the rest of when people said I belonged llie game on ii tw().fWI homer· Reds for the laSt four. innings.
but had worked well before the Saiimlay
win was "a big lopsided victory over St.
T
"
II
the world, thorollghly enjoying the fresh supply of chewing in a wheelchair aod that I by Mike !vie off AI Hrabosky. Philltes 3, Braves Z:
night
contest in St. U!uis. He will be out of
u.UIS.
In the other National
Dave Johnson drew a
tobacco. he. had just fished out of a silwr-lined package and couldo'l do it aj,y more,"
" rt was a very difficult night to play
actioo at least 10 weeks.
Brock revealed Monday League ga;nes, U!s Angeles basesfilled walk off Steve
stuffed m.his mouth. He was giVing it a good workout.
Guard Greg Fairchild suffered a badly
football
and
f
commend
both
teams,"
With Billy HWJter, his immediate family comes first. Alter night, alter setting a new defeated Chicago, 4·1 , llargan with two out in the · Johnson said, referring In the hot, humid
sprained ankle, resulting in extensive
that, .comes winning ball games, and right after that, comes mark ur career 893 steals in Montreal beat Cincinnati, 7-2, bottom of the 14th inning to
swelling, but x..-ays proved negative. It
conditions at game time. "I'm very happy
chewmg tobacco .•There are very lew things in life Hwtter the Cardinals' 4-3 loss to t!Mi and Philadelphia clipped Ioree ih the winning run.
we don't play St. U!uis in the regular
wasn't certain how long he would be
Greg Luztnski hit his 33rd
Allan!JI, 3-2, in 14 innings.
San Diego Padres.
loves more than a healthy chew or tA&gt;bacco.
sidelined, but Johnson blamed the injury
season."
Am~rican League scores
homer for the Pllillies and
"At that point, You wa~t to
. He chews a package a day and does il practically everyon the poor condition of the artificial
Johnson said it was his squad 's "team
where, exceept in his own home at Lutherville Md. His wife prove you don't have to be were New York 5, Kansas Jeff Burroughs connected for
effort"
that
pleased
him
most.
"St.
U!uis
surface· in Busch Memorial stadium. "He
&amp;;~rly, won't let him. She detests chewing iob&amp;cco. · ' tremendously fast to steal City 3; Minnesota swept No. 35 lor the Braves. Gene
has a great offensive line, but I'm proud of
(Fairchild) stepped in a crack in the field
Toronto 7-6, in 10 innings, Garber, who pitched two
. When we first got married in 1949, l made a deal with my bases," he added.
our defensive line . But this is exhibition
and nearly broke his ankle."
The 38-year old Brock then 6·5.; Baltimore 6, shutout innings won his sevwife," he said. "I could chew alii wanted at the ballpark and
Now 3-1 in preseason play, the Bengals
and you can't compare preseason to
'
equaled
Cobb's mark of 892 California I ; Cleveland 9, enth game, while Steve
on the road, but not in the house."
regular. I think, though, that we've made
will lace the Mlnneso!JI Vikings Saturday
I
by stealing second base in the Chicago 2, and Oakland 8, Hargan suffered his third
Occasionally, Hwtter cheats a little.
some real progress. "
night at Riverfront Stadium .
loss.
first
inning Monday night and Boston 7.
" H I'm mowing the lawn and get a phone call inside lhe
house, I don't take the tobacco out of my mouth," he said. surpassed it when he again Dodgers 4, Cubs 1:
Reggie Smith's two-run
"That's p-oviding I don't stay on the phone too long. If it's a stole second base in the
homer
- his 25th - in the
seventh inning .
long call, I golta get It out."
seventh
inning was the big
His teammates
Hunter first began chewing when he was 16.
:· ~ grew up in western Pennsylvania, which is a big coal immediately rushed on the blow for the Dodgers, who
IJIIIUIIg area, and one of the prerequisites of becoming a ball field and assisted him in increased their lead over the
ahead, 7~, in the sixth inning. header from Toronto, 7-6, in In the nightcap, Hisle singled
player in that section of the country was that you had In chew digging up the bag and San Reds In 9'h games in the NL By FRED McMANE
However, Boston's top 10 innings, and 6-5, Cleveland home the tying rwt in lhe
Diego pitcher Randy Jones West. Tommy John won his . UP! Sports Writer
tobaCCo," he said.
All it took was one Page to reliever, Bill Campbell, routed Chicago, 9·2, and sixth inning and Lyman
In the 30 years he has been in professional baseball, Hwtter presented it to Brock as a 16th game with late-inning
relief help from Lance spoil Jim Rice's magnificent couldn't hold it. The A's tied Baltimore topped California, Bostock drove in the go·
remembers haVing only one accident because he was chewing memento.
the score in the eighth when 6-1.
story.
"I did it my way/'. he said
ahead rwt with a sacrifice fly.
and that occurred one day in 1948, his first year out while
pinch runner Sheldon Mallory Yankees 5, Royals 3:
Rice
,
the
slugging
The Twins now are ino second .
playing shortstop lor Three Rivers in the old Canadian·
stole second and scored on
Chris Chambliss delivered place in the AL West, 2'h
lor
the
Boston
Red
outfielder
American League.
Sox, enjoyed the greatest Jim Tyrone's third hit of the a pinch-llit, three..-un blast in games behind Kansas City.
"I went back for a short pop fly in left field and was abool to
the eighth inning to give the Indians 9, White So&gt;: 2:
game of his threeyear major game.
say. ·~ have it,' but just as I got Uie first word out of my mouth,
Page, whose three-run Yankees a victory over the
league
career
Monday
night
Andre Thornton hit a pair .
the whole thing went down my throat," he recalled. "I caught
homer highlighted a four..-un Royals. Singles by Thurman of homers and Duane Kuiper
when
he
slammed
three
the ball. l still don't know how."
homers and a. single in a fourth inning, then drilled his Munson and U!u Piniella and Bruce Boehle each hit
The conversation switched to the pennant race aod the way
nationally televised contest second blast of the game into preceded the blast by Cham· one to power the Indians past
the Rangers have been making more of a run lor it since
the fl.'s bullpen off Campbell bliss. Cliff Johnson also hom- the White Sox . Eric
against the Oakland A's.
Hwtter became manager.
in
the ninth.
ered lor the Yankees while Soderhoim homered lor the
But, his heroics were
"I've changed a Iotta things and I'm gonna change some
"In
another
ballpark
it
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Lou about live minutes while spoiled a bit by Oakland might have been a lower George Brett and AI Cowens White Sox.
more," said Hwtter, who had several previous managerial
to rookie Mitchell Page, who scoring game, but this connected lor Kansas City . Orioles 6, Angels 1:
offers but had always turned them down to remain with Brock, 38, now joins Hank teammates rushed
Pat Kelly's third career
Aaron in the record books lor congratulate Brock. He was drilled his second homer of (Fenway Park) is a hitting Twins 7-6, 6-5:
Baltimore as a coach.
Larry
Hisle
sparked
the
the
game
in
the
nil1th
inning
grand slam and Rudy .May's
"One thing I'm not gonna change is Jim Swtdberg. "He's the breaking a mark set by a given the second hase bag
paradi~e and you always get
Twins' double-lleader sweep lour-bit pitching carried the
to
give
theA's
im
8-7triumph.
legendary
figure.
and
the
ball
as
a
memento.
best .catcher in the league. Throws everybody out, never has a
The defeat dropped Boston up when you come here," with seven hits and four RBI, Orioles to victory over Nolan
Aaron broke Babe Ruth's
Again, in the seventh irining
passed ball and picks people off base. And look at the job he's
said Page.
In the opener, Hisle tripled Ryan and the Angels. Bobby
was three games behind the
doing for us with his bat. He's right up there at .300. And has total home run mark and the , performance
"I'm
disappointed,
but
I'm
home two rwts to trigger a Bonds stole his 30th base lor
American League East.the best attitude you ever saw. The same as Brooks Robinson. Brock swiped the stolen base repeated and there . was an
three-run
eighth and enabled the Angels.
glad
I
had
4-for-li,"
said
Rice,
leading Yankees, who beat
even longer delay.
mark from Ty Cobb.
Need I say anymore? "
the
Twins
to tie the score .
who
has
been
battling
a
Cardinal players rushed Kansas City, 5·3, in an recent slump.
Brock, th~ St. Louis
Over in the American League East, Hunter would like tq see
Then
he
doubled
aod scored
his old boddy, Earl Weaver, and the Orioles win it, but he feels Express, tied Cobb's modern out to help dig up the bag. It afternoon. contest .
the
winning
rwt
in
the lOth on
In
other
AL
games,
New
The last of Rice's three
THIS WEEK' SSPECIA'
pretty sure the Yankees will. I'm not as sure as he is. I have a mark of 892 Monday night was formally presented to
Bob
Gorinski's
sacrifice
fly .
York
defeated
Kansas
City
,
f&gt;.
p~t the Red Sox
homers
and
then
beat
it
lor
a
to!Jil
of
Brock
by
Padre.
pitcher
feeling the Red Sox are still to be heard from before it's over.
3, Minnesota look a doubleShould the Rangers make it in their division, which looks like 893 by stealing second base Randy Jones, the team's
something of a long shot now, Hunter will owe Weaver adinner tWice against the San Diego player represen!Jilive.
Brock walked in front of the
Padres.
at the very least.
The
Padres
beat
St.
U!uis,
stands
near first base and
"~fore the Ali.Star break, l was trying to find a leadoff
4.3,
on
Mike
!vie's
tw&lt;rrwt
thanked
the crowd lor its
hitter," said HWJter. "I ha~ed to talk to Earl about it and
USED CARS
he suggested I try Mike Hargrove..I did, and since Hargrove . homer in the eighth inning off cbeers of congratulations,
has been leading off, his percentage for g~tting on base has reliever AI Hrabosky but that "It's a most fulfilling thing to
been close to .500. I hawn'l had a chance to thank Earl didn 'l seem to matter very ·better the record of a great
player such as Cobb."
personally for his suggestion but knowing him, I'm sure he has ·much to the Cardinals.
The Oilers, frustrated by a
A pair
of
rookie ( Ramsey) and Randy (Dean)
"I'm only sorry we didn't
It
was
U!u
Brock
Night
all
noticed Hargrc;)Ve's statistics."
·
is
a
No.
5
pick.
l
looked
like
series
of ntistakes in the first
•
quarterbacks excelled at
of a sudden at San Diego win the game," he said.
the
guy
who
was
out
of
the
alive
in
the
third
half,
came
· At the age of 35, Brock Set Giants Stadium Monday
Stadium.
picture.,
period to score on Karl
Brock disclosed alter the the season record of 118 night.
Pisarcik
finished
with
15
1-yard run and
Douglas'
Joe Pisarcik, figh.ting lor a
game that back in 1972 he was stolen bases in 1974, breaking
completions
in
21
attempts
Giles'
57-yard pass
Jinuny
taunted about being washed Maury Wills 1962 mark of 104. spot on the Giants' roster, for 178 yards and one
reception
In
win
their first
Cobb compiled his total of directed his fourth scoring
up as a hase stealer. It was
touchdown
after
relieving
pre.sea~on game in two
then he began to think 892 stolen bases in a career drive of the game to set up injured starter
Jerry
years.
The 49ers were not
seriously of breaking Cobb's lasting 24 seasons, ending in Joe Danelo's 30-y&lt;Ird field Golsteyn in the first quarter. effective offensively under
By Uolted Press International
1928. His best single year was · goal at 12:20 of overtime
Gritty twice-a-day workouts lor several Big Ten schools mark.
The Bills had tied the score the direction of either Jiin
1915 when he stole 96.
Mond,ay night, lifting New
"I
was
33
and
at
the
age
were pared down to one session with the beginning of classes
at
· 21-21 with 1: 13 left in Plunkett or Pat Sullivan and ·
Cobb stole 40 or more bases York to a 24-21 pre-&lt;leason
when people said I belonged
Monday as zero hour approaches lor the fall campaign.
re_gulation
·time when rookie suffered their third loss in
You'll Like OUT Quality
In West Lafayette, Ind., new Coach Jim Young said Purdue's in a whee)chair and that I. in nine seasons, but Brock victory over the Buffalo Bills. quarterback Ken Johnson lour pre-season games.
Way of Doing Business ·
has
done
that
in
13
seasons.
·
After
a
Buffalo
punt,
loolbi!ll squad is ''very close to where we expect to be following couldo'l do it any more," he
"
Ours'
was
a
shoddy
took
the
Bills
85
yards
in
13
GMAC FINANCING
said. "You get it from bench This season he has 28 thefts in Pisarcik marched the Giants plays and scored himself on performance,'' said 49ers 992-5342
two-a-day workouts, but we still have a way to go."
Pomeroy
into fieldgoal range in 12
The Boilermakers went to one 9G-minute practice Monday jockeys and your own 49 attempts.
Open Evenings 'til6 : ~
Coach
Ken
Myers.
"We
just
an
11-yard
rwt.
Strangely, the King of plays, including a key 21-yard
·
concentrating on problem areas and working for teammates.
Til5 p.m. Sat.
Joe Ferguson threw for two didn't play well. "
Thieves
has
never
stolen
pass
to
tight
end
Bob
Tucker
that
point,
you
want
to
"At
consistency.
that pushed New York to the earlier Buffalo touchdowns,
"All the offense and defense has been installed and the prove you don't have to he home.
Buffalo 33-yard line. ~ven hitting Reuben Gant with a
players should have their assignments by now," Young said. tremendously fast to steal
plays later Danelo gave the ID-yarder and passing live
"Hopelully, our positions are stabilized. We don't anticipate bases. Doing it .was
NEW YORK (UP!)- Rico Giants their first victory in yards to Bob Chandler. O.J .
something like Hank Aaron
any more changes."
Simpson, playing only in the
Coach John Pont said the quarterback hattie is still under but not the same thing. He Carty, designated hitter for lour outings.
first
half, picked up 88 yards
"Before the game, I didn't
contention at Northwestern but Steve Breitbeil appears to was hitting homers - the the · Cleveland Indians ,
in
15
carries for Buffalo.
ultimate hit. There are a lot smashed three home runs think my chances of making
have the edge.
·,
In the only other Monday
"Steve Bre!tbeil is practicing and playing like No. 1. It'll be.a of variabies in stolen bases~ and had 13 RBI to win the the team were tno good,'! said night
game,
Houston
Pisarcik,
who
played
despite
the pitcher, the infielder, the American League Player of
close battle between him and Scott Stronski," Pont said.
San
Francisco,
17-3.
defeated
a
persistent
cold.
"We
have
the Week Award Monday.
Iowa Coach Bob Comrnings said two freshmen have been .catcher and the umpire."
Jerry
(Golsteyn)
and
Steve
Carty hit .480 for the week
After the base was stolen in
moved up to the No. 1 wtit. Jiiruny Frazier is listed as the top
and
had an amazing slugging
wingback and Jeff llf!Vilder joined the first unit at offensive the first inning, to-tie Cobb's
mark, the game held
tackle.
.. up lor. percentage of .ooo.
In addition, Commings said freshman John Harty is making
•
a strong push for a starting defensive tackle spot and another ----------~-----------Priebe
who
is
suffering
a
mild
concussion,
are
also
out
with
freshman -Bruce Kittle- is battling Willis lor his position on
injuries.
the second wtit.
Indiana football Coach Lee Corso had his offense and defense
"ll's becoming pretty obvious right now what an excellent
!
recrulting year we had by the number of rookies either in or units con~ntrate on plays used by Wisconsin in the first day of
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio Alliance, Lawton Harrison of
single workouts lor the season and home game opener Sept. 10.
challenging for top spots," Comrnings said.
(UP!)
- Gene Ferrell of Cincinnati, Ken Mast of Lima
Even though the squad dropped from the tw&lt;Hl-day workouts
University of IDlnois offensive tackle Dan Melsek will be
Bryan
leads
by two shots
sidelll\ed with knee injuries for at least another few days, llllni with the beginn)ng of classes, Corso said, "We aren't !Jipering going into today's second and Dick Plummer of Cincin·
coach Gary Moeller reported following Monday's single prac· yet, but alter a fullscale scrimma_ge, we'D start lightening up a round of the 53rd Ohio Open nati.
At 69 is Todd Crandall of
bit."
tice session.
Golf
Championsllip.
Gerard. Nine players are at
Corso s8id John Swinehart was holding on to the first string
Melsek, a junior from Chicago, was injured during scrim·
The
34-year-old
lefthander
·
70 and 19, including defending
mages last week. Seven reserves, including junior guard Mike quarterback spot 'he took over from Willie Wilson.
shot a seven-under-par 65, champion Marty Roesnik of
Monday to head a record field Canton, are at 71.
ol288 professionals a'nd amaForty -one broke par on the
teur competing at. the Reid first round.
You can be assured coverage
. Park Memorial Golf Course.
·Of the eight lowest scores,
of even minor accidents ...
Tied lor second at 67 are all but Collins' carne on the
with ·.our full auto insurance
host pro El Collins, amateur ·south Course of . Collins was
Arthur Nash of Kent, a on the north laynut, the
policy. Get complete d~tails.
MONTREAL (UP!) - major o.ff-BeasOn deal, was the plate I let them have it." pushed Montreal ahead 6-2. student at Kent State tougher of the two.
Lefty Doug Capilla was one
Ken Griffey's first-inning University, and Mark
Today, the golfers switch
Maybe the Cincinnati Reds the man Montreal expeCted to
Minimal 'Rates
courses: The final round of
wish they had Tony Perez knock in rwts. And he has not of Perez's vict.ima in the thjtd' sacrifce fly and Johnny Zimmennan of Dayton.
At 68 are Barry Good of tournament is Wednesday .
inning, yielding a two;.iuil'; · ~nch's 29th horner provided
back.
,,
, been a disappoinbnenl.
homer
that
tied
the
game
2-2.
a
brief
lead
for
the
Reds,
who
Perez has hit safely in 15 of
"I know I can drive in a lot
his last 18 games. And in of i'UIIs but I have to have the · In the fifth, the Expos trail · the Dodgers by 9'h
those ia games he has 24 hits rwtners on a ahead of me," ignited lor four runs to put the games in the National League
with three doubles, live home said Perez, with 75 RBI to his game out of reach. After West.
Warren fromartie doubled
Fred Holdsworth won his
runs and 19 RBI.
credit.
.
Perez &amp;bowed no signs of a
"I've also been getting a lot home Daw Cash with the go- second start giving him a 2-0
Jet lip Monday night as he of intentional walks Ibis ahead run, Perez' run· record but he worked only the
first five innings. Don
c1row 1n tbree runs against season and the pitchers are scoring single made it 4.2.
Garry
Carter,
who
later
Stanho~~~e shut out Cinctmati
·hla fu noer teammates tA&gt; glw · making it difficult for me
had
a
·solo
homer
in
the
over
'the final four inilings,
the Montreal Espo1 a 7·2 because they're throwing me
yict«y over Cincinnati to a lot of inside and outside seventh inning, his 23rd, earning his fifth save after
doubled Perez home in the . Holdsworth was forced from
atop the Reds' ftve-t~ame pitches.
wlming streak.
"But I'm patient. I'll wall fifth. to make it 5-2. Del the game with a stiff right
Perez who came to the for my chance. And when Unser's pincl!-hit single shoulder.
Expos ft.om Cincinnati in a they throw the ball right over

= · head, leaned back in

·
·
will
Communi y c0 11
ege .courses

h e o f~.ere .· in Point Pleasant soon

•

UP! Sporta Edllor

•t

·

Brock cracks Cobb's record'
of 893 lifetime base thefts

Sport Parade

Rhodesians' chance to reject
the plan by voting lor him.
Young end Owen coolerred
with Vorster and Botha for
3'1'. hours in the a!'temoon in
Pretoria's Union building,
then· returned for an
unscheduled two hours of
talks. No reason was given
lor the secood session.
The key issue in the Anglo·
U.S. plan -officially a secret
though sections of it have
been leaked to newspapers is who will be in in charge of
Rhodesia's security forces
while it shifts to black rule.
The plan . calls lor a U.N.
peace-t&lt;eeping force to be in
charge of a new army made
up of black guerrillas now
6ghting the white regime and
perhaps some members of
Rhodesia's ellisting armed
forces.
Smith, professing not to
know for certain the detalla of
the plan, has said a U.N.
peacekeeping.force would not
guarantee the safety of white
Rhodesians.
Guerrilla leaders have de·
manded the total elimination
of the existing army, but have
not reliected the proposal
outright.
Young and Owen fly to
Salisbury Thursday to brief
Smith on the plan following
stopovers in Tanzania and
Kenya on Tuesday and
Wednesday .
Smith set Wednesdsy's
elections in an attempt to win
a vote of confidence for his
own plan for a limited
transfer of power to
moderate blacks in order to
exclude guerrillas from ,
government.

INDIANAPOUS (UP!) One man shook his head, By EDWARD S. LECIITZIN . "These statistics establish high as 900," Dowie claimed. a minimum of 500 persons,
looked at the more than 400 UP! Auto Writer
that the Ford Pinto is
Actual figures compiled by who would not even have
·police cars parked around the
DEARBORN, Mich. (UP!) involved in fewer fire- the NHTSA showed that ol848 been seriously injured in
Indianapolis City-County . ~ Ford Motor Co . has denied associated coliisions than deaths in !975associated with Pinto accidents, died of burns
Building
with
sirens allegations that the Ford might
be
expected passenger car accidents in was not based on actual
screaming and red lights Pinto is a firetrap in which considering the total number which fires &amp;so occurred, 12 cowtl.
flashing, then said to a 900 . persons died in fires · Of Pintos in operation," said · of the reported fatalities
Instead, Dowie said, he
companion, " It looks like it's following rear-end (X)llisions Misch , vice president in 'nvolved Pinto occupants, compared an estimate of the
going to be a rough night." in which they should not even charge of the EnVironmental Misch said. In 1976, lhe number of annual fire deaths period."
Off-duty patroimen staged have been seriously injured. · and Safety Engineering S.!Jiff . . number of persons killed in in autos - 3,500 - to the
"He has not shown any
the ''park in" Monday at 6
Ford Monday answered
Misch said the magazine's Pinto fires ":~ ll out of ~2 percen!Jige of Pintos on U.S. . signs of exasperation,
p.m. to protest the city's criticism leveled nearly a figures on the number of car.fire fatalities m the entire · highways and came up with paranoia, upset stomach,''
refusal to give police a $3,000 month ago by the magazine people who burned to death in coWitry.
the figure. Ford said even Powell added. "I think he
a year pay hike.
understands the
Mother Jones, which had flaming wrecks do not agree
Th~ subcompa.ct Pinto was that 3,500 ljgure was inflated fully
City officials say the city claimed Ford "for seven with official figures from the first mtroduced m the fall of since NiiTsA data for 1975 difficulty of the process."
cannot afford to pay so large years sold cars in which it National Highway Traffic 1970. More tban 2.5 mUllon associate a total of 1 342
On another matter, Carter
an increase.
knew hundreds of people Safety A&lt;ilninistralion .
have been sold since then.
deaths with · accide'nts expected In annowtce today
The police, many of them would needlessly burn to
Misch said , another study involving all types of vehicles acceptance of an advisory
1 In the article, author Mark
. still in WJiform, left the red death. "
,Dowie claimed that " by by inv~stigation ~in the where fires also were panel's recommendation that
lights flashing and sirens
the natioo's federal workers
In an eight-page statement, conservative
estimates, United States and Canada, present.
screaming as they locked the Ford Vice President Herbert Pinto crashes have caused covering 8,795 .injury ,or tow.
a
t the middle and lower levels
"The truth is that in every
'Cars and threw the keys in a L. Misch said real-world 500 burn deaths to people, away accidents between 1971 model year the Pinto has receiv~ a 7.05 per cent pay
large barrel.
evidence "totally discredits who would not have been and April o119V, included 326 been tested and met or raise starting Oct. I.
On-duty policemen used the opinions of the alleged seriously injured if the car Pintos. Three involved fires. surpassed the federal fuel·
The
pay
raise
coat hangers and other · safety experts quoted by had not burst into flames."
Dowie said during a news system-integrity
standard recommendation also
devices to unlock the cars and Mother Jones."
"The figure could be as conference his assertion that applicable to it," Misch said. provides for adjustments in
turn off sirens and lights. A
the military pay scale but no
spokesman said duplicate
increase at the upper levels of
keys were available but
the executive branch.
matching the keys with the
re~nrte~.;:;c=~~~~~
cars by number would take
several hours. The parked
with a breakfa!!l meeting
cars then were driven to the
~
with Vice President Walkr
city garage.
·
Fraternal Order of Police
officials said they may
.GTON w
· -.
.
Brzezinski, national security
consider "additional job
HUNTIN
, . Va. - Registration will be conducted P· m. ~ednesdays;. BaSic Econorrucs, 6:31).9 p. m. Tuesday;s." adviser.
actions," if the city does not at the first class meetings for 24 Marshall University lndustr!al Eco~nucs, 6:31).9 p.m. Thursdays; Introduction to
Afterward he arranged
meet its demands for a base Community College courses being offered in Point Pleasant Industrial Sociology, 11-9:50 Wednesday mornings.
another meeting, with CIA
pay of about $13,000.
·
this fall, according to Glenn E. Smith, associate dean of the
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY: Fundamentals of Director Stansfield Turner
Community College.
•
Occupational Safety and Health Programs, 6:30-9 p. m. Mondale and Brzezinski. '
r---=:=-:-:-----:-"1
All classes will be conducted in the Mason Cowtty Thursdays.
The President also planned
THEOAILYSENTINEL .
Vocational-T~hnical
Center
at
Point
Pleasant.
..
SECRETARIALSI'UDIES:
Accowttingfor
Business,
6:30the
secood in a series of
DEVOTED TO 1lfE
. INTEIIEST OF
. Srmlh sa1d courses .are being offered in Developmental 9 p. m. Tuesdays; Shoc:th~Uld I, 6:30-ll:40 p. m. Tuesdays and Panama . Canal treaty
MEIC.s.MASON AREA
Studies,. Commumcallon~ , Reading, G~neral Studi~s, Thursdays;'. Typewriting l, Typewriting II and Typewriting briefings, this Ume with
CllllSTERL
Es:er.TANNEHIU.
Ed.
Occup~tlonai Safety, Secretarutl. Studies, Industrial lll, .aU 6:30-ll:40 p. m. Mondays and Wednesdays. ·
officials from Georgia and
ROBERT HOEO'UCH
Super~on and Manag~ment . Legal Secretarial,. Medical
INI?USTRIAL SUPERVISION AND MANAGEMENT: F1orida, to drum up support
Secretarial, Small Busmess Management, Banking and Indpstr•al Matenals Processes and F1ow, 6:»11 p. m. for the controversial accord.
PubUshOO C:f,~!~!pt s.aturditr
.by The ~io VaUey Publiahin~ Co11&gt;
Finance, and BuSiness Support. ,
.
·
Georgia' Gov. George
1Tufli4ay~.
1111Y· Ill Coon St.. P""'"'Y· Ohio
.
Cla~s
scheduled
for
Wednesday
evenings
will
have
their
LEGAL
SECRETARIAL:
Legal
Secertarial
Typewriting,
Busbee,
who Is attending the
45769. BusineSil Offn.'e Phone 9922156. Edilorial PhoneM-21~7. ·
f1~st sessions and regiStration on Au~. 31; .Thursday classes 6:30-8:40 p.m. Mondays and Wedneadays.
Southern Governors
Second Ohio.
'"" ""'"'"' paid at
~I begm Sept. 1; Tuesday classes Will begm Sept. 6, and the
MEDICAL SECRETARIAL: Medical Secretarial Conference tn Texas aenl
Pomeroy,
National adven~in~ represenfirst session of Monday classes is scheduled Sept. 12.
Typewriting, 8:30-1:40 p. m. Mondays and Wednesdays.
· word he would be ~ble to
lative Ward - Grilfilh Company.
Complete details may be obtained by calling the
SMALL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT : Advertising come. BJit he will llend a
Inc., Bottinelli and Gallagher Oiv.,
Community College •. (304) 69&amp;,"1646.
· Merchandising and Sales Prornotion,6:30-9 p.m. Wedneadays: repr~tive aloog 'l"ith a
757 Third Ave., New YOrk, N.Y.
111017.
Classes offered 111 Pomt Pleasant are: .
BANKING and ~IN.ANCE: Money and Finance 6:30-f p. delegation of Dllllllllnent lea·
Subscription nl.ea : Delivered by
DEVELOPMENTAL STUDIES: Reading Improvement, m. Wednesdays; Princ1plea of Bank Operatioos, 6:30-f p.m. dera.
·,""" ~ ,
c•rr~r where availlble 7&gt; cenlS per
week . By Motor Route ~:.ere carrier
6:30-9 p. m. Mondays.
Moodays. .
Florida's Gov. Reuben
!!lervice not av.aUable, One month,
COMMUN!CAITONS: Communications I, Business
BUSINESS SUPPORT : Business Mathematics with Eskew and other Florida
13.~. By mail in Ohio lliKI w. Va.,
Commwtications I and Technical Com'llunications I, all 6:31).9 Machines, 6:31).9 p. m. Thursdays; Introduction to Buaineas, leaders
accepted· the
One Y~ar, $22.00; Six months,
tiUCI; Three months, $7.00;
p.,m. Mondays.
6:30-9 p. m. Thursdays.
invitatiOn. Lut week Carter
ElSewhere $26.00 )':ear; Six monlhs
READING: Speed reading, 6:30 -ll:30 p. m. Tuesdays.
The Community College has an "open door" admission held a 111m11ar
1 for
$13 . ~;
Three m o n~hs. S7.50.
Subm:riplion pnce includes Sunday
GENERAL STUDIES: Human Relations and Work, 6:31).9 policy and any person over the age of 18 who can benefit from a delegati0111 from Kentucky
TUnes-Sentir1el.
·
p. m. Mondays; Introduction to .Industrial Psychology, &amp;-7:50 program of study can be admitted to the college.
and ~ssippi.

d

•

30.11177

~erez ha~ts

·•
•
,;

·

·R·e ds' pitchers

.Downing Childs fjg
Insurance Agency, Inc.

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'

I

••

,,

,,

�Mark Hoegland and Marty
Smith. 'lbere ~ thnle bolet
in the o!fensi"" line and
Walsh has to wort o,. a
defense that includes only M•ior League Leaden
top player middle
By United Pr ess 1nterniilll1ona1
Unehacker Gordy CBellno,
By
Prns' t : ter-nati ontl offensive f&amp;Ckle 9111 W l ndauer
Batting
Mondav
and rook ie fr-ee i!lgent runn lno
.1.~
(b•se-ct on no al bat-sJ
who could be the belt at hla
Footb•ll
back. Kt ith F~rguson .
Nation a I League
position in the COWitry.
Ch
icago
Cut
defensive
New
York
Jets
Cur
tree
~Editor's
note
:
ABother
In
a
The
Trojans
have
los
t
G AB . H . Pet.
starters on defense
california is a dark horae
Parker P1f
130 533 184 .34S O.ck Ron Bush. w•de rece-iver agent defensive tackle Danny
Rollen series of colle&amp;e football seven
Stennett P it
116 ASJ 152 .336 G era I d Butter, t"omerback Johnson, ·cornerbacl(
team
all the way. The Beara
rtlfoul8fzeups. Today: Tlie while the Bruins have lost key
S1 mmns 51 L
122 421 14 1 .335 Tffry Irv i n, ltght end Doug Smith and rook 1e linebitcker Ed
are
looking
for a quarterback
Kingsriter
and
rvnnino
beck
-._:hompson
;
placed
free
agMt
Ji'ar
w-t.l
players
offense.
Eleven
Gr iffey Cln
128 489 158 .323 R:OO Wellmgton ·
00
ltnebacker Don Colem11n on
,..
Tmpltn 51 L
123 498 l SI .317
and
are
hoping
jc transfer
Cleveland - Wa ived rook ie iniured reserve
Trojans from the 1.916 team
L vznsk i Ph il
119 446 139 .312
Diaries
Young,
who
[lUlled
l
inebac
ker
Darw
in
Loaterman
_Mi
nn~ta
Cut
qubrterback
By
JOE
SARGIS
were
drafted
by
pro
teams,
Smi th L A
1"27 "08 117 .3 11
for
m&lt;re
than
4,6110
yards
in
Foster Cin
128 502 15S .309 ~;~kle frecarr~genJ~hn~en~~: ~~~sm5aa,!:":de P,~~~~~er R~~~~
UPI Sports Writer
and finding replacements for
Val n tine M il
104 412 130 .308
two
years,
is
the
answer.
Tbe
and
k ick -return Adams and defens ive tl'lck le
SAN f'R.ANCISOO lUPI) _ tbem in one year may be
M m phr y St.
11 5 355 109 .307 cornerback
specrallst Ernie Young .
Stan Lewis .
For
the first.,,,....._;
... a dozen more than even Rob'~
""ncan
offensive line is the leam'1
Amerinn league
Denver - Announc ed v!!teran
IJ•seball
1o1.11n: .... ,
.u-..
G. AB . H. Pet.
biggest question mark. It
New York {NL ) F ired yeats, neither Southern C8li· handle.
Carew M in
129 S l -4 .194 .377 offensive tackle Bi ll Ba in witt
" nor UCLA 15
The Bruins on the other isn't much going in but if qew
• a soll"d
Bostoc k M in
] 28 497 169 ,340 be lost tor the season due to Director of Pl ayer Devtlopment fonua
kne-e surgery .
Nelso.n Burbrinl&lt; ; announced
·
•
.
Rivers NY
112 460 152 .330 left
M
i
am
i
Waived
veterans
righf
-handt'd
p
itcher
Jackson
pick
to
win
the
Pacific
8
hand,
have
a
solid
defense, men come on quickly, so will
Singlt on , Ba t
H9 118 138 .330
!he Bear offense. However,
defensive
back.
Ted
Bac
hman,
T~dd
will
be
reulled
from
ttle
Conference
football
title
in
anchored
by
linebackers
L eFlore Det
)22 520 167 .321
Jerry
Robinson
and Mike White, for a change,
Rice Bos
128 521 to7 .321 wide rece-Iver Barr., Sm ith and mmors on Fr l ~av .
1977.
Ba ilor Tor
108 435 139 .310
That is not to say one or the Raymond BeU. But on the may have the best defensive
Bre11 K C
108 444 138 .lll
Zisk Chi
117 451 139 .308
other Los Angeles school offensive line, Donahue has 11 in the Pac 8 with 17
Harqrve Tex
122 426 131 .308
.won'twin again; only \hatfor only one retnmee of note ~ retw:nees, inclqding lineman
. NalionaiH~:.~~Rl"~oster, Cin .
Ralph DeLoach, linebacker
a change. the Trojans and Cus Coppens.
43; Burroughs . Atl 35: Luz insk.L
Burl
Toler and back Ken
Bruins go into a new season
Of course, all those holes at
Major Lugue Re.sults
(8) and Munson . WP- Lvle, 10
Ph il 33 ; Schmidt, Ph il 32 ;
By United Prest International
with as many question marks USC and UCLA have given McAllister.
4. LP- Mingori , 1-" · HRsBench . Cin '29.
National Lugue
Kansas City, Breu {17) , cowen$ as Washington, Stanf&lt;rd and Washington , Stan~rd and
That leaves Oregon State,
American league : Ri ce. Bos
no 000 opo- 7 50 (19) ; New Yorjlt , Johnson (81.
and Bonds , Cal 33 &lt; Scott Bos Cinc i
State and
Washington
California,
and
if
they
don't
California
heart.
Tie
three
Mntral
002
040
lOx
7
12
0
Chambliss (16) .
and NeHies. NY 31 : Hobson.
Capilla, Murray (5 ), Bi lling Oregon. The Pac 8 champion
Bos, Gamble and Zisk, Ch i,
solve
their
problems
early,
schools
face
similar
000 100 ooo- 1 _. 2
Thornton , Clev and Thompson , ham {6 1, Sarm iento { 8 ) and cam
isn't likely to came from
Bench ; Holdsworth , Stanhouse Billt
100 001 AOx - 6 7 0 there could be a wild problems for the m06t part
Del 26.
(6)
and
Carter
.
WHoldsworth.
amoog
them but each BChool
Ryan
,
Barlow
(8)
and
Humseramble
for
the
league
tiUe.
and
they
think
this
makes
Runs Batted In
National League : Fo~ter. Cin 1-0. L;;-Capilla , 6-6. HR5.._ phrey ; R , May and Skaggs. w
has
enough
solid players ID
Both IJSC and UCLA are them even with the Trojans
123 ; Luzinsk \, Phil 107 ; Bur - Ci ncJnnati, Bench ( 79) ; Mon - R . Mav, 14-12 . L- Ryan , 1713.
upset
any
of
the
other five. In
HAs-california, Jackson (5) . searching for a quarterback and the Bruins.
rou9hS , Af t and Cey, LA 98 ; treat. Perez (lS L Carter (23) .
. Baltimore, ·Kelly (9) .
Bench , Ci n -and Garvey, LA 94.
a
more
evenly
balanced
and have holes to fill elseLet's see.
American
League :
H isle , ( 14 innings I
The Huskies probably have league, it's usually the lower
~hic:go
000 010 001- 2 6 4 wl)ere . The Bruins need
Mlnn 109 ; Bonds, Cal 97 ; Atlanta
000 000 020 000 oo- 2 8 I Cleve
310 101 12x- 9 16'0 someone like John Sciarra or fewer problems than any Pac
bracket teams who make tbe
Hobson , Bos and Thompson ,
Stone. Martinez (6), KirkDet 93 ; Rice. Bos and Nettles. Ph i ladelphia
most
progress. That could be
Jeff
Dankworth
to
run
their
8
team
going
in.
Don
James
002 000 000 000 01 ......: 3 9 0 wood (8 ) and Downing ; wa its
NY 87.
Capra . Campbell (8 ). Oavev and Kendall. W- Walts , 8 ·5. L veer and that kind of a has done an excellent joob in tl1e case f&lt;r the Beavera,
Stolen Bases
Nati onal League : . Taveras, ( 10), Theiss (10 ), Hargan (12) Stone . 13 ·10. HA s- Cleveland, quarterback isn 't always rebuilding the team and of
Cougars arxl Duclls.
P itt 49 ; Cedeno, Hou 44 , and Nolan ; C h r i s t e n s on , Kuiper { 1 ) , Thornton 2 (26},
Craig Fertig is starting hls
easy
to
find.
The
Trojans
will
·the
three
schools
with
a
McGraw
·
(10
).
Reed
(II)
,
Botche (]) . Chicago, Soderholm
Morgan, Cin and Moreno . P itt
Garber (lJ ) and Boone, Foofe (22 ).
AI ; Lopes, lA 40.
second
year at OSU and if the
settle
.
for
a
standup
chance
to
upset
USC
and
7-5.
LAmer ican League : Patek . KC (}1J . W- Garber.
Beavers
stay away from
quarterback
who
can
take
UCLA,
Washington
seems
the
0-3.
HRs~Atlanta , Oaklnd
001041011 - 813 2
41 ; Remy , Cal 34 ; Page, Oak Hargan ,
021 202 ooo- 7 15 0 advantage of fine receivers likeliest.
3'2 ; Bonds , Cal 30 ; LeFlore, Del Burroughs (35) ; Philadelphia , Boston
injuries (last year alm06t
Luzinski (33) .
Coleman , Torrealba (A), Ba ir
29 .
and hit them more than 50 per
Warren
Moon
at every man from the staning
(7) and Sanguillen: Newman
Pitch i ng
SI .L
30000000Q-3 60 (7) ; Wise, Willoughby (6),, cent of the time.
quarterback,
Ronnie 22missed at least one game),
Most Victories
002 000 02x- A 7 2 Campbell ( 8 l. Stanley (9 } and
National League : R Reuschel , San Dgo
Thus, there is going to be a . Rowland at tailback, wide they are certain to win more
Urrea, Hrabosky ( 8) and Fisk . W- Balr , 3-2. L - Camp .
Chi 18 -5; Carlton , Ph i l 18 -8;
lot
of early heat on UCLA's receiver Spider Gaines (a than the two games they did
Simmofls
:
Frel
sleben.
Fingers
12-9.
HRs
Boston
,
Rice
2
belt
.
John . LA 16 -5; Forsct-1 , St.L 166 ; Seaver , Cin 15.-5 ; RhOden , LA (9 ) and RQberts • . W- Freis- (331 . Oakland, P icc iolo f2i. Terry Donahue to find the track star), center Blair Bush
in 1916. The team is deep at
leben , 6-7. L - Hrabosky , 6-5. Page 2 (1 6 ).
'
15 -8 .
quarterback,
righ.t
man
from
among
and
tackles
Jeff
Toews
and
has one of tbe
American League : Rvan , Cal HR - San D iego , tvie ( 9) .
17-13; Goltz , Minn 16 -7; "r .John holdover Steve Bukich, Roger Westlund are the solid finest receivers in the league
000 ooo 01o--- 1 a o
son . Mlnn 15 -6 ; Tanana. Cal 15- Ch i coo
reserve Rick Bashore or perfocmers on offense and in Dwayne Hall and is solid in
L.A .
200 000 20x- A 9 0
7; Torrez , NY 15-11 .
Krukow,
Gj
usti
(8
}
and
freshman
Craig Landis to run . the defense is led by tackle hoth lines. No depth, though,
Earned Run Average
Rautzhan
M i tterwald ; John,
( ba5.ed O'\ 117 innings pitched }
his veer T. Because of the Dave
Browning
annd and that's what will hurt the
National League : Candelar ia , (8), Garman (9) and Oates . W
formation's complexity he linebackers Brett Gagliardi team the m06t.
Pi tt
2.55 ; John, LA 2. 58 ; - John . 16-S. L- Krukow , 8-11.
R.Reuschel, Chi 2.70 ; Hooton, H_R- Los Angeles, Smi th (25) .
can't split the job and has to and Antowaine Richardson.
warren Powers, the former
LA 2.72 : Richard, Hou 2.78.
settle
oo
one
man.
The
Huskies
had
a
big
Oakland
Raider, is the new
American
League
American League : . Tanana,
Cal 2.33 ; Bly leven , Tex 2.70 ; (lsi game, ID innings)
John Robinson probably recruiting year arxl among coach at WSU. He has
010 005 000 o-- ·6 15 1
Ryan . Cal 2.77 ; Rozema. Del Tront
has the right man in Rob their prize signees are problems but is not without
000 201 030 1- 7 13 0
M inn
2.86; T .Johnson , M inn 2.95.
i
n,
Vuckovich
(8),
Will
is
Garv
RIVER
DOWNS
Hertel
at quarterback, but lineman CUrt Marsh and star
performers
Strikeouts
National Lngue : Niekro , A11 (8), Murphy (9) and Ashby ;
CINCINNATI
IUPII
th
Tr
·
h
J
·
b
k
I"
ba
k
e OJan coac isn't a! that runnmg ac • me c er quarterback Jack ThomJlllOn,
213 ; Rogers, Mtl 168 ; K_oosman, Redfern , Burgmeier ( 6), D . Worthy Way beat Feligres by
running back Dan Doornink
NY 163 ; Seaver . Cin 161; )ohnson (6), Schueler (6) and 1'1&gt; lengths to win Monday's sure. He needs someone who Toussiant Tyler.
Suit i ng . W - SchlJeler, 7-6. L ...,.... $;1,600 leature race at River can lake advantage of Randy
Richard, Hou 159.
At
Stanford,
there
is
a
new
and wide receivers Mike
Ameritan League : Ryan . Cal Murphy, 1-2.
Downs.
Simmrin's
pass
catching
coach
in
Bill
Walsh,
a
man
Levenseller and Brtan Kelly.
3&lt;15 1 Tanana , Cal 198 ; Leonard ,
Vince Clark guided Worthy abilities because for the first" many say has the most
.KC 18,1; Blyleven, Tex 170 ; (2n d game)
.Oregon also luis a new
Tronto
010 004 000-- 5 9 0 Way over the m lie -on the turf
E·ckers ley , Clev 161 .
coach
- Ricb . Brooks.
in
1:
39
1-5,
good
for
payoffs
of
time
in
years
usc
has
only
inventive
mind
in
football
.
112 001 00• - 6 15 0
. Minn
Jefferson , · W illis {5). Vutk - $8 . .00, 55 and S3.40. Straight one solid tailback - Charles He's paSs-oriented and in Guy
Quarterback
Jack llenderson
ANAHEIM (UPI) - The ovich (6) and Cerone; Zahn , T .
Poker
came
in
third.
White
instead
of
three
or
Benjamin
the
Cardinals
bave
and
an
experienced
defensive
California Angels Monday -Johnson (6) and Wytiegar . w.
A
5·3 da ily double com · four .and one fullback -Mosi maybe the best pure-passirJg
II
is
what
Brooks
starts
with,
T
.
Johnson
,
15-6.
L-·'Wi!
lis.·
2-6.
signed 18-year-old pitcher HR - M innesola , Cubbag~ (8). ~ bonat10n of Raise A Delight
'
.
.
and Amara fa returned , Tatupu. WhlfA! and Tatupu quarterback m the country From tllere he will have to
Brad Havens after a weekend
5208,60.
are more effective when they . plus wide receivers Bill pick and choose until be
Kan
City
000
102
ooo-3
7
0
workout by the left-bander N .Y .
100 010 OJx- 5 10 0
A
crowd
of
3,436
bet
don't have to play all the Kellar, James Lofton and comes up with a winning
while the club was at Tiger
Splittorff. Mingori {7), Bird
SJ75,33s.
time.
VInce Mulroy and tight ends combination.
(8} and Por ter ; Hunter , Lyl ~
Stadiwn playing Detroit.

~'"-Daily Smtinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 30, 19T7

Leaders

j Sports transactions
Unit~

M•jor Lugue Slat'l:dif19S

DetrO• I

'ly United Prtss tnttrnll tonll

MiiW\lU~~

N~tion•l Le~gue

pm

Eut'

Phila
P ltlsbgh
Chicago
St. Louis
Montreal
New York

W L

Pet. G8

79

4 12

so

16 ss .sao
70 S9 .543
7 1 60 .542

•

9
9

70 .462 191 3
.51 78 .395 28
West
W. L
Pet. GB
60

Los Ang
Cinc; l

79
70
61
61
57
48

Houston

51 .603
62 .530

91 1

San Diego 4, St . Lou is 3
Los Angeles 4, Ch icago 1 ,
Today•s Probable Pitchers
Atlanta

( Hanna

1-71

( Kaat

S-7l,

(Brown 9-10),

W L Pet. GB
74 58 .561
73 60 .549 11 '
73 60 .549 1' ~

Pawtucket
Tidewater
Charleston
Syracuse
Richmond

67 66 .504 · 71 1
66 67 .1196 8V2

65 67 .492 9
61 72 .459 13 1 2
52 81 .391 22 1 '

Columbus

Toledo

at

7: 35

p.m .
Cinc i nnat i (Norman 12 10) at

Montreal

lnter nationalleilgue •
United Press lnternati onill

Rochester

( All Times EDTI
Phi ladelph ia

WKntsday ' s Gam es
Cal if at Balt i mon~· . night
Seattle- at New York , n ight
O.Oitland at Boston, night
Texas at Kansas City , night
Oakland at M i rtnesota , nigh f
Oe'ro it at M ilwaukee, n igh t

69 .... 73 11

71 .462 18' ~
76 .479 73
82 .369 )Ql 2
Monday's Results
Montreal 1. Cinc innat i 2
Phila 3, Atlanta 2, 1• inns .

San Fran
S.•n Diego
A.tlarHa

( Rozema U Sl a t
( Caldwell 4 6 ). 8 30

8: 05

p .m .

New York (Swan 8 B or
Myrick 1-ll ;,t Houston (Niekro
9-Sl. 8 :15p.m .
St. Lou is (Schultz 5-l l at San
Diego (Griffin 6-9 or Toml in 34) . 10 p.m .
Chicago (R . Reusche l 18-5) at
Los Angel~s (Rau 13 -.4 ), 10 : 3(]

Monday's
Charles t on 3,
1st, 7 innings
Charleston 5,
2nd . 7 innings
Rochester 6,
1st, 7 innings
Rochester 7,
wnd. 7 inni ngs
Pawtucket 5

Toledo 7.

Results
Richmond 2
Richmond 3.
Syracuse 5,
Syracuse 3,
Tidewater ~

Columbu~

2

p .m .
Pittsburgh {Candel3ria 14 -4 )
at San Franc isco tBarr 11 -12 1.
10 : ~5

p.m .

Wednesday 's Games
Atla.nta at Philadel ph ia
Plttsburgh at San Francisco
Cincinnati at Montrea L nighT
New York at Houston , n i gh ~
Chicago at Los Angell!s , night
St. Louis at San D iego, nigh t

NORTHFIELD
NOR TH FIE LD,
Oh io
IU Pi l - Whoopie J P
grabbed the early lead and
held on for a head victory
ove r Chita Scott in the
featured $1,800 ninth race

Ameri can League

East
W

New York
Boston
Bal timre
DetrOit
Cl eveln.d
Mllw
Toronto

Pet. GB

L

7S 52 .600

74

54 .57 8

3

73 55 .570 4
61 67 .477 16
61 69 .469 17
57 7S .422 231}2
45
west
W
75
75
72

. 34~

84

321J:;o

L
Pet. GB
Kan Ci ty
53 .586
Minn
58 .564 2112
Chicago
56 .563
3
Texas
57 .558 31'2
Calif
61 66 .480 131/'1
Oakland
51 77 .398 24
Seattle
52 81 .391 25 11~
Monday's Results
M inn 7, Toronto 6. 1st. 10 inns .
M in nesota 6, Toronto 5, 2nd
New York 5, Kansas City 3
Balti more 6, Ca li fornia 1
Cleveland 9, Chicago 2
Oakland a, Boston 7
Today •s Probable Pitchers
(All Times eon
Oakland (Langford 8- 14 J at
Bo~ton (Tianl 8~ 8 ) , 7.: 3Q p.m .
Ch icago
CKravec 7-6l
at
Cleveland (Garland 10-15). 7: 30
p .m ',
California ( Brett 11 -9)
at
Balti more { Palmer 13-11) , 7: 30
p.m .
Aatt l e (Pole 7-"11 ) at New
Yo~igueroa 12-9 }, 8 p.m .
Texas
( Perry
11 -10)
a t.
Kansas City (Leonal--d 14-10).
8: 30p .m .

n

Monday night at Norlhf ield

Park .
The winner, driven by Don
McKirgan, covered the mile

In 2: 0~ and returned $1 3.80,
and SJ.20. Real Flashy

$5.20

was third .
The l Oth race b i g triple
combination of 9 - 1- 2 was
worth 5242.70.
A cro wd of 2,808 wagered

$292 ,543.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS IUPI ) - Old
Ganga Mine beat Line T ime

by three -quarters of a length
Monday night to win the
featured eighth race at Scioto
Downs .

Ven White guided th.e

winner whose 1:59 4-5 t ime
was good for payoffs of $3 . .40,

$2.20 and $2.20. Try Bret
came i n third .

A

1· I

nightly double . of

Hastings ~nd Dixie Mistress
returned $22 .80 and thE- 8-7•3
n l nth race trifecta com-

bination was worth $3,385.20.
A

crowd

$256,147.

of

3,534

bet

._nieDaiiJ!Ionl!ne], ~Pameroy,O., Tuesday, Aug. 30, 19T7

I PAC-8 title
up

~or

·

Ma»n .County

grabs

...

News Notes \l

»

By l!llle ReadJ for Alma ManhaU
~~
1be Muon.~ers met ~t tbe Malon City PBrk this
montll for I ptCIUC. 'lt.- altendtng were Catherine Smith,
Hazel Smith, Joyce Carson, Clara Willialll!, Laurene Lewis
M~d Mllr)' l'lcltw. a vilitor,
'
FELLOWSHIP AND PICNIC
.1'
Saturday evening the Ouistian Brethren Olurch, Father's
Houao Ourch, Fairview Bible Church and Salem Conununicy
Church bad a picnic back of Clifton at the site of the recent
revival on Picnic HW,
' Jack RUey had prayer before the group enjoyed the picnic
dinner, After the picnic Earl Stewart was in charge of the
devotions, and Charley Hargraves had the evening sermon.
Songs were song by the group and special songs by Contlie
Gibbs and Deloris Stewart and Mrs. Susie Drinker and Earl
and Deloris Seewart.
Attending were Janie Smith, Viola Stewart, Mary Zerkle,
Nettle Hemsley, Cormie Gibbs and son, Rex, Brooks and Peggy
Edwards, Olie. McDaniel, BW and Goldie Smith, Louis Gibbs,
Dick ~md Dolly TurnWII, Allee Roach, Ottie Roach, Marie .
Hoffman, Charley Hargraves, James and Nora Lewis,
Cynthia, John, Kim and Tammy Elliott, Thelma Henry, Hazel
Holchar, Rolfe Lee, Marion and Ellinor Reynolds, Norma
Queen, Barbara Queen, Carroll arxl Lillian Elliott, Jack and
Ruth Rlley, Caroll Stanley, Bill and Velma Zuspan, Roy and
Suale Brinker, Earl, Deloris, Troy and Rerma Stewart.

Mond. ay -lin.e scores

1

'
· JAMES Noble of New
Orleans visited Ia!!( week with Mr.
and Mrs, Roy Elmer of Clifton and Mrs. Mathilda Noble at
Mason. Mathilda Is Mr. Noble's mother .
,
Gary Schwabe spent the sununer with Mr· and Mrs. Roy
Elmer. He returned home to Ne.w Orleans with his
grandfather, James Noble.

-

MR. AND MRS. LAWRENCE L, LEWIS of Mason were
very pleased when their grandson, Lawrence Edward (Eddie)
Lewis Jr., 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Lewis Sr. of
1252 Parkway Dr., Dunbar, was selected by the Universal
Academy f&lt;r Music In Princeton, New Jersey, to P.articipate in
the American Youth in Concert 1977 ]II'Ogram.
Lewill participated in a nationwide audition and was one of
five Dunbar High School students asked to audition for the
program.
·
A !enOl', Lewis will perform with student musicians and
vocalbts from around the country in a performance at New
York City's Carnegie Hall before departing for a four-week
· EID'opeaiJ tour, during which he will sing in London, Paris,
Geneva, Innsbruck, Venice, Florence and Rome.
Lewill participates in the special chorus at Dunbar High
Sci&gt;OOI and has been a member Of the all.county and all.,o!tate
ch()fiiSell.

For those not yet familiar with it, marijuana is the dried
flowering or fruiting top of tl1e plant Cannabis ·s.tiva, !..,
fonnerly referred to as lndian Hemp. It usually looks like fine,
green tobacco when IUIO!Ii for smoking, in cigarettes and pipes.
Hashish, also a preparation from Cannabis, is taken orally in
many forms, and infrequently made into candy, sniffed in
powder form, mixed with honey for drinking or with butter for
spreading on bread. The primary results, and no doubt the
reason for its popularity, are feelings of great perceptiveness
and pleasure, accompanied by an exaggerated sense of ability,
from even smaU doses. Continued and larger doses cause
erratic behavior ,loss of memory, distortion of time and spatial
perceptions, and hilarity without cause. Due to visions and
exhilaration that result from use, users may lose all nonnal
restraint and do things that cause themselves, and those
around them, serious injury ... even death.
.Perhaps one of the greatest cons attempted in America
has been the effort to convince us that marijuana is harmless.
But, many have been so thoroughly convinced that responsible
people have stood idly by while Jaws across the nation were
changed to make ''the punislunent fit the crime" -to make
the penalties Jess severe, In many areas equal only to a slap on
the wrist for possession of small amounts "for personal use."
For the most part, this fallacious thinking was largely due
to parents and others not being able to stomach watching
young people being arrested and thrown in jail for using the
weed. Better judgment, which should have prevailed, was
pushed to the background, because we allowed ourselves to he
sold a bill of goods, So, much like the soft-hearted parent who
camot stand to punish a spoil'd brat, we gave in, Many adults
even joined in the fun by suing marijuana themselves.
One big argument given by users and advocates, was that
even the bigwigs of "medical science" could not prove that
marijuana was actually hannful to the body. While this was
true for awhile - before the real facts started to show
themselves - few even considered the harm marijuana
caused indirectly ... the personal injuries resulting from use,
the traffic accidents, robberies, burglaries, rapes, etc.
But now the proof-positive that everyone seemed to
demand before they'd let themselves become disturbed, is
finally beg!Jming_to slowly come out. Users delighted in
telling everyone that marijuana was not harmful, "like the
cigarettes you smoke and booze the e.'llablishment dripks."
Recent research, however, is . now tending to show that
marijuana is 100 times more damaging than alcohol or tobacco
cigarettes. Hit can deStroy you in a few years," says Dr.
Hardin B. Jones, professor of medical physics and physiology,
and assistant director of the Donner Laboratory at the
University of California at Berkeley. Dr. Jones added,
''marijuana probably is the most cytoxic (ceU.poisoning)
substance known; it dies not kill the cells outright, but
interferes with their function."
One research project, involving onlv :lO users who smoked
25 to 30 grams of hashish a month, for just a few months,
showed that 24 of them developed precancerous lesions of the
lungs. "We believe that we will begin to see a tremendous rash
of lung cancer in 10 to 15 years because of marijuana use,"
warns Dr. Jones ,
·
The marijuana user shifts from seH.activating, interesting

Big Two stopped
atomic explosion
•

MARKY

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
NO WASTE

FRESH &amp; LEAN

FRESH &amp; LEAN

SALT

SUPERIORS
ALL MEAT

BROUGHTON'S

HOMO
MILK

RC
bots.
ALL WEEK

CASH SAV.ER

~139

DIET RITE COLA

-.11=--

16 OZ. BOTS.

25 LB. BAG

DR. PEPPER
8-16 oz.
BOITLES

MORTON HOUSE

•339

CANS

•1oo

trigger epllepsy in children

wildlife

•tv v&lt;t

6

Sliced Pork 'n Gravy or
Sliced Turkey 'n Gravy

69e ~

CANS

•'100

"' ,!.~.
" 44'
89~ TREET••••••••••••• .l.2.~.~~. 99. GATORADE•••••••••••
I

ORANGE R.AVORED

e

I

Dear Sir:
'lbl.a letter Is concerning the Jetter submitted by Mrs; Mary
Rusk James on Slmday, August 28.
·
I feel that Mrs. James' rnlnd Is in the right place, but her
heart is Qlisleadlng her, To begin with, the new law requires
that trape mWII be c;hecked every 24 hours, Also, the fur,;belrlng lllima1a tblt are trapped in Qlio are not in the traps
wllen you let tbem 10 II does not have to suffer the full 24 hours.
Molt IJiimalll are IHit caught befoce midnight, leaving them in
ClliCAGO (UPI)
the tr..- DOt JllCII'e than 8 (X' 10 houn.
.
Epilepsy may be the result of
Mrs Jameelllatedsbewas nOt against the killing of deer, a chemical deficiency in the
· 11J1b or ~tber
u loog ·a s the animal did not have to blood, according to a report
lUff~, l can thlnt of n«&lt;tlng that does without a considerable today at the I74th meeting of
amount of aufferlng.
.
. the American Chemical
· Mri. James a1ao stated that I should not group all anti· Society.
trawera totether beeauae, aa she most accurately described
The disease which bas \ogg
10111e nut at~ they will not·stop until they have banned all baffled researchers has been
aport hunting In lbe state of Ohio, WeU, Mrs. James, I have no linked with dimlnlsbed levels
other choice but to group all anti's together, You see, a vote tn !)( manganese in the blond of
t.n tile let! -bold trap would be a wte to IIIJAPOl'l these, as you some patients and their
mothers, reported Dr. Yuklo
[Ill it, 11101t IICCII'Itely I might add, Ntl'I'S.
Apln I must r eapoud to Mrs. James' statement about Tanaka of St. Mary's hospital
1bere belnC a more lunane WIQ' ol c:apluring !heM animals. It in Montreal.
Reoearch bas revealed In
lu!nYP h1.,a.lble to get a ful, mink, II' aracc:oon into the so·
mDid "b!DIIne" trapa. I feel that tt.e trapping devices are general that children with
IIIDit Inadequate in controlling the populatloo of our wildlife. convulsions hav~ lowered
n- are DOt ooly my !eellnga, but the feellnp of prolesalonal manganese levels - 8.5
wlldlfe maswement people who hav' devoted years to the mlerogr~ per Uter of blood
compared to a normal
IIIINPJIIIIIl ol Ohio's wildlife, ·
By the way, Mrl. Jamee, It is not the sport of killing we ·average of 14.5, said Tanaka,
ltm It II the oul~ and the sport of the HUNT, - Grant E. wbo Is hopeful the dl8coVery
Rt. 1, Box a, lAng Bott&lt;m, Ohio.
will be a brtliklbroul!h in

Blood's manganese lev~ may

DOG FOOD
15 oz.

'. '

•

Not the killing, the.HUNT

CHUMMIE
BEEF OR UVER
IUVORED
.
.
.
.
CANNED

"'11 .• • • • •

SAVE 20•
121h OZ. CANS •••••••••••••••••••
.
ARMOUR'S

5 oz.

3

$}39

DOG FOOD •••.•.•....•..••.• ~ •.
DIET OR REGUlAR

'1"
8 PAK

I

VIENNA SAUSAGE

TWIN PAK
GALLON

GAU.ON

.

ARMOUR

MILK

MILK

79~

16 oz.

VAllEY BELl

2% LOWFAT

'h GALLON

303
CANS

2% LOWFAT

''1/l.•

'

Cut Green Beans • Sliced Green.
Beans • Shellie Beans or Whole
Kernel Yellow Corn

DAIRY SPECIALS
BROUGHTON'S

•

•

saying the Russians ·had
information South Africa was
planning to explode an
atomic bcmb.
M a result of cooperation

I

STOKELY SALE

WIENERS.................... ~:.

Russian.

I

26 oz.
BOXES

5

FRESH &amp; LEAN .

~~~~~~. . . . ~:. 99~ ~~~~~~·-······~~:-~ 1°

STEAKS

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;~:::..........~·..~ }49 ~~~·~·~···· ......~·. 6g~

NO WASTE

-

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
We Reserve the Riqht to Limit Quantities ·

not designed to test nuclear
explosives.
According to the accounts,
Vladillen M, Vasev, acting
chief of the Soviet Emhassy,
called William Hyland, senior
National Security Council
officer on duty that day, with
the text of Brezhnev's
message - written in

between the two leaders,
Vasev said Brezhnev
South Africa backed . down wanted Carter's heip in
and the two superpowers stopping the test, and added
reached a notable level of that the Soviet leader would
cooperation in preventing the he contacting Britain, France
spread of nuclear power to and w..t Germany for the
'
~--- ... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , · another nation.
same purpose,
Lel1en
of
opilllo•
are
welcomed.
They
should
be
1
The
account,
published
in
Hyland,
who
knows
1
1 1- tba •wordlloq (or be aubjecl to redaction by I the Washington Post and New Russian, contacted White
1 tile edit«) ad mast be algned wllll the olgnee'• ad- I York Times during the . House Press Secretary Jody
'' dreu. N - may be wltbbeld· upon ·[llbUeatioo. I weekend, was confirmed Powell in Plains, Ga., where
J ·B,......er, on J'ell-1, names wiD be diJcloeed. LettenJ
today by a White House Carter was vacationing, and
'I lbMld be bl good taate, addrt~~log Issues, oot per- 1 source,
White House National
1 · ~tiel.
1 The source, however, Security adviser Zbigniew
1 refused to comme.nt on why Brzezinski.
Ll ~- jf,
.
1 Soviet intelligence caught the
AB one consequence of the
I
,Q~ti:lltDt
I South African plans bui U.S .. message, a U.S. rece
·
/hi.~.,
•
I intellgence apparenUy did satellite with high-resolution
I
,I • • •
I not The Time8 said the camera was urgently pro·
I
I Soviets had refined its grammed for low-orbit
I
I photographic reconnaissance passes over~ the Kalahari·
:n h
from orbiting satellites with desert.
Sherin,
is peopIe, t han k ed
high-resolution· GermanThe Post said that by Aug.
made cameras.
10 the four northern powers
Dear Sir:
(In Tokyo today, Japanese had taken prelininary
As a citizen of Meigs County, 1 would like to thank Sheriff officials said u.S. arms diplomatic soundings in
James Proffitt, his deputies and volunteer help f&lt;r their negotiator Gerald Smith also Pretoria on South Africa's
es:cellent work at the Meigs County Fair this year. The infiux confirmed reports the United response to the Soviet
' of authority at the fair and elsewhere in the county has . States and the SOviet Union information,
It said Carter was deter. subalantially improved the feeling of tranquility that slowly cooperated in dissuading
seemed to be slipping away.
South Africa from carrying mined, in the process of
There are very few counties, cities or villages in this state out the rmclear test,)
persuading the
South
and elaewhere that provide so much for so lltUe in -return.
Carter announced at his Africans to halt, to preserve
Hopefully, they will be able to retain and obtain the necessary news conference Aug, 23 his contacts with them in his
'
South Africa had infonned . efforts to bring black
help that 'they need for this purpose,
If lll, we can then keep this COWJty and its communities . the United States It does not 1 majoruty rule to Africa.
1rom developing into undesirable and contemptuous areas as have arxl does not plan to
It was reported that, after
have 10 rilany of the state's and nation's cities, 1 feel that to develop nuclear explosive tough negotiations, South
loot forward oo things of this nature Is better than to have to devices, It also said the Africa agreed to forego the
look backward after the fact. -C, B. Mullen.
Kalahari desert test site was test.
WASHiNGTON (UPI) Sovi,t
leader
Leonid
Bre~hnev sent an urgent
personal
message
to
President Carter Aug. 6

l

yo.q,

•

favoring 7.05%

Marijuana--the innocent drug

THE SUNDAY SCHOOL classes of Carroll and Ulllan
Elliott and Peggy Edwards of the Christian Brethren Church
enjoyed hotdogs, baked beans, potato salad, brownies, potato
chipaM~d pop Friday evening at the Mason City Park.
Attending were Karen Lewis, Penni Hill, Carol Mitchell,
Tammy, Klrri and ,John Elliott, Suzie and David King, George
ZUspan, Jay McKeown, David Ross, Larry and Roger Roach,
Janie Smith, Carrie Ross, Hazel Taylor, RDse Williamson,
Ruth Rlley and Carroll and Ulllan Elliott.

SUPERMARKET
OPEN .DAILY ·9 TO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

Carter said

··'*"'"""'"""'"" Parents: What do you really know about drugs?

controlling the disease.
Blood analysis of a child
afflicted by seizurf8 duririg
an eight-year period revealed
a manganese level of only 6.5
micrograms per liter of
blond, compared to the level
in·six normal children of 11 to'
40 micrograms per liter, The
afflicted child's mother also
hlid low manganese levels,
Tanaka said. ·
"We do not claim at this
time that we found the cause
of or cure for epilepsy," he
said in hls report.
"However, we believe that
we have opened a whole new
field of Inquiry Into the
convulsive disorders and that
we have a very good chance
to
be able to help at least
·
some epilepsy patientS."
I'

•
pay mcrea,se

and interested perSiln, to one who is witl1drawn, disoriented In
his lhinking. In the average heavy user, there is a wide range
of brain chaogf8, with . tendencies toward paranoia or
schiwphrenia, or both .
The active ingredient in marijuana, delta-9-tetrahydrocaJUlabi.nol (THC), is unique among drugs because it
accumulates in the body . Because of the retention character,
even a few marijuana cigarettes can saturate the cells with
THC. Improvement from abstinence does not begin untU
several weeks have elapsed, and th~ only if use has been
under about three years duration.
In addition to the snowballing evidence that proves
marijuana to be the health and social detriment long
suspected, there are very readily recognized indicators which
show its use to be the forerunner - the introduction - to the
use of hard drugs. While users pooh-pooh this thinking
vigorously, if it were only a remote possibility, it should be
sufficient reason to outlaw marijuana even &lt;in a "let's just-try·

WASHINGTON (UP! )
President Carter i.s inclined
ID accept a recommendation
f&lt;r a 7. ~ per cent pay
increase for most of the
nation's federal w&lt;rkers Oct .
I, Civil Service Corrunissloo
Chairman Alan Campbell
681d today.
The proposal provides for
upward "adjustf!1ents" in the
military pay scale, CampbeU
said, but would not provide
raises
for
top-level
REV.LANIER
The Rev. John Laaler,
Junction City, will be ·
evangeU.t and Arnold and
Garnet Sexton, Ashland,
Ky., the ooug evangellota,
at revival services to be
held at 7:30 p. m. each
evelog, Aug. 31 through
Sept. 11, at the Rutland
Cburcb of the Nazarene,
Sunday morning services
wUI be at 10:30 a, m, Tbe
pubUc Is Invited.

it-once" basis.

For these reasons, this office urges all parents and other
responsible adults to asswne an attitude of absolute denial of
even the slightest tolerance of the use of marijuana, under any
circumstances. If we will save the upcoming generations from
falling victims to the international drug traffickers, there is no
other way to go!
Spoosored By: Ingels Furniture
Candy's Classic
Collections of Fine Jewelry, · eport, an provided by Olief
of Police J. J. Cremea , "ddle rt.

Queen Elizabeth resting?
not all that noticeably!
By ROBERT MUSEL .
LONDON (UPI) - Queen
Elizabeth is officially resting
at her Babnoral estate in
ScoUarid until October, when
she .leaves for the Silver
Jubilee visits to canada and
the Caribbean that will mark
the end of the major events of
her 25th year on the throne,
But resting for this
remarkable lady of 51 -only
5 feet 4 inches and 112 pounds
-means going for long walks
and clambering up and down
hills when she is not signing
the slate papers that amount
to reading a novel a day.
Some of the male courtiers
who bave accompanied her
most of th~ year are really
resting, sacked out in their
country homes replenishing
their reserves for the final
sprint.
The Idea is around that the
queen simply must be
exhausted on the basis of the
punishing schedule arranged
by her advisers. In England

alone she has traveled ·8 000
miles, kept 80 engageme~ts,
a11d . shaken 5,000 hands'
(changing her white gloveiJ
four times a day) in the paSt
few months, not to mention
many audiences with foreign
dignitaries.
.
And not all her traveling
has been easy on the mind,
though her journeys in and
out of the United Kingdom
almost always produced what
the Times called "an
explosion · of
genuine
popularity and emotion."
There
were
small
demonstrations in Australia
because of a local political
situation, And she had to have
a secwlty guard of 32,000
soldiers and police when she
visited Northern Ireland
after threats by · the
Provisional Irish Republican
Army (IRA) to disrupt her
two days there.
The queen sailed through
the scenes of adulation and
the tenser atmosphere of

Ulster with the same
serenity, And the morning
that a newspaper complained
she was 'fagged out," she
climbed a . 3QO,foot cliff on
Lundy
Island
while
sightseeing during a day
off.
She probably gave the clue
to the reason for her
remarkable resilience when
she told a Juhilee lunch at the
Guildhall In June, after riding
in a golden coach tJu:ough
crowds larger than those at
her coronation in 1!153 or on
Victory in Europe Day In
1945, that she enjoys her
duties,
Buckingham Palace said
the queen has received more
than 50,000 letters and
telegrams of good wishes and
thousands of presents, the
most notable, perhaps, being
a silver coffee pot from the
government and a set of
plates painted with the
queen's horses and doSS from
the royal household.

goverrunent exectives such

as Cainet members,

Carter met with the socalled ''pay agent" - an
advisory group including
Budget Director Bert Lance,
Labor Secretary
Ray
Marshall and Campbell which
unanimously
recommended the pay raise
on the hasis of c&lt;mparability
with private industry.
"I think he's inclined to
accept it," Campbell told
reporters after the meeting.
Carter has until Aug, 31 to
make up his mind on the
raise, He is es:pected to
announce shortly whether he
will accept the
recommendation or submit
an alternative plan.
Federal workers received
their last pay increase, 4,8
per cent, last fall,

TWO ASSISTED
RACINE- The Racine ER

Squad was called Fridsy at
12:40 p. m, for Violet Brewer,
Portland, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 3:30 p.
m. on the same day Jeff
Anderson, RD, Racine, was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

'Fascist terrorism is
disease in Argentina
ffy .GUY GUGUO'ITA
BUENOS AIRES,
"Argentina
(UPI)
Argentina's_efforts to clean
up its international hwnan
rights image have met with
considerable success In
recent weeks, But unchecked.
·right-wing terrorism against
people ostensibly innocent of
'crime is seriously damaging
the govenunent's attempts to ,
inspire trust among its own
citizens.
President Jorge Videla
granted audiences to a
bewildering array of official
visitors from the United
States in August and hwnan
rights took up a large part of
the conversations.
Terence Todf!lan, U.S.
assistant secretary of state
for lnterAmerican Affairs,
said Washington's relations
Argentina
"are
with
improving," and although
"it's not for me to judge ...
everyone I've talked with bas
told
111e
there
are
improvements" in the human
rights situation.
Texas Democratic Rep.
Enrique de La Garza said
that he ''was expecting to find
tanks in 'the streets,
machinegun , fire,
an
oppressed people without
civil rights, but I have foWJd
everythirig different"
These visits, a great
success- from the Argentine
standpoint, have underscored
the Cllrter administration's
softening position on human
rights violations in the
military-governed nations of
South America.
Unfoctunately, however,
the new warmth in fonnerly
chilly relations between
Buell08 Aires and Washington
has l!etved to obscure what is
becoming
Argentina's
biggest d001estlc ]II'Oblem the contimle«j and apparently
uncontroDable incidence of
right-wing terrorism,
Argentina's lingering
disease.
Many of the U.S. visitors
talked with Argentine
officials and clvillanil about
what have come ID be called

j&lt;the disappearances,",
unexplained seizures of
apparently innocent people
by plainclothes gunmen who
in many cases claim to work

for security agencies and
sometimes even shOw
credentials,
Some of the victims are
killed and their bodies,
riddled with do&gt;;ens of bullets,
are dumped in roadside
ditches. Others are released
after a few days, But the
majority just stay "disappeared,"- without their
families having any idea
where they are or whether
they are dead or alive,
Despite govenunent assurances that action will be
taken, and pleas from human
rights organizations arxl the
Roman Catholic Church, the
pace of the disappearances
continues unabated,
"We had about 6110 known
cases in March and we have '
about 600 now (August)," one
human rights spokesman
said recentiy, "They free
some and they pick up some,
but everything stays the
Nobody is quite sure wbo
''they" are, but the inescapa·
ble conclusion based on '
existing evidence is that the
terrorists could not operate
without the help, or at least

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and

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the acquiescence, of elements
within the Argentine security
forces.
~
The practical significance
of this is that the Argentine
gover·nment
cannot
guarantee the safety ·of its
citizens, and no amount of
International fence-mending
Is going to resolve the
problem.

same."

Personal!

Reuter-Brogan

•

"The
Insurance
Store"
Phone 992-5130
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

TRY OUR FaESH

PEM'.H SUte£$
. AND SHAKls .
~~E.s;y~

1:

'&lt;;

ADOLPH'S

~ · Dill! Gl

rOODS

DAIRY VAllEY

HRS,: 10.:00 A.M. til 11:00 P.M. Sun .. Thurs. 10:00 A.M,
P.M. Friday and S.turdoy.
See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

til 12:00

JUDY RIGGS

SCHOOL OF BATON
ANNOUNCES
NEW

CLASSES
STARTING SEPTEMBER 7TH

Place: Royal Oak Park Recreation Buiding
I
Time: Wednesdly, 6:00 p.m. BeginnetS
AI Aae' Welcome
TAUGHT IY JUDY RIGGS
PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTOR

ENROLL NOW! PHONE
"

. '

985-3595
I

. I•

�'-Tile O.l!ySentlnel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 30,1977

POLLY.$ POINTERS
PollyCramer

~1~

Brownies get into
..
.
the SWtm 0j thtngS
Syracuse Bro~e Troop
1120 and the Syracuse Junior
Girl Scot Troop held a
swimming party at the
London Pool , Syracuse,
Friday.
Brownies attending were
Kim Adams, Mary Baldwin,
Kathy Pickens, Paula
Winebrenner, Kim Cogan ,
Alicia Van Meter, Regina
,Nance, Shelley Wolfe, Tracy
Hubbard, Wendy Triplett,
Jane Jett, Jill Nease, and
guests, Todd Adams, Susan
Jett, Bill Cogar, Becky
Winebrenner, Cathy Caldwin,
Joyce Sisson, Carol Adams,

Fleas, fleas everywhere

$';":-~:~::-».:::.~-N.-.·.·:·:~;;.-»:-:-:::.~=:::n· ·

POLLY'S PROBLEM
glare and furniture fading,
DEAR POLLY - My makes the glass"shatterproof
neighbors and I are plagu~ and reduces heat loss. Even
with sand Oeas that get on the with the cost of the tool kit
children, down deep in our needed this could be applied
shag rugs and all over. for about hall of the amount
Everything we have used to of the price given her. -MRS.
get rid of them has failed. The E,R.S,
.
best thing was a flea spray • DEAR POlLY . - I am
but that is expensive as I use answering Hazel. We would
two cans to spray all my all like to look outside and see
carpets once a week. U I skip the things people do, but do
a week they are back in full you honesUy think that is
force SD I hope some of the fair ? We learn from what we
· readers will have some sug- see and others could learn .
gestions for us. -PAT
beneficial things by watching
DEAR PAT - Perhaps the you, too. God bless you. following letter from a reader GRACE.
will be of some help to you.
DEAR POU.Y - Doilies
Also it is sometimes recom- are not being used any more
mended that one thoroughly so I took one my grandmother
spray a room with FLY had made years ago and apSPRAY, close it up for an plied it to the front of a round
hour or so and then repeat pillow. It is really pretty and
within three days. - POLLY. when doing this the work
DEAR POlLY- I have no showsbestifputoverapillow
more flea$ in my house since that is darker in color than
I sprayed everything with a the doily. -KA N.
household insect spray and
DEAR POLLY - I always
then put moth halls under the keep a pair of gloves bandy in
davenport, chairs and my bedroom and put them on
anywhere out of reach of before putting on nylon stocksmall children and pets. This ings and this keeps my rough
really worked lor me. -GINJ. hands from making runs in
AIRMAN MARK GILKEY
DEAR POlLY - Hazel the hose.
wanted to know o( a way she .
When I wipe my hands on a
could fix two windows so she paper towel in the kitchen I
could see out but those on the drop the used towel in a conoutside could not see in. The tainer kept lor just that. The
Airman Mark A. Gilkey,
sales catalog of a well-known crwnpled towels are later usson
of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
mail order house describes a ed to wipe out dirty 'or greasy
D.
Gilkey
of 1284 Powell St.,
spray-on 111m for such win- pans and dishes so they are
Middleport,
has graduated at
dows whicb also stops sun ready to be washed. We are
Lockland
AFB,
Texas, from
,...,._ _ _ _ _...,
. - . now told to sa~per and
Air Force basic training. The
•
this is one easy way. ~
airman is remaining at
15
'""'
MRS.E.A.E.
Polly will send you one' of La~kland lor specialized
her . signed thank-ybu training in the security police
newspaper coupon clippers if field.
Airman Gilkey is a 1977
she uses your favorite
graduate
of Meigs High
Pointer, j?eeve or Problem in
School.
His
wife, Tammy, is
her column. Write POLLY'S
the
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.
Yov can help cvf down on
POINTERS in care of this
crime losses ... losses that
Earl
B.
Mossman of
newspaper.
directl y
affect
you,
Pomeroy.
·

FOR CURBIN
CRIME LOSSES

w~ejherthey

or not. ·

happen to you

1

Take the crime of arson.
You·r~

a~

paying

increasingly heavy subsidy

lor deliberately set !Ires
through your insurance
premiums.

Insurance

costs

are

adversely

affected

by

burglaries, robberies and
car

thefts .• . plus the
countless CB radios and
bicycles that tur·n up

missing .

HOMECOMING SET
There
will
be
a
homecoming Sunday, Sept. 4
at Freedom Gospel Mission
at Bald Knobs with all day
services. Sunday School will
be at 9:30 a. m. with basket
dinner at noon. Afternoon
services will be held at 1:30 p.
m. Guest speaker will be 0 .
G. McKinney. There will also
be dedication of new class
rooms. There will be special
singing. The public is invited.

One thing you can do Is to
support
for

wrongdoers

and

Rap :

proposals lor strengthened
crime investigation efforts.
Yot.~

can

also

make

it

tougher lor crooks. Use

secial security number.
Our

agency

provides

financial protection and
service when crime losses
occur .. . but many can be
prevented. That's why we

say· - prevention is the
best policy.

·I

DALE C. WARNER
IN_S.

TO 4542· ~ERSON AVENUE

RT. 2 NORllf
PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA
HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

992·2143

102

w. Main

Pomeroy

PHONE (304) 428 0000

Middleport
Personal Notes .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
RUSSell of Belpre and Mr. and
· Mrs. Merle Jolmson, Athens,
visited over the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Koenig,
Middleport.
Mrs. Lowell Wingett,
Chiefland, Fla. has been here
for a visit with her sister,
Mrs. Thomas Riley and family, and Zelia Pullin.

FIRESTONE FREEZERS
EXTRA
ON THESE MODELS
LISTED BELOW
05-19-033-7
05-19-006-1
05-19-501-2
05-19-512-8

16.0 Cu. Ft. Upright
19.0 Cu. Ft. Upright
20.3 Cu. Ft. Chest
25.3 cu. Ft. Chest

HARVEST
SPECIALS
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
992-2094
606 E. Main

•

Pomeroy,

o.

Plans have been completed

for the open church wedding
ol Irene Busch of PorUand
and Clifford Christy of
Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an

Daughter born

event of Sunday, Sept. t, al2
p.m. at the Mone Chapel
Church at Old Town Fiala,
located four miles East ol
Racine (take Route 124 0111 ol
Racine for four miles, then
turn Iefton County Roadl5) .
A reception will be held immediately following the wedding at the Senior Citpens
Center in Pomeroy. The couple invit.! their relatives and
friends to join them in the
reception but request that
they not bring gifts..

That guy who dinged you and all newspapers for
publishing "depraved" stuff he wouldn't let his children read:
Hooey! A parent's job is to interpret- be a sounding board for
- what every kid hears. Your column starts discussions at our
house . Also lively arguments. Sometimes you win, sometimes
you lose, but if an opinion changes, we've done it ourselves.
Newspapers don't corrupt our morals - they make us think.
"Appalled Father" must have a very low OPinion of his
ability \o guide if he figures censorship is the only way to keep
his teenagers "pure." - GLAD I'M NOT WRAPPED IN
COTI'ON BA ')'TING ,
. ,

cake and ice cream were
Marybelle· Pasquale, Arlene
Thompson, Nora Lucas,
Joyce Bartimus, Mary
Baldwin, Jenny Henry and
Phyllis Mason.
The club's next activity will
be a dance on Friday, Septembe~ 9, with Keith Rippeto
of Parkersburg, W. Va., as ·
the caller.

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
• OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

•••
GRIAf FOR CHARCOAI.ING

ALL MEAT

oz.

PKG.

1-LB.
PKG.

•

FOOD

r

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-3:30til 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

•

FRIDAY UNTIL B PM

DRESSINGS
FRENCH
CATALINA
49~
CUCUMER
. 8 oz. bottles

FEATURES

Mason , W.Va .

12 OL

\~

8oz.
pkg.

10 oz.

MORTON

DINNERS ... ~~·... 49
1l oz.

,.. _BEEF, TURKEY OR CHICKEN

I

Get

'

•

LOCllL

When you need money to keep your car running, or fo~f, good
.. reason, talk to us. We l¥utdle Personai Loans quickly, · yand
with consiaeration. You can borrow with trust where people save
with trUst. City Loan &amp; Savings.
·
We find ways to help.

OPENINGS YET

. There are ·SiOI some open

aTY~NS
&amp;.SA.VlJ~
ESr1912

3

125 E. Main Street 992-2In

/

SOFT
MARGARINE

69t

LB. CTN.

MUSTARD ••••••••••• ~~.~!.r.. 49
KRArr

.

~

EVERY DAY IS
DAY AT GATEWAYI

p

ve

n

L_ COUPD_N J
TENDER LEAF

TEA BAGS

79~

NO. 255
48ct.box

NO. 255

100 ft. roll

W/C

Coupon Expires Sept. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

(

('[I

p ( l !\I

coyPDN

SARAN WRAP

69~

HEINZ

BARBECUE SAUCE

TOMATO KETCHUP

39~

NO. 155

W/C

•••

16 oz. btl.

~-

COLD POWER
49 oz. box

99~

W/C

·'

8
W/C

26N:

b~l. 69~

W/C

Coupon Expires sept. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

I

j

HEINZ

Coupon Expires Sept. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupim Expires Sept. 3, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

r

~

c

No. 105

.

pq.

~~L 99~

DETERGENT
.

ggc

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seat

·a t.

79~

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ID

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10-LB.
BAG

JET-PUFF .·

.

}· :'''( !'-''/~

59~

:.:. DIXIE
~ CHICKEN &amp; TURKEY

..
-·
PIES ••••. ~.~ •.••••.•••••••...•.

,,

JAR

POTATOES

JELLY

CHEESE
SINGLES

~ POT

··· ;..,

GRA~E
18 oz.

-·

---

.·

ALL PURPOSE

KRAFT AMERICAN

~

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I&lt;RAFT CIRCUS OF VALUES
•

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89~

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TRADE-IN

$279

BACON

992-5554

Herman Grate

LB.

COLUMBIA

Social
Calendar

appointments .for Wednesday's free cervical
cancer cllnlc, free te Meigs
area women. The cUnlc
boars are from 1% to 3:30 p.
m. aDd the cUnlc wm he
held at Trinity' Church ln
Pomeroy. Women wlahlng
one of the open appointments may call 9925368 daytime or 99%·513% In
the evening.

STEAK
ARMOUR

·12

49

~

DELMONICO

FRANKIES

'

MONDAY
RUTLAND Garden Club,
annual picnic, MOnday 6 p.m.
at tlie Forest Acres Park
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club,
8 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. carne Grueser.
A home flower show to be
held.
UMWA Supporters Club
. Wednesday at noon at Middleport park. All miners'
wives are invited.
PAST Commanders and
Trustees of Drew Webster
Post 39, Amencan Legion,
will hold a dinner at 7 p. m.
Wednesday at .the posthome
followed . by a business
meeting.
FRIDAY
POMONA Grange, 8 p.m.
at Rock Springs Grange hall.
Meigs will host the Gallia
County Pomona ' Grange
members who will presen!
the program. National and
state contests will be held and
the suhoidinate granges are
reminded to take three pies,
two dozen sandwiches; and a
.beverage.

SPLIT
FRYERS ••••.•••••L!•

SUPERIORS

On All Living Room Suites

773-5592

.

NO DEALERS PLEASEI

•

'1 0000

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3RD

HAVE A·
PROBLEM?
CAll
CRISISLINE

GOING AWAY
Miss Sharon Wilson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Wilson, Middleport,
left Sunday for Grayson, Ky.
where she will attend the
Kentucky Christian College.

Fifth anniversary 'dance held
Members of the French
City Swingers Square Dance
Club celebrated their fifth
anniversary Saturday night
with a dance held at the Tri·
Grande Square Building. Bill
Evans, who has been with the
club all five years, called the
dance.
Several
independent
dancers and dancers from the
Shade River Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club of
the Pomeroy-Middleport
area joined with the club
members to celebrate.
Homemade ice cream and
'cake were served. Chairmen
for the evening were Doug
and Phyllis Mason.
Providin~ the delicious

PRICES GOOD THRU

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kapteina of Condor St., Pomeroy,
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Alkire,
Harrisonville. They were
taken to the Alkire home by
HugoKapteina.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ
of Cleveland have returned
home after visiting here with
their 11unts, Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart and Miss Erma
Smith, Pomeroy. They spent
a day with Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Bartels at Milton, W. Va.
before returning to
Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Armstrong, Cincinnati, were
weekend guests of Mrs. Sadie
Thuener, Syracuse.

Rap :

Misti Dawn King, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Danny King,
Pomeroy, celebrated her second birthday at thehomeof
her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack King.
A farm scene cake was
served with ice cream, potato
chips, and Kool-Aid. Guests
.attending and presenting
CADET Stephen E. Powell, gifts to Misti were Mr. and
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Mrs. Jack King, Mr. and Mrs.
Powell of 412 Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, is participating in David Campbell, Pomeroy, ·
Mr. and Mrs.
a U. S. Air Force Reserve grandparents;
Brian
Justice,
Debbie King,
Officers Training Corps field Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy
training encampment at Derenberger, Tony Pierce,
Rickenbacker AFB, Ohio.
Greg, Dick, Timmy, Carla
Cadet Powell, a student at and Darla King, Connie, Kim
Ohio University, is a 1972 · and Ricky Patterson, Roger
graduate of Meigs High King. Out of town guests senSchool. His wife, Sheila, is the ding gilts were Mr. and Mrs.
daughter of Mrs. Betty Dill o( David F. (;ampbell and Mr.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
and Mrs. Jerry Edwards,
Jerry, Claudia, and Kevin.

Wishes to Announce the
Relocation of His OHice

good, strong locks .· Mark
possessions with your

Wedding p!ans completed

I'm a teenager with a terrible problem. I live in a fantasy
world.
I'm alooe a lot so have many chances lo daydream. Even
when people are near I'm off in my "world" as I'm afraid 1o
•
get clooe to real live guys and girls.
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent E.
I can't afford a psychiatrist. Please help. - DESPERATE Knight, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of an eight
Desperate :
pound, one ounce daughter,
Your problem isn't as "terrible" - as unusual - as you Heather Lynn, born Saturday
think. Most of us enjoy daydreaming. It's the only state where morning at the Holzer
a happy ending is absolutely assured !
Medical Center.
But when you coostantly use fantasy to cut off the real
Mr. and Mrs. Knight have
world you're suffering from a large case of shyness that needs two sons, Vincent Edward,
outside help. And I don't necessarily mean a psychiatrist.
J r.,,''0 and Christophe r Ladd,
What you require is one good, wise friend (any age) who · two. Mr. and Mrs. A. R.
canmakeyouseeyourpotential,bringyououtfrom behind the Kl\lght ol Pomeroy and Mr.
· wall you've built of your dreamS.
and Mrs. Qtho Neal, Point
Talk lo someone you trust : .a teacher, counselor, clergy- · Pleasant, w. Va., are grand·
man, relative, peer. Ask nim or her to assist you on an "acUon
plan" which forces you to mix even th&lt;lllfih you're scared parents.
spitless. Make yourself converse with one new person a day ;
talk on the telephone; smile at people you don't know. And
keep track of your ''wins."
FESTIVAL SET
The Gloryroad Singers of
Perhaps, with the help of your school counselor you can
start a "shyness clinic." A good textbook here is Philip G. Pataskala will have a song
Zimbardo's "Shyness, What Is It, What To Do About It" festival at the Harrisonville
(Addison Wesley Publishing Co.), a must-read for all you quiet Presbyterian Church Sunday
at 10:30 a.m. There will be no
mes.
,
Daydream about this p~oject until the end of summer; Sunday school that day.
Following the festival a
then act on it. You can - HELEN
poUuck will be held on the
+++
church lawn. The public is inNote from Sue:
I can just hear you holler (softly), "What, me start a vited.
shyness clinic? I can't even whisper in a group!"
Well, you needn't talk - at first - except lo your
REUNION SET
counselor. U she (or he) is the right person, she'll, do the
The Victor C. Young, Jr.,
organizing.
family will hold its first
... And she won't lack lor joiners. Dr. Zimbardo reports family reunion Sundsy at the
that lour out of every ten persons you meet, or 84 million Young residence, 742 B. Main
Americans, are shy!
St., Pomeroy. All relatives
P.S. Mom, being somewhat reticent herself, didn't and friends are welcome. The
mention the article on shyness she has written for a fall issue ot reunion will start at I p. m.
REAL world, the new newspaper-magazine lor students with a buffet luncheon. The
distributed in many highs schoOls this year. You'll probably be Youngs will also observe
reading it. - SUE
their 29th anniversary with a
party given by their children.

Turns two

DR. DONALD S. ·.PRITT
PODIATRIST

By Helen and Sue Bottel
FanLasy ll:n't Alf Bad •••,

Janet Pickens, and Susan
Winebrenner.
Junior scouts attending
were Lori Michael, Kim
Morrow, Becky Amott, Jel)IIY
Bentley, Sherry Cogar and
Kim Sayre with their guests
being K. C. Amott, Tricia
Michael, Terri Michael,
Cathy Coates and Jina Arnott. Lee Ord and Dan
Granda! were the lifeguards
for the group.
The Brownies held a Oy-up
ceremony
and
were
presented their pins.

programs

providing stiller penalties

'*'·;:."":--:;:.~:~"'

Generation Rap

~~~;

In the service

. p.....ntion the
.
best polI&amp;J.
••

; 2 ,;:n:e:

-

COUPON

-

-

�••

.

'

WANT AD

.CHARGES
11wnor~

Cub
1.00

a..,...

IJ$
1.111

Let. The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items f!!,to Cash
B uszness
•
servzces
•

TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 19n •
4:3o--My Three ~ons 3; Sta,. I rek A; Eme .. gency One!
6; Andy Grlffllh 8; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
5 ·oo-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Roger' s
NelghborhO&lt;KI20.33; Emergency One! 13; Mission ;
1mposslble IS.
5 : JG--Odd Couple 4; News 6; Family Allalr 8; Ele&lt;:trlc
C_gmpany 20,33.
...
6 :DO-News 3,4,8,10.13,1S; Zoom 20 .
6 . J~NBC News l.4.r:.. ;.s~ New• 13; Andy Griffith
6 ; CBS News 8. 10; Vegetable Soup 20 .
7 :oo-&lt;lral Rober Is In San Francisco 3; Cross-Wlts 4;
Liars Club 6; Country Carnival 8; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33; News 10; To TeiiTheTruth 13; My
Three Sons 15: Anyone for Tennyson? 20.
7 :30--Holl ywood Squares -41 Let' s Deal W ilh II 6,
Malch Game PM 8; Mac Neil -Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
$25,000 Pyramid 10;" Wild Kingdom ·13; MuSic Clly
15. ·
. .
8 :oo-Baa Baa Bla ck Sheep 3,4,15i Happy Days 6,13;
Jack Benny 8,10; ln Performance at Wolf Trap 33 ;
Music in J@fusalem 20.
8 : 3~Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ; Phyllis 8,10.

_.
..,

'----------------------------------..1 ':

,..,:r.n••

.......

TELEVISION
VIEWING

WHAT'S

For Sale

THE FAMILY of R0r C. Nellon GARAGE SALE. Sept . I, 2. 3, 10-4. TIIEE RIPENED orcho&lt;d peoche•. COAl . hmeslor"le tmd calcium
uo
White or yellow ttorting Mon ..
WOt.lld like to ••peciolly thank
Guy Spencer, behind new
chloride ond cok1UM bline 101"
1.10
U5
Au; 1. Mason Peoch Orchard .
Sue Tillis . \.,P. N.. the Pomero)ll
Methodist Chun:h in Tuppen
s.oo
duttcontrolondspeciolmixing
us
$COlt lor farme&lt;S, bcolsior Salt
Plains . High pressure pump, 1975 HARLEY DAVIDSON. ox·
Emer~ Squod. 0&lt;. T•ll•
WDf'ks Main Str. .t , Pomeroy
Eacb WW1I Vftl' Ow minunwn 1~
ond the nunes at 'Vet.,en's
Cotem., comp 1tove. Antique
cellent condition . Gold . hos •• ·
~....... il i l'enU per word per day .
Memo dol Hospital for their
Dad , old organ, record ployet,
fl"as , len thon 1000 m1les .
Ohio or phoo.'992· 3891 .
4\dl runninc ot.htr U11n NIHl"V.LI.vr
T.V., highchair, toy5and misc .
in tr,oing to
quk:k
$2700. Call (614) 698·3290.
CAMPER. SbOO. ~l1o . horse
days will be chorved at the I day
revive an IO¥e our fa.ther ood
trailer. $450. Phon- (bl• ) 698.
husband . Roy C. Nelson 's. lif•. YARO SALE. Sepr. 1, 2, ond 3rd. APPALACHIAN STOVE Ca., Sum·
3290.
located betw. .n HarrisonVille
mer Sole. Ast'lley C-bO Wood
o• he pou.d away of a massive
In rnmwr')', 4Ard fJi1biJ\R ana
and Corpenffi on Jd al Cliftoo
Heaters, 5340 complete wifh SPRING GARDEN Suppl;eo. Cobcoronary heart attock .
~Lury : fi L'tt'ill per word. a .oo
boge , cauliflower , bfoccoli,
11'\irUrnl&amp;m. Cub lnadvmft.
blower . Thru Sept. 12. We ore
Special thonk5 to Rev, and Mr5.. _Fr~ley's. ~am to 4 pm.
ond head lenuoe plants,
the only oulherited dealer in
Dewey King , Rev . Ed ison YARD SAlE, Tues . and Wed., 9-4.
Mubilr Kmteaa1H 111\1.1 Ya.rd !U&amp;W.
yellow , white, ond red· omon
Meigs County . We 're in
Re ~identi.al
and
Weaver, the singers of ;the
Boys and odult clothing, misc.
~ MCcepted unl,y with ~o'Uh With
'li&amp;ts , onion plants , Kennebec. commercia f.
Co.!:_penter oft 143, 698- 7191 .~
far
Wetleyan
HoHnen
Church
and
C1ll
Route
338
.
across
ri11er
from
C.litl- ... ""'"""'" lloiooot
tll'der. 1$ ctnt chlrij:e ror aWl Cllm.'•
cobbler, Katahdin , Red Pontioc estimate, 24 hllur wrvice.
the Ewing Funeral Home for
II, • • " "'"""· $pKiol llri&lt;a lo
... Box Nwllb!!r In Carr Ill TI~e SefiNEW IOEA No. 310 one row Super·
Kolse
~
r~--~------and Ra&lt;J \.a1oda $Hd potatoes. Any~y, onvtlme.
WHn.
tlnol.
.
the ir aervlces well-performed
picker in e)icellent conditi()f1 .
Bulk garden s~s . potting soil,
{o
job well ~ done }, tl-te A FEW crab apples to give away - (:104) 675-_6908.
Phtne949-2114
Phont,.S-3806
fr . .. Phone 992-2021 .
peot mots. fruit tree5 and. rose
pallbe~nen ,
friends and
9
l.nt.
to
5 ,.Ill.
SET OF- Smith ' goUge~ '. larch ond . bus.kes . Midway 'Market ,
neighbon , to each and
Pom•roy
,
Ohio
,
992
-2582,
Rosebud . 742-2485,
everyone that s.,t flowers a nd
&amp;ob:t Morket . Mason, W.Va.
cords . brought or sent food ond
1 YEAR OLD Polled Herelord BulL
(304) 773· 5721 .
donations , 1he ones who visit~ RISING STAR l&lt;•nnel 8oording ,
Con be registered . Coil
our homes and the Funeral
Ches1er, Ohio
Box :1-4
ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil Ol·
9.19-2368.
Indoor-Outdoor runs, grooming
Home, for the consoling words
8·29-pd.
tachmeots . Like new. :~sk l ng
all br..ds, d_,n sanitary
6-16-1 mo.
of comfMI and prayers. To each
$2250. Phone (614) 698·3290.
facilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire. REG . POllED H•reford Bull. 16
mo.
old
.
$600.
985-3819.
and ..,.'"Yone of you thot
Phone (614) 367-0292.
CANNING TOMATOES . PEPPERS .
helpt&lt;l In ony way, os !t 'J"OS
TWO THREE· QUARTER ron Dodge
cucumbers . Cleland Forms .
AKC
SHETlAND sheep dogs.
deeply oppr.c:loted · more than
Power Wogan Trucks . 1%1 .o nd
enhouse .
Gerald ine
(Min.) Collies, 2 females , 7
you'll ever know. Mof God
1964. Col19~9-2nO.
weeks old . Shots and wormed.
Cl•l&lt;&lt;ncl,
Bless and be with each ond
Phone (614) 367·0292 or "NEW HOLLAND 163 bushel
every one of you . Your kindlot 11!111 SL
manure spreoder . Excellent
367-7112.
ness will never be forgotten.
pcondition . Coll949·2770.
YARD SALE , Middleport HH I. Wed . MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
Animal Coreline, 992·7680; or 1975 MASSEY FERGUSON diesel BUYERS WANTED. Dealers Auc · 1
through Sat ., 10-5. Blake
Moildoy
Weddinp
lion . Publ ic:: invited. Thurs.,
165. 360 hrJ. since new , extra
after 6 P.-m ., 992·5..427.
Nuun on Satl!rdy
residence.
Sepf. I , 11 :00 om . Truckloads of
Portraits
· wide tires, 1-teovy duty
ALL BREED dog gtooming. J . an~ ' stobalizers, aux . hydraulic ,
oil naw merchandise sold the
PISSpalts
Tu.""'y
Noiil StiMIIit Rood
0 . Kennels , Reasonable roles.
wholesale auction woy . by the
thru Frid11y
front weights like new. Coli
Anniwnuries
lilt
No drugs used . Coli for op·
and
quantity
to
go.
·ohlo
piece
4P.M.
949·2770.
liddlopoot. 0.
po intment, 742-3162.
Specilll Ocusions
$250.00 REWARD for rtiUrn of (no
the Way iwf«e publication
River Auction in Meigs Plozo on
"U724
questions asked) ~r informo· AKC REGISTERED S.Ogl• pups. Pt. KU BOTA TRACTOR, I only. Model
U.S. Business Rt. 7, Mi ddle~rt ,
Swiday
l -185, with 5 ft. Woods
C.Opllto S.ln ""' Soooico ontl Stop.
lion leading to the retUrn of
01-tio
.
Home
Phone
{30&lt;4)
loll lloolli&lt;~
Pleosont. w.. Vo . (304 )
I P.M.
plito.
Underslung Mower . list, S-4•05
lwo male dogs taken from Rt .
773-.5&lt;471 . Regular auction
675-4154 .
~yaftemoon
J.ll-l mo.
save $600. Gravely Tractor
33 near Darwin July 11. Please I
ev~ry Frj. night ot 7:00pm .
Soles.
Pomeroy .
Phone
love and miss my dogs very WILL GIVEAWAY 3 kittens . Phone
992-2975.
mush . 992-5848.
985-4288 .
RACINE VOLUNTEER Fire Oepb . FREE TO good home : 1 female 1972 CHEVROlET pickup truck .
New fires, good bcdy, ond runs
port cocker span iel and part
are sponsoring a chicken bor-bSMAll form for sale . 1o%
,
good. 992·6231 .
que on Sun. ., ·Sept , 4 starting at
shepherd . 5 mo. old . 992·71 85 .
owner
financed
.
Monroe
Coun
·
. NOTICE OF
11:00 om. at the Flrlll! Station :
SHOT SHELlS high power. $3 .93:
ty , W. Vo . Phone (304) 772·
PUBLIC SALE
The ladies Aux . are selling
22 LR . 79': 22 mognum . $2 .9() .
3102 or (304) 772·3227 .
You are herebv notified
home-matlelce cream ,
lots of used ond new auns .
lh.at the
Racine
Home
trade for onytning . Fifei$ , s. COUNTRY formlond witl-t seclud SENIORS OF Meigs County . Trodi ." PARTS FOR 1971 Golo xie Ford for
Nationa l Bank , Racine , Oh io
3rd, M id ~ ieport .
ed woods , water and good oc·
will otter at Public Auct ion
tl~al and outdoor settings for
sole. Phone 992-5858.
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
R: utaleum · P lint Products
the following :
your portraits. Call The Photo
RtoloZ
$ 1,000 down , call (304) 772 1969 Pontiac G .T .o .
1971 CHEVROLET STATION · BUilT-RITE PRAM . English style,
Place , Bob Hoeflich , 992-5292.
•we
c1n ship parts directly
naVy,
good
condition.
$A5.
··
31.02or{304)772
-3227.
1967 Ford :1.4 Ton Truck
'
-·
45761
WAGON. 992·:3-&lt;78
to your door by way at
Korastan Oriental Carpet , q• x -==:..::.:..c:.::.:!..:..:..::C.::::=- -Kitchen Cabinets -Ollio
Rooflnr
. Concrete
Said auction wifl be on
RACINE GUN Club w;ll hold a
U.
P
.S.
12' wool, cranberry color , very VA-FHA , 30 yr . financing. Ireland
Patios · Sidewalks - -New Construction •
Au~;~ust 31 , 1977, at 12 : 30 P .M.
Oticken Bar-B-Que, Sun. , Sept. 197• VEGA. 992-2775.
good condition . $185. Call'
Mortgage, 77 E. Stole, Athens , •Custom Hydraulic Hose
In parking lot of Raci ne Home
Remodehnr:.
4. All members are invited.
Making
1975 GRANADA, V-8 , automatic ,
National Bank.
phone (614) 592·3051 .
992-7539 .
P~. UHllhiH-1005
A .C. , 2 door , 31 ,000 miles, ex - ,
Phone 992-2176
Minimum bids will be $500
hliMIIOoiPttiotl fo jM.
2.
STORY
3
bedroom
frame
Pomeroy, 0 .
callen t condi ti on . 53 .500.
for 1969 Ponti ac and $400 for
6-21-1 mo. oxl.
house, F.A. furnace , storm w in8·7· 1 ma .
1967 Ford Truck . Terms of
992-6303 .
dows, fireplace iri Middleport,
· sale will be cash in hand day
LOST . BLACK and white male lit- 1972 DODGE CHARGER. A.C. ond
ot sale .
R aclne
Home
Phone 992·3-t57.
many more options. S1495. Coli
tle hound dog . Contact Howard
National Bank reserves the
DON'T PAY the added ewpense of
r.lght to withdraw either or
992-5169.
G..:man, 1~2-ma. Lost in
Farm • Commerciai
o Realtor! Buy this 3 bedroom ,
both of .fhest automobile!!;
leading Creek ar.a .
1973 PLYMOUTH SCAMP . 30.000 lndustfial • Horse Barns
2 '11 bath bUeval from the
from Public Sale atony time. ·
(8) 29, 30 . 2 tc
FOUND • IRI~H Setter bn Bunker · miles . N'ew radial tires . A.C..
Garages &amp; Workshops
owner o.nd 50Ve l 'Large fam ily
Aulolutk
P.S., 6 cyl. Like·new. Co11
Hill . Call Suoon . 992-5813.
room wjtM fireplace, eat-in kit·
Wickes Buildings
949-2770.
ch'e.n with double-oven ronge
Tr~IISitlission Stnke
and dishwasher , for,al dining
Circle.vil!e, Ohio, Box 523
1973 GMC 1lt ton pickup , 350
room , two cor garage. central
(614) 474-8732
engine, automatic. Also, 1971
a ir, on acre lot . Nice drive to
·camoro
.
Milo
HutcM
is
on
,
BABYSITTER TO live ln. P.O. Box
MODEl . H Form-oil Tractor with . power plants and mines.
Rut land . 7&lt;42-2306 .
924, Gollipolis . Ohio.
hydraulic . Good condition . 1 ::::'S:::=:
4 3 •c000
o=:::.·,:992
~·2::•:.:9:!:-.
2 ----WE ARE now toking applications 1975 CHEVROLET MONTE Carlo .
let
two
bottom
drag
plows
.
1
59
ACRE
FARM,
11 miles from
A.C.. P.S.. P.B.. to,. dock .
for evening nighrime ond
300-A Pa lomar Linear. (614)
new Ra venswood Bridg e .
$3650.
992·2628.
after
pm
.
wMkend help. Apply only in
843-2064 , ic1te evenings .
Modern home has 3 bedrooms ,
person , TMurs ., 2 to 5 pm. at tMe 197• CHEVROlET SUBURBAN . ful · PIC•
YOUR
living room wi th wood burning RoedSiil~, o.
.... 37 ,, 2 ~
Blue and Grey Restaurant.
"'
own canning
f'
1
d beo ed .1•
rn - ~
ly equir.ped , lowing package,
·
t
omatoes.
Also
.
green
be:ans
.
trep
ace
on
m
C&amp;l
tng,
5-27-TFC
Previo4s applicants need not
low mi eage . Call 992-2121 or
Bring co(ltainer .· Andrew Cross
barn , outbuildings . and fen c- ·L--~--~-..:..:~.:..J
apply.
Contact Ben Ewing .
letort Fells . 247-2852.
•
ing. $43,500. 949·2466 .
197&lt;4 "VW THING" . .. 9,800 miles . 0
Sl X ROOM house at 613 Mill St. ,
HARRISON'S T.V. Repair . Service
Middleport . Good condition . lnHard and soft top. $1495. Coli H RSE . 5 yea r old Gelding.
Coils . 276 Sycamore, St., Mid·
.
992-3113.
Sue , 992·7805.
quire at 4~9 llneolfl ,St .. Mid.
dleport. Phone 992-2522 ,
·
'HOM~S/TES for sale, I ocre and
dleporf .
CASH pold for cdl makes and 1972 FORD GRAN Torino . good CANNi.NG: TOMATOES and sw~t
. Aug. 31,1171
models · of mobiie homes .
d
$BOO C
com lo r free
· ,,·ng . Po"ck your
YEAR old house . 2 miles on
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
This coming year you wil l
Phoneareacode614-423·9531.
~~~:/~i;~~ . . o 1I 992-6115 , own. Col! Barbara Talbott ONE
Limo
Rd
.
in
Rvtlond
.
lt's·all
Coll.
992·7481 , ·
·New
becOme more closely allied with
TIMBER , Pomeroy Fmest ProPortlan.d . S.3·•515.
'
paneled , with three bedrooms · NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 boths , ,
persons of Initiative and ambiducts, Top price for standing 1970 INTERNATIONAl PICKUP, NE
and big living room , all
all elec., 1 acre, Middleport ,
tion . one such arrangement may
sawtimber. · Call 992. 5965 or
,000 mi. 1972 VVV , good cor:1di·
W IDEA No . 7 Cornpicket .
carpeted,
two
baths
,
dining
close to Rul l.o nd : Phone 992· PIANO TUNING, lane Daniels . 12
Kent
Hanbv,
.
.
•
tion
.
992-2987
.
Good
condition
.
Reody
lo
pick.
lead lo something substanlially
' 1 446 8570
(614 ) 843·2286.
year s of service . Phone
room . big kitchen witl-t built-in -"7.::4:::_81c : . · - - - - - - - -prol~able .
oven, on island stove end tami- COINS , CURRENCY, lokens . old 1974 PLYMOUTH GOLD Ouster . . --'=!..:::::~~::______ _
992-2082.
pocket watches and chains .
318 V-8. 3 speed on the floor . 1976 HONDA, SS0-.4 . Excellent
ly room with fireplace . One car
YIRQO (Aug. 2.3-Sopt. 22) An.
WATER WELL drilling. Phone
AM-FM stereo-Tape Player . :-;::c:=o::.
nd=:;C::H.::
o:.:.
n .'::S:.:.I::35~.,:
0 98~S~·3:;:5-:_97~·-garage . On two acres of land .
silver and gold. Wa need l%4
opportunity to a lter a condition
William P. Gront at 742-2879
35
000
For
more
iinformotion
,
coli
andolde,rsllvercoina ..Buy, •ell , ·
·
miles . Air shocks. Ex- NEW SSE Touch-Com 40 C. B.
that has worked 10 yOur disadafter6
p.m .
·
9
5
7
7
11
0
85
3
949-2519.
or trade Call Roger Wamsley , :-:"c:"C
•::.•::n::.tc:c::onc:d:.;rC;::.n::.·,:=::.:.·~:.:.-:·'c-- radio, 40 channel ; Tenna elec·
vantage may suddenly present
PENNZOIL RUTLAND open doHy
742-2331 .
1973 BUICK CENTURY . Excellent
tric re tracting antenna; anten- HOUSE . 4 I"OQms and both on a cre
itself today. Ogn't use subtle
till 10. Cloted Mondays ,
atrokes tf boldness is required. OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes , brass
of lontl . Include$ furniture .
condition. loaded with extras . no matcher {SWR): 3 meter
wr~ker service, tire repair ,
Find out more aboul yoursoll by
beds.
etc . , complete
992·7059.
modulation , wattage and SWR
SB,(X)(] . Ruby Bus M, 9.49-2052.
P~na742-9575 or 7~2 -208 1.
Hndlng lor your copy ol AalroMouseholds . Write M. Q. Miller, 1967 CAOIL\.AC HEARSE. $600 or ~auge; all cables Ond hook-up
1
TWO BEDROOM_. home situated on
Graph lener. Mall 50 cents tor
Rt . .4 , Pomeroy.. Ohip or coli
will trade for anything of equal . iffi'_'lQS fortradifo and gbuo ge. All
WILLING TO clecin land up for
1 cere land. Coli 992-7294 or
992-n60.
,
(
)
e_g utpmen is or mo Ue use.
_
each and a·long, salf-addr,$sed .
chlpwood. (614)247-2542 .
992-55()2.
va 1u•. 61~ 698 · 3•~ .
Call 992-24.S , oiler 5pm.
' stamped envelope to AstraBATHROOMS AND kitchens
Graph. P .0. Bo~ 489. Radio City CASH II. )unk cara, Fry's Truck &amp;
remodeled . Ceramic tile. plumMAIN
Auto,
Rutland.
Phone·
7•2-2081
· Slallon. N.Y. 1001~. Be sure 10
N
EED
A
WATE
R
bing , carpentry . ond general
or742-9575. Closed MOndays .
POMEROY, 0.
specify your birth sign .
moin1enonce. 13 vrs . exSOFTENER?
NO ITEM TOO large or too small.
perience. 992-3685.
LIBIIA (8epl. 23·0ol. 23) Early
GOT lOTS OF KIDS?
Will buy I piec.llt or complete 3 AND • RM. furnished and un- Let Pomeroy ._
Landmark
In lhe day you may be plagued
NELSON
'S PAINTING . Free
Here ls your home - 2
household . New, used, or anti ·
furn ished opts . Phone 992- soften &amp; condition your
with an attack of indecision .
estimates.
Call992-5804.
story
frame,
4
bedrooms,
ques . Morrin's Furniture, 20 N.
REA I IO.R
5434 .
water and Co-op water
Larer you'll have the courage of
l'h baths, large heated
2nd St. , Middleport. Phone COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt . . sOft•ner, Modal UC-XVI.
1
your convictions - and
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
endosedporch to play In on
992-6370.
33 , ten miles north of Pomeroy. Now Only
. successes to prove it.
REALTOR
ba~ days. 2 car garage &amp;
aEAN MODERN Home with 10
Lorge lots with concrete patios,
·
216
E.
SecoiHI
Street
storage,
corner
lot .
SCORPIO . (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
acres or more. Call {614 }
sidewalks, runners ond off
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
S1
1,:!00.00.
What appears to be afi un' 557-3382.
street parking . Phone 99'2-7479. let us test your water
MOBILE HOME , 12 ~ 60. Price
Phone "2-3325
SUMMER OR WINTER " welcome responsibility will turn
55,500. !=all 992-51158 .
FURNISHED APT. Adults only, no Free.
Thls home has a beautiful
oul lo be a challenge laden with
pets . . Phone 992 -387~ . Mid1973 Govenor. 12 x 60. 2 bedr., 1
view of the river. 1 floor
promise. a pteas.-nt surprise is in
LARGE BRICK - Has 4
% both . Air cond. with underplan
has
3
bedrooms,
broth,
· dleporl.
l . f j a c k W. Carsey, Mgr.
rentals near stores and
store.
pinnif!g and utility building.
IF YOU hove a ser¥ice to oHer, SMALL APARTMENT, 2nd Street in
.
basem _e nt,
storage
· Phone '92-~111
community activities . A
992 -3702 , ofter5pm . ~
IAOmARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec:.
wont lo buy or ••II oorriethlng,
Middleport. Suitable for 1 or 2 t=~~!__ _:__:_...:.:_:_:__J
building ; garden, other
real Investment lor only
21) Follow your hunches today In
oe looking for work . .. or
people . 992-5262.
features. 512,500.00.
$23,000.
speculative ventures . Your
whate~o~er ... you'll get results
ABOUT 18 ACRES ready
LIKE
NEW4
bedrooms,
guess Is as good as others and In
foster with o Sentinel Want Ad, TWO BEDROOM opt., unfurnish- FOR THE finest in wood · heating
for
St.Jbdivlsion
and
natural
gas
F
.A.
furnace
,
ed . Soutn 2nd , Middleport .
stoves . cookstoves and Coal
some instances better .
-=-'C'::a:ll-:
:: 9~·:"
92 2 :.:
156
:_::.,.- - - - - development
In
the
Village
nice
bath
and
eat-in
kitClose to Business Distr ict . 6
St()ves . Coli Zion Haot Co ., a
of Pomeroy . JUST LOOK,
CAPIIICORN (Dec. 22-.llln. 11) GARAGE SALE. hero it io ogo;n a t
rooms and a basement. {61~)
STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sale
Putnam Drive, Athens . (61&lt;4) chen . Corner lot In Mid367 -7514 .
.
S28,soo.OO.
In competitive situations today
log Cobin betwMn Keno ond
dleport.
$24,000.
on mini;motors, trailers , ond
696-1187 or (614 ) 592·6079.
assess your opponents sensibly.
lang , Bottom, twp . Rd. 261.
IMMEDI"ATE
NEW
TRFLEVEL
folddowns
. Trovelstor 25 ft .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork . 1976 BASS BOAT, 1977 Mercury
Don't endow them with pluses
Starts Aug. 27 thru Wed., Aug.
POSSESSION Meigs
Boasting 3 bedrooms, 1'12
$.4400
.00;
20 ft. mini-motor
Route 33. north of Pomeroy.
outboard trolling motor, live
they don 't possess . Don't un31 . Come all , loh of mds.e _
school district. Lovely 2
$10,850 .00. We sell service and
baths, laml!y room, olllce
large lots. Coli 992-7&lt;479.
well, drive· on tra iler , (6 U )
bedroom , equipped kItderrate yourself .
YARD SALE beginning Monday,
and garage on one acre.
· quality. Camp Conley Starcraft
767-2477 .
STORE ROOM on North Second
chen,
dining R., part
S-41
,000.
l
Soles. Rl. 62 nortM of Pt. PleaAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11)
Aug. 29 . Old dollo with 8ioque
Street , Middleport. Main part POTATOES FOR winter . Ken·
basement with garage .
LARGE Want .o ne of
sant .
AffiJI y.our signature to your work
Mods and tcld bodies , dishes,
of town , modern front , drop
nebec, Cobbler and Superior.
$16.500.00.
those
special
large
today so that another doesn 't
Avon , lomps, bed clothing,
FAIR
MONTH SPECIAL on entir•
ceiling. central heating and oif
Rt . 338 to Ravenswood ferry, 1
SOUTHERN
STYLE
bedrooms? This !s one and
stock . SH lhem ot CODNER"S
ta~e credit for somet" lng he Isn't
jewelry. lots of misc. 810 South
cond . Room sire 25 x 60. Inmi. Call 8&lt;43·2491 , Tom Sayre.
HOME - Has everything .
3 other ones. A good laml!y
enlllled to but you are.
2nd.Str. .l, Middleport , Ohio.
quire at Ingels Furniture. Mid~PEAS on ·Rainbow ridge.
First floor has lovely
PANASONIC RANGER Auto-Booihome with 2 baths and
. YARD SALE . Sept. 1,2, and 3, 9. lo
dleport, Ohio.
From Rt.7. taka Meigs 28 or 32
e ~ ulpped kitchen (house
AC·Outdoor block ond while
na;tura.l gas furnace.
' I.e.E I (Fib. 20-March 20)
3 pm . on old 33 bittween'M•Ig•
to Bashan\. Open evenings ,
BEDROOM Houoo .
compact televisio n. Coli
wile's dream). d!nlng R. 2
This will be a profitable day for
Co. Fairgrounds and Aockspr- THREE
$27,500.
too. Owner, Robert Codner
992-3090.
992-24~8 . after 5:00pm .
bedrooms, 2 modern baths,
long Bottom , Ohio.
'
you- not necessarily materially.
jngt Church .
INVESTMENT One 4
You'll accrue wealth in things
upper
floor
has
2
ret1lals
for
room
apartment
and
a
STARCRAFT MINI Motors, trollers
that won't rust.
YARD SALE . Mon ., Tues., and MOBILE HOME . 2 bedroom, 1975 CR 125 HONDA Elsinore. Ex, .studio apt. Both with baths .
good Income. $24,000;00.
pri¥ate lot. ~ mi. out of
cell ant condition . 9.49-2410.
Wed .. Aug. 29 , 30, and 31. AI
ond fold-downs. End of year
Gallipol
is
.
No
pati
,
no
OLDER
OME
l'h
story
Just S'600.
sole . Save . Sl ,700 on 1m
tho Louie Pickell res;dence al
ARIE81Morclt 21-Aprll11) SubMOTOROLA
PORTABLE
block
ond
children . (614) •46-3918.
frame, for less than the
105 ACRES Of nice
trailers. 1978 trailers in stock .
due H;lf-seeklng Incli nations to.
l ..tort Foils. Ohio. Next to
white television . Call 992-24.4B,
price
Of
most
new
cars.
In
hunting
land
lor
S150.00
an
Us.d units. We sell tervice and
Richard and Sons Grovel Comday and strive to be cooperallva.
after 5:00pm.
good
condlllan.
3
acre. A good. Investment ..
quality. CamP' Conley Starcroft
Noble motives will inst ill In
pony. lots of nice items.
HAY' FOR sqle. Pick up out of
bedrooms, beth, 6 rooms !n
MIDDLEPORT
3
Sole~ . Rt. .62 , nortM· of Pt. Pleootfiers a des ire to treat you in a YARD SALE, Man thru Fri. 1 mile
· field. Cail985·3555.
all . $7,000.00.
aont.
bedroom
frame
home
with
similar manner .
from Lan .... . .-ille on CR 10. SALE OR Trade. 1970 Plymoulh
NEWER MODERN VA
bath, nat.
gas heat,
1972 SELF-CONTAINED CAMPER .
Wagon . 6 cyl." std. $600. or" 23,000 B.T.U AIR conditioning.
TAURUS (April 20·M·p 20)
Clothing · women '• · si&lt;es
'IPProved
home ,
3
19fl . 742-2566.
fireplace
ln
the
living
and
Good
sho,..
99;2-7755.
frode
for
outo
wagon
of
equal
Problems today are no match for
10-16; little girls , , sit.as 4·7;
bedrooms.
lovely
family
two
car
garage.
$15,500.
small household Items. Phone
valu• . 7•2·3074. .
your ingenuity if you choose to
room , nice kitchen, carNEW
LISTING
742 . 2668 .
peting, panellng, llle, colq
apply yourself. Be creative , not
· Reasonable 5 room home. 2
co0rcod .
YARD SALE . Aug. 30, 31 and Sepl.
room
&amp; storage, central
• • • . • • • • • • • • .. •
bedrooms,
nice
bath,
New Co-Op water and
11 10 om. t&lt;? 5 pm, Royal
basement
.
wlth
new
gas
softeners, model VC-SVI.
OIMINI (Mar "21-Juno 20)
ty,.writor . bedspr110d, canopy
cond.
acre. •••
furnace. 2 porches, garage
011 ty l27t. 95
Friends will rally lo your banner
curtains, children 's ond odult FURNITURE: CALL 992-611&gt;1.
LOOK
HOTS
Space
lor
and
carport.
Want
$17,000.
Save SSO.DO on a new
mere readily to~ay once ·t hey're
clothing. Boots and other misc. RAB81T DOGS. 6 mo. old . $10 up.
BUILDING
LOT
City
the
kids
to
romp
In,
quiet
Hot
point
Refrigerator.
assured you're being frank with
items.. Mrs . Kenneth Russell .
H. W: Circle, Co. ltd . 30, one:
erea, 6 rooms, bath, and
water
and
electric
1 New 2D cubic ft. Chest
them. hold no aces vP your
949-2522.
mile off Racine-Boshon Rood.
----"'---------workshop. In ~cod consleeve.
••allab!e. Only S2800.
Freezer
19n 20 FT, SCAMPER miml- motor
S25 .00 Discount
NEW LISTING 175
~~~.:o.:lg• •c ool area .
' hqme, fully IO&lt;Kied , actual
CANCEl! (June 21-.lulp 22) ll"s
'
1 Goad McCullough Chain
acres, free gas well, 4
PHOENIX, Ariz. ( UPI)
mileage 3860 miles or will
very Important todoy lot your
WHY WAIT?
INSaw
Sl5.00
bedroom home, equipped
rrode for late model station · 2 Goad used XU Chain
MH-ooleom thai you do that The PboeniJ: Suns Monday
TEREST RATES ARE
birch kitchen wlth built-In
wagon and I'll toke th• d;f.
OOINQUP-PROPERTY
wlllch you believe 10 be rlghl, signed their top draft pick.•
Saws
·
cook and bake units.
f•rence
. NOte Vonomon ,
. 1-SIOO.OO, 1-SIG.OO
even If lt'o on unpopular octlon. Walter Davis of North
refrigerator, broth, gas F .A.
PRICES CONTINUE TO
Rutland. Ohio. Pho. •• 742-2761.
Eledrlc Trim-All cuh with
SOAR - BUY NOW.
furnace, and ell minerals.
LIO (Julp 2a·Autl·22) First Carolina.
nylon
$2U5
HENRY E. CLELAND
$65,000.
Davis, the fifth · player 1974 FORD % ton 4·whHI driVe
lhoughto ere nol nec1111rlly
I 1) Good Refrigerator 1200
huck . 4 h. r.·· Lock·out hub.
REALTOR
AN APPRAISAL IS A
your b•at onea In bualnee• selected ln the National
33,000 mi es . 1973 Jeep
VALUE
·
lASED
.
ON
Hank, Kathy &amp; LHM
•
tlluatlont todoy. Tho bulb BuketbaU Alaodation draft .
Wagon. .r , A.C., P.S.. P.B ..
FACTS. NOT AN OPINION
brlghlent you muM llllnu- In JDIIII,
Nice
.
1974
'I•
'
ton
lruck,
P.S.,
t:arsey,
Mtr;
ligned to a
BY ANYONE. ONLY IY
owr.
P.B. (614) 985-3554. Harold
PlloM m-2111
multiyear
contract
but
QUALIFIED PEOPLE:
INEWIPAPPJI EH'I'Eili'IUSE ~ .'
Brewer , longlottom , Ohio.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Jack's Septic
TankSeMce

-

GUITER
SERVICE

THE PHOTO PlACE

ADVERTISING
·oEADUNES

·-Sl

COMPANY

WI-At&gt;IOI&lt; '\S- PLANE
Ar-JV eooo,
COL ONlsl-~

P-m,mz·
.ttl-&amp;113
U.l. loC:ll P.M.
!ALES AIIO SliYitl.

•

7-28-lmo.

-

FREE ESTIMATES
I

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

IIIII-•

111-

ANAFU

lARRY lAVENDER
s.r-Oioio
f~ttz-lttl

PARTS· LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

TEAFORD(H

'279.95

Pomeroy Landmarll

.......:=:...:::.==-------

.....:..:::.==--------

FOR SALE

~~~~~r

v.

EXPERIENCED

Radiator~

,Service.................
............
,. .... ,.. .............

-·

Superior

Stealll Ellrldiolt

Young's

I:·, :

Carpeting

110 ! I DOH'T
BEliEVE IN
PEST ROVING
EVEN AN

At
992·2206 or 992·7630
'"TIIo~

BUT, SAHIB, 1HERE
IS VERY GOOD
Pll.ECEDENT FOR
THAT··

llollllol-

THAT GOES BACK THROUGH
BAREIARISM ·- KILL 1HE BIG S HOTS
WHEN YOU HAVE 'EM DOWN - ·
NO - NO~ THAT'S COWARD STUFF ··
HO! I'M STILL STRONG ENOUG~
TO LET MY ENEMIES LIVE -·

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Sidine.
Storm Windows &amp; lnsul•
tion.
.
Call Professionals

Yes~erday's

wa

'

.

detal1l wert not releued.

!lilll"'

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

. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . Gill' . . . .

alllll1.., ..... ............. til-

__

__

GASOUNEAL

. . "lllll . . St.,P....... O.

Remember. Slim!
The bllb4 is
little ~~
secret!

SEWING MACHINE Repo;ro, oervlce, oil moke&gt;s, 992·228.4 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles anCI
Service. We sMarpen Sci non .
EXCAVATING. do&lt;er : loader ond
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil. limestone and
ravel Coli Bob or Roger Jef .
ers, doy phone 992-7089'
night phone · 992·35::25 or
52::3::.2:..,·= c:----- - ::
EXCAVATING , dot.er, bockhots
ond ditcher. Chorles R. · Haf.
field , 'Back Hoe Ser¥ic • •
Rutland. Ohio . Phone 7~2-2008.
WILL ~ roofing, t"Onttrucllon,
plumbmg and Mealin~ . No iob
too lorg~ or too small. Phone
742-2348 .

31 Concise
32 Departs

34 Snare

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Expert outgue~ses exPert

26

Arne~.

27

a~~.~~.r-t'~l

before
29 Atelier
item
33 Cracker
35 Evil spell
36Uke

BRIDGE·

37 Chester
Riley's
wife

NORTH
• A Q 9 71
.J53

ISA F.AR,FAR. I3ET113R
THAN I HAVE ENER

HIN-=&gt;

b+-+--I-

SOUTH !DJ
• K J 10 52
•AQ2

tKQ

sladiwns
37 Prefix for
· meter
k-,.,.+.:......+---+-1-+or scope
38 Having a
handle
39 Formerly,
formerly

o!oKQ4

One le tter simply sta nds for anothe r . In this sa mple· A is
u sed f or the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
apostrophes , the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Eaoh day the code lellers are differe nt.
.

CRYPTOQUOTES

WINNIE

LAST TIME YClU
WE:RE IN !mE?

REALIZE IT UNTIL
IT WA6100 lATE !

WELL 1 1T'5 5TILLNOTIDO

BUT PRINCE CHAIZMIN&amp; 15 NOT GCINC7
10 COME BU6TING IN '&gt;OUiZ LI VING

ARWURD
HY

\'.OMAN .• •IN THE

ROOM l.CXJKING FOR YOU A5 lOU o :T
WI"TH YOUI( PARENTO N IGHT AFTER
NIGHT!

PR&lt;ME OF LIFE ...

ER

GJPR

SR

GJCC
JP

J

TY

A R W"U R D

D ·Y

DYH

ERRH

EV

WD')"QRG

HARQR.-

N W 0 F By D

HE

JUCHEST

Yesierday's Cryploquote:
IS
WHO IS CONTHE. LEAST, FOR CONTENT IS TilE ~ALTH
OF NA:ruRE .-SQCRATES

TENT WITH

.

Neither vulnerable

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

MOBILE Home Repair, Elec:.,
plumbing and heating. Phone
992-5858.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavotine;, ••.ptlc systems.
d 01er,
ckL"oe, d ump tru&lt;;k
lim..lon•. grav•l. blocklop
paving. Rl. 143. Phone I (614)
6'18·7331 .

t9865
.9632

o!oJ87

JAIL Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

t.ATE 10 FIND SOMEONE
ELSE. YOU'RE A HEALTHY

.108764

•K9
tlO 7 4 3 2

6·30

&amp;EVEJ&lt;AL VEAI&lt;B AGO

·EAST

WEST
• 863

·many

tiL ABNER

30

t Aj
• A 10 5

28 Night

• TELL ME, WINNIE1 ... Will-! HAL i\i'AIZT1N&amp;
. .. BUT I DIDN'T
WHEN WA61HE

I.

West

North East

Soutll

Pass
Pass
Pass

3o!o

4o!o .

4•

Pass
Pass
Pass

••
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 3•

4•
Solo

king - would not work .
What would? Maybe West
would hold the singleton king
or if he held a doubleton king;
West could be persuaded to
throw the king away. West
was an expert and would not
think Claggett held as strong a
hand as he did .
So Claggett drew trumps ,
c ashed the clubs and .
diamonds and then played .his· ·
ace of hearts .
The ordinary West pla¥er
would never throw the king of
hearts , but this West was an
expert He finally decided.that
Claggett had started with ace·
x-x in hearts and that it was
up to him to chuck his king to
, avoid being end piaye&lt;l. He did
' just that and Claggett had his
overtrick .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
We don't know if this hand·
shows experts at their best or
An Arkansas reader wants
worst. South was Claggett
to know if we ever bid a
Bowie of Baltimore. Claggett • Blackwood four notrump with
knew that he had underbid his a void suit.
hahd. He also noted that while 1· We try not to, but there are
the play·for seven )Vas pbor in- . very few nevers in bridge and
deed, six notrump was just as' we have made this normally
sure a contract as six spades. bad bid on occasion .
Since the game was match
(Do you have a question lor
points, Claggett decided to
lhe experts? Write " Ask tho
findSQmewaytomakeanex·
Jacobys " cars of this
Ira trick at his six-spade con- newspaper. The Jocobys will
tract.
answer individual questions it
olampod, sell-a ddrossod
When East discarded a
envelopes a.re enclosed. Tho
heart at trick one it appeared
mosr Jnleresting questions will
. that the normal play for seven . be .used In this. column and will
~ a heart finesse , followed by rocoivo copies or JACOBY
the play of the ace to drop the MODERN.)

CJ 1917 Kinl FutUre s Syndic•tl', Int.

e.• • • • e.e

BUY, SELL OR. TRADE'. ::.

'100 JEST BERT HER
TIMt 13'/ FIFTY-EIGHT
SECONTS ~!

SHE'LL TALK
ABOUT '1E TH'

e

MINUTE "'ORE

.._
•

NOT TO WORR'f! THESE
ARE DIET DOUGHNUTS!

.•
•
•

BACK IS

TARNED

•"

'•

e

7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM •
e
92 1n
• the Counftv
nu1 .
:

s\arting
word ·

coal

CARPENTER . flooring,_ ceiling,
paneling . Phone992-2759.

• • • • • •

30 Umerick·

22 Snooze,

in
Sonora
23 Uselessly
11 Nullify
(2 wds. ) .
12 Votes to
24
Eternal
accept
· 25 Masculine
16.Chinese
27 Propertydynasty
holding
18 Anagram of
29 Michel·
nape
angelo
21 Private eye
sculpture
Hammer

992:

=

Yesterday's Answer

25 Digs for

BRADFORD. Auction. . r, Com- .
plate Service. Phone 9.C9-2487
or 949·20CO. Racine , Ohio, Cri"
=:cB::-r':ad'=-=fo:::rd::-·::-c----- - ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters , irons. all
small appliances . lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7. Phone (61 .. ) 9853825 .
•
REMODELING. Plumbing, heat;ng
and oil types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 yeora experience. Phone 992-2~09.

DOWN

river

1 : 3~Days of Our Lives 3.~. 15; As The Wor ld Turns .
8,10.
2:0G-S20.000 Pyram id 6,13.
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
3:oo-A nother World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
M.D. 20 .
3 :1s.,-General Hospital 6,13.,
3:3~Malch Game 8,10; Li lias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
4: DO-Mlster Carloon 31 Gong Show 4,151 New Mickey
Mouse Club 6 ; Gilligan' s Is . 81 Sesame 51 . 20,33;·
Movie "Scared Stiff" 10; Olnah 13.
4 : 3~My Three Sons 3; Slar .Trek 4; Emergency One
61 Andy Grlfflth 8; Hogan's Heroes 15.
5 :oo-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mi sler Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13: Mission :
Impossible 15.
·
5:3~dd Couple A; News 61 Famlly Affa'lr 81 Elec. Co.
20,33.
.
6:0Q-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 : 3~NBC News3,4,151 ABC.News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7 :oo-Truth or Cons. 3 : Cross-WI Is 4; Liars Club 6; Pop
Goes theCbuntry 8; News 10; To Tell the Trulh 13;
My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; lnslghl 33 .
•
.
7 : J~Dolly 3; Redscene ' 77 4; Match ame PM 6;
$25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNJ!II -Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
The Judge 10 ; Brl&gt;ak the Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8 :0Q-Grizzly Adams 3,15; Eight Is Enough 6,15 ; Movl.e
Montezuma " 4; CB$ News Special 8.10: .
" Halls
Nova 20,33 .
·
·
9 :oo-&lt;:PO Sharkey 3,15; Charlie's Angels 6,13;
Childhood 33; Documentary Showcase 20.
1 : 3~We Think You Should Know 3; Kalllkaks 15 .
IO :oo-Maklng of a Bridge Too Far 3,4,15; Pilot "The
New Lowe Boat" 6,131 Nell's 20; 1mage Makers: 33.
1 0:3~Book Beat 33.
·
11 :0(}-News 3.4,6.8. 10,13,15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33 .
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,151 Rookies 6,13; U.S. Open
Tennis Highlights 8; Movle " That Certain Feeling"
101 ABC News 33 .
11 : 45-Movle "Hells Angels on Wheels" 8.
12:oo-Janakl 33.
12 : 4~Myslery of the Week .6,13 .
1 :ro-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:30--Mary Hartman 10.
2 : 1~News 13.

ot

1 Agreed with
2 Solitary
3 Hamlet et al.
4 Watch
5 Sullen
6 - Papas
7 Enwnerate
8 Not now
(2 wds. )

Jamaica
17 Loathe
19 Seance sound
20 Chemical
L----------..::::..- suffix
21 Preacher
Lucretia
22 Chinese

...~~:,.., .... n. ............ .......

,_ ...... •

THOMAS JOSEPH

16 - Bay,

aa.t ....................... ...

0

r--rl:!.J;:J._..., ~

••

=
.
:
~m-·_HH ·_m_·_2~ -_m_._•,_n~:•••••••••••••,••••••••••~i
~

STUt-JT 'lOUR
6F-OWTH !

llltt ............ ,.,..._, . .

SWAP SHOP

PomlftiJ undmart

SIDR'I lHAT'U-.

.... "........................
......... ,... ..... .

._.." S&amp;L till "1·11J4 .. 1

I

Dying "
(2 wds.)
Elizabeth I,
to bards
Skeletal
substance
Took a break
Opposite
of WSW

Kingsbury Home Sales
.....,
""

... ...... t.::il

l I I I J''

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: MAKER WHOSE NATURE PIRATE
Answer: How people who don't believe In wearing
balhing suits swim-IN THE WATER

r--------.:-----. 9 " As -

lll:i'l , ~~.
!'~10 bOT A

.............. ,.......,..

gested by lhe above cartoon.

ACROSS
40 WWI French
1 Precious stone
plane
5. John Stuart
U Between effs
· and aitches

·'

i-JJ.I-.

LISTEN TO THE

9 •.'_:::dc w."

BORN
LOSER
•.

fill~

-~~

ea.

Now arrange the circled letters ttJ
form the surprise answer, as sug-

Prlntanswerhere:. "(

by

fit s.oa, Ctlol'lo-.

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

· -ro

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GENERAL
CONTRACTING

WEDNESDAY , AUGUST31, m7
5:50-PTL Club 13 ; 6 :DOSummer Semester 10.
6 : 3~AG - USA ~ ; News 61 Summer Semester 8;
Chrlstooher Closeup 10; 6 :45-Mornlng Report 3;
6 : 5~Good Mornlng , Wesl Virginia 13; 6 :55-GO&lt;KI
Morning , Trl State 13.
7 :DO-Today 3.4,151 Good Morning America 6,13; CBNS
News 81 Chuck Wh ite Repofls 10 . .
7: 05-Porky -P ig 1 0;" 7 : 3~Schoolles 10.
.8: DO-Howdy Doody 6 ; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10 . .
8 : 3~Big Valley 6.
9 : oo-&lt;:ross-Wits 31 Phll Donahue 4; Andy Griffith 8;
Mike Douglas 10; Phll Donahue 13.15.
9 : 3~A . M. 3; Edge of N lghl 61 Concentration 8.
IO :oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Mike Douglas 13.
10 : 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4,15&gt; Price Is Rlght 8,10.
n :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3.4.15; Happy Days 6, 13.
II : 3~1t's Anybody's Guess 3,•, 151 Family Feud 6,13 ;
Love of Life 8.10: 11 : 55-CBS News 8; M s. Fl•lt 10.
12 :GO-News 3,4,6,10; Shoot lor the Stars 15; Divorce
Court 8; Midday 13.
•
12:3~Chlco &amp; lhe ~an 3,15: Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 :oo--Gong Show 3; ; News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10;
Not for Women Only 15.

5 : 4~Farm Report 13;

ftlll}f.\.ft IDlt ~ T~AT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\9 ~~ a byHenriArnofdandBoblee

510111
IIIIIOOIIS
Illi'UallfiiT

DAVID BRICKLES

•

~

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Pool Sales

I

IJOT'6 ~AVI! IT! 1!7

,_,.

D. Bumgardner

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT

CAPTAIN EASY

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

NOTICE

WANT-AD

\

CARTER

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

9 ro-Polico Womon 3; Movie " Hawing Babies" 6.13;
News Documet1tary 4; Oral Robert• In San
Franclsc;a IS; MAS -H 8,10; Opera Theater 20,33 .
9 : 3~ne Oay AI A Time 8.10.
lO : ro-NBC Reporls 3,4, 15; Maqjcaf, Ml/sltal WQrld
of Julie Andrews 8; Kalak 10.
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,10. 13,15; MacNeil Lehrer Report
33 .
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie '' The Ouf.ofTow"'ers" 6,13; Movie " Beyond the Bermuda
Triangle" 8: Movie "Tria(" 10; ABC News 33.
12 :00-Janakl 33.
I :00-f omorrow 3,4.
I :30-Mary Hartman 10; News 13.

1------1!

•

.,
·~

•

t.

�J

l~Tbe O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, All.l!. SO. 1977

r----Area-n~~ths____ lMiners
1

HARRISONVIL LE - Hiel

Clayton

French ,

morn ing

at

71,

Harrl$0nville, died Monday

O' Sieness

Hospital , Athens . Mr. French
was preceded i n death by his
~re-nts . Wa lter an(1 Kathryn

Oye French, and one brother.

David.

He was a farmf!r, and an
elder In the Presbyterian
Church here, and a member
of Harr isonville Mason ic

Lodge

411 .
He Is surY ived by his wife.

Adrienne, and one daughter.
Kathryn Wright, Stanford,

Conn .

Funera l services will

Wedn@sda r, at

2

be

p. m. at the

Harrisonville
Presbyter ian
Church with the Rev . trnest
Strickl in officiating . Surial
wfll be In Wells Cemetery.
Fr iends may call at Ew ln9
Funeral Home at anytime.

SCOTT MILLE R

Sc.o1t M iller, a resident of
Sidwell. died Monday in theHolzer Medica l Center .
Funeral arrangf!ments. and
other cte-tails will be lJin
nounced later by the McCoy .
Moore Funeral Home at
Vinton .

HELEN MURPHY

Funeral ser-vices will be
held at 1 p.m . Thursday from
the M cCoy.Moore Funeral
Home In Vinton for Helen
Murphy. 70. of Akron . for ·

merly of Vinton, who died

Sunday. Bud ai will follow In
McGhee Cemetery with Rev .
Jerry Neal offici ating.
Friends may . cal-L at the
McCoy ..Yi()ore Funeral Home
from 2· A and 1·9 p.m . Wednesday.

HOSPITAL NEWS
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges
Olive
Warren, Lakin ; Odessa
Greenl'ee , Leon ; Greg
Kennedy, Point Pleasant ;
Selena
Lynch ,
Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Sidney Ja ck,
Gallipolis Ferry; Clarence
Kerr, Point Pleasani ; Beulah
Porter, Point Pleasant ;
Sidney Huddleston, Point
Pleasant ; Stephanie Given,
Point Pleasant ; Jackie
Elliott, Bidwell, and Bruce
Rayburn, Point Pleasant.
MASON DR. IN
Now Thru Tuesday

"THE OTHER
SIDE OF THE
MOUNTAIN"
Also
Henry Fonda
Terence Hi ll
in
"MY NAME
IS NOBODY"

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions
Kathy
Lawrence, Minersville ;
Lowell Carper, Pomeroy ;
Opal Barr, Middleport ;
Samantha Pickens, Port·
land ; Gwenda Ferguson ,
Pomeroy ; Barbara Smith,
Rutland; Bertha Zamorans,
Shade ; Lowell Collins,
Shade; Bess Ellis, Pomeroy ;
Betty Armentrout, Pomeroy.
Discharges
Lillie
Adams, Margaret Johnson,
Michael Priddy, Lenna Lenz,
William Williams, Doris
Haynes.

ANITA BEGINS
MIAMl IUPI) - Anita, the
first tropical storm or the
season, formed in the Gulf of
Mexico today and pushed
gale-force winds and high
tides towards the Louisiana
coast.

wavering in coalfields

off the job.
ret~rn here to contmue the
Meanwhile Miller, who has executive board meetil'g.
said the only way 10 end the 9Cheduled to r110 through
strike ''is in negotiatloos," Friday.
focused his attention on com·
Some local Wlion officials
plaints about the hardling of found Monday 's board ·
last June's local union meeting, which drew a large
elections as he met here for number of rank and file
the secmd day with the miners, to be disawointing ,
UMW's poliey making particularly the board ' s
international executive handling of the election
bo d
protests.
~t~r today 's session "Board member Lee Roy
ended, he was to travel to Patterson, who lost the UMW
Pittsburgh lor the meeting Presidential election, made a
with the BCOA. After the motion to let a union election
confab with the coal near Barnes.boro (Pa ,) stand,
operators, Miller was to despite a questionable twovote edge, while he himself is
going to challenge an election
he lost by about a thousand
votes," said John Siekon,
president of UMW Local1412,
•
"I aril very dissatisfied with
the international board
members. It is worse than a
drunkerr coal miners '
picnic."
'
Following news of the two
. strikHelated disturbances in
k M d
us
A number of c;ontests with Kentuc y . on ay '
. .
prizes of silver dollars,
trophies and craft items will
be staged at the annual observance of " Yesteryear"
from 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. atthe
Senior Citizens Center on
Sept. 17.
Thei'e..will be a pie baking
contest and contestants can
enter any kind o[ pie in the
competition. There will be a
tug·of·war lor three age
groups. Groups interested in
taking part can get the entire
John Wayne Flemming, 45,
rUle Jist by contacting the
of
LOng Bottom; who has been
center, 992-7886. There will be
charged
with the aggravated
a mustache growing contest
with prizes going to the murder in the 4th of July, 1977
thickest and the scraggliest. death of arsenic poisoning of
For the younger set there William C. Middleswarth, ~.
will be cracker eating event, today pleaded not guilty
a three-legged race and sack before Meigs County Com·
race, watermelon eating mon Pleas Judge John C.
contest and a watermelon Bacon.
Flemming came into court
seed spitting contest.
with
Joseph Yanity as legal
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: There will be a hog calling
contest, a rolling pin counsel. His bond was set at
.
throwing contest for two age $30,000.
George
Hosey
of
Waverly;
groups, under 55 and 55 and
also
appeared
Monday
before
over; a horseshoe pitching
Judge
Bacon
to
plead
guilty
contest, again for the same
to
having
a
weapon
after
two age groups. There will
being
convicted
of
a
felony
also be a picture identifying
(RC 2923.13). He had been
contest.
The public is invited to take paroled one month ago prior
MOSCOW (UPI)
part in the second aMual to his arrest on July 3, 1977 by
Palestinian leader Yasser
sheriff's deputy Ron Hollon ..
observance.
Arafat said today bfs talks
He had been in Lucasville
wltb Soviet Foreign
Penitentiary serving 10 years
Minister Andrei Gromyko
to life for bank robbery.
were a ·"great suecessn
E-RCAU.ED
Hosey has been charged with
and accused the United
The
Middleport theft, robbery, anned robStales or trying to·keep ·tbe · Emergency Squad was called . bery, wounding a guard at the
Soviet Union out of any
to County Road 5 near Ohio Penitentiary, arid car
Middle East peace set·
Bradbury for William Ray theft. He was sentenced today
tJement.
George, injured in a car to ten years to life on parole
"The Middle East
accident, at 1:48 a . m. Violation after which he will
problem can be settled
Tuesday morning . George serve six months to five
firmly and forever only
was taken to Veterans years,
according_· to
with the participation of
Prosecutor Rick Crow.
Memorial Hospital.
the Soviet Union," Arafat
said in an Interview with
the official Tass news
agency.
He caiied tbe Soviet
Union· a "loyal and tested
.
(eontinuOd !rom page I)
friend'' of Arabs and said It
Assembly. The scheduled trjps.to the United States have been
bas "always sided with
moved up by several days, and-the foreign ministers will come
their righteous cause."
to Washington before going to New York, the officials said. The
officials made it clear the Arab and Israeli ministers will not
::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:~:::::;:::::::::::::
meet with each other, but each will meet with Carter and
Vimce who are trying to lind a way around a procedural
roadblock tlrat threatens the Geneva conference on the Middle
NIGHT LINE
EAst.
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
state welfare department's ..
ANTIGO, WIS.-REPORTSTIIAT AFUGITIVE !rom the
Food Stamp Hotline will be Michigan state prison farm and tlre woman he is holding
staffed every Monday and hostage were sighted in northem-W'rsconsin have bolstered the
Tuesday night until 8 p.m. spirits of authorities oo the trail of tbe fleeing coirv:ict. The FBI
during September.
Monday took charge of the search for Douglas Henry, 22,
Cathy Elkins, state food . Lansing, Mich., and his hostage, Evelyn Vantassel, 58,
stamp outreach coordinator, Marquette, Mich., becall'!e the escaped prison farm lr)lsty ha,d
said if the number of callers crossed a state line .
is great enough, evening
Since ThUrsday,.the search for the pair had centered on
hours will be continued and Michigan's vast Up!Jer Peninsula. But witne!ISOS looking over
. possibly expanded.
mUg shots Monday confinned they had seen Henry and Mrs.
The toll-free number, 1-800- Vantassel at a northern Wisconsin resort cabin Sunday. Lee
282-1190, was instituted in Pendleton of Lilly said he saw a man believed to be Henry near
February, 1975, to provide . Pendleton's Jog cabin w.est of Lilly in Langlade County. Two
accurate information about other campers later identified the cabin's occupants as Henry
food stamp eligibility.
and Mrs. Vantassel.
INDIANA, Pa. (UPI) _
United
Mine Wor kers
President Arnold Miller
today heard bitter protests of
local Wlion elections and
prepared for a prenegotiating meeting with coal
industry officials, while
Appalachian miners teetered
between return ing to work
and continuing a violence·
marred wildcat strike.
Miller was to meet with
leaders of the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association in
Pittsburgh later tonight to
map out plans for upcoming
contract talks. The wildcat
strike was not reported ·011. the
agenda.
But union officials and
police assigned to the
coa lfield areas seemed
confident that the !~week
strike in protest of reduced
hos pital and . ret_irement
benefits has about run its
course, despite two outbursts
of violence in Pike County,
Ky., Monday .
"There are several more
mines working today in Pike,
Letcher and some of these
other counties,"
said
Kentucky State Pollee U.
Morgan Elkins Monday. n
think · everybody is getting
real fed up with the strike and that includesthe miners.
It looks like it's going to
neutralize itself."
Elkins' belief was echoed
by union officials in West
. gm
· iabased UMW District
Vlf
17. Following a meeting of the
district 's 102 local union
presidents Monday , union
sources .did they expected
loca~ to rqeet and vote to
return to work, possibly by
Wednesday.
About 10,000 miners
remained idle in Kentucky
Monday, while about 12,000
West Virginia miners were

... And do your part for the energy crisis.
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little compact that gets plenty of mi les to
the gallon . The money you save on gas
can go toward your monthly payments.
Talk to our loan officers today .

. "THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

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-

Contests
·•
Wit.h pnzeS

planned

Flemming
pleads
not guilty

g_ames in the afternoon . variety of mercha.ndlse on
Therewlli be bike races, sack hand especially household
races, greas~ pole , water items and chlldrM's clothing .

bailie for you119sters and
water bailie tor department
members.

The Chesler Fire Deparlment extends Its thanks to all

Saxhe takes
Southeast !llacl&lt; Lung A$5n . honorary
wlll .be held at p.
Sunday
at Shelter
Forest Acres
Park . The meeting Is open to
all Interested per5011s. A trip
is being planned to lobby in owe post
Washington, D.
Thanks to lhose who donated
baked goods and !hose who

gave cash donations.

A spec1al meeting of the

m.

1

J,

The Meigs REACT team

will meet in special session at
7: JO p. m. Wednesday at the
Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy. AU members and
their wives are urged to at.

tend. Final plans will be
made for a safety break to be
held on Labor Day weekend .

The monthly meeting of the
Southeastern Ohio Reg ional
Council on Alcoholism will be
held Sepl. 8 at I p. m. at the
Trinity Chapel, 300 Wooster
st:, Marlella .
All boys who will be par.
tlc ipatlng In the seventh and
eighth
grade
football
program at Meigs Junior
High are to attend an
Organizational
session

Wednesday at ~ p. m . at
Mlddleoort Municipal Park

William Saxbe, in ac·
cepting the ~ Honorary
Chalnna!lllhip or the newly
formed. Ohioans for WUdlife
Conservation (OWC), said he
has a strong concern for
wildlife conservation practices advocating professional
management programs. '
owe will actively oppose a
current campaign to restrict
wildlife programs. As a
farmer.
land
owner,
government official and
lawyer, Mr. Saxbe Is out·
spoken in our need to relate to
wildlife in a realistic way and
he opposes the emotional
campaign to ban trapping in
Ohio. ·

..

Fifteen

''concerned''

parents and citizens attended
a Meigs Local School District
Board of Education special
meeting Tuesday night to
diaeuss a teachers strike
which began in tbe district
Tuesday morning.
Following an executive
session, In which the board
reviewed
the
current
situation regardlng collective
bargaining, questions were
raised to the board regardlng
the band and athletic
program dqring the strike.
Board members ex1,1ressed
their concern that students
not be peqalized because of
the strike.

Assistant

Prosecutor

Canon Crow was asked to

research the legal lm·
plications on the programs
and will report to the board.
In response to questions,

the board affirmed its salary
offer of $8,800 on the present
index as a fair and legitimate
salary increase, one- which
was arrived at through
"considerable" negotiations
and reflects much movement
011 the hoard's part, Sup!.
Charles Ddwier said.

The board must . consider
the welfare or all employes
while still maintaining fiscal
responsibility to the tax-

payers, Dowler said.
The board indicated it
would voluntarily continue
paying the hospitalization
and major medical insurance
premiums lor the teaching
staff, although the strike is
taking place.
Explaining impassee
procedure, it was pointed out

that its result - a report - is
advisory only. However, the
board, acting In good raith
and working within a realistic
framework, accepted all of
the report except the item on
salary and index, Dowler
stated, and stands firm In not
accepting
the
salary
recommendation which

mlght be an Immediate
solution to the strike, but
could resolve in

Teachers say board won't budge despite
$80,()()0 error in figuring money on hand

severe

financial problems and
eventual school closing,
Dowler said.
The boar.d expressed its
Intent to keep schools open.
And , again this morning it
was reported that some buses
did run, that some teachers
are at their posts, and that
some students are in
classrooms. However, it was ·
unofficially reported that the
activity is only a fraction of
that which would take place if
schools were operating
without a strike sitUation.

Charles Downie, president of
Meigs Local Teachers Association,
issued the following statement today
as a teachers' strike moved into its
second day in the Meigs District.
"The Association is completely
dismayed by the board's refusal to
accept the impasse report. The
qualifications of the impasse panel,
especially Dr.John G. Drotning, the.
neutral
third
party ,
are
unquestionable. He holds a Ph. D.i is
a professor ol finance at Case
WEstern Reserve University, and is
considered an expert in the field of
finance. The panel's fact-finding
process led to the decision and
recommendation to grant the
Association its salary demands. 'I'!le
Board's representative at the
hearing dld not refute the
Association figures showing that the

Natural gas price hiked
In accordance with city
ordlnances, Columbia Gas of
·Ohio notilied legislative
councils in its service area
that it will be necessary to
increase the natural gas rates
in their communities '1:1 cents
per thousand cubic feet
beginning Oct. I.

on a dollar for dollar basis.
Computations showing how
the new rates were deter·
mined have been dellvered to
the Public Utilities Com·
mission for its review. The
increase is approximately 10
percent on the average.
'The rate change is the
reflected in customer rates
result
of increases in the
·:::::::!:*:t.-::::::::::~::;:;:.~::::::::::;::::::::;::::::::::::::~:i:·:;:!:!:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
price producers are being
permitted to charge for new
The rate change is being
made under '3 procedure
approved by the Public
Utlllties Commission of Ohio
which permits increases or
decereases in the wholesale
price a utility must pay its
suppliers for gas to be

fNews . . . in B~ief~\

By United Press International
MARION, omo .,.. ·r oR THOSE era!! enthu5iasts who
horde egg cartons and panty hose cont;Uners, the Marion
&amp;rap Yard has a novel discard to test your imagaination. ·
The finn has bought up 213 old railroad box cars and is
offering them to the public for resale at $1,0110 each. Company
spokesman Donald Sims said the 10-by-40 feet cars were
purchased from the old Erie Railway trustees. He suggested
t~~ey could be recycled as garages, tool sheds or offices.

gas at the wellhead and
adjustments in the rates
charged by Co,Jumbia Gas of
Ohio and Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp. to enable
th~ companies to recover the
difference between the higher
price the companies paid for
gas during the previous six·
month period and the lower

or disc ussion and deliberation,

Superintendent Dowler and Mrs.
Jane Wagner, the clerk, readily
admitted substantial errors in their
calculations.
" Then Mr. Dowler. at the insistance of the Association, at·
tempted to contact the board
members to act on setting up a
meeting between them . and the
Association. The Board again
refused to meet and Mr. Dowler
requested a recess in the meeting to
review his and the clerk's figures.
The Association agreed and in·
formed Mr. Dowler that all items on
the table at impasse were again on
the table and considered unresolved.
"The Association 's attempt to
resume negotiations Tuesday af·
ternoon

were

unsuccessful . 1Mr.

Dowler stated that the Board had
given him no authority to negotiate
·
"Superintendent Qowler met
any further than their last positjon
Monday evening and into Tuesday . at the table. The Association again
morning with members of the
~rged the Board to meet with them
Association discussing his and the
and discuss the obvious misun·
clerk's problem in understanding
derstandings concerning finances of
their own figures. After many hours
the school district . It must he emmoney was available ,

rate customers were charged

phasized that this seems to be the
only way to resolve the problems.
The Association Is willing to meet
and negotiate any time and any
place to settle the situation.
" At a board meeting held
Tuesday night board members met
in executive session for almost one

and one-half hours. Their position
after that lengthy session was that
although they were made aware of
an eighty thousand dollar error in
the clerk's ligures, they woUld
maintain their same salary offer.
They did not deny the money was
and is available to pay for the im·
passe panel's recommendation, but
&lt;lnly that their offer is a "fair" one.
The board, also, arbitrarily refused
any further n~gotiations meetings
with Association representatives. .
" The Association also ap·
predates the concern of local
community leaders in suggesting a
town meeting to discuss the
problem. The Association would be
glad to cooperate in setting up such a
meeting.''

during the same period.

•

•

erittne

at
VOL. XXVIII , NO. 97

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 31. 1977

SA!JSBURY, RHODESIA - RODESIA 'S overwhel.rnin.lliY
white electorate vote today in a parliamentary election that
will have a crucial impact on efforts to end five years of racial
bloodshed.
.
Prime Minister Ian Smith and his Rhodesia Front party,
the mainstays of. Rhodesia's white minority regime since 1962,
Soli · borings indicate no new multi-purpose health November.
for bidding by the middle or
were favored to win 61 percent of the vote for the 50·seats at problems are ahead, there is facility . near Veterans
That summarizes the in· end of November.
stake in the House of Assembly. A resounding Smith victory a possibility of plans being Memorial Hospital may be formation that Ron Keske
Bill Wicklin, deputy auditor
would give a strong boost to his proposal to settle the race war expa~ded, and bids for the awarded by the middle of and Steve Miller of Wright, and HUD grants adby giving limited powers to black moderates and would
Keske, Kritscgan, architects, ministrator for Meigs
severely undermine an Anglo-U.S. peace plan that includes
had lor the county com· County, indicated to the
black guerrillas as well as moderates.
·
commission he would check
mission Tuesday.
The polls were to close at 7:30p.m. (1 :30 p.m. EDT) and
Keske said the soil tests with HUD and Mrs. Plummer
complete results were not expected until Thursday.
taken of the area had proven to. coordinate the disbur·
'
satsifactory for construction, sment of funds for the
NEW YORK - COURT HEARINGS WlU. BE held in
and· no slipping problems project.
October to determine if David Berkowitz is mentally
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Estep
anticipated.
competent to stand trial for the shooting death of the last of
Keske stated that he had of 'Dyesville discussed a
"Son of Sam's" mprder victims.
·
The Stockwell Generl!l Harrisonvill~. ·
talked with Mrs. Maxine township road that has been
Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Gerald Held set Oct ..4 for Store and a second floor · The Rutland Fire Depart· Plummer, director of mental closed by a fence in Dyesville
the start of formal hearings after reading a psychiatric report apartment nver the busineSs ment, on the scene with three health, and she had informed by 0. M. Rile and Donald
on the pudgy 24-year~ld former postal worker. The report, were gutted by lire about-4 : 10 trucks and l5 men · was him that she was going to Wooten, · according to the
filed Tuesday, concluded Berkowitz suffers from paranoia and a.m. . Wednesday
in assisted by the -Pomeroy Fire apply for additional money to couple. Mrs . Estep said
is incapable of standing trial. The eight-page report, signed by
Department which also sent provide a bulldlng consisting Columbia Township trustees
two court-appointed psychiatrists who examined Berkowitz for
three truck and 12 men.
of 17,600 square feet instead say their records show the
11 hours, stated, "Said defendant, as a result of mental disease
Rutland firemen reported of IG,IJOO square feet as was road has not been closed. The
or defect, Jacks the capacity to undersland the proceeding
losses to contents amounted originally proposed.
· commission advised the
against him or to assist in his own defense."
to $12,000 and damage to the
Keske further stated that Esteps to have the trustees
building was set at $23,0110. the project should be ready ask Rife and Wooten to
PARMA,'OIDO- THREE .MEN WERE KlLLED and a
Owner is James W. Stock·
remove the fence .
woman was injured today when their car, which police said
well.
The corn.missioners ap~
was travelling at a high rate of speed, plowed Into the rear of
proved a request orthe Meigs
The lire was reported by
an illegally parked tractor-trailer loaded with steel.
ffi
0 Harrisonville resident Bob
County Bar Associatoin to
John. T. Nickels, 24, Rocky River, driver of the car,
Clark. Cause of the blaze has
~yor
0
make some necessary
Timothy Thomas, 26, and Richard Payne, 18, both of Parma,
Two persons were treated not been determined. The
.
changes in the arrangement
six· defendants were fined of siJme of the offices on the
were dead on arrival at Parma Community General Hospital. and released at Veterans · state fire marshall's office
Debra Farkasnfsky, 18, Parma, was in lair condition with a Memorial
Hospital
In will send in a representative Tuesday night in the court of third floor of the court house
fractured nose and facial lacerations. The mishap occurred at Pomeroy following a traffic ' later today. It was out of · Middleport Mayor Fred in order to increase its ·
facilities.
2:15a.m. along Chevrolet Boulevard, according to police, who accident at 1:15 a.m. today on control when
firemen Hoffman. .
.They are Charles J. Pen·
said there was no attempt made by Nickels to stop the south: CR 5, in Meigs County.
arrived.
nington, 2B, Middleport, $15
The commission reap·
The Gallia-Meigs Post ::::::::::::':-:::,:::':::::':::':':::::::::::::::::::::,:;:,:;:;:;:':;:;:;:':'
bound car, nQr was there any effort made to avoid slamming
d ost
eed"
H
pointed Orion Roush, ·Rt. 1,
State Highway Patrol said
an c s, 8P mg ; erman• Langsville as trustee of Rio
into the truck.
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
Angelia Hubbard, 22, Racine,
Taylo~, Middleport, Grande Community College.
Friday through Sunday,
dlst~rbmg the peace by · In other business the
· ROANOKE, VA.- NORFOLK &amp; WESTERN Railway Co. going west, lost control of her a chance of thun·
f1ghtmg, $25 an? costs; Freda commissioners
signed
officials say 60 mQ!'e workers will be laid off today because of car which skidded off the dershowers dally, ~with
the continuing effects of a wildcat Appalachian coal strike. right side of the road striking highs In the mid or upper
M. Swan, 38 • Middleport, $21!0
proclamation declaring
Company spokesman Bill Martin said Tuesday the latest a mailbox.
and costs and three days. m saturday, Sept. 24, as trap80s Friday and · Saturday
Hubbard and a passenger, and around 80 Sunday.
jail on a charge .of dnvmg ping,hulningandlishingday.
layoffs will bring the total nwnber of N&amp;W employes
Michael Taylor, 22, Mid· L!Jws will be In the upper
while mtox1eated, $50 ~nd Attending were Henry Wells,
furloughed to 760.
.
. .
costs, fleeing from a pollee Richard Jones and Jim
Martin said the layoffs were necessary beeause the strike · dleport, were treated .lor 60s Friday and· Saturday
minor
Injuries.
Hubbard
was
off1~er.' and $50 a~d costs,.· Roush, commiSsioners, and
bas curtailed the line's coal hauling operations. He said no
and In the low 80s Sunday.
res1st1.ng arrest ; Marcia Mary Hobstetter clerk.
further layoffs were antiCipated as the ·strike appeared to be cited to Meigs County Court
'
:::::~: ~ :~:~::::::::::::::::: :: : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::;: ;:;;::;. Spauldrng, Middleport, $5 and
winding down: He said 30 of the 220 coal mines -all in West for speed for conditions.
allowing
a
dog
to
run
costs,
Dawna Mills, 5, a
Vtrginia - served by N&amp;W remained closed Tu~sday .
SCHOOUI OPEN
loose; Mitchell H. Meadows,
At the peak of the strike, 90 mines served by the company passenger In a ear driven by
RACINE
Schools
of
the
18, Middleport, $25 and costs
Barbara Mills, 29, Crown
were closed, he said.
Southern
Local
School
lor premitting an unlicensed
City, was injured in an acDistrict
opened
on
schedule
driver
to operate a motor
LOS ANGELES - ALL THE TRAFFIC JAM on the · cident at 10:21l a.m. Tuesday
for
the
new
school
year
Chance of thundershowers
vehicle,
and Brian Johnson,
freeway coMecting road Tuesday needed was Slime whipped on the Bladen-Mercerville
Tuesday,
Bob
Ord,
tonight
and Thursday, lows in
21,
Middleport,
$25
and
costs,
cream and a cherry on top. The jam was caused by cars Rd. ea131 of SR 218.
superintendent,
reported.
the
upper
60s or around 70,
disorderly
maMer
charge.
slowing down for, or skidding around, in a pool of 250 gaJlons of
The patrol said Mrs. Mills
highs
Thursday
between 90
Enrollment
in
the
district
Forfeiting
a
$30
bond
in
the
chocolate syrup, "the kind used for sundaes," the highwaY lost control of her ear which
was
down
62
students
on
and
95.
Probability
of
G.
court
was
Charles
patrol said.
·
ran off (he right side of the
'opening
day
compared
to
last
Oldaker,
no
age
or
address
precipitation
is
30
percent
'The chocolate spilled from 50 drums that toppled off a highway into a ditch. '!'here
today and tonight and 50
truck carrying them for Popsickle Industries of La Puente, be· was moderate damge. No year. The district enrollment recorded, posted on
yesterday
was
1,043.
disorderly manner charge. percent Thursday.
ch"ooolating the 09nnecting road between the San Bernardino citation was issued.
and H~llywood freeways. ·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Health building may be larger

... where craftsmen stiH

caret!~

PECIALS!
COMPLETE SELECTION OF

tea kettles

Great tor your instant
beverages. Adecorative and
ptactical touch tor your
kitchen. Made with West
Bend quality craftsmanship. ·

conserv~tion.

21h 01:. Trlg• Tea Kame
P01celain-on -a1um•num. Harvest
(1 8,.). Avocado (1840).

SS.95

2112 01. Scandia Tea Kettle
Porcelain eKteriot and interior. Carbon
steel oore tor fast heating. (5230)
3

16.95

.1

2 01. Tea Kettle

POfcelai!"'-ort·aluminuiJI color
Avocado (2626). Harvesr (2627).

Trig• Tea Ket11e

Fast-heating copper bottom.

" SS.95

~

WEST BEND®
~

FJorcelain-on-aluminum
EllQsheU-colorecl exteJior. Attract.Ne
SCriplng decoration, (2644}

SS.95

. . .where craftsmen &amp;till care3

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Three are

injured
. a CCI.dentc:

Six fined by
H ·. ffm an
M.

R

Weather.

a

CLEVELAND- RATIONING OF BLOOD to 70 hospitSis
in northern Ohio will take place unless 2,300 pints of blood are
·
(Continued on page 12)
'

Miller working on wildcat prob~ems
By KAREN SOUTHWICK

MAN'S 7 DIAMOND
RING

Pomeroy 'firm is

7 Flashing
Diamonds set
in massive
design gold
mounting.

to receive $1,118
R~

lA CT. T.W.

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
992-2920

Harrisonville
store gutted

a

Stainless steel eX'Ierior. (4522)

tllel'e.

.'lbe plant will create about 1110 jobs for the area, according
. to 'lbomas D. Harrington, president of HIUtop Basic
Resources Inc., parent company of Resource Development. He .
said Monday engineering for the plant bas already begun, but
no completion date lor construc\ion bas been set:

.Concerned parents given school board's side

C.

- The pollution coming
from
storm
water,
agricult-ure, mining and
construction, and how we can
control it.
-Who will have control and
responsibility for Water
Quality Management.
-How these new programs
can be effective.
The overall goal of the
Water Quality Planning
program is simple: With your
help, this program can resUlt
'in a better life for you and
your children.
If we work together the
resUlt can be:
-Safe, cleaner water in our
streams Snd. rivers.
-The elimination of
needless waste of tax dollars
for polution control systems.
- A reasonable set of
guidelines for the future.
-A realistic framework ,to
lund water quality related
programs.
-Reduced . environmental
physical, social and economic
•
conflicts.
The public is urged to
participate in the future. For
further information on how to
become involved, call the
office of the SoU Conservation
WASIUNGTON - THE COLOR OF THE FEDERAL Service, Box 432, Pomeroy,
income tax forms for 1977 will be a soothing pink~n-white and 992-6647.
easier tqlill out, the head of the Internal Revenue Service said
today. IRS Commissioner Jerome Kurtz said the style of the
. forms is not yet final, but planning has reached an advanced
stage.
·
"We will probably"make a few more minor changes," said
Kurtz, "but tlre form is about what we expect to be mailing to
taxpayers in a few months." The color ofthe form has changed
from the red, white and blue.of recent years to an easy~n-the·
eyes pink and white. Kurtz Said use of the pastel shade helps
focus the eye on the white areas to be completed.

CINCINNATI - A CINC!NNATI·BASED company has
announced plans to build a $40 million lirnestooe mine and
plant 15 miles up the Ohio River from Cincinnati, at Mentor,
Ky. Resource Development Corp. bas exercised an option to
buy the 126-acre site from the YMCA of Cincinnati and
Hariutton' County, which formerly operated a boys' camp

al 7:30 p. m. al lhe high
school.

those who helped make ihelr

(Continued from page 1)
represented at · the past
regional meetings conee~
your water quality. This
meeting will be a result of our
efforts to hold a localized
discussion on how you think
the program should work in
Meigs County.
Now for a little background
about how this water quality
concern came about :
In 1972, the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act was
passed by Congress. The goal
of this Act is to make the
waters of this country clean
enough to preserve fish and
wildlife and to, permit
swimming
and
other
recreational activities by
July 1983.
A section of the Act
provides lor Water Quality
Planning activities to be
carried out by planning
agencies throughout the
state. The overall objective is
to establish sound, long range
Water Quality Management,
thereby assuring protection
of Ohio' s waters. Citizen
involvement Is needed to
make this program work lor
the future. Your opinions and
solutions coUld provide the
connecting . link for a
workable Water Quality
Management Program.
Water Quality
Management Programs will
affect your everyday life :
employment, · transportation
to and from work, your water
and sewage bills, recreation,
Ohio's streams and water·
ways, and the health of your
family.
To be successful, we need
to consider the ofllowing:
- Where the problems are.
How they can be solved. How
we can prevent futu.r e
problems.
- Proper mana~ement of
existing sewage treatment
.systems.
- 111creasing soil and water

CLEVELAND- THE ELECfRODE CORP., Chardon,
· Ohio, has· awarded oontracts to Arthur G. McKee &amp; Co.,
Cle~eland, to proVide process design and engineering services
for two 40-ton-a-:(lay caustic chlorine plants.
The plants, to be located Argentina and Brazil, are valued
at $20 million apiece and ar.e scheduled to be completed If! late
1978, a McKee representative said Monday. McKee, an
international engineering and construction firm, said work .
woUld be. perfurrired by its petroleum and chemicals technical
center, Cleveland.

The Southern Athletic
Booster$ Jwll meet Thursday

booth at the fair a success .

Public

News •• in Briefs

Admiral

n .. ,. will be .. thicken John Arnott . coach , an ·
b!lrbolcue Labor Day. Mtm · nounced today.
day, Sepl. 5, al the Chester
TM&lt;e wltl "be o basement
Fire Station.
·,
There will be a tractor pull sale on Saturday, Sept. J,
at 10 e . m . with serving of from 9 • · m . to 3 p. m . In the
chicken at 11 a. m . There WHI oudi!orlum ol ihe Sacred
be a parade at 1 p. m . and Heart Church. TM&lt;e will be a

Secretary ~~ Labor . Ray
Marltlall olf•elally conftrmed
that the FBl has begun
monitoring the wildcat.strike
situation to determme tf
federal law is being.violaled.
111 the wor!le ol the two
incidents, an estimated :;u
roving ~ickets overturned
three pickup mlne~wned
pickup trucks at the Russell
Fork Mine nar Elkhorn City,
Ky., and roughed up a lew
miners who were oo the job.

Arafat calls on
Moscow to
assist Arabs

UNLOAD....
YOUR GAS GUZZLER

NoUces, local briefs

PomiiUJ, 0.

r

C. Glasgow ana
Asaoclates of Pomeroy will
receive $1,188 in a sup·
plemental appropriation
voted Tuesday by the Gallla
County Board of Com·
missioners for surveying
aervlces already done,
leading toward construction
of a noo,ooo children's
mllltal health faclUty on SR
180 Mar the children's home.
'lbla money ill totally state
relmburslble, the com·
mlulonen were told. 'l1le i~
~ lbort-term faclUty will be

operated- by the Gallia·
Jackson-Meigs Community
Heahh Center, and there will
be no county tax money in
either construction or
operation of the facility.
Malcolm Orebaugh,
director, said that the project
will be open for bids within a
month, and It will be in·
patient work in ·.;onjunctlon
with the comprehensive
community mental health
center and its children's
ouq,&amp;tlent program.

PITISBURGH (UP!)
United Mine Workers
President Arnold Miller said
Tuesday earlier contracts
with the coal industry "didn't
do enougl) to bring the
wildcat problem ' under
control.''

"It's a negotiable item,'' he
added. "We're working on it
now. I think It can be worked

out."

Lingering wildcat str;lkes
this swruner In the coalffelds
- protesting cutbacks in
health fund benefits - Idled
u)l to 110,0110 at their peak but
now appear to be dying out.
About
23,300
miners
remained off the job Tuesday
In West Virginia . and
Kentucky ..
Miller said the union and
the coal industry "will be

ready to sit down and start
bargaining soon" to replace
the - cont~"act which expires
Dec. 6.
Miller and ooveral other
UMW negotiators met for
nearly two hours here with ·
·Joseph Brennan, president of
the
Bituminous
Coal
Oper~tors Association, to Jay
groundwork for the contract
negotiations.
Miller called tbe session "a
very good meeting" in which
procedural aspects of
negotiations - including
where and when to meet were discussed, but he did not
disclose any specifics.
He acknowledged that the
pension fund "has been in
danger for years," adding
"this rurrent problem we're
going through hasn't helped."
Miller said the \FB1's

~·

monitoring of the wildcat
situation "puts a lot of people
011 · notice that somebody's
looking.''
ae charged that a "small
minority has caused some of
the inore serious problems"
in the union.
'
"We're trying to establish
majority rule," the UMW
leader said.
Miller also said a call lor
his resignation by Lee Roy
Patterson, a Kentucky
member of the UMW
International
Executive
Board who challenged Miller
for the presidency, was to be
expected from a losing can·
didate.
"The only thing that will
ever restore unity to the
organization
is
the
resignation of President
Miller," Patterson said

earlier.
Referring to the !~week­
old' strike, Patterson said,
"The union has suffered more
dissension

and

more

discontent
under
the
leadership of Miller than ever
before in its history."
Following the meeting,
Mllier returned to 111diana,
Pa ., where the UMW
International
Executive
Board continued to hear
complaints about UMW local
elections.
The board 's Tuesday
session concerned complaints
about elections held in the
Charleston, W.Va.-based
District 17. A high-ranking
Dist(ict 17 official said
petitions seeking Miller's
recall were circulating in his
34,000-member district.

Wahama musician
in McDonald hand
MASON, W.Va.- Mary McFarland, daughter of George
and. Bonnie ·McFarland, Mason, a senior at Wabama High
School was one of two students from the State of West Virginia
to be chosen to be a member of McDonald's "All American
High School Band."
·
Students were chosen according to their own
accomplishments; Mary for her achievements in the band at
Wahama.
. She has been in the " All State Band" two years, has
received superior ratings in solo and ensemble work for three
years, a majorette for two years, one of "Who's Who ~mong
American High School Students" for two years, Society of
Distinguished American high school students, vice president of
the band, secretary-treasurer of Keywanettes and student
council member of MasiJn United MethodiSt Church 8J!d
Natiori~l Honor Society, has been in the marching band five
years and takes private lessons at Marshall from Thomas
O'Connell.
.
She is the drum majorette this school year. She bas also
performed in both the stage and pep bands . Her band director
is Charles Yeago.
.
. Participation in McDonald's Band involves several events .
First is the nationally televised Macy's Christmas Day Parade
held in New York City Thanksgiving, and the Tournament of
Roses Parade, (Rose Bowl) in Paiadena, Calif. Both trips are.
paid by McDonald's
111 addition to her participating in those events she will
bave opportunities to audition for music scholarships in New
York.
FIREMEN CALLED
ONE IS FINED
Middleport liremen were
One defendant was fined
called to Pearl St. at 12:20 and three others forfeited
a.m. Wednesday where a car bonds in Pomeroy Mayor
whose owner was not iden~ Clarence Andrews' court
tified was on lire. At 1:16 a.m. Tuesday night. Fined was
Wednesday the E·R squad David McDonald, Langsville,
went to he intersection of $27 and costs, speeding.
Route 7 and CR 9 lor Angela Forfeiting bonds were J. R.
Hubbard, Racine, . and Mike King, Jr., Pt. Pleasant, $350,
Taylor, Middleport, injured driving while Intoxicated;
in an auto accident. They Michael Whitlock, Coolville,
were taken to Veterans $30, running stop slgil; Randy
Memorial Hospital.
Hart, Rutland, $25, speeding.

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