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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.
We'll lend you the money to buy a snappy
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

COLOR SYSTEM

n

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televis ion' s first 100% Modular Solid State System. With a
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------------auvNow------------SALE PRICES

Qua lily is Built in

Every Sel-28 Different Models to Choose From

eTERMS TO SUITE YOUR BUDGET .

-

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.

�-.

•••

Z-The Ilalh Sentinel. Middi~·Porrw'OV. 0 .. WednMdav. AWP:. 31. 1m

All farmers won't have
to set aside acreage
By BERNARD BRE;NNER
l!PI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Carter administration 's
plan ror a 20 per cent acreage
"set as ide " program for
wheal growers doesn 't mean
that all Ianners who grow the
crop will have to slash 19'18
plantings by one-fifth.
Some farmers, in fact, will
·be able to grow -as much
wheat in 1978 as they did this
year - or more - while still
complying with the terms of
the program.
Th i s
apparent
CQntradiction is caused by the
fact that the set aside
program will operate oo a
flexible system allowing
farmers to comply by idling
land which has been used for
Other crops, as well as for
lvheat.
· Many farmers will comply

by idling part or their wheat
acreage, experts said . They
estimated that 1978 wheat
planting will decline to 63.5
miUion a cres. a drop of 10.9
miUion acres or 14.6 per cent
from 1977.
Other farmers, however,
may comply by idling
acreage which has been used
for cottOil or other c rops.
Agriculture · Department
specialists estimate that with
a 20 per cent wheat set aside
and a companion 10 per cent
set aside for feed grains, 19'18
cotton acreage would decline
2.2 million acres below 1977.
One major new feature of
the set aside program for
1978, under terms of a farm
bill still pending in Congress,
Is elimination of historic
acreage allotments as the
benchmark for measuring
the amount of land farmers

m ust idle.
l1 nder the new legislation,
set aside reductions are to be
b ased on the a mou.n t a
fanner announces he intends
to plant fo r the current
sea son -in this case, the1978.
wheat planting season which
is now getting under way.
To comply with the
program, a farmer must fll'St
'tell his local ' Agricultural
S t ab iliza ti on
a nd
Conservation Service offi ce
how much 19'18 wheat he
intends to plant. The office
then tells htm that for each
100 acres of wheat he plans to
grow, he must idle, or set
aside, 20 acres from a-neWlydesignated " normHI crop

acreage base " covering
wheat and other major crops.
Suppose, for example, a
fanner planted 100 acres of
wheat and 100 acres of corn or
cotton in 1977. U both crops
were included in his new

'

339 nominated
now for emmys
· LOS ANGELES (UPI) The Academy of Television
: Arts and Sciences Tuesday
; announced
23
final
· • hominations for Emmy
awards, including the JohlUiy
. Carson show and the
· Bicentennial
Minutes ,
. bringing the total to 339.
· The awards will be announced Sept. 11.
Newly
selected
nominations include five in
· the outstanding program
achievement categ&lt;iry, four
· of them NBC programs :
- :'The First Fifty Years,"

makeup

artists

"oonnal acreage base" he
would have a base of 200
acres.
If the farmer intends to
pla nt 100 acres of wheat again
for

"Pinochio"; Jerry Greene,

~~~c~i~:.~

editor

l or .

Jean DeJoux and Elizabet
Savel, children's
animators programs,
for three
NBC
also were nominated.
For outstanding individual
achievement , Robert
Lambert and Peter Johnson
were nominated for NBC's
"Life Goes To the Movies' '
and "The Big Event," while
George Pitts and Clay Cassell
were nominated for their film
editing in NBC's "The First
Fifty Years," and "The Big

.

· ·: By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
; : migraines and back pains
· · plus osteoarthritis. The usual
' advice of iny doctor is to take
• aspirin, every four hours, and
· ; this has worked well.
: : But last May I went to a
; well knoW!!. clini~ for a
• : checkup for a problem I had
: and they found I had
: · gallstones and removed the
' gall bladder.
: · With all the tesLs that I
: · went through, no one thought
· : of making a coagulation test.
: . Result, during surgery I bled
; • profusely and the surgeon
· , had quite a problem stopping
: the bleeding. Later I was
black and blue from the navel
down to the buttocks. The
aspirin products had thinned
the blood to an extreme point.
The surgeon told my wife that
if I had had the operation for
a stomach ulcer be could not
have stopped the bleeding
and I would have passed on.
It seem5 strange that some
doctors will prescribe aspirin
· · in large amounts for arthritis
when tbe results can be fatal
or cause severe bleeding as it
•• did in my case.
I have followed your col·
umn for years but cannot
reco.llect any mention of this
poBSible effect of the use 0f
aspirin which is ·so readily
available and can be misued.
DEAR READER - I have
mentioned this not once but
several times. Your paper
may not have carried that
particular column or you
may have missed it.
In any case, aspirin does af·
feet , blood
clotting
mechanisms. That is tbe logic
' for the study of the ~ible
• use of aspirin w ]ll'l!vent
heart attacks and strokes which is still experimental.
.When taken properly, in
• moderate.amounts with food,
f1i at 1eut a cup of milk, there
:.,: ll{ little danger that aspirin
'· will cause bleeding in norma:l
":· people. [f you bad aa .ulcer

that was ready to bleed it
might cause sudden bleeding.
I am . sending you The
Health Letter number ~.
Aspirin and Related
Medicines. It will give you
more information on aspirin
and bleeding as well as other
information on aspirin. You
will be partkularly interested in seeing the long list
of other medicines by other ·
names that you can buy
without a prescription that
also contain aspirin. All of
these medicines will also af·
feet the blood clotting
mechanism. Others who want
this inforination can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y.
10019.
When you think about it you
would not have had a problem
if you bad not had to have
surgery. Most hospitals or
surgical services · require
testing the blood for bleeding
tendencies before surgery.
Despite all our sophisticated
tests there are some people
who have an unrecognized
bleeding tendency and they
develop trouble during
surgery or afterward. ·
It is generally reco}lllllend·
ed that NO ONE should take
aspirin - riot even t.-:o small
tablets - for at least a week
before surgery and I think
that should be at least two .
weeks. The same should apply to any of the salicylates or
medicines containing aspirin.
A woman should not take any
aspirin for at least a week
before childbirth and probably would be wise to avoid
these medicines Throughout ·
pregnancy
(Because of the volume of
mail Dr. Lamb c;mnot
answer your letters personal·
ly but he wiD answer
representative letters of
general interest in his col·
wnn.)

Alter na tely, the fa rmer
could announce plans to plant
only 80 acres of wheat. Since
his 20 per cent ~t aside is
based on this intended
planting figure, his landidling requirement would be
20 per cent of 80, or IS acres.
That would leave him
eligible to plant 184 of his
total 200 acres- 80 in wheat
and 104 in other crops.
Theoretically, the farmer
would be free to drop most of
his other cr ops a nd
co ncentrat e heavil y on
wheat .. He could, for
example, raise his wheat
planting to 140 acres. This
would require a set aside of 28
acres, leaving htm only 32
acres fat·other crops, and he
would be using only 172 of his
total of 200 acres.

will he Iim·I•ted

home."

..:;Aspirin causes hieeding

corn.

T eIephone calls

COLUMBUS (UPI )
Members of the Ohio House
will be allowed a . limited
number of personal, long
distance calls at state
expense under telephone
ethics guidelines adopted
Wlanimously Tuesday by the
House Ethics Committee.
• 11Life Goes to the 'Movies,"
The new rules, prompted
: "The Tonight Show Starring Event."
by a series of articles
Johnny Carson," and "The · For video tape editing of published earlier this year by
; Wonderful World of Disney." ''The First Fifty Years," and ScrippsHo\vard Newspapers
~
; CBS' "Bicentennial HThe Big Event,"
detailing abuse of telephone
nomination
was
made
for
· Minutes"
also
was
privileges
by
House
Allen Brewster, Bob Roethle, members , go into effect
: nominated.
: ·css received four nomina- William Lorenz, Manuel immediately.
. lions in the outstanding in- Martinez, Ron Fleury, Mike
Rep . Arthur Wilkowski. !)..
· dividual achievement Welch , Jerry Burling, Walter Toledo. said a limited
Chuck number of personal calls
: category: Michael-Tilson Balderson . and
· Thomas, for three classical Oroedge.
should be allowed since
Enzo Martinelli received a lawmakers must fulfil the
: musi~ programs for young
for obligations of their elected
Hargate, nomination
; people;
Bill
cinematography
for
ABC's
· costume designer for "Pinocposition in Columbus at the
: chio"; Stan Winston, Larry "Nancy Drew and the Hardy same time they are trying to
: Abbott and Ed Butterworth, Boys" mysteries. ·
"keep a business alive back

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

in 1978. he could comply with
the 20 per cent wheat set
aside by idling 20 acres of
other crops. He would then
plant 180 total acres instead
of this year's 200 - 100 in
wheat and 80 in cotton or

Under the guidelines,
House members would .be
allowed to call their families
and home office to "check in
periodically" and to " pick up
messages pertaining to
legislative business and to
conduct business " which
cannot await their return .
Use of state telephones for
campaigning or for routine
business matters would be an
abuse, however.
· ·
For long..distance calls
made !rom their homes or
district offices and charged to
the state, lawmakers would
be issued a telephone credit
card.
A list of all credit-&lt;:ard and
other long-distance calls
either charged to or made
from state telephones would
be provided to each member
each month. The member

would then he given 14 days to
reimburse the state lor
''personal" calls.
Records of calls thus paid
for would then be stricken
from the public record, said
Wilkowski.
" I predict that in January,
the cost of telephone service
provided (by the state ) to the
Ohio
House
will
be
significantly reduced perhaps 8 or 9 percent," said
Wilkowski.
"There are two unique
things about this job," said
Rep . Alan E. Norris, RWesterville, who helped draw
up the telephone rules. "One
is our necessary absence
from home.
" The second is the unique
status of the 'citizen Legislature ' whose membefs have
to keep their business alive
back home," said Norris.
Wilkowski said the . be_st
accomplishment of the rules
4 would be an "awareness, a
consciousness on behalf of the
members that the telephone
can be abused ." ·
Richard Jackson, director
of the Ohio Department- of
Admiilistrative Services, told
the committee he would have
to consult his agency's legal
counsel to make sure the
P!Jblic record of long ~ance
telephone toll could be ·
stricken if the lawmaker
reimbursed the state.
Jackson aiso assured the
committee that tile credit
cards could be issued to each
IBwmaker within a week.
Wilkowski and Norris also
promised \0 brief members at
their respective party
caucuse• about the new rules
when
the
legislature
reconvenes Sept. 19 for two
weeks.

Shuttle
sure to
produce
benefits
By AL ROSSITER JR.
UPI Science Editor
HOUSTON (UPI ) - Space
agency engineers predict a
key practical payoff of the
space shuttle rocket plane
now undergoing flight testing
in a California desert will be
iLs con tributioo to the design
of commercial airliners.
" It 's going to allow a
tremendous increase in
efficiency of airplane
design," said Christopher
Kraft, !lirector of the Johnson
Spa ce
Ce nter .
" The
techniques that we are
developing now are going to
be directly applicable to the
next
generation
of
commercial vehicles in this
country."
This will happen, he said in
an interview, with the use of
computerized flight control
systems based on the one that
will translate the desires of
spa ce shuttle pilots into
precise movelnenLs of its
aerod y nami c
c ontrol
surfaces.

In most airplanes today,
there is a direct mechanical
or ·hydraulic lin!\ between the
pilot and controls. In the
winged space shuttle, this is
replaced by a "fly by wire"
control system.
The shuttle has four main
flight control computers plus
200 electronic "black boxes" .
The computers receive commands from the piloLs and
their navigation systems,
perform the necessary
computations and transmit
the proper orders to the black ·
boxes which in turn position
shuttle control surfaces such
as the elevator, flap and
, elevons , which combine the
functions of elevators and
in
ordinary
ailerons
airplanes.
This is something like the
human body works. The eyes
and ears sense what is going
on and ·signal the brain to
react. The brain then
transmits
the
proper
instructions to the rest of the
body such as legs, arms,
hands and fingers.
The shuttle pilots can have
the flight control system fly
the ship automatically if they
want. Or they can fly in what
is called the control stick
mode. This is expected to be
the normal way of operating
the shuttle. The pilots use a
pistolgrip control stick to
signal the computers how
they want the craft to fly.
They also have the option of
controlling
the
ship
themselves with · control
surfaces responding only to
their use of the stick and
rudder pedals . This is
expected to be a very difficult
way to fly the shuttle.
· Kraft said use of the
computerized digital flight
control system with its builtin redundancy will be
extremeiy reliable and will
allow airplanes to have
smaller stability surfaces.

Redistricting hill could
go to House in September
COLUMBUS ( UPI) -The House floor during the twoOhio House Governmental week legislative sessioo next
Affairs
Committee
is month.
planning to vote on a
The bill, pushed through
Democratic-drafted
the Senate by majority
congressional redistricting Democrats last July, would
bill when the legislature give the DemocraLs a good
reconvenes the week of Sept: chance of picking up four
19.
seats and perhaps a fifth in
The committee held its the Ohio congressional
initial hearing on the Senate- delegation in the 1978
approved measure Tuesday election.
and Rep. Michael Del Bane,
Del Bane said opponents to
D-Hubbard, committee the plan will be heard next
chairman, said it is possible week, and some amendments
the proposal may go to the are likely to be offered after
that.
THE DAILVSE!&gt;ITINEL
Several incumbent
DEVOTED TO TilE
Democratic congressmen
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
have expressed opposition to
CHESTER L TANNEIIIIL .
the plan_, as have GOP
Exee.Ed.
congressmen whose districts
ROBERT HOEn.ICH
Ch}Edttor
are affected. The realignPublished dally except Saturday
ment. combines the ·districts
by The (jlio Valley Publishing Comany, 111 Court St., Pcmeroy, Ohio
of
several
pairs
of
~769. Bwi.ness Office Phone 992.
Republican congressmen.
2U6. Editorial Phone992-2157.
Second class po5tage paid at
At Tuesday's hearing, Sen.
Pomeruy, Ohio.
Marlgene
.Valiquette, D·
NaUunal advertising reprae~
Toledo, chief sponsor,
laU\Ie Ward • Griffith Company,
Inc •• Bottinelli and Gallagher Div.,
outlined the proposal and said
757 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
it was fair in view of
10017.
Sut.crlpllon n~tes : Delivered by
Republican domination of the
carrier •here uailable 75 cen\s per
state's congressional
week. Sy Motor Route v. here Cllrrier
service not ivaflat»e, One mmth, • delegation in recent years.
$3.25. s, moll in Ohio ond W. Va.,
She said the last time
One Year, $22.00; Six mualhs,
111.~; Three month1, $1 .00;
Democrats
redrew
~ DI.OO yar; Silt rnantllo
congressional
boundaries
1!3 . ~;
Three munlh•, .,-·.so.
was in 1913, adding there has
~:g::un prk:e Includes SundHy
Tim
nUnel.
.
been
a
"pattern
of

• •

President recruztlng
more treaty support

3-TheDailySentinel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 31, 1977

•

•

Rusk said be hoped the
WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Carter is recruiting Senate would not be "so
traditiooal shapers of public foolhardy" tD reject a treaty
opinion in his .campaign to which resulted lnm negotia·
win domestic backing for a lions started in 1964, when
new Panama Canal treaty. Rusk headed the State
Carter conceded Tuesday Department.
Other en dorsements
he faces an uphill light to win
arrived.
congressional approval lor
The Executive Council of
the U.S.-Panama agreement
that would cede control of the
S!knile waterway in 23 years.
But he won fresh support ·
from a variety of sources,
including organized labor, .
Southern political leaders,
the chairman of tbe J oint
Chiefs of Staff and a lormer
. WAS!llNGTON (UP! ) - It
secretary of state.
"I think it's true that many would be a serious mistake
American citizens who are for opponents for the Panama
well educated and patriotic Canal treaty to consider onlY
don't think this treaty is U.S.-Panamanian relations,
good," Carter told a White in considering the proposal
House briefing of political treaty negotiator Sol Linowitz
leaders from Georgia 81)d warned Tuesdav.
Latin America, he said,
Florida.
looksonthecanalas ' ~helast
He said his job as President
vestige of U.S. colonialism."
was to educate the American
" What happens in the
public on the advantages of
Panama
Canal situation
the treaty rather than " to
affects
far
more than the
cajole or pressure."
future
of
relations
between
" Adverse reaction
the
United
States
and
throughout the world would
Panama,"
be
said
of
be profound" if the Senate
President
Carter's
con·
rejects the trea\)' he intends
to sign within~ next two troversial plan to turn the
canal over to Panama by the
weeks, Carter said.
year 2000.
The
personal
effort
"It affects, in the first
immediately paicj off.
place,
ihe relations between
Florida ' s Gov. Reuben
the
Uruted
States and all
Askew and Georgia 's Lt. Gov.
Latin
America.
They look
Zell Miller, the ranking
upon
this,
whether
we like it
Georgia official attending the
or
not,
as
the
last
vestige
of
briefing, declared support for
colonialism which has
the new treaty.
Monday,
Southern provoked so much dissension
governors opposing the and hostility in the past treaty lost a bid to have the and they are standing firmly
Southern Governor's with Panama in this need for
Conference condemn the a new treaty.
"By teh same token, the
agreement.
whole
Third World places the
Support came, too, from
panama
Canal issue high on
former Secretary of State
its
agenda.
So what we do in
Dean Rusk, the Georgian who
advised Carter· on foreign this matter is going to have .
affairs during the early days profound repercussions
of Carter's presidential throughout the hemisphere
and in other parts of the
campaign.
·
Rusk said if the Senate world."
who
along
with
Linowitz,
rejects the treaty, Coogress
should exempt Panama from Ellsworth Bunker negotiated
the War Powers Act, which the treaty, was interviewed
bars a president from on the NBC Today program.
The Senate must approve
committing U;S. troops
the
treaty to make.it binding
abroad without congressional
and
Carter has promised a
approval.

By JOSEPH A• .REAVES
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Hurricane Anita, the first
major storm of the season,
gained strength today and
slowly aimed its gale force
winds at the crowded resort
beaches of the Texas coast.
More than 30,000 offshore

-Pollution
control is
•

expensive
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
$40 million suppressed
combustion system was
started up Tuesday to control
pollution from Republic Steel
Corp.'s Cleveland District
basic oxygen furnace shop.
"We do not know of any
similar sized steel plant anywhere that bas an investment
of this magnitude in environmental controls," said
William De Lancey, Republic
president.
''The addition of the suppressed combustion
equipment brings
our
environmental expenditures
at the melt shop to a suro
larger that we spent w build
the shop itself about a decade

strong grass-roots campaign
on behalf of the proposal,
which would retain U.S.
protection rights over • the
waterway.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS (UPI )
CbristmasEveandPattyTad
captured victories Tuesday
night at Scioto Downs in the
final Ohio Sires Stakes
elmination races for twoyear-old trotting fillies.
The victories assured the
two winDers of berths in the
$56,000 series finale to be run
at Lebanon Raceway Oct. 1~ .
Christmas Eve, driven by
Carl Allen, covered the mile
in 2:04 3-5 and caPtured the
$17,800 fifth race by 3%
lengths over Neoma's Flash
to return $2.80, $2.40 and
$2.20. Bingo Winner was
third.
.
In the $17,800 eighth race,
Patty Tad, driven by Archie
McNeil, scored a two-length
win over Caml Almahurst,
covering the mile in 2:04 to
better the track record for
two-year-old trotting fiUies
by one-filth of a second.
Previously, the record was
held by Cam1 A]mahurst and
Beech Girt
Patty Tad returned $5.40,
$2.60 and $2.80. Orna Hanover
finished third.
Fifty G's and Brittany
Road finished one-two in the
first race for a 11-2 nightly
double combination which
was worth $123.40.
A crowd of 4,~23. wagered
$273,677.

niURSDAY NIGHT SEPT. 1

1
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SUNDAY, SEPT. 4
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Wheelbarrow Race, Husband Pushes W~e
•100 THE WINNER

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409 Pearl Street

CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
down payment of $25,000 on a
North American Soccer
League
franchise
for
Cleveland has been made by
shopping mall magnate
Edward J. DeBartolo, who
recently bought the San
Francisco 49ers for his son,
The Cleveland Press reported
Tuesday. ·
Bartolo would complete tbe
$250,000 purchase only if he
can find a suitable playing
site, receiving a refund of his
down payment should the
deal falter. His first choice
. would be Cleveland Stadium,
but Stadium Corp. President
Arthur Modell, owner of the
· Cleveland Browns of the
National Football League,
indicated the facility is not
available at 'the present time.
"My top . priority is
stabalizing lhe Cleveland
Indians," ·s aid Modell.
-"Adding 20 soccer dates to
the stadium schedule does not
help that stability: I'm not
closing the door on soccer. It
might not happen in 1978 or
even 1979, but I can see it
down ·stream. Soccer must
take a back seat to the
Indians."
Modell has been attempting
to find investers willing to
buy up the huge debt the
Indians ran ~p 'with local
banks.
Phil
Woosnam,
commisslonet of the soccer
league, said he does not see
any problem with .expansion
of the NASL for next season.
"I am extremely positive
that we wUI be at 24 teams for
next spring and Clevelan'd
will be one of them,"
Woosnam said in a telephone
interview from .~Portland,

llllleport1 Ohio
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1-...::::~---------~ · 0re.

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Tl,.ru t• o cr ed•l

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Reg.
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100 you c an

DeBartolo·makes·
franchise offer

TIME TRIALS 7 PM

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'

lha

.

Uruversity of Illinois football coach Gary M&lt;&gt;&lt;:ller sald
Chicago freshman David Finzer is in line as the IDin1 's punter
and placekicker.
·
·
" If we were playing tomorrow, Finzer would probably do
both (punt and placekick) ," Moeller said. Finzer is a 6-foot,
180-pound Loyola Academy graduate,
. .
One of Moeller's chief-concerns has been findmg replacemimts for punter Phil Vierneisel and placekicker Dan Beaver,
who graduated last spring.
.
Wisconsin Coach John Jardine said he was pleased w~th the
improved throwing of his quarterbacks. He also said the
offensive line seemed to be giving the quarterbacks much
better protection.
.
Jardine said he was anxious to have his players' "nagging,
small injuries " healed in time lor a full-&lt;~cale scrinunage on
·
•
Saturday .
. "There's no give and take either way and that's. wh~t . we re
trying to develop,'' saiq Coach John Pont !ollowmg the
Wildcats' eighth day of practice.
"Today the CaLs played a good even scrinunage. YesterdaY
the defense stood out and,today it was the offense,'' Pont said.

SPINET .CARS, SEMI-LATE MODELS, STREET
STOCKS

discrimination" · against
I
I
Democrats similar to racial
I
I
segregation within school
districts.
. Six months negotiating enough
Republicans, she said, have
received a far higher
Dear Sir:
percentage
of
Ohio's
For tbe second straight year, the Meigs Local School
congressional ~ats than the ago."
.teachers are m strike. So what are we the parents and the
combined percentage of votes
De Lancey told a luncheon taxpayers in the Meigs Local School District doing about It?
their candidates received.
audience his company's total Should we sit idly by and do nothing but complain and take
For example, she said, in investiment in environmental sides? I say no! If you are concerned whether your child
1974,
the
Republican controls at its Cleveland attellds acbool then you should ask questions and find out what
candidates totaled 49 per cent works at more than $150 is happening.
of the vote yet captured 65 per million. He also used tbe
I have talked to both school board members and teachers
cent of the congressional opportunity to request and attended a school board meeting Monday night.
seaLs.
"equitable international
After hearing both sides, · I feel that the board and the
"Thls is a ~greeable and trade ground rules" to · deal · teachers. association have two definite problems:
.
·vecy unfair situation," she with the challenge of foreign .
( 1.) The present negotiation · process is obviously not .
working. ·
said. "It's been suggested steel.
that this is the only time there
"We in Cleveland need only
(2) The interpretation of the salary figures by the board
has been an a Item pt to to look to our own Lake Erie and the teachers !leeDI to be in direct conflict.
redistrict on a political basis. docks to see shipload after
Auumlng the board votes to renegotiate (Monday nl8ht
Actually, this is the only time · shipload of foreign flakOlled they bad not opened new nfl!oiiatiOIII), could not the board
there's been redistricting steels being unloaded almost meet with the teacher representatives on a ooe-to-one basla
based upon a principle."
in the very shadon of this 81)d discuss tbe two moat bnportant issues- salary and a new
Rep. Alan E. Norris, R- steel plant - steel targeted ' and clearer negotiating procedure?
Westerville, repeated Repub- for American CWitomers that
U you are conceriled, call !I' write SUperintendent Dowler,
licans' observations that if we and other domestic the school board members and teachen !I' attand their
the same principle were producers are well equipped meetings. Aak them questions, e~~~resa your oplnlm, and Jllten
applied tD the Ohio General to serve.
to theirs for a better understandiJJI of the situation, and lilo
Assembly, mw dominated by
"We are cmvinced that this ask them for a fair and quick aettlement.
Democrats, a legislative foreign tonnage - l'hich
U the administration, the school board and the teacbera
reapportionment would be In CUfl'l!lllly II at record levels .-e ttuly concerned about our cblldren '1 educatlan, • I llllow
order.
~
and contiJales, to grow - II they are, they will have ream,d a leltlernent bllora IJIIl
Sen. Valiquette replied that entering
.tlll1
country week. U they do not, they, aklns with apathlllc: parmta .00
is not ' the functioo of the primarily.. " ... result of ' tl ~. are ALL guilty of not t'elpcJIJdfq to our dJOdnn'a
General Assembly but of the variety · Ol aldl frl'41lln , 'Q' :sUD1181 needs. ·
state A~portionment Board. ~r«:eive f~ ··
Six rnonthl of negotlallag Ia enough! - Mrs. Jllllt

government&amp;."

program," he said.

,---------------------------,
1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
I
I
:

1

SKYLINE SPEEDWAY

'

Ies• than 300 words long (or be BDbject to reduction by
the edilor) and mU.t be signed with the slpee'• ad·
dren. Names Diay be wltbheld upon publleatiOD.
However, on request, names will be dlacloeed. Letten
should be In good taate,. addresalng llllles, not perSODalities.

his seventh win with relief
help from Dave Tomlin and
Dan Spillner while Eric
Rasmussen was the loser.
Astrus &amp;, Mets ! :
Wilbor Howard and Enos
Cabell drove in two runs each
and Joe Niekro won his l oth
game lor the Astros despite
allowing 11 hiLs . The Astros
clinched the victory with a
four-run fifth inning with a
two-run double by Cabell and
RBI singles by Art Howe and
Joe Ferguson .
·

Big Ten Notes

oil workers and coastal about 375 miles .· eastresldenLs In Louisiana and southeast of Corpus Christi,
the upper Texas coast had Tex. The storm was drifting
fled inland Tuesday as Anita slowly westward with highest ·
changed from a blustery sustained winds of 95 miles
tropical storm to a hurricane per hour.
Gale {orce winds extended
packing 95 mph winds. .
150
miles to the east and tides
The
season's
first
were
running two w four feet
hurricane drifted aimlessly
for more than 12 hours, above normal along the
gaining strength in the warm Texas and westem Louisiana
waters of the Gulf of Mexico coasts. A hurricane watch
200 miles from New Orleans. was in effect from Vertnjlion
But early today the storm Bay on the central Louisiana
westward
to
started moving slowly in a coast
Brownsville,
Tex.
westerly direction, a course
Forecasters predicted the
which rould take It to the
South Texas resorl beaches storm would continue w
by the Labor Day weekend . intensify and remain on a
At 6 a .m. (EDT), Anita was westerly track for t1ie next 24
centered at latitude 26.2north hours.
and longitude 91.5 'fest, or

1

M:orga~~rs.

Pirates, wh o
homer after Joe
The Cu bs luts and scored three runs fo r the
remained
lour
games behind
and
Gru-ry
Maddox
and
Ted
walked in the lirst inning and snapped a 1-ttie m the s1xth
the
Phillies
in
the NL East.
drove in a third run with a · when sacTilice flies by Gene S1zetnore homered tAl lead the
Phil
Garn
er
had
three hits,
single in the seventh, also Clines . and Steve Onti veros Ph ilhes' 1&gt;-hit attack. Jim
three
bases
and
scored
stole
leads the majors with 126 drove m a prur of run s. Doug Kaa t allowed 10 hits but went
the distance for the 253rd win two runs as the Pirates dealt
RBL
Rau was the loser .
Philadelphia
defeated nl his career - tying htm .John Montefusco his loth
Fred Nonnan allowed six
hits and a run in eight innings Atlanta , ll~2, PitLsburgh beat with Carl Hubbell for No. 25 setback.
and won his 13th game and San Francisco, 3-1, San D1ego on the alltime lio1. Junior Padres 7, Cards 4:
George Hendrick drove in
Jackie Brown suffered his topped St. Louis, 7-4, and Moor e homered for the
three runs with a double and
lith loss aga inst n ine ' Houston scored a 6-2 victory Braves.
two singles lor the 'Padres,
victories.
over New York, in other NL Pirates 3, Giants I :
who handed the Cardinals
J
ohn
Candelilrta
pitched
a
The victory enabled the games.
their sixth straight loss. Bob
four-hitte
r
and
struck
out
six
Reds to move to within .8th Phillics 11, Braves 2:
Owchinko
received credit for
in
raising
his
reeord
to
I:H
games of the Los Angeles
Jay Johnstone had three
Dodgers, who were beaten by
the Chica go Cubs, 4-1.
Rick Reuschel, with ninthinning relief help !rom Bruce
Sutter, raised his record to 195 for the Cubs while striking
out four and walking two.
Reggie Smith led off the
Dodgers' ninth with a single
but Sutter retired the last

NEW YORK (UPI ) - For maybe two or three seconds, or
about as long as it takes her to control herself when she starts
laughing , Virginia Wade was allowing this utterly ridiculous
possibility to cross her mind ..
What if she, Virginia Wade, the Wimbledon champion , walks
out there on center court at Forest Hills Th~ rsday and loses
beropening-round match in the U.S. Open t~ Renee Richard:&lt;?
The idea was so preposterous, she put 1t out of her mmd
immediately.
Not that she considers herself invincible or incapable of
losing a match to someone who isn •t even seeded. Bur to a 42year-old transsexual who has never played in the Open before?'
Never.
•1T!Jere•s no way I should lose this match unless I screw u!',
and that's one thin g I'm not going to do," she sa1d
emphatically Tuesday. " I'm not going to screw up ."
In all likelihood, she won 't. ·
Certainly not against someone like Richards , who doesn't
have as strong an all-&lt;~round game as she does and is. bound to
be affected by all kinds of pressure.
Wade says she has nothing against transsexuals. She doesn 't
even care if Richards changes her mind and dec ides to go back
to being a man again.
" I think everybody shou ld do what he or she likes,·: said the
By United Press International
.
32-year-old, Britisb-b,orn, onetime U.S. Open wmner at
Michigan State, which takes its passing attack more seriO.usTuesday's get-together where it was announced she had signed ly than just about any Big Ten school, suffered a damagmg
a five-year contract for five fi gures to endorse PRO-Keds blow Tuesday with the loss of junior split end Eugene Byrd.
sneakers. " As for Renee, I have a ll the time in the world for
Spartan officials said Byrd who suffered a shoulder separaher as· a person, but it just doesn't sit quite right with me that tion and required surgery, ~Y be back by mid-season but
she's playing in this tournament. "
could be lost for the season.
Wade repeated the phrase several times.
.
.
The injury, however, created an opening f~~ a player who
The meeting between the two women Thursday will be therr has stirred considerable curios1ty at Michigan :state - 6-f'!"t-5,
first on any tennis court. Off the court , they haven 't met 200-pound senior Edgar Wilson - now considered the likely
. formally , either .
.
starting wide receiver.
.
.
.
"I think she passed me last night and I said, ' Hello, Renee ,'
Wilson , a high school football standout m Dowagiac, M1ch.,
but she didn 't answer," said Wade. "Maybe she didn't hear came to MSU on a basketball scholarshi\' and played m four
me."
.
.
consecutive cage campaigns. But he decided to use his final
Publicly, Richards hasn 't made any personal statements season of eligibility on the gridiron. . . . ·
about Wade. Privately, she has. What burned her up
Elsewhere it was more of the same grind m Big Ten camps.
particularly was a newspaper quote attributed to Wade after Indiana's fO:,tball team polished its offellSP end defense .
someone asked the lormer British Wightman Cup captam what Tuesday for Thursday's big scrinunage- presumably the last
she would do if Richards beat her .
before the season opener against Wisconsin Sept. 10.
.
"I'd demand that she IJe tested,'' Wade was quoted as
Coach Lee Corso indicated he will probably go to some da1ly
saying.
close-order scrimmages after Thursday.
That was reasonably close.
Meanwhile tackle Charlie Peal and linebacker Doug Sybert
Wade's actu al answer was "I'd demand she be checked out." came off the' injured list and tailback Mike Harkrader was
She said it off-bandededly, without any seeming malice .
expected to collie off crutches today .
. .
Continued on Page 4
The Iowa Hawkeyes spent the bulk of their Tuesday workout
almost entirely oo " specialty gl!ffies."
.
Coach Bob Commings kid these included puntmg, punt
returns, kickoffs and kickoff returns.
_
commings said punter Dave Holsclaw and place kicker Scott
.
.
Schilling were "perfoming excellently.".
"If we can get game performances.out of these two men like
STEWART, OHIO
they performed in practice, it will be a great asset to our

Hurricane
Anita adds new muscle·
.
.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
George Foster , who has hit
44 homers this season, finds
more and mo re his name is
being lin ked with Hac k
Wilson . who set the National
League record of 56 homers
_
hack in 1930.
Foster hit No. 44 in the
Cincin nati Reds' 4-3 victory
over the Montreal Expos
Tuesday night a nd could
equa l . or surpass Wilson's
home run mark. tol;lowever,
he 's finding the growing news
media press ure distinctly
uncomfortable.
He says, "I'm trying to
concentrate on one at bat at a
time. But it 's hard to do when
people are always asking you
to project current statistics
for a whole season."
Foster, who hit a two-run

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP I Sportl Editor

Canal treaty bas wide
impact on S. America

.

••

·Foster socks 44th m 4·3 victory

Sport Parade

the AFUIO followed the
lead of AFUIO President
George
Meany
and
unanimously endorsed the
treaty as "a just and
enduring basis for hannony
in the Western Hemisphere."
The union pledged Its
lobbyil\g muscle in the fight
for Senate ratiftcation.

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�~The Daily Senlinel

•

MiddJeport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesd.oy, Aug.
. 31, 1m

Sports transactions
4-TbeDally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 31,1m

Storm didn't bother
millionaire Turner

Fmal round features tie
SPRINGSF!ELD, Ohio
(UPI) - The final roWld of
the $3rd Ohio Open al Reid
Memorial Park today fmds
Charles Siff&lt;rd of Brecksville
and Gene Ferrell of Bryan in
a lie for first place and 16
players within four slrokes.
Sitrord, 54, who won
$381,000 in 18 years on the pro
lour, carded a seven-under·
par 65 Tuesday for a 36-hole
score of 137. He was in the
pack qJening day with a 72.
First rOWld leader Ferrell,
a ~year.old lefthander after
his first Ohio Open win, added
a par 72 to his opening 65 to
hold a share of the top spot.
Host pro El Collins, who

holds the COII{Jje mark al 64
soared to 74 Tuesday.
added a 71 to ~his 67 Mooday
Defending
champion
for a 138 total and a share of Martin Rnesink continued to
second place with Art Nash of shoot his way out of
Kent who lacked a 71 onto his cootention "'th a 74 Tuesday
earlier 67.
for 145.
.
In third place at 139 were
Sifford, the club pro at
Lawton Harrison, Cincinnati Brecksville's Sleepy Hollow,
and Barry Good of Alliance. had seven birdies in his
Five golfers are at 140 in round. He SJ!id he'd watched
fourth place: Bryan Abbott, Collins putt and had learned a
Akron; Todd Cra ndall , lesson. "I had been hitting the
Gerard; Hank Gerring , ball too low." he said.
Dubbn; George Bellino,
Collins, who says the next
Danfield ; Craig Carson, time he practices he'll go into
~ Columbus.
' · ' a tent, predicted a real dog
Five are tied at 141 fight in the final round. With
including Mike Zimmerman so many players so close, he
of Dayton, who was third said, "it's going to be a real
after a first round 67. He fight ."

'

NEWPORT, R.I. ( UPI) Courageous' skipper Ted
Turner, the millionaire
sportsman who will lead the
23rd defense of the America's
Cup against Australia, didn't

Leaders .
Major LeagUe Leaders
By Uni ted Press lnfernaliona i

Batting
(based on 350 at bats)
Nat_
i pnal League
G. AB . H . Pet.

P arker Pit
Stennett Pit
S immns St L
Gri ffey Cin
Tm pltn SI . L
L uzns ki Phil
Smith LA
Foster Cin
Hen dr ic k SD

131 536
116 453
123 425
128 489
124 503
120 448
123 412
129 507
12!1 442

18S .345
152 .336
142 .334
158 .323
159 316
140 313
129 .313
158 .312
136 ,308

Va lntin , M i l
104 422 130 JOB
American League

Carew Min
Bo stock Min
R: 1vers NY

S inglton Bal
l e Flore Oet
S ai lor Tor

G . AB. H. Pet.
129 51.4 194 .377
128 497 169 . 340
113 ~65 155 333

120 420
123 525
108 435
129 525

138 . 329
168 .320
139 .320
167 318

aclion for the enlire season, an offseason back injury, the
according to Mike Brown, Bengals also d1sclosed.
Cincinnati assistant general
Now 3-1 in preseason play,
manager.
.
the Bengals lake on the
The team waived rookie Minnesota Vikings Saturctay
wide receiver Alex Percival mght
at
Riverfront
and traded rookie defensive Coliseum.
back Carl Allen to st. Louis. ~ In this week 's Bengals
Percival was a 12tb-round depth chart, veteran Boobie
draft choice from Morehouse Clark bas moved ahead of
College . Allen , from Southern rookie Pete Johnson of Ohio
Mississippi, was an nth- State in their battle for the
round pick.
starting fullback
slot .
Veteran defensive Iackie Johnson, bothered by a sore
Ron Carpenter is oo a two· leg, didn't play against the
week "rest program," due to Cardinals last week.

Tuesday linescores
By Unifed .PreSs International
Nat1ona1 League
Atlanta
000 ooo 110--- 2 10 1
Phil a
140 410 Oh:- ll lS 0
Hanna , The 1ss ( 2 }. Coll ins
(5), Davey (1) and Nolan ; Kaat
and Boone . w - Kaat, 6 .7. LHanna, 1·3. H Rs - Atlanta,
Nloore (5); Ph 1 1 a de 1 ph i a,
Maddox 01), Sizemore (4) .
Cinci
200 100 lOQ- 4 12 0
Mntral
100 000 002-3 10 o
Norman , Borbon (9) and
Bench ; Srown , Atkinson (7),
Kerrigan ·(8) and ca rter. wNorman . 13-10. L-Brown 9·11
HR-Ci ncinna1i, Foster (44).
·

N.Y

00200000D-211 0
010 140 OOx- 6 12 0

Houstn
Myrick, Baldwin (5), Apoda .
ca (5), Siebert {8) snd Hodges ;
N!ekro and Ferguson
wN•ekro , 10·5. L- Myr ick, 1-2.

St .L
.
210 000 1QO- -4 .10 1
San Dgo
401 110 OO:x.- 7 10 0
.Rasmussen, Schultz (5), East .
WtCk (7) and Simm ons , Ow
chmko, Tomlin (7), Spillner (7 )
and Roberts W- Owchinko, 7-9
L-Rasmussen, 10-13. HR -S t .
LOUIS , Templeton {6l.
,

SanFrn
000 001 0{)()---;-- 1 4 o
ca d Ia ·
d o t
M
n e n.a an
t ;
o_n ·
te t usco, Wtltrams (7J, Moffitt
(9 ) ~nd Alexanaer . w - ean
del ana~ 15·4. L - M:ontefusco, J.
~~ ·l HR San Franctsco , Thom as
·
American League
Oaklnd
000 001 01o--- 2 9 1
Boston
001 020 l Jx- 7 10 2
L angford, Lacey (8 ) and
Sangulllen ; Tiant, Cleveland ( 6)
and Fisk. W- Tiant. 9·8. L Langford . 8-15. HR - Boston.
Lynn (15l.
Ctlicgo
003 000 ooo- 3 6 0
Cleve
000 000 001- 1 7 3
Kravet , LaGrow (9), Ham tl 1
t&lt;m {91 and Down1ng ; Garland
and Kendall. Fosse {9). wKravec , 1! -6. 1..-- Ga rland , 10-16.
000 110 ooo- 2 7 1
Calif
Balt
000 00.4 3lx - 8 , 6 o
Brett , LaRoche (6) , Miller {7J
and Etchebarren ; Palm er and
Skaggs. W- Palmer. 14 ll. L-

' .
Kloes, 745 Glendale Rd
Marietta, bas begun working at Belpre Rexall Pharmacy
the past week. Owner Tol/1 Lewis said Kloes is a graduate
of ~lo Northern University, Ada, on May 22 this year and
... e_son of Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes of Middleport .
~wife of three months, Elizabeth, also was a student at
Oh•? Northern, .a nalive of Roundhead, Ohio. She is
tna)ormg m muSic and elementary educatioo at Marietta
College. (Sheppard llhoto ).

day.
FOREST HILLS, N.Y.
This pushed their debut in
(UP!) - Snap, crackle and
this
$464,000 tournament Ill
pop, before it even starts the
the
same
U.S.
Open
Tennis Thursday,
afternoon
Dr
.
Renee
Championships has the ·
a
medical
unmislakeable
air
of Richards,
phenomen
on,
makes
her
developing into a medical
debut
against
Virginia
Wade.
curiosity. ·
With the absence of Borg,
First defending champion
the
honor of starting play on
Jimmy Connors came up with
the
stadium court this
an aching back , and on the
morning
fell to two u!&lt;leeded
eve of the tournament top
players,
Peter Fleming · of
seed Bjorn Borg injured his
Chatham,
N.J., and Colin
right shoulder, forcing hoth to
Dibley of Australia.
miss Wednesday's opening
Following them will be
fourth-seed Guillermo Vilas
of
Argentina
against
Spaniard Manuel Santana,
llie Nastase against Fred
McMillan of South Africa and
Roscoe
Tanner of Lookout
a league meeting Monday.
Mountain,
Tenn ., against
The league did announce
Matt
Mitchell
of Palo Alto,
teams would play 3~ame
schedules next year, 15 at Calif.
The two opening night mal·
home and 15 games away .
feature
former
The 1977 schedule was 26 ches
champion Ken Rosewall, the
regular season games.
While no final decision was
reached Monday on a site for ~;~~t ~frog:. ft:~ali~
Soccer Bowl 78, there were Dayton , Ohio, and John
reports the Cosmos would McEnroe of Douglaston,
host the title game at Giants N.Y., a surprise semifinals!
stadium in New Jersey next at Wimbledon, against Eliot
year. Minnesota and Tampa Teltscher of Palos Verdes,
Bay .also were mentioned as Calif.
The women begin their
sites.
singles play Thursday, with
the most interesting match
being Wimbledon champion
BALTIMORE ( UPI) Virginia Wade against Renee
Baltimore Colts'
wide Richards, th e trans sexual
rece iver Roger carr ended who required a court order to
his protracted holdout gain entry into
this
Tuesday by signing a series tournament.
of one-year contracts and
"~ have absolutely nothing
should r eport to training
camp by Thursday , a club ~:~~l:;!,"J:" said Wade,
spokesman announced.
"There's onlY a remote
No tenns were announced chance of it happening again
but there were reports that (of a transsexua I playing in
Carr was seeking a three- the women's division) but
. year contract for $400,000.
it's a very bad pr~edent. "

Soccer league expands
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) The North American Soccer
League, riding a tide of new
popularity, may add six
teams next season, The
Oregon Journal reported
Tuesday.
In addition to the new
teams, Hawaii, Connecticut
and possibly St. Louis may
relocate their franchises
with Hawaii appeared headed
for Tulsa, Okla.
The newspaper said the
Connecticut fran chise may be
relocated in Oakland, Calif.,
joining San Jose as a second
Bay Area.franchise, and St.
Louis could be relocated in
Indianapolis if it does not
move into a larger sladiwn in
the st . Louis area.
New franchises,
the
newspaper said, could be

located in Boston, Cleveland,
in addition to Denver, which
has received a franchise
grant. It aiso was reported
franchise bids may be made
by the Sept. 16 application
deadline by Houston, Atiarrta
and Orange County in ·
Southern California . If they
do not enter for the 1978
season, they were expected to
be candidates for franchises
in 1979, the newspaper
reported.
League owners and general
~ managers would not make
poblic comment on franchise
shifts or expansion following

EAST RUTHERFORD,
R1ce Bos
N.J.
(UPIJ - The New York
Brett KC
109 448 140 .313
Zisk Chi
117 45 1 139 .308
Giants Obtained veteran
Brett , 11 -10.
Yount M!l
128 508 155 .305
tackle Gordon Gravelle
H 1sle Min
125 486 148 .305
&lt;11 mnings)
---"----~~-Hargrve Tex
123 429 13 1 .305
Tuesday from the Pittsburgh
Sea
000 011 030 oo- 5 ll 1
Home Runs
020 000 OOQ- 2 4 0 Steelers for an undisclosed
N .Y .
00013010001 - 6120 K~n City
Nahonal League : Foster, Cin Chicgo
Perry and Sundberg ; Leo.
Pole, Montague (5), Romo
000 102 01 o- 4 8 1
future draft choice. ·
~ ; Burroughs . Atl 35; Luzinsk !,
L.A
.
001
000
OOQ- 1 6 0 (9 ), Kekich (10), Seg ui (IO J and nard, Gura {11 and Porter . wPhil 33; Schmidt , Phi l 32.
Gravelle was the steelers'
R . Reuschel, Sutter {9 ) and Stinson ; Figueroa , Lyle {8) and Perry , 12 -10. L - Leonard, 14-11 .
Bl&gt;n ch , Cln 29.
HRs Texas, Horton { 12),
LMitterwald ; Rau , Hough (8}. Munson . W- Ly te, 11 ·4
starting
right tackle when
American League : R1ce, Bos Sosa
Harrah
(21
).
Segui, O·S H Rs-N ew York,
{9)
and
Oates. wand Bonds, Cal 33 ; Nettles, NY Reuschel . 19-5. L-Rau, JJ.s.
Nettles (32), Rivers ( 1()) .
they won consecutive Super
3?,; Scott, Bos 31 ; Hobson, Bos,
Det
220 ooo ooo- 4 7 1
Ga mble and Zisk, Ch i, Thorn · Pttsbgh
020 000 0~ 2 9 2 Bowls in 1974 and 1975. A
311 000 111:- 8 13 2 Mi lw
201
000
0003 12 0 Texas
t on. Clev and Thompson. Oet
Rozem a and May ; Cal dwell series of injuries last year
26 ~
~
and Moore. w - Rozema , 15·5. L limited the 6-foo t-5, 250Runs Batted In
- Caldwel l, 4-7. HR - Detroit,
pounder to six games.
National League : Foster, Ci n
Rodriguez ~ 9 )

126; Luzinski , Phil 108, Bur ·
r oughs, Atl and Cey, LA 98 ;
b ench, Cin and Garvey , LA 94 .
American
League :
H isle,
M inn 109 ; Bonds, Cal 97 ,
Thompson , Det 94 ; Hobson , 8os
93; Nettles. NY 90.
Stolen Bases
Natio11al League : . Taver-as,
P itt 51; Cedeno . Hou 44 ,
M prgan , Cin and Moreno, Pitt
41; Lopes, L A and Richards,

let
Tuesday's
violent
thunderstorm interrupt his
celebration.
He guzzled champagne
from a botUe and was tossed
into the water by his crew.

U. S. Open h~s
hurt players

Bengals slash roster
CINCINNATI (UPl!- The
Cincinnati Bengals have
waived a wide receiver ,
traded a defensive back and
placed on linebacker on the
Iiijured reserve list, to reduce
their roster to the 52-player
lhnit for NFL teams this
week.
The Bengals Tuesday
p laced veteran linebacker
Chris Devlin on injured
r eserve, the result of a
ruptured achilles tendon he
suffered in Saturday's 33-9
victory over the St. Louis
Cardinals.
Devlin underwent surgery
Sunday . He will be out of

SP.Orts Tr•nsiCtiOn'l
8y Un1fed Pr~n lntern~ional
TUHdily
Bnebl:ll
Toronto - Pvrchas:~· infield
e-r - Tim Nordbrook. from the
ctu~ago White So• for an
ondt~CIOSed amount of cash
New Vork MeH - Announced
the appolntment of co~CI'I Tom
B,urge!s to the position of
dlrect?r ol player development
effective "'' the end or the
season
.
Montreal Purchased con tract ot left handed p rtcher Dan
Scha tzeder trom Denver of the
Amer ican Association .
Football
. New York Jets Traded
1tght end Richard Osborne to
the .PhiladelPhia Eagles for an
undtsclosed draft choice and
cut tree agent safety 's teve
Ebbecke of V i llanova ~
New York Giants - Obtained
veteran. tackle Gordon Gravelle
frQm Ptftsburgh tor art. lmdls ·
closed futur·e draft choice.
·
Baltimore . Signed wide
receiver Roger Carr to a series
of one -vear contracts
St. Louis - Obtained rookie
d~ l f!':'S i ve . back Carl Allen from
Cm~mnatt for a futur-e draft
cho•ce and cut veteran corner .
bac:k pwayne Cr-ump ; rookie
Clef~Sive end Ernest Lee ; wide
re&lt;:e•ver Jim Lelay and tree
agent Alonzo Emery
Se~ttle - Traded rook ie wide
re«:;eJVer
Larry
Se1vers to
Tampa Ba y lor an undisclosed
fu ture draft choice and placed
veteran q u a r t e r b a c k Bill
Munson on waivers. along with
defensive back Rolly Woolsey
and rookie wide receiver Forry
Smith
Washington Announced
retir-ement of offens ive guard
Paul .Laaveg , Pl aced r ookie
defenstve tackle Perry Brooks
on the injured reserve list
Waived r unning backs Harold
Hart and Eddie Moss, tackle
Pete Solver-son, wide receiver
Doug w i n s I ow, cornerback
David Thomas and linebacker
Cli ff Laboy ,
San Francisco - Cut k1c ker
~teve M ike·Mayer,
defensive
l•neman Reggie Lewis rookie
w ide receiver Eugene Washing .
ton, center- Jim Harlan , ctuar -

Turner thanked, by name,
all the crewmen and backers
who made his challenge
possible, including many who
participated
in
his
unsuccessful 1974 effort. He
also thanked the boat,
praising its design by Olin
Stephens and redesign by
Marblehea .d , Mass.,
sailma ker Ted Hood. ~ .
T.hWider rumpled across
Newport Harhor and rain
cascaded off the straw hats of
the six black-jacketed
members of the New York
Yacht Club America's Cup
Committee.' They came to
shake TUrner's hand and
wish him luck in the best.of.
seven final series against
Australia beginning Sept. 13.
They picked the defender
Tuesday after observing the
preliminary trials and a final
trial series that began Aug. 16
- all dominated by Courageous, the boat that
successfully defended the
Cup in 1974 when Hood was at
the helm.

BELKNAP
BLACK
ROOF PAINT

NEW YORK (UPI ) -U.S.
Open Golf Champion Hubert
Green and Lanny Wadkins
winner of the U.S. PGA title'
will represent the United
states in the 25th "Silver
Anniversary" World Cup and
Internal i o n a I Trophy Golf
Championship.
The championship will be
held at Wack Wack Golf and
Country Club, in Manila, the
Philippines, Dec . 7-11.

1

Sports parade

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In 1954, Hurricane Carol
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26 foot

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By RALPH

wAKLEY

be findingrunning
replacements
for
departed
backs Fred
UPI Sports Writer
w·m
d M k Lo t.t
ArizonaState'sFrankKush au't amats aartn baark Kvshe, ·
has. grown ca u t',•ous, bu 1 only' difficulty
qu er
u s
will cbe pickin
Br1gham Youngs LaVell between retu ing
te g
Edwards is finally beginning Fred M rt rn
dveDera~s
to soun.d ~timistlc.
. . .
nms
Sproul. o ensen an
In h1s first 18 years at
Wheth .ts M te
Ar !ZOna
'
state, Frank Kush ' s Sproul, er the
1
or !&lt;len
or
Sun
Devil
teams never suffered through qu rte b k
ill ha
a losing season, and his Sun excellaerntagc w f
v~ an
.
'shed
th
roup
o
receivers
e 197ii cam- led be
·
J h J ff
'
De vils f101
n tight
e erson
pa ign with a pe rfec t 12-0 at widesemors
receiveroand
end
r~rd, a 17·14 Fiesta Bowl Bruce Hardy. And Kush 11
wm over national powerhouse Jefferso . "Th be 1
':" s
Nebraska , and a No. 2
'v
n.
e ~.receiver
ranking on UPI 's final I Ue e;er tcoache d·
f
ratings.
n or un,a 1e 1y
or
00
Then came 1976 and Kush Jefferson, .he s not
the
began to believe that his ASU team
wlt~ the . best
Sun Devils were "reaching ::'i!r~=~the Rotheldest.10
lor No. 1" as the team's
Y
.
e na •on
publicity managers were - .
Bn,gha;n
Young
forecasting. Instead, Arizona u;;er~[ st~iff~~·~.r·e~n.
State lost its first four games
e ed :
C
s~mor
0
- to UCLA, California, ~:,.':,"of the w1~gf.'J
~
1
~.:;'Western Athletic Conference Wyomin 1 \
c~bamp!on Wyoming, and the Tangg ~e ~ar \a d ~
Cmcmnali.
rec
er
~w •.an . a
And they went on to post a
ord - BYU s wmnmgest
4-7 mark, the worst record for mark ever · And Co~gar
a Sun Devil team in 30 years. coach LaVell Edwards thinks
All that is behind Kush now . his team ..~an repeat th~t
" We 're not
predicting mark -;, if we can avmd
anything for 1977, " says the ml~w•esh.
th
bili't'
winningest coach in WAC
~ ave e capa
1es
history
. of bemg an excellent team
K · adds, "This year's this fall ," Edwards added.
team · 1 keep a low profile " But a lot of things. have to
and itS erits or demerits fall mto place. Our kids ~ow
will be a ounted for on tbe th_ey need to go 9-? agam to
playing fie . Until that time wm th~ WAC. And if th~y do,
we're giv'
all athletes a we beheve the opportwuty for
shot at start g. However, we some . postl;ea~n .rlay will
will not sink to the level of materlal!2e agam. "
1as1 season "
Nielsen threw for. nearly
Arizona State should easily '3,200
yards
and
29
rebound from last year's touchdowns last fall , and this
setback, but the sun Devils ~ason he coulabecome the
will still have to battle first
major
college
&amp;igharn YoWig for the WAC quarterback w1th back-totitle and top team hooors in back 3,000 yard seasons. .
the Rocky Mountain West.
Most of th~ other coaches m
ASU's biggest problem will the West p1ck the Nov. 12

SLICED BACON ...................................:... ~~. s1.39
HOME MADE HAM SALAD ..................... ~~:.. 99~
SUPERIOR- CASING
By - Pc
·
·
·
- ·
Shced
NA ............................ ~~·.. 99~ •.. ••• •••LB.
$1.09
R Assorted Pkg.
•• •..
EAT.·....................... ~ ............... ~~~:.. ·51.15

FOOD SUNSHINE
HALVES
GREER

PORK AND BEANS SHOW BOAT
R.C. or DIET RITE
NEW AUNT JEMIMA

M

GREEN PEPPERS........ 2/25c

CHEESE

Regular

Complete
Buttermilk

LB.

Sib.

Bag

NEW CABBAGE.. ..... 2 LB. 25~

,

...

FRIED
oz.
PALMOLIVE
LIOUID
...
~~~..~~............................·79~
JUMBO
·
"
BOUNTY
TOWELS
......
~~.~~ ............................... 69~
12" REYNOLDS . - '
·
39~
ALUMINUM FOIL. ..:........... :... ;. ·······················
32 oz. VLASAC
HAMBURGER
DILL
PICKLES
.......................
7f1
12 oz.
ARMOUR
CORN
BEEF
....................
:
...........
sl.29
13¥4 oz. SWANSON
·
CHICKEN BROTH ......................................... 2/ 45~
19 oz. DUNCAN HINES
REG. CAKE MIX ..................................:.. 2/$1.49
10c Off
49 OZ. TIDE ..................... ,.....................~~--~1.39
10 oz. INSTANT
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE ............ ~........... ss.39
l

TASTEE

39
BOLOGNA
2Ls.Sl
. '
SLICED

.

M
~

••

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

M

33 oz.

PEACHES
22 Size 79~ POTATOES 20LB.$1.39
8 Pak
99~ GRAPES
Li. sr
16 oz.
1
i2

Johnathan, Red &amp; Yellow Delic •.

APPLES

CARROTS ........ ~~.~.~~-~.~?:.19'

MASON, W.VA. :

CUBE
STEAK

]u~. &amp;r

.

SCHWEIG

·
coach
- Tony MaSlin. The
Wildcats return 20 of 22
starters from 1976 uicluding
quarterback Mark ' Lundsford
and Lundsford 's entire
offense
•
Air Force
also comes back
with a solid nucleus with 16
starters returning. ,But the
Falcons' schedule includes
Arizona Slate
Baylor
•
California Georgia Tech and•
, so it looks like
Notre Dame,
another tough year for the
Academy.

'

BASEBALL
MajOr League Standings
By United Press International
National League

East
W. L

Phi l a
PittsbQh
Chicago
,St. LOUIS
Montreal
New York
LOS Ang
Cinci
Houston
San F'ran
San Diego
Atlanta

Pet. GB

' 80 so .615 77 55 .583 4
71 59 .546 9
71 61 .SJB r\()
60 71 . 458 201h
51 79
West

.m

29

W. L Pd. GB
79 53 .598
71 62 .534 8 V~

63 . 69
61

477 16

12 ·459 181h

C'1ncinnati (Seaver 15-5) at
Montr-eal
&lt;Twitc:hell
J.9 or
Bahnsen 1·6) , 7: 35p .m,
New York ( Koosman 8 16&gt; at
Houston CLemongello 5·1•tl , 8:35
p .m .
St. Louis (Underwood 7.9) at
San Diego (Shirley 8·16), 10
p ,&lt;Tj .
Ch ic:ago ( Burris 11 -13) at Los
Angeles (Rhoden 15-8) , 10 · 30
p .m .
Thursdayfs GameS
&lt;No games scheduled )
American League

East

New York
Boston
Baltimre

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

THURSDAY THRU SAT.

showdown m
. Tempe, Ariz.,
.
between ASU and BYU as the
battle for the 1977 WAC Iitle.
If e'th
' er tea':" ha san edge~'·t
must be AriZOna State w1th
seven games in SWI Devil
Stad'•urn, .., nc 1~ding home
contests agamst BYU ,
M'•ssoun. .and Ar~zona.
..
The AtlZOna W1ldcats could
be the sl~eper in the Rockies,
while Air F orce may be
among the be st m
. the West ·
But the AF A Falco!&lt;l. play
such a tough national
schedule, their record will
probablymakethemlooklike
an also ran.
The other outstanding team
in the West is defending
NCAA Division II champion
Mootana Slate.
Montana State coach Sonny
Holland has 72 players on this
year's roster - a big group
for a small college team plus he returns junior
·quarterback Paul Dennehy ·
and the bulk of the Bobcat
offensive line that led MSU to
the 1976 national title.
Arizona has to be rated
high among the Mountain
West's major college teams,
despite working with a new

7 :35p .m

pitch)

PICNI.C
HA~ lb. 79~·
SLICED
89~1b~

io

58 76 .433 22
48 83 366 3()•; 2
Tuesdav's Results
Philadelphia 11, Atlan t a 2

DELIVERED TO JOB SITE

773-5554

..

By IRA KAUFMAN
l••mers thiS
' season . "! don't
UP I Sporns Writer
get II!• thrill no more fr om
The Yankees' Mickey home runs - just winning
Ri ve rsts
. gett 'mg a 1·lttle blase games and · stealing bases."
aboul belting the loogbaU However, "Mick The
but he gave the Seattle "'••'ck," who has stolen 21
M
"""'
ariners quite a boot bases so (ar Ulis season,
Tuesday night.
.
dlscussed his goals after
He h't
·
"Segui's first Tuesday 's game and subtly
1 Diego
~~c~ghoftthfleld'llfth inntoinligftovether Missued a. chaillllenge to Yankee
anager B' Y Martin.
Yank ees e t o ence
a
sudden
" U I steal 20 more bases it
dramatic 6-5 victory over the would be a decent year for
Marmers
.
that propelled me," RiVers said. "After
20,oJ6 fans out of their seats. tonight, 1 guess he'll (Martin)
"Th e ho me run ended a Iet 'me run. l get as much
long dreary day for me " charge from stealing bases as
Rivers said , who has hit
hitting h&lt;me runs. "

Cincinnati 4, Montreal J
Houston 6, New York 2
San D1ego 7, St. Lou is 4
Ch icago 4, Los Angel es 1
Pittsburgh 3, San Fr-ancisco 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Pi ttsburgh (Kison 7-6) at San
Francisc o &lt;Montefusco 7-9),
4:05p.m .
Atlanta (N lekro 13-161 at
Philadelph i a
(Carlton
18·8),

(4/12

MATERIALS CO.

Rivers' homer beats Mariners

Sun Devils not bragging this year

Pimento

CRACKERS 'SAL TINE

PANCAKE

~::i~~ersc:t~~~··~u~~"J' :J:~; ::::::::::::&lt;:::,:,:,:,:::::·:·::::::~:,r,::;,:::,:,:::,:::,:,:;:::;:,:,:;

Horton , light end Jeff eut ts and

ISLE VAC.

24 foot

. good set of snow tires.

EFF~CTIVE

PEACHES

Valley Bell

Tommmy Compbell. t•ckle Jeff

tackle football tbis season
should
attend
these
session• or •onta•t Mr.
"
....
....
While at
14%-3121.

Overhand
24 inches

1
ll

LEMONAIDCOUNTRY TIME

Saturday t:00-9 :00
CLOSED

free agenl fullback
Henry
Hynoski , linebltcker Joe Geise,
veteran de ten s i v e back.

-

Be ready for winter,

PRIDE

DOG

Bnan Billtck and an unidenti

fled plover Acquired tlnebock
e-r- Rod Martin and defensive
back St.ve Jackson tmm
Oakland In exch•not tor two
futurt- draft picks . Placeo
detens1ve back Bruce Rhode-s
on the Injured reserve list
Philadelphia - Cut · wide
receiver John
Mas.tronardo,

-~

DEUCACY

PHEBE ' STORE
, Prices EHedlve Thutsd•~Y lstthru :.aturday 3rd
Rrght Reserved To Limit Quantities
We Gladly Accept Ftd: Food Stamps
~day thru Friday

terback. Rog~r Proffit , t 1ght end

The Big Belld Warriors
football squad drills tontiaue thll week at the
tl d II
Ru an
eld from 5:30
untO 7 p.m. earh night
through Friday and ne•t
week. All players over ..18
lntereoiH In playing adult

__, ~

HAM

Racine, o.

BREAKS

,,,,.,,~,.,~,:~;:;;,~~:;':'''''''':

Pre-Fabricated Trusses

Continued from Page 3 •
Richards heard about it and reacted.
"I've had the privilege of mixing with a lot of fine women in
tennis," she said. "Chris Evert and Billie Jean King have been
marvelous to me. Why should Virginia say such a bitchy thing?
so 40 .
Well,
she seems to have wasted a lot of her career putting her
American League ; Patek. KC
foot
in
her moutil."
41 ; Renw , Cal 34; Page, Oak
32; Bonds , .Cal 31 ; LeFlore , Det
Wade made light of the whole thing.
29 .
''I thought it was a furmy remark," she said. " It was a joke.
• Pitching
Most Victories
The newspaper report I read said I 'snapped' when I gave my
National League: R.Reuschel, answer. I didn'tsnapal all. I just said that in jest."
Chi 19-5, Carlton, Phi l 18-8;
The fact is Virginia Wade considers Renee Richards pretty
John, LA 16-5 ; Forsch , St L 16.
6; Candel ar ia , Pitt 15 . 4; much the same way as do the majority of other women
Sea ver , Cm 15-5; Rhoden , LA
professionals, some of whom refer to Richards privately as
15-Q.
American League : Ryan, Cal "an over-the-hiD broad," who came over to their side of the net
17 - 13 ; Goltz, M inn 16. 7:
Rozema , Oet 15·5; T Johnson, hoping perhaps to cash in on the publicity and make a few
Mmn 15·6: Tanana, Ca l 15-7 ; bucks. Chief concern among the women players is not
Torr ez, NY 15 11.
Richards so much, but that sam~ other male tennis player,
Earned Run Average
~uch younger :"'d better than Richards, might get the same
{based on 126 innings pitched)
National League : Candelar ia. 1dea, change his sex, and then make off with all their prize
P itt 2.47; John , LA 2.58;
, R .Reuschel. Chi 2.6.4, Hooton . money in the w&lt;men's tournaments.
L A 2.72; Richa rd , Hou 2.78.
In this year's Open which starts with the men's competition
American League : . Tanana ,
today,
Evert is favored to defend her women's title
Cal 2.33; Blyleven , Tex 2.70;
Ry an , Cal 2.77 ; Rozema , Oet successfully although Wade gave her a IHl beating last
2.82; T .Johnson, M inn 2.95 .
weekend at Phoenix, where the New York Apples won the the
Strikeouts
National League : Niekro, Atl World Team Tennis title . Ordinarily, Evert annihilates Wade
213; Rogers, Mtl 168 ; Koosman. every time.
NY 163 ; Seaver , Cln 161 ,
Was she surprised at how easily she handled Evert this
R1chard, Hou 159.
American League : Ryan. Cal tim e.?
305; Tanana , Cal 198 ; Leonard,
"What do I say to that?" laughed Wade.
I&lt;. C 185; Btyleven , Tex 170 ;
She wasn't going to put her foot in it again.
Eckersley . (lev 161.

SUi &amp; Pearl

THE MISSOURI

~

.

.

~

'

W L
Pet. GB
79 52 .603 75 54 .581 3
74

55

~ 573

.4

Detroit

62 67 .481 16

Clevelnd
Milw

57 79 .419 241h

Toronto
Kan City
Chi cago
Minn

61

70

466 18

45 84 .349 33

West
W
7':J
73
75
73

L
Pet. GB
54· .581
56

.566

2

st1 .564 2
Texas
57 .562 2V2
Calif
61 67 .477 J31h
Oakland
51 78 395 24
Seattle
52 82 .388 25 1h
.
Tuesday's Results
Boston 7, Oakland 2

New York starter Ed
Figueroa dissipated an early
4-1lead, and Sparky Lyle, 114, pitched 3 2-3 scoreless
innings lor the victory.' Graig
Nettles hit his 32nd h&lt;mer of
the season for the Yankees in
the fifth with two oo.
Elsewhere in the American
League, Boston defeated
Oakland , 7-2, Baltimore
crushed California, 8-2, Texas
downed Kansas City, 8-2,
Chicago beat Cleveland, 3-1,
and
Detroit
topped
Mllwaukee, 4-2.
Red Sox '1, A's 2:
Fred Lynn drove in three
runs with a homer and a
sac rifice fly while Denny
Doyle had four hits and one
RBI as the Red Sox halted
Oakland's six-game winning

streak. Luis Tiant went 5 1-3
innings to raise his record .to
9-8 wit~ solid relief help from
Reggie Cleveland.
Orivles 8, Angels 2:
Jim Palmer scattered
seven hits for his 14th victory,
Al Bumbry drove in ·three
runs with a pair of singles and

, .CAll Times EDT)

.

California (Tanana 15-71 at
Baltimore ( T . Martinez J.l ),

7:30p .m .
Seattle &lt;Honeycutt 0-0) at
New York. (Tor.-ez 15-11), 8

ThYrsder's Games
Clevelancl at Boston
Oakland at Minnesota , nloht
Detroit at Milwaukee, night

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST
Wishes to Announce the Relocatfo11
of His Office

HAVE A
PROBLEM?

RT. 2 NORTH

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

CAll
CRISISLINE

.HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

PHONE (304) 428.0000

992-5554

.

~

JACKSON
PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING (4) The lunct&lt;ons and tn ·
stitutions tnvolved in the flow of goods and serv1ces from
production to consumption. Special attention to the
functions and operations of wholesalers, merchants,
rela&lt;lers and consumers.
Time: 7-9 p.m.. Tuesdays and Thursdays beginnmg Sep~
!ember 6
Cost: $52 (10)
Locat10n : Jackson Htgh School
lns! ructor: Bernard Goldstayn
Class Limit: 25.

Columbus 10, Toledo 9

. .

GALLIPOLIS
FUNDAMENTALS OF DESIGN (4 ) Composition and design
us1ng ~aned two and three dimensional media.
Time : 6 ~8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning Se p ~
!ember 6. _.
Cost" $52 (ID) Lab Fee $5
Location : French Art Colony
Instructor: lark Napier Jr.
Class Limit: 15

BASIC ACTING Baste theones and practice for ·beginning
and amateur actors.
'' Ttme. Tuesdays, ].10. p.m., beginning Se ptember 13
Cost: $30
Location : French Art Colony
PRE·RETIREMENT PLANNING Informative sessions on how
Instructor:
Greg
M
iller
Class limit: 20
to cope with retirement and alternatives to retirement
living.
FLOWER ARRANGING Bas1c principles and elements of
Time : 7- 9 p.m., Wednesdays. beginning September 7
Cost: $20
Location. Jackson Htgh School design in flower arranging.
Time : 7-9 p.m., Mondays begmning September 12
Instructor· John Allen and staff
Class L1m1t: 30
Cost: $15
Local ton : French Art Colony
Instructor: Vi~1an Kirkel
Class limit: 15
FLOWERING IDEAS Creating seasonal home decorations
using fresh , d1ied, and silk flowers .
FAMILY FINANCIAL PLANNING Learn ing to ltve w;thin your
Time: 7-9 p.m. beginnmg September 13
mcome, planning a family budget. influence of ~alues and
Cost: $15 plus materials
Locatton : Jackson High School
goals on money management, definition and use 111 family
Instructor: Reba Mullins
Class limit: 15
resources, stmple economics affecting the family
and usi ng consumer credtl to your best advantage.
BEGINNING CAKE DECORATING , Basic cake decorating Time : 7-9 p.m., Thursdays · beginning September 8
techniques including bas1c flowers. edging and design.
Cost: $15 location : Ohio Valley Bank, Jackson Pike Branch '
Time : 7-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays, beginning ~ September 13
Instructor: Suzanne De Rita
Class Ltmit: 25
Cost: $22
Location : 56 High Street
Instructor: Lee Miller
Class Limtt: 15
BEGINNING CROCHETING Principles, elements of design
and practice in crocheting for beginners.
ADVANCED CAKE DECORATING ~vanced techniques of Time: 7-9 p.m., Wednesdays begtnning October 5
cake decorating using concepts of color flow and rolled . Cost: $22 Location : Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
fondant. A complete wedd ing cake will be constructed and
I
20
decorated.
.Time : 7-9:30 p.m. Mondays beginning ·September 12
.,.
Cost: $22
Location : 56 High Street · · MIDDLEPORT
Instructor: Lee Miller
Class Limit 15 -~~~"fhi~~~ (3) A study of how real estate is
a1
and implications. Prerequisites:

r

REAL ESTATE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES (3) An overall
view of real estate practices.
Time: J.JO p.m., Tuesdays, beginning September 6
Cost: $39 (ID)
Localion: Vinlon High School
Instructor: Art DeStephen
Class Limit: 25
GENERAL ACCOUNTING FUNDAMENTALS (5) An accounting
·course for non~business·non·accounting students. The
course includes the basic financial recording and reporting
process and managenal accounting with a decision making
emphasis.
Time : 6-8:30 p.m ., Tuesdays and Thursdays begmning
September 6
Location: Vinton H;gh School
Cost: $65 (I D)
Instructor: Dav1d
I

Real Eslate Principles and Practices and Real Estate Law.
Time: ]. 10 p.m., Thursday, beginning September 8
Cost. $39 (ID)
Localion : Meigs Jr. High
Instructor: Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Class limit: 20
WELLSTON
INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS (4) A general overall view of '
business activities including those of management,
marketing and accounting.
Time: 7-9 p m., Mondays and Wednesdays, beginning
September 7
Location : First National Bank
Cos!J52 (I D)
Instructor Bernard Goldstayn
Class Limit: 25
BASIC OILS (2) Introduction to the basic techniques of
working with oil paints as a medium.
Time : 7-9 p.m.. Mondays, begtnning September 12
Cost: $26 (ID) Lab Fee $5 Local1on : Wellston High School
lnstrucl1lr: Ltlly Goldstayn
Class limit: 30

RIO GRANIDE
HATHA YOGA learning control of mind and booy to achieve
BASIC WATERCOLORS (2) Introduction to the bastc
physical and mental harmony and relaxatton . ·
techniques of working with watercolors on various textures.
Time: 7:30·9 p.m., Mondays, beginning September 12
Time : 7-9 p.m., Wednesdays, beginning September 7
Cost: $15
Location : Lyne Ce~ter 103
Cost: $26 (ID) Lab Fee $5 Location: Wellston High School
Instructor: Rebecca Stump
Class Limit: 30 . Instructor: lilly Goldstayn
Class Limit: 30
WESTERN SQUARE DANCING Instruction and experience in
· western square dancing forms and movements.
·
Time : 7-10 p.m., Wednesdays, beginning Sep.tember 7
Cost: $30 per person
localion: Community Hall

BASIC ACRYLICS Introduction to t~e basic techn;ques of
working with acrylics as .a medium:
Time : 7-9 p.m.,. Wednesdays, beginning September 7
Cost: $26 (lD) Lab fee $5 · Location: Wellston High School
Instructor: lilly Goldstayn
Class lim11: 30

listed above .
the location noted, or you may register at Lyne Center on the
6. All fees are payable at the time of registration .

I be held at the first session of each c
io Grande cam pus between 6 and 9 p.m., TuleS&lt;lay ,;

nufnber In parentheses after a class title Indicates that the co urse carries cred1t hours . Atl other courses ar&amp; In

COtlt.lrlulrla education department and offer no College credit.
International League
United Press International
W L Pet. GB
Pawtucket
75 58 . 564
T idewater
73 61 . 545 2ih
Charleston
73 61 . 545 2lfz
Syracuse
68 66 . 507 7'12
Richmond
~:' 61 . 500 81!2
Rochester
65 68 . 489 10
Columbus
62 72 . 463 13 lfz
Toledo
52 ·&amp;2 . 388 23'12
Tuesday's Results
Richmond 4, Charle!.lon J
Syr,acuse 4, Rochestet 3
Pawtucket 10, Tidewater 3

'

Education.

pm .

Cleveland (Eckersly 16-10) at
Boston (Aase 3- 1) , 7 · 30 p .m .
Texas (Alexander 13-8) at
Kansas , C!ty (Colburn 14· 13 ).
8 : 30p .m .
Oaklj:ind
(Medlct'l 1·6)
at
Minnesota CThormodsgard 10·
9 ), 8:30pm
Detroit
(Morris
1·2)
at
Milwaukee (Slaton 8-13 ), 8 : 30
p ,m ,

none.

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE

Chicago 3. Cleveiond 1
Baltimore 8, Catiforn Ia 2
New York 6, Seattle 5, 11 inns
Texas 8. Kansas City 2
Detroit .4 , Milwauk.ee 2
Today's Probable Pitchers

Eddie Murray stroked a
bases-loaded single to keep
Baltimore four games behind
New York in the AL Ea:t.
Tigers I, Brewen %:
Aurelio Rodriguez
slanuned a two-run h&lt;mer to
help rookie Dave Rozema to
his victory over the Brewers.
Rozema scattered nine hits
in boosting hiS record to 1~'
struck out four and walked

.

after a listed tuition or fee Indicates the amount charged for residents of Gallia, Jackson , Meigs and Vinton "~.u~::~"_.';;i\'•, 1
. outside those counties would pay $17 per credit hour and out-of·state residents would pay $55 .50 per
Grande College and Community College reserves the rlghl 10 cancel any class for insufficient enrollment. If ca nof any class is neoossary, a full refund will be made to students registered for that class .

~ellatl&lt;or

Grande College and Community College admlls students of any race, color and natlo~a! or ethnic origin .
tht1 Ofillco of Conllnullfil Education, 245·5353.

,

'*.A,, (A)llfl'lltl.

�6-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 31,1977

Swartz reunion held
ALFRED - The Swartz son, Harry and Marilyn Ross,
family reunion was held in Don and Donna Ross. Nonna

~.r::::~:~ii;i;;::~ii;ip
-~"'
·
···

:·: · S

28 ~~~=.' t.~~~w":~•. A~: :[~
A basket dinner was served and Leola Swartz, Genevieve

~~"!n "::n~~~~ o1~:

at 12:30 with Gerald Swartz
asking the blessing. The
afternoon was spent viSiting
and playing games.'
Gerald Swartz acted as
chainnan in the absence of
his brother, Harold Swartz.
The reunion is held each
year on the last Sunday in
August.
Attending
were
the
following : Hazel Creamer,
Clara Follrod, Nina Robin- .

WILL CELEBRATE

Mr. and Mrs. Walter
· (Nancy ) Walker,
both
residents at Arcadia Nursing
Home, Coolville, will observe
their 50th wedding anniversary on Saturday, Sept.
3. No celebration is being
planned but cards may be
sent to the couple there.

CINDY NEUTZLING

Has birthday.
Cindy Neutzling, (laughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Neutzling , Syracuse ,
celebrated her sixth birthday
on Aug. 24 with a party at her
home.
A decorated cake, ice
cream, koolaid, and coffee
were served by Mrs. NeuWing to Cindy's guests, Amy
Patterson, Darla Lambert,
Mildred and Tina Pierce,
Syra.cuse; Sharon, Usa and
Randy King, Racine; Dean
and Sherry Pierce, Elyria ;
and David Kearns, Oilton,
W.Va.
Sending gifts were her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence King, Middleport,
and her great uncle, Elmer
King, Cleveland.
The Almanac
United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Aug.
31, the 243rd day of 1977 with
122 to follow.
The moon is moving from
its full phase to the last
quarter.
The morning stars are
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and

Saturn.

NOTICE

Ballroom Dance
Classes To
Resume Sept 7
At The

ORCHID ROOM
Pomeroy·

For more information call
992:-2622

and Archie Swartz, Boyd,
Judy and Tammy Ruth,
Caryl and Jack Ruth, Zura
Hawk, Mr. and Mr's. Vernon
Swartz. Rena, Tena, Robin ,
Re• and Roger Swartz,
Tamm)' Murphy, Waid and
Katie Swartz and Charles and
Helen Woode.

anytime.

The evening star is
Mercury.
Those horn on this date are
under the sign of Virgo.
American . entertainer
Arthur Godfrey was horn
Aug. 31, 1903.
In 1939, German dictator
Adolf Hitler premised peace
if Poland• :would accept 16 ··
conditions. Poland refused,
was invaded the following
day, and World War 11 was
under way.

'IR' ' '

• • •

By Helen Bonel

~

Those Lovely Shade&amp; of Gray ...
Dear Helen :
1 too was appalled by ''Appalled Ex-Reader" who blasted
you and newspapers in general. But all of us who believe in
morals aren't lanatics. Please be fair and print my more
tempered view.
You asked, "What's wrong with elderly people living
!()gether unmarried (to save the wife's pension)?"
What's wrong is that if it involves sex, it is sin, just as are
adultery and homosexuality. The Bible specifically states that
those who do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.
You columnists should be encouraging youth (and
oldsters) to resist temptation, in this~ of moral decay.
Granted, it's disgraceful that senior citiuns should be
faced with a choice between a survival income or a marriage
partner . But you, Helen, are also disgraceful when you don't
point out the literal Biblical truth: if they give in to passion,
they are "living in sin." -A RATIONAL PERSON

Dear Rational :
I respect your opinion, just as I hope you respect mine, but
oo matters of elderly sex, we'll never agree, because your
Biblical black and white world doesn't allow for my "lovely
shades ol gray."
"Morality" to me, means not hurting others. (And that
doesn ~ include the · superficial hurt experienced · by
disapproving relatives or friends.)
Somehow I can't see a caring, giving, sharing Jong-tenn
adult relationship as "sinful," just because.that scrap of paper
hasn't been signed, (Excuse me, God.) -H.
P. S. A columnist who parrots your beliefs is soon so dull
you ignore her. Be glad I offer you and your family fuel for
argument!

The .Hcv. and Mr!-1. Peter
Gr•ndal and fanuly were
honored Sunday night al a
farewell party held al lhe
Mtddleport First Baptist
Omrch following tht: evenmg
service. The family will move
this week to Racine, W. Va.
where the Rev. Mr. Granda!
has accepted a Baptist
Church pastorate:
The Board ~ Christian
Education with Mrs. Freda
Edwards and Mrs. Freda
Hood as co-chairmen, hosled
the farewell party . Others
assisting were Mrs. Helen
Bodimer and Mrs. Fran

A'ITENOJAMBOREE
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kellon,
Pomeroy, spent the weekend
at Cox's Jamboree Fann at·
tending the Blue" Grass Jamboree at Webster, W. Va.

GOING TO SCHOOL
Beverly Wilcox. 1977
gradute of Meigs High, left
Sunday for Huntington where
she will attend Marshall
University. Classes started
there today.

A thought for the day : Nazi
dictator Adolf Hitler said,
Dear Helen:
· "The great masses of the
Re your colwnn on workaholics:
people ... will more easily fall
I think there are a great many borderline workaholics ..,.. victims to a big lie than to a
people who may like their work but are a bit compulsive or small ooe. 11
obsessive and may tend to forget otber human values.
.
Here is one antidote for this condition: Make it a point to
perform some duty or help some friend , totally without
expectation of reward. Do this regularly once a day, once a
week. lbe help we give freely often brings the greatest
satisfaction ... and unexpected rewards ! - BORDERUNE
WORKAHOUC, ATI'ORNEY AT LAW

+++

Dear Attorney :
How right you are ! Workaholics or not , when we reach out
to help others, we've helped ourselves most of all. -H.

+++

Dear Helen :
I must let off steam about parents who let their children
ride in the car while standing on the seat! How come a government which raises a stink about safety belts makes no laws
about how children ride? So what if they "scream if strapped
down." It's better to hear their cries of anger than "dead"

Bokn family reunion held

Grandals honored
Demoskey,

Mrs.

was held Sunday at Lake
Alma.

Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Austin Wogan, Mr. and

Betty

Gilkey, and Mrs. Janke
Gibbs.
The table was covered with
yellow and h.ad an overlay of
white net. A mooey tree made
by Mrs. Sarah Fowler was a
gift to the minister and his
family. It was the table
centerpiece and was flanked
by yellow tapers.
A decorated cake was served with punch, mints and
nuts. Lacy Barton presented
the money tree lo the Granda!
famll:y . Miss Dorothy
Reynolds had a song during
the sa&lt;;ial.

WAS VISITING
Weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine
were Mr. and Mrs. David
Eskew and children, Kandi,
Beth and Amy, Newark. They
came especially for a family
reunion. Beth and Amy were
overnight guests of Mrs. John
Howe·ll. Gailipolis. ·

.
IN
:LI\11~~ '~L~R

••
..
~~~ I

•

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~
tr.ID differeat *k.~t~
• , and Qlttom ~
Limit : """' ptr •ubJ-, t•o per f&amp;milr
• AddiLioaai ponrail&amp; n.w.ble ia ..U
~ """ el ~ P""•
• • Grou,. SLZS nclt .dd..itNtaal •abteet
; • Per- Wider 18 mlllll. b!, ..emm·
• ~ br pveat "' 1\l&amp;l'diaa
• • p-mYIJed portr.,it. deii"rertd •t l&amp;ort

*•

•

'
•

NEW! "

"DUO-IMAGE "
PORTRAIT

·

'•

•

''

••

:,.
•...
......
·~

..

-

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. George
Jayne, have returned to Cin·
cinnati alter spending a week
in Pomeroy with Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Kelson. Jayne
will enter the University of
Cincinnali in September.

HERE VIS ITlNG ~
Mr. and Mrs . Harry
McGuffin and daughter,
Ta:bitha,' of Moundsville, W.
Va. are here for a several
days, visit with his mother,
Mrs. Dorothy McGuffin, and
Debra , Middleport.

WILL MEET
The Middleport Garden
Club will meet Wednesday in
the social room of the Colum· bus and Southern Ohio Elec. tric Co. 7: 30 P·J!I:

Surprise party hosted

"GOSPEL SINGING
HEM PH ILLS"

HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Erlewine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Ogdin, Sycamore,
ru. were Monday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Rutland.

FROM NASHVIUE, TENN.
I •.

I:

7:30P.M.
AT THE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL

Polly Cramer

RT. 7 NEAR CHESTER, OHIO. SEE YOU lliER£.

Slic.k soks a hazard

i ..

W.C,R. -I did not know what
to do with my husband 's flag
so after much thought I decid·
ed to send it to the high school
in Kansas where he
graduated. They raise and
lower the flag in his memory
and I have received their
heart felt thanks. -E.H. ·
DEAR READERS - Ruth
wrote to tell us that the Gold
Star Wives of America, Inc.
had a request in their
newsletterfor such fla~ to go
to the Avenue of Flags being
planned for the Fort Snelling
· Natiohal Cemetery. There
the ·flags will be flown on
legal
holidays
and
ceremonial occasions. I do
suggest writing to any '
organization before sending
such a flag and be sure y~u
know it is welcome and how it
istobeused.-POLLY.
Polly will send you one of
· her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if ·
she us es your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Et Cetera Boutique
Gift &amp; jean Shop

•

'

'•

has received new
jeans. skirts. jumpers.
blouses and sweaters in
the latest styles.
We f!lso have a group
of items reduced for quick
sale.
Hurry in for Jhe best
selections.
We' re open 10:00 a.m .
to 5: oo p.m . Monday thru
Saturday and until 8: 00
p.m. on Friday.

.
I

'

'

.,·-·
•

BffiTHSTONE RINGS
tiurve !ous
You'll

~vailable at our low discount priees.

TilE., WED., lltURS., FRI. and SAT.
• AUGUST 30-31 SEPTEMBER 1, 2, 3

•

. At These Locations
Pt. Pleasant; Ripley, Athens
and Belpre

SATURDAY-:-SEPTEMBER 3RD
UNtiL 4 PM

pick one oul for that s pecli~ l
som
your birthda Y
list.

l7'.M

~AHA.:!_'~UE
ONLY

lllustralion enlarged l o show detail

OFFICIAL

"FAMILY OUTING"
of CONSTRUCTION&amp; GENERAL
LABORERS UNION
LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON
Shows &amp; Fireworks- Sunday and Labor Day

•
: BONUS OFFER : " FREE" PORTRAIT ol GRANDPARENTS
Photo Hours: Daily 10..1 2-5 6-8 • Sat. 10..1 24:31)
'

'

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60 West-

Burgundy
Plum Purple
Azure Blue
Shell White
Fern Green
Salmon Pink
Claret Red
Mint Green
Cornflower Blue
Azalea Pink
Lemon Yellow
Bahama Blue

January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

GRANB
OF

GILUAN'S
FASHION

CENTER
On the Tin
Middleport

GRAND OPENING

CANDY'S
CLASSIC COIJ.ECfiONS

SALE PRICES
ON

nie new addition to Ingels Furiture
I06N. Second

TOPS - SWEATERS,
BffiER DRESSES
FASHION ITEMS
WIN .

·

·

Middleport. O.

l~~ti~

AND ON ALL

TO

'60.00

lfS THE
OPENING

COME IN &amp; · REGISTER
PURCHASE NECESSARY .

a

here . Why not stop In . il!'d

:J~j ..

9:30 to 8: 00 9: 30 to 5:30 9:30-5:30

find

arrav of birthstone .nngs

111

FRIDAY-SATURDAY-TUESDAY

some budget directors who
never knew what it was like
tn be overdrawn at ttie·'bank. ·
It's difficull to see how a
budget
director
with
sufficient funds in his
acco unts could properly
relate to all that red ink in the

finances had always been in
lhe bl~ck .
It
seems
almost

experiences.

Ergo, administration of the
deficit would not necessarily
be a subjective challenge that
would inspire creative
management.
The foregoing explains why
I thi nk Bert Lance is
potentially tbe best budget
director we've ever had . It's
understandable that
President Carter would he
loath to lose his services.
Show me a banker who has
tried to take more money out
of an account than he had put
into it and I'll show you a
banker .who is intimately
acquainted with the first
principle of deficit financing .

Forest Acres Park shetlered
3; opened lo everyone. Trip to
Washington , D.C. being
planned .
VICTOR C. Young, Jr.,
first family reunion Sunday
at 742 E. Main St., Pomeroy
with a I p.m. buffet luncheon.
Some
critics
have
Youngs also will observe suggested that Lan ~e's
their 29th wedding an- overdrafts indicate he is
niversary with a party given lacking in competence for the
by their children. Relatives OBM job. Just the opposite, I
and friends invited.
say.

Social
Calendar

LINDE STAR

..--------.q,-----,....._,....,.,..

-

paradoxical, bul we've had

to meet a payroll."
A t'Omplaint somewhat of
that sort could be made about
ooe of the newer agencies, the
Office of Budget and
Management.
Traditionally, federal
budget directors, although

has ever known. have been
individuals whose personal

government's ledgers.
H~ would, 1 should think,
tend tn look upon federal
deficits in a detached ,
objective manner than with a
view colored by his own

that " It 's better not to.''
lbat awareness surely is
perSOI\ally - even if inadverthe
first step toward
tently - can attest to its
achieving
a balanced budget.
reli~bilit y .
Carter says he has written And Carter obviously picked
nverdrafts himself at ti~s. the right man to help him
Thus he was able In conium att,ain it.

MANY
MANY

A bndget director deals in
nothing but deficits . There is
never eoough money in the
federal coffers to cover the
withdrawals .
A person who has demonstrated a t'ertain agility in
fielding overdrafts has ideal
training for coping with the
federal budget.
Carter ·has made balancing
the budget one of the goals of

FALL
FABRICS
Polyester Fleece,

.

his administration.

The typical budget director
of yore might have been
philosophically in favor of
that campaign, but would
have had no feeling of
empathy.
Lance, however, can bring
to the effort a strong sense of
identification. He knows first
hand the main cause of
imbalance - that when a

Challis, Corduroy,
Wool Blends,

Sweater Knit;, Polyester Knits, Flannels,
Denim, Kettle Cloth, Etc.

check is written for an

Is on Sale

amount that exceeds the
funds
available,
the
transaction

acquires

a

negative aspect.
Other budget directors undoubtedly were familiar with ·
the rule in the abstract. But

THE FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy

W. 2nd

Values

to '10.99

WOMENS
SANDALS
Out They Go!

$1 ~PR.

.

who National
will present·
~~~~=~~=~~~~~~!:~F~PO~NY~OO~S60~~~ ··members
the program.
and

. MiddleDC&gt;rt,

0

theoreticians " who never had

roses and blue inscription -:
with a Bible replica as an
' terson was hosted by the Ad· elevated center section.
.dison Free Will Baptist Guests were served cake, ice
, Ladies Aid Sunday. The cream, punch and coffee.
The Ladies Aid gresented
' reception was held in the
the
Rev. Mr. Patterson with a
church basement after the
Bulova
watch with the Sun'!"' evening worship service.
.
WEDNESDAY
day
school
giving him a gift of
- _ The table decoraleil ·by
WILDWOOD
Garden Club,
,Mrs. Jewell Russell arid Mrs. money. Other gifts and cards
8
p.m.
Wednesday
at the
Lou Grubb, was in yellow, were presented by church
home
of
Mrs.
Carrie
Grueser.
white and blue. The center· ' members and friends. Fifty' piece was a large birthday one persons attended lhe A hOme flower show to be
held.
cake decorated with yellow reception.
UMWA Supporters Club
They'll Do It Every T !me
Wednesday at noon at Mid·
r---~ dleport park.
All miners'
THE'
PAN
I CAiili&lt;.Y
ENlARGe T/'IE
wives are invited.
MAI&lt;ERSMU~
Al.l. MY r&lt;cclPES
. ,KITCHEN 70
PAST Commanders and
GHOSTWRITE
IN MY HEAD· ..
H0tl7 AU THE
Trustees
of Drew Webster
THO$~
RECIPE
AND
l
ONL-Y
R4NS·-Post_ 39, American Legion,
CARDS .. ·
OWN TWO
will hold a dinner at 7 p. m.
CAKI' PANS!
Wednesday at the posthome
USE CAKE ~N
followed by a business
9'X9'~2' AN171111S
•
meeting .
Ri!CIPE' SAYS USE
PAN 6 ' X2' X1 : I'D
THURSDAY
81: UP TO MY HIPS
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER
IN PANS IF I HAl?
172, Order of the Eastern
Al.l. OF 1'HcMI
Star, will meet at 7:30 Thursday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Past
matrons and past patrons will
be honored, Mason night and
obligation . night will be
observed and · twenty-five
year pin presentations will be
made. Oflicers are reminded
to wear their chapter dresses.
FRIDAY
POMONA Gravge, 8 p.m.
at Rock Springs Grange hall.
"7N..o,.:. '!llo&gt; A kEN :
Meigs will host the Gallia
USNA oox 2056,
County Pomona Grange

Et Cetera Boutique

205 N. 2nd Ave:

presiding over some of the
greatest defjl"its the world

'

I'

SATURDAY, SEPT. 3,

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Business leaders used to
t'Omplain that FOR's "New
Deal" programs were being
run by egghead professors
and
Ivory-domed

;un ·

A surprise birthday recep' tion for the Rev. Walter Pat·

SEE THE

Admission 13.00 at Door. Children 6 to 12 11.00

Celebrates
birthday

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Walter Patterson

Shiveler, Jr., and daughler,

POLLY.$ POINTERS

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hope
someone can tell me what I
can do to make the very slick
silence .
soles and heels on my shoes
For heaven's sake, parents, if you love them, buckle their safer to wear. The are
,..,tety belts! -MINE SIT DOWN, DO YOURS?
dangerous and ! am surprised that more women do not
have very severe falls. I have
tried putting adhesive tape on
them but this does not last
long. One does not want rubher soles on dress shoes and I
guess this is plastic that is
now used so much instead or
leather. -IDA.
CharlesCloydCovertof640
DARWIN Nancy
DEAR IDA- Yours is a
Unwood Drive in Rio Grande. Stanley entertained Simday, . very common problem and a
has earned his Associate of Aug. 28, at her home in Dar- hazard; too. I spoke with a
Applied Science Degree at win with a birthday dinner for shoe repairnlan who told me
The Ohio State University's David Wilcox on his 17th bir· that many of today's shoes
Agricultural Technical In· thday.
have both plastichasoles and
stitute in Wooster.
Gifts were presented to heels and even c nging the
Son of Mr. and Mrs: Ernest David and included a motor- plastic heels to rubber will
Covert, Charels received his cycle (Bultaco ) replica cake help the problem. Often the
degree in the Livestock baked by Sharon Stewart. At· plastic soles can be changed
Production and Management tending the party were tile to leather but this depends on
technology. He is a · 1975 parents of the hostess, Mr. the style of the shoe. Sandgraduate of Gallia Academy and Mrs. Joseph Stanley and paper is often suggested for
High School; .
son, Steve, Myrtle Brown, the "roughening" the soles of
students earning degrees honoree's parents, Mr. and shoes and works on composifrom Marshall University Mrs.· Kenneth Wilcox and lion soles but only makes
during the first swruner term daughter, Oar!&lt;~ , Middleport, plastic soles even slicker. included : Point Pleasant and Jim Webster, Pomeroy.
~~R POLLY _ 1 am
James David Hall , M.A.
elementary education, and
answering W.C. R. who
Lowell R. Thomas, M. A.
wanted someha suggestionS
secondary
Education ;
r•
concerning w t could be
Michael Elliott Thompson,
Russell McElhinny is con- done with a serviceman's
M. A. educational ad- fined to the Seminole flag. I found two .chmces. The
ministration, Gallipolis ;- Memori2l Hospital, Room-~Ameman Leg1on always
Judith Mae Darst (Summa 244, First St., Sanford, Fla. welcomes the g1ft .of such
Cum Laude) and Jeffrey G. for treatment of injujries suf- ·nags and they are g1ven to a
Hilbert, Point Pleasant, and fered in an automobile acci· cemet~ry for the '_'Avenue of
Doris Kay Lanier McMahon dent early Sunday morrung. Flags . they display on
of Gallipolis.
·
McElhinny was enroute home · Memo~1al Day. Tbe flag 1s
The following students from his employment when · ~ven m the 'name ·of the ser·
have been named to the honor the accident occurred.
vtceman.
roll for :;pring quarter at Ohio
He sustained rib case inMy husband always loved
State University:
jury, a punctured lung, frac- t~ watch a Oagflymg so after
. Gallia County- Carol Ann tured shoulder, and other his flag lay m 1ts plastic bag
Scruggs, Cheshire ; Jane Ann •possible internal injuries. Mr. With mothballs for four years
Hannon, Judith Diane Kemp, and Mrs. Kenneth McElhinny I dec1ded 1t was not do~
Elizabeth Ann McMahon , flew down Sunday to be with anyone any g.ood so I gave 1t
Michael Aaron Sheets, their son.
to the India':"' cemetery
where .he IS buned and 1t fltes
Valorie Gale Sheets Jeffery
·
'
ll
over his grave. When the flag
Mtc.h ael
Thaler,
a
On this day in history:
has " lived" its fullest it will
GalllpollS.
.
In 1887, Thomas Alva be laid to rest as all good
Meigs County -:- Rtcha~ Edison was awarded .a patent flags are. Such a flag lasts
A!an. Co uch , Pomeroy • for a device he called from three to five months
V1ck1 Sue SPencer, Pqmer~y "kinetoscope," to "produce depending on how long it has
and Mand1e Kay Rose , Lo g p.ictures representing objects been packed away and! know
Bottom.
.
in motion .... "
my husband would be pleased
Shirley LouiSe Tabor was
In 1903, a Packard automo- to know his flag is flying and
graduated from Cumberland bile completed a 52-day will soon be put away "flag
Coll~ge Magna Cum Laude journey from San Francisco · style". -DROTIIY.
dunng the sununer com· to New York. It was the first
DEAR POLLY - and
mencement ceremony held automobile to cross the
· August 13.
nation under its own power.

Present budget dir~ctor k n 0 w s
all ·about deficit spending

state contests will be held and
the subordinate granges are ·
reminded to take three pies,
two dozen sandwiches, and a
, beverage.
SATURDAY ·
BASEMENT Sale Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the
auditorium at the Sacred
Heart Church. There will be a
·variety of merchandise including household items and
clothing for children.
.
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Freedom Gospel Mission ,
Bald Knobs with all day
services. Sunday School at
9:30 a.m. Basket dinner at
noon . Afternoon services at
I :30 p.m. Speaker will be 0.
G. McKinney. There will be
dedication
of
new
classrooms. Special singing.
Public invited.
MONDA.Y ~
CHICKEN Barbecue
Monday at Chester Fire ·
House. Tractor pull at 10
a.m., dinner at II, parade at
1. Games will be played in.
afternoon. ·
THE Southern Athletic
Boosters will meet Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at the high
school.
THURSDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Thursqay, 7:30p.m.
at high school.
SUNDAY
OURS Family reunion
Sunday at Rock Springs
·Fairgrounds; basket dinner
at I p.m.
BLACK LUNG Association
meeting I p.m. Sunday,

GREAT SAVINGS FOR THE END OF SUMMER--- SEEI

2.99

1

WHY DO MORE DOCTORS

S5Q • $25 · SlQ

THAN EVER BEFORE

GIFT CERTIFICATES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY

RECOMMEND MYADEC?

MYADEC

MyadK II a high·
pobtnCf vitamin formula
with fftintl'll•. In tact.
MpdeC containt l lm-

Gll..LIAN'S- ASHION
CENTER
On

130 DAY
VITAMIN

ponant vitam\naand 8

.

mlnerate-an idell for·
mutlllon fOf ICflvt
,.ap~e on the 10. That'•

.

clant and pNrmacl1ta recommend ~a

:::::: •* before. 11 you Wlnl a high-potency

the T
In Middleport

&lt;k!

c

~n tprmula with I'I'Jinerals-recomfl'tnded byd

=Myadfe

SUPPLY

lkfolof'IIINI pMirmlldltt-ttop In todey an . buy

'•
' "'
' ,

\

oapiUitl or I"ISV·IO-I"ke tableU. '

NILSON'S REG. •5.29

"

a To la

Divided Plate
Tumblers
Dinner Ware

. $166

We'll Be Open Monday - Labor Day - At All Three -r-Stor_es_ _ _ _ _....,

--------.

SHORT SLEE-VE
M'ENS SH_
I Rlt

Perfect for Schools Warm Days. Gingham,

plaids, solid colors, prints, perman~nt press.
Final markdown on all summer shirts. Come on

in, save up to $4.00

Regular '5.99 and '7.99

20%

OFF
WOMENS

BOYS and MENS

OFF

TENNIS SHOES
WITH JOGGER STRIPES

WINTER
·COATS

Regular '4.99 and '5.99
Boys siz:e 10112 to-6. Mens
size 6112 to 12. 6 colors.
Many with padded collar.
Made in U.S.A.

sorry

AUG. 31 lltRU SEPT. 4

NO

Check Writers, Too
11.69 Values! ·

SERVICE FOR 4

Boys or Girls

Reg.

WOME.NS VINYL
BILLFOLDS ·

20 PC. PLASTIC
PICNIC--SET ·

NUMERAL
SHIRTS
Size

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STUDENTS

$ 99

ANY
MENS or BOYS

WINTER
EJ

No Lay-Aways

While Quantities Last
Quantity Rights Reserved
\Vt are not, responsible for typognDhical errors :

PARK RESERVED

••

•

Junior Wot~an and
Mark, Pickerington; Mr. and
Mrs. Max Bolen and Ricky,
Mrs. Linda Dixon, Jeff and
Kory, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Bolen, Columbus ;
Tami
Beard,
Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Brock and Douglas,
Belfontaine; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Weaver and Dee,
Rome; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Bolen and Greg, Dexter; Mr.
and Mrs. Grover Stout,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Bessie Stout,
Mr. and Mtl. Bernard Allen,
Bonnie, Judy, Boyd, Bruce
and Jill Allen, Steve Brooks,
Luke Brooks, Albany; and
Tinuny and P.atty Casto, Yin· ,
ton..
·

•
••

Jn the hoshifd/

PORTRAIT

the lighter side

The annual Bolen reunion Mrs.

Parker, both bv.rd
members, and Mrs. ~: va
Hartley. Mrs . Lillian

'"'IY th&lt;&gt;se who have tested &gt;t

7-'tbe DailySentiDel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 31, 1977

Size

a

NEEDED SCHOOL SUPPLIES

Short
Sleeve

REPORT or

To

18Plastic Cover

40 PAGE

THEME

BOOK
37~

THEME
COVERS
14~

300
Sheets

Pencils - Erase11 - Crayons
Theme BoOks - Rule11
Bit Pins - Typing Papet
Plus Many More

�l -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, AQg. 31, 1977

""

Energy will he conserved
{'OLUMBUS !UP!) - The
Federal
Energy
Administration has granted
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
MEIGS COU NTV , OH tO PROBATE OIVISIOfrll

~BE T TY 8RICKlES .

Adm imstrator ol
the Esbte of

tna Hoback , O ecea.sed,
Platnf iU ,
\' 5 .

BRUCE HOBACK ,
Address Unknown ;
, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES . LEGATEES .
DISTR:IBUTEES ,
ADMINISTRATORS ,

EXECUTORS . IF ANY ,
OF BRUCK HOBACK .

DECEASED ,
El al. ,
· Defendant,~:
. tiiOl'ICE

For Thu,-.d1y, Sept. 1, 1177

ASTRO·GRAPH

place of residence or aacres:s

Bernice Bede Osol

is unknown and cannot w ith

reasonable

diligence

AQUARIUS (JIIfl, 20-Feb. 11)

the Ohio Energy and
Resource. Development
Agency $952,000 to promote
energy COill!ervalion.
The funds were included in
the 19~ Energy Policy and
Conservation Act.
Federal guidelines r~:r the
Ohio Conservation Pian
require five mandatory
. programs addressing rightturnoOn-red legislation, which
Ohio already has; promotion
of carpools and mass transit;
energy-efficient procurement
practices for the state and its
political subdivisions;
lighting efficiency standards
and thermal efficiency
standards.

SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION
The
Defendant,
Bruce
Hoback who~e address Is
unknown and whose •as!

be

ascertained Is hereby not ified

TPR. ARLEDGE

1haf Pla.inHff has brought this
action naming each of you as
one of the defendants in the

SGT. CONKLIN

Arl~dge promoted Conklin promoted

Your DOSS•()tlmes for ad'lance men1 took ~ery hOpeful at tht$
ttmP Contmue 10 put forlh your
best efforts

PISCES (Fob. 20·1br&lt;:h 20) Do
someth1nq: lurt H·us evemng that's
a departvfe rrom your usual

G
for Hen I

ARIES (Mirth 21-Ap&lt;i111) Yoor
ftnanctal prospects ar13 Qu•te ~m ·
couraq1nq today . espectally '"
areas where you re hopmg to
Qatn so you can do tor ott'1ers

TAURUS (Aprii20-Mer 20)11's a
qood day to tackle someth1ng
b1q yolf ve had on the back
burner bu1 have been hes•tant to
auernpt Vou re lucky with large
fSSU ~S

3 AND 4 RM. furnid1ed ond vn
furnished opts
Phone 992
54:U. .

GEMINI (Mor 21-Juno 20) 11'
somethmq you re tnvolved tn Is

already qomg good . th is ts not
the 11me to rock the boat ,Left
COUNl'RV Mobtle Home Pork, At.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy . alone cl'lances are 11 wtll get
large lot~ with concrete polio~ even better
s1dewolk~ .
runners ond off CANCER (June 21·Julr 22)
slreit1 porking. Phone 992-7479. Don 't be too surpr1sed today
FURNISHED APT . Adu lts only , no should 'f'OlJ rece1Ve more com pets . Phone 992 -3874 , Mtd p\lments than usual Vour
dlepor t .
chansma IS showing and so IS
SMALL A PARTM ENT , 2nd Street 1n your sex appeal
(ilid~leport . · Suitable for I or, '2 . LEO. (July Z3·A\JQ.22) · You- may
people W~- S2b2 .
nOt be aware of people .Pull1rlg
COUNTRY . MOBILE . Home Pork . l or you today The'fr' effor1s
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy . wtllpa'ile the way for your
large lots . Co11992 -7479
success
MOBILE HOME : 2 bedroom ,
· ~EWSI,APEA t;.'IITEAPRISEASSN'

private' lot. 4 mi. out of
Gallipol is . No pets .
no - - - - - - - - - - - children. (b l ~ ) 44b-3918.
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ATHENS
COUNTY
SAVINGS

above .named court by _filing
her comp la int on July 2n&lt;1,
1977 .
The object of the compl(!in l
is that the real estate
hereinafter descr tbed be sold
in its entirety. and to pay the
debts of th e decedent, Ina
Hoback. , deceased : that the
r ights _, in ter ests and liens of
all parties may be ful ly
determined, adjusted ll!nd
protected : that plaint ill be
autllOrize d and ordered to sell
said r eal es tat e accor d ing to
the statutes In such case
made . and provided , and for
such other and further rel i ef
as she may be entitled to ;
that said rea l es tat e . is
descr i bed as to !lows :
The following de scribed
rea l estate situated in the
State of Oh i o , Co unty of
• Meigs and Village of R a ci ne ,
to ·wit : All ot Lot No . eighty
one (81) in said Village of
Racine ,· Oh i o , except seven
{7) f ee.t off the West end of
sai d Lot. Said lot is bounded
on the Ea st · by Fifth Str eet. ·
~ ' Reference Deed : Vol. 155,
Page 45, Deed Re co rds .
Meigs County , Ohio ,
You are requ i red to answer
the complaint w ith in twenty .
eight days after the last
publication of th is not ice ,
wh ich will be published once
each week tor SI)C successive

rourtnE&gt; A recreattOnal breek Wilt
freshen your oullook

Sept 1, 1977
Tht!' comtnq yea·r ava1l yourselt
ol onoortllnities 10 make new
sor:.,i'll ·contacts and fnends . E)C·
p;~nn,na your C1rcle of acqua.n tanres Will ennch· your life 10 unP.xnr•c:tP.d ways .

AND LOAN COMPANY ,

PLAINTIFF

vs

COLUMBUS - rpr. (.arry Post. He has attended
RONALO D. fHOMAS,
COLUMBUS ~ Ohio State
Originally from Minford in
ET AL ,
L. Arledge, a member of the specialized management Highway Patrol Sgt. Harold Scioto County, Lt. Conklin
OEFENDANTS
Ohio State . Highway since training ·and is a .past D. Conklin, assistant com- graduated from Clay High
NO . 16 ,161
LEGAL NOTICE
1971, was promoted to the recipient of the Post Trooper mander of the Gallipolis Post, School in Portsmouth. He bas
Pursuant to an order Of
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You
rank of Sergeant in of the Year Award.
was promoted to the rank of attended Ohio University and
Sale Issued by the Common
&lt;HP 111 f'\ fortunate posit1on where
ceremonies held here this
P leas Court of Meigs County,
Sgt. Arledge's hometown is Lieutenant today.
~rved in the U. S. Army.
vnu C&lt;ln make a hope a reali ty
01'1io ; r will offer for sale at
week:
Laurelville
where
he
He
and
his
wife,
Mary,
Slop
Slllinq
Ori
your
dreams
and
Col. Adam G. Reiss, Highpublic aucti on on the 21st
Col. Adam G. Reiss, Patrol graduated from high school. way Patrol superintendent, have three children: Sherry,
s!art actmq on th em _ Having
day of ~ep t ember , 1977 at
10:00 a .m .• atthe Court House
1rnuhiP select1ng a career? Send
superintendent, announced Before joining the Highway announced the promotion and 13; Donald, II ; andSteven,lO
steps i n the Village of
for
your
copy
of
A
s~ro-Graph
Tpr. Arledge has been trans- Patrol he served two years in Lt. Conklin's new assignment months.
Pomeroy , County of Me igs ,
Le11C'r by mailing 50 cen ts for
State of Ohio, the following
ferred from Xenia to the the U. S. Army.
as commandet of the
E'&lt;t&lt;":h and a long . self -a ddressed .
C!escr ibed real estate s ituated
Gallipolis Post where he will
Sgt. Arledge and his wife, Chillicothe Post.
stnmned envelope to Asi roat 337 North Second Avenue ,
be assistant Commander.
. Midd leport , Ohio .
Gr~ph _ P 0 Box 489. Radto C1!y
Linda, have a daughter,
A member of the Patrol
Said real estate . Is situated
During his six-year career . Angela, 6 months.
Stalion NY 10019. Be su re tb
since 1963, Lt. Conklin has
In the Village of M iddleport ,
specJ 1v your bnth sign
he has served at the Xenia
County of Meigs and State of
served at Bellefontaine,
OhiO :
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) In
Portsmouth, and Gallipolis.
Lot No . 21 in· sa fd Villaye
SEVAREiD HONORED
c:ommP.rc1al negotiation s to d ay
located on Second Street tie ·
j
He -was chosen as Trooper of
start out ask1ng for the m oon
LOS ANGELES (UPI) tween Rutland and Walnut
the Year at the Bellefontaine
~vPrl II you're cut down a few
Stre-ets . Also all the grantors.'
In a da.lis hy itself, rht s boldly
The
Academy
of
Television
Post in 1966 and received the
right, t itle and interest in ;1nd
notches. you should still do
advanCed
Jetign u made umquely
Arts
and
Sciences
said
to the siK inch strip of tend
same distinction in 1967 for
hAndsomely
you
rs
b}·
the
selecnon of genume
and
the
party
wall
therein,
off
the Patrol's entire ten-county Tuesday Eric Sevareid, who
of
tl'1e
north
s
ide
of
Lot
22,
d1amonJ
or
gemstone
of your chotce
SCORPIO (Ocl . 24-NoY.22)
By
also i n said Village of Midsoutheastern Ohio district is retiring from CBS, will be
- wtthout extra enS(.
Look ~~ 1mportant matters from
dleport, sa id strip of land
~::
.
Miller
FashiOt)ed 10 superlat1ve white
atl ~nQies to day. A change o f
headquartered at Jackson. presented Sept. 10 with its
adlo inlng and being con .
1977
Broadcast
Journalism
weeks ,
and
the
las t persoec!lve w1U help point up
Valad1um '"' to be the nng nf a
tiguous
to
said
lot
No.
21.
An
expert
marksman,
Lt.
icat ion w i ll be made on
As pressures mount for the of Taiwan intact. Therefore,
Award "in tribute to his four publ
advrlntaQes blocked by a hmtted
RefereRce Deed Volume
li fetime
August 31st ., 1977 .
Conklin
earned
the
Jackson
256 page 383 Meigs · County
U.S. to abandon Taiwan and a military attack on the
decades of distinguished and
l ri case of yo ur failu.re to
district's
pistol
shooting
Records .
If th e ring stands out, it's an R, Johns.
answer
or
otherw
ise
r
es
pond
''normalize•' its relations island would not be very
courageous service in as perm itted by tl'1e Ohio SAGITTAR IUS (NOY. 23-Dec . Deed
Terms of sale : cash for not
trophy
in
1973
and
1976.
with
the
Comm unist useful.
less than two -th i rds of the
Rules of Civil Pr ocedure 21) Modesty 1S a becommg a1During his 14-year career broadcasting."
value , sublect to
government · in Peking, an
R.
LTD.
If Mainland China ·could he has had specialized law
the w ithin the time stated, lrlbu te. but 1oday don't put a appraised
Other
winners,
Hen for rea l estate taxes for
jud~ment
by
default
will
be.
oheaper prrce ta g on you r talents
important question needs to iSolate Taiwan from the rest
1V77
.
.
academy
announced,
are
the
rendered aga tnst you for ' tl'\e than they are actually worth .
enforcement training · in
Property appraised at
be asked: "Who will be tfie of the world both politically
CBS
series
"60
Minutes,"
the
r e l ief d.emanded in tt1e
$8 ,500.00 .
main beneficiary from in- and economically, then she superv .ision a. nd . Publlc Broadcasting Ser- 1=ompl a i n t.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jon . 19)
James J . Proffitt
management; usage of
Cup1d is taking a spe:cial interest
Sheriff of
creased trade with mainland could intervene in the
vice's
MacNeil-Lehrer
Manning
D
.
Webster
breath-testing
'
and
speed. Me igs County ,
1n
·vour
love
lif
e
Someone
new
Probate
Judge
China?"
commercial affairs of measuring devices; and in- · Report and the televised 1976.
Oh io
Meigs County , Ohio may enter the picture. or exi~ting
Communist China is not Taiwan and seriously weaken
(81 H . 24, 31 (91 7, · 14, 21. 6fc
presidential debates.
(7) 27 (8) 3, 10 , 17, 24, 31. 6tc bonds w fll be greatly strengthen·
depth
taccident
investigation.
doing
very
well the Nationalist government.
economically, and they would To accomplish this task,
like nothing better than a Communist China must first ·----------~---------- W _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..,.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.large infusion of American 'be recognized as the only
SAVE 36•
SAVE 32•
SAVE 1 0 • 1
I
SAVE 3S•
.
investment capital and ad. vanced technology.
2 DOUBLE
2 DOUBLE
LARGE
.
But the main obstacle to a
significant and. lasting trade
relationship with Communist significant trade with the
China is its demand that the Mainland.
tJ. S.: (1) break diplomatic The effects .of this strategy
Two pure beef patties with melted ~heese
Two pure beef patties with our fixios
Hot gol~en brown french fries in a large
FOR
with lixins' added.
.
added.
container .
relations and end its mutual already can be seen. Taiwan
defense treaty with the was ousted from the United
39~
Wi1h coupon
Nationalist Chinese on
$
With Coupon
With coupon
Wilh Coupon
Taiwan. (2.) recqgnize Pekin
E.pl.res·
9
15 77
E
.
Exp,
·
res
·
.
·9-IS-77
Expires : 9-ll -77
· · ·
xplres: ~-ll-77
1
as the only true Government similar actions were taken
of the two Chinas, and (3)
the Nationalist
--------~-----------.
remove all military per- against
Chinese during the 1976
SAVE
40•
SAVE
12•
SAVE 13•
SAVE
sonnel from Taiwan.
Olympics in Montreal.
ONE
Many experts argue that
The 16 million people of
ONE
trade with the. Soviet Union
Taiwan are enjoying the
has become a one-way
benefitsand
of dofree
enterprise
avenue with the Russians system
n9t wish
to live
recetvmg most of the under Coniin unist deminFQR
benefits. Will the same thing
Since Taiwan plays
FOR
happen with Chin;~ if we ation.
a strategis role in mainconsent to 'its demands and taining freedom and huWith Coupon
With Coupon
break our ties with Taiwan? man rights. in the Asian
w·th
c
W
'th
c
1
1
oupon
oupon
.
·
It is difficult to understand world, the U. , S . . should
Expires ·· ~-ll-77
9
5
77
why the Administration is continue to honor its treaties
Expores: · I ·
EJC!Iires : ~-lS-77
Expires: 9-IS-77
rushing
to
recognize
Mainland China at the ex- with
Nationalist
Taiwan Chinese
and help
shape
the
pense of Taiwan.
their own destiny.
SAVE 15•
SAVE 90•
SAVE 80•
SAVE 85•
Communist China has
Let us pursue peaceful and .
always been dedicated to the normal trade relations with
ONE DOUBLE
DOUBLE
DOUBLE
destruction of the free and
democratic government of
Taiwan by making the island
part of the .Communist democratic principles upon
Mainland. But Peking would
which this nation was
like to seize the modern and founded .
FOR •
FOR
With Coupon
Two pure beef patties, cheese, letfuce and
vast industrial infrastructure
With Coupon·
.
W~t~ Coupon
With Coupon
.
the Cousins' special sauce.
.

l='==~:::m=w;;:hi;;;i~~ii:

I Report ·

fijji1

~arence

R.JOHNS
CLASSIC.
THE PRIDE OF
L+'I-J.nONDS AT
A COST.

JOHNS,

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Limestone boiler shown
to research, utility executives
ALUANCE, Ohio (UP!) Fifty research and electric
utility executives from
.around the country convened
Tuesday at the Babcock &amp;
Wilcox Research Center for
the dediCation of an advanced
coal-fired boiler designed to
burn high-sulfur coal without
emitting high sulfur-dioxide
fumes.
B&amp;W said its fluid(zed bed

comqustion system uses a
coal and limestone mixture
wf!ich is suspended during
combustion by air. The
limestone in the · mixture
absorbs the sulfur dioxide gas
·produced by the burning coal.
The system could be a
great help to Ohio's coal
industry, B&amp;W officials said,
since much of the state's coal
has a high sulfur content.
·,
• Proposed fed 'eral
regulations place restrictions
on how much sulfur dioxide
BEST TONIC
can be emitted by boilers, but
MINNEAPOUS (UPJ )
B&amp;W said its §Ystem can
The best tonic for Sen. Hubert meet those standards.
Humphrey, recovering from
cancer surgery at University
of Minnesota Hospitals,
would be to return to
Washington, according to Dr.
FAMILY FEUD
John Najarian, the hospi~l's
cbief surgeon.
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
"He is using his time in the The "All in the Family"
hospital to understand his television series, buih on
diseaae and his operation so family divisions, has a real
be can better cope with his one on the set.
Paul Bogart, the oeries'
tbenpy now in the future,"
director,
was sued for legal
Hajlrian said. "The • best ·
tanh: for the senator would be separation Tuesday by his
to ntam to tbe Senate and wife of 37 years, Alma Jane
Bogart, the set director.
llnUtJ tile session."

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Don't Miss Out On Our FRISIEE MEAL DEAL.

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 31, 1977

Child hearing. symposium
attended by staffers
The Gallia-Meigs.Jackson
Corrununity Health Center
was represented at a symposium on children's hearing
at Vanderbilt University by
three of its staff.
They were Lisbeth L.
Cherrington, Coordinator of
Speech and Hearing Services; Jeri Stephens, Clinical
Audiologist, and Barbara
Rood , Clinical Speech
Pathologist.
The principle speakers

were Dr. Charles Bluestone,
Otologist, University of Pittsburgh ; Jack Paradise, M.D.,
University of Pit!llburgh, and
.Jerry Northern, Ph. D.,
University of Colorado
Medical Center. All three
stressed the need to identify
middle ear dysfunction In
infants, preschool age
children and . school a,ge
children in order tii refer
these children to a physician
for examination.
The tympanometric test

\

Small firms are
•
•
maJor mnovators
By LeROY POPE
UPI Bus.iness Writer
NEW YORK (UP!)
There are those who Iii.&lt;• a
dim view of the govemmenrs
Small
Business
loan
program, considering many
of the ventures it helps
boondoggles, but some of the
great inventions
lirst
developed by tiny businesses
in
this
century are
impressive.
Sen. Thomas Mcintyre, J).
N.H., recalled some major
innovations recently as he
introduced a bill. designed to
increase the flow of equity
capital to small business
from pension funds . .
The list, puhliBhed in the
U.s. Chamber of Commerce's
Washington Report on Small
Business, almost gives the
impression the only really
vital inventions of this
century developed by big
business are the electronic
computer and the electric
refrigerator.
That's not really true, of
course, because so many
indus trial processes have
been achieved by big
companies.
Nevertheless,
the
accompliBhments of small
business will surprise many
people.
Both the airplane and the
helicopter were made
realities by very small firms,
the plane by Orville and
Wilbur Wright, the helicopter
by Igor Sikorsky . The radio
was made possible by Lee

More ·school
closings

predicted
UPPER SANDUSKY School closings . far more
numerous that the 31 already
are
being
scheduled
predicted, on the grounds
that local funds cannot pay
lor the many extraeducational programs now
being required by \!Ill- state.E. Dennis BarneS, leader of
a petition drive for local
control of schools, said today
that many rnore s~hool
districts, unable to pay for
state-mandated procrams,
will be forced to close next
year.
"This would not have to be
happening," said Barnes.
"Our school home-rule
amendment would mitke it
possible for local voters to
require their school boards to
provide back-to-basics nofrills programs that wouldprovide good education at a
cost that could keep the
schools open and operating.
"By being able to require
an educational program
suited to local needs, voters
of a· district could eliminate
costly programs now being
implemented merely to fulfill
a state requirement.
"Passage of our amendment would, in many cases,
mean that schools could
remain open be!!ause . the
voters themselves would be
deciding what to spend their
money on. That gap, between '
the amount of local monies
raised and the amount
mandated by the state for
local districts to spend on
costly state programs, is
what is forcing many schools
to close. . Home-rule would
solve that by putting control
back In local hands," said

DeForest's invention of the
vacuum tube and TV by the
little Dumont Co.'s perfection
or the cathode ray tube and
Maj . Ralph Armstrong's
design of the FM circuit.
Business procedures and
communications were
revolutionized by several
small
business
achievements : the teletype
by
the
MarkrumKleinschmidt Co., the Xerox
copying machine by Chester
Carlson, the ballpoint pen
invented by an Argentinian
and facsimile transmission of
pictures and documents, for
example.
The world of photography
was metamorphosed by Dr.
Edwin Land's invention of the
instant camera.
Although nylon
was
developed by the DuPont Co.,
polyester fabric known under
the trade names Dacron and
Terylene, was invented by a
small company. So was
shrink¥oof knitwear.
The Carrier Co. was very
small when it broQght out the
air
first
successful
conditioning machines,
Penicillin and a number of
the other drugs that now are
sold all over the world in huge
amounts also were products
originally of little businesses.
Among such products are
some of the more successful
birth control pill,i.
The jet engine, which
enabled Sikorsky to perfect
the helicopter and made the
jumbO airliner possible, was
invented by a small German
company.
Mcintyre ·said the mighty
automobile industry owes the
development of a successful
automatic transmission and
power steering to small companies.
A careful search doubtless
would reveal other major
automotive invention.s by
very small firms.
The ubiquitous zippt;r was
developed by a tiny firm and
for some years was used only
on tobacco pouches. Than it
moved into clothing , luggage
and other products and took
off like a whirlwin&lt;j.
It's also important to
remember that most of
toctBy's big business was once
very little business.
The elder Henry Ford's
first auto factory was hardly
. bigger than an average
.
storage garage.
The mighty Standard Oil
Co. of Indiana was started In
Baltimore as ~n American
Petroleum with a single
horsedrawn · delivery
tankwagon.
In its first year in business
in New York, the mighty Bell
System's telepb&lt;ine directory
was printed on a single sheet
of paper.

Oinic closing
on Labor Day
The Holzer Medical Clinic
will be closed Monday,
September 5, in observance
of the Labor Day Holiday.
In case of an emergency
during the holiday weekend,
physicians of the Holze•
Medical Center Clini~ ·staff
will be on duty m the
Em·ergency Room (Phone
446-5201) of the ~olzer
Medical Center Hospttal to
handle emergency cases
only. HMC wUI resume
normal operations
on
· Tuesday morning, ~pt. 6.

Barnes.

For A Limited Time You Can Take Home A Free FRISBEEI
Now Open Until 9:15PM Sunday thru Thursday and 11115 PM Frlclay and Saturclay
1

,At tbe Upper Sandusky
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
headquarters of CI!Uens for
Oood Scboolll, Barnes con- ( UPI) - The Minnesota
cluded by pointing to 50,000 Twins announced Monday
slcnatlll'ell on petitions and to pitcher Jim Shellenback, 1
slacka of letters from aU over 31-:;ear-old exmajor leaguer
t~e ltate u proof that tryUw • Clllleblclt, .... been
Ohioan• blame echool called pp from the Twlnl'
cloe!PP on the PI OIJ'8IIII and Orlando farm club and ~
expiue&amp; mudated by the join the team 'lburadlly, aner
the ciole of Orlando's .uon.
ute.

takes only a matter of
moments is inexpensive, and
ca n provide valuable inrorm atl on. Most hearing
specialists that have used this
test for any length of time
have found it to be in·
dispensable in their clinical
programs.
The need for physician
referral must be stressed. It
· is his decision to decide how
audiometries and · tympanometric testing can assist
in dealing with this everyday
caseload. The test data can
provide the raw materials for
identifying middle ear
dysrunctlon ,
but
the
philosophies concerning the
use of the test results can only
be developed by the
physician.
The Audiologist does the
testing, but the physician
determines how he wants to
use the lest results in case
manaRement .
The

Audiologist does his part by
identifying the problem ,
•preventing it from being
undetected, and rererring to
the physician for lhe
examination and dia~nosis. It
is not uncommon to find that
middle ear dysfunctin is not
identified without the use of
special equipment since the
problem does not have to
afrect hearing and may not
create any feeling of
discomfort to the child .
Many times, children who
have had a history of middle
ear dysfunction often develop
poor listening skills and are
inattentive in the classroom
setting, particularly with
excessive · notse iri the
background. That is, the
p~esence of middle ear
dysfunction may not cause a
significant hearing loss, but
can cause a fluctuation in
hearing which may be conducive to poor listening and
inattentiveness.
of
The
significance
detecting
middle
ear
dysfunction is two-fold, (I ) to
refer to the physician for
examination and diagnosis,
and (2), prevent possible
learning difficulties (rom
occuring.

FRANK AND

by Bob Thaoes

ERN~ST

SOCIAL S~I&lt;VICES
DEPARTMENT

-

~--~- Wf!'VE:

G~ II

GIZEA,., NEW IPfA,
~HI~F!-­
··SG~tf• "N'• .SNifF''

foOD STAA\P.S!

·Oass in real estate to
RIO GRANDE - "Real
Estate Appraisal," a three
credit hour class from Rio
Grande College and Community College, will be offered in Middleport Thursday
evenings, 7-10 p.m., beginning September 8.
The course is a study of how
real•estate is appraised, both
its methods and implicatins.
Anyone Who wants to register
for the course must first have
taken " Principles and

be given

Practices of Real Estate"
and "Real Estate Law." All
three are required for
possible real estate licensing.
Henry E. Cleland Jr. will
teach the course. Cleland is a
licenses real estate salesman
and certified appraiser who
received his bachelor of
science degree from Ohio
University. -He also served
four years as a counselor lor
the Bureau of Vocational
Rehabilitation.

t'Ourse location on the first
night of dass. The class will
·• be limited to 20 partlcpants.
Additional information is
Tuition for the class, which available by calling Rio
will be taught at Meigs Junior Grande College-Community
High School, is $39 for those College at 245-5353.
living in Meigs, Ja ckson ,
HRABOSKYS SPLIT
Vinton or Gallia Counties.
ST.
LOUIS !UP!)
Residents of Ohio who live
outside the four county Delores Yvonne · Hrabosky,
Community College district the wife of St. Louis Cardinal
will pay $51, and out of state relief pitcher AI Hrabosky •.
residents would pay $157.50. has filed for divorce.
The couple sepa rated Aug.
· Registration will be from 69 p.m., 'l'uesday, September 11 after seven years of
6, on the Rio Grande campus marriage . They have one
at Lyne Center, or at the child, Lisa, 5,

•

'

?'
0

,,.
'

'

•

........

WI IUUVI btl liGHT 10 LIMIT QUAN1'ITIIS. N0J1E SOlO fO

59 C

· Country Oven . I
·Potato Chips ......... .:-:;:
tiNOtWHtTI

Home Pride
Paper Plates ......

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,
liON£ IN

G;deA

Loin Strip
Steak ............. .... ...lb .

Mediunt Eggs ........

Kroger . ·
Pork 'N' leans
KliOGIR

Sandwich or ·
Wiener Buns .....

$

2 1

·4
2

Doz.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.

l6·oz. s 1 ·
Cans

12-ct. $ 1··
Pkgo.

GOV'T GRADED c:HoiCE

Yellow
•
.
0n1ons
....................
lb.

Macaroni &amp; Cheese4· 7'1•- oz..$ 1 WISCONSIN
· Russet Baking
Kroger Dinners ,..... ao...
·Potatoes .......... .

LUNCH IOK FAVORITE

BartleH
Pears ......................lb.

19

California
Green Peppers ...... Each
JUMIO

Pak
PLUS DEPOSIT

IIPICIAl foaMUlA , 100% WHOLE

-...roa

Kroger Regular
Rye Bread .. .. .. .. .. ..

2·

16•01..

7· .

. Kroger Frozen
Lemonade ... .. .. .. .. .

-

.

L••·

6·o:r.

Tender Buffet
Ham ..................... lb.
I·LI. CAN .. ,SII .99, 5·LI.
CAN ... S7.69 01

White Thompson
Seedless Grapes ......lb.

Coca Cole
or Sprite

GWALTNEY IONID'N'

~~ S149 _

LUNCH lOX FA\IORITI

8$

Boneless Loin
Strip Steak ............ ib.
U,s.
Boneless
Rib Eye Steak ........ lb .

69c
39c

Country Club
Canned Ham ....

0C
1

3~:~ S4&amp;9

USDA

$1

CHOICE

$1

canl

Hi Nu; 2%•
Gol . $119
Plastic
Lowfat Milk .. .. .. ''"·
11-C)Z. LYS.
Kroger
.
20·o•.$1
L¥1.
White BrHd ....

Polar Pak
Ice
Cream .,..c!'·

.,. "" MCMN• . .
l•·lil. J&amp;l

Manetti

Slaw Dresslnt

TOTAl SATISfACTION GUARAIITEE

.......
·-··koMI•

We ..." Wh.t Wo A*-rtt" , II ot ell ,oulblo. If, du• to con·
dltlo111 lteyond our utl.trol, -. rvn out of on """''"' lptt·
del, .. . IVMtttvt. • c..,._l'llllle llt...nd at o sllftl ..r aavlnt or
fi" you o lAIN CHICK far the od¥ortlnd .,.clol Dt th•
lfN'CW
fltM wltttht 11 . , .. wo au..m.. Wh.t w.
W. M,... .,. ..,., ....tllfiM with o K,....r p•rchf•• .
wll
your I.. M or """""' ,ovr ntOM'r·

,m. .,.,

,..

''" '"""''

.,.,loc•

\

w•

~

...,......

U·OI . C.....!lllla ,......,.,

llgK
Drlllk AkiMI1

�..

lG-TbeDaiiySentlnel, Middleport·Plmei'OY, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 31,1977

I5 Wurds. Ul' Umler
Cosh
1 ..

.

1.25
1.90

u•

3.7&gt;

.......

In n~JIIlll)', Card uf 'n~ankl&gt; a11..1
Obt.llWU')': 6 t.-.:!"IUI per word, S:!.OO
mmunwn, C¥.sh m udvHnl't'
Mobik Houle sales and Yard saiL'S
lil'tl' IIIL't.'~pltd unl)· With 1.'~ With

25 cent chcl~ for ads t'llfi"Y·

u1g Box Nwnbt!r ln C&lt;Are u( Tl~ St&gt;tttinel.
rl~llt

tu edll or l"t!J~ilifl)' ad.s tl~Hl~ ub-

)l'CtiONll. The Publisher w1U nO( be

1"\'Spol\);lllle fur nl!Jn: than 1Jllt' mL'or·
l't!\.1 UISCrtwll.

Phone 99HI54!

WANT-AD
. ADVERTISING
DEADU NES
Monday

Noon un Saturday
Tu~sda y

tlu-u Friday
4P.M.
the day btofure publkat1on

.
••

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST31,1977

m iles . New radi al tires . A .C..
P.S., 6 cyl , like-new. Coli

mer Sal e . Ashley C.6CJ Wood
Heoters, $340 co mplete witt-1
blower . Thru Sept . 12. We ore
the only oulherized dealer m
Me igs County . We 're
in
Carpenter off 143. b98-7191.

949·2770 .

fnday aftermu1

•t,

1973 GMC

'

-.

VARD SAlE , M iddl eport H ill. Wed .
·through
Sci .,
10:5. Bloke
residence .
THE FAMilY of John Krocjovi&lt;:
· wishes , to thank eve ryone f or
kindnesses e)(fended duri ng
the recent death of their son
ond brother . 1The Peter Krm:·

;;:--"-~m~_:-~~Y~·~··~.,~:::~·~-~:------,---

'7..-

$250.00 REWARD for return of (no
questions asked) or informo·
tion leading to ttle return of
two mole dogs token from Rt .
33 near Darwin July II . Please I
love and m!ss my dogs very
mush . 992 -58.48,
RAC INE VOLUNTEER Fire Depts.
ore sponsoring o chicken bar -b·
que on Sun ., Sept . 4 starting at
11 :00 am . at the Fire Station.
The Ladies. Aux . Ore selling
home-made ice cream .
SENIORS OF Meigs County . Trodi ·
fiono l ·and outdoor settings for
your portraits . Call The Photo
Place . Bob Hoeflich , 992 -5292.

.

RACINE GUN Club. will ho ld a
Chicken 8or· B·Oue , Sun ., Sept .
4 . All members ore invited.

ton pickup , 350
engine , automa tic. AlsO, 1971
Camara . Milo Hutchison ,

Rut land . 742-2306 .
1974
THING ". 49 ,800 miles .
Hard and $Oft lop . $1495 . Call

·vw

1"----------~

Sue, 992· 7805 .
19?0 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP .
,000 mi . 1972 VW , go(:ld condi ·
lion . 992 -2987 .

CASE LOJ'
CAN GOODS

1974 PlYMOUTH GOLD Duster .
318 V-8, 3 speed on the f loor ,
AM·FM stereo· Tope Player ,
35 ,000 miles. A ir shocks . Ex cellent condition. 985-35n .

NEW j bedroom tlouse. 2 both,,
oil elec ., I acre Mtddleport,
close fO Rutland Phone 992
74(H .

TIMBER , Pomeroy ~ares ! '·Products . Top price for standing
sawt imber. CoH 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby, ~46-B570 .
COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocket watches and chains,
silver and gold. We need 1964
and older silver coins. Buy , sel l.
or !rode ' Call Roger Wamsley ,
7-42 -2331.
OLD FURNITURE , Ice boxes , brass
beds ,
etc .,
com plete
households , ~rite M. D. M il ler .
Rt . -4 , Pomeroy , Oh io or call

COU NTRY farmland with sec1ud
ed w oods , wote:t Qnd ·good oc·
cess in" M onroe County. W. Va
$1 ,000 down call ("304 )' 172·
3102 or (30&lt;11)172 3'1'17 .
VA FHA . 30 yr. financing . I rel and
Mort gage, 77 E. State, ~thens .
phone {b14 1592 ·305 1.

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

2

992-7760.
CASH ! I . Junk cars, Fry.'s Truck &amp;
Auto, "R utland. Phon~ 742 -2081
or 742-9575 . Closed· Monday~ .

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or lao ~mall.
Will buy 1 piece Dr comple te
household. New, u.sed , or ant i·
ques . Morf in 's Furn iture . 20 N.
2nd St ., _ M iddleport. Phone
9'92 -6370.
ClEAN MODERN-

DON"T PAY the added expense of
D Realtor! Buy tl'li s .3 bedroom,
2 ', bDih bilev&amp;l from the
owner and save! large family
room with fireplace, ea l •in kit·
chen with double-oven range
and dtshwasher , formal dining
~oom , two cor garage , cen tral
air . on acre lot . N1ce dr ive to
power
plant$ and mines .

$43.000. '1'12·2492 .
59 ACRE FARM , 11 m iles from
n ew
Raven swood
Br idge .
Modern home has 3 bedrooms
living room w 1lh wood burn ing
fireplace and beamed cet l mg ,
born outbuildings . ond f enc ing. $43 ,500. 949-2466.

Belpre, Ohio

tt:

(6 14)

FOUND . IRISH Setter an Bunker
Hill. Coli Susan . 992-5813.

f!..tirW:~~~::;:-:~
MOBilE HOME . 12' x 60 . Price

-~5..:.,500. Coii992J_~ · ~--~

1973Govenor. l2x60, 2bedr ., 1
1/2 bo t h. Air cond . w ith under·
p innin g and util ity building .

_992 -~~· - ~~ rn .
12 x 64 THREE BEDROOM trailer ,
f ully furn ished . Being tran sf er ·
red , must sell immed iately .

992·'7092 .

BABYSITTER TO· live in. P.O . Box
924 , Gall ipolis , Oih~io~.iiii

IF YOU hove a service to off~r .
wont to buy Of sell something ,
ae looklng foi- work . . • or
.,.,hatever ... yov'\1 get r esults
foster with o Sentin~l WOnt Ad .

Coll992·2156.

- --- ----···

YARD SALE , Sept . 1,2, and 3 , 9. fa
3 pm . on old 3.3"between Meigs
Co. Fbirgrounds and Rockspr·
ings_Chur'!:-_ __ .,
YARD SALE , Mon· thru Fti . 1 m ile
from Langsvi lle on CR l d.
Clothing .· wome~ · s . sizes
1'0 -16; little gi rl s, sizes 4· 7;
small household items. Phane

742·2668 .
GARAGE SAlE . Sept . 1. 2. 3, 10-4.
Guy Spencer, behind new
Methodist Church in Tuppers
Pl ains . High pressure pump ,
Calemen camp Stove, Antique
bed , old organ, reco rd/layer ,
T.V .. high ch~ i r , toys an misc.

YARD SAL E~ &gt;ept. -1, 2. ond 3•d.
l oca ted between HarrisonVIlle
a nd Carpen ter on 143 at Clif ton
__ F!~I•'(~~&lt;;J.m ~om to -4 pm.

A FEW crab cppfes to g ive away
f rH . PhoM 992-2021.

YARD SALE-:-S.pt:-1~ 2, 3. 9,00 IO

_. ;0!0 . Men's, women 's, bo y's

and Jitrle gir l's d olhing . Odds
and ends . 500 lincoln Hi II .

¥Aitli SA LE1 1, 2, and Jrd of Sept .
Seccmd hou1e on 4t h Str . .t in
Racine oH 124 . In caJe of rai n ,
tole In basemer,r .

1 YEAR OLD Polled Hereford Bu ll.

Con

be

reg is te re d .

Co li

949 ·2368 .
REC. . POLLED Hereford Bull. 16
mo. old . $600. 985· 3819.
Pawer Wagon Tr ucks. 1961 and
1964 . Coll949 -2770.
-

-

--

NEW

HOlLAND 163 bushe l
m~H'1Ure spreader . Excellent
co ndition . Co11949·2770.

-

-·-

-

1975 MASSEY FERGUSON diesel
165. 360 hrs . since new. · e~tra
wide
t ire!&gt;,
he!)vy duty
JtobalizerS , aux . hydrauli&lt;: ,
front weights like _n ew . Coli
949-2770 .
KUBOTA TRACTOR. 1 only . Model
L-1 85 with
5 ,it. - WoodsUnde-rslu"ng Mower. list , $.4A05
save $600 . . Gravely Tro ctor
Soles ,
Pomeroy .
Phone

992-2975 .
1972 CHEVROLET pickup. truck .
New tires, good body , and runs
_ good . 992-6231.
SHOT SHELLS hig-h power , S3.93:
22 LR, 79• ; 22 rrtagnurri . $2 .90.
lot s of used and new guns .
Trade for anything . Fife's, S.
Jrd, M i d~lepor t .
.,
BUll T-RITE ·PRA M , English style ,
naVy . good condition , $-45 .
Kor_ostan Orien tal Carpet , 9" x
12' wool , cranberry color . _very
good condition , $185. Coli

992·7539 .
PICK
YOUR
own
conning
tomatoes . A f5o, green beons .
Bring container. A ndrew Cross,
letart Foils . 247-2852.
CANNING TOMATOES and swee t
corn for, free zing. Pick your
own . Cell Barbara Talbo tt ,
Portl and . 843·.f515.

I'OICHSALI' . Sept.,1. Thurs . only. NEW IDEA·, No . 1 Carnpicker .
312 Pearl StrHI, Middleport .
Stortt ot 9 om.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp;. condition your
water and Co.op water

'Now
l et

On ly

Model

Good co ndition . Re-ady to pick .

(61•111&lt;03·2286.

liE AllOR

VIRGI L B."TE AFORD. SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992.3325
LARGE BR ICK -

Has 4

rentals near stores and
commun ity activities . A
rea l investment for on ly

$23,000.
LIKE NEW - 4 bedrooms.
natu r al gas F .A. furnace,
nice bath and eaf.in kit·
chen . Corner lot In Mid·

dl eport. S24,000 .
NEW T RI -LEVE L
Boa~.tlng

3 bedr ooms. ll/:2
baths, family room, office
. and garage on one acre .
$41,000 .

LARGE -

Wa nt one of

those
speci al
bedrooms? This is

la r ge
one and

3 other ones . A good lamlly
home with 2 baths a nd
na t u r ~

gas

furnace .

$27 ,500.
INVESTMENT -

One 4
room apa rtment and a
stu dio a pt. Both wi th baths .
Just 59600.
105 ACRES - Of nice
hOnfing·land for S15C.OO an
· acr e. A good Investment.
MIDDLEPORT
3
bed room fra me home with ·
bath, nat. gas heat,
fireplace In the living and
two ca r ga rage. $15,500.
NEW
LISTING
Reasonable 5 r oom home. 2

•279.95

us test your water

and ca rport. Want S17.000.
BUILDING LOT - City

Pomeroy Landmark

availa ble. On ly S2800.
NEW L ISTING i75

wa ter

Fre.:o

'9a _ j ack W. Carsey, Mgr .
aiill Phone 992-2181

acres,

~

_(6 ~4 1 592 · 1692

Simmental

elect ric

free gas

well , 4

bedroom home, equipped
birch kitchen with bullf.ln

· Con -AM Motorcycles. Complete
soles and fantastic servlce 1
Hours M-r. T 9 -6; W-F, 9-7; Sot .
9· 5. " The Motorcy cle People of
Southeastern Oh io " Athen s
Sport Cycles, Inc . 20 W. Stimson
A ve .. Athens , Oh io. Phone
THREE·FOURTH

and

cook an d ba k e un i"ts.
re f rigera1or , bath , ga s F.A.
f urn ace, and all miner als.

$65,000.
AN APPRAISAL IS A
VALUE
BASED
ON
FACTS . NOT AN OPINION
BY ANYONE . ONLY BY
QUAL IFIED PEOPLE.

9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Here is your home - 2
story frame , A bedrooms,

1'1' . baths , lor!l,e , heat.ed
enclosed porch to play In on
bad days , 2 car garage &amp;
storage.
corner
l ot , .
511 ,200.00.
·SUMMER OR WINT E R This home has a beautiful
view of the river. 1 f loor
plan has 3 bedr ooms, bath,
basemen1 , s t orage
bu iJ ding, garden , other
fe a tures. $12,500.00.
ABOUT 18 ACRES ready
for
subdivis ion
and
development in ·the Village
of Pomeroy. JU ST LOOK,
$28,500.00.
IMMEDIATE
POSSES S ION
Meigs
sc hool district. Lovely 2
bed room, equipped kif chen. din i ng R., part
ba sement with ga r age.
$16,500.00.
SOUTHERN
STYLE
HOME - Has ever ything .
Fir st floor has lovely
equi pped kitchen (hO&lt;Jse
wi"fe's dream). dini ng R. 2
bedrooms , 2 modern baths,
upper floor has 2 r entals for
good income. $24,000.00.
OLDER OME - 11/2 story
frame, for less than Jh~
price of most new cars . In
good
co lidi tiOn .
3
bed r ooms, ba th, 6 robms in
a ll. $7,000.00.
NEWER MODERN VA
ap proved
home 1
3
bedrooms, lovely family
room, nice kitc hen , car·
pe1ing , paneli ng/ tile, cold
.room &amp; storage. cen t ral
heat and air cond. 112 acr e.
532,500.00.
LQOK 4 LOTS - Space for
the .kid s to r omp in, quiet
ar ea, 6 rooms, bath, and
workshop. In good con dition. M eigs school area.
$13,000.00.
WHY WAIT?
IN TERES T RATES ARE
GOING UP - PROPERTY
PRICES CONTINUE TO
SOAR - BUY NOW .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland
Associates
m -2259 . 992-2561 . 985·4112

FREE ESTIMATES
1... ~tio11Stni&lt;os

fltooncinlllldlbtt

Pom,..,

lllown lnbl Wills l Atliu

STORM
WINDOIIS&amp;DOORS
REPOOMEIIT
WINDOWS
AUIMINUII
SIDIJIG.SOFTm
GUTTtRS,AWNINGS

Weddinp
Portraits
Passports

Annive!Uries
Special Occtsio,n5

$JrKIISI,0hio
r~ 992.3993

mo.

DAVID BRICKLES
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

bedrooms. nice 11h story house, large livi ng room w ith
shini ng oak flooring, la rge kl1chen w ith dining area ...2
full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upst airs. Completel y
insul ated wl1h F .A. nat. gas f urnace. large porches &amp;

·

S2S.oo Discount,
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
$85.00
2 Good used XU Chain
Saws

1- $100.00, 1-$80.00
Electric Trlm -AII cuts with
nylon
529.95
(1 1 Good Refrlger1tor $200

Pomeroy Landmark

...'..':ack w. ~ruy, Mgr.
~ Phont'lfl-211l
•

'
'

I

Trat1$mi$$lon SerYice

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Phone Mi•• Young
At
992-2206 Of 992-7630
"Tht llrirJnoton
Not fht lmitJton

mwer:

ll'ITLE O~PHAN ANNIE., ·

""'•

EXPERIENCED

••
•.

~

YOU, SAHIB, ARE
A JUST MAN·· I
GIVE UP MY STUPID
AHEIY\PT TO S WAY
YOUR .JUDGMENT··

l l''l'S NOT
FORGET THAT
A~EL STILL IS
DANGEROUS··

1-B·III'IO.

Radiator~

Service -

, . _ the kKtHt frvdt or 1u114o~
._...., ... to the
c.~.

· ~t ,...,,..lt!ll'im ...-fa. u.-'ftlliJ'P •

flluralht. W1 "" •

Alocal contractor
Phone 949-2801
or949-2860

p,.,...

Cll'l

BRAOFO.RO . Au ctioneer , Com·
plete Service . Phone 949·2497
or 949-2000: Rac ine . Ohio, (rift
Bradfori:L
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR . Sweepers , toasters . irons . oil
smal l appliances . lawn mower ,
next to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985 ·

3825 .
REMOOEUNG . Plumbing , heating
and all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 year s ex per ience . Phone 992-2409 .

--- - SEWINC MACHINE

Repairs , ser ·
vice. all makes . 992-2284 . Tl"le
Fobri&lt;.
Shop ,
P o meroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Se~v~c~ :..,W_!~harpen S~!stors .

1-2().1

EXCAVATIN,G , dozer , loOder and
bockh9e work ; dul)lp \rucks
and lo · boys for hire ; wi l l haul
fill •d irt , to sOil. limestone and
grovel. Call SOb or Roge( Jef fers . day ' phone·. 992 -7089 ."
night phone 992-3525 or 992 -

5232.
Wi l l do roofing , Co~ s lruction ,
plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or too S!"oll , Phone

•••
•

••
•

1? HAI/t:
~IV6D AT At.t...'

•

Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3806

''
''

and
c ommer ci al .
Ca ll for
esti mate , 24 hour ·servi ce.

&lt;

HOWERY
A ND
MARTIN
f:x.
cavating , septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone , grovel , blacktop
paving , Rt . 143 . Phone 1 (614}

'

'

j

'

27 In unison
(2 wds.)
28 - Island, La.b+ -+29 Legendary

.,

LOOK

HER E -

lo j)IIY.

room, kltet'len and bath, 2 rooms built on, nice famil y
room with fi replace, plen1y of garden space, some frul1

trees. Large wor kshop and bloc k cellar. City water and
septic tank , Ni ce country setting on County Rd . 28.
Pri ce $15,900 .
UPPER SYRACUSE - Good 2 bedroom house wfth
bath. Two more small bedroom s could be finished
upstairs. Also garage. storage building, strawberry
patch and garden space . Dr iveway Is electric heeled .
Nice Oh io River view. Furniture can be bought extra,
Price for qu ick cale. House and lot, $12,600.

'"I'*

"'K 97

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

GYAX

DAYUKYTC
DPPU ,

New Fuel FiHer
This price 1lso lncludts labor, 6 cylinder cheapter. Havt your - k
done by 1 certlfltd mtchlnlc. Thlo offer good through 111 of
.September. Bring thlo c e - wllll you and get a free w11h lob.

MV .RRYMM

CKAYQYMM

KM
Z. YA ·

YTYHX.

MEVCCM

., 1977 Kin,
~'~'\RNEY

I

$43.95 .

New Cond.

PO

KT·

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: HEAVEN WILL Blj: NO HEAVEN
TO ME IF I DO NOT MEET MY WIFE THERE .-PRES.
ANDREW JACKSON

. Gel your car tuned up at Smith Nelson and have It in
good shape for the winter ahead. You get the following
. work lor the very low price of $39.95. Regular price
New Plugs
Now Plllnts

KHZPACJTC

SKUY · JSJNY

MKM C,YTC • .

SUMMER'S END TUNE.UP SPECIAL
SMITH NELSON MOTORI

WELL,'Tl-l.tr COULD
I-lAPPEN ...

6UT MAI{BE LATER
01'1 i{OU COULD DO .
SOMETHING ELSE

WHAT IF IT WAS
A LONG DITCH ?

oloB 5 4 2
"'AK JB
• A K9
• K 65

CRYPTOQUOTES

p T y .

•Q4

SOUTH IDI

One 1~tte r simply stands ror another. In this sample A lo
used Cor the three I.'s , X lor th e two O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
apostro phes, the length and ror mati on or the wo rds are all
hints·. Each day t he code letters are diffe rent.

F ive

EAST£RN DISTRICT - l'/2 acres of levelland , nice
12x64 all carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs, living

• 8 7 53
• J 10 9 7 3 2

Is

RUnAND
FURNI:NRE

EAST
"' 6 53 2
• Q 106

WEST

olo J6

OAJ'i'N

the Qll lo River . Ask ing 516.500.

.4

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

Call742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

MINERSVILLE - 4 bedroom house, mostly carpeted,

Call Jimmy Deem At

b+--l--

Switze r
UQuick wink
(2 wds,)

J

garage . Loc. In Chester . Price 519•.800.

• AB ...,....--~
"'A Q 10 3

l~~~~~;;==~~~~~!f=]!~~~~~~~~F.J.~~~~Il~~~~~~~N-T~~!5~~~ 40Reineror

Eastern District, 2 mi . off Rt. 7. Asking S29,BOO.
lr-1 YOU.R HAIR,

-++-I Slam proves double ruff
·31

I

;I

r ~. tUU' t

Syndintll", Inc.

Both vulnerable
West Nortb East

South

Pass

P&lt;i. ss
Pass
Pass

34.2N.T.
.
5.

Pass

Pa ss

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

South won the diamond lead
in dummy, drew two rounds ol
~ rumps , paused brieflY when
West showed out, led..i!_jlia, .
mond to his king , ruffed his
la st diamond in dummy and
came to a real halt when Andy
underruffed .
Our real life unlucky expert
worried about just why Andy
had underruffed . He tried to
visualize Andy's hand and
decided that he was holding
three hearts to the queen and
four clu~s to the jack .
He thought some more, con·
firmed his diagnosis , cashed
dummy 's last trump , led the
three ol clubs, thought some
more, played his nine ol clubs
a nd let West score the setting
tric k with his unprotected
jack .

Opening lead - J •
By Oswald &amp; Jamos Jacoby
The ordinary bridge player
would have no trouble making
se ven spades . Only an expert
could go wrong and it required
a master stroke of misdirection by another expert to beat
him.
·
East was Andy Gabrilovich
of Connecticut. His retire·
ment !rom serious bridge due
to press work has deprived
bridge of one of its most
delightful e xponents .

or

~

e
~

e

L
f

8

.,
0
3

'

Oswald and Jim Jacoby
NORTH
"'Q 10 9 7

1

1

r

BRIDGE
• H 2

36 eosuy~
38 Word to the
unwanted
39 Conveyed
by will

bedrooms. 1'h b8th•. util ity room . Nice kitchen with

KIDS

Movie "An Amerkan Dream " 10.

Lovely"

padding,

"'

26 Desert
crosser

20.

9:31)-Three's Company 6.
10:oo-College Football Preview 6 ; Barnaby Jones 8;
News 20; Dlc.k ens of London 33.
ll :OG-News 3,4,6,8,10,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; S)NAT 6; U.S. . Open.
Tennis Highlights B; Movie " Gaby" 10; News 13;
ABC News 33.
11 :45-Kojak B. .
12 :GO-Emergency One 13; Janak! 33.
12 :4()-Unofflclal Miss Las Vegas Showglrl Pageant 6.
12 :55-Movle " The Deadly Dream" B.
1:00--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
1: 3o-Mary Hartman 10

33 "- De-

all on sale..

Close Sal At 5 P.M.

nervous
str ain
Iii Edge one's
way
19 ·" East· of
Eden" star
21 Cooked a

32 Mining find

in

FRIDAY TIL 5

commune

canal

• ~(eti15:16

ntu~I!.Y.IJ.ti_MOtt

30 Netherlands

30 .. _ Rabbit"
31 Great Lakes

Candy Strip
Rubber Back
Regular $6.9S
_Save$·4.88

..

12 With

zoom

6:3o-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr lffllh 6; .
CB S News 8,10; Once Upon A Class ic 20
7:GO-Truth or Cons. 3; Cross-WIIs 4; Liars Club 6;
Tr.e asur.e Hunt 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Almanac 20; Consumer Survival Kit
33.7 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ma tch Gam e PM
6; Price Is Right B; Mac Ne il -Le hrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dol ly
15.
8 :GO-PIIot3,4,15; Welcome Back, Kotter 6,13: Waltons
8,10; Key to the Universe 20,33 .
8:31)-PIIot " Good Penny" 3,4,15; What's Happening 6;
Movie " South Pacific " 13.
9:GO-Movle "The Man In the Iron Mask" 3,4,15 ;
Bar.ney Miller 6; Oral Roberts In San Francisco 8;

Celt

SAVE ON .
CARPETING

12 and 15ft. width Carpet .
rubber back .
14.88 sq. yd .

•: .

23 Contour
25 Kingly

I've qot a qlass
head or something?

Yesterday's Answer

32 Set cap for
34 Sailors
35 Nomiandy
town
37 Muckraker
11
The"
certain way
Tarbell
(2 wds.)
22 Bring back 38 Kind of
fiction
11 Woody Allen 23 Terrify
(abbr.)
film
24 Own

ZO Si or oui,

Movie " Fancy Pants" 10; Dinah 13.

4:31)-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergen cy One
6; Andy Grllflth 8; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
5:GO-Big Volley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33: Emergency One 13; Mission :
Impossible 15.
5: 31)-()dd Couple 4; News 6; Family Altair 8; E lec. Co .
20,33.

,

6:0G-News 3,4,6,8,10,131 15; A BC News 6;

42- fa r as
.ACROSS
1 Noted movie
(2 wds .)
. censor
DOWN
5 Je ffers on
1 Pueblo
Davis'
Indian
league
2 "-for All
8 Sharif is one
Seasons"
9 Stately;
3 Xenophobic
majestic
slogan
g 13 Revie ws un·
(3 wds.)
favorably
4 Upperclass·
~ 14 Small hound
men (abbr.)
:i 15 India or
5 Bruce or
printer'SSebastian
li !6 Titanic
6 Takes to
i signal
court
~ 17 Author
7 Moslem ruler
Deighton ~ 10 1963 Brando
18 Correct copy
film , with

GASOLlNE Al

Chester, Ohi o
8·29-pd .

l o -"BOUND''

L--~~~-----~T-~·!••':',~ 21 translated
Engender

Tank Service

992·585:.:8;_
. ------·-

Man,, TillS., Wid.

~--

Jack'_s Septic
Bo• 34

HORROR

·

1:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Chil dren 6.13; News 8;
Young &amp; the Reslless 1D; Not for Women Only 15
1: 3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turl)s
8,1 0.
2:G0-$20,000 Pyram id 6,13.
2:3o-Docfors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guid ing
Light 8,10.
3:GO-Another World 3,4, 15; All In T he Fam ily 8,10;
Ant iques 20,
·
3: 15-General Hospita l 6.13.
3: 3()-Match Game 8,10; Lil ias, Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:GO-Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 4,15; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Gill igan' s Is. 8; Sesame St. 20,33 :

Answer; What a man ·In love is sooner or later bound

!

,.

R esi dent i al

CARPENTER . . floor ing, ceiling ,
paneling . Phone 992 -27S9.
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec .,
plumbing and h.eoting. Phone

1M

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

742· 2348.

~---

••

Rl'Mt:MBeR, M'1 l..AO! '~E:VI:'~ TO
"-'"'"DIED I ~ B!m~R TI-WJ

'

..., lilt 1100 L IUil Sl. r.....,, 0.

EXCAVAit N"(,7, dozer , backhoe
698-7331.
and ditcher . Charles R. Hal ·
HARRISON
'S T.V . Repair . Service
f ield . Back Hoe Service ,
Calfs
.
'176
Sycamore, St. , MidRutland , Oh io. Phone 742 ·2008 .
dleport . Phone 992 -2522 .

••
••
•••
..

.'

llrl i•W•l'-"~'-.at""llul
M1t11 t1 SIL C. HHU4 .. 1 ir" ....._ .,.

Free EstitnJit1

I

Jumbles: OUTDO FAUNA BUTLER

Yesterday's

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BORN WSER

,W iliJUI alta. • • oft~~ ..-tJ f•

'-1 3-1 mo

Bnli.;~S\;~~&lt;:I!Ii'"

!!We -

CftlltM - J tl . . . iM .,..lily Nlli~p tM Ul·

Ro Sun ill! Clis Pleose

992·2174

C;ll·

,.,U. I! ,... Wtjl\ I ~tt~ali J!' (lf~Ud l'llki Ifill IIlllf Ntlt tl JOI!I " - , • i'aiNI lloi!M; .,.
IIIII • iiiiiiiUict ill ~tJ t. ,._. II U1M. !Iris
WI sllit ,.., IIMIII. flit UU liM jr. Ill ll.ntifllttll,
...,. Plitt. ~· IIi~... 1114 ,.., ,..,. •

Bissell Siding Co.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
p~

Kingsbury Home Sales

A,.....
[ 1&lt;1'7"."&lt;171""Wl--=:tii'"""&lt;;:I17""'lJ7""l
&lt;J7"'"'\17'
l-wX~
)

~~-~~at

.'
.•'
••
.'
4

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum Siding,
Storm Windows &amp; Insulation,
Call Professionals

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

tAnswers tomorrow)

11lA1'S THE WAV ~TTILA
TiiE HUN AGURED ·SO HE MU RDE RED
MIU.iONS·- IN l'HE
NAM!' OF -JUSTICE··

"•
'

A CAGE "TO
DREAM ON .

[ J I I aJ

•

Automatic

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,1 0.

~WOUTAL~

dining area. Concre1e porches. Nat . gas F.A. fu r nace.
Nice country settin g with approx. 33/4 acre land In

wrap around porch , garage, large lot, al l overlooki ng

Freeur

SWAIN

Young's
Carpeting
11
•• 1'Uph
i;;'h3s{ery
Carpet

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

I
KJ I I

,.•
Superior
Slum btrulion

Urban League 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3: 6 :5o-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13; 6:55-Good Morning. Trl State 13.
7:Do-Today 3.~ .1S; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:0~ Porky Pig 10; 7:Jo-Schoolles 10 .
B:oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St . 33.
8:31)-Big Valley 6.
9:0G-Cross.Wits 3; Ph il Dona hue 4; , 1/o'IO,V.'IO : Andy
rl ffllh B; Mike Douglas 10.
9:31)-A .M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration B.
10:GO-Sa nford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dina h 6; Here's Lucy 8.10;
Mike Douglas 13.
"
10:3()-.-'Ho ll ywood Squa res 3,4,15: Pr ice Is Right 8,10.
11 :GO-Wheel of Fo rtune 3.4,15; Happy Da ys 6,13.
11 :3()-lt's Anybody's Guess 3.4.15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8.1 0.
11 : S~CB S News 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:GO-News 3.4.6,1 0; Shoot for. the Stars IS; Divorce
Cour t B; Midday 13.
12:3()-Chlco &amp; the Ma n 3, 15; Rya n's Hope 6,13; Bob

\SUPCAM

8-7-1mo .

411-1--

Summer SemeSter 10:
6: 3o-Doc1ors on Call .4 i News 6; Summer Semester 8;

,•

Rustolnm Paint Produ cts
•we can ship puts directly
to you r. door by Wily of
U. P .S.
~ C u stom Hydraulic Hose
M.aking
Pho ne 992·2116
Pomeroy , O .

LARRY LAVENDER
!192-1292

••

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

THURSDAY, SEPTE MB ER 1, lf77
5:4}-Farrn Report 13; 5: 5o-PTL Clob 13; 6:oo-

Unscrambte these four Jum~es,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Here's wha t YPIJ' ve been

Sll VER QUEEN
your own . Cheap. Clarence
Proff itt , Portland , Ohio .

New Co -Op water and
softeners, model VC-SVI ,
Only $279.95
Save UO . OO on a new
Hotpoint Refrlgeretor,
1 New 20 cubic ft. Chest

I

llltwn

109 Hilh$L

,•

J.J4.J mo.

mo.

~ ~ ~~ ®

.

asking for. Beautiful6 y r. old, all car peted home wi t ~ 3

FOR SALE

rn'il

7 ·2 ~1

2:1()-News 13.

sight 33.
7: 31)-Dolly 3; Redscene '77 4; Match ame PM 6 ;
S25,000 Pvramid 8; Mac Neil -Lehrer Reoort 20.33 ;
'ftft\lrul
~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

•'

SM.IS ANDSUVIC£

1 :30--Mary Hartman 10,

My Three Sbns 15: Consumer Survival Klt 20; In-

~7:4~7-.:n:1~1::~~::A~R:N~O~L:D~G:R~A:T~E~~~:R:U~~::~N=D~-~!::::::::::::::R:u:fl:lnd==~;
;••••••••••••••••••••••••••

12 FOOT ALUMINUM boot 6 h.p,
EVinrude motor . 19 ft , cabin
&lt;:ru iser equ i pped wifh living
faci li ties and 90 h.p. Evinrude
molor and troi ler. 1962 GMC
Diesel Tractor with tonem axle.
773-5238 .

CANNING TOMATOES . Br ing your
own con l alners. Robert H.
ROush , Rocl11e . 247 ·2190.

&lt;3REAT:

~

John

- ·-.
Sweet Corn . Pick

PAPE',._ IT LOOI&lt;.,;

i'JE')(T QVEHION-· WHO WAS THE
CALLER WHO TRIED TO 8L!Ll.D0ZE' 'IOU OUT OF RB.VIEW IN(;
THI; DES16Nl... ANV IDEA'!

.192, 263

THE PHOTO PLACE

1&gt;21-1

! CAN TEU..
AT THIS STAG! IS-· ON

~

6-16-1 mo.

Bob Hleflich

i&lt;:IGHT~ ALL

a u .to ~:lor.11.

GOT LOTS PF KIDS?

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
EASTERN DISTRICT -

eA~Y...I\'ITH MILITARY
AliUI't/IFT; THE SI&lt;Y!&gt;
THE! ~I MITl

Pool Sales .

,.,..... !92-6282

Kitchen cabmeh · Rootmr • Concrete
PatiOS · Sidewalks . New Construction'
Remodeling.

· Coil . (61•1843·2653 .

KENNEBEC
POTATOES.
Pope . q49. 2273.

OEVI1.0PING ANY
P•ANe COST5 /AONEY.

J00 MoioSL

Roo11 2
'Pome101. Ohio 45169

Bull

TWO ARABIAN Horses . Also , o
1974 TS Su1:uki. very good con·
dition. $525 . 992 -7559 .

D. Bumgardner

P~, O hit

Ph. 992·1119 • 596-1005
Estimaln opplied to job.
~27· 1 mo. pd.

bed roo m s, nice bath ,
basemen1 with new gas
furnace. 2 porches, gara_ge

UC · XVI .

YAMAHA . HARLEY ·DAVID&gt;ON

TWO THREE· QUARlER ton Dodge

15 .rsa..-

23 .000 B.T.U AIR cond itioning .
Good shape. 9J2 · 77? ~

s oftener ,

Ho~i;h Jo . L{,5J~!uiJfn!!!'~~-~:- ~.- ·j~_

· Phoae 949-2814

,-'--------,=

TEAFORD[H

6; Andy Griffith 8; Hogan 's Heroes 15.

5:Q()-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Ne ighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
Imposslble 15.
·
5:3~dCoupl . . ; News6; Family A!falrB; Elec. Co .
20.33.
6:GO-News 3.4.6.8.10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:30-NBC News3.4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grllllth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7: oo-TruthorCons , 3; Cross.WIIs.4; LlarsCiub.6; Pop
GO.s the Country B; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13;

CAPTAIN EASY

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC,

1210 Washington Blvd .

-

19ft . 742·2566.

SIX ROOM house at 61.3 M il l St. ,
Middleport. Good con dil ion. In ·
qu ire at 439 lincoln St. , M id·
dlepart .

992-5502 .

v.s,

1972 5ELF·CONTAINED CAMPER .

STORY 3 bedr oom frame .
house . F.A . Iurnoce , storm wm ·
dews f ireplace in Middlepor• .
Phone992-3457 .

illlilil111.

one piece cutlers. Wt hint
,..1101f. Spotial )Hie• II
.

8,10; Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20.

4:CJO--Mis;ter- Cartoon J; Gong Show •,15; New Mic key
Mouse Club 6 ; Gilligan's Is. B; Sesame St. 20,33;
Movie "Scared Still" 10; Dinah 13.
4: 30-My Three Sons 3: Star Trek 4; Emergency One

•

CARTER

Contin~Wt
it, or do ~

TWO BEDROOM home si tuated on
I ac re land . Coli 997 -729.4 or

1967 CAblllAC HEARSE . $600 or
w ill t rade for anything of equal
Y'Oiue . (61.4 ) 698 - 32~.
NEW SBE Touch· Com 40 C.B .
rodio , 40 channel ; lennQ elec·19b5 FORD . FOUR · DOOR .
tric relfDcling antenna : onte:n·
automat ic,
$145. 1968
no matche r (S WR ), 3 meter
Chevrolet pickup 11, ton; ·v.s ..
modulation , Wattage and SWR
- automat ic , pctwer steering ,
gouge : all cables and hook-up
$.450 . CharleS Rus5ell , Bashon.
fittin gs for radio and guoge. Al l
949·2860 .
e·guipment is for mobi le use .
19b5 CHEV . BISCAYN Wagon 283 ,
Coll992-1448, after 5 pm .
standard, new tires·. runs good .
1126 East Main St .. Pomeroy, FOR THE fines! in wood . heating
stoves. cooks toves ·and [Ool
Ohio. ·
stoves , Call Zion Heo! Co ., 8
1976 Monte CARLO with full Y'in yl
Putnam Drive, Athens. (bl4)
root. AM . tope, P.S., P.B.. A .C. .
b9b -l 187 or (b 1-4 ) 592 -6079 .
cruise control. power door
locks , and more extras . E)( - 1976 BASS BOAT , 1977 Mercur y
outboard tro lli ng motor , live
&lt;:eltenl condition. 992 -b24.3.
well , dri ve-on tra iler . (61.4 )
767-'1477.
-.
POTATOES FOR winter . Ken ·
nebeC, Cobb"ler and Superio r.
STARCRAFT 10th anniversary sole
Rt . 338 to Ravenswood fer ry. 1
on m ini -motors , tra ilers , and
m i. Coll843-2491 , Tom Sayre .
folddbwns . Travels tor 25. ft .
·~---$-4400:00; 20
mini -moto r PANASONIC RANGER Aut o- BootAC-Ou tdoor block and white
$10,850.00 . We sell service and
quality. Camp Con ley Storcr6ft
compact
telev ~ion .
Colt
Soles , Rt . 62 north of Pt . Plea·
991 -24.48 , after 5:00pm .
sont .
1975 CR 125 HONDA Elsinore. Ex ·
FAIR MONTH SPECIAL on entir e
cellent con dit ion. 9-49· 241 0.
stock . See them at CODNER "S
CAMPERS on Rainbow ridge . MOlOROLA PORTABlE blo&lt;:k and
white television . Coli 992-2.448.
From Rt. 7, toke Meigs :28 or 32
_
at~5:~ pm .
to Bast-lam. Open evenings;
too , Owner , RObert Codner , HAY FOR sole , Pick up out ol
field . Coii985-35S5.
_lo~g Bc:'to~ , Oh~. __
. __ _
S"T AfKRAFT MINI Motors. trailers
and fold -downs, End of year
sole . Save $1',700 on 1977
trailers . 1978 trai lers in stock .
Used units . We sell serY'ice and
quality , Camp Conley Storc.rof1
Soles . Rt . 62 . north of Pt. Pleasent .

GUTTER
SERVICE

SMALL I arm for sole , 10• .. down.
owner flnanced Monroe Coun ·
ty , w. Vo. Phone (J0-4 ) 777·
3102pr (304 ) 172 3227 .

HOUSE . 4 rooms and bat h on acre
of land . Includes furnit ure .
$8 .o00. Ruby Bush , 949-2052 .

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

1973 BUICK CENTURY . Ex&lt;:ellen t
&lt;:ondition . Loaded with e)(tros
992 -7059 .

ONE YEAR old house , 2 m iles on
New limo Rd . 1n Rutland. It 's all
paneled , with three bedrooms
and big livtng room , all
carpeted . two baths , dining
room . big k i tchen w ith bu ilt-in
o"Ven , on island stove and fomi·
!y room wfth fireplo&lt;:e . One cor
garage. 011 two a cres ol lond .
F.or more imformotion, ·col i

949.25 19 .

Str ickl y whol esale to all.
,Not less than 1J2 case.

-

CASH poid for oi l make$ ond '
models · of mo.bHe hbmes .
Phone area code 614 -.423-9531 ,

Coil

Coli 992 HHI .

. ~arne

3:30---Match

.''..

Business Services

HOMt~ITE~ for sole 1 Qcre and
up Mtddleport, near Rutland

1973 PlYMOUTH SCAMP . 30.000 APPAlACHIAN STOVE Co ., Sum·

SWlday
4P.M.

more.

H•·al !-:slaW ror Sale

.

NOTICE

acres or
557 -3382 .

urft.•rt 1d

1-'IANO TUNING, lone Oomels . 12
RISING ST AR Kennel Boordtng COAL ltmestone and cok•vm
years of
servtce
Phone
chlon de ond colc1um bune for
Indoor Outdoor runs , groom1ng
997 70H7
dust control ond Spe&lt;tol miMing
all breeds
dean sanitary
solt tar lo1mers hcelsror Salt WA TfR WEll dnlhng
Phone
foci lilies oe 367 -7112. Cttesh1re
Worlc.s Mom Street , Pomeroy
Wdltom P Grant of 742 2979
Phone {614 ) 3()7 -om.
Oh1o or phone 991· 3891 .
oher6p m .
AKC SHETLAND -sheep dogs .
$600
Also
horse PENNZOil RUTL AND open doily
CAMPER
{M;n .) Collies 2 females 1
tro1ler . $450 Phone {b14) 69R
h!l 10
Closed Mondays
weeks old .. Shats and wormed.
3:2'10 .
wrecker ser\ltCe , hr e reparr .
Phone
(6U ) :Jb7 0292 or
Phone 74'19575 or 742 2081
367 -7112 .
SPRING GARDEN Supplies, Cab bage
cauliflower . broccoli . NH SO N 5o
PAINTING
Free
MEIGS COUNTY .Humane- Sodety
ond
head le tt uce plants ,
estimates. Co11 992 5804 .
An imal Coreli!"'e .. 997 - 7~1 ,or
yellow , wh1 t e, and red o ~i on
after b p ~ f!t ., 992 -5427 .
s'ets . oniOn plants , KennebeC Will 00 bobysttting ril fl'Y home .
'1'11-&gt;301
ALL BREED dog groomtng . J. ond
cobbler Katahdin , Red P.or'ltioc
D. Kennels. Reasonable rates .
and Red lasodo seed potatoes . WATER HAULED , 550 gollons per
No drugs used. Coil for Op ·
Bulk garden seeds, pot11ng soil,
load , m Tuppers Plains
po1n tment , 742·31 62.
peot moss , fru it trees. ond rose
Coolville a(eO . Call · (bl4 )
bushet . Midway "Ma rke t ,
667 -3675 , offer~ pm .
AI&lt;C REG ISTERED Beagle pups. Pt .
Pomeroy , Ohio , 991 ·1581,
Pleasant ,
W.
Vo .
(30-4 )
Sobs Market , Mason. W .Va. Will DO bobystlttng in my home .
675-415-4 . .
992·6309.
(3041 773 5711 .
FREE TO good home· I female
ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil a t·
part cocker spaniel and port
toch ments . like new , ask ing
shepherd . 5 mo . old . 992 -7185.
Auction
$2250. Phone {614 ) 698 -3290.
TO Y,IVE OWO'/ . German snort·
CAN NING TOMATOES , PEPPERS , BUYERS WANTED. Dealers Au c"
haired Po in ter. Gentle, needs
tion , Public m¥ ~ ted . Thur~ ..
cuc umbers . Cleland Form s,
place to run . 949 -2595.
Sept. 1. 11.00 om . TrtJck loods of
G reen house .
Ge r a l d ine
oil new merchandise sold the
Cleland .
•
Wholesa le ou c;: t1on way · by· the
TREE RIPENED orchard peaches .
piece and quan tify to go. Ohio
White. or ye l low stoning Man·.,
R!Y'er Au ct ion in Me.igs Ploza on
PART-S FOR 197 1 GoloK ie Ford tor
Aug . I. Mason Peach Orchard .
U.S. Bu siness Rt . ?. M iddleporT ,
sole. Ph on e 992 -5858 .
Ohio . Home Phone (304 )
1975 HARlEY DA VID SON , ex·
773-5471 . Regula r OUCtiOn
1972 DODGE CHARGER. A.C. and
ce!l ent condition . Go ld, has ex every Fri. night al7:00 pm .
many more options. $1495 . Coli
tras , less than 1000 miles .
992-51 69 .
$2700. Coil (614 ) 698·32'10.

E.v.t.il wunl u\'d' U... murunum l~
wort.~!&gt; is 4 (.'ent.S P'!r word ptor day
~Ads rwmu11 UO...r u.:~n t'UIISi!L'Ulln•
days Wilt be r.:harKed tt~ lilt' I tli)

~

~ni&lt;:es

For Sale

l'els ror Sale

0.\lil"!(t'"

Pubh.sher rt"!f(l'\'es the

'

'

\.
J.IIO

nw

......
"

1..0

()!'del" .

TELEVISION
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•

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18

A Texas reader wan\3 to
know what we think of a three·
club oj&gt;ening bid as dealer
with ;
• - •J832 + - •AKJ842. ·
We have no criticism or that

opening,

a one-club

opening,

or a pass. It's a matter ol
style and partnership.
. (F or a copy. of JACOBY
MODERN. send $! .fo: "Win at
Bridge," c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Station.
Naw York, N. Y. 10019}

m
!n

m
~d

�ll-111e DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. 31, 1m

Irish urged to end all violence By HELEN THOMAS
UPI ftlk Hvuae Reporter
W¥!HlNGTON ( UPI ) Presidrnt Carter, affirming a
U.S. policy of impartiality, is
pleading for an end · to the
bloodshed
in Northern
lr•land and promising to join
others
in · job-e reatin g
economic investments ooce
peace is established .
In an extraordinary policy
statement Tu es d ay,
prompted bY a group or
lawmakers of Irish heritage,
the President also urged all
Americans to refrain from
supporting groups involved in

the violence In Ulster.
He warned that violators of
American law in this regard
will be prosecuted .
The Chief Ex~ utive was
meeting
today
with
Transportati on Sec reta ry
Brock Adams to launch a
special appeal for motorists
to obey the 55-mile-an·hour
speed limit to cutdown traffi c
accidents over the Labor Day
weekend .
Carter also arranged to
meet with Chairma n At
t.nlman of llle House Ways
and Means Committee on his
fo rth coming tax r eform

proposals, and Rep. Parren will. command widespread
Mitchell; D-Md., head of the acceptance throughout both
congressional black caucus . part.'; of the commWI.ity /' he
The President's statement said, but added that the
on Ireland exPressed the hope United States has " no
" that all those engaged in intentioo of telling the parties
violence will renounce this how this might be achieved ."
co urse
and
commit
U a settlement is achieved ,
the ms elves to peaceful Carter said " the U.S. governpurswt of legitimate goals ." ment would be J)l'epared to
Car ter said American join witb others to see how
policy oo the issue has long add iti onal job-c reatin g
been one of impartl'atity , investment
could
be
" and that is how it will encouraged, to the benefit of
remaln."
all the people of Northern
" We support the establish· Ireland ."
ment of a form of government
White
House
Press
!n Northern .Ireland, which Secretary Jody Powell was
&amp;Sked why Carter wore a
·button during the St .
Patrick's Day para~e in the
campaign year which read
" Get the British Out of
years ,
particularly
in Ireland" if he believed in
preparing the field and neutrality.
Powell said someone
concession stand each day for
pinned the bution on Carter,
the upcoming games.
who was unaware of its
During the past year, the
message.
Employees Club received
The President had anothet
sanction to sponsor slow pitch
in his series of promotional
softball tournaments during
briefings on the new Panama
the month of June with
Canal treaties Tuesday and
I proceeds going to finance the
added two more powerful
little league tournament. Not
allies to his team favoring
enough teams entered the
ratification: former
1977 tournament so the event
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
was cancelled.
·
and Florida's Gov. Reubin
A spokesman added, "We
Askew.
apologize to the youngsters
Carter plans a quiet stay at
entering little league next
Camp David over the holiday
year but this action had to be
weekend to prime himself for
· taken ."
a heavy week ahead, with
Congress returning and 18
chiefs of state arriving for an
tax extravangza
treaty signing
ceremony Sept. 7.

KC tournament no more
Mounting financial losses
has led to the end of one of the
tri-county area ' s biggest
summer events, the Kyger
Creek little League Tour·
nament.
At a recent meeting of the
hoard of directors of the
Kyger Creek . Employees
Club, it was agreed to
discontinue $ponsorship of
the annual tournament. The
event has been held on the

Emcees named
for Yesteryear
observance
Four residents have been
selected to emcee the ·con·
tinual entertainment to be
featured during the ob·
servance of "Yesteryear" at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy from II a.m. to II
p.m. on Sept. 17.
Serving throughout the day
will be Dan Smith, Racine ;
Joan Stewart, Rutland; Bill
Childs of Middleport, and
Alice Nease, of Route 3,
Pomeroy.
Among the entertainers
will be Jennifer and Jim
Sheets
performing
on
dulcimer, banjo, autoharp
and other instruments ; Doug
Circle and his Ranch Hands
featuring country and blue
gra0!5 music by Gary and
Crolyil Bauman, Brent
Patter59n, Harold Smith, and
Margaret Tuttle. Loretta
Beegle will dance The
Charleston, Francis Andrews
Band composed of Brian
Collins, Bill Thurston, Pa ul.
Andrews, Mary Wippel and
Andrews, the Senior Citizens
Chorus and Kitchen Band,
Bill stockwell, folk sing, the
Stringduster! and dancers,
and a tall ta'le contest.

diamond opposite the Kyger
Creek Power Plant the past
19 years.
According to an employees
club spokesman, the club felt
it could no longer stand the
financial losses that have
mounted in recent years. For
several years, the club has
depended on the profits from
Its concession stand to
fmance the tournament .
However, in recent years,
patronage has not been
sufficient to meet the costs of
the tournament.
The hoard expressed its
thanks to OVEC for the
assistance rendered those 19

Meigs
Property

Real estate
exemption
must be asked

Appeals

:

Area Deaths

1

the Holzer Medical Center .

He was bor-n J a n. 31. 1900 in
Mor.gan Twp., son of the rate
Wyatt and Sara Evans Miller .
He marr ied Jenn ie M il ler,
who survl vt!S . as do two
daught e r ~.
Mrs .
John
t Dorothy)
Rippey
of
Ga ll ipol is and Mrs. Hu rley
(Clar a) Borden of Bidwell ; a

Killin•
gs
set 0 f£
-

··

convene

court to

OiJ magnates
. d. guil y
oun
fi

.

of price fixes

Now You Know

Meigs Co. Branch

..-1'7WSl

F'- Sf:IC

QUALITY•••

FOR LESS•••
THAN YOU DO AT

BAKER'S
FINE FURNITURE

Morgan.Belhel
Cemetery.
VIsitation will be held at the

rurwr-"1home from 7 to 9 p. m .

Thursday.

Alfred

· Social Notes

.

h y Phone
-

I

and one great.grandchHd.
He was a member of the
Morgan-Bethel Church .
Funeral &amp;ervices wilt be
conducted at l p. m. Friday
from
the McCoy -moore
Funeral Home in VInton with
Rev . Vance Watson of .
ficiatlng . Buritll will be in

Mille-r , Sr., 71 , Bidwell , a
retired
e mployee
of
CnlltiLothe State Hospitat.
died at S: JO p. m. Monday In

•

:Notices, local bnefs

.
I
son . Scott Miller. Jr- .•
Springfield, Ohio; four grand·

SCOTTW. MILLER
BIDWELL - Sco11 W illiam

Sunday School attendance
on August 28 was 47. Offering
was $26.61. Worship services
were held at 10:45 with the
Rev. Thomas speaking on

"Buried Treasures 11 from

The Meigs Hlg)I School a.m. untU 10 p.m. on both
Individuals
or
Band Boosters bave set up days.
businesses
desiring
to
mike
work schedules at the two
football field refreshment contributions may call 992·
stands for painting and 7349 or 992-7597.
repairing of the facilities. The
RACINE - The Southern
sessions will be held at 6 p.m.
Local
School District Board
Friday night, and at 10 a .m.
of Education will meet tn
Saturday morning,
The food booth at tbe Meigs ~ial session at 7 p.m.
County Fair was profitable, it Thursday in the school
was reported, and thanka cafeteria.
have been enended to those
A hymn sing will be held at
who donated, Royal Crown
the
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Bottling Co., Holsum Bakery,
Church
starting at 7:30 p.m.
D and D Meats, Rutland
All singers are
Saturday.
Furniture; Midland Grocery,
'
invited,
Leland
. Haley ,
Rich Valley Dairy, David
palltor,
Invites
the
public.
.
Bumgardner, and to the
Meigs County Fair Board for
The sixth annual · ·wood
its cooperation.
Family Reunion will be held
Sunday, Sept. 11, at Forest
The Meigs County React
Acres Park with a picnic
team in cooperallon with the
lunch to be held at noon.
American
Truckers
Assoclallon wiU hold a safety
break Sunday and Monday on
The Orange Township
the Route 7 bypass north of Trustees will meet Tuesday,
Rt. 124. Free coffee and soft Sept. 6 at 8 p.m. instead of
drinks will be given to Monday due to Labor Day,
motorists. The safety break Nina Robinson,
Cl~rk,
will be in operation from 6
reported.

Matt. 13:3f.37. The choir sang
"The Love of God" as a
~i.al number. Attendance
at this service was 34.
~ttendance at the Cluster
Hy~n Sing on Saturday
evemng here was 'l/. Chur·
ches represented were
Alfred,TuppersPlaUIS,South
Bethel and North Bethel. The
next hymn sing will be at the
South Bethel Church on
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday evening, Sept. 24.
Lucille
ADMITTED The
Alfred
Church
Wise
,
Rutland;
William
Homecoming will be held
Sept. 18 with the " United George, Cheshire; Bessie
Harmo~izers" pi Newport as Stitt, Racine ; Unda Lou Dye,
guest smgers. Other cluster Letart, W. Va.; Dana
and home talent will be Douglas, Poineroy; Clarence
pr~. ~on_e is welcome. Hughes, Harttord; Ellen
The ill 111.,~ community Stewart, Gallipolis; Sally
are_ the . fouowmg: Martha Sauvage, Racine ; George
Elliott m Holzer Medica) Conde, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - Frank
Center; Juanita Swartz,
Westfall
, Charles Snider,
Camden Clark; Robert
•
Pullins, Veterans Memorial;
Jimmy Brooks, Parker·
sburg; and Glenna Flanders
Grimm
at
O'Bienness
Hospital, Athens. Hazel Biggs
By Mrs. FraDclll Morrta
of nearby area is in Marietta
A former pastor of the First
Memorial Hospital.
Baptist Church, Rev . and
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Bikacsan and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton have 'daughter, . Sharon, of New
been Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brighton , Pennsylvania ,
Vineyard and son and Mr. called on friends in Racine,
and Mrs. Chas. Barr, all of Friday night and Saturday,
Belpre, and Mr. and Mrs. August 19 and 20, enroute
Robert Duncan of Darwin. home tfrom Athens, ·Ten·
_ Russell Findling and nessee, where they visited
Charles . Wo.ode assisted their SQns. Miss Vera Beegle
Arthur Atherton in digging entertained them with a
his potatoes last week.
dinner Friday evenihg. Rev.
The Swartz family reunion and Mrs. Bikacsan spent
was held in the Woode grove, Friday night with Mrs.
Sunday, August 28 with an Gretta Simpson and Sharon
attendance of 33. .

By JUDI HASSSON
HACKETTSTOWN, N.J .
(UP!) - Authorlties say
Emile
Pierre
Benoist
apparenly went on a shooting
spree killing six persons and
taking his own life after an
upsetting telephone
conversation.
Police said Tuesday they
probably will never know for
Virgie Hobstetter, Robert
certain why the ex-Marine
Moore, Joan Wears,' Myrtle
walked to a nearby railroad
Wilson, Carol Coleman,
bed last Friday and killed
Kathryn O'Connor;
himself after shooting down
six. persons as they !;trolled,
PLEASANT VALLEY
jogged or motorbiked near
Ida
DISCHARGES
his home.
Warbaugh,
Buffalo;
Mrs.
But
James
Courter,
Roger May, Bidwell ; Thomas
assistant . prosecutor of
Huddleston·, Point Pleasant;
Warren County, said police
Mrs. Jimmy Hughes, Ashton ;
believe that Benoist had a
Dennis
Craig, Buffalo; and
telephone conversation about
Norman Henry, Henderl!Qn.
a "private rosiness ril.atter"
shortly before he left his
family's hmne armed with a
.4kaliber rifle.
"There doesn't appear to
was an . overnight guest of
be a motive in the traditional
Lois Bailey. Mrs. Bikacsan
sense," Courter said, at a
showed pictures of their trip
news conference called to
to Hawaii. A dinner was
discuss police efforts to
served
in their honor 0n
explain the factors behind tbe
Saturday
at the Simpson
shootings.
home.
Others
present were
However, Courter said an
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
autopsy revealed that Benoist
Vera Beegle, Mary Ann
had a high content of alcohol
Findley a nd Lillian Hayman.
in his bloodstream and
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sayre
authorities were awaiting the
spent a vacation at Myrtle
results of further tests to
Beach, S. C. Enroute home
determine if he had been
they
spent a couple of days
using drugs.
with Mr. and Mrs. Dean
"I don't think anyone will
Sayre at Harrisburg, Pa. .
really know why," Courter
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre
said .. " Perhaps the reason he
and Brian of J ackaon spent a
did this died with him." The
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
prosecutor said no diary or
Herbert
Sayre. Other guestS .
any notes were found · to
Sunday
were
Mr. and Mrs.
explain a motivation.
the annual Sunday School
Buck
Rogers
of Columbus
Friends and neighbors said
picni~atFort Meigs at 6 p. m.•
and Mr. and Mrs. Sid Car·
that Benoist had been disMrs . Jennie Ward of
penter of Weljsville.
tressed and angry because of .
sister of Mrs. Eva
Columbus,
Bill McKenzie of Gallipolis
the slow disposition of an
Attendance at the Free
spent Siulday afternoon with
. automobile insurance claim, Methodist Church on August Robson, fell . at the Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
which left him without a car. 28 was ·76. Choir ·members County Fair and is a patient
at Veterans
Memorial
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre
present were 15. Mr. and Mrs. Hospital.
Eric of Bowerston spent
and
Phil Wise of Beverly attended
PINBALL DEATH
Mr. and Mrs. Norman a couple of days with her
services at the local church Hysell and children have
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI )
mother, Mrs. Ethel Johnson
Sunday.
Kerry D. Edwards, 32, Ketreturned home from their and other relatives.
Mrs. Emma Fox spent vacation. They visited In New
tering, was shot to death at a
Mrs. Josephine Reitlimiller
Sunday
with her daughter York, Canada, Pennsylvania
Mad River Township bar
of Sarasota, Fla. is a guest of
Saturday, apparently in an and son·in·law, Mr. and Mrs. and the Wesleyan Methodist her sister-in-law, Mr. Ann
argument over a pinball Jolm Douglas, Byesville.
Church Camp.
Coe,
Mrs. W. R. Swan, fell at her
game, Montgomery County
home and broke her leg. She
sheriff's deputies said.
An unidenWied 31-year..Old was taken to Holzer Medical'
Center for treatment and is
DJIIll was being sought.
Authorities said EdWards now at home . .
(Continued from page 1)
Saturday, Sept. 10, will be
died at the Wright Place
collected by Saturday, P8u! J . Regal, CleVeland Red Cross
Lounge of a gunshot wound to
blood program administrator, said today.
the chest.
~._~~~
"If- we-don't get cooununity_respnnse, !ben iLwilllead to

RIO GRANDE - Senior
Citizens who believe they
may qualify for a homestead
exemption on real estate
Robert L. Reeves, Robert
taxes should file an apLee Reeves to Ronald W. plication with the county
Hannin ~,
Charlotte A.
auditor's office according to
Hanning , .50 acre, Chester.
·an announcement made
Paul J. Adler to Winford
today by the Area Agency on
Judge Homer E. Abele,
Cale, 3 acres, Lebanon .
Aging District 7.
McArthur,
Presiding Judge
Elols Vinson Gitcheff ,
Agency officials noted that of the Fourth District Court of
steve Gitcheff to Charles N.
Neese, Jr., Sylvia Neece, anyone 65 years of age or Appeals, announced today
older, with an income of the Court will convene on
16.56 acres, Satisbory.
$10,000 or less could qualify. Tuesday, September 6, at
Charles R. Lyons, Ruth S.
With an income of'less than 9:30a.m. in Gallia County. In
Lyons,..to Corbett E. Ratliff,
· $3,000 annually, senior adults addition to Judge Abele, the
Juanita J . Ratliff, 17* acres,
could receive a 70 percent court is comprised of Judge
Bedford.
homestead exemption ; an Earl E. Stephenson of Portsincome of less than $5,000 mouth, and Judge Lawrence
qualifies. for a 60 percent Grey of. Athens.
exemption ; less than $7,000
The Court of 1\,ppeals·
for a 50 percent exemption directly reviews all ci1ses
and those with an income heard ortried in lower courts
he!lveen $7,000 and $10,000 in which a decision is being
could receive a 40 percent appealed. These cases may
exemption.
have been tried in Conunon
Those filing an application Pleas, Probate · or Juvenile ,
BALTIMORE (UPI)
Seven of the nine oil industry should have all necessary Municipal or County Courts,
defendants charged with income information in their and may be either civil or
engaging in a seven-year passession ·including social criminal cases.
In addition to three Gallia
conspiracy to fix prices in the · security, and qe prepared to
Mid-Atlantic region were . give their age and current County cases the court will
found guilty Tuesday.
address. For more in· also hear five cases from
Thejury, which deliberated formation, contact the county Meigs County and two from
Vinton County on this date.
for more than five days, auditor' s office.
The Fourth District Court
acquitted Crown Central
of
Appeals serves 15 counties
Petroleum · and Continental
. ·
in Southern Ohio. They are:
Oil Co. Sentencing was set for
Adams, Athens, Brown ,
Sept. 16.
Gallia,
Highland, Hocking,
Convicted were the Societv
Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs,
of Independent Gasoline
The " Pledge of Allegiance"· Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto,
Markete rs of · America, to the flag didn't appear on
Pet. per year on a
SIGMA's executive director the American scene untill892 Vinton and Washington .
year cer1ifi cafe of
Robert Cavin, Kayo Oil Co., when J;:,rancis Bellamy, staff
Ashland Oil Inc., Meadville,
member of a boys' magazine,
ROCKY ·DENIES
minimum
Petroleum Marketi ng and
"Youth's Companion," wrote
Amerada Hess Corp.deposit.
ay..--~NEW-..Y_O.RK (UP!)
it - for a--:--columbuSD"'
Forme~
Vice President
The defendants were ac·
A sub-stantial penalty is
HAVING SALE
program.
Nelson
Rockefeller
says he
cused of a 1967-74 conspiracy
Invoked on all certificate
The
Apple Grove United
never tried to thwart a 1975
accounts withdrawn prior
to eliminate price wars in the
Methodist
Women are having
to the date of maturity.
investigation . by a com·
saie of 17 billion gallons worth
yard
sale
at the church
a
mission he headed into illegal
$4 billion in the Mid-Atlantic
Thursday
and
Friday.
activities by the CIA.
area.
ASK DiSSOLUTION
An article iil the current
Debbie Grate and Michael
issue
of New York Magazine
Grate, both of Rutland, have
~
filed for dissolution of quoted unnamed sources as
marriage in Meigs County saying Rockefeller " quietly
ca lled CIA director William
Common Pleas Court.
E-RCALLED
.
Colby into his office and
' The Athens County
The
Pomeroy
ER
Squad
urged him ... not to volunteer ·
Savings &amp; loan Co.
was
called
Tuesday
at
I:
10
any
information" to a panel
296 Second St.
Pomerov, Ohio
p .m . for Mrs . Laura
appointed
by
former
Eiselstein, Osborne St., who PILOT UNHURT
President Ford to look into
had fallen . She was taken to
THREE OAKES, Mich . illegal CIA actions.
Veterans Memoriai Hospital. (UPI ) - An Ohio man
Rockefeller, who headed
At 3:30p.m. the squad trans• escaped injury Sunday when the panel, said Tuesday, "On
L-~-;-;;-;;·;·~-~-.J ported her back to her home, gusty winds forced his small the contrary, it was the
plane off an airport runway Rockefeller Commission
and into · a clump of trees, which was the first to expose
the CIA's mail intercept
police said.
Police said Robert Ash, 21, activities as well as its drug
of Delphos, Ohio, was experiments..'''
heading to Benton Harbor
from Purdue University
when his Cessna 150 ran low
EIDEDIEs
on fuel. He was attempting to
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
CLEVELAND (UPI)_ landatOselka's Airport when
Randolph Eide, 89, former
the mishap occurre4.
Ash was alone in the single- Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
engine
plane,
which chairman and president, died
apparently was undamaged. Tuesday following a brief
YOU'LL NEVER BUT QUALITY
in the incident, police said. illness.

Transfers

•

~--------- -- - - ---------------I

HOSPITAL NEWS

Racine Social Events

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

News •• in Briefs

Meigs Local schools closed
duration of teacher strike
About 110 M~igs Local the line, telllng them they
elderly and female teachers
As s ociation were 11 not helping the
crossing picket lines at Salem TeaChers '
Center Elementary School members went on strike teaching profession " by
were being harassed by ·Tuesday in a salary dispute. doing so.
An association spokesman
Meantime, it was reported
picketers.
Dowler said sheriff's said he knows of no that there was no com·
deputies were called to the harassment of teachers munication between
reporting for work. Ted representatives of the
Bibler told wire service teachers association and the
rl!porters picketers stopped board of education on
the automobiles of all · Wednesday. The board did
, had · been entering the teachers who reported · for not meet Wednesday night,
ByUDlted Press Interuatloaol
building with students since work to talk with them. about but Dowler indicated that the
joining the strike, but ~e board probably will meet this
SAUSBURY, RHODESIA - PRIME MINISTER Ian • the strike began.
that any force was evening.
denied
Smith today received a new Anglo-American "package deal"
In a statement announcing
used
.
Dowler said he was
for black majority rule in Rhodesia and, without cornmiting the closmg of the schools,
On
behalf
of
the
Meigs
reluctant
to close the 3,000himself to accepting it, said "we will give it thorough Dowler said there had been
Local
Teachers
Association,
student
district
bur the
consideration." Smith's remarks, indicating the U. s.-British an incident at one of the
Charles
A.
Downie,
danger
to
personnel
did not
peace initiative is still alive, came as he won a .stunriing schools and a personal threat
president,
said
there
were
no
warrant
keeping
schools
parliamentary election victory reported in detail on page 2 made to employes. He stated
today.
.
that he was closing all of the threats of violence at the open. Children will have to
Smith received the latest set of Anglo-American pro~ Is schools · for the safety of Sa I em Center School on make up the days the schools
· are closed at the end of the
in a 3'&gt;!1-hour meeting with U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young personnel who have been Wednesday morning .
Downie said there were 10 year.
and British Foreign Secretary David Owen. While saying .he honoring their contracts.
teachers
on the picket line at
In 1976, a teacher strike
might ~ "a couple of days to understand it corr~tly ,"
" It is with deep regret that
asked
the
here
lasted nine days, but
the
school.
They
Smith said the package contained elements he had not I am closmg schools until
other
teachers
not
to
cross
schools
were not closed.
expected: Sonle were pleasantly surprising rut others were further notice," Dowler said.
not, he said.

Meigs Local School District
classes were suspended
Wednesday for the duration
of a teacher strike because of
alleged threats to and
harassment of nonstrikers

picket lines.
District Superintendent
Charles Dowler announced
the suspension of classes
after receiving reports that
WhO Ct'Ossed

~~~~;,;if~ E~~,;.,:~~;;

•

FAIRPORT HARBOR, OHIO - HIGH WAVES early
today forced distance swimmer Bob Elfers to abandon his
attempt to swim 63 miles across Lake Erie and thereby set a
record for longest continuous swim in open water.
Elfers . was pulled from ·the water at 1:20 a. m. after
swimming about 28 miles, a Coast Guard spokesman said. ·
NASHVILLE, TENN. - COUNTRY SINGER Waylon
Jennings and an assistant to his business manager have been
ordered held for a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring
to possess and distrioote cocaine.
The 46-year.old entertainer, who has been called an
"outlaw'' f&lt;r defying traditional country music, appeared at a
probable cause hearing Wednesday wearing black boots,
jeans, a leather vest and shirt unbuttoned to his stomach. He
made no comment following the ruling bY U. S. Magistrate
Kent Sandidge Ill. ''They (prosecutors) don 't have enough to
convict, but they have enough for probably cause," Sandidge
told Elliot Sagor, me of Jennings' attorneys.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 98

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

cancellation of elective surgery in ho8pitals," Regal said. "We
aren't getting the blood. It's that simple." A critical shortage
exists in 0-positlve and all the neBative blood types, according
to Regal, who said weekly blood needs for the hospitals are
4,000pints and the prevent inventory is less than 75 percent of
what it should be- and it's being depl~ted daily . ·

SMALL WONDER THAT GROUPS grow weary of improving the lot Of Meigs
Couritians. Above, a swing set at the Jaycee mini-park in Pomeroy has been vandslized.
Remaining - and bent off the hooks that support it -is one trapeze bar. The set was
donated r~enUy to the park .

-

Board.
Patrick said a decision on
condition of the United Mine the assets will bave to be
Workersunioomayforceitto made at the board ' s
sell off some assets just to November meeting . A
meet operating expenses, location and date for that
UMW Secretary-Treasurer session have not been set.
Harry · Patrick
said "We do own some shares in
the National Bank of
Wednesday.
Patrick characterized the Washington , but that would
UMW's finareial situation as be a last resort," Patrick
"terribly serious, but not said.
·
unsolveable," following a He said the union has $1.6
controller's report presented million in cash· on hand, of
to a meeting of the union's which $1 million will have to
International
Executive - Continued on page 7 ·
JNDIANA, Pa. (tlPI) -

ELBERFELD$
ANNOUNCING

SPECIAL TRUNK SHOWING

WOMENS COATS
MR. STEVEN SCHAEFFER
of
LANSON COAT CO. ·
.and
MACKINTOSH COATS

FRIDAY, SEPT. 2nd
Mr. Schaeffer is an experienced
women's coat salesman and will
gladly help you to select the coat
style and color that's best for you.
Storm coats · wool coats - ski jackets
- real leather and suede coats -zip
out all weather coats . m.eny wool
pant coats·.

".

Crime solved
Sheriff James J . Proffitt
reported today the arrest of
two Washington County.
youths solved the early
Tuesday morning breaking
and entering of the Royal Oak
Trading Post at Five Points.
The youths admitted en·
terlng the Trading .Post by
breaking out a rear window.
After entering they stole a
radio and radio battery and
oeveral cartons of cigarettes.
The stolen items were
recovered · and returned to
Horace Karr, owner. The
youths were released to the
culltody of their perents
pending hftringa liter In the
Juvenile Court in Marietta.
In other ihetlff's depart·
mlllt activity:
Deputlea are Investigating
a report of vandalism to the.

I'

outside bulletin board at the
Eden Church at Rt. 1; Reeds·
Ville. Pastor Eidon Blake
advised that the plexlglass
front on the bulletin board
was broken out sometime between Sunday night and early ·.
Wednesday morning.
Deputies spent mollt of
wednesday Investigating
reports of vandalism to·
mailboxes, ·stop l!.lgns and
other roadsigns in the area of
the Boy Scout Camp to Eagle
Ridge to Bashan and Rain·
vow Ridge areas. Many of the
owners of the mailboJ:es have
been contacted bY deputies.
The incident is under in·
vestlgatlon. Anyone having
lmowledge bout the maUboJ:
vandalism is asked to contact
the S)Ierlff's office.

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Anita pushing
toward Texas

WASHINGTON -,. HERE ARE THE 38 STATES where
. extended unemployment benefits have been renewed by the
" Labur Department:
Alabama, Arizona,· Arkansas , Colorado, Delaware,
Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa ,
!Uinsas, Kentucky, Lo\listana, M!lfYiand, Massachusetts,
Minnesota , Mississippi, Missouri, Montana , Nebraska,
Nevada, New Hampshire, Ne'll' Mellico, North Carolina, North
Dakota, Ohio, Olkah001a, South ·earolina, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Tesas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia , Wisconsin,
Wyoming. Benefits also were restored in Puerto Rico and the
District of Columbia.

The deteriorating financial

•

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1977

· HUNTINGTON, W. VA . - THE FREEBURN Coal Co. of
Mingo County has been sold to three investors from Ohio and
Maryland, its Huntington owners announced. ·
Freeburn produced 200,000 tons of metallll(gical coal last
year, but productioo has dropped this year due to wildcat
strikes and fiQnding last April in Mingo County. The company,
which has the capacity to produce a II\illion tons a year, has
reserves of 51 billion tons and will have a new preparation
. plant in operation by 1979.

NASHVILLE, TENN . ...: THE MIDGET LEADER of the
gospel singers traveling with the Rev. Bob Harrington and
atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair says their debates on tbe
existence of God are "theatrical and money.oriented."
. "We just don't want to be part of this thing any more," said
Richard Jarvis, leader -of " Uttle Ritchie and My Brother 's
Keeper." "We doo't want our name associated with it." He
added Wednesday that Harrington and Mrs. O'Hair "ar~ doing
something that isn't right."
·
His group warms uP the audience with songs Uke
"America the Beautiful" and "Give Me That Old Time
Religion " before the debaters emerge on stage.

,

a1 y

.•.

AsK! TO WED
A marria'.ee license was
issued to ,RObert Utile, 34,
Che~hire, and Patsy Ann
Ye~uger, 22, Rt. 1, Chester.

PICKET LINES HAVE BEEN formed at all the schools in Meigs Local School District
as the teachers strike went into its second day . This is a picture of teachers ihat were on
duty at Meigs Junior High in Middleport.

the
C'olumbia
Gas
Transmission
Corp.
A
company spokesman said the
increase probably will be
reduced in March.
Public
Utilities
The
Commission of Ofiio was once
more called on by Brown to
give his case against
Columbia top priority.
The PUCO was asked by
him to order the firm to make
elaborate, monthly reports on
available gas, Brown also
wants a detailed account of
the firm's efforts to secure
additional gas supplies before
\he winter heating season.
Continued on page 7

COLUMBUS (UP!)- A 13
per cent increase in natural
gas bills, to reflect the high
cost of emergency gas
purchases, was announced
Wednesday by Columbia Gas
of Ohio, Inc.
The .rate hike was blasted
today by State Attorney
General William J . Brown,
will take effect Oct. 1.
Rates charged by Colwnbia
Gas will increase 'll cents per
thousand cubic feet to match
the increaile in wholesale
G(&gt;sts it paid for gas obtained .
during the first six months of
this year .
"Mismanagement on the

Treaty ceremonies planned
By· HELEN TIIOMAS

UPI Wblte Ho11se Reporter

W~HINGTON (UP! ) PreSident Carter is setting
aside three day~ next ~eek
for talks with Latm Amencan
,

leaders and ceremonials in·
valved in the formal signing
of the Panama Canal
treaties.
Carter is pulling out all the
st 0ps
to
dramatize

NoJI"ces, local bn"efs

The Meigs 'C hapter of
Future Farmers of America
attended the recent Meigs
County Fair. Winning grand
champion In the market hog
' udglng was Brian Windon

!rom Meigs. Also taking a hot

was Gary Hottiday . The
Meigs Chapter had a booth

carrying out "Agriculture, a
Future for America" as its

theine.
RACINE -

The , Racine

Fire Department accepted its

first

f~male

member

Tuesday night. She Is Warlda
Lyons.

The Mel ~s County Dog
Warden , Ke1th Wood . warned
that all

unlicensed

and

licensed dogs found running
loose will be Impounded and
the· owner will be dted to

county court. Section 955 .21
ORC states that failure to
register or confine dogs can
result in a fine of not les5. than
SlO nor mor.e than 'S25. ,(

.. .

hemispheric solidaritY for the
~ontroversial· agreement ,'
with some 15 to 20 Latin
American
heads
of
government and Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre
Trudeau
traveling
to
Washington for the big show
Wednesday evening.
The signing is eXJlCCted to
be nationally televised.
The President meets with
Panama's leader,Gen. Omar
Torrijos, Tuesday to discuss
the document.
The official signing of the
two treaties, which will turn
over control of the SO-mile
waterway to Panama by the
end of the century but
continue the U.S. right to

By FRANK E . GRIFFIS
BROWNSVILLE,
T .
(UPI) - Intensifying to 105.
mile-an-hour
win·ds
Hurricane Anita, the season's
first tropical storm, pushed
towards the South Texas
coast today . Hurricane
warnings were issued along
the Texas coast from Corpu~
Christi to Brownsville, Tex.
At 5 am. CDT today the
center of Anita was near
latitude 25.9 north, longitude
94.3 west or about 200 miles
east of Brownsville.
Anita had increased its
speed to 10 miles per hour and
was moving generally ·
westward. The NWS said she
should continue on this course
today.

1ve feet abov
. At the top of G
ton Bay
approximately 1,200 persons
had been advised to evacuate
their homes, said Fletcher
Hickerson , a civil defense
spokesman in Baytown,
Tex.
Hickerson said "most of the
city is not In danger," but
those in low-lying areas have
traditionally experienced
flooding and closed 'roads in
heavy· storms.. At Corpus
Christi lumber companies
were expected to do a
booming business as Ani\il
approached the coast.
"The lumber companies
are . going crazy with .

business, 1 ' said 'Mike Yuras,
a salesman at a sporting
goods store. "There won't be
enough wood in this town for
people to board up their
windows . ·
The last hurricane to hit
South Texas was Fern which
killed two persons and caused
$3ll.3 million in damage in
1971.
On A,ug. 3, 1970 Hurricane
Celia, tbe costliest storm in
the state's history, came
ashore near Corpus Christi.
· Celia, with sustained winds of
130 miles per hour and gusts
estimated at up to 180 m.p.h.,
killed 11 persons, Injured 480
others and ca.used $453
million in damages.

::::::::::::::::::':':::::::::::::':::::::::::::::;:::;::::::::::::::;::;:::::

Highest sustained winds
were 105 m .p.h and the NWS
said the · storm could
strengthened during the day .
A hurricane watch was in
effect from Corpus Christi to
Matagorda Bay. An earlier
watch was discontinued east
of Matagorda Bay to
VermiliOn Bay, Loltisiana.
The NWS satd tides would
gr.adually...mcrease. al~g the
T~xas Coast reachmg fi.ve to
etght feet above normalm the
hurricane warning area
tonight . The NWS said tiq~s
would be three to five feet
above normal from Corpus
Christi to Lake Charles, La.
and over extreme Northeast
Mexico.
Evacuation of South Padre
Island, Port Isabel and other
bay shore developments
should be completed before
nightfall.
Fringe squalls from tbe
storm reached the Texas
coast Wednesday.
Waves up to 12 feet high,
five feet abuve normal, were
breaking on the beach at Port
Isabel, the Coast Guard
reported.
The NWS recommended
evacuation of hundreds of
persons living on land up to

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday, .a chance of .
showers and turning cooler
Sat~!rday. Fair Sunday and
a chance of showers again
Momlay. Highs wUI be in
the 80s Saturday and .bi the .
l)lld 70s or tow 80s Sunday
and Monday. Lows wlll be
in the upper 80s Saturday
Through the use of
_ aDd tn the upper-50s or low•~--'v"'ol!IDteer help, about one608 by Monday.
fourth of Meigs County's
voters have already been
::~:::::::::::::::;:,:,~:::,:::,:,:::':':':':':::::':':':':':':::::: :::::::: registered, E. ·A. Wingett of
the Meigs Board of Elections
E-R CALLED
.said today .
T h ·e
M i d d 1e p o r t
Wingett pointed out that
Emergency Squad was called volunteer workers have
to the LaSalle Hotel at 6:33 p. saved thousands of dollars for
m. Wednesday for Theima Meigs County taxpayers in
Siders who was 111. She conducting the registration
refused treatment. At 9:41 program. There were 797
the fire department w.a s voters registered at the
called to a school bus stop county fair and about 1600
building on Route 7. The registered . at the recent
building was on fire and special elections in the South·
firemen extinguished the ern and Eastern Local School
blaze.
Districts. Registration has
also been taking place at the
yOU
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center.
Additional· registration
The worst hurricane in U.S. locattiogs will be set up even
history claimed 6,000 lives, though the voter registration
hitting Galveston, Tex., on does not have to be completed
Sept. 8, 1900.
until November, 1978.

R egiS
• t enng
•
of vote'.rs

proceeding

Now

Know

District court voids
student's suspension
-

administrators also
COLUMBUS - (Special) An agreement wiping out the stipulates that rules of the
suspension of a student at board regarding corporal
Southern Local School in punishment be followed .
The suit filed on beha If of
Meigs County has ended a
suit in U. S. District Court in Nance by his mother had
sought $37 ,ooo In com Columbus.
.
'The entry signed by Judge pensatory and $100,000 in
Robert L. Duncan erases punitive damages. Set·
from school records the tlement of the case also
suspension of Michael Nance, resulted in dropping the
15, on March 16, 1976.
damage claims.
The complaint filed by Ray
The settlement in the suit
brought against tl)e hoard of L. King of (Jahanna, attorney
education. a teacher. aild for Nance, charged that !he

student was suspended after
he was struck and slapped by
Mrs. Lee Lee, music teacher
who was one of the defen·
dants.
. The compiaint charged that
Nance was struck more than
20 times with a razor ~~trap u
he was being taken to the
principal's office.
Jennings Beegle, principal,
suspended the student. The
suspension was upheld by the
.board of education.
·

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