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•
0...- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 4. 1977

~County agent's corner

Late FG wins
26-23 grid game
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Fred Johnson kicked a pressure-packed 26-yard fie ld
goal with just five seconds
remaining t o lift Miam i
(Ohio ) to a :IS-23 victory over
upset-minded Dayton in a
wild college football opener
Saturday.
Miami, heavily favored ,
found itself trailing 20-10 with
less than seven minutes to
play, but rallied for a two
touchdowns within 90 seconds
to pave the way for Johnson 's
game-winning field goal.
The Miami miracle started
when Rick Hyde took a short,
underhand, shovel pass from
quarterback Larry Fortner
and dashed 85 yards lor a
touchdown to bring the
Redskins to within 20-16 with
6:10 remaining . Johnson 's
extra-point kick was wide .
Just 90 seconds later,
Miami defensive end Greg
Sullivan intercepted a
deflected B.J. Dailey pass
and raced 25 yards for a
touchdown and a 23-20
Redskin lead.
But the F1yers refused to
fold and Harmut Strecker
booted a 22-yard field goal
with 40 secmds remaining to
lift Daytm to a 23-23 tie.
Miami, then starting on its
own 29-yard-line with just 3D
seconds to go; drove inro ·
scoring position on For tner's
44-yard pass to Paul Warth
with 15 seconds remaining.
With only five seconds
remaining, the lanky IHI, 200pound J ohnson calmly kicked
a field goal from 26 yards
awa y to give Miami the :IS-23
victory.
Dayton, in conunand most
of the way, got a 46-yard
touchdown
run
fr om
Sylvester Monroe, a one-yard
TO plunge from Mike
Watterson and field goSJs of
25, 34 and 22 yards from

POMEROY - I have rece.ved several calls abo ut blackleg
in cattle thiS;J&gt;ast week.
Blarkle~: is b~ no means a new disease. Prevention of
blackleg by vaccination is highly reconunended on all young
cattle (under two years of age l. Cause : a bacterium, and the
germs are dist ributed throughou t the bod)' of diseased
animals.
Spread of the disease - Genera lly through the swallowing
of germs. The ca rcasses of dead animals represent the chief
source of infection , for spores are formed inside and outside
the body. These spores will persist indefinitely in the soil.
Symproms - Lameness is apt to be the first one noticed ,
but general sickness is soon shown by goi ng off feed,
trembling, fever of 105 and higher, last. pulse, and la bored
breathing. Along with other symptoms, swellings appear in
va rious body. muscles, chiefly in the hips, flanks , and
Shoulders. These swellings are small and pafnful at first, but

Strecker.
Miami had managed only a
27-yard field goa l by Johnson
and a five-y ard TO r un by
Mark Hunter befor e it finally
el&lt;J)Ioded for 16 points in the
final quarter ..

Ohio trio in
daring escape
in Kentucky
.
.
PARIS, Ky. (UP! ) - Three
inmates, including two
brothers from the Hillsboro,
Ohio, area, escaped from the
Bourbon County Jail late
Saturday morning after one
of them used the cell keys he
had access to a s a trusty .
Paris Police Chief Johnny
Mynear said trusty James
Bryant , 'tl , apparently freed
Bobby Cole, 22, and Joe Cole,
32, from their second-Door
cellblock and the trio escaped
through a basement furnace
room window .
The chief said there were
no indi,cations the mert stole a
car in making their getaway.
"We think they'r e on foot
and we've issued a warning to
all drivers in the area to
avoid picking up any
hitchhikers," he said. " We're
making a pretty broad search
of the area , with the help of
State Police and police from
nearby counties."
Bryant , who had less than
90 days to serve of his, jail
term, was described as :Heel·
7 and 120 pounds, with brown
hair and brown eyes. Bobby
Cole was reported to be :Hi
and 135 pounds with blond
hair and blue eyes.
Police described his
brother as 5-9 and 185 pounds
with red hair and brown eyes.
The Coles were serving a
sente nce for third-degr ee
burglary, police said.

Experiments aid
tobacco farmers

Hy CHARLES PENTECOST
FRANKFORT , Ky. (UPI )
- Kenneth C. Hockensmith ,
31, is a good example or the
modern burl ey tobacco
grower who likes to
experiment with new time
and cost-&lt;lBving methods of
growmg and preparing leaf
for market.
Last year, Hoc kensmith
and his family produced
40,000 pounds of burley
tobacco on 16 or 17 acres of
rich bluegrass farm 'land i.n
Franklin County . Most of the
tobacco sold for $1.21 per
pound.
Thanks to recent rains
which ended a summer
drought, he expects to
produce aproximately 42,000
pounds this year . Until the
rains came, he had been
watering his crop with a guntype irrigator where it was
possible.
He participated in a n
experimental program on
prepa ring tile leaf for market
with his 1976 crop co·
sponsored bY the University
of Kentucky . Under th e
experimental program, one;
•
• • • e e e • · • e • e e • • e e e e e • e third was prepared by the old
~
hand-tied method, one-third
•
II:&amp;~
• bY baling a~d one-third by the
•
\..fU
•. sheeting method, in which the
•
leal is placed in burlap bags.
Any county farmers who
{le: wished to do so could partici•
pate in the experimental
program.
The Reynolds Tobacco
•
By
it Corp. co-sponsored the
. Willis T. Leadingham • experiment in cooperation
•
Realtor
with the UK, to see if tile leaf
e
• sustained
any damage in
e
Your
n ngs. the ove rhead lights in these e quality through the sheeting
elt Is your REA LTO R rooms for it co ul d be ha rsh e or baling methods. ·
e saying that he is coming and make the room look e Hockensmith said damage
• ri ght over with a prospect. uninvit ing . Turn on every e was negligible and estimated
e You hang up the phone. light in a storage room or • the shee ting a nd ba ling
• Wha t's the next thing you closet . Go al l out in • method saved 40 per cent in
e do? Turn or ever y light in illum ina ting the kitchen • the house. Why?
the cheerier the better. • time of prepar ation for
e Because you want to g ive Brig hten up the bathroom, e market and 8 00 10 cents per
• the prospectthe best image too - but ca refully choose • pound in labor costs. All of
• · you can of the comfort, the rig ht wattage for ·bulbs .: which definitely sold him on
• beauty and li vabil ity you by the mirror, pick the • the sheetin g lind ba ling
• are offer ing . In oth er most
fla tter} ng, one .
processes.
• words, you want to sell a ~· Remember, lt s JUst as •
"As far as the experiments
• home not a house. And full Im portant to have lights on • are concerned, 1 don't think
ill um ination is the best way in the afternoon as It is for • there will be any more," he .

•

1•

••

CJ::'

-LIS

•:

•

ta-1-

•

T0 ·d a. Y :•

tHERE BE' LIGHT

•

e

eto

gi ve your home that

: " lived-in" loo k. Fur niture
• and rugs and fixtures take
on a warm glow fr om the
• proper lighting . Here are a
• few " bright'' ideas:
•
Turn or every lamp in
• the living room , bedrooms
• and fam ily room . Be

a night-t i me showing.

11 there is anything we
can do to. help you in the
field of real estate please
phon e or drop in at
LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE, 512 Second Ave. ,
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699 .
We' re here to help!

• · careful about t urni ng on • • • • • • • • • • • .. •

• said."lt's upto the individUal
• farmers now to get together
• and get something passed
• where they can strip and
• pre pare their burley fo r
• market any way they wa nt
• to ."
A business administration

1

HI SENORS and SENORITAS!
•

AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD
IS COMING TO

CROW'S

NOT FROZEN - MADE FRESH ·TO ORDER
1

TACOS • TASTADOS · BURRITOS · ENCHILADAS •
FRIJOLES • COMBINATION PLATES EAT IN CARRY-OUT OR HAVE A MEXICAN FOOD PARTY
Oth•r New Items Coming Soonf
WATCH FOR OIJR ANNOUNCEMENT

* THE FINEST AND MOST COMPLETE HOT DOG MENU
IN THIS AREA.
* niE ru:i HIGHEST QUALITY SOFT ICE CREAM TREATS.

graduate of Georgetown
(Ky .) College, he depends
mostly on his own family for
labor until it becomes time to
cut and house the leaf in the
fall . Then he hires eight to 10
extra workers weekly for a
brief period .
" It 's mostly a family
thing ," he s aid in an
interview. " I and my wife ,
my mother and lather and
father-in-law can handle it
pretty well until the time
comes to cut and hoUSt· the
crop."
Hockensmith, who bas been
growing burley since 1968,
coo cedes tbat the past four or
five years have been with
good growing seasons and
high prices.
He is particularly pleased
with the change in federal
allotment regulations from
the old acreage allotment
sys tem to . the poundage
system for each individual
crop.
" The poundage syst~m
gives you a chance to make
-up what you're lacking from
the previous year," he said.
;&lt;You've always got your
pounds . Under the old
acreage system, you never
knew how many pounds you 'd
have per acre .
"Now if I've got 5,000
pounds. more t han I'm
supposed to have, I can hold
over until the next year . If
you're light, you can increase
your poundage and make up
the next year," he added.

By JOHN C. RICE
Extenslua Aceat Alt"kullure

Seeding dead1ine
falls on Sept. 15

soon become extensive and painless to the thouch , Skin over
the center of lhe swellings eventually becomes dry and paper·
is agreed as the last of the
like . Gas in the tissues causes a peculiar cracking sound when
By Stephen D. HIbinger
the swellings are rubbed, and opening one of them usually
optimum dates . Since we
Conservalioll Servlte
reveals a dark, frothy liquid that has a peculiar sour smell.
GALI, IPOLIS
The &amp;ln't predict or control the
Muscles in the swollen areas are characterized by a metallic autumn deadline for seeding weather ,
playing
the
sheen that is easily seen. The disease is seldom seen in animals grasses and legumes is averages Is the safest game.
over two years old, but a milder form sometimes affects the almost here. The Soil Con·
When seeding hay fields or
older stock. Most of the young animals die within a day or two servatlon Se r vice and pastures can range in cost
after symptllniS appear, but lhose that ~over at any age are Cooperative Extension from S50 to $150 per acre, a
inunune tn blackleg for life afterward. The formation of gas Service mutually agree that lost seeding due to late
con.tinues even after death and blackleg deaths are noted for approximately September 15 planting can be a costly way
excessive bloating that causes legs to stick straight out and is a final date for establishing to learn a lesson.
forces bloody foam from the natural body openings . Blood ne w forage seedings.
The seeding deadline apclots in a normal manner and in this way is different from that
This established date is no plies to grassed waterways,
of anthrax cases. Outbreaks are COJlllll()llellt when stock is on magic number, but research too . Newly constructed
pasture,·but may occur at any time of the
are
very
and experience have shown waterways
Treatment : Contact your veterinarian.
that on average years, a·later s usceptible to extensive
Prevention : VaccinatiOil with bacterins has been proven seeding has ·a high risk of erosion. If the seeding fails ,
as very effective lor immunizing s~&amp;eptible cattle. However, winter killing the new pia nts. even more erosion is
for seven to ten days after vaccination animals are more A late. or extra mild winter probable.
susceptible to infection, •o losses may continue for at least ten season win permit a late
II you are interested in
days alter vaccination . Since they contain no living ge rms, the seeding to survive. In some building a waterway be sure
bacterins cannot cause the disease . ·
cases, though, even a Sep- that eithe.r construction and
location conditions will detennine the best time for tember 1· 15 seeding is seeding are completed by
vaccination, but in general, lour months is consider ed the best dama ged or r uined by a mid-September or ma ke
· age. However , if an ar ea is badly infected, it will be advisa~le harsh winter.
pla ns to wait until spring to
to vaccinate calves at a bout one month of age when immumty
The ·averages lie with a start coll!!truction.
given by antibodies in the colostrum has been lost. Such timely seeding. September 15
animals should then be revaccinated at weaning time because
the colostrum immunity may prevent proper action of he
bacterin. II an outbreak occurs, it will be desirable to
vaccinate all cattle less than two years old , with the exception
of calves less than one month old. Since mixed infections are
likely to occur, the use of a mixed bacterin gives extra
insurance. Whenever possible, vaccinated animals should be FUNNY BUSINESS
By Roger Bollen
separated from teh herd and kept on dry feed for at least ten
days following vaccination.
•
When animals die of blackleg, carcasses are best
CfFICER ...
· destroyed by burning. As an altenative, they should be buried
l::)QJlT
~IUE
deeply in quicklime. Such destruction is desirable because
infectioo is distributed throughout the body at the time of
death. Spores are highly resistant ro heat and cold, and may
persist in the soil for years. In a ddition, they can be carried by
dogs, wild animals, birds, and floods to infect a large area if
infected carcasses a re not completely destroyed . Small
patches of ground can be made fairly·safe by burning a heavy
layer of straw on them. It is believed that infe cted pastures
may eventually become clean if a program of vaccination is
followed ever y year to prevent the reintroduction of germs
from carcasses.

Neither side budging in Meigs Local
Progress toward a settlement is at an apparent standstlll
in the teachen strike which began last Tuesday In the Meigs
Local School District.
There was me discussion session between teacher and board
representatives Saturday and no sessions after that time, it
was reported.
Meantime, football practice and band practices are being
held to prepare for Friday night's opening football game which
apparently ls to be held, despite the closed schools.

Otarles Downie, president of the Meigs Local Teachers
Assn ., today issued the following update on the situation between the teachers and the board from the teachers' point or
view :
" Meigs Local Teachers' Association President Charles
Downie reports:
" ... The si,tuation remains unchanged between teachers
and the board of education. At a supposed ne~otiation sessioh

called by Superintendent Charles Dowler over the weekend , he association repeats their willingness to negoti8te at any time.
stated that nothing bad changed. The board's position remains
" Although OAPSE ( non-eertlfled personnel ) have settled
the same, even though they have admitted to errors in their their differences with the Board or Education, they have
calculations (of money on hand).
pledged their support to the Teachers' Association untll the
"Although the $8,1100 figure is the same one that caused strike is settled. This means that they will not cross teacher
teachers to strike, the board's position is to negotiate picket lines and schools will remain closed."
downward from that figure .
Downie urges coocerned citizens of Meigs local School
" Downie stated that the responsibtlity is still firmly on the District to call the board and make their views known .
Board of Education to call a negotiations meeting . The

•

at y

year.

A't.J Ctt\OJ\
IOHy'

YA

Nle A WARNINESr

Pollution Control Act
explained in Pomeroy

F

OKA'/. IF I CATCH YC()
~
~

~

SPEED IN~ MAIN I I'LL
61VE 'lt() A~E:I&lt;. 11 CKET.

Roush ; two Meigs Soil lind 1
ilyBOY!lRu m
Conservation Service
Water Conservation District ~
POMEROY - Ohio En- superv isors
Dave ~
vironment Prot ection Agency Gloeckner and Roy Miller, 0
(O.E .P .A.) representatives Mayor of Middleport - Fred l
Clare Puchy and Tina J en· . Hpffman.
e
nings explained "Section 208"
Other local citizens at·
of the 1972 Federa l Water tending included : Dave Fox,
Pollution Control Act at a Glenn Enslen, Mary HobWednesday night meeting in stetter, Robert Mattox, Reid ,....,-.;:
the Meigs Ag ri cult ure Young, Leota Youing, Judy ...._._
Confe r ence
Room
in Rutha nd TaJilltly Ruth.
Pomeroy.
About 20 ~rsonsheardhow . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,fut ure
water
quality
requirements might aifect
them , Meigs County, and the
entire nation. The goal of the
Act is to make all waters of
this country clean enough to
preserve fish and wildlife and
permit swimming by 1983.
Puchy pointed out that the
1983 date may have to be
extended due to the technical
and economical problems
that have to be over come.
Main Store and Mechanic St. Warehouse
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The.
Discussion included how
· Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday 9:30
Colwnbus school board is "Section · 208" wauld affect
con sidering placing an 8.7 villages, r urallandusers, the
to. p.m. Friday 9:30 to 8 p.m.
·
mill operating ·Ievey on the mining industry and even·
Make Elberfelds your shopping center for wearing
November ballot to raise · tually everyone. A local
apparel for you and your familY and furnishings for your
$76.8 million in revenue over committee of people in·
th e next three years .
home.
terested in the Shade River,
Superintendent Joseph L. Leading Creek and direct
. Davis said Friday the extra Ohio River tributaries In
money was needed In help Meigs. Co unty was formed
meet inflation , restore cut with membership open to
program and meet special anyone.
1977 ALBANY COMMUNITY FAIR
education requiiements and
An el ection of officers voted
desegregation ,
·PROGRAM Jo'OR TilE WEEK
David Wright of Rutland as
President, Roy Miller of
SEPTEMBER 8-9-10.11, 1977
Chester .a s Vice President,
Gary ASpin of Dexter as
•
recording secretary and
,THURSDAY, SEP1'E!11BER 8, 1977
Boyd Ruth of Chester as
Gates Open - 4 :00P.M.
·
reporting secr'e tary (works
Hams ter Sweepstakes .. .... ......... ....................... .... ..... ............ . 5 :00 P.M.
with news media ).
Local Church Program ... ....... . ... .. .. .... ......... .... 4 :00 P .M. _ 6:00 P.M.
Next meeting will· be
Alexander Band Concert .. .. .......... ........................ 6:00P.M.•. 7:00 P .M.
Wednesday, 8 p .m . Sep·
Tractor Pulling Contes t and P owder Puff Pulling Contest .... 7 :00 P.M.
tember 21 at same location.
Gospel Ambassadors ................... ................ ..... 8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P .M.
Open to the public. Purpose of
meeting is to determine how
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 1977
Gates Open - 12 Noon
·
.
'
to get elected officials to
represent Meigs County at
Judg ing -- Fruit, Vegetables , Baking, Sewing Art
regional "208" meetings.
Flowers and Hay ....... ... ................... ........... :........:......... .. 1 ·OO p M
Public officials attenidng
Bicycle &amp; Tricycle Parade &amp; Races - Fair Ground Only .::: 3
P:M:
were all three Meigs Co.
Hamster Sweepstakes ............................ .. .................... ... : .......... 5 :00 P.M
Commissi011ers - Henry
Les Young and Harts Brothers ... .... ,.. .. ............ ...... .... 6 ·00 - 7•30 p M.
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Billy Walker Show .......... .......... .. ........ .................. .. .. 8:00 - 10 ;00 P :M:
~

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Closed All Day Monday Sept. 5th

8.7 mill levy

CiLWBORVAY

is considered

s

By United Pres• Internadooal
m E NATIONWlDE muscular
dystrophy telethon, sponl!Ored by comedian J erry Lewis Labor
Day weekend, netted more than $26 mllllon in pledges- well
above last year's $21.7 million.
This year's telethon, which ran for 21 \i hours, gained a
record $26,M1,490 in pledges . The te~thon is to raise money for
research into the causes aoo cures of muscular dystrophy.
LAS VEGAS, NEV. -

PASADENA, CALIF - A "FLAWLESS" LAUNCH sent
the Voyager I spacecraft hurtling towards Jupiter and Satur n
today and scientists said there were no problems such as those
that plagued its sister ship and delayed this flight for lour
days.
"Voyager I deployed all booms and turned on various
scientific instruments as planned and on schedule without any
of the problems that plagued the Voyager 2," a spokesman at
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory said. The unmanned
spacecraft, carrying 254 pounds of cameras and scientific
measuring equipment, rode into the sky btop a Titan Centaur
rocket that blasted off from Cape Canaveral, Fla ., at 8:56a.m .
EDT Monday.
0

TRAVELERS HEADING HOME FROM LABOR DAY
tiips clogged the nation 's roadways and added steadily to the
week(!lld traffic death toll , but the three-day bollday period
wail much safer than Labor Day 1976 when 526 Jiersons were
,killed.
It appeared the final death toll would be close to - and
possibly short of - the lower end of the National Safety
Council's projection. The council had estimated between 470
and 570persons would die in traffic accidents from 6 p.m . local
time Friday to midnight Monday.
NAIROBI, KENYA - A UGANDAN MU..ITARY tribunal
bas sentenced 12 high-ranking officials and businessmen to be
executed with the very guns they had planned to use to
overthrow President !eli Amin. The · sentence, announced
Monday by Radio Kampala, ended a sensational treason case
that provoked li public uproar when Uganda's· Anglican
archbishop was Implicated in the plot and later died under
mysterious circumstances.
The radio Kampala broadcast said the head of the milil!Jry
tribunal that heard the case ordered the 12 condemned men
shot to death with the weapons they allegedly smuggled into
the country. Two other defendants were given IS-year prison
lenDs .

•

All mmers·
on.the job
CHARLESTON,
W.Va .
(UPI) - For the first time
since a wildcat mine strike
erupted 10 10 weeks ago in
protest of cutbacks in miners'
health benefits, all mines in
West Virginia we,re reported
working today .
West
Virginia
Coal
Association spokesman Dan
Fields Said some operations
were reported with light
crews but all mines were

open.
As of Friday the lingering
wildcat strike idled about
8,400 miners West Virginia
miners, all of them in United
Mine Workers rn,trict 17.
Vernon Maasey, the union's
International
Executive
Board member from District
17, had predicted during the
weekend that the strike would
end today. Massey said all of
the district's 104 locals voted
to return to work.
" There's been a lot of
confusion in the mine
workers, " Massey said .
"Now I feel our people have
realized they must return to

work."

board members from West
Virginia
and
eastern
Kentucky ;
and
UMW
President Arnold Miller 's
negotiating team were to
meet . Friday with Joseph
Brennan, president of the
Bitliminous Coal Operators
Association, to try to resolve
the conflict wer cutbacks in
union health benefits that
provoked the strike.
However, District ,17 vice
president Cecil Roberts said
he thought hunger pangs had
more to do with ending the
strike than helated efforts by
UMW officials to pressure the
industry into diverting money
into the ailing health benefit
funds.
•:J guess it's really been
just starved out, to be honest
about it," he said.
The 1G-week walkol'\ has
cost the union's henefit funds
$23 million in · company
contributions based on coal
production. Miners have lost
$73 mllllon in wages, while
the state of West Virginia has
lost $14 million In coal-related
taxes.

Massey said he. three other

;oo

·
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1977
Gates Open - 8:00A.M.
Cattle Show and Judging .......................................: ..... ........... :30 A M
Pet _Show _and Parade ...... ,........................... ... ........................... 9 ·OO AM.
J~~1or Fa1r Tractor Pu!ling,Contest ............ :.......... ....... ..... ..... 9;00 A .M:
S . ep Show and Judgmg ........................ __ " ........................ 10·00 AM
·
Also PeeWee Show
·.
·
"
.' .. · · .
She~p Sh~ring Demonstration .,.. ................ 11 :00 A.M. - 12:00 Noon
J~1or F~1r. Garden Tractor Pulling Contest ..... ...... ...... ...... 12 :00 Noon
Children s Matinee ..... .. ............. ,.,................................. 1 :00 - 4
p M
Mul~ Jumping Contest - Juniors and Adults .... 12 Noon - 3 ;00 P:M:
Jumor Fair Parade .. ......... ................ ........ .......... ..................... : •. 3
pM
~unior Fair Demonstrations .... ... ................ ............... 3 :00 - 5
P:M:
amster Sweepstakes .. ........................: .................. ,... , ............. 5:00 P.M.
W. 0 . U. ~· -T.V. Show ............................... .. ............... 5 :00 - 7:00 P.M.
Pony Pullin&amp;' Contest ..... .. .. .... ................. ............... ......... .......... 6 :00 p .M.
Sonnenschein, German iAmerican Music .................... 6 :30 - 8:30 P.M.
S9uare Dance- Frog and The Greenhorns .... 9:00 P.M. - 12 midnight
Fireworks ..................... ...... .............................. ... .............. ........ 10 :SO P.M.

Non-£ertified workers

.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED
Lula
Westfa ll, Long Bottom;
Hannah Greenlee , Mid·
dleport ; Cheryl Haning ,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Jeffrey
Cullier, Otis Knight, Kathy
Lawrence, Tina Pierce,
Linda Dye, Robert Dye, BiUy
Brewer; Dorothy Brewer,
Mar y Russell.

DRIVE-THRU WINDOW.
DOWN THE MIDDLE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) When Vonley Jordan Jr.'s
wile of · two years said
goodbye, she also said she
wanted what was due her
under law: half of everything
they had.
Jordan, 25, took her
literally and this week took a
saw to their 14-foot outboard
dividing it evenly from bow to
stem.
!

s

·oo
·oo
;oo

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1977
Gates OPen - 8:00A.M.
Parade Through Town ......................................................... .. . 12:00 Noon
(Parade MUST move promptly at 12 :00 noon)
ijorse Show ................................ ........................................ ........ 1·00 p M

.

Curfew,

all nl&amp;"lits of the fall"- 1 :00 A.M.

RIDES and ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL ,.AGES

..

granted pay increase
EAST MEIGS · - !'ion·
certified e!llployes were
awilrded a 3.7 percent pay
increaae when the Eastern
Local School District Board
of Education met In recessed
session Monday night.
It WIIB reported that the .
salary increale.lB required by
law In that non-certified
employes mll8t be given the
same percentage Increase
that teaching employes were
given last spring.
'nle board hired Edgar •
Pulllna u the new high school
custodian and Eastern
alum111 Dennis Eichinger, a
graduate of Ohio State
Unlvenlty, as physical
education,
health
and
driver's education inltrul:tor.
'nle board postponed the

r-a

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I

VOL XXVIII .NO. 100

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN GENTS

Justice Brennan
stays Kent Gym
· KENT, Ohio (UPI ) -Con"l am quite unhappy," c o uld
co m menc e
struction on the proposed Go lding told a
news construction prior to the
gymnasiwn at Kent State conference today when students return to campus so
University n ea~ the s ite informed of Brennan's that we could get back to the
educating
where four students were action. " I concede more or business of
shot to death was stopped less cheerfully the right of students and put this issue
again today, this time by a any group to follow any legal · behind us," he said.
U.S. Supreme Court justice. procedure to accomplish its
Parisi said he would file the
KSU · President-designate ends, wha tever they may be. university's side of the arguBrage Golding said he was Thus far it seems to me this ment before Brennan or the
" quite unhappy " with the has been strictly a legal set of court on· Thursday.
court action.
maneuvers. All we can do is
Anthony Walsh, counsel lor
Attorneys for the May 4th wait and be patient .
the May 4th Coalition, said
Coalition, which is opposing
" I am no lawyer and I may Brennan's decision was a
the construction, filed be wrong, but I don'tthink the temporary victory for his
requests today to stop the Supreme Court can tell us side.
construction in both the U.S. wh;;ther the gym can be built
" We're very pleased that
Supreme Court and the 6th on that site," he said. "I see we have still a further
. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals no constitutio11al issue opportunity to press our
involved here.''
in Cincinnati.
lawsuit," he said.
About 250 opponents of the
Stephen Par isi, an attorney
The double-barreled courtaction came ., alter U.S. for the university , ~d he gym marched Monday to
Surpeme Court Justice Potter \V a s
' ' e x t r e m e I y Golding's campus home .and
Stewart refused Saturday to disappointed" by Brennan's posted a, " people's injunction
issue ·an order . halting decision.
against the university." The
the
" We were hopeful that we placard was studded with
construction ' of
controversial $6 million
"moVe the ~ " bumper
facility, which is scheduled to
stickers.
be constructed near where
the students were shot ro
death
by
National
Guardsmen on May 4, 1970,
during an anti-war demonstration.
Attorneys for the Coalition ·
petitoned U.S. Supreme QJurt
Justice William Brennan,
who granted the request for
The long weekend activity
the stay. Opponents of the . CUFTON, w. Va. - Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
of
Middleport
log.
of Sheriff James J .
gym want the site declared a
said
today
William
Zuspan,
Proffitt's
office was more
National Memorial by the
Mason,
whose
bid
to
build
ll
than
enough
to keep every
.U .S. Department of the
coal
loading
facility
on
the
deputy
available
busy around
Interior.
Brennan's order may only Ohio River ·here was turned the clock.
Here's how it went:
halt construction for a short down , has filed a notice of
A teletype from Riverside
. time . He said the stay was appeal.
The appeal has been made County 'Sheriff's Office,
granted until he or the court
isaues a further order alter to the West ·virginia Air Riverside, Calif., reported
university attorneys file a Pollution Control Com· two Rutland area youths
response to the request to halt mission of which Carl G. were being held in a Juvenile
Hall
there.
Beard, II is director. It was Detention
construllon.
· Just minutes before Bren- Beard who ruled against Charges on file in the Meigs
nan's
decision,
gym Zuspan last month following . County Juvenile Court
opponents, who frantically an . open hearing in the charging these boys with
High
School delinquency. AllegedlY they
have been asking several Wahama
gymnasium
where
opinions
stole a 1974 van, several
courts to halt the work, also
asked the 6th U.S. Circuit were taken · from residents in handguns, a TV set, and
Court of Appeals in Middleport, Ohio , directly several stereo and record
Cincinnati to temporarily across from the proposed players. Juvenile Officer Carl
construction, and from Hysell said the parents of one
stop construction.
The gym opponents had lost Mason and Clifton in West hlld left lor California to
return the juveniles to Meigs
their case in Cincinnati two Virginia.
weeks ago, but tnday they
Beard ruled Mr. Zuspan County.
Sunday morning at 12:51
filed . a . "petition for had failed to include
rehearing, " . claiming the adequate measures for .dust a.m. sheriff~ s deputies took a
c i r c u I t
c o u ·r t control in his plans provided stolen auto report from Roger
" misapprehended" their · to the commission, to the U. Stewart, Rt. 1, Middleport.
earlier court arguments.
S. Corjls of Engineers, and In The car, a 1912 Ford Torino 4gym
opponents his own testlmbny ~t the door, was recovered at apThe
proximately 2:15 a .m . near
pleaded with the circuit court hearing before Beard.
to stop gym .construction witil
A new hearing will be
a rehearing is held, but Bren- seheduled before the West
nan's decision made such a Virginia Air Pollution Control
step unnecessary, at least for Commission. Its date. will be
The
Middleport
the time being.
announced.
Emergency
Squad was called
Mayor Hoffman parout
six
times
over the holiday
ticipated in the hearing
weekend.
before Beard, and the earlier
At 8:24a.m. Monday, Alma
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
one conducted by the Hun·
Mlller
was taken from her
Thursday through
tlngton district, Corps of
home
on
S. Third Ave. to
Saturday, fair Thursday ·Engineers. His statements
and a ebance af showers
made in both hearings Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 3:51 p.m . Monday, Mary
Friday and Saturday.
summarized people's ob·
Sue
Durst and Jan Durst,
Highs wUI be In the 70o or
jections to coal being loaded
low 80s and lows wUI be In across the river without Pomeroy, w~re treated at the
the 50s or low 80&amp;.
adequate protection from dirt scene of an accident on Route
7.
and dust.
At 2 p.m. Monday, Debbie
•
&gt;
'

Zuspan
appeals
ruling

Marion Crawford,
members of the Meigs County Humane Society, are
pictured with the SQCiety' s animal shelter !DOCkup which
will be on display at "Yesteryear," the observance being
held at the Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy on
Saturday, Sept. 17. The society will also sell authentic
bandcrafted jewelry made by the Zuni and Navajo
Indians at Scottsdale, Ariz. Proceeds wlll go to the Shelter
fund~

Sheri
the ··Hobson Br id ge. The
owner of the car, who knew
the persoQs that took the car,
refused to file charges .
Sheriff Proffitt said the case
is closed.
At 5: 3D p.m. Saturday,
Michael Pierce, 18, Rt. 1,
.M iddleport , was arrested
following a short chase out
New 'Lima Road. · Pierce,
o~raling ' a motorcycle, has
been charged and jailed for
operating a cycle · without
cycle endorsement, reckless
operation , and willfully
eluding an officer after his
signal to stop. Pierce will
appear later this week before·
Meigs County Court Judge
Robert Buck.
Also arrested at ap·
proximately 4:50 a. m .
Monday after the auto he was
driving struck wall on
Mulberry Ave.,' was Franklin
Giles, 20, Rt, 4, Pomeroy,
charged with OWl · and
contributing
to
the
delinquency of a minor by
furnishing beer to the minor.
He is being held in jail and

E-R goes on six missions

hiring of a secretary and
assistant to the board of
education clerk.
Shelia Fields was hired as a
full time bus driver. Em·
played as asSistant bus
James W. Farmer; 61,
drivers were Alan Holter,
Clark Lees, Mitchell Holley Middleport, was fatally in·
and Charles Estep.
jured In a traffic accident at
Due to the cash analysis to 2:10a.m . Sunday on SR 124,
be conducted In the district one and three tentha miles
bY the state auditor's office "~Jutheast of Pomeroy. .
The Gallia-Melgs Post
the.next regular meeting was
moved from Sept. 13 to Sept. State Highway Patrol said
Fanner, traveling east, afier
20.
Attending were board loslnc control of his car, hit a
members Doug Bissell, guardrail, then a telephone·
Done! Larkins, Bob Davis pole, before going over a
and Clifford Lqngenette, steep embankment. Farmer
county
superintendent was pronoun~ed dead at the
Robert Bowen; Principal scene by Dr. Ray Pickens,
Clark Lees, . Clerk Eloise Meigs County Coroner, Death ,
Boaton,
and
district ~waa due to a crushed chest
'
superintendent, John Riebel. and fractured neck.

log ull
''

will appear In Meigs County
Court.
Saturday morning deputies
took a report from Roger
Clark, Chester, thathe had a
CB set stolen from his auto
that had been parked near the
Vista Station at Five Points.
The l!Ccident is under in·
vestigailon.
A Rt. I Portland woman
has been cited for failing to
report an l!Ccident that
resulted in damage to other
property. Carol Mullins was
cited for hiptsklp in leaving
an accident on SR 124 at
approximately 3:20 a .m .
Sunday. Mrs. Mullins said
while traveling east her tire
went flat, she lost control,
skidded, and went off the
road and struck and broke off
a telephone pole. She was not
injured, and left the scene
with a passing motorist. She
will appear Friday in Meigs

~

.

.

'

·

Governor ~sks
support/or

Pomeroy E-R Caner program
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Gov.
called 3 times Jame
s A. Rhodes urges

Three calls were answered
Blair was taken to Veterans over the holiday weekend by
Memorial Hospital, and at the Pomeroy Emergency
2:45 a.m. the squad took Clay Squad:
At 7:03 p.m . Satdrday for
Burns, 648 ·S. Second Ave., to
Avanell
Bass, taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Veterans
Memorial
with head
Saturday at 2:22 p.m . Ben
lacerations;
at
2:33
a .m .
Davidson, Walnut St., was
removed
to
Veterans Sunday io the scene of a
Memorial Hospital and at traffic accident in Miners4:41 p.m ., Glen Ledsome, ville where Eileen Swan was
Elizabeth, W. Va ., injured in injured, to VMH, and at 8:06
an accident on Route 7 and p.m. Sunday, for Tom
·County Road 5, was taken to Gasper, Success road, taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
VMH.

and Jonathan N. Ledsome, A. Malone, 22, Waterloo, off
age 8, were also injured. They the roadway. There was
were .removed to Veterans minor da!llage.
No one was injured in an
Memoria!' Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency accident at 11 :40 a .m.
Squad. There was moderate Saturday on SR 7, north of
Gallipolis. The patrol said an
damage.
l.edsome was charged with auto operated by Mabel
Harrison, 18, Bidwell, falling
stop sign violation.
Joseph P . Riee , 19, Camp to stop, hit a car driven by
Lyevene, N. C. was cited for Robert E . Walding, 18,
left of center following an .Racine, in the rear. The
accident at 4:40 p .m . impact knocked the Walding
Saturday on SR 141, at the car into a vehicle operated by
junction to SR 233.
Paul D. Swan, 22, · Rio
The patrol said Rice's car Grande. .There was minor
damage. Harrison was cited
went left of tenter forcing a
vehicle driven by Klmllerly for failure to stop within .the

.

Co unty Court,
.
Monday at 3:50 p.m. ,
deputies investigated an
accicjent on SR 7 below
Hobson that resulted In heavy
damage to a house owned by
F reda Clark, Rt. I, Mid·
dleport .
The driver of an auto, Mary
Sue Durst, 18, of 1 Cave St.,
Pomeroy, said she was north·
bound, attempting. to pass
another auto, when her auto
struck a water puddle in the
southbollnd-lane causing her
to lose control. The car,
owned by her father, Willard
Durst, went offthe road to the
right and struck the corner of
the Clark house.
The driver suffered minor
injuries but was no.t im·
mediately treated. There was
no arrest.

61-year-old Middleport man killed in crash
.A passenger in his car,
Eileen D.. Swan, 53, Syracuse,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for
treatment of a broken arm .
Three persons were injured
in an accident at 4:35 p.m.
Saturday on SR 7, one mile
south or SR 124.
The patrol said an auto
operated by Glenn . L. Led·
some, 46, Elizabeth, W, Va.
pulled into the path of a
vehicle driven by Timothy E.
Gillespie, 17, Gallipolis. '
Ledsome had minor injuries
· while two ·passengers In his
car, Wilma J. Ledsome, 45,

'

assured clear distance.
At 1:05 p.m. Sunday on the
Eno-Vinton Rd. one mile
south of SR 160, cars driven
by Hazel L. Nickels, 35,
Vinton, and Terry 0 . Russell,
20, Vinton, collided on a
curve. Russell was Cited for
having no license plates.
John T. Fisher, 59, Racine,
waB cited for driving left of
center following an accident
at 11 :35 a.m . Sunday on CR
26, two tenths of a mile east of
SR 7.
The patrol said Fisher's car
. struck a vehicle operated by
'I
(Contlnu~ on page 13)

,

support of President Cllrter's
recent programs, as he's
cancerned about unemployed
youth, Ohio large cities
deterioration imil the auto
and steel industry prospects.
"Our inner cities are pock·
marked with empty, idle
factories ," he said in a Labor
Day state ment. " These
facilities which once provided
hundreds of thousands of
productive jobs have moved
out, taking the jobs to other
locations ...
" The j~s are gone , but the
people remain without oppor"tunity. They are idle, not of
their own choosing , but .
beca use no industries are
moving in to replace those
which have migrated.".
Rhodes urged support for
President Carter's recently
publicized reconunendatlons
on revitalizing inner cities,
suggestions that Rhodes has
also championed. They
in clude Investment tax
credits, increased levels of
industrial revenue bonding
capabilities and other
fmancial incentives.
The governor also urged
quick action by the Congress
and Ohio General Assembly
to " provide the employment
opportunities for the young
peopl~ who now live from day
to day without hQpe.''

'

... .

�1- Tbe DIIUy Senti~!. Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday,Sept. 6,1971

Contents of
note secret
gunshot wound in the chest.
Jo Ann Terry, 28, of
Charlotte, underwent surgery
at the hospital Mooday night
and was described in "very
critical" condition with a
gunshot wound in the
abdomen. Treated and
released at Presbyterian for
a gunshot wound in the leg
was
15-year-old Larry
Eugene Smith of Charlotte.
The foorth victim, Joseph
Walker Jr., 29, of Charlotte,
was taken to Memorial
Hospital in Charlotte for
treatment of a gunshot woWld
in the foot.
Witnesses at the scene told
police two of the victims were
playing baseball when shot
and a third victim was
standing on the sidelines.
Ira Simpson said the first
thing he saw was the man on
the pitchers' mound fall. "We
thought he was playing. The
guy started shooting again
and everybody hit the deck.
He must have shot 12 times.
After he paused, I got up and
started ruming for cover."

By JERKY M1l'CEIElL
CHARLOTl'E. N.C. (UP!)
-Police refuse to divulge the
cootents of a handwritten
note loond on the body of a
white youth who killed one
man and woonded three other
peraons in a 12-&lt;lbot atiack on
200 blacks at a Labor Day
church pimic.
The Identity of the 17-yearold,'who sllot himself to death
with a 36-30 rifle after the
attack Monday, also was
being withheld pending a
search for the youth's
parents.
Officers hoped the parents
could provide some reason
for the young man's
apparently unprovoked
attack on the blacks. He wore
a swastika on a red armband
oo his green work shirt. The
note was found In a pocket of
his khaki pants.
"From the way he was
dressed, he seemed In be
diloorganized," said U . C.L.
Owens of the Mecklenburg
Coonty Police Department.
" U he had been part of an
Louie Davis, a church
(Nazi) organization, I think
member,
said he heard three
he would have had spit-shined
wh~
by his head.
bullets
boots and a uniform."
"They
sizzled,"
he said. "The
The attack tnok place about
man
on
the
pitcher's
mound
4:30 p.m . Monday when the
youth parked his Volkswagen was hit and fell to the ground.
near the small, rural New All the other players fell In
Jonesville AME Zion Church, the ground or started running
walked out on a ballfield and Inward the fellowship hall."
fired 12 shots in quick
Slll:cession before turning the
gun on himself.
"It """ like Vietnam all
over again. He started DAN DOING FINE
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
shooting and I hit the dirt.
Something like this shouldn't (UP!) -Veteran actnr Dan
happen in America," said one . Dailey was up and about
young man who witnessed the Monday, saying he was
recovering well from hip
shooting.
surgery.
"It:s a shocking thing,"
"I feel fine - I've always
said Howard Johnson, .a
fine," said .Dailey' in a
felt
member of the church for 15
years. "We haven't had any· telephone interview.
Dailey, 63, broke his right
problems around here. This Is
hip when he stumbled and fell
a peaceful community."
Tbe dead church member during the third act of a
waa identified as Roosevelt matinee performance of Neil
Davis, 29, of Charlotte. A Simon's "The Odd Couple" at
spokesman at Presbyterian the Village Dinner Theater in
H011Pital said he died of a Morrisville last month.

HEALTH
lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

Painful trapped air
By Lawrence E. Lamb ,M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB several weeks ago my
· daug1Jter, age 14, suffered a
spontaneous pneumothorax.
The doctor prescribed complete bed rest for several
days and something for pain.
Her pain was of short duration.
Her X rays show no signs of
this now. What causes this
condition? Is another attack
likely? Will she feel the ef·
feels of this condition for a
long period of time
-shortness of breath, etc.? Is
there anything that can be
dooe tn prevent this from
happening again? The doctor
described this attack as
slight. Does this mean she
can completely recover from
the attack?
DEAR READER - Your
daughter has probably
alreadly
completely
recovered.
A pneumothorax means air
trapped between the lungs
and chest wall. This usually
happens when a small blister·
like area on the lungs ruptures and air leaks .out of the
lung into the space .between
the lungs and the rib cage.
This potential space is usual·
ly occupied with the air-filled
eJ:pllllded lungs. As air accumulates between the leaky
lung and the chest wall the
lung collapses, like a leaky Inner tube. The more the lung is
collapsed the less lung ~ue
is available for respiration. If
the amount or air trapped is
small the person may be
unaware of its presence.
While the IWlg is collapsed
the area where the bleb
(blister) broke heals and
becomes airtight. Then the
lung gradually expands as
the trapped aic between the
lung and ribe is absorbed. It
is nature's natural "tire pat·
ching" mechanism.
I am sending you the
Jjealth Letter number 2-4,
Keeping Your Lungs Fit, to
give you a more complete
concept ol how your lungs
work. Othetll who want this
infonnation can send 50 cents
with a lonl. stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it to

"

•

P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y., 10019.
As it explains, the lungs expand or contract in response
to the expansion and contraction of the chest space itself.
· To rest a lung, patients with
tuberculosis used to have aliInjected into the same space
.where your daughter col·
lected air with her
pneumothorax. That should
give you an idea that it is not
so dangerous . Of course, if
complications arise such as
bleeding, then things can be
different.
They can recur, particularly if there are more blebs on
the lung that can burst and induce a leak, Unless there are
a lot of them and · tbe
pneumothorax .recurs frequently it is best in most
cases to just treat. the
pneumothorax when it occurs
or support the patient WJtil
nature accomplishes its heal·
ing process. In a small
number of cases it is
sometimes worthwhile to
surgicaUy remove a IWig segment that contains a lot of
blebs as might occur at the
upper tip of the lungs.
. X rays show the presence
or absence of accumulated
air between the lung and the
chest wall. The ncrmal X
rays of your daughter simply
prove that the ruptured bleb
has healed and the air has
been absorbed. There is no
reason for any disability or
shortness of breath once this
has occurred.
I would add only one
precaution . During · a
pneumothoral!: a per$on
should avoid going to altitude
or air travel. The trapped air
will expand and further collspse a lung or even put
pressure on the heart and
other structures in the center
of the chest that forms a par·
tition between the right and
left lungs.
Dr. Lamb answers
representative letters of
general interest .in his col·
umn. ·write to him in care of
this newspaper, P.O. fl9x
1551, !Uidio City Station, New
York.N ..Y. 10019.

r------------------------------------------1
Link to lqponaire's disease sought

By ROSEMARY ARMAO

COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UP!)
Microbiologists and doctors are combing
through records and interviewing
relations In find a link that might coMect
five Central Ohio women and help solve
the mystery of Legionnaire's Disease, a
bacterial infection they have all caught.
One of the women, Catherine M. McCoy
of Columbus, is dead of the pnemonia-like
illness. Another woman recovered and
three more are listed in serious conditions
under treatment at Riverside Hospital in
the worst outbreak of the disease since it
killed 29 and felled 151 other Pennsylvania
American Legionnaires meeting last
summer In Philadelphia.
Four of the f'ranldin County cases are
confirmed Legionnaire's. Test results in
the fifth case have not yet been received
from the federal Center for Disease
Control in Atlanta.
Center investigators and state health
offici'!ls have converged on the Columbus
area, eager for clues about the cause and
spread · of the baffling disease.
uwe are. very determined about this,"
said a health department spokesman. He

Con~ess
By GENE BERNHARDT

WASHINGTON (UPI) Congress returns Wednesday
from a monthlong summer
recess In a crowded calendar,
a burgeoning scandal, a
Panama Canal controversy
and enough contentious
issues · to keep House and
Senate in session until
January.
But they hope to adjourn in
'
mid-October.
Several pressing matters
·must be acted on as soon as
possible. A 1974 law says the
budget resolution must be in
effect by Sept. 15 for the new
fiscal year which starts
Oct.!., and that is the major
item of business for both
bodies In the first week hack .
At least three hearings

said huspital officials throughoot the area
have been asked to report current and
recent cases that may have been
Ulldete;;-ted I .egionnaires'.
No new cases had been WK:overed by
Monday.
Health officials, who knew aboot the
outbreak Friday but did rot release details
Ulltil Sunday, have downplayed worries
that the five cases signal an outbreak.
Ohio Health Director John Ackerman
described it as "a very limited problem,"
and pointed out that no one even knew the
normal inciden&lt;!e of the rare disease,
much less what constituted an epidemic.
Riverside doctors will not release the
victims' names. Ackennan said, "We are
trying In be considerate ... we don't think
they are a source of infection and -we don't .
want them treated like lepers."
Since Legionnaires' Disease hit in
Philadelphia, 30 sporadic cases have been
recorded around the country. The bacterium, that can kill but is also treatable
with antibiotics is detected early enough,
has also been implicated in mysterious
and deadly outbreaks in 1968 in
Washington and In 1971-in Pontisc, Mich.

of
"illegalities" their
investigators had found.
Heads of state or other
highranking representatives
from 24 Latin American
countries were arriving in
Washington, meanwhile, for
gala .ceremonies attendant to
the signing of the two new
Panama Canal treaties,

which fa&lt;!e a lnugh fight for
Senate ratification.
Sen. James Allen, D-Ala.,
chairman of the Senate
Judi~iary separation of
powers subcommittee, will
open hearings on the treaties
Thursday with former Gov.
Ronald Reagan, a foe of tbe
pact, as the first witness.
All but four of the 13
regular appropriations bills
needed
to
keep
the
government operating in the
new fiscal year have been
sent In the White House.
Under the 1974 budget law,
work on the remaining four
must be completed by Sept.
12.
The bills contain emotional
issues which leaders have so

Brown moves to block rate
increase asked by GasCo
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio
Attnrney General William J.
Brown tnok action today to
block part of a 13 per cent
rate hi~e by Cqlumbia Gas of
Ohio because it would forre
consumers to pay for
"mismanagement and bad
business decisions" on the
part of the utility.
Brown sent his assistants In
Washington tnday where they
will ask the f'ederal Power
Commission to allow Brown
to intervene in the case.
Brown said they will ask the
FPC to convene a rormal
hearing on the rate increase
to determine whether it is
.
necessary.
The attorney general said
he is prepared to · present

evidence to Show the rate
increase will only reimburse
the utility company for errors
it made last winter.
In his petition, Brown noted
that a portion of the planned
rate hike is·. necessary
becaui;e of "mismanagement
and bad business deciaions on
the part of Columbia Gas.' ;
He is asking the FPC In
disapprove that portion of the
increase which would pay for
last winter's emergency gas
purchases.
Brown said the emergency
gas purchases would not have
been necessary if Columbia
had an adequate supply of
stnred natural gas. He said
much of the hardship caused
by the gas shortage can be

linked to mistakes by
Columbia.
"The consumers of Ohio
are now being forced In pay
extra for that emergency
gas," Brown said; "In Other
words, we'r.e now paying for
Columbia's mistakes, I don't
think this gas company, or
any other business, should be
allowed In profit from their
miStakes at the expense of

Ute conswners."
If the increase takes effect
Oct.
I,
the
average
residential consumer's gas
bill will be $1.25 more each
month. During the winter
heating season, the increase
will mean an extra $8 month
tacked onto the consumer's
bills, Brown said.

BOLSHOI BE'ITY
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Betty Ford will be honored by
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
at a tribute dinner Sept. 17
before she leaves for Russia
where she will be the oncamera hostess for the
Bolshoi Ballet.
Mrs. Ford will host the
Bolshoi's performance of
Tchaikovsky's
"Nutcracker," which will be shown on ·
· NBC in the United States
during
the
Christmas
holidays.

billy clubs."
The Guild is a New York
based
organization
of
lawyers, law students, legal
workero and jail house
lawyers which was founded in
1937, the release said.
Guild Vice President John
Quigley said the group's
information comes from its
own members and others who
observed events al the Statehouse in Columbus.

''I;Jemonstrators were

about to leave when police
began picking out mdividuals
In assault," Quigley said.
"Anti-Klan penple were the
only ones beaten by police,"
said Quigley. "Three had tn
beJlospitalized. Not a single
pro-Klan person was Injured
by police."
"On · the
contrary,
Columbus police and Ohio
State troopers gave the Klan
excellent protection," said
Quigley.

Berrys World

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Editor
r
Published dally excel)(. S.turdaf
by The (jolo VaUey PubliBhi!lg Conjany, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45169. Business Offlc' Phone 99'.iJ.
2156. Editorial Ph~ 992-2157.

Sewnd class postage P9ki al
Pomeroy, Ohio.
•
1

".. ·. AND/ do hereby declare our rights to s8id
r.ana/ in perpetuity!"
--- - · .. - --- ··---

~--·-

•

were very bad, you could get
alotoCC.vorable comment oo
unims," he said. '"But we're
paying the price oC success ...
it's pretty hard to get people
excited about the problems of
a worker who's doing all right
himself.''
In Michigan, Gov. William
Milliken made his annual
trek across the five-mile-long
Mackinac bridge linking the
state's two peninsulas. With
27 500 hikers following him,
he' made the trip in 64 minutes
- 20 minutes oH the pace he

Recovery of
$24.2 million
being sought
CLEVELAND ( UP!)
The
Federal
Deposit
Insurance Corp. nas asked
the t.J.S. District Court In
order 19 former officers and

far been WJable In resolve government
financed
abortions,
Bl
bomber
-construction money, and
whether In ban aid to nations
not meeting recognized
human rights standards.
Speaker Thomas O'Neill
has pledged In push through
the House this year the bill In
increase the minimum wage
from its current $2.30 an hour
to $2.65 an hour and Include
automatic alinual increases.
The measure faces heavy
GOP oppositi9n.
O'Neill and Byrd also are
under heavy pressure from
consumer groups to call up
the Consumer Protection
Agency bill, which has spotty
Democratic
and
over w he I min g G 0 P
opposition in both bodies and
cool&lt;! prompt a filibuster in
the Senate.
The question of halting
construction of new nuclear
fuel plants must also be
resolved in order In get
funding for the Energy
Research and ~elopment
Administration
programs.
The fight centers oo · the
Clinch River,. Tenn., plant
nuclear proponents want
funded and Carter said
should be shut down.
The same ERDA bill has
authorization tn develop the
neutron bomb, the new
. weapon that could kill ~pie
but leave objects like
buildings or tanks Intact.
Carter asked approval of the
project in the event he
decides In carry it out' after
an in-depth study.

Leftists
threaten
By JOSEPH B. FLEMING

. !975, 'w return $24.2 million.
The FDIC, acting as
receiver for the bank, said it
wants to recover losses
brough~on by the negligence
of the 19 defendants. FDIC
atlnrney James Smith said
the agency charged the losses
stemmed from millions of
dollars in loans that exceeded
legal lending limits.
Those named as defendants
included Richard Palmer,
former president and chief
executive officer of the bailk;
Louis Kastelic, former vice
president. and Elliot Guten·plan, a former director .
Palmer, Kastelic and Gutenplan previously were indicted
on criminal charges in the
bank failure.
· others named were: Mario
BoiMrdi, Willis Boyer· Jr.,
Peter Chernicky, Bruce
f'elder, Robert Hexter,
·Robert Madison , John
Marquis, r.t~chael McKenna,
Harvey Mierke Jr., Ronald
Peltz, Bernard Plechaty,
John Ritter, Richard Schulz,
John Stewart Jr ., John
Sytsma and Leon Worley.

NO ANSWERS
ROME (UP!) -The wife of
dissident Soviet physicist
Andrei D. Sakharov came In
Italy Monday for eye
surgery,
but
ducked
reporters' questions about
her husband.
"He is still having many
big problems, but I absolutely
cannot talk about this," said
Yelena Sakharov.

set in 1111.
In Columbus, Ohio, a
hoStile crowd o( 1,500 pelted
Ku K!wt K)ansmen with pop
cans and eggs at an antibasing rally.
The protesters chanted,
"Power of the worlr.ers
cannot be beat. Let the blood
of the Klan flow in the

streel"

Carlton captures ®
BASEBAlL
•
20th WID, 11-1

himself.
"It was like Vietnam aU
over again," said one of the
picknickers.
Nothing kept people off tbe
highways
in
Southern
California,
where
an
estimated 1.5 million beaded
for the beaches and for Baja
California, Mexico. They
jammed freeways from
Ventura County to Los
Angeles and clogged custnms
booths for hours along the
Mexican border.
Nationwide, where the National
Safety
Council
estimated motorists would
drive 13.5 billion miles over
the weekend, the traditional
highway death lnll appeared
In be falling short of the
council estimate of 470 In 570,
but more than 400 were
known dead In traffic by
midnight and the toll was
rising slowly.
In the South, the holiday
yielded to the last gasp of
Hurricane Babe, which
spawned tnrnadoes and \llllnderstnrms as it moved inland
across Louisiana, Florida
and Mississippi.
No deaths were reported, .
but an elementary school was
demolished by a tornado in
Pass Christian, Miss., and
another twister wrecked
several
homes
in
Ponchatnula, La.
Thunderstorms also
rumbled over New York City,
beac))-goers
were
but
undaunted. An estimated
600,000 flocked to Coney
Island Monday and officials
said the weekend's total
beach traffic hit about 2.2
million.

BONN, West Germany
(UP!) - Leftist terrorists
threaten In execute a top
West German Industrialist
tnday unless tbe leader of the
notorious
Baader-Meinhof
urban guerrilla band is freed
from prison.
Hanns Martin Schleyer was
kidnaped In broad daylight
Monday by five gunmen, who
ambushed
three . cars
carrying Schleyer and his
bodyguards, spraying the
caravan with submachinegun fire that killed four
bodyguards.
An anonymous telephone
call to the Bild Zeitung
newspaper said Schleyer, 62,
would be executed at 12: 15
p.m. EDT today unless
Andreas Baader, serving a
life priaon term for murder,
is freed along with other
terrorists.
A second anonymous call to
the DPA news agency said
the Red Anny Faction, the
' official name of the BaaderMeinhoi
band,
was
responsible for the abduction.
The gang has claimed
Seven new employees have
responsibility for several begun work with the ERDA
political slayings
and Expansion, Comp!lttee of the
kidoappings iii pasl years. It Ohio
Valley
Regional
is named after Baader ·and Development
Commission
Ulriche Meinhof, who pollee (OVRDC), five of them Wider
said hanged herself while a recently approved Comserving a prison term for prehensive EmploYment &amp;
trying In break Baader out of Traning Act (CETA) Title VI
jail.
grant. They are: Debbie
Chancellor Helmut Treber from Waverly In Pllr.e
Schmidt immediately County; Theresa Mantel
ordered security agenciee on from Wheeleraburg In Setoto
an all-out lltnt 'for Schleyer, County; Harry Dealr.lns of
who is chairman of the ,KinnJklnnlck in Roil County;
f'ederation of German John Triplett from Wellltoo
Industry and the ·Federation In la'*- ColdJ; llld Pial
or , German Employers ·Seaman of Peeblellll Mama
Associations, and a member Coumy.
of the board of.Daimler-Benz,
Jac:lr.llmltb, Caoidh eter II
makers of Mercedes-Benz. the' Exparsion C1 • W 1,

den leader; each month all
dens meet as a pack led by a
Cubmaster. Boys start as
Bobcats and earn Wolf, Bear,
Webelos, and Arrow of Light
awards.
The Scout program is for
boys who have completed
fifth grade or are II through
17 y,e ars old. The program is
designed
to
develop
character, mental and
physical
fitness,
and
citizenship training through
vigorous activities. Troops,
consisting of patrols with
elected leaders, meet weekly
under the leadership of a
Scoutmaster. Scouts may
earn Tenderfoot, Second ·
C1 ass, F'II'st C1 ass, Sta r,
e,
and Eagle progress awards.
The Tri-state Area Council
. is a member agency of the
Cabell-Wayne United FUnd,
the Lawrence County Ohio
United Fund, and t~ Boyd
County Community Chest.

Ent

Phil a
Pittsbgh
Chicilgo
St . Louis
Montreal

"

New York

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Steve Carltnn seems In be
an unknown quantity and
often is curt with both fans
and the press.
He has now put tngether .
consecutive 20-game seasons
with Monday's 11-1 victory
over. the Pittsburgh Pirates,
and IS the first pitcher In the
majors to reach the 211-game
plateau this year - but that
hasn't made him any more
approachable. .
"I have a goal for this
season," Carlton informed a
large gathering after his win .
" But I'm not gonna teD you
what .it is."
He was gingerly prodded to
elaborate.
" I'd just rather not tell
you," ht snapped.
Carlino scattered eight hits
over eight Innings, picking up
ninth-inning help from
Warren Brusstar. He also
belted his third home run of
the year to go along with Jay
Johnstnne 's two-nm homer
and Richie Hebner's two-run
single. .
In the opener, John Cande!aria and Rich Gossage collabor a ted on a seven-hitter as
the Pirates took a 3-1
decision. Dave Parker
•

transactwns
Philadelph ia

the

retirement

-

cars.

llid ' 11111 -

•c

.,

stroked an RBI double, Duffy
Oyer cracked a solo homer
and Fernando Gonzalez
drove in an insurance run
with a ground out. The split
enabled the Phils In maintain
· a seven-game lead over the
Bucs in the NL. East.
Later, Carlton said, most
affably, "I'm real happy
about the 20th win. I feel that
I've been a consistent pitcher
this year. But the big thing
now is to win the division
race."
"What can you say about
Carlton?" asked Pirates'
Manager Chuck Tanner,
shaking
his . head
in
amazement.
That's a very good
question .
In other National League
action, Chicago got by St .
Louis, 4-2, Montreal nipped
New York, 4·3, Atlanta
blanked San f'ranclsco, ~.
San Diego stymied Los
Angeles, 1~. and Houston
ripped Cincinnati, $-1.
Cubs 4; ·Cardinals 2:
Bill Buckner stroked a two:
run homer and a sacrifice fly
and Larry Biittner added a
solo homer as Dave Roberts
won his first game as a Cub.
Expos 4, Mets 3:
Tony Perez and Ellis
Valentine cracked homers In
hand Jerry Koosman his 18th
' loss of the season. Lee
Mazzil.Ji's two-run homer

Announced

of

c.Qt:Der.b.ti:k .e,I _Clark.

veteran

Saturday's

Ohio College
back
Autry · Seamon
and
Football Schedule
linebacker Amos Martin from
United Pr~ss l.n t,rnational
Minnesota for an undisclosed Miami (Fla.) iii Ohio St.
tuture .draft. choice.
Tampa Bay Traded. a Ball St. at Toledo
future draft choice to Miami tor Bowling Green at Grand
corn~rback Jerris White and Valley (Mich .)
gave up another undisclosed Illinois St. at Kent St. ·
draft selection to Oakland tor NW Louisiana at Cincinnati
offensive guard Jeff Winans .
Ohio University at Marshall
Dayton at Buller
Akron at Morehead (Ky) St.
Franklin (Ind . ) at Ashland
Seattle

Acquired defensi ve

Morris

·-~:;·

Brown

&lt;Ga.}

·at

Central St .
·
Youngstown Sl . at VIllanova
Heidelberg at Ohio Wesleyan

Bluffton at. Adrian (Mich .)
at Case Western

Hiram

.USED CARS

1972 CHEV.

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Wednesday
Mixed. League
Aug. 31, 1977 ·
Standings
Pfs.
Team
6
Eagles Club
.
6
Smith Nelson,Motor Co .
Nelson Drug Co. ·
6

IMPAlA H.T.

Zlde's Sport Shop

1973 NOVA SS COUPE

'1995

Young',s Super Mkt .

4 Dr., air .

Tenth Framers

'1395

Russ

·!Carr &amp; Vanlandt
't'Du'll Uk• 0.... Quellty
lp'fayof Doing Buslnon·

GMAC FINANCING
W2-5342

Pomeroy

0,0... Ev•••fl91 'tiU:OG

'T•ts p.m. S•t.

Phelps 187 ; Richard Ru$Sell
173, Helen Phelps 183 ; John
Tyree 169, Pat Carson 172.
" High series ..,- Richard
Russell 465, Helen Phelps
491; To01 Smith 4.52, Pat
Carsor 473; Larry Dugan 450,
Betty Sm lth 426.
Team high game - Eagles
Club 640.
Team high series- E;agles
Club 1751.

THIS WEEK'S

September 4th
thru

September lOth

French Fries
,stop in
and Register
for the 1951
Kaiser to be
given away
September 15,
1977.
'

TRY OUR

borne countlell, acting aa
liaison between local groupe
and the Expanalon Com-

STILl THE 8EST
CHICKEN piNNER
OFFERED ANYWHERE.

mittee. They will ailo
coordlnaU pla•IDII eftorta ol .
the eJIPllllllaa ••bcwpmlttW

' 2
2
2

High individual game
Carson 183, Helt?n

ur

Development SpeclaUsts' will
work from offices In the five
Impact
area
counties
surrounding the expanding
Piketon atnmic energy plant.
They will begin by contactinl
community leaders and
aervlce agenclea in · tbeir

with victory at Akron

Natian.al Leavue

Special events
in scout roundup·
Cub Scout packs and Scout
troops in this area will invite
boys not ill the Scouting
programs to join them as part
of the aMual fall · mem·
bership program o! the Tri·
State Araea CoWK:il, Boy
Scouts of America.
The Wonderful World of
Scouting Roundup will In·
elude Special programs In
local ,.schools, special pack
and troop open houses,
patches for boy recruiters
phis others for both boy and
adult leaders.
·
Directing the membership
program are Executive
Board members David N.
Harris of
Huntington,
Richard B. Meyers of
Chesapeake, and Neil A.
Barlett of Ashland.
~e Cub Scout program is
fanuly-centered. Boys who
have completed second grade
or 8_ through 10 years old are
eligtble. They meet wo:ekly as
a den under supervision of a

•

1¥" United Press lnt•rnatianal

"

Imperial Wizard Dale
Reusch taunted back, "Come
on, throw some more ... give
me an egg right In the
kisser .11
Eight persons - five o(
them police .officers - were
injured in ,the melee and and
five were arrested.
. In Charlotte, N.C., a lone
rifleman,
sporting
an
armband with a swastllca,
opened fire at a church's
Labor Day picnic attended by
about 200 blacks.
The young man killed one
man and wounded three other
persons - one critically before turning tbe gun on

Wadkins eants $lOO,ooQ...

Mator League STandings

valley group at work

ERe. Ed.

Ti.m~~~nel.

R. Cl.ARK
UDiled Pres• lnleroatloaal
Labor Day was 800,000
people at Coney Island, 1.5
million .., the beaches of
Southern California and an
uncounted swarm on the
nation's hi8hways.
But it also was sniper fire in
North Carolina, violence at a
Ku Klux Klan rally in Ohio
and mighty winds along the
Gulf Coast where Hurricane
breathed
her
Babe
destructive last.
AFUIO President George
Meany marked the day by
calling President Carter "a
friend in the White House,
despite the fact that he's not
perhaps doing all the things
we think he should do."
In a Labor Day interview
on CBS Morning News,
Meany also said success has
cost the union movement
SQme of its support.
"When working conditions

New specialists with

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTEDTOTIIE '
lN'IEII&gt;m OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL

N41tional advertisifli representative Ward - Griffith Comp~~ny,
Inc., BoltineJli and Gallag.her Oiv.,
757 Third Ave., New York, N. y;.
10017.
Sut.cription rates: Delivered b)'. ·
carrier where MVailable 75 cents per
wteil. By Motor Rout.e where c.rriet
aervicf: nol available, One lnOOth.
!3-Z. By mooD In Ohio ond W. Va.,
One Yur, $22.00j Sir. munths,
tll.50; Three months, ,7.00;
ElSewhere QUO year; SiX moot.he:
tll.SO; Three · months, $7 .50.
Sub!K:r!PUon price lncludes Sundlly

By KENNE111

execution

Violence at KKK rally said provoked
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
National Lawyers Guild said
today the violence at the
Labor Day Ku Klux Klan
rally at the state Capitol in
which eight persons were
injured and 10 arrested was
" police provoked."
The Guild, in a statement
released prior to a news
conference in Columbus,
charged that Columbus police
"attacked peaceful anti-Klan
demonstrators ·and beat
many of them savagely with

Labor Day bad it all

.
t
b
t
expec s usy au umn :~"';~c~ra~:":;e~~~

were planned this week ,
beginning today, on the
banking and
financial
transactions of Budget
Director Bert Lance.
Chai..-man
Abraham
Ribicoff and ranking GOP
member Charles Percy of the
Senate Government Affairs
·eommittee went In the White
asking
House Sunday,
President Carter In request
Lance's resignation because

,_The Daily Sentinei,Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday ,Sept. 6,1977

with OVBDC."
Ia fdd(dan, two clerical
peOple were aelped to the
Waverly EKJIIDIIOD Committie aft~~», , . , .,.., Carol

paced 1 e Mets.
Braves &amp;, Gianl:8 0:
Gary Matthews knocked in
two runs with an RBI double
and a sacrifi&lt;!e fly and Dick
Ruthven fired a three-hitter
((! raise his record to &amp;-10. .

Padres I, Dudgers 0:
Rookie Bob Owchinko
hurled a two-hitter and Steve
Garvey's throwing error
allowed Gene Richards to
score !rom second base with
the game's only run.

Today's

W. L PC1.
8&lt; 52 .618
78 60 .565
73 62 .5 ..1
73 6&lt; .533
62 7&lt; .456
53 8J .390

GB

7
101/l
11 1/ )
22
31

West
W. L Pet . GB
LOS Ang
83 5.-4 .606
Cincl
73 65 .529 10112
Houston
67 70 .o48q 16
San Fran
63 75 ,457 20 1h
San Diego
62 77 .A-46 22
Atlanta
51 86 .372 :)2
Monday's A esults
Plttsburgh ·J, Phil a 1, lst
·Phlla 11 , P ittsburgh , 1, 2nd
Montre~l -4, New York 3
Chicago 4, st. Louis 2
Atlanta 4, San Francisco 0
Houston 5, Cincinnati 1
San Diego 1. Los Angeles 0
Todayo's Probable Pitchers

CAll Times EDT)

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Edllnr

Montreal (Holdsworth 2-0) at
New York (To&lt;Jd 2-4). 2 :05p .m .
St . Louis (Underwood 7-10) at
Chicago (Krukow 8-12 ), 2: 30

p.m.

Los Angeles {RhOden 16-Bl at
San Diego (Jones 6-11 L A p .m .
Philadelphia (Lonborg 10-3)
at Pittsburgh (FteUss 10-12 },
7:35p .m.
,
San Francisco {Knepper 7-7)
at Atlanta (Solomon 4-4 or

3-lOL 7:35p.m .
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Last time he was here with the Capr11
Cincinnati (Capllla 6-6) at
Cincinnati Reds, Tom Seaver made a point of going over In Houston {Richard 14-10). 8: 35
steve Henderson and asking him how everything was coming p.m .
Wednesday's Games
along.
Montreal at Ch i cago
"How ya doing?" Seaver greeted Henderson, whom he had Ph iladelphi a at New York.,
never met or spoken with before. "How are they treating night
Sl. Louis at Pittsburgh, night
you?"
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night
11
Fran at Clnclnnati, n ight
Everything's fine," Henderson told him. 11 l'm very San
San Di ego al Houston, night
happy ."
So are the Mets. In a season where they have almost nothing
else to be happy about, the lastplace Mets are completely
Amorlcan League
ecstatic over their shy but affable 24-year-old left fielder, one
East
Pel . GB
of thefourplayers they gotfor Seaver from the Reds.
New York
~ 5 ~ .6Q6
Prom the first day he reported to the Mets in midJWJe (he Boslon
80 56 .588 2112
4
heard about the deal on tbe radio while showering after a ball g;:~~~te
~~ .578
.48"5 l 61iz
game In Indianapolis) , Henderson began winning over Clevelnd
65 73 .471 l81fz
27
everybody, not only by the natural way he played ball but also *'~~~nto
l~ :~ .413
. 336 3611-2
by the natural way he did everything else.
west
"It's funny In sit here and listen In them interview him,"
w L Pet. GB
says third baseman Lenny Randle, who has the Shea Stadium ~~~.g~y
~;
s•;,
locker next In Henderson. "You can't help hear his answers Mlnn .
76 62 .ss 1 . ,,,
and they're all so ... so ... innocent."
~:fi~s
~~
:~~:
That 's the perfect word, innocent.
Oakland
s• " .400 21
ss 84 .396 28
Steve Henderson Is so unspoiled and does everything so Seattle
·
f
th
·
ho
·
1
·
Monday's Results
II
natura y, nunus any uss, at Wit ut even consciOUS y trymg Det 8. Bait 7. lsi. 11 Inns .
he invariably invites comparison with Willie Mays, when he Baltimore Sr Detro it o, 2nd
'
the. obvi ous par all e1 Chicago
Oa~land 8, Ch icago 7, 1st
. t came up t o th e G'1ants . Mays·· not 1ces
f1rs
2• Oakland 1. 2nd
hintself.
·
Cleveland 4, New York 3, 1st
"We had a doubleheader last month in Pittsburgh," says CBolevlelan8dTS, New Yoork 4, 2nd
· h.lS best not •·
s on 6,. Toronto
oronto o,. 2nd
lsi
Mets ' Manager J oe Torre, who •s d omg
w rw) h
Boston
Henderson, "and the day before that I tnld him I was gonna · 'Minn esota s. Texas •
· him
. • one of those tw o games off • He sat'd ok ay. It must Mi
Kansas
City 8. Sealtle 4
glve
lwaukee 6, California s
have bothered him a litUe, though, because he came In me
Today's Probable Pitchers
later !ooklng troublo;&lt;J. 'Did I do "!!Y~ing In sho~,you I need a
New &lt;~~~r~ 1 (~fd~o0: 1 8.41 at
rest ? he asked me, because if! did, Ill cbange.
Cleveland (Eckersley 13-11 1,
Torre allayed Henderson's fears. In the game that evening, 7:3BoO Pt.m. (L
T
. th e d oubleeaerm"'tc
h d . h' h therooteou
k'
If'1e lderwas ~ (Darr0-0)
s on , 7ee
6·31 . at oron 1o
preced mg
: 30p.m
k! have gotten one game off, the Pirates murdered the Mets, 9Balllmore (Flanagan 10-101 at
I and Henderson was removed in the sixth inning
Delroot !Arroyo 7-141. 8 p.m.
•
.
.
.
··
Texas ( Blyleven lJ-11)
"That was your rest," Torre said, playmg him In both games Mlnnesot a 1Go Iiz 16-81, 8:30
the following day . Henderson was tickled. He didn't want In P · ~ansos City !Hassler 8.51 ••
nuss a ball game.
Seattle (Honeycutt o.OJ. 10 :35
Altethof~lhdeAndre D~thwsohn,EMontrfreal's thexcbeitin~ ~ll-l;ll'ofunthd P·'21i;c:ago . (Knapp HI al
cen r 1e r, was WI t e xpos om e gmrung o e oakland · (Blue 13·161: 10 :30
season and seemingly has the National League Rookie of the p.m.
Year Award pretty much locked up, Henderson is pushing him . Kansa":~~r:sa~al;!t~~~n~~ht
The Mets' &amp;-I, 187-pound speedster never has had any kind of Ch Jcago at Oakland, n lght
real slump since coming up to the big leagues from Milwaukee al Callforn la, night
Texas at Minnesota. nioht
Indianapolis, where he was hitting .323. In 74 games with the Ball at Detroit.~, twl -nJght
Mets, he's hitting .314 with 48 RBI and 11 homers. Five New York al Cfeveland , night
different times he has won games with his hits.
Boston at Toronto , night
Heroics of this type have led In his being caUed Stevie
Wonder. Henderson says if penple wish to call him that, it's
Final
okay with him .
lnterriational League
United Press International
For all the accolades he has rec;&lt;,ived, Steve Henderson still
W L Pel. GB
Is doing what he can In keep both feet on the ground.
x- Pawtuckel 80 60 .571
"!like New York," he says, "but I've never really gone .out y-Charlestor 78 62 .557 2 .
since I've been here. After a ball game, I go back In lbe place y.Tidewater 73 67 ·.521 6
where I'm living and watch TV. What do I watch? Anything y. Richmond 71 69 .507 9
Syracuse
70 70 .500 10
that's on.
Rochester
67 73 .479 13
"Everybody has been nice In me here. They were nice to me Columbus
65 75 .46A 15
in the Cincinnati organization, !no, but over here I'll get a Toledo
56 84 .400 24 112
x-cllnched 1st 'place
cbance to play everyday and that's what I like."
y.ciJnched playoff spot
Henderson bites inln the ham sandwich he's eating and
Monday's Results
washes it down with some Gatorade.
Charle'ston 5, Columbus 3
"People ask me how I feel about the deal," he says. "I tell Toledo 7, Syracuse 2
them I feel good being in the major leagues, have no com- Richmond 2, Tidewater 1
plaints and was real surprised being involved in a trade for Rochester 6, Pawtucket 5
someone like Tom Seaver."

r:

n :m

n ,;

at

Umpire requests Foli be
suspended rest of year
ATLANTA
(UP!)
Umpire Bruce Froemming
says- he will recommend In
National League President
Chub Feeney that shortstop
Tim Foli of San Francisco be
suspended for the rest of the
season.
·
"We are dealing with a guy
who doesn't belong on the
ballfield," said Froemming,
after Foli was thrown out of
Monday night's g81.11e for
scuffling with Braves' pitcher
Dick Ruthven.
Foli· .and Ruthven, who
pitched a three-hitter in
Atlanta 's W victnry ·over the
Giants, got inln an argument
w~n Foli grounded out ,In
end the seventh Inning. Foll
exchanged words with
Ruthven and the players
began
scuffling ,
Both
benches emptied ontn the
field .
.
All four umpires blamed
Foli for the incident.
"I saw the fight coming,"
said Froemming. "l tnld tbeir·
coach, Tom Haller, that when

it starts, I'm going to
recommend In the league Foli
be suspended for the rest of
the year.
" He was cussing the
pitcher, yelling obscenities
from the fifth inning on. He
was mad because the pitcher
was. getting him out, because
he wouldn't throw · him a
fastball."
'•It's always him," said
umpire Bill Williams. "I'd
say he's involved in
something like this a
minimum of five times a
year, and that's being conser-

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPD - Mari Juno, with
Andres Stafford riding, tnok
the second running of the
$10,900 Thomas Edison
Handicap at Thistledown
Monday, covering the six
furlongs in .1:11 U.
. Marl Juno, in from Finger
Lakes, earned first money of
$6,540 and paid $38 to win.
Salesian was second an.d
Nadurra third in the race for
3-year-olds.
The
daily
double
combination of Windy Dawn
( I) and F'loorlen (2) paid
$144.
Attendance was 8,373 and
the handle $893,182.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
LaMy Wadkins is a positive
thinker .
Even when Tom Weiskopf
waa making a record run at
his lead Monday during the
early part of the final round
of the $300,000 World Series of
Golf, Wadkins wasn't really
worried .
" It was fun just being a
part of it," said Wadkins, who
withstood a record tying 29 by
Weiskopf on the front side of
the par 70 Firestone Country
Club South Course and then
went on In win the $100,000
first prize by five shots.
"1 knew if I could play my
game I'd be okay," Wadkins
said. "I would never pull for
anyone to hit a bad shot. I just
try to play better."
Wadkins, who had a five
shot lead over Weiskopl when
the two teed off for the final
round, found himself in a tie
after Weiskopf rolled in his
sixth birdie of the roUnd on
the eighth hole.
But Wadkins rose In the
occasion, birdied the ninth,
and had things his way from
then on.
"I really wanted that birdie
on the ninth," said Wadkins,

•

College football play picks
up this weekend with 16 Ohio
teams in action lncl!!!ling_,
Ohio State which hosts~
of f'lorida In one of the
Buckeyes' earliest season
openers in recent history.
In ·a slim schedule
Saturday, Miami of Ohio
edged Dayton 26-23, Akron
defeated Wayne State 24-14
and Central State beat
Lincoln University ~Ohio Stat&lt;l Coach Woody
Hayes is optimistic about his
Buckeye football squad going
into the Miami game.
The OSU Red ~quad ,
sparked
by
junior
quarterback Rod Gerald,
soundly defeated the White
reserves 38-7 in the final
intrasquad scrimmage
Saturday after!loon.
.
"Generally speaking, I'd
·h avetosay.that our offense is
better off than a year ago,
both running and passing,"
said Hayes. "And moving the
hall, that's probably the best
that our White team has done
since I've heen here. Of
course, that's always relative
since it's against our
defense."
Gerald completed several
passes; including a '40-yard

Dtnaey of WellltoD. and
ltree BradJ ol a.ID(!Whe.

Locust Street

r

'1'12-5248

Middleport, o.

,

toss to Greg Stnrer which set
Miami Coach Dick Crum ·
up a touchdown and a 1&amp;- was stunned by the nwnber of
yarder to Bill Jaco 1o set up points his team surrendered.
another one. Gerald also ran Daytnn had not been able In
for three touchdowns, the last score more than nine points
bemg a 31-yard keeper on the on the Redskinsin the prior 13 ·
option play.
years.
Hayes said he was pleased . "We gotta tighten our
the Buckeyes escaped serious defense," c,um admitted.
injuries in the ''dress rehear- " We missed too many
sal."
tackles."
·
"We're most fJJrturuite on
The Miami coach was .
that count," Hayes said. pleased with the last quarter ·
"These things (scrinunages) rally, the season after tile ·
are necessary but they Redskins were seldom able to
always scare me a litUe. It's rally from an early deficit
good to get through it without and finished with a 3-8 record . .
anything seriou:; happening.''
" We didn't quit," Crum ·
Dayton,
which
has said. " We got up off the deck ·
deemphasized football and no · to win. Last year we would ;
longer awards scho)arships, have quit."
outplayed heavily favored
In games this week Akron
Miami nearly all the way will be at Morehead, Ky.,
S!lturday and had a 211-10 lead. ; State College; Ball State will
with les.&lt;; than seven minutes be at Toledo, Bluffton will be
to go.
at Adrian, Mich., .College,
Miami suddenly scored two Bowling
Green
State
touchdowns and added a field University at Grand Valley, ·,
goal to down the upset Mich., College and Daytnn at : :
minded F'lyers in both te8(11S' BuUer.
.
.
opening season game.
Also, f'ranklin, Ind. will be
"I think our kids deserved at Ashland, Heidelberg will
the Win " Mid Dayton Coach be at Ohio Wesleyan, Hiram·
Rick Carter. " I think we at Case Western, Illinois
outplayed Miami. Our kids State at Kent State and
reaDy distinguished themsel- Morris Brown, Ga., at
ves."
· Central St.a te.

Rio runners ·perfonn
'

in Amanda Road Run
The Rio Grande Cross
Country team ran in the third
annual Amanda road run.
This was a warm-up meet
for the Redmen harriers as
no team scores were kept.
The course was five miles
In length and very flat . The
winner of the race was the
defending champion Dan
Sekarek of Newark, Ohio who
tnured the course in 25 :14.
Archie Mundy, a Rio Grande
College Senior, finished
second In the meet with a
time of 25:30.
Four other Rio Grande
Cross Country runners
finished in the top ten. Dave
Parlin finished fourth with a
time of 26:04, Don · Cook
placed fifth with a time of
26:52, Ron Dunfee was ninth
with a time of 27 :4S and Ben
Junk ·finished tenth with a
time of 27:54. There were
around 250 runners who
finished the race. Rio Grande
will officially open their
season September 24 at the
Malone Invitational.
Other Rio Grande runners

Convenient Shopping Hours

were:
14th,
Mark
Shonebarger 28:08; 19th,
Mark Fox 28:28; 28th, Jeff
Elick 29:20; 32nd, Sam
Mohler 29:32; 83rd, Tom
Dorsey 32 ::15; IOOth, Mike
LaBenne 33:31.

TAKES TRIP
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Wilcox and son, Bryan, were
in Huntington, W.Va. Friday
In pick up Beverly Wilcox a
student at Marshall, who
came home for the weekend:
She was taken back In Huntingtnn Monday by Greg
Browning.

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And P11rtnership Insurance
is a good way to protect your
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Insurance Agency.,
'

OFFICE
2 ro 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT

feet, the seventh, on which he
missed a five footer, and the
ninth, where he missed a :!:&gt;foot " makable" putt.
"I thought I put all the
pressure I coold on Lanny ,"
said Weiskoji, who is through
playing golf fpr the year and
is now on his way to Alberta,
Canada, on a big horn sheep .
hunt.
" He (Wadkins) just played
perfect golf," Weiskopf
. added. ' 1He never - looked
worried and that's why he's : ·
the champion."
·
Weiskopf and Hale Irwin, •
who trailed by only one sllot
when the day began but could
never make a charge,
finished second In Wadkins
with eight under par 272
totals, earning $35,000 each.
Irwin had a closing round 69.
Mark Hayes, who also had
a 69Monday, finishedalone in
the fourth spot, picking up
. $15,000, while Raymond
F'loyd, Gary Player and Jack •
Nicklaus earned $11,166 for
their tie for fifth.
The victory for Wadkins, .
his fifth since joining the tnur
in 1971, made him the first
player to . qualify for next
year's World Series, also In
be played at Firestnne.

16 Ohio teams open '.7 7
grid campaign this week

vative."
Foli contended the incident
"was ro big deal. It was just a
wrestling match."
"I was just trying In get
him In throw me a hall In
hit," he said. "I was just
trying In get him mad so he
could throw me a good one ."
Ruthven refused In discuss
the fight.
"He said something. I said
something. It shouldn 't have
happened," he said.

whose second win in four
weeks (the PGA was the
other) pushed his 1977
earnings to $238,920. "I felt if
I could take the lead there, I'd
be in the driver's S&lt;:at going
to the back side which I
usually play best."
Wadkins was right. He
followed the birdie on the
ninth with another on 10,
tacked on another on 12 and
when he birdied the 14th he
t;ad a four shot lead over his
·
closest rival.
He also birdied the 16th and
17th and, despite a bogey· on
the final hole, bettered Ray
.Floyd's previous 72-hole
Firestone course record of
2S8 by one shot.
"It (the record) entered my
mind on the 15th or 16th
hole," he said. "I thought it
was :IS8. But I didn't want In
get
preoccupied
with
records.''
Weiskopf, who birdied the
first
four
holes and
"conceivably could have
birdied all nine," ca\)ed his
round " the best nine holes
I've ever played. " He
finished with a 65.
The only three holes he
didn't birdie were the fifth, on
which he lipped out from 35

.

992-2342

'
.
·
·
·

�•

n.. Daily Sentinel, MJddleport·Pomero)', 0 ., Tuesday, Sept.&amp;, 1977

lll

.. Sherk out 6 weeks 1 '~on

. ~:.~~:~.:;::::;.~ ~
t hse-&lt;1 em US .JI blifJ ~
,..•• ...,.~ u..,w
G. AB H

Pd' tl.er Pit

l16 -t53 152 3.36

S•f'I"Mt'l$ St L

l11 «6

Tmpltn 5' l

llO..f961D 321
nt Sll 16.5 319
118 419 1341 317

Smtfrl t,.A

1~7

lJO

•

with knee injury

1?9 460 l.tS 315
1:S. 5'15 164 311

By PETER P.SPUDICH JR.

s-.

1

LA 2. 67 ; R ichard , Hou and
Carlton, Ph il 2.74.
Am erican League ; . Tanana ,
Cal 2 .54 ,:
Ryan , Cal and
8 1y1even, Tex 2.68 ; Guidry , NY

'2.96; Rozema , Oer 3.()1.
Strikeouts

Na lional League: Niekro , Atl
"22.1 ; Koosman, NY 176; Rooers.
Mtt 172; Seaver, Cin 170;
Carlton , Phil 166.
American Lugue : Ryan . Cal
312; Tanana , Cal 205 ; Leonard.
t&lt; C 1~•; Blylevellll!. Te~ 172 ;
E ckersley, Clev 1M• :

Pearson irritated
because of delay

By WilLIAM STRACENER
DARLINGTON, S.C. (UP! )
- If NASCAR officials had
agreed with defending
champion David Pearson 's
position on rain delays, the
Wood Brothers Mercury
driver wouldn't have been
able to claim his second
straight Southern 500 victory
at D~rlington Raceway
Monday ..
Pearson , irritated at
fQLuMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) having ID wait an hour and 32
Ohio Slate Coach Woody minutes for a rain delay, said
Ho)'es is optimistic about his after the 367-lap event suet&gt;
Buckeye football squad a races should be called after
w~k before it opens against
an hour.
Miami (Florida ) at Ohio
If that had happened,
Stadium, because it did well · Donnie
Allison , whom .
in the weekend practice.
Pearson and his pit crew
The OSU Red squad, outsmarted in the final laps to
sparked
by
junior gain a 2.He&lt;:ond victory,
quarterb ack Rod Gerald, would have won tbe $2()7,000
soundly defeated the White race . His Chevrolet swept by
r e.serves lS-7 in the fmd Pearson into the lead on the
int rasqu ad scrimmage !85th lap before rain brought
Soturday afternoon.
on the delay and one of seven
" ~nerally speaking, I'd
caution flags in the race.
h•veto say that our offense is
Buddy Baker finished third
better off than a year ago, in a Ford. Richard Petty,
beth running and passing. hurt in last week's Volunteer
And moving the ball, that 's .
probably the best that our
\lihite team has done since
!' re been here. Of course,
tlwt's always relative since
it' s against .our defense."
Gerald passed successfully
s;; vet~ times, including a 40yJrd toss to Greg Storer
..-trlch set up a touchdown and
FOREST HILLS , N.Y .
a JGcyarder to Bill Jaco to set
{UP! ) ...: Manuel Orantes,
up another ooe. Gerald also
r:tn for three touchdowns, the after two years with a bad
being a 31-yard keeper m back, ann surgery and a fight
to regain his form, Will iry IJl
the option play.
m9ve
one. step closer . to
Sophomore defensive back
another championship today
MIke GueSs snapped up a
when he" takes on Ill-year-old
pqsg by Greg Castignola, and
Jolm McEnroe of Douglaston,
r;~n &amp;!yards for another Red
N.Y . in a quarterfinal match.
SI..Ofe.
" It 's always nice to play
Hayes said he was pleased
well
and try to win this tourthe Buckeyes escaped serious
nament, " Orantes says in his
injuries in the "dress rehear·
characteristic soft-s poken
sal."
way . 0 for me, it' s special not
" We're most fortunate on
because this is the last one at
that count," Ha yes said.
Forest
Hills but because I had
"These things (scrimmages )
an
operation
and I missed all
a re necessary but they
the big tournaments. This is
always scare 111e a little. It 's
maybe the last chanCe I have
good to get through it without
to
do well in a big tour·
a nything strious happening ."
nament."
When he is at his best,' and
it
appears be is at that level
Sports Transactions
now, Or antes plays a
Oy United Press International
Monday
disciplined, thoughtful game.
Baseball
Baltimore
Calfed
up He is quick and &lt;"OIIsistent
ouHie-lder Lany Harlow and and all the more dangerous
pitchers Mike Parrott, Ra ndy
on a clay-like surface such as
f&gt;~.:fl er and Ed Farmer from
~ nch ester .
·the one ·at Forest Hills.
Pro Foot-ball
It -is Bjorn Borg, Sweden's
Chi cago Placed veterans
two-time
· Wimb led on
d•..t cnsive end Royce Berry ,
wid e receiver Randa ll Burks champion, that he is most.
a.nd running back . Tammy
wary of.
Reamon on waivers.

Bucks
do well
in practice

500, was relieved after Tllaps
by Dave Marcis for fourth
place in a Dodge . Cale
Yarborough placed fifth in a
Chevrolet.
The winning margin was
decided in the' pits when both
drivers stopped lor gasoline
-with less than 2(J laps remaining .
Allison , who again JDok
command at the 260th lap
during a Pearson pit stop,
held the lead going into the.
pits on lap 344, but Pearson's
pit crew, which poured about
four gallons into his Mercury
in 4.2 seconds, was 3.5
seconds faster.
·
" I just knew I wasn't going
tn stay any longer than he
had," said Pearson, whose
average speed was 106.797
m.p.h.
The victory, Pears on's
eighth at Darlington, earned
him $24,550.
One.fourth of the race,
which saw 32 lead changes,
was rWl under caution flags ,
posted by a series of wrec)ts
th&lt;1l tool&lt; nine cars out of the
race.

'

Orantes still alive,

n~

~

Ma10f'" Lntve tlnuns
By Un•led Pre-sss lnternll1iaft•t
No~tion• t lUtiH

Cuolina State, and use
CLEVELAND (UPI ) second-year defensive end
lu rrtSki Pn it
125-466 U..t l09 Jerry Sberlt is hurting - but
Mike St. Clair of Grambling
\.' :f'l•ne Mtl
lQS 425 131 308
not
as
much
as
1m
Cleveland
as
a back"-lp until Sherk's
Amerlun lNtU4
G AB H Pet. Browns, who've lost the
status is determined.
Ci!"~ Mm
134 Sll ~ llf &gt;-eteran defensive tackle 's
The Browns have jll8! one
&amp;stock. Min
'l32 51117? 337
pre..&lt;;eason game remaining
126 .UO U6 331 buli.JJke prowess for at least
S•"lQiton Sal
f&lt; ,~ ~rs NY
11' .c90 160 327 six wet!ks because of severely
- Friday night against the
l t-tlore- Oet
130 SSJ 171 .323
Detroit Lions at Pontiac,
strained
ligaments
in
his
left
Ba,Jor Tqr
101 d5 139 320
R1ce Boi
136 SSI 175 318 knee.
Mich. And with Sherk out of
Z
Chi
121 462 Ul 310
Sherk, wm injured the leg co mm1sston
lor
that
F \·t'&gt;fl1H Oet
13'2 543 161 . 309
B"eti KC
llS •10 1A5 309 in last Saiurday night's 19-H
encounter and at least half of
t-. &lt;lrqrve- 1"eK
121 ••• 137 309 exhibition victory over the
the regular season, chances
Home Runs ·
Green
Bay
Packers,
was
of
the Browns making the ·
N•tu;~n•l Leig~o~e ~ Foster . Cln
.i" Burr-oughS,·Atl 3S luzinski , examined Moliday in New
NFL playoffs appear slim Pr :J lJ
Schm idt , Pn il 32 .
York by Dr . James A. if not impossible.
B P~·c~. Cin and Ganey. LA 29
Americin Lugu• : R: ice . Bos Nicholas, the Jets ' orthopedic
'' It's going to be very IJlugh
31. Netll~s . NY 34 Bonds, Cal surgeon wbo did wonders lor
without
him," MO&lt;helewSki
3J Scort, Bos ll Hobson, 8os
Joe Namath's knees while relates. " When he played,
?&gt;!
Runs BaH.C In
Namath was with the Jets. people kind of wondered
J.. ~1io nal lt-ague : Foster, Cin
Nicholas ordered Sherk IJl about just how good he was.
l .lJ&lt; Luzlnski, Phil 111 Garvey.
L.... 101 ; BurroughS , At! and wear a knee immobilizer
They found out in a hurry he
( r!y, LA 99.
around-the-clock
in
an
effort
was damn good. He just
Ameriun
League ·
Hi5l e ,
M1nn 111 ; Bonds, Cal 100 ; ro help the ligaments heal. II
makes the whole damn thing
HGbSon , 8os and ThOmPSOI'I , they do not, surgery is likely.
happen."
Oo.t '17; R ice, Bos 95
And
that
means
Sherk,
whO
Can Sims or St. Clair
Stolen Bases
PJali onal Lugue : Tavefas , never bef ore has had a
compensate lor the. void left
P tt S• ; Cedeno.
Hov 48 :
Sherk 's
untimely
to,.-\or gan. Cin .U.; Moreno , P itt serious injury , would he lost · by
-43 Rich ards, SO 41.
departure?
to the club lor the seaoon.
A merican league : Patek 1 KC
uNot totally , no," a
"
With
him
being
gone
• 3 Page, Oak 36 . Remy , Cal
dejected Modzelewski
lS Bonds . Cal 32 . LeFlore, Oet anytime you lose a great
3
football player ~ it's going to admits. " He's in a class of his
P ltc:hing
hurt,"
said
Dick own. There's nobody that can
Most Victories
Na tionill Leo~gue : . Carlton . Modzelewski, the Browns '
replace him - NOBODY! "
P ~·•l 10 8 ; R Reusct,el, Chi 19-6 ;
That's why Browns' Execu·
defensh'e
coordir.ator
and
Jc+-!n , LA 17 -5 ; Candel ari a, P itt
live Vice President-General
lt. "'' Seaver, Cin and Forsch , defensive line coach. '~ His
St L l 6-6 l Rho'den , LA 16-11.
play alone was super all the Manager Peter Hadhaey and
.t..merican league : Rvan , Cal
Dick Evans, tbe team's pro
time
. When you don't have a
I B 13; Goltz, M fnn 16-8; Col tx·r n, KC 16-13; Rozema , Oet guy like him playing, you
scouting
ctirector, frantically
cn·-d T.JohnSOn , M i nn 15-6.;
are checking around the
T,:m.:ina , Cal 15-9 ; Leonard, KC miss him tremendously ."
1!- 11 , .R .May , Bait and Torr-ez.
Modzelewski's immediate league in an attempt to
N "~ 15· 12.
plan is to replace Sherk with acquire a veteran defensive
Earned Run Average
( ·)olsed on 137 innings pitched ) rookie
defensive tackle tackle to replace Sherk ~ or
National le-ague : Candelaria, Robert "Mickey" Sims, a &amp;.5,
at least try ro.
P 1U 2.43;
JOhn, LA 2.55 ;
R· Reusche-1 , Chi 7.60 ; Hooton , 282-pounder from South
tir"dr;ck SO
htrH Ctn

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Sept: 6, 1977

znesco ..

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ll7 S57 19.i W

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Indians end Yankees
hex; Bosox cop pair

010 000 ooo- l 7 0
011 0.10 oox- 3 lJ 0
Lrrch , Carber {~H. Srvsstar
{8 ~ ~nd Boof'le- . Ctn~l.,ria ,
Gosuge (ll anc1 Over . wc andelaria, 16 4. L-Leoreh. 7-5 • By BIU... MADDEN
HRs- Phllad~P&gt;Iph l a , Mart in f6L
UPI SpnrU Writer

you , I loved every bit of this with the Tigers, J1.7; Oticago
doubleheadet"."
and Oai&lt;Jand split a pair, the
Patsooron, ov ... Ill.
In a dramatic Labor Day
Aase yielded jwtt three hits A's taking the first game. 11-7 •
llnd oomel
turn of events, the BQston and benefitted from Jim and the White Sox cormng
Phil a
021 105 002- 11 13 1
Pttsb&lt;lh
001 ooo ooo- 1 10 • Red Sox suddenly came up Rice's three-run homer in back in the nightcap, 2-1:
notching his foorlh win in five Minnesota shaded Teras, 5-I :
Carlton. Brunter f'} and wiUl some pitching ugems'"
Boone ; Kison , Jackson {-4 ), while the Yankees' aees, decisions since being reealled Kansas City put away
Demery
[ 6 }.
Holland
(7),
Whitson ( I ) and ov.... w~ Catfish Hunter and Mike from the minors. Then in the Seattle, 8-4, and Milwaukee
Carlton, 20·8. L- Kioon, 7·8. Torr&lt;1-. were getting rocked nightcap, Cleveland tossed a edged California, 6-5.
HRs - Philadelph ia . JOhnstone- before 2&amp;,!&amp;4 hand-""'erchief· five-hitter
while Butch Orioles 7~, Tige.rs 8-4:
{11), Carlton (3) .
e~.~
Hobson
had
three
hits and
Rudy May , backed by AI
waving fans in Cleveland. A3
N.ntral
ooo
202 ooo- • 8 1 . a result, there's once again a
scored
twice.
Bwnbry's
thretH\ln double ,
N.Y . .
000 11021\l()- 3 71
The
Yankees,
meanwhile,
earned
his
15th victory and
Twltd•~I L
McEnaney
{6 ), race in the East.
Stanhous.e (7) and
Carter ;
Rooki
'ght-hande Don didn't get any time to savor second shutout this season in
Koosmon , Mvrico m. Lock·
e n
r
wooo 19! ono Ho&lt;lg... w~ Aase and veteran Reggie either the return of Doo helping the Orioles rally 1JJ
Twitchell, ... 10. L-Koosman. 8- Oeveland combined to pitch
Gullett or their recent win the nightcap. The Orioles
18. HRs~Mont&lt;eal , P ... ez P 6J, the Red Sox to a double winning streak. After 13 seemingly had the first game
Valenrine (2U . New York,
Maziilli Ill .
shutout, an 11-0, fi.O sweep of straight losses 1&lt;&gt; the Yankees won when Andres Mora
since July 1 of last year, the singled in a run in the top of
SI.L
010 lOll 00Q- l 6 1 the Toronto Blue Jays, while
Ch icgo
102 DlO (1())( - • 1 1 tlle Yankees were dropping Indians suddenly erupted to the loth inning. However,
. Rasmussen and Simmons ; both ends of a 4-J, :i-4 twin bill snap the New Yorkers' seven· with two oul in .the bot!Dm of
Ro~s
and Swisher . wRoberts. •·1 . L - ~asmuss.en , 10- to the Cleveland Indians. game winning streak. The loth, .Orioles' l.janager Earl
14. HRS- Biittner (~}. Buckne-r Thus, the Red Sox now trail extraordinarily large crowd, Weaver · yanked
Tippy
{11} ,
the first'9lace Yankees by most of whom were waving Martinez after a single by
Mickey Stanley and Dick
SonFm
000 000 ooo- 0 3 0 only 2\'.1 games- and there's " I Hate The Yankees "
Atlanta
)(11 OOCl OO&gt;c- • 11 1 still those five games remain· handkerchiefs, couldn't have Drago proceeded to give up
Barr . Curtis (1). Will i ams
two more singles to tie the
(3). Heaverlo {01 , McGlothen ing between the two rivals been happier.
(8) and Hill; R.utt'IVen and later this month.
Bruce Boehle drove in score before yielding a gamePocroba . W- Ruthven , 6-10. L "The race is there." said three runs lor Cleveland in winning homer to Rusty
Barr , 12-13.
elated Red Sox' Manager Don the openet" with a . double, Staub, his 19th, in the lith .
Cin cl
000 001 ooo- 1 6 1
Houstn
101 003 OOx - S 10 0 Zimmer. " It can he won. I tell single and sacrifice fly as · Royals 8, Mariners 4:
Hunter, 9-8, was roughed up
Frank White 's two-run
Seaver , Oui\I\Oulin f7). Billing ham ta l and Bench ; Lemongel lorninehitsandfourrunsin6 single and George Brett's
lo
and
Ferguson .
W
1-3 innings. In the second twiH'Iln homer capped a six·
Lemon9e-t1o , 7-1.4. l - Seaver, 166. HRs-C inc innati , Seaver (2) ;
game, Andre Thornton 's run second inning, which
Houston , Cabe-ll {13) .
checked-6wing double down carried the streaking Royals
L.A.
000 000 OQO- 0 2 2
the right field line scored ro their sixth straight victory
San Dga
001 000 00)1.- 1 5 ()
pinch runner Ron Pruitt with and 17th in the last 2(J games,
Rau , Hough (I ) and Yeager~
what
proved to be the winning Jim Colborn, 1&amp;-13, went the
Grote
(8 );
Owchinko and
RoberTs. W-Qwch inko . 8·9. L nm in a tw&lt;H'UJI eighth distance as the Royals
Rau , 13-6.
inning. Torrez saw his record increased their AL West lead .
drop to 1~12 after being to 5'h games.
Amer ica n Le•gue
{1 st game, 11 innings )
tagged for nine hits and five White Sox 7·2, A's 8-1:
Bol
1101 001 l2l 1o- 7 16 1
HOUSTON {UP! ) - The nms in eight innings.
Wilbur Wood and Lerron
Det
010 202 100 11- 8 14 0
o . Mart inez , Parrott (6), T. Houston Astros have fared
" These kinds of thin gs LaGrow combined on an
Mortin•z m. Dro90 1101 ono surprisingly well this season happen," said Yankees ' eighthitter in the nightcap to
Dempsey , Rudolph (I I; Wi lcox .
Billy
Martin keep the Chisox' fading
Hill er (6), Foucault {7), Taylor against the two teams ahead Manager
I8J, Sykes (81, Ruhlo (91. of them in the National matter.of.factly. "You just pennant hopes alive . In the
Cr a~wfor-d (11) a nd May . Woc k - Lea
W st
have to win every day . But opener, the A's belted Chisox
enfuss 01 ). W- Crawford , 7-5.
gue e ·
L~Drago , 6·" · HRs- Baltirnore ,
The Astros continued the don' t these fans kn ow starter Ken Kravec for seven
Murr ay &lt;!OJ. s;ngle1ort (201. tradition Monday night , hand ker ch i e r s
are runs in 11-3 innings to nullify
DeCinces ( 15 ). Detroit . Ogl ivie
three RBI by Oscar Ga!llble ,
&lt;18 !. Stoub (!9!.
whippinl! the Cincinnati Reds unsanitary? .
and Tom Seaver ~1 .
·
Elsewhere
in
the
American
who hit his 271!1 homer.
O nd nme&gt;
sau
o.tO 001 ooo-- s 13 o
This season Ule Astros are League, Baltimore beat Mitchell Page drove in two
Det
ooo ooo ooo- o a 1 liJ.S aga~ the Reds and s..:; Detroit, :;..o, after losing the runs and stole three bases for
R . May and Skagos ; Grill i~ against Los Angeles .
opener of its doubleheader
Taylor (9) and Parr i sh . W-R .
Ma-; , 15-1'2 . L - GrJIIi , 1-2. HR "A couple of years ago we
Baltimore , Belanger (2 ).
were
terrible
a_g ainst
I lSI v•m•J
Cincinnati and Los Angeles.

Astros
hammer
Reds 5•1

Chicgo

200

o1o-- 7 11 2 .
Oaklnd
170 000 OOx- 8 11 1
Kravec. Mart inez (21 anel
Downing , Esslan {8); Medic h,
0().-4

Colemon (6!, Ba ir 181 and
Newman . W- Med ich,

Kravec , B-7. HR -

Gamble 127).
1lnd game !
000 002

Chicgo
Oaklnd

LChicago .
9~ .

ooo- 2 5o

100 000 ()()()-- 1 8 1,

Wood,

LaGrow

IBI

ond

Euian : Torrealba and Hosley .· W-Wood , 7-7. L- Torrealba . ·45.
fi st game!
N .Y .

OOOO:!QOlD-3 70
Cleve
101 000 !Ox~ , 111
Hunter , Lyl e 171 ond Mun$0n ;
Hood , Kern {8) and Fosse . W._
Hood, 2-0. L~ Hunter , 9-8. HR ~
New Yoro. Jackson (23 1.

(20d game)

N.v .
Cleve

This year we're beating

them/' said Astros first
baseman Bob Watson.
" Beating
'
Seaver tonight
gave us a big lift in OW' quest
for second place. They've got
IJl be looking over their
shoulder at us now," Said
g1
Watson, who had two sin es
and drOve in the ~al Astro
nm.

Houst on pitcher Mark
Lemongello tripled and
ed
hi) limi' tin
'
scor one run w e
g
Cfucinnati to six hits.
bas
be the
' 'This game
to
high point of the season for

me/

Lemongello.
ooo ooo o•o- , 7 o . " Beating Tom Seaver and
1

said

ooo 000 32x~ 5 • 1 getting a hit off him, and not a
Torrez and Johnson ; Wa its , cheap hit.
Kern
! 8),,
Bibby
(9 ) and
KendalL Fosse (9). W-Kern , a. · "Thegamewasalmostlike
8. L~Torrez , 15-ll. HR ~ pitching in the world series.
Cleveland . Lowenstein (3 ).
The club is really going

( ht game}

Boston
Tronto

020 030 2to- 8 8

1
000 000 ()()lr- o. 3 1

Aase and F isk ; Byrd, John -

great."
~-aver had ••.x:

IUO)

·

streak of .:.

-...

straight complete games

son {5) and Cerone. W- Aase,
d d uff ed ••- first
•-1. L~Bvrd. 2·9. HRs-Boston . snappe an s er ""'
R;ce I35J. Hobsotl I7B L
loss in his last nine decisions.
He is now 16-6.
(2nd 91me )
"! pitched badly tooight
Boston
010 300 020- 6 11 o
Tronto
000 000 ()()()- 0 5 2 and I lost," said Seaver. "!
Cl evel and and IY.Ontoom~y ;
Wil li s (• ), Vuc kov i ch didn't have my good stuff.''
Orantes says,n he always Clancv.
(8 ) and Ashby , W- Cieveland ,
Houston touched Seaver for
plays at that same level.''
9.7. L- Cianc y, 2·6.
eight hits in six innings. Enos
But Orantes has come pre·
Texas
002 000 200- • 10 3 Cabell hit a solo home run in
pared to dethrone Borg, fully M inn
102 200 COx- 5 8 1 the
first inning ,and
Alexander , N,oret ( -4 ) and
aware that there won't he too
I..emongello
made it 2-0 in the
Sundberg ; Thormodsgard, T .
many more opportunities.
Johnson (8), Burgmeier (9) and third when he tripled and
One small thing Orimtes Wynegar . W - Thormodsgard, scored when Johnny Bench
10. L-AI@xander , 13-10 . HR
will have to get by en route to -11·Minne-sota
threW wild for an error in an
, Wynegar {9).
a championship is the specter
attempted pickoff play at
of the second-seeded Jinuny Kan c;1v
0601102 ooo- 8 • 1
SeaHie
120 000 01o-- • 1 1 third.
Connor s.
Col born and Porter ; Pol e,
After Seaver hit a borne nm
Conno rs , reeling the .~ Kek ich (21 and Stinson . Win
the sixth to make it 2-1,
·
effects of
bad Colborn, 16-13 . L-Pole, 7~ 12.
ling ermg
a
HRs~ Kansos Ci1y, Brett 08 1; Houston scored three runs in
back ," pits his fierce Seattl•. Bernhardt 161.
the sixth. Cabell singled and
groundstrokes against the M if w
201 002 1()0-- 6 11 0 came
home on Cesar ·
thunderball serve of II th· Calif
030 001 lOll- 5 n o Cedeno's triple. Cedeno then
Sl aton , McClure { 6), Ro seeded Roscoe Tanner in
dr i g'uez { 7) and Moor-e ; scored on a sacrifice fly by
another important match Tanana , Simpson (7), Miller (9)
Jose Cruz and Joe Ferguson
today . The winner of that and Humphrey . W-Staton. 9-14.
doubled
and scored on a
L- Tanana , 15-9. HRs-Mil+
showdown .l aces either waukee
, SandO (17), Lezcano single by Watson.
Orant.es or McEnroe in tbe (1$),
semifinals.
Meanwhile, the top.&lt;ieeded 1101 i f 11 0 11
Borg will keep everyone 's 10
clinical curiosity bnsy today
when he tests his sore
shoulder against 10lh-5eeded
Dick Stockton .
" ! · cannot win
the
tOilfllament if the shoulder
7. Motorcycles
doesn't get better... The only
1. Auto insurance
a. Jewelry •nd Olhor
thing I need is rest," he said.
2. Home Insurance
Votuobles
J. Mobile Hom ..
Monday it was 14-year-old
9. Busine-st: Packaoe
4. He1lth tnsur.ance
Tracy Austin who was in the
f'oliciH
S.
Life Insurance·
spotlight.
10. Li1bility lnsuranc.
6. But Insurance
11. F1rm tnsur1nce

Austin in spotlight

Green Bay Signed fre-e
aqt"nt offensive guard Denn is
~ av~ g .

.· "I:Ie never

g~ts

tired,''

Bengals hang 26-7
loss on Minnesota
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A
couple of things are for
cerlail).
Bob Lee isn't any Fran
Tarkenton.
And Tommy Kramer isn 't
either.
With No. I q(larterback
Tar kenton taking a -rest
Saturday night, backups Lee
and Kramer tried to pass the
Minnesota Vikings to a
preseason victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals.
What tlley did was help
pass tbe Vlkes to a 26-7 loss.
· A
Lee
aerial
was
intercepted and carried back
57 yards for a touchdOWil by
Marvin Cobb.
Arid Kramer, a rookie,
went Lee one better.
He threw an interception
that Jerry Anderson
back
96 yards for a 'ID.
But the backups had some
help.
Minnesola's Leonard Willis
fumbled a punt rereption and
Cincy ' s Melvin Morgan
grabbed it at the Viking 22 to
set up a four-yard touchdown
run by Tony Davis.
Less · than two minutes
later, the Vlkes' Steve Craig

T~ ....

drama
classes
scheduled
RIO GRANDE - Two
drama classes, one especially
for teachers and the other for
the general public, are part of
tlje fall schedule at Rio
Grande College and Com·
munlty College.

Oakland.
Twins 5, Rallll~ 4:
Butch.Wynegar drove in a
pair of runs with a solo hOIIlel'
and a single for Minnesota.
Rookie Paul Thonnodsgard,
11·10, worked seven innings
for the win, but needed relief
from Tom 'Johnson and Tom
Burgmeier. Lyman Bostock
also knocked in a run and
scored another during a tworun Minnesolil fourth inning,
Brewe'l 6, Angels .5:
SUllo l.ezcano stroked a
leadoff homer in tlle seventh
inning to lift the Brewers over
California. Sal Bando also
had a two-run hOmer in the
first inning off starter and
loser Frank Tanana, 15-9, and
Charlie Moore droVI' in two
runs with a sixth-inning
single to give Jim Slaton, !114, his first win since July 30.

"Creative

WHEN
AMPLIFICATION

IS NECESSARY

All types of aids, includ ing

custom-made all ~in - the ·
eor.
Medical ·
and
audiological referral.

ever need!

DILES HEARING
AID CENTER

•

Union Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
Tel. sn62J8

DR G J STO MBAUGH

COLUMBUS - Starting
today, September 6, ac·
curate,
first-hand
in·
formation about food stamps
Will be avJIIlable after 5 p.m .
by calling the toll-free Food
stamp Hotline, 1-1100·282-1190.,
The Hotline will be staffed
Monday and Tuesday 8 a.m.
to 8 p.m. during September,
Cathy Elkins, State Food
Stamp Outreach Coordinator
of the Ohio Department of
Public Welfare, explained. ff
the number of calls is sufficient to provide the need for
extended hours, the evening
hours wlli be continued and
· possibly expanded.
Elkins noted that many
working persons are withiJ\
the food stamp allowable net
monthly income levels. The
income levels are:
One-person households,

C W SEAL

One or two day full denture
service. partial dentures,
relines, repairs

ran

RIVIERE CENTER
949 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus
Weekdays 8:30 A.M. to 6:30P.M.

$266.
~·

Th~rson

Five-person
Five-person
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Seven·peri;IOn
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households,
households,
households,

$1,020.
For
ea cb
additional
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eight, add $1TI.

OlCII.f.AS

SLI(ED
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5 19

1
SMOKED PICNIC ............... :... ,..,., 69c

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BIAUIStiiWIEGEI

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$

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'1000 ""'eM ..

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5

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LUICH BAGS ........................3 ~&lt;.:'.~

84-oz.
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Umi1 three with c:oupon end 110.00 purchase
•~eluding

McCOAMLCil-

beer. wine •nd cigerettet.

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Umh one wilh coupon end 110.00 purch..•
u;lvding Mer, ¥~~~ine and clglren,u.

13 ¥•·0Z. B11n11n1
13 Yt ·OZ. Chocolet•
SARA LEE ( AKES ....... 12 '/o-oz. Germen· Chocolete

••

The PhoneBank

Z

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214 E. MAIN

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$893.

Put ·your auto, home, hHIIh
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Some Of Our OfMr Services:
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...•
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WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

LOIN END PORK ROAST ... ,..,... s 109

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$447.

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PACKAGE POLICY -

m -7155
149 5. TIHnl St.

CARRYOUT SERVICE

DECKERS

·•~Hotline on
food stamps
is offered

44 West

"If You Haoe It, We Can lnsrve It"

MikeSwi&amp;w

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER - MIDDLEPORT

.

DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
D~

STORE HOURS
MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 11 AM TO 6 PM

.

DENTURES

OR A J, STAEM LI

a

cpurse in methods lor
elementary teachers, will be
taught Thursday, 6-6:50 p.m.,
beginning September 8. "The
Development
of
the
American Musical" will meet
Mondays, Tuesdays· and
Thursdays, noon·l2:50 p.m.
with the first class meeting
September B. Both will be
taught by Ed Roark,
assistant
professor
of
theatre.
" Creative Dramau is
designed to offer methods ,
objectives and rationale for
the use of creative dramatics
as a teaching approach, as
recreation and as a lonn of
individual expression.
.
Roark said the class should
be of interest to those who are
'Already teaching as well as
hllege
s tudents
in
:elementary education. He
}mphasized that the class is
'POt for drama instructors, but
.for all teachers who want to
~ea rn to use drama eflectively in the classroom.
: "The Development of the
j\rnerican Musical" will use
•rj!COrds, films, video tape and
.discussion to study the fonns
:'and influence of muSicals.
• Roark. said
. he's been
_:collecting material for use in
· .(be course
so that par!ticipants will have a chance
:ito experience how this fonn
:or theatre has affected
•American life..
• The course ts open to any
: resident of the four county
;Community College district.
: Tuition for "C reati.v.e
:Drama," a two. credit hour
•course, is $26 for residents of
:vinton, Gallia, Jackson and
: Meigs Counties. Tuition for
; the other class, which offers
•three credit hours, is $39.
: Registration for classes
!will be held Tuesday,
: September 6, in Lyne Center
: on the Rio Grande campus.
- Open registration is S-9 p.m .
=Those who want to register
• during the day should phone
~ 245·5353 to be given a
! registration time.

Modest
cost,
openiy
discu55ed. over 28 yeo~rs
experience the only
hearing aid service you' ll

fumbled away a pass
rereption and Morgan was
there to jwnp on it, setting up
a 41-yard field goal by Chris
Bahr.
" If
you
give
up
interceptiorts and fumble~.
. you can't win no matter who
you're
pl,aying ,"
said
Minnesota coach Bud Grant.

J1ratl)a,,.

16.West Washington
Athens
•

CLEVELAND (UP!)
Open heart $urgery is to be
done Sept. 14 on U.S. District
Court Judge Leroy Contie Jr.
of Akron in Cleveland Clinic. ·
The 57-year-old judge is
expected to spend two . to
three months recovermg
.;;-..Jrom bypass surgery to clear
'.;::an arterial blockage. ·
• While he is absent,
.:'c leveland federal judges
• .agreed to handle some
prellminary.Jivil matters,
but other
tters will bE
postponed. Criminal cases
will go throll/!h the Cleyeland
courts eo that a 90-day speedy
trial law will be cOillplled
with .

I'

1-Lb

Cartons

89~.

09

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KRAFT ORAIGE JUICE ..........:.... ::.~ '1
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Umit one with coupon

CHEEZ-IT$

·DRIVE CAREFULLY!

5109

SUNSHINE

SUNSHINE

REMEMBER CHILDREN ARE BACK TO SCHOOL

Pkg.

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~'il STORES • CARDINAL fOOD STORES
CLOROX Z
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.~o sTORES , ~Hili i:llldHII;,Iii c:~~N~t~#

�C- The O.ilv c;..nhnei, Middleport·Pomt'foy,O., TUroda) . &amp;-pl. 6, 1977

Middleport Garden Club
displays facets of beauty

OES honors past officers
Evelyn Lewis, Kathryn M•tchell, Genevee Chesher,
Virginia Buchanan, Emma
Cia !worthy, Naomi King.
KB thy Johnson, Bessie King,
Fane Kennedy, Maryln
Wilcox, Ann 'Thomas' Euvet·
ta Bechtle, Marie Ha wkins,
and Kathryn Kmght.
Past patrons honored were
Allen Hu g hes, Harr y
Chesher, Lee McComas, Pa ul
Darnell, Bob King, and Bill
King. An honored Mason was
James Buchanan, illustrious
master of Bosworth Council.
Mrs . Bu c hanan . was
presented her. 25 year pjn ·by
Mrs. Clatwortlly. Sunshine
page for the meeting was
Mrn. Chesher .
It was announced that initiation will be held at the
November meeting. A com·
munication was read from
Grand Chapter announcing a

Past matrons and past
patrons of Evangeline
Chapter l'n, Order of the
Eastern Star, were honored
at a meeting of the chapter
Thursday night at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Glenna Cr is p, worthy
niatron, and Paul Darnell.
worthy patron, presided during lhe recognition program.
A distin g uished guest
presented was James Clat·
worthy, district deputy grand
master or the 12th Masonic
District of the Grand Lodge or
Ohio,~ and past patron of
Evangeline Chapter.
Past matrons honored were
Beulah Hayes , Grace French,

e : ue

.... · .. .. ,

!! f

.,.?_·

Social
Calendar
nJESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7: 45 · Tu es day at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
MIDDL.to:: PORT LODGE
363, R. and A. M. 7:30 Tuesda y night at the Masonic
Temple. All master masons
welcome.
XI GAMMA 1-!U Chapter ol
Beta Sigma Phi Soroity will
have a progressive dinner
Tuesday evening. The dinn~r
will begin at 6:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Iris Payne.
From there the members will
go to the homes of Mrs. Debbi
Buck, Ka~en Goins, and Carol
McCullough.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. Guest speaker
Andy Lyles who will speak on
Issue TI, trapping.
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Band Practice at
high school parking Jot
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thurnday, 4 to 7 p.m. AU
members urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
CLUB, Middleport Fire Station social room, 7:30
Wednesday.
UNITED METHODIST
WOMEN of the Letart Falls
Church, 7:30p.m, Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Bert
Grinun. Members are to take
their thank offering containern. Mrs. Andrew Cross
will present the orogram.
-TirnRSDAY
. SOUTHERN
Athletic
Boosters Thurnday, ,7:30 p.m.
at high school.
··
GALIJJ\'County Salon 612,
Eight and Forty, 7:30 Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Gerald Wildermuth.
ROCK Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Thuroday at the hall.
New officers will be elected.
FRIDAY
HAPPY Harvesters Class,
!rlnity Church, 7:30 Friday
m the social room of the
church.

Miller family gathers
MIDDLEPORT--Th e
Her bert Miller. lamily held
their 36th annual family reunion at Forest Acres Park on
Aug. IJ.
A five generation family
was in attendance at the reunion. They were Mrn. Helen
Miller, her daughter, Mrs.
Eileen Bowers •. her granddaughter , Shirley Bumgardner,
he r
grea tgranddaughter, Mrs. Terri
Davis, and her great-greatgranddaug hte r ,
Bridget
Davis.
·
Attending the reunion were
Mrs. Herbert (Helen) Miller,
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ohlinger and daughter, Kathryn,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Ohlinger, Albany;
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood
Bowers, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Venoy, Craig and

Celebrates
fifth birthday
Cake, ice cream,

1

TRY OUR J;RESH

PEACH SUNDAES
AND SHAKES

~
.

-.,.

.

and

koolaid were .served to Ray
R{!dman, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Long, Dorothy Long, . ~
.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Red- '
man, Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, and Mr. and Mrs.
[.
Ray Redman.
·
Sending cards and gifts
were Mrs. Pauline Cunningham, Jan Long, Mrs.
Sarah Spencer, Mrn. Clara
LORI REDMAN
Redman , Mr. and Mrs . ..
Gerald Johnson and Larry,
and Mr. and Mrs. George
Gehring.
NOW YOU KNOW
Labor
Day
was
inaugurated in 1869 by the
Knights of Labor
in
Philadelphia, Pa., but the U.
S. Congress did not make it a
national holiday until 1894.

- ,;

MJDDLEPORT - Expressions ol beauty in poetry,
m usic a nd noral arrangements highlighted a recent meeting of the Middleport Garden Club held at
lheCheshirehome of Mrs . M.
J . Fry.
Mrs. Carl Horky was pr&lt;&gt;gram leader and introduced
Mrs. J ea nnie Bowen who
read a series of poems ineluding " Lonely As a Cloud"
by Williain Wadsworth· " The.
Rhodora " by Em~rson '
Houseman's "The Loveliest
of Trees" , and Emily Dickenson's " A Narrow Fellow in
the Grass."
Mrn. Becky Glaze sang a
medley of songs enjoyed by
her family while traveling in
their car and also led the
group in singing "Shine on
Harvest Moon." She concluded with a poem recited to her

at he r mother's knee and one
wluch she now recites' to her
children entiUed " Litue Orphl.n Annie."
Table displays were arranged by Miss Judy Arnold
who represented a spring
sbower using a white linen
covered table centered with
an arrangement or pink
roses, baby 's breath and pink
tapers with a glass slipper
and parasol in the decor. .
· Mrs. M. L. Fren ch's
display was on winter and she
used· a white damask cloth
under her brass candelabra
with red tapers, green boxwood, and a redbird figurine.
For spring, Mrll. Walter
Hayes showed pink and white
snapdragons with a pink
taper in a green container
placed on a handcut cloth
!rom Portugal.
Furthering the theme · of

" things beautiful" •. memhern
and guests were taken on a
tour or the Fry home includi~g the lawn area which
featured a sunken founta in,
and black iron park benches
within a lighted area .
Mrn. Walter Hayes gave
the secretary 's report. Miss
Nellie Zerkle, the treasurer's
report. Mrn. Horky gave a
report on the planted on the T
in Middleport.
.
Homemad~ ice cream pi'cr
vided by Mrn. Horky, Mrs .
Mary Skinner , Mrs . Ruth Arnold, Mrs. Dorothy Morris,
and Mrs. Walter Hayes and
homemade cakes furnished
furnished by Mrn. Dorothy
Roller, Mrs. Grac-e French,
Mrll. Hallie Zerkle, and Mrn.
Sibley Slack were served.
Guests were Mrs. Susan
Jackson, Mrn. Irene Jackson,
Mrs. Rose Reynolds, Mrn.
Emogene Crooks, Mrn. Max::~:::::::::::m~::..-.::.~:::::::.:::::-&lt;-:~~~:s::s:.{!::..%.""=*~=~~~'*"-~"~"~~~~~:~~::~~ ine Gaskill, Mrn. Lennie Haptonstall, Mrs. John Redovian,
Mrs . Doris Will, Mrs. Bowen,
Mrs. Lee Lee Janet Horky,
Sheila Horky, Keith RobertHelen and Sue Bottel
son, and M. J . F ry.

Beverly Wilcox, 1911 Meigs
High School grad1111te, has
been selected for membership in the Associatlort of
D is t i ngui ti he d
Yo ung
Americans All-American.
Daughter ol Mr. a nd Mrn.
Raymond Wilcox, Route I,
Middleport, Beverly was advised or her selection by
Douglas Divjne, vice president, a nd is the only Meigs
High School grad1111te to be so
honored . She was earlier
listed among those in Who's
Who in American Music.
Beverly's selection was
made on the basis ol her
dedicated effort in band as
well as cor.tributlons to her
school and her community.
She is a freshman al Marshall University where she is
majoring in music.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER lOTH

NO DEALERS PLEASE I
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
BEVERLY WILCOX

JOP FLAVOR-TOP QUALITY

Mrs. Hamm
is honored

~

Generation Rap

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF.

Mrli'. Louise Thompson and
members of the Busy Bee
Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church entertained
with a party in celebration of
the 9Jst birthday or Mrs. Dana

ROUND
STEAK

.. .

~

19

World
Turns ten
mtsston
service held

Atteruhnce
pins presertted

LB.

-

Boneless
----

Delicious

•

Large
Bunch

ve

% CT. T.W.

4 ROLL
PKG.

L

KIDNEY
BEANS

FRENCH
FRIES

12 oz. can

29 oz. can

CORN
MUFFIN .
MIX
8 OL boxes

69¢

COUPON

W/C

NU SOFT

CJTYLO\N

FABRIC SOFTENER
NO. 405

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
125 E. Main $belt 992·2171

KING SIZE
BOX

W/C

~ -

PANCAKE SYRUP

COUPO"'_ __

W/C

32 OZ. BTL

WOO LITE
8 oz.

an..

59¢

Coupon Expires
TWIN CITY

W/C

12 OZ. SIZE

l'

,,

,.'

99~

I

W/C

AERO WAX

69¢

NO. 155
27 OZ. CAN

W/C

&lt;

$109

W/C

Coupon Expires Sept. 10, 1977
TWIN CITYGATEWA

·Coupon Expires Sept. 10, 1'977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
~-

!

'

!

COUPON

SANI-FLUSH LIQUID
NO. 125

I

Coupon Expires Sept. 10, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

L__ co_uPDN_j

j

j

MAYONNAISE
NO. 125

$139

--

HELLMAN'S

GOLDEN GRIDDLE

36 OZ. BTL

W/C

Coupon Expires Sept. 10, 1977
TWIN C
Y

Coupon Expires s·e pt. 10, 1977 '
TWIN CITY
TEWAY

W/C

$}99
CDYPON

W/C

20 OZ. BOX

&lt;;oupon Expires Sept. 10, 1977
TWIN CITY . TEWAY

'

SOAP POWDER

J

NO. 205

NO. 155

$}39

COFFEE
NO. 305
$299
LB. CAN

Coupon Expires Sept. 10, 1977 .
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

NO. 155

L

We Hnd ways to help,

HEER

MAXWELL HOU

POST RAISIN BRAN

W/C

'

2 lb. bag

L_couP~-

.

l _ C O U f'f~~ _j

64 OZ. BTL

Pomeroy, 0.

ORANGE
JUICE

Coupon Expires-Sept. 10, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COMPANY

992-2920

99¢

LB.

Tl!l!ll Qeieen

BATHROOM TISSUE

LCDL)PON

TRASH BAGS

.19

Jiffy

Coupon Expires Sept. 10, 1977
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

HEFTY

""--

lb.

Joan of Arc

CHARMIN

AND

When you need money for a new·kitchen, other hom~ improvements,
or for any good reason, call us. We'll handle your loan quickly and with ·
.consideration. Amounts up to $15,000 available.
·

. 89¢

SLICED
BACON

59' 49¢ 5/99¢ 59¢

29~each

I

NO. 255 ·.
10 CT. PKG.

lb.

Armour

COUPON

Cook uP. · .
a new kitChen
at·City Loa&amp;

_$}29

BONELESS ROLLED

LB.

Scott, Mr. and ldrn. Don
Harden, D. J . and Michael,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fry, Wendy and Stacie, Mr. and Mrli.
Ken Buckley and Tarruny,
Mr. and Mrn. Russ Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pape, Kris
and Cheryl, Mr. and Mrli.
Aaron Sayre and Stephanie,
Mr. and Mrll. Jack Williams,
Jane Ann Tucker, and Ryan,
Mr. and Mrll. Roy Jenkins
and Kimberly, and Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Moore, .Jerod
and Andrea.

Diamonds set
in massive
· design gold
mounting.

~.99~

ROUND
STEAK

RUMP
ROAST
CELERY

7 Flashing

~.99e

GROUND
CHUCK

CABBAGE

DAIRY VAUEY
See Us At The Pomeroy Bend Bridge

NEW CROP
FRESH SOLID HEADS

( GOT A PROBLEM? An adult subject for discussion? You
can talk it over in her column if you write to Helen Bolte!, care
ol this newspaper.)
·

ADOLPH'S
HJIS.: !O:ooA.M. tn 11 :00 I'.M. Sun. - Thurs. 10 :00 A.M.
til 12:00 P .M. Frid•y and S..turday.

MEAT

lb.

Boneless

BEEF STEW
PRODUCE SPECIALS

$}69

CUBE
STEAK

29
lb.$1

STEAK

PASCAL

MAN'S 7' DIAMOND
RING

Tender

Sirloin Tip

NOTE FROM SUE : Be sure you include the new wife in your
relationship. When you two become friends, you'll make it as
part of the family. But if ther's submerged competition or
je~lousy here, don't expect many invitations.

The Young Adult Class of
lhe Asbury United Methodist
Church held a picnic recenUy
at Forked Run Lake.
Following a dinner, the
group enjoyed volleyball and
hors horseshoes. Dennis
Moore had devotions with the
Rev. Harvey Kock having the
prayer. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Al Harmon, Wendi
and Cyrstal, the Rev. and
Mrs. Kock, Mr. and Mrll.
James Lawrence, Mr. and
Mrs. John Lisle, Todd and

.

Hamm.

I

By

'

'·

Mrn. Hamm has resided for
the past two years at the Arcadia Nursing Home but i5
now at her home on South
Third St. In Middleport.
Numerous gifts were
presented t.o Mrli. Hamrh and
cake and lee cream were
.-.. ,•
served.
,'
.~
Attending were Mrs.
Thompson
, Mrs. Isabel
Should The Clerk Apologize?
BRADLEY YOUNG
Winebrenner,
Mrs. Eva
RAP :
Hartley,
Mrs.
Nelle
Werner,
I'm 13. It wouldn't have happened if I'd been 23 !
Hughes,
Mrll.
Mrs.
Ethel
In a food store, I picked up a package of candies. Then
Elizabeth
Gardner,
Mrs.
went into my pocket to get my moeny out. Later I decided I
Freda
Edwards,
Mrs.
Cora
.·
didn't want the candy, and put it back.
POMEROY - Bradley Pullen, Mrs. Carol Granda!,
•
•
But a clerk saw me and thought I slipped the package ln
Young celebrated his lOth birMrs. Ouida Chase, Mrs.
my pocket. At the checkout stand, she accused me of·steating,
thday recently with a party Roma Hawkins, Mrs. Lettie
and loudly said if I di\ln't hand over the candy there'd be big
given at his home, 742 East
Roush , Mrs . Lillian
trouble.
Main St., Pomeroy.
Demoskey, Mrli, Nancy Hill •
I emptied my pockets, very embarrassed. She growled,
The decorations carried out and Jerred, Mrs. Nora Jor- •
"Okay, then," but didn't apologize. People watching probably
a cartoon theme and the cake
thought I was a thief .
The monthly world mis- featured " Big Bird." Games dan, Mrn. Rosemary Lyons, ;.
Why do grown-ups have to act so mean, just because sions service was held were played with Rick Baker, Mrs. Julia Grim. Mrll. Alice you' re a teenager? - ACCUSED
Wednesday evening at the Mike Hawk, and Angie Baker Freeland, unable to attend, _
•
Middleport
United winning the prizes. Gifts were sent a gift.
DEAR ACCUSED :
Unfortunately, some groW!Hips don't consider yoW!g Pentecostal Church under the presented to Bradley and
people human. The clerk should (I) not have accused you in direction of Mrll. Louise Lon- relreshments of cake, ice
front ol other customers, and (2) have apologized lor being don, Syracuse, director of the cream, potato chips, and
wrong.
World Mls.$ions Department. koolaid were served.
Let's hope your parents alert the store manager to this Devotional singing and
Attending were · Mike
crude treatment! -SUE .
prayer opened the service Hawk, Angie, Nancy and
Attendance pins were .:.,.
with a brief summary of past Rick Baker, Kimbeily and presented during the Sunday DEAR ACCUSED :
missionary meetings. Mrn. Timothy Deem, Mindy Har- school hour at the Mid1leport
Granted, the clerk was wrong, but maybe she felt you . Shirley Smith read the ris, Charlie Brewer, Diana First Baptist Church Sunday.
outsmarted her- by eating the candy and throwing away the minutes and Mrll. Maxine Brewer, Vickie Harris,
Receiving pins from MannVarian gave the t(easurer's Janice Young, his grand- ing Kloes, superintendent, in ..
empty.
Unfortunately, you were blamed for the petty shoplifting report.
mother, Mrn. Audrey Young, the adult Sunday school were
so many kids pull off without getting caught.
Mrn. Joyce Sautern spoke and his parents, Mr. and Mrli. Mary Brewer of the Golden •
If you were a store employee, you might better understand to the congregation using the VjctorC. Young, Jr.
Rule Class, one year; Leora '
why checkers sometimes lose their cool when tbey think topic, '' What Can I Give"
Sigman
.of the Busy Bee
Sending gifts were
they've spotted a thief. (And it's happened to adults, as well as with scripture from I Kings 3,
Bradley's brother, Victor Class, one year; Lillian
kids. ) - HELEN
·
Luke 6, and Second GorinChuck
Young and family , Demoskey of the Busy Bee
. thians9.
~
Jenny, Tony, and Todd Lee, Class, a two year pin; and
DEAR RAP:
A song entitled " I Love to and Tarruny Queen . · ·
Clifford Hayes of the Men's
My parents were divorced when I was a baby. ! was never Tell the Story" was sung by
Bible class; a live year pin.
t.old about my re8l.father until my teens. So, when I was 18, I Thomas and Jean Kelly. The
In the children's Sunday
.ATrENDS FUN'ji:RAL
called him. I recently spent my first weekend with him and his serVice · concluded with Mrn.
Mr. and Mrn. Everett Per- school receiving pins were
new wife., but I haven't seen him since. Between his pregnant London reading scriptures rymim · and Wesley, . New Jennifer and Teresa Leivlng,
wife and his job, he doesn't have time.
from Isaiah I, J-8,and the con- Albany, Ind. were here for six year pins; Ronnie Denny,
I want so much t.o be a part of his life. What shall! do? gregational song, "Jesus Use the luneral services of Mrs. six year pin, and Van Klein, a·
NEED MY FATHER
Me."
one year pin.
Clara Howery.
DEAR NMF:
Slow down! You've been out of your father's life for 18
years. It will take time for him to adjust, especially now that a
new baby is on the way.
Settle for phone calls, letters, and an occasional visit and
let the relationship build naturally. - HELEN

1:

Wt ACCEPT
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

PRICES GOOD THRU

Picnic enjoyed by young adults

MASON ~Lori Renee Redman celebrated her fifth birthday Tuesday evening with a
party at her home in Mason.

Richard L. Jeffers, Lois J.
Jeffers to Reed Jeffers, Gene
Jeffers, Pareels, ColumbiaScipio.
W. R. Shasteen, Ethel G.
Shasteen to Stephen R.
Hartenbach , Cynthia M.
Hartenbach ,
.60
a cre ,
Pomeroy.
James J . Proffitt, Harold
E. Wolfe, by Shrf., Bernadette L. Wolfe by Shrf.,
Lester A. Price, Kathryn
Price, I acre, Lebanon.
Viola Tugarden to Una
Pooler, Sally ·Pooler, Parcels,
Chester.
Christine Kessler to Mitchell Holley Jr., Carolyn
Holley, Parcels, Chester.

.

Kevin, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. David Bumgardner,
son , Bruce , a nd Cindy
Thompson, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrn. Danny Bowers,
Tina, Tracy and Artie, Middleport ;
Mrs.
Danny
Brickles, Paul and Peter,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs .
Gene Davis and ·Bridget,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrn. J ohn
Michels, · Tim, Laura, and
Diana Abbinati, Mt. Prcr
spect, lll. ;. Mrs. Herbert
Glaze, Middleport ; Charlotte,
Nicky, Brenda , Scott, Helen
and Patty Glaze ,. Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. James Reed,
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
David Reed and J . S;, Lancaster ; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Durst, Tim and Jim, Middle por t, Lawrence Reed,
Middleport; and April Ellis,
Rutland.

FIVE GENERATIONS of the Herbert Miller lamily
attended a recent reunion. They were Mrs. Helen Miller
and her daughter, Mrs. Eileen Bowers, front; and Mrs.
Shirley Bumgardner, Bridget Davis and T&lt;!rry Davis,
back row.

Meigs ·
Property
Transfers

•.:--

receptwn lor the grand
vr~:aiUsl to be held at Uniontown.
T he annual motherdaughter banquet was set for
Sept. 22 at 6:30 p.m. with
tickets to be $2.25. Tickets
may be purchased !rom
Bessie King, Euoetta Becl&gt;tl e, Na omi King, Ann
Thomas, or Betiy Van Meter.
It was noted that the combmed Friends' Night observance for the chapters of
Racine, Evangeline, Harrisonville, and Pomeroy, will
be held at Evangeline on Oct.
l5at 7: 30.
Pro-tem of!icers for the
meeting were Mrn. Kathryn
Mitchell, associate matron;
Marie Hawkins, EJecta, and
Bill King, warder.
Paul and Ila Darnell, Glenna Crisp, and Maryln Wilcox
served relreshmenls.

Named to All-Americans

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

~ ~~;;;~~~ ;;; ~~ !;~
&lt;

:

�V- The O.Uy Sentinei.Mkldleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Tui!Sday,Sepl. 6,1977

-

--

POLLY'S POINTERS

ERASURES

&amp; ALTERATIONS

HAVE. A
PROBLEM?
CAl!
CRISISLINE
992-5554

DI\IVING
:PIBCB

You can help cut down on
crime losses ... losses that
direc tly
affect
you,

whether they happen to you

or not .

Insurance

costs

are

by

burglaries, robber ies and

car lhelts .. . plus the

countless CB radios and

bicycles that turn up

missing.
One thing you can do is to

support

programs

providing stiffer penal.ties

for
wrongdoers
and
proposals for strengthened
crime Investigation efforts.

You can afso. make it
tougher for crooks . Use

agency

provides

financial protection .!nd
service when crime lqsses
occur ... but many can be

prevent&lt;!(j. That's why we
say -

prevention is the

INS.

IT ...TE OF OHIO.

COU NTY SS:
DATE
t.IFR'S SE RIAL NO.
MOOEL
MOTOR NO.

VEAR

MAKE
BOOY TYPE
PURCHASER'S NAME

19-

0

I (we) certify that the mrleage regrstered on lhrs vehr cl ~ at the lrme of assrgnment rs
mrles.
CHECK ON( OF THE FOLLOWING STATEMENTS. I (WE1CERTIFY THAT:
0 To the best of my (our) knowledge, the Odometer read10g reflecls the actual n11 leage,
0 The Odometer readrng reflects mrleage 10 ex r.oss ol t11e ne,gned "lechani cal lrmil of 99,999
m1les.
0 To the best ot my .lour) knowlenge, the Odouete r reotlrog IS nat the ;r.lual n11leage and should
not be relred upon.
CHECK ONE OF THE FOLLOWING. I (WE) CERTifY THAT, WHILE IN MY lOUR I POSSESSION:
D The Odomete r of thrs veh1c le was not alteren, sri back. or d1sconnecled;
0 The Odometer ot :hrs vehrcle was reiia11ed or replaced.

0

SI G ~ATUHE ,

Farmers
POMEROY, OHIO

worn to and subsc11bed
hiS day of

10

Ohio Power"-""'-'

Member F~deral Deposit Insurance Corporation

Working together is the only way.

992-214J
102 w. Main
Pomeroy
,

•

TELEVISION
VIEWING

my presence by
Sworn to and subsCIIbed
thos day ot

19_

19 __ • My CommiSSi on e.p11es

SEAl

my presence by
19 -·My Commrss1on expues
IClERK

Odometer readings must he
verified beginning Sept. ·6
POMEROY
Larry
Spencer, clerk of courts, aaid
that beginning Sept. 6, geople
9elling cars, according to a
new state law will have to
verify the od&lt;meter reading

on a car is accurate before a
tltle can be transferred to the
buyer's name.
The new law requires
people who are selling cars io
fill out an affidavit which

19-

SEAL

I CLERK. DEf'UT Y CLERK OF COURTS-NOTARY )

.

10

must be attached to the title.
Eventually the odometer
reading will be on the back of
aU . titles but the affidavits
will be required until all titles
now issued or in print are

eliminated.
The title office of the clerk
of courts will not be allowed
to issue a new title for a car
until the odometer statement
is obtained.
The odometer statement
will be the size of the regular
title and remain attached to
the tltle.
The clerk of co~rts will be

DEPUTY

CLE RK OF COURTS-NOTARY I

instructed by the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles to attach a
copy of the seller's affidavit
to each title issued from their
existing stocks of old title
fonns I!Jltil the old fonns are
depleted and they begin using
the new titles containing the
new odometer. information.
The clerks will be advised
by the bureau to obtain the

Seller's affidavit indicating
mileage on the motor vehicle,
but can accept an affidavit
from the buyer, if the mileage
infortnation cannot ·be obtained · from the previous
owner.
The public will be able to
obtain
the
affidavits
necessary from the office of
the clerk of courts.

SENIOR CITIZENS' SCENES
SENIOR CITIZENS: House
Blll No. ~. endorsed by the
Ohio Commission on Aging, ts
a bill which establishes
credits for heating bills for
persons whose incomes are
under $7,000 a year and are
over 65, or who are permanently
and , totally
disabled. The amount of
credit would be 25 percent of
the monthly !)eating bills
December through AprU 197778 and 1978-79 for ll.!ers of
electricity, gas or natural
gas: For users of fuel oil,
bottled gas, coal and
kerosene; the credit would be

WHY NOT SEND AlDNG

THE DAILY SENTINEL
and·
SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

•17.50
lHEY WIU. RECEIVE
9 MONlHS OF
lHE HOMETOWN

SEPTEMBER 30, 1977

Tbe

DailiSentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769
'

'

tl~~---···••••••t•••···········~································

~~············~·····························~·············

C:rl1f ·············•••·••·············••··•··············••••······•

,· ...aft ··••·················
. • ••••••••••• ZIP CODE ••• ~··········~
sr
0 'CHECK ........... [l MONEY .ORDER ........ AMT...... ,,
~

..

NORJIUND

time and effort these persons
are donating for "Yesteryear
Il."
Be
here
for
"YesterYear" and watch
your favorite judge at
''work."
_
Enter the various rontests
. and games, look at the an-

tique display and craft
demonstrations,
browse
tbrougb the Country Store
rind enjoy good food at the
Country Kitchen. When you
are tired, you can relax and
listen to the entertainment
which will be held all af-

by THOMAS JOSEPH.

ACROSS

1 ~~~r of

1

Tahnee Jo were Tuesday
viaitors of Helen JobnJon.
Miss Patricia Thoma of
Kentucky was weekend
visitor of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson were
Mr. aod Mrs. Pete Earnheart
and Louise Earnheart of
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma and Patricia were
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs
and Adam spent several days
with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Downs and family
of Glouster, 0 .

'111REAT REMOVED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Two
lead-lined containers, filled
with a potentially dangerous
radioactive chemical, were
stolen
from a patient's room
ternoon.
at
Holmes
Hospital this
"Yesteryear ll"· will be a
day for the whole family. A weekend.
day for fun and relaxation.
A thought for ·lbe day:
Join us Saturday, September
11 at the Senior Citizens American novelist F. Scott
Fitzgerald said, "All good
Center in Pomeroy.
Watch your local paper for writing ls swimming under
further Information con- water and holding your
cerning "Yesteryear II.''
breath."

APPLICANT'S SIGNATURE

OFFER EXPIRES

$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor

Helen JobMon was a recent
visitor of her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Ray Johnson
and family of Dublin. She also
visited with Mrs. Gurney
Walker, Mrs. Ntna Fairchild
and Myma Wilson of
Columbos.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Johnson and family and
Helen JOhnson toured to the
Roscoe Village at Coshocton,
Ohio aod other places of
interest.
' Karl Knapp lll visiting his
grandmother, Lena Knapp of
Langsville.
Mrs. Myrta Wilson of •
Columbus spent from Sunday
to Wednesday with Helen
Johnson and other relatives.
Cheryl Roush of Pomeroy
also visited.
Geneva Shumate and

( Must Be Completed )

United States

At the power company, we're continuing
to expand our seai'ch for ecpnoniiCal fuel
sources. Planriing for new facilities that will
~ needed in the future. And, we're contiit?Jll!l' our efforts to ho!d our operating costs
m_li_ne so we can effiaently provide the elec- ·
tnc1ty that helps all of us get our jobs done.
.
How can you help? By using electricity
wisely. On the job. And at home, too.
You can also help by \Ulderstanding
and sharing the joint responsibility we have
in assuring our electric supply.
And working together offers the best
chance for all of us to get the job done. .

prev•ous owne1.
'

The above described motor vehicle (CHECK ONEiiSOnewly self-assembled,Ois presently
ev1denced 'by a salvage cert1f1cale of I rile, orO was previously register.ed/titied in another
slate, prov1nce, or country and (CHECK ONE OF THE FOLLOWING) ;
0 To the best ol my (our) knowledge, the odometer reading reflects the actual milea&amp;e;
OThe odomeler read10g relleets m1leage 10 ex cess of the desrgned mechanrcallimil o199,999
miles.
0To the besl ot my (our) know ledge, the odometerreadrng is not the actual mileage and
should nol be reloed upon,
I (we ) cert1iy thai lhe mrle age regrslered on the odometer ol ihos motor vehicle at lhe trme of
appl 1ca!lon for t1tle IS
mi les.

in the

All of o_ur jobs, as we~ as the basic quality
of our Uves, depend, m part, on a stable
sUpply of electric power..
But the price of electricity has been
going up. And a lot of people are worrying
&amp;bout the possibility of shortages in a few
years.
These are serious problems. Not just
for you. For all of us. .
.
Because without electricit)i machines
stop. Work stops. Paychecks stop. The
economy suffers. And progress stops.
So, how do we deal with this?
By working together.

I (we) have made every ellort possible and cannot locate the prevrous owner of the above described motor vehrcle to obta in the odometer statement required by Section 4505.06 ol the Rev1sed Code.
I (we i obtarned ownershrp of the above desc11bed motor vehocle by operation of law pursuant lo
Sect10ns 4!il5.10; 4505.101 ; 4513.60; 4513.61 "' 4513.62 of the Rev1sed Code, and at the time
of transfer of ownershr p ~as not able lo obta~n a statement of the odometer reading from the

0

X
(T RANSfEROR 'S

MODEL

MAKE

MOTOR NO.
BODY TYPE
PURCHASER'S NAME
CHECK ONE OF THE FOLLOWING STATEJ.IENTS. I (WE) CERTIFY THAT:

At Jlry College

S

top ~riving imd start looking! When you're in the ,
market for a new or later model car ... see us.
Our Auto Loans are geared to help you buy that car
you want now ... when you want it .. -and let you
repay with a plan that's geared to your budget! Just
select the car you want and tell us the amount you 'II
need to purchase it. On approval. , . in many cases
it's the same day .. . you'll have the ri).oney to drive
home in your new set of wheels! Get all the facts soon!

best policy.

1W.E C. WERNER

NOTICE 'FO TRANSFEROR : YOU ARE REQU IRED BY LAW TO ENTER ALL INFORMATION REQUIRED HEREIN, INCLUDING THE ODOMETER READING OF THE MOTOR
VEHICLE iN THE AFFIDAVIT iMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING. THE MAK I ~G OF A FALSE
STATEMENT UNDER OATH OR AFFIRMATION IS IN VIOLATION OF SECTION 2921.13
OF THE REVISED CODE AND IS PUNISHABLE BY SIX MONTHS IMPRISONMENT AND
A FINE OF UP TO ONE THOUSAND OOLLARS , OR BOTH.

This Offer Good

and Wishing You Weren't

good strong lo~ks. Mark
possessi ons with your
social s·e cvrif)' number.

Our

NOTICE TO APPLICANT FOR CERTIFICATE OF TITLE : YOU ARE REQUIRED BY
LAW TO ENTER ALL INFORMATION REQUIRED HEREIN , iNCLUDING THE OOOM·
ETER READING OF THIS MOTOR VEHIClE IN THE AFFIDAVIT IMMEDIATELY
FOLLOWING. THE MAKING OF A FALSE STATEMENT UNDER OATH OR AFFIRMATION iS IN VIOLATION OF SECTION 2921J3 OF THE REViSED CODE AND IS
PUNISHABLE BY SIX MONTHS iMPRISONMENT liND A FiNE OF UP TO ONE THOU·
SAND DOLLARS , OR BOTH.
STATE OF OHIO,
COUNTY SS:
DATE
19_
YEAR
MFR'S SERIAL NO .

NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

ad versely affected

ODOMETER READING DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
(TYPE OR PRINT IN INK)

(TYPE OR PRINT IN INK)

.

Prevention is the
best policy .. •

Take the crime of arson .
You ' re
paying
an
increasingly heavy subsid y
for deliberatel y 'Set fires
through your insurance
premiums.

APPLICANT'S AFFIDAVIT

OQOMETER RE.a DING DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

water au around. '!'his really
works, since they see their
shadows when looking at the
water jugs. I have used many
different methods but this has
worked best for me.
-LORETTA.
DEAR POLLY - When
pressing seams open with a
non-steam iron I keep a pan
with an ice cube in it and a
towel near my ironing board.
I run the ice cube down the
open seam, c!rY my hands ·
with the towel and then iron.
This eliminates water over
the entire gannent or having
a stopped up sprayer. - LOIS.
DEAR POLLY- I use a tea
ball to season stews and
soups. Place ' the desired
seasonings in the ball, cook
with the food until it is
seasoned to taste nd then
remove. .
Sprinkle doughnuts with a
mixture of instant coffee anq
confectioner's sugar lor a dif- .
ferent flavor.- MRS. M.B.
DEAR POLLY - Wl)en I
want to use some food coloring I cut a plastic drinking
straw in hall and dip one
piece in the bottle of food coloring and my finger on the
end of the straw controls the
amount I get - a drop or
more. I do hope this helps Unda and others. FLORENCE.

Wolfpen News Notes

&amp; ALTERATIONS VOID THIS STATEMENT
STATE OF OHIO

SELLER'S AFFIDAVIT

Nail polish stains shirt

Summer outdoor activity expanded on Bob Evans·Farm

VOID THIS STATEMENT

STATE OF OHIO

Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I spilled
fingernail polish on ooe of my
favorite shirts and carmot get
it out even though I have tried
everything I know of. Do you
have any ideas?- LEAH
DEAR LEAH~ You failed
to say what color your shirt is
or what sort of Iabrie it is
made of, so test anything on
an inconspicuous spot before
using. You might try sponging the spot with rubbing
alrohol to which you have added just a few drops of ammonia.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY- I want to
~ tell Helene how I use the
plastic mesh bags that
oranges often come in. I cut
one bag to a ten-inch length,
fold in hall and wrap a rubber
band around the middle
several times. This makes a
ADAMSVILLE OUTFITTERS, A NEW new adventure activities oo Bob Evans Farm at Rio nice scrubber to use when
backpacking, camping and outerwear store, will Grande. The farm now offers day and overnight washing dishes and it lasts a
double as an information headquarters for all the canoeing, backpackifig and horseback riding.
long time and costs nothing. MARGARET.
DEAR READERS - The
following letter from L.K.
tells of her way of making
scrubbers from mesh fruit
Only outdoor store·in Ohio that permits rentinghags, Take your choice. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - The mesh
to try out equipment-before the purchase
bags that oranges and parINSIDE OF ADAMSVILLE Outfitters is rustic but the
ticularly grapefruit come in
merchandise is modern. The store handles the latest in dehydrated foods for
make great scrubbers. A
the ~early hiker aod backpacker, backpacks, tents, outdoor cookware,
large bag will make three.
sleepmg bags, compasses, and down vests and jackets. Pictured at the
Cut each b~g in thirds and
counter is store assistant Linda Phelan.
then fold each piece into a
square. Whip cut ends
together with thread the
same color as the bag and
then single . crochet around
finishes.
RIO GRANDE - The packing, and horse trails. In horsemanship infonnation sc\ customers to try out
popular for carrying books on the entire square. Edge as
desired. They are very useful
Adamsville Outfitters rents coUege campuses.
summer of 1977 has been a July the toughest of the back- that you can enjoy your ride. equipment on the spot by
and
very colorful when a conovernight and daypacks to
•season of innovation and packing trails was dedicated
The Outfitters Shop also is
They also provide some renting first
before
trasting
color t! !read is used
backpackers on the farm 's the information center and
development of outdoor to Gallia County's famous interesting asides - tidbits selling," Wolle said. Tbe
for
the
crocheted
edge. They
trails for less than $10. The headquarters for all the
actlvlties on the 1100 acre Bob hiker "Grandma Gatewood". about the soil, vegetation and store Is also lbe only shop
outwear
nylon
net.L.K.
daypacks are used for farm's outdoor activities.
Evans Farm located among The trails have since been wilflife, and in particular, of lis type In southeastern
DEAR
POLLYTo keep
carry-ing water bottles, Curreritly the shop is open IHl
the rolling hills of Gallia used for numerous en- Meyer is an expert on habits Obio.
the
rabbits
from
eating
the
County.
vironmental and back- and calls of owls. Often
For sale are Richmoor SJiacks, and nature guides for p.m. seven days a week
flowers
and
vegetables
in
my
.Canoeing down clear packing clinics and tours.
Meyer will call owls into dehydrated foods for the ·one day trips. Wolfe said the although Wolfe said the hours
garden I set jars or jugs of
For the equestrian-minded, camp at night · while Ron hearty hiker and back- daypacks are the ·same bags may change this fall .
Raccoon Creek, back·
packing, and overnight trail an overnight horsepack trip Dunfee, manager of the packer ; backpacks, tents ~nd that are becoming_extremely ·
rides all offer new outlets to was created complete with canoe livery, lead songs outdoor cookware . by Janoutdoorsmen or families meals eooked over a camp- around the fire .
sport and Gerry; Snow Lion
looking for an exciting group fire, folk singing around the
The newest element on the sleeping bags ; Silva Comactivity. Expansion has also· fire, and a three hour ride to farm is Adamsville Out- passes; and Woolrich and
led to the opening of an and from camp. Meyer and fitters Shop which Wolfe says Gerry fall and winter down
outdoor shop called Adams- horse trainer Paul Brown stocks the latest in hiking and vests and jackets.
ville Outfitters.
usually lead this trip which is backpacking equipment plus
The store itseU is a rustic
·,The back to nature held by reservation only on fall and winter outerwear for log cabin, however, the
Programs actually began Tuesday and Friday nights in the backpacker, hunter and - merchandise is modern.
many months ago when groups of six to 20. Meyer and farmer.
Wolle can explain in great
George Wolfe, the farm's new Brown have a way of making
"To mr knowledge, we dep\11 the advantages ' and
recreation director, sat down novice horsemen feel at ease are the only outdoor store disadvantages of . various
with · company officials to and provide the necessary hi Ohio tbai allows styles, fills , fabrics and
help plan the !ann's future
development.
''What we have hoped to
do," Wolfe said, " is to
provide fun-oriented adventure activities that also
teach a respect for the land
and our environment."
To this end, the farm has
been the scene of bustling
activity since early ·spring.
The company acquired the
Raccoon Creek Canoe Livery
from private owners and
several improvements that
were made to the area and
equipment was added.
Secondly, Wolle's assistant
Kingsley Meyer directed the
marking of approximately
twelve miles of hiking, back-

ERASURES

t

DO NOT DETACH FROM TITLE

DOWN

~fe~~v~r

. F' . 1
• In heaven
5 1ct10na
•
un.Cle
3 Modern times
$8
10 Border on .
,( 2 wds .)
~ bill is now before the 11 Happenings 4 Altitudes
Senate Finance Conunlttee. 13 Trims, as
(abbr.)
We feel thia bill should be
branches
5 Entertain
passed. 11 certainly would be 14 Part of N.J.'s 6 Dodge
' 'l
'ckname
7
Mal
de
ru
Yesterday's
Answer
of great help to all Senior
Citizens. we all remember 15 First-person 8 On earth
31 "Sergeant
23 Pure
the high cost of fuel thia past
contraction
(3 wds.)
Preston
24
Swiss
·
16 Stripling
9 Unfruitful
of
the-"
wmter.
•T k
lake
But- your help is needed 17 S'lk
1 worm
1. a es
36
Late
Mr.
25 River islets
- if you feel this bill should 18 Prolific
potshots
Hodges
27 Zodiacal sign
be passed stop in at the 20 Detective
16 Join
37 "Luck - .
Z9 Fishnet
Kirby
19 Proceed to
Center and sign a petition
Lady"
30
Serpents'
which is going to be sent in 21 Sensible
windward
(2 wds.}
weapons
support of thia bill. Ask your 22 Salt tree
Z2- spumante
family, friends and neighbors 23 Tinnek:eeJ:oerr;-""!2,_:.13"14to stop In and sign lbe petition 25 Campsite
residue
also. If you cannot come to 26 Thick slice
the Center, send us a short
1:;-+--lr--+-letter saying you are in 27 Quote.
support of House Bill No. 230 28 ChemlCal
to the· Meigs County Senior · prefrx
Citizens Center, East Main 1Z9 Please
Street, Pomeroy, Oblo, 45769. 32 Le~ than
The following individuals
a nun.
have agreed to serve as 33 Naval off.
judges for the various con- 34 St.
,
tests and games for
Anthony s
"Yesteryear Il," a· public · cross
celebration to be held 35 Disastrous 1;;..-+-t~
Saturday, September 17 37 Keep an
beginning at 11 a.m. at the
~~'fr:!
Senior Citizens Center in 38
Pomeroy.
39 Hence
Oakley Collins, State 40 Lamprey
catcher
Senator; Ronald James, 41 Part of
State
Representative;
NBA
Carolyn McKinley, Ohio
(abbr.}
Department of He~~lth; I,lruce
Parmalee, State Office
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
R.S.V.P.; Bettie Bjcrn,
AXYDLBAAXR
Activities Specialist, Ohio
II LONGFELLOW
Conunission on Aging; Molly
Varner, Director, ·Area
One letter aimply stand~ for nnother. In thla sample A Ia
Agency on Aging; Henry
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
Wells, Richard Jones, James
apostrophes, the length and formation of the worda are all
County
Comhints. Each day the code letters are different.
Roush,
m~sl.oners; Clarence AnCIIYPTOQUOTES
drews, Mayor, Pomeruy;
Charlea Pyles, . Mayor,
1
l D
EU
AIC
SUO
V· U F F I Z
Racine; Fred W. Crow In,
YHO
V TV,
USNL
Prosecuting Attorney, and
KI Z
TO
ID
Mary [()u Johnlon, Msry
TS
TO
KUZ
HG
A I WL D
Telle, Dayton McElroy,
T0
Maidie Mora and Suzy
SLV GZLDOUS
D G L LV . Carpenter.
Dan Smith, Joan stewart, · . Yestenllly'a Cryptoquote: IDLENESS IS THE FINEST
Blll Childs and Allee Neue
THING IN TilE WORLD PROVIDED ONE DOESN'T SUn'ER
will be serving as emcees.
FROM lT.-EDGAR DEGAS
The center appreciatetl the ·
C) U71 K1n1 Feat.urea Syodlc:atf, lne.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6,1977
3: Is-General Hospital 6, 13.
3:3ll-Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; Merv Griffin 6; Sesame St . 20,33; Movie
" Hunters of the Wild" 10; Dinah 13.
4: 15-Ltltle Rascals 4.
4:3ll-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch B; Hogan's Heroes 15.
5:oo-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke B;
Mister Rogers' Nleghborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Mission : Impossible 15.
5 : 3~d Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6:oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; In Pursuit ot Liberty 20.
7:oo-Trulh or Cons. 3; Billy Grah~m Crusade 6;
Cross-Wits 4; Pop Goes the Country B; Lowell
Thomas Remembers33; News10; To Tell the Trut~
13; My Three Sons 15.
,
7:30-Hoilywood Squa,res 3,4; Billy Graham Crusade'
8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33; $25,000 Pyramid '
10; Wild Kingdom 13; Marty Robbins Spotlight 15.
B:oo-Movle "The Hlndenburg" 3,~,15; Happy Days ·
6,13; Upstairs, Downstairs 20,33; Bugs Bunny 10.
B:3Q-Washlnglon : Behind Closed Doors 6,13; Movie
''LKogan's Run" 8,10.

9:oo--&lt;)pera Theater 20,33.
ll : ~News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15.
.
11:3ll-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Scenes !rom a
Murder" 6,13; U.S. Open tennis Highlights 8;
Movie "It Happened One Night" 10; ABC News 33,
11 :45-Movle " Escape from the Planet of the Apes" 8. ·
l2 : ~Janakl 33.
1: oo-TomorroW 3,.. .

1: 25-News 13.
1:3ll-Mary Hartman 10
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7,1977
5:45-Farm Report 13; S:Sll-PTL Club 13.
6:~Summer Semester 10.
6:3ll-News 4; News 6; Summer Semester 8;
Christopher Closeup 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13.
_
6:55-Good Morning, Trl State 13; 7:Dg-Today 3,4,15;
Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS News 8; Chuck
White Reports 10.
.
·
7:05-Porky P.\g 10; 7:3ll-Schoolles 10.
·a:oo---{;apt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33. .•
9:oo---{;ross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; 'Family
Affair 8; Mike Douglas 10.
9:3ll-A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Andy Griffith B.
10 : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Here's Lucy 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:3ll-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10 .
11 : ~Wheel of Fortune 3, IS; Happy Qav• 6, 13;
Marcus WElby, M.D. 4.
11 :30-lt's Anybody's Guess 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Love of ~lie 8, 10.
11 :55-CBS Nev.:s 8; Lovlna Free 10.
12:~News 3,4,6, 10; Shoot for the Stars 15;Midday 13.
12:30-Chtco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob .
Braun 4; Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10.
·
1:00-Gong ·Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp;the Rstless 10; Notlor Women Only 15.
1:3ll-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8110.

Pyramid 6, 13.
2:3ll-Doclors 3,4, 15; One Life lo Live 6, 13; Guiding
' Light 8,10.
3:~Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Famll.y 8,10;
M.D. 20.
3:15-General Hospital 6,13.
'f
3:30-Malch Game 8, tO; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge of. Night 4; Gong Show
15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is. 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Movie "Bundle of Joy" 10; Dinah 13.
4:15-Litt\e Rascals 4.
4:3ll-My ,Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch B; Hogan's Heroes 15.
s:~Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; ; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13.
5:3lf-Odd Couple 4; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6 : ~News 3,4,8,10,14,15; ABC Ne,ws 6; Zoom 2D.6 :30NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBSN News 8,10; Della Reese &amp; Woody Herman In
Concert 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Billy. Graham Crusade 6;
Cross-Wits 4; Sha Na Na a.. twals 10; Io.]~ll the
Truth 13; Billy Graham Crusade 15; Big Green
Machine 33.
7:3ll-Dolly 3; Sha Na Na 4: Tattletales 8; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank
13.
8:00-Us Against the World 3,4, 15; Magic of ABC 6, \3;;
B'illy Graham Crusade 8; Upstairs, Downstairs
20,33;. Waltons \0.
9 : ~Washlngton: Behind Closed Doors Part :i ~.131
Movie "The Caper of the Golden Bulls" 8;
Childhood 20,33.
2:~$20,000

lD:DO-Movle "Elvis on Tour'' 3,4, 15; Leaf from a
Town ~ecord 33: PilOt 10J"lQiWs2ll. ·

10:3ll-Book Beat 33.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ·MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.
11 :JO-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
u.s. Open· Tennis Highlights 8; Movie "Quest' lor
Love" 10; ABC News 33.
11 :45-Movle "Sweet Hostage" 8; 12:~Janakt 33.
12:4ll-Mystery of the Week 6,13.
'1:oo- Tomorrow 3,-6.
t :3ll-Mary Hartman 10.
lo,\ll-News 13.

,,

�10- The

IS Wurdti ur Undrr

. ..
..'·...."'

Cub

ctwo,..

. ..

1.201

Wanted to Huy

biMemory

3.7$

fWitWlg «Jlt&gt;r UIOIII t.'\II~'UlWe
da)'¥ will be dlllr~t'\1 111t tilt' I tllly

'Ads

ltak!,
~ Tha nks

ou.a

ObitWiry : 6 &lt;.'f tllS ptor word, 13.00
nunimwn. Cuh m .ttvarn.·~MubileHome!#M k~ and Yil hJ~II!$
a~

at'(,'tpled ooly with ,:JtSh With
ordt&gt;r. 25 t.'fltll cllil rt~e {OI' .~tll CM r ryll ~ Bux Nwnller In Qj re of Tl~ Senllllt!l.

Tilt' Publlsher rt&gt;serv~ lh~ n~ ht
tu l'di.1 or rt!Jfl.'\ any iidli ~ult"d u~
jt!(:IJoiUt l. Tl~ Pubhshl•r "K'Ill Not lll'
n!~l!ilhle for more than tit~ ll l&lt;:vt~

rt"t.1 msert10n.

Phone 992-%1513

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
·oEADUNES
Munilay
Noon on Sal.urday
Tue.day
thruFnday
4P.M.
t.he d&lt;ty before pubhcillMlll
Swl{!ay

4P.M.

Friday t~.flemoon

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of the order of
sale du ly issued out nt thP
Court of · Common Pleas. in
rne case ot 1-'0.meroy National
Bank and Citizens Nationa l
Bank vs. Fred B. Goeglein , et
al. , be ing case No . 16,046, 1
will offer a t public sale at the
door of the Court House of
Meigs County , Oh io, on the
hUh da y of S_e pte mber , 1977 ,
at 10 o 'cl ock A . M ., the
follow i ng
ibnds
and
tenements :
P•rcel 1: Situate In
Salisbury Township , Meigs
County , Oh io, and being in
Section 15 , Town 2 , Rang e 13 ,
and being Lot No . S of Rock
Springs Subdivision. and
recorded In Vol. 4 , Page 36,
37. 38, of Meigs County Plat
Records.
Deed Reference : Volume
256, Paqe 45·1, Me igs County
Deed Records .·
·
Parcel :I: Situated In
Townshi.P
of
Salisbury ,
County of Meigs, and Sto~~te of
Oh io : Being In Section 15,
Town 2, Ra!'loe 13 . and
bounded and descr ibe-d as
follows : Beg inn ing , at the
center of the Pomero y and
Athens P ike Road a t a point
about 155 feet nor t h of a
sycamOre tree at tt'le side of
said road ; thence north eo
degrees JO' East 220 feel to a
stake ; th ence soutn 18
degrees 33' east 20(1 feet to a
st ake ; th ence south so
degrees JO' west 220 feet to
th• c enter of the said
Pomeroy and AthenS. Road ;
thence west along ttle center
of said road 200 feet to th e
place · of begl~ning , co n taining One (1} Acre , more or
less. EXCEPTING all t he
coal ana all mining rights ,
Including air shafts , a'r ways ,
drainage and entries to mine
coel under the above and
ot her land ; as heretofore sold
by previous grantors .
EXCEPTING a ce rta in
parcel conveyed to Helen B .
Collins by dt:ed recorded in
Deed Book 172, Page 263,
Me i e~s County Deed R ecorcfs ,
contah1ing . 17 A . more or
less .
Being in Section lS, Town 2,
and Range 13, bounded and
described as follows : Lots 7, 8
and 9 of the Rock Springs
Sub -Dlvis·ion.• as recorded 10
Plat BOOk Nil . 4 , Page 36, of
the Records in the Meigs
County Recorder's Office.
Reference Deed : Volume
216, Page 659 and 719·, Meigs
County Deed Records.
The real estate is appraised
at $39,350 .00 for Parcel 1. and
$25,000.00 tor Parce l 2.
Terms of sale . are cash in
hand on day of sale .
JAMES J. PROfFITT
Sheriff o1
Meigs County, Ohio .
(II 15, 22 , (9) 6, 3tc

WOULD YOU like on e)(tra income
for things you wont for your
ho·m e or vocation? You con
work os much as you like.
Great opportunities . Write to
BoK 7'29-A , c-o Doily Sentine l,
Pomeroy , ~hio 45769.

Carrier Wanted
IN

Syracuse and
Middleport areas.
The .Dai~ Sentinel
992·2156

A heart of gold stopped ·
beating .
Two Shin ing eyes at rest ,
God broke our hearts ro

provl! to us

He only takes the best.
God knows you had to leave

us.
But you didn ' t go alone .
For part Of us went with
you .
The day l-Ie took vou hOmt.
To some you are forgotten
To others just part of the
past.
But to us who loved and lost
you
Your memory will always
last .
It's a lonesome house
without you
And sad has been the way
For life and home are not
the same
Since you were c al led away
What wou ld we g i\le if we
could say
" Hel lo , Son" in th e s-ame
old way
To hear your voice to see
you sm ile
To sit w it h you and chat a
wh ile
So if · you h a ve a son or
daughter
Cheri s t'l them with loving
care
For you'll never know the
heartache
Until you see the ir vacant
chair .
Mom , D•d &amp; Homer

$250.00 REWARD for return of (no
queStions asked ) or informa.
tion leading to ti-le return of
two mole dogs token from Rt.
33 near Darwin Ju ly 11 . Please I
love and iniss my dogs very
mush . 992-5848 .
~

Will CARE for elderly in our
home. Trained and e)(per ienced. 992 -7314 .

---~=-=c----::-:-___.,.
NO TRESPASSING or Bike riding
on

REVIVAL AT the Chester
Nazarene Church . Sept. 6 to 11 ,
7:30 pm Nig htly. George one!
Charlotte Dixon a s Evangelists,
Singers , and Mu sic::ia ns from
Patchogue .
New' York .
Homecoming , ~udoy afternoon
1-: 30. Featuring Adkins Family.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTOR$
STATE OF OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio,
August 19, 1917
Contnc1 Salts Ltlll
Copy No.77-1095
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Seated proposals will be
rtce ived at the office of the
Director
of
th·e
Ohio
oe·p artment
of
Trans portation. Columbus. Oh io.
until
10 : 00 A . M ., .Oh io
Standard Time, Tuesday ,
September · 13, 1977, for im ·
provemerits in ;
Meigs County , Oh io, on
Section MEG -33·2 .22, U. S.
Route 33 in Bedford Town ship . by grading ; dra ini ng
end paving w ith asphaltic
concrete ; In stallation of
traffic control device ; and by
constructing : Bridge No .
MEG -33 -0226, a prestressed·
concrete box -beam super structure w lt h concrete
substructure (s pans 39 .87 teet
- 40.73 feet . 39 .87 feet ,
roadway 34 feet bttween
guardrail), over West Branch
Shade R lver .
Pavement Width 20 feet .
Project Length 400.00'
feet or 0.07.5 mile ,
Work Length - 1,400,00 feet
or 0.265 mile .
"Th e date set for com pletion of th is work shall _b e
as set forth In the b idding
proposal. "
Each b idder shall be
rtqufred t o me w ith his bid a
c ertified check or cashier's
chec k for an emount equal to
five per cent of his bid, but in
no event more then t Jfty
thousand dollars , or a bond
for ten par cent Df his bid,
payable to the Director .
8 'i dders must apply, on the
proper
forms , ·
for
qua lific ation at teast ten days
prior to the elate set . tor
open ing bids In accordance
with Chapter 5525 Ohio
Revised Code .
Plans and specifications
are on file in the Oepertment
of Transportation and f·he
office of the D is trict Deputy
Director .
The Dir ector reserves the
rtght to reject an y and all
b idS .

5, 2tc

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

LISTEN TO THE

:

•:

SWAP SHOP

••

: 7 PM - WMPO • 92.1 FM :

••

••
:
92 in the Country
:
:•..•....•.....•............•
•

·TO G.tVE

Away -. 2 mo!e dogs , 1 HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepers .
year old, port Beagle .. Call
1977 model. Will sell for $22 .5() ,
cash or terms. qcn ,514b.
_992·7331 .

AKC ENGLISH Springer pups. 8
week~_.':'.~ :_$S9_~~t,_._9!~?.?_~3.
AKC IRISH Setter , female. 1 Y1
yeo rs old . Obedionc.e tr a ined.
9'12·7313 .

·- --- ·- ---

-------·----------

-----·-

1972 DODGE CHARGER . A.C. ond
mqny more option• . $1495 . Coli
9'12 ·51b9.

...

----------~-----··--

-·

•

-------

1976 Monte CARlO with ful l vinyl
roof. AM . top•. P.S .. P.8. , A.C..
cruise contro l, power door
lcx.ks, and more extros . E)( ·
ceUent condition . 992-6243.

··---------- -···---·--

1966 FORO . .4 door . 6 c.yl.. standard. Good condition. $300.
992· 28.9 .

--·--------------·
19oii IMPALA STATION Wagon . 9
po~s~~~!!..:_~~...:..!~;_2_! 4~:~---·
,1974 Grand Prix .

~ow

mileoge .

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

-- ·-·----------------··--

Let

- ---

~

---..,...•-.-----

Fi72- SELF·CONTAINED

19ft. 7•2·2566 .
1977 APACHE FOLD-UP.
twice. S 1,800. 992-2849

---

------

CAMPER.

---.- ---

-

Used
-~

1973 27 FOOT TERRY Travel
Troiler . Self-conta ined , air con·
ditioned , roll -outowning. Good
Con d it ion , 992 - 2 A96 or
9'12-3287 .

~"-~~;~~~ltl~~l

s'ofttn~r, Model
Now OnlY

FURNISHED APARTMENT, newly
d.coroted. 992-3165. after A.
l'orSaJe
ECONOMY TRACTO~ with oil ol·
tochm•nts .. Like new , asking .
$2250. Phono (61~ ) 698·3290.
CANNING TOMATOES, PePPERS .
cucumber•. Cleland Forms ,
GreenhOus• ,
Ge r aldine
Cloland .

S!UIIM

IIINOOIIS&amp;OOOWS
II£PIJCOIENI

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

DAVID BRICKLES

SIOI~

us test

your

water

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack
carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992· 2111

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

USED FARM MACHINERY
66 Oliver 1250 Tractor
$2995
71 MF 165 Die sel Tr.
$5800
MF No . 9 Hoy Boler
$1695
MF No. 10 Hay oler
$1495
Cose 220 Boler &amp; Kicker
$~5
Matthews Rotary Scythe
$2195
N. 717 Chopper 1 row
$2695
NEW FARM MACHINERY
Gehl Mower Conditioner
$329
MF 450 Round Boler
$4b00
MF 5bO Round Boler
$S350
MF 200 Chopper 2 row
$5500
MF Hoy Heod fo r 200
$850
MF 880 Plow Six 16"
$4000
MF 520 Oisc·12 ft . cut .
$2200
Bush Hog Offset Disc 9 '4" cu t
s
2
a
9
5
SHINN'S TRACTOR
SALES
leon , W. Vo .

NewFOR
Co. OpSALE
woter

and

softeners, model VCSVI.

Only '27U5

Save SSO.OO on

1

new

Hotpolnt Refrlg•rotor.
I New 20 cubic fl . Chesl

Frftz:er

'25.00 Discount
1 Good McCullough Chlin
Sew
115.00
2 Good uHd XU Cheln
Sews
1-1100.00, 1-MO.OO
Elec1rlc Trim.AU cuts with
nylon
Ut.t5
( 11 Good Refrlgerotor 1200

PomeRIJ ..~~!1!~~-

•ck W. \.lrMy, Mgr.
PlloM m -21a1
·

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
5 ACRES WITH LOVELY
BRICK

HOME
4
bedrooms~ 2 baths, very
modern eqvlpped kllchen,
Rec. room ~ large stone
fireplace, perma payne
doors
and
Windows,
carport.
Many
other
features. $45,000 .00.
CLOSE TO MEIGS HI
SCHOOL - 50 acres lovely
for building sites. Buy all
or half. $1 , 800.00 per acre .
RUTLAND - 4 acres with
home, 3 bedrooms, bath,
patio. and pcrch&amp;s. also
trailer hookup. Nalural gas
heat. $15,500.00.
POMEROY - 5 acres wllh'
3 bedroom home. bath, nice

kitchen, porches, natural
gas. city water . $7,900.00.
NICE KITCHEN - Dining

area, large master Bdrm.,
at leastl other Bdrms. Fvll
basement. newer ranch
type · home, car pet i ng ,
many other
features .
$23,500.00.
COUNTRY
Nice
remodeled 1 lloor plan

home, 2

Bdrms., barn,

alher building . 3'12 acres of
usable ground. '12,500.00 .
NEAR CHESTER - OYer 3
acres ~

'

Glln£IS.,IIIIIIKS

•Custom Hvctraulic Hon

LARRY lAVENDER
$Jrlc-.O.
"' H2·3'"

SWAIN

Superior

Young's
Carpeting

2 · barns,

Cold

storage. garage, modern 3
Bdrm. ranch home, dining
room, large living room,
many features, financing
available. $3.4,900.00.
MAIN ST. POMEROY This 3 Bdrm, older home
has a tovch of elegance.
Dining room, sliding doors
to
living .room with

fireplace, basement. A
GOOD BUY $12,500.00.
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
PROPERTIES BUT ARE
IN
NEED
OF
NEW
LISTINGS. USE OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
TO
YOUR
ADVANTAGE.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Honk, Kallly .. Loon•
As'IOCIIfn
992·2259-992.2UI

· ~-. 0.451"

.

..o.

AI

·-,0.

992·2206 or 992·7630
"TiwOriti-

Not l1lt IMiiJiots

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Storm Windows &amp; Insul•
.tion.
Call Professionals

Bissell Sjding Co.
Alocal contrKtor

•

· Fm bliotl"'

llo Stttl4ar C&lt;lls ~~-

HERE0'5 MV CARD. MR.Kt,cK.... ;
O&gt;JE;
WR irE ME A COMPL&amp;TIO
?CAilCELY
PROF /LEO OF TISH ADAIR!
lii&lt;E$ TO
DISCU$5
FEES, I!&gt;UTMM,.. AH ...

.JU$; SEND ME YOUR

BILL-· ALL STRICTLY
HUSH· HUSH: 'IOU

EA?Y HERE·
wi.ADEK! JUST
WANTED TO LET
YOU I&lt;NOW I'LL.
5E FL.VI"'t:;

THEW yOu·~·­
YOU"RE WOT
INTERESTED
IN Jlo.Y PLANE!

THIS AFrER·

"· Hz.lllt.or f"-1005
Eotitla!os ""'"' 1o ioi.
0.2/.1 mo. ptj.

NOO~!

_

-·

ALI.E'I'S A FINE BOY,
DEAR! AH LIKE HIM! .

~E DINOSAUR

I V.ONDEit WHY

I'ROTECTB 11-IE

HIV'\M.o.! MA'I'SE , IF
ELAC DUG PIT .... !

MOOVIAN , SO I MUST GET

ASI&lt;ED ME! IF I
A GIRL?

RID OF HIM .. . BUT HOWl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~A.37UZ50

S.2HfC

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Kingsbury Home Sales
h ,.., 11i1Mrile41 . . . 1,.- U"- ••11 IN'*'
(MI1I. n,.. . - • ...-., ~ .lltdl • . •

en•tN..,..,,..r.._,.,._....., ...
1111•111 Nhala illlillllr Ill pMII II talll, In
IIIII wit,_, HNL Be IIIMI ... II II ..IIIIHI-.

' - ' . . ,.. llllliiMI rn... ..r ...., 111M •
. . . .. .. '"' ......... ""' . . hill

..... "....... ....,..... -""

""
,...;, Ill ••

Phone 949-2101
or 949·2860

ION!O WITH THE AIRCRAFT
&amp;USI~ES5·· OR THE;; .
1,\!LITAIILV f

Wc MAY USE&gt;
HER $0MEDAY
IN A Mei&lt;EE'
INDUSTil: IE$ TV
COMMERCIAL!

SACI&lt; EA!&gt;T

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

PARTS -LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Up1101S1ery
Phone II ike Yaunc

HAS ~;He GOT ANY COWNE!CT-

WHO KNOW!&gt;l ...

Radiator
Service
.._

Automltic
· Transmission Senice

•••3·~-

CI~Jtt •

r

DARE ASK·· WHAT'S YOUR
INTERE!&gt;T IN TH6 YOtJNIS t.ADYf

Rernodelin~

Making
Phone tU-2176
Pomeroy, 0 .
8-1· 1 mo.

Stum Eltraction

T/!0&gt;4 ADAIRl ... AH ,
Yli!&gt;, A MODE!ITLY
TALEWTIOD &amp;IT
PLAYIOR!

Ktlchen Cabinets. - Roofine . Coocrete
PatiOS - Sid!1Walks - New Construction '

';::==========:. ~==========~
••••-

•

loolt2

U .P .S.

MI. • • "

Res l denllal
and
commercial.
Call for
Anytlay, anytime.
Phone 915· 3806

l WISH I COULD TE LL
YOU W~ ANNIE -- SOME.
DAY I WILL --

DO YOU MeAN
YOU'VE GOT TO GO
THERE TO
STOP ITf

Chester, Ohio
S.29· pd .

.Box 34

1-20-1 1M

YES-- l MUST DO SOME oHING ABOUT oHAT AT
ONCE -- Bl'FORE IT GETS
. OUo OF HAND --

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

tt.t ,.... ..., .. .

......... . ,
t .... fl ,.., ...
.._ ., ~I. til HHSM llf 1 liM ....... tt
... _, l!OG L lhi1 St. ,....,, 0.

L!TI'LE: OI{PHAN ANNIE

estimate, 24 hour service.

-

6Hllfl0

r---~-------,

GUTTER
SERVICE

UC·XVI.

Free.

PINS,

•

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Rustaleum Painl Praducft
•W• can shi p parts dlrtctly
to ¥Our Cloar by way ol

.11110011$
AWl iliUM

TEAFORD

'279.95
Let

USINO

YEAH- VVANT THE
PLACE "TO LOOK NICE
FOR THOSE CAROI.fRS.
THE'i 1RE A REAL. C:O•OL..1

, - - - - - - - ,.

CARTER .
D. Bumgardner

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pool Sales

300 lllitt SL

r.....,.Ohio

Nabi

VIRGIL B. TEAFORO, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992·3325
CHESTER- Large corner
lal with n ice older home of
3 bedrooms, bath, -natural
gas heat, for 514,000.
72
ACRES
N ic e
remodeled 5 bedroom
home with 2 baths, oil F .A.
furnace. modern k.ltchen,
full basement, good fences
and small barn. Want Only
137,500.
NEW
LISTING
3
bedroom ranch home ,
bath, gas ·F.A. furnace.
copper plvmblng
and
hardwood floors. 150'x200'
loot lot. $19,000. In Tvppers
Plains.
NEW
LISTING
3
bedroom split level home.
Has bath, equipped kitchen
with
stove
· and
refrigerator, oil
F .A .

.,m,Z63

J.ll-1

exCAvATING.~~~-;~~;d,;~nd

backl-loe work ~ dump tfut ks
and lo -boys for hire: will houl
fill dirt . to toi l. limestone Ond
gro vel. Coli 6ob or Roger Jeffers , doy phone 992-7089,
night pnone 992-3525 or 9'925232 .
.

EXCAVATI NG , dozer , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat ·
. fi~l d ,
Bock Hoe Serviee ,
Rutlond, Ohio, Phone 742-2008 .
Will do roofing , cpnStru~tion ,
plumbing ond heating. No iob
too larQe or too small. Phone
7•2-23•8.

furnace and 3A acre near
Shade . m ,500. .
POMEROY - 3 bedroom
home
wllh
partial
basement, full bath and 2
half baths. Central heating
and -lully carpeted. $25,000.
COUNTRY- loiS acres of
rolling land, old house and
barn'. TWO·thfrds good
fencing and lots of lrvlt

trees.

.

PRIVACY - o15 acrl!s of
land · with r~ral water,
eleclrlc and 2 bedroom
trailer for only $12,500.
NEAR TOWN - 1'/2 acres
on Rt. ·33, 3 bedroom 1\ome,
bath, oil furnace, 2 POrches
and garage. $23,000.
NO DOWN PAYMENT - 2
or3 bedroom home with l'h
baths and large lot. Has
large shade trees , full
basement, outbuilding, and
garage. Needs some work,
but Its only 112,000.
WELCOME
NEWCOMERS. YOU CAN
BUY WITH 3 PCT. DOWN
IF YOU HAVE GOOD
CREDrt. MORTGAGE OF
$16,000. PAYMENT
I157.U .or SI2U3.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE
FORD
ASSCC

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..plumbing and heotin~ . Phone
992·SISB.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
tovotiryg, sePtic systems .
dozer , bock hoe, dul1)p truck ,
limestone , grovel , blocktcp
poving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)
698·7331.
HARRISON'S T.V. Repo ir. Service
Colts . 276 Sycamore, St ., Middleport . Phone 992-2522
. - --_______,..

___
AND Kitchens

BATHROOMS
rerr)odeled, cerarnic. tile, plumbing, carpentry, and genefol
maintenance . 13 yeors experience . 992-36B5 .

~

Wetdinp

Porfraits

Pmports .
Annillrsories
S~mill OcCisions
Sob Hoollich

REPAIR Sweepers. roos ters , irons, all
sma ll appliances, lown mower .
nex~ to Sta te Highway Garage
on Ro ute 7. Phone (614) 98~ 3925 .

-

'1 00

-

~--

.. -- _________,

__

CARPENTER . flooring , ceilinQ1
paneling. Phonem,2759
.
,
.___.__"
"

-- ----

SAVE ON
CARPEnNG

TO HANI!&gt;LE IT?

I

.. _,_

c,..,.,_.__

You're not
sellinq

Sarge! Its "---~ ....,~---=~

Decided
to sell Clovia's
car instead~

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

4our
truck,

h for that extra chance

·Slim?

• 8 7 53

• K7
+6 5
•K J732

'4.88 sq. yd.
Rag. "·95·not lnstoUed

•AK

0

' o•

West

South
It

Pass
Pass
Pass

••

3N.T .

Opening lead -

Rutland

IIIII

LISPaiOII

H_~A~RNF.
__
. Y - - ' - - ' - - - - - - ' = - - - r...._,;;......---==-----.::::-===--~~"'::~-:'--\"':-1-:i

r

IT 'PeARS LIKE THIS
JOB CALLS FER. ABOUT
· THREE HOSS POWER--

TWO SAW HOSSES
AN' ONE WORK HOSS

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
Herman Grate

North East

Mason. w. va.

•

)

Pass
Pass

f

'1Jl\f'i.VI

· ·g 8 4
Both vulnerable

0

FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

t A
• A Q 10

. • AQ
tKQJ9 1j

RU~ND

TRADE-IN

EAST
.J9 6 4 2
• 8 64 3

SOUTH 10)

·can742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

00

WEST
• Q 10
•JI09 5 2
+10,832

.u s

.30 rolls of c.rpet In stock ..
Good selection 111 0. .. to.
lntlofled wllll podding, no
oxtro to pey.

742-2211

6

NORTH

12 end 15 ft. width Corplf .
rubber beck .

--.

Banana Drawblu-•
Los Angeles
A
Filipino
experimenter
Los Angeles with~ city P?P·
found
that
humans
who ate
ulation of 2.7 million. Uurd
bananas
appealed
to,
moslargest . In the nation, has a
quitoes.
The
insects
apparentfive-county urban area pop·
ly crave two chemicals found
ulation of 10.2 million, also the
nation's third largest. The city in the fruit as well as in blood .
and are equipped with send iamonds and East shows out. covers an area ?f 463.7 square
sitive
detectors that enable
The hand collapses and in· mile.s . In add1t~on to bemg a
\bern to sniff out faint banana
stead of making ni~e Lricks leadmg mdustr~al ~d enterSouth is likely to make only tamment.center, 1l1s a maJOr odors in sweat.
six .
agricultural producer.
South should go up with
dummy ' s king of hearts at
trick one . Then he leads the
firs t diamond from dummy.
EM! plays his ace, but
catches a small diamond, not
an honot . South gets five ·
diamonds, two spades , two
f 1~1f ~ TH '.'T SCRAMBLED WORD ~AME
hearts , game and rubber.
byHenri ArnoldandBob Lee
Note that this gains only ~ ~ ~~ ®
because East held a singlelon Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
ace of diamonds. Against any one letter to each square , to form
PSYCHIATRIST
other combination It would four ordinary words.
not have hurt South to win that r----,-=:-:--,
~
first trick in his own hand.

BRIDGE

official!

Cindy Strip
Rubber B.lck
Regular "·95
Seve 14.11 Sq. Yd.

On All I.Mng Room Suites

773-5592

AUDITION ltlDAY ?

5iG0EBT DIS~IBU1Dl&lt;6 IN 11-IE
COUNTRY L/1&lt;£5 OUR FI LM!

~EV'vE /\GREED .

-----

REMODELING , Plumbing . 1-lec~ting
ond all types of general repa ir.
Work guoron t~ 20 yeors experiei'lce. Phone 992-2.409.

PENNZOIL RUTLAND open doily
till 10. Closed Mondays ,
wrecker ser..,ic.e. tire repair .
Phone 7A2-9575 or 7.42-2081 .

_____

IT ONCE!

• GootJNEW~ 8/LLYl ONE OF lt1E

----

---·BOWERS

~LWOOD

--~

WATER HAULED, 550 gallons per
load, in Tuppers Ploins Coolville areo . Coli (61 4)
after 5 pm .. ____ .__ -667 ·3675,
,_
- ----.

r.&gt;IRDIE .. .
I 'LL TRY

I WONDER HOW WENDY
MADE OUT AT HER

BRADFORD. AuctiOnee ·r , Com ple te Servite . Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Radne , Oh io, Critt
Bradford.

NICE LOT in Pomeroy with block
top driveway . Has a 65 )( 12, 2
bedroom frailer. Totol electric
with cenlrol ai r tondition ing
and wood burning (Franklin )
firep la ce. Ha$ lots of ex tra s.
Col19'12 ·2•3a.

----··~--.----

992-5292
6-22-1 mo.

OKAY,

~~~~~~i'L::"

MOBilE HOME, 11 x biJ. Price
•s .500. Coii9'12-S8SB.
_........,...___ ___

--- ---.

OOME ON 1 WINNIE,
DON'T l'&gt;i': AN OLD

FUDDY·DUDDY!

-

LOADED 1972 12 x bO Scron
Mob ile Home. All electric , central a ir and heat , underpinned
and oil originol furniture goes
with trailer . Already sat up on
Iorge lot in Mason. W. Vo.
Phone

......,

IO~Hillt SL

~~¥:f4ffi.~--~

mo.

THE PHOTO PLACE

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs , $8r ·
vice. ell makes, 99-2'.2284 . ThE)
Fobri c Shop . P.dm~roy .
Author ized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

---

AN I:L.DERLY

plios.

ti · ~sg'!''!_fF
- . ;.,s;;:;:.,.~;::-~
. . . -.. __;;_~- ~

-

)'t&gt;(.J Wll.L ~
DIS6LIISED AS

s.....~ ••d

Mldllltport. 0.
9!2·5724
CGttt pitt&lt; Silts IIIII Stnict IIIII Stt ~

Ill. 1o Uo ~.II.
SAW AND SEW'IIC£
HS.I mo.

·-----~--

ULABNER

ILl

,.....,,2,212

1

·---

THREE ROOM furnis hed apt.
9'12-6 10 1.
MOBILE HOME. Phone Albert Hill
a t 9A9-2261 .

lttto ilalo &amp;Allkt

water and Co-op w1ter

3 AND 4 RM . furnisn.d and unfurnished opts . PhOne 992·
TOP QUALITY Pigs , •O·SO lbs.,
5•3• ...
wormed, ca st rated . $30. Buy
~···-e-OuNTRY Mobile Homa Po rk, Rt .
now for winter butchering . Call
33. ten miles norfh of Pomeroy .
(6 .. ) 379· 6311.
lorgelats with concrete patios,
sidewalks, runners ond off 1973 FORO TRUCK . Custom F-100.
PS, Automatic, 302 engine .
s!re4!!_~~i".9.·. ~~-n!_~2~?~J! · Topper Included, good tires,
SMAll APARTMENT, 2nd Street in
condition. 992.J-410 .
Middleport . Suitable for 1 or 1 OL-IVER·-10 H r. : D ·11 .;,
peopMt. m -526:2 .
. oe vram n ' 5... ..,.,.
.. ------:-'-- -·--- --· Post Onver. $50 . Con loci Go.ry
COU NTRV MOB1LE Home Park .
Michael. 985-4237 .
·
Rou te 33·, north of Pomeroy, 1966 CAsE 310- DOZER ~th ' f k
l arge lots. Coll992-7479.
Or
11.f t and buc.ket . $5,500. Call
• -- --- - - ---- "
GARAGE fOR Rent su itable for
after 9:30pm . {61• ) 592-2605.
boot 1to roge o r other storage. ·
·
Reos.onoble rent . Cotl992-26.23. r---;;:.;;:~:-:;;;-;;:-;--:--,
.O.VAILABLE AT Rivers ide Apts. 1
bedroom. $105 per monti-1, $150
••c. urity depotlt . 99
. 2·60'1
.._ 8.

~-

-

2 •;,: both bile..,et from the
owner ond save! large fo.m ily Coolin., 001 tlit&lt;o plttrs. Wt 11tn1
room with fireplace . eot-in kit · il. " do ~ JOOnolf. Spoclol prlca 10
llttirl ...
c.hen wifh double·o'&lt;'en range
and d ishwasher , formol dininQ
Phone 949-2814
room , two cor garage, centro! 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m.
a ir, on acre lot . Nice drive to
po wer plants and mmes .
5•3 .000. 992·2•92.
5fjl ACRE FARM , 11 mi les from
new Ra"w" enswood Bridge .
Modern home hos 3 bedrooms .
6-16-1 mo.
llvirig room with wood burning
firep la ce 'Ond beamed tai ling ,
born . outbuildings . and lenc.ing. $43,50(1. .q-49-1406 .
SIX ROOM house at 613 Mill St.,
M i dd~eport. Good conditio n. In - HOUSE . 4 roor:m.ond both on acre
of land . lodudes furn itu re .
quire ,ot 439 lincoln St., Midsa.ooo, R~~Y-~~.~h . 9" ·.2~S2 .
d le~ort . _ _
ONE YEAR old ' house. 2 miles 011 T'NO BEDROOM home situated on
1 oc.re land. Call 992-7294 or
New limo Rd . in Rutland . It's oil
992·5502
.
poneled . with three bedrooms
--- and blg living room , all NEW HOME with 3 bedrooms ,
carpeted , two boths , dining
both , full basement , large
room . big kitchen wit h built-i n
garage . fully carpeted , large
oven , on island stove and fom ideck on bock . leading Creek
ly room with fireplace . One cor
Rood . Phone992-705• .
goroge. On two acres of land .
For more imformol ion , call
949· 2519 .

Pomeroy Landmark
&amp; condition your

w.

STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sofa
on mini-motors. trailers , and
folddow ns . Travelstar 25. lt .
$&lt;4400.00; 20 ft . mini-motor
$10,850.00. We sell saivice and
quality. Camp Conley Storcrafl
Sales, Rt . 62 north of Pt . P!eo·
sont .

llll/lllill-·

DoN'T PAY the added expe:nse of
a Realtor ! Buy th is 3 'bedroom .

soften

$3: ~~'-9~HSI!_ _ "-

1970 BI SCAYNE CHEVROLET .
Good condition . 992-SOBA .

-. I

FREE ESTIMATES

1....-------...::..:.::.::..::::::..J

PARTS FO~ 1971 Gola xle Ford for
sole . Phone 992-5858 .

PLENTY FASHIONS
A REPLICA OF THE
CAROI.ZI'lS' .JACKET

~

Business Services

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

MALE IRISH Setter . Coll985-3540.

· - ----------.-.---

(8 ) 29, ( 9 )

•

~..t.,J-@t?'~~~;~~~~tb

our property.. Roy and
Little, Rt. 4 , Pomeroy .

R·ev . 8·11·73

•
:
••

COAl . ltmestoo• and cotclum
White or yellow starti ng Mon .,
chlo ride and ult ium bnne for
Aug . 1. Mos.on p~,hOr&lt;h or d .
dus t control and spe&lt;lol mndng
salt for farmers , Ell(elsior Soh
APPAlACHIAN STOVt: Co., Sum
Wo rks , Mom Street , Pomeroy ,
mer Sole As hley (.60 Wood
Ohto o r phone 9'12 · 3891
CASH ! ! . Junk con, Fry 't TnK.k &amp;
Heoten , $340 c.amplete wtth
Auto , Rutland. Phone 742-20A1
blo.wer . Thru Sept . 12. W• ore CAMP EM , $600
Also, horse
or 742-9575. CloliedMondoyli .
the only ovtnerized dea le r in
trader . s.-::.o. f'hone (bl4] 698Meigs County . We 're tn
3290 .
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small .
Carpenter off 143 . 69R 7191,
Will buy I pi«e or complttte
SPRING GARDEN Supphes , Cabhousehold. New, used, or anli· SHOT SHEllS high power . $3 .93;
~ge .
t auOflower . broccoli,
que1 , Mar tin 's Furniture , 20 N.
22 lR , 79 1 : 22 magnum, $1 .90.
ond h.ad letruae plants .
2nd St .. Middl•port. PI-lone
lots of used and new guns.
yellow, white , and red on ion
9'12 ·6370 .
Trade for anything . Fifw's, S.
sets . on ion plonts , KennEIJbe&lt;
Jrd, M i ~dleport .
cobbler, Katahd in, Red Pontiac.
and
Red losodo seed potoloes .
NEW SHE Tpuch-Com _.0 C 8.
Yard Sale
,Bulk garden seeds . pot1in9 soil ,
t odio . 40 channel ; hnno ete,
peot mou, fru it trees and rose
trlc retracting antenna ; antenIF VOU hove a s..-vice to Offer ,
busnes . MidwQy Morket ,
na matcher (SWR }: 3 ·m·eter
wont to buy or sell sometning,
Pomeroy , Ohio, 991 · 2582 ,
modulotio.,, wottoga and SWR
ae looking for work , . . or
SOb:s Ma rket, Mason , W. Va .
gouge; all t ables and hook ·\Jp
whatever . , . you'll get results
(3o. l 773 ·5721.
fittings for radio and gvoge. All
foster witl-1 o Se-ntinel Wont "d .
egulpment is for mobile use. Wmrted to.IJuy Coli 9'11·2151&gt;.
Co11992-2••B . after 5 pm.
HUGE YARQ Sole. Sept. S. 6, 7, ol
paid for oil makes and
FOR
THE finest in wood - heating CASH
Hudton residence. 5th and
models of mobile homes
stove• . cookstoves a nd tool
P.arl Str. . rs, Racine , Ohio.
Phone or eo code 614·423-9531 .
sto'&lt;'es, Call Zion Heat Cp .. 8
Tools , colleclables . clothing,
TIMBER,
Pomeroy F9rest ProPutnam Drive , Atl-lens. {bl4)
and mlsc. Starts 10 em each
ducts. Top price for standing
696· 1187 or (b ,.) 592·0079 ..
day . Ra in cancels .
sawt imber . Col! 992-59b5 or
PORCH SALE . Sept. 3-10 at b20 POTATOES FOR winter . Ken t&lt;ent Hanby . 1-4·o4tl·8570.
nebec , Cobbler ~nd SuperiOr .
Loc.ust Street , Middleport._
Rt. 338 to Ravenswood ferry , 1 COINS, CURRENCY, tokens . old
Clothi ng, Avon, T. V.'s , camera ,
potket watches and chains
mi. Coli 843-1491 . Tom Sayre .
bitycl!. Fo~r ~-2 - 7 pm .
silver ond gold . We need 19b4
YARO s,ALE , Sop/. 5th. 6/h, 7th . PANASONIC RANGER Auto·Boot·
ond older s ilver coins. Buy, sell
AC-Outdoor bloc.k and wh ite
Gas Heater , e lectric stove,
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley
(Ompoc.l telev ision . Call
loble , choirs , n•w trumpet , end
U2·2331 .
992-2448,
after
5:00pm
.
tablet . brand name dotl-!ing all sizes . boby clothing, roys . 1975 CR 125 HONDA Elsinore. EK- Rehl Estate fur Sale..
Racine, on Route 12A , 1 1h miles
tellent condition . 94Cjl-2,.10.
post high school. Betty
HOMESITES for sale , 1 acre ond
MOTOROLA PORT ABLE block ond
Carp~nter r_eside~_c•:..
up . Middleport , nea r Rut land.
white telev ision . Ca11992-2448,
Coli 992-7 •B I .
GARAGE SALE. Sept . 6, 7, B. 105
after 5:00pm.
Wright Street , Pomeroy .
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 baths .
Dishes , winter dothes , toys , 23 ,000 B.T.U AIR conditioning .
olt elec... 1 acre , Middleport ,
Good
sh(lpe
.992
-7755
.
and misc .
d ose to Rut!and . Phone 9917481'.
'MO ARABIAN Horses . Also , o
197-4 TS Suzuk i, "'ery good con - SMAL-l fo rm for sole, 10 % down ,
dition . $525, 992-7559.
owner finonced . Monroe County , W . Vo . Phone (304 ) 771 RISING STAR Kennel Boarding . KENNEBEC POTATOES .. John
3101or {304 ) 772·3'127.
Pope. 949-2273 .
Indoor-Outdoor rUns . grooming
aU breeds, clean sanitary
SILVER QUEEN Sweet Corn. Pick COUNTRY formlond with smlud facilit ies oe 367 -7112 . Cheshire .
ed · woods . water and 9ood Ot ·
your own . Cheap . Clarence
Phone (61A) 361-0292 .
cess in Monroe County , W . Vo .
Proffitt . Portland . Ohio .
$1 ,000 down , tal! (304 ) 772 ·
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs . TOUCH AND Sew Does It All. Just
3 102or (30• 1 772-3227 ,
(Min . ) Collies , 2 females , 7
lik e new. Sold for S-*49 .95 .
weeks old . Shots and wormed .
VA-FHA
. 30 yr . financing . ireland
Cleoring out stock·. Must sell for
Phona (614 ) 367-0292 or
Mortgoge. 77 E. ,Stole , Athens .
$89 .95 . Cosh or terms .
367·71 12.
99] .51.46.
phone (614) 592-3051.
MEIGS COUNTY Hu ma ne Society
SINGER
Sew i ng 2. STORV 3 bedroom frome
Animol Coreline, 992-7680: or SCHOOL
house, F. A. furnace . storm win Machines . Mony features . Only
__ aft~~ b_.P~~..:.'.. 9!2': ~4~?.:_ -·-- -·
dows , fireplace in Middleport .
$3 1.50 , cash
or terms .
Phone 992-3457 ,
BOXE R PUPS for sole . 949-2644.
991 ·51AO.

~ol die

DAVID L. WE I'R
DIRE.CTOR

'•

! NEE NIPI:NEO orchord peaches.

b•ds . •tc. ..
c.omplete
housel-lo ldt . Wr tte M. D. MtU&lt;er ,
Rt . 4 , Pomeroy . Ohio or coli
9'117700 .

•

•

t 'or ~aJe

t'orSal~

OlD FURNITURI:, t(e boxes brass

us

Ear..-h word tNt"r lhe minunwn !S
wonk w 4 (.'e nu per- word po:r Illy.

In rnemury, Cud

••

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

,

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport·Porneroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 6, 1~77
1JTC..K TKA171

nauv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday. Sept. 6, 1971

2N .T.
Pass

J• ·

. In ' "Bridge is Beautiful "
Paul Cromelin gives this haod
to show how declarer should
take advantage of every little
extra chance . He is in three
notrump. Never mind how he
got there. '!be c.o ntract is a
good one and will ~ ironclad
as long as the diamond suit
can be brought in with just one
loser.
Paul points out that the
average declarer plays second
hand low at trick one without
stopping to think . He wins the
trick wlth his ace or queen of
hear!$ and leads the king of
diamonds . East takes his ace
and leads bark a heart. Now
South leads his· queen of

~Q~--

A New York reader asks if
we approve of all the fancy
modern leads that have
cropped up in the last few
years.
.
We think that they just will
confuse anyone except the
man who plays all the time
and with just one or two
partners . Also, no one has
been able to prove that they do
much for those who use them.
(Do you have a quesUon lor
the experts? Write "Ask the
Jscobys " care of " th i s
newspap9r. The Jacobys wiff
answer individual questions Jr

sramped, solf-a .ddr .. sed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most intetesting ·questions will
be used In this column and will
receive copies c,, JACOBY

MODERN.)

(]

CHARN

I

I .· [j

t l f110,ti. C..._ T,_

.
--~"'

N!--..0

0
IHOMAFT

I

tSEXOPE

I

) I I Kl:J
mer.

·-·

MI0HT ~E OF ::OME
HELP IF YOU ~ITE
YOUR" NAILS•
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gesled by lhe above cartoon .

KI trr J[IIII1
(Answers tomorrow)

• \ Jumb.les: NE. RVY SAHIB wAITER, OPPOS.E
Saturday • Answer : Why so -could~ be?-ostentatlous?..SHowY'"

�12- Tho Daily Sentinel, Muldleport·Pmnen•y. 0 .• Tht'Sda&gt;. lM'pt. 6. 1977

Sloppy, careless drivers
keep state Patrohnen busy
One traffic fatality was recorded in the GalllaMeigs County area during the long Labor Day Holiday.
James Farmer. 61, Muldleport, died early Sunday
morning in a single car accident on SR 124, southeast of.
Pomeroy.
According to Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth,
conunander of the Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol, 25 traffic accidents were investigated during
the period from Friday morning through midnight
Monday. There were four injury accidents in which
nine persons were injured. Patrolmen from the local
post made-78·attests and assisted 89 motorists.
Across tlof Buckeye State, the Ohio State Highway
Patrol investigated 828 accidents. There were 327
injury accidents in which ~persons were inj ured and
21 persons killed. Troopers made 9,804. arrests and
assisted 10,&amp;97 motorists.
In all, 24 persons were killed in traffic accidents
around Ohio. It was the second highest holiday death
count this year, UPI said. The pa trol also reported one
drowning death and a plane crash victinn during the
holiday period. Herbert L. Torrence, 2.'1, Canton,
drowned while swimming in an unauthorized a rea of
Lake Hope State Pa rk in Vinton County Saturday and
William Falck, 64, Ellenton, Fla., was killed when the
plane he was piloting crashed during a Burke
Lakefront Airpor t air show into Lake Erie also on
Saturday.
The traffic count was boosted Sunday by three
multiple death accidents, the Patrol said.
Three persons were killed in Miamisburg when
their ca r was struck by a ConRail freight. The victinns
were Stepben Combs, 17, Douglas Combs, 20, (no
relation ) and Johnny Head, 20, all of Miamisburg.
A motorcycle-two car crash on Ohio 93 south of
Logan in Hocking County claimed the lives of Charles
F. Harsh , 19, and William R. Worthington, and William
R. Patten, Jr., 22, Marion.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions !olichola Pickens , Pomeroy;
Charles Buckley, Miner s·
ville ; Jerry Larg e, Middleport ; Albert Woodard,
Langsville; Albert ' Hill, Jr .,
Long Bottom ; Avanell Bass,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges Tamara Gibbs , Lucill e
Wears, Shirley Bishop,
Wayne Adams, Adam Collins,
Erie Stone, Minnie Johnson ,
Sally Sauvage, Betty Armentrout, Mary Hackney,

Marie

CuSter,

Warren

Reeves.
·
Sunday Admissions Eileen Swan, . Syra cuse;
Leroy Cadle, Chester ;
Frances Williams, Pomeroy;
Earl Shepard, Reedsville;
Shirley Willis, Syracuse.
Sudsy Dlsebarges - Anna
Hawk, Doris Haynes, Jerry
Avanell Bass.
Admissions -

Franklin Lemley, Portla nd ;
Ronald Da iley, Pomer oy;
Cheryl Hysell, Middleport ;
Charity Boggs, Coolville ;
Mollie Fox, Clifton, W. Va.;
Dorothy Nichollion, Middleport ; Sharon Brown ,
Middleport.
Monday Discharges Rebecca Wa rd , · Robert
Pullins, Betty Van Meter,
Lowell Carper, Albert Hill,
Jr. , August Games, Charles
Buckley.

LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM
regular meeting Wednesday
at 7 p.m. All Master Masons
invited.
·

WITH A QUICK
AND ECONOMICAL
A11TOLOAN
Why wait any longer for that car
you ' ve been wanting? Find out
about our convenient auto loans
that offer the lowest Interest rates
·allowed by law. And all payable in
monthly installments, tailored to
your special budget. We'll try .our
best to give you fast, friendly serv·
ice. Come In and see us today!

"THE
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, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
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DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000
'

Teacher strike threatened Wednesday in Gallia county
Unless a satisfactory
contract Is agreed upon
during negotiations this
evening, Gallia County's
classroom teachers will go on
strike Wednesday morning.
That ultimatum came
following a teachers' general
membership
meeting
Monday night at the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds.
Howard Neekamp, president
of the Gallia County Local
Teachers - Associa t ion
(GCL'rAl said today :
"Last night. the teachers
agreed to extend their dead·
line one more day upon
re quest or the board of
education: The Gallia County
teach e rs
have
been
negotiating for eight months
trying, in good fa ith, to reach
a satisfactory contract.
"The board has forced the
profession al staff to take this
action. We hope that all

concer ned cilltens will
rontact their board members
and insist they negotiate in
good faith."
The association will meet
at 9 p.m. tonight at the
fairgrounds to assess the
situation.
Mon&lt;lay's vote was sur·
prising considering the fact
tbat the negotiaiors for the
GCLTA had rejected the
board's request for additional
negotiations Sunday.
Co unty School Superintendent Thomas Hairston
said Monda y he had received
a letter signed by President
Neekamp stating " Any
f urther eXtensions of time are
inappropr iate.''
According to Hairston, the
association had taken the
position tMt it wlll refuse the
board's attempt to finally
resolve the contract on

r- -- ------- -- ~------ - - --- - - ~

:
I

LOUISE .GILMORE
CHES HIRE - Mrs. Louise

Gilmore, 60, Rt. l, Cheshire,
died Su nday afternoon at
Holzer M ed ical · Center
following a long illness:

in

TueSifay-;5ept. 6, because the

associ at ion's executive
committee decided in a
motion Aug . 24, that
negotiations must be com·
plet.ed by Sept. 6.
Supt. Hairston, one of the
board's negotiators, continued :
"The letter received from
the leachers' negotiators
does not make anr sense to
the board's negotiating team.
If the teachers want a con·
tract it seems they should be
willing to meet in accordance
with. the most recent request
of the boa~d's negotiators. It
is impossible for all members
of the board's' negotiating
team to be present until
tonight."
The superintendent also
said:
"The most recent position
taken by tbe association in
refusing to meet also seems
ca lcul at ed to cut federal
mediator Joseph San ta
Emma out of the negotiations
com pletely . Th is see m s
inappropriate to board
negotiators because it was
the association who caUed on
Mr. Santa E mma to mediate
negotiations in the first place.
In a ny
ev ent, boa rd
negotiators still stand ready
to meet with the association
this evening at 7 p. m."
Supt. Hairston also indicated that it was th e
board's intention to open
schools regardless of whether
the association extends any
deadlines it may have set for
itself.
The board has a.lso
scheduled a special meeting
for 9this evening at the board
office on Jackson Pike to
review any legal steps to be
taken in view of a work
stoppa ge and an y other
business deemed necessary.
In conjunction with the
teachers, Leonard Newberry ,
president of the Gallia County
Chapter, OAPSE, has submitted his second r41Qtlest for
. negotiations with the county's
classified employees. Non·
certificated employees held
special meeting Monda y
night at the Holiday Inn to
discuss their situation .
That group is also working
without a contract. The last

negotiated a~ment with
classified employees was in
19Th. No negotiations were
he ld last year; however,

classified
em ployees
received the same per·
centage raise that cer·
tificated employees g,ot Jan .

1.
Newberry said the baud
has not acted upon •.n earlier
request for negotiatiOnS.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Mens Dept

1st Floor
,

Board,teachers,parents review school impaSse

She wa s born Feb. 14, 1917

Ga lli a

Coun ty,

the

daughter of the l ate Geo r ge
a nd F lorence Ralph Gard ner .
She was also p r ~eded in
death by a sister and four
brothers .
·
She is su r v ived by her

husband, Mil lard Gi lmore;
two daughters, Mrs. James
( Patt y ) Ri ckma n. Mid·
dlepor t, and Mrs. James
(Reva ) Trent, Oceana. W.

I
Bloo mda le ; six grand·
child ren. and one step ·

gr andchll d.

She was a member of the
Old Kyger Free Will Baptist
Chu r ch .
F uneral · senices will be
he ld Wedn esday at 2 p.m. at
the Raw lings-Coats Funera l
Home with t he Rev. George
Oiler off iciati ng. Bur ial will
be in Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cemetery . F riends may ca ll
at the f uner al home any time.

JAMES W. FARMI;R

Va .; one son, Lionel Gil more,
Ches h ire, a sister, Mr s.
Henr y ( Helen ) Ca r penter ,

Funera l serv ices for J am es
W. Farme r. 61. S. Secon d
Ave., Middl epor t, who was
killed ear ly Sunda y morn ing
ifl a car acciden t in M iner svi lle on Rt. 124, wi ll be held

George and Way ne Gardner,

was bor n March 9, 1916 in

Middleport ; three brothers,

both of Chesh ire, and Mark ,

61-year-old
(Continued !rem J118t 1)
Gerald L. Dill, 43, Minersville. There was moderate
damage.
William D. Lundsford, 17,
Oak Hill, ood minor injuries
in a traffic accident at 4:33
p.m. Saturday on SR · 588,
three tenths of a mile east of
us 35.
.
.
Ltlndsford's car struck a
vehicle operated . by Janice
M. Sommers , 39, Rt . 3,
Gallipolis. A passenger in his
car, Richard L. Carter, 14,
Oak Hill, also suffered minor
injuries. .
A single car accident occurred Saturday at 6 p.m. on
SR 7, nine tentbs of a mile
north of Old ~R 7 where the
hitch bolt broke on a vehicle
towing a car operated by
Terry L. Searles, 22, Bidwell.
When the vehicles separated,
the car ran into a ditch. There
was minor damage.
No one was injured or cited
in an accident at 11 :24 p.m.
Saturday on SR 7, five tenths
of a mile south of US 35. The
patrol said arrauto driven by
Connie M. Mulford, 33,
Pomeroy, struck a vehicle
driven by Delmas G. Sargent,
4&amp;, Columbus. There was
minor damage.
Four traffic accidents were
investigated Monday. The
first occurred at 4 p.m. on SR
160, north of US 35 where an
auto operated by William N.
Sibley, 17, Gallipolis, struck a
car driven by Kevin C. Dill,
20, P omeroy. There was
minor damage. Sibley was
cited to Juvenile Court for
speeding.
Edward R. Haycraft, 18,
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure to yield right of way
following an accident at 4:50
p.m. on US 35, three tenths of
a mile east of TR 2.'1 . The
patrol said Haycraft's car
puUed into the path of an auto
operated by Blirl Burn·
heimer, 69, Gallipolis. There
was minor damage.
At 4:&amp;&amp; p.m. on C!{ 20, one
tenth of a mile east of SR 7 in
Meigs. County, an auto driven ·
by Roy G. Bareswilt, · 17,
Middleport, traveling
through high water, went left
of center to hit an auto
operated by Wanda L.
Lambert, 29, Pomeroy. There
was minor damage. Bares·
wilt was cited for driving left
of center.
·
A final accident occurred at
5 p.m. Monday on US 35, four
tentbs of a mile east of Old
Rt. 35 where Brenda K.
Keels, 23, Oak Hill, lost
control of her car which ran
off the right side of the high·
way striking a fence. There
was minor damage. Keels
was cited to municipal court
for driving an unsafe vehicle.

Wednesda y at 10:30 a .m. He

Sykesvil le, Pa .. the son of the
late Will iam and Anna Hill
Farmer .
Survivor s incl ude his w ife.

He len

Ruth

McCu ll oug h

Frank

('Pegg y)

Farm er ; t wo daught er s, Mrs,
Gallipol is, and

Har rah ,

Mrs.

J ohn

(Ruth Ann ) Boyer, Co lum .

bus, and six grandch ildren.
He wa s a member of the

Sy kesvil le

tPa.')

Bapti st

Church, and a member of the
Eag les Club in Pomeroy.
Funeral servi ces wi ll be
Wednesday at 10 : 30 a.m . at
the Rawl ing s-Coats Funera l
Home w ith the Rev . Robert
Harrah off iciating .
Burial will be In t he
Cheshire
Gra vel
Hill
Cemetery . Friends may ca ll
at the funera l ho.m e any time.

at
VOL. XXVIII

STYlE t9015
fran the

PRJ ACTION collection
by CAMPUS

MARIJUANA CONFISCATED - Gallia County
Sheriff James Montgomery , left, and Chief Deputy Robert
Hartenbach, with · otber deputies confiscated 900
marijuana plants Tuesday afternoon in .a field .off the
Bidwell-MI . Olive Rd. The plants were growing on the ·
Hager property . Thus far, the owner of the crop has not
been located.

'l1&gt;e sweat shirt has C(ll1e a l ong way ! In this all aery lie
· model fran Pro !lotion by Can-pus the basics are therelp:xl and p::&gt;uch pockets-rut the .e xtra detailing transfcyms
the sweat shirt to """ heights! Quil ted yo~e . placket fl;'Dnt,
cxmtrast piping· and neck and' cuff treatrrent, all add up to a
shirt with style! In sizes S, M. L. XL .

sweat

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

B. rze
• !fis~·.\,·',i~

·~:r:::&lt;:::::::::~::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·,:·:·:,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;&lt;:::::~-::::~1

:,'.,·:. ews
.;.N
:

ln
•

e

e

e

·~

..
''

By United Press International
LONDON - THERE IS NO BREAD, fewer planes come
and go, electricity Ia sbaky, some 'newspapers are missing , car
th
ind' ·
toda
••
·
·1
ractorte~ are Sl ent - and ere were
1cation,s
Y
Britain's labor problems would worsen. A sudden strike by
33,000 bakery w~rkers demanding additional pay for working
on a holiday strt!ipOO grocery s~elves Tuesda y. Some shop·
keepers reported 'paruc buymg and many sa1d they would
bave no bread at aU today .
11
We're sorry about the incOnvenience to housewives." one
strike .leader said, "b~t tllere wi~l be no bread fr?m us unW
ti:Jere IS~ l!ettlement. More stn~es seemed tneVJtable after
Prime Minister .James Callaghan .s st~ong spe ech Tuesday to
the Trades Umon Congress; Bntam s central labor umon
organization.
.
.
.
.Callaghan. S31d hiS gover~ment,. as . part of Its battle
against Inflation, would continue ft ghting to keep w~ge
increases low and ~paced at least.J2 months apart. The Umon
Cong~ess was voting today on whether to back the ·government s program . Th~ outcome was 10 doubt.

ADMIRAL.
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

SOFA BEDS
Coil Springs Constructed
With Nylon Floral Cover

21.6 Cubic Feet, top freezer,
textured steel doors, 2 separate
temp. controls, tempered glass
shelves.

'98
3 PC.

'598

.

ADMIRAL

$68 BEDROOM$148 25" COLOR
SUITES
.
CONSOLES

"PROVINCETOWN"

••FLEXSTEEL"
FINE UPHOLSTERED
.FURNITURE AT SPECIAL

ANNIVERSARY

SALE PRICES

(X)LUMBUS - A COAUTION FIGHTING for legislation
banning pull-tab cans and requiring a deposit on all soda and
beer bottles began a drive Thesday to collect 150,000 signatures
on initiative petitions. The Ohio Alliance for Returnables
(OAR), based in Columbus, said. it hopes to obtain the
necessary signatures by Nov. 13.
~ The drive is an attempt to enact legislation which has been
sidestepped because of heavy pressure from the metal and
glass industries in Ohio. Participating in the drive are the Ohio
Fann Bureau Federation, the League of Ohio Sporismen, the
League of Women Voters, the Ohio PI'A, the Ohio Environmental Council, the Ohio Public Interest Research Group,
Jay's Beer Drive-In, and Waste Watchers, Inc.
COLUMBUS, OHIO - THE CHIEF OF preventive
medicine for the Ohio Health Department said Tuesday an
outbreak of LegioMaires disease in Central Ohio is "going to
(Continued on page 14) ·

Members of '' ' '' '' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' '' '' '' ' ' '' ' ' ''' ' ' ' '
• •
commtsston
are listed

SOLID, HARD ROCK
MAPLE DI'NING ROOMS

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday througb Sunday,
lair Friday and Sunday and
cbaoce
of
showers
Saturday. Highs will be lu
t~e 70s or low 80s aod lows
will be In tbe 50s or low 60s.

;

.

Rev . Linson H. Stebbins, 76,
a resident of 347 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis, died at 4:20 a .m.
today (Wednesday ) in Holzer
Medical Center followin g a)l
extended illness.
He
wa s
a r etired
Presbyterian minister haviitg
served churches in Sugar
Grove, Pa ., Harbor Creek,
Pa., Jamtestown, Pa., Kinsman, Ohio, Gallipolis, Me·
Connelsville, Deerfield ·and
Syracuse in Meigs County.
He served as a supply
minister in Harrisonville for
three years.
Rev. Stebbins was active in
all community affairs in both
Gallia and Meigs County. He
helped form · the . Gallia
County Senior · Citizens
Chapter , was its · first
president, and was a member
of the Senior Citizens Council
at the time of his .death .
He was active in the Gallia
SoCoun
i ty Cripdpled Children's
c ety, an was a past
president of the Gallipolis
Blue Devil Boosters Club.
He was a member of the
Gallia County Ministerial
Association,..and· Moder•to•

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBlH I , 19/7

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

w. va.,

of the Session for the First
Un ited Presbyteria n Church
of Gallipolis and a member of
the Gallia County can.c er
Society's board of directors.
Rev. Stebbins served as
oostor of the First United
Presbyterian Church in
Gallipolis from 1947 through
1958. For several years, Rev.
Stebbins gave annual football
sermons for members of the
Galli a Academy High School
footbaU teams.
He married the former
Emily A. Rich May 3, 1927.
She preceded him in death on
June 23, 1968. To this union ,
five children were born : John
E . Stebbins, Gallipolis;
David L. Stebbins, Daytona
Beach, Fla.; Jane Kerwood,
Mt. Ver non; Marg a r et
Johnson,
McConnellsville,
and Candy Stebbins, Athens.
Fiye grandchildren survive.
His second marriage was to
·Ruth Martin of Gallipolis on
April 15, 1972. She survives .
The following s isters
survive : Mrs. H. Rae Miller,
Sun City, Ariz. ; Mrs. Ross
Loga Lo · Oh '
dM
n, ram, 10 an
rs.
Carl Bl.trker Meadvill~ Pa .
'
'
·

. It will probably be at least
another 40 days before
motorists can once again
drive acro ss the Silve r
Memorial Bridge.
This became apparent late
Tuesday afternoon when
Dean Blake, deputy com·
missioner of the West
Virginia Department of High·
REV. L. H. STEBBINS
ways said 10 defects on the
span still need to be
Foneral ser vices will be corrected. He said it takes
held at the First United four good days to correct one
Presbyterian Church in defect.
Gallipolis on Friday, at 1;30
Weather, which is unp.m. with Rev. Frank and predictable at this time of the
Tura Hayes officiating.
year, could also be a factor
Burial will be in Letart causing add,itional delays in
F alls Cemetery. Friends may completing the bridge repair
r ail alter 2 p.m. on Thursday work.
at the Warehime Funeral
Blake said that as of
Home.
Tuesday, six defects had been
The body will lie in state at rorrected and the first phase
th~ cthurtchh unW one hour of the testing his compl~e. d
pnor o e serv1ces.
That first · p ase conSlste
Memorial donations for the of testing the tension
First United Presbyter ian members of the upper chords
Church, or the Gallia County of. the bridge, according to
Unit Cancer Society will be Blake. Throu. gh the use of
.
.
.
.
aocepted. .
Sight and ultra some testing
·
'
·

•

,

.

Andy Lyles, representing
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources as Meigs
County's game prote ctor '
h p
~he:~~~r tooft econ:'~=~~~
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs
. Inn was strongly opposed to a

..
.
proposed amendment to the animals would be banned but
Ohio Constitution that would also traps for mice or rats in
ban the leghold trap in Ohio. the home .
Lyles made these points in
- Trapping of birds is not
his presentation :
done by hunters, but only by
Lyles made these points on the U. S. Department of
his presentation :
Wildlife using nets and . done
- Not only trapping of for research methods .

.
nt'
r
act
'
.
let
t
.
0
Co

- Ohio trapping "is most
progressive.:• All traps are
checked within 24. hours .a nd
are set atleast 150 yards from
any dwelling, and do not use
open fresh bait.
- In 1976 trapping was
great for the economy in tbat
it was a $50 million business
. in furs in lining gloves and ·

Court laid it on
Minersville man
a

and fined $~0 and costs on
disorderly manner charge.
Dale M. Jacobs, Middleport, was fined $10 and
costs, charge of failing to
yield the right of way. Police
said Jacobs pulled from an
exit at the Gateway Supermarket at 6:&amp;5 p.ni. Monday
into the path of a pickup truck
driven by Danny R: Russell,
Route 2, Pomeroy, which was
struck by another car driven
by Wilbur S. Holter, Akron.
Heavy damages were incurred ot the Russell vehicle
and medium to the other
vehicles.
Also fined Tuesday night
were William A. Stoeffer,
Cuyahoga Falls, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner,
and Ben Davidson, Mid·
dleport, $25 and costs,
disorderly manner. U. T.
Hump)lreys, Gallipolis,
forfeited a $27 bond in the
court posted on SJltleding
charges.

equipment these 16 defects,

believe defects located in this

m what has been described as area of the bridge are as
ooirline cracks, wer e un·
covered.
The first crack discovered,
which apparently was the
most critical, W!IS fo und on
July 6. At that time the

decision was made to close
the bridge to all motorized
traffic.
The next phase of testing,
which is currently underway,
is to test the compression
members located on the
lower half of the bridge.
Blake said he did not

crit ical as those already
found in the tension mem·
bers. He even hinted at the
possibility that the bridge
may be ·opened should there
be a nescessity to repair any
defects in this area after the
defects in the other areas
have been corrected.
" We are meeting later this
week to discuss this testing
procedure and to try and
determine whether the bridge ·
can open during that period."
(Continued on page 141

Events scheduled
for 'Yesteryear'
Contests and judged events
oove been scheduled for the
second annual " Yesteryear"
observance to be held from 11
a.m. to 11 p.m.. Saturday,
Sept. 17 at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Cente.r in Pomeroy.
The first event will be a pie
baking contest at 11 a.m .
followed by sack races for
two age groups at 11:30 a .m.
At 12 noon a cracker eating
contest will be held with
watermelon to take over at
12:30,firstwitha watermelon
seed spitting contest and then
a watermelon eating contest.
At I p.m. the annual hor·
sespoe pitChing contest will
be held: the three-legged

prizes awarded each hour
during the observance. The
contributions were received
by council members.
merchants or individuals ali!O
wishing to contribute .but .
unintentionally missed by the
council members are asked
to contact the center, 992-

"11

7886.
Merchants who have
contributed are Krogers,
Meigs Tire Center, Inc.,
Excelsior Oil Co., Pomeroy
Cement Block Co., Landmark, Smith-Nelson Motor
Inc ., Kapple's Pennzoll,
Pomeroy Motor Co., Sears,
Pomeroy Pastry Shop, K. &amp;
C. Jewelry, Pomeroy Ben
. Franklin Store, New York
Clothing House, Twin Elm
Farms, Dale C. Warner In·
surance, Stiffler Department
Store, Moore 's American
Hardware, Pomeroy Wine
Store, Simon's Mark and
Pi ck-a-Pair,
Pomeroy
Flower Shop, Powell's Super·
Valu Store, G. and J. Auto
Parts, Fabric Shop, Meigs
Auto Parts, Kiddie Shoppe,
Goessler's Jewelry, Mullen
Insurance, and ·the V. D.
Edward.s Insurance Agency.

making coats to name a few race at 1:30 and a rolling pin
uses . .
throw eo,:ent at 2 p.!Jl. Hog
Disease and health factors calling wili be a diversion at
are other reasons to keep 2:30p.m . with the judging of
trapping in Ohio.
the mustache contest to be
- The Ohio Veterinarian heldat3. Apieauctionwillbe
Assn. has adopted a held at 3:30 and a tug-of-war
resolution in support of the at 4 p.m.
leghold trap as an effective
Pomeroy merchants have
means of conserving wildlife. contributed merchandise and
Lyles urged the chamber to cash for the annul ob·
inform others of the im· servanGe. Cash will be used to
po"'ance of defeating the ban purchase trophies awarded
statue of the soldier beside of the leghold trap. He for the various contests and
the courthouse, for $590.
( ~ontinued on page 14)
there will be attendanc e
Sam Calebretta, architect,
and Jerry Peterson of
Peterson and Young (bonding
firm) met with the commissioners to again discuss
the possibility of the board
issuing industrial revenue
bonds to construct a nursing
home in Meigs County.
It was pointed out that a
program such as this ·would
need to be sponSored by the
By Katie Crow
asked if police officers not
utility's system~a&amp;t week .
Community lmrovement
According to a letter under the hospitalization plan
Corp. of the county. Should a
Mayor Clarence Andrews
plan such as this develop, the . told councilmen Tuesday directed to council the ad· for the village, may ac·
rounty itself would be only night that Pomeroy's !Ire justment reflects an in· cumulate days off or do they
the issuer of the ·bonds and insurance classification will crease of 23.46 cents per have to take them each
would in no way have any improve from Class 8 to Class 1,000 cubic feet. This is the . month? · According to the
result of increased purchase minutes officers inay not
liability.
6 effective Oct. 1, 1977.
The .Community
gas
costs of ·a. 77 cents per accumulate days off but must
Im·
The change comes as the
take them each month.
provement Corp. in the result of a survey of 1,000 cubic feet .
It was reported that
county has been inactive for Pomeroy's fire defenses
Council granted permission
many years, however the recently completed by the to Charles Legar, fire chief, loitering on the parking lot
commissioners agreed to ·Insurance ·Services Office. to purchase necessary hose has decreased.
.
Harry Davis, councilman,
rontaci past officers of the · The survey was made at no for the · fire trucks as he
group to obtain their feelings rost to the city.
reported roads at' Beech
deemed necessary.
Grove
Cemetery are washed
Jeff
Burt,
deputy
on such a project.
director·
The better classification
A long discussion was held tesulted from improved fire planning , Buckeye Hills out. He suggested all roada
concerning the landfill truck. defenses such as the new Hocking Valley Regional going to the cemetery lfe
It was noted tbat the truck water system which includes District, cliscussed a work ditched · and drains opened.
Council accepted bids for a
bas been broken dolm since a new ivell field and two new program that can provide
last Thursday and a con- lmits of elevated storage, community leaders an op- new truck for the village but
siderable amount of garbage training of fire department portunity to · Identify their agreed to . readvertise and
has piled up throughout the members, and the new ladder needs and propose programs agreed to advertise for bids
county.
and projects they feel will fill for a new police cruiser to be
truck.
Everything possible is
The .change in tht needs of a village. This type submitted by noon Sept. 30.
Attending were Mayor
being done to get the truck classification will mean that of process is necessary and
repaired . It is hoped it will be residents and businessmen helpful in obtaining funds Clarence Andrews, Harry
back in operation the latter will pay less for fire in- from other local sources, Davis, Ralph Werry, Lou
Osborne, Dr. Harold Brown,
part of the week.
surance. That is good news. Burt aaid.
Mayor
Andrews
signed
a
Bad news is that Columbia
Attending were Henry
councilmen, C'bfe( Jed
Wells, Richard Jones and Gas Co . is increasing its rates proclamation declaring Sept. Webster, Capt. Henry Werry,
James
Roush,
com· 27.23 cents per 1,000 cubic feet 24 as hunting, trapping and Donnie Ward and M~rK
'
missioners ~nd Mary Hob- effective with
Smith. Qsbome opened t"e
bills rendered fishing day .
stetter, clerk.
Lou
Osborne,
councilman,
meeting with prayer.
Oct. 1, announced over the

paint courthouse
The board also accepted
The exterior of the Meigs
the
proposal of ·Gheen's
Co!ll1tY Courthouse will get a
new face.
· ·
Painting to sandblast the
Tuesday night the 'county ·stone .on the front lower
Commission accepted the bid portion of the courthouse and
of Gheen's Painting Co. , the wall on the sidewalk level
Reine, in the amount of $5,356 a long Second Street and
for the exterior painting of Mulberry Ave., and also the
the courthouse and dome.

. PRICE Fl fTEEN CENTS

40 more days to
fix bridge flaws

Leg. h 0 ld trap·d e £e·.n d e d

Members of .the West
James N. Norris, ,Miners·
Virginia Air Pollution Control
ville, was fined and sentenced
Commission who will sit at
Partly cloudy tonight and on six counts when he apthe hearing on William Thursday. Highs Thursday pear.ed in the court of MidZuspan's appeal on a ruling between 80 and 85, lows dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
by commission director Carl tonight · between 60 and 6&amp;. Thesday night.
.G. Beard It against Zuspan Probability of precipitation
Norris was iinell $200 and
building a coal loading 20 P!'rcent today, tonight' and costs and given three days i~
fllcilltY at Clifton on the Ohio Thursday.
· jail on a charge of driving
River includes Mason County
while intoxicated. He was
native and W. Va. Secre\llry
fined $100 and costs and given
of Agriculture Gus .R.
CALLED TWICE
a 10 day sentence for driving
Douglass.
The
M I d d I e p o r t without a license and 15 days.
Middleport Mayor Fred Emergency Squad wentto 728 each on four ·counts of hit
Hoffman, who has appeared Pearl St., at 10 : ~7 p:m. skip.
at two earlier hearings to · Tuesday for Todd Lalhey who
Police ~aid Norris was
speak against the 'tipple', · was taken to Holzer Medical driving a car owned by Tim
aald other members of the Center. At 11:21 p.m., the Ellis, Middleport, Saturday
commtuion are Samuel squad went to the Shamrock night when he struck parked
Kllllc, L. Newton Thomas Motel for Clyde Brookover cars owned by Cheryl
Jr., Dr. George E. Pickett, who was having trouble Lefebre, Route 4, Pomeroy;
Creole D. Douglas~~ Jr. and breathing. He was taken to Paula J . Thomas, Route I,
Dr, Alltn Hunner.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Middleport, and · Gary R.
Blw'a
address of the
Acree and Kim Neal, both of
POOLER ASSisTED
~ommiAion
Is
15~8
Middleport.
The Pomeroy Emergency
WubiDilOJI St.,
East,
Tuesday night EUis was
~
25311. Squad was called to CR 82 at fined $100 and costs and given
l'bane MNZ'll or 148 32M. l0:48p.m. TuesciiYto remove a 10 day jail sentence for
'1be date of tfle hearing on the Lawrence POOler to Veterans permitting an unllcens~d
Memurial Hospital.
appeal wUl be announced,
driver to operate his vehicle,

Weather

Handle
Despite its stylish appearance,
this chair is a genuine rockerrecliner. Rock away to your
heart's content, then a mere
touch Of the handle and you can.
recline and relax ... at least
until some other member of
your family clamors for this
· favorite chair. May we show It
to you today?

NO. 100

Another parent suggested that the students go bllck to
schools they attended before consolidation since consolidation
was supposed to have provided a better financial picture but
has not done so.
Several parents suggested that the band and sports program
be stopped until the strike is settled. Jesse Rodman questioned
the board on the finandal picture and an additional $80,000
figure which teachers say the board has, but the board says it
does not.
The board moved into executive session for about an boor
with legal counsel and then returned to announce its adjourn·
ment, with no further suggestions. The board is scheduled to
meet in special session at 7:30 each evening this week. The
meetings, however , are subject to cimcellaUon.

en tine

Rev. Stebbins··
dies at age 76

\

'499
PLATFORM
ROCKERS

•

1

•.

Your Choice of Early
American or Contemporary

$8,800 wtth a 1.7 index h"d nut even been offered the U&gt;adJers.
Board member 01'. Keith Riggs inquired if there was some
provision smnewherc U1at the board ood to spend " the last
dollar and orlc-ltulf fur teachers' salaries."
Mrs. Slavin, '"' the other oond, contended that ahout 58
percent of the total budget is not exeessive for U&gt;aehers'
salaries and the board'soffer falls under that percentage . Mrs.
Slavin suggested that the teacher and the board
representatives sit down and discuss figures since they are
both working with the same figures (supposedly); but they do
not agree.
One parent suggested the board is too concerned about
finances in 1979 while it should be conc-erned with getting the
school district open now, and see if perhaps additiona l funds or
help would not be forthcoming in 1979.

•

·:··

3 PIECE LIVING
ROOM GROUP

board oilers a base salary of $8,800 annually una 1.7 tndex and
the teachers are asking $8,700 fur a StarLin~ te:fd11•r with a 4.5
compound index, or 1.7722 on the scale off•red by the board .
Don Dixon and Rita Slavin of Ute teachers association
during the meeting stressed that ac-cording to fit.,'ures they
have on district funds, the board can afford the salary
requested .
The board, however, contended that it cannot. Several
times during the meeting the suggestion arose that the board
will have to go to the voters for more taxes for additional
money and a strong protest could be heard from the parents
attending when this suggestion was made.
Dixon said until an impasse panel ood come up with a
report recommending the $8,700 base with a 4.5 index. the

\

a

-·

a-

Parenta, teachers, and members of the board or education
took anolher look at their present impasse in the week-&lt;&gt;ld
teachers Itt ike in Meigs Local district Tuesday night, making
no apparent progresa toward a settlement.
Approximately 60 parents, including a few teachers,
attended a special meeting of the Board of Education.
To open the session, Board President Wendell Hoover
ouUined rules to be observed at tho session and District Supt.
Charles Dowler outlined briefly the status of the negotiations
between teachers a nd the boa rd.
The meeting was orderly with parents raising a number of
points during a short per iod when they were invited to ma ke
romments or ask questions.
The point of eontentian primarily in the settlement of the
strike, according to last night's discussion, is salary. The

Area Deaths . !

ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses were
issued to Clifford L. Christy,
6&amp;, Pomeroy, and Irene L.
Busch, &amp;6, Portland ; Edward
Milton Craddock, 19, West
BOOSTERS ro MEET
RACINE
Southern Columbia and Pamela Ann
Athletic Boosters will meet Willard, 18, Hartford; An·
Wednesday at 7: 30p.m . at the drew Byrne Vaughan, 22,
Pomeroy , and Julia Ann
high school.
Hutchison , 22, Rt. 1, Rutland. ·

It's New
It's Beautiful
It's Yours

"b

•

Fire insurance rates
in Pomeroy reduced

,.

,

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